The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 2, 1920, Page 11

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE 11 By ALLMAN THE SEATTLE STAR DOINGS OF THE DUFFS Tom, QurT PickING “The NUTS OFF THAT CAKE Aap So AND FIND pawn! He's a One-Piece Guy PS | % DION'T You Wear. me caning You? Wuo Is Ths LITTLE $0 You were Bord IN INDIA ~ WHat PART? Oi, DADDY, he WAS ALL OF Born wh wDiA! “ahd Bd T remember the Indian]/and wo always feared them even does? | when we met them singly “The summer I was 4 years old | we played a great deal on the | !M®, *arling pack, running at top Ddeach. speed “It was a beautiful place to play before they filled it all in| homes, and it looked as if they ‘with sawdust, and messed would swoop down on us and tear with the mill, and its work and | U# to pieces workers.” | “On the beach not far from us Peggy sald, “That was when | Stood a big empty hogshead. the water come up to the “What's that?” Peggy asked. totem pole, wasn't It? And trees) “It's @ great big, ‘Were tnstead of stores ’* big barrel, and it's pretty high, I “Yes, Pegay, child; treea were| can tell you, and there ten't much instead of nearly everything in| to clim> up by, but up we went those earliest Seattle days, and | and over and in “Woowe! we panted. “And here they came in a yelp | “They cut us off from our it up IN “WHAT’S NEWS TODAY?” WELL-THEY Can'r ay SAY AUYTHING ARC ae “>> THIS LAST Semies — IF SPEAR? SOLD CUT TH'S YBAR HE SOLD-Ty SOMB BODY ~THar WAS BETTIN' OW (HIMSELF )— a very great Sure some SCAUDAL — WASN'T IT? READ “THAT ABOUT THEM BAse BALL PLAYVeRes = LAT the woods were so thick with un "Safe! @erbrush that the long stretch of | But wasn't that a dangerous om open hard be: the only piace we had to play. | “No sooner had we breathed “We would race up and down| that sigh than the dogs reached our refuge and tried to follow us. h was really about | Cap with the wind blowing our ha r) and making sails out of our little} “Jumping and yelping about us, full calico skirta they put their fore paws on the “The Indian children loved it as| edge of the barrel and tried to much as we did, and we ofter| Jump in, Played together. 1 I can see them yet, their red “One morning I remember a lit. | tongues hanging out, their long Re crowd Of ugawere racing up| ‘ect eleaming, and we could feel é their hot breath as they barked and down, ha¥ing a gay time. | and snaried. when down the beach from the “It must have been one awful Indian village came a whole pack | din, for every child In the barrel Of those dogs. erry Mert easd Set eo BOP eON \, Ae on yelled at the top c “Lean, savage looking brutes | they were. “I do not know what breed. but they had a mean, woilfish look, | "And that is wh guess, for my big sister heard the commotion and came down and drove the dogs away.” Reeaeee ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS Clive Roberts Barton COBBY COON OFFERS HELP aes Wa Or. * fe Xn ; sR. - Seo ey, in f cool mud op Squirret’s bornet bites ter, Everybody the plenic again wre Fleet Fox had and the Magical was playing policeman said he would warn them if any came near them again. Bo they started to play some more one of them being called ince the Grape.” boy knew of half @ @onen wid grapevines, some of them quite near indeed, but for a reason of hie own he went quite a distance to get to @ certain vine that had climbed up [the trunk of a sycamore tree. Up he scampered into the boughs, where he filled his pockets with enough herapes for all the Meadow Grove people who were in the «ame. Something else! Some bees had left a lot of wild honey in a hole, and, reaching in, Cobby put a tiny ‘The way it was played was like) ‘this: Everybody got in a row and/dab of it onto his nose. Then he put a grape on each perton’s|slid down thé tree and scampered ‘Then when he sald “Go,” ev-/back to the picnic as hard as he ody started toward the willew/!could tear. He gave Nick all the and the person who kept his!grapes he had gathered and then Brape on the longest got the prize. took his place in line with the “‘Cobby Coon sid he knew where | others. were some nice round, wild) Nick wagt along placing « grape and offered to get some, and {carefully on each one’s nose. By who was very busy, was glad and by he came to Cobby. take his offer. Now the Coon| (Copyright, 1920, N. KE. A.) BY THOKNTON W. BURGESS The Exciting Hunt for Bobby Coon HEN Happy Jack Squirrel asked; man ameli is one of the hardest the Merry Little Breezes of| things in the world to carry, and the @ Mother West Wind to hurry over | only way in which the Merry Little the middle of the cornfield and| Preezes can carry it is by working Bobby Coon that Farmer all together and continually passing n and Farmer Brown's Boy had it along ‘from one to another. Of 4 his tracks and were looking course, when Farmer Brown and him, the Merry Little Breezes Farmer Brown's Boy moved off to rushed away im great excite one side, the nearest Little Breese} nt. All that Happy Jack could) lost the smell and couldn't pass It} li them was that Bobby Coon was| here in the middie of the field—just where Happy Jack | know. They would have to! him themselves, ‘Now, the way that the Merry Little | tell the little meadow and Fforest people that danger is near is w carrying every little sound to the p little ears of whoever they are to warn, or by carrying the F i of the danger to the keen little Pose Of the one who ix in danger. | mow they hurried over to Farmer | and Farmer Brown's Boy to the emeil of them, and then hunt the brown corn tents for Coon. There wasn't any d for them to carry, tor Farmer m and Farmer Brown's Boy not making the least bit of a fag they followed Bobby Coon's Stracks. Just as s00n as the Merry Little Happy Jack Squirrel, Watch- ing From the Fence Post, co So Excited That He got that man-smell they Covldn’t. K. Sti straight ahead with it, but, | Keep Still knowing just where Bobby Coon | along. So back they all had to come they «tarted jn the wrong direc-|and start over, and this time they Farmer Brown «miled, for, you| went in the wrong direction again, he. knows all about the Merry |and once more Farmer Brown smiles ttle Breezes, and he knew then just | as he and his boy very, very careful-| sthey were trying to do, so he|ly approached one brown corn tont right on following Bobby Coon's | after another, all the time watching cl When the Merry Little| out for Bobby Coon. The Merry Lit failed to find Bobby they | tle Breezes grew so excited that they back to start again in another | separated and seattered in all direc on. This time they started in| tions, hunting for Bobby Coon, and same direction that Bobby’s|then, of course, they couldn't carry is pointed, but Farmer Brown the smell at all ‘watching out sharp, and the in-| Happy Jack Squirrel atching they started he and his boy|from the fence post where he had off to one side and began to|first called to the Merry Little toward the middle of the corn-| Breezes, grew so excited that he from that point couldn't keep still, Who would euch @ very faint amell as a tind Bobby Coon first? He could nee "*RECKLES wer AL OF AY GBOGRADHY }/ Aow T WANT “To GINS You 4 FEW QUIRTES ON From my BROTHER! HE MUST GE Pay’ ME BACK THAT # 410 | HE BORROWED Four | AND HIS FRIENDS Holes Are Less Than Nothing! ALL QIGHT—TELL ME WUY, YoU ARENT Gog YES TUATS ALL Don’? Quite 1 Too HARD Now Pop il WUAT ANIMALS ARE GET STUCK ON HE FIRST SATISFIED WITY WE QUESTION = MINK NOW» WHAT LEAST AMOUNT OF ANIMALS ARE SATISFIED Wht AOURISUMENT | Z=—}||\ “WE LEAST AMOUATT See UT New LISTEN “TO WHA WHAT DIO HE “DEAR BROTHER: SEND, A CHECK OR CuRREN THE DOLLAR WAS WORTH {00 CENTS! To-day IT 18 FOuR_ YEARS AGO I TOUCHED YOU FOR FO &T THAT TINE Tr EATS AUTH! BUT Holes! te> MOMAND SO L HAVE DECIDED IN FAIRNESS To You To WAIT UNTIL THE DOLLAR GOES BACK TO 17'S FULL VALUE, YOu WONT LOSE any THING! © WITH LOTS OF LOVE peter Your BROTHER LES. MGINIS* ONLY WORTH FREIGHT CARS TAKING A CURVE )( repay! IGHING Y 7 WOT ONLN DOES TiS MIRACLE OL EUMINATE ASTD SQUEAKS, BUT, Farmer Brown and Parmer Brown's) Boy getting nearer and nearer to the | middie of the cornfigid, and his heart almost stopped beating as he thought of what might happen to Bobby Coon | if they should find him, It was| dreadful to sit there and not be able | to do anything at all to warn| Bobby! | ‘Oh, dear! Oh, dear! They'll surely get him!” wailed Happy Jack Next story: What happened lA. F. Spawn Says He “*" Mexico to Pension Slain Man’s Widow) WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—Mexico} has made her first move in settling the claims of foreigners. Agreement has been affected with the British | government to pay the widow of amount of good and I am delighted | ine, and right there concluded to get William S$. Benson, murdered Febru- ary 17, 1914, by Francisco Villa or his a $10,000 cash and $2.50 a day while she remains a widow, Mrs. Benson is @ Mexican woman, | Is Fined $500 for Booze Conspiracy) Ernest Kruse, long known aa the | mysterious “missing defendant” in| the Meadowdale booze conspiracy | case in federal court here last spring, was fined $500 Monday when he| pleaded guilty to the charges against bim. John Now Has an | Abnormal Headache Jack Schater's head ached more than it should Tuesday, Jack tm bibed freely with friends. Then the: wugged him and stole $176 | RENOWNED FOOD EXPERT Yea, Luke, things are actually what they seem—about one time in @ hundred. ETHICAL HIGHLY PRAISES TANLAG tin South Africa, At first the attacks not frequent and only mildly | 4 severe, However, they grew in in-| Thought His Days of tensity and frequency, and two years | Usefulness Were Over, ago caused me so much suffering 1 * +’ quit my business in Africa and start But Master Medicine oa home, my destination being Seat Soon Overcame His |'!*,, Washington. Troubles er I picked up an Amer. jean newspaper and read an account | y before 1 was to leave | the ster “Tanine has done me a wonderfdl of some one’s experience with Tan ve it my indorsement,” wag the ding. Well, 1 ment recently made by A. F. an taking it at once, and Spawn, residing at the Hotel Ange-| before the first bottle was gone I had lus, Vane B. C. world re-lretief. You can well imagine my de | nowned expert in dehydrated food | light, and I continued taking Tanlac | products right along till I had finished six | Mr. Spawn has traveled extensive: | bottles, but long before that the gas | ly, having visited every country of | tric o was gone. | importance on the map, and three| “Before beginning with Tanlac my times cireled the globe. He is prob | sufferings were so terrible and I was ably the world’s best authority on|in such a rundown condition, I was the dehydrating of foods, having | thinking for a while my days of use- | : years’ close study to|fulness were over, But now I'm in| He it was who evolved | fine condition, thanks to ‘Tanlac, and ocons of making flour out of | though eighty years of age am just . and coffee of ban-|as much interested as ever in’ my n to his Vancouver | life work | wn regards Seat-| “I am glad to give Taniae the/| his home, and | credit it deserves, for it is one medi-| with his son. jctne entitled to good recommenda r he most | tio excruciating troub! which al 1 nan ever suffered,” ¢ Spawn, “and I+contracted to sta ouver “absolutely well.” the human and neglected teeth. A little pus sac ment develops. after? c papa it might be in the future. anas. In addit residence, tle, W whe LADY ATTENDANTS " nlac is sold in Seattle by Bartell ntinued Mr.| Drug Stores under the personal di. it four| rection of @ special Tanlac represen- OPEN EVENINGS years ago while engaged in business | tative, v Dead Men Tell No Tales ‘i ) jeyouetsitl AS WELL AS SHOULD BE? se are very few of us who can say we are We have little ac! that some day will be “big” aches and pains. Medical science tells us-that a large per cent of Iments comes originally from decayed one tooth is secreting poison and pumping it stead- ily into the system until finally a very serious ail- Why not be sensible and have your teeth looked The cost now is nothing compared to what Do it today. ELLIOTT 4357 1604- Beak Fa Sevngs Sg Why is a good liar always com sidered bad? | DENTINE be eliminated by wearing the Can Lundberg Rupture Support. We give free trial to prove its superiority, + hes and pains at the root of Everyone whoindulges in indoor or outdoor sports should keep a jar of Resinolready torelieve thechaf- ing or the itching rash so often pro- duced by overheating the blood. It cools the inflamed spots, stops the itching and burning and restores the skin to its normal condition, Jon statiy aned ot opertiog eee oa a pr adony -_ QNONUUOOOUUUUAUUUONCUUUTOQUOUONTOORAA OANA IHy

Other pages from this issue: