The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 19, 1920, Page 10

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mares fopuh ge oe sense gers aga pine THE SEATTLE STAR ‘ tH DOINGS OF THE DUFFS a re Soa e HELLO, Nes, Tis 1S Me-DoFE F OK, HELLO The@e Mes PETERS, How ARB Yo? No- MOT A PLACE - We INTENDED STAVING Home - IT WAS MRS, PETERS, Avo Trey were NO WONDER She cUT mi COMING OVER ToMIGHT- ODT | TOLO ' WHAT Wale BHE THINK ? | HER WE WERE GOING To THe HEATER, OW WaT WiLL SHE SAY: I'VE GOT ALOT OF Taues | H OM, WHAT WiLL We DO? WAVE TO Do ToMIGHT! : Yes, 6uT | Toup Hee 7 Come OVER THAT WE WERE Gaus TO STAY Home. ! HELLO - OH, MRS, PETERS , how Are You= } WAS JUST UP STAIRS GETTING Oresseo - we're Gone To THE . TheaTeR - 1M So- * Prue - Yes Swe's Weer - PL CALL «= o\Mhiie: * WER~ JUST A MINUTE | Ae — Us * ? * " LD OOK: . | ee Page 212 om fs ges AY Ah Go To A Mome THEATER AND KEEP , Ove CONC IEMCE CLEAR. oe - PIONEER PLUCK AATUTERE ts so much to tell Mscinated me—that Mttle mene about the Olympia people.” | painted over and over again all “Harriet Dar | row was among those Pioneers over the walla, “ "Then the dishest When I think how dishes get amashed up now. Grandmother said. who first crossed the Cascadea. “The ones I told you about a | adays, how cups lose handles and ‘tong time ago, who had to let thetr over the Sumping off place’ with ropes, Femember? I don’t see how they | got anything down whole, do you?) ner set of old blue willowware “Rut Mra de Montis says*that| china; china which had been she knows an old lady who told| bumped across long, long miles of her something about some of the| the Lewis and Clark trail to things which did come thru safe | Walla Walla, then on again: into y. | the wilderness up the steep sides “She mid, ‘Yea, Myrtle (that's | of the Cascades, down again, and Mra. de Montia), I can remember) on to Olympla, and there they your great grandmother very| Were on a white linen cloth as Welk My! my! but I never shaf| dainty as could ba and safe forget the Tranksgiving dinner I/ “‘Sho was a plucky soul that ate in her houset | woman. I recall once she wae go *"T was but a mite of a gtrt, but Ing to Tacoma tn a rowboat, the picture of that day, and that) “They were about to make a dinner’and the bouse, is as clear) “nding there at Old Town whe friny mind; yea, a sight clearer| CTT WeDt the boat and into the ad deep water plunged the lady. than the dinner 1 had last) “-There were many people on Thanksgiving. | the shore who witnessed the acct. “‘In the first place, T@ been dent, and the crowd held tts used all my little life to seeing | breath in amazed fright. walls of bark logy, or logs with| “‘“It is a woman!” they shud newspapers tacked up on them:) dered. “She will drown” | but her walls were different. They| ~* ‘But pretty soon up she cama, were papered with real wall pa-| puffing and blowing the salt water [) per, pasted on smooth; and, look | from her mouth. She didn't make where I would, there was the plo-| a heroine. of hervelf and want to . . ¥ Bo ture of Quaint ttle ships salling| be carried in. She smiled at the [| on @ dit of sea; that was the de. | crowd and said, “Oh, I've been in sign. I remember it-eo well, It| worse scrapes tnan this!’* Reekee , ADVENTURES OF THE TW N teapots have broken spouts Just ff) wagons down every day or #0, I just can't see | how these dishes got theret “But there they were—a din Pan WILL ROGERS (HIMSELF )— DvD YOH uKearr ? Some Ssweirt / Del There's One for You, Pop! TWITY OAS WAS SEOTEWBER, APRN, JUNE AND AOVEMBER + AL TH REST WAVE TARY. ONE KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES Aren't Women the Limit? By POP MOMAND I TELL YA ITS 4 CRIME TH WAY] DEAR WIFE WENT DOWN TOWN $26 FoR A SHIRT WAIST: AIN'T [\1,I GOTTA BE GETTIN’ HONE, WOMEN SPEND ttoney! rn THIS MORNING AN’ BOPGHT A THAT TH LIMIT? WOULD You op] Im EXPECTIN' A CASE OF SCOTCH GETTIN’ SICK OF IT, Itt GONNA |SHIRT WAIST) SHE CALLS (TA 1 POY 26 FoR A SHIRT? T To BE DELIVERED IGOTATA - CALL @ HALT! BLOUSE) AN’ PAID $ Rb FoR tT? | GUESS NOT, \e HAVE MoRE | BARGAIN, ONLY # 140 — Drop : j £9 CAN ‘you BEAT IT IN. SOON AND HAVE ; I ‘| HEY ? a sre! DS! " “If there were any more light, I'd surely know that this , gentepapee Mr. Seripble Scratch, but as it is, J don't know ; @ ‘The last quarter of the hunter's Parmer Smith Then he shook Moon didn't give too much Ught | hands with his guests all around for Mr. Scarecrow’s masquerading | very cordially before answertng. Party in the cornfield; fust @ pale,| “If there were too much light, my ‘misty glimmer that made shadotvs | friends, you could all tell who each look queer, and the cornstalks piled other really are (It isn't well to F into shocks looked like min-| have too much light at a masquerade fature mountains, | partyseyou know. Now, take my __ Between the corn shocks were friend here, I'd never gues in the eat raaqkies Ret ge hm world (that he was Mr. Chip Chip “s re ina, you' gw | munk.’ tightly, my dears. If Peter hadbeen| Chip straightened hie mask and there he'd surely have had @ great| pulled down his little yellow jacket * feast and found plenty t6 spare for|and said he was glad of that Ris wifa “And.” went on Mr. Scarecrow, ~ £ | But to Cutie Cottontall’s surprise, md Ben Bunny, jr. and Cobby ba Coon’s, and everybody's, there wasn't single one of them made into Jack- turning to shake hands with some new guesta, “if there were any more light, I'a surety know that this gen tieman was Mr. Scribble Scratch, the Lanterns. The place was so dim/|fairy schoolmaster, but as it ta 1 You couldnt see to hop over @ leaf. |don’t know him at all.” “How come?” asked Scamper| Scribble Scratch, who'd gone as Squirrel, running around curtously.| Mr. Adam, and wore a lot of leaven, “Why so dark, Mr. Scarecrow?” was greatly gratified at this and } git Scarecrow appeared from be | winked at Nick thru his false-fate. vbind a corn shock, all tattered and torn, in an old coat and hat a | Pair of trousers that had belonged to OTTO AUTO BY THORNTON BURGESS Une’ Billy Possum Explains to Peter SPETER RABHIT had sat still all) Peter Rabbit grinned ae be stop 2 : day long in his safe hiding|ped running “1 didn't mean to! | place in the middie of the dear, dear | frighten you, Unc’ Billy, ‘The fact|WWld pop right out of bins head. = : mar ANE AAS A pencil is often hard pushed to Because the average man just has 9 VOl4 Brier Patch. Jolly, round, red|ia, I was on my wa: = |"And Grandfather Frog—what has Ki Can | Mr. Sun had gone to bed behind the | house to see how you and old are |become of bim?™ he asked. + | tell the trutn. hon oon en seh ot pte iddies Coughs “Contentment abides the truth,”, A married man says that the says the old maxim, but few men) forts of home would be more are in position to vouch for the/able tf they didn’t include the truth of it. comfort of paying for them, nad 7 Purple Hills, and the black shadows | Possum and all the children do this) “Oh. Grandfather Wrog, he 4 . —__) figs meses cnggenge thad raced out across the Green Mead-| fine fall weather,” said Peter Rabbit. take care of hisself, all right He | KEEP LOOKING YOUNG love, vfs “ wbit | done gone to #leep, too, down in the Unc’ Billy Possum looked at Peter | mua at tho bottom of the feanes | ee | Rabbit shazply. “seems to me that! poo an reckon yo’ will see Grand It’s Easy—If You Know Dr. yo’ail done taken @ powerful sudden | eager wealle, Ah dean remem-|the spring.” anid Une Billy. Edwards’ Olive Tablets ys fo along) “nd Old Mistah Bussard? He — 3 tims, Brer Rabbit,” sald he, secret young shouted down from the bias, blue! The of keeping is to feed Peter looked a little foolish, for it! sky that he would see me in the —todo ‘ou must watch your was true that he hadn't been near spring. Has he gone to sleep up| liver and bowels—there’s no need of Une’ Billy's hollow tree for a long there?” asked Peter. having a sallow complexion—dark rings j time. “You see, I've been very busy| Uno’ Billy Possum threw back his | under your or =, les—a_bilious | getting ready for winter,” said Peter | head and laughed fit to kiN himself. | look in your ace—dull eyes with no, by way of an excuse, “Blows yo! long ears, no, Brer Rab | Sparkle. Your doctor will tell you Une’ Billy began to chuckle and bit! No, Indeed! Oh, my, no! Brer ninety per cent of all tickness comes then to laugh, He rested both hands | Buzzard doan go to sleep up in the | from inactive bowels and liver. | on his knees and laughed, and|#ky! He done fly away down sout| | Dr. Edwards, a well-known physician laughed. Peter Rabbit couldn't see to Ol’ Virginny, to stay thru the cold in Ohio, perfected a vegetable com- anything to laugh at, and he began |Winter. And Ah almost wish An was | Pound mixed will olive oil to act on to get just a wee bit provoked.|richt along with him," added Uno" | the liver and bowels, which he gave to at's the joke?” he demanded, Billy, suddenly growing sober. Then | he very idea of Peter Rabbit! Peter Rabbit bad a sudden thought. | getting rendy fot winter or ing “You aren't going away or to sleep “Ah reckons yo-all can find \ busy avout anything but other poo, all winter. are you, Uncle Billy?" he action yet always effective. ‘They brit ‘me right in mah hollow tree pie’ affairs!” cried Unc’ Billy, wip-| asked. anxiously, pote, tat natural buoyancy which al eee, har aren The grin came back to Unc’ Bitly’s should enjoy by toning up the liver and A Peter tried to fool and to look! fice, “No, Brer Rabbit. Ah reckons Clearing the system of impurities | very angry, but he couldn’t, No, wir;|¥0°all can find me right in mah hol-|, Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tabletsare knowa father Frog come up right peart in ! i High Class Dentistry At most reasonable prices, Extraction ‘absolutely with- | out pain or bad after ef- fects. All work guaranteed S (( 15 years. Take care of Py P bate Taint the Bread -/¢s your health. ‘ows and into the Green Forest. Now and down three or four times, to get| had troubled him | Next story: the kink out of his long hind legx,, “Johnny Chuck disappeared down | Some One Kise Busy, and finally started off up the Lone|in his house and sald he would see! - — Little Path, Upperty-lpperty-lip. | me in the spring, What did he mean RIGHT, AG ' Haif-way up the Lone Little Path | by that?” asked Peter, Teacher—What is Peter almost ran headlong into Unc'| “Just what he said,” replied Une’! breviation of, Charles? Billy Powum Billy, “He done gone down to his| Charles—Can “Mah goodness, Brer Rabbit, yo’-| bed and gone to sleep, and he's| Teacher — That's right. BM done give me & powerful start!*|gwine to stay asleep until next] Jimmy, what is “don't” the abbrevia- med Une’ Billy, “What yo'-all | spring.” tion of? e fm such @ right smart hurry fo'? Peter's eyes Jimmy—-Doughnut.—Detrolt News. | lhe couldn't. ‘The very twinkle in| low tree most any time this winter, | by their olive color, 15¢ and 30c, X-RAY FREE the moonlight was driving them) Unc’ pilly Possurr™ eyes made Peter | if yo’ knock loud enough, But Ab : Make Bowels Normal e Pack a little way. Peter hopped out| want to laugh, too. In fact, Peter d0an reckon on going out much, and| 9 to 10:30 A. M. forming purgatives, when taken nmson am. er ‘of the Old Brier Patch into the moory| just had to laugh. Finally poth|Ah do reckon Ah'm going to have a! for consti ick the system yvio- Hight and stretched first one leg and! stopped laughing, and Peter told pane art lot of sleep,” replied | Ganktaee jature's way is the way df Dr. then another. Then he jumped up| Une’ Billy all about the thinga that, Une’ Billy. | ° nk vulat~ * Peter Rabbit Finds | United eget nnd Siwy ee HAE LOR Boy SYRUP 7 and for cooking—_ Youll be surprised | CONNER U CO. PORTLAND bowels, eliminating the intestine | ing tl . Same old price, 25¢. Painless ||P) Paget Wortc hi ihe ia: Dentists Drikin 5 Pills Phone whiott 3633 11 OPPORTUNITY Third and James Street. STAR WANTADS wan't” the ab- looked as if they

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