The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 14, 1921, Page 9

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PAGE 9 THE SEATTLE STAR BY ALLMAN You MUST BE A HOT POKER PLAYER TO LET ALITTLE THING UKE THAT SPOIL ‘YouR Luck! 4 Good-bye Good Luck BEFORE YOu GO .TOM. DON'T OPEN IT! gym } WANT ‘TO SHOW You > BAD LucK! J w, SOMETHING | gated Ao) BAD Luck! Topay ! Sia ee A, TOM, DID You FIX 1T SO THAT You CAN GO TO THE POKER PARTY? YEP, 1°"M ALL SET TWN® PRETTY ANDO! FEEL LUCKY TONIGHT, Too! WELL, | GUESS I"LL BE EASING ALONG! = BY B. M, BOWE (Copyright, 1921, by Little, ac (Continued Prom Page D | Brown att —1 Girl Who Has Overcome i. . teriously gone to heaven, according ) Bugbear of Super-Sen-|to mother. Then his memory ot ~ 4 WELL, I'M NOT sitivencss, Writes Ad-|"™"* Davin blurred, But never ‘ Y Cc eoiwet ry 4 > +, | bis memory of that terrible time a, j IN vice to One Who Hasn't. | wren te Tomahawk outfit lost 500 & ‘ = Jeattle In the dry drive and the ¢ Dear Miss Grey: May I say &/ stampede for water, | > few words to M. M.? | T can feel for her, for T have been CHAPTER 11 | there, too. When I was 19 T had a! Some Indian Lore | ) very bad case of senaitivencss, but! Buddy knew Indians as he knew SBR had it taken out of me, none too cattle, hors rattlesnakes and storms—by having them mixed in with Nis everyday lite Once, when he had s too far from camp, some Indians rid ing that way saw him, and one 5 | gently, and now at 26 I am grateful: i. Senaitivencss is a disease of youth, Dut some people mever get over it. leaned and lifted him from the % Fi T have an aunt who will carry a Chip on her shoulder to her grave. Tt ts youth's resentment at “being f told." Youth is cocksure, but doesn't | ground and rode off with him, Buddy y humor, soon ain strayed BY BLOSSER Pepe on ~ tC fz ww F think so. {did not struggle much. He saved Tt ts the antithesis of a sense of his breath for the long, shrill yell in mind, of cow-country. Twice he yodled be Learn to fore the Indian clapped a hand over this = overcome, and bearing be y at yourself, as does Mary ;his mouth. | Pickford, and you will find yourself} Father and some of the cowboys GEE-You Like &@ good scout among your frienda =| heard and came after, riding hard LOLLYPORS BETTER N w and shooting as they came, Buddy's pink apron Muyered a signal fag in ANYTHING, DONT I experienced the supreme test @uring the war. My people and my | husband's people are all German,|the arms of his captor, and so it ie and we consider our mothers and happened that the bullets whistled our relatives as pure and as manty (close to that particular Indian, He gathered a handful of caltoo between © and kind as any on the face of the earth. Yet those whom we had | Buddy's shoulders, held him aloft like ©) called our friends thought nothing of |4 puppy, leaned far over and de standing before us and denouncing | posited him on the croumd. | ) all Germans as the lowest, meanest} Budeay rolled over twice and got | class of people In tre world. }up, a little dixcy and very indige | IT had a life-tong chum who had nant. | heard that ris change toward!) From that time Buddy added friends after they marry.” When I hatred to his distrust of Indians | Married she actually watched for the) From the time when he was 4/ symptoms to crop out In me, and, of |until he was 13, Buddy's life con: | course, looking for trouble one finds | tained enough thrills to keep a it. I consider that the real wife does |movie-mad boy of today sitting on not reveal the family skeleton even the edge of hin seat gasping enviour | - } to her dearest friend. So when/|ly thru many a reel, but to Buc troubles arose, I became leas con-|!t waag all mther humdrum and monotoflous, What he wanted to do Yersational, tho no different in any other way. She immediately decid ed I had “changed,” and withdrew her devotion just when I needed It most. She was sensitive, because 1 @id not confide, and rather selfish,|be doing. Still, Buddy himself T think achieved now and then a thrill. Since then I have cultivated only| There was one day, when he stood ople who are older than I, or chil-|6n a ridge looking for a doren lost iren. And I get quite a kick out of horses In the draws below, Buddy ng the baby in our crowd. I hear happened to miss old Rattler with | ew criticisms about myself every | the others. WHATS THAT YOU WERE SAYING ? was to get out and hunt buffalo, Just | herding horses and watching ont for Indiana, and killing nakes Was what any boy in the country would | AND THEN SHE GIMME TH’ GO BY ' BLIEVE ME @ay, simply because my friends, be-| Rattler would drive cattle out of ing such, want to help me to my|the brush without a rider to Page 338 highest efficiency, him, if onty you put a aaddie on hi | LITTLE HOUSEKEEPERS | _ Better look om the sunny side,/He had helped Buddy to mount his M OM. and youll find happiness. |back—when Buddy was = much Otherwise you retard your progress, smaller than now—by lowering his and many a sensitive wife has ruined |head until Buddy straddied it, and & business man. Remember, “Wita|then lifting it so that Buddy slid) sharpen on disappointments.” |down his neck and over his withers | V. MG [to his back. Many other lovable Once upon @ time there came) that would hook up against the wall and be ont of the way when they weren't ustng it, and a bench out by the door and a few shelves to the big forest in the Whulge country a little family ‘The “f father was strong and brave and the mother was aweet| to put thingy on, and when he forest and i eee beam had Rattler, and to lose him . Federal Reserve would be a tragedy. and brave, and they mid, “We! hed all she big things finished he ( : f : cn Tt So Budd: seannt the Only in U.S. Pero oun ,MPvred gga Al Bcd will take our children and teach| sawed and measured and ham. on essions | Re) Dear Miss Grey: Are there any | a. * | \ 2c) hin head. them to love tt bis mered away, and the mother maid, “aes & A a bullet ping-g-ged over of a Bride federal reserve banks im American |Buddy caught the bridle retns and a : ‘ dependencies? D | balled his horwe into the peer of to fear nothing. ¥ _ A Es Rs ae ore MER BILL FOR $97.67 federal re- now ey) & NOU SENT ME MR OTEBONE > | Wo, there are only 12 | serve danks, and they are located im — @ontinental United States eee The father sald, “I will teach the boy to love this new country rocks, untied his rifle from the sad dle and crept back to reconnoiter j | An Indian on a horse presently | Copyrighted, 1921, by the Newspaper Baterpriee Assoctation AY FAMILY AD T FEEL You QUGHT TD CANCEL THE DEBT OP “TAKE TT OUT WW TRADE + And what do you think ft war? A woe little stout wooden chair ' 5 [appeared cautiously from cover, and and he shall have courage andj for each of the children. JANE’S BOOK ; Trials on |puddy, trembling with excitement, |] strength and he will fear noth-| And the little house looked very A CLIMB TO A RESCUR oe ee High Seas lahot wild, but not so wild that the pein J : | ing. much like the house Goldie Locks We regarded the shred of Chrys’ Dear Miss Grey: Kjndly publish |Indian could afford to ride closer | whether or not ail trials on the high After another tneffectual shot at gras are held under the Union Jack Buddy, he whipped his horse down | of Engiand. EFFIE. |the ridge and made for Bannock | No; this is not true. England has creek. . only over her owe ves| Father had warned him never to chase an Indian into cover, where jvell with amazen et “The girl never climbed that lad: | der of her own free will,” sald Daddy | | Lorimer. |__1 started up the vertical ladder Bob pulled me back. “Jane, dear,” he remonstrated, found when ran away and found the home of the three bears tn the wooda Only in this house there were four of every- thing, Instead of thres. ‘There waa the great, huge chair And the mother mid, “I will) ashe teach the little girl to endure hard | things and to use her mind quick ly when danger comes and laugh when things go wrong.” ‘Then they amfled at each other, to a lothers would probably be waiting for | him. So he stayed where he was land let the bullets follow the enemy | to the fringe of bushes. His last/ |shot knocked the Indian off his} horse. Buddy waited for a long ~ Query About _ Army Deserters Dear Miss Grey: Is the govern- Been estimated? AN EX-SOLDIER. The war department is still con- @ucting a search for army deserters Becret service agents are not allowed | te wear uniforms, The number of army desertions among enlisted men _ @earch for army deserters? s ltime, watching the brush. After a| of deserters in the United States ever 7) oan no rider. one about the Indian. Imostly confined to teaching Buddy) and though the boy, who was only | 1 year old, understoed not a word | they were mying. of what and the little girl, who was 3, under stood but little more, their pioneer training began there. right Now, as I told you, the home they chone, like so many other | pioneer homes, waa in the big for est, miles and miles away from And the father and/ mother worked together and bullt | any city then and/ in which the father ant, and the middlesize chair for the mother, | and the wee «mall chair for the little girl and another just like it for baby brother. Then there were the tablee— the great, huge table where they all ate, and the middle-sized table where the mother sewed and | worked and the father wrote and mended leather straps and things and the sturdy little wee, small children could table which the jistay here with Dad and Kath! 'Céme on Syence.” | But Spence had mounted a dozen rungs while Bob wa# talking to me. | waited until Bob had followed him jto the level of the floor above, then 1 turned to Katherine with | “Don't leave Daddy! I'm going upt Daddy Uhrtmer had been lame for months. But he protested: | “I can make it! ) He supposed that there waa but | |the height of the basement to ascend, but I expiainc? that# the shaft had no opening except Into the fare these agents allowed to wear | re | wiitirees? th Ter (while he saw. the Indian's horse | crtgd Has the number | imbing the slope across the ort | Buddy rode home without the missing horses and did not tell any- He wondered what mother would | think of it. Mother's interests seemed ‘and Dulcle what they were deprived | of learning im schools, and to play | floor of a closet in the second story | during the fiscal year ended June $0, of Certeis’ house. Daddy gave up 1920, totaled 12,48%. The nusnber of nnry obeet at Chay eee their little home adters returned 10 military con-|t% Didno—a wonderful old square Then the father built a table (To Re Continued) the idea wi ' trol during the year totaled $258, of Piano that had come all the way lr Whe..eteiyer, poloats Sanusnaod iehom 1866 wore apprehended and|‘Fo™ Scotland to the Tomahawk kekrne | Katherine. 7499 eurrendered themscives t8 mili. |Fanch. the very frontier of the West Because I know the plan of th " | Mother was a wonderful woman, eh yy uly od authority. . ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS Clive Roberts Barton with a soft voice and a alight & jaceent, and wit; and a knowledge of Address of things which were little known tn/ Official |the wilderness. Buddy never| Dear Mise Grey: What is the name (dreamed then how strangely culture | of the state superintendent of public was mixed with pure savagery in Highways of South Dakota’? lhis Mfe. To him the secret regret TRAVELER. |that he had not dared ride into the Frank 8. Peck, highway engincer,|bushes to scalp the Indian he be | state highway department, Pierre, lieved he had shot, and the fact that South Dakota |his hands were straining at the full) ~ \chords of the Anvil Chorus on that oe |i you Ko too fast!" “1 dia” “Pueh upward, hard! It's a trap door. Step out—you'll find yourself in a closet—very dark; bulb hangs |from the ceiling; pull the chain!” By the time I had finished speak ing, a square of light gleamed above my head. I made the rest of the strenueus climb in silence. Bob reached down a helping hand and pulled me out of the shaft. |roome up there! I called down to her. ‘Then to Spence who was near y ing the top: “You'll bump your head very evening, was not even to be) considered unusual, The place wag as still as a burial While he counted the time with Sjeoctentiond saaend tt the vests, Se Wo three stood in the closat where| Vilas suite which one had. bee! 5 idibated the Wieder of telling wicth-| fonths before I had hidden thru a|duisite suite which onee bad we WALT A MINUTE CUGRETT, er, and decided that he had better | long, hot night, in the uncomfortable I'M GOING To Terr You A” 7 keep that matter to himself, like a| |folde of a diving suit The feet, Stolp of the Pash: man. Hob turned the knob of the closet |Spence'’s hand revealed Chrystpbe! | |door, 1 placed a warning finger on|/°rimer, bound hand and foot, and ioe cae stretched upon the bed. And she “Go slow! Don't walk into a trap!"|Ws sagged! Her great eyes stared | Cautiously, slowly, he pushed the ;“t Us. lacer opeb. My heart stopped beating. Woe had been wandering In the cel: (To Re Comtiuned) lars for more than an hour, and it —erettey |was already dusk when wo had filed| The Southern Arabs hot thru the panel im the alley wall.| grease from a candle on a bride's Blackness engulfed the corners of | fingers and then plaster the fingers the great room we were about to) with henna, enter, but rays from the small closet | — ee light showed me that the wonderful! pe, j t foodstu Chinese rugs were still stretched on | Roiat's ts pss tolinecdl peed seg the floor. anil * | wane | CHAPTER IV. | Buddy Gives Warning © | May Escape the Dreaded Suffer Hae of Tha Period by Taking |p inact and marnd | the cabin. “The Utes are having @ war-dance, ; 2 mother,” he announced. “They mean W Horkies, Minn.—“ During Change ‘i: this time. 1 lay in the brush and Life I had hot flashes and suffered watched them last night. I told you 2 for two years. IT) you can't change an Injun,” he add. | saw Lydia E.Pink-|.4 ~Cojorou ain't any whiter than! ham's Vegetable |:,, was before you set out to learn Compound adve: ; %, him manners. He hoppin’ high tised in the PAPer or than any of ‘em. “The monkey family is nezt,” said Flippety-Flap. Mushroom looked at them carefully. “They are good for a apell yet,” he Fairy Queen was much pleased because so many of the circus ant in als had returned to the Place- cd the. CPerhees two ean |— ~ and t re- Hewes - “ a ae id , aasure hem. rhaps ‘o spells. And tab! | and got good Fe-| where's father? I guess I'd bet-| Where They Ought-To-Be. lAnd how. about your Language |ine oval silver te ee et ee 1 ter tell him. He'll want to get the| “It certainly looks," she said to|Charm?" er hich once A. W. WHISTLER it. I recommend ..oo% out of the mountains.” Nancy and Nick and Flppety-Ilap, 4 enclosed the photograph I had given your medicine to ““°°™ a . ppety: :| Nancy produced tt, also, Certeis before Bob and I were en-| R OF PIANO For en cityeg | “Colorou will xend me word before| "an tho wo were fomg to have | very good, my dears. I reckon |gaged. ‘The frame pal ITZKY METHOD may publish this ‘Ney take the warpath,” mother ob-|real circus after all, thin year. Th), o4 nave enough magic to coax two|Womanlike, even in that time of || 9P°°!#! Te ata pow. ae is very contented and in- Mra. reassuringly. “He always | elephant I gave him a whole pound of | served yaa. 404 Montelius Md. |scatter-bralned monkeys back to the Hlliett 2704 . suspense, I couldn't help wondering Kangaroo and |etrcus. Goodbye and good luck.” whether or not Certels had de-| IF YoU'RS GOING to fact as a testi-| THEN I'VE HEARD monial. ’’ — Mra. Res. East 8081 tends to stay q - y d Ronert B tea and a blue ribbon the Iast time|Kicky Kang are more than happy b Fomer tae’ t : Box 642, Hopkins, Minn. TOK Ne was here.” cleinae I gave each of (he & DON Goe?,. “Sovesdanr | wre acne Tine Peveiacy Maid 3 NO MATTSR HOW M@t CHEST= at has been said that not one woman me gy Ph Lor re ges: Bbrtaed Pope en pend Lhasa ba To Be Continued) splendid chamber and into the great NUTS ARE YoU ALWAYS PASS THEM tural change Sithont cxperienusae ‘a |hundred head of cattle. You got to|Mr. Lion and Mr. Seal will stay as | _ (Copyrighted, 1921, N.C. A) por gee eer See Boe the place was uucura ap ITH A CAVISH HAND I train of very annoying and sometimes | Laramie, all right, but he didn't tell they have such clever wives nip MeN amis Moab abil cod IS IDEAL: t= = : i cap ba ge Those dreadful hot |father in time to mal roundup them. Who is next?” i i he pill fouryed ipiacer: oe ‘Soa = : : 3, sinking spells, spots before |back in the foothills, They're danc-| Flippety Flap looked at the sole of Spasmodic Croup is frequently il . by | th H d = the eyes, pd pe nervousness, |ing, mother?” his shoe, “The Monkey Family,” relieved by oneapplicationof— |*°veral of the luxurious rooms and | or e ani S| are only a few of symptoms, | “Well, I suppose we're due for an|waid he. “They live in tho fifth Be he eee Mca olor Ser. hteret em Recerca isrepe Every woman at this age should profit outbreak,” sighed mother, “Colorou |story of the Cocoanut-Palm-Tree | | S} seuard, caretaker nor Housekpeper Uswsaes - by Mrs, Block’s experience and says he can't hold his young men off | Hotel on the Island of Farthest- | —, try Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable when some of the tribe have been|Ever, Leastways that's the addreas VARPORVUEB Compound. |killed. He himself doesn’t counte-|1 have here, but you never can tell , Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly ndard Monument Co = _ } le Jabout them, the rascals. ‘Home Is Where the Grub Is,’ ts their motto, you're likely to find them wher or a good square meal happens to be growing, or around one, or an ob long one. Theyre not particular.” The Magical Mushroom then put | | nagee the stealing and the occasional kifing of white men. There are bad Indians and good ones.” | “It's the bad ones that were doing | |the dancing, mother,” he flung over | |his shoulder. “And if I was you I'd} take Dulcie and the eats and hit for If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- paand will help you write to Lydia E. ham Medicine Co. (confidential) gmn. Masa.. about vour health. —~Advertisement. ‘3520-22 Fremont Ave, Phone Nerth 121, Seattle AS THE YEARS Ri on the memory of your departed dear ones calls upon your affections for some lasting token, some symbol of love that time cannot efface. Try One Bottle On Our Guarantee Why suffer itching torment « moment jonger? A few drops of D. D. D, brings Laramie, Colotou might forget to|in an appearance, “How are the| instant relief, | 86c, 60, $1.00. Try Rock ieccur manement oF warole QUILTING igor oa Magic Green Shoes holding out,| PD. D- Soap. too. or granite or limestone, which we al | “It just makes me sick when I|kiddies?’ said he. “Any holes in| will design and erect for you We quilt your pieced quilts and ||think how they'll muss thingy up|’em yet? That wouldn't do, you! not the New Year serve as a re- cial attention «i to out. comforters in beautiful designs— to $3.00 each. Phone Ballard 2014 142 No. 76th St. Phinney Car know, with so many oceans to cross on your travels,” The twins took them off and hand- ed them over, and the Magical around here! I wish now,” he blurt ed unthinkingly, “that I hadn't idiled the Injun that stole Rattler.” (Continued Tomorrow.) of-town orders and inqu right, Write for part (J e « lotion for Skin Disease BARTELL’S DRUG STORES

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