The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 6, 1921, Page 15

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FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1921. THE SEATTLE STAR PAGE 15 THE DUFFS Cynthia DOINGS OF Cow Country WELL I'M IN, ANYWAY NOW IF |} CAN GET TO BED WITHOUT WAKING ASINBODY UP, ALL WILL BE LOVELY! by Little, Brown Co.) - * (Continued From Yesterday) That Little Word “Obey” of No Real Consequence in Modern Marriage. RY CYNTHIA “Would you be worried if you knew y had her and the horse? looked away "They wouldn't hurt her unless they "t Lew was dead, “Are you sure of that? him in a grip that widened the boy's voters of the future, as do} American men politicians of the day, propeses changes Do you think I'm bad enough [to let my sister get into troublé with the Catrockers? Tt is to laugh. The word “odey” has deen but a dead letter in this Ponnection for many years. Taking | # owt would make no difference with | ‘ contract, just as| pteaving it in has not brought instant | As one witty man puts) it, the women say it, the men pro-| coed to do it. Of course. Why does a man marry, F anyway, if not to have some woman © him his pathway? of the first Roasts made con- ing wives of political candidates | that the wife has been the making if the man? That's what a wife is! Ffor—to pry away the soiled collars | ind the frayed favorite neckties, or egulate (if she can) the diet, to keep |™mind.” the grown-up child that most men doing himself “They wanted peeled off the crowd Sunday, grinned Jerry e of it to anyone that would tell FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS ig ,POP, I BET You CANT GUESS WUAT T DREAMED LAST ~T WAVENT THE SLIGUTEST IDEA, FRECKLES, T DREAMED rr WAS BUT, FRECKLES, Here! HERE! TM MY BIRTHDAY AND THAT You KNOW DREAMS” MOM GAVE ME A WATCH AND VOU GAVE ME A BICVCLE. “Pick Your Footing!" die blurted, looking at Bud eage “She would, if she made up her Bud lifted his head and looked at Badie like a man newly awakened Danny Was Quiet, But Didn’t Sleep BY ALLMAN HERE'S A QuaRTeR! NOW You GO BACK “To SLEEP- WE MUSTN'T WAKE MOTHER UP SHES TIRED! SLEEP-1 WISH IT WAS _ MORNING! Freckles Can't Be Discowraged BY BLOSSER YES T Do= You'll SNE ME “TH WATCH AND MOM “HE BICYCLE ! AFRAID YOU DON'T UNDERSTAND THE MEANING OF CONTRARY. T'M GONNA TELL MOM. Go BY CONTRARIES. “I gave her money to take home for Men know this, len to admit it. I begged her to go if 5! over leaving d she wouldn't To one masculine | Way: the taw tq his{table to be in troub Rumble spouse there are dozens who | g0 unless she was missed.” have done it,” “What do we have for | ) dinner tonight, my dear?” and go | downtown with sampjes hid away tm |hazarded hopefully vest pockets, samples | matched with fear and trembling. * declared Bud, The mere saying over of vows of @ny kind does not insure their keep- into proper Place when the spirit is not lacking, Gnd the question of who shall com- mand and who shall obey is never _ @ mooted one in a marriage which is @ true mating. A politician must have a firmer use than that to win the m of womanhood. dentity of trginia Dare Dear Miss Grey; who Virginia Dare was, and why please print ipe for making orange marma- and hurried to the cori Pop came from the s Bud was crossin, off with Lew’s wife, too, didn’t Aa t Ss I know what my * eyes tells me!” been in Crater all the time Dit you know ew was mixed jup in a bank robbery yesterday |the cashier of the bank shot him? The rest of the gang is dead or in Lo Ory _ By Mabel C % Ke Pop stared at for a minute Bud unwinkingly “Don't lie to me,” “Went to Crater, did ye?} Cashed them checks, | Bud pulled his mouth into a rue- I cashed the) a here's what's | MERRY CHRISTMAS Virginia Dare was the first child pf English parents in the forid; born at , and named‘after the district little fir tree first peep of dawn Now Libby was a whole Year younger than was fastened firmly to its stand ard, and was probably ,about the checks, all ‘right- proudest little tree from the for left of the mone: @ small roll af bills. stuck to running my Poker's sure a fright.” “Went and lost all that money on| when she came out into the pres Jence of that tree, all dressed up Wasn't it the very first one to|!" its popcorn garlands and its be chosen for a Christmas tree jn| Fed apples and everything, she just had to have \hold on to, to keep her from go straight up in the wood, its tall ancestors had been happin the granddaughter of White, who was governor of colony sent by Sir Walter Ral- to found an agricultural state, sailed from Plymouth, April 41587, and reached the shores of in July of the same year. White's daughter was married to ir. Dare, who was one of the as- ints of the governor, and Vir- was born about a month after arrival of the expedition. Orange Marmalade—Select he-skinned oranges. and allow \three-fourths their | Remove peel fruit in quarters. Cook peel un- soft in enough boiling water to drain, remove white part peel by scraping it with a Cut this yellow rind in strips, 9 @ pair of scissors. This is more c accomplished by cutting twe or three pieces at a time. @ oranges in sections, remove and tough part of the skin. into a preserving kettle and heat le doilino-point, add sugar gradually, ind Cook slowly one hour; add rind, cook one hour longer. Turn into “I might better country around? brothers bad been used for fire me tellin’ yuh how| The old man's rage |] made into totem poles and canoes hold of her fath and posts for potlatch hot no other little tender green tree| pap, “Yes, and just to show you I ap I'm going to give you| counted off | enough to see me thru to Spokane. " just lke that. She couldn't in all that region had ever been| think of another thing to say. chosen for the center of a house! “Aunt Sadie! called Ida, coming up”?| And do you know those twins and Libby, remember yet some of the gifts on that tree. tin cart with a horsesto it; an iron “Pretty soon, dear,” came Aunt) bank with a head which bowed when you put in a penny, and things like that, and I think prob. ably that waa the first Christmas tree in Skagit county. Two years and a half Ida and Eva and Aunt Sadie waited for Don’t you wish and wish and wish | mother and the boys and then the there and letter came saying they were com. Mother was was going to teach Crater—why, I don't know what you | I only ride one horse at a} stopped counting when he Teached $50 and gave the rest to Pop, who thumbed the bank notes in a frenzy of greed until he saw that he had $200 in his possession. “I always said 't you're a good, well-meaning boy,” ly putting the money out “Dave thought mebby you stole Boise—and if I was you, Bud, I'd get to Spokane quick as I could. Dave's out lookin’ for ye. picioned you'd have the gall to come right back, I expect he'd string yuh up, young feller.” “There's something else, Pop, that I don’t like to be accused of. say Mrs. Morris is gone. know a thing about that, or about the horse being gone.” Pop grinned foxily. »| don’t care nothin’ about Lew's wife goin’, ner I don’t care nothin’ much a ee Ee maiten about the horse. Dave an’ Lew, let ‘em look after theit own belongin’s.” | troubles enough without having a woman on hands. Are you sure Marian’s gone?” Pop snorted, she’s had to do the cookin’ for me an’ Jerry—and if I ain’t sure—" Bud did not wait to hear him out. He went to the house and entered by way of the kitchen. ‘The disorder there was sufficiently that Marian was gone, so he tiptoed across the room to a door thru which he had never seen any one pass save Lew and Marian. | It was her bedroom, meagerly fur-| nished, but in perfect orde goods-box dresser a few cheap tollet necessities lay, with the comb acrogs | |a nail file as if she had put it down| | hurriedly before going out to serve| supper to the men. |had not stolen home to pack things | Bud closed the door. | Hope was still with him, but it was darkened now with doubts. In the kitchen he hesitated owed him for more than three weeks of work, so Bud collected fre | pantry as much ag he could carry, “Dave owes me for work I took what grub I “I'll show you what got, so you'll know I’m not anything that I've no right to | set down the sack, opened it, and looked up into what appeared to be| Butter-BAll Brown Bear ‘and Billy Bunch Brown Bear, while their pa- rents waited below, Sadie’s voice, then more whisper | ing ang low tones and papers whispered Eva, they making a Christmas we could go down Then, “Aunt Sadie! she} called, “aren't you ever coming| over on Whidby island, up to bed”? “Pretty soon, dear,” Aunt Sadie | OWT called again, and still the | The twins sat out under their » tree and talked it over, Eva,” said Ida, “if Aunt Sadie | goes to Whidby island she can’t | go alone; | think I'll just go along You can stay here with ge of Our Dear Miss Grey: Well, finally the house was all | with her. still, still as a house is only on | mother.” Christmas eve, with Can you please me the age of Governor Hart? o if he has any children? Where can I get the book “The International _ Encyclopedia’ “No,” Eva answered, “I'll waiting hush as if the house and|with Aunt Sadie and you stay everything im it were alive this | with mama.” one night in the year a to shout a Merry Christmas at the And so they argued. (To Be Continued) A READER. Governor Hart was 59 years of age wary 4, 1921. He has one daugh- See ghusk suloiie: nese ney ENTU RES ae sone OF THE TWIR addresses cannot be printed in Dear Miss Grey: 1 would like to the religion and nationality of Governor Hart, also his middle ANOTHER INTERESTED. Louis Folwell Hart was born at Point, Missouri, and is a mem- of the Methodist o- 4, you please int directions for canning spinach | for the journey. | Dear Miss Grey: Wash spinach in cold water, then in fresh water siz minutes, Cool ff in running water. to taste, bring to a boil in a le, put hot into jars and boil in containing false bottom for Tighten caps and place in Chop leaves, The bear boys soon reached the place tree shinnied “It's just full of honey! can feel it fine, all cozy any sticky | Let's just ha |take down mam largest-muzzled had ever seen in his life, “No ye don’t, young feller! “Yuh think I'd let thief git off'n this ranch? over that money you got on ye, first differentia-| thing yuh do! one nibble be Dear Miss Grey; Where did the 0 come from? <1n the view of modern scientific the races of man, as we under the great horse | oak where the bears lived, Flippety: answered Billy-Bunch, | wiggling his nose. “Dish me out a ow them today, of @ common ancestry which | to a sub-human ights.” | tion had becom: You know and I know, but land ! how could the visitors know? ‘I'll keep the bees away if they fe gits | come, |ingly to his sons. called down Billy-Bunch, | curiously, looking down. |that bees, once they |are pretty hard to k led up Bruin, sus: | two “Hi, there! pocket and got what?” he wanted to know. “Now you'll wa here to hang yuh fer horse-s shrilled Pop. finding out if it's gontll nt? Wpoid apes. enough for mama,” The ancestors of an/ widely spread over the world Bnd subject to great differences of i very different lod in different regions, attacked by fferent enemies, must have been called down But-| © a notion, glancing quickly toward the b ke a notion, INGROWN TOE NAIL mand differentiation over In this view a group the human race living in Africa ould tend to differentiate sop had without doubt been a man 4 aitnieate to trick in his youth, but he| Mt; Bruin. He turned to see what was wrong with Jerry. “ “Look out, Pop, you'll bust a blood | brother vessel if you don’t quiet down,” Bud | giggling at his ow ’ exclaimed Billy Buneh in Hedidn't like to b Bands of years. TURNS OUT ITSELF hich was best adapted to stand the bear boys soon place where and stopped to taste it, holding on |by their long toenails in the bark But do you know, children, has such smooth white and brown), how they did it. A woted authority says that a few drops of “Outgro” upon the skin sur. | rounding the ingrowtng nail reduces | inflammation and pain and so tough: | ens the tender, sensitive skin under: | dlarly other and entirely separate faces developed negroid characteris- ica in other parts of the world. PRS FRIEND For Expectant Mothers By THREE GENERATIONS one of tne only two white k garoos known in the world has been ReeuLaTon Co. Dery. 6-9, aTLanTAnga, “ent Lo England from Australia, gun from the ¢ man in his armas, “Wildeats is nothing to Pop when gets riled,” Jerry grinned, ing up on the run. “What you want| bark (all patch done with him, Bud “Gag him and take him along—| | when I’ve got my money back.” wing, struggling old a buttomball tree neath the toe nail, that it cannot the flesh, and the nail| |turns naturally outward almost 4 | that I don’t s “Ou'ero” Is a harmle: answered | manufactured for chiropodists. |, sticking his hand into 4)ever, anyone can buy from the drug store a tiny bottle containing direc: antiseptic | How- re hurrying,” and feeling ‘round he exclaimed to Billy: | tions, BETTY AND HER BEAU HOW COME | SAW VOU Ze Z ‘TELL YOu~ WITH CRIS LAST NIGHT IF YOU PROMISE BET Sper NOT YO GO with ; with crig || ANOTHER Guy iF) WANT "Lt PROMISE NOT] YO CANT 1? YO GO wits ANOTHER GIRL" Confessions of a Bride Sopyrighted, 1921, by the N Enterprise Association LOVE'S SACRIFICE I went with Bob to our neighbor's ~ house. The Millers were old their children were scattered to tht ends of the land, Katherine had not been at b the night before. Her parents posed that she was watching Chrys’ bedside. The morning pap story of the strange accident on Ilake had made them nervous. 5 They sent at once for the mam ‘ who took care of their dock. SOF BABE HAS SWATTED previous afternoon, he had WORSE-HIDE OVER THE FENCE over the boats with Katherine. EQUIVALENT “TO 21 HORSES OP had given orders, had inspected a U2 PONIES - pretty new power boat which : just been delivered and was to be tried out. Katherine had him to town to pick out some ‘ ing fittings. She had walked i to the house with him; but at dusic when he returned, the boat wag gone. Bob and I faced each other with: wide eyes. We comforted the people by promises which we : rather than expected to fill. ies. “We must meet that passenger steamer when it comes in! There’a no one else to go!” Bob said to me, And so the malictous god of F ordained that I should be at my hum band's side when the white sheet — was drawn from the form of Kathers ine Miller. Never had the girl been so exquis- ite. “This is her hour! Now she will triumph over me!" I thought. But Bob was no more moved than was I. I_ slipped my hand in his an@ walked in great humility back to the a RICE ri, jauto. I remained with him, advised ter-Ball. We don’t want to take her | with him, while he phoned the terri- (To Be Continued) letails with the undertaker. “THE ENERGY ‘BABE HAS USED ‘TO DATE IN CLOUTING HOME- RUNG WOULD BEAT ALL THE RUGS IN TURKEY > YES, You CAN TAKE MY SUIT-CASE UP TO THE DEPOT! TANK: TT MIGHT BUST AND GeT fF A BOJACK HOOFED THE DASTANCE RUTH COVERED ON HOME RUNG, HE WOULD STUMBLE OVER 334,726 RR. TES OR 784 MILES+ | Because the Millers were our (neighbors, because Mother Lorimer and Chrys were ill, many sad duties fell to my lot in the next few days. I was constantly In and out of the splendid room where lay the motion- less form with its magnificent gold- en crown, The splendor of the girl in her coffin forced me to think of that other splendor, the treasure of gems glittering in the baby casket. Both had had more power for evil than for good in this world. That power had ceased to exist. Bob helped the aged father and mother as if he were their own son, but he never went near their house |without me. He was tenderness it begins with girls as. the |sel€ to me but I couldn't rejoice in approach maturity, and that is jhis| gentleness as I might have theverytimethe mothershouldwatch yes Y jyriehes. thatthe important Tunction of dally | The girl—in her coffin—seemed to elimination is regula . B Many thousands of mothers who 5 4 ANY 4 J Pearcy to ace a oe have daughters will tell you they give v £ y's a | Ny . only Dr. Galdwell's Syrup Pepe A (FE YOU CAN'T WAIT TILL THG||, And it seemed to me that she, and fe poonful ix sufficient to relieve I, and all women, are bound by the constipation and ita commoner symp- CROWD AHEAD SSTS ORE _| | same sacrifice ina common fds toms such as headache, bad breath, TRY ONG OF THE WinBow fl] | dom. (To Be Continued) biliousness, loss of appetite and rest- Mother Gray’s less sleep, AROMATIC-LEAF a Syrup Pepsin is a compound of Egyptian Senna and other simple The Medicinal Tea, regulates the * system and gives quick relief to : laxative herbs with pepsin and weakness and lameness of the bal : ATTN — SUD rt ("A +] Ser Healthy Young Womanhood ‘THE tendencyto constipation * | WILL Mg Ylidildddis pleasant-tasting aromatics, and a sixty-cent bottle is enough for many months. Eight million bottles were tores last year, the and kidneys, nervousness and. the dull pains of the head. AROMATIO® LEAF is a simple. pleasant remedy for that tired, languid condition which so unfits one for the daily tasks, Get a package at your drug> gists, or by mail, 60c, Address Mother Gray Co., Le Roy, N.Y. be it to develop 80 large and steady sale. Buy a bottle today and you w! quickly see why it is so popular, TRY IT FREE Send me your name and address and I will send you a free trial bottle of my Syrup Pepsin, Address me Dr. W.B. Caldwell, 513Washington St, Monticello, Ill, Everybody now a then needs a laxative, and it is well

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