The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 18, 1922, 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)

rome rece ataimalinal ie a fHE SEATTLE STAR Cynthia Gr OUR BOARDING HOUSE BY AHERN | THE OLD HOME T o Cy go) |/ WELL Bove, t toox “Y — ADVANTAGE OF “THE GOSH, FIVE HA-HA= A GUY School Girl E. LOW RAT OF EXCHANGE WHo'p BUY THAT \"| AS SOON BUT” Sch Vv. _ tm 4a Sora in Fiction Mag-| AND Dae soa fare | sven STUFF COULD MY MONEY “ ines; Mother Has Forbidden Her er "hon MILLI 4 ; “9 S*) [EASILY BE SOLD A VOLCANO t+ to Read Them, LION RUSSIAN guess Tut Ger | | SN Coume sr apy ay RUBLES FoR GEVEN A SOME AN’ We'LL ILARM CLOCKS PANCY MOUSTACHE CUPS DouUGH GETS and Now She Is Seeking Advice, | IN GREENLAND = ; — “atin DOLLARS |= I WouLD NTH! e “TO TOOTH PIC! Dear Wise Grey, Lam coming to you for help.” I am a| || ADVISE YOU"® Do"THe ReNGWG GAME tel | WHY SAY, EVEN HERD LL oe ail ately I have. bean ‘eaten teat high’ school, SAMS, FOR Some DAV || 1 s'PoSE \F You f-4 GOATS IN) Russia || TE OE ous. & love story magazines, but my VALUES IN RUSSIA FLAGH A NICKEL QUIT EATING = / | Witere NIAGARA won't let me read them any more. She h my he f and she doesn’t think they are very “geod nea to} for a girl of my age. Will you please tell me if they are} WILL COME BACK~Tp “THAT PAPER PAR ANID You With POSSESS A TIDY OVER “THERE IN A PENNY ARCADE ie oe ¥ Pa right. MISS FOURTEEN. | TL NeaRow wr s Fourteen, mother is just about alwaye right. It is} Aas Ne} earns ti | tty good idea to keep that in mind. Hh | i You are too young to be bothering over “love story maga-| | | .” The literature that you are attracted to will hind development of your intellect. You can’t get the benefit| your lessons and devour the stuff that is so often printed | iodicals, | You don’t realize it, but you are a ve 5 ry fortunate girl to " we a mother who cares enough about your reading material | vf take the time and patience to even read over the stories u like, and to have her care enough to forbid your reading | if she thinks them unfit for you. She knows you, and knows what you need tn the matter of literary diet, as 4 probably does in everything else, aot _* * (ot are gorillas found? What Star readers who would like di- average height? Are they|| rections and information as to wont how to care for wood floors, car- - f ~ " VY are found on the western || ing for hardwood, treating old]| fics > | Ctr 7 OO ddd } const of Africa, The males || hardwood, ete., will receive same 4 Si i the average larger than man, by writing to The Seattle Star exceeding siz feet in height Washington bureau, 1522 New they stand upright The fe- York ave, Washington, D.C, end however, ore always much} | inclosing two cents ia stamps for , wawally four and enc-haif postage Sueen. Geriiles ere enid to take} \ es when they can get it, tho they | Et hacin to oleh to hit ether | Mighty elevated temperatures, Com- | WAN NR FING MINUTES APTER MARSHAL OTEY WALKER re for the sake of cating them. dustion of a small amount of off . weir n wits e@uses the evolution of a correspond ——- " — r ) beige teed gdend Gag milion of Acer; tied. af tompere- Te "MOR" purrs a. WAS SEEN TALKING TO DEACON ARCHIBALD TWIDDELL, end fledytings, Earl spatioraies che wvectotten, aro. A DENT IN “THE RUSSIAN TREASURY ——= - HE WENT INTO THE JEWELRY STORE oak eee jeucing « further degree o/ seat, until i eae outs in the Bible is the /%!.% Siven moment the temperature Giese unas the | may become a high as to cause the | “BY ALLMAN oe [masa to burst into flame. @rong drink unto him that gets iy to perish, and wine unto NOW WHEN THE TEACHER that be of heavy hearts.” Weet fo the resipe for Mpqnish vy ASKS YOU WHAT YOUR NAMEIS verse of the Slat chapter of S*'Ce? J YES, YOU CAN WEAR OLD You ARE, Yi One green pepper, one red pepper. | YOUR SUNDAY SUIT THE AND HOW OL » YoU eee one amall onion, two tablespoons fat, FIRST DAY BUT You SAY," DANNY DUFF, SiX YEARS one and one-half tablespoons flour, | op" — one to two teaspoons sugar, one cup) of water, on cup of canned tomatoes, | salt and pepper, six chopped mush- | rooms (f desired. Chop the onton) and pepper for five minutes in the) quantities of soot, paper, linen, \fet, then add water and tomatoes! or woolen stuffs, ships’ cables, | 24 Cook until the onion and peppers | Mecome soaked with a relatively \27¢ tender. Thicken with the flour | Memount of oils, and exposed to | Mended with one-fourth cap of water | amount of air, they may |2"4 cook five minutes longer to Blend fire sooner or later. The pres. |*h flavors. If fresh peppers are} of molsture frequently elds | “ted they may be perboiled for five ua combustion, and piles of |Minutes Uf the strong flavor is dla- hay or freshly mown grass | hed. take fire spontaneously . Phenomenon te not, however, Why are horses shod? clearly defined cause. Fats| For the same reason that humans! can de shown to undergo a 47; to protect the fect. It was early | 1¢ Of combustion at but discovered that the wscfulneas of the! horse was limited by the /ondition of Ris feet, 20 that the story of| horsexhocing is practically an ac-| count of wariows devices that have | led up to the modern shoe. eee | What fs the largest tron mining | pit ta the United States? Tha Hull-Rust Nakoning pit on Mesade range, Hibbing, Minn. 1s spontaneous combustion? | MUST COME RIGHT HOME ue combustion is the ig- Of substances apparently with- y direct cause. The spontanc- dbustion ef organic materials imes @ cause of fires, When OH, | KNOW THAT MUCH EVEN IF I NEVER WENT To SCHOOL BEFORE! NICE AND CLEAN |. YOUR FIRST DAV Peis COME ON DANNY ! GET UP, You'RE GOING ‘To START TO SCHOOL == ' er ey mee! IT BEFORE You Goour _/BEFORE 1GO To Play! by Louis Joseph Vance (Copyright, 1921, International Magazine Company) e eee e (Starts on Page 1) ings of curieatty. It occurred to @i4 im your Diemed 8. 5.” him that his caller should have You thinks so?" found plenty to do in his bureau in (a think «so if you'd been! the war office... round the East End all! “And to what,” he inquired with with your life in your| the tedious frony of ennui, “is one d | indebted. for this unexpected honor e it your age—I'd be think-|on the part of the First Under-Sec Babout retiring instead of asking| retary of the British Secret Service?| Test.” Or whatever your high-sounding of. ® Duchemin knew very well ficial title is...” j he was merely being ragged in| “Oh!” Wertheimer replied lazity—| a way of deadly sgeriousness| ang knocked out his pipe—“I merely PRED so often amuses tte English, dropped in to say good-bye.” those to suggest sourly: “My| Duchemin discovered symptoms nation is at your disposal any/of more animation. you ‘wish it.” | Hello! Where are you off to? | control over yor ovements.” “It twn't the first time you've! 4.” sald Wertheimer alr} “Nowhere—worse luck! 1 mean| or, Ov* Your movements | veuaiied ide me = this Steele ae “Wo take effect at once.” jI'm here to bid you farewell and} Jever no more, Didn't you ten-! member?” this Duchemin merely grunt-| Godspeed and what not on the eve | der me your resignation a moment) “Well, you've earned as fair title ig who should say he didn't/of your geparture from the British| .257 Wasn't it promptly accepted?"|to the name of Duchemin as I ever in turn of cohversation| Isles.” “Look here: What the devil r*| did to that of Wertheimer.” ely amusing. And Werthel-| “And where, pray, am I going “y if you must know,” the| But the smile was fading from Hesuming his chair, the two| ‘“That’s for you to say.” | Englishman interrupted ha “my | the eyes of the man whom England fed for some moments in si-/ Monsieur Duchemin meditated | instruc fons were to give a your) preferred to recognize as Andre & silence so doggedly matsy| briefly “I see,” he announced:) waxing papers if you refused to) Duchemin IVERETT TRUE BY CONDO “The wind bloweth where it) the envelope which his late chief listeth’" (Wertheimer affirmed.) hag handed him, then from his let “How do I know whither you'll) s.. o¢ credit and passports looked blow, now you're a free agent again, j entirely on your own? I've got no up With a reminiscent «mile. | {MORG GXPENSes lg ar Ceattle fe » Won't HAVE YOuR + * ; Won't BS IN THE * COLD FECT IN WE * 4 nd 4 ; FRONT ROW WHEN 2. DSF By Mabel Cle You GWE ‘ove MIDDLS OF MY Page 784 CURTAIN CECTwWRES! 1s on both sidés that Duchémin’ “Worse than that; none at all.”| sien. So your connection with; “But where on earth is one to THE SPUNKY LITTLE GRANDMOTHER } ware of dull gnaw Hachemin opened his eyes wide. | the. 6. B. is from this hour severed. | 607” | ean you all know about Col.) than alone, for she had seven egy th Bee beg) Pagar gre vrei Nalin cng ap remy Ebey's death,” Mr. Crosby contin- | children to protect, ; “About daybreak grandmother ued. “The Indians bad a grudge against the whites up around) heard the long ‘Halloo-oo! of the Whidby tsiand, and the Indian} Indians at her door, and at first way Is to kill the man highest up.| she did not answer, but when it ADVERNTU Es in 24 hours, we'll jolly well deport| protested. “And above Z you. And that's that.” PY me. I don't want to know Sinee fo) — THE Ww “One preceives one has served|I've been on this Job, I've learned fot England not wisely but too well.”|to believe in telepathy and mind “Shrewd ladt’ Wertheimer! reading and witeheraft and all man 7 ‘o , old soul, we ad-|ner of unholy rot. And I don't . THE FAIRIES BEWITCHED laughed. “You nee, olf now, we ad: ner of unnoly Tot And len end|| ‘They reckoned that « chief Is] Sounded again and again 0 in- — ~~. Pome mined to save your life. Word has| thru somebody's establish worth a hundred common men, | sistently she got up and dressed quickly and unbarred the door. and took it for granted that white 4 th Yetrograd that intercourse with my «ut Cnmgally gn are Mga . “They pushed into the house lyour name has been triple-starred | mind.” ckoned the same Pag : an the Bmoiny’s Index Expurga-| He took his leave shortly after|} ™°” reckoned th : ry | Without ceremony, the big, dirty, = htorius, Karsiake’s too. An honor|that; and Monsieur Duchemin set- wun epee ee eee ‘Col. | bt oe : yn gt 2% ee Heuo! Herco! FPURNITURG STORE € earne pernic-|tied down in the chair which his|} Sveut @ mi . peg atsgten wy ety ner, eset i ¥ ° j legitimately earned by your perm ‘aye yo Poor : Ebey's place, and I can remember | the lust of hate still in their dark prvi THS 18 MRS. TRUS. YES. T WANT TO COUNTGRMAND MY ORDER. I HAVE CHANGED MY MIND ABOUT TWIN Bens, ULC BE Down AND PICK OVT SOMETHING fous collaboration in the Vassily-| guest had quitted to grapple with levski bust. Karsiake’s already tak- his problem: where under Heaven) en care of, but you're still in the|to go? | limelight, and that makes you After a wasted while, he picked| | public nutwance. If you linger h p in abstraction the book which} much longer the verdict will un-| Wertheimer had been reading—and| doubtedly be; Violent death at the| wondered if, by any chance, he had | hands of some person or persons |left it there on purpo: ) strona | unknown, So here are passports; seemed the hint. It was Stevenson’s| land a goodish bit of money. If| ‘Travels with a Donkey.’ Duchemin| |you run thru all of it before this) wns familiar enough with the work, blows over, we'll find a way, of|and had no need to dip anew into} course, to get more to you. Yerlits pages to know it offered one | understand; No price too high that fair solution to his quandary buys good riddance of you. And| If—he assured himself—there was there will be @ destroyer waiting} any place in Europe where one} eae at Portsmouth tonight with tnstruc-| might count on being reasonably} He saw a queer person striding thru the sley tions to put you auhore secretly any-| secure from the solicitous attentions) flap-Doodle, the purple fairy, who |him into a beetle!" which he aia, | Where you like across the channel,|of the grudge-bearing bolsheviks, It} by hie cars, flew up to the| Then he turned nice Mr. Sprinkle. | ARer that—as far as the British |was tho Covennes, those little-known | ¥ Gleam Star, Blow into a rain-toad, and Mr, Scrip. | Bmpire ts © peered your blood be itis 42 <a goth of France, well] ve got the Fairy Queen’s wand |ble-Scratch, the fairy school-master, |O% Your own hea rc ung fro eo Ken. | I'm going to have some fun,” |into a Mzard, and Mr, Pim-Pim, the| The other ded, Investigatin « inued T morrow) } he to himmlf. “Those Twins| Brownie, into an angle-worm, and errrerrrnt nt Titel far away, down on the earth, |nice little Buskins, who ran the ele | id they can’: catch me now |vator in the apple-tres, into « spider 6“ 99 | lef ciel chia thaMlmnsnemenssssssmesmeseeeendl “Let's see! I'll begin on all the| Wasn't he dreadful? | 9 sald {t than Olive undulated up to | said trick of narrowing his eyes and draw: | versation with Ted Harker, stopped about playing with the bey chil dren years after the colonel's ‘ous food! they demanded death. tn their own language, ‘Good food! “Well, that night, the night Col.| Much food! White man's bread, Ebey was killed, the Indians came | Much food! to his door, you know, and called) “It was an unearthly hour to him out and—you know the story,| have an unexpected company they scalped him, and the only | breakfast and an unreasonably wonder is they didn't massacre | big crowd to feed, but the early the whole settlement, for they] pioneers made it a rule never to were surely out for blood, with as | refuse the Indians food when they mean a band of savages as they| asked for it. It was one way to could command. establish friendly relations with “It was a quieter killing than| the people whose land they were they usually made; a sneaking | taking. sort of trick—to call a man out of “So the litte grandmother his own house and kill him like | bustled about and got out her that. But that's why my grand-| Dutch oven to bake biscuits, made mother, only a mile distant, knew! a buge lump of biseuit dough, nothing of the trouble, The whole} more almost than ‘her slender thing happened while grandfather | arms could handle, while her grim was away getting his arm set; so| guests sat on their heels and as alone in the little house. | watched her every movement.” ey she “That is, she was almost worse (To Be Continued) le who have helped the Twins| “Tee, hee, hee,” he tittered de- | ¥ o rr 1 MICK ar roulder, 5 | Bob! pmptly \ is tha f y ones Tl He icoknd down at the earth tar|change them into bats, but I don't NO. 16—PEG AND LEE IN ROMANTIC STROLL “It must be pretty easy to get|The girl looked up with @ challeng: |full of controlled pendienayinseys yromy Letote. te eae Jorcah Sh baet and spied fat Mr. Tingaling,;know where they are.” The reproach in Ted's voice ao-| “Can't I help you, Ted?" Bobby |down to the water from over there.” |ing smile and, humming @ little min. | ing. diiuetict Yin waved « tant @ fairy landlord, who coliected| Just then he saw @ queer person | cused Peggy at least of being care. | offered. And with head archly on one side, /uet, walked off beside him. Peggy's look changed quickly | her, in Whispering Forest. jcome striding thru the sky. It was|- fe “i ‘ity aho|, Tea’® volce came muffled from the|she pointed to one of the gullies, Pegxy leaned against the door of|from one of cross resentment at| “Come along too, Miss Hollis,” he IN begin with him,” said Flap. |Fiippity-Flop in his magic boots. less. How much more guilty interior of the car Bobby was not slow to take the |the car, tapping # foot, her face be-|things in general to a glance of in-|sald, but his tone was as cordial as fle, “He's a good friend of the} “Here's a new one,” waid Flap.|was, it left for each of the others to| «No, thanks! It'll take « bit of {hint Olive alone would have been|taying more of her mood than she terest in his handsome self and his |a zea of Joe, It would have taken Ba and I don’t like him!’ |Doodie, “I never saw him before, |decide. tinkering, but we ought to bit the|tompting enough with her lovely, |realized. Duncan Lee, in the moon. |half-amused, half-appraising smile.|courage as crass as Peggy's to ac he waved his wand and eald|He's got the biggest shoes I ever| ‘The suspicion was felt that she|trail in an hour. Just leave the|slim figure, luminous eyes, red lips |light, with his hat off and his hand: On sudden impulse she slipped her }eept. Poor Winnlo hadn't it Words, and what do you think! |saw in my life” had done the thing with malice |tool# handy, ofa bean, and the rest|and slender throat, But Olive, |some face suffused with a dreamy |arm thru his, his hand promptly Shanks,” she answered — tone- Tingaling turned into w turtie.| Little did he guess that Nancy and |aforethought. In spite of himwelf,|of you can stroll around Ull I blow |joined with the chance of flicking at | gentleness, seenred the Ideal hero of closing fast upon hers. lessly, “I'm going to keep ‘Ted com: salle’ sigh’ Wisc Leta were aside thank dod lobby turned partly away from her.|the foghorn.” xy! No wonder the boy respond: | the soreen. Catching Pegsy's eye, he| “Why not, indeed?" smiled Pegay. | pany. ) “He's another friend of the (To Be Continued) He couldn't heip showing his re| Winnie could have shaken him for|ed with a sort of Jump, lemiled and came near her, “I'm strong for strolls.” i (To Be Continued) that I don’t Uke. I'll turn] (Copyright, 1922, by Seattle Star) | sentment the suggestion, for no sooner had he| “Come om aud let's sool’ be “Why uot @ stroll?” He had a Winnie, carrying on anty con. | (Copyright, 1922, by Seattle Star) n i

Other pages from this issue: