The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 27, 1922, Page 13

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OVEMBER 27, 1922. THE SEATTLE STAR PAGE 13 OUR BOARDING HOUSE BY AHERN THE OLD) HOME TOWN BY STANLEY . . | ' lin ° , — , YOU YOUNG OTEY DO HAVER NO SARAH Tri = SEA: LOG MH WINTER T “TH ONLY WAY FOLKS OnITER ANOTHER: WWE KAD RTH’ CHESTNUT SPUN SNORES UP IN A THEY CAN GET Come In OUT ae} HELPING OF Four ROASTER MRS. \ooPLE|~ | TWAT ATIC BOOTH WARMED UD wrth OF THE NIGHT Nee e O BOUGHT TO WAFT \T WAS GO COLD “H’ Met CAN \9 TO ° ‘ ‘ “raid SOME WARM UP It 7 " nee Dp 4 DUGAN AN’ DIKON'S FERNS ON TH WALL RIDE AROUND (T by Metviiie Davisson Post f AGIA ioap ae PAPER DRIED UP AN! A COUPLA HOURS ON OM « WHY, THIS FELL OFF «THEVLL KEEP ES) 4 TANDEM BIKE ! © 1999 NEA Service, Inc ba le agree WARM WITH HEATED “THAT WOULDN'T (Continued From Page ]{t was a mystery that had puseied | ™ SMILE On WORDS OVER “THAT / PuT A FRECKLE ON talk about her—that's the reason 1 | everybody, a 1 was willing to bear | ol SHIN: TOASTER Za! \ A MARSHMALLOW e laughed | that he had to say about it, 1 x tt ante you to come id cteuthed | took the chair beyond bin. | ' >\_ kT CLoGe RANGE! tout ent Not by & jugful. I sent} Me shot hiv head forward sudden. | 4 ly, in @ tense gesture. 0 put you wien, I wanted | Y os elgtedl things up before I "She's a heavenly angel!” he sald. } ished in. Hut tt was a@ clean lie |“! don't know what God Almighty | C 4 ¥ hat I wanted was somebody to|/ Meant by setting her in the game Y7/| ten while I talked about her, sit| With the bunch of crooks that He's | NW ” |got running the world—unless He | wn. 1 ye | ‘was @ strange introductory, But | Counted on me." The laugh became - ~ ——- |& wort of chuckle In his big throat | “Ain't she a heavenly angel?” | } He whipped a worn photograph | a out of his pocket and reached it! | across the table to me. | Tt was the photograph of a «trl | with the face cut out. It had been taken from @ painting, one could tell y from the flat surface, and the strange background of beauty and an inde ritable charm in the pose of the | tirl remained even in the mutilated ploture. “I eut out the face,” he added, “ she wouldn't come into the case tf ow at Dresses you caught me; your littl Weat ‘Skirts Kimonas smatahe ridge must have been slaughtered at the loss of her. Coats Curtains Stockings Again he touched me at an om] Everything oxpected potnt. Shortly after the thing, for which we were secking the man before me, had, as the Americans say, “been | = i oni pulled off,” Lord Westridge returned | FoR LODGE to England. He had gone to visit | N= * te THERE WAS A BIG TURN OUT BE MaMlecetiy ope ecime vith Atnerieana, and there wan : SUPPER. AUNT SARAH PEABODY uTS E & rumor that some adventure had ‘ WAS A SHORTAGE OF ICE CREAM BUT THEY HAD Bach 15-cent package of “Diamond | fallen him. FOUR. PANS OF BAKED BEANS LEFT OVER Dyes” contains directions so simple - Hic tated things new, even tf ol: | quire; all the blood from the original hap never dyed before. Ruy Diamond | Gtastow solicitor, as the British say Dyes—no other kind—then perfect | Would “bite a shilling.” But again - home dyeing is guaranteed. Just tet! |! Teplied as tho I were tn his accret | SUPPOSE A F Pa ” = 7 your iinet ‘Whether the sentertal | da hat happened to Westridge? 1) OUGHT rag ea” w/ yy OHn,.DaDDY! Sal wish to dye to wool or silk. or |WAF | ewisted around ta hie} Some OLD croTmes ny | - aah nes hea, : IS TT snowine “4 kk, | Chair. TO FOOL WITH A NVEN ry SID ee ene never given “Friend,” he said, “you've got a FURNACE , BUT V1L BE f MUST BE IN THE ; our SI! phi __ | head full of brains or you wouldn't et COAL Business! be Chief of the Criminal Investign- |] | tion Department of the Service de la Surete and the English would not have you over on this case: now an- swer me @ question—What's the bie- gest notion in the Christian church ?* | “I don’t know,” I answered him truthfully “Well, I know,” he went on. “It's the notion that you'll git what's a- | comin’ to yout | He looked at me with a big, cyni- | cal leer. “That's what happened to your tit- | tle Weatridge—and the next time you | se him he's agoin’ to got another | Jolt. He will be blamed sorry that you found me. He couldn't squeal, any place along the line, but I'll bet | & finger he didn’t let you forget | about me.” | | And again I saw an incident of this long search, for the man before | me, from another angle, The Black- | Vibo A DEAL |MOOUTED |acre Bank had kept the search hot ; ! ENGUSH ULSTER ~ NOTE | for him, pretending the public wel- i -- | fare. I saw st now, that was West UE LOOSE EFFECT $Tue | ridge’s monsy-box~-that would be lit- UST WORD IN STYLE | Ue Westridge in the background. 6; : | He eyed me curiously in a mo- mont’s pause. “He kept siippin’ you the word, eh? Well, she blocked him at that, even if she didn’t know it.” ‘There came « sudden energy into hia voice. “An’ if the plague hadn't got me ra saved her that trouble; I'd ‘a’ played ring-a-round-rosy with you.” He lifted himaelf in the chair with the strength of his hands on the broad arm-rests. And I realized more | fully what a physical wreck he was— the lower part of his body was mo- | tontess. | “tT want to tel you about this | thf he sald. “And then you can | so ahead with your warrant.” “I fear.” I replied, “that a some- | what higher authority has got tn be- | fore your king’s writ.” He chuckled ax tho the deadly fact were a sort of pleasantry. “Sure,” he anid, “the big Judge has | beat you to It.” oF T NS He looked out, a moment, at the | ar * * SSG abel Cle LT Page 544 THE WHALE GUN AND THE DARKEY “Well, there was much excite. hall where he was to lecture, to Sits mised mont about Mickey and the big| see tf everything was ready. He SAY, NEIGNGOR, WE CAN'T Rest WITH THAT . gun. Some said he couldn't fire] bought a can of gunpowder on STUCE SHOT OVT OF YouR HOUSE INTO OURS Thin? Run-down? It from a little boat, but he got] the way, and prepared to make Do i Come INTO KovR Houss SA \ an Indian to handle the boat and] ready for the evening’s entertain. || [YOUR WILL AND CREATS A DiStTuRGancs F Sure Wa to 4 gS, Y he took charge of the gun. ment. = Ee — | Nothing definite ever came to me, and I liked the man too little to in. | “Mickey's sister heard the roar| “When he got to the town hall Ri ht W i ht of the first shots, and asked, ‘And| he found that the janitor was Get 4 e § Y . | what's that? A war? Let's get] gone, and everything was dark, Increase our Red-Blood-Cells. That's across to Port Townsend as fast] and there was a good deal to be the Sere War! S. 8. 3.Builds Blood- : as We cant pane Cells; This Strength! i Fa A hi “But, ‘It's no war,’ they an- “While he stood wondering De you knew why insurance com | tee ghotsereshs wf. 0 ext “Ouch!” went something or someone under him awered her. ‘Bure, it’s only Mick-| howto begin a Barbados nesro panies refuse to insure many Decause they are under weight? | with the face cut out Buskins, the apple-tree fairy, was) Then he took the glasses out off oy xtocrone shootin’ ducks.’ came up. ‘Howdy, Marse Cap'n,’ Simply because to be wader weight waiting patiently. the box and hooked them behind his woolly Highland cattle In the dis-| jie was waiting for the smoked tant meadow, at the age-old beech- | gingseu the Green Wizard had prom- . trees and the dark, swift, silent |iseq to send him. ‘The sun hurt his| Suddenly shore and he found that he must | 4at ship, and I'se just itchin’ for water, and then the upper part Of|eyexs when he ran his funny litt clapped bis hands over his eyes. | ~ ‘ ad oe ae. eal "nobded sahil’ to ‘entrants his big body settled in the chair. lelevator up to the sky, #0 that’s why |“Oh, my!" he cried. “What's wrong? be ; a, he ty bie ap age : “I thought it was a slick trick, |i wanted the glasses. I'm going blind?’ fe a . * teil Sain evenin’. I sure be glad to help but maybe it was God Almighty. | Bye 'n’ bye Nancy and Nick came And he got so dizzy he fell out of say a Me “ie eee rege ome Bnt B all ef you ht me stay and Anyway when the thing was pulled |ajong and handed him a package |his elevator all the way down to the bd co & epvsewn ra pl ln i hag | heah yo lecture,’ off I slid up to Bar Harbor and set) with the Green Wizard's compli: | ground tirely tha eo Roepe pod thet. “Aik: sabe, eikl’s fine* Can. down in @ hotel, 1 figured it out) ments, “Ouch! went something—or some: been ro are ; oe ro “ Rife poe The ae oy ~ like this—you look for @ crook in) «on, thank yout" said Buskina/one under him. | amt dst. oa nym we and I'll get things reaar aaa U" | the places that crooks go, and you| gratefully, pulling off the string and| Buskins Jumped up oUNe Ot HE Seek 190 Ree iin ahehe) ane] here, QA fire the bie gon’ proves low fighting-power in the {look for a gentleman In the places | tearing away the paper. “I'm just jhe said. “Did I wah Te yaar called after him, 6 the gunf ‘Now, they had a system of body. It often means you are minus | where gentlemen go. I'll switch It-| 4 my way up to the sixteenth floor] “My fault! My fault, sir!’ an ; Fn od Big api ane: , minus red-celle in your | «i cot me nome quiet clothes. 1 hunt “for ‘Widow |swered Tingaling (for’ t was he) But the Indian moved on oil lamps at stage, and a r p “4 4 {Sthe aay ee Bee “When he got back to Port| the footlights were operated by lle Hmped a little to show that I wasn't | Ootity's pig that blew away in the| “I've got a pair of qucer glaases that|> r 8. ® Wate, aitment you increase |golf-fit and I didn’t talk. 1 just set last tornado and hasn't been seen|1 can’t sce a thing thru, and 1 don't Townsend the Indian took the] a wire, and the darkey didn’t un ted-blood-cells, | about with the New York Times and|.in.. Now J can look for him with-|know what I'm doing. I ordered ex- | gun to the Captain ae So no Tg ‘a aie ups poss,’ he That's wy |the Financial Register and let thelr yurting my eyes.” tra-seeing glasses and got thene|] 100k he said, ‘Take a look at ble | called, Bomapin done gone , |days pass. When there was doings) posking worked the handle and|foggy ones by mistake.” gun. I return, Safe.’ ta wren. 9 ! heah lights. in the hotel I was there in my all- ling 4 ree elevator began to| “Goodness!” cried Buskins, ‘I Mong foward evening, : Cat | Oa} WON a right evening clothes, In a chair ane tell the Green Wizard |guess I have yours and you've got |] tain El went down to the town (Continued) wy! move. Penity looker You tn e - [against the wall, and I limped along) iia: im ever and ever and ever so|mine, 1 ordered smoked ones and papas our body filie to the point of powsr, |the sea-path in the afternoon for a Seal obliged,” he said again, then |got these instead.” So they traded | = that come from thinness disap. | little exercise away he went up and up and up—|and everybody was happy a Re Ro ie look younger, firmer, hap- "I looked nome bored to keep the |"OM Vt cna bye he got very close (To Bo Coninued) mas aye in at a we Rote core bor ae Lg ze fr hd aver. : . too, all over your | proper form. But T wasn't bored. | in (Copyright, 1922, Seattle Star) ' a 1 8. §. 1 was seeing something new and I : pitty |... | was next to his hide was his money. |just as he was in the Tenderloin, 1% was getting more light on it all the ‘All for me,’ that was the notion. He was working on a higher. time. ridge.” your Englishman, I watched them| He went on with no break in his|line, but it was only a different sort!] 114 “l was seeing that this bunch was He moved in his chair. dancing in the hotel, and riding, and | words, of road to his same old hell. | ving up to @ standard that nearly| “She was there with an old, faded] playing tennis at the Casino—I'd| “1 got to thinking about ft. ‘This| “It would be a heavenly angel | all the people I'd ever seen were| grandmother that. read novels and| never seen any people like them. ttle Westridge was 40; he'd never | flung to a wolf no matter how you | only pretending. That wan the dif-|smoked cigarets—and waa a Indy.) “And pretty soon I got onto some-| change; and the girl was at the age|dressed the situation up; an’ I sald | ference, I soon figured {t out.” And right there ts where this real| thing; this Westridge gentleman was|when the things he was dangling |to myself, ‘You can’t beat him. ‘The | He flung up his hand fn a curtous,|bunch has got the goods! They|trying to buy the girl, but he didn’t| were all mixed up with moonshine, | devil's got a set of traps for any expressive geature. don't let down because they do|want to pay for her. He was put-|He might win, and If he did she was| kind of a layout!’ “I'm a crook, keep that in your|#ome things that would make you/ting out the bait, but he had a| headed for hell chen Hi AtWaya teave: cule (Wo lasts hbeters::an ans cabled Olin weliennn head, and the thing was Itke a|cros# your fingers on the other set.”| string on It “I aw it all clean out to the end.”| Another installment of this unus- || middio layer underdone, while the top and bottom layers would be over: theater to me, I began to watch the| He leaned back in his char, “1 got on to his dope. He moved In the chair. ual mystery story will appear in our donk: actors; then I saw her and West-| “Well! I got to watching her and ‘If he could dazzle her tuto ‘1 used to wet about, and look at! neat issue, “Before he was well started on| ne said, ‘You wantin’ help? I onre. his exciting day's work someone come up heah to see de cook on he gave a yell and|| signaléd Mickey from the other P Scalloped Oysters By Bertha E, Shapleigh of Columbia University quart or three dozen oysters 4 cup melted butter cups bread crumbs (from the \ cup cream center of a stale loaf) % cup oyster liquor cups cracker crumbs Salt and pepper Slight grating of nutmeg Pick over and drain from liquor the oysters, Add butter to bread and cracker crumbs, In the bottom of a buttered dish place a layer of crumbs, over this a thick layer of, oysters, adding half the cream and oyster liquor, Sprinkle with salt and pepper, Repeat and on top of the second layer of oysters have a layer of crumbs. Bake in a moderate oven 80 minutes.

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