The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 24, 1925, Page 12

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THE SEATTLE STAR ee ‘' Daily Doings of The Star’s Funny F ollks x, ‘\ JOB QUINCE Nae) betes, manana uk: Si ae WIDE WATERS = SEES CABTAIN AE.DINGLE sae A. SER) This Baby Is Some Guide! : _ BY KEN KLING 4 THATS AW bed Tus BABY CAN | : SPOT ‘EM jgiTH ! His EYES SHUT!) - WELL, LET'S GET ON fume A Boo. Boss')| KNOW THE PHEW Ss 1'm THROUGH® | ay MULE'S Bact oa. OT } | ARE A Lor o [With TS Hike FROM] l@y take A Lite HIGH PRECH#ICE See! HE MIAMI To BALTIMoM® ! | | Wap WHILE ARCA ares LE. | Found \@m ALL INN ong L TRA@ELLING ! 5 y $ 4 : eet ) ONE = 3 4 Y J (ag ) ALREADY! Sc. cagho & —= froin wenn TODAY in. ry nstantly are Now Go oN Wert THE sTORY “am sorry. Forgive mo, Mary he muttered, standing aside with |), eet hea wae | E: 2 owed head. ‘I wanted you : rd to mon ROOTS 4 hoped you could love me. Tam|yy out rae es Se BOOTS man, with a man's e n | KNOW, BUT THIS WAS GAY BILL WANTS ONE OF PERSONAL” REMEMBER 7 YOUR PICTURES ? WELL, WHAT WECAME OF IME DOZEN Yoo HAD be TAKEN A COUPLE OF JACK COMES To TAKEN EVERY WEEK . ed o) WREKS M0?) WIGHT 1M GONNA THERE, | GUESS. ei WM mF TT | O} | GRE “YOU WANT To KEE THEM IN CIRCULATION 2)) BALL AN ICANT BE HAVIN’ PICTURES. WHAT ~ THAT PICTURE You GATE ME? NOTHIN’ DOIN’ — “Ou GAVE \T TO ME — a IN She was sincere in All right.’ But take this'to bed $vith you: I'm a man mre adrift for that cold-blooded, . oft fluty-proud money bag Drake, and | ¢nispir ow't i i fully laughed savagely in t But she wanted to hear no more. | scinp. white face. Bhe fled below ahd left him to his Thoughts reply an You cast ea seemed Instead of telling tho truth shame his words » to hell!” he snarled. M r hand to her ears, rank far into the black * Once Mary awakened and saw the of the d , Mash of Java Head still in the port: | ry alr ved to droop hole glass. The next) time she | ful vil ne could Opened her’ éy@s ‘the sun poured k apes of three m thru thé skylights ang she ran on whe helmarman st @eck in her wrapper to find the Bhip safling smoothly thru a gor @eous. sollen 5 Krakatoa in ight to sterboart. hape Jake see FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS” Wa GNE T HANS A NICE » T TELL YA!! COULD YOU PUT IT 7 ONE SIDE ‘s FoR ME UNTIL I GET TH ee a) = Bia SOME OTHER ) TINE MEBBE - YES crouch: THAT BAT IN TH WINDOW BUT T KNOW AXY POP. WONT LET ME ¢ BANE IT NOW. ) ; bearlike, She « *! By nightfall again the Orontes |slighter, but as powerful figure shad edged into Sunda Straits, but | Drak athe wind died utterly with t ir ued ra set. Drake was anxiously plotting the currents and drift. The day palling had carried the ship over Howards umatra side of the ‘traits, the had set her in to fwards Sebesi Cha nd the reefs |b ett Verlate Hre fitful ‘per in his calculat fhervous as the hours passed with no breeze, There hed thru the he. shoreward 4 watch. He remain slong as the calm last r stayed up there with To Swerds midnight came a Uttle wind, ‘avd there was promise of a clear, woreezy dawn to follow } “You'll go thru the Sebes! Chan- mel, won't you, Alden?” Mary asked BAT LIKE THAT] TLL GOIN AN’ MEGRE” MEASLES OR SOMETHING F Ree between th the tinkling tid (Te Be Continued.) TheTangle & |LETTER FROM ALDEN my” he Terceeed Marok De) PRESCOTT TO 1 & PRES Serous with such a a COTT, CONTINU tor father went thru a Besides, it saves such 3 MOM’N POP WHAT'S THE BOOK, YOURE READING YAW! You BAN RIGHT! - I YUST PUT MY HEADIN DA DUMB WAITER T’ SEE IF SRE J WUZ COMIN’ LP AN' SHE WU COMIN’ DOWN BY YIMMINYE Now THIS BUMP INDICATES THAT OLGA 1S INQUISITIVE AT TIMES ITH A TENDENCY TO DO THINGS FoR WHICH SHE 1S SORRY FOR AFTERWARD ONLM EXPERIENCE CAN TEACH HER “To BE MORE CAREFUL IT'S A TREATISE T You MEAN TO SURE HERE COMES ON PHRENOLOGH Say You CAN OLGA- TLL GUE YOU OR HOW YO TELL Do ir? A DEMONSTRATION PEOPLES’ CHARACTER BY THE BUMPS ON “THEIR HEADS » Lasiic, perhaps Jin an carry on the bust but you k ’ fa I shall stand back towards Great !ther did not think Channel on the next tack, a st he would have put him in. fn Sthru in daylight,” “he said, an stead of me. Besides, it is mad. unset her to asked no cath [ness to réward a man who, like “erm ne fingernails until the |Gondon, had prepared to Fr ny s hurt her oa c with the payroll by t For two days more the ship drift-|hack and making him general man sed about the straits dntrance, beset! sear of the ‘ 4 je maf fled ny Wy airs at | 7 cog hac 1 ty. light : that ¥¢withibe ‘some years before. 1 ‘pletely by spells of stark calm. {yi eel avons at ¥e ciqeeti After almost 50 hours of sleepless! yn the me: we ‘can ‘tb watchfulness, Drake fell into a|t\ 1 gown ti ; jeavy sleep when the ship was!” 1 sie in some ways you are one <again becalmed within a few miles}. 4). 1 Nant Weelan Tea of Verlaten. The three mates were |OF (he mes n ay emanace cee ‘on deck, hopefully getting the ship oa 06, tha women are most} ready for port, altho that port was ei a hundred miles. away. An. | T blazing day was dying. Stev-| 8 marched the poop with swaying Mhoulders, brooding, seething. He “ad scarcely spoken to Mary since is last outburst. She watched him | euriously, for he kept glancing. to-| Qrards the rock strewn Sebest Chan- fel towards! which) the current was sObtly setting. “She wondered if he, 400, ‘were so impatient.. The ship lay pointing at the northern end of Verlaten, as perfectly’ reflected in the glassy sea as if she ware act- ually set in a sheet of glass or a @late of steel. Her yards were auare, ready for bracing up either Svay if a breeze came. Far out to Ghe westward a faint blue line heemed to creep over the water. @ake saw it, He was a perfect @ailorman. That breeze meant a Jair wind at last. There would be # short board on the starboard tack | {9 reach into the great channel fair | way, then isquated Yards and aj dlear run thru, He raised hin} ‘whistle to summon the’ hands to| dhe braces | © "Why don't you run’ thru, Bebesi, | Wake?" suggested Mary eagerly, ‘Bhe gripped his arm in her exctte- sment. He smiled down at her ad-| dmiringly as she rattied on: “If that | @reeze doesn't Jaet, it'll just mean | Seat, beat, beat again.. You know | the ship was over 40 days wind-| gammed here once, when father was sing they know about Some old French. d, “The temptation to which we think it is most sinful to suc-| cumb fs the temptation which does not tempt us.” I think you will find this true I thought, dear—yes, you are still! the dearest woman on this earth that you might .at le come to understand that men are queer creatures,’ slightly monstrous per: haps, in the eyes of the delicately minded woman. Such is a man's/ complex heart that he ean-love a} woman with his whole soul and be| untrue to her all the time. ‘That is the difference between a man and a woman. A man can be in love with ons woman while being very much interested in another, and a woman may be interested in many men but she can only love one of them at @ time. Leslie, do I have to tell you that the woman in a man’s arms is not always the woman of his heart. Have you not yet learned from the modern stories and from the lives of your friends that, however tragic a@ woman regards the seventh com- mandment, to a man it has always seemed something like the. elgh- teenth amendment—a law that may | be necessary for the other fellow, but not for one's self, You see, dear, Iam being per fectly frank and honest with you fam not trying to glows over any- NO. 12—THE MARCH HARE TALK Suddenly the March Hare stop: ped. ‘I declare,” said he anxious “I forgot completely, I com pletely forgot. I certainly did.” “"What?" asked Nick, ‘What did you forget, Mister Hare? “1 forgot the notification,” sal the March Hare impatient! “The notifi—what?’ said the Twins together. “The notification,” said the March Hare. “I have to notify somebody about something that somebody else | won't know that something has hap pened.” “For gooaness anke!’ sald Nancy. “You're a regular riddle book, Mis jter Hare, that's exactly what you sound like.” “What's that?" said the hare ab- sently What sounds like a rid- die? Just because I said that if a [certain persons didn't do something, or rather if he did do something, IN RIDDLES jthe first person didn't do it! The} idea! It's all as clear as butter.” | The Twins laughed merrily.| ‘Whatever are you talking about, | Mister March Hare? We don’t un derstand a word. What is it all about?” akes,”” said the hare so short ly that the Twins jumped Snakes!’ they shouted fes, s—n—a—k—e—s, snake id the hare with a worried lo u seo it's this way. Right] under those rocks the whole snake} family is asleep. They haven't the least idea that it is so near spring, | in fact that spring is here, And 1| ant them to ay a g ax possible. thing that will that mustn't "What?" aske “Thunder!” sald the Mareh Hare. | “T shall have to get word to Mister| @! old cat. ake them up and} © 1P26 BY NEA SERVICE, Ome Many a kittenish girl turns into! ‘ AREARIN i) eS AY ) SUPPOSE Youre |>jjO 8 GOIN’ TO START RIGHT JN AND | LITTER. UP TH WHOLE TOWN & Raenenns | eam —————— SQUALL PROOF { BABY CARRIAGES Pay l c &) pam practice ade 4i and the.mate wouldn't take her |thing, and yet & want, oh, how 1/a second person would take advan-| Sprinkle Blow, the W Nee Many | Fee recs tee eae $hru the dangerous channel, I'j1| Want you to know, that I love you/tage and make trouble just because |to keep the nuisan iries lockedjup tights If the Storm Boys get} Met you aro not that timid! 1t'1| With ail the intensity of the male} — ee _ ere ~Jout and begin pounding their | jpave us miles and miles! And,’ |afimal as well as with all the ad-| lup in the sky, pop!—every snuko | whe added with a little droop of|miration and reverence. of whic " |this aide of China will wake up like | | Her’ mouth, looking up strafght,into |My soul’ is capable B 7 ye (eae his eyes, “I am s06 anxious to You are mine, dear. much you may chafe against your | will the: asked Nancy, ‘They Seach Batavia, Jake,” * Now Jake knew he ghouls eall| bonds, you are mine, | i YOU are not already a croas-word puzzle fan you surely will be have to wake up some time.” “Sure,” said the March Hare, “but | Aho skipper, But jie did not. He) 1 gm-proud of my poasesston, ahd after you havo filled out the coupon below and sent for our Wash. fell, ax many a better mitin ra i rigid ington bureau’s latest bulletin, which contains six specially pr y n DAS! gtrang P not until all tho little toads and «ll jthe little frogs and all the 4 it may seem to you, I fallen, %s many, many better men|want vou to be tabye } |] crowsword puzzles, together with thelr answers—the answoe on a SWilL tall, for a woman's cltallenge. > t that can be detached and put away until the puzzles are workec | Had he been master of that ship | ‘These six puzzles are graded in difficulty and will test your yocabu. || P@bbits and all tho litte everythings sca have got a good start and can hop o a fhe knew he would take her thru;|{ forse! ao utterly, wate aeyey lary and mental powers. If you want them fill out the coupon and ‘ MW HERM DOOLITTLE HAD JUST yg tii’ @ i db Nel erage] minds of only one track, When|! mail to Washington as directed, Hitate aInG ain kere EL Te Pua TAN hos sith old Saanie ores Sitheycare using tito tthe tteir|| an Snake coming. The longer the| & Do HIS FIRST OLTDOOR. WHITTLING SINCE ae Be ae penne) THe tail of ROY Other < Kotivity || wonnnnnmernanen OID. COUPON HERE aaerrnnnrrrranrrn japeing thunder held ott, the better | Ff] LAST FALL. WHEN AUNT SARAH PEABODY CREA chance they will have to grow.” = YHA (HAPPENED ALONG ot es wink. wh 9323 pared ot Of course, there are times when business, Da ot call’ the’ taster,” Tistan, | Which! does not: concern thelr wives, |l’ 51001. suene-aahingion Burded: Tho Ba ; et one ents rt naend | Tey forget. them, || Puzzle dltor; Washington Buren, The Seattle 8 Then leva hurry and send word "i ANS | copyright, 1925, i, Service, Ine.) ag 238 ET VO iy Se BR URN? \to M F sald Ni, fo brace up on tarboard tack, | COPysEne 4 ‘ nt « copy of the bulletin containing SIX CROSS-WORD PUZ ie aaNet Fisokine ry wares | — — - — te guvo the helmeman a cour ZLE8 and inclose herewith five cents in Joowe postage for dame ‘ nF ng Up at somo ; | has the whip’ Geea lack olouds, jleave them alone for a minute.| yx Rut before the March Hare could |And a lot of other poople bosides.* ‘phe curling seas, 4 MM Ay WopSEALEAHE oki weiaKd Name «icvns. HONEA Tio NOE Ce LOE ER oe answer, flash—crash—bang! Such} ‘Tho rain began then and the inent, 10 @yed and rony, her hair flying and| ‘ i loud clap of thunder split the sky | March Hare sald that would bring |°f the three Prairlo provinces for} !arest on the es woh ther lpn parted, thrilled with thel ye rr ot gH \ ¥}] st. and No, or R.F SPSL N ery betel ait ReTiae _, || Mat everybody Jumped about a foot, (alt tho snakes out sure even if the|tho past year is $681,700, obtained | stalled in the mew VIS i thonse of progress, but infinitely | trom one Eeanibestho bullaing: (othe 0 Jute now," sald the March thunder hadn't, "Oh, well! People| for 2,690,000 pounds of wool, Sas. |the parliament bul anore thrilled with the knowledge of * } Hore, “And all because I talked #o/should watch their children, any: | katcnewan's hare of this was §4o,.| been let. it ts understood: other, In the Gloucester cathedral | Wah? ; Qaving done the forbidden, the i much, Thats what comes of talk-jway,” said he. “I'm not going to ’ Gillett & Johnson Mu 1 ef BM | the gallery of octagonal form con-| ing instead of acting. Now It |worry,’ © (91 000 pounds, for whieh an sere io oh : vy ee re TOMORROW — Jeter con © peed then | tinued, OTTAWA, Ont—The oni | 0 @ carition of 68. Dell8, 088 A, Saskatchewan.—The es timated value of the total wool elip ry pardonable, Jake watched her un-! veya a whisper 76 foot act 1am a reader of The Seattle Star don, England, who also” evening fell. “He had little dout neva ee ttle Star have to go and telephone to Mrs. (Co Bo Continued.) price of 23 cents per pound was ob: | facture the great ¢ ps y\Toad to wateh her children and not (Copyright, 1996, No HL A. Service, tno.) tained, ‘wiorn the tower, 4 y ‘ ¥ Br. | inh Hist fh HAN i

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