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STAR TUESDAY, JUNI pg aS $ALESMAN $AM . , (WE \(Ge wr even 50 \peicony-) \(o \ op 49. ~\ For [Dey iy || HUMBLE -THeme’s / REO SUNT PD || are ror OT) e- rout sino] | No aera: PLACE \ FEEL HOMES\cK ee ono LON b= ) y lgonncrs |} Ho ME : ] | ] 6% An0| | ? eee 2 ( sae ~ ’ ale > oe adit’ | JRESPeCHVELY) | mL On | Y Beatrice Burton © 1925 NEA sERvice Inc. ieee fou THE J Goutennent| me @ ut On THE — . /PALARADY t « nig MOPARS 1K WEA AKO BLUE | t roon J 1 WeHolLe rom muslo beat vols det da Bh, SHOCK #7 |, AE-° TO THE GLORIA His hand at dior May record #0 we phonegraph, Btan swept her # you think o Friendof-the-fam: ents, and savages dancing that music, de didn't a o| like anyone to ¢ Glor not even Stan serene ping outelde jaald afte a moment Ar | pecting Heavens, no!” G ming to find t ‘ ‘ m—4q NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY ain, from ae each of the tall! a 4 h H BY MARTIN COME ,DEAR-\TS TIME YO GET YOu ARENT ? Wry || SURE Too MiXH. HE SAID OP, HORRY . ‘YOU'LL LOSE YouR 7 DD MR, FOSTER J} HE HAD THIRE ANOTHER 308 AY THE Book STORE DISCHARGE OU- CLERK TGO "ROUND AN’ ed doubtfully at her| she stirred It. | down on the} 5 stand that had| mas leareniaihid Dick. | WF You'Re LATE - | soles You PICK UP AFTER ME, were Jim and e was cold —— 2 ING ENOUGH ; heir drinks that | aveled from WORK 2 take & a and Stan there ad been alone yes . as ne) \s been cheering Up| gy Dick, “We't | Gloria in your absence.” “So I see,” Dick's voice was cold and hard “{ love y For he never had Jim stared at Glory and her un. mall his thumb in the of May and Jim them out! Get rid of ther veld hands out h Go on, take a a crepe-hanger at you "N HE SAID 1D HAVE TWORK ANOTHER WEEK WELL, \Ll DECLARE . On cai] pont BE SIL. f YET TPAY UP AN OL BILL ID FORGOTIEN ANYWAY YOU MADE A THATS WHAT LITTLE MONEY - S| \ Houent Too : NTILA | ASKED HIM FoR Mir | PAY ‘YESTERDAY — beon ned over and touched his piass to hers “T drink to busi womer ourt atines " room at | ed with | do! Pretty | | May and Jim “The chap sun room, so you w ad seen being a bad wif t for her | right,” “T should w 1 es yer to each other. haa! at this wemarked in his loud, good-n: house! Who asked bh woice ‘and out | He picked up the plate of sand brought| He t t 4 od bh aviches and followed May out of the|* for him | af r Mtving room. |. Glo t n | fe fee © trem ITAN looked at Glory with a ques. | “i/¢ War burs f friendal . « s before | bled violently #2 tion in his eyes. : 3 met Di | (To Be Continued Tomorrow, “Chaperones?”’ he asked. “Explain yourself. Did you ask cosy over here today to chaperone | sod at hame. § hid it in her hands. $ Glory shook her head gravely —s usin “ \ (ron bee] “No, not she said. ALAN beech ¢ stood, and lifted he NEWT, imentioned to M. that you were} to her fe | A 3} a THE O ; y x ie eee STANLEY = ee : =a ave Oe oe oe eee SON ~ FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS BY BLOSSER WE 6BT cuaAsED } Guecc Wecliiree Teme SWIMMIN’ AT et Weuiea >) as EVER MAD ANY/ those two ' LEY! WILL ONG {OF You Boys HAND AE TWO OF THOSE (CC wires Down woming to seo me this afternoon, and| “That drink’s whe invited herself and Jim over. Why . do you wish they|} aweren’t here?" ; “I do,” Stan replied shortly. He gazed thoughtfully into the fire Glory watched him. She had an | dress i ®imost unbearable desire to cross the | "You look like the Lorelet room to him, and put her arm|ber the Lorelei in the olk ong? around him . « to hold his dark | Her hair was golden, like} head in the crook of it . . . to tell] yours. Sim how very much he meant to her.| Wayburn walked over to the piano ! Nervously she struck a match to a|and lifted the lid of It. He sat down cigaret. land struck a few chords | “Hmm, I had a letter this morning | Then he began to sing the Lorete! | that I certainly wasn't looking for,” |song between puffs at the cigaret| Stan said suddenty. that clung to his lower lip j VCNVURES | Coreen @ fl Y Olive Roberts Barton your head he asked GOOD LANDS JUDY YOULL TALK YouR SELF THAT'S FING «FEEL é Neier cer eer eee ee . WELL, DONT TOUCH, NO. 24—THE LAST OF THE STORY MAN | sis neon one yould you like to go thru my, “Away flew the bird and when 7 | house?” asked Mi O” Mi, the Story | he came back he had this tone dn | I 2. oe aia 1: ave" atl oe: things {0 lite beak. which he dropped to the 4 qe f oy tty show you.” | floor | - “Oh, yes indeed, thank you,” said| “The soldier picked it up and the Twins who were anxious to sec | suddenly his chains fell away, Thon everything before they went home.| he touched the door of his cell and So Mi O’ Mi took them around] it opened. As he passed his jailer from room to room, picking up this|the jailer bowed and let him pass thing and that and telling a story | out bout it. | ‘The soldier later became rich, The first thing he picked up was} but he never forgot his bird friend a sieve. “Hero is the Witch's|He built him a golden house in his Sieve,” said he. “Once there garden and fed him on 40 kinds of white cow that was really a fairy. | seed." She appeared in a yillage one win “How did you get the stono?’| bucketful of milk and no more,| Mi, “It is yery magic, but I never| fy AUNT JUDY WITHERSPOON ROCKED HERSELF | s0dd she. “But one day her enemy, the use ft. I think it is better to get} things by our own efforts, unless | switch, heard of it. So she came|we reed help very much indeed," | and brought a bucket with a sic He showed the Twins the poart | for a bottom. Then shoe sat down|that Simple Jack had found in the| and milked and mifked until the|mackerel he had foolishly bought , white cow was dry. | for 40 pounds; and he # wad than } MOM N POP OFF THE PORCH TWICE DURING THE FIRSTY HALF HOUR. OF “TALK — White ©1925 OY NEA RERVICE, INC s30- | “Then the white cow disappeared |the gold coing that Nureddin pald| TEE SEVERA - : and the witch, too, But she for-|to the caliph for a handful of ap. | Wa esto APPROVAL ‘THEN PERHAPS ’ You're SURE ou ALLRIGHT THEN TLL KEEP IT got her bucket and I picked it up| ples, supposing him to be a beggar. TODAY ~ THIS 1S THE MOST You LIKE THIS i Like THIS ONE GETTER RUT L SHOWEDYOU THE SAME HAT and here ft 1s," snd MiO' Mi. | ‘There was alao the hatchet that EXPENSIVE ONE BUT L ane ONE BETTER? ULL SAY L DO- THAN THE ONE & BOTH TIMES ~ AT FIRST THE “Then what happened?” asked) Jack chopped tho beanstalk down LIKE IT BEST x tr Does THAT HAT HAS " WHY SURE -1L ‘FEATHER WAG IN FRONT THEN L Nancy. with; and the comb the wicked Mipe? SOME CLASS ; “IRS CAN ‘TELL WHEN “TORNED IT AROUND So"THAT Ir ff “Nothing,” said the Story Teller. | queen sold to Snow White; the spin ‘ TO 1T A HAT LOOKS, WAS IN THE BACK !! Good ON You “But it shows how mean some peo-|ning wheel on which the Sleeping} ple are. That Old witch ne Beauty pricked her finger; and one touched milk in her life, but she|of Red Riding Hood's shoe wasn't going to lot anyone else have) “Dear mo!" sald Nancy. "L any, either, never, never was in such an inter The next thing Mi O' MI picked|osting place. And you have been up was a stone, “This has a/very kind to tell us eo many ator story,” said she. “A soldier was In|ies. We have had a lovely time.” prison in a foreign land, One day a bird camo and gang to him, so ain,’ said MiO' Mi, “I seriow & he fed it, They became great more stories, But € promixed friends, Hyvery day the bird came | the Watry Queen to send you to be fed, then he would sit on the t got lute, And I must window-aill outside the bars and sing|my word, Good-bye, children hin gratitude. ‘Good-bye, suid Nanoy and Nick “One day the soldier sald, ‘Oh, And the magic shoes whinked \ittle bird, if 1 could only be as|them away over the trea-tops to freo as you! itheir own house far, far away, hen you must ®ome and seo | i)