The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 15, 1925, Page 12

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SURES ERT? PELE PETE PIER POH PNR EET FETED CpEET! SeO TN eee pre gees TUESDAY, PAGE 12 SEPTEMBER 15, 1925. _ MAY SIEYMOUM Df rcs ec os| ewes [on |e SEQUEL TO"O/o FLAPPER WIFE ©NEA answered ‘with fine sarcnam, "No, [whe aaid, and patised. Wor Jack Dart thanks, Jack, not tonight. Tomor|iey was leaning forward, t i THE } row maybe seemed to be handing upon her MAY Her tone was soothing, She knew | words, Sudden he put it his | |he was in no mood to be crossed hand and grasped ¢ f hers, a “Oh, I hope won't talk about |it jay upon the table, May snatche kissing mo, in front of Herbert!" she | it away—as if a flame had touched it | you going? This ot the time and t For Jack bad risen and was mov-|to an 10o@ «her engageme carafe that the waiter had left|naif-drunken, lovenick boy was there there he poured himself a giade of |—Heaven alone k what he would Dsus 4) water, Into jt he solemnly meas-| say, or do! Lees Aw : om 7 — distress of Car | ured a liberal amount of whisky “Well,” Dan Sprague drawled, and DAWLONIT™ BATTERY 'S iv) D AT LEMST DAE yah en Fa from’ his elaborate flask lthere was a devil of mischief in hin| (CARBURETOR BLOCKED- FAN BELT BRoKe-ETC — ‘OU COULD F > oh wee be proposes Way rs | The ' » fon't drink any | brown ey What 4 ; nd Me Meme BV 1 tea ‘ih (TIN THE SHADE ONDER erburh | more May begged and reached |bie want to spri Going a SANT TAS OVER “THERE ~ + for the glass, but the boy tdok it|to get married, I suppc TH | and drained it at a gulp. Then he May closed one hand about he (3) aa stood looking at her with solemn/|throat, She felt as if a heart wer ws a blood-shot eyes. wagging a fore | beating beating ole > + . finger at her reprovingly ab A =o ever “landing” Waterbury, Then » ‘Little girl,’ min’ her own busi. | not spes de Jack Darnley, a young collegtate, neas!’’ he sald, and poured a second Yes Tis appears on the scene drink married a week rd ar Car a ¥. who t w with t third of these | Waterbu na ho im a ee Uaioe thes the. othe etka’ th YO) DONT SHOW ANY CONSIDERATION For < a, ., rt j |items of ‘enh ! cha PIPL AT PLL - INSTEAD OF LETTING ME SIT HERE. "; LiA 4 | later wide, frigh » FING TH’ CAR — Jack Darnley ts the first | He greeted them with a brilllant) upon Jack fa r He ts very drunk, hey came in, and bowed he boy and was looking - | » eyen questioned May Mr. Waterbur he said fina (NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY) | ‘ 1 been doing tojin a low, even votce, “Thin ts 4 Mi streets to tree nerseit trom | eenied ‘fe “ene Res REGGE SOROS EDG. Meeay. ee Saale Haridey'y lode’ time, Wat | “He's a terrible boy," May told;has your heart just reduced me they held her fas she could feel him in an undertone You nobernesn, b ener oe ta . his hot, alcoholic breath upon her tell me how really bad he | = ~ se DTTAT che me here half a hour ago an te blet T'S J ‘R RIT cheek. i halt an 2 ! ' BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES BY MARTIN “Let me g0, you fool! Her whis tried to make, love to me 4 Ade per sounded like a shriek in her own t moment the walter ar felt sure that if Water- Att | rived y ginger ale and toe WAT D0 FEKPECT ME TO\ / simmy Youve ACTED — ] 20 CRAB BECAUSE listening at the door, he | “1h, make these highballs!" May rela BE GRoMPY-~ DO-LAUGA MYSELF 4 f iM GRoucky AND couldn't help but hear it said firmly, snatching the flaskfrom|craah. Then, be } knew GEE WHizz/ SUL SCA oe SOME Suen per Bea dae XET YOO SAY THAT ~ my rotten luck to have Her. | young Darnley. She opened the bot-| what he was about, he had come BEAT Ali Label MAKE ME FEEL BAD- {Oo cieen ME, OP, me here, with this kid mak. | tles of ginger ale and mixed four| around the table to her, seized her SF 2 ‘YOU HAVE NO RIGHT TSAY heal ing love to me—" she thought, de.| ; highbalis. | by both arms and h Minaed her — WAT YOO DO ABOUT THIS. spairingly. And then all thought ; ‘ | "Jack doesnt’ care for any—he's| upon the mouth. ell, Delilah, 2 aa mg CHD, 8g 2 seemed to stop in her brain | “May and I are going to be married—a week from to-| nad enough,” she explained quietly. | he said wildly, “I guens that means A pe hy lbound she waited thru an eter-| day,” Herbert Waterbury said. ‘Th eboy made no answer, but} that name is walker bp 08 until at last the door opened 65 awiftly removed one of the high. he backed out of the room, wide to reveal—not Herble, thank| manded furiously goodness—but the broad back of a| slipped out of Dar as she]said, throwing out appealing hands,| pails from the table to his own im-| leaving a deathitk teu “I wan sure I heard madam say,| mediate possession, He raised the! him nilence behind waiter bringing In the table. turned and bi | glass high in the alr Then, in the corridor without 0 What do you mean by coming tn He shook his bullet-| ort! May con { drink,” he said slowly and with | rose a long peal of crazy laughter here without knocking?" May de.‘ shaped head. “But I did knock,” he “But never! great dignity, “to the lady who has| At last it died away e over there by e e6: 8 d Cleopatra and all tt Carmen nome evening at tched into an do any y. Over the bri k to May!” ed the glass and| Dan suggested, May flower rushed by thinking “Th erbie. I'm do for She felt his cold eyes upon her, with the air of a man who | kept ed himeelf well and nobly, | with (AGYVS Mpa GREASE OF VHS PUNT Hos Olive Roberts Barton NO. 19—HUNTING THE SHIP’S CLOCK “Where to next?” asked the| motion of the boat ‘Twins. them ev in a “Out to sea,” sald Tick Tock, | W¢ Will have to be t the clock fairy, shoes or we ah “What?” fairly shrieked Nancy| , But arrivis sed on the davenport. r is served, Madam,” sald waiter and could not meet them fos not The minw His\to wit + that Carlotta and Dan WELL .YOORE SPOSED TBE # WHEN DOES TH without | sminute that: Carotts, and Ds MAPPY WHEN VAM NIE SAP GET oon 4a bib, Jack?” Water-| had gone, he faced her with grim OO HAD TH’ GOMPTION. ¥ F fling the shaking Ia4| accusation in his gaze. “That boy,” OF A PEANUT You WOULDN'T ed you before, ACT TH’ WAY Yoo ARE { of a spe bury naked, up from his seat. “Come along, my) he said; “he's k and Nick in their surprise. ue cl me ee inh Syren bo ; His voles was sharp. A bar 8s her ‘ e . | was n her hey Ked along j Jon't "boy’ me! Jack hnawere May made no answer, and he Ni oench Diao hs pong srinned| at all the big boats in the il vanes. | suikily as he nat down. Ye picked| shook her, holding her shoulders in ek Tock. | from the] up his soup spoon and began to|his great hands. “Hasn't he?” But where shall wo find any| t himeeif) eat «rm just as much of a man| Then, finally, May rained appeal. | clocks on the sea?” asked Nick. | port, put his you are any day In the week.) ing eyes to hin You know he | “Where do you suppose?’ re. and smiled {t comes to knowing the | haan’t Kinsed me," she said. “Now, marked the fairy. “On a big ship, | t May with unshadowed pleas t I have the edge on| sit down, caveman, and tell me of «course: «If you+really want to| laughed Tick Tock i" this: Sball I put my money tn know it, ships have more uses for| right. That {s Craay about you," he mut-|" 7 ieeg uneas her chair,| Dan Sprague’s oi! well? clocks than any other thing, ex-| about ed thickly, “Cme here an’ kins “Why : , " ‘The meal was a nightmare to her. | by, suret’ Herble'’s whole ex cept railroad trains. If it hadn't/ place near th : 2 tenet a tadh that at pression changed. “It'll make your been for ships needing something| where they run tho tx I ed daca ten is the ts was terribly afraid that at any ; | mab 1 to tell time by, 1 don't suppose| wheels right out of the water. 7 tt the boy might take Jt into dy apet Fe ea “eh pie ta Ys supp . oath tall reg Naw watchs over to me and I'll drive a clocks would have been invented| boat sits up on a sort gh rack | groaned that he t aud.| DArEAin with Dan. Will you do| when they were.” #0 that eve ha might sud. | DATES Dan. V uw do} “What ship are we going on?”| has an acc , again, to run off : asked Nancy who was beginning to| get at | > fix York and arry him. (To Be Continued) ' get excited fix up a beat as long as she is Corte _ — seer i “On a ship called ‘La Paloma’|the water. I suppose the “La Pa-!1 brow MUDD CENTER FOLKS that brings coffee from South Am-|loma’ has had a: bad scrape and With erica and sugar from Cuba for the| needs some new boards people in the 4 States to use,"| repair her. Yeu FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS BY BLOSSER _ said Tick Tock | Here & “Is the clock broken?” asked| the boat + Nick. like a lady tn GEE-YOURS KINDA \WHAT ARE You “Sort of. st It had a bump| men are all gone LATE IN TH’ SEASON OSE THIS Box MAKE and won't go properly. Something| up this rope ladder p GOING TO /DONSTL A COONTER FoR TH’ GETTIN STARTED— went wr with a lighthouse on| deck. Then we ca mi THAT BIG BOX, A COMTER FORT a pee a some of the Florida reefs and the| room where the cap’ stays and/ tail. BOW MUCH xhip struck a rock. It didn’t hit| where the clock the log is All right Paes it GOING TO CHARGE For, 2 it ver only sidew: and | kept.”* A GLASS? hb 5 h harm was done. But| “The what?" cried the "Twins. #0 not muc oving toward things were knocked about.” | Tick Tock Inughed again The Asn she stood there giving her “I suppose the clock fell down,”| log. That's a sort of ship's diary |order to the kitchen of the hotel said Nancy where they put down everything} she summed Jack up with troubled “No, sir! Not a ship's clock,”|that happens each day,” he said. | eye: said Tick Tock. “Not only are they| “Every boat keeps a log. It is very| He shaped: so that they cannot fall! important over, but they are fastened tight so} “Here we aro at the captain's | cake-on With his flash that nothing but an ax could loosen | cabin now.” pressed tight to his brea . them. And the works are arranged | (To Be Continued.) cignret dangling from the lax fingers A. Bervice, Inc.) im such a way that the swinging’ (copyright, 197 FLAPPER FANNY 5: | | B LLY ATHER- forth. The two places are too far TON TO LES PRESCOTT | apart to interfere with each other. —CONTINUED I thought, dear Leslie, that 1 would not write anyone again be- fore I started for home, but I am so full of Paula Perrier and her| wonderful party, and I fear I shall| be so busy with the work of the office when I get back, that I am afraid I shall not have time to tell you all about her and her activities TEN CENTS? wny, Oh, TEN You'LL NEVER HAVE CENTS! / | any BUSINESS=TREY WON'T PAY IT! WELL, IF THEY WON'T PAy TEN CENTS TILL COME DOWN TO FIVE cENTS! The music room contains an Aeo- an and a grand p.ano, and fs a} glorious great studio room In which at least 150 couples might dance. Paula's héme Js a marvelous old Spanish house, She bought it part ly furnished from @ man who had gotten suddenly rich in oll, and as| Pop SLuP HAS BEEN ABSOLUTELY SoLD » ON THE (DEA OF THE POCKET INSURANCE Policy ‘THAT AN OUT OF TOWN DRUMMER AT CALEB SYKES GENERAL STORE PuT HIM -ON TO | suddenly poor again. She has added | to its interior furnishings lovely old Leslie, she is one of the most re-| spanish pleces and paintings until markable women I have ever met-|j¢ might be the home of ancient I am sending you the clippings of} Castilian nobility. her dinner which she gave to Mel‘! 1 ¢nig house, strange an it may | ville Sartoris, These clippings 4°) wom Pauia Perrier, perhaps the not do it justice. It was the most! i ost beautiful cloak model in New| beautiful dinner I ever attended. I] yore looks as tho she were to was told that the luncheon given} ye ano, horn, diay wlk baw wie to you by Melville Sartoris was a _ most marvelous affair, but I am pure {t could not have been as gor geous as Miss Perrier's dinnor. It - weemed to make the blase, much- charm , 5 traveled man of the world, Melville Hecotuel MOM'N POP ft, evening she told me sho was at one = — Hartoris, sit up and take notice. | time xo poor, so alone, and #o un } " \ I am sure that you did not have é U8 4 dite dhe Phi happy, that she contemplated ma nt your luncheon the ‘exquisite | )APPY Fike eit) Ja gt Bedi Southern California moon which, 4 : sometimes t¢ * she ald augmented by regular moving pic- I sometimes think,” she sald, WHA HE ture moon-Ughting, gave a sliver! outgiy ty den wet cin Welne, eel DEUCE 15 THIS? “ea to Paula's fairylike gar-)inat time, 1 made a greater snc- id lee tha vat of y 6 Particuastaldknoad® (thiihe great rif n that of my ife, it munt © appeased malignant fate, for patio at one end of the house, Piel ea digdisoaie SIAR: anooT well aw in the musfe room, , which, . , bpp Winleebs tthe) . tiny fortunes changed. Immediately jn situated at the other end. In ‘ afterward I had the good fortune the patio Hawallan musicians play-|', atreact the attention of At od, and in the music room the best | y° phd hottarpe a toa Abel Minstein, perhaps the biggaxt of all a ve \ Los A lew eld fi jazz band in Angelon held) moving picture producers, and cums out here to act for the cinema Zeweenenenese i tds adel | 1 @) “Again tate wan Kind, for now, in their lunch for school He Mitle over four yoars tater, 1 am able to satisfy all my desires but (Copyright, 1925, The Seattle Star) ESE AT CHE! TOMORROW—Letter from Sally BOROROKOROORORORGROROS | \iherton to Leslie Prescoit, f Us Do you know, Leslie, T must con-| fess to you that I'm rather} ashamed, for I found that 1 was| small enough to envy th woman her good fortune. goss ©1025 MY NEA SERVICE, INC. 915 Modern skirts are more than} (© 1025 PY WEA GkrviceInc:) “knee-high-to-a-grasshopper.” | "Don't Tread on Me re. BY TAYLOR — BY CRACKY - THIS HAS GONE CY FAR ENOUGH ~ THAT NEIGHBOR: OF MINE ISN'T GOING To ADD INSULT TO INJURY AND GET "AWAY WITH (T- Off w--*

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