The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 14, 1925, Page 5

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14 THE SEATTLE STAR , SALESMAN $AM BY SWAN 4 ir oat ee \C oS E Ee, r & | AGAIN |! | a sit | ait pw . , ae ‘w Wiret Nationa! Pictures, ine, an¢ Frack idoye | 1 1 Pr \ J | r Row t aoe ‘ ~, i a w y A 2 > vesides breaking away for long rur . ; . ’ at he | fae thru the Franklin tackles and around end De l 1 - : 1 Big Sharing honors with the little backfield Li 1 of fo, sock 8 8 4 star, was Ellis, halfback, whose 29-yard run , , ¢ F Have 1.4 48 gave the Tigers their second touchdown cha cher Bh rat ; boys been quarreling ig Se ge eo8 But the brilliant work of Hurley and El- You're tn | for sure. Lay off ho ae lg | maar: Divinien lis would have gone for naught if it hadn't 4 Ww « ad words, mebbe W. L . ¥ ar < iy to the f What t 4.3 been for Bill Marsh, giant lineman of the “tne er eek 3 Ef es wkward mir 43 Bengals. Marsh did all of the punting and my. Eta’ y : gentle hs = > many of his kicks went for 50 yards—long, , ithe : aes high spirals that were deceptive to the en can , 4 eer yay | T. BELL Franklin safety. Marsh’s work on the line iy. ae. Drea sr with Tee ee |was also brilliant and he broke thru the Quakers’ forward| % that tussles bevel \ set wall to*break up their plays. — 7 2 et to be played t ae 9, TIGERS SCORE BAGEHAW the Coast \ : pmee in the Nort & Soc FARLY IN GAME California, whet ty the 7 Sapre! W : - Mic jor the season ‘ for the the Bru ool a sed I per Woo arried tho ba t ; a P t at ithe tanie t t a ata Lee pct tbr the ball « ao stk ae Coach Enoch Bagshaw's Hus ad f grade 1 Peak ah eh J fum| slevey. 800. ail) ides are the likely selection Af ' edi hie id From the mess of players, entere ' they win or lose to California. io fa : i grease bo untangled by Referee Morgan, cay iege Stanford also figures in. the i . Bk eT Bill Marsh was found at the ; chooshug, as a Cardinal victory : , antic team are : * the hean with the ps sisi y over ( ornia—if Washington WAIT TQ 1 7 NING “ : ae hear lm at night FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS BY BLOSSER ] ripah Ceythaiebaitht Me SKY mis | AOM, ARE 2 ps 7 \rmeycame THOSE LITTLE BIRDS ‘8 \ ro GET warm, {| J miptenin- ta. probes IN THE YARD WOULD THEY . cee Pee , SNOW BIRDS ‘ - J dat y y ss ee leek wa ee " T K huckled, Tom loc p from th cay ; tove and his smoke-blue eyes “I can't offer you more ‘n 8 a peat-house, | —— a the ‘lay ar , a y mad at each) MOM’N POP , im so reech lak people | o+ A thie uired. Dey're 3 cs ;: * mak* HOT DOG - NOW'S MY CHANCE TO OX SHE'S BEEN HERE AND 5 SI MAKE A HIT WITH THIS PEACHERINO~ GONE ~ SHE al DROPPED a ‘ reastin’ out—cross TLL DOLL UP A LITTLE BEFORE eee : IN TO LEAVE THIS BOOK i skttak, bat-2isokye* —, SHE GETS HERE ~ Peeters FoR me! 1OU Gol ATTEND TONIG J 1 7 (Advertisement) \ ae pin : } f T ili ° , ; for Lonsiitis . ? ; 1 4 : ——— : 1 NT > : ER, MUD CENTER FOLKS ay ° fe thro LAPPER FANNY say pais carat Cerone the ; APPER FANNY soya SURE, THET WAS & SHAD ia tase only th jks | | SoLD Ya YesTapay ! 1 SUSPECTED (IT Siooter trom it : | | WHAT DID Y& THINK om is nal LETTER FROM LESLIE PRES VouLL PLAY | iT was? WAS A PORCYPINE COTT TO JOHN ALDEN PRES. : TURNED WRONG SIDE yuletta set them right Raed Tes t THE SECOND . Roulette. * COTT—CONTINUED in the mornin I | rack. dude iy but carnes eee Ruth was talking to me the night Ruth is almost crazy, espe y OUT’ 4 tho nature and the circum: |) rived before Walter had come 5 Walter's latest obeasion } tances of the misfortune that bad | .c.0 Naturally she was very much of Ruth's worry about A efforts his friend wer Dé. you knw, Le that W ome other terribl making in his behalf. She concluded Aa A ae iti t king her hearers to go his bail, |2@# had the most superstitio ag ing about the baby’s comin Vhy, sure’ Linton exclatmed : ‘ts 1 lef, “That's enay,| seems to fea t {1 being un ce tena ia happiness rather than joy 7 1 pia naeare What a terrible feeling, Ruth I must close th ° here you are, hoggin’ the cure} ive tri him out | will write you anoth Bh IN CVETY tain, as usual.” Je Tig Seat ot it tor tt months, he has | operation i f THIS AFTERNOON go bail mysel him in . et} 8 rte mi fag eed ated in snying that he was sure|note to Hanna. 1 TLL PLAY THE home rouble at Sheep Camp. JT owe him) veer te in for somo kind of a fall,|am away ther Burns, scalds! st+ve Known the boy longer than|#nd naturally he thoy that som: tofgstte ELD ie, % scratches, chafings | yo have, Besides, I'm a family {thing was hocMth lade tak 1 Pauln P sores, little patches |). 7 know the anguish of a| baby or me when it was t aid Paula Peri @ of itching rash a pat heart—" “Do you know, that he harp: 0} Dea fi iL wh ; 4 wicked for " A “Lay off th fam uff.’ | much upon thi vib iy born forms of ectes |» wied Mr. Quirk. “You know it r uperstitious m y Re 1d be operaved ion An the u | ma are so quickly PIRSA ce Gad ad Gavan 6t dldoee ink Away, he|morning? But T am thanking God "| relieved by Resinol 4 to. | would not keep me stirred up all the | that you are perfectly happy. Don’t) | ; ‘i Ointment that eves et ot ata be too happy hout me, and | (L@se28 ay nea seavice, 1m | y housewife should keep a jar conven apis ss all, do nto ¢ »¢ as fat heousaats GF heist ned | that wot’ NPN te aig | then something always happens, you fle down ought to stay single eal thoi D , you act | ter I cannot forgive myself | ‘ ys he us, Yo! jetta. uy itself invaluable for the many You | for letting leave mo | know hurts or ills to which the skin is sub LasigPantabery | cate tachi nar Tach, at Lovingly, your wife, | T UG ah ee ea | ject, because it stopsitching and smart Nihil Min aby ya Cua teyenrnenmemuaey Her deer eee | 2 | { get it all off | ing almost instantly, allays inflammae | !008e doorknob you f raed fee SA odck tel A ts dt a eM Ba : tat pe / | “Let’s have a donkey-party,”” sald | ear and actensae: and aWastene the If you'd lay Rca 1d> | ge ma to pial that he i entirely | (Copyrish NEA Service, Inc.) val NN ‘| oY,” hata a Ibe oe toch But Ask nist for Resin t wee t along bette x to ame for alters accident | cue we'll have to have a donkey.” Once again tho tras "It never would have happened. if} TOMORROW—Letter from Leslie Neweede BWhell ibe iter donkepr’ eal} 4 rag mittently thruput the ave; jhe had stayed at home and, Loslle, | Prescott 9 Harinah Smith, (Conrrteht 104, Aistlaed Béloy t0e) out Mister Corn Dodger, “Woe are | Si SPECK, MUDD CENTERS FISH PEDDLER, ning; it did 1 le ou he didn’t want to g au TES ages eases going to have a donkey-party, . TRIES HARD TO ASE ALL OF HIS we shall have to have a donkey,” | “Oh, no, no, no!’ laughed Nancy, CUSTOMERS ~~ HE HAS ABOUT GIVEN up | “Not a real donkey, or even @ per-| HOPE, HOWEVER, OF SATISFYING MRS. ABNER re) the iS) PR | But there wasn't auch’ x thing in| BONE AND HAD TO PAY Doc TEBBS Two ontrol jas the lights of Dawson were be-) And Tam asking the same question Ay / F | High Jinks Land, of course, so the | DOLLARS TO COME OVER AND GET IT OUTom Me the Men | of you, Jack. You know that just | OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON ORG CON Ono NPE Seal nes Wann y ement) ppeeer aged. £67 & were too happy," she said wistfully 4 Rouletta and her three companions |ang when I found the baby was | were Into in reaching town on the|coming 1 thought It would be the| | followltg day, for they awakened tol sompietion of our Ittle paradixe on | PREVENTED OR tind a storm’ raging, and in conse-| earth, Do you suppose thdt no one| Costs MOTHING quence the trails were honvy. Out of |i allowed to bo perfectly happy | this white smother they plodded Just | +); world 16 suddenly asked. To prove Asthma-T ginning to gleam. Le Hae eee eee Ue OPENERS RSS SERRE ESSE URS EROOREUEPASN at the barracks, (he girl proceeded | when we lave sald to ourselves that 17). ont remy Re Han DES (Ota ne Y to her hotel id changed Ot) “everything is ready now for happl NO, 25—THE DONKEY PARTY fk 6 | 13 nel of hier trail clothes and was upon | jeas,"’ when it seemed to us that all! », So tho Muffin Man lent him a| © 192s ny NEA SERVICE, ‘ Ithe point of hurrying down-town|ttecoude that Had darkened our| There Wore certainly some high that, but the king could keep the| bi » of wrapping paper, end to her work when she encountered | way jiad passed and we prepared for| Jinks cut up in High Jinks Land,|beans if he wanted to and mako| the Sweep got him some soot, and | blindfolded, go pin the tail on Mis-j he pinned the tuil quite carefully: Hilda Courteau ae great contentment, something yal-| When thoy had finished playing! soup for his bowl Hea : ek. ah aettencns aaa ee re be meas ene Who pits it ‘o fair feeling acuntl bi a “Where in the world have you 6 loomed up big and blac | i pre draw 6 dec ooking don-| nearest to the right place, wins! “You have to pin it the first plact Gun ” the latter Inquire Ni fel iia land dot London Bridge, the merry.makers| ‘Thon they had a taffy-pull, but} key. It was a bit crooked and it) the 1 fg the prize, ganeau Bee is “Nowhere, in the world,” Rou-|teau, Hoe confessed." had a stilt race Mrs, Spratt, who did the polling, | mi have passed as well for a| uld the Dunce, who| And oh! how all the High Jinks letta amiled. “I've been quite out! ‘It waa a frame-up—a plot? Oh,| A stilt race is a race where|put in too much butter, and {t/ eat or a cow as a donkey, but then | han't been doing much and who] people laughed. “Take off your of it" Then she told of her and|my dear—!" verybody walks on stilts, The|stuck to everything 1% @ouched,|!* “it well enough and everybody | decided to go: into things handkerchief, Mister Dune," said Poleon'’s trip te the mines and of « notly But don't, wet HY! own won that J l thought it very good, indeed, | So they tied a handkerchief over Nancy, “and soe what you Mave their succes Pleree Al be at] teri I'm the one 6 do that “hdl tha Everybody got stuck up, and the w what? said Mister Corn} the Punce's eves, then tinted im | done.” libert inside of an hour he de What a night vit a day I've put Then they had a bean hunt. Mis Little Dog-That-Laughed, l@ghed so| Dodger around six times, and then gave And what gio you suppose? The rte er clared, int” The speaker shuddered and} ter Dodger hid beans everywhere, | hard when the Hi-Did Nddle-Cat| "Cut its tail off,” said Naney,| him the donkey's tin, and a pin} poor Sine pinned the done ¥ ‘Wor lel en. welll I've learned the truth, Rouletta noticed for tho first time} and then the @hkers hunted for} got taffy all over his paws and} “And pin the vest of him upon the} to pin it on by Key's tall right onto the end of his CAINESD, MEDICINE & BOOT Co, Rouletta Wtarted engerly he | how pale, how il she looked, aL ey einen ‘ whiskers, that he sat down in al wall’ aa } The Dunce went creeping along | nose. yf 119 Oveldentat J Cor, Wash, gt, || elutehed at tho @er woman.| “Then Plereo In free already 1 King Cole found the most] pan of tafty himself—a pan that] “But what for?” they all asked. {and creoping along, and finally he| Such a merry time as they had, Phone MAin-Ky hat? You menn—?" He's out? beans and so he won, But Mister| was net to cool, and indecd 1 think] “Why, that’s the game,” said} reached the place where the don (To Be Continued.) a a "You, | weung It out of Cour (To he continued) Dodger Haid there was no prizo for| they had to soak him overnight to] Nancy. “Hveryone takes his turn,’ koy'’s plocure was hanging. ‘Then (copretent, tnthe Ni Ac Sérvlon, INOS Ol

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