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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 24, 1923)
BURGESS BEDTIME STORIES --- By THORNTON W. Bl'RGESS. - Danny and Nanny Start for the Sunny South. Very early the morning after Dan ny and Nanny Meadow Mouse were made prisoners in the great man bird on the (ireen Meadows they learned what whs going to happen. A number of people gathered around the gnat man-bird. The aviator, who was Farmer Brown's Boy’s cousin, climbed into his sent. Almost at once there was a terrible noise. The engine had been started. Danny was frightened because tl came so suddenly, but In a moment or two he got over his fright. You see. he had been up In that man bird)before and had learned that that terrible noise was quite harmless. But poor Nanny wns so frightened that she shook nil over. “Oh, Danny!" sho squeaked. "What la going lo happen? What la going to happen?” Danny didn't tell her for the very good reason that ho didn't hear her That terrible mdse drowned out Nan ny's pitiful little squeak, in a few moments the great man-bird was in the air. Up. up. up it climbed. Then j it headed straight south. Danny andj Nanny Meadow Mouse had begun thei longest and strangest Journey that ever any Meadow Mice had taken. They were headed for the Sunny, THE NEBBS_ the mountain comes to mohammed. Directed for The Omaha Bee by Sol Hess _ __ /RUDV - TELEPHONE^ A GENTLE MAM J ( WANTS TO SPEAK £!_ V0^ Jrim 'UEUO~-WES_TU\S vs mqX NEBB -WES - WUO? ou WES,| v MR WE'T - WWPO" CBN I ) \T "DO EOS WQU ■ /wt'wANT VOO AND VOUR GooS\ ( VniFE TO COME TO A UTTlE WEDDING ) dinner we ARE GvvinG to OUR f ( SON AND VOUR DAUGHTER ON ( we ONE SO AV - MV WIFE AND \ \ l ARE vEftv ko*2PT( VOURNEW QEAUTffUl DAUGHTER I/tuanks , mrT (VAIE'LU BE THERE. X^NES SIR EE B»B I« I (VjFLL t MADE THAT \ s T ~ QvRD CALL ME UP 1 *cc ALL R'GUT-I MAV MUCH MOQ.C CLASS , Kirvr wjf\'JF AS MUCH VOUVE GOT TUAN HE \ upsftrtr (was BUTl DP KNOW ^ CftNT BUVANV BOT lv/E GOT ^S\rT,rVTH'.NG w\th \T - I CLASS - ANDlOWT ws VAj^r BuVS GET MV MONEV ON 1 RIP COAT THE l POLITICAL CONTRAaSJCLta.K DOESN’T S EITHER_HER HOW UER , V--^r-( ^ UOSGAND MADE THE | ) [mONEV - SHE WALKS Mk -tfS » OUT WITH THE COAT ] ^ NICE AND COMrV TOR _Gj.et'GkQ,wv»* Barney Google and Spark Plug Sparky Picked a Bad Time for His Nap._Drawn for The Qmaha Bee by Billy PeBeck on.Bctf ■ n. CRogg Some ekcitememt A ^^TINeMTA, i HERE IfA To\fJN •» SPARK RACE ] pLU£ s DUE HERE an* NEWYosk > minute. - SASSY sus-t's SAN FRancocI SIGUT behind PuRSi $100,000 first us of 61© <?ACE NEtNToN RLL Copyright. 1923. by King Features Syndicate. ne y / %2V Tjn TXTTXTV IT'S 17 A rTI4l7'D Re*i.ter,d SEE JIGGS AND MAGG|E ,N FUEL Drawn for The Omaha Bee by McManus IjKI NCjINCj UP r A 1 HEiK-u. s. p....! onic. PACE OF colors IN THE SUNDAY BEE ccwyrt.ht. iui.i 1 MACOE KIN TOO DON'T I CO DOWN SET A, FOOT L. TO OlNTV OUTS'OE THIS MOORES HOUSE TONIGHT TOMICHT1 YOOVE (SEEN OUT EVERV NICtHT "LO^ir"EK 1^000 EVENING MR“b JlitCb'l JU5T DROPPED I hi TO tsEE TOUR /-' /7\ ^.CAUCHTER ) ’ I Iffi 1 JjYr^rWELU-jubTO^O^OOT i off TOLO TOO 1 OiDN'T VvANT TOO to COME HERE .-*C "— fmiur ”Jk LEAVE HIM TO ME MWiCilE I'LL LET HIM K.MOW WE OOH'T W\NT HIM TO CALL. I OMTIL. HE <^lTt> A JOE) — TE^> W^O i^EEta him OOT ONE E>Om i^s EAO EMOO^M A.g.OUMC^^^pHERJE 1 __ © HZ3 «v wn Fiatui** Senvic*. Inc. , WELL. vs/HAT j NOTHIN ’ W D^E WAJs*T TO . ITACOI^ TO [-U ME^> ^ DirsTV I rrn^=r7Jiit ^oore^ 1 JERRY ON THE JOB— BEGINNING THE EDUCATION OF MR FIGSBY. Drawn for The Omahn Bee by Hoban | \*)Uile mu. Gimmes 'S Sick. 4ho\ .STm'TAKmG wr Place. 1 wawt) ; To MAKE A SnjOS' OB AIL y 1 V"WB OBTAMS- at Tub B.R.) = f)Q\N \NAAT ABOUT t-"' TABLES' ?) oose a\nav\ / \Aj(TU TUEM LONG I ( AGO.MC, FlgSBV ) HQ »**▼'*» w* *wwc«. ***■ SllWoSfc Sc/AESOOV 1 (AVtS MOO WWEXi 1WE \ NEVT 'TtSAIKj “PpONv j ‘NEW //Oi\A* J >WSr CjetS" HEC.E ?J "'“"7 te7-7- ‘ ( Comes1 'Twt uunX >7 RaSSEksehs: J I J._ _H South, of whieh they had heard the!r| feathered friends who spend their wintprs there talk »o much. l-’armer Brown's Boy had helped his cousin start the greaX man-bird and actually had envied Danny and Nanny Meadow Mouse. You see, he' knew all about the plans of his cousin, the aviator. The latter was going down to spend the winter In the Sunny South, giving exhibitions. He was planning to stay there all winter. He expected to go way down to the warmest part of this great country of ours. He was planning to make many stops on the way down there. How surprised Danny and Nanny Meadow Mouse would have been If they bad known this. But of course they didn't know it. To Danny it was just repeating the wonderful journey he had had before. He was no longer afraid and came out in the little cage. He felt quite at home. He stuffed himself with the good food he found there and he wished that that man would take him up In a lew minutes the great bird man was in the air. where he rould look down and ace the Great World passing below. But poor little Nanny was too frightened to stir out of their nest in the little cupboard. She was too frightened to be hungry. Somehow she felt safer in that familiar nest and in the dark. To her it was all very dreadful. She was having just the same experience that Danny had had the first time he- flew. It wag a long time before Nanny knew that she was flying. She didn't know when that great man-bird left the Green Meadows. It wasn't until she remembered that the great mar. bird only made that dreadful noise when it was flying that she understood that she was really being carried away. And the thought of that frightened her even more than did the dreadful noise. So Danny and Nanny Meadow Mouse started for the Sunny South. Many little people of the Old Orrhard the Green Forest and the Green Meadows had already started for the Sunny South, but none In such a strange way. (CoBj-riuht. 1913 ) The next story: Nanny and Danny Hear a Familiar Voice." Soups of Many Types and Flavors We are soup enthusiasts. We can contemplate bouillon or tomato soup for breakfast, miss it from any dinner and welcome it as a lunch eon mainstay; but when we picked up a new book of unusual soups and found a Hading chapter on fruit soups we weakened. An orange soup seems to us a waste of vitamines and f.av ;-. and as for cream of raisins with bits of candied carroU—we re fuse to contemplate such a possibility at all. though both raisins and car rota are among our best friends, pro fessionally and personally. Having absolved ourselves from responsibility for this chapter (such foods bring unmerited scorn on natural fruit and vegetarian dishes, we venture to think, we can applaud heartily the nice appreciation shown bf soups and their accompaniments; members of the onion family browned in butter and used for savor find the large place they deserve; Wor cestershire and cheese in connection with soups are rightfully appraised; chervil, the delicious herb so few Americans know, is often mentioned, and chives are also present. The hook is original in the thor ough discussion of accompaniments and garnishes appropriate to each recipe and there is the crowning grace, so seldom found, that the number served l>y each formula is definitely stated. First, there is all about stock and the basic ingredients for all kinds of soup making, there are special meat Me and Mine ' * By Briggs 7-f HENRV There’S am OVERCOAT- JuST LOOK AT The Quality im , \^That Piece of G,oov>sJ ( HERe'S A MICE ?IFCE \ of Cooo-s Too -- You CAN'T BEAT IT FOR The money— I'm goinJG/ To BUY ANOTHER AND yS LAY IT ASIDE ^-/ ( look at The fit The; Back henrv-- did You eugr: See anVTh.mC Nicefi'n That??—»ts \^jpt«FecT I T , , -T I ■! M - —■ ' - weu Take a Look AT The back of THIS-** ISN'T IT JUST ABOUT Perfection ? if • Cout-DN T .Duplicate it- i vjouldwt sell This coat for a -^Thousand « dollars ittUM YOUR 1 HAND ^DooJN The - '^BACK / WUELL CH- ALL ThG j Tiresome bozos _ / HE WRY IS> ABOUT l he \ LIMIT-** iTlS A LUON^Et^. I ) HE WOULDN'T IaKG A j (^Tumble To himoCle / H-C. must Th IH K HAS The oulv clothes im To'-A-"° — what a Bore He'S GETTIIU6 To Be | HOPE \ .Dokj'T <SES H_IM A&A<*J SoO^ * _ ABIF THE AGENT_Drawn for The Omaha Bee by Hershfield A New Expression of Success. I PrtOOV - \ VAJONbCR UMN \'r A'.N’Y SO C*>OD iX. me the business?? I\ WATERCD MI WITH THAT CUSTOMER, \ A3E - AVTEV5. HE MADE THE PURCHASE \ TOU DIDN'T EVEH SAY "THANK YOU"' I _ l TO HIM’•THAT'S VYHAT CUSTOMERS ) -IT HFI PS BusiNiStS’1. P / / maybe A e&rh' °£^Hk pbo^r / HOW WAS A ! Business iasv ) Vwe9^,abe? L_ soups, such as chicken and olive, chicken and spinach, an a sweet bread soup that sounds unusual, but seasonable and delicious. Sweet Corn Bread. Two cups of yellow cornmeal, one cup wheat flour, two cups milk, one half cup sugar, one teaspoon salt, two eggs and three teaspoons bak ing powder. Sift the cornmeal, flour, sugar and salt and baking powder. Add the eggs, well beaten, and then the milk, and bake half an hour in a moderate oven. The children will love It and get much that they need out of It. espe cially If you use whole cornmeal (it can be found), but the degerminated product when reinf reed by the egg and milk and sugar and w'-ll but tered will be a good ration, with milk and fruit, and you won't have to coax the children to eat It. Springfield Lady Gains 30 Lbs. Taking Tanlac and Says It Was a Blessing "The T..nlac treatment increueeu my weight 30 pounds and made a new woman of me." is the truly remarka ble statement mad» by Mrs. J. A Chronister, 624 College St., Spring field. Mo. "A complication of indigestion and other ailments brought me to the verge of a complete breakdown. 1 must have sptnt near three thousand dollars trying to get well, but It took only a few bottles of Tanlac to brine me health and strength that maker life a pleasure." Tanlac is for sale by all good drug gists. Accept no substitute. Over 37 million bottles sold. Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills.—Ad vertisement. J HlLbCjcfs xit once^ ops Colds in 24 Hours Hill's Cascara Bromide Quinine gives quicker relief than any other cold or la grippe remedy. Tablets disintegrate in 10 seconds. Effectiveness proved in millions cf cases. Demand red box bear ing Mr. Hill’s portrait. All druggists— - FACE FULL OF REDPjMPLES Itched and Burned. Scalp Covered With Dry Lumps. Cuticura Healed. " Mv face was full of small, red pimples and so sere that I could hardly stand to shave. My scalp was covevd with dry lumps that would scab off and leave sore erup tions. The eruptions itched and burned so badly that 1 scratched them, causing them to bleed. “ 1 began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment and they helped me. and after using one bos of Cuticura Ointment, together with the Cuti cura Soap, I was healed." (Signed) C. L. Walker, 717 Zane St.. Mar tins Ferry, Ohio. Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal cum are all you need for all toilet uses. Bathe with Soap, soothe with Ointment, dust with Talcum. Pt-atCt* frm fcv Ukl! Ad *'Prt!r«a UV«r ttertM. Dwpt fc. Maiden «t Vut N\d avary wfcarjtJSaaip 2^e. Ointment S ar d **V TnJ'w-aa 3k* CuLcura Soaptharei without mat Vm ERTIM.'IK-NT. MRS. COFFMAN ILLSEVENJfEARS Saved from an Operation by Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound Pidoll, III.—“I was a nervous wreck. I was suffering from a pain in my left i side. which w as ai most unbearable, and I could not even let the bed clothing rest on my body at night. I had been sick for seven years, but not so bad until the lsrt eighteen months, and bad become so run down that 1 cart'd LcTr.TT--.< tor nobody, and would rather have died than live. 1 couldn’t do my work without help, and the doctors told me that an < peration was nil there was left.I would not con sent to that, so my husband brought me a Kittle of Lydia K. Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound and begged me to take it. 1 have taken fourteen Kit tles of it and 1 fool ton years younger. Life is full of hope. 1 do all niv house work and had a largo garden this year. I never will bo without the Vegetable Compound in the house, a and when mv two little girls reach ' womanhood t intend to teach them to take it. l am never too busy to tell some suffering sister of my help, and you can use my name and letter to spread the gO"d nows of I.vdia K. Ihnkham’s medieittea.”—Mra.li.iA M. Cokfman, It. B. a, SidelL I1L ,4