New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 5, 1921, Page 5

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and e I'HE \H‘\.'vlHul)l’l,l,‘\l”l\l(l\. & . : ”l'h e - The EIlf Hunter 1 This is the Missingdollarmark : M S fother thinks t 1 beat w wow oW s So ! Wl come m.u.‘lm e {\‘ yhenshel “““"“”“ 2 nofie My daddy says the clves are here, Ill take my Japancse sun shade, Stuff oursclves up to the i1 QHE IS ‘; A just last night— And ride my “Kiddie Kar, e e R And the whole world sets forth awail. py, Do s trantetshalf A e e, ' t Riokers despair and bankers fail; by flickering candle light, If I should travel far Light grows the poor man's dinn ‘ f ] Prisoners can not get out on bail. ¢ said that he saw three of them, But all I hope at L'l find Oh, troubles in a regula ¢ A boy and girl and man; At least one tiny elf, When the Missingdolarmark wags his 7 fiud them if I can i I go to the county fair, fa- cents he nceded to the county asked little Jack fair. I think I'll beat Susie, too, tud we don't [ I can cat so But to be her pride ¢ 0y So I'll set out Teddy here For Daddy savs that he saw three Mar37 !;fill Gets Hoggick Lou as she sat on - Grandmother's JARCOZINE rning . Mary Lou wyy g PIECE OF LEAD BROUGHT give cacl poa lonial house. Mary T Jeqgach frecon vou get money to spend Really, with the 50 cents his fath asked his father, ®ave him, too, he felt quite rich it was such fun spending the he had earned himself! He didn’t spend it all on himself, though—he bought lemonade for three little friends ; e Somctimes she held AL miles away and she el SRd) e G i i cried Jack—"T will earn spend the Summer with Imother h these imaginary vis who lived alone in the it white its any e received ; 5 . 0 to “Good” said his father—"if you earn house standing amid the 1ig oak trees 17on b rgot her homesick g : X nts, T will give you 30 more.s i : ! who hadi't any spending money. 1 lik far back from the ¢ ) were very grateful and gave the S0 Jack went out to try his luck. On puek " dont you? e was talking to th Rl R the street he met Mrs. Brown, carrying o = : her heard her and oo ¢ Y ) : a basket FAIRY JEWELS, '] G onol o er secret. But Grandmother - Lake it they said. It will help rs. Brown,” he asked (raising his Hee t Grandmother is d to me rstood little girls and said nothing YU buy food and clothing cap politely)—"do you need a boy to I know a jeweler so cheap UNELHEAS Al » interrupt her ¢ ling game. The weaver s overjoyed at such @y crrands? My price is five cents an No mortal wears his glittering heap. T gly out over the Then came a morning bright and gift, and told no one of it, not even his ggapq» ’ They are for fairies and for flow o 5 clear when Mary Lou ran out in the wife. “Why, yes, Jack” answered Mrs. This jeweler works through night's S i o b iy vird with ore zest than usual to “PIl hide it in that bag of old rags,” Brown—“that's just what I do nced— long hours Th o Four,” she cried, suddenly : greet her trees. She patted Suc's little he decided. ) one will ever think of can do three errands for me, and Though blossom dons a moc Aid ircosires it ; and running down on I tree, hugged Ted's, passed her hands looking there for m know Mrs. White will lad to use She still may have a spa They feel that they i wealth, Mame this smallest oue for Suc, over Mother's, but when she The very next day the wife sold the you, too—she is so busy. I know you wish he worked for vou, on, so they must land on an island gr on the big trees. 1 an 1slai it (e one Ted, thi 10d Daddy’s tree she saw some- bag of to a pedder, and Jan was — Well, hefore the morning was over, This jeweler, whose name is Dew And now hey ol yres Mother and this 1 ne all IT'll stir behind it—and her Daddy po better off than be ittle Jack had run enc errands for — Lo! - To see the sights of call Daddy. T'll imagine that the trees stepped out to gather her in his arms. The rext year tl ree students the busy folks in the neighborhood A Thought for the Weck: And as they sail they e good-by ~ mean Mother, Daddy, Ted and Sue For he had come to take his little girl passed " the he town and did not have any little boys of "B osing a friend, For all that they are =unetl watching over me and being near me hom h , Ted and Sue, conght out the weaver, cxpecting to their own) to earn every bit of the 50 in changin were moved to ¢ on and gave him another hund TS, “Be carcful of it, Jan,” they warned him “Don’t lose it as vou did the other money.” ‘Indeed, I will “T'll never hid n" He did not. tell anyone, not even Marta, his wife, of the new windfall “Women can never keep a secret,” he said. “If 1 tell her she will want to pend it on foalish tr § Is Puss so wery sound asl So, to make sure of his money, he That she can not take a peep? hic it in the dust-tub in which all sorts rd m(“r‘ ph ol adenc e et WHEN THE MOON LOOKS IN among those old things,” the TONIGHT. €. Lider He was right. No one did, ¢ e | Iy Marta, who sold all the s in When the moon looks in tonight, MY APPLE TREE, “No one will think that n the dust-tub for a few cakes of soap. at you through the pane, oft breezes blow, : The next year the thre idents reams of lovely light, ot rost below came again, and were surpr to find g with a silver stain, 1 1 he v in rags an YUOrer an towe te upset the plan, | the ground the Neayer rags and poorer and more wretched than cver They were positively angry with Ja ) man ight when Dreamland we find, behind Kpmypos was vepy, mucH B a one of them threw a picce o & IMPRESSED WITH THE BIG- CAT" ] e lead he happencd to have picked up o t > a pirate HE SAW ON A RECENT V/ISIT e the roadside. “Take that; all you ; f TO THE ZOO~FENCIL FROM DOT 70 “kr ) L] deserve” 2 AND SEE WHAT HIND OF 4 'CAT" HE SAN St alores ndic B e a1l at Tanis scas a. studer nt s net pothing but this sherman was as g word, and when he returned Jan a fine fish weighing four pounds When the fish was opened a splendid shining st wa It proved to b merchant bought from the weaver for , Mrs. Llla Fant seems awjully friendly with ‘Suppose we sirip « i suils, too— $1,000. bra tribe. —Philadephia Record. LADIES AND GENTS, I'LL ONE HUNDRED Pe UNDS - [ Now I'tL PLACE (T ON ToP m AMUSE YOU THIS EVENIN ITS A CINCH - OF A STICK AND JUGGLE ‘GY LIFTIN' HEAVY WEIGHTS, IT ON MY CHIN- TRE AGT.| : | 2 11 \ MovIE OF UNKINDNESS— |~~~ —— Ve ) [

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