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1 | you wande = ' j huts and fruits to p from earthland, you go ind hushes In the astray The Evening World’s } | woodiand he knew caution, but here | And live in dreamland ‘till the dawn oe ° im vhe city, ne did not know What to | of day | refuse. So kiddies who fove him|.First to the of Night where 1 1é u orner | win not be surprised to learn that! where dman dwells only yesterday Rilly Brighteyes ate aj Then to the n Castle through Comretint, 1981, ty the Prone Publishing Co., (The Now York ening World.) whole lemon drop from the chubby) | | starry dells e = all hand of a pretty little girl and Js at| And then after a tour of the Heavens Coftiducted by Eleanor Schorer present fecling.very ill. The kiddies », bright, who dove him will fot be surprised| Uda bids the twinkling stars ex- but they will be concerned to hear tinguish their light. ood and Wonder I al si Poor, silly Billy Brighteyes. Radiant at the e aa Story: Billy Brighteyes Sick- Dear Cousins: By Cousin Eleanor im No. 58—Billy Brighteyes Eats, ‘ore he would learn aii about them.) “Those of you who wroie for the | York City | but for now—while he was visiting | lay contest deserve congratulations. @ Lemon Drop and. town—he mus& remain ignorant, have received a great deal of good, Summer © news of the woodland ever! me ohars hie ae Brey ots Led ia york from Kiddies who Waa to) Summer britigs into our mind park where his city relatives tool ‘ontribute to the Korner, and chil- |The swimming and rowing fine. cam ; ve ot e to the city, so Bily| to ive. “His Aunt Agale Uiticle ies ren who competed in the con The flowers, brooks and humming ighteyes did not know what| and Gousin Mary were very sweet to) but never before have they been bees, ‘Wis happening back home: He did| Billy Brighteyes andgvery much) consistently good as are these com-| The meadows and the birds and trees, not know that Slim, the Robber Red, | #MUsed at his funny ys and his | positions. The lake? and nooks and grass and had started to plunder thé atore ‘that | Umcity. ry morning—excepting! Do you, s, know what “con- | downs, D the rainy ones, little childr would sistently means? It means The fige times had on the sands al! Billy Brighteyes had locked so se-| come to the park to play. ‘They would! thut they ; that there ‘around, bring nuts and popped corn to the w: ‘ ood ones curely; he did not know how grouchy old Unk Wunk, the prickly porcupine, had come along and eaten all the} beech nuts that Slim had raked out n of the store house. How Billy Bright-| social creature.” Aunt Aggie told i y righteyes, when after a week eyes would have enjoyed that joke On| tn the city he still fled trom the sight| 1 his thieving cousin; how he would|of the people, and Billy Brighteyes! have laughed to think of Sitm up in| 900M found out that this was exactly the tree te ha. e would have to do, For aj f watehing the prickly porcu-| Tate Aunt Aggie and the rest, used pine gorge himself with sweet beech | to share with Billy Brighteyes ail that meat while he, Slim, was helpless to| they got but they soon grew tired of, | doing this, so Billy Brighteyes had to become used to eating from the hands of visitors to the park. He ate the oddest kinds of things: things he had} never tasted Sefore and never dreamed squirrels and even try to tempt them rat peppermint candies and suclr ings. “You positions were a very few were I wish to 8 on really must get to be a more written, mong all elved. They a 698 Ocean Ayenu stop him. Almost none of the animals Age nine, Naomi of the wood are bold enough to inter- tere with the prickly porcupine when once that stubborn fellow’s mind is ; i shalt t existe e ate strange, sweet nuts made up A do’ a certain something. | such did not grow in his woodland. | And when Sifm found that the certain Pecans, some, one called them. They | i something which Unk Wunk bad de-|were very good, And littie Roy-bey termined upon was, to dine off his | Who ar seuecr frida ue PS i rought some of her favorite pis! plunder, Slim thought it wise to let achiog tor Billy Brighteyes to taste. him do it. Bily Brighteyes would) He liked them but a taste was all have laughed at that. | that Billy Brighteyes got for the rea- But perhaps the best joke that the|son that Aunt Aggie was so extremely | woodland knew these days was thc|fond of pistachios that she became! pitght of Mr. Tip-Tail Fox when he/tiownright disagreeable when Roy- as kept prisoner by Unk Wunk, | boy brought thom to Billy Brighteyes, Hendrix ! Age thirteen, No. 1078 Sim Age fourteen, rence Avenue, Age fifteen 409 Saratoga Their awards will oung authors at t Isade on Str: lly the winners who did Leonard Cohen, N Eva Titman, awrence L. ettie Starin: venue, These tell sun Andsit will Py Lola Wil} soon be he ned with a chee York Cit counts of he com- | and only | i and badly congra tylate their wétk, MAY CONTEST WINNER Seven-Year Class. “A Night's Dream.’ The night before Poter went to bel and the clever wark | re: ore Mermelstein, ‘eet, Bronx, Law- No. Brooklyn. be sent these he end of this when, that boorish fellow, returning | 80 Billy Brigliteyes let her have them | month, after all their stories have. home unexpectedly, lay down in the| Billy’ Brighteyes got the habit of| in turn, appeared printed in the Kid- all the entrance of his hom® and fell asleep, eating anything that the ,children|die Korner , F keeping Mr. Tip-Tatl Fox safely in-j would bring. All the other saul ety COUSIN ELEANOR. ingredients side the hollow log where he had | sdemed to to it: why should not — in one tiidden from Bruno, the hound | He forgot that thetother squirrels Dreams, paci red Billy Brighteyes would have loved alway’s lived in the city and had, trom| When the soft silver rays of the| to know about all these things. No! wee-est babyhvod on, learned what doubt, he would not be back in the! to take and what to leave alone, just woodland for any length of time be-' 1s Billy Brighteyes had learned whict nn bridi@t moon be Weave ‘a mystic through your d ams LLL) enchantment reams, pyery morning © 200,000 pass this spot How many are foolishly wasting their greatest asset—enersy ? VERY morning two hundred thou- sand people stream past the corner of Grand Central Station, New York— 200,000 people on their way to work! > All over America a similar throng is rushing daily—to office and factory, to mine and mill. Day in, day out, they keep the wheels of industry turning. No strikes, no “depressions,” no threats of war or panic can stop the steady, endless \tread of thirty million hurrying feet. Gigantic tasks are facing them this year. New pilots, new leaders are needed. The big jobs are waiting for every man with limitless energy. But not everyone can measure up, for day by day the pace quickens and the strain on nerves and muscles grows more severe. To win to success in 1921 demands the saving of every ounce of energy! Blocking the road to success Thousands in the great throng of American workers are suffering from a needless handicap. Others pass them in the race and they wonder why: it is because they waste their energy. The average: person takes 8000 steps a day. If he wears hard leather or ordinary “dead” rubber heels he gets 8000 separate shocks— every shock a hammer blow fo the delicate ner- vous system. Day by day this drains away his energy—slowly, stealthily, but none the less with ruinous effects. You can avoid this waste of energy. O’Sullivan’s Heels absorb the shocks that tire you out. To secure the resiliency, the springiness of O'’Sullivan’s Heels, the highest grades of rubber , are blended by. ial formula. With this blend of live, sprit rubber are “‘compounded” the best toughening agents known. The compound is then ‘‘cured” or baked under high pressure. The same process that makes O’Sullivan’s Heels resilient gives them their great durability. O'Sullivan’s Heels outlast three pairs of leather heels—they often outlast two pairs of ordinary rubber heels. Stop pounding away your energy. Go to your shoe repairer today and have O’Sullivan’s Heels put on your shoes. Insist on getting O’Sul- livan's! NOTE—A wise economy these days is to have your repairman resole your old shoes and fit them with O'Sullivan's Heele. They'll give you months of extra wear! ‘Sullivan’s Heels Absorb the\shocks that tire you out y he Home made Cookies pe no trouble to make ~ Cg Ne For Jiggtime Cake Add Water and Bake HOW TO JOIN THE CLUB AND OBTAIN YOUR PIN. Begiuuing wey any oem ber, cut out six of te cou 4, TEI, 86, = 20k ANI ‘i HESS, All chikirea up tg sixisea year of age recat eS a rent uae acver gray Riub tin and town eutnae, COUPON 781. made a snow man, when he sot bed he d somethir bump. It k ed at the Peter sald, “Come tn.” & buinp, door and into hea It walked | and he saw that it was the snow mun | 2, 1921. below ccst. About 300 Coats $555 he had made. “AVhat do you eat?” asked Peter who was frightened, | “Oh, I eat red mittens and twigs,” | an the snow man. “Loowas afraid you eat little boys,” sald Poter, Drip, drip, came the water and (he snow inan was J When Peter! awoke he told his mother and 1 “It was only a Night's Dream LEONARD COWEN, New York | HONORABLE MENTION Marion Kassell, New York City Q Splen Coats Women Misses. varie style fabrics, evety one a wonder- Extra Size Dresses Figured voile, embroid- ered organdie trim. . Figured Voile Dresses Dark colors, with a cream white embroidery French Serge Dresses Misses’ navy models, with embroidery trim. 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Girls’ Dresses 600 handsome little plaid Ging ham Dresses with Oto id yes, $1.97 Boys’ White Pants Washable white drill 00 knickers; unlined. .. $1 00 4-Piece Wash Suits Boys’ tan khaki cloth; $400 extra pants and hat — Small Boys’ Coats Dou. breasted, Shep- 97 herd check reefer coat $397 Boys’ 2-Pants Suits Light weight cassi mere; lined; sizes 7 to 9, While Oxfords Women’s White Canvas Ox- fords, leather soles, Former Fore" $100 $2.19... — Basement $397 $500 $999 $144 $500 L119- “119-125 West 24th St.. Near 6th Ave, N.Y. | New York’s Greatest Bargain Store Offers Specials for Friday and Saturday: A Great Demonstration of Bargains! Eash and every article in this advertisement far’ Hundreds of other items, in lots too small to advertise, offer even greater values. : EXTRA SPECIAL! Just 50 of these Capes $777 Handsome accordion plaited Capes of navy blue Wool Serge with a large double collar of rich blaék silk taffeta. 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Girls’ Dresses of Good Becoming Style, $100 &, Ginghams, plaid or checked, Linenes, Cham- brays; sizes 8 to FM Linene Dres. for tots of 1 to & years, Many pattems Men's Shirt Sale Choice of many! For $990 work or dress F $1 00 Men's White Trousers White drill, for sum- mer. Easily laundered $159 Men's Khaki Coats For werk, motor cyc- $229 ling, huncing, ete. Men's Outing Trousers White serge, with fine fibre silk stripe $497 White Shoes Women’s White Canvas Shoes, with . leather sole. Former $100 SRE a: SAS Re RRR price $2.59.