OCR Text |
Show """ "'"a""'"'"""""" ciiiiriiiiiiHiiMcjiiiiiiiiiuiciuiiiiiiiiitciiii unauumimiHiiimiiimnui iiioiiiiiimNniiiiiiuiiioiiMiimiinii iiiQiuiiiuiiiiaiuiiiuius ""Dolls, Fairies And A Story Will Entertain Young People At Library Cleo Pierce Heavener To Tell Of "Alice In Wonderland" . Adventure During Story Hour For Children Friday At 3 p. in.' At The Public Library . 'There's no use trying," Alice said. '-Que can't believe the impossible things." -"I dare say you haven't had much practice," said the Queen. "When I was your age, I always did it for half an hour a dav . . . t - Irish fairies; a little Pixie from Dartmoor, England, who has the special charm that brings good luck; Peter Troll, the guard emeritus; emeri-tus; Star Child, the little betwixt and between, who is part doll and part fairy; Millicent, the Moon Maiden; Emeleen, the - changeling child; Blixie the Whincher Pixie, and Moosrose, Moonrose, Cobweb, Milkweed, Mustardseed, Squash-Blosom, Squash-Blosom, Clover, Cowslip, Perriwin-kle Perriwin-kle and even old Santa Claus, who got himself captured for this very occasion. There will also be a lovely love-ly little group of kewpie dolls belonging be-longing to Nancy Salisbury. Among the animals will be Ferdinand Fer-dinand the Bull, Triamond the Fairy Cat, Cyrus and Saunders fresh from the hundred-acre-wood, Mr. and Mrs. Penguin, and maybe Winnie the Pooh. Daisy Maybelle, the little pink-haired pink-haired Spring-of-Green dollie from Port Arthur, Texas, will be there, and Sally Pigtail, who are great favorites at the court. Then there are Cleo-la-Dottie, Dottie-la-Cleo, Floy, Philindia, Molly Wood, Li-zette Li-zette Dibble, Lela Rose and Julia Noakes, all named for Springville ladies, who will be there to greet the boys and girls; also Ariel, a fairy sprite, and Tickletoe, the Brownie King. 'The story hour last week attracted at-tracted approximately 150 boys and girls who heard the story of "The Nightingale," by Yetta Rich-in, Rich-in, in connection with the roll call of the dolls. i Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before be-fore breakfast ..." and so on runs the story of "Alice In Wonderland, Wonder-land, relating the adventure of the fair-haired girl who tumbled down a rabbit hole. And that's where Cleo Pierce Heavener has promised to take the boys and girls of Springville next Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock, if they will meet at the public library all ready for the trip. She says she will take them right down the rabbit rab-bit hole, that is, if they will come prepared to believe the impossible things and the suppose things and the make-believe things. "All you need," she says, "is a little practice. prac-tice. Ther'll be a lot of doll folk there, too, and fairy folk and animals ani-mals and things to help you along in case you find the way difficult." diffi-cult." H. R. H. Queen Rosabelle will be there to assist in the roll call, which will bring any number of fairy folk out of their hiding places. Tex will be there, too, riding rid-ing old Widowmaker the Second, and Cousin Bun, the brigadier-general, brigadier-general, who takes charge of the affairs of the court. Alice herself will be there, "cur-iouser "cur-iouser and curiouser," she says, "now that they have made me into a doll." And so Alice of Wonderland Wonder-land fame made into aMoll will be there and Pygmalion, the little trash pile dollie who came to the Lilliputian Court via the gutter route; McGuffey Ann, a pinafore doll of long ago; Snow White, Scarlett O'Hara, The Old Woman In The Shoe, Mary Jane Bluebell, a fairy, and others. Among the fairy folk whom Mrs. Heavener hopes will be there are Old Sal, the witch from Salem; Rumpelstiltskin, the merry little dwarf who could spin straw into gold; Sabastine, a choice little lepracaun straight from Ireland, said to be the real king of the |