| OCR Text |
Show The Shirt Department Ruth Dixon . Margaret Key . Here's a lively game! ' The players. form, a double column, each couple chrping hands. The player who is It stands at. the head of this double column and calls, "Run, twins, run!" Then the When is a shirt like a cow? What shirt is like a letter of the alphabet? 3. What shirt is suitable for a girl? 4. What shirt is a direction of the compass? 5. What shirt is a timber worker? 6. What shirt is like a part of the Scotch Highlanders' dress? T. What shirt plays games? 1. 2. r? h.zt two in the column hands end run, each on hl3 own side of the column and try to meet somevhere in frcnt of It end cbrp hands caih, without letting It tag them. It can't look, around after his call until the players un-ch- -- 11 n 1:tAritk Vliv AlllU tllVl Uluii Titan k.... V,.tUtulv f-- i he czn try o tag cither one cf the twins. The one tagged tecc.es it, wraie tiio other twin stands with the former It at the head cf the column. If It dacan't tag either twin, he has to try cgain and again. is one that Try it! This C- -s everyone enjoys. " 7 Lc3 Alamos, N. VL Dear Libs Barrows: This b my stcry: T-I- Lcr-ely Tdrviflca Set TcJy, the TV set, was very He had once to I.!r. Smith, who was very rich. The trouble was Ilr. Smith was nearsighted cr.d Teddy had a small screen. One day, I!r. Smith carried unhy. be-lerg- ed svods l ipieid Ws amiiTV-r !ujaiS3AA -j- iei fc funis L. Junior Houmdiato Dear l.Iiss Barrows: I live in the Atomic City of Lcs Alamos, N. IX No one can enter our city without a paos. 7e have gates on both reads into the city. I read your Junior Treasure Chert every Sunday. My sister and I take turns coloring the pictures. I take hikes down the can-y- en with my dad. We have seen wild animals, too. One day a big brown bear came inta town and scared lots of people. It took two days for the policemen to catch it! ' Sincerely, Ilike Ahlman Age 11 4. Teddy away to the city dump. Mr. Smith wanted a big television set so he wouldn't have to squint As Teddy lay among the tin cans and orange peels, a little boy named Billy came along. Billy couldn't afford even a tiny set When Teddylaw-the-" boy he shined his face and called, Take me, Billy . . I work fine!" Billy must have heard him, for he got his wagon and carried ' Teddy home. , Teddy was so happy lie began to show Howdy Doody even before he was plugged in! Sincerely, David Saunders 12 Ithaca, N. Y. Age mouth. After that I got an old sock and cut out holes big enough for two fingers. I slipped the sock on my fingers and then the potato. .Sincerely, Age 8 . Dear Miss Barrows: I have a lot of hobbies, but yesterday afternoon I discovered a new one. I got a potato and made a puppet I washed and peeled it and cut a hole in it for two fingers. Then I got some cloves and made the eyes, nose, and Family Weekly llapazine, llsty 20, I3SS , ' " Melinda Meers Tampa; Fla. Dear Miss Barrows: I have a playhouse that used to be a bunkhouse and then a chicken coop. Last Summer my three cousins and I cleaned it all out. This Summer I am going to put a . wall , in the middle oi it so there will be two rooms. One will be a kitchen, and the other a living room and bedroom together. I am also going to paint it inside and out, put in another window, and put a porch on one side. Age 11 Sincerely,. Marlene Ellenson Gardner, N. D. Dear Miss Barrows: Last Summer we went on a vacation to the mountains around Newport, Wash. The first night we got there Mom, Dad, and I slept in a tent Dot, J. B., Mike, and Bill slept outside. About; 10 at night we had to bring Mike and Dot into the tent because it started to rain like mad. H. B. and Bill put a pup tent over the back of the pickup and slept there. We spent the next two days drying out sleeping bags. We were going to stay for Ta week but"onThursday it started to rain so about 6 o'clock we broke camp. Daddy said that all you had to do to fish was throw your line, up t over the limb of a tree because there was as much water up in the air as there was down in the lake. ' Yours sincerely, Sally Campbell Colville, Wash. Age 10 Miner9 Puzzle Square Suzie Snider . ; LCTTERS-HOBSJES-STORI- ES In this square are hidden . six meiais ior you 10 nna. You can start with any. letter in any square go in any direction, and repeat letters any number of "times, but don't skip over a square. Happy ... a 1 ... prospecting! I R T N E fl B A P N . Children! Sand In your ORIGINAL ont to Miss Marion Barrows, J R JOURNALISTS, 153 N. Michigan Avanua, Chicago I. Illinois, with your nam, AGE, and addrass. Tha writan of tho bast contributions S. All contributors will racaiva tha JUNIOR JOURNALISTS' button. UN-IO- ra-cai- E E D R O T O L I C G S S va N .Z." |