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Show ; THE INTER-MOUNTAIN ==" OUR REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER CHILDREN'S 9, 1906 PAGE ‘LITTLE BUZZER-BING juice whieh By Maud ja Walker. i all be Observed his was only a small as free and easy way as one insect | But never j-mve i In the could world ‘ find} When aa in nble onee could Buzzer-Bing, she touch: the who: would sail he et Wit fo A . = ° | ' 7 Gg io = é ¢ . ; 7 covet the " P . wa D ~ \° ~ r ( He _ - - ‘> f \ / : ie | ‘ 7 ¢ = My ou coule hay Ve } THE cols Pe Na ; a er that he for his tle en ris} fi 2 ao unpoor an ‘ Nae ae erin Fret . > flower. pots. pe nda seeing. its there the away through the air, singing as gaily a8: you please. And just as, Madam 1"Tigress would agaim lay her head down jon her paws tovrest the Hlthe: teaser enter the room with muddy,!) would creep on her back-to a place feet where Madam Tigress could not touch move about nervously In your) him-and bury his nipper into her }warm flesh Then, with,a snarl ‘of|} rattic your books, slate and}roge, Madam Tigress would spring to about : e ; . : bendround, and round leap feet, her person] your "about untidy be jing her head backward, trying to set sk. Each oie an 1oving +. fly-pa-|OVer numeérous-victim Don't othe you while while you play. work, nor work | teeth on her small tormentor | | ear and youth for it, regret but once,/and tunity come when oppor- to get animal that want he tf }t pastime of acquiring knowledg | boy. ke glory: om October, the ovember, chrysanthemum. rethe for oaken small keeping in time by of go into Fie: Heare an enemy An a thind : dark. always) "@bout Buzzer-Bing But pest. boys, | small big the/lows catch to trying up, being with to afraid impunity I'll and thing today every them with struck | about the:trunk of afraid: here |/they're And sat away just before he where place where go just | enough |wended | indeed, curious, How. ;mon - fly Buzzer- Bing | thought cage went His name was Thomas everybody _ called him was only 5 years old Perhaps dead. was being called Troubles he had no mother. people with whom Perkins, but]poor woman there go} would never was the fact that | passed far as the his home i shut }and softly out, drawing the behind her. "Come, I must take this little the wails of little fellow, the children stopped asked him what the matter was. "Mamma said, won't hushing questioners. ‘Where is kind little heart speak his sobs she?" going mortal out on SLcDs oF "On the bed," a- quer again to asked said, me," look to the the he to at Sally, the|him and) stay | her shivering his all| us till door | every clothes." ctl "But the | asked Bob "Oh, bread <we'll get Come, for that: little we And. what Sally saw there made her| step involuntarily backward from the bed, for there lay a poor, emanciated woman, her eyes set in. death. oa hough Sally had neyer looked u ue i 5 lifeless Farag before, she knew that ahh with her.' The shivering eeve Pee ¢ s eee S drew his . sol ae how gr tit ZA eo ‘ ~ home. As they trudged along Bob asked the little rier eal his name. "My name's Thomas Perkins, but mamma calls me Baby," * answered the lane : ; : are a eke in ; =) oi Thomas Perkins his new home, was with dime!/T'll ‘rested! call' the cop Stop! seven | ih e After Give an'| me nearer: |newspaper. following papers, Sally » Hg! )u at "Come, Litthe Ti you must go home with us." most of|of over littke the wom- |away True, hé might living|@ home in an orphan have found|his asylum, but) an little earnings old big-necked a a long, together... weary Srish. way {ful, he did not the Gnifes we In_an: there once announcement serious lay my Irish) appeared Owing for xwhen . ree he havea rag.-t0 ss ae while she was co aur eas who Irishman with anew .palr the | shall never. techy I have W aa cheeks and a said of | Man, hurting| illness, an Irishman sald | noon. spaachless for six weeks and] TI cry was wather! wather!" A} |certain the| Wife, bank fund | the shoes. ; pale man, And needed Irishman, that hugging breast in she the you speaking was most child are my of close own his} of get them them a she ver wi . ave shoes on day Ce th ut or to little his} And what shall I we se ae : a rte ran 1 un two, tell can't find him," answeree ‘It is great comfort to be self," ungrate- if your said ( an Irish lover by esp sweetheart is with THE MISTAKE. SAD son. you him { Fall on « She fought bravely and uncomplaif-| tioned whether we could care for ingly, the neighbors-who were as/him, but just took his. little halfpoor as she was-said. and although |frozen hands in theirs and fetched they knew she was in wretched health, }him home. And how they do love chair; Fall from the treetop; Fall everywhere they never near unto suspected death that until she the was awful so| "Troubles," news| love and how them-and "Troubles' me, Was spread by Sally and Bob our dear Loré So the weeks wore away, the little |can for him. Thomas becoming reconciled to his|between him new home. But soon after his advent | kids too I does hope, for knows I do the best I I shew' no. partiality and my own blessed into the poor home-which really So the neighbors decided to let could not afford to share with him-j|Mrs. Smith alone, and said that if his name was sradually lost and the|she wanted to burden herself with queer nickname of "Troubles'' was;pauper brats, let her end by going to given him. Who was Sener bie for|the poorhouse. But when the time this no one could tell. First, the peo-|should come for such disgrace she ple in the neighborhood would say,|needn't come wailing to them. "Oh, isn't he a little trouble?" Then And all the time little "Troubles" some gossiping woman would remark /never dreamed of the trouble he was on seeing him selling his papers, | giving the busy-tongued neighbors. He "There's that trouble arn This is the onto bunch of|was out early with the his papers, calling as wise as most boys who pick up One quiet evening in early Septemthelr. educations from the streets,| ber "Troubles" was on the corner, as where most of their time is employed | usual, selling his papers. He was very fall, in time of year: aoe this hangs little Smiths!" |his trade in a young voice. came |Usually he made about 10 cents clear to somehow belong to him, and hej/each day, and this bought the bread grew so accustomed to it that helfor breakfast and dinner: so li . would give it as his rightful name, "Troubles" was not wholly dependent Almost a year had passed since the|upon the good Mrs. Smith, though she little ‘"‘Troubles"" had been found|would net have complained had weeping because his mamma would!/"froubles' been unable. to add his not speak to him, and he had grown| pittance to the family fund aa that ugly season f fall, do yo u hear? im-Juglets, selling but his five, rights size. | was In a papers, he as Although could many the member he fight as fiercely a fellow household there of were twice which only was|anxious for | before his|school hé| wanted Mrs. | children my pain such as he | Don't you Peiaen han me-your papa?" the morning when "You Jook like papa what we nt} stilh and white and|@Way a long time ago," admitted) yin and Jack, two youngsters, Tos the r sat in school Jim was always playins, would not-answer his cries |*"Proubles,' scanning the face so close And disobc yed the rule. | All at onee a big hand was laid on) to his Seas | lhis trembling shoulder and a man's And I am that papa, dear, come} But Jack was a good student | voice asked kindly ‘What's the mat-| ba k to find that dear wife has been| And eee to read und spell; ; the the his | SW jas head caus man. name he Then6 rediy thought of his my and ' little roubles) fn wept loss |tell me "Come, look what your here' sa quarter me to in last make grief, inter-| oO you son?' the name up over had been put into | belive I've found my botHle for a week | ime ae Thomas.' buried these many, And for weeks I've NUnting for you, at UP in despa But adasked: | can aa his: Be sleeve came double force. Well, well; ‘that {is an name for so small a boy," | man, lifting "Troubles" arm lface. Gead and ' months "Troubles" of his" becoming Ane down s as happy bappy 1 am once more ever be without your ee. him) fi few oe (oon i ec his ne many) been He last almost giving now that I've got} , studied And. knew One Of { as I} mam- dear ai later w-four as day hard his Jim threw threw roubles "Trouble c fal rer at figures "language" chewed paper; paper, it a g wad well up high, 7 Into Mrs: Smith's. presence, anfl soon unhappy|c¢verything had been explained to the said the | Joy of all. Mr. Perkins bad wander« wy from hfs/S¢ far from civilization in the gold} face is. for and} And| child-my fields of Wrote and your|'o the Alaska that the dispatched by nearest Jetters he messenger postoffice-some fifty niles. away-were never sent to his ife, for they never reached ithe oftice to which they hac been sent. Thus It was that over a year had gone bY without one word to him from his dear ones. and fearing that his let- darl-| ters, which contained | lest, he returned, to find money, were his wife dead to make the next opened very all much attend the Monday, then if sales and to she he have could oom a Hae ae Smith the see three her rhe ao Ce) iene nine ? ; ane an ees Aa ha hi iT It cume down Hit teacher lshals : Athy Bimar rn hale : TL le i nds, Poor the ii le Lo ; , tiv :B - While the little man tia ally and Bob. And Ah," smiled Mre. Smith,..-i¢ le: not| fieighbors said.) wouldgo, Just to the poorhouse then,becnunert| as the} «Now |P ve a I £ keeping in d with!1; "Troubles" "Cast thy bread upon quoted Mr. Perkins, with the waters, feeling. | | --__ e-pe-- -- - "A In is Few Facts Brussels Wound sion the by | year is clock heat clock by Clocks. a atmospherle the euckoo Switzerland About there by induced The Franz 735. which expan- of was the sun made Ketterer in In the 5 Peterborough Cathodral: England, has the oldest running clock in the | world. It was made by a monk in|! 1320 and is the only' clock in ex-| istence that is wound up oyer a wood-| en whee -----_ could for the public Mrs. eek ae a 1 rt ae | make eisai ae ee ete eas. vs ot eds vue at Pg oe Japan's Japan ne nt of -_o+>- Link to fs connected Asia jover which \than one by a the water hundred ----- Mainland. with the submarine is nowhere fathoms in contibank, more| depth, a dpzen Jack with a vengeange in the eve. , 7 Was seconds ‘cross her if elally for herself and little Thomas. Once| When a neighbor made this suggestion | past, with the result that there was | at's my name sure," said | and his little son missing or twice she had spoken of her hus-|to Mrs. Smith one day, that good soul|now almost enough to buy the shoes. | "roubles " now recovered from his! "But I thank Providence that. I band, who had gone the year before |Shook her head and replied: "‘'Never| While he was crying his papers anwor and holding tightly to the quar-| have found my _ child, said Mr. Perto the gold tields of Alaska. But only! Will I part with ‘Troubles' till some-j|other litthe newsboy came running to) ter My mamma told me my name| kins, with emotion; "and I have also one letter was ever received from him.:;one who loves him better than we do | him, asking for penny change for a/ was Thomas Perkins, and I'm now | found most noble souls who have cared aid the poor woman, after using up|comés to claim him. Sally and Bob|/dime Er Sune took the 10 pen-|five years old. Mamma died when I} [for him and shared their. little genthe little fund he had left with her,|found him crying-in the snow, and,)}nies from a rn little purse, one} was four, going on five." | erosity with him vr his most kind act was thrown upon her own resources. | bless their hearts, they never ques-| which had eoan found empty under ‘Dear, dear baby." whispered the} Will not go unrepaid, for I return to Fall on ‘a-table; til your- Ae RAT a with aT . Kid, \ A for newsboys. had That, added to his would almost get poured heroie stooped j‘‘What's your name, : Ui little and Bob, for the day following their Y ; ; | less As the big hand pressed a finding of him his poor mother was|Smith, a poor scrub woman, and Sally | way clear to sending them-that is silver plece into the little dirty palm | buried by the city, no one being able | and Bob Kach wis forced to oe say, if she could manage the' exTroubles" looked up into the kind to locate any of her relatives or close | for the meager living they paid for 80!) pense account without thelr aid. But} face above him As he did so the} friends: People in the same tenement | dearly. But neve onee did they! "Troubles" ~was sadly in need of a|man gasped, quickly lifted the child| house knew Mrs. Perkins to be a|think of sending the little ‘Troubles' | new pairof shoes and a jacket, and|in his arms, and said ‘Why, I do| |sickly, thourh very industrious an, doing plain sewing for a tramping stones' my thelr papers at the|‘I stands, thus making|all the "Troubles" legates at his heart, lhad not felt since lhis mother lay so |.} ested ammns+ iim in- for | murmured lary aa yon (} ‘ i few { ter, little: chap 2" | Without raising \ ) child. in uh <3 coat got they where bakery, the to went the bread; then they turned toward stalled i UN a f er, FALL. so my much ltears ¥ ii: . lashes. hat were well-nigh freezing on his ‘Then without uestio Wess eaneicgand went with the'Serer le rose boy ent and girl, who led him between them. They And me: money lat home f Fall down stairs; Fall on your head; Fall in the washtub; Or milk pail instead. the the sardoi yak ae DESTEI, UNE GRE yea or beryl. aquamarine | October, the ,his}|November, the topaz. December, ;. the turquoise. Anh, Qurte "Troubles" was after him, ! 94 Irishman remarked that out in a voice' choked with ) Yond pire fresniekeaue ariecrsy S SS ; Wy dime! | Se&. my me "Give tears only sales fie be to are +--+ -____. SYMBOLS. , GEM BES. ' lsold to ray ee acoomditia. to tha 20 toward buy- which iframe shaken by sobs. How long he|‘‘Ireland's cup of misery, said he,) save all the fuel. An' Irish ees had worked for those 10 pennies. He has been overflowing for ages, and it) was told to tell a man that an engage| had been busy all the evening and had |seems to be not yet full Speaking | ment had been made to meet him at ; child ERS yO at F yaa, tages an February, a garnet, January, amethyst, March, a bloodstone, April, thing life-) death, her after pillow [the men bought inumerous news . I'll go in and sce if she's sick," said go to my house and send my mamma Sally; and into the house ‘she | we nt, |over here. Lots of the neighbors will for the weeping child had, left the|come, too. Then they wil come and door open behind him on coming out. | fell you all about what they have done - teio ee m™ Zo speaking |® Wah to - these prize at i» ny -- i i ‘it be Ha breakfast?" before. kid," "ded Ww of the bad "Troubles: fellow who was.had nowrobbed the lack of space, postponed, a number of re pened save a ae faa lthe Buttrusting lost || are unavoidably In the | would haltRK a ya us od in a ‘In the erowd, and Troubles" stopped | House of Commans an Irishman once); ordinary one, an inhabitant o ‘or c at' the (side: of. a-tall. buildine his | arose to disc uss his country s wrongs. | declared that he would buy two and his the crying child on the steps, "you must go home with us. Your mamma is awful sick-can't speak, and we'll Are prizes little "ine (1 try and can how June, an emerald. May, diamond. people who/a those August, ruby. the July, animals;/agate the at for terror frightened no so held were fellows| pa-| of his of many sheet this on ere have you d-i-m-e!" else day-maybe be telling ee nn Mt Upoo Dp paged oe inhi to him came thought a held thing\ vhich |The moment: As he approached the paper aj which held no te vee for a fly. smell filled his nostrils, and he ;strange ineconsistenc closed Buzzer-Bing then And had| immediately that the flies there to sip from that fragrant |eyes to open them nevermore, mother's Give Bob, you | kid home somebody same story littl ory1ittl attending in ft the of turns. gine aor ln or oN prog im, said. fine at of| chock-full for him "the mo-|the most danger boys' conversation at the which was robbing him of his investigate) he would thought a flash calling jcoming will take him. He's big enough to sell papers, and in that way he can make he|something his snow-covered | home, i voice with can the stories. the. make." ee eve ee people int listened Buzzer-Bing flies many paper words be-| Buzzer-Bing, and standing, interested | dyving not and curious, bit ee house in the tenement district of the |"Onh-h-h!" was all he said. "Yes,' town by Bob and Sally Smith as they | went on Sally, "I know we are as poor went to the grocery for bread _ for|as dirt, but I'm sure mamma will let Hearing . you~ at are children. particularly the he mothers the their. take "brave‘id pte cemctt ie felt bo}him. :toss|JUG&¢s. Tata ties ba t sheets That took them and started The boy trade joff down the street at a run, not hav-} |ing given "Troubles" the dime Like | knew father, His mother is''-- And Sally It he was had on ano very eald either, morning in|jand whispered something into bent her December that ooniice was found | brother's ear, which made the child's crying on the doorstep of a forlorn old | eves grow round and serlous breakfast. and wonderful the sal © ns st ith S . flies." shining | damp, a saw paper, the with tangleas stu disgusting under the noses of their such right eieecie bi Las this On surface | his "Troubles," He|breathe again. Going on tip-toe to} and his mamma |the bed, she gently pulled the coverlet| turning, still face, and cold, the the reason for his|over And so he made abi th he up Wel ait the Whee m % | Davis. lying bres grab t vith paper jin the hadj,ment, SS CN aa Helena last ly child, so of cause and|the present, of animals for the so still restaurant,|standing the to way their a - se By es hi all his might can. ake you if him fly/yellow were if} see a that/ing people who were frightened at fies or walks on four legs." Andj|were he could catch him. But the boys seemed to have he, just a simple little fly, | things that held no terror for a com-| to enter any j}who was not afraid he even Why, grounds. the |on I And singing lustily the gay fellow| where ‘they sat about a table on the|per, lions, also sat the roaring easks, from whieh it absorbs certain |4mong Near the table|sweet porch. amuse} wide, cool ethers and essential oils contained in |perched on the top of old elephant's) flew after the boys, just to behind| knew hidden to the almost frenzy of that himaem watching cowards. "The idea," |where they sat-and the wood and necessary to its per-|head, his|he mused to himself, "of those fel- ‘Some potted plants-was a piece of!come enormous beast, who would pass » fection ""Groubles. with man see the cannot his relief, deur » to He : Buzzer-Bing | got his | the of end put the But though he looks So wall, the of very is all Where trunk great wonder-| sat approach, har the shadow Hark, Within pew lion's the to those of words the could whom with business of of }one out to ‘re- eee asc story-tellers the quit some "(heir own Le Let tellers | us. among struggling was loose Buzzer-Bing stories, get! to animal that want wouldn't is her| between of the group. | on Buzzer-Bing and at |ing take <" ; , SRL aT passed they Then ot it take another she'd laughed ‘And teeth," | house, thumb-if low to Age Brandy. Ordinarily brandy, before being "pot- |t there was 1s aged tled, quisite length would ife i my life in ake rte i { plied | take the} blos- hop the holly. the Prenton. ane. ‘lly. September, poppy. the the zo ig aritiont OhJuly:. thevwater aa yr. honeysuckle: the August, ee "What l her cage, eh ymbols, "lowe February, y, the snowdrop. RCN Let ES BE-'f clever | quic k pretty make She'd us of your;among task a tiresome make Don't she‘ wouldn't work of this crowd; the right! in it with engage but study, nal a replied yes," "Gee-whiz! SoMehiteie | to the belongs which gpirit. ee pencil' the Jino, then see if another drawing like background is handled devise . loose comrades severa in front of the tigress' cage, }wouldn't a Phe hair original nd each teller should to 7 make his on is interesting mind as his plot innocent of full | with as | mark, | paused neg- of reparation, means is no there lected fake without z ~ paper the of have and. alphabetically, upon called two, 01 three on each "afternoon's be should stories The program | re- boy one heard She brom CPUE ROMA members of | oP Mercy! } wi you when a you If exams. ome wil day the your at cheat Don't drawn. mu from the edge the eee 7: . me . ‘ ' A STORY TELLING CLUB. So much fun can be had by the little folk on Saturday afternoons it they gather together for the purpose f "story-telling To make each boy and girl do his and her share of the story-telling it is a good plan to form teasing time jolly a having studying | been in object your think Don't. is to please your teacher, for her life Is |Madam Tigress, he perched himgelf-on | to | began cage and of her a top bar rola ig future your by affected not or failure. The erhobston Bite » i y 1g | wateh the crowd of people and chil-|| In ro y o ye : 7 r pci al A to get is s wholly feeeu ee were; passing - in front of . ae | do, is wa had Buzzer-Bing after just day, One } ficure the pen at made the: Just | trac | make The | | the iw Schoolroom. Don't noisy Don't seats Don't yenciis : Don't GOSSIPS. at the 1a again: but impossible, aa Binz feet But then the other Only the greatest pai ollowed these effort ind unless he stopped -the struggle all his legs would be torn from his hurting body Ah; héerevat: dast had-the brave Buzr-Bing found. his -equal-ye more than that, he had foune hi on quero He tried to cry out, hoping that h vole might bring aid bu th iite-aproned waiter, who was a thn V coward \ " sing uch co tempt for, only loo at him and hi poor suffering companions with an exultan xpression on his ugly face nd then it) wa that Buzzer-Bing knew the end of: ht carthly existence| wasy) hand Not long could he | iand such torture With one last hopeless appeal he raised up his voice | Which had been so merry all his life and buzzed with all his strength It vas hi leath-buz One of the hoys overheard the: fly ionized ery, and tlookéd=behindethel nend avi ain : Ss <. a a ife away to be f he aha ei o rh himself tood first} | hate hed he went flying about Inde- | Bo idle ntly, not ‘caring, asthe: saying | goes, "whether sehoo!l kept or not." |} | Hs life began im the great zoo In | Central park):Newr¥ ork city. He was lone of rane hundred thousands, but jhe kept to himself, not caring to asso} ciate with any of his winged kind } | Buzzer-Bing soon became acquaint-| jed with many of the large and dan-| }gferous animals that were held prisoners in heavily froned enges in the zoo; jan those same Jarge and dangerous| . animals, came to know Buzzer-Bing }to their great annoyance and vexation }oft spirit One great, beautiful Bengal | tigress was the especial prey of Buzzer-Bing on. warm wornings © when Madam Tigres wanted to put her jhead on her paws and sleep. Then it |} Was that Buzzer-Bing would fly sihlently to her-ear, cree p inside and nipjnip as hard as: he could And how Madam Tigress would jump, snarl and | car stinging to her paws her i throw wT Don' ts Buzzer-Bing hé was about fellow lin scemed down he dropped, all on that onticing paper er | Little i fly, but 4 ==<>= neet So onee, wh Ne otra Beat knee whackity-whack. went ruler Jack paid the penal-ty iv : you ask, "should Jackie, Could be TODed on: Getwhowhipped for ecbad ne Jim's meanness?" on were twins, you see they Why, Walker. -Maud |