OCR Text |
Show i . Chatter Bo: ! Dear Suzy, When Julia Bogh won the horse at Deseret she brought despair and despondency to 3812 children who had their hearts set on winn ing the beast, which should prove . to the committee at Deseret that they should give each kid a ho rse with each ticket to the show. There are enough horses to do that and they could ask the p ar-ents ar-ents at the time the tickets are bought if they wanted their Uid to have a horse. If they did n't want a horse they would have to pay double for the kid's ticket. Julia rode the horse home t he ne:tt day, but that night to prive she had won the horse, Nels ie-ceded ie-ceded to take the saddle ho me to show the little girl they 1 ad that much anyway. So late at night Nels came staggering up the stairs clunking the stirrups on the wall of the hall where tliey live in the old sugar factory bo ard ing house. Bert Parker, on hear ing the noise, got up, remarking to his wife, ''Here it is Satur day mght and here comes Nels loa ded again.'.' Well, Nels had the opposite op-posite kind of a load from w hat rt thought, but he was loa ded with a right heavy saddle muc i to Bert's relief when he learned about ab-out it the next morning. Marion Dillonbeck, meat hi igg-w igg-w at Stevens, is through b eing mce to bears. When they 'vere T II i showing the tame bear about the streets of Delta the other day, he decided the bear needed a bottle of pop. So he got the bear a bottle bot-tle of pop and because he took so long giving it to the bear, the bear became slightly irked and swatted Marion a lusty wallop and then gave Marion the true version of the bear hug. Marion is a little lit-tle sore about the head and chest t but otherwise he is back on the j job, still weighing his thumb and sometimes his arm up to the elbow. el-bow. Genevieve Eliason and Georgi-anna Georgi-anna Adams have recently returned return-ed from one of those conducted tours where you see and visit everything ev-erything worthwhile with all expenses ex-penses paid. That is, you see every thing but the night clubs and bowl ing alleys. When they got to Mt. Vernon Genevieve bought a very dainty and delicate replica of Washington's desk and chair. In fact it was so delicate that she put it in a sack which she carried car-ried in her hand rather than trust the object to her suitcase and the hazards a suitcase meets when being shunted from one train to another. The bag was tenderly protected along the trip and when they got to New York the girls decided to clean up (it seems a long ways to go just to clean up.) Anyway for just a few finutes Genevieve set the sack down, and then picked pick-ed it back up, guarding it with all 'her might. For two days they visitedabout New York City with Genevieve still carrying the sack. For some reason or other they decided to have a peek at the contents of the sack and on viewing view-ing the interior, Genevieve realized realiz-ed that instead of carrying a sack she had been holding the bag, for inside the sack were a choice collection of banana skins. Genevieve doesn't know whether wheth-er the exchange was done with mirrors or through some special kind of magic. But now she is out the desk and chair, and also the banana skins because she left them some place in New York as a constant reminder that you can get skinned back east as well as at home. After 211 days it finally rained in these parts. It really might not have been 211 days, but it seemed that way. Toots. |