OCR Text |
Show The Commentator New thoughts are rare but new ways of saying old thoughts are more frequent. Our little friend Sally, whom we have not mentioned men-tioned for some time now, saw a little Jersey calf the other day and described it by saying, "It had a black eye and red ears, another an-other black eye and a foot, and a loot, and a foot, and a foot." Last summer we heard of the motorist who while traveling a-long a-long through all the dust saw a hat laying on the road; he stopped stop-ped to pick it up and found a man underneath it. On being asked ask-ed if he didn't want a ride in the car, the man replied, "No, I am riding a horse." Well, we just heard the story again only this time the hat was on top 01 the mud, the man was under the hat, and a load of hay was under him. Some mud we would say! Each year at kite-time we think of Thomas A. Edison who drew electricity out of the clouds, and then began a series of inventions inven-tions which revolutionized the world. At the same time we wonder what some enterprising young kite-flyer might do these days. HONORABLE PATCHES |