365 Bedtime Stories

THE BEDTIME STORY

365
Bedtime Stories

By
Mary Graham Bonner

With twenty illustrations in color by
Florence Choate and Elizabeth Curtis

New York
Frederick A. Stokes Company
MCMXXIII

Copyright, 1923, by
Frederick A. Stokes Company

All rights reserved

Printed in the United States of America

This book is
dedicated
with all my love
and all my admiration
and all my affection
to

EUGENE EDWARD EARLY

CONTENTS

PAGE
January 1: A New Year’s Party [1]
2: The Rhyming Years [2]
3: Naughty Wind [3]
4: The Selfish Oyster Crabs [4]
5: Brownie’s Toothache [4]
6: The Pink Cockatoo [4]
7: The Pet Monkey [5]
8: The Bravery Medal [6]
9: The Jack-knife [6]
10: The Brave Little Sister [7]
11: Baby Bears [7]
12: The Snow House [8]
13: Peter Goblin’s Trip [9]
14: The Words [10]
15: The Medicine Bottle [10]
16: A Loaf of Bread [11]
17: The Tame Canary [12]
18: Little Carry’s Birthday [13]
19: Maggie’s Meals [14]
20: Winter Trees [14]
21: Poor Prunes [15]
22: Molly’s Piano Recital [16]
23: Goblins’ Secrets [17]
24: In the Fish Bowl [17]
25: Mac, the Dog [18]
26: The Three Horses [19]
27: In the Kitchen [20]
28: The Little Needle [21]
29: Real Dogs [21]
30: The Little Old Man [22]
31: The Fussy Cat [23]
February 1: Mice are Discovered [24]
2: In the Sea [25]
3: The Circus Dream [26]
4: Little Mildred’s Muff [28]
5: The Coal-bin [28]
6: In Dreamland [29]
7: How the Inkfishes Protect Themselves [30]
8: The Vegetables [31]
9: The Life Saving St. Bernards [31]
10: The Birthday Goblin [32]
11: A Make-believe and Real President [33]
12: Abraham Lincoln [33]
13: Isa’s Valentine Party [34]
14: Why There is a Saint Valentine’s Day [34]
15: The Desk and the Ink-well [35]
16: Dr. Sun [36]
17: Mr. Moon Hides [37]
18: A Careless Master [37]
19: The Cat Show [39]
20: The Queer Pets [40]
21: Harry’s Composition [40]
22: Father of His Country [41]
23: The Stamp Traveler [42]
24: How Rowdy Shared His Home [43]
25: The Tired Eagles [44]
26: The Squirrels’ Peanut Hunt [45]
27: The Game of Manners [45]
28: Naughty Julius [46]
29: The Whistling Boy [47]
March 1: Lucy’s Tonsils [48]
2: Lucy’s Visitors [49]
3: The Homesick Puppy [51]
4: Lady Ethel [52]
5: The Soup [52]
6: Elephant Ways [53]
7: The Marbles [53]
8: Tomatoes’ Advantages [54]
9: The Old Woman and the Pot of Daffodils [55]
10: The Tick-tock Twins [55]
11: The Fig [57]
12: Happy Compton [58]
13: Ice Box and Furnace [58]
14: The Pet Dogs [59]
15: Biddle’s Trick [61]
16: The Naughty Colds [61]
17: Why the Shamrock is Worn on St. Patrick’s Day [63]
18: St. Patrick [63]
19: The Clocks [64]
20: A Party and Polly [65]
21: Salt, Pepper and Sugar [65]
22: A Sun Parlor for Birds [66]
23: The Automobiles [67]
24: The Trailing Arbutus [68]
25: The Telephone Dog [69]
26: The Kettle’s Trouble [69]
27: Mr. Measles’ Puzzle [70]
28: Winter’s Exit [72]
29: Another Biddle Story [72]
30: The Squirrels’ Spring Work [73]
31: The Bunch of Keys [74]
April 1: Marketing [74]
2: The Buds’ Secrets [75]
3: The Clock and the Watch [76]
4: Billie’s Springtime [76]
5: Brenda’s Easter Visit [78]
6: An Uninvited Guest [79]
7: The Tired Honeysuckle [80]
8: The Flower Parade [81]
9: The Big Parade [82]
10: The Alphabet Letters [82]
11: The Scissor-Tailed Flycatcher [84]
12: The Woodpecker Band [85]
13: The Tease [86]
14: The Onion’s Speech [87]
15: A Bookworm [88]
16: The Wild Black Cherry [89]
17: Spring Blossoms [89]
18: The Button Bag [90]
19: The Patient Chimpanzee [92]
20: The Toad [92]
21: The Pine Needles [93]
22: The Cat’s Mistake [93]
23: The Butterfly who Loved the Sun [94]
24: The Horse-chestnut [95]
25: The Loving Mates [95]
26: The Dandelion [96]
27: Butterfly’s Growth [96]
28: The Tack and the Nail [97]
29: Moon’s Misunderstanding [98]
30: Marion’s Fern Garden [99]
May 1: The Tree Swallows [99]
2: The Pig who Took a Walk [100]
3: The Fairy and the Kangaroo [101]
4: The Maple Tree Talks [102]
5: The Daisies’ Name [102]
6: The Two Rabbits [102]
7: Evelyn Decides Something [104]
8: Bossy White’s Escape [105]
9: The Spring Snow-storm [106]
10: A Reward for Mr. Walrus [108]
11: Kay and the Trunk [109]
12: The Sun Talks to Harry [109]
13: Old Mr. Owl Writes a Book [110]
14: The Little Turkeys [111]
15: Billy’s Trip in the Coach [112]
16: Mother Maple Tree [113]
17: The Sport Fish [114]
18: Mother Sheep [115]
19: The Monkeys’ Victory [116]
20: The Mosquitoes [117]
21: The Potato Bugs [118]
22: Meadow Mouse and Mole [120]
23: Wishes [120]
24: The Tree’s Complaint [122]
25: Saving a Tail [122]
26: Life in the Fireplace [123]
27: The Jewelweed’s Visitor [124]
28: Peter’s Birthday Party [125]
29: The Spring Flowers’ Talk [127]
30: Decoration Day [127]
31: What the Flag said to Fred [128]
June 1: The Robin Parents [128]
2: The Robins Come to the Rescue [129]
3: The Persian Lilacs [130]
4: How a Wish Saved the Raccoons [131]
5: The New Mole Home [132]
6: The Green Canoe [133]
7: The Bunnie and the Fox [134]
8: The Homebody Bee [136]
9: Ladybug’s Lecture [136]
10: The Waves’ Wishes [138]
11: The Waves’ Adventures [138]
12: The Waves’ Story [140]
13: A Poor Weed [140]
14: The Bicycle’s Joy [141]
15: The Best Apple Tree of All [142]
16: An Elephant’s Wanderings [143]
17: The Story the Oak Tree Told [144]
18: The Weeds and the Flowers [145]
19: The Insulted Flowers [146]
20: The Colored Bags [147]
21: A Spider’s Curiosity [148]
22: The Sun-dial [149]
23: Shoes and Stockings [150]
24: Mosquitoes and Snails [150]
25: The Rose-breasted Grosbeak [151]
26: The Goldfishes [153]
27: The Pigeons’ Bath [153]
28: The Man in the Moon’s Party [154]
29: Billy and the Dragon [155]
30: Cozy Balsam Flowers [156]
July 1: A Brother’s Plan [156]
2: The Best Dream [157]
3: The Hash and the Watermelon [158]
4: Independence Day [159]
5: The Sun and the Thunder [159]
6: The True Story of a Dog [159]
7: The Rabbit Named Pigeon [160]
8: The Big Tent [161]
9: Mrs. Hippopotamus [162]
10: The Papoose [163]
11: A Feast for the Mice [165]
12: Knowing how to Swim [165]
13: Flower Dreams [165]
14: The Naughty Breezes [166]
15: The Coral Families [166]
16: The Garden Tools [168]
17: The Jolly Dust Brothers [169]
18: The Bad Poison Ivy [170]
19: The Sun Fairies [171]
20: The Meadow Fritillary Family [171]
21: George and the Goblin [173]
22: Jack-in-the-pulpit [174]
23: The Tide [175]
24: Little Edith’s Garden [177]
25: The Earth Visits the Moon [177]
26: The Elephant’s Toothache [179]
27: The Potato Skins [179]
28: The Traveling Flowers [180]
29: The Visitors [181]
30: The Little Bumblebee’s Mistake [182]
31: Ripe Raspberries [183]
August 1: The Brave Mocking Bird [183]
2: The Milkweed Plants [184]
3: Telephone Peas [184]
4: The Harebell Umbrellas [185]
5: A Children’s Circus [186]
6: The Bank Swallow [187]
7: The Cuckoo-clock [188]
8: Zuzeppa, the Monkey [190]
9: Mr. Bullfrog [191]
10: Allie Baa’s Letter [191]
11: Chickadee [193]
12: The Little Caterpillars [193]
13: The Catbird [194]
14: The Fairy Queen’s Story [195]
15: A Hospital Circus [196]
16: The Fire [197]
17: Friends of Animals [198]
18: The Orangeade [199]
19: The Climbing Perch [199]
20: The Onion’s Insult [201]
21: Harriet’s Monkey [201]
22: Summer Corn [202]
23: A Bee Story [203]
24: Allie Baa’s Portrait [204]
25: Saving the Elm [205]
26: A Magic Lantern Show [205]
27: The Baby Ear [206]
28: How Arthur Saved a Little Girl [207]
29: The Huckleberry Pickers [207]
30: Mr. Sun’s Birthday [208]
31: The Lost Dog [209]
September 1: The Whippoorwills [210]
2: The Monkey [211]
3: Paper Dolls [213]
4: Larry’s Labor Day [214]
5: In the Barnyard [215]
6: The Animals’ Talk [215]
7: Doctor Birds [216]
8: Nine Years Old [217]
9: Evelyn’s Story [218]
10: The Gallant Rooster [218]
11: The Fairy Queen Story [218]
12: The White Oak [219]
13: Wasted Moments [220]
14: Welcome, the Dog [220]
15: The Children’s Museum [221]
16: Prince, the Horse [222]
17: The Deer [223]
18: A Black Cat [225]
19: The Oysters [225]
20: The Elevator [225]
21: The Fog [226]
22: The Land of Nod [226]
23: The Homesick Chicken [227]
24: Mrs. Duck’s Dinner [228]
25: Doll Children [229]
26: The Leaves [229]
27: The Dawn Fairies [229]
28: The Dream [229]
29: The Monkey’s Collar [230]
30: Mr. Fox’s Marketing [231]
October 1: Gypsy, the Cat [232]
2: The Make-believe Elephant [233]
3: Canary Cloudy Wings [234]
4: The Abused Pencil [234]
5: The Onions [236]
6: Trixie’s Burglar [237]
7: An Autumn Party [238]
8: A Little Dog [238]
9: Alta’s Guinea Pigs [239]
10: A Devoted Dog [240]
11: A Bird’s Secret [240]
12: Columbus Day [241]
13: The Camels [241]
14: A Naughty Cat [242]
15: The Chipmunks [243]
16: The Fairies’ Trip [243]
17: The Lion Babies [244]
18: Max’s Escape [246]
19: The Fire Bell [246]
20: The Rain [247]
21: Grandfather Pine Tree [247]
22: Jack Frost’s Evening [248]
23: Beans and Peas [249]
24: Tiger West’s Food [249]
25: Autumn Leaves [250]
26: Blackie’s Escape [251]
27: A Talk with the Sun [253]
28: The Squash [254]
29: Jack O’Lantern [254]
30: Daddy’s Hallowe’en [255]
31: Hallowe’en [256]
November 1: The Brownies Help [257]
2: The Butterfly and Bumble-bee [258]
3: The Furnace [259]
4: The Elephant’s Bath [259]
5: Waving and Dreaming [261]
6: The Clever Fire Horses [261]
7: The Two Roses [262]
8: The Moth Balls [262]
9: Good-winter [263]
10: The Horse’s Complaint [264]
11: Armistice Day [264]
12: Window Castles [266]
13: The Autumn Paint Club [266]
14: Mother Brown Bat [267]
15: The Magic Slate [268]
16: Peter’s Trip with the Man in the Moon [269]
17: Dinah [270]
18: Winter Sleepers [271]
19: Toody Ruggles’ Luck [271]
20: The Limpets [272]
21: The Rescue [273]
22: The Old Man in the Woods [274]
23: The Queen’s Pin [274]
24: Eagle’s Thanksgiving [275]
25: Thanksgiving Day [276]
26: Thanksgiving Day [277]
27: Good News [278]
28: The Newsboy’s Dog [278]
29: The Gun-metal Watch [279]
30: Barnyard Thoughts [279]
December 1: The Toy-Shop [280]
2: A Story of the Fireplace [281]
3: The Pig who Had no Table Manners [281]
4: Jimmie’s Airplane [282]
5: The Christmas Dog [282]
6: The Pride of Toys [284]
7: Christmas with the Squirrels [285]
8: How to Address Santa [285]
9: A Letter to Santa Claus and the Answer [285]
10: Betty’s Dream [286]
11: The Snow Man [287]
12: Sharpy and Chappy [287]
13: Christmas Letters [288]
14: Candy Toys [290]
15: Santa’s Gifts [290]
16: The Gray Rabbit [291]
17: Santa Claus and Teddy [291]
18: Blue Sky and Sun [292]
19: Christmas Time Joy [294]
20: Santa in Eskimo Land [294]
21: Santa’s Toy-shop [295]
22: A White Christmas [295]
23: The Tree and the Stockings [295]
24: The Two Little Mice’s Christmas Eve Party [296]
25: Christmas Morning [297]
26: Santa’s Telescope [298]
27: Christmas Letters [299]
28: Homes without Chimneys [299]
29: The Barnyard Christmas [300]
30: Ambitions [300]
31: Little Pitchers [301]

ILLUSTRATIONS

The Bedtime Story Hour [Frontispiece]
FACING
PAGE
“In the afternoons Elizabeth lets him out of his cage” [12]
“‘Hurry, Dream Fairies, tie up the dreams for me to take around’” [30]
“‘We’ve been on this chair so long,’ said the fourth eagle” [44]
“A lovely gray felt bunny and a brown felt monkey always were with Lucy” [50]
“‘This is the season for us to tap the sirup from the maple trees, and you are spending your time swinging in a hammock’” [74]
“The butterfly thought, ‘Well, this may be my first party, but it won’t be my last’” [94]
“Mr. Owl awakened the fairies and told them to listen to his book” [112]
“The mother humming-bird hurried back” [130]
“‘The Fairy Queen brings all the little fairies to admire us’” [142]
“The Fairy Queen was dressed in glittering gold” [154]
“‘You are paying me a fine compliment’” [162]
“As the bumble-bees got nearer, they, too, saw they had made a mistake” [182]
“For a moment Mr. Sun was hidden by a purple cloud” [208]
“After a long time the lovely dawn fairies came out from their sleeping places” [230]
“So off they sailed, feeling just like birds with the delightful flying motion of the ships” [244]
“There would be fortune-telling, too, and Janet’s mother had promised to be the fortune-telling witch who would sit by her caldron” [256]
“Peter felt a little afraid at first that he’d fall” [270]
“If he couldn’t reach a thing he’d climb on the table” [282]
“They ate until they could eat no more” [296]

365
Bedtime Stories

JANUARY 1: A New Year’s Party

“Just because it was the first day of the year,” commenced daddy, “and because parties were about the nicest things in the world to the mind of a little girl named Ella, her mother decided to give her one.

“‘It certainly does seem like the first of the year, or the first of something,’ said Ella. ‘It’s a new day, a new year and we have new toys and new games. We are even going to have supper out of new dishes.’

“For among the presents Santa Claus had brought to Ella was a fine set of dishes. They were pink and white and there were six cups and saucers, six little plates, a teapot, sugar bowl and cream jug. It was really a very complete set.

“They had thin bread and butter, hot chocolate with whipped cream and a cake which Ella’s mother called a New Year’s cake. It was pink and white on the top with pink sugared trimmings on the white frosting.

“In the center of the cake was one pink candle, for Ella’s mother said it would be quite impossible to have a candle for the number of years there had been, and too, it would be nice to have a new way and just consider the year a day old.

“After the cake had been almost entirely eaten they played house. Each little girl took a corner of the room as her house and fixed it up with some of Ella’s things. They all had their own dolls and many of their other toys so they really felt quite at home.

“Then they began calling on each other, dressing up in shawls and old hats which Ella’s mother let them use. After a while they heard a flutter, flutter against the window pane, and then another little flapping sound.

“‘It’s a little bird,’ said Ella, as she looked out of the window. ‘It’s right on the sill, and I am dreadfully afraid it has hurt its wings. Poor little dear.’

“They opened the window and Ella took the little bird in her hands. Oh, how cold the little bird’s feathers were!

“‘We’ll take care of you,’ said Ella. They gave the little bird some bread-crumbs and some water. Then he had a delicious piece of lettuce from the seeds which Ella had started in a box in her room.

“Pretty soon the bird began to grow much better and hopped and chirped about the room, and then they let him out for he had simply been very hungry.

“‘We’ll put some suet in that tree over there,’ said Ella.

“‘Let’s put some bread-crumbs,’ said her friends, and then one of them added,

“‘And let’s give some of the New Year cake crumbs too.’

“So the little bird was given a regular New Year’s feast, and Ella and her friends were among other children who decided to look after the feathered people through the cold months of the winter and to give them bread-crumbs and suet which they love so well.”

JANUARY 2: The Rhyming Years

“Well,” said the Old Year, “I am going to make up a poem about myself. I feel quite poetical.”

“And,” said the New Year, “I will, too.” For the New Year didn’t want to have the Old Year think that he was unable to do anything like that, even though he was young. But he felt very much pleased when the Old Year said: “Though I have lived twelve whole months, I have not become a poet.”

“I think age should be given the right to speak first,” said the New Year.

The Old Year shook his white hair and smiled so that the wrinkles in his face all ran in together.

This is what he said:

“Yes, it is true I was feeling old,

Yes, it is true I was also cold,

Yes, it is true I heard them cheer,

Welcoming in the glad New Year.”

Then New Year recited this verse:

“Of course, you see I was out for fun,

My life has only just begun,

They said ‘He is young and full of vim,

No one can help but welcome him.’

“You mustn’t think I am conceited,” he added. “I say a lot to make my rhyme come out right.”

“Of course,” said the Old Year, “for I do too. Well. I will give my second verse. Don’t believe it all, though!” Then the Old Year took an old harp he had and he began to play and sing, and this was what he sang:

“And Poor Old Year—he almost wept

As he packed up his things and left.

But as he turned to say good-by,

Something in him made him cry:

‘Though my work is mostly done,

I, have, too, had lots of fun,

And ’ere I go upon my way,

This I certainly would say:

‘Happy New Year, big and small,

Happy New Year, short and tall,

Happy New Year, every one!

May you all have lots of fun!’”

JANUARY 3: Naughty Wind

“The Clothes-Pins on the line,” said daddy, “were having a very jolly time.

“‘I’ll blow those clothes away,’ said the North Wind.

“‘Oh, no you won’t,’ said the Clothes-Pins in chorus.

“‘You are only little wooden things,’ said the Wind. ‘I am strong and powerful and can do just exactly as I like.’

“Now the Fairies saw that the Clothes-Pins were doing their work so well that they thought they would like to help them, so they all perched on the line and began to sing:

‘Heigh-ho, heigh-ho,

Let the North Wind blow,

The Clothes-Pins and we,

Will certainly see,

That the clothes will stay here.

The day’s nice and clear,

The sun’s good and strong,

And the wind is quite wrong.

To try such a trick,

But the Clothes-Pins will stick.’

“The Clothes-Pins did stick to the line and the Fairies helped them, singing all the time. The Wind kept on blowing and tried his hardest to get the better of the Fairies, but he had no luck at all and the Clothes-Pins won!”

JANUARY 4: The Selfish Oyster Crabs

“You know, I think oyster-crabs are perhaps the most selfish of all the sea animals,” began daddy. “The oyster-crabs really belong to the crab family. They are called oyster-crabs, however, because above all things they love the juice of an oyster and absolutely live on it. And what I am going to tell you about now is the way they get it.

“First of all, the oyster-crab hovers around the oysters and then picks out a nice, fat, juicy looking oyster, saying to himself: ‘You look as if you could feed me well without any effort. I think I will crawl into your shell.’ So then he crawls right inside the oyster’s shell and proceeds to enjoy himself. He prefers just to ‘sponge’ on others, as the expression goes!”

JANUARY 5: Brownie’s Toothache

Going to the dentist’s always frightened Evelyn. “Dear me,” said daddy, “I think I will have to tell you about the brownie’s trip to the dentist, for I think his case was very similar to yours.

“This little brownie had had a toothache which had bothered him for some time, but he dreaded to go to the dentist’s, just the way you do.

“One day, though, it got awfully painful and he felt he could stand it no longer. He went right off to see the brownie dentist. He was a very clever dentist and very kind and gentle. He got a pair of pullers, and after a moment or two Dr. Brownie said:

“‘Well, here’s the old toothache.’

“‘What, my tooth already out?’ said the little brownie. ‘And to think of all I’ve suffered before I came to you.’”

JANUARY 6: The Pink Cockatoo

“On the morning of the birthday of a little girl named Natalie,” said daddy, “a pink cockatoo was ready to greet her when she awoke. Well, you can imagine how happy Natalie was. And she kept saying over and over again:

“‘Oh, how lovely you are.’ The cockatoo would raise up his pink crest on the top of his head at that—just as some people raise up their foreheads—only his crest went way, way higher. He did that whenever he felt like it, and he always felt like it when he was being talked to.

“And after a very short time the cockatoo was just as tame as could be and he seemed to grow more beautiful every day.

“Before long he began to talk just as a parrot will and follow Natalie around the house. He had his food out of special little pink dishes Natalie had given him to match his pink feathers, and every morning he took his bath in a pink soup bowl which he thought was very fine indeed.

“Maybe you will think he got spoiled by so much fussing and attention, but he just became tamer and tamer every day. He learned many tricks and would often perform them for Natalie’s friends.

“And when it came time for Natalie’s next birthday she gave a party. On the invitation it said the party was being given by Natalie and the pink cockatoo. And in one corner was a little colored drawing Natalie had made of her cockatoo. When the cockatoo saw it he put his crest way up in the air, and said in a funny voice:

“‘Goodie, Natalie,’ which was his pet name for his Mistress.

“And this is a truly true story, you know.”

JANUARY 7: The Pet Monkey

“Once there was an old lady,” said daddy, “who lived all alone. One day, though, she went to town and bought a pet monkey. She named him Niles. He was only seven inches long and had a curly tail. He was a very dark gray color. He proved to be a most expensive pet, for he liked all the most delicious fruits and would only eat his bread and rice when plenty of rich cream was poured over it. What fascinated him above all was the old lady’s rings.

“When the old lady saw how fond Niles was of jewels she took out her jewel box. Niles had the most glorious time playing with its contents. He decorated himself with all the beads and chains and bangles and looked at himself in the mirror. He shook all over, for he liked the noise as well as the glitter of the jewels.

“So the old lady was very, very happy with her pet monkey. Niles was delighted with his new home and his new mistress, for he had never had jewels to play with in the animal shop.”

JANUARY 8: The Bravery Medal

“Two children,” said daddy, “were skating on a pond. It was a blustery, snowy afternoon, and they were the only ones on the ice.

“A big dog was taking a good run on this cold winter’s day when he spied the children on the pond.

“He went down to the pond and ran across it a little way, but the ice had a bad way of creaking, and he was sure it was not so very firm. He decided that he had better stay around to see that nothing happened to the children.

“He had been there but a moment or two when a terrific crack in the ice sounded. It gave way, and the two children fell through. The sheet of ice broke rapidly, and the water was soon clear for some distance around them.

“Quickly the dog went to the rescue of the children and swam to the shore with them. He saw some people drive by in a sleigh on the road above, and he barked so frantically that they stopped to see what the trouble was. Then, of course, they drove the two children to their home. The big dog went along too. The hero simply said ‘Bow-wow!’ when later they fastened a medal on his collar. He wanted to tell them that he thought they were being very good to him, and he thanked them, but at the same time he was so modest that he didn’t think he had been so brave. He felt any other dog would have done just the same, as he adored children.”

JANUARY 9: The Jack-knife

“This evening,” said daddy, “I am going to tell you about the little boy who was given a jack-knife as a birthday present. He did so many things with his knife that I think it might give you some ideas and suggestions of things you might make with the help of the knife. He set up a little carpentry shop in his room with a workstand.

“He made little bird-houses, little squirrel houses, chairs, stands, boats, an express cart, and, oh, countless other things! In fact, he just made all the things that boys like.

“Before he had his jack-knife he was not at all interested in carpentry. But his knife helped so much. It was far more useful to him than his other tools.”

JANUARY 10: The Brave Little Sister

“There was once a little boy who had a sister just about Evelyn’s age,” said daddy. “He was much disappointed that his sister didn’t care more for long walks and boys’ games and that animals seemed to frighten her.

“He used to scold her about it instead of helping her to get over her fear. One day these two children were taking a walk. They went into the country along a quiet road. They passed a little house in which lived an old woman who had a great many cats. She was very queer and her cats seemed to be queer too. Anyway, it was said that they hated strangers.

“The little boy didn’t believe this, and when his sister tried to hurry by he laughed at her.

“‘Oh, come and see this nice cat!’ he said. And he tried to pick the cat up.

“The cat objected to strangers, as all the people had said, and he started to scratch the little boy. With a cry his sister rushed to him. She grabbed the back of the cat and got him off. Then she cried ‘Shoo!’ to the cat, which made him go right home, for he didn’t care about hurting the little boy. He only would not be played with.

“‘I shall never make fun of you again, sister,’ he said. ‘You saved me by taking off that cat, of which you were afraid. I have not been at all a nice brother to you, and I don’t deserve such a good sister, for it was love for me that made you forget about your fear. But you may be quite sure I will never make fun of you in the future, for really you are the brave one.’”

JANUARY 11: Baby Bears

“In the winter, at the start of the new year,” said daddy, “when Mother Bear was sleeping and dozing and dreaming in her home back in the hole of a big rock, the little bears arrived. She taught them about the berries they must eat and about the things which would make them feel well and strong. She also told them of the bad things they must not touch—the things which would make their little tummies feel very miserable indeed and which would make them quite, quite sick.

“And when, at last, they went out of the cave, and saw the real world, the trees and the forest paths, they wanted to start off at once for adventures, for the world looked so mysterious and wondrous.

“‘Do you want to leave your old mother?’ the black bear asked.

“‘We love you, mother, but we want to see the world,’ they said.

“‘Bang,’ suddenly went a gun, and Mother Bear received a slight wound.

“The baby bears were around her in a flash, but mother bear was safe, for the man with the gun had hurriedly gone when he had seen how near the old bear was. And he had seen her teeth and had almost been able to feel them!

“And the babies knew their teeth would never have done. They, too, had had a glimpse of their mother’s anger and their mother’s strength.

“And as they licked the wound they said,

“‘We won’t leave you, Mother Bear. We don’t know the world as yet.’

“And Mother Black Bear groaned with the hurt from the slight wound in her shoulder, but still more she grunted with pleasure, for her babies had seen that they still needed their mother.”

JANUARY 12: The Snow House

“At night after the children had gone to bed and it had grown colder and colder Old Man Snow came around to see what the children had been doing,” said daddy.

“‘Well, well, well,’ he said as he saw a snow house and a snow fort and a snow man, ‘this is fine. They appreciate me. They know what handsome things I can make. This is really gorgeous.’

“‘Look, Prince Icicle, isn’t this fine?’

“Prince Icicle appeared with a number of the other princes and princesses who hung down from the roof of the snow house and the top of the snow fort and from the shoulders of the snow man. Prince Icicle himself took a very fine place over the doorway of the snow house.

“‘Isn’t this handsome?’ asked Old Man Snow. ‘Our fine king will be delighted and his royal majesty will be honored.’

“As Old Man Snow said these words along came King Snow. He wore a most beautiful crown of snow and he showed the Icicle family the compliment of wearing icicles from his beard and his crown and his locks of snow and from his hanging snowy sleeves.

“‘They stopped me as I went by the brook,’ said King Snow, ‘and begged me to have some of their jeweled icicles. Don’t they sparkle beautifully? Yes, they asked me to have them, and the brook, which was beginning to freeze around the edges, begged me to listen to its story.’

“‘It had so much to tell of its travels, how it ran down a long and winding hill and how it couldn’t help trickling and laughing all the time with the jokes and merry tales it kept hearing.’

“So Old Man Snow, King Snow, Prince Icicle and the other princes and princesses talked all through the night and told wonderful stories as they sat in the children’s snow house.”

JANUARY 13: Peter Goblin’s Trip

“To think,” and Peter Goblin looked as if he were going to cry, “to think,” he repeated, “that children shouldn’t like us. Why, children are the nicest creatures in all the world, and I love them, I do. That’s why I am so unhappy when they talk about me.”

The Fairy Queen had been listening to this talk and she felt sorry that so many untrue stories had gone around the children’s world about Peter Goblin and the goblin brothers.

“I’ll tell you what I’d do, Peter,” she said.

“Keep on trying to tell as many children as you can how much you like them. Tell them that in years gone by people were far more nervous than they are now. They were afraid of the dark and things like that.

“Tell them that you never jump out at them in the dark, and that you only come to them when they are asleep. Explain as much and as often as you can that you never carry them far away from home, but that you simply sit on their bedposts and talk to them. I’ll help you too, Peter.”

“Thank you,” said Peter Goblin, as he hopped and jumped away, for he felt far more cheerful now.

He went to call on his friends, the children. He had a very hard time with one little girl. “Good evening,” said Peter, as he perched himself on the edge of the right bedpost of her bed.

She drew the clothes over her head. “Oh, don’t do that,” screamed Peter. “It will make you have bad dreams and maybe you’ll smother.”

“Oh, dear,” thought Peter, “she will dream I’m horrid indeed if she does that.” But after a moment she poked her head out again and looked at Peter.

She couldn’t help laughing at him, for he looked so funny and yet so sad. But still she was frightened, until after she had looked again (for between looks she hid her face), when she saw two big tears rolling down Peter Goblin’s funny little face.

“What’s the matter, little sir?” she asked. She wanted to be polite when he felt so badly and yet he seemed so small and tiny to be called just Sir.

“I’m blue and sad,” said Peter, “‘cause children think I’m bad. They think I hide in the dark to catch them. And I love them, and want to tell them stories. Not a single goblin has ever hurt a child—no, no, no! Why, we would disown a bad goblin, we would.” And the little girl promised Peter she’d let all her friends know this.

JANUARY 14: The Words

The words Beautiful, Gorgeous, Glorious and Wonderful were talking. “You see,” said Beautiful, “we’ve all been feeling rather sad that no one used us. We’re always trying to live up to our names. We’re always trying to be beautiful and gorgeous and glorious.

“We don’t try to be mean or horrid or ugly. We haven’t been jealous of you, Wonderful.”

“Ah,” said Wonderful, “I understand. You’ve never gone back on your names. You’ve always meant the same things. You’ve been fine to keep your names and to be beautiful and gorgeous and glorious.

“But you needn’t feel sad because you haven’t been given much attention and because you haven’t been used much lately. People have got into the habit of saying everything is wonderful.

“Really and truly I’ve been worked to death. I don’t like to be worked so hard. I really and truly don’t. I get tired, and yet I have to be ready when they want me. I’m just jumping from one to another and sometimes I’m half with one and half with another at the same time.

“But you keep on being Beautiful and Gorgeous and Glorious, for you are three lovely words and Wonderful couldn’t get along without you.”

“Ah, Wonderful,” said Beautiful, “you do cheer us up. Yes, you are Wonderful.”

And they all laughed as they saw what a useful, fitting, wonderful word it really was!

JANUARY 15: The Medicine Bottle

“If you think my life is a pleasant one,” said the Medicine Bottle, “I’ll tell you from the start that it isn’t.

“In the first place I was in the doctor’s office. I saw the people quake and shake when they were told they had to take some bitter medicine. I don’t suppose they really shook as much as I thought they did, but I was standing quite still at the time and they seemed to make a great deal of fuss.

“Then I heard some one say,

“‘Doctors give us horrible stuff,

When we think we’re sick enough,

But after all they make us well,

And this fact, too, I think we should tell.’

“Then some one else said,

“‘I wonder if the doctor has taken

From the medicine bottle which must be shaken.

It’s hard to swallow it and be held by the nose

While we get down the horrible dose.’

“Such are the things I’ve heard,” said the Medicine Bottle.

“Did all the people speak like that?” asked the little White Pills.

“They didn’t speak in rhyme like that,” said the Medicine Bottle, “but those were the things they said which I’ve changed into rhymes.

“A medicine bottle must have something to cheer it up at times.

“Yes, I’ll tell you my life is not a pleasant one. I’m never greeted with a smile. Fancy that, White Pills! I’m never greeted with a smile.

“Here I sit on the mantelpiece and three times a day I am taken down and shaken as though they’d like to kill me, I do believe, and then with groans or tears or complaints I’m swallowed. Or rather, some of the medicine from me is swallowed. It’s a terrible life that I lead!”

JANUARY 16: A Loaf of Bread

“One day in a baker’s shop,” said daddy, “appeared a very small-sized loaf of bread.

“A little girl named Lucy was shopping with her grandmother.

“‘Oh, look,’ said Lucy, ‘look at the tiny loaf of bread.’

“Now the loaf of bread would have smiled, only loaves of bread can’t smile and if they should laugh they would crumble, so the loaf of bread kept a perfectly straight face.

“‘I thought I’d be noticed by a child,’ said the small loaf of bread.

“‘You won’t last as long as we will,’ said a larger loaf of bread.

“‘Oh, who cares about the size,’ said the small loaf.

“‘Of course you don’t,’ said another larger loaf.

“‘Now, now,’ said the small loaf, ‘don’t be mean and unkind to your little friend and relative, the small loaf of bread. I’m the only small one here, though I heard the baker say if folks liked me the size I am and if mothers bought me for their children he’d make a lot like me.’

“‘We didn’t mean to be unkind or mean,’ said the larger loaves, ‘only we are a little envious. We’ve been the same size always. We have to follow our relatives who are baked ahead of us and are sold ahead of us. We always have to follow their example.

“‘But you have been made differently. You have been made a small size. You’re cunning and different. You are just like us in taste and shape and kind, but smaller in size and that makes you very interesting.’

“‘Hush,’ said the small loaf of bread, ‘I am being bought. Hush!’

“And off went the little tiny loaf, in a paper bag, carried by Lucy. Just as soon as it got home, having been carried all the way, for Lucy knew it couldn’t walk or run home, a nice fat crust was cut off and Lucy ate it with joy.

“‘My nice little baby loaf of bread,’ she said, ‘you are so cunning and so good to eat!’ And the loaf of bread was glad it had been made so tiny and cunning and yet so good.”

JANUARY 17: The Tame Canary Bird

Daddy had heard that afternoon the story of a very tame canary bird. The little girl who owned the bird, and who was a friend of Jack and Evelyn, had told daddy about her little pet. So when daddy got home in the evening he was ready at once to tell the story of the little bird.

“I am going to tell you about the little bird Elizabeth has. Her daddy gave him to her several weeks ago, and he is just as tame as tame can be,” said daddy. “She has named him Bubsie, and he knows his name too, for whenever she calls ‘Bubsie!’ he replies with a little ‘Peep, peep!’

“Every morning, bright and early, he wakes up and begins to sing the most beautiful songs. He sings so steadily that Elizabeth says it is a surprise to her that he doesn’t burst his little throat.

“After Elizabeth gets up she always gives him a little piece of apple before she begins her breakfast. She puts it on her finger between two wires of the cage, and he hops right over on his little bar and takes it from her finger.

“IN THE AFTERNOONS ELIZABETH LETS HIM OUT OF HIS CAGE.”—[Page 13]

“The next thing is his bath, which he takes soon after breakfast. He loves that. He spatters the water about and has just the best time in the world. He acts as if it were the most wonderful game. After his bath he has a treat of delicious lettuce to eat, and then he sits in the sun and smoothes down his feathers.

“In his cage there is a swing, and he swings on it and hops from one perch to the other. In fact, he has a fine romp. He usually does this right after his bath, for then he feels so energetic.

“In the afternoon Elizabeth lets him out of his cage. Of course she sees first that there are no windows up or doors ajar before she opens the door of the cage. When the cage door is open Bubsie flies out and makes a tour of the room. How he does enjoy flying around and perching back of the different pictures and on the window-sill. The thing he likes more than anything else is to play with Elizabeth. He perches on her shoulder and walks around on her hand. And he loves to tease her too, for if there are any flowers in the room he will fly over to them, peck at them and begin munching at them. Then he won’t let Elizabeth catch him. He thinks this a huge joke, and he always flies to some high spot in the room and begins to sing which is his favorite trick of all.”

JANUARY 18: Little Carry’s Birthday

“Carry was nine years old,” daddy said. “A few minutes before eleven Carry’s little brother came to her, ringing a large bell. ‘Come to the celebration for the queen of the day!’ he shouted and all the family joined the procession.

“In the center of the room was a table. And such a marvelously covered table! But, first of all, they seated Carry in a big rocking-chair at the head of the table. They were all dressed up in funny costumes which they always wore for birthday celebrations. The table was full of presents, and in the center was a cake with nine lighted candles on it. ‘Many happy returns of the day!’ they all cried together.

“She opened her presents one by one. She had lovely pink knitted bed-room slippers from her mother, a beautiful doll from her daddy, a workbag from her granny, a paint box from her auntie and a big box of candy from her brother, which he’d bought with his very own saved-up money, and which to Carry was the best present of all!”

JANUARY 19: Maggie’s Meals

“There was once a little girl whose name was Maggie,” said daddy, “and how she did love meals! Now, one evening when Maggie had gone to bed along came a fine looking creature very handsomely dressed.

“‘Who are you?’ asked Maggie.

“‘I’m the Dream King and I’m going to take you to a party.’

“So Maggie went with the Dream King and they visited such interesting and hospitable people.

“They went to a huge city which seemed to be made of delicious things to eat and which, as soon as people ate from the city, the food grew or was cooked back again!

“It was all very marvelous. And to Maggie’s surprise she saw Duke Ice Cream take up a spoon and scoop a huge mouthful right off his very arm. And in another few minutes his arm was as before.

“The Duke told her he liked the cold weather and that he always lived in the coldest part of the city.

“Lady Lettuce was followed everywhere by her pages, the Vinegar and Oil boys. And sometimes she had friends to call on her like the Tomato Twins and the Cucumber Cousins and the Potato Pals. Maggie also met Apple, the queen of all the Pies.

“Maggie had the very best time in the world and when the Dream King told her he must be taking her back Maggie said:

“‘And you’ve not told me I was wrong to enjoy my meals so much.’

“‘I gave you a surprise, in not scolding you, eh?’ asked the Dream King. ‘Well, you’re never greedy or selfish and if you like your food I think it is fine. Good-night!’”

JANUARY 20: Winter Trees

“All the winter things,” said daddy, “such as the cold Winds, the Snow and the Ice told the Pine Trees and the Fir Trees and the Spruce Trees how much they liked them.

“‘I will tell you a secret,’ said the Pine Tree.

“‘Yes,’ said the Snow, as it nestled closer to the branches of the big tree.

“‘Years and years and years ago, I talked to my family about dropping off in the Winter-time. We never got any further than talking about it, for just as I had said, “Well, and what do you think of the scheme?” some of the Snow Flakes came and rested on our branches. “Oh,” they said, “you’re so much nicer than the branches without any leaves. There we have to fill up the corners, but with you we can nestle down.”

“‘The North Wind told us,’ continued the Pine Tree, ‘that it was such a joy to have a good strong tree around that wouldn’t feel hurt if he played about and had a good time. And so we discovered how much the North Wind liked us.

“‘Then,’ said the Pine Tree, ‘we heard the Grown-Ups. They said what a comfort it was to have some green trees in the Winter and they said how horrible it would be if every tree were quite bare and ugly. And then came the Children. They walked through the woods one snowy day and they stopped to look up at us. “Ah, how tall those trees are. And how warm it is in these woods. Our favorite trees are the Winter Trees—the Spruce Trees, the Fir Trees, the Pine Trees.”

“‘Now do you understand how we have to be as fine looking in the Winter as in the Spring?’ And the Snow understood.”

JANUARY 21: Poor Prunes

“My life is a sad one,” said the stewed prune.

“How is that?” asked the orange, near by.

“Oh, dear, no one loves me. People usually eat me when they can’t get anything else.”

“But I saw them eat you, and buy you, of course I mean members of your illustrious prune family, when a member of my family was around.”

“Once in a while that happens,” said the prune, “but it is very, very seldom. One morning,” continued the prune, “some one at the breakfast table apologized and said, ‘I’m sorry, but we only have prunes this morning.’

“Wasn’t that sad? Enough to break the poor heart of a prune.”

“You haven’t a heart, prune, dear; you only have a stone as your heart—heart of stone—that means hard-hearted, and so forth,” said the orange.

“Ah, but that’s wrong,” said the prune. “I felt dreadfully to think that such a thing should be said of us. ‘Sorry, but we only have prunes.’ You’d have thought she had said, ‘Sorry, but we only have bricks for breakfast,’ from the tone in which she said it.

“And then what was our joy and a thing the family has never forgotten nor ever will forget when in reply the person at the table said she actually and really liked prunes.

“That event will be put down as the greatest event that has happened in a long time.

“And following that great event are a number of others, and we plan to erect a monument made of prune stones and made only of those stones left by people who’ve enjoyed the prunes!

“Isn’t that a good idea?”

“Yes, indeed,” said the orange.

Just then the orange was called for and the prune with its brothers and sisters stayed behind.

“Poor prunes,” cried the prune who had been talking, “our great monument may not go up so fast as for a moment I had hopes that it would.

“Ah, well, we have the ever-ready prune juice to receive the sad tears of the prunes.” And then they sang this ditty:

“Poor prunes, poor prunes, how sad is your lot;

Some people like you, but, alas, most do not.

But you’re really, poor prunes, you’re really good food,

And those who say not, are, I fear, very rude.”

JANUARY 22: Molly’s Piano Recital

“Molly,” began daddy, “was very musical and ever since she had been a little girl, so little that she had to be lifted to the piano stool, she had been able to play anything she heard.

“Her family were far from being well off, but they strove to give Molly a musical education.

“One day it was decided that Molly was so talented she could give a concert. So the evening for the concert was decided upon. Molly practiced and practiced the pieces she was to play.

“She was not at all nervous. She was very proud of her pretty new dress, for she had always before had the dresses of her older sisters cut down and made smaller for her. Unknown to her, Molly’s teacher had invited an old friend of his to the concert. This gentleman was very rich and fond of music. He liked to help along any one he felt deserved it. He was so delighted with Molly’s playing that he rushed up to the little girl, saying: ‘I shall send you and your mother abroad. There you’ll have the finest music teachers in the world. You will come back making us all very proud of you.’”

JANUARY 23: Goblins’ Secrets

“One night, not long ago, Peter Goblin went a-calling,” said daddy. “From house to house he went, and in every house he went to the bedsides of the little boys and girls and invited them to go on the greatest coasting party of the year.

“‘We’re going to coast,’ said Peter, ‘down the hill of Dreams.’

“They all put their sleds together and down the hill of Dreams they went until they reached the valley below.

“‘Down this valley all the dreams come,’ said Peter Goblin. ‘Then our Goblin Dream Workers must tie them up into little packages, for every nice dream must be saved. It must be made to come true some day or some time—that is, if it’s all for the very best that it should come true. For the Goblins are wise little Creatures!’ And as the Children watched the Goblin Dream Workers they certainly decided they looked very bright indeed.

“‘They tie the dreams into the little packages and then the Goblin Visitors take them back to the land of Children and drop them in their bedrooms at night as they sleep.’

“‘But,’ said the Boys and Girls, ‘we’ve never seen packages like these.’

“‘No,’ said Peter Goblin. ‘In one of these packages a good many dreams will come true, and so the contents of the package are dropped,—some parts in the corners, some around the ceiling. And one by one they come out into the room later on when they’re COMING TRUE!

“‘So on our way back tonight,’ said Peter, ‘a lot of us will lead you to your little rooms and we’ll drop the contents of the packages of dreams which will sometime come true. But now we must be off for more coasting, hurrah, hurrah!’”

JANUARY 24: In the Fish Bowl

“There was once a little girl named Susan,” said daddy, “who had in her room a great big glass bowl which held some helleries.”

“What are helleries?” of course asked Evelyn.

“They are fresh-water fish that live in climates where the water is sure always to be very warm. Susan also kept some snails in the water with the helleries.

“The helleries are about the size of minnows, but of a different shape, being more round than the minnows are.”

“One day Susan saw the big hellery daddy trying to chase the mother hellery around so that she could not get hold of any of the little ones. Susan grabbed the mother hellery and put her quickly into a glass of water that was standing near by. The next thing Susan did was to count the little helleries and, to her delight, she found that all the twenty were quite alive. But they had evidently been very much frightened, for they were all in a corner of the bowl, as near to the daddy hellery as possible, and the big daddy hellery was quiet and seemed to be much relieved that the danger was over. The snails, as you can imagine, were only too glad to rest once more. Susan gave them all some delicious fish food to comfort them.

“And she kept the mother hellery in a separate bowl until the little ones were grown up, and then she was welcomed back.”

“Why was she kept in a separate bowl?” asked Jack.

“Because the mother hellery doesn’t care for her children until they are big, and she might harm them. But the daddy loves them, even when they are little bits of things!”

JANUARY 25: Mac, the Dog

“There was a dog named Mac,” said daddy, “a beautiful Airedale dog and he belonged to two young girls named Janet and Mildred. They were much excited for their daddy was to have a birthday.

“At last came the birthday.

“Mac thought to himself that he wouldn’t be much pleased with the presents their daddy received, a pipe, tobacco, a necktie. Mac had been dressed up in a beautiful ribbon on a number of special occasions but he didn’t think much of neckties. There were some candies, though, and they were all right. Candies were really a sensible present.

“Mac knew that there were going to be more festivities. He sat about and waited.

“‘It’s time for the birthday cake,’ they called at last.

“Up got Mac. ‘It’s rude to be late,’ he said to himself, ‘and I’ll show them that an Airedale dog doesn’t forget his manners.’

“After it was all over and Mac was about to go to bed, he smiled to himself:

“‘Well, it was foolish to have all those candles but the cake was good, mighty good!’”

JANUARY 26: The Three Horses

In a barn there were three horses and their names were Danny and Fanny and Prince. Somehow Bobbie, who was the farmer’s youngest son, always liked it when the horses had their ears up though he couldn’t have quite told you why. They seemed to be so very, very friendly then.

Bobbie had been having a very fine day, and as he tumbled into bed he hardly had time to whisper to his old friend the Dream King. He used to say, just before he went off to sleep, “Please, Mr. Dream King, send me nice dreams.”

If he did not feel so dreadfully, dreadfully sleepy he would make his little speech longer and would say, “Your gracious majesty, Mr. Dream King, will your royal highness do a poor, humble subject like myself the great and noble and wondrous honor of sending me most royal and noble dreams?”

This evening all he said was, “Nice dreams, please.”

Soon, oh, so soon, it seemed as though he saw Danny and Fanny and Prince walking into his room. And then they stood at the end of the bed, all in a row.