Jerry's Reward, by Evelyn Snead
Barnett
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Title: Jerry's Reward
Author: Evelyn Snead Barnett
Illustrator: Etheldred B. Barry
Release Date: March 20, 2007 [EBook #20862]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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REWARD ***
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JERRY'S REWARD
[Illustration: "THEY NEVER SAW THE OLD FELLOW WITHOUT
SHOUTING." (See page 21)]
Cosy Corner Series
JERRY'S REWARD
By Evelyn Snead Barnett
Illustrated by Etheldred B. Barry
Boston L. C. Page & Company 1903
Copyright, 1900, 1901 By E. S. BARNETT
Copyright, 1902 By L. C. PAGE & COMPANY (INCORPORATED)
All rights reserved
Published, May, 1902
Colonial Press Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds & Co.
Boston, Mass., U. S. A.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE
I. THE INTERRUPTED GAME 11
II. THE SHADOW 16
III. PADDY AND PEGGY 22
IV. HARD TIMES 28
V. PEGGY OVERHEARS A STARTLING CONVERSATION 35
VI. THE POLICE ARE SUMMONED 41
VII. WHERE WAS PEGGY? 49
VIII. LUCK IN DISGUISE 58
IX. PADDY MAKES THE EFFORT OF HIS LIFE 66
ILLUSTRATIONS
PAGE
"THEY NEVER SAW THE OLD FELLOW WITHOUT SHOUTING"
(See page 21) Frontispiece
"THEY STOOD IN A LONG ROW" 13
"HE TURNED AROUND SUDDENLY" 19
"'THE TOP OF THE MORNIN' TO YE'" 24
"ALL THE CHILDREN EXCEPT THE BABIES STARTED FOR
SCHOOL" 29
"ALTHOUGH SHE WAS WARMLY CLAD, THE RUSH OF COLD
AIR MADE HER SHIVER" 39
"'WHAT ON EARTH ARE YOU DOING HERE ALONE?'" 44
"A STURDY LEG EMERGING FROM HIS FRONT WINDOW" 53
"AROUND HIS TANNED AND WRINKLED NECK WENT HER
WHITE ARMS" 64
"AFTER THEM FOLLOWED THE NURSES, CARRYING THE
BABIES" 73
JERRY'S REWARD
* * * * *
CHAPTER I.
THE INTERRUPTED GAME
Jefferson Square was a short street in Gaminsville, occupying just one
block. It took only two things on one side of it to fill up the space from
corner to corner. One was the Convent of the Good Shepherd, built on a
large lot surrounded by a high brick wall; the other, a common where
all the people around dumped cinders, rags, tin cans--in fact, anything
on earth they wished to throw away. On the other side were
dwelling-houses, and these were filled with children--lots of them.
There surely were never so many children on one square before!
There were the Earlys, the Rickersons, the Bakers, the Adamses, the
Mortons, and the Longs--twenty-one in all.
There were really twenty-eight; but the parents of seven children,
though they were not what you might call poor, were not well-born like
the others, so nobody counted them any more than they included them
in the games that the twenty-one played. This was sad for the seven
little outcasts, but the others never thought about that.
The twenty-one had splendid times together. It was play, play, play for
ever--dolls, pin fairs, circuses, and games. Every afternoon they
gathered in the Mortons' front gate, because it was wider and had three
stone steps leading down from it, where all the children could sit.
One evening, the latter part of August, the sun had dipped down behind
the world, leaving red splashes over a green sky. On seeing it the
children played fast and furiously, for they knew only too well that
when the sky looked like that they might at any moment be called
indoors, made to eat their suppers and go to bed.
[Illustration]
The oldest child of the lot was Henry Clay Morton. He was one of
those boys who try to have their way in everything, and generally
succeed; so, on this particular evening when he got tired playing
"Grammammy Gray" and proposed "Lost My Handkerchief," the
others consented without any fuss. The next thing to decide was who
should be "ole man." They stood in a long row, and Henry Clay,
pointing, began at the top and gave each child a word like this:
"Eeny, meany, miny, mo; Cracky, feeny, finy fo; Ommer neutcha,
popper teucha; Rick, bick, ban, do.
"Oner-ry, oer-ry, ickery Ann; Phyllis and Phollis and Nicholas John;
Queevy quavy, English Navy, Stinklum, stanklum, BUCK."
"Buck" was "ole man," and on this occasion happened to be Addison
Gravison Rickerson, a little pudgy boy who was called "Addy Gravvy"
for short. He took a handkerchief, and the children, joining hands,
formed a big circle. Then skipping behind them he sang:
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