IDKWfciflm* ^ all of iliu J flgani7oa*ll en> r, »Tun gom. a itwHng-aehooaer beeome froien into Wfetwwv ap in th* Gtoda. vmnSxL% m W Bon^ was paint. W darwMi flashss of ninbow I ataxtod out tosMwliat leoaM find in that trasen land. s-r. W first mag 1 ^Momed was a pra^iistoKt nuudodon frosea insidt a 1^ icdberg* wlwre it had llkelj been for thoiuaads of years. A litUe later I toonded a snowJiill. and there was a bnnch of pen.* gains, waddlln* anx^ lito little old fat men all dressed 9 np in evenin* clothes. A little farther on I snr. prised a fat wi^lookfat' walrus, with bristly addsk. era and long ivory tnaks, loanin’ on his fhmt flippers at th’edge of thr water. Be gave me a sour look when I said good momin’, and let oat a roar that made th’ Aorora Borealis lights shiv* or. I saw I wasn’t wanted around there so 1 made for th* openin' of a cave I saw far thr distance.' It felt Unda spooky in that cave, it was so dark, qpiet, and lonely.like. 1 was tamin’ to get out when there was S roar that lifted me off my feet, and I saw a polar b^ makin’ for me. I lit out for a tall pole 1 had noticed standin’ in th’ snow snd shinned to th’ top of It in a hfurry. Th’ pole wasn’t large enough around far th’ bear to climb, so I had a good laugh as he made off fMr his cave. And then,'I discovered that I had climbed th’ North Pole. I was so tickled I slid down, palled it ap out of Ih’ snow and lagged it aboard th’ achoener to show my mates what W North Pole looked Bhsi that AVeOiVA ^ -SURfe AH I ^Ko-rneR. I REASON ARE'iou DEAD oa oHwY SuPeP\H(3 ? SUEEPIH6 ViHf DONT Yoy oo Yooa suEEpine AT NIGjHT V COOUCSN'T,- TrtE FAN\\uY ABOVE HAD A RovW- Hoa Shooud do AS \ Do iM A case- MKE YHAT \t'S -^OO KOvSY To Sleep at home \ ori.wE \r\-rb A ckmeteP-Y AKD Sleep m n\y cap. .

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view