FAY'S SIXPENCE
(Little Tale for Little Ones.) "Fay,"- said Mrs. Mullay, ' Fay's mother, "go to tli'e sliop and get mo sixpence-worth, of cakes, for I am having visitors to-morrow afternoon." So Fay set off, but she stopped to pick primroses-, on the way, and lost her sixpence. ■''■■■, .
•' She hunted •■everywhere, but couldn/t find it, so she went homo. Next day, when she was on her way to school, her,friend, Joan, said, "Oh, JTay, look what I've found!" And there, sure .enough, was a sixpence. "I-lost a sixpence here yesterday," said Fay, so Joan gave her the sispence, and Fay was very, delighted, and went on, feeling xery happy, to do her mother's message. ; M.CHBISTOPHEE BOBIN" (11). Brooklyn.. ; , ,
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19321015.2.45.7
Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXIV, Issue 92, 15 October 1932, Page 10
Word Count
117FAY'S SIXPENCE Evening Post, Volume CXIV, Issue 92, 15 October 1932, Page 10
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