FROM A LETTER
Little Boudie has the quaintest habits. If we eat, lie eats. If we sing*, he sings. If we play the piano j or put on the gramophone he chirps and sings as loudly as ever he can, and always succeeds in making himself heard above the noise. If we look sad he sits quietly on the perch and assumes a sympathetic air. Will you please tell the Little Thought to make himself invisible, and then to fly to a white house with green shingles, facing Cheltenham Beach; then fly inside until he sees a beautiful golden canary with a brown patch bn his head. 1 Inform him that the canary’s name is Boudoir (Boudie for short), and please make him understand that it is his duty to ihake friends with him. —Sylvia Woodhouse, aged 12. A MODEST ORDER Molly: “A pennyworth of mixed nuts, please, and not too many coconuts.”
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19291012.2.234.9
Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 792, 12 October 1929, Page 33
Word Count
153FROM A LETTER Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 792, 12 October 1929, Page 33
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