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HAS AN-Y-BOD-Y SEEN MY MOUSE?

I opened his box for half a minute, * Just to make sure he was really in it, And while I was looking he jumped, outside! I tried to catch him, I tried, I tried. ; I think he's somewhere about the house*. ' Has anyone seen my mouse? Tncle John, have you seen my mouse?

Just a smallsort of mouse; a dear little brown one; He came from the country; he wasn't | a toTvn one; So he'll feel all lonely in a London street;. ■ Why, what could he possibly find to eat? ';■■.. He must be somewhere; I'll ask Aunt Eose; * Have,you seen a mouse with a wof- . fel-ly nose? Oh! Some.rhere about. He's just got out. ' '.'. ' .. Hasn't anybody seen my mouse? . —From "Fourteen Song's," by A. A. Milne. .

Green vegetables are plumbers that keep the system from becoming cogged. An inactive liver is often responsible for a sallow skin. An orange eaten - first thing in.the morning, followod by; - a glass. of hot water sipped slowly, is' * good for both liver and complexion.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19270305.2.168.2

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXIII, Issue 54, 5 March 1927, Page 26

Word Count
175

HAS AN-Y-BOD-Y SEEN MY MOUSE? Evening Post, Volume CXIII, Issue 54, 5 March 1927, Page 26

HAS AN-Y-BOD-Y SEEN MY MOUSE? Evening Post, Volume CXIII, Issue 54, 5 March 1927, Page 26