Title: | More About Teddy B. and Teddy G. The Roosevelt Bears |
Being Volume Two Depicting their further Travels and Adventures |
Transcriber’s Note:
The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“From noon till night they let things go,
In sky above and on earth below.”
When in the autumn of 1905, I created the characters of TEDDY-B and TEDDY-G I builded better than I knew. I brought these bears out of their mountain den in Colorado and started them on their tour of the East to teach children that animals, even bears, may have some measure of human feeling; that the primary purpose of animals is not necessarily that of supplying sport for the hunter. That this lesson has been abundantly taught is proven by the overwhelming welcome given the Teddy Bears by the boys and girls of the United States; and it is safe to say that the traditional “bear will get you” has now and forever lost its frightening significance.
This book is a sequel to “The Travels and Adventures of the Roosevelt Bears,” and completes the story of the tour of TEDDY-B and TEDDY-G from Colorado to Washington. The third volume will report in jingle and picture the tour of the Teddy Bears abroad.
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“To ride bare-backed in the hurdle shute, |
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Or join a band with drum and flute.” | Cover |
“From noon till night they let things go, |
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In sky above and on earth below.” | Frontispiece |
“With bags on backs and sticks in hand, |
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They started their tramp across the land.” | 11 |
“They climbed up ladders in clouds of smoke, |
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And lifted hose and windows broke.” | 22 |
“‘Good afternoon,’ said TEDDY-B, |
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‘Is this Buster Brown and Tige I see?’” | 35 |
“Dressed and ready for hours of fun, |
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With cavalry horse or battery gun.” | 49 |
“TEDDY-B threw the monkey and made him yell, |
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And caught him every time he fell.” | 60 |
“‘We’ve sailed before,’ said TEDDY-B, |
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‘We hit Chicago down a tree.’” | 73 |
“As Dublin Mike and Pat from Cork, |
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They came on the stage to look for work.” | 87 |
“Across the sand in running dash, |
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They struck the breakers with a splash.” | 98 |
“At the Liberty Bell they took a try, |
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And hoisted it up both good and high.” | 111 |
“‘You mind these things,’ said TEDDY-G, |
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‘Our breakfast hour is half-past three.’” | 125 |
“They met a lad on his way from school, |
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Whom they stopped to question about a rule.” | 136 |
“Said TEDDY-B, ‘Pay up the fares, |
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We’ll pass to-morrow as millionaires,’” | 149 |
“When Teddy Bears would rulers be, |
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And hunt for men in cave or tree.” | 167 |
“With outstretched hand and smiling face, |
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He gave them welcome to the place.” | 178 |
“They found some gold in a cave one day.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“With bags on backs and sticks in hand,
They started their tramp across the land.”
“But they got in trouble when TEDDY-G climbed on the roof of the car to see the working of the electricity.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“They climbed up ladders in clouds of smoke,
And lifted hose and windows broke.”
Muddy Pete.
“Up to a roof with hose in hand
And on the ridge to take his stand.”
TEDDY-G.
TEDDY-B.
“A hundred letters for each Roosevelt Bear, from East and West and everywhere.”
“But TEDDY-G went straight ahead, while the machine by TEDDY-B was fed.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“‘Good afternoon,’ said TEDDY-B,
‘Is this Buster Brown and Tige I see?’”
“TEDDY-G looked at him from head to heels, and his side door opened to see the wheels.”
“The four took hands to skip and sing and to dance around in a jolly ring.”
“To ride bare-backed in the hurdle shute, or join a band with drum and flute.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“Dressed and ready for hours of fun,
With cavalry horse or battery gun.”
“Like a diver he struck the water right and quick as a wink was out of sight.”
“The children laughed, he looked so queer, with the newsboy’s cap hung on his ear.”
“They loaded up like old Saint Nick, with bundles piled on high and thick.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“TEDDY-B threw the monkey and made him yell,
And caught him every time he fell.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“‘We’ve sailed before,’ said TEDDY-B,
‘We hit Chicago down a tree.’”
“They came from the clouds like sailors bold, with not a thing but the rope to hold.”
“But TEDDY-G to answer Jack lifted him high up on his back.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“As Dublin Mike and Pat from Cork,
They came on the stage to look for work.”
“There they stayed enjoying a rest, and eating things the very best.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“Across the sand in running dash,
They struck the breakers with a splash.”
“All four danced with toe and paw the smartest cake-walk you ever saw.”
TEDDY-G—His paw
TEDDY-B—His paw
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“At the Liberty Bell they took a try,
And hoisted it up both good and high.”
“They strung a wire from tree to tree and then the fellows with TEDDY-B
Put crackers all along the wire, to prepare the field for an army fire.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“‘You mind these things,’ said TEDDY-G,
‘Our breakfast hour is half-past three.’”
“The monkeys had gone in a solid bunch and captured the whole of the picnic lunch.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“They met a lad on his way from school,
Whom they stopped to question about a rule.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“Said TEDDY-B, ‘Pay up the fares,
We’ll pass to-morrow as millionaires.’”
“They chased each other round the Block with bow and arrow and tomahawk.”
“They met a newsboy on the street who said the newsboys were to meet that night at six in a nook of theirs.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“When Teddy Bears would rulers be,
And hunt for men in cave or tree.”
“Dee-lighted.”
Copyright, 1907, by Edward Stern & Co., Inc.
“With outstretched hand and smiling face,
He gave them welcome to the place.”
Signed and
“The Teddy Bears on Broncho backs piled front and back with loaded sacks.”
“They had gifts for each bought in the East, and they passed them round at the evening feast.”
This book records in complete detail the wonderful trip of the Roosevelt Bears from their cave in the Rocky Mountains to New York City. It tells how these Bears entertained their animal friends at home, of the exciting race to catch the Pullman train, the eventful night on the sleeping car and the exciting adventures on the Kansas farm. Of the day spent in rollicking fun at the district school, the adventures at the county fair and the overnight trip in the balloon which took them from Missouri to Chicago, where they landed in Lincoln Park and spent some days in entertaining the children of that city, and seeing all the points of interest, including the Athletic Club and a modern department store.
Then to Niagara Falls to view the wonders of nature at that place, and next to Boston, where they meet with a rousing reception and are entertained at the home of Miss Priscilla Alden and her brother Will. While in Boston they visit all the places of historical interest, such as Bunker Hill, Plymouth Rock, Concord and Lexington. They have an exciting scorch in an automobile, which causes their arrest and an uncomfortable night in the Boston Jail. They receive honorary degrees at Harvard University, and afterwards take a canoe trip down Boston Bay and are swept out to sea by a storm and land on an iceberg, where they meet a polar bear who has just come down from the northern seas on his floating ship of ice. They are rescued from this place by a passing steamer and carried to New York City, in which place they immediately advertise for a guide to assist them in seeing the town.
Volume 1 closes with an interesting account of how they entertained the children of New York City at the annual circus held in Madison Square Garden, and which completes the account of the first half of the tour of the United States by Teddy-B and Teddy-G, the Roosevelt Bears.
Copyright, 1907, by Seymour Eaton
After having rested for the winter in their home in the mountains of Colorado, the Roosevelt Bears, now thoroughly used to the modern ways of civilization, once more become restless, and having a strong desire to see more of the world, start out upon their European tour. This book will record in picture and in verse their trip across the Atlantic, the tour through Ireland, Scotland and England, where they visit Stratford-on-Avon, the home of Dickens, Oxford University, the Tower of London, and meet King Edward, by whom they are entertained in royal fashion. Then over to Paris and to Holland and Germany, where they encounter Emperor William in the Black Forest From Germany they go to Russia, where they take the Czar out for a carriage ride, and through some mishap land in a dungeon cell. They next visit Switzerland and the Alps, then down to Rome, Venice and Athens.
Feeling that their foreign tour would not be complete without a visit to Egypt, they take a trip up the Nile and see the Pyramids and the Sphinx, after which they start back for America, and are greeted upon landing at the steamer pier in New York City by that famous gentleman known throughout the world as “Uncle Sam.” This will undoubtedly be one of the most interesting books of the Roosevelt Bears series.
These books can be procured from all book dealers in the United States and Canada. List Price, $1.50.
A fascinating story for children of all ages, with enough of the fairy element to gratify the taste for the wonderful that is present in every child. There is a very nice moral in the story, and its presentation is made through the use of an idea which is entirely unique. The literary quality of the book is excellent. Profusely illustrated with color plates and pen drawings by
Formal announcement of the date of publication of this story will be made to the trade in ample season by the publishers.
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