St. Nicholas/Volume 32/Number 3/Letter-Box
The Letter-Box.
Munich, Germany
Dear St. Nicholas: Though it is now nearly nineteen years since I first began to look forward to the first of each month as being the earliest date at which you might arrive, yet I have never once written to tell you how much enjoyment you have often brought me. Five of the nineteen years have been spent in Germany and Italy, and the bit of fresh American life and thought which you carried between your pages was very welcome to an American girl, who, in spite of admiring and greatly enjoying the art and music which one finds in these Old World countries, yet misses the energetic, wide-awake life of her own country, and has been often very homesick
Wishing you a very long life,and great success in the future, believe me, your grateful reader and well-wisher.
Gertrude McCrackan.
Cleveland, Ohio
Dear St. Nicholas: I was about eight years old when I first took you, and am now a League member.
I would like to tell you about the delightful summer I had. Next to our house is a large ficld which was full of weeds and rubbish. Our school is opposite the field and we decided to rent this and clean it out and have a school vegetable-garden. So in about three weeks the field was Converted into sixty gardens with sixty happy owners. Then we planted the seeds, which soon sprouted, and we took care of our gardens in the most interesting way. We had four division superintendents and over these was a head gardener.
I was the head gardener. At the end of the summer, when school started again, our principal awarded two prizes: four dollars, first prize, and two for the second.
I got the first prize and our neighbor’s boy got the second prize.
Now they are all cleaned out and the field is in perfect order, ready to give it back to fits owner.
Your sincere reader,
Your sincDorothy Haake.
West Kirby, Cheshire, England
Dear St. Nicholas: We have had you now for a year, and we want to tell you how we love you. We think you are the best children’s magazine in the world. We have the first year of St. Nicholas that was ever published. Our uncle had you, and then you came to mother for years when she was Christine Halsey. Our aunt, Dycie Warden, had you when she was a little girl, and used to send a great many puzzles to your Riddle-Box. Our cousins, the Gabains, sent me two volumes, and they have you. So a great many people in our family have loved you for years. We lived in South America eight years before we came to England. Here we have been nearly four years. Buenos Aires was mach sunnier than here. John, our three-year-old baby, is the only Englishman. Mother and grannie are American. We hope to go to America some day soon and see all our relations.
We all wish you a very happy New Year
Your loving readers,
Your lovinEleanor Warden (age 11).
Your lovinBertha Warden (age 9).
Your lovinEdwin Warden (age 7).