Teddy and Carrots: Two Merchants of Newpaper Row
n shouted to a party of his friends who were seated on a curbstone, not far from the Newsboys
dy Jackson asked, replac
must be quick about it, o
nsiderable importance to cause him to move in such a lively manner, and they followed him a
aster Jellison's agi
as a boy, apparently about twelve years of age, who, to the newsboy spectators, looked pa
spaper wrappings a small cake of yell
ash his face and hands, using a plentiful amount of soap; and then, to the in
" Skip said, in what he intended for a sarca
country, an' is goin' to buy
ried, in mingled excitement and anger t
o use, the water in the basin serving as a mirror; and then, to the surprise and di
to laugh or be angry, "that feller's makin' me tired. S'pos'n' we go over an' give him a
r astonishment nor alarm; and Skip involuntarily halted a few paces awa
t you
chaps here made sure there m
at those who were surroun
wd, I should think you might be s'prised to s
y, as he stepped forward to Skip's side. "We didn'
did you wa
yin' 'round this city very long. There was a chap jest like you come down h
, 'cause there's nobody wants to know where I am. So go ah
any threatening gestures, because the stranger was not at all disturbed b
n, instead of going away, as Skip and his friends seemed to think he should have done as soon as they arrived, he stood with his
y to defy them; and the latter finally asked, impatiently: Well, what're you fel
ve here?"
in' here, an' don't feel like leavin' till
id you c
arana
n a parlor-c
ose wrong, 'c
once more Skip scrutinise
ost anything for a feller to wash his face, comb his hair, or have his cloth
F YOU COUNT ON STAYIN' ROUND TH
the interest of yo
quiet reply. "That's my calkerlation; but
d br
one hand, while he guarded himself against a possible attack. "There were twenty
t would be worth his while to cultivate; and, in order to show his friendliness, he seated himself, in a st
money enough for my ke
ellin' papers?
cause I've got to make money enough for my
s your
y Thu
per business, are goin' to have you comin' in takin' the
ny money in it, jest as long as I want to. I didn't travel all the way down here to get scared the first day. You see, I figger it 'bout like this: Sam Thompson, he came to the city last summer, an' some fellers-I don't know whether it was you or not-made it hot for him. It wasn't more'n a week before he w
ing the fact that Skip was sarcastic. "
fter I'm settled down, it'll be a pret
oin' to begi
, somewhere. I reckon there are fellers in this town that would show a
expressive. "If you want to go to work, an' mind your eye, I don't know but it can be done; but you won't get alon
his new acquaintances. "You see, I'm pretty green, an' may
a new hand can go to work, that
aps I may come down 'cordin' to your idees; but jest now I've got too much business on hand;" and the stranger walked away, as if
a state of intense excitement over the most trifling matters, "the way he's goin' o
d asked in much too quiet a to
es to sell a paper, to start with, an' run
n tackle him now when h
n' the first time he tucks a bundle of papers
ver in Brooklyn!" Teenie Massey cried, in his shrillest to
was his favourite amusement to arouse Skip's anger, and rely upon his diminutive stature to escape a whipping; for Master Jellison prided himself upon his ability to flog any fellow of his size in New York. "You fellers meet m
in in the city; but continued on his way down-town, ignorant of, and, perhaps, careless regarding, the fact that he was to be d