The Circus Comes to Town, by 
Lebbeus Mitchell 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Circus Comes to Town, by 
Lebbeus Mitchell This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no 
cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give 
it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License 
included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net 
Title: The Circus Comes to Town 
Author: Lebbeus Mitchell 
Illustrator: Rhoda Chase 
Release Date: November 3, 2005 [EBook #16991] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
CIRCUS COMES TO TOWN *** 
 
Produced by Emmy and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at 
http://www.pgdp.net 
 
[Illustration: This is my Book]
[Illustration: "JERRY KEPT FASCINATED EYES ON THAT 
CHALKY WHITE FACE." 
"The Circus Comes to Town." (See Page 128)] 
 
The Circus Comes to Town 
BY LEBBEUS MITCHELL 
AUTHOR OF "One Boy Too Many" and "Here, Tricks, Here!" 
[Illustration] 
CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY PUBLISHERS --- NEW YORK 
OTHER LEBBEUS MITCHELL BOOKS PUBLISHED BY 
CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY ARE 
ONE BOY TOO MANY 
& 
HERE, TRICKS, HERE! 
THE CIRCUS COMES TO TOWN COPYRIGHT, 1921, BY LITTLE, 
BROWN, AND COMPANY 
PRINTED IN U.S.A. 
[Illustration: Contents] 
 
Contents 
CHAPTER PAGE 
I. "ASK YOUR MOTHER FOR FIFTY CENTS" 1
II. THE BLACK HALF-DOLLAR 18 
III. THE WIDTH OF AN ELEPHANT'S TAIL 37 
IV. JERRY LEARNS THAT O-U-T SPELLS OUT 49 
V. THE GREEN ELEPHANT BUYS AN AUDIENCE 65 
VI. THE CHILDREN THAT CRIED IN THE LANE 80 
VII. TICKETS TO PARADISE 97 
VIII. THE CROCODILE TEARS OF CELIA JANE 112 
IX. CLOWN OF CLOWNS 127 
X. "GREAT SULT ANNA O'QUEEN" 142 
XI. A BOY NAMED GARY 157 
XII. THE DIZZY SEAT OF GLORY 171 
XIII. "--AND ELEPHANTS TO RIDE UPON" 188 
 
THE CIRCUS COMES TO TOWN 
CHAPTER I 
"ASK YOUR MOTHER FOR FIFTY CENTS" 
The apple seemed to Jerry Elbow too big to be true. 
He held it out at arm's length to get a good squint at its bigness and its 
redness. Then he turned to look wonderingly after the disappearing 
automobile with the lady who had tossed him the apple for directing 
her to the post office. A long trail of dust rose from the unpaved street 
behind the motor car.
Next he addressed himself to the business of eating the apple. He 
rubbed it shiny against his patched trousers, carefully hunted out the 
reddest spot on it, and took a big, luscious bite. Instead of chewing the 
morsel at once, he crushed it against his palate just to feel the 
mellowness of it and to get the full flavor of the first taste of juice. 
Then he chewed vigorously. 
He started on to Mother 'Larkey's where he had made his home for 
nearly three years, ever since Mr. Mullarkey, dead this year now, had 
found him by the roadside one dark night. He had just started to take a 
second bite when a shout stopped him. 
"Hi, Jerry! What you got?" 
Instinctively Jerry hid the apple behind him, for it was Danny 
Mullarkey's voice that he had heard. 
"Jerry's got something to eat!" Danny called over his shoulder to some 
one out of sight. "Come on, kids!" 
Jerry hastily swallowed the piece of apple in his mouth and bit off the 
very largest chunk he could. He knew by long and bitter experience 
how little would be left for him after the Mullarkey brood had all 
nibbled at it. 
Danny, who was past nine, reached him before Jerry could gulp down 
that mouthful and take another bite, as he had intended to do. Chris and 
Nora followed at Danny's heels, with Celia Jane, as usual, far in the 
rear. 
"Save me a bite, Jerry!" called Celia Jane. 
"Give me a bite of your apple, Jerry," coaxed Danny. 
"Me, too," echoed Chris. 
"It looks awful nice," observed Nora. "Where'd you get it?" 
Jerry explained and handed her the apple first because she had not
asked for a bite. Nora bit off a small piece and was passing it on to 
Celia Jane, who ran panting up to them, when Jerry stopped her by 
urging: 
"Take a bigger bite than that, Nora. I want you to." 
"Not till after you've had your turn again," replied Nora, who was 
nearly eight and was celebrated in the Mullarkey household for a finer 
sense of fair play than any of the others possessed. 
Celia Jane was greedy and bit off so big a chunk that she could not 
cram it into her mouth, despite her heroic efforts to accomplish that 
feat. 
"That ain't fair, Celia Jane," reproved Nora. "Mother told you never to 
do that again." 
"That's two bites!" cried Danny. "Take it out and bite it in two." 
Celia Jane's mouth was too full for utterance. She    
    
		
	
	
	Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
 
	 	
	
	
	    Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the 
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.
	    
	    
