<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p class="titleblock" style="font-size: 200%;">THE TALE OF</p>
<p class="titleblock" style="font-size: 255%; letter-spacing: 0.1em; margin-bottom: 10px;">JASPER JAY</p>
<p class="titleblock" style="font-size: 80%;">BY</p>
<p class="titleblock" style="font-size: 130%; margin-bottom: 5px; word-spacing: 0.5em;">ARTHUR SCOTT BAILEY</p>
<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_1" id="p_1"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="I" id="I"></SPAN>I</h2><h3>A NOISY ROUGE</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">Some</span> of the feathered folk in Pleasant
Valley said that old Mr. Crow was the
noisiest person in the neighborhood. But
they must have forgotten all about Mr.
Crow's knavish cousin, Jasper Jay. And
it was not only in summer, either, that
Jasper's shrieks and laughter woke the
echoes. Since it was his habit to spend his
winters right there in Farmer Green's
young pines, near the foot of Blue Mountain,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_2" id="p_2"></SPAN></span>on many a cold morning Jasper's
ear-splitting "<i>Jay! jay!</i>" rang out on the
frosty air.</p>
<p>At that season Jasper often visited the
farm buildings, in the hope of finding a
few kernels of corn scattered about the
door of the corn-crib. But it seemed to
make little difference to him whether he
found food there or not. If he caught the
cat out of doors he had good sport teasing
her. And he always enjoyed that.</p>
<p>Jasper was a bold rowdy—but handsome.
And Farmer Green liked to look
out of the window early on a bleak morning
and see him in his bright blue suit
frisking in and out of the bare trees. Still,
Farmer Green knew well enough that Jasper
Jay was a rogue.</p>
<p>"He reminds me of a bad boy," Johnnie
Green's father said one day. "He's mischievous
and destructive; and he's forever
screeching and whistling. But there's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_3" id="p_3"></SPAN></span>
something about him that I can't help liking....
Maybe it's because he always
has such a good time."</p>
<p>"He steals birds' eggs in summer,"
Johnnie Green remarked.</p>
<p>"I've known boys to do that," his father
answered. And Johnnie said nothing
more just then. Perhaps he was too busy
watching Jasper Jay, who had flown into
the orchard and was already breakfasting
on frozen apples, which hung here and
there upon the trees.</p>
<p>When warm weather came, the rogue
Jasper fared better. Then there were insects
and fruit for him. And though Jasper
took his full share of Farmer Green's
strawberries, currants and blackberries,
he did him no small service by devouring
moths that would have harmed the grapes.</p>
<p>But in the fall Jasper scorned almost
any food except nuts, which he liked more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_4" id="p_4"></SPAN></span>
than anything else—that is, if their shells
were not too thick. Beechnuts and chestnuts
and acorns suited him well. And he
was very skilful in opening them. He
would grasp a nut firmly with his feet and
split it with his strong bill. Johnnie
Green could not crack a butternut with his
father's hammer more quickly than Jasper
could reach the inside of a sweet beechnut.</p>
<p>Though Jasper hated to spend any of
his time during the nutting season by doing
much else except <i>eat</i>, he was so fond
of nuts that he always hid away as many
as he could in cracks and crevices, and
buried them under the fallen leaves.</p>
<p>You see, he was like Frisky Squirrel
in that. He believed in storing nuts for
the winter. But since he had no hollow
tree in which to put them, it was only natural
that he never succeeded in finding<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_5" id="p_5"></SPAN></span>
every one of his carefully hidden nuts. He
left them in so many different places that
he couldn't remember them all. Those
that he lost in that fashion often took root
and grew into trees. And so Jasper Jay
helped Farmer Green in more ways than
one.</p>
<p>But no doubt Jasper would have
shrieked with laughter had anybody suggested
such an idea to him.</p>
<hr class="chapter" />
<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_6" id="p_6"></SPAN></span></p>
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