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    NATIONAL TOM SAWYER DAYS
    What do Tom Sawyer and jumping frogs have in common? Stories about both of them were
    created by one man: Mark Twain. Born Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain was his pen name), Twain
    was 4 when his family moved to Hannibal, Missouri, located on the west bank of the Mississippi.
    Twain grew up there and was fascinated with life along the river -- the steamboats, the giant lumber
    rafts, and the people who worked on them.
    "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" is one of Twain's best-loved short
    stories, and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer is one of his most famous novels. Both these works are
    celebrated by events held during National Tom Sawyer Days every fourth of July. The boy in the
    photo entered his frog in the jumping contest. There's also a fence-painting contest to see who can
    paint the fastest. The idea for this contest comes from a scene in Tom Sawyer, in which Tom has
    been told to paint the fence in front of the house he lives in. It's a beautiful day, and he would rather
    be doing anything else. As his friends walk by, he convinces them it's fun to paint, and they join in
    the "fun." By the end of the day, the fence has three coats of paint!
    Although the story of Tom Sawyer is fiction, it's based on fact. If you go to Hannibal, you'll
    see the white fence, which still stands at Twain's boyhood home.

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