My dad used to tell me it wasn't the size of the dog in the fight. It was the size of the fight in the dog. That principle applies to a video showing a Missouri boy using his tiny truck to pull his big brother's adult-sized truck.
A YouTube channel posted a video ranking the 10 Fun Places to go in Illinois with kids, and I gotta be honest I think she nails this list, except I would add one major place she missed!
Children ages 5 to 12 will have a jolly time creating holiday gifts at the Hannibal Arts Council’s popular annual event Holly Jolly Hands-On Holiday Workshop to be held on Saturday, Dec. 5. Two time options will be offered this year to accommodate busy schedules and an increased number of participants. Participants may choose to attend either a two-hour workshop beginning at Noon or beginning at 3
The Hannibal Arts Council will present the Wild & Wacky Art Adventure, a FREE hands-on arts festival for kids 3 to 12 and their families, from 9:00 a.m. to Noon on Saturday, August 1 in Hannibal’s Central Park.
A trip to the dentist usually doesn't usually come to mind when a kid thinks "fun" (or an adult, for that matter), but the dentists and staff at Advanced Dental Care in Quincy are planning a special event for kids that sounds like a pretty good time. Wacky Wednesday Kids Day is coming up on June 17. The crew at Advanced Dental Care took a minute to answer a few questions about the event.
Valentine's Day is approaching, and the Hannibal Arts Council's next First Friday Art Adventure will have the theme "close to my heart" to tie in to the season. During this event, area children will be creating a bottle cap locket project.
Quincy Community Theatre is asking kids, preschool through 6th grade, to help decorate the entrance to 'Seussical: The Musical,' which runs February 6 - 9. Kids are asked to use their imaginations to illustrate the world of Who. Drawings can be mailed to Quincy Community Theatre, or dropped off at the theater office at the Oakley-Lindsay Center. Drawings must be received by February 6.
U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin and other Democrats are asking energy drink companies not to market to children and to stop making products available in schools.