Atwood Bee, 10 Nov 1893, p. 3

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hamper, and was now holding it up for admiration by the legs. The turkey could emeotionr, ** Sazanne !" he exclaimed {ao a tone of exact moment when he was on the very verge of the precipice!" , kneckout blow. Looking at beth men's records Ib te! fii EE a -- " ' "Alten Water. 5 i You see, with enly « double | master to en his cloak, handed him Tu ea compartocn their physiques might. Flow gently, sweet Afton, among thy green. {him ® man gote te sleep 'estle shin | een re v PUG ! ONS IDEAS, out of "bere Corben sinads ex Soot ; *, ,' jafternece, and the Care s chin. | " Monssiguear will take a little refresh- ' ons and Mitchell is net quite five feat Bre a aes Hine |hee s song te the praise,| And he had » dream--the dream éf «| meet," he . a aine. My sre aclcop oe by the eas distarb not. her Ib wad the timpioch deenes ie eata: Bee The Bishep was clere by, so a 7 * . COMPARING THE FIGHTERS. Pang dream." : was sorely sftiing ot hia table; it a ere ge seemnicaien wat timp sible. 'Doesn't Think Mitchell Can Stand] cortett's reach is between twe and three Thos Ss © whose echo resounds through | vistte under his three chizs, and the | ness, and Suranne closed the door behind ans ork than that of The Yo wild whistling black birds in yon thorny |tarkey was before him, and he wns him. * : Against Corbett Long. Eagishuan Mitchell hes lod's power yo of it. 'Thatwas the whole dreain./ Very] The Bishop suddenly turned round. In she Eat alacant a wen Thou green crested lapwing, thy screaming for-|etmple, you say, but then the was| three strides he bad cressed the hall, and oui , : dene to » turn. before Sazanne j what he was doing he oo poke vk _ mig --_ I charge you disturb not my efumbering fair, Ho was jast saying, " You will fifd seme | bad reached the on lead ee ae that ef Seemeriag oe How lofty, sweet Afton, thy neighboring bi plokings 'back, Suzanne," knew the' ploasan rhea 4 Far murtsd with the cours of cat Winding [be awoke, "He rubbed hls oyeny"be wal " Pattee yerete kindle eae eee ale COULD WHIP EITHER. |r ted) but tls conan wets tod caret There daily I wander as noon rises high, |*stonisbed that the turkey was no lenger | of bread and a glass ef water." -- | S ros for yours will toll in his basale Stak My flocks and my Marg's sweet cot in my eye. ke tng pracgicon' Te Moneelgneur----" began Bezsune. Mis High Opinion of Jackson and Wigher of : / deor was epen, ine exqui- ¢t was too late. Tne door was alread Mr. Fitzsimmons--Thinks Corbett Geod > that Cerbets How pant thy banks and green valleys site odor of reast turkey pervaded the room. | open. 'There in frent of the Bishop was the for 100 Rounds--Mitchell is Tee Fat. base Ltvoes fa" tien werld, kgf F ck sa Where wild in the woodlanas the primroses |Sozanne was certainly cooking the bird. reast tarkey, still » and - ' kept his system pri cleir of alochelis blow, 'TheCare sighed. _Life is fall of disilln- | ously diffusing all around it an appedsing TRONG-MOUTHED pretty. Where oft as mild evening weeps over the lea, pe ! a sila Fi excesses. Hoe magn Tong. 'honk. apd knows The sweet scented birk shades my Mary andjSiens. .' I wish I had not awoke," he sald, : what he is deing, and will train mere care- me.. [a little ishly. '* The dream was nicer} The Bishop almost started at the spsc- talks to the New York fall hens b- I have , ";,[tbam this. I wonder what o'clock {6 is?" |taole. What! One of his clergy feasting Herald on the ince KX leek aire aad contain Th scryetal stream, Afton, how lovely it He pulled eut his watch. " Dear me, it {s }in this way on a Friday in Advent! I» was! Corbett-Mitchell mill -: better form than Corbett was the night nd winds by the cot where my Mary resides, [already five." intolerable. Such enermities might pass 1 is not one why there |, met Ballivan at New Orleans, 'If be' te How wanton thy waters her snowy feet lave Av5 the Care dined, and Sazanne was|unheeded among Pretestants, witn whom should be so "pee tia aa good fettle whea e facea M ttohell As gathering sweet flowers she stems thy clear punctuality fteelf. At that moment there was no discipline, bus ia b's charch it ulatien ever the out ~. be Mi wave. . --Burns. f the match be- Ican't pessibly see but one resulh As she put in ber head. *M. le Care, le diner | was different. He bore-a swerd, and he tat Corbett a |Tegerds the science of both men, I think ; est servi," she said. weuld not bear it in vain. Mitchell. To my mind |O°rbett eutclasses Mitchell. He will be : The Care got ups and walked acress| He leoked round. Soainne had fied, fear- ; : my much mere rapid and catiike, and the #|the hall into the ether room, his dining-|ing, parhap), te be excommunicated on the} Oe eT welehh well that Mitshell hae aaa, _ te tesen. "Dux femins facti," said the Bishop te ™Sy put upa little better fight than did |£°° ghee, pe Ma Whenth comes ts '* A hamper for M. le Cure." Bazsnne lifted the cover. Yes, it was [himeclf. 'I fearsheis a had woman. A Sullivan, as he will no deudt enter the ring a beat punch is a straight left hand "Bien! Bs good enough to epen it,firae! There was the tarkey, plamp and jtarkey in Advent! It is strange hew many 15 conditien. Mitchell is too cunning a jab for the and face. I expect te sea Suzanne." brewn ani juicy, exhaling the most ex- | women are wicked at heart." man to allow any stone to untarned him pokedt into Mitchell's face o Sazanne did as she was told.- M. le Cure, | quisite odors under his very nese. There} Then be drew clorer 6) ths table and: te win thisfight I know if Mitchell was I am pretty weil up 'myself on straight letb in soutane, at a» his desk, awai this | was a terrible mental le. He turned |notloed™the knife in the dish, and the ferk ; fighting me I would be willing to bet that hand jab awd hace dene seme pretty mew revelation. He bad great faith im the] at first very red--the binsh that waits opon | still sticking in the tarkey's breast. | he would not last eight reunds. tive work on Maher and others, whom I unscen--as regstd-d parcels, acrime ; then palo--he was formisga| " Arrested in the very act!" he said ; 'tin should Corbett allow him te go any farther bdem't care' about mentioning. Mitchell's **O, Monsteur, v'ia je beau dinden !" stern resolve; thon nearly blue--this was |fiagrante delicte. But not a mouthful Oorbstt is » heavier man by 20 or 30 pounds, best panch is a left hand swing for the She had extricated 'the turkey frem the] the strangulating effect of cenfiicting jeateo. That I should have come at that but he deesn't seem tobe abie to deliver a stemach as he docs aside step toward the ; ' Mike" ° did nobquits ander- mot but hang its head. If it was thelrepacach. Oh, the Eve-like oraft of the e sat dewn, strack the strange simply absurd te consider Mitchell as any- moment of Suzanne's triumph, it was also ! Be fatality of the affair. Teere was breed where mear a winner. Compare their sively woke rican Gghhon as the moment ef the turkey's bamillstion.}| 'Mats M.leCare comminded me to | upon the table almost under his hand. He records: Mitchell has only fought two the time Mitchell his first Life non unsven balsnce ; page beet " cook it!" began tecrambleit. Then he put a little ---- in rs -- -- both drawa. = in this try appearance ene scale means always the depression ** Cook it ?--yes," answered the Oure ard |into his mouth. He was hungry--he had feught '* Jack" Bur ® race track nena ' the other. stopped short. stg nothing since the shousles. The | England with bare knuckles fdr about an MITCHELL'S EFFECTIVE BODY BLOWS. 6 not ecclesiastics right in their dread of women'? Is not every woman a bern temptreas? Aod the worst of it is you can never cure them. Here, for instance, had this abandonéd woman been enjoying Yor gears the advantage of living inthe same house with a really good man, who lsd overand over again pointed ont to hor exactly what she ought to do and what shs ought te leave undone, and yet all this did not prevent her from playing the temptress when a faverable opportanity presented iteelf. And the Cure was so huogry ! Nevertheless, he would not give away without a struggle. He laid down his knife and tork. M. le Curs got up with Signity He was short and stent, with small bieck eyes, and plump cheeks, seni thick Upr, aod a treble chin. Had be not been a priest, you might have fsncied that he was a little sensual Bat he had foreworn the werld. Still, there is scme- thing loterrsting even to a priest in a tur? key at Christm:s 'ime, He went up te the bird still pen4ent f-om the hand of Sazanne. He even weot so f.ras to apply his thamb and forefinger to the breact--net an eager pinch, but one calm and critical, such as be- came a man cf his vrofessien. . ** A plomp bird, Suzanne, eh 7" For s moment Suz.snoe was enthusiastic. It was a turxey of othousand. She might bread he was taking excited the saliva glands and made his appsti wondered whether geing to bring him anyth speken of bread and water, 5 in his mind there had been the vision of an emelette. Ax omelette is innocent ai any time, and yet it-is tasty and nourishing. But thefe was no sign of Sazanne, and con- sequently no of an omaletve. ** T shall be fit for nothing at this rate," said the Bishop to himself, very sternly. **I feel podtively fainting. I shall net be abl» te get through my sfork." And still the tarkey steamed before him, and every exhalation was fresh testimony to its sucoulense. Poor, neglested bird ! 'hour, and they afterward fought numerous yst keener, | draws was W He had - him in three rounds gees over to Eagland and pute Pritchard éut in four rennda, and I knosked "' Jim" Hall eut ia four rounds, having bsaten him and where does he really class ? say he csnnot s:and befere me for eight rounds I think there is argument. in England and in this country. hen Pritchard met Barks he smetherad then " Jim" Hall twloe before, Take this line on Mitchell, Whea I loge inmy CHAMPION CORBETT 'S RECORD, Now, look ever Corbett's record. he was enly an amateur he bested "' Jack " | Pec Barke in eight rounds easily, and on three Cleary was s knocker out, and fought en- tirely for the head ; and Mischell's centina- L. Sallivan down at Madisen Sqaare Gardem when the big fellew was in his prime. He wiil prebabdly play for Cerbett's stom- ach, as he won't be able to reach exoopt when he is deliv punch. And 'as he is oa ing his righ '* What else is there, Suzinne?' he asked. © : _ "Batthere fs nething elas, M. le Cure." "* Oh," said the Care, 'that is very, very wrong ef yeu." eocasions he whipped "' Jue ' Choynski ; he outpoloted "' Jake" Kilrain with perfect ease. He easily defeated Dominick Mo- Caffrey, who told me he did net land en Corbett, while he could easily outpsint have setn larger--yes, that was quite pos- alble--but never, ne never, a plumper one. Would M. io Cara put himself te the treubie to notice the d-pth of fiseh upon the breast-*one * It seemed te prevoke the knife of the carver--to implore the attention of seme kindly eater. - A' last the Bishop was so much dis- himself can stand much bedy punching, as after he Ho felt tnat it was indeed very wrong ; for, afer all, if a man may nod eat meat, he must eat semething. He cannot nourish & treble chin on air alone. ** It lg very wrong of you," be repeated. Then, in sheer absence of mind, he took up bis fork and began p-ickiag the turkey with the prongs. Now, man is; after all, so much ef a creature of habit taat I-defy you to have a fork in your naads for mere than a few seconds without the fork finding the way to your moath ; you do not censclonsly She held the bird uo higher as she spoke, Then, all at enoe, a change osme over her expression, ** We will have it on Christmas Day," said the Cure, and hs eyes twinkled. " Mais, M. le Cure--" began Sazanne, a Uttle timidly. * - ** Wail, what is it?" *' It hae, perisps, been a little leng on the way," sald 5.z.nne, ** You mean {: wiil not keep ?" ** It wouid be perfect if M. le Oare would have it to-day." '* Bat tha: is tmpossible. It is Friday-- in Advent too," ** It willoo- keep til] Sanday." ** Oa, dear !" ead the Care. " Lst me look at the 'abel, Suzanne." It was trae. The bird had not come © flying. I: had syparently been mizsent to some out of the-way place, where it had d remsined several days, probably in some clone apartmen:, '*It would be a thousand pibies for se fine a bird to be throwniipway," romerked the Cure, as tf to himself. Sczsnne agreed with him, respe.tfully yet eagerly. '"* And yer «hat is to be done?" con- tinued the Care, The Care wes a good man, or he might have acived the proniem [ma moment. Or, rather, thera weold have been re prob- lem to sive. Bot hfe is fall of preb'ems for good people. Others may walk straigh» to their object, bat the good man musteitde*«n and think the matter out in all ite bear:ogs. M. le Care did not actually sit down ; en the contrary, he walked np and down the room. Every time he csme near the tarkey he sniffed alittle, and seid t himself thas the bird wou'd cartsiniy oot keep. This was the ene firm fact whico he nad to go upon. No, there was one other. It wasa fine bird, a very fine bird, an exosediugly. fine bird ; ite plump: ess was quite temarkable Most turkeys hav~'a very sharp breaatbone, needing some'imes, indeed, a kind o surgical operati.n to reduce it ts a seenly place it there--the hand cally. So ib was with the Cure. atady ? He paused ani then added, " Apropos, Sazaane, you had better keep the door of thia room ehat while I am with his lord- ship." @ move mechani- '* It was very wrong of you, Suzanne," he repeated once mere. Sazanne noticed that the wrongdoing had now been trans/erred to the past tense. The fork returnod méchanically te the breast of the turkey. All atonce taere wasa ring at the frenb oor. Suzaane weobto open it. Presently she returned, hor fasz flashed wich excite- ment. "It ta Monseigneur!" she exclaimed. Monseigneur was the Bishop. The Cure siarted up. . Sazanne noticed that the xnife was now in the dish with the fork : a0 mush progress had been made daring her brief absence. ** You have shown Monselgnenr into the Good! I will ge there at once." He had alresdy epeced it, and wason his way to the stady, wien Suz snngexcialmed, ** Mate, M. ie Cure, will not you take off your rerviette fires?" The Care looked down a little abashed. Yes, the serviette was resily tacked uoder 'hte chain, In bis burry he haf forgotven it. Bat how had !t come there at all when there had been nothing bat the forbidden tu:key before him ? In 'was certainly rather edd. The Bishop was gracieus and courtly, bit i he waea disciplinarian. * T have jas: heard," he ssid, as the Care enteréd the room, " of a very asd case, and I thoaght, as I was psssing your door, that I weuld tell you of it at ence. There is no time te ba lost "' level when on tha table. Bat this tarkey seemed to be allmesxt. Surely it mast bea sin to wastea bird like tnia. Giveit te the poor? No, certainly net! Isis not | im » good for the soul's h-a!tn, even of the poor, [ am at the command of Monseigneur, to cad turkey on a Friday in Advent. "rne, | a8wered the Care, deiefally. ** Io is a workman named Ls Bron and his family, who have jast come into your parish," esaidthe shop; ' Rue de Is Gaerre, Nof 8. He had fallen froma ladder, and grave fears are entertained. I think they have to starve on a good many flesh days, but you can't balance things in this way. Without adspmsation no one can eat meaton any fern een less a Friday in Advent. And only the bishop can grant «pee ct dhet on enaorcect oT Ee ant," sa r) Ib te terrible . ale what ri amount of Care, still mere doletully. The Rue de la evil haa been brought about by vi. | Guerre wae at the farthest extremity of bis Whena ths Cure asked ths qiestion, '* What, deh, Is eres purkues tes tal Chia' in to be done 2" he deked it in all innocence. ee news had ties uveciky venshel tee - Was Suzsane a3 innecent when abe, re- | He had said that he would go that very instant, bat he did not mége. The Bishop looked at him a litile sternly. "There isno time to be lost," he re- peated. *' I did not like to leave your lordship alene," said the Care, pe The turkey can be «lone, M. le Cure 2" ** Well, yes," eaid the Care, taking his three chins in hie right hacd and caressing them, ' there can.be no harm in that." Suzanne waited to hear. no more. Tak- ing the turkey wih her, she left the reom. 'peeping from the kitchen, glimps-d the The Care returned to his d ak. ** Ib 1s a cariou» thing," he saidto himself, ** that there is).othing in the Bi'le ahous turkeys." He had foryo ten for the meneaw Chst turkey- came originally from Amertos, | Then he went on -- or cen evel It od ae I have had nething since the was about elns of tne ff sh, acd' be found ip, ™° a very hatd work. H.s mid seemed all con-' " a et 1 will tell! fusion., O.ce he even canght himself writ- | "" Bat do pot delay te go.to . t tog on carer E yer. : pila Brua," said the Bishop oo Soranne * the -pots ef Egypt." Tis made him bas . smile, and, when y.va are alone and emile to | K20ws m>, and will not miad giving me a yourself, you generally mean it as a' kind ef dispensation from work. So he pat dewn! his pen and lay back in, his' great leathern | armchair. Then sometl i ha had. sfien happened befere-- with a smile. may remain here till yeu return. I have an engagement close by a little later,. the way, ceuld yo give af: a'morsel of ' ** Oh, don's mind me," sald the Bishop '* With your psrmlissioa I - By gusted with things in general thet he placked the fork out of the crea'ure's breast. | What business had one of his clergy eyer to | have stuck itin? Dieclpline must be main- tained, especially ig his diocase. He must give the Care a leeson--but how'? ** It is Rousseau," he said to himself, " who advocates the doctrine that in education all punishment aheuld be the natural consequence ef the fanlt com- mitted. In this case, forexample, 1 sup* pose he would say that this man's fault Mitche!l avd eutpnach him. His long fight with Peter Jackson places Corbett, in my estimation, ons higher pinnacie than his defeat of Sallivan. ' eel fally confident that I could have whipped Sallivan ia thrie rounds the night that he met.Corbett. Im fact, there were a number of.pesple in the business who could have bested him on thajéccasion ; bub I, long bave always had a suspicion that Cerbett's M battle with Jackson was net altogether on the level. would be mioss properly pun'shed by some "19 oe eating up vhe dinner he had criminally ordered to bs prepared for him- ; self. Itisa pity Rousseau was an infidel, , for there is certainly something in his "* Yes," he repeated, " there is cartainly ; something init. Butitcould not be car- ried o1t in this case without a certain ascri- fice 01 the part of some ene ele. And wno is thers te make the sacrifcs ?" "Rapt in meditation, he bent forward across the table, as ifhe would conault the turkey itself cmmGdentially on the sstj-ct. The oder that the bird sent forth was tude- acribably delicious. The Bishsp alghed. ** Someone, it is clear, must make the wacrifice," he said. 'If there fs anything wrong in it the guilt must rest on the original transgreseor." He took up the carving kulfe and felt the edge with bis thumb. It wae very keen. The turkey, it was clear, woald not be able to realst for a moment. 'Queensberry. At the latter game a man ef There was » job somewhere, for I .am ulte pesitive toat Jackson would have de- Under the | Wi eated Corbett on that eccasien. rales which Mitchell fights Corbett time --the Marquis of Queensberry--Mitchell has never tought teafinish, He tea far better London rule general than he is Mitohell's build has ay geod, if nov better, chance than one of Corbett's physique. Be- sides, Mitchell is a good wrestier and alittle bit on the rough and tumble order. In my opinion, if the present articles ef agreement are broken by the interference of the authorities ab Coney Iceland, Mitchel. in all pronability will propose te fight Corbett under on rules, as then he will haves better chance. His hands are ia fair oondi- tion, but in his fight with Sailivan in France his knuckles went to pieces, ar able te finish John L., who was really at his mercy, fighting him with one. hand, having fojared his right arm in the firs» part of the ** Yes, on ths origiosl transzresver," re- peated the Bishop; "ib is throngh him alone that this complication has arisen." Ten he teok up ibe fork. ** There ie no oae else to do it," he said ; * ** it bas been forced upon ms. Ib weuld be Wreng en my part te let him eacape the natural consequence ef his errer. Discipline must be mainiatoed. Ialonetn this dio- cese have the power to grant a dispensation, acd I hereby grant it--to myself." There was a half bubling, balf hissing' sound as the trenchant bivde mide a; deep incision in the turkey's breast ; then there was a slight clatter «f the knife and fork upon the plate as the B'shop began thé sacrifice, eate slowly and sternly ; he was dircharging a daty, and he dis-; chatged {it consslentiously, The dining- room doer was sl] open, and Sozanne, solemn ecene. . At the end of a quarter of an hour the Bisbop rese from the tabie, looking sterner than ever. ** cannot eat it all," he said to bim- self,, " bat I have done my best. I have at any rate sacoseded in reducing the temptatien. Tne cholcor morsels are now removed. 1 think the legs are probably tough." ¥ " . Then, without sammontng' Suzanne, he made his w to the hall and let himeelf eut at the frent door. Half ao heur later the Cure returned. ** Has Monselgneur gene ft" he asked. ** Monselgneur has gone and has taken the turkey with him." . * Taken the tarkey with him ?" '§ Moat of it,' eald Suzance. '* He has eaten it. Is it not very wicked ?" . The Cure went into the hall. Suozanne was there--there was generally semethin which | % be done im the hall when actually a visitor in the stady. She helped her / j '*No," said the Care, sadly, "a bishop can vive himself « dispsnsation." '* Ob, what a pity M. le Care fsn't a bishop !- It was such a be utifal b'r4." Was !--Roy Tellet in Longmans Maga fight with Mitchell: with bub very Little: puaishment--nod evea jab the Englishman cons left te keep him out ef harm's way. * In Cerbett's battle with Jackson, which is booked te take place next May, in my epinien, ib willeod in the defeat ef the -- champion. Jackson I bh big fellow-~bigger than Corbett in every (mighty sight him cub of condition, and: being limited number of rounds it saved Gaddard from defeat. Comparing Goddard and Jack- fight. . "rt I had been In Mitchell's place on that occasion I think I wouid have been pro- claimed champion at the finish If my hands were gone I .would have wrestled Satltvan a bit and thrown him down,having great advantage over him, as he could only use one arm., Sallivan was demoralized. by the cold sleeting rain, the intense pain frem his injured arm, the lack ef proper wind and the heavy mud and slush all over the ring. If Mitchell had really been a goed man he would have undoubtedly beaten Sallivan that day in Franoe, WILL. JAB THE ENGLISHMAN. I predict that Corbett will come out of his ink eye, He will with his leng consider the t heavyweight in the world. He is « way--just asclever,and he can punch a harder. Jackson has fought more hard finish fights under Q rales than any ether heavyweight in the world. He beat " Paddy" Slavin quite easily in-ten rounds, and Corbett positively refured te meethim. The enly man who has given him any battle whatever was ** Joe" Goddard, and the latter pot -- ya son is like the comparison ef an artist and a bill poster, + I will fight Corbett or "Mitchell at any time, ard' feel folly confident of bea either ofjtheém, bub I won's ge out of my class for Choynski er a lot'of other' second rate fighters, for to defeat them will not increase my reputation in pa way te any 'great extent ; nor either : I moet Peter. J n, whem I consider' the best hea ' ht in the world. Politeness. Every big man cannot beceme & cham- Miss Tailor--Oa, paps, Mr. De Sweete 9, pbysloalty --T ---- has been paying me a great deal of attention | D« Ys. tally, aince Pye aan. 7 . _ | man who wisbps te reach the top notch in _ be'd be ite to the pugilism. --~ blile I ocod ate - = ' Retaraing to Corbett and Mitchell, a he was ua- f bis "bellowa" wili be none toe goed Le and ths - viger of a man like Corbett, whe has really no flesh te takeoff, ee his mus- cles firm and his wind g Ceoing Earcfeeot. As te the healthiness of going without shoes or stockings there oan be no question. Some of the healthiest children of the world are to be found in the Scebttish Highlands, where shoes are seldom worn at an earlier age than 12 or 13. The negro and oeolie lab-. erers, who work barefooted, are usually tx xen hoalth. Brown, in the " of aD, that reason was that, by the laws of his king- dom, he alone was permitted te clethe his feet, 'and that he gratified his vanity by always wearing gorgeous sandals? Itis probably generalizing too much te atate asa medical fact that the barefooted races are the healthiest. Bat it is certain that baref-et are healthier than badly shod feet. In English vil oblidren are can- narnia 4 geht te school in wet weather with holes ia their shees. They sit for hours with damp feet, and illimesses-aro the re- sula If thelr parents would send them off barefooted, as is done in Scotland and Ire- land, thelr feeb would dry by evaporation in a short time, and it would be feand that no harm fellewed. ~ , _ The Basting Thread. It is custo through all of the -shops te sell large sponta of cearse, easily breakable cotten for basting. This ts almost.univer- sally used, and is very goed for many pur- . peser, but in making up fine materials it bas the ,ebjecion that {pt makes holes in the fabric, Ia basting silke er fice linens the very smallest needle and the mest delicate threads should be used. Ninety or 120 is not toe fine for putting eutelde and lining together, and a No. 8 or 9 needle should uve f for it. Fer basting up walnt seams poor cotton is not worth having. Te try on adress and have the seams give way simply because the cetten is nod strong en te hold a waste ef time, temper vi use of gold cotton fer basting seam' and the" é os ge The Little Teddling Feet. Watoh the liptle toddliog feet, and if they ~ show a disposition te " tee in" take the « little one en your lap after ite bath and bedtime and rub the outer side of The unsuccessful speculater is ameng those who find it particularly hard either ta settle down er settle up. : . ~ 4

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