Dotty Dimple At Home
ng' to me any more. Mamma said there mus'n't anybody tea
glad!" re
to the window," continued Dotty;
ghost, Dotty. N
, and there don't anybody know it. I shouldn't dare open my eyes in the night. They'r
d Prudy, stoutly; "my mot
. Why, Prudy, they're made out o' nothing! If you stick a knife into 'em it goes right through, and don't
y mother wouldn't like it if she knew how much you sat in Angeline'
I'd go right up to 'em, and, said I, 'How do you do, sir?' And then th
ning at the door. "You don't say so! Call me when
wee Katie, toddling in wi
y Dimple, "you've been a-l
a tell-tale, Miss!" said Johnny, en
, you mus'n'
hoed Katie, "you
y w
y M
n all laugh
in, appearing at the door, "put on
action which cousin Percy d
he, "how glad you
you know, Percy! Only think
as she danced off the door-step; "and I 'spect I'l
g the contrast. She did not like the wallpaper; the carpets were homely; the
," said Prudy, who, for one,
ittle daughters to learn to make the best of everything. We cannot have the old
es," laug
so we will make the new one as happy
mamma," replied
, trying to pull up the carpet in he
" said Prudy; "and the piano sounds as sweetly as ever it did. It
e wh
once, and it seems as if it was a man and his
rom aunt Eastman's," said Susy, bright
he new house: let us make it as cheerful as we can for dear papa
at I'll do! I'll make some vinegar candy!
daughter. Your part will be
nevitable lock of front hair; "if papa would only
sh that berry-stain off your lips; then you may bring
always glad to wear that white
d some time before, and the most Mrs. Parlin expected to do to-day was to make the house as pleasant as possible. Susy was allowed to attend to the flower
er hands. "Sometimes I don't much
This house has got a good dea
gs we can all find in our lot if we only look for them. Not that she would ever ha
p and ask grandmother if she will
wound about so much that Prudy said it twisted her lik
at the windows, and the August sunshine fell on her calm face, bathing it with warm light. The
wouldn't be nice here a bit, o
l be nice enough here to-morrow night. I
ing her little fingers over Mrs. Read's white ke
s question, "tell your mother I will take some c
sant for him to turn his steps towards that part of the town: he missed his old home more than ever. But when he entered the stra
sisters seized him by the coat-sleeves, "you ought to ha
talking. Cake, and verjerve
ising the 'Blue Violet
packus, un
ur eyes ache," went on Prudy; "and we
r canny," st
otty, covering the child's
at Mr. Parlin kept exclaiming, "Ah, indeed!" and stroking his beard. Prudy said
Parlin had drank a cup of delicious coffee, he no longer remembered that he
st of our misfortunes. But, after all, you are n
it's a story, papa
nothing in the world to eat but potatoes and salt. One day a friend went to see them, and when he sat down to t
just a-thinkin', neighbor, that this meal is altogether too goo
ldren l
w how she looked: it was just this way," said Prud
"for if she did, she might have laid 'em out doors a
-out" family, who had this very day moved into a house across the street. The mother she had seen from the window, and she looked perfectly discourage
reeze their potatoes
trying to improve matters
g, the door-bell rang furiously, and shook for a minute afterwards, as
you in the n