Lizzies Tiger -1
arriage; ly uncooked almost put ing mood, but t is not to say emper. So t, ten-like upon cruly loved t daughter, whose obduracy recalled his own.
Emma unhandily darned a sock.
"Get t co bed before I lose my temper!"
Emma dropped t in dour lines of affront as sed on tling stratress -- oat straest and c -- sat t in a sunbeam. Sment. It midsummer, only six oclock and still brigside.
S on to tool upon o tcood open for air beo Father.
Next-doors lean and famisself at t concealed ts on trotting doreet, ent. S be denied. tinkled in might signify a profane church.
"ts a tiger," Emma old ed ter on their fence.
"A tiger is a big cat," Emma added instructively.
?
A very big cat.
A dumpy, red-striped, regular cat of tic variety greeted Lizzie op a gatepost as sumped determinedly along Ferry Street; our cat, Ginger, imental er protracted spinsterimes call Miss Ginger, or even Miss Ginger Cuddles. Lizzie, ernly ignored Miss Ginger Cuddles. Miss Ginger Cuddles sneaked. t put out a pao detain o suggest sook second ts as to , for all t decision one firm foot before t t idea t all tan, barking dog of unforeseen breed t could go pleased.
ts easy-going grin took a fancy to Lizzie and, yapping tle figure in te pinafore as it marc to pat its head. She was a fearless girl.
t took a fancy to tle on one particular tree. to t clo sook tle legs could not ke