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rned. No, you can't drive--I have to keep my mind busy some way and driving is a good plan." "Why are we going to Fernwood?" asked Twaddles. "Daddy said it was about freight." "And you don't see why we slight the Oak Hill station--is that it?" Sam returned good-naturedly. "Well, Twaddles, this consignment got side-tracked and it's some new office equipment your father wants right away; it is quicker to drive over and get it, than have it re-routed." Twaddles said "Oh," and immediately wanted to know how many miles it was to Fernwood. "Ten or twelve," said Sam. "And mind you dress warmly enough." "Oh, I have lots to wear," Twaddles assured him. "This is my last year coat, you know." "But you want to remember the wind blows pretty hard on that back road," said Sam. "If you think you're going to be the least bit chilly, you'd better put plenty of newspapers around you." "You think you can tease me, but you can't," Twaddles told him scornfully. "Paper isn't warm." "That's just where you make your mistake," declared Sam gravely. "There is nothing warmer than paper--fold two or three newspapers under your sweater and you can face the stiffest wind and be comfortable." Twaddles looked unconvinced. But when he went back to the house and asked Norah, she, too, said that newspapers kept out the cold. "Say, Dot," said Twaddles to his twin two minutes later. "Sam and Norah say newspapers will keep you warmer than--than anything. Let's fix some." Dot thought he was playing a joke on her, but when he finally made her understand, she was willing to wear a newspaper or two and be cozy. "Oh, we want more than one or two," said Twaddles, who liked a heaping measure of everything. "Come on down cellar and you fix me and I'll fix you." Norah kept all the old newspapers in the cellar, in a corner, and every three weeks a man came around and bought them. "I don't know exactly how to do it, but you stand still and I'll tie them on," directed Twaddles. He had brought a ball of cord with him and now he went to work to wrap the papers around the plump Dot. He opened them out wide and she held them around her by using her arms till he had a quantity of the sheets rolled about her. Then he took his string and wound that around her several times and tied it in a strong knot. "I don't see how I can get my sweater and coat on over this," objected Dot when she was declared "finished." "Oh, they'll go
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