St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, Vol. 5, Nov 1877-Nov 1878 - No 1, Nov 1877 by Various
page 117 of 206 (56%)
page 117 of 206 (56%)
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be pasted to look as if held in the hand.
[Illustration: A LITTLE NUN.] BEAN-BAG CASES. Are there any of you who do not know the game of bean-bags? It is capital exercise for rainy days, besides being very good fun, and we would advise all of you who are not familiar with it to make a set at once. Usually, there are four bags to a set, but any number of persons from two to eight can play at bean-bags. Each player holds two, flinging to his opponent the one in his right hand, and rapidly shifting the one in his left to the right, so as to leave the left hand free to catch the bag which is thrown at him. A set of these bags would be a nice present for some of you little girls to make for your small brothers; and there are various ways of ornamenting the bags gayly and prettily. The real bags must first be made of stout ticking, over-handed strongly all round, and filled (not too full) with white baking-beans. Over these are drawn covers of flannel, blue or scarlet, and you can work an initial in white letters or braid on each, or make each of the four bags of a different color--yellow, blue, red, green; anything but black, which is hard to follow with the eye, or white, which soils too soon to be desirable. [Illustration: DIAGRAMS FOR MAKING THE LITTLE NUN.] BABY'S SHOES IN CASHMERE. |
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