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Page 4 (1/1)

Of course that lady had kept up with the ti Mrs Lennox had ever seen, what must her new one be, with all theher head upon the ht how proud she would be could she live to see her daughter in similar circumstances to the envied Mrs Woodhull, at that moment in the crowded car between Boston and Silverton, tired, hot, and dusty, worn out, and as nearly cross as a fashionable lady can be

A call fro out into the square entry she tied his ginghae he took with him in sunshine and in storon and drove briskly away in the direction of the depot, where he was to meet his niece

"I wish Cousin Morris had offered his carriage," she thought, as the corn-colored and white wagon disappeared from view "The train stops five rand people will be likely to see the turnout," and with a sigh as she doubted whether it were not a disgrace as well as an inconvenience to be poor, she repaired to the kitchen, where sundry savory s over the sink, with her cap strings tucked back, her sleeves rolled up, and her short, purple calico shielded from harm by her broad,the silvery onions, and occasionally wiping her di for her At another table stood Aunt Hannah, deep in the ht, white crust which was to cover the tender chicken boiling in the pot, while in the oven bubbled and baked the custard pie, re by Helen herself--plain-spoken, blue-eyed Helen--now out in the strawberry beds, picking the few luscious berries which almost by a miracle had been coaxed to wait for Katy, who loved thee would iht little sister, for she remembered well that even to her obtuse perceptions there had co in a place where the etiquette of life was rigidly enforced, she had returned to their homely ways, and felt that it orse than vain to try to effect a change But Helen's strong sense, with the help of two or three good cries, had carried her safely through, and her humble home amid the hills was very dear to her now But she was Helen, as the ht be lonely and ho herself to sleep in her patient sister's arua, which Helen remembered so well