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First, here will be a recompense for all that have sincerely laboured in the word and doctrine I say, a recompense for all the souls they have saved by their word, and watered by the same. Now, all the preaching, praying, watching, and labour thou hast been at, in thy endeavouring to catch men from Satan to God, shall be rewarded with spangling glory.

There was, of course, much to tell about on both sides, and after dinner the family gathered in the big sitting room, in front of a cheerful, blazing fire. Mr. Anderson Rover listened with keen interest to what his sons had to say about Jasper Grinder and Dan Baxter. "I sincerely trust they do not plot against us," he said. "I am getting old, and I want no more trouble."

The two Hague Conferences of 1899 and 1907 did little but reveal the mutual fears and suspicions of the European nations, though many statesmen, especially English and American, laboured sincerely to make the Hague Conventions the guarantee of a lasting peace.

As I sincerely love him, I have forgotten it; and I do not believe that we shall ever quarrel in future. When I have anything to say about his conduct, I say it openly, and there is an end of it. He behaves to me very respectfully. I did all in my power to prevent his marriage; but since it did take place, and with his consent, though without mine, I wish now only for his tranquillity.

In this way the news of the disaster reached Sir Henry Clinton at breakfast. After the surrender, Wayne wrote the following letter to Washington: Stony Point, 16th July, 1779, 2 o'clock. Dear General, The fort and garrison with Colonel Johnson are ours. Our officers and men behaved like men who are determined to be free. Yours most sincerely, Ant'y Wayne. General Washington.

My answer went as follows: "Dear John: I will come to your commencement and bring you back with me for a short time. I may take you on a fishing trip to Canada. Sincerely, Uncle Bill." The youngster as he came into the school drawing-room was a thing to remember. He was a tall boy, and he looked like his father.

Then why had the man he had heard in the church beside him testified so forcibly and sincerely to his healing? Well, he would wait and see. He did not see what it could do for him now. He had to work. He sat there in one corner, his hands folded and braced under his chin, thinking. The room was not artistic but rather nondescript, the furniture cheap or rather tasteless in design.

But it would be a blow to me." "I sincerely trust that Peregrine may marry early," said Mrs. Orme, perhaps thinking that babies were preferable either to rats or foxes. "Yes, it would be well I am sure, because you have ample means, and the house is large; and you would have his wife to love." "If she were nice it would be so sweet to have her for a daughter.

"I'll bet I can call the turn, eh, Jack?" Rebener glanced across the table to Edestone, with a twinkle in his eye. "Didn't the chap also tell you with great seriousness, 'Lord Denton, that he had pulled off more good deals in his 'little canoe' than in all the hotel corridors put together?" "Well, I sincerely hope it's the same," said "Lord Denton."

She felt that she was acting almost falsely in going on with such questions, while she was in fact aware of all the circumstances which Mrs Askerton could tell but she did not know how to declare her knowledge and to explain it. She sincerely wished that Mrs Askerton should be made acquainted with the truth; but she had fallen into a line of conversation which did not make her own task easy.