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"I underland," said Diana; "I would not bweak my word; that would be mean." "Well, let us go now." Diana slipped off the little bench on which she had seated herself. She was still in her circus dress; her little bow was hung at her side, her arrow slung round her neck. Orion was also in his pretty dress, with his tiny sword and belt, his blue jacket and little white knickers.

These were not hastily tossed aboard, but placed where they would be out of the way of the one who was using the long push-pole. "Thank goodneth we've got our camp hatchet along," remarked Ted, as he took his place, "tho even if we do lose or bweak our pole we can alwayth cut another one." "Yep, I never go intuh the swamp without my hatchet," asserted Johnny.

The question was more loudly answered by Furlong, who roared out, "Bweak the door! bweak the door!" interlarding his directions with cries of "mu'der!" The door at length was forced, Furlong rescued, and the old lady separated from him.

Bayard, as well as every share of Northern Consolidated delivered to perfect those sales that had brought him down in ruin in short, if he had been told the whole romance, from Mr. Fopling's exhortation to "Bweak him!" to the close of the market on that crashing Friday afternoon, he might have been less sure of recapturing those French shares.

And I would lend you my beasts an' fings, because I know you wouldn't bweak them?" "See that Berta has her share in them meanwhile. Off with you, now!"