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W.E. Colburn's Paris, and belonging to Mrs. L. Kemp, of Huron, S. Dak.; Silver Dick, a gorgeous buff and white, whose grandmother was Mrs. Colburn's Caprice, and who is owned by Mrs. Porter L. Evans, of East St. Louis; Toby, a pure white with green eyes, owned by Mrs. Elbert W. Shirk, of Indianapolis; and Amytis, a chinchilla belonging to Mrs. S.S. Leach, of New London, sired by Mrs.

Randolph at all," was the answer aside. But I begged to see it. Now this was a comfortable, soft quilted silk cap, with a chinchilla border. Not much style about it, but also nothing to dislike, except its simplicity. The price was moderate, and it fitted me. You are going to be a different Daisy Randolph from what you have been all your life something whispered to me.

Think of the Bishop with his gentle, thin old arm about my shoulders, holding me for just a second as though I was his daughter! My, think of it! And me, Nance Olden, with that fat man's watch in my waist and some girl's beautiful long coat and hat on, all covered with chinchilla!

"Do look at Fagette," said Nanteuil. "She is charming in that blue Marie-Louise dress trimmed with chinchilla." Madame Doulce brought out from under her furs a stack of tickets already soiled through having been too frequently offered.

When the girls went in now, they found Rita curled up on her sofa, with the robe and pillow of chinchilla fur that had come with her from Cuba. It was a bad sign, Margaret had learned, when the furs came out in warm weather. It meant a headache generally, and at any rate a chilly state of body, which was apt to be accompanied by a peevish state of mind.

And then I thought "If any of you suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed." "I thought I should be comfortable in these things, Dr. Sandford," I then said, glancing at the little chinchilla cap which lay on the table; "and respectable. And there were other people who needed all the money the other things would have cost." "What other people?" said the doctor.

"'What sort of diggings have you got? asked the Chinchilla. "'Oh, pretty fair. "'Nice people? "'Yes, nice enough as people go. "'Pretty willing? Look after you well, and all that sort of thing? "'Yes oh yes. I've no fault to find with them. "'What's the victuals like? "'Oh, the usual thing, you know, bones and scraps, and a bit of dog-biscuit now and then for a change.

She was philosophically prepared to pay it in her own coin, and be done with it, and then give herself to the enjoyment of the pleasures of her lot. Her first enjoyment was in her beautiful going-away dress grey cloth and chinchilla fur, with flushes of pink as delicate as the rose of her cheeks and in her knowledge of the effect she made in that dream of a costume.

And then I thought "If any of you suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed." "I thought I should be comfortable in these things, Dr. Sandford," I then said, glancing at the little chinchilla cap which lay on the table; "and respectable. And there were other people who needed all the money the other things would have cost." "What other people?" said the doctor.

Julie repented, and, drawing her friend towards her, rested her head against the chinchilla cloak. "I'm tired, I suppose," she said, in a low voice. "Don't think me an ungrateful wretch. Well, there's my foster-sister and her child." "Madame Bornier and the little cripple girl?" cried the Duchess. "Excellent! Where are they?"