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At a little before ten, the young man who had found him his place touched his shoulder. "Mr. Bullen will see you now, sir," he said. Norgate followed his conductor through a maze of passages into a barely-furnished but lofty apartment. The personage whom he had come to see was standing at the further end, talking somewhat heatedly to one or two of his supporters.

Mauverensen," she said, heatedly, "to belong to an army made up of such ruffians. Every rag of raiment that man has on he stole from my husband's wardrobe at the Hall. To think of calling such low fellows officers, or consorting with them!"

Tom went back to the house for lunch, and as he joined his father in the dining room he remarked to Eradicate: "I want the electric runabout brought around after lunch. I am going to Waterfield. Tell Koku, will you, Rad?" "Tell that crazy fellow?" demanded the old colored man heatedly. "Why should I tell him, Massa Tom? Ain't I able to bring dat runabout out o' de garbarge? Shore I is!"

They're beating them, I'm sure they are; can't it be stopped?" we resented the charge as a slur on our very honour; for what our romantic relative had heatedly imagined to reach us, in a hushed-up manner from behind, was the sounds attendant on the application of blows to some acrobatic infant who had "funked" his little job.

Merrill denied having mutilated Skaroff's fingers beneath the casters of the bed, but even the capitalist press reported that his livid face and thick voice belied his words of denial. And Prosecutor Lloyd Black remarked heatedly, "I don't see the materiality of all this." Merrill left the stand, having presented the sorriest figure among the number of poor witnesses produced by the prosecution.

"Come away, Rundell, the race is yer ain," shouted an enthusiastic supporter of Peter. "Nae wonner!" answered Matthew Maitland, heatedly. "They've gi'en him the race in a present. Look at the handikep!" "An' what aboot it?" enquired the other, not knowing what to answer. "Plenty aboot it," replied Matthew. "If it hadna' been he was Peter Rundell, he wadna' ha'e gotten sic a start.

"I feel the need of a walk. When I feel the need of anything I always take it and I’ve needed and taken so freely to-night that I need to take a walk to—" "I don’t think it funny to talk that way," said Burnett a little heatedly. "If you want to get the cabs why get the cabs. I’m going to get them, too, and I reckon we can get them combined just as easy as alone."

"Miss McIntyre here?" Clymer stared in amazement at his questioner. "No, certainly not." "Don't be so positive," retorted the lawyer heatedly, his color rising at the other's incredulous tone. "Helen McIntyre telephoned me to meet her, and by Jove, here she comes," as a slight stir at the back of the court room caused him to glance in that direction.

She said what a mercy it was that half a dozen yelling demons wasn't in this house at that moment to make life an evil thing for all. And Homer sunned right up and took the talk away from her. While she done his mending he spoke heatedly of little children in his well-known happy vein, relating many incidents in his blasted career that had brought him to these views.

Finally they came back to the face again, and once more studied it with intentness, though apparently without the slightest interest. "Come," said the merchant a little heatedly, and flushing at the man's coolness. "Answer me. Are ye used to horses and gardening?" As if he had not heard the question, the man turned, and resumed his staring at the water.