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Updated: May 13, 2025
The next moment an exceedingly astonished, irate cat was taking an unusual amount of exercise in the prim little garden, urged cheerily on by a small, curly dog, whose three legs seemed quite as effective as most dogs' four.
There was one pair of field glasses and there were nine irate men to whom inaction was intolerable. "One thing we can do, if we have to," Luck said at last, with the fighting look in his face which moving-picture people had cause to remember. "We can help ourselves to any horses we run across. Applehead, how's the best way to go about it?"
Ray called to the irate infantryman to hold on a moment, he would explain; but Ray was in arrest and could give no orders. The sergeant knew that for the time being he was virtually the superior.
"Randolph street!" yells the conductor in a great voice. The irate and insulted Corkey debarks with Lockwin. "Pardner, I wouldn't like to see him come back, though. I'd be sorry for him. Think of the racket he'd have to take!" "What time does the train start for New York?" asks Lockwin. "Panic! Panic! Panic!" is the deafening cry of the newsboys.
His sense of order made it a pleasure to see a plate yellow with dried egg glisten iridescently and flash into shining whiteness; or a room corner filled with dust and tobacco flakes become again a "nice square clean corner with the baseboard shining, gee! just like it was new." An irate grocer called with a bill for fifteen dollars. Mr.
"But it won't be hot at night, and then you will wish you hadn't been such a fool," said George, irate. No, he couldn't make Jacky see this; being hot at the time Jacky could not feel the cold to come.
"I'll have none of your impertinence, young lady," cried the irate father, seizing her by the shoulder none too gently and giving her a shake. "You deserve to be trounced." Tabitha's heart stood still. The day of the licking had come at last!
Van Mander heard from Holbein's circle a story which modern pedantry is inclined to flout. This is, that when an irate nobleman wanted the painter punished for an affront, the King hotly exclaimed: "Understand, my lord, that I can make seven earls out of as many hinds, any day; but out of seven earls I could not make one such painter as this Holbein." An eminently ben-trovato story, at all events.
Mr. Hamblin did not know this, but everybody else did. "Don't you know this writing, Mr. Stoute?" demanded the irate man of Greek roots, after an attentive study of the note. "I do not." "I do!" added Mr. Hamblin, decidedly. "You are fortunate then. If we can unearth the culprit, he will be severely punished." "I am not so clear on that point. This note was written by Captain Kendall."
But, although the guide was so pronounced in his opinion of the continuance of the enmity of Captain Dawson, the lieutenant believed otherwise. He was confident that if he and Nellie could reach Sacramento before meeting the irate father, the latter would be open to reason, and all would turn out well. Vose turned to the young woman. "Nellie, do you want a little advice from me?"
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