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Updated: May 24, 2025


And he such a quiet and respectful young chap in the bargain." "Please tell me more about it, for I can't possibly be of any assistance to you, Mrs. Pangborn, unless I know the facts," Hugh continued, his curiosity beginning to rise by jumps.

Chief interests: those of a publicist, aiding social and political reforms. He lives in New Jersey. From the Life: Thomas Wales Warren. O'SULLIVAN, VINCENT. Born in New York, 1872. Graduate of Oxford. Author of "The Good Girl," "Sentiment," "Of Human Affairs," and many other books. Lives in Brooklyn, N. Y. *Interval, The. PANGBORN, GEORGIA WOOD. Born at Malone, N. Y., 1872.

What can she mean by always keeping in our tracks? Perhaps she is weak and has not the strength to make her own way through the crowds." "Then she should have stayed at home," replied the practical Tavia. "I see no reason why we should be inconvenienced by her infirmities." "But she may have babies. Come, we will go to the jewelry counter. I must get a pretty comb for Mrs. Pangborn."

"I do not walk in my sleep, and that colored girl is as honest as your own mother, I feel positive. Please tell me you will try and find out the answer to this distressing puzzle." "I can easily promise you that I will at least do my level best to learn where your property went, Mrs. Pangborn; and if possible recover it for you," he hastened to assure her. "Thank you very much, my son.

"Oh! all right, Hugh, I'll go with you," complained Thad, "but I know as well as anything you've got some queer notion back of it all, which you don't mean to share with me. But remember that Madame Pangborn told you she would trust Sarah with her purse or her life, she has such confidence in the woman." "I haven't forgotten," said Hugh, quietly. "I know what I'm doing.

Pangborn is well known for her artistic stories of the supernatural, and this will rank among the very best of them. She shares with Algernon Blackwood that gift for making spiritual illusion real which is so rare in contemporary work. What is specially distinctive is her gift of selection, by which she brings out the most illusive psychological contrasts.

Branard was a kind sympathizing woman, and to her, I confided the history of my convent life. She would not allow me to work hard, for she saw that my nerves were easily excited. She made me sit with her in her own room a great part of the time, and did not wish me to go out alone. Z. K. Pangborn, late editor of the Worcester Daily Transcript. Both Mr. and Mrs. Branard.

In fact, he was so bruised that his teacher thought it prudent to accompany him to his home and explain to his father the particulars of the affray in school. Mr. Pangborn gave a detailed history of the occurrence, to which Dr. Dewey listened gravely.

Z. K. Pangborn, at that time editor of the Worcester Daily Transcript, voluntarily offered the following testimony which we copy from one of his editorials. "We have no doubt that the nun here spoken of as one who escaped from the Grey Nunnery at Montreal, is the same person who spent some weeks in our family in the fall of 1853, after her first escape from the Nunnery.

I vote for a drop right here!" "Never!" declared Tavia. "These are to make up the sacrificial altar. If old Pangborn growls won't allow the doors open we will do it with a match!" and she signified that the hay would make a spontaneous blaze in that lamentable instance. Dorothy saw more than a joke in the remark. Tavia was so ridiculously daring!

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