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Reprinted from The Century Magazine of July, 1903 by permission AT NINE o'clock that morning Rosella arrived in her little office on the third floor of the great publishing house of Conant & Company, and putting up her veil without removing her hat, addressed herself to her day's work.

Trevor looked at her anxiously. He had hated to hurt her. Rosella gazed vaguely at the fire. Then at last the tears filled her eyes. "I am sorry, very, very sorry," said Trevor, kindly. "But to have told you anything but the truth would have done you a wrong and, then, no earnest work is altogether wasted.

There, at the very end of the column, stood the notice: VICKERS. At New York, on Sunday, November 12, Harold Anderson Vickers, in the twenty-third year of his age. Arizona papers please copy. Notice of funeral hereafter. Three days later she began to write "Patroclus." Rosella stood upon the door-step of Trevor's house, closing her umbrella and shaking the water from the folds of her mackintosh.

So I work very hard to put money in my box, because Jesus come into my heart." Rosella did not answer, but stood looking at Louie Ming. Then she suddenly turned and caught Drew's hand, and pulled him along till they were running toward their own tent. Rosella rushed in. The baby was sitting on the straw floor, and Rosella caught him up, crying: "O baby, baby brother, don't you ever die!

He had imagination enough to be almost persuaded of fairyland by her earnestness, and she certainly took him into doll-land. He had a turn for carpentry and contrivance, and he undertook that the Ladies Rosella, etc., should be better housed than ever.

"Declined," said Rosella, firmly, tossing it aside. She turned to 1124: "About three o'clock of a roseate day in early spring two fashionables of the softer sex, elegantly arrayed, might have been observed sauntering languidly down Fifth Avenue. "'Are you going to Mrs. Van Billion's musicale tonight? inquired the older of the two, a tall and striking demi-brunette, turning to her companion.

Among charter members of the Woman Suffrage Party were Mrs. E. C. G. Ferguson, Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Chamberlain, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Myers, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Graham, Mrs. Rosella Bayhi, Mrs. M. M. Reid, Mrs. Margaret Hunt Brisbane, Miss Florence Huberwald, Edward Wisner, Marshall Ballard, James M. Thomson, Lynn Dinkins, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Edmonds, Trist Wood, Ethel Hutson, Mr. and Mrs.