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Updated: June 10, 2025
"Did I? Too bad! I'll have to find another. Where are the girls?" "Asleep in the house, and so are Dick Rover and old Jerry Tolman." "What of Cap'n Blossom and them other Rover boys?" "They are not expected back for several days." "Humph! Say, I feel bad, I do. I must have something to brace me up." "You'd better not disturb them, Lesher. They are mighty stiff-necked since they landed here."
"That's a good girl!" This was his commendation, from hour to hour; it made up the litany of his gratitude for what she had been to him. "But I dunno's I feel quite up to preachin' to-day, Dorcas!" "That'll be all right, father. We'll get somebody." "You bring me out my sermon-box after breakfast, an' I'll pick out one," said he, happily. "Deacon Tolman can read it." But, alas!
It'll taste good to him." Molly nodded, and hurried away; presently she came back, bearing a tin cup, and Elvin drank, though he did not thank her. In the early afternoon, Ebenezer Tolman came striding down between the pens in ostentatious indignation. He was a tall, red-faced man, with a large, loose mouth, and blond-gray whiskers, always parted and blowing in the wind.
William Pry and Violet Seymour, creatures of habit, had joined in the seething game of the spectators, unable to resist the overwhelming desire to gaze upon themselves entering, as bride and bridegroom, the rose-decked church. Rubber will out. "One thousand dollars," repeated Lawyer Tolman, solemnly and severely, "and here is the money."
"Yes, tell us the truth, Lesher," said Captain Blossom sternly. "All against me, aint you?" "We want the truth," answered Tom. "Well, if you must have it, all right. He got cheeky and hit me on the head with an oar. Then I hit back and knocked him down. Then he got mad and so did Jerry Tolman, and both refused to come back in the boat with Baxter and me."
She was a bright, handsome young lady, and looked as if she had very good sense. He could not understand it. But he told her the book was out. "Out!" she said. "Why, it's always out. It seems strange to me that there should be such a demand for that book. I have been trying to get it for ever so long." "It IS strange," said Mr. Tolman, "but it is certainly in demand. Did Mrs.
As the hypnotist returned to his seat, Serviss opened up the special discussion by asking him his opinion of the claims of spiritualists. This question threw Tolman into a roar.
Tolman to be entered, he told him in a low voice that he hoped there would be no objection to letting his account run on for a little while longer. On the first of the month he would settle it, and then he hoped to be able to pay cash whenever he brought in a book. Mr.
Though they were dear to you, we think that now they have come to us, your joy in them is greater. We hope to hear of many of you carrying the leaves of life to the dark corners of the earth. "Dear Miss Tolman, you said, 'You love Miss Fiske, you must also love Miss Rice. Did you think that we would not love her?
Tolman, "would be for these two people to get married. Then they could take the book and study it to their heart's content. And they would certainly suit each other, for they are both greatly attached to musical mathematics and philosophy, and neither of them either plays or sings, as they have told me. It would be an admirable match." Mr.
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