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Marguerite Verne

Creator: Armour, Rebecca Agatha, 1846?-1891
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the broad stone steps leading to the elegant home. It was six o'clock and the first bell gave the warning that there was barely time to dress for dinner. "He will be here without fail, for I know his word is inviolable," cried the girl, as she hastily re-arranged some lace on the sleeves of her pretty dinner dress--a combination of silk and velvet in shade of ash of roses. "Dear me, there is the bell, and my hair not presentable." But Marguerite was mistaken. "Why, Madge, where have you been?" "I have been out making calls," said she, with an air of surprise. "Well, my dear, I advise you to go every day if you can bring back such roses." Marguerite blushed as deeply as if the compliment came from an admirer--aye, more so; for the girl well knew that those from her fond parent were from the heart. "There now, don't spoil them, _ma belle_," cried Mr. Verne, his
The Parts Men Play

THE PARTS MEN PLAY by ARTHUR BEVERLEY BAXTER Author of "The Blower of Bubbles" With Foreword by Lord Beaverbrook McClelland & Stewart Publishers ======== Toronto Copyright, Canada, 1920 By McClelland & Stewart, Limited, Toronto
eye resting with fond admiration upon his daughter. Children are oftentimes _de trop_, and Charlie Verne proved no exception. "Papa, I was one day with Madge, and she had two big red spots on her cheeks as big peonies." The precocious youth was on the eve of explanation, when Mrs. Verne's--"Children should be seen and not heard" put an end to the subject. It were well for Marguerite that her elder sister did not grace the festive board that evening. Evelyn's keen and penetrative eye would have taken in the situation at a glance. The light in the soft, deep, violet eyes would tell the tale that the maiden would strive to conceal; and the bright flush, heightened by fond anticipation, would have accomplished its deadly work. But Marguerite was granted further respite. She gave Phillip Lawson a quiet reception, and much to the relief of the latter, they were allowed to chat at their ease the greater part of the evening, uninterrupted by a guest. Mr. Verne, having returned from one of those Board of Trade