L.P.M. : the end of the Great War
L. P. M. The End of the Great War By J. Stewart Barney 1915 With a Frontispiece by Clarence F. Underwood
"God bless you, Jim!"
Van Blake faced the great crisis, fought his way courageously
through it, and won.
Slowly he retraced his steps up the path to health again, and as
soon as he was able to be moved he and his father and mother
together with the Carltons went to Allenville and opened the old
farmhouse for Christmas.
What a Christmas it was!
What a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving among young and old!
Tim McGrew and all his family were brought down for a holiday, and
there was a royal tree decked with candles and loaded with gifts;
there was a pudding which could nowhere have been matched; a
southern plum-pudding made by Van's mother; there were carols sung
as only those to whom they meant much could sing them; and there was
joy and peace in every heart.
"Next summer it must be Colorado for you all, Jim," cried Asa Blake
as he stood with his hand on the shoulder of his old partner. "We'll
make this New Year the happiest of our lives. Tim shall go too; and
if money can buy surgical skill he shall make the journey hither on
his own two feet. Here's to the new year, Jim!"
L. P. M. The End of the Great War By J. Stewart Barney 1915 With a Frontispiece by Clarence F. Underwood