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Morris laughed a loud, hearty laugh, which did hiood, and e: "You just ask her ag'in Once ain't nothing at all, and she'll come to She likes you; 'tain't that which made her say no It's some foolish idea about faithfulness to Wilford, as if he deserved that she should be faithful They never orto have had one another--never; and now that he is well in heaven, as I do suppose he is, it ain't I who hanker for him to coing to tell you yes So ask her again, will you?"
"I think it very doubtful Katy knehat she was doing, andre folks would be fools it was none of her business to bother with the up both basket and uht, and went back across the fields to the farone to bed with a racking headache
"Just the way I felt when I heard about Joel and Patty," Aunt Betsy said to herself, and as she remembered what had helped her then, so, fifteen minutes later, she appeared at Katy's bedside, with a cup of strong sage tea which she bade Katy s, telling her it was good for her coed and annoyed, Katy drank the tea, and then without a question concerning Aunt Betsy's call at Linwood, lay down upon her pillow, asking to be left alone