. Ursula at home . nows any tricks,,for often their owners teach them tricks. Have you seen her name engraved here on the-collar, it is a pretty name, i TutuV We will call her by the same name. After dinner the children were delighted to find theirlittle pet could stand on its hind legs, and make itslittle front paws go up and down begging for a smallpiece of cake Mrs. Roelof held up before her. I cant help it. mamma, if the lady does love herdog, I love it too, said Ursula. Tutu can come up in your room with you, Ursula,at your Twilight Hour.: May I hold it in my lap, mamma.: You may, Ursula,
. Ursula at home . nows any tricks,,for often their owners teach them tricks. Have you seen her name engraved here on the-collar, it is a pretty name, i TutuV We will call her by the same name. After dinner the children were delighted to find theirlittle pet could stand on its hind legs, and make itslittle front paws go up and down begging for a smallpiece of cake Mrs. Roelof held up before her. I cant help it. mamma, if the lady does love herdog, I love it too, said Ursula. Tutu can come up in your room with you, Ursula,at your Twilight Hour.: May I hold it in my lap, mamma.: You may, Ursula, it has been accustomed to being:petted. 276 Ursula at Home. Ursula took it up and it nestled down in her lap,quite contented and happy, Just then the folding doors opened, and there was thepretty tableau Little Red Biding The children were very much surprised and delighted, oh ! how pretty, they constantly repeated. It is time now, children, for the Twilight Hour,come, Tutu. PU, ASTOR, LENOXTILDEN . OATIONS. en H^ £ HQ i_i QO PART FOURTH. CHAPTER XXIV. TWILIGHT HOUR. THE GYPSIES. I want to teach 3^011 some of your scliool pieces to-night, we will go up to your room, Ursula. You alreadyknow some of yours, Elsie, all but the last two believe. It was not long before Elsie knew it all by heart. 11 To-morrow is the last day of school; I hope all thescholars will be able to say their pieces well. You maysay yours, Ursula ; and John Eliot and Paul, you mayboth speak your little Your piece is about the gypsies, John Eliot, saidPaul, isnt it? Yes, it is about a child that the gypsies tried tosteal, and he had a dog with him and the dog barked,and a man in the woods heard him bark, and he earnerand got the boy away from the gypsies. Did Miss Gertrude teach it to you T No, mamma did ; and Marguerite says the man was- Ursula at Home. sorry the gypsies were so wicked to try and steal a€hild, and he said all he could to them, to make themknow their wickedness and
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