On the following day, Berry—who had lain awake all night, wondering what she ought to do, and finally resolving to find her niece and save her from the disgrace that threatened her—lost no time in tracing the unhappy girl.
To her surprise, she was charmed with her niece, after only an hour’s talk with Dora. Childless herself, and loving children dearly, Berry welcomed Dora to her heart and home; and when Charles returned from America, he, too, rejoiced in Berry’s happiness.
Thus Dora found in Berry a mother who deserved and won her love, and in Charles a kind father, to take the place of one whom she had never known.
THE END.
No. 1173 of the New Eagle Series, by Charlotte May Stanley, is entitled “Could He Have Known.”
Love Stories
There is a great deal of difference between love stories and sex stories. There is something about love which commands respect and reverence.
There is nothing about the sex story which commands either. Most decent-minded people are disgusted with the sort of literature that some publishers are putting out in the guise of truth.
If you want to know what a really decent, clean, wholesome love story is, ask your dealer to sell you a copy of the Bertha Clay Library, or the Eagle Library.
In these two series, you will find everything that is necessary in fiction to hold your interest, and a great deal that is preferable to the sort of stuff which is being put out under camouflage by certain publishers who are not very careful either about the way they make money or what they publish.