Copyright, 1912,
by
HURST & COMPANY
CONTENTS
| CHAPTER | | PAGE |
| I. | Daughters of Wellington | [5] |
| II. | Minerva Higgins | [18] |
| III. | In the Cloisters | [32] |
| IV. | A Literary Evening | [44] |
| V. | Various Happenings | [57] |
| VI. | “The Best Laid Schemes” | [74] |
| VII. | A Midnight Adventure | [89] |
| VIII. | Covering Their Tracks | [105] |
| IX. | The Grave Diggers | [116] |
| X. | A Visit of State | [134] |
| XI. | A Swopping Party and a Mock Trial | [147] |
| XII. | Alarms and Discoveries | [163] |
| XIII. | “The Moving Finger Writes” | [175] |
| XIV. | An Invitation and an Apology | [187] |
| XV. | A Christmas Ghost Story That Was Never Told | [200] |
| XVI. | More Christmas Presents and a Coasting Party of Two | [212] |
| XVII. | The Wayfarers | [226] |
| XVIII. | Healing the Blind | [246] |
| XIX. | A Warning | [259] |
| XX. | The Parable of the Sun and Wind | [272] |
| XXI. | The Junior Gambol | [289] |
ILLUSTRATIONS
| Did I frighten you? I am sorry | [Frontispiece] |
| | Page |
| They set to work to dig a small grave for Judy’s
slipper | [129] |
| “And she’s given me a pair of silk stockings,”
cried Molly | [213] |
| The next thing she knew she was buried deep in a
snow drift, and Judy was whizzing on alone | [224] |
Molly Brown’s Junior Days