Page:Jepson--The terrible twins.djvu/17

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THE TERRIBLE TWINS


CHAPTER I

AND CAPTAIN BASTER

FOR all that their voices rang high and hot, the Twins were really discussing the question who had hit Stubb's bull-terrier with the greatest number of stones, in the most amicable spirit. It was indeed a nice question and hard to decide since both of them could throw stones quicker, straighter and harder than any one of their size and weight for miles and miles round; and they had thrown some fifty at the bull-terrier before they had convinced that dense, but irritated, quadruped that his master's interests did not really demand his presence in the orchard; and of these some thirty had hit him. Violet Anastasia Dangerfield, who always took the most favorable view of her exploits, had claimed twenty hits out of a possible thirty; Hyacinth Wolfram Dangerfield, in a very

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