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r pieces came from. She made a great mystery of the matter, asserting, in reply to all inquiries, that hers would be a crazy quilt with a history, and nobody should know anything about it until the quilt was finished. A crazy quilt with a history is no trifling piece of work, and the girls have not yet heard the story. DAVY'S TURN. BY FLORENCE B. HALLOWELL. "Never mind! It'll come my turn some day, and then I'll pay you boys up; and you'll be sorry enough for all the mean things you've done to me," and Davy Potter stooped to pick up the books which one of a group of a dozen boys had pushed from his arm. The school-house yard was muddy from recent rains, and the books were so wet and dirty that Davy took out his pocket handkerchief to wipe them off. "What'll you take for that handkerchief, Dave?" asked Fred Bassett. "It's a beauty, and no mistake." There was a loud shout from the other boys, and universal attention was directed to the little square of faded calico Davy was so industriously using. A hot flush rose to the boy's thin, freckled face; but he made no reply, except to mutter under his breath something which the boys could not catch. But there was a bitter, vindictive feeling in his heart as he followed his persecutors into the school-house. He did not understand why all the wit--if wit it could be called--should be leveled at him; why he should be the target for every poisoned arrow, simply because he was poor, ugly and always at the bottom of his classes. He thought it unjust and cruel, and longed with all his heart for the time to come when by some real good luck he would have a chance to "pay the boys up." He knew that if he ever needed assistance in any such work, he could rely on old Sim Kane to help him; for the old man--a half-witted creature who earned a miserable livelihood by doing odd jobs of wood-sawing and cleaning for charitably-disposed people--had good reason, also, to hate the boys of the Prickett school, and long for revenge. Davy lived with an aunt, who gave him a home as a matter of duty, and regarded him as a burden and a nuisance, often treating him so unkindly that he was made very unhappy, and spent as little time with her as possible. He tried honestly to be dutiful and obedient; but he couldn't help forgetting occasionally to wipe his feet before entering the kitchen, and sometimes he let the fire go out, or forgot to feed the chickens. Then he w
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