Produced by Naomi Parkhurst, Juliet Sutherland, CharlesFranks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
    "WELL, AMY, CHILD, HOW CAN I HELP YOU?"]
   FIVE LITTLE PEPPERS GROWN UP
   BY
   MARGARET SIDNEY
     CONTENTS
     CHAPTER I. POLLY GIVES MUSIC LESSONS  CHAPTER II. GETTING READY FOB CHRISTMAS  CHAPTER III. CHRISTMAS AT DUNRAVEN  CHAPTER IV. THE FESTIVITIES  CHAPTER V. BAD NEWS  CHAPTER VI. OF MANY THINGS  CHAPTER VII. PHRONSIE  CHAPTER VIII. POLLY LOOKS OUT FOR CHARLOTTE  CHAPTER IX. POLLY'S RECITAL  CHAPTER X. PHRONSIE HAS A PLAN  CHAPTER XI. THINGS ARE GETTING MIXED  CHAPTER XII. POLLY TRIES TO DO WHAT IS RIGHT  CHAPTER XIII. THE ACCIDENT  CHAPTER XIV. JOEL  CHAPTER XV. THE FARMHOUSE HOSPITAL  CHAPTER XVI. ON THE BORDERLAND  CHAPTER XVII. JASPER  CHAPTER XVIII. MR. KING ATTENDS TO MATTERS  CHAPTER XIX. MOTHER FISHER AND CHARLOTTE  CHAPTER XX. STRAIGHTENING OUT AFFAIRS  CHAPTER XXI. POLLY TRIES TO HELP JASPER  CHAPTER XXII. MR. KING AND POLLY  CHAPTER XXIII. THAT SETTLES MANY THINGS  CHAPTER XXIV. HOME!
   LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
   "Well, Amy child, how can I help you?"
   "Why, Polly Pepper, what do you mean?"
   "Baby ought to have a Christmas tree," said Phronsie slowly
   "Oh!" said Jack Loughead. Then he tapped his boot with his walking stick
   "Joel's gone," panted Phronsie, flying back
   Joel swinging a big box, rushed into Dunraven Hall
   "And did we," cried Phronsie, "find it out, Polly, and spoil it all?"
   "Will you?" asked Phronsie, looking down into their faces
   "We don't know how to tell it, Grandpapa"
   "Now do set us to work, Joel"
   "Oh, you don't know how I miss those boys!"
   "And please make dear papa give her the right things"
   Charlotte, standing composedly in one corner of the hall
   Alexia coolly read on, one arm around Polly
   "My dear Alexia," cried Miss Salisbury, quite softened, "don't feel so"
   "I'll not sing a note!"
   "For shame, Polly, if the Little Brown House teachings are forgottenlike this"
   Polly turned and waved her music-roll at them
   "I'm not going to lecture you"
   "Don't stop me," cried Pickering crossly
   "I'm going home," declared Charlotte
   "What do you say?" cried Polly
   "Oh, Polly, are you hurt?"
   Old Mr. King drew up his chair to oversee it all
   "You come along yourself, Dobbs," said Joel pleasantly
   "I'll help you; I'm strong," said Charlotte.
   "It's so nice, everybody is getting on so well," said Polly
   Then Phronsie glanced back again, and softly jogged the cradle
   "Why do you put your apron up there?" asked Phronsie in gentle reproach
   "An old gentleman in my room," repeated Jasper, turning on the stairs
   "Good-morning," said Mr. Marlowe; "business all right?"
   "How you can sit there and laugh when Joe is in danger, I don't see,"exclaimed Percy irritably.
   "Well, now I have two babies," said Mother Fisher
   "I've always found," said Dr. Fisher, "that all you had to do to start athing, was to begin"
   "Phronsie, get a glass of water; be quick, child!"
   "I think it was a mean shame!" began Dick wrathfully
   "Oh, why did I speak?" cried Polly over and over
   "Are you sick, Polly?" cried Phronsie anxiously
   "Polly hasn't had all the milk," said Phronsie
   Amy
   "Nothing can be too good for Polly Pepper!" cried Alexia, startingforward
   He walked off, leaving Polly alone in the lane
   "My! what a sight of fish!" exclaimed Mrs. Higby, dropping to her kneesbeside the basket
   "Now, Jasper, you begin," cried Polly, "and we'll tell Mamsie all aboutit, as we always do when we get home"
   "Polly, do come with us!"
   "And you will be my own brother, Jasper," said Phronsie