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A flood in the Victorian bush washes away a railway bridge. Only the tenacity of a railway ganger in a valiant ride to the nearest station, the signalling of a stationmaster and the quick thinking of a country lad with a dray save the Melbourne express from disaster. (PB)
Tale of a wife's pleadings changing an officer's idea of honour so that he refuses to meet her husband in a duel and perhaps leave her a widow. Her husband when he learns of this agrees it is a false code of honour that duels for a slight insult. (PB)
Account of a white man's kindness to an indigent negro and the old man's generous blessing on his deathbed. Christian sentiment - some humour amidst patronage. (PB)
A solidly respectable childless English couple are troubled only by the husband's careful charity to children's hospitals. His wife decides to adopt a child but refuses to consider her dead sister's son - until, after a long and fruitless hunt, her husband brings home a handsome boy ... Solidly respectable tale with a touch of warmth. (PB)
Tale of love abandoned and lost. A poor young woman decides to marry for wealth in New England - but when her aged husband dies two years later discovers she has lost true love. (PB)
Set around a lodging house. The murder of a rich and cantankerous woman, owner of a Murray station, and the theft of her jewels inplicate her niece and the husband she secretly married to avoid her aunt's disapproval. Sub-plot of romance between a retired officer staying in the house - the victim's suitor from years before who broke their engagement, and the kindly old maid Miss Pinkerton. A firm landlady; the victim's ghost and the confession of the real jewel thief complete the tale. (PB)
Romantic tragedy of a husband and wife estranged by misunderstanding. Unable and unwilling to show their love for each other, a husband and wife of seven years are separated finally by his death. And she learns too late that he did not marry her for her fortune but for love. (PB)
A chance meeting in a railway carriage introduces an army deserter on his way home to visit a reportedly dying father, and a young woman recalled from her holidays. It results in Ermengarde witnessing his change of costume on the train and lending him her hat and some money - which he repays by mail. Another meeting on holiday at Folkestone accidentally reveals the now rehabilitated deserter has invoked her name to protect him from the matrimonial design of a Highland chieftainess. (PB)
A merchant ensures a reformed burglar cannot find or keep a job - and the burglar takes his revenge by stealing his money - a fate worse than death for the merchant. (PB)
A Munich doctor recounts a case of a wealthy and beautiful woman who spent three days in a death house in a fit of catalepsy. Only signals of life from 'the signalling instrument' and the narrator's attention to its causes saved her from burial. Germanic combination of reason and superstition. (PB)
A bank manager tracks down a defaulting customer and old acquaintance through a photographer's card. He obtains the money owing by attending the man's wedding and demanding its return in the vestry. (PB)
A fog delays the boat from Holland to Harwich and a watch smuggler whose specially constructed shirt won't allow him to sit down gives himself away. (PB)