Baby Mine
  CHAPTER XX  

  CHAPTER XXI  

  CHAPTER XXII  

  CHAPTER XVIII  

  CHAPTER XXIV  

  CHAPTER XXV  

  CHAPTER XXVI  

  CHAPTER XXVII  

  CHAPTER XXVIII  

  CHAPTER XXIX  

  CHAPTER XXX  

   

    

       CHAPTER I     

       Even in college Alfred Hardy was a young man of fixed ideas and high ideals and proud of it.     

       His friend, Jimmy Jinks, had few ideas and no ideals, and was glad of it, and before half of their first college term had passed, Jimmy had ridded himself of all such worries as making up his own mind or directing his own morals. Alfred did all these things so much better, argued Jimmy, furthermore, Alfred LIKED to do them—Jimmy owed it to his friend to give him that pleasure.     

       The fact that Jimmy was several years Alfred's senior and twice his size, in no way altered his opinion of Alfred's judgment, and through their entire college course they agreed as one man in all their 
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