She was always an optimist, sometimes too much so. Tiffany Circle clasp necklace also gathered up the scattered pages of Anne's diary on August 4th 1944, when the eight were arrested. Simply from the sound of their shoes on the stairs, she knew her friends were coming down "like beaten dogs". Much of the diary had been written in blank account books smuggled from her office. She stowed it in a drawer, unread. After the war, and Tiffany Blue Box Charm and Chain death in Bergen-Belsen, she gave it to Otto Frank. In Leiden station Mrs Gies felt so strongly for the Franks because she was a refugee herself. She had been born Hermine Santrouschitz in Vienna in 1909. Eleven years later, her legs like sticks, her parents sent her away from starving Austria to be taken in by a Tiffany 1837 Interlocking circles necklace family. She sat waiting in Leiden railway station until a strong-looking man inspected the name-card hung around her neck, said a decided "Ja", and took her away to join his family for a few months to fatten up. She remembered all her life that first drink of frothy milk, the warmth of her bed and the way that, on her first day at school, "Return to Tiffany Heart tag ring many hands reached out to guide me". Eventually her birth-mother agreed that she should stay there. By 1938 she was "Dutch through and through". Her life crossed Otto Frank's when she joined his pectin firm in 1933. Her jam-making commended her. All his staff were devoted to Frank, but it was Mrs Gies to whom he turned in 1941 with the question: "Are you willing to take on the responsibility of taking care of us when we are in hiding?"
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