THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1945 PAGE NENE . ' XV- ' Early In February f cmsln Vic toria wrote us that she would board for- the remainder ol the winter at tue Amertpan House. Balmoral was getting too jnuch lor ner. ane wouia arrive, sne announced, on the afternoon of the fifteenth. (Cousin Victoria never consulted anyone's conven ience. She merely announced her own.) "I suppose we should be thank ful for the extra rnqney," my mother said. "But it does seem . . .". What she meant was, "TJjis is the last straw." "She won't stay a week, if she comes," my latner assured her. "You know Victoria. As likely as not, she won t turn up at ail. Someone ought to convince her that the Queen was steadfast," he t added with a wink at the three of us. Cousin Victoria had always Imi tated the Queen. From girlhood she had studied pictures of the royal costumes, and. being an ex pert seamstress, copied them. Her home bore the name of the Queen's. Her dog, now buried under the lilac bush, had been called Dash, Reading once that the Queen had gobbled her food, Cousin Victoria had fornied the habit, too, and as a result was constantly "in distress." Naturally she kept a Journal, which now in her seventy-thind year had reached its eighty-second volume. This was her second most valued possession. Her first was a let ter, dated Nov. 16, 1898, from a Lady-in-Waiting to the Queen herself, replying to Cousin Vic toria's cabled felicitations' upon the Jubilee of 1897. ' Like the Queen, Cousin Victoria was a wjdow, and still (ostensi bly) grieylng. Her husband's pic ture hung aoove the fireplace in the parlor of Balmoral, .delicately musiached and whiskered. His name, discordantly, had been Hiram, a circumstance which Cousin Victoria had found hard to bear. She was childless. When she lamented this state, you had the feeling that her grief was less for the children she lacked than for the opportunity she bad missed of presenting them with royal names. ' , ' . Instead of arriving on the aft ernoon of the fifteenth, as she had announced, Cousin Victoria came, bag and baggage (includ ing volumes of 76-82 of her Jour nal) on the morning of the twelth in a hired carriage, much upset that no one ha4 met her at the train. She was a handsome woman. She possessed you had to admit it a truly regal air. Stepping out of that carriage, her hair as black as her bonnet, her eyes bright and her body nimble, she had a good deal about her that the Queen herself might have envied. My lather, who had told us only an hour earlier that he was going to spend a quiet morning at home, left almost immediately fori his office. My mother had re sponsibilities in the kitchen. But we girls had no escape. We fol lowed Cousin Victoria upstairs and dutifully helped her unpack. rp o u s i n Victorians room was next to the parlor and facing the village. It was the best room in the American House. "If I put her there in the first place,1' my moth er said, "mere won't be any ex cuse for her wanting to change." But Cousin Victoria took nothing on faith. Before we could un pack a bag she had to be shown every bedroom, including our own. Then, satisfied, at least tem porarily, she allowed us to help her settle. In selecting Cousin Victoria's bedroom, my mother had thought of its convenience to the pallor, where she had planned for her to sit during the day with her cro cheting. Cousin Victoria used her spare time and surplus energy, in mak ing lace for edging. This neyer wore put. A pair of drawers might fall into shreds, but the lace remained as good as ever. In order that none should be wasted, my mother used it lavishly around hems, necklines, and even armholes. We girls had hardly a spot on us that had not at one time or another been scratched by it (Cousin Victoria had a very embarrassing way of lifting our skirts to see how it was wear ing.) Roll after rqll lay un touched in her work basket. Yet she kept right on. . . . - But Cousin Victoria soon made it clear that she didn't care for the parlor. She preferred the so ciability of the office. She Ignored Mr. Cutter as she did all the help but she relished the drum mers. One of them couldn't be in the office five minutes before she knew his product, his route, his schedules, and the size of his fam- SHELLHART'S Pay Day Hits Thur. FA-Sat. Swans Down 9 lh W 2.29 glSi 20c . 31c SYRUP Staleys Golden 5 " 43c Peaches .,, .can 25c Mcrrmutc Halves ' Plums jar 17c Crovvi) l'oint, I Hi. 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Something had to be done, she said, ' - Something was. miring ine morning Cousin Victoria wrote In ka TnnrtiDl V. 1 1 i,r-lnr t )l Q rv- j away from the office became an other of our cnores. TViarxi tuara itict huA wove V111 could keep her In the parlor. One was to get her to give you a les son in lace making; the other was to get her tq read aloud from one of her Journals. (These were underlined, of course, in the man ner o the Queen.) Since long and Intimate association had made us detest the lace, we usu ally promoted the Journals. They were dull reading. "Awakened at "seven." i-ay until "seven-fifteen." For breakfast "oatmeal, prunes, gooseberry jam, toasted muffin.' Two cups of tea. (Green) Record ed the events, of yesterday. Ex amined the books of F. of the H. F. Branch 2. Found them In "good order," Re-read "In Memoriam." Here follows my reflections on it . . Those reflections might cov er from 10 tq 2Q pages. We began to think wore long ingly than ever of the time when vacation would be over. (To Be Continued) G.I.'S PLOW iS ACBES Camp Ellis, 1(1. IP Soldier gardeners at Camp Ellis have plowed 45 acres for "victory gar dens" so far during 1945. The "gardening detail" hopes to sur pass its 1944 total of more than 500.000 pounds of food, 30 varie ties of vegetables, 230. acres of cultivation and savings of approx imately 450,000. Gary, Ind. fhrQr4inaTiiy, churches upheld reputation, but F. Laurence ' .Anderson charged the First Baptist church imr$ with damaging his, and he asks $5,000 damages. He claimed that he wa excluded from the church without goqd cause after 20 years of attending and paying dues,. The dormouse usually hiber nates far six months, and a sud den coercive' wakening jgay fee fatal. ' " , " HORNEECK Typewriter Co. ' Author'ned Agent for ' ROYAL Salts end Service Eoytype Ribbons and Carbon B. , Bieij AiMing Machines A2! Makes Typewriters . 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