Rural enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1924-1927, March 18, 1925, Page 3, Image 3

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    Z
. (C on tin ued )
e v w v s - t s w ..- .
SYNOPSIS
• — -------- »
"So Bl«
mother, 8«lin» H e J o n t^ d /u g h t“ r of
ofnf2?t'ur « ‘ 1CH » i, o 7 bl?r * nd B«ntleman
iiood In C h ic a g o ln V'l» » |,y hX", b 7 « n °u n -
18 * hy ° f
s tn i- he could not wltb-
‘,und her 1,J“ g.
Together they dug
in<l Planted flower beds In Perm «'
JlnKy fn ,n t yard
n WHS too lu t* f« r
n,,w
Pervus had brought her
“ »“ e «fed« from town. They ranged
I* ' ^ *e wny fro,n P°PI>1es to asters;
i« m j,
but ' frf>nl purple iris to morning glories,
la J u lie J H e m p e t'd a u g h 'ter hof ' fh e la8t nanled were to form the back-
« « n Ir » itilv n ^ lA< • ° m , w h * t
chum
iu u V in
«d
b u tc h s r
srnr : { . ; hn8 t ; ”
f»ach«rB,ly
X
“
la
S lm s o n
r ^
7
^
porch vine, of course, because they
< "”* 1 « * « , .
Selina, dty-hred, was
becomes a school* ' 'fDornnt of vurieties, but insisted she
I reacted an old-fashioned
garden—
J * — S e lin a sec u re s a post*
t i * atCi : r oS,, .i:ihre, . Hi f hc f 1^
“figolds, ¡»Inks, mignonette, phlox.
811 1 Roe!f du‘ ^ d* d- P '^ te d
fa r m e r ,
“ er trous eao Was of the scantiest.
K l ^ s . n ' n ^ V . r V s . v W ^ - P#r? 8' . buuss,“ '‘d
««•
already
her own little bedroom at the Pools',
no longer hers, must be deliciously cool
and still w ith the breese fanning fresh
from the west.
Pervus was putting
the horse into i he bam . The bedroom
was off the sitting room. The window
was shut. This last year had taught
Selina to prepare the night before for
next morning's rising, so as to lose the
least possible time. She did this now
unconsciously. She brushed her hair
laid out tomorrow'* garments, put on
her high-necked, long-sleeved night
gown and got into thia strange bed
She .heard Pervus DeJong shut the
kitchen door; the latch «Hiked, the
lock turned.
Heavy quick footsteps
cross the bare kitchen floor. Thia
man was coming into her room. . . .
' Vou can't run f u r enough," M aa rtje
owl had. said. "Except you stop liv­
ing you can't run away from Mie.”
Next morning It was dark «then he
awakened her nt four. She at&rted up
w ith a little cry and sat up, straining
her ears, her eyes.
"la that« you,
father?'' She. was little Selina Peake
aguin, and Simeon Peake had come in,
£uy. debonair, from a night's gaming.
1 ervua DeJong was alreudy padding
about tlie room in stocking feet. "W hat
— what time is it? ' W hat's the matter,
fatlier?
Why are you up? H aven’t
you gone to bed. . . .*• Then site re-
membered.
1 ervua D ejo n g laughed and came
to ..a rd her “Get up, little lo ry bones.
It a a fte r four. A ll yesterday's "work
I ve got to do. and all today’s. Break-
last, little Lina, breakfust. You are a
furm er’s w ife now.”
i r Y i . f At5 l V * h,6 m t o f a t r u c k
h irfJiT 1
D irk DeJong was born In the bed-
“ lover of basuty, like | ®quIPPed with such linens as they
I would need. The question of a wed-
• r C ? A ^ Z 5 S „ I , I T T h ,? m o n o to n o u i I l f . d in g gown troubled
tlm « la S e lln a 'a V b r U fh te n 'a ifa o J n e w h It 1 suk'KeStetl thut she
¿'J"7 l J * JoL“ " “
o r |K n ie n « il s o m e w h a t
, ,
a rtlitlo boy^Ro0??hlp ot th* ,a n ,IU v ".
M A R C H 18, 182ff
This
uun
PAGE Î
of romance
EA ST
Go by train and «hip, through the
Southland to New Y o rk — it cote, but
little more.
The superb 5ha»r,i route to California
— (four fine train« daily - thence the
•cenic Sunset route through the South­
land to New Orleans.
Yo u ’ ll relish y o u r meals in the
S o u th ern Pacific d in in g car— fresh
fruits and vegetables alwa> i a delicious
mature.
Connection at New Orleans w ith pa­
latial steamers fot N ew Y o rk — meals
and berth included in the one fare.
Ask about Carrijo fjc ’ . i route
from San Diego—Apatite T ra il
detour of Aritona.
Stopovers en route. Fot tun her
inform ation, ask
“ Farm W o rk G ran d !
F a rm
S lave W o rk ."
W o rk
la
was because Pervus brought them the
food that made them so. Something
of this she tried to convey to Pervua
He only stared. Ills blue eyes wide and
unresponsive.
“Farm work g ra n d ! Farm work la
slave work. Yesterday, from the load
of carrots in town I didn’t make
♦« bring you the goods for the
her until M aurtle
be m arried In the
0 d Dutch wedding dress tiiHt lay in
1 the bride's chest in Selina’s bedroom.
“A real Dutch bride," M aa rtje said.
a.
— S « lln a h e a rs go ssip
i P a a a a r r l le
lS h
& g
r * ," ”* r » ic
S h
e c tio
e “ W id o w
a n n d o « f ¿ lh
o . d
• B k rle n
n b
b e
e r rg
.
r ic h
«nrt
h -lo o k T n a I T out man w ill think that is floe."
D « J o p a . p o o r tr u c k f a r m e r
l 'ervu« was delighted. Selina busked
la a ja a ik le tu tb s w id o w ■ a t -
™ — Fo T * c o m m u n ity
s o c ia b le • In his love like a kitten in the sun.
b u t rii>.P « V a r e * . * lo o c h b a s k e t, d a in ty , She was, a fte r all, a very lonely little
- a ic t lo 'n ir t * m p ’ S f ’ P o rtlo n a . w h ic h Is
a u c tio n e d , a c c o rd in g to c u s to m . T h e bride w ith only two photographs on
iin n
iOf t h * lu ,lc h bo* e x c lts s d e r i- the shelf In her bedroom to give tier
fu n *he b id d in g courage and counsel.
Tlig old Dutch
u r » " r T i r«'“ d
wedding gown was miiny Inches too
a n d nV*! ‘J f- “ ? oh b“ " k a t - w h ic h B elin «
lar„e tor her. T he skirt-baud over-
? « h a re t o g e th e r , th e s c h o o l­
te a c h e r a a . r r a --------
n g e s to
In s
. tr u c t th e g o o d - ! *a PI*<l her slim w aist; her slender llt-
14 in
bJan neglected/' ' * ° ,e ■ad u c ,t'° "
' H« bosom did not fill out the generous
R U R A L E N T E R P R IS E
Southern Pacific
c . P . MOODY.-Aifent
We want you to investigate our
Phone 226
®
FURNITURE •
DEPARTMENT«
She kept, perforca, to the house that
; Mellila started bravely out to make her
Hrst year, and the second. Pervus de­
hMSband over.
H e waa hnndaome,
clared that his woman should never
strong, gentle; slow, conservative, njo-
work In the fields as did muny of the
rose. She would make him keen, dar­
High l ’ra lrle wives and daughters
ing. succesaful, b ic y e s t. Now. hump­ Selina learned mnch that first year.
ing
down
the
Halated
road,
she
sketched
s k
k -------
----- | ,lnd
«econd. but ahe said little. She
daLdnC . Z T . .
P' Hn*
" r“ e l:ppt tl,e 1,oose ln o rdeN -rough work.
I nnd endless— and she managed mlrnc-
OctobTr“ befoíreratUl*, T*“,’ ‘h’ h,°U8* ‘D ' Ul°U8b''
keep hvr,elf loukln* freBl'
. f t e r Ih b f
h* fru ,t Setl'
A nd und
n e ,f -
She
underatood
now
a
fte
r
the
summer
work
Is
over
Then
M
aa
rtje
Pool's
drab garments, harassed
C H A P TP D V I » — . .
Width of the bodice; hut the effect of
that west sixteen
W e’ll drain It.”
p o s itio n s o f " ts 'a c h e r P anndU " p u p il "‘ a n d t t " '
WUH
q u a in t as
, face, heavily aw lfr feet, never at reat.
“Yeh, drain," Pervua muttered. “H's i T lie idea of flowers In bowls waa aban­
? .!° n « lln V e a " s - In h
her
uncongenial
ar u
n c o n g e n ia l " e ll as pathetic.
P . r rv°uU. n
' 2 U-‘-“ * 1 * « « t l o n
clay lund. D rain and you have got yet
They were married at the Pools’.
doned by July
H ad It not been for
S a lin a 's c o n s e n t
b« hla w ife .
clay. H ard clay »oil.”
Klaaa and M aa rtje had Insisted on
R oelfs faith fu l tending, the flower
Selina had tlie answer to that. " I
furnishing the wedding supper— ham,
C hapter V I
(Continued on oatfe 6)
know It. You’ve got to use tlie d rain ­
chickens, sausages, cukes, pickles, beer.
age. And— wait a minute— humus. I
The
Reverend
Dekker
married
them,
They w ere m arried the following
know what humus Is.
It's decayed
M ay. Just tw o months later.
Selina and all through the ceremony Selina
vegetables. There's always a pile by / ASH PAID for false teeth, den­
chided herself because she could not room olf the sitting room oil the nr-
was at once bewildered and calm ; re
ial g old, platinum s.nd discarded
child
so
when
It
comes
you
s
h
o
u
ld
have
teenlh day of March, of a bewildered,
the side of the barn; and you've been
hellious and content. O verlaying these keep her mind on his words in the
clothes fo r it. It's better I feed them using It on the quick la id . All tlie jv w c iry H o k e S m eltin g and Refining
somewhat
resentful,
but
deeply
in
te
r­
I n . . Otsego, M ich,
emotipns was sometliing like grim fascination of watching his short, ested mother; und a proud, foolish,
to the live stock.”
west sixteen Isn’t clay
P art of it’s
amusement. Beneath them, something stubby heard as It waggled with every and vainglorious fath er whose a ir of
AU It needs Is draining
Pervus looked
Pervus drove Into the Chicago m ar­ muckland.
lik e fright. She móved w ith a strange motion of his ja w .
achievement, considering the really
and manure. W ith potash, too. and
a ir o f fntaitty. I t was as I f she were stiff, solemn and uncomfortable in Ids slight part he had played ln the long, ket every other day. During July und
phosphoric acid.”
being drawn Inexorably, against her wedding blacks— not at all the hand­ tedious, and rucking business, was dis­ August he sometimes did not have his
Pervus laughed a great hearty laugl
clothes off fo r a week. Together he
w ill, her Judgrifent, her plans, into some giant of the everyday corduroys
proportionate. T lie name D irk had
that Selina found Surprisingly in fu ria t­
something sweet and terrible.
When and blue s h ill. In the midst of the sounded to Selina like something tall, und Jon Steen woukl loud the wugun
local and internal, and has been success­
ing. “ W ell, well, well I School teacher
w ith Pervus she bras elated, gay, vol­ ceremony Selina had her moment of straight, ami slim. Pervus had chosen w ith the day’s garnering. At four he
is n farm er now, huh? I het even
ful (n the treatment o f Catarrh f c t ovet
panic
when
she
actually
saw
herself
would
start
on
the
tedious
trip
Into
uble. H e talked little ; looked a t her
it.
It bad been bis grandfather's
W idow Panrlenherg don’t know ns forty years. Sold by all deugglata.
running shrieking from this coni|*any,
town
T lie historic old H aym arket on
dumbly, worshlpingly.
name.
much as m.v little farm er shout”— he F. J. C H E N E Y & C O ., T o le d o , O h io
this
m
an
,-th
ia
house,
down
the
road,
West Randolph street had become tlie
T here were days when the feeling of
Sometimes, during those months,
exploded again— “about thia, now, pot­
on. on tow ard— toward what?
The
stand for m arket gardeners for miles
u n rea lity possessed her ‘ She, a truck
Selina would look hack on her first win­
ash snd— whal kind ot arid? T ell ait,
feeling
was
so
strong
th
a
t'
she
was
uround
Chicago.
Here
they
stationed
1» Your child uickiog good prog-
farm er's wife, liv in g in High P ra irie
ter In High P rairie— thHt w inter of
little Lina, from where did you learn
surprised
to
find
herself
still
standing
th
e
ir
wagons
in
preparation
fo
r
the
the reat o f her days! W hy, no I No I
roan
at «ohool?
the
icy
bedroom,
the
chill
black
all thia about truck farming?*
Wag this the great adventure th a t Iter there In the Dutch wedding gown an­ drum, the schoolhouse fire, the chil­ next day’s selling. T lie early coiner
“Out of a hook." Selina said, alifihst
If
your Child is not making a
swering
"1
do"
in
tlie
proper
place.
fa th e r had alw ays spoken of? She,
blains, the Pool pork— and it seemed got the advantageous stand. There
snappishly. " I sent to Chicago for it.”
A fte r
the
wedding
they
went
satisfactory
average at school you
was
no
regular
allotm
ent
of
sjiace.
who was going to be a happy way­
a lovely dream ; a time o f ease, of free­
“A book! A honk!" H e slappedJil»
Pervus tried to reach the H aym arket
fa re r down the path o f life— any one straight to D e jo n g ’s house. In May
Should
And
out why. Defective
knee.
dom,
of
.careless
happiness.
ee.
*"
A
vegetable
farm
er
out
tff
a
the vegetable farm er cunnot neglect
by nine at night. O ften bad roads
of a dozen tilings. T h is H igh P ra irie
book.”
Pervus DeJong loved his pretty
eyesight
is
often
iLponeiblc for
his
garden
even
for
a
day.
The
house
made a detour necessary and he waa
w in te r wag to. have been only an epi­
W hy n o t! T he man who wrote It
young wife, and she him. But young late T h a t usually meant had business
bad been made ready fo r them.
poor
progress
in
studies.Don’»
sode. N ot her life !
She looked at
knows more shout vegetable farming
love thrives on color, warm th, beauty.
Throughout the supper Selina had
next day.
T he men. for the most
M a a rtje . Oh, ahe’d never be like that.
nwad
longer.
Find
out
for su r e »
than
unyhody
in
all
High
Prairie.
'H
e
It
becomes
prosaic
and
Inarticulate
had thoughts which were so foolish
part, slept on th eir wagons, curled up
T h a t was stupid, unnecessary.
Pink
knows about new ways. You're ru n ­ now,
when forced to begin its <lqy at four
and
detached
as
almost
to
alarm
her.
on
the
wagon
seat
or
stretched
out
on
and blue dresses in the house, fo r her.
ning the farm Juat the way your father
l a m married. I am Mrs. Per­ in the morning by reaching blindly, the sacks. T h e ir horses were stabled
I rills <)n the window curtains. F lo w ­ vus “ Now
run It.”
dazedly, for limp and obscure garments
DeJong.
That's
a
pretty
name.
It
and fed In near-by sheds, with more
ers in bowls.
“W hat was good enough fo r my fa ­
would look quite distinguished on a dangling from bedpost or chair, and to actual comfort than the men them­
Hotne of the pangs and terrors w ith
ther Is good enough for me."
end
that
day
at
nine,
numb
and
sodden
selves
One could get a room for
which moat prospective brides are as- calling curd, very spidery and line:
" It isn'tL" cried Selina. “I t isn’t !
with weariness, a fte r seventeen hours
twenty-five cents in one of tlie ra m ­
■alled she conflded to M rs. Pool w hile
The book says clay loam is all right
“M RS. P E R V U S D K JO NG
of physical labor. .
shackle
rooming
houses
that
faced
the
th a t active lady waa slamming about
for cabbages, peas, and beans It tells
I t was a wet summer.
Pervua*
street.
But the rooms were small,
ths kitchen.
AJ Home Frldaya.”
you how. It tells yon how !" She wa»
choice tomato plants, so carefully set
stuffy, none too clean; the beds little
"Did you ever feel scared and— and
like a fra n tic little fly darting and
out in the hope of a dry aeagon. be­
She recalled this later, grimiy, when
more comfortable than the wagons. Be­ pricking him on to accelerate the stolid
sort of— scared when you thought
came draggled gray specters in a sides. Iwenty-flve cents I You got tw en­
she
was
Mrs.
Pervus
DeJong,
at
home
■bout m arry. M rs, Pool?”
not only Fridays, hut Saturdays, Sun­ waste of mire. O f fru it the field here ty-five cents for h alf a barrel of toma­ sluggishness o f his alow plodding gait.
M a a rtje Pool's hands were In a great
Pervua stared straight ahead down
days,
Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednes­ one tomato the size of a marble.
toes. You got twenty-five cents for a
hatch o f bread dough which site putn-
the road between Ills horse’s ears much
For the rest, the crops were moder­
days
and
Thursdays.
of potatoes.
Onions brought
meled and slapped and kneaded vlg
as Klas« Pool had done so maddeningly
ately successful on the DeJong place. seventy-five cents a sack. Cabbages
They drove down the road to De
orously. She shook out a handful of
on Selina's first ride on the Halsted
But
the
work
necessary
to
m
ik
p
th
ls
so
Jong's
place.
Selina
thought,
“
Now
1
went
a
hundred
heads
for
two
dollars,
flour on the baking board w hile she
r^ad. "Fine t>lk
Fine talk.”
was heartbreaking. Selina hrfijtn ow n. and they were five-pound heads. I f you
am driving home w ith my husband.
held the dough mass in the other hand,
" It isn't talk. It's plans. Yon've got
during her w lite r at the I ’ixfi«’, that
1
feel
his
shoulder
against
mine.
1
Optonictrists. Jewelers
drove home w ith ten dollars ln your
then plumped it down and a gain ' be­
Klaas, lluelf, and old Jakoli- worked pocket it represented a profit of ex­ to plan.”
wish he would talk. I wish he would
and
inauufacliiriBg optioiaoe
gan to knead, both hands doubled Into
“Fine talk. Fine tgHi.”
early and late, but her months there actly zero. The sum must go above
say something.
S till, 1 am not
flats.
“Oh
1”
Melina
beat
her
knea
with
an
ALBANY
had
encompassed
whut
is
really
the
frightened.’’
that. N o ; one did not puy out twenty-
8he laughed a short little laugh. “I
impotent fist.
truck farm er s leisure period, «he hhd five cents for the mere privilege of
Pervus’
m
arket
itagun
was
standing
ran aw ay.”
It was the nearest they had ever
a rrltc d In November. She had m ar­ sleeping in a hed.
in the yard, shafts down. He should
"You d id ! Tou mean you really ran
come to quarreling
It would seem
ried in May
F rotn May tirui] October
|
have
gone
to
market
today
;
would
cer­
One June dayi a month o r more nft^r
— but
why?
D id n ’t
you lo— like
that pervos hed Ihe best uf the argu­
it
was
necessary
to
tend
the
fields
with
tainly have to go tomorrow, starting
th eir marriage, Selina drove Into r iil-
Klaaar*
LAWYER AND NOTARY
ment. fiw when two years bad passed
a concentration amounting to fury. cago w ith Pervus. an Incongruous little
early in the afternoon so ns to get a
M a a rtje Pool kneaded briskly, the
the west sixteen was still a boggy day
Selina had never dreamed that human figure ln her bride's finery perched on
good
stand
In
ti,e
Haym
arket.
By
the
H a l . s h y . O h m i h
color high in h er cheeks, w hat w ith
mass, and unprolifle; and the old
beings tolled like that fo r sustenance. the seat o f the vegetable wagon piled
ligh t of Ids lantern tlie wagon seemed
the vigorous pummeling and rolling,
house
stared
out
shabby
and
pal
nt
I
ess.
Toil was a thing she had never en- high w ith early garden stuff. It was,
to Selina to he a symbol. She had
and something else th a t made her look
at the dense willows by the roadside.
< ountered until coming to High Prairie. | In a way, th e ir wedding tr(p, fo r Melina
often seen it before, but now that it
strangely young for the moment— g irl­
They slept fhst n lrh t In one of the
Now she saw her husband wrenching a had not been away from the farm since
was
to
lie
a
p
art
o
f
her
life—
this
the
ish, almost. "Sure 1 liked him. I liked
twenty flve-cent rooming houses. Rath­
living out of the earth by sheer mus­ j her marriage.
DeJong
m
arket
wagon
and
she
Mrs
him ”
er, Pervua slept. The woman lay
cle. sweat, and pain.
During June,
DeJong— she saw clearly what a crazy
Ag they Jogged along now she re-
“ But you ran away?”
«wake, wept a little, perhaps. But In
•July, August, and .«epfember ihe good I vealed magnificent plans that had been
disreputable
and
poverty-proclaiming
"Not far.
I came back.
Nobody
the morning Pervus might have noted I fficicnt Serviee»!
Motor Hrarse.
black p rairie soil for miles around was forming In her imagination during the
old vehicle It was, in contrast with the
ever knew I ran. even. But I ran. I
Lady Atteadant.
teeming, h hotbed of plenty. T here I past four weeks« It had not taken tier G f be Und been a men given to noting)
neat
strong
wagon
in
Klaas
Pool's
knew.”
was born In Selina a b th ls tim e a feel­ four weeks— or days— to discover that that the fine Jaw-ilne w u sat as de­ Brownsville___________ ______ tfis ^ -.r
yard, smart w ith green paint and red
"W hy did you come back?”
ing for the land tiiHt she was newer to this great broad-shouldered man she terminedly as ever w lpi un angle that ---------------- 1 '■
lettering that announced, “ Kians Pool.
■'
11
M m rtje elucidated her philosophy
lose.
Perhaps the child w ith in her ! had m arried was a kindly rrenbtre, spelled Inevitably (silnt, drainage, hu­
Garden Produce.” W ith the two sleek
TV
without hejng in ihe Jeaat aw are th a t
-
farm horses the turnout looked as had something to do w ith this. She tender and good, but lacking any mus, potash, phosphoric acid, and a
It could be called by any such high- prosperous and comfortable as Kiana was aw are of a feeling o f kinship w ith | vestige of Initiative, of spirit She horse learn.
W L. W R IG H T
sounding name
“You can’t run away
the e arth ; an Illusion of splamkor, o f marveled, sometimes, at the m e m o rv
Hbe rose before fou r w ith Pervua
himself.
Mortician
A Funeral Director
fa r enough.
Except you atop living
of his boldness in bidding for her lunch glud to he out o f the stuffy little room
Pervus swung t e r down from the fulfillm ent.
Halsey sod H arrisbu rg '.
you can't run aw ay from life ."
with Its spotted sad scaly green wall
As cabbages had been cabt>a(Ca, and
box that evening of the raffle.
It
seat of the buggy, bis hand a^out her
C a ll D T m c n . Halsey, nr
The girlish look had fled. She waa
p i | * r . Its rickety bad und chair. They
no more, to Klaas Pool, so, to Pervus. seemed incredible now though he fre
waist, and held her so fo r a moment,
W . I.. W a iG w r, Harrisburg
worid-old.
H e r strong arms ceased
these
carrots,
beets,
onions,
turnips,
bad
a
cup
of
coffee
and
a
slice
of
bread
close. Selina said: “You must have
quently referred to it, wagging his
• heir pounding and thumping fo r a mo­
th a t wagon painted. Pervus. And the i nd radishes were Jnst so m v h prod­ head doggishly and grinning the broad­ in the eating house on the first floor.
ment. On the steps outside Klnas and
Selina v u ite d w h llt he tended the
seat-springs fixed and the sideboard uce, to be planted, teoded. gathered, ly complacent grin of the conquering
Jakob were scanning the weekly re­
marketed. But to Selina, during that
male. But he was. a fte r all, a dull horse. It waa scarcely dawn when the
mended."
porta preparatory to going into the city
Selina, watching It
He stared. “W a g o n !"
• summer, they became a vital p art In fellow , and there waa in Selina a dash trading began.
•ate that afternoon.
the vaat mechanism of a living world
of fire, o f wholesome wickedness, of from the wagon sent, thought that thia
'Yes
I t looks a sight."
Selina had the difficult task of w in­
The house was tidy enough, but none Pervua. earth, sun. rain, all elem ental adventure, that he never quite under­ was a ridiculously haphazard and peril­
king Roelf to her all over again. H -
force* that labored to produce too rood stood.
F o r *h e r flashes of fln m e he ous method of distributing the food for
too clean. Pervua lighted the lamps
•a s 111--- a trusting little anim al, who,
for millions of human«. She thooxht had a mingled feeling of uneasiness whose fru itio n Pervua bad tolled w l’ h
There was a fire ln the kitchen stove.
ssundtd by the band ba has trusted. It made the bouae seem stuffy on this o f Chicago a children. I f they bad red I and pride
ai tilng buck and tired arms, But she
ebeekn, clear eyes, nimbi« b rain» i t 1 In the
mild M ay night- Selina thought that
mapner of all young brides, «old nothing.
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