Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County observer. (Moro, Sherman County, Or.) 1897-1931 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1920)
r •• '? 4 Kfrf rr.i.hftiW .-. O-Hfe «A», . i o j j M o r o ,.’ S h e r m a n C o u n t v , O r e g o n . F r id a y . E s t a b l i s h e d T Q S 7. C . J. B woht • W . C. MANY FAIRIES IN GREEN ISLE B mtamt . SWEET PEAS Bright & Bryant By L O U IM H O FFM AN . ___________ _______ A tto rn e y » -a t-L a w offices at The Osllea and M jr o , O re. - J. R. Morgan Jaa. Wilkie iMtMMMMMMWMMMtMMtMMM». Gertrude Fraser was sealing the last ja r .of pineapple when she heard a timid ring nt the front door. Through the glass panel she caught a glimpse of a dainty little woman In a cool white toile gown. She opened the door and found herself gaxlng Into a pair of the softest velvety brown eye« she bad ever Idea That the Gnome« Have Dla- appeared Is Declared to Be Altogether Erroneous. M OSUL M ay F i v e C e n t» 21, 1920. and MANY KINDS, AND ALL GOOD » -» - T h a t Would S«em t« Be the Verdict ' of Hum anity «n the Great Question of Pies. There «till are fairies In Ireland, de- elaree the Ulster Folklore, which ex plains by saying: To many, perhaps, thia statement will be really news. O f course, anyone who has never taken any Interest In the matter at nil knows that In the days gone by there were plenty of them from one end of the green Isle to the other—are not their old haunpt, the thorn bushes, their raths, forts, coves ftnd souterralnes »till to be found In every corner o f Ireland Just as they have existed since time out of mind? But It has been the general belief that the fairies themselves long ago, In one fashion or another, bad for- k saken or been driven from their se cret places, the last heglrn being placed at as modern a period as the middle of the nineteenth century— the Bight of the Mg wind, In fart when th.ey„were all supposed to have been blown Into the »ea with (be exception of a few that lumled In Scotland. The error of that belief, however, has been scientifically ascertained In a series of Investigations pursued by Miss Elizabeth Andrews, F. It. A. I., for a decade or so. “The belief Is general," Miss An drew's. says, "that these little people were at one tim e' very numerous throughout the country, but have now disappeared from many of their for mer haunts. At Bnllynahlnch I was told they had been blown away 50 years ago by n great storm, ami Jh«' caretaker nt Klllevy said they bad gone to Scotland. They are, however, supposed still to Inhabit the more re mote parts of the country, and the old people have many stories of fairy vis itors and of wiint happened in their own youth and In the time of. their fathers and grandfathers." « They were talking ah»ut pies and discussing which was the best, and. what we gathered from the clu'erful controversy, all were the lw*st. The person who stood up for the good old apple pie was Just as eloquent In his references to the peach or pump kin pje. In fact, each person would hurry through the praise of one kind of pie In order to champion another, which couvlnced us thut of all the varieties of food In this world the pie Is the -bLesSedest. Sometimes you will find a man who doesn’t eat pie, but watch bltn. Fib Is a remedy for many distempers. We one time cured a feroelpus sick head ache with a quarter of mince pie, and that, too, on the advice of a physician. One of the party never heard of a mulberry pie, and what a barren ttfew she must have led. We are through with the cherry pie era and with what Joy It has filled the world! We c'-me to the herr.v era, and first of all there Is the huckleberry pie, which berry has rescued from sunshine and soil all' th e /ra c e of the earth. If a man does not like a huckleberry pie, It Is be cause the pie or himself has not been well made. The black raspberry pie stnnds away up on the snowy peaks of perfection und fbr picnic purposes It Is -unparalleled. When we eat raspberry pie In the Woods we feel that the Dryads are feeding us front their lily white hands. There are other glorious pies, of course, but we must have room to say that the glory of s pie Is In the gWace and charm of the cook. The pastry depends upon her temper, and the pas try Is three-fourths of a pie. If we were going to get, married again, we would arrange a pastry-making con test, and the dantael that made the best pastry we would marry—If we could.—Dido State Journal. Scarcely had a word of Introduction been spoken before these comparative fit stranger*. Instinctively, felt a mutual attraction. D E N T IS T S The Uttle woman, Mias . Eunice Spragoo, was carrying an exquisite bouquet of sweat peas, which she silent ly placed In her hostess* hand». •Office on P in t Mreet, -H ow lovely I" exclaimed Gertrude, Phone M ain 83 ecstatically. “They are my favorite O R E G O N flower», Inseparably linked with my MORO. dearest and sweetest association». Why, here Is my old friend, Marks Tey," drawing forth a dusky blcolor of huge slxe, "and here Is Dobble’s Cream and Wedgwood Blue and beau tiful Blanche Ferry with blush-white wings.” she rambled on, naming each* & iii turn. The little woman*» velvet brown eye» glistened. “I ’m sure you love them," ■»he murmured, sinking Into a com fort a- O ffic i» in the Rank of Moro build* uuTwinga<rcbalr which Gertruds drew ing, upitairi. forward. “Do you grow them?" “We planted some, but unfortunately OREGON • hey are a little late.’’ MORO, 'Gertrude buried her flushed face In he delicate fragrance and drew greal irafts of inspiration from their depths was so tired. Housework dlscqur ■ - 3 5 ^ 5 D R . W A L T E R W . H A R T •»he ,gwl and fretted her so. There wa- •«ueb an Infinite amount of detull. Out was never doue. She could direct a -.laff of servants In hotel management^ with-comparative euse. But she found' Vogt Bldg. it quite another matter when her two T H E D A L L E S . - O R E G O N baud» musi do the work of cook, .wait- WAS PIONEER IN WIREL c S S Scene In Mosul. .•esa. chambermaid and seamstress, even If the establishment was small. James Bowman Lindsay, Scottish En H E most important feature leg. The noise which I had heard UNABLE TO ANALYZE DRUG Her Idea of rest and relaxation In a gineer, Hae Not Been Given the about Mosul, which. Is begin from all over the city came straight «mall house, to which she had fled In Credit He Deserves. ning to show’ tl v beneficial ef from his beak, the hollow upper and Intoxicating Principle» of Powerful • his quiet little hamlet, had proved a lower halves of which he was striking Narcotic, "Cohoba," Remain a fect« of British control, Is Its delusion. Yel here was this little worn L ittle Is heard about James Bow mra together with Incredible rapidity." Mystery to Ch«ml«t«r g«xîgrSphTêaI“ sirûatIôn. MtïKoT la the an from the narrow coil flues of farm Lindsay, and niu<h about wireless te In the Bazaars and Square. meeting points of roads and caravan P h y s ic ia n , an d S u rg eon. •lie. who had probably been accus legraphy, yet the career of the one and When Columbus arrived nt the Is The bazaars of Mosul are not the tomed to this drudgery all her life, the hitjJory of the other are insepara routes from everywhere. They wind land Of Haiti he and his followers In through the mountain-passes and attractive places they might be ex fairly radiating peace and quiet. ble, says the Christian Science Moni Were Interested to uhArve a etirlous They chatted away like old friend» tor. Upwards of sixty year» ago Bow over the rocky highland from Dlar- pected to be In a city of so much tra f practice of the native», who were ac M o ro , O regon. b< k r and BItlls, across rim great des fic. As William WnrfiéTd” say» In his m various subjects for a few minutes man Lindsay operated a system across customed on ceremonial occasions to »ut Gertrude went back to the flowers the River Tay, a distune.e of one and a ert from Aleppo and over the sands book, "The Gate of Asia," they are ...make uae of a narcotic snuff produc * O ffic e in re s id e n c e . rarely roofed, and n rr furnished only •Come and see my sweet pea tre llis / half miles, just above the bridge the from Persia atod Rugdad. Its very tive'o f a sort of hypnotic state, with construction of which ranks as one Of name, Indeed, from the Arabic AI- with the commonest wares. The shop vision supposed to be supernatural. iivlted Gertrude. keepers are generally Christians, hut Mottsll, "the place of connection," tells “Why." exclaimed Gertrude In rap the roost notable feats In engineering. The tribal wizards, or priest», while • ures. as they entered the garden His efforts failed to attract attention Its story. And ns with toads and car there are many Arnbs. Garden prod under the Influence of the drug, were Residence phone M 72 uce is often sold In the »qua res In open avan routes, so It w ill be, some time Here Is a Klug of the Whites In bios - at the time, however, because of his accuMtomcd to hold *Yammun I cation Office phone 463 •«ora. .They were my bridal flowers, you retiring disposition, but the history of again In the fnture In ,the matter of markets, and nt any time venders may with unseen power», ami their mut snow." she explained hupplly remlnls electrical research records few names railways, when the famous Bagdad be seen talking In the streets, with tering» were construed as prophecies -ent as she picked the glistering Im more deserving of respect than his. fie line Is'completed, says the Christian eggs or cucumbers In a basket while and revelation» of hidden things. A t present Ger the mosque courtyards are favored was a pioneer In the application of Science Monitor. iiiaculate white blossom. The »nuff was called “cohoba,” and, many’s great effort falls short of Mo places for sweetment sellers, who dis electricity for heating and lighting The little woman’s reive» brown eye» In the form of a fine powder, was In play “Turkish delight" on scalloped sul by many miles In the west and glowed with a strange sympathy. "How purposes and bespoke a great future The bazaars radiate haled through a forked wooden tube, In the south, and the "ramshackle copper trays. strange," she murmured. Then In a for It. from a picturesque a square quite near the forks being Inserted in the nos city,” as It has been Irreverently Apropos of Bowman Lindsay, ns he scarcely audible tone •she confided the bridge, which Is the center of the tril» and the lower end of the tube " Office opp. Hotel Sherman T h e y were to have been mine, too. was fnmillnrly known, It is interesting called, still depends for Its communi burled In a little heup of the snuff, cations on the road and the caravan town. To the south and southwest W ASCO, : : O R E G O N Bui your love story ended happily,” to note that his energies were not route hr It has done through the ages. are the drapers, shoemakers and har which was held on a tray of carved wholly directed to the advancement of with a yea ruing wistfulness. wood. Sometimes large snail shells O f all the cities In the Turkish em ness makers ; to the northwest the were used for snuff boxes. Gertrude Fraser glanced up quickly. the mechanic^ arts: He was a lin Hour« by Appointment pire, as one writer has well said of It, greengrocers, while the potters and Phone The mlmosa-llke tree from which In a flash she saw the little woman guist und ns such started out to trans late the Bible into many different lan perhaps Mosul Is the one that has dealers In hardware are to be found the snuff 1» obtained Is plentiful along was yearning for the prize every worn In narrow stores opening on a street guages. Seven years’ labor w’ns ex been least touched by western civili the banks of the Orinoco and the an longs for. And here she was mak pended on the task, ami the work was zation. Built on ground that onee was that runs to the north. Amazon. It grows In Haiti, Porto ing herself miserable because she As to the Rquare Itself, It Is, of fur from being finished when It had to a suburb of Nineveh, It stands on the Bleo und other Islands of the Antilles. couldn’t attain an Impossible ideal In he abandoned. The Bible, in Incom- .western bank of the. Tigris, looking course, one of the famous meeting The seeds yielded by Its pods are housekeeping^ Suddenly, she came to plete form, may still be seen in the i n(*ross at the mounds which are all places of Mosul. Here the cnruvuriN dried, roasted and <round to powder, a realization of her priceless blessing Albert Institute, Dundee, Scotland. It j rerna'n of the glories of the capl- are gathered together, and their own which Is sometimes mixed with lime “ No. no. don’t say It’s ended happily lies open In a gloss ease and shows tai of ancient Assyria. Nineveh has ers sit on the famous second-story from calcined snail shell. Office et Residence. MORO, ORE. yet," she begged, leading the way to a that the method employed was to di a history that stretches throughout a gallery of a . coffee shop, while the Only recently has this tree been secluded garden scat. vide the boob Into tin* nqulsite num period nearly two thousand years muleteers stroll about the crowded The little woman looked troubled and ber of columns and in each column long, ending with the fall of the em place, or lounge among bales covered • I deo 11 tied by Dr. W. E. Haffonl of the the sadness ItTfcer eyes deepened. Il place the words in English and their pire of Senn: chcrib about the year with brown and white striped sack government plant bureau as the was such a shock to have this new equivalent In each language Into which 000 B. C. From that time until Lay- cloth. These men are utmost always source of the snuff, the origin of which has hitherto been a puzzle. The found friend ruthlessly dash her cher they were translated. nrd unveiled the palaces of Ashur- Kurds, those from the southern and chemical properties of the drug nre still ished dream on the rocks. eastern tribes dressed In tuules, zou banlpal and Sennacherib, and un QEO. ELLSW O RTH, Proprietor unknown and so Its Intoxicating prin " I m e a n t/ continued Gertrude softly earthed the literary chamber contain ave Juckets and turbans. They wear ciple remains a mystery. Dangerous Counterfeit radiant as she caught the fleeting ex The most expert means of counter ing the famous deluge tablet the ru bpggy trousers reaching to their feet, Washing done each Monday, Tuesday presslon. “my love story Is going on feiting Americun greenbacks has been ins of Nineveh for 2,500 long years which are covered with brogues of F rightful Exp«rleno«.1 % end Wednesday happily. I’m happier uow than I was discovered bv the state police In the have Hlept undisturbed. As fo r Mosut" heavy hemp or rawhide. ' 1“\Vhut was my most thrilling expe Site of Ancient ftlneveh. Third day delivery schedule maintained. on my wedding day." Adlrondueks lumber camps, where $20, Itself, It Is partienlarly mentioned In rience?” mused the ex-pllot. "Ah! I The little woman leaned forward $50 and $100 notes were being dupli all history since the Arab conquest, Leave bundles at Ellsworth Hotel Annex For many people the great attrac could never forget It. It was a bright eagerly. “I ’m so happy to hear you cated. Banking experts have pro and It ls^a checkered history Indeed, tion of a visit to Mosul, the most In starlight night, but the lurid tlushes say that," she breathed. “1 knew you nounced them the most clever counter for It suffer-ed pillage nt the hands of accessible place In the Rultan’s domin Patronise Home Induatry around us obscured ull else as we must be happy. How could you be feits In existence. Tamerlane, w in besieged by Nadir ion, lies across the famous "bridge of sped through the air. The advancing W e aim to please our customers otherwise In a dear little home like The Information now In the hands Shah, and endured a host of other vl- boats" at the other side of the Tigris, enemy wu» hard upon us, while all this? You know," she explained, “thlv of the state police Is to be turned over cldiitudes. where the huge, formless mounds, rls around we heard the weird, savage was my old home, and I ’ve always to the United State» deportment of Jus Ing up out of the sand, mark the sit«* music so terribly fandllur, and the MoeuF» Many Storks. loved It. I was born here." tlce. The secret of the device Is a ma thtid ns of a thousand falling meteors. The ohi town, with Its strangely of the ancient d t w o f Nineveh. Any " Robert and I were to have been chine which Is capable of splitting the attempt to tell the' story of Nineveh We «11 vc«l, looped, corkscrewed till our narrow streets, even for tho east, Is married the year before we moved. thin note paper on which American would Involve a Journey back to the senses were numbed. I felt a sharp We bud planned to have oceans of note« are engraved and permit ling the surrounded by a half-ruined wall, built very beginning of things. Later As pain In my right foot, a dull weight In modern times as a protection sweet peus for our wedding, and Rob face and buck of the’ note to be against the Shmnraar Arabs. Every syrian writers declare with confidence In my side— I was fulling, falling— ert bnd helped ine plant them. A month sjripped from'each other. W-axed pa one remarks on the narrow streets of that Its story ran back ns n m utter'of and knew no mote till I found myself before our wedding Bobert was obliged per is then laid over each half of the Mosul, on its white, crumbling houses, course to the “creation of the world,’’ lying on the ground badly smashed to make a trip to Faris, and while there note and a solution applied to trail» on the gypsum dust which falls con but, ns a matter of fact, the first firm some hours Inter.” war was declared." She paused a mo fer enough of the original Ink to the "And thnt was rrtilly your record stantly from the walls over everything, ground In the midst of tradition Is ment. " It Is five years this summer waxed pnper to make an exact dupll reached about the year 2200 B. C. Thnt aerial engagement?" ’and. upon the storks. Indeed the since I saw him last gaily waving his cate of the note. The waxed section» wonderfully vivid period In Nineveh's "No," he replied: ‘"It was my first 'cap as the steamer disappeared from to which the Ink has been transferred ptorks of Mosul are apparently Its history with which the world, espe experiment with the Jazz."— Pitts most remarkable feature? • view. Then one awful day early In tho are then pasted to thé opposite half Discussing «h- matter one authority cially recently, has become familiar, burgh Chronicle-Telegraph. war I received official notice that he of the good note and In tills way two lies between the ninth and sixth cen bank notes exactly alike are produced. tells how, In thnt cool of the evening, turies B. G. In this period the reign was lost In. action.’’ Paying the W a r Coet. inters U te Stock inspector the eIMzehs of Mosul share their A motor whirled Into the driveway. f ----------------------- Referring to the cost of the war, of 8ennneherlb Is of course b y ,fa r housetops with Innumerable storks, Exam iner of » U llio n « for License Malin«« Carillons Busy. A young man, with the assured air of a Secretary of War Baker told the the most Im portant The carillons of Mallnes have never who build th d r ragged nests on the welcome visitor, pulnfully alighted and Nineveh, however, depended entire finance committee of the senate and highest places "In uttwr disregard of walked over to the sweet pea trellis. been heard so much and to such splen W ASCO, O R E G O N a s he turned to go to the door, the did effect ns of late. The truth Is that the laws o f -jpravHy." Four great, pre- ly for Its greutuess and I <>wer upoh house thnt the total ontg.« in round the conquering spirit of Its rulers Hnd numbers waul’d he $30,000000odd; but Telephone Main 502 little woman caught a glimpse of his Mallnes has undertaken to get together pos<erous"»ppiHien» of the species the military glory and powers of Its $0,000,000 000 of this was loan» to our stood, in the'enriy morning, on a wall -»catred feature»- She started forward. a sufficient sutrt of money with Which armies, and when these were ultimate allies. Nearly a third of the net cost "B-ob,” »he gasped- “Is— It— really to present to St. Quentin a hew caril beside tlie.yooni where he was, he con- ly defeated the city fell, never to rise has ulreaily been paid out of money . id he dimly r<*allzed that lon, the Germans having seized the raised by luxation. The other two- -you?" they were performing their morning again, und Its very site was quickly bells of the French town. So ,ever,\ . thlrds was obtained from the five Mrs. Fraser »nd Bob sprang forward forgotten among the nations.- carillon of Mallnes has. been ringing toilet. They t<»nk no notice of him. Liberty loans. I f we pay a billion a ro catch the little woman. But a loud noise like someone rattling year, be»ld«,s Interest, we can clear M°ro, When Hubby Displayed Tact. A fter a few momenta, Mrs. Fraser and pealing. There have been carillon a slick In a wooden bucket attracted concerts, one of tho performer» On the Wife— "Please match this piece of off the war cost In about twenty-one discreetly »lipped away, leaving the his attention. Th.en somebody else • * _____ (overt In their flrat rapturous momenta bells of the cathedral of 8f. Ttombant with another bucket made a similar silk for me before you come home." years. being the hell ringer of Ht. Quentin Husband—"At the «winter where th at of reunloo. himself. The hymn. whh li he plaxcd noise In a different key, and he won pretty little blonde serves? The one BI3 ContribfilTori to War. A great wave of hspplneaa eq p lfe d - T o M y Patrons: If you cannot Set me embodied the motifs of the “Marseil dered whnt In the world could they be with the soulful eyes and-—’’ W lfe1- One of the most striking eontribu direct by phone at Moro, please call Foes tier. The little woman’» yearning look doing to the buckets. Then It dawned "No. You're too tired to shop for me tlons of the United States to the war A C o .’e garage, who w ill promptly notify mid magically disappeared. She would laise" and the "Brabançonne. upon him that half the population of was the enormous quantity of smoke when your «lay's work Is done. denF. me when I return to town. nave her heart’» d w lra —husband and Moral must he rnttllng buckets, for AM Busy. less pmviler high explosives produced, On weotvl tlmught I won't bother home. the sound came from fa r and near, “Whht’s your wife doing?" say» Ute Scientific American. From . e '_________ ' A few week« later, Gertrude algnlfl- faint or loud according to dfctnnce, you." "Preserving watermelon rind." April 1. 1017. to November 11, 1018, we •antly whispered Into the bride’» ear, and In a hundred different keys. Then • "So?" pnaluced 032 million pounds of smoke Why Joe Left Home. nver a huge ahower of King of the came a loud rqttlo c l^ e beside him. Catketa and Robes always on “And the kids are. entliuslnstlenllv less powder, which waa-almoet exactly *‘Penr • Joe— Come home. Forgive band; special supplies and caskets Vhltoa. “May your love atory continue supplying her with the material."— "W ithin nine feet of him." he «ays. »nd forget. I have destroyed the book equal to the combined output of France I "stood a solemn stork, the toilet over, lapplly.” _ of war recipe».— V io let"— Tlt-Blta, 1 and Grant Britain. ordered at any time Ixiulivllle Courier-Journal. .copyright, wit. McClure Newspaper By»- his attitude ot graceful balance on one 8am Brtsbtne, Moro, Oregon. Drs Morgan & Wilkie D r .C . E. Gard D E N T IS T D E N T IS T -3*. .. ... -Ì53 T Dr. G L . Poley J. Carlos Ghornley, I D . PHYSICIAN and SURGEON DR. C. H. TOHNS Chiropractor MORO L A U N D R Y Thco.BcIetslri, D .V .S. V E TE R IN A R IA N D r . S anders BBS’s», Or*0°n VETERINARIAN Undertaking ~ * • I m - A SPRAINED By BLANCHE D. STICKNEY. ’ Eleanor Hanson was Joyfully look- . ing forward to patting aside school duties for two months of "do-a»-yoo- IIke” at one of New England*» beaches. Before going, she was to chaperon during the last week of June a group of girls from her "math” class at a camp at Pride’s Brook. At nine o'clock on the Saturday morning after school closed, the merry group wa» at the »tut Ion, each laden with a suitcase and a box of home-made goodies. She re ceived the exhortations of anxious mothers to be watchful that Mary didn’t catch cold and that Francena rubbed her arm three time» a day with that green liniment which was la her suitcase. , > ' As Miss Hanson got on the train, she began to wonder whether she bad taken more on her shoulder» than she had calculated. But thia thought stayed only a moment, for the admlra tlon of the girls for her wa» omnipre- ent. "Oh, Miss Hanson," ejaculated Mar Jorle Thorpe, “you will sit here with Ethel and Mabel and me. won’t you?. Oh, we’ve got to te ll‘you all about the junior projn last nlgbL" __"Well, Miss Hanson, I f you do that, we’re going to engage you right now to be with us coming back." called the spokesman for the other three. After the suitcases were a«lju«te' and everybody settled. Miss Him-' heard a most detailed account of ih previous night’s prom, together wltF si’hoolglrls’ Impressions of the faculty It seemed such a short trip when the conductor called out, “Next station Pride’s Brook. Pr-r-r-r-lde’s Brixik As they alighted from the train. » gentle breeze came their way, bring Ing the odors of wild flowers sn«< country air. They found an old <1ero oerntlc wagon at the station waiting to take them to Camp Breeze. For one of .the girls It was her first visit to the country, and she looked with gres’ wonderment at everything about bei When old Dobbin began to slow up the girls noticed the little group» nt cottages. They were greeted by a most cordial host and hostess, who hnd run the place for many summer« One nfternoon Miss Hanson decide to rest on the veranda and read wV th» girls went to the village. Th< didn’t return at the time they .sai they would, but she knew girls and •.« did not worry. . Soon, however st; was attracted by calls of: “Oh M Hanson,' come quick I” . She rn»h»*«i the girls and found Ethel Stantor ' Ing carled by two young men. "Oh, whnt has happened?" she e r « before giving Ethel'herself a cl»»n to felploln, Marjorie Thorpe •»««‘«I “Oh. we were all running home, «me trying to bent the other, and Ethel turned her ankle and fell. We didn’t know what we were going to do. no autos or nothing came until, finally Mr. Cross, who has a camp of young men up the road a little ways, came by and offered to help.*! “I r«'slly don’t think, Miss Hanson." he volunteered, "that you need have cause for worry. There are no bones broken, but as It was somewhat pain ful. It seeinetl advisable for her not to walk on It. If you do not object. I will be over after supper with something I have In m.v first aid kit which I know will benefit her.” . . "May we not Invite the young men, too, Miss Hanson, they have been, so good to us?" asked the girls. "Yes, Indeed," she replied, “we should be glad to have you all come I am more than grateful for your valu able help this afternoon. We will look for you all tonight." There was such greal excitement In preparation for the evening that sup per and the lame ankle were hut trivial matters. In an hour or so a group of five splendid young men came tramping up the piazza. The ankle had first attention, and Mr. Cross, who was decidedly opposite to the Idea his name conveyed, as sured Ethel thnt her ankle woqld prob ably be all right to walk on the next day. When Mr. Cross naked Miss Hanson If they were enjoying their stay, she replbnl: "We like It »0 much that aP ready we bnd planned to come next year." The yttle house was lively that night with everything from a Virginia reel to the latest one-»tep. Even Ethel, who thought that her time wa»^ spoiled: was the center of attractloe at the close of each dance when «he daintily served fruit punch to th» merry party. For the few remaining days. nee(ll«»s to say. there were many visits to the cottage . ai.d canoeing parties. ' ____ . The night before they were to leave the girls gave a farewell party. D ar ing the last dance Mr. Crow gradual ly directed Miss Hanson’s stop» to • remote corner of the plassa and «»Id: "Miss Hanson, our friendship has meant so much to me th«w few day«. Must I wait until a year from now before I hear from you or » •• yuw «gain?* What »he said wa» not heard. b»t a few days before the camping party ( started off the next year, her fellow teachers discovered a beautiful aolP talre on Miss Hanaou’s hand. Almost simultaneously Mahal W W sted came rushing down Ih e corrtder to a group of girla und anld enettad- ly : “Say. whom do you « u pp w I out antolng ywtarday? Mr. Mias Hanson.* tCopyright, WA /