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Ethel Morton at Rose House

Ethel Morton at Rose House

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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The Project Gutenberg eBook, Ethel Morton at Rose House, by Mabell S. C. Smith

Title: Ethel Morton at Rose House

Author: Mabell S. C. Smith

Release Date: April 5, 2005 [eBook #15550]

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ETHEL MORTON AT ROSE HOUSE***



E-text prepared by Al Haines







Frontispiece
[Frontispiece: "Here's where we should land"]





Juvenile Library Girls Series




ETHEL MORTON AT ROSE HOUSE



BY



MABELL S. C. SMITH








THE WORLD SYNDICATE PUBLISHING CO.
CLEVELAND                       NEW YORK



1915





PRESS OF

THE COMMERCIAL BOOKBINDING CO.

CLEVELAND






TABLE OF CONTENTS



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS





ETHEL MORTON AT ROSE HOUSE


CHAPTER I

ROGER'S IDEA

For the fortieth time that afternoon, it seemed to Ethel Brown Morton and her cousin, Ethel Blue, they untangled the hopelessly mixed garlands of the maypole and started the weavers once more to lacing and interlacing them properly.

"Under, over; under, over," they directed, each girl escorting a small child in and out among the gay bands of pink and white which streamed from the top of the pole.

May Day in New Jersey is never a certain quality; it may be reminiscent of the North Pole or the Equator. This happened to be the hottest day of the year so far, and both Ethels had wiped their foreheads until their handkerchiefs were small balls too soaked to be of any further use. But they kept on, for this was the first Community Maypole that Rosemont ever had had, and the United Service Club, to which the girls belonged, was doing its part to make the afternoon successful. Helen, Ethel Brown's sister, and Margaret Hancock, another member of the Club, were teaching the younger children a folk dance on the side of the lawn; Roger Morton, James Hancock and Tom Watkins were marshalling a group of boys and marching them back and forth across the end of the grass plot nearest the schoolhouse. Delia Watkins, Tom's sister, and Dorothy Smith, a cousin of the Mortons, were going about among the mothers and urging them to let the little ones take part in the games. Everybody was busy until dusk sent the small children home and the caretaker came to uproot the pole and to shake his head ruefully over the condition of the lawn whose smoothness had been roughened by the tread of scores of dancing feet.

It was while the Club members were sitting on the Mortons' veranda, resting, that Helen, who was president of the Club, called them to order.

"Saturday

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