Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 183, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 July 1920 — FORESAW A LENGTHY SESSION [ARTICLE]
FORESAW A LENGTHY SESSION
. .1 —WHOM. :■ -V... ' • LMgte When, c th* fling Humber ffnt The very small ladyriteunArf a oortota diAcuity in maintainingM Otatsttate restgnattow aa sbo ante*** thdr chnrehi To 'begtnt with, she had on a psrdectly now summer .frock, and rtMtwas quite aware that her hair, ju*t coßnbediout sf »<rart papeflA loohedt-a Mttto ntasr'ith**.)nsgMd4: Purthorm®te ah* was being allowed 'to icome to ctairch like p grown up, v*a fo* ciwasn eoopanton of an enttreiy grown-up uwale.:. It l wa*' tbw too. ! So. so dbeibegiantag of .thing*. *h* strugto,*, overcome ~ an- n un-Christian Atobe, testing at the same time qnita aomy foenehlWron who were still, for, towed to go only to Bunday schooL Thefc after what-soomed. a very.long ttane of very long speeches, which pbvtewiiy were not original because the rector read, titata out.ef a book, and WWh .stagiWoOf' music of ,a not par-, Asfoariy mtereating sort, things began to Sewn a Httto dull. Try an she might, i aha eouMn*! eacap* a consciousness of | th* teat that the sun was shining brightly outside, and .that .it was getting on toward th* hour when everyoaa wouM >be going to take a swim or paddte la a canoe or dp something else lidwcsttag Than the congregation root to stag a hymn, and the grown-up URMie gravely opened a hymnal and beta it so that she might see the words. It was opened at hymn Mo. 1. 8t» eould a*a that, and she had heard the rector aanounre.-it,..... The grown-up unde observed resttveness on the part of the very small tody, whlfo he translated as a desire to whisper. He leaned down to listen. “Uncle Henry,” she said, “they—they don't go straight through the book, do they?”—Cincinnati Times-Star.
