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Page 32 text:
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28 NORMAL OFFERING evening in spite of the zealous efforts of her friends to cheer her up. At eleven o'clock Mary said she had a headache and went home. The other girls, returning from the party, came to her room to ask how she felt and found her crying. She could not explain her deep trouble so they consoled her as best they could before leaving her for the night. The following morning, after a sleepless night, Mary was sum- moned to the dean's office and asked to explain how she had hap- pened to have a cigarette case in her possession. She could only say that she did not know where it came from and that it was not hers. Yet there were Mary's initials, so what .could the dean think? She reprimanded Mary severely and then sent her to her room to think the matter over. Mary had scarcely returned to her room when her friend, Jean Kirkpatrick, entered and asked: Have you found anything in the pocket of your coat which I wore the evening I went to the party with Milton Gregory? Mary replied that she had not. Then Jean told her that on the evening when she went to the party with Milton, he dropped his cigarette case. One of the girls picked it up and gave it to her to return to him as he was not in the room at the time when it was found. She had placed the .cigarette case in the pocket of Mary's coat and had forgotten to give it to him, and now she had lost it. But Mary did not allow her to say more, she sprang up to her dresser, opened a box, took from it a cigarette case, and asked if that were it. Jean recognized it, took it, and danced joyously out of the room to return it to Milton, while Mary, very much relieved, went to explain to her dean. ' E. O. S.
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Page 31 text:
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NORMAL OFFERING 27 He stopped and jumped into the road, Upraised the board erect once more. And read the danger it forbade. He went the washout to explore When lo! he saw a maid in tears. She did not know the way around. The brother soon allayed her fears And said he'd carry her to town. He took her in his roadster then And soon to Happiness they came. Their wedding bells have rung since then, And life is as the city's name. The second brother failed, we see Because although his eyes were keen To see the pin and sign, yet he D Too lazy was to act, we've seen. The eldest brother's eyes were dull, His opportunity it cost. What folly 'tis to scorn the rule Which states the truth with no words lost! RUTH E. SLADEN. A Svvrinun mistake. As Mary Gilmore descended the stairs of the boarding school to meet her friends who were going to the Annual School Ball, she met the Dean with whom she was very friendly. They discussed the ball for a few minutes and then Mary' re- moved her coat to show the dean her new evening dress. As she did so, a shining silver object dropped from her pocket to the stairs. The dean picked it up, looked at it, saw the initials, M. G., and passed it to Mary with the severe remark: Yours, I believe. Mary took it-a cigarette case. She could not have dropped it, but where had it come from, and with her initials, too? Smoking was forbidden in the school, and to have the dean iind her with a cigarette case led Mary to spend a very unpleasant
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Page 33 text:
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