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Page 11 text:
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THE CHIMES 9 HANNAH ' S REVOLT Kathryn Dorr, ' 31 What, you ain ' t a-going? Why, Hannah Jones, do you mean to sit there and tell me you ain ' t a-going! It ' ll be the time of your life! Why, just think of it, going on a great big boat to New York to visit your daughter! Course you ' re going. No, Hettie, Hiram says there ain ' t no sense of a woman of my age to go gallivanting around. He says I ' ve always been a home-loving person and he doesn ' t see wdiy I have to start now. Anyhow he ' s planning to go to see about hiring another man for the harvesting and that wall make more work. He says he isn ' t going to waste money on me that he can use for hiring a man to help him. Lord sakes ! how many more men is he going to hire? He ' s got four now. There ' s more work for yer. But you ain ' t a-going to do it; I tell yer you ' re going to New York But Hiram says — You never mind Hiram. You ' ve listened to him for the last thirty years, and I guess it ' s about time you had your own way. Hannah, you get ready to go. You get yer things packed. You gotta revolt some day and you might as well start now. Well, goodbye. You be a-thinking it over and get ready. Goodbye. But, Hettie — She was gone leaving Hannah in a bewildered state of mind. Would she dare to do it? To go against Hiram, whose word had always been law in her house? But she hadn ' t any money, only what little she had saved from sell-
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Page 10 text:
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8 THE CHIMES work easier; can help your school l)y boosting it to outsiders. Jt you have not already ])een doing your best — originate. Originate school spirit. Lo e your school. Without love you cannot do your best for it. A thing done because you feel it to be your duty is not as well done as one which } ou do out of love and re- spect for a person or thing. If necessary you should sacrifice some things for your school. You may have to sacrifice a night at the movies in order to pay your class dues, but in the end you will not regret it. Participate in all things you can. Anyone athletically inclined should participate in sports. Participate, too, in your class activities. Impel yourself to do your best in your studies and any office which you may hold. Respect your teachers and your school. Little can be done for a person not respecting anything or anyone worthy of this tribute. Include everyone in your list of friends. Personality is one of your greatest assets. Tackle all work with an ambition and desire to reach the top. A BOOK REVIEW Dorothy MacDonald, ' 31 ' ' Lincoln, an interesting biography, was written by Emil Ludwig. This stor3 -portrait of Lincoln is very realistic. It shows a Lincoln of many moods, — Lincoln gay, happy, careworn, depressed, angry, loving, and humiliated. One can come to know him better — even if one thinks he knows all there is about him — through reading this delight- ful biography. Ludwig does not dwell on historical facts that we can get in any good Hbrary if we hunt for history. He tries to emphasize the fact that Lincoln was human. He had his faults, his ideas, his mottoes, and his ambitions. He had enemies as well as friends. Ludwig visited the birthplace and other places where Lincoln had lived. Erom neighbors and relatives he learned of some very amusing and pathetic incidents in the life of Lincoln. In this biography Ludwig just touches on historical events when they are necessary for his subject to be better under- stood.
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Page 12 text:
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10 THE CHIMES ing- eg-g-s last summer. She went over to the sideboard and took down the cracked sugar l)owl, which hekl her hard earned money. Counting it, she found she had just exactly forty- four dollars. It wasn ' t much to be sure l)ut enough for her fare. But she ' d promised Hiram he could have it toward the fund for his new chicken house. She had never been away in all her married life except, once when she went to the country fair when the children were small and then it had been more work than pleasure. Hiram had been promising- her ever since they had been married that they ' d go on a trip someday, but that some- day had never come. She put the dinner on to cook and then she we nt into her little bedroom and began to pack her shabby clothes. By dniner time she had packed. During dinner she tried to evade Hiram because her con- science made her feel a bit uneasy. Almost all he talked about was what kind of hired man he wanted and about the chicken house. Just after the meal he asked Hannah for the money so he could order the lumber for the chicken house. Hannah didn ' t know what to do. She couldn ' t give it to him. She made some kind of mumbled excuse and he went out grum- bling. How could she tell him ! She kept putting it off all the afternoon. Finally at sup- per she told him — Er, Hiram, I ' m going to New York. I ' m going tomor- row morning early. You ' ll have to shift for yourself for the next two weeks, hired men or no hired men. I ' ve de- cided and nobody — not even you — can stop me. ' ' WHiy, Hannah you ' re only fooling; aintcha? Why, you can ' t go off and leave me with a new man coming and har- vesting to be done ! Besides where are you going to get the money? ' I ' m going to take my egg money, Hiram Jones. You aren ' t going to have it for the chicken house. I earned it myself and it ' s mine to do what I want with it. ' ' Why, Hannah, what ' s happened to yer? I have never seen you act like this before. What ' s got into you? You ain ' t ailing; l)e you? ' ' No, I ' m not ailing , Hiram Jones. I just woke up to the fact that I haven ' t had that trip we ' ve been going to take foT the last thirty years. I guess it ' s about time I did
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