[Dickey Downy by Virginia Sharpe Patterson]@TWC D-Link bookDickey Downy CHAPTER XI 4/9
The mother remarked, with forced playfulness, as she watched her, "Elsie's a g-r-e-a-t girl, I tell you.
You can't fool her." [Illustration: The Baltimore Oriole.] As the trimmer returned the boxes to the shelves, I overheard her mutter, "Oh, yes, Elsie is a g-r-e-a-t girl, a perfect little jewel, so well-behaved.
Her polite manners show her careful home training; quite a reflection on her dear mamma." But from the peculiar laugh she gave I didn't believe she really meant it as praise. When the nights grew longer and the store was closed for the evening, the milliner and her husband usually spent an hour or two in the back room looking over the newspaper which came every day from the city. The man always turned at once to the wheat reports, and the price of wool, which he read aloud to his wife, though I could see she did not care very much to hear about them; but she hunted first for the fashion notes and the bargains in millinery before she read the other news. One night while thus engaged she suddenly exclaimed: "Here's something that is bound to hurt trade." By trade she meant the millinery business. "What is it ?" her husband inquired, looking over the top of the page he held. "Why, here's a lot of women who have been meeting in a convention in Chicago and getting excited and losing their heads, and passing some ridiculous resolutions." "What kind of resolutions ?" he inquired. "Oh, they've been denouncing the fashion of wearing birds.
They belong to a society called--called--something or other, I forget what.
Let me see," and she ran her eye down the column.
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