social position and money, and she even sided 
with the wife against her son, who considered it all wrong. 
One afternoon Archibald Hollister came home early and ran right into 
the "Pink Tea" crowd. Old Mrs. Hollister, tastefully gowned in black 
and white, sat in the library where the maids brought up refreshments 
to her. A young musician whose mother had been a schoolmate of Mrs. 
Hollister's, and who was poor, played the piano from four to seven for 
the small sum of three dollars. Everything went off pleasantly. The 
maids acted as though they were really fixtures in the house. The 
refreshments were excellent. No wonder with the line of autos before 
the door people considered the Hollisters wealthy, "but plain and solid 
with no airs, etc." 
Old Mrs. Hollister enjoyed young people's society, and they all voted 
her a dear. She'd invite their confidences, and before leaving each girl
would come up to the library for a chat with Grandmother. 
"Oh, Mrs. Hollister," said Lottie Owen, a girl of Ethel's age, "have you 
heard about the 'turkey trot?' We can't dance it any more,--it's been 
suppressed." 
"How does it go?" asked the old lady. "I've read something of it." 
"Well, just wait,--I'll get Nannie Bigelow and we'll dance it for you." 
Thereupon the two girls would show Grandmother Hollister the steps. 
"That's something like the 'Boston Dip,'" responded she very much 
excited. "Why, when I was a girl my mother took me away from a 
cotillion one night because they danced it," and she grew pretty as she 
excitedly told of her younger days. 
"I bet you were lovely, Mrs. Hollister," said Nannie. "Ethel will never 
be as pretty as you were. We were looking at your portrait in the 
drawing room. You must have been fascinating, and as for Mr. 
Hollister--your husband--well, he was just a dear." 
The old lady blushed. Here Lottie spoke up: 
"Yes, and people say you were such a belle. Old Mr. Tupper was at our 
house and met Ethel, and he told us a lot about you. But here's Mr. 
Hollister," and they rushed forward to greet her son. 
"Well, well!" he exclaimed gallantly, "I didn't expect to get into such a 
garden of roses. And you, too, Mother--why, you've actually grown 
younger." 
"That's just what we tell her," said Nannie. "We've been dancing the 
'turkey trot' for her," they whispered, slyly kissing her goodbye. 
These were happy afternoons for Grandmother, after which she and her 
son would sit and chat. 
"It sort of livens things up to have young people about, doesn't it,
Mother?" he said, taking a cup of tea and a sandwich. 
"Yes, Archie, it certainly does; but you look tired." 
"I am, Mother," replied the man, "I wish Ethel was finished with her 
school and happily married. This strain is telling on me and I suppose 
poor Bella suffers from it even as I do." 
"It's too bad, Archie. I don't like this sailing under false colors. People 
imagine Ethel a wealthy girl. Probably they think she'll inherit my 
money. Of course, they never dream that I'm penniless and that you 
have a salary of only three thousand a year; but so long as we keep out 
of debt I don't know as we are doing wrong." 
"Has Kate gone?" he asked. 
"Yes, she left this morning. Bella took her to the train. She's gone to 
visit her mother's people in Tarrytown. Kate's a nice girl." 
"She's a sensible girl. I only hope that Ethel will grow into as good a 
woman as Kate Hollister," said Archibald. 
"You see, Kate has a new fad," began Grandmother--"not a fad either; 
its purpose is too earnest to call it that. She is the head of a Company of 
girls called 'Camp Fire Girls.' They are something like the 'Boy Scout 
Organization.' The object is to make girls healthy. It gives them 
knowledge; it causes them to work and learn to love it; it makes them 
trustworthy; they begin to search for beauty in Nature and they're 
perfectly happy. I remember that much, but the sum and substance of it 
is that it teaches a girl everything that is useful. Kate is the Guardian of 
one Camp Fire section. They meet weekly and from what she tells me it 
must be a great thing. Kate spoke of it to Bella but she ridiculed it and 
forbade her to speak of it to Ethel. She declares it is like the Salvation 
Army, etc., and Kate promised not to, I think she had hoped to secure 
Ethel for one of the girls next summer." 
"Well, there's no need of us trying to oppose Bella," said her son. "She 
is determined that Ethel shall make a brilliant match and in her eyes
this would be a waste    
    
		
	
	
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