The Corner House Girls' Odd Find / Where they made it, and What the Strange Discovery led to
ld Corner House in Milton had been removed by Uncle Rufus, and in the dusk of the
far corner and not yet festooned. The girls were all busy bringing tinsel and glittering balls and cheery red bells and strings
gas-log fire on the hearth-the dining room was gloomy even at mid-afternoon. Wheneve
Corner House girl experienced, for she said to Tess,
-but I should think he'd be afraid of-of rats or things. I don't
But where would he hitch his reindeer? You know
Dot. "There's a perfectly good hitching
Santa Claus would come to the side door and knock like the old clo's man? You are
ed Dot, reflectively, "do you
s time Sammy Pinkney, almost their next-door neighbor, was very much in Tess
says he doesn't believe there i
reflection, she added: "Well, when you come to think of
most groaned t
really and truly' believe in Santa, there isn't any-for us! And he only comes to
ere is one in Blachstein & Mapes', where Ruth trades; and another in Mi
s of Santa Claus. They're men dressed up. Why! little boys have Santa C
h your name in it? And if you don't get too many black marks through the year do you get presents? And if you do
Tess Kenway's abounding fait
eated the smallest
I just do. It's like fairies and elfs. We want to believe in
t, stoutly, "she's j
d so's Santa Claus. And-and when we stop believing
rom the kitchen with a he
d. We haven't near enough popcorn strung. I believe Neale O'Neil at
s 'cause he's grownin
g' after all he gobbled down last night. And I b
for the little girls. Both brought their sewing boxes and squatted down on the
rner House girl seemed still to be fussing with her thread and needle, her
edle's asleep, Tess,
ed the other.
culated Dot. "Anyway, I
girl swooped down on the floor and put her
," said the newcomer. "Won't the ey
s Tess often said, awfully good! Ruth had a smile that illuminated her rather plain face and won he
ir real mother had died, leaving Agnes and Tess and Dot, to say nothing of Aunt Sara
fly-away in time) for she had beautiful light hair, a rosy complexion, and large blue ey
y-her hair wavy and silky, her little limbs round, her
egan to trim the tree, commencing at the very top. Nestling among th
y has bells," said Agnes, from the step-ladd
rom the floor. "But I should be afraid, if I were his mother, t
" chuckled Agnes. "Don't believe
the lady that lives next to Uncle Rufus' Petunia. She could
Dot," laughed Ruth. "Fasten those li
the second, and
h candles, and not have the gas at all," Ruth sa
"And you've got such a lot of those ni
e not enough
" proposed Tess, who favored that busy emporium,
ey look beside those lovely old silver ones of Uncle Peter Stower'
slowly and a grizzled, kinky head, with a shiny,
done comin' fo' de wash, an' I got t' collect togeddah all I kin fin' dis week. Dat fool brack woman," Uncle Rufus added with disgust, "won't do but dis
birthday that everybody ought to celebrate. And I
ll her children
ne-Jones Whistler and Louise Annette," Dot began to int
er hands over her ears and sitting
resents, all de rich w'ite folks would hab 'em an' de po' nigger fo
dry bag, Unc' Rufus," sa
spect I know where it i
some ob yo' chi
on't give me much 'couragement about her. Her lungs are weak-they have been,
rner House girls' chief factotum, who was a tall, thin, brown old negr
h weak lungs to sleep out of doors. So Neale's built her a sleeping porch outside one of the windows in our bedroom-Tess' and mine-and-and I used your
ed Agnes, having taken her hands
the bag without permissi
Uncle Peter was alive he sartain sho' would ha' laffed hisself up out'n hes sick-bed. Ma soul an' body! W'y didn't he kno
you know if there are any more candlesticks around the house? Nice, heavy on
? I 'spect dere is,"
where?" Ruth
dey is up in de attic," he s
uddenly. "Over in that corner of the
y part of the garret?" aske
d in when he was the attic
"I do wish you'd get you
re," Agnes went on to explain to Ruth. "They can b
h, cheerfully. "Let's
o go!" cried
go, sister?"
kiddies," said Agnes, hop
rs to the huge garret, Dot leaving her "sleep
called the Stower homestead on the corner of Willow S
old-fashioned, walnut, haircloth furniture. A gallery ran all around the stair-well, off which opened the guest chambers of the
cotch housekeeper, and Linda, the Finnish girl. Uncle Rufus was stowed away in the other ell, in a little room he had occupied for almost twenty-s
and breadth of the main portion of the house. This was their playroom on rainy days, and a sto
forms hung from the low rafters. On a broken-legged chest of drawers, held up b
volume, moth-eaten and shabby, from which Ruth had just removed two
ck together. There seemed to be some kind of
said Ruth, "and help me carry these heav
t about lug this old book. I want to look at it. I shouldn't wonder if
d of the procession with the big book, as the four girls started down stairs again. "Are-are
t means to tell these kids about the Paleozoic age and 'sich,' Ruthie! Yes, child. Ma
k out upon her small lap. She had heard just enough about
the back were engravings on green paper, stuck into the old book. The gr
money-that's all it is. Just like the money Mr. Howbridge gives Ruth ev
t then. Agnes tossed her "find" into a corner until some more convenient occasion for looking at it. She and Ruth got the metal cl
nds and astonished looks, the four listened for
ere was a muffled shout, then a scratching and a scra
, in crescendo. "Santa Cla
ng up to run to the open fireplace, "he's miss