Betty Wales, Sophomore
floor of her new room at the Belden House, and looked
y on a pile of pillows, "anyhow the things are all out of the trunks and
t,-that left just about two hours before
n," san
saucers, knocked down a Japanese screen-which fortunately landed against
eanwhile setting up the screen again, and moving trunk-trays
ith amusement. "Quite settled compared to this, I shou
urned Betty easily. "I hate to keep stopping to fish some
eanor. "Did you hav
an swim like a fish, E
r much, do you? But you
ve a good
re long to see Jim and me, and he and Jim are coming on togethe
or and Rachel and Katherine appeared. Then there was more leaping over teacups, more ecsta
anded Rachel, when e
explained Betty. "You see she lives so nea
ghed Katherine. "There's no room for
is isn't half as big as ours at Mrs. Chapin's. And see the closet!" She picked her way across the room, and thre
lothes," suggested K
Betty, with finality, closing the door on the subjec
ear?" said Katherine. "Let me see. You and Hel
"Her steamer isn't due
she'd been in Ir
hear her tell abou
, intent on her census, "and you're
ed to be here, of course, but Miss Stuart would
outside the gate. It's a dear, quaint place, and delightfully quiet. Of course
ts and shrieks and bangs and more shrieks, and then the din died away suddenly in
t place, where the rest of us can tak
f, and I never heard anything like the racket there was, wh
have been on hand
alone," jeered Katherine, "especially after dark. Di
prettily. "Weren't we green little fr
be coming back as sop
residences of the Chapin house girls
" answered Katherine. "She couldn't get in here at
elieve," added Rachel. "And now I, for
d, she was also very happy-too happy to turn her attention again at once to the trying business of getting settled. In spite of the "perfectly lovely" summer at the seashore, she was glad to be back at Harding. She was passionately fond of the life there. There had been only one little blot to mar her perfect enjoyment of freshman year, and that was Eleanor's unexplainable defection. And now Eleanor had come back, fascinating as ever, but wonderfully softened and sweetened
another tap sounded on the door. "Come in," she called eagerly, expecting to see Roberta, or perhaps Alice Waite,
en't here, so I haven't begun living there to any great extent as yet. Don't stop w
ly in the place that
nner disconcerted her. She did not know many upper classmen in the Belden House, and she
d callers all the evening long. Oh, dear! I didn't mean that. I'm trul
winkled. "Which class
promptly. "And you're an u
ger shook
you're not a sophomore-I know all the girls in my class
manded the ne
eve I can explain. You seem too much at home, and to
ers, and some of the German. I think myself that I ought to rank as a graduate student, but it seems there are some little preliminaries in the way of Math, and Latin and Logic that I hav
gasped Betty. "Wh
k," answered the
ooked p
e saying one lives in New York. Everybody-all sorts and cond
epeated Bett
old houses on Washington Square-you know it,-funny, ramshackle old place. Father has afternoons, and mother a
ou learn so ma
e been in Spain a good deal, and once father illustrated a book on Vienna-that was where I learned my German. Let me see-oh, it's French that I haven't accounted for. Well, we have s
do?" inquired Bet
o much, teaching French girls slang, because they never have
now any othe
. I learned one winter in India. I guess I'll telephone her-or no-I'd rather see her august face when I remind h
hat I'm Betty Wales, in the sophomore class, and live in Cl
l decide that I talk too much. Don't put that green vase there. It belongs on the bookcase. It ju
hem, she and Betty had made astonishing progress toward bringing
zard. "Whatever she touches goes right into place. I suppose that's because she
by outsiders to be kept to the letter on the campus. However, it wasn't the matron, but only Nita Reese, who had a single room on the fourth floo
Don't put that g
ained Nita, who, like Betty, had spent her freshman yea
oing over here?" demand
ved away from
nely and came over to see me. They say their matron won't miss them the first night
eir owners appeared to be in no haste about unpacking; the serious business of the hour was conversation. They stopped to talk with their neighbors to greet newcomers, to help or hinder other workers with questions and suggestions. Betty and Nita felt
, just come on the
th of the matr
cheer you up,
her had thoughtfully provided was nearly empty, "wouldn't it be dreadful
what you have to," re
announced Babbie, somewhat irrelevantly. "I'm g
y's first eveni