Details
One more week has flown by- They are busy ones now, and so
they go more quickly- especially the Saturdays and Sundays, to which we
look forward. We always expect to do so much on Saturday, and then,
somehow, when the day is gone, it seems as If we had done so little. Aad
Sunday too, when it is gone, seems so short. Today we went to town to
church, because the minister who was to have preached did not come. It
was such a pleasant day that we walked in - I walked in to town yesterday
too, with Belle, as she wished me to help her select a hat. They are begin-
ning
The new dresses are appearing these pleasant days, and the sleeves, well- they are so inflated that if they grow any larger they will burst. Tell Edie that if she makes a new dress she will have to remember the rule for sweetening canned pie-plant. "Put as much cloth into the sleeves as your conscience will allow, then turn away your head and put some more in." Most of the sleeves are lined with fiber chamois too, which keeps them very stiff and rattling. And the fiber chamois in the skirt reaches half way up the back. It looks like yellow wrapping-paper. I am glad the skirts are made perfectly plain - I guess the attempt to introduce drapery has been given up. But box plaits, box plaits, box plaits in the waist!
I put my name down to stay
The Juniors have been selecting their rooms for next year, in the last two days. It is a time of great excitement, for there Is such a difference in the desirability of the rooms. They draw in this way: Mrs. Kendrick puts a lot of little blocks of wood, each with a number on it, into her little black handbag. Then the girls pass in front of her, each "putting in a thumb and pulling out a plum"- Then whoever has drawn no. 1. has first choice of rooms in the building. No. 2 second choice and so on. More and more girls every year seem to want single rooms, so that there is great
Belle is not coming back next year, because she can not afford to. She did not know of the possibility till just lately, and it was not settled till Easter vacation, I am so sorry she has to stop now, for the two hardest years only, are passed, and the two pleasantest are to come. Belle's mother needs her too, I think, for she is sick most of the time, and is at home alone. The only other members of the family are Belle's two brothers who are in other towns. Belle has been away to boarding school for a good many years, so that I should think her mother had not seen much of her.
Mary writes that she is making plans on the supposition that
Kate Dunham has selected a single room - a very pretty little one - though it is little. She does not appear to be very anxious to come back next year. I think she would have been just as happy at home, though she likes it well enough here.
I like it more and more the longer I stay here, that is, I
Mr. Thompson - ("Uncle Fred" as the girls call him) gave the Seniors each a spoon last night, as he does every year. The spoons are rather larger than teaspoons, and are very heavy - quite a nice thing to keep-
Give my love to the neighbors - I am glad Etta is well. I am relieved that the Kendricks are settled in their house at last, and did not have any more fuss.
Lovingly Adelaide. [Claflin]
Vassar College. April 21, 1895.