Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 4, 1924 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Garber Sentinel and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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JOSSELYN'S WI
p
THE STEPMOTHER
SYNOPSIS--Ellen and Joe Lat-
imer orphans without means
make their home with their Aunt
Elsie at Port Washington small
New York town Ellen is study-
ing art her expenses being paid
by Mrs Sewall Rose girlhood
friend of her mother Mrs Rose
Invites Ellen to a Thanksgiving
house party and the girl Is de
CHAPTER II
—2—
All the way up In the train she was
busy identifying the various groups
about her as either being bound for
the Rose house party or being unwor-
thy of that classification Ellen was so
excited by this time that she could not
breathe naturally her cheeks were
blazing and her heart beat fast With
her little new suitcase she got down
from the train in a sort of joyous panic
of expectation The Roses chauffeur
made himself known and Ellen a gray-
baked elderly man and an exception-
ally handsome and self-possessed
young woman all got into the limou-
sine Ellen imagined the pair to be fa-
ttier and daughter and thought it would
be romantic to be rich and travel
abroad with an adoring father
The lady looked at her amiably
enough but did not speak Presently
they turned In at a snow-powdered
gate and could see a splendid stone
mansion lying along a hilistle draped
In bare vines but with heartening
smoke arising from a dozen chimneys
They all went up the stone steps
and were admitted to an enormous
warm hall where fires and tables and
rich rugs and great bowls of towers
all were jumbled together before her
confused senses Here was Mrs Hose
tnagnificent and distrait murmuring
that the children were about some-
where perhaps they had gone out giv-
ing a maid directions in an aside and
looking a little blankly at Ellen until
the girl reminded her brightly: "It's
Ellen Latitner I"
"Well of course it is you dear
child" she said then with a warming
kiss "and you came up in the car with
Mr and Mrs Josselyn Tom this is a
little friend of mine Miss Latimer
and this Is Mr and Mrs Josselyn Ellen
I hope you all talked to each other?"
Ellen wit just going to say "We
'weren't introduced" but the young
end beautiful Mrs Josselyn spoke first
with a sort of pretty languor "I 41-
ways talk on all occasions!" and then
they all laughed Ellen knew sudden-
ly that the two women did not know
each other very well and that the man
was quite at home in this house
"Where'd you put us Abby?" he
asked "Don't come up I know my
way about"
"I've got to go up" Mrs Rose said
Interrupting a low-toned conversation
she was having with an elderly maid
'I declare" she went on mounting a
'dark carved stairway that was spread
'with rugs ornamented with potted
palms and lighted with a stained-glass
window "I declare I get perfectly
frantic sometimes when the children
bave these affairs Arthur brought
(town four boys from Harvard on
Wednesday and Lucia—presumably
mot out yet if you please—all I can
say is that I don't expect to live
through it until she Is out—and it's
rush to this and rush to that—I don't
know what they're doing now—"
Ellen perceived that the matron was
really deeply enjoying the responsibil-
ity and confusion and the strain on
meals and beds They went upstairs
mow and had left the Josselyns at the
door of a delightful room
"Which explains" said Mrs Hose
"why I've tucked you in here on a
couch in my sewing room my dear
You needn't hesitate to come in and
out for Mr Rose is up at Great Bar-
rington for the golf"
"It's lovely" Ellen smiled "It's a
perfectly wonderful house" she added
bashfully
"It's comfortable" Mrs Hose said
carelessly "Josselyn did it" And
with a sudden twinkle she added:
'How did you like the bride and
groom?"
"I thought they were father and
daughter I"
"Every one does I've known Tom
Josselyn all my life we knew his first
wife well She only died a year ago
end ten months later he married this—
Lillian Keeler Nobody knows any-
thing about her Doris Potter—you'll
meet her tonight—says that she was a
model for Madame Yvonne but I don't
believe it Young Gibbs Josselyn the
son—one of the dearest fellows that
ever lived—has never gotten over it
Tom Josselyn is sixty-five you know
and she's twenty-eight Ile broke with
his father the day he heard the news
hasn't seen him since He was in the
firm too I guess the old man felt it
pretty much Now I hear that Giggs
is going to study painting—he's a
gifted fellow Well! now I'll leave
you Brush up a little and then come
down and have tea"
It was just like an' English house
party in a novel Ellen smoothed her
hair and put on the gray-velvet dress
with the fresh frills and went down
to the library in a tremor of happiness
She was early and had time to enjoy
a book of photograph§ and a fire be-
fore her hostess mate down Tben-the
Josselyns ealnev: qid drinr
Mrs Hose altid tvo 'friends iffe
aunt paying it leajcall
much the yobbieilfand Mrs- Rise-ea'
thanted her by letting her pass s'ald-
and taut and bring back the
By KATHLEEN NORRIS
Co Might by 1Cath1een Norris
cups for more tea It Wag a wonder-
ful hour
She was able to see now how really
beautiful young Mrs Josselyn was
Her golden brown hair was wound
carelessly in glorious waves and coils
above her white forehead and her
white hand heavily ringed lay against
the dark wood of' the chair-arm with
all the pure beauty of alabaster She
sometimes raised her glittering eye-
lashes brown eyelashes with a hint of
gold in them to smile lazily at her
husband but for the most part she
was inert making no effort to be more
than a lovely picture
Mrs Rose asked her about Paris
and she answered casually Ellen did
not know that she was trying to make
the older woman think that travel
wealth and the free purchase of gowns
and jewels were but an ordinary part
of the day's work to Lillian Keeler
Ellen was deeply interested and even
thrilled by their talk Her loyalty
and affection were bound to Mrs Rose
she decided that young Mrs Josselyn
was not a gentlewoman All those
blazing jewels at informal tea!
A great-grandfather's clock in the
dimness of the room boomed half-past
five And with a cold and Joyous rush
the youngsters came in for their tea
That was Ellen Latimer's last happy
minute in the Rose house The little
velvet dress did not fall from her as
the clock struck but she would have
been happier running away from them
all into the night bare of feet and
hair and in her shabbiest kitchen
dress than she was to be here in all
their luxury and warmth
They were introduced and they nod-
ded flinging furs and wraps into the
arms of silent patient waiting maids
Ellen marveled at their sports-clothes
the soft Swiss coats the smart shaggy
little caps the velvet skirts with their
big buttons the silk blouses so Im-
maculately white Lucia w as not
pretty but how smart she was and
how she chattered! Doris was pretty
and everything else that Ellen would
have liked to be as well The five
boys were all quite young fresh-faced
She Was Able to See Now How Really
Beautiful Young Mrs Josselyn Was
well-groomed superficially poised in
spite of their youthful clumsiness
There were nine of them altogether
They talked only to each other in a
sort of running fire of growling and
tittering and laughing It was impos-
sible for an outsider to follow their
conversation and even when the older
people had drifted away and Ellen
was left with them they made no con-
cessions for her
Oh what a fool she was to come
here at all she thought undressing
late that night And how she hated
them all! They felt her unwelcome
and shabby and different and the bit-
ter thing was that Ellen knew that
they were right She could not speak
their language nor understand them
when they spoke her little attempts
at merriment fell fiat her best gown
was not as smart as their simplest
sporting outfit She had gone down-
stairs timidly in the fussy little lace
dress to have them presently follow in
their exquisite simplicities of sheer
linen and lawn with girlish touches of
pink baby roses or childish wide Ro-
man sashes plain silk stockings plain-
ly dressed little satiny heads with jew-
eled pins tucked trimly against the
coils and plaits How fresh how Or-
ginal they were schoolgirls just on
the threshold of womanhood seven-
teen eighteen nineteen! Ellen's twenty-two
years seemed suddenly grimy
and gray A sense of injustice seized
her She had never been as young and
sweet and confident as they were
They were all in love with -life and
with each other it was a pity that
they could not spare a little love for
Elleh too But Dorothy complimented
Lucia and Lucia Doris and Doris in
turn told Mary that She looked ador-
able No one of them gave to Ellen the
word for which she hungered or bet-
ter than praise made the slightest ef-
fort io briturherinto the group gave
hr an reasen0be1leve that with
eyes like beret and cheeks like hers
the lace gown mattered not at all
The elaborate dinner was served
and the young people began to dance
Then Ellen slipped upstairs equally
unable to review the events of the day
' or to anticipate those of tomorrow
with any equanimity There would be
a big dance tomorrow night and a ride
to the "Red Lion" for lunch Ellen did
not ride Well she would go with old
I Mr Josselyn and Mrs Rose In the
closed car Unless she had a wire from
! Aunt Elsie saying that Grandpa was
dead--ah If only she might
I But Grandpa R as far from death
and Saturday had to be endured It
was all worse than Ellen's fears Mrs
! Rose was not going on the ride after
' all she and the auntand the Josselyns
! were going to play bridge Lucia un-
bent from her Indifference long enough
to urge Ellen to try to ride But Ellen
although she was eager to dare it did
i not like to risk the danger of making
herself absurd on a horse
There was another choice but that
Ellen did not see until long after-
ward She might simply have pleaded
indisposition have begged to be left
quietly at home and so have watched
the bridge which interested her and
have had another pleasant tea-hour
But instead she let Lucia separate
herself from her friends to drive the
funny girl from Long Island in a small
roadster The roads were heavy but
Ellen knew nothing of cars and did not
know that really difficult driving was
angering the already exasperated Lu-
cia For perhaps fifteen minutes out
of the long two hours the girls talked
naturally
They reached the "Red Lion" an
hour after the others and immediately
bad a large and noisy lunch in a sort
of club lunchroom with stags' antlers
and bearskins a roaring open fire and
exposed rafters of dark wood to give
a rustic effect After lunch skis were
brought out and Ellen was dragged
several cold miles on a sort of combi-
nation walk scramble slide and skate
The boy called "Red" drove her silent-
ly home he had had a good many
cocktails before and after the walk
and drove recklessly
They got home none too early to
dress for the dance an experience that
Ellen never forgot The young guests
In the house had been indifferent to
her yesterday today they actively dis-
liked her and she afforded them deli-
cious material for laughter No one
asked her to dance she might have
been an invisible witness to the gayety
as she heartily rished herself for any
attention that was offered her The
girls perfumed powdered laughing
pushed by her without a glance and
the boys gathering eagerly about them
saw her as little At twenty minutes
to one Ellen found herself watching
the bridge game Mrs Rose was play-
ing with Mr Josselyn and it was evi-
dent that the luck was running against
them
"There's no bidding hands like
these! I declare I never saw anything
like it!"
"I suppose we can't start another—
we said we would stop at one" young
Mrs Josselyn smiled Ellen saw Mrs
Rose give her a venomous look as the
jeweled hands tumbled the cards idly
and the army man earnestly and quick-
ly added the various scores
"I'm going upstairs now" Ellen put in
shyly "I am—a sort of a headache—
I think I'd really better! And Mrs
Rose will you tell me about trains to-
morrow—I think I had better—Aunt
Elsie expects me—"
She had nerved herself for opposi-
tion but Mrs Rose made none
"I'm sorry you can't stay" she said
"Better stay and have a little more
good time Auntie will forgive you!
Anyway come down and have some
supper now I"
But Ellen murmured of her head-
ache again She slipped upstairs And
once in the safety of her own room she
began to undress automatically with
scarlet cheeks aud a heaving breast
They had been rude to her they had
been rude to her She had only want-
ed to be innocently happy she had
only asked that they be reasonably
kind and they had turned her world
upside down and scarred the old hap-
py confidence forever!
In Mrs Rose's room beyond the
bathroom a fire was burning and
Ellen went in to it and sat down Hud-
dled in her wrapper she was dream-
ing over the coals when the door was
pusbed open and she turned with a
smile expecting to see her hostess
But it was young Mrs Josselyn who
came in wrapped in a splendid orient-
al robe and with her thick soft brown
hair hanging in a loose coil betwcen
her shoulders
"I saw the door open" said she
dropping Into the chair opposite Ellen
"I'm tired to death but I don't feel
like going to bed!"
She stretched her slippered feet to
the blaze locked her hands behind her
head and yawned as unselfconsciolDi
as a cat Ellen studied the lovely
white arms the smooth low forehead
from which the hair was swept the
dropped bronze eyelashes She dared
not open a conversation and risk an-
other snub
The other woman took a framed pic-
ture from the table studied it for a
few minutes and again moved her
eyes slowly to Ellen '
"So you've been having a perfectly
rotten time?"
Ellen laughed nervously
"Why no I couldn't say that l"
"I suspected it the way you hung a
around the card taldet" said young
tire Josselyn frankly: She extended
the picture she held to Ellen "Know c
him?" she asked briefly 1
Ellen shook her bead She looked at
THE GARBER SENTINEL GARBER OKLAHOMA
the face of a young man thin earnest
of mouth and jaw keen of eye Even
In the picture she could see that the
I thick crest Or hair was gray and even
In the picture the handsome face
showed character and power At one
corner In a small square hand was
written: "To Lucia's Mother from
T G J Jr"
"Ile's not spoken to his father since
our marriage" Mrs Josselyn said dis-
passionately "I've never met him
lIe's good looking—"
She stared silently for several mo-
ments at the face of her unknown step-
son before replacing the silver frame
upon the crowded table behind her
Ellen whose sense of the romantic had
been touched by this situation looked
at her with new Interest Mrs Jos-
selyn again stretching her lithe body
with luxurious pleasure apparently
dismissed the subject from her mind
for when she spoke again it was of
"So you've had a nasty time and
they treated you badly?" she said rumi-
natingly "Well that's your fault my
dear You mustn't try to play their
game they'll have you there Make
them play yours!"
"Easier said than done!" Ellen said
sensitive and girlish
"Tell 'em you hate walks ard you
think they're all silly Tell 'em you
won't (lance mitil you feel like It—
they'll fall for anthingi I'm going tp
bed—good-night!" she said sleepily
and was gone
CHAPTER HI
The morning came with glorious win-
ter sunlight and Ellen Lathner turn-
ing luxuriously under her warm soft
blankets stared blankly at a clock
that was rapidly moving toward nine
o'clock They must all have had
breakfast by this time—evidently no-
body cared whether she was alive or
dead
Ellen had had a white night one of
the few in her experience For long
hours she had lain awake thinking
soberly about the events of the past
two days and quite unconsciously as-
similating their bitter lesson
These girls were not better than she
not wiser not really happier But
their circumstances were utterly differ-
ent and it was Ellen who was to
blame not they for trying to bridge
the gulf between their lives She still
had her good home her own admiring
and affe(tionate group her books to
read by the fire her garden to dream
over in the spring and the swimming
and boating and tennis that absorbed
ail youthful Port Washington from
June to October Lucia and Doris were
not real and Ellen's life dee) only
with what was pracJeal and sane One
might sigh for the prettiness the gay-
ety the irresponsibility of Lucia's life
one's face might burn because this
pretty butterfly could be so triumphant-
ly rude and so self-centered but It
was wiser to forget it all or remem-
bering remember ten that the dainty
superfluities were a mere accident of
income Ellen Latimer would have
something that Lucia Torrey might
envy some day and through no acci-
dent of birth
The breakfast room was deserted
Ellen was the first of all the house-
hold to appear She smiled over her
carefully served courses and presently
was banging absorbed over a jig-saw
puzzle that had been scattered upon
one of the library tables the day be-
fore Her train went at half-past
eleven it was not yet ten o'clock
As the young people straggled down-
sialrs she looked up to nod at them
composedly She presently went quiet-
ly upstairs to pack and pinned on the
fur-trimmed hat and fastened a little
clump of fresh violets from a vase
against the sober litttle suit It was
only goodby now and the whole ex-
perience was over
"The limousine's coming 'round
dear" Mrs Rose said They stepped
out to the stone veranda that Ellen
had crossed with such high hopes two
days ago and looked down upon a
panorama of scattered homes and gar-
dens powdered with the light snow and
washed with brilliant sunshine stone
fences brick fences clean-swept drive-
ways everything shining and prosper
ous In a bath of Sunday peace
Ellen began her thanks and good
by& "Don't say one word dearle"
said kindly Mrs Rose "I'm only sorry
you have to go" Her eyes suddenly
were fixed upon the gate and Ellen
turning too saw a low-hung power-
fully built roadster turn in and come
quickly up the drive "Now who's
that?" wondered the elder woman dis-
contentedly eyeing the two furred men
who occupied the car "I never sit
down to a game of—why it's Wardl
It's my husband and Gibbs Josselyn
She turned agitatedly to Ellen "For
heaven's sake what shall I do?"
Ellen aware of an emergency had
yet not at ail grasped the situation
when the two men came laughing up
the steps and greeted her hostess
Mrs Rose dazedly kissed the small
gray-haired man who was her husban&
and dazedly introduced Ellen
"Ward this is Nellie Buckley's girl
you've heard me talk about and Miss
Latimer—Mr Josselyn" she said
Nothing heavenly about the
first taste of high life But how
about the next?
(TO BE CONTINUED)
Sensational Dancer
Lola Montez a Spanish daneek
stirred Europe and America with her
ativentureaduring the first half ofrthe
Nineteenth' centbri— After 'many el-
eape4es111 Euoj r she came to the
United States In 1831 and died here
In 1801
0" DISTINCTLY youthful treat-
ment and in range of delightful-
ly original colors are the regulation
idraight-line frocks styled for office
nd schoolroom wear In fact these
frocks of simplicity are the sort which
make instant appeal to women of
practical affairs In general
Flannel is a favorite medium for the
informal daytime frock In such out
soft wine tones brilliant red std
greens on the reseda and Lanvin or-
der Because of the prevailing sim-
plicity In styles these high shades do
not make the wearer seem conspicuous
NVearable for sports and especially
desirable as a school type for autumn
Is the girlish model here pictured It
Is developed In peach-color flannel
with pintucks detailing vestee and
pockets Clusters of pearl buttons and
collars and cuffs of white linen com-
plete this frock
Among the distinctive features
stressed in the youthful flannel frock
In the Latest "Fetching" flannels
FLANNELS HAVE FOUND FAVOR
FOR THE AUTUMN SCHOOLTIME
and plain as can be ACCentillg the
beitiess vogue
All good things nmst come to
an end even sumtner vacations
which at this moment tneans to moth-
ers and daughters the Immediate stag-
ing of that annual prologue which al-
ways precedes "first day of school" As
usual the outstanding theme for this
regular autumn program is outfitting
of-the-ordinary shades as russet daughter for school
peach poAtter blue mauve reindeer I It is a fortunate circumstance that
smart vogue favors the simple cloth
dress this fall It makes the problem
of school apparel so much easier to
solve Furthermore fashion decrees
that the youthful frock of flannel rep
poiret twill or serge be enhanced with
daintiest lingerie accessories A touch
of lace a bit of embroidery what vast
possibilities do these trifles of femi-
nine finery suggest! A swift trans-
formation In one's costume may be ac-
complished by simply changing one's
collars or culls or adding a lace slip-
over bib Some of these new laces and
tucked net bib effects have become so
Collar and Cuff Adornment
is that of the bishop sleeve This ' elongated in the process of design Mei
fulled-in-to-the-wrist t3pe gives oppor- fall quite below the front of tilt
unity for trimming effects in that the waistitne slipping under the girdle
The fact that long tight-fitting
wristbands may be tucked embroid-
ered and otherwise designed sleeves are the fashion augurs well for
The arrival of the direetoire style the future of fanciful detachable cuffs
adds zest to the designing of the se- such as arePictured In this group of
eely plain cloth street frOck Tigbt— naafis!' lingerie sets That novelty
fitting sleeves conventional revers cuffs are to feature this fall is told at
buttons many of them nad losig a glanc4
Eselet embroidery sets such as that
severe lines with interesting capelets
interpret this- mode 'shown hbove to the left in this eoltec-
ComPeting WItll:soft NVOL)10118 Nr SP- that -ttres especially approved by- the
premacy ln matter of talloredotle- mode Not always is this openwork
piece frocks- are 'heavy 'ribliete silks vlitle or 6cru for 'some of the most at-
bengaline being of oUtnlaltlifOstYle rrafetivt set's are &La blue Orzfoge
importalnce A)s(1ilteavYgesPe8419ns or rose)
and marocala crepes iontinue in fa- JULIA LIOTTOMLEY
wet 4 re wade Pp as straight 1924 Western Newspaper ratan)
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Peters, S. H. Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 4, 1924, newspaper, September 4, 1924; Garber, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2078418/m1/3/?q=+%22Latimer%22: accessed June 21, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.