However, when Jonas Miller died and left the hoarded money to his wife

she did not let it fly. She rented the big farm and moved to the little

old-fashioned house in Landisville--a little house whose outward

appearance might have easily proclaimed its tenant poor. There she

lived alone, with occasional visits and visitors to break the monotony

of her existence.

That Sunday morning of the Reist visit, Uncle Amos hitched the horse to

the carriage, tied it by the front fence of the farm, then he went

up-stairs and donned his Sunday suit of gray cloth. Later he brought

out his broad-brimmed Mennonite hat and called to Amanda and her mother,

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"I'm ready. Come along!"

Mrs. Reist wore a black cashmere shawl pinned over her plain gray lawn

dress and a stiff black silk bonnet was tied under her chin. Amanda

skipped out to the yard, wearing a white dress with a wide buff sash. A

matching ribbon was tied on her red hair.

"Jiminy," whistled Uncle Amos as she ran to him and swung her leghorn

hat on its elastic. "Jiminy, you're pretty---"

"Oh, am I, Uncle Amos?" She smiled radiantly. "Am I really pretty?"

"Hold on, here!" He tried to look very sober. "If you ain't growin' up

for sure! Lookin' for compliments a'ready, same as all the rest. I was

goin' to say that you're pretty fancy dressed for havin' a Mennonite

mom."

"Oh, Uncle Amos!" Amanda laughed and tossed her head so the yellow bow

danced like a butterfly. "I don't believe you at all! You're too good

to be findin' fault like that! Millie says so, too."

"She does, eh? She does? Just what does Millie say about me now?"

"Why, she said yesterday that you're the nicest man and have the

biggest heart of any person she knows."

"Um--so! And Millie says that, does she? Um--so! well, well"--a glow of

joy spread in his face and stained his neck and ears. Fortunately, for

his future peace of mind, the child did not notice the flush. A

swallowtail butterfly had flitted among the zinnias and attracted the

attention of Amanda so it was diverted from her uncle. But he still

smiled as Millie opened the front door and she and Mrs. Reist stepped

on the porch.

Millie, in her blue gingham dress and her checked apron, her straight

hair drawn back from her plain face, was certainly no vision to cause

the heart of the average man to pump faster. But as Amos looked at her

he saw suddenly something lovelier than her face. She walked to the

gate, smoothing the shawl of Mrs. Reist, patting the buff sash of the

little girl.

"Big heart," thought Amos, "it's her got the big heart!"

"Good-bye, safe journey," the hired girl called after them as they

started down the road. "Don't worry about us. Me and Phil can manage

alone. Good-bye."