"And now they pay the shoemaker more than a 'fib' to put a few pegs in

the shoes and take the squeak out."

"Well, well, how things get different! But then I'm glad mine don't

make no noise if that's the way now."

Commencement day Millie could have held her own with any well-dressed

city woman. Her plain face was almost beautiful as she stood ready for

the great event of Amanda's life. At the last moment she thought of the

big bush of shrubs in the yard--"I must get me a shrub to smell in the

Commencement," she decided. So she gathered one of the queer-looking,

fragrant brown blossoms, tied it in the corner of her handkerchief and

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bruised it gently so that the sweet perfume might be exuded. "Um-ah,"

she breathed in the odor, "now I'm ready for Millersville."

As she stood with Mrs. Reist and Philip on the front porch waiting for

Uncle Amos she said to Mrs. Reist, "Ain't Amanda fixed me up fine?

Abody'd hardly know me."

Mrs. Reist in her plain gray Mennonite dress and stiff black silk

bonnet was, as usual, an attractive figure. Philip, grown to the

dignity of long trousers, carried himself with all the poise of

seventeen. He was now a student in the Lancaster High School and had he

not learned to dress and act like city boys do! Uncle Amos, in his best

Sunday suit of gray, his Mennonite hat in his hand, ambled along last

as the little group went down the aisle of the Millersville chapel to

see Amanda's graduation.

As Amanda marched in, her red hair parted on the side and coiled into a

womanly coiffure, wearing a simple white organdie, she was just one of

the hundred graduates who marched into the chapel. But later, as she

stood alone on the platform and delivered her oration, "The Flowers of

the Garden Spot," she held the interested attention of all in that vast

audience. She knew her subject and succeeded in waking in the hearts of

her hearers a desire to go out in the green fields and quiet woods and

find the lovely habitants of the flower world.

After it was all over and she stood, shining-eyed and happy, among her

own people in the chapel, Martin Landis joined them. He, too, had left

childhood behind. The serious gravity of his new estate was deepened in

his face, but the same tenderness that had soothed the numerous Landis

babies also still dwelt there. One of the regrets of his heart was the

fact that nature had denied him great stature. He had always dreamed of

growing into a tall man, powerful in physique, like Lyman Mertzheimer.

But nature was obstinate and Martin Landis reached manhood, a strong,

sturdy being, but of medium height. His mother tried to assuage his

disappointment by asserting that even if his stature was not great as

he wished his heart was big enough to make up for it. He tried to live

up to her valuation of him, but it was scant comfort as he stood in the

presence of physically big men. Life had not dealt generously with him

as with Amanda in the matter of education. He wanted a chance to study

at some institution higher than the little school at Crow Hill but his

father needed him on the farm. The elder man was subject to attacks of

rheumatism and at such times the brunt of farm labor fell upon the

shoulders of Martin.