“Here’s to a winter of hard work!” cried Babe. “I shall have to sew, and I hate it.”
“But you must make fun out of it all the same,” Betty told her, with the flash of gay courage in her eyes that had won over Mr. Morton. “I shall, no matter what happens, and whatever we do, think of the fun we’ll have talking it over when we all get together again. Oh, is that our train, Babe?” And with her curls flying and her eyes dancing with eagerness Betty Wales turned merrily from her happy summer’s Interlude to “the real business of life.”
THE END
Transcriber’s Notes:
Minor corrections (addition or deletion) of double quote marks have been made on pages 188, 196, 230 and 317, to conform to accepted usage.
Splended, on page 153, has been changed to splendid.
Cooperation, on page 218, has been changed to coöperation, to conform to other occurrences in this e-book.
On page 270, Louxembourg has been changed to Luxembourg.
All other hyphenation and variant and archaic spellings have been retained as typeset.
Illustrations have been moved to avoid interrupting paragraphs.