"Yonder goes Mrs. O'Dowd to the rescue. Do you know, Mame, I think it is a wise step for daddie to hitch up with Sally O'Dowd? He might go farther and fare a whole lot worse."
Although the greeting the Rogers family received from the Ranger household was not exactly in keeping with the open-hearted hospitality of the border, it seemed to satisfy the preacher, who made himself as agreeable as possible.
"I went, Squire, to see your parents and Mrs. Ranger's a few days before I left the States," said the preacher. " The dear old people were well and prosperous and contented. They have imbibed a new theory about time and distance. They talk learnedly about vibrations, a fourth dimension in space, and other such nonsense; and they declare that there can be no real separation of souls that are in perfect accord with one another. Their new belief is making them as happy as birds. I would have no objection to such speculations if they didn't tend to undermine the gospel. All such theories detract from the faith of our fathers."
"Not necessarily," said Jean. "I think that we ought always to accept truth for authority; but you want everybody to accept authority for truth."
"I see it is the same little ' doubting Thomas ' we used to have in the Pleasant Prairie schoolhouse," said the minister.
"There is a whole lot of common-sense in Jean's religion," cried Hal; "I mean to accept her manufacture of the article as straight goods, full measure and a yard wide."
"These discussions are not profitable," said Captain Ranger, dryly.
"Your father and mother are certainly very happy in their theories; I can say that much for them," said Mrs. Rogers, who, from her nook in the corner, had seldom ventured a word. "Their cottage was as neat as a new