An old west town tosses a party for Sally. |
Fleet Jack Hagen first had the idea to throw a party for Sally. She had just turned sixteen. Pecan Grove, just north of Dodge City, Kansas, was want for the shindig, was all revved up to honor Sally with homemade gifts, cakes and pies, and an occasional store-bought present; some of the more well-to-do were able. Turned into quite the shindig: a square-dance on the dusty streets as the Kansas sun eyed intently, even for mid-September. There were mild breezes and occasionally a tumbleweed would roll into town like some alien bramble-ball from far away. Miss Kitty Long arranged for red balloons to help accentuate the drab of pine wood storefronts. But it was Chad Jay Ingle who had the idea of a horse for Sally; he knew she had always wanted one. So he road out to the Sioux encampment and made a deal with Chief Red Cloud for a young Palomino fourteen hands high and tied it to a banyan tree outside of town in a field of flowing grass lush and thick. Nellie O’Henry, owner of the General Store, supplied many of the party accoutrements; her husband, Jonathan, worked hard on hanging decorations and a, Happy Birthday Sally banner. He even managed to dig up fireworks he had in the store; he brought them back from a San Francisco convention. The steam locomotive was on its way to Abilene but stayed over so as to blow its whistle often and show that this was no ordinary birthday celebration. The party grew—more and more people came, even those from farms a fur piece away, yet they had time, for word spread like a valley mist in spring days before, and thus this Pecan Grove to-do morphed into a grand and showy shindig, with laughter and dancing and hollering and a-fussing over one so dear as young Miss Sally. Ponytails, dimples, a lacy white dress and eyes so blue that the sky itself seemed jealous. So happened that a reporter from back east happened to stop in Pecan Grove; and so he wrote about the party. When Sally road in on her Palomino, the whole town cheered, but Clarence Kent (the reporter), got so flustered he dropped his notepad on the street. Miss Sally beamed from ear-to-ear, yet poor old Clarence paused with a chagrinned look on his face. But it was also a look of utter satisfaction. 40 Lines Writer’s Cramp 9-8-16 |