IIL) her basket, and the two then shared the repast together. There were no Ferris wheels, tilt-a- whirls, bumper cars or moonwalks, but there was a merry-go-round contraption that provided the thrill-of—a-lifetime ride. It consisted of eight or ten rope-swings suspended from overhead beams that were attached to a central axis. A lone horse harnessed to the axis walked in a circle inside the ring of swings. The % horse provided the power that made the swings rotate. The cost per ride was usually a penny or two. In the evening, a dance was held either in the church hall or in a dance saloon erected outdoors. A lone fiddler supplied the music, sometimes with Organ accompaniment, and the dancing continued until the fiddler became