New London High School - Whaler Yearbook (New London, CT)

 - Class of 1913

Page 8 of 32

 

New London High School - Whaler Yearbook (New London, CT) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 8 of 32
Page 8 of 32



New London High School - Whaler Yearbook (New London, CT) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 7
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New London High School - Whaler Yearbook (New London, CT) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 9
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Page 8 text:

4 BULKELEY NEWS railroad bridge. The car goes down the gorge until finally you reach the Whirpool. In this place you may see the water passing round and round, and also sticks of wood floating there. It is said that a stick of wood may stay in the Whirpool for a year before the current carries it away. The car passes Brock’s Monument, and then you see Queenstown Heights, where a battle was fought on October 13, 1812. You pass down the slope and over the suspension bridge. After the car reaches the American side it turns to the left and then right in a long curve and goes up the stream close to the waters edge. About three miles above the bridge there is a large hole in the cliff, called the Devils Hole. In 1763 about 100 soldiers were murdered by the Indians and thrown into this hole The car passes on and soon reaches the Whirlpool. The current goes at a rate of 28 miles an hour here. After passing under the railroad bridges the car gradually rises until it is level with the surrounding country. The car runs through the city of Niagara Falls and lands one at the Soldier’s Monument. By this monument we got off the car. Then after a long walk we reached the “Home of the Shredded Wheat.’ Visitors may go with a guide all through the building and see the process by which Shredded Wheat is made. After seeing this factory we returned to the hotel. The next day we started home, sorry to leave a place which had given us so much real pleasure. C. B. ’16. A Home Run. |T was just at sunset one hot August afternoon that Richard’s father asked him to take a quart of milk over to Henry’s. Now Dick was only too glad to have such a chance and so he took the pail and started for his chum s house. He had gone only a short distance when his father called out, for he knew his son’s weakness, “ Richard, you come right back, for supper is almost ready.” Dick stopped whistling long enough to answer, “Alright” then journeyed on his way. He reached his friend’s house without spilling the milk and asked Henry’s mother to empty the pail, for he must go home immediately. Just then Henry came in, “Hello, Dick,” he said, “Come in the other room father is going to play the graph-ophone. This was something new in Henry’s house and it was the first thing he thought of when any one came to his home. “No,” said Dick, I haven’t time to-night. Father told me not to stay.” “ You just step in and hear one or two while I am washing the pail for you,” said Henry’s mother. Richard thought it would only take a few minutes to hear one or two pieces so he was easily persuaded to go into the parlor. After the first one had been played Dick rose to go but his friend begged him to stay and hear just one more. Richard readily agreed to this and sat down beside his friend knowing in his heart that he ought to go home, for supper was waiting for him The piece was played and it was even better than the first and before it was realized a third one was starting in. This was a march and as Dick sat there listening to it he imagined that he saw a great army marching right out the hom. He soon forgot all about home as the different pieces were played for he was marching with the soldiers; in the automobile with Uncle Josh ; with the singers on the stage.

Page 7 text:

BULKELEY NEWS 3 States in 1824, was a guest. This spring is still sending out hot water while the hotel has become a ruin, and the scenery remains as beautiful as any in the state of New York. On reaching Albany we visited the state capital, and found it to be very interesting. It was after the fire, and we saw what a large amount of damage had been done. After leaving this city we went by way of Schenectady to Fort Stanwix, and then to Syracuse, arriving in the evening. In this city all the trains pass through the main street, and in front of the large city hall. The trains passed the door of the hotel where we remained over night. In fourteen years only two men have been killed at any place by the trains. Next morning we traveled until eleven o’clock, as far as Auburn where we visited my aunt, and remained until the following morning. That day we crossed Cayuga Lake on the way to Rochester. In Rochester the Erie Canal is carried over the river in a large trough because the river was in line of the Canal. In the afternoon we traveled many miles. The road was as straight as an arrow and we could see it at least ten miles ahead. About five o’clock we arrived at Buffalo and passing through went to Niagara Falls. That evening we went into Prospect Park and saw the whole of the falls from the very brink. In the moonlight it enchants one and gives one a sensation of falling. We stopped at Cataract House and early next morning went back of the hotel and looked over the surging waters of tbe American Rapids. After breakfast we went for a walk through Prospect Park, which is now owned by the state of New York. From there I went over the bridge to Goat Island, and saw a building in which one dresses if he goes into the Cave of the Winds. I decided to go under the falls, and entered the building. I obtained a flannel suit, oilskins and carpet shoes; dressed in these I followed a guide and with several other people started down a flight of long spiral stairs. There are two hundred and eighty steps down to the ground. We followed a guide on a narrow path to the Rock of Ages, where there is a wooden bridge. Here you get wet and go more slowly, as it is slippery. The bridge curves under the fall. The Cave of the Winds is 100 feet long, 100 feet wide, and 1 60 feeet high. Here the wind blows at a rate of forty miles an hour, and you have to hold on to the railing to keep from blowing off. This is the only place where you can realize the force of the water. It is estimated that two hundred eighty thousand cubic feet of water pass over the falls every second. The spray forms white satin spar, which is made into barrels, necklaces, stars, and everything immaginable. The Cave is made larger every year by the action of the water. Every winter the ice breaks the bridges, and they have to be rebuilt. After passing through, you again strike the path, and ascend the spiral stairway. We went all over the island that morning and returned to the hotel and had dinner. Immediately after dinner we took a “ Gorge Route” trolley, which crosses over the Niagara River, and stops in the center so one can have a general view of the falls. The car passes along the Canadian shore and stops opposite where Table Rock used to be. This Rock projected 100 feet over the edge of the gorge. In 1833 it fell into the water, which is at least 170 feet below. The car goes on and then stops close to the Canadian Fall. You obtain a stop-over, and go into a little house, get a pair of rubbers, rain coat and hat, go down 100 feet, through a tunnel 800 feet, and find yourself under the Horseshoe Fall. At this place you see a great sheet of water roaring downward in front of you. You retrace your steps to the car and go on. In a few minutes the car turns and passes the bridge leading to the American side, and the next thing of importance you see is the



Page 9 text:

BULKELEY NEWS 5 All this passed away in a flash when he heard his father call his name. He jumped up looked at the clock fifteen minutes of nine ! He had been there an hour and a half and it seemed less than five minutes. Bidding the folks a hasty good night he started for home and even forgot his pail in his excitement. Father was standing like a statue at the gate, waiting for his disobedient son. Not a word was said either by Richard or his father. They started toward home together and after walking a short distance father stepped behind, to let beauty go before age. All of a sudden without any, “ Strike one or ball one” or other familiar terms you hear at a base-ball game Richard started the greatest home run of his life, for his father was hitting him with a long horse whip right around the bare legs. Usually when a boy starts to make a home run he likes to have a large audience to cheer him on but Dick’s father and the whip was enough of an audience to keep him shortening the distance from home plate at a break-neck speed. He tried his best to get away from the object that was pushing him on, this was impossible for his father was keeping at a convenient distance and applying the whip at very short intervals. Faster and still faster they thundered on. Would they ever reach the house? The distance had never seemed so long to Dick before and he knew that he had never gone over it any faster. At last home plate, the kitchen door, is only a few feet away. He did not stop to think whether he would have to slide to make it but with one jump up the three steps he was in the door way. He received one good blow to help him through it then he turned at right angles and made for the dining room door. Still the unceasing force from behind was pushing him on to victory, which he knew to be bed. In far less time than it takes to tell it he was at the stairway which lead to his room, and father was there too. Three more blows from the great inspiration given to make sure Richard reached the top of the stairs and the game was won by his home run. B.’14. A Piggish Affair. It was early in the summer vacation when Phone began work on the farm. He was a tall, lanky, sickly looking individual with a desire for open air work. He was city bred, but in time he mastered all the tricks of the farming trade. That is, all but the proper method of catching a pig. Above all this is the first thing he should have learned. For the ignorance of it nearly cost him two dollars. One afternoon Mrs. Brown came rushing up to the barn and confronted us with a wild, angry look, “ Where’s my pig? she demanded. “ I don’t know, where did you leave him last ?’’ “You got it in there, she pointed to the stable. “ Come in and get it then.” “ I don’t see it. Haven’t you got it ? Honest ? Well he is around here some where. I’ll give two dollars to get him back.” Phone, who had been taking it all in quietly, spoke up after Mrs. Brown left. “That double buck listens good, doesn’t it ?” “ It sure does; we’ll get it.” As Phone was taking a short cut through the barnyard that noon, his eyes suddenly fell on a queer looking object lying in a gap in the wall. He approached it for investi-

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