Girls High School - Yearbook (Reading, PA)

 - Class of 1915

Page 16 of 180

 

Girls High School - Yearbook (Reading, PA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 16 of 180
Page 16 of 180



Girls High School - Yearbook (Reading, PA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 15
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Girls High School - Yearbook (Reading, PA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 17
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Page 16 text:

The' :White Rose Mary E. Potts DEEP in the valley, closely guarded by higli IS' gg mountains, lay the little village ot B-, the prettiest and quaintest in the country for miles around.. At least, so declared the tourists who, on their way to the fashionable watering towne farther north, deserted the beaten track traced by wealth and luxury, and stopped tor a cort- kqg ff'-5? f'x X tortahle night at its untreqtzentcd doors. They loved its tiny white cottages with thc green .roots and shutters carrying out to perfection the cool color scheme of the neat front lawns Jji2iTii -' with their immaculate white fences, they loved - A -'tw the sparkle of the clear waters of the wayward stream, which, fed by a cold, blue mountain glacier, swished and foamed not a hundred yards tronr the very gardens in which grew the greatest attraction of all-the multitude ot roses. Not a cottage, but was surrounded by them, not a garden but fairly burst with its burden of velvet petals. From the trailest bud to the most pertect full-blown rose, they ranged--in color from the pink of it delicate coral to the glory of a royal crimson. The tourists marveled at the beauty of it all and listened attentively to the tale told of the eccentric old mayor, who oticred yearly a prize for the rose most perfect in every detail. They heard vague rumors of the old manis young nephew, a lad of some ten or twelve summers, who had lately come to live in the great gray house on the mountain side, and who was this year to choose the winning rose and pre- sent the prize. The old men ot the village shook their heads dubiously when they repeated the tale. lt did not seem right that so much responsibility should be placed on such young shoulders, and they wondered that the mayor should have it thus. But it was not for them to murmur, and if the mayor considered the boy equal to the task, well and good. ln the garden ot the grim silent house on the hill, on the evening before that day ot days for the simple peasants of B-, the mayor and his nephew were talking. The sky was dark and ominous, with heavy clouds gathering closely around the rugged peaks of the mountains, covering their jagged tops lege-53' ,rears aE',r . is ,AJ -ff'-' gi' ., . , .,' -2.15, H., , , 4. .:l -wt.. v ,-,, , . , if ri' 1 's ---'1.l4'. -'-111. .6- fx- s L .'.7' 5' 'r . -'- in .. '- ,LP , . .. - .':u.a?r 'N,f- ..'.-'1'-- ,-if A .-1-'1.'x ' ', 3 ' --' '4 - iw, ,.. , ', fre 1 .. . ,. ,-, 'f '--gff... ,-f '-'f -' if 'f. : , ttgw.. gg:-,,,j.,a, 15-,.', ,,z,4,-31,125 gl, 4. ,-A .5 f --- '1T.-- .. .1 ,da - -'fu'-.fgff-f,-3 1 mia... . J , ,.'..44 ly. -1' :-:-- 1 1'.- D 7-..-..- ' r ' ' : ' AJ'-L -v '-' 'G r N.. :!ii ' . 5,-fn gif , -' f .faq-' -- ,-.fr -4 125.5 Qgj:fi:f'.vi:a':-, ' T ,- - f ,y'v'5 . '4 ,Iff-'T' 7...f - 115.-11-rff! .l79'I-' . f ..9'i: fi- Qwfff. ,, 72.-vigil'-Q1-L-5 az -5 1 -- V5-.'f fjtiifl F-5 ' 'f X '7'x ?i'- ar-1:-,'-'-Aff-:':2!'4f, ii ' - fi f--1. l'1'1: - - . N-SQL -1 Ht SEP.. ':3'f.L-L--- ses- gi .. . fe-rs-11 swiss? : ':':4'? 'f:.f-, s .1 4: iatklriif ,f ,. 'fQQ?:'f1s--. ..X bif- ' '1-' '- A . Q- Simi'-J.r: ffl- 4 -fa -1-H-ts:-wr. 371. TF A' ' 'f'.I'2L3:s:.rL'241v1jifi',': - tl ' 1' -'few-- Z 5.-- --' F' N 'vga '-.La V--1 ru. T as with an invisible mantle. The man spoke tirst: We will be having a storm soon, my boy, he said, and his voice, deep and low, yet with a certain harshness, was like the thunder which even then rumbled threateningly overhead. The boy nodded. l-le was a frail little chap with great brown eyes in -vhose sott depths there now lingered an expression of timidity that was almost fear. . 10 .

Page 15 text:

IN MEMo1uAM MISS ELLEN SIMPSON, for twenty-two years a teacher in the High School for Girls. A cultured gentlewoman, she gave years of faith- ful and loving service to the inspiring of a love of the beautiful. As an individual and as an instructor. she was ever ready to proiier the hand of aid and the voice of sympathy io all who needed it. A 9



Page 17 text:

HY 7 '..Hl es sn. ie said quietly, but there was no animation in his voice, and his thoughts were far away, dwelling on the dreaded duty which to-morrow he must perform. In the old man's mind there were no such thoughts. For him the morrow would be a day of happiness, of joy-the day on which he would rind of what stuti' this small young nephew beside him was made, and in his heart he be- lieved implicitly that the boy would stand the test. He shall love flowers as I have loved them,t' he murmured, so that when I ani no longer here to see them tlonrish in the village, he may take my place. lt is well for him to begin young. The tirst large drops were falling now, a warning of the torrents that were to follow, and the man and boy, hand in hand, silently entered the house. All that evening the boy was ill at ease. Fear gnawed at his heart, a fear which increased with every tick of the solemn faced clock on the mantel, slowly marking otl' the minutes through which his uncle so peacefully slept. It was a dread of the people before whom to-morrow he must speak-those rough, uncouth villagers whose red, coarse features frightened him, and whose manner, so different from that of the people he had lived among heretofore, he could not understand. With every tormentiug tick of the old clock his fear grew upon him. To stand before the il all, to have them laugh at his way of speaking and mock at what he said-Hlie would not do it. His uncle did not know what he demanded when he bade him do it. He would tell him that it could not be done, that he was afraid. Bipt then the boy drew in his breath sharply. Admit that he was a coward? No, that was even worse, and he dismissed the thought of confessing as one not worthy to be considered a moment. Nevertheless he was but a boy, not without boyish traits, in spite of his old way of thinking, and he did what many another boy would have done under the circuinstances.-That is, he ran away. Not so very far away, however- althougli his intentions were good-for the storm was raging now in all its fury, and the wind blew down the mountain with such force as nearly to lift him oti' his feet. The cool drops of rain, dashing against his face, were strange-- ly refreshing and invigorating. He realized how warm and close it had been in the great house he had left, and then at the thought of his uncle he struggled on down the path with redoubled vigor. But the odds were against him, and a stormy path, along which he had to feel his way in the darkness, the wind, and rain, were too much for a small boy to conquer, and although he fought bravely, for he was not naturally a coward, he slipped on a loose stone at the very bottom of the mountain, lunged forward in the darkness, and rolled, a wet moaning bundle, to the very door of one of the village cottages. Had the boy been able to see, he would have noticed that it was a very humble little cottage, so frail and forlorn looking that it might have been no task at all for the wind to carry it away. lt must have been a determined little cottage, however, for it stood its ground, and although the wind, angry now, 11

Suggestions in the Girls High School - Yearbook (Reading, PA) collection:

Girls High School - Yearbook (Reading, PA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Girls High School - Yearbook (Reading, PA) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Girls High School - Yearbook (Reading, PA) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

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Girls High School - Yearbook (Reading, PA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Girls High School - Yearbook (Reading, PA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Girls High School - Yearbook (Reading, PA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918


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