Santa Rosa High School - Echo Yearbook (Santa Rosa, CA)

 - Class of 1921

Page 32 of 212

 

Santa Rosa High School - Echo Yearbook (Santa Rosa, CA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 32 of 212
Page 32 of 212



Santa Rosa High School - Echo Yearbook (Santa Rosa, CA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 31
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Santa Rosa High School - Echo Yearbook (Santa Rosa, CA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 33
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Page 32 text:

tesco OK PS Che Nivht © Ht Rained ING-A-LING! Ding-a-ling! I awoke with a start. How long had that pesky telephone bell been ringing? Out of patience, I answered it. ““Hello!’? ‘Hello!’? The answering ‘‘hello’’ was in a woman’s voice— sweet but teary. “‘Oh Jim, please come down to the station at once! I am in terrible trouble!’’ ‘But, Madame, | !’? But I heard the click of the receiver and I knew that I was alone on the line. Having been christened Archibald by a doting parent and having never had the honor of being called ‘‘Jim’’ in my en- lire life, I knew I was not the rightful recipient of that pleading message, out [ pulled back the curtain and looked out. Tt was certainly a wet world that I beheld. The rain was beating down pell-mell and the eutter’s and ear tracks were miniature Mississippis at the flood season. The dull street lamps sent out their sickly gleams through the mist of the downpour, but added no light to the dripping world. No living mortal was in sieht. Gad! What a beastly night! How I would hate to be out there! But a woman—alone and in trouble. I turned and looked at the bed. The eover’s were thrown back where I had left them in a hurry, the pillows were piled in an anviting heap, and moreover, the chills were running up and down my spine. Well, taken altogether, the bed was the most enticing thine I could see. so I jumped into it, pulled the cover’s over my head and tried to resume my slumbers, but my conscience troubled me, trying to tell me it was a gentleman’s place to help a lady in distress. The clock, chiming twelve, added the last drop in the bucket and I arose, dressed, and hurried to the station. cursing the rain, vet with my innate adventurous spirit at its highest. Twenty-eight

Page 31 text:

HESECHIO FIRST PRIZE Earl Kuykendall SECOND PRIZE Kruneth Schafer THIRD PRIZE Bobert Gardin HONORABLE MENTION Francis Piazzi Ellen Golm John Massarek Twenty-seven



Page 33 text:

TEE ECHO At the station I was greeted with a tearful kiss, which was not at all dis- pleasing, for the giver was a well-dressed, pretty giril with the most bewiteh- ine black eyes, now filled with large glistening tears. { ‘‘Oh Jim, I am so glad you came. I lost my purse’and this terrible cab- ; man refused to let me go—and I never could have walked home this black ! and rainy night—why, it’s so dark I ean hardly see a thing—so—so—l sent tor you,’’ she ended limply. Who was I supposed to be? A long lost brother or fond cousin. My brain was in a muddle. But that was hardly the place for explanations and, well, it was a rather thrilling adventure, so why not go through with it? { settled with the cabman, helped her into the waiting taxi. After we were comfortably settled and out of the rain I noticed the chauffeur still waiting ‘ there- for directions. My gray matter whirled. ‘Br—er—you tell him where to go, my dear, while I get a match at the j corner.’’ I lit my cigarette. How quieting it was to smoke, and | prided myself on how easily I had gotten out of that difficulty about directions. | When I returned to the car she said rather angrily, ‘‘Even though it is lark, I can see the light of your cigarette and Jim, I am not going to let s you break your promise to me and smoke.’’ } “Why—er—I thought under the circumstances, I——”’ ‘ Well, I won’t have it!’’ and she snapped the cigarette out of my mouth. ; I consoled myself by remembering’ that 1 wasn’t married to her—yet. I | i looked at her closely and wondered who ‘‘Ji m’’ was. Supposing—but her ‘ cloves prevented my knowing that one thing at least. 4 ‘And Jim,’’ when I kissed you at the station I noticed that you had ; shaved your moustache, I don’t think it was a bit nice of you when you know i don’t like you nearly so well without it. Oh, I wish it were lighter so I | uld see you better !”’ Having never had a moustache I was decidedly amused but answered with | | all gravity, ‘‘I’ll let it grow again if you want, but it—it got in my coffee in | the morning and was a nuisance?’’ i She looked at me rather curiously and the awful thought struck me that maybe ‘‘Jim’’ was the proud possessor of the now fashionable very diminu- tive moustache and I thought that I had surely said something wrong, but her mind was busy elsewhere, for she soon said: ‘““Why don’t you ask me why I came home from my vacation a week sooner than I had planned, at such an hour, and in the rain?”’ ‘“Why—er—my dear, you know—why I was so confused by the situation that I had forgotten.’’ 4 “Oh, Ill forgive you, as it is rather unusual. It’s this way—Frankie got q the measles, and Mr. Stoddard said I should go home at onee, as I had never had them.’’ yg Now was the chance for some finishing touches! And how is Mrs. Stod- y dard?’’ IT asked, coolly. 7 “Why, Jim, you know she has been dead these two years?’’ Oh, you mean , his mother! She’s’’—and she launched into a description of some old lady’s | |e Y = i ry a s aes cd —e . U SS Y Twenty-nine

Suggestions in the Santa Rosa High School - Echo Yearbook (Santa Rosa, CA) collection:

Santa Rosa High School - Echo Yearbook (Santa Rosa, CA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Santa Rosa High School - Echo Yearbook (Santa Rosa, CA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Santa Rosa High School - Echo Yearbook (Santa Rosa, CA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Santa Rosa High School - Echo Yearbook (Santa Rosa, CA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Santa Rosa High School - Echo Yearbook (Santa Rosa, CA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Santa Rosa High School - Echo Yearbook (Santa Rosa, CA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924


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