Wells High School - Crimson and Gray Yearbook (Southbridge, MA)

 - Class of 1925

Page 19 of 308

 

Wells High School - Crimson and Gray Yearbook (Southbridge, MA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 19 of 308
Page 19 of 308



Wells High School - Crimson and Gray Yearbook (Southbridge, MA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 18
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Page 19 text:

THE CRIMSON AND GRAY Coral had never told him she had a cousin there. When he saw Coral next, his first inquiry- was for her cousin. She is a perfect book- worm and manhater, was the answer. These two words produced on Worthing a far dif- ferent effect from what Coral had intended and he often thought of the deep blue eyes of Betty. The annual examinations at Madame Du- frey ' s were drawing near, and it had always been the custom to offer a prize for the best examination. As Coral was to graduate, both she and Betty had entered their names on the list. Betty was much surprised to see Coral ' s name, because composition writ- ing was one of the things in which Coral did not excel. She was doubly surprised to come upon Coral suddenly one day, apparent- ly deep in thought, and filling one sheet after another. At last she finished it and came to Betty with the request that she go over it and correct all mistakes in spelling. Betty did not refuse, for this was not the first time Coral had come to her with the same request, and upon reading it she won- dered at Coral ' s new achievement. If she had any suspicions she did not make them known, however, but handed her cousin ' s composition in with her own. The examinations were over and Coral, who had known just what questions would be asked of her, answered with such accu- racy that her mother had been very proud of her when she heard on all sides the praises of her daughter. Now all that remained was graduation, and the great auditorium was filled. Worthing, who had arrived very early, had been fortunate in obtaining a front seat. He had graduated the week before and was leaving that night for Europe. Coral was first on the program and she seemed very beautiful to Worthing, as she came forward in a simple white dress to sing and play. After that came the reading of the compositions. Betty was called upon first, and in a very sweet voice she read her es- say, which when finished, was greeted with such cheering and clapping that there seemed little doubt of her obtaining the prize. Coral, at her own request, was last. Her composi- tion bore the title The Future and Present Life. When she ended a burst of applause filled the large hall, while her name was on every lip as she left the room, proudly bear- ing the prize. Worthing was obliged to leave at nine o ' clock so he was not present at the scene which followed. A little, bent, gray-haired woman arose, just as Coral again entered the room, and making her way to the stage, said in a shrill voice, I am a woman who loves justice and therefore will not hold my peace. That young lady has no right to the prize, for that same piece appeared in one of the daily papers, two years ago, and if any one doubts my word I can produce that article for it is one that I have always kept. At this, the old lady went out and returned a few minutes later with the same article. Co- ral was obliged to hand over the prize to Bet- ty, and mortified beyond all imagining left the room, followed by her mother. Three months later, in a hotel in London, Worthing sat awaiting the mail. As yet he had received no letter from Coral and did not know about her disgrace. The mortifica- tion which she had endured had brought on a fever, and she had taken to her bed, waited on by Betty. At Coral ' s request Betty had written Worthing a long letter as she her- self could write only a little. He opened and read the one written by Betty first. Then he turned to the second. It was a sickly, sen- timental affair which had been partly copied from an old letter writer, containing uch nonsense as the silvery starlite the pearl- ing rill and the golden moonlite, wh ch being spelled in such a manner filled him ,;r th disgust. Almost every other word was mis- spelled, and Worthing ' s thoughts of the writer were not very complimentary. It was a long time before he answered it and the coolness of that letter filled Coral with such anger that she tossed it into the fire, and so the correspondence ceased. A year had gone by and now it was Betty ' s turn to graduate. Among those present at the graduation was Worthing. To him, she seemed the most beautiful girl that he had ever seen and he did not wait long to tell her so. Before the evening was over, they were engaged. On a fine October morning, they were mar- ried, but needless to say, Coral did not at- tend the wedding. To Europe, they returned to live in the lovely Southern home that Worthing had prepared. I. Lindblad ' 24. HIS LETTER It happened on one of those glorious Nev- ember days when every one is pleased with everyone else and there is just enough rivalry

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THE CRIMSON AND GRAY savage beasts. The bloody dagger came into play again with deadly surety of winning. The inevitable would have happened, but with over confidence, the ruffian stepped back to the very edge of the footing. He slipped slightly, trembled on the brink, and with a shriek dropped down to the very fate to which he had treacherously flung the others. Steve picked up the weapon and sadly quitted the valley. The chief boss paused — and the silence seemed oppressive. The shadow, appeared to be gathering to rush, to strike, and to blot out. I raised the blade, and as I handled it the last crimson ray of the setting sun tinged it with color; but soon the streak of bloody color changed to purest silver and then to the dusk of ended day even as in our story. K. Taylor ' 24. THE FIRST ESSENTIAL It was the first day of school, and already the main room of Madame Dufrey ' s select school was filled with the noisy babble of young girls. Madame Dufrey, who had just been advising the teachers on various sub- jects, was just leaving the room when a large handsome car was seen to stop at the en- trance of the school. The new arrival proved to be an extremely fashionably dressed woman with a very haughty air. She went into the room fol- lowed by two young girls, one who looked about sixteen, and the other, a year her ju- nior. The younger and plainer of the girls was unmistakably a poor relation, for her face bore the meek, humble look of a depen- dent, while the haughty black eyes of the other marked her as the lady ' s daughter. At Madame Dufrey ' s inquiry, the lady gave her name as Mrs. Browning, wife of the Honorable Mr. Browning of Riverside, N. Y. I have come, she said, apparently speak- ing to Madame Dufrey, but looking straight at the window, to place my daughter Coral in your charge. She is to study the higher branches of education, such as music, French, Italian and dancing; I do not wish her to waste her time over such ordinary studies as geography, spelling, arithmetic and gram- mar. Those will do very well for Betty, and she threw a look of disdain at the poor relation, whose eyes were bent upon the carpet. She is the child of my husband ' s sister, and it had been decided that she become a teacher, so it is my wish that you be very thorough with her in all those stupid th ings which Coral is not to study. Madame Dufrey bowed, and Mrs. Brown- ing continued, Last year, the girls were studying at Sunnybrook Seminary, and if you ' ll believe it, the principal insisted on placing Coral in the spelling class, because she made a few mistakes in her first com- position. I dare say it was more Betty ' s fault than hers, because Coral admitted to me later that it was one of Betty ' s that she had found and copied. Naturally I would not consent to having Coral placed in the spelling class, so I took her away. It was my intention to have Betty finish her edu- cation there, but my husband, who is very peculiar wouldn ' t submit to it, so I have brought them both. Mrs. Browning then arose, and after kiss- ing Coral six or seven times and nodding to Betty, took her departure. Just beyond the immense grounds of the school and separated from them by a huge concrete wall, was a fashionable boys ' col- lege. The young ladies were strictly prohib- ited from having anything to do with the young men, but in spite of the careful watch- ings of the teachers, notes were flung across the wall while handkerchiefs were waved from the windows of the girls ' rooms. Coral had not been there long before she was well acquainted with all the young men, but it was only on one that she lavished her bright- est glances and most winsome smiles. That one was Worthing Halton, a young man who possessed great wealth. He was immediately attracted to the beauty and charm of Coral, and went boldly to Madame Dufrey and ask- ed permission to call upon her. His request was granted and during the two years he remained at college, he continued to see her. One evening when he called, he was made to wait for so long that he had made up his mind to leave, when a fair delicate looking girl, with deep blue eyes and curling auburn ha:r, entered the room. She introduced her- self as Betty Lee, cousin of Coral, who. she said, was unable to come down. Worthing looked at her with great admiration, which made her blush deeply, and would gladly have detained her, but with a polite good-evening she left him in a state of complete bewilder- ment. How strange, he said to himself, that



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10 THE CRIMSON AND GRAY in the atmosphere to suggest a struggle of some description. And there was to be a struggle, for a football game was on schedule, a game that would go down in history as one of the greatest contests ever staged in Mere- dith, a town enjoying its first year as a con- testant for the league cup, and this game was to decide the championship. The referee ' s whistle blew bringing the kick-off, the wonderful run of the opposing full-back and the tackle of Meredith ' s veter- an end. The first quarter quickly ended with both sides scoreless and the ball in Meredith territory, Witherton academy having posses- sion of the ball when the whistle blew to re- sume play. Successive plunges, end runs, and passes put Witherton on the eight yard line, with two minutes to go. The ball was snapped, fumbled, and before it could be re- covered, Howe, the Meredith tackle, was off up the field, headed for what would have been a sure touchdown, but for the superb work of Davidson, Witherton ' s speedy half-back. The whistle blew and the half was over. Let us glance back to a night about two weeks before the date of this game. Mere- dith ' s full-back, Cap. Wadsworth, was tak- ing a short walk after supper to be alone and think things over for the coming game with Witherton. Crosssing the campus and heading for the park a little to the rear of Lipton Hall, the captain ' s quick ear caught the sound of leather meeting pigskin, or, in other words some one kicking a football. Always interested in the sport and its dif- ferent departments Wadsworth started around the corner. In amazement he stopped ; for the kicker was none other than Dick Tyson, the quiet fellow who attended every game and offered the fellows congrat- ulations if they won and his sympathy if they lost, all in that quiet way of his. Smack ! Far and high the pigskin travel- ed, stopping only after it had cleared the makeshift crossbar by a comfortable margin. Never had Wadsworth seen a kick to equal it. Straight as a bullet it had gone, and the sender apparently did it with perfect ease. Tyson patiently went over to the place where the ball had fell and brought it back for an- other kick. Once more it sailed over the uprights and rolled along the green. Without a monment ' s hesitation Wads- worth approached Ty. I saw you old man, he exclaimed. Why in the world didn ' t you say you could drop-kick like that ? Well, thoughtfully replied Dick, You see there are so many fellows who can play better than I, that I didn ' t think I ' d be good enough. Goodness knows, I ' d like to play. A wistful smile passed over the youth ' s face. Well. I ' ll be going now, said Cap after a moment ' s reflection, see you later, though. ' He left the boy still booting the ball and chasing it. Each time he kicked accurately and with the confidence of a veteran. Later in the evening Cap was seen going to Dick ' s room with his face wreathed in smiles. Ev- ery one stopped to watch him; He was al- ways good natured, but now he was unac- countably happy. He had an affectionate pound on the shoulder for some, and a hello for fellows he had never seen before. Upon reaching Ty ' s door he met that worthy young man in the act of going out No, you don ' t said Cap, accompanying his assertion with a shove that sent Ty back in- to the room and into an easy chair. Now, old man, get me straight, we ' ll need you for that game two weeks from now, you know,, the Witherton game. Never mind the buts 1 and ands . You ' ve been to the gym class and you ' re in good condition. With the com- ing two weeks to top off with, you ' ll be in top form. Dick looked at him in a sort of daze, his face flushed and his eyes sparkling. Gee do you mean to say you want me to play in that game-the game deciding the champion- ship? he queried excitedly. Not only I want you, but coach Ayres wants you and the team needs you. Report tomorrow after classes and we ' ll fix you up Goodnight, and dont forget to show up. Cap was gone before Dick could reply Dick was first to be on the practice field next day, and after watching just one of those drop kicks, Coach Ayres made a dive for his office yelling to Dick to follow Dick emerged fully attired in a uniform and was immediately placed in the field as a half- back. The days passed all too quickly and al- though Dick was steadily improving the coach dared not start him in the game as he had never seen the boy play before So, the beginning of the second half was at hand and Ty, although in uniform was still warming the bench. Meredith received the kick-off and O ' Donnell, Meredith ' s elusive back, received the ball. Dodging here and there, ever ready to take advantage of his

Suggestions in the Wells High School - Crimson and Gray Yearbook (Southbridge, MA) collection:

Wells High School - Crimson and Gray Yearbook (Southbridge, MA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

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Wells High School - Crimson and Gray Yearbook (Southbridge, MA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

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Wells High School - Crimson and Gray Yearbook (Southbridge, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

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Wells High School - Crimson and Gray Yearbook (Southbridge, MA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

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Wells High School - Crimson and Gray Yearbook (Southbridge, MA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

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Wells High School - Crimson and Gray Yearbook (Southbridge, MA) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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