Grace Harlowe's Junior Year at
High School, by
Jessie Graham Flower This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at
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Title: Grace Harlowe's Junior Year at High School Or, Fast Friends in
the Sororities
Author: Jessie Graham Flower
Release Date: February 20, 2006 [EBook #17811]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GRACE
HARLOWE'S JUNIOR YEAR ***
Produced by Sigal Alon, Emmy and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Grace Harlowe's Junior Year at High School
OR
Fast Friends in the Sororities
By JESSIE GRAHAM FLOWER, A.M.
Author of Grace Harlowe's Plebe Year at High School, Grace
Harlowe's Sophomore Year at High School, Grace Harlowe's Senior
Year at High School, etc.
Illustrated
PHILADELPHIA HENRY ALTEMUS COMPANY
COPYRIGHT, 1911, BY HOWARD E. ALTEMUS
[Illustration: Grace Snatched Off the White Mask. Frontispiece--High
School Girls No. 3.]
CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE
I. A NEW ARRIVAL 7
II. CONFIDENCES 20
III. AN AUTUMN WALKING EXPEDITION 30
IV. GRACE MAKES A DISCOVERY 42
V. THE PHI SIGMA TAU 53
VI. A VISIT TO ELEANOR 68
VII. THE CLAIM OF THE "ARTISTIC TEMPERAMENT" 78
VIII. ELEANOR THROWS DOWN THE GAUNTLET 85
IX. THE RESCUE PARTY 96
X. JULIA PERFORMS A SACRED DUTY 106
XI. WORRIES AND PLANS 121
XII. A RECKLESS CHAUFFEUR 129
XIII. A THANKSGIVING FROLIC 137
XIV. ELEANOR FINDS A WAY 145
XV. A WOULD-BE "LARK" 150
XVI. THE JUNIORS FOREVER 163
XVII. THE LAST STRAW 173
XVIII. THE PLAY'S THE THING 182
XIX. THE TRY OUT 191
XX. THE ANONYMOUS LETTER 199
XXI. BREAKERS AHEAD 208
XXII. AS YOU LIKE IT 215
XXIII. THE JUNIOR PICNIC 235
XXIV. CONCLUSION 252
Grace Harlowe's Junior Year at High School
CHAPTER I
A NEW ARRIVAL
"Next to home, there is really nothing quite so satisfying as our dear old
High School!" exclaimed Grace Harlowe, as she entered the
locker-room and beamed on her three friends who stood near by.
"It does seem good to be back, even though we have had such a
perfectly glorious summer," said Jessica Bright. "We are a notch higher,
too. We're actually juniors. This locker-room is now our property,
although I don't like it as well as the one we had last year."
"We'll get accustomed to it, and it will seem like home inside of two
weeks," said Anne Pierson philosophically. "Everything is bound to
change in this world, you know. 'We must put ourselves in harmony
with the things among which our lot is cast.'"
"Well, Marcus Aurelius, we'll try to accept your teaching," laughed
Grace, who immediately recognized the quotation as coming from a
tiny "Marcus Aurelius Year Book" that Anne kept in her desk and
frequently perused.
"I wonder what school will bring us this year?" mused Nora O'Malley,
as she retied her bow for the fifth time before the mirror and critically
surveyed the final effect. "We had a stormy enough time last year,
goodness knows. Really, girls, it is hard to believe that Miriam Nesbit
and Julia Crosby were at one time the banes of our existence. They
come next to you three girls with me, now."
"I think that we all feel the same about them," replied Grace. "Miriam
is a perfect dear now, and is just as enthusiastic over class matters as
we are."
"It looks as though everything were going to be plain sailing this year,"
said Jessica. "There isn't a disturbing element in the class that I know of.
Still, one can never tell."
"Oh, here come Eva Allen and Marian Barber," called Grace
delightedly, and rushed over to the newcomers with outstretched hands.
By this time girls began to arrive rapidly, and soon the locker-room
hummed with the sound of fresh, young voices. Coats of tan were
compared and newly acquired freckles deplored, as the girls stood
about in groups, talking of the delights of the summer vacation just
ended.
To the readers of "GRACE HARLOWE'S PLEBE YEAR AT HIGH
SCHOOL," and "GRACE HARLOWE'S SOPHOMORE YEAR AT
HIGH SCHOOL," the girl chums have become familiar figures. It will
be remembered how Grace Harlowe and her friends, Nora O'Malley
and Jessica Bright, during their freshman year, became the firm friends
of Anne Pierson, the brilliant young girl who won the freshman prize
offered each year to the freshmen by Mrs. Gray. The reader will recall
the repeated efforts of Miriam Nesbit, aided by Miss Leece, the algebra
teacher, to disgrace Anne in the eyes of the faculty, and the way each
attempt was frustrated by Grace Harlowe and her friends. Mrs. Gray's
house party, the winter picnic in Upton
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