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Show EXPRESSION OF REGRET With every call of the Grim Reaper comes a mute appeal to the her. strings of us all in general, to some in particular. To immediate relative, it always falls with the same d peal as the knell of fate. To the cir ale of acquaintances and friends the I acuteness of the loss is measured b the social worth the deceased ma have established multiplied, in fo-anticipation, fo-anticipation, by the delightful promises prom-ises to unfold in the years to com'-To com'-To those who have known, labored with and enjoyed the buoyant per personality of Mrs. G. W. Himstreet. her tragic demise represents far more than an ordinary death. Her ' tion to the Grecian ideal of a beautiful and symmetrically developed phyr: que under the command of a brilliar mind, equally devoted to the modern nsychic culture, combined to prodr a personality of which the world has alas, all too few. To ponder what might have been, can but plunge us into the gloom of i-retrievable i-retrievable regret, but to recount that for a time though all too brief we profited by her aesthentic and inspirational inspir-ational influence shall never fade from the vault of cherished memories These thoughts but feebly present the high esteem in which Mrs. Himstreet Him-street was and shall ever he held by the faculty and students of the Beaver County High School, of which faculty facul-ty she was an honored member during dur-ing the year 1917-1918. |