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Sunny Boy and His Playmates by Ramy Allison White
page 71 of 127 (55%)
"By and by, when spring comes, if not before," said Mr. Horton
pleasantly. "Now, Son, here we are at Miss May's. If it doesn't stop
snowing pretty soon I shall telephone Mother to have Harriet come for
you this noon."

Sunny Boy kissed Daddy and ran up the steps. Miss May opened the door
for him.

"Well, Sunny Boy, you are not afraid of the weather, are you?" she said
brightly. "I'm sure some of the children will not be able to come
to-day. The trolley cars have stopped, Miss Davis tells me, and Lottie
Carr and her sister live in the suburbs, you know."

When the nine o'clock bell rang all the children in Miss Davis' room
were there, except the two Carr girls. They could not come because
there were no trolley cars running and they lived too far away to walk.
There were three or four little girls in Miss May's room who stayed at
home, too, but nearly every one came. The children thought it great
fun to scramble through the snow, and then, when they reached Miss
May's, to have Maria stand them on a mat of linoleum and brush them off
with a whisk broom so that they should not carry snow into the school
rooms.

Miss Davis' class was having a reading lesson just after recess, when
Miss May came in to speak to Miss Davis. The two teachers went over by
the window to talk and the children could not hear what they said.
Miss May went back to her own room in a few moments and then, to every
one's surprise, instead of telling Sunny Boy to finish the story he had
been reading to her, Miss Davis asked her class to close their books.

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