
Helen is a bright, diligent teenager in the quiet Midwestern town of Rolfe, where the weekly rhythm revolves around the clatter of the local newspaper press. On “press day” she swaps schoolbooks for stacks of fresh Herald sheets, folding them with care while her father runs the editorial office and her brother feeds the linotype. The story paints a vivid picture of a sleepy main street lined with brick storefronts, a lake that draws summer visitors, and a close‑knit community that gathers around the paper each evening.
When Helen finds her father looking pale and exhausted in the dim editorial room, her sense of duty quickens. She insists he rest, shouldering the responsibility of getting the paper out despite the looming deadline. As the press hums and the town waits for its news, Helen’s resolve hints at the personal challenges she’ll face while trying to keep the family business—and her own future—on track.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (252K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2013-02-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Best known for lively girls' adventure stories from the 1930s, this author wrote about young women stepping into exciting jobs and new public roles. Her books pair quick-moving plots with a strong sense that capable heroines could handle the newsroom, the radio world, or even the airline industry.
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