Appomattox State Agricultural School - Agricola Yearbook (Appomattox, VA)

 - Class of 1918

Page 25 of 88

 

Appomattox State Agricultural School - Agricola Yearbook (Appomattox, VA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 25 of 88
Page 25 of 88



Appomattox State Agricultural School - Agricola Yearbook (Appomattox, VA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 24
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Page 25 text:

SAG R MA Prophecy of Class '18 HEN our little band of pilgrims swung into the boisterous tide of Q ' High School work just four years ago, there was such a terrible if mixture of giggling girls and wiggling boys, that it was rather per- QS3 plexing to know just what Dame Fortune had in store for them. 6 The long and the short, the fat and lean, the idiot and genius, 00 the wise and foolish, have fought their way shoulder to shoulder, ris- ' ing and falling on the cbbing tide until in June, 1918, we have twenty-five survivors, who appear above the surging waves of Geometry, Latin and Physics, and have a future worth revealing. Before me a dark mysterious veil lifted, enveloping me into eternal dark- ness, and the uncanny hand of fate guided me across unfathomable depths to the Delphian Oracle. There in a sequestered bower, amidst rustling oaks, shrouded in the clouds of vapor, I connnuned with the goddess of fate, who many times in the history of old, has waved her mystic wand over the heads of Roman and Grecian heroes. A still small voice whispered into my ears, t'Be not amazed, for 'whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap '. The future of your classmates is only a fulfillment of the past. A stroke of the mystic wand and out of the vapor came Herman Bass with his serene countenance and drea.1ny eyes of brown. He wa.s living in his happy home of the far West-his profession obtained-and by his Fireside was his faithful Kat. - Far off in the Oriental world-Harry Shotwell was swaying the audience of Ancient Rome to the strains of his melodious music. In the Sunny South, was Lucile Caldwell, teaching Domestic Science with a zealous CZellerlsj heart to return to 4'Old Virginny. There was our athlete, Elliott Cheatham, happily residing in a neat bunga- low beside Randolph-Macon, as his better half was a member of the faculty of that College. Next from the vapor, flew Lewis Vaughan, our faithful student in Mathe- matics. He was a skillful civil engineer in France, which speaks 'well for our Class of '18. 25

Page 24 text:

fi. SAG A A gentleman who believes that Impossible is a word to be found only in the dictionary of fools is Thomas Turnes, who has always been among the tirst of our class. His motto is good, and we hope after he leaves us, that he may ever retain benefits derived from it. A Boldly and without fear, the jolly Susie Booker stepped from Liberty Chapel High School into our class, and little cause has she to fear, for Chemistry HD has no terrors for her. All through the High School, We have had with us Aubrey VVebb, from Hixburg. In all the dignity of his Seniorship, he aspires to Win a Young,' maiden. He has been a faithful member of the VVashington Literary Society, and ever loyal to all duties imposed. Kathleen Rucker, who was with us as a Freshman, is talented, having won two medals in W. C. T. U. contest. She has been loyal to the Washington Literary Society, and has Won fame for it. The president of the Washington Literary Society, is Julian Gills, who is like the poor-We have had him with us always. He is adept in things, both artistic and literary, and to him credit is due for numerous sketches found in our annual. I Now that I have given you a mental picture as We were-as we arc, you will bear with us even in this hour-the time when We come to realize that. our young lives are just on the verge of the great field awaiting us. True to our motto, Labor conquers all things, we go forth, determined to achieve success. ITISTORIAN. 24



Page 26 text:

QAG 14533, I then saw Elsie Payne, to which the following description may be applied: Eyes that are blue and smiles that bewitchf' She was an efficient gray-haired history teacher, impressing upon her pupils the importance of knowing all about Richelieu and Captain Smith. In a group, Thomas Caldwell, Guy Harris and Walker Thornhill made their appearance. No American Soldiers were as proud of responding to their Country's call as these three, for they were then fighting in the trenches of France, clisplaymg 'in them what was best. Next came Joe Inge. Yes, there he stood in the shoes of President Wilson, which he had long since laid aside. His face was serious and grave, and in his thought, the destiny of the mightiest nation on earth. Crying and sighing, came our aifectionate Annie Laurie Marshall for a divorce from Richard Caldwell, because she had found out that he was not a self-made man. I caught sight of the most wonderful city of Virginia, Hopewell, and in its midst were two of my classmates, Aubrey Webb, having risen to the position of principal of a High School, had associated with him in the enlightenment of the cosmopolitan population, Beulah St. John. Other familiar faces then rose out of the darkness and portrayed their paths of life. There came to my ears the sentiment of Lillian Evans, Happy Am I, from Care I'm Free, Why Arenlt They All Contented Like Me? Sweetly and lovingly, she lrightened the home of a young professor of Chatham Training School. I heard the favorite quotation of Julian Gills, Let not the creaking of shoes nor the rustling of silks betray thy poor heart to woman. He had closely followed his motto, for he was a bachelor and also an artist, studying intensively the Architecture of Greece. And he went from place to place, gathering relics of the Old Greek Art. With a cat purring on the hearth-rug, dozing by the fire-side sat an old maid-her hair screwed up in a tight little knot on the top of her head. Her, I recognized to be Macie Inge still living in Appomattox, 4'Still achieving, still pursuing. t'Learn to labor and to wait, brought to my mind the daily expression of George Martin 's face, and truly said, for he was the only member of our class engaged in active Christian service-being a. progressive Missionary, in China. 26

Suggestions in the Appomattox State Agricultural School - Agricola Yearbook (Appomattox, VA) collection:

Appomattox State Agricultural School - Agricola Yearbook (Appomattox, VA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 23

1918, pg 23

Appomattox State Agricultural School - Agricola Yearbook (Appomattox, VA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 53

1918, pg 53

Appomattox State Agricultural School - Agricola Yearbook (Appomattox, VA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 19

1918, pg 19

Appomattox State Agricultural School - Agricola Yearbook (Appomattox, VA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 86

1918, pg 86

Appomattox State Agricultural School - Agricola Yearbook (Appomattox, VA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 38

1918, pg 38

Appomattox State Agricultural School - Agricola Yearbook (Appomattox, VA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 42

1918, pg 42


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