Hudson High School - True Blue Yearbook (Hudson, WI)

 - Class of 1902

Page 8 of 46

 

Hudson High School - True Blue Yearbook (Hudson, WI) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 8 of 46
Page 8 of 46



Hudson High School - True Blue Yearbook (Hudson, WI) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 7
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Page 8 text:

4 TRUK HLUE XXI. How the boys are in the Senate, In the House, and at the bar, How the girls have all been carried off By some brave Lockinvar. XXII. Then the welfare of these Students To your minds return anew, While their fame rings down the ages As the Class of Ninteen Two. Last week witnessed the swarming of Hudson’s educational beehive, and a more happy occasion cannot well be imagined. A class of 28 bright boys and girls finished the course of study and received diplomas. On June 2, the class exercises were held and were somewhat different from those of previous years. The class decided to give a play this year, and Jeannette Scott was chosen to arrange for it. The play given was adopted from John Kenduck Bangs’ little farce, “A Fatal Mistake,” and was a complete success. The original class song written by Saidee Cole, was a great hit, and was repeated the second night by request. The class poem by Chas. Wingender, printed elsewhere, was splendid, and Miss Olga Hanson pleased the audience with her class statistics. Father Time, in the person of Chas. Lumley was a novel and pleasing feature, as he foretold the future. On the whole the exercises were very successful, and our High School may well be proud of the class, and the evidence of work accomplished shown in their graduation parts. However, let the new graduates remember that they have only started in life, and that the future is before them. The Junior, or perhaps we must now say Senior Class has 33 names on its roll. Class of 1903 are you going to let the Class of 1902 say after next June that they are the largest class ever grad- uated from the Hudson High?

Page 7 text:

TRUE BLUE XIV. Thus the seed of education On that fertile soil was sown, There to grow and scatter increase, Twas not left to thrive alone. XV. Now from borderland to border, From the Lakes to New Orleans, Dotting this fair country over Myriads of schools are seen. XVI. From the simple country school house To the college, tall and grand, All are waiting, doors wide open For the youthful of this land. XVII. Here before your grave attention Is the Class of Ninteen Two With their faces on the future, Wondering what they have to do. XVIII. Opportunities they’ve taken, Entered at the open door, And returning brought more knowledge Than they ever hoped before. XIX. In their minds stirs great ambition, All to lofty heights aspire, And their watchword always shall be To climb higher, higher, higher. XX. And as time with fleeting footsteps Glides along its rugged way You’ll review their many victories On some distant future day.



Page 9 text:

TRUK HLUK 0 The Companionship of Book. By Kitty Johnson. Kitty Johnson, in her essay shows us what good books may do for us. Human beings crave for companionship, a feeling which is shared also by beasts and birds. We may not always have our friends with us to comfort us; but there are always books. We should choose only valuable books which are now within the reach of every one. Some of us may have the pleasure of talking to a poet, who paints nature for us; or to a historian, who tells us how to profit by the experience of the past; or to a senator or president, whose words are unimportant, yet we covet such chances and neglect our books. Travel is broadening, but few of us have the opportunity; but by means of books we may see not only the present grandeur of kings, but also the civilization of ages. In early times the scholars taught their pupils orally. The masses remained in ignorance for centuries for books could be produced only by copying with a pen. Hence the noble ideas of the few scholars rarely reached beyond the sound of their voices. Books like friends should be well chosen for both influence character. If we cultivate the habit of good reading in youth, we will appreciate it in old age. Who is more to be pitied than one who, during life, has not come in contact with the great thoughts of great men? How would we regard a man wTho refused to enter into an inheritance produc- ed at great sacrifice and toil? Milton says, “A good book is the life blood of a master spirit. Do you refuse to be the heirs of the world’s master spirits?” Come and join this brotherhood of literature lovers, it will bring you all that is noble in life; all that is elevating. The Puritan Character. By Gertrude Otis. In Gertrude Otis’ Essay she shows us the early Puritan ideals which are the same as we strive for today. The Reformation is the greatest movement the world has ever

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Hudson High School - True Blue Yearbook (Hudson, WI) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

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Hudson High School - True Blue Yearbook (Hudson, WI) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

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Hudson High School - True Blue Yearbook (Hudson, WI) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

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Hudson High School - True Blue Yearbook (Hudson, WI) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

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