Madera Union High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Madera, CA)

 - Class of 1898

Page 18 of 36

 

Madera Union High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Madera, CA) online collection, 1898 Edition, Page 18 of 36
Page 18 of 36



Madera Union High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Madera, CA) online collection, 1898 Edition, Page 17
Previous Page

Madera Union High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Madera, CA) online collection, 1898 Edition, Page 19
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 18 text:

12 HIGH SCHOOL ANNUAL. which will give employment to our men, women and children during the picking cur- ing, packing and harvesting seasons. Good wine grape vineyards are paying bet- ter now than raisin or table grape, and better than almost any kind of orchard. ‘The grapes of the San Joaquin Valley make better sweet wine, taking a natural port and sherry flavor, than those grown in any other section of America. At present there is a large winery, estab- lished by the Swiss-Italian Colony, which em- ploys a large number of men, and does a thriving business. Olive orchards are also a paying industry, and, although they require from six to seven years’ growth before bearing, the fruit brings a good price when ready for market. The industry of beet raising and sugar manufacturing will be introduced into the county as soon as a necessary amount of water is procured. This will undoubtedly prove a paying industry as California is the most favorable section in the world for the raising of sugar beets, and this section of the State offers superior inducements for the loca- tion of a beet sugar factory, owing to the abundance of cheap power and the competing railroad facilities for transportation. Madera enjoys the advantage ot competition between rival lines of railroad, the Southern Pacific and the San Joaquin Valley. The rates of shipment will be lowered more if the proposed Monterey Railroad is ever built, which is doubted by some,who think it is a money making scheme of capitalists. It will probably pass through Madera because the in- ducements here are superior to those offered by any other town in the surrounding country. The competition of the rival railroads will be a great advantage to the farmers, stock- raisers and wool growers as they can save many hundreds of dollars yearly on their ship- ments. In Madera is located a large, new brick planing mill, also a sash and door and box factory. Lumberis shipped from the mount- ains in a flume sixty miles in length. In 1874, when the flume was built, it tapped one of the finest pineries in the world, but over twenty years of continuous cutting has left it in such shape that it will be nearly a quarter of a century before the-trees will be large enough to be cut again. ; The Michigan Lumber Company has lum- ber interests near those of the Madera Com- pany, and as these are for sale at a compara- tively low price, the Madera Company can con- tinue working if they desire to do so. In the early days of the ’60’s or ’70’s large amounts of gold bullion were shipped from mines of the county. ‘The most famous of these early mines were the Fresno Enterprise, near Potter Ridge, the Josephine and the Gam- betta, at Grub Gulch, the Abbey, near Hildreth, and the Lily, near O’Neals. In looking over the county quite a number of promising pros- pects are found, which apparently require a reasonable amount of money and a practical knowledge of mining to place them on a pay- ing basis. This county, although possessing a number of gold mines of undoubted value, has been retar ded in the development of its mining in- terests by reason of ill-advised investments or insufficient capital to make necessary develop- ment, or to furnish the proper equipment of machinery. The greatest mining industry at present is granite quarrying at Raymond. ‘This great quarry, The Raymond, owned by the Ray- mond Granite Company, has been actively worked for a number of years, giving employ- ment toa large number of men at the quar- ries, and at the company’s yard in San Fran- cisco, where most of the finer stone dressing is done. A portion of the new jail now being erected is made of granite taken from this quarry. After an interval of four years no considerable impression seems to have been made on this immense dome-shaped granite hill. Any noticeable change has been for the better, as the quarry improves as it is opened,

Page 17 text:

neuory ov ke HIGH SCHOOL ANNUAL. ila precious moments we spent in listening to those semi-annual professors talk science, and how we used to awaken in agony from our moaning dreams, in the stillness of the lecture and wipe the great beads of perspiration from our troubled brow, as we imagined that we might some day be a circuit professor. Dear schoolmates, do you still retain in your misty memory the recollection of the time when all the boys, having become wearied of the monotony of school life, rashly re- solved to go to war and kill something, and when the time came for enlistment they could not sign their names, had a bad cold and wished themselves home ? How like the thought of a delirious night- mare comes back to us the recollection of the time when we rudely resolved to quit school and break up the whole public school system in America. But we found that school kept, notwithstanding our absence, and we returned as visitor next day only to meet with a cold reception from the teacher. When we are aged and great and are presi- dent or newspaper reporter, how like the the fragrance of the almost forgotten forget- me-not will come back to us the memory of the first day we orated to the debating society and how we stirred our audience’s blood to such a flood of mutiny that we pitied them, and how that great lump of embarrassment rose in our throat choking us until they pitied us. In the illusive and fanciful future how will we seek refuge from the stare of the nation’s eye and thrust away the cares of statesman- ship and give full vent to the thronging thoughts of the fantastic capers we cut in school; and like a long lost mystery we will discover the cold, hard fact that to our school days we owe our destiny. It was there that we learned to concentrate our minds into one great mass of thought, and how to tell a plausible lie. It was there we learned to ex- press our wrathful feelings in good plain Anglo-Saxon. It was there we learned to wield the death dealing pen like a demon, and how to chew gum. Let us support the public school always; it is the place where we at- tained our inexhaustible knowledge and re- ceived our first impulses for better lives. De emecOor Resources of Madera County. ar Among the counties of Central California none can lay claim to a brighter outlook for an early and extensive industrial development than Madera, which embraces a broad extent of fertile valley land, a section of foothills dotted with productive gold mines, and a lib- eral slice of mountainous territory, with all its diversified resources. All that is lacking to make it one of the most productive sections in the State is a suf- ficient supply of water. The irrigation question has been somewhat of a puzzle, the several streams lying too low to admit of turning their waters upon more than a small portion of the tillable soil. One of the. most feasible plans to provide water for the unirrigated portion of the county is the use of wells and centrifugal pumps. ‘These may be operated by electricity, obtained from the North Fork plant, or by petroleum, which is found along the western boundary of the San Joaquin Valley. It has been esti- mated thatirrigation by electric pumps can be accomplished at less than one dollar per acre for the season. ‘This system has been suc- cessfully tried by Tulare fruit growers and there is no reason why it should not be a success in Madera County, as an abundance of cheap power may be easily procured, and the water supply cannot be exhausted by pumping. With this additional supply of water, vineyardist, fruit and grain growers will be greatly benefited as their crops will be increased and made certain, for a drought will be impossible. Besides being a great aid to ranchers this will assist the people in gen- eral, as an increase in the products will neces- sitate the establishment of new factories,



Page 19 text:

HIGH SCHOOL ANNUAL. 13 SS ty both in quality of the stone and in the size of | the blocks which may be obtained. ‘These Mel granite quarries are reputed to be the best in Ito the world. sy White marble suitable for building purposes Ma is found on the Chowchilla river. As yet no quarries have been opened. A copper smelter is soon to be erected at Daulton, fifteen miles 1 hy, from Madera, and will leave a considerable erin, amount of money in the county per annum. Cotta. If the belt of copper mines lying in the ¥ Cauca. lower foothills and extending from Buchanan to Green Mountain were worked they would prove a great benefit to the county. fant organized in Madera. It is to be regretted inte that the business men of the town have not formed such an organization many years ago, as the town would then be in a imore progress- ive state than at present. IME, Wis IPs Se We IRs IME, IK. CO: aes ie a patil Formation of the Constitution of the 0 ap United States. ee On the deck of the Mayflower in 1620, the Puritans signed a paper, written by themselves, in which they stated that they would pass and obey such laws as would be good for the colony as a whole; also that they would fight together 4 one , fas bet mag esmeniot ry derehp pment in case of war. Of course this was not really a written constitution, but it was the first attempt at one since the days of the Romans. Nineteen vears later, the first real written pests ‘This ge the By ih constitution was formed. The Government ef) atte under this constitution is known in history as the Republic of Connecticut. Most of the colonies in America were granted charters from the King of England. Nearly every colony had a legislature which made its laws. Sometimes a law was passed and its validity disputed; in this case it had to be sent ng ea tthe qu ak to England if it was contrary to the charter are granted to the colony. So you see, the people of America were used to having some written charter above them. Now it is plainly seen A Chamber of Commerce has recently been why the United States have a written constitu- tion and other countries have not. From 1640 till the Revolutionary war, it was » the opinion of several prominent men that the thirteen States should be united. The inhabitants were all English-speaking people; there were many tribes. of Indians to contend against, and there were the French and Spanish colonies, attacks from which they ought to be able to sustain. The New England States formed a confederacy in 1643 which lasted forty-one years. At this time the government of Massa- chusetts was overthrown by the King. In 1688, the need of a confederacy in the New England States was seen by Penn, but the union was not accomplished until 1754, when the final struggle with France came on. In 1765, nine of the northern States sent delegates to Philadelphia to take some action on the infamous Stamp Act which had been passed by British Parliament. When the Townshend Act was passed in 1768, there was no congress, but Massachusetts sent out circulars asking the other States to take joint action on this. Soon afterwards a system was formed which provided for the selection of committees of correspondence be- tween several of the States. In the year 1774, when the government of Massachusetts was overthrown by England, an assembly met in Philadelphia. If the Brit- ish had complied with the wishes of this body probably all the Revolutionary war would have been avoided. ‘This assembly is known as the Continental Congress, and lasted until 1788. In 1775, a continental army was organized in the name of the United Colonies. Two years later the Articles of Confederation were written and sent to the several States to be ratified. ‘hey were not returned until 1781, having been ratified by the thirteen States. In 1787, the people, dissatisfied with the Articles of Confederation, framed the Federal Constitution—a model of all instruments of its kind—which was unanimously adopted by all

Suggestions in the Madera Union High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Madera, CA) collection:

Madera Union High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Madera, CA) online collection, 1899 Edition, Page 1

1899

Madera Union High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Madera, CA) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

1900

Madera Union High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Madera, CA) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 1

1901

Madera Union High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Madera, CA) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

Madera Union High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Madera, CA) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Madera Union High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Madera, CA) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912


Searching for more yearbooks in California?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online California yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.