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Page 20 text:
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sly 1- 2J 1916 £ ur Drtixcipal’s JfflrsSngc To tiik Class or l! IS: The teacher, like nil luiiiuui I joints, must ever look lo proper ami commensurate rewards for service rendered. These rewards come in tlie form of salaries, promotions, honorable positions of trust and responsibility, jind social distinction. No wise teacher will despise any of these. They make comfortable living possible and life tolerable and enjoyable. Much jus these rewards must and do appeal l » all, there is one far above them in value and in power of impelling to the best effort by every one. It is the approbation « f an intelligent conscience directed consciously by well thought-out guiding principles, that must ultimately be the teacher’s reward. To have a keen mind well trained in the science and jirt of teaching, to apply one’s lowers intelligently and with a conscious purpose toward ;i definite end, to feel that the course pursued in doing this is right, to have the satisfaction of seeing results in growing youth: these sire the rewards the teacher will find most comforting and most lasting. Conscience always approves of these. Having started in your training as teachers may you. each member of the class of nineteen hundred and eighteen, continue in the study of the art of your chosen calling till this highest reward is vours. The world is constantly beckoning such to come cheerfully to do her work willingly for others. Sincerely and affectionately. I . M. Harbold. i
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Page 19 text:
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41. I aibolb, !H.j4L, c.D. I )r. 11;irl « l I. a son of tin Fast, was liorn XovcihIkt 17. 1S715. near Imrv'lilowii. Cumberland County. Pennsylvania. His parents soon moved to York County, where liis early years were sja’iit on a farm. I he greatest fitting school physically and morally; it gave him self-reliance, individuality, and sane philosophy of lift . Hi education in the sturdy rural and private normal schools of his home community developed him symmetrically. At seventeen he entered the teaching profession and continued therein until 1895. In the fall of that year he came to the Millersville State Normal School, where lie was graduated with honors in 1898. lie was elected to the faculty of his Alina Mater and taught here four years during which time lie completed the courses for the degrees of Bachelor and Master of Pedagogy. In 1902 he entered Franklin and Marshall College, graduating with honors in 1904. I ways was he a student. During the following summer lie pursued studies in Lite t’diversity of Chicago, and received the degree of A. M. one year lateral Harvard. In the fall of 1905 Dr. Ilarhold was callc d hack to Millersville to Become principal of the Model School. His six years of successful priucipulship, combined with his heartiness of manner, individualism, and rare executive ability secured for him the (wsition of superintendency in the city schools of Lancaster. In June, 1912, he again responded to the call of his first Alma Mater, and left Lancaster to become the chief executive of Millersville State Normal School, which position he has held since that time. Dr. Ilarhold ranks with the leading educators of the Slate. He is smoulder of Normal School men and women and always exercises u sympathetic interest in its graduates. It is largely through his rare executive as well as intellectual ability that the high standards and traditions of this school have been maintained. ir,
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Page 21 text:
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(Eo tljc Jfacultp To I host? who in I he love of common good. Toiled for ns here and toiled as true men should; W ho made the plans and set the standard high. Hut yet within the reach of you and I Our hearts in truly grateful thanks we raise. Forgetting just the few unpleasant days That to our lot have fallen in this place. Where each one ran a grand and winning race. Our teachers, nay, for friends we claim them now; For did they not with graces us endow? (•races that fit the common and the great. Graces that teach to love and not to hate. Not always from out books' their teaching came. For something more we need to play the game Of life, to ease the anguish and the pain. And turn the highway to the verdant lane. True, too, it is, that there have been some times. When we have sighed and longed for other clinics. When hooks were odious to our narrow minds And lessons seemed to burden and to hind. But now with clearness on our view, appears The good we gained within the passing years; And on our Faculty we now bestow. The honors they have given us e’er we go. c IH. n
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