Titusville High School - Optimist Yearbook (Titusville, PA)

 - Class of 1922

Page 31 of 164

 

Titusville High School - Optimist Yearbook (Titusville, PA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 31 of 164
Page 31 of 164



Titusville High School - Optimist Yearbook (Titusville, PA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 30
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Page 31 text:

cam ur. 19. 9, va ,M SALUTATGRY Dear Friends : It has fallen to my happy lot to bid you welcome to the Com- mencement exercises of the Class of Nineteen Twenty-two. During the years of our school life you have shared our sor- rows and our joys-encouraged us in all our difficulties-guided us through devious paths, and now that we have reached the goal of graduation-we want you to share in the festivities which crown our labors. - The four years we have spent in High School seem to have passed all too quickly. VVe realize at last that our Commencement day, to which we have looked forward so eagerly, is a day of mingled joy and sadness. NVe are happy because we have suc- cessfully completed our High School course-we are sad because the time has come for us to say good-bye-good-bye to teachers and classmates-good-bye to all the associations that make school days the happiest days of all. Though we are going out into the world to take up new re- sponsibilities, new cares that we have never known before, many and enchanting are the vistas of the future into which we gaze- and we start out with high hopes and eager hearts to apply the lessons we have learned in school to the problems of life. lNe realize that to-day there are more opportunities for well- trained, well-educated men and women than ever before and we hope we ahve some equipment for whatever struggles may come. Some of us will go to college, others will take up the burdens of the workaday world immediately. In a few years the fifty-four members of the Class of Twenty-two will probably be engaged in as many different activities. But for tonight we are the Class. of Nineteen Twenty-two and we have asked you to come here in or- der to show the appreciation we feel for all that you have done for us. i VVe hope you will enjoy our program. W'e hope that you will feel at its close that the Class of Nineteen Twenty-two is go- ing to fulfill your fondest expectations. To the citizens of Titusville, who have ever been ready to lend a helping hand in every school activityg to Mr. Pease, our Superintendentg to the School Board and to the members of the faculty who have been so untiring and so unseliish in their efforts in our behalfg to you, our parents, whose loving devotion has been and will always be our guiding star-we-extend a thriceihearty welcome. To one and all of you, we say, r VV e greet you, we salute youe And crown you with our welcome as with flowers. .-.MURIEL KERR. If TIG 29 GW! AW N 77' ' i 3

Page 30 text:

0- T yNm,m.5.,m VALEDICTORY In the business world of today are many men of eminence who are graduates of the Titusville High School. They have won for themselves a place of prominence and esteem and are the represen- tation of the High School in the world of affairs. These men and women uphold the ideals taught them in school which have helped gain for them their influence in this community and elsewhere. Now, it is incumbent upon us, the Class of '22, just starting out on its life career, to strive to join this company of fellow graduates, so that in after years we, too, may find members of our class who have recognition. During our four High School years, we trust we have strengthened our character, are better equipped to cope with the problems of the future. NNe have learned to be independent, will- ing workers, and earnest citizens of the United States. Only too soon will we be called on to take part in the govern- ment of our country. For this new field we must be true and loyal workers. Today, many more opportunities are open to High School graduates than ever before, especially to women. In the present day and age they are receiving recognition, and are proving their efficiency in all departments of activity. They are coming to be relied on more a11d more, bearing o11 their shoulders burdens, which their puritan mothers never dreamed of. And now, dear classmates, we must part. After four happy years, perhaps the happiest of our lives, we must leave behind our dear Alma Mater. Always will we think of her with love in our hearts and always will we think of our teachers who have done so much for us and yet who are not fully appreciated, and who have guided our lives and inspired us with the flaming desire to ever go Onward and Upward. In behalf of our class I desire to thank all who have made pos- sible the privileges which we have enjoyed. To the Teachers, the School Board, to our Superintendent, Mr. Pease, and to the citizens of Titusville, we express our gratitude. VVe trust that we fully appreciate the burden which the community bears in order that it may offer to the young people of Titusville all that a High School course can do for them. . DOROTHY FRANCIS. AgM 'l bv 28 owl 1 L C



Page 32 text:

I- nw 6.5.5. wa g CLASS PROPHECY Believing, with Lincoln, that in preparation, lies the secret of success, and having resolved to put forth my best efforts in an endeavor to make a success of my assignment as prophetess of the class of '22, T. H. S., recently I spent an evening' in diligent perusal of the prophecies of Mother Shipton, whose strange and remarkable forecast thrilled the people of the world 400 years ago, she it was who predicted that in the air men shall be seen, floating in space where none hath been, that around the world thoughts shall fly in the twinkling of an eye. After a thorough digest of the work of this wonderful prophetess, I proceeded to write, desir- ing to state at the beginning, however, that I hope some of my forecasts do not come true, for if they do, most of my classmates are doomed to not very lofty positions in life. The time of which I am writing is the year 1936. I return to my old home in Titusville, via Schiewe Air Line, riding in a newly invented polyplane, the brain-child of Lowell Schiewe. The plane is named Mary, fReynoldsj after his charming wife. My cross-country trip through the air was of less than on hour's duration, but in this short time a number of incidents of in- terest transpired. At one time I was called on the radio-phone, with which the plane was equipped. Wright and Fritts, radio magnates and owners of a far-flung system of radio telephony, were calling to inform me that I had forgotten to pay 'my regular monthly toll. During our conversation the talk became muddled with that of two other parties, who proved to be 'Glen Reed and Nelson Burns, two well-to-do agriculturists, who were disputing over the boundary between their farms. Gne of the wonderful features of the air-craft in which I was being transported was that it could remain stationary in mid-air, and several times during the journey we stopped to view the earth below, made easily perceptible with the aid of field glasses. Once my gaze rested upon a man pursuing a butterfly. The man was Frederick VVagner, an eminent entomologist and so intent was he upon capturing the butterfly that he did not see a landscape artist directly in his patch. Their collision resulted. in a grand conglomeration of bugs, paint, canvass and man. I was surprised to see the scientist and artist shake hands after the. accident, but as I more closely scrutinized the face of the artist, I recognized Jack Johnstone. ' At another stage of the trip I noticed a speeding automobile being pursued by a motor cop. The scene was the Drake Me- morial Mighway, leading from Titusville to Pleasantville. The pilot of the car was VVilliam Renfrew and the officer, Raymond Myers, both of whom I recognized when the policeman caught up with the car and ordered the driver to halt. I followed them with my field glasses, and as our plane neared its destination, the public landing in the center of the city, I noticed officer and motorist en- ou-30M

Suggestions in the Titusville High School - Optimist Yearbook (Titusville, PA) collection:

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