Braham High School - Echo Yearbook (Braham, MN)

 - Class of 1925

Page 26 of 64

 

Braham High School - Echo Yearbook (Braham, MN) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 26 of 64
Page 26 of 64



Braham High School - Echo Yearbook (Braham, MN) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 25
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Braham High School - Echo Yearbook (Braham, MN) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 27
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Page 26 text:

ivvioioioi 111111111-11-31:11 in 1o1n1o1o11 11 11 1oio1u11v1n1o11 ia he formed his judgment and laid his plans, in the undismayed firmness with which he adhered to them in the face of popular clamor, of conflict- ing counsels from his advisors, sometimes of what others deemed all but hopeless failure. However, the mainspring of his powers, the truest evidence of his greatness, lay in the nobility of his aims, in the ferver of his conviction, in the stainless cause which guided his action and won for him the confidence of the people. Without these things his great character would never have been revealed. There is a vulgar saying that all great men are unscrupulous. Lincoln's is one of the careers that refute this imputation on human nature. -Leonard Stroud THE CLASS OF 1925 Where and Who They will be In half a Century After my discoveiy of a method by which I am able to separate the electrons of an atom and utilize the vast amount of energy thus set. f1'ee, I devised a machine with which I could tunnel my way to the center of the earth. This machine will travel about three thousand miles a second underground and uses less than 2-3 of an atom of hydrogen to travel a mile, On arriving at the earth's core, I found it to be very different from all theories that had been given by various scientists. The core of the earth is a hollow sphere about six miles in diameter and is separated from the earth by a large set of ball bearings about which, because of the laws of inertia, the earth revolves. In the center of the room, is a large permanent magnet, held in space by its own power and the source of gravity, this magnet has no effect on those objects within the sphere itself. Just below this magnet on a hugh pedestal of bronze is a peculiar looking telescope, with many adjusting screws and levers on it. On a large table standing besides this queer instrunient are the directions for its use, and for what it can be used. If the proper adjustments are made, one can see by looking through the lenses any object in the universe, that is on the face of this earth or any other earth or planet, and every- thing that takes place in the space about all heavenly bodies. After reading the directions I immediately thought of my classmates whom I had not seen since I left for Abyssinia, fa place of quiet where I could concentrate on my study of sciencei some fifty years ago. The first to come to my mind was my old pal and fellow worker, Leslie Schwarten. After the proper adjustment had been made, I looked and behold! there I saw him dressed in the garb of a laboratory worker. Lying before him were three sets of human teeth which he was carefully examining with a microscope, forceps and tongs. On further adjustment I was able to read his past and found that as yet Les had done nothing but study, hoping to become some day, the most practical, efiicient and pain- less dentist in the world. After going through all the schools of dentistry, in America, Germany and Japan, he had gone to Moscow Know the center of learning regarding the science of human teethl where he expects to finish his education by making a thorough study of the structure, development, and reconstruction of the Russian Slovak tooth, which has become as complex as the government of that country. After receiving his degree, he will go to Southern Chile to begin practise. The next man of fame to appear in the tell-tale instruments, after considerable adjusting, was my beloved brother, Herbert Skjod. He was standing before an old- time stock ticker. His hair twhat there was left of itj was white and still standing on end. His Coleridge-like face had become hardened and wrinkled and bore a look of 31:21-11111 :wining in 3011viuv1oniv:11inia11si1v1u11v1 in 1 ii iviuiu in 1112

Page 25 text:

ii-ifvzaiui 1'A1avi.siIwilininiuihiuiwililoiiai-ec-snihiui 1 at 0111 uiuiu :uint if 1 3 -2-1 :ca-'11'11-iwi-vi--:wilvi.-31-101w1u1--3-ucusw1-.1- :ui-ni ni I1 civil strife, and had a great deal to do with making that country from what it was then to what it is now. In foreign countries the writings of Lincoln are greatly in demand. ln popularly governed countries, the great statesman is almost of necessity as an oratcr. There have been famous orators whose speeches we have read for the beauty of their language or wealth of ideas they contain, with comparatively little regard to the circumstance of time and place that led to their being delivered. Lincoln is not of these. His speeches need to be studied in close relation to the occasions which called them forth. They are not noted for their philosophic value or brilliant displays of rhetoric. They are a part of his life. Few great characters stand out so clearly revealed by their words, whether spoken or written, as he does. There is no superfluous ornament in his orations, but each is very plain and striking. For the most part, he addresses the reason of his liearers, and credits them with desiring to have none but solid arguments laid before them. When he does appeal to emotion, he does it quietly. perhaps even solemnly. The impressiveness of the appeal comes not from fervid vehemence of language, but from the sincerity of his own convic- tions. Lincoln speaks his own belief upon the subject, and his speeches are always given with the steady heat of an intense and strenuous soul. The impression which most of his speeches leaves on the reader is that their matter has been carefully thought over when the words have not been memorized. The famous Gettysburg speech is the best example one could desire of the characteristic quality of Lincoln's eloquence. It is short and is wonderfully terse in expression. It is quiet, so quiet that at the moment it did not make an impression upon the audience, an audience wrought rp by a long and highly decorated speech from one of the prominent orators of the day. The career of Lincoln is often held up to ambitious young Americans as an example to show what a man may achieve by his native strength, with no advantage of birth or environment or education. He triumphed over the adverse cfnditions of his early years because nature had be- stowed upon him high and rare powers. What is a great man? Common speech, which, after all, must be our guide to the sense of the terms which the world uses. has given this name to many sorts of men. How far greatness lies in the power and range of the intellect, how far in the strength of the will, how far in elevation of view, aim and purpose, -this is a question too large to be debated here. But of Abraham Lincoln it may be truly said that in his greatness all three elements were present. He had not the brilliance, either in thought or word or act, that dazzles, nor the restless activity that occasionally pushes to the front even persons with gifts not of the first order. He was a patient, thoughtful, melancholy man, whose intelli- gence, Working sometimes slowly but always steadily and surely was capacious enough to embrace, and vigorous enough to master, the incomparably difficult facts and problems he was called upon to deal with. His executive talent showed itself in the calm serenity with which



Page 27 text:

nioxmgc ! l i i l l ,14- vjrvieicvicuierjuvzfi vioiojoioiw oi: fianiarjenieriefiniefiarioinfiniuinfiunznljw Q nin- l i i I l l I actress. nursery and kitchen. ifllflifilililPl0i1liCl1fll4Dl4llll0l!lif7i0l'!l''if'i i01.'i0i i 'i l1'l1'i' ' l l determination. Cn looking over his past I found he had left Braham at the age of I twenty-four, determined to accumulate vast sums of gold. He had gone to New York City to enter the stock rrarkets and had becorre one of the wealthiest men of our I country. He might have been the most happy, had he taken his mother's advise and i become a bachelor, but evidently he had become addicted to the fairer sex and forced through two scandalous divorces. However he is now entirely a man of business except l for a dark eyed Jewess who has recently appeared on the scene. Q A slight turn of the adjustment screw brought before my eyes a very beautiful l ,lady sitting leisurely an-tng 1he Crshions of a large easy chair in an elaborate apart- ,ment in the ntost fashionable district of New York City. After a few seconds I I recognized our class salvtaiorfan, Esther Anderson. She was carefully reading over a I document which I recognized as a signed stage contract. I found out that she had I worked her way to the top in a very short time, but always with the aid of a dark l complexioned gentlenfan, who wore a red sweater on most occasions. It appeared from i gossip that some day the gentlen an was expected to win the heart of this successful i The next person to appear on the lens of the telescope was the old geometry shark, I but evidently he had left planes and solids alone to prove themselves, for I saw him I sitting at the desk of a large mill. trying to make endless columns of figures balance. I On some stationery lying on the desk I read the following, The South American Q Woolen Trust, Harvey Anderson, President. I then scanned friend Darby's past and C saw it as one of rare exception. Because of his idea, I can do just as good as that, - Harvey had risen from the wage earning boy of a small town mill to the head of the I world's largest woolen Corporation. Mr. Anderson had become to South America what I Henry Ford was to the United States. I After a lengthy and difficult adjustment I was able to find our former orator, Ray- Q mond Carlson. I located him on one of the Ryukyu Islands, a very changed charater l from the strdiors lox er of literary history. When I located him he was busy studying Q the cross section of a little brown pill, in a large laboratory. I found that after finish- ing high school, Ray had decided to become a medical missionary. He had spent thirteen I years in preparation, after which he had gone to the Orient to practice on the natures I of that part of the world. While working in the jungles of these islands, he had dis- I covered a very extraordinary herb which, if mixed with the proper chemicals and taken in the form of a pill, would in most cases heal, relieve or repair any illness from falling hair to a fractured toe nail. It appears that Dr. Carlson had by shrewd methods acquired sole monopoly on the manufacture and sale of pills in the most important Oriental countries. Thus I saw him a man of success, serving his fellow men and not I forgetting his duty to his pocketbook. - The next to appear before my eye was a very queer scene. Whether the country I brought to the lens had taken great strides either forward or backward in civilization I cannot say, as I am no judge of politics. It was a land where women had gained in full measure that which they had started when the nineteenth amendment of the Con- stitution of the United States was ratified. When I saw the ruler of this country, I was astounded for it could be none other than Doris Chelberg. It appeared that she had left school determined to make her fellow-women the superior sex. She had gone to Mexico and after several revolutions gained control of that government. An entirely new Constitution was drawn up wherein woman was always given the highest place and man was forced to give up his position and to take his place next to monkey. The l powers of President Chelberg can only be compared to those of Caesar and Nero. She has as far as Mexico goes accomplished her purpose in making man chief of the g Last but not least successful I saw Eric Gustafson sitting submerged in study and I deep thought over the habits of the Coleoptera and other bugs of a destructive nature. l Our old pal, Har Gusty has now become Professor of Entomology, D. S. His head- I quarters are the Sturtevant Biological Laboratories, New York City. Professor Gus- i tafson entered the field of science soon after leaving Braham and soon became one of i

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Braham High School - Echo Yearbook (Braham, MN) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 49

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