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Page 16 text:
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BARTALON PETKU Pete Dublin, March 2, 1915 ':lVl1ere's our good-looking blonde, and all around chap? Oh! Here he is- Pete right off the buff, Activities: Class Treasurer, 1, 2, 3,3 Art Editor of Echo, 4-3 Vice President of Lit- erary Society, 4: 4'Hes My Pal, 4, Edu- catin' Mary, lg Operetta Stage Manager, 3, Captain of Basket Ball Team, 4g Sports Busi- ness Manager, 43 Basket Ball, 1, 2 , 3, 43 Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4gTrack, 3, 4: Field Man- ager, 4: B. C. I. M., 3, 43 Glee Club, 3. Whenever you feel hands clasped around your neck, imitating Frankenstein, you can he sure Pete is around. Petey has almost unsurpassed ability in Athletics, being our worthy captain in Bas- ket Ball. He seldom misses a tap. Probably it is due to the fact that he is such a distinguished blonde that proves his effect upon the weaker sex, usually falling along: the petite line. His good nature makes him a pal to everyone. 'iPete'7 plays the trumpet and :is talented vocally. lPete's ideal life would be to isolate himself from all human beings, however, a sailor's life would do, says he, but we don't believe that will ever happen. We're not saying why. Can you imagine? 'gPete is a manager and business man, as is proven by his activities, so numerous. He's one of our French students and when he discovers words like Sapristi and Mon Dieu you should just hear him rave. ' if I4
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Page 15 text:
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He's interested in teaching, Farm Craft in one of our big High Schools - perhaps in CHARLES DETWEILER Charlie Blooming Glen, Pa., April 24, 1915 Some people have characteristics by the horrlc Charlieis are-a peculiar walk and Model T Ford. Activities: Orchestra, 4g Censor of Lit. Soc., 3g He's My Pal, 43 Truant Officer, 4g Boys' Sports Editor, 4-. Charlie is one of Souderton's live wires who joined us in our Sophomore year. He's a short, big-hearted lad with dark hair, brown eyes and a sense of humor that appeals to everyone and especially to the girls. We won- der how Bedminster likes him. Well, as I was saying--he's well liked. If any hauling is to be done it's t'Charlie on the spot with his truck. His willingness and helping hand are hound to pull him thru, but he's a mischief. Some- body through his pranks does irefully wiggle and giggle. We think perhaps he'll be a poet some day judging from some of his poetry that he writes now. Charlie is an addition to the orchestra this year. He plays a Hawaiian guitar. A hit more practice and he'll be right there. Hilltown Consolidated-someday. We're sure he'll succeed! ESTHER D. MOYER Perkasie, R. D. No. 3, December 24, 1914 Esther Moyer zall, not slim Has a personality tluzfs bound to win? Activities: Glee Club, 1, 2, 3g Class Re- porter, 43 Newspaper Reporter, 43 B. C. I. M., 3: Operetta, 3g Librarian, 2, 3g 'iHe's My Palf' 4. Esther comes from the large end of our class, but is known for her jolly disposition. Esther is always ready to help and do things for our class and always with a smile. Esther is loved hy all of her classmates and every one else, but who wouldn't be-such an adorable, blue-eyed blonde! Esther has shown talent for acting by giv- ing us her best in i'He's My Pal. Mah hands and mah feet, dat was good! Esther has the sweetest face that we are sure will help her in getting her-Line Lex- ington! Esther is talented with a rich deep.alto voice and we find her making use of lt in our four years of High, marked in the Glee Club as elsewhere. We wish you luck, Esther, and lots of it in Vl'l111lCV6l' YOU PUTSUC. Esther says she would like to be a dress maker. We haven't any doubt but what she will and will make a ,good one, too. I3
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Page 17 text:
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One realizes that God becomes not only the answer to all of our lueks, but the com- pletion of all of our possibilities. He is not only essential to our existence, but the factor that explains, that qualifies and that coalesces our limited powers. Creation may be the first act in this drama. For who knows but that the world is a stage and we are the actors. Each one plays his or her individual part. To bring something out of nothing, as in the creation of the universe, was no more of a miracle than to bring perfection out of imperfection, completion out of incompletion. So that when one reads and hears all of the modern or age-old philosophing about the possible nonexistence of God, one wonders with what the talkers and writers have dulled their perceptions. They might just as well philosophize about the non-existence of themselves or argue that because their hands saw no head, their bodies were possibly headless. , For apart from the esthetic satisfaction of thinking about God or the religious inspir- ation of obeying God, there is the natural sequence from a Creator to Creation, which, probe as they may, the physicists cannot gainsay, even though they may choose to ignore the logic. For the rest of us, who are not bent on discovering the reason why, but are merely concerned about our next step into the dark, how simplifying, how mercifully direct is the alternative reliance on God. His way is our necessity, since we know no way, if the choice is to lead us through and out. His strength, as David discovered ages ago, is our rod and staff in the dark valley where to take one misstep is death. His power obviates the man-made temporary makeshifts. His stake in our existence is our explanation for being alive. This is ego- iism on our part, this instinctive reaching out for Cod and claiming a relationship with him. It is what we, as human beings, share with all created things that fulfill His laws, from electrons to stars. Egotism would be in the other direction, in supposing that we could choose sensibly without Him. Jesus, whose every act and word testified to this relationship of the created to the creator, found for Himself, and revealed with a crescendo of emphasis, the word in the languages of mortals. 'I' hat word was 'iFather. But he added one other to it, which made what it expressed, unique in human speech, Our Fatherf' You can make a whole creed out of that and involve all the commandments. For it involves not only an all-comprehensive relationship of man to God, but of man to man. It permeates all our plans and influences all our thoughts. For it assumes not only the source from which we have sprung, but the goal to which we return. And as a standard we must not only measure all that we do by that supreme relationship, but all that we dream could be done. Beyond Him there is no where. Without Him there is no here. In Him we live and have our being, our imperfections fitting into His eternal perfecting. And that is a conviction which both stabilizes and energizes. Futile restlessness is done away by the serene confidence which takes its place. Everything counts, but in pro- portion., All of our experiences throughout the years, are grist at this mill. Yet our consciousness of God, Our Father, takes the sting out of memory. But our cumulative knowledge is merely the handful of the years learning of God, Our Father. Our sins, our mistakes, our failures, no less nor more than our successes, stand or fall as they reveal Him. Nothing else counts. Love that has swept, turned, buffeted, failed or found us, is as Jesus told mankind, the great asset toward finding God. But even love must take its place as part of that seeking and finding, or lose its value in our final summing up. For though we have every opportunity to argue from less to greater and in youth make Love a God, in the perspective of our years, we come to know that God is Love and are content. Since, if all of life and perhaps all eternity combined, make that, bourne from which no traveler returns, we seem permitted to carry with us all that matters of the past, our part being not only to remember, but to understand. At least that was the high role to which Jesus urged followers to aspire. Not servants who know not what is done by their Lord, nor why, but friends who love, and are His Children' J. WALTER STAUFFER I 7 '
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