Lacon High School - Tickler Yearbook (Lacon, IL)

 - Class of 1921

Page 65 of 132

 

Lacon High School - Tickler Yearbook (Lacon, IL) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 65 of 132
Page 65 of 132



Lacon High School - Tickler Yearbook (Lacon, IL) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 64
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Lacon High School - Tickler Yearbook (Lacon, IL) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 66
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Page 65 text:

L 5 is courted rather than deprecated. Human nature is weak, and forty years of revolving time dims the brightest images graven on the tablets of the mind. .Xt first we strove to reconcile these conflicting variations and strike a balance of probabilities, but the task was so hopeless that it was abandoned, and the plan adopted of giving each statement as received and allowing it to pass for what it was worth. Circumstances have compelled a more hurried preparation of the literary portion of the work than was intended or desirable, but such as it is we send it forth. Success in life is not the effect of accident or chance: it is the result of the intelligent application of certain fixed principles to the affairs of every day. Each man must make this application according to the circumstances by which he is surrounded, and he can derive no better assistance or encouragement in his struggles than from the example of those whose advantages were meagre and worthless compared with ours. He who peruses the records of those early pio- neers will surely find principles which he can safely carry into his own life and use for his own advancement. In these latter days, when every acre nearly is appropriated by the hus- bandman or covered with thriving towns and cities, it seems strange to read of the trials of those who first broke the soil and opened the way for them that followed. It seems so far back when these incidents occurred that one can hardly imagine it was only the fathers of the people of today of whom we write. XVith every comfort the mind of man can devise, with every want supplied by the creations of these later years, we look back upon the lives of our nearest ancestors as tales of an olden time, coeval almost with the days when Adam delved and live spanfy But those deeds of heroism, those days of toil, those nights of danger were all experienced. were all accomplished by the sires whose descendants we are. There lives today but a renmant of that pioneer band, fast drifting on to the confines of time, where they shall leave behind forever the recollections of those early days, and pass beyond into the glorious rewards of their trials and sorrows. But their good deeds will live after them: they will not be interred with their bonesf' The record of their lives is the property of their descendants, and in the pages of this volume we shall endeavor to tell their stories so that he who runs may read. and take some useful lessons from the experience of those gone before. 'l' 'K if 'K 1' As regards the literary value of the work, we have nothing to say, and do not now expect to see it appreciated: but there will assuredly come a time when the information laboriously sought and perhaps clumsily given will be valued, and then our labors will be appreciated. J ,

Page 64 text:

.J of our children and our children's children. This Mr. Ellsworth has done, and. although written in 1880. the value of his work enhances with each pass- ing year. Forty years have passed, forty more are coming, and then forty, yet this great citizen gave us a memorial for the benefit of the present and future generations of Marshall and Putnam counties. XYould that words would better express our admiration, our praise, our thankfulness! lts immeasurable worth. its tranquil beauty is found in the inspiration of its pages. And now the thought comes of life's greatest tragedy, yet life's greatest beauty, the passing of time. But tomorrow and we too will join that unnumbered throng. May we have done as much for ours as Mr. Ellsworth did for the people of Marshall and Putnam. There follows the preface of this volume, unexcelled in beauty and loftiness of thought. The Preface ln the following pages we have endeavored to trace the early settlement of that portion of our state embraced in the counties of Putnam and Marshall. gathering up the forgotten records of each township and neighborhood, and telling for the benefit of the descendants the story of the brave men and women who wrested their homes from the savage, and turned a desert into the fairest land that beams beneath the sun. It is not a history, and does not claim to be, nor should it be judged as such. but in its pages we have sought to tell in plain. simple language the story of our ancestors' lives, and string together for the amusement and instruction of their descendants the incidents and happenings-solemn, grotesque or ludi- crous as they were-that make up the warp and woof of their daily existence. The old settlers are fast passing away. Many prominent actors in the scenes here is well-nigh noble band passed into faithfulness At the statements of the same occurrence restricted to the uncertain memory reached the depicted have paid the debt of nature, and the story of their lives forgotten. But a few years more, and we shall see the last of that carried to their final home. Much that is valuable has already oblivion, and to rescue what remains has been our study. The with which it has been performed can best be judged by the public. outset of our task it was found that to reconcile dates and even was impossible. Our sole dependence was of a few feeble men and women, who had stage of life when the Ugrasshopper is a burden, and forgetfulness



Page 66 text:

L LACON AS A COMMUNITY IN WHICH TO LIVE Nestling among its hundreds of leafy spreading elms which line its broad streets, on the east shore of the Illinois River, lies the little city of Lacon. Its natural beauties are manyg its advantages as a town in which to live and rear one's children are apparent to the careful observer, and its location is ideal. Built upon a gently rising slope. running back from the river, there is an unexcelled natural drainage which insures comparatively dry streets even after a heavy rain. Its numerous shade trees, many of which have served to inter- cept the rays of the summer sun for nigh onto a century, are everywhere. Their spreading branches on many streets form nearly an unbroken line of shade for blocks, lending an air of quiet and sylvan beauty second only to that of the nat- ural forest. One might travel over many states and visit scores of cities and towns, before iinding one with natural beauties equal to those of Lacon. And with Mother Nature having provided an ideal site, man has proceeded to build thereon a little city of many beauties and advantages. The streets are broad and laid out 'fsquare with the world, its business section is compact and its residence district attractive. Lacon is a city of beautiful homes, of well- kept lawns, and of people who take pride in the appearance of the town. Its church societies are progressive, its lodges and clubs active, and its social life interesting. The Congregational Church has but lately been com- pletely remodeled and modernized, the Methodist people have a new and modern parsonage and are planning a new structure to take the place of their present house of worship. which has done duty since the early days of the community. The Roman Catholic organization has a commodious and substantial structure in which to worship. The Masonic orders own a splendid building on a prominent corner, the Knights of Pythias have their own home in a two-story brick business block of nearly equal size and worth, while the Odd Fellows, Modern VVoodmen and American Legion are lodges of numerical strength and activity. The Eastern Star and Royal Neighbors tladies' auxiliariesj are also live ones. The women of Lacon have their other intellectual and social organizations in the VVoman's Club, the Loani Club, the T. B. H. Club and the usual church aid and missionary societies. Marshall County's seat of government is located at Lacon, and, while the court house itself is not a new building, it is a substantial one, and sufficiently commodious to house the county's officials and its records, and it is beautifully and centrally located in a half block dotted with towering elms and carpeted with nature's green.

Suggestions in the Lacon High School - Tickler Yearbook (Lacon, IL) collection:

Lacon High School - Tickler Yearbook (Lacon, IL) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Lacon High School - Tickler Yearbook (Lacon, IL) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Lacon High School - Tickler Yearbook (Lacon, IL) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 35

1921, pg 35

Lacon High School - Tickler Yearbook (Lacon, IL) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 74

1921, pg 74

Lacon High School - Tickler Yearbook (Lacon, IL) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 121

1921, pg 121

Lacon High School - Tickler Yearbook (Lacon, IL) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 44

1921, pg 44


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