Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL)

 - Class of 1909

Page 29 of 276

 

Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 29 of 276
Page 29 of 276



Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 28
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Page 29 text:

The World as l Have Seen It No specific antidote has been discovered which will eradicate the germs of Wander'- lust. Since leaving Lake Forest in '95, I have spent most of the time in foreign lands. I have operated as a mining engineer and in commercial pursuits in al- most every State of the Union and in Mexico, japan, China, Manchuria, Korea, Siberia, Malay, Burmah, India, the South Sea Islands, Africa, Con- tinental Europe and the British Isles. Within the past two Arthur D. Coulter in China months' I Completed my thirty- eighth voyage. No other land offers the bounteous opportunities which are olfered by our own glorious country. The American expatriate who earns a fortune in a foreign field does so at the expense of sacrificing the best that life may hold for him. One who is not imbued with the missionary spirit may find favorable fields for monetary gain by taking advantage of the unfavorable conditions of the laborer in other lands. It has given me, however, far greater satisfaction to pay for one day's work of eight hours to an American Workman in the mines than to pay a Chinese Coolie for a month's work of thirty days of twelve hours each. There are splendid commercial opportunities abroad, but the occupancy of the Philippines by our government, and the exclusion of their products from our markets offers the E.. D. of my argument. There is no country in the world, save certain countries of South America, notably Argentine and Brazil, whose inhabitants do not regard America as the country of blessed privilege and of golden opportunity. The experience of an expatriate should cause his patriotism to multiply and grow by geometrical ratio: especially so if his expatriation be diversified, Do you stop to think that discontent is the most potent factor of progress? One 15 so prone to desire that which the other fellow has, but does not in reality want. If my present plans do not prove abortive, l shall, during the coming twelve months, travel from here to Boston and return, then sail north to Alaska, navigate the Yukon river 2,300 miles and return via the Pacific, and then sail for a trip through Peru and Bolivia. This will necessitate I8,000 miles of travel. Do some of my alumni brothers or sisters envy me? Did you ever hear of the little boy who undertook to eat a barrel of sugar? I-le came to a place where it was not sweet. It is all in the game. Stay at home Be a good American. ARTHUR D. COULTER, '95. Seattle, Washington.

Page 28 text:

'sau I'1i The World Around E Lael Lake Forest is now represented on every one of the world's great divisions except South America. By chance the letters printed below are chiefly from various quarters of Asia and Africa, but Europe might have been represented by Macl-Iattan, '95, pastor of the American Church in Leipzig, Australia by Elizabeth Smith Greenlees,, '90. Of course the largest number by far of our expatriates are missionaries, and these letters indicate what useful purpose they serve in the spread of civilization and Christianity. A number, some of whom have now returned, have served as teachers in the Philippines, and Linebarger, '93, won distinction there as a judge. One graduate, Bergen, '83, is president of a college: Irwin, '92, has returned to his former home in Irland. The class of '95 has furnished the largest number of dwellers abroad, as well as the champion globe-trotter, Coulter. But one of the some 35 expatriates has died: W. S. Faris, '92, after a useful and honored life in China. The College Diploma Applied It is a great pleasure to be remembered and to be asked to write a message for the Forester.'i I understand you want a testimony to the worth of our diploma and how it stands the wear and tear of life, so I will acknowledge my debt of gratitude. Logarithms may have no direct connection with housekeeping for a family of nine, but they certainly spur oneis courage to attempt the solution of any problem. Languages are a necessity, when, at our New Year's reception, twelve nationalities are represented and one gets so mixed that he even greets an Englishman with Bon jour. The list of Sciences in our curriculum seems incredible here, where one is asked with awe if he has read Geography. History is a bulwark to us among a people who confound Miriam, the sister of Moses, with Mary the mother of Jesus, and there is pleasure in planting Uchest- nutsn in virgin soil, e. g., telling of the mother of the Gracchi to a new audience. Rhetoric is a useful act where one must use the introduction conciliatory in discourse and resort to every form of argument and illustration. Civil Government and Constitutional History are but studies of principles on a large scale, which apply also to the ever-recurring decisions in law and executions of justice a mother has to make, especially when a small boy, the youngest of the family, is inclined to be an autocrat. The same principles apply also to the government of a club of turbulent boys, who would like to use knock-down arguments in debate. Best of all the outfit given by our Alma Mater is the Bible training. Dr. Gregory's Why Four Gospels suggested the practical question: Wlrich Gospel is best suited to the Moslem? and, following his arguments, I have found Matthew especially appropriate and convincing. However different the circumstances and needs of one's life work, I believe in the all- round culture of a college education, and so, after a test of twenty-six years, I would give it the recommendation of a genuine Persian rug - Its colors are fast. ANNIE Rl-IEA CMRS. S. GJ WILSON, '8I. Tabriz, Persia. 0 A



Page 30 text:

The First Stentor My copy of the first Stentor l laid up for safe-keeping at home, so I cannot now refer to it but must depend upon old memories, memories that come across weary miles of land and sea and through many years of sunshine and shadow. My memory of that first paper is dim indeed compared with that, fresh and tender, of those who worked with me upon it. -- of French, G. A. Wilson, Linnell, Welch, and Becker, two of whom have gone on before. Though l try to brush the dusty cobwebs from my memory, l really cannot recollect what was in the first Stentor, but l remember vividly what was on the outside. L. M. Bergen had conceived a Buonarottian cartoon for the front cover including, among other things strange and wonderful, a young lady in classic attire. ln being assisted from Bergen's drawing to the engraved cover of the Stentor this unfortunate female apparently susstained a dislocation of a limb. We suffered with her a few months, and then clothed the Stentor in a dress severely plain. l remember some later issues: one that called forth the criticism from one of the professors that is was Umeaslyng another long-delayed while waiting for some black-letter type, and the resulting clamor of impatient fellow students, When's the Stentor coming out? The Stentor would not have been in our day, l fear, if we had not had the encourage- ment and advice of Professor Kelsey. The venture was of benefit to us editors at least, giving us a chance to test our crudities on a public critical though small. The memories of those days are pleasant indeed, and if after twenty years I should attempt moralizing for the benefit of Stentor-makers and Stentor-readers, it would sum up thus: Carpe Diem. JOHN J. BOGGS, '88. Canton, China. The Making of Vlfomen among the Ndau Tribe Wanted - A letter from Africa. What shall it be? just a scene from the home of an alumna. It is a bright, cool morning and some one knocks. Upon opening the door l see a native girl clothed with a dirty drape. She wants to work. Coming from a home which is a bee-hive shaped hut with only one opening for a door, which one enters on hands and knees, she knows nothing about civilized ways. Reluctantly l tell her she may stay, but at first cutting grass, pulling weeds and bringing water is all she is allowed to do. If she proves faithful she is given a dress and is next taught to sweep and dust. When she has learned to set the house in order she is taught to make beds. At first she is inclined to put the coveis on so that they cover my head and leave my feet exposed, for when she rolls up in her blanket she covers her head and leaves her feet uncovered and does not know there is a better way to sleep until taught. Laying a table is her next ac- complishment. Why does the white man need so many forks, knives, spoons and dishes? What difference does it make if the tablecloth is put on crooked and the food and dishes bunched together? Many other such questions undoubtedly arise in her mind, but after a time she does learn the niceties about table-laying and will even gather flowers to brighten the table without being told to do so. If our novice proves very capable she is granted the privilege of reigning in the kitchen, an opportunity not given to every girl, as cooking more than one thing at a time is too much for some of them. Those who are not taught to cook are trained in laundry work which furnishes them a source of income when they marry. The girls who have been in our home are in two classes: those who are betrothed to 24

Suggestions in the Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) collection:

Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907

Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908

Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912


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