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Page 40 text:
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PROPHECY Louis KRUEGER ELWIN ALDER Louie: What have you there? Pinky: An old picture album of our school days. Louie: Have you a picture of our class? Pinky: You bet I have. Louie: It has been thirty years since that picture was taken. Pinky: Who is that call boy standing beside you, Louie?', Louie: That is Lawerence, he was the brightest boy in the class. The teachers were very proud of him. Pinky: You surely don't mean Mr. Mitchell? Why he is our County Judge. Louie: Yes, that is he and this little boy is Glenwood Pfister. Pinky: Oh, yeah, he runs the corner drug Store. Who is this fat boy?', Louie: Q'That is Carl Crone, you remember we expected something brilliant of him, but he ran away and became a tin peddler. I bought some pans from him several years ago. Pinky: Who is that tall girl'?', Louie: That is Margaret Wells. You know the old maid who built the home for cats up on North Main Street. Pinky: Well, who are those two girls?,' Louie: They are Glida Stevenson and Jane Brydon. They were always such good friends. Went through High School and College together and have been in business together all these years. You know that big Millinery Store on Maumee Street. They have made a wonderful success of it. Pinky: Here right behind me is Mary Lake. She founded that splendid school for girls in China, and here is James Myers, the most famous surgeon in the United States. This funny looking little boy is Max Yeutter, Vice President of our great country. You cannot always cell by a fellow's looks what he will be in after years. This is Donald Schomp. Who would ever have thought he would have made a famous preacher. I heard him last summer while I was in Boston. Here is Leonard Shoberg he went as a foreign Missionary to Africa, and here is Carroll Powell. He was so trying to all the teachers, but gained their eternal gratitude by establishing that splendid, big apartment building where each teacher may have, free of cost, the most adorable little apartment you ever saw. I was there yesterday to see Helen Harrington. She is very old now, but still very active. Loves to read and cook in that cute little kitchenf' Louie: This group of girls, Jean McPhail, Grace Finkell, Vivian Comstock, Irene Daley, Norma Driscoll, and Jean Westerman all married and made happy homes. After all home-making is the best career that any woman can have. Pinky: This boy on the end is Alvin Siddall. He became an aviator, and Arnold Breckel here next to him invented that wonderful automobile that runs with- out gas. It made a fortune for him. Louie: Paul Cairns, on this end, became Superintendent of Public Schools, and Billy Gilmore turned out to be a second Edison. Pinky: This lock of hair ! How well I remember the day Virginia Dermyer gave that to Robert Skinner. They were sweethearts then for a long time, but he was ambitious and wanted to be a poet. Alvin Wiebeck however turned out to be the better poet. Louie: Dear old school days, happiest days of our whole life. Dear old Adrian High School and those splendid teachers most all of them having crossed the great divide and entered into their eternal reward. And those boys and girls that meant so much to my young life. Pinky: How I have enjoyed turning the pages of memory and living again the happy days of long agof, Louie: So have I.
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Page 39 text:
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SALUTATORY MARGARET YEUTTER ONIGHT, as in years past, a graduating class is here to bid you welcome. We have looked forward to the day when we should stand before you and say, We are now ready to begin in your way of life, and are men and women soon to take upon ourselves the task of livingf' You are here to witness our farewell to the irresponsibility of youth and our welcome to the trials and joys of life. Our class is glad to have you here, for it is good to make a beginning in the presence of friends. This is truly a great day in our lives, for the future has many things in store for usg hope and disappointment, success and failure, happiness and bitterness. Our class faces the problem of an overcrowded world, in which we must take our place without using our elbows too much. The social life is now complete with- out us, we must make our way. We must find jobs, or, if there are none, make new ones. For the past twelve years our lives have been planned for us. When we left school one year it was only to return the next year to find our assignments all planned, our work in readiness. Now, that is not so. The majority of us are through with school and face immediately the problems of an adult who has his own way to make in the world. We can dwell no more in the mystic shadow' land of childhood but are come now into the light of common day, with work to do. We know that our life will not be a bed of roses, with no thorns, but we do look for- ward to doing many things to help. Many graduating classes have gone from school with the idea that the world was a great big rock candy mountain, where there were streams of milk and honey running down the slopes, and all things were provided. This leads to many heart- aches and disillusionments. We do not believe in that idea. We know that no one is offering us a living for nothing. We must work for what we get, and, what is more, provide the work. There are many new fields open to us, if we can only find and utilize them. It will be a long road, and a hard one, for conquering is not easy. We can no more ride out on white chargers and kill dragons, our difiiculties must be met in a long and steady fight. Our place will be hard to find, and because of that we ask you, our friends, to bear with us and guide us to be good and honest citizens of our country. A salutatory is a welcome, and I have fulfilled that requirement in welcoming you to our Class Day program. In reality, however, yours is a greater welcome, for ou are welcomin us to our world of res onsibilit and reali . Y S Y P Y ty
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