Medina High School - Medinian Yearbook (Medina, OH)

 - Class of 1915

Page 15 of 102

 

Medina High School - Medinian Yearbook (Medina, OH) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 15 of 102
Page 15 of 102



Medina High School - Medinian Yearbook (Medina, OH) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 14
Previous Page

Medina High School - Medinian Yearbook (Medina, OH) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 16
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 15 text:

©I ye Animal 11 tonight is testimony to your past success. It means that you have been successful in your studies and examinations, and have brought your high school course to a worthy comple- tion. You are to be highly congratulated on your past achievements. But you are not here tonight merely for the delicious sensation of listening to congrat- ulations on your past success, you are here for a more serious purpose. These are your commencement, not your completion, days. Although these graduating days inevitably cause you to look wistfully back over your happy high school career, yet today your faces front the future as never before, and more opportune and appropriate than our congrat- ulations on your past success are our wishes for the success of your future. But you already know from sad experience that it takes more than wishes to mate- rialize access. If good wishes would pass examinations, every scholar would always be marked .100, or A plus. “ If wishes were horses, beggars might ride,” is the old saying, but you have learned that it takes more than a “ pony ” to get successful grades. Your future success, young people, depends upon something more substantial than our wishes, sincere as they may be. Your future success is conditional on your own application of certain practical principles, on your own adoption of and adaption to certain eternal essentials. Surely we can not better occupy the time we are to be together tonight than by a discussion of these principles and essentials of success. I will present them as they are contained in the chosen text: ‘‘Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might, for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in Sheol, whither thou goest.” Four essentials of success does this ancient prescription present. I. The first essential is effort — “ Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it.” I suppose it is true of success, as Shakespeare says of greatness, that some are born successful, some achieve success, and some have success thrust upon them. But by far the greatest proportion of successes are those of achievement. The others are the rare and seldom exceptions., Success is not the child of luck, but of pluck; not the result of acci- dent, but of effort. There is no royal road to success. Men are not carried to the sky- heights of success on flowery beds of ease. The price of success is work, labor, energy, effort ! It is one of the most deadly and dangerous fallacies which supposes that genius is essentia] to success. Genius, according to the popular notion, is that peculiar inborn quality which makes success easy and certain. It is that which people have in mind when they explain a person who is a failure in everything he undertakes, by saying, “ It simply is not in him to succeed,” meaning that success requires that a person have in him some peculiar quality of genius. To be sure, the person who succeeds must have genius in him — but it is the genius for work! Says Ruskin truly: “Whenever I hear of any young man starting out in the battle of life, and praised as being a man of promise, a man of genius, I always ask just one question, ‘ Does he work?’ ” That is the decisive question, “ Does he work? ” In my day I have seen several “ infant wonders ” and “ knee-pant prodigies ” for whom, on high school class day, the class prophet made wonderful predictions, but the prophecies never came true simply because the wonderful prodigy went out into the world believing himself to be a great genius to whom success would come as a matter of course. He had to learn by bitter experience that the stern Goddess of Success bestows her laurels, not upon those who have “ swelled heads,” but upon those whose muscles and joints are swollen with labor! Young people, never forget that the first essential of success is effort. Work wins! Effort is effective! Labor conquers all things! Perspiration is a mighty good substitute for inspiration! Remember Robert Collyer’s homely suggestion, “A man’s best friends

Page 14 text:

in alrr Annual ilarraluurratr ESSENTIALS OF SUCCESS BY REV. H. SAMUEL FRTTSCH, D.D. Pastor First Congregational Church Ecc. 9:10: Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might, for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom in Sheol, whither thou goest. This is a tried and true prescription for success. It is natural and right for every human being to covet success. The normal mind glories in the successful completion of every attempted undertaking. To all self-respecting persons failure is repugnant and repellant. It is the privilege and the possibility, the duty and the destiny of every human life to be successful. Failure is unnatural and abnormal; the natural and normal experience is success. I count it peculiarly opportune that at this particular juncture of your lives, you young people should give serious attention to the essentials of success. Your presence here



Page 16 text:

12 Annual are his ten fingers.” Remember the lesson of the hare and the tortoise — the hare, the genius; the tortoise, the plodder: “ The heights by great men won and kept, Were not attained by sudden flight, But they, while their companions slept, Were toiling upward in the night.” II. The second essential of success consists in fitting one’s self into the work for which one is fitted — “Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it.” While it is absolutely true that work is the fundamental essential of success, work is not all there is to it. There are thousands of people who work, and work hard, and yet are not successful. Brawn is not all that is required to make success, it also takes some brains. It is not enough that a man find work, he must find his work. While all that we have said about the futility of depending on genius is true, this is also true, that every person has his own peculiar talents and capabilities. One is fit for some kinds of work, and unfit for other kinds. The reason that some hard-working people are nevertheless unsuccessful is not because they do not work hard enough, but because they are not engaged in the right kind of work. There are men trying to preach Christ, and wearing out the saints of the Most High, who would be magnificently successful plant- ing corn. There are attorneys practicing at law, and eking out a precarious and nefarious existence, who would be noble and honorable successes digging ditches. There are doctors peddling pills, and acting as the advance agents for the tombstone business, who would be glorious successes building bridges. There are starving poets writing sonnets and impecuni- ous artists painting sunsets, who would be splendid successes writing life insurance and painting barns. There are young ladies pounding out their sweet young lives on the key- board of ' a grand piano, driving everybody to the distance, who would be simply irresistible in a kitchen apron. Now the reason that these are failures in their chosen vocations is not because they do not work, but because they are not at the right kind of work. They have not found their place. God has put into this world an almost infinite variety of work. He has equipped human nature with an equally infinite variety of talents. Furthermore, He has given to each individual human being the faculties of judgment, reason, and choice. It is left largely to the individual person to choose his own work. It is absolutely essential to success that one find the work for which by nature, experience, or training, one is best fitted. This process of finding one’s own peculiar task in the world’s work is a serious matter. Mazah , of my text, the Hebrew verb for findeth , is not a passive, but an active, alert word. There is no “ happenstance ” about it. It is not find in the sense of “ stumbling upon,” as one might happen to find a horseshoe during a stroll, or a sweetheart at a summer resort. Mazah has in it the element of conscious search, the process of walking the streets from morning until night looking for a job, and not resting until that job is found. A subsidiary meaning of mazah is acquire. Christ said, “ I go to prepare a place for you.” In heaven, therefore, every person steps into a place prepared for him, but we are not yet in heaven, so here we must often make our place for ourselves — if we cannot find our place, we must acquire a place for ourselves. The men who today stand on the top rung of the ladder of success are usually not the men who at some point in their career stumbled upon a vacant pair of shoes and had sense enough to see that they fit their feet and put them on, but they are usually the men who have made the shoes for themselves, soles and uppers both. An interesting example of this is the recent remarkable development of the jitney bus. Last December some one in the city of Los Angeles conceived the idea of running an automobile in competition with the streetcar and charging the same fare as the streetcar. Although the automobile has been with us successfully for quite a number of years, no

Suggestions in the Medina High School - Medinian Yearbook (Medina, OH) collection:

Medina High School - Medinian Yearbook (Medina, OH) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Medina High School - Medinian Yearbook (Medina, OH) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Medina High School - Medinian Yearbook (Medina, OH) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Medina High School - Medinian Yearbook (Medina, OH) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Medina High School - Medinian Yearbook (Medina, OH) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Medina High School - Medinian Yearbook (Medina, OH) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919


Searching for more yearbooks in Ohio?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Ohio yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.