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 25 text:
“
f’jR ITV ' VOL. I. MILFORD, MASS., MAY, 1885. No. 7. The Season. “O fair inidspring, besung so oft and oft, IIow can I praise tliy loveliness enow ? Thy sun tint burns not, and thy breezes soft That o’er the blossoms of the orchard blow. The thousand things that ’neath the young leaves grow, 1 he hopes and chances of the growing year. Winter forgotten long, and summer near.” It is an old, old story—this recurrec- tion of life, but one of which we never weary. Every year, daring the long- winter months, we look eagerly for¬ ward to the coining of sjn-ing and are cheered by the thought that soon these dark, gloomy days will be gone and all nature will put on her fairest dress. Almost before we know it, we seem to be in another world. The snow which just now covered the ground has melted, and reveals the green grass springing up; the cold winds that made us shiver in spite of our thick garments have given place to warm breezes that seem to whispei-, as they fan our cheeks, “S])ring has come.” From beneath dry leaves the pink arbu¬ tus raises its head and greets us with its sweet perfume. The trees which so long have lifted their bare arms to the sky, once more rejoice in their mantle of green leaves, while among their branches we can hear the birds twittering to one another as they fly from bough to bough in search of a suitable place for their summer quar¬ ters. ddie advent of spring is hailed with delight by the old, who can more read¬ ily go out of doors now that the snow has gone and the warm weather come, and by the young who, in spite of the merry times they have had skating and sliding, still prefer the sports in which they can now indulge, and who also, if tlie-truth must be told, rejoice that soon the summer vacation will be at hand. d’he farmer goes whistling to his jtloughing after his long winter’s rest from out-of-door work, the housewife throws open the windoAvs, lets the fresh spring air penetrate every nook and coi-ner and gives the house what she calls “a good cleaning,” the bota¬ nist sallies out in search of the early flowers, the gardener cheerfully begins his summer’s task, all glad, ‘heartily glad that spring has come. I. L. G., ’85. What Our Memorial Hall Thinks. “I fear that too few of these, schol¬ ars who daily jiass me by have their thoughts turned to the reason of my being here, and that those Avhose memories I hold sacred, are not brought to mind ; for the cause seems to be foi-gotton, for Avhich brave sol¬ diers, twenty years ago, fouglit and died on battle fields far from home and friends. I hardly think their heroic conduct and deeds stir u}) withiil these young persons patriotic feelings, and there is too little gratitude shown for citizens’ lives given to obtain univer¬ sal freedom and to kee]) inviolate the Union. It is sad for me to feel that my purpose is not heeded, that 1 strive in vain to re]n-esent a history of im- ]K)rtant events of tbe ]uist. Cotdd 1 s])eak aloud, with tender¬ ness I should tell them how 1,142 men of this town, at the President’s call, were Avilling to leave home comforts and dear ones to undergo the hard- shi])s of army life, not knoAving Avheth- er they Avere evei- to return, or not. All Avere determined to preserve the gOA ' ernment and their country, to crush the evil of slavery, Avhich, starting from that Vii-ginian ])ort in 1019, had cre])t like a serj)ent through the Avhole South, poisoning Idberty Avith its sting, till she, overcome l)y grief ajid anguish, turned and tram])led it. Let these sciiolars remember that they formed a ])art of the glorious ar¬ my Avhich delivered the negroes from serA ' itude, and gaA e them human rights. As soldiers they were eager to prevent the republic’s falling to pieces in its youth and they loA ' ed the name of LTkited States too aa ' cII to lose it so soon. I might recall civil strifes, for¬ eign Avars for territory and poAver, Avars for existence, and for securing freedom from unreasonable oppression, but none that had greater ends in view than this contest for destroying a wrong Avhich brought a race of hu¬ man beings almost to the same level as beasts of burden. That manv of those Avho formerly })romoted this evil are noAV glad because it exists no longer, is a fact Avhich proves that justice has been done m its destruction. To blot out such a stain, our volunteers Avent to the battle-field. Weary marches, nights of Avatching, days of hunger and suffering were their lot. Some pined aAA ' ay in foul prisons, some in the thick of the fight Avere Avounded, others Avere cut doAvn by shot and shell, never to rise again. SorroAving families day by day increased, as ncAvs Avas received of a father’s, a brother’s or a son’s death. When, at last, the conflict Avas end¬ ed, and the stars and stri])es were rec¬ ognized as the flag of South as Avell as North, the survivors came back to per¬ form the duties of laAA ' -abiding citizens; and noAv, in memory of their fallen comi-ades, graves are yearly decorated Avith fioAvers and flags. FloAvers and flags are memorials of a day and onh ' once a year remind these scholars of patriotic sacrifices, but I stand as a memorial for generations to come, a constant reminder during every day of the year. Although admiration is oft¬ en exjn-essed for my outward appear¬ ance, ’tis not merely this Avhich should be admired, but the bravery and man¬ liness of these dead soldiers Avhom I commemorate, and though age may crumble me to dust, time must never destroy their honor and praise.” o. II. Af., ’85.
”
Page 24 text:
“
I Y. IMPORTANT TO BOOK-BUYERS. We have just- completed our annual inventory, during which we have marked down the cost of our entire stock to the amount of FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS. We propose to give our customers the benefit of this large reduction, and have inaugurated a GRAND CLEARANCE SALE, which will include the whole of our immense stock of OVER 200,000 VOJjUMES, endjracing standard books in every depart¬ ment of literature, as well as the choicest collection of illustrated works and hooks in elegant bindings to be found in New England. The limits of this advertisement will not allow of any details, nor will the prices at which the books are to be sold admit of any expensive advertising. A personal inspection will convince the most skeptical that it is our intention to make this in reality, as well as in name, “a clearance sale,” and that the prices named are such as WILL MAKE THE BOOKS SELL, and give every buyer a bargain. We cordially invite you to call and examine the tempting display on our shelves and counters. ESTES LAURIAT, 301-305 Washington St,, opp. Old South, Boston. A Gorgeous Easter Souvenir! COME TO J. ALLEN RICE’S PHARMACY, mars: Immense OstrichEgg, Imbedded in a Cluster of Lilies, Unlike anything before issued in richness of design and execution. We hope to have the reputation of presenting to our cusTO.UERS the most elegant souvenir of the season. 116 JVtain Street, - - Milford, Mass. BUY YOUR • RAISINS, CURRANTS AND CITR0N - AT THE BOSTON GROCERY AND TEA HOUSE. G. F. WINCH, Proprietor. Buy Your Stationery, Statuary, AND SCRAP BOOKS, OF R. C. ELDRIDGE, 132 Main Street, Miltord. GEORGE G. PARKER, Attorney Counsellor at Law, No. 2 Washington Block, Milford, C. F. WIGHT, TUNER AND REPAIRER V Tip • Warerooms in Washington Block, Milford. Church Organ tuning a Specialty. J or Your 3Iedical Advice Consult Dr. W. J. Clarke., 100 Alain Street. DR. GEO. P. COOKE. Surgeon Dentist, A T 168 Main Street, Milford. MILFORD GRANITE -L COMPANY, Building and Monumental Work Of all kinds executed with despatch. This Granite is pronounced the best in the state. Does not change its color, and is free from iron. Samples furnished on application. Estimates made on work in any part of the country. Feed Swasev, Agt. J. B. Baxckoft, Treas. CLAFLIN THAYER, Manufacturers of CALF AND KIP BOOTS, Boston Office, 90 Pearl street. New York office, A. Claflin Co., 116 Church St. “Active shears gather no rust.” We d Sire to exchange with all School papers. We coiiifratulate one of our ex- changes upon lieing able to recognize our parody on Longfellow’s “Tlie Old Clock.” Try again. A conundrum for some of our aged (?) exchanges. IIow much olderds a paper in its fourth or fifth volume wliose editors are new every year than one in its first volume? We thank tlie Yale Courant for three hearty laughs. Instructor: “Where was Homer born?” Student: “He was claimed to have been born in 20 places, but was only known to have been born in 8.” Instructor : “That will do,” as he inscribed the half of tlie figure 8 in his little book. A scientist says—a scientist is al¬ ways saying something—tliat each adult person carries enough phophor- ons ill his body to make forty thou¬ sand matches. We are beginning to lose our faith in scientists, for we’ve been trying to make a match for the last year, and we had two persons to experiment on. The Girls! —May they add charity to heanty, subtract envy from friend¬ ship, multiply genial affections, divide time by industry and recreations, re¬ duce scandal to its lowest denomina¬ tion, and raise virtue to its highest power. Exchanges received since our last issue: Academian, Advocate, Archon, Academy Bell, Academy Trio, Amateur Journal, Deaf Mute, High School News, High School Becord, High School Review, High School AVorld, Latin School Register, Literary Gem, Messenger, PhiRhomnian, Portfolio, Trinity School Record, Schoolmate, Skirmisher, Spy, Waste Basket, Willistonian, Yale Courant, Yonth’s Journal, Package from Leominster. ,4 START IN LIFE FOR YOUNG MEN Is an Important Problem in Every Home. Self-Support is essential in manhood, Self-Reliance a strono; defense. M O R E T H A N 3 3,000 OF THE Prosperous BRsioess lei of To-Day WERE TRAINED For Active, Useful Business Life AT Eastman College, Poughkeepsie, N. y. For Twf.nty-Five Years it has been the most popular and Largest I’rivate School in America. It is to-day the only institution devoted to the specialty of teaching Young and Middle-Aged Men how to get a living, make money, and become enterprising, in¬ dustrious, useful citizens. It is the ONLY SCHOOL in the world where the course of study is practical, instead of Theoretical; where the students act as Buy¬ ers, Sellers, Traders, Bankers, Bookkeepers and Accountants in actual business oper¬ ations; where the Bank Bills, Fractional Currency and Merchandise are actually USED, and have a real value, and every transaction is just as legitimate and bona fide as in any Mercantile, Banking or Busi¬ ness House. TOTAL EXPENSES. Board, Tuition Fee and Stationery for the prescribed business course of three mouths, §100 to .$115. Applicants may enter any week-day in the year. The Illustrated Catalogue Giving full information in regard to course of study, time required, expenses, etc., will he mailed on receipt of three letter stamps. Prospectus giving terms and a synopsis of the course of study, mailed free. Address EASTMAN COLLEGE, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
”
Page 26 text:
“
O -A. IC l ' fIEv0 K,vmiiY|IYY. Published Monthly During the School Year, nv The Senior Class of the Milford High School. PRINTED BY G. M. BILLINGS. GENEK. I. EPITOISS. INEZ L. GAY ami CLARENCE II. MORGAN. PE11SON.A.E EDITORS. H.4.RRIET A. SMITH and HORACE A. BROWN. LOCAL EDITORS. ANNA IM. WALKER and ROBERT C. HUSSEY. BUSINESS EDITORS. THERESA A. McCARTEN and HARRY P. CROSBY. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. (Eight Numbers.) For the Year, . 35 cents | Single Copies, . 6 cents This paper is for sale at the well-known drug store of J. Allen Rice, where subscriptions for the year will also be received. Address all communications to THE OAK, LILY AND IVY, Box 871. Entered at the Milford, Dlass., Post-Ollice, as second class matter. N. B. It is our intention to furnish our patrons, however, with a better and hiqher than second class. Editorial. We are happy to announce tli.at the O. L. and I’s accounts on both the credit and deiiit side are balanced. W e owe no one and no one owes us ;— that is to say, as far as money is con¬ cerned; but for good will and kind assistance we feel deeply indebted to all advertisers and subscribers who have enabled us to donate to the school a $90 present as a remembrance of the happy days of the past four years. The paper fund contribution was so liberal this term that we had a suf¬ ficient sur])lus to buy and frame a picture of the Three Fates. The old ladies, Clotho with her spindle and open mouth, Lachesis with measur¬ ing thumb and thoughtful face, and Atro])os with sheep shears and inquir¬ ing face, look down upon the for, fari, fatum of the Latin classes. Principal Lull briefly explained to the Classical and High School teach¬ ers at their last meeting the cause, method and result of our industrial work. Several letters have been re¬ ceived from distant parts of the coun¬ try asking for information in regard to it and ex])ressing a -wish to attempt something similar. A bank certificate of $149 repre¬ sents the jirofits of our exhibition. We do not jiropose to hoard it, but it will be S])ent at once for the good of the school. Query :—“Will next year’s scholars see the sunny faces of the class of ’85 loooking down at them from the wall?” We desire to acknovdedfre with O thanks the congratulatory letter re- cei ' ed from Edwin Cheney since our last issue. We find our columns too crowded to allow its insertion, but it is jileasant to know that both our head and hand work are appreciated by the citizens of Milford. Does it pay ? Eight weeks of worry and fret; essay written and re-written and written yet once again ; rehearsals before school, after school, on Satur¬ days, in our dreams; the mercury standing on tip-toe trying to push the roof off its tubular house; and all for what?-a short five minutes on the Opera House stage, and then- oblivion. (’olumbus first saw the American Continent, St. Augustine was founded, the Mayflower landed her passengers at Plymouth Ivock, George Washing¬ ton was born, the battle of Bunker Hill was fought and Y orktown sur¬ rendered on hangman’s day. What an unlucky day is Friday ! Married. In the Church of the Laboratory, in the presence of the parents and friends of the hajipy pair, Mr. Lightweight Hydrogen, only son of Hon. H O. Water-producer and Miss Astringent Chlorine, daughter of Dr. Bleacher, the Disinfector. The bride was charming in her lovely yel¬ lowish-green silk, which was highly perfumed. The ceremony was jier- formed by Rev. Omnipotent Sunlight at mid-day. The union caused a sen¬ sation that shook the building and the spectators v ere glad that they had observed the directions of the usher and taken the back seats. John Harvard. Rev. George E. Ellis (H. C. 1833) says: “A. secrecy and silence as yet unpenetrated and unvoiced cover the whole life history, in the mother country, of him who planted learning in the New England wilderness. We know neither his birth-time, nor birth¬ place, nor lineage, nor parentage. Ilis name appeai-s on the entry book at Emmanuel Col¬ lege, Cambridge, in 1628. He was matricu¬ lated there as pensioner,—that is, one who can pay his own charges,—July 7,1631. The signature for his bachelor’s degree is dated 1631, and that for his master’s degree, 1635. There all we know of John Harvard in Eng¬ land stops.” A guinea for each word, or a hun¬ dred dollars for each of five lines, of information about John Harvard in England, have been offered, and in ad¬ dition the graduates of Harvard Col¬ lege projiose to raise a fund to secure the services of the eminent American Antiquary, Henry Fitz-Gilbert Waters (class of 1855), now in England, to make a thorough search there. Not a Graduate. Ella J. Newton, ’08, has been teach¬ ing a young ladies’ seminary in Foo- Chow, China, for the last five years. The young ladies are all Chinese. Harry C. Smith, ’72, is a jihoto- grapher in the emjiloy of Richardson tfe Harrington, photograjihers, Tremont street, Boston, Mass. Charles H. Fisher, ’82, is clerk in G. T. Fales Co’s dry goods store. Minnie Aylward, ’82, is teacliing school in Medway. Arthur W. Vant, ’82, English, is employed in Rice’s drug store. Walter A. Vant, ’83, English, is in Willis’ photograph gallery. Martin Foley, ’83, is working in Worthen’s market. Ida M. Bradley, ’84, English, is en¬ gaged to sing in the quartette at the Methodist church this year. Charles Gillon, ’85, is attending Holy Cross College, W orcester. Nellie Partridge, ’86, was married a short time ago to Henry Weeks. Robert E. I. Ellsbree, ’84, English, died Wednesday, April 30. His own class,the four years’ class of’86, of which the two years’ class of ’84 was a part, and the teachers, contributed a beauti¬ ful pillow with a suitable inscription and attended the funeral in a body on the following Sunday. The following is from the eleventh px’incipal of our school: Hudson, Mass., M.vrcii 31, 1885. Editors of the Oak, Lily and Ivy: Your acceptable paper, telling of the pro¬ gress of the pupils ami school I love, has been read with pleasure. Y our Industrial Exhibition I especially commend, enabling each pupil to compare his own industrial skill with each of the oth¬ ers, and by comparison widening his range of ideas and stimulating to higher excel¬ lence. Education will be one-sided, unbal¬ anced, till manual and mental training go hand in hand together. It is a long way from the brain down the arm, througli the hand and fingers to the mind’s ideal in mat¬ ter. The painter and sculptor, the musician and inventor have not alone found this true. The hand as well as the head and heart needs training, and many a student may find some aptitude he, till trial, little deemed he pos¬ sessed. Too generally industrial training is received dissociated from mental, without regularity, too late in life. The two should begin when young, go together and with reg¬ ularity. For the word of personal mention your paper requests, Milford ' I ' own History will suffice, by adding two years in the Massachu¬ setts Legislature; one as secretary of the Committee on Educatiom; the latter as chairman of the Committee on Federal Rela¬ tions. 8ince then I have the Law essayed. Enclosed please find a postal note in pay¬ ment of subscription, with thanks. Y ' ours most slncendy, Silas W. Hale.
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.