New Lexington High School - Lexingtonian Yearbook (New Lexington, OH)

 - Class of 1913

Page 19 of 52

 

New Lexington High School - Lexingtonian Yearbook (New Lexington, OH) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 19 of 52
Page 19 of 52



New Lexington High School - Lexingtonian Yearbook (New Lexington, OH) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 18
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Page 19 text:

VALEDICTORY CLASS POEM, 1913 It is all too true that the hour draws nigh When farewells must be said to this dear old school; But ’tis with a feeling of sadness, when we say good-bye, Thinking of the hours we have spent in learning each rule. Four years we have spent in the dear old place, Four years did we study and labor and cram; Memories have been formed, which time ne’er can erase, Of how we dreaded and feared each terrible exam. Now those days are but things of the past, Those tests and exams we shall know no more; Our books have been laid on the shelf at last, And all too soon we will knock at life's school door. We have followed Caesar in his long campaigns, And saw Wilhelm Tell as the apple he shot; We know all about man, his muscles and brains; To grind through mathematics has been our sad lot. The wonders of electricity, we know them by heart; We can name all the great men and their deeds oi renown. But now we must forget them in life's busy mart. For their purpose is accomplished, their mission is done. Thus endeth our first lesson, Soon in life’s school, with its great problems, we shall be. May our teachers in every session, Be that Great Teacher, the One from Galilee. As we pass from this school, a young, hearty throng. We remember with regret, those who have left us; Some have dropped by the wayside, some to other schools have gone, Yet we will never forget that they were once among us. Just a word of thanks to our teachers is due, Who have so faithfully helped us on our way; We can never express our praise and gratitude. To them our indebtedness we can never repay. We have tried for twelve years a foundation to build. So that our lives to others more useful may be. Now to those younger, our places we yield, Only hoping that they may be more successful than we. When long years have rolled around, And we return to the scenes of our youth, We trust that some of our class a victor's crown May bring back to our dear old High School. George L. Brown, '13. 17

Page 18 text:

SENIOR CLASS HISTORY And so we are Seniors. It seems but a short time since we were called “Freshies.” There were then fifty-two of us, but, like the “little pickaninnies” on the fence, we dwindled until in our Sophomore year we were thirty-six. In our Junior year twenty-seven, and now we are twenty-two “sitting on the fence.” When we entered High School four years sounded like an interminable time. Many things have our class of ’13 accomplished during our High School career. As Freshmen and Sophomores we were rather backward, spending most of our time with our books and confining our social activities to informals. When we were Juniors we took the lead in scholarship, athletics and dramatics, for it was in that year that “Red” Greely starred on the basketball team; we also improved and enlarged the Literary Society and added dramatic art to our programs. The first production was “Too Much of a Good Thing,” given Thursday, December 21, 1911, for the benefit of the “Piano Fund.” A debating club was also formed and proved a success. Society did not find us wanting, as the mention of our Junior-Senior reception and other parties prove; this function included a banquet and dance, at which the Faculty and Seniors were guests. As Seniors our class is the first to introduce a year-book and to leave a large class pennant as a memorial. Several of our Seniors this year took the leading roles in “That Rascal, Pat,” and “Texas Mother-in-law,” two productions given for the benefit of the “Piano Fund.” We do not mean to boast, but before we make our adieux to High School we wish to say that we have achieved much for which we hope we shall be remembered. Mabel Rinehart, ’13. Helen Lewis, ’13. 16



Page 20 text:

SENIOR ( LASS PROPHECY I, Hathmar, having searched the secrets of the revolving planets at the conjunction of Saturn, Jupiter and Neptune, proclaim to you certain hidden truths. The N. L. H. S. has reached the zenith of her glory. She will never in the future graduate a class that will rank with the class of T3, the star class of all history. As the pupils make up the class, so the individual characteristics, as a whole, will determine the future for the class. Glenn Park, the curly-headed boy, will learn the tinner’s trade, and at the age of thirty fall from a high building and suffer the loss of his egotism. Ethel Sycks will, at the tender age of twenty-two. become a member of the firm of ------- Co. Paul Wolfe| the second E. A. Poe, will finally become unbalanced and end his life traveling the road to and from Somerset. Mae Leach, the society editor, will choose teaching as her life-work, and will become a famous expounder of the A. B. C’s. Warren Donnelly will pass the time away sitting around on the hilltops, gazing at the heavens. He will not idle his time away, but act in the capacity of a weather prophet for Uncle Sam. Helen Lewis will fret out her life trying to find an antidote for “Blue Monday. Errett Le Fever will serve eighteen years as supervisor of Bear Run, and later be elected Congressman by the “Ruffneck party. Eugena Quinn will become an instructor in domestic science at O. S. U., and many savory odors will issue from the kitchen under her supervision. Charles Elder will be a pharmacist, and a good one. He will fill prescriptions that will cither kill or cure—invariably kill. He will die suddenly, and on his monument will be inscribed the following lines: “Maxie” has departed for the better shore, For what he took for H20 was H2S01. Enid Spencer will, at the age of forty-seven, become the President of the United States. The first one under the suffragettes. George Brown, having completed his college course, will settle down on the farm and, with the help and encouragement of his golden-haired wife, will raise corn that will average two hundred bushels per acre. 18

Suggestions in the New Lexington High School - Lexingtonian Yearbook (New Lexington, OH) collection:

New Lexington High School - Lexingtonian Yearbook (New Lexington, OH) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

New Lexington High School - Lexingtonian Yearbook (New Lexington, OH) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

New Lexington High School - Lexingtonian Yearbook (New Lexington, OH) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

New Lexington High School - Lexingtonian Yearbook (New Lexington, OH) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

New Lexington High School - Lexingtonian Yearbook (New Lexington, OH) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

New Lexington High School - Lexingtonian Yearbook (New Lexington, OH) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924


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