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Page 15 text:
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Staff Assistants Dc port men I a I Edit ors L. L. Anderson—Agriculture J. J. Hagerman Mechanical R. R. Shoemaker—Civil Juliet Matthews- E. K. (Joss- Electrical J. L. Ford—Chemical J. B. Burt- Pharmacy Science Art Contributors Nellie E. Byers Harold Henley S. B. M erica Bess Hartley I B. Morgan E. L. Apor J. Oxer F. W. Ovkresch J. M. Trotter Joke Contributors E. E. Plummer E. P. Talbot R. G. Spears E. G. SlKVEKING F. M. Ferguson Margaret Ward F. J. Keilholz Carl Miller Duke Patrick E. H. Kirkland Elizabeth Dukes W. K. Creson H. A. McMahon Eleven
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Page 14 text:
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Page 16 text:
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Emma Montgomery McRae Emma Montgomery McRae, bom February 12, 1848, at Loveland, Ohio, died September 21, 1919, at Newton Center, Massachusetts—the psalmist’s three score years and ten—but what a life when measured by service, what a life when measured by beauty, by love. Mrs. McRae loved Purdue. And when she found last June that she could not come for commencement, she wrote: “It breaks my heart not to be with you.” And we know that Mrs. McRae died with the love of Purdue in her heart. I)r. Carter, who conducted the services held at Muncie over Mrs. McRae, began by saying that at that moment the Muncie High School, over which Mrs. McRae had presided for so many years, was observing a period of silence that was to last five minutes. And at his request those who were assembled paid the same silent tribute. Dr. Carter was followed by President Stone, who began: “At this moment the Hag at Purdue hangs at half-mast in honor of Mrs. McRae. And this, it must seem to all of us, is the heart of the whole matter, silence—more eloquent than words—and the flag at half-mast for one whom we loved even as she had loved us. Those of us who knew Mrs. McRae best, knew her as a woman of the highest type of spirituality. She walked with God. And it is a source of satisfaction to know that she found in her last years the fellowship for which she had always yearned, in the Unitarian Church at Newton Center. When there seemed, earlier in the year a possibility that death was inevitable, Mrs. McRae gave utterance to the faith: “I have lived a long life, a life of service, and it has been a happy life. If it is my time to go, 1 am content.” Thus is brought to a close a life that had reached the allotted three score years and ten, and what a life when measured by service, by beauty, by love. i'at r Tictlri'
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