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:
“
THE GOLDEN ROD. year lived on a farm, working there in the summer and in a shoema- ker’s shop in the winter. His scanty education was increased by two years’ academic training. No one who has not felt the cold or the wildness of the storm could have written Snow-Bound, the best poetic description of our New En- gland winters that has ever been produced. “This shall be a sign unto you. Ye shall find the Babe wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger.” Thus was the news of the greatest manger-birth conveyed to the world, the birth that brought with it the first vital breath of Christianity. Rome was at the zenith of her power, and all author- ity rested with one man, Augustus, when the star of Bethlehem pro- claimed that humble birth over eighteen hundred years ago. As White says, “Whilst in the enjoy- ment of his pre-eminence, the Ro- man emperor was unconscious that in the village of Judea, in the low- est rank of life, amongst the most contemned tribe of his dominion, his Master was born.” Under the same roof with an ox and an ass, Christ, the Saviour of mankind, came upon the earth. Could there have been a birth more lowly, yet where is such majesty and power! What hope did His birth bring to the low classes of that day ? Had He come as an earthly king as the Jews expected, what influence could manger-births have had ? But His birth showed that if the Son of God was willing to come upon this earth in a stable, it is surely no disgrace to be of humble birth. Throughout His life, too, He was associated with the lower class, which was another cause of their rise in the estimation of the world. The influence of manger-births on the world is great. When men of such birth succeed in being rep- resented in the government, the condition of the laboring class is better understood, and such laws as will be beneficial to them will be enacted. The success of men of manger-births in America inspires great hope in those of lowly birth, because of the wonderful opportu- nities offered them. Then let us— “Press on ! for it is godlike to unloose 'I'lie spirit and forget yourself in thought; Pending a pinion tor the deeper skv, And in the verv fetters of your flesh, Mating with the pure essences of heaven ! Press on! for in the grave there is no work And no device.—Press on! while yet you may! ’ 8ui fait le mal, trouve le mal; ui fait le bien, trouve le bien. —Frances C. Sullivan. “The common school is the in- fant republic, because in the com- mon school all castes, classes, shades of belief, meet and learn to love and live for each other. Un- der the divine influence of the common school that bigotry and hate and narrowness which perpet- uate fixed ideas vanish and give place to the profoundest human sympathy. The supreme duty of a nation is to give to each and all the liberty and the means of be- coming free. Liberty is granted by constitutions and laws. The common school is the one central institution which presents to each the means of freedom.” “The common school has for its ideal the common education of all the people of a nation, of all races, classes, sexes, and sects, and social positions.in one school, common to all, from the kindergarten to the university inclusive. Thus the ideal education of America makes the kindergarten, the high school, and the university as free to all as are the primary and grammar schools. The ideal education of the common school comprehends all charities; it sums them up in one gift, that of character.” “New Orleans has a sugar school under state auspices. The course of two years will fit the students to cultivate the cane and manufac- ture the sugar profitably. There are five professors of sugar agricul- ture, sugar chemistry, analytic chemistry, sugar mechanics, and sugar making.. There is also a small sugar plantation and plant.”
”
Page 24 text:
“
THE GOLDEN ROD. welcomed. His entrance is not barred on account of birth, race, or color. He is the equal of all. Which path shall he choose ? By earnest and faithful attention to duty he is bound to succeed, and may perhaps become a successful business man. He may become a citizen, enter the political field and represent a portion of the people. He may hold any office with the exception of the presidency. Amer- ica’s great free institutions, the evening schools, public libraries, and reading rooms, will advance him on the road to success. In conclusion, what can be a more appropriate greeting to those coming from afar than these elo- quent words of Webster? “We welcome you to the blessings of good government and religious lib- erty. We welcome you to the treasures of science and the de- lights of learning. We welcome you to the transcendent sweets of domestic life, to the happiness of kindred, and parents, and children. We welcome you to the immeas- urable blessings of rational exis- tence, the immortal hope of Chris- tianity, and the light of everlasting truth. —John W. Thompson. MA NGER-BIR THS. TWO simple little words, only three syllables in ajl, and we do not need Webster or Worcester to aid us in understanding them ; vet some of the best-loved words m our language can boast of no greater power than these. When we think of manger, the lowly sta- ble and the domestic animals natur- ally come to our mind, and they suggest a humble birth. Many believe implicitly in the doctrine of inheritance, out if a man inherits good traits and does not improve them or use them for any good purpose, it is not an honor for him to point with pride to distinguished ancestry. Poe and Byron are sad illustrations of this fact, and one cannot count the people who with a goodly inheri- tance of mental and physical powers have failed to develop them- selves. We may find examples of manger-births in every department of life—in statesmen and generals, in philanthropists and poets, in professional and business men. In a log-cabin in Kentucky, far away from all schools, churches, li- braries, and places of instruction, miles from the nearest neighbor, a boy was born of very poor parents. So far from what we now deem ne- cessities of life, what could be ex- pected of him ? He was flat-boat hand, country store-keeper, post- master and surveyor, yet he man- aged to acquire a Knowledge of law by borrowing books at an office at night, and returning them in the morning. At twenty-five he was sent to the legislature, thence to congress, and thence to the White House. As president, his life was identified with the history of his country. Thus Abraham Lincoln rose from flat-boat hand on the Mississippi to president of the United States. In South Danvers, now named Peabody from the name of its ben- efactor, stands a house which is always visited by strangers because it was the home of one of our greatest philanthropists. On that spot lived George Peabody, the boy of poverty and the millionaire phil- anthropist. What an amount of good he did for both America and England ! He gave two and a half millions for dwelling-houses for the poor in London, and three and a half millions for the education of the poor in the southern states. He endowed museums for Harvard and Yale, and also one in Salem. Who shall represent the poets? Why!- “All honor and praise to that right-heart- ed bard, Who was true to the cause when such service was hard, Who himself was so free he dared sing for the slave, When to look but a protest in silence was brave.’ Who has not read the Voices of Freedom? Whittier was not born of rich parents. On the contrary, he was born in very poor circum- stances, and until his eighteenth
”
Page 26 text:
“
THE GOLDEN ROD. EXCHANGE. EDITED BY Cassie Thayer, John Estabrooks. The Beacon, Vol. I. No. i, is very interesting. The column headed Our Book Table is a good feature of the paper. . One can gain much information concerning the Japanese bv read- ing the “Lecture by Rev. E. G. Porter,” in The Stranger. The Cadet speaks of growth in the Maine State College and of a year of good work. This paper and the Oak, Lily and Ivy are obliged to write In Memoriam. We trust that we shall be spared this painful task. After we have turned the cover upside down several times to see what makes us dizzy when looking at it, we open The Record of the English high school, Boston, and read of military matters. As we believe that all high schools should have a military drill, we congratu- late the said school and commiser- ate ourselves. The Oak, Lily and Ivy is a very pleasing paper. The composition entitled ‘T'ashionable Follies” is especially entertaining and con- tains much common sense. We cannot help wondering what the good democrats of the town will say to the advertisement (?) on the inside of the cover. Ought a school paper to be used for politi- cal purposes ? As the September and October numbers of The Golden Rod are separated from each other by only one week, we have not had time to send our paper and receive ex- changes. However, four papers have been placed in our hands by friends, and we have examined them with pleasure. Our ex- changes wifi see that our experi- ence is very limited, for this is on- ly Vol. I. No. 2, and therefore we read for entertainment and in- struction. We hope to correct our own faults by our private criti- cisms of our exchanges. Publicly, however, we shall try to sympa- thize with the good intentions of those who have voluntarily under- taken so much hard work, and speak of what is best. SCISSORS. How much a dunce that has been sent to roam Excels a dunce that has been kept at home. Nothing sinks so gently and so deeply into men’s minds as exam- ples. Reputation is what men and wo- men think of us; character is what God and the angels know of us. Do not ask if a man has been through the high school. Ask if the high school has been through him. Every person has two.educa- tions ;—one which he receives from others, and one more important which he gives himself. Histories make men wise; poets, witty; the mathematics, subtile; natural philosophy, deep ; morals, grave; logic and rhetoric, able to contend. Railway statistics show that the American takes 27 railway trips a year, the Englishman 19, the Bel- gian ii. the Frenchman, the Ger- man, Swede, Norwegian, and the Spaniard five each, while the Turk, the Swiss and Italian take but one each. The Egyptian pyramids, mauso- leum of Artemisia, Temple of Di- ana at Ephesus, walls and hanging gardens of Babylon, Colossus at Rhodes, the statue of Jupiter Olympus, the Pharos, or watch tower of Alexandria, are the seven wonders of the ancient world. An Italian immigrant carried a stiletto; a German immigrant car- ried a bundle; a Portuguese immi- grant carried a banjo; an Irish im- migrant carried a baby; a Syrian immigrant carried a pouchful of trinkets; a Scotch immigrant car- ried a plaid and a bunch of heath- er ; a Russian Hebrew immigrant carried a purse containing a few foreign coins, and a Scandinavian immigrant carried himself as straight as an arrow.
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.