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
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 21 text:
“
and withal happy hearted girls and boys. During our Junior year oratorical honors were won by one of our n embers—Henry Powell—who was the school representa tive at the league Contest. Nearly every year our class ias ranked the highest in quarterly average. 1912 finds us Seniors at last, and with the very name we feel an added responsibility. We have successfully weathered the rocks of Geometry, and, given proper con-litions, we expect to be able to prove two triangles equal •ven when we are old and grey and other generations are puzzling over these problems. We are now struggling in he rapids of Physics and although few of us can construct in electric bell or run a steam engine, we all have come to .ealize the sad truth of tin law “that for every action there is a reaction, equal in magnitude and opposite in direction.” We are supposed, by this time, to have lost all signs of timidity and ignorance and to have acquired a dignity of bearing and wisdom of manner more befitting our maturer years and calmer judgment, yet we are still as tun-loving as ever and ready for a lark any time. Two short months and we will say good-bye to our dear old school and go out into the world to gain further knowledge or to earn our own living. We will never for. get the four happiest years of our life years of work, of play, of enjoyment, years which have broadened our life in every sense and which have taught us that great end of all education righ living. Happy as we will in to have completed the High School coarse, everyone of us will leave school next May with a feeling of sadness and re gret, sadness that those care-free happy days of our youth can never be again, and regr rt'that we must L ave so many dear friends and classmates. Many and helpful are the lessons we have learned during these four short years and we owe much to our able instructors whose influence and good example have guided our actions and helped shape our characters, and no matter what we do in the future, or where we shall be, in the storms of the years to come we will ever be mindful of our High School struggles and victories and how we have won and always expect to win Success Through Difficulties.
”
Page 20 text:
“
Senior Class Officers Class History President Vice President Secretary Treasurer WALTERE. DONAHUE ESTHER C. BROWN MINNIE B. FOSS PHILLIP R. SCHWEKE Motto “Success Through Difficulties. Flower Colors Yellow Hose Purple and Hold Yell We‘re the last. We'ie the lK st, Seniors Seniors. Yes! Yes! Yes! On September 7, 1909, fifty-five timid shrinking: Freshmen, with diplomas clasped tightly in hand, knocked at the door of the Reeds burg High School and asked to be admitted with the elect. Who will ever forget that memorable tirst day, how we got into the Junior and Senior class rooms and how tin) and insignificant we did seem! Our class, as Freshmen, was noted for two things, namely, its size, being the largest class ever entered here, and its class party, something never heard of before, which was given in the Gym, to the envy of all the other classes. The Sophomores, instead of hazing us, took us under their protecting wing and proceeded to initiate us into all the fun and follies of the underclassmen, and many were the seats changed and the promises made before the influence of those Sophs wore off! When we returned again to school in 1910, how much older and wiser we felt and how we did lord it over those green freshies! The class, however, soon entered into tin-oblivion common to all Sophomore classes. When we reached our Junior year, the class roll had shrunk to thirty two,—thirty-two hard-working, earnest
”
Page 22 text:
“
It • • limi ] V i • i The Class of Returning after an absence of fifteen years to the city of Reedsburg I found everything much changed- On the night after my arrival I chanced to pass by the old High School building, and as I drew near the old, familiar place I noticed, to my intense surprise, that a group of some twenty or thirty people were assembled on the lawn. They were seated in a se ni circL around a blazing ca np fire and I w ndered what this gathering meant. Hut, as the tlicce ii' rays of firelight shed its ruddy glow on each fa I lomprehended it all in a second. It was a reunion of tn. Classof 1913. Ithen happily joined the gathering and in due time found out where each individual had been and what cacti had accomplished during this long period of separation. Malvin Davis, it seemed, had made himself famous in the wrorld of Exploration and Discovery. In the year 1h20 lie discovered a new continent the like of which no one had ever even dreamed. He explained further that he was contemplating an expedition to the East Pole. Phillip Schweke, it was said, had, soon after completing lign School, contracted the terrifying disease called “verbomania” and physicians had pronounced his a hopeless case. I recall that even in his early school days Phillip showed a remarkable tendency toward this disease. 1913 in 1928 Florence Thompson for a time seemed to have completely disappeared. It was revealed later that she had become a most noted critic. Chief among her interests was the criticizing and revising of Dante’s and Shakespeare’s works. Later, I was informed that the original works were abolished entirely and Florence's versions placed into the hands of the whimsical public. Forest Vayette had. as a writer of poetry, fulfilled the great expectations of his friends and teachers. His poems, so I was told, were of the most simple and alluring type, and his efforts had brightened many a desolate home. Among his most noted ones were, “If I Were a Hird, “Dotty Dimple,” “Hoses Red,” “The Private Cutter.” and a series of Lullaoys, all of which were dedicated to his wife. Fate, it seemed dealt harshly with Walter Brown. He accidently stepped too near a tire while kindling it, and “Sparks” became attached to him. In spite of his frantic efforts to free himself, he was a doomed man. He died shortly alter. Soon after leaving High School Walter Donahue and John Flynn were seized with a “Wanderlust.” They set out on foot, intending to take a trip around the world, but after a few days absence they returned to their native city
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.