Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO)

 - Class of 1919

Page 14 of 88

 

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 14 of 88
Page 14 of 88



Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 13
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Page 14 text:

'. .. T -5 ff: AW- 1--T LY -L -f f .:L-,fa-f ri - :- his materials. He will be a better father, for he will do more for the souls of his children. He will be a better citizen for he will hoard and make usable to all the resources of his state. The doors of pros- perity may be open to such a man, but it will not tempt him to turn this prosperity to selfish ends. It is not what you save, but what you do with your treasure: This is the new light on the word thrift. Did you ever think it your duty to be thrifty? It is one of the strongest calls of duty. It is a duty not only to those that may be dependent upon you, but also to your country and to your higher self. You need hardly be told the methods of thrift. The beasts and the insects lay aside for a period of want. They are taught by instinct. But, with us, it must be a matter of thought and education. It does not mean that we are to be miserly or that we must forego the pleasures of life. As a young American Lieutenant, just returned from overseas service, said: We are learning that many things deemed indispensable before this war can now be readily dispensed with. We are not going back to where we were before the war. We are going to have a new world, a better managed world, a rescued world of beauty, contrib- uted to and shared by all. We are a nation of spendthrifts. Out of every thousand people in this country, so our statistician tells us, only one hundred and eight have grasped the wisdom of thrift. It is said: To save is to know wisdom, to know wisdom is to live well, to live well is to enjoy life. Our great method of thrift is our national conservation. Bills on conservation already passed, show that we are moving in the right direction. But the idea of conserving our human and spiritual forces is yet undeveloped. There are, indeed, obstacles to thrift, the love of luxury, the im- pulse to buy whatever pleases the fancy, and the habit of gambling and intemperance in the precious things of life. But thrift is really com- paratively easy and may soon become a habit. War is the greatest spendthrift. It is then necessary to call for all that thrift implies to offset this great waste. Surely, there can be no greater foundation for democracy than thrift -thrift means to save and to share. It means a square deal from man to man. Self-abnegation is one of the assets of the war and the complement of thrift. There is a new world about us. The rich woman who scrubbed and served at the canteensg the boy who lived gloriously in the trenchg the woman who at grey dawn giving up all comforts, cared for the French re-patriatesg these know the meaning of self-abnegation and of thrift. War, then, has given new dignity to this old Benjamin Franklin word. Never again can it drop' to its old materialistic mean- ing, this new, inspiring, word Thrift -Gertrude Kehl. 12

Page 13 text:

n -xg 12 - , liffiixi- . e ea ,-, I see the frontiers and boundaries of the old aristocra- cies broken, I see the landmarks of European kings removed. Are all nations communing? is there going to be but one heart to the globe? Is humanity forming en-masse? for lo, tyrants trem- ble, crowns grow dim, The earth restive, confronts a new era. The perform'd America and Europe grow dim, retir- ing in shadow behind me. The unperform'd, more gigantic than ever, advance. And has this prophecy come to pass? This terrible war of four years is the answer. There is now one heart to the globe. Democracy has almost real- ized the vision of fifty years ago, the prophecy of her bard, Walt Whitman. -Frances Vivian Feldkamp. A War Definition , ,, 5-A S it not true that with experience some commonplace words Q:l 33'1 F7 . . 'Q grow heavy with new mean1ng? Recently, I learned to ,' thrill at the sound of an old-fashioned word. For this rea- ES' ' son, I dare to bring it to your attention, you who have learned the meaning of the word and the value of the habit expressed, and I, whose attention has been arrested in recent months through a new insight given by war. The immediate thought which comes to many, is that thrift is simply a fact of saving money and material substance. But thrift is an attitude of mind toward life. It means the exercising of the rules of reason with regard to things about us. It warns against yielding to our natural whims and impulses. Thrift must not be thought of as a means of accumulating a fortune only. A thrifty man need not accumulate a fortune, large or small. The object of thrift is to make us masters of all material things that we may enjoy, that these things may not master us. True happiness consists, not in satisfying many wants, but in having fewer wants to satisfy. It is said that people go through life discontented, chiefly because of artificially created and stim- ulated wants. The war taught us to be thrifty in the satisfaction of our wants, that we might lavish our souls and our savings on our country. And then, too, it is necessary that a man uphold thrift as the basis of sound living. He will be a better craftsmang he will do more with 11



Page 15 text:

'wffsjv' -iv A :fig I , 'V fi- - , TQ.: .3 . LJ.,-,-- A League ofNations Y, OUR years of bitter struggle are ended. Human blood has been shed until the fields of battle teem with streams red. All knowledge and science has been bent toward one goal, destruction. Millions of the defenders of liberty have U paid the supreme price. Now the world at last has decided that the foundations of a lasting peace must be laid, that some other means of settling international controversies must be adopted. The greatest question that confronts the members of the peace conference is how to secure an honorable, lasting peace, and yet provide for just settlement of all controversies. They are considering a league of nations to prevent aggression, encroachment, and offense, a league to enforce arbitration, a league to assure justice to all. This league is to consist of a union of all the self-determined and ethnically constituted nations. It is to have a supreme court of arbitration. The weapons of international boycott or military power are to be used against an offending nation. The eyes of the whole world are fixed upon this peace conferenceg the eyes of the weak, the oppressed, the wronged, all look forward to the formation of this league of nations which is to insure freedom, peace, and justice to a stricken world. All the nations are deeply interested. Americans are vitally con- cerned. Heretofore, America has kept herself isolated from European affairs. The formation of such a league may mean death to the Mon- roe Doctrine. Besides, America has never before fought a war outside this continent. Our membership in this league may mean the lives of our youths to enforce decisions of the international court. There 'are leading Americans who are strongly in favor of a league of nations, these are led by our beloved president. There are opponents, however, and among them is a senator from this sovereign state of Missouri. This man offers certain academic objections. He does not want America to take a part in European affairs. He does not want Ameri- can youths to give their lives to settle European disputes. He fears men are not perfect enough to carry into practice their signed cove- nants. These are his objections. Now let us give some of these points the acid test. Let us consider these objections from two points of view, namely, the selfish point of view and the generous or the humani- tarian point of view. From the selfish point of view: Are we concerned by the outcome of the European disputes? I wonder whether it would have mattered to us if Germany had defeated England, Italy, and France? I wonder 13

Suggestions in the Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) collection:

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925


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