St Gabriels High School - Archangel Yearbook (Hazleton, PA)

 - Class of 1926

Page 81 of 148

 

St Gabriels High School - Archangel Yearbook (Hazleton, PA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 81 of 148
Page 81 of 148



St Gabriels High School - Archangel Yearbook (Hazleton, PA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 80
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St Gabriels High School - Archangel Yearbook (Hazleton, PA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 82
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Page 81 text:

The TRUMPET -q l l , l ' O' j Abraham Lincoln ICCIZNT years have witnessed an intensive study of all the details of Mr. Lincoln's life. No word of his has been too small, no act too trivial, no association too remote to enlist the quick attention of an interested people. The child of pioneers, he was a pioneer himself. The story of his childhood is one of the most stirring in the record of American pioneering. and one of the most pathetic inthe history of the world. The humble Kentucky cabin, without Hoor or window, in which he first saw the light, is as safe from profanation by the instinctive feel- ings of all true citizens of the Republic, as was the ark of the covenant by the written law of the jew. The house in which he lived receives the jealous care of the state to which his re- nown brings its greatest honor, and the to-mb which holds hi's ashes is a mecca to which all lovers of free government, from all nations and in all generations will turn with continually in- creasing devotion. Abraham Lincoln was the child' of the common people. The training for his great work was in the school of poverty and toil. His rough pioneer life opened to him the secret springs of human action. The people of the North had been separated by political discussion and hate. It was not money but brawn which could put down the Rebellion. They were to be united in feeling before an army could be marshalled. His sagacious words, born of his experience in Illinois, did the work. His feeling for the lowly and oppressed was intense, almost consuming. He could treat a stalwart man with indifference, but the cry of a child touched his heart and the pleadings of a woman unnerved him. Abraham Lincoln had a judicial mind. He was just by nature. VVhen the time came, he grasped great events w-ith a firm hand,-which gave confidence, with a kindly spirit, which gained support and with great legal learning, which carried weight. His great mind never departed from its simple creed. The waves of selfishness, of supercilious self importance, of political hate, of bigotry, all beat against him, but the rock stood the storm. In speaking of the character of Abraham Lin- coln it is not permissible to omit a special refer- 'Oh 7 ii? i ence to his wit. It was proverbial and a part of the man. In quick retort, in apt illustrations, in ready humor he had few peers. This accom- plishment is commonly dangerous to public men. but his wit was so pure, so spontaneous, so lacking in i-nvective, that he did not suffer in consequence of it. Indeed it was fortunate that he had, for it came to his aid at crucial junc- tures. It helped to relieve the hours of his despondency, and they were many. It enforced his views. It saved him when at the breaking point. Mr. Lincoln's religious views have been sur- rounded with mystery. An analysils of his religious feelings would doubtless uncover points with which many Christians would not agree. But he came to be an undoubted be- liever in God. in immortality, in the larger liberty. which makes men free. As early as 1860 he wrote to Newton Bateman, superin- tendent of schools in Illinois: UI know that there is a God and that He hates injustice and slavery. I see the storm coming and I know that His hand is in it. If He has a place and work for me, and I think He has, I believe I am ready. I am nothing, but truth is every- thing. I know that I am right, because I know that liberty is right, for Christ teaches it and Christ is Cod. He had a constitutional tendency toward sacred things and an intense emotional nature. an intimate regard for the truth, an inborn reverence for the right, an abiding sense of his dependence upon Cod. All this limited and ex- panded and correlated his other qualities to the development and upbuilding of a great and un- the common character. which safely directed American Republic through the greatest crisis in its history, and perhaps the greatest crisis of free government in the world. An imposing monument has been erected to l,incoln's memory in the beautiful cemetery, at Springfieldg but his position is so secure in the hearts of men, that no monument, however im- posing, can add to his renown. The work of Abraham Lincoln will bear fruit forever. His career is an unceasing inspiration to us. LAURIiNcl': F. Faumfv, '26. u u6- I 77 I

Page 80 text:

The TRUMPET WINTER The skies are dull and east with grey, Chill winter is here for a time. The birds have flown their eager way, Down south, to the warm sunny clime. AGNES G. MCGEEHIN, '26. THE PURPLE AND WHITE The memory of High School days, Forever will keep bright, Our hearts will always sing to praise The dear PURPLE and WHITE. THOMAS A. SHERIDAN, '26. THE SUN AND THE MOON The sun with his great eye, Sees not so much as I. The moon all silver proud, Might best be in a cloud. MARY B. CORRIGAN, '26. WHEN? Mine be a mansion, nestled in the trees, A beautiful stone-gray structure beside the seas. A group of stately sycamores a-sway, And a silvery gray yacht, afloat in the bay. EDWARD A. LYNCH, '26. A DREAM Mine be to write sweet poems, with ease About pretty pictures or dear little homes. My friends pick up their pens and write, ll'hile I have to sit and think all night. MARY B. CORRIGAN, '26, TROUBLESOME THOUGHTS We often sit and ponder, Grieve and worry and fret, Afraid that something may happen, But it hasuft happened yet. ETTA M. KEHOE, 26. SUNRISE In the East the light appears, The shadows steal away. The hills and vales awaken, At the birth of another day. josrivu P. MULIIERIN, '26. HAVOC The spell was cast and silence reigns, U pon the stillness wafts the strains, A shattered bridge, the cry within, 'Twas just the bridge of a violin. AGNES G. MCGEEIIIN, '26. A TRAGEDY lVith a leap he sprang upon her, In a dark corner of the house, A weird cry pierced the darkness, For the cat had caught a mouse. MARY R. MCNERTNEY, '26. THE FOOTBALL STAR Stretch lllartin was a shining star when on the high school team, His tackling was ferocious, his blows had lots of steam. lrVhen Martin took the pig-skin ball beneath his clutching arm, We kept a special nzan to ring an ambulance alarm. .S'tretch hit the line, ran around the end like wild bulls amuck, The other side would shiver when they saw him start to buckg And when the rival halfback tried to stand him on his head The lineman called an armistice to carry out the dead. Stretch had the size, he had the speed, his nerve would never yield, You ought to see him grab the ball and clamber up the field, Indeed there was a standing bet which no one dared to call, That Stretch could make his distance through a ten-inch iron wall. But .S'tretch,'s high school days are passed and every heart is sore, They weep to think that Martin will buck the line no more, Not so with him, in dreams he see the held of golden fame Where he would buck for glory in dear old St. Gabriel's name. THOMAS A. SHERTDAN, '26. l Q.. . I 76 1 .



Page 82 text:

The TRUMPET 'Q' 'iq' 1 1 1 wg. The Religious Element in Education HE theory of development, which is now widely received and applied to all things, is at once a sign and cause of the almost unlimited confidence which we put in their remedial and transforming power of education. We no longer think of God as standing aloof from nature and the course of history but we feel that we move in the direction towards which He impels. Education, therefore, we deem nec- essary, not merely because it is so absolutely essential to any kind of life, but also because God has made development the law of both conscious and unconscious nature. Man exists that he may make himself like Godg in other words, that he may educate himself, for the end of education is to fit him for complete- ness in life, to train all his faculties. to call his endowments into play, and to make him equally whole in body and soul. This is the ideal and to take a lower view of it, is to take a partial view. Years ago, to make education universal, it was necessary to levy a school tax, and as this could be done only by the state, the state estab- lished systems of education and assumed the office of teacher. The result of all this has been that the school, which throughout christen- dom is the creation of the church, has in most countries very largely passed into the control of the civil government. This transference of control, need not, how- ever, exclude religious influence and instruc- ti'ong though once the state has gained control, the natural tendency is to limit the functions of the school to the training of the mental faculties. As a matter of fact, this tendency is most pronounced in the educational theories and systems of positivists and agnostics. Since they maintain that there is no God, or that we can- not know that there is a God, they conclude that it is absurd to teach children anything about God. To bring up the young with such views is to teach them what is false, and to give a wrong direction to the whole course of life. But apart from all theories and systems of belief and thought, public opinion in America sets strongly against the denominational school. The civilized world now recognizes the nec- essity of a popular education. In a government such as this, intelligence should be universal. In such a government, to be ignorant is not only to be weak, it is also to be dangerous to the common welfare. for the ignorant are the tools which unscrupulous men use to taint the source of public authority and to baffle the will of the people. To protect itself, the State is forced to establish schools and to see that all acquire at least the rudiments of letters. But the American State can give only a secular educa- tion, for it is separate from the church, and its citizens profess such various beliefs, that in establishing a school system, it is compelled to eliminate the question of religion. Church and State are separate institutions, and their func- tions are different and distinct. Americans are a christian people. Religious zeal iinpelled their ancestors to the New World, and when schools were first established here, they were established by the churches, and religious instruction formed an important part in education. This was only natural, and as the school was the daughter of the church, she has doubtless rendered invalu- able service to civilization. The Catholic view of the school question is as clearly defined as it is well known. It rests upon the general ground that man is created for a supernatural end, and that the church is the divinely appointed agency to help him to attain his supreme destiny. As education is a train- ing for completeness of life, its primary element is the religious, for complete life in God. A Complete man is not one whose mind alone is active and enlightened, the man who is alive in all his faculties is the complete man. Religion is the vital element in character, and to treat it as though it were but an incidental phase of I1l3.I'1,S life is to blunder in a matter of the highest and most serious import. The education which forms character is absolutely necessary, that which trains the mind is desir- able. To exclude religion is to exclude the spirit of reverence, of gentleness and obedience. 4 l I l 1 O i781

Suggestions in the St Gabriels High School - Archangel Yearbook (Hazleton, PA) collection:

St Gabriels High School - Archangel Yearbook (Hazleton, PA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

St Gabriels High School - Archangel Yearbook (Hazleton, PA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 12

1926, pg 12

St Gabriels High School - Archangel Yearbook (Hazleton, PA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 59

1926, pg 59

St Gabriels High School - Archangel Yearbook (Hazleton, PA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 103

1926, pg 103

St Gabriels High School - Archangel Yearbook (Hazleton, PA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 117

1926, pg 117

St Gabriels High School - Archangel Yearbook (Hazleton, PA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 135

1926, pg 135


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