Strong High School - Mussul Unsquit Yearbook (Strong, ME)

 - Class of 1925

Page 15 of 50

 

Strong High School - Mussul Unsquit Yearbook (Strong, ME) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 15 of 50
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Strong High School - Mussul Unsquit Yearbook (Strong, ME) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 14
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Strong High School - Mussul Unsquit Yearbook (Strong, ME) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 16
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Page 15 text:

THE MUSSUL UNSQUIT 13 take him. The Bible says, Be sure your sin shall find you out. There is one fear which we should all have and that is the fear of God our Maker. Hilu'a, foluzxon, '26. THE MAN WHO WAS INNOCENT FNNFTH TAYLOR at the age of twenty-one was young and full of happiness. He held a good position in one of the largest department stores in Boston. He was always ready to help someone in trouble and many times he had given money to poor children in the streets so that they might have a warm dinner or supper. Kenneth Taylor on returning from his work discovered that he had left some papers and books, which he had wanted, on his desk at the department store. After eating his supper he decided to return to the store and get the things that he had left as he had a key and could enter the building anytime he wished. On entering the ofhee where he worked he discoverd that the safe had been broken into. He rushed to the street and called an officer and then telephoned the president of the company. VVhen they arrived Kenneth told them his story of returning for his books and discovering that the safe had been broken into. After hearing the story the president told him to go home as they would need him no more that night. About two hours after Kenneth had been home he heard a knock at his door. On opening it he met two ofiicers of the law with the president of the company and his best friend, Harold Phillips. One of the ofiicers said they had come to search his room for the money and papers that were stolen from the safe and that his friend, Harold. had seen him take the money from the safe and followed him home and seen him place the money in his room, then re- turned to the store and called an officer. I think you must be mistaken, Harold, said Kenneth, and you are welcome to search the room but I am afraid you will not be successful in finding the money here. Harold then spoke to the oliicer and, I.et's look in the bed mattress first, that is where he usually puts his stolen goods. You 're a liar, said Kenneth. The officers went to the bed and after removing the blanket and sheets they found part of the money and papers in the mattress. Well, what have you to say about your- self, now? said the officer, showing Ken- neth the money. l never took it. Someone else must have put it in my bed when I was out. I swear that I did not know it was there, said Kenneth. That is what they all say when they get caught, said the officer. You will believe me, Harold: you know that I am honest and would not steal, don't you? said Kenneth. No, Kenneth, said Harold. You might as well give up and admit that it is nothing new for you to steal. You lie, said Kenneth. Conte, said the ofiicer, you can tell this to the judge. . .Xt the end of Kenneth's trial the next day he was found guilty on the information given by Harold and was sentenced to ten years in the Federal prison near Boston. .lust before leaving the court room for prison Kenneth turned to I-Iarold who was seated near him and said, All right, Har- old, I know now who took the money. lt was you, but I can not prove it. You put it in my room as a blind to protect yourself. I thought you were my friend but now I know that you are my enemy and some day you will suffer as I am going to suffer for the next ten years. After saying these words Kenneth was conducted from the court room by two onicers and taken to the Federal prison. an ik if lk av Today, nearly ten years later, Kenneth Taylor is again passing through the gates of the Federal prison but this time he is

Page 14 text:

l2 THE MUSSUL UNSQUIT father jammed the throttle home and snap- ped in the air brakes. It was a close call. A heavily loaded freight train had jumped the tracks and the flyer had narrowly missed plowing through it. From then on Nels kept watch of the signals and if his father did not slow down at the proper time he warned him. At their last stop the engineer climbed down from his seat ,and told his son to take the throttle because he could not see to drive any farther. Nels did as he was told and brought the train through safely. The next day he took his father to a doctor who told him that he would have to take a long vacation to rest his eyes. Nels work- ing as fireman received enough pay to support the family. Arthur McClc'ary, '25, ESSAY ON FEAR EAR is defined to be a painful emotion excited by an apprehension of impending danger. In this definition there are four things to be noticed. First, fear is an emotion of the mind. This dis- tinguishes it from bodily acts and affec- tions. Secondly, it is painful. This dis- tinguishes it from many other mental emo- tions, such as joy. and the like. Thirdly, it is excited in view of something impend- ing or yet to come. This distinguishes it from remorse and other such feelings which refer to what is past. Fourthly, it is ex- cited in view of coming danger. This dis- tinguishes it from hope and feelings of that kind which look forward to coming happi- ness. The definition, therefore, includes a great deal, although it is short. The scope of the utility of fear is broad. It makes people careful. There would be a great many more crimes than there are now if wicked men were not afraid of the consequences of wrong-doing. Fear of being drowned makes boys more careful about going into the water. Fear of bad marks or of other kinds of punishment sometimes keeps students from misbehaving or from neglecting their lessons. Though fear is a mental, not a bodily affection it shows itself in bodily signs. When a horse is frightened he often trembles all over, but generally runs away, looking wildly out of his eyes. When a dog is afraid he hangs his head and sneaks away with his tail drooping between his legs. In men, fear shows itself chiefly in their loss of color. A man who is very much terrified generally becomes ghastly white. I have seen it stated that the reason of this is that the blood leaves the face and rushes back to the heart. Fear is unreasonable when it is without good cause or when the danger apprehended is imaginary. This is what leads people to be afraid of the dark, or of witches and ghosts. Horses often get frightened at imaginary dangers. They see a leaf stir at the side of the street and they seem to think it is a monster about to spring upon them. Horses seem more easily frightened than any other animals by unreal dangers. When a person looks down from the top of a house or a high tower, he is apt to be afraid, even though there is a strong rail- ing so that he could not fall over if he tried. This seems to be an unreasonable fear, and yet almost everybody feels it. We have the same feeling when standing on the platform of a railroad station, as the engine comes thundering up. We know we are beyond its reach and yet we involun- tarily shrink back from the monster. Fear is reasonable when the evil appre- hended is real, and is of such magnitude that it is likely to cause us great distress. If a man had fallen upon the railroad track, and his feet had caught fast in the timbers, so that he could not get off and he should see the train coming very fast he would be horribly afraid and his fear would be per- fectly reasonable. If a man had murdered another or had committed any great crime, he would have reason to be afraid, because the hand of justice may at any time over-



Page 16 text:

14 THE MUSSUL UNSQUIT passing out free to do as he pleases once more. As one looks closely and watches this man as he passes through the gates one can not believe that this is the same young man who entered the prison ten years be- fore. Today this man is older, his shoul- ders are rounding and stooping and in his face can be seen the suffering that he has been through. His eyes show no light of happiness that had once been there and on his hands are the signs caused by the hard work in the prison. As the gates of the prison close behind him he turns and views what has been his home for the last ten years and begins to think. Could he call this his home for the last ten years? Yes, it has been his home but still it was not a home. It was a place of hard labor and punishment. It made you a marked man for the rest of your life. It gave you a record but such a record as would injure you more than help you. In fact, it de- stroys all chances of success for you. You had no friends who would trust you and help you get started. It left you without money and with a hard life ahead. It fact, it makes you a lone man among thousands and thousands of honest people. It gives you the name of an ex-convict, a name that follows you to the end of your days and with it ten years of life that you will never forget. As Kenneth turned from looking at the prison there was but one light in his eyes, hate and revenge for the wrong that had as he was walking been done him. just away from the prison an oliicer came run- ning up and told him that he was wanted at the Courthouse and that he would take him there. On entering the Court room whom did Kenneth see sitting, handcuffed, before the judges' desk but his old friend Harold Phillips. Kenneth soon learned that Harold had been caught and found guilty of enter- ing with intentions to steal and of an at- tempt to murder a watchman, in the build- ing where he once worked. The watch- man had been found in the building with two bullet holes in his side when Harold was caught. When the judge pronounced sentence Harold was given twenty years of hard labor in the Federal prison. Fifteen years was for the attempt at murder and the other five was for deceiving the Court and giving false information ten years before that had sent an innocent man to prison. When Harold heard his sentence read he turned to Kenneth and said, Oh, Kenneth, can't you save me? You know that I was your best friend before you went to prisonf' Yes, I knowf' said Kenneth, and what did my best friend do but send me to prison? You forgot to mention that and now when you are in trouble you expect the man you sent to prison to help you out, but you are mistaken. I will not raise my little finger to help you out. I told you ten years ago in this same Court room that you would suffer as I was going to suffer and now the day has come. Be a man and take what you deserve, that is what I had to do. After Harold had been taken from the Court room Kenneth learned that a diary had been found in Harold's room and in it was a page written about how Harold had placed the money in Kenneth's room when he was out and that he had had him arrested by bringing the ofhcers to his room and showing them where the money was and making them believe that Kenneth had taken it. As Kenneth turned to leave the Court room he felt a light tap on his shoulder and on turning whom did he see but the president of the company where he had once worked. I am sorry that I made a mistake in believing that you took the money, said the president, and now I want to shake hands with you and tell you that I have a position for you at my office with a salary of fifty dollars a week to commence with. Will you forget the wrong that I have done by mistake and take the job ?',

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