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Page18 THE MAROON AND GOLD -0 gill' - uGaxQ,:,4,f ll IIE 'D' a deeper zest in their life and work. This is of vital importance to the nation, as agriculture is the basic industry. Another side of this extensive travel by auto is observed in the influence on farmers and country neighborhoods by those who pass through or visit in the vicinity. With their different standards, tastes, equipment, their localisms and colloquialisms, they exert an erosive and polishing force on the people with whom they have contact. Farming people catch glimpses of different and better ways to live, dress, talk, act, and come to the realization that there are some larger and finer things in life than that which they enjoy and often there is thus generated aspira- tions and endeavor for improvement by reason of this contact. The improvement of rural roads is the founda- tion for the establishment and extension of rural de- livery mail routes of the federal government. The im- proved highways are trustworthy for all the year's passage of the rural carrier's car. This enables the farmer to receive the scientific discussions of farming and marketing, of home making and schooling the children, which they read from publications, and ac- counts for much of the rural development that is taking place. In olden times country children failed to receive more education than that which their parents could give them in their hours of leisure. Later, rural schools were opened where the children of nearby homes gathered. In these schools teaching was de- ficient because of insufficient personnel, and because the lack of adequate resources did not permit the engagement of good teachers. Today, there are schools where children from great distances gather together. In these institutions resources have been concentrated so that they possess buildings with proper conveniences and good hygienic conditions, sufficient and well-remunerated personnel, and ma- terial elements necessary for this important public service. Formerly, it was impossible for the great majority of the children of the rural sections to ob- tain more than a rudimentary education. Today, thanks to good communications, it is very easy for them to receive their secondary instruction. This important progress is due principally to modern highways. -Marlyn Doyle Rusk. VA LEDICTORY Friends of tl1e school: It is an honor to address you in behalf of the graduating class of nineteen twenty-six. Tonight we launch, where shall we anchor is our motto. Each one is a ship venturing upon the one great ocean-the sea of life and experience. Af- ter all, experience is the best teacher. It is thru experienced workmen and careful planning that great ships are built. Some graduates will, by desire or force of cir- cumstances, drop school or college courses unfin- ished, and step out into the hurly-burly of industry and business. Others will continue on with their education. Later, all will learn that education is a process which is never completed. A diploma merely signifies that the bearer has been given a fair start on the way to education. But it does not mean that he is through with education. Some think to fill their minds with knowledge in their youth and live off of it for the rest of their lives is education. Education, however, is much more than a supply of knowledge. It is, first of all, a state of mind and spirit, a yearning to know the truth, and a courage great enough to act upon the truth once it is known. A man unlearned in booklore may be profoundly educated. Perhaps his fund of knowledge along formal lines may not be great, but he may be great in wisdom, tolerance, and open-mindedness. Such a man is better educated than the best informed man in the world should the latter have a sealed mind. The true education is rich in poise, power, and freedom. It is open to all. To those who have made it possible-to our teachers, superintendent, school board, and friends -for us the class of twenty-six to pass another mile-stone in our lives, we give our sincerest expres- sion of gratitude. To the advancing students who are to take our places and perhaps achieve greater success we give them encouragement and our good wishes as we leave them. For we have: A life to live! A helping hand to giveg A bit of shadow here and there,- Then comes a brightening flare. A life to live! An unkindness to forgive, A bit of heartache along the way,- Then comes the glorious-May. A life to live! A world of love to give, A bit of sorrow now and then,- And radiant sunshine comes again. And now farewell, but in the hope that we shall meet again. Farewell - But in that word-that melancholy word-howe'er There's still a promise of a fairer field to Win somewhere. -Charles Carroll Seif. Margaret S.-Doesn't Doyle have a divine part in his hair? Elizabeth R.-That's not a part. Tliat's only where the marble cracked. -mi iw li'-
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THE MAROON AND GOLD Page17 .ff :Qu - i . ics:-al broader standard, which has its foundation in right- eousness and its end and purpose in the well being of man and his eternal welfare? Shall we enter and pursue life's mission for an altogether seliish pur- pose, which seeks to acquire all things by any means which may accomplish the end, or shall our deal- ings with men be governed with justice and kind- ness, with some regard of what is fair and right? Shall our lives be measured by the dollars we have gained or by the general good we have done in the world? Shall we not live that we may blessg gain that we may give, and love that we may benefit man- kind? The supreme agency for gaining success is the mind. It is sometimes said that the greatest cause of success is labor-meaning energy of body and strength of muscle. This is a great mistake. Intel- lect is mightier, and of more importance to success and the highest degree of happiness than manual labor. Indeed, mere muscular energy does but a very small part of the world's work today. Skill and power are not of brawn but of mind. He who teaches a man how to handle a tool effect- ively, or who produces a labor machine, is as much a producer of the world's food and wealth as he who uses them. The teacher, therefore, is, in the highest sense, as much of a producer of the world's Wealth and food supply as is the mechanic or the farmer. He who taught James Watt the principles of mechanics that led him to invent the 'tseparate condenser did more to enrich the world than any ten million laborers that ever lived. It is not a fact that the progress and present state of civilization is due to a few who are dis- tinguished above their fellow men by a superior energy. Look over the events of history. Who caused them? Men of energy who have stirred this gift that is in them like Edison, lVlorse, Newton, and many other noted men. Do not be content to be com- monplace but strike out for something worthy. Aspire after great idealsg great things of which the world has not a few. Determine to rise and so help others to rise. Climb to the highest yourself, some one has to be leader, so why not you? Success is sometimes thought impossible because of difficulties, such as the failure in first attempt of some accomplishment or maybe the lack of money. The great orator Web- ster did not succeed in his first attempt but he did not give up. Lincoln was a poor farm lad but he was not overpowered by this difficulty for he was a man of true politeness, strong courage, tact, persever ance, patience, honesty, and intellectual ability. Therefore, the men who succeed best in the end are frequently the men who have the most difficulty at the start. Can success be procured without education? Statistics show that in general the larger percent of educated people succeed rather than those of no ed- ucation. The beginnings of talent or genius are, like the other things of nature, very small, and if not cultivated, will remain small or disappear. If our great writers-Longfellow, Shakespeare, Bryant, Hawthorne, Emerson, Lowell, Holmes, Mather-had not worked to cultivate their minds they would nev- er have been heard of today. The present day affords opportunities for obtaining knowledge which lies in reach of all and he who would gain knowledge need not remain ignorant nor be hindered in pro- curing success. Knowledge, then is o11e of the secret keys to success. Procure knowledge, be strictly honest, C0llI'3g6- ous, persevering, patient, diligent, and you have the secret of making your life a success or securing success. lVIake yourself worthy and honor will come to you. -Elnora Belle Johnson. THE RELATION OF IMPROVED HIGHWAYS TO EDUCATION The extent of social contact in the country and of the interchange of opinion between rural residents is almost exactly proportionate to the degree of fre- quency and improvement of local roads. Also, the various local enterprises relating to business, enter- tainment, recreation, church, and school are immed- iately conditioned by the state of highway communi- cation. Therefore, whether or not the people of a neighborhood or community will get together and promote the various agencies of culture and so reap the benefits of their inspiring and deepening influ- ences will be determinned very largely by the con- dition of the roads. Without previous improvement of highways, it is impossible to bring about the consolidation of dis- trict schools and the union of the small, competing, and struggling churches. This is especially true in areas of extensive precipitation. Specifically, then, the educational process in its strict and narrow sense is conditioned and determined by the quality of roads. To a very large degree the grading and standardiz- ing of schools, the establishment of rural high schools, the provision of an adequate physical plant and facilities, the readjustment of curriculum so that it is more nearly adapted to rural needs, and the i11- ducement to adequately trained teachers depend on the quality of highways. The development of inter-state and national trails and highways has enabled people to make cer- tain long-reaching contacts. The advent and wide- spread use of the automobile has made travel to dis- tant points not only a possibility but a delightful realization, wherever adeqquate arterial highways permit. As a consequence, we see everywhere cars from the most distant states with their pleasure-seek- ing occupants and not a few of these distant travel- ers are farm families, More and more frequently farmers are resorting to distant lakes and forests and enjoying the inspiring scenery of some of our mountain parks and ocean vistas, and these larger contacts are of undoubted educational value to farm- ers, widening their vision and inspiring them with -- Bi- I -'EP-98 --legal
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THE MAROON AND GOLD Page19 f'?3Il a Ilx'?iQ Il a nc-5,35 a---- JUNIOR CLASS Standing, left to right-Carol Strahin, Burton Cass, Mary Johnson, Avis Garneld, Vivian Close, Howard Crider, James Hindman, Mildred Breese, Gladys Wilson, Waide Rensch, Lester Kunze. Sitting, left to right-Clarence McClurg, Carol Auld, Margery Thomas, Bessie Northrupp, Thelma Hillis, E1- Iner Burggraf. --mu aanwgaon - ,gh
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