Hundreds of references may be given to government and public buildings and private dwellings which have been most satisfactorily covered with roof tiles of this company for the last sixteen years, whatever investigation I have invited. The audience must continue to eat while the group leaves the hall, and then the film Babe ck Hall where the Cla Ivy will be planted.
It behooves us then to investigate the causes and conditions that exist, and as a result of our investigation bring freedom to men who are slaves to avarice and poverty of their own accord. Preident oo evelt has perhaps best expressed the duty of each in the following: '' The true Christian is the true citizen, high in purpose, re olut in endeavor ready for heroic actions. Tall men crowned with sun, who live above the fog in public duty and in private thought."
Cbtrd Honor Oration
There is the simplest cell which possesses within itself all the forces essential to its nourishment and reproduction; there are all the different stages of tissue and organ differentiation; there is man with a highly differentiated physical organism, a detailed nervous system. In all these forms the preservation of desirable qualities and the adaptation to the environment are so perfect that we are compelled to pay respect to the ruling power of a universe wonderfully organized. It has been well said: “Study the laws of nature, conform to them, work in harmony with them, and work becomes a prayer and a thanksgiving, a worship of the universal wisdom and a true obedience to the universal law.”
The true basis of morality is utility; that is, the adjustment of our activities to the promotion of the general welfare and happiness, the attempt to govern our lives in such a way that we can do so. The manual laborer may wake up in the morning and see his work being done by a machine; the millionaire can wake up and find the foundation upon which his happiness is built. Only the power of readjustment, of adaptability, will ensure a share in the possibilities hidden in the future.
A well-discharged responsibility means an effort easily adapted to the goal set, energy well spent, and a willingness to cheerfully comply with uJts. The measure of success will vary according to environment and ideals, but the greatest success is in so far as there is a rich heritage of low work and comes to each alik as a reward for a duty well done. for the burden of bearing patiently, for love and mercy towards all, for faith in man and God. Don't say the days are hard, - who's to blame? - And fold your hands and confess - Oh, shame.
Ualtdlctory
We have spent four important years of our lives receiving the education which forms a large part of it. For this education we are grateful to our highly honored president and to the faithful, serious members of the f cult. As a classmate, our minds today are under the spell of two great forces: memory and jump.
In memory we look back on the years that have now passed and which have given us experiences that no other life than that of a student can live. We must live in a world where we can be sure that our path will one day be crossed by shadow. The responsibilities and opportunities of these four years have passed away forever, but the future is a matter of honor or shame.
34; Today, as far as we know, is the occasion and occasion of our lives. On what we do or say today may depend the success and completeness of our entire life struggle. It is therefore up to us to use every moment of today as if our eternity depends on his words and actions.
We, the classmates of 1905, can wish for nothing higher and happier than this throughout our lives.
So our program, if you can call it that, was not made with the idea of entertainment. By this we do not mean that it is only about us, on the contrary, we warmly welcome you who came to our last meeting. We heartily hope that your trouble will be repaid, and if our exercises ar.
But again, we ask you not to look at this meeting as an exhibition of what we can do, as a meeting that will somehow enlighten our minds obsessed with the thought of leaving our Alma Mater. Maybe we left undone those things we should have done, maybe we did those things we shouldn't have done. But the classmen of 1905 know and appreciate this fact that "the heights of the classes which they attained and held were not attained by a sudden flight, but they, while their comrades, galloped upward through the night.
To you, classmates, I would like to express my heartfelt thanks for your cooperation in all the work in the class. I reassure you of the spirit of unity without which whatever success the class of 1905 may have achieved would have been impossible.
Clearly the content of the 0 overall idea h b n small application in your story. One is that just v rnments rest on the consent of the o-above; the other in that the government exists for the b nefit of the 0 ov rn d. Our patriot-fathers were considered to be in England merely because she managed her colonial affairs solely for the benefit of her self and not for the benefit of the governed, America.
The only question is who can I best use to handle the concept of law if I am unable. To be sure, remain of the opinion that the words of the venerated Wa hington in Hello Farewell Addre forever forbid our intermingling in international affairs. The father of his country might rightly express contempt for the entanglement of alliances in the shameful iatriau.
But modern-day diplomacy is a very different matter, and steam and electricity have combined to bring the nations of the world closer together than the colonies were together at that time. Stop worshiping the parenthetical phrase in the Declaration of Independence, which says that just governments rest on the consent of those who are governed and who exercise power. Abandon the stay-at-home policies of the eighteenth century and rise with our eyes wide open and our faces turned toward the future.
Our whole history appears to be a last effort of Divine Providence on behalf of the human race, and any literal slavish following of precedent is not for those who would at this time guide the destiny of this people.” Ern t Ralph Brown.
We carefully push our boat off the shore, take short and doubtful strokes through High School, gather strength and confidence as we go through college, gradually learning our strength and our needs as we progress. Now that we are nearing the end of our college course, we pause with our oars raised to see how far we have come and to catch our breath before beginning the longer trek to our goal. Looking back over our course we can see little twists and turns where we made mistakes, but despite that we made progress.
Side by side during the four years of our college course we have drawn each other. We have had opportunities, for studies, for culture, and for all the amenities of life, which our father never had, and which are the only privilege to be enjoyed in our generation. For four years we have been allowed to look at life from the outside We have been allowed to study our need, the need of the human race, and our duty to ourselves and to the race.
Tomorrow our paths will begin to diverge; our aims and our duties will lie in different directions, and we cannot go together. With pleasure we look forward to the work that lies before us; with regret we say goodbye to our friend and our college. They will mean as much or as little in proportion as your college courses mean. Take them, and with them the will and best wishes of the class of 1905.
May you preserve them, as we have endeavored to do, to the honor and glory of ur Alma Mater.
Rlfrltdlan .. Jlllt9ban1an Session
Oropblltan £ ommenc~ment Session
The changes in the printing day are a revolution in duetional id al from the perspective of biology and ociology. Education in psychology and physiology consists of the complete adaptation of man to his physical, intellectual and sensory environment. Note: Jaan's seemingly rapid rise to the front rank of world leaders over the past half-century. He suggested that there was much in her past history that was responsible for this and that we now call her the New Jaan because we see her in a new light. He has also brought about many far-reaching changes of a military, political and commercial nature as a result of the HR position.
Jllfred Jlcadtmv
Jlnn ual eonctrt
Jllumnt Dav
Prtshl¢nt' s Rec~ption
RED FOX
JUNE
OUTING
The Outdoor Mag azine of Human Interest
1300KS of all
Sdtntific Jlmtrican
B ~Ll\iAR
Pblladtlpb la, Pa
Commencement Invitations
Medical Department
Benneboff
GENERAL
AGE T FOR
SUMJHER
E M P LOYMENT
FO~E SIGHT
EgE SIGHT
One Hundred Dollars
EQUITABLE POLICIES
HOWARD'S SHOP,
SATISFIED PATRONS
Alfred
Steam
Laundry
Sta tion¢ry
Your
CENTURY
Metropolitan Life Insurance
Compan y
Teachers'
HARLAN P. FRENCH,
COTRELL & LEONARD
Caps, Cowns and Hoods