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Show E. S. A. NOTES "THE SENIOR TWELVE" Great men are not born great, but ail have, early in life, selected a goal of high and great degree, and by toil and diligence they have attained their riames and fame. This being the case the future of the "Promising Senior Twelve" is great indeed! For with my prophetic eyes I see Mr. Lyman S. Larsen seated in the modern chemical (department of the coming Emery Sugar Factory. Out in the fields I see Mr. Harvey M. Mills advising and directing the farmers as they sow and harvest those sweet sugar beets. Over in Emerv I see Mr. Howard Jensen seated in the office of his great department. Up in Orangeville I see Mr. Guy Snow seated in the office of his modern drur store. In the modern school at Orangeville I see Messrs. Elbert S. Cox and Lorin Fulmer as they direct the young and rising ris-ing generation along the slowing path of knowledge. Over at Ferron I see Mr. Gunnar Soderquist directing the farmers in scientific animal husbandry. In Orangeville I see Mr. Leslie Crawford Craw-ford as president of the coming San-pete-Emerv Auto line. In the chemical laboratory of the smelters to be located near Castle Dale, I see Mr. Floyd Day. I can see Ira Mace as representative of this district. In his law office I see Mr. John Arnold reading the law to those that are not able to settle their quarrels. Down in the Emery County hospital I see Mr. Denver Oviatt guiding the surgical knife. This in part is the future of the Senior "Twelve." |