Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA)

 - Class of 1936

Page 21 of 208

 

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 21 of 208
Page 21 of 208



Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 20
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Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 22
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110 Q ffl 11 W1 x S Q 1111 f 110111 1 x 5 x E E Q s E x Sxxxxxxwxxmxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxmxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxmxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxmxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx x s xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxg S for? Now, as like as not, l'll not get to sleep again tonight. 5 Well, if this ain't good, I'm blessed! cried the watchman. R The off-watch were just turning in, and they let out a brutal laugh and E yelled, Hello, watchman! Ain't the new cub turned out yet? He's delicate. 3 likely. Give him some sugar in a rag and send for the chambermaid to sing Q 2 'Rock-a-by-baby' to him. X S As his education went on, Mr. Bixby, the pilot, decided to give Mark : 3 a test. On this particular day, they were in the lower river, and the water 5 S had almost reached the tops of the banks: Twain himself said if anyone S . . . . . . 4 X 5 would have questioned his ability to run any crossing between Cairo and x E New Orleans without help or instruction, he would have been irrepar- g 1 ably hurt. : E Mr. Bixby said, I am going below a while. l suppose you know the 5 A ., S Q next crossing? 3 3 . 3 This was almost an affront as the crossin was about the plainest X 9 S crossing in the river. X X X S Know how to run it? Why, I can run it with my eyes shut. 5 5 .. . . . H , l How much water is there in it? 5 Q 5 3 Well, that is an odd question. I couldn't get bottom with a church 3 steeple. if E You think so: do you? W Q The very sound shook Mark's confidence, and he began to imagine all 5 5 sorts of dangers confronting him. Unknown to him, Mr. Bixby sent word to the leadsman to give false reading of the depth of the water and word to 5 Q 3 the captain to appear below the deck while he himself hid behind the smoke- I r x R 5 stack and observed Mark's reaction. 3 As they approached the crossing, the captain looked up, and in an uneasy Q voice asked for the pilot and told him. He then went below and did the busi- 3 X ness for him'-Mark Twain. Mark's imagination constructed dangers which x , Q X Q multiplied till he seized the bell and then dropped it again shamefully. Q Q. 5 Deep four, cried the leadsman. : E Deep four in a bottomless crossing! Terror seized his breath. fx? 5 u . rv 3 SQ Q Mark three! Mark three! Quarter-less three! Half twain! Q N V X 11 Quarter-less-twain! Nine-and-a-half! The boat was drawing nine feet. Oh, Ben, if you love me, back her! Quick Ben! Oh, back the immortal is 3 soul of her! cried Twain to the engineer in great fear. kgs The door closed gently, and Twain looked around and saw Mr. Bixby 5 .....,,,, , Nxxk standing there with a smile. The audience that had gathered R S Xwxiyxxfsmi Xsxxxxxg on the hurricane deck sent up a thundergust of humiliating laughter. Thus did Mark Twain attain his pilot's license. E X sx 5 X Q +, x Matthew Sheedy Q xx S Q Qgx5xycXg X XX .cftwcwlg S Qg XNg Rxxxxxxxxx x x xxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx x xx xmxx xxw ZW z4j2 MZ' Mi? 59 26 27 ff af ef x x Q



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xx x X X xxx x x xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxQQxxxxQxxxxxxxxxQxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxQxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx X N NNNNNNNKNNNXE N x x X A REVIEW OF UROUGHING IT 1 10111 Q ,X XQ x Q 11 1 111 111 11111111 1 11 1 1 0 1 11 11 11111111 11111 1 1111 11 11111111d10W0n01W1WM11 1 1 101 111 M111 X N Qlx X51 :QQ Qs' Q! Q ik 111111111111111111110111 QQ Q : xx Q: Q QQ QQ , 1.,.X. QQ Q STE Q 4111 X QX X SX Q X X N gxxig yfhll 7 f 1 ,114 4 1 I 4 4 f 5 Z 4 I ? 7 1 4 Z 7 A In this, his first important work, we find Mark Twain a young man in Missouri. His brother was appointed territorial secretary of Nevada in 1861. At this point, the story begins because Mark is taken along as a private secretary. Mark describes fully the overland route of that day. In that he gives in detail an account of life in the West of that day, the book is important to us of the present day in helping us to reconstruct in our minds an accurate picture of the times. Mark and his brother set out in a stagecoach at St. Ioseph, Mo. En- route, they met Slade, who was probably the most picturesque man of the early West. Slade had the reputation of being a killer. The stage arrived at Salt Lake City after nine days of constant travel- ing. They had occasion to meet important Mormons, but they failed to ar- range a meeting with the Mormon leader, Brigham Young. After two days, the party set off again. A hundred miles from Salt Lake, they came upon the first alkali desert. The desert was sixty-eight miles across and the travellers suffered all of the way. On the other side of the desert, they saw what Mark calls the wretch- edest type of mankind he has ever seen, the Goshoot Indians. These In- dians are of the same order as the Bushman of Africa and Australia. They passed the highest mountain peaks they had ever seen, and on the nineteenth day they crossed the Great American Desert--forty miles of bottomless sand. Every new passenger they picked up on the far side of the desert wanted to tell them a humorous anecdote. The reason they didn't appreciate the stories was that the stories were all the same. Finally it grew so tiresome that Mark asked one newcomer not to tell it, and the strain from keeping it to himself was so great that he died. On the twentieth day, they arrived at Carson City. Mark's iob was a sinecure without work or pay, and so Mark started out to amuse himself. He and other idle men went about the land exploring. With three other persons. he went silver prospecting. Mark Twain never struck it rich in mining. Once he came within twenty-four hours of being rich. He and two others claimed a blind lead, a vein of silver that does not crop out to surface. They lost the claim because they failed to do the work upon it required by the law. The vein was worth more than a million dollars, but Mark lost out. Soon afterwards he was offered a position as citv editor of the Enterprise at twenty-five dollars a week. This work was paying him more in side earninns and in gratuitous feet or shares of mining stock than he had made up to 3 Q that time. City Virginia Q 3 X Q Rx . X ANQQQQNW Q 5 QgxwxQQiQgg QQ X Q Q N N XXXQ YQ::sQQQQQQQQQ? S 'x -- --g t. .. ,. .. .. ,AX 1, ,..-x,.. .Q -- Q Q Q Q Q Q E Q Q Q Q Q E S Q Q Q Q Q E Q Q Q Q Q Q x Q Q Q Q x Q Q Q Q E Q Q Q Q Q Q Q 5 Q Q Q Q E Q Q Q Q Q x Q Q Q x Q Q Q Q N Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q S Q Q Q E z Q Q Q QQQQQQQQQQQ xxx N NXNN QSMwNwQ MQQ w SQQwNQQQQQ QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQWQ....QQ.. ........QQ Q ....,.................... . ..... Q.. .Q.. ,Q.. . Q . ..Q.Q Q.. ....,. . .... ..QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ-QQQQQQQQQQQ,QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ.QQQQQQQQQQQQ-QQQQQQQQQQQQ.QQQQQQQQQ..QQQQ.QQ.QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ .... .QQQ-.QQQQQQQQQQ,QQQQ-QQQQQQQQQQQQQQ--QQN

Suggestions in the Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) collection:

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939


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