Moreno Valley High School - Valhalla Yearbook (Sunnymead, CA)

 - Class of 1976

Page 159 of 304

 

Moreno Valley High School - Valhalla Yearbook (Sunnymead, CA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 159 of 304
Page 159 of 304



Moreno Valley High School - Valhalla Yearbook (Sunnymead, CA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 158
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Moreno Valley High School - Valhalla Yearbook (Sunnymead, CA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 160
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Page 159 text:

I ' •» 1 ' QUILL Manufacturer 95 South Second street, (Opposite i ip Mfrcliants CotTcf-Hoine, Pliilad.) M ANllFACTbRES ALI, KIN D OV qi ' lLLS, Dutch, English, German, and Opaque, raoK S2 60 TO 30S rziR looa SWA V AN 1) (UOW (JllLLa, Be ftiM ' j: ' • fei s cofiaUnlly on btild. fttHma- larioifr, firms, a llir|;c Alock of GRBNVILLB ' S CHKMICAI INK POWDEB, yftmnlti superior for imroediito producttun or Jel Block Ink. ALSO, Sf PKKIOR SEALING WAX. Wimnted to bu- frro ond nlick w«ll, of TOnoui colouro, li. I.I;Ut on I Dark lllur, LiEbt and Dark Gtteo, Yelloar, BiDwo. GoU, Boir, KInli, Orongr, kc. • CTi 7 .- ymtrii laton art: J TUrv- ' tBaoUe % iaU. Tht StiB5cmiir,m reftprrirnlly intiirni Ihf I ' nhlif, nit ihr CiliMM nt Wilmiii«|»n «nil r v.ri «tlr in p»rlinilor.ih«l (hrv hnvf ulthliolird »SI« » fnrilif piirpnw of r«rr iii ln» .M«il iiflMffn the arorf5»iiI plarc . »ml al»n for Ihf ronvnante of pae«fn r» aiiit h«; a?r -I ' ' ' I Iphvp Nrw.Caellp for Wilniin lon, f (try mnrnint fwiwfen « tuJ 1 nVlnfk, anil arrive al U- Brikton ' s Tavern, in lime for p«««»n ni lo lakr tlip H n ' tlock Sla e for I ' hilailclpliia. Tiir. Siaijt will orpa«inn,illy rcliirn lo Nrw-C»«llf in ihf fopf noon, when a •offirif nl nJmbfr of pa cni trn offpr. nml hurk In Wiliiiinjtim, tod leave lhtr« every day for Ne »-C ' a»lle afler the arrival of the PliilailelpliiaSi, ' ;;e9. PaMenjeni may rp»t a««npe J. Ihal lhi« eslabliohment will h rniieli ' «ff r anri more expeililioin Ihan any Iierelnfore es(abliiliei] bel»cen lliose Ixo Toxni ; litvinj (he best honci, and a rareful JOSEPH HmAt)RUR1T, r. «• Wilmington, n ' ilmin lon, } DJifJO MORRISOX, r. it.Mw-QatU. Drituare. INCORRUPTIBLE Porcelain Teeth » bscribcr rei- ttifurnn Uie putv i«t« Porccloun, or »ny MitLf r« .T7i ihc per»t»n ' m.iy dciu«, un m-KJcratt icf(t t. ' rh« •jjpfAvcJ Porcel.uit Tecih, whnh he minu- TtoCtttru of any stulilc lo cofrctpond «»iih Uie nftiur l ooci, •ill retain ihnc tm mit colour Tur tutv Icr-cth oitimc And ire no •Ifcoinj otcd by tcidj TboM »t by lnm will be kvkrrMiicd tu auf l, I ' td bm u tervicuAbte j Knjr ituag o be htnJ cin b« made. 0(tenJK(U OA ' he Tceib peHlinnod oo rcaMmabte Icrtia. PAMt ' EL CHAMBERLAIN, Demi !, No. 47 Nnrtb Ci htb, H t dour bttow Area t x 9U •pril to— If TTM. COTJPLAirr ' S LIVERY STABLES, Harmony Street, RINSING FROM THIRU TO FOl ' RTH. Between Clic»mit :md Wnlnui Slrnis. run l)l■;I.Plu KCHSI . ' , AMI ( AUHIAI.KS,. . IIAUmOIK? ' li.s -titOLK HOHSKS, ,(. TO BIKE. HORSES TAKEN IN AT tlVERV forthlHANDKERGHIEI: Composed of the most - fragrant and coslly ' trr3 extracts fiom flowers 41B Silver Watchcg • .■ iiiiil »iai i.ijiu.aeh. war- Jr roi ' i ! to ivn- t ' otvMllyi vrra, tltM aiMl c )t%vr or tho iimxi op I |»ovrd nMkO ' o, IW l-oi; ■ ' ' t« ' ' Hlt ' T ' . f ' ' 5 • ' •• •° I ' i.olF. llllO BtP»-l rni» • ' J f ii.ivi Ruip from S UO 111 J ' »ll Ji ' t-- A loriciy nrijufy i.-J-dirci aod ( i cl0PH:o and (;ili,8i kpr :1poiiii . TliiibUka, 4ic. e »ufwboli 01 risiu cM .I H « Olid no Ul«ral i rniii ftI ' VI i.f llie u ' (ui.d.oi..Ouf«Mii d«i J for 0.10 bf RfiUINiiOM.ollilo •ir.ro. l»o. W Uorkot nrrrt. WlwoirB H««i.nJ ond Tulid •lt .-u. ns duuc abeva DubwIwi u o , tovlA aU . ■ fo t -3« GLASS CUTTLNU FACTORY. ri HK aubaerilnr (till conlinutt tht ( Glaia Culluif buolBOoa, ib ajl ttf vari. oiai broucbea, and bai at hii olorf , t lo. 66 t(or(b J ' bird olrtei, rhilod i|ibia, a ? -ry oxIeutiTe aMPrtaeiil of all kiodo ii Olai , cut, plain ooJ iircoocdj raniitorc baoba, A;c of .all kiuda. — .Cnoolry ftlerchoolo anU jlbi ra ore rvqaralci) lo coll hod oianime ppc- Ki partbitiSK. oleotr aiiici will be mid oi ib tapcrl«r PaUnt Fir Proaf CoiBp««ill«M CHESTS. r| lir. kiitioellbtr hr coutionl • iid; oiid aninn|ifW4 Inrltoo- M o ' In ' bia on. lAr aioilo r»r ihiD loal in ii ' C cruiiiiio o laiit ' l dl-env ' - ' rjr l. nie proof oialpriala. Ho crtnuo ' ii-o to anoHufouunr iho ob.iT« o iicio i as l-rto price 00 iljf; coo k |iii «liaM4 la auif iiarief ib« Xiaixjti iiiair John scott. Ito t Lndfeotjepi. miMih of r«iiaayl«ajito nanb. A ' l nritpra ihAiifcfulljr r«eol oti and •«fti to any jiort rtf the l. ' aHr ikoie l«-l »- ' POWELL THORP ' S Sla e C- ' Canal I ' acket Boat Office,

Page 158 text:

WORKING FOR THE YANKEE DOLLAR A CA.KD. ' i HR li-ibllc«cl» ' B» It miwc.culcjr Inf.inMnllhM »«» JL lat(. .»» rlmc l 1 t »i« •nd tU«.»«.of «. u tf« crlp- u-.i.,u.»r cHiwUobiiliwJuu ' iM» ' o«ile piKt«, bf •PP ' J ' HS..uih Finn • » «. Hjlr rioib (n f» y ' li ' lr. Truth •ml Amtf ic o nana ' 4N. II. ni« fub«crtl «l ' » l(w« • N.i K Soulh f itlh ill ! • ri ' DK Iwiiw M.ikel. »•• • 0(v - : Uie tide .if IfM S huylWi H,.„ .ptil »-lf OLD liSTABLlSHillEr iT, OfPOSlTii GIRARiyS BASK. A GOOD awotiment ofHATSi ! No. SI t ouib U •irwl, which wilt fee lottl at f«ir priecf. ]]7 Tbuw kIio «I h • bit nr« f qM- li y or fft ' bioo wbairrrr, Aai«b d, eaa ' ba lecoiAmndalTd. jod ihogid lb« trticW KOI i.lme wh«n fiauhnj, ihcr« will ht no oblifHiM «• ih 1..11 n(ilii K »bo nwtf ' ' ' i ' - »pnl II ATS, WHOLESALK AND RETAIL, IVO. 41 South liiird Street, NEAR CONORKSS HALL. OHN C. OVER offor for iil«, HATS gf «»f f)r l««ri(«i », «( M- perivr qiislltirtf •U ' l cheap. J C D. pariJcQlarty ij ffitv« ib at otioa «i Iba publK In 111! Toor il»llar H«i , «rbi«h, fat iKauty. durabiliiy isd c1i |iHa«, araaot tania ! by aBT ieihe ci T- JOU - C DVEK t«; tcifully iofonrt bia frieodi aM tb public, Ikal bi h a« car l a lora ia bia liaa of baai n i tt ibe tbii t earned place, « bcr« ba luKuli to ttap cofitlaatif tt hand a jeo«fjI aiaorlttam of UATV. which ha Will aril at kut u (bay caa be pnrcKucd la Ik ciiy. march K-0ai« p ML maw • ■Speeis%fop€hii(1r?eri- ima fgr tbe DISTSUSID Mii BILM lor Ifer mwm a inti In PERRY DAVISS VEGETABLE PAIN KILLER. afnnnfacnitad by PERRT DA Via «i •OH, Mo 7 inaa axajwr. raovioMic »■ t Imagine buying that acre of land you havt spotted for $1.25! Or, even at the highei price of $10. Those are the prices offered to our founding fathers to encourage set- tlement of the wilderness areas of thi nation. A stage wasn ' t the most comfortable wav to go, but you could get from city to citv for as little as $3 — at the amazing pace ot six miles per hour. Compare todays wages with a 12-hour day in the early ISOO ' s. A man earned 50c a day. Of course his dollar bought a littU more than today ' s. Butter in 1826 was about 5it lb. in the Midwest; eggs, 3C doz corn oc bu., wheat, 25c bu.; and a co s could be bought for $5 . With travel becoming the American tradi tion, you could choose train, wagon horseback or the water. A canal ride, witli bed and board included, averaged 3 or 4c per mile. And when you reached your des tination, you could sit down to a 5, or even 10 course meal for 25£. (Ladies 20e. in consideration of appetite.) Farmers in the early 1800 ' s could own the famous McCormick Reaper for a mere $100. But the Civil War increased prices as the machine became the first item farmers could buy on time payments for the sum of $1,500. A good suit of clothes then might cost $1.95 and ladies waists (blouses) were marketed for 49c to $3.50 with a whole dress pattern priced at ISC. Cookstoves, quality-satisfaction guaran- teed, could cost you $29.25 at $4 per month and a dandy heating stove could set you back as much as $5.73 and up. The first electric refrigerator cost $900 — which might be enough to make you faint on your 1907 fainting couch that had cost a mere $7.85. Your new baby travelled in the height of fashion in a wicker sleeping coach (stroll- er) for the sum of $12.04. If you had $1,500 in 1903 you could show off in one of the first automobiles. , h. those were the days. Some of the cur- rent prices are reminiscent of those days, but at frontier prices, which were a whole different story Hardy pioneers had to pav $2 a pound for sugar, too. And the same for a pound of coffee or pepper. Those items were only 15c per pound back in civ- ilized St. Louis. Flour was marked up 100 times for sale to the frontiersmen and dur ing the famous Cold Rush, that precious commoditv went for $400 a barrel COTTOJT. 7ftr r [.t,iC 11 )■■,! l..i.J»J In mi Wig Y«)|i ' W Bif . 9 IruiK .New IJikaiai. Fih lalaJaBi iBK AD. MS ' PATEVTSWEI.l.KO llcaiii Viii(ll:iN« nr«l!»lc.-nl«- riiHt bove Bodalaadi tr« put ln(«ihec wilb- 1. • ' Ill a. r« t. tad by Biea . nl ib Wi»dlji« a4 baell.a !lcam, Ibt ackia( ia llfpt erawaiac aad ctaa- lie ai 111 linita .mh ilie lat«l pn.« »l« Iroubla, «bi(h K imp ' .BiUlt In obr n • n Ibnaa naJ. aay rthrr war. Pun cu ' ltd H.i ' Malra»f«» cnntlaai ' y nn haao. ' HDSKiN 1-PKINO SE T RDCKINU CH.MH :, V»n.ii », Traaiptrc. ' l tad IrJra Hlmda. Abn, agrfr rarifiy of ornan bU and ma ' ri ! lor iairrior itfyr Una. tonu ullj on baud an ' l UplOltt ry Wn«» «if r»«fT Jrarrl|.ii.,uci cbUJ wilb aaai. at. i-iBCIaalily tad do paUb.br ' i HANCOCK Co S. W. »ortief nf Tbi i» and WalKumirrT, P. S J II. la C «fal»fnl I ' M- pa l Utoura, ili ' liftp . by cna«l«f l alurjl. !! to baaiatta, an.H a drtifr - pieata, by krtpin ih« iielwil a.l.cln 10 iheif lii.f, 1 n ' ifa.o fitt-irr i.hlrnnate apti! gl — W 111 Pliiladdpinu Museum, IN rilK 1 I ' I ' KK I ' MII ' UI- lilt ARCADE, CHESNDT HTREET, (ABOVE SIXTH.) Tkii MuMwm i« the e b( our »b...M;.fl. pintt of Anlii) ' . t tHl|( •t (he Ihiii ' ' ■■ on Ut« part i ( ( ' i- iSlwijpiicnikm f ' nt .n Ihf I ' mM a( tKr inott di l r ] » ih«tf ■- trtidct pitted m th« MvKun tll roil NBW TOIUL I i:ft V •crMnno atkxi 4 I ■■rnrdcd.iOM — ft M ill ihr ktail. vbtncli it c r- .M.Iiit.NKW YfiltK InREk: l(lt. ' ■{Mt-iidMl hi CujtrH Ihootas Gibson, JfiuuUtcr, KMCrx.TIIM.I.V infotiiiihiafrvLad.ai ii,a i iM« inf .iKral. lUai brtJii.i oa IM II. ..1.. and ill..;! r|M«.l,liii. la ail lo hraiv chra al N . I U .S-. ' ' I li d an-.i. wKrra tMba-c a«»r ii band ll ilraai«. nr vail t.bi •l, ' Mtip1i ' ii,a. PairMi ll.iiii ' ' « PtAnh Kcl. Ill « III liu ' ii l. ' lii|li CoaJ n ' llH- ' ' -t tun- ririiri Wjii-f Ll«»«la, Htll.t. Ii ' l-.tji-iw « UaiiK. LoiJ aud l oo I ' lpia, Rriuiia f« llUachms i-l all .. ' !■ ' ' iii - l •i an i t. Mrn »li d al iba tH.. .;iH.ri l. »d or illUvj. ' .•loOi. ' la ' ii, 1 in -l Ycniti.in Itlind WarrhousCy M I ivf ! Of ruk-«LT mn tr o D •rwiiTt. IMU: «iib- ribcr rr p i fully iiirMitMii ih« cill I i.r ' nl l ' Utl3d |-liln •••ii • ri.oiy thil rir hkixontisniljr tin hitiij • •») ••It- n»lvr M- t.liitTiit 4 ( 4 iil(i4 It tm- •» UhmJa. ftf J»«n vtn |.«ifrn . •«» « . •■. l c» ' 1 ' tr- i.cw «. ,. .1 m ' tft will, h » t » »« .»«tartlM.I ' t«l «l tri.M) t ■■ • .-hi.»



Page 160 text:

THEY MADE THEIR MARK Men and women who helped shape America ' s history THOMAS PAINE, a banktupl Quaker corsetmaket. some- Iitne leacher. preacher and grocer wrote the most bril- liant pamphlel of the American Revolution. His words in Common Sense rettiected longings and aspirations that have remained part o( American culture to Ihis day Chief Justice JOHN MARSHALL established lundamental principles of American constitutional taw He is noted (or his precedental declaration of a Congressional act as unconstitutional He served through five administra- tions, from 1801 183S DANIEL WEBSTER ctiose law as a career and went on to become well-known in the courts and m politics. He was twice Secretary of State witli an ey e always to the Presi- dency which eluded him. DOROTHEA DIX worked her entire adult life tor reloim ot the eiistmg penal and mental institutions m the mid- 1800 ' s The first state hospital m the nation at Trenton, New Jersey was a direct result of her efforts The creator of the Cherokee alphabet, SEQUOYAH, wa an artist, writer and silversmith He used a simple 1821 English primer to compose the characters The famous redwood trees ot the Pacific coast bear his name Born a slave in lUlaryland. FREDERICK DOUGLASS taught himself to read and write secretly and. at 21, escaped to freedom He was an ardent abolitionist campaigning successfully lor Negro suffrage and civil rights The New Colossus, a sonnet composed by EMMA LAZ- ARUS in 1883 IS inscriljed on a bronze tablet at the base of the Statue of Liberty She organized relief for Jews and helped fugitives from the Czar s ghettos lo establish homes in America. AMELIA JENKS BLOOMER, best known lor a mode ot dress she adopted dunng her campaign for equal rights tor women Tnough ridiculed until she gave up the cos- tume, the term ' bloomer ' came to symbolize woman ' s bid for individual lieedom ABRAHAM LINCOLN epitomized the American dream of a humble young man ascending lo the highest office of the land He was superbly skilled at analyzing complei is sues and translating them into meaningful words for Ihe public. He was devoted to the preservation of the Union HARRIET BEECHfR SIOWE wrote Uncle Toms Cabin m an effort to make Ihe whole nation realize Ihe inhumani- ty of slavery Her book resulted in one ot the most popu- lar and controversial plays on Ihe American stage The Civil War was kindled by this work HORACE GREELEY ' S jdmonilion to Go West young man ' was a rallying cry of the pioneers of America He was founder and editor ot the New York Tribune He was t)esl known for his philosophy of social reform and his unsuccessful bid for the Presidency m IB ? JOSEPH PUIIULR ».!■. thf tirsi |OU .iUst to rejth 3 liu ly massive audience His New York World newspjper was the symbol ol yellow lournalism with its sensational ism aimed at the common man

Suggestions in the Moreno Valley High School - Valhalla Yearbook (Sunnymead, CA) collection:

Moreno Valley High School - Valhalla Yearbook (Sunnymead, CA) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

1986

Moreno Valley High School - Valhalla Yearbook (Sunnymead, CA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 138

1976, pg 138

Moreno Valley High School - Valhalla Yearbook (Sunnymead, CA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 177

1976, pg 177

Moreno Valley High School - Valhalla Yearbook (Sunnymead, CA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 128

1976, pg 128

Moreno Valley High School - Valhalla Yearbook (Sunnymead, CA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 13

1976, pg 13

Moreno Valley High School - Valhalla Yearbook (Sunnymead, CA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 179

1976, pg 179


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