Central Collegiate Institute - Analecta Yearbook (Calgary, Alberta Canada)

 - Class of 1927

Page 24 of 122

 

Central Collegiate Institute - Analecta Yearbook (Calgary, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 24 of 122
Page 24 of 122



Central Collegiate Institute - Analecta Yearbook (Calgary, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 23
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Central Collegiate Institute - Analecta Yearbook (Calgary, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 25
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Page 24 text:

24 The Analecta XIB —Continued Nancy Hamilton—Where’d you get those eyes? Irene Twidale—I only think of noble men. Marion Ingham—Love thy neighbours as thyself. Harold Grevett—Heaven helps those who help themselves. Malcolm Peck—He is one of those unfortunate individuals who are always in trouble. Jack Langston—Lord God of Hosts is with me not, For I’ve forgot! For I’ve forgot! Parker Harris—Blessed is he who expected detentions for he will not be disappointed. Ronald Harris—A February face, so full of frost, of storm, of cloudiness. Keith Monroe—He hath a heart as sound as a bell, and his tongue is the clapper thereof. Elmer Herring—A lass so neat with smile so sweet, Has won his right good will. William Hillocks—Weep not for me my classmates dear, I am not dead, but sleeping here. Willis Gross—One of his many good qualities that comes to my mind is his modesty. Erith Smith—If she be not fair to me, what care I how fair she be. Genivieve Tigh—-Who chooseth me shall get as much as he deserves. Margaret McDermid—Her blue eyes sought the west afar, for lovers love the western star. Thomas Mckee—Never had master a more humble, more docile pupil. Bernice Venine—What ever with the past has gone, the best is ever yet to come. GOING THROUGH XIC Nellie Brielsmen—With happy smiles and merry face she chases gloom from every place. Patricia Parker—And still our wonder grew—that one small head could carry all she knew. Vernona Potts—Her hair is yellow; Her eyes are blue; At doing her lessons she always is true. Audrey Anderson—Good things come done up in small parcels. Hails from Manitoba. Gee, I think I’ll move there!!! Hilda Eddy—Pretty, with eyes that bewitch. But the day is yet to come when she is not tired. Miss Rabideau—Believes that silence is golden and rarely breaks the spell. Annalee Crane—Always has a smile for everyone and you never see her temper ruffled. Has a brother in same room so her actions are limited. Ella Stuart-—She has one supreme virtue—quietness. Lillian Wallace—If silence is golden she must be a pauper. But she’s a snappy kid. Keeps all the boys going—especially Mannix. Miss Seville—Extremely proud of her name. Ambition—learn to dance. Flora McTavish—To know her is to love her—both for her personality and beauty. Thelma Fox—Her only purpose in school is to answer the door, but she’s a charming maid with a winning smile. Gladys Ross—I chatter, chatter as I go. Francis Hamlin—A silent stillness reigns supreme. Dorothy Small—Maiden with the big brown eyes, like the dusk of evening skies. Agnes King—A noble heart that harbours virtuous thoughts.

Page 23 text:

The Analecta 23 XIA —Continued R. Monilaws—He really looks like Mr. Churchill with these tortoise-shell glasses. Sherry Hayden—Off again, on again, gone again!—a dumb customer. Arthur Buckley—A talented French-horner, but makes too much noise for his size. IMPOSSIBILITIES IN XIA No one talking between bells. Mr. Dunlop not asking Miss Carscallen, Miss Ford, Miss McAlpin and Bray a question during an entire period. Miss Evans present for a week. Cole not casting languishing glances on Miss Anderson and Miss Eddy during the French spare. Everyone having 25 marks on Miss Elliott’s famous tests. Buckley on time once. Hayden here for the rest of the term. XIB Mr. Scott—Beware the fury of a patient man. Jack McKenzie—If he be not in love with some woman, there is no be¬ lieving old signs. Lois Morris—The world to me is like a lasting storm. Anna Liner—Let gentleness my strong enforcement be. Jack Chaiken—-None but the brave deserve the fair. Gordon Buchanan—Nature has framed strange fellows in her time. Clarence Busch— Say, sheik, who’s your Sheba? Percy Dickeson—He seems content wi;h life. John Grodeland—He is a man of mirth, and all the girls shall follow him. Betty Epstein—-Oft in the stilly night, ere slumber’s chain hath bound her, we find her at her desk, her homework spread around her. Marjorie Aikenhead—Turn away thine eyes, lest they behold vanity. Lavinia Begg—Oh what may lass within her hide, tho’ angel on the outward side. Florence Pallesen—-Never look obstinate, sulky, or glum. Wait till you’re married, my dear. Joyce Abbis—A reader of the palm is she—will tell you what your lot will be. Betty Churgin—What is man, that thou art mindful of him? Walter Davidson—-To see the child so very bright—It was a pure delight. Grace Doherty—She is rarely heard to speak. Fearl Gourley—Yes, sir, she’s my baby. Beatrice Grant—She tells you flatly what her mind is. Anna Keith—-Certainly a woman’s actions run before her thoughts. Sarah Campbell—Blessed are the lates, for they shall inherit detentions. Marjorie Kells—A successful inventor of perpetual motion (of the tongue). Layton Gardner—He isn’t a marrying man, my dears, He is made on a different plan. Lillian Tupper—We believe she is seriously thinking of becoming a gardner, we don’t know how much there is in it. Alberta Chronkhite—Not a word will she disclose, not a word of all she knows. Margaret Carson—What statue is she of? Just as high as my heart.



Page 25 text:

The Analecta 25 XIC -Continued Ruth Walsh—Another girl who has a brother in the same room but it doesn’t seem to limit her actions. Yet at duty’s call she is fair and unflinching. Grammar genius. Georgina Dunlop—And always do our hearts with pleasure dance, when we thinkT of thy sunny countenance. Phyllis Steel—She certainly is not fragile. Marion Leak—Very quiet, but likable. lone Williams—Imported from XIA so is rapidlv improving in knowledge. Margaret Butler—Can be described as calm, tall and impressive. Alfreda Berquist—If to her share some female errors fall, look on her face and you’ll forgive them all. Archie Aiken—Is our rugby star of whom we’re very proud. Gordon Lewis—If hot air was electricity he would be a power house. He is luminous for notes from several girls in XIC. Stuart Tonley—A student concise and consistent, quiet and accommodating —a regular fellow. Clayton Crane—Says little, but says it often. Freeman—Fills his place in the class as no one else could. We would only be 41 without him. Jimmy Rae—A nice little guy—laughs at every teacher’s joke whether he sees it or not. Jack Martin—Seldom heard from but present just the same. Murry—Quiet but obliging. Robe—Occupies a back seat and certainly makes use of all the opportunities. Barker—Chief pastime—arguing with the teachers. Moore—The time is yet to come when he gets to school on time. Mannix-—Sheik of XIC. Ambition—to be popular with the girls. Dan—Weep not, my school mates, dear, I am not dead—just sleeping here. Stiernaught—Our “petit eleve Francais” delights in teasing the girls some¬ times. Baker-—Does my “Scotch” confuse you? The only clever boy in the room—with the exception of the rest. WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF— Gladys Ross and Nellie Brielsman didn’t talk in Latin period? Edith Seville won the half mile dash? Ruth Walsh did not get in an argument with Mr. Dunlop in grammar period? Audrey Anderson received less than 10 notes per period? Agnes King couldn’t blush? Dorothy Small could answer a question? Pearl Rabidau stopped grinning? Gordon Lewis took the same girl home from a rugby game twice? Pat Parker played hooky? Jimmy Rae knew his latin? Phyllis Steel ran? —XIC.

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