Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1937

Page 7 of 148

 

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 7 of 148
Page 7 of 148



Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 6
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Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 8
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Page 7 text:

98 Form IC Tumcss WE XVOULD LIKE T0 KNow: l. How did Miss VVells happen to fall in the creek on the day of the Physiography Examination? 2. VVhere do Miss Stocker and Miss Symonds get all the gum? CThis question by special request of Mr. Collingwoodj 3. VVho is the girl in green Pogue is always seen with? 4. XVhy are MeVVilliams' feet so sore after eoming out of Literature Period? S. Vi'liere did Miss Stenson get her in- formation that Garnet and Gray was the school motto? 6. XYhy doesn't Tully walk in from the country 9 7. just how do you pronounce Schiarizza? S. Vl'lio is the gentleman seen at the show with Miss Smith? 9. XN'hy did Red XK'illiamson lose interest in a certain young lady? ltl. Who's the baby of our class? I THE EeHoEs Comnzerctal PUPILSY NABIES Messrs.: Keith Smyth, John O'Brien, XV:-1lter lvlurphy, Art Vilinslow, Charlie Willis, Jack Ryan, Andrew Price, Graham Strick- land, Calvin Nichols, Ralph Tully, Bill Mil- lar, jim Shadgett, Milcolm Packenham, Edward Patterson, Roly MeXVilliams, Walter Packer, Red VVilliamson, joe Roehetta, Norman Sargeant, Bob Pogue, Stewart Loekington. Misses: Leona Slite, Sylvia Temm, Cathe- rine VVhite, Ruby Scott, Goldie Tully, Grace Schiarizza, Dorothy Vl'hite, Marion VVhite, Madeline Vifheatley, Moira VVhal0n, Made- lene Stark, Helen VVL-ston, Barbara Staples, Marjorie Yates, Dorothy Symonds, Jean Sehollard, Doris Savigny, Roana Wickenden, Doris VVithers, Maxine VVells, Betty Sayer, Norma Stenson. Form 111 lfoztcvflzofd drtx MERRY group indeed are we J. The girls of H. A. III Carefree and happy one and all As we trip gaily down the hall. Bernice goes tirst so broad and tall, Hiding Andry like a high brick wall, Betty comes next with rapid pace lillen steps in so meek and mild, It makes the others seem quite wild, Then smiling jean with hair a name To call her wild, would be a shame. Isabel is often late, She gets there at any rate, Fair Gladys last with Marion's two, Class is all in, we say Adieu. She may be training for a marathon mee. MARtoN RICAADABIS l M HOUSEHOLD ARTS GRADUATING CLASS BACK RHXY: li Theyton, M McAdams. H Vandervoort G McFarlane. -I Blewett, ll. Yandetvoort FRONT RUXY' RI. Hail. D Blade, E Revay, J Hzmbidge

Page 6 text:

THE ECHOES Jean Hopkins Eleanor Craig Evelyn Gardner Alberta Ellis Marjorie Hanrahan 97 Curlytop Happy Days are Here Again Bend Down, Sister That's Life, I Guess Don't Blame Me Irene Forsythe When I Grow Up Dorothy Dolan I Was Saying to the Moon Margaret Henry There's Something in the Air Mary Jamieson Dorothy Lord Norma Collins Viola Hobson Eleanor Brown Peggy Leonard Mary Conlin Aileen Brisco Clarabel Kelly It's the IYIH Painting the Town Red Gypsy in Me Little Dutch Girl Baby, Take a Bow Rural Rhythm From Coast to Coast Sweet and Slow Don't Say a Word Fare Thee Well, Clarabel A. GALLAGHER Form IB Commercial . HAT great ocean liner, One Bee, swings away from the dock. If you hurry you can come aboard with me and go on the trip. We stroll along and are met by Captain Jim Clancy who directs us to the dining saloon. As we near the saloon there is a crash of dishes. A door opens and out run Anna McLean, Ethel O'T0ole, Mary Pepe, Maureen Perdue and Audrey Rose. In the doorway we see Harold Moore, the cook, standing. I'm sorry, Captain Jim, he says, but these girls are always taking the pies I bake. At one end of the dining saloon we see a full orchestra, John Fife, Wallace Agnew, Ervine Fraser and James Buchan are all beating one bass drum. Helen Sim- mons, Clare Saunders, Marion Lyons and Dave Chamberlain are all playing trombones, And there is Roy Fairbairn peeking from behind that base violin. Two waiters usher ns to our table. They are Bob Doris and Carl Guerin. Now enters First Mate J. Jopling, B. A. A. representative. Carrying his Junior Field Day Championship is Ken Handbidge. Through an open door we see Adelle Morrow with a bottle of Orange Extract. H. Eph- grave, G. Dundas and J. Crough get seasick and are taken away by Nurses Barbara Meilceljohn, Dorothy Mitchell and Jean Pearson. After dinner, much is added to our enjoyment by a tapadance, which included Phyliss McClennan, Irene Niles, Mary Moore, Ruth Morden, Audrey Murray, G. A. A, representative, Mary O'Brien, Merion Peters and Viola Price. They are led by those able dancers, J. Belfry, G. Allen, and K. Bolam with his clarinet. Then we see a movie star- ring Evelyn Ranger and Harold Campbell, and assisted by such such artists as Misses Velleta Richardson and Barbara Millar, The picture was entitled, Love in Bloom. That's all I'll say about our trip, but come again next year and maybe we'll visit China. G, EAs'roN ff? f. 9 8 e w aka , H :IX wg. VR I gi-ff bh ' ' J . l'QiQf'i if it X -- g li' V ' U igrgs gui ffgia e , , -f f' ,, ' f-f 'N-L 15: 2' ff1li7l'li'f' ff' , , ' j,a,jg -44?ffi:2- 1 'Jw NIGHTMARE OF ANCIENT HISTORY STUDENT



Page 8 text:

THE ECHOES 99 Form II Household Arts ARY ALEXANDER, Eunice Armstrong, Gladys Brock, Beryl Johnston, Orma Lacheur, Muriel MacKeage, Eleanore Morri- son, Marjorie Plumpton, Dorothy Pringle, Doris Sayer, Hazel Telford, Isobel Thorne, Lenore Tinker, Betty lVhaley. One day we decided to go on a hike to Hazel Telford's farm. After an early break- fast we started on our long and perilous journey out the Lakefveld Highway. Making our way cautiously along the road we spied Eleanore Morrison in a near-by field hilling potatoes while singing, I'm sitting on a hill-top. Coming along in a horse and buggy were Isobel Thorne and Doris Sayer, taking their farm produce to the city of Peter- borough. They were dressed in bright ging- ham dresses which they had made in H. A. II at P. C. Y. S. Slowly trudging along and thumbing our way we saw a bright shinv baby Austin coming along the road. As it neared us we noticed that Orma Lacheur was at the wheel. Being very hospitable, Orma asked us to hop on the car, as she was going to pass through Lakelield. By the time we were settled and ready to start, the baby Austin looked as if it had been in a wreck. Slowly making our way along the highway, wevreached Nassau, that great railway and industrial metropolis. We .stopped here a while and obtained refreshments at the rail- way depot. Gladys Brock and Eunice Armstrong were serving the customers bits of tasty morsels, which only these girls could cook. The recipes are the personal property of these two girls and have never been entered on a piece of paper and the results can be seen if any day you look at the bridge and see human beings hanging over it ready to drop themselves in the canal. ln another corner of the depot, Betty Whaley and Lenore Tinker were busily making tablecloths and tea-towels for the lunchroom. Arriving at Lakefield we saw Mary Alexander, Beryl Johnston, lllarjorie Plumpton and Dorothy Pringle all on one corner selling tags. Curious to know what the proceeds were going to be used for we asked Mary. We learned the proceeds were to be used to educate under- privileged alld backward elephants in Africa. XVe were glad to learn that Muriel Mac- Keague, our fair damsel, was mayoress. When we arrived at Telford's farm we were footsore and weary. H. A. II signing off till next year. Form III I ARRINGERI lVhat fair curly-haired III Former has all the girls ga ga? BENsON: The brawny electrician. fThere seems to be a short circuit somewherej BOOTH: Always wide awake and on the job. CARPENTER: Tall, dark and handsome. CAMPBELL: The reason the girls come to school. Coss: Boy Scout does his good deed every day. CLARK: Farmer specialized in wood- working to become a country plumber. COURNEYA: The little French dynamite man. ndzwtrial flrzfx DEAN: Collegiate's gift to the women, especially H. A. IY. FARR: The All American Drawback. FERGUSON: The Flashy basketball forward. GRADY: The country boy who made good. HALL: The man with hair like Jean Harlow. HALES: Mad Master Motor Mechanic. HEss: Can't seem to get his special subject out of his head. OVoodworking.D IXICCLENNANI The schOol's most promising mathematician. JAcKsON: The only resistance in the day's circuit. PAGE: The calm, cool, clear-collected kid. RORLE: The Norwood Flash, picked to go to Toronto for exams. Form II I7ZdZl.VZ'l'1.df Arts ACK KENNEDY played on the Senior Team. ALFRED PROUT is working at McLeod's Drug Store. HAROl.D MORROW was hurt while sleigh riding in December. BOB DYER and EARLE GIBSON are in the orchestra. TOM IVICNIILLAN, treasurer ofthe Students' Council, was hurt in woodworking in No- vember. DON PERKS, ALEX ELLIS, C. FISHER and E. HOFFMAN attended the Royal VVinter Fair at Toronto. BOB VVHITESIDE spent a few weeks in the hospital in October. For several days MEI. ANDRUS was the centre of much activity as he had several puzzles which everyone was trying. PLUMPTON and BILL FRANCIS had their Nlatliematics homework done after Mr. Browne's threat of 50 questions if it were not completed, Both JACK EASTON and T. MCMILLAN received valentines from an unknown party who prints her G's the same as a certain Mary A. does. VVhen REN TURNRALI. was asked why he 1. I

Suggestions in the Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) collection:

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 137

1937, pg 137

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