Prescott High School - Hassayamper Yearbook (Prescott, AZ)

 - Class of 1914

Page 22 of 108

 

Prescott High School - Hassayamper Yearbook (Prescott, AZ) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 22 of 108
Page 22 of 108



Prescott High School - Hassayamper Yearbook (Prescott, AZ) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 21
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Page 22 text:

CONFIDKNTIAL STATISTICS Name Sobriquet Favorite Pastime Favorite Sayings Favorite Books Hopes To Be Will Probably Be Kenneth Aitken Head Marbles and Croquet Splash! Mother Goose Rhymes A queener Fireman Andrew Baldwin Baldy Queening Fresh- men Doggonnit How To Win a Home A bishop Editor of comic supplement Marcella Brink- meyer Brinky Eating Custard Curses! Immensee Politician Chambermaid Clarence Bur- mister Pinkie Athletics For Mercy Sake! When Woman Proposes A man Angel Harold Brisley Bon Bon Tango Gracedear Theory of Evolu- tion Moving picture hero Capitalist Alma Cousins Cos Disturbing the Peace Oh, Rubbish Box of Monkeys Athletic instruc- tor Missionary Grace Cousins Gracie Typing Say,girls. Father’s Check Book Melba II Old maid Homer Clark Senator Swiping Can’t be pub- lished. Pilgrim’s Prog- ress President Evangelist Miley Deming Deming Milking You say you did. A Thousand Ways To Make Money A Rhodes scholar A walking phi- losopher Olive Haisley Peggy Flirting Oh, gee! Chemistry Nurse Married Marguerite Levy Dearest “Slip” I’ll tell you Hamlet Willowy Mrs. Slip David Levy Irish Talking You’re a boob! Trig. Champion bil- liard player Traveling sales- man Ernest Love Cupid Martha Martha St. Elmo Whatever Mar- tha wants Whatever Mar- tha wants Nellie Marshall Nel Loafing Lissenere Intensive Farm- ing A stenographer A “belle” Howard Morrow Hope • Blowing Say, kid Lives of Great Men Caruso Organ grinder Jean Elliott Sheeny Giggling Oh. piffle The Rosary “Toast of Two Continents” Country school- marm Anna Wallingford Wauggle Cooking By Heck Les Miserables Fat Thinner

Page 21 text:

ulltr Saaaauam rr A TOAST TO THE SENIORS Here’s to the class of one-nine-one- four. May their names in the Halls of Fame so soar That the names of them will gain re- nown In every city and country and town. May their deeds in life be very greai And show of virtue and not of fate. May they shine out for the side of right Just as the beacon for the ship at night. May each one be full of love and trust And all be honest, true and just. And all that is low and wrong detest, But uphold that which is always best. —HOMER CLARK, H4,



Page 23 text:

ulfrf lagaauamypr ®lj? g mta (EkfiB ittfltnnj Was there ever such a class? Needless to answer for those who know us. bor the sake of those who do not, we shall relate a few of our accomplishments and let them decide for themselves. In the field of athletics: Behold the football stars from the Senior class, especially David, our captain and all-state quarterback. Then in basketball: The Senior girls’ team holds the championship of the Hi. What is more, the Senior girls furnished four of the best team the school ever hopes to put upon the field. Olive, captain, is “best shot in the state” (Journal Miner), while Alma, the embodiment of perpetual motion, can outdo any opponent. Three of the Senior boys comprised the best part of the boys’ basketball team. Baldy can “put it over them” (and their heads, too) every time. On the stage: Look forward to the time when Grace becomes a concert singer; Ernest, the passionate lover, in a modern domestic drama, and Howard as the American tenor with his ravishing melodies delights the grand opera devotees. Contrary to the accepted theory, our athletic and dramatic accomplishments have not been attained at the expense of scholarship. Intellectually our record is unrivaled. We always have a large per cent, on the “A list;” in fact, some of our class have never seen anything but A’s. We boast of a number of celebrities along various lines: Annie, the “math shark”; Homer, skilled in the art of bluffing; Marcella, our youngest and our brightest; Marguerite, the budding poetess; Miley, brilliant in his own nonchalant way; Nellie, an all-round genius; and Howard, whose opinion of himself we believe to be the highest yet attained; Kenneth is the only good boy in the class. Clarence’s red hair bars him from the honor. There is a reason for everything. Let us look into the past history of the class of '14 and see if we can discover a cause for this unusual ability. Our scientific friends tell us it is due to the process of evolution, but we are more inclined to feel it is a case of “the survival of the fittest.” We have only a few members who began their educational careers together in the old grammar school: Marguerite, Olive, Jean (ladies first), David, and Clarence. How that first grade teacher escaped insanity has always been a miracle to us, for we were precocious infants, if ever there were any. Whether or not the law of cause and effect has anything to do with it, some significance must needs be attached to the fact that ours was the last class to enter the old grammar school and will be the last to be graduated from the old Hi. The next few years were uneventful except for the coming of new members and the departing of others. In that seeming dormant period, however, we were not idle. We were learning in the school of experience, and preparing to start a campaign against “teacherdom” and all that interfered with our independence. We gladly welcomed Grace to our ranks in the third grade and Annie in the fourth. By the fifth grade we had our forces well lined up and somewhat resented the arrival of “the new boy,” Harold Brisley, who recehed too much attention to suit us. It did not take us long, however, to show him it was either “line up” or “get out.” Greatly did we feel our self-importance about this time, and that feeling knew no bounds when we reached the sixth grade. But alas! “Pride goeth before destruction and a haughty spirit before a fall.” We found ourselves in the hands of a veritable “task-mistress,” a terrible, tall, fierce teacher, who scared us almost to death. She told us we were the

Suggestions in the Prescott High School - Hassayamper Yearbook (Prescott, AZ) collection:

Prescott High School - Hassayamper Yearbook (Prescott, AZ) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Prescott High School - Hassayamper Yearbook (Prescott, AZ) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Prescott High School - Hassayamper Yearbook (Prescott, AZ) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

Prescott High School - Hassayamper Yearbook (Prescott, AZ) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Prescott High School - Hassayamper Yearbook (Prescott, AZ) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Prescott High School - Hassayamper Yearbook (Prescott, AZ) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920


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