St Josephs High School - Crest / Signet Yearbook (Garrett, IN) - Class of 1934 Page 9 of 20
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Page 9 text: “Page 7 oe © © ©2220 FRESHMEN Left to right, top row—Paul Gorski, Richard Deuitch, John Brennan, Donald Shoudel. Second row: Rita Johnson, Loretta Bollan, Mildred Van Denbosch. Third row—Helen Klinker, Helen Philip, Marvel Smith, Catherine Sobasky. Fourth row—Virginia Etoll, Rosemary Snyder, Marcella Joknson, Victoria Bonkoski. @ 0000000000000 060503 00 oo © © © 0 -@ 0 0 0 @ «-« © CLASS SCRAP-BAG Classmates, it is a well known saying, often proved true, that “Coming events cast their shadows before.” Therefore, I have taken time to study what will take place in the future. The pleasure of looking into the future is mingled with pain. We love to know what lies before us, but when we find out we tremble for we are afraid that we will be unable to carry out those things as we should. Therefore, I have taken the liberty of select- ing a few remembrances that will help you in the future. I hope that they will help you per- form your duties of life. I sincerely hope that you will accept them in the spirit in which they are given. Please keep them as a keepsake and remembrance of your Senior year. As I call your names please come forward to receive these trifling tokens of my interest in your future. Le Roy Beber: My dear classmate, all signs indicate that you will be a Latin teacher. Judging from the work you have done during your Latin course I know you will prove a won- derful help to the students. I leave you my Latin book. Albert Lemish: out work. We usually have to live and earn all that we get in this world. I see you as a farmer working hard. I am giving you this cushion to make your many rest hours as com- fortable as possible in memory of the class of 1934. Kate Hyde: Here is a little postage stamp I give you with this advice—always follow its example and stick tightly to one thing until you get to the place for which you set out. This is one sure rule of success. Agnes Shivell: Fearing you may get as lonesome in your spare hours as you always seem to get in school hours, I am giving you this class picture to keep in memory of your life at school with us. Esther Muzzillo: You are always so busy that I see very little that you can need to help you along the way. I give you, then, this sack of candy, that the days of your business college course may be sweetened with the memory of your life with us at school. And now, classmates, I trust that these little gifts will prove helpful to you. It is not easy to live with- SPSS SSSSSHSSHSSSCHSSCSCSCSCSHSSSESCSSESCOSCSCECSCHSCOCSHOCSCSSCSOCSCSSOC EHH SSS ® ”
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Page 8 text: “e@ 22 e626 © © 6 6 6 © 6 6 6 6 6 6 So oS SS OSS SSF SOS ESS HSHSSOS SOSH HSH OHSS OOS OOS SSS OSOHO OHS H HOO HEO COOH OSS OF OOO COCO SO Se Left to right, top row—Lucille Johnson, Alda Mansfield. Bottom row —Norbert Deuitch, Vincent Muzzillo, Arnold Seifert. @ © © © © © © © 2 © 02006666 SFOS FOSS SSSSSSSFSSSSSFESCOCSCOFSS FOO SCO OS SOSSOSCSOSS OOOO COOCOSO® CLASS VISION In the good old summer of 1944 I was called out West on business and while passing through the State of Idaho the train was wrecked and the passengers were obliged to alight at a small station. When I left the train I noticed a huge black cloud in the sky. Almost immediately everything grew dark and I felt myself being lifted rapidly upward. I landed on the planet Mars. When I dared to look around I saw an old man coming towards me and he informed me that there was only one way to return to earth and that was by allowing myself to be put in a trance. To this I readily agreed. The old man made a few signs over me and I passed into a deep sleep. The first thing I knew I was in a strange city. As I walked up the street I met a woman, who was pushing a large go-cart. I thought she looked familiar. Imagine my surprise when I found out it was my old pal, Esther Muzzillo. The city then changed. I was trying to secure a position in a large firm in Chicago. I was at last given the chance to meet the President for a private interview. Imagine my surprise to find Le Roy Beber, the President. From Chicago I went to Boston. I decided to visit one of the large Agricultural Colleges. One of the teachers looked familiar. Well, it proved to be my old classmate, Albert Lemish. Then I went to New York. I decided to visit the La Salle Beauty Salon. I immediately recognized the owner as my old pal, Kate Hyde. My last vision took me to a small town in Florida. I went to one of the leading hospitals to visit a friend, and coming out of the sick- room to my surprise I met an old classmate of mine, Agnes Schivell, who was the head nurse there. ) Economy and hard work are an excellent team in harness. If to these is added a spirit of sacrifice, an irresistible trio is making for success. 0) Suspicion is a heavy armor, and with its own weight impedes more than protects. 2 ee ee ees It is a hard road that leads to a soft job. So eo Oe Se So Oe Se SS OSS SSeS SS LOSOOSOOSOOSOSO S OOSOPS OSS SO SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSOSSSOOSSOSSOSSSSO® ”Page 10 text: “Page 8 ® 727772 eee +o Oo ee o 22S OO SS FF SSS SSSHSSFSHOSOHSSHSHSHSSOSHOSOSOOOSOSOOSOOOOOOOCOOOOOOHOSOOSOOSOSOS tree eco eo © : ° ¢ ? s ’ 4 ¢ ¢ ¢ ’ rs ¢ °Y a 4 6 4 ° ° 9 a ry ¢ é Y ? 4 » 2 ¢ 4 4 ° 9 r ¢ 4 ¢ 4 ? + 4 4 rs + ’ ¢ 4 + 4 ¢ ’ r ¢ ¢ 4 ’ r) ¢ 4 4 ’ ° ° ¢ ¢ ’ ) ® ° ¢ ? + 4 | ¢ 4 ¢ e WHAT BOYS AND GIRLS SHOULD KNOW Boys and girls of this day and age should at the age of seventeen know a few valuable things that they will need in their course of life. If they do not know these things there wiil be many blockades for them. Nothing in this list is impossible. They should know how to make out every kind of check. How to deposit money in a bank. How to write out a promissory note. How to keep a simple set of daybook and ledger. How to write a simple receipt. How to speak and write good English. How to use the dictionary. How to spell all words correctly. How to speak to all people politely. How to care for their health. How the chief officials are elected and the duties of each. How to use simple tools. How to get a meal. How to conduct themselves properly at table. How to play indoor and outdoor games. How to tell the truth without fear. How to be honest in business. How to be fair in all dealings. They should have a great knowledge of their geography. They should know the Constitution of the United States. They should be able to buy clothing with an idea to fitness and economy. They should begin to plan for the future. Boys and girls who have learned these things well will have success in the world even if they are forced to leave school before their educa- tion will have been completed.—’36. O FRIENDS Friends are necessary in our lives. They add pieasure, joy and brightness to our lives. Fortunate is the one who is blessed with true friends who will “stick” to him when things go wrong and joy in praising his accomplish- ments and success. Friendship has come to us through our ancestors, and it has been passed on for ages, cherished for ages and still is cherished. Friends cannot be bought, they must be won. We can win them by our sunny dispositions toward them, our kind deeds and our good character. If we have been good friends during our school days we shall have precious memories to recall, when we leave school, something more precious even than our diplomas. Will you have friendships that have been sealed with co-operative effort? You will—if you yourself have been a friend.—’37. LITERATURE We all enjoy ourselves, do we not? Well, at least most of us do and usually in a general manner—these enjoyments resemble one an- other. These enjoyments, or pastimes, fre- quently are directly from books and magazines. Darling youngsters just learning to read love to show their little knowledge from the baby grade by reading a few lines from their little primers valued as much by them as High School students should value their Shakespeare. They give little quotations from “The Little Red Hen’’, we should give selections from “As You Like It’ or Poe’s “Fall of the House of Usher”. In “Alice in Wonderland” the child of eight learns to love her clean, joyous life. At twelve the girl copies “Jo” from “Little Women’’, an Alcott production. Jo’s full-of-fun, mischiev- ous, still honest character inspires the girl. And the young lady envies Rosalind and her lover meeting in the end through lasting love, and sincerity. Now, my dear, do you see the important part literature and nursery rhymes play in forming the people of this our modern world? Will you not agree that if you cannot aspire to the same seat of honor as our great authors that you will help, and that it is your duty to forward honest literary leaders? By doing so you must simply set them an example, for h ow do we know but that you shall be a character to be mimicked. Shakespeare says the world is a theater and we are the actors; our lives are formed from lives on other stages formed from literature.—’35. See WORTH REMEMBERING You and adversity may be partners, sharers of sorrowful hours and the dividends of hope may be long in coming; but that is no reason why despair should be chosen as the third part- ner of the firm. Link up with God! Join hands with the eternal winner of victories. Melan- choly never enters the soul with a good motive. God is the Author of sunshine, the Purveyor of peace on earth, the Song-writer of the worid, from the singing of the morning stars down to the late bird-twitter in the trees this morning. Love is the fulfilling of the law. When happi- ness is at the organ eternal love directs the orchestra. God smiles on the man who loves his wife. He loves the man who acts as a true father to his children. The soul in man is the generator of his life atmosphere. Get a little heaven in you as much as you can hold. Don’t mope. Have something better than a scowl] for mankind. God gives us all an atmosphere of sympathy, clemency, compassion. The soul that is out of harmony is out of proportion. God has a world full of suns and stars; but He per- mits no black orb in all His great universe. 0 He will easily be content and at peace whose conscience is pure. ”
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