Tantasqua Regional High School - Tantasquan Yearbook (Sturbridge, MA)

 - Class of 1976

Page 19 of 224

 

Tantasqua Regional High School - Tantasquan Yearbook (Sturbridge, MA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 19 of 224
Page 19 of 224



Tantasqua Regional High School - Tantasquan Yearbook (Sturbridge, MA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 18
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Page 19 text:

e. J a 232 2,2 PSE 2 , 2. : ee wie ote afe ofe «fe Lege wfo ete 2 2 § ‘ Ole 052 fe of oe a ° ; 7, J nO tN eee Zee. Ma, Lee Ore oy a OG S2o, 04 (a Ves Bead SM Pad SN SONS BSRE REA YS Ruane nr’ Pg J on and Cew-Castle in particular.that they have established a Stage for the purpose of carrying the Mail Y hetween the aforesaid places, and alan for the conveyance of passencers and baxgage....}t will leave New-Castle for Wilmington, every morning between 4 and 7 o’clack, and arrive at D, Brinton’s Tavern, in time for passengers to take the 8 o’elock Stage for Philadelphia. ouse, Philad.) nts’ Coffce-H 5 Tur Stage will occadonally return to New-Castle in the forenoon, when a sufficient ndmber of passengers offer. and buck ta Wilmington, and leave there every day for New-Castle after the 2 arrival of the Philadelphia Stages. zi ee a Passengers may rest assured, that this establishment will be much safer and more expeditious $2650 TO 30S FOR 1000. than any heretofore established between those two Towns; having the best horses, and a careful Eos pea driver. ete ee JOSEPH BRINGHURST, . v. Wilmington. oat ORS So Wilmington, BS, aoa DAVID MORRISON, ?. «. Jfew-Castle. Deaware, a : ee Le Teeth. | SHE Subscriber res- pectfully informs. the pub- ie sete Porceluan, or may desire, on moderate aut Peeth, which he manu- pond with the natural ones,| SE for any length of time, and} ‘acids. Those ser by luins will be aes d be os serviceable as any thing of ee: ect performed on fensonable L CHAMBERLAIN, Dentist, 4th doug below Arco sir. at, - Oe ae Superior Patent Fire Proof Composition DKEBCHIER CuESTS. sols i anata A ape tuleerber hy consiant study aud animnlited indus try iy his ori, te made for the lass twolse muitiie arapld dinav-ry ts fire proof materiale. He contin to Composed ofthe most | Saker Sec t iaesne e fragrant a nd cost ly No t Ladge street, nomh of Ponnsylvasia Bank. 4 extracts from flowers - All ardera thankfully received and sent to any part of ihe Valted thaies. — aja d 23-18 v3 eres, rf Be” New Vouk. 478 Silver Watches, RS $350 to S10 rach, werr- yauted to ryn. Patent Levers, p Gold and Sitver. of the tuont op: or) proved inakers, 1800 pais Guia Ear nf Binge, from 75 cis. to BLO per vault, 4 109 Brean Pins eid Pinger ings from $7 00 to $V! per doz — fetes A variety of fancy geuuls Stecl and es Gilt, Hilver Spoons, Npeciactes and : a Thimbles, e, kc. Fur wholeae A} as reduces jicce and on liberal tetiny. Mist of the udove goods oianufactured and for eaie by OB. ROBINSON, at his ore, No. 62 Market street, beiween Becond afd Tad drevis. one dout above mheuw hurry euect, couth ale. . feb ua GLASS CUTTING FACTORY. wt subscriber still continues the Glace Cutting business, it all Its vari. a - QCUPLAND'S RY STABLES, o “RUNNING FROM THIRD TO FOURTH, Between Chesnut and Walnut Streets. — PHILADELPHIA. HORSES AND CARKIAGES,......BAROUCHES. g ; . : nARie Soe ts +s —— 7, = Senies ck weavegs Siac es out branches, aod hae at his store, No. 68 Sa a a a x 2 GIGS, SADDLE HORSES, fc. North Phird street, Philadelphia, a very ete [oa,8 yea Ses ee eee ; ss exleusive assoriment of all hiads of Gluss, eo Lene KIS if fo To HIRE. i 2 Bebe cut, plain apd pressed; furniture knobs, Kc VR nes = 3 ee ee ae of all kinde-—Covuatry Merchants and Mh te are reqacsted tu call snd exanune pre- purcht ting. sf every asticle will be seld at the HORSES TAKEN IN AT LIVERY. Bs Mop:

Page 18 text:

Imagine buying that acre of land you have spotted for $1.25! Or, even at the higher price of $10. Those are the prices offered to our founding fathers to encourage set- tlement of the wilderness areas of this nation. A stage wasn’t the most comfortable way to go, but you could get from city to city for as little as $3 — at the amazing pace of six miles per hour. Compare today’s wages with a 12-hour day in the early 1800's. A man earned 50¢ a day. Of course his dollar bought a little more than today’s. Butter in 1826 was about 5¢ lb. in the Midwest; eggs, 3¢ doz.; corn 6¢ bu., wheat, 25¢ bu.; and a cow could be bought for $5. With travel becoming the American tradi- tion, you could choose train, wagon, horseback or the water. A canal ride, with bed and board included, averaged 3 or 4¢ per mile. And when you reached your des- tination, you could sit down to a5, or even 10 course meal for 25¢. (Ladies 20¢, 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 49¢ to $3.50 with a whole dress pattern priced at 15¢. 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. Ah, 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 pay $2 a pound for sugar, too. And the same for a pound of coffee or pepper. Those items were only 15¢ per pound back in civ- ilized St. Louis. Flour was marked up 100 times for sale to the frontiersmen and dur- ing the famous Gold Rush, that precious commodity went for $400 a barrel.



Page 20 text:

THE SPIRIT OF A NATION “| was born American; | live an American: | shall die an American.’’ DANIEL WEBSTER ‘‘Don’t give up the ship.”’ carr. sames LawRENCE “So you are the little woman who wrote the book that made this great war. LINCOLN to Harriet Beecher Stowe. : “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, .. .“ EMMA LAZARUS “The people are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty.’’ THOMAS JEFFERSON A truly American sentiment recognises the dignity of labor | and the fact that honor lies in honest toil.”? GROVER CLEVELAND “Be sure you are right, then go ahead.” DAVID CROCKETT “A knowledge of the past prepares us for the crisis of the present and the challenge of the future.” JoHN F. KENNEDY . That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom.”’ LINCOLN “Historic continuity with the past ts not a duty; it is bale necessity.” JUSTICE OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES ‘ America is a tune. It must be sung together.” GERALD STANLEY LEE ‘Go West, young man, and grow up with the country. HorAcecREELEY ‘I come to present the strong claims of suffering humanity.’ DOROTHEA DIX

Suggestions in the Tantasqua Regional High School - Tantasquan Yearbook (Sturbridge, MA) collection:

Tantasqua Regional High School - Tantasquan Yearbook (Sturbridge, MA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

Tantasqua Regional High School - Tantasquan Yearbook (Sturbridge, MA) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

Tantasqua Regional High School - Tantasquan Yearbook (Sturbridge, MA) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975

Tantasqua Regional High School - Tantasquan Yearbook (Sturbridge, MA) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

1977

Tantasqua Regional High School - Tantasquan Yearbook (Sturbridge, MA) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 1

1978

Tantasqua Regional High School - Tantasquan Yearbook (Sturbridge, MA) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

1979


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