Dallas High School - Dragon Yearbook (Dallas, OR)

 - Class of 1914

Page 17 of 98

 

Dallas High School - Dragon Yearbook (Dallas, OR) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 17 of 98
Page 17 of 98



Dallas High School - Dragon Yearbook (Dallas, OR) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 16
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Page 17 text:

'..MMu Nd WWW: l. '1 h WV!!! u: h the Win;- U tub I! the h: !N M Mm; l 1nd mhmm man I'll culprits? ix hnu; amber rm. WIMDE end , n um um 15mm; ,1 1:3: '15- R336 new 36 lwpw N :: 132W Khan: ,5 mm W .J-W' L. CLASS COLORS 101d Rose and Black CLASS FLOWER Papa Gontier CLASS MOTTO Be Sharp, Be Natural But Never Be Flat CLASS YELL L were going, going, going, gone, And when we stop yowll know it, For Were the classy class of 14, Domt you think we show it?

Page 16 text:

iiShould auld acquaintance be forgot, and never brought to minhW-e-Burns As the High School Annual is a good medium by which to revive the pleasant memories of bygone days, we have endeavored to report the whereabouts of all the Alumni when last heard from, and any errors in our following account, will be the result of misleading information we may have obtained. If each of the Alumni will report his location and occupation to the Oriole every year, it will be an excellent way for all to keep in touch with one another. Of our first graduating class, which was composed entirely of girls, Roberta Ballard is teaching at Cochrane; Olive Coulter 'is taking a course of Domestic Science in the Oregon Agricultural College; Lil- lian Fellowes has changed her place of residence and also her name; Georgiana Fiske is clerk in the Dallas Post Omce; Anne Garner is a Dallas farmerls wife, Mrs. Homer Dashiell; and Letitia Shewey was a school teacher when the last report arrived. The peculiarity of the second class was that there were thirteen in the class graduating on the 13th of June i13. Ruth Campbell, CarolYn Gohrke, Alice Miles, Lena Skersies and Josephine Luebke country; Claudia Brown is still at home in Dallas and often takes part in High School activities; Pearl Phillips has been in California with her parents during the winter; Ray Boydston has become a civil engineer; Loren Butler is attending Dallas College; Frank Campbell is a Freshman at the University of Oregon; Frank Wilson is working in Dallas; Julius Herzog is replenishing his stock of wisdom in a Portland school, Ruth Shaw is the only one of the class of i13 that has changed her name. She is now Mrs. Hillary, of Portland. iiI have had playmates, I have had companions, t In the days of my childhood, in my joyful school days, All are gone, the old familiar facesRi-nLamb. have begun their careers as pedagogues in various schools about the. LJ Be Shm 95 We're And w For W1 Don't



Page 18 text:

14 Senior Class History I feel that responsibility lies heavily upon my shoulders, for. to do this class justice would require a historian of talent. Be assured it is neither conceit nor exaggeration to say we are, and always have been, a remarkable iiBuncth Even as freshmen we were not as other freshmen, for we were quiet and dignified, feel- ing the responsibility of freshmen upon us. We studied all the lessons- required by the teachers, recited loudly enough, and expressed our opinionswithout thought of concealing our ignorance. As sophomores we were still different from other sophomores. We excelled in our argumentsll in Physical Geography; furthermore we studied most of the lessons assigned by the' teachers. The distinction of being different from others was still retained. in our junior year,'for ,by this time we had learned to study only a. part of the required lessons, and to speak softly, softly, so the teachers would be unable to understand us. And in this our senior year We still are different, for, unlike classes that have a reputation yet to be made, we are living on our former reputation and enjoying iieach shining hourll in the earnest endeavor to live up to our motto HB sharp, B natural, but never B flat. It is characteristic of the Class of 1914 that it has never yet failed in anything seriously undertaken. The class parties have been entirely satisfactory to all concerned; our boys of the basketball, baseball and football teams have been entirely satisfactory; our studies, grades, school work and teachers have been entirely satis- factory. In fact, we are an entirely satisfactorily satisfied class. But now, although there is a certain pleasure not unmixed with pride and pleasant expectation, there is also an anxiety, a certain feeling of regret and of coming responsibility in graduation. For this will be our last year together as a class, and after four years of friendship and association in schOol, after friendships formed with members of other classes, we will all regret the graduation time. --Georgia Ellis ,14 7 oklt N. 1': THE ORIOLE ' lE BISSELL English and SCicncc .mepath be open to t Dallas High Scho iron in '14 philogia President '1 Gymnasium '14 Timmy. ml must be told I It gm? many. :m the name of 10v Ho all too 3m One? philogia '12-'13 Camp Fire '12-:13 Y- w. my Fvditor Oriole St well to -'12 '13

Suggestions in the Dallas High School - Dragon Yearbook (Dallas, OR) collection:

Dallas High School - Dragon Yearbook (Dallas, OR) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Dallas High School - Dragon Yearbook (Dallas, OR) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Dallas High School - Dragon Yearbook (Dallas, OR) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Dallas High School - Dragon Yearbook (Dallas, OR) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Dallas High School - Dragon Yearbook (Dallas, OR) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Dallas High School - Dragon Yearbook (Dallas, OR) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924


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