High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 24 text:
“
THE ASHBURIAN A GLANCE AT FCRM V Form Five is at work once more, On Friday after school, For last Tuesday it was caught Playing the well-known fool. 'Twas just before geometry, About ten thirty-three, When a noise was heard throughout the school 3 Form Five was on a spree! It seems that Puggy owned a ball, Which he had brought to school, Balls aren't supposed to break blackboards, But Puggy broke that rule. Doug Hall, or Bush as he is called, Was chased around the room, The chase became a free-for-all , That was Form Five's doom. The noise reached our good Head's ears, He came striding down the hall, The merry melee he interrupted, And set work for them all. A. S. FORM SHELL F is for form-master named Mr. Cranston He must be very fine to teach in such a mansion. B is for Brown who is driven by need, To stop between periods for a couple of weeds. D is for Darby who has the forgetting disease, For when on parade he is always at ease . D also for Dreyfus the hot-tempered boy, But when near the girls he's always so coy. F is for Feuche the cartographical cuss, And when he is nipped he will usually blush. G is for Grant, Connaught's own secret weapon, Woollcombe's best batters he's beginning to threaten. H is for Hart who is rather overweight, For we have been told he can't enter the gate. J is for Johnstone the short little cad, Who always is good and never is bad.
”
Page 23 text:
“
THE ASHBURIAN Q m .L gg ac Q 3 S- E2.Q rw. cd -ca S-4 :s 4-7 cd mln on .53 'xml' H E Oo SIE .CI fi 3 'Ecu oc. .go 2. Se unQ. .EQ Er. O: Om YQ Q CD Z' E75 .2 .z Q cd 3-a Ir-4 -5-7 -4-7 .2 S-1 as EE glish En Pall-bearer S- GJ 33 33 A3 DD -5 3 9-o Q-n I CAtlasD Charlie ae R 30 M E cd .Q tires at er Fl on .29 -cs Q9 Q cd S-1 CD s.. CD cu .E C0 C CTI P15 -a-1 .Z U Qc .Q Q E Pm C C JI O 'Q 4-w if JD cn GJ Z m 13 L N C JD Ji Q L3 CQ T3 C C O Q3 U2 5a .E Z5 Q UD .E Q Y-4 GJ +2 JI Q0 UI Q9 N 'Q Q. CL GJ L CL S-1 C Qu GJ P N A3 an 3 E -Q What Puggy OD Paters an .E .Q on :s as v-T Q .2 fi .Q E as .2 .Q E Q 9-4 E cu 'Ii S- Q9 .E cd ? Q. GJ CD E cd GJ .Q Q E4 9. 3 Q Q on Q o S-1 3 Q 'cs P14 T2 'Q 4-1 N rf' 5 E CL Q +9 rn Q9 .n-1 .C O 6-3 ti Brains ats O JD I-1 GJ CL cd CL C0 .E AC 2 -A-7 GJ 2 Q. Q9 JI 4-7 '-0-4 O Ts .Q E TJ 41 .s Q3 FH C is N .A 5: E Q9 CI CD T5 :J C CD D' cd JI P14 OJ if E as E C O Di Robertson a circus A midget in To be six feet tall Excuse me, Mr. Cranston, ck Spe 111 th Smi Et cd 50-1 GJ -C 4-7 7: C C1 .1 co .E talk as not Iw Q2 .Q Q +-3 cc .E iv cs II'-I as C .Q .2 .Q Q -A-J cn rn Q9 U2 S- O .C CD C .n-1 Ill .n-4 cs CC 5. Q in ,- ,1- 31 S' -A-P :u .Q UQ E O Moon HVCT We P0 -A energetic
”
Page 25 text:
“
THE ASHBURIAN 23 L is for Lighthall a little bit mad, He may be a weed fiend, but he isn't a cad. M for Macdonald, captain of our class, Not quite the first boy but not near the last. R is for Robertson by the telephone waiting, He usually ends up with a nice little gating. S is for Scott the form's merry joker, Whose Sunday night sport is usually playing poker. sD.S.M., o.c.o. JUNE CLOSING The closing took place on Thursday, June 1!,th, and we had the usual difficulty in firidirig room for all inthe Chapel for the Leaving Service which preceded the speeches and prize-gz'ving. The follouirzg account of the proceedings is taken from THE OTTAWA CITIZEN. N HIS parting Words to the students at Ashbury College at the closing ceremony yesterday, N. M. Archdale, headmaster for the past nine years, envisioned the college becoming a great school. Ashbury has had an oppor- tunity given to no other school in Canada, in its location in the Capital city , he said. The Hon. Malcolm MacDonald, Bri- tish High Commissioner, presented the prizes and awards at the ceremony, and members of the board of governors of the college were present for the occa- sion. Mr. Archdale said he could see no reason why an inspiring headmaster , as he believed his successor, Lt. Ogden Glass, R.C.N.V.R., to be, and the support of an energetic and powerful board of governors, should not make Ashbury a great school. I picture this great Ashbury as being not necessarily any larger than at pre- sent, but with the best of equipment, with the best of staff, and with the best of reputationmin other words, the best, he told the boys. Mr. Archdale reviewed briefly the happenings at the school during his
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.