LaGrange High School - Granger Yearbook (Lagrange, GA)

 - Class of 1934

Page 13 of 44

 

LaGrange High School - Granger Yearbook (Lagrange, GA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 13 of 44
Page 13 of 44



LaGrange High School - Granger Yearbook (Lagrange, GA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 12
Previous Page

LaGrange High School - Granger Yearbook (Lagrange, GA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 14
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • 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 13 text:

THE 1934 CLARION Thrills and Heart Throbs Told in Rhythm Romona . Sweetheart Darling . I Love You Truly . but Can't We Talk It Over When the Moon Comes Over the Mountain . After the Ball Is Over . Because , My Darling , Ain't You Glad that we're Contented Together ? Adorable , I Want to Know All About You : you know I'll Be Faithful? lsn't This the Night for Love . Altho lt'll Take a Little Timee . i'For You are Mean to Me . This Is Romance Under a Blanket of Blue , though It Don't Mean a Thing to you. 'cause I Don't Stand the Ghost of a Chance With You : so. Go Home and Tell Your Mother that I'd Like to Call You My Sweetheart . Ye Olde Wante Addes FOR SALE-L's off old sweaters. Girl customers only. Apply to Football Boys. WILL BUY-Cheaper canary seed for Glee Club girls. Our present seed, they're too good. We fear conceit, if something isn't done. LOST--Hearts of several girls we know. Russell Dunn it, FOUND-Several dimes. probably lost when our cherubic cheer-leader ordered owners to get off. Finders. keepers. WANTED BY HISTORY PROP.-Just one pupil who will study the lesson or keep quiet in class or Dubose. Wood Gene do? GOOD BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY-Detective agency will employ someone to find out: What makes Dan Ware such a love-sick look on the countenance? What countenance means? Who Betty Boop and Joe Palooka are in L. H. S.? Why Carolyn sings You're Gonna Lose Your Gal ? Who Doss Marie like? CD0 you think she will Sue PhiIlips?J Who calls Mary Bob Mi-lam? For whom has Curtis Fallen? WILL BORROW-Hair oil to be used when Curtis Combs his hair. WANTED FOR THEFT--Everyone who has stolen Mae West's line. Come up to see me some time. WANTED FOR MURDER-Mr. Roberts who has boldly bisected. oh. just hundreds of peo- ple in geometry class. WILL SWAP-Slightly used keys of Oscar for a new can-opener. WILL NEED PROTECTION-The person who wrote these Wante Addes. -Address all complaints to MISS ALANEOUS.

Page 12 text:

sf' THE 1934 CLARION MY IDEAL CResuIt of interview by Margaret Ann Smith? VIRGINIA Doss- I would like for my ideal man to be an athlete-to be interested in sports of the ath- letic type and hunting. He must be independent, am- bitious. and have lots of respect for himself: and he must be considered a man's man among men. It doesn't matter what else he is, he must be faithful. REBECCA CAUDLE- My ideal man must be good- natured and have a good word for everybody. He must have a pleasant smile and be a good sport. He should have nice manners. He must be clever and never once lose his head. He must have self-control, also be as tall as I and a good dancer. He must be neat in appearance. CHARLIE Jo KIMBROUGI-I- I like a boy who is a good sport, has a good disposition. is popular with all people, and is preferably a brunette, I'd also like for him to be a good athlete. MARY GREEN- As my ideal, I picture a tall bru- net with wavy hair and pretty teeth. He has well- kept hands and wears well-tailored clothes. He is able to converse easily, is well-mannered. is amiable, is thoughtful of others, and has just a little grey matter in his head. VIRGINIA BOYLES-- My ideal does not have to be handsome, but he must be well-mannered and thought- ful fwithout being sissyj. Besides having an interest in sports and an excellent sense of humor, he will have to be'patient and true to the highest ideals. In brief, he must be an all-round. sincere, sociable chap, well- liked by everyone, EVELYN SPINKS- Personal apperaance is not the only thing that counts in my idea of an ideal. I would like a man with good, common sense. with pride in himself though not conceited. He should have a good sense of humor and a good'understanding of other people. In appearance, I prefer a man with dark hair, brown eyes, and a dark complexion: he should also possess a good physique. He might engage in ath- letics, have a good personality, and most of all, he should be a good sport. LOUISE BAILEY- My ideal must be a real tall brunet, with long legs and pretty white teeth. He must be a member of the 'Court Square Cowboys Club'. Above all he must drive a blue Ford roadster with no top on it. SARAH PRITCI-IET'I'-- I prefer a nice-looking bru- net who dresses neatly, has an amiable disposition, and a good sense of humor. He should be a good sport. taking an interest in the various school activities. He should demand the respect of others and respect him- self as well as others. MARGARET ANN SMITH-- I prefer the he-man or cave-man type with broad shoulders and a good 10 , Jlwslazie . physique. There are two outstanding qualities that he must not possess-that of deceit and conceit. Also he must be lenient with my faults and understand me completely. CAROLYN VENABLE- My ideal must be a person who has a great deal of self-respect, as well as being respectful of others. -He should be tall, or at least several inches taler than I. He should be handsome. but not to extent that he is aware of it. His hair should be dark and wavy, his eyes should be blue: he should be of an athletic nature and be somewhat witty: but, above all, he must be dependable and faithful. MARGARET MOOTY-- I prefer brunets, although blonds are O. K. He must be tall and well-built. He must be clean in spirit as well as in his clothes. He's gotta' have something in him--personality, ambition. brains. He must be good-natured, and be a leader. Above all, he must understand me. WARNER MORGAN- My ideal girl must be good- natured. She can be either blonde or brunette, but not extremely either. She must not be too tall or too short. She must have a good figure and be fairly good-looking, but not conceited as most of them are. She must be smart, or at least smarter than the average girl--as they are all dumb. She must have a sense of humor, but not to the extreme of being silly. She must like sports and other pastimes and take part in them. IRBY HENDERSON- No girl at all is my ideal. ALLEL DANIEL- My ideal girl may be either blonde or Qlnette: I like either blonde or dark hair. She must. However, be good looking in both face and figure. She must be clean in mind and body, and not conceited as some girls. Girls do not usually partici- pate in outdoor sports. but I would like for her to be able to play tennis or golf fairly well. She must have a winning personality: also she must be a good dancer. Above all things, she must be a good sport. JOE HUTCHINSON- I think thatran ideal girl should be full of life and a good dancer. She must be friendly and right pretty. The main thing is 'that personality'. A type of girl that .thinks she knows it all doesn't go. Above all, she must not keep a boy waiting fifteen minutes when she has a date. I don't like them to be too fast or too stiff either. It doesn't matter whether she is a blonde or brunette. JOHN AWTREY-- Existing only in my mind as a mere mental image, visionary and quite incomplete, lurks the figure of my ideal. My imagination is fired at the thought though only visionary: her figure stands to me, symbolizing an ideal which lives only in fancy. To be so real and yet ever beyond my grasping fingers adds that sense of ambition which I hope will some day enable me to reach my ideal.



Page 14 text:

THE 1934 CLAR ION The Seniors Sail On Our ship is leaving port today To sail the boundless sea of life: Aspiring souls are on their way To meet life's conflict and its strife. We've anchored here throughout four years Inside the walls we love so well: We've had our joys and hopes and fears- Each one means more than words can tell. We've worked and studied side by side To gain more knowledge in each class: By what we've learned we shall abide, After our days of school have passed. So out of the port our good ship sails. Taking the class of thirty-four. School days grow dim. hidden by veils That bid. Strive on: return no more. So to happy hours we've spent here, To every book and class and bell, To every thing we hold so dear. Alma Mater, we wave farewell. -Mary Green, January, l934 Our Alma Mater Our years in High School now are nearly done And as a student will review the work completed Ere he advances to a chapter strange. We think of all the happy years we've spent Beneath your colors, dear old white and blue. Four havvv. active years. with mind and brain Alert and clean. progressing day bv day. We've made mistakes and suffered penalties For wasted hours. but still we've learned a lot. Not just from books but from our daily life. We know and love you, dear old L. H. S. For all the things that you have meant to us. Ideals of life we've formed within your walls. And plans for making all our dreams come true. With reasoning to uphold all our plans. You've seen us turn from childhood's shallow joys To young maturity's grave questioning. We've learned to see and know life as it is. But held up by the knowledge you have given, We face the world, courageous, unafraid. -Virginia Doss, May, 1934

Suggestions in the LaGrange High School - Granger Yearbook (Lagrange, GA) collection:

LaGrange High School - Granger Yearbook (Lagrange, GA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

LaGrange High School - Granger Yearbook (Lagrange, GA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

LaGrange High School - Granger Yearbook (Lagrange, GA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

LaGrange High School - Granger Yearbook (Lagrange, GA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

LaGrange High School - Granger Yearbook (Lagrange, GA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

LaGrange High School - Granger Yearbook (Lagrange, GA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947


Searching for more yearbooks in Georgia?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Georgia yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
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.