London South Collegiate Institute - Oracle Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1936

Page 55 of 92

 

London South Collegiate Institute - Oracle Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 55 of 92
Page 55 of 92



London South Collegiate Institute - Oracle Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 54
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London South Collegiate Institute - Oracle Yearbook (London, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 56
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Page 55 text:

FAMOUS SAYINGS BY FAMOUS FOLK The flivver owner: Well, wouldn't that jar you? The radio operator: I'll tell the world! The murderer: Well l'll be hanged. The judge: Fine. The telephone girl: l got your number. The sausagemaker: Doggone. The fisherman: l'll drop you a line. The author: Ill write. The seamstress: Darn it. 1 1- 1- The trouble with most operations is that the patients live to tell about them. 1- 1- 1- I-Ie: Aren't sheep stupid-looking animals? She: Yes, my lamb. at 1- 1- Garage Attendant Cas a car drives upl: luice? Driver: Vell, vat if ve are? 1 1- -A- What are you crying for, john? Mr. Dinsmore fell downstairs. Well, don't feel too badly: he-'ll get better soon, said a stranger. That isn't it, said john. lean saw him fall and I didn't. 1- 1- 1- Charley Hoare: Here's the candy, sweets to to the sweet. Mary Fraser: Thank you. May I pass you the nuts? 1- 1- 1 First Acquaintance: My wife's just had quinsy. Second Ditto: Good gracious, how many's tl'1Ctl?H 1- 1- 1- Mr. Armstrong: Name a liquid that won't freeze. Betty Walker: Hot water. 1- 9: xl' Al Iohnston: Last night I dreamed I was dancing with Doris Parker. Tom Woolley: How was that? A. Iohnston: I woke up and found my mother pounding me with a flat-iron. Pete Mason: Have you seen those jokes that I handed in last week yet? H jean Iarmain: No, but I'm trying hard. lack Woolley: Did you rent your dress suit last night? H Don Filrnore: Not until I bent over. Eavesdroppmg again, said Adam as his mate fell out of the apple tree. 1 1- 1 Bill Todd is so dumb he thinks cornflakes is a foot disease. 1- 1 1 Hugh Fteilley Cwith a triumphant gleam in his eyel: What was the matter with the wooden cow? Bert Buchanan Cdejectedlyl: I dunno. Hugh Beilley: Wooden milk. 1- z 1 Mr. McNeil: Why do the Portuguese stand at the head of the mule raising in Europe? Leo Hamer: Because the other end's dan- gerous. 1- 1- we lon Simington: Dont you think tennis is a nice quiet game?'5' Al. johnson: No: it can't be played without a racquet. 1' 1 1' RIDDLES l. Why is a snowstorm like a good joke? 2. Why is a railway guide book like a pair of handcuffs? 3. What is the most useful creature? 4. What is the recipe for honeymoon salad? CAnswers on page 547 Gordon Kidd: I wish I was gifted. l'm just itching to write. Mrs. Carr-Harris: Oh well, just sit down and scratch a little. xi' ik 'lr Graeme Cameron: Have you shown these poems to anyone else? Bob Calvert: Not a single soul. G. Cameron: Then where did you get that black eye? ,U 'hTiLEDiTo - , lf? . lf? H16 OHTICIAL CADACI-ry ' Lx ., 'Q - H N ' X Ill K 29 ij' .L ' I l P! if ,lf I7 -' it 53

Page 54 text:

fit Hman- -2250 -1 Y ! s X .91 ff Q GQ-2 ixwu'-u I had QIXMSTQRY thzl vvouli YQWHI nqiexgf Betty Ferris: Don't you think Ken Keene is an angel? Mary Fraser: Yes, no good on earth. 1- i- al' Mr. Byles tto Pete Mason coming in latel: What kept you so late? .. Pete Mason: Well, you told us to obey the traffic signs and the sign said 'School, go slow'. Q Q- -A- SONGS Q Nudist Song: My baby don't care for clothes. Triplets Song: Trees. Symptom Song: Symptoms I'm happy and symptoms I'm blue, Corset Song: Some of these stays. Mr. Ireland's Song: 'Ohm, Sweet 'Ohm. Cuspidor Song: Oh how I miss you tonight. Vegetarian Song: Till we meet again. 'P 1' i' She was only a bootlegger's daughter, but I love her still. 1- 1 1- She was the apple of her father's eye, but she was only appealing to me. ir 1- 1- ZERO MORNING There may be some few supermen Who jump up when they ought to But most of us crawl out just when We've absolutely got tol i' i' 'I' Miss MacPherson: No, I don't drive my car in winter because I hate the ruts. Mrs. Carr-Harris: Well, at least they keep you on the road. A- vt- 'A- ' Don Fillmore: I am one of the leading lights at South. Mr. Dinsmore: Yes, you're one of the fixtures. 52 Herman Scheiding Ipondering over a physics problemlz I don't see where you get your four feet. Mr. Ireland: I only have two. How many have you? if Il' 'k In Germany, since the black-shirt regime everyone has been having a hard time to find a white-collar job. 1- -A- 1: Teacher: Why haven't you learned your geography? Bill Olmsted: I heard Dad say that the world was changing every day, so I thought I would wait till it settled down. -A- al- A- Mary Fraser I got zero in French Comp. to-day. Betty Ferris: Thats nothing to worry about. i' 'A' 'k MISS CONGO I am a hippo-pota-mus ' A-playing steamboat in the stream, I'm thirty-six around the bust, And forty round the beam. 1' 1' 1' I-Iow do you like your chimney sweeping job? , I Oh, it soots me. 1' i' 1' Betty Turner: What makes the leaves turn red in the fall? PeqQY Gilmour: I guess they blush to think how green they were in the spring. Bob Calvert: Do you keep hairbrushes for boys with genuine bristles and ebony backs? Clerk: No sir. Bob Calvert: Well have you got a comb for youngster with Celluloid teeth? 1' ul' 'k Mr. Burns: Fallis, give the principal parts of the verb 'to hear.' Fallis: Psss-t, Smith, what's the verb 'to hear'? Smith: I dunno. Fallis Idunno, idunare, idunnavi idunnatumf' Mr. Burns: What on earth do you think you're giving? Fallis: I dunno. , Mr. McKiIlop was testing the general knowl- edge of the fifth form. Slapping a half-dollar Ori the desk, he said sharply: What's that? Iack'Macaulay: Tails, sir.



Page 56 text:

V . . ' V v 5 A W Fhes: There' are no fees charged to day students' who are resiideiits off: I' - ' .ao ' ' I an agreerrfent- With the London' Board pf Education are paid by the Ha p Beal Technical an -1 ax: 1 1 ,Mud N. . !,,Vf9i.4 ' - 1. rye..-e. V r Q i lL ,i After Graduation VVhat,?i 1 I The Special One - Year Intensive Vocational Courses at the I . I-I. B. Beal Technical and Commercial High School are open .g to students with at least three years' High School. standing. - Special two-year courses are provided for students who 1' A have completed a two - year High School course. It ' Special Une Year Commercial Courses ' ACCOUNTANCY BOOKKEEPING ll BUSINESS AND SECBETARIAL STENOGRAPHY TYPEWRITING ' pecial Une Year Technical Courses Kit AUTOMOTIVE MECHANICS - BUILDING CONSTRUCTION - CABINET MAKING CARPENTRY - COMMERCIAL ART AND INDUSTRIAL DESIGN . . ' COOKING - DRAUGHTING .' DRQESSMAKING AND COSTUME DESIGN - ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION ff? 41 f - 'MACHINE SHOP PRACTICE 1 ' 3 NURSES AND DIETITIANS' PREVPARATQRY ln Qi. PRINTING 'D L, Ogg, ,vw R TOOL AND DIE MAKING . ,I g, ,- I at O o ,ir ' 1 1 o . 0 ,',,.jx 'A' The IS no Substitute for Vocat1onalfTra1,nIng! The school maintains a well-Organized Placement Department to assist. its 35, , Sz Commercialntlfliilgh School Q. 3 5 London attending'th'eSe courses. Fees for the residents .ofxcounties having, - couritiesin accordance 'With the agreerneniif ' Tl A e , A : W , f- .f I l'l I 1 OC .O Q Q 5. Sr Students in Securing p employmenti The imost' desirable positions inf' 'V London and vicinity are open to the graduates of the B. Bealj'Technical I 'hn-

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1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
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