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Page 12 text:
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OPOSCOPQ NAME NICKNAMF1 FAVORITE SAYING AMBITION PASTIME Donna D. Beck Heavenly Days! To be a Mrs. Writing Wiliam Bill OlTYeah!:' 7Preaclier Shining Boots Marianne Annemae Wow! To be Goude Primping John Junior Gee Kid! Good Flsherman l lirtlng Alex Axel Nuts! 7'Forest Ranger Sleeping Mae V. I know! Teacher Studying Y Lynn -'Sr' Fiddle-stiZlcE'! LawyerT' Flllbustering 7 x eniori Sneak We, the senior class of Mapleton high school, left on our senior sneak day, Friday April 5. The time was set to leave Mapleton at live so, oi course, we left promptly at five and then went to Swisshome where we got the rest of the senior members. We then traveled over that everlasting piece of road td' Eugene. Here we stopped long enough for everyone to get shot and then went on leaving behind us, l fear, a broken camera. We then traveled up the Willamette Valley to Salem. We stopped at Salem to see the new capitol building and lunch was eaten there at the State Fair-grounds before we journeYi' ed on to Portland. Immediately upon arriving at Portland we went to the Iantzen knitting mills where a guide was waiting to take us through the entire plant. That night we spent the evening skating before going to the placesiwe staYed ' - the girls at Miss Rattey's home and the boys at an auto camp. The next morning we waved good-bye to good old Oregon and crossed to the Wash- Gradualion The baccalaureate service for the senior class of 1940 was Sunday evening, May 19. in the local church. Achievements and Aims was the topic of the sermon given by Reverend Durdle. Musical selections were given by the glee clubs. Miss Eleanor Morris played the processional and recess- ional marches. The commencement exercises for the class ington side and drove up the Columbia river highway. There was little difference in the scenery but one thing we noticed was that Washington seemed to have even more Oregon Grape than Oregon. At Beacon Rock we stopped to stretch our muscles by climbing up the 4,488 toot trail to the top on the rock where the beacon was located. After our climb the dinner cooked in the government camp was welcomed by all. We then went on to the Bridge of the Gods, but as this was closed we had to go on to Stevenson where we were ferried across the river to Cascade Locks. We then went to Bonneville where Mr. Harris con- ducted us through the dam and fish hatch- eries. We attended a show at Cascade Locks and then went to our cabins at Herman Creek. Then, the next morning we started on our homeward journey going down the highway on the Oregon side. We stopped to see the Multomah falls and at the Vista I-louse. We then headed for the coast and return- ed home by the coast highway. xercisef ' of '40 were held in the high school auditor- ium on Thursday evening, May 23. Mr. Thomas H. Gentle, former professor at the Oregon College of Education'at Monmouth, spoke on Our Embarrasing Leisure. The girls' glee club sang Calm as the Night and Go Thou Dear Music. The proces- sional and recessional marches were play- ed by Miss Bonnie Wheeler.
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Page 11 text:
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Class hophecq--Continued bounce over for a touch-down. Seaver, who is coaching OSC's eleven, seems to be doing some great work this year. Let us turn our attention now toward the highest peak of the rcckies. Alex Lewis re- sides here with his beautiful young wife. Could it be he is afraid some one will steal her Is that the resaon he lives so far away from everyone? No! I-le is a lookout attender Before we leave, let us watch the mountian climbing party coming up the steep hill. Well for goodness sake! It's none other than Bill Bill Brown, the most famous doctor of athlete's foot in all the west. This is his honeymoon trip. We all know who his wife is, They live in California on a walnut ranch. ICISS We, the senior class of 1940, being un-- sound of mind and infirm of body as a re- sult of our four strenuous years forced upon us during our attendance at Mapleton High School District No. 32, hereby declare this to be our last will and testament: To the faculty we leave our appreciation for the effort they put forth to guide us through our high school days. To the junior class we leave our senior dignity and superiority. To the sophomore class we leave our ability to debate in class. To the freshmen we leave our dramatic ability and our many happy memories of Mapleton Hi! As individuals: I, Lynn Ellingson, do will my ability to So far we find all of our graduating class doing well for themselves. Now let us fly toward Mapleton and see if Mapleton High School is still standing. Yes, sure enough. There it is. Well, who is this gossiping over the back fence? Could it be? Yes, - - believe it is. Marianne Stutz, now Mrs. Irvin Goude. She and Irvin live a very happy life in Mapleton. Marianne couldn't stand to stray so far away from her old home town. Now, as we have all the students ot the Senior class of 1940 and know they are all alive and doing well, let us turn homeward and wish them all the luck from now on and wish that they all live to a ripe old age. ill keep my desk clean to Adelyn McLellan. I I, Alex Lewis, will my fighting ability to Annice Ellingson hoping she will be able to protect herself better. I, Donna Beck, will my blonde hair and tiny feet to Tommy Neely and my melod- ious voice to Marie Vingelen. I, Iunior Seaver, will all my cards, includ- ing queens, QW. WJ to Harvey Kneaper. I, Mae Vincent, will my feet to anyone who can get them in the right shoes if they promise to treat them carefully. I, Bill Brown, will my Duster to Frank Noffsinger. I, Marianne Stutz, will my Goude times to Mary I-Iunzicker, hoping she enjoys them as much as I have. SIGNED AND UNSEALED Qkzn gffigydan ganna QM! .fzlwflnne Q16 . Zami fvfn fjlfnfer, if Declared by the above class of 4O as testament in the presence of us and others Iigworrfn .Wm khan-f X and for our last, but not least, will and who were peeking.
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