Suffield High School - Sagitta / Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Suffield, CT)
- Class of 1925
Page 1 of 119
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 119 of the 1925 volume:
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,. n. W. at. 3. .,. .,. .,. az. n. H. . varzaliarzaczacaaczacaarzat-.1-vac-Cant: C O The Orange and Black X X SUFFIELD SCHOOL SLJFFIELD CONNECTICUT 1925 ' 2?acL:tL:cL::za:iaf.vL::Q:rQa:zalQatia1acQ:rQnQatka:Q1tQa3JQo 9o Ilfnrewnrh Thr plzrpofr QI' Ihr l'fIl,f.f of 1025 in 1rbf1'rl11'np lhfy book fr lfllll li zum' P - - 1 - . ,rfrf'f ax fl mrmmzfo of ilu' plnufuzl day: pa.r.re'd nl Szfjifld, and affo 11.1 Il IlIl'IlIOI'1.Ill of Dr. Trl11'.rdfll. 0lIl'f0l'HII'I' lowd l1a'11d1n11.vlfr, and cur lrrul llzal fl may crllm? 1-If l'4'!IdI'7'.f lo t'07If1'1l In' llzoyz' high l.dKlll.f cvlmfclz ln' .vo dvfply '1'1ul1'llrd in lu, and ai the fame lime awaken cheerful memorie: of lzlfc af Sufield, 1Vhe11 our dayx af .rclzool are over -The Board of lL'd1'lor,v Rev. BROWNELL, GAGE, A.M., B.D., PH.D ' To . E112 lieu. Ernumell Gdge who has so nobly fulfilled his duties as headmaster of Suflield School, who has continually kept as his aim the loftiest ideals and who receives from the class of 1925 most sincere wishes for success in his work, we respectfully dedi- cate this edition of The Orange ' eand Black Walmart Genrge Erueshell lt is with pride that we look back on scholastic life passed under the leadership of such a faithful servant of youth. For twelve years he labored incessantly to do his best, ever striving toward the high ideals which he had set as the goal to he won hy the school that was his very life. Untiringly he gave of his energy in the endowment fund campaign. which Hnally took him from his work on earth, but which will always recall to students and friends of Sullield his constant efforts. 11 emnriam 'THE LATE HOBART G. TRUESDEL1., PD.D. lln flllemnriam Giveurge A. Eiarxnnu A student ofSull'ielc1 School from 1870-1875, a member of the hoard of trustees for many years and secretary of that hody until 1924, this upright citizen kept the interests of the school and community always at heart. The remembrance of such a loyal son of this institution will always remain in the minds of those who knew him. Mics. BRowNE1.1. CJAGH, Doc'rou P.H. To Mrs. Gage much credit and many thanks are due for several of the radical changes in the stand ofthe school on many matters. Sheis responsible for much of the recent leniency in some of the unwritten laws and policies maintained by the school, and has done an almost incalculahle amount for the physical benefit and comfort of both the day students and the boarders. The class of 1925 wishes to extend their sincere thanks to Mrs. Gage for all that she has done for the class, its individual members, and for the school as a whole. l Dk. WILLIAM Ii. CAI,nwi2l,1, 'l'o Dr. Caldwell is due much gratitude from Surlield School and from many ol' its students. His interest in the welfare of the athletes ofthe school has al- ways been more personal than professional, it being to his credit that he has never accepted any remuneration for service to disabled players. He has also helped athletics at Surlield to no small degree through the abilities of his three sons who attended the institution. . Dr. Caldwell's popularity is by no means confined to Sullield School, for he is well liked and honored by the residents of the town of Sullield, both for his personality and his professional ability. 1 X . Editor-in-Chief Axfociate Editors Social Editor Athletic Editor Clan Editor: llisrorian - joke Editor Art Editor Year Book Staff Buxineff Manager EDWARD RUBACK Advertixing Staj 1 OSGOOD RAE LUANNA PHELPS ADA HOLLOWAY NORMAN THOMPSON AGNES GILLIGAN MAE BIGGERSTAFP D ROY NEELY JOSEPH POTTES NELLIE FULLER CHARLES PEIX KENNETH THOMPSON FRANK LOUGHLIN, Manager KENNETH THOMPSON, Axxixtanz Manager Circulation Staff WILLIAM SUTHERLAND, Manager MELVIN SCI-IUH DOROTHY HOVEY 1 4 THE FACULTY ii Faculty REV. BROWNELL GAGE, A.lVl., B.D., PH.D. DELMAR F. SISSON, B.S., A.lVl. . DANIEL J. SWEENEY, A.B. . JESSE FOWLER SMITH, A.B. . MARJORIE O. BEACH THOMAS M. BROWN . . M. R. WEHR, B.S., General Science, Ph R. Q. V. MACQUIRE, A.B. . . G. E. ERICKSON, B.S. C. L. SCHANZ, PH.B. WILLIAM j. -IANES, A.B.' S. G. ICEEFER . . REV. E. SCOTT FARLEY, A.B. ALLISON H. MITCHELL, A.B. DONALD HOLMES WALLACE, A.B. i . . Headmaster Associate Headmaster, History . . Mathematics Head of English Department . , Mathematics . Commercial Department ysiography, Physics, Chemistry . Public Speaking, English . Latin ' . . History lVlaster Of' the junior School . junior School Assistant Biblical Literature . Spanish, French Biology, French. Economics Ode of ifze Claw 0 '25 With joy we've thought of gladsome June 'lihat would bring our graduation dayg But now we find it comes too soon. And hard it seems to break away. Our many friends we are loath to leave, Friends true and tried, as we believeg Old Suffield School has grown so dear, We wish the parting were not near. Though miles may sever, our friends we'll keep Our happy mem'ries can't be lostg And knowledge broad and impulse deep Shall prove of worth beyond their cost. Thus all the happiest, all the best Our school has brought us, will remaing And rather than reflections sad, ' Let gratitude be now expressed To Suflield School, that heart and brain Are for all time through her made glad. Dear Suflield School, farewell, we say, But even as the words we speak, We know her love will with us stay, Where'er we go, whate'er we seek. So we, the class of '25 This pledge to the school will keep alive: Our aims to Sufiield standards true, We'll finish what we start to do.' -D. R. HovE,' EEIIIIFIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Glu' Wrmlsll' HHH Tllflllrk FIFIFIIIIIIIIIFIIIIIIIFE I NN N MxxNNN - N- xwi ,7 FIFIIIIIFIflflflflflflflimlP 'IPYHUBP UND mark :l:IFl:Ii'Il'l:lfI:l:lfIEi u I: 2: 'I ll ll -I 'I ll ll .. 'I ll ll -. 'I ll .I -I 'I ll ll -. 'I In .I -l 'I ll ll -I 'I In ll -I :I II I -I 'I ll I- -I 'I In I- -I 'I II ll -. 'I In ll -. 'I In ll -I 'I II .- -I 'I ll ll .. 'I ll In -I 'I ll In -I 'I In In 'I Il ll WW -- 'I ll ll -I F2 L' :: WILLIAM J. SUTHERLAND Sl I L: Presldent Class 1925 ll :I In I l -- ---- .: I.: -3 In Notro: :I 'I II ll I .. 'I ffgf 011011 flgm In I- N -. I8 . I' up Colors: I1 'I 2: fwnroon and Cold ll :: --- -- -I 'I ll II -I :: . 1 -- -I Ofhcers: ll I: AGNES GILLIGAN . Vice-President - , . I li CHARLES O'CONNI7Ii Secretary and lreasurer I: ll :I NlEl.l,Ili l Ux.LlQR . . Historian I. gl I. l -I 'I II I- -. :: -- -I 'I In I I 'I :H I- -- :: H II ll I'.I1.lhIl't'l'l EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII GIMP flbrwlyv will ililflrk IIIIIIIIFIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE In In Senior Claw Hiafory halls ofSuHield, but what lW6dltl'l of memoiv is cont uned in those foul years! Let us turn for a moment from the shiningroad of thelfuture to look back down the dim avenue of the Past, before we leave our Alma Nlater, to return no more as students. l' was only four short years ago that we. the class of '25, enteredthe The scenes of yesterday crowd before our eyes in a gaily-colored stream, here and there touched by a darker note, where failure or disappointment crept in. Behold ourselves as Freshmen, timid, awe-stricken, anxious to make a good impression, wondering if we would ever be like the Seniors. That lirst autumn here we shall never forget, for the WonderTeam shone then in all its glory, and we learned at once what Suflield spirit was. Never to be forgotten are those pep rallies in the gym. when thundering cheers threatened to lift the roof, nor those autumn afternoons when the Wonder Team swept on to victory before us. I 'lihe scene changes to a classroom in the Middle Building, where the class of '25, now sophomores, is holding its lirst class-meeting, l-Iow swiftly the days have flown! We shall always remember that year as the winter of heavy snow s. Never before in Suffield's history. it would seem. have there been such sleigh- rilles and snowball-fightsg so many skiis and snowshoes in evidence, or such good times sliding down hill behind the gym. Then Winter passed into Spring, exams were the orderof the day, and before we knew it we were watching another class go out into the world. The fall of 1923 came, and we were juniors. Looking over our ranks we found many a new member added, and many an old one gone. We were half- way through our journey, new responsibilities had come to us: we owed a great deal to the school, and must prove ourselves worthy of SuHield's name. So we set to work again even more earnestly, leaving out some of our play, in the realization that we were being tried, and must not be found wanting. Among the memories of our Junior year, the Endowment Fund Campaign stands para- mount. Former students at SuH'ield came back to pay her tribute. and inspire us to hclp her carry on. 'lihen came news of banquets connected with the cam- paign, and linally our own student banquet, followed by the campaign in the Ninn-tw,-n l l Ihr 0Drangr :mil Eiilurk l'l gnlnlnlllllnlnlllalllnll lllulllnlllnlnllllllllgn :E ai 51 51 51 51 11 11 ll In 12 . . . , . 12 :: school. May it be said to-our credit that though the Seniors won the cup for :: their contributions, the juniors were close at their heels. 12 12 :g But here a heavy shadow darkens ouripathi of memory-the death of :: Dr. Truesdell, who gave his life that SuHield might live. For three years he had :': been our friend and helper, and in deep sorrow we left for the summer vacation. 1.1 , . 12 Ll: We returned in the fall greater in number than ever before, and resolved :: to make of this year an unforgettable me-mory. At our first class-meeting :g Sutherland who served us so well as our Junior President, was re-elected and :: he has served us well. During the ensuing football season we had every reason :g to be proud of those Seniors who gave their best for the School-CaptainO'Con- f: nor, Sutherland, Ross, Zande, Hubbard, Barstow, and Larson. In basketball we :g claim Captain Sutherland, Ross, fhornton, Hubbard, Swarthout, and Mann. :: In track we claim Pottes, Barstow, Peix, and Thompsong and in baseball, Cap- :g tain Sutherland, Thornton, O'Connor and Zande. 12 . . . . . 13 :: But we are quite as proud of our Senior celebrities in other fields. Osgood :: Rae, besides being Editor-in-Chief of the Year Book, has won high laurels in :: debate. Luanna Phelps, President of the Lesbian Society, deserves the most :: sincere thanks of the girls she has served. As President of the Students' :: Association joseph Pottes has rendered the school great service. The Senior :: Class may also claim many budding actor who became distinguished in the :: school play, All Aboardn, given last March. . nl ll II ll :g And now we drop the curtain over our avenue of memories, and tllrrl to :: face the future again, for we have followed the path to its end and are standing :g once more on the threshold. Our chosen motto is Age quad ag1'r : :: Finish what you attempt. When in the years to come we look back upon the f: dreams of our Prep. School days, may we feel that we have fulfilled our dreams :: and lived up to our motto. -I -I 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 5: T Lg :T wenty ll ll EEFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFIIIFI UUI1' QRVUUBI' Ulm Uilflfk FIIIFIFIFIIIFIFIIIIIFIE ll ll ug ll ll ll ll ll L1 I-1 EE EE Ei Senior Claw Jlembem EE E: RICHARD BARSTOW . Boston, MMI- I: HOWARD W. CLARK Gffwlby, COH11- Il I: RICHARD CURTIS - Wvliffbufy, COHUH- L: FRANK DANIELS New York City L: DWIGHT F001-E Ilartford, Conn. DOUGLAS S. FORD as OSCAR FREEBURG . Hartford, Conn. ul WILLIAM GETMAN . Frankfort, N. Y. ul 21 GEORGE HIBBARD V Bethel, Conn L: MERVIN -IENNINGS Torrington, Conn In ABRAHAM KREMER Lowell, MMI- In f: HARRY LARSON . Bridgeport, Conn. :g DONALD MACMANUS . Pawtucket, L. I :I Il PI-IILII' MICHEL West Snjield. Conn -1 I: HAROLD MONTROSS . New York City L: ROY H. NEELY, jR. New York City In CHARLES O,CONNOR New York City lu :g WALTER ODDY Stratford, Conn. :le CHARLES PEIX New York City ug JOSEPH POTTES . Anaeoftia, DAC. ug L: OSGOOD RAE Brooklyn, New York L: ARCHIE F. Ross Harrtilton, New York I: EDWARD C. RUBACK . Troy, New York M W. . II I d, C . EE EDEVYXRDD SMIQFIHUH Scheneclt?d.g,i0?Vew fggrk ll GERARD SULLIVAN . New London, Conn. Il L1 WILLIAM J. SUTHERLAND Springjield, Maxx. L: KENNETH SWARTHOUT Little Fall.r, New York In KENNETH THOMPSON . Stamford, Conn. lu f: NORMAN THOMPSON . Sujeld, Conn. gg SAMUEL THORNTON . Manchester, Conn. :g lg JOHN WICKWIRE . Wett Haven, Conn. Il L: JAMES ZANDE . Torrington, Conn. L: MAE BIGGERSTAFF Sufeld, Conn, In ELIZABETH DEVINE . Sujield, Conn. In :: MYRA FORD . . Wert Sujield, Conn. :g NELl.IE FULLER . Snjjield, Conn. ll AGNES GILLIGAN . Weft Snjeld, Conn. ll L1 ADA HOLLOWAY . Snjield, Conn. :la DOROTHY HOPE Sujiftd, Conn, lp DOROTHY HOVEY . Springfield, Maxx. In :Q BAILEY LOCKETT , Su!-jigld, Cgnn, :': MARY LOCKFTT , Sulitftd, Qonn, ll LUANNA PHBLPS . West Snjteld, Conn. ll L: ANNA PREKOP . Wert Sulfeld, Conn. S1 51 II lu fl Fl ll ll 21 51 In ' ll 'I Twenty-one 'I llllllllllllllllilll-Ill Il-l-lll- I I I I I I I :1lIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlI Gull' WVUUBP- UND mlllfk nl-lu-IIUIIIIIIIIIIIII I II I: :I :lg I1 ll ll '- :: -- -I RICHARD liaasrow li,,,ff,,,,, jl,,,f,, II , , iq '-nick , Red'. L1 I II -I Yr 0fl llIlHl -lmrricau Plrzv-l1uv 'I '- is ' . . '- F: t 'l'his frequent visitor of West Su'l'lielid came to this school ll in l92l and has been a steady player in l'ootball, Baseball, and I I' 'l' k I .I rac . ' r I I- Welwishkllick the best ofluck at and in anything that he ll may unc erta e. Il I- Honors: Football '22, '23, '2-l: Baseball '23s 'l'rack '24, '25g '- ll Glee Club '73 '24 '25- BIock 9 Club ' Il -I 1 - v 9 - A - -I I- '- II :- ll Il I- II ll ll I' II QI Il Il I. I' -. ll '- ll .I L: Howaku W. CLARK Granby, Conn. II ll S ark Plu1 :. -I P 1. - -1 :R Spark Plug caprurrx Ihr Sujicld llundicap. II , . . . . -I :I . lhis youth's 'reserved a'ppearance 'gives one the hrst II I: ' impression of conceit, but that impression is invariably exploded :I ll very shortly, for Sparky becomes acquainted ulcklv and - . . . q. - II L: easily. Scholastically he ranks among the highest in the class II I. of' '23 and many of thehmembers of.our class have received a :I I' helping hand from him in their studies. -Q L: We wish you the best that Yale can oFl'er. II Honors: Senior Class Basketball. .- ll .- I-1 I1 I' II 73 I: :' -- I: I' II I -I 11 Rickman Cuwris, Waterbury, Conn. Dick . II H . . . . ,, -I lirlmld a boy wllfl an nbjcrz an aww. II 'lim e ntV'two Dick has a peculiar liking for the higher education. lf you should chance to pass lVlr. Holyoke College any week- end you would surely see Dick and his girl out walking. Our friend Richard has joined us for the year and is one ofthe most popular bays in school. We, the class of '25. feel that this popularity will win laurels for him at the U. of P. and later in business. Here's luck anyway. Should you, dear reader care to get a big laugh, ask Dick to let you see his photograph album, page 5. C lHonors: '25 Class Basketball: 'l'au Omega Kappag Glee lu 1. IlI'IlI.I'I'I'IgIlIlIlIl , tk llllll'lllll'l'l'l'l'l'l --l-.-.-l-.-.-.-.-l-l-.- Uhr qlyfamgr ann mln IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIL: :: -- -I -I II II II -' -' II II -I II I1 . . . .. 'I I. I1 RANK DANual.s . New Mrk Clly - t Q - i I ' Dan , l3ebe' l'rankie'. Il 1 ' . ,, 'I r. Ur llzouglll the N. Y. Crum' form' .fl1lI'lz'cf in ilu' lliulmu . I . . I: Dannle , one ofthe Knickerbocker boys ofthe school. LI :I was forced to leave us last year, due to illness, but returned in the -3 .G fall of '24 to make a strong hnlsh this year. - ll I- As an athlete he will be a great asset to Columbia and he has :I . . , :I our best wishes. We also have no doubts as to l' rank s scho- I: ' lastic abilities I ll ' I :1 Honors: Basketball 2nd leam, '2S. .- II I' 'I I- ll ll 'I I- .- ll 'I 1. II ll ll II I' .I -I I- .- ug II II Il Il . . , 'I I- Dwicrrr l'oo'rie lla:-ffm-fl, Conn. II . -I rg Feet. - M . . . . . . . . ll l his game Hartfordlte though Clll'l'llllllIlVCll1 size and weight I: tg was feared by many of the football candidates because of his :- gameness and daring as well as his playing ability. lhough Il E studies are not his long suit he always is right there when the time comes. .- L- Nlay all good luck he yours in your future career, expecially ll . at Yale. I- Honors: . Football 2nd team, '2-l-, '2Sg Senior Class Basket- II :I Ballg Dramatncs '25. I -I fl I- ll 'I l- ll ll 'I I- II ll 'I II ll I' 'I ll I' -I fl :: I S II . ' Doucms S'I'Rl5li'I' lfolm I :: Doug . :I Thr U11izfrr.ml C5l7 F01U'ilVfIl'fl.f, 110 b!'lIk1'.rfH I . . , , :I Doug , the quiet unassuming lad from the hills of llastmg -: has been among us a goodly number of years.. He has been I' I- seen many times onlone basketball court playingasupcrior brand II Il of ball. We wish Doug ' the best Worcester has for him and : ll we exnect tonhear of his doing great things in the future. Good Il Il luck, ' Doug . :- Honors: '23, '24,'25 Basketball town teamg '23, '2-l,'2S, ': -' Baseball town team. Il li II -I I as . ll 4- gg l' II :I . . ll wr tx-three --Il-I-.Il-I-I-I-IQ.-I-I . ' - -I-I-ID.-I-I-I-I-I-I-'H' lilllllllllllllllllilill alll' oprnngp Huh MIN-tk l-l-l.g-l-l-l-l-'-l-g-l- -I -I :I ll -I ll ll ll lj L: ' ' W ll -I ll In -I -I ll In ll Q -l 2: OSCAR l'RlilillURG . . , llarqford, Ct. S: Swede , Square-head , Freckles . :1 Swede was the Senior Class' hest bet for a center on the I- class team and was much feared by all of his opponents. I. gl We've often 'wondered where Oscar was parking during ll -T those many inexplicable week-ends' which he has spent in Hart- l- ford. We ha-ve our suspicions she is a lady thatis known as Lu I- -I but he IS as silent as the Sphinx on the matter. ll 5: We have no doubt that Swede will make good in the lg future. I- -' H ' S ' Cl' li k-tl ll I- onors. enlor ass as e ma . '- up I' II lu lg ul ll lu .I -I ll lu ll 1. ll , In ll 1. ll II ll -I II In Il -I ll ll -I 1 . . -I lg VVil.1.i,m C1m'xmN. . lrankfori. New York I- 'l .. - ,, Il I- 9 .- ll , . . , . u lg . 'll1ll upon entering Muhlenberg will honor that college I: R: with his presence for 1sn't Bill a very deserving young man ll -I possessed with rare qualities that would honor any college, the lg class of.'25 thinks so anyway. 5 . .- :E Bill has had a rather remarkable year at Sul'l1eld making :I .I a name in athletics and a host 0ffl'llfl1ClS. -1 'U Honors: Football Seconds, 'Z-lg Basketball Varsity '25g ll I: Block club. ' gg Il Il ll ll -I Il .I II ll Il ll I- ll lg ll I. ll lj ll ll Il -I ll ll ll -I ll ll 'I Groarr Hmiukn Bethel Conn ll I. . .. , , . , . .- -I llIlldKlV!l III-lihbvfl 'FY .- , , . , . 5, . -- :: 'Ti.f Iikr Ihr' Irfll of II lnwr In hir lIl!1lI'.H :I l g: Alasfthe Beau Brummel steps mvand captivates the hearts :I -I of our fair maidens. ,luddy came into our mIilSt.l3SC year -1 ll and has proven himself in sports as well as any boy in school I- :: perhaps. He is expcclally noted for his work on thc mound. :I .I lhehclass sends George down Dixie way CUmversity of West -1 lg Vlrgimal with all wishes for the best ofluck and a bit of warning I- F: Beware, else some southern bloom will get you. I' Honors: Varsity Baseball, '24, '25: Varsity Football, '2-lg ll lg Varsity Basketball, '24-'25. Block S Club. I1 L' I ll I- II ll ll II ll ll Il Q I- ll 'l wentv-four ll AI ,. llllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllll t ,lf l Il tk I I ::l-'-'-l-l-l-.-l-.-.-l- alll' WVUIYBI' 'aah in a lllnlnlnlllnlllnlulu 1:1 lu I: ll ll 51 I' ll u: :I I' -u nl 'I ,. . . ll :: MERVIN JENNINGS, lorrmgmn, Cr. 'I Buzzard , Stretch . ' ll In l l I l H Il :S Verily, tlli.r .rtrtplzng hall: lofty zz,rpn'al1ou,f. :I As his nick-name implies, Stretch is very short and I- -: stocky, Qabout'6 feet 4 to.be exact CFD. He has been in the ll habit of migrating to a certain establishment of the terpslchorean -I :I art in Springfield. Buzzard is a football player of not mean I- -: abiltiy. In bidding you farewell we sincerely hope that Dame ll Fortune will always smile upon you, and not her daughter - . , - - w I :I Miss-Fortune ', especially during your stay at the U. of l. ll Honors: Football 2nd Team, '24: Tau Omega Kappa. '- ll ll 'I ll ll -I 'I II ll ll 'I 3 ll ll -I 'I II ll 1 -I -I 1 ll ll l -I 'I ll 'I -I -I ll :: ABRAHAM KREMER, . Lvwfll, IVHH- -I Abie l.ankev Cohen ll ll ' ' ' :: Introducing Ihe broad llarrfard Nfl . 'I This oun fellow hails from a place which was made lg I- y g ' cc yr r ' ' .I verv popular and well known here in Suffield by Abe Liskind, ll ' . L k ha alwa s '- ll one of thc best cheerleaders wc ever had. lfan y s y .- Fa been very reserved and so he never mingled with the boys much. I- .. We sincerely wish you good luck. :I Honors: Class Basketball. ll -I 'I lu ll ll 'I ll ll -I 'I ll ll -I 'I ll ll -I -I lu ll -I 'I ll ll -I 'I ll ll -I :: I In -I HARRY l,ARSON, . Br1dgfport, Conn. gg Chubbie , Cherub . L: H IHlove.lo nzrditate on anything bu! books-. - 1 . ll C,hub hails from Bridgeport and seems to be satished ln -I :I all that. lVlany'f fourth floor events were spiced up by the actions lg -: of this small child. This year's class hopes to hear reports about :I ll Cherub from Lafayette on whose gridiron we are sure that he - , . . -I :I will make'good. l We are confident that Harry will win even li -I greater things in life after college. I: Honors: Varsity Football, '243 Block S Club. :I ll .1 :I ll I -I :I ll I- 'I l I ll -I I' - l L: Twenty-live -I llllll-lilililllllilll-I I III I I I I I I I I :il-lul-lnl-I-I-nl-I-n Gull' 0975999 lint' Bind' lg:-l:l:l:l:l:l:l:l:l::: II I. -' ll I' .- ll .- ll -I Ig II I' n M M - i Il :. oN,u.n . AC .-wus. Inwluclerl, R. 1. .I . UM' in .- :I .lc . -I U . . H. . ' . .H II ' llrml, mon. frm yr :nur lmfrrl I1 Don .ll!IL.lllIIIIl.l. - I I .- - - . . :I lhe pinnacle of lVlac's glory is reached when clad in kllts, I: - hveltoors away on the hag-pipe Csuwapliopel. hringing forth musie :- I: f On the Road to lVlandaluy'j which Rohert Burns savs :I , , . I' makes man s blood run faster, and spurs him on to valorous .1 I: deedsl.M' H I I 'I lv Hi li I I v t .- :- ac is t me sc moo s o cial l11llCl',l10lWOVCI' it s just across 'I the streetyhe runs now and try.and heat hun there. . Don enters the University of Virginia and we wish him lg l success. rl . .... ... - . , , . I . Honors' Glee Cluh, '73, '7-lg 'l'r'lck, 'Ng Orchestra '25 I- - 1 3 . Il l ' In l ' i ll -I II .' II ll II II 'I ll I II fl ll l II fl -I p . 'VI . . r - - . ' I. HILII 1 lllllul., . ll',',f1 hujfi,-ld, Lg, 'I ll HM-ki., ..l,l -I.. ' I. 1 t. , n . ' - ' - - . I: My kl!lgCl0NI.flIf Il pouy. ' Cpnny-,fniall lrorff' :mul in fffllfllb 'I Il As ua dlllglent.student '23 ranks lVl1ke paramount. He is - 1: mechzlnlczlhlly inclined. and shows 'more interest in sciences and .- mathematics than m the arts. His Intentions are to pursue an :I Il engineering course at Harvard, and we have not the least douhr .1 'I that he will succeed at this. Our hest wishes Mike , and show II I' . . . . .I Harvard what Sulheld training can do. :I . ,. . I :g T Hogorsz l'ooth:lll 2nd, 'Z-lc lown htudent's liasltethall Il .I enm, J. I II fl Il ' II II -I II -' II ll II gl ll 4' II -I II ll 'I II II -I II :U II ' II Il .I I1 M .. .. v f .- - .- Akon: ONIROSS. Nrw lurk Lily I ' II I HM . - ont5 . I I . . 'U .S Behold another New Yorlzylad, who has gained a widespread ll gl reputation as zu good sport . Although this is lVlonty's : -1 hrst and last year here at hufhcld he is leaving hehind him a Il I. very worthy reputation. Well Harold, you may be assured that QI rhelclass of 25 wishes you the hest of luck in your work at I as University of llllaryland. I II PI 'I I 2 lfl :: ,I II ,. . I' l wenty-six 'II'- 'I hr mr . Hunt .1 ' fu 1 .ilsilnrk -..--I-. -I-I-I-I I-- I :l 'ilu :I 'II'-I I I :- - I I I I- ROY H I. EN l RY N . -l uk HELY I: Gyn- 'Jun lIlIlIl I ll I , -I- L: tio Lim- a Sl 1 gyplurfa, Now Y Illll-I-I :I sung of thigol-r While ll aj. NM H Wk Cflx, I:- I ' In tl A A Met Wg WA Oy-ffl, - I .I H0 11, 'M Fo 3 ' C-Fe 'ffl Q '- f ta 0 -1011: Puy' - la 'I N C I sill! an I JUG! ' 'I II CW lin 'mil to H Ito Sratwad- A, K abfbug tl l II I Came - Hlandf .nd an L pro ' Rm-a ' 'C ext. I' :: I into thLe'TIninitVa'1Sxvcr tgeg to l,ecfl'0n of Jindcd Vacq :- Ha .' i ,---:1 ' 1 10 .eo . I: ball candfhlvncs iycllghtl mln the films markesflfltlon. p?0S1f,, I: I' I I9 lrlau, f Oy ha ZlgQ 4 nndm- f'di1 I. :I Cmug 525 Imopesoq rhree 3 Showed - Wen 0fNU enCe rf, :I ' s t o , , 1 .. e I: run!-ZS onyou llavcwg YOU vsiicnflvgrsflt fenacit W-Iel'Scy I: :I I4 H0 HTC ladd een at S 1-1l:lWaVgLli1S0nS ya being I f I ' no . Cr ll ' . f c ' 5 0 I - Outh FS. C fo S old as . Or- . I C HII , las- UCCP 5 fllr Const I II lags Bzzqind 1-cams ,Secreta 'Ss. those twglnr and tl :I ll ' Urban ,J 23 fy and ., flllali -Jfl1a- Il I1 1021111-, qfnd ,24- B lfeasl, tm' are I: 1 ,l 5 a rc. :I mf Book Eetball Mah '21, and , :I I: aFF, a1.zer,,21'S 22: .: -I a Cnior -I I' I. -I Q. I- I- I I I N I I- CHA I. I RU: , . I .S O C I I- 14 ONN .- Il 014561, R, g II ' HCI1 ' I: I , a ll'r ll .. '0 5- ' I' . Ok' v, '1'r'!0 . N, - I be le I Cf. '10 y I. I. en Ser. ms h MIL! 0 F orb P, I - arch louslv een . ,011 , I .ny -I :E noftarzhtif Ci! T5 for Sic, W1 in low I. one of Om the C NCI1 Inf 'Wing tl Years , I - lll- It ' Rm 3 1 5 kt, .10 la 1 and . I I: gm hestadlnfz 'fer 'NS mists FPW ycallls W0rk I ll '75 Onor Wlshc Cfvs f Dani, Consil S du., 'HS I. I ' S P - S1 I+ 5 acc 01' 1 HI V feral, t0 rl . -1 meal' 1:2 S'wft'.2'- 1.L'7fa1-mic :: I . . , ' 1 2 1' . Ou , 'nut' '. ya 'I' I: L' A., '2'g,231 'Z-gig syfaclsseof flings BCCI1 :: ' ' Bllgehanapgising Clazgnll after :I x . 8 . . 3- .. lilockjinlyeasurev 5: HI S ' la -I LI ' uh- II I I I- I- - I I 51 li II II 'l W 'I :- AL-'AER ODDY :- II W , I ' I altu u - ll W ' Odd' I 'I H9 is OFSIIEH Cam. i . 'I I. wln, ,W New 2 to Us Srf,,,f I. w alt 'Ln 1 from 'Ufd 5- Il I I .C feel Cl' ent Il and Q the 7 x 4011 H '- I lhe , Sure tl ers Col ' tuck 3 LFCCI1 ' - I . Clag 1111: 1 Rat. ' - nd g lllg I I- -Ill k 5 Of '25 TC w'l L lhe 'Veg tl of M I- UOW w' ll t 010 r' 10 5 ' U. H I tl Ish llr klc an - I Wat Cs n 0 3' Q. .'Sfg1 - Crm I I H You - You UU to ' Cm Cflon OD. I- I3 0n0r . I Wlll ' the b . be ' In SQ ofg - I 38k - S- g Cs 2' c - Pt 00d I - Ltlyall. ,V Cl-,eerle dlve the Wt ln the onvlncin Cmher and .- I ' r. H 0 Wo ll ' - I I: 'lckv Cer' Fld YOUI- l'Wali?,'nlStel. I: I ' 'lvc C ' B CS: 4 fo ' a . r I 'lib 1 Skcd We -' I- x F wall Q '- ll 00cbaH'511SonQ C I' I . qu: 1 , lugs I. IL . g 1 25 I ., I Il lg II I' I- . r - I fl gi :E I I ,IRI Wntvu JI . sgvon -- p I llllllll-I-Ill-Ill-IIIUI - IIIIIIIIIIIII III I I I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII alll' allfmflll' UND mlafli I-I-I-I-I-I-l:l-ull-:nhl I Il ' I: II .I ll I- II .I II I- UI II ll I- Il -I Lg I II I- QHARLICS l,liIX, . Nrw lork City - , , , . I: lt-w Gun . Qharlie . 1 . I: lV11l, I rrckon lhlllif nnolllfr rwlrli Ifor my paul. - ,, . . . . I: ' lew Gun , so named for his ability to devour Zane Grey's ll novels, rode iInto town uponIhis favorite mustang Pinto and II g: has done considerable shooting up ever since. Charlie has been ll here only a year but during that time has made many friends b ' -I II . . . 5 I- Il his smile and havw nature. He foes to the West to b- o I I I. L I ec me II gl a gold dlgger and plans on further education at the Colorado ll I School of Mines. Here's how Charlie-ro 'et 'em. -I ll P P I- :S Honors: Tennis, '25s Dramatics, '25: Glee Club, '25, 'I -I lrack, '2J: Year Book btaff: President 'l'au Omega Kappa. I' II ll Il ll I- II -I II ll - I ll I I Cl . I Il ll Ilosiarn Rlaln l,0'l l'IiS, .flzmmr 'II .- I- ,li , . .. ll . . , II -I 'loe l, Doc , Hfeken. q ll ' Il -I ln Furl I lrufl ffl!! oth 'r.r muff av czrh . I- II , I ' ' , pf A l , I: :I Globe tIrotter, speculator, agent, hnancler, and jack-of-all- Il -: trades. l his could apply to anyone, but there is only one Joe Il I- Pottes, the boy with the million dollar smile. Coming in the fall ll ol 22, Doc has graced the fertile soil about buflield for three I ,. . . . . , I -. years. His tactics relative to the female species are deceptive :- I- to those about him, but a close analysis reveals a most passionate lg 'I and persistant adhesion to their kind. lfrom Fat l.oefl'el, l I. H H - I -I Doc grabbed the torch of school dalesman with no mean re- :I I- sult. Illinois will surelyIhnd in joe a ready backer and yet I: :I one not to forget old burbeld. II ll Honors: President of Class in '23, Bulletin StaH', '23, :- gg lfootball, ,22. 2nds '23, Varsity '2-lg ilirack, '23, '24, '25: l.cader I: Glee Club '2-l' l'r'sid'nt Athlltic A ' ti '2-l-'7 Bl k .I I- II III I . , e ei I e , ssocia .on, ..J, oc '- II h Club: Year Book Stall. - . I 'I l II Il -I II I- II -I II I- Il Osooon Ralf l?rool'lwi N Y Il I-I - .. . , I , . . '- 'I 017ie Racer ll I- .. , . ' f. . I :g Ihr grnllrnizlu .rclzufar 1r1rnl . :I 'I lhe ClllCOl'Il'lCllICl'Ol.tl1C Yearbook is well worthv of wraise I II -- ,- - l ' . for is it not the Year Book of 2:--and does not that class I' l I II choose wisely? I: 'I No member ofthe class has been more faithful in his untirin f I I- . . . . la I etlorts in relation to the class and to school life. 3 'I .. - , ,. - - .. .,- . Il II Ozzie s Dl'CSCI'lPl'l0l1ll0!' the blues is music. He plays a I- :: inean banJo, and can play all sorts of weird harmony as proved -I bv his playing at the numerous tea dances. I H' 'l 'f'l- ll - 'l fl' lv lf'll l' -I I is antit ott TI: tI1tI wuts I is aug ung ant ,ooc e ows up ant one can a wavs nc tiem in us room. I , . - . ' . . ' I he class of'2n owes Rae much and also wishes lnm success 'l'wenty-eight in his work at M. l. 'l'. and life. The class of'25 thanks you Rae. Honors: Class Basketball, '24, '25, Orchestra, '2S: Y. lVl. C. A. Secretary, '2Sg Debating Team, 'Z-l: lfditor in chief of this book. Il I IIIIIIIII n.u.a.u.uHIFIIH!FIFIFIIIFIIIFIFSFIFlFIFIFIFIFIFIFIIIIIIIIIFIFIFHIIIIIII :E :: :: :: :: ii I'I'.li'lIIi'lFli'.!I.1i'II'lIII'2 Ulu QDUUYBP HND iilvfk FIIIFIIIIIFIFBIIIIIIIII-E Anemia F. Ross, Ilnmilioa, N. Y. Pug , Archie . Small, bu! lmrd like a nal. Pug , one of the valley boys,-now all together. l.ove has touched this fair lad from the north and he now hats .400 with her and .375 with the 9. Archie is one of the popular boys of the school and incidentally one ofthe best athletes winning his letter in three sports. lt's good luck and Godspeed. May your career at Colgate be as spectacular as it has been at Sul'l'icld. Honors: '24, Football: '25, Basketball: Baseball '25: Block S Club. limvfum C. Rulmcx, Troy, Ni-w York lfddy . Oral Qf Troy-llomr Qf .flrrow Collars and llrlrnf' Although licldy has been among us only one year, he seems one of us, and we shall all lniss him after tlune. lfddy can handle his lunch-hooks whether they are in boxing gloves or tickling the piano ivories. lf you always try to make life as much of an enjoyable thing as you have at Sullield, your sorrows will be few in number. Honors: All Aboard Orchestra: Business lVlanager, Year Book: Vice-Presiclent, 'liau Omega Kappa. MEl.VlN WMKHR Scuuu, llnrlford, Conn. Nellie , lfrlmlz1 llllf drmmrr mmf'1li. Considered by many of the students as one of the best mathematicians ofthe Senior Class, this Hartford youth will undoubtedly make good in the solution of his life's problems. His favorite indoor sport is earning as many H's as possible on all of his monthly reports. Keep up the good work at Yale, Schuh, and we know that you will come through with high laurcls. Honors: Glee Club, '24 and '25g Year Book Staff. Twentv-nine llllllilllll-Iilllllll-I f V ' -I-I-I-I-I-Ill-Ill! I I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII alll'-'DYNWLIF ann mlafk I-l-nl-l-lnl-nl-l:l:l: I II I: ll ll 'I II ll ll IC I- -I Il l- .- ll I. ll Ib :g ltnwakn SMITH, - Scllrnrrrady, Nrw York gg Eddy , Smitty . :: lfddy is q'-joe lVloore's only 'rival on the rink and on the gl court. he gives lilden'a good run. lhe lower extremities of his gl :I clothing give one the impression that he has served in the navv. II In lnqaddition to this Smitty ' has a pleasing personality and an gl afbnityi for the brand of cigarettes which has a veiled woman of gl :I the Orient on its containers. II I: bo here's wishing you luck at Yale l'Iddy . .I H Cl' B' 'k- I ll 'V' 'l' '- 'IV '7' ll I. I onors. . ass as ttia , ..n. ennls eam, -ng Dra- gl matics, '2J. II lg II Il I- -- -I I. I- II ll I' II .- II Il I- II Il -I Il .- Il -I II , :I GERARD SULLIVAN. New l.on1lon, Conn. ' 1 - II ll lerrv , bullie . - . . I II , :I Jil, haf Cnmr, .mmf mu.rzr.' Comr, Ihr n'mr11rr. ' I . . . . . :I Originality plus humor minus all seriousness equal the U characteristic found in jerr's dailv routine. We suspect his II - . . . ' . . . ' uen ongue is s reng iene mi s unceasmg wi v ns a ent ance l: H r t r tl d t t b.l tr l ll ar performances of an abbreviated nature. His ability to act gl L: was proven by All Aboard and his voice, in quality, is probably II l- due to the oratorieal contests between him and lVlr. Sisson. Il Completing a second year with us, ,lerry's never failing cheer gl ag will certainly be missed when he becomes a buflaeld Ugrad . II L: Honors: Football Squad, '23, 'Z-I-: Draniatics. '25, lg -I ll II Il -I ll II ll - II I I I Il - I II ll Il .- II Il -I -I .. .. . . .f , . I' Wuiiui iuruifiu mn II I .- Bill Billv II -I V . ' - . . I A: Aly Capmzn! .lly Capln1u! 5: Bill has proven himself a .worthy leader in both the II lg social and athletic SlCl.l'S of school life. lover since he entered II sehool he has been active and a favorite with all. -l a: Bill goes to Colgate and there we feel sure he will he in the II :I limelight and a favorite-ll H I H V I I lhe class of -J wisies to thank Bill lor his support gl L: and leadership. II ,. , . . . lg lhe honor of 25 owes its success to you. Good luck, Blll,- 'I '75 Il II ' . . . ll Honors: '23 '24, l'ootball: '24, '25 Basketball. Captain . . - . - - N - II '23, '24g '25 Baseball, Captain, 25: Block 5 Club. junior .- :Q Prom Committee: Presuleiit of Class, '24, '25. Year Book Stall :I ll '25, Y. M. C. A: Vice-l'resident. 25. -: :U II I Il II -l II II -' - , , ln I I 1 ll ' II El I l Ei :- rl :: L: :: :: I I I 5: :E an . .I - I I :: L: zz I 3 - I E: :F I - :z :: :n :E In . I I I :: L: :: e.: :: gl ai IlI.II2i'lFlI.'lI.Ii'li'li'Ii'l Uhr' Ubrdfwl' wil' ililflrk FIFIIIFIIIIIIIIIFIIIIIE ll KIENNIETH SWAR'I'l'l0U'l', Ken . Ken has dwelt among us for a short period and during that time has won friends galore. He has proven himself in athletics, the school feels proud in having had him on its teams. Ken , we of '25 wish you success in Colgate and thereafter. Honors: '24, lfoorhallz '25, Basketball: '25, liasehall. Senior Dance Committee. Block S Cluh. K1aNNra'ru 'lfr-romvsou, . Smmford, Cf. Ken , Sir Kenneth , 'l'ornmy . l 0ur1g Krnvzfllz rodr out of Ihr WMI. Sir Kenneth the bold and flashy knave of Stamford, rode into our hamlet via the good horse Huckleberry . He has covered every empty space with his works of line art and has made us extremely happy by his playing and singing. Ken goes to the New York School of l ine and Applied Arts and we know already that he will surpass our best artists. lie gone and luck . Honors: Glee Club, '24, '25, Year Book Staff. '24, '25: Dramatics, '25, Orchestra, '24, '25: Secretary-'l'reasurer, 'l'au Omega Kappa: 'l'rack, '25. NKIRAIAN 'l'll0MI'SON, Sujifld, Conn. Tommy , Norm. I7lIf0!f1lC'I'7lg zllr. for 11'r0ole.r- thai Kollrgf Ku! Klofhn Man' 'l'ommy, the Popular , might well be the title of this town lad. He has served his time faithfully and has won manv school honors. Tommy is noted for his speed and grit iii athletics and although handicapped hy his small stature he makes up hy his aggressiveness. 1 St.Hl,awnence University is to he honored next year with 'Norm and 25 feels that he will he a huge success. We only regret that 'l'ommy cannot go to college with each one of us, but let him rest assured that we are with him in spirit and we feel that there's a spot in his heart for each of us and for his Alma Mater. A few deals will be recalled in which 'l'ommy took active part, along with Cherub and the boys-f-Au revoir I 1 l l ommy and good luck. Honors: Football Squad, '22, '23, '24, Varsity '25: Basket- hall Squad, '22, liasehall Squad, '22, '23, Orchestra, '24, '25: Track, '23, '24, '25: Treasurer, Class in '23: Vice-President Athletic Assoeiation,'24: l3loek S Cluh: Year Book StaFf,'25. hirty-one I2 EE :I al. L-1 L1 21 I 1 Ei L1 21 L1 L1 2.1 I l Il I2 I2 Il r: rx E! EE IIIIIIFIFIIIFIFIIIFSIIII film' Ullrfftlsll' ifllfllilflrrlf IIIIIIFIFIFIIIIIIIISFIII I 'I II ll II -I II ll Il -I II ll ll ll I'-1 51 ll T , , li :I SAMUEL IHORNTON, Soufh zllanclzexier, Conn. I :I Red , Sam . I :I '7'l1r Blond lifafl' al Ihr Sourlz rllazrclmrlxr Tlzenlrf' - o 1 s :I Sam gave us all the impression at the beginning ofthe -1 year of being a man of few words butlhe has blossomed out -I I- into a great sport. He has much athletic ability, especially on II :I the basketball court, as those of us know, who have seen htm ' :lay rin fs around o 1 monents much larger than himself. - -I l . f-.I ll H H I I I- We will doubtless hear of Red often m the future and he II ll will doubtless make good at l'ratt. :I :I Honors: Football 2nd, 'Z-l: Varsitv Basketball. 'ZSL Varsitv 'I 'I Baseball '75' Block S Club. i .- UI ' ' ll I- II Il -I I- II Il ll II ll ll ll I- ll Il ll I- ll HI II II ll ll IoHN WICKWIRH. W1-.rl lla:-rn, Cr. ll II K , ll II Wlck . -I I- I G ll ll Y-ll' olfon will render lux Ialfzrl mzunmv-.ron . -I I- ' K .- II This 'product of West Haven showed his abilities as a I- COIl1CKllClI1ll1 All Aboard . and he also displays them everv dav -I . . . - . - . - Il about the cammus. Hts S3CCl2ll hobby IS muttmg American I- l , l ll . . l . . . ll History on its back, and IDCOIIOITIICS holds no terrors for him. :I E: Wherever you go you can count on us to back you up, .1 I- especially at Yale. I- :S Honors: Manager Track Team, 'Zia Captain Senior 1 - , . -I Basketball Fl eam: Dramatics, 23. II I- ll Il II II ll II ll I- '- ll ll I- ll II ll II ll ll ll II ll Il ll II ll Il ll II ll :: james ZANIJH, , :: Big Chief , Alim . -I Fuforado--urlararo'' -. I- ' ' ll F: The music now Hays the lndian l.ove Song as Big Chief Zande Dl2lI'llSl1lS totem aole in our lI1lClSl'f0l' the year '25. lm I ll l . I - , . l II as some know him better has been one ofthe school s best bets in :I :g football and baseball. May good tidings be with you wher'er I: -I you go, jim , and here's luck from your classmates of '2S. II L: Honors: '24, Football Varsity: '25, Baseballg Block I- 5 Club. I- ll ll II -I II ll -I -I II ll II -I II ll II :I :g Thirty-two I: s ' ' , IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII will 0- rdugl' dnl flilflfk IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIILI :' I: ' I 'l I: II -I 'I ln II -I -I II In ,- '. II II -I -. II L' A . ll .: MAH Brccnnsmrr, Sujhflrl. Conn. .- T: Martha , Skinny . . . , I :: Silence 11 Gofriwzn. :: 'lhis miss, though rather shy in her Freshman year, has '- -I become one of the favorites of ou-r class. lo Mae, many of ll II the members of our class owe their deep appreciation for the :: great assistance that she has rendered them in their studies. .- -I We all wish Mae the best of luck, and hope she' will continue :I I mrowmg sunsune on e car pa 1s o a 1er riencs. -I I tl l th l k tl f ll I f I ' I 1 . . - 'I Honors: Year Book btafl: Glee Club, '22, '24, '25: Lesbian. -I II ll Il 'I I- .I I' 'I I- ll Cl 'I II '- Il -l I- II ll ll I- ll Il -I . . . II L: l'.1.rzAnH'rH Dicvmiz, Sujln-Id, Conn. :- I- ul iyu ul n - -I . . , .1 y . I' 'I -'xml - f'ld af' -I f 1 r rag Q L0 rn .rul1.i1111.. . Il ,. . . , l ll I us little maid from the banks of the Connecticut has been ll l- a continual ray of sunshine.through our four years of fun and II gl frolic. and whenever there is Aan argument l.ihhy takes the ' front seat with her commanding voice. gl :: We all wish you the best of luck, Libby , and hope that II ll you will continue to be as successful in the future as you have :I been in your four years of fun in Prep. School. -I ll Honors: Glee Club, '22g Lesbian. .- ll 'I II '- I' ll II ll Ip 'I I- .- Il 'I II '- I ll l: II Il Il II 'I Il 'I I- -U . . I :S lVlYRA l'0RD, . Iliff! Sufflrld, Conn. I: :E cxMyxn, ruriluya' ulfordu. :: YH I low' glory-gIory',v a grrai Il1i11,:f. .: :g Here is one who always makes herself heard. She has very -I sensible Ideas and her classmates respect her for them. She Il ll has-shown herself as a diligent and prosperous young woman :- :: during her four years as one of our class, and her friends and lg -I classmates wish her good luck and success for the future. Il L: Honors: Glee Club, '22, '24, '25: Lesbian. I- ll ll ll II -I II .I II II -I :I II I -I ll II II :: 'l'l1i1'ty-three -. l !IIIlIlInI!IlIlI:InIIIII , . 1. -IQIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII lilnlllulllllnlllllnllln alll ajrunllv UND Quark lnlnlllulllllllllllnllll Il ll I- .- ll 'I Il ll I- '- Cl Q ll ll Niai.1.iic l'Ul.t,isu, . . Sujffld, CONN- I' ll ll 1: She is pretty to walk with, I- And witty to talk NVltll,' k H I- ll And pleasant too, to tlun on. II :Q Here we have one of the sharks of the class and also one -: lp of its fairest magnets. Her special magnetic powers have done lg :S damage to the heart ofa certain tall lad fromlNew York, City, -I but Nellie doesn't let these things interfere with her social life -I ll and her help in the class. y She has always been Wlllll'I11Uf0 help lg :I any of her classmates out in their individual struggles and -I has never heen known to lack pep in any ofthe school actlvl- -I Il ties, ll :I You have left many friends in Sufheld School, Nellie, and we -1 all wish you the best of success and prosperity. -I I .. X. . . . - . . Q .v --. -. - 'I Honors' l eshian' 'l'reasurer, '7-l' Class Historian, '77 '73, ll :: '24, '2h: Glee C lub, '22, '2-I-, '25: Year Book Stall. I: -I ll Il Il Sl ll In ll ll II In , ll Il Il ll ll :g :loulss Gll,I.ioaN, . . lI'r.vr Sujhl-ld, Conn. 'I C'illi ren Gill Ci I vl B9 -- .- 7 L 1 1 I l-.ls V- .- -I l7or it's 'l'ommv this 'lI1 l.0l1l1 f tl t ' -. I- 'H , U . . . 1 lj ia an -- lomm ' 'Walt 1 l -' -I 5, 0 ltslt L . -I In liut it's 'Special train for Windsor l.ocks', ll R: When the troops.-r's on the tide. nl We are indeed fortunate in having this brilliant and 'I L: pleasant spark of lile as one ofour members. She has always I- been willing to help the class in social and business aflairs and lg :I has shown great ability along this line. She believes in keeping :I -1 up with the world, even in owning a lord and has never been -: I- known to fail in anything she has undertaken. lg :I We know you will be successful, Agnes, and hope joy and -1 happiness will come your way. -I I: Honors: Class Secretary. '23, '2-la Vice-President, '25g Glee Club '77 '74 '79 l -sbian' Y-1' Bot k Qt'l'l' I- . --, .. , ... . .L. . . et! I tt .l . I- Il Il II ll ll -I In In Cl ll ll In II Cl I! In :g :XDA ll0l.l.0WAY, Sujflrlzl, Conn. ll UR A I-v Cl II U - ll Cl .. . .A . .. Il lomr on lvl 1 rmrl romrrlnnf' I- A . . . . s- ln I I: Red , our .famous athlete, entered school as a very bash- Il lul l'reshman, with her auburn tresses strmging way down her ll :l back, but behold her now as the foremost ofthe bobbed heads, :- I: and one of the llvellest and most popular girls ofthe class. Al- I: Il though she exhibits no hendlsh devotion to the acquisition of Il I: knowledge, Red is named among the best students ofthe class. I- Red we sincerely hope that you will continue your hght I- Il Ill llle as you have done so skillfully down on the basketball floor. :I , . - l L: 3 Honors: Year Book Staff: Basketball, Varsity, '24, '25: -I ll L Lesbian. Il Il If , Il lu f . II ll 3' f ' Q ll ' . -. I' ' 1 I1 In ll Il 'I 'l'hir '- t ' I- ty fo u .- :::l:I:I-lllllilllil-Ill any QQ!-.angle ann 415181-k 'l:l:l'I:l:I-I-I-I:l:l:l -I I I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII II I III I IIIIIII I I-1 II -I I1 I1 II ll II ll II II I' F' -: DOROTHY Horne, Sltjiffd, Conn. .1 I- 11D tn .- -I 0 . I 5: Warmly puff and xwuflly wrong. -I II - - - - 1 II -I 'lDot joined our class in the fall of l92-l- and in less time 1. I- than it takes to tell, she became a friend of most everyone of the II :E class. During the year she has shown herself to be a basketball .I star as well as a star in her studies. gl II lfyou do as well in the future as you have done during your II :: year at Suffield School we have no need to wish you success, .. H - - - -I Dot , but know you will gain lt. I' I' Honors' l3'1sketb'1ll '25' lesbian .- -I . .. . . . . , . . . -- II ll Il ll II ll -I -I II II Il Il II II Il ll II II Il Il II ll ul ll II ll ul Bl I: lJOR0'l'HY HovHY, . Springffld, 4lla.r,r. II Dot , Heavy , The Wreck . ll ll ' l ll L: Oli fllonry, ,llom'y',. R :I .When Dot, hailing from Springheld, joined our class as a 1 :- Ig junior in the fall of 1923, we knew at a glance that here was one I: gl who would help push our class to success and she has lived ll :I up to. our expectations. Although she is not very fond of :- I: studying, she always gets there some way. .g g' bo keep up the line , Dot , and we are sure you will be Il I1 successful in the future. I- Y Honors: Lesbian, Vice-l'residenr, '25: Glee Club, 'Z-l, 'ZSQ II ll ear Book Staff: Dramaties. '25. -I II II -I -I II II -I -I II ll Cl ll II 'sg II ll ll II II ll ll II II ll Il ll II Il l3All.rY l,ocKic'r'r, . , . Suf,-ffl, Cf,,,,,, ll II U f, , . I H II :I 11 f prrzf bookf and we prim' llzfm -mor! who llfl' ll11'1n,rflf'r.v wma :I I . . l , , . I Il Barley is one of our foremost students, winning many prizes il L: for her literary achievements. She also has been 21 help to some of I- her classmates and she is always ready to give her honest opinion I- Il on any subject. ll L: . Bailey, we hope that. you xwill be as successful in the future I- as you have been at bufheld School. .- :: y Honors: Glee Club, '21, '22, '24, '25s lst. Kent Prize lissay V -I 23g Znd. Kent Prize lussay, 'Z-la Lesbian. -' II AJP' ' II Cl Il ll saw j ll ll . - -I :g iw' gr r M .... I-.. . ll II ll Il , . . , - 51 'I II I hurry-hve I- -I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I Q -- - ' - -I-I-I-I-I-I-llllllll I lnlllnlnlulllllllllllill E119 mldnlll' dim 'lfilflflf I-Illllllllnlllllnlulglg -I I I- ul ll ll ll Il 'I ll 2.1 ll 11 11 ll I- ll ng ll .- 'I , . 'I L: MARY l,0CKli'l I'. Sujin-ffl, Conn. Il -I ll lVlae . lg -l .. - - , 4 H -. g: hm' hail: no vom' bu! Ihr lzrarl ,r znzpzrlrr. :I Mary is a diligent student with a remarkable faculty for ll -I ' mastering her lessons, and her classmates are grateful to her for gl her ever wilhngnwesshto help them with their studies. She has Il A: many friends in Surheld. hy her pleasing ways and they all wish :I her the hest of success for the future. I ll , , In , . T: l-lonors: Crlee Cluh, 2l, '22, '24, '25g l.eshian. :I I ll ll ll Il II ug Il I- ll II 'I Il ll ll I' ' ll ll ll ll .- ll ll I' II -' fl l' ' ' f ' ' -I ll - NN-'l Rl'-R01 i . . l1r.rlSujf1rld, Conn. I :g Que-ene Anne , l3ohhy . U , . . . I: lvl I lIIl'l'l' 201111111 mr .romfllzmg zi111rgrm11,r. - - ' - - . .: Here is a miss from the rocky regions of West bulheld. who lg has always heen hrilhant in her classes and who shines among ll her classmates. She has never heen taken with the ferver of ll -I - ll I- studying and has never heen known to let anyone walk over .- ll her. hut we all admire her independence and wish her success ll and happiness for the future. L: I ll-lonors: Glee Cluh, '22, liaskethall. '2S: Varsity, '25, ll . . gl I- .ts sian. , .- ll ll 'I Il ll Il 'U II 'I lj Il f I. ll ll 'I Il ll Il 'I Il ll ll ll , . -I l,UANNA l'mai.l's, ll'r,rr bujhvld, Conn. ll .. , H l- Q. l CU' . -I 1: My hear! 1..f truf ay ,f1e'rl. ' In . . . . Il I Here rs a girl from West bulheld, who forlfour years has :I enlrvened huffield Schooldmylmeans of her great influence in the In I: class and in other organizations and, though she is very quiet, :I gl her :once may he heard everywhere, speaking its many words of 'I ll wist om. I- . . I: .We wish you a happy and prosperous future and may luck 1. continue to come your way as it has in the past. -I I- Honors: Class Secretary, '22, '25, Vice-President, '2-lg -- ll A -, - - . ,. . ll I. SSOCIJIC ltditor, Year Book: becretarv and lreasurer, Students . . , , ,. , , ln Il Association, 25gl,esb1an Secretar , 2-lg President, 255 Basket- Il li - , , - y -I ball, Varsity, 24, 253 Glee Llub, '22, '24, '25. In j- ll ll :I Il I I Il -l ll I ll :: 'l'hirtv-sis '- l ' ' ' I ll i'lFlFlIlI'7'i I I I'!I.ll'l Ulu' UWYHIILII' UHF' Wlflflf IIFIIIIIIIIIFIIIIIIIIIFI -I E: - - - I I Iv I - 5: :: :E :I :I ll II 75 ' 4 FI Ei Ei I l I I :I :I :I :I Ei ' Ei I I I ' I - 5: :: :E Ei 11 l 11 11 5 L' :z I : 1: E5 L: :F E.: Fam' :-E L1 11 ll In E: l :I :E .. EE Ei Ei as EE Ei Ei 11 11 L1 11 EE 57 5: :E :E 75 5- F2 I: I' I I I- l u C H e r u lo I ,I l I l l I l I l :I I: fl F2 I I I l :I I n 'li e F 7: I1 what X5 L ' our Eyes Tl I l U l ll l 5-'I 11 l ' I U FI I' I I I1 - lu l'llllllll'l:::g , I - mth Exililrk l:::::u:nl-l-n.n-l- .- :'luTlnTIl'I:I:l:l:I:Ii'll'I:I ml' mrmgl Il ll lu ln ll ll :I ... :I 11 ll lu -I ll ll I: ll l Il ll Q lu ll ll ll I ll ll ll ll II ll UI ll ll Il ll ll ll ll ll I: In l nl ll After lu ll X in'-Tj 4 ll off' I-1 'WM L: ll ll :I ll I . I- flm I 0 V l I: PIPES I: ll ll ll ll ll Il ll ll ll ll ll I- ll II ll lu ll ll lg lu l -I ll ll ll ll ll ll ll Il ll ll ll ll :I , ll I U: The Four Horseman I: n s . ll I: ll ll ll II ll ll 'I ll ll ll ll In ll ll ll ll ll II ll I- ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll Il II I- ll ll ll .- ll x ll ll I- ll ll L: ll ll fd' MQ ll Ou ll Il . rhflr la ll Il ll I- ll II ll I' Il II .I I- ll ll ll I. UI ll ll I. 'I ll ll II Il ': l II IHSFIFIIIFIFIFIFIFIIIFI Gill' Wrflllsll' UND Eflllrlf IIIIIIIIIIIIIHSIIIIFIFI 'I ll ll Il Il nl In Il lg lg ll In 'I 'I I: In ng :I II ll ll ng In In 'I 'I ll ll 'I 'I ll Is up :I ll In 'I 'I I! In -I 'I In In 'I 'I Il In -I -I II In ll ll ll In 'I 'I ll ll ul Il I! In 'I 'I ll In 'I 'I ll In ll ug In In 'I 'I ll In 'I 'I ll In I' I. :I Il I 'I In In ll UI ll Il ll nl lu In ll ll ll I! lj ll gl In I ll :I NN In I 'I II ll 'I 'I ll In 'I 'I ll lu ll ng In In 'I ll ll In 'I 'I Il ll 'I 'I I! In 'I 'I ll ll Il lg ll In Il ug ll ll Cl ll L: In u ll I: 'I 'I ll Il 'I 'I ll ll 'I 'I ll II 'I 'I ll In 'I ll ll II ll ll .I lg 'I II ll In 'I ll ll lp ll gl ll lg 'I Il CLASS 1926 EIIFIIIFIIIIIFIIIFIFIFI 'C-Uhr lllllvfllltxis qil'llh-fml'i'l'il' ISIIFIFIFIFIFIIIIIIIIIE ll :I :I ul ll ll 11 - 11 l: 0 0 5.1 Jumor Claw H wiory E.: u , I l K ll :E E are the class of '26. It seems but yesterday that we were Freshmen with I. good old Johnnie Cofiiey as our President. When We were first at In :: - SuHield.we spent a year never to be forgotten, since we had a jolly good :Il time, and for inexperienced youngsters, accomplished a great deal. We were ug glad to be at Suffield, proud that we could really take a part in the school life, and ll :I lastly-Cperhaps we should have been more humblej-we were alive with the :I spirit of competition. and eager to show the other classes that we could keep I: with them any time, at any place. :I If On St. Patrick's day we combined with the sophomores and gave a dance 5: :: that was no refiection on the standard which we had set for ourselves. Miss ul Beach decorated the gym. in a manner that the most loyal Irishman would com- ll I - - ll .1 mend, anfd ,Shel class ofthe orchestra was certainly no drawback to the general :I ll successo t e ance. ' :: To finance the dance and for other expenses we sold 'Hot Dogs' at the Mil- :: ford game, and for fun we had a sleigh ride to Springfield, where we ate, went to :: the movies, and came back by moonlight. ll Our second year was started with the election of George Vales to the Class ll l: Presidency. As Sophomores we had less ambition than as Freshmen, and con- L: sequently we accomplished less. However, we worked and played hard and lu our year could not be, called a failure. II f: When the leaves were turning red we gave the Sophomore dance, decorating :g tha ghym in sush a rgannir that itippfareg likg ahe Irlnpstdcolorful out-ofiqldoors ug an iring a jazzy orc estra. ' ot og ae' e pe us to meet t e ex- ll ll ' ' 'I . pendltures of' this dance. ng :E This year Meade Alcorn has shouldered the responsibility of being our I. President. Under his management, the Junior Prom of this year will be one of II :: the best dances ever held at Sufiield, lasting later than has been the custom and :: being carried out correctly to the smallest detail. A baseball game will be ug played on the .afternoon preceding the prom. The day following the Prom a :I I: Lrack meet will be held in the afternoon, and in the evening there will be open Il ouse. ' I :: The promise given by our athletes is this year beginning to be fulfilled. :: Alcorn is a good track man, and Jerry Sprague played center on the Varsity :: football eleven. The managers ofthe football, basketball and baseball teams, :: g FuzzyE:lLaCava, Frank Blenkhorn and Pat Valesj are members of the - umor ass. .I :E We are also very proud of our basketball girls. Although Mary Cusick has lg had hard luck this year, she is one ofthe best girl players that ever graced the II f: Suffield gym. Dot Root is very close behind, and Winnie Wilson and ll Muriel Fitzgerald are players any class might well be roud to claim. To Helen ll - , P . . . ll :: l-Ioliloway, manager ofthe Girl s team, much ofthe credit for the line team spirit . is ue.. .I gi I With sorrow we left each sport in turn behind us, but we have another year L: in which to make history and leave with our school a memory not quickly to be .. erase . ' ., :: We are going to make next year, our last at Suflield, a year worth while-a ug year of' undertaking, pleasurable and profitable, accomplishing much for ll L: Suflield and ourselves. 5-'I 5-1 51 51 ll ' . ll I u Forty one ii EFIIIFIFIFIFSIIIEFIFIFI Uhr GUHIIIQD wif' flilvfk FIFIFIIIFIFIFIFBFIFIIIE I1 E1 21 li 21 51 In In Fl , Fl Ei Junior Class Jlembers Ei ll I1 21 , I1 L: FRANK BLENRHQRN Stoneham, Mass, L: GEORGE BROWN ' Brooklyn, New York 2: DWIGHT FOOTE ' Hartford, Conn. L: HAROLD GENEEN New York, New York L: SAMUEL GOULD Hartford, Conn L: FRED HAWLEY Amherst, Mass. L: GILBERT I-IEIMOVITCH Hartford, Conn g: WILLIAM INSINGER Philadelphia, Pa L: FRANKLYN JONES Waterbury, Conn L: HENRY KUMPITCH Hartford, Conn L: PROsI'ER LACAVA New Britain, Conn L: LLOYD NAPIER Springfield, Mass 2: GEORGE NELIBAUER Bristol, Conn :: GEORGE PERAKOS New Britain Conn :I GEORGE POLA New Britain, Conn L: BALDASSARE RIZZO New York, N. Y. 2: GERALD SPRHGUE Hamilton, N. Y. is AUGUSTIN VAI,Es New Orleans, La az GEORGE VALES New Orleans, La L: WAYNE WILLIAMSON Cazenovia, N. Y. 2: MEADE AI.coRN Sujield, Conn :z ELIZABETH BAWN Sujield, Conn 2: CHARLES BYRNE Suffield, Conn L: ALBERT CROMBIE Thornpsonoille, Conn 1: MARY CUSICK Sufeld, Conn. 2: KENNETH DUMAS Sujield, Conn. ll: HELEN HOLLOWAY Sajield, Conn. L: KATHERINE KENNEDY Suffield, Conn. L: HENRY KING, West Sujield, Conn. L: FELIX MARKEL Southwiek, Mass. zu: MILDRED ORR West Sujield, Conn. :ls EVELYN ORR West Sujield, Conn. L: DOROTHY ROOT West Su-field, Conn. L: ELEANOR SMITH Sujield, Conn. L: CORNELIA STAPLES Sn-field, Conn. :z HELEN WALKER Sujield, Conn. II WINNIE WILSON Sujeld, Conn. lu ll Il 51 I1 51 51 I1 I1 In ll :S Forty-two q.ulllll'I -, k nlll:l::::::::'-I-l-lgll Drzmuv muh 411-lar nn - -llllIlllIl :':::: alll' 0 - l-l-l-l-l-l-'-l-.- l ll L1 -l ll 11 :I ll 'I -I ll ll 'I -I N ll ll 1 :I ll 1 , I II 1 :I Cl I EE Ei -I .I ll 'I -I .H In ' 'I -I , Il ll :I ug I -- :: :I gg :I 2 ' 'I -I ' tl .- II ' Jw- 'I -I xmtx IH I- , 'I ll Y as .-- GW 1: IL' 31 :I li :: 5: FI I -7 Il - 51 :: Spqrky - -I Y Y' ll 'I II 'I -' ll ll 'I -' II L1 ' :I ll 'I g II sl -I -I ll lu V 'I -I ' II In ' 'I :: , QA 2: FI fs' 1, I-1 3 if 5 3 rg' in L1 ll ll ,md . L: - 4 - .A :Y-V ... L1 ' 3 fi D P If I: - V1 A A X. h f '- 'I f. , ' 4 ' - N-'W' I' A 'f f' . 5- I 4 fri. X W -I :Il 1 V ' , - ,, A X. ll ll In -Y an 4-.. ll :g .I , '1 2.1 ll 5:12153-f A F ' ll :: ffm 055, :: 51 i W V' Biluous Il ll ' ll ll ll ll 'I ll ll ll ll ll ll :: ' 11 ll EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIS alll' 0DrIrnur znruhiallaurk flflflflflflflflflflflai ll lj W ell Known H-ymnw Again, as evening's shadow falls-iStudy Hallj. Another day begun-fFir:z Period.J Begin, my tongue, some heavenly theme-CGuard exeuxej. A Courage, brother, do not stumble-CSneaking outb. Fling out the banner, let it Hoat-C We beat Spr1'ngjield J. Give thanks all ye people-CGlady.f got a haircutll He that goeth forth with weeping-fTen hour: guardj. How hrm a foundation-CFreeburg':feetj. Looking upward every day--fW1'll it rain FD Holy, Holy, Holy,-CLaundryj. I could not dowithout thee-fDaily nicotinej. Nearer My God to thee-CMacManuJ' Fordj. Standing at the portal-CGuard lineb. Not in some cloistered cell-CSir Kenneth, Cell No. 41j. O, grant us light that we may know-U0.'05 P. MJ Watchman tell us ofthe night-C fim Zandej. Brightest and best ofthe sons of the morning-CGeorge Brown.j At length there dawns the glorious day-fjune 9, 1925.1 Popular Sonya' No-one knows what it's all about-Mr. Erickron. Somebody loves me. Dream Daddy-Schuh. Nobody knows what a red-head mama can do.-Barrtow. How I love that girl.-Meade Alcorn. The only, only one.-MaeMannx. Forty-four 'IFIIIFIIIFIFIFIFIFIIIFI Elm' 09ff1'1u1' HUF' fiilllfli FIIIFIFIIIIIFIFIIIIIFIII CLASS 1927 EIFIIIFIFIFIFIFIFSFIFIFI Uhr f!9fH11BP HUD WRYR FIIIFIFIIIFIIIIIFIFIIIEI :5 :E L: L: :E L: I.: 21 51 51 I ll a' :5 EE :E 1: 21 I-'I :I ' . , :I Sophomore Claw H wfory 5: lg :- ll ll lj Q ll :: N September 1923 Suflield School student ranks were augmented by hfty- f: nine verdant Freshmen. - ll . :I :: As was the custom we werewelcomed by a Freshman Reception which is I: :: one of the features of the first month of the school year. We had a line time :g and became acquainted with many students. I: lg Il L: At our first class meeting we elected as president Robert Alcorn. Under ll - - - ll ng his presidency we gave the annual Freshman Dance and several tea-dances in ll L: the Chapel. I1 21 lg The following September found us back at school not so verdant. we hope, In ll . . . - A ll L: and known by the dignified title-Sophomores. E: At our first class meeting we elected Bohn Brennan as President, Helen :z Sheldon as Vice-President, and Jim Austin as Secretary and Treasurer. H I :g Early in the Sophomore year we gave a tea-dance in the Chapel which was Il - In :. considered a success. In February we gave the Sophomore Dance and cleared In 5: a small sum of money. Il I' ug In the fall of our Sophomore year Herbert King, one of our classmates was I: ll - . . . ll :g obliged to withdraw from school on account of illness. We were grieved to :I :g know that he was not able to survive an operation and passed away April 23, 1: .1 1925. . 2: 51 L' L: We approach the end of the school year anticipating the return next Septem- I: :n ber as full-Hedged juniors. ll M F2 ll ll ll ll ll Il ll In Il ll ll ll -I - 'I I: -I - II I: -I -- II .- -I ln :I :- -- - ll Il -I L: lu ll Fort - ll .. , y scvtn .- -l'l-Illilllllilllllllllilllililililllll I-I-l-l-I-I-I-III-.UI-'Ill'-I-I EEIIFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFI 'EU1' '09 fHfWL1P+'fPlff' 'lilfli'-ff FIFSFIIIFIFHIIIFIIIFI I- I- - :I I' II I' ll I: E-E Sophomore Claw llembenr EE fl E: I2 .2 JAMES AUSTIN South Norwalk, Conn. :. Ll: ROBERT BRENNAN Pawtucket, R. 1. :I :ng HOWARD CARTER Artsonia Conn. Ll: FLETCHER EDES Plymouth, Mas: il: DANIELS FISK Pine Orchard, Conn :: JAMES FLYNN Palmer, Maxx :g ABRAHAM HERRUP Hartford, Conn :Ie JACOB HOLSTEIN Hartford, Conn :: LEONARD HURLBUT Utica, N. Y :: WALDO LINQUIST Bridgeport Conn :g PHILLIP MILDRUM East Berlin Conn :Ig DONALD RATHBONE Norwich Conn il: FREDERICK SELCHOW Mt. Kisco, N. Y :g JOHN STEELE Noarile, Conn. :lg WALTER TREAT Norwich Conn. :g EDWARD VALES New Orleam, La. H ROBERT ALCORN Sufeld, Conn :I :le DANIEL BARNETT West Sujield, Conn al: LEWIS BELDEN Sujfeld Conn. :: JOHN CANNON Windfor Lockx, Conn. :: DONALD EAGLESON Su-field, Conn. :: THOMAS EAGLESON Sujield, Conn. :g CHARLES FIELDS Sujield, Conn. :: MURIEL FITZGERALD Wen Su-feld, Conn, :: DOROTHY FULLER Sujield, Conn. :Ig KATHRYN FULLER Su-field, Conn. :: HARRIET HOPE Su-field, Conn. :: SIDNEY JONES Sujield, Conn. :g JESSIE MARNICKI Sujield, Conn. :g HELEN MARTYN West Suffield, Conn. :lg FRANCIS PREKOP Southwick, Man. :g BURTON ROOT Weft Su-yield, Conn. :: LAVERNE ROOT -Wert Sujield, Conn. 2 HELEN SHELDON West Suffield, Conn. :': GRACE TAYLOR Wert Sujield, Conn. :ll ALVIN TOLPIN Wext Sujield, Conn. :: GEORGE VLIETSTRA Sujield, Conn. :: MARGARET WHITE Sujield, Conn. ll ll 51 ' 21 II '- :: A -- Ig . . :- I- Forty-exght I: lIll!!IlIlIlIlI.I'IlIgI.lgIgI.IlI'I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I-.Sl-I-I-I-'Sl---I-I-I-I-.-I-I-I-.:.:.:l:l:.:.:-:.:.:l:l:.:.::::::::::::: Iglllllgnl .Il-lllhlil-I ' 3 Y' 'nl llllllll-lllilllllll-I illl!lllllI:llIlllllllll- wh P 0- ruugv alll U at ' lllllnlllllllllllullllzn L: :: -I -.I I' ng In Il 'I ll E.: L1 L' L' I: ' ' F 1: Il ll L' L1 I: , Il -I ll ll In 'I ll Il Il 'I ll L: L1 L' I1 :F :- -I ll as as 11 136 The Field 21 In Il ll ll ll ,WY , II ll Il I.: '11 2.1 Pu - , 11 In Il ll Il ll ll ll Il In In ng Il :un :I I: I: I2 II ug ng L' 1' L: , .: :E Q a ' :: 7 ? ' :E L: E.d.uHisselfn Il Il ll ll ll In ll ll In In :I .- gl II -I F.: 'I ug I- I- EE g,---- W E: :: 'v'gg ' Il :E :U If Il I Il I1 L' ll I: :: NGJQ- :: Door :g :: ation :I I: ll -I ll '- nl -- I' Il :I I: ul - Fifty :::::::::::::::::::::.::: Glu-1-off-nw mm we-fu :::::::::::::::::::::::: f ,M- Z. L ,l r . VL r . rv, IQ: fl? Cz: :ig E:-1 mg Fu 'il Eu D25 Eu E., Ez: N3 I1 YZ 2:3 :'a-'- W: ii-3 BL r., . , :psi r'-3 E A z-sg Fu 'H Er: il Es 'iii lm B! En 'li ln 'Elf EH 548 Em 53 Ee: E.-5 ff: fi C.: ig g ,. ,,, 3, 3-'E I: CLASS 1928 Fanzfgffjrv-ypgcngmllggxgrfsgv-ggzvgjawg'zjzrzpa,13f:.1g:'L2:L:j-'zgbzrfgf 'wg'-z--'fggr-fx fr- - -.arg-if-15 tzisxirv.. Sz.-ExE:::5nCa:2L':Qixli.a4L::Eu.25inflzgfmucxfgnL.4,i... :zqrallc-zlz:l.Q..:.g,.i .izkdfi '1..zs..:1.. vI 4.1n's.iZ51w..,:1' 3 .- .w ..- TJ f. E E E. .1 EI fgifl :JE in NLS 5:4 rx Un mg: 1 '93 :::::::::::::::::::::::: wmv awww- mm mlm :::::':::::::::::::::::g.5 :S ' II 'I :I ll 'I :I ln ,I -I ll In ,I -. ll II -I -I lu ll :I lu ' lg :I ll ' ll 'I In . L' Fl 1 . I5 gg Prealzman Claw H wfory EL: II L1 -I II L' ul 4 ' ll ' L' 'I . I: L: E, the present Freshman students, entered the doors of Suffield School in :I l: the Fall of 1924. Although we were very green and frightened, we L: were also a very gay class. We knew not what trials and tribulations L: awaited us, but we have passed through them all by hard work and the help of our teachers. Crlihanksl. 1: Il 5,- :: V As soon as we became accustomed to the routine of the school we enjoyed :: it more. ' -I L: At our Hrst meeting Donald Bon was elected President, Gladys Bassett, L: Vice-President, and Louis Galgano, Secretary and Treasurer. These officers L: have fulfilled their duties faithfully and exceedingly well. II :g The social activities of the school began with the Freshman Reception at :: which gathering we first become acquainted with each other. Refreshments Lu :: were served and the reception was concluded with dancing. ll ' L: Our class gave its lirst dance during the first part of the month of February. L: It was an afternoon dance given in the Chapel. Music was furnished by the 2: School Orchestra. A good time was enjoyed by everybody. ll :: In athletics as in other activities ofthe school the class of '28 is well repre- f: sented. -I L: We are now looking forward to the time when we shall be classed as the L: Saucy Sophomores , and through our united efforts we hope to make a suc- :: cessful class. -1 ll '- ll :I ll -1 -' ll ll -I -I ll ll Il 'I ll ll :I ll -1 -I ll .I 'I ll ug 'I II -I .- .ll Il .'l I- ' .al :g Fifty-three EIFIFIFIIIIIITHIFIFIIIFI alll' QDYUUBP HUD i'5l2lrk FIIIFIFIIIFIFITIFIIIIIEI :E A :E 2.1 L1 L1 51 ll ' ' I1 li I1 gg Frefhman Claw .41 embenr gg ll ll :: JOHN AUSTIN South Norwalk, Conn. :I DONALD BON Waterbury, Conn. :g WILLIAM DAVIS ' New Britain, Conn. ll FRANK IJOWNES New Britain, Conn. ll I1 LOUIS GALGANO New Rochelle, N. Y. L: JOHN GRIEVIS Walerbury, Conn. xl: ROBERT GRIEVE Wazerlrury, Conn. f, ILLLIS HOLBROOK Wexzfzeld, Maxx. .- fg STUART HOLIIROOR Palmer, Man. ll WILLIAM POLA New Brirain, Conn. ll :I RAINIERIO PORTU ' Caibezrien, Cuba L: ESMOND STERLING Windfor Locks, Conn. :I PAUL SULLIVAN llargford, Conn. In I: HAROLD ZWERDLING New York, N, Y, :g DOUGLAS ADAMS Wei! Sujield, Conn. :I LOIS ADAMS Suffield, Conn. ll 1: MEN-YN ADAMS Wen Sujield, Conn. L: ANGELO ALFANO Sujield, Conn. :u LENA ANDERSON Sujield. Conn. ln 5: .RALPH ANDERSON Srujield, Conn, E: GLADYSYBESSETT 7 Sujfeld, Qonn. ll -IAMES QOLSON Wen Sujzeld, Conn. ll -1 MARGARET DINEEN Su-field, Conn. I: PAUL DONNELLY Suffield, Conn. L: ESTELLE EDWARDS Granby, Conn. In 51 IMWL EflV'i'f,?fDS S'j7?'Z2Q' Ei ARGA ' S u e , onn. 5: EVELYN GIBBS Sujield, Conn. 2: -1 JOHN GILLIGAN Wen Sujield, Conn. 11 I1 DOROTHY HAYES Suffield, Conn, :II JEROME HEFFLER Sujjield, Conn. :- L: LILLIAN HOLLOWAY Sujigld, Conn, l- MICHEL JANIK Su-field, Conn. I: 'gg BTEFANIA JANIR Suffield, Conn. :I :g JASPER JOHNSON Sujield, Conn. -I .1 BARBARA KENT Sujzeld, Conn. L: LEO KULAS Su-field, Conn. :I In TAFILA KURAS West Suffield, Conn. 1: :ll HOWARD LILLIE Wexz Su-field, Conn. :: LAWRENCE NICHOLSON , Su-figld, Conn, Il ,IQOHN O'LEARY - . Windsor Locks, Conn. Il L: CELIA ORGANEK Su-figld, Conn, L: ELIZABETH PI-IELPS Sujield, Conn. :n lg MARJORIE REID Sujield, Conn. I: f: -IANE ROGERS Sujield, Conn. :g EUNICE ROOT Wen Suffield, Conn. :I ug ARLINE SMIJTI-I Sujield, Conn. .1 If SARAFINA SZOKA . Wext Sujield, Conn. 51 21 ll ll ll ll Fifty-four Il-'IIB'-I-.UI - -I u u s I I llllllllll W 0 lark . -n :E':':.:':.:.:.-.-un., Uhr UDYZIIIQI' H111 5 lllllllllllllllllll I :I - ll Il UI ll In I' 'I ll ll Il 'I II ll ll ll In ll -I 'I ll ll lj ll ll ll UI 'I ll I! ll Ul X ll ll Il -I In ll ll 'I In ll ll -I In ll ll ll ln ll Il ll lu ll ll Il ll ll ul -I ll ll Cl :: he H :- Qu I ll se I- ll ll ll II ll ll Il In ll ll -I ll In Cl ll ll ll II :I L bry :- I 1 ll Ou' I: ll ll ll In ll ll 'I In ll ll ll ll In ll I' L1 I ll ' 'ff In ll Y 1 -I ll In :: :- u I! C. V ll :I UM 1 'fl :I u ' r 1 ' f' -I Gujjhng G Y' Y .3 ll II ll In In nl ll In ll Il 'I II ll il -I ll ll ll ll In ll ll Il ll In ng ll II ll I' 'I ll In II UI ll ll Il II 5-I Il Oheof lu II ' cur Il -. Youngsfers '- ll ll Il lu lu ll 'I ll lu ll Il II ll ll II ll ll Il ll IIIIIIFIFIFIIIIIIIIIIIII Ulu' Ulfflllslv HNF' Ufilflrlf IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE ll I1 ll I1 51 I- .- ll ll I- Il :I :I l Ei W we Cacfclea' of Some of ilze Broilzenr gg I- ll :: Dr. Gage:- Now your merits are a minus quantity, and this condition must be :: remedied. 'U Mr. Sisson:- l'luh? Can't hear ya? II ll f: Mr. Sweeney:- Come and eat, Barstow. f: Mr. James:- Do you want a smack in the puss ? :g Mr. Maplesdon:- Oh, you've got number 17, that nice warm room on the second :: floor, best one in school. ll ll E: Mr- Prior:-.fH,l-Zyiyghen are you going to pay that 21.98 due on your last I semester s 1 . I Ei Mr. Brown:- Get back in your room or you'll be socked with 'p-a-lenty'l L: Mr. Smith:- You should attend to those details before 10 o'clock. L: Mr. McGuire:- Manhattan Transfer, change for Newark, jersey City and I- downtown New York ! :u E: Mr. Erickson:- Yes, and I had engine trouble outside of Northamptonf, I: Mr. Wehr:- No, that's wrong-the intensity ofthe electric current along a I: :: conductor equals the electromotive force divided by the resistance. :: Mr. Mischcil:--Haloiq 69 is all you deserve-l've given you the beneht of the ll ou t in a t e fractions. :I EE Miss Beach:- Don't give me any back talk or you'll have a minus score. :: Mr. Schanz:- Lucky break, that's what I call it . -I -I ll ------- ll E5 E: :E THE WEEKLY WAR WIIOOP L: Claxrified Advertising L: Why be afa1'Zure,? Amaze your firiends and neighbors. Our twelve weeks' corre- lg spondence in tomahawkingis guaranteed to make you an expert. We have In :g placed' our graduates in some of the finest graves in the country. Learn by :g the Hitman method. :g For Sale!-One birchbark canoe, slightly used, 1491 model, accessories included. :g Will sell or exchange for middle aged squaw. Guarantee expected. ll ll ll ---w--- II ul Il L: Sampson had the right idea about advertising. He took two columns and L: brought down the house. ll ll ll .-i .,-- ll I1 . . . I-1 lu 'Iwo Phi Beta Kappas at whist, Lu :I . Smote each other real hard on the wrist. I: :g Cried the one with pervescence, :: You super-ex-crescennceln n H :I Cried, the other, Desist, now, desist! :- u u ll 'I L1 -51 51 - - 51 I- Fifty-six -- L I 05 1 W I l Q u.v-ff jlfmou Sci-1001 IIIIFIFIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Uhr QDYUITBP 11115 mlflflf FIIIFIFIIIIIIIIIFSIIIIII Junior School Hzlfiory HE unior School Department ofSuH71eld for the school year of 192-L-1925 has been bigger and better than ever before , and this is no exaggeration, n I if ' . as the picture opposite shows. Of the twenty-eight pupils in the department this year, there were l9 who came to Suffield for the first time in September. But those have all shown the same spirit of vigor, self-confidence and ambition which characterizes the veter- ans, and they have displayed it in their work and in their play. The Preps , as they are called by the students of the upper school, have themselves organized football, baseball. and basketball tean's in the respective seasons of each sport, and have shown their democratic spirit, as well as their love for athletics, by playing neighboring grammar school tean's, etc. The Class of '25 says, More power to the 'Preps'l Fifty nine :: -I :: :.: l l I . - I ll ll llIIIllllllllIIl'IllllllllilllllllllilllllllllllllilllillIII!lllllllllllll lllulnlulllulllulllllllllllllIIll:lIlullIll!lnlnlllllulnlnlllnlulnlllnluln Memo JOHN ARvo JOHN BEGGS JOHN COWDRY RAFAEL DIEOUEZ CHARLES DOHERTY CLARK FANTON WINSTON GARDINER BRADFORD HOYT ' CLEGG HOYT JAMES HUNT ERNEST LAZO JOSEPH INIARONNA GILLETTE MARTIN LEONARD MEISNER BERNADO PISONERO ARTHUR RAYMOND PEDRO SAINZ CARLISLE SMITH THEODORE SMITH ROBERT SPROLE DANIEL SWEENEY JOHN TILLETSON JOsE TUf'10N GAIL BORDEN ULRICH ROBERT WHITBECKV THURSTON WHITBECR NATHAN WOODHULL Sixty . Glu' Gffmnur mlb flilflrk FIIIIIIIIIFIISIIIIIIIIII ll erzr of the Junior School Stamford, Conn. New York City New York City Puerto Padre, Cuba. Waterbury, Conn. New York City Providence, R. I. . H artford, . South Norwalk, . Hartford, Conn. Conn. Conn. Guatemala, Central America . New York City Springfield, Maxx. Northampton, M ass. Puerto Padre, Cuba Stamford, Havana, New London, New Lonodn, Hartford, Sujield, New Haven, Conn. Cuba Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. . Sancti Spiritus, Cuba New Haven, Conn. Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkerx, N. Y. Bayshore, L. I. :'::'::::::::::::::'::::::': Gln' fnlilllljl' Lush iiilauvls I::::::::,::::::,::'::::,1:': ll ll ll 2.1.3 Pm 'fl In 'I lu ll In n I In ll In ll ll 'UI In il In H 5. g. 'fu I . -I ll 'I ks QC we Goff - fvvfa .3 'fi ,r , Swede 'V' George 1'-Q-s . k ' snowahoesfwc ev T11eme..ML.S ketfigrs ll ll ll ll ll ll ll In ll In ll In ll ll il In ll ll ll In Il In ll In ll ll ll In Il II ll In ll ll ll In ll In ll ll ll In ll ll ll ll 'I ll 'I ll ll ll ll ll Il ll ll In ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ,ll ll II Il In ll ll ll ll ll ll 'I ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll Il ll ll ll ll ll ll In 'I In ll I- ll ll l I ALUMNI AssoclA1'loN cJFFlCERS 'I' EFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFI Ulu' UNSUB? H115 mark IIISIIIIIISIIIIIIIIIIIE EE EE EE Ei H 21 21 l'-'I 21 li III li 51 I1 li li I' 51 . . . -I .filumru fiwocaaizon 5.3 El ul J school can attain a lasting success without a strong Alumni Association seeking the welfare of their Alma Mater. just what should membership U in the Alumni Association mean to the average Alumnus? To my mind, it should mean the active endeavor of former students and graduates to render service in some way or other to their school. Would that these words might be written indelibly on the minds and hearts of all former students of old C. L. l. :E 51 5'-I L: 44!L1I1Hli and .Mmnbfry Qf the Clan of 1925: ll li ll I1 51 Among the noteworthy achievements during the year are: 'lihe publishing of the Alumni Quarterly, the defeat of the Varsity Basketball Team by the Alumni Stars Team, and the planning of an Alumni Field Day by the officers and a number of former stud.ents. Keep 51.00 in your pocket, and at the end of a year you still have one dollar. Keep 591.00 in the bank, and at the end of a year you have just one dollar with a few cents interest. Invest your dollar in reading the Alumni publication, which includes mem- -1 L1 21 li L: bership in the Association, and your returns will be many-fold. l'-1 L1 51 I1 51 L1 5-1 ll . U Sixty-three ll ::HlHl u llllll lllllIlllllllilllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllIll!! lllllllulilllllllllllllilulllllllllllllllllhlllululllnlllnlllllIlnlnllln 1 llllll-lllllllilllllllll G1 03' M L.' 1 an '1 llllrlrlllllllllhlrlll-u iv. I-'U'-I-I-'H'-I-I-I-'III Fl' ffillllll 'UU zu' C lnlulllulllllllnlnl-lug: I :f :- nl nl ll ll ll ll ll ll 51 51 L: L1 11 I-1 5-1 51 21 I1 2.1 I.: L1 L1 2.1 I.: L' I: :E L: gl X :I lg rogues ' I: ng ll ll In ll ll 51 I1 ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll II ll F' I' -1 H IT! ITI m -: In ll ng ng 21 21 I1 21 21 21 L' 2.1 I: Some of'lhe 'Faculfy 1. ng lg ll ll ng ll ll ll ng ll ll ll ll ll 51 11 In ll 'I ll ll ll ll ug In ll nl ll 21 2.1 In X In ll , ll ll ll ll , Il I- . ll ll . ll In ' ll ll , -I In ll ng w ll 21 - I-'I g: .' ,, ' ,-rx, lu ' i'gQ In ll ' Il II 'YY Y H H ll ll ' I ---f--11 -I ll ll Il ' ll In ll ng Il ll ll ll lg ll ll - f . 4 , . , . I' F' 'IllIlIIllllllllllll'IllllllilllllIllIllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllillII: ,., -1 A , IIHIHIKI-I-I-I-.-I-I-I-I M .mmnlumn-n-l'1nM'l'H'l I - 13-41 1 - 'xnxx 'infill I- 1-s-I-1-I-I-I-I Wgiiseairkmlulnlinlmlmliuimlllllln Llyh K I t l-U ' . - gl mxn ll lu Il ll In lla ll mi In lm 'I Bl In lu ll IW ll lu ll Bl ll In ll ml In lm ll IH In Fam Il Ill In In ll UI In Sl ll WI In Bl ll may lg In ll WB In ll ll UI ll lil ll WI ll li ul ffl ll ll ll 'll In Hn ug 'Fl ll lu ng 'll In In Cl Nl ll lu lg Ul In ln I' 'fl ll In lg Wl In lu ll ll ln la ni UI ll In Il 'll In lu ng Nl ll In ll ll ll ln Sl 'll In In ug ll ll lu nl 5l ll ll nl ml ll lu up ll In In lg 'I In In ul NI In In ug -I In In ug ll In Ill us' UI In lla 3. ll In In ug I ll In Cl 'I In In ng 'I In In gl 'I L! -ff ij In In ..-I -U 1' 6-51 .. In ng ll ll ll ug 'I In ll QI 'I In li gl 'I In ll Sl 'fl ll ll ng 'I ll ll Flflflflflflflflflflflfl alll' UDYUIIBP UND mini!! IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIEI El a :E I: :I :I nl ll ll II II -I ll II II ll -I II II -l ll 2.1 51 I1 I1 21 I1 :I :I I: I: -I -I 21 L1 II II Il Il F M , F :E The Carla' Glee Club :E Il V Il :' HE Girls' Glee Club started work at the beginning ofthe year under the :- I I l L: capable direction of Mrs. Sisson. II II :S The girls enjoyed the club very much and looked forward to the hours :: of fun they would have every Tuesday. Il ll I' I1 :E The club is composed of Luanna Phelps, Mary Lockett, Dorothy Hayes, L: Myra Ford, Mae Biggerstaff, Katherine Kennedy, and Dorothy Hovey, first L: sopranosg Agnes Gilligan, Harriet Hope, and Bailey Lockett, second sopranosg EE Nellie Fuller, Dorothy Hope, Stephania Janik, Sarahna Szoka, and Tafila :gl Cuiras, altos. FI , Il :: The Club sang in Chapel once and also sang at the Circus that was given :: in town last winter. The girls are now working hard and expect to sing at the :: Senior Concert at Commencement time. . Il ll ll E1 21 I1 :I :I ,.: 5: :E :E 2.1 Ill II II Il ll I' I1 :F :- :5 :F I: I: Il ll I-' ll :i :- is 5: ,.: 5: :E :E gg Sixty-six u , t llllllllll EEIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII alll' q9l'lU'Bl 11113 flilflfk II:l:l:I:I:IFln.u-n-sq: :- n :: :5 I.: :5 L: :E L: ll lu ll Il I' I1 L5 L: F L: L: :I I: I: ll ll 2' ll :E :: I ' In -I Y. JI. C. A. -- ll ll l ll I ll F' F' . . - I: T Dr. Gage's request, a number of students who were interested in the UI In . . . . In :: Christian element ofthe school assembled one evening with Mr. Elmer :I T. Thienes, of I-lartford,who helped them to form a plan of action for the :Il - - EE year. L: This original group of boys constituted an inner circle ,and from them :: Charles 0'Connor was elected President of the Y for the year. William L: Sutherland was elected to the Vice-Presidency ofthe organization, and Osgood In Rae, Secretary. ll F' :I - - . ll Delegates were sent to two of the Prep. School and College Christian ll In . . . . ll :I Association conferences, one of which was held at Smith College and the other l . ll at Wllbraham Academy. ll I1 ' I1 :n Although the plan of' action formulated at the beginning ofthe year was not :E carried out to the fullest extent, due to meetings of other societies falling on the L: evenings when it was convenient to have outside individuals come to advise :n the students in regard to their Christian activities as well as other interferences, :E it is doubtless true that the Y has caused at least an undercurrent of higher L: Christian ideals among the students ofthe school, and has thus far from fail- lu ed in its purpose. ln ll ll li I1 ll 1' L: :E ll ll ll Il 2.1 L' L: :F ll I: ll .- 5-1 ll I1 L' ll I: 'I Il ll ll -I II ll I- 'l ng ll I- -I Il :T Sixty-seven ll H'Hl-I-.Cl-I-I-I-I :lil-lnlujnlnlllillgnll :lu:gl-I-lu-I-I-l-I-I-im!!1' 49111059 UND mlilfk I-nl-I-nl-lnl-I-nl-L: I I :E I.: I H J In - :5 L: I H H ll ll P H I II ug H H H H H H H H H H In ll 2 H nl l :: :E H H ll ntqy. 1 Il ll r r ll 11 51 H H H 3 H H In In H H Il ll H H H H 11 '1' sz K L1 H H I- fM.,- . H , . ,., - IH -fa, n -. Init lxnw. ltclwarcl C. Ruhaclc, Nice-l res., C harlcs H. l cm, l res., lxenm-th VN. l hompson, bee- l rcas. -I L: Sfcoml Row: George Newbauer, lfrank l.ougl1lin, Nlerwin W. hlennings, Ricliurcl Nl. Curtis, l rcderick :I II C. Hawley. II up ll L: In I L: I: - II I: 3 F I - 0 - :E Tau mega Kappa gi 3 H I I 4 ... ..... . 4 L: HIL spirit and enthusiasm with which this body is infused, enables them L: to maintain a strong and influential organization. II . . . . . . . ll :: Athletic teams. both major and minor, managerial staHs, dramatic assocla- :: tions, musical clubs and activities, Year Book Staff, and the literary societies, :: have all received the fraternity's contribution. ll , . , . . I L: lhe members of thc lau Omega Kappa should be congratulated upon their 2: earnest efforts and splendid success of this past year. z: II - L: I: - L: I: .. . -I In hixty-eiglit II ll ll E333233323333333333HHHHHHHHHHHHHHEHHE g::::.::::::::::::::::::: Uhr' Gbrmmr wh alms ::::::::::::::::::::::g5 The Le.rbZanJ generations, chellsh this orgimlation IS they would 1 piece of silvu or a ring that had belonged to their mothers and grandmothers before them and which is in some way connected with their family traditions. Those members whose families have not lived in Sufheld so long appreciate that the Lesbian Society was founded in 1870 and that its fine old traditions have re- mained unaltered through the years. HE members of the Lesbian Society, whose families have lived in Suflield for Crash-bangl-s-ll-i-pp-Oo, that was awful!-Make her open her mouth! -Let'er slideln My dear reader, do I10t be alarmed, no one was killed, it was just the Freshman Initiation. They showed the right spirit and took it all with the smile that won't come off , and now they are all ready Lesbians. Their en- tertaining at Lesbian meetings has been proof of this. Every year the class entertainments are good fun, and one way to tell whether or not the girls ofa class are original and executive is to watchltheir shows. Sixty-nine IIIIIIIIIIFIIIIIIIIIIIII alll' 09ffU1BP UND Elflilfk IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIFIIIIIII Ei ' Ei ll ll Ei Ei EE Next to the class entertainments the greatest source of inspiration for the :: Lesbians has been their connection with the Y. W. C. A. The understanding :: and jolly companionship of the Y',leaders has had not'alittle to do with this, :: but anyway, wherever there is a crowd of girls together-unhampered by the :: necessity of impressing men, or by women who have lost the spirit of girlhood- :: there is a hrst rate good time. Ei . Some of the Lesbians had a time like this at Hartford when a banquet was L: given to Y members of Hartford County. Another such time was the Y L: convention of girls from this county at Hartford where the Lesbians gave a play L: agnd still anosher was a conxggtion it New Haven :here there wireagirls from all In t e surroun ing states. to tie companions ip mentione , owers, goo ll EE fo-od, singing, ideas and ideals, and the fact that the Suffield School Headmaster's :: wife, Mrs. Gage. was elected President of the Hartford County Y , and you 2: willhperfaapjs be able to realize why the Y. W. C. A. is such a source of inspiration In to t e es lans. ll ll ll L: Influenced by that part of girl nature which loves imagining, the Lesbians :fl put on a pantomime at the school Hallowe'en party, where they could be :I langorous Persian girls or scintillating dames from Spain 'till they were satisfied. EE Another way the Lesbians have of satisfying their imagination, as well as :: their sense of humor, is to write The Tatlerv, that Lesbian paper which is no :: respecter of persons and spares only the very discreet. Ei The.Christmas party for the small children of the town is the occasion when L: the Lesbians forgetsall-about themselves, and devote themselves to giving a real :: Christmas to the kiddies. There are some youngsters there who have no other L: Christmas at all, 'except possibly a Church Christmas. They are thrilled when L: bzarllta comes, theirleyhes talke o-nlthe shine of the big tree. and fthleir antics and In ta are so comica t at t e grr s are ept in aug ter most o t e time. I ll ll L: On the night of the Lesbian dance the gymnasium was an enchanted place, L: glowing in soft rose light which mingled the tones of the evening gowns into one L: gay harmony. The syncopating orchestra lent wings to the feet of the dancers, L: and the dance was among the most successful of the year. EE In the Spring, when spring fever and examinations hang heavy over :: Suflield School, a good hike over the fields into the wilds, where conventionalities :: can be forgotten, makes a woman feel herself again, so the Lesbians turned one :: meeting over to a 'cross-country hike. Ei Q The last meeting of the year is a goodby meeting to the Senior girls. The L: ofhcers for the next year are elected with some ceremony, then all honor is paid L: to the girls who have been pals with the underclassmen, shared their fun and L1 troubles and will not be with them any more. 55 EE ll ll 5-'I , , ll :T Seventy X 1 v A V I - l 4 ll II II Il II FI Fl Il :I II Il Il I2 Il II Fl Il CII F! Il Il Fl Il Il Il Il I2 :I Il II II Fl I! Il II Il IL' :::::::::::::::::::::::: asm- ovff-nm muh aw-fu :::::'::::'::::::::::::::: :: F-1 nl 'I L: 1: lu -I 5- A EE I- 'I I II 11 'I II f f, X f -I fm ' If - A-'- W :I :: -- as W5 , X as FOOT BALI, TEAM E15151515151515151-11.115 alll' Qllfflilsll' H1131 Ulllflfli 1!1I1I15151l1!1!1I1'!1.!E.E 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 ll II lg UI 51 . 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 zz l at t :: 51 51 51 51 51 CAPTAIN 6'0Kll'I,, O,CONNOR 51 51 51 ,. . . . . 51 :: lACKLE'of no mean alnhty, both on the OHKGIISIVG and on the ClCl1Cl1SlVC, g: was destined to captain Sufheld's l92-l loothall team. 51 Captain Okie1' played the game and won. and he showed not only the grit :g and hght necessary Ill a star football player: hut he. played the game as-a sports- :g man--ln a hard, elean, aggressive way, Illlilhg l?llI1lSl1ll1CI'lt and gxwng It eqlrally :: well. He gave has team-mates his heart and spmt, and Sulheld IS proud Ofllillll. - - :E :E 51 51 51 '1 :-: E: 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 51 ll In ll Seventy-three II In ll EEIIIIIIIIFIFIFIIIFIIIII 5-Ulf WFHIYBP HND 435121514 IIIIIIIIFIFIIIIIIIIIIIE 21 li I1 li ll 51 I1 51 In ll :I a a. I2 E.: Foo! Ball 1924 Ei 21 I1 21 .. A . . . . I: L: l the end of the first week of practice thirty husky men had responded to L: Coach I-Iermann's call for football candidates. Four letter men of last L: D year's team, Sutherland, U'Connor, Brennan, and Barstow returned, L: while the new material which appeared included the Nutmeggers, Zande, Hib- L: hard and Larson, and the Knickerhockers, Ross, White, Williamson, Sprague, L: and Getman. , II :: Owing to Captain Landino's failure to return, Charlie O'Connor was unan- :: imously elected Captain of the 192-l Football Team. Under his inspiring :: leadership and by his whole-hearted enthusiasm, the team was to have a suc- f: cessful season. - Il U' as Then began the task of whipping a team into shape for the first game of the -5 season which was with St. Anselnfs Prep. on October -fth. The day of the first -1 L: game Coach Hermann and Line Coach Vose pronounced the team in fine shape. :I St. Anselm's proved to be a very scrappy outfit and the end of the first half In . ll ug found the score 7 to 7. ln the second half, however, our team opened up and ll EE shoved the ball over for a second touchdown, making the final score 14 to 7. Ei The next week found Milford journeying to Sufiield, eager to avenge the L: beating they had received the previous year. They did not come up to their L: expectations, however, and received a swamping of 75 to 0. ll ' In :: The next game could not have been with any team that was more eager to :: get SuHield's scalp than our old rival. Springfield Frosh. They planted them- :: selves on the field early, veryanxious to get a whack at us, but they seemed to :: lose their pep as Williamson gradually milled through their line and finally f: shoved the ball over. After the second halfthere was no doubt as to the winner. :g Our team played hard, smashing football and deserved all the credit they re- :: ceived for beating the Frosh 26 to 7. ln this game Billy Sutherland by his :: wonderful interference made it possible for Williamson to tear off his long :: gains through Springfield's team. ll Il :LE The next week the team went to Cushing Academy. Here the team lost :: and lacked the drive it had shown in the previous games. Cushing recovered :: the ball on a fumble at the beginning of the game and romped down the field I :E Ei I1 21 I1 51 I1 li II II Seventy-four y k 4 ll ,i. V ll ll w f II UIHIIIIIIIIIII--IIIl-l-l-lll-.-l-l-lHl-IIl-I-I-.Hl-l-l-.-l-lHlI'-.Hl-I-'Il lnlllllllllllllllilillllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnlllllulllull IIIEIIIIIIFIIIIIIIFIIIII Ulu' UDNIIILIP HUD Eflflfk IIFIIIIIIIFIFIIIIIFIIIII Fl Fl II ll L: I-1 1' 5-1 I: In :: for a touchdown. Our team worked hard, but was unable to score. Thus came f: the first defeat. ll Il L: The next game on the card, that with Dean Academy, was a battle from the L: start. Dean was anxious to make up for the heating they had received in '23 L: and Suflield was there to stop them. The team was at first taken oil its feet by L: Dean's aerial attack and seemed unable to break it up. On her line plunges L: Dean was stopped in her tracks. The end of the game, however, found Suflield L1 still behind. I-'I I1 . . . , I: I. 'l he game with Providence College Frosh proved to he a very easy one for In :: the team. Providence showed some aggressiveness at the beginning of the game, Ei but this soon died down and the team ran away with them to a score of 57 to 0. :LE 1 At Hamilton.the team-put up- the hardest Fight ofthe season against Colgate :: Prosh who outweighed their Varsity by twenty pounds to the man. lhe game :: was a tough scrap from the kick-off until the last whistle blew. Qur team never :: let up their drive oncesduring the entire game and outplayed the'l4 rosh the whole :: of the first half despite Duke bhaughnessy's repeated smashes at the line. :: However the Frosh scored another touchdown in the second halfon a fumble and ug Suflield was unable to tie the score which was 15 to 7. ll :I L1 L: The team made its best showing in this game, and received many compli- L: ments from the oflicials and coaches on the great teamwork and smashing drive L: the team had shown during every minute of the game. EE The last clash of the season came with our old rival, Roxbury Prep., at :: Cheshire. In this game the team lacked the drive they had shown at Colgate the :: previous week and as a result were defeated, 19 to 0. Ei Thus ended the 1924 football season with four victories and four defeats B.: for the team. At the Final meeting of the Letter men, Bob Brennan, star :: end of the '24 team was elected Captain for 1925, and the team sends with him L: nts best wishes for a very successful season next fall. I1 I-1 L1 51 I1 I1 I1 ll 11 I'-I 11 I1 lu ll :I :I Ei Ei 11 I1 I1 21 I1 L1 ll ll rg Qevent -li IU . ,. . ,, - y ve .I I- . 0 X ' . ., . .- 'IUlililllllllllilllIl-lllllililll-lllllllilllll-lllllllllilililllllllllll llllllllllllllIlIIIlllIlllllI!IIlillIllllIIIIIIIIIlilllllllllnlililillllll BASKET BALL TEAM ?,,,.,A,,,, W, i 4 f 2-..,L. 4 .ir 31 5: E: -. -.4 L 4 E, F F f L ., Q, 1 .. FHIFIFIIIFIFIIIFIFIFIFI alll' 'l9l'Hl'9P HND 5-'ilflfk IIIIIIIIFIIIIIIIIIIIIIE :I II ll 'I ll :- ll I In I' ll 'I In :I ll I I- II -- :: 5-'I 'fl I- ll ll ll I- ll ll 'I ll ' :' ll I ll I' ll 'I ll :I ll I In :' ll I In :' Il I II L' ll I ll L' lg I ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll I' ll ll II Il ng ll II I' ng ll ll ll lj Il ll Il I. Il I' 21 Li I.: li I-1 I- rc D9 W :' CAPTAIN BILLY bUTHER1.ANn I' Il I: Il ll I! Il Sl :g AP'l'AlN Sutherland, captain of both the baseball and basketball teams :g this season, is the one student deserving of the highest athletic honors, :g for only one possessing remarkable ability could so successfully captain :g both teams. Captain Billy as he is better known among the players gave all :g he had on all of the SuHield teams on which he has played. ng ll 21 . . L1 gn Summing up this young captain, one might do it well in the following few :I L: words, A fighter, a sportsman, a gentleman. :E 2: 21 I-I 21 51 2' ll :E zz I1 21 2' I1 :E :- ll ll Ig Scventv-seven :I ' :I 'l'l'l'lll'l'l'l'l'l I..-I-I-I-l-l-I-I-I-I-I-I-l-l-l-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII alll' wrrlnligr muh Eilark IIIIIIIIIIIIFIIIIIIIIIEE ,: L: :E EE :,: Bawkef Ball 1924-'25 :g Q :E E: lu ROSPECTS for a .fast basketball team looked good from the beginning ofthe I: :g season. Captain Billy', Sutherland was the'only veteran from last :: year's varsity, but excellent material appeared in Kulas, Thornton, De- :g laney, Hibbard, Ross, Getman, Jones, Napier, Williamson, Swarthout :I -I and Mann. .1 5: The first game of the season with Springfield Evening High School proved to -1 be an easy victory for the team. After the first half lt could easily be seen that L: we had a team which .excelled in drive and especially in speed over teams we L: have put on the floor in previous years. L: Our old rival, Springfield Froslh., received quite a shock when our team hand- :ll ed them a 34 to 30 beating. Springfield lost only two games and our team de- lu 3: serves much credit for being one of the two to be victorious over such a fast :g quintet. :: Among the teams defeated was Torrington High, which won the Yale Inter- :: scholastics and 'played in the Chicago Tournamentg Wilbraham, one ofthe fastest :g teams in the vicinity, and Cushing Academy. :I I 1 - :: Suffield would undoubtedly have had a championship team but became Il greatly handicapped in the middle of the season by the loss of several star players. ll I. , , , . . . I! :: lihe team, howlevir, buoyeifi up bybltithirlzxidhs figlhtllng splrig, keqpltl on through :- tie season wit t e same rave wit w ic t ey a starte . e score was Ei close in those games lost, and our opponents knew that they had played a team L- which could play hard, clean basketball. 3: I W ll E1 BASK f3'1'lzA1.1. scoizizs '24-'25 I1 I ll T: Suffield . 33 Springfield lfvening High :S Suffield . 36 Suffield Alumni . ll Sumekl . 50 Lenoxfhgh . -I ag Suffield , 25 United Workers Cluh L: Suffield . 30 Northampton Comm. College :I ll Sumdd , 22 ComLHAgm6'FmdL I: :: Suffield . 30 Holy Cross jr. Varsity :: Suffield . 34 Springfield College lfrosh :I ll sufiaaa . 27 sf. Joseplvs High .1 L: Suffield , 2l St. Thomas' gg Suffield . 21 Worcester Academy :I ll Sumdd . I2 Cdkmamfhqi . I: I: sumad . 33 Bay Path Institute gg :: Suffield . I3 Springfield College lfrosh ll Suffield . 27 Hartford Evening High -I L: Suffield . 31 Roxbury School . :R Suffield l . 36 Torrington High ll Suffield . . 50 Cushing Academy ll :S Suffield . . 31 Wilhraham Academy :E Suffield Tom! . 559 Opponents Total f'-1 '11 21 L1 I1 I-1 :I Seventy-eight '- I - . ll ll l 'IllllllllllllIlllll'IllllIlllllllllilllllllllilllllllllllllllllllilllllll lllulllllllllilllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllnlllllllllnlnlllnlullllllll is :::.::::::::::::::::::::: wwf ww-ef wh flflafk 5'-li'-12225272Fl?-'IFR-WEE ul u ll Il ll II In ll ug :I :- IF :E :E li Il li I' 51 U: II 21 Il 1: . Q :.: L: Slirlek Kulas L: CherUb Larson L: Cl1ieF zande EE Farmer Blenkhorn f: Okle O'Connor Ei ArchiE Ross L: Willie WilLiamson I: Doc Pottes 2.1 Billie Sutherland E: F :.-E :E Fuzzy Lacava :: Mickey jAnik Dick BaRstow In Il Ei SammyITl1ornton L: Tony Flnello L: Ken SW8fTl1Ollf EE JerrY Sprague ll ll L1 Judd Hibbard I2 ll y ll :: Billy GEtman f: Bob BRennan Ei Meade Alc0rn L: Roy NEely :I Tommy Thompson In ll -I ll In ll ll ll '11 Il In ll -I ll In II :I H FI 51 ll ll In ng ll ll ll ll fl 51 ll ll In ug ll . . In ll Seventy-nlne ll EEIIFIFIFIFIFIFIIIIIFIFI mhz' Qbra-urge will 5518144 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE I' :I ll -- ll I' -I ll II Il .- I- II ll -- In ll -- .' ll :' -- ' ll :' -- ' In I' -I II ug -I L: ll I- ll :' -- ' II :' -- ' II :' -- ' ll :' -- - ll Il -I .' ll :' -- ' ll :' -- .1 ll ll .- II ll -I In Il -I ll '- II ll -I ll ul -I II ll -l I' ll Il -- In I' ll Il - L: N ll gn QOACH AB HERMANN --1 :: :' -- ' In Il .- ll . . . . . I' L: GREAT factor in the maintaining of the Suffield pep and persistent L: fighting spirit which has caused Suffield School to become known as L: Little Colgate , has been Coach Hermann. Not only a talented athlete, In a capable coach, strong leader and a staunch friend, Ab Hermann is, as those ll . . . . .- 21 who know him have learned, a remarkable personality, able to animate his I. L: teams with Eery drive, even when handicapped and the score were heavy :: against them. ll Ei We are very grateful for the services rendered by Ab during his two years L: at Suffield, and sincerely hope that the abilities which made him so successful L: at Suffield will help him to attain the better heights of his ambitions in the future. gg Il ll -' -I ll ll Il E- In ' ll :' -- ' ll :' -- ,1 Eighty I- EEIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIBIIII alll' UDYUIIN UND mlllfk IIIIIIIIIIISIIIIIIIIIIE II II Ei I Ei II II Ei Coach Hermann Ei II II E: There-.is a coachvat. a certain school, I: - Helping Others. His his goal. U H .- ll If he balls us out -and we wonder why? ll :g It is just to help both you and I. A: To help us win a game, perhaps, II Or learn to take our own mishaps- II I: With Sportsmanship and Courage high-- :: His goal- To help -both you and I. ll To bring our name-not his-to fame. ll L: Then Play Up!-play up!-and PLAY THE GAME! '- II :I :g Play up! to win for him who works :A To help us out-He never shirks ll He suFFers our sorrows and defeats ll :: But yet toils on to see us beat , :: To help us learn this game oflife :I By teaching us the game ofstrife. II I: To play it fair and hard and true, :: To give the best you have in you, :I To bring our name--not his-to fame. ll I: Then Play up!-play up-and L: PLAY THE GAME! gg :I 1 II I: Give all our courage-all our might I: That we may win-by just hard fight, :I To pay him back just one small share ll I: For all his work and all his care, :: And prove we'll not go back on him gl Although we cannot always win, II I: And so in all the games we play- I: F: l.et's show him we stick -let's show him we stay :: And let this always be our aim- II Play up!-play upland -- II WIN THE GAME! ll 5: :: I: What more is done by any man Q: Than to help a person get a stand, :I To start in life with head held high, ll I: In short, to help both you and I? L: Then let us show we appreciate z: His toil for us-perhaps heartache- II I- Bygiving all our light and vim :g To show we're proud of his very name, :S For HE plays up!-plays up!-and ll .. PLAYS TH EGAMEV' L1 L1 -D. R. lg: :I From the Girly Tram. II I ll ll I- ll ll :I II I Il I- '- ll . Il L: Eighty-one :I H.-I-IQIQIHHHIQ-I-IHIHIHI-III-I-IDI-I-IIIDl-.SlCl-IU--I-IUIHIHIH.DlH'H'D.D.Cl1.1.1.---.Cl-I-I-'HI-I W -.S E? V- B 9 4 'T C3 1 cl 'S 'S 8 3 Y V 2 :I E E' Q- Il EE 2.1 21 L1 I I Ei li ll BASE BALL TEAM -an. -ss . L. ...--I F227232322-..JSEn.u22F2i'- F2III.lI2I.n.II2n22F22323232732227272722III2?Ii'lF!F2IlI2I2IIn3u. ::lIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlI alll' 00rf11wv.w1'h Ulflflfk lIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlI I :I :T :: I: ll II ll ll ll II II ll Il I- ll I: ll I L: If ': nl I'- Il :I I. Il II 'I Il ll 21 :I 21 I1 II ll ll -I I- ll ll -I 1' 51 :I L: I: L: ll 21 I1 I' 21 ul :- :: 5: fl :5 -I II ll :nf CAPTAIN SUTHERLAND :: Il Il 51 I1 I- ll 7.1 Baxe Ball 1925 -I , I 5: AS soon as the first snows-left the green, the boys dug our their gloves and I: began loosening up their arms. U Ig L: A large squad responded to Ab Hermann's calltfor candidates and prepara- :I tions began immediately for whipping a team into shape. Captain Billy I: Sutherland, Kulas, Brennan, Hibbard, Barstow and Willialiisoli were the only II :g veterans to return but excellent material showed up in Zancle, Getman, Thorn- :I ton, Swarthout, Janik, Foote, O'Connor, jones and Daniels. r: Everyone worked hard and in two weeks Ab pronounced the team in fine :I ' shape. ' ' E: The first game ofthe season found SuH'ield on the Held ready to give battle to I: Bridgeport East High School, a ball club which has already won two or three I: 'I games. 'I E: Bridgeport made three runs the first inning, a bad outlook for Suflield, but it -1 only made the team tighten up and Bridgeport was held to three runs while we I: L: scored live during the remainder of the game. :I The boys kept their heads up every minute of the game and although it was :I ll the first game of the season, few errors were made and the spirit never I: :: flagged although the afternoon was cold and showery. rl The remainder of the games of the season cannot be recorded here but we are :I I: encouraged to believe that the good start made by the team, will, under the I: 2: leadership of Captain Sutherland, result in a successful season. I :E ' EE Fl 4 Fl :' -- -R Eighty-three ll lj llIlI I I I III IIIQIIIIIII I I-H I I I I I III I I I Ill u.u-nlnlllflllilllllllilululn-nlI-u-u-n-n.:Inlnlnlnlnlnlululn-ulnlnlulu-nl Y ' TRACK TEAM Gi -'L' vs Q Q7 -r F4 1 1 1 '15 '1 GQ 1 I 1 Cl Lge .2 F-1 1 '1 il 6 ll ll ll ll ll :I I ll ll ll 'I ll ll II ll ll ll ll ll ll ll In .1 g5:::::::::::::::::::::: arm nm-wr wh ww ::::::::::::::::::::::gg 2: :E 51 F' L: -7 ll :I In -'J Fl ll 'V :Q lg Fl .A . - ll I: A 9 :I 'I .-,Y i ' l l LI: t, f sfaif X- ll ll ffil lazf gilv V flT'lFf -I ' hm I .- ll ,, b.. i ' A - A -I :I In L: II A E.: :: s :5 :: 1 :E :ig A :- :Il 1 Q, ' ,W I I ll 'I -I 'FI ' T 'I A :I 2' as 'I I: 2' L1 'I P f In ll V U I' :I I A' ll .1 . -- ll :I I1 f: TRACK CAPTAIN BRENNAN 'I ll ll gl I! 21 Fl A L' :I LARGE. squad responded to Cocah Schanz's call for candidates, and work I: :: began lmmediately for the hard schedule which Suflield was to encounter. - :g . The team was very fortunate in having a majority ofthe veterans return, :I including Barstow, Pottes, Brennan CCapt.D, Thompson, and Alcorn. These .- g: served as a nucleus for the new team. New material appeared in Peix, Drugg, L: Mann, Eggleston, Fiske, Bon, Hawley, and Adams. ' I . :: The.schedule opens May 2nd when the team Journeys to Worcester to :: meet their old rivals at the Academy. I f: . The next week finds Torrington High and Central High at Suffield- for a :: triangular meet. Then follows the Yale, Roxbury, Brown, interscholastlcs. g, :: The dash men include: Brennan, Thompson, Pottes, Alcorn and Drugg. :g The distance holds: Bon, Hawley, Adams, and Mann. :: The timber-toppers consist of Peix, Alcorn and Brennan. :: The weight men are: Barstow, Pottes and Mann. , :I Alcorn, Peix, Thompson, Brennan, Eggleston, and Finello comprise the U: jumping strength ofthe team. I1 ' 7' 'I -1 'I ll ll il :' .I -ig tv-live :l:l:'I:l:l:l:l:l:l:Il'I:I UNIV Ulfflliillv' Ulm lilllflfk IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIISIIIIII :I :I 73 as :I L: fl :- Il ul :: rg ga gi I - as fe :E E: 21 51 I: 5: I: I. ll :I 7: E5 Ei -I Coach Crawford -. :: 5: II ul :I :I :: OACH Crawford has been here but a short :: ' time, but he has, during this lapse of time, :I developed a team in baseball that rates as :Q one of the best the school has had. ll 'I 51 11 :E Much of the team's success is due to Bill :I Crawford's advice, given frankly to the members of ll ll f: the squad, and to his untiring efforts. -I -I 51 '1 L: Coach Crawford came from Colgate University as and he has brought the fighting spirit with him from E: his Alma Mater. i nl nl El El :E 'E ll Il :: :5 II I'- fl :I fi ll u I Ei Ss F' fl H gl EE ml ll -1 ,Eighty-sax t JJ' n i . - ' 'l'l'lll-lil-I-III-I-I-I Uhr tnrnngl duh mnnrk lnlllllnlulnlillllllllzz Il ll ' l ll 'I l' -1 -' L: fl L: I' li 1 -I :I .- I 'Eg :l l !l :I ll li ll ll I: ll ' ll -I lg ll QI :Q II -' Il gg Fl g- '-! :E ' w - I H Coach Sclzanz :: ' I WI . . F' E' S a member ol the faculty this year, lVlr. -E -E Schanz has created for himself, among the :I '. students, a lasting feeling of friendship and I- .A . . '- sense of hne sportsmanship. In charge ol the I: girls' athletics, he proved a competent instructor, f: and has been held in esteem by SuHield girls, es- . . . . ' i ll E: pecially for his congenlality. ii I II . . , . rg With the coming of Spring, 11 track squad of fl: many promising aspirants has been developed under . . . . . I Fl his supervision. It manifests signs already of Eg bettering last year's team and hopes are high for l establishing Sul'lield's name in interscholastics as it i . , . . , II ii has been in years gone by. Mr. bchanz's ability i ml to mingle with the fellows is certain to characterize him as a good sport and wherever he may go, the best wishes for success from Suffield are with him. lf: V ll QI 'I In ll ug :I ll -1 Ill li ll :I u ii ii' ll H li L- If lg I3 I .I I In ' ll ll iq' i' I I -1 in li lfighty-seven :I72:52:17:flflflflllflflflflflflflflflflflflTIF:Ilflnflflflflflflflflfl ,..... , N....,..z.i, 5.15,-..,, JU: 3.-H, L ..., f ...1..e ,..4.,,.s .... .--.,g I L .,-,....:,....:..--.z.14,x 5 GIRLS, BASKET BALL TEAM EEIIIIIIFIIIFIIIIIIIIIII UNH' UDNIIIQI' HUD Hlilflrlf IIIIIIIIIIIIFIFIIIIIIIEE I ll :E II ll :I ll -: :: -- :I II -I -' I- ll -I -. li ll lg 'I In F: ll ll :: -- I-'L' 7: :I 7.1 - -- -I ll 11 -I ll '- ll -I In 11 :I l l :E Fl ll :I ll -- II 5: :I I: I' :I I: 'I :: 11 ll El 1: :li CAPTAIN CUSICK I ll GL.l'!J' ' Ba.,-ffef Ball ll ' :: ATI-IER few experienced players were on hand at the beginning ofthe season :lf R of 1924-25, but under the excellent coaching received the new recruits ll soon developed into good material and under the leadership of Captain 'I I ll -1 Dot Root the team made a good showing during the season. ll L: The scores ofthe games were as follows: II Y - - -I Sujzeld Opponent.: Il L: 2 Agawam 18 L: 15 Alumni . 26 In 7 Bloomfield 14 :: 16 Simsbury 15 ln :': I5 Bloomheld 3 :Il 0 Stafford 19 :: 21 Stafford . 16 Ill Ei 23 Aetna . 18 In ll Simsbury . 15 :': 9 Chicopee H. Stars . 15 :- :': 14 Chicopee H. S. 3 I: ul 8 Agawam ll :1 6 West Springfield 10 nl 1: 8 West Springfield 3 lu 14 i Warren . . ll 'I Il 'I ll 'I ll II gg . . 7.1 -I Eighty-nine gl UI 03 clllgl' .muh Qllalrlc :::' ' I' 'I-I X llll Fl I Cfllfk x J Nvfkihw FIFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFIFI UDP fmffllllll' HND 5-flflfk IIIQIIIIFSIIIIIIIIIIIIEE :I I- ll ll I- ll ll ll I- ll ll 'I ll L' In I li :ll . . I :E Social Evenia' gg ll Il L' - 31 Li HE social activities of the school began with the Freshman Reception in the L' - Chapel on the night of September 15, at seven-thirty. After meeting :E the Reception Committee, which consisted of the Faculty and their wives, .1 I' we all sat downlto enjoy an entertainment, which was furnished by Mr. Paul 'S Fleming, a famous magician, and which lasted about an hour and a half. After Ei that refreshments were served and we passed a social half-hour making new acquaintances and having a general good time. Then we danced until eleven Ei o'clock, when the evening came to a close and everyone went home feeling that they had enjoyed themselves and that the new school year was well begun. -1 .- '- fl F . . . . . fl I: The first informal dance'was given by the Seniors in the gymnasium on N :I October 4. The Hall was decorated with autumn leaves and streamers of ma- Il roon and gold, the class colors. Music was furnished by Happy Harringtonls :: snappy Orchestra and the dance was a social as well as a financial success. F-I ' Ei I' The annual I-lallowe'en party was held Thursday evening, October 30. gi The gymnasium was Httingly decorated for the occasion with black cats, .1 :' witches, pumpkins, and cornstalks, and seven-thirty found the hall filled with !i gaily attired students. The Lesbians began the evening's entertainment by I: presenting a pantomime entitled The Straw Phantom ,which was followed if by a saxophone solo. The Girls Glee Club sang and a group of musical enter- -1 I: tainers from Bristol kept the gym in an uproar. Prizes were awarded for the ': best costumes. Refreshments were served, and the evening came to a close .1 'Li with dancing. A I El , . ll The Juniors, not to be outdone by the Seniors, gave a very successful dance on the evening of November 8. The gymnasium was artistically decorated with I: streamers of orange and black, the school colors. Music was furnished by the :: New Departure Orchestra of Bristol. .5 n .- i' The Sophomores'turn came next and they loyally lived up to all expecta- ra tions by coming forth with the first dance of 1925. This was a banner dance mn given in the gym', on February 7. Music was furnished by the Twentieth J' Century orchestra of Bristol, and although the attendance was not as large as is B.: ij . ll .I rl I ! QI :I ll I F! Il :s . .Ninety-one :I g - II:HIFI:HIFI:HIFIflflflflflflIlIlIlIlflflflflflflflflflflfifl7272727272 1.11I1l1.11l1I1'I1'.11.11I1'l1.I GUN' QMUUBP 111111 mlflfk 1.11.11.11I1.I1l1l1I1I1'I1.11.1 Ei Ei 11 11 11 , 11 L: had been anticipated, all who came had a good time and the dance was quite a L: success in spite of the bad weather which accompanied it. EE The annual Lesbian 'Dance which was the first formal one of the year, :: was held on February 28. Couples, on entering the gymnasium, found it trans- :: formed with draperies of white and streamers of blue and white, the Lesbian :: colors, and Japanese lanterns, which added to the attraction of the scene. The :g music for this dance was furnished by Bob Morgan's Collegians and the :g dance turned out to be one of the most successful of the year. - Ei The Jnuiors are planning something different this year. School will close L: at noon on Friday, May 1, and a track meet will take place that afternoon, L: followed by the Junior Prom that evening. The next day there will be a L: baseball game as well as tennis matches and an open house party in the evening. L: We wish the class of '26 all possible success in this unique undertaking. if In addition to these social activities, various afternoon dances have been :: given,- all with the desire for earning money for sundry purposes. - Ei The Senior Prom will take place on Tuesday evening, June 9, and will mark fl: the climax of the social events at Suffield during 1925. 11 51 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11' 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 51 51 11 11 51 51 51 51 11 11 II II 1.1 11 1.1 11 Il Ninety-two Il FIFIIIFIFIIIIIFIFIFIFIFI WIP QDYHIIBP HND ililflfk FIIIFIFIFIFIFIIIFIIIFIEI Il I3 ll ll ll '- ll ll ll .- ll ll .- '- ll ll In ll lg ll I- ll ll ll ll ll ll Il I- Il ll ll ll Il ll ll ll ll ll ll I- ll ll ll ll ll up ll li' 51 I Q gg Dramafwx E.: :I I: I- .- I' F2 l: HE greatest dramatic event in the history of the school occurred on March L1 20 and 21 in the form ofa musical comedy, All Aboard , under the direc- L: tion of J. W. Seabold, a representative of the john B. Rogers Producing :I L: Co. I: ll ll -- a :: L: Its purpose was to raise funds for improving the track Knot railroadl E: facilities, and enough was taken in to make possible quite a few changes. I :I The cast, consisting of Ed. Smith, Farmer Blenkhorn, Doc Pottes, Gerry' :g Sullivan, Kenn Thompson, john Wickwire, Dot Root, ,lane Adams, Connie :: Staples and Helen Sheldon all did very fine work. -I I- ll :S Specialty acts were given by two companies , Chas. Peix Sz Co. and ll Ac ' av if ' 19 - - -. 1. Thompson and Sullivan . Peix 81 Co. gave several one-act comedies with E: much shooting. etc., keeping the audience in an uproar. I lj ll :l Thompson and Sullivan held the audience for several encores with their :g songs with a banjo.- ' :iv -I 21 51 I1 21 21 ll I' li :E A L: 2' ll :-E zz 21 51 I1 21 21 51 ll I1 2.1 21 :I :I ll In .I -I L: Ninety-three :- EIIFIIIIIIIISIIIIIIFIII -alll' 0l71'1111L11' 111131 35111-lik IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE ar. E: ll In ll ll L: Mr. Sisson: Name a remarkable date in history. L: Bob Brennan: Mark Anthony's date with Cleopatra. is ------ zz :I Red Orr: Is Dick a varsity wrestler? Georgie Brown: No, Why? fl: Red : Well, he knows all the holds. ll l ng H'--- lg L: Miss Biggerstaff: So your brother made the team? - Miss janik: Oh, I wouldn't say that, but ofcourse he helped. ll up ------ n At the dining room the definition of milk seems to be something to make I. water white. l In lg ------ ll 5: Pottes: Can I get a room for three? 'I Clerk: Have you got reservations? I Il .E Joe: What do you think I am, an Indian? I I ll ug Sweet Young Thing: Mrercy, what a long tunnel we're going through. L: Mr. Keefer Cblushingj: l'his a1n't a tunnel,-1t's Pittsburgh. 5: ------ 2: :: Dot Root: Are my lips the only ones you ever kissed? .' Ed. Smith: Yes, dear, and the nicest. I ll r ----'N :- :: Margie Reid: Did you ever see a cat-fish? jim Austin: Certainly. ll .. Margie: How did he hold the pole? E. II 1 I H ------ H :I :IPop Janes: Say, joe, you can't smoke in this building. :I Joe Army Who s smoking? :I -: Pop : Well, you got your pipe in your mouth. i: joe : Yes, well, and you got your pants on, but you ain't panting. - ' - ll liimli ll EE Why don't they have an intelligence test for congressmen? ll flTTT1 1. ll . ll Prof.: Do you think you can run this class better than I can? I: Ed. Vales: Yes, sir. :g Prof.: I've got a good mind to let you try. :I :nl Ed.: Yes, sir. Class dismissed. I u 5.5 , in--7 :: .. Mr. Erickson: Are you laughlng at me. :g Class in Latin I Qin chorusbg No! :g Mr. Erickson: Well, what else is there in the room to laugh at? I. - I EE 1-E L: E: H P lu ' . I Ninety four , ll II ' ' I I' 72327372ISFSFIWIIWFIFSFIFIIIIIIIFlIIIIISIIFIFIFIIIFIIIFIFIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE Ei li EE :I re :- E! ii :I 5: : :E :l :z u r, r : u I . 'I 5: EE Ei ll E-I I EE :E F I IIIIIIIIIIFIFIIIFIIIIS Glu' 051'l'llLU' H110 lflflflf IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIFIIIII T0 OUR READERSF- Wu axle you lo read fha IIdZ'I'l'lfJ'1'1L-Q 1,71 fll1jJ' hook, and hwg you ro fJllf7'07l'lf'Lt,' ihoxf who haw .ro kindly and gevnfr- ouxfy L'0IIf7 l.b'1Ifl'd lheir loyal .rvnpporf fo nf by f7ll7'l'hIl.f'l-Ylg Il!lT'l'l'lI..Yl.7lg .YfJ!lL'L' in lh'1'.r hook. for fhfy are largely rr- J'lf7O'Il.f7.!2!L' for llzfji111mc1'nl 5'1rcz'f'J'.r of our M1!Np1 1',rf. For any l,7'l'fJlU'Ilf07'3' School .f41HIIIIl! fo bf I1 .r11c'cf.r.r, adwr- !1',r1'11g m 1151 he Jold, and Ihr jirmx l11'rfV1'11, f1dwrf1A,rrd h11f'r' llflpfd IIJ' fo ,ruth an mlm! thai 1'!'l'Uf6'f'! fha! if I-J' no mon' lh n 11 fy dur' lhmn io rrqzmvl lhal yo :1 fJlIf1'0III '-r' fhfm zu mzzfh fly fx !'0IZY'f'7I1't'7lffj' pof,v1'bZf'. - 1'hIT Cfzzu' of IQZ5. ' : 'IAbie:---Look- papa, Issic got rid of his cold :md tl1Cl'C,S zu whole lmox of cough drops left! Papa: Ooy! Mine gqmql- meds! 'lxell Hermon to go out un' get his feers wer! Ninety-five 'l'l:l':'lfIflll'llrlllillllllllllllllllrlllllllllnlululul-lulnlslulllll ' l L1 E-E Fl Il I2 Il F2 Fl Il F! IL' Il I2 Fl II FI Il F! Il II -'TI 72 I2 F! Fl Il II II FI Il I2 Il I2 Il II II S! Ei 5: :E El 5-E 55 E::llllllI:ll-lllillllll EIU' obrungl' ann mill!!! :-.-:-.-'-l-.-l-:-:-:-- ll Il I I I I I I - I I I! II I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I II Fl II I I I I I I I: I I I I I I I I I I I - I I I I I I I I Il II I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Il I! :ll 1, . . . L II :, if True to its traditions, now nearly a century P L1 I -' J I EI lg old, Suffield opens the door of educational op- QE :E I I as portunity to ambitious youth of moderate if ' -' I E.: means, who are preparing for college enrollment, 2: . . . . , 'I EE 3 in endowment, in equipment, in the quality of 3 L1 .' . I I Ei its teaching staff. Its service for the coming QE I: I I EE year will be better than ever, both in the training fs E1 1' 1' I E2 of mind and character, and in physical education. lg II I: 1- A A A A A A A - I +Ii!Q0lQ3UQ3CQd!Q5lQI- v1I'vJQIFiI- QICQIIQJQQFQIELJQIIQIEQI- QI- uit' I I 2.1 . :- ll I: I I I I I I I I I! :g 73 Il F! I: I I I I 21 L1 I I I - I I I I I I I - I I I I I I I I I I I I :I I I I: I: Fl IL' I I I I L: I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 7.1 :' un - , .W .1 I I L Herrup I nc. I I liolx Grieve: l.ook up ro me lg2ll'll1lI'2l. llmbara Kent: No, 'cause if I do you'll kiss me again. Bolm: Honest l won't. in 'Lu 'Lass l3:n'lm:u'n: Vlllllfh wli:lt's the use of looking up? Furniiure Mann: You look sweet enough to car. and Springlielcl dame: I do ent-Where do - we go? Floor Coveriqgw Nellie lfullerz No, thc only men l kiss :ne my lmrotlmers. xnsnsnss Okie: Say, wliut lodge clo you lielong to? The Home of Home Outfits UCC ' 'SPRINGFXELG T W lj A,C, ' J fr q 3 3 J 1 4 . M A s . Look For Thilv Trade .Mark Hunt' Vleat Foods are D olicious Auzfow Worilz Rtidting in arf worth INS UR ING nin 111 nts 111 Samuel N. Reid INSURANCE SUFFIELD, CONN. Mr. Smith: You czin't sleep in class, Schuh. Melvin: l know it: l'vc hccn trying for half :ln hour. Pcrzikosr Give im 1 conih without pyorrhouzl. Clerk: Whuc do you niuainf 0wl : Ono whose tccrlm won'r full out. lVlr. Muguiruzfllic goof who kids himsulf into thinking l1c's il clvtcctivc hccnusc he ram clown his heels. Chincsu conception of coasting: Swish--Walkcc, wulkcc one milu. -f-Dr. Cagf. hr 'Qartfnrh Glnurant ESTABLISHED 1764 0ldest Newspaper in America Published Daily Special Sunday Edition Complimeutf of LLOYD IVI. NAl'IER :md ROY H. NEELY, -In Room-mates Compliments of JULIUS LONGO BARBER SUFFIELD, - IN 'l'HIC AGIC OF INNOCICNCIC Pete Orr: You'll have to marry me now Meade Alcorn: Wliatzat? Pete: Dicln't you just kiss me? IVlr. Wel11' Cin Pliysiograpllylz I will use my har to represent the planet Mars. Is there any question before I go on? 0'Connor: Yes sir, Is Mars inhaliitecl? Waiter Cserving Jack Grieve, who is taking girl to dinner for first timejz Nectar? ,Iaek Cblushingjz No, not yet. CONN. Compliments of LA WTO GARAGE F. A. GOLGANO Operator N ew Rochelle - New York G. C99 TSWON, Inc. Furrzllure, Carpezir, Draperleo, WL'Hrd0W Slzadeo, Glenwood Slove! FUNERAL DIRECTORS II PROSPECT STREET, - BRISTOL CONN TELEPHONE 345 Rolled Zinc Plaiew Rodd' cop Bazffery Zlnco ThE EUES MANUFACTURING llll. l'l,YlVlOU'l'H. MASS. Established in 1855. NICCKING Holy Smoke, my Cl1I'O2lflH Let golll l.et goll l,e-e-ee ---- H I r ,ow gu terzil sounds guslie l f' fl k lll from oam ec cm ixs Arteries diluted HlVl'l11 2l'1l'l'llCll' His breath enme in hor Gnsps. Slowly sinking into olmlivio HlVl'l'll'Zl'il'I'1.ZC7 lVI:1-:n-r- My girls' --My . . . girl, l tolml you, l tolml you Ir's wrong. lr's wrong!! . . . , llzmg it ull. . , , . George I c:m'r tie them four-in-hz -- Darlnmullz Booth-Townsend Co. 42 Taylor St. Springfield, Mass. Tel. Hfzzlvzirt 2480 MW Wholewale Confeciionenr QQ S2 We carry a selected line of candies from leading manu- facturers ofthis country and Europe. lVlr. Nlaplesclon: l woulcln'r slicle rlown that lmanisrer! Hoyt: Woulrln'r, my eye, you coulcln'tl lVlildrum: WhIlt,l'tj'0llNVl'itlf1fI? North: A joke. lVlilclrurn: Well, give her my host regrirrls. Night lfV1l!'x'l1lllIll1Z Young man, are you going to kiss that girl? Thompson Cstraightening uplz No. Sir. Pop: Here then, hold my lantern. Helen Sheldon: Why rlicl you let go ofthe wh cel F Sutherlxinmlz l wzintul to see if l haul Il Hat rire. Helen: Oh, you mean thing! Here's to Il glass of whiskey So amber and so clear- l'is not so sweet as a woman's kiss- But a darn sight more sincere! Geneen: Would you care to dance this one? Connie Staples: Yes. would you mind asking someone for me? COMPLIMENTS OF Suffield Billiard Parlor The Barnett Bldg. Main Street, SUFFIELD, CONN. O Swnrthour: Are you 1 traxinecl nurse? Nurse: Yes. Ken.: Well let's set some of your tricks. LADIES' and GENTS' Mmm 1 'llhc trouble with most Suflield lads is that they study too much.-l3ut they clon't use text-hooks. lixpericnce is Il great school. Fil Iii lil 'Tl Suits Made to Order Buy il clnvenport :mtl keep your ll1llIglIfCl' at home. Cooper Block Hurlhurt: l have il chance for the track team. - Foote: Arc they going to rnme it off? Quninsniuininxuntuxnxntuin jgnz,:snwsuvscosususnsavsnsnuxuig for College Annuals and Class Books QUALITY FIRST PRICES RIGHT JAMES MCKINNON CO. 257 MAIN STREET, SPRINGFIELD, MASS. SAGE-ALLE 85 CQ., Inc. Everything in Music at Your Command with a .. Brunswick adiola . At a turn of the lever you have the music of the air -at another turn the World's most famous phonograph to play your favorite record. Everything in radio, in music, is yours instantly, beautifully, wonderfully, -and at a comparatively small cost. PRICES AS LOW AS 5190.00 Liberal terms of payment may be arranged if desired. I. R. Mitchell 8. Son Bn. Bristol, Conn. cluininsuio ST EIN-BLOCK SMART SUITS PARKER SHIRTS SPORT CLOTHES KNOX HATS All are not cold that shiver. Oddy: That window has a pane. Sparky: Yes! Irs sash is too right. Curtis: lid is going to leave school for a month and work. Peix: Bosh! I heard him say that before. Curtis: Yeh? Well this time Dr. Gage said it. lVIr. Wallace Cin Biologyjz Describe your spinal column. , Barstow: It'sa bone that runs up and down my back. My brains sits on one end, and I sit on the other. The Hartford fEtna National Bank .' Corner Main and Asylum Sts., Hartford, Connecticut 'liransacts a general commercial banking business. Issues foreign ex- change on all parts of the world at the lowest rates. A. B. C. Cheques indispensible to the traveler. Boxes to rent from 555.00 a year up. Our Safe Deposit Department up to date in every particular. A Trust Department thoroughly qualified to render service in this im- portant branch of banking. Capital, 552,000,000 Surplus and Profits, 53,400,000 Mr. lVleGuire: li want some examples of collective nouns. LaCava: Hash and garbage. A Texas man is reported to be the father of 32 children. lt is not known whether he will apply for admission to the League of Nations or just let America represent him for a while. Nlr. McGuire: Miss Orr, I've winked at you three times and you've only smiled and kept on talking-Three demerits! Miss Beach Cexplaining algebra probleml: Now pay close attention to the board, while I run through it again. Dr. Farley Cin quizjz Who defeated the Israelites? Gerry Sullivan fcoming out of fogl: l dun- no! I don't follow any of those hush league teams. RAYMOND COREY Compliments of L00kwe11-See better Ophcxan EDWARD C. RUBACK 174-As lum Si. HARTFOR D, CONN. Compliments of Compliments of THE VALLEY BOYS H7-ht, Room-makin Willie Williamson Archie Ross THE PERFECT ROOM Jerry', Sprague Ken Swzirthout Charlie O'Co1z1zo1' Dick Barfrow Hl3ill'3 German Luke White Compliments of lfoorlsanl gzznlm-s :always rn-minml us ofnucking parties. The main llll'l L'l'Cl1Cl' is rho lu-ight nt 'hich rho tackles are mzulc. DONALD H. IVIZICNIANUS ll Doc Farley: Now who knows where the men go who shoot craps on Sunday? l'llll11'I Down in the old hotel. Compliments of 'lilicre :irc two kinds of girls-those you c in A 'kiss :intl those you tlon't want to. Compliments ot' GEORGE POLA and WILLIAM POLA Thomas I. Nicholson Automobile Supplies and Accessories Main Street, . Suffield TELEPHONE 224-5 Compliments of EDWARD C. RUB nxnsn :Qui- U. S. AND FISK TIRES EXIDE BATTERIES AC K SALES and SERVICE EDWARD M. WHITE SUFFIELD, CONN. ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION HOUSE WIRING A SPECIALTY Flatirons, Stoves, Toasters, Lamps, Fixtures, Washing Machines, Vacuum Cleaners, Electrical Merchandise. TRAVELERS TOWER The TRA VELERS 'l'ravelers Insurance Co. Travelers Indemnit Co. Y Travelers Fire Insurance Co. The largest multiple line Company in the world Rep1'e5e1zled by The largest Insurance Agency in Northern Connecticut HNOTH ING BUT INSURANCEU BRAINARD - AHRENS, IIIC. Offices in SuHielcl and Tliompsonville Go to the ' Nl Suffield Pharmacy THE REXALL STORE For Fine Confectionery, Ice Cream, ' Sodas, and all Fountain Drinks. y 5 . lu . n Q if, A nice line of Cigars, Tobacco, Cigar- , I u 5,L3,I,L-If ettes and Pipes. Rubber Goods Surgical Dressings, Cotton, Bandages, Z. O. Plaster Drugs, Toilet Articles, Perfumes, etc. good quality and right prices. WILLIS L. CI-IAPELL, Mgr. Registered Pharmacift N J - - Q? xr j D ii?-1 -a- i ,I ' After years of research, We have found why this hird holds one leg up in the air.-If he lifted the other one up, he'd fall down. CARLISLE HARDWARE 00. ls prep. school to lezlrn the pigskin gznne And try to pile up foothnll fzinie? 1 Or toughen up for liarilwood hrziwl And try your luck :lr lmslcerhzill? ATHLETIC GOODS Or dress in scant Olympic style And choose the lengrhv Cinder mile ? . ' . Ever thin for Ever Line of Q or Ur just to use some hzlckneyed wit y g y A P t TRY US when you want Sporting Equipment And try to make ri hzlsehzxll hit? Or maybe take a little set And drive halls through :x tennis net? Ir muy he this, but still besides lt's most ro get the old sheepshide . 326 MAIN STREET Springfield, - Mass. A CONIPLINIENTS OF GALGANO BROS. NEW Roc:-lEl.l.E, NEW YORK A M iff! Wir, ,fl lf ,mr , ili ' ' A 'il' Jiri Q' llQ1,l u i a rg, 'wifja b l-l Llw lllliil' 'li ll lllgl Hlliiiii iiigi. hlgariaaq: ll Lllf ull 5-gh giiujjgiii -Lu '1 -- 1 I ll L vlli EQEES-1551353 lllll il N ul ll l l luv I ml , 4 lm? H A ' S x X --114' line. HAllKTflFl0R'llD, GUNNQ. Connecticut's Greatest Department Store Apparel Shops For Men, Women and Children MAIL ORDERS 'PHONE ORDERS Arc carefully lillccl by trained Will be filled as satisfactorily as shoppers to your satisfaction. though you shopped yourself. ' Deliveries to All Parts of the State USCLES on strikew-move like 21 steam roller-feel like a Ylcnnings: She's 21 prncle. She won'r even dance in the clark. lllcnkhornz Well, l woulzln't tlancc either. Clothicr: Anything l can clo for you? Hzuwley: Have you any nice white shirts? Clothicr: YL-s,z1wholc store full. Punk: VVL-ll, go :incl put one on. Willizunsonz X eff we-:Irs lt-ss clothes than any girl l know. Swnrrliour: l'tl say slit- wus an girl without much honor. century! Apply a few drops of Absorhine Jr. The tension relaxes. You'll say there's nothing like it. 'Ev Liherzll trial hottle f ,1 sent upon receipt ,lgwgguiiggiff of ten cents in stumps. W . F. Young, lnc Sarin field, Mass. I . , SI 2l .S Ql lQl M .W Roon at WooDBURY Everything Good to Eat 138-144 Main Street SPRINGFIELD, - MASS. Compliments of . Pete Orr: l hear you had a party last night. What was it to celebrate? Red Orr: Ir was a hirthclay party cele- Sj7l'Fi!llf'1gE7ll brating the 10th anniversary of Dick's loth birthday. You'd think the Finns would make hertnr swimmers than runners We mortals have to sn at and shoo The flies from dawn to clark. 'Cause Noah clicln't swat the two That roostvcl on the ark. Connecticut General Life Insurance Company of Hartford LIFE, ACCIDENT and AUTO INSURANCE CUMPLIMEN TS OF UL VER-SJIITH W' Kindergarfen Training Selma! Havntforci, Conn. Dot Hovcy: Dear, clon't hug the hrc now 1 Sl,lIll1Cl'C. Wick: Who do you think you wrt-- l l:xming Youth? X c:I'IlCC'll2lYl0l'I Stop! liill German: l won't. Grace fwith ll sigh of rolicfj: Alright, l'vc clone my duty, Pcoplc who livc in glass houses arouse suspicion hy pulling clown thc shmlcs. Paul Sullivan: Do you like cigars? i , lnsingcr: Yes, hut'- Punl: No! No! I mean whole cigars. F. SBIDWELL CO. WINDSOR LOCKS, CONN. 5233352 Lumber and Hardware Farm Supply S tore ELECTROL OIL BURNERS FOR Heating Plant or Stove Demonstrations gladly given. W SB HOLYOKE KEROSENE WATER HEATERS for constant Hot Water S2 SZ Arthur F. Saxton Plumbing Sz Heating Windsor Locks, - Ct. A PATIICNCIQ lVly roommate is the kind of guy Who never gets up in the morning: Nor has he ever any tooth-paste or stamps and He is entirely lacking in hooks. He is always broke and Smokes my cigarettes and Wears my tuck. Moreover, he loses everything anal ls terrihly messy. Also, he hates hriclge nntl never reads :tnytliing lfxcept -oh, yes. my letters! lint what makes me sore is illll2lI'l1t'lS got my girl! -f-l'dl1' Rrcurrl. cllilllilpll, in a motor cur, l'ushetl the lever hack too fair. Twinkle. twinkle, little star, Music hy the G. A. li. Complimenlf of 11 Friend lVlr. Sweeney: How did you get that proposition to-day? Michel: By the indirect method. lVlr. Sweeney: What do you mean? Michel: I copied it from Thompson. third Mr. Erickson: Any more shredded wheat? Waiter: Nope. lVlr. Erickson: WL-llAth:1t's the last straw. Peix Ito lihrru'ianD: Could l take I.orn1 Doonen out over the week-end. Downes: I bet lfdes' futher owns zu wood- pile. Bon: Wl1yF Harp : Oh, I just saw him llllIllM'l'll11l up the street. xnxnsnsn CONIPLI IVIENTS OF' A FRIEND The Electric Shop 57 North Main St. Phone 620 THOM PSONVILLE, CONN. Radio and Electrical Experts J Electrical Repairing and Appliances I P BUILD WITH BRICK THE EASTERN BRICK COMPANY EAST BERLIN, CONN. Representing The R. O. Clark gl Son Brick Co. The C. P. Merwin Brick Co. The Aetna Brick Co. '1-1 Sterling: I've been trying all day to get something for my girl? Lindquist: Had any offers? Red Orr: Oh, what 21 dark room! Dick: Here's where things develop. The Hrst time I went to church, they threw water on me. The second time, they threw rice on me. I suppose the third time they will throw dirt on me. It is always good to be nice, But not always nice to be good. MITCHELL BELKIN 0j lclezl Photographer Sufeld Sclzool CCLASS OF 19253 'bk' Speclallft in Home P 0 rtra Z t u re, Fraierrtlty Groupe and College Work. 473 Dwight Street Tel. Holyoke, Mass. Holyoke 2589W S. R. Spencer, President. H. C. Cone, Treasurer. H. L. Pomeroy, Secretary SPENCER BROTHERS, Inc. Lumber, Hardware, Paint, Coal, Wood, Grain, Fertilizers, Lime and Cement. SUFFIELD, CONN. , J...-L . 4-' sf'- ' . ' .1-'14'.'fAv:,vb.., :'?,' ' .. - -:.1.'-3'-: 'F?f '!'. '- N r 5:1:-jtQ-:nTfQ5 .qVi.--- gay' 'M . .- :'f.1.'gT2?f14' ' i-gf- T C.-12' .X '.g'5'34f:: .f ' . ,A ':?nJ3J':gZ' 1 - Ti My ' ' ...,.j,Q r ,X sk f .-..- . , K . .7 I'-Ifiggvgif XG S XQWI I Ma,-A-9 . - ...l'.1.. fx - C011zpZ1me1zfJ of l I ,:.,...N 6 K 1, I . I E80 ,- J f ,EL-.xo il'1'.,:h- I. X I.. .,. . 5: 1' N ' ' ' LEIIN M. H1Ln11c11, IJ. 11. s. , , --gtg.: .3115-r' -ff? ' 1 - '--'- .! 'r .'Q.:,au, '-'A 1 V .-.1 Q- . .-, -. - . . . - .fl --51. z V..-1 ., i. -Boy,-the mam who lllllllltb mv daughter gets 21 prize. -My!-What an inducement' .l. Compliments of Windsor Locks Say it with Flowers Trust SPAlll.lllllli GARDENS and Suffield, Conn. Safe Deposit Co. R l'fQU l IC NI My lfnglish instructor departed this life, I hope he may rest in peace--f llc promised his classes a tan-minute test lforthe day of his timely decease. he very last words that he said in this world Were uttered that hour he died: RL-memher to give all my sections that test. It will scotch every idiot hide! And then the poor fellow relapsed with a sigh. And quietly hreathed his last: llis widow arrived just in time at the room With a test that not one of us passed. On cold days, if a phonograph is nor wound lf intervals, it will soon run down and stop. l'his will also happen on warm days. George S. Phelps 8100. U SE Agricultural Warehouse Grain and Feeds Agricultural Implements Wagons and Harness W SZ 110 Prospect St. Thompsonville, - Conn A remarkable piano-remarkably priced' MUCH of the joy of owning a really fine piano lies in the knowledge of its lasting beauty. For years, this quality has been identified with only high-priced pianos. But now, the York Piano, at a very reasonable price, enables you to enjoy true beauty of tone combined with a high standard of mechanical excellence. It is indeed a remarkable piano at a remarkably low price! The rich sweetness of tone, the perfect, easy action and charming case designs are unusual in any piano! York Pianos are made by the makers of the famous Weaver Pianos. Come in to see them. You will find the prices surprisingly favorable. Terms to suit purchaser. Music Lover's Shop Windsor Locks, Ct. 114 Main St., Bank Building Q keno W COMPLIMENTS OF THE SUF-'F'IEl.D SAVINGS BANK CHARTERED NIAY, 1869 S. R. SPENCER, President. W. J. WILSON, Treasurer Q PRINTED BY THE REPUBLICAN PRESS HAMILTON, N. Y.
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