Suffield High School - Sagitta / Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Suffield, CT)

 - Class of 1943

Page 28 of 48

 

Suffield High School - Sagitta / Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Suffield, CT) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 28 of 48
Page 28 of 48



Suffield High School - Sagitta / Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Suffield, CT) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 27
Previous Page

Suffield High School - Sagitta / Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Suffield, CT) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 29
Next Page

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



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 28 text:

PROPHECY It was my appointed job to write the class proph¬ ecy. Very well, but clairvoyance runs thin in my veins. Therefore, I searched for help. The best is none too good for the class of ’43, so I sped to New York and consulted Mysterious Mildred who is acknowledged to be the seeing eye of the future. After several hours of consultation, we were able to conclude the fol¬ lowing : Wilfred House will realize his life’s dearest am¬ bition when he marries an Amish girl, buys a sixty acre Ohio farm, and raises a healthy family of four¬ teen. Dottie Hamilton will get the job of manicurist in Joe Falkowski’s swank, seven chair barbershop on Day Avenue. Charle s Robert Brome, Jr., will someday drill oil wells down in New York City. There aren’t any? Well, maybe he’ll discover some. How do you know? Shirley McComb will run Suffield’s largest riding academy west of East Street and north of South Street, or somewhere. Bob Curtin will land a job as chief gag writer for Bob Hope’s successor, C. Elmer Sillybritches. The Jap exterminator, John Rising, will make his fortune by endorsing the product which keeps him in top condition, Soogies Breakfast Cereal. He’ll also write a ten volume essay How I Dood It’’. Chet Grabowski will be flying that New York- Alexandria hop and will do all right until his Egyp¬ tian goddess divorces him, then he will settle down with Maggie O’Flaherty, the cop’s daughter. Here Mildred got a little mixed up, asking me if any of the class of ' 43 were married. It looks as though Lillian Zukowski won’t stay single very long. I believe Walter Sadowski is a farmer at heart and someday he will settle down with the cutest, nice- est little—hog farm in New England. Mildred says that Betty Stafford and Muriel Whalen will operate one of Suffield’s largest homes for aged cats. (Feline or female?) Lillian Stratton will have a patriotic war job for the duration but her real love is nursing, so after the war she will land a job as a Marine nurse. Andy Organik will make a successful career of carv¬ ing epitaphs on gravestones, until his six ton master¬ piece falls the wrong way. They just left it there. Walter Drenzek will fly The Rover’’, high, fast flagship of Ralph Merrell’s new Suffield-Hindustan airline. Mildred says Ralph will take pity on a couple of his old classmates, giving Vernon Trudo the job of running the soda founta ins aboard his airliners and Helen Papafil a job serving light snaks to the passen¬ gers on one of his big ships. From all the activity there will be in Suffield, I began to wonder where the gold mine would be lo¬ cated. There will be no gold mine, but the cause of it all is even more astounding. It will be found by that eminent semi-chemodoodler, Bruce Hinckley, that two weeks spent breathing the air from the Suf¬ field area is an absolute cure for cronic disjointitis. Hawley Rising will set up a bottling works where he will have Jessie Glownia and Marguerite Kopernik jamming air into bottles as fast as they can, while Chink Carlson rushes it in his sealed pressure truck to the President in Washington. Henry Wilson will run a bottling works too. No, not air, just let it go at that. Florence Putkowski and Jennie Karpinski wil be featured at Edwin Phelon’s night club in North Granby. Francis Deane must have more drag than an air¬ plane carrying the hangar because Mildred says he will soon—ten years—find himself a Lieutenant-Colonel! Olive Hinckley is a natural born critic so it’s nat¬ ural that she should grow famous in that capacity. Her specialty will remain a secret, she’s just a critic, that’s all. Rachel Cutler will develop the newest thing in lipstick, Honey Pine Pitch’’, guaranteed not to come off. Off what? Ardelle Pease has risen to the lofty heights of editor of McCall’s magazine. Florence she’ll get it if it’s your last cent” Yasai- tis will collect bills for the Ajax Bill Collecting and Pleasant Bouncing Agency”. I believe it will be the first such occupation undertaken by the weaker (?) sex. Lawrence Tavino will develop that artistic touch of his and open an art studio. He won’t make much money because of the high wages of models and how could he paint without models? Mildred says that Veronica Kosinski will spend a long, tranquil life as an old maid librarian. I’m losing faith in my mysterious friend. Gordon Blakesley will have charge of physical education at Yale someday—or is it Vassar or it could be Alcatraz, I’m not sure. Sailors Alfred Rock and John Cain will soon be shipwrecked on a South Sea isle and lost for twenty years. Oh happy day—such hospitable people. Mildred would like to have Dorothy Kraiza as her own understudy, but says Dorothy will attempt the psychic malarky” on her own. Esther Koski will finally marry a buck private from Bradley Field. It must have been just what he needed because in a few weeks he will find himself wearing stripes.

Page 27 text:

BASKETBALL Because of the curtailment on transportation, the basketball schedule for the season of 1942-43 had to be shortened. The games which were played proved to be eventful. BASEBALL The baseball team, lacking pitching reserves, played under handicap condi¬ tions all season. The games which were lost, were lost by one run margins.



Page 29 text:

That on the job” fashion editor, Jane Golon, will enlarge her column, taking in a syndicate of 317 fash¬ ion magazines. That dare-devil, Roger Gardner, will just live on danger. Death will be his business. Yes, he’ll be Roger E. Gardner, mortician. Jeanne Sikes will give combination lessons. Fifteen minutes of painting and one half hour on the cello for forty-seven cents. The Marions, Lawton and Lovich, will soon marry, and that’s that. They will be Mrs. I. Rollin Kash and Lady R. U. Corney. Joyce Bentley will write a tangy novel of the Old West without leaving tangy old Suffield. With all the business in Suffield, Gertrude Israel will find it profitable to open a hotel. It will be unicjue in that it is entirely staffed by women. Louise Gemboski and Mary Klaus as bell-hops, will get some very sizeable tips, mostly from men. Lillian Edmonds will cook things, says Mildred, as they have never been cooked. Helen Los and Ann Barnach will run a beauty salon on the mezzanine, while giving orders and filling rooms from the desk will be Vera Mills. Joe Philips will shoot down many zeroes with his P-47. But just when it looks as though he’s through with twenty Japs on his tail, the war ends and the Japs have to go home. Mary Kozikowski and Jennie Pacewicz will take time from their war jobs for their weddings. Their sailor boys will soon be out to sea but they’ll come back and all will live happily ever after. Howie Morell will venture far from the hills of West Suffield. Yes, way into the coal mines of Penn¬ sylvania. Glenn Spauding will make a lot of money some¬ day, with his argumentative powers. He was the de¬ fending lawyer in the case of Mr. Jones versus The Missing Tire. Mildred prophecies that Lillian Rising will be¬ come a famous tight rope walker. She’ll be the first of three generations of tight rope walkers. The Misses Murphy will operate one of the big¬ gest ice cream bars in Suffield, offering competition to the Suffield Pharmacy and Mix’s Emporium. It seems that Carl Matyskiela has his picture in all magazines because the Atlas treatment has worked very well. He is now part owner of the exercising machine which stands in Mr. Charles Atlas’ gym¬ nasium. And now Mildred had seen absolutely all of the future that I could afford. She couldn’t tell me any¬ thing about Helen Glownia, so I’m afraid the future of that little miss will have to tell it’s own secret. This appointed job written and completed by: Vernon Trudo. 3n iWemoriam to Charles Robert Brome, Jr. Born — April 18, 1926 Died — April 24, 1943 NAMES OF BABY PICTURES— 1. Ralph Merrell; 2. Jennie Karpinski; 3. Howard Morrell; 4. Hawley Rising; 5. Walter Drenzek; 6. Veronica Kosinski; 7. Helen Los; 8. Elizabeth Stafford; 9. Florence Putkowski; 10. Dorothy Kraiza; 11. Sheila Murphy; 12. Marion Lovich; 13. Jessie Glownia; 14. Louise Glemboski; 15. Charles Colson; 16. Joseph Phillips; 17. Charles Brome; 18. Joseph Falkowski; 19. Ardelle Pease; 20. Edwin Phelon; 21. Glenn Spaulding; 22. John Qiin; 23. Marguerite Kopernik; 24. Wilfred House; 25. Rachel Cutler; 26. Robert Curtin; 27. Gertrude Israel; 28. Muriel Whalen; 29. Carl Matyskiela; 30. Jennie Pacewicz; 31. Lillian Zukowski; 32. Gordon Blakes- ley; 33. Lillian Edmonds; 34. Ann Barnach; 35. Jane Golon; 36. Helen Papafil; 37, Jeanne Sikes; 38. Dorothy Hamilton; 39. Andrew Organek; 40. Florence Yasaitis; 41. Chester Grabowski; 42. Lawrence Tavino; 43. Helen Glownia; 44: Vernon Trudo; 45. Lillian Stratton; 46. Helen Murphy; 47. Olive Hinckley; 48. Shirley McComb.

Suggestions in the Suffield High School - Sagitta / Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Suffield, CT) collection:

Suffield High School - Sagitta / Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Suffield, CT) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Suffield High School - Sagitta / Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Suffield, CT) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Suffield High School - Sagitta / Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Suffield, CT) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Suffield High School - Sagitta / Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Suffield, CT) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Suffield High School - Sagitta / Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Suffield, CT) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Suffield High School - Sagitta / Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Suffield, CT) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946


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



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.