Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA)

 - Class of 1935

Page 1 of 92

 

Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1935 Edition, Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collectionPage 7, 1935 Edition, Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1935 Edition, Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collectionPage 11, 1935 Edition, Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1935 Edition, Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collectionPage 15, 1935 Edition, Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1935 Edition, Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collectionPage 9, 1935 Edition, Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1935 Edition, Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collectionPage 13, 1935 Edition, Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1935 Edition, Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collectionPage 17, 1935 Edition, Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 92 of the 1935 volume:

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Qj'i'fg?ff.fES,:' .'7,533.f1J7,:?Q:242gx''47F35-2 5-Q Q02Ei'Z'X.'.r2f9?-YF' 1 : - A f , - 1 Riff.. gy, 14555, 4.5. 5.5 f l, 5, .g. eq-. . A A yub, ?3Zr il,5.fi: -Q.. .QQMAWQ f15:EQ,,,:3b.,,,i.,,kXmfdxf:-M A-wx gf' I felzfigwf.-pf, I 'asf-:E w M4-lwgkws 3 4 1 Q4 ,L S ., K 12- 9 5' f K 1 -. L 'Mia 4 13' ,K 4 3 5 -sf L ., 'W Q My h wy! ,uk M AQ., 0, A 3 'xr K fd its 4,5 , WW 'E f 'HRW 4 ,A hh, ig' J '55 vi' -3,5 M Y' Avi' Ugg' X, U, n v 13 , bl 'vii 35:9 NG wi LQX4, , V ' nb . - ' fm. f ' ,, -grim 4. ,- -tvif 'Liu , ,gi g EL 'gmgz ,222 '-... r:vRw, g- 4 ' . HM x ,, fx Xi 9 X X X X N w xi KN N X suaiwfivinnsfzxs:z:s1:xsexxsif5xs1fssazsunQ,:f 4cDyibWQ.3uuggggi,-Egg-EQbQ5Q,Eg5g1,ane,'ffcDn2!,g . 5? 6 THE U TATTLETALE 6 ISSUE GF THE B L U E O W L A0 2f5g.- I9 3 5 TKT Q 9 Q A 2 if ATTLEBQRQ HIGH SCHOOL Q g, ATTQEBORO :: :: MASSACHUSETTS Q QS Q l5 Q-El C?siU IIGTQQ-lVQ,f5Ell D3i5QE 9L33SDQ 2lb3 UUQz-iQ Wi' --wH1v1P!l THE TATTLETALE 1JageTw0 ' A. I. Vffn- ' 'M fmt. A Q' :Af A 4A 71. ATTLEBORO HIG H SCHOOL 'bf Q AAHAAAHRA w TATT LETALE STAFF 193 5 QQ Editor- in - Chief CHARLES OBRIST Class Statistics WILLIAM LEE DCROTIIY DEN NEN CATHERINE SLATTERY ALMCN ANDREWS RICIIARD CLARK RI7'I'II IIAzLE'I I' DO'I'C'I'IIY PULLEN xx ILIIRED IIOIINSICVIIIIIIC RAYMOND 0'DQNNELL LIIWIR BALSICR Who 's Who PETER GAGNICR IGVELYN c1oI,E Class Questionnaire CHARLES GODDARD CERTRUDE CAIN MILDRED LINGARD ALLEN BRUCE LED ESSEY .ICHEPII TAYLOR FRANCES MCRIN CECRCE o'IiI+:III'Ic CLIFFORD FIELDING TIICAIAS Ii ELLIHICR rm E we SENIOR CLASS LITERATURE History Will RUTH FLYNN DONALD PHILLIPS ARTHUR I'AYET'I'E JANE CAMI'RELL 'Prophecy RICHARD READ RAYMOND 0'DoNNELL RIIRNARD YOUNG GEORGE HIGGINS LYAIAN .ICIINHCN ALBION ANDREWS PHILIP BROWN MILIJRICD LINGARD Page Three TH E T ,Pl T T L E T ,AI L I i l E., Ez. E-..., ,-- .. THE TATTLETALE Page Four Q M W V7 W Y if fr YY W 6 HE CLASS 798 ALFRED R. MACK Principal ' ' ag..-L5af.qm,..-V. spectfully , 4, . ,, this, the 1935 edition LOYAL FRIENDS and whose fbremost thought has always been our success and happiness and to whom we wish cz brilliant future .. .. .giamwafau . Page Fwe Q ee - f UFIQ V 3 5 Q 4. ci e d i c a t of the 'Tattletalen to two UPRIGHT GENTLEMEN whose devoted and un- tiring patience has won our undying gratitude . . . his mem- ory will never fade WILLIAM F. EASTWOOD S u ln m a s t e P T11 , . . TII E T A T T L E T A L E Page Six QV A A A A Qs f ,ffyf . , .f . Jkjff ' iff s FACULTY rnoro ny o'Ni-zu. First Row-Miss Hunter, Miss Simonds, Miss Daley, Mr. Eastwood, Mr, Mack, Miss E. Claflin, Miss Craves, Miss Ramsdell, Miss MeC'ormiek. Second Row- -Miss llilliarml, Miss Crilliths, Miss llosmer, Miss Farr, Miss Smith, Miss Churchill, Miss Connolly, Miss Pieree, Miss Ott, Miss Searle, Miss Dorwart, Third Row-Mr. Cilih, Mr. Coding, Mr. Mueller, Miss Moore, Miss Pithie, Miss Parsons, Miss Ceer, Miss Il. Claflin, Miss Bradley, Miss Vitherell, Mr. Hall, Mr. Spatcher, Mr. Tunstall. List of Faculty, l934-I935 PRINCIPAL ALFRED R. MACK .... .,... B ridgewater Normal School, Brown University, Harvard University SUB-MASTER WILLIAM F. EASTWOOD, Homerton College, England, Sloyd Training School, Boston, Mass., Institute of Tech- nology, Harvard Summer School-Design, School Administration. ENGLISH CAROLYN CHURCHILL .... .... A urora College, Taylor University, Leland Powers Dramatic School GRACE C. DALEY ....., ,.,..., V .........,..,.......,.,...,.............,, Bates College HELEN M. CLAFLIN ..,... . . . . . ..,.. Smith College, N. Y. State Library School VIOLET C. CONNOLLY ..... ..........,.,. I iings College, Nova Scotia MARIAN GEER ...,,.,..,.., .......... C onnecticut College CONSTANCE WITHERELL. . . .......... ..... B oston University y FRENCH MARJORIE A. PIERCE ...,. .....,.............. S orbonne, Paris, University of Vermont FRANCES FARR ........ ..... U niversity oi Vermont, McGill University French School Page Seven LATIN JESSIE M. GRAVES .....,. ....... .................... B f Iiddlebury College EVELYN Y. GRIFFITHS ...., .... P embroke College in Brown University MABEL WALL ,........... .......... ................,..,..... C o lby College GERMAN EDITH CLAFLIN .......... . .,.,....., .,............,,........ S mith College GERTRUDE H. PARSONS ..., .................. .... B r own University, Boston University MATHEMATICS RUTH BRADLEY ........... ......................,...........,............. B ates College RAYMOND H. GRAYSON ..... ....,..................... M assachusetts State College JULIUS H. MUELLER ....l .....,...... B rown University, Harvard University, Bates College COMMERCIAL RUTH A. RAMSDELL. .Smith College, Burdett Business College, Boston University of Business Administration BERNICE B. HOSMER ......................,............,.......,........... Maine School of Commerce MABEL M. OTT ....... ..... .,.. . . . . . . . . . ..................... Baypath Institute ETTA E. MOORE .... ...........,............,........,...,....... P embroke College in Brown University JESSIE I. PITHIE ..., .... B oston University, Brown University, Bryant 8: Stratton College, Simmons College IRMA G. SEARLE .... .............,......................,.... P etnbroke College in Brown University HISTORY AND CIV ICS ' ELIZABETH M. HILLIARD ..... .,...........,....,..,....... S mith College, Columbia University FREEMAN HALL .....,.... ...............,..... B oston University DOROTHY SIMONDS .... ........... .... IX I iddlebury College SCIENCE KENNETH L. GODING .... .......... ' , .,................... Boston University INA M. HUNTER .,,...... .... P embroke College in Brown University LIBRARY BEATRICE SMITH ..,. ...... ......,... ,.... B o s ton University DOMESTIC SCIENCE HELENA A. MCCORMICK .... ....,.,................ . . . .Skidmore College DRAWING PERSIS A. CROWELL ...... .......... ........... lX I assachusetts Normal Art School CUTHBERT W. TUNSTALL ..... ....................... B oston University, State Teachers College ' I MANUAL TRAINING GEORGE I. SPATCHER. . . . ..,...........,....... ..... W entworth Institute JOHN LAING GIBB ..... BENITA DORWART ..... MUSIC ....New England Conservatory of Music CLERK OF OFFICE THE TATTLETALE Qs- IL' TA T'I'li1L1ALE .l Y,,wW., . , W . v..Y,.,v.,,Nw. ,W ,.,..,.W. .,...,.. Page Eight JOHN CHAMPION SINCLAIR College Dartmouth IlJack7I Jackie has been very active in sports, as you can see. As our Senior Presi- dent he has led us to unknown heights, and we all respect him highly because of his great qualities. Happy landings, J ack. I never saw his like, there lives N0 greater leader. Football '33, '34 , Baseball '34, '35 , President of Class '35 , Vice President '34, President of Student Council '35, President Executive Board '35, Ring Committee '34, Torch Club '31, '32, Hi-Y Club '35, Honor Usher '35. ALMON HAMMOND ANDREWS College Dartmouth K KBud7 7 1 Who doesn't know Bud of the Three Musketeers-Andrews, Carpenter and Keeler , the despair of the faculty. Besides being one of our most popular boys, he is one of our best athletes. Best of luck, Bud, I 've lived and loved. Football '32, '35, Baseball '32, '34, '35, Basketball '32, '34, '35, Captain of Basketball '35, President of Class '34 , Vice-President '35, Student Council '34 , President of Student Council '34, Dance Committee '32, '34, '35, Reception Committee '34, Ring Committee '34, Hi-Y Club '34, '35, Vice-President '35, Senior Prom Committee '35, Prophecy. fef. College Amherst 4 1 ' , RED VANETTEN ROUNSEVILLE Another of our most popular members with male-and otherwise-is Bill, who was also chosen our cutest boy. We know with all your characteristics you'll be successful in whatever you do, Bill, De.ser'ibe hfzfm if you can, An abridgemeht of all that is pleasant in man. Secretary of Class '34, '35, Dance Committee '34, Reception Committee '34, Ring Committee '33, Torch Club '32, '33, Secretary of '32, '33, Hi-Y Club '34, '35, Treasurer of '34, '35, Honor Usher '34, Senior Prom Committee '35, Blue Owl Staif '34, '35, Tattletale Staff '35, Orchestra '32, '33, '34, '35, Band '32, '34, Assembly Committee '35' Honor Roll '32, '33, '34, '35. RAYMOND GERARD GEORGE O'DONNELL College Boston College KKRa'y77 t'Ray is one of our most popular boys. His wit has made us all admire-him. Coed luck, 'tRay. Laugh and the world laughs with you. Treasurer '35, Dance Committee '35, Reception '34, '35, Ring Committee '34, French Club '33, '34, Hi-Y Club '35, Senior Prom Committee, Prophecy, Honor Usher '35, Debating Club, Footlight Club '33, '34, -v-,-vp.,-,,-1 'bf Q PageNine THE TATTLETALE EUGENE THOMAS ALGER Commercial Bryant College KKGQHCJP UGene has taken an interest in Baseball during high school days. We would have gladly welcomed you in more of our clubs, Gene '4Still Water Runs Deep. Baseball '35. KENNETH WILLIAM ALLARD Technical Kelly Field HKen77 Who doesn't know 'KKen and his many escapades. His likeable personality will certainly be an asset to his future. '4Why should I be ruled by Custom, Rules were only made for those too weak to break them. Football '32, '33g Secretary of Class '33. PHYLLIS MABEL ALLEN College Katherine Gibbs 'fPhilH t'Phil is another of our popular blonds. She has spent her four years in studying and making friends-'1Good Luck Phil. 'Friendship is the Wine of Life. French Club '34g Pin Committee 5 Honor Usher '355 Glee Club '32, Footlight Club '33, '34, ELEANOR VIANNA AMSBURY Commercial Sturdy Memorial Hospital Toots 'tToots has taken part in most all of our musical activities. She is also one of our most friendly girls. 'KI try to be friendly with the whole human race. Orchestra ,34, '35g Glee Club '32, '33, '34, '35g Debating Club '33, Music Club ,345 Operetta '34. JOHN ANACKO, JR. Manual Arts Apples John has been quiet, but we have been pleasantly aware of him. His personality has been agreeable to us all. Hels a good friend 'br ' ' r - - '-irpv-if-H--' -w -V' - V 'fr'-' 'f--v -- - fs-we --- -r r.-pg.-Y-.,,,.,.., -.7-.,,.-,..v..,. . . - W-..,-Y.-. THE TATTLETALE PageTen Y. ..f ,W .4 :B ELSIE ALTHEA JEANETTE ANDERSON College Katherine Gibbs KlE1kl7 Elk has been one of our little Hcutupsf' She brings cheer and joy totany classroom. Good Luck, Elk.l' Hllni really pleasanter to know When I have just been terrible. Basketball '34, '35, Tennis '35, Tri-Y '34, '35, Honor Usher '35, Glee Club '32, Assembly Committeeg School Play '34, Footlight Club '33, '34. MILDRED AURORA ANDERSON Commercial Bryant College 1KMi11y77 We never hear much from 'tlVIilly. She hasn't joined us in many of the school activities, but she is greatly liked by all her classmates. 'Tlfly tongue within my lips I reign, For whom talks much must talk in vain. RUTH MABEL ANDERSON Commercial t 'Ruthie K'Ruthie in her quiet way has gone thru her four years capturing the hearts of our most eligible young men. N icer are none than she. French Club '34. RACHEL MAY ANDERTON College Atlantic Uni on C fRayJ 7 With her quiet and unassuming way Ray has won a place in the hearts of her classmates. She is one of our studious girls. From her cradle she was a scholar. French Club '34, Honor Usher ,34, '35, Glee Club '34, Operetta '34. HASMIG ARABIAN Commercial V , Bryant College Mickey A girl with a sweet disposition, a pleasing personality and a Winning smile- that's t'Mickcy.l' Friendship is the :wine of life. gun PageEleven THE TATTLETALE Q' W- - - -- -H ----M CARL ARTHUR ARVIDSON General Bryant College HArt.,Y, Art hasn't taken a very active part in our clubs but what should we have done without him in the orchestra. Best of luck, 'fArt. f'Pe0ple offew words are best. Orchestra '32, '33, '34, '35, EDWARD WILLIAM AUDETTE Manual Arts Eddie Who doesn't know Eddie'? His lively wit and ready smile is welcome anywhere. Better laughter than sadness. Honor Usher '34, Class Basketball '32, '33. LILLIAN RHEA AUDETTE Commercial St. Hyacinth's College KiLil7Y 'tLil has passed a very quiet four years with us and has always been well supplied with friends. Good luck, Lil, HT0 be pleasant is my aim. French Club '33, '34. BLANCHE LOUISE BALSER General Memorial Hospital Hsisff Although Sis hasn't taken part in many activities, she has gained many friends. We all know Sis will be good medicine for her patients. A good Pal and Friend. Glee Club '33. LEWIS CLEVELAND BALSER, JR. Commercial Bryant College HLBWIJ 'tLew is one of our busy boys. He surely can handle the business end of the 'tBlue Owl. t'Best of Luck to Lew. Because Time goes too fast for me I can't do half the things I ought. Track '35, Torch Club '32, '33, Manager of Track '35, Senior Prom Com- mittee, Blue Owl Staff '35, Tattletale Staff '35, Orchestra '32, Band '33, '34, '35, E T fl T T lr E T A L E Page Twelve 'Q Y - 'b AMY BERTHA BARTON College Bridgewater Normal With her quiet unassuming manner, we know she will make good as a teacher. Still and calm and seg'-possessed. Honor Usher '35. EARL EDWARD BAUMGARTEL Technical Northeastern Earl is one of our quiet industrious boys but his unassuming way has gained for him many friends. i'Persislencefis a rung in the ladder of success. Honor Usher '34, '35g Orchestra '32, '33, '34g Band '33, '34, Faculty Honorsg School Play '35, LOUIS PHILLIP BELLONZI Technical Boston University KKL0u77 Lou is an easy going sort of person. You should have taken a more active ,part in our Clubs, 'tLou. 'tThese books on How To Win Success Have left my problems all unsolved. They sound inspiring but I find There's always loo much work involved' Tennis '35g Orchestra '32, '33g Band '33, '34. J BEATRICE EVELYNL BENNION Commercial ' Burdett College Beat t'Beat , with her quiet ways and her ability to make friends will be sure to succeed no matter what 'she undertakes. Good luck, Beat. 5'A friend indeed. - French Club '34g Honor Usher' 35. LUCY ISABEL BENSON Commercial Bryant College We have not seen much of Lucy these four years but whenever we wanted her we could find her with her side-kick Phil, l With burdens far from light, l By simply looking helpless Though school life is confusing I get along all right, Page Thirteen THE TATTLETAIF ALYCE VIRGINIA BERGERON Commercial HAP, Burdett College UAF' is one of our busiest girls. She has been quite active in school work. We all know she will succeed. Efficiency and success go hancl in hand. 732 lg:-ance Committee '33g Tri-Y Club '35g Honor Usher ,34g ,35, Glee Club ROBERT OVILLA BLAIS Manual Arts Work KiB0bU t'Bobl' has been rather quiet during his four year's stay with us, but we all know and like him. A silent tongue finds no trouble. Honor Usher l35. Dorus VIOLA BLANCHARD Commercial Dot'l Although 'tDot'l has been rather quiet during the school years, we all know she will succeed in whatever she does. Silence is in itself a virtue. MARY RUTH BONNER, Cgllggg UHd0Cld0d Maisi Although Mary has been quiet during her stay with us, we know she will be a success in life. We remember her especially for her pleasant disposition and friendly ways. A Soul sincere, In action faithful. And in honor clear!'l ARTHUR NEWELL BOTTOMLFIY College Worcester Academy KKNeWie?7 'tNewiel' islour tallest ladhand he has been throughout the school years. Best of luck, 'tNewie. HA smile for every mon, And two for every gzrlf' -,psf 4 id . 0 TH If T A T T L E T A L E Page Fourteen Q f A fr e - f as RAYMOND ALBERT BOURBONNAIS General University of Southern California llB00by7! Booby is one of our smallest boys, but what he lacks in size he makes up in vitality. Good luck f'Booby.U Large oaks from little acorns growf, French Club '34, WILLIAM HOGUE BOYLE Technical Bill 'tBill has been rather quiet-at times-during his four year's stay yvith us. We all remember him for his friendly Ways and he was always willing to Join in a little fun. Friendship is the wine of life. DORIS LOUISE BRADSHAW Commercial Secretarial School lKDOtH f'Dot, with her quiet manner and pleasing personality, will make friends everywhere. Just another girl, but isn't that enough to say? French Club '34, Glee Club '32, '33, '34: Operetta ,34. THOMAS HENRY BRENNAN College Rhode Island School of Design KlT0m7! t'Tom is one of our many class musicians. He has played the piano with many different orchestras. He is also quite an artist. Good luck to you, 4'Tom His clever brain makes pictures for his hands to draw. Reception ,Committee '35, Debating Club '32, French Club '34. ' I ' 1' LYDIA RICHARDSON BRIGGS College Pembroke M , , uLydn Who can ever forget 'tLyd's pleasing personality? In addition to being one of our tallest and neatest girls, she has taken part in many school activities, gaining a host of friends. f'She's bonnie, blooming, straight and tall. Junior Ring Committeeg French Club '34: Tri-Y Club ,34, ,35. 7 . .Y . ,Y .-...vY.,...-.-.-r....v,..,.....,,.... Page Fifteen THI ITA Q- in W eff fe --A -fe - - A- Y f ERIKA DOROTHEA BRAUN College Boston University KiRiCky77 Erika has been a pleasant and a capable classmate. She has been a loyal member of our class, and we wish her the best in her work at B. U. A smilefm' eachg f1fI'1'67lfl to all. Tri-Y Club '35g Glee Club '32. PHILIP RUSSELL BROWN College Q Colorado School of Mines Bruno Have you ever seen Herit without a smile or some word of cheer? No! He is one of our best natured and most likeable fellows. In addition to this he has been very active in school life as can be seen. All the success in the world, 'fBruno. JM X For he's a jolly good fellowf, 6 uf, 4 Football '35g Treasurer of Freshman Class 5 Student Council '34g Executive Board '34g Torch Club '33g Hi-Y Club '3-55 Class Prophecy. ALLEN EDMUND BRUCE Technical Boston University Well, well, here is our big butter and egg man! Allen always had a smile for everyone and we will always remember his good nature. Why do you blush my buxom lad? Torch Club '31, '32g Hi-Y Club '34, '35g Tattletale Staff '35g Assembly Com- mittee 335. WILLIAM HENRY BUCK, JR. Commercial , Buck Although Buck hasn't been very active in school activities other than track we cannot say that he is a quiet boy. 4'Fool that I am. Track '34, '35. PHYLLIS GRACE BUCKLEY Commercial . , tPhil'l t'Phil,' is our smallest girl but we know she'll find her way on the road of ,success despite her stature. She's as sweet as she can be. M 10 T A T T I, E T A L If Page Sixteen, GERTRUDE ALICE CAIN College Pembroke Gert By just looking at her record we can see how active Gert has been. She has been a great asset to the class by her pep and willingness to work. Happiness and success at Pembroke, Gert I have a heart with room for every joy. Reception Committee '34, French Club '34, Tri-Y Club '35, Senior Prom Committee '35, Blue Owl Staff '34, '35, Tattletale Staff '35. ALEXANDER CAMPBELL, JR. Alex His pleasant attitude and fine spirit are welcome wherever he luck to you, K'Alex in whatever you may do. may go. Good A bit of laughter, a bit of music, makes lzfe easier. Orchestra '31, '32, '33. JANE MARCHBANK CAMPBELL General Scotty Everyone knows Scotty and her pep. She is always ready with a smile and jest for everyone. A witty girl, with lots of cheer. A laugh or smile when she is near. Class VVill, Glee Club '31 , -'32 5 Class Basketball '31 JEAN CARNES Commercial ' Hospital Training KKSk1ppy!! P Jean has been quite active in several of our clubs. She also has been a help in the lunchroom. She intends to be a nurse and we wish her the best of luck. She is a friend. Basketball '32, '33, Glee Club '32, '33, '34, '35, Music Club '33, '34, Operetta '34 ALBERT JEFFERSON CARPENTER, JR. College MAIN Duke University Carpenter! What more can we say? HAI is one of our class cut-ups. Wher- ever Carp is you can be sure there will bewno dull moments. Besides taking active part in school activities, he has participated in several sports. Good luck at Duke, Al, I f wit was iron, I 'd be a junkyard. Football '32, '33, '34, Basketball '31, '32, Hi-Y Club '34, '35 g Chairman of Assembly Committee. 'bf Q Pagf Seventeen TH la' T A T T Ii E T A li If 'Q RAYMOND ANDREW CASAVANT Technical Southern California HRBJYYY Ray has acquired many friends in his four years at A. H. S. He is a fine fellow when you know him. As merry as the day is long. Track '34, '35, DOROTHY LOUISE CAVANAUGH College Rhode Island Hospital KKDOU? Dot is a girl of pleasing personality and full of fun. She has accomplished much in the line of music and has been an asset to our orchestra. Achievement follows study. Honor Usher '34, '35, Orchestra '33, '34, '35, Band '33, '34, '35, Glee Club '34, '35, Music Club '35, Honor Roll '32, '33, '34, '35. GERTRUDE MAY CHARETTE College Pembroke HGert77 Gert has been very active in all the sports and social activities of our class. She is also a fine student. Gert is well liked by all. A good scout and a perfect lady. Tennis '32, '33, '34, '35, Basketball '32, '33, '34, '35, French Club '34, Honor Usher '34, '35 , Orchestra '32 , Glee Club '32, '33, '34 , Debating Club '32, Music Club '34, '35, Honor Roll '32, '33, '34, '35, Dramatic Club '33, '34, HELEN ELIZABETH CHURCHILL Domestic Arts Deaconess Hospital Helen is one of our quiet girls. As an actress Helen certainly did very fine in making our School Play a success. We know she will succeed in whatever she attempts. To do is to succeed. Basketball '33, '34, Honor Usher '34, '35 , Glee Club '32, '33, School Play '35, RICHARD IRVING CLARK College Rhode Island State Clarkie Dick has been very active in the social life of our School and for one so active has accomplished much. He is liked by all and We know he will reach the height of success. He ts a quiet lad, at times. Student Council '34, Dance Committee '34, '35 , Torch Club '33, Hi-Y Club '34, '35, Honor Usher '35, Tattletale Staff '35, T11 10 T A T T 1, If T A 1, 11 page Elfghteen, DONALD EDWARD CODDAIRE General 'fghortyt' Donn is a live wire at all times and a wizard on the baseball diamond. Why shoulft I wort: and l7lfTA'6 1nyseU' mad? Baseball ,32, l33, '34, '35g Captain ,35. EVELYN COLE College Bridgewater Eviel' 'tEvie came into our midst our Sophomore year and has made up for the time she lost. She is one of our cutest girls and more than one fellow would like to return to be a student when she starts teaching. t'Swect as a rosef' Student Council '35g Tri-Y '34, '35g Honor Usher '35g Senior Prom ,355 Blue Owl Staff '35g Tattletale Staff '35. EVA LOUISE CRANNAN Commercial , , Katherine Gibbs Toots Tootsl' is one of the quiet girls of the class and has not participated in many activities. But still we know she is in our midst by her friendly and cheerful smile. She who says little, has nothing to answer for. .Glce Club '33, 734. . MARGARET ELLEN CREEDEN Domestic Arts St. Joseph's Nurses Training School HPCg7J 'tPeg has not been very active in school sports but she ,certainly was active in her classes and put the P in Pep for more than one class. HT0 know her is to like herf, Tennis '32g Class Basketball '32g'Glee Club '33. E.. Q. 1-ww f--Y --M-- 'bf Page Nineteen TH E T A T T L IL' T A 45. Y-, W W .- ,,. H., ,,, ROSE DEBORAH CUMMINS Commercial Sturdy Memorial Hospital 4'Rosie Rose has been very quiet but she certainly has aided in the success of musical organizations to which she belonged. '4Foithful and True. Glee Club '33, '34, Operetta '33, '34. DOROTHY ELIZEBETH DENNEN Commercial Skidmore HDOt!7 Dot is our best girl dancer and has always been prominent in all social activities. Everyone likes her. Many a freshman had lost sleep over her and everyone likes to dance with her. Smile and the world smiles with you, Cry and you only get a red nose. Basketball '32, '33g Assistant Manager '34g Manager '35g Dance Committee '32, '33, '34g Reception Committee '34g Tri-Y '34, '35 g Tattletale Staff '35g Cheer Leader '35, RITA YVONNE DESORCY Commercial Rhode Island Hospital Re-et' ' We have not seen much of Rita these four years, but when we needed her she was right there. She has decided to go into training and we wish her the best of luck. 'KN ot stepping o'er the bounds fy' modesty. EDWIDGE EVELYN DION Commercial Bryant College Eddie Eddie has not been very active in our school life. We know she will make a fine secretary for some big business man. She is not too tall, yet not too small. THE TA TTLETALE 53 Page Twenty VIRGINIA ANNA DRISCOLL College Rhode Island State HSHAIU Everyone knows f'Sa1 by that brilliant smile. We all know Sal can't help but be successful with her pleasing personality. What a combination! HSal's smile reaches all within a mile. French Club '34g Glee Club ,32, '33g Assembly Committee l35g Debating Club '32, '33. ANNA ALBINA EMOND Commercial Ann Ann has been very quiet these four years of high school. She has not chosen her life occupation but We are sure she will succeed. Silence is golden. DAVID GEORGE ESSEX College Brown University Dave', Dave is quiet in class, but when knowing him you very quickly change your opinion. His cheerful smile has urged many on to success. His smile was always proininent in trig and more than once got the class out of a hole and led them on to solution. Good nature without rltsguisef' THERESA MARY FASULO Commercial Simmons lKTOd!7 'tTod is one of our quiet classmates and some employer will be glad to get Tod', for a secretary. A Good things come in small packagesf' LILLIAN ELNORA FAULKNER Domestic Arts Sturdy Memorial Hospital HLi17! Lil is another one of our good singers who has aided Mr. Gibb in the pro- duction of our operettas. We may some day see her name in the cast of Madame Butterfly. Her patients will be lucky to have such a soothing voice to lull them to sleep. 'AA true jrtendf' Glee Club '34, '355 Opcretta '34, '35. Page Twenty-mze ' TH IL' T A T T L E T A L E Q 4A A -fr H- -ef - A A me ---ee-Qs i J EANNETTE NASH FELTS Domestic Arts Boston School of Art HJCHIIIJY VVe remember Jean as a member of our famous operettas at High School, and we know that she will succeed in her chosen field of art. HM asia has its charms, so too does art. Glee Club '32, '33, '34, '35, Music Club '32, '33, '34, '35, Operetta '34, '35. ROBERT WELLINGTON FIELD College Bridgewater Normal I KB0b7, Here's a fine actor and although he hasn't joined in any clubs, he sure was a big success in our school plays. A ll the w0rlfl's a stage, and some are great actors. School Play '34, '35, Footlight Club '33, '34. CLIFFORD EARL FIELDING College ' Harvard LAQMH77 What an athlete and what a man! If you don't break the world's broad jump record, Cliff , nobody will, and we are sure that one day you'll jump to success. 'tTl1c goal is a long way off bat tlzczzga toaclzdoa:n. Football '32, '33, '34, '35, Track '32, '33, '34, '35, Captain '35, Student Council '35 , Executive Board '35 , Dance Committee '32, '34, Reception Committee, Chairman '35, Ring Committee '34, Hi-Y Club '34, '35, Senior Prom Committee '35, Tattletale Staff '35, GEORGE HERBERT FISH General Penn State George's bus may be late often, but he's never late in the 440. Best of luck at Pen State,'George. To be successful don't be late. Baseball '32, Track '32, '34, '35, Basketball '35, Class Basketball '32, '33, Radio Club '32, Debating Club '32, AGNES VERONICA FLANAGAN College Katherine Gibbs Here's to a smart girl, whom we know will be a welcome addition to some I business man's office. Best of luck in the future, Agnes. Intelligence plus personalztg equals success. j Tennis '34, '35, French Club '34, Honor Usher '34, '35, Blue Owl Staff '34, '35, j Honor Roll-Average. , l 5 If T A T T I, IL' T .rl I, E Page Twenty-two JAMES STANLEY FLYNN Commercial U. S. Navy Medical Corps Nstalnll Stan is the composer of our class song and is it good! He is also a cartoonist on the Blue Owl Staff. The pen 'ls often mightier than the lcmjef' Football '32, '33, Track '32, Dance Committee '32, Blue Owl Staff '33, '34, '35, Glee Club '32, '33, '34, '35, Debating Club '34, Operctta '34, '35, Class Basketball '33, '34, '35, Class Song '35. RUTH MARIE FLYNN College Simmons Ruthie Ruthie is one of our class historians and she sure has made history in High School. She has been efficient on the Blue Owl Staff and we know she'll succeed. Do your best and success will reach you before the rest. Dance Committee '32, French Club '34, Tri-Y Club '34, '35, Vice-President '35, Historian '35, Blue Owl Staff '33, '34, '35, Business Manager '35, Tattletale Staff '35, Glee Club '32. DORIS LOUISE FORD Commercial Office Work lKD0tH Dot has spent a quiet four years with us but we know that with her sincerity she will succeed. Siacerity-one of the greatest of modern virtues. PETER FREDERICK GAGNER Technical Brown Pete In order to find Pete just look for someone neat. We know that with this feature he will be a successful engineer. What a feat to keep neat. Tennis '31, Torch Club '33, French Club '34, Hi-Y Club '34, '35, Tattletale Staff '35, Glee Club '33, '34, Radio Club '34 3 Class Basketball '32, '33, '34. - MARY ELLEN GARRITY Domestic Arts Bobby Bobby surely was a help in making the operetta successful. We know that with her ability to cooperate she will succeed. Silence is in ttseb' a virtue. Glee Club '33, '34, Music Club '34, Operctta '34, be Page Twenty-three TH L T 4 T T I L' TA I F BARBARA AGNES GILMOUR ' College Sayles Memorial Hospital liBarb77 Barb is going to be a nurse. Lucky patients! To work -is to succeed. Honor Usher '34, '35. CHARLES TURELL GODDARD Technical M. I. T. Charlie Meet one of the smartest boys in our class. With his ambition he will be a great success. Ambition, may have rained some men, but not this one. Basketball '34, 'Treasurer '34, Student Council '35, Dance Committee '34, '35, Reception Committee '34, Ring Committee '34g Torch Club '32, '33, Treasurer '33, Hi-Y Club '34, '35g President '35, Honor Usher '34, '35, Senior Prom Committee '35 5 Blue Owl Staff '35 g Tattletale Staff '35, Radio Club '34 5 Class Basketball '32, '333 Class Essayist '35. JOHN JAMES GORMLEY Technical A John John has made many a dull day lively with his wit. How he slays those Freshman and Sophomores. He's a quiet tad, - - at t-imesf' Track '34, '35, Hi-Y Club '35. LOIS HAYDEN GRANT College Lois is still undecided as to her future schooling but We know that whatever she does she will be successful. 'LHaste often causes a great many mistakes. Glee Club '33, '34, Operetta '34. DORIS GREENBERG Commercial 'fDottie Dottie has been quiet at high school and even though she is small she will do big things. Good things often come 'in small packages. French Club '34, Honor Usher '35, Debating Club '35, Dramatic Club '34. TH E T A T T L E T A L If Page Twenty-four - 15 MARJORIE LOWE GREENE Domestic Arts New England Peabody Home for Cripplied Children K4Marge!7 Marge surely has patience and cheerfulness. We are sure she will make good use of these qualities in her chosen field. To be happy, be with children. French Club '34, Honor Usher '34, '35, PETER JEROME GUIMOND Technical Pete Here's our own Atlas, and how he can tackle on the gridiron! He has friends everywhere and he deserves them. f'To have a friend, be one. Football '35, Baseball '34, '35, Hi-Y Club '35. CARL GUSTAFSON Technical Gus Gus has been our most artistic boy. He has designed the covers of the Blue Owl. Good luck Gus Hts clever brain makes pictures for his hands to draw Blue Owl Staff '35, FRANKLIN DAVID GUSTAFSON Technical Guy ' The memory of HGus on our football team will never fade. He's quite a scholar, too. Study and play-but d0n't mix them. Football '32, '33, '34, '35, Honor Usher '34, '35, Operetta '34. STEPHEN HALKO General Dean Academy Steve' ' Everyone at school knows t'Steve, including teachers. He's going to take up sports at Dean Academy and what a success he'll be! '24 sound mind in a sound body is a thing to be desired. Football '32, '33, '34, '35, Track '32, '33, Hi-Y Club '34, '35, Blue Owl Staff '35, Tattletale Stall '35, P1196 Tlpenlyifpg TH IL' T .fl T T L IL' T A I E asia, A as are A A A A A ess Av MERRILL HORACE HATHAWAY General Bentley School of Accountancy t'Mac Mac was always ready for fun with his dry sense of humor which at times almost proved disasterous in the classrooms. 'tSmoll and noisy, but nCz'ertl1c'less showing a jiner quality. Orchestra '32, '33, '34, '35, Band '35. RUTH CURTIS HAZLETT Household Arts Forsyth Dental Infirmary Everyone knows Ruth for her sweet disposition, pleasing personality and winning smile. With all these qualities we are sure she will be a success. lV'l'C67' are none Hum she. Student Council '35, Executive Board '35, Dance Committee '34, '35, Recep- tion Committee '34, Tri-Y '34, '35, President '34, '35, Blue Owl Staff '32, '33, '34, '35, Tattletale Staff '35, Glee Club '32. ' LEO FRANCIS HENNESSEY College Holy Cross 3-star Leo certainly has 'twhat it takes when it comes to football. He also stands out as a great cut-up which has made him popular among all the students. I leave the history class at last 'fn peace. Football '34, '35, Track '34, '35, Torch Club '32, '33, Blue Owl Staff '33, '34, '35, Tattletale Staff '35, Glee Club '33, '35, Radio Club '34, Class Basketball '33, '34, RITA MARIE HENRY College Rita has been rather quiet during our four years but has been liked by all. She has not any further intentions at present but we know she will be on top in whatever she does. ' Sho who .says little has nothing to answer for. French Club '34, Honor Usher. GEORGE FRANCIS HIGGINS, 3rd College , Princeton lKIggy7l Georgie certainly has been a headlight in our class. Everyone knows him for his curious and remarkable actions. His success in the Senior Play is known to all. Hllescribc him 'lf you can. Prophecy '35, Orchestra '32, Glee Club '34, '35, Debating Club Treasurer '35, Music Club '34, '35, Operetta '34, '35, School Play '35, Footlight Club '33, '35. E T A T T It E T A If E Page Twenty-sim 'QW ANITA VIRGINIA HUTCHINSON Commercial St. Hyacinth College A'KNitaA7Y Upon meeting Anita one is impressed by her ever-ready smile and by her amiability and readiness to adapt herself to any situation. Although of a fun loving and carefree nature, Anita has high ambitions and we wish her success in the future. ' A Smile for Each French Club '34. DORIS ELIZABETH JAMES Commercial Dot 'fDot has been rather quiet but well liked by all. She was always ready with a smile and with this quality she will always be happy. 'AA merry heart maketh a cheerful countenance. RITA MILDRED JANSON , Commercial The unassuming, generous and lovable characteristics which we admired in Rita the Freshman are still the cause of admiration to all of us, when we View Rita the Senior. We wish her every possible success. , 'fQuietness has its own charms. CAROL ELIZABETH JOHNSON General Sayles Memorial Hospital HKay77 Carol is known by all for her acting ability. We are sure Sayles will welcome such a smart, clever and pretty nurse. 'fl ongings sabltnzef aspirations high. J Glee Club '32, l33, '34, ,355 School Play '35, Dramatic Club '33. MARGUERITE LUCILLE JOHNSON Commercial f'Lou'l Lou is noted for her friendliness. She has not made any further plans, but whatever she does we know she will make good. - To be pleasant is my atm. French Club '34, '35. Page Twenty-sezzen TH If T A T T L E T A 'Q 'bf ' LYMAN CARL JOHNSON Technical Dartmouth Doc .We present for your inspection 'tDoc -radiant with pep, overflowing with wit, and endowed with a most pleasing personality. 'tW'z't, new and then .struck smartly, shows a spark. Football T33, '34, Tennis '32, '33, '34, Captain ,343 Hi-Y Club '35, Manager of Tennis '35, Prophecy, Blue Owl Staff '35, CHARLES MELVIN JOHNSON Commercial Mel Mel', was chosen our best boy blusher. Although he hasn't joined any clubs he is well known by all. Silence 'is one of the virtues of the wise. DERWENT RODGIQR JOHNSTON College Iowa State College of Mechanical Arts ihDerI,yJl Folks, meet Derry. His bubbling good nature has earned him a host of friends. He has been a great success as manager of baseball team. 'tl'll be merry, I'll be free, I'll be sad for neboclyf' Honor Usher '35, Baseball '34, '35. DONALD McKIM JOHNSTON Technical '4Stub f'Stub is the type of boy who forgets his worries with a smile. He has been popular among all. A'Fer he's a jelly good fellow. Senior Prom Committee. CYRIL BYRON KEANE College VVentworth Institute Kfcyll Cyril has not entered any activities but he has made many good friends. With his character he is sure to be a success at Wentworth Institute. Hljeeple of few words are best. TH If T A T T I If T .1 L If Page Twenty-e1'gl1t W A ee ees ee ee ee e e e e e A' asv MARY LOUISE KEANE Commercial Miss Dearborn's Since Louise came to us four years ago she has never quite put aside that quiet reserves which hides her from usg but yet we know and have experienced that her silence guards a wealth of kindliness and dependability that expresses itself in actions rather than in words. Silence is sublinzcf, THOMAS EMMET KICLLIHER Technical Marine Air Corps School 'KMouse Step right up folks, and meet t'Mousel', the happy-go-lucky, curly-haired youth who is always full of life and pep. He is well known by the members of the class. Who dures to laugh out loud f11zdfree. Basketball '34g Football ,311 g Blue Owl Staff ,353 Tattletale Staff l35g Class Basketball '32, '33, WILLIAM ADAM KIMMELL, JR. Commercial Rider College 441311172 Always ready for fun. His witty remarks make his classes amusing. HTMS bold bad manf, A DORIS EVA KLEPPFIR College Wilfred Academy 1 77 'tDot has not entered many of the clubs but she is well known by all. With her winning smile we are sure she will be a success. HTh67'C is no truer hearteclf, Honor Usher '35g Footlight Club I33, '34, PHILIP JOHN KRACZKOWSKI Manual Arts Rhode Island School of Design Zlphilll Everyone knows f'Phil with his tongue twisting name. He has been full of fun during four years. We know his pleasing ways will bring him success. A bit of nonsense new and then-who cares, Page Twenty-mfne TH E T A T T L If T A 'Q' MARY ALICE LaROCQUE Dompgtig Arts Sfllfdy Memflflal KfMaC,7 t'Mae has not been heard from Very much during her four years with us, but we know she is there just the same. Silence is golden. PHILIP LASHWAY College R. I. State Phil Phil came to Attleboro High School in our senior year but he has made friends quickly. To one of our neatest boys we wish success. 'Pers0naltty is the way to success. WILLIAM FRANCIS LEE College Holy Cross HBH177 Whether on the field or in the classroom, Bill is always on top. t'Bill ought to succeed at Holy Cross. Keep up the good work Bill. What is there to say? Football '35, Baseball '34, '35, Captain '35, Basketball '34, '35, Class Secretary '33, Student Council '34, Executive Board '34, French Club '34, Hi-Y Club '35, Honor Usher '34, '35, Senior Prom Committee, Blue Owl Staff '35, Tattletale Staff '35, Orchestra '32, '33, '34, '35, Glee Club '32, '33, '34, Debating Club '32, '33, Music Club '32, Operetta '34, Class Basketball '32, '33, Faculty Honors. JOHN ALDEN LEMAIRE Technical Alden is our best looking boy, and also our quietest boy. With that com- bination, Alden should succeed. A smile for everyone. Honor Usher '35. EVA HELEN GRACE LEMIRE Commercial Bryant dz Stratton Eva has found only time enough to join our musical clubs. We certainly wish she could have found time to join some of our other clubs. MuS1'C soothes the savage beast. Glee Club, Operetta, Music Club. IC T A T T I. E T A L If Page Thirty MILDRICD SHICRIDAN LINGARD ' College Connecticut College HMi11y77 'fMilly is one of our liveliest girls. Her lively Wit and ready smile are sure to make many friends for her at Connecticut. And everywhere that f'IlI1'llz'e went her smile was sure to go. French Club '34g Junior Dance Committee 5 Senior Prom Committee 3 Tri-Y Club '34, '35g Class Prophecy. MARION LUTHER General Penn Hall Anyone who Went to the football games remembers Marion, our lively cheer leader. Keep cheering, Marion. N'zfeer is none than she. Basketball ,33, ,345 Dance Committee ,325 Tri-Y Club '34, '35g Senior Prom Committeeg Cheer Leader '35. EILEEN ALYCE LYONS Commercial f'Beanie 'fBeanie is one of our friendliest girls. VVe wish her the best of luck in the future. HA real friend is she. Basketball '32g French Club '34g Glee Club '32g Music Club '35. RITA CATHERINE McCRACKEN College R. I. Hospital Training School Root Featherville gave us 'fReet. She has enjoyed herself during her four years, but did not neglect her studies. How do we know? She's our Salutatorian. 'flauvely as the month of Jiffy. French Club l34g Vice-President '35g Honor Usher l35g Salutatorian '35, ANITA MARY McELlCNY Commercial McDowell School HNeet77 Neet'l always has a ready smile for everyone. We Wish her the best of luck in the future. ' HA smile goes nl long wayf' French Club ,345 Debating Club '32g Footlight Club l33. Page Th'Z'7'l'jj-0710 TH E T A T T I If T A 'Q - f MARY CATH ERINE MCGOVIGRN Commercial Bryant dz Stratton Mary in her quiet, unassuming manner, has won many friends in her four years here. HA true friend. MARION VIRGINIA MacLEOD College Pembroke 6KSpCc77 Spec is one of our friendliest girls, and is Well liked by her classmates. Spec did fine Work on the basketball team. She's a quiet lass-sometimes. g Tennis '34, '35, Basketball '32, '33, '34, '35, Captain '35, French Club '34, Tri-Y Club '34, '35, Glee Club '32, Footlight Club '33, '34. FRANCES LORETTA NICNALLY Commercial Bryant KKEfHO!7 Effie always has a smile for everyone. She'll make a fine secretary for some lucky man. ' t'Her charm delights us all. Basketball '33, Debating Club '32, ANGELA FRANCES M cNERNEY College Pembroke 1LAngiC77 - Angie has the rare combination of personality, popularity and good looks. She is one of our most popular girls and a swell pal. Lovely to look at, delightful to know. Tennis '33, '34, '35, Basketball '32, '33, Sophomore, Junior, Senior Dance Committees, French Club '34, Tri-Y Club '34, '35, Glee Club '34, '35. THIRZA ELIZABETH MacPHERSON Commercial Thirza has taken an active part in our Glee Club during her four years here. 'SAM A bonnie lass. Glee Club '32, '33, '34, '35. TH 1 T A T T L 1 T A L I Page Thea'-w'0 GLADYS ELOISE NIADDEN Commercial Bryant IKFIU J '4El has been rather quiet during her stay with us. We wish her the best of luck. 4'Sfilence itseU is a virtue. French Club '34. RITA JOSEPHINE MADDEN Commercial Business School K'Rll0t,7 HReet is one of our jolliest girls. The man who hires her as a secretary will be lucky. Full oj fun as she. Basketball '32, '33, Glee Club '32. RUTH KENYON MANTER College Pembroke f'Ruthie t'Ruthie is our valedictorian. She is Well liked by her classmates and has taken an active part in school activities. Success is my aim. Basketball '32, '33, '34, Captain '34, Senior Dance Committee, French Club '34, Honor Usher '34, '35, Blue Owl Staff '33, '34, '35, Glee Club '32, '33, '34, '35, Music Club '34, '35, Vice-President '35, Operetta '34, '35. MARY SARA MARTIN Commercial Mary has won many friends for herself during her four years. Best of luck, Mary. Steady, sure and true. Glee Club '33, '34, Operetta '34, Footlight Club '33, '34. CONSTANCE MENARD General Business School Connie 'fConnie is one of those quiet, good-natured girls whom everybody likes. We wish you the best of luck, 4'Connie. Speech is great, silence is greater. French Club '34, Honor Usher '35. Q Page Thirty-three TH E T A T T L E T A L E Q, f -A - -W sf f -mmf f -- -- -W . FRANCES MORIN . General 'tFran 'fFran is our liveliest girl. She hasn't told us her plans for the future but we Wish her success and happiness in whatever she chooses. Happy am Ig from care I am freeg Why aren't they all contented like me? Tri-Y Club '34, '35. ETHEL MAY MOSSBERG College Sayles Memorial Hospital Ethel has been rather quiet during her four years at high school. We wish her luck in her nursing career. A quiet but pleasant classmate. CATHERINE THERESA MULLANEY Domestic Arts 'fKitty All Kitty's friends wish her luck and happiness in her future life. HPeacefully she treads her way among us. DOROTHEA IRENE MURRAY College Hospital 'fDot ' Dot was chosen by the faculty to be one of our class essayists. We know - her sunny disposition will carry her far. A merry heart maketh a cheerful countenance. GERTRUDE EVELYN MUZZY General The Wheelock School t'Gert Gert is our best girl musician. We know she'll make good at Wheelock as she has at A. H. S. 'LShe ts not tall and yet not too small. 'B r,,.,,, .+......? . ,,,, ., 7. , .Y W -. V . Y . 'V THE TATTLETALE Gy -fe A ff A -Awe Pa gc 7'h.1'rty-four DOROTHY MAY NEWTON College Bryant dz Stratton Dot 4 Dot has been outstanding as a tennis and basketball player. Lots of luck at Bryant Sz Stratton Dot. 130ll71Z'6, blooming, SfI'Il7'gllf and tf1Zl.'L' 1 Tennis '32, '33, '34, '35, Captain '34, Glee Club '32, Basketball '32, '33, '34, '35, Manager Tennis Team '34, '35. CHARLES HERMAN OBRIST Tech y Naval Academy KKChiCk77 t'Chick has been Editor-in-chief of the Blue Ovvl and Tattletale. If he keeps up such good Work he will surely be successful. I 'tEfff1.c'zIency and success go hrmfl 'in Izumi. I Vice-President '32, Student Council '34, '35, Executive Board '34, '35, Dance Comniittee '32, '33, '34, Reception Committee, Hi-Y Club '35, Senior Prom Com- mittee, Blue Owl Staff '33, '34, '35, Editor-in-chief '35, Tattletale Staff '35, Editor- in-chief '35, Orchestra '32, '33, '34, '35, Band '33, '34, '35. GEORGE MICHAEL O'KEEFE College Holy Cross George has pleased us all with his fine singing. We know they'll like him at Holy Cross as We have at A. H. S. From his crmllc he was fl scholrn'. French Club '34, Hi-Y Club '35, Honor Usher '35, Tattletale Staff , Glee Club '35, Music Club '35, Operetta '35, Class Motto and Color Committee. JOSEPHIN E LITOLF OLVAN i College Bellevue Hospital, N. Y. t'Jo is one of our taller girls and every bit of her is full of fun-personality. Good luck Jo in your chosen career. A merry heart mrzlretlz fl clzeczjul c0untcnarzcc. DONALD BRIAN OTTERSON Technical M, I, T, KKDOHY7 Don has been rather quiet in high school but We know he'll do big things at M. I. T. ' 'iA'WIb1'fl'07Z has 'no rest. Page Thirty-flee TH E T A T T L la' T Q -- 4-A 4- -44444 f 4 ROLAND LUCIEN OUIMET General t'Pops Roland has spent a quiet four years among us. We will always remember his pleasant manner. t'Ple'asz'ng to lfn0u'. ANTHON GEORGE PARISEAU . HGig77 We don't 'jl?1g's plans for the future but if he works as hard as he has at footba .ain h 1 be a success. O' 'tHe's a jolly good fellow. Football '32, '33, '34, '35, Captain '35, Basketball '34, Class Basketball '32, '33, Track '32. HERBERT CLINTON PARKER, JR. Technical Herbert has not participated in school activities, but has gone on making friends. We wish you luck in whatever you take up, Herb. J 'tTl1e boy is noble naturcdf' LOIS EMILY PARKER Commercial Bryant College Lois has been a big help on the oHice force this year and we know she will make someone an efficient secretary. S2'l6llC6 is golden. Honor Usher '35, Glee Club '32, '33, '34g Operetta '34. VIVIAN LEONA PATNEAUD E i Commercial Viv We know you'll succeed 'tViv in whatever you do, because you've got what it takes. fl7I'LlI'lil'f0'lL is fl, great virtue. Glee Club '33, '34, '35, Operetta '34, '35, IL' T A T T L E T A Page Thffvty-szfzr . ARTHUR EVANS PAYETTE Tcchnicul Brown HArt77 'fArt is our cutcst :md most popular boy. If thcre's fun, t'Art will bc therc. Good luck :tt Brown, Art. Thr QUOKI that nzwn do lives after them. Football '33, '34, '35g Tcnnis '32, '33, '34, '35, Class Baskctball '32, '33, '34g Hi-Y Club '35g Stud:-nt Council '35, T'lXOCl1ftiVl Board '35, Class VVill. ALDAGE ROBERT PICLLETIER Comme-rcial Al HAI has driftcd through high school vcry quictly, but wo all remcrnbcr him just thc szimc. Good luck, HAI. HHF Slllilfll lfiilrf bu! IZOPUI 'm'uch. ARTHUR PICRLOVV Gcncrzil Navy blAb077 f'Abc hasn't bccn zictivv in :my of tho sports or clubs but wo'vc all known hc was tht-ro. ll'l1y shoulrl he .study and nmlrc ln'nz.srfU ll1lIfI.H JOSEPH ALMONT PERRY Tochnical Joe 'tJoe has been one of our studious quict boys and wc havcn't hoard much from him-only in thc blind. Bcst of luck, Joc. A sclzolrztr rmfl rx g67'Ill077?II?'I.7, Orchestra '32, '33, '34, '35g Band '34g Leader '35. CONSTANTINIC CHARLES PETERS Collogv Harvard npptpnv Hr-re we have t'Petc, our livelicst boy. His pep and witty rc-marks have brightic-nod our high school dznys. Happy am, Ig from care I am free. 117111 lII'I'7l,li they all contmztcd like mc? Bziscbrill '32g Bziskctball '33g Studi-nt Council '33g Dzincc Committee '32, '33g Torch Club '32g Hi-Y Club '34, '35g Bluc Owl Staff '33g 'l'attlctzilv Stuff '35, Glare Club '34, Music Club '33g Radio Club '32, '33, '34. F Q' Page Tlm'ty-semlz, W TH IL' T A T T L E T A L E THOMAS LIBERTY PHARMAKIS Technical University of Alabama Tommy Tommy is a rather silent person, but who can forget l1is occasional humor which has always been welcome. H He is zz Q'l,LI'l?If youilzfczt times. Football '35, Glce Club '32, Debating Club '32, Radio Club '34, Class Basket- ball '33. DONALD KIMBALL PH LLTPS College I Tufts College KIDO 3 Don is noted particularly for 's' a .ing and musical ability. No one will ever forget his parts in our lra . s. mb tum has no rest. Student Counc' 35, Tor J '33, Honor Usher '34, '35, Senior Provn Committee 35' orian '35, ,e Club '32, '33, '34, '35, Debating Club '32, '33, '34, '35, P 1 ,nt of '35, Oper tta '34, '35, School Play '34, '35, VIRGINIA RETA PINEO Commercial Ginny Ginny is one of our less active mexnbers, but all who know her will remember her friendly ways. Silence is one of the L ltI'fll83 of H10 msc. Glee Club '34, '35, Operetta '34: lfootliehf Club RR. '34. OLIVE MARIA POTTER Comniercial Boston Childrc-n's Hospital Al0piC77 We hope you'll always retain your cheery manner and smile, Opie , as an- other of the White Parade. As sunny as a day in Julie. Glee Club '33, Debating Club '33. NINA VIOLA POTT ICR Domestic Arts Sturdy Memorial Hospital Jerry Jerry has been rather quiet in these four years, but we know she will be very successful as a nurse. Serene and l'I7S0lllIflf mul still 7 Am! calm mul self-1ms.s0sserI. Glee Club '32, '33, '34, '35, Operetta '34, '35, rv, ,,,, L, W. THE. TA TTLIJTALE ---A -NA - f- E ' r ' 'V' 'rr' . wr,---if 'rv-mug-W Page Thirty-eight DOROTHY CLARK PULLEN Household Arts Sayles Memorial Hospital HDOtH Here's to '4Dot, our cutest girl, and with her looks and personality she surely will go far in her career of nursing. We envy the patients! Two so full and bright-such eyes! Basketball '32, '34, '35, Dance Committee '34, Tri-Y Club '34, '35, Vice- President of '34, Blue Owl Staff '35, Tattletale Staff '35, Glee Club '32. JOHN PHILIP QVARNSTROM Technical Johnny Although Johnny hasn't entered our clubs, he has made many friends with his good nature and humorous remarks. I'll be merry, I'll be free, I'll be sad for nobody. Student Council '34, Ring Committee '34, CLARA LOUISE RANDALL Household Arts Sayles Memorial Hospital Squeaks Meet Squeaks, our best-looking girl. She intends to be a nurse-we wonder who could resist her charms. Sweet and lovely. Glee Club '32. VIVIAN AMELA RA YMOND Commercial Katherine Gibbs Secretarial School K 7 7 This delightful miss is Viv, who easily Wins her way into the hearts of her friends. Her good humor brightens up our dull moments. She is happy and gay, N 0 cares block her way. I Dance Committee '33, Cheer Leader '34, '35, Glee Cl b '32. yn, I .wlw RICHARD H NRY READ College Cornell Dick ' . Dick is another of our popular members and also one of our busy members. We all certainly know that Cornell is getting a great fellow. A true sport in every sense of the word. Basketball '35, Treasurer of Class '33, Dance Committee '33, Torch Club '33, Hi-Y Club '35, Prophecy '35, Blue Owl Staff '33, '34, Tattletale Staff '35, Class Marshall '35, Class Basketball '32. Q Page Tim-fy-,,m0 TH E T A T T L If T A L E Q f f' ' 'Y ' 'f' ' 7 6 Z LILLIAN ALICE RHEAUME Commercial Nursing HLi177 f Lil is one of our classmates who hasn't entered our clubs, but made many friends with ,her merry ways. W M Quality, not quantity. ALBERT REGINALD RHYNO General Alabama Red Red has always gained popularity with his always ready-smile and good- natured ways. We know you'll make good in whatever you do, Red His frzenrls-he has many, His foes-has he any? Football '32, '32, '34, '35, Class Basketball '32, '33, Torch Club '33, Hi-Y Club '35. ORVILLE PRATT RICHA SON, JR. College V fx M Dartmouth fees QR8,,.,..., f Q Who hasn't seen Opie gliding over a smooth fir with some fair' c ai el , in his arms His dancing ability with his other hcl ful characteristics make s feel sure he will be successful always. I A lien among the lfzclfcs, a most rfrcadful 15l1.1'11g. Football '34, Dance Committee '33, '34, '35, Reception Committee '34, Torch Club '32, '33, Hi-Y Club '34, '35, Honor Usher '35, Manager Torch Club Basketball Team '33, Assembly Committee '35, School Play '35. VVILLIAIVI HAROLD RILEY Technical M. I. T. Harold is one of our notedly ambitious classmates. Nl. I. T. ought to be improved 100W next year. To work 'Is to succeed. Student Council '34, '35, Reception Committee '35, Honor Usher '34, '35, Orchestra '32, '33, '34, Band '34, '35. DOROTHY FRANCES ROBINSON Commercial Dot Dot has been one of our quiet members, but she leaves many friends gained by her amiable disposition. Sv'lenre fs golden. Orchestra '32. E T A T T L IL' T A L E Page Forty DOROTHY BEERS ROGERS College Simmons KiD0t77 Though reserved in manner, we find Dot a loyal classmate of pleasing person- ality and lady-like manners. May you have much success, Dot. Oft'tt'mc.s re.serz'e is I7ZZ'blCIk67l for ind-zLU e2'ertceg tndzb17e1'emef0r conceit. French Club '34, Tri-Y Club '34, '35 5 Orchestra '35 , Glee Club '34, Music Club '34. RUTH J ANICE ROSENBERG College Bristol County Agricultural School Rosie We haven't heard much from Rosie during our four years, but we know she will go far in the agricultural line. HEjj71'c'iency and success go hand 'tn hand. Glee Club '32, '33, '34, '35, Music Club '33, '34, '35, Operetta '34. SHELDON ROTENBERG College Music A nshclvr 'J 'tShel was voted our best boy musician, and all who have heard him play or conduct our orchestra surely know that he deserves this honor. He saith little, but doth much. Tennis '32, '33, '34, '35, Torch Club '34, Blue Owl Staff '34, '35, Orchestra '32, '33, '34, '35, Glee Club '32, '33, Debating Club '32, '33, Music Club' 34, '35, President of '35. DONALD JOSEPH SALLEY Commercial Burdett KKDOHYY 'tDon hasn't been very active in our clubs, but he's one of our star athletes. We wish you the best, t'Don. 'iflfve hint sports-any kind will do. Football '34, Baseball '32, '33, Student Council '34, EDNA ALMA SALLEY Commercial Burdctt KlEddy7J Wherever you see Eddy you are sure to see t'Marg and Olix. Eddy intends to be a secretary. Good luck, always. 'fflttcmpt the best, and fate wall do the rest. Heavy, , ......,. . qfffQ0F0ffqffm6 g g THE TATTLETALE W W ' ' ' ' H -- - - , W. ,W b OLIX VERONICA SALLEY Domestic Arts R. I. State Hospital HOllie Ollie is looking forward to becoming a nurse. She has been quiet and studious during her four years. Silence is as deep as eternity. RALPH IRVING SEARS Technical Ralph Ralph has been industrious during his four years, and that resulted in his being at the head of our class. A1nbil'ion has no rest. Track '32, '33, '34, Student Council '35, Torch Club '32, '33, Hi-Y Club '34, '35, Secretary '34, '35, Manager of Track '34 , School Play '35. RUTH EVELEEN SEYBOTH Commercial Ruthie Ruthie is another one of our quiet girls. You should have entered more of our activities Ruthie Good luck always. My mind runs in channels deep. French Club '34, Footlight Club '33, '34, Glee Club '33. JAMES FREDERICK SHEEHAN Commercial Bryant College K IJi ln? 7 Jim is one of our smallest boys, yet he is one of the best known. He has taken part in class activities and has made many friends. We all wish Jim the best of luck. To be liked-be likeable. Torch Club '32, '33, Orchestra '32, Glee Club '33, Radio Club '32. CATHERINE VIRGINIA SLATTERY ,DJ ' Y College , . 'Hp N I R. 1. stale ' C I rl 'KCat is one of our best girl athletes. Her winning smile and great personality have made her a friend of all her classmates. we know she'll be a success in whatever she attempts. We all wish you the best of luck HCat. Happy landings. czca an X .X vfxrm- -1 Personality plus. Tennis '35, Basketball '33, '34, '35, Dance Committee '33, '34, '35, Tri-Y Club '34, '35, Secretary '34, Treasurer '34, Tattletalc Staff 5 Statistics, Glee Club '32. E T .4 T T I I T,-1 L L' P11gcForty-tae Q f Y -mf 4-4 sv ARLENIC HELEN SLOMAN College R. I. State Arlene, With her sunny smile, has been a favorite member of our class. Her genial disposition has made her Well liked by everyone. We wish you good luck, always. As .sunny as a clay m June. Tri-Y Club '34, '35, Glee Club '32, HICRBICRT CORY SMITH Commercial R. I. State Smitty' ' Smitty hasn't taken part in many of our activities, but his dry humor has amused everyone. To be pleasant is my sin. 'FLORENCE LOUISE STAPLES College Vtfhat will the orchestra do Without Louise? IVe will all miss her! Sweet, meals mul mflfl, you zezll IlCI,'C1'bC wzlrl. French Club '33, '34, Honor Usher '34, Blue Owl Staff '35, Glee Club '33, '34, '35, Orchestra '32, '33, '34, '35, Music Club '34, '35, Operetta '34, '35, GEORGIANNA BLANCHE ST. LAWRENCE Commercial Georgie Georgie is one of our smallest girls. With her quiet and unassuming ways she has found a place in the hearts of her classmates. Quality not qua1ztz'Zy. Glec Club '35 3 Opcrctta '35, MARJORIIC DORIS STONE Commercial Burdett Marge Marge is one of our liveliest girls, though she hasn't taken part in many activities, We all know shc'll make good at dear old Burdette. I A good pal and aj1'1'cnfl, ' Debating Club '34, Page Forty-lh1'cc TH L' T A T T L If T A L I -Q, -V ---if 2 . Yi , - 7--- 2 2 - , HOWARD LEONARD SWANSON Commercial t'SWedc Swede hasn't found time to join any of our clubs. It has been our mis- T fortune f'SWede. 'tTimc goes too fast for me. ALMA TABBERNICR Commercial HAI Here is another of our quiet classmates. We wish you the best of luck Alma. t'S2'lc1zce is one of the virtues ofthe wise. ALBINA LORETTA TAILLON College 'fAl We are sure that Al with her quiet smile and Winning personality will succeed in Whatever she attempts. People of few words are best. MARGARET TATARIAN Commercial Bryant College Hpoglf 'tPeg always has a smile for everyone. We all admire her disposition. Good luck, Peg A friend to all, 'ILO enemies hath she. JOSEPH MCCLAIR TAYLOR, JR. Technical Tufts 1KJfJC77 What will Mr. Gibb do next year Without Joe, his ace saxaphonist and ace annoyer. Good luck at Tufts, .loe. A f'He's little but hc's wise H 12's a terror for his size. Basketball '33, '34, Dance Committee '33, '34g Torch Club '32, '33, Blue Owl Staff '34 '35' Tattletale St iff '35' Orchcstra '32 '33 '34 '35' Band '3 ' 4 f y 2 'i 'Z I r x 1 1 1 31 3 J Operetta '34, '35, Class Basketball '32, '33. ' 2 TH E T A T T It E T A .li E Page Forty-fo'a1' - 'bf ALICE TEACHER Commercial Bryant College HAIH Al, with her ready wit and smile, is one of our liveliest girls. We wish you the best always, Al. From head to foot she's mtrth and joy. Basketball '32, '33, Footlight Club '32, '33. MARIE ROSE ADRI ENNIC TETREAULT Domestic Arts Marie has been quiet during her high school days, but she has been a very pleasant classmate. Silence is a virtue. EVERETT MASON THURBER Technical Tri-State, Indiana I KV17hurb77 We all know 'tThurb. His wit and smile makes him agreeable with everyone. He has been active in our sports and clubs. Success and lots of it. Success once-always. Hi-Y Club '34, '35, Football Manager '34, '35, Class Basketball '35, School Play '35 , Reception Committee, Class Baseball '33. ROBERT EARL THURBER Technical Park's Air College HB0bY7 'tBob is the brother of Thurb. He's a great pal and is always there with a smile. Best of luck, Bob I el brotherly love continue. Baseball '35, Honor Usher '35, Radio Club '32, '33, '34 , Class Basketball '32, '33, Class Baseball '32, '33. BARBARA LUIS TORREY College Bridgewater Teacher's College Barb t'Barb has been very friendly and is liked by all. We believe f'Barb will be a teacher. May you succeed in your profession, Barb Good company on the roaa' is the shortest cal. Student Council '34, Tri-Y Club '34, '35, Treasurer '34, '35, Honor Usher '3-5. Pffge Forty-fee VIRGINIA FLORENCE TWOMBLY College Mitzie Mitzie is always seen with her winning smile. She also is one of our smart- est girls. We know she'll be a success in whatever line she follows. Whose little body lodged a mighty mind. French Club '34, Honor Usher '35, Debating Club '35, Dramatic Club '33, '34. JOHN RICHARD VANDERPYL Technical Bryant tk Stratton Johnie Johnie is usually quiet, but at times his dry humor has made many a class more interesting. Laugh ff you'rc wise. Track '35, Torch Club 5 Football '33. JANICE HELEN VICKERY College Katherine Gibbs I KKJanH J an has been one of our quieter hard working girls who was well liked by all. She was ready always with a smile for her classmates. Here's wishing you great success at Katherine Gibbs, 'fJan. K'Stfll water runs deep. French Club '34g Honor Usher '35, Glee Club '33, '34. FLORENCE CAROLYN VIEIRA A Commercial Bryant 8: Stratton K 7 7 Flo has been rather quiet during her years at High School, but we are sure she'll make an excellent stenographer. A true friend ts the nectar of life. MONICA MARY WALLACE Commercial Monny Monny has been a very ambitious girl always ready to lend a helping hand. She is also active in other activities. A friend in need ts a friend indeed. Basketball '30, Glee Club '30, '31, '32, '33, '34, '35, Debating Club '30, '3lg Music Club '33, '34, '35, Operetta '33, '34. THE TATTLETALE 'bf IL' 7' fl 7' T 1', If T .-1 I If Page l o1'ty-.vfa' ETH EL HEATON WARD College Wilfred's Academy Ethel is one of our smartest students :md her success is assured. HSll'0C'f07' is 710110 H1011 size. French Club '34g Honor Usher ,355 Band '33, '34g Glee Club '33. MURIEL ELIZABETH WATTS General Masszichusetis General Hospital Red Helly, has the makin YS of ai fine nurse. Sickness in her Wziril will be ai ileasure. I She l'fl!ll.fI,l'8 p1'1'.w01211I1'lyf' STANLEY AINSIVORTH WOOIWVA R D Commercial ' 'lSt:inl' 'lSt:Ln is :ilways there with :L smile To greet everyone and everything. He luis not yet planned his future life but We know he'll be IL success. UWC 11111.vt have your 11111110 7'l1c1'e will he more 1jfI'1'1'1'e11cy 'in it Ninn in mrlny on Hl'H1jj.H Fool ball '34. MILDRED MARY WRIGHT Commercial Millie Although Millie has been rather quiet during her four years of high school, she has won many friends here. IVe :ill wish you success in your chosen work, Cl ' ' 77 Mllllc. HS1'lc11ec is Golc1011. Debating Club 7325 Class l3:iske1ib:Lll 7315 Footlight, Club '33. MARIE PAULINE IVRY Commercial Burdpif Marie hasn't taken part in our :Lcfivities yet one cannot czill her quiet. She hos formed mainy friends with her ever-ready smile. The best of luck at Burdet I, Klairie. HA Ilfly Ihr toil, rm lllllll' for sporf, li'11ifo1' rr j1'11'1zrl life fs lllll SlllII'I'.U '18 Page Forty-seven TH E T A T T L E T A L E BERNARD JOHN YOUNG General R. I. School of Design Butch Butch is one of our most popular boys. Wherever you find Butch you find fun-a great pal and what a football star! All the luck in the world Butch The best fellow we ever knew. Football '34, '35, Hi-Y Club '35, Prophecy. WILLIAM PARIELLCOONEY, JR. General M. I. T. Bill We shall never forget Bill, our first drum major, whose lovely eyes and white plumed hat has set many a freshman girl's heart aflut-ter-ing. Bill's stride has been not only a pleasure to see but somewhat of a famed walk. If you can'25 succeed atjrst, try, try again. Torch Club '32, Blue Owl Staff '32, '33, '34, '35, Band Drum Major '33, '34, '35g Glee Club '32, '33, '34, '35, Music Club '34, '35, Opcretta '34, '35. ANNA EVA DOWGIALA Commercial Sargent fPhysical Education J Annie With her quiet and unassuming manner no one has had much of a chance to know her, but all will remember her. She rooms among us. RICHARD EUGENE MOORE Manual Arts Buck Buck hasn't been heard from very much while he has been with us, but we all know of his fine work in the band. 'KA silent tongue finds no trouble. Band, Orchestra. '6- -7 -Y---Y- ----W -4-fi'-W V- -v--+V V - 1 T 1 1 1 1 E TA L E Page Forty eight e ee A e 9 WHO WHO Best Girl Musician ...., Best Boy Musician ..... Best Girl Blusher ..,.. Best Boy Blusher ..... Cutest Girl ....... Cutest Boy ........ Best Looking Girl .... Best Looking Boy .... Quietest Girl ,...... Quietest Boy ..,.. Livcliest Girl ..... Liveliest Boy ..... Wittiest Girl ......... VVittiest Boy .......... Nlost Ambitious Girl ..... Most Ambitious Boy. . . Best Girl Dancer ....... Best Boy Dancer ..... Neatest Girl ....... Neatest Boy ...... Smartest Girl ..... Smartest Boy ,..... Most Serious Girl .,.. Most Serious Boy. . . . Tallcst Girl ........ Tallest Boy ..... Class Optimist ..,. Smallest Girl ..... Smallest Boy ....... Most Popular Girl ,... Most Popular Boy .... Best Girl Athlete ..,.. Best Boy Athlete ....... Best All-round Girl ...., Best All-round Boy ...... Girl with the Best Line i..., Boy with the Best Line ..... Friendliest Girl ........,. Friendliest Boy ..... , . . . Gertrude E. Muzzy . . . . Sheldon Rotenberg ..... . . . .Ruth Flynn . . . Melvin Johnson . . . . . . Dorothy Pullen . . , .Wilfred Rounsevillc . . . . . . .Louise Randall . . , . John Alden Lemaire . . . . . . . . Louise Keane John Alden Lemaire . . . . . . Frances Morin . . . Constantine Peters . . . . . . . Virginia Driscoll . . . . Raymond O'Donnell . . . . . . Ruth Manter . . . . . Charles Goddard . . . . . . Dorothy Dennen . . . . Orville P. Richardson Lydia Briggs . . . . . . Peter F. Gagner . . . . Ruth Manter ....... William Lee Ruth Manter . . . John Alden Lemaire ........ Lydia Briggs . . , Newell Bottomley . . . . Lyman Johnson . . . Phyllis Buckley . . . James Sheehan . . . Ruth Hazlett ........ John Sinclair . . . , Virginia MacLeod . . , . . Almon Andrews . . . . . Virginia MacLeod , . . . . . John Sinclair . . . . . . Frances Morin . . . . Albert Carpenter . . . . . . Ruth Hazlett . . . 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EGU: Li 5 M w H B6 S?F Q 'U O C 0 1-UD F-C '-1 PA,-Q: CQ 3c'Q 5 E2 2 Te32fQf3w 2 LE me say 'Ninja gobbiig :ogg 42335 'Hama 5+-2-5 1 3 as dw W Q Sizgfw-c.ooEP-4 3 Q iipgywggqi 'Q 5,2 MES QE W2 - 5115050 ' N Pgpigwfgj 5 Sg'..gES2 O: UEOW L I-Q QMS SP :Q : U 50 ' N- O r-1 -gibna -Ci' '52 an Q ::5g'-555,505 Q 2 GSlb4.H2q3 O 2 C-5'Qa.: .. E4 6 EH gn-36 ? Q Q2 50 H LS a'EbpZ:0 Z2 '-4 051542 4-1 QS-4 4-Vw 55 5-wgim Rfk QEEQ E4 ':'s..Z Qgghbga QEEEQET EEE ESUSEEQBTQ mi fQ's Q4E-4cu,gs o..Q 4 in E-+9459-E... 5ii15wf5gQT qasr Hgz S305 155620 4CbCq.CQ::,g'-.U md'-Q,..Ceo.qgcS FG LE5 'E55S: s.. Sw S Q 5225 EEEQ QEQNSQCQ SLS'-2:3511 an Tsswkis A552655 :SPE 45:22 EEN :E we THE TA T TL E TAL E 'Q --V - Y Yf-- -- - - -- ---- Wi -f -- ff- Page F zftyffour C u l t u r e RUTH MANTER, Valeclictorian What is culture? The dictionary calls it the refinement of the mind, morals, and tastes. One generally thinks of a cultured person as an educated and charming person who knows how and when to do and say the right thing. But polish is not culture, culture is much more embodying, en- riching and far reaching than polish. It embraces all that is elevating, inspiring, idealistic and spiritual, it enhances all it touches and we do not have to travel to other climes and countries to find culture for we find it in so many things all about us-books, art, music, nature and even some people with whom we daily come in contact. There is a very real and tangible joy in knowing and loving books. And music is the perfect outlet for the human emotions. It has an uplifting effect, it is inspiring. Haven't you been to a concert to hear sone rrusician and then gone home with the conviction that you could conquer the world? A cultured person should know something about every- thing. Leonardo da Vinci has come down through the ages as a painter but he was interested in many other things. He liked engineering and he always had the fond hope that some day he would see men fly like birds. His skill on the lute was known all over Florence. Genuine culture should start at the beginning of education so that it will be a part of us and not just a thin veneer to varnish a crude interior or a cloak donned for the occasion. The person who comes from a family which has been of comfortable circumstances for generations is more likely to be cultured than he who comes from a very poor family be- cause the wealthy alone give their children training expressly for the purpose of producing culture. Recently I read that 1080 students in fifteen teachers, colleges had been questioned and it was found that over half of them were indifferent to the fine arts and some were even hostile to them. The person who goes to college is much more likely to be cultured than the one who does notg but this does not always follow as a necessity. The average man who is neither rich nor scholarly educated may still be cultured. He can educate himself by intelligent reading and listening. This is an age of machines which brings as a result many spare hours. The favorite topic for a speech these days seems to be t'How to Spend One's Leisure Time. It is just as Emerson said, Leisure time is the time to do something really worth while. And there is never too much time for that. The man of culture has many interests for his leisure time. The man without it can well use this time to become cultured. If these things were so, the topics for such speeches would soon be 'tHow to Find More Leisure Time. But culture does not deal only with abstract things. It demands a knowledge and understanding of people. Of what use is appreciation of the tire and beautiful if there are ret other people to benefit from it? It has been said that the tl-C'2tt9St gift a fine mind can give is to help others to rise to its own magnificent level. Imagine a world in which there were no people. Even the most cultured person would soon tire of it. Isn't a concert or a play, an inspiring lecture or a book more enjoyable if there is sorre one to enjoy that pleasure with us? N othing takes the place of contact with people. Many a man might have the intelligence to build a beautiful building yet not the delicacy of mind to be con- siderate of his fellow man. Education should give us an in- sight into the different religions, the various characters and standards of nations, and the many walks of life, and by doing this should make us tolerant of these things because of the understandings we have of them. The final test of a cultured man is his conduct towards those around him. The world to-day which has become so materialized needs more culture, more appreciation of music and the arts. Nations as a whole, as well as individuals, can be cultured. In the case of Dante it was not only Italy, but the whole world which was affected. His ttInferno infiuenced the thoughts of the world, not only in his own time but long afterwards. I recently read this statement which seems to me to be very true. 'tThe happiness of a nation may be measured by the interest it has in the arts. The man or the nation who spends all his time earning his bread and butter or inventing implen, ents of war to kill his neighbor does rot enjoy life 5 he ngerely exists. Some of the great educators of to-day insist that the true essence of democracy is not in its political structure. This was illustrated in the most perfect of all democracies- that of ancient Athens. The Athenians thought beauty and culture to be the highest attainments of life. In their oath of citizenship, they swore they would try to make their city a better place because they had lived in it. Too many people are apt to think of culture as a luxury. But true culture is a necessity to the advancement of civiliza- tion. It has been needed by man just as much as he has found it necessary to enlarge his home from a one room log cabin. I should like to show you that this is so by ugiog music as an illustration. Music, a big factor in producing culture, has the most universal appeal of any of the arts. An English critic once said that all arts tend to the condition of music, and it is generally acknowledged that music brings pleasure to more people than any of the other arts. It is rather hard to explain why this is so but it has certainly been proved by history. Music has always been a necessity to man. Even the most primitive man had seine form of music. It was his way of asking the gods to give him food and sunshine. To him music was not a luxury, but a daily need. We all know the high civilization to which the ancient Egyptians attained. Music played no small part in this. The Egyptians thought nothing of having an orchestra of six hundred players of harps, lyres, lutes, flutes, and sistrums or bell rattles. The Greeks had music in their civilization. According to them music combined not only the playing of instruments, Page Fifty-jizfc Q, . . L, , , A .. .. . dancing and singing but all arts and sciences including mathematics. So music which is generally considered a luxury and a purely cultural subject is really a necessity. It has de- veloped along with civilization not just after the attainment of it. What is culture? Knowledge of the fine arts, ability to get on with one's fellow man? It is all this yet something more. Through culture we live and live abundantly. It is an ideal to be attained of a life perfectly balanced. It is the aspiration for and the attainment of beauty, in its largest sense, in our daily lives. t'Life has loveliness to sell- All beautiful and splendid things, Spend all you have for loveliness, Buy it and never count the cost. THE TATTLETALE f- -W - - - W - 9 For one white singing hour of peace Count many a year of strife well lost. For one breath of ecstasy Give all you have been or could be. VALEDICTORY Dear classmates, we have come to the happiest yet saddest moments of the four years we have spent together. Most of our life is new before us. It is ours to do what we will with it. Let us go forward determined to get the best out of life by giving the best we have in us. We must have the capacity within ourselves to discriminate values. C For though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, we must carry it with us or we find it not. j The Saga of t e High School The curtain has just rolled back on the historic stage of education, and immediately we see a quaint picture of old England. This is the prologue in our drama of the modern high school. Here we see the famous Latin grammar schools, Where young men are preparing for college in order that they may later take their places in religious minded England. We learn -that it is in this setting that the Pil- grim fathers are being educated, and thus we realize that here are the beginnings of our modern high school. Now the curtain has fallen on our prologue, and after a brief space, the stage is all set for the first act. As the curtain is slowly drawn back, a faint hush falls over the audience for there appears before us a bleak picture of the lonely New England coast, and we are poignantly re- minded of the famous lines of that grand old poem: The breaking waves dashed high, On a stern and rockbound coast, And the woods against the stormy sky Their giant branches tossed. The heavy night hung dark, The hills and waters o'er, When a band of exiles moor their barks On a wild New England shore. Once again we witness the historic pageant of the landing of the Pilgrims at Plymouth Rock. The background of the entire act is early colonial, and although there is no easily recognized plot, the characters and incidents are many. We feel the dramatic struggle against various odds. In the early hardships of the Pilgrims we see the hearts and minds of a liberty-loving people aflanne with an eager thirst for knowl- edge. With the eyes of history we watch the free schools of these early settlers spread across the new world. VVe find ourselves studying with the young colonists in the strict re- ligious atmosphere of the times. Their aim is ably expressed in the v ords of a Puritan mother as she says to her young son, 'tlf God makes thee a good Christian and a good scholar, that is all thy mother will ever ask of thee. K Then out of this romantic background, our attention is brought to bear forcibly upon a very important and out- standing milestone of our story. The date is 1635, the incident the founding of the Boston Latin School. As an understanding audience, we see at once the connection with the future. This is the birth-place of our high school, which, we realize is now exactly three hundred years old. During the remaining part of this first act of our dreams, there is an atmosphere of hardship and opposition. We feel a keen sympathy with the young scholars, striving to learn to overcome the numerous handicaps. As an added difficulty, we recognize the characters of famous men in high of'Hccs, as they voice their objections. Among them is Governor Berkley who remarks, I thank God we have no free schools in Virginia, and hope we shall not have, for learning brings only disobediencefl But it is in his very state that we witness our greatest triumph, when a new and familiar character appears on the stage. It is George Washington, and there is a spontaneous burst of applause as we see him riding many miles on horseback to attend a small village school. So we follow the lives of great Virginians through perhaps the most important half-century of our history and sec them become leaders of the new nation. We realize they are all products of the forerunners of our modern high school, and as in the first act, the picturization of the colonial era, comes to an end, we rejoice as we look upon a truly remarkable scene- free schools, very much like our high schools, scattered over all thirteen colonies. While the stage is being set and the audience enter- tained by the orchestra, we will skip over a few years of history that do not concern the theme of our story. As the curtain begins to roll back, an expectant hush again comes over the audience. In this second act we are greeted by an entirely different scene. By this time the Revolution is over, and we feel the effects of great changes in business and THE TA TTI. ETA LE QV- - em- -f in commerce. We now have a new nation, new leaders, and new laws. Perhaps the greatest change is in the schools. Our characters have new ideas, and to keep in step with the times new subjects must be taught. An outstanding event of this act is the ushering in of Andrew Jackson to the Presidency, for at the same time a decidedly new factor is ushered into the schools. It is at this time that girls are first given the privileges of education. VVe see boys and girls studying together in twelve year periods of instruction. As a very definite step, the last four years are kept distinct from the others, and the high school comes of age. During this period there are many enemies to the progress of education. Here and there, we see groups of taxpayers showing their unwillingness to pay for everybody's education. Also, untold difficulties are presented as we watch the great westward movement. However, just as the first act came to a satisfactory close, likewise do we rejoice at the end of the second act, for we see established in triumph from coast to coast, countless numbers of these modern institutions of learning. Pa ge Fifty-s-1'x 'WW ' ' W' ' ' Q Now comes the epilogue, and no longer may we remain in the audience, we feel ourselves being drawn into the action of the drama. Although the modern high school has pro- gressed very rapidly there is still room for advancement and improvement. It is hoped that education will have an even more progressive and a smoother history in the future than it has in the past. Classmates, you are leaving here to go out and help make the future history of our nation. It is up to you to take an interest in your government, and especially in furthering education. When future historians write in their annals the history of today, will they write about your failure in this matter, or will they praise your well-earned success? Before you is the opportunity to aid in making an even more glorious history for the future of our nation than that of the past. Hliducation alone can conduct us to that enjoyment which is, at once, best in quality and infinite in quantity. Sail on, C Ship of State! Sail on, O Union, strong and great! Humanity with all its fears, With all the hopes of future years, ls hanging breathless on thy fate! Allied Branches of Radio To the average person the mention of the topic, Radio, brings to mind only thoughts of Jack Benny, Guy Lombardo, or some other prominent radio artist. The mention of the technical side of Radio introduces a chain of thoughts along the line of new short-wave receivers and modern trans- mitters. There are, however, various allied branches of which the average person knows almost nothing. Among the most prominent of these are: television, the therimin, and other musical instruments which operate by electricity, and electrical therapy or the so-called fever machine. These three branches of the radio art all operate on the principles of the electron tube and thus are very closely allied to radio. A few years ago, television was given much pre-mature publicity. Radio manufacturers predicted that there would be a television receiver in nearly every home by 1934. The fallacy of this statement is now evident, but even so, the average person does not realize to what extend the art has progressed. At present there are nine radio stations in New England which transmit television programs regularly. A complete home television receiver may now be purchased for the same price as the average radio receiver. The great handicap to the method of transmission and reception used by these stations and receivers is the fact that the resulting picture is only slightly more than an inch square. These pictures can be enlarged and thrown on a screen similar to the type used for home movies, but the effect is un- satisfactory. Although the picture can be enlarged con- tiderably by this method, it appears somewhat blurred, due to the fact that the fiaws are enlarged proportionately. The original picture when received is similar to a newspaper photograph about one inch square. Throwing the television picture on a screen has the same effect as viewing the news- paper photo under a powerful magnifying glass. The television receivers are not advertised commercially because they do not represent the ultimate in design and would be severely criticised by an exacting public. Manu- facturers and radio engineers agree that it appears that the present system of television has been expended to cover all possible ground and that the ultimate has been reached in present trends. It is apparent, from the exhaustive re- search along present lines, that the future success of television will depend on entirely different principles from that of the infant, television as it is today. Closely related to television in the science of radio is facsimile transmission. This differs from television in that the picture received is a reproduction of a still picture in the transmitting studio. This fact, of course, repsents the transmission of pictures of moving objects. From the results of a recent experiment in the R. C. A. Laboratories, it appears that the perfection of a newly devised method depends almost entirely on the mechanical accuracy in the design of the machine. Facsimile reproductions will, when perfected, be a great boon to the newspapers, police and other agencies to whom the transmission of pictures is a necessity. The production of music by electrical means is be- coming more popular every day. When scientists first experimented along this line, prominent musicians were insistent in their cries that the so-called canned music could never equal the beauty of tone and quality of present day instruments. However the engineers carried out their Page lffffty-seven Q, . .Wim Wm. . , . ..,. -., work and found that by the use of specially designed in- struments, they could make a visual check of the notes which were emitted from their queer looking instruments. As the human ear is very deceptive in judging the quality of music, these instruments were a great help. Work of this type had been in progress in several different laboratories and a myriad of instruments appeared simultaneously. The principles involved were similar in all cases but the method of manipulation was different. The instrument which met with the most success is the therimin. The notes which issue from this instrument are produced by Vacuum tubes and are more nearly pure than any note from an ordinary instrument. The range of pitch is greater than was ever possible before. The two controls are con- structed in the form of copper rods, one to control the pitch and the other, the volume. Recent developments have in- troduced the possibility of operating a similar piece of apparatus from a piano type of key-board. One branch of the radio art which promises to be a special benefit to mankind is electrical therapy, the pro- duction of a fever in the human body by electricity. It is a well known fact that a rise in body temperature is a strong element in the combat against disease. We were so con- structed that an over abundance of germs in the system would bring about a fever. However, conditions sometimes THE TATTLETALE e---Q arise which make it impossible for nature to do its work. In such cases it has been a practise in the past to produce an artificial fever by means of chemicals. This practise was found dangerous because a fever saps the strength. If the patient is in such a condition that his body does not produce its own fever, the added strain may prove disastrous. Members of the medical profession have been searching for years for a means of acquiring the therapeutic effect in a limited area of the body. It this was made possible, the strain on the patient's system would not be so severe. This effect is now possible through the use of apparatus similar in construction to that of a transmitter in a short-Wave station. The patient suffers practically no ill feelings. In practical use it was found that the body temperature of the patient rises slowly at the rate of about one degree in fifteen minutes. The effects of the fever do not disappear for several hours after treatment. The curing effects of this apparatus are remarkable and range from the treatment of simple rheumatic ailments to that of tuberculosis and cancer. Radio is the father of many present day wonders. The three phases that have been discussed are not necessarily the most important, but it is hoped that the discussion of them has helped to impress more strongly in our minds the true value of the allied branches of radio to the human race. Virgilian Uses and Allusions 'fArma virumque cane. To most people this Latin sentence means very little if it means anything at all. But to Latin students it means the opening line of Virgills immortal Aeneid, one of the greatest, perhaps the greatest of all Latin classics. lt has been a popular mistake to call classic Latin and Greek dead languages. Because they are not spoken colloquially, or written or read by anyone but scholars, does not prove them dead. On the contrary, they are living constituents of the speech of the day. The grocer, the plumber, the farmer, neen and women in all walks of life, are compelled to use them in the ordinary transactions of life. They are as common as our bread or coffee and more essential. Without these dead languages we would be very much handicapped. The classics are not dead, but living. They are a treasure of knowledge and education. Virgil is not the only Latin poet to whom one could refer for uses and allusions. There is Ovid, and there are other Latin greats, but Virgil is the most outstanding. 'fArma virumque canol' translated means, HI sing of the arms and of the man. How many times have you seen or heard this simple sentence? At the moment you probably cannot remember any time that you have, but while reading your favorite newspaper or magazine you have probably read this line many times, if not in this form, in some similar form. Many of you read the comics in the Sunday newspapers. On one page is a f'thriller that takes place sometime in the future. To make it more picturesque, a coat of arms is placed at the beginning of the strip. On this coat of arms are the words, We sing of the arms and of the heroes. You probably have seen this same sentence is such forms as Arms and the Mant'-the National Military and Shooting Weekly 5 Charms and the Woman, Arms and the Cigar- ette , Clothes and the Woman , Arms and the Race ' Pride and the Girln Cboth motion picturesl. , The episode of the Trojan horse is responsible for a large share of the allusions assembled. A cartoon represents Ulysess as inquiring, t'Think the Trojans will fall for this wooden horse? And Nestor is replying, t'Sure, they'll bite. They'll want it for a summer park attraction as a 'seeing Troy, car. The attempted introduction of a bill with an objectionable rider is dubbed in a congressman's speech as 'fThe Trojan horse trick. During the presidential campaign of nineteen hundred and twenty-eight the Satur- day Evening Post ran a cartoon entitled The Trojan Horse dealing with the matter of prohibition enforcement. The judgment of Paris is referred to frequently. One old cartoon entitled The Judgment of Paris represents Uncle Sam as Paris, presenting the apple of the presidency to Wilson, to the discomfiture of Taft and Roosevelt. Other allusions to Virgil are numerous. One cartoon shows King Manuel making his escape with his family on his shoulders and a few treasured possessions in his hand. This is entitled the Modern Aeneas? THE TATTLETALE .W A - Y -JIp'1ll'l79nw.-,,....., . Page Fifty-eight Q- --- g To most people these allusions have no significance. Many people ask What about the Trojan horse?l', Who was Paris? or 'tWhat is the Aeneid'? Therein lies the valueof Latin. A Latin student would not have to ask such questions, he would know. Q F Quotations and translations from the Aeneid are frequent. Many newspaper and magazine writers refer to Virgil for quotations and ideas. One newspaper printed an agcount of an earthquake that wrecked the town of Scilla and then quoted the Virgil passages that describe the place. m5,Virgil is used as an example by many poets. The two poets who seem most akin to Virgil in spirit are the Italian Dante, and the English Milton. In his UInferno Dante addresses Virgil as his master and chooses him to be his guide through the lower world. Milton, on nearly every page of his t'Paradise Lost,'l pays unconscious tribute to Virgil by many references and by traits of style that recall the Roman poet. The works of Virgil were given the name of f'Sortes Virgilianaei' tThe Oracles of Virgilj. The custom arose of opening them at random and taking as prophetic .the first line on which the eye chanced to fall. Proof of Virgil's undying fame is given by the surprising fact that even during the World VVar the t'Sortes Virgilianaev was used in this way. Patriotism is dominant in the f'Aeneid.U The central figure, Aeneas, is a pattern of patience, courtesy, and sym- pathy. His pre-eminent quality is peitas, the steady fulfillment of duty to God and man. Aeneas lets no human feeling or emotions stand in his way of fulfillment of duty. This may seem a bit cruel, but to the Romans duty was the finest thing possible. In the Aeneid Aeneas is told by the gods that he will found Rome. Here Aeneas' sense of duty reaches its peak. He crushes all human feelings under him until he founds Rome. Perhaps, if the sense of duty to God and man could be impressed upon the minds of the youths of today, there would be no public enemies and no need for the Department of Justice. The religion of Ancient Rome and of Ancient Troy, has a direct connection with Christianity. Many of the present 4 - - Q, day church services and customs are directly descended from the Roman religion. The Romans believed in life after death, much like the belief of Christians today. Virgil clearly shows this by his conception of the lower world. There is a distinct note of spirituality in the Aeneid. This is present in practically all of Virgil's works. He frequently seeks and received guidance from the gods. In many places omens of spiritualistic nature appear. In the latter part of the sixth book, Aeneas journeys through the lower world with the help of the gods. Then he pursues his divinely ordered way until he eventually founds Rome. The value of the classics cannot be emphasized too much. It is the conviction of most Latin students and teachers that the thought and judgment of educated men and women would be greatly enriched and strengthened by a knowledge of the classics. The tendency of our educated, to snap judgment, advocate political remedies, and diagnose current events would have a much needed correction in a knowledge of what men were doing and thinking thousands of years ago, the ancients dealed with problems of life which haven't been solved yet, they speak to us in a voice surprisingly modern. To know these classics is a profit as practical as any knowl- edge can be. Every great civilization has profited by them. Our public leadership would be better for more of them. Our public opinion would be wiser if it drew upon them. Latin is not dead, it is living. Virgil has helped to keep it alive. Tennyson, in his poem to Virgil, pays tribute to the greatest Latin poet the world has known. THE VIRGIL Roman Virgil, thou that singest Ilion's lofty temples robed in fire. Ilion falling, Rome arising Wars and filial faith, and Dido's pyreg I salute thee Mantovano, I have loved thee since my day began, Wielder of the stateliest measure Ever moulded by the lips of man. A Sound Mind in a Sound Body Wehave often heard the quotation A Sound Mind in a Sound Body, and there is a story which very aptly portrays the neeaning of this well-known phrase. This story concerns a Western railroad president who was warned by an intimate friend to see a doctor immediately because of his run-down condition. The president did see a doctor who said to him, Your vitality is undermined. I see it in your face. Your brain has overtaxed your body. Take a vacation immediate- ly.'l The railroad man replied that he had no time to rest. Some months later his friend found him in a bed, but the ill one said, I shall be up in a week. Your doctor was right, but I cannot rest. My salary is fifty thousand dollars, and I have just received a bonus. One cannot accept this remuneration without assuming the responsibilities that go with it. His friend urged him once more to take a vacation on the basis of his value to the road, but the railroad president replied, I shall be out in a week. Responsibilities will not leave at this time. Later I can restf' Later he did rest. He rested forever! Everyone of us when in normal health, acquires, through the ordinary processes of sleep, nutrition, circulation, and respiration, a fund of nervous energy which is more than sufficient for the demands made upon us by our usual vocations. We are so eonsituted that, although we may, and actually do, store up some of this surplus for use in times of emergency, we cannot retain all of it. We must make use of it to our greatest advantage, and the obvious way is through play, especially play out-of-doors. In this way we are simply disposing of unneeded energy, but are also drawing upon the Page Fifty-nine sv THE TATTLETALE - W b mind and body-building resources of nature to fit us better for our daily tasks, whatever they may happen to be. And now let us see why we have athletics in high schools and how they aid the American youth to become a better and more competent citizen. The youth of to-day is not content to simply go into a field and throw a baseball around, or kick a football aim- lessly, or do anything that may ordinarily be termed informal athletics. He needs a stimulus and an incentive, because he has been educated with these ideas in mind. He has been taught in street, school, college-wherever he goes-what we so familiarly call the fighting spiritf, He must measure his prowess against some rival. There must be some reward for brains, and skill. Therefore, we have games, contests, and teams, and what is more thrilling than the spectacle of skilled athletes matching their powers in a fair, generous, courageous struggle for mastery. Since we have seen why we have athletics, let us consider whether or not they are detrimental. The first agrument that is nearly always offered by those who are not in sympathy with athletics is that many injuries are sustained by athletes. Statistics show that the injury and mortality reports have been over rated. Ordinary life with its many dangers presents a far greater opportunity for casualties, and is it nor far better for a mother to know that her son is engaged in a football contest than for her to be constantly worrying over the many misfortunes that might happen to him while roaming the streets? However, most injuries that do occur in play have resulted largely from preventable causes, such as unseasoned players, and those not playing according to rule, or not under supervision. Interschool athletics do not severely harm scholastic and intellectual standings is verified by recent statistics from Indiana State College which show that athletes are not greatly surpassed by non-athletes in the field of knowledge. More often than not athletic contests give mental zest and vigor. Can you imagine anything requiring more intelligence and brain power than that which is needed to visualize the thoughts of a fellow contestant? In all athletic contests it is a necessity that one be able to think quickly and accurately and to act accordingly. Perhaps the greatest value of athletics is shown by their moral benefit. Group co-operation teaches self-control, self-confidence, sacrifice, obedience, gameness, and courage. No courage is required to push a dumb-bell up fifty times, but courage is required to tackle a man on the gridiron. No initiative is required to squat fifty times, but initiative is constantly needed and developed in basketball and baseball. A certain kind of nerve is needed for the giant swing and flyaway, but nerve of a higher type is needed to finish a winner in a gruelling race. We judge a person by his character, and what better innate traits of character are brought out than in the stress of games. In these difficult times, through which we are passing, what characteristics are more in need than those just mentioned? Now that we have seen some of the values of sports and play, we might like to know the application of athletics to high ideals. Man is a tripartite being and education should place him on the threshhold of life with a maximum efficiency of all his powers-spiritual, mental and physical. In regard to this, one physical education director says, UI charge that the servitude of youth which we commonly term education has, up to the present, devoted to mental development alone nine-tenths or more of its systematized effort, and has left the two other elements to a haphazard and unsystematic evolution quite individual and elective. However, no matter how true this may be, the body is the temple of the spirit and of the mind, as well as the engine through which their energies become manifest and operative. You may have plenty of coal and water in your tender and plenty of fire under your boiler, but if the reciprocating parts are out of order, you cannot move ahead and do effective Work. God has given us a machine to bring about the fulfillment of our destiny and it is our duty to keep it strong and perfect. And so, too, we need more Americans. We need every effort centered upon making us a compact nation, assimilat- ing not only its foreign-born, but those of foreign parentage. People who play together and exercise together soon grow to know and understand each other, and the further this development is carried, the more homogenous and physically prepared will be the product. Therefore, the popularization of physical education, the operation of public playgrounds, the sound and simple method of gymnastics or calisthenics, athletic teams and contests, which can be gained only by the co-operation and complete support of citizens, will go far toward leading us over that seemingly endless road of darkness and despair, and improving our people in bringing about more American- ization. The Supernatural Sense Graduation day is an appropriate occasion to take in- ventory of our senses. In a grateful and appreciative sense, we give thanks to our principal and to the members of the faculty for having guided our lives during these past four years. In like manner, we give thanks to our parents who have made possible these years of fond association and of a liberal education. May we do them justice in the days to come. As we march on in divergent ways, our thoughts, actions, and Words will be influenced by the natural senses. Science tells us that there are at least eleven definite senses, namely, touch, sight, smell, taste, hearing, cold, heat, pain, muscle, equilibrium and internal. Generally speaking, we think of only five senses: touch, by our hands 3 sight, by our eyes, smell, by our nose, taste, by our mouth, and hearing, by our ears. F.-v.--q 1--+---.---- ---- - ---V--vwv--Y-W f' ' ' ' i THE TATTLETA LE Page Sixty 'Q' - 'bf In addition to these normal preceptions, there is a so- called Hsixth sensef, What is this so-called 'tsixth senseu about which we hear so much? It may best be defined as the miraculous powers which compensate for the loss of any of the natural senses. Normal human beings develop some of these powers under stress of special occupation or great need. The mysterious workings of these phenomena are evident in the lives of the blind and the deaf. A very dramatic example illustrates this marvellous power which the blind seem to have. A blind girl lived with her step-brother on a farm. Because of the weak condition of her brother, she took it upon herself to feed the cows daily. She knew exactly where the pail hung in the barn and carried out her task very efficiently. One day as the girl reached for the pail, she suddenly became ill and was scarcely able to drag herself to the house. After his sister felt some- what better, the brother went out to the barn to finish the intended task of feeding the cows and found to his great horror a huge deadly rattlesnake coiled in the pail. This illustration proves that a premonition of danger can be received by handicapped persons. That feeling of sickness probably saved the blind girl's life. Perhaps the hated reptile is able to make its presence noticeable to the deaf as well as the blind since the deaf have been known to be aware of its danger. A girl, deaf from birth, enjoyed camping in the woods with her husband. One day a queer buzzing souud shot through her brain and at the same instant she had leaped clear of the bush near which she was standing. The following day a huge rattlesnake was killed in the same vicinity. The girl herself marvels at the warning and the way her muscles reacted. Thus again the ttsixth sense saves a life by that ever present premonition of danger. This so-called sixth sense may be defined as a sense of muscular resistance such as a blind person experiences as he walks along the street. On approaching a stationary object such as a tree or post, he is aware of an immediate collision. This is caused by the muscles of the face which react when affected by the stimuli radiated from inanimate objects. As he avoids the object, the muscles in his face relax and he is able to resume a more easy pace in Walking. The supernatural sense may be considered a sense of equilibrium as in the case of a cat falling from a great height and landing on his four feet. We also have the case of the man on the flying trapeze who flies through the air with the mmeuummm greatest of ease and lands in the suspended net in either a sitting or standing position. It mightbe the sense of touch magnified as shown by the blind who determine the exact color of an animal simply by feeling. We also know that a miller can distinguish the grade of flour by the sense of touch as he sifts it through his fingers. It may be said that those who are handicapped either mentally or physically perform the more startling feats. Charity has endowed institutions dedicated to the sacred purpose of giving the light of science and of a knowledge of useful arts to those who do not behold the beautiful earth and the serene sky by developing these latent faculties. This so-called sixth sense which may seem ghostly to some, marvelous to others and not even interesting to a few, has been described as a summation of all unexplained phe- nomena. In this age of enlightenment, science is bending every effort to aid our less fortunate neighbors in securing for them- selves the right to life, liberty and happiness. Therefore, couldnlt we, the progressive Americans, encourage the har- nessing of the sixth sense which is common to both handi- capped and normal persons? Instead of exclaiming in wonder over these miraculous feats of facial perception, delicate hear- ing and sensitive touch, let us hasten slowly in developing them by education. Who knows, one of this graduation class may someday be the guardian angel who, by means of this Hsixth sense, will find a way of percepted safety through this age of machinery. This sense is so difficult to understand and to grasp so that it might be molded into something useful, that we might allow a golden opportunity to slip through our hands. Neither teachers nor scientists have yet tried to explain outwardly what this sixth sensel, really is-thus another problem is presented to the younger generation to perfect. As did other noted Americans harness steam, fire, electricity and other forces of nature, let us adapt our other unused sense to keep us from unforeseen danger. Let it be the inner urge that spurs us to eagerly learn and live. Let it be the inner urge that awakens us to enlarge our horizons, develop our capacities and seize our opportunities. Let it be the inner urge that pushes the skyline of our existence to infinite heights of far flung goals and high ambitions where we may live, behold and understand. mmmmnmm Class History OUR FRESHMAN YEAR Who can forget that memorable morning, September 10, 1931, when three hundred enthusiastic freshmen became members of the Attleboro High School? We were welcomed most cordially by Mr. Alfred R. Mack under whose careful guidance for four years we were to be the first class to graduate. Being the largest class in the history of the school, it was necessary to utilize every available corner to accom- modate each and every one of us. Our being was proclaimed by Ruth Hazlett who so cleverly wrote the Fresh Notesl' for the t'Blue Owl. The sports were well represented by both boys and girls. It was during our first year that we made known the fact that we were capable of putting men on the field with the rest of the classes. At our first class meeting wc elected officers who were to start us off on our long journey. The magnitude of our number made it rather difficult to make a certain choice, Page Sixty-one as -+'W fe --e - f but we finally decided upon James Toner, President 5 Charles Obrist, Vice-President, Kenneth Allard, Secretary 5 and Philip Brown, Treasurer. Next on the calendar came the biggest event of our social life-the freshman social. It was everything that the name implies, due to the superlative efforts of the class officers, assisted by Dorothy Dennen, Marion Luther, Almon Andrews, Clifford Fielding and Ruth Flynn. This event will live long in the minds of us all, for was it not this affair that started the prominence of our treasury? Our scholastic ability had improved greatly through the untiring efforts of our faithful pedagogues. The honor roll included many of our number who desired to establish a creditable record for the Class of 1935. It was in our Freshman year also that Sheldon Rotenberg motivated our ambitions with an insuperable musical talent. Anticipating that our Sophomore year would be equally as interesting, we closed the first chapter of our high school life. OUR SOPHOMORE YEAR We entered the second year of high school life with great delight for we had left behind us that insignificant appellation freshmen . Being now upper-classmen we frequently remarked about the oddities of the freshman class, forgetting that we had ever been in their category. The first event of importance was the election of our class officers. After a vigorous campaign we selected Herbert Smith, James Toomey, William Lee, and Richard Read for President, Vice-President, Secretary and Treasurer, respectively, to represent us in all official capacities. Our social-dance committee is to be praised eternally for molding the foundation of our prestige. To them also goes the honor of arranging the most attractive as well as successful social of the year. , Our interest in the Blue Owl was greatly stimulated when it was announced that Charles Obrist, Ruth Flynn, and James Toner had been added to the staff of our school magazine. The department editors representing 1935 in- cluded Ruth Manter, Ruth Hazlett, and Richard Read. It was in these earlier years that our journalists gained their experience which has been so gratefully accepted by the readers of the 'tBlue Owl. Although we were only in our second year, we were ably represented in all fields of sport. Tennis took a new turn with Sheldon Rotenberg and Arthur Payette appearing on the courts. Those who later proved to be the foundation of our sports teams were promisingly active during this season. It was in our Sophomore year that a band was organized with William Cooney as drum-major. This unit proved in- valuable at football games and other functions necessitating colorful appearances of such an agency. Thus it was that we came to the close of our second year hoping that the future would be as kind to us as it had been in the past. And so now to our Junior year! OUR JUNIOR YEAR By this time we had become scholarly wise by much experience. The girls became very much interested in the Senior boys and the boys showed preference for the Fresh- man girls. THE TATTLETALE , ,C CLIE., 11.1. - 9 The boys won again in the class elections with Almon Andrews, President, John Sinclair, Vice-President, Wilfred Rounseville, Secretary, and Charles Goddard, Treasurer. A Student Council was formed during our Junior year. We were represented in this honorable body by Barbara Torrey, Richard Clark, John Qvarnstrom, William Lee, Charles Obrist, and Philip Brown. Later William Lee was elected President of the Southeastern Massachusetts Body of Associated Student Councils. A class ring was chosen by the following committee: Lydia Briggs, Clifford Fielding, Raymond O'Donnell, John Qvarnstrom, and John Sinclair. The design of the ring was a gold shield mounted on a black stone. This ring proved serviceable and pleasing to everyone. We were represented in the school play, 'Tll Leave It to You, by Elsie Anderson, Robert Field and Donald Phillips who showed splendid dramatic ability. We were certainly proud to be so nobly recognized by the Senior Class. As early as our Junior year we were represented by many men wearing the HA for their activities in the various branches of athletics. The girls also prided themselves with a fine basketball and tennis team. Our school magazine gained our attention with an efficient corps of editors com- piling the vital statistics of the activities of the school. We came to the end of our Junior year with many regrets, but we looked forward with much enthusiasm to the last and most eventful year of our high school career. OUR SENIOR YEAR It was with joy and enthusiasm that we entered upon our Senior year-the last of four happy and eventful years full of accomplishment and consequence. For many of us it was the last opportunity to augment our intellectual capacities, while for others it was merely preparation for enrollment in institutions of higher learning. To guide us safely through calm and storm on this last voyage, we elected to office these capable young men who did their duty so well: John Sinclair, President, Almon Andrews, Vice-President, Wilfred Rounseville, Secretary, Raymond O'Donnell, Treasurer. f Next on the calendar came our class social which was, like all our other class dances, a great success both socially and financially. After Captain Pariseau had led Coach Grayson's men down the field to many a thrilling victory, we found the following 1935 men Wearing the foot-ball letter: Steve Halko, Art Payette, Butch Young, Red Rhyno, Al Carpenter, Jack Sinclair, Cliff Fielding, Bud Andrews, Frank Gustafson, Leo Hennessey, Peter Guimond, Opie Richardson, and Phil Brown. The next illustrious event was the Senior Prom. By all who attended, it will be remembered as the most colorful and successful social gathering of its kind ever held in the gym. Then came t'The Haunted House with Carol Johnson, Helen Churchill, George Higgins, Everett Thurber, Robert Field, Ralph Sears, Earl Baumgartel, Orville Richardson and Donald Phillips enacting the thrilling story which provoked so many a hearty laugh. Nor will we forget Irene Guimond and Harlow Paul of the Class of 1936 who TH.E TATTLETALE Q., ,,, so splendidly gave their services toward the success of this production. The cast of the operetta-t'The Belle of Bagdadn- was supplemented by the following 1935 students who had lead- ing roles: George O'Keefe, George Higgins, William Cooney, Louise Staples and Donald Phillips. This musical comedy, which was a tremdous success due to the untiring efforts of Miss Carolyn Churchill and Mr. John Laing Gibb, added much to the prestige of our Alma Mater. It was with pride, admiration, and appreciation that we announced the names of Ruth Manter and Rita Mc- Pagc Sixty-two as Cracken, our valedictorian and salutatorian, respectively, who have done so much to maintain the high scholastic standing of the Attleboro High School. To Stanley Flynn goes the honor of composing our class song. Thus it is that the Class of 1935 leaves to carry on guided always by its splendid motto-'tLearn to Live-Live to Learnf' We owe much to our parents, teachers, and friends who have made possible the happiest four years of our lives. May we ever be of serviceable consequence to our posterity! Class Prophecy RAYMOND O'DONNELL RICHARD READ MILDRED LINGARD PHILIP BROWN This scene is a schoolroom. The teacher enters and the class begins. The teacher announces a talk on the lives of famous people to be given by two members of the class. Louis Bellonzi is the missing link in one of the latest chain letters. Despite the depression, Lewis Philip Cleve- land Balser, Jr., has donated one thousand dollars to the 'tMoron Relief Association. He claims that charity begins at home. VVe are sorry to hear that Arthur Arvidson, not a resident of our dear city, has obtained the sole right to collect garbage in Attleboro. We feel this to be most un- just and are going to try to do all in our power to return the rights to Earl Baumgartel. Eddie Audette works on Wednesdays. He and Blanche Balser ride their tandem to West Mansfield to do a little perch cleaning for the West Mansfield chicken hatchery. Robert Blais wound up tight at a watchnight party one night, and now he is doing time at Waltham. Lucy Benson, Hasmi g Arabian, Lillian Audette and Mary Bonner are showing remarkable progress in some deaf and dumb school. It's rather queer, but we did not know they were deaf. Rachel Anderton and Ruth Anderson are both growing older. Why now? Doris Blanchard had a drag and got into the movies. What a drag! Ken Allard has gone in for horse racing in a big way. He hopes to be the winner of the Kentucky Derby. Amy Barton is a reporter. She reported that a friend of hers said that she was told by somebody, who knew a certain person, who had heard someone talking about somebody, who had found out from someone else that Bud Andrews was cleaning up at the Narragansett Races. She's right, he wears a white uniform and pushes a broom. John Anacho and his wife, formerly Eleanor Amsbury, are entertaining three of the most celebrated African head-hunters, who have just ar- rived from their native land in South America. One of the guests, Gene Alger, will do one of his native dances for friends and relatives. Beatrice Bennion is still claiming the fortune that the Scotchman left the widow of the Un- known Soldier. Elsie Anderson asked all her friends to a party one night. After eating, two of them sang a duet to the music of McNary's Band. Alyce Bergeron works at Pariseau's bakery selling eskimo pies, and Mildred Anderson was offered live hundred dollars to haunt a house. LYMAN JOHNSON GEORGE HIGGINS BERNARD YOUNG ALMON ANDREWS Q Tom Brennan was stranded in Europe after his band and he were thrown out of the Hotel Ritz, because of lack of funds. Dick Clark, who was sponsoring the tour went bankrupt after losing his money in a breach-of-promise suit to Alec Campbell. He had promised Alec a job playing in the band, but could only play the phonograph. Jean Carnes is still driving around in her yellow roadster. Brucey'l has become the world's largest chain store magnate. 'tLargest modifies magnate. Dot Dennen has just filled out a million dollar contract with the Ziegfield Follies. Al Carpenter is behind a counter in a large department store selling gardenia toilet water. Gert Cain is a sob sister for that large well- known newspaper, The Attleboro Moonf, In her latest article she gives us that memorable account of Shorty Coddaire pitching his last game for Lonicut Prep'l school. Jean Campbell has become a lawyer, while William Buck is still striving hard for that job which Miss Hilliard said he might get,if he did well in Civics-namely President of the United States. Rita Desorcy is living comfortably with her cats. Rose Cummings has taken over a hobby of playing tiddly Winks. Ev Cole still lives on Park Avenue. She married into a couple of million. Sally Driscoll is again featured in a new sensational hit, Canned Love. Not to be forgotten are her two untiring patronizers, Ray Casavant and William Boyle, who have not missed a show in ten years. Margaret Creedon has decided on married life. Phil Brown he is growing older. Gert Charette and have joined the White Parade. Edwidge Crannan have bought bicycles. They are finds out that Lucille Johnson Dion and Eva planning a tour around the world. Dot Cavanaugh, Helen Churchill and Anna Dowigala have decided that two could live as cheaply as one. So they each bought a canary. Newell Bottomley is now running a private bus line between Attleboro and South Attleboro, but Lydia Briggs, to the surprise of all Cherself includedj has been chosen Judge of the Supreme Court. Doris Bradshaw has started a non-stop flight to the South Pole, while Erika Braun is still in the wilds of Pleasant Street, hunting the ferocious alley cat. Phyllis Buckley is now dancing in Pete Gagner's night club, The Bottle Opener,'l and William 'tWild Bill Cooney Page Sixty-three -Q ff - vi---Y-Y Y is commanding officer of the Foxboro Boy Scouts. Anna Emond is acting on the stage of the Briggs Corner Palace in that forty-six act thriller, Over the Hill to the Gas Stationfl David Essex has returned from his old jail life and is keeping a home for old and mangy dogs. Doris Ford, Jeanette Felts and Theresa Fasula are running a beauty shop and have Agnes Flanagan as their house to house representative. Robert Field and Melvin Johnson are showing the lads on Broadway QPawtucketj how to tap dance and do they get a kick out of it! Clif Fielding has kept out of jail long enough to start a professional football team in Plainville. George Fish is still running away from the bill collector. Ruth Flynn is blushing her way through Hollywood. People call her Hthe blush girl with that blush you love to see. Stanley Featherstone Flynn has written a new song entitled f'The Hill-Billy Lullabyf' Mary Garrity is chief cook and bottle washer in Barbara Gilmour's new restaurant, f'Thc Dirty Dish. Charles HSecond Story Goddard is teaching the backward boys at Sing Sing a few fundamentals of f'Trig.'l John Gormley, resident of the high school for twenty years, has been finally graduated. For this event a holiday was declared, and the day was given over to rejoicing that such a pestilence had finally been removed. Lois Grant is now president of the Lonely Hearts Correspondence Club. If you are romantic and lonely, you should communicate with her at once. Doris Greenberg is Attleborols representative in Congress. She is trying to pass a bill which states 'tDinner at Eightu will be postponed until nine o'elock on account of daylight saving time. Marjorie Greene is teaching the dumb how to keep still. Nice work, Marge 5 how's Phillips coming along? Pete Guimond is the object of the argument among the Athletics, the Red Sox, and the Yankees. The Athletics want the Yanks to take him, and the Yanks want the Sox to own or rent him, while the Red Sox want the Lonicut Terrors to keep him for their mascot. Carl Gustafson is drawing scenes of Attleboro. Most any time you can find him at the city dump. Frank Gustafson is competing with Kentucky Club. He pays three cents cash to every boy who brings in one pound of cigar cigarette or corn silk butts. Steve Halko is doing a stretch at Sing-Sing, Hong Kong, wearing the numerals 23 5 he never did realize that he would have to wear those same numerals after taking off his A. H. S. football jersey. Mack Hathaway kept behind a closed barb wired cage at Capron Park is spending an easy life eating the almonds out of Hershey bars. Ruth Hazlett and Rita Henry are married, but not to each other. George Higgins is abroad cultivating his voice. He is now fifty two and has never been kissed except once by his aunt Minnie. Anita Hutchinson is not teaching Dutch as was expected, but has married one of the 'Thurber boys. CI wonder which one?j Doris James and Rita Janson are writing poetry for the Old Farmer's Almanacf' Derwent and Donald Johnston are joint horse doctors, Derwent does the cutting and Donald does the sewing. Cyril Keane, after a long hard struggle, has succeeded in having the term Hjanitorn changed to Superintendent of Steam and Heat. Louise Keane is doing missionary work in Iceland, making the Eskimo step around with red pepper. Mouse Kelliher is now the Faculty Manager of the High School. QIt's about time we THE TATTLETALE f f-v H- -f-fed - A-----ere --A - efwffee -A W- -4 - 9 won a game!D Bill Kimmell is Mayor and 'bartender of Rehoboth. He is annually elected by the few tbumsrlto whom he gives free drinks. The Jones and Johnsons, all graduates of the class of 1935, make up the Anti-Depression Society. f'Lumma Johnson, their president, has proclaimed that we are on the way to prosperity, for the castway cigar butts have increased one and one-quarter inches in sizef Vrf Dot Klepper, Anita McEleny, and Frances McNally are farmerettes and are running a chicken farm in Norton. Phil Kraczkowski is the dog face boy in a side show in one of the big circuscs, while Bill Lee has changed his name' to Billski Leeovitch, and is trying to play his fiddle on amateur programs. All that Bill has got out of these amateur programs so far, is the go g. Eva Lemire is writing column, f'Advice to the Lovcaornn in the Daily Sun. Mary LaRocque is teaching the Freshman class in the Lonicut High School, while Alden Leinaire is giving the dames in Holly- wood a break. Millie Lingard is running a stand on Park Street, where mothers can leave their babies, while they shop. Millie seems to think the business would be more profitable if there were some women in Attleboro like Mrs. Dionne. Marion Luther has turned authoress and is writing a book entitled, Can We Live on Love? Rita Madden and Rita McCracken are running an insane asylum, and Ruth Manter is writing her third volume on how to become a valedictorian. Constance Menard is a chorus girl in the Follies Review, now playing at the Dodgeville Opera House. Richard Moore is a trumpet player in Cab Calloway's orchestra. Eileen Lyons has taken over the management of a local five and ten, in which Mary McGovern and Vir- ginia MaeLeod are running a beauty shop. They specialize in face lifting. Phyllis Allen is a blues singer in a chop suey joint in Hebronville. Thirza McPherson and Eloise Madden have taken over the management ofa Pine Street dog hatch- ery. They plan to breed an Irish Terrier and an Airdale to get a new streamlined dog. 'fFranny Morin is writing a book on how to obtain that youthful form and beauty in three easy lessons. In the meantime Ethel Mossberg and Catherine Mullaney have started an around the world bicycle trip. After a week of hard riding they have finally reached South Attleboro. They have decided to trade in the bikes and get an airplane. Carol Johnson has just been elected Mayoress of Attleboro, assisted by her campaign manager, Lillian Faulkner. Do you remember back in 1935 how interested Dorothea Murray was in Scout work? She has now become the 'fFirst Lady of the Landf, Gertrudy Muzzy, first violinist in the Philadelphia Philharmonic Orchestra, has so much fan mail that she has engaged Virginia Pineo and Olive Potter as her private secretaries. O'Donnell, Peters and Pariseau have combined their efforts in a consolidated cream, fruit and bun shoppee which is advertised over station BING by George Walter O'Keefe, the most popular crooner of today. Miss Josephine Litoff Olvan, formerly Cab Calloway's Hi-de-ho Queen, has succeeded in divorcing Cab and is now trying to make up her mind between the four Mills Brothers. Have you been into Johnnie Qvarnstrom's new night club the Belle of the Gutter which is now featuring the world famous couple, Donnie,' Phillips and Lois Parker doing the latest hit the Hunka Dola'? The four P's, Viola THE TA TTLETALE 37777777 77 7 7 7 .7, 4,777 .7 Potter, Patneaude, Pelletier and Perlow are making patty shells for Pariseauis Bakery. Dorothy Pullen, who was our cutest girl, has broken her engagement to Chick Obrist, because he did not come up to her shoulder when dancing. Dot has again turned her undivided attention to f'Mousic. Dot Newton has outshone Mae West in the movie world by singing her theme song, Eat an Apple Every Day and Keep Mae West Awayf' Art Payette and Muriel Watts after visiting gay Paris have brought back the title of the Most Famous Dancing Team in the world to Attleboro. Ouimet and Joe Perry have given up music in despair and have turned their efforts to bull fighting in Spain. Otterson, Pharmikis and Parker went back to the A. H. S. in 1975 for a P. G. course, and are still struggling along. Dick Read has taken over his position at Taunton as basketball coach. Is Joan in the line-up, Dick? f'Red,' Rhyno has opened a school for lonely redheads, while Bill Rounseville is leading his orchestra at the t'Hot Stuff Night Club on Attleboro's great white way. Olix Salley is doing a spring dance in the shady glades of Capron Park. Don Salley is still trying to find a galloping pancake that will say Uncle Don, while Dot Robinson has gone to Africa on a very serious expedition of tracking down and killing a man-eating French-fried banana. Lillian Rheaume has gone into the business of planting shoe trees, and Edna Salley is riding around on a bicycle selling doughnuts, but when the-doughnuts give out, she sells the tires, and no one seems to know the difference. Ruth Seyboth is doing the rumba with Raymond Bourbonnais. Louise Staples is still trying tomfind a tonic that will grow hair on billiard balls. Have you tried grass-seed, Lu? Blanche St. Lawrence is doing a non-stop drive between Attleboro and Briggs Corner on her super-streamlined, all steel scooter, while Harold Riley is a professor at South Gilopi Grammar School. He is teaching the art of running the movie machine. Ralph Sears is at some college trying to make a name for himself. Dot Rogers is playing with any well known orchestra, while Orville Pratt Continental Richardson is still trying to decide whether he'll settle down in North Attleboro or Taunton. Arlene Sloman is growing gray haired trying to find which end of a shoe horn to blow. t'Cat Slattery and Angie McNerney are together as usual singing, It's not Because Your Hair is Curly on the Gillette Blue-beard mmmummmm Class JEAN CAMPBELL and Even the best of us must leave and so in leaving, we, the Class of 1935, being of unsound mind and of practically no memory, do bequeath to our inferior underclassmen the following articles, and do declare this to be our last will and testament. Gert Cain leaves her snappy walk to Arline Jess. George Fish leaves to fish for fish on Fisher Street. Everett Thurber leaves because he doesn't know what else to do. Marion Luther and Red Rhyno leave together. Sheldon Rotenberg leaves with his violin tucked under his arm. Page Sffxfy-four -- --V------1 -- 7 7 7 7.qb, program. Vivian Raymond is still running down to Soloman Street. John Sinclair is coaching 'tHow to Spin the Bottle at East Overshoe University. Marjorie Stone is testing her husband's stomach with her cooking. Poor Man! Herbert Smith has become a well known contortionist, and the other day one of the fellows mistook him for a pretzel. Ruth Rosenberg is teaching the young ones how to say Da-Da. That is quite a vocation. After exterminating Rubinoff, Shel Rotenberg has very nicely stepped into his shoes, or was it boxes? Jimmy Sheehan has been reported lost. He got into the house of mirrors at Coney Island, and has not been seen since. Louise Randall has just been reported as Miss America. We all agree with the judges. Albina Taillon is a hairdresser of no little note, having arranged the coiffeur of no less a personage than the mighty Butch Young, who has grown gentler these days, since he became a toe-dancer. Alice Teacher has let her hair grow and is now known to her intimates as Alice in Wonderland. Mary Tetreault has been giggling so much lately that she has ruined six perfectly good dresses. Everett Thurber has side whiskers and a beard now. He also has grandchildren. Robert Thurber is garbage collector for the Briggs Corner district. Virginia Twombley is slaying them all nightly, at the mighty Union Theatre as Little Eva. John VanderPyl has wrecked so many feet in his dancing that he is now in the wrecking business. Thatfs what you call Hfrom toes to tons. Margaret Tatarian has lost none of her dainty feminine appeal. In fact she has gained more. Ethel Ward and Janice Vickery are both happily married and hang their wash on the same line. Florence Vieira has left our city for New York, where she does a rumba in a night club to the music furnished by Joe Taylor. Phil Lashway has renounced race horses forever, they left him no spending money. Marie Wry still thinks Jazz has it all over classical music. Mildred Wright just smiles and says nothing. Stanley Woodward has lost his nice grin at the dentistis and now when he smiles, children say to their mothers, 'tThere's gold in them thar teeth, hey Ma? Monica Wallace is chief attraction at Earl Carroll's Vanities, while Alma Tabberner and Barbara Torrey are running a dude ranch in South Dakota. W 'll ARTHUR PAYETTE Dot Dennen leaves her dancing ability to the in- coming Freshmen. HDon', Salley leaves his session slips to Art Davis. John Gormley leaves Miss Hilliard with a few gray hairs. HArt Payette leaves Gert', to the mercy of John Cooper. Steve Halko leaves to become Mayor of South Attleboro. Donald Phillips leaves to prove to the world that the moon is made of green cheese. Ruth Manter leaves her name on the bronze tablet in the front hall. H . Y I - v Page Sixty jzze Q, -21 fi -nf-'-' - ---- - 7---fw - fan - ' 7 ' ' 'fBillH Cooney leaves his military stride to the highest bidder. t'Phil Lashway leaves with the compliments of his many friends made during his few months at A. H. S. Phill' Brown leaves a Detective Magazine to Mr. Spatcher to aid him in finding some of the football equipment that vias borrowed and never returned. Emmet leaves with Dot for the City Clerk's office. 'fSal Driscoll leaves her book on the art of love making to any ten Freshman girls who think that they can take it. Lydia Briggs leaves a little of her height to the girl that needs it the most. Evelyn Cole leaves her Winsome smile to help brighten the dark days ahead for our underelass friends Louise Randall leaves her seat on the South Attleboro bus to some poor unfortunate person who has had to stand up all year. Charlie Goddard leaves a few of his brains to anyone that needs them. Marie Wry leaves someone else to worry about keeping the lunch ticket money straight. Frank Gustafson leaves the map of Germany to Miss Claflin. Milly'l Lingard leaves her sister to carry on the honor of the family name. Dot'l Newton leaves her job in the ofliee to anyone that wishes to shoulder the responsibility. 'tPeteH Gagner leaves his answers to the history ques- tions to some other 'fbrightn student. Stub Johnston leaves to annoy someone else besides Miss Hilliard. Billyl' Rounseville leaves his appreciation of music to the orchestra. Alex Campbell leaves to sell dime banks to the natives in Scotland. 'tDickl' Clark leaves some of his senseless jokes to bore the Freshmen. Pegl' Creeden leaves a stick of gum in her home room desk. tDon't get lost in the rush.j Rita McCracken leaves her naturally curly hair to 'fRene Guimond. John Qvarnstrom leaves to write a book on ffThd Perfect Boy. Constantine Peters leaves for Hollywood to double for Jimmy Durante. Joe'l Taylor leaves in a fit of laughterg he told himself another joke. Carl Gustafson leaves in that Ford of his in the general direction of the 'fValleyf' ftDave Essex leaves Miss Hillard exhausted. Chick Obrist and Ruth Hazlett leave to increase production at the Chevrolet plant. 'tDiek Read leaves on his weekly jaunt to 'tMinsky's. Newell Bottomley leaves Stella to the mercy of the ferocious Freshmen. Butch'l Young leaves a certain Freshman broken- hearted. George O'Keefe leaves his golden voice to that silver voiced tenor, Vincent Coyle. THE TATTLETALE 7- V ---V-im - - - W W- f-A-W 'Q- Joel' Olvan leaves for Athens to substitute for Helen of Troy. Harold Riley and Ralph'l Sears leave Mr. Tunstall without an errand boy. Stanley Flynn leaves to encourage Irving Berlin with his original ideas on popular tunes. 'tOrfilcrat Richardson leaves his masculine traits to be carried on by one John Cooper. Angela MeNerney leaves her peculiar cackle to Bettyl' Toner. Gigi Pariseau leaves to throw the Ideal Bakery for a loss. Alu Carpenter leaves for Worcester without his gardenia water. He gave it to Fryfield. Allen Bruce leaves his excess avoirdupois where it will do the most good. tfPete Guimond leaves to woo a little Miss on Water Street-. Lyman Johnson leaves with the first mortgage paid. Frances Morin leaves that walk to be copied by all interested Freshmen. Cliffl' Fielding leaves the records shattered, and the coach broken hearted. Shortyl' Coddaire leaves for his favorite Hspotl' up North. 'tBud Andrews leaves to carry on at Dartmouth and Wellesley. Kc-nl' Allard leaves all sessions to Hank Gorman. 'tRayl' OlDonnell leaves to play milkman in that thriving plant on George Street. 'tBill'l Lee leaves his brother to carry on his traditions. Slats'l Slattery leaves the basketball team, finally. Jack'l Sinclair leaves to go back home and wake up. Eddie Audette leaves Ulndianl' Spatcher without his favorite carpenter. Ruth Flynn leaves her girlish blush to Sis,' Richardson. ftScotty Campbell leaves. She should, after her part in the VVill. - BRYAN c COLLEGE BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION and SECRETARIAL PRACTICE QFounded 1863 as Bryant-Stratton Collegej PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND Co-educational 73rd Year Begins Sept. 3 With the Fall Term, 1935, Bryant College will occupy a distinguished group of modern- ized and newly constructed buildings on its own campus at Hope and Benevolent Streets and Young Orchard Avenue. TWO-YEAR DEGREE PROGRAMS ECONOMICAL SHORTER COURSES SUMMER SESSIONS OPEN JUNE 24'-JULY s TH T A T T L E T A IJ E Pqgg gif Qs W' 'bf PHYLLIS M. ALLEN ELSIE A. ANDERSON RUTH M. ANDERSON RACHEL M. ANDERTON EARL BAUMGARTEL BEATRICE F. BENNION ALYCE V BERGERON DOROTHY L. CAVANAUCH CERTRUDE M. CHARETTE HELEN F. CHURCHILL RICHARD I. CLARK AGNES li. FLANAGAN 6 6 RUTH K. MANTER, Valedictorian RITA C. IVICCRACKEN, Salutatorian Honor Roll IALPHABETICALLY ARRANGEDD RUTH M. FLYNN BARBARA A. CILMOUR CHARLES T. GODDARD DORIS GREENBERC RUTH C. HAZLETT RITA M. HENRY LUCILLE M. JOHNSON WILLIAM A. KIMMELL DORIS E. KLEPPER WILLIAM F. LEE RITA C. MCCRACKEN FRANCES L. MCNALLY Class Motto : Learn to Live and Live t Learn o Class Colors: Crimson and Grey CLASS SONG WORDS AND MUSIC BY JAMES S. FLYNN Now we must go, sadly, I know, Away from the ties that bind us- Mem'ries that soothe linger with you, As sadly we must say adieu. For-we-are Learning to live, living to learn, Making the most of our chances. School days are through, happy ones, too, Seeking a goal that entrances. Holding our faith in the knowledge we've learned, Crasping a future and striving to earn, as we'r0 Learning to live, living to learn, Dear Class of Thirty-Five! R UTI I K. MANTER DOROTHEA I. MURRAY CHARLES OBRIST GEORGE O'KEEFE LOIS E. PARKER DONALD li. PHILLIPS W. IIAROLD RILEY WILFRED VE. ROUNSEW ILLIE F. LOUISE STAPLES ALICE TEACHER MONICA M. NYALLACE 99 Page Sixty-Seve TH If T A T T L If T A L E ACKNOWLEDGMENT ir if if 'Ir 'Ir ir ir ir . . . the members of the 'Tattletalen staff wishi- to recognize the invaluable assistance given by the faculty and to thank all who aided in the completion of this Work .... especial grati- tude do we express to Mr. Mack, Miss Claflin, Miss Churchill, Miss Ranisdell, Mr. O'Neil and the Attleboro Print, Incorporated z: :: A E T A T T L If 7' A Ii Ia' Page Sixty-mqlzt Q ' 'b QI IQ , . . fr- ' J? ortheasftern Unlverslty DAY DIVISION SCHOOL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES Offers a broad program of college sub- jects serving as a foundation for the under- standing of modern culture, social relations, and technical achievement, and including selected occupational courses. The purpose of this program is to give the student a liberal and cultural education and a voca- tional competence which fits him to enter some specific type of useful employment. The vocational options are in such fields as: Accounting, Advertising, Industrial Chem- istry, Teaching, Factory Administration, Salcsmanship, Surveying and Topography, Physical Education, Industrial Relations, Business Practice, Drafting and Technical Drawing. SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Offers a college program with broad and thorough training in the principles of busi- ness with specialization in ACCOUNTING, BANKING AND FINANCE, or BUSI- NESS MANAGEMENT. Instruction is SCHOOL OF Provides complete college programs in Engineering with professional courses in the fields of CIVIL, MECHANICAL, ELEC- TRIA,L, CHEMICAL and INDUS- TRIAL ENGINEERING. General en- through modern methods including lectures, solution of business problems, class dis- cussions, professional talks by business executives, and motion pictures of man- ufacturing processes. ENGINEERING gineering courses are pursued during the Freshman year, thus the student need not make a final decision as to the branch of Engineering in which he wishes to specialize until the beginning of the Sophomore year. Co-operative Plan The Co-operative Plan, which is available to the students in all courses, provides for a combination of practical industrial experi- ence With classroom instruction. Under this plan the student is able to earn a portion of his school expenses as well as to form business contacts which prove valuable in later years. Degrees Awarded The Bachelor of Science Degree is conferred upon all students who satis- factorily complete an approved course of study. 'l l l !'-l' For catalog or further information write to! NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY MILTON SCHLAGENHAUF, Director of Admissions BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 1 Sty-of THLIIIIIIIAII. Attlelaoro Print, lno. A PRINTERS or The Blue Owl Comphments of R. M. ROSEN Gllb6ft,S Shoe Hospital 46 SOUTH MAIN STREET GILBERT REA, Prop. Shoe Rebuilding ofthe Better Kind l Morse-Andrews Co. l MANUFACTURERS OF BELT BUCKLES l '5- Most everywhere you go, you'll find Well dressed men Wearing Swank jewelry made in your city ----- Jewelry Accessories for Men THE BAER 61 WILDE COMPANY ATTLEBORO MASSACHUSETTS l no T11 IL' T A 7' 7' l If T ,I 1. la' 114,011 Sgygnty Q ea ea A Q FRATERNITY, COI,I.F.GF4 and CLASS JEWELRY DIPLQMAS CLUB EIVIBLEIVIS ax, -,,,,sx1e5QiD L. G. Balfour Company ATTLEBORO, MASSACHUSETTS gllanufacturing jewelers and Stationers K1'1OWI'l WhCI'CVCI' tl'1CI'C HTC schools and colleges Slvnb uuf 1 ty Lttthlbt tl t bldg Hsu L1tJ't1 tl Attleboro Automobile Company Sales---CHEVRQLET, QLDSMQBILE---Service TELEPHONE 5-1 64 Pleasant Street Attleboro, Massachusetts TELEPHONE 1 I I2 0 . Compliments of Wllllam F. Flynn gl Son I DEALERS IN u . i Hardware, KltChCD Furnlshmgs, Palnts, Toys, Sporting Goods, Plumbing Supplies Exclusive Boys' and Men'S ooo EELLOWS BUILDING FURNISHINGS ATTLEBORO :: -- :: MASS. I 1eSevt1 THE TITTIFTALE an is Mwmfr. .. it ELE VEN YEA RS, YO UR SENIOR PHOTOORAPHER Your High School Photograph will serve as a reminder of those happy high school days. Let us make a photograph that will capture your own individual personality. PORTRAITS AT HOME OR IN OUR STUDIO Copying- Enlarging-Framing CCM MERCIAL WORK Restoring of Old Photograp hs a Specialty The O' EIL Studio PHONE I44 24 PARK STREET S'-'lh btL t gt II Ik tth ff d Itt Dtta'Y'h Ill I kt Id t tt College I .fri p HS Leach 86 Garner I THE fgijgog L.Nt,,,, EL11,,s ESTABLISHED 1879 I. M. FISHER COMPANY Attleboro, Massachusetts MANUFACTURING I JEWELERS l Attleboro Massachusetts I TN 19' 7' A T 7' 1' If 7' A L If Page Seventy-two Complete Home Furnishers : - ' 'T' Wi, 1, 'T' - ' f T '4,W,,, O I1 O I1 S L d ' Compliments of N Saart Bros. Co. D e p e n d a b 1 e i Found on A. H. S. exams: British subjects have al, right to IJLLI'tJitfi0I1 the king. The Pope lives i11 ai va,cuum. A Palmetto is the child of white and black parents. Make OUR Service YOUR Service 0 FOR o i The Robbins Co. Wiring-Fzxtures-Applzances R A D I O 5 A Class Rings and Pins Fernald Electric Co. T ATTLEBOROA MASS- I4 NORTH MAIN STREET ATTLEBORO, MASS' Efficiency-Economy-Reliability 0- ED- CAMERON C0- ELECTRO PLATING added to real up-to-the-minute Style, makes the modem gas A 43 RAILROAD AVENUE ATTLEBORO, MASS. rangetheidealcookingappliance 'ffl' 'flfe ff -fffff' W' ff-A f ' Compliments of ATTLEBORO GAS LIGHT COMPANY Associated Attleboro Manufacturers Telephone 289 29 DUNHAN STREET 5 INCORPORATED s Page Seventy-tl11'1'e Q-f A Q T11 lz'S 'I'.l 7' Tl 11 TA 1, 11 Compliments of I . FWW1 hC l Sansoum l - ' 00 WON 0- Department Store E1I1Cl ZOC Store Ladies' and BANK AND PARK STREETS l Chi1dren'S Furnishings ATTLEBORO :: :: MASSACHUSETTS 25 PARK STREET ATTLEBORO, MASS RADIOS PIANOS THCE Westinghouse Electric Refrigerators N P M k I ew u IC ar et ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES M . WESTINGHOUSE-MARR OIL BURNERS ffiurnacej eatSiE..Fl,1g-UIEQ-Vegetables, IS , OCCIICS B LA K E ' S l 9 COUNTY STREET W BIRDS' EYE FROSTED FOODS Y ATTLEBORO, MASS. 36 PARK STREET Telephone I900 Vll02LChfFV iiNilYV if tll0I'0 were five Hivs on :L table :mtl I killed one, how m y would be luft?'l S-X-H0110 dc-nd one, si WALK-ovER SHOE W 37 So. Main Street I Compliments of STURE l 7 Attleboro Steam and Electric Company WORSTED TEX SUITS MALLORY HATS Guyot Brothers Company, Inc. I' MANUFACTURERS OF Me11'S and B0YS, Clothing jewelers' Findings and Settings and Shoes MANHATTAN SHIRTS I n OF EVERY DESCRIPTION NTERWOVEN HOSIERY 45 UNION STREET ATTLEBORO, MASS. T11 If TA T T L If T A In IL' Q COMPLIMENTS OF J. J. Newberry Company' ATTLEBORO, MASS. Locally 0wnedMLocal1y Operated Chain Store Buying Power WE SPECIALIZE IN COMPLETE HOME FURNISHINGS RADIOS, FLOOR COVERINGS, GLENWOOD RANGES Page S02't ?Ifjjjf0Il7' Compliments of McINTYRE'S FLOWER SHOP COUNTY STREET C.,..,Q,.g..g. gf T QUlNTIN'S BARBER SHOP 21 PARK STREET ATTLEBOR0, MASS. FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS ADEN FLORAL CO. GREENHOUSES: 263 COUNTY STREET TEL. 280-W GIFT DEPARTMENT AAA- A A Visitors Always Welcome GORDON Nl. MacKlNNON Atherton Furniture Company INSURANCE C. C. GILBERT T. W. GILBERT 32 SOUTH MAIN STREET ATTLEBORO, MASS. 1 Room 9, Woolworth Bldg. Telephone 1011 Why zm- you crying little girl'?,' C':u1s4- my brothel' has holidays :mtl I clOn't.H Hwhy c1On't you have hOlicl:Lys?', I rlOn'l go to school yet. Compliments of U C. PETERS' FRUIT STORE PARK STREET I Compliments of l EVAN L. FORBES I COAL AND GRAIN li Ll HARRY STANTON'S I. G. A. Meats and Groceries I M Quality and Service coR. BROOK arid EMORY STREETS Y .M ATTLEBORO, MASS. Compliments of Compliments of R. H. BRIDGES JEWELED CROSS CO. FLOWERS FOCR ALL OCCASIONS C0mP1imemS0f DR AKE THE FLORIST DR. CLARENCE N. DAVIS 141 PARK STREET TELEPHONE 1282 SURGEON DENTIST FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING Page Sclvfntzf-H110 T11 I T I I T I I 7 A L E 45 i U i 'Q Attleboro Ice Co. gllanufactured Ice 1 CHFIIPIS Made in Attleboro A Sure-Pure-Safe Refrigerant .COOLERATOR The Air-Conditioned Refrigerator HIGH GRADE FUEL OILS TELEPHONE 250 1 Used All Over the World 1 I EI IE R. F. Simmons Co ESTABLISHED I874 Attleboro t Massachusetts She- How do the f1'vsI1m0n IIUWHXYH 01111111 prossu ' kc-vp those cliuky little caps on HICKS' BAKERY HERBERT F. HICKS .. .,,L ',1f1, 1 um X, .1 1. 111' A 'Proprietor WE CARRY A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF PASTR--AY AT ALL TIMES. Alsot BREAD, ROLLS, Etc. v Nothing But Best Materials Used I ALL FOOD HAND-MADE ON PREMISES 22 South Main Street TELEPHONE 669 1 Hayward Cllality I E W E L R Y MADE IN ATTLEBORO t SINCE I85l Walter E. Hayward Company T11 If T rl T T I. If 7' .fl Ii If Page Seventy-six CHEMICAL BIOLOGICAL PHYSICAL SKATES SKIS Laboratory Supplies Sporting Goocls Thermometers Biological Stains Complete Line I-Iyclrometers Glassware . BASEBALL FOOTBALL Barometers Porcelain Chemical Reagents Balances GOLF Microscopes BASKETBALL TENNIS Binoculars By Wright 61 Ditson ancl Draper 8: Maynard George L. Claflin Company I50 DORRANCE STREET 46 UNION STREET PROVIDENCE, R. I. ATTLEBORO, MASS. Hello, Smith, old man, hnv0nIt ,n you for :L Iong tim H141-on in Iwcl sown Weeks. Oh, th:Lt's too haul. Flu I suppose Yes, and CI'2LSlI1'll.y' R MAGU1pE'5 OSHQISTT QUALITY Foofrwrum FOR THE RALPH H- CGPPOI-A WHOLE FAMILY Ladies' and Gents' Custom Tailoring 42 PARK STREET AIITLEBORO, MASS. I 45 Park Street Telephone Connection Attleboro, Mass. Compliments of - I Compliments of WALTER E. BRIGGS, D. M. D. . . , CLASS OF 1903 V zfvzans Beauty Shoppe sul'rE No. zo, BATES Bl.ocK BRONSON BUILDING UNION PLATE at WIRE co. LAURE'S SPECIALTY SHOPPE I 3 PARK STREET HUNICO PRODUCTS I , , , I Ladies' Coats, Gowns and Specialties ATTLEBORO 22 22 MASSACHUSETTS Exclusive, CBut No! Expensive Compliments of ATTLEBORO FRUIT GROCERIES, TOBACCO and CANDIES . OPEN UNTIL 11 P. M. A. Zito, Prop. FLEPHONEW w Q ,CQ ECE lin ,Cb Q 165 Q ,R Q' Al 'LID Q 'C Cb B 'S Q b 'Q L- S 'Q 'F S. s S Ar .. N. r N. lt 0 5- -,XX xx fff ,ff ge F ff ' 73 a 2 f 8 Q' o 5 S- 1 VJ Q 5 94 J 'U U3 H rn. H 'U gg v-4 H P5 P4 '6 di S Q-X4 O ' , S, I Q, usfo Auto PARTS ,E ,, U . X w 3 O ff! f XNX 2 805 O Q WAsfmGTON K I XSOUTH A'rrLEBoRo, Mass. '21 'cg 5 ,f f ,X ,Il .xtnx X X h ' I. t 'I'eleph0!16 Bl8.0kSt0I1e 5035 . - ' . '7 - t'. N X WAVE SHOPPE , f Permanent Waving by Experts I Comphments 0 ALL BRANCHES OF BEAUTY CULTURE R Over Five and Ten Cent Store CQ. 16 PARK STREET ATTLEBORO, MASS. VIYCXIICIIPI'-KAUKIIIIII here :Incl give me what you lmve in 3 111' ITIUIIIILH Pete- I'rl like tofifs Il, Ql1IT'lbHIl.,' COMPLIMENTS OF I COMPLIMENTS OF Stephen H. Foley A Bay State Optical Co. BLISS BROS. DAIRY COMPLIMENTS OF GRADE A PASTEURIZED V R Milk, Cream and Buttermilk j All Cream Ice Cream Served at Our Stand I-I, Hggd 81 S011 All Year Round TELEPHONE 787 I l 697 PARK STREET ATTLEBORO, MASS. THE TA TT! lL'T.'l LE Q i ,M pp WW np xi ,V i ppipfjuge Sczfmzly-ezfght Bruce and Lindstrom Johnson Decorating Co. DEALERS IN MEATS, GROCERIES l Paints, Brushes, Linseed Oil, and PROVISIONS A Turpentine, Wall Paper and Glass is SOUTH MAIN STREET i 74-76 UNION STREET ATTLEBORO, MASSACHUSETTS iTe1- 674 ATTLEBORO, MASS- ' STORE PHONE 828-W HOME PHONE 858-J 1 0 , 0 Durand's, Gobelin, johnson? Candy A St' Marle S Optical Store S. S. PIERCE'S GROCERIES K ATTLEBORWS BEST EQUIPPED DuBarry, Max Factor, Helena Rubenstein, Elizabeth Arden, Harriet Hubbard Aye' Tmlemes Eyes Tested-Oculists Prescriptions Filled CENTURY MUSIC 28 PARK STREET ATTLEBORO, MASS. ss PARK STREET ATTLEBORO, MASS. She- My fathorls for-t are bothering him so much he ciLn't use them. II0A'4VVhnt time Shall I come up? Compliments of WATSON'S DINER ALBERT HOULE WATCHMAKER WATCHES-DIAMONDSSCLOCKS 59 Park Street Carnes Building THE FLOWER SHOP C. E. Barblom I. R. Barblom ATTLEBORO'S LEADING FLORISTS 28 South Main Street Tel. 435-W Compliments of DR. F. LONGPRE GRANT'S Inc. Rent a Typewriter and Keep in Practice 6 SOUTH MAIN STREET ATTLEBORO, MASS. Compliments of S. A. PAYETTE 67 PARK STREET ATTLEBORO, MASS Compliments of ATTLEBORO REFINING CO. Gold and Silver Refiners Compliments of WM. J. WATSON ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE Room 205, Sanford Bldg. Attleboro, Mass. Page SC7,'C1lfIj-717016 TH If T A T T I, If T A L E Q ef f-- -- 1v Dependable Insurance of Every Description I-I. K. and O. P. RICHARDSON BATES THEATRE BUILDING Telephones: 845-846 ATTLEBORO, MASS. Compliments of HAMEL,S DINER A GOOD PLACE TO EAT KNOBBY KRAFTERS OPP- Post Office A ' 7 Union Street Attleboro, Mass. GUY C, RQGERS L. ROTENBERG and son I s UNION STREET CUSTOM TAILORS Newspapers Magazines Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing at Lowest Prices Cigars, Tobacco, Confectionery, Sporting Goods 76 PARK STREET A1TLEB0R0, MASS. Skippy- Wh:1cIIIyn got in the shape of IllITOIHObIIf' tires? S2IIl1'SINIl.UiX'l'll1HP1'2l.l wrwitiis Iifo 7I'0Sl'I'VCl'S inv:1,IimI cushions :md dflllffllllllf 7 7 P5 FRANK GODFREY IVIICI-IELSQN I Thotographer Representative IVIrs. Elvira I..inoIeII Tel. Attleboro I 32-R Compliments of I TT. T TS I TT Iii B. SL ATER T I BRANAGHAN'S CATERING BEAUTY SI-IOPPE Maker of Choice Ice Cream and Sherbets 29 PLEASANT STREET Telephone 761 72 HOLMAN STREET UNITED BUTCHERS Wholesale and Retail Dealers in C rnplirnents of IVIEATS AND PROVISIONS HOTEL AND RESTAURANT sUPPuEs 1 3 Park Street Tel. 543 Attleboro, Mass. ' 1' F 1' 1- 1 11 1, T A T T 1, 1, T A 1, 1, ,,,,,,,, jwqmy I 'bf BATES 8z KLINKE, Inc. SCHOOL AND COLLEGE JEWELRY ATTLEBORO, MASS. l IDEAL BAKERY A CATHERINE'S BEAUTY SHOPPE A- 0- PARISEHL Prev- A PERMANENT WAVING BY EXPERTS Wedding and Birthday Cakes a Specialty All Branches of Beauty Culture Y OVER BROWN'S STORE 63 PARK STREET 24 PARK STREET ATTLEBOR0, MASS. Compliments of Compliments of 1 PARK APPAREL SHOPPE DR. J. ROBERT ALLEN Women's Wearing Apparel CDistinctive olrrangement of Flowers Mabel Louise Beauty Studio for All Occasions A SHOP OF RARE CHARM , HAWKINS FLOWER SHOPPE AND DISTINCTION 14 ,BANK STREET First Flyv VVhy are you making so much noise-'?,' Socfmfl Fl 7tWVlmo oo! I assed the S011-on llesif, Y r-,SM ABLE, SL S , 1 RADIOS WASHERS CLEANERS 3 . REFRIGERATORS RANGES A Comphments of E' H' MONEY A Downyflake cDoughnut Shop 22 NORTH MAIN STREET ATTLEBORO, MASS E pp ES EE A .A A A EAA A L S S AS we Compliments of Compliments of VOGUE BEAUTY SHOPPE S. O. BIGNEY Complimentsof R A A AA RW RT FPEQUOTQE 1 ' C b MARY HAWTHORNE CANDIES me ar 222:00 'averages ATTLEBORO, MASS- 1 ATTLEBORO, MASS. ,Wifi j ' ii ' g,' '4'T, ,iii 'W' '7'L,, ' - E 'W 7 YN R SlLLlVlAN'S SHOE STORE Acomplimems of ILLMAN'S and 1-1oEs ARE 1 YNONYMOUS FIN E, S Attleborffs 0ldeetSl10e Store 43 Park Street so PARK STREET Tel. 952 ATTLEBoRo, MASS. 'Q Page Eighty-one TH E T A T T L E T A L E f'gggE1ghty.tw0 'Q ' fp' ff W- 15 TABLE DI: CUNTENTI HIGII SCHOOL PICTURE ...,. .... P age TATTLETALE STA FF ...,. DEDICATION ......... LIST OF FACULTS .............. PICTURES OF CLASS OFFICERS .,........ INDIVIDUAL PICTURES OF CLASS OF 1935. , XX HO'S V HO ,..,............ CLASS QUESTIONNAIRE .......,..... , I ESSAY ESSAY ESSAY ESSAY ESSAY ESSAY- H 41 ' ' ' CII LTL REU-Ruth Manter ..,.................,..,..... . 'KALLIED BRANCHES OF RADIO -Charles T. Goddard. . . . HVIRGILIAN USES AND ALLUSIONSI'-George O'Keefe . . . HA SOUND MIND IN A SOUND BODY -XViI1iam Lee. . . . . HTHE SIIPERNATURAL SENSEI'-Dorothea Murray, . . . w CLASS HIST ORY .........,....,,...,.,. .................. CLASS PROPHEC Y .... 'w CLASS XX ILL .....,.... ........,............,....................... CLASS COLORS, CLASS MOTTO, HONOR ROLL AND CLASS SONG .... ACFNOXX LEDGMENT .........,........,......................... A ADVERTISEMENTS ..... THE SAGA OF TIIE HIGH SCHOOL -Rita McCracken. , . . . . . L l ,, Y ww Xb9SU7219'b9j MQ' ,Qsg KQV? 0 rr -.11 .I r 11111 yur. 1 . . L vm: .RL .V m gw!5.3M3a3ggv2ligI 9! W Eegaggggfggw Qfgpdgga-iii f .gVA ,254 is f ' Wff' ki- Vp . if -- 2' VV 'Q-1 Vfxz ' V- 1' - ' ' ' 555 ' VV -V ' -V -- -- - -f -- '- 'V .' V- A 1. 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Suggestions in the Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) collection:

Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Attleboro High School - Tattletale Yearbook (Attleboro, MA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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