Governors Academy - Milestone Yearbook (Byfield, MA)
- Class of 1926
Page 1 of 136
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 136 of the 1926 volume:
“
- ...Ulu .IN if- l K- 'L .. -.. Mg.-v - N. . .'.'.-. K .,,. -41 vu , Q ' .-9:4 .':.g.-,gr-.'l'1 -1-'W --...4..4.-t... ,.',.4,:.x..:,,.,.,.4,. - .-:,,,,, - . -nf, .'.,,', ?5'!.g M ..f-.,-..4--.1,- 1 R . . . -- -- . ::. f .-1 ,. ..'-'-,ya-.r.4: J 1.11,-. J ':--,Lg -.-.-M.-'... .,, . ,.,,.,,.. ,V ..- - --:.::. -'-.-,wf ,-1,---,-1 : .nk H... ., ,. ., . . .,. ., ,.- . , .ga--..:, 11 -.-.1..-ng.--. 1:1--,fp-. 1. . .-gf.-1: .',..-::.-.-.15 rl ::..!.f.-:. f -5, f 4- -3.1.-.:: ' gagg- . n,.f-- .., -bw.. '-1 - .zu- --ff -'uxii 44- ,f,-.-.'!f5,'- 2:-.1 :i.'.-.M-lv, Q .1-:.f1.f,.' ,I q, .-.I I I4 ,ll V I , . I -U ..... . 1 ,.,. ' ,ff-4i.7'.A.:,5'S'ff-'157' - 1. - 1,' 1 1 :.: '!.'f'7:' ','.'-'w .,1., -. '.' . f -'f.'-s4.',-,I . 7 h .3 A .Ag 7.31, - J . ,.w.a .. .. '?lI1.f.-, 11-1'.E':'z -.E : .': 1 : L. - I -3.'.'f f.':':.'f E. 'Tw ' .Ti gg 4:11 ,4- '-1. ,:-:ffs- - -',,'.:.1.. .uf ..A.1-.-,.-,..-.e,-:,-- .'rx'.-,:..- -'----af-1 . H A . 4, ,ll 5 1 1 , 5 X1 1 :Q . 3.14 . 1 af.f.1.-.- a ' - ' I4 . ' 1:15 K .I -. . -1 x 'V '. k E -.X 4 - -l I -4 5: 2-9. at 'A .sn-.-rx s. 1 U .1 Biff- 'Zi i 1: . 11121 , ,. 5 ....... X- 1 ., . -.1 1:15, V --433, 2 ,-:.-- 4-2-: xx- 1 : 1 -87 .' 'He .. .... J . fx-ij . 1- ,. -KN ' Y UQ..L.,..- ...-.. .1-1--1.1. ., .... r . f 1'- 323' I :i.,ii,, l -- . -tu. -Af ..'.. .,- .L- .. . . . :E 5.....:.:' U. :- :-1- . . ....:-EJ!! B X , ,f 1 Qi I x a rr, L I N . ' K X P x J x ' I A X 1 I Q , 5 x -1 I N U 1 . 1 l Ny ' 1 H . I X I 1 . ' X Q X 1 ' l I A 10 I -. ' 1 s 1 Xi , ' x I 7 n 5 1 ' ,f e if ' 1 ' x . 1 I I ' n I1 '.,, ,J N if ' .- 1 H x . 4 , , 1 I .::?.-rf, P . -'1!5?!5.'Ef'-Q3 '-'7.-Zi:-35 . . l,'g3j75f,f-I'Ej5.-:E H...-' , ' Vg' 'r:'.':'7'- x ' H x K v ' N J N s C I 1 x , 1 .' 1 U V f, ' t If 1 A 1 I I1 u f K 1-,r ' -z-- -I - ' f.f.Q',r, ' .. . '...-an . .- R-A ' ' 1 :Pi ff '. .:.':-'1.7:':?P P'-fi:'.'.'E ' ...., . ..,,.,,..j...,. --:H a..: :.-.- .- if-'ff 5 1 f 'u':':': 1'-E . U Q 4. .....-... Qnmpliment,-sf nf Qfllyt qiugg nf 132.5 I 1 . V It u Q 6 Q . . A ' . v 1 ' 'o 'w A f ' N O s. ,' I ' O . ' Q . -1- ' . v' ' o -Q is ,.' fi 'v r . 6 0 ' ' , 5 I C O x 1 1+ ' 44. ' Q I Q C a I I . ff . Q.: gl 6 2 E ' 7 :J 0 v kat .6'.,'x 4 ga 3 A w. . -Ez 2? I if 0 of c ' Q. .'-'ia DESIGNED AND PRINfED sv NEWBURYPORT HERALD PRESS Nswaunvrdnv, mxss. o .QQ ' Q.. s 'Q 49, I. s Y. 0 1 , 5. 9 - 9 I . 5, fx H P! , , C1 -, , m Q . is 'z r .4, . w -f Q 0 I' . . 1 n A :.. .. g-ig 1 1 r -, ' 5 ' .1 A.-. ' 1'r: .'w.o 5 - I J' , MQ, ,If-f'f' . ?', 4 4 1 , - 1 f'.,Q 'Mm Y if ' , '!'v r 3-. -O x'1 Q, ff .4 , 1 , 'rl' A '31 a 1 , I - u 4 , S A A i' B . f- ox' - Jil ' -1 4-. '4g.l'. 56555110 Gybffilestonef IQ26 'fin args- 1753 - wa , vi U. M, full! 655116 eibftilestono PUBLISHED BY THE enior Glass of Tnmmer Cfzicaclemy GERALD MAY . . ROBERT JAMES MCGINLEY . LAWRENCE WILBUR KENNEY . NORMAN SCHULTZ . . JOHN WINTHROP HINDS Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Business Manager Art Editor Circulation Manager SOUTH BYFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS June, 1926 T H E M I L E S T O N E JOHN HAMILTON MORSE N '1 V1 T H E M I L In S I O N I4 . DEDICATION To Johfn Hamilton Morse, a graduate of Dummer iii the Class of 1885, in recogiiitiofh of his great services to the school and especially for his generous provision for the health and happiness of ourselves and our succes- sors, this book is affectionately dedicated. T I I I' IVI I I, IC S I 0 IN I CHARLES SAMUEL INGHAM, Headmaster B. A., Yale, 1891 Ph. D., Yale, 1896 T H E M I L E S T O N E APPRECIATION MR. FLOYD EAST JARVIS JAMES W. BRIDGES, '27 RUSSELL D. HAMILTON, '27 DR. CHARLES S. INGHAM I II I' NI I I I S 'I' U N ,I X IE!! A. I X, ..,. ik. xx yr Xxx Wi ix XXX I KX X WALTER JOHN FAHRELI. Assistant to the Headmaster A. B. Boston University, 1001 Mathematics AthIetic Director Faculty Ailviscr for Thi' .firvlmn I 11 I THE MILESTONE l PAUL WILLIAM LEHMANN A. B. Clark College, 1923 Junior School Instructor Faculty Adviser for the Dramatic Club Master of The Commons l12l FLOYD EAST JARVIS A. B. University of Michigan, 1916 Harvard Graduate School English Master of Moody House Faculty Adviser for The Mile- stone T H E M I L lu S 'I' O N l 554' , in -aw' iii FRANCIS JOSEPH REAGAN Bates, 1914 Lowell Normal School Registrar Commercial subjects Coach of Baseball and Basketball Master of Pierce Hall ltOlIlClt'l' TITUS l'lllLL 3. l 'cloin,1Ei23 Frcnch, Latin, Spunisli ll'b l13l T H E M I L E S T O N E I GILBERT MARION SMITH B. A. St. Stephens, 1925 French Latin Coach of Junior Football IMI PHILIP BALDWIN SKERIQYI' Harvard, 1920 History Coach of Golf Master of Purkins Hall 1 rw T Q' I II F M I I I S I O IN I. STEPHEN WIC BBEIQ Harvard, 1921 Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology Mathematics Science Mechanical Drawing Coach of Tennis I15I T H E M I L E S T O N E THE MASON COTTAGE x i ' V . . 1 . , 1 1 7 .x X W J , .X N XX XXv! , ., X x x X4 t 4 l17l THE MILESTQNE JOHN WINTHROP HINDS Milford, N. H. General Course Entered school 1921. Preparing for New Hampshire State President of the Senior Class '26 Student Council '24, '26 Junior Prom Committee '24, '25 Football Dance Committee '24, '25 Smoking Club '26 Goodwin Athletic Prize '24 Football '23, '24, '25 Basketball '22, '23 Captain '24, '25, '26 Baseball '22, '23, '26 Captain '24, '25 Track '24, '25, '26 HDOCH Here we have a strong silent man. Female hearts flutter at sight of this brute, and then crack and break as he goes on his unheeding Way. For John sticks faithfully to a certain blonde in the New Hampshire Hills. As an athlete we must bow to him. The best back that Dummer has ever produced, a star basket-ball player, dash man, shot-putter, anchor- man on the relay team, and catcher on the baseball team. Not so bad for one small boy. Doc is also a loyal member of the Smoking Club, and spec player, par excellence. His drag with the faculty is a thing marvelous to behold, and the envy of all us humble beholders. If We rated. as he does, school wouldn't keep. But we don't, so Dummer rolls on. In practicing for his future profession of plumbing, he usually for- gets to do his work, but now and then he is condescending, and prepares a lesson. A good scout, though, and Dummer will feel his loss. IO o'clockl Lights out! Five marks, Albianil llfil 'I' I I IC M I I . IC S 'I' C J N IC FI'lICI,JEIilCK I'flIAIiI.PfS AIJCXANIJICR xVlIlL'llC'?1tK'l', Mass. Scientific Fourse Entered school 19221 Preparing' for M. I. T. Manager of Football '23 Manager of Baseball '25 Manager of Hockey '26 Class Historian '23 Alex The boy with the tired eyes-more commonly known as Weary Willie . Alex is a Worker though, as the foot-ball and hockey teams can testify. He Was assistant manager of one, and manager of the other. Be- tween times he played trainer for the track team. But it always makes me sleepy to look at him. Last fall Alex started getting behind some cigars. It seems he couldn't control them, and they played all kinds of havoc with his fragile constitution. But he has gotten over that now, and is his former self. He is heading for M. I. T. Where men aren't men, but greasy grinds. lt is our personal opinion that he tries to look tired so his family will think he has been working. Just an emergency measure in case the grade should prove too steep. We think he'll make it though. We caught him reading Plato in his spare time, which is reason enough for our confidence. I19l T H E M I L E S T O N E r in DANIEL ADAMS BROWN Newbury, Mass, Classical Course Entered school 1922 Preparing for New Hampshire State I KlDan77 The quietest boy in Dummer Academy-so quiet, indeed, that one day Mr. Phillips asked in the study hall, Is Dan Brown still in school '? Whereupon Dan promptly gave pro-of of his presence with a few Well chosen words, breaking a silence of many Weeks. We haven't heard from him since. One could easily imagine Dan as the old owl perched on an oak who the more he heard, the less he spoke. But because he is so quiet and bashful, I can't find out anything about him and thereby hangs the tale. What ho! Dannello, my lord! I 20 I I T H E M I I I E S 'I' O N E .Y 5 JOHN SAMUEL BIZIIJGICS Baltimore, Md. Scientific Course lflntered school 19224 Preparing for the University of Pennsylvania Orchestra '26 Mid-year Prom Committee '26 Asst. Gym Instructor Football '2-1, '25 Tennis '25, '26 KKSZIYYIY1 The acme of manly beauty and physical perfection. Playmate of Earl Liederman and Charley Atlas. His best friend, a dumb-bell. Every other night this superman pulls from beneath his desk a Wicked looking contrivance, and amid cheers from the spectators, and much grunt- ing and sweating, proceeds to assume odd positions and make weird pass- es. Each month he collects magazines devoted to physical culture, but containing, as far as We can make out, numerous studies of the feminine nude with an occasional hairy ape. Sam was pivot man on the foot-ball team, a member of the track squad, and the tennis team. He engineered the Mid-Year Prom, taking the important part of Permanent Relief Man. When the cash-box got overloaded Sam relieve-d it promptly and permanently. But he Worked: hard, and the dance was a success, although Dr. Ing- ham seemed to have an uncomplimentary opinion of the orchestra. Next year Sam trots off to Penn, leaving Dummer with a place that will not be filled easily. y -l21l T H E M I L E S T O N E ROBERT CAMERON CARTER JR. Glens Falls, New York Classical Course Entered school 1925 Preparing for Hamilton College Football Squad '25 Tennis Squad '26 Nick Nick is one of our little cut-ups. French III is usually the scene of his straying from the straight and narrow path. He gets up and beats the boys mercilessly, showing neither fear nor favor. Up on the top floor of Commons where Nick resides there sometimes arise foul and rank odors. Scientists are unable to discover the reason for these, although Nick Schultz has advanced some logical theories. We are unable as yet to make these public, but hope to after a little more research work. One thing which does make us mighty proud of Nick, and that is the way he does the Charleston, or in fact any way he dances. Every muscle in his body comes into play in a sort of cross between the shimmy and the Saint Vitus dance. Nick went out for football, but hurt his leg. He dragged it around in a plaster cast for a good while. Before that he was a very promising drop-kicker and punter. He had a nasty habit of sticking his tongue out at peop-le, and was almost dropped from the squad when he caused several members to burst into tears by this unnecessary roughness. But he was a good sort, and one who will always bring a smile when we think of him. l22l T H E lVl I L E S 'I' O N IC LAWRENCE WILBUR KENNEY Lynnfield, Mass. Classical Course Entered school 1924 Preparing for the University of Pennsylvania Student Council '25 Chairman fsecond term! '25 Football Dance Committee Dramatics '26 Business Manager of the Milf'- stmze '26 Football '24 Captain '25 Track '25 Hockey '25 Captain '26 Baslgetball '26 Baseball '25, '26 Smoking Club '26 lKLaF1,y7! The toothless wonder. We always rub our eyes and throw the last load of bootleg away when we see Larry with, without and then with his front teeth. To-o much football has played havoc with his nippers. Larry plays football, basketball and hockey, and runs on the track team in spare time. ' He fondly believes that he plays the saxaphone, but the general opin- ion seems to be to the contrary. He is a member of the Smoking Club, and ofttimes joins Smiling Robert in spreading tobacco juice over the mural decorations. Larry is a member of the Student Council , which may or may not be to his credit. He is not the sort of boy to take advantage of his position, so We do not resent his Lights Out or Five Marks. Larry is going to follow his father's footsteps in the cruel, co-ld world. His father being a shoe manufacturer, his job should be comparatively easy. We rather think he will get ahead because he is a consistent plugger, and is not given to unmanly dissipations. At least we wish him luck. Well, here we go! l23l THE MILESTONE - GERALD MAY Boston, Mass. Classical Course Entered school 1921 Preparing for Williams Stud-ent Council '24, '25 Chairman '26 ffirst terml President of the Class of 1926, '25 Vice President '23, '24 Associate Editor of the Archon '25, '26 Editor-in-chief of the Milestone '26 Dramatic Club '26 Manager of the School Store '25, '26 . Prize for best record in the Junior School '22 Moody Kent prize in English '23, '25 2nd prize Ambrose Prize Speaking Contest '24, '25 Associate Harvard Club Prize '25 Captain of the 2nd team, football '24 gg. . K Basketball Squad '25 Varsity football '25 uJ'eI,I,yu Men may come and men may go, but May will always have his Latin. Considering the violent and almost vulgar language with which he characterizes this dear old subject We must bow to him for his persistent study. We caught him doing it the first night of a new term, and ever since t'hen we have gazed with awe at this prodigy. Jerry played on the foot-ball team, and then decided to take a rest. He joined John Bridges and his aspiring, but not perspiring gymnasts. Jerry is an Archoner and a Milestoner, especially the latter, being the power plant of this publication. It has netted him a lot of Work and a lot of days off. But he earned them, so we shouldn't kick. He is the boy who introduced a particularly fine specimen of felin- ity into the time-worn halls of the Commons. That cat was the joy and fear ol' his life, and caused him beaucoup trouble in its day. It was also Lhe two-yard dash champion. We can picture Jerry as a college trained cat trainer. l2f1l T Il E M 1 L E S T O N E ROBERT JAMES McGlNLEY So. Grovelandn Mass. Classical Course Entered school 1924 Preparing- for Brown University Associate Editor of the Milestone 1926 Associate Editor of the Archon '25 '26 Smoking Club '25, '26 Dalton Hamor Prize '25 Baseball '25, '26 Track '25, '26 Basketball '26 ldMaC!9 Smiling Robert, the Haverhill youth. Bob is one of our star athletes, lead-off man on the relay team, a consistent winner of the twenty and three hundred, forward on the basket-ball team, and about the best baseball player We have produced. He is also one of our Well-known Spanish athletes, or bull-throwers. This is perhaps his strongest point. As a member of the Smoking Club he leaves little to be desired. Some of the choicest ornaments on our Walls are Where Bob has parted with some of his Lumberjack Cut Plug. He is also a good spec player, a thing Which arouses admiration in the breast of all Dummer youths. Bob appears to be of a missionary calibre. After hearing him stub his toe one day We think he might not be so good. Either that or very good. But We all have our Weaknesses and We all have toes. So We cannot let that little fault overbalance his good points. Why, listen man . . . etc .... etc. , l25l T H E M I L E S T O N E WILLIAM C. MORRISON Bradford, Mass. Classical Course Entered school 1925 Preparing for Dartmouth Track Squad '26 Tennis Squad '26 J L HBHI77 Here we have the only boy in our class who has so many girls that he has to spend days in trying to decide which one to bring to a dance. Wil- liam has yet to painfully learn that no man can serve two sorority sis- ters. Bill's greatest ambition, made of stern stuff, is to be able to write his name W. Charles Morrison instead of William C. He has been brazen enough to try it once-but only once. I hate to see a good man go wrongg early in the year Bill fell under the evil influence of Horr and May and has never been the same since. But nevertheless he is a good fellow and still brushes his teeth regularly, although he should learn to let the women aloneg in fact, his actions in the Strand Theatre in Newburyport necessitated a letter from the mianager- Ilaverhill matrons please take notice. l26l 'l' 1 l E lVI I I i E S 'l' 0 N IC HAROLD ALFKICD SLATER Pine Brush, New York Scientific Course Entered school 1925 Preparing for New York Univei sity HI-121179 This is the boy who made Steinmetz die of a broken heart. Everything electrical, or anything electrical, lights, door-bells, radios and curling irons are as simple to him as he is to us. He has his room wired with burglar alarms, electric mouse-traps, magnetic fly seducers and, towering over everything a bottle filled, not with stove-blacking, but the enemy of that insidious thing that makes your best friend a total flop. As an athlete Hal was content to be an interested observer of us lesser and more low-brow mortals. He did occasionally favor the gym class with his presence, but otherwise was content to rest on his laurels. He has preserved that school-girl complexion wonderfully, but his chief pride and joy is his hair, always smoothly combed, and reflecting the sunlight. Usually there is a fly or two who have skidded and broken their wings, or a layer of dust such as one sees on varnished tables. But he is a good boy, really reads the Bible every night, and writes to his blonde mama every day. f igme day we expect to hear great things of him-some day-not very ar 0 . l27l T H E M I L E S T O N E RALPH EMERTON SLEEPER Rowley, Mass. Scientific Course Entered school 1921 Preparing for New Hampshire State Baseball '24, '25, '26 usleepyn This generation of Dummerites will always remember Ralph Sleeper as the little boy who went around with needles in the toes of his shoes for use on one's posterior extremity in classes. He used to be full of such playful and highly entertaining, as well as elevating, tricks until after the Junior Prom when a subtle change was noticeable. His hair was neatly combedg his shoes were neatly polishedg he began to carry a finger-nail file. In the spring a young man's fancy often turns to . . . etc. Still we can hardly think this of our star left-fielder, but evidently it is the sad, sad, bitter truth. l28l T H E M I L E S T O N E WESLEY JOHN WHITE Portland, Maine Classical Course Entered school 1924 Preparing for Tufts Football '24, '25 Track '25 Captain '26 Baseball '25 Captain '26 Basketball '26 Charley Here We have the wo-man-hater 'par excellence'. To mention women to Charley is the same pleasant occupation as selling red-flannels to a bull. We Wonder if this boy will ever get a girl. It is very doubtful, but time may erase some of his prejudices. Chuck is an athlete. That is not sarcasm. To see him win the 1000, the 600, and then to open up a lead on the relay is enough to make anybody perform an undignified series of acrobatic stunts in an adjacent snow-drift. He has yet to be headed on the track. Besides playing in the backfield on the football team, and on the basketball team, Charley is the captain and pitcher of our nine. . Cfharles is the proud possessor of a letter from the Bell Telephone Co., saying that they trace their sudden increase in business directly to him. g7VebW51nted to reproduce that letter here, but modesty-his of course- or a e. i I291 I ' ' ' x l H 1 Hllllfl . 75,505 'lx -1 4- ff , all .v NW 3. ff! 13,523 T X Wai , A-1 + if 5 ik E iii? QQZQ - M5 514 1 2 wwf .rx Z 0111011173 30412 2 , ,,,,.,, ,,,,, . . Cmss l'lzo1'Hxf:c'Y 1 rw I CL f , Jai ' xxx! 1. 1- 552233 n N Z-:X 04 Y , M N f' Q - .. +1-. M0 W '1 R H 'N f i M f W ff A A J 0 f l k wnws- V ' HV' Keri 1 -r ? H Nu. H was llliilfhmlifli 5335+ Q g i. 2 I .'I'W U 7 ,V '-va 2 '- .,f ,, 'fu' . ' 5 121' v , 1 - CWrnawwz-eggI,m11nnxu1l.,. Amlllillilllllll llllll m -a'::a:LN HE '7 5 kv -.M ill . f : W's C22 ' ' aww nillfllil liilIUIIZIMIIAIIYUAWIDIK 45 X- Ta-., 1 --ow-fwkwsrigx x xx X flue! mf .,..,.... , , ,Dems J35, AS.,5c, 5 Mg , , E.-.sv A3 1'ALmNr.. X X M -'-f,f'+-'fm 9'i99 ' f T'-Fl ' 5 'NX :X gi, ' K - 75' . ' W-V 'WW ' ' ' X A, ' 4 ' 5' Q -- '--72' ' : Q' 'Egg as-5 if fl .SW , X 4 I I Hg' I N , . Q ff. ..-- . --A' 4 ,. .,,..A .. - - 5 x ' J ZW -If .u sw. - - ,,,.,tl..f,I, .1,-,-:,,- n f 7 , ,N 4-1 M '-f'f,'.- NIM, .u'd -f'1'2:flp 1' 1 5 -I ' ffffw Y A W n::ss if' 1 I JIIIIQ : ff I, K 6' ',.' -1,'-'f' -,i'r,- ' ' '15, ff V A f WWW - 151923 X A wif' I A' F' Q -' ' XI' ' if E 53 ff 2' nn -H 7 I T 1 I V AN 'x f ,5' fl ,Ii i Ig, 1 M - -if ! ,.f f' 5 1 V 4L' f 'W -, - A f QA - .- K X E- J - 1 A,,. ao t xxx X f .ii lzaomaaarmiunxunv 'l:m:s1:mm:u::l N ' ' --.vgsrxsazsx ,g -1 -'- '.....----.... 'wx X ' H '-' W-R.: -.,---.-15--..-Tv' ,.a.rg-5-Q,Xviw-ww Y2'1,fQN , dim m R N f ,.Qx..iNh ii--.gfifggggfy lu. ' x X :z.'f.1f:Nff'Xx 4' I' -. 1 :MH - XMK-v :w '4A Af Wifi' I' XKQQNXxxfxx.55RE-Ywx 9 2415, L X ' I , . 'W 0 N w WW ' V '11-.. , ' ' .i5 .1a,fZ'-'I yy '93 N ' I 0, ' X H , X ' lx N 2 ff 1 Y I fl T f !I I f J' sj - 5 ull W Uawllliifiiwli' -I I I I !Zla'll2ll1!l12lII f CLASS PROPH1-sm' l31l T H E M I L E S T O N E PEIRCI-3 HALL 1 f' nm! mu R' . 5. 6 xg: K ,MN X ' ,,'1,, , Q.: , - W N 't 'I'! , ,',,,,, A 'J I, ,4 , V ,lw , I. J 'W1.w ., N , v , , . N 3 , . ' W 4 ' f, 1 - . I ..- ff-f ,A . , , 1, ff, W ,rx f a. I : : 1 W V s U 4 N ' Y W 4 , 1 1 UN V k X ' A W N z 9 h V F 'rv 2 1 ' 1. iggyuygiq 4 , , V W I , 41 Ing ' I-... jjj r .N nw K- H MIIIIIIMII I . xx' . ,XXX 1327 , f , f ' + V ' rl 'f 2 lx '. ! ,' KN kf L ,NM .V ' , ' . , I .HM A N I ll KI i ,A 5 N y, I s ' 4- , .WY U NL 'ff v 5 inf W? f ez Q, 5? Fla,-,NK Ln' Nlvlixwxrw, I'1-csidmt U - T H E M I L E S T O N E OFFICERS Frank Lee McKinney ............... .... P resident George Murchie Haley .... ............ .... V i ce-President John Phillip English ..... .... S ecretary Elvin Hathaway Cox... ....Treasurer JUNIOR CLASS ROLL Albiani, Peter Joseph Budgell, Walter James, 2nd Calderwood, John Dimock Cox, Elvin Hathaway English, John Phillip Fcarnside, Thomas Ashley Haley, George Murchie Hamilton, Russell Dike Jackson, Eben Lane, Warren Spencer i341 I Lawson, Leonard Stuart McKinney, Frank Leo Padula, Alfred Ferdinand Pickering, Norton Wright Pillsbury, Henry Bourne Sawyer, Lawrence White Scott, Russel Hermon Sloane, Ronald Robie Van Ettcn, Jack Seaman Woodward, Edmund Foster 1928 2 - 'WYQ . , 71 1 ,. 9 , X Rf ff Mill fy f X1 , If JY uw Fwik' Ifllmmcxl GA1cF1E1,1v HART, Prusiclent l35 T H E M I L E S T O N E Fifi' .......... OFFICERS Edward Garfield Hart ...... ............... .... P r esident Richard Chapin Griggs ....... .... .... V i ce-President David Nues Carvalho Hyams .... .... S ecretary Carl John Edward Gove .......... , . ....................... .... C lass Historian SOPHOMORE CLASS ROLL Hottger, William Carl Chase, Roland Phillips Fitzsimmons, Robert LaF0nd Gove, Carl John Edward Griggs, Richard Chapin Hart, Edward Garfield lfiiil Hyams, David Nues Carvalho Martinez, Ramon Moulton, Richard Hammond Palmer, Stephen' Billings Van Etten, Willct Dec 7 Xgxxyxx fr rl I929 f , , ROY XVILLIAM LOVETT, Pl'C:4idCIlt 1? 21' 5 A W f 'ffnlsfx W4 fl ww I U.l yy s1Mg ,ab f r fn wWJ V -'f,, 4 .. L ...-i-. s..-1-1-.1 T H E M I L E S T O N E Q -e ...,....l,,Tnl OFFICERS Roy William Lovett .... ............ .... P r esident Conway Schultz ....... .... V ice-President Foster L. Brown .... .................................. .... S e cretary FRESHMAN CLASS ROLL Best, George Edgar Lovett, Roy William Brown, Foster Linwood Miller, Richard Burch, Edwin Charles Schultz, Conway Chandler, John Parker Hale, Jr. Steinharter, Lawrence Charles Cox, Mann Ulric Walker, Malcomb Swain Cutler, Granville Keith Whyte, Howard Thomas 1381 21 H 1 1 1 ' 7 1 I I M 1 ,I w 1 I i 1 I I I I 1 1 4 I . 4 I 1 1 n 7 N' f J!!! if 4 Q I f mf I 'I f I A 1,5 -V Q ,V ,f X K K X l s I -wlflx 1,-- Q X' 9 av- Q- Q Q ' 'i7X43'1i.CX ff .A ,-'fj :. Z- Z? D ' . WW, KENNETH C1.r:vE1,AN1n Brzu., Plwsifiwt l39l I W fi' X Q T H E M I L E S T O N E OFFICERS Kenneth Cleveland Bell ....... ............... .... P r csident Wilbur Hammond Russell, Jr. ................ .... V ice-President Robert Appleton Hale .................................... .... S ecretary l401 JUNIOR SCHOOL Bell, Kenneth Cleveland Chase, Charles Stuart Fernandez. Carlos Grant, Owen, Jr. Haag, Jesse Robert Hale, Robert Appleton Learned, John Palmer Mc-Kenzie, Stuart Arnold ROLL Morril, Frank Forrest Ortega, Pablo Llata Russell, Wilbur Hammond Smith, Talbot Tate, James Donge Wagner, Richard Daniel Walker, Thomas Simpson Whitehead, Walter, Jr. I II E M I L E S T SPECIAL STUDENTS Bridges, James W. Schultz, Norman Horr, Albert Winslow Bridges, John S. Budgell, Walter J. Cutler, Granville K. F-earnside, Thomas A. Gove, Karl K. E. Hamilton, Russell D. Horr, Albert W. Jr. Hyams, David N. C. Kenney, Lawrence W Fernandez, Carlos Grant, Owen Haag, Jesse R. Learned, John P. HONOR ROLL UPPER SCHOOL O N In Ladds, Edward G. G. Lovett, Roy W. Martinez, Ramon May, Gerald McGinley, Robert J. Mlorrison, William C Pickering, Norton W. Schultz, Conway Steinharter, Lawren LOWER SCHOOL IUIIllllIlllllllllllllmllulll ' f r'-T-F ce C. McKenzie, Stuart A. Ortega, Pablo L. Tate, James D. Walker, Thomas ll U s 4 T H E M I L E S T O N E STAIRWAY IN MANSION HOUSE M T 9 M I K , g. I XX N as T H E M I L E S T O N E ONE AMONG MANY Milestone Short Story Contest. 1926. Won by Russell D. Hamilton, '27 The great war that was waged from August, 1914, to November, 1918, was the most momentous of history. This story is of that struggle, it happened to many. My tale begins in December, 1917. I. HE recruiting sergeant looked around the bare recruiting office. He was tired, and the whole office reflected his fatigue after the first draft rushes. Many scratches of shoes of all descriptions marred the rail in front of the sergeant's desk, and the railing sagged as if tired after a long fight. Everything but the files and the typewriter were covered with dust. The door at this moment creaked open on un- oiled hinges. . A young man entered. He was tall and well built, he had brown wavy hair, brown eyes, a handsome nose, and a smiling mouth. The ser- geant looked him over critically. He seemed a cool specimen of young American manhood. He bent the rail farther as he leaned on it. I've decided to join your army, he said calmly. Name ? said the sergeant shortly. James Reid. Age '? Twenty. There were other questions of no importance to us. Let me take the time to tell something about James Reid, aged twenty. The preceding June he had graduated from preparatory school after loafing through six years attempting to get an education. When the call for men came, he l 44 l T l l E M l L E S T O N IC had entered in his first year at college and was about to flunk out. He chose the War for recreation. A The sergeant spoke again, What branch of the service d'you Want to enter? What branches you got? The sergeant looked up, he had judged this fellow correctly as being cool. Artillery, cavalry, infantry,-- Put me in that. All right, said the sergeant, sign here. James signed. Jim's company went to Paris to show up the French army. An in- definite stay in gay Paree before the front and its discomforts. Paris greeted the Americans with delight, they had paraded to show the civil- ians what a few months training and l'ecole du soldat did to a recruit. Later they were free to parade alone. Jim and another, a school friend who had lived in Paris and knew, France, French, and the French people, were parading the Champs Elysees. Wally Atwell, the comrade in arms, was shorter and lighter than Jim, had light hair and eyes and a way with army slang whiclh aroused the envy of the recruits wlhen they first heard it. He was point- ing out sights of interest with all the art of an experienced sight-seeing conductor to an unheeding Jim. Jim's eyes were on the French populace. Most of the men were soldiers, some wounded. Jim wondered if he would Walk the Champs Elysees again with a bandage or a crutch, maybe. There were women-Jim noted the younger feminine with satisfaction. He broke into his friend's discourse. Say, bo, these Frog mamselles are some queens, ness pah ? Mebbie you'd like to meet one, huh ? returned the interrupted Wally, who had been duly impressed by the French mamselles on his own first visit. Now I know a nice little doll who lives down the Avenoo a way. Tha's me all over, Mabelg lead me to her, pardnerf' affirmed James. They continued in silence and finally turned in at a mansion on the left. Jim reviewed his prep school French rapidly and looked at the house. Rich, huh? he inquired. Darn tootin', said Wally, Now lay off the slang, you're goin' to I45l T H E M I L E S T O N E meet up with high class Parisians. They don't speak the vulgar army dialect. Combien can you speak French, huh ? A little, mon Vieux. KA Well, if you're not sure of your verb forms, don't get too flashy with your conjunctions. You might fall into a subjunctive or something. ll Oh, yeah, I remember those lousy things. Sure, I'll be careful. They went up to the fron door, and Wally pulled the bell. They heard it ring from within. They waited. Wally looked back over the lawn and drive with a gaze that memory illuminated. Yeah, he said, same old place. Boy, I'll sure be glad to see Yvonne again. She's one pretty girl. Yvonne's her name ? Oui, now don't forget that 'oui' means 'yes', and 'non' means 'no'. An' remember the flukey constructions. I hear the maid coming. The door was opened by an attractive French maid who said some- thing to Wally that Jim did not understand. He di'dn't know as much French as he thought, it wasn't his fault he didn't pay attention in classes at school. The boys used to fool so. Wally answered in like manner, fluent and rapidg and the maid ush- ered them into a long hall tastefully decorated and excellently furnished. She took their hats and left them. Jim started after her, but Wally chcked him. Where d'you think you're goin', you big embus-kay? This ain't no bread line. She's just gone to tell the family. I'm her.e Don' be in a hur- ry. This is Paris, not Camp Devensf' The maid returned, spoke to Wally, and held aside a curtain. Wally stepped boldly by it, meekly followed by Jim, into a large salon as fash- ionably fitted out as the hallway. A grand piano stood in the farther cor- ner, a table stood near the large French windows opening onto a charm- ing garden. On the left was a fireplace with a fire that threw wierd shadows on the divan in front of it. Some easy chairs, a large bookcase, and two reading lamps completed the furnishings. Their presence was announced, and a lady seated at the piano turned toward them. She was a portly, pleasant-faced woman, with graying hair and brown eyes. She saw Wally and came forward to greet him. Ah, she said, Monsieur Atwell, je me souvien bien de lui. Je suis l 46 l T H E M I L E S T O N E heureuse de vous voir encore. Yvonne serait aussi. Mais qui est votre ami? Jim followed this maze as best he could gathering that she was glad to see Wally and wanted to know who he was. He didn't get quite what she said about Yvonne. Ile looked around for Yvonne-whoever she was. Wally was speaking, Madame Arnoton, c'est Monsieur James Reid, un bon ami du mien. Jim, this is Madame Arnotonf' Jim never remembered how he got through that introduction, but he managed somehow. Wally and Madame talked French rapidly, Jim con- tributed to the silence. However, the wine that was brought was excel- lent, and he gave up his attempt to follow the conversation. He was sit- ting on the divan watching the fire and considering the age of the wine when he felt someone sit down beside him. Madame and Wally were ab- sorbed in the talk, oblivious to all else. Jim turned and looked. Brown eyes, pert nose, and cute, smiling mouth set in an oval face framed in dark brown hair greeted and refreshed his glance. Gray dress edged with fur, trim ankles below the fringe, and high-heeled French shoes, she sat altogether adorable in the firelight. She laughed the could see pearly, even teeth beneath the laughing lipsb, Vous ne parlez pas Francais '? A light, happy voice she had. No sorrow in this home, he thought. Aloud he said, Not so good. Parlez-vous Anglais, huh? A little, mon vieux, she replied and laughed again. That was just what 'he had said. She might have seen them coming up the drive and overheard his remark. She was certainly pretty, but she couldn't compare, in his estimation, with the little blonde who had smiled at him back on the Avenoo . He had turned away, now he be- came aware that she was watching him. He faced her, she dropped her eyes hurriedly. Madame Arnoton saw her then. Introductions were again in order, Jim rose with Wally. Madame performed the honors. Monsieur Reid, Mlle. Yvonne Arnotonf' The conversation became more general then. Both women displayed a good general knowledge of English-better, anyway, than Jim's knowl- edge of French. Mademoiselle proved to be an artiste, and Madame proud- l47l T H E M I L E S T O N E ly showed Yvonne's pictures. She had painted several after the battle scenes from life while on Y. M. C. A. work. However the visit could not last always, soldiers must return to their quarters. Wally and Jim had to leave if Madame would permit. Madame would if it was necessary, and do come again before leaving Paris. Yvonne saw them to the door, let them kiss her hand-long fingered, delicate, ex- quisitely manicuredg Jim felt a square of paper pressed into his hand. He slipped it into his pocket, forgot about it. They were going down the drive. Yvonne stood at the door watching them-the taller of them. They gained the avenue and disappearedg the door closed slowly. II. The company went to rest billets at a little town on the Marne River after five days at Paris. Croutte-sur-Marne was not Paris, but then it was not the front either, although to the north and east could be heard the rumbling and growling of the artillery. The company attached itself to the 1st Battalion of Marines, which was badly cut to pieces after long days of attacking and holding from Hill 142 on the right to Vaux on the left. The veterans took little interest in the warg but to Wally and Jim and certain others, who had not received their baptism of fire yet, it was a source of much speculation. The Bois-de-Belleau-Bouresches area, scene of hard and unpleasant fighting, was not far away, and the loud and con- tinuous noise of guns could be heard in the direction of Chateau-Thierry, up the river. July 14th came, and the noise of' the artillery grew nearer: Croutte was in range of the Boche heavies. Early the next morning Jim was awakened by a heavy crash and a trembling of the earth. There were shoutsg a sergeant yelling, Turn out! Turn out! Get t' hell outside and fall in ! Jim tumbled out of his blanket and was thrown to the earth by a violent concussion somlewhere outside. He picked himself up, saw others do tlhe same, grabbed his helmet and gun, and ran out the door. Soldiers crowded the street, Jim found his company and fell in next to Wally, who shouted in his ear, Nine inchers I Later, I hope these babies fall where I am not I The battalion stood under arms until the shelling stopped regretting the lost sleep-the last for many. That day there was further shelling, and the heavy guns were near- er. The battalion held itself in readiness all that day and night. At noon on the 16th the rolling kitdhens left, and toward evening the companies l48l T ll E M I L E S T O N IC fell in and left also. They passed through other towns at which other bat- talions of the Fifth Marines had been quarteredg they passed the sixth regiment. One by one the companies took the road until the whole Marine Brigade was hiking down the Marne in the lengthening shadows. A long column of camions drawn up at the side of the road greeted the eyes of the 1st Battalion as they rounded a curve in the road. The veterans growled. Camions! Recroots, set yo'selves for the comfort of sardinesf' Yeh, we're goin' somewhere uncomfortable. Jim had heard of camionsg now he examined them closely. Small wheels, no springs, heavy truck body, noisy engineg these make up the camion, the sour milk of war conveyances. The platoons crammed themselves in, and the long train started. Jim recollected the crowded cars in which they had come up from Parisg crowded then, the wide open spaces now. The men conversed in short sen- tencesg there is not much room even for talk in camions. Omigosh, what an ungodly racket. . . . When do we disembark, huh? . . . Dunno, but I hope it's dam' soon .... Boys, how in hell do we sleep in these things? . . . Say, this guerre is wearin' on a guy . . . In the mid-forenoon of the next day the line stoppedg the files oozed out on cramped legs and fell in on the right of the road. They tightened slings and settled equipment for a long and forced march. The command came, Squads right .... March! Company after company, the first Battalion filed by, then other battalions of the 5th and after them the 6th. After a day and a night of continuous marching with only short rests, Jim was too tired even to swear. The night had been the most trying ex- perience he had ever been through. Thy had marched through a wood on a road crowded with three files of traffic, all moving forward. On the right was a ditch six feet deep into which men fell and broke arms and legs. The darkness was impenetrable, and eachman in the darkness had to follow the route by holding on to the pack of the man in front of him. It had rained. Dawn came. The column at last halted, and the men looked eagerly for food not of which was to be seen or smelt. The officers went into con- ference. The files waited at ease. Finally the knot of officers broke up, and attack formation was formed in the wood. Again the soldiers wait- ed, this time with bayonets fixed and all aslant in the sun. Jim felt what was going to happeng there was going to be a- The air suddenly roared as the artillery in the rear opened fire. Shells l 49 l T H E M I L E S T O N E of all calibres shrieked and howled through the dawn to land in the Boche defenses only rods away. Jim saw his captain's hand go forward, the line started moving-also forward, following the barrage which lasted only five minutes. It ceased with an abruptness which left Jim's ears ringing, torturing his head. He considered his position. He was on the left flank of the line, Wally on his right, and a tall, rangy corporal on his left. The Boche coun- ter barrage came, but it was weak and only bothered the support columns to the rear. The line was right on the edge of the recent shell-scarred area vsfhere the Allied barrage had done its worst. Trees were lopped off, uprotted, splitg barbed wire entanglements were wiped out, rifle pits ex- terminatedg such were the marks of the heavies and the seventy-fives. Jim wondered where the enemy was. Suddenly a rifle cracked, a few more followedg a man in the center of the line went down on his face. Jim stumbled over some wire and fell just as a machine gun opened fire from the tangle directly in front. He saw the lanky corporal, a veteran of Chateau-Thierry, take a grenade from his pocket, jerk out the pin with his teeth, and hurl it toward the chattering gun. There was a heavy, coughing explosion as the bomb burst, and the gun ceased firing. Jim staggered to his feet and with Wally and the corporal rushed the emplacement. There was a dead German across the gun and his countrymen were trying to drag him from the mechanism. A small crater showed where the grenade had exploded. There were two living Germans in the pit, one of them aimed a pistol, and the corporal fired his rifle-exit Boche. Wally took care of the other. The three climbed out of the pit and looked around. On the rigiht was another Maxim holding its front against all comers. Jim could see the operatorg he kneeled and fired, and the Boche collapsed. The line once more advanced. The battle swept on into the wo-od held by three lines of Maxim ma- chine guns. Men silenced them by killing the crew from behind trees, silenced them by flank attacks and grenades, silenced them by blind, fur- ious rushes leaving a trail of dead and wounded, but always getting one or two raging Marines into the emplacement, and then woe to the Boche who resisted. Fighting was fast and furiousg machine guns dinned, and men cursed. Cries of, Kamaraden, kamaradenln could be heard above the noise of weapons. There were other sounds, clotted and unpleasant. Jim wondered, in the thick of the fight Why he did not feel tired. He I 50 1 'l' I l E M I L E S T O N E had been two days without food and three without sleep, but he had lost his weariness the minute the first machine gun had barked. It was the same with Wally and the other meng they had dropped their fatigue and jumped forward, yelling, toward the German lines. Wally found time to pant, Bo, ain' this one dam' good fight. Look at the guys floppin' over. lf I get out of this without gettin' plugged . . . lt was a bon fight after all. The second German line had been passed, and the third line opened up on the advancing battalion. The tall corporal fell, a bullet in 'his leg. He waved to Jim and shouted, Got a bon blighty. See yuh in Paris, ness pah '? Jim was glad the corporal had not been badl yhurt. He and Wally swerved to the left out of range and revenged their comrade with gren- ades. The third line was taken, and the woods began to tlhin out. The fight roared out onto the rolling Wheatland. To the right was a great paved highway, astride this road their first objective. Near it was the smoking ruin of a farmhouse from which a nest of Maxims opened a flanking fire on the troops emerging from the wood. The men checkedg the raking fire ntowed dow nthe thickest part of the line. Jim saw Wally go down, the blood from a wound in his thigh red- dening the kahki. The war became deadly personal at once. Jim hurled a grenade hastily and rushed at the gun that had hit Wally. He saw his lieutenant and another private rush too. Jim's grenade had silenced the gun, but the men that had not been killed by the explosion were very much alive. The three Americans swarmed over tihe parapet of the emplace- ment and into the pit. A huge Boche rifleman swung around to face Jim, who .then looked down the longest gun he had ever seen. There was a flash of flame, a report, and Jim felt the bullet rip through his right cheek bone tearing the eye muscles. He fell forward onto the smoking barrel of the German's gun throwing his own rifle as he fell. The red- dened bayonet sank into the Hun's flesh. The guns were finally captured, and the attack halted to reform and to let the tanks take the lead. The Boche had been shelling the wood, but he now shortened his range, and shells bgan to fall around the farmhouse. Directed by airplanes above, the shells crashed down into a roaring murk of smoke and dust and flickers of red and green flame. The road was so-on a mass of shell holes. A tank, passing near the farm, had its front blown off and was disabled by an explosion directly behind it. The at- tack was reformed and moved on into the wheat .... The crackling of l5ll T H E M I L E S T O N E machine guns told of new obstacles to overcome. The machine of war moved up behind the advance. III Yvonne Arnoton closed the door slowly and went back to the salon where her mother was seated once more at the piano, playing softly. Yvonne sat down again on the divan and took up her album of paintings. However, her mind was not on art, she spoke. Mother, wasn't he nice ? Yes, dear, and I was very glad to see him again, said Madame. But I don't mean Wallace, I mean his friend, Jimeef' KC Monsieur Reid was indeed very handsome and tall. Such nice eyes and hair. You know, he reminds of fatherf' it Yes, said Madame, your father was handsome too-when he was young. He has kept his looks well for an older man. This young Ameri- can reminds me also of your father. If he were only a French type . . . Yvonne came over and leaned her pretty head against the mothe1 s shoulder. After a pause, she spoke. Mother, this Jimee .... Like father, I am in . . Madame stopped her. Yvonne left the next day to return to Y. M. C. A. work behind the lines. She took with her a sketching outfit, as she considered this a good opportunity to get some good scenes. For several days her work kept her busy, since there had been heavy fighting the preceding days in that sec- tor. However, one afternoon she was off duty for a while, and, taking a canvass and some pencils, walked through a wood by a shell-torn road toward the scene of a recent battle. The dead had not been removed yet, but grave digging parties were at work. A ruined farmhouse attracted attention as a good subject. It had been the scene of a hard fought machine gun nest, dismantled guns and riddled bodies showed the price paid for its capture. A disabled tank stood at the edge of a nearby shell crater, the front end blown entirely away. She she up a portable easel, arranged 'her canvass, and set her pencils for use. She turned her attention to the figures. The carriage of the nearest gun was splintered. Two dead Boche soldiers lay near the re- l52l 1. l 'l' H E M l L E S 'l' O N IC mains and another one a little farther away. On the parapet lay one doughboy, face downward, a pistol still clutched in an outstretched hand. Another American soldier decorated the shambles of the emplacement. He was lying, also face down, across the knees of a large Boche infantryman. Yvonne considered this mang she should like to get his facial expression. She climbed down the farther side of the pit, took the American by the shoulder strap, and heaved him over on his back. One of the out- flung hands struck her as she did so. A stub of a pencile and a dirty piece of paper fluttered to the torn earth. There- was writing on the paper al- most illegible beneatlh the grime. She barely made it out. In a small fminine hand-her own-was written, 1 love you, very much, Jimee, and below in a weak scrawling masculine, And I you-Yvonne. She turned to the dead face, it was almost unrecognizable. Although streaked with blood, with a smashed-in cheek bone, and dirty, the face was Jim's, the mouth smiling even while drawn witvh pain. Yvonne kissed the bloody, stiff lips, and her tears made salty rivulets on his whole cheek. The sun set over the quiet battlefield on the spot where the road merged with the horizon. Silhouetted against the red glow, Yvonne re- urned sadly to the Y. M. C. A. headquarters. They moved that night to another section. The Bocse once again shelled the vicinity of the farm- ih-ouse, feeling for a so-ft spot. The ruin was ground to dust. The broken tank was erased. i iz milf, 5 ahxswlxn 5 ,ln ,, r ,Z 6 rW71?6's72gQf'i1 , i le 9 7' 1 l53l T H E M I L E S T O NT E 4 In waters of an unknown land, Where sorrow is not known, The voyage of my ship began And out to sea 'twas blown. For years, I think, my ship will sail, The waters of life's seag I'll do my best and will not fail, My trust will be in Thee. If ever woe should come my way, My ground I'll always stand, And never will I flinch away But make myself a man. When darkness comes upon the day And night winds cover meg Successfully, my friends can say, His ship has sailed the sea. R. A. HALE, AGED 12. i9 :ii 6 :I X y a, M if 1 , xy H' Y Xx 1 x ?' 'TL - . M V f - Q f 3 f xl li-i yi -QE 2- - 391, 1 5 ' if W 1 , - ai , K Zflf f?! pfgx ,g I .i,7:,f ' ff QTQQSQSN 1 - Q ig. ' - L- Ef. 41' i:fAA -R Q - n E.: -F .3 5 ,Ji 11.1 'Ti ,J - -. J My -W , E x ,, I f I' Nfl . EI ATHLETICSM I5 T H E M I L E S T O N E 1. CAPTAINS Hinds .. .............. ....... B asketball Kenney . .. ........... . . . Football, Hockey White .... Track, Baseball l56l T I I IG IVI I I, IC S 'I' O N IC IVIANAGERS Mr. Farrell . .. ....,....... . . Athletic Director Lovett ..... ........ B aseball Hamilton . . . .... Basketball Alexander .... ......... H ockey Lawson .... Football, Track I57l T H E M I L E S T O N E FOOTBALL Lawrence Kenney ...,... .......... .... C a ptain Mr. W. J. Comerford .... .......... ..... C 0 ach Leonard Lawson ...,.. ..... ......... .... M a n ager THE TEAM Back Row-How, Hinds, Hart, White, Sawyer, Lawson. Middle Row-Calderwood, Bridges, J. W., Schultz, Kenney, Griggs, Kitteridge. Front Row-Bridges, J. S., Pickering, Bottger, May. FOOTBALL ITH only one veteran of last year's line to build upon, Coach Tony Comerford found the task of developing a line of the calibre of the backfield too great. He did not have any substi- tutes for the line, and as a result the brilliant backfield was unable to prove its real worth. All the material was green, and only in one game, l58l T I I FJ M l I. E S T O N IC the Amesbury game, did the team play as a unit. Taking all things into consideration, it must be said, even though the scores do not indicate it, that the season was a successful one. The nucleus of an excellent team will be left for next year, and the experience gained in one season's campaign should be of great value. In every game, Dummer was outweighed by her opponents, and all of her opponents had many substitutes to Dummer's two or three. The Milton game showed this situation most strikingly. In this game Dummer played two Milton teams to a standstill, and at the end of the first half the score was only 7-0. Dummer had held the powerful Milton team as no team had held them during the season, but the second half told a different story. Milton sent a fresh team onto the field in t-he second half, and just as soon as a man weakened a substitute would be rushed in to take his place. Milton played 34 men in this game, and it is little wonder that they were able to defeat the plucky Dummer team which only had 13 men cap- able of playing. This same fact, although not so great in other games, was the situation in all the contests. The Amesbury game was high mark of the season for Dummer. The team functioned perfectly, the only time it did so during the season, and Dummer swamped her by a score of 32-7. Hinds and White performed brilliantly all season and tore off many gains. Doc was troubled with a bad kneeg but when he was able to play, he was always smashing away. White was an ideal plunging full-back, and -his defensive work was the feature of that side of the game in every con- test. Kenney played steadily all season and developed into an excellent in- terferer. Sawyer, although he was in poor shape, proved that he will have to be carefully watched next season. Bill Hart at quarter-back used fine judgment all season, and his kicking was better than the aver- age. The play of the line, except for Schultz who played his bear-like fighting game, was mediumg but Griggs and Bottger showed all the ear- marks of good football players. Next season should develop them into the driving type of linesmen who make a coach's heart happy. The scores: Oct. 3 Dummer Academy 18 Salem Industrial Oct. 9 Dummer Academy T B1-Own 81 Nichols Oct. 17 Dummer Academy 0 Sanborn Oct. 24 Dummer Academy 32 Amesbury Oct. 31 Dummer Academy 0 Milton Academy Nov. 7 Dummer Academy 0 Allen School 5 T H E M I L E S T O N E BASKETBALL John Hinds ...... ................ .... C a ptain Mr. F. J. Reagan .. .......... .... C oach Russell Hamilton . .. ............. .... M anager THE TEAM Back Row-Mr. Reagan, McGinley, Kenney, Pillsbury, Hamilton. Front Row-Bottger, Hart, Van Etten, J., Hinds, Fitzsimmons, White. BASKETBALL HE basket-ball season was not the success it might have been, al- though this doesn't reflect on the team or Coach Reagan. Save in one instance, our team was more than enough competition for any of its opponents. The first handicap was that many of the teams We played were out of our class. The second Was that Captain Hinds, the mainstay of the team, was forced by docto1 s orders to remain in the gal- l601 'I' l I E M l I 1 Pl S 'l' 0 N E lery during several of the games. The fact that we started the season with but two veterans reflects credit on the coach and on the team itself. The team was not lacking in fight or spirit: the Sanborn game proved that. This game was tied up again and again during two overtime periods by both teams, until a Dummer man finally sunk the winning basket. Two veterans, Captain llinds and Fitzrimn'-ons, reported to Coach Reagan at the beginning of the season. llinds played forward or center, while Fitzsimmons also played forward. A battle royal ensued for the re- maining positions, and they were finally captured by lVIcGilney, forward, White and Pillsbury, guards, with Ilart, Kenney, Van Etten, and Bottger first string subs. Hinds was renowned for his fast dashes down the floor and his ac- curate shooting under the basket, as well as for his bewildering passing. McGinley and Fitzsiminons made the spectacular, long shots, and were both very fast forwards. Pillsbury developed into a fine defensive guard and spoiled many ri good shot. White played the other guard and was equally at home at either end of the floor, sinking a few baskets himself now and then. The fact that we won but four games does not signify that We had a poor disorganized team. Of course, being a human institution, the team had its faults and made its mistakes, but it was a team that kept fighting and playing up to the last whistle, no matter what the score was. Of the nine letter men five return next year. The experience these men have gained this year should be an important factor in building up a winning team next winter. The scores Dummer 29 Danvers 17 Dummer 12 Sir Galahad 19 Dummer 29 Sanborn Seminary 25 Dummer 21 St. Georges 27 Dummer 44 De Witt Clinton 13 Dummer 12 Thayer Academy 11 Dummer 13 Milton 33 Dummer 21 Huntington 31 Dummer 13 St. John's 66 Dummer 31 Boston Normal Art 47 Dummer 5 Rivers School 23 1611 T H E M I L E S T O N E TRACK Wesley White .,..... ..... C aptain Mr. F. E. Jarvis . ...Coach Leonard Lawson . . .......... ...Manager THE TEAM Standing-McGinley, Mr. Jarvis, Martinez. Seated-Horr, White, Hinds, McKinney. TRACK T would be no exageration to say' that the track team of 1926, ably coached by Mr. Jarvis, was the best balanced team Dummer has seen for several years. There were but three meets held owing to several heavy falls of snowy with Gloucester High School, Haverlhill High, and Brown and Nichols School. In each meet Dummer won decisivly. l6Zl T H E M I L E S T O N E Captain White and McGinley were the outstanding men on the track itself, While Horr and Hinds performed very creditably in the gym. Captain White ran the 1000 and the 600, never losing either event, and also ran on the relay team. McGinley specialized in the 20 yd. dash and the 300 yd. dash, break- ing the tape first every time in both events. Horr gave everyone a pleasant surprise in his high-jumping, being out-jumped but once. Hinds, who was anchor man on the relay team, could always be re- lied upon to get his share of points with the iron shot. He was defeated but once, by Towne of Haverhill High, w'ho, by putting the shot 40 feet, set up a new school record, previously held by Hinds with 38 feet. Captain-elect McKinney developed into a very fast runner. He placed in the 20 and also in the 300 consistantly. Martinez, a new boy, ran a good race in the 1000 and placed enough times to get his letter. The relay team, McGinley, White, McKinney, Hinds, came through the season with a record unscatched, and compared favorably with any relay team we have yet had. The nucleus of next year's team will probably consist of Calderwood and Sawyer, high-jumpers, and Cox, Wilson, Steinharter, and Hart, dash men. These boys, combined with McKinney and Martinez, should make a very creditable showing. The scores Dummer 3116 Dummer 40 Dummer 38 Gloucester 27Va Haverhill High 19 Brown 8x Nichols 21 THE POINT WINNERS White 33 gfi Horr McGinley 23 376. Martinez Hinds 183A Calderwood 2 112 McKinney 11 :Zi Morrison Kenney 1 6 3. . T H E M I L E S T O N E BASEBALL Wesley White ....... .......... .... C a ptain Mr. Francis Reagan .... Coach Roy Lovett ......... ........... .... M a nager THE TEAM Standing-M1'.Reag'an, Van Etten, Haley, Hyams, Wilson, Sleeper, Fitzsimmons, Lovett. Seated-Hart, McGinley, White, Hinds, Calderwood, Kenney, BASEBALL HERE is no doubt about itg this year's baseball team is by far the best one the class of 1926 has seen at Dummer. Last year We went through a rather ordinary season, as far as scores gog but all the time our men Were moulding themselves into real ball-players and were acquiring that training and polish which makes them look like leag- uers this year. Ilifll T I I E M l I. E S 'I' 0 N IC The high-light of our season thus far is the Middlesex game. This game gave undisputable proof of the quality and stability of our machine. Dummer held Middlesex scoreless, having collected three runs herself, until the ninth inning. Then Middlesex tied tihe score. From then on the game was tense and dramatic. Middlesex collected another run, but McGinley's home run made it useless. Finally, after three hours of playing, the game was called when a 12th inning had failed to break the deadlock. The only defeat of the season Was suffered at T'hayer two days later. Naturally, after pitching all through the previous twelve-inning game, Captain White's arm was not in the best of shape, and he failed to main- tain his usual standard. The game uncovered a future south-paw for Dum- mer, however, in the person of Wilson, a freshman. Wilson held the Thayer batters very well. The rest of the games have been well-earned victories by large margins. Several combinations have been tried out, but the one that works the most smoothly is: Captain White and J. Van Etten, the batteryg Calder- wood, first base, McGinley, second baseg Hart, short-stopg Hinds, 'third baseg Wilson, right fieldg Kenney, center-fieldg and Sleeper, left-field. Bottger, Haley, and Hyams can retrieve at the bases when needs be, While Wilson and Fitzsimmons are good relief twirlers. McGinley, Hinds, and White are our heaviest hitters, poking out two and three-baggers consist- antly, McGinley also having three home-runs to his credit. As We go to press, the season is not yet overg but its ultimate outcome is not the least bit doubtful. Good Work, Mr. Reagan! The scores : -7 Dummer 24 Traip Academy Dummer -1 Middlesex Dummer .. Thayer Dummer 18 Country Day Dummer 17 DeWitt Clinton Dummer 27 Traip Dummer 8 Country Day Dummer 5 Johnson High Dummer 10 Manning High Dummer Practical Arts Dummer Danvers High T ll E M I L E S T O N E HOCKEY Lawrence Kenney . . ............. . . .Captain Mr. W. J. Farrell ..,.. .......... .... C 0 ach Frederick Alexander . .......... .... M anager THE TEAM Standing-Lovett, English, Calderwood, Mr. Farrell, Fearnside, Wilson, Alexander. Seated-Sawyer, Hart, Kenney, Schultz, Griggs, Hyams. HOCKEY NDER the leadership of Captain Larry Kenney this year's hockey team had a short, though successful, season. Poor weather conditions greatly handicapped the team Which, how- ever, emerged from the cold and snow-drifts with a victory hanging from its helts. This achievement, the first a Dummer hockey team has gained for many years, was made at the expense of Manning High, of I66l P T ll E M I L E S 'I' O N IC Ipswich. The score was 2-1, with Griggs and llyams scoring Dummer's goals. This game was the first of the season, and we all looked forward to more victoriesg but lack of practise due to Weather conidtions was too much of a handicap for the boys, and another victory was not obtained. The boys played good hockey in the remaining games, but the hoodoo that has camped, year after year on Dummer's trail could not be shaken. Just when Dummer had apparently worn down the opposing team, some- thing Would go Wrong and a goal would be scored in the last few minutes that decided the game. It was heart-breaking, but try as they would the boys could not make victory perch on their banner. Only Captain Kenney and Schultz, two of the best defense men Dum- mer has had in recent years, will be lost to next year's team. The loss will be a severe blow, however, as the poke-checking and body-checking of this pair was the feature of every game this season. In Sawyer, who seems at home in the net, next year's team will have an excellent goalie. Wilson, Hart, and Hyams played a good forward game this year, and they should be able to give the opposing teams much food for thought next year. Griggs at center ice developed rapidly, and we sincerely trust that his brilliant stick-handling and lightning-like shots Will meet with much more success next season. Little Tommy Fearnside played a splendid game all sea- s-on. He is rather light, his lack of Weight handicapping him greatlyg but he packs a remarkably fast and accurate shot, and We expect to hear great things about him. Calderwood and English were the all-around substi- tute men, and they should show up better next year, when they will have an opportunity to fill in the vacant defense positions. Lou Lovett was Sawyer's understudy, and he proved to be a very capable one. Much credit for the showing of the team is deserved by Head Coach Walter J. Farrell and his assistant, Phillip B. Skerrye. Next year's team, with so many vet- erans on it, should be the best in recent years. The scores : Dummer 2 Manning , 1 Dummer 0 Thayer 1 Dummer 0 Stone School 1 l67l T H E M I L E S T O N E GOLF PROSPECTS HE golf team is looking forward to another successful season. The course is rapidly rounding into shape, and Coach Skerrye can soon get a good idea of what his men are good for. Of last year's team English, the number two man and Schultz the number four man, returned. A good sized squad is out, and from this numb-er two others should be chosen of good ability. English seems capable of taking the lead off posi- tion, and Schultz should move upg but Griggs, Wilson, and Fearnside will give him hot battles all the way. An extensive schedule is planned, Phil- ips Exeter, Newton High, Lowell High, and Thayer Academy are expected to be played. The scores : ' Dummer 5 St. Johns 1 Dummer Thayer 3 Dummer Beverly 3 Dummer Burdett 0 Dummer Manchester 3 Dummer Newton , 4 Dummer St. Johns V2 Dummer Exeter 6 Dummer Manchester 4 Dummer Beverly f Yi I WX Y l6P5l T Il E M l L E S 'I' O N I JUNIOR FOOTBALL Howard Whyte . . . ...........,...... .... C' aptain Mr. G. Smith .... ............... ..... C' o at-h THE TEAM Back Row-Tate, Best, Bell, Mr. Smith, Steinharter, Sheafe, Cox, M. Middle Row-McKenzie, Walker, Hale, Whyte, Wayner, Morrill, Gove. Front Row-Grant, Chandler, Cutler, Whitehead. l6'll L. T H E M I L E S T O N E DUMMER ACADEMY LETTER MEN Hart .... Hinds . . . Kenney . . . White ..... Calderwood McGinley .. Alexander . Bottger . . . Fitzsimmons Griggs .... Horr .... Hyams . . . Lawson . . Lovett . . . Sawyer . . Schultz, N Van Etten Wilson . . . Bridges, J. Bridges, J. English .. Fearnside Haley . . . Hamilton . Kitteridge Martinez May ..... McKinney Pickering Pillsbury Sleeper ............ 1 li , ' H11 ' . , ,L - 'P ,ll ,x -s- -,. Q-sn' 1..- , - l 'T1l ',, ---- - - uyfgj- if f ',: s-.x-- . -3':-,571 -'- - V. -. . 5: 9' .L -. w ff' it ,uf X ja' 'Y az , x If ' 51 HTF, ., 'xx Q X 1, . y v ff .. I A .K X ,f .f 1 1, t f fd 1 fr, f i A 1711? Hikfifjplf 4 I ' is r I '- 'egg 5 11 5 A I lla 1'i - igQ1'fP7f L ,mms , but 11: 4 ' -if f' ' f TTN1 -- N ., . ts .iv Q Qkgyxi ,L V ,X ,M --,,x,LkrvJ,. - , . 5 A - -. pr. fvqflf, N-5' -. if- :L.-'7J A : 44--V- , ' - , . fvgrm. ' V 'QR ff, ,ff-'K'1L :' 3 f ,ii , A b J., . ' fu-ef, - . 9' '- I-:git l gf D K- M ln- . 'rr , lg A -3 n Ml ' 4 LIZ nl N fd ' 3 'Y I Q I f. v I 5 g ,, - . 3 1 'b I , 1 . ' ' ' K '1,Q-Q. ' f 9 5 f' ,rf ' 1... lb!! i f-f -' -' if . - N,,:g:g- ' ' .1 g A- Lff-f ' : , ' .. 'fJzufa22Bn'f2i6S12-x 4... - nd! fi- .S gif iff? .-'gl AROUND T FET T II E M I L E S T O N E Q. . . fa f '52 . ..f 3 ' ' f ' 1 1' 4 f' 'C' 4' If --55.14 1.-, .- -5 V M , fvs,--gn! ,J -W . aff zfzfzilfiqi Q, 3' -L ' -5 .gzgfiag g. 5, ,iZ:'j.fa.ifj.4 ,-WZ: ,Li-:L J 'g -AQ.-.gf ?5'-'-f '9 '1 '7'f : Ta5 Te ' . 1:51 , V ji-1'7 f z' 'x Affffii Af- 'gl' J ' : !f,q 'rsifl ' 'f47 'igyawi-'W' t1i':57UiE 7? fibd-g Z' :Aff . fl -11.7.6 : if 1 f -H..-a'.,.Qf.i v 14-2 -.J 15151, Lf -'f-5-w-5:51 --1-nge ,a ' . . 'wwe.-'V'-'f--'..,.f.,1'6'.fpf-5 1'1'- . e:---,..e- A Q- , LH q.- - 41,5-' i,Qi.f, ' 'ui .1422 ff- 'AJ'-.:Q. '3 1,7.f.i..Wif:'6',-1-frri' L' f'iq,,, : -r, wm - -f -ni - Y- .af gf 151'1': 'QI , -1 if x,-f ---1 wi- :F 15.3 +L'--' f-ff: ff wwf? EEZQ B E E E E , INN j, if 4?,,j4w,:y 3.1 '2.:g,g :?:5:,3L5,g,455,r,3fQ34Ef,ig53,5 , ', -mm' .?. 1' R-B. 41- ' f ' f'i?if'LE?53-'fi'-,7i 251.22 1121 5,5513-.Qu- j5.fkf?21?'-f 1'1 1 ,em E fi 1 '1 . ' , N i 2 --1733 iifiifil' x '?z,? wwf ,1 ' a' .- -:' . . ' ' , ' ' 1 A xxx ' ,- ,-- , E 5 J A ' 1 M' ' --F W Eiiliial' . ,-E, flrfg-T7 aqfdi-y 41263 ' ff .431 f-L - .,9 i-f'-5 'fffi 'VV' f '-,- gy Jai '.f,,.r.,,. F . - f , f -Q ff., ' 1, 2 ' 23419 1 - g ,X ,- - ' by ,f, f ,f V, ,A X - , ff ,,,, 7 fi 'X K, 1 ,g , 1 W ,,- f, 4, ,,f:'L 'X 1 f 4' , 4, K .Tlx K , ff ,Uf-ff f 7 f, 31 5 Q f zz 5:42 ! . f4 i - A zz if 42 wif? iff' -1, 'f ' ff, K,-f 1'-,ff f7'-' 'Q-'ff' ! -,f , . f' . k f . - A ' ' f , 4 f 1' Off in the Sully mgm: E re slumbefs chain has bound me, Fond Memory brings the light Of Okher days around me: l71l T II IC M I I, Ii S 'I' O X I-. '1' r -.. . f -f - . . , ' f ' ' :- fg Q 1 f. .14 . -Jw? 912' 551- ' ' .-sg-.q5.,.: . III, ..-- . - f-X ? r -If A Q' -. 4 II 'fi i'1 'fi' I' ' - f'f2f'f'f2zik ' 4 Ii - . 1.-- .- - ' H . -v- 'X I , . - If-:-H My 5.1 s!'5I'. PZ: Q. -Q:-.5-..ff f!-g'.fal2:f'.i2I5fg3:42231 I?a'1Q'diFQ1f:gf5f:.:?xf '4 T- f::i 51,-fy g I.: ,T , - ,T ,G '- ,371 Q4 -.Qs ,-eg' 1 3 -I :QI 53gi,'::gf'f',:.g3'.9Q2 ,QL -I- 4 ., 4 '. f-IN M : .1-I .. fry U ...ALS , 11 1 45'f:fiI25 if?5-z'-A-11' f:f.gQf,l vi 1ss r4gg1' -I 4,.' -- 0 - . 2-' .. ggx --sf Q - 4 -.-YH--'P ' I - -xxx -,.' -1 'E-Ula' film Im 1 -' ' .. ns- .-fu-P' -I I 44 '-::2f-fvfzfzwfi' Ziff .I I-' . .uf-3 .- I -'-iff! 5 FAI.: -' f 1' '15 ' 7 sv fi ' J 1 I- '--LE: '. . ' '- '. :'57 :'-' If-2112 fb QII1- I c f -- If' .. -5 , ,.HL:,Li,3 ji fqijtg p s-.1:1 f: '-:r-- Q , C , . ' - --fi 1-' 4.52. g:. -1-4, '-' i, 3..- Vl ' '. .1 ' - : , 432' 1 1?-,, 5.2: 11: - , j x-We k 71. ' V,-459' I- 'f?f' ' 5' - J '- -- NIQIIII' fffv ' -9- - ' F -Z K- ' '!'4'+-':. - 'AI if-'V Z- '-5151.1 P-'--55.3934 . !i:'T.I'..v ' pr i' ' ,.,f'.-fer ' .-.. s-1.-2 H-4-klii' - V-QA-'I3v'P4-:fax Y 4, . --f-1510 4. -Q2-K: - 1, 4 rf: - . 5:1313 :7 lim. ,Q,,Z?45, , ff IQLX Q1 I- 14- - ..1- . .nv - ff . ,XL .f'. Af, ff - -dll 'i' Q ,. p-,,5y, . gs' -. .:r1:?5Haaf-2 3.1.46 lu' f 3.2, .1 1, 7 1 .4 if ,pf .fifwf 1:12 I IU.-I.: .Q -1 I ,fkwgf-gg' ,Z , 1-,X f ., - gi 5 A,g,.,,'59jfiSQ-' .1-r, 3 - gif ,, , ' , ' f, . 4. , ' fl - 'V ' ' - K 414.-. . 1- . 525.-j-Lf2 Q Y cn, .fyyyff f-'ffif ' .- 1 f 2-13- --'- - -sv. - . .f ' f' I .,f . f ' - f ff..-7 - . -1--'-fa: 4 ,Q-ff'-ZF ., f f -f 1- haf jf ff V4 f ,f - - I ,,!.f .l,f'f,'6- x LL' ' f.. I 2.4 ff fx, ,filif ul .rf - .A . x ' L- kyyy ,fl ,fr ,,'-ffk 'f 3.1 f ,f,'1ftfU,.f.f - E I Jann, Thus In we stilly night Ere slumberks Cham Ixus bound me, Sad Memory br1ngstIneI1gIwn Of Other days around me. 77 MOOFQI I75I I II E M I L E S T O N E LANG GYMNASIUM I I I I' IVI I I 1 IC S I O N I LANG GYMNASIUM-INTERIOR IIIIMILESLONE NIANSION HOUSE-1718 1 . lu A X I' . i , -f' A 'T v. .F- 'A ' x ,wf 1 Mg, ,J .1,.,,.L. N a.'Kf',5.,1f 1 Pri, f -b ZW . , 1 .1 ff H ' w if-rw TW '- --- ' .- ,v 5- ,.,,:b.., -,-Av-Q.. - EA yr 4 ' V 1421: ,1 ' -f .U . N , , WP ,,tl-H5 , i,,f-Q,,,g?,3:?--,uf V 1 , . . fi. X1 4, fu 1 1: 'wwf f-fs, ' Mi 187 3 , A ii ,, g ,1u1,a,, f' b ci 3' - 'iii 1 . .tgwig if i ' ' ' N x , 'n.,'-'Hz Ii , - .5 4-,ala U :Eng fy. gi., 5 JM :iA-. ,Q ..,,- x N J N -E V L ga n - I W , I nfm dl . i x .N .fi 'had 1. 7 1. -4 x Hin' E Mlm '-I!!! llll X ml ix V Nw as J, '-1 -if J sg 4 6' 1. g ,dl ,f A , e ' s f W' M' ,. gf! G -fm, f yt ':',n a 5 X' NT JLJUQQ T H E M I L E S T O N THE M11,EsT0N1a BOARD Standing: McGinley, Schultz, Hinds Seated: May, Mr. Jarvis, Kenney IWI i I I I I' IVI I I. IC S 'I' O NI I THE STUDENT COUNCIL Standing: Lovcti, Woodward, Griggs, Hinds Sczltccl: Ch21INII 1', May, Kenney, ML-Kinney T H E M I L E S T O N E THE ARCHON BOARD Standing: May, McGinley, Hart, Haley Seated: English, Mr. Farrell, McKinney T H I' M I L E S l O N I OFFICERS OF THE DRAMATIC CLUB Standing: English, Morrison Seated: Budgc-Il, Mr. Lehmann, Hom' T H E M I L E S T O N E JUNIOR PROM COMMITTEE Standing: Pickering, Calderwood Seated: Cox, Haley, McKinney T H E M l L E S 'l' O N E TIIE STUDENT COUNCIL HE Student Council is the student-governing body. It is composed of two boys elected from the Senior Class, two from the Junior Class, and one from the Sophomore and Freshman classes re- spectively. Elections are held twice during the school year. Each coun- cil elects its Chairman. The election to this office ranks among the high- est honors the school has to offer. The powers of the Student Council ex- tend from ordinary discipline to actual suspension. The Council is forced but rarely to use its suspension powerg but occasionally questions of a ser- ious nature have come up, all of which have been dealt with very satis- factorily. The Student Council : First Half-Year' Gerald May, Chairman Lawrence W. Kenney John Hinds Frank L. McKinney Adolph Matthes Last-Half Year Lawrence W. Kenney, Chairman John Hinds Frank L. McKinney Edmund Woodward Richard Griggs John Chandler Roy Lovett X ,ix Q' li 'V' l ff ' y -115' ' ,- if ., x A QNX in , .-x . -1' 'Y ,ll , 4 K A W i I ' ill z alfa' Patil- Xe--I l87l T H E M I L E S T O N E THE ARCHON HE A1-chow is the school paper, published by the students of Dum- mer Academy 12 times during the school year. One of its most important functions is to keep the alumni in touch With the doings of the school, and to this end it has proved very valuable. Positions on the staff are open on a competitive basis, the candidate's ability being the deciding factor. The services which Mr. Farrell renders to this organiza- tion are indispensible, and we wish to take this opportunity to thank him on behalf of the Board. The A rclzovz board of 1925-26: Editor-in-Chief .............................................. John P. English '27 Associate Editors ...... Gerald May '26, Robert J. McGinley '26, James W. Bridges '27 Business Manager ..................................... Frank L. McKinney '27 Assistant Manager .. .... ....................,............ G eorge M. Haley '27 Circulation Manager .. ..... Edward Hart '28 Faculty Advisor .... . .. Mr. Walter J. Farrell f.. .. 5' f ' 2' 1, 12? 53 N431 f5 1705 WS u w 'W Q iw if l.,-4 f f-'- - ,- , , .2 J?- - 3.-5,15 -ff-i F -ws ,Idol I S 9 THE MILESTQONE 1 l90l T I I E M I L E S 'I' O N IC DRAMATICS HE Dramatic Club represents the newest organization on our cam- pus. It has been well received and well supported and will, no doubt, beco-me a permanent institution. It is the intention of the Dramatic Club to be absolutely self-supporting-no very easy thing to do when one considers royalties, the cost of sets and scenery, and other mis- cellaneous but necessary properties. As it is, the club has broken even in its expenditures and receipts, and shows a balance consisting of two com- plete sets of scenery, a curtain, and sundry properties. The scenery was painted by Mr. Jarvis, whose deftness with the paint brush thereby ren- dered invaluable services. The work this year paved the way for a good start next year and enable-d Mr. Lehmann to discover just 'how much tal- ent there is in the school. - To Mr. Lehmann for the most part belongs the credit for the success of this organization. He was responsible for its origin and was its main- stay thereafter. Mr. Smith also loaned his services in coaching two of the plays. It -has been the aim and purpose of the Dramatic Club not only to give the boys an opportunity to appear before the public but also to aid in the general rounding-out of their education at Dummer. For that reason plays have been selected which cover the entire field of drama, with the possible exception of sentimental love dramas, from stark tragedy to up- roarious comedy. Three series of one-act plays have 'been presented: Moonshine and Trasih g A Night in an Inn , The End of the Rope , and Not Quite Such a Goose , and The Medicine Show , Nevertheless , Sham , and A Thief by Night . A key will be awarded each year at Commencement to any Junior or Senior who has appeared in two plays during his junior or senior year or during both, subject to the approval of the coach of those plays. This year the following men will receive keys: J. W. Bridges, Budgell, Griggs, Hamil- ton, Kenney, Lane, Lawson, Horr, May, Pickering, Morrison, and English. The cast of characters: MOONSHINE By Arthur Hopkins Luke Hazy, a moonshiner .................. Richard C. Griggs Revenue Officer ........... Norton Pickering l91l T H E M I L E S T O N E TRASH By Lloyd Thanhouser A Tramp .... ....................... A Kid ..... ACop A NIGHT AT AN INN By Lord Dunsany A. E. Scott-Fortesque fthe Toffj ........... William Jones fBillD ............ . Albert Thomas ............ Jacob Smith fSniggersD .... First Priest of Klesh ..... Second Priest of Klesh ,... Third Priest of Klesh . . . Klesh .............. THE END OF THE ROPE By Lloyd Thanhouser Old Man ..... .................... Young Man .... NOT QUITE SUCH A GOOSE By Elizabeth Gale Mrs. Bell Ka happy motherl ............... Albert Bell ther seventeen-year-old sonj . . . Sylvia Bell fher daughterl ........... Philip Flick fSylvia's sweetheartb . .. Hazel Henderson lSylvia's friendl . .. l92l Russell D. Hamilton James W. Bridges Gerald May . James W. Bridges Russell D. Hamilton ..... L. W. Kenney . . . Richard Griggs . . . . . Gerald May . . . . . Warren Lane . . . . Leonard Lawson Albert W. Horr . . . Gerald May . . . Albert Horr . . . . James Budgell . . . Forrest Morrill . . . . . Warren Lane . . . Norton Pickering . . . . Leonard Lawson T H E M I L E S T O N E NE'VE'RTHE'LES'S By Stuart Walker A Boy .................. .... I+ 'orrest lVlorriIl A Girl ..... . . . Stuart McKenzie A Burglar .... Eben .l?l.CliFOll THE MEDICINE SHOW By Stuart Walker Giz .................. ....................... R ussell D. Hamilton Lut'er ................. ........ R ussell Scott Dr. Stev'n Van Dexter .... .... R ichard Griggs SHAM By Frank O. Tompkins Charles ta householderj ..................... .... W arren Lane Clara this wifej ........ . . . Leonard Lawson The Thief ............ ..... G erald May A THIEF BY NIGHT Adapted from E. Phillips Oppenheim's short story of the same title by Mr. F. E. Jarvis for the Dummer Academy Drcwnaltic Club. M. Armand Paul de Mellet, Marquis de Severan .......... Roland Chase Sir Henry Melhampton, Master of Melhampton Manor . . Richard Griggs George Melhampton this son? ...................... Norton Pickering Phyllis, tSir Henry's daughter! ..................... Leonard Lawson Dowdswell tkeeper of Melhampton Inn! .... ..... N orman Schultz Mrs. Dowdswell this wifel .............. .... W alter J. Budgell Granfer Crocombe .................. .... L awrence Kenney Harry Foulds ta young horse dealerj ...... ......... G eorge Haley 'Pom Baker tkeeper of the local garagej . . . . . . Russell D. Hamilton Mr. Scroggi-ns ta butcherj ............... ..... J ames Van Etten Police Constable Chopping . . . ...... Gerald May l93l T H E M l L E S T O N E Officers of The Dummer Academy Dramatic Club Walter J. Budgell, Pfresident John P. English, Vice President Albert Horr, Secretary William C. Morrison, Treasurer Mr. P. W. Lehmann, Faculty Advisor Elvin Il. Cox Properties Linwood Brown if' fgigfw W yi- 1 il: fm: W will BFI? lf' ,w 9 X F e gg 3 ix T H E M I L E S T O N E THE ANNUAL FOOTBALL BANQUET CFrom The Archonj N the evening of Dec. 12 Dumm-er had its turn at honoring the grid- iron heroes. A banquet was given in the school dining hall. Dr. Ingham acting as toastmaster introduced Mr. Smith who coached the juniors. The following were awarded their junior letters: Bell, Best, Chandler, Cox, Cutler, Fearnside, Cove, Hall, McKenzie, Morrill, Sheafe, Steinharter, Tate, Walker, Whitehead, Wagner and Capt. Whyte. Whyte in a short speech thanked Mr. Smith for his coaching and the rest of the team for their coordination and spirit. In closing he presented Mr. Smith with a combination set pen and pencil. The Juniors had one of the most successful teams of the past few years losing only two games out of seven and those by scant margins. Mr. Reagan then presented the following with the second team insignia: Burch, Cox, Padula, Brown, Albiani, Fitzsim- mons, Jackson, Lane, Jones, Palmer, McKinney, Lovett and C. Schultz. Coach Comerford was then introduced and received a tremendous ovation. In opening he told of the values and 'benefits derived from foot- ball. One of the most important lessons being that of coordinating with others for one main end. He stated that he firmly believed that football was not played to lose. . He sees no glory in defeat. After thanking the team for their sacrifice and spirit he touched on the more prominent sport- ing topic of the day. He thinks that Owen must have been misintrepreted in saying that he didn't like football. He said in no uncertain terms that he loved football. During the last few Weeks of the season he admitted that the practice sessions became a bit tiresome and he often felt that he would have been as well off without practice. Hefeels that football is played for an ideal, this ideal making the team work as it never w-ould for anything else. Pecuniary ideals are nothing compared to the college manls ideals and the game as the professionals play it is not football and should not be so called. He saw Grange play in Boston and saw nothing in the game as he played it. He then awarded varsity letters, to the following: Alexander, Bottger, White, Hart, Horr, Calderwood, Kitteridge, J. S. Bridges, Pickering, Griggs, N. Schultz, May, Hinds, Sawyer, Lawson, and Kenney. Captain-elect Sawyer was called on and thanked the coach for the foundation he had given them and hoped that he would be with them next year. He also thanked the team for their expression of confidence in him. Captain Kenney thanked the team and supporters for their help, l96l T I l E M I L E S T O N E lauded the scrubs for their work in thc development of the varsity. llc wished Sawyer a successful season and good cooperation. A telegram arrived from Forsberg and Whalen of last year's eleven sending their best wishes to the incoming and outgoing captains and wish- ing they were with us. Dr. Ingham addressed the assembly telling of the view point of the more aged in watching a football game. They come to see the spirit and not the skill. Anyone Who has the qualities in him that make a good football player will make a real man. One has to give all he has and hold back nothing. The few outside guests present were Mr. F. E. Smith, Mr. George F. Learned, Mr. and Mrs. Bottger, Mr. and Mrs. Whyte, Mr. Calderwood, and Mr. C. I. Somerby. THE ANNUAL FOOTBALL DANCE HE annual football dance was held in the Lang Gymnasium on Sat- urday vening, November 14th. It was more or less of a family affairg very few of the male element outside the school proper were present. The Gym was simply but tastefully decorated. Ted Wright's Orchestra of Newburyport furnished the music. Cider and dough- nuts Were served during the intermission. The patronessesg Mrs. Ingham, Mrs. Farrell, Mrs. Jarvis, Miss Brown, Miss Robinson, and Mrs. Kimball. Captain Kenney and Doc Hinds were the committee in charge. CX on -P f? CI! A X l f l97l T H E M I L E S T O N E CHRISTMAS TREE HE final social event of the old year was given in the form of a house Christmas tree on December 17th. This is one of the old standbys in school tradition and never fails in its power to amuse. This year Mr. Webber was chosen to play Santa and although the chimney stunt would have proven too much for him, the exclusion of this gave him a chance to enjoy himself. Certainly the receivers did not, and many were reminded of their shortcomings in a pointed way. Part of the act is for the person receiving to stand up in a chair and open his present before his comrades who are well aware of his short-com- ings and weaknesses. Mr. Webber and his committee used good judgment and some of the gifts were quite to the point. THE MID-YEAR PROM HE first dance of the winter term was held in the gymnasium on the evening of February 6. The interior was tastefully decorated With all the pomp and glory that banners can give. The feature of the evening was the orchestra, The Tufts College Missouriansn who rival the best orchestras ever brought to the Academy. Because of the severe snow storm many who planned to be guests were unable to get here, but a suffi- cient crowd was present to make the event an enjoyable one. During the intermission refreshments consisting of punch, ice-cream and cake were served. C J. S. Bridges and Norman Schultz were the committee in charge and a vote of thanks is due them for the experienced and smooth manner in which they carried off the affair. i981 T I I E M l L E S T 0 N IC THE JUNIOR PROM fFI'OH1 the Arclzonl HE much heralded Junior Prom came off in due style at the Oulcl Newbury Colf Club on May 8. To say that it was a success is to put it mildly. The committee outdid themselves in all respects, and everything from the grandeur of the decorations to the completeness of all the smaller details was carefully planned and executed. Excellent music was furnished by the Tufts College Missourians, eleven pieces strong, who made a great hit all around. More than fifty young ladies in- vaded the premises to enjoy the annual event and their wishes were more than fulfilled. After Dun1mer's walkover on the home diamond in the afternoon, all were in high spirits for the occasion. A supper was served at the club to those who attended, at six thirty. The affair was strictly formal, dance orders were in order, and each member of the fair sex was presented with a compact suitably engraved to commorate the event. The catering was taken care of in a flawless manner by John Edwards, the popular and efficient chef of the club: and 'his punch, ice cream, and cake left nothing to be desired. The hall was decorated with blue and gold streamers above and detailed objcts rI'art around the walls. Ferns and geraniums decorated the walls. The party was ended with the usual noise- making and confetti-throwing. The patrons and patronesses were: Dr. and Mrs. Ingham, Mr. and Mrs. Farrell, Mrs. McKinney, Mrs. Cox, Mrs. Budgell, Mrs. Pickering, Mrs. Pillsbury, Mrs. Calderwood, Mrs. Morse and Miss Brown. The committee in charge were: George Haley, chairman, Frank McKinney, Elvin Cox, Norton Pickering and John Calderwood. i991 T H E M I L E S T O N E THE PAGEANT N September 26, the historical pageant of Dummer Academy was presented on the school grounds before a large and enthusiastic audience. The pageant portrayed the early Colonial days of New England and the establishing of Dummer Academy by Governor Dummer of the Massachusetts colony. Mrs. Hazel Hammond Albertson Wrote the pageant and directed it with the aid of Mrs. Paul Capron. The day was perfect, with a clear blue sky overhead, and the air was balmy. The stage, a natural one and far superior to an imported setting, was an open amphitheatre gently sloping upwards in the rear to the top of a small knoll. T'he side of the knoll was studded with small pine trees that gave an atmosphere of reality to the scenes. The wilderness, present in the early days, and the whooping of the Indians brought back long for- gotten feelings of bitterness to the minds of many of the audience. The cast consisted of about 50 characters, many of whom are present members of Dummer Academy. It was very unique to have the students of today impersonating students of many years ago. The players were in the costumes of the times depicted, and each one gave a most successful presentation of an ancient person. Dr. and Mrs. Ingham played the part of Governor and Lady Dummer. The same house that the Dummers in- habited is now the home of Dr. and Mrs. Ingham. This along with the fact that a descendant of Richard Dummer, Joseph Dummer, of Newbury, played his part, was an interesting coincidence of character portrayal. WA! IIIIIIIIEP.. Z IIIIIIIIIIW 'lllllllllllll-' - 1'iiie..fi5 .'1 X111 - f l ' use E. TL .--pvarfr' - it f . - a , - . 1 -xv:-+2 i 5-:-. ssl .. ME . .. ' - .. -...., . .. .4.,....,.., ..,...-.....-.- . ..,..- , . V: - ,, n .f-fr. n ,A I100l ' fi fl , , v , I up . 1 . T N Y -1- wif' I 'aussi -ff. Af 'VL' ' v .V+ M ,y,f3f:.4z x vp X M Q ,, I - 1' M, X'-'K ,H 55, sm-,.-0 f .-.J-1, 4'f 'ws .wr 2 .., , ,. ,. , .rf-17' -1 .-:, .. ' A' ' 1 fffnbv N ..., 'Sail' ' ' Sb4f'T3'w' 1, ,, Qu 1 ea- ,A ,Q rg' ..,',,,,f'.-v-3 A .. 4 'f ,K -. af- -in . A-Y-4 ' ,-,ml -4. ,- .. ,- .kll .a ' , 12? ' ' ' ' l',,Q'vJ '.. -Q-f , 1 . s 'rg 5'-.f,'E1:'-ff f 'L' ' L.N' - jst.. x- .. W., F . fgryixl ,. 1 df -- f- Vt.. ' ,L ff- 1. I 5 ,g' I, .iw - ' - ,. Af' ' '57 '. L.:-4 qnffl ' ':v4,,...,y V 4,1 1 ':'V5-L -if 2' ' 3. ,,.. W.-Q ,F D- i Eff 'H'-2 . Q . -- ' A- .':-aa? 5, -Q ,l a, ff, it AV H: 1 'f-Aff, 7,1 ., 'C D ' I, f- A F, K -gmt. ,-X ' , ' 'f - 'EQ Tj,-,gf '1bff'x .W gNL.1.,s' . - 7 W 37 'H QQ. 1-4 V4 , s f S 101 T H E M I L E S T O N E l1021 4 y X ,Z jniij SIGN HERE I 'I I I 4 .. I, II F II If III ll I XI In II II II II II M MI III I pi I 3: 'III It II I III! ,sw 'HI I I If' I I I II I .ll , o O I I 1 ' C. 1 n A D V L I J. .- f.,'f. '- -xg D l ',.f'.-9.5 ' - 1' .n v F'-,QI x.. . ' vvr 1 bg . v .l . I '. 11 , .u. 'I . v' 5, , iii-121 V' f ,Q X QKl.5l'A,','f-4-1 Uk., ,..,.- . -I Il. E LA ff I .ff-I . .,f.,A ,v'fn,. ' - I, 'Q 1 f.Q .n 9 1 , . :gi 5-iq : 1 'In if 1 'ta ff -1, 'al I rg,-.' fit 1 'I -'N --c v - N l,' UV ' ',v .I ,n 4 Q, ,A '- .: . WV- U, ,I , ,p . 1 I ' ,'xf.v3. ,,,-'A ' -. ,z 't'Jj . x lg -5 ,X 4 N, ,tix vl 4' n n',,!-, ' 4 A S 1 ' fi I- 'P . H iQSf.l'b . 1jf5f.f, .. Aj .- 'xx J E QV' I I 105 1 T H E M I L E S T O N E WILLIAM LEAVENS SL CO., Inc F U R N I T U R E 09 CANAL AND 31 MERRIMAC STREETS BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS l1061 T H E M I L E S 'I' O N E COMPLIMENTS OF 69505. GW. Coonway l107l T H E M I L E S T O N E COMPLIMENTS OF GYXCT. and GMTS. Q. E. Simmon., l108l T H In M 1 I E b I O N L COMPLIMENTS OF C52 Qfqlefander -r l1091 T H E M I L E S T O N E Important to the Young Man in School Is the Style of 'his Shoes, including the COLOR and QUALITY of the UPPER LEATHER ff 1 7513 ,,,,, 1' I f ' li ,i ,ff b f, f N ' 4: - E5 . I f Q ,,.,,, ,f mf? , - f .: s. 1 Q .1 TY f if tifff' kfiiillvll LJ IJ -3 ' lglf, 4-'ff -J 3215? 4. ,L-A, ,gs -1,5--3 f, n pp 52-' fl U , , 1'-7?.'7-as-.. - . , ariflgl 1- K: ' fi 'N .il-X' I ' ff. V A. .ix KAZQ3' ' gpg . ' VU. vs ff- ' - . ,, .,.,Q, :'Z'rf?'V 'U -,o' v. 5. V '.g.+Af4- 'as--zuaege-2--vu36,6 Q ---f.'...:.z.-- I This up-to-date Shoe for young men is made by Geo. E. Keith Co., Campello, Mass., Walk-Over Style No. 3859. The Upper Leather Was tanned by the American Hide Sz Leather Co. It is Sauterne, Popular Light Shade of Calfskin No. 240. American Hide SL Leather Company Owners of Seven Tanneries 17 EAST STREET, BOSTON l1101 1' I I L M I L E S 'l' O N IC COMPLIMENTS OF cvfllbiani Lunch Go. BOSTON, MASS. COMPLIMENTS OF Q54 Cgriend l111l 1 H E M I L E S T O N E FOWLE'S FCUNTAIN CENTER OF ATTRACTION . IN NEWBURYPORT . COMPLIMENTS OF 'lohn and qim fBriclges 112 E M I I, E S 'I' O SPECIFY SHOES MADE OF The Schmidt Calf Leathers IN THE SEASON'S POPULAR COLORS They give you Phe utmost in wear and quality. . Adapted to the IJQtJf,O1 f.f1'2:1dQ footwear . Robert A. Boit SL Co. ALL INSURANCE 40 KILBY STREET, BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS T H E M I L E S T O N E BLAKE BROTHERS Sz CO. Founded 1858 Members of New York and Boston g Stock Exchanges 5 Nassau Street 111 Devonshire Street NEW YORK BOSTON COMPLIMENTS OF George W. Pickering Coal Company SALEM, PEABODY, BEVERLY, MARBLEHEAD . . DANVERS, LYNN . . 114 1 l ll E M l L E S T O N I W. E. BCDTTGER EURS and SHEEP LINED COATS WHOLESALE 110 SUMMER STREET, BOSTON, MASS. HUNT- RANKIN LEATHER CO. 106 Beach Street : Boston, Mass. FINE CALF LEATHERS Specializing for requirements -of the Novelty Trade and the United States Veterans, Bureau Hospitals. Calderwood SL Preg, Inc. SHOE ILLUSTRATORS DESIGNING BOSTON 115 T H E M I L E S T O N E COMPLIMENTS OF GMT. Roland 6215. Sherman Wrigley, Frey GL johnson LYNN, MASS. HIGH GRADE KID : BLACK AND COLORS DUIVIIVIER BOYS SHOULD READ The Newburyport Daily News Contains All the News of the School and Everything . . . Pertaining to It. . . . 116 T I I E M I I . IC S T O N E P? Jw b Tim Nm' England Tool, Supply and Rculio Dc'pot GRASS, HARDWARE, METALS, RADIO, TOOLS 360 IDICVONSIIIRE STREET fin Winthrop Squarej BOSTON CHARLES C. GILIVIAN INSURANCE 159 DEVONSHIRE STREET - - - BOSTON, MASS. ' O Cx ED - DEAl. I'N rAl,I:. KINDS or u N C' FtI,?AgFsxA'l' .,s.wI...' NW S I 3 I !'1'll'VfV r S 152 154 LANTIC AVENUE I B 4,5 I m, rl '.TT if S S-xr W, I If , ,IIN If I -: ' - U - ,ifhlg '5 ' 51227 A 1 Q' - Q 117 T H E M I L E S T O N E GECRGE D. EMERSCN COMPANY WHOLESALE GROCERS BOSTON, - - - MASS. LARGEST DISTRIBUTORS IN NEW ENGLAND OF HIGH GRADE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES IN NUMBER TEN CANS Compliments of Compliments of Dodge Bros' Stephen Billings Palmer, Zn Newburyport '28 HoVt's Drug Store U The Rcxall Store Comvllments of C5-ll Cgriend 53 Pleasant Street Drugs, Hospital Supplies . and Toilet Goods . P Compliments of Compliments of The Hygrade Lamp Co. jacques Barber Shop Salem, Mass. A Newburyport, Mass. l1181 T H E M I L E S T O N E COMPLIMENTS OF GYXCT. and WTS. L. QU. Qnney l1191 'l H E M I L E S T O N E Tatienco Cl Specialty C5710 qaculty I H E M I L E S 'I' O N I COMPLIMENTS OF Richardsom, Will 59' Go. 121 T H E M I L E S T O N E 'Dummcr Mlcaclcm SOUTH BYFIELD, MASS. N? ELE M ll i q e w v IIOII S. my l 5 M ISI . lg RZ 15.35 4 n..u 'b m 164th Year. 35 Miles from Boston. 370 Acres for sports and life in the open. Athletic field, golf course, tennis court, hockey pond, new gymnasium. Separate building and school for boys from 10 to 14. Play and school life carefully planned accordilng to the needs of each boy. Infirmary. . . 'L . . . . . . For catalogue, address Clhcwlcs Ingham, Th., KD. l1221 I' H E M I L E S T O N E RICHARD B. LUDWIG The Paul F. Clark Agency of the JOHN HANCOCK MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. 200 Devonshire St., Boston, Mass. COMPLIMENTS OF GEORGE A. LEARNED CO. NEWBURYPORT l123l T H E M I L E S T O N E COMPLIMENTS OF ccgudgear Us V Hep A. J. SLATER L 'A AUTHORIZED ' H FRESHMAN DEALER H' PINE BUSH 'ff NEW YORK ll 2 4 1 T H E M I L E S T O N IC COMPLIMENTS OF 557161 Smoking Glub COMPLIMENTS OF C5110 Glass of IQ28 l1251 T H E M 1 L E S T O N E Gamp fwyanoke for fBoys ON LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE I AT WOLFBORO, N. H. Dummei- Academy boys have attended Camp Wyanoke for the past fifteen years. CAMP WINONA FOR GIRLS-Under Same Management. Compliments of Nick fatter Compliments of S. Bauxbam SL Co. Brookline, Mass. Austin's Ice Cream, Co1z.fecz'z'0ncry Compliments of Love! and Covefs 'Masterpiecest Dancing Parties dand Weddings a ere to. state street Tel. 548-W. C' Desmend Wadsworth N ewburyport, Mass. Compliments of Compliments of M. McKenna O. l.eFavre llZ61 T H E M I L E S T O N F BASE BALL, TENNIS and GULF Care for your 1'6L1LII1'6IIIQI1tS can be in no better hands than here. Spvcial Disvount to nzwtnzbww of this srlzool. LYNN SPORTING GQODS CQ. 465 Washington Street : Lynn, Mass. NEWBURYPCRT HERALD PRESS PRINTERS OF THE MILESTONE 1923 1925 1926 CENTRAL WHARF l127l fn' ' f , 1. xc I- 'I I U I X -H , , Q V A ,5,,. ' ANAL v 4 Q ,,, ' 1 . , I . ' A ,X x Q f J , 4 ' U u ,ul5, 'g 5.'h'll .N .V, ,,l' V I R . ,,, X ,L ' .x N ' 'N I, . 'g I NNN s ' Q , , 1 , . . v , . , H , , 'I K ' I f , MQ I I 1 . - 'r if . v, ' uw, A - HF 'x .I V ' , Q. , 1 U I , ' 4 5 . ,N H' V-J' W 1' y . In 1- ',' I H. A4 X r f LM, ., , A v ,I I 34 N , , x A , 4 , y ..,.',. , . 'lQ,'Uf- ,mvfq.,,pya lu., ., LA . . - Y , ,, -I -Af?, N. . ,, , F'f W, '., . :IMI F 1' ,..,4,.--.3-J M Q ' .,,,.'w:- fu, E . , 1 , W 51 -x'. ' 'M VIL, ,wr-w '. .1 'Q' ' wg -',-My ,, 'X 4' . , . - Q , -. x 5 Q ,ri A. , Im. . f I N ,X-I , V94 I 1 ' Av ff f F ' Q ,, X-,I , . , . YW, .,g . Q f nv. 1 A 1' .1 w,. v q ' xg ' 1,-M.: , I ' 'p- 5,ll, ' 'L. U.k'v? ,i.1.,7tr,. . ',,, . X X . 'mxnx' r N H 5 ,, .rll , , ' f. ., ,.,,'x' , ,I ' I .1 1 . ' ' I + ,v' ,, ' 'v hp5','.uP' 'Q 'o,, , S 1 . X HJ , -fb. ,. A R ..f-,...AJ4nn4' n--...lilllli 4,10 .Q ,1v,.l,'c 1 L ' A V 1 y nf ,' bv 0 O -' db ' 1'u:',m5 -31 1- 11 'rf i1'r'1 4 7 1 u 1 I 1 . 1 1.1,- , 1 1' 51' 1 n 1 1 11 k. 1 1 1 1' Y! S N1' ' 1 I' X I L ' . 1 j 1 1 1 1 Inf J l 1 J X X 1 15 . , 1 I lv V I ,1 1 1 I1 '1 N' Q, 1x ,'. 1 Q 1 ' u ,1,. 1214- 1 I1 V I. .1 1, , 1--Ivjrr?-i'1 I 'R fx' ,'., fm ' , ',1 N11- ,1 Xb 1 5, , ' V11 '44 1 , 1' N, ' ,1-fl' V JI, 1f,' Y 'J '1 QV J, 11 'ff 1 ' N in .1,,. I. 1 ' ,1g,..,. 17- J5,, W, in-..1n -X .4 , M7 F .. w.'f,y,f : -H 11,-, Jglx -' ,' 11' 1 ,. ,. ' Mn. rx 6 41 W N Q, 1 N , x...1h,1, - .,,1,1. A . , ,.11 1. . ,-1 ,., 5.4 I 1 V1-191 1 11f.'w. . ,1 1, .1 ' ' 11l ' 1 1'111f1, 11' ', 1 11 ' ' 1 I A11 ' !:t'11,l, 'I nl W, .41 'I' .xx X ,-Y 'wx ' ' n ' 1 u :'1'11-- L' 1 11.11 1'-31 9 1 1. ok .v um' -51 ' '1'.1,-6,n.j .1 ll ! ,',: 1 -A !,!j,,'1- . X ,1 I Y 1 F ,1vu,4f..', 1 gl 1 .1 .,1' 1 w'-,,'..'fr 1 ' ' V s, y, ,1M'4 1 I ' ,' , A . ,111 3-11,1-1 g,,. '.H'l1e'V '. A J ', 1,1-.-r,:-.Q3r.1'1-.31 , , 1' 5 .'1g.5!Q'.'V s 'fg yfgfw ' 'g 7,1-', q -4113, .f nn,-X 1lQ 1-.n-1'-', -1 5,1 vuwg f Nl YQ JAL.Ati5',V?hQ ff 1 , ..a .X 'ww 1 l vv s f .- Vlfl fpxl i 5: f K 1 I' '1 v NV. Va Q' 1 aa? A 1: l 5U 11' 4-5 ,?x-72' 1 .fl S 1 1 .1 1 ' ' 1 I 1 I
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.