Ontario Agricultural College - OAC Bulletin Yearbook (Guelph, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1920

Page 32 of 146

 

Ontario Agricultural College - OAC Bulletin Yearbook (Guelph, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 32 of 146
Page 32 of 146



Ontario Agricultural College - OAC Bulletin Yearbook (Guelph, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 31
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Ontario Agricultural College - OAC Bulletin Yearbook (Guelph, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 33
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Page 32 text:

ALVIN I . H A NSULD. Still water.: run deep, hy .links! llural Puhlie Sehuul, 'l'avistm'k f'untinuatiun, Stratl'nrd Vullegiate, and Stratffn'd Normal tuium-ml uul Alvin as a fully qualitierl teziehr-i', hut four year's expwieiire in iuulining the twig fle- riflerl him against surh a prufessiun. iVIrlVlaster University Arts course attraeterl him fm' a time, hut Year '20, tl,A.t'., exvrterl a nwri- powerful magnetism anfl has helfl him for the full course. l ur the past four summers he has her-n Assistant Distric-t Rep, fur Waterloo County, special- izing in St-linul l air wurk. He was one uf the oriyginaturs of the Township Teavhers' Association sc'hi'l11s-wliieh has taken such a strmn: holrl in rural districts, aufl his teaching experience has eri- uhh-zl him tu appreeiate anfl meet the prnhleni ut' the munlry sehuol. Alvin is une ut' thust- quiet, uirissuming inrlivirluals who think much aufl say little, so none uf us linuw lletiiiitely the Wi'lk'l'l'i.0l'L' ul' his mysterious weekly clisappearanees-hut we can g'll9SS. Rlt'llARlJ ll. H URHT. Ili-antn-1 in ruin thu-ii pn-tty eyes may full, X ll' you shuulil uri-1' happen tu llrup intu the lliulugy huiltling anil hear suinehurly whistling with all the strengtli uf an healthy set ot' lungs-that will he Richard. Dick was huru in Pietmi, Nura Si-utia, ami completed his twu year L'0lll'St' at the Nova Scfitia A51l'iCllitllI'ili Vullepre, Truru, N.S,, in 15118. He ents-real 0.At'. with Year '20, an'l, having hafl sc-i'i-ral years' expr-rieiiee in the employ of the Iluminiun Department of Botany, sleeided to take the liiulugy option, sperialixing in plant pathnlogy, Erirlently scientific names hulfl nn horrors for him. Ili-ing stucliuus as well as practical he has prm'e'l lieyonrl a iluuht that the curriculum of the lliulugy uptiun. invlurling such l rench rt-ailing as is fuuml in Les Alu-illes, can he altacke'l and 1u'1-i'rm1n- with 1-uiiiparalive ease. A 1:1-neral guuil ll-lluw, funil ul' a euml time. he has maule .fur himsell' a wimle rirele ul' friends ainung lmth liuys aml girls. llicharml inte-urls staying in tlntariu un i-umpletinp: his 1-nurse, hut we helit-ve he will always he an :mlent suppurternt' the liast, ul' whuse heauties' lliuth n'ilural anrl paintecl J he never wt-aries ut telling. With his ,iuxial ilisnusitiun anil linarli ot' saying' the right thing in the right place we feel sure that in his future wurk he will mem-t with every measure ut' a well meriteml success. A 'I .unit

Page 31 text:

ALFRED FRANCIS STEPHEN GII,BER'l'. Gosh Darn itl , Oh, how shall I tell the story of this youth, this man nt' profoinid miirl and long legs? How can I cramp into this small space all his had habits, good qualities. and a record ot' his acliievemeuts since entering this world of strife? His tirst appearance was at Peterboro. There he grew up. attenderl the Public School, t'ul- legiate and Normal School. I imagine there are no more sthools there, for it' there had been tiil. would have attended them, as he is a great home town hooster. He taught pulvlic school for some time in both Eastern and Western Canada, spending two years at Qucen's University in preparation for the B.Sc. degree here. He entered the O-A.t'. in September, 1918, with Year '20, In his first year at the O.A.C. he tried hard to mend, rather than hreak, the hearts ot' the fair ones of Macdonald Hall and Guelph. Whether he succeeded or not is dillicull tu say, hut it is gener- ally known that this year he has securely dug himself in hehind the prntec-ting walls ot' the tins- mopolitan Club-that haven for the women-weary. Gil, is a man who can be depended on. If he undertakes a juli, he dues il, as proven by his successful eI'l'orts in raising the tiuancial standing ol' the tltlbllllfllttllllilll t'luli. llc isa lorerol'argu4 ment and takes keen delight in controversy: a true-hearted friend and a man who is always readx to help in any scheme for the welfare ol' hist'ollege or fellow students. LIONEL H. HAMILTON. My kingdom for a horse. To Lionel H. Hamilton certain farm near Arthur, Wellington County, Ontario, is the centre ofthe universe. It was here that he received his practical agricultural education and at the same time wound his way through the Arthur High School. Entering O.A.C. with Class '18 he established for himselt' a reputation as a sprinter and a ,il1Kl1!1' ol' live stock, particularly horses. At the end of his third year he went back to the farm. where he remained for the next two years, and then returned to take his final year with '2tl. In addition to being one of the best all-round, practical men of the year, he is a keen lover ot' womankind. Without doubt the best evidence that can be brought forward to substantiate this fact is the great interest Lionel takes in the postofiice at the end of the third lecture in the morning. Here he may be heard gently humming. Give me a cosy nook, as he devours the manuscript. Anyone wishing information as to his future possibilities had better rc-read this brief bio- graphy. iw-I



Page 33 text:

Wll.l.l.KM GORDON Hll.l.. A nu-trier man Within the llniit ot' ln-cunning niirth I never spent un hour's tall-Q withal. I ' It was in 1801 that Gord made his debut as an infant ot' the genus homo. ln his tender years. it is said that he attended Deer Park Public School and later mnt1'iculated I'roni Jarvis Collegiate. There is also evidence to be had that he put in a year at S.P.S, He entered definitely into our ken when he appeared on the lleights with 'lT. llowever it was not ordained that he should pursue the H,S.A. without interruption, with the Vorining ol' thc Uullcge Battery in the spring of 'Ili tlord was among the tlrst recruits. He served in l'll'llllL'U with thc titith Battery ami won an N.t',O,'s rank. Unfortunatelb' fel' llll' l'.l'2.l . hl' WHS lllVlllllll'-l ill lilllrlilllll ill Jan. 1918. On his return to Camula in 1919 hg rendered most valuahle service with tlie S,S.ll. until September, when he returned to the fold. Gord is gi fellow one doesnt mind meetiiigl While a diligent worker one never found him so deep in thought or so pressed for time that he could not crack a joke or smoke the old pipe with you a while. A keen supporter ot' athletics generally, he played tirst base on thc hasehall team in pleas- ing style. Like many other good men he was a lvllllllltf mUml1l'l'0l' ihl' llUlllNlS. As for his attitude towards the fair sex. we feel certain that the weakness is present, lint on account ot' his precautionary disposition no circumSi2lIlti2ll Willvllfv CHN lil' Dl'f'fll'l'l'll- While we will leave time to tell the story of Gord's rise to prominence. we may safely predict that he will he appreciated as he has been at the 0.A.C- GEORGE B. HOOD. I wanta tight. i clnet tlnng to yilnfh fuoiift owes his success as a student, journalist, and live-stock judge is the quality embodied in the foregoing phrase-though he is not at all pugnacious unless very much riled. He has to be shown before he believes, convinced before he will give in and then, when his mind is made up, his Scotch appears. Since his boyhood days out in Paisley lllock, Guelph Township, where fat steers were originally fattened. we are told, G. H. has steadfastly kept to the path ot' learning, tirst in the Guelph Fol- legiate Institute and then at Model School. It was while goading youthful minds into assimilating the rudiments of a primary ezlucation that he decided preaching truths to farmers was a less para- sitical profession than telling lies for pickpockets, which two-faced lite he had planned to follow. In the fall of the same year in which this great idea gripped him he became a member ot' '20, then in their second year. Although living down town George has taken an active part in class and college activities. He was editor of the Review in 1919, and has been vice-president of the class forthe past two years. When the smoke of battle had cleared away after the Chicago Judging Competition, G.B. was high man on the College team. His favorite occupations are writing, arguing, attempting to get to first lecture on time, and iluking new shots on the Club billiard table. He is following up the first named, having decided to write fillers for one ofthe Farm papers in Toronto. Indications point to the housing problem becom- ing one of Georges future worries, but, of course, this will be duly gazetted in the Review.

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