ie Armed imam y AT YN WHIRLPOOL WHIRLPOOL 1949 PENNELL INSTITUTE Gray, Matine 1949 PENNELL INSTITUTE We, THE CLASS OF '50 express our thanks to everyone who has helped toward the sucess of this year's WHIRLPOOL 1948 WHIRLPOOL We, the Class of 1950, dedicate this edition of the WHIRLPOOL to Mr. Flye, who has efficiently performed his duties at Pennell for the past eleven years. We hope he will stay with us many more. Always present whenever he's needed; Unpleasant tasks never go unheeded. To lend a hand is his desire; In the students’ estimation One couldn't rank higher. Cooperation — Dependable — Efficient, In these features he ranks high ; He's also a good friend to everyone. That's our Janitor — Mr. Flye. JEANETTE Bisitop, '50, 1949 = PENNELL INSTITUTE | | — n A [4 e e- ® E US DEANE A. DURGIN ELEANOR H. DEMPSEY Gorham Normal School Colby College. B. A. INDUSTRIAL ARTS Graduate Work — University of Maine ENGLISH, FRENCH AND LATIN HAROLD N. DEMPSEY Colby College. B. S. Graduate Work — University of Maine MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCE PM OY | ELE EE I BOWIE ANDREW M. LAUGHTON d Husson College, University of Maine, B. S. Farmington State Teachers' College, B. S. Graduate Work DUniversity of Maine Home ECONOMICS COMMERCIAL AND PHYSICAL MDUCATION : 1948 WHIRLPOOL THE SENIOR CLASS OF ae necem — وو EE— ——— ——— PENNELL INSTITUTE = — ا NORMA LOUISE BISHOP “Lou” “If you would rule thc world quietly you must kccp it amused.” Senior Fair Committees 1, 2, 3, 4; Senior Dances 4; Senior Play 4; Food Sales 4; Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Glec Club 1, 2, 3; Junior Prom Committee 3; Freshman Reception Committee 2; Vice President 3: President of Student Council 2; Exchange Editor of WHIRLPOOL 3; Latin Club 2; Christmas Pageant 1; Prize Speaking 3. MADALINE VIVIAN BLAKE “Mannie” “A witty woman is a treasure, el witty beauty is a power.” Transferred from N. G. H. S. 4; Senior Play 4; Senior Fair Com- mittee 4: Food Sales 4; Senior Dance Committee 4. JOHN SYLVESTA COBB “Johnny” “An undisturbed mind is the best sauce for adversity.” Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2; Class Treasurer 1; Speaking Contest 3; Class Play 4; Intramural Football 3; Freshman Re- ception Committee 2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Committee for Senior Dances 4; Business Manager of Wnnp oon 3; Senior Fair Committees 1, 2, 3, 4. ERMINIE MARTHA CRANDALL “Candy” “A constant friend is a thing rare and hard to find.” Cheerleader 1, 2, 3; American Legion Essay Award 1; Latin Club 2; School Marshal 2; Captain of Magazine Drive 2; Assistant Pusiness Manager of Magazine Drive 3; Class President 2; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Prize Speaking 3; Senior Fair Committees 1, 2, 3, 4; Senior Play 4; Junior Prom Committee 3; Freshman Reception Committee 2; Business Manager of WHIRLPOOL 3; Class Secretary 3, 4; Senior Dance Committees 4; Principal's Secretary 4; Class Reporter 3; Food Sales 4; Christmas Pageant 1. 1948 LEON ROBERT HATCH “Bob” “A jest loses its point when the jester laughs himself. Basketball 3; Baseball 3; Senior Play 4; Student Council 3; Glec Club 2, 3; Graduation Usher 2; Joke Editor of WHIRLPOOL 3; Freshman Reception Committee 2; Junior Prom Committee 3: Christmas Pageant 1; Captain of Magazine Drive 4; Prize Speak- ing 3; Senior Fair Committees 1, 2, 3, 4; Senior Dance Committees 4. AUSTIN MERRILL KUCH Cookic “Our playwright may show in some fifth act what this wild drama means.” Class President 1, 3; Senior Fair Committees 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1; American legion Essay Award 1; Freshman Reception Commit- tee 2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Intramural Foothall 3; Prize Speaking 3; Wuirtroot Board 3: Senior Play 4; Senior Dances 4. RICHARD FREEMAN LASHUA “Dick” “I have not yet begun to fight.” Transferred from Springfield, Vermont 2; Basketball 2; WHIRL- poo. Joke Editor 3; Senior Fair Committees 2, 3, 4; Prize Speak- ing 3; Freshman Reception Committee 2; Senior Play 4; Junior Prom Committee 3; Intramural Touch Football 3; Senior Dances 4. MALCOLM CHARLES MacDONALD Mac If at first you don't succeed, try, try, try again. Baseball 1, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 3. 4; Senior Dances 4; Senior Play 4; President of Student Council 4; Junior Prom 3; Senior Vair Committees 1, 2, 3, 4; Graduation Usher 3; Intramural Football 3; Freshman Reception 2; Prize Speaking 3; Sports Editor of W iik POOL 3. 1949 WHIRLPOOL PENNELL INSTITUTE ب KENNETH LEON MOREY “Ken” “A workman that ncedeth not to be ashamed.” American Legion Award 2; Glee Club 2; Alumni Editor of WHIRL- Poot 3; Senior Dances 1, 2, 3, 4; Senior Play 4; Senior Fair Com- mittees 1, 2, 3, +; Food Sales 4; Freshman Reception Committee 2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Prize Speaking 3. PRISCILLA IRENE POLLARD “Put” “So sweet thc blush of bashfulness, E'cn pity scarce can wish it less,” Class Treasurer 2, 4; Student Council 1, 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Cheerleader 3; Glec Club 1, 2, 3; Christmas Pageant 1; Swimming Team 3; Freshman Reception Committee 2; Junior Prom Com- mittee 3; Senior Dance Committees 4; Senior Fair Committee 1, 2, 3, 4; Senior Play 4; Prize Speaking 3; Graduation Usher 2; Ath- letic Editor of WirRELPooL 3; Food Sales 4. BEATRICE HELEN ROLFE “Bese” “Those who bring sunshine to the lives of others cannot keep tt from themselves.” Transferred from Keene High School, Keene, N. H. 4; Senior Dance Committees 4; Cheerleader 4; Food Sales 4; Senior Fair Com mittee 4; Senior Play 4. KENNETH STUART SKILLING “Skill” “Friendship is the gift of the gods, and the most precious boon to man.” Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Editor-in-Chief of WHIRL- poor. 3; Senior Play 4; Freshman Reception Committee 2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Student Council 1; Swimming Team 3; Gradu- ation Usher 1; Senior Fair Committees 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Vice Presi- dent 4; Prize Speaking 3; Senior Dance Committees 4; Class Marshal 3; Intramural Touch Football 3. 1948 WHIRLPOOL BARBARA ELAINE TUFTS Barb “Take no repulse, whatever she doth say.” Basketball 1, 2; Class Treasurer 3; Vice President 2; President 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Senior Dances 4; Christmas Pageant 1; Latin Club 2; Freshman Reception Committee 2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Prize Speaking 3; Senior Fair Committees 1, 2, 3, 4; Senior Play 4; Graduation Usher 3; Assistant Editor of WHIRLPOOL 3; Food Sales 4. JOAN MARY WILSON “Joanie” “Thy madesty’s a candle to thy merit.” Senior Fair Committees 1, 2, 3, 4; Prize Speaking 3; Senior Class Play +; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Junior Prom Committee 3; Food Sales 4; Student Council 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Literar y Editor of W HIR- Poor 3; Christmas Pageant 1. CLASS PARTS Faledictory ERMINIE CRANDALL SOMO a Norma BISHOP Honor Essay uen . BARBARA TUFTS History . AUSTIN RUCH Address to Undergraduates MALCOLM MACDONALD )EATRICE ROLFE, KENNETH SKILLING JOAN WILSON, RICHARD LASHUA Prophecy PRISCILLA POLLARD, ROBERT HATCH School Gift JOHN COBB Optimist MADELINE DLAKE Grouch KENNETH MOREY 1949 ۳ PENNELL INSTITUTE SCHOOL CALENDAR Sept. 13. School began. Back to studying. Sept. 24. Freshman Reception. A nice bunch of sports. Sept. 29. Cumberland Fair. School closed at noon. Much Fun.” Oct. 5. Seniors go to Brunswick to have their pictures taken. Oct. 12. Girls try out for swimming meet. Oct. 19. Girls' swimming meet at Y. Oct. 21. Boys try out for swimming meet. Oct. 25. Rank cards were issued for the first six weeks. It's pitiful. Oct. 26. Boys’ swimming meet at Y. Oct. 29. Hallowe'en Dance. Gee, what fun! Nov. 11. Armistice Day. No school! Hurray! Nov. 12. Junior Prom. Pretty evening gowns, girls. Nov. 24. School closed for two days' va- cation. Um, good food! Nov. 30. Basketball game with New Gloucester, and we won. Dec. 3. Basketball game with Standish. We lost. Dec. 7. Basketball game at Potter. We won again. Dec. 10. Senior Play. Nice going. Seniors. Dec. 14. Pennell played Freeport here; we lost by ? points; not bad, huh? Dec. 17. Game at Greely : we lost. Dec. 21. Two games with Alumni. Pen- nell boys lost, and Pennell girls won. Good work, girls and boys. Dec. 23. Assembly; Skit and Fashion Show by the Home Ec. Girls. Dec. 23 to Jan. 3. School vacation Why don't we have it more often? Dec. 31. New Year's Ball sponsored by Kiwanis. Jan. 4. Game at Windham. We lost. Jan. 7. Game here, Yarmouth. Ditto. ges 11. Pennell game at New Gloucester. Sh! Jan. 11. The WHIRLPOOL pictures were taken by Maki-Favor Studio. Hope we didn't break the camera! Jan. 14. Game here with Standish. We lost. Jan. 18. Pennell boys and Pennell girls vs. Potter boys and girls. Pennell won both games. Nice going, kids! Jan. 21. Pennell vs. Leavitt here. ‘“An- other Victory.” Jan.25. Gameat Cape. Welost. Remem- ber Ray's Diner ? Feb. 2. Game at Leavitt Institute. We lost another game. Feb. 4. Game here with Greely. Same story. Feb. 8. Game here with Cape: lost the Ist game but won the 2nd. Swell work, fellows! Feb. 10. Dedication of new Russell School. Feb. 11. Game at Yarmouth. Lost again. Feb. 14. Pennell played Cape Elizabeth for a place in the tournament. We tried, even if we did lose. Feb. 18. St. Valentine’s Dance put on by the Seniors. Carole Muzzy was chosen “Miss P. I. of 1949.” Feb. 21 to Feb. 28. Spring Vacation. Should have more of them, huh? Mar. 11. Junior Night (play and amateur show). Had fun and made money, too. Mar. 18. Held a St. Patrick’s Assembly with Mrs. Bowie in charge. Mar. 18. Chemistry Class visits Pond's factory at Mechanic Falls. Mar. 22. Alumni benefit games. Pennell vs. Alumni, both boys and girls; Hancock vs. Falmouth. Mar. 25. Sophomore Minstrel Show. Lots of talent there. Mar. 30. WHIRLPOOL goes to print. Apr. 8. The Seniors and Mr. and Mrs. Dempsey left for the Senior Class Trip. | Apr. 8 to Apr. 18. Spring Vacation. What a relief ! May 9. Senior Fair. Not much longer to o! f May 27. Junior Dance. Gosh, what fun! June 12. Baccalaureate. June 1 7. Graduation. JEANNE BUTLER, '50. BEATRICE Lunn, '50. 1948 — WHIRLPOOL EDITORIALS THE SCHOOL YEARBOOK The school yearbook is coming into its own in more schools every ycar. The greater em- phasis placed on journalism in the colleges is spreading into the secondary field. The value of this project is many sided. The students learn to work together: they express their opinions and talk them over in groups. The exchange of yearbooks with other schools helps to develop friendly com- petition and to broaden viewpoints. The business managers receive invaluable experi- ence not only in soliciting advertising, but also in conducting all the business transac- tions involved, in such a way as to make the project a financial success. More interest is aroused in writing stories, poems, and spe- cial articles for English classes if the students feel that their work mav be brought before the public in print. Perhaps the most lasting value of a yearbook is that it produces a per- manent record of the happenings of the cur- rent year and statistics about the students in a school. To put out a yearbook like our WHIRL- POOL requires a lot of time and work, but we feel that the result is worth all our efforts. The students take pride in making each year's bcok better than the preceding ones and rtrive for some individual distinction for their book. This year a complete list of Pen- nell graduates is to be included with the ad- dresses. This list has been compiled by the alumni with great pains, and we hope that it will prove to be complete and appreciated by readers of this WHIRLPOOL. P. WHITNEY, '50. TESTS Did you ever enjoy taking a test? This year two such tests were given to all the students at Pennell. The first was a prefer- ence test. 'There were no formal questions in the test ; instead, each student picked from a number of activities what he or she enjoyed the most and the least. In this way the stu- dent's likes and dislikes could be determined in their varying degrees. After this test we were given an aptitude test which showed in what field we excelled. By comparing these two tests we formed a 1949 pretty good idea of what courses would bene- fit us most in high school. In some cases we found we had natural ability in fields we had never thought of before. These tests should be given to all Fresh- men, for it is much easier to fit the course to the student, than the student to the course. These tests are proving a step toward im- proving the guidance program in the school by promoting individualism in the choice of future occupations. H. Sawyer, '50. DO GIRLS HAVE A FAIR SHOW IN SPORTS? I say that the girls of today do not have a fair show in athletics. Why? Because they do not have an equal chance with the boys; for example, a girls’ team that I know of has been down and out, but there were enough interested girls to start and finance a basket- ball team with help from their parents; they have advanced considerably, winning about 9 per cent of their games. Although there are only about 10 to 15 girls interested, they have practiced faithfully, but what do they or any other girls’ team get from it? Noth- ing. The girls can't even enter the Triple C anymore. Why are the girls of today any different from what they were 30 years ago? Back in 1912, girls' basketball was the up and coming sport; girls traveled miles to play and stay over night. Why can't we bring girls' bas- ketball back? In every school a girl should be given an egual chance with a boy in sports. Basketball is fun to play, but it also teaches fair play, team work (that is a very important factor), self control, and above all good sportsmanship, which every team should have. A recent article in the Sunday Telegram showed Maine's own Margaret Chase Smith as an ardent advocate of sports for girls, and we feel sure that her active participation in sports while in high school helped her in developing some of the many admirable gualities that she shows today in the Senate. P. CARLL, '50. Eleven — — ——À f STUDENT COUNCIL Seated, left to right: C. Muzzy, P. Carll, J. Wilson, M. MacDonald, R. Webb, P. Bowen. Standing: V. Henry, R. Taylor. STUDENT COUNCIL REPORT President ........ DER MALCOLM MacDoxaun Vice President |... . ROBERT WEBB OOF ae TT BAUL BoweN Secretary een isa CAROLE MUZZY The members chosen from cach class this In addition to this, the Student Council year are Lois Henry and Ralph Taylor for chose the following cheerleaders for this the Freshman Class; Carole Muzzy and Paul year’s basketball season: Barbara Pollard, lowen from the Sophomore Class; Patricia Freshman Class; Marilyn Butler, Sophomore Carll and Robert Webb from the Junior Class; Barbara Witham, Jeanette Bishop, Class: and Joan Wilson and Malco'm Mac- and Jean Butler, Junior Class; and Beatrice Donald from the Senior Class. Rolfe from the Senior Class. The Student Council has made rules re- garding conduct on the stairs and in the hall. Most of the students have been very co- operative. CAROLE Muzzy, DL, Secretary. Twelve z I 948 کے p fF cu. un 1949 ڪڪ Seated, left to right: J. Butler, P. Whitney, D. Beck, را ۰ Standing: B. Witham, B. Keene, M. “WHIRLPOOL” BOARD E S a, Carll, J. Verrill, H. Sawyer, J. Bishop, E. Kimball, مک رس `: c Foster, W. White, D. Worden, E. Dutler, J. Gilpatrick, “cen, A Ma JUNIOR | LAN 2 Nn 4 ylion سس M. Barker, B. Mason, J. Merrill, B. Marr, B. Lund, R. Webb, I. Evans. WHIRLPOOL STAFF Editor-in-Chief clssistant Editors HELEN SAWYER, PATRICIA CARLL (JAMES VERRILL 4JEANETTE DISsHOD (ELLEN NIMBALL Business Managers ........ Literary Editors Doroty Beck, JAMES GILPATRICK íDononEs WORDEN {ROBERT WERB eldvertising Editors (JOHN MERRILL ۱۵ ۱ 110 WENDELL WHITE, Marton Foster BEATRICE Marr, MARTIN BARKER Jokes .. TENCHU G GUS CULOTS e rae eee eee BARBARA WITHAM, BARBARA MASON EDWARD BUTLER, ISABELLA Evans Calendar ...... JEAN DUTLER, DEATRICE LUND TG A A M TU MARY THURLOW, BARBARA KEENE Thirteen PENNELL INSIITUTE SENIOR REPORT On September 17, the dignified Senior Class of 49 met for the first time with two new members in our midst—Reatrice “Beze” Rolfe and Madaline Dlake. We elected the following officers : President, Barbara Tufts. Vice President, Kenneth Skilling. Secretary, Erminie Crandall. Treasurer, Priscilla Pollard. Student Council, Joan Wilson and Mal- colm MacDonald. On October 29, we sponsored a Hallowe'en Dance for the benefit of our class trip to New York and Washington which we take in April. The Kiwanis Club sponsored a dance on New Year's Eve for the benefit of our class trip, and it was greatly appreciated by us all. We also held a Valentine Dance on February 18 and at that time, Carole Muzzy, 51. was chosen “Miss P. I. of 1949. Our illustrious class was represented in basketball by Kenneth Skilling, John Cobb, and Malcolm MacDonald. The cheerleader was “Beze” Rolfe. Austin Kuch represented us in the Inter- scholastic Riding Meet held at the Tomlinson Riding School in Stroudwater on December 2. He did the school and the class proud by walking off with the first prize in the race and the third prize in the style show. On December 10, we presented the three- act play, “The Show Must Go On.” Many thanks to Mrs. Dempsey and Mr, Fred Skill- ings for their help and cooperation ! Those whose names graced the honor roll this year are: Norma Bishop, Barbara Tufts, Austin Kuch, Robert Hatch, and Erminie Crandall. It is with regret that we leave the scene of our happiest hours this June but we will al- ways carry with us at least part of the knowl- edge and all of the pleasant memories im- parted to us by our teachers and friends dur- ing our “Happy School Days.” IERMINIE CRANDALL. Secretary. IHE SENIOR PLAY THE SHOW MUST GO ON The members of the versatile Senior Class, talen ted actors all, this year chose a play which called for a number of characters ex- actly equal to the number of students, which is fourteen—seven boys and seven girls. De- spite the fact that we had a limited time for practice and rehearsal, that John Cobb and Dick Lashua were frequently engrossed in a friendly game of craps, and that Ken Morey was continually searching for his playbook which had a peculiar wanderlust due to a cer- tain young lady whom one Kennie Skill- ing is in a better position to name than I, the play went over in a manner which may be termed good, if not excellent. The play concerned a group of post-gradu- ates who have formed a dramatic club and are striving to prepare a play in spite of the opposition presented by the egotistical father of the leading lady, with the result that there is a small scale verbal war in the Stanley family; however. youth and love triumph with the help o: an understanding mother, and harmony reigns again. fourteen There were four leading parts in the play: Norma Bishop and Barbara Tufts performed excellently as the leading ladies, and Robert Match as the clowning younger brother. did a good job of keeping the audience happy. As for the second male lead, perhaps the less said, the better. At the head of the support- ing cast, Kenneth Skilling, as Ruth’s would- be suitor, served reluctantly, but as a good soldier. In truth, the entirc cast was more than good. CAST OF CHARACTERS Robert Stanley (thc father) Austin Kuch Stella (the mother) sous Norma Bishop Ruth Stanley (the daughter) ........... Barbara Tufts Donald Stanley (the son) ................. Robert Hatch Edward Holman (Stella's brother) John Cobb, Jr. Friends of Ruth WW T T . Kenneth Skiiling USA CO aec rec Priscilla Pollard Mack Malcolm MacDonald Ann Ierminie Crandall ARG i e Gee .. Kenneth Morey AMULET DIE os cc Joan Wilson DONE ی eei Richard Lashua Irene Beatrice Rolfe Margie Madeline Blake Austin Kecu, '49, -` - “ 1948 === WHIRLPOOL JUNIOR CLASS REPORT The noble class of 1950 entered Pennell Institute this fall with a total enrollment of 23 members, including four new students — Barbara Witham, Sally Roth, Isabella Evans, and Edward Butler. During the course of the first six weeks Sally left us; two weeks later, Peggy Robin- son, who bad been with us since our class first entered high school, moved to Hallowell. This brought our class enrollment down to 31 members. Later on, however, we were joined by Barbara Keene, Mary Thurlow, and Anna Callaghan. At our first class meeting, we elected the following class officers: President, Dolores Worden; Vice President. Helen Sawyer ; Secretary, Jeanette Dishop; Treasurer. James Verrill; Student Council Members, Patricia Carll and Robert Webb. Members of the class who participated in active sports were as follows: Girls — JUNIOR The inimitable Junior Class of Pennell In- stitute presented Junior Night, March 11, 1949. The whole class participated. We pre- sented a one-act comedy, “A Case of Sus- pension.” The actors threw themselves into it whole heartedly, especially when the food was brought on. Ready Marr as an Irish maid was excel- lent, and Dot Beck, Ellen Kimball, Jeanette Bishop, Patty Carll, and Barb Keene really played their parts as scheming school girls. Jim Verrill, Phil Whitney, Wendell White, and Mariin Barker showed considerable pro- ficiency in climbing through the window. Ed 1949 Patricia Carll, Dorothy Beck, Ellen Kimball, Marion Foster, and Helen Sawyer. Boys — Robert Webb, James Verrill, and John Mer- rill. The following cheerleaders were chosen from the Junior Class: Barbara Witham, Jeanne Butler, and Jeanette Bishop. All members of the class are on the Year- book Staff and have worked hard to make the ycarbook a success. We have greatly appreciated the untiring efforts of our fac- ulty advisor, Mrs. Dempsey, who has helped us considerably in all of our projects, which proves why both our Junior Prom and play, A Case of Suspension, were great suc- cesses. The Junior Class of 1950 feels that this past year has been very prosperous for us, and we wish to thank all those who have made this success possible. JEANETTE DISHOP, '50. NIGHT Butler as Professor Dempsey and Dolores Worden as Miss Judkins really made typical teachers. We all thought the play was a great suc- cess. After the play we presented an amateur show. Prizes were awarded to the following: Donnie and Jean Libby, first; Pamelia Wil- son, second ; and Burchard and Lloyd Dunn, third. Everyone in the class was on some committee and coóperated. wonderfully. D. BECK. D. WORDEN. Fifteen - PENNELL INSTITUTE SOPHOMORE CLASS Front row, left to right: G. Humph rey, P. Bowen, M. Verrill, R. Ayer, C. Leach, A. Todd, C Muzzy. : Second row: H. Hansen, R. Morton, A. Quint, H. Libby, R. White, R. Sawyer, R. MacDonal | Third row: R. Sayward, M. Henry. C. Bilter, W. Anderson, A. Berry, V. Sawyer, B. ۰ Fourth row: M. Butler, F. Ayer, G. Tufts, W. Wallace, H. Cobb, C. Duplisca, D. Quint, R Marsh. IHE SOPHOMORE REPORT We started our Sophomore year with 29 members, Richard Morton was the only new member. At the first class meeting, Richard Ayer was re-clecled President; Cora Leach. Vice President; Audrey Todd, Treasurer: and Muriel Verrill, Secretary. Our Student Council members are Carole Muzzy and Paul Bowen. We held Freshman Reception on Septem- ber 24. We hope the Freshmen had as much fun as we did planning it. A number of our boys and girls went out for sports. Girls going out for basketball wcre Rita Sayward, Marilyn Butler, Muriel Henry, and Muriel Verrill. Doys who went out for basketball were Richard Ayer, Rich- ard Morton, Frederick Ayer, Paul owen, Hubert Cobb, Car! Duplisea, Horace Libby, and Robert Sawyer. Gerald (Buzzy) Humphrey was the manager. Those who were in the Swim Meets were Cora Leach, Muriel Verrill, Frederick Ayer, William Wallace, and Richard Morton. At the Valentine Dance, February 18, Carole Muzzy was chosen Miss P. L Gordon Tufts, who represented us in the Sixteen Riding Meet, came back with two ribbons. The two who represented Pennell in foul shooting were from our class, Richard Ayer and Rita Sayward. Our Minstrel Show on March 25th was ably directed by Mrs. Norman lov and Mr. and Mrs. Karl Libby. Our pianist was Mrs. Elbert Sawyer. In spite of the fact that measles interfered somewhat with our pro- duction it was a grand success. ý The Endmen were: Robert Sawyer, Rich- ard Ayer, Robert White, Paul Bowen. Ger- eld Humphrey, Horace Libby, Gordon Fufts, and Cora Leach as “Topsy.” Soloists were: Cecile Bilter, Beverly Smith, Ruth Marsh, Audrey Todd, Carl Duplisea, Dill Wallace. A duet was sung by Bill Wallace and Carole Muzzy. Arthur Quint was the Interlocutor. The rest of the class sang in the chorus. “Two little girls from out of town did a tap dance. We had fun galore rehearsing for this event and feel that we have received invalu- able training in coóperation as well as experi- ence in appearing before the public. We've had a most enjoyable year and hope the next two ycars will be as pleasant. M. VERRILL, ۰ 1948 1949 = ج WHIRLPOOL FRESHMAN CLASS Seated, left to right: B. Pollard, R. Raylor, R. Skilling, J. Rand, E. Leach, C. Qualey, L. Henry. Second row: R. Douglass, C. Barter, O. Brown, R. White, L. Libby, M. Brown, R. Strout, R. Lashua. Third row: Wilbert Whitney, Warren Whitney, J. Bartlett, B. Brown, J. Libby, Al Johnson, B. Ferri, A. Ferri. Fourth row: R. Peterson, J. Bunnell, R. Libby, C. Tripp, A. Berry, G. Richardson, E. Marr, C. Nason, R. Berry. FRESHMAN CLASS REPORT School opened September 13, 1948. We were familiar with Pennell because we at- tended it last year in the eighth grade. We started the year with 31 pupils. Before six weeks went by another pupil, Joan Bartlett, joined us. She had been in our grade once before but had moved away. We dreaded Freshman Reception hut when it came I think most of the Freshmen had fun. I think some of us had more fun than the Sophomores. At the first class meeting the following officers were elected: Jay Rand, President; lZugene Leach, Vice President; Charles Qualey, Treasurer; Robert Skilling, Secre- tary. Members elected to the Student Council from our class were Ralph Taylor and Lois Henry. The Freshman Class was pretty well repre- sented in boys' basketball this year. Those who made the team were: Ralph Taylor, Eugene Leach, Lawrence Libby, Osborne Brown, and Robert Skilling. The Freshman girls who made the team were Barbara Pollard and Barbara Brown. Barbara Pollard was chosen as the cheer- leader from our class. Those who tried out for fall baseball were as follows: Eugene Leach, Ralph Taylor, Osborne Brown, Charles Qualey, Lawrence Libby, and Robert Skilling. ROBERT SKILLING, 02. Seventeen سس ا ےک See ڪڪ - s PENNELL INSTITUTE LITERARY THE DARE Jonesboro was a town that you might find anywhere, with its white churches, schools and small stores. There were trees in front of the old houses, and one could see many small white houses—upstarts with their new shrubbery. And like other small towns, they had their small social groups. There was O'Leary, the cop: Shultze, the butcher ; Par- row, the barber; and a few other smali busi- ness men. There was also Smith who worked in an office. No one seemed to know quite what he did : for he was a small, mousey, un- important person. Although he was always at the club meeting, they seldom askel his opinion, cnd he never ventured to give it; he might as well have been the invisible man. On the ouiskirts of the town was a ceme- tery. In the daylight it was a pretty place with the trees and green grass, but under the curtain of night, it took on a different aspect. The trees took on the germents of giants, and wind whistled through them like eerie musicians paying a death march. So it wasn't queer that many people preferred to walk around it, rather than save them- selves a few steps and go through it to get home. One winter's eve the talk at the club drifted around to this place. and some of the old settlers related many stories told to them by their grandparents about strange people who dwelt there. “'Tis strange, remarked l'arrow, “that no one dares test these stories and casually saunter through there at night. Think of all the time it'd save. Don't look at me when you say that, sald Shultze, a very superstitious person, you won't catch me risking my neck just to prove a story. How about you, Smith, you walk around there every night? Why don't you try it? returned Darrow. I will!” said Smith, emphatically. I will, this very night. “Better be careful, my boy, warned Eighteen O'Leary. ‘Tis said, goblins live there.” “Yea, how'll we know whether he does or e. 2 not? Maybe he'll chicken out on us. “Oh, no!” cried Smith, seeing his moment of glory fast fading away. ['ve got an idea, said Shultze, and he turned and took a long sword from the wall. Take this and drive it into the ground in front of a certain headstone.” How about Mrs. Coffin's? That’s the round one.” Smith put his coat on and took the sword. It was a bitter cold night, and the courage that came so easily in the warm room began to leave him. But he buttoned his coat up tighter and set out. After he departed, the rest of the group left also, hurrying around the other way to meet him at the road to taunt him, for they were sure he would lose his nerve and walk around. But Smith hadn't lost his nerve and was just entering the cemetery. The wind started blowing harder and heavy clouds covered the moon just as he saw the silhouette of the headstone. He imagined something follow- ing as he stumbled over a grave and broke into a run. He heard footsteps, voices. and then they disappeared. Exhausted, he stumbled over another grave and saw what he thought was the round headstone in front of him. He jumped up and fumbled with a match to make sure. He knelt down and pushed his heavy coat out of the way. He lit the match, breathed a sigh of relief, and fumbled with the sword. Why did it have to make so much noise? Someone would hear him. Maybe they already had. Maybe they were right behind him. He stabbed the sword into the earth and started to run. They had seen him and had grabbed him from behind. He could hear them playing his death march in the trees. He screamed into the wind and sank to the ground with a hopeless shudder. Outside the gate his friends waited. Did I just hear a scream? asked O'Leary. سس 1948 -— “Must have been the wind, there's no one around here. Ile must have left before we got here. Let's go home. It’s getting cold,” said one. The next morning they called at Smith's apartment, but the door was locked and no one answered. With a bewildered shrug, they headed for the cemetery, for it held no fear during the day. There they found Smith, frozen to death, held fast to the ground by thc sword — he had pushed it through his coat in his frenzied effort to escape. “Dor” Breck, '50. A SENIOR'S VIEW OF GRADUATION The year of 1949 has come and with it the Class of 1949. It will be but a few weeks before this class will be graduating, with each boy and girl receiving his and her diploma with a wistful look. Since we started as Freshmen we have looked forward to the day of graduation. We didn't seem to care so much then—just to get through the four years of high school. But now as we look back, at times we wish we were starting over again as Freshmen. During the four years of high school, our class has had good times together, putting on dances, a prize speaking contest, the Senior Play, publishing the yearbook, and many other activities. As I write this, our class is getting ready for our trip to New York and Washington, D. C.: we feel that it will be our last time together to have a good time. When we come back from New York and Washington, we must get ready for the big day for us, June 17, 1949. We have been building memories that can never be forgotten. Each one of us has a picture of his classmates individually and as a class. Long after we receive our diplomas may each one of us in the Class of 1949 have fond memories of the good old school days spent at Pennell. KENNETH Morey, '49. 1949 WHIRLPOOL A SCHOOL MORNING It is only seven o'clock in the wee hours of the morning when from somewhere below I hear, “beady, are you going to get up? I turn over and try to open my eyes but all in vain. I just can't wake myself enough to answer that [ am going to get up. Soon I hear footsteps on the stairs. Mom shakes me so hard she pulls me out on the cold floor. Picking myself up I try to find my slippers, but I just never do know where I left them the night before. You all know how it is. Finally I decide to get dressed instead of standing there all day in my bare feet. Can't decide what to wear to school today so I close my eyes and pick out a green skirt and a blue blouse; of course that won't do, so I try again. This time I pick out a white blouse. Gee, I'm right on time this morning. It only took me twenty-five minutes to get dressed. I am just starting to enjoy my breakfast when the horrible thought comes to me from somewhere in my empty head that we are going to have a French test today. Jumping up from the table I start searching for that old French book. I find it on top of the piano, but I am sure that I didn't put it there. There must be spooks at my house! Every time I put something away I never can find it again in the place I am sure that I put it. Well, I sit down to the table again and start to conjugate avoir in the present tense and eat at the same time. This is the way it sounded. J'ai, tu as-Nancy, please pass the butter-il a, nous avons, gulp—Mom. what comes next? You don't know? I thought that you took French in high school — Yes, I suppose it was a long time ago — crunch, cranch— Well, gee whiz. what did I say now? You said it yourself. O. K., I give up: everytime I open my mouth, I put my foot in it.” Time for the school bus! Well for crying out loud, I haven't even finished my break- fast yet. Will you tell Mr. Whitney that I will get the bus on the way back. Where's my kerchief? Nancy took it again today? Well, darn her! I wish she'd wear her own clothes sometime. (On the bus): Hi, Bea! No, I guess I'll sit alone so that I can study my French.—Well, here we are at the school already. Nineteen “ سس سس um ———————— c —— PENNELL INSTITUTE Bell is ringing as we enter the main hall. I dash up to the French room only to find out that although we have French today, there's no test because the French newspaper that we get once a week has arrived. Golly am ] ever glad that we aren't having the test today. Then I remember that I'll only have to go through the same torture again to- morrow. Woe is me! What chance is there for a girl at Pennell Institute. Just tell me, will you? BEADY Marr, '50. COURTESY Courtesy has been defined as politeness combined with kindness. Jt is one of the gualities most to be desired in young people and yet, unfortunately, it is a trait too often lacking. Doys and girls with fine manners always win the confidence, admiration, and pride of cveryone they come in contact with, It has been said that “politeness never yet made a gentleman. This is true of false courtesy but a true gentleman, however, is one who is polite and courteous at all times as a result of a kind heart. Kindness is courtesy put into action. Courtesy is necessary in every walk of life —in the business world, a courteous clerk attracts buyers while a rude one turns cus- tomers away. In the home there should be courtesy in order to have peace and happi- ness. ]t consists in helpfulness, kindness toward our parents and brothers and sisters, and cheerfulness. Courtesy is simply showing consideration for others. We should try to develop this quality every day by performing daily acts of courtesy at home, at school, and on the street. We can try to show more consideration for cur teachers, our schoolmates, and our parents. As the conduct of a a student body reflects greatly the character of the school, we should try to make it all that it should be by prac- ticing the simple rules of courtesy every day. We should not cast any reflections on our school, home, or parents by failing to observe these rules. BARBARA TUFTS, '49, Twenty THE JAZZ-MASTER Ask anyone who knows good music about jazz: ask him about the Jellv-roll Blues. Nine out of ten will tell you that 'Jelly-roll Blues is jazz. real jazz. But then ask him why it is real jazz, why it is popular. Nine out of ten will be unable to answer, but the answer is a funny little man in a dark suit, saddle-back shoes, and a trumpet : none other than Bunny Berrigan himself, and his golden trumpet. [In nineteen hundred and forty a nation-wide poll voted Bunny Berrigan the best trumpet player in the world; and it was 2 unny Berrigan who made Jelly-roll Blues famous. Dut now Bunny Berrigan is dead, and the outside world has forgotten him ; but Bunny s world, the world of jazz. is still mourning. and as long as wax platters continue to be made, the world of jazz will continue to mourn. Bunny gave his life for his country as surely as any hero who died in battle, and greater still is the fact that Dunny did it willingly, even eagerly. Bunny had made a lot of songs famous. but only one was greater than Jelly-roll Blues,” and that one was I Cant Get Started which Bunny adopted as his orches- tra theme song. That song called for a trumpet to reach E sharp above high C. not just once, but five times—the hardest song in the books. When the war broke out in 1941, Bunny began touring the country, putting on U. S. O. benefit performances, but after three months his lungs “went back on him. Doctor after doctor warned Bunny to quit and let a younger man serve, but Bunny re- fused. Finally, though, even Dunny admitted that he was through, but he said he would put on a last and great show for the boys in the service. The show went on without a theme song until, just before closing time, requests for I Can't Get Started, began to come in. Dunny stepped to the mike and a hush fell over the audience. There was a sad, rather wistful smile on Bunny's face as he said: Ladies and gentlemen, I have several reguests for 'I Can't Get Started.' It is my song, and as a grand finale, T. will try ìt. | lowever, I don't guarantee a thing about it; so if I miss a high note, I hope you'll forgive me. Here it is, ladies and gentlemen, ‘I Can't Get Started.’ ” ee سس 1948 Bunny raised his hand, and the orchestra began; Bunny sang his chorus, and tears came into the eyes of his musicians. Then he raised his trumpet; the melody continued; and four times E sharp above high C shrieked forth; then came the final touch where the note must be held for the last ten bars. The golden trumpet pointed skyward, and Dunny's nimble fingers adjusted the valves. The tone of the trumpet rose in pitch and volume: high C was reached, then E sharp blared forth as the orchestra melody gradually died away. Eight bars came and went, then Dunny gasped, and the note was clipped off; Bunny clutched at his chest, knowing what the trouble was: his left lung had collapsed. Then Bunny smiled, and again he raised the trumpet. The last two bars of “I Can't Get Started rang out. Never be- fore or since has an orchestra received such applause as Dunny received then; but there would have been tears 1n the eyes of the audi- ence, just as there were tears in the eyes of Bunny, if they had known what Bunny knew : Bunny had just played his last song. Medical science slaved over Bunny for six long months, but it was no use. Then one day he asked to have a phonograph placed be- side his bed ; he wanted to hear I Can't Get Started. The record began and Bunny smiled as he heard his tenor voice singing but when the record finished, Bunny Berri- gan was dead. That was in nineteen hundred and forty- two, but the world of jazz still has a soft spot in its heart. That soft spot is reserved for Dunny Berrigan, the King of Jazz. A. Kucu, '49. BOOK REPORT Title of Book and Author: The Big Fish- crman, by Lloyd C. Douglas. Something about the author: Lloyd Cas- sel Douglas was born at Columbia City, Indi- ana, in the year 1877. He was educated at Wittenberg College, Springfield, Ohio, and Hamma Divinity School. He was in church work until 1933, when he retired from the ministry and he now devotes all his time to writing. Some of his other widely read books 1949 WHIRLPOOL are The Robe, Magnificent Obsession, Dis- puted Passage and Green Light. Setting: Most of the events of the story take place in the village of Bethsaida during the time of Jesus Christ. Plot: Fara, the Arabian-Jewish princess of Arabia, pledges herself to kill her father when, while still a child, she learns of the tormented life which he caused her mother to live. When her mother dies, Fara cuts her hair and runs away in the night, in the person of a boy, to avenge her mother. In her jour- ney to the Tetrarch’s palace, she meets John, the Baptist, who recognizes her as a girl. The two become friends and part with the hope that they will meet again. When she reaches her destination, she is taken into the home of Simon, the fisherman, and Hannah, his mother-in-law. They soon discover that she is a girl and allow her to stay with them. David, the Sadduccee, also discovers that she is a girl, but he also realizes that she is Fara, the daughter of Antipas, the Tetrarch. David assists her in getting a position in the Tetrarch's palace where she hopes to fulfill her pledge. While all this has been taking place, Jesus, the carpenter of Nazareth, has become the talk of the whole country-side. His wondrous works and “peace and brotherly-love” doc- trine have won him many followers and also many disbelieving enemies. Fara becomes one of his most ardent believers, and Simon becomes his most trusted and beloved dis- ciple. When Jesus cures Hannah of a terrible sickness, Fara is so deeply stirred by the love and kindness of Jesus that she resolves not to keep her pledge and dedicates her life to helping Jesus in his good works. However, Voldi, her lover, eventually kills her father. After the crucifixion of Jesus, Fara goes back to Arabia with Voldi, only to find the Arabian court hostile to her. She and Voldi then plan to run away together. but as their ship is leaving the dock, two messengers ride up with the news that Zendi, the king of Arabia, is dead, and Voldi has been declared king of Arabia. Duty calls, and Voldi goes back to serve his people while Fara continues her journey to an unknown destiny. ERMINIE CRANDALL, 49. Twenty-one PENNELL INSTITUTE POET'S NOOK ODE TO ARGUMENT I'll not open my mouth, and I'll not say a word; Ill be as quiet as a mouse; I'll be seen and not heard. But hardly a minute will Go by, wait and see, If you don't hear a sguawk From quiet little me. D. Beck, '50. Who am I but one small speck In all the sky around, To feel and see the joys and fears Of something newly found? And why does time go on and on? Why does it never stay? And why does night, with diamonds bright Always turn to day? Will this go on till day or night Will always fill the sky? And why can't I live on to see The centuries slip by? Are stars the diamonds of our lives? Or are they hope still pure? Or are they dreams of a new place Where life will stand secure? Is there a world outside of this? Is there another place Where we may live another life Or show a different face. Why will no one answer me These questions that I ask? Because imagination can And will assume the task. D. Beck, '50. ALONE Alone—the night is dark and stealthy, Echoed by a soft unhealthy Footstep down the road. Alone—each shiny branch is saying Words of warning by its swaying In an unknown code. Alone—the clashing thunder shakes The house, while lashing lightning rakes The sky in shreds. Alone—the clouds pile up in mountains; | Rain comes down from unknown fountains In the clouds’ high heads. Twenty-two Alone—each wave is greedy, grasping, Reaching up while vainly gasping With a moaning tone. Alone—each noise is there behind you Stumbling softly, trying to find you While you wait—alone. D. Beck, '50. STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE Strawberry shortcake is my desire. When I think of it my heart is on fire. With its red, red cap and its creamy tassel It is almost more than I can wrestle. But I eat, and I eat till it comes out my ears, And the dreams I dream are full of fears. But next day I'm ready to start all over— With that strawberry shortcake, I'm in clover. C. QUALEY, '52. SALUTE TO THE TEXAS RANGERS They were called the Texas Rangers, an undistin- guished name, But through battling hordes of outlaws they fought their way to fame. They were loved by decent citizens, hated by thc rest, Theirs was the job of enforcing the law from the Pecos River west. Their home was in the saddle, in the saddle was their bed, They rode by night, they rode by day, proud of the life they led. An cye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth was the code the Ranger knew, Mercy was not a part of him—he had a job to do. Hc could kill a man before breakfast; he could kill a man at noon ; ۲ And without the least compunction, he could kill in the light of the moon. His partner was a broncho; his best friend was a gun; ۲ And a single Texas Ranger could make a regiment turn and run. He had no bosom buddy, no girl to call his own, For a Ranger rode a long, hard trail, and a Ranger rode alone. Austin Kucit, '49. N WHIRLPOOL YOU TELL ON YOURSELF On Sunday morn' the church bells, Their friendly greetings ring You tell on yourself Calling the folks to worship, By the friends you seck, To meditate and sing. By the vcry manner In which you speak, There's Pennell's lofty tower— By the way you employ Symbol of learning and light, Your leisure time, Standing staunch and steady By the use you make For everything that's right. Of each dollar and dime. But more than brick and mortar You tell what you are In memory set apart. By the things you wear, I love the school's traditions By the spirit in which And hold them in my heart. Your troubles you bear, By the kind of things Although I fain would wander— At which you laugh, In distant lands should roam, By the records you play I'll ever hold in memory On the phonograph,— The rolling hills of home. That's how you tell on yourself. D. WORDEN, '50. A WINTER SCENE A beautiful, glittering, white crust of snow I sce, With the sun beating down as bright as can be. EXCHANGES In the far away distance, I also can hear The call of a chick-a-dee so soft and so clear. Then all of a sudden the jingling of bells, Whence down in the valley an old farmer dwells. Windham High School Stillness once more settles over the scene, And again the call of the chick-a-dee so keen. When you wake up some cold winter morn, Picture this scene as a new beauty born. Porter High School Leavitt Institute, Turner L. HENny, '52. Jay High School Potter Academy A POEM Standish High School I cannot write a poem; I cannot make it rhyme; I cannot master meter, Falmouth Fligh School Now isn't that a crimc? Freeport High School I could maybe write a story, p p Or a composition, too; Richmond High School But when it comes to poems, ۲ There's something I can't do. Dridgton Academy 4 £50 ud r C BARS North Yarmouth Academy Mapleton High School THE HILLS OF GRAY The rolling hills of Gray Mechanic Falls High School Are fairer to my cycs, Limerick High School Than any lofty mountain peak | Snow-capped against blue skies. Parsonsfield High School I love her fine old houses, w Her shaded village streets, A B. ITHAM. Her orchards. lawns, and gardens, h Where thrift with beauty meets. B. Mason. Twenty-three 1949 JUNIOR ALPHABET A is for Anm, Callaghan, by heck. B is for E. Butler, Bishop, Barker, and Beck. C is for Carll, We all call her Patty. D is for Dolores, She's a cute little fatty. E is for Ellen, How sweetly she plays. F is for Foster, Sho's guiet in her ways. G is for George, But he Tikes to be called Bobby. H is for Helen, Now, sewing's her hobby. I is for Isabella, Called Bella by the rest. J is for Jearme, And Jimmy, the pest. K is for Keene Who joined us this year. L is for Lund, With a letter, we hear. M is for Mason And Merrill and Marr. N is for naughty Which we aren't, by far. O is for oafs, Now do you think we're dumb? P is for Phil, Called Little Caesar by some. Q is for the quizes, We all get our share. R is for the rainy days ۲ That takes the curI from your hair. S is for Satan, At times he's our guide. T is for Thurlow And her automobile ride. U is for you Who are reading this ditty. V is for Verrill , Who thinks Barb's quite pretty- W is for White And Witham, too. X is for xenon In the Chemistry we do. Y is for the yells At the basketball game. Z is for the zeal That's brought us our fame. After finishing this We're a mental wreck, So we'll just sign our names, D. Worden, D. Beck. ARTICLES FOR SALE SENIORS M. MacDonald— Dashfulness. J. Cobb— Dainty voice. E. Crandall—Ring (see Ralph White). N. Bishop—Calls from Pownal. B. Rolíe—Ability to blow kisses. P. Pollard—Love for Kokv. M. Blake—One temper (slightly-used). B. Tufts—One Gray oil truck. J. Wilson— 98 in English test. K. Skilling—Bubble dancers (car, too). K. Morey—Troubles. R. Hatch—Several snappy neckties. A. Kuch—Book (in the process). R. Lashua—Just Dick. — JUNIORS J. Butler— Green Chevie. Twenty-four E. Kimball—Sax. D. Worden—Pictures of boy friends. D. Beck—Watch bracelet. W. White—Cora. M. Foster—Shorthand books. R. Webb—Talks with ‘Barb’? Witham. J. Verrill— Big feet. E. Butler—Lunch box. P. Whitney—Turkeys. B. Mason—The measles. J. Gilpatrick—Chemistry experiment (40 grt. MNO,). D. Marr—Sizzling letters from Roger. P. Carll—Paul's ring. B. Witham—Trips to Augusta. J. Bishop—Iodine experiment in Chemis- try. B. Keene—Allerton's picture. B. Lund—Week of March 14. کک 1948 “ly = 1949 M. Thurlow — Barb Keene's brother's ring. M. Barker—One alarm clock (it doesn't work). J. Merrill—Razor (brand new). I. Evans—Trips to Lashua's. A. Callaghan—Soft voice. H. Sawyer—Complaints. SOPHOMORES M. Verrill—Glasses. A. Todd— Her sinus. C. Leach—Good hearing (8 line). F. Aver—Curly hair. R. Sawyer.— Motor bike. H. Hanson—Geometry book. R. Ayer—Good disposition. G. Tufts—Talk. R. MacDonald—Blue eyes. D. Quint—Plaid shirts. A. Quint—Bashfulness. R. Sayward— Dillfold. C. Muzzy — (2 ushers in Portland theaters). M. Henry—Gum. C. Dilter—Bragging. B. Smith—Candy bars. V. Sawyer—Candy and gum. C. Duplisea—Scoreboard. R. White—Walks to North Gray. R. Marsh—Singing ability. H. Libby—French book. W. Wallace—First-aid kit. G. Humphrey— Violin (when he remem- bers it). R. Morton — “Barb” Witham's silver chain. W. Anderson—Language! ? ? ! M. Butler—John's ring. P. Bowen—Evenings at Carll's. H. Cobb—Coke machine. A. Berry— Wool socks. WHIRLPOOL FRESHMEN C. Barter—Ability to play cards. J. Bartlett—Bobbie's medal. A. Berry—Harmonica. R. Berry—Bicycles. B. Brown—Bangs. M. Brown—Sweater. O. Brown—Glasses. J. Bunnell—Noraco Bus. A. Ferri—Italian sandwiches. D. Ferri—Knitting needles. L. Henry—Absent mindedness. A. Johnson—Charlie’s picture. R. Lashua—Auto-Biography. E. Leach— Baseball glove. J. Libby—Corny jokes. L. Libby—Remarks for all occasions. R. Libby—Funny faces. E. Marr—Fights with Bea. C. Nason—Ice cream cones. B. Pollard—Everything but Jim. C. Qualey—Slowness. J. Rand—Brains. G. Richardson — Her Clyde for the present. R. Skilling—Red hair. R. Strout—Navy pants. R. Taylor—Dimples. C. Tripp—Her Howard Verrill (N. G.). R. White—Dislike for Cora. Warren Whitney, Wilbert Whitney — Their tractors. TEACHERS Mr. Dempsey—U. S. History class. Mrs. Dempsey—All English classes. Mrs. Bowie—Jeanette Bishop in Home Ec. Mr. Durgin — Auger holes and plank stretcher. Mr. Laughton—Mimeograph machine. Mr. Flye—Mops and brooms and broken windows. Twenty-five رټ بت JOKES Mr. Durgin was speeding to school when he was stopped by a policeman. Policeman: “T should give you a ticket for this. Mr. Durgin: But I'm on my way to my Freshman Class.” Policeman: “Ignorance is no excuse.” Two students were about to take an exam in English literature. “Great Scott,” said one, “I've forgotten who wrote vanhoe!” “I'N tell you that,” replied the other, “if you'll tell me who the dickens wrote The Tale of Two Cities.” Mr. Dempsey in Chem. class: “What's the difference between lightning and elec- tricity ? Austin K.: You have to pay for elec- tricity. Mrs. D.: Well, Mr. Verrill, why don't you answer me? Jim V.: I did. I shook nîy head. Mrs. D.: You don't expect me to hear it rattle way down here, do you ? Mr. D.: “What makes the Tower of Pisa lean? Beady Marr: I wish I knew—I'd like to try it.” One day recently at noon lunch, Mrs. Bowie was asked: Will you pass the nuts? Mrs. Bowie: Oh! I suppose so, but I really ought to flunk most of them. Bobby H.: new hair do. Skill: No, she hasn't. Bobby H.: “Well, something's different.” Skill: It's a new girl friend. I see your girl friend has a Mrs. Dempsey in English class: “Give the definition of marital. — Ken Skilling: ‘Pertaining to war.” Twenty-six PENNELL INSTITUTE Dot: “Gosh, I just found a quarter. Phil: It's mine; it's got my name on it. i Dot: Oh, yeah! What's your name? Phil: Iz. Pluribus Unum. Dot: “Darn it—it's yours all right. Employer to Jeanette: job?” Jeanette: “Yes, sir.” Employer: ‘Do you ever tell lies ? Jeanette: No, sir, but I can learn. So you want a Mr. Dempsey in History class: What does ی produce more of than any other country ? Jimmy G.: “Mexicans!” Mrs. Skilling: “Why are you jumping up and down, 'Dib'? Bib : I took my medicine and forgot to shake the bottle. John M.: “Why are you standing on your head?” Dick L.: I'm turning things over in my mind.” Mr. Durgin: Will you give me one use for horsehide ? Qualey: “Well, I guess it helps to hold the horse together. She: Stop! Don't kiss me. He: I will not stop. She: Well, I tried anyway. Mr. Dempsey: Since none of you fin- ished the history assignment, the whole class will stay after school. Phil: Give me liberty or give me death. Mr. Dempsey: “Who said “hat?” Phil: “Patrick Henry.” Teacher: “What is a synonym, Bobby?” Bobby: That's the word you use when you can’t spell the other one.’ 1949 While saying his prayers, a little boy had his mind centered on his parents’ talk about our troubled world. Having prayed for everything and everybody he could remem- ber, the lad concluded, “And please God, take care of yourself. If anything happened to you, we'd all be sunk.” THINGS TO WHIRLPOOL Voice over the phone: “Wendell won’t be at school today.” Teacher: “Who is this speaking, please?” Voice: “This is my father speaking.” “Bib”: 'How many times were you whipped in school, Grandpa ?” Grandpa: Oh! I don't know. I never paid anv attention to things that went on behind my back.” REMEMBER AT PENNELL I.oud noise of bell (8.45 sharp). Broken pencil sharpener. Eddie Butler’s destructiveness. Crowded girls’ room. Ilorrible English tests. Lovable student council. Smelly lab after Chemistry. Gathering of untouchables in South room ( Casco crows' nest). Coke machine during the rush hour. Mr. Dempsey's nickles. Hot dog hikes. Walks in the spring. All basketball games. Double seats in geometry room. Telephone calls during tests. Gum donations to wastebasket. Smell of Mr. Flye's pipe. Basketball rallies. Juniors singing ( ?). Mr. Dempsey's ties. Freshman boys dash to the door at noon. Intelligent U. S. History class. Fire drills when the teacher goes out through the door. Mrs. Bowie's biology class (48). Jim Verrill's romance: Jimmy Gilpatrick's antics. Mrs. Dempsey's French II class. Barb Mason's faithfulness to Les? Seniors’ April Fool's Dance they didn’t put on. Wilma Anderson’s feuds with Mr. Demp- sey. Two buses to the basketball games. separate Mr. Aiken's visits to Pennell. Noise through the walls. Erminie Crandall's sympathetic looks at the T'reshmen. Classes we skipped with various excuses. Twenty-seven BROWSING AROUND THE CLASS OF 1949 KEY Name Companion . Pastime . Favorite Expression . Prized Possession Ambition Our Prediction M. BLAKE C Or go to n . Marty . Cooking “Oh, gosh ۳ . Driver's license . Housewife . Night watchman E. CRANDALL C: Ot G3 90 سر Norma . Writing to Ralph “Natch” Ralph's ring . Teacher . Housewife Sok go Nr R. LASHUA . Martin B. Walking “Huh!” Pipe Wrestler Policeman c: ات ke ot سر J. Coss 1. “Cookie” and “Skill” 2. Driving his car ??????? . Navy 6. A minister K. Morey “Bobby” Working at Hayes' Store Where's Helen!” His ring Teacher Storekeeper J. WILsoN Barb Mason Reading “Oh, for goodness sake” Ability to read Social worker Nursery teacher سر نج مو FO il 2. 3. 4. 9. 6. Twenty-eight eru O مسر تج EN 56 SUE WI Go ON oo MH ob go o Ci vt Ow مت P. POLLARD “Barb” T. Being with Neal “Gosh! ! ۳ Green dress Airline hostess Housewife B. ROLFE Ken S. Being with Skill You Shmoo— “Skill's” ring Singer Housewife N. BISHOP Erminie Talking “Oh, for the love of Nicky!” Clothes Secretary Old maid B. HATCH “Betty” Telling jokes “Is that so!” Bicycle Mechanic Professor A. Kucu “Skill” and John Riding horseback “You don’t say !” Horse Army Cowboy K. SKILLING “Beze” Courting “Beze” [11 No m Motorcycle Truck driver Band conductor for “Beze” B. Turrs “Putt” Being with “Bob” “I don't know” “Bob” Nurse Housewife M. MACDONALD . Jim V. Playing cards . Oh, shoot . Brains Surveyor History teacher 1949 س BROWSING AROUND THE CLASS OF 1950 KEY 1. Nickname 2. Seen with 3. Pastime 4. Favorite Expression 5. Ambition 6. Our Prediction D. Beck 1. “Dot” 2 SIS 3. Playing piano ۱. “Hey!” 5. College 6. Psycologist I. Evans “Bella” Two Beas Doing Shorthand [ don't know join the Waves Admiral T toa nr س ت J. BUTLER “Jeannie” “Tommy” - Shows—dancing “It’s just a struggle” Housewife Hairdresser Cre چن wm سر — is] J. GILPATRICK “Jimmy” Raymond Strout Illegal hunting and fishing “It all depends— General fixit Selling refrigerators to Eskimos Ot wm wwe ی E. BUTLER “Ed” Too numerous Visiting Blakes Hot D—! 5. Motorcycle to Indiana 6. Walking to Indiana ot € [m I ۰ بر جح D جر ات Cs 7 Cte OD رن2 IEEE WHIRLPOOL M. BARKER “Mike” “Phil” Gazing out the window “Ha-a-a-h !” Boxer Artist M. FosTER Marion Jean Doing Shorthand “What” Nurse Librarian E. KIMBALL “Babydoll” “Gabby” Playing piano “Who me?” Musician Telephone operator A. CALLAGHAN “Trish” Two “Beas” Reading “Cussed” Telephone operator Telephone operator J. BISHOP “Jen” “Barb” Fishing “Phnee !” To own fishing schooner Opera singer P. CARLL “Patty” Paul Gadding “Heck!” P. E. instructor Jazz pianist B. MARR “Beady” “Bea” Going to Gorham, N. H. رس ور O” To be a wrestler Swimming instructor Twenty-nine w 6 or ملم c zs eie سے مس ون لر ال بر 0« دن بر St T Ct OS DO سا J. MERRILL “Jawn” M. Butler Running over cows “I dunno” To go a long way Hermit B. Lunp “Dea” . Beady Writing to Cliff “That's all he wrote O'd maid Share in U. S. P. O. J. VERRILL “Jim” B. Pollard Going to West Gray “I dunno “A” in English Dancing teacher ? B. WITHAW “Barb” “Jen” Talking to Bobby “Bull frogs!” To get driver's license Nurse B. KEENE Bobby Mary Going to Westbrook Gee Housewife urlesgue queen H. SAWYER Helen K. Morey Sewing “You half pint!” Nurse Nurse W. WHITE “Windy” Cora Visiting Cora “I Don't Care” Radio Minister? Thirty T ke O te س س لت دن شر ا ork wwe 6. = — ن دن سل ان ` P. WHITNEY Phil, “Little Caesar” “Mike” Jacking deer Who me? Civil engineer Game warden D. WORDEN Gabby, “Doie” Ellen Coming in at 4.00 A. M. Ho-hopoo” Learn to spell Five husbands M. THURLOW Mary B. Keene Going riding Gee Stenographer Housewife B. MASON “Barb” Austin Horses What are you talking about Commercial teacher Police matron 7 R. WEnB “Bobby’ “Red” Riding “Judas Priest!” Frank Duck, 2nd Find “Jawn” WHIRLPOOL ۱ : SENIOR CLASS AU i to right: M. Blake, J. Wilson, E. Crandall, B. Tufts, P. Pollard, B. Rolfe, N. ishop. Standing: K. Skilling, R. Hatch, A. Kuch, J. Cobb, M. MacDonald, R. Lashua, K. Morey. ORCHESTRA Seated, left to right: R Ayer, D. Beck, E. Kimball. Standing: N. Bishop, R. Douglass, G. Humphrey. Thirty-one Saas 1949 SWIMMING MEETS This year the boys and girls who entered the swimming meets showed great improve- ment. The girls who competed were: Cora Leach and Patricia Carll, 25-yard free style; Dorothy Beck, breast stroke: Peggy Robin- son, back stroke: Muriel Verrill, Cora Leach, Dorothy Beck, and Pat Carll, the relay. The boys were: James Verrill and Fred- erick Ayer, 25-yard free style; Richard Mor- ton and John Merrill, 50-yard free style; John Merrill, 100-yard free style; James Verrill, 50-yard breast stroke; Frederick Aver, William Wallace, James Verrill, and Richard Morton, the relay. GIRLS' BASKETBALL Well, another season has come and gone, and here we all are again—a year older, but oh,—ages wiser. We shouldn't brag, but we really think we “done noble,” as you will see as you read our record. We won six games out of thirteen starts this year. We played the following teams: Pennell 17 Alumni 23 Pennell 24 At Scarborough 25 Pennell 23 At Standish 21 Pennell 34 At New Gloucester 38 Pennell 22 Windham 39 Pennell 37 Potter 23 Pennell 21 At Potter 16 Pennell! 31 Scarborough 39 Pennel! 38 Freeport 35 Pennell 36 At Freeport 22 Pennell 33 New Gloucester 73 Penuell 44 Standish 37 Pennell 34 At Windham 39 We scored 427 points this year against our opponents' 436. Rita Sayward was high with 211 points. She was followed by Darbara Pollard, with 103, and Patty Carll with 94. Patty Carll — Elected captain again this year. Good player, swell sport, team inspira- tion, and in there fighting every minute. Rita Stretch Sayward — Ta!l, lanky, on- the-backboard type; teams always put their best guards on Stretch, but it doesn't szem to do them much good. Barbara “Barb” Pollard — Good fighter, nice passer, good on defense, but don't ever get Barb mad. When they do, a whole army can't stop her. Dorothy “Dot” Beck — Our wee, wee one, never a complaint, and we just dare you to try and dribble around her. Can't be done! Muriel Sis Verrill — Tall, cheerful Thirty-two (yes, she’s cheerful even as she takes the ball away from the forwards). Always gets ‘em off the backboard. She gives any team a bad time. Helen Sawyer — Quietly gives ’em room, then just as quietly moves in and takes the ball away from them. What more can you ask ? Marion Foster — Everybody sits and gapes as Marion wows them with those beau- tiful long shots. Other players who could be depended upon were: Barbara Brown — Only a Freshman, out to learn, “Barb” has come along fast. A lot of action this year, even more next year. And—if we need a forward—why she can do that, too. Muriel Henry — You can always depend on a big grin from “Fatty,” just as you can always depend on her for a good game. Marilyn Butler — She always scores when you least expect it. Need we say more? Barbara Keene — A new fare in our ranks. She’s fast mastering Pennell techniques. We'll see you next year, “Barb.” Ellen Kimball — She's our manager, our mother hen, our guardian, our foreman on the job, and our good pal. Could we get along without her? Sure, just as well as we could get along without our right arms. We're not going to lose a girl by gradua- tion this ycar. We're all looking forward to another season — pardon us, another GOOD season—next year. You've read our story. Now tell us, was it luck, or could it be a certain green sweater EEN VEE INSTITUTE = X — 1948 — WHIRLPOOL BOYS AND GIRLS SWIMMING TEAMS Seated, left to right: M. Verrill, C. Leach, Coach Mrs. Laughton, P. Carll, D. Beck. Namotug; R. Morton, J. Verrill, W. Wailace, Coach Laughton, J. Merrill, F. Ayer. GIRLS' BASKETBALI. TEAM D. Beck, R. Sayward. P. Carll, M. Verrill, H. Sawyer, B. Pollard. Second rew: Coach Laughton, B. Keene, M. Butler, A. Berry, M. Foster, B. Brown (manager), E. Kimball. Kueeling, left to right: Thirty-three 1949 س — PENNELL INSTITUTE INDIVIDUAL SCORING GAME SCORES Player BG Un TP Pennell 25 Porter 55 James Verrill 52 92 126 Pennell 13 Porter 28 Robert Webb 46 24 116 Pennell 40 New Gloucester 33 Rm 34 23 91 Pennell 18 Standish 33 alph Tay 32 8 72 i M 5 Richard WU 28 11 Resell a Bouse a Robert Skilling 22 2 46 Pennell 37 Freeport B Kenneth Skilling 16 11 43 Pennell 30 Greely 53 Eugene Leach 15 4 34 Pennell 26 Alumni 60 ۳ AU ; p 17 Pennell 30 Windham 59 Paul Bowen 4 2 10 John Cobb 3 o 8 Pennell 26 North Yarmouth 54 Malcolm MacDonald 1 3 5 Pennell 16 New Gloucester 59 nn an 1 0 2 Pennell 36 Potter 25 John Merri 1 0 2 Pennell 53 Leavitt 14 This year Kenneth Skilling was chosen CEU a9 ا ie captain. He has played on the varsity for Pennell E Freeport B four years and proved himself well qualified Benne! 4 i e to lead the team. Pennell 38 Greely a TI d E Pennell 15 Cape Elizabeth 45 ig DK receiving letters this year are as fol- Pennell 31 North Yarmouth — 52 ows: Kenneth Skilling, James Verrill, Rich- Pennell 26 Cape Elizabeth 50 Eu cupa Ta Skilling, Eugene Leach, League games. and Kalph laylor. Tripe C playoff. ns to Mr. Calvin Austin, of Fal- Gray scored 206 points to their opponents' er , a Junior High Triple C League was 173. High scorer was Dale Maxwell with 55 oo this year. Coached by Andy points, followed closely by Ken Hayes with aughton, our own Gray cagers walked off 44, Joe Ferri with 27, Eddie Strout with 33, with the league championship trophy, losing and Maurice Thompson with 16. only one league game. Members of the squad are: Maurice We olar s Thompson, Dale Maxwell. Eddie Strout, j e played the following teams: Ken Hayes, Joe Ferri, Bob Gibbs, Dick Carr, id 23 a Cumberland 12 Sterns Caswell, Clint Nason, Burchard Mrs 5 irae a Dunn, John Hamilton, John Doughty, David Gray 18 A Y qc go Copp and Peter Currie. nis 27 Scarborough 16 At the end of the season, the boys elected ray 19 Cumberland 14 Dale Maxwell captain. ud a AU TL 15 Only three boys — Ken Hayes, Maurice a ds SON die ! a Thompson, and Burchard Dunn are gradu- Gray 23 At Scarborough ı ating, but Junior High's loss will be Pennell's Triple C games. pain, Thirty-four t I T ——————MM PH — MÀ ue —— Pa —— I 1949 — ui WHIRLPOOL BASKETBALL VARSITY Nnecliug, le tt to right: R. Taylor, R. Morton, J. Verrill, K. Skilling, R. Webb, E. Leach, R. Skilling. Standing: P. Bowen, Coach Laughton, H. Cobb. J. Cobb, R. Ayer, J. Merrill, L. Libby, G. Humphrey. (manager), F. Ayer. HANCOCK JUNIOR HIGH Kneeling, left to right: D. Maxwell, J. Ferri, E. Strout, M. Thompson, K. Hayes. J. Doug':ty, R. Carr Standing: P. Currie, C. Nason, B. Dunn, J. Hamilton, Coach Laughton, D. Copp, R. Gibbs, Thirty-firc 1949 ت a m BASKETBALL J. V.'S Kuecling, left to right: O. Brown, F. Ayer, J. Cobb, H. Cobb, L. Libby. Standing: Coach Laughton, R. Sawyer, C. Duplisea, H. Libby, G. Humphrey (manager). A tta o iliis CHEERLEADERS Knecling, left to right: J. Bishop, J. Butler, B. Witham, B. Pollard, M. Butler. Standing: B. Rolfe. Thirty-six PENNELL INSTITUIEE—— ——— — — ——— WHIRLPOOL BASEBALL, 1948 Kneeling, left to right: R. Sawyer, R. Hatch, M. Childs, N. LaVallee, F. Ayer, K. Skilling. Standing: Coach Laughton, D. Quint, W. Wallace, M. MacDonald, R. White, H. Beck, J. Verrill J. Merrill, H. Cobb, C. Duplisea, R. MacDonald. BASEBALL Pennell 4 New Gloucester 19 B.A. Pennell 9 Deering Frosh n Ralph White 333 Pennell 5 New Gloucester 13 Henry Beck 292 Pennell 5 Grecly 9 John Merrill 3 Pennell 3 Standish 25 Maurice Childs 219 +p 2 r ü ale S ERE Pennell i North Yarmouth 6 Su E VESTES 200 Pennell 7 Stanclish 4 AMD MEE RE Pennell 10 North Yarmouth 23 James errill -186 Pennell 4 l'reeport 8 William Wallace .tü6 Pennell 3 Greely 24 Kenneth Skilling AGI Pennell 1 Freeport 14 Frederick Ayer 142 League games. Malcolm MacDonald .128 T hirly- Ven 1949 T A PENNELL INSTITUTE JOKES CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS Night Life— Freshman: Mama, may I go out to- night ? Sophomore: ‘Going out, mom. Be home by 10. Junior: 'Bye, Ma. Don't wait up. Senior: “Night, Mater. I'll bring in the milk. Shakesperian— Freshman: Comedy of Errors. Sophomore: Much Ado About Nothing. Junior: As You Like It. Senior: “All's Well That Ends Well.” You Tell 'Em— You can tell a Freshman by the way she gawks, You can tell a Sophomore by the way she talks, You can tell a Junior by the way she walks, You can tell a Senior—But You Can't Tell Her Much! But, Don't you Love School? Well, 'Tur- ally, Itively and 'Finitely. (That's the new way to say, “Natch,” Pos and Def. ) Mr. Dempsey : What is rhubarb ۳ Bill Wallace: Rhubarb is celery gone bloodshot.” Mr. Durgin: “Beze, leave the room.” Beze: “Why?” Mr. Durgin: “Well, you can't very well take it with you.” Ellen (to her brother, who was staying at the Y. M. C. A.): “Are the rooms in there very large?” Gordon: “They are so small that the mice crawl around on their hands and knees.” Thirty -cight Dolores: “Will you join me in a cup of coffee?” Ellen: “Don't be silly, you know we can't both get in that little cup.” Teacher to Freshman girl late for class: “What kept you?” Barb: “Gym.” Teacher: “Please reveal his last name.” Mr. Laughton: “I’d like to know why it is Mrs. Dempsey: “You should have been here an hour ago.” Martin: “Why, what happened?” “Wallace, you mustn't laugh out loud in the classroom.” “I didn't mean to do it. I was smiling and the smile busted.” Isabella, who was Anne Boleyn?” “She was a flatiron.” “What on earth do you mean ?” “Well, it says in the history book: ‘Henry, having disposed of Catherine, pressed his suit with Anne Boleyn.’ “What is a cannibal ? “I don't know. If you ate your father and mother..what would you be?” “An orphan.” Mrs. Dempsey asked her English class to make some remarks on the subject, “Books that have helped me.” Jim Verrill: “My mother's cookbook and my father's checkbook.” 1948 — Maine. ALUMNI President, DONALD F. HALL Vice President, GEORGE Muzzy Skillings Award Won By: 1939—Frances Field Manchester. 1940—Betty Blake Skilling. 1941— Catherine MacDonald Bisciglia. 1942—Ruth Smith Nutting. 1943—Earle Wilson. 1944—Colleen Blake. 1945—James Pollard. 1946—Ethel Verrill Small. 1947—Clifton Hall. 194 — Henry Beck. Complete alumni roster (as compiled by the alumni). Class of 1889 Arthur L. Bennett — Deceased. Annie Bean Haves — Deceased. Grace P. Dow Ramsdell — Deceased. Katie Leslie Anderson — Deceased. Katie Libby Morrill — Portland, Maine. Mabel Libby Small — Deceased. Class of 1890 Laura Allen Weeks — Deceased. Ethel Cummings Pierce — Lewiston, Mabel F. Douglass — Deceased. J. Lillian Frank — Deceased. Grace E. Foster — Deceased. J. H. B. Goff — Gardner, Mass. Wilbert T. Libby — Portland, Maine. Annette W. Libby — Portland, Maine. William C. Smith — Deceased. Grace Webster Morrill — Deceased. Clara Goff Ramsdell — Portland, Maine. Class of 1891 Lizzie Bell Cobb — Portland, Maine. Daniel N. Cushing — San Antonio, Texas. Lottie Lowe Dunphe — Deceased.. Abbie C. Knight Miles Standish, Maine. Elsie Megguire — Poland Spring, Maine. Fannie Symonds Witham — Gray, Maine. May Whitney Clough — Deceased. Silas D. Smith — Address Unknown. 1949 WHIRLPOOL OFFICERS Treasurer, OLIVE HITCHCOCK Lewis Secretary, NORMA LIBERTY Class of 1892 Richard M. Andrews — Deceased. Lillian Adams Cummings — Deceased. Clarence Foster — Deceased. Ella S. Knight — Standish, Maine. Willard Mayberry — Deceased. Susie H. Perley Gates — Summer resi- dence at East Gray. Ivy H. Smith — Deceased. Class of 1893 George E. Hawkes — Gray. Clara Haskell Twombley — Deceased. Charles K. Freeman — Deceased. Susie Hall Sawyer — Deceased. Harry Libby — Deceased. Clarence Libby — West Gray. Stephen R. Morrill — Portland, Maine. Ella Ramsdell Whitney — Gray. Alma Savoy Higgins — Gray. Marion Smith Manning — Colorado. Leonard B. Tripp — Deceased. Mertie Skillings Larrabee — Deceased. Edward T. Frank — Deceased. Class of 1894 Thomas H. Foster — Deceased. Susie M. Jordan — Deceased. Frank E. Knight — Deceased. Class of 1895 Maria Allen Knight —Deceased. Eva Barbour Bohnson — Deceased. Stanwood Marr — Deceased. Gertrude H. Plummer Guekom — Un- known. Addie Stimpson Small — Deceased. Annie B. Thompson Morrill — South Windham, Maine. Class of 1896 Edith Allen Cobb — Gray. Margaret H. Andrews — Deceased. Edna Merrill Wheeler — Deceased. Clara M. Smith — Deceased. Lucy P. Cole Morrill — Deceased. Susie Pennell Chipman — Falmouth, Maine. Thirty-nine NS = Pad N Pt Carrie A. Hall Botts — Deceased. William S. Cole — Deceased. Frank Adams — Deceased. William C. Barbour — Deceased Albert Bohnson — Deceased. Warren P. Doughty — Deceased. Bessie Cummings — Augusta, Maine. Herman Hall — Unknown. Class of 1897 l'essie Andrews Morrill — Deceased. Annie E. Bailey — Deceased. Albertina Jordan — Raymond, Maine. Ida Morrill Lord Ackley — Philadelphia, Pa. Guy W. Chipman — Deceased. William K. Foster — South Windham, Maine. George Freeman — Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Charles A. Haskell — Deceased. Frank Leavitt — East Gray. Warren Freeman — North Windham, Maine. Frank Allen — West Gray. Abram Anderson — Portland, Maine. Class of 1898 Mary Hancock Leavitt — Deceased. Grace Stimpson Bennett — Massachusetts. Florence Smith Manning — Deceased. Class of 1899 A. Katrina Bohnson — Deceased. Ina A. Barbour Doughty —Gray. Erlon S. Fogg — Washington, D. C. Lena McConkey Day — Gorham, Maine. Lucy Freeman Freeman — Deceased. Percie E. Leavitt Leach — Raymond, Maine. Charles W. Pennell — Providence, R. I. Della Haskell Chipman — Deceased. Gertrude Stimpson Leighton — Portland, Maine. Lois Libby Dolloff — Gray. Class of 1900 Esmeralda W. Mann — Deceased. Almont Barston — Brookline, Mass. Lida Small Libby — Portland, Maine. Charles Barbour — Portland, Maine. Ina A. Fogg — Gray. John E. Cummings — New Gloucester, Maine. Marion Merrill Libby — Gray. Susie Parker Delano — Deceased. Blanche Hall Knight — Deceased. Wilbur P. Hancock — Portland, Maine. PENNELL INSTITUTE AW Class of 1901 Maria L. Haskell — Deceased. Andrew D. Blake — Deceased. Mildred A. Thompson — lairhaven, Mass. Frank C. Kidder — Cape Elizabeth, Maine, Julia Chipman Tripp — San Diego, Calif. Claude Caswell — Portland, Maine. George P. Allen — Deceased. l'ertha Frank Bryant — Gray. Burton L. Barstow — Doston, Mass. Class of 1902 Horace Chester Marsden — Summer resi- dence at Gray. Mabel Foster Knapp — Pownal, Maine. Lewis L. Leighton Westbrook, Maine. Elizabeth M. Savoy Ellis -— Lawe'l ‘Toss Eugene Foster — Dry Mills, Mai e. Bessie Sheehan Mahoney — South Man- chester, Mass. Class of 1903 Minnie E. Bohnson Foster — Deceased. Tennie M. Bohnson Sawyer — Gray. Annie F. Clark — Deceased. Marcia E. Megguire Libby — Intervale, Maine. Ralph E. Morey — Deceased. Henry Savoy — Deceased. Hartie Chipman — Waterville, Maine. True C. Morrill — Park Ridge, N. J. Gordon Skillings Gilispie — Deceased. Class of 1904 Ellen T. Libby Dunn — Deccased. Mildred S. Bailey Frank — Deceased. luliette Edwards Megquire — Deceased. Caroline D. Leighton Davis — Rid'onville, Maine. Helen I. Merrill — Gray. Agnes S. Fogg Fogg — Great Neck, L. I., N. Y, George Haskell — Deceased. Leon C. Manchester — Gray. Perley C. Sawyer — Gray. Helen Hunt — Deceased. Class of 1905 Dana Jordan — Meredith, N. H. Arthur Hill — Gray. Angie l'rank — Gray. Roland Barrows — Gorham, Maine. Francis D. Hall — Massachusetts. Anna E. Whitney Haskell — South Port- land, Maine. Ivy Henry Smith — Deceased. Hewitt D. Cole — Gray. Jennie Cummings Cole — Gray. Class of 1906 Mildred E. Colley Webb — Gray. Irene S. Foster Foster — Auburn, Maine. Ethel M. Whitney Foye — Westbrook 1 Maine. Grace W. Doughty Manchester — Gray. Frank G. Merrill — Gray. LeRoy Libby — Gray. Ralph P. Dow — Deceased. Harold B. Clapp — Hartford, Conn. Fred L. Webb — Deceased. Edith Fogg Strout — Portland, Maine. Class of 1907 Lena Stevens Merrill — Gray. Bessie M. Burns Libby — Gray. Matilda C. Smith — Deceased. Albert N. Whitney — Portland, Maine. Elmer T. Lawrence — Portland, Maine. Florence A. Small Foye — Gray. Class of 1908 Mabel H. Hunt — Livermore Falls, Maine. Roy F. Webb — Deceased. Priscilla B. Merrill Small — Arlington, Va. William C. Osgood — Bristol, Maine. Myra L. Frank Barton — Gray. Class of 1909 Gertrude H. Merrill — Arlington, Va. Archie H. Ouint — Portland. Maine. Dana M. Russell — Deceased. Earle L. Whitney — Gray. J. Frank Hill — Torrington, Conn. Fred T. Whitney — Gray. Ruth Freeman Bowden — Brockton, Mass. George T. Hill — Gray. Philip H. Dow — Hartford, Conn. Class of 1910 Alice Brown Hitchcock — Gray. Albert E. Leighton — Employed in Bos- ton, Mass. Bessie Libby Cobb — Deceased. Class of 1911 Walter E. Leighton — Gray. Ruth P. Thayer Goff — Gray. Harriet B. Webster Whittaker — Dar Mills, Maine. Clara Thompson Hayes — Gray. WHIRLPOOL Helen Merrill Lawrence — Gray. LeRoy A. Fogg — Deceased. Rena A. Colley Whitney — Gray. Helen A. Frank — Gray. Christine Brown Dooley — Dover, N. H. Dorothy L. Dow Libby — Bangor, Maine. Ruth Hamilton — South Portland, Maine. Class of 1912 Gladys M. Small Berry — Augusta, Maine. Lilla Cobb Thompson Greene — Nor- wood, Mass. Hazel M. Woodbury Hodgman — South Dartmouth, Mass. Bertha Libby Hodge — Mechanic Falls, Maine. Inez Burns Prince — Gorham, Maine. Perley Lawrence — Gray. Evelyn Bishop Sawyer — Gray. Marion Leighton Small — Gray. Class of 1913 Arline M. Hunt Russell — Deceased. Muriel Stinchfield Blake — Intervale, Maine. Lucy Small Dunlap — Gorham, Maine. Aldine Osgood Morrill — Gray. Edith Merrill Coombs — Castine, Maine. M. Gardner Morrill — Gray. Lillian Verrill Fossett — Portland, Maine. Philip Libby — Deceased. Joseph MacDonald — Gray. Class of 1914 Eleanor Russell — Teaching at Stoneham, Mass. Eva M. Bishop — Gray. E. Mae Berry Nadeau — Lewiston, Maine. Elva Gilman Boynton — Tenafly, N. J. Frank A. Woodbury — Van Nuys, Calif. S. Esther Field Hall — Gray. Class of 1915 Beatrice V. Berry Hayden — Dryden, Maine. Julia H. Bishop Paul — Wakefield, N. H. Gladys Burns — Gray. Rachel H. Foster — Deceased. . Hilda J. Leavitt Breese — San Diego, Calif. Annie Merrill Merrill — Gray. Velma Snow Segars — Boston, Mass. Ruby Wilson Merrill — Gray. Catherine Woodbury Packard Alfred, N. Y. Forty-one سس سس سس 1949 Class of 1916 Henry R. Butler — New York. Marion L. Merrill Johnson — Deceased. Alberta Roberts Colby — Wells, Maine. Adelle Snow Eakins — Gray. Helen Sweetser Martin — Portland, Maine, Class of 1917 Carolyn Cole Crockett — Raymond, Maine, Marion Fogg Flanders — Malden, Mass. Eliza W. Merrill — Arlington, Va. Thurza McConkey Waterman — New Gloucester, Maine. Virginia Morrill Maxwell — Gray. L. Percis Snow Bragg — Gray. Harvey Berry — Portland, Maine. Alfred Dunn — Portland, Maine. Harold Quint — Gray. Mary Sweetser Chandler — New Glouces- ter, Maine. Frederick Skilling — Portland, Maine. Helen Cole — Deceased. Albert T. Rogers — Falmouth Foreside, Maine. Josephine Davis Hancock — New Jersey. Class of 1918 Eva Morrill Libby — South Portland, Maine. Eda Morrill Verrill — Deceased. M. Gladys Merrill — Portland, Maine. - Gertrude W. Berry Browning — Sarasota, ‘la. Lysle A. Parker — Rome, N. Y. Ruth Morrill Morrill — Freeport, Maine. Amos Woodbury — Portland, Maine. Elsie M. Duplisea Goodwin — Deceased. Charles Berry — Gray. Louise Libby — Portland, Maine. Iva Chipman Sayward — Deceased. Class of 1919 Carl Duplisea — Gray. : Raymond W. Roberts — Deceased. Russell Coffin — Boston, Mass. Margaret Thompson Reed — Gray. Mary McConkey Cummings — Florida. Mabel B. Verrill Joy — New Gloucester, Maine. S. Allen Coffin — Bar Harbor, Maine. Susie S. Spiller Quint — Gray. Kenneth Huston — West Newton, Mass. Alice Lawrence Shaw — Falmouth Fore- side, Maine. Torly-1wo PENNELL INSTITUTE Class of 1920 Charles Barker — Gray. Frances Cushing Piper — Cornish, Maine. Emily M. Field Hodsdon — Naples, Maine. Marion E. Leach Lord — Westbrook, Maine. Karl E. Libby — Gray. J. Anderson Morrill — Freeport, Maine. Grace Small Alexander — Portland, Maine. Francis Soule Knapp — Deceased. Capt. W. Merton Sweetser — Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Class of 1921 Egbert Andrews — Hartford, Conn. Harold Kent — Newton Highlands, Mass. Melville Wilson — Cumberland, Maine. Inez Lufkins Hicks — Danville, Maine. Cecile Leavitt Blanchard — Hiram, Maine. Chester W. Campbell — Torenton, Mass. Charles Campbell — Unknown. Marguerite Morrill Duplisea — Gray. Bertha Libby Roberts — Portland, Maine. John S. Andrews — St. Paul, Minn. Alice Sweetser Lothrop — Cape Elizabeth, Maine. Harland L. Whitney — Gray. Ruth C. Blake Loeser — Elizabeth, N. J. Paul W. Libby — Deceased. Roscoe W. Sawyer — Christiana, Del. Class of 1922 Florence Brown Lamb — Brunswick, Maine. Frances Cole Small — East Raymond, Maine. Elizabeth Douglas — Gray. Jennie Foster Chute — Casco, Maine. Marion E. Roberts Russell — Portland, Maine. Harriett Russell Humphrey — Gray. Katherine Sweetser Peck — Cape Eliza- beth, Maine. Ernest L. Coffin — Northeast Harbor, Maine. Byron Hanson — Gray. Edward Kent — OU Chenier. N; Y. Guy O. Prince — Gray. Clarence Quint — Gray. Percy Quint — Gray. William Russell — West Cumberland, Maine. AA 1948 — Class of 1923 Marguerite E. Verrill — Teaching at Stoneham, Mass. Lillian Hancock Robinson — Raymond, Maine. Alva Strout Clough — Raymond, Maine. Eugenia Doughty Shea — Wiscasset, Maine. Eleanor Dennis Berry — Cape Elizabeth, Maine. Esther Brackett — Portland, Maine. Kenneth Burns — Falmouth, Maine. William S. Douglas — Gray. Class of 1924 Elizabeth Campbell — Alaska. Ellen Cole McCann — Gray. Louise J. Douglas — Deceased. Doris M. Roberts Humphrey — Gray. Marjorie Stacy Hamilton — Conway, Nel Verna M. Ycaton Wentworth — Porter, Maine. Albert Doughty — Lynn, Mass. Ernest Leonard — Poland, Maine. Clyve Muzzy — Yarmouth, Maine. Eugene F. Sawyer — Bayside, N. Y. George C. Severy — Portland, Maine. Class of 1925 Warren H. Libby — Gray. Lena Allen Carll — Gray. Isabel K. Sawyer Hayes — Portland, Maine. Lawrence Whitney — Gray. Alice Skillings Smith — Portland, Maine. H. Lawrence Humphrey — Gray. Frank T. McConkey — Westbrook, Maine. Annie Frank Manchester — Gorham, Maine. Ina Severy Wall — South Portland, Maine. Maynard Colley — Wilton, Maine. Marion Pollard Douglas — Gray. Mary Higgins — Gray. Chester Morrill — Raymond, Maine. Earl Stevens — Connecticut. C. Nelson Winslow — Kent, Ohio. Class of 1926 Everett W. Morrill — Stony Point, N. Y. Bernice Winslow Sanborn — South Waterford, Maine. Merrill Libby — Winthrop, Maine. Mary Campbell Danforth — St. Johns- bury, Vt. 1940 WHIRLPOOL Lenville Hawkes — Cumberland, Maine. Clara Edwards Strout — North Raymond, Maine. Kenneth Sawyer — Gray. Kathryn Leavitt Prince — Gray. Wendell Tripp — Cornish, Maine. Alice Davis — California. George H. Kent — Newton, Mass. Class of 1927 Everett E. Ellingwood — Army, Overseas. Marjorie Strout McDonald — Raymond, Maine. Harvey Cobb — Portland, Maine. [Eleanor Brackett — West Falmouth, Maine. Louise Chipman Doughty — Gray. Class of 1928 Clarice Berry Rogers — Portland, Maine. Marion Hawkes — Gray. H. Norman Cole —Gray. Mary Hill Todd — Deceased. Georgiana Young — Unknown. Carlton Edwards — Raymond, Maine. Kenneth Leavitt — South Warren, Maine. Lewis Peterson — West Falmouth, Maine. J. Winnifred Cobb Strout—Gray. Ethel Douglas Learnard — South Port- land, Maine. F. Bernice Yeaton Burnell — Gray. Clarence Gray — Pownal, Maine. Naomi Roberts Small — Gray. Ruth Jordan Morrill — Harrison, Maine. Elizabeth S. White — Portland, Maine. K. Louise Campbell Diskie — Pownal, Maine. Amy Morrill French — Gray. Evelyn Pierce Sawyer — Gray. Jeanette Foster Horton — Reading, Mass. Aubigne Cushing Smith — Bangor, Maine. Class of 1929 Willard Caswell — Gray. Rena Leach Lambert — Raymond, Maine. Ellen Megquire Tufts — Gray. Evelyn Lowe Farwell — Lewiston, Maine. LeRoy Verrill — Gray. Erwin Severy — Gray. Philip Frost — Gray. Mary S. Sawyer — Gray. Hortense Lowe Leach — Gray. Elbert Sawyer — Gray. ۱ Darbara Libby Hale — Waterville, Maine. Carroll Foster — Gray. Forty-three PENNELL INSTITUTE Class of 1930 Phyllis Leavitt Bentley — Gray. Marguerite Webster Leavitt — Hiram, Maine. Owen Hawkes — Gray. Ruby Severy Johnson — Presque Isle. Maine. Maynard Dolloff — Gray. Arline Tripp Grover — Oxford, Maine. Alice Doughty Morton — South Casco, Maine. Merle Foster — Gray. Charlotte Pierce Perkins — Lewiston, Maine. Class of 1931 Ernest Libby — Gray. Norman Dolloff — Gray. John Hancock — Mechanic Falls, Maine. Frances Manchester Duerbeck — South Jacksonville, Fla. LeRoy Sawyer — Cumberland, Maine. Allen Tripp — Oxford, Maine. Raymond Simpson — Massachusetts. Loan Brackett Hancock — Mechanic Falls, Maine. Irene Potter Brown — Caryville, N. Y. Elizabeth Merrill Barton — Westbrook, Maine. Erwin Barton — Westbrook, Maine. Arnold Tripp — Deceased. Abby Dolloff Semmes — North Yar- mouth, Maine, Alice Coffin MacFarland — Bar Harbor, Maine. Class of 1932 Margaret Loring Small — North Yar- mouth, Maine. Evelyn Gallop Morrill — Gray. Russell Chipman — Gray. Marion Clark Muzzy — Yarmouth, Maine. Phyllis Hancock Pierce — Portland, Maine. Dorothy Winslow Anderson — Deceased. Ruel E. Taylor, Jr. — Gray. Frank Whitney — Gray. Arthur Harmon — Gray. Harlen MacPherson — Washington, D. C. Class of 1933 Hortense Caswell Hall — New Hamp- shire. Howard Cole — Gray. Charlotte Webster Stevens — Gray. Carroll Leavitt — Deceased. forty-four Viola Winslow — Rutherford, N. J. James Frost — Connecticut. Clyde Verrill — Gray. Eleanor Chipman Foster — Gray. Lawrence Carter — Pownal, Maine. Maxine Peterson — Boston, Mass. Class of 1934 Ernest DeLorme — Yarmouth, Maine. Frank Cooper — Poland, Maine. G'ennis Morrill Wilkinson -— Sabbathday Loke, Maine. Dorothy Edwards — Raymond, Maine. Mary Sawyer King — Gray. Silas Foster — Massachusetts. Phyllis Barton Tuttle — Auburn, Maine. William Caswell — Gray. Lillian Wallace Berry — Gray. Lafayette Wallace — Gray. Oren Whitney — Gray. Edward Webb — Dow Field, Bangor, Maine. Warren Cole — Gray. Class of 1935 Alice Leavitt Hathaway — Saco, Maine. Phyllis Winslow — Cumberland, Maine. Helen Caswell — Florida. Priscilla Dunn Harmon Maine. Robert Merrill — Augusta, Maine. Bernice Nason Harmon — Gray. Gertrude Nason Harmon — Tamworth, NH. Glendon Cobb — Gray. Adah Richards Parkhurst — Sabattus, Maine. Elizabeth Whitney Megquire — Falmouth, Maine. George Muzzy — Gardiner, Maine. Nancy Webb Farwell — Gray. James Wilkinson — Sabbathday Lake, Maine. Eleanor Simpson — Pownal, Maine. Ruth Barton Clark — Gray. Class of 1936 Ruth Clark Colley — Lynn, Mass. George Delorme — Portland, Maine. Arlene Hall Burnham — Naples, Maine. Marvin Harmon — Gray, Maine. Ruth Hitchcock Emerson — Portland. Maine. Elizabeth Knudson — Portland, Maine. Estelle Lawrence Emery — Gray, Maine. Shirley Leavitt Constantine — Wakefield, Mass. Portland, سس 1948 Edmond Leonard — Rumford, Maine. June Muzzy Thurbe — Gray, Maine. Lillabel Pousland Cummings — Kittery, Maine. Norma Prince Liberty — Dry Mills, Maine. Eloise Russell — Portland, Maine. Lawrence Sawyer — Gray, Maine. Margaret Sawyer — Gray, Maine. Anna Simpson Hardy — U. of M. Campus. Robert Thibodeau — Connecticut. Robert Wallace — Deceased. Ross Wilson — Connecticut. Natala Knudson Durton — Norwichtown, Conn. Class of 1937 Laura Dennett Proctor — Casco, Maine. Ronald H. Colley — Bangor, Maine. Charlotte Foster Burnell — Cumberland, Maine. James H. Hall — Yarmouth, Maine. Jeannette Harmon Abbott — New Hamp- shire. Gerald Kimball — Gray, Maine. Doris Manchester Higgins — Gray, Maine. Evelyn Morrill Durgin — Gray, Maine. Marie P i Lali Earl H. Sawyer — Brimfield, Mass. Charlotte Verrill Frost — Gray, Maine. Earla Whitney Bonney — Gray, Maine. Marion Whitney Demmons — Lenox, Mass. Marjorie Winslow — Cumberland, Maine. Class of 1938 Elsie Disbee — Deering, Maine. Linwood Clark — Canton, Maine. Helen Colley Faunce — Bridgton, Maine. Deane A. Durgin — Teacher at Pennell Institute, Gray, Maine. Anthony H. Eaton — California. Arthur P. Higgins — Pownal, Maine. David N. Kupelian — Massachusetts. Harry A. Lauritsen — Westbrook, Maine. Earl Leavitt — Gray, Maine. Virginia McInnis Morse — Gray, Maine. Ava Megguire Walker — Pennsylvania. ia. Wilma Qualey Wilson — Dry Mills, Maine. Edith Russell Welch — Gray, Maine. James H. Russell — Deceased. Aldine Verrill — Dry Mills, Maine. James Morey — Gray, Maine. 1949 WHIRLPOOL Sarah Wilson Garrett — Baltimore, Mary- land. Class of 1939 Vivian Boyd Bailey — Gray, Maine. Everett Doughty — South Portland, Maine. William Duplisea — Attending U. of M. Frances Field Manchester — Windham, Maine. Robert Glass — South Portland, Maine. June Hall — Gray, Maine. Willis Hancock — Portland, Maine. Mildred Hayes Strout — Gray, Maine. Walter Hinds — Dry Mills, Maine. Arvilla Humphrey LaChance — Auburn, Maine. Olive Knudson Day — Portland, Maine. Kathleen Jordan Chapman — Quincy, Mass. Sidney Leavitt — Gray, Maine. Urban Roberts — Gray, Maine. Ralph Sawyer — Gray, Maine. William Taylor — Deceased. Raymond Winslow — Falmouth, Maine. Class of 1840 Miriam Bisbee — Gray, Maine. Betty Blake Skilling — Gray, Maine. Catherine Boyd Griffin — California. Detty Cooper Dergert — Indiana. Edward Delorme — Portland, Maine. Almon Hall — Laconia. N. H. Charles Kuch — Calais, Maine. Arthur Lawrence — Windham, Maine. Beatrice Scribner Buhre — California. Albert Skilling — Gray, Maine. Annie Thibodeau — Massachusetts. - Laura Thompson Campbell — Gray, Maine. Neal Morey — Gray, Maine Madeline Merrill Towle — Walpole, New Hampshire. Margarite Nichols Adams — Gray, Maine. John. Whitney — Saco, Maine. Donald Verrill — Dry Mills. Maine. Helen Winslow — Boston, Mass. Margarite Perry — Gray, Maine. Class of 1941 Virginia Barton Partridge — Gray, Maine. Hender son Beal — College i in Boston. Christine Clark Mornisüh — Yarmouth, Maine. ۲ Jane Eaton Gage — Ohio. l'orty-fixe Lm PENNELL INSTITUTE —— Berenice Edwards — Teacher at Wind- ham High School, Windham, Maine. Ravmond Field — Windham, Maine. Jonald B. Hall — Gray, Maine. Donald F. Hall — Gray, Maine. Arthur Hitchcock — State Game Warden. James Johnson — Hawaiian Islands. Philip Kupelian — Pownal, Maine. Esther Libby Ruch — Gray, Maine. Edra Maxwell Wilkinson — Poland, Maine. Catherine MacDonald Bisciglia — Bronx, New York. Neal Merrill — Attending U. of M at Orono, Maine. Vernon Pollard — Gray, Maine. Helen Russell — Deceased. Kathleen Sawyer Leavitt — Gray, Maine. Thurza Sawyer Hinds—Pownal, Maine. June Whitney Glazier — Iowa. Class of 1942 Luella Boyd Warren — Portland, Mai ne. Dorothy Colley — Employed in Boston, Mass. Edgar Dauphinee — Deceased. Madeline Grant Penley — Standish, Maine, Roland Humphrey — New Hampshire. Mae Muzzy — Portland, Maine. Ruth Smith Nutting — Lansing, Mich. Class of 1943 Leatrice Adler Muzzy — Gardiner, Maine. Giles Carr — Gray, Maine. Arnold Hall — California. Milo Cummings — Gray, Maine. Shirley Kuch Skilling — Gray, Maine. Gera'dine Pollard — Gray, Maine. Jeanne Smith — Portland, Maine. Elizabeth Stetson — Dry Mills, Maine. Earle Wilson — Attending Bowdoin Col- lege, Drunswick, Maine. Frank Lee Mitchell — Hollywood, Cali- fornia. Class of 1944 Marion Thompson Sawyer — Gray Maine. i Colleen Blake — Walpole, Mass. Harold Cooper — Poland, Maine. Ethel Tripp Stewart -- San Diego, Calif. Clara Wilbur — Rangeley, Maine. Louiza Douvielle Crawford — Falmouth, Maine. Merilyn Cole Pollard — Gray, Maine. Forty-six Janice Doughty Morrison — Gloucester, Maine, Class of 1945 Alta Goff Foster — Dry Mills, Maine. Doris MacDonald Morrison — New Gloucester, Maine. Allecia Wilbur Wilkins — Lewiston, Maine. Richard Prince — U. S. Army. James Pollard — Gray. Maine. Carleton Skilling — Gray, Maine. Donald Strout — Portland, Maine. Payson Tufts — Grav. Irving Verrill — Dry Mills, Maine. Class of 1946 Priscilla Douvielle — Portland, Maine. Priscilla Dunn — Gray, Mainc. Pauline Pollard Tufts — Gray. Ethel Verrill Small — Portland, Maine. Martha White O'Neil — Long Island, New York. Reginald Clark — U. S. Navy. Karl Libby — Gray, Maine. Lloyd Wing — Attending U. of M. Marcus Muzzy — U. S. Navy. Class of 1947 Clifford Goff — Dry Mills, Maine. Leslie Taylor — U. S. Marines. Beverly Maxwell — Dry Mills, Maine. Aldine Tripp Parker — Poland, Maine. Olive Hitchcock Lewis — Gray, Maine. Viola Hatch — Gray, Maine. George Humphrey — Gray, Maine. Philip Pollard — Gray, Maine. Clifton Hall — Gray, Maine. Barbara Nichols Humphrey — Gray, Maine. Robert Slater — Attending U. of M. Fae Wilson — Portland, Maine. Class of 1948 Henry Beck — Gray, Maine. Maurice Childs — U. S. Air Force. Beverly Douglass Parker — Gray, Maine. Patricia Dunn — Gray, Maine. Pauline Ferri — Gray, Maine. Nina Hicks — New Jersey. Eleanor Humphrey — Attending Burdett College in Boston, Mass. Gordon Kimball — Gray, Maine. Ruth Jenkins — Attending U. of M. at Orono, Maine. Neal LaVallee — Gray, Maine. Abbie Lunn — Rhode Island. 1948 — WHIRLPOOL Virginia Marsh Gormley — Stillwater, Pauline Stewart — Portland, Maine. Maine. George White — U. S. Air Force. Kenneth Sanborn — Cumberland, Maine. Ralph White — U. S. Air Force. PATRONS Supt. and Mrs. ۲۰ A. Aikins Mr. and Mrs. Morris Keene Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Humphrey Family Mr. and Mrs. H. Earl Megquier Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kimbail Mr. and Mrs. Howard Verrill Mr. and Mrs. Martin Lashua Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dempsey Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Leighton Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Bowie Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Libby Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Laughton Mr. Karl E. Libby, Jr. Mr. Deane Durgin Mrs. Francis Livermore Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Adams Mr. and Mrs. William Marr Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Austin Mrs. Lois E. Morrison Mr. and Mrs. Caryl Baldwin Mr. and Mrs. Ward Pollard and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bonney Family Mr. Frank C. Bohnson Mrs. Bernice L. Prince Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bragg Mrs. Eleanor Sawyer Mr. and Mrs. Alburn Butler Mr. and Mrs. John Skilli ng Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Butler Mr. and Mrs. Collins Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Carll Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Thurlow and Mrs. Beatrice Cobb Family Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Crandall Mr. and Mrs. Earl Whitney Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davison Mr. and Mrs. Edward Witham Mr. and Mrs. John T. Doughty Mrs. Laura Worden Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Evans Bud and Doey Mr. and Mrs. Warren Flye In memory of my husband, Fred L. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Foster Webb, Mrs. Mildred Webb SENIOR BABY PICTURES 1. Lou Bishop î. “Ken” Morey 2. “Dick” Lashua 8. “Put” Pollard 3. Candy Crandall 9. “Mae” MacDonald 4. Dob Hatch 10. “Joanie Wilson 5. Mannie Blake 11. Johnny Cobb 6. “Barb” Tufts 12. Skill Skilling Farly-seren ssm PENNELL INSTITUTE WHIRLPOOL - m= 1949 ——— — -N Dy Wes D? € St ين هلر e I En AUTOGRAPHS ACTIVITIES - 1949 . Freshman Initiation . Winter Sports . Summer Sports Our Coaches Junior Prom . Sophomore Minstrel . Senior Play . Senior Play Mr. Skillings in action Winners of Amateur Contest . Pennell-Greely Game . Miss Pennell, 1949 . Junior Night WHIRLPOOL ADFERT: ME, INDEX Alls: Restaurante- aco ec e Hawkes Filling Station .......... sse 72 Allen, Sterling, and Potro: ۱ Henley Kimball Co. een ini 60 Alumni, Pennell Henry Nolin Jewelry a. iH 78 Andrew, L. C. Higgins Garage .............. Ayer, Fred D. - Humphrey Garage .. Bailey, James, Co., nc. ad NR I. G. A. Store ............. Balfour; LNG Con ete E c MM e 53 Jenkins, G..A. Le 61 Barbour, M. L. and Son _..... Goes TO — Jewetts Garage cs a — ee 7 Barnstone and Cyson me sense. 6% Joe's Army and Navy Store ies 8 Bartlett, Everett W. Nr AR se. 01 Joy Inn. se d IS RM 76 Beck's, The Dr. Laws wn. BT Kimball's: Shell Stations D NEED 18 Bell Shop. The ۳۹ need را and ES ND Yg 77 Benoit's NA er et .55. Lawrence Leighton eT LOIRE te e 54 Bicks Service Station... ss .. 76 Leach, Victor ..... MEE axo pauca 69 Bisallion_ Music Co. ۱ Sw to Liberty Bros. = کر سر 70 Bishop Family, The . ss... 56 Loring, Short Harmon sea ee 63 Blacksmith Shop, The ۰ DN NR YN Mac's Service Station i. aeee 73 Brownstone, Dr. MH. Maine Hardware ... ............. NR e 73 Casco Cleaners McIntire Agency ................. EES 57 Century Tire Co. 4 Melanson, O. A. ee. 69 Chase Greenhouse, F. H. Morin Brick Co. ................. rin Cole-Marsden Co. Morrill's Coal Grain 67 Consumers’ Gas Co. Cook's Bakery ۳ Crystal Lake Cabins |... Cushing, Dr. Cushman Service Co. D Mr. and Mrs. Franklin. Day's Jewelry Store (Portland) Dogggett, A. L. ya Dry Mills Store Dubois Jewelry Morrill, Irving ...... Morrill, M. G. Ces Mm Morris Motor Mart ... Myer Canter ME rss New Gloucester Farmers’ Union edd Northeast Co. os Osgood E. C SO e Qualey, Charles T Borat and LeBlanc Parson, B. S. CQ =) اي زج Neb) Oo del) Qo Ct Zt e C ally VC مر lo to Dunn, A. E. ag Perkins, M. N. ..... RE Eaton, Carleton W. Petersen's Bakery and Restaurant .. ibi Eaton, Mary H. Picnic Basket e ENS Ed's Variety Store Pine Tree Telephone ۷ ees n Ericksen, L. B. Pinc Tree State Auto Sales ... ME ee, E Esso Filling Station Pine State Battery E eec u EA Faibisy Photo is a e code Porteous, Mitchell Braun .......... Mn Te Md The Favor Studio... x Portland Engraving Co. ........ ... ee = Gy) Flagg, Brackett Da O a aW Pulsifer, Edward T. |... — 60 Flanders TS Rackley A. Hoo ER ee eer 1 Frank, Angie M. Mm eoe etos: Ray ss Diner uae mea T RE S ۳ 157 51۱۱۱۵۱۱۵۵5 ss oe Oe Reid Hughes My E Er 66 Friend, A een eg NN RP Ring's Gas Applies Es — UI ERO AS GG ; Royal Press ...... Pom St EN ON O en gs Brost nl bert Gei. Y eae Russell, Dr. een ME e yn R 75 (GYF EY NU e ——c e PNE 9 Sawyer Mary Ss a ee 95 . 74 Girls' Basketball Team qe. c ae Sawycr, S le ete ET ا ۱ 65 Gleason, Shaw E EE TH Senior Class ...... .. oy 79 Goff's Garage, Mose .. Shaw's Garage .. ; 63 Gray American Legion Auxiliary . T 94 Snow House, The TUS i omen Gray American Legion .............. || Sophomore Class 62 Gray American Legion .................. nee @% Springer's Jewelry Store ... 7 15 Gray Beauty Shop ss rere TE Star Shoe Co. se d Gowns cnd) Gray Garage, Inc. ..... — Lee. Gb Taxi Service ; cd Gray Grange, No. 41 .... a 5 66 — Thurston ¥ Son, C. E. 67 Gray Kiwanis Club . vM a 96. Verrill, Howard à 59 Gray Meadows Garage 52 .— Wasson's Grove , ۲ 25 Gray Oil Co. 64. Wehher's Grain ۱ ۹ 78 Gray School Lunch R T8 West Gray Cash Market ' 69 Grenier, Leo 77 White's Corner Garage 71 Hamel's TI Wilson, Mrs. Lucy Gn Hansen Market Gardens 70 — Woman's Shop, The 67 Hay Peabody 55 Yarmouth Theater 66 Hayes Store, C. E wm Yudy's 70 Fifty-one 1949 B Compliments of GRAY MEADOW’S GARAGE, INC. w 4 Your DeSoto - Plymouth Dealer S ۵ Fifty-two چ ی 1948 A سے سم پر ۲ s WHIRLPOOL L. G. BALFOUR COMPANY Attleboro, Massachusetts Class Rings and Pins Commencement Invitations Diplomas - Personal Cards Club Insignia Memorial Plaques Represented by: MR. DONALD B. TUPPER 2 Ivie Road, Cape Cottage, Maine FLAGG, BRACKETT DURGIN, Inc. 405 Park Square Building Boston 16, Massachusetts MAINE REPRESENTATIVE . RUEL E. TAYLOR, JR. Gray, Maine Telephone Gray 60 Manufacturer's Sales Representatives of Power Plant and Equipment Fifty-tbrec 1949 . سے AY — Aas GRAY GARAGE, INC. Sales — CHEVROLET — Service Motor Tune Up Service Welding - General Repairs - Wrecking Service Telephone 70-3 Gray, Maine ev x Sy ۱ LAWRENCE LEIGHTON L ۹ — Authorized Sales and Service — ۵٤ Lincoln - Mercury Ford - Zephyr Telephone 8032-2 GRAY, MAINE Fifty-four بو — yp 1948 — WHIRLPOOL Compliments of EN. Geuotl à PREP HALL PORTLAND LEWISTON HAY PEABODY 749 Congress Street Portland, Maine Ambulance Service Telephone Portland 2-5464 — 2-5465 — 2-5247 Fifty-five 1949 A T PENNELL INSTITUTE THE BISHOP FAMILY Compliments of GRAY KIWANIS CLUB GRAY, MAINE E. S. Phalen CRYSTAL LAKE CABINS and DINING ROOM Route 26 Dry Mills Fifty-six 1948 سس سس جع Se o لا | ۵ ۵ ۵ ۳ ۳ ۵ ۳ Ŵ Ŵ — مھ A Good Place to Gat PETERSEN’S RESTAURANT AND BAKERY GRAY, MAINE JENS PETERSEN Compliments of THE DR. BECKS THE McINTIRE-SAWYER AGENCY Insurance SUCCESSOR TO THE SAWYER AGENCY Telephone 37 New Gloucester, Maine Telephone 10-22 Gray, Maine Fifty-seven 1949 — PENNELL INSTITUTE GLEASON SHAW For Fine Foods ‘Door to door in Gray Tuesday and Friday Service you can rely on Auburn Maine THE OLD BLACKSMITH SHOP 12 Mechanic Street, Westbrook WILLIAM L. RUSSELL Electric and Actylene Welding We Repair Old and Build New Anytime — Anywhere Res. West Cumberland Tel. 62-11 Congratulations Class of I 949 L. C. ANDREW Lumber and Building Materials SOUTH WINDHAM, MAINE Fifty-eight 1948 ee و هو و e ea WHIRLPOOL Custom Slaughtering HOWARD A. VERRILL Dry Mills, Maine Compliments of MR. AND MRS. FRANKLIN DAVIS Compliments of GRAY AMERICAN LEGION No. 86 Fifty-ninc 1949 ———————— PENNELL INSTITUTE Em —— EDWARD T. PULSIFER Texaco Gas - Kendall Oils MARFAK LUBRICATION Dial 3.9278 1401 Washington Ave. THE HENLEY-KIMBALL COMPANY 380 Forest Avenue, Portland, Maine Hudsons White Trucks F. H. CHASE GREENHOUSE Cut Flowers and Potted Plants Floral Designs Cumberland Center, Maine Tel. 100 Sixty | 1948 — c WHIRLPOOL سس سس G. A. JENKINS Agent for Grange Fire Insurance and Harrison Mutual Fire Insurance Telephone Gray 17-21 Gray, Maine F. C. OSGOOD Butcher, Provisioner and Market Gardener Pork Products a Specialty Cumberland Center, Maine TELEPHONE 7 LIST GRAY PROPERTY WITH NEIGHBOR BARTLETT I have customers waiting to purchase farms and homes in or near Gray. I also have several parties interested in rent- ing summer property at Little Sebago or Crystal Lakes. If you own a cottage and want to rent it, please contact me. EVERETT W. BARTLETT GRAY, MAINE Telephones: Winter 7-2 Summer 52-22 Sixty-one 1949 PENNELL INSTITUTE BARNSTONE-OSGOOD CO. H. A. OSGOOD SON Jewelers and Silversmiths 50 Lisbon Street Lewiston, Maine 'Telephone 4-5241 SOPHOMORE CLASS Wilmer Anderson Muriel Henry Robert Sawyer Fred Ayer Gerald Humphrey Vera Sawyer Richard Aver Cora Leach Rita Say ward Anne Derry Horace Libby Beverly Smith Paul Bowen Roy MacDona'd Audrey Todd Marilyn Butler Ruth Marsh Gordon Tufts Cecile Cobb Richard Morton Muriel Verrill Hubert Cobb Carole Muzzv William Wallace Carl Duplisea Arthur Quint Robert White Hans Hansen Dwight Quint Engravers for the WHIRLPOOL Portland Engraving Company ha PE $ PHOTO 5 , mu 33ni ۲۳2۲۲ 12. MONUMC SQUARE - PORTLAND 3 MAINE 27. —d SNL Makers of Quality Engravings for School and College Annuals Also — Commercial Use Sixty-two س 1948 WHIRLPOOL Compliments of COLE-MARSDEN CO. Red and White Store Telephone 30-2 GRAY, MAINE LORING, SHORT anp HARMON Stationery and School Supplies Monument Sguare, Portland GRAY OIL CO. A. R. LIBERTY, Proprietor Range and Fuel Oil OUALITY PRODUCT. - RELIABLE SERVICE Telephone 53 GRAY, MAINE Sixty-three 1949 i A PENNELL INSTITUTE HUMPHREY'S GARAGE Repairing - Welding - Wrecker Service Gray Road Gray, Maine Compliments of MORRIS AUTO MART Auburn Maine Compliments of ESSO FILLING STATION Telephone 8010-2 Sixty-four سے 1948 WHIRLPOOL S. IL. SAWYER Insurance Telephone 50 Gray, Maine Compliments of PINE TREE BATTERY Portland, Maine RING'S GAS AND APPLIANCES 20th Anniversary At Your Service Anytime Telephone 206 Yarmouth, Maine Sixty-fire 1940 4 PENNELL INSTITUTE (Compliments of YARMOUTH THEATRE Compliments of REID HUGHES Lewiston Compliments of GRAY GRANGE No. 41 Sixty-six 1948 WHIRLPOOL Eee The Woman’s Shop DRESSES - SPORTSWEAR COATS - HOSIERY 86 Lisbon St., Lewiston, Maine C. E. THURSTON SONS Danville, Maine MORRILL’S COAL AND GRAIN CO. John Deere Tractors and Farm Machinery Field, Garden Seeds - Fertilizers, Insecticides Wirthmore Poultry and Dairy Feeds General Farm Supplies 35 Allen Ave., Portland, Maine Dial 3-8101 Sixty-seven T 1949 y PENNELL INSTITUTE Maine's Leading Sporting Goods Store JAMES BAILEY CO., INC. SPORTING GOODS ATHLETIC SUPPLIES Portland, Maine PINE STATE AUTO SALES New Gloucester FAIBISY PHOTO Phone 8017-3 WILLYS SALES AND SERVICE New Gloucester, Maine Phone 16 General Repairing Welding SHAW’S GARAGE Sunoco Products Upper Gloucester, Maine Telephone 19-13 Sixty-eight 1948 ۳۱۷ ۱۲۱۱۳۱۲0 — Compliments of MORES l Ll, WY, WEST GRAY DUBOIS CASH MARKET 182 ‘LISBON SL W LEWISTON, ME Groceries - Cigarettes QE Y Candy and Tonics WEST GRAY, MAINE M. N. PERKINS Representing ۰ Compliments of M. N. PERKINS COMPANY and Gy ENO tate Legion | UNIVERSITY CAP GOWN Auxiliary, No. 86 COMPANY 33 Otis Street Boston 10, Muss. GIL’S VARIETY O. A. MELANSON Everything from A to Z Telephone 80242 New Gloucester HIGH GRADE WHITE PINE LUMBER Radio and Electric Service VICTOR LEACH Mill - Danville, Maine Telephone Lewiston 2-0621 , i Communicating Systems Sixty-nine ——— 1949 سح PENNELL INSTITUTE Compliments of x FRED D. AYER Ed's Variety Store GROCERIES Electric Welding - Forge Work MEATS AND VEGETABLES West Gray, Maine Edward Robichaud, Prop. Dry Mills, Maine Compliments of YUDY'S Ouality Retreaders LIBERTY BROS. RANGE % POWER OIL BURNERS Vulcanizing - Recapping - Used Tires ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING Distributors of U. S. Royal Tires Telephone 421 Gray, Maine 391 Forest Ave. 940 Main St. Portland, Maine Westbrook, Maine Mose Goff's Garage GENERAL REPAIRING Compliments of AND BODY WORK PAINTING FRESHMAN CLASS Dry Mills, Maine Seventy سے 1948 BH — سس Compliments of I. G. A. STORE THE SNOW HOUSE Manchester's Market GROCERIES, MEATS 'Telephone Gray 41 AND PROVISIONS Routes 3-26-100 Telephone 8042-1 Gray, Maine Compliments of ALBERT G. FROST CO. Maine Marine Distributors NORTHEAST GO. Cris-Craft Boats YOUR FARM MACHINERY Johnson's Outboard Motors HEADQUARTERS NEW and USED BOATS and ENGINE’ 26 Forest Ave 875 Forest Ave., Portland, Maine Portland, Maine Telephone 2-2846 Compliments of CENTURY TIRE CO. Mary H. Eaton OUALITY RECAPPING FIRE INSURANCE Guaranteed Vulcanizing ARMSTRONG TIRES West Gray, Maine FIRESTONE TIRES Telephone 19-3 185 Kennebec St. Portland 3, Maine Serenty-one 1940 PENNELL INSTITUTE NEW GLOUCESTER Compliments of FARMERS' UNION C. E. HAYES’ STORE GROCERIES - GAS - OIL HARDWARE - PAINT Candy - Cigars - Tobacco AMOCO GAS AND OIL MAINE CENTRAL BUS STATION Service since 1916 Telephone 8056-2 Gray, Maine Phone N. G. 27-2 Compliments of MYER - CANTER ANGIE M. FRANK Footwear X-Ray Fitting Telephone 15-5 Gray, Maine WILBUR COON SHOES TREADEASY -STYLEZE €7 Lisbon Street, Lewiston, Maine Compliments of PARADIS LEBLANC Apparel for Men and Boys E CS Cacoline Station and Store 184-188 LISBON ST., LEWISTON, ME. Is Ready to Serve the Public GERALD R. LEBLANC 5:30 A. M. to 6:30 P. M. HENRY N. PARADIS Except Sundays Seventy-two 1948 -a و WHIRLPOOL تس liment. Compliments of Compliments of BOTAL ERESS MAINE HARDWARE Job Printing 618 Congress Street Portland, Maine Telephone 80-3 Gray, Maine CASCO CLEANERS HIGGINS GARAGE Complete Auto Repairing AU Used Cars Bought and Sold Repairing - Fur Storage New Used Boats Motors Cleaning - Dyeing Telephone Yarmouth 400 NORTH MAIN STREET DRIVER, TED GRANT DIAL 2-6181 AUBURN, ME. TAXI SERVICE Short and Long Distances Compliments of HILL’S ORCHESTRA PORTEOUS, MITCHEL L Dance Music a Spectalty AND BRAUN Arthur W. Hill, Mgr. Telephone 65-4 Gray, Maine Portland, Maine ۱٠ ۱. E E تسس سس Seventy-three p P 1949 PENNELL INSTITUTE Compliments of FLANDERS WASSON’S GROVE 1 d ti , 7.50 Suits for Graduation, $4 Delicious Hamburgers and Hot Dogs 62 Court Street Auburn, Maine Gray Road West Falmouth ALLEN, STERLING STAR SHOES, INC. LOTHROP SHOES - RUBBERS ELASTIC STOCKINGS Sterling Ouality Seeds Portland, Maine 221 Lisbon St., Lewiston, Maine HAMELU'S Dr. Brownstone, Dentist 1 Watch, Clock and Jewelry Telephone 2528 Repairing 229 labon Skeet Lewiston, Maine 66 Lisbon Street Lewiston, Maine Seventy-four 1948 N WHIRLPOOL Hot Dogs Hamburgs “THE PICNIC BASKET Compliments of Telephone 31-22 Gray, Maine Dr. and Mrs. Russell Fried Clams French Fries Compliments of Compliments of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Qualey| MARY S. SAWYER Compliments of Compliments of ae GERS JEWELLE Pine Tree Telephone and 580 CONGRESS STREET Telegraph Company PORTLAND New Gloucester, Maine JEWELERS SINCE 0 Seventy-five PENNELL INSTITUTE JOY INN Compliments of i American and Chinese Restaurant CUSHMAN SERVICE CO. SPECIAL DAILY DINNERS IRON FIREMAN HEATING All Kinds of Chop Suey To Take Out COAL = OIL = GAS Telephone 4-4351 20 Lisbon Street ۲ Auburn, Maine Lewiston, Maine Compliments of CONSUMERS GAS CO. “Pyrofax” The Superior Bottled Gas Service Compliments of M. L. BARBOUR AND SON Wholesale - SEEDS - Retail Write For Seed Catalog 147 Main Street, Yarmouth, Maine | 937 Forest Ave. Portland, Me. Compliments of BICK'S SERVICE STATION Leslie E. Bickford THE TEXACO STATION ON THE HILL Compliments of BELL SHOPS WOMEN'S SPECIAL TY SHOP Lewiston, Maine Telephone 2-5323 Danville, Maine WOOLEN CLOTH A. E. DUNN Rawleigh Dealer Compliments of Bisallion Music Co. Lewiston, Maine Gray, Maine Compliments of : Compliments of DAY'S JEWELRY STORE A. FRIEND Portland, Maine COR MG Ui Compliments of L. B. ERICKSEN Cabinet-Woodworking Shop GIRLS BASKET-BALL TEAM Telephone 30-23 New Gloucester, Me. Seventy-six 1948 WHIRLPOOL Compliments of Compliments of B. S. PARSONS LEO L. GRENIER GENERAL STORE Upper Gloucester, Maine Compliments of Compliments of MORIN BRICK CO. Mrs. Lucy Wilson Compliments of Compliments of ELS red Mac’s Cities Service North Deering d una ray, Main (Compliments of Compliments of KNAPP'S 57 to $1.00 STORE RAY'S DINER Yarmouth, Maine (Compliments of (Compliments of GRAY BEAUTY SHOP White's Corner Garage Telephone 8046 A. W. CoBB, Prop. Gray, Maine New Gloucester, Maine Compliments of DRY MILLS STORE Compliments of Groceries - Provisions SOFT DRINKS - CANDIES A FRIEND Telephone 8033-23 Seventy-seven 1949 PENNELL INSTITUTE Compliments of Compliments of A.H. Rackley's Sunoco Station TIRES - BATTERIES AU'S RESTAURANT ACCESSORIES Court Street, Auburn, Maine 1155 Fore:t Avenue Portland, Maine Compliments of Compliments of CARLETON W. EATON IRVING MORRILL LAND SURVEYS Auctioneer 6 CUMBERLAND CENTER, MAINE Tel. 19-3 Gray, Maine Compliments of Compliments of GRAY SCHOOL LUNCH M. G. MORRILL The Three M's GRAY, MAINE Compliments of Compliments of Joe’s Army Navy Webber Grain Feed Co. Su-plus Store GRAIN - FEED - SUPPLIES ۲ E GRAY, MAINE 87 Main St., Lewiston, Maine E Compliments of Compliments of DR. L. T. CUSHING JEWETT'S GARAGE General Repairs RAY, MAINE : € SINE Pownal, Maine Tel. Gray 8081-2 | Compliments of Compliments of HENRY NOLIN | Jeweler Kimball's Shell Station 79 Lisbon Street, Lewiston, Maine GRAY, MAINE Telephone 2-7351 Seventy-cight سس 1948 سس (Compliments of (Compliments of Hansen's Market Gardens GRAY AMERICAN LEGION Gray, Maine No. 86 ( mpliments of Compliments of PENNELL INSTITUTE A. L. DOGGETT ALUMNI Electrician Gray, Maine — Tel. 67-3 SENIOR CLASS Norma Dishop Malcolm MacDonald Kenneth Morey Priscilla Pollard Barbara Tufts Madaline Blake John Cobb lzrminie Crandall Robert Hatch Joan Wilson Austin Kuch Beatrice Rolfe Richard Lashua Kenneth Skilling PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS They Patronized Us cc —— سس Seventy-ninc PENNELL INSTITUTE FOR COMPLETE SATISFACTION Have Your Photographs Taken Nearby OUR CUSTOMERS ARE OUR BEST ADS — ASK THEM — THE FAVOR STUDIO 136 MAINE STREET TEL. BRUNSWICK 995 Eighty THE EAGLE PRESS, PORTLAND, MAINE 1948
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