Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC)

 - Class of 1939

Page 1 of 136

 

Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection, 1939 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1939 Edition, Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collectionPage 7, 1939 Edition, Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1939 Edition, Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collectionPage 11, 1939 Edition, Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1939 Edition, Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collectionPage 15, 1939 Edition, Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1939 Edition, Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collectionPage 9, 1939 Edition, Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1939 Edition, Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collectionPage 13, 1939 Edition, Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1939 Edition, Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collectionPage 17, 1939 Edition, Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 136 of the 1939 volume:

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'AL?.-is - .3gs..ff.V.,wV4.V.V,,.V,.fVS,V,,..V.:fw ..V..ffmfm..m.,ww V , 5gj.W4i,..k . .V-gfag, N if-:.V,..9,.,i,.'gv'v,i5V:2a,VV,,3. nw 4- ia. 1. ,V ,.,V..xggf,j-5-F., VE , - P, .rr Q! 33:95,-...,. .nu - F 41 ,MM V . -F' 5991119555 fir... 1, ,-ffm . f'?.f-vS'..41w.,f3-,-ff ,g T. Wh! ,, jgw - 1, -- 4' 434- - Gfii..-:W V ' Aw. .-'Su L-g,,31V.-:x'.rgj 4' ' ' , A1 '. 4 'Au , ,f . IL A 94 , ':,nx1gnfN-,Qv.,-14.-QM, 4- ,V w 1 1' A , fn. V-ws W .,.4Q..,wM,.f4.: gM..x.2Qwwecrmm1.u,pa1'fm-a sqm-Hmrnr.-as-a r-,f.wwf:s:.w-ia....awJr.w:sfa-wnnm.. m.rfz:,a-3. ,.-agen L:-,s,m:::slc:.m..mufz+',',1nvnnu..ssfz4',z.1- ,w.q4f.amazs.1,w,1.,e.fas.,..Arabia-u.mu.11.' ma.-' ve.. was - v .- -zwzws-:::msa,vswmwxn The Scribe H E WW? E6 ublished by the senior class ni the Holton-Arms Sch V a s h i n g t o n , D C MISS BROWN came to Holton-Arms with experience acquired at the Roberts- Beach School outside Baltimore, where she taught mathematics, conducted gym classes, and acted as chaperon. At the age ot fifteen she exhibited her inherent teaching ability in tutoring less brilliant students. Today that ability is the basis of her success in the college preparatory work. A Baltimore girl, she attended Goucher College and was graduated from there in 1921. In l933 she received a master's degree in education from George Washington University. You all know Miss Brown--know her for her piercing eyes, her sport clothes, and arresting accent-precise, clipped, cosmopolitan-which is so much a part of her. What you may not know is that she is sensitive, and though now a most fluent and witty talker, she was once tongue-tied in the presence of our principal. Since then she has become an invaluable assistant and companion to Mrs. Holton, one of whose former subjects, physiography, Miss Brown now teaches. We have all been impressed with her brilliance, her charm, and her candor-although the latter sometimes startles us. We cannot too much em- phasize her classroom manner. Perched on a step-ladder, or painstakingly drawing a diagram, or convulsing us with amusing anecdotes-she still inspires us with that awe so necessary to a teacher in disciplining her students. When asked what characteristic she believed most important to develop in girls, her answer was responsibility This idea she develops in her annual talk as Community Chest campaign in the school. Beca as e her courses interesting by her dramatic way of teach ause she gi X selfishly of her time in explaining the mysteries to us and becau er sympathetic understanding of us, we, the ' C 'fl 1. of - . , 1 f 1 f the senior class, o i te our annual to Miss Brown as a symbol of . . iration and esteem. K E D I C A T I O N MISS MILDRED BROWN Q85 5' A EET from Florida Avenue to Massachusetts Avenue is a street famous in the political, social, and educational life of Wash- ington. We in the Holton-Arms School this year have looked around our own doorstep and have found facts to record, pictures to snap, doorways and gateways to sketch that have made us aware of the romance of a street. We are especially proud of a door that opened on S Street in 1906. S and Twenty-fourth Street- The Chancery of the Czechoslovakian Legation. The wall sketched here ad- joins the Chancery. V At either end of our S Street -which we think ot as be- ginning at Florida Avenue and ending at Massachusetts Avenue---we find- 2lOO S+The residence of Mrs. Perry S. Heath. Mr. Heath was the First Assistant Postmaster General under President McKinley. He established Rural Free Delivery-a fact we like to think about as We go to the mail box corner. The Woodrow Wilson house-the most famous residence on S Street-was occupied by Woodrow Wilson during the years after he left the White House until his death. It is the present home of Mrs. Wilson. To this residence many of his devoted followers came on Armistice Day to pay tribute to him and to receive his greetings given from the little balcony. 2200 S-The residence ot the Honorable and Mrs. William R. Castle. Mr. Castle was the Under Secretary of State during the Hoover Administration. 5 X ' ix S and Twenty-second Street-the house ot Mrs. Charles D. Walcott, widow of the former head ot the Geological Survey and Secretary ot the Smithsonian lnstitution. Mrs. Walcott is an authority on the wild flowers indigenous to North America and the Smithsonian has published in several volumes her paintings of the flowers. These steps, known as the Spanish steps, were built by authority of Congress, over thirty-tive years ago, in keeping with Mr. Walcott's de- sire that no street should be cut through into S. He originally bought the lot there under that condition. Considered a public park, the steps were laid out under the direction ot Mr. Wal- cott. The Meeting House was built during the Hoover Administration and was at- tended by Mr. Hoover during his years in Washington. Its simplicity of struc- ture and its rugged stone give it a unique charm on a street of distinctive residences. The lovely gateway of the Friends' Meeting House. 35 WW Af... 1 va D 2300 S-known as the Hoover House because it was the residence of Herbert Hoover 0 while he was Secretary of Commerce, in the years before he went to the White House. During the present administration it has been the home of the Secretary of War and Mrs. Woodring. 2244 S Street-the present residence ot Mrs. R. S. Reynolds Hitt. When it was completed several years ago, for Mr. Frederic Delano-the Presi- dent's uncle-the noted architect, Mr. Waddy B. Wood, received the yearly architectural prize tor it. The capitals on the stone columns on the porch are exact duplicates ot those in one of the small rotundas in the Capitol which were designed by Thomas lefterson and which were based on his theory ot a sixth order ot architecture representing our new country. 2230 S Street-The Adolph Miller House considered to have one of the beautiful doorways in this area. Familiar doorways that L belong to Holton-Arms 1809 1809 Phelps Place 2119 is Mrs. Holton's special door because it leads more directly to her apartment. 1803 Phelps Place I 1 52 mfagg JESSIE MOON HOLTON The portrait of Mrs. Holton, which now hangs in the library of 2125, was painted in 1936 and presented by the ahimnae on the occasion ot the thirtysfifth anniversary of the Holton-Arms School. FREDERIKA HODDER Assistant Principal THE FACULTY 0 'N Alice Chase Raine Ethel Ronaldson Mildred Brown Helen Shearman English History Physical Science and Latin and French Mathematics Eloise Dunbracco Sallie Evans Lurton Virginia Fox Sociology and Mathematics English English 18 THE FACULTY Margaret B. Townsend Frances Ronaldson Denise B. de Gorostiaga Stenography and Typing Lower School Director V French Marjorie Kimball Ann Stockton Little Katharine Bowie King Sallie Y. Ovenshine Spanish and French French History and Biology Reading and Word Study 19 THE FACULTY Helen Smith Macfarlane Anne C. Myers Lois F. Croft Caroline Brown Primary School Director Arithmetic and Handwork Primary Kindergarten and Playground Louise DeLane Phoebe Hyatt Banes Marilla MacDil1 Art Commercial Art and Crafts Piano 20 TH E FACULTY Edith S. Phillips Helen Elizabeth Bull Librarian Reader Jane Plummer Rice Gretchen Feiker Dramatic Club Director of Hygiene and Physical Education Ruth Salisbury Registered Nurse Deborah Kinsman Assistant Physical Direc Mary Happer tor Secretary and Modern Dance 21 THE FACULTY Margaret L. Yates Elizabeth B. Smith Marcia T. Lystad Elizabeth du F. Tyler House Director Chaperon Chaperon Chaperon 22 L A AT some time during the clay all classes pass through what is known as the Lounge, though it never looks lei- surely during school hours. 'VI' 5-f Wm' H vm fmhm H SCRIBE 01938-1939 YOLANDA MARIA ALFARO YOLI, daughter ot the former minister from Panama, has for four years been a live wire in Holton. Her love of talking has plunged her into many scrapes and innumerable Saturday mornings in study hall. Yoli keeps things alive, classes included, with her guick, emotional response. She likes dancing and reading semi-classics, dislikes physiography and cabbage. Her personal interest in the acting of the Dramatic Club plays and catching enthusiasm make her an excellent president ot that organization. Always in motion, in expression as Well as move- ment, she acts her parts with freshness and feeling. Yoli needs two lives to accomplish all her ambitions. Among them-a debut, a trip to Argentina, marriage, With a country home included. 25 THE SCRIBEol938 l l DORIS ADELINE ALLEN WE think of her dashing for home-Seaford, Delaware-on I, . the Week-ends. She literally dashes, not only because she is anxious to get there, but also because she likes nothing better than driving fast. Her love of speed once took her on a forbidden plane ride to Dover. She still remembers the ensuing punish- ment. However, Doris is anything but flightyg she's easy-going, dependable, and friendly-greets everyone with Hi, chum. Her clirectness and habit of quaintly blushing on the least provocation endear her to her friends. She says she needs a lot of room to talk, for no matter what the topic, her small, artistic hands are constantly gesticulating. From Holton she carries a memory of a congenial faculty. A homemaking school and travel are included in her plans for next year. 26 H ESCRIBE01938-1939 MARGUERITE PHYLLIS BAILEY IN her twofyears at Holton, Phyllis has acquired many close friends by her quiet charm and sincere desire to help people. Her nickname is Peggy, but few people in school know it. She tells about the hard time she had during her first few weeks at Holton in remembering what her name was. But you must know that girl in a riding-habit no matter what name she uses! She loves all animals, cats in particular, despises spiders and cauliflower. After finishing college she would like to teach in a primary school, for which her kindness and good nature should make her particularly fitted. Many know her for her soft voice and her reticence-and some of us know her as a very amusing companion. 27 THE SCRIBE 01938 BETTIE AGNES BEEBE ALTHOUGH Bettie was born and has always lived in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, she has traveled widely. She has been to Europe three times, to South America, the West Indies, and all over Wyoming. She has been in Holton for two years, where her intellectual interests are shown by membership in The Scroll and as the president ot the Gflee Club. Her most vivid memories will be of Monday night dinners and of getting up at six in the morning to sing Christmas carols. She also painfully remembers throwing a cue in a dramatic production and having to ad-lib frantically until the belated actor appeared. Her hobby is collecting knick-knacks which now till eight shelves in her room. She intends to go either to Smith or Vassar and eventually to own a ranch in her beloved Wyoming. 28 H SCRIBEo1938-1939 GERTRUDE MARTHA BOURNE SHE was born in Memphis but soon moved to Dallas, where she became a true Texan as evidenced by her love ot hot Weather and her distaste for high placesg now she adopts for her home Lima, Peru, where she can be lazy and eat avocado pears as often as she likes. We can't imagine her being lazy, for she is always doing things-being editor-in-chief of The Scribe, excelling in her studies, reading a mystery story, or dashing down town to see the current shows. Always being on the job reaps a reward though-her enviable high grades! She gets her biggest laughs out of unexpected happenings in the History of Art class and she says she's going to an art school next year, but we think Lima has more appeal for Sugar. 29 T H l SARA BRADY AS a leader in all the riotous fun of nineteen and as an intelligent student, Sara has endeared herself to the entire school. She is an active member of both The Scroll and The Scribe board as well as the hockey and basketball teams. To show her versatility see the list of her chiet interests: photography, music, art, tennis, swimming, skating, and we might add teasing Miss Shearman. Sara says her greatest achievement was the persuasion of my parents that I possessed the mental capacity for guiding a car through the busy me- tropolis ot Pasadena. We know that in just the two years she has attended Holton her ettervescent personality and ready laughter have won us all, from the kindergarten to the faculty. 30 ESCRIBEl1938- H SCRIBEo1938-1939 LYDIA MOORE BRYANT Sl-IES Tippa to us-that real Texas girl. Her leisurely manner and slow drawl, her snail's pace and clroll humor have caused many a laugh. T. says I'l1 always remember the time my mother told me I was going to have a birthday soon. I went all around the house looking for one in dresser drawers and magazines. Here at Holton she's been looking for things too- especially ads for The Scribe. In fact she and Shallberg have covered the waterfront. Ranches, horses, dances, and people with a sense of humor appeal to her-but oral reports, snoring, and eight hundred-page books give her goose flesh. After Holton, it's back to Texas, where she may attend the University. 31 THE SCRIBEol938 FLOYCE RULE BURCHFIELD F LOYCE was born in Ruleville, Mississippi, Which, incidentally, has been built up by the Rule family. The streets have been named after the children, and curiously enough Floyce lives on Floyce Street. By nature she is friendly and chatty and her two years at Holton have endeared her to everyone, Bancroft especially. Floycekshould never have anything to Worry about, but her conscientiousness makes her set high standards that she is out to reach. Horseback riding and swimming are her favorite sports-basketball and hockey she thinks are too energetic. After graduating from Holton, Floyce intends to enter the University ot Mississippi, but as to any other future plans she says, Let nature take its course. 32 H ESCRIBE01938-1939 ELIZABETH BURGESS BETTY was born in Boston and lived there until her family moved to Washington three years ago. It is characteristic of Betty that in her first year here she should have entered into school activities-Glee Club, Dramatic Club,-and last year she became a member ot The Scribe staff, The Scroll, and the hockey team. Initiative and Yankee ingenuity make her an invaluable ad-getter. She punctuates her mad scramble to get everything done With l'm so happy or the reverse. Betty's summers are spent in traveling and collecting that prodigious dingle-dangle bracelet with its charms from every country. lf you ask her Where she is going next year, she will give that big, prolonged smile and say- Why Smith, of course! 33 THE S LUCY BERRY CLAGETT LU is one ot the Maryland Clagetts and comes from Weston, Upper Marlboro. She has been in Holton during the last tour years where she has been active on the hockey and basketball teams. She has also given outstanding performances in the Dramatic Club. Her interpretations ot a doomed aristocrat in The Minuet and ot Henry VIH in The Wives of Henry were enriched 'by the low pitch and resonance of her lovely voice. She plans to make her debut next winter in Baltimore and Washington and looks forward to attending Bryn Mawr College. A favorite pastime of Lu's is riding horseback and hunting on her farm. She loves the genuine simplicity ot the country tolk and has a fondness for all animals. 34 CRIBEOI938- H ESCRIBEo1938-1939 CATHERINE LOUISA ADAMS CLEMENT CATHERINE came to Holton tour years ago. ln that time she has made a brilliant record, both in her studies and in extra- curricular activities. Her activities include The Scroll, the modern dance, the Dramatic Club, The Scribe board, and the Lower School directorship. Her most embarrassing moment in play production was when she pulled out a crumpled kleenex instead of a withered rose in The Minuet, an intensely dramatic play. Her hobby is photography, especially the candid variety. She loves the West with its friendly people and moun- tainous country, and one of her greatest desires is to return to Montana, where she spent last summer. Next year she will attend Bryn Mawr College and in the more remote future she aspires to be an author. Already she has shown a gift for creative writing. 35 T H ANNE PAGE COACHMAN MANY a time has Miss Yates' table jovially teased Pagie for eating slowly, for she does everything in her own tempo. Appealingly cute in personality and appearance, Page is surprisingly studious and has succeeded in meeting the require- ments ot the senior class, which is an accomplishment for a one-year girl. Her Pittsburgh roommate pronounces her intelli- gent about everything but the Civil War-Page still sticks up for the Southland. Cccasionally, one can hear her squealing in Betty Clarkson's room about some current social happening of her native Jacksonville. She loves its palm trees and sunshine and says she hopes someday she will marry some one ot its boys and find her place in that sun. 36 ESCRIBE019381939 H SCRIBE01938-1939 JEAN ALLYS DAVIS JEAN is one of tive children in a family known as the J. Davises -the father, Senator James J. Davis of Pennsylvania. Holton also has Joan and Jewel. For ten years a student here, Jeanie has been a member of H.A.A., on hockey and basketball teams, leader of the Blues this year, one-time president of the Dramatic Club, and class president twice. Intense and irnpetuous Jean has afforded us many laughs in classroom as well as on the stage. Members of the physiography class say she punctuates her recitations by dropping books. They recall the time she teetered on the edge of her chair trying to think of an answer and in her absorption teetered completely off! Next year she hopes to attend Vassar College. 37 T H DORIS ANNE DEFENDERFER FOR thirteen years DA. has dashed around I-lolton's halls. Here since kindergarten days, she leaves as definite an im- pression upon the minds ot those who have known her as any member of the graduating class. There is no one who has shown more school spirit. As one of her classmates said, I'll always think ot her flailing the air. She's a good athlete, a member of HJ-LA., and important to the basketball and hockey teams. She loves riding, tennis, driving her car-and hates things domestic. She loves movement, activity and it isn't easy tor her to be grown-up. Next year she hopes to go to Bradford lunior College and then on to a university. Her idea is to study medicine in order to be a doctor's assistant someday. 38 ESCRIBE01938- H SCRIBE01938-1939 l NELLE JORDAN DeLOACHE NELLE comes from Dallas, Texas, Where she has always lived. She has traveled in Europe and has spent recent school years in Virginia and Washington, D.C.-the last three at Holton- Arms. Nelle regrets not having any nickname, but she is not one to brood over her misfortunes! Although she is Very frank, she mingles her candor with an intelligent humor, which she says has got her out of many a tight place. Her hobby is collecting poems, which accounts perhaps for her liking spring and summer moonlight. ln her senior year at Holton, Nelle has been active in The Scroll and on The Scribe board as well as in haunting Mary Happer's dancing class. And do you remember her as a circus barker of the Gay Nineties at the lamboree when she acted as master of ceremonies? After being graduated at long last, she wants to continue her traveling Where she left off. 39 THE LOUISE GLASS DIBRELL SHE is not the dignified type of girl her name implies. In fact she's not a type at all,-she's an individual. She is generally seen conscientiously studying, tearing around with books in hand, relaxing at Bancroft, or giving the latest information on the population of her beloved Danville, Virginia-which we have come to know so well during her two years here. She likes football games, square dances, and pre-Roosevelt democrats as fervently as she dislikes hats, eggs, and affected people. Her own naturalness is refreshing, as is her trim appearance in her sports clothes. Though loyal to Danville, she does plan to travel and see the big cities next year. 40 SCRIBEo1938- H SCRIBE0l938-1939 ACHSAH BOWIE DORSEY ACHSAH, called Axie by Mrs. Holton, was born in Bremerton, Washington, a Navy post near Puget Sound, and since then has lived in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Newport, Rhode Island, Portsmouth, Virginia, Boston, Massachusetts, and now Wash- ington, D.C. Here at Holton she has integrated business and literary talents so that she has been able to hold the offices of president of The Scroll and business manager of The Scribe with complete efficiency. Her experience in securing ads has led to her desire for some sort of advertising job after her debut next year. She says she likes to eat olives and to gaze in admi- ration at beautiful people. She dislikes personal remarks and rudeness, having in herself an unusual sensitiveness to people and situations. ' 41 T H CONSTAN CE FLANAGAN CONNIE has been in Holton for two years, having come from the Hendrick Hudson High School in New York City. She has lived in Alabama, Maryland, Washington, D.C., and now at Briar Cliff Manor, New York. She likes all athletics-which is obvious from the important positions she has played on the hockey and basketball teams. The musical side of her nature is shown in her enjoyment of dancing and work in the Cflee Club. After her graduation from Holton, Connie intends to go to secretarial school where her reputation for being capable and hard-working should precede her. Her ambition is to be a good wife, which seems a natural desire for a girl of such a friendly, domestic, and dependable nature. 42 ESCRIBEQIQ38-1939 H SCRIBEo1938-1939 JEAN GRANT GIESELMANN JEAN, born in Annapolis, Maryland, belongs to a Navy family- conseguently she's never been settled in any place long enough to call it horne. But she likes the Navy life and plans to do more traveling after her college days. She says that, in a year and a half, Holton has managed to give her plenty of hard work, nevertheless the teachers are always there in helpfulness. Her own seriousness and determination to go to college make her a good student-one who knows how to work with that complete absorption we all envy. Her choice of a college has not been definitely made as yet, though she is mentioning both Duke and William and Mary. 43 THE SCRIBE01938 I MARGARET FLEETWOOD GORDON MARGARET is the second member of her family to be a Holton alumna. Here for tive years, she has been a member of the hockey and basketball teams, and president ot the H.A.A. This year she was awarded the coveted blazer. A healthy young person, she loves to eat, requires a lot of sleep, and is noisy when awake. Blessed with a sunny nature and plenty ot common sense, Margaret is fun to be with and always has fun wherever she goes. An excellent dancer, she is as popular with boys as she is with girls. One of her hobbies is to collect colored fashion plates. Her own good-looking clothes would seem to be the result ot her interest. Holton will miss her direct, outspoken comments next year, as well as her genial nature. 44 H ESCRIBEQ HARRIET ELIZABETH GREENE BETSY, a native Washingtonian, has attended Holton since the second form days. On close questioning we find that she is very decided in her likes and dislikes. She has studied piano and is passionately fond of violin music. Her pet obsession is one ot the strangest ones we've run across-extreme annoy- ance when a person's belt does not exactly surround her waistg she can scarcely restrain herself from setting the belt just so. She describes herself as meticulous but does not want to be thought of as finicky. We've enjoyed her character parts in the Dramatic Club's plays. Plans for the future are somewhat hazy, but with her innate good taste and artistic leanings one feels sure that she will succeed in one ambition, to be an interior decorator. 45 1938-1939 THE SCRIBEo1938 ERNA IDA MARIE GRUNEWALD ERNA has been at Holton for two years and has lived in Wash- ington for seven years. Before coming here she attended the Cathedral School and the Gordon lunior High School. Although she has lived in New York a great part of her life, a southern college seems to be uppermost in her mind for next year. It may be Duke, for she has a sister and many friends thereg however, she talks of the University of Pennsylvania too. Erna's favorite pastimes are swimming and dancing, and we hear she is proficient in both. Her hobbies are collecting dolls from foreign countries and making her own phonograph records. Travel appeals to her very much, and she hopes to do a lot of it in the future. 46 H SCRIBE0l938-1939 ELIZABETH GARDNER HALL EVEN though she is graduating, Beekie wants to come back to Holton's lunior College so she can climb more steps and eat more good food, which are what she'll remember best about life here. Calmly she knits away in that Buddha-like position she can collapse into so easily. When not up to some nocturnal escapade, she is the peacernaker of rowdy '25, Beekie tells with giggles her harrowing experience at Lake Louise, Where one dark night she climbed up a mountain in evening clothes. Mountain lions and bears on the loose added to the danger of invisible boulders and precipices. Where she got her nickname Beekie we don't know-probably back in her hometown, Nashville-anyway it suits her-and here's hoping we do see her back next year. 47 THE SCRI-BE01938 1 5 l 1 l E MARSHA NAOMI HATCH ANOTHER Senate daughter. This one is from New Mexico, where she collects that unusual Indian jewelry. Marsha became Bunny five years ago on entering Holton-Arms and has remained Bunny to all Holtonites. She likes to write and to sing-except at musicales in school! Her repeating of a voice exercise after the teacher is one of the familiar sounds in the vicinity of 'l5. She collects rocks and yens to be a geologist, so next year she will study geology-which is quite an unusual vocation for a girl whom Annapolis week-ends and new hair-dos have always intrigued. Anyway she is serious about the physiography of New Mexico and found herself writing a senior essay on it this year. 48 H SCRIBE01938-1939 ALICE CHEATHAM HODGSON ALTHOUGH Alice was born in Nashville she claims Sewanee, Tennessee, a small university town which is made up of the students, as her home. She is trim, rather conventional, un- ruffled, like a character from So Red the Rose, and is as religious about her ice-skating, her bridge, and her letter- writing as she is beatitic about the hills of Tennessee and Henry. At present her main concern is learning how to cook before domesticity begins, for Alice's immediate future is more certain than most of ours. She likes Bancroft, Brownie, and chinker- checks, but hates the eight o'clock bell. Alice has traveled in Canada and Europe, but she says that she wishes she had had the advantage ot a History of Art course before doing so. 49 TH DORIS BEARDSLEY HOENINGHAUS DORIS has attended Holton-Arms for six years and still remem- bers pleasant civics trips with Miss Ethel in the first torm. She has been a member of The Scroll, and in her senior year, the assistant literary editor of The Scribe. A clear thinker, Doris always goes directly to the point ot a problem, she immedi- ately shears it ot the superfluous, deciding quickly and accu- rately on the real issue. ln keeping with her dislike tor the unnecessary is her antipathy for costume jewelry and showy penmanship which sports circles over its i's. As this might suggest, she is an amusing companion-and a considerate one. Next year she will study at the Sorbonne. Eventually she expects to return to her native New York and complete her education at Columbia University-perhaps in the school of journalism. 50 ESCRIBEo1938- H SCRIBE0l938-1939 I PATRICIA JAMESON EVERYONE knows Pat for her philosophical disposition, her creative writing, and her Hoosier-state accent, but few realize the many colors of her personality. Her abilities and interests extend to the Dramatic Club, the Glee Club, The Scroll, the sketch class, and modern dancing. Pat is intellectual and has decided attitudes. She adores O'Neill's plays, Chopin's music, New Yorker type ot satire, and progressive education-detests Lloyd C. Douglas, sentimentality, mathematics, and the noise ot gum-chewing. She loves the unusual-the macabre, and rebels against the conventional, as evidenced in her senior question- naire When she wrote that her ambitions are: to go to Lapland, to run a colored orphanage, or to be a prison reformer. Perhaps this suggests Why Pat is so hard to catch in words-Why the future for her is an indeterminate thing. 51 T H DOROTHY JEAN LAMB IE!-KN hails from Evanston, Illinois, and is so loyal to Chicago that she'll jump to its defense at the hint ot any insult. Washing- ton and Holton have known her for three years during which time she's been preparing tor college. She has been important to the hockey team-and to the Blue and White rallies when she leads the cheering with that natural abandon so character- istic of her. Although a recent member ot the Dramatic Club, she has been outstanding in this season's productions-especially in the role of that baretooted, gumdrop-chewing old Granny in the hillbilly classic Sparkin' . Extremely Witty herself, she is appreciative ot the Wit in others. Certain mannerisms endear her to usfthe way she licks her lips, madly twists one lock of her hair, and accents her remarks with her expressive eyes. 52 ESCRIBE01938- H SCRIBEo1938-1939 MARY EVELYN MACKALL MARY EVELYN comes from an old Maryland family whose home in Calvert County is called Mackall's Landing, which she says consists of the post office and her home. She tells of the quaint custom in the county of reliving the old tournament conflicts with the jousting on horseback and choosing the queen of the day. Four years in Holton have developed in Mary Evelyn the most earnest kind of studiousness. She finds pleasure in difficult courses and has the inquiring mind of a real scholar. Her only absence from school, for pleasure, was on the occasion of a luncheon in honor of her uncle, Dr. Parran, when Mrs. Roosevelt presented him a medal honoring his work. Her education may be carried on at Duke University next year and beyond that Mary Evelyn would like to study architecture. 53 THE SCRIBE0l938 l ZOE McCOMBS ZOE, who has one of the most euphonious names we seem to have heard in the senior class, has been in Holton tor one and a half years. In that time she has been an honor rank student whose abilities have been recognized by The Scroll --the honorary art and literary club. We think oi her especially when she quietly appreciates the humor of the scene about her. While in the Central High School, from which she was graduated two years ago, she became interested in dancing and has con- tinued this activity in Miss Happer's class. She also manages to find time tor a heavy course in music along with the regular senior subjects. College follows her graduation from Holton, and after that, perhaps, teaching music. We notice, however, that she spends numerous week-ends at Annapolis. 54 H SCRIBE01938-1939 5 l JOE ROBINSON MCKENNA lOANIE, really named for the late Senator loe Robinson, has been at Holton for seven years and is the third of her family to have been graduated from the school. During this time she has so allied herself with the life of the school that any absence brings inquiries and visits from her classmates. She is outstand- ing in sports and plays for the Blues on the hockey team. She is a member of the Holton Athletic Association to which she has given all of her intense energy. loanie adores 'lRufty, her dog, and when she is not collecting stamps, spends most of her play time with him. She hopes to go to college but isn't quite sure yet what she will do. She is a native of Washington, where she has made innumerable friends. 55 THE 5 SARA LOUISE McLELLAN FRIENDS, the Bermuda trip, History of Art, losephine, bridge after study-these will always mean Holton to 'lSwee 3 horses, exclamations over chocolate pie, basketball, and good fun in Bancroft-these will always mean Swee to Holton. Her nick- name can easily be confused with sweet, but it really came about through her little brother's inability to pronounce Sara Louise. Swee comes from New Orleans, which she says isn't as glamorous as the Mardi Gras and colonial stories ot the Missis- sippi make it, but Swee will probably make her debut there next year. Swee, always ready for a joke, even though some- times on herseltp Swee, playing some variety of chopsticks Calthough she is an accomplished pianistlg Swee in her red bathrobe-that's how we'll remember her. 56 SCRIBE01938- H ESCRIBI-201938-1939 MARGARET RUTH MINK MARGOT, sister of Mary Mink in last year's graduating class, is a Navy junior and has lived in varied surroundings-Great Lakes Naval Station, Illinois, the Samoan Islands, and the Philippines. So modest is she that it was difficult to draw from her a list ot her many important activities-member of the hockey and basketball teams, member of The Scroll. sub- scription manager of The Scribe and director of the upper school. She is dependable, conscientious, and willing-traits which have won for her the confidence of her classmates and teachers-and her friendly, cheerful disposition has endeared her to all. Margot's plans after she leaves Holton are not com- pleted as yet. For one of her abilities, college would seem to be the right choice, but dress designing may be her choice. 57 THE SCRIBEO 1938 LOUISE MOORE 2119 and its intimates know her as Weesie 5 we all know her as an attractive girl and a conscientious worker. She was born in Charlotte, North Carolina, in 1921, but has since moved to Berryville, Virginia, and thence to Winchester. Louise plays the piano admirably and aspires to play Gersl'1win's Rhapsody in Blue well. She also shows her musical ability in her work in the Glee Club. Her extra-curricular activities range from The Scroll meetings to the dances at the local high schools. As does every lovely, social-minded Winchester girl, she yearns to be Queen of its Apple Blossom Festival. Her immediate plans include college at Sweet Briar and following that, perhaps, a musical career. 58 H SCRIBE01938-1939 I PATRICIA STIRLING PROCHNIK AS daughter of the former Austrian Minister to the United States, Pat has always lived in Washington. Here at Holton- Arms since the lower school days, she has always been promi- nent in every school activity-in athletics, the Dramatic Club, student government, Community Chest drives, Glee Club. President of her class in the third and fifth forms, she was unanimously elected president of the senior class this year. Looking ahead-she says that there will probably be a debut and eventually a secretarial position- no night-club singing or marriage. A sweeping statement, Pat! Looking back-she says she will always remember the girls, the teachers, and the spirit of Holton. May we say that Holton will never forget Pat's ex- uberant spirit. 59 THE SCRIBEo1938 KATHARINE POOLE REEVES KATIE, during her six years at Holton, has been active in athletics, as was her sister Anne before her, and has been on the basketball and hockey teams. ln addition to this she has been a member of our Glee Club. She likes the first period in the library, when there isn't the usual sanctity about it, and she can let her gift for chatter have its way. Among her dislikes she lists excess sarcasm and banana splits. Her ambition is to be an alumna! In commenting on her career at Holton, she gives us this: My school life--it's a tragic story of a girl too social-minded to work hard, and too exuberant to be repressed. Make what you can of it! With all that, we note she plans to attend Connecticut College next year. 60 H SCRIBEo1938-1939 i CHARLOTTE ELIZABETH RIDDICK CHARLOTTE is another Navy junior who comes to Washington after having lived in such widely different places as New Orleans, Haiti, Honolulu, and Boston. At Holton for two years she has acquired a reputation for being reliable and con- scientious. She admits a definite prejudice against strapless evening gowns and hoop skirts, and a definite yen for travel- ing, which it would seem her life in the Navy ought to satisfy. She collects old jewelry, loves to swim and to dance. Next year she will go back to New Orleans, where she was born, for her debut. Holton stands out in her memory for the great interest taken by all the teachers in the girls. 61 THE S MADELEINE MARIE RIZIK SHE was born in Washington, but has lived in Paris and Beirut, Syria. Her nickname, Mad, is as unusual as it is untrue, for her disposition is even. She loves clothes, travel, and avocado pears-despises cats and long journeys in buses. Her immediate future after graduating from Holton?-a college in Paris, she doesn't know which one. In the more distant future she hopes to be a professional dress buyer. She has been in Holton for nine years, and she remembers best the merited scoldings received from Miss Fran Way back in the sixth grade! They were not in vain, for as Mrs. Holton says, she has been one of the most conscientious students in this year's History of Art class. 62 CRIBEo1938- H SCRIBE01938-1939 l . DOROTHY VIRGINIA SHELTON DOT is a Washingtonian who came to us from the Western High School. In her two years at Holton she has been a member of the Dramatic Club and The Scroll. This past year she has been secretary of The Scroll, and says that she will always remember wondering whether she had her minutes ready to read. As to dramatics, she has always liked being in plays, and says that the most embarrassing moment of her life was when she had to kiss a boy on the stage before an audience whose front row was composed of many of her friends. Next year she will attend business school and then hopes to be somebody's secretary. She likes dancing, sororities, and Annapolis-and we like the Shelton smile and the Shelton efficiency. 63 T H l MARTHA HOLLAND SHELTON A PRE-MEDICAL course at George Washington University was unfortunately interrupted for Martha when she was thrown from a horse and injured. But that is why Holton has had fun-loving, witty Brute in its student body. Though only with us for a year and a halt, she has been a member ot the Glee Club and has shown real ability in the Dramatic Club. A versatile person, she plays the piano easily and delightfully. Something of Brute's spirit is shown by the fact that her favorite sport is still riding- in spite of her recent mishap. She expects to take up her college work again--probably at William and Mary in Virginia. 64 ESCRIBE01938- SCRIBE01938-1939 MAY BYRN E SIMPSON MAY, during her three years at Holton, has given us an unusual personality and a rare charm. She has been a talented member of The Scroll, and this year has filled her posts as both art and literary editor of The Scribe with the discriminating taste and intelligence she invariably shows. She likes anything French, especially their records and music. She is fond of classical music, and her favorite composition is the Moonlight Sonata, which she aspires to play on the piano. Among her dislikes she lists ill-fitting shoes, crowds, and self-consciousness. After her graduation she would like to take a year off and do everything she has always wanted. Plans for the future include art school and lots of travel. 65 THE SCRIBE01938- l MARY ANNE TAYLOR MARY ANNE is a true southerner, having been born at Friar's Point, Mississippi. Her nickname, Bom-Bom, expresses well her vivacious nature. Here at Holton these past two years, she has found an outlet for her energy in basketball and in being class treasurer. She loves Bancroft with its alley and says it will always stand out in her memories of Holton. Surely Holton will always remember the hilarious fun she and Smitty have had at dinner. Part of her charm lies in her excitability, part in the mobile face which shows every passing emotion. After graduation from Holton she plans to attend the University ot Mississippi, where her easy manner and ready sense of humor should make college life a grand experience for her. 66 H 1 SCRIBE01938-1939 l , KATE WHEAT THOMAS FOR the last six generations Wheat's family has lived in Alex- andria, Virginia. For five and a half years Wheat has contributed her strength of character to her class and the school. A girl of high principles and strong convictions-her ambition is to be surrounded by the beautiful. Typical of her is her love for old silver, china, and lace. After two years of thorough Work in The Scribe's advertising department, Wheat has been an exceptionally fine advertising manager in her senior year. On the basketball team and hockey team for four years, she has received many athletic awards including the hockey blazer last year. She, however, seriously plans to study along literary and artistic lines, though not until after four years at Bryn Mawr College. I 67 T H i A I BILLIE BYRD WEST WITH us first in the lower school, Billie Byrd returned to Holton after a rigid convent life. She has been here for the past two years where she finds outlet for expression in being one of Miss Happer's most agile dancers fwitness her famous back flip on the dancing pagel. Her daintiness and grace have been featured in the Dramatic Club productions. Such feminine roles as the heartless coquette Columbine in the Watteau play and Ann Boleyn in The Wives of Henry VIII are Billie's tour de force. Her plans for the future are a trip abroad, a debut, and marriage-all of which seems exactly right for glamorous Billie Byrd. 68 ESCRIBEo1938- JUNIOR COLLEGE Louise Adair, Mary Catherine Armstrong, Barbara Bassett, Gertrude Breclcinridge, locelyn Bumstead, Betty Clarkson, Grace Dexter, lane Ducey, Mardie Dudley, Beth Dyer, Tillie Graddick, Lucile Hester, lean Holden, president, Beverley Huse, Alice Keck, Ruth Anne Kennedy, Frances Logan, Fayette Ann Miller, Betty lane Nourse, Patty Paulk, Mary Pope, Bettie Ragle, Emily Shelton, Mary Katharine Shutts, lean Slcinlcer, Frances Smyser, Martha lane Totty. 69 FIFTH FORM Frances Acher, Kitty Adair, Mary Lord Andrews, lean Black, Rosalyn Buchanan, Mary Carter, Kitty Claude, Sheila Finerty, Marilynn Hinies, Mary Lee, Phoebe Lewis, Elaine McDowell, Berry Merchant, Renee Morse, Lydia Q'Neal, Marnie Osborn, lean Potter, Wanda Pruett, Coby Rannett, Susie Sloracgins, Giovanna Stewart, Marqheritta Stirling, Agnes White, Anne Wotherspoon. 70 FOURTH FORM Sally Anderson, Esther Bourne, Mary Buckner, Beth Case, Clotilde Cunningham, Mabel Cunningham, Kathleen Daly, Peggy Davis, Mary Dutton, Mary Ann Ferrandou, lean Gibbons, Doris leanne Griffith, Catherine I-lambley, Betty lane Knighton, Patsy Kyle, Frances Lee, lane Lesh, president, Nancy Lewis, Louise Love, Ann Lystad, Katherine MacDill, Mary McLaughlin, Mary McNeil, lulia Mills, Lalor Molten, Courtenay Moore, lune Noble, Louise Q'Reilly, Peggy Qstermann, Courtenay Owens, Annie Laurie Rankin, Ann Reinicke, Ann Sacks, Sue Lee Silvester, Nancy Strong, Ann Swanson, Constance Taffincler, Harriet Whitehurst, Margaret Wotherspoon. 71 THIRD FORM Ruth Bielaski, president, Elinor Burton, Rosemary Butler, Bette Lee Cain, Livia Canas, Katharine Colvin, Grace Hunt Davis, Ioan Davis, Maria de Bianchi, Nancy Derby, Betty Good, Barbara Griffith, Margaret Harnbley, Marguerite Hunter, Mary Iohn- ston, Patsy Jones, Idelyn Kass, Monica Neumark, Mary O'Nea1, Margaret G'Rei11y, Frances Osborn, Ieanne Symes, Miriam Tittrnann, Marjorie Tenero- wicz, Louise Vance. 72 Dana Arnold, Patricia Baker, Barbara Beij, Frances Booth, Flora Canas, lewel Davis, Daphne Fay, Louise Gore, Anne Heard, lackie Heine, president, Eleanor Hernpstone, Anne Kacy, Betty Lee, Sylvia McNeale, Zelah Millard, Sally Noble, Evelyn Byrd Robinson, lulia Ann Sparkrnan, Marie Vallance. SECOND FORM 73 LOWER SCHOOL AND PRIMARY Katharine Allen, lean Allwine, Clarissa Alvord, lo Anne Bacon, Edith Bailey, Sally Bailey, Mary Bond, loan Briggs, Julia Marvin Claud, Katharine Claud, Claire Crott, losephine Culbertson, Laura Davis, Ellen Galvin, Barbara Heine, Katrina Himes, Betty King, lean MacDill, Sarah McGreW, Nancy Martin, Mar- jorie Rhodes, Claire Rice, Ann Rothery, Betty Ann Sherwood, Elizabeth Steuart, Mary Alice Stoddard, Peggy Unzicker, loanne Wharton, Helen Parker Willard, Anna-Marie Zoller. Robert Allen, Laura Alvord, lulie Arnold, Damara Bolte, Caro Butler, Pearce Butler, William Butler, lr., David Byron, Maureen Canning, Carol Caruthers, Dorsey Clagett, Anne Coe, Nancy Cox, Mary Anne Daubin, Marguerite Davis, Mary Ellen Davis, Patricia Davis, Anne Marie Dostert, Harley Evans, Harry Gibson, Catherine Goodrich, Elizabeth Henry, Grace Howard, leanne Howard, lackie lameson, Constance Kelly, lean King, Mary Bridget lrwin, loanne Logue, Betsy MacCubbin, Mary Martin, Beatrice MacArthur, Anne Mearns, Nancy Minter, Betsy Price, Meredith Price, lamie Smith, Betty lane Somerville, lacque- line Somerville, Margaret Somerville, Armistead Talman, Sally Thom, Amie Willard, Garnett Williams, Delight Wood. 74 RGANIZATIONS ORGANIZATION HEADS HERE are the people who see to it that the organizations in school operate as they should: Achsah Dorsey, president of The Scroll and business manager of The Scribe , Bettie Beebe, president ot the Glee Clulog Gertrude Bourne, editor-in-chief of The Scribe , Margaret Gor- don, president ot the H.A.A., Patricia Prochnik, president ot the Senior Class, Yolanda Alfaro, president ot the Dramatic Club. HOLTON ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Margaret Gordon Wheat Thomas Katharine Reeves Ioan McKenna Doris Anne Defenderfer Iean Davis Sara Brady Clotilde Cunningham Peggy Davis Constance Flanagan Margot Mink Sue Lee Silvester Anne Wotherspoon Margaret Wotherspoon AWARDS Hockey Blazer Margaret Gordon Basketball Blazer Peggy Davis THE GLEE CLUB Sally Anderson Mary Lord Andrews Pat Baker Doris Beckwith Bettie Beebe-president Betty Cain Beth Case Clotilde Cunningham Kathleen Daly lewel Davis Constance Flanagan lean Gibbons Louise Gore Betsy Greene lackie Heine lean Holden Marguerite Hunter Patricia larneson lane Lesh Mary McLaughlin Zelah Millard Courtenay Moore Louise Moore Patricia Prochnik Ann Sacks Bettie Ragle Annie Laurie Rankin DirectorYMiss Feiker THE DRAMATI Frances Acher Yolanda Altaro-president Mary Lord Andrews Mary Catherine Armstrong Mary Buckner Jocelyn Bumstead Billie Byrd West Lucy Clagett lean Davis Mardy Dudley Betsy Greene Marguerite Hunter Patricia lameson lean Lamb C CLUB Phoebe Lewis Louise Love-secretary Ann Lystad Fayette Ann Miller lulie Mills Patricia Prochnik Ann Reinicke Ann Sacks Martha Shelton Giovanna Stewart Nancy Stronq Martha lane Toddy Mary Pope-scenery Betty Burgesshproperties Director-Mrs. Rice 79 THE SCROLL LITERARY AND ART CLUB Frances Acher, Bettie Beebe, Gertrude Bourne, Sara Brady, Betty Burgess, Mary Buckner, Catherine Clement, Clotilcle Cunningham, Nelle DeLoache, Achsah Dorseydpresidentg Betsy Greene, Doris Hoeninghaus, Pat Iameson, Mary Lee, Ann Lystad, Zoe McCornbs, Elaine McDowell, Margot Mink, Louise Moore, Lucy Proctor, Dorothy Shelton, secretary, May Simpson, Mickey Stirling, Wheat Thomas. l 80 THE SCRIBE' BOARD Editor-in-Chief ..... . Gertrude Bourne Business Manager ...,... Achsah Dorsey THE EDITORIAL STAFF Literary Editor ......... May Simpson Assistant Literary Editor . . . Doris Hoeninghaus Art Editor ........... May Simpson Assistants ..... Mickey Stirling, Ann Lystad Feature Editors . Sara Brady, Catherine Clement Photographic Editor ..,... Nelle DeLoache Snapshot Editor ......... Renee Morse THE BUSINESS MANAGER'S STAFF Advertising Manager ...... Wheat Thomas Advertising Assistants: Betty Burgess, Lydia Bryant, Betty Shallberg Subscription Manager ...... Margot Mink Typing ............. Cora Cferon t FACULTY ADVISORS Miss DeLane, Miss Fox, Miss Lurton The literary staff-Doris Hoeninghaus, May Simpson, Catherine Clement, The business staff-Margot Mink, Betty Burgess, Achsah Dorsey, Betty Shallberg, Wheat Thomas, Lydia Bryantg The art staff-Mickey Stirling, Ann Lystad, May Simpson, The faculty advisors-Miss Lurton, Miss DeLane, Miss Fox. 81 Ulla gay insides am 0155 qo ding ting linq you musi- sn-sq, Ulm TOWN TO -NIGHT The Spirit of the Nineties-Clotilde Cunningham's accurate conception wins a costume prize. GN lanuary 20, we went, as Bea Lillie would say, to a Marvelous Party. The Scribe lamboree was staging its annual costume affair at the big gym and the place fairly swam in the atmosphere of the gay old days. We entered very authentic Hswinging doors as the nickelodeon ground out Daisy, Daisy, 'll-lot Time in the Gld Town, l'After the Ball, and all the old pearls of the Golden Age of Song. Scattered about the floor were cozy tables with red-checkered covers and candlelights. Behind a long red table in the corner were Hester and his crew serving the most superior food. Funny posters were on the wallsgGibson girls and men, can-can dancers, Fitz- simmons and Sullivan prize fight, and on the floor gathering for the grand march before the judges' stand was the funniest and grandest group of costumed people imaginable. The Chicago Fire-Mrs. O'Leary's cow and all-bathing beauties, picnic groups, Bowery babes, wasp-waist ladies, top hat gents, tandemseall were there! When Nelle Delaoache, acting as master of cere- monies in her circus barker's outfit, finally got the circle rotating, we knew we were seeing the gay nineties relived. It was an evening full of fun-the Glee Club's guartet with Doris Beckwith, lean Gibbons, Pat lameson, and Miss Feiker lugubriously singing A Bird in a Gilded Cage 5 he Floradora sextet of willowy maidens and undersized gents doing a perfect routine to 'Tell Me, Pretty Maiden 5 and finally the whole crowd singing the old songs as they were projected on the screen. Yes, it was the most Marvelous Party ! I when you hear dem -a- beth Nl :pin found and swectuty and when 'WG V056 am ihrouq In his Cho-rv! AN :pin lr... Tfwre ll be a hd' time in-th 9 i Emily Shelton and Kitty Adair are familiar con- ceptions of the period in their swinging corduroy skirts and starched waists. The Floradora Sextet twirls a mean parasol and a meaner mustache. Q .lf -p f 9-I I! E' ,i W ,f A Km A, f. ,H KA ,wxsriz-v , an 'ii i J it , ill? fi f J 'Hi el 2 'W 5 N 2 V am Q ,xii E AA ' ' - K f if A group ot the faculty Cyes, in shell-pink tiqhtsll flutter in Miss Happens School of the Ballet. loan Davis and Maria cle Bianchi win prizes tor I-Xnna-Marie Zollei' carries oft tmp honors for the younger completeness of detail in costumes. generation in her pinalore and hlack cotton stockings. ' ' 4 4' x ieiii ,i L .. if mwnnm.pmxm.wfA,w,mewmun Betty Burgess, Catherine Clement. I THE COMMITTEE Hester managed an ice-cream, coca- cola, hot-dog cate with his usual finesse. BEHIND THE SCENES Sugar Bourne, May Simpson, Achsah Dorsey, Nelle DeLoache. 85 WHO REMEMBERS? MY mother, on my asking what she remembered about the Gay Nineties, replied, We wore pompadours and there was a song entitled There'll be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight. During ten years only those two things had made an impression on her. Once again I turned in search of someone to give me just a little more information about the Nineties. This time I struck a gold mine-my father. Yes, he thought he remembered something. Let's see, he was living in Alabama at the time-a little boy. It must have been then that the wandering vaudeville shows were in vogue. Particularly vivid in his mind was one night when Grand- father had let him, his older sister, and younger brother go with a white hired man to a vaudeville show. It was held in an old wooden barn, swarming with people dressed in their Sunday best. Father and Chester, wearing knee-length trousers, frilly shirts with bow-ties, and yellow straw hats clung to each of Whitey's hands. Lillie was considered old enough to walk just ahead of them alone. The show consisted of Punch and Iudy presented by Mr. Thunderbug, who stood on a raised platform in his best pair of tight, black trousers and turned his professional smile on the audience. When it was over and all were about to leave, Thunderbug held up his hand. Wait, Tonight I have a great surprise for you all. If you will kindly step up to the lines that are suspended above your heads, hook your finger through any one of the many rings there, and then hold your ear to that finger-tip, you will hear a most remarkable thing. It will be an experience of a lifetime. Instantly people pushed and crowded to reach a ring, until all were strung up in the required position. Thunderbug could hardly contain himself. I've fished all over the United States, he announced from the platform, but I've never caught so many suckers on one line as I have here tonight! Father was waxing reminiscent now. The women? he said in answer to my question, The women had wasp waists, huge hips, and legs like hams! Immense hats, lots of lace, and voluminous bathing suits that covered every inch were all the style. And chaperons for young ladies, on all occasions, were indispensable. Memories came thick and fast. The patch in the seat of your trousers was called the Democratic Badge by the defeated Republican Party. Cities and towns made laws forbidding Scorching in congested districts, meaning no bicycles can speed. The new safety bicycle was creating a gre-at stir, and the famous Century Club was formed which rewarded another bar to your badge at the end of every hundred miles on your bicycle. Oh, and that great temptation to youth, so severely forbidden, the Yellow Back Novels or the Dime Novels full of stories of Wild West villains, desperadoes, and railroad robbers. And those pathetic trains which puffed, whistled, and Wheezed, and had such laborious mechanical difficulties. The book, Slow Train Through Arkansas, that took off the railroads in those days, was full of typical jokes of the time- the lady with her gawky, sixteen-year-old boy, insisting he should be able to pay half fare. He must be over twelve, shouted the conductor. Well, replied the exasperated woman, he wasn't when the train started! The ha- rangue continued. Look, the conductor pointed out, he has long pants. Oh, she replied, Then I can go half fare! sa , But it is the songs of the period that have made the Gay Nineties so inimitable and unique. Sigmund Spaeth has collected the most popular in his book Read 'Em and Weep. When Sweet Rosie O'Grady, Daisy, Daisy, and On a Sunday Afternoon hit the country they were wildly received. To a nation in which the women wore bustles, carried muffs and parasols, and the men had sideburns, wore narrow trousers and derbies, the sweet, sentimental mushiness of some of the songs had great appeal. It was a time when music had a mournful melodramatic note of tragedy in it, with happy, sticky endings tacked on. Partings, villains, and reconciliations were favorite themes. And the songs usually told stories. In The Little Lost Child a policeman found a little Waif who later turned out to be his own lost child. When the frantic mother came in search of her, the estranged husband and wife had a touching reconciliation scene. Of course there were also some peppier songs, pieces with more punch and less sentimentality such as, Make a Noise Like a Hoop and Roll Away, and My Mother Was a Lady. As it was the beginning of the mechanization of America, automobiles and telephones inspired such songs as ln My Merry Oldsmobile and Ting-a-Ling Ling. Hordes of country yokels were being drawn to the cities which were springing up overnight-men for the factories, girls for telephone operators. Everywhere were sung cautions to the little, innocent, country maid arriving in the big city or den of iniquity, warning her of cabs, men with fascinating ways, and the evil of money. She's Only a Bird in a Gilded Cage sang the sad story of a girl who married for money, and She's Only a Poor Working Girl linked demi-tasses and the upper classes sinfully together. Songs laid great emphasis on girls. lust One Girl, Sweet Marie, and Elsie from Chelsea are just a few out of many. Words in many of the songs were pathetic in their triteness, their only excuse being that they rhymed. A typical verse of this type is one of the many stanzas in the popular Ta-Ra-Ra Boom-dere. I'll sing a little song, it won't take long, If I sing it Wrong, why ring the gong, Then I will say to you so long, And start at once for old I-long Kong. Then a tear to my eye 'twill surely bring And l'll call you a saucy thing. Then for the Patrol you all may ring And hear the Copper sweetly sing. When this was sung by, say, Lottie Gilson in a bouffante dress pulled up to display a leg, and wearing a huge straw hat with ostrich feathers it is more understandable how such a song could go over. But can we truthfully say that their words are much sillier than those in many of our songs today, such as, Flatfoot Floogie and Satchelmouth Swing ? What will future generations say of Tommy Dorsey, jitterbugs, and swing music? Will we be referred to as Those Trying Thirties ? Will we be revered, remem- bered, or laughed at? Catherine Clement, Form Vl 87 TH IE l ! , MIUIDDIERN DANCE 89 BASKETBALL Blue Team Frances Acher Jean Black Lucy Ciagett Ciotiide Cunningham lean Davis Constance Flanagan Beverly Huse Sara Louise McLellan Margot Mink Sue Lee Siivester 90 t VVhite Team Mary Lord Andrews Sara Brady Betty Burgess lean Davis Peggy Davis Doris Ann Detenderfer Margaret Gordon Doris Griffith Ann Reinicke Wheat Thomas Anne Wotherspoon Margaret Wotherspoon Blue Team Frances Acher lean Black Rosalyn Buchanan Lucy Clagett Clotilde Cunningham Constance Flanagan lean Lamb lane Lesh Nancy Lewis loan McKenna lulie Mills Margot Mink Betty lane Nourse Madeleine Rizik Sue Lee Silvester Mickey Stirling White Team Sara Brady Betty Burgess Peggy Davis Doris Anne Detenderter Margaret Gordon Doris Griffith Mary Lee I une Noble Patricia Prochnik Katharine Reeves Wheat Thomas Anne Wotherspoon Margaret Wotherspoon HOCKEY 91 , 1 X ,pw Nm :wx Q. Www, I U61 mx W :-- '- - w mv fiffsimff-1. .- .m Q, .. 4 Q - ,... 1 W -Us . www-5 W- , , 3. ' f my ffl, Q fp.-f 5 Q:-f SL S+- ? A fl J, krQ.,swgg 'Af xl. 1 HQZQY3-TN Q A S ' 5 Sl',.,4 h A'kh ' ' . U : iw, 16' A 1 4 X - Maw 7 K .- K' 'im ,F 1 E 'L A 3 Q -51,5 A 'N .X s I , - x ,, 4 I I f-QXQU v I ' Q V ' f ik' ff-yi 4 ,kg I I. i EA . M. , 4 9' I' ' I - X. v kc ,X . 'J 'Mu .W kj A, .A ,. - Q.-R XX :A x , . IW ,y , .. .. 1 xx- X ' ff A , - ' T L, S. I ,. . - W K fx K ' b W , - ,X 1, 5 5' ' . S k 4 A K' Q Q ' rrfl-5 . Q . , . K bv -X x . K . X 4 , 4,1 . Q www J X V f'f . ,.,x. 1 '- TD ily! M 1 ff. S f .4 M' f ,Sing gf - - 51 ',s'f', 'QI' hs ani. 1 K qw. Q kv X, -xrki xy . .........,--me-W..,,. new .M--A-'W x'.'S..,L,511'.w-A vu- --Yolando Altaro's name is just Alferry to Mrs. DID YOU KNOW THAT- --Mrs. Holton explored Crater Lake last summer? Holton? --Miss Brown yearns to paint pastels in the summer? --Bettie Beebe is partial to cowboys, especially from Wyoming? i ---Miss Ethel and Miss Hodder have a living room which is the last word in modernism? --Sinnie wore a tarlatan shirt in the ballet? --Sara Brady has a 'ldark room fthe closet ot her room in 'l9D where she develops and enlarges her pictures? --Tippa Bryant includes tucking Smitty in every night as part of her house captain's duties? --The erudite editor ot The Scribe, upon seeing all the scaffolding on the Cathedral, Wanted to know why they were tearing it down? ---This is considered modern grace? 94 --Miss Ethel and Miss Hodder have a lovely summer place on Long Lake in Naples, Maine? See it for yourself. Miss Ovenshine Miss Ethel Sinnie, Miss Hodder --Mary Happer thinks of the Miss Fran modern dance even while relaxing at Camp Holton? -Mary Happer once consumed an hour in driving from the gym to school because she wouldn't make a left-hand turn? -Fayette Ann Miller and Pat lameson's room harbors some Surrealist pictures that are definitely on the macabre side? Especially that gray model that hangs between their beds. -A magazine salesman, with luminous brown eyes and a long list of impres- sive names, made enough to put himself through college twice when he took in three innocents-the Misses Hester, Delaoache, and Pruett? Mary Catherine Armstrong has a secret desire to live the artistic, uncon- ventional life of the summer stock actress? locelyn Bumstead likes to watch things grow ? She has a room filled with starving gold fish and numerous plants that struggle against drought. 95 DID YOU KNOW THESE FACTS ABOUT S STREET- That the Chief Justice Walks down S Street every morning and that he usually passes Holton-Arms about 8:30 and always bows to his many admirers who greet him? That the quaint red-brickedhouse at S and Twenty- fourth Streets was the residence of Mr. Hughes in the days before he be- came the Chief Justice? its That the playground extending from Twenty- second to Twenty-third Street on S is a memorial to a well-loved dog whose grave is also there? That the German Government owns the land at S alnd lihelps Place and plans to build its embassy t ere. That the former Austro Hungarian Embassy was the building where Fireside Inn is now located? That the sketch class has become and has also be- come double- jointed and am- bidextrous while sketching on pre- cipitous grades? 96 famous on S Street That the Textile Museum at 2330 S is the property of the Myers family Whose residences are at 2310 and 2320 S Street? H ESCRIBEo1938-1939 SO-AND-SO After struggling through forty-four senior write-ups, the literary board was ready to give up and go nuts. If we had to write another this would be the result: SO-AND-SO comes from Our Town, having attended Mrs. Petti- bone's-by-the-Brook, Gallup Academy, and The Van Snoot Seminary-but why should we care where she comes from?- we'll never see her again, we hope. She's just another dull child in the senior class whom we have to make devastating She's as graceful as a member ot the faculty ballet, and she's as vivacious as a turtle. She hopes to be a little Wife , she told us with giggles, but who would marry her-Frankenstein? COnly eighty-tour words and we need a hundred and twenty. Where is that questionnaire?D Her likes are rather corny-corn flakes, cornets, and corn likker Cphewlll Clvlaybe with double spacing this will look like a hundred and twenty words.J So little So-and- So go out and light up the World-anyway light up! 97 Y S 5 5 ' w7Q , qw.-f 5: 1 Q if-vw 'tg-We 2 7 f -v :Q -Lv .L - j,PSlz9 'kkk .. - 'Q ,. 9 .,- r i ws? gy? +1 pi? - vt f pi . KW I - f N 7: .,, -as i 1. QP if ,fx 1 ,Q Q, 'gf gil-G? A IIAV AT Scrxool. - :cs 'rms -foo 7 mix,-,, fx Nor new A k X K V ff? MOT!-1Y:f'f5 mf: A LOVE! xcx V X 53,1 P ,xv W H COFFEE ns A STIMULANT 0 E47 X A W S- NLM, .47 ZlPPlNC': UP AT ,-X QM E, E Fmwnsuwe Pom? Lessows nv A wmv: AX T-5ETQlO'D 'i' L W' 'EQ X' 4 f WGEX! K f -Q rj K Eff? M b xx- KN sim X X 'PSYCHon.oGY ' - Remy FOR NEW IDEAS f ' lr wm-I HN oven Mum ? IOO 1 3 f Enema commence A , If Q S--7Dlj,j f if J Rx., 07 X, Sway 45 ov fl f- GU F9909 . Cam-,,,,6 6: l j WP oN df Q 5'?4 U 2 Q? ? l,Yg?:E.nn1. I 'S' xx K ,Zz L L -' UFE Q -px kv- ig ko N! wi! Q 4 1 ff ffm! ' l-MSTORY OF ART Ream' To eo. use HEART AND souL uw me Lourase Qxlmg Cumuur Elem-s- Gmunnmf, mg Foua To A Bm-4 IIRNJGS OF I1F.MocR nav 6200 Efxw ff: I 2: E Q Q TTN v X S 5 f 1 Q J u X! bus f f-jx K' X RQ Q? X I...-1 - -f 'U m In M f gs-m-gif 101 ON WRITING A THESIS WRITING my senior thesis has been a lowering cloud over me for four long months and will probably assume thunderstorm proportions by the end of four more long months. I am writing on The Physiography of New Mexico, with a bit of the history and present-day conditions of the Indians, Spanish-Americans and Anglos of New Mexico. Why I chose that subject I'm not exactly sure, since in all probability no one else is interested in the slightest degree in the physi- ography of New Mexico. Nevertheless, that much is done, so now all I can do is to spend long hours in libraries in a frantic search for material. I say frantic because I never seem to have quite enough long hours. The result is that I rush into my research in a mad frenzy trying to get a lot done in practically no time, and when I get through I'm not at all sure whether I'm gaining or losing ground. Such is the way that most students go about writing a thesis. Now it occurs to me that the solution to this problem is to take a year off from school and leisurely write a thesis. In this way I could spend a few days idly looking around the library becoming oriented to my new surroundings. When I actually did get down to work I wouldn't be distracted by suddenly noticing a picture on the Wall facing me that I had never seen before. I would also have plenty of time to read everything I Wanted to whether it had any direct bearing on my thesis or not. For instance, if I looked up New Mexico in an encyclopedia I might first run across the nervous system. Now I have always been a little curious and extremely vague about the nervous system so I could take time out right then to read up on it. Or if I looked up Indians and ran across India first, I could delve into the story of that mystery-shrouded country. Who knows what amusing or exciting tales I might find in an encyclopedia before I finally found what I was looking for? To me encyclopedias are the most intriguing of all books anyway. There seems to be nothing that these volumes of wisdom do not discuss. Every im- portant person and place are mentioned. You can read on any subject from the smelting of steel or refining of oil to the Headhunters of South America or the Eskimos of Alaska. You can find the story of Pelleas et Melisande with its unique atmospheric charm or the story of Pancho Villa with all his banditry. The Yucca plant, Wool, Whirligig Beetle, Wallpaper, Virgil, Vaccine Therapy, Union of Socialist Soviet Republics, Tweed, Tractors and Track and Field Sports are only a few of the many fascinating subjects I would like to have time to read about. However, I'm afraid I'll have to postpone that extensive reading. In the meantime I am plodding laboriously' through my research. The thing I object to most is having to jot down innumerable notes on everything I read. It always spoils the fun of reading for me. Besides it is very bad because it is habit- forming. As a result, I have come to depend so much upon notes that now I have to make a note on everything I want to remember for more than five minutes. I am slowly but surely losing all power of retaining facts of any kind. After the note-taking stage, I have to go through the process of selecting the material that is finally to go into the thesis. This in itself is a problem, although it never bothers me very much. I just go through my notes and the ones that strike my eye as being good points I set aside to use. Then comes the final writing. Since my work is never so good that I want it read by anyone, except the teacher, I type it myself, using the hunt and peck system. After eons of struggling with a machine, the manipulation of which is completely beyond me, I finally get the thesis to that half-finished stage in which I hand it in. Marsha I-Iatch, Form VI 102 Our garden above S Street L ' E N V O I Q fill STUDENT DIRECTORY Acher, Frances Adair, Louise Adair, Sydney Alfaro, Yolanda ..... Allen, Doris ....... Anderson, Mary Bachman . Andrews, Mary Lord. . . Armstrong, Mary Catherine. . . Arnold, Dana ...... . Bailey, Marguerite Phyllis .... Baker, Patricia Fairfield . . Bassett, Barbara . . . Beckwith, Doris . . . Beebe, Bettie . . . Beij, Barbara . . . Bielaski, Ruth Cary . Bivins, Mary Miles . Black, lean ...... Booth, Louise Frances Bourne, Esther . . . . Bourne, Gertrude . . Brady, Sara ...... Breckinridge, Gertrude. . Bryant, Lydia .... Buchanan, Rosalyn . . Buckner, Mary . . Bullock, Dorothy . . . Bumstead, locelyn . . Burchfield, Floyce Rule Burgess, Elizabeth . . . Burton, Elinor . . . Butler, Rosemary . . Cain, Bette Lee . . Canas, Flora. . Canas, Livia. . Carter, Mary . . Case, Elizabeth . . . 555 Sylvan Drive, Winter Park, Florida 1870 Challen Avenue, lacksonville, Florida 1870 Challen Avenue, lacksonville, Florida . . 4211 Forty-third Street, Washington, D.C. . . . . . . . . . . . Seaford, Delaware . . . 1831 Twenty-third Street, Washington, D.C. . . . Seminary Hill, Alexandria, Virginia . 310 Encino Avenue, San Antonio, Texas . . 2501 Calvert Street, Washington, D.C. Wynnewood Park, Silver Spring, Maryland . . 2911 Olive Avenue, Georgetown, D.C. . . . . 226 Pennsylvania Avenue, El Paso, Texas 6315 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Maryland . 4470 North Lake Drive, Milwaukee, Wisconsin . . . . . 3428 Porter Street, Washington, D.C. 111 North Berendo Street, Los Angeles, California . . . . . 1300 Madison Street, Amarillo, Texas . . . 4348 Livingston Avenue, Dallas, Texas . . 3215 Macomb Street, Washington, D.C. . . . . . . Hotel Washington, Washington, D.C. . . . . . . 3716 Stratford Avenue, Dallas, Texas 507 East Washington Street, Pasadena, California . . . . Russell Cave Pike, Lexington, Kentucky . 230 West Summit Avenue, San Antonio, Texas . . 6804 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Maryland . . . . . . Fort McClellan, Anniston, Alabama . . . 411 Lovett Boulevard, Houston, Texas . . . . . . . . Helrnetta, New lersey . . . . . . . . . . . Ruleville, Mississippi . . , . . 2412 Tracy Place, W'ashington, D.C. . . 2029 Connecticut Avenue Washington . . . 1559 Forty-fourth Street, 'Washington . . 4007 Connecticut Avenue, Washington . . . . 2128 Bancroft Place Vwfashington . . . . . 2128 Bancroft Place, Washington . 1500 De Kalb Street, Norristown, Pennsylvania . . . . 1661 Crescent Place, Vlfashington, D.C. Clagett, Lucy ........ .... 2 230 Que Street, Washington, D.C. Clarkson, Harriet Elizabeth ..... 16 Vernon Terrace, lacksonville, Florida Claude, Katherine ......... 3508 Rodman Street, Washington, D.C. Clement, Catherine. . . . . 313 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland 104' Coachman, Anne Page ..... 1045 Riverside Avenue, lacksonville, Florida Colvin, Katharine . ...... 1808 Thirty-seventh Street, Washington, D.C. Cunningham, Clotilde ......... 2045 Park Road, Washington, D.C. Cunningham, Mabel. .484 East Mountain Avenue, Williamsport, Pennsylvania Daly, Kathleen ................... Garrison, New York . . 1841 Wyoming Avenue, Washington, D.C. 3012 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D.C. Davis, Grace Hunt. . . Davis, lean Allyn . . Davis, lewel Ann . . Davis, loan. . . Davis, Peggy. . de Bianchi, Maria . . . Defenderfer, Doris Anne DeLoache, Nelle .... Derby, Nancy ..... Dexter, Grace . . Dibrell, Louise . . Dorsey, Achsah . . Ducey, lane. . . Dudley, Mardy . Dutton, Mary. . Dyer, Mary Elizabeth . . Fay, Daphne ..... Ferrandou, Mary Ann . Finerty, Sheila .... Flanagan, Constance . Geron, Cora .... Gibbons, lean. . . Gieselmann, .lean . Good, Elizabeth . . . Gordon, Margaret . . Gore, Louise ..... Greene, Harriet Elizabeth Griffith, Barbara . . . Griffith, Doris leanne . Grunewald, Erna . . . Hall, Elizabeth Gardner Hambley, Catherine . . Hambley, Margaret . . Hanes, Mary Margaret . Hatch, Marsha .... Heard, Anne ..... Heine, lacqueline . . 3012 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D.C. 3012 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D.C. . 5562 Crestwood Drive, Ka nsas City, Missouri Portuguese Legation, Wardman Park Hotel, D.C. . . 7 East Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland . . . . . . . . Preston Road, Dallas, Texas . . . 2034 Allen Place, Washington, D.C. . . . . . . Preston Road, Dallas, Texas . . . . . 124 Broad Street, Danville, Virginia . . 3404 Hawthorne Street, Washington, D.C. . . Navy Yard, Quarters H, Washington, D.C. 1803 North Highland Street, Arlington, Virginia . . . . . . . . . . . . Upperville, Virginia 604 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland . 5904 Cedar Parkway, Chev y Chase, Maryland . . . 3554 Edmunds Street, Washington, D.C. . 208 North Fairfax Street, A lexandria, Virginia . . . . . . . . . Briarcliff Manor, New York . . . 436 Eustis Street, Huntsville, Alabama . . 1643 Harvard Street, Washington, D.C. . . . 3300 Newark Street, Washington, D.C. . . 4833 Rockwood Parkway, Washington, D.C. . . . 2905 Woodland Drive, Washington, D.C. 2100 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D.C. Gracldick, Tillie .... 127 West Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland 2509 Cliffbourne Place, Washington, D.C. , . 2808 Thirty-fourth Street, Washington, D.C. . . . 4200 Harrison Street, Washington, D.C. . . 4100 Cathedral Avenue, Washington, D.C. . . . Ensworth Avenue, Nashville, Tennessee . . 3017 Forty-fourth Place, . . 3017 Forty-fourth Place, . . 2715 Thirty-sixth Place, Washington, D.C. Washington, D.C. Washington, D.C. Clovis, New Mexico . . . . 3331OStreet, . . 4512 Edmunds Street, 105 Washington, D.C. Washington, D.C. Hempstone, Eleanor Hester, Lucile . . . Himes, Marilynn . Hodgson, Alice . . . Hoeninghaus, Doris Holden, lean ..... Hunter, Marguerite Huse, Beverley . . . lameson, Patricia . . lohnston, Mary . . lones, Helen Clark. lones, Patsy ..... Kacy, Anne .... Kass, ldelyn .... Keck, Alice ..... Kennedy, Ruth Anne Knighton, Betty lane . . Kyle, Patricia . . . Lamb, Dorothy Iean Lee, Elizabeth . . . Lee, Frances . . . Lee, Mary . . Lesh, lane . . . Lewis, Nancy . . Lewis, Phoebe . . Logan, Frances. . Love, Barbara Louise . Lystad, Ann ...... McCombs, Zoe . . . . MacDill, Katherine 'Rose McDowell, Elaine . . . MacKall, Mary Evelyn. . McKenna, loan Robinson McLaughlin, Mary. . . McLellan, Sara Louise . McNeale, Sylvia .... McNeil, Mary ..... Merchant, Berenice. . Millard, Zelah .... Miller, Fayette Ann . . Mills, Iulia .... Mink, Margot. . . Molten, Lalor . . . 1730 New Hampshire Avenue, Washington, D.C. . . . . . 3803 South Main Street, Houston, Texas . . 2941 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D.C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sewanee, Tennessee . . . 1954 Columbia Road, Washington, D.C. . . 2343 South Meade Street, Arlington, Virginia . . . The Shoreham Hotel, Washington, D.C. . . . . . . . . Carvel Hall, Annapolis, Maryland . . . 4644 Central Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana . 6503 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Maryland . . . . . . . . . . . . . Columbia, Tennessee . . . . . 3006 Forty-fitth Street, Washington, D.C. . . 38 Noyes Drive, Silver Spring, Maryland . . . 1612 Buchanan Street, Washington, D.C. . . 795 Cak Knoll Circle, Pasadena, California . . Kennedy-Warren Hotel, Washington, D.C. . . 5711 Thirty-second Street, Washington, D.C. . . . 2123 Le Roy Place, Washington, D.C. . . . 1661 Crescent Place, Washington, D.C. . . 8551 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, Maryland . . 8551 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, Maryland . . . . 8551 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, Maryland . . 2820 Thirty-second Street, Vlfashington, D.C. . . . . . . 3214 Klingle Road, Vilashington, D.C. . . . . . . . 3099 Que Street, Washington, D.C. 1344 Squirrel Hill Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania . . . . The Decatur Apartments, Washington, D.C. . . . . . . . . 2125 S Street, Washington, D.C. . 1833 New Hampshire Avenue, Washington, D.C. . . 3105 Cathedral Avenue, Washington, D.C. . . . 5058 Lowell Street, Washington, D.C. . . . . . . MacKall's Landing, Maryland . . . 82 Kalorama Circle, Washington, D.C. . . . 2120 Kalorama Road, Washington, D.C. . . 1430 State Street, New Orleans, Louisiana . . . 1823 Biltmore Street, Washington, D.C. . . 2728 Thirty-fourth Street, Washington, D.C. . . . . . . . Box 297, Kensington, Maryland . . . . . Goldsboro Road, Bethesda, Maryland . . 5262 North Illinois Street, Indianapolis, Indiana . . 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Washington, D.C. . . 1 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland . . 4 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland 106 Pruett, Wanda .... Moore, Courtenay . . Moore, Louise. . . Morse, Renee. . . Neumark, Monica . Noble, lune .... Noble, Sally ..... Nourse, Betty lane. . . . . 1656 Twenty-ninth Street, Washington, D.C. 217 West Boscawen Street, Winchester, Virginia 2023 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D.C. . . . . The Powhatan Hotel, Washington, D.C. . . , 2404 Kalorama Road, Washington, D.C. . . . . 2404 Kalorama Road, Washington, D.C. . . . . . 4125 Windsor'Parkway, Dallas, Texas Nulsen, Marion . . . Naval Ordnance Plant, South Charleston, West Virginia O'Neal, Lydia ....... O'Neal, Mary . . O'Reilly, Louise . . O'Reilly, Margaret . . Osborn, Frances . . . Osborn, Margaret . . Osterrnann, Margaret. Owens, Courtenay . . Paulk, Patricia . . . Pope, Mary. . . . Potter, lean .... Prochnik, Patricia . . Proctor, Lucy Bayne . . Ragle, Mary Elizabeth . Rankin, Annie Laurie . Ranneft, Coby Meyer . Reeves, Katharine Poole Riddick, Charlotte. . . Rizik, Madeleine . . . Robinson, Evelyn Byrd . Sacks, Ann ........ Sexton, lean .... Shallberg, Betty. . . Shelton, Dorothy . . Shelton, Emily .... Shelton, Martha .... Shutts, Mary Katharine Si1vester,Susette Lee . . Simpson, May .... Skinker, lean. . . Reinicke, Ann .... Srnyser, France . . . . . . . . . . The Rooseve1t,'Washington, D C . . . . . . . The Roosevelt, Washington, . . 2000 Connecticut Avenue Washington , . 2000 Connecticut Avenue Washington , . . 3407 Woodley Road Washington . . . . 3407 Woodley Road Washington . . 1620 Twenty-ninth Street Washington . . . . . 2124 Le Roy Place, Washington . 1709 Edgewood Avenue, lacksonville, Florida . . 2853 Twenty-ninth Street, Washington, D.C. . Treemont, Franklin Road, Nashville, Tennessee . . 1813 Twenty-fourth Street, Washington, D.C. . . . . . Salubria, Oxon Hill, Maryland . . . 3385 Del Monte Drive, Houston, Texas . . . 5318 Nebraska Avenue, . 100 Maryland Avenue, N.E. I . . . 7114 Alaska Avenue, , . 39031ocelyn Street, . . . . . Naval Hospital, . . . . . . . 1616SStreet, . . . . The Shoreham Apartment, Washington, Washington, Washington, Washington, Washington, Washington, Washington, 101 Chevy Chase Drive, Chevy Chase, Maryland . . 28 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland . . . . . . 2401 Ninth Avenue, Moline, Illinois . . 2812 Chesterfield Place, Washington, D.C. . . . 3801 Maplewood Avenue, Dallas, Texas . .... 3734 locelyn Street, Chevy Chase, D.C. . 1607 Grove Avenue, Lake Charles, Louisiana . . . . . 3140 Klingle Road, Washington, D.C. . , 2605 South loyce Street, Arlington, Virginia . . . 3041 Sedgwick Street, Washington, D.C. . . . . 1703 Cloncurry Road, Norfolk, Virginia . . . . Upper River Road, Louisville, Kentucky Sparkrnan, lulie Ann, The Broadmoor, 3601 Connecticut Ave., Washington, D.C. Spragins, Susie . . . . . . . . . . Echols Hill, Huntsville, Alabama 107 Stewart, Giovanna B. . Stirling, Margheritta . Strong, Nancy . . . Swanson, Ann . . Symes, Ieanne .... . . Tattinder, Constance . Taylor, Mary Ann . . . Tenerowicz, Marjorie . Thomas, Kate Wheat . Tittmann, Miriam . . . Totty, Martha lane . . Vallance, Marie . . . Vance, Louise . . West, Billie Byrd . . White, Agnes .... Whitehurst, Harriet . . Wotherspoon, Anne . Wotherspoon, Margaret. . . . 2210 Wyoming Avenue . 2618 Thirty-first Street 2301 Connecticut Avenue . 2761 Brandywine Street I 2101 Connecticut Avenue, . . . . 2318 California Street, I I I Washington, DC Washington, D C Washington, D C D C Washington, Washington, Washington, D C D.C . . . . . . . . . Friar's Point, Mississippi . . The Roosevelt Hotel, Washington, D C . 1515 Princess Street, Alexandria, Virginia 1718 Connecticut Avenue 3208 Cleveland Avenue . 3016 Forty-third Street, . . 16 West Irving Street, Washington D Washington, D C Washington Washington D D . . . . . . . . . . . lessups, Maryland . . . 570 Prince Avenue, Athens, Georgia . 3115 Thirty-fourth Street, Washington, D C . Quarters F, Navy Yard, Washington, D C . Quarters F, Navy Yard, Washington, D C 108 PATRONIZE OUR E. B. Adams Co. Adkins and Ainley, lnc. The Baileys Bailey, Banks, and Biddle Wm. Ballantyne and Sons Bartemeier's Auto Supply Benson Weeks, Photographer Berlitz School of Languages Burt's Shoe Shop Camalier and Buckley T. A. Cannon Co., Inc. Capital Transit Co. Copenhaver Demonet Diamond Cab l. E. Donovan Dorothy Prencipe Beauty Shop, Inc. E. F. Droop and Sons Co. Edmonds, Optician Embassy Dairy Emerson and Orme Emile, Inc. Empire Pharmacy Forrest Oakley, Inc. Francise, Inc. Galt and Bros., Inc. Julius Garfinckel and Company Griffith Consumers Gude Bros. Co., Florists B. Hariton Harper Method Edith S. Hawes F. C. Hays and Co., Inc. M. E. Horton and Co., Inc. lack Rollins Studios of Dancing 109 ADVERTISERS lahn and Ollier-Engravers lelleff's lohnstone, Inc. Lenard-Smith-Your Florists Livingston's Lutz and Co., Inc. Lyon Conklin Magruder, Inc. Manoukian Bros. Martin's Mary Elizabeth McBride's Gown Shop Mountain Lake Camp for Girls lack Mullane Muth Art Materials The Parrott Pluym's Reeves Hugh Reilly Rich's Shoe Shop Rizik Bros. Sandford's Cleaners Schwartz Pharmacy Small's-Florists Steinbraker Charles G. Stott and Co., Inc. Temple School, Inc. E. Thomfordt Thomsen-Ellis-Printers Walpole Brothers, Inc. Warfield and Sanford, Inc. Washington Laundry Washington Woodworking Co., Inc W. R. Winslow Woodward and Lothrop North 4883 North 4866 ORIENTAL BUGS 1 AUBUSSONS - TAPESTRIES BRQADLQQM CARPETS Crnoderately priced? CLEANING. REPAIRING. STERILIZING and FIREPROOF STORAGE Mcmoukicm Bros. 1332-34 CONNECTICUT AVENUE CStore with the Map of Orient? T0 Charter A BUS Empire Pharmacy, Inc Iust can Michigan 6363 1738 Co nnec ticut Ave., N.W. CAPITAL TRANSIT Washingm' D' C- COMPANY Charter Bus Headquarters t 1416 F Street. N.W. C Finest Equipment Moderate Rates Dupont 1717 . . . tar more seemly were it for thee to have thy Studie full of bookes, than thy Purses full of Mony. WM. BALLANTYNE 6. SONS 1421 F Street Washington, D. C. Sellers of books and stationery since 1852 l our own beloved SPORTSWEAR i The specialite de la maison. We l i think of nothing else. Being , experts we don't dolt on gym- cracks or passing fancies, Only the sort of sportswear that is l unusual yet classic-having that special air of gentility l instantly recognized wherever you wear it. qafnuz' Uahleq 1313 Connecticut Ave. Ladies' Tailoring Fur Storage and Repairs Phone North 3292 ohlazifon FUR SHOP Fur Garments Made to Order 1617 Connecticut Ave. Washington, D. C. THE E. B. ADAMS CO. China-Glassware-Food Service Appli- ances-House Furnishings-Dining Room Furniture 641-643-645 New York Avenue, N.W. Washington, D. C. District 8717 REEVES Chocolates if 1209 F STREET T. A. CANNON CO.. Inc. Wholesale Fruits and Vegetables 1272 5th Street, Northeast Washington, D. C. Atlantic 3201 Artistic Producers of SCHOOL DRESSES and UNIFOBMS FRANCISE, INC. 1919 QUE STREET COPENHAVER 1521 Connecticut Avenue Calling Cards-Smart Stationery Greeting Cards Novelties for Gifts Phone, NOrth 0475 'VV'ashinqton, D. C. LIVINGSTON'S 905-Q08 7111 st., N.w. Cha uffeurs', Butlers', Houseman's Uniforms 'U Phone, National 4312 Permanent Wave Specialist Beauty in Its Entiretv Perfumes Chiropoclv W Maison Francaise 1221 Connecticut Ave. District 3616 For the Best in Flowers SMALL'S Flower and Garden Center 1501 Connecticut Avenue Dupont 7000 Telephone North 2850 Established 1766 WALPOLE BROTHERS, Inc. Specialists in Linens 1529 Connecticut Avenue Washington, D. C. Our Best Wishes to The Scribe of '39 and the Holton-Arms School CHAS. G. STOTT 61 CO.. Inc. 1310 New York Ave. 1513 K St. EosToN LoNDoN DUBLIN MAGNo1.1A 822-17th St- HYANNIS 804 Rhode Island Ave., N.E. IULIUS GARFINCKEL 6. COMPANY for young women at l-lolton-Arms F ASCINATING NEW STYLES ON OUR FOURTH FLOOR Smart, youthful clothes and accessories particularly suited to college lite, travel and vacations. Our exclusive Greenbrier Sportswear for classroom and spectator sports. Lovely dresses, suits and hats for dress occasions. We invite you to make this store your shopping headquarters at all times. F at Fourteenth WARFIELD and SANFORD GALT G BRO., INC. Inc- Established 1002 Elevator Maintenance Electric Motor Repairs Iewellers and SflV6ISIT1ffhS Electrical Wiring 913 E street, Nw. LA National 4707-08 607 13th Street Night Phone, Col. 7889 Washington, D. C. E. F. Droop and Sons Co. YOUTHPUL SHOES 1300 G, Nw. SI-IIPPERS QA 1-1os1ERY CID STEINWAY PIANOS and B U R T ' S MUSICAL MERCHANDISE , , l343 F Street Washington, D. C. of every description Since 1875 District 8250 MAGRUDER. Inc. Importers, Grocers and Wine Merchants Fresh Meats, Fruits and Vegetables 1138 Connecticut Avenue CBetween L and Ml Cornplirnents of W. R. Winslow Co. 922 NEW YORK AVENUE MARY ELIZABETH, Inc. 1715 Connecticut Ave. as IICQFVUKAYID Gowns - Lingerie 2021 L Street, N.W. Sweaters Makers of Delightful .3 ICE CREAMS - BONBONS PASTRIES Phone North 1862 MEtropolitan 1874 Dlstrict 0482 Compliments E. THOMFORDT f o Sea Food Delicacies 641-647 New Center Market WASHINGTON, D. C. Edmonds. Optician 915 Fifteenth Street Washington, D. C. Young Lover . . . . . are YOUR loves . . . the zest-of- youth fashions created for Juniors by Cartwright CMartha Galej, Louise Mulligan, Ellen Kaye . . . and found . . . Onbf at fellqfflf 1214-1220 F Street lVa.rhingto11,, D. C. The Washington Woodworking Company, Inc. Manufacturers of High Grade Millwork Dealers in Plywoods, Wallboards and Homasote National 5624-5625 912 FOURTH STREET, N.W. Washingtcwn, D. C. The I ACK ROLLINS STUDIOS of Dancing axe 1611 CONNECTICUT AVENUE Dec. 5770 Compliments of EMERSON AND ORME Buick Dealers O 17th and M Streets, N.W. Edith S. Hawes O Decorative ACCSSSOIIGS O 1228 CONNECTICUT AVENUE ARTie.:t,e MATERIALS 'I ' Woodward 6: Lothrop 10th, 11th, F and G Streets Meet in the Fountain Room . . . for a refreshing beverage, a crisp sa1ad, a substantial sandwich, after a shopping tour or before going to a movie. Adjoining the Down Stairs Store gf ,X Zawiumllnwri LUTZ 61 COMPANY. INC. Established 1804 TRUNKS AND LEATHER GOODS of the Better Grade 1325 G STREET Telephone NAtiona1 0244 Gloves, Hand Bags and Hosiery Repairing by Experts Phone Decatur 4710 for Appointment Artistic Hair Styling 5 DOROTHY PRENCIPE Beauty Shop 1726 CONNECTICUT AVE., N.W. WASHINGTON, D. C. Expert Operators in Attendance 50c Service Youth comer but once zz lifetime our sports, daytime and evening apparel is designed expressly to glorify it. R I Z I K Brothers 1108-l l IO CONNECTICUT AVENUE Shepherd 3993 C SANDFORD'S COMPLETE CLEANING SERVICE I 7908 GEORGIA AVENUE CDistrict Line? Compliments of A FRIEND IOHNSTONE, Inc. 1706 CONNECTICUT AVE. .99 Gifts Greeting Cards Hosiery Notions Lending Library Decatur 0415 TACK MULLANE MASQUERADE cos'rUMEs for Private Parties, Dramatics, Musical-Comedies, Min- strels, Pageants, etc. Tuxedos - Full Dress - Morning Suits Prince Alberts and Accessories for Hire. A Full Line of Wiqs, Hair Goods and Theatrical Makeups-Graduation Caps and Gowns- Choir Robes, etc. SLIP COVERS-DRAPERIES-CURTAINS Custom Made, Expertly Tailored 714 11th N.W. ------- MEIropolitan 9395 Residence ---------- GEorgia 7048 gamgrlgmff Buckley ina lflesfwar 1141 CONNECTICUT AVENUE 2 doors above the Mayflower Rfb COMPLIMENTS ot YOUR FRIEND C. F. D. LID Makers of the Rings and Pins for The Holton-Arms School GRADUATION GIFTS That are Sure to Please Choose from one ot the important stocks of America-the Bailey name is ever a symbol ot quality and moderate price. B,.tLqf,E9m.!5:,:E1QgtEQ, Established 1832 ' 1218 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA Schwartz Pharmacy Prescription Specialists Toilet Articles, Soda, Drugs and FLORENCE GILFILLAN SCALP TREAIrrSEIaIiiStjnE1q HEALTHFUL BEAUTY AIDS Uptown Shop Sundries 1714 CONNECTICUT AVE. . DEcatur 5686 Downtown Shop 1700 CONNECTICUT AVENUE, N.W. 701'2'3'4 WESTORY BLDG- WASHINGTON, D. C. Phone Decatur 3161 14th and F Streets, N.W. MEtropolitan 8323 Harper Method Toilet Preparation Established 1888 I A Your Key to New Opportunities , E Learn- a second.Language for Petter Q understandin of National and Forex n Events. g g H 5 FRENCH SPANISH GERMAN ITALIAN RUSSIAN Izmiififififfi .rirtrirtifi z 5 ... Q i'.Cf3f1 E5i3Ef25S5?ES5S5??f3f55553E51515555E51IE3E5E53555EZ55351F55ifE35-is?E5f5151555IE515S535E2E5ZZ2ii5E3E1Si33E15525E53E3E5EE55EE25E5E5E2E5E5E3E5E5E5S5553E3EfS5E5E3E3E5Z5E5S5E3E5E52525555525Z5E5E5E?E3E5S5E5E?EE5S55?E523E53525555251 U MW ., .,,... ......,...,,... . ,.,.... A, ..... A asm.-.-...',.-,-...-..-...-...a-.-,.ff.f5535.g:::g,1.1n 3 I. .' - cp:-zg:-:' P 28 wt 5 ,. : 5 .,... .,.... P P. SCHOOL of LANGUAGES H '1'e1. Nlltional 02-70 1115 Connecticut Ave. 5, N SCIIO0L IN EVERY LEADING CITY 9 The Appian Way Conquer the Business World TEMPLE SECRETARIAL SCHOOL 1420 K Street National 3258 Intensive summer courses for high school graduates and college students il? Members of National Association ot Accredited Commercial Schools North 0632 PLUYJNFS L. KAPLCHEM Ladies' Tailor and Furrier 1734 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Washington, D. C. 1 Fine China, Rich Crystal, Silver, Art Objects and Lamps 7 p 1223 Connecticut Ave. Between M and N W Streets Adkins 6. Ainley. Inc. General insurance agents and brokers, 922 Barr Bldg., 910 17th St.. N.W.. cordially invite you to consult them about your insurance problems. Phone, NOrth 7907 Specialists in Luncheon and Dinner Party Orders L E. DONOVAN Quality Meats P Street between 14th and 15th Sts. Marketing Delivered Promptly 38 and 47 Riggs Market Beauty Personifiedn That is the watchword of the hour, on all occasions for the discriminating Lady. For fashion's latest dictum, see . . . THE BI-lILEY'S Coiffure Stylists l3l7 Connecticut Ave. Phone Dec. 3435 USE LYONORE METAL Costs less because it lasts longer MARTIN-SENOUH PAINTS LYON. CONKLIN 6- CO., Inc. 932 E Street, N.W. Fred C. Hays :S Co., Inc. C O A L CORRECT PICTURE FRAMING ' PICTURES and GREETING CARDS Fuel O11 IZ37 G Street, N.W. Washington, D. C. RIFFITH' ONSUMERS Phone, National 3269 GMPANY PdlI'lill'1QS R9StOI'Gd--R9qildl.I'1q Metro. Phone, National 9890 M. E. HORTON, Inc. Compllmems IMPORTERS and WHOLESALERS of of FOOD PRODUCTS Approval on the Label -A Means Approval on the Table 608-620 C STREET, S.W. WASHINGTON, D. C. 1.1 r .li 89,8 I E designed by PALTER DE uso , -- are styled to hazsmo 'ze w'th ' d'v'd al- ,k vain X24 E' - . ized fashionable atgie-hltrireitclugive Luncheon - Tea - Dinner Cocktails The Culinary Art of the old South originates in our kitchens by our master chefs! 20th and R Streets. N.W.. at Conn. Ave. 1889 Golden Iubilee Year 1939 Gude's Flowers for the sick for the go-aways for congratulations for every occasion regardless of the time or the place GUDE BROTHERS CO. 1212 F STREET, N.W. Phones, NAtional 4276-4277-4278 shoes that complement every prevailing color and fashion theme. De Liso Debs are 8.75. RICH'S F STREET AT TENTH WASHINGTON, D. C. G. MORRIS STEINBRAKER Building Construction il? WASHINGTON LAUNDRY 2627 K STREET, N. W. WASHINGTON, D. C. COMPLIIVIENTS of A FRIEND Batteries Gas and Oil Tires BARTEMEIER'S Uptown Auto Supply Master Automobile Service Station Equipped to Give Expert Service in LENARD SMITH Your Florist ck! Every Line 1528 CONNECTICUT AVENUE 18th STREET at CALIFORNIA Mlchigan NAtiona1 8272 Complete Stock of ' 1 McBVzde J Ask about Reil1y's Time Payment P1an For A11 Occasions G1-A55 FREE PAINT Suits and Coats for every PARKING for every purpose ,k surface . HUGH EEE-LY CO. 1334 NEW YQRK AVE. NA. 1703 1613 Connecticut Ave, Washington, D. C DIAMOND CABS DUpont 6200 1 0071 Locally Owned and Operated and Not Connected or Controlled by any other dairy EMBASSY-FAIRFAX DAIRY PRODUCTS DU. 1441 MOUNTAIN LAKE CAMP FOR GIRLS MOUNTAIN LAKE, VIRGINIA Owned and Directed by the Director of Physical Education at the Holton Arms School, GRETCHEN FEIKER 2137 BANCROFT PLACE WASHINGTON, D. C. 4,500 FEET HIGH IN THE ALLEGHENIES Compliments WF mfr FRIEND OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS 1939 SCRIBE W BENSON WEEKS SUCCESSOR TO I-IESSLER, I-IENDERSON, INC. POTOMAC 2114 1526 CONNECTICUT AVENUE WASHINGTON, D.C. 'X i Tilfwfyfjti X 'X , if M1-A' M 1: If ix. Xu xyxllslvxtxw 7,13 , sf, -U.: X X, I I tx X we v iiAHN AND OLLIER AGAIN N gba '4 1 Y .. y -xg: I 1 1 N Xui, HIL , tptlxi qt Nr J Ltiiigii- .- L LT. 1 T i 1,-..f Repeated acceptance by discriminating Year Book Boards has inspired and sustained the Jahn 8. Ollier slogan that gathers increas- ing signiticance with each succeeding year. MEMBER OF Th C 11 g Annual Producers of the Uruted St t BALTIMORE -1- TI-IOMSEN-ELLIS CO. COLLEGE ANNUALS VIEW BOOKS - CATALOGS ADVERTISING LITERATURE 5 I SEQ T H OM S E N KW! PRINTERS OF THE 1939 SCRIBE NEW YORK A1sn4nz.mmvs.ayw.+r..Y:.g, . .1 , fyn. fm fame. w.rua:,w-imraqmlf fi. Q:--,-mu-ff L , . V- 121,--,--fxeazz' ' 'mann-mn. ' N w f mmumum: - nm . - he -ev-11


Suggestions in the Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) collection:

Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

1955

Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Holton Arms School - Scribe Yearbook (Washington, DC) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 8

1939, pg 8


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