Roycemore School - Griffin Yearbook (Evanston, IL)

 - Class of 1937

Page 1 of 184

 

Roycemore School - Griffin Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1937 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 184 of the 1937 volume:

'ah Wlmaiif THE GRIFFIN Roycemcbre Schcnol Vd XX 1937 I - L EvQnMon,HimQM To MRS WILLIAM H NGBLE in deep apprecidiien of all she has done io enrich wiih knowiedqe and happiest years ai Roycemore We the class of 1937 aiieciioddiely dedicaie ihis Volume of The Griffin friendship, dnd guidance, our iasi Mrs. Wlllldm H Noble E W k I GRD . 1 51 w.:. : A. 1 fm il, g:1'.'Alc 1gx1 ' f : ihilciqg thirt Qiciwi f ' Yi 'fri . fr11: ' 1 Y1ff.1a 1 gi 115. . U7 , 4, ffrywv, j3,i I ,T NTEN R JRRER S IWICDQI LQWER bCHQCDL VERI SI ADD SENICI S LITERARY ACTIVITIES FEATURE AD TITNG RESSES 1154 1.1 x. 0 I -'11, Grlffln Board Edrtor rn Chlef Asslstant Edltors Busmess Manaqer Senlor Echtor Quotatlon Ed1tor L1terary Ed1tor Athlehc Edttor Feature Edltor Photoqraphlc Ed1tor ACl1V1l19S Sentor Advertrsmq Sol1c1tor Frances Webb lane Conrad and Sylv1a W1llner lrll Fabxan Ed1th Mane Appleton Helen Gambrlll B1ll1e Engel Kathleen Dow Barbara Remy Nancy Stern Dorothy Reed Sylvla Wlllner lumor ,A.dV9fl1S11'1Q Sol1c1tors Kathryn Keller and Norrna Fancy Assembler Cherry Sue Orr Faculty Advxsers Mrs Noble and Mrss Cox O 2 I Dramatic Editor ................................. Betty Ullrich l -3 EDITH MARIE APPLETON IIl9V9fdCIT9'lOWf116GSI.1 Pfcrslccm 1 5 S. Y F S. I 5 , a, H nf - 'E I' - :i v V Y iii? if wf, . f H . f- r IOAN BENTLEY Wh:-n h r CIQJICCIIQ leer m Lh dar 2- twmkle round her bf Us ara of Hqht hvr ho mb cvr , - ' 1 : wi .3'x in 55f ,FS if P g 11? :J- 056' , e V A ' e lcv ' .. N 9 V . , 'X T519 ' fH9 .. MARY IANE BUTLER F 2 5, -'E -2 fe! is 3 0 'P a'v U 9 il' A 1 c love to more cmd 1: observe. .1 qw.- .4-. su. -51.1115- MITZIE BUTZ News 5.x Pwr wor L. ff: 1 V :ni ff, ,Q-5 2 '11 L. . jti' 114: inf W Fe ff? 6' 1 v' ,.. 4,4 if sl 2. ,. H H , , H F A1 A 1 Q , - I' .HG :L A., : G ROSEMARY CAGNEY Llve on' No iouch of Ume shall cause One wrmkle on thy smooth unruffled brow 1 I X' 3 gf: ti' Zia? ag w F . H A , . IANE CONRAD i N 'Her eyes :li radiant wiih K A T H L E E N D O W Method IS good m C111 thmqs BILLIE ENGEL 'XD-D ff N151 1 flung 2-f Uma cz ffm 'Ha v Nd N Mau .PA ,Tr ' 3. f.,J , 4- , 'ef if QL .1 M14 .FL if, EQ? iff .. iii Rf ij. 3.5 Qu 'Lf 72'- J! ry ff.-1 'Jil ,, fi: 56' WXST' fi? gg.. 'W .ye Q1 H1 - 1 ,- ', . W., , 1: M, :M W L. ,J C hiv. ' ' . ' A ' .-. ' .U Vu-.. L.. L TH: ' C . ... ... HELEN GAMBRILL No 'mud IS thoruuqhly well orqcxmzed That In dDf1c1er1t m cz sense of humor CECIL IORDAN Much wir, buf shy cf using 1 D O R O T H Y R E E D As the sun colours flowers so does art Colour hfe' . I , . 44 BARBARA REMY or the lcv Q of :mgnt r hwa r MQ- mvlmu fb Q1 D1 '1 fa, Ljf fi? F313 3552. L41 5241 N 1 w V.. .,.L iff Fi' :PQ 2321 4? .dj A 1 Q if? F5 ., Q il' L, m 'Tj .. ,, ,fi 1 , f N 1 7, ,LV if? fn V Y . ' A ' ff, A F M., L :' , A 'J , . A 1 . H .N .. . F r 3 .cr ef gms. BARBARA SCHNERING CI gr sqrox Jhr lycrgruc M ke :wc in -.' V .9 9 there was on W 9' h. NANCY STERN I W ve enthubxclsts i 2 1 lc MARGARET Sha that was Qver icm and L Had tongue at wlll and YQ MCI '1 STRALE proud Q fer loud Aff JP'- .'g -, ? fi 355 rig? mi 13-' i rf' i?.Fg XF S. - 21 wg fi ,,, .. ..f, 4-12 1-5 -.2 S' ,. .za M :S ff! 43:5 wg fill. . fi ff. Lf: 3,1 1:11 ,iii iii ini i'Z ' ' vu 3 - Y 3 '- - - , . , . - . , . ff f ' A : ' f .. . - . . , . Q 1. BETTY ULLRICH TCQNCIWM Jp ,A ,.wQ1'a,l li: 1 :Qi 15, E2 ig, ggi. B2 .,.' ,. Q, 'I sn- ul avi: Z, A 1,5 3 '-if - , , g f sf 1? 1 ,, 1 1 1 , , ,.-,,,w.: A Cv, ,, .,.,,., , , .- . -- ,.., nu. FRANCES WEBB Enjoy your dear wit cmd qcly rhetoric. 551' SYLVIA LOIS WILLNER he Lax '16 true eww: d1T'TWG t Of C em 'W Pct Q exce le t Z? . I kv. ff -3 QA' if SL :Q .M fi f'f W? .W 'ii 12 ,1 . A w A -'13 aff ,gg xx 'E .JK 92 .LW ff! -s Tu 531 ish ,ga :fi 155. ng 1 MQS.. ..O .... 1 AV film: I.. 'L I T1 Class Prophecy Q Q -Q C11 D C QQA. U IQ JLI LY I C K' 1 ' 'ritz r .: xi. QD at ': :TQ 1 is H 1'. g . - ifjf 5 fiffi- I .' 'f' .1 ,X Q 1 Qu Ei: 15.1.11 :fi.!j7f.. f '1111' 1.1 FSM Q 1 1: 1 ff' 71 ru. ., , , 'wr r:::.x173r,.f Yu, .1fg'wffi'1 44 21,1 fl mei TN fs :I i',' IT- Tiff FII 'N nfs The' Ilffifflff. Nizzify ffgifs will thc- 31.1, U. ,f SUI' iprtigd his Ilfill HLuQ'L 4 N. ,x,1.,,,,1.-.M U. ,,y...g ..M.-3 SC :ucv SESS :hang Cfffln I-tefy Eeciige the 'ixlfcxgge 'izgfifg D-A3 5 Pezifg is fC1Ij.Q A5- 53155 :5.f5Ie'9 1229 firgizl 151- She S retiiilg' 21Q'N',:f.51 fl. Sf?TfYl'T9 :-1155 M36 r. .'25'. 1 14-,,y. ,,.1:f.,,w,1 , . Q.f1.44.r : : .., J. ..., :A L ,Y-,Y Miss ,i.SEQe',' QI, 1: CQULFT, 'W ..V..'..V, v v'.,f , rx 51,112.1 U1 .1f. S, Gnyti .,..L 9, EM-7 ggsi Qfmxffg f111'1e1. FX' r quiet Bild, That 51195 text, ffl: :'gi:.:1. Bm QI fAi:1ff':,.g:r. 1-.ith vii f',Q!l',' iii Tw' ':.ff Yi'.1.?f ff.: rj! - . - - Q - . ,Ir jyvff .1:, . . 7 ,. ', DH' .f Y .I..L'IA.f.1 1 ' ' I: f 'fvlqgf I' ff. ' ', ip f 1. Pussy s rn a nut house- Its grven us the blues She went qu1te mad one day Collectmg Athletlc dues Mary lane s surprrsed us We knew the day was ar We thought she never would u She s fmally got a car Iane has never changed Shes never had a fall Ever through the years She s the sweetest of us a Sylvy our French student Has left us all at sea She IS now the hostess At the well known Chez Paree Betty has a method She guarantees that she can ose On SIX square meals a day Peg Just couldnt stand 1t So she started an exploit And Wllh determrnatton l'l1tchh1ked to Detrort We always thought that Dorothy Would be a soda Jerker We never thought she wanted To be a soclal worker Our Cec1l 11tt1e Rhythm Queen Is down 1n Chma town You can always hnd her K1ck1n the gong around Our Helen IS a merchant For Lord s We thml-c lt s n1ce She guarantees to make the sales And ALWAYS VPD gets her Pryce 033 f , , b t ' ll. For reducing, so they say-se l O Frannle has a hobby Its been her only wtsh She s grven all her hte to Catchlng llttle Flsh But when 1t comes to m The wheel of Fortune slows And 1f youll ask my future Ill answer No one knows Edrth Marle Appleton Xll Form Semor Speeches Each year the members of the graduatmg class glve a speech ln morn1ng assembly Every g1rl trres to choose a sub1ect not only 1nterest1ng to her but to the rest of the school The purposes of the semor speech are to QIVS practlce and pO1SG 1n speakrng before an audlence and to gxve rnterestmg and bene f1c1al mformatlon to the other members of Upper School Name Echth Mane Appleton Ioan Bentley M1tZ1G Butz Rosemary Cagney lane Conrad Kathleen Dow Mary lane Butler B1ll1e Engel Cecxl Iordan Helen Gambrlll Dorothy Reed Barbara Remy Nancy Stem Barbara Schnermg Margaret Strale Betty Ullr1ch Frances Webb Sylvra Lols W1llner 0340 SubJect Sp1dGfS Russtan Theatre Women s Symphony Frances Wlllard Malvma Hoffman Stamps Bohvar Frances Perktns The Astor Fam11y Advertlsmg Van Gogh The Supreme Court Cesar Franck The Flyxng Fox Savonarola Iohn G1elgud War Propaganda Harrret Munroe 1 1 . 1 . . 1 . 1 1 11 11 1 o 1 4 . 1 Class Will Knock, knock. Who's there? Senior. Senior who? Senior waitin' for it-here's the will: We, the inmates of the senior Psychopathic Ward lassemblyl, hereby at- testing to our insanity, do make this last will and testament. The year of our Lord in the Merrie, Merrie Month of May, 1937. Gus what! We, the seniors, will our gallant knight to lean Pirie, on con- dition that she doesn't share him with Helen Clayton. Ioanie leaves her grace and feminine charm to Teenie Vail. Mary lane wills Bill McCreary to all the other susceptible members of the school. Frannie, with the permission of Miss Minott, leaves the volume, Tiny Gar- ments to Ricey. We, the hot-house plants, make lill Fabian an honorary member of Mrs. Noble's fresh-air-society. And now to dampen the occasion, we sprinkle the Iuniors in appropriate dedication of our showersg-guaranteed running ice water and no towels. Having struggled for four years, Billie, Helen, and Rosemary leave their diet that starts tomorrow to their fellow sufferers, Ruth, Guinan, and Schutter. After the martyrdom of twelve long years with our three bees, Brain, Brawn, and Borrowing, We hereby leave our banner to the incoming first form. Cecil and Billie leave the ladder to Betty Roulet and Eleanor Counselman, hoping it stands the strain under the new regime better than before. C It broke.l Remy leaves her social breaks to any car without them. We leave Mlle.'s hieroglyphic outlines and the much discussed Rendez- vous to the sophomores. Helen leaves, like a shot, with many reports. And last, we bequeath to the juniors our assembly with all the advantages entrance and desks with free wheeling and remote Cll control. Go.,-thx Ullrioh - ?rem'Aen1' om... and - Qing.. - :Pi-'GSYAQSS' Z'Ja4lcu4- J C Q Rogues CFor Key She may be WISE But oh those eyes Colm wlth no nolse Now stlll poxse Now there s more hon But the qrms st111 there Guess this Wlfh ease The sclme Cham qesture Hove you guessed her? S1111 sweet enough to eo For charm she cont be beat Cute httle tyke But that appetite' Who ever kept her tcxlkmq QUIGQ7 We qove up dont even try You should guess her but Shes changed the bowl hcur cu ...1 036 l 2. I. 3, 'PV 4 A A I .L V: 4. 5, x ' ' lQ.:'4afv3 Our clcss's biq tease. Www A It .3 h- , I A f kk 3 t 5' ' V 4 n 'LQ C, . 7. G. 1, K 7. ' s, ' it. , 9. . 5 8. t A P s. ' 1 f 5. if Q Gallery See Page 38l Looks Cx lot hko OI Our wellknown hmkf The smlle and curls rm 7115592 Aren t changed mu ' uq 1 now Wllh qlcxssws xo lxk Our N so lolly all to fx But our crust can h Gi sg Destxned susf-t by fx W od thlnk shfld tm Qophlstlccxtd' Nxt fcxnnus Gmh 'Q 1 ipmad Oor our und hood VV o Jnuld turn l'1b next ' :mud b papa O xr sm T1'7VV Nl S1 lfll' w 037 I fyf .U Helen Gambnll Nancy Stern Frances Webb Margaret Strale lane Conrad Betty Ullrxch Edrth Mar1e Appleton Rosemary Caqney M1tz1e Butz Kathleen Dow Mary lane Butler Dorothy Reed Ioan Bentley B1ll1e Engel Sylvra Lozs W1llner Cec1l Iordan Barbara Remy 0380 . .V4 ., B lam ' Barbara Schnerinq. ack R w S h e mg Appl t S n e Bu e R ed Co rad Mlddle Row Butz Remy Bentley Ullnch Noble Strale Engel Dow t Gambnll Cagrxey Webb Iordan Semor Class Betty Ullr1ch Ioan Bentley Barbara Remy Margaret Strale Mrs Noble Appleton Ed1tbMar1e Bentley Ioan Butler Mary lane Butz M1lZ19 Cagney Rosemary Conrad lane Dow Kathleen Engel B1ll1e Gambrxll Helen 40 Prestdent Vlce Pres1dent Treasurer Representatrve Class Advlser Iordan Cec1l Reed Dorothy Remy Barbara Schnenng Barbara Stern Nancy Strale Margaret Ul1r1cl'1 Betty Webb Frances W1llner Sylvxa LOIS B o : c n r , eon, ter , Wzlln r, tl r, e , n . ' 2 , , , ' . , , . V Fron Row: ' , . . . . I ' I I 1 1 1 I I I I I I I I I 1 I I Mxddle Row Iones Fnzqerald Russell Ladd Kohlsaat Keller Donaldson W1qqlnS Fancy l umor Class lean Ladd Nancy lean Donaldson Kathryn Keller Leonore Russell Mrs Kohlsaat Best Patr1c1a Donaldson Nancy Fablan I1ll Fancy Norma Fltzqerald Dorcas Freeman lean Gaudy Ieanne Grant Eleanor Iacobs Anq1e Iohnson Edna lones Iean Keller Kathryn Presldent Treasurer Representatlve Class Advlser Kornbhth Sue Ladd lean Lee VITQIHIQ Lowrey Constance Mellmqer Carolyn Orr Cherry Sue Paulsen Dorothy Plamond Adellne Rledel lean Russell Lenore Van Deusen V1raen1a Wmqqrns Margaret Back Row: Hawxhurst, Fabian, Iacobs, Paulsen, Ramond, Iohnson, Orr, Mellinqer, Van Deusen, Lowrey . . ..... , . . .............. Vice-President 1 1 1 1 1 1 , 1 1 1 , 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 , 1 , 1 1 1 Mrddle Row Morrrssey Roberts McBr1de Va1l NCKSHZIS Colborn Counselman Wrlhams Front Row Bishop Macnetlle Mclntosh Hubachek Sophomore Class Blanche Va1l Ioy Garnson Ioan Garnbrtll Mary McIntosh M1ss MCKSHZIG B1shop Sue Brazler V1rq1n1a Clayton Helen Colborn Ieanne Counselman Eleanor Gambnll Ioan Garmson Ioy Harms Betty Hubachek Maryorle lohnson Martha Iohnson Walta lane MacKay Scott lean 42 Prestdent Treasurer Representatrve Class Advlser MacNe11le Betty McBr1de Iar1eAnn Mclntosh Mary M9S1Ck Marlon Morrrssey lean P1r1e lean Roberts Mary Loulse Roulet Betty Va1l Blanche Walters Mary W1ll1ams Ioan Back Row Gambrill, Harris, Brazier, Johnson, W., Iohnson, M., Garrison, Clayton, Mackay-Scott, Walters ' . ........ ................ ......... V i ce-President I r r 1 I I I 1 f f 1 I I I I r ' I f I - I l Back Row Hellman Brossard Brown Husted Amend McCloud OBr1en Freeman Guman Mercer Allen Harrrson Front Row Bxrmmqham Iackman Speed Bowes Doyle Lowrey Mxss Cox Delaney johnson Dorter We ton Whtte Freshman Class Catherme Lowrey Nancy McCloud Dorothy Amend Nancy Delaney Mrss Cox Allen Barbara Amend Dorothy Berrnrnqharn lane Blssell lulla Bowes Barbara Brossard Kathryn Brown MarJor1e Cashel lane Delaney Nancy Doyle Betty lane Freeman Bennette Guman Marlon HGTIISOH Mary Lou1se Herlman Mary Lou Hlll Sue Page Husted Holly Huth loan lackman lane Iohnson lsabel Q43 Presldent Vrce Pres1dent Treasurer Bepresentatlve Class AdV1S9f Krrtland Lorame Lowrey Cathenne McCloud Nancy Maqle Betty Mercer Ioan OBr1en Shlrley Parkhrll Evelyn Patterson Barbara Porter Madellne Powers ludlth Roach Beverly Schutter loan Speed Helen Marlone Sulhvan Suzanne Walter Margaret Weston Grace Whrte lean Wleboldt Mary Loulse Wrnston Laura Mrddle Row Parkhill, Walter, Krrtland, Cashel, Bissell, Patterson, Wieboldt, Sullivan Shutter H1 Maqie, Roach, 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' I u 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 O V V ' girl ff: ' lr Iv 5: , , v Student Government Board Cttlcers l936 1937 Helen Garnbrrll Edna Iohnson Cec11 Iordan B1ll1e Engel EX OFFICIO Mrss Ashley CLASS Catherme Lowrey Presldent Nancy McCloud Vrce-Presldent Dorothy Amend Treasurer Nancy Delaney Bepresentanve Mrss Cox Class Advlser SOPHOMORE Blanche Varl loy Garrlson Ioan Garnbrlll Mary McIntosh M1ss MCKGHZIG Presrdent Vlce Presldent Treasurer Bepresentatlve Class Adv1ser OFFICERS 44 Pres1dent Vrce Presrdent Secretary Treasurer Mrs Preston FRESHMAN lUNIOR lean Ladd Presldent Nancy Donaldson Vlce Presrdent Kathryn Keller Treasurer Lenore Russell Bepresentatlve Mrs Kohlsaat Class Advlser SENIOR Betty Ullrlch loan Bentley Barbara Rerny Peg Strale Mrs Noble Presldent VICQ Presrdent Treasurer Representatlve Class Adv1ser LITERARY PRIZES Awarded to DOROTHY REED for Prose IOY PENDLETON GARRISON for Poetry Iudges Mrs Ke1th Preston MISS Iean Cox Mrs Noble Nlghtmare It all began by the snakes of Laocoon Instead of runnmg after the poor pr1est of Apollo they chose to enfold me 1n thelr shmy embrace blood and f1re shoot1ng from the1r h1ss1ng mouths I screamed but 1t was no use When a nlghtmare once gets hold of me I can never wake up untll I feel myself talhng from great he1ghts The snakes had no sooner chosen to stop crushmg me when mto the mead hall ot I-Irothgar from the Moorland neath the m1sty h11ls1des came Grendel stalkmg If only Grendel would have k1lled me then and there I m1ght have rested qu1etly But Grendel IS not such a k1nd monster We fought Not con tent even w1th a wrathful mood and t1ery eyes he se1zed me wrth h1s deadly claws to devour my whole corpse and dr1nk the blood from my ve1ns Terntxed I looked out of the paned w1ndow 1nto a m1sty pla1n I looked so hard I could see a hgure approachmg from far away I held my breath untrl the dot became a prnk deformed tnangle As soon as Ih1S queer ob1ect had landed on th w1ndow s1ll I not1ced w1th a start and at the same t1me a tl1cker of hope that th1s was someth1ng human But what a nose' That apparently was the trlangle I had seen Needless to say 1t belonged to Monsreur de Bergerac My hope ever mcreasmg unt1l now waned tor Mons1eur de Bergerac only stood t1m1dly on the st1ll peeklng through the curta1ns qu1etly repeat1ng to the funous Grendel such phrases as Monarque des drotes' 1vrogne' ras cal' coqu1n tupon canarlle' Whatever M Bergerac s purpose he seemed to help me for Grendel IGSC1 nated wrthdrew h1s halry claws from my face to stare Thls was all the mcen IIVG Cyrano needed for he sw1shed h1s sword from under hrs black cloak and sald th1s t1me tn a bold command Ie vous provoque en duel' There my mmd went blank I flew through the wlndow through the heavy m1st 1nto the pla1n passed a moon wh1ch laughed and sang at me 1nto the mrlky way wh1ch loudly shouted One thousand and nmexsquared plus two hundred m1ll1on d equals three men gomg down stream by SIX o clock w1th th1rteen 1nches of shadow on h1s back Then I tell' I was released' Grendel and Cyrano and Laocoon and all the stars fell through a black hole I landed on my wh1te bed 1ncoherently shout 1ng Yes 1t 1S solved' They saved me then' I am through saved College Boards' through' Dorothy Reed XII Form 0460 u 1 . 1 1 . , . I - 1 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 1 - 1 ' 1 1 - 9 1 1 1 , . 1 1 1 1 11 11 111 11 11 . , 1 , ' 11 11 . 1 11 - 1 1 1 - I 1 - 1 1 1 ' 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 11 11 1 1 - ' 1 7 I 1 1 11 . 1 1 ' ' ' ' ' 1 - - 1 1 1 1 . 1 11 , . . . , - . 11 . . 1 1 ' ' W 1 -' 1 Poetls Blood Past time and out beyond all space I see the poets come uphill, And the air is filled with music I cannot define and in my body Poet s blood that is not mine. And space and time are one together In this grand company of all Who lived for love and loved For love s sake only The songs they re singing Are the music of their souls And ours who walk beside the poets Down past the ages on we come Singing as none before have sung Ecstattc too yet with hearts unstrung I am afraid and run away They call me back Oh poets I cannot stay It is a dream a mystic fantasy Dear poets I cannot They call and call The song they sing Is each a different line In closest harmony The poets blood tthat is not mme? answers Dear friends Ihear I hear And shall come back past time and dance with you Back through the ages I go alone except for thought And heart and soul that are afraid when alone together The merry unceasing company at last I find They smile and catch me by the hand And lead me as they go eternally unendingly Through chaos and through time The poet s blood is mine The Wrong Way to Write a Story One evening in a creative mood I began to Write a story It was to be about a man who murdered a friend for money and escaped only to be caught later This was one of those great psychological ideas which every one has at tunes but very few can carry out I began courageously wrth a b1t of atmosphere A lone man was creep mg against the shadows of a wall in the town I thought for a whrle about the setting It would seem glamorous if I set it in England but on the other hand I didnt know much about England After considering Spain Africa and Ireland as possibilities I decided on Prttsburgh Pennsylvania That would be realistic I concluded for after all this was a psychological story not a romance 047 , , , , , . , ll I . , , . , ll 1 I , , , i , , I -Ioy Pendleton Garrison, X Form , , . n u I ll I ' I I I ' V , , . C The elements of tlme and place had completely drawn me away from my story I wrote two paragraphs wh1ch descrrbed the shadows the surround mgs the nrght and the trme Here I stopped to look over what I had wrrtten I crossed out the second paragraph and began agam He approached the place where he had planned hrs act over and over rn h1s mmd There I wondered whether rt would be better to tell about hrs plans th1s would take pages or go ahead wrth the murder I plctured the k1ll1ng and my heros escapmg successfully Thrs I wrote feverrshly But afterwards I felt a d1st1nct letdown I began agarn I told about the plot before the man had actually done the murder I wrote th1s w1th as much eloquence as possrble The same feelmg of nothmg to say after th1s took hold My mmol wandered I made prctures on my sheets of paper I scratched I decided to begm agam I couldnt start Wrth a fmal effort at concentra t1on I looked at my paper amazed Whrle my mmd was apparently blank I One dark nrght When all was st1lI The moon came up And so drd B111 That completely fmrshed me The creatlve urge dlsappeared Wlth a par t1al feelmg of emptrness I left the room but w1th a promrse that I would always apprecrate and try to understand any stones that I should read 1n the future Dorothy Reed XII Form If I Wander Out Alone Alone a new moon sh1nes Pale cmd shm but beautrful I see no stars To nrght belongs to the moon And rf I wander out alone I w1ll fmd a peace And strllness broken only By the motron of the leaves And the pressure of my foot Agamst the grass And frlendshrp I w1ll fmd walklng among the trees Beneath the new moon The nrght w1ll speak w1th me When rt knows me The cr1ckets w1ll smg one more song The b1rds chrrp rn the1r sleep Peace and strllness A new moon and nrght robed trees, I shall have If I wander out alone Ioy Pendleton Garrlson, X Form 0480 1 I ' . ..., , , . 1 ' : : I 1 - I I 1 had written: , , Yi I . , . I . , , : : The Glamor of Saquenay Rlver Our party had chosen a cold desolate September day to make the trxp from Montreal up the Saguenay Rrver After a slow r1de of two days the steamer fmally made a successful land1ng at Tadousac a tlny hrstorlc town at the very mouth of the Saguenay Rrver F rom the promenade deck we could see rn the drstance Murray Bay where stood the palatral Mcmotr Rrchelreu greetrng pleasure lovrng tour1sts of hrgh class Th1s unlncorporated town stands atop the h1ll whrch overlooks the St Law rence Rlver A stately whrte hotel attracted the eye of every shlp tourrst and made htm wrsh that he were able to spend the mght there but we were allowed only frfteen m1nutes to 1nspect the httle town On the rrght stands a tmy wh1te church whrch was bu1lt by Srr Francrs Drake Th1s IS the oldest town rn Canada After th1s delrghtful excurslon the llttle steamer flnally pulled out of the port and trudged along to enter the mysterrous Saguenay Rrver On the deck my new cornpamon and I together watched the change of landscape as le paquebot advanced through the dark waters of the small r1ver The h1lly green shores changed color and character w1th the 1ncessant change of the weather One moment they were fresh and green rn the sunhght rn an mstant they were cold and forebodtng as the clouds obscured the sun As the steamer made her way through the wmdmg r1ver the shores seemed to be followrng along the boat because they were always srmrlar No 1nterrupt1on nor awk ward change 1n the landscape Not one s1gn of l1fe except the lonely tmy lrghthouses not more than three feet tall stand1ng 1n the wrlderness l fancred myself as I was adm1r1ng the peculrar beauty of the green land as a ploneer seektng a locatron whrch would be sultable for my especral taste All day long our party sat wrapped up warmly 1n deck chalrs and gazed at the remarkable passmg scene The constant whrstlmg of the steamer as rt proceeded on through the grandeur of the Saguenay Hrver was the only thlng whrch drs turbed me My thoughts were about my future and they were very deep At tw111ght we went below to have a regular table d hote IH the hollow of the steamer After our dehghtful drnner wrth Sauterne for the older people and glasses of grape Julce for the younger we stepped out to breathe the evenmg a1r Total darkness everywhere beyond the lumlnous sphere of the boat About ten oclock the steamer once more came to a stop at a small town by the name of Chrcoutrmr The srght of the pleasant v1llage lured us to take a walk We tramped down the gangplank all bundled up and started out for our GXSFCISG It was very dark the drm street llghts showed us some quarnt old houses ln whrch the famrlles were entoylng probably therr warm sleep rn the strllness of the cold ntght Dew w1th frost l1ke des1gns rested on the grass and leaves of the drooplng trees We passed an old cemetery wlth a gloomy and haunted a1r We returned by the same way to the dock whlch held the steamer fast At last after our enyoyable day we got mto the comfortable beds 1n our staterooms to sleep soundly as the boat softly made her way back to Tadousac Iane Conrad XII Form O49 9 1 1 1 , . 1 I . 11 11 . . - 1 1 1 1 - 1 1 I - . , . . . 1 . 1 . , . 1 - 1 - 1 1 'I Sonnet The snow tn crystal patterns softly fell Agamst my cheek from out the starry n1ght And all the world from sa1nt to 1nf1del Felt round them then the sptrtt of our Chrlst I saw unself1sh glows 1n hard men s eyes And candle l1ght and carols softly sung For ten days all thxs beauty s1gn1f1ed What all year round by all men should be done For we who 1n thrs short t1me are mspxred By mus1c br1ghtly colored llghts and wreaths From all unselhsh lrves of Joy ret1re When gone are bells and decorated trees And so I wxshed that mght rt could be then Contlnual Peace on earth good w1ll toward men Frances Webb XII Forn The lrres1st1ble Spmt Noel Nouvelet Noel now let us s1ng droned wearlly m my ears What a day to s1ng Chrtstmas carols' The melttng snow from the roof above beat a monotonous accompantment to the rnusrc Over and over we sang that song unt1l 1t became a def1n1te background to the day dreams form1ng 1n my head The song suddenly turned 1nto unrepressed grggles and everyone looked my way I gathered that I had been scolded for lack of attent1on but was not con SCIOUS of what had been satd Probably the usual lf you know lh1S song so Well youd better s1ng 1t alone or somethmg of the sort My face fur1ously terest and turned agam to thmkrng How could there even be a Chrrstmas IH thts weather? It was warm enough for Apnll I dldnt have money enough to grve presents to all my frrends and couldnt see the pomt m wastmg 1t any how That nxght s1tt1ng at my desk dorng the last asslgnment for two weeks I heard a d1stant but clear and s1lvery sound Wondermg what 1t could be I flung the w1ndow Vtflde open and sat on the s1ll hstemng l looked 1nto the bal my s1lent mght and heard nothlng for a moment Then 1t came thxs tlme a deflnrte tune Clnmes playmg carols' I l1stened for an hour then cltmbed rn to bed begmnmg at last to look forward to the hol1day season Early the next morn1ng I awoke and there above the frosty Chrrstmas tree frozen on my w1ndow stlhouetted aga1nst the gray sky were lovely flakes of snow That afternoon walk1ng home rn a da1nty wh1te dress through drtfts of fresh snow st1ll humm1ng the Wassall Song I real1zed that I ll e everyone else throughout the world had at last succumbed to the 1rres1st1ble Chrlstmas sp1r1t Mary Lou Hellman IX Form I 50 I - I I I a Il n ll I I 1 ' ll - I 1 red, I boomed the alto part lustily for at least three minutes, but soon lost in- I ' I C Chrrstmas Morn lt was srx o clock on a Chrrstmas mornrng when seven year old Brlly frrst turned over rn hrs bed and looked out upon the snow covered roof whrch Santa had vrsrted that nrght He strll belreved devoutly rn Santa Claus cmd therefore had the dashrng ternptatron to see what Santa had left hrm downstarrs He pulled back the covers whrch had been so tenderly tucked about hrm the nrght before and sat on the edge of hrs bed Wrth hrs head tousled and hrs blue eyes gleamrng at hrs vrsron of what he would frnd Quretly hrs bare feet touched the Humpty Dumpty that was a pattern on the softly carpeted floor At last he was ready to make hrs rourney across Old Mother Hubbard and the Wo man rn the Shoe When he reached the door the floor gave a squeak under hrs lrght unsteady werght and he heard hrs father turn over rn bed lt frrght ened hrm for a mrnute to thrnk that he mrght be drscovered slrpprng downstarrs rnstead of wartrng untrl Srster Mama Papa and Grandma were dressed and ready to go down together Wrth hrm Through the downstarrs hall he went very quretly and cautrously and then rnto the lrvrngroom The Chrrstmas tree was lrghted and the presents decorated the floor rn a gayly colored pattern Brlly had to clasp hrs hand trghtly over hrs mouth to stop a Joyful scream for fear of wakrng up somebody He trptoed over slowly toward the brrght array Wrth both hands now clasped over hrs small mouth and hrs eyes brrght Wrth amazement and the glow of everythrng before hrm Hrs thoughts rushed madly as he glanced at an electrrc tram a sarlboat a brcycle and many presents under the tree all wrapped rn brrllrantly colored paper and rrbborr He frrst touched the trarn gently and saw that rt would really run then he turned the pedals of the brke slowly so that the rear wheel hummed around then the boat came next whrch he frngered Wrth the same amazement At last when he was lookrng over the names of the packages and countrng the ones Wrth hrs name whrch he could really read now he heard a frrghtful groanrng of the back starrs as cook was comrng down to prepare the Chrrstmas breakfast He knew cook would tell rf she found hrm there so takrng one last glance he scarnpered upstarrs and completely mrssrng the Humpty Dumpty he snuggled down rnto the covers rn the pretense of sleep untrl he would be awakened by nurse who had promrsed to call hrm early lane Ann McBrrde X Form Doorbells You never know wrth a doorbell Who may be rrngrng rt lt may be Grandmama To spend the day and knrt lt may be a peddler Wrth thrngs to sell Or the grocer boy rrngrng and rrngrng the bell You never know Wrth a doorbell Who may be wartrng there' Betty Magre IX Form 0510 - . 1 1 . . . I - , ' 1 - 1 1 - ' 1 1 , . , . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 , . '- 1 1 1 '-' 1 Superst1t1on Nxght swept sw1ftly along on her black w1ngs hover1ng uncerta1nly over the hamlet on Bald Mountaln W1th a slow langu1d movement she shpped off her cloak leav1ng 1t as a cover for all ev1l wh1ch was abroad that n1ght In the belfry the seventh toll was dymq away leav1ng a row of barred doors along the l1ttle lane In each wmdow hung the charm the nettle a safeguard for each home on that most wxcked of n1ghts the W1tches Sabbath For IIVG mad hours they would cast a spell on the v1llagers then would wlthdraw for another long year For fxve mad hours Ivan would crouch behlnd barred doors not dar1ng to wh1sper 1n terr1f1ed s1lence For IIVG mad hours h1s mother and s1sters would wall and chant wall--and-chant I Good Mother' Could he endure 1t agam? A slow reahzatlon awoke h1m from h1s mental agony The Nettle yes the Nettle' The charm for h1s home-Had he gathered 1t that afternoon felt IIS unpleasant scratch on h1s legs pulled h1s lacket on the horny spmes? No- No It couldnt be-he couldnt have forgotten In a w1ld hyster1a he flung h1mself agamst the pane a clear pane No nettle blurred h1s v1s1on In a far corner the chant1ng began softly at IIISI then mount1ng as the w1tches presence was felt stronger and closer Nettle-nettle-no church bell yes 1f he could reach the church bell dr1ve out these demons and the1r hell from h1s home W1th a determ1ned calm he stepped out Ahead lay the church only a few steps more endless steps not lookmg to the r1ght nor left he walked h1s legs no longer a part of h1m h1s throat was parched and he wanted to scream Mechan1cally he moved forward Now he was 1n the church h1s church a calm possessed h1m he felt the fxrm steps under hmm now he had the rope of the bell 1n h1s f1ngers 1n h1s grasp-her felt stronger One-a sense of power flowed 1n h1s vems two-he ern1tted a hard chuckle three four IIVQ s1x seven the rope cut 1nto h1s hand and on and on he went eleven wxth a desperate toll twelve pealed through the hamlet on Bald Mountam The W1tches Sabbath was over Helen Gambrtll XII Form Alone on the shore I watched the storm Glvlng vent to IIS angry feellngs But I had come down to comfort my soul Not watch the seas dreadful dealmgs For I was so t1red and f1lled W1th grlef L1fe seemed more than I could well bear As surely no be1ng could face that great storm So I could not face all th1s care But as I sttll watched the black and grey sky A lonely petrel appeared And I knew thxs tmy yet brave l1ttle blrd Had conquered the force that I feared Then over me swept a great wave of peace And my trouble fled as w1th wngs The blrd had defeated I had defeated What had seemed undefeatable thmgs Kathryn Keller XI Form 0520 I ' I , . I ' I I I ' u I I u ' I I charm-Ivan--Ivan-Ivan-Ivan! Walling, chanting Witches' Sabbath! The .i I I 1 I I I -T . A I I I I . i l To the Memory of I-Iamet Monroe We wart for green leaves petals of heaven To cover her our frlend Small shght and yet strong As the w1nds are strong And the far off seas And lullabres On the snow capped Andes And b1rds crles Above a1r pockets In our souls lockets We carry love so pure to the end And mfehcxty to thmk We d1d not know you better frxend Ioy Pendleton Garrxson X Form MOVIE, Book, and Stage Each tune the story of Charlotte Bronte s rmmortal lane Eyre appeared be fore me I was enl1ghtened another degree I had heard so much about rt yet had never taken the t1me to read xt When the movmg p1cture was released I went to see 1t and thoroughly emoyed the 1nterest1ng but rather fanc1ful plot although the lane Eyre whom I had heard about and prctured was entrrely absent from the drama That mght I came home solemnly determrned to read the famous classlc I lxved the story agam M1ss Bronte s lovely descrrptrons of the young govern ess confrrmed my thoughts on the lack of characterrzatron on the part of V1r g1n1a Bruce who played lane Eyre 1n the rnovre I echoed every sorrow and Joy expenenced by the young bllthe g1rl and I was sure that she would for ever be tmprtnted on my mmd as one of my favor1te characters Th1S fall when I heard that Katherme Hepburn was commng to grve a stage verslon of the book I was thrllled beyond explanat1on and could hardly wart unt1l I saw the performance Every ldeal every plcture every 1nc1dent was realrsed and brought to color before my eyes To me Katherxne Hepburn was the true Iane Eyre sweet graceful sympathetlc and lmpetuous She had a certaln glamour youth and s1mpl1c1ty about her although she was not beau trful Her costumes the stage settmg and the supportmg cast helped to g1ve me a more v1v1d DICIUTG As I sat there too thrxlled to speak I reallsed the mterest and Joy Charlotte Bronte had rn pamtrng thrs character for the emoy ment of other people Sylv1a Lols Wxllner XII Form Clear clean water runnrng oer Br1ll1ant pebbles on the floor It may come from far off snows But where rt runs no one knows Catherme Lowrey IX Form 053 Q 1 1 1 1 ' 1 . 1 . 1 1 1 . 1 . . - , . I . . 1 1 - 1 ' 1 1 1 - . . , . , . . 1 . . , . 1 1 ' .1 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' - 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Professor Pocklestone Professor Pocklestone thought that at last he was on the r1ght road to the drscovery of the cure for that deadly malady Housema1ds Knee He had found that pure saltpeter mrxed w1th half a p1nch of grass seed would pro duce symptoms exactly llke those of Housema1ds Knee when rmected rnto the velns of squlrrels I must explaln Why the Professor used squ1rrels 1n hrs expenments lnstead of mlce or gu1nea DIQS It was hrs theory that human be 1ngs were or1g1nally of the squ1rrel famrly that we all used to have bushy ta11s and hved on a d1et cons1st1ng ma1nly of nuts Thus rf he could cure squ1r rels of the drsease surely he could cure human be1ngs The effect of the salt peter-grass seed serum would 9XC1l9 the germs located at the knee and cause them to follow the blood stream to the nose Where because of the l1ght they would tlckle the mucous membrane and a vlolent sneeze would follow takrng the germs wrth 1t because of 1nert1a What a noble benef1t to mankrndl He could Just see hrs effrgy hang1ng 1n the Hall of Fame beslde that of Edlson and L1ster bearlng the 1nscr1pt1on In Honor of Professor Percy Pocklestone D T B O B C and P M Who through HIS Gallant Efforts Rld the World of House matd s Knee Oh l1fe was real l1fe was earnest he felt a warm Wave of happl ness surge over hlm But what was that gurglmg sound? Was Karsav1na chok 1ng'? Pocklestone rushed to the cage of h1s beloved squlrrel and found her obvl ously undergomg a ghastly struggle of some klnd Upon closer scrutlny she proved to be trylng to sneeze What ecstasy' The experlment was worklngl But sudden Karsav1na ceased strugghng and wrth a feeble tslckc she rolled over pawrng her nose What did thls mean? Pocklestone carefully examlned her and to hrs horror found that she had a severe case of Housemard s Nose O K1srnet how could you be so cruel' The Professor saw the fut1l1ty of hrs ex perlment and gave way to hyster1cal Weep1ng Indeed to add to Karsav1na s rn1ser1es she became qurte damp from hrs tears She squeaked rn protest and Pocklestone was at last aroused Lookmg at Karsav1na he suddenly thought how wonderful 1t would be to produce a squlrrel ballet He could see them now gracefully executlng The Spectre of the Rose Ah here was somethlng to wh1ch he could devote hrs l1fe Happrly he drred poor Karsav1na and cut her toena1ls rn preparatlon for her f1rst steps Edna Iohnson XI Form Mr W1llow had rntroduced the cha1rman the cha1rman had rntroduced Mrs W1llow Mrs Wrllow had passed the ball back to Mr W1llow and he was now engaged 1n rntroducmg Mr Tr1pley who rn about three-quarters of an hour would proceed to 1ntroduce Mr Watson The program Was some half hour behmd tlme and the last tardy club member had flltered 1n from the muddy streets qurte a Whlle before Nevertheless Mr W1llow stood very stra1ght ln fact he drdnt move he kept h1s heels together and faced the aucll ence w1th the a1r of one who never shakes before a crowd He had a rather rectangular face and gray brrstly harr The hghts ghnted coldly on h1 glasses he had the appearance of one who never sm1les At the moment he was rec1t1ng compllmentary and or1g1nal poetry on the subJect of George Tr1pley Eleanor Grant Xl Form O54 . . 1 , . . . 1 . . . 1 , . 1 1 I 1 - 1 - -1 . ., . ., . ., ' . 1 . . . ' I I I P , . . . . 1 A , . ' . . . . 1 - 1 1 - 1 W I . 1 . , . - 1 - 1 , . . . , . . . 1 . - . 1 ' , . a , . 'W A l A P M-uslc f Yesterday we went to the symphony, We heard Rachmaninoff. He is a very great man But yesterday we were all great Even we near the roof School g1rls 1n m1dd1es and skrrts We were great because we saw Beyond Latrn prose and rnathematrcs Rachmcrnrnoff was a man Yet he was mak1ng a prano Speak sprrrtually Passlonate strength And gentleness It contradlcted It moved us Part1cularly a man besrde me Who played wrth hrrn Hands out from a worn coat And 1n h1s eyes Immortal ecstasy As Slqhl HIS eyes were mus1c Mus1c ln h1s eyes In h1s hands from the frayed cuffs MUSIC 1n Rachrnanmoff s hands From new cuffs sh1n1ng Whlle There was muslc 1n both Ioy Pendleton Garrrson X Form Ive Been Worklnq on the Reulroad Yas suh boss they sure IS queer people that goes a travelrn As man and boy Ah ve been work1n on thrs lme for mgh thrrty years and the passengers weve carrledl Well suh frrst comes the know all traveler wrth all h1s httle berth and my lan how to do thlngs that a porter can hx 1n hrs sleep by th1s t1me Then there s the old gal that hovers near the car steps fra1d she s gonna get lett at the statron She grves me the utters but not more than the gentle- man worrled bout an apporntment 1n hrs place of destrnatlon who s always say1n to me Portah IS we on t1me'? But Wust of all IS them folks that rates themselves a drawrn room You know boss that lrttle hole rn the wall down at the end of the car well anyways they hgger they can put on a lot of dog wrth me so they s always chasrn me for cold drrnks from the club car or a menu from the drnrng car Ah m surpnsed they don t concoct a HOl1OH to have somprn from the baggage car or the eng1ne Well boss rt s been good a seerng you all agarn but dont you hear the whlstle blow1n 'P Well suh that means that we s a gonna pull out a here ln seven mlnutes exact We s a runnln nght on schedule We s only forty mlnutes late Laura Wlnston IX Form 055 1 I 1 1 r I W V I KK I . n ll . . , . . . . collapsible cups and other jiggers. They's always tellin' you how to make the ' I I . v I I I u O The Evergreen and the Flower The tree was tall -majestic -still And towered dizzily oer head It flaunted greenness to the world When all the rest of life was dead It was so sturdy young cmd strong Of lasting lite it seemed possessed It stretched 1ts branches toward the sun And it seemed quietly at rest Beneath its shady branches grew A tiny flower small and fair That danced and nodded with the breeze And charmed me with its beauty rare Oh could I have a thousand trees Of v1r1le strength and equal power I would not change them all for thee Thou innocent and Jaunty flower Edith Marie Appleton Xll Form Picture Book It was one of those cold Sundays Just before Christmas when 1t began and 1t has been going on ever since She arrived about twelve thirty as usual and toddled up the walk in her new bunny fur coat She held something in her hand l couldnt imagine what it was but l was soon to know The first thing she dtd after her coat was off was to hand it to us They explained that it was her new picture book and that you were to read it to her My Dad started it He took her in his lap and began the story lt was called Barnyard Playmates and was full of brlght pictures of animals There were little verses under each and these you carefully read Then you pointed to you and sometimes she would try to imitate its name Dad used to make noises He would moo like a cow or ne1gh like a horse Mother would cackle like a hen She stared fascinated first at Dad then at Mother But always her attentlon returned to the bright colored pictures She was so intent upon what you were reading There was one special page she loved It was the one with the dogs on it You d explain carefully how 1t was l1ke the toy one she had at home or even like our real dog She would pat it gently or often lean down and kiss it There isnt a word that you can omit without her noticing it Every time you turn to the last page with a sigh of relief shell look at it for a minute then at you After this she picks it up turns it over and hands it to you with queer gurgling noises meaning that you should read it again Nothing saves you but Paul s announcing dinner Then she book clutched tightly 1n her left hand toddles into the dining room to be followed at a more dignified pace by the rest of the family Nancy McCloud IX Form O56 , , I I I I - ' ' I 1 I I ' each animal and told her the name. She always pointed to each animal after 1 I ' ' ' ' ' 0 ' I , . ' I I I Wrestlmq Perhaps there 1S somethrng human way down rn all of us wh1ch makes l1ttle grrls love Raggedy Ann best and l1ttle boys want to be fxremen and older people lose therr drgnrty for awh1le to attend a very shockmg play and wh1ch tells me not once but every week to go to the wresthng matches Wrestlrng holds for me the same earthly charm that a tued buslness man would fmd 1n hunttng or f1sh1ng lt IS not pretty rn any sense of the word 1t s seldom entrrely fa1r but wrestlrng IS a ceaseless spectacle for the person who loves a good show Even before the flrst round the audxence transforms from a crowd of mld dleaged mrddle class people to h1ss1ng shout1ng screammg chrldren you hear at the movres on Saturday afternoons But they do not all shout the same thrngs at the same t1me At the entrance of a handsome lr1sh youth named Paddy Mack for mstance most people would keep qu1et conslderrng the grave questron of whether he looks farr The audlence decrdes unan1mously 1n Paddy s favor when a huge bear l1ke man named All Baba lurnbers 1n wearlng a red turban gl1tter1ng over hrs black and yellow strlped robe W1thout ceremony they cl1mb over the ropes Paddy stretches out hrs hand to All Baba to show the crowd that he at least 1n the beg1nn1ng holds no 1ll feelrng toward hrs opponent The great brute takes thrs fr1endly gesture the wrong way and w1th a tremendous sweep knocks the surprlsed Paddy agamst the ropes The aud1ence love Paddy by thrs t1me and cheer when he approaches A11 Baba They shout Down em Paddy break h1s leg Or 1f Paddy rsnt on the alert 1n a confldentral tone Look out Paddy he ll get you' They rush at each other and slap the knock punch by punch unt1l one of them 1S downed or the half hour IS up Maybe rn the next week the mob w1ll hate Paddy as much as 1t hated All Baba The audrence rs not frckle The f1ghters are actmg therr parts What everyone really loves IS the sxght of Paddy and Ah Baba not actxng wrth elaborate grunts and groans but really mad Th1s happens very seldom for f1ghters have better tempers than men of any other professlon When 1t does nelther flghter pays the sllghtest attentlon to the audlence or the rules of wrestl1ng I once saw a small boney man named Drop Klck Murphy Jump wrth all his Welqhl agalnst a huge opponent pxck hmm up from the floor and hurl h1m over the ropes lnto the surpr1sed laps of the people s1tt1ng rn the frrst row In sprte of all the seemlngly brutal treatment the f1ghters are never very badly hurt They are so used to wresthng they have to act to keep up the crowd s rnterest Almost every t1me there IS a bout of clean frghtrng The opponents ar evenly matched They do not prey on the emotrons of the crowd l1ke the rest but make It the1r busmess to play a farr game O57 I I I I ' i . . . , , . , , . I I 4 I Y And so the fight begins. ll I I n ll . . I , , , , ' ' ' ' . e C These men are the real hghters They know the sclence of every move and a certam amount of psychology They know how to go about locklng a man s hands behlnd h1s back or throwmg htm on the floor wtthout touchrng the ropes Unllke boxers they have beautlful phys1ques and use therr bodres as gracefully as dancers After the drama has sorted out 1lS wlnner the audtence leaves hoarse and sorry to go And the same audrence comes back the next week and the next as I do Wllh an mcreasmg awe and adm1rat1on for those men who make 1t the1r buslness to ftght Dorothy Reed XII Form A Generahon Ago It 1S mdeed amus1ng when we examme the books our parents read as chrldren to f1nd one theme predomtnant They are generally wrttten about ch1ldren who although absolutely fnendless at the beglnnmg of the book T159 to fame and fortune at the end In some cases these ch1ldren are lovable and beauttful and they are frrendless merely because all therr frrends have d1ed rn Indra Fame and fortune for them consrsts of a long lost grandfather uncle or frtend of the fam1ly two Shetland pomes a Sa1nt Bernard and a Wardrobe of black velvet dresses wlth whlte lace collars ln such cases the book usually starts when they are l'1CIDDY and has them frrendless rn about two chapters The best ex ample of thrs 1S Sarah Crewe Another 1S Lady lane The well known board1ng school stor1es present the other type ln these rt IS merely because she IS sllent and rather queer and after she has saved three grrls from drowmng or carr1ed someone out of a burnmg bu1ld1ng the other grrls learn that she IS srlent because she has never had frlends her own age but has ltved rn Chlna for twelve years Two thrngs may happen 1f she 1S deservedly frlendless If she IS a mlnor character she leaves the school If she 15 a maJor one she IS cured These cures are usually very strange They may be dlvlded 1nto three classes shame fear and gratrtude Shame IS often the strangest The Rebel of the School I beheve offers an example Whenever the frrendless grrl leaves her l1ght on after an hour her room mate the herome thlnks suttable the room mate puts up her umbrella to shleld herself from the l1ght that she may sleep After several months of th1s the frlendless grrl d1v1nes that her room mate does not lrke the l1ght and reforms Fear 15 perhaps the most common lt occurs when the frlendless g1rl let us call her DQISY drlves her carnage too fast durmg the summer vacatlon The horse runnmg away w1th them upsets the carnage sprlhng Daisy and her frrend Mabel Mabel suffers a broken arm or leg and becomes unconsc1ous and Datsy spends the mght reformtng whtle she wonders how Mabel IS Gratrtude also IS rather usual as ev1nced by Dalsy after be1ng rescued from the lake These books are mdeed amusrng and I ennoy them almost as much as the modern less morahzrng stor1es Eleanor Grant XI Form O58 . 1 . l 1 I I I I ' r I ' the girl is usually friendless because she deserves to be. Of course at times A I I C Slow Spring Spring did not come quickly this year The snow retarded her steps And each green shoot that started Was bitten by Winters breath But yesterday she truly came Out past the urban noisiness Spring birds sang and trees Stretched in the freshness Brooks gasped with freedom Ah there she was and there alone Could spring grass be seen Between the melting spots of snow There did the crocus peek her perky head And she too made us know That Spring our Spring was not still dead Ioy Pendleton Garrison X Form Cn Being a Slster You have undoubtedly on hearing the title settled back in your easy chairs and said to yourselves What does she think she has that we haven t'? There you are wrong I dare anyone of you to say that you are the sister of not one-not two not three but four brothers Ohl Now you are leaning for Ward in your easy chairs with interest You smile at each other Did she say four brothers? I bid you lean back for surely none could hold anything worth while for you The sensation of being an only girl among such a mob is rather interesting and often amusing for me When I say Oh no they never spoil me I am greeted with discreet smiles It seems to be the general opinion that life would be fun with so many boys I try to deny this but it is futile How can I for when we are all at home we have such good times As you can see my brothers are my Joy and I show them off like priz peonies whenever my friends drop 1n In my bedroom girls think it a great source of fun to find out which picture is who and why Why has always been my hardest problem By now you must be curious to know iust a little about them Well I hardly need tell you about the first two They are engaged It explams itself The next one should be more interesting but he hates girls The last but not least is the family s pride and ioy and my doom lust eight he 1S completing plans for his Wedding to the little girl next door Well I see you are all leaning back in your easy chairs now You are think 1ng Not a prospect in the group I can see your point of view but prospect or not I d be lost without my prize peonies Rosemary Cagney XII Form O59 1 1 1 . . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 . - 1 1 . 11 . 1 11 , . 1 1 - ' 1 1 . . . 11 . 11 . . - 1 1 . 11 . 11 - 1 1 1 1 . , . 1 I ' Q , X., 1 - 1 . . 1 . 11 11 1 1 , . . . 1 . . . . . - 1 1 - ' 1 11 . 11 , . 1 - 1 1 . , . 1 A Chlnaman In Amerlca IAPOIOQIGS to Ollver Goldsmlthl I left England somewhat worn out by VQIIOUS exper1ences My fr1end lfl black drrected me to that most occrdental country Amerrca for as he put rt a rest lnstead I found th1s land more confuslng than the other I w1ll explarn My f1rst experrence was most dlsconcertlng I relate rt to you at length as I belxeve th1s blatant habrt expresses the mode of l1fe of these crude people I am speaklng of therr advertrsmg as they call 1t Before I tell you of my experrence I wrll explarn that advertlsmg 1S a form of puttlng a product before the publrc gaze But so superfluous so uncultrvated Perhaps our m1nds are more retentrve or we have more d1scr1m1nat1on But my story As I was about to retrre for the nrght I prcked up a magazrne for the purpose of amuslng myself and soothmq my somewhat yaded nerves But what decep t1on' An announcement rn prodrgrous letters proclarmed SUPER COLOSSAL GORGEOUS SUPERB After further research I d1SCOV9fed that these extrava gant adJect1ves apphed to an otherwrse obscure brand of potato' Somewhat shocked by th1s lack of subtlety I turned the page only to see the portrart of a coxcomb embractng a fabulously pamted woman These two I deduced from the somewhat fam1l1ar publ1c1ty are the 1dols of the Arner1can Publrc GARBO ROBERT TAYLOR the announcement publ1shed Other audactous superlatrves followed rapldly such as SAVAGE' SEN SIBLE' STUPENDOUS' THE WATER FOR ALL TIME' THE WORLDS GREATEST SHOW' My fr1end I must pause here to catch my breath before gorng on F or that 1S not the only way America bel1eves 1n selllng IIS goods Wlthout further effort I was surrounded by the most terr1fy1ng of phrases From each page pantc 1rr1tat1on and decay stared out at me wrth haggard tragrc haunted faces I could not 1gnore the tortured eyes nor the dragrams show mg 1n loathsome detarl what happens to the feet teeth and scalps of these doomed mortals I notlced hrdeous complalnts hltherto unknown such as Crepey throat Acld mouth Flour face N1ght trme nerves whrch I undoubtedly had by th1s trme My fr1end after readlng these advertrsements I would belreve the warnrng came too late All I can do 1S awalt the end' But I remlnd myself that Ih1S IS Amerxca And so I am reslgned to further torture not however wlthout a serrous thought of returnrng to England to reconsrder the1r method of actrng' Dorothy Reed XII Form I saw Mr Paul only once but I was 1mmed1a'tely preJud1ced agarnst hlm I was s1tt1ng 1n a doctor s offrce wartrng for a fr1end when he came rn to talk to the doctor I couldnt have told why I was preyudrced for there seemed to be noth1ng about h1m espectally br1ng1ng out th1s rdea He was qu1te an lmportant man a rentrng agent or someth1ng of the sort He was nerther tall nor short had dark harr and eyes and a very quxck manner of speakrng What was rt I drdnt lrke about h1m'P Surely not h1S moustache whrch was closely cropped and neat rn appearance Was rt the way he spoke as though he wzshed to get you to say someth1ng you really drdnt want to or h1s suave ness? What 1t was I dont know but to me he seemed a typrcal v1lla1n Kathryn Keller XI Form 0 60 1 n 1 . . 1 1 1 1 1 , . . - 1 , . 1 . , . , . . . 1 1 . . 11 11 . 1 . , . 1 1 - 1 1 . 11 11 . . . . 11 11 11 1 - ' 11 11 11 11 11 11 1 11 , . , . 1 1 . , ' 1 f 1 11 11 11 . 11 11 11 11 1 1 11 . ' 1 ' 1 ' 1 ' ' 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 W 1 . , . . . . 1 . . . . . 1 1 1 . - 1 1 1 - 1 1 ' . . 1 . . . . ' 1 1 ' 1 . . . 1 . I . . 1 . . . . , . .... I The Cheshire Cheese If you turn tnto a small doorway off the Strand one of the busrest streets rn London and contmue up an alley s1dewalk for a few yards untrl xt turns sharply to the left you come upon the door of one of the most famous plc turesque and unchanged old coffee houses rn the world It doesnt look as though 1t had been changed slnce Samuel Iohnson s tlme even to the stratght backed hard benches and the sawdust on the floor Around the noon hour smoke frlls the ce1l1ng 1n gray clouds the atr smells of tobacco ale and beer and of savory toasted cheese turnxng a golden brown rn the ovens of the Cheshrre Cheese Srt down 1n a corner near the door so as to watch the door the starrs the bar and the lunchroom FlfSl 1n come the true Enghshmen who spend the1r lunch hour at the bar drrnklng ale and dlscussrng the worlds latest news the fattest of them also has a blte to eat Then as the clock moves on all krnds of people enter for London 1S one of the largest c1t1es rn the world and all k1nds of people drne and wrne there Now Just note the l1ttle wa1ters and busboys short and stocky w1th feet that seem to run around tn trme w1th the rhythmrc hum of vorces lf you lean far enough out of your corner you w1ll get a glrmpse 1nto the krtchen wrth tts large steamlng stoves and of the chefs wrth the1r h1gh snowy caps bounctng around to f1ll large and small orders None of thxs has been changed for over a century and rt probably never w1ll be I hope not MarJor1e Hubachek X Form Llterature Escape There seem to be three ktnds of lrterature llterature that 1S read for record such as hrstory hterature that 15 read for 1nterpretat1on such as a character But Just now lm tak1ng up ltterature as an escape and rt 1S an escape for many people lm sure An escape from the real1t1es and sordrdness of the1r present world A pleasant refuge where they can relax and enloy themselves completely l1v1ng w1th the1r f1ct1t1ous characters dramas whlch they perhaps long to enact but can never realrze lt IS then a delrverance from drscourage ments at hand to the herghts of beauttful unrealrtres created by the V1Vld 1mag1nat1on of another man It mlght also be a dellverance from ones own dlscouragements 1nto an absorblng tale of another mans troubles whrch 1 comparrson make your worrres trrvral Thus one can be brought back to hope and self confrdence ln the hght of relaxatlon take for rnstance my father After he has poured over a technrc book a book read for record he often prck up a detectrve magazrne or a good wtld western lve often wondered tt my father hasnt a secret longtng to be a cowboy but be that as 1t may rt lS an escape from technlcalrtres to ltght d1vers1ons for hrs bra1n Another srde havent you ever heard of some poor devrl who has fallen mto poverty and contempt and s treated wlth scorn by h1s fellow men? Dont tudge hlm too qulckly lt 1snt 1mposs1ble that he should have IH hrs lodgmgs an old 0610 I I 1 - study, and literature read for escape. Many of us read for all three reasons. ' , . ' S , , threadbare volume-perhaps a translatron of some old classlc whtch he con tmually thumbs over and rereads It 1S h1s last lrnk to a lost world of beauty and greatness hrs escape from the truth and h1s own self contempt And he who can st1ll be st1mulated mtellectually to apprecratlon of fme l1terature 1snt thoroughly lost etther to hrmself or to rnanktnd Stlll another srde there was 1n an old southern college an amrable and senlle Janltor-a colored man Thrs old Negro had acqu1red a vast amount of knowledge of Greek and I..at1n and h1s matn enyoyment was to help h1s boys 1n these studres For Pappy not only emoyed the contact w1th the boys but those ancrent classrcs were to hlm an escape from h1s drab exrstence to real enloyment of the l1tera ture he loved So you see I thmk the qual1ty of escape IS one of the greatest attnbutes lrterature has brought to us For no matter who you are through 1t you can come to apprec1at1on of frner thrngs and can let loose your rmagrnatron to run Joyously free Frances Webb XII Form Though I am not Robert Rrpley I ll try to tell you a very 1nterest1ng Beheve It or Not The place IS Man1la the cap1tal of the Phtltpptne Islands The scene IS the Grand Opera House used as a stable between opera seasons It had been cleaned and the seats placed leavmg Just two a1sles A world famous v1ol1n1st Mrscha Elman was gorng to play on h1s tour of the world All the soctety of Man1la were there dressed rn thetr best and the house was ftlled The evemng was hot and stuffy and the aud1ence was a l1ttle restless But when Elman started to play all the aud1ence became qutet He had charmed every s1ng1e one After the second or th1rd prece had been rece1ved w1th as w1ld an applause as the heat would allow he nonced the people rn the last two rows gett1ng up and leavrng Although he was surp1sed and a lrttle angry he cont1nued to play As the front row was vacated rn a hushed hurry he left the stage hurt and very angry He went strarght to h1s room rn the hotel speakrng to no one The next morn1ng the newspaper was shoved beneath the door When he looked he saw three headhnes Rome had 1ts Nero but Man1la has 1ts Elman It seems that h1s playrng had not only charmed the people but also two larg snakes A cobra came down one a1sle a python down the other They had been so charmed by h1s musrc that they left therr h1d1ng places ID the walls of the Opera House Though the aud1ence had been charmed they had dectded that 1t was really too crowded to stay Though most of these facts are true I have had to add a few to be able to f1n1sh th1s story Barbara Schnerrng XII Form 62 m , . , ' . . . . . . . . . 1 , , . . I I . . . . 11 . 11 . . , . 11 11 1 . . . 1 , v ' 1 I L 1 1 1 1 1 11 . I 11 , . , . , . 1 1 - 1 , . 1 - 1 , . . 11 . 1 . 11 . , - . . Q , V . , . 1 1 1 Drouth, 1936 And so I take the dry, burnt soil Between my fingers, Through constant patient years of toil A mustrness lrngers A dream of a world forgotten now And of a sorl so dear And earth turned under by a plow Year after year Frne earth fond of the sun A part of the wrnd and rarn Now all Man s work rs undone And He must begrn agarn Begrn wrth a so1l so hardened A heart too heavy to feel Does Man remarn unpardoned? And lrfe remarn so real? Ioy Pendleton Garrrson X Form The Gardener Old Mrke the gardener next door was a queer man I had always known hrm and he never changed rn all the years of our frrendshrp He was of medrum herqht and Just a lrttle stooped hrs actrve work kept hrm thm but rn good health He had small hands that always had some of the sorl he loved so well on them and I wrll always remember how gentle those hands could be frrm on the spade or rake but tender wrth the flower or plant Hrs harr was snow whrte and thm but rt was never drrty Hrs deep blue eyes varred so rn mood and hrs thrck eye brows Jumped around so on hrs forehead when he talked that I could hardly keep from laughrng I never notrced hrs nose t must have Just surfed hrs face He had thrn lrps but the words he spoke were never thrn always krnd and most of the trme wrse Hrs anger was never expressed through hrs lrps but through hrs eyes Hrs whole face was of a ruddy color and he had only a few wrrnkles He usually wore blue over alls a blue shrrt and heavy ankle hrgh shoes In summer he wore a hat but not rn the wrnter CI now belreve he drd thrs to keep the sun from turnrng hrs harr yellow I really don t knowl I never knew hrs age but I thought he must be old because of hrs whrte harr He loved gardenrng and knew a great deal about rt He talked to me and taught me many lrttle secrets about plants He was my frrend and when he dred I knew no one could ever replace Old Mrke Ieanne Colburn X Form 063 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 , 1 1 '4 1 1 1 - I . 1 1 1 , . . , I - 1 1 1 - , . 1 - ' 1 ' ' 1 . . 1 . . . 11 1 . 11 1 Happiness I looked for her almost everywhere. I searched the hills in vain. I called and mocking echo Sent me back her name I looked inside a buttercup And saw a beauty rare But though she seemed quite near I d1d not find her there I went through all the forest And peeked behind each tree But though I didnt miss a one She st1ll escaped from me I thought I heard her laughing And ran to take a look But all I saw before me Was a saucy little brook I searched the r1ppl1ng waters That were so clear and free But I only saw one maiden face And that belonged to me But when I sadly turned away Some one said Come find me' And I realized that all lh1S wh1le She d been frohcking behind me' Edith Marie Appleton XII Form The Skipper One brlght Iune morning he stopped and bent over my work I sat in the boatyard close to the water s edge busy with the spring pa1nt1ng of my sail boat I-Ie smiled and spoke to me with mterest as I looked up at him for the first t1me He seemed like a character out of a book standing there with the color of his face and neck His features once sharp and handsome were soft ened by age His body was clad in an immaculate blue officer s uniform with brass buttons proudly reflecting the sun After our IITSI meeting a warm friendship grew between the Skipper and me I treasured all of h1s stories and t1ps on sailing We called him the Skrp per because he had been a great sailor in his early days Now he lived a haDDY existence on board the Ponyola a small black two masted yawl She was a noble craft that had won the Chlcago to Macklnac Race more than once proof enough of her old navigator s ability Often in the evening I would see him standlng on the bow of his silent ship gazmg into the purple twilight and dreaming perhaps of other ships in other days Blanche Vatl X Form O64 I I I I Z l ' l I sunlight shining on his silver hair which contrasted sharply with the bronze I I I - ' I Dear Llngapow Poor hm ran down the street after Dear Llngapow lt was the hottest after noon of last summer s hot spell and hm was hot He was hav1ng a SGIIOUS t1me Wllh Dear L1ng because the dog dldn t seem to understand that hrn wanted h1m to get 1nto the car not under 1t After what seemed hours of chas1ng pleadmg and coaxmg on hm s part L1ng Spled a cat and was off 1n a bound hm chased h1m a l1ttle way and then came slowly back and sat down on the runn1ng board Gosh 1t was hot' What could he do' The fam1ly were 1n the country for the summer and hm was tak1ng Lmg up to stay w1th them If he arr1ved w1thout h1m Mom would have a f1t and 1f he left the dear creature home Dad would stop h1s allowance So he had no alternat1ve-L1ngapow must be con quered' But th1s accord1ng to the old say1ng was eas1er sa1d than done When hm f1nally got the pooch corralled 1n the garage and was Just about to l1ft h1m 1nto the car the telephone rang It was Dad want1ng to know 1f hm had left Poor hm told Dad h1s dog troubles and much to hm s d1sgust Dad laughed as 1f 1t were funny What was that? Mother had 1nterrupted and sa1d that 1f hm had too much trouble w1th Lmg he neednt br1ng h1m Th1s tardy news made hm angry for a m1nute then he let out a carefree whoop and ran out to the garage only to f1nd Dear L1ng comfortably seated 1n the back seat all set to go Nancy Delaney IX Form On CHTCDIHQ Trams A recent 1nvest1gat1on showed that 1 50th of the average man s hfe 1S spent catch1ng trams That means that a man over f1fty years old w1ll have spent one whole year attemptrng to get a seat on the 8 U8 or the 7 13 or whatever tra1n he chooses Yet has he spent th1s year systemat1cally'? Undoubtedly he has not for there are correct and 1ncorrect ways to board a ra1lroad car Just as there are to do anyth1ng else To catch a tra1n 1n the correct manner you must f1fSl have one th1ng a tra1n to catch It IS also a good 1dea to know whether or not your tra1n 15 stopp1ng and when and where espec1ally when for tlme IS a great factor There are two ma1n schools of thought on th1s subJect The f1rst and commonest IS that of people who have what 1S sc1ent1f1cally termed an early worm complex Cfrorn the p1g Latm e thay ly earay orrny way ets gay e thay 1rd bay J They arr1ve at the stat1on fully an hour before thelr tra1n IS scheduled to leave Wllh the ch1ldren Emma the dog and merry parrot 1n tow Then the usual pro cedure IS to follow one of two courses erther rush the ch1ldren and dog etc rnto the car where they can play some game thavoc IS a favorltel or take them all to the stat1on soda fountam lt doesnt make much dlfference wh1ch of these you do 1f plan number one IS followed you w1ll 1nvar1ably have to go out at the last m1nute to buy the old lady across the a1sle a new maga 0650 - . 1 . 1 . . - . . . 1 1 . 1 - 1 1 . 1 . . 1 . , . . , . . 1 1 1 - . 11 11 . . . 1 , . . . . ' . 1 . I 1 . . . 1 . . 1 . 11 . 11 - 1 . - . . . 1 . . . 1 1 1 1 1 - . . . . 11 11 . - 11 . 11 1 1 - ' . , , 1 . . 1 . . 1 zine to replace the one that Iohnny is making confetti out of, or to take Phido for a last run, and if you take the second course Mary will undoubtedly eat too many strawberry sundaes and become violently ill. So you see you not only waste a lot of time, but also probably miss your train. The second method, widely used by the traveling salesman, requires the same apparatus as number one. Five minutes before train time you call home, saying to pack a bag, and at the same time you call the fastest taxi in town. lump into the taxi, roar home, grab your suitcase, and rip to the station arriving just in time to see your train pull out. You can now see that these are the incorrect ways to get to get to trains. Unfortunately however no one has discovered a better plan so my advice to you IS Stay at home Iill Fabian XI Form Sea Shells I take two shells And press one to each ear The murmur and rumble Of faraway shores And distant seas I seem to hear For hours and hours I l1e on the sands Warm white and clean Dreaming my dreams And planning fanciful schemes I wonder if some of them W1ll come true I Wonder do you hear the call Of distant lands too? lean MacKay Scott X Form Yesterday Yesterday our house was noisy and cheerful with children s laughter and no laughter or barking There are red eyes tears and gloomy faces The only thing that is natural IS the dog s chain hanging in its place and the drsh in the hall There IS a bone on the porch respected by all At dinner nobody talks for fear his voice will break No one saves a choice bit from his plate to sho to a waiting friend beneath the table No one goes to the kitchen after the meal to see that all IS well Tomorrow and the next day it will be the same Nobody wants another pet because our own dog IS dead Barbara Patterson IX Form O 66 the barking of a dog. But today-today it is quiet, and sobs reach your ears, I Fantasy It must have been a dream and yet at the t1me rt seemed so real that I know not whether rt be true The ra1n was beatrng rn foam1ng torrents down upon my lrttle cottage and the wlnd moaned around tts uneven corners I glanced dtsgustedly out the wrndow for the twentreth t1me then settled down on the couch w1th a scowl a book and a plate of fudge I had been 1n Greece a week and due to a wrenched ankle plcked up when I got off the boat had been unable to do more than poke my nose out of the rude cottage whrch I had rented for the month s stay and now the frrst day when my ankle was well th1s sudden storm would break' I had looked forward all the long wrnter months at Smrth to my arrrval rn Greece 1n fact 1t had been a vague dream ever smce my early chzldhood when my mother told me the rmmortal Greek legends and had frnally been crystallrzed by the desrre of my roommate to go there W1th me and wander around among the old Greek rums for We were both rncurable romant1cs She had backed out the last m1nute but I had come on alone And now I was day dreammg 1n front of a roarmg frre dreammg about Apollo And suddenly he stood before me tall bronzed farr clad rn golden sandles and an exqurstte golden tumc and hrs curly th1ck harr was held back from h1s forehead by a slrm radrant band of gold At frrst I gasped 1n astonlshment then 1t seemed the most natural thlng 1n the world for hrm to be standrng there before me holdlng out hrs hand a Joyous smtle lrghtmg up h1s whole face I rose He took my hand and led me to the door and mstead of the ragmg storm all was br1ght sunny and peaceful But I was no longer astonlshed for wrth htm all thmgs seemed posslble He took a l1ttle path whrch up t1l then I had not notlced stretchlng rn front of my house and we ran garly down the valley across a meadow and up the s1de of a rather steep h1ll We drd not speak for he was a god and I a mortal We reached the summrt of the hrll I stopped short rn sheer wonder There spread out before me was a beautlful green plateau bathed 1n a cloak of warm br1ght sunshme dotted wrth laz1ly noddtng cypress and olrve trees A lrttle brook ran tts sparkl1ng course through the center and all around btrds were smgrng and t1ny an1mals playmg But what held my fascrnated gaze was a pure whrte Grec1an temple It drd not look lrke a rum tn fact rt seemed qutte new and out of rt came several prcturesque flgures I gazed for a moment before I realrzed who they were and then I recogmzed them There was Aphrodxte and Narcrssus and Perseus Drana and Iason and Orpheus I seemed to have been transported back thousands of years to the t1me of Greek gods and legends of heroes and brave deeds of beauty and htgh rdeals Stlently we sat and watched unt1l the sun went down behrnd the temple bathrng the whole scene rn a soft mellow lrght As we reached my cottage I turned to thank htm but wrthout my notrcmg he had vamshed It may have been a dream for when I searched the yard next day I could not fmd the path But yesterday when I was srttrng rn an old ru1n which looked strangely l1ke the temple to whrch he had led me I thought I saw hrm standlng before me once more sm1l1ng radlant Pamcm Best XI Form O67 1 1 1 1 - 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 1 , . 1 1 1 , . , . ' , ..- 1 1 1 1 1 1 , . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 1 . . . 1. . . - 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 , . 1 1 , 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 - .. 'i 1 Cde to l-ler Apple Tree You were lovely and twisty You were gnarled cmd old Your blossoms were mlsty And your apples were gold Beneath you was shade Where your boughs bent down You formed a cool glade Your green leaves were a crown But she loved your outspread boughs And your warm glossy leaves She loved your shadow on the house She loved you above all other trees And now they have cut you down Mary Lou He1lman IX Form Nlght L1fe The transom over the door was covered w1th a bedspread so that only the most d1scern1ng eye could detect the l1ght Wllhln The hght was also draped Wllh dark mater1al vaguely resembl1ng a pleated skxrt wh1ch muffled tt so effectlvely that 1t shone downward 1n a restrlcted yellow clrcle leavlnq the rest of the room 1n deep shadow In thrs enchanted clrcle stood a great armchalr wh1ch many t1mes held 1ts owner enwrapped 1n numberless stor1es from the farry tales of her chrldhood through the mevltable Alcott and Llttle Colonel books up to the we1rd mystery stor1es wh1ch captlvated her at the moment green robe and warm furry sllppers She had tousled red ha1r wh1ch was contrnually 1n her eyes but she seemed totally UDCOHSCIOUS of 1t so absorbed was she ln her book The deep s1lence was only 1ntens1f1ed by the steady t1ck1ng of an alarm clock on the table beslde the bed and the occas1onal turn1ng of a page She sat w1th one long leg stretched over the arm of the chamr and her head txlted back the hght fall1ng on her face She was perfectly mot1onless except that once she shrfted her pos1t1on glanced at the clock whose hands had already reached the top of the d1al and were descendlng the other Slde and was 1mmed1ately lost to her sur round1ngs agaxn At t1mes her eyes skxmmed over the l1nes anxtous to rescue the hero from h1s dangers and at others she read slowly dr1nk1ng IU the beauty of the l1nes The pages steadrly decreased on one s1de and as stead1ly 1ncreased on the other The clock tlcked the pages turned one by one the llght burned brlghtly and somewhere ln the stlllness of the n1ght a dog howled Marlon Guman IX Form O68 She was curled up in the middle of it now, snugly wrapped in a dark C On Omons Our much quoted fr1end Mr Webster ummagmatrvely defmes the on1on as the roundxsh bulb of a certam plant of the l1ly fam1ly havrng a strong odor and taste grown as a common vegetable from the earhest ttmes How far th1s descr1pt1on comes from dorng 1USllCe to that pear llke paragon of pulchrl tude the vegetable krngdom s greatest glft to mankrndl I have a farnt susptcron that people do not really apprecrate our aromatrc frrend As people s hrst 1mpress1ons are usually vtsual let us f1rst consrder the questron of appearance Take an on1on peel off the outs1de layer of skm and notrce the pearly smoothness of the mxlk whlte globule before you hold 1t ln the llght and watch the sunl1ght play on 1ts satmy exterlor Cut the on1on ln half and 1f you can st1ll see through your tears observe the flrm young flesh gorng round and round 1n a perfect poem of symmetry Here IS real beauty' If you have not an esthet1c pornt of v1ew and prefer cold hard facts concern 1ng a product s ut1l1ty there are many to convmce you of the on1on s worth Take for rnstance mans 1n1t1al appearance on th1s earth 1n the Garden of Eden lf the forbldden fruxt had been the on1on mstead of the apple there wouldnt have been any trouble at all for serpents detest them At least I pre sume they do for only last week I saw that a restaurant advertlsed omon sandwrches to go w1th 1ts own partrcular brand of snake brte med1c1ne At any rate Eve surely used them rn her cook1ng for where would the culmary world be wrthout thls much scorned vegetable The perfect complement and seasonmg for so many d1shes'P lmagrne not havxng on1on soup beef steak and omons on1on JUICE to flavor soups and sauces or hamburgers and onlons The on1on lS lnvaluable 1n all countrxes for onlonless Spanlsh Rrce lr1sh Stew Hungarran Goulash ltalran Spaghettl or Chmese Chop Suey are unth1nkable and ID Bermuda the on1on IS no longer the under dog but a crowned k1ng However the kxtchen lS not the only place where the umble on1on IS precrous for 1t IS found 1n all walks of l1fe Beggars buy them because they are cheap and one can eat the sarne on1on for weeks sob srsters fmd them unparalleled for producmg tears many sctentlsts would be 1dle lf they werent workmg on the perplexmg problem of how to el1m1nate O B tOn1on Breathl and poets would be lost wrthout them for green ones are the frrst slgns of sprmg and on1on IS the only concelvable rhyme for words llke runyon or bunlon Next ttme you blte mto a cr1sp frred on1on rmg or a succulent sl1thery slab of borled onxon or a pungent crunchy leek remember what they have done for mankmd and be glad that you know your omons Itll Fabran Xl Form I 69 . 11 . . . . . I . . 11 , . 1 1 . . 1 . 1 . . . . . . ' I - 1 1 1 1 1 I - . 1 .. . . 1 , . 1 1 . . . . . I ' I I I I - ' I 1 I ' I 1 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 , . . . 1 . . . 1 1 . . . . . 1 . 1 . . , 1 1 I . 11 . 11 .... I F arth Wanderrng down the narrow streets rn Florence a fortunate traveler mar' chance to come upon an obscure shop wrth the placard Lurs Mennendoza G Son Iewelers If he were attracted rnsrde he would frnd superbly lovely brts of craftsmanshrp Lurs Mennendoza rs known to experts as one of the frnest Jewelers rn Europe but as he and hrs son do all the work he rs lrttle known to the world Lurs was not always the successful contented man he rs today In hrs youth he asprred to be a parnter and wrth hrs eye for color and hrs vrvrd rmagrna tron he drd well for one so young and rnexperrenced Both hrs parents were too busy to spend much t1me over hrm there were seven chrldren So Lurs stopped school and roamed up and down the country srde each day parntrng Boys of hrs own age annoyed hrm he had nothrrrg rn common wrth them so he was always alone He drdnt mrnd that much he was too busy tryrng to frnd an artrstrc scene and then to parnt rt One day he gave hrs lunch to a thrn homely dog The dog was an out cast and so from then on he followed Lurs everywhere rnutely adorrng hrm recervrng attentron every t1me Lurs remembered hrm When Lurs was satrsfred wrth hrs work he patted the dog and fed hrm well but when thrngs went wrong and rnsprratron farled hrm he krcked and beat hrs bewrldered worshrp per Nevertheless the dog always forgave hrm and Lurs feelrng remorseful treated hrm very krndly One day after hours of concentratron on hrs work Lurs grew trred and rmpatrent threw down hrs brush and vowed to parnt no more He stumbled over the dog crouched at hrs feet and krcked hrm The anrmal leaped at hrs master Lurs shoved hrm away but the dog had torn hrs hand That nrght the vrllage doctor amputated hrs rrght hand Just above the wrrst No longer able to parnt trme became a burden and Lurs became depressed Never socrable he was now less so drrvrng away the few who trred to cheer hrm He was losrng all confrdence rn hrmself for rt seemed there was nothrng whrch he could do Nothrng satrsfred hrm no one pleased hrm Frequently the cheerful greetrng of Marla Carlottr pleasant fat and smrlrng Marra annoyed hrm when he met her on the street and he pretended not to see her But rn trme Lurs grew ac customed to meetrng Marla and even grew to lrke her She felt sorry for hrm and skrllfully rf slowly made Lurs depend on her for encouragement and help As therr frrendshrp grew he began to feel equal to others rf not more able than some Marra found hrm a posrtron rn a Jewelry shop where he lrked hrs work But somehow hrs former enthusrasm and zest for hrs rnterests drd not return As Lurs walked home late one nrght the world seemed exceptronally beau trful srlent and rnrstrly clear He suddenly felt peaceful as the glowrng' stars As each star rs rmportarrt to the spendour of the sky so must I be to the world he thought He went rnsrde hrs house Everythrng was the same but hrs soul rt was rnsprred no longer restless From then on he steadrly garned new power rn hrs work When hrs son was born he taught hrm all he had learned If you chance to frrrd therr shop Lurs Mennendoza and hrs son themselves will greet You Nancy Iean Donaldson XI Form O70 n 1 , 11 . 1 11 1 . . - 1 - 1 1 1 , . I - , . 1 1 . 1 . . v 1 , . 1 ' - , 1 1 1 . , , 1 1 1 1 1 ' . , . , . 1 1 ' 1 , . 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 ' 1 I . , . . 1 1 . . , , , . , . ' 1 1 1 'L' 1 Slum Chllds Lullaby My feet have never felt Fresh dew upon my toes My hands have not touched a ca To see how cold hrs nose Ive never prcked apples And set them on the s1ll To watch them grow Redder and rlper st1ll Or smelt the pungent perfume Of closely cl1pped hay Or over tasseled cornhelas Watch nrght turn IDIO day I do not know or understand The language farmers speak Im not qu1te sure stars are the same On a rocky mountaln peak I do not know the r1ng1ng cowbells Commg down the hrll Or the age old rusty creakmg OI a country water mtll lm halfafrald to seek them And yet I pray OU And an unsrnoked day Ioy Pendleton I thought Id found the secret heart Of all the world and God The only plan by whtch to hve The only path to trod It seemed that tn the one great flame The tlre of lrberty Id found the only cause and way Llfe would exrst for me To ltve and laugh and sttll be free As all the w1nds and ftre To be an 1ndependent soul Was then my one des1re But now I know rt rsnt so Sxnce you have come to me For I m dependent as a tear On Joy or rnlsery And thus have I to knowledge come That human happmess Depends on sharrng love And all wtth whlch we re blessed Garrtson X Form Frances Webb XII Form C710 - 1 lf 4 1 ' - ' I For a common red-gold sun, French Sechon Thus year the French classes wnth the generous help of Ninss Preston have co operated -mth the Grnffm Board m creatmg a French Sectxon Fable pour les Enfcmts Le Rat EIDE! Sun ant I.El1mr du Reverend Pere Gaucher de Daudetj Il y a trente sourns blanches qux demeurent comme des momes dans un monastere solrtaxre Parmn ces trentes sourns demeure un rat nonr -' que tout le monde axme mend-:EN 'U '1 .. rn v-s rn na 5 ru ru '1 P1 fu '-1 sn xu no F9 ... sa Q. na 'D U, ... na U7 n O ,- ..... ..- 'D ra V7 4 ru v-1 H ro V, chez un sage hnbou grrs 072 Maxs ce rat nonr au lxeu de faire sa 'Q-e ll ll It i L- ' 1:1 I le Le , Q J . . . 9 ' X ,I O Un jour le lnbou explnque comment faxre du vm fm, recette qu elle tnent depurs cent 3.115 VIH ln Le hnbou est tres vxeux et bxentot apres xl meurt Donc le rat commence a f.11re le vm secret pour alder son monastere QV Les sourxs devlenncnt f 5 ' tres rxches Ils alment leur rat nonr plus que jamans 'SQ O73 t wg- '. we Mans nl a une fanblesse son vm Chaque sour, xl se retnrc secrctement dans son trou pour qu ll le fasse IPFHVEI Et xl deucnt tres xvre et on a a lemmcner Un sou' un demon prcvnent le rat qu xl nc dont bonrc qu asscl de sm pour saxomr que le vm est pur et bon Le jour prochaln, les sourns decouvrent que le rat a d1sparu Ils sont fous parce qu nls dependent du rat pour leur Maxs on ne WOlt Les sourns le US Y ICUX P US lamals g d sages secouent ICICS Et dnsent Mes Enfants, nous voyons que moyens ne justnfxent jamans la fin Doroths Reed XII Form .SW prosperite actuelle. . le v. . . ' s et les l x X les al' N les 74 I LQ Provence Il y a un lieu dans la Provence Ou les boeufs et moutons paissent Ou les arbres sont grands et verts Oi: il fait du soleil chaque jour Ou les raisins sont doux et bleus C'est le lieu ou je voudrais etre. Cecil Jordan, XII Form Nancy Stern, XII Form Le Paysan Est il vivant, mon ami le paysan Un bon homme vicux avec un nre an ui nous causait , et qui nous chanta Est il deja mort, mon ami cet an? Est il vivant, mon ami, si bon Avec sa barbe et ses yeux scmtillants Ses sabots, jambes nues, son bleu vetement Est il mort au lom dans le grand vallon7 Barbara Remy, XII Form Avrll Saluons l arrivee du prmtemps' Les oiseaux accueillent avec leurs chants Ies nouweaux bourgeons werts des belles fleurs Et les herbes trempees dans les ondees Le ciel est bleu et cousert de nuees EveilleL sous' I amour est dans notre coeur jane Conrad, XII Form Henri un chat tristement et alors Y irginia qui est sa petite maitrtsse lun donne quelque chose de bon a manger Il mange les poissons ou la wiande Yirgmm et Henri ont goue ensemble avec un bouchon qu elle, Virginia await attache a une ficelle and Yirgxnla tirait la ficelle, elle courait et Henri croxait que c etait une souris Il courait apres tres vite et quand il lattrapait, letait un bouchon Alors Henri netzut pas content Un petit chat ne mange ,amais les bouchons, mais il mangerait bien une souris' Lenore Russell, XI Form I 75 g Q ' ' -- ' it? , . , . I ' V , 1 Y Henri est un petit chat noir, noir comme de l'encre. Quand il a faim il miaule - g - ,, . ' . ,, . - C Mon ch1en Il nest pas long, pas blanc, mans nonr, Ce petlt pouf que tu peux vonr, Roulant par terre et puns mans tnens' Je rns parc que c est bnen mon clnen Helen Gambrnll, XII Form L lmperatmce Eugeme Mane Eugenie Ignace Augustm de Montnlo est nee le S man, 1826 iille du comte de Teba Elle etalt la petxte fllle d un Amencaxn qur etant le consul de Malaga Quand elle etant encore petnte, sa mere la amenee a Pans avec sa soeur ou elle est allee au couvent du Sacre Coeur Elle etant une tres belle jeune fllle et a assnste a beaucoup de bals Elle est allee aussn aux chasses et Louxs Napoleon ly a vue En 1853 xl l a epousee et la faxte llmperatrnce Eugeme Apres cela, c etant elle qux a mspnre la mode Des chapeaux et des m3nt63UX portanent son nom Les affanres detat aussx etanent mteressantes pour elle et elle a dlrxge le gouvernement trons fons dans labsence de son man Elle etart une bonne xmperatrlce parcequ elle etant charmante et mtellngente aussn Mals les Francals ne lont pas almee Elle a persuade a son marl d envoyer Max lmxlxen au Mexxque et aussn de commencer la guerre franco pruss1e-nne Apres cette guerre cn, nls etanent oblnges de quntter la France Eugeme et Napoleon et leur flls sont alles en Angleterre Napoleon est mort en 1873 Son flls est mort dans la guerre Zulu en Afrnque Eugeme elle meme a vecu jusqu a 1921 Eleanor Grant, Xl Form Les Colomes FFGHCGISSS a lEXpos1t1on lntematlonale Il y a a Pans dans lete de 1937 une exposmon mternatnonale consacree aux arts et techmques dans la vue moderne L exposxtnon sera partagee en hunt sectnons, le Palals aux techmques, les Pavnllons mdustrxels, les Colomes francalses, les Departements Fran cans, le Palais de Decouverte, les Fetes de 1937 ftheatre, ballet, musxque et ceteraj, les Fetes de Lumnere sur la Seme et les Exlnbmons etrangeres Sans doute, les Colomes seront une des sectxons les plus mteressantes pour letranger Les Colomes seront sur l1le des Cygnes au mnlneu de la Seme On y verra de vrars mdochxnes, malaxs, arabes, bebers et tous les habntants des colonnes frangaxses Des danseuses mdlgenes montreront leurs danses et ceremomes avec de vraxs costumes et mstruments de musxque De petlts cafes caches dans des colns obscurs, servlront dauthentnques vrvres naturels On pourra vonr des artlsans travanllant dans leurs atelners C est une exhlbntlon qun pour lmteret, lorngmalnte et le pnttoresque est sans egal Cela sera un spectacle qu on ne peut volr qu une fols par sxecle Adelme Ramond, XI Form O 76 . , . . . , , . . . 1 . . - - - , , ,. . , ,.. ,. . . , ,. . 1 , , ,. . - -,. , . . , , . , . . . , , , , . , , - ,. . ,,. - - ., . . ,, . . . , ., ,, . , ..,. ., . ,. , , , - ,. . , . ,. . . K .- . . - . , . .. - , , ., . , , . . ., ,, . ,. .. . . ,, - - . . . , , . . , . . . . . . , . ,. ,. ,.. ., . , , . , . .. Athletlo Board Barbara Schnertnq Nancy Stern Betty Ullr1ch Kathleen Dow Patty Austm I1ll Fab1an lean Ladd Constance Lowrey Kathryn Keller Btlhe Engel MISS Hlermstad PROGRAM FOR THE YEAR Party to welcome Freshmen Hockey Spread Party and 1n1t1at1on Pallo Fleld Day Electlon of Othcers Banquet O78 Pres1dent V1ce Prestdent Secretary Treasurer Head of Hockey Head of Basketball Head ot Baseball Head of Track Head ot Health Head of Nhscellaneous Sports Faculty AdV1SGf September November February March May May May Mitzie Butz .... I... l...-. ....'.b............. l. l. Q. I. D. I. l. l. l. A. Head ot Hikinq C B. Butler McBride Putnam Donaldson Hoier Keller Herbst P Austin I Husted P Austin I Husted Klmk Leffinawell McCall Moore P Austin I Husted Fabian Iacobs Athletic Honors 1936-37 NUMERALS C125 POINTSI Iacobs Faricy Fabian E. Iohnson BLUE R's Lowrey Ladd GOLD Butz Dow H Gambrill Moss Lee Remy Keith C250 POINTS? Engel M. I. Butler R's C350 POINTSI Schnermq Stern Ullrich GOLD MEDALS C450 POINTS? Delaney McCall Klink G Smith Letfinawell B Tennant FIELD DAY 1936 SENIORS Pettibone Pulver L Roach Smith SOPHOMORES Ladd Lowrey Herbst Russell Lindley Parker Pulver Sethness Ullrich K. L. Vail Klink Moore Matthews McCracken I Tennant Quisenberry I UN IORS Butz Iordan Dow Schnerinq Engel Remy H Gambrill Ullrlch B Butler I Gambrill M Iohnson McBride FRESHMEN Mclntosh Pirie Putnam Vai Ftrst Place Sophomoreg Second PlCICe Iuruors Third Place Se-1'1101'S FOL1Ilh Place Freshmen ' '1 0790 Hockey Squad FIRST TEAM SECOND TEAM P Austm FGb1CI1'1 Butz Irlcobs Hcrrrls C Lowrey Keller H Gcrrnbrlll I Gombnll Schnermq Copt Counselmcm Vcul Best Butler Butz Dow Fobmm Fancy E Iohnson M Iohnson Iones Russell Ullr1ch Ccxpt Wlllloms INTERMURAL SCORES North Shore Women Nov 4 61 KN Sl Kemper Hcxll Nov 14 lst 21 lliemperl 2nd 0 0 he North Shore Country Doy Nov 20 lst 21 CN SD 2nd OOt1e 3rd 20 iN S7 4th UOt1e 800 .-I I . 1 I I yn , f A A X ' '- .v Class Hockey Frrst Place Senrors Second Place Iun1ors Thrrd Place Sophornores Fourth Place Freshmen SENIORS First Appleton Bentley Butler Butz Capt Caqney Conrad Dow Engel H Gambrrll Second Iordan Reed Remy Schnermq Stern Strale Ullnch Webb Wlllner FRESHMEN Fust Bermrngham Brossard Cashel Delaney Capt B Freeman Husted Huth Lowrey McCloud Maqle Mercer Roach Wrebolt Wrnston Day Harrrson Krrtland Parkhrll Patterson Porter Second Allen Amend Brssell Bowes Brown Doyle Gurnan Herlman H1 Iackman Mercer O'Br1en Powers Wlnston Thud Powers Schutter Speed Sullrvan Walters Whrte Capt Capt First Austrn Best Capt Fablcm Fancy Gaudy Iacobs Iones Keller Lowrey Orr Russell Van Deusen WIQQIHS IUNIORS Second Donaldson I Freeman Frtzqerald Grant Hawxhurst E I hnson Capt ee Melhnqer Paulsen Ramond Rredel SOPHCDMORES Fxrst Colburn Counselman I Gambrrll Harms M Iohnson McBr1de MacNe1lle Mclntosh MOTIISSGY Varl Capt Wrllrams 810 Second Brshop Braz1er Clayton Garrrson Hubachek W Iohnson MacKay Scott Mesrck Pzrre Roberts M Russell ' L -11 H Basketball Squad FIRST TEAM Best Fancy I Gambrrll Hams Hawxhurst KellereCapt. C. Lowrey Schnerinq Vail Williams SECOND TEAM Butz Conrad Capt Dow H Garnbrrll Gaudy Iacobs M. lohnson Stern Ullrich M. Walter INTERMURAL SCORES Roycernore vs. Eaulknerflfelo. l3-lst-36-l8 CFaulknerl 2nde38-21 CRoycemorel North Shore Country Dayf'Feb. 27eflst-38-31 Clzloycernoreb 2nd-36-l4 CNorth Shf vel O 82 0 Flrst Place Class Basketball Second Place Ctredl rourth Place Fzrst Butler Butz Conrad Dow Engel H Gambrlll Iordan Reed SENIOR Second Remy Schnerrnq Stern Ullrlch Webb Wrllner Capt SOPHOMORES Fust cmd Second Colburn I Gambrrll Garrtson Harrrs Capt M Iohnson McBrrde Var W1ll1ams Flrst Team Second Team Semors lunlors Sophomores Freshmen TEAMS 83 Senlors lunlors Sophomor s Freshmen lUNIOR Fusi Best Donaldson Fablan Farlcy Gaudy Hawxhurst Iacobs Keller Lowrey grant Capt Second E Iohnson Orr Capt ee Russell Paulsen grant FRESHMEN Fust Brssell Brossard B Freeman Klrtland Lowrey Mercer Capt Patterson Walter Wrnston Delaney Thud Allen Bowes Brown Second Bermrnqham Cashel Gulnan Herlman Huth McCloud Cap Speed Doyle O'Br1en Porter Roach Maqle Capt H111 Amend ' L CR' V 1 . bl- The Paho PRIMARY SCHOOL PALIO 1937 The Amerrcan Flag carrled by Helen Gambrrll Presrdent of Roycemore Commonwealth Mlss Natahe Rockman Drrector of Prrmary School Physlcal Educatron PLACES POSTURE DAILY WORK FIIST Form Second Form LOWER SCHOOL PALIO IUDGES Mrss Elena Chamberlarn Unrversrty School for Glrls MISS Iulra Barnett Starrett School for Grrls Mrss Margaret Watt Francrs W Parker School Wmners of the Paho tn 1936 PLACES POSTURE PALIO lst place-lean Fancy lst place Elqhth Form 2nd Place-Helen Rodger 2nd place Seventh Form 3rd place--Courtney Cook 3rd place-Srxth Form 4th place- Ieanne Gousha 4th placwlhfth Form UPPER SCHOOL PALIO IU DGES Mrss lf1S Boulton New Trter Townshtp Hrqh School Drrector of Warwrck Woods Camp M1SSlGCk1G Thompson Northwestern Umversrty The Pallo Banner carrled by Bonnte Leffrnqwell and Ruth Carolyn Iohnson Members of the Class of l936 wmners of the Pallo of 1936 Mrss Helen C Iames PLACES POSTURE PALIO lst place-Helen Gambrrll lst place-Senrors 2nd place-Patty Best 2nd place-Sophornores 3rd place- Ioan Gambrlll 3rd place-Iumors 4th place-Barbara Patterson 4th place- Freshmen O84 The Palio Banner carried by the Officers of the Eighth. Form, O Red Feather Club OFFICERS 1936 1937 Mltzle Butz Illl Fablan SENIOR MEMBERS IUNIOR MEMBERS Appleton Ed1thMar1e Fablan I1ll Keller Kathryn Ladd lean Lee Vrrqrnia Iacobs Angle Iohnson Edna Russell Lenore Gaudy Ieanne Donaldson Nancy Orr Cherry Sue Butler Mary lane Butz Mitzie Conrad lane Dow Kathleen Enqel B1ll1e Gambrlll Helen Remy Barbara Schnennq Barbara Stern Nancy Ullrlch Betty Webb Frances Presldent Vxce-Presxdent SOPHOMORE MEMBERS McBr1de lane Ann McIntosh Mary Vaxl Blanche Garnbrxll loan Brshop Sue Iohnson Martha FRESHMAN MEMBERS Delaney lean Mercer Ioan Wmston Laura The Red Feather Club had tts beqlnnlnq one fall ten years aqo when Mrss Cox and a few hardy followers braved the wrlds of the lndrana Dunes for a weekend Durlna the snow storrn they had tor the ent1re VlS1l and dunnq the rarn the next sprrnq when they returned our forebears oraanlzed the Red Feather Club Today the club wrth a larqer rnembershrp strll qoes to the dunes twrce a year and hrkes along the North Shore Thrs year because of the rmld wrnter we were unable to have the annual sports party of slcatxna and toboqaannxnq O 85 Barbara Remy .......... . . ...... . ..... , . . .Secretary-Treasurer 1 ' I I I l I I I I I I I . I I I I I I l I I I I I I MISS Elmor Rlce Edlth Marle Appleton B1ll1e Engel Nancy Stern Mary lane Butler Ioan Bentley Dramatlc D1rector Presldent Secretary Treasurer Head of Llqhts Head of Costumes Cecrl Iordan Head of Make Up Barbara Remy Head of Publ1c1ty The Masque and Dusk Masque and Dlrk a1ms to 1nclude everyone lnterested ln Dramahcs from Semors to Freshmen Compamonshlp un1ty a fnendly Splfll throughout the school plus a ma1nte nance of h1qh standards make Masque and Dxrk more than Just another club Roycemore q1rls feel honored when 1nv1ted to membersh1p and work loyally to protect Masque and Dxrk Th1s IS what we teel a club should be and thls IS the constant qoal of Masque and D1rk O86 The Masque and Dirk Board l937 Betty Ullrich .. .i . ...l .... ... .....'.. ofgtaqe Crew O The Royal Family By Edna Ferber and George Kaufman PRESENTED BY THE SENIOR CLASS December 4 and 5 1936 CAST OF CHARACTERS In Order ot Their Appearance Della McDermot Herbert Dean Kitty Dean Gwen Perry Stewart Fanny Cavendlsh Oscar Wolfe Iulie Cavendish Anthony Cavendish Hallboys Chauffeur Gilbert Marshall Gunga Miss Peake Kathleen Dow Barbara Schnering Mitzie Butz Frances Webb Barbara Remy Ioan Bentley Mary lane Butler Edith Marie Appleton Helen Gambrill Billie Engel Betty Ullr1ch Dorothy Reed lane Conrad Nancy Stern Margaret Strale Cecil Iordan Dorothy Reed lane Conrad Play staged by Elinor Rice Technical Director Nancy Stern Publicity Manager Barbara Remy 087 The Senlor Play As a contrast to last years ser1ous play Ioan of Arc the Senror Play of 1937 was a roll1ck1ng farce by Edna Ferber and George Kaufman t1tled The Royal Fam1ly The play was successfully produced on Broadway a few years ago and 1S a cred1ble take-off on the well known Barrymore tam1ly As the Sen1or Play 1S the lead1ng act1v1ty of the f1rst semester great em phas1s 1S placed on hav1ng a super1or product1on All the members of the class part1c1pate 1n some capaclty exther act1ng or ass1gned to one of the numerous crews Fortunately The Royal Famlly requ1red a large cast and no sen1or 1nterested rn dramat1cs work was omitted Throughout the rehearsals the Splfll enthus1asm and cooperat1on of the g1rls was evrdenced by the1r consc1ent1ous work Each member of the cast endeared herself to the others 1n some manner and there was never a dull or ldle moment from the opemng call to rehearsal unt1l the ftnal performance Members of the other classes w1ll long remember Edtth Mar1e as Fanny the dom1nat1ng yet lovable old star around whom the Cavendlsh fam1ly moved No less clear w1ll be happy v1s1ons of B1ll1e rn her array of glor1ous clothes and grand manner or handsome heartbreakmg Betty Ullrxch rush mg 1n and out wlth her retmue of followers t1ny Helen Gambnll and her members of the cast all addlnq to the fun and sp1r1t of the play each trme they entered the scene A professronal company could not have emoyed the gradual evolvmg of each character more completely than dld the sen1ors Careful study and cmalysls of each part specxal rehearsals wxth d1ff1cult scenes plus the regular long and late rehearsals fxttmg of costumes and wrgs and the thousand de talls to be taken care of pr1or to an opemng all combxned to make the months of November and December hurry by as no other perrod of the year and to have December Sth and 7th the red letter days on the Roycemore semor calendar The semors were not alone rn the excrtement of the1r flnal product1on mem bers of the rumor dramaucs class headed all the 1mportant clews and when we realize that the work of stag1ng l1ght1ng and costumtng a large product1on 1S handled only by QITIS we credrt and thank the members of the other classes for therr generous unt1r1ng asslstance and successful results Of course we realize that the presence of charm1ng Mr McCreary was an added mducement to be on crews and to be there promptly and to stay to the endl To Mrss Elrnor R1ce who d1rected and staged the product1on and to Mr B111 McCreary who assrsted her by takmg charge of the construction and pamtmq of the set we express our apprec1at1on To each eleventh tenth and nrnth form g1r1 who part1c1pated 1n any manner 1n makmg the sen1or play the 1mportant event that 1t succeeded ln berng our message IS not Just a thank you but a hope that your fmal dramatlc produc txon w1ll be the hal-DDY memory to you that our Royal Famxly IS to the sen1or class of 1937 Betty Ullrxch Xll Form O88 I I II ll I I ll n II I 1 - I Il ll ' ' I I I - padding: Cecil and her shaggy wig: Fannie, Ioan, Mary lane, Barbara and all r 4 T I I I I , . I I . . . . -7' I I O Masque and Dunk Members Ed1th Marxe Appleton Ioan Bentley Mary lane Butler M1tz1e Butz Nancy Delaney Nancy Iean Donaldson Kathleen Dow I1ll Fabran Helen Gambrlll loan Garnbrlll Marxlou Hellman Maryorxe Hubachek Ioan Huth Anqehne Iacobs Edna Iohnson Walta Iane Iohnson Cecxl Iordan Kathryn Keller V1rq1n1a Lee Constance Lowrey lane Ann McBr1de Mary Mclntosh 089 Carolyn Melhnqer Cherry Sue Orr Barbara Remy Mary Loulse Roberts Lenore Russell Barbara Schnerlnq Nancy Stern Blanche Vall Frances Webb Ioan W1ll1ams Laura Wmston Billie Engel lean Ladd Betty Ullrich C One Act Plays 193637 Call lt a Day lean Ladd Lenore Russell Vrrqrnra Lee Cherry Sue Orr Nancy lean Donaldson Carolyn Mellrnqer Martha lohnson A tour star show as tar as Boners are oncerned Laburnam Grove Act One Mary Mclntosh loan Wrlllams Blanche Va1l Walta lane lohnson Mary Lourse Roberts Who would have thought that a promxnent blonde sophomore resembled one of the famous Marx Brothers? Laburnam Grove Act Two Iean P1r1e Ioan Huth Eleanor Grant Cherry Sue Orr Edna Iohnson V1rq1n1a Lee FOUND TWO MALE HEROES ATTENDING ROYCEMOREl I How could Grnny and Ioan have hrdden therr manly qlorles from us for so long? The Murder Scream Edlth Mane Appleton Mary lane Butler Ioan Bentley Betty U1lr1ch Lo who was the masked stranger wrth the vrcrous str1de and hrqh heels NOT our trrpprng Ioamel I Oumcey s great essay Murder Consrdered as a Flne Art and You have read detectrve novels as often as B U our murderous hero felt lt necessary to do? Th1s commentary IS requxred before the presentatron of the followrng plays but wrth lean Iones 1n the Travelers we 1maq1ne they 11 cover around-and wxth the Semors turnrnq to Propaganda we Wonder what wrll corne next The Travelers Peace 1n our Trme Lrttle Women Scenes from Shakespeare Berkeley Square Martha and Mary O90 . C . . A cracked record couldn't have repeated the questions: Have you read De n I I I I 1 I I ll ll n n ll ll I I I I I ll I u ll ll 1 ll W ll ll I MUSIC Board Nancy Stern Chalrrnan Mrs Kohlsaat AdV1S9f MEMBERS Walta Iane Iohnson Mary LOUISE Roberts Constance Lowrey Mary Lou We1boldt Cecrl Iordan M1lZ19 Butz An unusually 9ll9Cl1V6 and eff1c1ent group of qlrls whose duty rt rs to further the mterest of rnus1c rn Roycemore Lecl by Nancy Stem they per form such servrces as plannmq the muslc pcxrt1es wh1ch take place at therr houses lookmq after the busrness end of the glee clubs spnnq concert sellmq hckets for the Fnday Symphony and choosmq momma assembly hymns 0910 Ioan Bentley .................................. Vice-Chairman Cecll Iordan Edna Iohnson Norma Fancy Mary Lou1se Roberts Helen Gambrxll The Glee Club Offxcer 1936 1937 ALTOS SECOND SOPRANOS lean Iones Edna Iohnson Constance Lowrey Kathryn Keller Kathleen Dow I1l1 Fabxan Helen Gambnll Angle Iacobs Frances Webb Ioan Gambnll Cherry Sue Orr President Secretary Treasurer Llbranan Accompamst SOPRANOS Patty Best V1rq1n1a Brazler Cecll Iordan Mary Lou1se Roberts Ioan Wxlharns Helen Clayton Norma Fancy VIIQIDIG Van Deusen The Royce-more Glee Club now under the d1rect1on of MISS Madl Bacon fers an opportumty for all gtrls lnterested 1n ITIUSIC and havtnq a deslre for qroup smqmq They meet every Monday afternoon to rehearse for concerts outs1de of school tor entertamments at Roycemore or Just for fun Among the annual customs lS the Chrlstmas Concert Wllh the chorus and thexr own Sprmq Concert when they are at thelr best O92 . S - . . ...... , ' ' ' ' ,Of' , , . I The Chrlstmas Program 1936 Glona Patrl Glory Be To God Break Forth O Beauteous Heavenly Lxght Adeste Fldeles Cherublc Hymn Scrlpture-The Prophecy O Come O Come Emmanuel He Shall Feed Hrs Flock tThe M9SS1Ghl Come Unto Hlm Scrlpture-The NGl1V1lY Annunclatlon and Dresden Amen Angels Oer the Flelds fThe M6SS1Qhl Hark the Herald Angels Smg Cw1th audlencel Scrlpture-The Magr Say Where ls He? Noel Nouvelet God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen twrth audlencel Pat a Pan Carol of Russlan Cluldren tfrom Whrte Russral Hallelulah tThe Messrahl Palestr1na Tours Bach 18th CenturY Gretchamnoff Isalah 13th Century' Handel Handel St Luke French Mendelssohn St Matthew Mendelssohn French Enghsh Burgundran Gaul Handel The Chrlstmas Clrcle and Carol Here We Come A Wassarhng Yorkshlre A moment ot 1ntense s1lence as one hundred glrls 1n wl 1te hfted therr laces to the dlrector then a host of vorces fllled the room w1th the t1rst bnght notes Glona Patrl et F1110 The gymnaslum walls transformed by garlands and decked hlgh w1th plne bough lent therr fragrance to the atmosphere Our most beautrtul program tamrhar w1th tradltlon held us as one The Splfll of the hollday season captured every member and we rn the Joy of smglng you w1th the thnll ot llstenmg were experlencmg the heart of Roycemore Those of us who sang our last program knew that year after year We would come back at thls tlme rust to be a part of the HalleluJah Chorus Onto the floor we walked to form our last Wassarl ClfCl9- May God bless you and send you a hCIIDDY New Year' Helen Gambrrll XII Form 0930 H , l H ................. ....... 0 . - , , ............................ .. Silent Night, Holy Night ............... . . . . . .................... Gruber , ............... , . ....................................... . ' ' ' s ' . v v I! l .. The Student Government I-Iallowe en Party A lamp dances ga1ly wrth an envelope the klte and the corpse chat merrrly whrle the skyscraper downs the th1rd glass of clder cmd frfth doughnut no IIS not a nrghtmare Just the Student Government Halloween Inanrmate ObJect party on October thrrtleth In one corner a pumpkln carvmg con test gatns popularlty whlle others expertment w1th Truckrn to the frve prece orchestra or rush 1n and out preparmg for the next stunt After th Senlors emerge v1Ctor1ous wrth the prrze for thelr dramatlc comedy they smg therr Senror Song to the Indran Love Call accompanred by tears and the prano The party breaks up at nrne thlrty wrth the usual Wanna r1de'? Gomg north? and we all go our varrous ways some home some to movle hen parttes As the stragglers depart a darkness descends over Roycemore and the old burldlng srghs another Halloween Party rs over Frances Webb XII Form Commonwealth Prom At 7 30 oclock after an afternoon that was more of a cram than any nrght before the exams we had 1ust f1n1shed Helen and her few helpers frmshed puttrng rn the last tack of the decoratrons for the Commonwealth Prom They dldn t have trme to g1ve 1t a fmal survey for they were due for dmner rn frfteen mrnutes at Pegs If 1t hadnt been for our loyal freshmen we would have been w1thout decoratrons or at least w1thout many of the grrls who were gaxly dancrng there a few hours later For the Prom was a success Everyone adm1red the blue and srlver decora t1ons everyone from the Recervmg Lme presrded over by Mrs Preston rn the absence of Mrss Ashley to the drummer 1n the orchestra who remarked 1n h1s cont1dent1al sales talk tone that Roycemore has a better Prom every year The Sophomores were there proud that they were at last mcluded w1th the upper classrnen I remember Teenre her Whlle dress sw1sh1ng across the floor Sophlstlcated Ioan Wlllrams dancrng w1th an mcredrbly tall partner Ieanne Gaudy who practrcally hved at the dr1nk1ng fountam where we would coll1de Angre rn black and whrte lean Ladd who was a close second to the boys who drank the most punch and the Semor combmatrons of Helen and Dave Blbs and Hank and Ioan and B111 Twelve o clock came before we had trme to notrce 1t The orchestra played ncore after encore but the end had to come Agarn we went down the Re cervrng Lrne th1s trme to say goodbye and we scattered out 1nto the nlght to go to Cooley s or San Pedro s or to our own welcome beds Dorothy Reed XII Form 094 l . 1 . . 1 11 - . 11 . . . . . . 1 . . 11 1 1 11 1 1 . . . Q , . V . . . . . . 11 . 11 1 . . . 11 . 11 . 1 . . - . 11 . 11 11 . 11 . 1 - 1 1 ' 1 1 . . . 1 . , . 1 11 11 - 1 1 . 1 . . . . . . . 1 . 1 . 1 - 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 , . 1 . . . Q . C , . 1 1 1 1 , . , . Never was Ro school of glrls to rng up to one of 4.2 fmt t P5 C'O The Deep Sea Party ycemore more transformed' Over n1ght 1t changed from a a school of hshes and such fancy flshes too' Imagrne walk these and out of a clear sky say1ng I-I1 ya keed' CQ Q 2. .f really tell from therr d1sgu1se'P Of course we couldnt bel1eve our eyes when the two very l1fel1ke stalks of seaweed prctured on the left stumbled 1D We thought they and glggled l1ke any Roycernore g1rls but how could We e all went down rn a bathosphere and saw many of the strange teachers looked famlhar o of the Fxsh Scho d1dnt look so We wg' I and swam away f1shes Instructor and couldnt be 4.135 1 We also caught a g11mpse of MIHDIG the Merma1d who ll because she had been celebratrng all nxght w1th some poor ftsh Heres a photograph our staff photographer managed to snap- M1nn1e was very put out they sa1d 23 1n a huff We trred most desperately to get a prcture of the of Sports but she was off somewhere playmg Flsh Ball located We had to admlt that we d had a wonderfully exc1t1ng trme even 1f lt was a b1t f1shy C' leavrng the Colo J and we were sorry when the bathosphere was pulled up rful world of the deep sea frshes behmd f acc 1 few 'J ,fi fr? if H 095 Ed1thMar1e Appleton XII Form ' MG' C S If I' , F X 36? fig ft I I Q A 3 Y 5 N Xautxj hh I ! ' U I I , . W . 0: ' ' ' ' ' - - : ' lf' Al ' ' , ' , F ,2?v,mQ J, xc' . 'V :Zo V , M Utfis ,R fn if 'if E2 5T?' I I K fda, ff xlll o ' 5 , ' I 'f Q I ' ,,,, 1 K 1, O Alumnae News Many t1mes dur1ng the past year the prom1se sung 1D the old Roycemore song Thy fame s llght st1ll we keep burnmg Wtth all f1del1ty has been carrmed out by the Alumnae For 1nterest 1n Roycemore act1v1t1es and eagerness to help 1n Roycemore prolects has been 1ncreas1ngly strong 1n the Assoc1at1on as a Whole and 1n mdlvtduals Many came to school on open1ng day others to hear the Chr1stmas program or see the Pal1o or to buy books at the annual November book sale On the Monday before Thanks g1v1ng the b1enn1al card party of the ASSOC1Gl1OD was held 1n the Gymnas1um The competent plann1ng of ofhcers and commrttees brought together an un usually large number consequently the reun1on was especlally 1nclus1ve and f1nanc1al returns larger than for several years prevxous Our pres1dent lane Hymers cut short a tr1p to New York to be present that afternoon She 1S away aga1n on a CIUISG and the V1C9PF9S1d9Ul Edlth Lapham has been 1n charge It has been very convenlent to have Edlth as asslstant 1n the school Off1CG Other offlcers are lean Rawlms Ward Secretary Dorothy Fablan Sulllvan Treasurer representat1ves of the last hfteen classes form an adv1sory board The annual Faculty tea to 1ntroduce the graduat1ng class to the Alumnae IS set for Wednesday Iune 9 Put down the date SQDIOYS Alumnae and Ashley announced as her most excltxng plece of news for the year The l1brary as planned w1ll be bu1lt above the entrance to the gymnas1um on the second floor to be reached from the COYI1dOf 1ead1ng from Study Hall to Sen1or Room Mr Earl Reed whose daughter Dorothy IS a Senlor 1S arch1tect Mr Raymond W1eboldt whose daughter Mary Lou 1S a Freshman 1S contractor The1r spec1al mterest guarantees a perfectly adapted and charmmg room for our l1brary It 15 hoped that work can start dur1ng sprmg vacat1on so that the extenor w1ll be almost f1n1shed before Commencement on Iune ll Last year a record seemed establ1shed for wedd1ngs But look at thls year s hst of br1des Roberta Scott Margaret Huxley V1rg1n1a Dawes Dorothy Weston Cora Khng Dorothy Bard Georg1ana Moore Dorothy Thomson El IOUISG Pope Lorrame Haskell Betty McKay lane Holmes Sara Betty Rob1 son Sara Muzzy Carolyn Uhlemann Ruth Fordyce Barbara Bruce Charlotte Wh1te Betty Wh1tf1eld Patr1c1a Keeley Margaret Peacock Isabel Ludlow We cannot g1ve the names of all the Ptoycemore sons 1n law but must ment1on that Dorothy Cl1ne has become the s1ster 1n law of Barbara Schnermg 1937 Fran ces McDan1el of Georgeanna Rundall MarJor1e M1lls of Anne and Constance Hopkms O96 I Il I s n l I I I I I , , : ' I I ' I l I Faculty! Surely you are curious to hear more about the library that Miss I 1 I I 1 1 ' . 1 I 1 1 I .- I . . I I . I I ' -I - . I Z . O hngagements have been announced by Harr1et Hamm Betty F1scher Cam11la Folds Sylv1a Sm1th Ehzabeth Campbell VIIQIDIG Haskell N1na Bruce M1ldred Garnett Betty Thompson Betty Alger Betty F1sher Betsy Tlttle Nancy Avery Dorothy Sheehan Nancy M9fT1Ck 1S engaged to the brother ot Barbara and Mary Cook Peggy Lou Do r1ng IS engaged to lane TFIQQS brother Mar1anne Hoover to Dorothy DQVIS brother Suzanne Lord to Lorna Beaton s brother Betty Buck Roblnson Sue Tletgens Seyfr1ed and Margaret Broomell Blelock have sent word of the arrlval of the1r sons word of daughters has come from Iudy Woodruff Snead Io Hanchett McFadden Melarue Truman Bullard Mary Day Martm Betsy Day Lockhart Elva E1tel Bersbach and Betty Sargent Doughty fHelen Irl The class of 1936 was so large that we have Freshmen ln many schools and colleges of varled locat1ons and types In CGl1fOfH1G are Betty Bllls 1n Scr1pps Ieanne Cutler and Io Ann W1ll1amson 1n Leland Stanford B1ll1e Kl1nk lean Ke1th L1bb1e Schutter ar1d Betsy Ann Doer1ng are at Connect1cut lean Delany and MGIJOIIG Ham1lton at Sm1th Bett1e Ioshn at Wells Mary Moore and Patr1c1a Speed at Wellesley Barbara Austm who entered Vassar w1thout exam1nat1ons at the end of her Sen1or year because of her h1gh standmg was elected Pres1dent of her class f1rst semester recently she was elected secretary of the Vassar Student Government ASSOC1Gl1OH Ruth Carolyn Iohnson and Bonnle Leftmgwell are 1n Northwestern Troy Parker at the Un1 vers1ty of Ch1cago Allce MacQueen at Carleton Glor1a Matthews at Den1son lean Potter at Purdue Lorra1ne Roach and E1leen L1ndley are at Sarah Lawrence lean Pett1bone at Bennlngton Iean Curran IS at the Masters School lean Encson lean and Barbara Tennant at Fmch Esther McCall and Ger trude Sm1th at Mt Vernon Betty H1ntz at Ferry Hall Katy Lew Vaxl at the Northampton School lean McCracken and Franclgene Sher1dan at Pme Mano Mary Iane Sethness attends the Katherme Cubbs School 1n New York Bar bara Terry the Evanston Art Academy Graduatmg th1s Tune from college are Mar1anne Hoover Vassar Mar1an Bard Sarah Lawrence M1ldred Garnett COHDGCl1CUl Barbara Barry Nancy Merr1ck Margaret Potter from Sm1th Iean Gardner WISCOHSID Mar1or1e Mock ATIZOHO Dorothy Cllne N1na Bruce MarJor1e Helm Iane Mclntosh Mar1on Hedr1ck Marle Stevenson Georgeanne Rundahl from Northwestern We are del1ghted to learn that Mar1or1e Helm and Georgeanne Bundall have been honored by electlon to Ph1 Beta Kappa Nancy Cla1re Parker has transferred to Vassar Betty Crandall to M1ch1gan Fa1th Hardy IS domg graduate work 1r the Un1vers1ty of Ch1cago lanet Se1del and Florence Barry are at busmess college lane Hart at the Art Inst1tute lane Sturtevant 1S IH Northwestern Mar1 ana McCabe at the Nat1onal College of Educat1on TIQQIC 1tems are the death of Mary El1zabeth Spencer s father 1n an a1rplane accldent Elva E1tel Berbach s husband from a sudden heart attack Prudence johnson IS recover1ng from ser1ous 1n1ur1es rece1ved 1n an automoblle acc1dent hhzabeth Lee Poster passed away Apr1l eleventh of pneumon1a O97 -, . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 , 1 1 1 1 1 , . . . . 1 9 , .1 ' , 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 , . , . 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 1 1 I .. 1 1 1 1 - 1 1 1 ' - 1 1 T , 1. I - , . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - , . 1 1 - '1 ' . . . 1 . . . . 1 , . -1. . . , . Many of the alumnae have been taking interesting trips and the Association has suggested mducmg them to give us programs Llbby Paine cmd Mary Husted have been around the world Theo Winters stayed for several months in Mexico learning the language The Ouisenberrys are spending a year study1ng in Switzerland and travelling in Europe Edith Lapham had a sum mer trip to England Frances Olmsted and Martha Vincent took the North Cape cruise adding other places of interest The Ostermann family is spend1ng the year in Munich and other parts of Germany Mary Alan Hokanson went to the Salzburg Festival last summer she has appeared as solo harplst on many programs this winter Evelyn Patterson took a Mediterranean cruise Lydia Gray a European tour Gladys Green and Helen Chapman wmtered in Flortda Among our alumnae who have business positions are lane Whitacre Angie Drake Martha Rodgers MarJor1e Cowan Lucy lane Hedberg Lois Stewart Elaine Walker lean Prussmg Nancy Thomas Mae Bliss PGQQY Milne B l Norcott Mary Cook danced solo parts in the Chicago Opera ballet Gretchen Keene is secretary to Lewis Gannett daily book reviewer on the New York Herald Tr1bune Frances Olmsted 1S on the magazine Antiques Virginia Troup Uhlemann was sent to New York by the Crowell Publishing Company the smart young matron s point ot view Frances Badger has exhibited at the Art Institute Billee White won a Iumor League award tor bookbinding Eliza beth Wmg and Madeline Trlpp Tourtelot tor paintings Florence Peacock suc ceeded her sister as secretary at Evanston High School Martha Meaker Mit tlebusher holds many book review classes lean Rawlins Ward is president of the Infant Welfare Service League Helen Iones Tourtellot and Martha Sher man Bennet are active m Girl Scout work Helen Chapman continues as Chair man of the Council of Social Agencies Katherine Brothers and Mera Gallo way assrsted by Gertrude Matthews were co-chairmen of the Vassar Alum nae dinner dance to raise scholarship funds Naomi Sloan Burnstan is a splen did patron of Roycemore with two sons in our kmdergarten Cary Roloson Whose father and three aunts attended Roycemore has been in First Form This summary ot Alumnae news is iar from complete we realize and we wish xt were longer For every bit of news about our old girls IS dear to us and eagerly welcomed by the Faculty and girls in school Changes of name or address travel or Jobs or activities should be reported for the Alumnae file so that it may be kept up to date Thls advlce is for undergraduates who will too soon be eligible for the Alumnae Association Edlth Lapham reporter Mrs Preston rewnte desk Alumnae OfflC9 April 18 1937 O98 , . , . ' I I I I I ' I I . I I Y 1 I 1 1 I 1 l 1 - ' I to give special advice on articles in The Woman's Home Companion from . , ' 1 1 ' ' I , . I I 1 1 I ' I , . I , . O IN MEMCDRIAM Darlene Ann Elhson Feb 5 1929 Sept 26 1936 The memory of Darlene Arms gentle spmt and haDDY Ways hves 11'1 the heart of her classmates and frlends at Royce more 01020 LITERARY PRIZE Awarded to MARIE I-IELMOLD HONORABLE MENTION Courtney Cook Martha Lourse Harbrecht Iudqes lane Conrad Sylvra LOIS Wrllner Tryon There 1S on the very border between South and North Carolrna a lrttle town called Tryon It IS truly lovely as 1t 1S surrounded by tall and majestrc moun ta1ns The sound of a warm wrnd 1n the poplars and mountam laurel of a rushmq stream fmdrng IIS Way 1nto the valley below of the croonmq so soft and deep of the darlcres workrnq rn the frelds the beat of horses hoofs on a red clay road the creek of the old m1ll wheel these are the sounds of Tryon That IS the place of my dreams The SGCIIOD of town where the Whlte folk l1ve 1n the1r neat lrttle houses covered w1th w1star1a rs very d1stant from that of the blacks The people of Tryon are mostly horse owners and lovers Perhaps you wrsh to take a moon llqht rrde throuqh the tra1ls on horseback There are adventures qalore as you go through the dense woods The trees cast the1r shadows before you Ahead there IS a pale lrqht the lamp rn the cabrn w1ndow of a mountameer who rn the day ra1ses cotton flowers corn and almost any krnd of truck that they mrqht sell to the people rn the hotel Those who come to Tryon on VISITS may stay at the larqe ramblrnq hotels that are bu1lt of oak wood Many people come 1n the sprrnq when a beaut1ful horse and hound show IS held rn the Harmond Freld rmq Horses and doqs come from east and south to the show Often there are tennrs matches held at the country club There the resrdents come to sw1m qolf play cards or as Tryon folks do almost everywhere they qo talk horses The only people who drawl are the Northerners who come to stay fo the wrntah and of course they wouldn t have a qood trme lest they got the sprrahrt of the saouth Autumn rs the most beautrful season rn the entrre year there The rnoun ta1ns are covered wrth the lovel1est colors of fall The arr IS warm but rn Tryon 1t IS never sultry It has but one fault It lures lrttle qrrls from the1r school 1n the north and 1ts charms draw them to the Southland Each summer we qo to thrs dreamland to enloy 1ts breezes w1star1a the stream to have a spell woven about m that lasts forever Mane I-Ielmold VII Form 01010 ' 1 1 1 . . . . 1 1 1 , 1 . 1 , . ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 11 1 - 1 1 . 1 . 1 . . 1 - 1 1 1 t Q C . .4 V Wmter s Evemng The skeletons of trees outlmed aga1nst the l1ght grey sky Bowed down 1n evenlng prayer as the wrnd came howl1ng by The sun s rosy l1ght casts shadows on the snow The f1rel1ght fhckermg on the wall QIVGS an amber glow The sky IS QIOWIHQ darker now the yellow lamps are br1ght And 1n my cha1r beslde the f1re I read by candle l1ght Then watchmg all the stars come out so br1ght yet so serene I see the pale and lovely moon r1se h1gh and re1gn as queen M L Harbrecht VIII Form VV'1nter s N1qht The small ch1ld stlrred restlessly 1n the old Sleepy Hollow cl'1a1r The lrve orange flames crouched then leaped about the frreplace OUIS1d9 rergned a bleak raw w1nters n1ght The w1nd wh1stled shr1lly through the leafless trees makmg a sound as though someone were play1ng a harp far far away The branches beat agalnst the th1n glass w1ndow panes l1ke t1nkl1ng 1cy fmgers The f1re and the brxght moon alone were enough to 1llum1nate the large room Strange that they should actually appear to be dear faces ot people who had left h1m long ago He stared w1ldly about h1m obserV1ng the strange fl1cker 1ng shadows beh1nd h1m and the gray mob1le shadows 1n all corners H heard a pattenng and scratch1ng no1se 1n the wall a mouse perhaps The floor creaked makmg a fr1ghten1ng sound The warm dark n1ght enveloped h1m and slowly h1s fears subs1ded leav1ng only a lonely boy to be led 1nto the land of dreams Courtney Cook VIII Form A Day ln Madelra There 1S an lsland way out yonder Where We Just love to go It truly IS a place of wonder And you would hnd 1t so Maderra IS th1s 1sland fa1r Where grow the flowers and brrds s rare Up the mounta1n you go 1n a car And look down on the clty afar Down the mounta1n 1n a basket you slrde It really 1S a most thr1ll1ng r1de Next to old w1ne cellars to try the wrne Then to a street cafe to d1ne When for souvemrs you ve spent your money You can r1de away 1n an ox cart funny Th1s completes a very good day And you w1ll be ready to sa1l away Iudy Peake VI Form O 102 . I . I Q I vu The young boy half closed his eyes and gazed dreamily at the flames. ' ' ' ' ' . e ' o . I The Wild Horse No halter ever donned his nose, Yet he was the one that the cowhands chose. On prickly cactus he was fed At nlght on the prairies he made his bed Across the plains he d wander alone A dashing streak of strawberry roan A cloud of dust the cowhands saw They knew from then twas a born outlaw He stood on a crevice with rocks below The sun was Just showing its last gleaming glow The men chatted and planned through part of the night Then decided to make the horse completely afright He stood on the side of the crevice so deep Then snorted and turned and gave a wild leap For he saw all around him with ropes in hand The dreaded men from the civilized land Patricia Ripley VII Form A Most Colorful EXPSFIQDCS CThe following story was told me by a friend as having happened to an acquaintance of hersl Mr and Mrs Earl lrv1ng after Journeying through Europe for SIX months settled down IH an old French chateau They had been surprised to find that a very large French home could be purchased for a minor sum Upon arr1v1ng at their destination an old man opened the gate and practical Mrs Irving asked for the keys to the house The mans eyes almost popped out of his head with incredulous amazement You Cant live here he said This house has been empty for over one hundred years the place is haunted a beautiful princess lived in this castle the gardener commenced The night she was to have been married her lover while walking through the castle with her on a sudden strange Impulse selzed and choked her to death Ever since then each night at twelve o clock the maiden ghost walks up and down the castle corridors lamenting for her lover How interesting comment d Mrs Irving but I believe we will have no trouble with your so called ghost The man offered no argument so with bags the lrvings proceeded up the walk They had brought their own servants who knew nothing about the ghost and they laughingly Joked about the superstition all through dinner before settling down to their own individual books Tired out after a long day s Journey to the house they went to bed about ten thirty Earl l must admit that this place has rather an eerie look and gives you the creeps said Mrs lrv1ng Why Ethel dear you have absolutely nothing to fear replied Mr Irving 0103 I I I I I I ul l I u . II With great difficulty Mrs. Irving suppressed laughter. A long, long time ago 4 1 u 1 . I r O Thelr bedroom opened onto a balcony overlookmg the garden and was connected wrth a dresslng room whrch rn turn opened mto the hall About twelve oclock Mrs lrvrng wakened to feel a shrvery sensatlon start at the base of her spme and crawl slowly up her back She sat up and looked out of the wlndow all was serene and qulet A beautrful moon was sh1n1ng peace fully on the ground below Tap tap The sound 1ncreased 1n volume as rt came closer Mrs lrv1ng swallowed hard and thought to herself Earl wlll thrnk me a sllly goose for wakrng h1m up but thls certalnly couldnt be mY rmaglnatron Earl Earl wake up she frantlcally Whlspered HIS only re sponse was a low gutteral grunt Earl I say do you hear that? Huh what? he drowslly rephed That horrld tappmg norse comrng down the hall she answered Oh that l wonder what rt could be he sald 1n a dense way Meanwhlle the tapp1ng contlnued consc1ous of a shght swrshlng nolse accompanylng the steps as though a woman had shaken her sllken skrrts 1n ag1tat1on and then a p1erc1ng unearthly scream All sounds stopped outs1de the bedroom door Rece1v1ng a small push from hrs w1fe Mr Irvrnq reluctantly crawled out of bed to llght the candl and as he stumbled back to h1de beneath the covers the door connectxng the bedroom and the dressrng room swung s1lently open Mrs lrvrng hfted a corner of the prllow from her face expectlng to fmd her husband ready to at tack the 1ntruder but lnstead an amazmg slght confronted her eyes A strange flgure wrth a long scrawny neck ornamentally feathered head short sptndly legs spread toes gaplng screamlng mouth and long drooprng trarn gave her a frrghtened look and then tapped frenzledly across the floor through the bal cony door struggled to the rallmg and wrth a flnal squawk a peacock flew away Courtney Cook Vlll Form I once took me the queerest test The easrest most srmplest That l ever took Draw a crrcle round the rat Connect the head to the l1ttle hat What s a book? Where does a doggre run and why? Do flshes swrm? Do robms fly? Then lt asked me Who are you? That was all we skrpped the rest But someone told me later on After the testrng man had gone 'Twas srmply an l Q Marle Helmold, Vll Form a 01040 Earl, go light that candle on the dressing table. As she said this she was ' ' , . ' ' e I I W I L I I I , . Back Row Sherrdan Sherrxtt McPherr1n Cook Loeb Drake Foley Harbrecht Anderson Mxddle Row OConor lohnson Webb Bogert Boqan Sullr an Harrmqton Austm Front Row Fox Ev mt Inqram Krmball Cook Hoyt Amo E1qhth Form Ieanne Kunball Carol1ne Iohnson Llbby Austln Mary Anderson Marlorte Amos Ehzabeth Austm Sally Boqan Dale Boqert Ellen Coale Courtney Cook Nancy Drake Mary Eveutt Ie-an Fancy Darlene Foley Nancy Fox Martha Harbrecht Marcella Harrrnqton 10 0 Pres1dent V1ce Presldent Secretary Treasurer Peqqy Hoyt Ianet lnqrarn Carolrne Iohnson Ieanne Ktrnball lane Loeb Constance Love Ioy McPherr1n Peqa1e Maq1e Mary O Conor Madellne Shendan Arlee Rue Sherrltt Ioan Stover lean Sulhvan Teasley Webb Dale Boqert ................................... ' - ' . , ' . 5 The GFIHIH The Gnffin IS our year book And rn 1t pass by The Seniors and the Iuniors And girls as small as I There s a picture 1n of every girl And advertisements too We send our contributions in Wrth the hope of pleasing you But there 1S one thing sad about 1t And of that you probably know That when this book 1S flnlshed Out the doors the Seniors go Iulie Lane Vl Form Openlng N1qht An undercurrent of excitement hummed through the crowd Tension was everywhere It was like a high voltage w1re uncovered in the a1r Men in dress suits smokrng cigars or cigarettes were gathered in groups all of them with an expression of anticrpatron or rather one of questionlng antici patlon 1n their manner The buzz of voices droned unceasrngly except for a shrill laugh or voice that would be audible above the noise Wealthy ladies to friends or some of them Just promenadrng A bell cut the a1r wtth its ringing and the audience hurried to thezr seats The conductor walked to his box am1dst a thunder of applause He started stiffly because he was very t1ghtened up from nervousness That loosened up after the orchestra had played a minute or two However the audience were still restless and eager As the footlrghts changed and the curta1n rose there was first a murmur of approval and applause The curtain had risen on opening night on Broadway Libby Austin VIII Form lce Skatmq The lake has frozen overnight The 1ce 1S smooth and milky white Skaters shouting cheery words Skim across the ice l1ke birds Flashes of color flylng by Silhouetted against the sky There s many a tumble but never a care Skating along ln the cold brisk air They skate so swiftly there s only a flash Then turning pivot and off they dash As twilight comes and gone is all light They leave the1r gay sport disappear in the night M L Harbrecht VIII Form 0 106 displayed beautiful gowns, wraps, and jewels while walking around, talking C Tomahawk Clatter crash bang' Down the starrs tumbled lane wrth War palnt and feathers Her brother was dorng hrs best to scalp her wlth a tomahawk Iane whrsked behrnd her mother s sk1rts Just as he came rnto the hall Mrs Peters was qurte shaken by the ferocrty of her young daughter I declare I thmk we shall have to he you two up unt1l you become c1v1l1zed agaln sard she Wrth a mrghty a1r lane swept from behmd her declarrng she was no coward she d show h1m Iust you wa1t trll tonrght after you go to bed and Ill come and scalp you That nrght when everyone was asleep Iane took the tomahawk and wrth a stealthy tread crept to her brothers room She opened the door wrthout a sound and crept 1nto the room lust then outsrde the wmdow she saw a ladder be1ng rarsed Down she went on all fours wa1t1ng for the excrtement that was sure to come A man crept rn to the room bent over the dresser as rf he were lookrng for somethrng Swrtt as an arrow lane flew at h1m tomahawk rarsed to scare h1m Then wharnl At the polrce statron the next day the mspector gave lane a medal for her bravery rn catchmg an ex convlct Nowl am told the tomahawk 1S rn a glass case rn lane s room Peggy Bradley VII Form My Fore1gn Doll The dolls are srttmg on a chalr One 1S dark and one IS farr The hrst one has a happy look Lrke doll1es IH a prcture book But Oh how lovely and how sad Is the one that came from Trrrudad ulre Lane VI Forrr Groblmtown Gobhns l1ve m Goblrntown Thats the funmest place l know All the houses are upsrde dovm The goblms burld them so All the streets rn Gobhntown Dont run anywhere They seem to go round and round But the Gobllns dont care There s so much fun rn Goblrntown A crrcus every mght You cant make goblms go to school Iust to read and wrrte Do you want to go to Goblmtown? There rs Just one way Let your mother tuck you 1nto bed And sleep the nrght away Paula Fleer, VII Form 01070 , . There was a heavy thud. lane breathlessly stood up. - 1 -I ' , .. Enqllsh Daddy and I played golf one day durmg our three day stop 1n Stratforcl on Avon We drove up to the clubhouse and made arrangements to rent clubs I was naturally curlous to see what an Englrsh golf club would be llke The f1rst th1ng I was strangely lmpressed by was the Way the grass was cut I.1ttle groups of sheep were grazmg 1dly all over the course and munch1ng grass very nonchalantly I drdn t thmk they d bother me and so set off 1D h1gh hopes that I mrght break one hundred 1n mne holes After the frrst frve holes I was angry After the seventh I was seethrng and by the n1nthI was popp1ng Those horrld sheep They got rn my way at prac t1cally every shot FITSI one stood over my ball whlle I looked through under brush huntlng for 1t Then one baa baad r1ght beh1nd me wh1le I was dr1v1ng I was so scared I gave the ball a terr1f1c sl1ce On the n1nth hole how ever I got my revenge I h1t one of my Woolly frrends r1ght 1n the stomach w1th my ball It Jumped and I felt f1ne I d1dnt break one hundred though On return1ng to the clubhouse Daddy and I met an elderly Enghshman who asked us to partake 1n a glass of sherry Daddy d1d wh1le I sat th1nk1ng what a typ1cal Englrsh gentleman he was I even plctured h1m dr1v1ng up 1n a carrlage We sa1d goodbye and got 1nto the car I hoped to see h1m enter a carrrage or at least a b1g black tourrng car w1th a chauffeur To my great drsappomtment he walked over to a blcycle lean1ng agamst a tree and casually pedaled off Ah me what queer hab1ts and what queer grasscutters these Engllsh have L1bby Austm VIII Form October October 1S a month of Joy The sun shmes overhead Leaves are falhng from the trees Brown yellow and red The geese have started southward And wmters on the way But who w1ll thmk of w1nter On such a gorgeous day? In October one sees bonf1res All along the street Rakmg the leaves 15 not much fun But burn1ng them s a treat October IS such a glorlous month W1th IIS colored leaves and zest I really 11ke all the months, But October IS the best Carol McHenry, VII Form OlO80 1 . 1 . 1 . . - 1 . , ' , . . . . . 1 - 1 1 1 ' i 1 1 1 , . 1 . 1 1 . 1 Back Row Mowry Flezschman Hoover Grlmm Helmold Bradley Wxckman Bryant Callahan Front Row Rlqley Gousha Fleer 'Thomas Mclnms McHenry Robmson Eddy be venth Form Lorayne Hoover Pres1dent Marxe Helmold Vlce Presldent Paula Fleer Secretary Barbara Thomas Treasurer Peqqy Ann Bradley Barbara Eddy Paula Fleer Ieanne Gousha Marqaret Grxrnm Mane Helmold VIIQIHIG Mowry Shlrley lean Bobmson Marv Patr1c1a Brpley OlO O Bermece Fle1schmann Lorayne Hoover Bobs Thomas Mary Mclnn1s Carol McHenry PeQC5Y W1CkIIlGH ROb1H Bryant Anne Callahan .J The Storm It was past m1dn1ght and stmll the storm contmued All through the day lt had raged and sent 1ts torrents on 1nto the nlght The hghtmng flashed wlth a bnlhance that dehed the sun Dark threaten 1ng clouds hld the moon from all eyes That br1ght yellow d1sk was not to be seen thrs ntght Masslve thunder clouds roared out the1r challenge The heavens rocked wtth the resoundmg of the blasts The Wlnd trumpeted 1ts mtght and procla1med to all 1lS undylng power Its sound echoed and reechoed down the canyon wtth a hollow ghost hke r1ng Ram lashed agamst the trees and bent them w1th tts force Small broolclets were now rmghty nvers Even the boldest were not abroad tonrght The bear the powerful hunter of the forest was 1n h1s cozy den huddled back 1n the farthest corner the Ilmld deer 1n a sheltered glade 1n the densest part of the wood was alert and wh1te eyed w1th fear ready to bound away at a mmute s not1ce The t1n1er creatures were all 1n some safe place for the mght content to go wxthout food rather than brave the danger by go1ng out 1nto the gale of death Margaret Gnmm VII Form The Insects Ball Have you ever been to the Insects Ball? They have one every year They hold 1t under the hollow stump When the moon 1S br1ght and clear Str Walkmg Sttck and Lady Bug Were walklng hand 1n hand Twelve cnckets and a katy d1d Made up the handsome band MISS qulto and loe Horse fly Came out from the slums Ioe runs a horse p1tal down there Hts pattents are mostly bums Mrster Beetle and Iune bug Also came to dance lane A.ph1d and Black Ant Soon began to prance Margare Mernck VI Form My Thoughts I telt so very sad today, I don't know why I was that way, Maybe 1t's because I stayed at home And d1dn't go outs1de to roam Louise Grulee, V Form 01100 . 4 ' ' I . . . . - 1 1 I I - . . 1 . . . , . 1 'T' 1 I 1 . . lr ll - T . An Unusual May Day When I awoke last May Day the mood I was 1n corresponded beaut1fully w1th the weather wh1ch was exceedxngly bad espectally for May Day I was Jn bed and had been for nearly a week hav1ng been starved on a l1qu1d d1et all that t1me Also I had a temperature of 102 degrees WhlCh doesnt often promote happtness It had been stormmg all n1ght and was very wet outdoors another cause for my unreasonable mood I love to be outdoors rn storms When the morn1ng paper was brought up I started plowtng through rt hav 1ng entxrely too much t1me on my hands On the last page was an arttcle about an 1ncornpleted bulldmg wh1ch had been struck by hghtmng three trmes and had caught f1re every ttme I was m1ldly surpr1sed and felt a vague ptty tor the owners of the house Then came the doctor chang1ng thts mood of black fury to one of gray gloom Mother asked htm to come up agam 1n the afternoon at about 4 I5 Just before she left for the Kentucky Derby races For lunch I had noodle soup wh1ch put to fl1ght all the fury and gloom of the mornmg By and by Ann our mard came up to read to me The Story of Stegfrted Ann suddenly stopped read1ng Someone was scream1ng mothers name down beneath the wmdow None of us could 1mag1ne what was wrong s Ann and mother went to the w1ndow and saw the lrttle Swedtsh laundres dancmg frenztedly around on our front door step Mother gathered from her screams that somebody s house was on f1re She opened my door leadmg to the hall 1ntend1ng to call the f1re department A th1ck black strflmg wall of smoke rose up rn front of her She slammed the door shoutlng to Ann to get me out of bed I was already out Ann seelng th1s tore 1nto my closet draggmg down a lot of sweaters and dresses trymg to fmd a wrap for me to put on Then mother called from the other end of the room and Ann left me The room was full of smoke by th1s t1me for though one door lead1ng to the hall was closed the other was not The smoke and heat swept 1n from there I sllpped tnto my bedroom sl1ppers and an old blue corduroy Jacket went over my n1ghtgown We were all choklng I doubly so because of my sore throat and the thermometer wh1ch I stxll had Jn my mouth I took 1t out and la1d 1t on the bureau Then I grabbed a small box of Jewels and made for the wmdow nearest a small balcony over the front door Ann turned hopelessly around at that mlnute and saw me openlng the w1n dow across the room She rushed over to help me the curta1ns comtng down over both of us addlng to the almost unbearable suffocatton by smoke I glanced behmd me to see 1f mother was followrng and then holdmg the Jewel box between my teeth I guessed at where the balcony should be and Jumped The smoke was so th1ck we couldnt see anythmg I caught the balcony and began to cl1mb down by means of the brrcks around the front door I had done 1t before so tt was not hard for me though I was conslder ably weakened from sxckness and lack of food 01110 1 1 1 f 1 . - 1 - 1 1 1 1 ' , . . , . . . 11 - 1 1 1 . . 11 . . 1 - , O . . . H O 1 . . ' 1 1 - 1 1 ' 1 - ' 1 1 1 1 . , . 1 , . . - 1 ' 1 - 1 , . 1 1 1 . 1 . . 1 1 ' I reached ground and looked up Ann was hang1ng on the balcony She saw mother was comlng so she cl1mbed down two steps and then dropped Just as mother 1umped from the wmdow Mother was down 1n a second hav 1ng been qu1te an athlete when about my age We were all three coughlng vlolently and Hose the Swed1sh laundress knew I was 1Il So mutter1ng Oh 1ts turrh1bul' 1n a th1ck Swedlsh accent she hurr1ed me over to the Talleys house and p1led me 1nto bed Then s e rushed out agam I got up and went to the w1ndow The f1re trucks were all 1n front of our house and the f1remen were squlrtlng water over and 1nto the house When the f1re was out they chopped the walls down to be sure there was no h1dden spark left The doctor came a few mmutes later and was amazed at the way th1ngs had changed He stood and gazed for a moment and then hear1ng we were at the Talleys he came over He found that the ra1n smoke heat and exclte ment hadnt kllled me by any means I was qu1te ready for anyth1ng He took I was back at school w1th1n two days Also never agaln was I vague 1n the p1ty I felt for people whose homes burned down lean Marlon Fancy Form V A Mad Mood I w1sh I had a dog I do To tear my stock1ng and to drag my shoe To bark and brte and chew the rug Id love hlrn more the Worse he d tug LOUISE Grulee V Form My Dog I have a l1ttle dog and h1s name IS D1ck And he 1S full of cute llttle tr1cks He ll run and play all the day Then I flnd hlm asleep 1n the hay Then I QIVG hun a great b1g bone And off he scampers to eat alone One of h1s tr1cks 15 to stand on h1s head And then I say L1ttle doqQY play dead He tumbles down and l1es very st1l1 And really looks as 1f he were 1ll Then I glve hlrn a k1SS and say Have a good sleep 1n the sweet smelhng hay And that IS the end of a very lovely day Helen Rodger, VI Form 0 l 12 0 1 I - ' ' ' ' . h I ' I I - my temperature ...... it had gone down from 102 degrees to normal! -A ' ' , III I T ' 1 I ,, . ,, I ,, . . .. Back Ro Nock St Nart Merrick Lane Laid Ed Jards Grulee Claus r' Scheunernann Frost Evans r 1tRol Rodqer Rasn us age Althx k 1' 'Nia ln Kmqht Zrs Sixth Form Flrst Semester Virginia Russell President Sue Buckley Vice President Nancy Nock Treasurer losephine Alther Sue Buckley Anamary Evans Patsy Ann Harbre ht Laverne Knight luhe Lane Barbara Mayo Marqaret Merrick Wayne Nash Second Semester Iosephine Alther President Patsy Ann Harbrecht V1cePresrdent lud th Peake Treasurer Nancy Nock Iudy Peake Geraldine Rasmussen Helen Rodger Virginia Russell lean Unander Scharrn Carol Scheunemann Iulre Zischke Fifth Form Frrst Semester Louise Grulee Pres1de t Suzanne Edwards Vice Pres dent Barbara Frost Secretary Margaret Laird Treasure Barbara Ann Boqan loan Clausen Suzanne Edwards Barbara Frost Second Semester Barbara Boqan President Suzanne Edwards Vice President Sally Stewart Secretary Louise Grulee Treasurer Louise Grulee Margaret Io Lalrd Sally Stewart 01130 1 w: , e' , ' ', , r , v , , se ., , , ', F or 'fi , t .sen Russel, Pe ' , .e , Buc le' , 1 s ., ' , chke, Iosephine Alther ........ Secretary Virqinia Russell ......... Secretary V I' ' r ' ....... c Spnnq Sprlnq IS the lovellest t1me of the year When the sn w drops walfe and cheer And the v1olets open wxde the1r sleepy eyes And the bla round sun shlnes warrn and clear The gentle breeze lrtts the wmter leaves And Crocus and narclssus st1r IH the1r beds The sllvery brook Wlth 1ts unkly tune Lulls the new born pussy w1llow Oh what a Joyful tlme IS the sprlng of the year' lean Unander Scharln VI Form Dawn The sky was plnk tn expectatlon of the connnq ot the sun The stars had faded far away the1r nlqhtly work was done A sparklmq dew descended upon a sleeplnq world And k1ssed the scented flowers the1r waxen leaves unfurled A blrd 1n the pmk and wh1te blossoms ot the apple tree Chlrped a mormna qreetrnq and sanq a sonq to me Then o er the bulk the sun arose 1n IIS rnalestlc way Bnqht as a ruby lt procla1med the comlnq ofthe day M L I-Iarbrecht VIII Form March When the world IS all a blowy And the w1nd IS on the hum And the rob1ns are a tw1tter1nq We know that March has come All the boys are sa1l1nq krtes And the q1rls are Jurnplnq rope Crocuses are peepmq up And spnnq has come we hope Iulle Lane VI Form Shadows 1n the Nlght When mother turns off my hqht And says good mqht Shadows come 1nto my room Some l1ke qobllns Some hke w1tches on a broom I watch them flymq round the wall Some so fat and some so tall Then they march around my bed T1ll I nod my sleepy head Susle Evans Ill Form 01140 . o- I 5 1 1 1 1 . -T A I I I I n n n 1 I 'W-Q I . 1 . . 1 1 . 'W I . . 1 , . I Tn I The Informal Entertatners Along a d1rty street 1n Havana Cuba our car sped lt really wasnt our car but one that had been arranged for on the Conte Grande wh1ch we were tak 1ng on a South Amerlcan crulse My srster and brother were rn the back seat w1th me whrle Mother and Father were rn the front We had lust stopped at a llttle shop where my mother had bought us some rhumbas two balls on sttcks that mark tlme to the rhythm when shaken Now as we drove through the streets of one of the suburbs Mother notrced a ltttle shop whrch she thought mterestmg She told Dad to stop the car as she wanted to see 1f she could f1nd anyth1ng to brlng her frlends at home Father sald 1t looked very lnterestmg too and would love to go w1th her There we were s1tt1ng 1n the car w1th noth1ng to do We were 1nterested for a whrle 1n the peddlers shout1ng at the1r lung tops to attract people to buy therr wares Women were hobbllng through the street w1th baskets on thetr heads or on thelr arms Here and there were lrttle clusters of women gosslp 1ng Perhaps a certam nerghbors husband had gotten a ralse for rollmg an extra amount of clgars tn the factory After a whlle we became very bored watchmg the people and the scenery Then my S1SlGf had a brlght 1dea' What about playlng w1th the rhumbas 1n the bag? As we had never played them before we could not understand why they wouldnt stop rattl1ng when we wanted them to As soon as we brought out the rhumbas a group of men who were loafmg near by suddenly waked up and started to draw near the car We were frrghtened and wrshed there were some pollce around so we could then ask them to help us The men drew nearer and nearer unt1l one flnally asked us 1f we could let hrm play on our rhumbas We were surpnsed that he could talk Enghsh but w1th fear gave hrrn the mstruments When he started to shake them the men began s1ng1ng After a whrle a man w1th a gultar came up and accompamed them Never had we heard s1ng1ng that we thought was so beautlful It rang through the dlrty street and made tt seem llke heaven No more could we hear the callmg of peddlers because the mus1c drowned 1t out When Mother and Dad heard the musrc they came out to see what 1t was all about They about falnted There gathered around the car were about hfteen Mexxcans s1ng1ng After the crowd had gone away and we had started on our way nobody sa1d a word except Dad who was scoldrng us for not commg rnto the shop and tel11ng h1m about the serenaders But not one of us heard a word We were thmkmg of how lovely 1t had been whlle rt lasted Mary Patr1c1a Rxpley VII Form Flowers Flowers g1ve honey to the bees And gtve beauty to the trees Some flowers are blue None of them gray They Just s1t and blow all day Bobsle Frost V Form 01150 . . 1 f I ' I 1 1 1 1 1 - , . l .. . . . 1 . . 1 . - 1 . . , L' 1 1 'N' 1 A Trlp to the Desert We left CGIIO by auto and drove to the edge of the desert wlth our Shetk There we saw l1ned up many camels and donkeys We mounted camels our .uhe1k had a donkey My camel s name was Queen V1ctor1a Torn s was Love ly N1ce Mother s was Darsy We rode across the Desert unttl we came to the Pyram1ds of G1zeh On the way Tom s camel was contlnually bawllng at htm and opemng h1S ugly mouth and showlng h1S long yellow teeth We v1s1ted the Sphmx and the temple of the Sphlnx and had our p1ctures taken Wllh the Pyramtds for a background Mountlng our camels aga1n we rode four m1les over the Desert to our camp whrch was prepared for us There were several camp tents w1th plctures appllqued on them 1n brlght colors The tents were beaut1fully furnxshed w1th or1ental rugs spread on the sand Beautlful ltnens and s1lver were on our table and beS1d9S our She1k we had a cook and a handy man We had tea at seven o clock After tea when we went outs1de our tent we saw a m1rage of a large pool of water At 8 15 we sat down to a very elabor ate seven course d1nner It was as follows soup sausage Wllh stuffed toma toes and marrow lamb chops wfth peas and carrots chlcken w1th l1ver k1d neys and str1ng beans salad and tomatoes and beets custard and peaches agarn Our Shelk clapped h1s hands and cr1ed Allah Allah and from the dark ness outsrde appeared f1ve or1ental dancers Wllh weu-d p1p9S and drums One dancer was a genmus who could do wonderful 1m1tat1ons The best one was that of mak1ng hunself bhnd After the entertalnment we went outslde to vlew the Pyram1ds by moonllght It was a Slqhl we shall never forget We went to our tents and slept soundly on our cots whlch had prllows so hard we thought they were ftlled wlth sand Our Shelk slept on an or1ental rug outslde the d1n1ng room door The desert was lovely at mght and very cool and towards morn1ng the desert dew fell and everythlng felt motst when we woke up After a hearty breakfast we returned to CGIIO by camels ludy Peake VI Form The Model T Sput sput spatter f1SS pop' The model T comes to a stop She grunts and gurgles coughs and d1es Send1ng back stuff mto our eyes Halfanhour and she starts at last As a brand new car goes speedlng past Its gomg sxxty lrn sure 1t 1S It seems to laugh at poor old LIZ But the Joke 1S on the car brand new When the copper yells Pull over youll' Mane Helmold VII Form 01160 . , , . . . : ' : ' ' ' , ' - ' : 2 : coffee, nuts, and fruit. We sat back from the table thinking we could never eat 1 I ' T I I l I h I ' I I ' ' 1 I I II ll '-' I I Autumn Autumn is a lovely lady In her dress so brxght But her beautrful colors Vamsh slowly from our slght Autumn IS a lovely lady That srngs a beautrful song We are sad that she must leave us Ere so very long Autumn IS a lovely lady lack Frost and Mr Wrnd are cruel They drrve her from her leafy home Wrth weather sharp and cool Robm Mary Bryant VII Form A Day W1th the Gypsles One brrght mornrng two summers past we saw the QYDSIGS We had often seen camps of QYDSIGS up at the crossroads They came every summer tall dark men scowhng women laughmg chrldren screammg bables and bark mg dogs Thrs was drfferent There was only one farnrly of gyps1es two sons and the father cmd mother The sons were both full grown Over 1n the grove where we hked to play on hot summer days because tall old trees kept out the sun and made It cool and across the creek they were camped And rt was there that we went They had erected a large canvas tent sorled by the weather and showmg long use The gypsy woman rn her gay b1l1ow1ng sk1rt squatted on her heels rn front of a large caldron hangrng above an open frreplace cook1ng break fast The men were lounglng around under the tent wartrng for therr fare They were tall dark and mysterrous lookrng wrth neatly waxed mustaches The sons were easy to drstrngursh because of the older man s appearance of authorrty The father was recl1n1ng on a prle of prllows wlth a srlken Coverlet thrown over h1m The sons were sprawled out on blankets In varrous parts of the tent were artrcles of cloth1ng beddmg and cook1ng utensrls We ventured nearer and nearer and at last we were talkrng easlly to the gyps1es The old woman asked us 1f we could carry water Of course we said we could Almost before we knew rt we found ourselves at the pump f1ll1ng the canvas buckets All the way back the water kept sloppmq out untrl we were as wet as the water we were carrylng On the tr1p back to the camp w proudly told people who asked that we were carryrng water for the gyps1es We found the gypsy woman fascrnatxng She talked rn a mysterrous way soft and pleasant to the ear That nrght when we told our parents we were forbrdden to go near the gyps1es agam Wrth dragglng feet we shuffled out to play Margaret Grrmm VII Form 01170 1 1 1 ' 1 . . 1 1 . 1 1 1 ' . . , 1 1 1 ' 1 1 I - , . . . . 1 , . . 9 11 . . 11 , . ' 1 , 1 - 1 '42 , It I I Back Row OConnor l.arson rcxson Sreqer Lrndop Turnbull Snerrrtt Hansmann Munns Lrzars Front Row Nock lyer Shrader Ellrs Meyers Schann Grrer Flowers SECOND FORM Suzanne Ellrs Ann Flowers Rachel Grrer Mary McNeal Madelerne Meyers Palrrcra Meyers Evan Ann OConnor Suzanne Shrader Lours Unander Scharrn pak THIRD FORM Susle Evans leanne Hansrnann Eva Myra Larson Henrretia Llzars l-larr1et McNeal Gertrude Munns Georqene Nock Phoebe Steaer FOURTH FORM loan Ann Becker Anne Boscow Vrrgrnra Croxson Betty lane Llndop loanne lanes Evaro lean Shentt Elsa Turnbul The Circus The circus is coming to town With a jolly old clown, With lions and tigers and elephants, too, And balloons of red, yellow and blue. Soon it will be here, The town's full of cheer, Then bands will march round and round, They ll make such a roaring sound Phoebe Steger I Fo rn The Little Qld l-louse The little old house sits on a hill And everything round it is quiet and still The broken old panes in the window bare Have a forlorn look as they sit there The little old root is most broken through But the doves sit on it and coo and coo There s an old black cat who sleeps on an eave And it really seems like he never will leave Suzanne Edwards V Form Thoughts Thoughts can wander anywhere To the woodland far away Or to a fairy castle great Then to a calm cool lake My thoughts do wander far each day But they are with me when l play Ioan Clausen V Form The Cocoanut Henrietta Lizars brought a big cocoanut to school that she got in Florida ment and took turns trying to open it After awhile it got too difficult for us even Miss Ashley tried to open it but didnt succeed Finally we sent one of the girls to call Birger He took a saw and split the cocoanut down the middle Then he took a screwdriver and broke it He took the big pieces of fiber off then we came to the cocoanut itself The fiber was three inches thick We took the cocoanut into the wash tub and drilled a hole in the monkey s face Some Juice came out Finally we cracked the cocoanut in two The meat inside was a quarter of an inch thick Everybody in the pri mary school had a piece of Henriettas lovely cocoanut Gertrude Munns lll Form Qll9O ee , ll r We all looked at it and were anxious to open it. We went down in the base- The Zephyr The Zephyr is speeding along. The wheels singing a loud song. It goes so very quick and fast You see it a minute then it s past It goes by l1ke a sxlver flash W1th a hum and a tr1ghten1ng dash I love to Watch 1t go1ng by It goes so fast I wonder why? Ieanne Hansmann III Form Falhnq Snow I..1ttle snowflakes wh1rl1ng round Over roofs and over ground L1ttle b1ts of stlver lace Falhng Wllh a fa1ry grace Wh1rl1ng wh1rl1ng through the n1ght What a lovely lovely Slqht Gertrude Munns III Form Ram 111 W1nter The ra1ndrops freeze as they fall They leave a cover ot 1C9 over all See the cars go Cfeeplnq by When 1t 1snt sl1ck they seem to fly Rachel Gner Il Form My Dolls Blrthday Today 1S my dolls buthday She has one every month Today she IS e1ght months old She 1S hav1ng a cake Wlfh some candles She got some presents for her b1rthday My s1ster gave her a book It 1S named Betty and Dolly Mary McNeal II Form A Surprlse One day daddy brought home a surpr1se It was a httle book It was Just an 1nch tall I hked 1t very much Daddy sa1d 1t was the story of Abraham Lxncoln I laughed and sald Daddy a book l1ke th1s to tell such a b1q story Eavan O Connor II Form Ltndy and Dandy are dogs They love mlce and they love to play They love meat and they run all over the garden I chase them around the garden and play w1th them Ol1velynn Gad I Form Our dog IS a g1rl dog Its name IS Syb1l We have some rabb1ts and one IS Wh1te and one 1S gray The gray one IS a boy rabb1t Hxs name IS Pop Eye The whtte rabb1t IS Betty Boop Betty Boop IS gomg to have some lrttle baby ICIbb1lS Fa1th Ward I Form 0 120 1 1 , . 1 1 , . 1 - 1 1 1 , . ... I 1 . . 1 1 . . 1 1 W- 1 I 1 . 1 . . . . 1 . 11 11 'W 1 - . . 11 . . . 11 . , , . 1 'q 1 - 1 W 1 Back Row F DeVrxes Ayars All n Wynne Burnstan Gall Dxck Helmold Ward Marchant Front Row Clausen I DeVrx s Tannenberq Hall Burnstan De Moe Flowers Rolllson . 5, - - - 1 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 1 Z 1 - .9 1 1 1 1 1 , . FIRST FORM Alex Burnstan Arthur Burnstan Dana Brown Ellen De Moe Ioanne De Vr1es Stephan Edwards Paula Flowers Dxeter Tannenberq 121 KINDERGARTEN V1rq1n1a Allen Ahce Ayars Mary Catherme Clausen Florlssa De Vr1es Rowena D1ClC Ohvelyn Gall Nancy Hall Eumce Helrnold L1ll1an Marchanl Carrey Rollxson Farth Ward Ellen Wynne The Chrlstmas Tree Oh Chrlstmas Tree Oh Chnstmas Tree You brlng us Joy 1n every toy And when you do the bables coo And when you d1e the bables cry Oh thank you Chrlstmas Tree Eumce Helmold I Form Snowy Day The wmd 1S cold and the ground IS wh1te The snow has been fallmg all through the n1ght But llttle seeds sleepmg under the snow Do not feel the cold wmd blow Ann Flowers II Form My Teddy Bear loves to play and he loves to v1s1t me He Walks up the stalrs and down thlnktng He always loves fat and he always IS hungry Sometxmes he goes out on snowy days and he always does sh1ver He IS worn out L1ly Marchant I Form I have a doll When my b1rthday came Grandma gave me a dress for her and a hat and I thought 1t was a dress for me Her eyes are brown and so are mme I got her for Chnstmas Flor1ssa DeVr1es I Form A Blrthday Party for h1m 1f she can hnd the book she wants Patr1c1a gave h1m a lollxpop It was l1cor1ce I should l1ke to QIVG htm a blue t1e Madele1ne Meyers II Form A Tea Party I somet1mes glve my dolls a tea party I use my llttle dlshes Mother lets me have some cook1es for the party I have to set the dolls on the table because I do not have any chalrs btg enough for them Madeleme Meyers II Form The Carclmal When I was commg to school today A card1naI was smgmg a song so gay He looked so hC1pDY and gay and br1ght I thmk he IS glad 1t snowed last nlght Louls Unander Scharm II Form Iust th1s mornmg I was gettlng ready for school and my mommy satd I would be late I hurrled and stuffed my clothes on me and ran out Was she surprtsedl Ioanne De Vr1es Kmdergarten O 122 Our daddy's birthday is tomorrow. Our mother says she will buy a book O Thls IS Statlon R S Vox Pop How do you do ladres and gentlemen of the radlo audrence' Th1s IS your prxze news pup Peeker Plnchall brmgrng you 1nt1mate gl1mpses of the year S news Latest news bulletrn' Greatest fraud and most colossal collusron of century exposed Two senxors tr1p abroad for Mlle s beneht and the French Class s entertamment a fake' Aunt Ienny says When you buy to fry TY Spry' Flash' Landon elected by overwhelrnmg maJor1ty 1n R S 96 to 12 Ctncludmg facultyl Extra bulletm on above-R S 1nv1tes Marne and Vermont to meetmg of 1l'1l9ll1Q9I'1l m1nor1ty to torrn mutual adrn1rat1on socrety It you hnd yourself a mooner for a crooner Try Peruna And now for an 1nt1mate keyhole ghmpse' The faculty headed by our own Rebecca Sherman IS contemplat1ng the customary sprmg s1t down off the- wmdow s1lls strrke Outrageous says the proctor Wonderful says the doctor But really Mlss Ashley chewlng IS good for the gums Flash' Our Presldent has packed the R S G A Court wrth a new group of supreme Judges' Says Pres1dent H G tquotel Thrs step 1S necessary to save our system of dernocratrc government by for and of the pup1ls from revolutron Lrttle grrls have pep lrke Skrppy Guaranteed not to make you hlppy And truly makes your flgure Sp1ffY lust try our Wheatles they are prppy' And now a l1ttle human mterest' A l1ttle brrd told me that Upper School was expect1ng-and sure enough e1ghteen blessed events were presented to the sen1or assembly on February l hold on here s a late report on result ot Baby Day serrous coll1s1on of bench and trrcycle rn hands of hrt and run drrver on corner of Upper Hall and Statrway' Plea from faculty Please motorlsts drlve carefully and save our chlldren' Out of gas or o1l'P Dont iurne and borl Standard O11 products W1ll cease your turmorl' News' Sweet and hot oft the grxddle The press and radlo are 1ssu1ng a plea to Vox Pop Where 1S another -Iarrret Beecher Stowe? Another great ernanc1pator'? Do we need revolutxon or war to free the senrors from slavery? O 124 ll - . A . n I I ' 1 , I l T n. . . . n u ' ' - n ' I ll . ll I I I I We don't wish to mock her, r I I I . 1 ll , . I 11 . n . I ll . I I I ' O Says baby Pete If you cant eat Oranges or meat Try Cream of Wheat It cant be beat Flash' A new clue has been dlscovered that the Plnkerton Detect1ve Agency hopes may lead to the decodlng of Mlle s outllnes' Latest news bulletln' The Blue Leglon whlch has been terrorlzmg certa1n Evanston homes ln the last month has been captured and 1dent1f1ed as none other than the usual S A M C fSen1or Antl Men Clubl Are your hanas Whxte and bland Or rough and tan? Try Remlngton Rand pardon me Iergen s Lotron Well sorry folks butl see my tlme IS up so untll th1s tlme next year cheer1o and lotlons of love your news pup Peeker Plnchall s1gn1ng off' Frances Webb XII Form Man s Best Frlend, the Toothbrush IADOIOQIGS to Robert Benchleyl Now lets see oh yes' The toothbrush' Today women and men Cwe wrll deal w1th the common layman? we come to the subJect ot the tooth brush whlch has long been a brlstle 1n my mmd From that French quotatlon We may gtve advrce but cannot 1nsp1re the conduct I launch my cam palgn In deahng wrth the toothbrush we must use a certa1n amount of IIHGSSG As grandpa found out ln a current play You cant take It w1th you Well maybe you can take rt wlth you but you cant take 1t back For thus reason I strongly adv1se the havlng of two ot the aforesa1d 1n the cab1net However no part1al1ty must be shown as a melancholta often sets tn w1th one commonly known as deyected or soggy brlstle There has always been the unsolved mystery as to a mans toothbrush mamly the tmdmg upon wendlng one s way sleeplly to the bathroom the flrst thlng 1n the mormng a wet toothbrush' Some say 1t s the hum1d1ty For th1s I recommend a stnng not around the fmger Just through the loop at the end of the brush If th1s doesnt work use some one else s' Color' Yes color holds a fast place on the toothbrush The weaker sex runs to pastels aprlcot baby blue dusty rose whlle we men CI was elevated to that pos1t1on 1n my last CLI'l1Cl9l have the more brutal hues blood red carnellan hellotrope KNO? You obJect to the IIGIIOIIODGTI But th1s theory IS reckless' The color has a v1v1d lnfluence on the mlnd well on the head and can make or break your day' Start out yes' start out IH the mormng wlth a blank color yes thats rlght wh1te or black and work up to the 1nv1gorat1ng cllmax by noon A l1ttle too much orush1ng'P Well 1t takes a lot of practlce It thas doesnt work Just send me twenty IIVG cents along w1th your character tNo madam' I dont want you Just a wrltten analystsl and Ill see what I can do-on twenty f1V9 cents' I see Im neanng the end of my paper so Ill leave you w1th your brushes and the slogan Two brrstles ln the hand are worth two IH the tooth Helen Gambnll XII Form O 125 1 1 ' 1 1 . 1 . . 11 1 11 . 1 - . 11 11 . . 1 1 . 1 . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' ' 1 1 I 1 1 , . . . . , . . , I . 1 - 1 11 . . . . 11 1 1 ' . . 11 1 . . '11 . , . . . 1 . . 1 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 1 . . . 1 1 . 1 . . . . . 1 . 1 . . . . ' , . 1 1 , . . . . . , - 1 1 1 1 . , , . '-4 , ' . . . . 1 1 . 1 - ' 1 1 , . 1 . . 1 . 1 . ' 1 ' 1 . . 1 ' 1 - 1 . . . 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 I 11 - 1 . 11 'i 1 In Days to Come When your husband IS surprlsed by your great mformatlon Say From Mrs Preston I learned all creat1on If to the R1tz he asks you dramatlcally Remember Mtss Cox and answer grammattcally When books are mtxed and budgets spent Recall Mrs Hlnd who would never relent When arr1v1ng 1n Par1s here s to your luck In spoutmg French garly l1ke Mlle Buck And rf over and over your ambrtrons soar Remember the faculty of dear old Roycemore Laura Wmston IX Form DQWH by the Iordan CAn Excerpt from my Complete ENGI..Er J Day was slowly shppmg through the s1lken REEDS as I stepped 1nto the STERN of my rowboat A few stlcky WEBBS had encased the oars stnce my last V1S1l BUTZ they merely herghtened my drstaste for my audactous adven ture I had apparently netther the WILLNER the way Allow1ng the boat to BENTLEY ward and my feet to STRALE through the lappmg lake I dectded to V1S1l the lower reg1ons though 1t be to HELEN back At the door of the mky lnferno a SCHNERING BUTLER w1th a false a1r of a CONRAD ushered me 1nto the room of tortures There I saw a gtrl wlth MARIE face pushtng an APPLE TON up a hrll In another corner a poor tnmate w1th a bad leg I thrnk they called 1t CAGNEY was BETTY1ng that the NOBLE soul had a hopeless task Havmg suffered an excruc1at1ng enterprxse I made for home and ouR EMYd1ate world Helen Gambrzll XII Form The purpose of th1s test 1S to dtscover your read1ng vocabulary Underlme e word most l1ke the word appearrng 1n boldface type lane stood on a hummock SWIHQ song w1thout words game b1rd He went off on a tangent blcycle butlt for two fru1t l1ke-an orange Caesar proclarmed a v1ctory proxrmrty Queen of England Henry waved the sabre wooden shoe ur An old bonnet was rn the trunk shackle candy ma1d. The horse was caught w1th a lcxsso young g1rl East Indran sarlor They ha1led a hcmsom young Apollo game b1rd He had a hrgh tempercxtuxe Knrght d1spos1t1on rashness There were yams on the platter oxen small boats preserves He saw the Colosseum shepherd dog young horse statue Eleanor Grant XI Form O 126 th ' ' ' : 4. . - f . 5. ' . ' 7. ' . - ' . 9. . . IO. . . C Best dresser Best bluffer Largest appetrte Most procrastrnatmg Most absentmrnded Best announcer Best cr1t1c Best chauffeur Best athlete Best actress W1tt1est Best srnger Most frank Most graceful Most amus1ng Most charrmng Most spontaneous Best dancer Class backbone Best grggler Teacher s pet Asks the most questrons Best drsposrtron Most sparklrng Most sophrstrcated Most narve STATlSTlCS 1936 IQ37 Freshmen Sophomores O Brren Bowes O Brren Freeman Bowes Bowes McCloud Delaney Powers Whlte Brown Lowrey l-le1lman Amend Freeman Parkhrll Guman Guman l-lu ted Lowrey Schutter Walter Porter Iohnson McCloud Freeman Lowrey I-lerlrnan WlUSlOH Bowes Delaney Mercer l-larrrson Brazrer Val MacNe1lle M9S1Ck Brshop Roberts Garrrson Var Var P1r1e Iohnson Clayton Clayton McBr1de Hubachek Iohnson Roberts Val Hubachek Val McNe1lle Gambrlll Brshop P1r1e Brshop Hubachek Mes1ck Wrlltarns Bermmgham Garrrson Iumors ee gaudy lacobs Lowrey Iacobs Ladd Fab1an Keller Best Fablan Donaldson Fablan Iacobs Paulson Russell lones Orr Fabran Iacobs ee Ladd Van Deusen Fab1an Grant Gaudy Orr ee Orr ROYCEMORE GIRL Helen Gambnll 127 Semors Bentley Remy Webb Ullrlch Butler Webb Garnbrtll Butler Schnerlng Schnerlng Appleton Appleton Iordan Butz Bentley Webb Conrad Engel Bentley Gambrlll Engel Garnbrlll Butler Iordan Ullrlch Remy Strale Rmy ' ' ' L nl f'! .1 . .1 . . Most dignified Cashel Garrison Russell Stern ,I v . L 11 ' ' ' ' ' L O Freshman Most Charmmq Sophomore Athlete Freshman Best Stnqer Fre hman Best Actres 120 Iun1or Athlete Sophomore Best Srnaer Freshman Backbone Sophomore Best Actress . 5' . 6. ' Sophomore Backbone 7. Freshman Athlete s s 8. 8 Semor Best Actress Semor Best Smqer Boycemore Glrl 129 Semor Most Chormmq Iumor Backbone Semor Athlete , 5' . t Iunior Best Actress 6. Iunior Most Charming . . 7' . . 8' . O Flood CFISIS Comes to a Bo1l Flood of reports whlch began to seep through early 1n September breaks over D1ke of Cptrrmsm Havoc and Rum pervade safest ctty 1n world All but Gambnll rescued Went down standmg on desk rn Room V w1th these last words Qu1d pro quo? D1sappo1ntment relgns as all make desperate attemp to se1ze cherlshed possesslons D1ff1culty 1n explammg to M1nott and Cox that no room on coast guard cutter for all of New England Patr1ot1c touch g1ven by MCKSHZIG and flags whlch were planted 1n helm as gu1d1ng force Noble and Preston clash 1n effort to port pun club Noble- And where the offense l1es let the great axe fall Preston Its all 1n a day s pun' Dramatlc mtenslty 1n the person of El1nor RICG gave vent to an outburst of tears as she rec1ted twtth gesturesl The Boy Stood on the Burnmg Deck Sc1ent1st Howe attempt1ng to use method of electrolysls to overcome flooded area became confused Do you recognrze the hydrogen sulphxde SGHIOTS? Flash' Has Cupxd struck h1s dart? Loulse Hagerty seen walkmg on B Deck W1th Companton of Vergrl Kohlsaat 1nfluenced by two well known ftgures Let s str1ke our h1gh seas' Sprague and soft bo1led eggs meet d1saster tn galley Ashley I have two words thts mornmg Debt and Redebt Can any one tell me what they come from? Lapham UNPAID TELEPHONE BILLS Ashley tasldel Thank you Edxthl Helen Gambnll XII Form The Dog W1th the Gloomy Eyes Huddled rn the square where the w1nd blew raw W1th a droop1ng ear and a trernblmg paw He was nothrng more than a l1ttle lost cur, That cute l1ttle dog Wlth the shaggy fur He would QIVG a sn1ff to the passerbys The qua1nt l1ttle pup Wllh the gloomy eyes My heartstrmgs were torn as I watched h1m there On that frosty morn 1n the m1ddle of the square Then all at once I l1fted h1m up There was no one so gay as that small lost pup He wagged h1s tall and he l1cked my face And of the shaggy cur there wasnt a trace Now he shares my room and he owns my bed And he farrly shouts when he hears my tread When thmgs go wrong and I m not so wrse He s always there to meet me w1th h1s gloomy eyes Ioan Mercer IX Form O 130 O - 1 . l 11 . 11 . . . . 1 . l . .R . 1 1 . 11 1 . 11 11 1 . 1 11 . 1 V 11 . 11 1 11 . . . 11 1 - 1 ' . 11 . . 11 . . I 11 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 . . 11 . . 11 5 11 11 . . 11 . 11 . , . '-' 1 Q 1 1 1 1 1 1 , . 1 1 1 1 . 1 . 1 1 1 . 1 Sllence As a ch1ld I was brought up on the rdea that sxlence was rn general a mute ness Bas1cally thls may be true but here are a few observatlons Tune 6 OO A M Place Under a p1llow Chrcago and Grove Evanston yawned to the tune of two newspaper boys who retreated as no1s1ly Slow rumbllng as from earthquake knock knocked the heat from the radlators and some thoughts from my head Moaned 1nto unconsclousness from the rhythmrc expansxon of the floor-and dreamed of The quret retreat of the mov1e last mght that pause that refreshes how she must have emoyed the gum so rnce that the mother had talked sonny 1nto a state of numbness teeth ached from Jaw crackmg 1n front wonder whether g1r1 fmally gxggled truth from h1m-good p1cture HICS CPD scenes gun reports loud and d1stxnct scream1ng IeGl1Sl1C T1me 6 10 A M Place Half under p1llow Ch1CGqO and Grove Due to breakage only three alarms Shfleked thts mormng Too bad Iodle beat me to the bathtub must be gettrng clean wonder how she made Glee Club buses all honktng on schedule famlly downstaxrs golng duck hunt mg so he says-good hockey weather mce SIIII breeze Just blew oft the Lake and my papers Tlme 630 A M Place Dark rn room Chtcago and Grove I now s1t pen porsed 1n hand two empty pleces of paper and a word runmng through my head Sllencel Helen Gambnll XII Form To a Wee Brown Ant CW1th apolog1es to Burnsl Oh wee brown ant Now buslly scuttl1ng along I ve often wondered what you do From dusk t1ll dawn Do you qu1etly rest amld the so1l Or 1S rt a fact That you never cease your to1I Unt1l you re curled up dead In a stdewalk crack? Frances Webb XII Form I 131 0 - . , , . . , . 1 - 1 , . . , . , . I 4- . , . 1 1 .1 I 1 1 1 1 . 1 i I 1 Yrs ow tz Butz Qtem Rees Ir or U Venn Austm V cw n G ofvrey cter cwrey Ftve our se 2 usted nz GG D 0 132 A f I 1tR :Bu. ,.. . ', cd., QIrzch'f . .. Second RCW: Clayton Ptrxe. Lcwrey, Van Deusex. Truck 1936, ..1Id R ' 1 Cc I d. C ' , 'W I . I. . jf. 5. Lcx-.'z,y H . B't Ullrzci O The Magazine Stand Town and Country B ycemore s advantages Iudqe The Senrors Voque Freshman s reports Good Housekeeptnq Brrqer Physrcal Culture Hrermre Amerrca and Everybody s My pencrls Punch At the Prom Metropolttan Cooley s Companton Nancy McCloud and Dot Amend Arnerrcan Boy Iohn Heath Esqurre lean Whtte House Beautrtul Mtss Cox s apartment Look Freshman grades Ttme Exams Betty and PGQQY Maqle IX and VIII Forms What Would the SGHIOFS Do rf Betty stopped rn tlme the prayer to mumble or ceased to over every doorstep stumble? rt Bobs and Mrtzre ever aqreed on handlmq the Bed Feather treasury? rf Mademorselle ever an outllne drew that drd what outlmes ouqht to do? rf when the sh1v rtnq Sentors a wrndow carefully shut Mrs Noble d1dn t on schedule open tt up? lf B1ll1e rust once came to school wlthout matched color scheme and oh those shoes' rf Helen d1dn t ev ry exam clarm she d tarled and then a pleasant 96 or so shed na1l'? rt Pussy wrth exhausted mews drdnt announce athlettc dues? rf Mrss Mrnott aqam Eureka satd when tn alqeora Remy used her head? rt the whole Sentor class acqurred some dlf-ZIIIIY out that s 'to fun so dont be trnrclcy Frances Webb XII Form 0 133 11 A 1 U 11 , 11 1 . 11 . . 11 . . . 1 11 . 11 . 11 1 . 11 . 11 . 11 . . 11 . 1 11 . 11 'Y 1 1 1 . 1 1 . . . 1 . 1 1 . , . 1 1 ' , . 1 . 1 . 9 1 . . 1 1 . . , , 11 11 , . v 1 1 1 . . A , . '- 1 Name Never Wxthout Edlth Mane fEd1eD Appleton loan floanlel Bentley Mary lane fWOOZ19l Butler MIIZIG fM1tzl Butz L1pst1ck A Worry Sales talk Charactensuc Expressxon By crackyl Boop No but I thought Red Feather Treasury Rosemary tRos1el Caqney lane flanlel Conrad Kathleen tPussyl Dow B1ll1e tSyb1D Engel Srmle Mltzre Come on you krds Mlle Je n a1 pas frm Really' Pay your 50cl Color scheme Helen fDeedeel Gambrrll Cecll fCecl Iordan Barbara tBobsl Remy Barbara fB1bSl Schnermq Qurck comeback Her work done Whlte shoes ar Nancy CNannyl Stern MGTQaret fPeQl Strale Symphony trckets Dont talk to me' I knowl flunkecl' Dont forget Glee Club Phooey to hun' Im through Hmm hmm' Drd I tell you about the dream I had? Algebra conference Betty lBetsJ Ullrrch Frances fFrann1el Webb An appetxte An excuse Sylv1a tS1lIyJ Wrllner Homework done Long dlstance aqam' Shut up and srt downl It was a ho ot' Take a f1t' Dorothy fDotl Reed Polse Mrs Noble A hank1e I 134 Uh huh' My 1t s stuffy here Y 'Y ' V -W7iDYYiY? Vn --W! vnlnwig- Y- - - ------- I-HV W .ll. . . . . . . . . . . . . WWW NY I ....... Y Zyl ...... .... iSDYHVWY1Cfi.......Yf.iQY.iY.Y..V V W W nn Y Y I - MY- - . . - . . . H , WZ?-V . . . I I W ir ....V.HIYD.Vfn.. V Y YY Zrmllrr , I H. ... ... I I ' .... .. CH' I -agen... I nnausna uvvunnnnnu ll nllnann nnuu nancy'-any rn ii? snows- I lu -4nn'nn-u-..n. ull -llqanunq.-ap. I I YYY 'WY qqnnun nan. --nj snu. 'I I allpounnauino W --YYY Y I uun. 2' Wi 7.7 n.... II 7 ir W all uuunun a - v 47 iii' Y Y YY 6 Y Bnuws sr a n 1 1 Y 'ini n - A-IY'YV?YYi Y Y2YYV 776,575 ir Win -K VY Yrwrrir 'Yi-1ri' iYiiiiiVYfViV nanaaaw ll Yrnrrrrrkirrrl .A -I Wirivi V762 -DCC-Y I 'V I .CA . . . . .. ..... .. I . .I llnlil' I .....H I .H........... ? ---gYY1 v-iiiiir M WH 77777 .Y. . .H A4 l 1 -V I ......... l ....VSY......IlmAY l H.... I .... YYY YY Y ...n.BBl...Y.Y...-:I Y --Y Y ' .H....YeY.n.-... . I l ....... Y......Tl --g..H,...--....... .. .... ..... . -.......... ...... H ' .H............ .... . ............... ............. , ...,,, , , I Favorlte POSSESSIOH Besethnq Sm Pei Peeve O ' Q C 0 YC1 C'.'Z-' ,'Jfg'4 . fin-'IIC .-.'Z'If':v .-.fjju 130 1 dj-an Motion Pictures of the Day Star Reporter starring Helen Gambrill. More Than a Secretary starring Miss Sprague. Black Legion starring Student Government Board. The Plot Thickens starring Geometry Class. We Who Are About to Die starring Roycemore students before exam tnations The B1g House stamng Roycemore Charge of the Light Brigade starring Sentors leav1ng morning assembly Mad Holiday starr1ng Roycemore g1rls on any vacation Come and Get It starring the lunchroom Make Way for a Lady starrtng Miss Ashley Big Broadcast of 1937 starring the Senior speeches Back to Nature starring the Locker Room Triple Feature Love on the Run Tarzan Escapes starring Birger Go West Young Man Walta Iohnson X Form Algebra In algebra I work with numbers That grace my dreams and haunt my slumbers I turn and twtst them every way And labor with them every day Problems that have triple digits Always give me nervous fidgets Ratios and factors have no attractions Grasping the text wtth an 1ron grlp I say to the problems none of your lip An a1r that IS blunt and a steely gllnt Somehow will not awe that coefficient Dorothy Amend IX Form Something About Which I Know Nothing There are many would be authors who would do well to call their efforts Something About Which I Know Nothing Perhaps that IS why I use this title for my effort' lt s hard for me to decide whether to wrtte something about which I know nothing or to write noth1ng about wh1ch I really should know something or to write someth1ng about someth1ng about wh1ch I know too much However I have decided that tt s safer for me to write something about which I know noth1ng than to say too much about someth1ng about which I should say noth1ng To place yourself tn the pos1t1on of saying someth1ng about which you know less than nothing makes it possible to continue with a clear conscience but having said someth1ng about wh1ch you should say noth1ng you have put yourself in a posttion from wh1ch tt ts hard to extrxcate yourself All of wh1ch is simply to tell you dont say something about which you know something but should say nothing or m other words shut up' Kathryn Keller XI Form 0 137 , , , , , . , . , . ll I ll W fl n I I -' 1 I As the exponent of simpler fractions, I W' I 1 F- I . ' u 'X 3 r ' I -, . , I . ' I O , Ln ' 'nib' 17 1? tif? 1 -X5 rx fi Sill- 6-if fn,-I -'cia uf. v, !-aj ug! A I fr, .4 nlrr ,rv - A my 'fn P 4 fe 1 x , I f p : X nw 'fri' , , ., .gy 111' I gm x-'f -'L 3 iii 'iii A ji, Wfsfi ' 1539 11,235 V1.5 ' f'-'Pl ' mm fagr, I 5525? aka . ya, Rm., I wil , IAQ , :V 51.131 .gg ' gi... ., iff? f . '.. .,Z -7 if !': Y f ' Q f A K V 5 1 . , , , , 5 , ' ss 'Qs 'fi .,. 521: .ifff ' R V',t'Q. 15253 3414, Effilz-I' , 957.1 MQ-E' PQ: N lfxm, un , f , rw - .sz ' gall' 4 - its ua., Mig iff? ' Q i V E . .1 l :YK ' 1,19 5 ag: z is'-.Q e ' ' - . ' 1.5. v , , . , . H 4 'Q r W.: 1 ' : ,155 , I Mg 1 :lim , A ' ' 5 nf-'-': '-, figs j ACU: 59,-. , , . 1 A ' lilac' , 9' i ' C A- hy- ,- ,- W K H, ,ML w . 15 .fa - r-Y- V ' P:-fh yy A Tffflr 1 RWE! TflLrf4 U In Aibip f' M'v '3p C ,234 KA f- 'CX yn, 'K 1211 ' --HZ:-r , 'v-Hz: i f ' -1-we, ' f A E - ...hfyl SLP 1 E A 1,1 1 P Y , f , i . A Sonnet to Carlos The lights were playing softly on my hair, Two soulful eyes gazed lov1ngly at space No gaze wrth whrch the sptder fllled h1s la1r But that whrch melted France spread o er my face Too bad I thought that rn the t1mes to come I could not be the1r tnsplratron then For certalnly thls pxcture would to some Lack pass1on Whlch they tmltate tn pen A short three days and then I would be sure That I was all I thought and even more How strange I never found thxs deep allure And realrzed how much I had tn store But then I saw the plece that held my fate- The proof that I would never be so great Helen Gambrlll XII Form A1nt Nature Grand Ah' Nature' Nature' I pondered long on Wordsworth s poems and thought how much he appreclated nature aye much more than books He sa1d you could learn from nature and rt was an ever present pleasure Well' What Wordsworth could do I could do I would learn to apprectate nature too- I would drscard my heavy books full of dee eep thoughts and throw myself to the mercy of mother earth At the crack of dawn I cranked my fltvver and started for the Wlde open spaces There was a lovely drrzzle that dampened my spxrrts but not to be daunted I thought Thls IS Nature-and I love 1tl It took me half an hour to conv1nce myself that I loved 1t and by that trme I had reached somethtng that w1th a very v1v1d 1mag1nat1on mrght have been a forest Namely three trees that resembled telephone poles a bramble bush and some wet spongy grass Ath the beautrful woods' crted I Nature rn all her glory' I took a deep breath of fresh atr but the w1nd was blowrng the wrong way Smgmg the latest song h1t In the Sprmg the beaut1ful sprmg I stooped over to see 1f I could see some shy lrttle bluebell peaklng through the slush but not one could I flnd rt bemg March and lookmg as 1f the only plants that grew there were rank weeds I-low beautrful 1t all rs' I sa1d to myself as I looked up at the bare trees that were absolutely srck wrth the yellow plaque One of them looked as 1f 1t were tted rn knots The ra1n the beautlful mspmng ra1n kept fallmg and drenchtng me I loved the way 1t felt Somehow 1t msprred me to h1gher thoughts and I longed to wnte a poem Later I got hungry and was annoyed to fmd that I had forqotten my lunch Ah f1e' sa1d I Why do I need lunch? I wlll dunk m the beaut1es of nature and consume the glortes of these woods Th1s I proceeded to do the result bemg I got so hungry from lack of nour1shment that I became hysterrcal I was found wearmg a frxed happy gr1n and repeatmg Am t Nature Grand? I have s1nce become a devout book worm Ed1th Mar1e Appleton XII Form 0 139 1 1 . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 T 1 1 T , . , . . 1 11 1 1 . 11 I , 1 ' 1 1 , . 11 . 11 . 11 1 11 , . . . , . . 11 . . 1 ll 1 1 1 1 11 . . . 11 . 11 . 11 . 11 . . . . , . . . . 11 . ' 1 1 . . . 11 - 1 11 1 1 - .. - , ..- 'nw . uf RH-.. H.':.:1.1f. zffzz. YQ Webs. Rauch Mffjlzud. Emssurc, ' ' ' ' W K'1 k 1051111 Kem. Tilfd F ,'.'2 F1'Z'IfZ'1Qd. .5.77.'H i, p '4' JH O 140 zdirx. ,A,,I1f,, 1Y..',,,Q.. L., 4 , ,, -, Ifn Croise I 2. 3 H -1' B Y g I Honzontal Wednesday they Indefrmte pronoun to the Masculrne Srnq the Island arena rot Iol sheepl oqre to be born Fern srnq Past part pond pool Plural badly to ce born Dast part rnasc about a thousand future of to qo You srna pron un o Je t :xi bd Vertlcal lamb for or be ause street God he personal pronoun Io rnarry aqed a a law r a ctrrne rna t a III have rny Ie'n Baroara Schnerrnq XII F rrn Sylvra LOIS Wzllner XII Forrn 0I4I0 I I I I 3-'T if 9 3l I I I .. ' 33 0 I '43, I . I 3 5' 96 7 I , I 'ff I fl I3 ' '- I 1 I I 57 I . I I. . ' ' 2. In . ' ' . 4. C ' 5. 7. 8. , f 3 I5. . . you, srna. personal pron. I7. hitter . . ' . . 24. , . 32. b II 33. o 'o ' ' .. . V . . 38. . I 43. h If . 48. . . ' . o lo' CQ 49. . . I.. stnft. Les Pensees d une Ieune F1lle de Roycemore -Iaxmerals ttre 7cppclnn Et flottcr I1 lnut dams le clel e mangerans tant que je xcux Des gateaux des crtpcs et du mxel Je mangerals toutes les bonnes choses ue jzume et personne ne dxra uavec mon appetxt feroce Je deuendran tres grosse ou grasse Fabian XI Form Mon Deslr O xf summer would only come je suns fatxgue de lhner I want to feel the vsarmmg sun Et vonr les mxlle jolxes fleurs The harbor wxll awake once more Wxll crulse and race along the shore e serax heureuse de nouveau Vlrgeema Van Deusen XI Form La Meme sempare de la France Toc' toc' U1 est la? ean uel Jean? e ne sans pas Toc' toc un est la? Marne uelle Marne? Marncz mon Toe' toc' U1 est la? Pnerre uel Pnerrea Pnerre quu roule amasse pas mousse Toc' toc' U1 est la? Mere uelle mere? Mercl beaucoup Jull Fabxan XI Form 0 142 f a J . V . V Q ., . . Q , . , I Jan ' , Les petites barques et grands bateaux I ' - . I Q ' '. Q ' '. J . Q . Q ' - J ' . ' ' n' . . I . . Q '. Q ' . . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1...-..1......1..1 1 1 1 1 .1 1 1 1 1..1..1,.1,.1 ROYCEMORE Twenty-third Year Opens September I6 1937 KINDERGARTEN THROUGH HIGH SCHOOL COLLEGE PREPARATORY AND GENERAL COURSE INCLUDING ART DRAMATICS MUSIC AND PHYSICAL TRAINING if Wffi REBECCA SHERMAN ASHLEY Prmclpul MRS KEITH PRESTON Assocmte Prmc1pc1I E V A N S T O N 640 Lmcoln Street Phone UDIVGISIIY 5790 O 144 I ' W O win.-.nl ,iniuqin-.uu1n1ll1up1n..-...QUQ..1u-n-.n1..1.q1ni..1..-I .1n..n- will As ok c v o '4nv.0 Identifying Pure Oil Service Stations in Evanston and all alonq the North Shore the Pure Oil Seal stands as a symbol of Efficient Service and Ouality Products BE SURE WITH PURE ASK THE MAN WARREN BUCKLEY WHS EDWIN C AUSTIN OWNS CHARLES R DONALDSON ONE THE IUNIORS O l 45 ll ll I O I I I I I I I I I I I l'l'l Say It With Flowers lCi-ll.ING'3 FLOWERS 1511 Sherman Avenue EVANSTON T 1 h 0920 THE GROVE STREET BUILD1NG A W STERN COMPLIMENTS PHARMACY Paper Box Company 3401 West Dunsxon Street CHICAGO ILLINOIS '1' . gm -In E 'U I S3 S 1 . el I Q I . A A . mm I If I 2 I I I I ' I I I . I I : I I 4....-..-..-.........................-..-.......................-..-..-.. .. 146 .-.--4. I I I I I I I I I I I I I -ru n-..-..-.n1ao11.1-.1..1...-......1 1 -.1'::.:-,Qu mL :zz nl: 1.-n,.::Y.: .T PHONES UNIV. 2656-2657 Established 1880 Geo. C. Weiland 6 Sons Member of Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association 602 Davis Sine! EVANSTON. ILL. FROM A FATHER A CLEAN UNIFORM IS THE ORDER OF TI-IE DAY. MAY WE OFFER OUR SERV- ICES? SAME DAY SERVICE IF DESIRED X301-TLNNQ I LLAGE LEANER 1152 Ce irul A Wllm lt 360 O qi G 441 Estabhshed 1895 BOOKS CLASS ROOM NEEDS TYPEWRITERS FOUNTAIN PENS SPORTING GOODS GIFTS and STATIONERY CHANDLER S O 147 n vo.. o e Wil 1718 rrin on Avo.. Evanston ro 7 fOrrinqton Hotel! O O O O O O I O ..... I : I ! School days arehappydays l When you come to Cooleys Cupboards Inc ORRINGTON NORTH OF DAVIS CHICAGO SOUTH OF DAVIS AIN EAST OF CHICAG EVANSTON ILLINOIS Alxcla Pratt We Examine Eyes By the New Analyttcal Method The ANALYTICAL METHOD of GXQHIIHIHCJ eyes rs a new dtaqnostxc procedure devel oped by the Graduate CIIUIC Foundatlon of Optometry through the cooperatron of the worlds leadmq optometrtc practrtroners physrctsts cmd educators It elxmrnates the guesswork and mdefmtteness often found ID older systems of refractron The ANALYTI CAL METHOD msures true ocular COM FORT rn all tts phases w1th or wrthout ard of lenses Glasses may be the one thmq you may not need Former methods frequently were qutlty of prescrtbmg lenses unnecessarlly and only by the newer scxen txfrc ANALYTICAL DIAGNOSIS can thus condition be truly revealed I I I r I 1 - I I ! 1 1 M , O I I l I l I - - l I . . I A ' 1 I ' ii. . ? . . 1 I ' I 2 Eleanor G. Counselman rt Isyaifferenu Ask us about ia. I I . I ' ' . ' ' or I . . . I ' s zo 2 :Q - ' ' 4 3' :nent +.-..- . ..--- . -. 4. 0 CONSULTANT Concernmq Correct COATS OF ARMS CIGARETTE CASES COMPACTS I 148 We have tnstalled complete modern equtp ment necessary to carry out the ANALYTI CAL TECHNIQUE The charge for thts sctenttlmc eye survey IS very nommal We mvrte your case f consultatron Hattstrorn 6. Sanders Optometnsts and Optxcrans 702 CHURCH STREET EVANSTON Phone Umverslty IB48 Hour 8 QC 5 'O Efemnas by App rn' flsix 'uint 3:7--::+a:fc:' : :Y 1:7::f: :: SIGNING OFF THE SENIORS Mlss Iessle L Pococks School of Dancmg BALLET CHARACTER d TAP SOCIAL DANCING BALLROOM DEPORTMENT EVENING FORTNIGHTLIES cl ASSEMBLIES 8 O EVANSTON ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS li oss cnuncn smear EvANs'roN..1u.mons l ART !5S3'LZ'SP'252'E A U T H O R I Z E D UNITED DU PONT AUTO SIMONIZING MOTORS REFINISHING STATION SERVICE TOWING UHIVGTSILY Garage One Stop Service GREENLEAF 4600 1 612 Clncago Avenue Evanston 0 149 I I I C Classes in , , cm on R lerences required 1 enter all classes o e ll I ll COne Door North of Dcxvis StreetI I I 4. .....-..-..-.......-..............-.......-.......-..,1... zz.-.i:.. -1 - 2- Cz.: .+ O . ., ., .. , ., .. .. .. ., ., .. ,. ,, ,, -, Wal., H W ,, ,, ., ., W7 is : :: ::+ : f: 1 1 - - - - -.r 1 WILLIAM FARICY KATHARINE LORD'S STUDIO CLASSES IN ART FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN 614 Davis St. Gre. 1035 COMPLIMENTS OF F E Foster 6. Company Frances Heffernan WALLACE M I L L E R PHOTO ENGRAVERS 466 West Supenor St Phone Supenor 7440 C H I C A G O O 150 CO. .,. ,LI I Z I Hi ,-: L- I -Lx L... ,I O ici: :: 1 : : : A - - - , -7 - 1 . . . . . , 1 .- .. 1 1. 1u1..-...-...il...-,.1n.- dllzfersnulhs Uetvelers OTTi71gt07l- N11Ot81 QUYISTOYL IOHN I. MUNNS WERNER'S BOOKSTORE INC 176 North M1ch1qc1r1 Ave CHICAGO ILLINOIS WHERE DO WE GO? TO THE Villa Demefre 1657 Sherldan Road WILMETTE ILLINOIS NO MAN S LAND BETWEEN WILMETTE AND KENILWORTH Where dehcrous barbecue Chrckeh cmd Other Scmdwlches are served Wr11 I meet you rn the he-c1utx1u1 Spczfush Vrllc after schoo1 the dance or the theatre? GOOD EATS and PROMPT SERVICE 151 1 u 1 0 1 f 1 , . 7.1 .1..-...1........-..1......1..1..1..1......i..1..1..1..1..-......--1.-1....,.1..1....... J- :neieo1n.1n1.n--uisn1oo1ou-n..-n1I-1n.1 .- -Q 1 1n-n-..u--n1n1n1.p1g--n.-...-...- The Everett Resort -:mul-af mo EAGLE RIVER WISCONSIN bm colony hat shop 1640 ornngton avenue MCIDCIQ' 01' evqngion MUMM PRINT OP I PRINTERS TO PARTICULAR PEOPLE ELSIE THAL SPORTS THINGS DAYTIME CLOTHES COSTUME ACCESSORIES Office and Plant Located at 1033 35 Umversxty Place WINNI'.'1'KA ILLINOIS EVANSTON Phones Greenleaf 6900 8901 4.11 kngvsliil'- I?gm BEST WISHES I of the WARDROBE TRUNKS PACKING TRUNKS OVERNIGHT CASES HAT 6 SHOE BOXES WARDROBE CASES GLADSTONE BAGS ZIPPER BAGS BILL FOLD CONT RACTING AND MATERIAL COMPANY WILLIAM P CAGNEY Pres1der1t Kaehler s Luggage Shop 1421 Sherman Ave EVANSTON Tel Umv 5637 P cz e Tru k c1ndC 0 152 T' I I I , as 3 I I Y l L f s H . N c . 1 I ! E I . . g - . ! I -. I 1 - R 1 - ,,u -A ! .. ... ! . 1 ' 1 Nl QI -' Ig, I ea cccccctt ? lllli ' i Iii... i ! ! ! I i . I ' ' 5 l . i ! . I 1 l - We re air and refinish all m k s of n s uses. O 31-Y u W ,Y W- H -V N - N ,, Y... - 1... 1 1 , . , ., 1 :A , ni I. I. BROSSARD F. B. HUBACHEK I H. WINSTON I. R. BROWN ' I L. PORTER C M WYNNE ROYCEMORE STUDENTS SHOP AT THE CO OP Q I Typewnters ISBELL s Remed Repcnred Sold STEAK DINNERS CALLGM600 COOP Htl dq The Home of Charcoal Broiled Bl e Rxbb FACILITIES PGH LUN CHEONS-PARTIES ORDER Flowers lor Every Occas o FROM BHIDFEQ AND SHOWERD 590 Dwersey Parkway For Reservaho s Call G acelcnd 0066 In WILMEYTE 4400 235 Rxdqe Road ed T 1 0 153 is - Chicc o's Most Celebrated Restuu cmt . I ' u ' on ln the Orrinqton oe Bl . i ' n r Free Park' q GREENLEAF 4480 Wilmet!e's Bond .e eqrcph Florists 4. .-..-...............-..-..-.. ....- ..-......-..-..- -..-..- ...........-..-...... ..!. O -1 :L 1 1 .- in-inuim-ppQ COMPLIMENTS OF American Colortype Company CHICAGO AND NEW YORK Cottage Mard Ice Cream Co EVANSTON Every flavor meets wlth Favor the fl k t ge THE RED FEATHER CLUB IOHN C BEST 154 O Birds of a fea r oc o ther O ll l ll 1: :: Yz: gf: 7:1 :: ::-,::,:,, 1 1 : Y :: ,zrf :min-qnlnfnrf' nw: ,zin- O 4. ....,-..-..-..-,....-..-..-..-......-......-..- .....-.- -,-.- - - .. ....-..-. 4. EDWARD I. DOYLE E W BRADLEY QL-5 LIN N F MCBRIDE IEROME P BOWES GEORGE B EVERITT CLARENCE T Mc1cNEILLE Qgw O O I -.iu1n..n....n1up1nuiuu1 1 g-- .i:u.1n1-: ni 1 5--Y -. 1: , , 2,31 :W gg 3 - : H. Kornblith COMPLIMENTS OF iw Iarnes Guinan 324 South Michigan Avenue 7 La Salle Street CHICAGO IU- LONDON S FLORIST SPASMODIC Isnt the wealth you have acqulred ent1tled to as competent and contmuous management as the busmess that produced rt? Doesnt 1t deserve more than spasmodlc attentton more than casual scraps of t1me'P Then why not let us make an efhctent sc1ent1f1c full ttme Job of 1t qrve 1t the benetlt of mdependent thorough research the con t1nuous attentlon ot spectallsts the unbrased Judqrnent of experl enced counsellors? Sharlnq the expense w1th a larqe qroup ot other substant1al 1n vestors makes the cost to any one account qulte nomrnal rn Comparlson w1th results Inqulrles 1nv1ted from those with funds of S100 O00 or more SHERIDAN F ARWELL 6 MORRISON Inc 8 So Mxchxqcm Avenue Chxcaqo INVESTMENT COUNSELLORS O 156 I , . 4 . . 1 . . . 1 4 I ' 1 I ' I . , . I 1 o n 1 THE CRADLE 2045 Ihdqe Ave Evanston Telephone Greenleaf 5800 Serves a delxcxous buffet luncheon 175273 dally except Sundays and holldays Also drsplays and sells exquxsxte layettes at low pnces Why not combme cz v1s1t to thrs umque and mterestmq nursery wnh a quiet homehke luncheon party or an asy delxqhtful selectxon of just the rlqht gxft for the new baby? AMPLE PARKING SPACE Easy to love- THE SOPHOMORES COMPLIMENTS McBr1de Animal Hospital The Pehfe Shop INVITES YOU TO SEE THE NEW Ch1C Cottons Dehghtful Dresses Clever Coats Fasclnatmg Forrnals In Slzes ll to 17 Second Floor L D S of EVANSTON for Qualify 15 +1 n1......,1..-...p1u1n1...-..1..-..1..1..1...1.gi-n1n1..1.,l..i..1 .1 ... -. 1n1n1u ? Nuff'- Q 5 U llo.I CAI! nm, uuumr: mc: mu, Q L2 24 TEBIIAPLANE 'fel . fr BUTLER MOTORS. INC. rAc'ronY msmmurons or HUDSONS and TERRAPLANES SOUTH SHORE BRANCH zsoo s MICHIGAN Avnmn: BROADWAY BRANCH 7722 Slo y Island Ave Ph e V try 7600 0 B dwuy thSh 730 CHICAGO gb 115050 W Cpl THE COIFFURE 1618 Chic qo A e e cmsion COMPLIMENTS 6070 OF A F R 1 E N D North Shore Tcxlkmg Machxne Co The North Sh Ce 712 Church Street E ans! Illx 0 158 n . on ico 505 roa Phone Sou ore O Phone Lon ecxc ith om iments of a v nu Ev Univ. 1 ore Music mer v ou. 'nois 1-2 11 11 14:1 1: 11 1: :1 A 1 ,::,1,:: 1: 1:11-11 11:1-:1--1 1:1 11-11 1:-1: Q rnpfxf- r -o1n---nf-1--f- -A r n-'Y --1--ga: -:iz 1211- H S an-ue--an FRESHIES Engineers cmd Surveyors EST 1886 E1merLClcusen Prscilneas Clausen 6. Company STRUCTURAL HYDRAULIC MUNICIPAL G E O B WIN T E R ENGINEERS LAND SURVEYORS Buxlders Buxldmq Randolph 5215 6 NELSON 525 Dm sl Evanston LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING sYsn:M 1012 H Davn Street Evanston ll44 Central Ave Wllmette 44 years of Laundermq and Dry Cleanmq Ser me to those who recoqmze and demand 387 Roger Wllharns Ave Ravuua the fmest quahty CALL Umveruty 0422 0423 0112 0 159 INC. ' ' ' ' v' ' .I 4. 1 1 11 1 1 111 1 1111, 1111- 1 1 1 1 1 1, 1 1 1 1 1 4, O KOOPMAN-ROBINSON-NEUMER, INC. advertising artists photographers advertising and merchandising c o u n s e 1 o r s SOUTH GREEN STREET CHICAGO MONROE 3144 Compliments Lester Zimmerman READY MADE CUSTOM MADE Formal Inton-nal BAILEY S INC RIDING APPAREL SADDLERY Fo Men Women Boys G rls I Chu ch St n Gre 3060 SMART CLOTHES FOR TOWN AND COUNTRY WEAR 2544 Green Bay Road EVUHSIOII Du-ectly across from the Northwestern Central Street Station 0 160 HHUIKIIHHIUNI Md1 yPttyA 1 Embroxdered Marqmsette Evenmg Dress FLORENCE EVANSTON RIDING SCHOOL FANCY GROCERIES CHOICE MEATS M O R G A N S 6l6Dcrv1sStreet ty 275 SPIES BROS INC 11 e 1878 MANUFACTURING IEWELERS Ofh ul Ie elers to ROYCEMORE GRADUATES DANCE PROGRAMS FAVORS CHICAGO Z7 E M R d 1ph 9 SOME PUN EH KID? THE PUN CLUB CHRYSLER North Shore HEADQUARTERS BILLREAGAN 1840 Ridge Ave Evanston P L Y M O U T H 01610 ur u 1----1------11--- H- ---- 1... 1 tn-. + o e ed 1:3 cz usiin Pho c by Marsh I Phones: Universi 1 Avenue Glencoe' Wilmette 835-836 Inc 10111 . 1 . Re1ic 1 Since 'ci w I . onroe Street cm 0 414 I O . Ol I .,. ..q.-..-..-.....-..-..-..-.-..-.m-..-.. .... ..-.m-.....-.-.-..m....4 sis - ----1f--w------.- . ------... ..-.. ,P Lee Nelson I E W E L E R Phone Wellington 2718 Opfomefrisf FUNERAL DESIGNS A SPECIALTY 1626 Orrinqton Avenue I A I DIVERSEY PARKWAY Phone Umverslty 046i EVANSTON, ILLINOIS F l o w e r s FOR ALI. OCCASIONS FLOWERS h cl I ohn Pme 588 Dlversey Parkway CHICAGO PORTRAITS FOR GRIFFIN arlos Phofos 942 Spcmlsh Court Wnlmene O 162 Teleqrcxp e Everywhere by 4- ................-,....... .. - - ., ,. -,,-,,-,,,-,,- - --,-- - - -H-N 4. O Some Interesting Facts About TEL. GREENLEAF 2338 THE SELLNER SHOP MERCHANDISE MART DRUG STORE Inc CI-IAS E. MATTHEWS Pres A most mod rn Drug Stcr larq st md p nd nt y owned Druq at r s rn the Norld Area 9200 square fe t Customers served daily between SOOO and 6 U00 Four departments v1z Drugs Tollet rres Crqars Soda Fountarn servrce Employees 75 Store rs located m th ma1n arcade fWells Street Entrance! at the largest merchandrse burldmq IH the world A wholesale crty under one root Store IS Closed evenrnqs Sundays Hall days ard 4 OO P M Sa urdays A stor of charmmq atrrvospn re beau tltully and artrstrcally decorated and completely equxpped Courtesy lnteqrrty qualrty and farr prrces always prevail Desxqners of FUR COATS CLOTH COATS DRESSB Repamng Remodelmg Storage 1720 Sherman Ave Evanston F ranklm Realty Corporatlon 1569 Sherman Avenue Evanston Unw rsr 1 77 CURTISS BABY RUTH PURE AND DELICIOUS NOW 0, RICH IN , wi' DEXTROSE nttillns The Sugar You Need 4: ' 'Wy or Q1 fsxfny M 4 ij ENERGY 3 1 f CURTISS CANDY COMPANY Otto Schnennq President CHICAGO 163 I I ' R el 1 4 l . .i One of the e e e 'e l - 7 o e ' . . , ' . . , 9 - ' . , Q . - , . . . I I . . I . e ' . . e . - ' ' ' . e tr 77 ,gf 3 A 9 X, X t fs I fa V 1: Z ', f 0 ,tu wx W N 'ti I ' .l ul V I 2 ,- . . , --lg , 7 0 2 slhxha 4 Z X -1- - --H ---- - -- ----- - 4- I I IUNIOR AND SENIOR 4-XS3 :Me-il! MO l'rlFRS Fl Uj 0 164 i x x I N X X Q i 1 h Q x Q X F Q Q Daili1lllll1lIlilllll1DlUilli::C-Illlll S ' Iilfillif I 4, ..-. ---- ---- -lv BEST LINE Announces new tour of France and Southern Countmes Consult Webb and Engel Your local dealers Phone Semor Class Roycemore I-'IGURELESS Amazma new advancement 1n drets Free Booklet revealmq secrets of the fleshless world alonq wrth personally autograph ed photo ot me before and after For further mformatron Just phone H Gambrrll and Co noted au thorlty We kly outmq ot Blrd Club for nature lovers conducted every Thursday mqht under the sprces of Bre zy Appleton W1de Open Spaces Corner Lake and Beach Maxrmurn tee Mrmmum pleasure LOST AND FOUND One person answermq to name of Henry Last seen rn v1c1n1ty of Efanston Revxe ff Frnder please Psychopathic Ward ln care Mrs W1ll1am H Noble Senror Assembly Roycemore School 0 165 9 . , ' au- 9 r ' 1 . ' , return to: 4.. ......-.. ....... .-.-.-----..--..-,--.--..--. 4. I +- .-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-.............. - ....- .,. PLEASE PATRONIZE Hlavacek cmd Sons Merchandise Mart Drug Store Cooley's Cupboards, Inc. Frances Hefieman Katherine Lord's Studio Everett Resort Werner s Bookstore Murnm Print Shop nc The Northwestern Co-op Lee Nelson Londons Flower Shop The Cradle Tea Room Elsie Thal The Florence Shop Contracting and Matenal Co North Suburban Sales Inc Iessre Pocock Lord s Ierrems Nelson Laundry Morgan s Lester Zimmerman Isbell s Restaurant Wallace Miller and Company Dlversey Parkway Florist Pharmacy Paper Box Company American Colortype Company Curtis Candy Company Koopman Robinson Neumer Inc OUR ADVERTISERS Pure Oil Compcmy F. E. Foster and Company Evanston Riding School Sellner Shop Butler Motors Sheridan, Morrison and Farwell nc Franklin Realty Corporation Geo B Wmter Inc Carlos Photographs Geo C Wetland and Sons The Colffure Colony Hat Shop Sptes Bros The Cellmi Shop Etchlmg s Flowers Cottage Maid Ice Cream Co McBride Ammal Hospital Kaehler Lock and Trunk Shop University Garage Eleanor G Counselman The Village Cleaners Barley s Inc Evanston Academy of Fine Arts Brockett Cecil Inc Clausen and Company Chandler s Inc North Shore Talking Machine Co Hattstrom and Sanders 166 I . .I . . , . 1 , . I I , ' , , , Villa Demetre O 4... M1ss M1ss M1ss M1ss M le M le M1s M1ss M1ss Mrs M1ss M1ss M1ss M1ss Mrs M1ss Mrs M1ss M1ss Mrs MISS MISS M1ss Mrs M1ss M1ss Mrs M1ss Mrs M1ss M1ss M1ss Mrs FACULTY NAMES AND ADDRESSES 1936 1937 Rebecca Sherman Ashley The Orrmgton Evanston Madr Bacon 653 Elm Street Wlnnetka Mary E Barclay Greenwood Inn Evanston Alma Brrmmgham Hull House Chlcago Mlna Fortln Buck Margarlta Club Evanston Re1ne Marguer1te Cazes Margarrta Club Evanston lean Cox 531 Grove Street Evanston Madele1ne H Eyland 919 Hlnman Avenue Evanston Loulse Hagerty 2310 Marcy Avenue Evanston Dorothy Hmman Hmd 1307 Maple Avenue Evanston Marte Hyermstad Greenwood Inn Evanston Anne Holmes 1906 Lmcoln Street Evanston Emma Holmes 1906 Llncoln Street Evanston Mrldred Holt 2020 Sherman Avenue Evanston Donnell C Howe Lrbrary Plaza Hotel Evanston P B Kohlsaat 124 Glenwood Avenue Hubbard Woods Lulu Langston North Shore Hotel Evanston Ed1th Lapham 309 Davls Street Evanston Iohn G McAll1ster 413 Grove Street Evanston Marlon MCKGHZIG 2209 R1dge Avenue Evanston Nellre R Mlnott Llbrary Plaza Hotel Evanston Franc1s Moore 6639 Krmbark Avenue Ch1cago W1ll1Gm Noble 1621 Rldge Avenue Evanston Florence Nussbaum 1039 Hollywood Avenue Ch1cago Ethel Preston 725 Emerson Street Evanston Ke1th Preston 729 Emerson Street Evanston Ellnor Rrce 2207 Maple Avenue Evanston George Rlchmond The Orrmgton Evanston Natalre Rockman Alpha Gamma Delta House Evanston Clarrssa Srnlth 933 Chlcago Avenue Evanston Mlldred Sprague Ltbrary Plaza Hotel Evanston Thomas E Ward 625 Emerson Street Evanston 0 168 ! - . .... .-... - . .. 1 1 1 1 - 1 1 ' , ' , I , , 1 1 . ' ' , ' , 1 QS . ' 1 1 . , , I . , I . . Y . I I , I l ' I I E . . , I 1 1 ' Catherine H. Hurd, 1139 Lunt Avenue, Chicago 1 f ' i . , , I I , 1 Q . . I 1 1 'l'.-...-U- -. -..-.----.--n ------------- -------.- . NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF ROYCEMORE STUDENTS 1936 1937 Barbara Allen 1242 Asbury Avenue Evanston Vrrqrnra Allen 1100 Ramona Road Wrlmette losephrne Alther 2714 Sher1dan Road Evanston Dorothy Amend 412 Lee Street Evanston Marlorre Amos 831 Ashland Avenue Wrlmette Mary Anderson 2427 Central Park Avenue Evanston Ed1th Mane Appleton 2735 Sher1dan Road Evanston Ellzabeth Austrn 3 Brrar Lane Glencoe Alrce Ayars 1130 Sherrdan Road Evanston loan Ann Becker 2743 Ashland Avenue Wrlmette loan Bentley 2855 Sher1dan Place Evanston lane Bermrnqham 2764 Garrlson Avenue Evanston Patrrcra Best 1270 Asbury Avenue Wrnnetka Sue Brshop 1430 Hlnman Avenue Evanston Iulxa Brssell 811 Montrcello Street Evanston Barbara Boqan 733 Mrlburn Street Evanston Sally Boqan 733 Mllburn Street Evanston Dale Boqert 663 Walden Road Wrnnetka Ann Boscow 344 Washrnqton Street Wrlmette Barbara Bowes 346 Prospect Avenue 1-lrqhland Park Peqqy Ann Bradley The Georglan Evanston Vrrqrnra Brazrer 1086 Elm Rrdqe Drrve Glencoe Kathryn Brossard 1020 Bluff Road Glencoe Dana Brown 810 Forest Avenue Wrlmette MarJor1e Brown 420 Sunset Road Wmnetka Robrn Bryant 2914 Lrncoln Street Evanston Sue Buckley 1500 Asbury Avenue Evanston Alex Burnstan 2014 Orrrnqton Avenue Evanston Arthur Burnstan 2014 Orrrnqton Avenue Evanston Mary lane Butler 200 Lee Street Evanston Mrtzre Butz 317 Hazel Avenue 1-lrqhland Park lane Cashel The Orrrnqton Evanston Rosemary Caqney 1046 Sher1dan Road Evanston Anne Callahan 404 Greenwood Boulevard Evanston Ioan Clausen 610 Mrchrqan Avenue Evanston Mary Cathenne Clausen 818 Clrnton Place Evanston Helen Ruth Clayton 1153 Prne Street Wrnnetka O 169 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Ellen Coale 322 Kenrlworth Avenue Kenrlworth leanne Colborn 2400 Ewrnq Avenue Evanston lane Conrad 1099 Pelham Road W1nnetka Courtney Cook 150 Meadow Lane Wmnetka Eleanor Counselman 1017 Rrdqe Court Evanston Vrrqrnla Croxson 2425 Ploneer Road Evanston Nancy Delaney 834 Valley Road Glencoe Ellen De Moe 315 Davrs Street Evanston Flor1ssa De Vrres 725 Colfax Street Evanston loanne De Vrres 725 Colfax Street Evanston Rowena Dlck 1015 Greenwood Boulevard Evanston Nancy lean Donaldson 1111 Forest Avenue Evanston Kathleen Dow 1236 ludson Avenue Evanston Betty lane Doyle 1035 Starr Road Wmnetka Nancy Drake 1609 Tenth Street Wrlrnette Barbara Eddy 564 Arbor Vrtae Road Wlnnetka Stephen Edwards 2344 Sherrdan Road Evanston Suzanne Edwards 2344 Sherldan Road Evanston Suzanne Ellrs 2878 Sher1dan Place Evanston B11l1e Engel 1005 Sherrdan Road Evanston Anamary Evans 3240 Lake Shore Drrve CDICGQO Susre Evans 3240 Lake Shore Drrve Ch1caqo Mary Ever1tt 60 Locust Road Wlnnetka 1111 Fab1an 1462 Wesley Avenue Evanston Iean Farlcy 1110 Rldqe Avenue Evanston Norma Fancy 1110 Rrdqe Avenue Evanston Dorcas F1tzqerald 12 Ravme Terrace I-llqhland Park Paula Fleer 425 Grove Street Evanston Berenlce Flelschmann The Georqran Evanston Ann Flowers 2047 larv1s Avenue Ch1caqo Paula Flowers 2047 larvrs Avenue Chlcaqo Darlene Foley 1519 Hrnman Avenue Evanston Nancy Fox 626 Warwrck Road Kenrlworth Bennette Freeman 955 Vernon Avenue Wmnetka lean Freeman 955 Vernon Avenue Wlnnetka Barbara Frost The Orrlnqton Evanston Ohvelynn Gall 2215 Orrmqton Avenue Evanston Helen Gambrlll 1426 Ch1cago Avenue Evanston Ioan Gambr111 1426 Chrcaqo Avenue Evanston loy Garrlson 2019 Sherman Avenue Evanston Ieanne Gaudy 927 M1ch1qan Avenue Evanston Ieanne Gousha The Georqlan Evanston Eleanor Grant 2145 Ornnqton Avenue Evanston Rachel Gr1er 1714 Asbury Avenue Evanston Marqaret Gnmm 3240 Lake Shore Drrve Ch1caqo Lourse Grulee 2703 Colfax Street Evanston 0 170 I I I I I I Y I I' I II , , I-I I I I , , I I I I ll I , , 'I I , , , , I II I I. I l I' , , I ' I II I I 4' I l I I II l l II I .I I I II l I , , I I I 'I I 5 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Il I I. I I I ' 'I . I II l I .I I I AI I I .I I I I .Y I I I I I Mar1on Gurnan 417 Abbotsford Road Kentlworth Nancy Hall 1600 Ashland Avenue Evanston leanne Hansrnann 1220 Maple Avenue Wrlrnette Martha Lourse Harbrecht 2510 Orrmqton Avenue Evanston Patr1c1a Ann Harbrecht 2510 Orrlnqton Avenue Evanston Marcella Harrrnqton 500 Adams Street Glencoe Betty Harrls 2380 Deere Park Drlve Hrqhland Park Mary Lourse Harnson 2488 Deere Park Drrve Hrqhland Park Mary Lourse Herlman 731 Clrnton Place Evanston Eunrce Helrnold 2524 North Deere Park Drrve Htqhland Park Marte Helmold 2524 North Deere Park Drlve Hrqhland Park Sue Page H111 2721 South Deere Park Dr1ve Htqhland Park Lorayne Hoover 1103 Sherrdan Road Evanston Peqqy Hoyt 515 Sherrdan Road Wrnnetka Martorte Ann Hubachek 635 Washlnqton Avenue Glencoe Holly Husted 978 Elm Rrdqe Drrve Glencoe Ioan Huth 6229 Wrnthrop Avenue Chlcaqo Ianet lnqrarn 634 Vine Avenue Hrqhland Park lane Carter lackrnan 1509 Asbury Avenue Evanston Anqelrne lacobs 1302 Scott Avenue Hubbard Woods Caroltne Iohnson 158 Melrose Avenue Kentlworth Edna Iohnson 2809 Lrncoln Street Evanston Isabel Iohnson 158 Melrose Avenue Kenrlworth Martha Iohnson 2715 Colfax Street Evanston Walta lane lohnson 1563 Pratt Boulevard Chrcaqo lean lones 318 Oxford Road Kenllworth loanne Iones 809 Noyes Street Evanston Cecrl Iordan 125 Abmqdon Road Kenrlworth Kathryn Keller 340 Prospect Avenue Hlqhland Park Ieanne K1rnba1l 333 Lercester Road Kenrlworth Lorarne Klrtland 1000 Mrchrqan Avenue Wtlrnette Laverne Kntqht 575 Stoneqate Terrace Glencoe Sue Kornblxth 628 Woodpath Road Hrqhland Park lean Ladd 257 Woodstock Avenue Kenllworth Margaret Io La1rd 1513 Forest Avenue Evanston Iulre Lane 714 Foster Street Evanston Eva Myra Larson 431 Rldqe Avenue Evanston Vrrqrnra Lee 825 Mrchlqan Avenue Evanston Betty lane Ltndop 714 Sherrdan Road Evanston Henrretta Ltzars The Orrrnqton Evanston lane Loeb 621 Waverly Road Hrqhland Park Helen Constance Love 935 ludson Avenue Evanston Catherrne Lowrey 550 Oak Street Wrnnetka Constance Lowrey 550 Oak Street Wrnnetka lean MacKay Scott 147 Dempster Street Evanston Betty MacNe1lle 828 Bluff Street Glencoe lane Ann McBr1de 1319 Church Street Evanston 01710 1 1 1 1 1 1 l 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 Nancy McCloud 338 Kemlworth Avenue Kentlworth Carol Mcl-lenry 177 Scott Avenue Hubbard Woods Mary Mclnnts 714 Mllburn Street Evanston Mary Mclntosh 521 Roslyn Road Kenllworth Harnet McNeal 247 Prospect Avenue Hrghland Park Mary McNea1 247 Prospect Avenue Hrghland Park Ioy McPherr1n 2759 Rldge Avenue Evanston Betty Magte 2815 Blackhawk Road W1lrnette Peggy Magte 2815 Blackhawk Road W1lmette L1l1an Marchant 1615 Ashland Avenue Evanston Carolyn Melltnger 747 Shertdan Road Evanston Ioan Mercer 2332 R1dge Avenue Evanston Margaret Merrtck 1625 Ashland Avenue Evanston Mar1on Mes1ck 331 Essex Road Kenrlworth Madeletne Meyers 120 Euclld Avenue Glencoe Patncra Meyers 120 Euc11d Avenue Glencoe lean Mornssey 903 South Green Bay Road Hrghland Park V1rg1n1a Mowry 901 Forest Avenue Evanston Gertrude Holhngshead Munns 617 Noyes Street Evanston Wayne Nash 1107 Ramona Road W1lmette Georgene Nock 425 Grove Street Evanston Nancy Nock 425 Grove Street Evanston Sh1rley O Brten 503 Orchard Lane W1nnetka Mary O Conor 3 Woodley Road W1nnetka Cherry Sue Orr 225 Woodbrne Avenue Wtlrnette Evelyn Parkhlll 1031 Sherldan Road Evanston Barbara Patterson 727 South Sherldan Road Hlghland Park Dorothy Paulsen 625 Eleventh Street W1lmette ludlth Peake 1426 Chlcago Avenue Evanston lean P1119 The Georglan Evanston Madellne Porter 900 Ashland Avenue W1lrnette 1ud1th Powers 634 Ltncoln Avenue I-11gh1and Park Adelrne Ramond 1069 Mosely Road Rav1n1a Geraldlne Rarnussen 699 Carol Court Hlghland Park Dorothy Reed 915 Rldge Court Evanston Barbara Remy 1123 H1nman Avenue Evanston lean Rtedel 1018 Tenth Street W11mette Mary Patr1c1a Rlpley 631 Llnden Avenue Wllmette Beverly Roach 199 Ravtne Drlve Htghland Park Mary LOUISE Roberts 1402 Chase Avenue Chtcago Shlrley lean Rob1nson 827 Ltncoln Street Evanston Helen Rodger Happ Road W1nnetka Betty Roulet 807 Greenwood Avenue Glencoe O 172 , . , , , . , , , , , . , , , , , , , , I I , , , , , . I I , , I I , , , , I I , , Eavan Ann O'Connor, 1720 Asbury Avenue, Evanston , . , , , , 1 I I I I I I V I I , . , , , , , , I I I I I I I , , I 1 I I 1 I I 1 I I 1 I I I I I O Lenore Russell 625 Noyes Street Evanston V1rg1n1a Russell 625 Noyes Street Evanston Carol Scheunemann 2319 Prerce Road 1'11gh1and Park Barbara Schnerrng 934 Mlchrgan Avenue Evanston loan Schutter 125 Park Avenue Glencoe Madelerne Sher1dan 310 Church Street Evanston Arlee Rue Sherrrtt The Georgran Evanston Evaro lean Sherrltt The Georg1an Evanston Suzanne Shrader 319 Sher1dan Road Wrnnetka Helen Manorre Speed 530 South Sher1dan Road Hrghland Park Phoebe Steger 1714 Hlnrnan Avenue Evanston Nancy Stern 615 Crescent Court Hrghland Park Sallre Stewart 2153 Central Park Avenue Evanston loan Stover 25 Lake Place Hrghland Park Margaret Strale 1519 Hlnrnan Avenue Evanston lean Sullrvan 155 Chestnut Street Wlnnetka Suzanne Sullrvan 155 Chestnut Street Wrnnetlca Dleter Tannenberg 2233 Orrlngton Avenue Evanston Babs Thomas 700 Forest Avenue Wrlrnette Elsa Turnbull 2011 Orrlngton Avenue Evanston Betty U11r1ch 925 Lake Avenue Wllrnette Louls Unander Scharln 2808 Sher1dan Place Evanston Blanche Va11 621 Ingleslde Place Evanston V1rgen1a Van Deusen 1401 Llncoln Street Evanston Margaret Walter 500 South Avenue Glencoe Mary Walters 170 Llnden Street Wrnnetka Fa1th Ward 625 Emerson Street Evanston Frances Webb 1122 Colfax Street Evanston Teasley Webb 925 Mrchrgan Avenue Evanston Grace Weston 2430 Central Park Avenue Evanston lean Whlte 159 Sher1dan Road Wmnetka Peggy Wlckrnan 16 Canterbury Court Wzlmette Mary Lourse Wteboldt 639 Central Street Evanston Margaret Wrggrns 1100 Rrdge Avenue Evanston Ioan W1111GmS 1519 Hrnman Avenue Evanston Sylvta Wlllner 2750 Sher1dan Road Evanston Laura Ianet Wlnston 1231 Asbury Avenue Evanston E1l1n Wynne 548 Mrchrgan Avenue Evanston Iuhe Zrschke 299 Morrarn Road Hlghland Park O 173 , . , , , , , , , , , , , , . , , , , , , , , , , , I I , , , , I I , , , , , , lean Unander-Scharin, 2808 Sheridan Place, Evanston - I I ' I , , , , . , , . . , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . . . I , S I . O


Suggestions in the Roycemore School - Griffin Yearbook (Evanston, IL) collection:

Roycemore School - Griffin Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Roycemore School - Griffin Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Roycemore School - Griffin Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Roycemore School - Griffin Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Roycemore School - Griffin Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Roycemore School - Griffin Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940


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