1941-1942 Yearbook

Aileen Hogan, Keith Coleman, Margueflte O'Banian, Kern Sears, Wilella Knapple. Clifton Horton, Era Madge Ellis, Caudell Lane, Doris Cluck, Orvid Mason. Mabel Ford, Imogene NIcholas, Marie Massey, Edward Shewmaker, Jewel Dean Hardie. Jim Lacy, Margaret Jane Sherrill, Had CurtIs, Bernice CurtIs, Dale Van Patten, Ermyl McFadden, Edith Hulett, Jean Overton, Ferrel Mason. Juanita Weaver, Rolph Starling, Mary Etta Langston, Buddy Langston, Mabel Groce Turnage, Dick Adams, Mary Blanche Jackson, Arvin Edwards, Wando Lee Trawick. Koy Covin, Geraldine Richards, Monflne Richards, Gladys Sue Burford, Aubrey Miller, Gretchen Hill, Christine Neal, Mabrey Miller, Ruth Bradley. Dorothy Brown, Harvey Robins, Theda Robins, Zulema Little, Marie Thatcher, Jae Bradsher, Metta Dean Smith, Mounelle Bearden, Wendell Watson. All students from Arkansas are eligible for membership In the Arkansas Club. This group with Kern Sears, president; Thednel Garner, vice-president, and Louise Nicholas, treasurer, had two functIOns. Dean L. C. Sears sponsoring the group, they had a theatre party In the fall and In the spring, a picnic. Situated amidst the forest foothills of the Ouachita Mountains, Hot Springs attracts a multitude of sick people to its curative springs annually. Looking closely at the above picture of the town, Both-House Row, occupying one block on the main street, may be seen. Here are located nine bathhouses under government supervIsion with twelve more in the city. Both-House Row is especially attractive when the raws of magnolia trees bardering it are in bloom. The legendory "fountain of youth" was known first ta the Indians and then to DeSoto and the Spanish explorers. Within two years after the Revolutionary War there was a white settlement at Hot Springs. The waters of the forty-six springs which gush fram the slopes of Hot Springs MOUiltain are colorless and odarless and contain twenty chemical constituents.

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