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THE SILHOUETTE
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PUBLISHED
BY THE STUDENTS
AGNES SCOTT
COLLEGE
DECATUR GEORGIA.
Ourselves as Hasimura Togo Sees Us
LETTER 1
PAGE
11
Togo Learns of The Silhouette - -
Publications 14
LETTER II
Togo Learns That Things Are Xot Just What They Seem.
1. Y. W. C. A
2. Freshman Class
LETTER III
Togo Experiences the Various Pleasures of Rebekah Scott Hall 34
1. Glee Club 35
2. Literary Societies 38
LETTER IV
Togo Spends a Night with Mr. Star..
1. Student Government
2. Faculty
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Letter I
TOGO LEARNS OF THE SILHOUETTE
Editor of Silly-zvet, magazine published annually one per yr.
Hon. Miss: Michael angelo are favorite composer of mine who said,
"Man are not maid to live alone." The channels of great minds run in same
path as are exempled by I think so also.
Such are cause why I am now in residence at this homestead for learning.
Hon. lady at working bureau snuggest: "To work at house of Agnes
Scott are excellent method to amputate feeling of lonesome from the heart
h)' presents of young females & improve talking Eng."
For such opportunities I am induced to arrive there, where I am remain
without receiving discharge larger times than seven ( 7 ).
News concerning your hon. books reach me called Silly-wet and
Aurora.
"Such must be for benefit of talking Eng.," are thought from me to some
lady, "if I shall peruse some pages dayly."
With haste of speed 1 am arrive by the house of Miss. Library to speak
of these.
"What are content and use of such books of these names?" I diligate.
"These are unreal prose products of young ladys for bettering brains,
manufactured at intervals per month & yr.," retort she in writing neat figures
to deface books.
"Vellv well," instrukt I, velly Rockefeller, "for one per each I offer $1,"
while produce said currents.
"Not so done," snib she, and produce from shelves of other-such testi-
monies of these magazines.
Hon. Ed., I am enthralled to view at such art and letteratures.
"Delicious caracature studies of school joys are exposed in each with
photos," delight I.
"Caracatures are not purpose of manufactory," dib she with zero stair,
"but honest exhibiting of real existance in such high-standing colleges."
"Most untruthfully done," came from my tongue, and invention are
started in my mind.
Hon. Ed., this are my ideal for writing communications so that in before
spoken publication can be exposure to institution females to see other persons
as other persons see them.
If friendly ties become broken by these honest picktures of truth I am
sad in keep trying remember duty obliged in anticipating pleasure.
Hoping you are the same,
Hasimura Togo.
'T
12
"Delicious caracatures of school joys are exposed in each with photos," delite I.
Silhouette Staff
KATE L. RICHARDSON Editor-in-Chief
MARY HYER Assistant Editor-in-Chief
MARY HAMILTON..C-..C-: ; ..Business Manager tt
SALLIE CARRERE Assistant Business Manager
ALMA BUCHANAN , Local Editor
HALLIE SMITH. CJL , .: ; Art Editor
VIRGINIA WHITE Assistant Art Editor
14
Aurora Staff
EMMA JONES _ Editor-in-Chief
MARY HELEN SCHNEIDER..CJET. Assistant. Editor-in-Chief
FRANCES L. WEST Business Manager
ANNIE POPE BRYAN Assistant Business Manager
MARYELLEN HARVEY C..& Exchange Editor
VALUE YOUNG WHITE Local Editor
15
Letter II
TOGO LEARNS THAT THINGS ARE NOT JUST WHAT
THEY SEEM
Hon. Ed. Silly-wet book to yet ladys piktures printed in it.
Dere Miss: On daytime of Sept. 16th clay I elope forthly to domicilum
of Agnes Scott being accompany by one ( 1 ) suit casing minus any suit.
On arrival I advance upward to door containing one ( 1 ) bell and make
sounds of my presence. A head are dejected outward.
"What want?" are demand of man of face peculiar to ministerial show.
"To see president or other such?"
"Presence of Hon. would-row are not known to me for being here." I
redress. "I search to be employed in work in these places."
"Proceed back-doorly," are reply with door-slam.
Hon. Ed.. I am reach there with cents peculiar to Sherlock Holmes
where I am brought in with stairs of suspicion.
Following questions are asked by one looking very ladyhood.
How old yrs. have you?
Honesty of Grandfather.
Experience taken awav from other emplovments.
If so your ans. is I do.
Reply given of me are yes.
"This are place of considerable ease and much work," enumerate she.
"You are obliged by duty for answering two (2) tellyfoams, and two (2)
bells of electric kind, one on front door for entrance, and other on back door
reserved for servants, girls, and other nuisances to enter in it. When answer-
ing to tellyfoams your answer is, 'Young ladys is not proper for speaking to
these instruments.' At front door those resembling men are bereft of
entrance until credentials are presented to authority. If these simple notes
are consumed by your brain you may retire to be robed in whiteness peculiar
to nurserys, which must be kept so while scrubbing floors and other furniture."
After this ceremony I make entrance to room for sitting containing no
complete person but one. This are talking to tellyfoam in sweetness of tones
peculiar to society.
"Such are too improperly done," hast I while rejecting instrument from
clutching fingers. "Orders are such to prohibit."
Continued on page 2$.
Exception are made to me, . . . who are stationed here for kindness & V. \\
Cabinet of the Y. W. C. A.
Officers
FRANCES KELL Secretary
ELIZABETH BULGIN Treasurer
MARGARET ANDERSON-CC-.President
MARTHA ROSS Vice-President
Cftairmen of Committees
Martha Brenner Religious Meetings
Mary Kelly Bible Study
Maryellen Harvey.. j^C^... .Mission Study
Martha Ross Membership
Recina Pinkston Association News
Alice Fleming Social
Katherine Lindamood Music
Grace Harris Conference and Convention
Louise Obekly Y. W. C- A. Store
The Young Women's Christian Association
"I am come that tliey might have life, and that they might have
it mure abundantly."
EAL success in the work of the Young Women's Christian
Association can not be measured by mere statistics, or by
definite statements of things that have been accomplished;
but, in looking back over the work of the year, it is interesting
to note those things that have been of particular importance.
The membership of the Association has increased to over
two hundred, and our budget to seven hundred and fifty dollars. The change
from the College Sunday School to the Y-. W. C A. Voluntary Bible Study
classes, though a radical one, has proven successful. There is a large enroll-
ment in the Mission Study classes, the members of which are gaining a more
comprehensive view of the world's need and the relation of Christian stu-
dents to this need.
The remaining five hundred dollars due on our cottage at Blue Ridge
has been paid by the Tech Y. M. C. A. in order that they may have the use
of the cottage during the Y. M. C. A. conferences; so the Agnes Scott
Cottage is now the Agnes Scott-Tech Cottage. We were represented at the
Georgia Students' Missionary League by ten delegates, who brought back to
us much of the inspiration that they had received from the meetings in
La Grange. We were also fortunate in having several of our girls at the
wonderful Laymen's Missionary Convention in Charlotte. One of the biggest
privileges, however, that has come to us as an Association this year, lias
been that of representation by an annual member on the Student Department
of the South Atlantic Field.
The idea of the Y. W. C. A. tea room was received with much enthu-
siasm, and it is hoped that the room, which has just been attractively fitted up
for this purpose, will prove a most popular social center, and that in the
future it will be a place in which every member of our college community will
feel really at home.
The coming of Dr. Chapman and Mr. Alexander to Atlanta, and the
meetings held in our own chapel by Miss Conde, of the National Board,
19
assisted by Miss Hanes and Miss Stone, of the South Atlantic Field Com-
mittee, have been of immeasurable assistance toward the attainment of which
is after all the one real purpose of the Young Women's Christian Associa-
tion "the bringing of girls to Christ, building them up in Christ, and sending
them out for Christ." Miss Conde has a place in our college life, and
particularly in the "heart life" of Agnes Scott girls, that could be filled by no
one else, and her coming just at the close of our year's work has made the
year, in spite of our many failures and shortcomings, seem crowned with
blessings.
Margaret Neal Anderson, 'IS. C^
20
Delegation
JULIE MacINTYRE
JANE HARWELL
HENRIETTA LAMBDEN
GERTRUDE BRIESENICK
MARYELLEN HARVEY
MARGARET PHILLIPS
MARGARET CATER
CLAUDE DUXSOX
ELIZABETH WEST
Georgia Students' Missionary League
HE sixth, seventh, and eighth days of November. 1914, will
always be red-letter days in the memory of the Agnes Scott
delegation to the Georgia Students' Missionary League in
La Grange. From the very moment we were met at the
Terminal Station by the charming old gentleman who asked
if we were from Agnes Scott, and who showed us the special
car for the delegates, till the last notes of "Blest Be the Tie That Binds" died
away on Sunday evening, we lived in a state of happiness that was almost
unreal.
No girls have ever enjoyed themselves as much as we. No people have
ever been, or will ever be. as nice as the people of La Grange were to us.
They met us at the train in their hospitable way, which was only a prediction
of the hospitality extended to us while there. Besides all the fun associated
with the convention, there was the deeper, fuller pleasure derived from the
meetings. Few of us went to La Grange with any idea of the real worth of
the convention, but, after the first services, the welcoming addresses, and the
wonderful talks on Africa by Mr. J. L. Mangnm, we all knew the significance,
and were thrilled with the old, yet always new, message.
As the other days came, bringing more good tidings of the work beyond
the seas, we wished more and more the other girls could have been there to
share this joy with us.
Wonderful talks were given by Dr. Davis, of Japan; Dr. Pickard, Mr.
Gordon Poteat, Dr. Jenkins, and others. Although we kept these addresses
in our hearts, we wished we could bring them back verbatim.
When the evening of the closing service came we were all sorry. We
were sorry to leave the newly made friends, and sorry to leave because the
meetings had been such a joy and inspiration to us that we wished they could
last longer. We were happy, too, because we bad had this privilege of going,
and receiving the inspiration, and could bring it back with us, though in our
feeble way, to the girls at Agnes Scott.
22
Dreams of Black Mountain
X the midst of cold, windy days and rainy, winter nights there
comes sometimes a tantalizing little spring breeze, which
blows saucily in your window, slams your German book
closed all unnoticed snatches your mind away, and carries
it far, far back to last summer, and, of course, to Black
Mountain. You take that ride again from the station in a
rickety old hack, then hasten to explore Robert E. Lee Hall, and the cottage
Agnes Scott-Tech Cottage, of course.
Then you get your program and start to committee meetings, and classes,
and lectures, in the bewildering fear of letting some opportunity slip by; for
there is so very much you really want to do.
And can't you just hear the first clear notes from the rising bugle, and
see all the cottage in a turmoil over the little pink and blue meal slips?
After breakfast that impudent breeze is blowing you 'way up to the crest
of Hightop, and all along the road you're gathering mountain laurel until
your arms are full, and you are laughing, and panting, and out of breath, but
very proud of yourself for having made the climb. Then back down to the
grounds again, and supper in the big dining hall.
Then, with a final teasing little ripple, that breeze gives von a glimpse of
Black Mountain by moonlight the star-studded sky. the hills towering on
all sides; the white pillars of Robert E. Lee Hall: the murmur of the little
brook as it runs under the rustic bridge; and last, and best of all, a group of
girls on the steps of the cottage, in the close communion of a delegation
meeting. Listen! they are singing now "Peace I leave with von ; my peace
I give unto you."
But the little breeze has frolicked away, and left you to an unlearned
German lesson, and the harsh reality of a cold, winter night.
Clara Whips, '17.
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Delegation
ALICE FLEMING HALLIE SMITH tf.
MARYELLEN HARVEY CC, MARION BLACK CC
CLARA WHIPS MARGARET ANDERSON C.C.
JUDGE and MRS. PARRY
24
TOGO LEARNS THAT THINGS ARE NOT JUST WHAT
THEY SEEM
Continued from page 16.
''Exception are made to me," sarcast she while making renewing attempts,
"who are stationed here for kindness and Y. \Y."
"Are Y. W. gent of shoe-black expression?" with discreet retreat.
"Y. W. are social organism to polish souls and ideals for young girls,"
answer came of her. "Preceeding named clan have stationed me here for
giving welcome hand to fresh-men."
"Too horhle," dib I. and return to view of first ladv for making report.
"Income of fresh men are against regulations which friend of Y. \Y.
plot to do so," statist I.
"This adjective of description are called for spite," mistily she. "Many
persons are called fresh-men because girls and new. These of new appearance
leave residence of parental home to enter into this which we make homely
by study & other pleasures. Office of your service are remitting these fresh
ladies with joy of expression peculiar to motherhood, while Y. \Y. makes
finish of this job."
"To do are not so easy as to advice," proverb I walking awayward.
Madame first arrival are of this fresh variety.
Long ring of bell are followed by my appearance at door for entrance.
"Lhiless fresh proceed back-doorlv," are advice from me: "this are
observed for entrance."
"Freshness of others are invisible when compared to yours," negate she.
"Have you left parental residence for this homely place?" require I.
"Such commodious dwellings are not easily to transport," brilliant she
while entering without invite.
This are ditto for several scenes each different.
Arrival of one are accomplished to my downfalling. This are not of
fresh looking. Another failure are this. Parental residence were transported
in seven (7) bags, three (3) suit-cases, & five (5) boxes accompanying
this one.
25
"I have come for entering freshman division," denounce she.
"Unnaturally so," dib I. "Fresh are adjective rule for this, and residence
are not left behind as required."
"Report shall be of this," snarrell she, while doing as she said so.
"Why are not fresh ladies given entrance by you?" request she of
ladyhood.
"This are possessed of old appearance & have transported home place in
much packagery," explain I for attackt. "This does not fill in with require-
ments."
"This are your state also," she spoke it hashly; "you are promoted
downward."
Hoping you are the same,
Hasimura Toco.
Parental residence were transported in 7 bags, 3 suit-cases, & 5 boxes accompanying this one
Freshman Class
Class Colors : Red and White Class Flower : Richmond Rose
Motto : Esto quod esse videris
Officers
FIRST semester
LOIS EVE President
JULIA ABBOTT Vice-President
MARGARET CATER Secretary and Treasurer
second semester
MAYMIE CALLAWAY
RUTH ANDERSON C t..Lt***^
ANNIE WHITE MARSHALL..C.X.JL.L. JLmlS
HELEN HOOD
MARGARET CATER
HELEN CONNETT
President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
Class Historian
Class Poet
Silhouette Member
Members
Julia Abbott
Hallie Alexander
Virginia Allen C-f- .
Emma K. Anderson
Ruth Anderson tt.
Agnes Ball
Mary Bowers
Elva Brehm
Emogene Brown
Myrtis Burnett
Maymie Callaway
Martha Comer
Margaret Cater
Helen Connett
Claude Dunson
Caribel Davis
Elizabeth Denman
Effie Doe
Elizabeth de Graffenreid
Lois Eve
May Freeman-
Mary Ford
Gladys Gaines
Ruth Gilbert
Lois Grier
Luella Griggs
Goldie Ham
Louise Halliburton
Olive Hardwick
Irene Havis
28
Rose Harwood
Susie Hecker
Ouida May Herrington
Edith Hichtower
Louise Holtzclaw
Katherine Holtzclaw
Helen Hughes
Helen Hood
Jeanette Jovner c - t ~
Ruth Lester
Margaret Leyburn
Caroline Larendon
Samille Lowe cc.
Mary R. Lyle
Annie White Marshall tc
Elizabeth Miller
Katherine Moore
Dorothy Moore house
Nancy McCord
Annie L. McCorkle
Fannie Oliver c t
Ruth Pierce
Regina Pinkston
Porter Pope
Martha Young
Caroline Randolph
Elizabeth Riley
Miriam Reynolds
Elizabeth Ring
Annie Saxon * *~
Stuart Sanderson
Myra C. Scott
Nancy Sizer tL
May Smith
Winifred Smith
Marie Stone
Mary Ellen Stanley
Isa Beall Talmadge
Olga Thiesen
Delia Terry
Mary Etta Thomas
Bessie Lee Varnell
Madie Ward
Julia Walker
Mary Elizabeth Walker
Fannie Whelchel
Fannie Wheeler
Ella C. Weston
Olive Wright
39
Freshman Class History
"A wondrous little gem
Within that little globe lies all the pain
And all the joy the world can ever know
Tis called a tear."
TEAR! The Tears we Freshmen have shed! But one en-
couraging thought to us is that, after all, every poor human
started life thus with a tear. We left home amid tears
mother's tears, little sister's tears, and. I think, even father
shed a tear. We arrived at Agnes Scott at last, still among
tears. But "all things come to an end," and even so with this
"weep}'" state of mind : for. before we knew it, we were in the midst of
Y. W. C. A. parties, then literary society parties, and a smile or a laugh
seemed to be the password to all these affairs. Here we first caught a glimpse
of the true Agnes Scott spirit the "old girls" showed it to us. You were not
living in a stiff, hard school, where you must run from your shadow, but at
home just one big family where ever}' one worked, loved, and was happy.
There is a shifting of scenes now and we are ushered into another
world the world of war and strife. The first meeting of the Freshman
Class was announced. It was a call to mobilize, and. true to our love of class,
we left the quiet retreat of our home life, shouldered our little guns, and
marched to Room 13, our "War Department." Our people were being
persecuted by our enemy, the Sophomores a heartless, cold-blooded race
and the call to arms was for protection against them. There was honor to be
upheld, possessions to be protected, and the Sophs should be taught a severe
lesson against invading the country of a peaceful and quiet-loving people.
Then came the first great battle. Such scenes are best passed over quickly.
It was a desperate struggle! A band of ruffians invading our peaceful homes
in the quiet hours of the night, and our brave resistance! The results of the
battle were heart-rending and truly distressing a wreckage of home and
costumes. Then came an offer of peace and a treaty to be signed, bringing
quiet between these two long-standing enemies for all years to come. We
returned to "Indian clays," smoked the pipe of peace, and straightway hung
these corncob creations on our walls as souvenirs, and thus entered a world of
peace.
31
After this the Freshman's life was only one of daily college routine, until
the break for Christmas vacation. Then, more family tears, and we were
hack again! Verily there is no rest for the weary. One bright January
morning we waked to find ourselves facing another declaration of war (this
time posted on the Faculty bulletin board), Mid- Year Examinations! the
horror of every Freshman! But we were helpless when opposed to the powei
ruling the college world the Faculty and so we went forth to the struggle.
We faced the big guns of the German, and came out wounded and worn.
After the English artillery had swept our lines we were thinned in number,
and sad and dejected of spirit. Still, we were forced to meet the French
forces we shrugged our shoulders and determined to do our best. Thus we
ough t
struggle.
But. now, it is all past ! We've fought our battles and gloried in them
such is the spirit of the college girl. We work. love, and are happy such is
the spirit of the Agnes Scott girl.
32
Class Poem 1918
There may have been chapel-seat buying,
Promiscuous permissions asked, too.
As well as some questions called "foolish,"
And such things that Freshmen all do.
And now, over much we have triumphed :
Exams, and foolish Sophomore pranks.
A few of us left by the former,
Disfigured, we're still in the ranks.
And troubles why, Job isn't in it !
Was he ever tricked and dubbed "new"?
But time has proved Freshmen quite equal
To wily tricks Soph'mores might do.
With aims now to live in the present.
To weave well as time's threads unwind.
Undoing the hard knots with patience.
We're striving life's best threads to find.
Then here's to the years just before us !
To successes the future might mean,
To the glorious purple and white girls.
To the Class of Nineteen and Eighteen !
Margaret Cater.
33
Letter III
TOGO EXPERIENCES THE VARIOUS PLEASURES OF
REBEKAH SCOTT HALL
Hon. Ed. of Silly-zvet magazine of Agnes Scott school for teaching atmosphere
and other accomplishments.
Dere Madam : Another location where I am in past tense are home
place of Miss Rebeccah Scott containing one ( 1 ) religious chapel for giving
entertainments in it, and two (2) halls for society, & rooms for eating and
other past times.
In this position I learn & see many things thru' experience, which is
bitter teacher for fools, as are quoted in ancient remark of Benjamin Franklin.
I work in this house enduring concert. This are haunt of ladys having
considerable musical ambition in their voice. At daybreak of 8 o'clock pianos
are struck with cruelty, while lady make soprano. I stand feeling sweetly to
listen at it. Then from opposing room another lady make same soprano in
alto voice very different. This chorus are lengthened by addition of severial
more of other pitches.
All of these make voice doing following gymnasium :
e a o
e e a a o o
e e a a o o
And so on during manifold ladders of these sounds.
I feel considerable De Bussy.
This joy are removed by accident all unthougbtful to me.
One soonly morning I am sweeping surrounded by dust and other music.
Two youngly ladys deport near looking very friendship. They seat on
table & make following conversation :
"Are you in acquaintance with those two (2) delicious societies named
propi lean & nemosi lean?" interrogate one arranging select fingers among
Sth Avenue hair.
"Odd fellers and Elks are my only friends among those sets," I say so.
"What are kind of these?"
Continued on page j?(5.
34
H-'
Sft
The Japanese Girl
An Operetta in Two Acts
presented by
THE AGXES SCOTT COLLEGE GLEE CLUB
Saturday Evening, January 30. 1915
CHARACTERS
O Hani; San A Japanese Girl
SALLIE MAY TILLMAN
O Kitu San - Her Cousin Nora Twinn American Girl
CELESTE SHADBURN RUTH LAWRENCE
O Kayo San Her Cousin Dora Twinn American Girl
LYSBETH PENDLETON ELEANOR CRABTREE
Choya Her Servant Miss Minerva Knowall Governess
MARY BRYAN ORA GLENN
CHORUS OF JAPANESE GIRLS
sopranos
Faith Bukt Clara Whips Katherine Jones [Catherine Lindamooi
Charlotte Cope Augusta Skeen t L. Sara Patton
Elizabeth de Graffenreid
Samille Lowe
tc ( fc Cv }
Mayme Callaway
Carolyn Ballentine
altos
Mary West c e -
Frances Thatcher C i
Margaret Phillip:
director
Mrs. Gussie O'Neal Johnson
accompanist
Miss Louise Oberly
TOGO EXPERIENCES THE VARIOUS PLEASURES OF
REBEKAH SCOTT HALL
Continued from page 34.
"These are two sisterly societies arranged for rivalry of getting head of
each," liant she looking so. "Business of each are for obtaining fresh-men
girls desired by opponent society. This smartly job are made joyous by
parties consisting of much work and eat things."
I feel entirely hashed for my ignorance.
"On this evening entertainment will be held by society belonging to us."
inform next lady. "This are year of considerable war & other poverty, and
shrinkage of expense are necessity. For this because variety of monotonous
foods previously experienced will be diminished. Sleight nibble of cakes,
sleight splash of punches, & dainty drib of iced cream will be too abundant
with conversation, music, & other games. This expense will be greatly less
for reason that Togo will spy out cheapness of bakery and freezery while
engaging in off afternoon."
I say nothing in complete slilence while these two (2) elope upwards,
screaming downstairslv :
"Your presence will be required to serve these deliteful viandes looking
very chef."
Madame, this party are wonderful joy to all but Togo. One orchestry
in four (4) pieces sound quite Mozart, while playing "You're here & so
am I," and other Sonatas. Young ladys dressed very 400 march butterflyly.
All feel sleight hearted. I stand outcloorward peeping thru' spvlv.
One fresh girl wish effusively desire for ornament on chandelier.
"This are no trouble," sweetheart pardner of her.
I am elected to dispatch for one ( 1 ) ladder & fly upward on this piece
of furniture for procurring this. This are sadiv tale.
I tell you.
Hon. ladder fold teliscopely. Bereaved of my support \ make wildly
grab for atmosphere & attach myself to chandelier with tense affection. To
this I sway with motion peculiar to wet stockings. Then crash ! out come
hon. chandelier from ceiling wall & 1 ascend floorward midst glass & other
wires.
Screams amid hallo like chorus girls. My tranquility are scarce & I
make fareby covered with red splashes of brilliant futurist art caused bv blood
& other paint. u .,,
1 Hoping you are the same,
Hasimura Togo.
Bereaved of my support I make wildly grab for atmosphere.
Propylean Literary Society
Officers
FIRST TERM
EMMA JONES President
MARION BLACK....J~J-tt...-. Vice-President
MARY HAMILTON. C,..C Secretary
LUCILE WILLIAMS Treasurer
HALLIE SMITH t., ..*!.., Critic
ANNA SVKES Censor
MARGARET PHYTHIAN..JE.-JC... Sergeant-at-Akms
second term
MARY HYER President
ALMA BUCHANAN Vice-President
MARY BRYAN Secretary
SALLIE CARRERE Treasurer
RAY HARVISON 4\JEL (....Critic
MARYELLEN HARVEY.. ..,..!., Censor
FANNIE OLIVER C.-C ...... /..t..***..A Sergeant-at-Arms
38
M
L. WILLIAMS
G. HAM
WILLETT
M. MONTGOMERY
J. ANDERSON
GIBSON COUCH
PATTON
PERRY REID
A. BUCHANAN
MORRIS
M. BLACK CC
L. ANDERSON
*
CARRERE LAWRENCE NEFF
C. MONTGOMERY PHYTHIAN BULGIN STONE
M. ANDERSON HYER MCGUIRE
KOYE BRIGGS LEYBURN I. BROWN
c
,ve fr
L 1 9
*
LVLE OLIVER fc ^ E. K. AND]
FORI) A.P.BRYAN WILLIAMS
PHILLIPS BALL VARXELL
VAN ARSDALE BRIGGS HALLIBURTON
SAXON E. U (jtt> -* 3
WELCHEL RAMSEY KINNEAR
STANLEY HAMILTON X - R. ANDERSON
WATTS MCEACHERN HASVISON t t HARVEY * i
JONES GLENN SMITH U-t-
ci.It,> \re$
The Canterbury Pilgrims
BY
PERCY MACKAYE
PRESENTED BY THE
PROPYLEAN LITERARY SOCIETY
Saturday Evening, April 18, 1914
ON
COLLEGE CAMPUS
I. Characters based on "The Canterbury Tales"
MEN
Geoffrey Chaucer, Poet at King Richard's Court, and Knight of the Shire of Kent,
India Hunt
The Knight (Don Roderigo de Algezin) Mary Hyer
The Squire (Aubrey) his son Edith Meek
The Friar (Hubert) '. Maryellen Harvey t C
The Man of Law RuTH NlSBET
The Cook - Ruth Hicks
The Miller (Bob) Hallie Smith rr.E. .
WOMEN
The Wife =i Elth (Ahsoun) Lmma Jones
The Prioress (Madame Eglantine) IsABEI . Norwood C.C
[I. Characters not based on "The Canterbury Tales"
MEN
Richard II, King of England ra Glenn
Bottlejohn, Host of the One Ninepin Inn, at Bob-Up-and-Down Margaret Phythian C C .
WOMAN
Johanna, Marchioness of Kent _ Bessie FoSTE| .
canterbury brooch girls
Lillian Anderson Margaret Brown E. - Frances Pugh
Helen Brown c XT Ray Harvison t.C. . Janje Rqce ^ cC
swains
Margaret Brown **- Ruth Hicks j anie r ogees c t- .
Maryellen HarvevCX Frances Pugh Hallie Smith c'.C
Music by Mr. C. W. Dieckmann
43
Mnemosynean Literary Society
Meets
FIRST SEMESTER
HENRIETTA LAMBDTN President
FRANCES KELL Vtce-Prestdent
FRANCES WEST Secretary
GRACE GEOHEGAN Treasurer
MARY WEST ...-.* - Censor
SALLIE MAY KING '. Critic
LULA MADDOX Librarian
SECOND SEMESTER
FRANCES KELL President
MARY KELLY - Vice-President
ALICE WEATHERLY C,., Secretary
VALLIE YOUNG WHITE Treasurer
MARY SPOTSWOOD PAYNE Censor
MARGARET PRUDEN Critic
GIERTRUD AMUNDSEN Librarian
THE S1LH0UET
*T*fC M
COWERS
J. JONES t t> .
DONALDSON'
WARE
FLEMING K. HOLTZCLAW
AMUNDSEN BURKE
KYLE DARRETT
THATCHER t^, E. COOPER
PAYNE
V. Y. WHITE
GILBERT
LI \l>A\looli
*T
M
FREEMAN
HOLT
PHILLIPS
FKYE
BISHOP
THOMAS
MOORE
SHAMBAUGH
BRUNEE RICHARDSON 1
F. WEST KELLY
KING WHITNER
WEATHERLY C f- . CALDWELL
PRUDEN
1 1 AK WOOD
VVITHERSPOON
BRENNER
HARWELL
DUNSON
GAINES
SANDERSON
DENNISON
ALLEN * *- .
BLUE
B. COOPER
V. WHITE
KELL
NAIVE
<35
G. WHITE SKEEN C *- RANDOLPH HOOPEk C -
SCHWARTZ THOMPSON OBERLV
COPE LESTER LEE TILLMAN
NELSON PINKSTON M. WESlCt
F. THOMAS ROSS LEDBETTER MARTIN
^Yh/c
L1C
i
HORN
MARSHALL C t.\> * ^PENDLETON
CRABTREE HAMMOND WALKER
WHIPS
GRIER
LAMBDEN WILSON
SEAYCt CALLAWAY
JACKSON
FIELDS
(To U e.) GOODE
MADDOX
CSSI?
*
GRANT MACINTYRE MC MURRAY CAY
MCEACHERN ORR
WALDRON BRIESENICK E. WEST
L. ROACH CARTER EVE
CONNETT DUBOSE MILLER SCHNEIDER C^
The Mnemosynean Literary Society
presents Shakespeare's
"TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA"
Saturday, December 12, 1914
cast of characters
Duke of Milan Grace Harris
Valentine - - Lois Eye
Proteus Julie MacIntyre
Antonio Value Young White
Thurio Agnes Donaldson
Eglamour - Loutse Hooper fc .
Speed Ruth Co"er
Launce Louise Wake
Parthero Anne Kyle .
Host Mary Helen Sizer CUlJ* *)
First Outlaw Gjertrud Amundsen
Second Outlaw Sarah Powers
Third Outlaw Jane Harwell
Julia - - Jeanette Victor
Silvia Henrietta Lambdin
Lucetta .- Eloise Gay
:.l
Letter IV
TOGO SPENDS A NIGHT WITH MR. STAR
Hon. Ed. of Silly-wet magazine of Agnes Scott College, which inject behavior,
culture, & other advancement unto womanhood.
Dere Miss: Duty are reward for himself. By following this I have
accomplished one ( 1 ) more fired. I can not digest this reason.
One looking very judge approach in black gown & board of mortar.
"Togo, you are in requirance by president of Exec."
"Are this a college or other uniting of states?" request I in button-hook
voice.
"Neither of them all," freeze she. "but largely governing body to keep
girls from eloping, laughing in the dark, & other amusements."
"Most needful," agree I.
Mad. Ed., this are strangely desire of this political lady:
"Togo, scandal are reached our apprehension about one thoughtless lady
seeking to obtain matrimony sneekretly by elopage. For observance of this
Mr. Star are picketed to tell us so."
"For sneekret elopage this appear very open," mild I. "This are wonder-
ful astronomy to learn from stars concerning lady's departure."
"Mr. Star are trustly gentleman acting very watch-clog on all similar
cases," ventrolucate she. "But fear have overtook Exec, that his eyes can not
see 200 places on campus yard at one peek, and you are embassador to
suspicious place to notate this invisible runaway."
Madame Editor, at sharp 10 p. m. I approach by suspicious gate to view
at this starlike gentleman. He are man with considerable kind hearted &
other keys. He show great delight at introduction to my acquaintance.
"I & the otherly faculties converse considerable concerning you," friend-
ship he, & I assimulate that he is waiting to view this sneekret go-away act.
"This faculty are Mighty man like other fiys," indignate I: "for several
weeks of prior I hear of this personality & get no glance."
"This are no man, but many of other smartly scholars beside me,"
renumerate he, & occupy considerable space in time giving names to this
centipide body with acute accuracy peculiar to statistics.
Continued on page 6o.
52
Debating Council of Agnes Scott College
MARY HELEN SCHNEIDER, M. L. S....f-..*r., President
ELIZABETH W1LLETT, P. L. S Secretary
Ruth Cofer, M. L. S. Grace Harris, M. L. S.
Emma Jones, P. L. S. Makyeli.ex Harvey. P. L. S.C*~,
53
s
( With many thanks
to Mr. Dickens)
mm times, it was the worst
jm of wisdom, it was the
fwas the epoch of belief,
credulity ; it was the
season of darkness; it was
winter of despair ; we had
Wf nothing before us; we were all
f all going direct the other way
like the present period that some
on its being received, for good or
comparison only."
There was a President with a distinguished air and a grey mustache in
the executive chair of Newcomb College; there was a President with an
equally distinguished air and a mustache no less grey in the executive chair of
Agnes Scott College. In both colleges it was clearer than crystal that the
superiority and permanency of things in general were settled forever.
It was the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fourteen.
Into the midst of the tranquillity of academic life without warning into
the local self-satisfaction of two ideally dreaming and idyllically peaceful col-
"It was the best of
of times; it was the age
age of foolishness; it
it was the epoch of in-
season of light, it was the ^B
the spring of hope, it was the Vv.
everything before us. we had
going direct to Heaven, we were
in short, the period was so far
of its noisiest authorities insisted
for evil, in the superlative degree of
54
lege communities came hurtling a bolt from an unexpected source a hitherto-
unheard-of source, at least so far as one of the colleges was concerned. This
bolt, at once fatal and joy-giving, was the product of a brain ; a brain that
knew how to conceive and to execute, to create with one pulsation of its
convolutions ( or nerve centers, or ganglia, or whatever they may be that
pulsate or combust when a great and original idea is evolved), both ecstatic
joy and death-dealing woe, and the brain belonged to one Isaac S. Heller, of
the Tulane University of Louisiana. The bolt fell in the form of a challenge.
It scattered the fragments of the academic peace of Agnes Scott College to
the four winds, and, in place of that peace, left the germ of a desire for
glory the glory of victory : victory such as our brothers are wont to win on
the hard-fought field, with wonderful show of physical brawn. Here was
something out of the routine of our college, out of the routine of all Southern
colleges for women ; here was a chance to place the purple and white aloft,
where it belonged, among the banners of the great of the land, through
successful competition with a worth}' adversary.
What mattered the lack of physical brawn? Why should we not show
to the college world that the brawn of intellect is a superior thing? What
hindered us from demonstrating to our brothers that their petty materialistic
triumphs of the gridiron and the diamond were not the last word in inter-
collegiate achievement? Thus did the bolt of Mr. Heller work out its destiny,
and, after Agnes Scott had recovered from the first shock and had begun to
realize the opportunity that was offered her, a great unanimity of purpose
took possession of her very soul : and every one from the dignified President
with the grey mustache to the Evening Star that faithfully watches over our
several fates from the twilight of evening till the dawn, all even the most
apathetic and academically secluded of the Faculty arose, shook the cobwebs
of indifference from the slumbering loyalty of their souls, and cried with one
voice, "Up guards, and at them! On to New Orleans!"
Thus was born a new era in the South the era of intercollegiate debating
in the world of the woman's college. To Newcomb belongs the honor, through
her representative, Mr. Heller, of having first conceived the idea. To Agnes
Scott belongs the honor of having won the first laurels, through her notable
team, composed of the two principals, Misses Mary Helen Schneider and
Emma Jones, with their equally able and ready alternate, Miss Marguerite
Wells.
55
In far-away New Orleans was waged the first great conflict of wits
between colleges for women in the South. And a memorable battle it was.
stubbornly fought on both sides. That the final decision came to Agnes Scott :
that we succeeded in winning the first intercollegiate debate, and winning with
the affirmative side of our own question, on our adversary's ground, was a
fact that gives us unending satisfaction. That New comb is a good loser and
a college made up of "true sports" is another fact that has been of great
service to us. We do not intend ever to be losers, but, if we for any cause
should some time be in that case, ma)- we be able to show our friends that
we, too, know how to lose with grace, and to give the glad hand to the
fortunate victor !
So has begun the Tale of Two Colleges. May it be a long story. And
may the honors go always to the best team ! And, furthermore, may Agnes
Scott have always the best team ! To get once more the heavenly sensation
caused by that famous telegram of March 27 , 1914, "Unanimous decision for
Agnes Scott. Don't forget the fire-alarm !" is worth any amount of work
through the months of preliminaries. And we promise solemnly never to
forget the fire-alarm ! Always will we have a kimono parade with a bonfire
at midnight on the campus (no men being allowed but Dr. Guy). Always
will we do snake dances by the hour the next morning, instead of attending
classes. Forever will we sacrifice our very best voices to the noble cause of
screaming, taking care that the good people of Decatur are kept awake during
the small hours of the morning. All these things will we do, and more,
whenever we win a debate from Newcomb College. It was a glorious victory
that we added to the fair fame of our beloved Alma Mater; for Newcomb
is Tulane. and be it known that Tulane is a giant in debating among the
colleges of the country.
But the best thing about this Tale of Two Colleges is not the winning of
the debate, after all. It is the realization that we know how to win with
enthusiasm, without "rubbing it in" ; and that we have learned from Newcomb
how to lose, with enthusiasm for Alma Mater, and without despair.
For this Tale of Two Colleges is moving on. We were "recalled to life"
by the challenge of 1914; the "golden thread" of intercollegiate friendship
has been bound about the two contestants, holding them fast with a common
interest and a common respect : and now. "in the track of the storm" of last
year's conflict, we are beginning the preliminaries for the debate of 1915.
This time the cry is: "Hang out our banners on the outer walls! The
Newcomb hosts are coming to take vengeance for last year's defeat, and
Agnes Scott expects every girl to do her duty!"
IT
M
Student Government Association
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
GRACE HARRIS President
MARION BLACK....C..&. First Vice-President
LUCY NAIVE Second Vice-President
OKA GLENN ." Secretary
RAY HARVISON..C.C., Marshal
senior class representatives
Annie Pope Bryan Mary Kelly
junior class representatives
Anne McClure Alice Weatiierly C*-
sophomore class representatives
Agnes Donaldson Mary Neff
freshman class representatives
Margaret Leyburn Nancy Sizeu ti (^ Q. .,_
irregular students' representative
Mynelle Blue
TOGO SPENDS A NIGHT WITH MR. STAR
Continued from page 52.
I write it as he said so.
Dr. Gains, gentleman containing considerable dignified & other mostache.
called D. G. by affection.
Miss Hopkins, who sit in delicious room
reserved for conferences, tears, & such crushes.
Miss Alexander, who smile while playing
with presidents grandchildren & other French.
Dr. Armistead. Gentleman containing
much pompous & gloves, while being adored
man}- ladys & Freshmen.
Miss Bartholomew. Lady who perform
considerable minuet on feet of pipe instrument,
while religious services are held in her hearing.
Miss Cady. Lady employed for going-
pro & con this institution, with fond affection
for maps, dates, & other cows.
Mr. Diekman, who are engaged in solitude
& harmony to most persons.
Miss DeGarmo. Lady for teaching homely economy, & enjoying largely
popularity & other knowledge.
Miss Duncan, lad}- for teaching Amelican girls to speak less so.
Dr. Guy. who arouse envy of institution females by driving gasoline cart
& appearing quite chemical.
Miss Trebein & Miss McCauley.
others feel quite the reverse.
Miss Hunt, who perform deeds no one else will by listening to harrowing
sounds from violins.
Mr. & Airs. Johnson, cutely fair, who engage in occupation to teach voice
gymnastics & such agony.
Miss Legate, who are employed in sustaining crushes. She perform
uneasy task of looking very beauty while talking very Paris.
Miss Lewis, who teach ambitious artful students to make objects look
so on paper & paint.
60
GAINS CONTAINING DIGNIFIED
& OTHER MOSTACHE.
Ladvs of much knowledge, who make
Miss Markley. Lady setting sample for dignity while training freshmen
to become almost student.
Prof. McClean. Harmonic gentleman engaged in work at gardening &
other rural joys.
Miss McKinney & Dr. Sweet. Inseparable twins, not so in looks, who
spend spare time teaching poems & microbes.
Misses Newcomb & Serin. Heavenly duo who masquerade biological
wisdom under youngish appearance. |
Miss Young, who look so while teaching
arithmetic surrounded by handkerchiefs &
other languid.
Mrs. Parry. Curly lady who teach dis-
guised dancing art with ropes, etc., enduring-
routine of whistles.
Miss Preston, who spend time in physical
laboratory while watching others enjoy it as
she says so.
Miss Smith. Grecian Dr. with failure to-
wards Latin & other excitements.
Miss Moore, who talk Frenchly while
resting from longly trips on feet.
Miss Torrence, who help make Latin pleasant with red ink & such flunks.
Miss West, pleasing gayous faculty, who appear very sweet-sixteen while
lecturing very goddes of liberty.
Rev. Dr. Strikes, sublime youth, who make college pleasures what they
are while monopolizing senior affection.
Emma Pope Moss, who are my favorite & infant pet of faculties while
acting the contrarily.
Madame Ed., I am enhanced by these word paints. Hon. Star depart off
foppishly leaving my interrogatives concerning this flighty elopage on roost
in my brain. I am left feeling very Robinson Caruso, which are repeated
feeling until sharp 12 p. m.
One furred lady appearing very emotion pickture show introduce her
presence at this suspicious gate loaded with double-barrel suit-casing. Hon.
61
ARMISTEAD
TOMPOUi
CONTAINING MUCH
AND GLOVES.
Ed., I told you. It were my vigilant for observing" this invisible act. This I
accomplish with eyebrows containing considerable Arthur Reeve, while she
make off with romance expression.
Succeeding a. m. this president approach my proximity.
"Togo, why are you so rubbish to dishobey orders?" sentence she ; flashes
from her eyes while she said this. "This villain lady has eloped forth novelly
amid sluggish quiet from you. Why were not halt of this from you?"
"My duty were not laid off by that map," eliminate I, feeling quite mutt
"My vigil were for observing this & demand for arrest were not made in my
hearing."
"Sufficiently enough of this," she vampire
amid madly tears ; "what can be left to sense
of such Jap fool-boy when this are absent
quantity."
"Sweetly lady, contain less grief," I waft
consoledly ; "this eloped damosel have not
brazen enough sufficiently to make return for
telling others how."
She make severial petrified replies while I
sustain smartly headache in my understanding.
Hoping you are the same,
Hasimura Togo.
Letter V
TOGO HELPS TO CELEBRATE
THANKSGIVING
Hon. Ed. Silly, of Agnes Scoff, democratic col-
lege in four ( j) castes.
Dere Miss : This school place contain
many divisions each one best. This are true
because all said so. All act very Hague until
war called basket-ball break out. This br.eak-
t are t.faptntg lady tt>t! that out disease are unlike measles & other small-
SUPEIUOUS CLASS CALLED BY ,
junior. Pox only more so.
ail
On thanksgiving day for feast celebration & other joys peculiar to
Amelican indians, this war disease were enacted in gym head quarters. This
are folk custom of Amelican races. In this warrish games classes make quest
to get a head of each.
Amazon lady sneek nearby me.
"Togo, I are leading lady of that superious class named by Junior."
"For looks this might be as you say so." I gallant very Launcelot.
Rakish smile of her.
"This distinguished class long for you as mascotter leader at basket
game when it cause others to look very Waterloo."
"This mascotter are parler trick not
taught in Japan," ans. I. "What to do?"
"You will disguise as Uncle Sammy, bald
eagle of Amelica, ear of corn, or other thanks-
giving novelty." illuminate she & flight off.
I spend cheerless hr. making attempt to
see how to look cranberry sauce at this defeat.
In these attitudes another lady sneek
slilently yonder & motion me.
"Togo," require she, "I am in position as
chief for that tribe called Sophemore."
"What indian tribe are this?" shout I very
warwhoop.
"Most indescribable, smartly, victory, well
looking. & brained division in this school."
effuse she. "Largely retreat of others will
follow this excellent tribe on thanksgiving
game-daw Your honor are destined for you
to lead by halter one ( 1 ) national beast called
turkey by one ( 1 ) leg. Union of you two are
mascott of us."
"To convey this national turkey would be
easier than appearing Thanksgiving novelty,"
remenis I, & accept with thanks this kind-hearted invitation to represent so
Continued on page ?j.
OST INDESCRIBABLE SMARTLY
DIVISION IN THIS SCHOOL.
63
Class Colors : Blue and White
Class Flower : White Rose
Junior Class
Motto: Age quod agis
^Officers
FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER
LOUISE WILSON , President ELIZABETH WILLETT
JOSIE JONES-.F..C- Vice-President LILLIAN ANDERSON
MAGARA WALDRON Secretary ELIZABETH BURKE
EVELYN GOODE Treasurer MALINDA ROBERTS
^embers of Ctecutitie Committee
Alice WeatherlyCC Anne McClure
Class doll
Lillian Anderson
Lucile Boyd
Emmie Branham
Mary Bryan
Alma Buchanan
Elizabeth Burke
Lorine Carter
Laura Cooper
Willie Mae Elkixs
Maggie Fields
Nell Frye
Eloise Gay
Grace Geohegan
Ora Glenn
Evelyn Goode
Ray Harvison C.^,
Louis
Maryellen Harvey c.fc _
Katherine Hay
Charis Hood
Mahota Horn
Katherine Lindamood
Anne McClure
Lula McMurry
Margaret PHYTHUxt C,
Mary Glenn Roberts
Malinda Roberts
Martha Ross
Anna Sykes
Magara Waldron
Alice Weatherly C- C .
Clara Whips
Elizabeth Wili.ett
?:
THE SILHOUETTE A
BURKE WALDRON
HARVEY C . .
GOODE
PHYTHIAN fcjfc ,
FIELDS L. COOPER
BUCHANAN
*
WILSON
HAKVISONCt- .
GLENN
CARTER
WEATHERLY C f.
BOYD
W HIPS
MC CLURE
LINDAMOOD
ROSS
MC MURRAY
Junior Progress
UCH reports came incessantly from the far-off land which
held the shrine of the Goddess of Knowledge, that Youth,
always prone to follow the beckonings of dream shapes, and
believing that the voyage would result in the highest good,
resolved to make the journey. No sooner had he resolved
this, than four persons in the guise of friends came to him.
The first. Laziness, said : "Youth, it is too much trouble."
"Yes. trouble, but it is worth it." answered impetuous Youth.
The second friend. Dependency, next took up the argument : "Think,
Youth, you'll be all alone."
"My mind to be a kingdom is." silenced him for the time being.
Puppy-love next stepped forward: "Youth, what's the use?"
Youth pondered a moment, then: "I'll show you."
Finally, Fear took the lead: "You'll never do it. Youth, never!"
Youth, now a little uneasy, but not to be daunted, answered a little
weakly : "Age quod agis."
"Well, if you must go, we will go with you," they said as one.
"But how?"
"Why, just place us in your pack."
Thus Youth started bowed down under his load, which, to the world,
flashed out the insignia Ignorance.
Before he had gone far down the road leading from home. Dependency
appeared changed into that time-honored, well-worn countenance Home-
sickness. Youth was for turning back, but he had just reached the main road
where a throng of youths beckoned him on to join them.
Pleasant companions and fellowship caused the bundle to grow seemingly
lighter. When "all of a sudden" Youth felt himself slipping, sinking
Laziness had escaped from the bag. Brotherly love reached forth a helping
hand, and Youth managed to pull through the first Slough of Despond.
The band was reduced, for some crawled out on the nearer side, and,
though saddened, the rest went on, and soon were enjoying the pleasant,
laughing meadows of a well-earned vacation.
67
When Youth next resumed the journey Puppy-love could not be found,
for he had carried away man}- with him and was afraid to show his face.
Laziness had been conquered, and was no longer an enemy. But Dependency
was present. Home-sickness changed to Home-appreciation. Fear, an ever-
present adversary, had been killed, Youth supposed ; but he revived, and was
present for the journey. Thus Youth resumed the climb. The road was
rough, and so bus}- was he helping his companions, that he was startled when
he reached the top. What a wonderful sight! There in the distance, only
a stone's throw, loomed the Shrine of the Goddess of Knowledge. One good
look he got a mist hid it from view. But that look was just enough to make
him redouble his efforts to reach it. and go beyond. "Age quod agis," and '16
were very dear to him.
Magara Waldron.
Age Quod Agis
The mountain top is beautiful indeed,
O Pilgrim sisters. Here the air is keen
And free. It sings to our souls hope.
And in the distance lo ! the end is seen.
For veiled in rosy mists, yet gleaming white
At times from out the veil, glorious it stands.
The long-sought shrine of knowledge. To worship there
We've come together from far-off, distant lands.
Behind us lies the winding, climbing road.
The weary road we've traveled for three years ;
Before us now the way is flower-bound,
For the mystic shrine the end of all appears.
Come, sister, bear your ever-lightening load.
Before the goddess' shrine you shall find rest.
Then, rising, know that you are free.
Go forth into the world supremely blessed.
Clara Whips, '16.
U9
Sophomore Class
Colors : White and Gold Flower : Daisy
Motto: Optima petamus
SPmcers
FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER
ANNE KYLE President RUTH NISBET
MARY NEFF Vice-President GJEUTRUD AMUNDSEN
MARY SPOTSWOOD PAYNE.-.Secretary-Treasurer JANET NEWT! )N
MARTHA DENN1SON, Silhouette Member
Members of aBrecutrtie Committee
Agnes Scott Donaldson
Mary Neff
Class Roll
Amelia Alexander India Hunt Esther Rogers
Gjertrud Amundsen Frankie Howald Louise Roach
Louise Ash Josie Jones C.C Rita Schwartz
Helen Allison Emma Jones Virginia Scott
Laurie Caldwell Willie Belle Jackson Kathrine Stmpson
Martha Dennison Leila Johnson Augusta Skeen CC_
Isabel Dew Anne Kyle Marguerite Stevens
Agnes Scott Donaldson Annie Lee Frances Thatcher Ct,
Kathrine Dubose Julie MacIntyre Charlotte Thompson
Mary Eakes Mary MacIyor Mary Van Arsdale
Alice Fleming Mary Neff Jeannette Victor
Elizabeth Gammon Janet Newton Louise Ware
Elizabeth Gregory Ruth Nisbet Sarah Webster
Celia Grant Louise Oberly Georgiana White
Mildred Hall Mary Spotswood Payne Yallie Young White
Charlotte Hammond Margaret Pruden Lucile Williams
Jane Harwell Ellen Ramsay Mary Virginia Yancey
The Memory Book of the Sophomores
LONE, alone; all, all alone" you stood in the great big hall.
Around you were girls, girls, girls, and you knew not even
one ! Just as a feeling of utter misery mounted up to
suffocate you, you caught the mournful glance of another
lonesome person, and smiled a radiant smile. The class had
begun to unite ! After that things began to improve. You
two found other fragments, and even great hunks of class in such "Fresh"
gathering places as the classification room. From there lessons started, and
presently things began to hum. You were overwhelmed by the idea that
finally you were a "college girl," a creature whom you had hitherto believed
of an especial kind of flesh and blood. Parties! Parties! Y. W., societies,
and private affairs all demanded your distracted attention. From the hubbub
of the first few weeks you emerged a full-fledged Freshman, member of your
own chosen society, and thirsting for more adventure. This was soon offered
you in the "great and only Soph-Freshman Fight," which, having ended
triumphantly, left a reign of quiet.
Then Christmas! Never can you forget the utter bliss of your first
return home, and of the joy-filled days which passed so fleetingly passed
like a flash of light, and dropped you dazed and miserable into the "abyss of
dark despair": for now came your first task of college exams! In bygone
high-school days you had imagined you knew a little, or perhaps even a good
deal. Strange, now you'd had so much more, to feel so abjectly ignorant;
yet the agony passed, and you survived. The wonder of survival sends you
speeding far into the second semester.
Spring at Agnes Scott ! The campus all green and flowery ; truly the
nicest place in all Georgia to be ! You wandered about and heard mighty
Seniors envying you the privilege of seeing it three times more; and, down in
your humble heart, you, too, were glad not to leave it no, not even to be a
Senior.
72
May Day recalled Old English Festivals of which you had read, and
thrilled you with the dancing' joy of a young, happy world. Then followed
separation and vacation.
Again you stood in the big hall surrounded by girls but not, not alone,
for you were now an "old" girl, and took enthusiastic part in the orgy of
kissy, noisy greetings around you.
You, too, could smile condescendingly on the wretched, lonesome "new"
beings. Indeed, you found the greatest distinction between Freshies and
Sophs to be just this : Freshies are done, but Sophomores do.
Now you were the most ardent rushers ; and when the time came at last
for the wondrous fight, you did not sit by, afraid of your own shadow, and
wait nay, for you were now the offender. Not that the Freshies remained
passive : no, indeed ! Xever had there been such stout resistance and such
utter wreckage. "And," said the faculty in a loud voice, "never again shall
there be another such." So, one cold night, the campus blazed with bonfires
as we entertained the Freshies. and, amid much good will and loud cheering,
we "buried the hatchet" thus ending forever the "Soph-Fresh" struggle at
Agnes Scott.
In a short time came a curious invitation to a Hallowe'en part)- in the
gym. Dressed in sheets you slipped across the moonlit campus to join the
great mass of other revelling spooks in the misty darkness. And from this
you had another pleasant memory to store away for after-times.
Then came the decision that Thanksgiving should be made a big occasion.
The first of the championship basket-ball games took place that morning.
Our turkey mascot proved the best of luck-bringers, for our class won ! Yet,
because of the luck he brought, the poor bird lost his tail, for even- Soph
just had to have a feather for her "Memory Book," and no turkey has more
than forty-six tail feathers. Truly, the whole of Thanksgiving was a great
success.
Before we knew it the Christmas holidays were here, and we were going-
home again. Then back again, working, and discussing plans for the future
ever keeping in mind our motto "Optima petunias" seeking to be the very-
best Sophomore Class that ever was, and passing on to coming classes the
bright light of our example.
Martha Dennison, '17.
73
Playing the Game
You who have followed the trail of Life,
Out on the broad highway,
Tell us the secret that you have brought
As your prize from out the fray ;
For some of us toil and never tire.
And some of us follow pleasure's fire,
And some are weak yet we all aspire
For the goal at the end of the way.
For the Sophs have fought, and we've stood our ground,
And we've taken our luck as it came :
And we grinned and took it when we were down,
And I think we've played the game.
But we long to know in the great outside
That stretches before us, unconquered and wide
What is the secret to be our guide,
And to keep us from danger and blame !
Let us listen to those who have followed the trail :
"You have asked for the truth of our soul
But you've found what it took all our journey to learn.
For it's the 'playing the game' that's the whole ;
And we who have finished the ones who know
Have no greater secret than that to bestow.
Just keep on up the trail you have started to go.
And be sure at the end of your goal."
India Hunt, '17.
71
TOGO HELPS TO CELEBRATE THANKSGIVING
Continued from page 63.
Madame, to make description of this play game are my sorrow. Yet
I do so.
At top of this Sophemore class I appear quite mascotter, holding hon.
turkey with gentle tensity peculiar to mud turtle, while entering in it at door
of gym house amid loudly hallos from all throats.
All contain good time hut me & turkey.
Game-start are accomplished. Largely hollow hall vibrate between
different places where girls seek to be there. This continues on-ly. Shouts
renewed by congregation. Echo are made by hon. turkey.
"My intelligence can not receive purpose of this effortful hall," haze I
amid rush of noise to succeeding neighbor.
"Those active damosels seek to place him in position in hollow loop in
suspension on wall," ans. she looking very information.
As she said so hon. hall make coquettish dash & skip from hands of she
seeking to obtain this. All off-standers make yells & help none. My [aply
chivalry are aroused.
"I will obtain this ungentlemanly ball." scream I, sounding very Sir
Walter Raleigh.
I make madly dash for cite of this. My manners overcome my remem-
brance how hon. turkey are fastened to my personality. This beast emit
helply squeel. erupt loose from my tense embrace, & make aereoplane ascent
into atmosphere full of angry applaud & other ozone. I arise jumplv to seize
at his talons in ju-jitsu attitude. That knave ball place its roundish surface
in my advance & I descend in diver attitude to floor.
All these youngish casts show appreciation by giving such hallos as
"Togo have spoiled this prize rightly game!" "Why do you act so black-
handly?" & other compliments.
enrage are aroused & I enter out looking considerable proud royalty.
Hoping you are the same.
Hasimura Togo.
Ma
Athletic Association
Dfficer0
JULIE MacINTYRE President
ISABELLE DEW Vice-President
ANNE KYLE Treasurer
MARYELLEN HARVEY...4C Secretary
GJERTRUD AMUNDSEN Manager of Athletic Store
LHOUET
Tennis Club
ISABEL DEW, President
Josie Jones c . -
Lillian Anderson
Elizabeth Pendleton
Julia Anderson
Henrietta Lamedtn
Mary Spotswood Payne
Sallie Carrere
Helen Connett
Eleanor Crabtree
Agnes Scott Donaldson
Laurie Caldwell
Mvnelle Blue
Maymie Callaway
Members
[Catherine Lindamood
Lucia Butler
Gertrude Briesenick
Miss Richardson
Priscilla Nelson
Elizabeth West
Vallie Young White
Elizabeth Miller
Lucy Naive
Frances Kell
Helen Hood
Marie Morris
Mary Neef
Claude Dunson
Maggie Fields
Charis Hood
Isabel Dew
Margaret Leyburn
Elizabeth Ring
Lucile Horn
Margaret Shambaugh
Ora Nicols
Lucile Boyd
Mary Etta Thomas
Janet Newton
Louise Ware
78
ana
F
&
- J ' 1 ] S*:| < ' S * i^'jt'ij FT""
Freshman Basket-Ball Team
MARTHA YOUNG, Captain
LINE-UP
MAYMIE CALLAWAY }
PATTY MONROE J "" --Forwards
LOIS EVE )
MAY FREEMAN j Guards
MARTHA YOUNG }
JULIA WALKER j "" .Centers
STUART SANDERSON Substitute
jr
Junior Basket-Bali Team
ELIZABETH GREGORY, Captain
LINE-OP
KATHERINE LINDAMOOD )
ORA GLENN J Forwards
ELIZABETH GREGORY )
EVELYN GOODE | .-.-Guards
ALICE WEATHERLY t -j
MARY ELLEN HARVEY^' Centers
CLARA WHIPS ]
RAY HARVISON .., Subs T1 tutes
LOUISE OBERLY J
Game: November 26
Score : Junior 15 Senior 7
Sophomore Basket-Ball Team
JULIE MacINTYRE, Captain
LINE-UP
VALUE YOUNG WHITE } Fokwakds
JANET NEWTON }"""
JULIE MacINTYRE / r
ANNE KYLE j GuARDS
AGNES SCOTT DONALDSON / r
ISABEL DEW \ centers
GJERTRUD AMUNDSEN ) c
RUTH NISBET j Substitutes
Game : November 26
Score : Sophomore 1 1 Freshman 7
81
Jfc
Senior Basket-Bail Team
CATHERINE PARKER, Captain
LINE-UP
KATE RICHARDSON j Forwards
FRANCES WEST \
RUTH COFER ] Guards
GRACE HARRIS j
CATHERINE PARKER ) Centers
MARY HELEN SCHNEIDER y. c .'
GERTRUDE BRIESENICK 1
SALLIE CARRERE I Substitutes
HENRIETTA LAMBDIN J
82
Irregular Basket-Bali Team
EDNA PERRY. Captain
LINE-UP
LUCILE HORN ] F
MARGARET SHAMBAUGH \
ELIZABETH KINNEAR ]
EFFIE BOYD BREWER \
CORINNE BRIGGS #t
EDNA PERRY \" "
83
Baseball
SUB-TEAM
..FANNIE THOMAS
HELEN HOOD
VARSITY TEAM POSITION
FAITH BURT PrrcHER
AGNES DONALDSON Catcher
MAYMIE CALLAWAY First Base ISA BEALL TALMADGE
ELIZABETH RING Right Field MAGGIE FIELDS
KATHERINE LINDAMOOD Second Base LOUISE ASH
MAUDE SHUTE Center Field ANNIE LEE
VALLIE YOUNG WHITE Short Stop MARTHA WHITNER
LILLIAN ANDERSON Left Field VIRGINIA WHITE
CHARIS HOOD Third Base GJERTRUD AMUNDSEN
84
Letter VI
TOGO KEEPS THE CANDY KITCHEN
Hon. Ed. of Silly-zvet, zvho seek to make college life cheerless zvith work,
expense. & other pleasures.
Reverend Madame : Another position where I am not are in building"
erected for slience, chemicals. & other courses. In that circumstance I
endured considerable cruelties. The cause why I am ejected outward from
cleaning employment there are of plural numbers chiefly being for because
of dangerous cooking habit peculiar to girls & other women.
Hon. president of school elocute at religious chapel gathering:
"Prohibition law concerning alcohol are necessary here for cooking as for
drinking, causing us fire & sleepless nights peculiar to policemen. Dishes for
burning this delicious beverage are not to be used for it."
Groans from thousand throats peculiar to swine.
"Habit of women for eating between times are not overcome by this
dangerous," colapse he for chivalry. "For such purpous womanly kitchen
are swept out in down floor-room of slience house containing non-breakable
table & burners of gaseous habits with guarantee not to burn."
"Togo are excellently made for such postures as cooking & other drug-
gery, being" deprived of job severial days of yore," advise one looking very
lawyer. I make income to this job.
Madame Ed., this place are meeting place for those of soup & other
tendencies. When not employed in work in elevated floors reserved for
laboratories & other tools I recreate by cleaning up debris left from
gastronomic art of these females.
Following narrative bereft me of this position.
Entrance are injected into this room of asbestus qualities by some lad}".
"Dinner-eat will be accomplished in this entertaining room by ten (TO)
complete persons in one (1 ) hr. belonging to membership of alfalfa omega
club," renounce she, while producing cans & other victuals from pockets & dish
for cooking alcohol.
Outbursts of slilence follow during much stir of liquid fluid in one dish.
"This delicious work of cooking art are to be left in caretake of you,"
electrocute she, "while I go to library for lack of time to do so."
85
Out-go are accomplished beside hauty actions. I am left feeling con-
siderable vacuum. This delicious compound are unrecognized bill affair
for me.
"To introduce this on gaseous burner will be sufficient care which are
guarantee not to burn," my mind snuggest, feeling very Manchu. "In this
attitude dual purpose are obtained while hon. cookery cook & Samurai accom-
plish sleep nap."
I act ditto amid slumber.
Mad. Ed., rudely it awake me.
Smell of burning eating product ascend to floor where I am at. I arise
to view at it. Hon. non-burn burner look very Vesuvius.
In this condition enter hastly said lady.
"Togo, why are this behavior of eating food?" declaim she calm but
nervous.
"Sneekretly this non-burn burner are burn this delicious cookery," rehash
I, "while I dream in sleep."
"Help," explain she amid c # voice, "lift this deliteful cinder from
danger."
I haste to do as she said it. Hon. dish reward my attempt by burn
ten ( 10) white balloons of considerable heat on me for thanks.
"Dinner-eat are entirely capsized by burning," among tears she hallo it.
"Ditto are true of my fingers," agonize I, and decamp outwards before
being kicked there.
Hoping you are the same,
Hasimura Togo.
c
&
Inter-Club Council
1914-1915
MARY HELEN SCHNEIDER, C C President
MARY SPOTSWOOD PAYNE, 2 A * Secretary
LOUISE WILSON, BD
88
S0em tiers
Elizabeth Burke, '16 - - Macon, Georgia
Sarah Con vers Greenville, South Carolina
Kathrine Dueose, 17- Atlanta, Georgia
Alice Fleming, '17 Lynchburg, Virginia
Evelyn Goode, '16 .....Lynchburg, Virginia
Eloise Gay, '16 ."_... Atlanta, Georgia
Mildred Hall. '17 Greenwood, Mississippi
Jane Harwell, '17 La Grange, Georgia
Katherine Hay, '16 Eaton, Pennsylvania
Julie MacIntyre, '17 Atlanta, Georgia
Louise Oberly, '17 _ McRae, Georgia
Kate Richardson, 'IS Washington, Georgia
Sallie May Tillman Trenton, South Carolina
Louise Wilson, '16 - Lynchburg, Virginia
Willie Belle Jackson, '17 - Velasco, Texas
89
epembers
Virginia Allen, '17 _ Greenville, South Carolina
Margaret Anderson, 'IS .Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Marion Black, '15 Montgomery. Alabama
Corinne Briggs, '16 Atlanta, Georgia
Mary Hamilton, '15 Lexington. Virginia
Maryellen Harvey, '16 Montgomery, Alabama
Ray Harvison, '16 Junction City, Arkansas
Louise Hooper, '18 Selma. Alabama
Josie Jones, '16 Valdosta, Georgia
Margaret Phythian, '16 New Port, Kentucky
Mary Helen Schneider. '15 Chattanooga, Tennessee
Augusta Skeen, '17 Tifton, Georgia
Hallie Smith, '16 ...Elkin, North Carolina
Frances Thatcher, '17 Chattanooga, Tennessee
Alice Weatherly, '16 Anniston, Alabama
Mary West, '15 Valdosta, Georgia
ipMiPk
9
%orores in Collegto
Myxelle Blue, '16 Union Springs. Alabama
Laurie leGare Caldwell. '17 L Greensboro. Georgia
Agnes Scott Donaldson, '17 Colorado Springs, Colorado
Helen P. H ughes. '17 Burkeville, Virginia
Anne Graham Kyle, '17 .' Lynchburg, Virginia
Elizabeth Alexander Kinnear, '17 _ Lexington, Virginia
Henrietta Kemp Lambdin, '15 Barnsville, Georgia
Annie Lee, '17 Birmingham, Alabama
Mary Pokterfield Xeff, '17...- Charlottesville, Virginia
Lysbeth Pendleton, '17 Pembroke, Kentucky
Margaret Berry Pruden, '17 Rome, Georgia
Mary Spotswood Payne, '17 Lynchburg, Virginia
Elizabeth Willet, '16 -\nniston, Alabama
^orores in Uibe
Mrs. Henry Eauthmax (Eliza Candler)
Mrs. Edward Craft (Mary Crosswell)
Mrs. Harold Wey (Carol Stearns)
Miss Lui.a Woods White
Mrs. George Lowndes (Inez Wilkerson)
94
Gamma Tau Alpha
Founded in 1914
jToundation Unifiers
Alice Lucile Alexander, M. A.,
Adjunct Professor of French
Mary Louise Cady, M. A.,
Professor of History
J. Sam Guy, Ph. D
Professor of Chemistry
Charles P. Oliver, Ph. D.,
Professor of Physics
J. D. M. Armistead, Ph. D.,
Professor of English
Mary C. de Garmo, M. A.,
Professor of Home Economics
Margaret Ellen McCallie, B. A., Ph. B.,
Adjunct Professor of German
Lillian Scoresby Smith, Ph. D
Professor of Latin
Anna Irwin Young, M. A.,
Professor of Mathematics
alumnae spem&ers
Class of 1906 Class of 1907
Ida Lee Hill, B. A. Sarah Boals, B. A.
(Mrs. I. T. Irwin) (Mrs. J. D. Spinks)
Class of 190S
Jeannette Brown, B. A. Elva Drake, B. A.
Maude Barker Hill, B. A. (Mrs. W. B. Drake)
Lizzabel Saxon, B. A. Rose Wood, B. A.
Class of iqoq
Eugenta Fuller, B. A. Ruth Marton, B. A.
Irene Newton, B. A. Mattie Newton, B. A.
Anne McIntosh Waddell, B. A.
Class of 19 12 Class of 1913
Cornells Elizabeth Cooper, B. A. Janie W, MacGaughey, B. A.
Annie Chapin McLane, B. A. Emma Pope Moss, B. A.
^tuoent ^embers
Elected from the Senior Class of igT/l
Annie Tait Jenkins Kathleen Kennedy
Louise McNui.ty Essie Roberts
Marguerite Wells
Elected from the Senior Class of 1913
Marion Black c c Catherine Parker
Gertrude Briesenick Mary Helen Schneider *:
Mary West. c
Oli
Dec /Deutsche Vtttin
ISeamtittnen
MARGARET PHYTHIAN.....f .?*.- Prasident
MARYELLEN HARVEY.. .,... Vice-Prasident
MARY NEFF Sekratar
ALICE FLEMING Schatzmeisier
FRANCES THATCHER........_ Beglcitcr
Cercle Francaise
Officers
RUTH COFER President
JEANNETTE VICTOR Vice-President
MARY HELEN SCHNEIDER.. tC Secretary
KATHRINE DUBOSE Treasurer
Suuisorp Committee
Frances Thatcher t C . India Hunt
Sai.i.ie Carrere Louise Ware
E. Katherixe Anderson
Louise Ash
Gertrude Briesexick
Imogene Brown
Laurie Caldwell
Helex Coxxett
Isabel Dew
Mary Eakes
Willie Mae Elkins
May Freeman
Gladys Gaines
Goldie Ham
Lena Holt
Helen Hood
Helex Hughes
Elizabeth Miller
Axxe McClure
Ruth Nisbet
Ellex Ramsay
Mary Glenn Roberts
Malixda Roberts
Stuart Sanderson
Mary Helen Sizer CC
Augusta Skeen C . C
Pearl Steinberg
Alice Weatherly t .*~-
Sarah Webster
Ella Capers Weston
Fannie Ruth Welchel
Georgiaxa White
Value Young White
Martha Young
JFacuItp Members
Miss Anna Young
Miss Amy F. Presto >
The North Georgia Club
Officers
MARY KELLY President
KATE RICHARDSON Treasurer
Members
Amelia Alexander
Julia Anderson
Emma K. Anderson
Louise Ash
Imogene Brown-
Martha Brenner
Annie Pope Bryan
Carolyn Ballentine
CORINNE BrIGGSCC
Emma Branham
Laura Caldwell
Lorine Carter
Martha Comer
Ruth Cofer
Laura Cooper
Belle Cooper
Martha Dennison
Isabel Dew
Kathrine Dubose
Claude Dunson
Lois Eve
Nell Frye
Rebekah Fromberg
Margaret Fields
Eloise Gay
Jane Harwell
Charis Hood
Helen Hood
India Hunt
Emma Jones
Katherine Jones
Mary Kelly
Samille LoweCC
Annie Lemon
Henrietta Lambdin
Lula McMurray
Julie MacIntyre
Janet Newton
Sarah Patton
Catherine Parker
Margaret Phillips
Margaret Pruden
Grace Reid
Matilda Roberts
Mary Glynn Roberts
Tsa Beall Talmadge
Charlotte Thompson
Jeannette Victor
Martha Whitner
Fanny Ruth Welchel
Frances West
Georgianna White
Louise Ware
Magara Waldron
100
MISS LEWIS "Ole Miss'
VALLIE YOUNG WHITE "Captain Coon'
"ALL THE LITTLE COONS"
Martha Bishop
Lucile Horn
Pauline Byrd
Charlotte Cope
Mynelle Blue
Marion Black c.C
Claude Martin-
Mary V. Yancey
Sue McEachern
Grace Gohegan
Helen Ledbetter
Mary Bowers
Gjertrud Amundsen
Elizabeth Willet
Grace Harris
Marie Morris
Madie Lee Ward
Fannie Oliver c*._
Margaret Cater
Virginia White
Ruth Pearce
.Olive Wright
Mary Ford
Jessie Ham
Lois Grier
Lucile Boyd
Elizabeth de Graffenreid Mary Bryan
Marvellen Harvey tt Porter Pope
Annie Saxon . *
Clara Whips
Lula Maddox
Annie Lee
Louise Hooper i. C
Gladys Gaines
Sarah Powers
Alice Weatherly
101
Tennessee Club
Officers
MARY HELEN SCHNEIDER .!?*....;. " President
ANNIE WHITE MARSHALL C.C. Secretary
^em tiers
Maymie Callaway Nancy McCord Katherine Seav CC .
Nell Couch Annie Leigh McCorkle Mary Helen Schneider Cf~.
Leonora Gray A. W. Marshall cC Mary Helen Sizer c-C .
Elizabeth Gregory Katherine Moore Frances Thatcher fc -C .
Luella Grigg Lucy Naive Bessie Lee Varnell
Rose Harwood Ora Nichols Mary Elizabeth Walker
Sallie May King Jessie Phillips Elizabeth West
Mary Rogers Lyle Elizabeth Ring Martha Young
onorarp Members
Dr. Gaines Miss Preston-
Miss McCallie Miss Jennie Smith
1H2
Motto: '"I wish I was in the land of cotton"
Officers
JOSIE JONES fvf". _ President
GERTRUDE BRIESENICK Vice-President
ELIZABETH BURKE - Secretary and Treasurer
C@embets
Julia Frances Abbott Katherine Holtzclavv
Lillian Anderson Ruth Lester
Agnes Ball Ruth Xisbet
Debra Block Louise Oberlv
Sallie Carrere Regina Pinkston
Florence Ellis Elizabeth Riley
Otelta Gibson Louise Roach
Annie May Glenn Augusta Skeen f.
Louise Halliburton Caroline Stapler
Olive Hardwick Julia Walker
Lucile Harrison Sarah Webster
Ouida Mae Herrington Mary West 1 1 ~
Edith Hightower Ella Capers Weston
Lena Holt Fannie Wheeler
Lucile Williams
103
North Carolina Club
Tin a Tar Heel born and a Tar Heel bred.
And -when I die I'll be a Tar Heel dead."
8em tiers
Margaret Anderson.'.*-!^ Winston-Salem
Ruth Anderson ....C.C. Winston-Salem
Elizabeth Bulgin Franklin
Eleanor Crabtree Goldsboro
Mahota Horn Franklin
Margaret Leyburn Durham
Mildred McGuire Franklin
Elizabeth Miller Salisbury
Helen Moore Asheville
Miriam Reynolds Asheville
Esther Rogers Franklin
Martha Ross Morganton
Maude Shute Monroe
Hallie Smith CjC Elkin
Elizabeth Taylor Asheville
Fannie Thomas _ Sanford
104
May Freeman
Alice Fleming
Evelyn Goode
Elizabeth Gammon
Mary Hamilton CL
Virginia Girls
8pem tiers
Helen Hughes
India Hunt
Elizabeth Kinnear
Axxe Kyle
jTactiltp (pemficts
Mary Neff
Mary Spotswood Payne
Caroline Randolph
Delia Perry
Louise Wilson
Miss Hopkins
Miss McKinney
Mrs. Gaines
Miss Moore
Dr. Armistead
105
Mississippi Club
Officers
FRANCES KELL - President
ANNA SYKES Secretary
^embers
Myrtis Burnett
Martha Dennison
Mildred Hall
Goldie Ham
Irene Havis
Charlotte Hammond
Lucile Kaye
Katherine Lindamood
Mary Montgomery
Priscilla Nelson
Stuart Sanderson
Elizabeth Witherspoon
106
I Curiosity 5hop
k
Officers
KATHERINE HAY, President Pennsylvania
ETHELYN BARRETT, Treasurer Iowa
Members
Willie Belle Jackson Texas
Agnes Donaldson _ Colorado
Marguerite Shambaugh Iowa
Mary Van Arsdale Indiana
Ellen Ramsay Texas
Faith Burt Kansas
Ruth Lawrence Ohio
Helen Connett Missouri
111?
Florida Club
Flower : Cherokee Rose Colors : Navy Blue and Gold
Motto : In God we trust
^Officers
PATTY MONROE President
EFFIE DOE Secretary
Members
Mary Hyek
Celia Grant
Olga Thiesen
Marie Hexdersox
Edna Perry
Miss Richardson
Effie Doe
Patty Moxroe
108
T
A
T3 .
t
Varsity Sweater Foot-
ball Team
Kate Richardson Left End I
Laurie Caldwell (Emory) Quarter-Back I
Elizabeth de Graffenreid (Auburn) Center 1
Elizabeth Kinneab (W. and L. ) Right End I
Effie Doe (Florida) Left Tackle I
Patty Monroe (Miami) Right Tackle I
Oka Glenn (Trinity) Left Guard |
Mary Xeff (U. of Va.) Right Guard I
Martha Young (U. of Miss.) .Full-Back I
May Freeman (Morris) Left Half-Back I
Sarah Powers, Captain (Tech) Right Half-Back 1
&
V
m
m
i
& J*%
*>
^@r
j^""**
Kentucky Club
Flower : Bluegrass Colors : Navy Blue ami White
Motto : ''United we stand, divided we fall"
flDfficers
LUCIA BUTLER President
LYSBETH PENDLETON Secretary and Treasurer
agembers
Martha Orr Margaret Phythian C C_ .
Lucia Butler Mary Etta Thomas
Lyseeth Pendleton
11(1
! ^
Captains
ORA GLENN Rebekah Scott Hall
FRANCES KELL Acnes Scott Hall
MARY WEST......^*r Inman Hall
Seven Senior Sinners
Motto : "Hitch your wagon to a star"
Meeting Place: Room 29, Rebekah Scott Hall
Password : Camiecer
Time of Meeting: By starlight
Prime Requisite : Raincoat
dinners
Mary Helen Schneider F"*"* t
,, T ., . } Investigators
trances L. West \
"Kate" Parker / ,,
', - Suggcst< >rs
Kate Richardson \
Marion Black *l* . T .
., TT T* Jesters
Mary Hyer j
Mary HAMiLTON.t.C... Spooner
Margaret Anderson. <*&..< Sneaker
112
Mynei.le Blue
CoRINNE BRIGGS t, L .
Julia Anderson
Debra Block
Florence Ellis
Jean Baker
Carolyn Ballantyn
Ethelyn Barrett
Effie Boy'd Brewer
Sarah Conyers
Belle Cooper
Charlotte Cope
Nelle Couch
Eleanor Crabtree
Rebeccah Fromberg
Otelia Gibson
Martha Bishop
Faith Burt
Lucia Butler
Irregulars
Third- Year Irregulars
Pauline I!yki>
Edith Roberson
Second-Year Irregulars
Elizabeth Kinnear Lyseeth Pendleton
Claude Martin Margaret Phillips
Ora Nichols Virginia Reed
First-Year Irregulars
Lenora Gray Annie Lemon
e Nellie Hale Katherine Montgomery
Virginia Haugh Mary Montgomery
Marie Henderson Helen Moore
Lena Holt Marie Morris
Louise Hooper Priscilla Nelson
Lucile FIorn Martha Orr
Pauline James Sarah Patton
Lucile Kaye Edna Perry-
Ruth Lawrence Jessie Phillips
Helen Ledbetter Sara Powers
Elizabeth Witherspoon
Special Students
Ida Feldman
Julia Ingram
Katherine Jones
Elizabeth Tam.hr
Ruth Wahdei.l
Maude Shute
I Iai.i.ie Smith C-C
Sallie May Tillman
Annie Saxon i .<;
Katherine Seay *; .^ .
Celeste Shadburn
Marguerite Shambaugh
Caroline Stapler
Marie Shippen
Fannie Thomas
Jessie Thompson
Elizabeth West
Virginia White
Martha Whitner
Laura McClelland
Mrs. Arthur Pew
Evelyn Pratt
Red-Headed Stepchildren Alias, Day
Students
Officers
CATHERINE PARKER..
MAGARA WALDRON....
President
..Secretary and Treasurer
Jeannette Victor
Winifred Smith
Charlotte Thompson
Elva Brehm
Myra Clark Scott
Mary Eakes
Ruth Gilbert
Members
Caroline Larendon
May Smith
Louise Holtzclaw
LULA McMuRRAY
Nancy McCord
Mary McIvor
Katherine Simpson
Susie Hecker
Elizabeth Denman
Olive Hardwtck
Louise Ware
Eloise Gay
Ida Fei.dman
114
Institution cleen
deface looks of each by coronation of them with these boards set uply.
Letter VII
TOGO FEELS "PUZZLE PICKTURE"
Madame Editor, belonging to Seniors, elass dressed very funeral while con-
templating the opponent.
Dere Lady : I write this epistle for because that my understanding feel
very puzzle pickture. Since adventing out to this college manifold inhuman
customs of young females are unravelled to me. ' Happening of severial days
of yore are superior degree of this peculiarity, & I interrogate for learning
reason of this.
I tell you.
Largely hustle in school one morning resembling wedding ceremony. All
look expecting. At alarum of chapel hell all troop inward to religious chapel
hall containing empty platform full of ferns & such ornaments. Turnings of
necks of youthful girls peculiar to cranes. I sneek indoorward to view at
this emotion.
One spryly gent begin peculiar dance step on instrument while playing
swell march on two (2) pianos placed above each.
Income white sophemores dressed so & pursued by line of funeral ladies
carrying squarish boards in direct front of each. These retard upward to
platform. Three faculties in uniforms resembling considerable emperor unite
in joining these. One make high-resounding oration while many weep over
absent past. Succeeding this all ladies in mourning advance one before each
& institution deen deface looks of each by coronation of them with these
boards set uply.
All elope colonadely amid tears.
This peculiaresque accident cause me to feel very sausage in my brain.
Hoping you are the same,
Hasimura Togo.
116
Senior Class, 1915
Officers
FIRST TERM
JESSIE HAM President
MARY WEST ...C.. Vice-President
FRANCES WEST Secretary and Treasurer
SECOND TERM
MARTHA BRENNER President
KATE RICHARDSON Vice-President
MILDRED McGUIRE Secretary and Treasurer
MARY HELEN SCHNEIDER-JST.*^. Prophet
MARION BLACK .., ._: '. Testator
CATHERINE PARKER Historian
FRANCES WEST Silhouette Member
117
MARGARET NEAL ANDERSON
P. L. S., C C
WIN'STON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA
Iii joys, in grief, in triumphs, in retreat,
Great always, -without aiming to be
great."
118
J
MARION PUTNAM BLACK
P. L. S., C C
MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA
'Peace rules the day where reason rules
I he mind."
119
M
MARTHA JEANNETTE BRENNER
M. L. S.
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA
'Love, sweetness, goodness, in her per-
son shine so clear!"
120
GERTRUDE DOROTHY
BRIESENICK
]:Kl'\S\VICK, GEORGIA
'Heart and hand that move together,
Feet that run on zvilling errands."
..; :i ' ! ...;
*
^jjaj|
EM ; -W> i^ - ff-i
II BH fc-aalEgga
121
<?
ANNIE POPE BRYAN
P. L. S.
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA
"A face with gladness overspread '
Soft smiles, by human kindness bred!
122
c
T
MARY ELIZABETH BULGIN
P. L. S.
FRANKLIN, NORTH CAROLINA
"I would make reason my guide
123
jr
SALLIE HUGER CARRERE
P. L. S.
DUBLIN, GEORGIA
'Rest awhile, nor longer ivaste
Life with inconsiderate haste."
^L~'
L
WW 1 ,
5\
.jP^^p^
124
RUTH MERRITT COFER
M. L. S.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
'Time, place, and action, may with pains
be wrought,
But genius must be bom, and never can
be taught."
125
JESSIE HAM
P. L. S.
ELBA, ALABAMA
Of all our parts, the eyes express
The sweetest kind of baslifiilncss."
M
MARY EVELYN HAMILTON
P. L. S., C C
LEXINGTON, VIRGINIA
"As merry as the day is long.'
GRACE ESTHER HARRIS
M. L. S.
MOBILE, ALABAMA
Hear vr not the hum of mighty work-
ings?"
128
T'
&
MARY FRANCES KEL.L
M. L. S.
PASCAGOULA. MISSISSIPPI
'And as the bright sun glorifies the sky,
So is her face illumin'd with her eye."
129
M
MARY LAETITIA KELLY
M. L. S.
MONTICELLO, GEORGIA
To friends a friend; how kind to all!"
130
SALL1E MAY KING
M. L. S.
ELKTON, TENNESSEE
'A truer, nobler, trustier heart,
More loving, or more loyal, never beat
Within a human breast."
131
J*
MARY BRUMMELL HYER
P. L. S.
OKLANDOj FLOIUDA
'With too much quickness ever to be
taught;
With too much thinking to have com-
mon thought."
132
M
HENRIETTA KEMP LAMBDIN
M. L. S.. S A *
BARNESV1LLE, GEORGIA
"Her glassy hair was clustered o'er a
brow
Bright with intelligence, and fair, and
smooth."
133
M
LULA GERTRUDE MADDOX
M. L. S.
BIRM INGHAM, ALABAMA
Endurance is the crowning quality.
And patience all the passion of great
hearts."
134
MILDRED CLYDE McGUIRE
P. L. S.
FRANKLIN, NORTH CAROLINA
"True as the needle to the pole,
Or as the dial to the sun."
135
LUCY JORDAN NAIVE
M. L. S.
DENVER, COLORADO
He that complies against his will
Is of his own opinion still."
136
THE SILHOUETTE
M
CATHERINE EVERETT PARKER
M. L. S.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
'Rare compound of oddity, frolic, and
fun.
Who relished a joke and rejoie'd in a
pun!"
137
"T 8 !
s
GRACE REID
P. L. S.
DECATUR, GEORGIA
Attempt the end, and never stand to
doubt;
Nothing's so hard but search will find
it out."
138
MARY HELEX SCHNEIDER
M. L. S.. C C
CHATTANOOGA, TENNESSEE
'Who first invented work, and bound
the free
And holiday rejoicing spirit down?"
139
KATE LUMPKIN RICHARDSON
M. L. S., BD
WASHINGTON, GEORGIA
Grace was in all her steps, heaven in
her eye,
In every gesture dignity and love."
M
FRANCES LOUISE WEST
M. L. S.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
'Prudence and sense, and spirit bold
and free.
With honor's soul, united, beam in
thee."
141
MARY NANCY WEST
M. L. S C C
VALDOSTA, GEORGIA
Her airs, her manners, all who saw
admired;
Courteous, tlio' coy, and gentle, tho'
retired."
Senior History
Should you ask me. "Whence these Seniors?
Whence the tall girls and the short ones.
With the brows of greatest wisdom.
With the stamp of many sessions.
With the careworn look of troubles,
With the pale and wan expressions
On their erstwhile ruddy faces.
On their former sunny faces?"
1 should answer. 1 should tell you :
"From this state and those adjacent.
From the hills of Carolina,
From the towns of Alabama,
From the state of Mississippi,
From the mountains, plains, and valleys.
Where the Girls' High or the prep school
Sent them forth to work and struggle."
If still further you should ask me,
"By what way reached they the summit?
Tell us of this hard, hard pathway,"
I should answer your inquiries
Straightway in such words as follow:
"In a room of this, our college,
In a bright but lonely chamber.
In a pleasant, airy bedroom.
Dwelt a bashful little Freshman.
Straight across the lovely campus
Hurried she to reach her classes;
Then she went and studied harder.
Worked all day. hut still was wretched.
And in silence of the nighttime.
Broke the slumber of her roommate.
Broke the long sleep of the dreamers,
Sobbed out loud, and kept on wailing.
She was homesick, and was crying,
She was crying for her mother.
Green in autumn, green in winter,
Ever fearful, ever tearful.
M3
"But out of childhood into girlhood
Soon had grown our little Freshie,
Skilled in all the craft of bluffing,
Learned in all the art of cramming.
In all helpful tricks and cunning,
In all harmless stunts and joking.
Swift of thought was bright young Soph'more ;
She could shoot an answer from her.
And another, with such fleetness
That her teacher fell behind her !
Light of heart was gay young Soph'more :
She could spend her evenings loafing.
Spend them in such ease and comfort
That exams had come upon her
Ere to study she had fallen ;
But she passed, and passed with credit.
"You shall hear how staid young Junior
Worked and studied night and morning
Not for greater skill in learning.
Not for greater joy in pleasing,
Not for greater praise from teachers
And renown among the students
But she worked to be a Senior,
Worked for cap. and gown of honor :
Onward then she toiled unceasing.
Onward through the maze of knowledge.
Onward through the pitchy darkness.
And behold! the striving Junior.
With a shout and song of triumph.
Saw the longed-for goal approaching.
Saw all barriers swept before her.
"From the brow of stately Senior
Gone was every trace of sorrow.
With a smile of joy and rapture.
With a look of exultation.
Worked and strutted happy Senior.
Toward the stars her cart was headed ;
All her thoughts were on the morrow,
Till a fearful blow was dealt her,
When to earth she had to fall :
144
Awful papers piled up on her,
Faster fell the work, and harder,
Each day brought its endless duties,
Each week brought its added troubles.
But at last her task's completed,
And she stands with expectation
On the threshold of the future."
Thus their history I have told you ;
Of their trials I have spoken.
Five and twenty is their number.
But for each there is one story :
How they came and how they studied.
How they dug and how they struggled.
How they boned and how they worried :
But besides this were their triumphs,
Their enjoyment and their pleasures.
Love is all they feel at leaving,
Sorrow that it all is over.
And, departing, each one whispers:
"Farewell, O my Alma Mater,
Farewell, O my kindly mother.
Loyal, constant, ever faithful.
True to thee I'll always stand."
Catherine Parker.
145
Senior Prophecy
CAN NOT tell what lured me to the shadowy dwelling of the
fortune-teller ; it may have been my natural love for things
mysterious, or it may have been my impatient curiosity which
prompted me to peer into my future. Be that as it may, I
found myself led, one bright spring morning, to the door of
"Madame Clementina, Mystic and Fortune-Teller." I stood
for several moments on the doorstep, uncertain and undecided ; should I
venture in to consult this mystic, or should I follow the dictates of my better
judgment and abandon my wild scheme of looking into the future? As usual,
my better judgment was peculiarly silent ; a sudden rashness seized me, and I
knocked at the door. It opened, I know not how, and closed again as soon as
I had stepped inside. My senses were completely stunned by the first glimpse
of the room into which I had come. It was small, dimly lighted with a purple
glow, and magnificent in its oriental draperies. The hangings were luxurious
velvets of deep, rich colors purples, oranges, and reds. Everything seemed
colored with those rich, mysterious colors which seem to breathe the fanciful
and the unknown ; colors which stir the emotions and prepare the mind to
receive the slightest sensations. The whole effect of this harmony of colors,
so full of beauty and of life, is to take you from the world of every-day life
and place you in the land of mystery and of magic.
I waited ; not a sound broke the stillness ; no one entered. I moved
cautiously toward one corner of the room, where an alcove was heavily
draped with deep orange curtains. Underneath the gorgeous hangings, on
the floor, was a row of seven small candles burning brightly ; in front of
them on a cushion of purple lay a huge crystal ball. With the candlelight
reflected myriads of times, the ball seemed so beautiful, so wonderful, that it
really seemed to contain human beings who were living and moving. I gazed
for a few seconds, spellbound ; then, realizing that this was the magic crystal
ball, I dropped to my knees as before the shrine of the god of the Future,
eager to peer into the realm of what is to be.
At first I could see only varied lights and colors, then they resolved
themselves into a brilliantly lighted stage. There is music, and dancing, lots
of color, mostly pink, and dozens of beautiful chorus girls. From the right
146
enters the leading lady, a picture of loveliness in her charming gown of pink.
Every one goes wild with ecstasy, the house rings with applause, people in
the boxes shower flowers, as Henrietta Lambdin, leading lady in "The Pink
Lady," comes to the front of the stage and gracefully bows.
The lights grow dim; the scene changes. Here is the blue, mountainous
country of North Carolina. The scene seems almost desolate no, there are
two small structures nestling against the hillside; one is a church and the
other is a cottage, the home of our old friend, Margaret Anderson. Yes,
after all her worrying, hurrying, and rushing at Agnes Scott, she is now
enjoying the calm, uneventfid life as a village minister's wife. Experience
has taught her what one helpless girl can learn to do in the way of keeping
house. She has even become a good cook, but her home Ec. recipes are of
little use to her since they serve only two.
Next, I see our ex-president, Jessie Ham. I hardly recognized her.
After man)- years she lias developed her athletic tendencies, and now holds
the championship for the forward high jump. She is also a noted football
referee. She received her early training for this position in the fall of 1 () 14,
when she was president of the Class of 1915. No wonder she's an excellent
referee !
Bess, can that stout lad}- of middle age really be you? So you've given
up teaching? Yes, there is Bess; she is giving up her life to research work
in tea rooms. At the end of live years she is to publish a book entitled, "The
surest way to make money out of a tea room is to leave out the tea."
Sallie May is happily married to one of those true sports who simply
showered her with candy. Her life is as calm and uneventful as married
lives can be.
Oh. I see New York City ! Yes, here is Marv Hyer, fat as ever, pursuing
her studies in the same serious way. She has just one aim in life to get an
M. D. But I believe, by the look in her eyes, that soon a certain young doctor
of New York will persuade her to accept the M. D. on his name. 'Twill be a
far easier way of getting it, and, as Mary was never inclined to do work when
she could get out of it, we believe she'll abandon her pursuit after knowledge.
Marion, at last, achieves success; her highest ambition in life is gratified.
She has discovered a new method for the fixation of atmospheric nitrogen.
The whole world is paying homage to this genius of the twentieth century.
The chemical society of America is erecting a life-sized statue of Miss Black
147
in front of the Science Hall at Agnes Scott, where she received her education.
Miss Black greatly appreciates the monument, but she says she hopes that
some of the tribute will be paid her in hard cash, since she needs a new pair
of ground grippers.
I am not surprised to see Mary Kelly at the hymeneal altar, for in college
her susceptibility to the attractions of good-looking men was equalled only
by her too-evident charms for them. On her wedding da)' she is not perfectly
happy, because she hates to turn down so many nice lovers for just one. She
realizes that now, for the first time in her life, she must be satisfied with the
attentions of one man. That's pretty hard on a natural-born coquette.
In a bus\- city I see Grace, the editor of a sensational, political news-
paper. By her masterly editorials, she directs public opinion to suit her own
uses. She has just been instrumental in creating public sentiment against
any noise whatsoever after eight o'clock. Miss Harris became so used to
perfect silence after this time at Agnes Scott that now it is impossible for
her to sleep with even a slight noise. Through her influence, Mobile is known
as the "Silent City of the South."
Mildred has become the favorite of the concert stage. Her wonderful
mezzo-soprano voice was accidentally discovered one morning as she went
about her housework singing to herself. She is now touring Europe, where
kings and queens applaud her talents. Madame Mildred is especially fine in
serious songs; of these her favorite is "I'm a Hottentot."
Grace Reid had ever a love for Latin and all things savoring of Latin,
so, when the supreme moment .came that she should choose a one and only
from among her numerous suitors, it was very natural that she should choose
a noted Latin professor. Many have gained more wealth and more renown,
but none more happiness than Grace.
Lucy went to Denver to live in 1915. In 1918, the Woman's Suffrage
League of Denver, recognizing her inborn genius for keeping law and order,
made her Chief of Police. Lucy discharges her duties with conscientiousness
and skill, and Denver now* merits the name of a model, peaceful city. It is
rumored that the alumme of Inman Hall are sending a beautiful medal to
their former president as a token of their esteem.
Mary Hamilton has been tied by the bonds of matrimony ! After all the
lectures that little man hater gave for the enlightenment of certain members
of her class on the general subject, "Why I'll never marry" ; and she always
148
prided herself on never changing her mind! None less than the illustrious
young governor of Virginia could have persuaded her to take such a rash
step. Indications were that she should be a portly, middle-aged lady, but,
much to my surprise, as I see her now, she is very thin and very happy. She
presides gracefully as mistress in the governor's mansion, and is "making a
terrible hit."
I see Kate but, no, surely this can not be our Kate, who was always
lovable, and whose disposition was as sunshiny as her hair! This person
before me is a hopeless spinster. How I hate the word, but none other will
apply! Her lovely rose-geranium hair is curled tightly over her brow, and
every vestige of a "smile is chased away. She spends her time lecturing to her
nieces about how prim and prissy she was as a young girl at Agnes Scott.
Poor Kate, you're the very last one we would have thought would come
to this!
Annie Pope remains the very truest of Agnes Scott girls. She. ever
loyal to her Alma Mater, carries its name through life. She did not aspire
to fame, riches, or knowledge she wanted only this, and is happy.
Sallie is winning all kinds of renown for herself not as a business
woman, as you might expect from her masterly handling of Silhouette
money, but as a private detective. Her sharp, black eyes and her quick wits
are ever ready to protect the innocent citizens. Her greatest ability is to
"Spot" people.
I find Gertrude in the realm of society. As soon as she is out of college
she becomes a butterfly, flitting from party to dance with never a serious
thought or a worry in the world. For wit, cleverness, and attractiveness she
has become the favorite of all South Georgia. As for lovers well, she has
as many as there are days in the year ! Needless to say, Gertrude is happy.
T find one of our illustrious class a promising young lawyer. Which of
us had wit, shrewdness, and the ability to convince you that black is white, or
nearly so at least? Why, Catherine Parker, of course. She is desperately
arguing a case which involves the point, that seven hairpins are sufficient to
hold up any lady's hair. For forty-five minutes straight she argued this one
technical point, until, at last, judge, jury, and prosecuting attorney, were
convinced, through sheer fatigue, that she knew more about it than they did.
Newspapers of Atlanta can not say enough in praise of this clever young
attorney.
I see Frances West the charming" hostess of the Federation of Women's
Clubs. For several years she has been president of this body, and has presided
with dignity and grace. She is also president of the Teacup Gossip Club, and
in this organization is identified as the best-informed woman in Florida
there's not one single thing about any one which she does not know. A
brilliant conversationalist she surely is, and, as a bureau of information, she is
unequalled in the state.
I see Mary West in a varied and broken career. First, dazzled by her
success in the Glee Club, she sings as a Japanese lady in a famous cabaret.
She soon tires of the attentions of men: their flowers and candy simply
irritate her. She seeks solace in chemistry formulas, but finds that even that
has lost its charms. Weary of the uncertainties and perplexities of life, she
marries her first love, and lives happily ever after.
Do you remember our wild little friend Frances Kell? Well, where is
all her excitement and her enthusiasm now? She is now a dignified, patient,
calm, and collected matron of an orphan asylum. Even her beloved Latin
has faded into a mere shadow in her memory ; she spends her time washing
dirty little hands and faces, and pacifying trivial childish sorrows. She is
perfectly happy to-day, because four new children have been brought in and
she has given each of them a double name !
Martha is a portly matron all dressed in lavender just as we should have
expected. Long ago she resigned her position as president of the old maids'
club and married a noted philanthropist of New Orleans. She is a great help
to her husband in his work, probably because of the sociology she studied in
the library every Tuesday and Thursday at 11 :20.
Lula Maddox has received all kinds of renown as the greatest woman
engineer in America. She started her brilliant career as a surveyor of
"Fields." At present she is engaged in planning a city in which there will be
circular blocks entirely. She states that for any one with such swift move-
ments as hers, corners are very inconvenient, It is very likely that Mr. Tart
will help build such a city as Miss Maddox is now planning.
Our little, red-headed Ruth Cofer has become the Queen of the Screen.
We always recognized her grace, her charm, and her talent in theatrical lines,
but we can hardly imagine her on the screen. Ruth, living, yet silent im-
150
possible ! Nevertheless she has become the favorite actress both in Europe
and in America. At present she is in Australia playing the title role in
"Festus, the tiger trainer."
Oh, here is a confused, indistinct scene! There are a lot of people. I
can't recognize any one yes, I can, there I am myself yes, and
A noise is heard outside the door. Madame Clementina enters. I jump
to my feet.
"Madame, I came to have my fortune told."
"Come with me." she said, and led me into the next room.
Mary Helen Schneider,
Prophet.
151
Last Will and Testament of the Class of 1915
F, the undersigned members of the Class of 1915. being of
marvelously sound and well-balanced minds, although
physically scarred and wrinkled by the hardships encountered
from Freshman-Sophomore Fights to Senior examina-
tions do hereby bequeath, in the following order, our
personal property and attractions, to the Class of 1916, with
the hope that they may profit by their possession as we have done.
Article I. We do hereby renounce any and all wills and testaments
made heretofore.
Art. II. Margaret Neal Anderson hereby bequeaths her "gym" suit
to Katherine Lindamood.
Art. III. Marion Putnam Black hands down to Maggie Fields her
interest in psychological advertisements.
Art. IV. Martha Jeannette Brenner wills her art gallery of men
to Charis Hood, and her methods of "bluffing" to Grace Geohegan.
Art. V. Gertrude Dorothy Briesenick wills her History Thesis to
Alice Weatherly, and her alarm-clock to Louise Wilson.
Art. VI. Annie Pope Bryan hands down to Eloise Gay her
L' Allegro and II Penseroso.
Art. VII. Elizabeth Bulgin wills her bug collection to Elizabeth
Burks, and her financial ability to Elizabeth Willett.
Art. VIII. Sallie Huger Carrere bequeaths her cards to Ora
Glenn, and her love of repose to Malinda Roberts.
Art. IX. Ruth Cofer wills her small black bag to Magara Wai.dron.
and her concise mode of expression to Nell Frye.
Art. X. Jessie Ham hands down her boisterous manner to Mary
Glenn Roberts.
Art. XL Mary Evelyn Hamilton wills to Josie Jones her wide
knowledge of love affairs.
Art. XII. Grace Esther Harris bequeaths her Trigonometry to
Margaret Phythian, and her "crushes" to Anna Sykes.
152
Art. XIII. Mary Brummell Hyer hands down to Ray Harvison
her Home Economics books.
Art. XIV. Mary Frances Kell bequeaths her position as Fire Chief
to Maryellen Harvey, and her punctuality at meals to Evelyn Goode.
Art. XV. Mary Laetitia Kelly wills her collection of sweaters to
Mahota Horn, and her 'phone ealls to Lillian Anderson.
Art. XVI. Sallie May King wills her secrets to Anne McClure,
and her candy to Laura Cooper.
Art. XVII. Henrietta Lambdin wills her "newly acquired dignity"
to Emma Jones.
Art. XVIII. Llla Maddox bequeaths her calm and gentle manner to
Clara \\ 'hips.
Art. XIX. Mildred McGuire wills her high-pitched "Latin" voice to
Martha Ross, and her effusiveness to Lorine Carter.
Art. XX. Lucy Naive hereby bequeaths the Innian Hall register book
to Louise Oberly, and her position at Wesley House to Alice Weatherly.
Art. XXI. Catherine Parker hands down to Helen Allison the
"sentimental nature" which she inherited from Theodosia Cobbs.
Art. XXII. Kate Lumpkin Richardson wills her record number of
trips to Atlanta to Lucile Boyd, and her hours in the library to Willie Mae
Elkins.
Art. XXIII. Grace Reid wills her fondness for spending the night in
Inman to Emmie Branham, and her language dictionaries to Mary Bryan.
Art. XXIV. Mary Helen Schneider hands down to Alma
Buchanan her "Mary Garden" and the "Rose Garden."
Art. XXV. Frances West bequeaths her short sojourn of eleven
years at Agnes Scott to Frances Thatcher.
Art. XXVI. Mary West wills her idle hours at Agnes Scott to Lula
McMurry, and her "flunks" to Jeannette Victor.
Art. XXVII. We do hereby bequeath to the Class of 1916, Mr.
Strikes, that he may be handed down from Senior Class to Senior Class.
Signed, sealed, and witnessed, this, the twenty-sixth day of May, in the
year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fifteen.
Marion Black,
Class Testator.
153
MR. SAMUEL M. INMAN
Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Agnes Scott College
Died January 12, 1915
jftr, Samuel JH- 3nman
AN APPRECIATION BY C. M. CANDLER
"Know ye not that there is a prince and a great man fallen this day in Israel?"
HESE words of David upon the death of Abner came
intuitively to many who knew Mr. Inman, when they were
told of his death they were so beautifully and truthfully
expressive of their estimate of his life and character.
Truly he was a great and good man. He lived well
he died well, and his deeds live after him. He was an
eminently successful man. In honorable business he accumulated a handsome
fortune. Not a human being ever believed he held a tainted dollar, or would
accept one. His business life was one of open, straightforward dealings with
his fellow-men. His word was his bond, accepted by all. scrupulously kept.
He advantaged himself at no man's cost. He builded no fortune upon the
ruin or misfortune of another. He won fairly and held steadfastly the
confidence and esteem of his fellow-men.
While of a younger generation, T knew Mr. Inman by reputation, since
my earlv manhood, more than twenty-five years. For the past ten years it
was my privilege to have enjoyed a somewhat close association with him m
the work for Agnes Scott College.
He is one of the few men I have known, of whom I have never at any
time heard spoken an unkind word or an envious criticism. The crown of
honest manhood placed upon his brow by all who knew him, or knew of him,
provoked no enmity, brought no jealousy, and doubtless
"Shall new luster boast
When Victor's wreaths and Monarch's gems
Shall blend in common dust."
Having honestly accumulated wealth, he used it for noble purposes and
to noble ends. What his benefactions aggregated perhaps no one knows. It
is known that they were wide and large, for in his giving he was more than
liberal, he was generous. He did not give impulsively or spasmodically. He
gave wisely and with judgment, as well as liberally and ungrudgingly. None
of his gifts were as balm for a perturbed conscience or atonement for conscious
155
wrong. He gave not merely to relieve necessity, but to be helpful to the object
of his donation, whether individual or institution. In all of his giving and
helping he was modest, unostentatious, and unselfish.
It is a sad truth that selfishness is too often the mainspring of giving.
Air. Inman's generosities, in so far as he could properly direct, were of the
Scriptural kind, unknown to the other hand. His larger gifts had in view
definite purposes. He gave to Agnes Scott College during the past ten years
more than $100,000.00 in cash. He believed in man's stewardship as to
wealth. He desired to so dispense his benefactions as that they would
multiply and perpetuate themselves in continuing results. He deliberately, in
my opinion, invested the $100,000.00 to Agnes Scott College, in Christian
education, that in its returns through the years to come, God might be glorified
in the upbuilding of His Kingdom and the preparation for labor therein of
His handmaidens.
His interest in education was not confined to one institution, nor alone
centered in the higher education. During the last year of the late Goyernor
Terrell's administration, in 1906-07, there was a great and far-reaching uplift
in Common School education for the masses in Georgia. By appointment of
the Governor, Mr. Inman headed the state-wide movement in this great cause,
giving liberally toward its expenses, and devoting much of his time, thought,
and activities to the creation of a healthier public sentiment for public edu-
cation, and the enlargement and improvement of our state public educational
system. I had the honor and the privilege of humble service and association
with him in this work, and therefore opportunity to know of his invaluable,
services in this movement from which flowed great public good. It was the
beginning of the new birth and growth of our regenerated public educational
system.
Air. Inman, though one of the most modest and retiring men I ever knew,
was, at the same time, a born leader of men. He never sought leadership.
It was always thrust upon him. During his active life in this community I
doubt if any one can recall a single great civic, religious, or educational move-
ment or effort in which he was not in the forefront of endeavor. As a leader,
he led not ostentatiously with flying banners and blaring trumpets, but with
firm step, unwavering courage, rare judgment, quiet determination.
I never heard of his making a failure or suffering defeat in any movement
or enterprise he led. He possessed rare qualities of resourcefulness, and a
156
spirit of determined purpose which quailed not in the presence of difficulties.
In his lexicon there was no such word as failure. He inspired unshakable
confidence in Ids associates and followers. Especially was this noticeable in
his leadership, in his later efforts, of young men, whose keenest enthusiasm he
always aroused. I have seen such young men perform wonders of work in a
noble cause because, as they said, it would never do to disappoint Mr. Inman.
And when the victory was won and the cause triumphant, how strikingly
characteristic it was to discover him like Saul, "hid among the stuff," and
graciously, earnestly insisting that to others belonged all the praise.
But in all and through all, Mr. Inman was a follozuer of the meek and
lowly Christ. His faith in God was simple, childlike; his leaning upon Him
constant; his confidence in His goodness, without wavering. No one ever
came in close contact with him without sure conviction as to the true nobleness
of this man's character, life, and purposes.
I have set down here no word of fulsome flatten- of the dead, for trulv
''Know ye not that there is a prince and a great man fallen this clay in Israel?"
Decatur, Ga.,
lanuarv 25, 1915.
157
Letter VIII
BEING HIS POSTSCRIPT
Hon. Ed. of Silly-wet, magazine compiled at ? A. M., amid tears & other
druggery.
This inscription are added to my letters.
Irate lady approach near my proximity & denounce.
"Why are not picktures of those famous dates called school anniversity
pageant, Sophia Newcomb debate, & other victories given by you for this
annual?"
"This were prehistoric age to my time," I defend, & make requests to
aborigines of this college to write concerning these.
I enclose these effusion writings in mine, feeling very thankfully to
read them.
Hoping you are the same,
Hasimura Togo.
158
I enclose these effusion writings in mine, feeling very thankfully to read them.
From the Private Diary of a 1914 Senior
May 24th Sunday It was to-night over on the steps of Inman Hall
that the thought came to me. It was the Vesper Service the Seniors' last
Y. W. meeting. Below us on each side of the tiled walk were the girls, in
light summer dresses, on cushions spread over the grass ; and, beyond the
girls, across the campus, the afternoon sunlight fell. I thought of Lanier's
words :
"The slant yellow beam down the wood-aisle doth seem
Like a lane into heaven that leads from a dream."
It was then the thought came a thought that had never come before.
What a wonderful thing it is to found a college! Sitting there on the steps
and looking off across the smooth grass and shadowy trees to the massive
buildings, for the first time I really caught the vision the vision that one
man had seen over twenty-five years ago! And as I sat there it seemed a
wonderful thing that the man who had first seen the vision should be yet living
to see it fulfilled. And this stood as his lifework to which lie had given twenty-
mo
live years of his life! I thought of what the college had meant to me and
how much it had brought into the lives of so many girls. And to-night, as
I sat there dreaming on the steps, I seemed to catch a glimpse of all it should
" 'grave" on the "ten thousand and more" that are to come after.
May 25th Monday It's late, but I'm so afraid that in the years to
come there might be something about this "Onarto-Centennial Commence-
ment" that I might forget. And yet how could I since it's my own Com-
mencement !
I must always when I think of it see the twenty-three of us in our caps
and gowns with the daisy chain, at last, across our shoulders, moving across
the campus singing. There was a crowd waiting for us where we were to
plant our ivy. From the steps ot the old Gymnasium Building we read our
history, our prophecy, our will. That was in the morning.
In the afternoon the Pageant.
I remember the excitement that went all over college the day we heard
of it. and now it has really come and past. And the day was perfect!
In my herald's suit of purple velvet I ran across the grass to get one look
at the crowd from behind the spiraea.
"There must be over two thousand people there," I heard some one say
on the other side of the walk.
101
"At least, I should say," a man's voice assented.
I peeped forth once more. I couldn't quite feel like a Senior in my
herald's suit. On the terraces around Inman Hall there were people, and
people, and people, and still they came! Such an array of men, accompanied
by spring bonnets, as Agnes Scott had never seen.
Then I stepped back to my place just in time.
"Are you all here, girls?" Miss Markley said. There was a short delay.
Then I saw the lines in front of me begin to move, and I followed holding
my bugle proudly forth. I was tempted to blow.
On we moved and on, and then I realized we had really reached the crowd.
There were "Ohs!" and "Ahs!" on all sides. They were exclaiming
over those that had just passed.
Just in front of us were alumnae representing the early institutions for
women, founded by Methodists, Catholics, Baptists, and Presbyterians.
These four groups were spaced, the girls representing the colleges by wearing
the dress of the time. And those dresses! Ruth Slack wore a dress of her
grandmother's a wonderful dark blue dress of heavy brocaded silk, and a
red rose in her hair ; and Laura Mel Towers, but you would have had to see
her to appreciate it. One person wore a train that trailed, it seemed to me,
1G2
for yards behind her. And the hoop skirts I laugh now when I think of
them. No wonder the audience oh-ed !
A long way ahead the procession turned a curve, and I had my first
chance to see it in order.
The Pageant was in three divisions Past, Present, and Future. The
Past came first. In front of all floated aloft Oglethorpe's coat of arms. A
frontiersman strode beside it, and behind came children in Indian suits and
small tots with blacked faces too cunning for anything representing the
little folk who long ago came to the Moravians' Mission School.
And then the figures of "Oglethorpe." "John and Charles Wesley,"
"Habersham," and "Whitfield," followed by the "Orphans from the Bethesda
Orphans' House" ; they might have been those very orphans themselves from
the quaintness of their costumes. It was fascinating to watch them as they
walked together primly, hand in hand, two bv two. Thev gave me an
irresistible desire to squeeze them. This was the first of education in the old
period of Colonial Dames and model infants how long ago that seems !
The state flag waved next. A continental officer bore it. There was a
schoolmistress behind with a group of queer-looking little school children
with slates and blue-back spellers from the Old-Field School. And then the
Academy High School boys.
I almost forgot to turn the curve in my efforts to see. I had had no
idea beforehand that it was going to be so interesting. Now the more I saw
the more there seemed still to be seen.
1G3
"Pay attention where you are going. Miss Herald," Frances reminded me.
"I just wish I could get away oft" and look at it. Don't you suppose we
are going to get any chance to see it?"
"Maybe, later."
But I was looking again, trying to see what was just behind the last I'd
seen. It was the alumnae the "Denominational Educational Institutions." I
heard some one reading from a programme.
The Present was behind me that hasn't the sound of a truthful state-
ment ! It was some time before I really had a good view of that part of it Which
represented "A Modern College Education in the Liberal Arts and Sciences."
The girls in the Department of Greek were leading, followed by the Roman
youths. Then the flowers, bees, and butterflies from the Biology part of it.
The Department of Chemistry was next in order. Fire. Water, Earth, and
Air all moved quietly and in harmony with Organic, Inorganic, and Physical
Chemistry, who followed behind. Art of every kind came next, and it truly
seemed of every kind from the variety of costumes. Those costumes were
fetching.
Then came the planets from the Department of Astronomy. The sun
had made sure of seeing the Pageant.
The learned Mathematical gentlemen ( ?) preceded the heroes and
heroines known in Shakespeare and the Old Drama.
The Prophets of the Old Testament carried a banner of scarlet and
white as they moved on with stately tread.
164
The god Pan bore the banner of music. Saint Cecilia, with characters
from "Die Meistersinger," followed in his wake.
Next in the procession I saw people of many nationalities under the
American flag. The little brown Germs, in the Home Economics Department,
were quite the most fascinating things in the whole Pageant. Even the
beauties of Fresh Air, Sunshine, Cleanliness, and Fairy Soap couldn't draw
my eyes from the Germs.
"Those poor trains!" Frances spoke.
"What trains?" I asked, still with my eyes on the Germs.
"The ones in the French Department. Don't you know they'll be nice
and dusty?"
And back of the Germs I discovered, for the first time, the French
Department, with its aristocrats in curls and trains and furbelows.
The procession wound on through sunshine and shadow along the many
walks of the campus.
Last of all came the Future. It seemed so wonderfully appropriate that
Mrs. Harman, the daughter of the man who made Agnes Scott possible,
should be "Alma Mater." Six girls in white were states, and, last of all,
walked "Columbia."
At last we had come back again to the northeast corner of the campus
beneath the great oaks. The line broke and, finally, under a tree, I found a
seat on the erass.
165
To the music of the orchestra there came forth violets, and, as zephyrs,
raindrops, and sunbeams danced about them, gradually they unfolded. Bees
and butterflies came to gather the pollen and carry it from white to purple
flowers. Violets arose, blending the colors. This from Biology.
The music went on and I saw once again the old story of John Smith,
and then the mingling of the many nationalities History and Sociology had
combined.
A scene from Wagner's "Die Meistersinger" was followed by St. George
and the Dragons.
Then the Prophets moved before me. The Greek chorus was charming.
Against the background of green under the great trees they seemed truly real.
The Latin Youth sang the Carmen Sseculare. Then once more I revelled
my eyes upon the costumes I called "fetching" the costumes by Art designed.
Ecclesiastical music was represented by a procession of clergy and
choristers.
Scenes with the French ladies we had next, and then the German folk
dances.
But the last was the best of all. We gathered in a semicircle the whole
of the procession and Alma Mater presented to each state a daughter. It
impressed me deeply. I saw then how the whole Pageant worked out to the
166
one great conclusion, which was its title, "The Significance of Agnes Scott
College to the State and the Nation."
The reception was to-night, when the lower floor of Rebekah Scott Hall
was thrown open to guests in honor of the Senior Class and visiting educators.
The Pageant was the subject we talked of nothing else. It was wonderful
every one says so. It comes to me now like a magnificent picture. 1 have
moved here and there and everywhere in my satin slippers, and I am tired
so tired, but it has been "a perfect day."
May 26th Tuesday I have been sitting here watching the lights on
the south wing go out one by one, and thinking over all the things that have
happened.
There must have been thirty or more colleges and universities repre-
sented in the procession this morning. We Seniors were trying to make out
what each person's academic robe stood for their degree, etc.
In the chapel Dr. Gaines spoke first of all in welcome to the educators.
Air. Murphy Candler's account of the beginning of Agnes Scott College
thrilled me. It seemed almost like a romance that a little school, that had
started twenty-five years ago in a "rented frame building," should have grown
in that short time to a college ranked, by government classification, in the first
of the four classes of colleges and universities in the United States. He
spoke of Col. George Scott the man who had made Agnes Scott possible;
of the great friend of the college Air. Samuel Inman. He spoke of the one
who had given to Agnes Scott the greatest gift that a man can give, his life
our President. And last, but far from least, lie gave praise to the Dean our
beloved Miss Hopkins.
I have only a confused idea of the other speeches made. I only remember
that they all seemed to be praising Agnes Scott, and that I seemed to grow
prouder every minute. And the speakers didn't say what they said as though
they were just using flower}- terms, but as though they really meant the words
they used.
But when the alumna; finally unveiled the two portraits their gift to the
college everybody seemed "on tiptoe" to get the first glimpse. And there,
just as naturally before us all, sat Miss Hopkins and Dr. Gaines; he leaning
back in his own dignified way in a great armchair, and she leaning forward
in that little eager way she has when you tell her your small joys or sorrows.
167
The lights are all out in the south wing, but I must tell about the Vice-
President of the United States. He was just charming. The cars were
packed going in, with scarcely breathing room, but the speech was worth it all.
Mr. Orr made a short speech. And then the Vice-President, Mr.
Marshall, arose. I must confess I wasn't particularly impressed at first, but as
the man went on I came fully under his sway, and felt the charm of both the
man and his speech. I can say with absolute truth that I was sorry when he
stopped. Somehow he seemed to bring inspiration not only by his words, but
by his very manner of saying them.
( Scribbled hastily in pencil ) May 27th I graduated to-day. The
Vice-President was there.
1GS
Calendar for 1914-1915
September
15 Conductor yells "Agnes Scott" car stops a moment of confusion
the tunnel the first impression welcome from old girls hare
room, and a roommate (in some cases this is a climax, in others
an anti-climax. Choose!)
16 Acres of Freshmen long or short, thick or thin, but ((// good
looking.
17 Trembling Freshmen confronted by the realities of college
person of Miss A-lcKinney.
18 Fire sale of units.
19 Y. W. C. A. reception.
21 Rushing starts new girls happy.
22 Dr. Gaines' address of welcome.
changes in the accepted formula.
Mnemosyneans entertain.
Propvleans entertain.
Which ?
281 :00 a. m. Soph-Fresh fight starts.
Talmadge broken door.
Sophomore injured: Louise Hooper, receives bite on the arm.
Marion Black, neutral, receives severe drenching in ink.
doubtful if her bathrobe will ever look the same.
29 Miss Hopkins proposes ( ? ) peace.
Hostilities cease warring factions assemble lovingly around
fire and smoke pipe of peace.
30 Miss Hopkins announces question: Shall Seniors have lights? Dr.
Gaines supports the affirmative ; the Seniors, the negative. Rebellion
threatened.
the
Seniors noticed three slight
Teshman injured: Izzie
It
cam])
October
1
2.
3'
12-
14-
16-
21
22-
24-
27-
29-
30-
31-
Mr. Tart keeps book room open five minutes overtime!
Senior rooms wired.
College entertains Freshmen with a chafing-dish party. How things
have changed since our clay !
The first of a series of written lessons in Home Ec. A number of
these delightful affairs are planned for the near future. They will
probably occur on the days set for the regular class meeting, except
at such times when these periods are given over to tests.
Safety first no more chafing-dishes.
-Ghost appears on third floor Main Building.
Dr. Gaines' pet scheme realized ; candy kitchen is opened by Senior
house-warming.
Interesting discussion in Bible II class: Did Jonah swallow the
whale ?
Dr. Arm. serves that "nervous" dessert.
Seniors entertain with "tacky" party to prevent homesickness.
Investiture service. Girls and Freshmen are inspired to take a
degree.
Seven Senior Sinners hold first regular meeting. We should be
very careful in dealing with these dangerous individuals.
-Margaret Anderson leaves for Charlotte to represent Agnes Scott
at the meeting of the "South Atlantic Field Committee of
Students."
-Seniors entertain college community with a Hallowe'en party in the
gym.
Midnight meeting of Senior Class on the top of Science Hall.
(This is a secret; don't let it get to Dr. Gaines. )
November
2 Compli Cators are hostesses of a Hallowe'en party for the Bull Dogs
and Sigma Delta Phis.
3 Senior rings arrive at last.
Grace Harris leaves for Radcliff, the Harvard-Princeton game,
and ( ? ) ask Gertrude.
-1 Lucy Naive jars Inman Hall practicing the stage fall.
7 As Dr. Guy enters dining-room every one softly hums. "Here
comes the " 'nough said !
9 Frances Kell gives Fire Drill. (Editor's Note On account of the
frequency and regularity of this event no further mention will lie
given in the calendar. )
12 "Percy" comes to see well, several people.
13 Bess Bulgin and Henrietta Lambdin, Seniors, appear in Bible I at
the half-hour bell and calmly remain, thinking they are in psyc. class.
20 Association of Bucket Carriers organized. For further information
apply to .-Mice Fleming and Hallie Smith.
2-1 Annual pictures made. North wind blowing, as usual, on this
occasion.
26 Thanksgiving Day.
Juniors and Sophs discover that the} - have basket-ball teams.
.Misses Phi and Frances entertain with dinner parties in honor of
the basket -ball teams.
"Silhoura Stock Company" gives one performance of its famous
vaudeville bill.
28 Mr. Tart borrows $1.75. Why? you are referred to him personally.
30 Margaret Anderson does not request students to remain after
prayers.
171
December
1 Seniors celebrate "Arbor Day." Their tree was planted on the front
campus while the class orchestra played soft strains. The
programme was delightful. Frances Kell rendered, with charm and
talent, the appropriate selection, "We're planting the tree in our
school yard."
2 Julia Walker is alleged to have had a thought. Student body
incredulous and amused.
-I Catherine Hay gets up, dresses, and goes to breakfast.
5 Biology class has received a cage of frogs to fatten.
7 New proctor system is working beautifully. Exec, has lost its job.
8 Freshman hunts diligently for a "camisole" in the chemistry supply
room. Dr. Guy says he has some.
12 Mnemosynean Play, "Two Gentlemen from Verona."
13 War tax levied on cosmetics. Dr. Sweet need not be alarmed if
there is a sudden epidemic of pallor.
15 "Spot." Louise, and Mary Helen decide that pastry is not good for
the college community.
16 Black Mountain delegation entertains delegation from Tech. How
things are changing at A. S. C. !
17 German Christmas party.
18 Grace Reid's party for Seniors.
Dinner parties in dining-rooms.
19 Girls entertain poor children of Atlanta.
21 Torn between conflicting emotions. Shall we finish our term papers,
or pack?
22 Off for the holidavs.
172
annr-
January
6-
7
10-
11-
12-
13-
15-
16-
23-
26-
27-
30-
-Back again. I wonder what tool it was first invented kissing?
-Marion Black's ground grippers arrive.
-"The get-thin" club organizes. A director for the exercises was
elected for each building: they are as follows: Katherine Dubose,
Maude Shute, and Dorothy Morehouse.
-Who ate the candy from Home Ec. lab ?
-Black cat appears. Poor creature, every failure is placed at his door!
-Hxams begin. Considered rather a juke at the time, but (see
Feb. 3).
-Gloom reigns in Inman Hall Lucile Rave is unable to sing because
of a sore throat.
-Man- Kelly and Mar}- Helen Schneider fail to receive 'phone calls.
-"A College Flirtation," intercollegiate coined}-, featuring Grace
Harris and Donald Frazier, boy, at the "Tunnel" to-day.
-Second semester begins.
-Debate question arrives.
-Mine. Slifer lectures on Brieux, and is the honoree of a tea given by
the French Club.
-Glee Club presents Japanese operetta. "Did the girls rent those
costumes?" poor, innocent man!
173
February
1 M. N. A. and Martha B. have bad attacks of the convention fever.
2 Fire commotion water wet ; boy false alarm Stuke's new tie.
3 Flunk slips appear such an innovation!
4 Painting day in tea room. 'We enjoy seeing the faculty work !
5 Seniors take characteristic pictures in uncharacteristic poses.
6 Freshmen "postphoned" their meeting.
7 Sign on cabinet room door reads : "Engaged till whistle." G. D. B.
8 Crushes walk to town.
9 Catherine Parker plays tennis in academic costume.
10 Surprise Valentine party in Rebekah Scott. We had a "heart-y"
meal.
12 Sigma Delta Phis entertain the other clubs at the borne of Lula
White.
1 3 Junior Masquerade.
IS Margaret Anderson, Anna Sykes, and Miss Hopkins off to another
convention.
174
Smiles
Stukes took not a look.
But grabbed it from the hook.
He went at such a rate
That he almost reached the gate
Before he stopped to think.
And then he turned all pink ;
Then he wished he were a goat,
Or the bathrobe were a coat.
Dr. Arm. : "In a description of a sunset what would you consider the
theme, Miss Ford?"
M. F. : "Well, I should say the setting."
There's a secret in that green slip,
That only a flunk-out knows ;
There's many a slip 'tween Fresh and clip,
That brings its pains and woes.
Upper-Classman : "The sulfuric acid plant surely is disagreeable
smelling."
Freshman: "Yes, it is a vile-smelling weed."
On exam history map Frances West (Senior) places Warsaw in Ireland
and Berlin on the Rhine.
"Lives of great men all remind us,
We can be as wise as they ;
And departing leave behind us
Brilliant things we did not say."
Dull Student: "Your explanation is just about as clear as mud.
Bright One: "Well, that covers the ground doesn't it?"
175
If I should die to-night.
And you should come to my cold corpse and say.
Weeping and heartsick o'er my lifeless clay.
That you would give to me, oh, little Grit,
If I should come again with thee to sit;
A table filled with William Goat,
And beans, and hash, and all such trash, on which I dote,
Then would I come a mile,
And, seeing, grow mum the while.
Visitor: "Oh, yes, I'd know Dr. Guy was a Northerner, she has such a
noticeable accent."
In Hygiene. Fresh : "Dr. Sweet, may I pull the window down on my
back?"
DID V ou Evz - r
Feel- LiK- This?
Faculty Directory
Gaines, Dr. F. H Decatur, Ga.
Hopkins, Miss Nanette (Care of Mrs. J. S. Dejarnette) Staunton, Va.
Alexander, Miss Alice Lucile Atlanta, Ga.
Armistead, Dr. J. D. M Woodstock, Va.
Bartholomew, Miss Eda E Atlanta, Ga.
Cadv. Miss Mary L Decatur, Ga.
Dieckmann, Mr. C. W Dexter, Mo.
DeGarmo, Miss Mary C 6181 Washington Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
Duncan, Miss Caroline Atlanta, Ga.
Guy, Dr. J. Sam Lowryville. S. C.
Hunt, Miss Anna E Atlanta, Ga.
Johnson, Mr. Lewis H Winder, Ga.
LeGate, Miss Helen _ Dillon Court, Hartford, Conn.
Lewis, Miss Louise G Birmingham, Ala.
Markley, Miss Mary E .' Zanesville, Ohio
Moore, Xettie Terrill 23 Easton Ave., Lynchburg, Va.
McCallie, Miss Margaret Ellen Chattanooga, Term.
McLean, Mr. Joseph Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.
McKinney, Miss M. Louise Decatur, Ga.
Newcomb, Miss Rose Oneida, N. Y.
Parry, Mrs. Maude Montgomery Decatur, Ga.
Preston, Miss Amy F Knoxville, Tenn.
Richardson, Miss Betty Marianna, Fla.
Sevin, Miss Gertrude K Erie, Pa.
Smith, Miss Lillian S 603 University Ave., Syracuse, N. Y.
Stukes, Mr. S. G Manning, S. C.
Sweet, Dr. Mary F 1108 Genesee St., Syracuse, N. Y.
Torrance, Miss Katharine Lexington, 111.
West, Miss Edith Randolph Madison Square, Savannah, Ga.
177
College Directory
Abbott, Julia Frances Louisville. Ga.
Adams, Ella 115 East Avenue, Atlanta, Ga.
Alexander, Amelia Decatur, Ga.
Alexander, Hallie Decatur, Ga.
Allen, Virginia : Greenville, S. C.
Allison, Helen - Franklin, N. C.
Amundsen, Gjertrud _ - 15 N. Ann St., Mobile, Ala.
Anderson, Emma Katherine Marietta, Ga.
Anderson, Julia Marietta, Ga.
Anderson, Lillian Danburg, Ga.
Anderson, Margaret - Winston-Salem, X. C.
Anderson, Ruth Winston-Salem N. C.
Baker, Jean Gadsden. Ala.
Ball, Agnes _ Thomasville, Ga.
Ballaxtyxe, Carolyn Swift Apartments, Atlanta, Ga.
Barrett, Ethelvn 720 Park Place,- Clinton, Iowa
Bishop, Martha Sheffield, Ala.
Black, Marion _ Cloverdale, Montgomery, Ala.
Block, Debra 140 Appleton Ave., Macon, Ga.
Blue, Mynelle Union Springs, Ala.
Bowers, Mary P 1140 Fifth St., South, Birmingham, Ala.
Boyd, Lucile _ Hartford, Ala.
Branham, Emmie Bolton, Ga.
Brehm, Elva _ 266 South Ashby, Atlanta, Ga.
Brenner, Martha _ _ The Hill, Augusta, Ga.
Brewer, Effie Boyd 318 Greene St., Augusta, Ga.
Briesexick, Gertrude Brunswick, Ga.
Briggs, Corinne 634 West Peachtree, Atlanta, Ga.
Brown, Imogene Marietta, Ga.
Bry'an, Annie Pope _ Griffin, Ga.
Bryan, Mary- _.623 South 22d St., Birmingham, Ala.
Buchanan, Alma _ Stamps. Ark.
Bulgin, Elizabeth Franklin, N. C.
Burke, Elizabeth Macon, Ga.
Burnett, Myrtis Vicksburg, Miss.
Burt, Faith Eureka, Kan.
Butler, Lucia. .._ Millersburg, Ky.
Byrd, Pauline Enterprise, Ala.
178
Callaway, Mavmie ...4420 Alabama St., St. Elmo. Tenn.
Caldwell, Laurie , ...Greensboro, Ga.
Carrere. Sallie _ Dublin, Ga.
Carter. Lorine.... 217 Juniper St., Atlanta, Ga.
Cater, Margaret Estelle Greenville. Ala.
Cofer, Ruth 61 Oak St.. Atlanta. Ga.
Comer, Martha Athens. Ga.
Connett, Helen 730 S. 14th St., St. Joseph, Mo.
Conyers, Sarah Greenville, S. C
Cooper, Belle 155 Peeples St., Atlanta, Ga.
Cooper, Laura - 155 Peeples St., Atlanta. Ga.
Cope, Charlotte Weems..._ Union Springs, Ala.
Couch. Xelle Elizabeth Tullahoma. Tenn.
Crabtree, Eleanor Goklsboro. X. C
Castleberry, Hilda 495 N. Boulevard, Atlanta. Ga.
Davis, Caribel - Decatur, Ga.
De Graffenretd, Elizabeth - Seale, Ala.
Denman, Elizabeth 523 Peachtree, Atlanta, Ga.
Dennison, Martha 20 Durant Place. Atlanta, Ga.
Dew, Isabel Fort McPherson. Ga.
Doe. Effie Palm Beach, Fla.
Donaldson, Agnes 1723 Wood Ave., Colorado Springs. Col.
Dubose, Kathrine Peachtree Road. Atlanta, Ga.
Dunson, Claude Polk lol Broad St., LaGrange, Ga.
Eakes, Mary Decatur. Ga.
Ellis, Florence 158 South Bradford, Gainesville, Ga.
Eve, Mary Lois 44 Greene St.. Augusta, Ga.
Elkins, Willie May - Fitzgerald, Ga.
Feldman, Ida B 225 Irwin St.. Atlanta. Ga.
Fields. Maggie 100 Lucile Ave.. Atlanta, Ga.
Ford, Mary D Hartford, Ala.
Fleming, Alice 413 Madison St., Lynchburg. Va.
Freeman, May M -222 S. Third St., Richmond, Va.
Fromberg, Rebeccah 589 King St., Charleston, S. C
Frye, Nell - 245 W. Peachtree St., Atlanta.' Ga.
Gaines, Gladys Mobile. Ala.
Gammon, Elizabeth Lavras E. DeMius, Brazil
Gay, Eloise 175 Juniper St., Atlanta. Ga.
Geohegan, Grace : 1428 North 20th St., Birmingham, Ala.
179
Gibson, Otelia 254 Hardeman Ave., Macon, Ga.
Gilbert, Ruth _ Perry, Ga.
Glenn, Ora Rock Hill. S. C.
Goode, Evelyn 1105 Wise St., Lynchburg, Va.
Grant, Celia West Palm Beach, Fla.
Gray, Lenora Nashville, Tenn.
Gregory, Elizabeth s : Franklin, Tenn.
Grier, Lois Camden, Ala.
Grigg, Luella Johnson City. Tenn.
Glenn, Annie May' Prince Ave., Athens, Ga.
Hale, Nellie Mae _ Davis, Okla.
Hall, Mildred Greenwood, Miss.
Halliburton, Louise Cuthbert, Ga.
Ham, Goldie _ Greenville, Miss.
Ham, Jessie Elba, Ala.
Hamilton, Mary Lexington, Va.
Hammond, Charlotte _ _ Kosciusko, Miss.
Hardwick, Olive Conyers, Ga.
Harris. Grace 912 Government St., Mobile, Ala.
Harvey, Maryellen Montgomery, Ala.
Harvison, Ray Junction City, Ark.
Harwell. Jane LaGrange, Ga.
Harwood, Rose Eleanor Trenton, Tenn.
Haugh, Virginia 513 N. Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga.
Havis, Irene _ Vicksburg, Miss.
Hay, Katherine Easton, Pa.
Hecker, Susie '. 31 Drury St., Atlanta, Ga.
Henderson, Marie _ Fort Myers, Fla.
Herrington, Ouida Mae Waynesboro, Ga.
Hightower, Edith 714 Lee St., Americus, Ga.
Holt, Lena L Wynnton, Columbus, Ga.
Holtzclaw, Katherine _ Perry, Ga.
Holtzclavv, Louise Perry, Ga.
Hood, Charis Seminary Heights, Atlanta, Ga.
Hood, Helen : Seminary Heights, Atlanta, Ga.
Hooper, Louise Selma. Ala.
Horn, Mahota Franklin, N. C
Howald. Frankie _ _ _.Decatur, Ga.
Hughes, Helen Burkeville, Va.
Hunt, India Decatur, Ga.
Hyer, Mary Orlando, Fla.
Hammond, Marjorie '. Decatur, Ga.
180
34 Columbia Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Ingram, Julia
Velasco, Texas
Jackson. Willie Belle ~ " " " Darlington. S. C.
James, Pauline K - Decatur, Ga.
Johnsox, Leila...- Decatur, Ga
Jones, Emma Decatur Ci
Jones, Katherine '" Valdosta Gi.
Jones, Josie "" Richmond. Ark.
Joyner, Jeannette '" Decatur, Ga.
Jerrigon, Reba
Columbus. Miss.
Kaye. Lucile Pascagoula, Miss.
Kell. Frances Monticello, Ga.
Kelly, Mary Elktcn Tenn.
King, Sallie May - Lexington Va.
Kinnear, Elizabeth - " 1106 1 ederal St . L vnchburg. V a.
Kyle. Anne
Barnsville. Ga.
Lambdin, Henrietta 139 Moreland Ave.. Atlanta, Ga.
Larendon. Caroline Bellefontaine, Ohio
Lawrence. Ruth Van Devanter " " Columbus, Miss.
Lindamood. Katherine ~~~ Washington. Ga.
Lowe, S-.MiLLE ..- " 1423 Marvin St Anniston, Ala.
Ledbetter, Sarah Helen "7.2731 College Hill, Birmingham, Ala.
Lee, Annie Waynesboro. Ga.
Lester, Ruth.. Durham. V C
Leyburn, Margaret K Dandridge. Tenn.
Lyle. Mary Rogers - - " " "" McDonough. Ga.
Lemon, Annie E -
Decatur, Ga.
McClellan. Laura Norcross, Ga.
McGlure Anne '"... Chiptl Hill, Tenn.
McCord, Nancy Raines, Tenn.
McCorkle Anna Leigh .Erundidge Ala.
McEachern, Sue Franklin, N. C.
McGuire, Mildred - " ^ cltburn S t Atlanta, Ga.
McIver, Mary ..Atlanta, Ga.
MacIxtvre Julie - 44 Arlington Ave Atlanta, d.
McMurry, Lula Hester -
6701 Walker Ave., Birmingham, Ala.
Maddox, Lula Lewisburg, Tenn.
Marshall, Annie W Clavton, Ala.
Martin, Claude -
181
Miller, Clara Elizabeth Salisbury, N. C.
Moore, Helen 25 North Liberty St., Ashville, N. C.
Moore, Katherine Franklin, Tenn.
Moorehouse, Dorothy 4445 Erie Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio
Monroe, Patty Miami, Fla.
Montgomery, Catherine Pine Bluff, Ark.
Montgomery, Mary Read Grand Ave., Yazoo City, Miss.
Morris, Marie 22 Pleasant Ave., Montgomery, Ala.
Moore, Marion. .._ : Decatur, Ga.
Naive, Lucy Denver, Col.
Neff, Mary Charlottesville, Va.
Nelson, Priscilla - Corinth, Miss.
Newton, Janet 892 Prince Ave., Athens, Ga.
Nichols, Ora Etowah, Tenn.
Nisbet, Ruth 1115 East Anderson St., Savannah, Ga.
Noland, Sarah _ Noland, Decatur, Ga.
Oberly. Louise McRae, Ga.
Oliver, Fannie F Montgomery, Ala.
Orr, Martha McGuire - Trenton, Ky.
Parker, Catherine 353 W. Peachtree, Atlanta, Ga.
Patton, Sarah Eunice Marietta, Ga.
Payne, Mary Spotswood 524 Federal St., Lynchburg, Va.
Pearce, Mary Ruth Prattville, Ala.
Pendleton, Lysbeth Pembroke, Ky.
Perry, Edna 88 San Marco Ave., St. Augustine, Fla.
Pew, Mrs. Arthur _ - 50 Columbia Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Phillips, Jessie Paris, Tenn.
Phillips, Margaret LaGrange, Ga.
Pinkston, Regina Greenville, Ga.
Pope, Porter _ Michigan Ave., Mobile, Ala.
Powers, Sara : Anniston, Ala.
Pruden, Margaret 401 First Ave., Rome, Ga.
Phythian, Margaret .' Newport, Ky.
Ramsay, Ellen Laredo, Texas
Randolph, Caroline 12 E. 16th St., Atlanta, Ga.
Reed, Virginia Hope, Ark.
Reid, Grace Decatur, Ga.
Reynolds, Miriam 146 Hillside, Ashville, N. C.
Richardson, Kate Washington, Ga.
182
Riley, Elizabeth 305 Adams St., Macon. Ga.
Ring, Elizabeth Franklin, Tenn.
Roach, Louise Oliver, Ga.
Roberson, Edith Dublin, Ga.
Roberts, Malinda Canton. Ga.
Roberts, Mary Glenn Canton, Ga.
Rogers. Esther Franklin. X. C.
Ross, Martha Morganton. N. C.
Roberts, Essie Fairburn, Ga.
Sanderson, Stuart French Camp, Miss.
Saxon, Annie Dothan, Ala.
Seay, Katherine L Gallatin. Tenn.
Schneider, Mary Helen _ 420 Houston St., Chattanooga. Tenn.
Schwartz, Reta Sumter, S. C.
Scott, Myra 433 N. Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga.
Scott, Virginia Decatur, Ga.
Shadburn. Celeste Buford. Ga.
Shambaugh, Marguerite. Clinton, Iowa
Shippen, Marie Ellijay. Ga.
Shute, Maude 405 N. Stewart St., Monroe, N. C.
Simpson. Katherine Decatur, Ga.
Sizer, Mary Helen Chattanooga. Tenn.
Skeen. Augusta Tifton, Ga.
Smith, May 62 Boulevard Terrace, Atlanta, Ga.
Smith, Hallie _ Elkin, N. C.
Smith, Henrietta Decatur. Ga.
Smith, Winifred 132 Angier Ave.. Atlanta, Ga.
Stanley, Mary Ellen La Fayette. Ala.
Steinberg, Pearl Cartersville, Ga.
Stevens, Marguerite _ Decatur, Ga.
Stone, Marie Modoc, S. C.
Sykes, Anna 37 Columbia Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Stapler, Caroline , Valdosta, Ga.
Talmadge, Isa Beall 1237 Prince Ave., Athens, Ga.
Taylor, Elizabeth 34 Courtland Ave., Asheville, N. C.
Thatcher, Frances 308 Duncan Ave., Chattanooga. Tenn.
Thiesen, Olga Pensacola, Fla.
Thomas, Fannie Sanford, N. C.
Thomas, Mary Etta 202 Phillips Court. Owensboro, Ky.
Thompson, Charlotte 202 Angier Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Tillman, Sallie May Trenton, S. C.
183
Thompson, Jessie 335 Courtland St.
Terry, Delia News Ferry, Va.
Van Aksdale, Mary 62 Lombard Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind.
Vaenell, Bessie Lee 416 W. 3d St., Chattanooga. Tenn.
Victor, Jeannette 303 Washington St., Atlanta, Ga.
Waddell, Ruth 130 McDonough St.. Decatur, Ga.
Waldron, Magara 247 W. Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
Walker, Julia 404 East Bolton St., Savannah, Ga.
Walker, Mary Elizabeth Savannah, Tenn.
Watts, Helen Camden, Ark.
Ward, Madie Lee _ Hartford, Ala.
Ware, Louise Kirkwood, Ga.
Weatherly, Alice Anniston, Ala.
Webster, Sarah Norcross, Ga.
West, Elizabeth McMinnville, Tenn.
West, Frances 3d National Bank Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
West, Mary Valdosta, Ga.
Weston, Ella Capers ..Quitman. Ga.
Whelcher, Fannie Ruth , Comer, Ga.
Wheeler, Fannie Greensboro, Ga.
Whips, Clara 444 S. 5th St., Gadsden, Ala.
White, Georgian a Griffen, Ga.
White, Vallie Young 1018 S. 15th St., Birmingham, Ala.
White, Virginia Livingston, Ala.
Whitner, Martha 59 Juniper St., Atlanta, Ga.
Willett, Elizabeth..., _ : Anniston, Ala.
Williams, Lucile Cordele, Ga.
Wilson, Louise 301 7th St., Lynchburg, Va.
Witherspoon, Elizabeth Ellisville, Miss
Wright, Olive _ Dadeville, Ala.
Yancey, Mary Virginia Tuskegee, Ala.
Young, Martha ....'. 10 S. Front St., Memphis, Tenn.
184
-b-MILKHIJ -K I
THE SILHOUETTE!
WILL TELL YOU. WHERETO
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Thur&on Hatcher
ATLANTA'S COLLEGE
PHOTOGRAPHER
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Chamberlin - Johnson - DuBose Company
Atlanta New York Paris
ffl
The friendship that exists between Agnes Scott and this
store is of long standing. It is a matter of service. Alumnae
of years and years ago came to us for correct styles in
wearing apparel, just as the young women of this day do.
Chamberlin - Johnson - DuBose Company
Not "How Much" But "How Good"
Is the question everyone should ask in buying CANDY. The old saying that
"a man is judged by the candy he gives" holds good to-day same as always.
Buy the best don't take the "just as good" kind. Nothing quite equals
H uy ler ' s
Famous BoivBons and Chocolates
They are distinctly in a class by themselves. Orders receive prompt and
careful attention. Just give us the name and address
and Uncle Sam does the rest.
Brown and Allen
Reliable Druggists
Whitehall Street Atlanta, Georgia
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Walter Ballard Optical Co.
We Are Exclusive OPTICIANS
No Side Lines
WE are not selling everybody Spectacles and Eyeglasses in Georgia
who need them, but there is a class who want good glasses at
reasonable prices ; this is the class we are catering to, and if you will y*'
visit our store and see who are patronizing us, you will need no further
guarantee as to the kind of work we are doing, or send us the pieces of
broken glasses and see how quickly we will return them. Give Us a Trial
85 Peachtree Street
Clock Sign
Atlanta, Georgia
The
Third National
Bank
of atlanta
Capital and Surplus
$1,800,000.00
Commercial Savings and Safety
Deposit Departments
KN0WWHERET05ENOY0URFILM5
If You Are as Hard Vatiant,
to Please as I Am
I know we will satisfy you wls.il the
prints we furnish on your orders. Pro-
fessionals in our laboratory know how
to produce the soft, gray tones that
give you every detail that is on your
negative. Roll Films Developed F ree .
This service is free, no matter from whom you
buy your films, (A nominal charge is made for
packs ) Mail vour films and let us demonstrate
the convenience of our Special-Mail-Order-Ser-
vice. J**" 1 - 2 Brownie prints 3c each. Write for
E. H. GONE, (lnc) 2 Stores, Atlanta, Ga.
Largest Laboratory in the South.
Wear Agnes Scott Shoes For Young Ladies
MADE IN ALL THE NEWEST STYLES BY
J. K. Orr Shoe Company
ATLANTA. GEORGIA
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM
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C. & C. ROSENBAUM
Successors to KUTZ
Exquisite Designs :: Exclusive Models
We carry the largest stock of Trimmed
and Untrimmed Hats in the City
Special Agents for VOGUE and LICHTENSTEIN HATS
Q This book is a fair sample of our work in printing,
binding and caring for the engravings. Q Into all of
our products, whether college publications or general
commercial work, we put the infinite pains necessary to
insure our patrons receiving the highest quality printing.
J. P. BELL COMPANY, INCORPORATED
PRINTERS, DESIGNERS. ENGRAVERS
LYNCHBURG, VIRGINIA
lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliri
J. B. Fallaize Company N. C. TOMPKINS
The Linen Store
Specialists in Linens, White Goods,
Wash Fabrics, Laces, Embroideries,
Handkerchiefs, Ladies' Neckwear
Cor. Broad and Alabama Streets
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
BANK of DECATUR
DECATUR, GEORGIA 1
Capital and Surplus
$50,000.00
Designated State Depository
Rountree Trunk and
Bag Company
Bell Phone, 1576 Main
Atlanta Phone 1654
W. Z. Turner, Manager
77 Whitehall Street
ATLANTA :: GEORGIA
Cotrell & Leonard
Albany
New York
MAKERS OF
Caps, Gowns
and Hoods
to the
American Colleges
and Universities
Good Printing
Phone M-795
16 West Alabama Street
Atlanta : : Georgia
A. McD. Wilson & Co.
Wholesale Groceries
Phone 804
55 and 57 Alabama Street
ATLANTA GEORGIA
WHEN PREPARING FOR VOICE CULTURE,
INCREASE THE VOICE WITH
Brower's
Medicated Cough Drops
AND STOP THE TICKLE
Brower Candy Company
Atlanta, Georgia
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS
FROHSIN'S
Ladies', Misses' and Children's
Ready - to - Wear Garments
centemeri gloves
50 Whitehall Street
ATLANTA GEORGIA
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Slaves of the Lamp
-more wonderful than
Aladdin's genii
Are yours at the
twitch of an
electric switch?
Chafing Dish, Coffee
Percolator, Toaster
and Iron these are
four of the many at
your command
L
J
Georgia Railway and Power Company
ATLANTA
GEORGIA
M. Rich & Bros.
ANSLEY-GOSS
Company
DRUG COMPANY
SPECIALISTS IN MISSES'
Prescription Druggists
APPAREL AND WOMEN'S
DRESS ACCESSORIES
AGENTS FOR
FURNITURE AND FURNISH-
INGS FOR DORMITORIES AND
INDIVIDUAL ROOMS- ESTI-
MATES FREELY GIVEN.
Nunnally's Cream and Candies
Waterman Pens : Eastman
Kodaks : Atlanta Floral
Company
^
*
52 - 56 Whitehall Street
Phone 203
ATLANTA :: GEORGIA
WESTERN UNION OFFICE
Mrs. E. M. BUCHANAN
. . Millinery . .
342 EDGEWOOD AVENUE
ATLANTA s a GEORGIA
YOU do not hesitate to express a
preference for certain books,
flowers or amusements. So
please tell him frankly you prefer
Fine Candies
"To Please You Pleases Us'
OPTICIANS KODAKS
A. K. HAWKES
COMPANY
14 WHITEHALL STREET
ATLANTA : : GEORGIA
The
D. L. Auld Company
MANUFACTURING
JEWELERS
COLUMBUS
FULTON MARKET COMPANY
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
AND SHIPPERS OF
OYSTERS, FISH, POULTRY, GAME
AND CELERY
25 and 27 E. Alabama Street ATLANTA, GEORGIA
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Jessup and Antrim
ICE CKEAM