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THE SILHOUETTE
VOLXVI
PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS
OF
AGNES scon COLLEGE
DECATUR, GEORGIA.
4i
J.
MILITARY SWlSTICSl
OF TRAINING CAMP
i
^^
RANKS
Bulletin No. I.
Page
0. R. C Senior Class 12-40
NoN-CoMS Junior Class 41-44
First-Class Privates Sophomore Class 45-47
Rookies Freshman Class . 48-51
Emergency Corps Irregulars .52-.54
THE "Y"
Bulletin No. II.
Field Work of Y. W. C. A 56
Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 57
The Waste of It 58
The Work of the War Committee 59
Patriotic League 60
ORGANIZATIONS
Bulletin No. III.
Military Police Student Government Association 62-63
The Legion of Honor Gamma Tau Alpha 64
Rewarded for Valiant Service Hoasc 65
The Pen Staff B. 0. Z 66
Young Ink Throwers Folio Club 67
The Debating Council 68
To the Victors Belong the Spoils 69
Mnemosynean Debating Society 70-71
Propylean Debating Society 72-73
Financial Department 74
Contingents State Clubs 75-86
Fire Brigade 87
Home Guards Day Pupils 88-89
Do-Re-Mi-Fa Soldiers Glee Club 90-91
Base Hospital 92
Page Four
DRAMATICS
Bulletin No. IV.
1. blackfrl4rs 94
2. Breezy Point 95
3. The Crowning of Flora 96
TUG-OF- WAR ATHLETICS
Bulletin No. V.
1. Drill Leaders Officers of Athletic Association 98
2. Rules and Regulations 99
3. Hockey Teams 100-101
4. Sham Battles 101
5. Basket-Ball Teams 102-103
6. Varsity Team 104
7. Wearers of the A. S 105
8. Off for a Hike 106
9. Heroes on the Tennis Field 107
10. S. U. S 108
CAMP CORRESPONDENTS PUBLICATIONS
Bulletin No. VI.
1. Camp Weekly Agonistic Staff 110
2. Quarterly Journal Aurora Staff Ill
3. Camp in Winter Quarters 112
CLUBS
Bulletin No. VII.
1. Bull Dog 114-115
2. Complicator 116-117
3. Sigma Delta Phi 118-119
4. Inter-Club Council, 1917-1918 120
LOCALS
Bulletin No. VIII.
1. Calendar 122-127
2. Founders' Day 128
3. Barrack Room Ballads 129
4. As Mutt and Jeff See It 130
5. Bureau of Misinformation 131
6. On Hallowe'en 132
7. Rookie Ticklers 133
8. What's Behind the Iron Gate 134
9. Miss Acnes Sees It Through 135
10. The Star Spangled Banner 136
11. Superior Officers' Roll Faculty Directory 137
12. Roster of Camp A. S. Student Directory 138-146
Page Five
Sn titm tul|n t|aa lie Ippb tutlt om
of Dur rank to prpparf for
ttie rnmtng battka
of Uff
I
Page Si.r
Page Seven
Louise Slack
Associate Editor
Catherine Reed
Acting Editor-in-Chief
Mary Paine Wendel
Art Editor
Annual i>tafif
Ruby Lee Estes
Business Manager
Marion Harper
Assistant Art Editor
Almeda Hutch eson
Assistant Business Manager
Lois Eve
Editor-in-Chief Retired
Elizabeth Denman
Local Editor
Page Eight
Wnr (^oah iFt5l)t
OBELOMlD land of our fathers, let us be of service to you in your time of
great need. Do not regard us as children who are playing joyously in the
sunshine, while all others are toiling unceasingly under darkened skies. From
your great storehouse of rich possessions, we have taken much ; to your treasury, so
heavily drawn upon today, we would return much.
Do you look upon us here at this college and wonder why we have escaped the
severe sacrifices which the war is exacting of so many of your daughters? Do we
appear to be blessed without reason? No matter how hard the cold winds blow, we
have a warm shelter. INight holds for us no terrors. With a knowledge of a day
well-spent, we sleep as do little tired children, forgetful of everything, even of to-
morrow. As you watch our busy, happy days fly past, you remember the things
which are happening to many girls just girls like we are, who are eager and longing
for the opportunities that life should hold for them.
Be just to us, dear Mother-country. Remember also that it is we who in the
future can help to alleviate the suffering which darkens this other picture so firmlv
implanted in your memory. We are not scarred and bleeding from warfare with a
cruel enemy. We are not discouraged and overwhelmed by the sight of mutilated
men and women and little children. Nevertheless, we are your soldiers your sol-
diers who, for your ideals, which are our ideals, are making a good fight.
In this fight of ours there is no sound of guns booming forth triumphal mes-
sages. It is a silent fight. We struggle to make this small world of ours a democ-
racy which would well serve as a model for other institutions. To foster in our
minds the principles of justice, of liberty and of equality which underlie your mag-
nificent government, to realize definitely the significance and importance of laws,
and to learn to render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's, and unto God, the
things which are God's: These are three large objective points in our campaign
against an enemy more powerful than the Kaiser ignorance.
Our good fight is made up of the sum total of all the little struggles which go
on in each girl's mind and heart. Sometimes there is a deserter from the post; but
the aggregate strength of all the girls is able to keep the weaker from giving up the
fight. Sometimes there are periods of depression as there are in every army, and
we cannot see anything ahead for us except drudgery and a monotonous routine of
duties. These dismal moods soon pass away, and we feel that the ideal for which we
are struggling is worth every sacrifice.
To become Americans who are capable of accomplishing tasks whose consum-
mation will be of great benefit to the world, who are ready to give their lives, if
Page Kine
need be, for the altainment of the right sort of peace, and who face the guns with
smiling faces and brave hearts; this is our ideal and your ideal. We have not for-
gotten that your protecting arms have sheltered us. For you, America, we wage this
good fight.
1
I
Page Ten
RANKS
BULLETIN NO. 1
(ifiirfra EfB^rur Qlorps
OFFICERS
First Semester Second Semester
Emma Jones President Hallie Alexander
Julia Abbot Vice-President Fannie Oliver
Belle Cooper Secretary Dorothy Moore
Hallie Alexander Treasurer Martha Comer
Belle Cooper Poet
Caroline Larendon Historian
Elizabeth Denman Testator
Emma Jones Prophet
Annie White Marshall . Student Government Representatives . Myrtis Burnett
MEMBERS
Julia Abbot
Hallie Alexander
Ruth Anderson
Elva Brehm
Myrtis Burnett
Martha Comer
Belle Cooper
Elizabeth Denman
Ruby Lee Estes
Lois Eve
Lois Crier
Olive Hardwick
Rose Harwood
Susie Hecker
Edith Hightower
Alvahn Holmes
Dr. McCain
FACULTY MEMBERS
Miss Hopkins
Helen Hood
Emma L. Jones
Virginia Lancaster
Caroline Larendon
Margaret Leyburn
Samille Lowe
Mary Rogers Lyle
Anna Leigh McCorkle
Annie White Marshall
Dorothy Moore
Fannie Y. Oliver
Porter Pope
Carolina Randolph
Myra Clark Scott
Katherine Seay
Eva Mail Willincham
Miss Harrison
I
Paoe Twelve
Julia Abbot
M. D. S. _ -R-n
Major subject Chemistry
Louisville, Ga.
This Julia is as changeful as the day is long.
This Julia whom ive think ivould never do a
wrong.
Whose eyes are tranquil, brooding, and whose
smile is slow.
But whose mind is quick and nimble as her
own inonkey-shoiu.
We love her as a monkey, and we love her
as a saint.
But we love her most of all because she
seems like what she ain't.
Hallie Alexander
P. D. S. Hoasc
Major subject Latin
Decatur, Ga.
Public-spirited, energetic, dependable, a
real athlete, a dramatic genius, a loyal sup-
porter of Agnes Scott, and a true friend
Hallie has made her place here we know
though that greater success is waiting for her.
Page Thirteen
Ruth Anderson
P. D. S. [ [
Major subject Philosophy
Savannah, Ga.
"// you can't be big in body
Make up by being big in deed."
Judging from the general viewpoint
This must be Ruth's working creed.
She's sincere and that's a big thing,
And she has the friendship spirit.
As for lessons that French II class
Just ask her, now, did she merit?
For further credentials see her Freshman
admirers.
Elva Margaret Brehm
M. D. S.
Major subject History
Atlanta, Ga.
Whoever heard of auburn hair above such
a quiet face? Yet Elva is always calm: al-
ways going straight ahead. She is a sphinx
we know nothing of those thoughts that
she controls so well. Whenever tests are
piling up, I like to be near Elva and see
those eyes alight with sympathy.
Page Fourteen
Myrtis Louise Burnett
P. D. S.
Major subject Biology
Vicksburg, Miss.
We always prefix seniors with the title
"dignified,"'
And in this slender senior we see it magni-
fied;
A lover of basket-ball, and the swimming
pool in Dec.
And what is more important, she's a mem-
ber of Exec.
Martha Comer
M. D. S.
Major subject Latin
Athens, Ga.
Martha has a brilliant mind
And is the very best of friends;
To all she is sweet and kind
('cept to the ball she defends)
She soon will leave old A. S. C.
Much to our regret.
But we know her future will be
Brightest ever yet.
Paye Fifteen
Belle Cooper
M. D. S.
Major subject English
Atlanta, Ga.
Why Belle Cooper is a success, why we
love her, I can easily tell. It is not only be-
cause she is poetic, unselfish, persevering,
understanding, (tho the last is very near it).
My Senior sister is singularly blessed be-
cause she possesses that rare charm prized
above all others a sense of humor.
Elizabeth Denman
M. D. S. HD
Major subject English
Atlanta, Ga.
/ might tell you about hoiv brilliant she is,
or about her dramatic ability, or her sunny
disposition(? ) or her personal charm, but
what's the use? If you know Elizabeth Den-
man, you've already found it out, and if you
don't you're just missing something, that's
all, and it can't be helped. Of course "Pat
says" but pshaw, my sixty words are up
Page Sixteen
i^r^f
Ruby Lee Estes
P. D. S. Hoasc
Major subject English
Rex, Ga.
// Carnegie knew about our Ruby Lee
he'd send down here in a hurry and ask her
to accept a high position in his largest es-
tablishment. The annual staff, especially the
editor, just falls down before her shrine and
says in an adoring voice: "From where did
this paragon of virtue and of sense (both
common and intellectual) fall?" Indeed,
she's a better bargain than "Three in One
Shoe Polish."
Lois Frances Grier
M. D. S.
Major subject Mathematics
Camden, Ala.
Is she triangular or round? Neither.
Her motto is B^, not only because she has
taken thru Math 85, but because she has held
her responsible position as 'Xec with dignity
and poise. One often finds her in the dead
hours of night gazing in rapture towards the
milky way. There is none siceeter or more
lovable than my Senior sister.
Page Seventeen
'^
Olive Hakdwick
P. D. S. Hoasc
Major subject English
Conyers, Ga.
There is something so sweetly mysterious
about Olive, a somethi/ig that makes you
ivant to try and solve that mystery. Whether
it's in those deep blue eyes or that curious
little smile that is always hovering around
her lips is a part of the secret. Her eyes
and the smile lead you on to her heart of
purest gold.
Rose E. Harwood
M. D. S.
Major subject German
Trenton, Tenn.
Just the name Rose E. Harwood suggests
the necessity of going to a class meeting, of
getting up debates, of paying dues or budget,
of fear lest she may be about to talk the life
out of you. Yet all this is the necessary oil
to keep the machinery of organization in
trim. It takes Rose's nerve, courage and
ever ready advice to make a thing go thru.
And yet you get a thorn ivith every "Rose,"
but ain't the "Rose(s)" sweet?
Page Eighteen
Susie Hecker
M. D. S.
Major subject History
Atlanta, Ga.
Susie possesses that rare, life-preserving
quality of giving advice in a sound, sisterly
way at the right moment. The ivisdom of
her sweet counsel has already carried her
Sophomore sister three times through No-
Man s land. Next year but why speculate
on Cupid's game of war? Agnes Scotters
will certainly miss the sound of her soft, en-
couraging, "Come on, girls!
Edith Hightower
P. D. S.
Major subject History
Americus, Ga.
Edith is the tiniest girl in her class, this
little Senior sister of mine. As long as that
is the only respect in which she stands last
in her class, ivho cares about a few inches,
more or less, of height? She is rather quiet
and reserved but "once a friend, alivays a
friend" is certainly true when applied to
her.
P'lfje yinetfen
Helem Hood
M. D. S.
Major subject English
Atlanta, Ga.
The story of Helen of Troy is no more
noteworthy than the achievements of Helen
of Agnes Scott. Her appearances in the
glee club concerts have been numerous; her
mental ability is evidenced by her four
majors. While her ministering, kindly sym-
pathy ivould naturally attract some Paris,
he has not yet arrived who could overcome
her frank, independent manner.
LuRA Alvahn Holmes
M. D. S. HD
Major subject English
Baltimore, Md.
Alvahn gets the Black-cat for the most
cosmopolitan college career of all. Chat-
tanooga University, Goucher and Agnes
Scott have each had a finger in the pie
and behold! Poor colleges, they must have
hated to give her to Agnes Scott, after they
had once had a taste of her charms, her
beauty, her delightful blushes, her never-
ending good humor!
Page Twenty
Emma Legg Jones
P. D. S. Hoasc r T A
Major subject English
Decatur, Ga.
"Mirror, mirror on the wall
Who is the dearest of us all?
Wittiest, smartest, cleverest, too
Most original, popular, sincere and true?'
"This year statistics have you none?
For all the honors go to one."
Virginia Hollingsworth Lancaster
P. D. S. 2 A $
Major subject English
Columbia, S. C.
Ginny asked me, as her Sophomore sister, to
help weave the daisy chain at Commence-
ment. I wish that I could iveave a flowery
chain of words to describe her as beautifully
as the chain will become her. My own
words being inadequate I use these:
''A perfect woman, nobly planned
To warn, to comfort and command."
Pdfje Twenty-One
Caroline Larendon
P. D. S.
Major subject French
Atlanta, Ga.
The eulogy which I submit
Tells of my sister fair
She's gay, funny and full of wit
And pep! she^s right there.
In dramatics she's a rarity.
In brilliance, not surpassed.
She's had her share of popularity
Now for her dip at last.
Margaret Kerr Leyburn
P. D. S. Hoasc 2 A -I-
Major subject History
Durham, N. C.
There's a girl at A. S. C.
And she is wondrous icise:
She plays a game of basket-ball
Then to Exec she flies.
Y. W. is her favorite spot;
She's good, no one denies.
We love her here she is a friend
Whose friendship never dies.
My Senior sister is a girl
Who "gets there" when she tries.
Page Ticenty-Tico
Samille L.owe
M. D. S. Hoasc [ [
Major subject English
Washington, Ga.
Madame President we arldress her, hut to
each she is just our Samille,
And this is the name which to everyone
makes its appeal.
Samille is a girl who is with us and for us,
even tho she goes on her way,
Samille is a friend who has come, and with
us in spirit will always stay.
Mary Rogers Lyle
P. D. S.
Major subject English
Dandridge, Tenn.
Riddle.
M. R. L. is not a cannibal.
Nor a belligerent Hannibal.
It never does bitingly mock vou.
It never does painfully shock you.
M. R. L. is a sweet, small being
Jf ho is gentle beyond believing
And who is as dear as dear can be.
Now, who M. R. L. is, pray tell me.
Page Ticenty-Ttiree
Anna Leigh McCorkle
M. D. S.
Major subject History
Raines, Tenn.
This Senior sister of mine has a deep sense
of humor. When it comes to advising a
Sophomore sister, she is a capital lawyer.
How interested she is in all college affairs
especially amorous ones! She is indeed a
wide-awake, progressive American citizen.
Annie White Marshall
M. D. S. [ [
Major subject Latin
Lewisburg, Tenn.
Two helping hands.
For she understands
And knows just ivhat to say;
A courage true,
Braving aught for you.
If it helps along your way;
A friend in need
A friend in deed
Throughout the livelong day.
m
Page Tiventy-Four
Dorothy Moore
P. D. S.
Major subject History
Columbia, S. C.
There is a Senior who even before she at-
tained that exalted position ivas always the
ideal Senior, at least to her Sophomore sis-
ter. A dignity of manner and poise of mind
combined with strength and serenity of char-
acter help to form a part of the perfect
whole. (Witness the fact that she never tore
her hair in Biology Lab J.
Fannie Falconer Oliver
P. D. S. [ [
Major subject History
Montgomery, Ala.
Fan, with her smile.
Does all the men beguile;
And yet she is true,
All thru and thru
To the high ideals
Of the Student's fields.
May her amiable way.
Forever lay
A road to success
And great happiness.
Pd'je Twenty-Five
Porter Pope
M. D. S.
Major subjects French and History
.Mobile, Ala.
Porter is just a horn musician, ivhy, you
can just look at her and tell that. Better still
she is not only a musician, but an all round
girl. There is nothing in school but has been
bettered by her being here. She is so at-
tractive and winsome that if not already,
certainly soon "On Mobile Bay, some one
stole my heart awav.'
Carolina Randolph
P. D. S. TTn
Major subject History
Douglas, Ariz.
Tho' once from the wide-aivake(? ) burg of
Tombstone, Caroline is not quite as quiet and
submissive a being as one might expect.
Once she was a lawless citizen of "'Rogues
Alley," but now she is a law abiding inmate
of the 'Wesley House." Little as one might
think this combination has resulted in a
peach of a girl in every respect.
Page Twenty-Six
Myra Cl.\rk Scott
M. D. S.
JNIajor subject History.
Atlanta, Ga.
There are some people ivho are just born
unusually blessed. Now take Myra for an ex-
ample. She has sense (common, book, and
business), tennis muscles, an abundance of
staunch friends, a jitney car and a True Love.
Nevertheless, if she appeared proud and
haughty on account of all these things, we
would not believe that it was our Myra-with-
the-sociable-grin.
Katherine Lauderdale Seay
M. D. S. Hoasc r T A [ [
Major subject History
Gallatin, Tenn.
Shine on, thou conscientious K. Seay, shine!
Examinations sweep o'er thee in vain.
Although distracted, though didst speak and
pine.
Gamma Tau did make thee shine again
Gloriously ! But K. Seay, brilliant.
The point of every joke thou dost forget
And when another jokes, thy lips remain
Expanded like a fly-trap! But thou yet
Though credulous, art great thine equal
never met.
Page Tu:enty-Heven
Eva Maie Willingham
M. D. S.
Major subject History
Kirk wood, Ga.
She is individualistic, just her own dear self.
Her brown eyes twinkle like the eyes of an elf.
Her mouth always smiles for she's brimful
of fun.
This is the ivay her philosophy doth run:
"If the dear men shave, why cant ive paint.
For both deeds make us what we ain't?"
The best of her all, she's a good friend and
true.
Whatever your mood, she has sympathy for
you.
Mary Lois Eve
General Eve is coming back next year to
get the last badge of honor which an officer
can receive from Camp A. Scott. At present
this officer is in Augusta conquering a per-
sonal enemy, a German whose name is ill-
health. As the dear General will be a strang-
er to those who shall enlist here next year, a
description of General Eve is necessary [for
if the gallant officer is wearing a blue ribbon,
one might mistake the worthy for a private] :
eyes which shine sometimes like the star the
General really is, and a firm, French, friendly
tone of voice. There has never been a com-
mander whose staff loved and admired its
leader more than does General Eve's.
Page Tiventy-Eight
Elizabeth Lawrence
Certificate in Music
Page Twenty-Kine
Imports 0f W, K Cd.
nN September 14, 1914, eighty-two of us raw recruits volunteered at Major Mc-
Cain's recruiting station. Camp Agnes Scott. After a rigorous examination
by these formidable members of the general's staff, we were accepted as men-
tally fit, and ranked as privates in the rear guard. There were not many of us, but
we were ambitious, and determined to rise through the ranks and win our com-
missions.
In our first battle, we were on the defensive. We took so much pride in our
formation and drill work and stuck so well to our posts that we were able to hold
back successfully the superior number of the enemy, even though they had had a
year more of military training than we. So fierce was our fighting spirit when it
came to hand-to-hand grips with the foe. that after completely overwhelming them,
we fed the traditional Wesson oil and macaroni.
Field Marshal Hopkins finally deemed it well to meet at a peace conference on
the battlefield of Agnes Scott, and sign a treaty. We smoked the pipe of peace, danced
a war dance and buried the hatchet. All hostilities were suspended for the year
1914, save for a few skirmishes in the basket-ball sector where we were completely
victorious.
The next year, a good many of our number were discharged, but forty-six of us
were made corporals, on account of our bravery in facing the fire, and our adapta-
bility to conditions of war. In September of our second year of service, we made
our great Fall drive. We showed such remarkable courage and initiative, such self-
control and co-operation, we drove the enemy so far, and brought down so manv
laughs at the final crisis of the conflict that we were awarded the Black Cat of Honor.
This was the very first time that the Black Cat of Honor was bestowed upon any sol-
diers of our army; now the prize is awarded every year to the most efficient battery.
After this, we began to feel our importance.
"We had taken a sip from the Pierian spring
And thought we'd quafl^ed the whole goblet."
We fought other skirmishes in the area of basket-ball, where "mirabile dictu." the
enemv was completelv annihilated.
We came off with such flying colors from these frays, that during the third
vear of our service, most of us were made sergeants. As non-commissioned officers,
we began to feel our responsibility, and to long more ardently for commissions. To
relieve the deadly monotony of trench warfare, we undertook several entertainments.
Our circus was a howling success: trapeze stunts, horseback riding, rope-walking
and animal training in the big ring; freaks of nature, Hawaiian dancers and for-
tune tellers in the side shows.
Our play, 'The Age of the Enlightened Despot," sufficed to entertain all the dis-
couraged and honiesick soldiers. For the entertainment of our superior officers.
Pane Thirty
we gave a banquet at a safe distance from No-Man's Land. At this banquet toasts
and speeches were made by lieutenant-colonels and adjutant-generals, and we re-
newed our oaths of allegiance to our fatherland.
The fourth year of service found us still fresh and unwounded. We were given
the promise of commissions to be received in the early part of June, commissions
which would give us the right to go "over the top," and "out" as commanders, in
whom those following might feel confidence.
As a means of showing our patriotism, we instituted the custom among the army
divisions of having on the birthday of George Washington and George Scott, two
of our greatest heroes, a patriotic celebration called Founders' Day.
About this time, incidentally, we suffered rather slight reverses in the athletic
sector.
So desirous were we of being capable and efficient officers when we should ob-
tain our commissions, that we met once a week at an Officers' Training School with
Colonel Cady to discuss the relation of our particular work to the scheme of the
whole organization about us. We were made to realize the necessity for co-operation.
We shall always try to adapt ourselves to the needs of the community and army and
country until the time
"When each man's good shall be all men's rule
And universal love lie like a shaft of light
Athwart the earth, or like a lane of beams across the sea."
^g f i f f
/f t t f t $
Pafje Thirty-One
W hen first enlisted side by side.
We faced the deadly fire.
Perhaps ice lacked the fighting pride
Of seasoned warriors, trained and tried.
The strength that will not be defied.
The zeal to struggle higher.
But the blinding flash of the cannon's glare
Aroused our sleeping soul.
We saw by light of its lurid flare
The hidden foe and pitfalls there;
Beheld the dangers ive must dare.
The vision of our goal.
And never did the vision, fade.
Though lessons brought defeat.
Although ive cowered half afraid
Yet still we struggled on and prayed.
And bloiv by blow advances made.
And braved the battle's heat.
When the trumpet blast of triumph falls.
Upon the war-ivreaked air.
No deadly hail of leaden balls.
No shrieking shells o'er tottering walls,
No shuddering memory recalls
The dangers hidden there.
For the flush of victory, at last.
Cheers on our struggling hearts.
Not once again we'll stand aghast
At foes we fought with in the past.
But triumph follows triumph fast.
When fear and dread depart.
So it's not the flash nor deaf'ning roar,
Stays ivith us from the fray;
But wounds we felt and pains we bore.
Have brought more courage than before.
And the victor's scars forevermore
Forestall life's battle day.
Page Thirty-Tim
fiirtal Appomttttpnta
Published under order of the President, by the Committee on Public Information.
Emma Jones, Chairman.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR.
The Secretary of the Department of the Interior publishes under the date of
July first, 1918, the following appointments:
Serial Orders No. 1.
1. The Pure Food Administration hereby names Ruth Anderson inspector of
Anti-Fat Manufacturing Plant in Hulu-Hulu, Miss. She will report in person for
further instruction.
2. The Secretary hereby confirms the appointment by the Food Administrator
of Julia Abbot as State Demonstrator of Food Conservation in Utah.
Appendix.
The Food Administrator submits for publication the following Washington
telegram sent by the first scientific women farmers of Georgia.
Food Administrator,
Washington, D. C.
"We hereby pledge to you our heartiest support in the drive for food conser-
vation."
Signed,
Eva Male Willingham,
Martha Comer.
DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY.
Serial Orders No. II.
1. Treasurer Rose Harwood is relieved from her present duties and asked to
return home. She will report in person to receive further instructions in the correct
making of "byrd" cages.
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INFORMATION.
Committee on Public Information announces following appointments:
Serial Orders No. III.
1. Olive Hardwick is assigned duty as public speaker on Protection for Young
Girls While Traveling.
2. Ruby Lee Estes is assigned duty on government official bulletin as Office
Girl.
3. Carolina Randolph is detailed from service in Tombstone, Ariz., and asked
to report to Washington, D. C. She is assigned duty on Bureau of Statistics.
Page Thirty-Three
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION.
Serial Orders No. IV.
1. Lois Eve will proceed without delay to State Reform School as Instructor in
Calisthenics.
2. Virginia Lancaster on completion of her present duties is assigned to duty
as director of Community Singing, New York City.
3. Margaret Leyburn is directed to appear in Washington where she will con-
fer with Theodore Roosevelt on the subject of opening a school to train young men
to be Presidents of United States.
DEPARTMENT OF WAR.
The Secretary of War announces the following appointments:
Serial Orders No. V .
1. Susie Hecker and Elva Brehm are detached from home service to assume
charge of interpretation in camp for interned Germans.
2. Anna Leigh McCorkle is appointed Directress of Camp Entertainments at
Camp Gordon. She will report for duty to the General-in-Command.
3. Belle Cooper is requested to report as Red Cross probation nurse. She
will come at once to New York.
4. The Adjutant General announces the acceptance of Annie White Marshall
and Dorothy Moore as telephone girls in training for service oversea.
5. Myrtis Burnett will proceed without delay to France and report to General
Pershing for ambulance duty.
6. Caroline Larendon will report to Washington to assume charge of enter-
tainment of French soldiers detailed to this country.
Appendix.
Serial Orders No. V. (Continued.)
Home Guard. The following appointments in the Home Guard have been made
in the office of the Adjutant General. Those whose names appear here, if they have
not already done so, should telegraph acceptance of commissions to parties concerned.
1. Following have been assigned duty as Captains of Home Guard: Elizabeth
Denman, Mary Rogers Lyle, Edith Hightower, Alvahn Holmes.
2. The Adjutant General announces the appointment of Hallie Alexander to
the Home Guard Training Camp.
WOMAN'S COMMITTEE ON NATIONAL DEFENSE.
The Committee makes public the following cablegram of congratulations sent
to Fannie Oliver, newly chosen head of the Woman's Legion of Battle.
"I admire the position you so nobly have taken in the work of proving woman's
equality with men."
Signed,
"Queen Sanskritte, of the Prussian Islands."
Page Thirty-Pour
SECRET SERVICE DEPARTMENT.
Serial Orders No. VI.
1. Lois Grier is ordered to assume duties as secret service agent in Chicago.
2. Porter Pope is directed to report to Atlanta to assume duties as Mounted
Police. She will report to Chief of Police for instruction as to safe-guarding college
girls on the streets Saturday afternoon.
NATIONAL BOARD OF CENSORSHIP.
The following acts of the National Board of Censorship are made public:
Serial Orders No. VII.
1. The Board of Censorship permits the appearance of Helen Hood as Violet the
Vampire in the latest release of the Screamer Film Company.
2. The Board of Censorship permits the appearance of Samille Lowe as co-
star with Pavlowa in the latest war dance.
3. The Board of Censorship announces the recognition of costumes worn by
Katherine Seay in the exhibition in New York of "America's Own Style for Ameri-
cans."
4. The Board of Censorship permits the sensational picture, "Myra, the Man
and the Car," to be shown in New York City and Decatur.
Page Thirty-Five
Alma MuUv
When far from the reach of thy sheltering arms.
The band of thy daughters shall roam
Still their hearts shall enshrine thee.
Thou crown of the South,
With the memory of youth that has flown.
Dear guide of our youth.
Whose spirit is truth.
The love of our girlhood is thine,
Alma Mater, whose name ive revere and adore.
May thy strength and thy power ne'er decline.
Agnes Scott, ivhen thy campus and halls rise to mind.
With the bright college scenes from our past.
Our regret is that those years can ne'er return more.
And we sigh that such joys could not last.
Wherever they are
Thy daughters afar.
Shall boiv at the sound of thy name.
And ivith reverence give thanks
For the standard that's thine.
And the noble ideal that's thy aim.
And when others besides us thy portals shall throng.
Think of us who have gone on before.
And the lesson that's 'graven deep into our hearts
Thou shalt 'grave on ten thousand and more.
Fair symbol of light.
The purple and white.
Which in purity adds to thy fame,
Knoivledge shall be thy shield.
And thy fair coat-of-arms,
A record without blot or shame.
Page Thirty-Six
LA5T WILL
AND
TESTAMENT
WHEREAS, we, the undersigned members of the Class of Nineteen Hundred
and Eighteen, our mental faculties activated to the highest possible degree
by the noted group of experts comprising the Faculty, realizing that we are
soon to leave this academic training camp to engage in the great battle of life in which
we must go over the top of the trenches of hard knocks for the struggle beyond in no-
man-can-tell-what-will-happen land, do hereby bequeath to the Class of Nineteen Hun-
dred and Nineteen the solemn duty and privilege of preserving the honored traditions
of our beloved college, of keeping it in the forefront of recognized academic achieve-
ment and of fostering that intangible yet mighty force our college spirit.
Article I. We do hereby renounce any and all wills and testaments made here-
tofore.
Article H. I, Julia Abbot, will my trusty alarm clock to Marguerite Watts
promising said recipient that she will never be disturbed by said article.
Article HI. I, Hallie Alexander, leave my skill as decorator to Trueheart
Nicolassen, and to Dorothy Mitchell, I leave my Roman nose.
Article IV. I, Ruth Anderson, do hereby bequeath my ability to "shush," my
naive smile and my power to understand Maeterlinck to Mary Brock Mallard.
Article V. I, Elva Brehm, leave to Elizabeth Richardson my joys and sorrows
of being a day pupil, hoping that her life as a boarder will not entirely eradicate
them from her mind.
Article VI. I, Myrtis Burnett, bequeath to Goldie Ham my certificate as
trained nurse, with the injunction that she cherish it carefully.
Article VII. I, Martha Comer, do hereby will my joy at receiving "boxes" to
Lulu Smith and my talkativeness to Virginia Newton.
Article VIII. I, Belle Cooper, leave my four eight o'clock classes to Ora Mell
Tribble, and to Mary Katherine Parks I leave my knowledge of the Bible, said gift
to be used in Bible II.
Page Thirty-Seven
Article IX. I, Elizabeth Denman, bequeath my suite of rooms and my rules for
doing light housekeeping to Leonora Gray, said rules to be assiduously followed and
passed on to Rachel Rushton ; to Frances Glasgow I leave my beautiful red negligee.
Article X. I, Ruby Lee Estes, will my superior executive ability and my college
spirit to Llewellyn Wilburn.
Article XL I, Mary Lois Eve, bequeath my sweet disposition and my cosmetics
to Lucy Durr, hoping said recipient will use them sparingly.
Article XIL I, Lois Grier, will the joys of being on Exec, to whoever may de-
serve such felicity.
Article XIIL I, Olive Hardwick, leave my dear little locker and my sweet
memories of happy luncheon hours in the tea-room to Frances Sledd.
Article XIV. I, Rose Harwood, will my line of "bull" and my influence with
the faculty to Agnes Wiley, trusting that they be used with discretion.
Article XV. I, Susie Hecker, bequeath my shrewdness in engaging Hist. II.
books ahead of time, to Minnie Claire Boyd.
Article XVI. I, Edith Hightower, leave my corduroy tam o' shanter and my
ability to fall in the breach when the cook is away, to Mary Ford.
Article XVII. I, Alvahn Holmes, will to Jean Douglas my ease in getting ad-
vanced standing.
Article XVIII. I, Helen Hood, bequeath my place as "Freshman Mother" to
Elizabeth Pruden, said place to be filled to the best of her ability.
Article XIX. I, Emma Jones, leave my darling little room in the "tinement"
to Julia Lake Skinner.
Article XX. I, Virginia Lancaster, will my protecting love for Elizabeth Moss
to Louise Felker.
Article XXI. I, Caroline Larendon, do hereby bequeath my dignity and high
grades, especially in French, to Dorothy Thigpen, hoping that said gifts will help
said recipient on to success.
Article XXII. I, Margaret Leyburn, will to Louise Marshburn my unusual
skill in applying cosmetics.
Article XXIII. I, Samille Lowe, bequeath to Almeda Hutcheson, otherwise
known as "Pete," my unrivaled prowess in athletics, especially in basket-ball, trust-
ing that it may be used to advantage in subduing certain victors of this year.
Article XXIV. I, Mary Rogers Lyle, leave my struggles with German II. to
Frances Thomas, and to Anna Harrell I leave my numerous 'phone calls.
Article XXV. I, Annie White Marshall, will to Alice Norman my boisterous
hilarity to be used with the moderation said giver has shown.
Article XXVI. I, Dorothy Moore, leave to Elizabeth Witherspoon my thrifty
habit of early rising, trusting that she will use it with care.
Article XXVII. I, Anna Leigh McCorkle, bequeath my power of mind read-
ing and my platonic friendships to Katharine Godbee.
Page Thirty-Eight
Article XXVIII. I, Fannie Oliver, will my antipathy for the other sex to
Blanche Copeland.
Article XXIX. I, Porter Pope, leave my dear little sister, Isabel, to the loving
care and tender mercies of Bess Ham.
Article XXX. I, Carolina Randolph, bequeath my position as Marguerite
Watts' maid to Shirley Fairly, guaranteeing to said recipient high wages and a good
mistress.
Article XXXI. I, Katherine Seay, leave my fondness for Sociology to Mar-
garet Leech, and my priceless and voluminous diaries to Margaret Rowe, said diaries
to be perused at recipient's leisure.
Article XXXII. I, Eva Maie Willingham, bequeath my intense love of poetry
to Emilie Keyes, hoping that said gift will enable said recipient to attain a higher
degree of culture.
This instrument was signed, sealed, and declared by the Class of 1918, this
twenty-ninth day of May, Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen, as their last will and
testament.
Paye Thirty-Nine
>pm0r
luttkt^a
Julia Abbot
Hallie Alexander
Ruth Anderson
Elva Brehm
Myrtis Burnett
Martha Comer
Belle Cooper
Elizabeth Denman
Ruby Lee Estes
Lois Crier
Olive Hardwick
Rose Harwood
Susie Hecker
Edith Hightower
Helen Hood
Alvahn Holmes
Emma Jones
Virginia Lancaster
Caroline Larendon
Margaret Leyburn
Samille Lowe
Mary Rogers Lyle
Anna Leigh McCorkle
Annie White Marshall
Dorothy Moore
Fannie Oliver
Porter Pope
Carolina Randolph
Katherine Seay
Myra Clark Scott
Eva Maie Willingham
Lois MacIntyre
Margaret Winslett
Mary Burnett
Alice Cooper
Margaret McConnell
Delia Gardner
Louise Johnson
Marion McCamy
Marguerite Davis
Romola Davis
Martha Brantley
Louise Slack
Helen Williamson
Clara Cole
Marion Conklin
HORTENSE ZaCHARIAS
Elizabeth Allen
Elizabeth Moss
Margaret Shive
Clifford Holtzclaw
Sarah Davis
Catherine Reed
Pauline Van Pelt
Laura S. Molloy
Virginia McLaughlin
Annie Houston
Lurline Torbert
Elizabeth Reid
Juliet Foster
Ethel Tye
Rosalind Wurm
Page Forty
(n .
Non-QInmB
OFFICERS
First Semester Second Semester
FRA^XES Glasgow President Margaret Rowe
Dorothy Thigpen .... Vice-President Lucy Durr
Alice Norman .... Secretary-Treasurer . Mary Katherine Parks
Virglnla Newton Poet
Representatives on Executive Committee
Lucy Durr Lulu Smith
Minnie Claire Boyd
Blanche Copeland
Lucy Durr
Claire Elliott
Louise Felker
Mary Ford
Frances Glasgow
Katherine Godbee
Leonora Gray
Bessie Ham
Goldie Ham
Anna Harrell
MEMBERS
Irene Havis
Almeda Hutcheson
Emilie Keyes
Margaret Leech
Mary Brock Mallard
Louise Marshburn
Dorothy Mitchell
Virginia Newton
Trueheart Nicolassen
Alice Norman
Mary Katherine Parks
Elizabeth Pruden
Elizabeth Richardson
Margaret Rowe
Julia Lake Skinner
Frances Sledd
Lulu Smith
Dorothy Thigpen
Frances Thomas
Ora Mell Tribble
Elizabeth M. Watkins
Marguerite Watts
Llewellyn Wilburn
Elizabeth Witherspoon
Miss Cady
FACULTY MEMBERS
Dr. Sweet Dr. Armistead
Mr. Stukes
Pane Forty-One
m
I
Page Forty-Two
Page Forty-Three
Suat l^fnr? tl|f Itrtnrii
Just before the victory. Juniors,
Comes the hardest of the fray;
But we've fought ivith noble spirit.
And ive know we'll tvin the day.
Trenches three we've met and vanquished.
Yet one more we'll have to gain
Then ive'll bravely press on towards it,
Trusting, striving not in vain.
Foes are all about us fighting,
And our wounds are oft severe.
E'en the first trench ivas a struggle
And the others cost us dear.
Comrades brave have dropped beside us.
Now our number is not great;
But we'll win that last trench. Juniors,
For our zeal will not abate.
The here and there ive've lost a skirmish.
We'll not lose the victory, too;
For our high hopes spur us onward
To the greater things in view.
Hear the battle cry of victory.
And our banner bright behold!
Here's all luck for 1919
And the glorious black and gold!
P
Page Forty-Four
Jirat OIlaaB fntiat^fi
OFFICERS
First Semester Second Semester
Lois MacIntyre President Juliet Foster
Sara Davis Vice-President Annie Houston
Marion Conklin .... Secretary-Treasurer . . Hortense Zacharias
Mary Burnett Poet
Kepr
Elizabeth Allen
jsentatives on txecutive (committee
Laura Stockton Molloy
MEMBERS
Louise Abney
LuLiE Speer Harris
Ethel Rea
Elizabeth Allen
Clifford Holtzclaw
Catherine Reed
Nell Aycock
Annie Houston
Elizabeth Reid
Jane Maury Bernhardt
Louise Johnson
Olivia Russell
Mary Burnett
Elizabeth Lawrence
Margaret Shive
Clara Cole
Marian B. Lindsay
Louise Slack
Marian Conklin
Marion McCamy
Lurline Torbert
Alice Cooper
Margaret McConnell
Ethel Tye
Marguerite Davis
Lois MacIntyre
Pauline Van Pelt
Romola Davis
Julia McKay
Clauzelle Whaley
Sara Davis
Elizabeth Marsh
Ida White
Jean Douglas
Laura Stockton Molloy
Agnes Wiley
Reva DuPree
Margery Moore
Helen Williamson
Shirley Fairly
Lillian Patton
Margaret Winslett
Juliet Foster
Eugenia Peed
Rosalind Wurm
Delia Gardner
Julia Reasoner
FACULTY MEMBERS
Hortense Zacharias
Miss Markley
Miss Alexander
Miss Fahnestock
Page Forty-Five
Paije Forty-Six
liigt? in tl|0 lanka
Aux armes! the cry rings clear and echoes far
Elusive ghost, class spirit, doth arise
With dreams of future conquest in her eyes;
Of heights attained, with victory, guiding star.
But discipline is needed to prepare
These raw recruits to bear the victory well
The reign of terror did its work and well.
For thru it we have learned to do and dare.
Aux armes! the words seem changed in connotation
Our period of discipline is o'er
And we, the lords, ivho were recruits before.
Seem bent on stirring strife and agitation.
The poor new-comers followed every laiv
Braids, placards were the order of the day
Courts martial ample means of holding sway
The upper classmen smiled at ivhat they saw.
Aux armes! a challenge to the future strife
To fight big battles, nobly bear defeat;
To press straight onivard, never to retreat;
To take our stand in this great ivar of life.
A glimpse beyond the top has brought us light.
Our watchword "carry on" rings true and clear;
Our testing and our victory are near
We'll do our bit our uttermost for right.
Pafje F'orty-Seven
Enntoa
OFFICERS
First Semester Second Semester
Sarah Hall President Jean McAluster
Frances Charlotte Markley . Vice-President Ida Brittain
Dorothy Allen Secretary Edythe Lowe
Jean McAllister Treasurer Edythe Lowe
Margaret Bland Poet
Representatives on Executive Committee
Margaret Bland Ch,\rlotte Newton
Anne Abernathy
Caroline Hunley Agee
Dorothy Clark Allen
Marjorie Allen
Margaret Anderson
Jeannette Archer
Marion Atkinson
Rheba Barnard
Margaret Wayt Bell
Marie Bennett
Myrtle Blackmon
Margaret Bland
Elise Lewis Bohannon
LiLA Mae Boswell
Anne Braddy
Martha Brantley
Dorothy Breese
Augusta Brewer
]\L\RY Gibson Brittain
Ida Louise Brittain
Gladys McIver Brown
Thelma Brown
MEMBERS
Emitom Burns
Eleanor Carpenter
Marion Cawthorn
Rosalie Chambers
Edyth Clarke
Julia Cohen
Lois Compton
Lynda Compton
LuciLE Conant
Fr.'VNCes Cooper
Marguerite Cousins
Sarah Cr.\gwall
Augusta Crawford
Ruth Crowell
Sue Cureton
Isabella Currie
Nellie Frances Daye
Frances Marion Dearing
Esther Dismukes
Alice Vivian Dowe
Evelyn Eagan
Marie Edgerton
Elsie Estes
Margaret Fain
Mary Robb Finney
Virginia Fish
Elizabeth Floding
Sarah Louise Fluker
Sarah Fulton
Aimee Dunwody Glover
Mildred Goodrich
Eleanor Gordon
Bernice Green
Mary Louise Green
Martha Lee Grier
Mabel Avery Grisard
Mary Olive Gunn
Julia Hagood
Sarah Hall
Helen Wright Hall
Fr.\nces Hamilton
Pearl Lowe Hamner
Mariwil Hanes
Marion S. Harper
m
Page Forty-Eight
Enoktra, Qlnttttttu^b
Mildred Harris
Anne Hart
Catherine Wilkins Haugh
Dorothy Havis
Margaret L. Hedrick
Emily Cobbs Hutter
Cornelia Hutton
Anna Locke Ingram
Melville Jameson
LiLLiE Jenkins
Eugenia Johnston
Alice Lake Jones
India Jones
Louise Jones
Mary Jones
Marian Justice
Juanita Kelly
Anna Marie Landress
Augusta Laxton
Eunice Legg
Frances Long
Elizabeth Lovett
Edythe Lowe
Dorothy Lumley
Jean McAlister
Frances McCaa
Ruth McClellan
Estelle McCormick
Julia McCullough
Margaret McLaughlin
Virginia McLaughlin
Margaret McLemore
Marion McPhail
Edna Katherine McRae
Gertrude Manly
Frances C. Markley
Fan Esther Meaktn
Caroline Montgomery
Elizabeth Moss
Lucia Murchison
Vienna Mae Murphy
Martha Nathan
Charlotte Newton
Theresa Newton
Sara Louise O'Kelley
Frances Oliver
Cynthia Pace
Dorothy Paine
Adelaide Park
LiNA Parry
Eddith Mae Patterson
Alethea Pinkston
Gladys Plaster
Margaret Logan Pratt
Janef Newman Preston
Lucile Price
Olive Berry Pringle
Cassie Ramsay
Sara Reese
Edith Roark
Rachel Rushton
Eula Russell
Margaret Sanders
Julie Saunders
Rebecca Saunders
Helen Scanlon
Claire Louise Scott
Frances Simpson
Elizabeth Graves Smith
Ruth Gaines Smith
Elizabeth Somerville
Clotile Spence
Kathleen Stanton
Mildred Louise Steele
Katherine Still
Mary Strong
Amy Curry Twitty
Nell Upshaw
Evelyn Hope Wade
Margaret Stuart Wade
Julia Walker
Julia Watkins
Helen Brice Wayt
Mary Wharton
Frances Whitfield
Elizabeth Tate Williams
Ellen Garnett Wilson
NiTA Woodard
Annie Dow Wurm
Eliza Bennett Young
Miss Young
FACULTY MEMBERS
Miss Tuller
Miss Phillips
Paye Forty-Nine
Page Fifty
iuat ISonktPB
It ivas long about September
As clearly as I remember
When a huge crowd of us came down to join thisring;
We thought we'd enlist at college
To fight a bit for knowledge
But we ivere rookies, and we didn't know a thing.
It was rather hard at first
'Cause they seemed to do their worst
To give us a job we could never learn to do ;
But most of us stuck to it
Until we learned to do it,
Tho at first we did get homesick and a wee bit blue.
Then the Sophomores had their chance
And they led us quite a dance.
Making us salute them and wear primly our hair;
But ive got even for that
'Cause we won the big black cat
Just to let the upper classmen know we were there.
It hasn't been half bad.
And indeed we're awfully glad
We came to get the training we have got;
We're so glad we're here
That all of us will cheer
First for our rookie class and then for Agnes Scott.
AWAKE! Arise! Rush forth, Irregulars. We are now banded together for a
worthy purpose. We are the emergency corps who are to be ordered out
in case the honor of the college is at stake. In any time of warfare, each
of us is to use her own particular weapon. Some must dart upon the enemy with
paint-brushes. Some must play upon the piano and the organ, and frighten our
foes away. Some must open their mouths, and either recite or sing in order to run
away the attacking force. No one knew until we received our name that our possi-
bilities were great. We have been useful in entertainments and in cheering new
girls and visitors. But we have been considered, heretofore, only as precious orna-
ments. Now, we are to show the world that all this exercising of lungs and of
finger-tips and all this training of the eye leads to a goal not to be scorned. Many
are the talents of the Emergency Corps, but our greatest worth comes from our
ability to smile when abused, to laugh when snubbed, and to beam when others are
receiving laurels which are denied Irregulars.
Page Fifty-Two
iEm^rg^ttrg Qlorpa
I
OFFICERS
First Semester Second Semester
Lucy Beman President Lucy Beman
Miriam Dean Vice-President Miriam Dean
Louise May Secretary-Treasurer . . . Rebecca Whaley
Representative on Executive Committee
Alice Slater Cannon
THIRD YEAR IRREGULAR.
Adele Bize
SECOND YEAR IRREGULARS.
Lucy Beman
Marjorie Busha
Alice Slater Cannon
Elizabeth Cass
Miriam Dean
Frances Ervin
Margaret Lyle
Adelaide McCaa
Louise May
Caroline Sproull
Ruby Stanley
Emily Walker
Mary Paine Wendel
Rebecca Whaley
Helen Williams
FIRST YEAR IRREGULARS.
Susie Anderson
Martha P. Ashcraft
Emma Bell
Alice Bloch
Carrie Lou Born
Frances Bowling
Marion Bowling
Julia Brantley
Margaret Brinson
Susie Mae Caruthers
Barbara Lewis Clapp
Virginia Crank
Jennie Thompson DeLand
Marguerite Downman
Elizabeth Enloe
Helen Gilbert
Sara Gilbreath
Alice Gillespy
Isabel Goff
Vivian Gregory
Mary Elizabeth Grimm
Ella Gunn
Sophie Hagedorn
Julia Heaton
Mary Hood
Florence Jarmulowsky
Iris Bradfield Jarrell
Beulah Johnson
Elva Keaton
Neel Kendrick
Beatrice Kipp
Marian Kriegshaber
Martha Laing
Vera Laird
Ruth Laughon
Jessie McCall
Sarah McCurdy
Gladys McDaniel
Margaret McMillan
Alice McNeill
Venice Mayson
Cecilia Milligan
Mary Louise Morgan
Marion McHenry Park
Josephine Peabody
Isabel Pope
Mabel Lee Price
Adelaide Ransom
Margaret Roach
Florence Rutherford
Annie Ola Sloan
Dorothy Speake
Josephine Telford
Lois Thompson
Mildred Thompson
Julia Tomlinson
Emily LTpshaw
Clara Waldrop
Agnes White
Mary Willie Wilson
SPECIAL STUDENTS.
Mary Frances Barnhart
Julia Ingram
LuLA B. Middlebrooks
Alice Wingo
Parje Fifty-Three
I
p
Page Fifty-Four
THE "Y'
BULLETIN No. I
THE WORLD at large has been shaken to its very foundations by the events of
1917-1918, and the same thing may well be said of our Student Christian
Associations. "There are some eddies," as Miss Conde has said, "in the streams
of our student life that are continuing unperturbed in the same old way, but the
main current is sweeping on full of new power and fraught with endless possi-
bilities." Surely the outstanding events of our Y. W. C. A. program for this year
prove that Agnes Scott students are no exception, but that they are awake to the
challenge of the world situation. We are trying to face it squarely and courage-
ously in the following ways:
First, by striving to abolish any spirit of irreverence in making our chapel
service more worshipful.
Second, by applying Christ's principles to our social standards right here at
Agnes Scott.
Third, by enlisting the students in groups for the study of Christian principles
of World Democracy, to conserve and direct the enthusiasm and sacrificial giving
of $2,242 towards the Student Friendship Fund so splendidly presented by Miss
Conde and Mr. Hayes.
Fourth, by working towards a higher standard of social morality through
intelligent study under the wise guidance of Dr. Ulrich.
Fifth, by maintaining our poise and normal program, through systematic study
and support of our regular home and foreign work to reveal our patriotism and
our love for our Master.
Notwithstanding the varied channels into which the interest of the students has
been turned, the purpose of the association has remained fundamentally the deep-
ening and strengthening of each individual life through service and a close fellow-
ship with Jesus Christ as a personal Saviour. "Know thou the God of thy father,
and serve Him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind."
Parje Fifty-Sia:
'V;
|. m. 01. A. Olabtot
Ruth Anderson .... President Katherine Seay . . . Secretary
Julia Lake Skinner . Vice-President Virginia Lancaster . . Treasurer
Julia Lake Skinner Chairman Membership Committee
Virginia Lancaster Chairman Finance Committee
Katherine Seay .... .... Chairman Educational Committee
GoLDiE Ham Chairman Social Committee
Claire Elliott Chairman Social Service Committee
Mary Brock Mallard Chairman Religious Meetings Committee
Dorothy Thigpen . . Chairman Voluntary Study Committee
Page Fifty-.^even
l|^ WubU of Jt
Oh. think, the waste of it the hopeless, heartless waste of it!
The flower of our manhood gone, and who knows why?
In their massing and their passing and the silent, solemn haste of it,
We only can remember they are going forth to die.
Ah no, we feel it not thoughtlessly we feel it not.
Wrapped in our own selfishness, like thick, hard shells.
The future-hiding veil is rending, yet we cry: "Reveal it not!"
And cowering, will not hark to what our own heart tells.
What does it say to us hinting, haunting, say to us?
"The weight of woe that wounds the world, shall seek our nation, too.
Oh, when shall morning dawn upon us, bring the waking day to us.
When roused at last to action, we shall seek some work to do?
Agnes White, '21.
Page Fifty-Eight
n
l(f Mnrk nf tljf Mar fflDmmittef
THE CREATION of the war committee has been the definite result of a common
and community desire among the students of Agnes Scott to express, in a
practical and efficient manner, their energies, toward meeting, as college wo-
men in the making, some of the needs of our country and the world at large. The
committee has tried to provide various activities in which students might take part,
and its program has been as broad and as wide as is possible in a college community,
in order that each girl might select the phase of war work through which she could
express herself most strongly.
The committee has procured wool from the Decatur and Atlanta Red Cross or-
ganizations, and has directed the making of one hundred and twenty-five articles,
the greater number of which were sweaters.
Every Saturday afternoon it has supervised groups for the making of trench
candles, under the direction of the Trench Light Headquarters in Atlanta. At these
gatherings books on the war were read.
At the suggestion of the committee the entire college community voted to have
the authorities in charge of the food adopt the regulations set forth by the govern-
ment in regard to the conservation of food.
A member of the committee has collected old magazines for the soldiers and
has sent them to Camp Gordon, the nearest cantonment.
Lectures have been given by a faculty member at the request of the committee
on the world questions and the present situation.
The Patriotic League has been organized at Agnes Scott, and practically every
girl has taken the pledge of membership.
The greatest work of the war committee has been the direction of the campaign
in the college for contributions to the Student Friendship War Fund. The total con-
tributions toward this fund, from both students and faculty, amounted to twenty-
two thousand dollars.
Page Fifty-'Nine
Patriotic Leaoue
PROMOTED BY THE
JUNIOR >VA.R WORK. COUNCIL,
OF THE
NATIONAL BOARD
OF THE YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS
I PLEDGE TO EXPRESS MY PATRIOTISM
BY DOING BETTER THAN EVER BEFORE
WHATEVER 'WORK I HAVE TO DO:
BY RENDERING M'HATEVER SPECIAl,
SERVICE I CAN TO MY COMMUNITY
AND COUNTRY;
BY LIVING UP TO THE HIGHEST STAN-
DARDS OF CHARACTER AND HONOR AND
HELPING OTHERS TO DO THE SAME.
Page Sixty
ORGANIZATIONS
BULLETIN No. Ill
[jflyUf
ililttary fnim
^tuirnt dntJ^rnmrnt Aaaoriation
EXECUTIVE COMiMITTEE
Samille Lowe President
Margaret Leyburn First Vice-President
Lois Grier Second Vice-President
Frances Glasgow Secretary
Mary Brock Mallard Treasurer
Myrtis Burnett I c -^i r,
. , -. > Senior Class Representatives
Annie White Marshall ( ^
Lucy Durr ) , ^; n
T r. > Junior Class Kepresentatives
Lulu Smith j ^
Elizabeth Allen ) c i ^, n
S isophomore Class Kepresentatives
Laur-a Stockton Molloy j
Margaret Bland 1 i- , ^i n
_ -. y treshman Class Kepresentatives
Charlotte Newton (
Alice Slater Cannon Irregular Class Representative
Page Sixty-Two
il
Page Sirty-Three
LuciLE Alexander
Louise Cady
ICpgtnn of Honar
FACULTY MEMBERS
J. D. M. Armistead
Rhoda Fahnestock
Lillian Smith
Anna Young
Reginald C. Lamb
ALUMNAE MEMBERS
Ida Lee Hill
(Mrs. L T. Irwin)
Class of 1908
Jeannette Brown
Maude Barker
Lizzabel Saxon
Elva Drake
(Mrs. W. B. Drake)
Rose Wood
Class of 1909
Eugenia Fuller
Irene Newton
Ruth Marion
Mattie Newton
Class of 1912
Cornelia Cooper
Anne McLane
Class of 1913
Janie MacGaughey
Emma Pope Moss
Class of 1914
Annie Jenkins
Louise McNulty
Kathleen Kennedy ~
Essie Roberts
Sarah Boals
Class of 1915
Marion Black
Gertrude Briesenick
Mary Helen Schneider
Mary West
Class of 1916
Laura Cooper
Elizabeth Burke
Jeannette Victor
Louise Wilson
Ray Harvison
Class of 1917
India Hunt
Katherine Lindamood
Janet Newton
Margaret Pruden
May Smith
Frances Thatcher
Class of 1918
Katherine Seay
Emma Jones
Lois Eve
Page Sixty-Four
(K
(I
IS^tmtxvhth for TIaltant ^^ rutr?
ALUMNAE MEMBERS
Class of 1916
Jeannette Victor
Ora Mast Glenn
Martha G. Ross
Louise W. Wilson
Maryellen Harvey
Eloise Gaston Gay
Alice S. Weatherly
Evelyn B. Goode
M. Ray Harvison
Neil Grafton Frye
Class of 1917
India Hunt
Gjertrud Amundsen
Laurie Caldwell
Mary Spottswood Payne
Anne Kyle
Louise Ware
Recina Pinkston
Janet Newton
Agnes Scott Donaldson
Georciana Wh.te
Ruth Nisbet
Vallie Young White
Margaret Leyburn
Samille Lowe
Ruby Lee Estes
Dr. McCain
STUDENT MEMBERS
Emma Jones
Ruth Anderson
Hallie Alexander
FACULTY MEMBERS
Miss Cady
Lois Eve
Olive Hardwick
Katherine Seay
Dr. Sweet
Page Hixty-Five
(Hlj? P^n i^taff
),I,
OFFICERS
Emma Jones
President
Belle Cooper ....
Secretary
MEMBERS
Oi.ivE Hardwick
Dorothy Thigpen
Margaret Rowe
Emilie Keyes
Agnes White
Catherine Reed
Elizabeth Denman
Pape Sixty-Six
3Fnltn (tlub
OFFICERS
i:
Margaret Bland
Elizabeth Enloe
Lois Compton
Marian Justice
. President
Secretary and Treasurer
MEMBERS
Elizabeth Lovett
Nell Upshaw
Frances C. Markley
Page Sixty-Seven
'wwm
all|^ Untpr-^nlkgtatf i? bating Olounrtl
OFFICERS
Rose Eleanor Harwood, M. D. S President
Fannie Falconer Oliver, P. D. S Secretary-Treasurer
MEMBERS
Mnttaai^ntatiB
Porter Pope
Lois Eve
Rose E. Harwood
Dr. Ar.viistead
FACULTY MEMBERS
Miss McKinney
l^rop^UatiB
Emma Jones
Fannie Oliver
Ruby Lee Estes
Mr. Stukes
Page Sixty-Eight
ALTHOUGH for three years, conflict reigned upon the inter-collegiate battle-
field, after Newcomb's victory in 1916 she sought an armistice; and hostili-
ties ceased. But peace threatened to corrupt our practiced fighters, and the
probability of future inter-collegiate contests demanded constant training. Accord-
ingly, the Debating Council of Collegiate Defense, before the students assembled in
the chapel, proclaimed that a state of war existed between the members of the
Mnemosynean and the Propylean Debating Societies. Their opposing interests
turned upon the question: Resolved, that Congress was justified in including the
literacy test in the recent Burnett Immigration Bill. A silver loving cup, brought
forth from hidden archives, bade defiance to each debating team and promised rich
spoils to the victor's hand. Each side felt this a challenge to its debating honor.
Which one with weapons yet untried, could yield the trophy for a moment to its rival?
Propyleans and Mnemosyneans each directed their supreme energies to mobiliz-
ing fighters and resources. Each recruiting officer listened jealously for the latest
recruiting figures from the opposing station. Freshman recruits and seasoned vet-
erans of the inter-collegiate struggles volunteered for service side by side. Training
camps? Ah, they were busy in each territory. Preliminary debating skirmishes
within each society revealed the ablest warriors, who were forthwith commissioned
to lead the fight.
Thus equipped, with the affirmative upheld by Mnemosyneans and the negative
as staunchly supported by Propyleans, the two great armies clashed. Freeman and
Donaldson led the Mnemosynean off^ensive, reinforced by Pruette, their alternative.
Again and again their attacking forces were hurled back by the brilliant Propylean
defense, generaled bv Ramsav and Estes, with Burnett's able support. Both Propy-
leans and Mnemosyneans showed ability, courage and technical skill by their coolness
under fire and by methods of attack and defense. Before a breathless assembly,
the judges at the council table accorded the victory to the Mnemosvnean debaters.
To them was presented the silver loving cup as a trophy for the excellency of their
society in debating warfare.
Special decorations were awarded to three fighters for exceptional prowess
upon the battlefield. Donaldson, Ramsay and Estes were chosen to form a cham-
pionship team and were decorated by the college with medals in recognition of their
successful generalship in the cause of debating at Agnes Scott.
Page Sixty-Nine
ilnf mnsytt^an B? bating ^nrtrtij
OFFICERS
First Semester Second Semester
Porter Pope President . . . .Mary Katherine Parks
Lois Grier Vice-President .... Elizabeth Watkins
Annie White Marshall . . . Secretary Sara Davis
Martha Comer Treasurer Helen Hood
Page Seventy
Julia Abbot
Louise Abney
Martha P. Ashcraft
Marian Atkinson
Nelle Aycock
Mary Barnhart
Emma Bell
Lucy Beman
Marie Bennett
Adele Bize
LiDA Boswell
Frances Bowling
Marian Bowling
Anne Braddy
Martha Brantley
Elva Brehm
Dorothy Breese
Augusta Brewer
>Largaret Brinson
Mary Brittain
Ida Brittain
Gladys Brown
Thelma Brown
Marjorie Busha
Alice S. Cannon
Susie Mae Caruthers
Elizabeth Cass
Julia Cohen
Clara Cole
^LARTHA Comer
Lynda Compton
LuciLE Con A NT
Alice Cooper
Belle Cooper
Frances Cooper
Virginia Crank
Augusta Crawford
Isabella Currie
Marguerite Davis
RoMOLA Davis
Sara Davis
Nellie Frances Da ye
Miriam Dean
Elizabeth Denman
Frances Dearinc
Jean Douglas
Evelyn Eagan
Frances Erwin
Elsie Estes
Lois Eve
Louise Felker
Hattie Mae Finney
Elizabeth Floding
Louise Fluker
Delia Gardner
Alice Gillespy
AiMEE D. Glover
Katherine Godbee
Eleanor Gordon
Mildred Goodrich
Leonora Gray
VrviAN Gregory
Mary Louise Green
Lois Grier
Martha Grier
MEMBERS
Avery Grisard
Ella Gunn
Mary Olive Gunn
Sophia Hagedorn
Sara Hall
Charlotte Hammond
Pearle Lowe Hamner
Marian Harper
Lulie Harris
Mildred Harris
Anne Hart
Rose Harwood
Julia Heaton
Susie Hecker
Alvahn Holmes
Isabel Holt
Clifford Holtzclaw
Helen Hood
Mary Hood
Annie Houston
Emily Hutter
Cornelia Hutton
Annie Locke Ingram
Julia Ingram
Melville Jameson
Florence Jarmulowsky
India Jones
JuANiTA Kelly
Emilie Keyes
Beatrix Kipp
Marion Kriecshaber
Neel Kendrick
Vera Laird
Anna M. Landress
Ruth Laughon
Elizabeth Lawrence
Eunice Legc
Margaret Leech
Samille Lowe
Edythe Lowe
Margaret Lyle
Lois MacIntyre
Addie McCaa
Fannie McCaa
Jessie McCall
Marian McCamy
Margaret McConnell
Alice McNeil
Anna L. McCorkle
ESTELLE McCoRMICK
Gladys McDaniel
Julia McKay
Margaret McLemore
Gertrude Manley
Elizabeth Marsh
Annie White Marshall
Louise Marshburn
Venice Mayson
Louise May
Cecelia Milligan
Dorothy Mitchell
Laura Stockton Molloy
Elizabeth Moss
Vienna Mae Murphy
Martha Nathan
Charlotte Newton
Janet Newton
Theressa Newton
Virginia Newton
Trueheart Nicolassen
Alice Norman
Frances Oliver
Sarah O'Kelley
Mabel Page
Dorothy Paine
Adelaide Park
Marian Park
Mary Katherine Parks
Lillian Patton
Isabel Pope
Porter Pope
Margaret Pratt
Olive Pringle
LuciLE Price
Elizabeth Pruden
Julia Reasoner
Sarah Reese
Margaret Roach
Margaret Rowe
EuLA Russell
Olivia Russell
Rebecca Saunders
Helen Scanlon
Claire Louise Scott
Myra Scott
Katherine Seay
Frances Simpson
Augusta Skeen
Annie Ola Sloan
Elizabeth Smith
Lulu Smith
Clotile Spence
Kathleen Stanton
Katherine Still
Frances Thomas
Mildred Thompson
Julia Tomlinson
LuRLINE ToRBERT
Amy Twitty
Nelle Upshaw
Emily Upshaw
Julia Walker
Elizabeth Watkins
Julia Watkins
-Marguerite Watts
Helen Wayt
Mary Paine Wendel
Clauselle Whaley
Rebecca Whaley
xMary Wharton
Agnes White
Frances Whitfield
Agnes Wiley
Elizabeth Williams
Helen Williams
Mary Will'e Wilson
Elizabeth Witherspoon
NiTA WOODARD
HORTENSE ZaCHARIAS
P'Afje Seventy-One
Prnpgkatt if bating ^ortdg
OFFICERS
First Semester
Fannie Oliver President .
Catherine Reed Vice-President
Claire Elliot Secretary .
Second Semester
. Louise Slack
Mary Burnett
. Bess Ham
Elizabeth Allen Treasurer Juliet Foster
Page Seventy-Two
Rose Abercromb;e
Caroline Acee
Hallie Alexander
Nell Alford
Dorothy Allen
ELii.\BETH Allen
IMarjorie Allen
Ruth Anderson
Margaret Anderson
Rheba Barnard
Jane Bernhardt
Louise Brand
Margaret Bell
Margaret Bland
Myrtle Blackmon
Elise Bohannon
Julia Brantley
Myrtis Burnett
Mary Burnett
Emitom Burns
Eleanor Carpenter
Marion Cawthorn
Rose Chambers
Edith Clark
Marion Conklin
Blanche Copeland
Barbara Clapp
Marguerite Cousins
Lois Compton
Sara Cragwell
Ruth Crowell
Sue Curlton
Jennie T. Deland
Esther Dismukes
Vivian Dowe
Lucy Durr
Marguerite Dovvnman
Reva DuPre
Marie Edgerton
Claire Elliot
Ruby Lee Estes
Margaret Fain
Shirley Fairley
MEMBERS
Mary R. Finney
Mary Ford
Juliet Foster
Sarah Fulton
Virginia F.sh
Sarah Glbreath
Frances Glasgow
Mary E. Grimm
Bernice Green
Goldie Ham
Bess Ham
Julia Hagood
Helen Hall
Mariw.'L Hanes
Olive Hardwick
Anna Harrell
Katherine Hauch
Dorothy Havis
Irene Havis
Margaret Hedrick
Edith Hightower
Almeda Hutchinson
Iris Jarrell
Lillie Jenkins
Alice Jones
Erma Jones
Louise Jones
Beulah Johnson
Eugenia Johnston
Marian Justice
Elva Kelton
Virginia Lancaster
Martha Laing
Augusta Laxton
Margaret Leyburn
Mar'on I,indsay
Frances Long
Elizabeth Lovell
Dorothy Lumly
Mary Rogers Lyle
Frances C. Markley
Dorothy Moore
Margery Moore
Louise Morgan
LucLA Murchison
Jean McAlister
Julia McCullough
Ruth McClellan
Margaret McLaughlin
Virginia McLaughlin
Marian McPhail
Frances Oliver
Cynthia Pace
Lina Parry
Edith Patterson
Josephine Peabody
Eugenia Peed
Gladys Plaster
Janet Preston
Mabel Price
Cassie Ramsay
Carolina Randolph
Adelaide Ransom
Ethel Rea
Catherine Reed
Edith Roark
Rachael Rushton
Margaret Saunders
Julia Lake Skinner
Louise Slack
Frances Sledd
Arvilla Smith
Elizabeth Somerville
Dorothy Speake
Mary Strong
Josephine Telford
Dorothy' Thigpen
Ora Tribble
Margaret Wade
Clara Waldrop
Llewellyn Wilburn
Ellen Wilson
Margaret Winslett
Annie Dowe Wurm
Rosalind Wurm
Eliza Bennett Young
Pane Seventy-Three
iFtuanrtal i^partm^ttt
Rose E. Harwood Student Treasurer
Some clever person once remarked that money does not grow on
trees. Nobody believes that half so much as do poor business
managers and treasurers of organizations and of funds, miscellan-
eous and otherwise. One has to have the wisdom of Solomon, the
charm of Cleopatra, the tenacity of a bull-dog and the tact of a
society leader to be a successful collector of money and of ads.
The girls who have never been treasurers or business managers be-
lieve that these office-holders have lovely positions. Do they not en-
counter attractive young business men? Do they not even get to
talk to these modern Apollos? Do not treasurers handle money,
and is not money a delightful rarity to possess? Yes, there are
bright sides to these money-getting jobs. But there are dark, oh!
very dark sides. When beautiful gentlemen just won't give you
ads, when girls just will gobble down their allowances as soon as
they get them, when bills have to be paid, then sounds the funeral
dirge for the doleful treasurers and business managers. Then do
they cry in despair, "Some money! some money! my kingdom for
some money!" Stand by treasurers and business managers, friends
and A. S. C. citizens, for they deserve our support.
Page Seventy-Fonr
Atlanta OInnttngrnt
'Be it ever so humble there's no place like home.'
OFFICERS
Elizabeth Denman
Evelyn Eagan .
Eugenia Johnston
. President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
Marie Bennett
Ida Brittain
Mary Brittain
Thelma Brown
Clara Cole
Jean Douglas
MEMBERS
Hattie May Finney
Elizabeth Floding
Anne Hart
Mildred Harris
Helen Hood
Marian Kriegshaber
FACULTY MEMBERS
Miss Young
Mary Brock Mallasd
Dorothy Paine
Margaret Pratt
Claire Louise Scott
Ethel Tye
Helen Wayt
Miss Tuller
Page Seventy-Five
i>outlj Carolina OInnttngfttt
OFFICERS
Virginia Lancastek President
Dorothy Moore Vice-President ,
Dorothy Lumley Secretary and Treasurer
MEMBERS
Barbara Clapp - Virginia LamcasteS
Claire Elliott Dorothy Lumley
Juliet Foster Dorothy Moore
Frances Hamilton Lucia Murchison
LiLLiE Jenkins Jess'e McCall
Louise Jones Rebecca Saunders
Mary Wharton
FACULTY MEMBERS
Mr. Stukes Mr. Maclean Miss Calhoun
Dr. McCain Mr. Cunningham Mrs. Calhoun
Miss Hutchins
T ^^F
I
Page Seventy-Six
JFlnn&a (flnttttng^nt
OFFICERS
Marion Conklin President
MEMBERS
Marion Cawthon De Funiak
Marion Conklin Miami
Virginia Fish Jacksonville
Alice Jones Jacksonville
Jllia Reasoner Oneco
"aj/e Heventy-Heven
iHiaataBtppi Olontmg^nt
OFFICERS
Elizabeth Watkins
Myrtis Burnett .
President
Treasurer
Myrtis Burnett
Shirley Fairly
Delia Gardner
Mary Louise Green .
Sophia Hagedorn
Bessie Ham .
GoLDiE Ham
Charlotte Hammond
Irene Havis .
MEMBERS
Vicksburg Beulah Johnson . . . McComb
Hazlehurst Estelle McCormick . . Senatobia
Greenwood Margaret McLemore . . Natchez
. Corinth CATHERINE Reed .... Natchez
Natchez Margaret Roach .... Tunica
Greenville Helen Scanlon .... Meridian
Greenville Katherine Still . . . Senatobia
Kosciusko Elizabeth Watkins . . . Jackson
Vicksburg Elizabeth Witherspoon . Ellisville
Page Seventy-Eight
Utrgtnia Olnnttttg^nt
OFFICERS
Frances Glasgow .
Virginia McLaughlin
President
Secretary
Virginia Crank
Elsie Estes
Frances Glasgow
Eleanor Gordon
VivLAN Gregory
MEMBERS
Anna Harrell
Emily Hutter
Ruth Laughon
Margaret McLaughlin
Virginia McLaughlin
Janef Preston
Margaret Wade
Julia Walker
Ellen Wilson
Agnes White
Miss Hopkins
Dr. Armistead
FACULTY MEMBERS
Miss Harrison
Miss McKinney
Mrs. Gaines
Faye Seventy-Nine
' OFFICERS
Louise Slack President
Elizabeth Pruden Vice-President
Lulu Smith Secretary and Treasurer
MEMBERS
Hallie Alexander Frances Dearing Iris Jarrell Alice Norman
Ruth Anderson Ruby Lee Estes Emma Jones Cynthu Pace
Martha Comer Louise Felker Eunice Lecg Adelaide Park
Lois Eve Mary Finney Samille Lowe IVUrion Park
Olive Hardwick Louise Fluker Edythe Lowe Mary Katherine Parks
Louise Akney Sarah Fulton Marion McCamy Eugenia Peed
Anne Abernathy Aimee D. Glover Laura McClellan Cassie Ramsay
Susie Anderson Eleanor Gordon Sarah McCurdy Myra Scott
Lucy Beman Mary Olive Gunn Harriett Mack Louise Slack
LiLA BoswELL Helen Hall Gertrude Manly Annie Ola Sloan
Annie L. Brooks Sarah Hall Louise Marshburn Clotile Spence
ALarjorie Busha Mariwill Hanes Caroline Montgomery j^ ,,
Lois Compton Lulie Harris Margery Moore ^^^^ lpshaw
Marguerite Cousins Julia Heaton Charlotte Newton Emily Lpshaw
Sue Cureton Helen Hood Virginia Newton Clara Waldrop
RoMOLA Davis Almeda Hutcheson Theressa Newton Marguerite Watts
Sara Davis Florence Jarmulowsky Trufheart Nicolassen Agnes Wiley
. '
Page Eighty
^0utl| O^pnrgia Qlnitttng^nt
OFFICERS
Elizabeth Lawrence President
Anne Braddy Vice-President
Olivia Russell Secretary and Treasurer
Julia Abbot
Ruth Andebson
Adele Bize
Myrtle Blackmon
Alice Block
Anne Braddy
Julia Brantley
Martha Brantley
Margaret Brinson
LuciLE Conant
MEMBERS
Augusta Crawford
ESTHEB DiSMUKES
Reva Ddpree
Katherine Godbee
Pearl Lowe Hamner
Edith Hichtower
Cornelia Hutton
Clifford Holtzclaw
Elizabeth Lawrence
Alice McNeill
Vienna May Murphy
Frances Oliver
Olivia Russell
Julia Saunders
Amy Twitty
Clauzelle Whaley
Rebecca Whaley
Frances Whitfield
Hortense Zacharias
Paoe Bifjhty-One
Alabama Olnnttng^nt
OFFICERS
Porter Pope President
Martha Nathan Secretary
Caroline Acee
Dorothy Allen
Marjorie Allen
Elizabeth Allen
Marion Bowling
Minme Claire Boyd
Augusta Brewer
Emitqm Burns
Mary Burnett
Lynda Compton
Frances Cooper
Blanche Copeland
MEMBERS
Nellie Frances Daye Addie McCaa
Miriam Dean
Lucy Durr
Frances Erwin
Mary Ford
Alice Gillespy
Mildred Goodrich
Los Grier
Martha Lee Grier
Ella Gunn
Dorothy Mitchell
Louise Morgan
Frances McCaa
Katherine McRae
EuLA Belle Middlebrooks
Martha Nathan
Fannie Oliver
Gladys Plaster
Isabel Pope
Porter Pope
Cassie Ramsey
Adelaide Ransom
Rachel Rushton
Julia Lake Skinner
Elizabeth Somerville
Dorothy Speake
Caroline Sproull
Ruby Stanley
Louise Steele
Dorothy Thigpen
Frances Thomas
Lurline Torbert
Mary Willie Wilson
Margaret Winslett
^<P
Page Eighty-Two
EmmsBtt aiantm^mt
w
OFFICERS
Margaret Leech President
Laura Stockton Molloy Secretary and Treasurer
Emma Bell
Dorothy Breese
Elizabeth Cass
Margaret Fain
Lenora Gray
Sara Gilbreath
Mary Elizabeth Grimm
Avery Grisard
Rose Harwood
Margaret Hedrick
Annie Houston
Dr. Gaines
MEMBERS
Melville Jamison
India Jones
Anna Marie Landress
Margaret Leech
Frances Long
Margaret Lyle
Mary Rogers Lyle
Annie White Marshall
Laura Stockton Molloy
Ruth McClellan
FACULTY MEMBERS
Annie Leigh McCorkle
Trueheart Nicolassen
Lillian Patton
Margaret Roach
Margaret Rovve
Florence RuTHERFORn
Eula Russell
Katherine Seay
Elizabeth Smith
Julia Tomlinson
Evelyn Wade
Miss Phillips
Paffe Eighty-Three
OFFICERS
Mildred Thompson President
IMEMBERS
Elise Bohannan Louisville
Eleanor Carpenter Louisville
Edith Roark Franklin
Josephine Telford Richmond
Mildred Thompson Hickman
Eliza Bennett Young Louisville
FACULTY MEMBERS
Miss Phythian Newport
Mr. Lamb ... ... Franklin
'J
Page Eighty-Four
Alvahn Holmes President
MEMBERS
Caroline Randolph Arizona
Marguerite Davis ... New Jersey
Alvahn Holmes Maryland
Margaret Bell West Virginia
Sarah Cragwall Indiana
Marian Harper Pennsylvania
Janef Preston Maryland
Margaret Sanders Arkansas
Neel Kendrick Kansas
Vera Laird Iowa
Frances Charlotte Markley Ohio
Paye Eiyhty-Five
Carolina! Carolina! Heavens blessings attend her,
ff Idle we live we will cherish and defend her.
Though the scorners may sneer at and ivhittlings defame her.
Yet our hearts swell with gladness whenever we name her.
OFFICERS
Alice Slater Cannon
Ethel Rea .
President
Secretary and Treasurer
Jeannette Archer
Martha P. Ashcraft
Marion Atkinson
Rheba Barnard
Jane Bernhardt
Margaret Bland
Gladys Brown
MEMBERS
Alice Slater Cannon
Edyth Clark
Ruth Crowell
Isabella Currie
Marie Edi.erton
Julia Hagood
Augusta Laxton
AIarcaret Leyburn
Jean McAllister
Margaret McConnell
Julia McKay
Marion McPhail
Ethel Rea
Ruth Smith
NiTA Woodard
Page Eighty-Six
Margaret Rowe Chief of Brigade
GoLDiE Ham Chief of Bucket Brigade
REBEKAH SCOTT HALL
AL\RY Brock Mallard Captain
Frances Glasgow First Lieutenant
Louise Slack Chief of Bucket Brigade
AGNES SCOTT HALL
Elizabeth Lawrence Captain
Anna Harrell First Lieutenant
Eugenia Peed Chief of Bucket Brigade
INMAN HALL
Margaret Rowe Captain
Dorothy Thigpen . . . ^. First Lieutenant
GoLDiE Ham Chief of Bucket Brigade
LUPTON COTTAGE
Alice Norman Captain
WHITE HOUSE
Hattie Mae Finney Captain
WEST LAWN
Louise Fluker Captain
'i
Page Eighty-Heven
I^ouip (Suarbs
WE ARE the valorous band who protect the homes in which we sleep at night
and the home Agnes Scott College, which we inhabit in the day time.
We arrive so early in the morning and depart so late at night that the ene-
mies of A. S. C. never have an opportunity to carry off any of the inmates. The
mess hall of the Home Guards is splendidly protected from bombs and from floods.
In fact, the chief dangers which the Home Guards encounter are indigestion (mental
and physical I over-exercise, and parcels. We are admired and envied because we
meet and converse with the arch-enemies of the college: boys. Indeed we sometimes
introduce these dangerous beasts to the inmates who are pretty and who do not look
like book-worms. United and one in purpose and spirit, we stand, a noble battalion
of martyrs, ready, either to throttle a German measles epidemic or to spread it. As
we sit in our Room of Rest and Peace and pant from our toils, we see the members
of the other regiments peer in through our handsome glass door, and we note their
envious glances. How they pine and sigh for the home fires we keep burning, es-
pecially the days the radiators are unsociable! How they wish they could take
pleasant little walks to their sleeping quarters, under the starlit heavens with gallant
youths at their elbows! Yes, we are a satisfied, blessed multitude of valiant fighters.
i
I
Page Eightij-Eight
OFFICERS
Ruby Lee Estes .
Almeda Hutcheson
President
Secretary
Hallie Alexander
Susie Marie Anderson
Mary Frances Barnhart
Elva Margaret Brehm
Mrs. M. E. Carthevv
Rosalie Chambers
Lois Hortense Compton
Alice Rosalie Cooper
Belle B. Cooper
Marguerite Louise Cous:ns
Alice Vivian Dovve
Elizabeth Enloe
Ruby Lee Estes
Mary Robe Finney
Sarah Hamilton Fulton
Helen Gilbert
Helen Hall
Olive Hardwick
MEMBERS
Catherine Haugh
Dorothy Havis
Susie Hecker
Almeda Hutcheson
Julia Ingram
Louise Johnson
Emma Legc Jones
Marian Justice
Elva Celeste Keeton
Emilie Keyes
Carol'ne Larendon
Elizabeth Lovett
Julia Lowe McCullouch
Sarah McCurdy
Elizabeth Marsh
Venice Mayson
Fan Esther Meakin
Caroline Montgomery
Marjorie Moore
Cynthia Pace
Lin A Parry
Josephine Peabody
Luc-LE Price
Mabel Lee Price
Elizabeth Reid
Myra Scott
Margaret Shive
Frances Simpson
Frances Sledd
Ora Tribble
Llewellyn Wilburn
Helen Will'amson
Eva Maie Wtllingham
Annie Dow Wurm
ROSAL'ND WuRM
Fnge Eighty-Nine
:m
-.''7
^
THE Glee Club this year has been exceptionally gleeful, not only on account of
the songs thev are singing, but also because of many tours and detours from
the sheltering arms of Agnes Scott. The secretary very proudly reports a
record enrollment of forty members, thirty of which usually appear at practices
and all of which sing most lustily, as the inmates of Rebekah Scott can tell you.
The work this year has been taken up mainly with American composers, and special
partiality has been shown to Nevin, whose Nightingale made quite as much an im-
pression as the girls did at the North Avenue Presbyterian church on Children's
Day. Dunk's arrangement of Annie Laurie was also much appreciated on this oc-
casion, and Alma Mater featured as usual. Camp Gordon has claimed its part of the
musical talent of Agnes Scott, and the Double Quartet there's a Triple Sextet, also
won much praise from the unusually appreciative audience which gathers every night
in the "Y" huts in the great cantonment. But the crowning event in the Glee Club's
career was a concert given March the second. Each member was all dressed in
muslin and what feats they didn't accomplish in the line of team work and quality!
The program was well selected from the latest American composers, and the rendi-
tion was little short of perfect. The success of the club this year has been largely
dependent upon the sympathetic and interested work of Miss Hutchings, the di-
rector. She expresses herself as being much pleased with the quality of work done
by her students this year, and predicts for each a splendid future.
Page Ninety
I
mn (dlitb
OFFICERS
Miss Berte Hutchins Manager and Director
Rose Harwood Business Manager
Miriam Dean Secretary and Treasurer
Rebecca Whaley Reporter
Jeanette Archer
Lucy Beman
Emma Bell
Frances Bowling
Alice Slater CANiNON
Elizabeth Cass
Barbara Clapp
Lucile Conant
Sara Davis
Miriam Dean
Mary Elizabeth Grimm
Hattie May Finney
MEMBERS
Evelyn Eagan
Lulie Harris
Rose E. Harwood
Frances Glasgow
Julia Heaton
Helen Hood
Iris Jarrell
Elizabeth Lawrence
Gertrude Manly
Mary Brock Mallard
Cecilia Milligan
Addie McCaa
Anna Leigh McCorkle
Margaret McLaughlin
Marion McPhail
Martha Nathan
Dorothy Paine
Isabel Pope
Eugenia Peed
Florence Rutherford
Helen Scanlon
Margaret Shive
Augusta Skeen
Lurline T'^RBERT
Rebecca Whaley
Page Ninety-One
f1
Base Hospital
Page yinety-Two
DRAMATICS
BULLETIN No. IV
llarkfrtars
OFFICERS
Llewellyn Wilbur-\ President
Margaret Rowe Vice-President
Lois Eve Secretary
Lucy Durr Treasurer
Catherl\e Reed Property Manager
Hallie Alexander Stage Manager
Olive Hardwick
CHARTER MEMBERS
Lois E^e Miss Phythian
js?
Lucy Durr
Margaret Rowe
Hallie Alexander
FULL MEMBERS
Llewellyn Wilburn
Catherine Reed
Ruby Stanley
Katherine Seay
Julia Abbot
Elizabeth Denman
Dorothy Thigpen
GoLDiE Ham
Caroline Larendon
Fannie Oliver
Blanche Copeland
Elizabeth Watkins
Marguerite Davis
Marion McCamey
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS
Claire Elliott
Rebecca Whaley
Martha Br.\ntley
Martha Nathan
Sarah Davis
Emma Jones
Virginia McLaughlin
Olivia Russell
Rose Abercrombie
Julia Hagood
Marguerite Cousins
Fr-Ances Markley
Margaret McLaughlin
Rachel Rushton
Fannie McCaa
Page Xinety-Four
"lrf?2y Point"
Sramatta p^rBon^
Elinor Pearl, an orphan Marion McCnmey
Bernice Vernon Martha Brantley
Clarice Fenleigh Julia Hagood
Laura Leigh Elizabeth Watkins
Edith North Virginia McLaughlin
Aunt Derby Dexter Blanche Copeland
Mrs. Hardscratch Caroline Larendon
Mehitable Doolittle, her sister Frances Charlotte Markley
Old Clem, the Gypsy Rebecca Whaley
Fantine, the French maid .... Martha Nathan
Sophia 1 tt i t- I Olivia Russell
> Ine Hardscratch I wins < ,
Bethiah j I tmma Jones
AsHRAEL Grant Margaret Rowe
Page Ninety-Five
i|f Olrouiutng of S^lora
IT WAS springtime and just before sunset. There was soft music and a sloping
stretch of grass where girls in lavender and sea-green, blue and rose were dancing.
Maeterlinck's fairy world was never lovelier; but this was real, true Agnes Scott ,'M
campus on May Day.
The crowning of a May queen has always been one of the most cherished of our
college traditions, and its accompanying dances have won such fame that the
campus is always crowded on these occasions with hundreds of interested spectators.
The May Day exercises of 1917 were uniquely beautiful. This year the May
queen was Flora, the goddess of flowers, or as known by mortals, Tyler Wilby.
Pompous heralds led the procession, and were followed by stately priestesses. Then
came a troup of dancers, and finally Flora herself accompanied by Dawn, the three
Graces, and a bevy of lovely maids.
As Flora is crowned by Will o' the Wisp and is approaching her throne, Pan
and his followers appear from behind bushes and trees in a fantastic dance, and Pan
presents the favored goddess with his precious pipes, to keep for one day, the day
with all its hours to be her very own. Then follows the day as Flora would have it.
The Priestesses in an impressive dance give thanks for the Daw'n, and the Sun-
beams mark the coming of the Great Sun God in all his gold splendor. Diana the
huntress, Mary Dudley, comes out in the forest to hunt for prey, but the sunshine
and beauty of the spring turn her thoughts to dancing instead. She is followed by
the Druids, full of the joy of brooks and leaves and growing things. The dance of
the Hours marks the passing of the Day, and it comes to a glorious climax in the
dance of the Flowers at noon. Then come shadows and echoes, bringing Narcissus
and his tragic death. This story was exquisitely interpreted by Pauline Smathers'
dancing. Sunset and Evening are danced away and the day closes, a dream of
rhythm and color and music, and another May Day is gone with its message of
Spring and beauty.
Page Xinety-Six
THE TUG-OF-WAR
BULLETIN NO. V
irtU lUmhnB
(iffirrra Atl|lptir Aaaariatton
GoLDiE Ham .
Hallie Alexander
Lois MacIntyre .
Almeda Hutcheson
Miss Tuller .
. President
Vice-President
. Secretary
Treasurer
. Director
Page Ninety-Eight
THE Athletic Association is the most democratic of institutions. Everybody is
cordially invited to pay her budget and belong. In fact, if one pays her
budget, she is just automatically elected a member whether or not she ever
risks her life in basket-ball or hockey, or ever braves the dangerous shallows of
our dainty swimming pool. This inclusive organization is kept within the law by
four officers elected annually the law being mostly of the unwritten variety. The
Athletic Association controls the sporting life of the college in a general sort of way.
It appoints the managers of the several sports, and with their assistance arranges the
schedule for all the games and the tennis tournament; it offers the cup, and so livens
things up all the year. The race for the cup is a hot struggle between the classes,
which lasts the whole year. Basket-ball, tennis and hockey each count in order of
their age and importance. By next year, probably hockey will count as much as
the other two. Besides these, the best floor work in the gym exhibition is counted
in, and this year a real swimming meet and a field meet are going to be worked in.
Each year athletics are gaining more importance, for the Athletic Association is pre-
paring each girl to take her place in the world maybe as a police lady. Who
knows?
Page Ninety-Nine
iinrk^U (H^autfi
JUNIOR
Almeda Hutcheson
Fran'ces Sledd .
Katherine Godbee
Llewellyn Wilblrn
Mary Katherine Park
ViRGiNL4 Newton
Dorothy Mitchell
Louise Marshburn
Alice Norman .
^LiRGUERlTE Watts
Elizabeth Watkins
SOPHOMORE
. Center Forward Jean Douglas
Lejt Fonvard AL\ry" Burnett
. Right Forward Juliet Foster
Center Half Back Louise Brand
. Lejt Hall Back Ethel Ty'E
Right Halt Back Julia McKay
Lett Wing Beff Allen
. .Right Wing Marjor e Moore
. Lejt Full Back Marguerite Davis
. Right Full Back Louise Slack
Goal Keeper Julia Reasoner
Page One Hundred
Unrk^g ?am
FRESHMAN
Louise Fluker Manager
Jean McAllister Captain
Charlotte Newton, Center Half Back
Margaret Pratt, Center Forward
Margaret Bland, Right Forward
Jean McAllister, Left Forward
Margaret McLaughlin, Right Wing
Dorothy Allen, Left Wing
Esther Dismukes, Right Half Back
Julia Hagood, Left Half Back
Myrtle Blackmon, Right Half Back
Marian McPhail, Left Half Back
f>I|am lattlfB
A WHISTLE blows, and there before my eyes rise visions of battles, fought
without hatred, dominated by a spirit of friendly rivalry. Forces arranged
in martial order mistreated one poor hockey ball in heartless fashion, making
it, against its will, perform strange antics up and down the field to the great amuse-
ment of the measles' victims who had reserved seats in the grand stand. Time after
time the privates high in the ranks came off victorious, boasting in their might.
At last, the day of final decision came to those who had most victims to their
credit. The battle was a close and heated one. At first the first class privates had
the upper hand, but those rookies, full of pep and irrepressible, arose in their might,
and the white and gold replaced the white and blue. The death list was very small,
the lost being mostly Voices and Fingernails (the latter by Pete and Crip). The
wounded were in more abundance. The color scheme was in reality black and blue.
Dr. Sweet, with iodine and court plaster, was in her glory.
When Gabriel blows his trumpet, the heroes of that day will arise and shout with
exaltation: We gained wings through rapid flights on the hockey field!
Tarje One Hundred One
SENIOR
Rose Hakwood
Alvahn Holmes. Manager
Virginia Lancaster
Helen Hood
Ruby Lee Estes, Captain
Dot Moore
Samille Lowe
Martha Comer
MyRTIS BUR^'ETT
Eva Maie Willi ncham
laato-lall (H^amB
For ward'.
Centers
Guards
SOPHOMORE
( L.MacIntyre, Captain
E. Tye
i J. Foster
, J. McKay
Beff Allen, Manager
I Mary Burnett
1 Marian McCamy
- Louise Slack
/ Rosalind Wurm
Page One Hundred Two
laak^t-lall Fama
JUNIOR
Llewellyn Wilburn
Jean Douglas
Elizabeth Watkins
Almeda Hutcheson
M. K. Pakks, Captain
Marguerite Watts
Elizabeth Watkins
Frances Sledd
. Forwards .
Centers
Guards .
FRESHMAN
I Caroline Montgomery
' Margaret Pratt, Captain
) Ida Brittain
V Helen Wayt
f Julia Hagood, Manager
Claire Louise Scott
I Margaret Bland
r Jean McAllister
Theresa Newton
. Elizabeth Floding
Page One Hundred Three
Llewellyn Wilburn, '19 I r j
Caroline Montgomery, '21 | forwards
Julia Haygood, '21 (
Almeda Hutcheson, '19 ^ (^enters
Marguerite Watts, '19 ] r j
Marion McCamy, '20 j i^uards
Page One Hundred Four
t\^t A. ^,
Margaret Leyburn, '18
Lois Eve, '18
Elva Brehm, '18
Mary Katherine Parks, '19
Llewellyn Wilburn, '19
lott?nt0t
I'm a Hottentot from Agnes Scott,
A player of basket-ball:
I jump so high I reach the sky
And never, never fall.
And once I get the ball,
I toss it o'er them all
I'll get it in, my side shall win
My foe shan't score at all.
One day I ivent, on fun intent,
A-prancing to the gym;
If not too late, I'd learn to skate.
Then I'd be in the swim.
Instead, I hit the floor,
I'll ne'er ivalk any more.
I broke my skate and split my pate,
I tell you I ivas sore.
Hi, rickety, whoopetv he.
What's the matter with A. S. C?
She's all right.
Who's all right?
A! S! C!
Page One Hundred Five
m for a il|tk?
Marguerite Davis
President Hikers' Club
DID the "call of the wilds" ever come to you? Come to you so strongly and per-
sistently that you had to go out, at a swinging pace, over hard roads between
gold and red trees, to a big fire and to a "bacon bat" where weiners and coffee
are the main features? If so, you can understand how we hikers tear ourselves away
on Saturday afternoons from the library, Decatur movies, and such pleasures, and
with pail, cup, and basket, make for our chosen spot in the woods. When supper is
over, and the camp fire has burned low, and when the moon and marshmallows ap-
pear, everybody begins to sing. Then, under the expert guidance of Captain Tuller,
we arc "squad-righting" and "left-filing" out from the woods, up the hill, through
the corn fields, and home to dear old Main. Does it sound like fun? Well, I should
say so.
Some afternoon, leave that care-worn book and fountain pen in a safe place,
firmly grasp a tin pail (it might have something in it) and a sweater, and come along
with us. The only requisites for our club are a ten-cent piece, a desire for a good
time, and the ability to toast weiners without dropping them into the fire.
Page One Hundred Six
Mtrots nn tl|? SI^nntB 3xtih, IBU
Katherine Lindamood j
Agnes Scott Donaldson /
Doubles
Isabel Dew
Singles
Sourttamptil, 1913
Margaret Leyburn 18
Hallie Alexander '18
Myra Clarke Scott '18
Helen Hood 18
Alvahn Holmes 18
Llewellyn Wilburn '19
Almeda Hutcheson '19
GoLDiE Ham 19
Jean Douglas, '20 Louise Fluker, '21
EuGENLA Johnston, '20 Ida Brittain, '21
Virginia McLaughlin, '20 Margaret Bland, '21
Marion McCamy, '20 Aimee Glover, '21
Frances Simpson, '21 Rachael Rushton, '21
Dorothy Allen, '21
Theressa Newton, '21
Elise Bohannon, '21
Elizabeth Summer\tlle,21
Margaret McLaughlin,'21
Parje One Hundred Heven
EYES TO THE FRONT I
A STRAIGHT LINE 15 THE SHORTEST
DISTANCE BETWEEN TWO POINTS
nRS NOAH DIDN'T SLOUCH
SHf COULDN'T BECAUSE SHE WAS
WOODEN.
s. u. s.
"Be strong, simply because mankind
at large will be better if all men be-
come physically more efficient, and
the other blessings shall be added to
you." Hawthorn.
Page One Hundred Eight
CAMP CORRESPONDENTS
BULLETIN No. VI
Olamp 5if?kl^
Margaret Rowe, '19
Louise Marshburn, '19
Clara Cole, '20
Margaret Leech, '19 .
Olivia Russell. '20 .
Editor-in-Chief
Assistant Editor
Athletic Editor
Y. W. C. A. Editor
Exchange Editor
Dorothy Thicpen, '19
Society Editor
Emilie Keyes, '19 ... . Local Editor
Lo:s MacIntyre, '20 . Business Manager
Ethel Tye, '20 . Asst. Business Manager
Marian McCamy, '20 . Circulation Manager
Laura Stockton Molloy, '20 Ass't. Cir'l'n. Mgr.
Paoe One Hiinclred Ten
l|f (luart^rlg Sournal
Claire Elliott
Associate Editor
Olive Hardwick
Editor-in-Chief
Belle Cooper
Exchange Editor
Marguerite Watts
Assistant Business Manager
Fannv Oliver
Business Manager
Margaret Bland
Circulation Manager
Parje One Hundred Eleven
Camp in Winter Quarters
Page One Hundred Twelve
CLUBS
BULLETIN No. VM
BULL DOG
M
MEMBERS
Julia Abbot, '18 Louisville, Ga.
Elizabeth Denman, '18 Atlanta, Ga.
Alvahn Holmes, '18 Baltimore, Md.
Carolina Randolph, '18 Douglas, Ariz.
Frances Glasgow, '19 Lexington, Va.
Almeda Hutcheson, '19 Decatur, Ga.
Mary Katherine Parks, '19 Newnan, Ga.
Elizabeth Reid, '19 Atlanta, Ga.
Marguerite Watts, '19 Rome, Ga.
Lois MacIntyre, '20 Atlanta, Ga.
Marion McCamy, '20 Dalton, Ga.
Louise Slack, '20 LaGrange, Ga.
Mary E. Champe Lexington, Va.
i
r^
11^
Page One Hundred Fourteen
Page One Hundred Fifteen
u'^-
'A.
MEMBERS
Elizabeth Allen, '20 LaFayette, Ala.
Ruth Anderson, '18 Savannah, Ga.
Mary G. Burnett, '20 Montgomery, Ala.
Lucy Durr, '19 Montgomery, Ala.
Juliet Foster, "20 Anderson, N. C.
Annie Houston, '20 Lewisburg, Tenn.,
Samille Lowe, 'lO Washington, Ga.
Annie White Marshall, '18 ... Lewisburg, Tenn.
Laura Stockton Molloy, "20 Columbia, Tenn.
Fannie Oliver, "18 Montgomery, Ala.
Margaret Rowe, "19 Raines, Tenn.
Katherine Seay, '18 Gallatin, Tenn.
Dorothy Thicpen, 19 Montgomery, Ala.
Page One Hundred Sixteen
Page One Hundred Seventeen
elfhi
MEMBERS
Lucy Beman Sparta, Ga.
Ci^iRE Elliott, '19 Columbia, S. C.
Mary Lois Eve, '18 Augusta, Ga.
Shirley Fairly, '19 Hazlehurst, Miss.
Louise Felker, '19 Monroe, Ga.
Lulie Speer Harris, '19 College Park, Ga.
Virginia Lancaster, '18 Columbia, S. C.
Margaret Kerr Leyburn, '18 ... Durham, N. C.
Mary Brock Mallard, "19 Atlanta, Ga.
Gertrude Manly, '20 Dalton, Ga.
Elizabeth Moss, '20 Athens, Ga.
Dorothy Mitchell, '19 Mobile, Ala.
Elizabeth Pruden, '19 Rome, Ga.
Agnes Gold Wiley. '19 Sparta, Ga.
^
I
M
Page One Hundred Eighteen
Page One Hundred, 2iineteen
Jntfr-OIlub (Hmntxl IBIZ-IBIB
Fannie Oliver, [ [ President
Frances Glasgow, 1 -j | ) . . Secretary
Mary Brock Mallard, 2 A *
Page One Hundred Ttcenty
U.S. POSrOFFICE
iL' iiiMii iH ra 111 (5
in (CI #^^'5 P B
ir*:
-/
LOCALS
BULLETIN No. VIII
I|p lam ISwrutt
September 17 Mothers busy packing. Many tears(?) shed by fond families as
recruits leave for training camp.
September 18 Decatur traffic blocked by superabundance of trunks. Gates thrown
open to receive newcomers.
September 19 Kissing and room-mate trouble begin.
September 20 Committees teach patience. Freshmen stand up bravely before Ex-
emption Board but discover that High School laurels are not sesame at college.
September 21 Signing up for places in mess-hall. Charlie Chaplin's name ap-
pears at Helen Hood's table.
September 22 Dr. Sweet tells us of the dangers of combining soldiers and soda.
September 26 Society pledge day. Bewildered Freshmen wearing streamers of
gay ribbon issue from the halls amid enthusiastic screams. The quiet hours of
the night are disturbed by marauding bands of vandals dressed like Arabs who
raid Freshmen rooms, demanding food and entertainment, and administering
cold baths for insubordination.
September 27 Freshmen do their "bit" and begin preliminaries of military train-
ing in saluting superiors. Frances Charlotte exhibits her desire to be known
as "Miss Markley's sister."
Page One Hundred Tweiity-Tivo
m
I|? Jtrat Ef tr^at
October 1 Great Excitement in Gym. Handsome likenesses of Freshmen's men
friends auctioned off to highest bidder. Endowment fund greatly enlarged.
October 2 Miss Cady tells us of fire drills wet towel an essential accessory.
October 3 Miss Sammis calls for volunteers to Patriotic League. Recalcitrant
Freshmen summoned before Sophomore tribunal. Barn fire of Freshmen pla-
cards denotes their freedom from bondage.
October 4 Freshmen presented with Faculty Advisors.
October 5 Talk on food conservation by Mr. Chandler.
October 6 Cross country hike.
October 8 Agnes Scott enlists in Hoover's army. Pear salad to the front.
October 9 Dogs have been giving trouble on campus. Dr. Gaines announces a
meeting of the "Fobia Club."
October 10 DeKalb county fair brings mysterious balloons and kewpies to A. S. C.
October 12 Miss Cady tells us "Why We Are at War."
October 13 Freshman-Sophomore stunt night. The black cat goes with all its
luck to the irrepressible Freshmen.
October 14 Impressive service at Y. W. when new members light their candles in
promise of their loyalty to the association.
October 18 Troop trains pass cheering, but quiet down as girls appear.
October 23 Miss Conde gives us our chance to do something big. Student Friend-
ship War Fund.
October 24 Mr. Dieckmann fails to swallow the announcements at supper. Thev
were understood.
October 31 K. Seay gets D+ on a Soc. 1 test. Dr. Armistead has a new^ green suit.
Paoe One Hundred Twenty-Three
1-i
m
lattb nf ti|? l0ok
November 2 first match game of hockey.
November 5 The Annual trembles in its boots at rumors of banishment. Prolonged
and frequent meetings of the staff from which Ruby Lee issues wan and breath-
less. Catherine Reed is not easily convinced that the whole affair is not "shady."
November 6 Investiture. Solemn and awe-inspiring as usual. Samille gives us a
valuable lesson in "equilibriumism."
November 8 Mr. Hayes, of Fort McPherson, speaks to us earnestly and frankly of
the boys in the service.
November 9 Silhouette passes the crisis. Many make the supreme sacrifice.
November 1.5 Seniors go into the "council chamber" but do not discuss hockey.
November 19 Girls get course in "waitressing" while waiters go "Sundaying."
November 20 Mr. Ivy Lee talks on Red Cross work. Emma wears her cap and
gown.
November 21 Billy and Ma Sunday visit Agnes Scott.
November 23 College night at the tabernacle. Mr. Sunday is duly pleased with our
songs.
November 25 Representatives of six war-torn countries tell of their sufferings.
November 26 Samille and Lucy recount their thrilling and instructive trip to Syra-
cuse. Mr. Davis gives us a vivid glimpse of Russia in Revolution.
November 28 Stunt night. Good ship Hoasc comes to port.
November 29 Thanksgiving. Hockey season closes with the Freshmen triumphant
and turkey closes the end of a perfect day.
Paffe One Hundred Ticenty-Four
December 1 The Blackfriars exhibit great talent. The audience greatly excited by
the advent of two handsome French officers.
December 2 Mrs. Gaines leads Y. W.
December 4 S. U. S.? The Agnes Scott stars venture to Camp Gordon and escape
without showers oi cabbage, et cetera.
December 5 The deep mystery solved Sit up straight! Stand up straight! It
wasn't sugar after all.
December 6 Economy in full force. Two sides of paper allowed by faculty. Aggie
breaks up housekeeping in Science Hall. Miss Young finds Math. I not suited
to a musical atmosphere.
December 11 Samille informs us that proctors may give knocks.
December 12 Snow! Day pupils' game of in-and-out-the-windows barred.
December 13 Eng. 24 is dismissed twenty minutes early to play in the snow.
December 14 Christmas is in the air sure enough with lighted candles on Christmas
trees. And three cheers for Miss Phi's cousin and the favors.
December 19 to January 3 Christmas furlough. We gladly leave camp for a short
trip home.
Page One Hundred Twenty-Five
!?bi
Tq Kui^jk
'^^^XSr^-^' NqtTd Flunk
l|f (iPuffittnnttatrp
January 2 White House mess-hall opens doors to returned recruits.
January 3 Virginia Lancaster helps us start the year right by keeping account sheets.
January 5 Emma gives evidence of former trade as medicine dealer. She sings
praises of "cure-all," guaranteeing it to rid buyer of flies, mosquitoes, soldiers
and other insects. Mr. Johnson has found it very helpful in bringing up the
baby.
January 7 He went and done it after all and Aggie's Lamb is married.
January 12 The college community attends the wedding of Miss Inman to Lieu-
tenant A. Wellbuilt Brickhouse. Very swell aff'air. Many in audience made
notes.
January 1-5-26 "Over the top with the best of luck and give 'em h 11!"
January 29 Miss Hopkins talks to us about good citizenship. Declares she would
not care to live in Germany un-married or otherwise.
January 30 Miss Smith gives enlightening lecture on "Why Study Latin."
I?
Page One Hundred Ttventy Six
w//M/wuN/m//mm))iiiin!/j///Mfwnmmfinf/n; n/ilunu/unnnnimiininf!rriinin>iulliiiniinii
MXn \\\t lattb
February 2 Miss Cady urges us to prepare ourselves to aid in the establishment of
world-wide Christian democracy. Basket-ball season opens. Bright prospects
for robust seniors.
February 8 Miss Harrison gives graphic exhibition of use of fire extinguishers.
Tells of her heroic saving of a young man's life by using her middy skirt.
February 9 Gamma Tau Alpha awes us all and spurs us on to better efforts.
February 13 Woe be us! Our noble Editor-in-Chief has acquired the measles.
February 14 Major Guinn explains how women of America may help win the
war by giving up the unnecessary "things."
February 15 Dr. Armistead convinces us of the advisability of investing in thrift
stamps. Committees are organized. Part of the evening hours (while the G. T.
A.'s eat I are whiled away by a diminutive danseuse. Dr. Sledd makes a splen-
did address.
February 16 Mr. Bryan Harrison gives us some valuable housekeeping hints
Adam and Eve sandwich, Dixie salad, etc. Miss Markley has been seen at a
rather questionable play "T B "
February 21 Stirring strains of the "Marseillaise" issue from chapel. General and
Mrs. George Washington entertain. The telephone is decided the most unique
invention.
February 22 Those little Freshmen win again. The turkey dinner consoled
us somewhat. Founders' Day celebration a wonderful success. Dancing in gym
until eleven o'clock!
February 23 Alumnae Day. Prof. Perry of Tech, makes a worthy plea for endow-
ments in general. Miss Marian Black tells us of ways and means in particular.
Blackfriars make big hit with "Breezy Point."
February 25 H E E R A ? M. Picard leaves us with the message to "keep
smiling."
Paoe One Htmdrecl Twenty-Seven
^?
->;;:
'i^'
JounbfrB* iag
SINCE the birthday of one of the founders of our beloved college, Mr. George
W. Scott, falls on February twenty-second, the birthday of General George
Washington, founder of our nation, the class of 1918 inaugurated a Founders'
Day celebration. It is hoped that this will find a place among the honored traditions
of Agnes Scott and become an annual event.
This year the celebration took the form of a colonial banquet presided over
by General Washington and his charming wife Martha. The guests included Dr.
and Mrs. Gaines, Dr. McCain, Mr. and Mrs. Murphy Candler, Miss Hopkins, Alma
Mater, Betsy Ross, General Lafayette, America, France, Belgium, Great Britain,
Italy, Japan and many beautiful colonial dames and stately gentlemen. Many bright
and interesting toasts were given and answered during the course of the delightful
turkey dinner and in the midst of the meal Paul Revere galloped in on a broom-stick
steed bringing news from the front of a victory won "somewhere in the region of the
gym."
After dinner Mr. Candler gave an enlightening and entertaining talk on the
early days of the college. Then the guests repaired to a ball where the minuette
and Virginia reel were danced most gracefully and enthusiastically.
Page One Hundred Ticenty-Eight
BARRACK
ROOM
BALLADS
Youve heard what Mr. Sunday thinks
About the silly maid.
Who can not turn a flap-jack
And is always on parade.
Well, what he says about her
Is exactly what we're not.
We're the up and gittin
Sweater-knittin girls of Agnes Scott.
They are a most sagacious crowd,
The girls who go to college.
With rich and ancient lore endowed
They are a most sagacious crowd;
And it must truly be alloived
That all they lack is knowledge.
They are a most sagacious crowd.
The girls who go to college.
Though professors are not yet resigned.
To knitting in classes, you'll find
Where you used to get D's
You'll receive A's and B's,
Its effect is so great on the mind.
Mr. Sunday, good day, Mr. Sunday, good day.
Are we co-operating, well I should say;
If you need us to help you
Just call us your way.
On the spot, Agnes Scott,
I should say!
Oh, say, can you see by the moon's modest light
What so dimly's disclosed by the flashlight's faint gleaming?
Juniors cold-creamed and mad. Freshmen trembling with fright
And Sophomores and Seniors with their wet towels dripping
And the lieutenant's glare, sneezes bursting in air
While in the cold night, we are driven out there.
Oh, say, won't it make you just mad enough to kill
If they wake you up again for another fire drill?
Page One Hundred Twenty-Nine
AS MUTT AND JEFF SEE IT.
Page One Hunclrea Thirty
BUREAU \ f
,1^ OF % f
MISINFORMATION fr\ M
ri
No one can knit and think. M. L. McK.
Of course the Faculty is always glad to give every petition thoughtful
consideration. "D. G."
Two exams a day are good for steadying nerves. M. F. S.
Students going to the concert will find their chaperons on the bulletin
board. J. D. M. A.
President WUson decrees all colleges to close a week earlier for Christmas
vacation ?
All girls are urged to attend the Billy Sunday meeting Friday night for
women only
Ci, le v.
Page One Hundred Thirty-One
O^n ^allotu^'m
Scene A dismal graveyard.
Death, wandering uneasily among the graves, in sepulchral tones which cause
shivers to chase each other down backs of audience 'Tis on the eve of Hallowe'en
that all the restless spirits from beyond the grave burst their bonds and rise from
the tomb to declare some message to mortals. Hark, 'tis the hour! Restless souls!
Come forth!
Slowly from one grave arises a maiden, sad but of noble mien.
Death: Ah, 'tis the Maiden Jean d' Arc! What is it troublest thee?
Jean d' Arc: I wish it known that though I am dead, mv spirit did not perish
with me, but is reincarnated in Katherine Seay.
Death, as the maiden sinks slowly into her grave: Very well, I will have it
announced in both dining rooms. But who comes here? Why honest George, fa-
ther of our noble republic, do you not rest in peace after all these years?
George Washington: I want to know who started the report that I never told
a lie?
Voice in the Audience: Miss Cady!
George Washington, shaking his head sadly: Then it must be so!
Death: Behold Diogenes! Famous cynic, what now?
Diogenes, getting out of his tub and holding on high his lantern: Still I seek
the honest man.
Dr. Gaines, approaching from audience: I have found him Woodrow Wilson.
Death: What is your special trouble this year, Dick?
Richard HI, moanfully: A horse, a horse! My kingdom for a horse!
Miss Smith, running up to him and holding out a small book: Here Mr.
Richard is a pony which I have found very helpful in Latin.
Death, falling back startled as a huge helmeted figure advances: Illustrious
Spreader of Kultur, what meaneth this?
The Kaiser, twisting his mustache and eyeing Death arrogantly: Oh, I was
killed to-day by Teddy Roosevelt.
The Devil, appearing suddenly from the black depths of the grave yard, catches
the Kaiser by the collar and drags him off the stage: Come along Bill, I've been
looking for you for a long time.
Page One Hundred Thirty-Two
Eookt? trkkra
Freshman: "Who's that?"
Junior: "That's Miss Gooch."
Freshman : "Oh, yes, she's the one that teaches 'Broken English.' "
Freshman (hearing power house whistle) : "There goes that train that passes
here every night at 9:45!"
Alice: "Fm not feeling very well."
Dr. S.: "That's too bad. Where do you feel worse?"
Alice: "In German class."
Miss Davis, in Soc. I: "What would you have thought on that subject twenty
years ago. Miss Seay?"
Emma Jones, (answering for K. Seay) : "Probably 'Goo goo!'"
C. Reed in Eng. 4: "Dr. Armistead, did you ever scrub floors?"
Dr. Armistead: "I will have to confess. Miss Catherine, only to a limited
extent."
Miss Fahnestock in Home Ec. I: "Miss Felker, how do you make tea?"
L. Felker: "Well, you pour boiling water over the leaves and let it sit or
set . ' '
Miss Fahnestock: "Oh, just let it stand for five minutes."
*
D. Thigpen to orchestra leader: "Can you play 'Some Sunday Morning' for
us?"
Orchestra Leader: "Why, I don't know. How early would you want us to
come out?"
* * *
J. Abbot to clerk in music store: "Have you 'An Old Fashioned Wife?' "
Clerk smiling blandly: "Not just at present."
Tage One Hundred Thirty-Three
T"J
What's Behind the Iron Gate.
Page One Hundred Thirty-Four
Oh, Miss Agnes' Annual comes from the press
Of all the annuals hers is the best!
But also for her editors! They never had shirked.
But one got the measles and one overworked.
And with breakdowns, LaGrippe, the measles and all
Miss Agnes' Annual had a close call.
She stayed not for rain and she stopped not for sleet.
She posed for her pictures in mud of three feet!
But before she had finished the dolorous tale.
The photographer fainted. Miss Estes was pale.
For Freshmen would wiggle, and the Sophomores squirm
And only the Seniors stood rigid and firm.
She constantly worried each pitiable maid
Who hated to write and was greatly afraid;
Till often a maid at her doorway would stand.
These words on her lips and a chair in her hand,
"Oh come ye in peace here or come ye in woe.
Or to get me to write something, nut that you are?"
One fuss whether annuals in tvar times are right.
One scrap with engravers, with printers one fight.
Then back to Miss Agnes the proof sheets they came.
All hinting of glory and telling of fame.
"It's done!" cried Miss Agnes, "The Annual's made!"
"Thank heavens!" the rapturous editors said.
Agnes White.
Paffe One Hundred Thirty-Five
By Francis Scott Key
Oh! say, can you see by the dawns early light,
What so proudly ive hailed at the twilight's last gleaming.
Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight.
O'er the ramparts we watched, were so gallantly streaming?
And the rockets' red glare, the bombs bursting in air.
Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there.
Oh! say, does that Star Spangled Banner yet ivave.
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
On the shore, dimly seen through the mists of the deep.
Where the foe's haughty host in dread silence reposes.
What is that which the breeze o'er the towering steep,
As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses?
Now it catches the gleam of the morning's first beam.
In full glory reflected now shines on the stream;
'Tis the Star Spangled Banner, 0! long may it wave.
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!
Oh, thus be it ever, when freemen shall stand
Between their loved home and foul war's desolation;
Blest with victory and peace may in Heaven s-rescued land
Praise the power that hath made and preserved us a nation!
Then conquer we must, ivhen our cause is so just.
And this be our motto: "In God is our Trust,"
And the Star Spangled Banner in triumph shall wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!
Page One Hundred Thirty-Six
Bnpmav (i^r^rs' Soil
Alexander, Miss Lucile 52 Park Lane, Atlanta, Ga.
Armistead, Dr. J. D. M Woodstock, Va.
BouRQUiN, Miss Helen Aspen, Col.
Cady, Miss Mary L 48 N. Church St., Decatur, Ga.
Davis, Miss Jean 38 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J.
DiECKMANN, Mr. C. W East Lawn, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.
DiECKMANN, Mrs. C. W East Lawn, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.
Fahnestock, Miss Rhoda 219 Fourth Ave., Watertown, S. D.
Gaines, Dr. F. H Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.
GoocH, Miss Frances K Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.
Harrison, Miss Julia Peachy 1214 Floyd Avenue, Richmond, Va.
Hopkins, Miss Nannette Hot Springs, Va.
HuTCHiNGS, Miss Berte Oxford, N. C.
Johnson, Mr. Lewis H Winder, Ga.
Lamb, Mr. Reginald Franklin, Ky.
LeGate, Miss Helen Hotel Bond Annex, Hartford, Conn.
Lewis, Miss Louise G Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.
Markley, Miss Mary E Seventh Street, Coshocton, Ohio
Maclean, Mr. Joseph Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.
McCain, Dr. J. R 19 S. Candler Street, Decatur, Ga.
McKiNNEY, Miss M. Louise 34 S. Candler Street, Decatur, Ga.
Parry, Mrs. Harvey L 43 College Avenue, Decatur, Ga.
Phillips, Miss Mary E 20th and Linden Avenues, Nashville, Tenn.
Phythian, Miss Margaret Nelson Place, Newport, Ky.
Roberts, Miss Essie Fairbum, Ga.
Smith, Miss Lillian S 630 University Avenue, Syracuse, N. Y.
Stukes, Mr. S. G Manning, S. C.
Sweet, Dr. Mary 1108 E. Genesee St., Syracuse, N. \.
Sydenstricker, Mrs. Alma Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.
Torrance, Miss Catherine Lexington, Illinois
Trebein, Miss Bertha E Xenia, Illinois
TuLLER, Miss Eliz\beth 42 W. North Avenue, Atlanta, Ga.
Wilcox, Miss Marguerite Oxford, N. Y.
Young, Miss Anna 1 840 Piedmont Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Page One Hundred Thirty-Seven
I^DBtpr nf (Unmp Agttpa Btatt
Abbot, Julia 801 Mulberry St., Louisville, Ga.
Abernathy, Anne 8 Jefferson Place, Decatur, Ga.
Abney, Edith Louise 765 Milledge Ave., Athens, Ga.
Agee, Caroline Hunley 1218 Woodstock Ave., Anniston, Ala.
Alexander, Hallie 18 College Ave., Decatur, Ga.
Allen, Dorothy Clark LaFayette, Ala.
Allen, Elizabeth Wheat LaFayette, Ala.
Allen, Marjorie 736 S. Court St., Montgomery, Ala.
Anderson, Margaret Williamson 516 Anderson St., Bristol, Tenn.
Anderson, Ruth Savannah, Ga.
Anderson, Susie Marie North Howard, Kirkwood, Ga.
Archer, Jeannette Montreat, N. C.
Atkinson, Marian Walnut St., Waynesville, N. C.
Aycock, Nell Bryant 70 Maple St., Carrollton, Ga.
Barnard, Rheba Merrimon Ave., Asheville, N. C.
Barnhart, Mary Frances 71 W. 11th St., Atlanta, Ga.
Bell, Emma Springfield, Tenn.
Bell, Margaret Lewisburg, West Virginia
Beman, Lucy Douglas East Broad St., Sparta, Ga.
Bennett, Marie Margaret 54 Westminster Drive, Atlanta, Ga.
Bernhardt, Jane Maury College Ave., Lenoir, N. C.
BiZE, Adele 904 2nd Ave., Columbus, Ga.
Blackmon, Myrtle Claire 2710 Hamilton Ave., Columbus, Ga.
Bland, Margaret Clarkson 800 East Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
Block, Alice 140 Appleton Ave., Macon, Ga.
Bohannon, Elise Lewis 525 Belgravia Court, Louisville, Ky.
Born, Carrie Lou 1549 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
BoswELL, LiLA Mae Greensboro, Ga.
Bowling, Marion Dadeville, Ala.
Bowling, Sarah Frances Dadeville. Ala.
Boyd, Minnie Claire Hartford, Ala.
Braddy, Anne 601 Jefferson St., Dublin, Ga.
Brand, Mena Louise Lawrenceville, Ga.
Brantley, Julia Blackshear, Ga.
Brantley, Martha McIntosh Boston. Ga.
Breese, Dorothy 802 W. Main St., Franklin, Tenn.
Brehm, Elva Margaret 266 S. Ashby St., Atlanta, Ga.
Brewer, Augusta Helene 601 East Holmes St., Huntsville, Ala.
Brinson, Margaret 208 Masonic St., Millen, Ga.
Brittain, Ida Louise West Peachtree, Atlanta, Ga.
Page One Hundred Thirty Eight
Brittain, Mary Gidson Briarcliff Road, Atlanta, Ga.
Brooks, Annie Lois . 12 W. College St., Decatur, Ga.
Brown, Gladys McIver Chadbourn, N. C.
Brown, Thelma 47 Columbia Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Burnett, Mary Guerrant Care Southern Ice Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Burnett, Myrtis 1800 Clay St., Vicksburg, Miss.
Burns, Emitom Lincoln, Ala.
Busha, Marjorie 1 New St., Buford, Ga.
Cannon, Alice Slater 202 S. Fulton St., Salisbury, N. C.
Carpenter, Eleanor Blake 1310 6th St., Louisville, Ky.
Cass, Elizabeth ......... 404 Watauga Ave., Johnson City, Tenn.
Cawthorn, Marion Louise .... 302 Baldwin Ave., DeFuniak Springs, Fla.
Carthew-Yorstoun, Mrs. M. E 92.5 North Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Chambers, Rosalie 200 Forrest Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Clapp, Barbara Lewis 110 Bradley Place, Easley, S. C.
Clarke, Edyth Bland 133 Ashland Ave., Asheville, N. C.
Cole, Clara Boynton 332 W. Peachtree, Atlanta, Ga.
Comer, Martha 270 Barber, Athens, Ga.
COMPTON, Lois Hortense 33 Adams St., Decatur, Ga.
CoMPTON, Lynda Mae Lincoln, Ala.
Conant, Lucile Bradford 31st St., E. Savannah, Ga.
CoNKLiN, Marion Odella 225 8th St., Miami. Fla.
Cooper, Alice Rosalie 155 Peeples St., Atlanta, Ga.
Cooper, Belle B 155 Peeples St., Atlanta, Ga.
Cooper, Frances Elizabeth 710 S. Main, Oxford, Ala.
CoPELAND, Blanche Attalla, Ala.
Cousins, Marguerite Louise 8 College Ave., Decatur, Ga.
Cragwall, Sarah Elizabeth Kennedy Place, Crawfordsville, Ind.
Crank, Virginia Esther Louisa, Va.
Crawford, Augusta Benning 1319 2nd Ave., Columbus, Ga.
CuRETON, Sue Thompson Moreland, Ga.
CuRRiE, Isabella Campbell Clarkton, N. C.
Davis, Marguerite 58 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J.
Davis, Romola Senoia, Ga.
Davis, Sara Spring St., Newnan, Ga.
Daye, Nellie Frances 327 Randolph St., Huntsville, Ala.
Dean, Miriam 4th Ave. & 10th St., Opelika, Ala.
Dearing, Frances Marion Covington, Ga.
DeLand, Jennie Thompson Augusta, Ark.
Denman, Elizabeth 523 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
Dennison, Martha Prince 20 Durant Place, Atlanta, Ga.
Dismukes, Esther Floyd 1515 3rd Ave., Columbus. Ga.
Page One Hundred Thirty-Nine
^""^^
Douglas, Jean 21 East 8th St., Atlanta, Ga.
DowE, Alice Vivian 9 West 11th St., Atlanta, Ga.
DowNMAN, Marguerite Lowell 19 E. Kimball St., Atlanta, Ga.
DuPree, Reva 402 Barlow St., Americus, Ga.
DuRR, Lucy 215 Moulton St., Montgomery, Ala.
Eagan, Evelyn Collins 436 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
Edgerton, Marie Belle Andrews, N. C.
Elliott, Claire Haynesworth 812 Barnwell St., Columbia, S. C.
Enloe, Elizabeth 338 St. Charles Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Ervin, Frances Patterson Spring Hill, Ala.
Estes, Elsie Clara Harrisonburg, Va.
Estes, Ruby Lee Rex, Ga.
Eve, Mary Lois 444 Greene St., Augusta, Ga.
Fain, Margaret Ruth Dandridge, Tenn.
Fairly, Shirley Hazlehurst, Miss.
Felker, Louise Monroe, Ga.
Finney, Hattie May 894 W. Peachtree, Atlanta, Ga.
Finney, Mary Robb 50 Ponce de Leon Ave., Decatur, Ga.
Floding, Elizabeth Parkinson 250 Myrtle St., Atlanta, Ga.
Fluker, Sarah Louise Thomson, Ga.
Ford, Mary Dwight Brewton, Ala.
Foster, Juliet Emily 1214 15th St., S. Birmingham, Ala.
Fulton, Sarah Hamilton 31 Oak St., Decatur, Ga.
Gardner, Delia Egcleston 205 George St., Greenwood, Miss.
Gilbreath, Sara Mitchell Lynnville, Tenn.
Gillespy, Alice Eulalta Glen Iris Park, Birmingham, Ala.
Glasgow, Frances 35 Jefferson Ave., Lexington, Ky.
Glover, Aimee Dunwody Marietta. Ga.
Godbee, Katherine Louise 701 Jackson St., Vidalia, Ga.
GoFF, Isabel McQueen 37 North St., Decatur, Ga.
Goodrich, Mildred 1018 Christine Ave., Anniston, Ala.
Gordon, Eleanor Moreman Fort Defiance, Virginia
Gray, Leonora R. F. D. No. 1, Columbia, Tenn.
Green, Bernice Mullinix 1015 6th St., Corinth, Miss.
Gregory, Vivian Mae . . . Cor. Stockley Garden & Maury Place, Norfolk, Va.
Grier, Martha Lee Camden, Ala.
Grier, Lois Frances Camden, Ala.
Grimm, Mary Elizabeth Fountain City, Tenn.
Grisard, Mabel Avery Winchester, Tenn.
GuNN, Ella 55 S. Three Notch St., Andalusia, Ala.
GuNN, Mary Olive Crawfordville, Ga.
i'S
Page One Hundred Forty
i
Hagedorn, Sophie Clifton Heights, Natchez, Miss.
Hacood, Julia Loriette 518 Clemont Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
Hall, Helen Wright 39 S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.
Hall. Sarah 27 W. Washington St., Newnan, Ga.
Ham. Bessie 1209 Main St., Greenville, Miss.
Ham, GOLDIE SuTTLE 1209 Main St., Greenville, Miss.
Hamilton, Frances Louise 207 Pine St., Seneca, S. C.
Hammond, Charlotte Kosciusko, Miss.
Hamner, Pearl Low Buena Vista, Ga.
Hanes, Mariwil Jonesboro, Ga.
Hardwick, Olive 208 Institute, Conyers, Ga.
Harper, Marian Stewart . . . 634 Cliveden Ave., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
Harrell, Anna Bourne 511 Washington St., Petersburg, Va.
Harris, Lulie Speer College Park, Ga.
Harris, Mildred 200 Waverly Way, Atlanta, Ga.
Harwood, Rose Eleanor College St., Trenton, Tenn.
Haugh, Catherine Wilkins 263 W. Peachtree, Atlanta, Ga.
Havis, Dorothy 273 Juniper St., Atlanta, Ga.
Havis, Irene W Bo^ 265, Vicksburg, Miss.
Heaton, Julia Tallapoosa, Ga.
Hecker, Susie 31 Drewry St., Atlanta, Ga.
Hedrick, Margaret L 420 6th St., Bristol, Tenn.
Hightower, Edith 226 S. Lee St., Amencus, Ga.
Holmes, Lura Alvahn 1316 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md.
Holtzclaw, Clifford P^"y' ^^
Hood, Helen Atlanta, Ga.
Hood, Mary Lucy Commerce, Ga.
Houston, Annie Lewisburg, Tenn.
Hutcheson, Almeda 130 McDonough St., Decatur, Ga.
Hutter, Emily Cobbs 1517 Jackson St., Lynchburg, Va.
Hutton, Cornelia 220 E. Henry St., Savannah, Ga.
A T^^^r- . . Wadesboro, N. C.
Ingram, Anna Locke
Ingram, Julia 34 Columbia Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Jameson, Melville Louise Spring Hill, Tenn.
JARMULOWSKY, FLORENCE Eatonton, Ga.
Jarrell, Iris Bradfield 39 W. Haralson St., LaGrange, Ga.
Jenkins, Lillie Eason Boulevard, Charleston, S. C.
Johnson, Beulah Whitestown St., McComb. Miss.
Johnson. Louise 904 E. North Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Johnston, Eugenia 59 W. 13th St., Atlanta, Ga.
Jones, Alice Lake 310 Barrs St., Jacksonville, Fla.
Page One Hundred Forty-One
Jones, Emma Legg 27 Howard Ave., Decatur, Ga.
Jones, India Coleman R. F. D. No. 1, Thompson Station, Tenn.
Justice, Marian Agnes 284 Luckie St., Atlanta, Ga.
Keeton, Elva Celeste Peachtree Heights, Atlanta, Ga.
Kelly, Juanita 1121 Woodlawn Ave., Augusta, Ga.
Keyes, Emilie 102 Greenwich Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
KiPP, Beatrice Odella 808 8th St., Ballinger, Texas.
Kriegshaber, Marian Caroline 66 Moreland Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Laing, Martha Spence Lewisburg, West Virginia.
Laird, Vera Esther Washington Ave., Mason City, Iowa.
Lancaster, Virginia Hollingsworth .... 1328 Lady St., Columbia, S. C.
Landress, Anna Marie 913 E. 9th St., Chattanooga, Tenn.
Larendon, Caroline 139 N. Moreland, Atlanta, Ga.
Laughon, Ruth Elizabeth 112 Fifth St., Pulaski, Va.
Lawrence, Elizabeth Baxley, Ga.
Laxton, Augusta Antoinette 832 Highland Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Leech, Margaret 400 Madison St., Clarksville, Tenn.
Legg, Eunice Dewey 109 North Ave., Calhoun, Ga.
Leyburn, Margaret Kerr 509 Holloway, Durham, N. C.
Lindsay, Marian Bernice 327 3rd St., Miami, Fla.
LovETT, Elizabeth 239 Gordon St., Atlanta, Ga.
Lowe, Edythe Water St., Washington, Ga.
Lowe, Samille 210 Water St., Washington, Ga.
Lumley, Dorothy Greenwood, S. C.
Lyle, Margaret Evans 100 Pine St., Johnson City, Tenn.
Lyle, Mary Rogers Dandridge, Tenn.
McAllister, Jean Colvin W. Market St., Greensboro, N. C.
McCaa, Addie Fairmont Ave., Anniston, Ala.
McCaa, Frances Dargan 1025 Fairmont Ave., Anniston, Ala.
McCall, Jessie McGee 520 E. Washington St., Greenville, S. C.
McCamy, Marian 48 S. Thornton Ave., Dalton, Ga.
McClellan, Laura 104 McDonough St., Decatur, Ga.
McClellan, Ruth R 120 5th St., Bristol, Tenn.
McConnell, Margaret Earle . Woodmere Place, Edgewood Rd., Asheville, N. C.
McCorkle, Anna Leigh Raines, Tenn.
McCoRMiCK, Estelle Senatobia, Miss.
McCullough, Julia Lowe 220 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
McCurdy, Sarah Carter Stone Mountain, Ga.
McDaniel, Gladys 434 Jackson St., Augusta, Ga.
MacIntyre, Lois Berrien Peachtree Road, Atlanta, Ga.
McKay, Julia Louise 30 Vance St., Asheville, N. C.
Page One Hundred Forty-Two
McLaughlin, Margaret Raphine, Va.
McLaughlin, Virginia Raphine, Va.
McLemore, Margaret Vidalia, La.
McNeill, Alice 216 Brown St., Americus, Ga.
MacPhail, Marion Louise Myers Park, Charlotte, N. C.
Mack, Harriett Banks 41 S. Candler, Decatur, Ga.
Mallard, Mary Brock 14 E. 14th St., Atlanta, Ga.
Manly, Gertrude 32 N. Thornton Ave., Dalton, Ga.
Markley, Frances Charlotte 131 S. 7th St., Coshocton, Ohio.
Marsh, Elizabeth 36 Crew St., Atlanta, Ga.
Marshall, Annie White 210 W. Church St., Lewisburg, Tenn.
Marshburn, Louise Thomaston St., Bamesville, Ga.
May, Louise Morris 825 Broad St., Augusta, Ga.
Mayson, Venice 274 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Meakin, Fan Esther 6 East 13th St., Atlanta, Ga.
Milligan, Cecilia 50 S. Three Notch St., Andalusia, Ala.
Mitchell, Dorothy 107 S. Cedar St., Mobile, Ala.
Molloy, Laura Stockton 603 N. High St., Columbia, Tenn.
Montgomery, Caroline Elizabeth 36 Sycamore, Decatur, Ga.
Moore, Dorothy 122 Market St., Lancaster, S. C.
Moore, Margery Stuart 76 S. Candler, Decatur, Ga.
Moss, Euzabeth Luckie 726 Hill St., Athens, Ga.
Murchison, Lucia 257 Main St., Lancaster, S. C.
Murphy, Vienna Mae 302 E. Broad St., Louisville, Ga.
Middlebrooks, Eula Belle Elamville, Ala.
Nathan, Martha Lindsay Park Blvd., Sheffield, Ala.
Newton, Charlotte 892 Prince Ave., Athens, Ga.
Newton, Ellen Theressa Madison, Ga.
Newton, Janet 892 Prince Ave., Athens, Ga.
Newton, Virginia Louise 892 Prince Ave., Athens, Ga.
Nicolassen, Trueheart Oglethorpe University, Ga.
Norman, Mary Alice West Point, Ga.
O'Kelley, Sara Louise Round Oak, Ga.
Oliver, Fannie Falconer R. F. D. No. 5, Montgomery, Ala.
Oliver, Frances Aughtry Plains, Ga.
Pace, Cynthia Rebecca 24 Oak St., Decatur, Ga.
Paine, Dorothy Averill 381 Piedmont Ave., Atlanta. Ga.
Park, Adelaide 303 Hill St., LaGrange, Ga.
Park, Marion McHenry Broad St., Greensboro, Ga.
Parks, Mary Katherine 117 Greenville St., Newnan, Ga.
Parry, Lina Conn 43 College Ave., Decatur. Ga.
Page One Hundred Forty-Three
k''
Patterson, Eddith Mae 26 Gordon Place, Atlanta, Ga.
Patton, Lillian Gertrude 404 Duncan Ave., Chattanooga, Tenn.
Peabody, Josephine 2500 Peachtree Rd., Atlanta, Ga.
Peed, Eugenia Avary Oxford, Ga.
PiNKSTON, Alethea Greenville, Ga.
Plaster, Annie Gladys 414 Madison Ave., Montgomery, Ala.
Pope, Isabel Michigan Ave., Mobile, Ala.
Pope, Porter Michigan Ave., Mobile, Ala.
Pratt, Margaret Logan 25 Fairview Rd., Atlanta, Ga.
Preston, Janef Newnan 412 Spencer St., Bristol, Va.
Price, Lucile 147 Peeples St., Atlanta, Ga.
Price, Mabel Lee 38 Elbert St., Atlanta, Ga.
Pringle, Olive Berry 49 Jackson St., Newnan, Ga.
Pruden, Elizabeth 312 Second Ave., Rome, Ga.
Ramsay, Cassie 401 N. Alice St., Dothan, Ala.
Randolph, Carolina Douglas, Ariz.
Rea, Sue Ethel Matthews, N. C.
Reasoner, Julia Oneco, Fla.
Reed, Catherine Cameron 667 N. Union St., Natchez, Miss.
Reese, Sara Evelyn 123 W. Broad St., Sparta, Ga.
Reid, Elizabeth Woodberry, Ga.
Richardson, Elizabeth Sanford ... Sayle, Ga.
Roach, Margaret Sangster 1073 McLemore Ave., Memphis, Tenn. ,^
Roark, Edith Newman R. F. D. No. 7, Franklin, Ky. -^
RowE, Margaret Raines, Tenn.
Rushton, Rachel 739 S. Court St., Montgomery, Ala.
Russell, Frances Olivia 705 Prince St., Brunswick, Ga.
Russell, Eula Nichols Carter's Creek, Tenn.
Sanders, Margaret Eva De Vall's Bluff, Ark. M
Saunders, Julie Adams 408 N. Patterson St., Valdosta. Ga. m
Saunders, Rebecca Greenwood, S. C. ~
ScANLON, Helen Setzer 912 24th Ave., Meridian, Miss.
Scott, Clare Louise 446 Spring St., Atlanta, Ga.
Scott, Myra Clark 21 N. Church St., Decatur, Ga. , ,'\
Seay, Katherine Lauderdale Gallatin, Tenn.
Shive, Margaret Ewing 4 King's Highway, Decatur, Ga.
Simpson, Frances Baker 42 S. Church, Decatur, Ga.
Skeen, Augusta 75 Sycamore St., Decatur, Ga. j,^
Skinner, Julia Lake Faunsdale, Ala. ^
Slack, Mary Louise 208 W. Haralson St., LaGrange, Ga. [fi
Sledd, Frances C 11 Superior St., Decatur, Ga. 1;^'.
Sloan, Annie Ola McDonough, Ga. ^^i
Page One Hundred Forty-Four
Smith, Elizabeth Greaves 429 W. Sparta St., McMinnville, Tenn.
Smith, Lulu 42 S. Thornton Ave., Dalton, Ga.
SoMERViLLE, ELIZABETH Fry 425 S. Perry St., Montgomery, Ala.
Stripling, Martha Ann 177 N. Moreland, Atlanta, Ga.
Speake, Dorothy Clare . . Eustis St., Huntsville, Ala.
Spence, Clotile Wilkinson Greenville St., Newnan, Ga.
Stanton, Kathleen Social Circle, Ga.
Steele, Mildred Louise 603 E. Holmes St., Huntsville, Ala.
Still, Katherine Henry Senatobia, Miss.
Strong, Mary Amanda 4 Jefferson PI., Decatur, Ga.
Telford, Josephine Lindsley 425 Campus, Richmond, Ky.
Thigpen, Dorothy Bissell 1200 S. Perry, Montgomery, Ala.
Thomas, Frances Wellborn 712 Selma Ave., Selma, Ala.
Thompson, Lois 707 Peachtree, Atlanta, Ga.
Thompson, Mildred Summers .... 107 E. Wellington St., Hickman, Ky.
ToMLiNSON, Julia Elizabeth Waverly, Tenn.
ToRBERT, Lurline S. 8th St., Opelika, Ala.
Tribble, Ora Mell Lithonia, Ga.
Twitty, Amy Curry Pelham, Ga.
Tye, Ethel 740 Peachtree, Atlanta, Ga.
Upshaw, Martha Emily Social Circle, Ga.
Upshaw, Nell Monroe St., Social Circle, Ga.
Van Pelt, Pauline 209 N. 10th St., Ballinger, Texas.
Wade, Margaret Stuart Raphine, Va.
Waldrop, Claire Louise Jonesboro, Ga.
Walker, Emily College Ave., Decatur, Ga.
Walker, Julia Pegram 600 Westover Ave., Norfolk, Va.
Watkins, Elizabeth Mitchell 1423 N. State St., Jackson, Miss.
Watkins, Julia 739 Pujo St., Lake Charles, La.
Watts, Marguerite Box 64, Rome, Ga.
Wayt, Helen Brice Peachtree Road, Atlanta, Ga.
Wendel, Mary Paine Oxford, Miss.
Whaley, Minnie Clauzelle Jefferson St., Boston, Ga.
Whaley, Rebecca Boston, Ga.
Wharton, Mary Greenwood, S. C.
White, Agnes Mary Tencheng, Kiangsu Province, China.
White, Ida Danielsville, Ga.
Whitfield, Frances Willingham .... 320 Merritt St., Hawkinsville. Ga.
WiLBURN, Llewellyn Willet 7 Adams St., Decatur. Ga.
Wiley, Agnes G Sparta. Ga.
Page One Hundred Forty-Five
Williams, Elizabeth Tate Oxford, Ga.
Williams, Helen 100 N. Louisiana St., Hope, Ark.
Williamson, Helen 10 Cherry St., Atlanta, Ga.
Willingham, Eva Maie "Sutherland," Kirkwood, Ga.
Wilson, Ellen Garnett Rawlings, Va.
Wilson, Mary Willie Russellville, Ala.
WiNGO, Alice Logan Atlanta, Ga.
WiNSLETT, Margaret Louise Epes, Ala.
Witherspoon, Elizabeth Ellisville, Miss.
WoODARD, Nita Exum Whitakers, N. C.
Wurm, Annie Dow 23 E. Merritts Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
WuRM, Rosalind Yancey 142 E. 8th St., Atlanta, Ga.
Young, Eliza Bennett 429 W. Ormsby St., Louisville, Ky.
Zacharias, Hortense Third Ave., Columbus, Ga.
Page One Hundred Forty-Six
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58Y2 Whitehall Street
Atlanta, Ga.
Page One Hundred Forty-Eight
S. Frank Bell
John G. Bell
BELL BROTHERS
ESTABLISHED 1899
FRUIT anJ PRODUCE JOBBERS
and COMMISSION MERCHANTS
Account Sales Daily Car Lots and Less
X
PHONES
BELL MAIN 378-379
ATLANTA 379-364446
1 PRODUCE ROW
ATLANTA, GA.
Einie, menie, minie, mo,
What's the weinie Hove so?
Cornfield, Cornfield, can't you guess?
That's the weinie I love best.
White Provision (ompany
ANSLEY-GOSS
DRUG COMPANY
"Phone 'Decatur 203
Decatur s Leading
Drug Store
Page One Hundred Forty-Nine
ATLANTA'S LEADING FLORIST.
Roses^ Violets^ Carnations
Orchids and Chrysanthemums
^
CANDLER BUILDING
123 Peachtree St. Atlanta, Ga.
Opposite Piedmont Hotel
Cut Flowers shipped to any
point in the South. Write,
wire or phone. Orders will
receive prompt attention.
OGLESBY
GROCERY CO.
WHOLESALE
GROCERIES
16-18-20-22 EAST ALABAMA STREET
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
The
CRITERION
7' HE PICK
n
of PICTURES
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
H. G. LEWIS & CO.
Women's and Misses'
Ready -to-Weai
and Millinery
S>
lQ-11 Whitehall St.
ATLANTA
Page One Hundred Fifty
THIRD NATIONAL BANK
of ATLANTA
CORDIALLY INVITES
YOUR ACCOUNT ON BASIS OF FAIR TREATMENT
AND CONSERVATIVE METHODS
1
RESOURCES, $19,000,000.00
A SAFETY DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT
A DEPARTMENT EXCLUSIVELY FOR WOMEN
STEINWAY
Freshest and Best Always
AND OTHER
FISH - OYSTERS
PIANOS
POULTRY - GAME
[t]
FULTON MARKET
VICTROLAS
and RECORD|S
25-27 E. ALABAMA ST.
PHONE MAIN 1500
^
30 YEARS IN ATLANTA
SHEET MUSIC
and MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS
Most Complete
Stock in South
China - Cut Glass
Art Ware - Bronzes
PhilUps & Crew Co.
82 N. Pryor St. Atlanta, Ga.
Choice Wedding Gifts
DOBBS & WEY CO.
57 N. Pryor St. Near Lowry Bank
Page One Hundred Fifty-One
The Atlanta National Bank
Atlanta, Georgia
Resources, $18,000,000. 00
WRITING and REST ROOM for the LADIES
The Atlanta National Bank offers to Lady Depositors and Investors every
courtesy, accommodation and convenience that could be desired.
In our Ladies' Department, the most spacious in the city, we have provided
for their comfort a sumptuously furnished writing and rest room, with lounge,
telephone and other conveniences.
Centrally located as the Bank is, in the very
heart of Atlanta's shopping district, these con-
veniences offer our Lady Custorrers excep-
tional opportunity for quiet rest while shopping
or attending to banking matters.
Your Account is Respectfully Invited
SILVER &
WOODS
MANUFACTURING
JEWELERS
DIAMOND MOUNTINGS
MEDALS, BADGES, Etc.
MADE TO ORDER
REPAIRING
BELL PHONE
M. 1935
i 1-2 WHITEHALL ST.
ATLANTA, GA.
I|? iflKalb 'Ntm lEra
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
of dekalb county
HIGH CLASS COMMERCIAL
PRINTING
McCullough Brothers
^jM, Fruits, Produce, ^
Commission
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
Pane One Hundred Fifty-Tico
Wear
Agnes Scott
Shoes
f Young
^ r'^ Ladies
Made in all the newest stgles by
J. K. Orr Shoe Co.
Atlanta, Georgia
Ask Your Dealer for Them
JESSUP i
and
ANTRIM
ir>E
G
REAM
PHONE IVY 3154
91 E. Ellis St. ATLANT/i, GA.
Hewey's Drug Store
Nunnally''s Candies
Ice Cream
Toilet Articles, Perfumes
Magazines - Post Cards
BANK of
DECATUR
BELL PHONE
DECATUR 640
Next to Georgia
Railway & Power
Co. Sub-Station
Depository of
Ihe State of Georgia
DECATUR,
GEORGIA
N. C TOMPKINS
GOOD PRINTING
Phone Main 795
16 West Alabama Stre];t
Atlanta,
Georgia
ATLANTA OPTICAL CO.
119 PEACHTREE STREET
We Duplicate any Lens
Bring us vour prescription
H. C. MONTGOMERY, Proprietor
Page One Hundred Fifty-Three
LADIES APPRECIATE
THE SERVICE AND CONVENIENCE OF
OUR COMBINED LADIES' AND
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT
OPEN DAILY UNTIL 5 P. M.
The Lowry National Bank
PRYOR and EDGEWOOD
WHERE THE DECATUR CAR STOPS
Page One Hundred Fifty-Four
Drink
^Hmm
Delicious and Refreshing
For
Choice
Flowers
for All Occasions
Go to
The Lawrence Floral
Company
138 Peachtree Street
Smith s Pharmacy
East Court Square Decatur, Georgia
tp^ Huyler s and
^ ^ Norris' Candies
OUR SODAS and ICES
ARE SUPREME
Fine Stationery ; College Jewelry
We Solic{t Your Patronage PHONE Dee. 495
Cottrell & Leonard
Albany, New York
Makers of
Caps, Gowns and Hoods
To the American Colleges and Universities
Alkahest Lyceum System
Healey Building Atlanta, Ga.
Furnishes Attractions for
All Occasions
Pacie One Hundred Fifty-Five
GEO. WINSHIP, Pres. &. Treas.
W. M. McDonald, V-Pres. fa. Gen. Mgr.
Fulton Supply Company
Mill and Machinery Supplies of Every Description
What You Want - - When You Want It
At the Right Price
86 Marietta Street
Plinnf<; Bell M. 3-400
r^nones , Aiunta 1674
Try Our Famous
MEAL
We have made it right for twenty years
ATLANTA MILLING COMPANY
DRINK
EUREKA
COFFEE
Roasted and Packed
Fresh in Atlanta
None Better at Any Price
At All Good Grocers
ATLANTA COFFEE MILLS CO.
ATLANTA, GA.
Page One Hundred Fifty-Six
ALPINE FLAX STATIONERY
FILLS every requirement for paper suitable to the uses of Her
Royal Highness, the American Girl. ^ Made of pure white
hnen rags, in the crystal spring waters of the Berkshire Hills, this
paper is fit for a queen. ^ Get it in box stationery, tablets or en-
velopes, at the stationery store. Made by
MONTAG BROTHERS, Inc. Atlanta, ca.
Dealers all over the Country appreciate the value of
Clover Fork and Harlan Coal
Give me the chance to show you the "Ideal"
coal for every purpose. Just call me on long
distance and I will make the right price and
give you the "real goods" in well prepared
coal.
JOHN C. DEADY, Georgia Manager
Bewley-Darst Coal Company
Lone Distance Phone Ivy 3176 ATLANTA. GA. P- O. Box 700
Atlanta Supply Co.
Successors to
Atlanta Hotel Supply Co.
FANCY MEATS
Catering to College, School and Institution Trade
Contract Prices furnished on Application
52 East Alabama St. ATLANTA, GEORGIA
Page One Hundred Fifty-Seven
MARRIAGE
INVITATIONS
Reception ana visiting Cards
J^onogram Stationery Dance Programs
Greeting Cards
K
Crests, Coats of Arms, 'Soolt 'Plates
Invitations and Announcements for All Occasions
Correctly ana Promptly Engraved
Send for Our Samfes and Prices
J. P. Stevens Engraving Co.
Society Engravers
47 W^hkeJtaJ} Street Atlanta, Georgia 99 'PeacJttree Street
Ij KODAK in
FINISHING
AS IT SHOULD
BE DONE
Glenn Photo
Stock Co.
Eastman Koaak Co.
117 Peachlree Street
If
B. B. LEWIS
Staple and Fancy Groceries
Fresh Western Meats
F'EGETABLES
and FRUITS
Bell Phone
Dec. 862-J
DECATUR.
GEORGIA
' The Corset Shop
^ Corsets made to order. Ready-to-
'^ ^^ear Corsets, Brassieres. Camisoles,
Lingerie. Sanitary Goods, in fact we
carry every article to be found in an
up-to-date Corset SKop.
Fitting Service Unequaled
Xailor-Made Corset Company
94 N. ForsytK St. "Phone Ivy 8641
Pafje One HundreiJ Fifty-Eight
AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE
DECATUR, GEORGIA
PAGIOUS and Beauts
ful Grounds^ Splendid
Buildings with Modern
Conveniences, Full and
Able Faculty, Course
Leading to A. B. Degree.
Best Advantage in Mu-
sic and Art.
FOR CATALOGUE, ADDRESS
F. H. GAINES, D. D., LL. D
PRESIDENT
Page One Hundred Fifty-Nine
DRY CLEANING
THAT SATISFIES IS OUR MOTTO.
WHEN YOU HAVE ANYTHING TO
BE DRY CLEANED, CALL
PIEDMONT LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING CO.
83 TRINITY AVE.
ATLANTA, GA.
Atlantic Ice & Coal
Corporation
-esc
iflKalb (Enuntg lank
Iwatur, (Bforgta
Capital Stock - - $25,000.00
Surplus and Undivided
Profits - - - S25.000.00
15 COLLINS STREET
DEPOSITORY OF DeKALB
COUNTY
ATLANTA, GA.
J. NORRIS C. H. BLOUNT
President Cashier
Phones
Bell M. 1900 Atlanta 549
ICE, COAL
and
Patronize
Our
Advertisers
COLD STORAGE
Page One Hundred Sixty
TA Y T r^ A R Q ^^^ ^"^ Representative
-r\. -A. 1 V^ Jr\. JD O and have your baggage
checked direct from college
to your home.
BAGGAGE TRANSFER
We call for and deliver your baggage either to some part
of the city or any station. We check from your residence
to destination. Call us.
ALL PHONES Main 4000
Atlanta Baggage and Cab Co
W. C. WILSON, President and Gen' I Mgr.
Ike
COLONIAL THEATRE
DECATUR, GEORGIA
1\
?4otto :
The Best to Be Had in Motion Pictures
W. L. McCLURE, Manager
A. K. HAWKES CO.
OPTOMETRISTS
and OPTICIANS
Established 1870
14 Whitehall Street
KODAKS - KODAK SUPPLIES
Expert Finishing
Barton's Drug Store
p URE
H J)RUGS H
Fine Candies, Sundries, Cigars
Soda and Ice Cream
19 E. COLLEGE AVE;
DECATUR, GA.
Patronize Our Advertisers
Page One Hundred Sixty-One
ASK THE SILHOUETTE STAFF
WHERE THEY
HAVE FOUND
QUALITY AND SERVICE
ORIGINALITY AND
SYMPATHETIC CO-OPERATION
FooTE ^ Davies Company
THE COLLEGE PUBLICATION HOUSE
Atlanta, Georgia
Page One Hundred Sixty-Tioo
-m
K