Silhouette (1920)

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THE SILHOUETTE

VOLUME XVII

PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS

OF

AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE

DECATUR, GEORGIA

LOUEfTTB

OIn itpr wlinap lagal J^runtinn

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spiralion in nur

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J. K. Orr, Chairman Atlanta

F. H. Gaines Decatur

C. M. Candler Decatur

George B. Scott Decatur

John J. Eagan Atlanta

L. C. Mandeville CarroUton

K. G. Matheson Atlanta

J. T. LuPTON Chattanooga, Tenn.

W. C. Vereen Moultrie

L. M. Hooper Selma, Ala.

J. S. Lyons Atlanta

Frank M. Inman Atlanta

Mrs. Samuel M. Inman Atlanta

Mrs. C. E. Harman Atlanta

Miss Mary Wallace Kirk Tuscumbia, Ala.

J. G. Venable Jacksonville, Fla.

W. S. LiNDAMOOD* Columbus, Miss.

G. W. MouNTCASTLE Lexington, N. C.

*Deceased.

] c/^UJlO

1919-1920

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F. H. Gaines, D.D.. LL.D.

President

Nannette Hopkins

Dean

M. Louise McKinney

Professor of English

Anna I. Young, B.A., M.A.

Agnes Scott College, Columbia University

Professor of Mathematics

J. D. M. Armistead. Ph.D.

Washington and Lee University

Professor of English

Lillian S. Smith, A.^L. Ph.D.

Syracuse University, Cornell University

Professor of Latin and Greek

Mary Frances Sweet, M.D.

Syracuse University, New England Hospital, Boston

Professor of Hygiene i

Helen LeGate, M.A. |

Wellesley College. The Sorbonne, Paris

Professor of Rom-ance Languages
Samuel Guerry Stukes, B.A., A.M., B.D.
Davidson College, Princeton University, Princeton Seminary f

Professor of Education t

James Ross McCain. M.A.. Ph.D. [

University of Chicago, Columbia University I

Professor of Sociology and History i

.Alma Sydenstricker. Ph.D. ;

Wooster University. Four Year a Student in A. L S. L. t

Professor of English Bible I

Sarah Parker White, M..A.. M.D. j:

Columbia University, New York Medical College ^

Professor of Philosophy i

Cleo Hearon. Ph.D. {

University of Chicago ^

Professor of History i

Robert B. Holt, AB. J

University of Wisconsin, Instructor in University of Wisconsin,
Graduate Student University of Chicago, 1915-"16-'18
Professor of Chemistry
Christian W. Dieckmann, F.A.G.O.
Fellow of the American Guild of Organists
Professor of Music

Mary Stuart MacDoucall, B.A., M.S.

Randolph-Macon Woman's College, University of Chicago

Professor of Biology

P. H. Graham. A.M.
University of Virginia
Physics and Astronomy

Catherine Torrance, M.A.

University of Chicago

Associate Professor of Latin and Greek

Alice Lucile Alexander, B.A., M.A.

Agnes Scott College, Columbia University

Associate Professor of French

Frances K. Gooch. Ph.B.

University of Chicago, Boston School of Expression

Associate Professor of English

Spoken English

Lillian Stevenson, B.A., M.A.

University of Texas, University of Chicago

Associate Professor of History

Emma Mae Laney, A.M.

University of Chicago

Associate Professor of English

*Martha Voeceli, B.A., M.A.

University of Berne, Switzerland, Columbia University

Professor of German

Hattie May Finlay, A.B.. M.A.

Colorado College, Radcliffe College

Associate Professor of Romance Languages

Spanish

Marion Bancker, A.B.. A.M.

Smith College, Columbia University

Asociate Professor of Sociology and Economics

Myra I. Wade, A.B.

Oberlin College

Associate Professor of Physical Education

Emma Moss Dieckmann, B.A.

Agnes Scott College

Instructor in English

Augusta Skeen, B.A.

Agnes Scott College

Assistant Professor of Chemistry

Charlotte Hammond. B.A,

Agnes Scott College

Instructor in Latin and German

Patsy Lupo, B.A.

Mount Holyoke College

Instructor in Biology

* Resigned December, 1919. The vacancy has been filled for the remainder
of the session by Christian F. HamfT, A.M., Professor of German in Emory
University.

JA^'ET Newton. B.A.

Agnes Scott College

Instructor in French

Frances Sledd, B.A.

Agnes Scott College

Instructor in Mathematics

Almeda Hutchesojn, B.A.

Agnes Scott College

Instructor in Hi tory

Louise Garland Lewis

University of Chicago. University of Paris

Art Institute. Chicago, Academic Julian, Ecole Delacluse

Art and Art Hi tory

Lewis H. Johnso?)

Graduate Pomona College School of Music

New York Institute Musical Art

Student of William Nelson Burritt, New York

Voice Culture

Katherine Van Dusen Sutphen

Graduate New England Conservatory

Piano

Eda Elizabeth Bartholomew

Graduate Piano. Pipe Organ, Royal Conservatory, Leipsic

Piano

C. Roland Flick

Student Jacob Bloom, Cincinnati Conservatory; also Student

of Max Donner, Stern Conservatory, Berlin

Violin

Irma Phillips

Student .Arthur J. Hubbard. Boston, Mass.

Assistant in Voice Culture

Alice Longshore, A.B.

University of Montana, Graduate Atlanta Library School

Librarian

c/^iw\a\i0rTB

roreK)(^or(5

With Apologies to R. W. Service)

eve labored o'er these pages here
For many days, weeks, months a year
From early morn 'til detvey eve.
Late in the night, if you'd believe.
And many nights in endless toil
Found us burning the midnight oil.
Dummies filled with empty pages
Wouldn't inspire most learn'd of sages.
But we are bold and brazen, too.
And we've done the best that we can do,
The things at A. S. C. most dear
We've tried to catch and paint them here.

We've sought to give in simple forms
Glimpses of pleasures, clouds and storms
A truthful vieiv of our college days
So different in so many ivays.
Of classes, organizations.
Athletics, examinations.
Of Blackfriar plays. Glee Club too.
Fire drills that scare you thru and thru
Of Faculty coffee and Faculty plays
The funny things each teacher says
The deeds of college life that swarm
Each day are here in simple form.

c^*

For you this task we undertook
And our mistakes, pray overlook.
After study of such high-brow stuff
No doubt our rhymes will seem quite rough.
But tell me please, can you produce
A single Anti-Mother Goose?
In childhood days she held first place
Now Alma Mater s in the race
We've tried to see what ive can do
At a combination of the ttvo.
So on your book shelf please save a nook
For "Alma Mater s Mother Goose Book."
The Editor.

-n

B

Louise Slack Editor-in-Chief

Rachel Rushton Assistant Editor

Margaret Bland Associate Editor

Clifford Holtzclaw Local Editor

Beff Allen 4rt Editor

Clara Johns Assistant Art Editor

Louise Johnson Bu iness Manager

Jean McAllister Assistant Business Manager

Mary Anne Justice Staff Photographer

Senior , Junior , Soph'more,

Irreg'kr , Fresh , too,
Geitliered 'round tjie Faculty
Wkt e jolly crew !

i

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^^ntor Claaa

OFFICERS
First Semester Second Semester

Marian McCamy President Romol.4 Davis

Elizabeth Moss Vice-President Ruth Crowell

RoMOL.\ Davis .... Secretary-Treasurer .... Gertrude Manly

Alice Cooper Historian

Margaret Bland Poet

Emilie Keyes Prophet

Virginia McLaughlin Testator

Louise Slack Census Taker

Anne Houston Representatives on Executive Com-mittee Virginia McLaughlin

MEMBERS

Louise Abney
Beff Allen
Nell Aycock
Margaret Bland
Mary Burnett
Clara Cole
Alice Cooper
Ruth Crowell
RoMOLA Davis
Sarah Davis

Agnes Dolvin
Juliet Foster
Delia Gardner
Julia Hagood
LuLiE Harris

Clifford Holtzclaw
Anne Houston
Cornelia Hutton
Louise Johnson
Emilie Keyes
Elizabeth Lovett

Lois MacIntyre
Marion MacPhail
Marian McCamy
Margaret McConnell
Virginia McLaughlin
Gertrude Manly
Elizabeth Marsh
Laura Stockton Molloy
Margery Moore
Elizabeth Moss
Eugenia Peed
Lillian Patton
Jlilia Reasoner
Elizabeth Reid
Margaret Sanders
Margaret Shive
Louise Slack
Pauline Van Pelt
Helen Williamson
Margaret Winslett
Rosalind Wurm

qTi

Marian McCamy
M. D. S. Hoasc BID "
Dalton, Ga.
Hark! Hark! Here comes a shark!

There's nothing she cant do.
In basket-ball, in tennis and all.

She wins the game straight through.

Hear! Hear! She's_ such a dear.
And a jolly, good friend, too.

She'll cheer you all, if you just call
Oh, there's nothing she can't do.

LuLA Graves Campbell.

RoMOLA Davis
M. D. S.

Senoia, Ga.
M. stands for merit, and M. stands for

man,
R. stands for Romola who flirts all she

can.
S. stands for her smile which does all

beguile.
What these three together are
She will be after a while.

Julia Jameson.

a^TB

Edith Louise Abney

M. D. S.

Athens, Ga.

Louise is a Latin shark,

Louise loves her French:
Louise plays the piano.
As if it were a cinch.

JuANiTA Kelly.

Nell Aycock

P. D. S.
Carrollton, Ga.
Some girls excell in basket-ball.

Some always bone like me;
But Nell Aycock's just full of fun,

And sweet as she can be.
And as she leaves old A. S. C.

To return to her duties no more.
May her path be always happy and
bright.
Just full of pleasures galore.

Esther Joy Trump.

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Elizabeth Wheat Allen
P. D. S. Hoasc [ [
LaFayette, Ala.
Small, sincere, ever sweet
Nicest girl you'd want to meet:
Auburn hair, eyes so brown
Most attractive girl in toivn;
As an artist she can't be beat
Doesn't know what means "defeat;"
Smiling, cheerful, never sad
The best friend I ever had!

Ruth Keiser.

Margaret Bland

P. D. S. Hoasc 2 A' $

Charlotte, N. C.

Hickory, dickory dee, what a fine girl is

she!
With a hockey stick, with pen and ink.
In cabinet meeting, or in casual greet-
ing.
She's the kind of person ne all should

be.
Hickory, dickory dee, we admire her
most unspeakablee.

Mary Knight.

Mary Guerrant Burnett

P. D. S. Hoasc [ [

Montgomery, Ala.

Mary, Mary, quite contrary,

To every rule we know!
How can you shine
In the highbrow line.
Yet make "Y. W." go!

Emily Thomas.

Clara Boynton Cole
M. D. S.
Atlanta, Ga.
Clara the studious,
Clara the beauteous,
Clara the best sport of all;
Clara with winning ways,
Clara with happy gaze,
Clara for whom we all fall.

Faustelle Williams.

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Alice Rosalie Cooper

M. D. S.

Atlanta, Ga.

Tivas only about four years ago

There came to A. S. C.
A curly-haired maid whom we all know,

A brilliant maid to be.
For she can both play basket-ball

And write for B. 0. Z.

Virginia Pottle.

Ruth May Crowell
P. D. S. 5 A <!>
Charlotte, N. C.
It's not because you re jolly.

And never a trifle blue.
It's not because your words
Are never slow and feiv.
It's not because you're pretty,

Tho, of course, we know that's true.
But the reason we all love you
Is because you're you.

Charlotte Keesler.

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Sarah Davis

M. D. S.

Newnan, Ga.

When ever there is trouble, when you're

stormy, when you're blue.
Then 'tis ^'Syra" whom you want with

her jolly ivord or two.
W^hen ever there is joy, when you're

happy, when you're gay
Then 'tis ''Syra" whom you want with

whom to while the hours away.
And that is just the reason thM of all

our Seniors fine
Our love and admiration for her shall

ne'er decline.

Ruth Scandrett.

Agnes Dolvin

P. D. S.

Siloam, Ga.

Ne'er would you. guess in one so small
There lay so much charm and wisdom

ivithal.
But let me tell you in her small head
There is more knowledge than can be

said.

Harriet Scott.

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Juliet Foster

P. D. S. [ [

Anderson, S. C.

Dark and slender, tall and stately
The finest girl that we've met lately
Is this Senior sister, Juliet Foster,
(What would happen if we had lost

her?)
She's an athlete thru and thru !
Oh! there's nothing that she can't do!
Eunice Dean.

Delia Gardner

M. D. S.

Greenwood, Miss.

"Where are you going, my diligent

maid?"
"I'm going to German II Class, sir,"

she said.
Who is this maid with heart of pure

gold?
"Her name's Delia Gardner, and her
worth is untold."

Sarah Till.

OUHTTe

Julia Hacood

P. D. S. Hoasc 2 A <l>

Charlotte, N. C.

"7/ all the seas were one sea
What a great sea that would be.'
But if all the beauty were one beauty
And all the duty were one duty
And all the best girls in school
Jfere centered in one it would be
Jule.

Susan Malone.

LuLiE Speer Harris

M. D. S. 2 A *

College Park, Ga.

Just a good old sport is Lulie. my dear.

With plenty of sense and heaps of good

cheer,
Tho' she seems to be very fond of her

books.
If you'll carefully scrutinize her looks,
You ivill discover in Lulie's heart
Cupid has secretly lodged his dart.

Alice Whipple.

1_

Clifford Virginia Holtzclaw

M. D. S. TTD

Perry, Ga.

Little maul, pretty maid,

Never is she blue.
But sweet and gentle, lots of fun.

This is "Tip," 'tis true.

Margaret Smith.

Anne Houston

M. D. S. Hoasc [ [

Lewisburg, Tenn.

Great A, little n, tiny e

Each standing alone, means nothing to

me.
But when A comes in front, n doubles
itself
And e hangs on at the end.
They mean to me then, whm I'll have

to confess
My inadequate words can scarcely ex-
press.
The dearest, best kind of a friend.
Laura Oliver.

'0

Cornelia Hutton
M. D. S.
Savannah, Ga.
"Multiplication is vexation"

So I've heard them say.
But really noiv Cornelia

Thinks its nothing more than play.
Calculus and Analyt

She knows from Z to A,
But what makes us love her most
Is her charming, gracious way.

Gene Burem.

Louise Johnson

P. D. S.

Atlanta, Ga.

Up Peachtree and down Pine,
She'll get 'nuff ads or loose her mind.
She's a busy lady, yet a poet too.
And a short-story writer, indeed, 'tis
true.

Otto Gilbert.

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Emilie Keyes

M. D. S.

Atlanta, Ga.

To write you a story

Will be Eniilie's glory

For that's where her fame has been ivon.

And to write you another

Will be no bother.
For she thinks writing's fun.

Lucy Macrae.

Elizabeth Lovett

P. D. S.

Atlanta, Ga.

What's the use of telling when every-
body knows.

Her rep is just like Mary's lamb: it
follows where she goes.

I'm only sorry tho' you see.

That it doesn't run in the family.

Catherine Dennuvgton.

'{VTB

Gertrude Manly

M. D. S. 5 A *

Dalton, Ga.

Needles and pins, needles and pins.
Once at college, trouble begins.
But fun and friends, fun and friends.
Once you find "Gertie," trouble all ends.

Elizabeth Nisbet.

Elizabeth Marsh
M. D. S.
Atlanta, Ga.
Some people you know are sharks.

Because they tell you so.
My Senior-sister is not that kind
She works and merits and never minds
That others may not know.

Mary Floding.

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Laura Stockton Molloy
M. D. S. Hoasc [ [
Columbia, Tenn.
"Stocks' ambition is quite high
To be a society butterfly.
She's the brightest girl on the campus
And she knoivs just how to vamp us.
One important thing more this is no

rumor
Is her delightful sense of humor.

Bess Telford.

Margery Moore

P. D. S.

Decatur, Ga.

Her laughing eyes and dimpled cheek

Indeed I do adore.
But her icinsome ways and manner
sweet

Make me love Margery Moore.

Nell Buch.\nan.

JEfl^TB

Elizabeth Luckie Moss
M. D. S. 2 A *
Athens, Ga.
// Shakespeare, Tennyson,

And Keats all three.
Should try to compose

A verse just for "E,"
With all of their genius

They couldnt half say
The many good things
I wish her for Aye.

Gena Callaway.

Lois Berrien MacIntyre

M. D. S. Hoasc-HID

Atlanta, Ga.

Sing, sing, what shall I sing,
A song for Lois, that's just the thing.
Do, do, what shall I do?
For no song I know is good enough for
you.

Frances White.

^^^^'^sv^&^vxmamK.maBimsMrs -^

Margaret Earle McConnell

M. D. S.

Asheville, N. C.

Gay, but not flighty.

Serious, yet not a ''gloom,"

She surely has the pep to put things

on a "boom."
"Grandma" is a wonder to all who

know her,
You can't find a better if you look the

world over.

Carolyn Moore.

Virginia McLaughlin

P. D. S. Hoasc

Raphine, Va.

She's lovely, sweet and all the rest

That might be said about her.
But of all Vd say this is the best

I couldn't do without her.
You simply can not find her match

Now tell me, honest, kin yer?
Because the pattern's lost, I'm sure.

On which they made Virginia.

Ruth Brown.

Marion McPhail

P. D. S.
Charlotte, N. C.

My Senior sister, as I'm sure you'll

agree.
Is as smart arui bright as she can be.
She is very tall and lots of fun.
And I ivouldn't change her for anyone.

Helen Barton.

Lillian Patton
P. D. S.
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Ting-a-ling-a-ling,
What shall I sing?

A song about our Lillian.
She's really quite fine.
If she's worth a dime

She's surely worth a million.

Sarah Alston.

Eugenia Avary Peed

P. D. S.
Emory University, Ga.

One, two, three, four, five,
Eugenia's nicest girl alive.
Six, seven, eight, nine, ten,
I'll say the same thing once again.

Lucy Wooten.

Julia Reasoner
P. D. S.
Oneco, Fla.
What sincerity in her face,
Hoiv much dignity, how much grace!
What a warmness in her heart.
And in her smile, ivhat a friendly art.
She must have come to A. S. C.
For all these other girls and me.

Ruth Hall.

m

Elizabeth Reid
M. D. S.
Woodbury. Ga.
There was never a girl like Elizabeth

In all this great, wide land.
Like ladies of old, she has hair of gold
And the proverbial lily white hand.
There was never a sport like Elizabeth,
From here to the great world's etui.
She shows her fun in all she's done
And she's a jolly good old friend.
Elizabeth Brown.

Margaret Eva Sanders

P. D. S.

De Vall's BluflF, Ark.

She is very, very bright.
And studies French with all her might.
In Glee Club she is known so well.
And she's a Prop, debater swell
In all she does she's quite correct.
For she has such an. intellect.

Mary Barton.

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Margaret Shive

P. D. S.

Decatur, Ga.

Curly locks, curly locks.

Over a brain.
That is far from a stupid one

Indeed, in the main.
Curly hair, curly hair.

Seems to betoken
A Margaret one likes more

With each word that's spoken.

Frances Oliver.

Mary Louise Slack

P. D. S. Hoasc FTP

LaGrange, Ga.

There was a lass at A. S. C.

And she was wondrous wise
In sports and books and energy,

Won fame before all eyes.
And while her wit drew jnany friends-

With all her might and main
She wrote this lovely Silhouette

And thus won fame again.

Georgia Weaver.

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Pauline Van Pelt

M. D. S.

Ballinger. Tex.

Sing a song of Pauline,

A heart full of good will;

A kind and loving friendship.
And a brain that's never still.

Mary Parks.

Helen Willl\mson
P. D. S.
Atlanta, Ga.
Always busy (w a bee,

Quiet and demure.
Anything there is to do.
Ask her then it's sure.
She's sweet, but that's not all you see.
She's smart, I'm sure you know it
She's keen on Sociology,
And is a sure-'nuff poet.

Ethel Ware.

Q/^ILTiOUErTTE

Margaret Winslett

P. D. S.

Epes, Ala.

Now whom do you think this maid can

be?
The best there is at A. S. C!
She's smart and pretty and full of pep
And on "e.rec" she's won a rep.
She'll win much fame where'er she be
Just as she's done at A. S. C.

Josephine Gardner.

Rosalind Wurm
P. D. S.
Atlanta, Ga.
There was a saying once of old.
That scientists are hard and cold;
But Rosalind knocked that theory down,
For she was never known to frown.
A frown? Ah, no, a smile for all.
Just stop a day pupil in the hall
And ask her who'll always assist her
And I know she'll name my Senior
sister.

Marion Hull.

lOMHTTB

mmas^^^^m^

Elizabeth Marsh
Certificate in Piano

mtiuriiiimitm^ttmmitfmtiiimsamaSmmm yt/m^ ib'i

Q/^W

Senior Faculty Members

^Fntnr i>0pl|Dmor? BxbUvb

Louise Abney .... Juanita Kelly

Beff Allen Ruth Keiser

Nell Aycock . . . Esther Joy Trump
Margaret Bland . . . Mary Knight
Mary Burnett .... Emily Thomas
Clara Cole . . . Faustelle Williams
Alice Cooper .... Virginia Pottle
Ruth Crowell . . Charlotte Keesler
Romola Dams .... Julia Jameson
Sarah Davis .... Ruth Scandrett
Agnes Dolvin .... Harriet Scott

Juliet Foster Eunice Dean

Delia Gardner Sarah Till

Julia Hagood .... Susan Malone
LuLiE Harris .... Alice Whipple
Clifford Holtzclaw . . Margaret Smith
Cornelia Hutton .... Gene Burem
Louise Johnson .... Otto Gilbert

Emilie Keyes Lucy Macrae

Elizabeth Lovett . Catherine Dennington
Rosalind Wurm

Lois MacIntyre . . . Frances White
Marion McPhail . . . Helen Barton
Marian McCamy . Lula Graves Campbell

Margaret McConnell
Virginia McLaughlin
Gertrude Manly
Elizabeth Marsh
Laura Stockton Molloy
Margery Moore
Elizabeth Moss
Lillian Patton
Eugenia Peed
Julia Reasoner .
Elizabeth Reid
Margaret Sanders
Margaret Shive
Louise Slack . . . .
Pauline Van Pelt . .
Helen Williamson
Margaret Winslett
. Marion Hull

Carolyn Moore

Ruth Brown

Elizabeth Nisbet

>L\RY Flodinc

. Bess Telford

Nell Buchanan

Gena Callaway'

. Lucy Wooten

Ruth Hall

Elizabeth Brown

. Mary Barton

. Frances Oliver

. Georgia Weaver

. Mary Parks

. Ethel Ware

Josephine Gardner

G/^iLi\a\j

S'pninr QIlaaH parm

Together we have come four years along the way.
And now we stop a moment, pause, and stay
To look across the past where shadows lie
Dim growing, and the sunshine from on high
Falls softly 'round us as we leave its ray.

We've met with laughter, tears, with work and play,
Have lived and loved together, felt the sway
Of Alma Mater's rule; now we say good-bye.
Together.

Together we have watched the leaves grow gray
About her, have seen the winter, felt the May
Spread round her, together seen the scarlet sky
Smile on her. And later as the years go by
We'll drift again to her, in dreams, some day.
Together.

'aaMHTTB

g'ljnrt ^iHtorij nf tijf giMtior f f Dpi?

Chapter I Introductory

IT is hard to realize, when we look upon the foremost people of our world to-day.
that they were once crude savages. A knowledge of their origin is necessary to
an understanding of their history.
The land in which this people lives is an isthmus, joined to the land on the north
by high mountains, and narrower at its southern end. The narrow part is covered
with hot springs and geysers, and is susceptible to chilling sea breezes. The great
adaptability of the race has been traced to the sudden climatic changes of the isthmus.
The origin of the present inhabitants is uncertain. In about the third century
before this one, they suddenly appeared on the southern coast, armed to the teeth.
They quickly gained a foothold among the ancient inhabitants, and set up a primi-
tive form of kingdom.

The race is characterized by graceful bodies, straight, silky hair usually of a
taupe color and fair skin. The genius they have always possessed in music is shown
by the harmonious quality of their speaking voices to-day.

Chapter II Beginnings of Civilization

The first kingdom was but a collection of tribes, loosely bound together. Closer
organization soon was necessary, due to the hostility of peoples on the north. Those
dw^elling farthest north called their land the Senior country; those just south of them
were called Juniors, and those just north of the incommg race were Sophomores.
Clashes with these gave rise, among the newcomers, to a national consciousness.
Especially with the Sophomores, a continual guerilla warfare was carried on.

Chapter III Period of Migrations and Wars

This was a very active race. It was continually moving northward to the more
fertile lands, pushing the old races before it. New immigrants began to fill up the
vacant southern end of the isthmus. These the dominant race called Freshmen, and
held subjugated for a time until they were capable of setting up an independent
government. Due to continual struggles with these neighboring races, a surprising
military prowess was attained. These struggles are roughly classified as the Hockey
Wars, and the Basket-Ball Wars. The climax was reached in the second Hockey War.
when complete and glorious victory was achieved over all surrounding nations.

Chapter IV Survey of Economic and Social Life

The most recent migration was that from Junior into Senior territory. The race
has always been of a moving disposition, and facts tend to show that this change will
not be the last. The change has always been an economic one. more fertile land
was always gained as the result of learning new methods of agriculture. Intensive,

e/^LLi

rather than extensive, farming is now the rule. The people are learning to be more
cosmopolitan. Although they are still a hardy race on account of constant military
activity, foreign influence has had a marked ruddying effect on the national com-
plexion, and instances have been seen of a curling tendency in hair. The chief
national fault has been the unsteadying of the government by political schemers,
but on the whole the monarchy has become so attuned to the interests of the people,
that it is in spirit really a democracy.

Now, that the race is in the Golden Age of its history, we can not but be proud, on
looking back, of the steady progress that has been made. Although it is an exceed-
ingly old race, there is much to show that its greatest development is still to come.

The End

H c/^ILT\0\IErTTE^

^tuitt ^tett at Qlliarlom. N. .. fur OIoUpbp
lay, Mnrti^ 12, 1920

Scene A corner in Mother Goose's "Salon."

Characters

Mother Hubbard "Crip" Slack

Little Miss Muffet Marie Hagood

Jack Horner (Student Government I JULE Hacood

BoPeep~{Y. W. C. A.) "Vengie" Burnett

Ding-dong-Bell (Publications) RuTH Crowell

Curly-Locks (Social Life) Anne Houston

Jack-be-Nimble (Athletics) Marian McCamy

Little Boy Blue (Unseen Voice)

Mother Hubbard

Fm old Mother Hubbard,

I went to the cupboard
To seek for my daughter a college.

But alas, I found there.

Many and to spare
Of institutions of knowledge.

My daughter. Miss Muffet,

I've placed on her tuffet
To sit still awhile and assist me.

Call my helpers together

While ice decide whether
Miss Muffet shall seek a degree.
(Miss Muffet takes a seat on her tuffet)

Little Boy Blue, come blow your horn

( Toot, toot, heart] outside )
For old Mother Hubbard's quite forlorn.
My wits are thrown in consternation
About Miss Muffet' s education.

(Enter Student Government, quite stately, in cap, gown, high collar, and hood.)

Student Government

Unlike Jack Horner

I've left my corner

To come here and give you a dot

On how things are done

How girls themselves run

Student Government at Agnes Scott.

G^IL'RQr

Do you know that we all have completely outgrown

The medieval age of the dear chaperone.

We go to Atlanta whenever we please

For shopping or lunching or afternoon teas.

No more have the faculty big ears and eyes

From snooping around and acting as spies.

Oh, I'm telling you now that the best thing we've got

Is a strong Student Government at Agnes Scott.

(Mother Hubbard and Miss Muffet look at Student Government in amazement.
Enter Y. W. C. A. as cheerful and beaming as ever.)

Y. W. C. A.-

I'm Bo-Peep and I lost my sheep

But it didn't take long to find them
At Agnes Scott they helped me a lot

As they'll tell you if you'd remind them.

There they keep each one of their sheep
That they are old maids prim or prosy.
All nice and healthy and cheerful.

The Y. W . C. A. almost every day

Does nice things so they can't be tearful.

Music in Gym where they land ivith a vim.

Receptions and parties all cozy
They give every year so have not a fear
And now that I keep each one of my sheep

As they do there, I don't have to find them
They no longer stray but close by me stay

Since they've left all their troubles behind them.

(Y. W. C. A. takes her place by Student Government. Miss Muffet is quite
interested and Mother Hubbard begins to take hope. Enter peppy Publi-
cations with an air of news both snappy and literary.)

PUBLICATIONS-

I
. f

Ding-dong bell I

Pussy's in the well! t

That's the way they used to do f
When there was news to tell.

But printing press and editors ,

Have stopped such explanations \

Arul we have now at Agnes Scott i

Three booming publications. (

There's Agonistic every week, j
That keeps us up-to-date
With news from every campus room
Arul gossip of our fete.

Aurora's the high-brow one

With poetry and stories.

And Silhouette, our Annual,

W alks off with all the glories.

Now if you have a taste for art

Or if you are literary

You'll find there all you like to read.

Both sad and glad, or merry.

(Publications joins the ranks of Student Government. Mother Hubbard and
Miss Muffet nod assent to each other, and already begin to catch the
"Agnes Scott beam." Curly-Locks (Social Life I. in a fluffy organdie,
breezes in, a veritable apparition of contentment! I

Social Life-

I'm Curly Locks who, as you know.

Sewed a fine seam

And feasted on strawberries, sugar and cream.

It was fine for a while to do nothing but this

But boredom at last spoiled all of my bliss.

So I rose from my cushion and wandered away

Till I reached Agnes Scott on a most lucky day.

There I had so much fun and enjoyed myself so

That back to my cushion I never could go

For the Social Life here is as fine as can be

From the parties they give to the phiys that they see.

ril never go back to tny stupid old seam

Nor swap off those joys for strawberries and cream.

(Curlv-Locks glides back to her place with Student Government. Y. W. C. A.,
and Publications. Miss Muffet is fairly overjoyed. Mother Hubbard is
well content. Enter Athletics, bubbling over with the A. S. G. spirit of
good sportsmanship. I

Athletics-

Jack be nimble. Jack be quick

Mother Hubbard used to say.
But Jack is nimble. Jack is quick

At Old Agnes every day.
Perhaps you think that studying is all we care to do
But Athletics at Agnes Scott will surely appeal to you.
At tennis and hockey Miss Agnes is grand

And at basket-ball quite energetic.
But, my dear, don't forget, that the very best yet

Is to see Agnes Scott so athletic!

(Athletics strides back to her place among her sisters. Miss Muffet springs
from her tuffet in glee. Old Mother Hubbard steps forward with much
delighted decision. )

Mother Hubbard

Hey-diddle-diddle

I've solved my riddle

While my daughter sat here on her tuffet.

Of all the rest

Agnes Scott is the best

It's the college I choose for Miss Muffet.

(Mother Hubbard and Miss Muffet join the overjoyed Agnes Scotters. All
sing "Hottentot." )

End.

Close All in Cahoots.

I c/^LUKO\lETTe

JJrnpbrrg of i>Putor Ollaaa

^uggratrJi irptiarin for IHag iag in 1930
"SiItp Jnrtunps of 1920"

Processional

Jl'piter. Ruler of Olympus.
Followers of Vesta, Goddess of Home.
Follower of Ceres, Goddess of Agriculture.
Follower of Flora, Goddess of Flowers.
Followers of Mercury, God of Commerce and Trade.
Followers of Minerva. Goddess of Learning, Arts. Justice.
Followers of Apollo. God of Healing. Music. Prophecy.
Followers of Graces.
Followers of Venus, Goddess of Love.
Follower of Mnemosyne, Goddess of Memory.

Follower of Muses: Calliope, Clio, Euterpe. Terpsichore. Eeuato, Mel-
pomene. Thalia, Polyphimnia, Urania.
Alma Mater.

Jupiter-

L ' Ajjj i imuu^^Lw>.i

Mortals of the Class of Twenty.

Who have uandered far aiiay
From the gates of your Olympus.

In the sreat. uide world to stray.

Each of you were pledged to follow

In the steps of some great god.
Pledged to keep your eyes upon him

As the steps of life you trod.
After ten long years of struggle

You have gathered here to tell
Which of you has been a failure.

Which of you has done so well.
Now let each ivho has been faithful

Come in and tell her story,
So that all of us may judge

Who deserves the greatest glory.
She who best has used her talents.

Been the truest to her aims
On her head shall wear the laurel.

Now come forth and state your claims!

Followers of Vesta

Elizabeth Moss

W ith mv dear family Fve stayed.

I'm nothing but a sneet old maid!
Eugenia Peed

/ also know domestic joys,

I entertain the Emory boys.

Crip Slack-

Deep in the heart of a factory town
My Welfare Home has won renown.

Follower of Ceres

Louise Johnson

/ rise before it's even light.
And toil until it's pitch-black night.
I plow and dig and plant and hoe.
On my beautiful farm in Idaho.

Follower of Flora

Elizabeth Reed

I've done so well n-ith my florist shop
That even Dahl's has had to stop.

Followers of Mercury
Sarah Davis

As the private secretary of a multi-millionaire
No longer over money do I have a single care.
Agnes Dolvin

Though Td hardly claim that I was as fortunate as she;
A stenographer's existence really quite appeals to me.
Margaret McConnell

// you want to go through Europe in the quickest, nicest way.
Join McConnell's self -conducted tours without the least delay.

Louise Abney

My tea-room off in Africa does guile a lot of good
To civilize the natives by giving them real food.
Lillian Patton

// you live in a village but want smart attire.
Write to Lillian Patton, the professional buyer.
Emilie Keyes

For fame I fear I can not speak,
I'm a cub reporter for ten a week.
Followers of Minerva
Learning

Marjorie Moore, Helen Williamson, Pauline van Pelt
// any one of all the girls of dear old nineteen-tiventy
Has had her troubles, then we'll say, that we have had a plenty.
In passing round the laurels, if you have some to spare,
" The teachers surely do their part, and all deserve their share.

I Justice

3 Margaret Winslett

I As first woman Senator from my state,

j I lead the Congress in debate.

I There's nothing I would not essay,

/ mar be President some day.

' Clara Cole

Though my practicing of law has hardly yet begun.
Six divorces for my clients have I already won.
Arts

Beff Allen

Underwood and Fisher, Howard Christy, too,
' Have to let me illustrate the books they used to do.

Nell Aycock
_! // you read the Atlanta Journal

I Then look on the very first page.

You will see my latest cartoons,
\ Which nowadays are the rage.

' Rosalind W urm

To prove that I'm a candidate

For architectural glory,
I drew the plans for Agnes Scott's
Endowment Dormitory.
Followers of Apollo
Healing

Clifford Holtzclaw

l/y cherished dream has come to pass.

Despite a feu- reverses.
To-day my dip admits me

To the realm of Red Cross nurses.
Delia Gardner and Julia Reasoner

Our ambitions also at last have been fulfilled:
In our dietician work we really are quite skilled.

iin iiii iT n i Vi i mfriTOffr i Fr igBrTrrrin r'wa iiiTr nrr i i ginir m'^^ "r ir n

J

c^IUMyJETlSl

Music |

Elizabeth Marsh J

In the finer arts I found my sphere; [

In musical concerts I appear.

Prophecy

Margaret Shive

Do you want to read the future,
Knoiv just what fate may hold?
Then consult with Mme. Shiva,
And have your fortune told.
Graces

Lois Maclntyre, Gertrude Manley, Anne Houston
As debutantes our lives were gay.
And though uere now a bit passe
We still pursue the social way.
Perhaps we all may wed some day.

Followers of Venus
Lulie Harris

/ just adore my husband and my seven girls and beys.
My life's a perfect paradise of calm domestic joys.

Marian McCamy

With m\ different clubs and charities

I've such a busy life,
I never have the time to be
A real old-fashioned wife.
Romola Davis

Matrimony did not cure my vampish ways. I fear.
As a resident of Reno I've had a wild career.

Laura Stockton Molloy

Despite the fact that hubby's head

Is very bald and slick,
I love my Jonathan as much

As if his hair were thick.

Follower of Melpomne
Elizabeth Lovett

Are you a failure or a drudge?

Your memory is not right.
Read Lovett' s "Helpful Memory Aids;"
Grow famous overnight.

Followers of the Muses

Calliope. Muse of Epic Poetry
Mary Burnett

/ wrote in epic verse the tale of Greater Agnes Scott,
The proceeds from my book have aided B. E. F. a lot.

ITB

Terpsichore, Muse of the Dance
Ruth Crowell

/ trip the light fantastic toe.

In vaudeville just now;
But I intend to win great fame.
Somewhere, some day, somehow.

Euterpe, Muse of Lyric Poetry
Alice Cooper

In "My Lyrics in Vers Libre" is easily seen
The result of my labors in English Eighteen.

POLYPHIMNIA, Muse of Sacred Music

Margaret Sanders and Marion McPhail

When in Chautauqua we appear
They turn away the throngs.
Our specialty is concert work,
With good old-fashioned songs.

Urania, Muse of Astronomy
Cornelia Hutton

After years of research in Astronomy and Science,
I've succeeded in inventing a new telescope appliance.

Clio, Muse of History
Juliet Foster

My History of Europe that I have just begun.

Is destined to be used some day as text in History One.

Erato, Muse of Love Poetry
Margaret Bland

The author of my "Love Songs" at least the critics say
Has lived and suffered as she wrote, so true to life are they.
Melpomene, Muse of Tragedy
Virginia McLaughlin

When at the Atlanta I appear
The college attends en masse
To see my Shakespearean repertoire;
I furnish each one a pass.
Thalia, Muse of Comedy
Julia Hagood

On the other hand when I appear.

The censor draws the line.
Because 'tis musical comedy
In which I chance to shine.
Jupiter

Mortals of the Class of Twenty,
Each of you so well has done.
That I find I can not choose

Which of you the wreath has won.

c/'ILl

Chorus

Jupiter, to none of us

Should the laurel go by right.
But to our dear Alma Mater,

Who has armed us for the fight.
Jupiter

Forward come, oh. Alma Mater,
To receive the crown of fame.
All your children bow before thee:
Loud your praises they acclaim.
Alma Mater Steps Forward and is Crowned.
Song "Alma Mater."
Recessional.

-Emilie Keyes, Prophet.

n w nr y ift a'ny j M i' jiBa Baiaafei<fe:>

iLnauHTTB

EaBt Hill anil Sf atammt of Sttiinr (ElaaB

WHEREAS, we, the undersigned members of the Class of Nineteen Hundred
and Twenty, being of sound mind, and particularly sound body, realize that
we are about to join the ranks of those who have gone on before, we do
hereby bequeath to the Class of Nineteen and Twenty-One the privilege of carrying
on the traditions of our beloved college.

Article I. We do herebv renounce all wills and testaments made heretofore.

Article II. I, Louise Abney, do will my art collection to Alice Jones.

Article III. I, Nell Aycock, bequeath my romantic inclination to Caroline
Agee, in the hopes that thev will be of valuable assistance in her future literarv career.

Article IV. It is with great regret that I. Beff Allen, do leave to the mercies
of my successor as house-president my tender little plants on third floor Main, hoping
that she will not forget to sprinkle them daily, as they need constant care: and to
Ellen Wilson I will my charming little tricks of tongue they'll get you almost any-
where if vou know how to use them.

Article V. I, Margaret Bland, do will my marvelous gait to Virginia Fish.
It's a wonderful help when vou have a lot to do. My alto voice and ear for music
I will to Dorothy Allen.

Article VI. I, Mary Burnett, do bequeath to Margaret Hedrick my maturity of
mind, that she may thereby be enabled to take my place in the hearts of the faculty.

Article VII. I. Clara Cole, do will to Anna Marie Landress my love of study,
but would also recommend that she exercise discretion, as I have done, in varying
the monotonv bv occasional trips to town.

Article VIII. I. Alice Cooper, do leave my love of philosophy to Mary Ann
Justice, knowing that she will follow in my footsteps in the pure love of knowledge
for its own sake.

i g^ILTigV I

Article IX. I. Ruth Crowell, do leave to Margaret Wade my killing manner
with the hope that she will use it as effectively as I have done to secure her a
millionaire husband.

Article X. I, Romola Davis, will to Myrtle Blackmon, my raven locks and my

bright smile. Last named acquisition may sometimes be substituted for laughter.

Article XI. I, Agnes Dolvin, do will my German marks to Marion Cawthon.

Article XII. I, Sarah Davis, do most cheerfully bequeath the long hours I've

spent in the library to those who never came to pay their budget.

Article XIII. I, Juliet Foster, hereby bequeath my zeal for parliamentary law
to the Propylean Debating Society; my darling little flat-heeled shoes I bequeath to
Clotile Spence.

Article XIV. I, Delia Gardner, do leave my Senior privileges (especially in
regard to the dining-room) to Eleanor Carpenter. Cherish them, my child, and
Mrs. Finnell will cherish you.

Article XV. I, Clifford Holtzclaw, do bequeath my boisterous manner to
Louise Fluker.

Article XVI. I, Julia Hagood, will my gracious and queenly dignity to Helen
Wayt; my copious lecture notes I bequeath to Mariwill Hanes.

Article XVII. I, Lulie Harris, bequeath my curlers and my rouge pot, which
I have abandoned, to Frances Charlotte Markley, hoping that they will aid her in
bringing out her latent possibilities; my artistic nature I leave to Pearl Lowe Hamner.
Article XVIII. I, Cornelia Hutton, do will my Math, genius to Jeanette
Archer, and my extraordinary discretion in choosing easy one-hour courses to
Eula Russell.

Article XIX. I, Anne Houston, hereby bequeath my blushes to Eleanor Gor-
don, and my imperturbability in all situations to Charlotte Newton.

Article XX. I, Louise Johnston, do will my cute little giggle to Elizabeth
Floding, and my tailor-made suits to Edythe Clarke.

Article XXI. I, Emilie Keyes, in order to curb any tendencies in the college
toward "vers libre" and polyphonic prose, do will to Janef Preston my rhymning
dictionary and my sense of rhythm; my responsibilities in White House I shift to
the willing shoulders of Miss Gooch.

Article XXII. I, Elizabeth Lovett, bequeath the inestimable joys of being a
day pupil to Elizabeth Enloe; my ability to "shine" in class I leave to Mary
Louise Green.

Article XXIII. I, Lois Maclntyre, will my sociable disposition to Marguerite
Cousins, and my accomplishments in the elocutionary art to Sarah Fulton.

Article XXIV. I, Marion McPhail, do hereby consign my poetical aspirations
to thin air. thinking of no better disposal I could make of them; however. I would
recommend that if Rachel Rushton desires to cultivate said article, she strenuously
avoid the commercializing of her art.

Arttclk XXV. I, Marian McCamy, do leave my golf sticks and the loving care
of Miss LeGate to Anne Hart.

Article XXVI. I, Margaret McConnell, do bequeath my manifold enthusiasm
to Eugenia Johnston, in order that she be not overtaken with ennui.

Article XXVI. I, Virginia McLaughlin, do will my promptness in meeting all
engagements (especially academic) to Charlotte Bell. Miss McKinney says this is
most useful in teaching.

Article XXVII. I, Gertrude Manly, bequeath to Vienna Mae Murphy my
political ambitions.

T\0\IETTB

Article XXVIII. I, Elizabeth Marsh, do will my preoccupation with the serious

aspects in life to Helen Hall.

Article XXIX. I. Laura Stockton Molloy, do will all my hairpins to Frances

Whitfield, in the fond hope that they will find with her a less precarious home; my
' athletic reputation I somewhat dubiously leave to the tender care of my friends.

'i Article XXX. I. Marjory Moore, realizing that variety is the spice of life,

i do will to Mary Wharton my interest in my fellow-me.

Article XXXI. I. Elizabeth Moss, bequeath mv fragile air to Theresa Newton.
^ Article XXXII. I, Lillian Patton, do will the privilege of staying by the phone

I to Nellie Frances Dave, in the full assurance that she will not fail to take advan-

5 tage of it.

' Article XXXIII. I. Eugenia Peed, bequeath my chewing gum, with its solace

on all occasions, to Emilv Hutter.
: Article XXXIV. I, Julia Reasoner, do bequeath to my little room mate,

i Marion Lindsay, my protecting love for the Freshmen, knowing that as long as they

continue to flunk she can support herself.
! Article XXXV. I, Elizabeth Reid, will my perseverance in the Quest after

I Knowledge to Nell Lipshaw.

' Article XXXVI. I. Margaret Sanders, do hereby bequeath my "affinities"' to

S Sarah Stansell.

I Article XXXVII. I, Margaret Shive, being of dual nature, do will my curls

^ and frivolity to Jean McAllister, and mv missionary ambitions to Augusta Brewer.

I Article XXXVIII. I. Louise Slack, do will my many illusions and my sweet,

naive outlook on life to Julia Watkins; and to Marguerite Watkins I bequeath the
many happy years Eve spent at Agnes Scott,
Article XXXIX. I, Pauline Van Pelt, do will to Fannie McCaa the extra-
ordinary advantages that I have enjoyed for studying spoken English, and for the

I benefit of Margaret McLaughlin, my Senior room. If you can"t get rid of your room-

i mates any other way, you can marry them off.

J Article XL. I, Helen Williamson, leave my five eight-o'clock classes to

f Thelma Brown.

] Article XLI. I, Margaret Winslett. do hereby bequeath to Margaret Bell my

sweet disposition. (N. B. This may be gained by taking cold showers every morn-

ing I, and hope that said acquisition will be of use to her in spreading into future
generations of students the beneficent influence of our after-light conferences.
; Article XLII. I, Rosalind Wurm, do bequeath to Lina Parry my sane

'i philosophv of life.

I This instrument was signed, sealed, and declared by the Class of 1920, this

': twentv-sixth day of May. Nineteen Hundred and Twenty, as their Last Will and

; Testament.

Virginia McLaughlin, Testator.
W itnesses:

Louise Sl.'^ck,
Margaret Bland,
Rachel Rushton.

{"

dluntor (HIubb

First Semester
Frances Markley
Alice Jones .
Margaret Wade
Fannie McCaa

Caroline Agee
Dorothy Allen
Charlotte Bell
Myrtle Bl.4Ckmon
Augusta Brewer
Thelma Brown
Eleanor Carpenter
Isabel Carr
Marion Cawthon
Edythe Clarke
Cora Connett
Marguerite Cousins
Sue Cureton
Sarah Davis
Nelle Frances Daye
Lois Drake
Elizabeth Enloe
Mary Robb Finney

OFFICERS

President

Vice-President

Secretary and Treasurer

Executive Members

MEMBERS

Virginia Fish
Elizabeth Floding
Sar.\h Fulton
Sara Gilbreath
Eleanor Gordon
Mary Louise Green
Helen Hall
Pearl Lowe Hamner
Mariwil Hanes
Dorothy Havis
Margaret Hedrick
Clifford Holtzclaw
Emily Hutter
Eugenia Johnston
Alice Jones
Mary Anne Justice
Anna Marie Landress
Marian Lindsey
Frances Whitfield

Second Semester

Margaret McLaughlin

. Charlotte Bell

Ellen Wilson

. Jean McAllister

Jean McAlister
Fannie McCaa
Margaret McLaughlin
Frances C. Markley
Vienna May Murphy
Charlotte Newton
Theressa Newton
LiNA Parry
Janef Preston
Rachel Rushton
EuLA Russell
Clotile Spence
Sarah Stansell
Nelle L'pshaw
Margaret Wade
Julia Watkins
Helen Wayt
Ellen Wilson

I a/^IUiOAIBTTB

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c/^IL'KaUErTTB

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"uBg^waaawmMWiWa nmwiaoe ji:-gwi^

c/^IL'nO\IETTE

Suntnr ClaBH Patm

Not many days ago to thee we came,
Agnes Scott. Yet three years thy name
Has been outs, thy life ive have shared;
And ice. thy Junior Class, have dared
To give and take, to mingle praise with blame.
Then how eager were we to declaim
The high place destined for our fame.
And being young no trumpeting ice spared
Not many days ago.

So in our youth we learned to play the game.
We strove, we won, we counted it but shame
To weaken in the path that was prepared
To scale the heights. O Agnes Scott, we cared
For thee so jealously! Red burned the flame
Not many days ago.

The dream is real to-day but years have shown
It made of firmer stuff than we had known.
The flame of our devotion burns more white
Than in the old days, and with steadier light;
Our dream of what devotion is has grown.
Agnes Scott, thy Juniors are thine oun.
And all their high desires for thee alone.
Fashioned by thyself thy power and might
The dream is real.

This is the best of years that too soon are gone:
Smiling we look backward. The mist is being blown
From the way that leads to one clear-shining height.
IFoven of toil and laughter and the light
Of comradeship, in deeper fuller tone
The dream is real.

<:riuso\

JIuntnr PrDapfrtH anh Ettraspttts

A JUNIOR remarked the other day that this "foot-prints on the sands of time"
business wasn't all it was cracked up to be. Which, being interpreted, means
she was getting rather nervous over the time, and it"s not so very far away,
that she'd wander far from the reach of these sheltering arms and become hopelessly
numbered with "those who have gone on before." Then, maybe she was wondering
how her class was going to develop into the poetic "hero in the strife" and man the
good ship Agnes Scott which the present Senior Class is leaving safe in the port
of success.

The same Junior, being of a rather reminiscent turn of mind, which is a sign of
rapidly advancing age. fell to musing over the time we went to little Dec, in the good
eld davs when ice cream cones were five cents, with our hats on and in dignified and
fearful importance at our blissful state of unchaperonedness. Then how we won
the cat after many days of agonized practice and most painful and unusual exertion
on our part. Next, the glorious day when the championship cup in athletics fell into
our somewhat surprised and thoroughly excited hands. 'Ihe thrills of being asked
for Sophomore Sisters it's almost as good as a proposal and much nicer under the
circumstances haven't been forgotten to this day. The successful hazing of next
year's Freshman Class was another jewel in our crown of glory which was beginning
to shine verv brightly, and must be burnished still brighter to guide the Fresh-
men of 1920.'

The Junior stopped musing. The sudden stop was rather upsetting, since even
thoughts of next year's responsibilities and this year's Junior Banquet are large
factors even in a day dream. Elections loomed up large and almost terrifying, and
the thought of her own dear class being weighed in the balance sent a thrill of pride
and awful horror through her. The "found wanting part" never occurred to her.
The hopes and joys and aspirations of three long years before the mast were to be
materialized in a single short nine months, when one prisses into meals late enough
to get a single biscuit, attached somewhere in ancient history to an idea of warmth,
inspires awe in younger friends with a somewhat awkward feeling mortar board
upon one's upper extremity, while the other extremities dance with the pure joy of
living, and especially of living a Senior, dignity thrown in for good measure, at
blessed Saint Agnes'. The unspeakable ecstacy of having lights till half past eleven
and actually getting to bed in one's right mind and proper state with no thought of
years gone by when one groped for night slippers in a closet where traffic was rather
congested, and the desired articles strangely hard to find, where evening slippers
were the only footgear that could serve the purpose, and they could give little clue
to the whereabouts of an equally elusive toothbrush! Then of rising exactly three
yawns after the insistent snarl of the bell and knowing that you can appear with your
hair fixed and shoes laced both on the same morning and pass in the security of a
perfect toilet the eye of the aloof John and the critical Zack.

The Junior began to think over the class' resources and found the ability of
her fellow class members strangely diversified. She thought first of the member who
married on the twenty-fourth of March, next of numerous diamonds and smiled that

OMEfTTB

the Senior duty of satisfying Aggie's Gossip column could be amply taken care of.
She wondered who would be Hoasc, who Gamma Tau, and she mentally separated
a few who had been builders of greater Agnes Scott and a much smaller few who
had deserved to touch the seat of the mighty. A President of the Students loomed
up tall and serious, but very shadowy and far in the distance. Y. W. C. A. and the
various other presidents and editors took their places around her, and she saw her
class leading the ever-increasing number of those whom the graduates are wont to
sadly name "others beside us," into a love and devotion to our Alma Mater.

The Junior stirred excitedly as she saw herself in long black robes, trying
vainly to keep step with the "Ancient of Days," and pretending very hard not to
catch the adoring eye of her Sophomore Sister. Then again she saw herself keeping
perfect time with the processional and trying to detect the same Sophomore through
the thick mist of tears which surrounded her. She hoped there would be tears they
were so romantic almost like a wedding.

The Junior stopped dreaming entirely. The realization that she must "carry on"
swept over her, and in order that she might not "break faith" with her beloved
Seniors, she shouldered her books, walked casually by the phone pad and dis-
appeared into the open portals of her next class room.

k

2

iirfciwamiii wririii-iTiiTn vtnemmtsmtfOaam

^0pl|0m0r? Ollaaa

First Semester
Laura Oliver .
Ruth Scandrett
Susan Malone .
Mary McLellan

Sar.4h Alston
Helen Barton
Mary Barton
LiL.\ Boswell
Elizabeth Brown
Gl\dys Brown
Nelle Buchanan
Cama Burgess
Helen Burkhalter
Eugene Burum
Gena Calloway
Eunice Dean
Catherine Dennington
Ruth Evans
Mary Floding
Otto Gilbert
IvYLYN Girardeau
AiMEE D. Glover
Mary Olive Gunn
Jennye Hall
Ruth Hall
Frances Harper
Anne Hart

OFFICERS

President

Vice-President

Secretary and Treasurer

Executive Members

MEMBERS
Marion Hull
Lilburne Ivey
Julia Jameson
Ruth Keiser
Juanita Kelly
Mary Knight
Ruth Laughon
Roberta Love
Julia McCullough
Mary C. McKinney
Mary McLellan
Lucy Macrae
Susan Malone
Fan Esther Meakin
Carolyn Moore
Anne Ruth Moore
Ruth Moriarty
Lucia Murchison
Elizabeth Nichols
Elizabeth Nisbet
Frances Oliver
Laura Oliver

Second Semester

Ruth Scandrett

Georgia Weaver

AiMEE D. Glover

Mary Knight

Mary Parks
Lois Polhill
Virginia Pottle
Emma Proctor
Ruth Scandrett
Harriet Scott
Dorothy Speake
Althea Stephens
Frances Stokes
Annie Mae Strickland
Martha Lee Taliaferro
Sarah Till
Allie Louise Travis
Amy Twitty
Ethel Ware
Marguerite Watkins
Georgia Weaver
Mary Wharton
Alice Whipple
Frances White
Elizabeth Wiluams
Elizabeth Wilson
Lucy Wooten

G/^iL'ftaMEnrTB

THE year 1918 will go down through the ages as a red letter year in the history
of the world because of two great events. First, it marked the end of the
World War, and secondly, it ushered the Class of 1922 within the sacred walls
of our Alma Mater. The Class of '22 is an exceptional class we even admit it
ourselves.

We arrived, one hundred and twenty-five strong, arrayed in the usual green.
We endured the horrors of Sophomore Week with a smile, taking mental note of the
most painful of the tortures in order to better wreak our revenge upon the unsus-
pecting Class of "23. We realized even then that we were an exceptional class, but
it was somewhat difficult to make the other classes get our point of view. The
Seniors, in their dignity, absolutely ignored us; the Juniors were very sweet and
kind, but their condescension was evident, while the Sophomores lost no opportunity
to make us feel our insignificance. This attitude hurt our vanity, and we decided
that we must quickly make these upper classmen realize how important we were.

The first thing to do was to win the cat from the confident Sophs. All the
ingenious minds in the class got together and the result was the creation of the
attractive play. "The Quest of the Cat." The night for the final contest of wits
arrived, and excitement reigned supreme. We yelled and we sang, and we won
the cat! That was our first victory, and that inspired us to put our whole souls
into our college life to give everything we could and to derive all the benefits that
Agnes Scott held out to us.

The Class of '22 entered into athletics with an enthusiasm which surprised every-
one, and we came off with flying colors. Half of the athletic cup belongs to us,
because we tied with the Juniors for the athletic honors of the year. In hockey and
basket-ball we were stars, and in tennis doubles we won the championship. In both
the Gvm and track meet our class was among the best, and we showed the same
interest in athletics that had marked every other branch of our college life.

In the spring of 1919 we invited the college community to the wedding of
Miss Aggie Scott to Mr. B. E. Fund. This beautiful wedding made a picture in the
mind of everyone present which will never be forgotten, and the reception held by the
mother of the bride after the ceremony was the most elaborate affair of the season.

The Class of '22 has shown an unusual interest in the Endowment Fund, and has
made rapid strides towards the raising of its quota. Plays and stunts have been given,
and often we have sold peanuts and candy to hungry girls B. E. F. Besides raising
a good deal of money for the Endowment last year, we showed our patriotism by
buying a Liberty Bond.

Of course, our Freshman year was not always a bed of roses, but our successes
so far outnumbered our failures that when we boarded the train on our way home for
the summer vacation, we were well pleased with the achievements of the year. Even
now, from our lofty height of Sophomore standing, we look back on our Freshman
year as being among the happiest of our lives.

fsmtmsmmmSK - ^..nensm&iitiatuiA-

o^IU^OUHTTE

The fall of 1919 marshalled us back into service, under the leadership of
Laura, whose enthusiasm and originality have never failed us in any extremity.
Although fewer in number we were as before above par in class spirit, and we
proceeded with a firm thoroughness to initiate the Freshmen into their new sur-
roundings. Sophomore week lacked neither variety nor spice as '23 will doubtless
testify. With our musical comedy "The Cat That Walked Alone" we again won
the Bronze Cat, and we have the distinction of being the only class in the history of
Agnes Scott to win the cat two years in succession. It is an achievement to which
we point with pride.

The moon was right when the class of "22 entered A. S. C, and all the auspices
were favorable. We have been watched over by a friendly Fortune which we hope
will never desert us. Mav our remaining two years of college life be as pleasant
and as profitable as have been our last two.

i

c^*

iFr^Blymatt OUasa

OFFICERS
First Semester Second Semester

Polly Stone President Polly Stone

Dell Bernhardt .... Vice-President . . Margaretta Womelsdorf
Mary W. Cardwell . . Secretary and Treasurer . . Mary W. Cardwell
Elizabeth Hoke .... Executive Members . . . Elizabeth Molloy

fanibel adams
Joyce alexander
clara mae alien
imogene alien
ruth almond
mary bailey
martha ballard
annie sue banks
janie barnes
iris battle
anna bedinger
kathleen belcher
dell bernhardt
cecile bowden
ruth bowden
dorothy bowron
margaret brenner

MEMBERS

clara bright
ruth broach
pauline broadhurst
sarah belle broadnax
ada elizabeth brown
louise brown
ruth brown
sarah bryan
Virginia burum
mary white caldwell
elise miner calmes
eula groves Campbell
maybeth carnes
ruth carpenter
minnie merle carter
willie chappell
minnie clarke

lois compton
thelma cook
Jessie dean cooper
alma crenshaw
louise crosland
wilmer daniel
dena danziger
edythe davis
rebecca dick
eileen dodd
mary key dolvin
elia ellis
dorothy elyea
rosalie engel
Christine evans
Caroline farquhar
helen faw

marjorie fish

elizabeth flake

louise fluker

margaret foster

maud foster

ellen french

anne gambrill

Josephine gardner

anna belle glenn

mary goodrich

geraldine goodroe

emilv guille

Isabel hall

sarah mildred ham

evelvn hannah

marv harris

sarah harrison

quenelle harrold

anna harwell

frances harwell

Jessie mae hatcher

Catherine haugh

margaret hav

Julia heaton

emma hermann

mary stewart hewlett

sarah hightower

helen hill

laura mae hill

elizabeth hoke

viola hollis

lucy howard

rubv hudson

eleanor hyde

erskine jarnagin

margaret Jenkins

mvrtle Johnson

frances Jordan

charlotte keesler

edith kerns

marv george kincannon

lillian kirbv

jane knight

eloise knight

hazel lamar

mary lane

Carolyn langford

Christine louise lawrence

concord leake
margaret leavitt
maggie ree legg
Virginia liles
lucile little
elizabeth lockhart
Josephine logan
marjorie lowe
edith mccallie
emilv mccollum
elizabeth mcclure
hilda mcconnel
marv mccurdv
sarah mccurdv
martha mcintosh
mvrtle mclaughlin
ellen mclean
margaret mclean
margaret macleod
mary stewart mcleod
harriet mcmillan
rachel maddox
janie mann
marguerite martin
mary matheson
Janet maultsby
annie byrd maxwell
anna meade
susve mvms

mattie moring mitchell
elizabeth molloy
ione moore
lillian moore
sarah olive moore
dolores moragues
lois moriarty
myrtle murphv
Catherine nash
Carrie belle norton
fredeva ogletree
Virginia ordway
isabel page
elizabeth parham
margaret parker
eddith mae patterson
alethea pinkston
ruth pirkle
marv lucia pope

Valeria posey
eugenia pou
margaret ransom
elizabeth ransom
roxie reed
eugenia rennie
mildred rvan
gertrude samuels
ruth Sanders
martha sasnett
Julie Saunders
dorothy scott
alma seagle
merle sellers
mildred shelton
Catherine shields
elizabeth smith
lucile smith
margaret smith
marv joe smith
pearl smith
martha stansfield
poUy stone
laurie belle stubbs
frances stewart
bess telford
annie wilson terry
emilv thomas
margaret thorington
lucv timmerman
eunice tomlinson
nancy tripp
joy trump
margaret turner
nell veal
alice virden
ruth virden
clara waldrop
marjorie warden
ruth Warner
eva wassum
Catherine waterfield
rosa wilkins
elsie Williams
faustelle williams
margaretta womelsdorf
mary wray
margaret voung

"ItT

ILTVOUETTE

(Sift lEnnlution af a 3Frraljman

Ir was the seventeenth of September. In one of the dormitories at Agnes Scott a
Freshman was sitting on the edge of her bed, waiting for supper. What bliss it
was to sit on the bed ! Mother never would let her do it at home, but she meant
to a lot now it was so kinder Bohemian. The Freshman had the unsuspecting air
of one whose faith in the world had not yet been destroyed by Sophomores. She was
thinking that at last she was at college, and how wonderful everything was! She
went over to the dresser and looked in the glass.

"I look just the same as I always did; am I really a college Freshman?" she
asked herself.

And then the most remarkable thing happened the glass answered her, in
these words:

''To tell you this I much regret
You are not a Freshman yet."
"But I have all my entrance credits," the startled Freshman cried. "What else
must I have?"

''Let college spirit come to light
Then you II be a Freshman right,"
the glass answered.

"How long will it be till Fm a really, truly Freshman? Will you tell me
when Fm one?"

The glass had just finished promising when the clang of the supper bell began,
and our Freshman (we shall call her that I went down to her first meal in that huge,
bewildering, dining-room.

What a terrible social error she made that very first night! She asked if the
girl next to her was a Freshman, and the girl said, "No, dear, I am a Senior." Our
poor little Freshman put a brave face on and tried not to look quite as unneces-
sary as she felt.

There were so many things to do those first few days. She had to look up so
many people the two girls who visited at home every summer, the niece of one of
mother's friends, a girl brother had met at a dance.

c/^m\o

What a thrill our Freshman got when she found out one of her teachers was a
man. and an unmarried one, too! But the thrill of thrills came with the first letters
from home. The one from mother began, "Dear daughter off at college ." Our
Freshman fairly flew to her magic glass.

"Fm a Freshman now, am I not?" she asked breathlessly.

But the glass said no, she had made a beginning, but she wasn't a sure-enough,
honest-to-goodness Freshman yet.

Social events came crowding next. There were little notes from old girls poked
in the Freshman's mail-box, asking to take her to this reception or that, and one
night a kind Junior carried her to see the Gaineses.

"Now, I am a Freshman, I know, because Dr. Gaines called me one," the
Freshman declared to the mirror that night. But it answered,

"Child, you yet must hear much sorrow
Sophomore week begins tomorrow."

Oh, the terrors of Sophomore week! Can the Freshman ever forget the night
her class was herded in the chapel to see that long, solemn line of cap and gowned
Sophomores file past? Can she ever forget the mode of hair-dressing prescribed by
the enemy? All during that week green-ribbon tied pigtails flapped in the breeze as
the Freshman skipped vigorously across the colonnades. She saluted old girls until
her poor arm was stiff". They persecuted her not only in the daytime: one night she
woke to find her room filled with a ghostly sheet-draped crowd, Sophomores! She
was made to scramble like an egg, to boil like a radiator, to dance on top of the table.
When at last the Sophomores had departed, the weary Freshman dragged her-
self to the mirror.

"Surely I am a Freshman now," she said, pleadingly, but it answered coldly,
"No, you're not a Freshman yet.
More experiences must you get.''

The Freshman got them, for several days later she found in her mail-box the
awful summons to meet the executive committee. At eight o'clock, pale and
trembling, she stood before the dread presence. Her knees were making so much
fuss knocking together and her heart was pounding so loudly she hardly heard the
sentence one week's restriction. And because she was not up on exec etiquette she
stammered out, "Thank you, Fm so much obliged, Fm sure."

Freshman week in the choir rolled round, and our heroine swelled with pride
as she took a place on the front row. Horrors! The hymn they gave out she had
never heard of, but she bluffed bravely through all seven verses, occasionally
hitting a right note.

There were a lot of rah-rah doings about that time, too class meetings and
hockey games and endowment rallies. One afternoon the Freshman put on her best
when-Patty-went-to-coIlegeish-air and swaggered down to the tea-room. There had
been midnight feasts, too, where everybody wore kimonas and ate hippolite with a
shoe-horn like they do in the movies. As a result of one of the feasts the Freshman
spent two days in the infirmary under Miss Dougherty's watchful eye.

Saturday was a day packed full of thrills. That afternoon the Freshman
shouldered a box a bacon and joined the hikers. She was in the seventh heaven of
delight as they sat around the fire at sunset and sang, but she would not have been
so reluctant to come back had she known that sitting on the green plush sofa in the
parlor under the portrait of Agnes Scott was a perfectly good date waiting for her.

She talked to him in the parlor for a while, and then she walked him up and down
the hall so the other girls could see him. Tired, but mighty, mighty happy she was
as she crawled in bed at eleven o'clock. About midnight she was wakened by the
terrible clang of the fire bell. Scared half out of her wits she got in her kimono
wrong side out, put her slippers on the wrong feet, and clutching a wet towel, got
down in the lobby just in time for roll-call. Later, as she threw her clammy towel
on the washstand she turned toward her mirror questioningly,

"Haven't I had experiences enough yet?" she asked.

"Almost," the mirror answered. "You know about the college life now. There
remains but one experience before you'll be a really, truly Frshman."

It came the next week. Tests! How the Freshman boned the night before until
she could say the book by heart, how panicky she got the next morning when she
realized she had forgotten everything she knew. At the end of the last test, the
Freshman, completely worn out, dragged herself to the mirror.

"Am I now?" she asked.

"Yes," the glass answered. "You've tasted the joys and sorrows of the life here,
you're learned what college spirit really is, so now instead of being the mere
Freshman you're listed in the catalogue as, you are really a college Freshman."

--''J^^'.''tfi:^:^^^<^^-:ifg:iX^i.

rrr

^nna t^irginia ^^ebinger

1902=1920

^-''W'*S*tKHIC6&M5*2&;:sS=?iMSS&^^

f:

//V

First Semester
Vivian. Gregory
Gladys Brown
Caroline Hutter

OFFICERS

President

Vice-President

Secretary and Treasurer

Executive Member

Coma McCaskill

Second Semester

Vivian Gregory

. Gladys Brown

Caroline Hutter

MEMBERS

Vivian Gregory

Hallie Cranford
Virginia Crank
Caroline Hutter

Ethelyn Allen
Carrie Allison
Frances Arant
Elizabeth Armstrong
Lucille Bailey

THIRD YEAR

Martha Laing

SECOND YEAR

Coma McCaskill
Joyce McLellan

FIRST YEAR

Martha Baker'
Ethel Bittick
Eva Boniske
Adeline Bostick
Ethel Cockrell

Julia Tomlinson

Mary Roberts
Catherine Smith
Julia Whaley

Evelyn Cohen
Mary Cooper
Harriet Costin
Essie Craig
Elizabeth Dickson

G/^IUV^

Mildred Dismukes
rowena dorn
Nelle Duke
AcHSAH Edwards
Nell Esslinger
EsLiE Fairley
Anne F.armer
EsTELLE Gardner
Anna Jennings
Clara Johns
Lydia Kimbrough
Euzabeth King
Elizabeth Ligon
Parrish Little
Margaret McColgan
Mary Mack
Helen May
Caroline Moody

Alex Morrison
Susie Reid Morton
Margaret Neal
Harriet Noyes
Bessie Radcliffe
Cl.\risse Read
Frances Reed
Wilda Richardson
Annie Ruth Griffis
Doris Guille
Helen Guy
LvLA Hammett
LouLiE Hendrick
Ruth Rickarby
Leila Rivenbark
Rosalie Robinson
Edith Ruff
Susan Russell

Annie Shurman
Christine Sinclair
Olive Smith
LiLLA Mae Stanton
Anabel Stith
Mary Stone
Elizabeth Stroud
Benita Taylor
Margaret Terry
Margaret Walker
Helen Watkins
Jessie Watts
Irene Watts
Mary Lee Wilhelm
Mary Williams
Pearl Woodward
Margaret Yeager
Nellie Young

Helen Christie
Frances Downing
Lena Feldman
Dorothy Haire

SPECIAL STUDENTS

Rhea King
Sarah Kinman
Mary Malone
Annie Miller

Blanch Ryan
Armine Watkins
LuETTiE Woodward
Bessie Zaban

'yrTB

An JriTgular

/ stood on knees that trembled

As THE COMMITTEE looked me o'er.
And gave their final verdict

In words thai vexed me sore.

"Irregular," shouted Miss McKinney,
^'Is the class you'll be in here!"

I felt as tho' I ivere disgraced
Outcast forsaken for e'er.

"Youll never have the glory
Of receiving the coveted A.B,

Unless you work in the summer
And bring some more units to me.

"You'll be looked donii upon by girls
To whom Latin and Math are dear"

She added in an awful voice
That filled me full of fear.

So I left that awful room

With a heart as heavy as lead

And stvept along the colonnade
Half fearing to lift my head.

But now that is all over

And I'm as proud as I can be

To lift my head above the rest
Arid say, "Irregular that's me!"

v';i:^.nG5p.:?Eii255a

gt^BQgjg^B^l^a

,-afjei!iSfisca6nK2saci5iS!'.ac-i!S!54

I0TTB

's t[)t lar?

Very wise and learned folks this maxim

I've heard speak:
"School days are the happiest'' their

Brains must have a leak.
Trying strenuous college life for
Quite a lonesome while;
Working fifteen hours a day and

Living on hard tack.
Hearing dry statistics all about

The Nation's lack
Makes the crying need of all the

Ages seem to be,
"Ought to be some mighty changes

Out at A. S. C."

Chorus:

For what's the

Use of learning forty 'leven lessons

If tomorroiv brings still more?
Of what's the use in people's using

Concentration when to study's such a bore.
Oh, what's the use in alivays turning

In at 'leven when the 'larrn clocks rings at four.
With a higher education
And ten hours' recitation
As a pleasant recreation

What's the use?

t7rK , krh , tKe tlo^5 do tjrK ,
Or^niztion^ hve we here ,
WorKer^ to Keep our jfivit up
cftrou^hout iRe live long, yeer

mrrisi

Julia Hagood President

Beff Allen First Vice-President

Margaret Winslett , Second Vice-President

LULIE Harris Third Vice-President

Margaret McLaughlin Secretary

Charlotte Newton Treasurer

Anne Houston c d , ,-

,. ,, I Senior Kepresentatives

Virginia McLaughlin ... r

Fannie McCaa ) r i> , .-

. 1,,, ; Junior Kepresentatives

Jean McAllister ) '^

Mary Knight ] c z d , , .

,. ,,T } Sophomore Kepresentatives

Mary McLellan i ^

Elizabeth Molloy f r i. o , .

Ti r reshman Kepresentatives

Elizabeth Hoke ) '^

Coma McCaskill Irregular Representative

qTIL

THE annual conference of the Woman's Inter-collegiate Association for Student
Government met at Wilson College, Chambersburg. Pennsylvania, from
November 20 to PVovember 22, 1919. Agnes Scott, as a member of the asso-
ciation, sent the two delegates to which she was entitled, the president of our
organization, Julia Hagood, and a representative from the Junior class, Frances Char-
lotte Marklev. Among the forty-six colleges represented, Agnes Scott was one of the
three Southern colleges. Anv college east of the Mississippi is eligible to member-
ship in this association, which gives an A.B. or B.S. degree, in which preparatory
schools are not included in Student Government organizations, and having an average
of thirty or more women in the graduating class.

The purpose of the association is to discuss the interest of the Student Govern-
ments of the different colleges, for mutual help and suggestion. The conference this
year succeeded admirably in this purpose, for the discussions at the closed, as well as
the open meetings, certainly gave every college a broader viewpoint, and many helpful
ideas. One of the best results of a conference of this kind is the inspiration which
comes from meeting together with girls who are interested in the same problems, and
who are trying to work out new plans for the advantage of their colleges.

The topics discussed included the attitude of the students toward self-govern-
ment; the relation of faculty and students, the machinery of self-government, and the
extent to which the Student Government Association regulates all student activities.
Such questions as these were considered, too, the cut system, the honor system,
relationship between the faculty and student publications, and light regulations.
Agnes Scott is especially interested in everything referring to such matters, and she
was able to give as well as take suggestions along these lines.

Wilson College had arranged a most enjoyable social time, which began the
minute the delegates arrived at the station. After a welcoming tea everyone felt at
home, and was able to enter into the conference with warmth, in spite of the coldness
of the weather. The dramatic club presented Lady Windemeres Fan, which was
given unusually well. But the crowning event was the trip to Gettysburg Battle Field,
in automobiles, over sixty miles of the Lincoln Highway through the heart of the
Allegheny Mountains. The official end of the conference was the last business ses-
sion, but the real end as far as our two girls were concerned was not reached until
they saw the tower of Main Building again.

~^>tK >it-WsMaHfB(S*f fla-iiwtiTA^ it .-

{j^

of lExf r!

7:15 Monday Night

Straggling up Gym steps

"Everybody bring a chair."
Voice from Exec room

"Got enough now, Lulies not coming, got a date, don't bring any more, Jean."
All congregated at last.

"Phew! Anything exciting, Jule?" This from Anne.

"Not particularly, but Beff, we have got to do something with that third floor
Main bunch! They just persist in washing their stockings after lights, and they have
just simply got to learn that they can't keep breaking rules and taking the penalty
for it. We aren't running a kindergarten or a reformatory! "

Coma: "Lets don't meet long because I've got French prose tomorrow and
haven't cracked it."

Marg. W. : "I say so, too, shuffle 'em in, Charlotte."

Jule: "How many have you, Jean?"

Jean: "Just two. My children have been good. Take first. She's

scared to death. Three knocks!" (Enter.)

Jule: " , you've been reported for three knocks, so you'll be restricted

for a week. I mean campused three days, beginning in the morning, This campus
takes the place of restriction during quarantine. And you understand what cam-
pus means?"

: "\es mam! Not to leave the campus?"

Jule: "Yes."

(Still waiting I.

Jule: "That will be all."

: "Yes, mam! Thank you, mam!" and backs out.

Door closes. Snicker, snicker, from the side lines

F. McC: "She hated to leave us, didn't she?"

M. McL.: "Poor kid." ^

M. W. : "Jule, I. B. broke the three-minute rule coming home from church
Sunday, but she reported it to me when she got back. She's out there now."

Jule: "All right, Charlotte, get her next."

I. B. enters with eyes as big as buckets, and trembling quite audibly.

Jule: "I., you reported yesterday that you broke the three-minute rule, is
this true?"

I.: "Y y yes m mam. But I w want to t t tell you all how it was.
You see this b b boy was from my h home and I didn't even know he was
h h here. He just c c came up to me kinda sudden and t t tipped his hat
and began to talk and "

Jule: "Yes, I., I think we can see your side of the question."

'3

I (E. A.

MA^Y a Freshman examines the sign on the door of the little room in Rebekah
Scott: "Y. W. C. A. Reading Room, open to all except dates," and wonders
why dates are excluded. But it is not long before they see in very material
wavs what has happened in this little room of so much more importance than dates.

It is here that the cabinet and its committees meet and plan so many of the
things that make our college life fuller. It is the social department that gives us
our warm welcome expressed in their helpful summer letters and cheerful parties
given in our homesick periods. Here are planned the meetings for evening watch
and Sundav night services, which gatherings give a touch of spiritual intimacy so
needed in the busy round of our college days. Here the publicity department plans
wavs to keep us in touch with "What's What On and Off the Campus," through her
most attractive bulletin board.

Here the financial department struggles to make our "Dues and Pledges" cover
all the organization's needs. For her interest is not confined to the campus, but
extends to students in distant lands. But to have this world-wide fellowship it is
necessary to know something of these students, and this is the task of the World
Fellowship department. Through study in her Sunday morning classes she brings
them closer and makes them more real to us. An "off campus" activity still closer at
home is that of the Social Service department through whom each girl is given an
opportunity to do actual service in the many charity organizations of the community.

To the girls acquainted with the Y. W. C. A., there is a depth of meaning in the
"sign" on the door. It is a meaning which calls to mind the big purpose and the
many sides of the organization and the happy experiences for which the little room
has been responsible.

G/^Iia^rsiiRfT

(H. A. OlahittPt

Mary' Burnett

/"resident

Margaret Bland

Vice-Pres.; Chmn. Membership Department

ViRGiMA McLaughlin

Secretary; Chairman Publicity Department

Margaret Bell

Treasurer; Chairman Finance Department

Lois MacIntyre

Chairman Social Service Department

AiNNE Houston

Chairman Social Department

Janef Newton

Chairman World Fellowship Department

Ellen Wilson

Chairman Religious Work Department

Charlotte Bell

Sub. Annual Member

&TTE

llm- JSiiigt

BLUE Ridge! Oh, no, those nine letters do not call up the same emotions as
Blue Monday, or any of these new fashion, popular Blues that are being
banged out of long suffering pianos. Blue Ridge means quiet and joy, and
love and girls. The Blue part of it is the most wonderful shade of a June skv that
anyone can imagine; and the Ridge part is the glorious view of mountains that meets
vour eves in ihe morning, when you're rushing to breakfast: at noon, when you're
sitting on the porch of Robert E. Lee Hall, gazing into the blue distance, and at night,
when the sheen of the sunset gradually turns into the deep night shades, with a
wondrous moon over all !

But Blue Ridge partly means to every Agnes Scotter, that little cottage on the
mountain side, witii the Agnes Scott sign on the door, which is home to us for ten
days. There are memories of pillow fights on the sleeping porch, or singing to
Randolph-Macon, who is just behind us. But the best part of every day is when we
sit around the fireplace at night, toasting marshmallows, discussing everything,
and everybody.

Blue Ridge is. in reality, the conference grounds in North Carolina, to which
we send delegates for the student Y. W. C. A. conference of all the colleges in the
southeastern field. The fine part is that everyone who goes can have the grandest
ten days of her life, right among the girls that she loves, and the girls who have the

interest of the same college at heart.
Lip there among the mountains one
gains faith anew, and comes down
from the heights prepared to put into
practice the ideals which she has dis-
covered. For there she has heard, or
talked with, men and women who
stand for the best and highest in life,
who are working with all their heart,
and soul to help us solve our problems.
Life there is crowded to the utmost
with good things lectures, stunts.

singing, hiking, swimming and food ! Even classes take on the attractive shape of a
thing much to be desired, and longed for. Standing in the water line, then rushing
to breakfast, has added charm when one knows that six hundred other girls are going
through the same agony. When all of them sit on the steps and sing, there is such
a melodv in the air that one wants to sing on and on, without stopping. Walking
along the little paths through the woods, onlv to find at the end a glorious view' of
the mountains, or a clear spring, overhung with ferns, is like finding a treasure. The
only difference is that no one can ever take away this pleasure from your soul.

To everyone who has ever been at Blue Ridge there is some special feature
which looms forth as the highest point of happiness and joy. But to all the loveliest
time, the one that we like best to remember is

''Quiet evening after service,
A stillness in the air
Sunset out beyond the mountain.
In each heart a prayer."

-Ill

fUOXlEfTTEr

1^0 iHottt^s i'luii^nt Unlutttf^r (Ennu^nttnu

ALL off for Des Moines! That was joy enough. All the excitement of "being chosen" at
Agnes Scott, of telling the homefolks good-bye, and oi chatting with the Pennsylvania
State boys on the way up became insignificant in comparison with the thrills of actually
being at the conference. The conductor looked rather astonished when all those myriads
of people filed out with such pervading smiles of anticipation, but when the Agnes Scott
delegation trouped out he only muttered something about Georgia (ostensibly rolling the r) and
let us go at that.

Then came more excitement! We crossed the street in the real snow (the kind that actually
makes the ground white), checked our baggage, and in about fifteen minutes we were at the first
session of the Eighth International Student Volunteer Convention.

As soon as we could regain our normal temperature and realize that we actually were there
we naturally looked around to see what we had come to anyway. This is what we saw eight
thousand students representing every college and university in the United States and forty-two
foreign nations. Among the foreign delegates there were students from Canada, South America,
Asiatic countries, the Far East, Africa, and Australia. So you see how we must have felt queer
among so many strangers. But just as we were about to sink back into insignificance we noticed
something else that helped us keep our equilibrium. That was the unity of purpose that all those
eight thousand students had. As all that throng sang together "Onward Christian Soldiers," we
felt the throb of a common pulse, and as Dr. Mott expressed it, we became united in the desire
"to realize common dreams." And all during that conference, as the most wonderful men in all
the world addressed us, we felt that we were beginning to catch the bigger vision and to lay a
foundation for the realization of our common dreams.

But meetings weren't the only interesting feature of the Des Moines convention. Realizing
that work and recreation go band in hand, the delegates from Agnes Scott did full justice to the
recreational part of the Convention. Strange as it may seem, meals at Des Moines were one of the
most important recreational features. It might seem too high flown to speak of the aristocratic
company in which we had most of our meals at the Harrison-Emer>' Tea Room, but you just
must know about a few separate engagements of your delegates. One of the most serious
members of the delegation had lunch with two young ministers fundetached, too! I. Then our
most prominent Y, W, C. A. worker at Agnes Scott lunched with a secretary from the National
Board, and our most efficient chaperone breakfasted most every morning with a family of a very
important speaker. But meals weren't the cinly diversion. Our underclassmen delegates found
one afternoon a form of recreation that was funny and unusual, but at the same time something
wholesome which, as they said, made for character building. Strange, isn't it?

And so all the days of the conference were spent both profitably and pleasurably. If such
a wonderful existence could only have lasted longer than three days. Still, when the Dixie Flyer
pulled out for ,\tlanta, the Agnes Scott delegates were glad to leave behind all the joys of
Des Moines, and come back to Agnes Scott and the Sunny South.

^sc^aaa^-

J

i G/^:

#tit^?nt Bnlmttr^r Aasonatton of K^ms

WHO are we. what are we, why are we? For the benefit of some who seem to misunderstand
what a Student Volunteer is, let us discard first all those things he or she is not a
Student Volunteer is neither a "queer" person, nor a religious fanatic, nor a super-
humanly good person. A Student Volunteer is, on the other hand, a perfectly human
somebody who is planning to join that great army of people who are going out carrying
the message of Christianity to the four comers of the earth. In other words college for him
or her is a sort of R. 0. T. C, in which the volunteer leads a perfectly normal human life.

The organization in which A. S. C. has six members is the Student Volunteer Movement for
Foreign Missions, an international, interdenominational movement organized thirty-three years
ago. It is not a missionary board, but is a recruiting agency for all the denominational boards.
Each year it publishes a list of the calls of these boards for red-blooded young men and women
to go out as college professors and presidents, as preachers, teachers, farmers, industrial and
social workers, as dentists and physicians but always and above all as messengers of the Word.
It is in answer to such calls that over seven thousand student volunteers have actually sailed
to the foreign field.

Here at .\gnes Scott, as in most colleges, the volunteers have their own band, which has its
weekly meetings, and are also as individual members of a union the Atlanta Student Volunteer
Union of about forty members from "Tech," Emory, Atlanta at large, and Agnes Scott. This
union holds monthly meetings, and through it Agnes Scott volunteers have gone out individually
to various young people's unions to present the call for "new recruits." But the great achieve-
ment of the Atlanta Union during 1919-"20 was the meeting at the Wesley Memorial Church,
where fi.\ or eight hundred representatives of the various young peoples" societies of Atlanta
were present. Agnes Scott was represented on the program not only by two present students
and one former student who has not yet "sailed," but also by Mrs. Mott Martin, home from
Africa, where she is a missionary. The Agnes Scott volunteers are also making plans to be
represented at the Georgia State Convention, which is to meet at Athens this spring.

The Agnes Scott band consists this year of Edith Kearns, Eloise Knight, Sarah Kinman,
Mary- Goodrich, and Anna Marie Landress, the leader, Agnes Scott is also represented by two
officers in the Atlanta union, where Edith Kearns is treasurer and Anna Marie Landress is
president.

The hope of A. S. C.'s volunteers, that for which they most long, is that in a few years they,
too. may be placed on that list of Agnes Scott girls who have heard the call and have literally
gone to the four corners of the earth:

Miss Emily Win, Korea,

Miss Lillie Lathrop, Kunsan, Korea.

Mrs. Annie Wylie Preston, Socuchun, Korea.

Mrs. Bell Dunnington Sloan, China.

Miss Agnes White, Yencheng. China.

Miss .A.nna Sykes, Kiangyin, China.

Vliss Elizabeth Gammon, Habras, Brazil,

Miss Ora Glenn, Brazil.

Mrs. Mott Martin, Luebo, Africa.

Miss Sarah Hansell. Magoya, Japan.

Mrs. Etta Ramsey Phillips. Yucatan.

Miss Clifford Hunter, China.

Miss Nellie Kandin, Seoul, Korea. (Died in Korea).

Mrs. Mary Thompson Stevens, China. ( Died in China ) .

Mrs. Bull (teacher), China.

Miss Alby (teacher), China.

Miss Collon, Chungu, Korea.

Julia Pratt (Mrs. Geo. W. Taylor I, Pernambico, Brazil.

oaiBttaiKraaflSaiaaBaaasspKjsEi::

OMEfTTE

Jfmirh r;iliaiiB

Jean Diron Madeline Deschamps

Marie Ducasse

I-UUIBU^

Louise Sl.\ck Editor-in-Chief

Rachel Rushton Assistant Editor

Margaret Bland Associate Editor

Clifford Holtzclaw Local Editor

Beff Allen Art Editor

Clara Johns Assistant Editor

Louise Johnson Business Manager

Jean McAllister Assistant Business Manager

i " rr3?XaB*4i?.13HE

naUEfTTB

Aurora Sitaff

Laura Stockton Mollov Editor-in-Chiej

Janef Preston Assistant Editor

Rhea King Business Manager

Fr.\nces White Assistant Business Manager

Eleanor Carpenter Exchange Editor

Ruth Hall Circulation Manager

Alice Cooper Book Reporter

Martha Taliaferro Assistant Circulation Manager

Frances C. Markley

Nell Buchanan . . . Assistant Editor

Laura Oliver Society Editor

Ruth Hall . . . . Y. IT'. C. A. Editor
Jeanette Archer . . . Exchange Editor

Mary Knight Joke Editor

Eleanor Carpenter . . Athletic Editor

AgnutBtir Binit

Editor-in-Chief

Mary Olive Gunn
Lolise Fluker
-Marion Hull .
Mary Barton
Lilburne I\y .
Harriet Noyes
Margaret Ransom
Mary Floding

Alumnae Editor

Business Manager

Asst. Bu'iness Manager

Circulation Manager

As t. Circulation Manager

> Advertising Managers

ROUEnrTEr

ljf ICrjfttii nf tlis ilnnunttut

A century or so from now

W hen other feet these halls shall throng.
The students shall in reverence bow
Before a marble column high.

And standing 'round shall sing a song
To those who underneath it lie.

And when a stranger passing near
Shall stop to look and to admire,
And ask the reason why it's there.
Someone shall say in wonderment,

"Have you not heard the story, sire.
The legend of this monument?

"Low underneath it lie the bones
Of many maidens, who, 'tis said.

By working late and all alone

To make the publications run.

First lost their health and soon were dead

For lack of aid and lack of 'mun.'

"It is a tale of martyrdom.

Of early death for worthy cause.

Appeals for help when none did come.

Of cruel toil without reward."

Then sadly shall the speaker pause

To read the names the stones record.

Epitaph
That those ivho lie beneath this sod

Shall not luive died in vain.
The hard and thorny paths they trod
Be known not to a future day.

Heed well the lesson that they taught
And help all editors. I pray.

^\-

v'/

p^

JEfTTB

Allflrttr ffiffitpra

Lois MacIntyre President

Marian McCamy Vice-President

Caroline Farquhar Secretary

Margaret McLaughlin Treasurer

SS3*B<R>ISSS3!5i^.w=&S*4'W*-S':iff*5Sias^^

^j>;'-r">ffl**ic-r'

KOMHTTB

afa thr Ibj Df (Sum?

READ THIS AND KNOW, PERHAPS, FOR THE FIRST TIME

GYM is the one department in a liberal arts college where one may receive a
vocational training.
"Forward March!" "To the rear!" such military experience fits one

for warfare, either foreign or domestic, as well as for holding high commissions
in the national army when that, like the bar and the ballot, is opened to women.

Or, if the League of Nations makes army life too tame, a graduate of Agnes
Scott's gym classes will be thoroughly prepared for the hazardous rope-ladder lifc^
of a pirate, or the thrilling adventures of a movie actress.

In fact, the latter calling seems to be the sole object of a great deal of the
apparatus work. Everv few weeks some bold spirit lassoes our dashing brown Dobbin,
and bravelv holds his head while stars that have not yet risen learn to ride in
broncho-busting wild West pictures. We could heroically scale the sides of burning
buildings, if we had a professional photographer to give the proper illusion of height.

Yes. we can see the practical value that this gym training will have for us when
we are readv to choose our careers. At present, however, gym is largely a
necessary nuisance.

Not that the modern American girl does not enjoy putting on bloomers and
tennis shoes and reverting io the pleasures of her Darwinian ancestors. But, unfor-
tunately, gym always comes at a time when you specially want to do something else.

Gym, itself, is indeed no bore to one who has a sense of humor. She can laugh
at the girl w'ho always turns to the left when the instructor calls "Right About!"; at
the girl who always bruises her knee in vaulting the horse: at the one who is
incurably stiff and studied in the folk dances a girl with a sense of humor could
laugh at these mistakes, if she were not always the one who makes them.

Q/'im

The Wearers of the A. S.

Sake a l^tke 5itll) il^

To begin with. Fm going to tell you what a real Agnes Scott hike is. It is a nice,
long, brisk walk with the wind at our back and fifteen cents tied in one corner
of your handkerchief to pay for your supper. Most of our hikes take place in
the afternoon and continue into the night, but occasionailv we have them in the
morning as we did Thanksgiving.

NoW', I'm going to take vou with us on a hike, a typical one. The dav before
a hike takes place Fan announces it in chapel and warns us to sign up before noon
on the bulletin board over the drinking fountain. We all sign up right after chapel,
and immediately we lay aside our fifteen cents. We also make sure that our best
chum is to walk beside us.

At last the starting time draws nigh and we leave the steps of Main for the
open country. As soon as we get good and started, strains of seraphic music break
forth from our ranks as we indulge in celestial, I mean vocal, harmony. The only
time some of us are allowed to sing is on a hike. Well, we walk and shout for a
mile or so and then Fan makes us stop and get readv to cook supper. Oh ! no. we are
never hungry on a hike: in fact, we hardly ever touch a thing! ( Sarcasm I . We build
a fire or two and, oh! the smell of the "weenies" and bacon that fills the air! My,
I can smell that food yet.

W^e eat just oodles and then someone discovers that Fan has provided a surprise
in the shape of marshmallows. W'hat a scuffle there is then. At last evervbody has
several of the white dainties on the end of her toasting stick and peace reigns. Next,
the moon comes up, smiling to see us so contented, but telling us it is time to leave.
We get under way with sighs of reluctance and soon the singing breaks out again.
We warble all along the dark path homeward and reach the college just in time to
hear the debates.

Come on, let s give fifteen for the hike and fifteen more for Fan. who makes
hikes possible!

123!!!!

ROMETTEr

||0rk?ij (5? ams

SENIOR
JixiA Hacood \

SOPHOMORE

Center Forward Mary Kmcht

Left Forward AiMEE D. Glover

Risht Forward Helen Borkhalter

Anne Houston /
Mary Burnett .
Juliet Foster /

Margaret Bland )

Beff Allen Center Half Back Elizabeth WrLSON

Virginia McLaughlin
Marion McCamy

M. WiNSLETT /

M. Sanders (

Alice Cooper Left Wing Fr-\nces Harper

Lois MacIntyre Right Wing Juanita Kelly

Marion McPhail Left Full Back Georgia Weaver

Louise Slack Right Full Back Alice Whipple

Julia Reasoner Coal Keeper Laura Oliver

. Left Half Back Susan Malone

Right Half Back Caroline Moore

Inrkpg (SmiuB

JUNIOR

Helen Wayt Center Forward .

Jeax McAllister Left Fornurd .

Elizabeth Flodinc Right Forward .

Charlotte Newton Center Half Back

"Sis" Jones Left Half Back .

Caroline Agee Right Half Back

Margaret McLaughlin Left Wing

Dorothy Allen Right Wing .

Theresa Newton ....... Left Full Back .

Myrtle Blackmon Right Full Back

Peggy Bell Goal Keeper

subs-
Margaret Wade
Fanny McCaa
Anna Marie Landress

EULA Ri:sSKLL

FRESHMAN

Hilda McConnell

Joyce .\lexander

. Lois McClean

Beth McClure

. Emily Glille

. Rosalie Encel

. Margaret Hay

. Ruth Bowden

Emma Hermann

Margaretta Womelsdorf

Virginia Burum

subs-
Alice ViRDEN
G. Samuels
Elizabeth Molloy
Margaret Ransom

TiouerT^

(51|? iltsfrablp iEoan of a iEultlatFli

Can I reach the top of the stairs?

Can I kneel on the floor for my prayers?

When my joints all ache

Every step that I take?
Can it be that I'm aging with cares?

My eye has a look of despair,
A pain ridden, cold, stony stare.

Education they say?

Well, it's life that is gay.
If you only are willing to dare.

My room mate, whom I do declare
Is the gentlest of all that are fair.

Puts her arm around me

And at once I must flee,
I'm sore to the touch everywhere.

Dr. Sweet said with unfeeling glare.
"A bottle of Sloan s Liniment there

May give you some aid.

But I'm very much afraid
That the soreness will just have to wear."

Now I know you are puzzling your brain
To decide how this terrible pain

At all is concerning

My search after learning.
Why it's clear as the sunshine, or rain!

You see we must all be athletic.

In fact we must be energetic;
So to hockey I've turned.
And my bridges I've burned.

My present condition's pathetic.

Bmxav laato-lall (T^am

Forwards

Ruth Crowell
Juliet Foster
Virginia McLaughlin

Centers

JULE HaGOOD

Margaret Bland
Anne Houston

Guards

Marian McCamy

Lois MacIntyre (Capt.)

Julia Reasoner

'bJ-

^0^1|0mnrF jSaaW-lall ?am

Forwards

Frances Harper
Ruth Brown
Elizabeth Nisbet

Centers

Althea Stephens (Capt.)
Lucy Wooten
Roberta Love

Guards

Georgia Weaver
Susan Malone
Frances White

{^

diumnr laak^t-lall Q^mm

Forwards

Margaret McLaughlin
Helen Wayt
Caroline Agee

Centers

Augusta Brewer (Capt.)
Amy Twitty
Eugenia Johnston

Guards

Jean McAllister
Theresa Newton
Elizabeth Floding

teJ-

iFrfBliutau laakft-IBall S^am

Forwards

Beth McCllre iCapt. )
Margaret Hay
Alma Segal

Centers

Concord Leak
Iris Battle
Anna Meade
Joyce Alexander

Guards

Hilda McConnell
Eugenia Pou
Lois Moriarty

&!&-. . ^ !r^^';:^>rJ^!*iiWefria3tt.to*iJB-'<

JxTFgitlar laskpt-laU (!>?am

Foncards

Gladys Brown
Elizabeth Stroud
Khea King

Centers

Julia Heaton
LuciLE Bailey
Harriet Noyes (Capt.)

Guards

Elizabeth Armstrong
Alex Morrison
Coma McCaskill

TB

Marian McCamy
Elizabeth Brown
Elizabeth Nisbet

rums QII;ampionHl|tpa

SCHOOL CHAMPIONSHIPS

CLASS CHAMPIONSHIPS

L

Marian McCamy '20
Virginia McLaughlin '20
Margaret McLaughlin '21
Dot Allen "21
Elizabeth Brown '22 )
Elizabeth Nisbet '22 )
Llewellyn Wilburn '19
Marian McCamy, '20
Dot Allen '21 . . .
Georgia Weaver "22

Singles
Doubles

Llewellyn Wilburn 19 ) n i^j

Elizabeth Watkins 19

Doubles

Doubles

Doubles
Singles

Singles
Singles

c/^IL'F

Mau lag

IT was May Day and the campus was covered with long quiet shade ws, broken by
patches of afternoon sunlight. The tree-bordered plot in front of Inman was
surrounded by a great crowd of visitors who had come to see Agnes Scott pay
its annual tiibute to the coming of spring. The plot itself, which was to be
ihe scene of the festival at other times a mere bit of the college campus. had now
become a woodland grove, where one would not have felt it unfitting to bee the
shepherds of Theocritus, or Anacreon's vine-crowned Dionysius wandering with their
pipes, or sporting with the shaggy satyrs. Against a background of dark trees stood
a pillared shrine, which showed very white in contrast to the green of the trees
about it. It was a shrine sacred to Aphrodite, goddess of Love and Beauty, and
near it was to be enacted a story of the age when Zeus ruled on Olympus and all
earth obeyed his nod.

The coming of the new season brought the Nymphs of Spring to the grove.
Dressed in the green of the first little leaves which venture out after winter is past,
thev danced on the grass before the shrine. When their dance was ended, new
visitors came to the grove. These were Psyche, loveliest of all maidens, and her
plavmates, who had come to frolic there. Then began the story of Psyche's great
adventure with Eros, god of Love, and the alternating bits of sorrow and joy which
filled it. Psyche, a slender figure in her dress of palest blue, danced with her com-
panions. Aphrodite, tall and regal goddess, with her stately attendants, moved about
in ceremonial dance, and at her bidding, the misty-blue, poppy-wreathed Spirits of
Sleep surrounded Psyche within the grove.

In an interlude between the two episodes of the story itself, the Spirits of Sum-
mer held their revels before the shrine. Dressed in soft shades of rose and yellow,
veiled in pale green, they circled about in their dance until they were driven away
by the Nymphs of Autumn, who came in a whirl of colored leaves. Autumn in turn
gave wav to the Spirits of Winter. These were dressed in white: even their hair
was white, and from their arms fell a cloud of snowflakes. Then once again came
the Nymphs of Spring, who marked the end of the interlude.

GKS^ii^iA^ii^SB

The story of Psyche went forward. At Aphrodite's command she was laid under
the spell of the Shadows of Night, who were robed in very long grey mantles, their
black hair bound with silver bands. With them came the little Fireflies, tiny creatures
all in black and gold, who threaded their way in and out among the shadows. The
mischievous spirits. Imagination, Discontent and Curiosity, tempted Psyche to her
harm, but in the end forgiveness was granted to her. and Hermes, with wings on hat
and sandals, came to bring her the precious draught of immortality. Then Eros and
Psyche, reunited, danced together in new-found happiness. As the white-clad couple
moved about before the shrine, from the back of it came four tiny little spirits,
bringing a crown of flowers for Psvche, who stood forth now not only as the central
figure of an old Greek myth, but as Agnes Scott's Queen of the May. As the crown
was placed on her head, all those who had played a part in her story came forth
from the shrine and in one long procession, nymphs, mortals, spirits and goddesses
followed Psyche and Eros as thev slowly left the grove.

Again the grove of the nymphs and goddesses of the long-ago age was but a
part of the campus, but the audience, as they scattered, carried with them memories
of a very lovely festival, by which Agnes Scott had shown honor to the coming of May.

Cast:

Psyche, a maiden ..^ Lucy Durr

Eros, God of Love Rhea King

Aphrodite, Goddess of Beauty Llewellyn Wilburn

Hermes. Messenger of the Gods Lois Maclntyre

Curiosity Elizabeth Nisbet

Discontent Eleanor Carpenter

Imaglnation Sarah McCarty

Nymphs, Playmates, Spirits of Sleep, Shadows of Night. Fireflies. Mortals.

>HWl1t<fc-OH^iri.ai-v<. r'

' tftsezs w iB B g g sa

'ILTLOAIHTTB

SAR.4H Davis
Student Treasurer

Sara s in the Soc. room.

Taking in the budget.
Girl is in her own room.

Wondering how to fudge it.
Student Treasurer gets it.

Tells them why she must.
Girl note glad she lets ii

Go without a fuss.

Sing a song of business,

A Student Treasurer, too,
W hen it comes to getting money.

She knons just what to do.
We owe our Student Treasurer

Much more than we can pay -
How much she helps the college

'Tis impossible to say.

Jit ]gr V^t, fcutTer f^r far,
Spite 1^ CQal pile , t^e^ 5t^i)^ pat.

Prapijkan irbalmg i'omtij

Caroline Agee
Clara Mae Allen
Imocene Allen
Elizabeth Allen
Dorothy Allen
Carrie Allison
Ruth Almond
Elizabeth Armstrong
Jeannette Archer
Frances Arant
Mary Bailey
Anna Bedincer
Charlotte Bell
Margaret Bell
Myrtle Blackmon
Margaret Bland
Helen Burkhalter
Mary Barton
Helen Barton
Mary Burnett
Clar.4 Bright
Ruth Brown
Elizabeth Bhown
Ruth Broach
Sarah Bryan
Ruth Bovvden
Cecile Bowden
Gena Callaway
Mary Caldwell
Margaret Campbell
Eleanor Carpenter
Marion Cawthon
Margaret Foster
Edith Clark
Lois Compton
Harriet Costin
Marguerite Cousins
Essie Craig
Alma Crenshaw
Ruth Crowell
Edythe Davis
Eunice Dean
Wilmer Daniels
Acnes Dolvin
Mildred Dismukes
Mary Key Dolvin
Rebecca Dick
Elizabeth Dickson
Lois Drake
Dorothy Elvea
Rosalie Engel
Nell Esslinger
Caroline Farquhar
Anne Farmer
Mary Robe Finney
Virginia Fish
Marjorie Fish
Juliet Foster

MEMBERS

Minnie Lee Clarke
Ellen French
Sarah Fulton
Anne Gambrill
Sarah Gilbreath
Emily Guille
IvYLYN Girardeau
Anna Belle Glenn
Geraldine Goodroe
Julia Hagood
Helen Hall
Ruth Hall
LuLA Hammett
Mariwill Hanes
Margaret Hay
Laura Mae Hill
Mary Harris
Peggy Hedrick
Emma Herman

LiLBURNE IVEY

Alice Jones
Eugenia Johnston
Myrtle Johnston
Frances Jordan
Mary Anne Justice
Edith Kerns
Ruth Keiser
Charlotte Keesler
Elizabeth King
Jane Knight
Eloise Knight
Mary George Kincannon
Martha Laing
Margaret Leavitt
Marion Lindsay
Marjorie Lowe
Josephine Logan
Elizabeth Lovett
Augusta Laxton
Concord Leake
Lucy Macrae
Susan Malone
Janie Mann
Marguerite Martin
Annie Byrd Maxwell
Janet Maultsby
Frances Markley
Anna Meade
Susye Mims
Caroline Moore
Sara 'Olive Moore
loNE Moore
Ruth Moriarty
Alex Morrison
Susie Reid Morton
Margery Moore
Dolores Moracues

Lucia Murchison
Jean McAllister
Lois McClain
Elizabeth McClure
Margaret McColgan
Margaret McLaughlin
Myrtle McLaughlin
Virginia McLaughlin
Mary McLellan
Margaret McLean
Ellen McLean
Mary Stewart McLeod
Hallie Sue McMillan
Marian McPhail
Carrie Belle Norton
Laura Oliver
Lin A Parry
Ruth Pirkle
Lois Polhill
Valeria Posey
Virginia Pottle
Eugenia Peed
Janef Preston
Frances Reed
Eugenia Rennie
Rachel Rushton
Susan Russell
Gertrude Samuels
Margaret Sanders
Ruth Sanders
Alma Seagle
Merle Sellers
Louise Slack
Mary Joe Smith
Margaret Smith
Pearl Smith
Althea Stephens
Anna Belle Stith
Frajnces Stewart
Polly Stone
Elizabeth Stroud
Martha Taliaferro
Bess Telford
Annie Wilson Terry
Emily Thomas
Margaret Thorington
Joy Trump
Margaret Wade
Marjorie Warden
Ruth Warner
Catherine Waterfield
Helen Watkins
Irene Watts
Mary Williams
Ellen Wilson
Margaret Winslett
Rosalind Wurm

^'

SSBl=55SS!5a^

OFFICERS

First Semester Second Semester

Charlotte Bell President Ellen Wilson

Margaret Bell .... Vice-President .... Eugenia Johnson

Lucy McCrea Secretary Margaret Bell

Mary Barton Treasurer . . . Margaret McLaughlin

Louise Abney
Fambel Adams
Ethelyn Allen
Sarah Alston
Pauline Broadhurst
Iris Battle
Martha Ballard
Janie Barnes
Kathleen Belcher
Eva Boniske
Adeline Bostic
Lila Boswell
Dorothy Bowron
Augusta Brewer
Sarah Broadnax
Ada E. Brown
LuciLE Bailey
Nelle Buchanan
Cama Burgess
Eugenia Burum
Virginia Burum
Maybeth Carnes
Ruth Carpenter
Willie Chappel
Clara Cole
Thelma Cook
Alice Cooper
Mary Cooper
Isabel Cabr
RoMOLA Davis
Nelle Frances Daye
Elya Ellis
Ruth Evans
Helen Faw
Delia Gardner
Josephine Gardner
AniEE D. Glover
Eleanor Gordon
Mary Louise Green
Vivian Gregory
Anna R. Griffis
Doris Guill
Mary Olive Gunn
Isabel Hall
Pearl L. Hamner
Evelyn Hannah
Frances Harper
LuLiE Harris
Sarah Harrison
Quenelle Harrold
Anne Hart
Jessie Mae Hatcher
Julia Heaton
LOULIE Hendrick

HTTEr

1

iimn0Bynfati iFbattn

9 f>0rtPtij

MEMBERS

Mary S. Hewlett

Fredeva Ogletree

Sarah Hightower

Frances Oliver

EuiiiBETH Hoke

\irginia Ordway

Viola Hollis

Isabel Page

r Clifford Holtzclaw

Elizabeth Parham

Anne Houston

Mary Elizabeth Parks

Lucia Howard

Alethea Pinkston

Marion Hull

Mary L. Pope

Caroline Hutter

Margaret Ranson

Emily Hutter

Sarah Ransom

Cornelia Hutton

Clarice Read

Eleanor Hyde

Julia Reasoner

Julia Jameson

Dinah Roberts

Erskine Jarnigan

EuLA Russell

Margaret Jenkins

Rosalie Robinson

Clara Johns

Julie Sanders

Juanita Kelly

Ruth Scandrett

Emily Keyes

Dorothy Scott

Rhea King

Harriet Scott

Mary Knight

Catherine Smith

Ruth Laughon

LuciLE Smith

Anna Marie Landress

Olive Smith

Maggie Ree Legc

Clotile Spence

\lRGINIA LiLES

Lilla Mae Stanton

Parrish Little

Sarah Stansell

Roberta Love

Mary Stone

Elizabeth Lockhart

Anna M. Strickland

LuciLE Little

Catherine Shields

Fannie McCaa

Laura B. Stubbs

Marian McCamy

Bernita Taylor

'- Coma McCaskill

Sarah Till

Joyce McLellan

Lucy Timmerman

Margaret McConnell

Eunice Tomlinson

Hilda McConnell

Alice L. Travis

Martha McIntosh

Margaret Turner

Lois MacIntyre

Amy Twitty

Mary C. McKinney

Pauline Van Pelt

Margaret McLeod

Nell Veal

Mary Mack

Alice Virden

Gertrude Manly

Ruth Virden

Mary Matheson

Margaret Walker

Helen May

Julia Watkins

Mattie Moring Mitchell

Helen Wayt

Elizabeth Molloy

Georgia Weaver

Laura Stockton Molloy

E\a Wassum

Elizabeth Moss

Julia Whaley

Myrtle Murphy

Alice Whipple

\ lENNA AIae Murphy

Frances Whitfield

Elizabeth Marsh

Mary L. Wilhelm

Lillian Moore

Rosa Wilkins

Emily McCollum

Elizabeth Williams

Theresa Newton

Elsie Williams

Elizabeth Nickols

Lucy Wooten

Elizabeth Nisbet

Marcaretta Womelsdorf

Harriet Noyes

>^i

!i4Ji

'-aaiBS!EsE5f,-;:;i".s3i:;'3i;=':

iHnrmnagn^att Irbattug ^nmlg

OFFICERS
First Semester

Fannie McCaa President

Mary Knight Vice-President .

Anne Houston .... Secretary and Treasurer

Second Semester

. Julia Watkins

. Helen Wayt

Charlotte Newton

BtsaaUisalMriMMki

innauETTe

i^bating dounnl

Charlotte Bell, P. D. S Presideru

Margaret Bell, P. D. S Secretary

MNEMOSYNEAN REPRESENTATIVES

Fannie McCaa Sara Davis Anne Houston Marguerite Watkins

PROPYLEAN REPRESENTATIVES
Juliet Foster Ellen Wilson

..' ^: :.,-ji^ts

''f-r^ be. or not to be" and this was tbe question that perplexed the Propylean and Mnemosy-

I nean Debating Societies in September, 1919. Some people held_ that these respective

I organizations were dead and advanced the policy of "not to be." advocating a decent

funeral for the colors and a sigh of suppressed relief as the once "big things" of Agnes

Scott passed into oblivion. But there were others who advanced the argument that henceforth and

forever the debating societies should "be" as they have never been before.

To these optimistic Agnes Scotters came the victory and debates have flourished this year
even more than in the grand old days when the debate with Sophie Newcomb was the most
thrilling event in an Agnes Scott girl's life. Again the "Blue and Yellow" has entered in bitter
conflict against the -'Green and White" to capture the loving cup; and. better still, again our old
friend Sophie Newcomb has been challenged and met on the battlefield!

It all came about this way^to bring back their ancient vigor, the societies decided to have
a debate on the coal subject: "Resolved, That the government should own and operate the coal
mines." .And then something happened we found that the old capacity for debating was still
in the make-up of ,\gnes Scott students so we challenged Sophie Newcomb.

Then came the climax Sophie Newcomb chose the subject and Agnes Scott chose the side.
Week after week. Props and Mnemosyneans debated on the all important subject. "Resolved. That
the mandatory clause as expressed in the covenant of the League of Nations is for the benefit
of human progress." Then the Inter-Society Debate came off, thrilling, of course, but not half
as exciting as the final Newcomb fray. Instead of asking. "Who got the cup?" ( Prop, or
Mnemosynean > , everybody was gasping wildly, "Who won? Agnes Scott or Sophie Newcomb?
Weren't we glad we had played up to the game and flung our colors as far south as New Orleans.
And our team it was the best ever Nelle, Jule. and Elizabeth. Weren't we proud of them!
So the debating societies decided "to be" and through them Agnes Scott has "been" the grand
old college that we love best of all!

r "^"' -""^'^"T* r"i "tf ^ IT*

Q/^iiaioAmrTB

1. w. z.

OFFICERS

Janef Preston President

Rhea King Secretary

MEMBERS

Frances Markley Margaret Bland

Alice Cooper Emily Keyes

Elizabeth Wilson Althea Stephens

Laura Stockton Molloy

3aixa

Sophomore Members

Nelle Buchanan
Laura Oliver
Ethel Ware

Elizabeth Wilson

Freshman Members

Helen Faw

Polly Stone

Marjorie Warden

JiOMBTTB

Ifirt Irigabr

Chief

Margaret Bell

Captains

Margaret Watkins Jean McAllister

Chiefs of Bucket Brigade

Fannie McCaa Juanita Kelly Charlotte Keesler

Lieutenants
Ellen Wilson Louise Fluker Sarah Tell Alex Morrison

Ruth Pirkle ' Marjorie Warden

, 3m irtUa. ! !

"FTlWAS just before midnight and all through the house, not a creature was
I stirring ," when suddenly the fire gong woke up. Now when it wakes up,
"^ there is no more sleep for anybody. "Clang, clang, clang!" it calls im-
periously, and all who hear must leave their lovely dreams and their warm beds to
grope around in the top bureau drawer for a flashlight. All except the very foolish
virgins are hugging cold, wet towels, when the lieutenant comes down the wing to
see that every bed is empty.

In the dancing flashlight and weird darkness, sleepy lines of gay, vari-colored
kimonas. bathrobes and blankets, surmounted by pigtails and curlers, form in the
halls. Third floor stumbles drowsily down the stairs first, while the bucket brigade
rattle their little red buckets on their way to the fire.

When the occupants of the entire dormitory are gathered in the lobby, the lights
come on. The fire captain then, in the superiority of her fore-knowledge, stands
wide-awake and fully clothed on the stairs to hurry through the roll-call, while she
smiles at the blinking discomfort of the erstwhile sawers of wood.

But since the Midnight Revue in Rebekah Scott, every one admits that fire
drills do serve a useful purpose.

That was the time when without resenting the disturbance, the dormitory
tumbled down into the lobby, where the fire captain, burdened with hose and a tin
hat, announced the celebrities of the evening. Fatty Arbuckle. Norma Talmadge,
"Head Over Heels," Annette Kellerman, Charlie Chaplin, Nazimova, April Showers,
Pavlowa, and "the only man at A. S. C. who really wanted to attend the Midnight
Revue," all showed themselves in turn, and nothing but dawn broke up the revelry.

In that night the practice of having fire drills justified itself for evermore.

^ir;T^wapv'^^'-^^'"^'^^^^''^'^^-: -""">

mCAIEfTTB

^nutlj (grnrgta Qllub

Louise Abney
Fannibel Adams
Clar.\ Mae Allen
Imogene Allen
Ruth Almond
Mary Bailey
Kathleen Belcher
Myrtle Blackmon
Eva Bashinska
Ruth Broach
Pauline Broadhurst
Elizabeth Brown
Sar.\h Bryan
Eugene Burum
Virginia Burum
Gena Callaway
Minnie Clark
Thelma Cook
Mildred Dismukes
Christine Evans
Ruth Evans
Ivylyn Girardeau
Doris Guill
Mary Olive Gunn
Isabel Hall

Mariwil Haynes
Quenelle Harrold
Jessie Mae Hatcher
Julia Heaton
Sarah Herman
Mary S. Hewlett
Sara Hightower
Clifford Holtzclaw
Cornelia Hutton
JuANiTA Kelly
Rhea King
Carolyn Langford
Maggie Ree Legg
Marjory Lowe
Martha McIntosh
Mary Mack
Mary Matheson
Helen May
Alexandra Morrison
Elizabeth Moss
Myrtle Murphy
Vienna Mae Murphy
Charlotte Newton
Elizabeth Nichols

Virginia Pottle
Eugenia Pou
Dinah Roberts
Gertrude Samuels
Julia Saunders
Ruth Scandrett
Olive Smith
Pearl Smith
Bernita Taylor
Lucy Timmerman
Eunice Tomlinson
Margaret Turner
Amy Twitty
Nell Veal
Cl.\ra Waldrop
Louise Walker
Julia Whaley
Alice Whipple
Fr^ances Whitfield
Elsie Williams
Elizabeth Williams
Faustelle Williams
Margaretta Womelsdorf
Lucy Wooten

\ =--.:siacEi-..

.^^xs'iSMitiaixacX'-i

5^nrtl| (^porgta (Elub

Joyce Alexander
Ethelyn xAllen
Sarah Alston
Frances Arant
Nelle Aycock
Martha Ballard
Annie Sle Banks
Ethel Bittick
Lela Boswell
Freida Brenner
Sarah Belle Broadnax
Louise Brown
Thelma Brown
Cama Burgess
Elise Calmes
LuLA Groves Campbell
Maybeth Carnes
Minnie Carter
Willie Chappell
Helen Christie
Ethel Cockrell
Evelyn Cohen
Clara Cole
Lois Compton
Alice Cooper
Marguerite Cousins
Essie Craig
Sue Cureton
DiNA Danziger
Edythe Davis
RoMOLA Davis
Sarah Davis
Catherine Dennincton
Eileen Dodd
Acnes Dolvin

Mary Dolvin

ROWENA DoRN

AcHSAH Edwards
Dorothy Elyea
Elizabeth Enloe
Helen Faw
Mary Robb Finney
Elizabeth Flake
Mary Floding
Elizabeth Floding
Louise Fluker
Maud Foster
Sarah Fulton
Estelle Gardner
Otto Gilbert
AiMEE D. Glover
Mary Goodrich
Dorothy Haire
Helen Hall
Jenny Alice Hall
Sarah Ham
Pearl Lowe Hamner
Evelyn Hannah
LuLiE Harris
Anne Hart
Anna Harwell
Frances Harwell
Catherine Haugh
Dorothy Havis
Helen Hill
Viola Hollis
Ruby Hudson
Marion Hull
Erskine Jarnacin
Anna Jennings

Louise Johnson
Mary Anne Justice
Emily Keyes
Sarah Kinman
Lillian Kirby
Mary Knight
Hazel Lamar
Mary Lane
Christine Lawrence
Elizabeth Eicon
Anne Little
Elizabeth Lockhart
Josephine Logan
Elizabeth Lovett
Emily McCallum
Marion McCamy
Lois McClain
Hilda McConnell
Mary McCurdy
Sarah McCurdy
Lois MacIntyre
Mary McLellan
Rachel Maddox
Mary Malone
Gertrude Manly
Elizabeth Marsh
Fan Esther Meakin

Theressa Newton
Harriet Noyes
Fredeva Ocletree
Frances Oliver
Elizabeth Parham
Margaret Parker
Lina Parry
Edith Patterson
Eugenia Peed
Alethea Pinkston
Ruth Pirkle
Lois Polhill
Mary L. Pope
Emma Proctor
Margaret Ransom
Clarisse Read
Elizabeth Reed
Roxie Reid
WiLDA Richardson
Rosalie Robinson
Edith Ruff
Blanche Ryan
Mildred Ryan
Martha Sasnett
Dorothy Scott
Harriet Scott
Catherine Shields

Mattie Morinc MitcheliMarcaret Shive

Caroline Moody
Annie Ruth Moore
Lillian Moore
^L^RGERY Moore
Sara 0. Moore
Catherine Nash
Katherine Neal

Louise Slack
\L4ry Joe Smith
Clotile Spence
Lilla ^L4E Stanton
Polly Stone
Anne Strickland
Laurie Belle Stubbs

lUKOXlHTTE

Alabama (ttlub

Caroline Agee
Dorothy Allen
Elizabeth Allen
Anna Bedinger
Dorothy Bowron
Helen Burkhalter
Mary Burnett
Jessie Dean Cooper
Alma Crenshaw
WiLMER Daniel
Nelle Frances Daye
Rosalie Encel
Nell Esslinger
Geraldine Goodroe
Annie Ruth Griffis
LouLiE Hendrick
Laura Mae Hill

LiLBURNE IVEY

Myrtle Johnson
Ruth Keiser
Jane Knight
Fanny McCaa
Harriet McMillan

Myrtle McLaughlin
Marguerite Martin
Janet Maultsby
Anna Meade
SusYE Mims
Caroline Moore
Dolores Moragues
Susie Reid Morton
Carrie Belle Norton
Laura Oliver
Virginia Ordway
Sarah Ransom
Leila Rivenbark
Rachel Rushton
Margaret Smith
Dorothy Speake
Anabel Stith
Martha Taliaferro
Annie Wilson Terry
Emily Thomas
Margaret Thorington
Esther Joy Trump
Margaret Winslett

Utrgtiita OIlub

Carrie Allison
Janie Barnes
Clara Bright
Nelle Buchanan
Virginia Crank
Ellen French
Eleanor Gordon
Vivian Gregory
Helen Guy
Lucie Harvard

Ellen Wilson

Caroline Hutter -
Emily Hutter
Edith Kerns
Martha Laing
Ruth Laughon
Margaret McColgan
Margaret McLaughlin
Virginia McLaughlin
Janef Preston
Margaret Wade

.J0rTB

jlisBiBBtp^i ffllub

Delia Gardner
Josephine Gardner
Mary Louise Green
Ruth Hall
Charlotte Keesler
Mary Parrish Little
Ellen McLean
Margaret McLean

Margaret Young

Susan Ma lone
Jane Mann
Eugenia Rennie
Elizabeth Stroud
Sarah Till
Alice Virden
Ruth Virden
Georgia Weaver

Nnrtl) Olaroltna (Elub

Elizbeth Armstrong
Jeanette Archer
Del Bernhardt
Margaret Bland
Adeline Bostic
Gladys Brown
Edythe Clark
Louise Crosland
Ruth Crowell
Julia Hagood

Elizabeth Hoke
Margaret Jenkins
Concord Leak
Roberta Love
Jean McAllister
Coma McCaskill
Margaret McConnell
Elizabeth McClure
Marion McPhail
Alma S eagle

TTi

i>autl| darfllma Club

Ruth Carpenter
Eunice Dean
Rebecca Dick
Anne Farmer
Juliet Foster
Margaret Foster
Anne Gambrill
Anna Belle Glenn

LuLA Hammett
Virginia Liles
Lucia Murchison
Valeria Posey
Helen Watkins
Mary Wharton
Rosa Wilkins
Eva Wassum

'.,T5-J!K<iS*3!*

IC^nturkg

Charlotte Bell
Eleanor Carpenter
Lois Drake
Mary Harris

Margaret MacLeod
Lucy Macrae
Mary Stone
Bess Telford

Marjorie Warden

mmummamH'.

j XIErTTB [

SrmtfBBw (llUtb

LuciLE Bailey
Mary Barton
Helen Barton
Ruth Bowden
Cecile Bowden
Ada Elizabeth Brown
Ruth Brown
Isabel Carr
Sara Gilbreath
Emily Guille
Elizabeth Dickson
S.'Urah Hansell
Sarah Harrison
Peggy Hedrick
Anne Houston
Julia Jameson

Mary George Kincannon
Anna Marie Landress
Margaret Leavitt
Annie Byrd Maxwell
Elizabeth Molloy
Laura Stockton Molloy
Lois Moriarty
Ruth Moriarty
Mary Catherine McKinney
Isabel Page
Mary Parks
Lillian Patton
eula russel
Frances Stewart
LuciLE Smith
Catherine Waterfield

{Ir

JloriJia Ollub

Iris Battle
Marion Cawthorn
Elia Ellis
Marjorie Fish
Virginia Fish
Alice Jones

Eloise Knight
Marian Lindsay
Mary Stewart McLeod
Julia Reasoner
Martha Stansfield
Alethea Stephens

iHTTEr

mil JrllnuiH

Margaret Bell
Mary White Caldwell
Cora Connett
Harriet Costin
Caroline Farquhar
Frances Harper
Margaret Hay
Eleanor Hyde
Frances Jordan
Edith Kerns
Elizabeth King
Joyce McLellan

Mary Wray

Frances Charlotte Markley

Elizabeth .\isbet

Mary Frances Reed

Susan Russell

Margaret Sanders

Ruth Sanders

Catherine Smith

Pauline Van Pelt

Ruth Warner

Julia Watkins

Irene Watts

Mary Wiluams

ia^ ^tu^pttta

Joyce Alexander
Sarah Alston
Martha Louise Baker
Ethel Rebekah Bittick
Margaret Brenner
Louise Katherine Brow
Thelma Brown
Elise Calmes
Minnie Merle Carter
Helen Christie
Ethel Cockrell
Lois Compton
Marguerite Cousins
Dena Danziger
Edythe Davis
Catherine Dennington
Lucile Eileen Dodd
rowena dorn
Frances Downing
AcHSAH Edwards
Elizabeth Enloe
Lena Feldman
Mary Robb Finney
Sarah Fulton

EsTELLE Gardner
Otto Gilbert
Mary Goodrich
Helen Marie Guy
Dorothy Haire
nHelen Hale
Jennye Hall
Sarah Mildred Ham
Anna Harwell
Frances Harwell
Catherine Haugh
Dorothy Harris
Helen Hill
Ruby Mae Hudson
Anna Jennings
Louise Johnson
Sarah Kinman
Lydia Kimbrouch
Lillian Kirby
Hazel Lamar
Carolyn Langford
Christine Lawrence
Elizabeth Eicon
Anne Lucile Little
Elizabeth Lockhart

Josephine Logan
Elizabeth Lovett
Edith McCallie
Emily McCallum
Julia McCullouch
Sarah McCurdy
Mary McCurdy
Rachel Maddox
Elizabeth Marsh
Mary Malone
Fan Esther Meakin
Annie E. Miller
Caroline Moody
Anne Ruth Moore
Margery Moore
Lillian Virginia Moore
Sara Olive Moore
Catherine Nash
Katherine Neal
Margaret Parker
Eddith Patterson
^L^RY Lucia Pope
Elizabeth Reid
RoxiE Reid
Wilda Richardson

Edith YIvvf
Blanche Marie Ryan
Mildred Ryan
Martha Sasnett
Mildred Shelton
Catherine Shields
Margaret Shive
Frances Stokes
Laurie Belle Stubbs
Christine Sinclair
Annie Flora Sherman
Margaret Terry
Nancy King Tripp
Clara Waldrop
Ethel Ware
LiLLA Ermine Watkins
Jessie Watts
Frances White
Helen Williamson
Elizabeth Wilson
Sarah Frances Winn
Pearl Woodward
Rosalind Wurm
Bessie Zaban

gaagqiw MM ri w i iM < r , w iaiifl**MBifeai<syjeggiiaegyfr"H'g^^

.liaUETTEr

l|f SrtalH nf A iaij f uptl

Fl\ E-THIRT\ on a freezing morning! The alarm clock peals out, and we
(editorially) carefully extricate our nose from the underside of the pillow into
the icy air, and open one eye. It's still dark outside, so suffering under the
flelusion that there's yet time for one more snooze, we return our members, stiff
with cold (also with gym. I , to their place. Not so! There gradually dawns upon
our sub-conscious mind the unspeakable thought of that eight-o'clock class. Need-
less to say, we arise.

Alighting at the entrance to Agnes Scott at seven-thirty, the first sound that
greets our ears is the musical (?) breakfast bell. Heavens! We had breakfast so
long ago now that we've forgotten it, and are about ready for our next meal. Ella,
who is just sweeping out the hall, asks us if we slept in the telephone room last night
to be sure to be on time, and we wish we had.

Let's pass lightly over that eight o'clock class. Gaining a place in the corner,
we answer "present" to our name, then subside quietly into a light slumber,
awakened only by an insistent question beating at the door of our dormant brain.
As if we knew when Alfred signed the Magna Charter, or what effects the Anglo-
Saxon invasion had on Spencer's "Morte D'Arthur."

At chapel, we are accosted by the slandering news that the day pupils are
surprisingly lacking in their budget. The other hours drag by on leaden wings
(that's mixed metaphor, but our fellow day pupils know what we mean). From
below the Physics lecture room, there float up fragrant aromas of Campbell's soup.
Oh! shades of a long-ago repast! Will the hour never cease?

One-thirty comes. Everybody goes to the dining-room except us. We wander
to the rest room in the library basement. There we sit a while, gingerly reposing
on the front of the chairs, not taking too much liberty with them for fear of im-
mediate collapse. We keep one eye glued to the floor, for there's no telling what
minute a rat will walk out right before our eyes.

Soon we repair to the tea room, where, no sooner has a delicious meal been
ordered, than it's time for lab. We snatch a sandwich and run. That's our motto
run! "Work for the night is coming" has no appeal to us; we have horrible night-
mares of our next day's rush. But yet "we'll get there just the same," some of
these days.

C(l 1 E^ 1""' '"

:i '.vi.s?r-Cr'Wi(!':S;*i-;vtf -1-

Ikrkfrtara

FULL MEMBERS

ASSOCIATE MEMBERS

Marguerite Cousins

Elizabeth Brown

Rebecca Dick

Nell Buchanan

Sarah Fulton

Cama Burgess

Mary Olive Gunn

Marion Cawthorn

Anne Hart

Ruth Crowell

Julia Hacood

Sarah Davis

Helen Hall

Virginia Fish

Mary Knight

Frances Harwell

Marian McCamy

Eleanor Hyde

Lois MacIntyre

Charlotte Keesler

Frances Markley

Rhea King

Fannie McCaa

Hazel Lamar

Virginia McLaughlin

Anna Byrd Maxwell

Margaret McLaughlin Mary McLellan |

Elizabeth Nesbit

Margery Moore

Rachel Rushton

Harriet Noyes

Annabel Stith

Laura Oliver

Sarah Till

Christine Sinclair

Lucile Smith

FACULTY BOARD

Miss Goo

ch Coach

Miss McKinney

Miss Wilburn

Miss Laney

Mr. Stukes

Dr. Armistead

Mr. Cunningham

Mr. Johnson ]

Miss Phillips

i c"

ji4^-f)i<fftL<iKt(Mmi)UtatKry>a

OIl|? Bxx 111)0 Pass Ulitlr tl|? IC^nttlB Intl

By Stuart Walker

Marian McCamy Queen

Llewllyn Wilburn Dreadful Headsman

Rachel Rushton The Boy

:>^iL'na\iBrTB

lee rlub

FIRST SOPRANOS

Gladys Brown

LuLiE Harris

Charlotte Keesler

Alice Whipple
Erskine Jarnagan

SECOND SOPRANOS

Lucile Smith
RoMOLA Davis

CLAR.A WaLDRON

Eloise Knight

Pauline Van Pelt

Irene Watts

FIRST ALTOS

Nell Esslinger
Elizabeth Lockhart
Virginia Crank
Ruth Almond
Christine Sinclair
Ruth Wakner

SECOND ALTOS

Margaret McLaughlin

Gertrude Manly

Caroline Moody

Margaret Sanders

Ruth Pirkle

I ' l ! " l i i ' ii rt ii ' l iir ^i Ti w r a lwi ili ^Mff^ iii 'Hif f^flfftti **

(xti}tBtrn

Director

Pianist

\ VIOLIN

MANDOLIN

i LuciLE Smith

Syra Davis

1 Crip Slack

Harriett Noyes

* Elizabeth Strand

Nelle Aycock

J Anna Harwell

Maude Foster

1

f. GUITAR

UKULELE

1 Ruth Crowell

Janie Mann

Julia Heaton

Elizabeth Nisbet

Frances Whitfield

Lucy Wooten

Eleanor Hyde

Rebecca Dick

Edythe Clarke

Julia Jameson

Lucy Howard

Nell Buchanan
Virginia Pottle

ijbsswf^'^-^-'---'"^ '^C^^jSfr^''ta3ea

^^r^ita^^s

1.

Oh, here comes our Miss Wilburn
Oh. how in the world do you know
You can tell her by her winning smile
That she has on all the while

Hah! Hah!
That she has on all the while.

II.

Miss Hopkins, Miss Hopkins, we greet you with our song
Whose echoes resounding the campus all along
We'll tell you that Agnes Scott is singing now to you
With hearts and voices ringing, ever true.

III.

Neat ha-ha, sweet ha-ha
Laughing and fair
She is a daisy the girls all declare
She's a high-stepping lassie as well

Here comes one

Say! don't she look swell?

IV.

By the light of the moon, by the light of the moon.
By the light, by the light, by the light of the moon
If you want to be a Senior just come along with me
By the light, by the light of the moon.

V.

Whoop her up, whoop her up, whoop her up some more

Agnes Scott is the spot that I do adore

She's such a peach she's won our hearts

She surely plays the game.

She is not rough, she is not tough.

But she gets there just the same.

VI.

Oh. me! Oh, my! We'll get there by and by
If anybody loves Miss Agnes
It's I, I, I: I, I.

^vs'i^jjv^^stsmiamn^fm

i gJlI i Mm BMW

y umi i iiia w u J t

(^amma au Alpl^a

Miss Lucile Alexander
Dr. J. D. M. Armistead
Mrs. C. W. Dieckmann
Mr. p. H. Graham

FACULTY MEMBERS

Miss Cleo Hearon
Mr. Robt. Holt
Miss Janet Newton

ALUMNAE MEMBERS

Miss Augusta Skeen
Miss Frances Sledd
Miss Lillian Smith
Miss Anna Young

Ida Lee Hill
CLASS OF 1908

Jeannette Brown
Maude Barker

Lizzabel Saxon
Elva 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 MacGaughev

EjMma Pope Moss

CLASS OF 1914
Annie Jenkins

Louise McNulty ,

Kathleen Kennedy
Essie Roberts

CLASS OF 1915
Marion Black

Gertrude Briesenick

Mary H. Schneider
Mary West

Sarah Boals

CLASS OF 1916
Laura Cooper

Elizabeth Blirke

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

Elizabeth Denman

CLASS OF 1919
Dorothy Thigpen
Margaret Watts

Louise Marshburn
Frances Sledd

Margaret Leech

CLASS OF 1920
Laura S. Molloy

Elizabeth Lovett
Mary Burnett

.Jr-.v\'C^A-,^yit*ji<aNftiia i i >j il w t a M Mi

HouBr

ALUMNAE MEMBERS

CLASS

OF 1916

Jeanneite Victor

Eloise Gay

Ora Glexx

Alice Weatherly

Martha Ross

Evelyn Goode

Maryellejv Harvey

Ray Harvison

Louise Wilson

Nell Frye

CLASS

OF 1917

GjERTRlTD AmUXDSEN

Regina Pinkston

India Hunt

Janet Newton

Spott Payne

A. S. Donaldson

Laurie Caldwell

Georciana White

Louise Ware

Ruth Nisbet

1

Anne Kyle

V. Y

White

CLASS

OF 1918

^LaRCARET LEYElTiN

Ruth Anderson

Samille Lowe

Katherine Seay

R. L. EsTEs

Olive Hardwick

?

Emma Jones

Lois Eve

"1

Hallie Alexander
CLASS OF 1919

Lucy Durr

Frances Glasgow

Mary Brock >Lallard
Margaret Rowe

Dorothy Thigpen
Goldie Ham

Claire Elliot
"Pete" Hutcheson
Julia Lake Skinner
Llewellyn Wilburn
Elizabeth Watkins
Lulu Smith

STUDEXT MEMBERS

Beff Allen

Margaret Bland

Lois MacIntyre
Julia Hacood

Louise Slack

Laura Stockton Molloy'
Virginia McLaughlin
Marian McCamy
Anne Houston
Mary Burnett

Dr. McCain

FACULTY MEMBERS

Dr. Sweet

Dr. White

.IL^ I J. Jh

Alma Mntn

W hen far from the reach of thy sheltering arms

The band of thy daughters shall roam.

Still their hearts shall enshrine thee.

Thou croivn 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, uhose name we 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 of our past.

Our regret is that those years can ne'er return more,

And ive sigh that such joys could not last.

Wherever they are

Thy daughters afar

Shall bow at the sound of thy name

And with reverence give thanks

For the standard that's thine.

And the noble ideal that's thy aim.

And when others beside us thy portals shall throng

Think of us who have gone on before

And the lessons 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.

3unny,5u^ny SoutKhnd ,}iave you any money?
ye^ fl^ne;, ye; f\^nej , j7lenty for you kney.

HTTE'

(in 111? (Eautpua

PERHAPS or I should say, of course you remember a certain clay last October
when we had a half-holiday. Now, half holidays are rare and great events at
Agnes Scott, but this was a rarer and greater event than even half-holidays most
generally are, for that was the launching of our great Endowment Campaign for
600,000. All the alumnae near and far were invited back, men came out from
Atlanta to speak, there was a crowded meeting in the chapel, and a bunch on the
campus afterward, and speeches, talking, and general excitement. But that was just
the beginning; how many things happened after that! The campaign was carried
through on the campus first, for we ourselves had to set the example for the others
and, indeed, we did do it. Miss Young was the faculty chairman of the Student Cam-
paign, and Louise Slack was chairman of the Student Committee, composed of five
members. Julia Hagood, Rachel Rushton. Frances Charlotte Markley, Laura Oliver,
and Charlotte Keesler. Their publicity work was quick and efficient the Agonistic
featured endowment every other line and the walls were plastered with posters of
every size and kind, posters artistically appealing but, at the same time, expressing
truths that made us stop and think, then one night a grand rallv came off. First of
all. there was a review of the work which the different classes had alreadv done for

the benefit of the Endowment Fund, because even before our campaign, the letters,
"B. E. F.," had been a by-word of good standing and anything sold or presented
"B. E. F." had had added interest and patronage. In behalf of Senior Class, Lois
Maclntyre told of the mum parties, the doughnuts, the plays, and the circuses that
had helped increase the Senior sum toward the Endowment. Then Frances Charlotte
Markley told how the Juniors had given a magazine show and a "Follies" chorus to
increase their share. And, last, Laura Oliver told, for the Sophomores, of the funds
from their mock wedding and of the S500 gift given in name of their class. After
that, Elizabeth Nisbet got up and announced that SL5 had been collected by Sopho-
mores from guileless Freshmen as payment for their chapel seats; so, she, in behalf
of Sophomore Class, presented the aforesaid sum to the Freshmen as a nest egg for
their endowment efforts. After the different classes had had their "says." the meet-
ing was turned over to Charlotte Keesler. the sing leader, and she introduced to us
her newly-organized orchestra, which was making its debut for the occasion. Nothing
else was needed to put "pep" into the meeting. But it was later that we really learned
about the practical side of the campaign, for one morning in chapel Dr. McCain
explained to us how our individual payments were to be made and then impressed us
with the great responsibility that lay before us in setting the pace for the whole cam-
paign. This prepared us for the meeting the last night where, after "the sing" and
the music. Miss Anna Young told us quietlv that we were going to be given the
privilege of contributing to the Endowment Campaign and of showing our love for
Agnes Scott. And we all felt that it was, indeed, a great privilege. When the girls
on the pledge committee came around, we felt that, if we were multi-millionaires, we
could not give a pledge as large as our love for our Alma Mater. But we all tried to
give one as large as our pocketbooks. It was tantalizing to have to go on to bed
that night without knowing how far "over the top" we had gone of course, we knew
we had gone "over the top" for Agnes Scott never fails to do that. But the next
morning, during the chapel hour, Mr. Tart had his adding machine on the platform
and we all sat in agonized silence watching Miss Young, Mr. Tart, and Dr. McCain
add up the figures. We had set a goal for $15,000 but we pledged, faculty and
students together, 820,000. When that announcement was made, the noise of
applause was so great and so long that it was with great difficulty that Dr. Gaines
secured quiet enough to tell us that the rest of the day would be a holiday. But
finally, the magic word was pronounced and we, led by our "sing leader," stampeded
joyously out of the chapel and stormed the streets of Decatur in a long, seemingly
endless line, singing, and shouting, and yelling. It was drizzling rain, but what did
we care? We had done our part, or a part of our part for Agnes Scott, and we were
happy in spite of clouds or rain or weather.

Tune: The Stars and Stripes

In the cities and toivns jar and wide.
In the states that ive all love the best.

We are launching endowment campaign
' To make our college the finest and best.

S So come join our glad company,

:' College students, let's all pull together.

We'll give what we can jar A. S. C,
I And pledge our loyalty and love for thee forever.

I Tune : Glory, Glory to ole Georcl\

(i We'll have recitation buildings

3 And a new gymnasium, too;

!j A fence without wood pailings,

T And a nmlk all shiny new:

t A hardwood floor for dancing.

[j Oh, a thousand things we'll do

I When B. E. F. comes true.

\ Glory, glory,

J Glory, glory,

^ Glory, glory,

\ When B. E. F. comes true.

I

I Tune: "Whooper Up"

^ Give a lot,

i Give a lot,

'. For greater Agnes Scott,

I For Agnes needs,

I So trim the weeds,

i And touch up every spot.

I She's such a peach

'i She's won our hearts,

I She sure deserves the fund,

I So give a lot,

} Give a lot

[ For GREATER AGNES SCOTT.

i Tune: "By the Light of the Moon"

i! Another campaign,

i Another campaign,

1; Agnes Scott's got to set

The pace once again.

We'll do it or bust.

Give over enough.

Spread our fame

In another campaign.

^imiimmi^smm

Wii tljr (Eampua

OF course, the campaign off the campus did not affect our college life very much
except for the girls in the Orchestra and Glee Club, who went to Atlanta and
Decatur meetings to sing and plav in order to give other people an idea of
how we felt. But whatever affects Agnes Scott affects her daughters wherever
they are and, so, we watched with interest the progress of the campaign in Atlanta,
in Georgia, and in all the states through which it was progressing. All the cities
and counties throughout Georgia were organized and many gifts came from outside
states. All of the classes from that of 1893 to that of 1919 gave a pledge and the
total gift of the Alumnae was $75,351.11. Mr. Orr, who is chairman of our board
of trustees, headed the campaign in Atlanta and wa,s responsible for the whole
campaign. He and the other members of the Board of Trustees pledged themselves
to take the responsibility of raising, personally, the deficit at end of campaign.
Though Mr. Orr's visits to the college have been seldom and his talks with the girls
infrequent, yet he has won for himself a place in the heart of every Agnes Scott girl
on account of his never-lagging interest and his untiring efforts in behalf of the
Endowment Campaign. As a slight appreciation of his great services to Agnes Scott,
the student body presented him with a loving cup at the meeting of the Atlanta mer-
chants, which closed the Atlanta campaign. The workers for the Alumnae who
devoted practically all of their time to the work were Miss Mary Wallace Kirk,
president of the Alumnae Association, and Miss Mary Spottswood Payne, general
secretary. And none have worked more loyally and faithfully than the facultv and
officers of our college. I scarcely need to mention Dr. McCain, because everyone at
Agnes Scott knows what a wonderful amount of work and patience he has spent in
the campaign.

. SB3a=assHSaWRSisa^?I3ir-5^?r^

EfTTE

j0rTB

Beff Allen, '20 LaFayette, Ala.

Dorothy Allen, '21 Lafayette, Ala.

Mary Burnett, '20 Montgomery, Ala.

Isabel Carr, '21 Harriman, Tenn.

Anne Houston, '20 Lewisburg, Tenn.

Caroline Farquhar, '22 Easton, Pa.

Juliet Foster, '20 Anderson, S. C.

Alice Jones, '21 Jacksonville. Fla.

Margaret Hedrick, '21 Bristol, Tenn.

Laura Stockton Molloy, '20 Columbia, Tenn.

Laura Oliver, '22 Montgomery, Ala.

Rachel Rushton, '21 Montgomery, Ala.

Martha Laing. '21 Lewisburg, W. Va.

Ruth Keiser, '21 Birmingham, Ala.

lU.-.

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SipaDeltaPhi

Margaret Bland, '20 Charlotte, N. C.

LuLA Groves Campbell, '22 Atlanta, Ga.

Ruth Crowell, '20 Charlotte, N. C.

Aimee D. Glover, '21 Marietta, Ga.

Julia Hacood, '20 Charlotte, N. C.

LuLiE Harris, '20 College Park, Ga.

Anne Hart, '21 Atlanta, Ga.

Rhea King, '22 Atlanta, Ga.

Gertrude Manley, '20 Dalton, Ga.

Elizabeth Moss, '20 Athens, Ga.

Helen Wayt. '21 Atlanta, Ga.

Mary Spottswood Payne. '17 Lynchburg, Va.

I irK rnmiiiif-MirjafriTnriarrriiT'-

KSSl^taS'Ti^alSAi^

BULL DOG

Clifford Holtzclaw, '20 Perry, Ga.

Lois MacIntyre, '20 Atlanta, Ga.

Marian McCamy, '20 Dalton, Ga.

Elizabeth Reid, '20 Atlanta, Ga.

Louise Slack, '20 LaGrange, Ga.

Jean McAllister, '21 Greensboro, N. G.

Gharlotte Keesler, '22 Greenwood, Miss.

Mary Knight, '22 Atlanta, Ga.

Susan Malone, '22 Greenwood, Miss.

Elizabeth Nisbet, '22 Kansas Gity, Mo.

RoxiE Reid, '22 Atlanta. Ca.

Almeda Hutcheson Decatur, Ga.

e/^ILTiOMET

m mmuivm ]

I^ i!

Pan-il|ellMtir (CnunttI

Elizabeth Moss, 2 a "t"
Mary Burnett, [ [ .
Lois MacIntyre,

President
Secretary

5>=**jii>a*S ,i':US*attJSiisSiS!iMn

c/^imOMBTTE

ilje m)jij)er is past*.
__^

(Ealpitbar

SEPTEMBER

September 12 "Here they come, three by three." Aggie's advance guard, Mary B.,
Margaret and Jule arrive.

September 17 Aggie is a real "old woman who lived in the shoe." What will
she do with all the Freshman pouring?

September 18 Ah! Now we know! Miss McKinney disposes of them "classi-
cally," and Miss Sturgess' cottage receives the overflow dormitorily.

September 19 Classes and tears begin. Walks and ice cream cones in Big Dec.
recommended as an antidote for homesick blues.

September 20 Y. W. C. A. and Student Government open their arms to the new
girls, and show how social even the most august of organizations can be. Grad-
uation dresses favorite variety of costume. Only sighs are for a "perfectly
marvelous orchestra wasted."

September 22 The tea room is a real, live, honest-to-goodness fact, and the Alumnae
knows the way to a girl's heart I ? ) and pocketbook.

September 2.5 Freshmen can not decide which is most becoming to their com-
plexion and costumes blue and gold streamers, or write and green. Decisions
made amidst rhythmic and regular applause.

September 25 October 2 Sophomore week! ! ! ! Period of dumb (?) misery
for Freshmen, and unspeakable (?) joy for Sophomores.

September 27 Athletics come to life, and warm their bones at a big bonfire.

I c/^ILJiCfUm'TC

I

^h _0,ot' 50 pou5ir,5, pulled
out' "KjJei^t^ "inou$aj:)(7.

OCTOBER

October 5 Miss B. E. Fund makes her debut. Agnes Scott is a charming hostess.
October 7 Miss Hopkins promises definitely that we may have a publication

room. Now all we need is a printing press!
October 12 Aggie counts her allowance to see how many pennies she can spare for

a "Greater Agnes Scott," then counts father's income to see how many he

can spare.
October 13 There! We knew we would do it! S21,000, and growing still!

Holiday and snake dance celebrate the grand occasion.
October 14 Calm after the storm.
October 16 Black Cat, Black Cat, have you any pet. Yes sir, yes sir. Class of '22,

you bet.
October 18 New Hoasc members announced. Freshmen try to decide whether to

run for president of Student Government, or Y. W. in 1923.
October 19 Gym classes definitely discover that "all is not aesthet that dances."
October 21 Miss Longshore learns how to "shoo," and practices her new accom-
plishment. (Note: Repeat this at accurate intervals from now until May 26th,

to get accurate results. I
October 2.5 Hoasc shows what's what at A. S. C. Stunt night great success.
October 27 Blackfriar tryouts. Candidates have great talent, and greater lung

power.
October 31 Grim and ghostly figures flutter around fourth floor Inman. If the

Seniors ever were dead, they have come to life with rattling bones.

irk , j[)grk , c5'll })3v a larK,
lurjcljeoti ,

NOVEMBER

November 1 Fire brigade selected. Surely such a formidable brigade would scare

off" any poor fire!
November 3 Decatur shows her appreciation of Agnes Scott and the matrimonial

prospects contained therein, by oversubscribing its quota B. E. F.
November 6 Mother Goose, under the auspices of the Sophomore class, entertains

the Freshmen.
November 8 Mr. Skeyhill tells us how to be a hero, and how to be a poet.
November 10 Dr. Noble begins her lectures. She tells us how low not to wear

our dresses, and recommends somersaults as a method of reducing.
November 11 Aggie turns somersaults before she goes to bed.
November 14 Vocational Bureau makes survey of Agnes Scott. One-fourth of old

girls have no future!
November 17 Agnes Scott furnishes music for the Georgia Products dinner. Girls

show their approval of the products by consuming them every one.
November 22 Eclipse gives temporary paralysis of the optic nerve to about half

of the student body.
November 2.5 Thanksgiving! Blessing on the man who invented turkey and even-
ing dresses! They do help one's looks so. John McCormack relieves the

Blackfriars of their usual burden of after-dinner entertainment.
November 26 Seniors are invested. The thrills of caps and gowns even make one

forget the choking of the high collar.
November 27 Blackfriars take up their burden, and give their delightful little play.

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\

DECEMBER

December 1 Epidemic of handkerchief-making breaks out.

December 2 Rebekah Scott's dining room fails to have a birthday party.

December 4^ Atlanta stores close at 4 o'clock. How can we buy a Christmas pres-
ent in town, when we have to "walk right in and turn around, and walk right
out again?"

December 6 Sophomores present the "Midnight Revue" at eight-thirty. Dear me!
Things have certainly changed since our day.

December 7 Dr. Sloop tells us how to educate mountain children on cast-off even-
ing dresses and tuxedos.

December 9 Freshmen stunt a great success. How young the children do begin
thinking of weddings, etc.

December 12 Blackfriars celebrate their greatness by a banquet at East -Lake.
Georgette dresses are finally decided upon as a suitable costume.

December 1.3 Assyrian children come out for their Christmas tree. Every one gets
a horn, a fife or some instrument of sound.

December 17 Christmas parties in both dining rooms. But that is merely a pre-
lude to

December 18 Home!

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c/^IL-ROUHTTB

JANUARY

January 1 Aggie would make new resolutions, but the trains are too bumpy.

January 4 "A dillar, a dollar, a ten o'clock scholar."' The student body drifts
slowly in.

January 6 And the physics department has gotten someone to help correct papers,
and cook breakfast, after all. We knew he would do it!

January 9 Virginia McLaughlin gets to Soc. 2 on time.

January 13-26 Sh! We only mark the hours that shine! These days are blotted
out of this record.

January 26 The faculty shows that it can act as well as give red marks.

January 30 First basket-ball game of the season. Seniors and Sophomores vic-
torious. Is this temporary, or will their glory last?

January 31 Grandmothers entertain in costumes. Grandchildren look remarkably
young considering the trying experiences they have just gone through with.

Q/^IL'Ri

FEBRUARY

February 1 The Junior and Senior class washes the powder out of its hair.

February 2 Bathing continues to happen.

February 4 Go in town only on necessary business. Flu restrictions.

February 5 More flu restrictions.

February 7 Nothing but flu restrictions !

February 8 "Ain't no sech animal" as necessary business for Miss Aggie in town.

February 9 Mr. Dietrick tells us of the "Immensity of the Universe," and the

swimming pool fund takes a huge jump.
February 10 We have been so good, that Jule can not even find anything to tell us

not to do in Student Government meeting. However, we sing. Charlotte has a

unique, but thoroughly pleasing habit of putting "Old Black Joe" and "Old

Folks at Home" to rag-time.
February 14 Every one who is popular gets candy, and every one who isn't eats

his neighbors.
February 16 The Annual goes to press. God bless you, my child, and good luck!

May you be a social success!
February 17 We take a rest.
February 21 Senior Class entertains in true G. Washington style. We are again

thankful for a grand holiday, and a grander feast.
February 23 Back to work again and so on, and on, and on.

.A^ifl 1 4 r

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e.

1.-^

A. Houston: Peggy, do you know that man?

P. Hedrick: Well, not to speak of, but we have a blushing (?) acquaintance.

V. G. : Whatcha gonna do tonight?

M. S. : Nothing. What you gonna do?

V. G.: Nothing.

M. S.: Who else will play?

Hostess: Professor, why didn't you bring your wife?

Aggie's Only Newly wed: Theie! I knew I had foi gotten somethins

'20: I saw her getting into her Chalmers.
'21: WTiat are Chalmers?

INTER-RUPTIONS.

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('IL'KOMBrTB

In Memoriam

Crinkle, crinkle, little bill.
How I Irish- I had you still!
Down among niv debts you lie,
Like a vision, dim and shy.

When I must buy my French and Math.

Latin, lit and that's not half

/ pass the Tea Room with a sigh

It is so far, and yet so nigh.

Crinkle, crinkle, little bill.

How many needs you ought to fill!

Wont you ever learn to be

A constant, better friend to me.

LS M AND?dinT5.

(APbl06)ES Tosm3 IfEYNgLt^

F. Markley (on Decatur street carl : Conductor, can't you go any faster?
Conductor: Yes, Madame, but I have to stay with the car.

M. McLaughlin: When I sing, tears come into my eyes. What can I do for it?
Mr. Johnson: Stuff cotton in your ears.

Miss McKinney (calling roll in Eng. II) : Miss Reid!
Elizabeth (slowly awakening) : Come in!

Antidote for Aggie's Ailments

1. Poise for advance of Decatur boys.

2. Emphasis upon r's and final g's for imagery in speech.

3. Washing hands and avoiding kissing for flu.

Little pennant on the wall.
Ain't you held in place at all?
Ain't got a big thumb tack?
Is the pin gone out your back?
Is you down?

Yes, you've got a fine thumb tack.
And the pin's' still in your back.
But yru still are doomed to fall-
Miss Miller says no tacks at all.
Now ain't that bad?

MMfiMonna.

4. Proper disposal of self and silver assist in good table manners.

5. For double chins be a Senior and wear a high collar. ;.

6. For reduction in weight, somersaults and Sunday night supper. I

7. For the blues, watch a class in aesthetic gym. 5

8. Quiet at any time: raise the right hand. (Useful in the White House. Not |
admissible to try on Whitehall 1 . 5

9. Ways of attaining quiet Throw shoos. i

L. Mac: 111 turn out the light, if you want to go to sleep. :

M. Mc; That's all right, Lois. I always sleep with my eyes shut anyway. J

Two of our colored friends crossing on a transport, were discussing their future.

"T^Tien I gits outta dis here man's war," said one. ''do you know what I'm
gwine ter do?"

"No," was the reply. "What?"

"Ise givine ter dress up in a white hat, white shoes, white coat, white trousers,
en white cane, and Ise s;wine out in white society. '

"Lh huh." said the other. "You know what I'm gwine ter do? I'se gwine !

ter dress up in a black hat. black coat, black trousers, black tie, black shoes, en a j

black cane, en yoa know wha" I'se gwine?'' }

"No," said his friend, "Wha' is you gwine?" ;

"Ise gwine ter yo funeral." ?

Means of transportation at Agnes Scott, classified according to their degrees

of approval: j

1. Walking best for health and pocketbook. {

2. Decatur street car not as rapid as No. 1, but conducive to a patient and |
calm disposition. J

3. Trains necessary in emergency, but noisy and dirty. |

4. Automobiling dangerous to all parties concerned. |

5. Aeroplane ? ? ! ! |

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Unral (Unlor

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Faculty

/ had a little husband, no bigger than a spoon,

I put him by a telescope and had him watch the moon;

I brought a little pupil to listen to him talk.

Then got a little chaperone, to watch them like a hawk.

"Miss Phi, Miss Phi, have you shut the door?"
"Yes, girl, yes, girl, upon second floor."
One girl's in the lobby, one girl's in the hall.
One girl's on the stair steps, with no shoes on at all.

Spot Payne had a little shop

To help B. E. Fund grow
And every place there was no rain.

That shop was sure to go.

There ivas a professor of psych
Who could never decide who to like;

While he tried to decide

Who to take for his bride.
Each married some other young tike.

ugrrg 1

Hey a dub. dub, three committees in a tub.
And who do you think they be?

The electives, the entrance.

The one on advance

Turn 'em out. knaves all three.

West Lawin

In a far atvay spot of the campus

There lies a dormitory fair,
Whose inmates raise glassless transoms

To let in more fresh air;
W here no one ever schreeches

And no one ever screams.
And no one knows the meaning

Of A -\- test mark dreams.
'Tis a heaven for the weary.

For the class-worn Ph. D's.
There they take their tea in silence,

W ith no horrid, noisy hes.

Br. Sweet
We love thee dearly. Doctor Sweet,
The reason ive need not repeal.
Indeed, 'tis quite an easy feat
To love thee dearly. Doctor Sweet.

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THAT the faculty is brilliant, we have never doubted; that they are human, we
have found out every time we have come into personal contact with them; but
that they are actresses was something of a shock to the whole student body. If
Miss Young had followed the stage instead of the path of Calculus and Analyt,
what a rival Sara Bernhardt would have had, or if Miss Lewis had been a movie star
instead of an artist, Nazimova would be nowhere! "The Ladies of Cranford" pro-
vided one of the most enjoyable evenings Agnes Scott has spent this year, or any
other year, for that matter. The parts were well chosen, and admirably acted even
down to the darling little Carlo. White House will have $104.00 with which to buy
new furniture for its lobby, due to the faithful and successful efforts of our faculty.

The cast of characters was:

Miss Matilda Jenkyns Anna Young

Miss Mary Smith Louise Lewis

Miss Jessie Brown Irma Phillips

Miss Pole Lucile Alexander

Miss Betty Barker Catherine Torrance

Mrs. Forrester Mary F. Sweet

The Hon. Mrs. Jameson Emma- Moss Dieckmann

Martha, Maid to Miss Jenkyns Llewellyn Wilbum

Peggy, Maid to Miss Barker Janet Newton

Mrs. Purkis, a Country Woman Emma May Laney

Little Susan, her Daughter Mary Cunningham

Jennie, a Country Girl Alice Longshore

Scene England. Time About 1810

Director Frances K. Gooch

Costume Manager Louise McKinney

Property Manager Hattie May Finlay

Stage Manager Frances Calhoun

Business Manager Cleo Hearon

Act L Miss Mattie Jenkyn's Parlor Afternoon Tea.

Act n. The same. "Miss Matilda Jenkyns Licensed to Sell Tea."

Act UL Miss Barker's Parlor A Card Party.

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There was an old laclv who lived at A. S. C.
Her children were fine as children could be.
She loved them all dearly, but wanted to know
Who's who in the shoe; her decisions we show:

The best all round is L. Maclntyre;
To know, you see, is but to admire 'er.

We all love Beff Allen.

Her heart is so warm;
She's the truest of friends,

Who does good, but no harm.

On Margaret Bland we all depend
Who's ready a helping hand to lend.

See brilliant L. S. Molloy scintillate.

She is doomed for a famous and high-brow fate.

To A. M. Landress I sing my song.
She studies hard, and she studies long.

M. Bland's the best worker, when once she is started;
Indeed, from her work she is seldom parted.

Rah, rah, siss boom ah, here comes Miss Ruth Hall,

Always peppy, very reppy, with the most college spirit of all.

Dainty little Virginia Burum,

You are the prettiest, we can assure 'em.

Mirror, mirror on the wall.
Who's the most attractive of all?
The honors are quite divided to-day,
'Twixt Peggy Hedrick and Charlotte K.

Amy Twitty, hear a ditty.

How do you dance so well?
With your airs and grace
And vour charming face.

You will always be a belle.

Maclntyre is the very best sport.
Athletics are her chiefest forte.

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^lUROMErTTeJ-

Most dignified is Jule Hagood,

She bears herself as a President should.

Anne Houston's fine as fine can be,
True to the Senior type is she.

Next comes the admirable Fannie McCaa,
Most typical Junior I ever saw.

->: * *

Full of wisdom and pep galore.

Is Laura Oliver, typical Sophomore.

The most typical Freshman ever grown
Is the bright, original Polly Stone.

Who makes us long for Irregular joys?
Its typical member, Harriet Noyes.

Jolly and laughing is Peggy Bell
When she laughs, you laugh, as well.

The cutest child in school, you bet.
Is happy, adorable Lib Nisbet.

Who could fail to be impressed

By the way Vivian Gregory is always dressed?

Gene Burum's as thin as thin can be
The skinniest one at A. S. C.

She can play, and she can sing;

Gifted Lucile Smith does 'most anything.

The girls with the exceedingly business-like air
Are S. Davis and Fluker, a stunning pair.

OMHTTa

Ifanniin'a Saij

0_\ February the twenty-first, Mr. and Mrs. George Washington entertained in
honor of the joint birthday of General Washington, and of Mr. George Wash-
ington Scott, the gentleman who made Agnes Scott College possible. Unfor-
tunately, as the General explained, he was too busy with Endowment affairs to
attend the dinner. The guests of the evening were beautifully attired in the newest
modes of 1776. The dining hall was charming, in its decorations of red, white and
blue. As usual. General and Mrs. Washington were the picture of gracious hospitality.
Seldom has Agnes Scott seen such a lovely host and hostess, nor attended an affair
which was more complete in its elegant simplicity and charm. The toasts were all
original and witty, with an adaptability all their own. Since poor Betsy Ross was
having such a time with her flag, and every one was begging for a star in it, the
various claimants rose to justify their claims. Patrick Henry spoke for Student
Freedom; LaFayette. in his piquant broken "Anglais,'" plead for the petits orphans;
Paul Revere was sure that athletics deserved, not only a star, but a stripe as well,
as a symbol of the many tokens basket-ball and hockey leave with one; La Salle plead
eloquently, though in incorrectlv French speech, for the Newcomb debaters, and
Paul Jones put in a word for the swimming pool. Last, but not least, Francis
Scott Key told of the glories of the band and Glee Club. Led by Mrs. Key, the
entire student body gave an illustration of their ability by singing Alma Mater and
Star Spangled Banner.

At the colonial ball in the gym, the Minuet was revived in its most graceful
form. The belles and beaux danced until the late hour of ten-thirty, when the powder
and orchestra had disappeared. Lang sine. G. Washington and G. Washington Scott!
Mav their birthdavs be celebrated forever!

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Abney, Louise 765 Milledge Ave., Athens, Ga.

Adams, Fanibel 511 Floyd St., Covington, Ga.

Agee, Caroline 1218 Woodstock, Anniston, Ala.

Alexander, Joyce 18 College Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Allen, Clara Mae Cumming, Ga.

Allen, Dorothy LaFayette, Ala.

Allen, Elizabeth LaFayette, Ala.

Allen, Ethylyne 452 Central Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Allen, Imogene Cumming, Ga.

Allison, Carrie . , . . . Draper, Va.

Almand, Ruth E 469 Mcintosh St., Elberton, Ga.

Alston, Sarah 56 Avery Drive, Atlanta, Ga.

Arant, Fr^ances 43 Mansfield Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Archer, Jeanette Montreal, N. C.

Armstrong, Elizabeth . West Market, Greensboro, N. C.

Aycock, Nelle B 70 Maple St., Carrollton, Ga.

Bailey, Lucile 126 S. Main St., Covington, Tenn.

Bailey, Mary Louise Cochran, Ga.

Ballard, Martha Bellevue Ave., Dublin, Ga.

Banks, Annie Sue Social Circle, Ga.

Barnes, Janie K Pounding Mill, Va.

Barton, Helen Sewanee, Tenn.

Barton, Mary Sewanee, Tenn.

Battle, Iris Sorrento, Fla.

Bedinger, Anna Huntsville, Ala.

Belcher, Kathleen Bainbridge, Ga.

Bell, Charlotte Shelbyville, Ky.

Bell, Marg.aret Lewisburg, W. Va.

BiTTiCK, Ethel East Lake. Ga.

Blackmon, Myrtle 2710 Hamilton Ave., Columbus, Ga.

Bland, Margaret 800 East Ave., Charlotte, N. C.

Baniske, Eva Cordele, Ga.

BosTiCK, Adeune Shelby. N. C.

BosWELL, LiLA Greensboro, Ga.

Bowden, Ruth Martin, Tenn.

BowDEN\ Cecile Martin, Tenn.

BowRON, Dorothy 2912 Cypress Ave., Birmingham, Ala.

Brenner, Margaret 134 Bamett St., Atlanta, Ga.

Brewer, Augusta 210 Title Guarantee Bldg, Birmingham, Ala.

Bright, Clara Walnut Ave., Waynesboro, Ga.

Broach, Ruth Point Peter, Ga.

Broadhurst, Pauline 620 Barlow St., Americas, Ga.

Brodnax, Sarah Belle 10 St. Augustine Place, Atlanta, Ga.

Brown, Ada Elizabeth 535 Vine St., Chattanooga, Tenn.

Brown, Elizabeth A 318 Church St., Fort Valley, Ga.

Brown, Gladys Chadburn, N. C.

Brown, Louise Katherine 155 McDonough St., Decatur, Ga.

Brown, Ruth 221 Prospect St., Chattanooga, Tenn.

Brown, Thelma 47 Columbia Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Bryan, Sar.\h 203 E. 9th St., Rome, Ga.

Buchanan, Eleanor 9 Strother St., Marion, Va.

Burgess, Cama 2 16th St., Atlanta, Ga.

Burkhalter, Helen St. Anthony St., Mobile, Ala.

Burnett, Mary G 410 S. Perry St., Montgomery, Ala.

BuRUM, Eugene 2306 Walton Way, Augusta, Ga.

BuRUM, Virginia 2306 Walton Way, Augusta, Ga.

Caldwell, Mary White 9 Henkow Road, Shanghai, China

Callaway, Gena Monto Sano Ave., Augusta, Ga.

Campbell, Lula Groves 29 Fairview Road, Atlanta, Ga.

Carnes, Maybeth 232 Waverly Way, Atlanta, Ga.

Carpenter, Eleanor 1310 6th St.. Louisville, Ky.

Carpenter, Ruth East Washington St., Greenville, S. C.

Carr, Isabel .... 506 Clinton St., Harriman. Tenn.

Carter, Minnie Merle 179 Myrtle St.. Atlanta, Ga.

Cawthon, Marion De Funiak Springs, Fla.

Chappell, Willie Church St., Dawson, Ga.

Christie. Helen Aline Decatur, Ga.

Clarke, Edythe 133 Ashland Ave., Asheville, N. C.

Clarke, Minnie Leticia 122 Jackson St.. Augusta, Ga.

CoCKRELL, Ethel Atlanta, Ga.

Cohen, Evelyn Covington, Ga.

Cole, Clara 332 W. Peachtree St.. Atlanta, Ga.

CoMPTON, Lois 33 Adam St.. Decatur, Ga.

Connett, Cora 703 S. 14th St.. St. Joseph. Mo.

Cooper, Alice 155 Peeples St.. Atlanta. Ga.

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Cooper, Jessie Centreville. Ala.

Cooper, Mary Thomasville, Ga.

Cook, Thelma E. 13th Ave., Cordele, Ga.

CosTEN, H-ARRIet 2318 Wolfe St., Little Rock, Ark.

Cousins, Marguerite S. W. College Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Craig, Essie Lawrenceville, Ga.

Crank, Virginia Louisa, Va.

Crenshaw, Alma Hope Hull, Ala.

Crosland, Louise Rockingham, N. C.

Crowell, Ruth Myers Park, Charlotte, N. C.

CURETON, Sue Moreland, Ga.

Damel. Wilmer Eliott Chisholm St., Montgomery, Ala.

Danziger, Dena D 151 Stewart Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Davis, Edythe 49 Washington St., Atlanta, Ga.

Davis, Romola Senoia, Ga.

Davis, Sarah 53 Spring St., Newnan, Ga.

Daye, Nelle Frances 201 Madison St., Huntsville. Ala.

Dean, Eunice Prevost St., Anderson, S. C.

Dennington, Catherine . . . ^ . . . 610 Washington St., Atlanta, Ga.

Dick, Rebecc.\ Home Ave., Hartsville, S. C.

Dickson, Elizabeth 212 Madison St., Clarksville. Tenn.

DiSMUKES, Mildred 1515 3rd j\ve., Columbus, Ga.

DoDD, Lucile Covington Road. Decatur, Ga.

DoLviN, Agnes Siloam. Ga.

DoLviN, Mary Siloam, Ga.

DoRN, RowENA 1142 Peachtree Road, Atlanta. Ga.

Drake, Lois N. 3rd St., Danville. Ky.

Edwards, Achsah 204 Church St., LaGrange. Ga.

Ellis, Elia 208 Sharon St., Quincy, Fla.

Elyea, Dorothy Peachtree Road. Atlanta, Ga.

Engel, Rosalie 13th St., Birmingham. Ala.

Enloe, Elizabeth 338 St. Charles Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Esslinger, Nell Randolph St., Huntsville, Ala.

Evans, Christine College and Miller Sts., Fort Valley, Ga.

Evans, Ruth College and Miller Sts., Fort Valley, Ga.

Farmer, Anne 815 W. X^Tiitner St., Anderson, S. C.

F'arquhar, Caroline 3 S. 11th St.. Easton, Pa.

Faw, Helen 404 Roswell St., Marietta, Ga.

JMBTTB

Finney, Mary 50 Ponce de Leon Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Fish, Marjorie 2353 Riverside Ave., Jacksonville, Fla.

Fish, Virginia 2353 Riverside Ave., Jacksonville, Fla.

Flake, Elizabeth Conyers, Ga.

Floding, Elizabeth 250 Myrtle St., Atlanta, Ga.

Floding, Mary 250 Myrtle St., Atlanta, Ga.

Fluker, Sarah Thomson, Ga.

Foster, Juliet 320 W. Whitner, Anderson, S. C.

Foster, Marg.aret 320 W. Whitner, Anderson, S. C.

Foster, Maud 175 Gordon St., Atlanta, Ga.

French, Ellen Cascade, Va.

Fulton, Sarah 31 Oak St., Decatur. Ga.

Gambrill, Anne 652 W. Market St., Anderson, S. C.

Gardner, Delia 205 George St., Greenwood, Miss.

Gardner, Estelle 10 N. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.

Gardner. Josephine 205 George St., Greenwood, Miss.

Gilbert, Otto R. F. D. No. 7, Atlanta, Ga.

GiLBREATH, Sarah Lynnville, Tenn.

Girardeau, Ivylyn Bethel St., Thomaston, Ga.

Glenn, Anna Belle Country St., Anderson, S. C.

Glover, Aimee D Whitelock Ave., Marietta, Ga.

Goodrich, Mary 481 Spring St., Atlanta, Ga.

GOODROE, Geraldine Barbour St., Eufaula, Ala.

Gordon, Eleanor Fort Defiance, Va.

Green, Mary Louise 1015 5th St., Corinth, Miss..

Gregory, Vivian 601 Maury Place, Norfolk, Va.

Griffis, Annie Tallassee, Ala.

GuiLLE, Emily Athens, Tenn.

GuiLL, Doris 516 E. Broad St., Sparta, Ga.

GuNN, Mary Olive Crawfordville, Ga.

Guy, Helen Pungoteague, Va.

Hagood, Julia 518 Clement Ave., Charlotte, N. C.

Hall, Ruth 404 Front St., Laurel, Miss.

Hall, Helen 38 S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.

Hall, Isabel Statesboro. Ga.

Hall, Jennye Alice 112 Peachtree Place. Atlanta. Ga.

Ham, Sarah Mildred Kirk wood, Ga.

Hammett, Lula Anderson. S. C.

Hamner, Pearl Lowe Buena Vista. Ga.

fei3SSSSli2!BR' .

Hanes, Mariwil Jonesboro, Ga.

Hannah, Evelyn Isla Thomaston, Ga.

Harper, Frances . . . . 122 W. Upsal St., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.

Harris, Lulie College Park, Ga.

Harris, Mary E W. Cedar St., Franklin, Ky.

Harrison, Sarah Murfreesboro, Tenn.

Harrold, Quenelle Americus, Ga.

Hart, Anne 701 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.

Harwell, Anna 79 Clairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Harwell, Frances Grace 211 Euclid Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Hatcher, Jessie Mae 1013 8th Ave., Columbus, Ga.

Haugh, Catherine 300 W. Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.

Havis, Dorothy 273 Juniper St., Atlanta, Ga.

Hay, Margaret 15th and Northampton Sts., Easton, Pa.

Heaton, Julia Tallapoosa, Ga.

Hedrick, Margaret Bristol, Tenn.

Hendrick, Loulie Hurtsboro, Ala.

Herman, Sarah Emma Dawson, Ga.

Hewlett, Mary Conyers, Ga.

Hightower, Sarah Americus, Ga.

Hill, Helen 9 Kings Highway, Decatur, Ga.

Hill, Laura Mae 315 Madison St., Montgomery, Ala.

Hoke, Elizabeth Lincolnton, N. C.

HoLLis, Viola Madison, Ga.

Holtzclaw, Clifford Perry, Ga.

Houston, Anne Lewisburg, Tenn.

Howard, Lucie 1101 Federal St., Lynchburg, Va.

Hudson, Ruby Mae Bolton, Ga.

Hull, Marion 35 Peachtree Circle, Atlanta, Ga.

Hutter, Caroline 1517 Jackson St., Lynchburg, Va.

HuTTER, Emily 1517 Jackson St., Lynchburg, Va.

HuTTON, Cornelia 220 E. Henry St., Savannah, Ga.

Hyde, Eleanor 1512 N. Carroll Ave., Dallas, Tex.

Ivey, Lilburne Evergreen, Ala.

Jameson, Julia Nashville, Tenn.

Jarnigan, Erskine 1539 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.

Jenkins, Margaret Shelby, N. C.

Johns, Clara 604 Jackson St.. Corinth, Miss.

Johnson, Louise 904 North Ave., Atlanta. Ga.

^ "^lUftOVlErTTB

Johnson. Myrtle 606 S. Perry St., Montgomery, Ala.

Johnston, Eugenia 51 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Jones, Alice Lake 310 Barrs St., Jacksonville, Fla.

Jordan, Frances Elizabeth Prescott, Ark.

Justice, Mary Ann 284 Luckie St.. Atlanta. Ga.

Keesler, Charlotte 401 Walthall St., Greenwood, Miss.

Keiser, Ruth 2170 Highland Ave., Birmingham, Ala.

Kelly, Juamta 1121 15th St., Augusta, Ga.

Kerns, Edith 313 Ohio Ave., Charleston, W. Va.

Keyes, Emilie 102 Greenwich Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Kincannon, Mary George Normal, Tenn.

King, Elizabeth Ashtabula, Ohio

King, Rhea Howell Cotton Co., Rome, Ga.

KiNMAN, Sarah 155 Cleburne Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Kirby, Lillian 235 Ponce de Leon, Atlanta, Ga.

Knight, Jane 548 Sherman St., Albany, Ala.

Knight, Katherine Eloise . Safety Harbor, Fla.

Knight. Mary Lamar 556 N. Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga.

Laing, Martha Lewisburg, W. Va.

Lamar, Hazel 121 McLendon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Landress, Anna Marie 913 E. 9th St., Chattanooga, Tenn.

Langford, Carolyn Greenwood St., Barnesville, Ga.

Laughon, Ruth Elizabeth 112 5th St., Pulaski, Va.

Lawrence, Christine Louise 83 Howard Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Leake, Concord . Rockingham. N. C.

Leavitt. Margaret Lookout Mountain. Tenn.

Legg, Maggie Ree 109 N. Avenue, Calhoun, Ga.

LiGON, Elizabeth 51 Ontario Ave., Atlanta. Ga.

LiLES, Virginia East Main. Spartanburg. S. C.

Lindsey, Marian 922 ^"edado St.. Miami, Fla.

Little, Lucile 158 Myrtle St., Atlanta, Ga.

Lockhart, Elizabeth 25 S Church St., Decatur, Ga.

Logan, Josephine 103 Sycamore St., Decatur. Ga.

Love, Roberta Lincolnton. N. C.

Lovett, Elizabeth 239 Gordon St., Atlanta, Ga.

Lowe, Marjorie R. F. D. No. 6, Macon, Ga.

McAllister. Jean 517 W. Market, Greensboro, N. C.

McCaa, Fanny 1025 Fairmount, Anniston, Ala.

McCallie, Edith 265 E. Fourth St., Atlanta, Ga.

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McCallum, Emily 63 W. Howard Ave., Decatur, Ga.

McCamy, Marian 47 S. Thornton Ave., Dalton, Ga.

McCaskill, Coma 208 Maiden Lane, Fayetteville, N. C.

McClain, Lois Jasper, Ga.

McClure, Elizabeth .516 N. 4th St., Wilmington, N. C.

McCoLGAN, Margaret Norton, Va.

McCoNNELL, Hilda Royston, Ga.

McCoNNELL, Margaret . . Woodmere Place, Edgewood Road, Asheville, N. C.

McCullough, Julia 220 Ponce de Leon Avenue, Atlanta, Ga.

McCuRDY, Mary Stone Mountain, Ga.

McCuRDY, Sarah Stone Mountain, Ga.

MacLntyre, Lois ... 503 Empire Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.

McIntosh, Martha 417 Tift St., Albany, Ga.

McKiNNEY, Mary Katherine Ripley, Tenn.

McMillan, Harriet 920 Dauphin St., Mobile, Ala.

McLaughlin, Margaret Raphine, Va.

McLaughlin, Myrtle 900 12th Ave. W., Birmingham, Ala.

McLaughlin, Virginia Raphine, Va.

McLean, Ellen 710 S. Boulevard, Greenwood, Miss.

McLean, Margaret Summitt St., Winona, Miss.

McLell.\n, Joyce 127 E. Mistletoe Ave., San Antonio, Texas

McLellan, Mary Dalton, Ga.

MacLeod, Margaret Versailles, Ky.

McLeod, Mary Stewart 73 Central Ave., Bartow, fla.

MacPhail, Marion . . . . N. Tryon St., Guthery Apt. 102, Charlotte, N. C.

Mack, Mary E. Jefferson, Thoniasville, Ga.

Macrae, Lucy 209 W. 13th St., Hopkinsville. Ky.

Maddox, Rachel 23 Jefferson Place. Decatur, Ga.

Malone, Mary Bartow, Ga.

Malone, Susan Greenwood, Miss.

Manly, Gertrude Thornton Ave., Dalton. Ga.

Mann, Janie Greenwood. Miss.

Markley, Frances Charlotte 131 S. 7th St., Coshocton, Ohio

Marsh, Elizabeth 36 Crew St., Atlanta. Ga.

Martin, Marguerite Clavton. Ala.

Matheson, Mary , . . . Hartwell, Ga.

Maultsby, Janet 603 S. Hull St., Montgomerv. Ala.

Maxwell, Annie Byrd White Haven, Tenn.

Meade, Anna 2014 S. 13tii Ave.. Birmingham. Ala.

Meakin, Fan Esther 6 East 13th St.. Atlanta. Ga.

Miller, Annie 41 Miller St., Atlanta, Ga.

' II nt fi MMriiw 1 . 1 LL iy^sgtwss n ! ^? " ^*'/ . ^ ^^

MiMS. SuSYE Monroeville, Ala.

Mitchell, Mattie Mooring Swainsboro, Ga.

MoLLOY, Elizabeth R. F. D. No. 1, Murfreesboro, Tenn.

MoLLOY, Laura Stockton 603 N. High St., Columbia, Tenn.

Moody, Caroline 91 W. Howard Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Moore, Anne Ruth 76 S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.

Moore, Carolyn 619 Randolph St., Eufaula, Ala.

Moore, Ione Sylacauga, Ala.

Moore, Lillian Virginia 118 McDonough St., Decatur, Ga.

Moore, Margery Stuart 76 S. Candler, Decatur, Ga.

Moore, Sara Olive 420 Waldburg E., Savannah, Ga.

MoRAGUES, Dolores Marty 936 Dauphin St., Mobile, Ala.

Moriarty, Lois Ripley, Tenn.

Moriarty, Ruth Ripley, Tenn.

Morrison, Alexandra 11 Brunei St., Waycross, Ga.

Morton, Susie Reid 620 Cotton Ave., Birmingham, Ala.

Moss, Elizabeth Luckie 626 Hill St., Athens, Ga.

MuRCHisoN, Lucia 258 Main St., Lancaster, S. C.

Murphy, Myrtle Broad St., Louisville, Ga.

Murphy, Vienna Mae Broad St., Louisville, Ga.

Nash, Catherine Emery 4 Gordon Ave., Kirkwood, Ga.

Neal, Katherine Margaret 7 Jefferson Place, Decatur, Ga.

Newton, Charlotte 892 Prince Ave., Athens, Ga.

Newton, E. Theressa Madison, Ga.

Nichols, Elizabeth 215 South 8th St., Griffin, Ga.

NiSBET, Mary Elizabeth 3527 Forest Ave., Kansas City, Mo.

Norton, Carrie Belle Attalla, Ala.

Noyes, Harriet Elizabeth 540 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

OcLETREE, Fredeva Stokes Cornelia, Ga.

Oliver, Fr-ANCEs Aughtry Plains, Ga.

Oliver, Laura Aldworth R. F. D. No. 5, Montgomery, Ala.

Ordway, Virginia Moore 1113 Christine Ave., Anniston, Ala.

Page, Isabel Boyd Henning St., Ripley, Tenn.

Parham. Elizabeth BuUochville, Ga.

Parker, Margaret Emogene 12 Avery Drive, Atlanta, Ga.

Parks. Mary Elizabeth Buffalo, Tenn.

Parry. Lina Conn 43 College Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Patterson, Eddith Mae 26 Gordon Place, Atlanta, Ga.

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Patton, Lillian Gertrude 404 Duncan Ave., Chattanooga, Tenn.

Peed, Eugenia Avary Emory University, Ga.

PiNKSTON, Alethea Tucker Greenville, Ga. i

PiRKLE, Ruth Janette Gumming, Ga. ;

PoLHiLL, Lois 828 8th St., Louisville, Ga. |

Pope, Mary Lucia 16 S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga. |

Posey, Ila Valeria Liberty, S. C. s

Pottle, Virginia Albany, Ga. }.

Pou, Eugenia Redd IT L5th St., Columbus, Ga.

Preston, Janef 412 Spencer St., Bristol, Va.

Proctor, Emma McIntyre 211 S. Main, College Park, Ga.

Ransom, Margaret Storey .54 N. Howard St., Kirkwood, Ga. |

Ransom, Sara Elizabeth 400 Lucy Ave., Birmingham, Ala. '

Read, Clarisse Virginia 141 Lee St., Birmingham, Ala.

Reasoner, Julia Oneco, Fla. ^

Reed, Mary Frances 609 W. Elm St., Hope, Ark.

Reid, Elizabeth 6 E. 13th St., Atlanta, Ga.

Reid, Roxie Louise 6 E. 13th St., Atlanta, Ga.

Rennie, Eugenia River Front, Greenwood, Miss.

Richardson, Wilda 200 Berne St., Atlanta, Ga.

RiVENBARK, LiNA Samson, Ala.

Roberts, Mary Remer ( Dinah ) 206 Wells St., Valdosta, Ga.

Robinson, Rosalie 31 N. Church, Decatur, Ga.

Ruff, Edith Lucile 119 S. Whitefoord Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

RusHTON, Rachel 739 S. Court St., Montgomery, Ala.

Russell, Eula Nichols Carter's Creek, Tenn.

Russell, Susan Mary 930 Gordon St., Shreveport, La.

Ryan, Mildred T 312 A Lee St., Atlanta, Ga.

Samuels, Elua Gertrude 548 Jackson St., Thomson, Ga.

Sanders, Margaret Eva . De Vails Bluff, Ark.

Sanders, Ruth Sylvester De Vails Bluff, Ark.

Sasnett, Martha Angelyn 290 Peeples St., Atlanta, Ga.

Saunders, Julie Adams 408 N. Patterson St., Valdosta, Ga.

Scandrett, Ruth 202 12th Ave., Cordele, Ga.

Scott, Dorothy Tazewell. Va.

Scott, Harriet Tazewell. Va.

Seagle, Alma Newland 103 Hibriten St.. Lenoir, N. C.

Sellers, Merle Samson, Ala.

Shields, Catherine 15 W. Howard Ave., Decatur. Ga.

Shive, Margaret Ewing 100 Sycamore St., Decatur. Ga.

nOUBTTE

Slack, Louise 208 W. Haralson St., LaGrange, Ga.

Smith, Catherine 1817 Fairfield Ave., Shreveport, La.

Smith, Lucile Pauline 401 E. Lytle St., Murfreesboro, Tenn.

Smith, Margaret 408 W. Market, Athens, Ala.

Smith, Mary Joe Griffin St., McDonough, Ga.

6 Smith, Olive Bruckner Hamilton Ave., Columbus, Ga.

I Smith, Pearl McWilliams 2nd Ave., Rome, Ga.

fi Speake, Dorothy Cl.\re . Rustis St., Huntsville. Ala.

ii Spence, Clotile Wilkinson 107 Greenville St., Newnan, Ga.

f, Stansell, Sarah Jane 801 Duncan Ave., Chattanooga, Tenn.

: Stansfield, Martha 405 E. Manatee Ave., Bradentown, Fla.

Si

I Stanton, Lilla Mae Social Circle, Ga.

I Stephens, Althea 1714 Liberty St., Jacksonville, Fla.

f. Stith, Anabel ......... 1113 N. 25th St., Birmingham, Ala.

fi Stokes, Frances 787 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

!; Stone, Mary Ousley 539 E. Main St., Danville, Ky.

i' Stone, Polly 44 Washita Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

]] Strickl.\nd, Annie Mae Stillson, Ga.

jj Stroud, Elizabeth Mary Greenwood, Miss.

f Stuart, Frances 1013 N. Central Ave., Knoxville, Tenn.

I Stubbs, Laurie Bell Jonesboro, Ga.

i

Taliaferro, Martha Lee Evergreen, Ala.

Taylor, Bonita Smythe 2406 Williams St., Augusta, Ga.

Telford, Bess Brown 425 Campus St., Richmond, Ky.

Terry, Annie Wilson Millbrook, Ala.

Terry, Margaret Caroline Oak St., Decatur, Ga.

I Thomas, Emma Julia Prattville, Ala.

I Thorington, Margaret Patterson . . . 1510 S. Hull St., Montgomery, Ala.

I Till, Sarah Knaff Fayette, Miss.

I Timmerman, Lucy Watkins St., Augusta, Ga.

I Tomunson, Eunice Irene 313 Tift St., Albany, Ga.

I Travis, Anna Louise Floyd St., Covington, Ga.

I Tripp. Nancy King 35 Stokes Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

1. Trump, Esther Joy East 5th St., Tuscumbia, Ala.

p Turner, Margaret Hand Ave., Pelham, Ga.

I Twitty, Amy Curry Railroad St., Pelham, Ga.

I

;- Upshaw Nell Monroe St., Social Circle, Ga.

aij -'---''- -^^.^ -^^g.^g.-'-'-^y^

Van Pelt, Pauline 209 N. 11th St., Ballinger, Texas

Veal, Nell Evelyn Roopville, Ga. . .

ViRDEN, Alice Mayes Cynthia, Miss.

Virden, Ruth Elizabeth Cynthia, Miss.

Wade, Margaret Stuart Raphine, Va.

Waldrop, Clara Louise Jonesboro, Ga.

Walker, Margaret Louise 125 East 45th St., Savannah, Ga.

Warden, Marjory Nell 1274 Willow Ave., Louisville, Ky.

Ware, Ethel Kime 34 Rockyford Road, Kirkwood, Ga. ,<

Warner, Ruth Salome 93 Morris Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.

Wassum, Eva McDavid Apts., Greenville, S. C.

Waterfield, Catherine Brownville, Tenn.

Watkins, Helen 244 Calhoun St., Anderson, S. C. ;;

Watkins, Julia 739 Pujo St., Lake Charles, La.

Watkins, Marguerite H 1425-H State St., Jackson, Miss.

Watts, Jessie 9 Adams St., Decatur, Ga. ',

Watts, Mary Irene 411 Washington St., Camden, Ark. j

Wayt, Helen Peachtree Road, Atlanta, Ga. ;

Weaver, Georgia 634 Jefferson, Tupelo, Miss. .

Whaley, Julia Jefferson Street, Boston, Ga. >;

Wharton, Mary 1008 Main St., Greenwood, S. C. f

Whipple, Alice 19th Ave., Cordele, Ga.

White, Frances 37 Cleburne Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Whitfield, Frances 320 Merritt, Hawkinsville, Ga.

WiLHELM, Mary L 99 Richardson St., Atlanta, Ga.

WiLKiNS, Rosa 420 Academy St., Kingstree, S. C. ,

Williams, Elsie 16th Ave., Cordele, Ga. 1

Williams, Elizabeth 500 S. Center St., Thomaston, Ga.

Williams, Faustelle 2nd St., Cordele, Ga. [

Williams, Mary N 100 N. Louisiana St., Hope, Ark. I

Williamson, Helen 29 Hurt St., Atlanta, Ga. |

Wilson, Ellen Rawlings, Va. \

Wilson, Margaret Elizabeth 18 Dixie Ave.. Atlanta, Ga. f

Winn, Sara Frances 909 W. Peachtree St.. Atlanta, Ga. |

Winslett, Margaret Epes, Ala. |

Womelsdorf, Margaretta 103 Howard Heights, Cartersville, Ga. f

Woodward, Pearle R. F. D. No. 1. Buford, Ga. |

Wooten, Lucy 300 College Ave., Covington, Ga. I

Wray, Mary 421 W. 10th St., Erie, Pa. ' f

Wurm, Rosalind 142 E. 8th St.. Atlanta. Ga. I

Young, Margaret
Young, Nellie .

. . 1540 Tate St., Corinth, Miss.
163 Howell Mill Road, Atlanta, Ga.

uli|f Ntnrtpi?n utttttg number nf tl|p
^illlimfttp maixlh not bt rnmpbtp utttltout
a tunrJi nf apprwiattnn fnr tl)p rnopprattnn
nf Mr. ilnlin - l^anrnrk nf Jnntp ^ iauiPH
Olnmpang. 3n Ittm, tntt^ tUtov ftnba an
fntl)uataatir anJii itplpful fmni anii rn^rg
buainp00 manager, a agmpallipttr abnianr.

;-'2'S&ai>JJSai&i.:tec**iiX^2!!^^ 'i'" i;

y^iL'RauE^TE

L'ENVOI

l?l
We've told you the story
Of Alma Mater s glory

As only her glory does run.

We've told you the story.
And now, by gory.

We're glad the story's done!

The Staff

fcm il

Lnaum

^gnes Scott College

i) c a t u r

(b & V % i a

PACIOUS and Beautiful
Gronnds, Splendid Build-
ings with Modern Con-
veniences, Full and Able
Faculty, Course leading
to A, B. Degree. Best
advantages in Music and
Art

FOR CATALOGUE, ADDRESS

A. H. GAINES, D. D., LL. D.

PRESIDENT

What About
YOUR Rainy Day?

r0 ACCOUNT

too large.
jNone too

SMALL.

Millions of Americans who learned to
SAVE during the war are keeping up the
good habit.

If you are not saving now, you are in the
minority you are turning .your back upon
opportunity.

More than 15,000 Atlantans about one
in every sixteen now have deposits in
the Savings Department of the Citizens
and Southern Bank.

They are fortifying themselves against
adversity laying by ^vhile they can.

Citizens and Southern Bank

Augusta

Savannah

Atlanta
Macon

Fulton
Supply Company

Agents for

GOODYEAR GARDEN HOSE

RU-BER-OIDJ ROOFING

Mill and Machinerg Supplies
of All Kinds

86 Marietta St.

ATLANTA, GA.

Red Seal Shoes

CMade In Atlanta)

We will appreciate your
asking for them your
feet will appreciate the
result.

Manufactured by

J. K. Orr Shoe Company

Atlanta

For Sale Everywhere

;rs3^s??1r!-.if--stt

LTIOUETTB

You Wm Find

"Everything that is Good to Eat" at

HAMPER'S

492-498 PEACHTREE ST. ATLANTA t

Bell Phone Ivy 5000 !,

Three Deliveries Each "Week

Tuesday Thursday Saturday Mornings

I

Try Our i

Own Bakery Cakes Candies Delicatessen [

Sandwiches and Cooked Meats, Salads, f

Pickles, Olives, etc. ;

CARDEls! TEA most cups per -pound.

King Hardware Company

CUTLERY, SILVERWARE

CUT GLASS, CHAFING DISHES

ALUMINUM WARE

ENAMELED WARE

Stoves, Ranges, Refrigerators, General
Hardware, Sporting Goods

EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE
53 Peachtree St. ATLANTA, GA. 87 Whitehall St.

G/^IL'ROAJ!

LADIES APPRECIA TE

THE SERVICE AND CONVENIENCE OF

OUR COMBINED LADIES" AND

SAVINGS DEPARTMENT

OPEN DAILY UNTIL 5 P.M.
SATURDAYS TO 6 P. M.

THE LOWRY NATIONAL BANK

PRYOR ? EDGEWOOD

here the Decatur Car Stop

Silvers & Woods

Manufacturing
Jewelers

Diamond Mountings
Medals, Badges, Etc.,
Made to Order.

REPAIRING

B. Phone
M. 1935

8M Whitehall St..

Atlanta, Ga

Sold hu Jewclers-Habcrdashers-Department Stores
evervivhere. An ideal gift for a man. Price 50c to
$3.75.

J. A. MARINER. Patentee

DESIGNER OF
Pins and Rings for Agnes Scott College

Graduates

STEINWAY

Love jewelrp; good de-
pendable jewelerg, the
kind that stands the test
of wear; whether thep
receive it as a present
or hup it themselves.
That's the onlp kind we
keep. The best proof of
this is customers who
have bought regularlp
of us for pears. Come
in and see. ; : : :

and other

Pianos

VICTROLAS

and Records

Sheet Music and
Musical Instruments

A. M. BALDING

Jeweler

17 Edgewood Ave.

PHILLIPS & CREW CO.

82 N. Pryor St. Atlanta, Georgia

W.. A. ALBRIGHT J. G. OGLESBY, Jr.
President Vice-Piesident

OGLESBY

Comp)iments of

GROCERY CO.

The Pittsburg Plate

Wholesale

Glass Company

Groceries

26 and 28 East Alabama St.

ATLANTA, GEORGIA

ife.--;-:;'Jae^aKftBBe4S*fc-.-A^:6E

Central Bank and Trust Corporation

ATLANTA, GEORGIA

y^^illS Dank nas a department set asiae especially
^^^ ror Ladies, and a Savings department wnicn
pays 4% interest.

YOU ARE ALL WELCOME HERE.

J. P. Stevens Engraving Co.

Society Stationers
and Engravers

WEDDING INVITATIONS
C A L L I N G C A R D S

MONOGRAM STATIONERY

47 WHITEHALL STREET
99 PEACHTREE STREET

Atlanta

Dealers all over the countrg appreciate the value of

Clover Fork and Harlan Coal

Give me the chance to show yoii 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

Long Distance Ivy 3176 P. O. Box 700

Candler Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.

c/^ILJ\OrUETTB

Barton's Drug Store

PURE DRUGS

Fine Candies, Sundries, Kodaks and
Supplies, Soda and Ice Cream

Phone Dec. 545
Pay Sta. Dec. 9191

19 E. College Ave
Decatur, Ga.

Mrs, Flora Houston
MODISTE

Weeks Building
Bell Phone 988 Decatur, Ga.

Bank of
Decatur

Depository of
The State of Georgia

DECATUR
GEORGIA

Com^hments of

Cone M. MadJox
Co.

274 Peters Street

and Quality Count, Avery's the Pla

A

very s

Ph

armacy

Pure Drugs, Sundries and
Toilet Articles

Prescription Specialties,
Sick Room Supplies

Welldon Hotel Block,

Decatur, Ga.

Ansley-Goss Drug Co.

MASONIC TEMPLE
Decatur^ s Leading Druggist

Both Phones Dec. 203 Decatur, Ga.

30 YEARS IN ATLANTA

Most Complete Stock in South

China, Cut Glass

Art Ware, Bronzes

CHOICE \;^EDDING GIFTS

Dobbs ^ Wey Co.

57 N. Pryor St.

Near Lowry Bank

DECATUR SHOE HOSPITAL

H. GREENFIELD, Proprietor

Work Called For and Delivered

No. 9 McDonough St. Decatur, Ga.

J. J. BOOKOUT

JEWELER
REPAIRING

110 Peachtree Arcade

C5/^I

AIBTTE

Thurston Hatcher

Artistic
.. llbotograpb?

STUDIO

l^X\,^ 58'/2 WKitetall St. Atlanta. Ga.

Betw^een sets drink Coca-Cola.
Welcome vherever it goes,
for there' s nothing that com-
pares to it as a thirst-quencher
and for delicious refreshment.

The Coca-Cola Co.

<3-g

Taxi Cabs

Cars for Business

Emergency, Social

and Pleasure Purposes

Ivg

166

[5190
Open All Night

Open and Closed
Cars For All
Occasions

Belle Isle Automobile

Rent Service

4 Luckie Street

Opposite Piedmont

W. E. FLODING

MANUFACTURER

Pennants, Badges, Banners,
Graduating Gowns, Caps, Etc.

COSTUMES FOR RENT

Your Fatrona^e Will Be Appreciated

46 W. Mitchell St. Atlanta, Ga.

FRESHEST AND BEST ALWAYS

FISH, OYSTERS
POULTRY, GAME

Fulton Market

Phone Main 1500

25-27 E. Alabama St.

K'-S::(MSX*^mfi!ri?sll^aHUS!WamaiifSseit!i'iJ!!XX9MUi^^

B. Frank Bell

John G. Bell

BELL BROTHERS

ESTABLISHED I S99

FRUIT and PRODUCE JOBBERS
and COMMISSION MERCHANTS

ACCOUNT SALES DAILY ^ CAR LOTS AND LESS

1 Produce Row

Atlanta, Ga.

PHONES:

Bell M. 378-379

ALPINE FLAX STATIONERY

J^ILLS every requirement for paper suitable to the uses of Her Royal Highness,
^^ the American Girl. Made of pure white linen rags, in the crystal spring
waters of the Berkshire Hills, this paper is fit for a queen. Get it in box stationery,
tablets or envelopes, at the stationery store. Made by

MONTAG BROTHERS, Ina

Atlanta, Georgia.

MISS DIXIE

mai'iiaSiisiiisiiiEiiiiiiEiiiiiiiiismiiiiiiE

Self - Rising Flour

ATLANTA MILLING COMPANY

MANUFACTURERS OF

CAPITOLA

PLAIN FLOUR

H eT'IL'KaUETTE

DRY GLEANING

That satisfies is \our motto.
When pou have anything to
.'be drp cleaned, call

Piedmont Laundry & Dry Gleaning Go.

83 TRINITY AVE. ATLANTA, GA.

Atlantic Ice j& Goal
Gorporation

15 COLLINS STREET

Or W^ashington St. Viaduct

ATLANTA, GA.

PHONE: Bell M. 1900

ICE, GOAL

AND

GOLD STORAGE

Atlanta Optical Co.

119 Peachtree Street

jrE DUPLICATE .4 NY LENS

Bring Us Your Prescription
H. C. MONTGOMERY, Prop.

rpahonxzd
our

^6verti5er5

1865 The Oldest National Bank in the Cotton States. 1920

SERVICE SAVINGS SECURITY

AT THE ATLANTA NATIONAL

The gratifying growth in our Savings Department is
the result of EFFICIENT SERVICE, perfected through 53
years of continuous and constructive effort, and a security
that is UNSURPASSED.

You will find it to your advantage to keep your Sav-
ings Account with this STRONG BANK whose record for
SECURITY and SERVICE is unexcelled.

Located in the heart of Atlanta's business district, you
will find the Atlanta National's Savings Department, on the
first or street floor, most CONVENIENT at all times.
Our Savings Department is open from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m.
Your account is cordially invited.

THE ATLANTA NATIONAL BANK

McCULLOUGH BROTHERS

TF^rults, ^ro6uce
(Tommission

ATLANTA,

GEORGIA

"patronize our
'lA.dvertlsers

BAILEY BROS.

SHO

WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED.
PHONE DEC. 172

Riley's Drug Store

AGENT IN LITTLE DECATUR FOR

i)rp ^rpam

Sntlpt Arttrlea, ^rrfumpH

IKagastttpa, l^ast (EarJia

B. Phone Dec. 640
Next to Ga. Railway & Power Co. Sub-Station

(Totrell ^ Ceonar6

ALBANY, N. Y.

The Largest

Manufacturers and Renters

OF

Caps (Bowns 'Sfoois

to Universities, Colleges, Normal
and High Schools the country over

^ C*J

Compliments
Of

Swift & Co,

Y'

'OU will never be satisfied
-) witn anotner kiss, once

you ve tried

Cj/iar/ies

tne delicious

candy (peanut Dutter) kisses

Made by
H. L. Schlesinrf

everyvr-here

SERVICE

QUALITY

SEUG

Disinfectants and Sanitary
Products of Dependability

Phone, Call or Write for Prices

The Selig Co.,

Atlanta, Ga.

W. Milledge White

'Pl)otograp^er

SPECIALIZING IN

Gommercial Photographs

10% Auburn Avenue

Telephone Ivy 366

Atlanta, Ga.

Franklin Was Right!

Benjamin Franklin writing from Paris to
his nephew in Philadelphia said "and as you
will before that time have come to believe it is
a very decent warrant of stability to serve one
thing faithfully for a quarter of a century".

The firm of Foote & Da vies Company are
now in their thirty-third year of continuously
serving the South in all matters pertaining to
typography, without a change in the manage-
ment; all the time working with you as well
as for you.

Thirty-three years is not a great age when
compared with the pyramids, but when the
rapid development of our section and the many
changes which have taken place are taken in-
to consideration, it is, as Franklin said "a
very decent warrant of stability".

Foote & Davies Company

Printers Binders Lithographers
ATLANTA

At

Agnes Scott

Who furnished the

Olives, Crackers, Cakes, Sardines,
Canned Meats, Canned Fruits,
Bottled Drinks,

for your "feasts"?

ROGERS'

103 Economy Stores 103

Blue Diamond Goal Sales
Company

Sole Shi ppers, Banner Kentenia
Kentucky - Harlan, Highcliff
St eam and Domestic Coals

FRED E. GORE, Southern Manager

1128 Candler Building, Atlanta, Ga.

rp A "XT' T /^ A "Tj Qj See our Representative and
1 _\. 7\. i V^ xjL J3 O have i)our baggage checked

direct from college to gour

BAGGAGE TRANSFER home.

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 & CAB CO.

nxaas^ssHiae^i. -