Silhouette (1923)

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THE

SILHOUETTE

VOL. XX

MGMXXIIl

PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS

of

AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE

DECATUR, GEORGIA

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Frank Henry Gaines
July 25, 1852
April 14, 1923

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"Sunset and evening star.

And one clear call for me,
And may there be no moaning of the bar.

When I put out to sea.

"But such a tide as moving seems asleep.

Too full jor sound and foam;
When that which drew from out the boundless deep

Turns again home."

Dr. Gaines has gone Home. One day he stepped out of his office not just
across the hall to be away for a moment on some errand of service, but into the
Radiant Life to be gone for always in the perfect service of the King. Just the
fact that he has gone away is so strange, so new, so difficult, to comprehend that we,
who in our love for him would have him near, cannot think yet of Agnes Scott
without him; we cannot think of the campus, the chapel, his office HIS college
without his own familiar, beloved figure. But through all the strangeness and sor-
row of these past days, there has been shining into our hearts the light of one
quiet thought; he has but gone Home. Quietly from his family, from his friends,
from his college and his girls, Dr. Gaines has passed on. Because we know that he
has but laid down his life and his work to take it up again, we cannot mourn without
comfort when "that which drew from out the boundless deep, turns again home."
Because the source of his life and power was God always, there can be no sting in
death, or victory in the grave. Though in sorrowing- for our friend, we have passed
through the valley of the shadow, yet even in sorrow we have irresistibly felt that
the death of him whose strength was God was triumphant the triumphant entering
into Life. We thrilled to that conviction as, in those last, simple, loving sentences,
we sang his favorite hymns; as we listened to the reading of those passages of the
Bible which he himself had many times read for the comfort of the distressed; as
we stood by his open grave and witnessed the last tribute of his Senior class. And
even as we go about the doing of the little and the big things that make up our lives,
we shall thrill again to that same conviction of the greatness of triumphant living
and dying.

We grieve that he has gone from us in person. We miss him so. But our
sadness is touched with the light of a great thankfulness thankfulness for the life
which he lived in simplicity, in strength and in sincerity; for the college which he
dreamed of, and toiled for, and loved into being; for his spirit that is inseparable
from the spirit of Agnes Scott. May it be given to us, the students of the college
that is the dream and the crown of his life, that with something of his goodness, his
faith, his vision of high things, we may carry on. '21.

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NOTHER YEAR IN THE ANNALS OF
OUR CAMPUS LIFE HAS PASSED, A
YEAR UNBELIEVABLY BRIEF, YET
ONE SO CROWDED WITH EXPERI-
ENCES THAT WE WHO HAVE TRIED TO COMPILE
THE RECORD OF WHAT HAS HAPPENED WOULD
HAVE BEEN APPALLED AT THE IMxMENSITY OF
THE TASK BUT FOR ONE REALIZATION: AFTER
ALL, EVERYONE IS HER OWN RECORDER, AND IN
THE MIND OF EVERY GIRL IS OUTLINED AN IM-
PRESSION OF THE PAST YEAR THAT IS INDIVID-
UALLY HER OWN. WITH THESE SILHOUETTES
OF AGNES SCOTT LIFE WE HAVE NOT ASPIRED TO
COMPETE, KNOWING THAT THEY ARE MORE
VITALLY INTERESTING THAN ANYTHING SET
DOWN UPON PAPER CAN BE, BUT IT IS SIMPLY
WITH THE HOPE THAT THROUGH THIS BOOK IN
ONE WAY OR ANOTHER YOUR CAMPUS MEMORIES
MAY BE RENDERED MORE VIVID THAT WE SUB-
MIT TO YOU THIS OUR OWN SILHOUETTE OF 1923

Inarb of ruatr^a

J. K. Orr, Chairman Atlanta

''F. H. Gaines Decatur

C. M. Candler Decatur

L. C. Mandeville Carrollton, Ga.

J. T. LuPTON Chattanooga, Tenn.

W. C. Vereen Moultrie, Ga.

J. S. Lyons Atlanta

F. M. Inman Atlanta

Mrs. Samuel M. Inman Atlanta

Mrs. C. E. Harman Atlanta

Miss Mary Wallace Kirk Tuscumbia, Ala.

G. W. Mountcastle Lexington, N. C.

Geo. E. King Atlanta

D. P. McGeachy Decatur

R. 0. f linn Atlanta

B. R. Lacy, Jr Atlanta

H. T. McIntosh Albany, Ga.

J. R. McCain Decatur

J. J. Scott Decatur

W. A. Bellingrath Montgomery, Ala.

D. H. Ogden Mobile, Ala.

W. R. Dobyns Birmingham, Ala.

"Deceased.

(Strrr0 of AbmmtBtrattnn

*F. H. Gaines, DD., LL.D.,
President

Nannette Hopkins, Pd.D.,
Dean

J. R. McCain, Ph.D.
Vice-President and Registrar

*J. D. M. Armistead, Ph.D.
Secretary of the Faculty

Mary Frances Sweet, M.D.
Resident Physician

R. B. Cunningham
Business Manager

J. C. Tart
Treasurer

Jennie E. Smith,
Secretary to the President

Martha Stansfield, B.A.
Secretary to the Dean

Harriet V. Daugherty
Resident Nurse

Emma E. Miller

Frances M. Calhoun

Matrons

Jennie Dunbar Finnell
Lena Davies
Housekeepers

* Deceased.

3 U E T T E

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(arranged by groups in order of appointmetst)
F. H. Gaines, D.D., LL.D.

President

Nannette Hopkins, Pd.D.

Dean

M. Louise McKinney

Professor of English

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

Washington and Lee University

Professor of English

Lillian S. Smith, A.M., 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

Samuel Guerry Stukes, B.A., A.M., B.D.

Davidson College, Princeton University, Princeton Seminary

Professor of Philosophy and Education

(The George W. Scott Memorial Foundation)

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

University of Chicago, Columbia University

Professor of Sociology and History

Alma Sydenstricker, Ph.D.

WoosTER University

Professor of English Bible

Cleo Hearon, Ph.D.

University of Chicago

Professor of History

Robert B. Holt, A.B., M.S.

University of Wisconsin, University of Chicago

Professor of Chemistry

Christian W. Dieckmann, F.A.G.O.

Fellow of the American Guild of Organists

Professor of Music

S I L ^^

"Mary Stuart MacDougall, B.A., M.S.

Randolph-Macon Woman's College, University of Chicago

Professor of Biology

Emily E. Howson, A.B., A.M.

Bryn Mawr College

Professor of Physics and Astronomy

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

Agnes Scott College, Columbia University

Professor of Romance Languages

William Walter Rankin, Jr., B.E., M.A.

A. and E. College of N. C, University of N. C.

Professor of Mathematics

Jean Scobie Davis, B.A., M.A.

Bryn Mawr College, University of Wisconsin

Professor of Economics and Sociology

Catherine Torrance, M.A.

University of Chicago

Associate Professor of Latin and Greek

Frances K. Gooch, Ph.B., A.M.

University of Chicago, Boston School of Expression

Associate Professor of English

Emma May Laney, M.A.

Columbia University

Associate Professor of English

Christian F. Hamff, A.M.

University of the South

(Associate Professor of German in Emory University)

Acting Associate Professor of German

Margaret 0. Fitzhugh, Ph.D.

Columbla. University

Associate Professor of Philosophy

Isabel F. Randolph, B.A., B.S.

Barnard College, Teachers' College

Associate Professor of Physical Education

Edith Muriel Harn, Ph.D.

Johns Hopkins University

Associate Professor of Romance Languages Spanish

* Absent on leave 1922-1923

I

Lois Oliphant Gibbons, A.B., M.A., Ph.D.

University of Michigan, University of Pennsylvania, Cornell University

Associate Professor of History

Louise Hale, A.B., A.M.

Smith College, University of Chicago

Associate Professor of French

Augusta Skeen, B.A.

Agnes Scott College

Assistant Professor of Chemistry

Woolford B. Baker, A.B., M.S.

Henderson Brown College, Emory LIniversity

(Assistant Professor of Biology, Emory University)

Acting Assistant Professor of Biology

Emma Moss Dieckmann, B.A.

Agnes Scott College

Instructor in English

Julia E. Rothermel, B.A.

Mount Holyoke College

Instructor in Biology

Margaret Augusta Culberson, A.B.

Smith College

Diploma d' Etudes de Civilisation Francaise, University of Paris

Instructor in French

Mary Elizabeth Goodwyn, A.B.

Vassar College

Instructor in Latin

Leslie Janet Gaylord, A.B.

Lake Erie College

Instructor in Mathematics

Gwendolen Glendenning, A.B.

Smith College

Instructor in French

Lucius Welborn Summers, B.S., M.A.

Clemson College, Emory University

(Instructor in Sociology, Emory University)

Acting Instructor in Sociology

Genevieve C. White, B.A.

Wesleyan College, Graduate Atlanta Library School

Librarian

Janef Preston, B.A.

Agnes Scott College

Assistant in English

Sarah Carter McCurdy, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Assistant in Chemistry
Fanny Dargan McCaa. B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Assistant in Biology
Martha Stansfield, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Assistant in Latin
Otto Gilbert, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Assistant in Physics
Cama Burgess, B.A.
Agnes Scott College

Assistant in History
Louise Garland Lewis
University of Chicago, Liniversit\ of Paris
Art Institute Chicago, Academie Julian, ecole Del.\cluse
Art and Art History
Lewis H. Johnson
Gr-ujuate Pomona College of Music
New York Institute Musical Art
Student of William Nelson Burritt, New York,
Student of Alexander Heinnemaj^n. Berlin,
Student of Arthur J. Hubbard, Boston
Voice Culture
Katherine Van Dusen Sutphen
Graduate New England Conservatory
Piano
Theodora Morgan-Stephens
Royal Academy of Arts, Berlin
Violin
Eunice W. Curry
Graduate of Acadia Conservatory of Music,
Student of Arthur J. Hubbard, Boston,
Assistant in Voice Culture

U E T T E

HE rare privilege of knowing Dr. Armistead has been succeeded by a
very beautiful memory of him and to our feeling of deep loss at his
going is added a great gratitude for all that was given to us by our
association with him.

During the eighteen years that he taught at Agnes Scott, Dr. Armistead was held
by the students in highest regard and devotion. We admired him for his power
of clear and vigorous thinking, his unerring judgment and his rare ability of dis-
cernment, and over and above all for his love of knowledge for its own sake which
made him a scholar of the highest type. It was through daily association with his
way of thinking and feeling that we gained a lasting conception of the "spirit of
learning;" one which will endure as a very precious and living possession.

The genuineness of his friendship was a quality which made him universally
beloved upon the campus, and while as a brilliant teacher he held up to us the
"vision of the ideal" the charm of his personality made his- influence felt everywhere.
Students went to him constantly for interest and counsel and sympathy in big and
little affairs and he was unfailing in readiness to understand, to appreciate and en-
courage, to advise, to support and to work with them'. It was this gracious friend-
liness that has made his loss felt most keenly, while the recollection of it com-
forts us. His courage and hopefulness, the gracious gentleness of his nature are
inseparable from our memory of him.

Through his influence and through his active service he helped to make pos-
sible all that is best loved at Agnes Scott. The campus will retain always the im-
press of his life who knew so well the art of living; he is one of the choir invisible
"whose music is the gladness of the world." The memorial which we would raise
to him is that of loyalty to that conception of life which he wished so earnestly
to give us; of eagerness to follow with singleness of aim the spirit of truth.

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Dr. J. D. M. Armistead

January 9, 1871
April 30, 1923

e

Jane Walker Inman

VERY splendid gift was that made to Agnes Scott when Miss Jane
Walker Inman of Atlanta, upon her death July 30, 1922, bequeathed
to the college a legacy of more than $100,000. The gift is to be used
in establishing the "Samuel M. Inman Endowment Fund," a memorial
to her brother who for many years was chairman of the Agnes Scott board of trus-
tees and who, throughout his life, was a promoter of education and a very loyal
friend to Agnes Scott. Miss Inman shared in this spirit with him, and together they
exerted a far-reaching influence upon the development of the college. The value of
the gift cannot be overestimated when a realization is felt of the large number of
young women students who will be benefited by it through years to come.

The gift stands not only as a memorial to Mr. Inman, but also to her who saw
so clearly the possibilities for good to be accomplished through such a fund, and who
conceived the idea of giving it in a way which would be a beautiful and lasting
tribute.

S I LH

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Sr. 31. U. Hrfflatn

HEN at a meeting of the board of trustees, held May twenty-fifth.
Dr. J. R. McCain was unanimously elected president of Agnes
Scott College, universal joy was felt among the students who
had so earnestly desired that this would take place. Although
for a number of years he had been holding the office of vice-president, and
during the period following the death of Dr. Gaines had served as acting pres-
ident, he was unwilling that the office of president be bestowed automatically
upon him, wishing the board of trustees to be entirely free in choosing some-
one for the office.

Dr. McCain possesses to a very high degree the qualities which fit him
for his position of responsibility, above all the quality of broad and clear
vision. His interest in the students as individuals, his sympathetic under-
standing of them and his unfailing faith in them as a body, have led them
always to look to him as a friend; and in all that he does he will receive,
as far as lies within their power, the loyal support of the students and the
alumnae who honor and love him.

BOOK I. Campus.

BOOK II. Classes.

BOOK III. Organizations.

BOOK IV. Athletics.

BOOK V. Feature.

BOOK VI. "The Passing of the Hours.'

BOOK VII. Inklings.

Book I

CAMPUS

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GOOD To THE LAST DROP"

T T E

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OFFICERS.

Mary Goodrich
Virginia Ordway
Geraldine Goodroe

Clara Mae Allen
Imogene Allen
Ruth Almond
Hazel Bordeaux
Dorothy Louise Bowron
Margaret F. Brenner
Sarah Belle Broadnax
Louise Katherine Brown
Nannie Carrington Campbell
Minnie Lee Clarke
Thelma Cook
Jessie Dean Cooper
LuciLE Eileen Dodd
Christine Evai\s
Helen Atkins Faw
Elizabeth Ansley Flake
Maud Foster
Philippa Garth Gilchrist
Mary Goodrich
Geraldine Goodroe
Brooks Grimes

President
Vice-President
Secretary-Treasurer

CLASS ROLL.
Emily Ecerton Guille
Mary E. Harris
Quenelle Harrold
Frances Grace Harwell
Mary Stewart Hewlett
Elizabeth Johnston Hoke
Viola Hollis
Lucie Howard
Eleanor Hyde
Charlotte Keesler
Jane Marcia Knight
Katherine Eloise Knight
LuciLE Little

Elizabeth Wardlaw Lockhart
Josephine Bell Logan
Marjorie Lowe
Edith McCallie
Lois McClain
Elizabeth Lyle McClure
Hilda McConnell
Anna Hall McDoucall

Mary Goodrich

Dorothy Bowron

Mary Stewart Hewlett

Martha McIntosh

Mary Stewart McLeod

Anna Hardeman Meade

SusYE Margaret Mims

Elizabeth Washington Molloy

Myrtle Murphey

Fredeva Stokes Ogletree

Elizabeth Parham

Valeria Posey

Sarah Elizabeth Ransom

Margaret Ransom

Rltth Sanders

Alma Newland Seagle

Catherine Shields

Pearl McWilliams Smith

Lucy McIver Timmerman

Nancy K. Tripp

Margaret Turner

Alice Mayes Virden

Eva Elizabeth Wassum

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Clara Mae Allen

Decatur, Ga.

Life need never be prosaic for Clara Mae
nor for anyone associated with her. Under
a quiet exterior, she conceals the wit of a
Mark Twain which is capable of lightening
any occasion.

Imogene Stephanie Allen

Decatur, Ga.

'"A place for everything and everything in
its place" is a motto that has saved Imogene
many a feverish moment and allowed her
mind to hold many facts that glide irretriev-
ably from the minds of others.

Ruth Almond

Elberton, Ga.

Versatility is the key to Ruth"s character.
With equal zeal she has guided the fire de-
partment and the Glee Club through a year
of brilliant performances.

Hazel Bordeaux
Little Rock, Ark.

Heights by great men reached and kept
may sometimes be attained without the pro-
verbial toilings, as Hazel has shown to her
dazzled classmates.

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Dorothy Louise Bowron

Birmingham, Ala.

Dorothy is an unusual combination, for it
is seldom that we find one who is gifted as
she is with a rare social charm and good busi-
ness ability, and we feel certain that she will
make a success in whichever of these lines
she shall choose to pursue in life.

Margaret Frieda Brenner
Atlanta, Ga.

Such minor obstacles as erratic street cars
have not hindered Margaret's zeal for college
life. According to her philosophy, distance
truly lends enchantment.

Sarah Belle Brodnax

Atlanta, Ga.

Dramatic ability and skill seem to come in
inverse ratio to size at least in the case of
Sarah Belle, who so ably heads the Senior
procession.

Louise Katherine Brown

Decatur, Ga.

The road to learning, so arduous for many
of us, became a pleasant highway for Louise
when she discovered the psychological effect
of a seat on the front row.

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Nannie Carrington Campbell

Richmond, Va.

Nannie will be missed in many ways as a
player on the hockey field: as house president
in Rebekah but for nothing more than for
the sincerity of her nature which draws us
all to her.

Minnie Lee Clarke
Augusta, Ga.

Minnie Lee might be described by two
phrases. "The calm that marks the caste of
vere de vere," and the Boy Scout aim. "Do
at least one kind deed every day," but she
doesn't stop at one.

H (

Thelma Cook

Cordele, Ga.

Although Cook finished her course in the
middle of our Senior year, she did not leave
too soon to leave many friends behind to miss
her greatly.

Jessie Dean Cooper

Centreville, Ala.

She has been here four years, and all of us
have found her a true sport and mighty fine
company. She is grave and gay by turns, but
cheerful withal.

LuciLE Eileen Dodd

Decatur, Ga.

The "mermaid tavern" was always a more
enticing spot with Eileen there, as was any
place on the campus where you stopped and
talked with her.

Christine Evans

Fort Valley, Ga.

A rare spirit is Christine, who collects bud-
gets on week days and still retains a disposi-
tion so unruffled as to be able to conduct the
maids' Sunday school class on Sundays.

; T E

Helen Atkins Faw

Marietta, Ga.

As a maker of music and a writer of parts,

Helen has shown her ability in the fine arts

to be equalled only by her intense love for
science.

Elizabeth Ansley Flake

Conyers, Ga.

Her matchless dimples, her gentle nature
and lovely manner have enshrined themselves,
and "Beth,"' in the hearts of her friends and
classmates.

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Maud Foster

Atlanta, Ga.

Maud's capacity for friendliness is equalled
only by her zeal for doing things for those she
likes. One may relieve a poetic temperament,
she finds, and at the same time keep the dis-
position even by an occasional outburst in

Philippa Garth Gilchrist

Courtland, Ala.

She toys flippantly with fourth dimensions,
differentials and their ilk, while we look on
aghast, wondering how one can soar so far
above us and yet be so near and dear, serene
and knowable.

T T E

Mary Goodrich

Atlanta, Ga.

This Mary's garden grows love and service
and bubbling good spirits, which not even the
responsibilities of a Senior presidency or a
cabinet membership have been able to quench.

Geraldine Goodroe

Eufaula, Ala.

Music hath charms to beguile the manly
breast, sings Jerry, displaying meanwhile her
most recently acquired frat pin.

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Annie Brooks Grimes

Statesboro, Ga.

Brooks possesses a rare ability that of re-
maining serene and calm in the face of all ob-
stacles. Not even biology lab could ruffle the
lovable disposition that is one of the secrets
of her charm.

Emily Egerton Guille
Athens, Tenn.

Her light-heartedness, dependableness and
willingness to do anything in her power for
her friends, the courage of her convictions
all these characterize our Em.

T T E

Mary Elizabeth Harris
Franklin, Ky.

Though Mary consistently proclaims herself
a wreck, yet just as consistently she has proven
herself an unfailing antidote for ennui.

Quenelle Harrold

Americus, Ga.

Quenelle's power of logic was developed at
an early age. In the lower right hand cor-
ner we observe her deciding unanimously in
favor of Agnes Scott as a future Alma Mater.

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Frances Grace Harwell

Atlanta, Ga.

This fair one with the golden locks has
found her tresses a valuable asset in Black-
friars, on May Day. and every day as well.

Mary Stewart Hewlett

Conyers, Ga.

With a willingness to work, an ability to
make friends and still collect the Senior dues,
she has made herself an unforgettable Mary.

Elizabeth Johnston Hoke

Lincolnton, N. C.

Besides being a good sportswoman, the pres-
ident of the Athletic Association lavishes her
smile and enthusiasm on such organizations as
the North Carolina Club, the Glee Club and
the Math Club, which could not exist without
her.

Viola Mollis

Madison, Ga.
We are forever grateful to Viola for being
one of the people who never grow up. The
sunniness of her nature is one of the things
we will miss when we are far away from Agnes
Scott.

Lucie Howard

Lynchburg, Va.

Lucie's slogan is "The race is not to the

swift," and her private conviction is that an

effective garb is the best method of coming

out foremost at Field Day.

Eleanor Hyde

Dallas, Texas

It is hard to choose between Eleanor's never-
failing good humor and her wit. mediocrely
described as "sparkling" as points for praise.
Lacking power to discriminate between these
two. we again try but find that another choice
must be made between originality and versa-
tility. And there you are or she is!

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Charlotte Keesler
Greenwood, Miss.

That she is good to look at and delightful
to listen to, are only two of the reasons why
we hate to see Charlotte go away from us.

Jane Marcu Knight

Albany, Ala.

If George Washington was so truthful as
we have been taught he was, he must have
acknowledged last February 22 that this dain-
ty and charming Martha far eclipsed the orig-
inal. We know of several present-day swains
who say as much with flowers.

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Eloise Katharine Knight
Safety Harbor, f la.

"A verray, parfit, gentil Knight'' is Eloise
one who is in flower in our hearts as a gay,
understanding comrade, as well as the presi-
dent of our Y. W. C. A.

LuciLE Little

Atlanta, Ga.

There is a legend that with the first words
lisped by her infant tongue. Lucile demanded
an Agnes Scott catalogue. We cannot won-
der then that with such an early start she has
accomplished many things.

T T E

Elizabeth Wardlaw Lockhart

Decatur, Ga.

Without the training which companionship
with Plautus and Terrence afforded her,
Madame Lock-Harta declared that she could
never have managed the difficult arias in Lucy
de Lawn Mower.

Josephine Bell Logan
Tokushima, Japan

Deep enough for sincerity, four-square
enough for sympathy, broad enough for World
Fellowship, is Josephine.

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Marjorie Glover Lowe

Macon, Ga.

What Daisy Ashford called '"rather mere
words" can never do Marjorie Justice. One
needs a flash from the glowing '"spark" which
she herself possesses; and how to obtain it,
only poets, like Marjorie, and the gods who
give it, know.

Edith McCallie
Atlanta, Ga.

Literary genius burns brightest in a heart
whose only thoughts are love, whose only looks
are sympathy, whose on'y deeds are service.

Lois McClain

Jasper, Ga.

This breeze which came blowing in four
years ago has been gladdening our lives ever
since. We are sorry that it must blow on to

Elizabeth Lyle McClure

Spartanburg, S. C.

The charm and magnetism of a will o" the
wisp, fused with the unselfishness and depend-
ability of a vice-president of Y. W. C. A.
not an impossible combination iot Beth.

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Hilda McConnell

Royston, Ga.

With a will to do, and a skill to win. she
has done her work with such a degree of
thoroughness that our meagre vocabulary finds
itself inadequate.

Anna Hall McDougall

Jackson, Tenn.

During the three short years of her sojourn
with us, the infant prodigy of the Senior class
kept our wonder growing that one small head
could hold ail she knew.

Martha McIntosh

Albany, Ga.

All that she does is done with a gracious-
ness that cannot be imitated because it is dis-
tinctly her own.

Mary Stewart McLeod

Bartow, Fla.

With enviable ease Mary Stewart has per-
formed the many duties entrusted to her, not
least of which is that of becoming the per-
fect secretary.

Anna Hardeman Meade

Birmingham, Ala.

Like the proverbial lilies, Anna Meade toils
not, neither does she spin, but she has some-
how managed to acquire in the course of four
short years three or four majors, a starry
sweater, and a host of friends.

SusYE Margaret Mims
Monroeville, Ala.

With an ease that defies imitation she
dances into our hearts as well as into the
hearts of numerous numbers of the sterner
sex.

3 U E T T E

Elizabeth Washington Malloy

Murfreesboro, Tenn.

Her histrionic ability makes Elizabeth as
interesting in every-day life as she is behind
the footlights.

Myrtle Murphy
Louisville, Ga.

Myrtle has so applied her winning ways as
not to allow the mastery of hard subjects to
interfere with conquests in other fields.

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Fredeva Stokes Ogletree

Cornelia, Ga.

Through "smiling so beguiling." Freddy has
found the way to getting what you want in
this world. Yet who could smile with the
weight of a new bonnet on one's mind?

Elizabeth Parham
Bullochville, Ga.

Blossoming quite suddenly into the realm of
athletics. "Lib" has become a veritable star.
making her goals with miraculous ease and
emerging from the fray as from a bandbox.

e^

c^

Valeria Posey
Liberty, S. C.

The joy of living. Valeria finds, can be ex-
pressed only by constant activity, for which
Blackfriars and many another organization
have reason to be grateful.

Sarah Elizabeth Ransom

Birmingham, Ala.

The lightness with which Elizabeth danced
through May Day was aided by the fact that
two weighty responsibilities had slipped from
her shoulders the Lecture Association and
The Silhouette.

Margaret Story Ransom

Atlanta, Ga.

Fairy princesses being part of a dead past,
all we could do for Margaret in recognition
of the glamour attaching to golden hair was
to crown her Queen of the May.

Ruth Sanders

DeVall's Bluff, Ark.

By day, the doer of gentle deeds, Ruth is
possessed by ten demons at night, with one
lusty yank at the fire alarm she calls forth a
legion of kindred spirits to carouse with her.

1 U E T T E

Alma Newland Seagle

Lenoir, N. C.

Even very skinny people can fill large places
sometimes. In her four years with us Alma
has made a big place in all our hearts.

Catherine Shields

Decatur, Ga.

She knows the uses of a capo dostro and
that distinguishes her from the rest of us
that and the distinction of being our near-
est and most active semi-resident.

o

) f

T TT__T

^

6

Pearl McWilliams Smith

Rome, Ga.

We wonder how the Y. W. C A. cabinet
could have done without Pearl. The ready
spirit with which she undertook the hardest
tasks, and her unfailing friendliness and cour-
tesy are only a few of the lovely traits that
have made her indispensable to this organiza-
tion and endeared her to our hearts.

Lucy McIver Timmerman
Sumter, S. C.

Her generous sympathy goes out to the
merest acquaintance, and her friends find her
truly a friend in need.

o-

a

Nancy King Tripp
Atlanta, Ga.

She has tripped her way gaily from Atlanta
to Agnes Scott and back again, but in the
intervals between she has made a faultless
record and won many friends to trip beside
her.

Margaret Turner
Pelham, Ala.

Seeing here how men's hearts open for her
we predict that Margaret will find a cordial
and welcoming world wherever she goes.

\

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";-;|yp

Alice Mayes Virden
Cynthia, Miss.

We might write indefinitely of her many
nameless virtues, but the ink being at a low
ebb we must hasten on to

Eva Elizabeth Wassum

Macon, Ga.

the next. It required nothing less than the
alphabet, which altereth not. to put Eva at
the end of the Seniors. She was always in
the foreground, loyally supporting her class
and doing many times her own share in any
undertaking on the campus.

/

G

T E

m

William Rankin, Jr.,

Gifted with a personality of more than ordi-
nary magnetism and charm, our loyal co-ed
will ever be one of the most popular members
of the class of '23.

S I

-; T TTT^

..-^g. .fe>^

6

i'mor JFarultg il^mb? ra

Miss McKinney

Dr. Armistead

Miss Torrance

Clara Mae Allen , Emily Spivey

IMOGENE Allen Lucile Phippen

Ruth Almond Lillian Thompson

Hazel Bordeaux ^.m'ly Zellars

Dorothy Bowron Annie Mae Terry

Margaret Brenner Annie Jonson

Sarah Belle Brodnax Martha Linn Manly

Louise Brown Elizabeth Blalock

Nannie Campbell Frances Bitzer

Minnie Lee Clarke Carolyn Smith

Thelma Cook Sarah Dunlap

Jessie Dean Cooper Florence Brawley

Eileen Dodd Ruth Drane

Christine Evans Mary Jarman

Helen Faw Elizabeth Griffin

Elizabeth Flake , Mildred Pitner

Maude Foster Eugenia Thompson

Philippa Gilchrist Margery Speake

Mary Goodrich Dorothy Keith

GeRALDINE GoODROE ^.^'^'-'-D WALKER

Brooks Grimes '^l*"'' ?^^'"-^'=

Emily Guille Mary Ann McKinney

Mary Harris Walker Fletcher

Quenelle Harrold ^Ltha Bowen

Frances Harwell Anne McKay

Mary Stewart Hewlett Catherine Carrier

Elizabeth Hoke Gertrude Green

Viola Hollis Margaret Prowell

Lucie Howard Maria Rose

Eleanor Hyde Frances Lincoln

Eloise Knight Georgia May Little

Jane Knight Rosamonde Neisler

Lucile Little ,; Ella Smith

Elizabeth Lockhart Montie Sewell

Josephine Logan Josephine Schuessler

Marjorie Lowe Lucile Caldwell

Anna Meade ^^"'^ 7*^*\^^

SusYE MiMS Jacqueline Rolston

Elizabeth Molloy Josephine Douglass

Myrtle Murphy ,; o ' r^ Tf

Edith McCallie Mary Palmer Caldwell

Lois McClain Mary Walker Perry

Elizabeth McClure Louise Buchanan

Hilda McConnell E"-^!" Evans

Hall McDougall -Rosalie Janes

Martha McIntosh Margaret Wood

Mary Stewart McLeod Frances Alston

Fredeva Ocletree Kuth Harrison

Elizabeth Parham Mary Stewart Sims

Valeria Posey II'^-'el Ferguson

Elizabeth Ransom Sibyl Callahan

Margaret Ransom Pocahontas Wight

Ruth Sanders Lucile Cause

Alma Seagle Gertrude Henry

Catherine Shields Alice Greenlee

Pearl Smith Mary Keesler

Lucy Timmerman , R" ^""^^

Nancy Tripp Elizabeth Cheatham

Margaret Turner Eugenia Perkins

Alice Virden Mary Phlegar Brown

Eva Wassum Margaret Hyatt

Ittl|tit Q^l^tBt l|aUa

Within these halls ive have found sanctuary for a space;

And as tve pause and backward sloivlj trace

The thread of life that passing years have spun,

We find it jewelled with victories nobly won.

Within the refuge that these walls embrace.

We have found courage to go forth and face

Defeat, and strength to run life's tangled race;

And we have had our share of youthful fun

Within these halls.

We have learned to scorn and shun the false and base

In life. There has been set for us an honored pace

That we shall folloiv gladly as we run

Until the tangled race of life is done;

For we have sought and found a shining grace

Within these halls.

Marjorie Lowe,

Class Poet.

lU E T

B'pmar OUasB l|tBtnrij

Dear old Bobbie Burns! How the class of 1923 revered him during those first
few days at Agnes Scott. He had penned one immortal couplet which suited us so
perfectly that we could have wept on his shoulder for his depth of understanding had
he only appeared at the Registrar's desk at the fitting moment.

"Wee cowering timorous beastie.
What a quivering's in thy breastie."

If those lines weren't written To a Freshman, they should have been!

We tried not to let anyone know how we felt during those first awful days.
We bore with phlegmatic expressionless calm the indignities the Sophomores heaped
upon us, and steadfastly refused to allow them a glimpse of the scandalized in-
teriors of our minds as we skipped sedately across the colonnade, and made the best
of pig-tails and the laundry list. Our zero hour came at the end of Sophonwre
week, when the bronze cat waved a saucy metaphorical tail and told us that he pre-
ferred the society of the Sophomores.

One cannot expect to remain always at the zero mark, and this defeat marked
the rise of the mercury for us. It developed within us the souls of philosophers and
we glimpsed the fact that true artistry demands a mingling of lights and shadows.
We had achieved the shadows, we set to work to capture the lights. Turning to
athletics, we found that we were capable of winning letters and numerals at a sur-
prising rate. And always these successes were accompanied by a vociferous chant-
ing of our own sacred class song, "Pelanky Lanky," which never failed to stir our
aesthetic sensibilities, to arouse our ardor, and to provoke the envious fires of
rival classes.

At the beginning of our Sophomore year we lost the cat once more. But
sober experience had hardened us, and, after the first sharp pangs of grief were spent,
we turned our attention to other things. We improved our athletic reputation by
winning second place in hockey. Musically, we still rode to fame to the tune of
"Pelanky." Socially we put forth our best efforts in the Sophomore party and were
blamelessly proud of our achievement.

Our Junior year proved to be our "blossom time." We retrieved our laurels in
the dramatic field by giving The Tenth Girl, a production which received the hearty
approbation of the college community and the public at large, and which increased
Agnes Scott's reputation for beauty by at least ten points all scored by the
Juniors! Our business abilities were amply developed as we slaved over Junior
peanuts and candy, and conducted a three-ring circus which boasted pink lemon-
ade, clowns, monkeys and all the circus regalia. We enjoyed the fruits of our

^-^

D i

toil at the Junior banquet, where blue moons shone above Main building and
where we regaled the Seniors with elaborate toasts and a more elaborate menu.

The great year toward which we all were striving and which held so many
promises of good things arrived at last. Members of 1923 listened to an imperious
rising bell with a smile deliciously beatific, and rose leisurely as the sound of
scampering footsteps told us that the doors were closing on our more unfortunate
sisters. Our great responsibilities as Seniors did not prevent us from making a
glorious record in athletics. The gold and black swept victoriously down the
hockey field without a single defeat. In track, we gained second place, treading
close upon the heels of the victorious Sophomores who won first place over us by
one point. Our more intellectual and literary bent found expression in two dramatic
productions of note; our intimate knowledge of classic literature and our dramatic
ability we combined in a quaint and attractive production, A Midwinter Night's
Scream; the crown of dramatic achievement was reached in the Senior Opera. Bori
and Martinelli could not have performed more gracefully, nor could any master
producer have conceived of a more magnificent situation.

We love to think of these tangible successes that have filled our brief four
years of happiness. But the best part of our history is the unwritten personal part
which has to do with the wonderful hours we have spent together, with the love
that we have for one another and for our Alma Mater. These things do not
need to be written because we will never forget them.

Eloise Knight,

Historian.

O-

S I

^ptttDr (Elasa J^ropl^prg

GNES SCOTT in 1933! It presented a very different appearance from
the time when the famous class of '23 started out to seek its fortune. I
had a feeling that surely this could not be the same Agnes Scott of ten
years ago. Rather hesitatingly, I made my way up the steps of a very
pretentious looking building occupying the site of old Main Building. As I pro-
ceeded down the hall, I stopped short before one of the offices whose door had the
inscription, "Information Miss Meade." When I entered, I found that "Miss
Meade ' was none other than my old classmate, Anna. She greeted me cordially and
in response to my question as to what sort of information she gave, she answered:

"Oh, just about everything in general. I make it my business to keep up with
everything that happens around the campus and off of it, too. For, you see, I don't
lose interest in people the minute they leave school. I manage to keep up with
the girls after they have gone."

I did not miss the opportunity to demand an account of the class of '23. She
was quite ready to give it, so I settled myself comfortably to hear of the varied
pursuits of my old friends.

Anna told me with great enthusiasm of Hilda McConnell's fashionable finishing
school in the suburbs of New York. She was besieged with applications, but she
felt forced to limit the number to twenty-five in order to supervise personally the
social development of each pupil. Her aim was to make a social success of each
girl. She guaranteed to introduce her pupils to all of New York's eligible million-
aires. She was ably assisted by Hazel Bordeaux, whose particular task it was to
give instructions as to how to behave gracefully at dinner dates and how to manage
the other sex at all times. Nancy Tripp was also an important member of the
establishment. She offered a French course which enabled the girls to interpret
menus and to employ French phrases in their conversation.

I inquired if any of our class had become distinguished in the literary world.

"Yes, indeed," exclaimed Anna. "Lucile Little has finally had some of her
work accepted by "Snappy Stories' and everyone predicts a wonderful future for
her. Alice Virden's latest book, 'Advantages of Being the Cow's Tail,' is creating
a nation-wide sensation equal only to that of Dorothy Bowron's celebrated work,
'Decatur Soda Jerkers I Have Known.' Of course, you've heard of Sarah Belle
Brodnax's success in her newspaper work. Her department is headed 'Helpful
Hints to Popularity,' and is the most widely read of any of the sections of The
Conslitution. However, the most renowned of our number along this line is Nannie
Campbell, who has succeeded Captain Billy as editor of 'The Ifhiz Bang.' "

Before I had recovered from this last shock, Anna continued :

"It certainly is surprising what some of them have done. Who in the world
would have expected Brooks Grimes to go as a missionary to Africa? Still, that

isn't any funnier than for Philippa Gilchrist to have become an I. W. W. They
say she is in constant danger of arrest because of her extremely radical views.

"Speaking of politics, have you heard about Mary Hewlett's running for gover-
nor of Georgia? She is conducting a vigorous campaign and all her friends feel
confident of her election. Her success is due largely to the influence of Mary
Stewart McLeod. You know she studied law after leaving Agnes Scott and is
now one of the most prominent judges in the State.

"The class of '23 is distinguished in the industrial world, too. Eloise Knight
and Josephine Logan were so delighted with their taste of industrial life that they
decided to make that their life work. They are rising steadily in their profession.
Now they are foremen of a factory producing the largest amount of cosmetics in
the world.

"Myrtle Murphy is running an elevator in one of the leading department stores
of Atlanta. The life suits her fine, for she is on the go every minute. Eileen Dodd
took a course in gum chewing and now holds the responsible position of head of the
jewelry department at Kress'.

"That reminds me of Lucie Howard's latest achievement. She has manufac-
tured a new kind of chewing gum that won't lose its flavor on the bed-post over
night. Besides that merit it has such a delicious flavor that the Agnes Scott faculty
simply refuses to use any other kind.

"Lucie Howard isn't the only one with inventive genius. Lib Ransom has made
a perfect fortune with her new freckle cream, 'Bushola.' She has contributed the
greater part of her fortune for building a new Beta house at Tech, realizing her in-
debtedness to that fraternity."

Suddenly, while Anna talked, I heard a loud, purring sound directly overhead.
I ran to the window toi see what it could be, and then I got the surprise of my life.
For it was nothing less than an airplane landing at Agnes Scott. Margaret Brenner,
in a snappy flying costume, jumped lightly to the ground and helped several other
girls to alight.

Seeing my astonishment, Anna laughed. "No wonder you're surprised. I
haven't had a chance to tell you about the airplane service that Margaret Brenner
has instituted between Decatur and Atlanta for the benefit of the day students. It
is a wonderful improvement on the Georgia Railway and Power Co. The day
students are actually on time for English eleven now.

"But airplanes aren't the only thing we have now at Agnes Scott Golf has re-
placed hockey as the leading sport. Our new 18-hole course is one of the best in
the South. You know Margaret Ransom is the instructor. We were awfully lucky
to get her for she has won the national golf championship. I don't suppose you
knew of our wonderfully equipped swimming pool either. With Ruth Sanders to
supervise, the Agnes Scott girls all excel in aquatic sports.

"Margaret and Ruth aren't the only ones who have distinguished themselves
along athletic lines. Lucy Timmerman has taken up ice-skating and is interna-

'-T E

^"^--;;::i^.^ tionally famous for her daring feats. Wallace and Camp have both been forced

to withdraw their reducing records from the market. Mary Goodrich's new system is
all the rage. She has motion pictures of herself illustrating the exercises, and in-
stead of a victrola she has regular orchestras. The only fly in her ointment is that
she won't allow herself to enjoy the luxuries her fortune has brought her, for fear
of getting fat."

"But what about the girls who showed such talent in the old Blackfriar plays?"
I asked. "Haven't any of them achieved fame?"

"Why, I should say so! Valeria Posey is the talk of the theatrical world.
She has deserted the speaking stage for the movies, and is simply besieged by pro-
ducers who want her to sign contracts with them. Marjorie Lowe is devoting her
genius to writing scenarios particularly for her. As a result, Valeria has attained a
position in filmdom unheard-of for such a young actress. Mary Harris as her
business manager and Jessie Dean Cooper as her press agent, have contributed
much to her success.

"The road to fame hasn't been quite so easy for Charlotte Keesler. Beginning
as a, chorus girl, she has had a pretty hard time of it. However, she seems to be
near her goal now, for Elizabeth Malloy has recently married a millionaire and is
using her money and influence for Charlotte's advancement. It is rumored that she
is to be starred on Broadway next season.

"The success of the Allen sisters has been phenomenal. Starting out in vaude-
ville, the originality of their singing and dancing act brought them a contract from
the Follies. They have now started out for themselves and they say it was due
to them that the Dolly sisters retired to private life.

"I do wish you could be here during opera season. The part Ruth Almond
took in Lucie de Lawnmower the night of our Senior opera, determined her career.
She's starring in Carmen this year, but it's become her custom to sing 'Oh, Lovey,
Dovey,' by request at the end of every performance. They say it wrings tears from
the stoniest heart."

"Don't tell me that all of the class of '23 prefers a career to the gentle
art of housekeeping," I interrupted.

"Oh, no!" replied Anna. "Our class is doing its bit to keep up Agnes
Scott's record of having the highest per cent, of married alumnae. Susye Minis
broke all records in getting a trousseau together and took her M. R. S. a week
after she got her A.B. Minnie Lee Clarke ran her a close second. Her happiness
is not so complete, however, for she feels that out of loyalty to the chemistry de-
partment of Agnes Scott she must have every meal perfectly balanced. They say
the poor girl is about to lose her mind on the subject; of calories, starches, carbohy-
drates, etc.

"Elizabeth Lockhart, after carefully considering the matter, has decided that
life in a little brown bungalow holds more charms than a musical career. So she
ia on the point of taking the fatal step, too.

V\

np nr" t:

"Jane Knight has made the most brilliant match ever made by the Agnes
Scott alumnae. To make a long story short, Jane went to Europe the year after
she graduated and succeeded in capturing a handsome French count. She has a
wonderful estate and is constantly entertaining. Alma Seagle and Pearl Smith were
recently her guests. You know they are conducting an archaeological investigation
in Pompeii, having been inspired by Latin Six. They have just made the amazing
discovery that the Roman women were constant users of Mascaro and orange rouge.

"I'm sorry to say all the matrimonial ventures haven't been so fortunate.
Martha Mcintosh is in Reno getting her third divorce. They say she is quite cheer-
ful about it and is already looking around for a fourth. We have another of our
number in Reno, too, but not for the same purpose. Elizabeth Parham has been
sent out there as a representative of the Anti-Mormon League of America, and is
getting very gratifying results.

"Jerry Goodroe has shown her humanitarianism by founding a home for
those members of the Agnes Scott alumnae who have at last submitted to a life
of single-blessedness. There isn't a dull minute in the day. Jerry has something
planned to keep them entertained all the time. On Tuesday and Thursday after-
noons Catherine Shields entertains them with her original musical compositions,
and Maud Foster reads them her love poems. Emily Guille has contributed greatly
to their happiness by interesting them in the famous indoor sport, knitting. Em
has recently received the signal honor of election to the presidency of the Organ-
ized Knitters of America.

"Beth McClure could not be outdone in the spirit of community helpfulness,
so she founded an asylum for those who have become demented as a result of
Miss Smith's latin. Her capacities are so limited that she is forced to turn away
hundreds. I am glad to hear that Lois McClain is to have advantage of the next
vacancy. Poor Lois became slightly unbalanced from her continued study of latin
prose. Since she has left school, her mental deficiency has become more and more
pronounced and has manifested itself along many lines. Her latest craze is imitating
the human fly. In addition to this, she is an ardent disciple of Coue. She is a
conspicuous figure in Jasper as she scales the skyscrapers shouting: 'Day by day
in every way, I'm getting cuter and cuter!'"

I was so distressed at learning about the sad plight of my former room-mate
that I hastily changed the subject.

"Tell me about some of the others," I begged. "What has happened to
Christine Evans, Margaret Turner and Thelma Cook?"

"Why, surely you've heard what authorities Margaret and Thelma are on
bridge. Nobody nowadays plays according to Hoyle or Foster. It is 'Turner
and Cook' in the best circles.

"Christine is Susanna Cocroft's most powerful rival. In almost any magazine
you pick up you see an advertisement of her correspondence course headed, 'You,

T E

J

too, may be a perfect physical specimen,' with a picture of Christine in bathing
suit.

"You will be interested to know that Christine's office in New York is in the
same building that Quenelle Harrold's is. Quenelle is a member of the firm, Drs.
Harrold and Harrold. I hear this partnership is about to be dissolved because
Quenelle is so busy studying her brother for her proposed book, 'The Perfect Man,'
that she just will not attend to any of the cases.

"Speaking of doctors, Frances Harwell became so interested in the dental
profession that she is now a dentist's assistant. I don't know which it is that appeals
to her more, dentistry or the dentist.

"Really, you have no idea what a wonderful work some of our class are
doing for the Greater Atlanta," Anna continued. "Edith McCallie is one of the
most valued members of the secret service. With the co-operation of Eleanor
Hyde, who is chief of Atlanta's police force, the crime wave is a thing of the past.
In fact, the penitentiary is used now as a summer hotel.

"Lib Hoke is doing her share, too. She has proved herself worthy of the dis-
tinguished position she holds as traffic cop at Five Points. She says the view from
the little tower is delightful.

"I regret to have to tell you that one of our number is not co-operating in
this spirit of reform. Helen Faw's new lottery is the favorite gambling device
of the younger social set and is having a very demoralizing effect."

Anna's face looked serious for a moment, then she brightened.

"The Agnes Scott girls are greatly indebted to our class for the gay social
whirl out here. Fredeva Ogletree and Viola Hollis are running a dog wagon
out at Emory and are doing all they can to encourage friendly relations between
the two institutions. Louise Brown, as social secretary of the Sigma Chi's, is a
great asset, too."

As Anna stopped for breath, I demanded, "Do tell me about Beth Flake
what is she doing now?"

"Why, surely you've heard what a celebrated cartoonist she is. You know she
discovered her talent in this direction while seeking recreation in her psychology
class.

"I've saved the best till the last, though," Anna ran on. "I have a won-
derful treat in store for you. The Lecture Association has had the marvelous luck
of securing Eva Wassum for a lecture tomorrow night on 'The Ameba.' Every-
body has been looking forward to it for weeks. You must certainly hear her."

Anna's words recalled the fact to me that I had only an hour to catch my
train, so I rose hastily to leave, but not before I had warmly thanked her for relating
to me the varied fortunes of the class of '23.

Hall McDougall,

Class Prophet.

3

i

State of Georgia,
County of DeKalb.

Know All Men by These Presents: That we, the Senior Class of 1923 of
Agnes Scott College in said State and County, being of sound mind and body de-
spite our four years of strenuous endeavor, and wishing to pass on our respective
gifts and personal attractions, do hereby make this last will and testament.

Item 1. We do hereby declare all previous documents null and void.

Item 2. I, Clara Mae Allen, do bequeath to Montie Sewell my great interest
in England, urging her to foster the same with great care, since Oxford is not
as near Decatur as might be desired.

Item 3. I, Imogene Allen, do bestow upon Elma Swaney my quiet and
soothing voice, urging her to make use of the same insofar as is necessary for
the preservation of the peace.

Item 4. I, Ruth Almond, do bequeath to the students all the fire drills I
might have given but never gave, hoping that they will be more appreciative of
these latter than they were of the drills given.

Item 5. I, Hazel Bordeaux, in all modesty, do leave to Mary Mobberly my
unrivalled attainments in the realm of scholarship.

Item 6. I, Dorothy Bowron, leave to Margaret Prowell my attachment to the
Beta fraternity, because I realize that only one more frat pin is needed to com-
plete her collection.

Item 7. I, Margaret Brenner, do leave to Georgia May Little my knowl-
edge and appreciation of animal psychology, which the recipient will find useful in
the taming of household pets, especially cats.

Item 8. I, Sarah Belle Brodnax, do leave to Elizabeth Riviere my intensely
home-loving nature.

Item 9. I, Louise Brown, to Isabel Ferguson do leave the secret of my mind-
reading ability, assuring her that it will prove especially helpful in psychological
study.

Item 10. I, Nannie Campbell, do in all sympathy leave to the succeeding
house president the joys (?) of checking over the register book, remembering to
turn on the lights, and "shushing" 'til all hours. Results on disposition not guar-
anteed.

Item 11. We, Minnie Lee Clarke, Eileen Dodd, Helen Faw and Elizabeth
Parham, do bequeath our hopeless matrimonial aspirations to Sarah Spiller.

Item 12. I, Thelma Cook, leave to Frances Lincoln my superfluous flesh,
with the provision that if it proves more than is becoming to her, she bestow
the surplus on Mary Stuart.

H

T E

Item 13. I, Jessie Dean Cooper, do leave the secret of my ever neat and care-
ful coiffure to Lulie Pou.

Item 14. I, Christine Evans, do bequeath to a certain psychology profes-
sor all my toys, especially my doll.

Item 15. I, Elizabeth Flake, do leave to Victoria Howie my winning smile,
and my bewitching dimples to Rosamonde Neisler.

Item 16. I, Maude Foster, do leave to the Atlanta girls boarding at the
college my many comings and goings, since I have found that too long residence in
any one place is decidedly boring.

Item 17. I, Philippa Gilchrist, do bequeath to Del Bernhardt my under-
standing of all four dimensions and then some.

Item 18. I, Mary Goodrich, do leave my healthy color to be bestowed upon
Daisy Frances Smith.

Item 19. I, Geraldine Goodroe, do leave my steadfast and unshakeable de-
termination to Helen Lane Comfort, with which gift she may supplement the
strength of her own will.

Item 20. I, Emily Guille, lamenting the fact that I have only one "redeem-
ing feature" to bequeath, do relinquish it my curly hair to Josephine Havis, as-
suring her that a natural curl is much more satisfactory than the frequent use of
irons.

Item 21. I, Brooks Grimes, do leave to Mary Keesler my unequalled ath-
letic prowess.

Item 22. I, Mary Harris, do bequeath to all late arrivals at entertainments
in chapel, my stature, and I hope they will appreciate it as I have.

Item 23. I, Quenelle Harrold, do leave my slothfulness to Emily Spivey, and
my spacious corner room with all conveniences, including the 'phone and fire-
place, to the succeeding house president.

Item 24. We, Frances Harwell and Edith McCallie, do leave to Mary
Jarman our maidenly blushes.

Item 25. I, Mary Hewlett, do will to Josephine Douglas my great aversion
to study, with the timely reflection that "all work and no play," etc.

Item 26. I, Elizabeth Hoke, do leave my cherished opinions to Virginia Owen.

Item 27. I, Viola Hollis, bequeath my squelching glances by which I main-
tain order in the library, to Sarah Kinman.

Item 28. I, Lucy Howard, do leave my domesticity, especially as evidenced
in the making of many "gents' h'dk'f's," to Nonie Peck.

Item 29. I, Eleanor Hyde, do leave my etiquette book to Zala Elder, assur-
ing her that diligent study of same will enable her to cultivate a very useful
and effective savoir-faire.

(D

Ti r

Item 30. We, Charlotte Keesler and Elizabeth Molloy, do pass on to "Squint"
and "Theta" that which was last year entrusted to us, viz., the secret of perfect
harmony and union.

Item 31. I, Eloise Knight, do leave my popularity with the philosophy de-
partment to all students who may in after years be inspired to major in philosophy,
with the admonition that the legatees use this gift for all its worth.

Item 32. I, Jane Knight, do bequeath my fame as an artist's model to whom-
soever after me shall prove a sufficiently "unusual type."

Item 33. I, Elizabeth Lockhart, do will my birdlike voice to Lillian McAlpine.

Item 34. I, Josephine Logan, do leave to Sarah Dunlap my great fondness
for public speaking and my oratorical abilities in the same line.

Item 35. L Marjorie Lowe, do bequeath to the Poetry Club in perpetuum
the secret of my poetic genius, on one condition that it never be used in com-
posing of verse of an amorous nature.

Item 36. I, Anna Meade, do leave to the reporters of the Agonistic my over-
developed instinct for accumulating news. This should prove especially helpful
in getting advance information of events.

Item 37. We, Susie Mims and Margaret Turner, do bequeath our playful
"cuteness" and our boisterousness to Elizabeth Randolph and Charlotte Higgs.

Item 38. I, Myrtle Murphy, feeling that Fanny Swann has been a wall flower
long enough, do bequeath to her my many dates.

Item 39. I, Lois McClain, do leave to Marjorie Speake my excessive fondness
for "boning," but would recommend a little light exercise at reasonable intervals.

Item 40. I, Elizabeth McClure, in the firm belief that such a "good thing"
should remain in the family, do leave to the tender mercies of Louise Buchanan
the cherished Saint Patrick, whose other name is Daniel.

Item 41. I, Hilda McConnell, do bequeath my absolute equanimity and level-
headedness on all occasions to Mellie Zellars.

Item 42. I, Martha Mcintosh, do leave to the International Relations Club
my tangled amorous affairs, hoping that that noble organization will have a greater
degree of success than I did in keeping them straightened out.

Item 43. I, Mary Stewart McLeod, do leave my numerous and sundry secre-
taryships and treasurerships to as many people as it is possible to divide them
among.

Item 44. I, Fredeva Ogletree, do bequeath to one or the other of the Land
twins, my coppery tresses in order that the general populace may be enabled, at
first glance, to distinguish between the aforesaid twins.

Item 45. I, Valeria Posey, do leave to the student treasurer and the chair-
man of the auditing committee my profound understanding of high finance, as I
know such a grift will be useful to them in their duties.

. /

F

Item 46. I. Elizabeth Ransom, do leave my naivete and my angelic expres-
sion to Virginia Perkins. Nv

Item 47. I, Margaret Ransom, do leave to Carrie Scandrett the peculiar qual- ( )

ities which fit me for the position of May Queen.

Item 48. I, Ruth Sanders, do leave to Ruth Kennedy my gentle voice and
retiring manner.

Item 49. I, Alma Seagle, do leave the secret of the process by which I
charmed "him," to Emmde Ficklen.

Item 50. I, Catherine Shields, bequeath to Pocahontas Wight my unfail-
ing poise and my dignity unruffled in any crisis.

Item 51. I, Pearl Smith, will turn over to the earliest applicant any and
all of my very distinguishing nicknames.

Item 52. I, Lucy Timmerman, do bequeath my scorn of all members of
the other sex to Araminta Edwards.

Item 53. I, Nancy Tripp, do leave to Polly Stone my unusual command of
the English language, as I feel sure the recipient can make use of same.

Item 54. I, Alice Virden, do leave to Mary Colley my radical views on love,
with the sincere hope that aforesaid views will not produce in her a morbid frame
of mind.

Item 55. I, Eva Wassum, do leave to Frances Amis my "uniform" of Tuxedo
jacket and plaid skirt, assuring the recipient that that outfit will give the wearer
an air of great efficiency useful in impressing the faculty.

Item 56. We, the Senior class as a whole, relinquish to the class of '24
the peculiar joys of Senior seats in chapel, caps and gowns, and late-to-meals
privileges.

Item 57. To the class of '25 our sister class we give our especial love,
and hope that their sister class may make them as happy as they have made us.

Item 58. To the class of '26 we give our assurance that "if we could do it,
they can," and the great wish that they may grow to love Agnes Scott as deeply
as we do.

This instrument was signed, sealed and delivered by the class of 1923, this
twenty-ninth day of May, 1923.

Lucile Little,

Testator.
Witnesses:

Louise Buchanan,
Olive Hall,
Nancy Evans.

JUNIOR

57 VSN'et/

es

i i

T TT^

T E

.>

Helen Wright
Elizabeth Henry
Frances Amis

Mabel Akers
Attie a. Alford
Frances Ann Amis
Emily Arnold
Mary Evelyn Arnold
Elizabeth Pinson Askew
Ella Delight Bernhardt
Minnie Rebecca Bivings
Janice Stewart Brown
Virginia Arnold Burt
Gwynne Cannon
Mary Wood Colley
Helen Lane Comfort
Beulah Lane Davidson
Martha Nancy Lakes
Nancy Chenault Evans
Emmie Bounds Ficklen
Katie Frank Gilchrist

ilunior Ollaaa

CLASS OFFICERS

President

Vice-President

Secretary-Treasurer

CLASS ROLL

Mary Frances Gilliland
Mary Hemphill Greene
Margaret Griffin
Josephine Havis
Marian Louise Hendrix
Elizabeth Henry
Emma Kate Higgs
Victoria Howie
Barron Hyatt
Marion Rhea Johnson
Sarah Aline Kinman
Vivian Little
Mary Lynder Mann
Mary Mobberly
Frances Caroline Myers
Lillian May McAlpine
Mary Lucile McCurdy
Margaret Clarkson McDow

Helen Wright

Elizabeth Henry

Frances Amis

Edna Arnetta McMurry
Catherine Emery Nash
Lucy Gilmer Oliver
Weenona Peck
Sarah Montine Phakr
Margaret Powell
Cora Richardson
Carrie Scandrett
Daisy Frances Smith
Melissa Smith
Mary Emily Stewart
Polly Stone
Fannie Swann
Annie Wilson Terry
Clara Waldrop
Annadawn Watson
Rosa Wilkins
Helen Wright

^O

5 I L

ATTIE ALFORD

"Never elated when one man's oppressed;
Never dejected while another's blessed."

FRANCES AMIS

"Few things are impossible to diligence
and skill."

EMILY ARNOLD

"// she will, she iiill you may depend

ont.
And if she won't, she won't; and there's

an end ont."

MARY EVELYN ARNOLD

"Bright as the sun her eyes the gazers

strike.
And like the sun they shine on all alike."

ELIZABETH ASKEW
^The tongue is the pen of the mind"

DEL BERNHARDT

"Blessed with that charm
The certainty to please."

n

n (

T F,

c

REBECCA BIVINGS

"Of manners, gentle ;
Of affections, mild."

JANICE BROWN

"Advise, wit; write, pen; for I am for
whole volumes in folio."

VIRGINIA BURT

''A lady richly clad was she, beautiful
exceedingly."

GWYNNE CANNON
"Common sense in an uncommon degree is
ivhat the leorld calls wi:dom."

MARY COLLEY

"The fairest garden in her looks.'

HELEN LANE COMFORT
"How prone to doubt, how cautious are
the wise."

o

BEULAH DAVIDSON

"She is so constant, and so kind.'

MARTHA EAKES
'True as the dial to the sun."

NANCY EVANS
"/ tvould do anything to serve a friend

EMMIE FICKLEN

"There was a soft and pensive grace.
A cast of thought upon her face"

KATIE FR.'VNK GILCHRIST
"Our hands are full of business; let's

FRANCES GILLILAND

"Cupid hath not in all his quiver's choice
An arrow for the heart like a sweet voice."

T T E

MARY HEMPHILL GREENE

'The heart to conceive, the understanding
to direct, and the hand to execute."

MARGARET GRIFFIN

"And I oft have heard defended.
Little said is soonest mended."

JOSEPHINE HAVIS

"Persuasive speech, and more persuasive

sighs.
Silence tfiat spoke, and eloquence of eyes."

LOUISE HENDRICKS

"/ was never less alone than when by
myself."

ELIZABETH HENRY

"At Learning's fountain it is sweet to
drink."

KATE HIGGS
"We learn not for school, but for life.'

O

-a

S I L

VICTORIA HOWIE

"Shalt show us how divine a thing
woman may be made."

BARRON HYATT
'^Gentle of speech, but abcolute of rule.'

MARION JOHNSON

'/Te meet thee like a plea ant thought
ivhen such are uanted."

LILLIAN McALPINE

"Nightingale, thou art a singer;
Ah, even such an one am I."

MARGARET McDOW
"Oh, why should life all labor be?"

EDNA McMURRAY

"Demure and quiet is she, and yet me-
thinks there's something more be-
neath."

T T E

MARY MOBBERLY

'Whose little body lodged a mighty mind"

MARY MANN

"Nothing great teas ever achieved ivithout
enthusiasm."

FRANCES MYERS
"/ am sure care's an enemy to life."

CATHERINE NASH

"S/ie ivould not, ivith a preemptory note
Assert the nose upon her face her own."

LUCY OLIVER

"She is pretty to walk with.
And wittY to talk with."

WENONA PECK
"A merry heart goes all the day.'

MONTINE PHARR

"Perseverance is the first step in the lad-
der of success."

MARGARET POWELL

"Hoio sweet and gracious, even in common
speech, is that fine sense which men
call courtesy."

CORA RICHARDSON

"Her eyes express the sweetest kind of
bahfulness."

CARRIE SCANDRETT

'tf ho mixed reason with pleasure and
wisdom with mirth."

DAISY FRANCES SMITH
"Whither haste thee, nymph?"

MELISSA SMITH

3e yourself, and leave custom to fools
who need it."

T E

FANNIE SWANN

^'Care to our coffin adds a nail, no doubt.
And every grin so merry draws one out."

POLLY STONE

"She gives herselj to every cause that she
upholds, and that's the greatest gift
of all."

MARY STEWART
"Life is short, but thou art long."

ANNIE WILSON TERRY

"She lives content and envies none.
Not even a monarch on his throne."

CLARA WALDROP

"She harbors Idndly thoughts towards all
the icorld."

ROSA WILKINS

-I'lrasiinl, anil capable uj sober thought."

HELEN WRIGHT

"Sweet promptings unto kindest deeds
were in her very look."

SOPHOMORE

T T E

FANNIE SWANN

"Care to our coffin adds a nail, no doubt.
And every grin so merry draws one out."

POLLY STONE

"She gives herself to every cause that she
upholds, and that's the greatest gift
of all."

MARY STEWART
"Life is short, but thou art long

ANNIE WILSON TERRY

"She lives content and envies none.
Not even a monarch on his throne."

CLARA WALDROP

"She harbors kindly thoughts toivards all
the loorld."

ROSA WILKINS

'^Pleasant, and capable of sober thought.'

HELEN WRIGHT

"Siceet promptings unto kindest deeds
were in her very look."

SOPHOMORE

^

^'W

'\^ere's a F^son

i>o^jl|omor? (Elasa

CLASS OFFICERS

Georgia May Little
Mary Keesler
Margaret Hyatt

President
Vice-President
Secretary-Treasurer

Louise Buchanan

Isabel Ferguson

Martha Linn Manly

i'npliomorp OIlaBS ISoU

Frances Alston
Frances Bitzer
Elizabeth Blalock
Mary Bess Bowdoin
Martha Bowen
Ida Florence Brawley
Mary Elizabeth Breedlove
Mary Phlecar Brown
Louise Ryman Buchanan
Lucile Caldwell
Mary Palmer Caldwell
Sybil Callahan
Catherine Eva Carrier
Elizabeth Cheatham
Bryte Daniel
Agatha Deaver
Marguerite Dobbs
Mary Key Dolvin
Josephine Douglass
Ruth Ernestine Drane
Sarah Buford Dunlap
Araminta Edwards
Eunice Prevost Evans
Isabel Ferguson
Walker Fletcher
Sarah Fullbright
RoMANA Callaway
Helen Lucile Cause
Selma Louise Gordon
Gertrude Moore Green
Alice Carolyn Greenlee
Vivian Keaton Gregory
Elizabeth Wilson Griffin
Ruth Leanna Guffin
Ruth Elizabeth Harrison

Gertrude Catherine Henry

Margaret Velma Henry

Vera Elberta Hickman

Sallie Elizabeth Horton

Margaret Hyatt

Martha Cobb Jackson

Rosalind Janes

Mary Jarman

Annie Barnes Johnson

Mary' Elizabeth Keesler

Dorothy Sykes Keith

Eunice Cloud Kell

Mary Evelyn King

Margaret Ladd

Frances Willard Lincoln

Frances Kellar Lineweaver

Georgia May Little

Mary Ann McKinney

Martha Lin Manly

Larsen Mattox

Evelyn Leo Melton

Mary' Lillian Middlebrooks

Isabel Midgley

Eva Sandifer Moore

Cora Frazer Morton

Rosamonde Walker Neisler

EuLA Norton

Ruth Whiting Owen

Clyde Passmore

jNIartha Pennington

Eugenia Walton Perkins

Mary Walker Perry

Lucille Woodley Phippen

Mildred Pitner

Mildred Frances Plunket

Margaret J. Prowell

Catherine Randolph

Lucy Rhyne

Margaret Frances Rogers

Jacqueline Campbell Rolston

Maria Kirkland Rose

Edith Ray Ruff

Floy Hilda Sadler

Josephine E. Schuessler

Lilla Exley Sims

Mary Stuart Sims

Carolyn Smith

Charlotte Smith

Ella Blanton Smith

Margery Mayhew Speake

Emily Ann Spivey

Annie Peyton Stinson

Susie Vallotton Stokes

Marianne Wallis Strouss

Elma Swaney

Sarah Tate

Susan Frances Tennent

Annie Mae Terry

Annie Wilson Terry

Mary Augusta Thomas

Eugenia Rutherford Thompson

Lillian Thompson

Ellen Axson Walker

Mary' Belle Walker

Pauline Wheeler

Pocahontas Wilson Wight

Margaret Rutledge Wood

Mary Ben Wright

Alicia Hart Young

Emily Quinn Zellars

T T E

\

S I LH O U E T

*

I

3M

^ T T E

TT-A >-n r'

SILHOUETTE

S Ji JL H

1^ 1

T T E

I

^:

3n Kntting iiputnry

iiartija Iflm^n

3lan. r, lans

Mnr. 5, 1923

/

>f^ T -rr TT T ./*% IT T

^

Po^m In i>ftitnr (HIubb

Halfway we pause upon the road and cast

A backward look on scenes that filled for us
The scores of shining days within the past;

They pass in quick review again, and thus
We see them now, as then we lived them through
With big and little joys, with work to do.
This, too, we know, the next tivo years that pass

Will even better joys bring in than they.
This we have learned from you, our Sister Class,

And gladly hail the other half the way.

FRESHMEN

Children Cry For 1+ -

c.

Nan Linglb
Edythe Coleman
Virginia Browning

Sarah Marion Albury
Emma Belle Allen
Sara Frances Asbury
Adelaide Atherton
Helen H. Atkins
Celeste Bailey
Annice Lillian Barr
Helen Adelaide Bates
Hannah Belle Benenson
Nellie Mae Benenson
Mary Louise Bennett
Eleanor Berger
Corena Berman
Elizabeth Beverly
Eunice Lee Bird
Lois Adelaide Bolles
Sarah Leone Bowers
Fannie Virginia Brown
Mary Anderson Brown
Mary Dudley Brown
Rachel Virginia Browning

CLASS OFFICERS
President

Nan Lingle
Edythe Coleman
Edythe Carpenter

Vice-President
Secretary -Treasurer

CLASS ROLL

Bertha Bernice Brunson

Josephine Idelle Bryant

Margaret Gertrude Bull

Marguerite Burnley

Esther Katherine Byers

Lillian Alice Callahan

Mary Elizabeth Callen

Katharine Gatewood CannadayElizabeth Moffat Douglas

Mary Louise Darcan
Clarkie Davis
Margaret Eunice Debele
Jennie Louise Dennington
Agnes Elizabeth Dinwiddie
Anne Helena Dismukes
Elizabeth C. Doggett

Edythe L. Carpenter
Elizabeth Carrere
Annette Carter
Elizabeth Julia Chapman
IsABELLE Louise Clarke
Verna June Clark
Lillian Clement
Edythe Nichols Coleman
Willie May Coleman
Mary Frances Conner
Frances Cooper
Sarah Will Cowan

LORENE CltRTIS

Louisa D. Dues
Gene Inman Dumas
Zala Winifred Elder
Ellen Ramey Fain
Nettie Simpson Feacin
Harriett Permelia Fearrington
Dora Ferrell
Ruth Fleming
Elizabeth Berry Fore
Frances Formby
Mary Emmie Freeman
Margaret Garrard
Elise Shepherd Gay

Edith Martin Gilchrist
Hilda Regina Goldbercer
/ Lucy Toomer Goodwin'

^ Catherine Graeber

v^ Carrie Augusta Graham

Mary Elizabeth Gregory
Elizabeth Juanita Greer
Eleanor Spencer Gresham
Sarah Elise Griffin
Virginia Grimes
Olive Hall

Sarah Elizabeth Hallum
Zona Martha Hamilton
Mary Ella Hanemond
Louise Hannah
Blanche Haslam
Helena E. Hermance
Charlotte Anna Higgs
Virginia Hollingsworth
Hattie Elizabeth Hood
Marcia Ford Horton
Hazel Annette Hosford
Katherine Houston
Hazel i\L\rcella Huff
Martha Ivey
Dorothy James
Mildred Louise Jennings
Sterling Johnson
Emily Jones
Cloah Kelley
Evelyn Kennedy
Ruth Martin Kennedy
Mary Elizabeth Kluttz
Mary Elizabeth Knox
Augusta Clark Land
Virginia LeGrande Land
Laura Lewis Lawhon
Freida Lazarus
Martha Eugenia Leonard
Mary Allen Lewis
Ruth Liggin
Nan Russell Lingle
Elizabeth Louise Little
Margaret Lotspeich
Mary Lines
Georgia McCaskill
Anne LeConte McKay
Ruth McMillan
Sarah Elizabeth Mackenzie
Virginia Louise Mahoney
Betty Helen Malone
Louisa Josephine Marbut
Helen Clarke Martin
Nellie Kate Martin
Margaret R. Martin
Martha Belle Martin
Margaret Marvin
Alice Frances Matthews
Alice Marcia Meldrim
Catherine Slover Mock
Elizabeth Heidt Moore
Florence Augusta Moriarty
Mildred Anne Morrow

Lucia Lewis Nimmons
Josephine Gardner North
Grace Augusta Ogden
Dorothy Wilhelmina Owen
Mary Virginia Owen
Harryett Payne
Virginia Peeler
Florence Elizabeth Perkins
Virginia Perkins
Louise Pfeiffer
Margaret Lane Perry
Ada Lela Pharr
Addie Pharr
Katherine Montgomery

Pitman
Mildred Lee Pitts
LouLiE Redd Pou
Sara Ernestine Ponder
Julia Ficklen Pope
Eugenia Louise Powell
Margaret Proctor
Mary Allene Ramage
Helene Ramsey
Elizabeth Randolph
Ethel Reece Redding
May L Reece
Nellie Bass Richardson
Elizabeth Riviere
Elizabeth Spotts Roberts
Ruth Elizabeth Rogers
Susan Murphy Rose
Lydia Rose Ryttenberg
Elizabeth Salter
Emmie Saxon
Mildred Scott
MONTIE Sewell
Susan Shadburn
Elizabeth Shaw
Ladelle Sherman
Sadibel Simons
Frances Singletary
Sarah Qihnn Slaughter
Martha Jane Smith
Mary Louise Smith
Sarah Falconer Smith
Viola Anna Smith
Mary Elizabeth Snow
Katherine Speights
Sarah Elizabeth Spiller
Frances Elizabeth Spratling
Evelyn Sprinkle
Alice Louise Stokes
Margaret Emily Stovall
Olivia Ward Swann
Margaret S. Terry
Margaret W. Terry
Marie Cornelia Thomas
Arnoldina Thornton
Florence Allen Tucker
Norma Tucker
Frances Gilder Turner
Ladie Sue Wallace
Frances Watterson

SPECL4L STUDENTS

Anita Yvonne Minter
LiLA Margaret Moore
Ellen Spicgle

UNCLASSIFIED STUDENTS

Grace Bargeron
Mary Lee Bell
Marjorie Clinton
Mary Ellen Colyer
Ruth Johnston
Frances Carolyn Moore
Chloe Leuelle O'Neal
Margaret Rose Smith
Margaret Anna Tufts
Maud Franklin Whittemore
Catharine Whittenberc
Margaret Elizabeth

Whitington
Virginia Cecile Wing
Lucy Kathryn Winn
Rosalie Elizabeth Wooten
Mary Frances Wright
Mary Ella Zellars

THIRD YEAR IRREGULARS

Margaret McColgan

SECOND YEAR IRREGULARS

Rebekah Apsyllah Harman
Lois Elizabeth Jennings
Sarah Morehouse
Olive Ruggles
Christine Turner
Virginia Watts
Frances White

FIRST YEAR IRREGULARS

Martha Pierce Aiken
Lorraine Beauchamp
Dorothy Eastman Connelly
Julia Leach Crenshaw
Eileen Culpepper
Jeffie Dunn
Elise Bluma Goldberger
Anne Louise Hubbard
DeCourcey Hobbs Jones
Dessie Gray Kuhlke
Frances Elizabeth Lipscomb
Willie Frances Marbut
Edith Lee Melton
Lucy Vernon Offert
Grace Overstreet
Bess Anita Rosenberg
Rebekah Skeen
Johnny V. Thomasson

L H O U E T T E

3a'i

Sc^

L H O U E

lEuoluttott of a iFr^alimatt

HAT a feeling of confidence I had when I stepped from the train (for
the first time in my life wearing everything brand new ) and was met
by superior upper classmen. They treated me, as I imagined they
would, quite politely; indeed, they carried my suit case, my umbrella,
my guitar, my tennis racket and my kodak, all out to the long-looked-for Agnes Scott.
Of course, I first had to go through the usual rites and ceremonies of "getting intro-
duced," but except for that I had a dandy time. Vague rumors began to reach my
ears about this time of how things were going to change soon, and sometimes
the word "Soph" in whispered awe rolled out of some one's lips. This, however,
meant nothing to me.

Then, one day, something did happen. The freshmen, like so many cattle,
were herded together by those audacious yes, that's just the word for those pre-
suming creatures, audacious sophomores into the chapel to receive instructions.
I went, having nothing better to do. I thought it might prove interesting and
listened for a few minutes, but I found that the girl on my right knew the cutest
boy from home, so we had lots of fun talking about him. Therefore, I gained
very little aid from the meeting.

Next morning when I went to breakfast, all curled and fluffed, the queerest
sight met by bewildered eyes. Half of the girls in the dining room were dressed
up like a tacky show, hair fixed backwards, middies on backwards, one white stock-
ing, one black, and they were actually sitting backwards at the table. I had no
sooner taken m^y seat than some good soul with the kindest intentions, I'm sure,
crept up behind me and shouted "Soph" in my ear. I had gathered by now that it
was no password to a club, so heeded her warning and when next I was ordered
upstairs to don the same queer rig, I lost no time in going for the sophomore
seemed rather positive and I didn't want to create any hard feelings so thought
I'd humor her.

The rest of that day lingers in my mind as a nightmare. I got a rush all
right but different from what I had expected. I was positively singled out from
that hideous bunch to assume all the dirty work, polish all the shoes, carry all
the books and generally act like the "scum of the earth." My former way of
greeting an upper classman by a slap on the back and a "Hey, ole frent," was
reduced to a feeble "Good morning" and a deferential bow.

I was warned to look at the freshman bulletin board for further instructions
before laying my weary form to rest, so I did. And you ask, dear friend, what
I did next morning? Well, I set my alarm for six o'clock and spent the next
hour profitably slicking my hair into eight wee pig tails, tying on the greenest
of green bows, bells, etc.

C-

O U E T T E

V

I shall spare you the details of the week. But let me assure you that the
sophisticated freshman who entered, in one week's time was as meek as the pro-
verbial lamb. I was first to assume the dust pan for my books, the laundry bag
and the suit case, in fact all those little conveniences provided me by those mighty
sophomores. Sophomore raid and sophomore council may be passed over, too, with
only a word: they likewise succeeded in bringing me to the point where I felt that
it was presumptuous to spell the name my parents had given me at birth with a cap-
ital letter.

And, friends, do you think if I were again to begin the year that I would change
one single incident? You ask why not, when I've complained of each duty. Well,
I cannot answer you, but I do know that I wish no better wish for the coming
freshmen but that they experience the same joys and terrors that I did, and that
they can travel along as bumpy a path until they reach that "perfect understand-
ing" with the sophomores and surrender their privilege of being an unnecessary
freshman who exists because it must.

H O

^

^'

S'tuirnt CHourrttinpnt AaBoriatinn

(L

_:- ^ . . - \1 HERE is on our campus an organization which helps each girl to form
the ideal that shall mold her life and gives her the strength of char-
acter to hold to her purpose. Here we are given the freedom that
brings forth our own personalities and we live as individuals. Our
aim is to live so as to be worthy of the faith placed in us.

In order that every girl may feel more vitally that she is a part of this or-
ganization, the Association is divided into two assemblies or houses, the upper and
lower house. The judicial power is entrusted to the upper house or executive
committee, while all suggestions from the student body are brought before the
lower house and passed upon. By such a division of responsibility a larger part
of the student body is brought into closer contact with the actual workings of the
organization, and more interest is taken in making it effective.

The students, however, are not the only ones on the campus who appre-
ciate student government, for the faculty also has often expressed its opinion in
whole-hearted co-operation. The sympathy and good will of the faculty have
helped make this organization of which we are so proud.

We cherish this heritage that was given to us when the charter for the
Student Government Association was granted not very many years ago, and there
is an earnest desire in the hearts of the "daughters of Agnes Scott" to live in
the spirit of their Alma Mater and uphold its standards and strive to reach the
noble ideal that is its aim.

U E T T E

Hilda McConnell President

Nannie Campbell First Vice-President

Emily Guille Second Vice-President

Quenelle Harrold Third Vice-President

Carrie Scandrett Secretary

Weenona Peck Treasurer

Pearl Smith ) ^ n

y Senior Kepresentatives

Alma Seagle j

Frances Myers , r,

- junior Kepresentatives

Polly Stone

Margery Speake I c- i n

^, , -, , X, ^ Sophomore Kepresentatives

Mary Ann McKinney j

Virginia Browning | r i n

^ ^ K tresliman Kepresentatives

Catherine Grabber '

STUDENTS' COUNCIL

Nannie Campbell, Chairman

Margaret Powell, Secretary

Hilda McConnell

Emily Guille

Quenelle Harrold

Pearl Smith

Alma Seacle

Carrie Scandrett

Weenona Peck

Polly Stone

Frances Myers

Margery Speake

Mary Ann McKinney

Catherine Graeber

Virginia Browning

Elizabeth Hoke

Beth McClure

Ruth Almond

Eileen Dodd

Mary Greene

Mary Goodrich

Helen Wright

Georgia May Little, First Semester

Louise Buchanan

Nan Lingle

Eva Wassum

Lucie Howard

Elizabeth Parham

Philippa Gilchrist

Mary Stewart McLeod

Helen Lane Comfort

Frances Amis

Emmie Ficklen

Mary Jarman

Margaret Hyatt, Second Semester

Catherine Houston

S I L

^ T

/

^

F

ljj f nung Unman'H ffll)riBttan ABBoriatian

HE Y. W. C. A. has become a vital part of Agnes Scott, not so much through the
actual deeds accomplished, though these have been a large factor in our campus
life, as through the living spirit created. It is a spirit which slowly and almost
unnoticed creeps into the soul of every student and leaves there a stamp never to be
erased. It acquires its growth gradually from continual contact with the good, the
pure and the beautiful. From a verse noticed on the bulletin board, from a word
spoken at evening watch, from a prayer heard at vespers, and from the constant influence of a
thousand other little things, there springs up a pervasive spirit of service, an undercurrent of ideal-
ism which marks the power of our Y. W. C. A.

Thus, by deeds and by pervasive influence, the Y. W. C. A. moves on toward its purpose,
big enough to tax the might of angels, "making the will of Christ effective in human society,"
and its efforts are not in vain, for the echoes of its spirit roll from soul to soul and grow for-
ever and forever.

|. m. C A. Olabtn^t

Eloise Knight President

/ Vice-President

Elizabeth McClure | Chairman Membership Department

Beulah Davidson | chairman. Publicity DepartmlZ

\ Treasurer

Barron Hyatt j Chairman Finance Department

Mary Goodrich Chairman Social Service Department

Pearl Smith . Chairman Religious Work Department

Virginia Ordway Chairman Social Department

(First Semester)

Victoria Howie Chairman Socio] Department

(Second Semester)

Josephine Logan Chairman World Fellowship Department

Victoria Howie Undergraduate Representative

(First Semester)

Frances Gilliland Undergraduate Representative

(Second Semester)

abtnft OIommtHBinn

Elizabeth Hoke Chairman Membership Committee

Janice Brown Chairman Publications Committee

Martha McIntosh . Chairman Bulletin Board Committee

Mary Ann McKinney' Chairman Dues and Pledges Committee

Valeria Posey Chairman Community IT ork Committee

Christine Evans Chairman Maids' Sunday School Committee

Emmie Ficklen Chairnmn Evening Watch Committee

Mary Colley Chairman Poster Committee

Helen Faw Chairman Sunday School Committee

Margaret Hyatt Chairman Chapel Committee

Lillian McAlpine Chairman Music Committee

Frances Myers Chairman, Church Affiliation Committee

Nancy Evans Chairman Social Work Committee

Mary Stewart McLeod Chairman World Fellowship Committee

Y. W. C. A. Cabinet

T T E

Cabinet Commission

\

<j

SILHOUETTE-

June 3. The advice in mother's letter this morning to strive to keep my feet
on the ground was too obviously needed, I'm afraid. Yet how can I? Was there
ever such a thrillingly lovely place? And who could be expected to walk sedately,
when one's great desire is to fly way up in the air across the Seven Sisters and per-
haps land for a breathing space on Mount Mitchell?

If I want to say anytliing, though, before Barron, like the good proctor she is,
makes us go to bed, I had better cease to rave. The trip up was splendid. Brenau
and Shorter and Cox delegations were on the train with us yesterday, and it was
fine to meet them even before we got to Blue Ridge. As we drove up to the steps
of Robert E. Lee Hall, nothing could have been lovelier than seeing Ruth S^andrett
and Miss Lumpkin there to welcome us. We registered as quickly as was possible in
the crowd of girls and suit-cases and went across the rustic bridge to see the
Agnes Scott cottage. The cottage is darling with a huge stone fireplace in the sit-
ting room and a sleeping porch on one side. Then we dressed and went to supper,
and, oh, the noise! Every college was singing to itself and every other college all
at the same time. At the opening meeting last night. Miss Flenniken, the executive
of the conference, introduced the leaders and speakers, and then she told the
purpose of the conference, which is printed on the program. I like both the idea
and the sound:

To break down barriers.

To change thinking.

To widen the reach of our love.

Today has been crowded to the last minute; but it is impossible to tell it all;
the lovely quiet service this morning, the discussion group meeting; when we
tried to form an opinion about the questions on Christian Internationalism that
Dr. Fleming, in his interesting lecture, later answered for us. After this came the
technical councils, and then an hour of loafing before dinner. In the afternoon
several hardy spirits tried the swimming pool and some of the others hiked to
Lookout or Black Mountain, but most of us began on the inevitable stack of picture
postcards that seem a necessary duty.

June 7. I am beginning to see that there is no such thing as keeping a
"well-balanced journal." We all just fly around steadily, hardly breathing for fear
of missing something. Lack of breath, though, is an unavoidable state, because every
place you look is more beautiful than the last. I believe the view from the steps
of R. E. Lee Hall is the most satisfying of all. To voice a truism, it is "aflways
and yet never the same"; the wine-colored sunset last night and mist this morning,
and the blue shadows this afternoon just make me ache with joy that such wonder
exists.

Frances and Helen, exulting in the feeling of getting close to nature, obeyed
an impulse to go wading this afternoon and dire calamity resulted. Both of them
stepped on a slippery rock and fell into the icy water. They behaved beautifully
and let us laugh all we wanted; but I don't think they particularly relished the
ducking.

June 9. Well, we thought that Agnes Scott, with Ruth Scandrett and Mrs.
Hazen Smith and Miss Markley to represent us, had sufficient idea of its own im-

e.

/

portance. But last night our self-esteem reached a pinnacle that we really had not
dreamed of attaining. Dr. Gilkie, before he began his interesting talk, said that
he wished to meet the delegation whose alma mater song was to the tune of "Be-
lieve Me if All Those Endearing Young Charms," since that was his song, too. So
after the meeting we trooped up like delighted barbarians and told him how proud
we were to meet him. Then he sat down and played, and while we sang "When
Far from the Reach," etc., he sang "Fair Harvard." It was most thrilling. Then
Dr. Gilkie came to our good-night meeting. We had a jolly time, toasting marsh-
mallows and singing. I believe the meeting around the fire is the loveliest thing
we do anyhow.

June 11. It just breaks my heart to think that tomorrow we shall be leaving.
If the moon just had not been so beautiful tonight I could stand it better. Why
can't such bliss last? But then there is next year and the thought of that is some
comfort to me. Frances Harper's song that gave Agnes Scott second place in the
contest seems to sum up the whole Blue Ridge feeling:

In the days when hearts are high;

When our youth is strong and true,
Blue Ridge, Land of the Sky,

We come to you.

Where each spirit deeply thrills,

Heaven and earth so close to view,
beloved of the hills,

We come to you.

May we here be lost in love;

Consecrate our lives anew;
Promise of the peace above,

We come to you.
Blue Ridge!

Sag ^tu^ftttB

Martha Eakes .... President Sarah F[:llbkight

Elizabeth Askew . . . Treaeurer Marion .Johnson

Eileen Dodd Daisy Frances Smith

Representative on Lower House Member of College Council

An auspicious star has guided the destinies of the Day Students during the year 1922-'2.3,
anil has added many new honors to our name. IVrhaps tlie most conspicuous of our achieve-
ments has been the raising of the fund for the long-dreamed-of cottage. Through pledges, sales
of all descriptions and "buy a brick" campaigns, our numher of dollars has increased so steadily
that we are now drawing up the plans for our cottage's construction. Next fall we are looking
forward to returning our boarding sisters' oft-expressed hospitality by inviting them to spend
the night in our new establishment.

Considered collectively, during this year we have played our customary role as Day Stu-
dents with much success. We feel that in certain respects we are invaluable both to the
faculty and to the boarders. To our professors we furnish unlimited knowledge concerning, De-
catur, Atlanta and the environs. What class could be complete without a Day Student to answer
such questions as, "Miss Smith, you are from Atlanta ; will you tell us about the city char-
ter?" To our boarding friends we are a source of continual cheer and diversion. How often we
dispense the gloom of F'rench verl>s or Latin sub.lunctives by simply being late to classes. It is
indeed inspiring to watch melancholy disappear at the mere entrance of a sunny, smiling Dav
Student ten minutes after the bell has rung !

As individuals, our members have distinguished themselves in many ways. We now have
efficient memliers on the Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, the lower house of Student Government and the
Alumnae Comiiiittee. Tn IT A $ we have several good debaters, one so excellent that she repre-
sented and won for Agnes Scott in the triangular debates. We have furnished many members for
Blackfriars, and three of the college's leading ladies are of our number. Many of us belong to
B. O. Z., the Poetry Club and Folio, where we writ stories and poems for the publications.
We also shine in athletics, having representatives on several of the class teams. As for May
Day, we feel an almost proprietary interest In it. for we have supplied the scenario, the May
Queen, and several of the most important dancers.

When we think over the part which we have played in the college durihg this year, we
come to the conclussion that, .iust as .-ignes Scott is indispensable to us, so we. as Day Students,
are necessary for the completeness of our Alma Mater.

lO ff TT Tt yr

ODETTE

I|? Alumnap Aasoriatinn of Agti^s Bcatt

OFFICERS 1922-24

Preddent Carol (Stearns) Wey, "12, 686 Piedmont Avenue, Atlanta, Ga.

First Vice-President Marie (McIntyre) Scott, '12, Scottdale, Ga.

Second Vice-Preiident Lucile Alexander, "11. Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

Secretary Lizabel Saxon, "10, 212 West College Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Treasurer Emma P. (Moss) Dieckmann, "13, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

CHAIRMEN OF STANDING COMMITTEES

Publicity Frances Charlotte Markley, "21, 901 Manor St., Lancaster, Penn.

Scholarship Julia Lake Skinner, '19, Faunsdale, Alabama

Preparatory Schools Julia Haygood, '20, .518 Clement Ave.. Charlotte, N. C.

Curriculum Margaret Bland, '20. 800 East Ave., Charlotte, N. C.

Alumnae House Committee Eliza (Candler) Earthman, Candler St.. Decatur, Ga.

Class Organizations and Records .... Eleanor Carpenter, '21, 1310 Sixth St., Louisville, Ky.

Local Clubs Margaret Rowe, "19, 1401 Court Ave., Memphis, Tenn.

Vocational Guidance Louise Ware, '17, W. Howard Ave.. Decatur, Ga.

Beautifying Grounds and Buildings Allie (Candler)' Guy, '13, 13 N. Decatur Road.

Atlanta, Ga.

Entertainment Mary West Thatcher, "16, Atlanta, Ga.

General Secretary Emma Jones, '18, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

ALUMNAE TRUSTEES

Bessie Scott Harmon Term Expires 1924

Mary Wallace Kirk Term Expires 1923

ALUMNAE AID LEAGUE
Secretary-Treasurer Mary Wallace Kirk

O

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all|0 Anna f nnng Alnmna? ^onBt

ERHAPS you've heard of the girl who had just come back in September
and rushing to answer the tube snatched down the receiver and shouted
her own telephone number into Ella's ear. You have that same feeling
of being at home whenever you enter the front door of the Anna
Young Alumnae House. On your left is the coziest sitting room with
an open fireplace and luxurious chairs, and best of all a huge cushioned lounge that
seems literally to minister to every tired bone in your body. Big doors open into
the nicest little breakfast room where you can have private parties and entertain
people like Vachel Lindsay and Dr. Robinson.

Upstairs the homey feeling lifts you off your feet. Maybe some alumnae
friend has come back to visit and asks you to spend the night with her, and you
go to sleep in the room your own class furnished, not forgetting to turn out the
light of the cute little lamp that matches everything. The waking-up process the next
morning is an event in itself. Instead of bouncing out to stop the alarm clock
while the early bird is searching for her first worm, you go through the lovely
process known as "slowly dawning consciousness." And the pictures on the walls
look down on you benignly. We have even heard of some people who have had
breakfast in bed, but they were privileged characters and not just the hoi polloi.

The guest room has a thrilly atmosphere because a baron was the first person
to stay in it, but you are not supposed to feel at home in there. You just say, "'Ah,"
and walk on out. The best room to put you back in your place is the room where
the sewing machines and electric irons stay. It gives you a homey feeling. It is
an ideal place to let down the hem of your evening dress and press the crushes
out. Only you mustn't forget to drop a dime in the top of the Woolworth
building when you go back downstairs into the tea room. If you have a nickel left
over Ola will bring you an ice cream cone in any color you like, and you can sit
down at one of the little blue tables while the silhouettes on the walls carry on
their charming pleasantries with one another. ,

A great source of good is the kitchen in which are concocted all the delicious
things that you have at banquets and parties and other times in between when hunger
swoops down on you. Sometimes yoii can act the role of menial, if you are a
hostess at senior coffee, and then have an orgy of dish washing afterwards.

The combination of the Alumnae House and of Miss Bishop, who keeps it,
leaves you so saturated with the feeling of hominess, that if the tube should ring
as soon as you got back to the dormitory and Ella's voice should say, "I want to
speak to Miss Eugenia Edwards," you'd reply politely, "I'm very sorry, but you
have the wrong number," and hang up.

H O U E T T E

OFFICERS

Quenelle Harrold President

Daisy Frances Smith Vice-President

Mary Stewart McLeod Secretary

Valeria Posey Treasurer

MEMBERS OF DEBATING COUNCIL

Mary Goodrich Selma Gordon

FACULTY MEMBERS

Dr. Armistead Miss Hearon

Miss Gooch Miss McKinney

Mr. Stukes Mr. Rankin

S I Lli O U E T

^ '

^^^ ^^ ^^ ^ *^

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OFFICERS

Quenelle Harrold President

Daisy Frances Smith Vice-President

Mary Stewart McLeod Secretary

Valeria Posey Treasurer

REPRESENTATIVES FROM PI ALPHA PHI

iViARY Goodrich Selma Gordon

FACULTY MEMBERS

Dr. Armistead Miss Hearon

Miss Gooch Miss McKinney

Mr. Stukes Mr. Rankin

,/

H O U E T T E

Alice Virden, Editor-in-Chief
Lucy Oliver, Assistant Editor-in-Chief

Martha McIntosh, Art Editor

Leone Bowers, Assistant Art Editor

Emmie Ficklen, Photographi^: Editor

Eugenia Perkins, Assistant Photographic Editor

Emily Spivey, Athletic Editor

ASSOCIATE EDITORS

Elizabeth Henry

Polly Stone
Elizabeth Ransom, Business Manager
Margaret Powell, Assistant Business Manager

ADVERTISING MANAGERS
Mary Evelyn Arnold
Virginia Burt
Helen Wright

^^ '^ T

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Aurora i'taflf

LuciLE Little, Editor-in-Chief

Jamce Brown, Assistant Editor

Dorothy Bowron, Business ManageA

Ellen Walker, Assistant Business Manager

Mary Colley, Associate Editor

Marjorie Lowe, Associate Editor

Elizabeth Cheatham, Exchange Editor

Frances Myers, Circulation Manager

LHOUETTE

Mary Hemphill Greene . Editor-in.Chi^^j Hall McDoucall . . . Business Manager

Dorothy Keith Assistant Editor Ella Smith . . A sistant Business Manager

T^ r^ Ai rj-. Frances Bitzer .... Circulation Manager

Frances Gilliland .... Alumnae Editor ii>"i'>-i.s jj" ^^n ^. , ,f

-. _ , ,, T^j. Monte Sewell . Assistant Circulation Mgr.

Louise Buchanan Athletic tditor n c. j . rj-, _

Elizabeth Cheatham . Day student Editor

Elizabeth Griffin .... Exchange Editor ^^^^^ ^^^^^ ' 5^^^-^^^ ^j^^^^

Georgia May Little Joke Editor Elizabeth Hoke

Frances Amis Y. W. C. A. Editor Intercollegiate Neios Editor

S I LH O U.E

2C. 1. 1.

OFFICERS

Eleanor Hyde President

Janice Brown Vice-President

Frances Amis Secretary and Treasurer

MEiMBERS

Louise Buchanan Dorothy Keith

Nannie Campbell Georgia May Little

Frances Gilliland Peyton Stinson

Mary Hemphill Greene Daisy Frances Smith

Elizabeth Griffin Polly Stone

V'icTORiA Howie Alice Virden

SILHOUETTE

LuciLE Little
Alice Virden

Margaret Brenner
Mary Colley
Helen Faw
Eloise Knight
Edith McCallie
Martha McIntosh
Dr. J. D. M. Armistead

1. (. 2.

OFFICERS

MEMBERS

President
Secretary

Polly Stone
Elizabeth Cheatham
Mary Hemphill Greene
Vivian Little
Nancy Tripp
Ellen Walker

Patron Saint

\

S I L H O l^

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OFFICERS

Larsen Mattox

President .... Olive Hall

Elizabeth Cheatham

Secretary . Grace Augusta Ogden

MEMBERS ]

Elizabeth Cheatham

Mary Ann McKinney |

Georgia May Little

Ellen Walker j

Larsen Mattox

Margaret Wood

FRESHMAN MEMBERS

Margaret Bull

Olive Hall

Louisa Duls

Virginia Hollingsworth

Grace Augusta Ogden

3 U E T T E

f 0?trg OIlub

OFFICERS

Mary Colley . President

Mary Ann McKinney . Vice-President

Marjorie Lowe Secretary and Treasurer

MEMBERS

Elizabeth Askew Janice Brown Margaret Bull Elizabeth Cheatham

Louisa Dues Nancy Evans Helen Faw Maltd Foster Olive Hall

LuciLE Little Anna Meade Grace Augusta Ogden Daisy Frances Smith

Margery Speake Sarah Slaughter Polly Stone

Olivia Swann Margaret Tufts Ellen Walker

Alice Virden

FACULTY MEMBERS
Miss McKinney Miss Laney Dr. Armistead Miss Preston Miss Randolph

First place in the Janef Preston and Frances Charlotte Markley lyric contest was awarded this
year to the poem by Elizabeth Cheatham entitled ""Mood."' The judges were DuBose Heyward of
Charleston, S. C, author; Hervey Allen of "Carolina Chansons"' and Karle Wilson Baker,
Texas poet, author of "Blue Smoke."

S I L

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Elizabeth Ransom Chairman

Pearl Smith Ba iness Manager

Lucy Oliver Costume Chairman

Elizabeth McClure Property Manager

Hall McDoucall Publicity Chairman

Anita Minter Chairman Poster Committee

Miss Randolph ) ^^^^^^^^

Miss Haynes \

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OFFICERS

Valeria Posey President

Charlotte Keesler Vice-President

Beth McClure Secretary

Sarah Belle Brodnax Treasurer

Georgia May Little Property Manager

Margaret Powell Stage Manager

Miss Frances K. Gooch . Dramatic Director

6

S I L H O ^ ^

llarkfrtars

FULL MEMBERS

Frances Amis
Dell Bernhardt
Frances Betzer
Sarah Belle Brodnax
Louise Buchanan
Quenelle Harrold
Frances Harwell
Eleanor Hyde
Charlotte Keesler

Georgia May Little
Marjorie Lowe
Beth McClure
Elizabeth Molloy
Mildred Pitner
Valeria Posey
Margaret Powell
Polly Stone

ASSOCIATE MEMBERS

Frances Alston
Mary Palmer Caldwell
Elizabeth Cheatham
IsABELLE Clarke
Isabel Ferguson
Mary Freeman
Frances Gilliland
Elizabeth Griffin
Helena Hermance
Vic Howie
Frances Lincoln
Nan Lingle

Margaret McDow
Mary Ann McKinney
Rosamond Neisler
Weenona Peck
Josephine Schuessler
Montie Sewell
Sarah Slaughter
Caroline Smith
Eugenia Thompson
Ellen Walker
Pocahontas Wight
Mary Ben Wright

H O U E T T E

(vtl^^Btrn

FIRST VIOLIN
Pocahontas Wight
Sarah McKenzie
Isabel Clarke
Virginia Browning
Virginia Hollingsworth

SECOND VIOLIN
Frances Formby
Elise Goldberger
Grace Overstreet
Margaret Tufts
Viola Smith

FLUTES

Mary Jarman

Alice Greenlea

BELLS

Louise Buchanan

SAXOPHONE

Ruth Kennedy

TRIANGLE AND TAMBOURINE

Marie Thomas

FIRST MANDOLIN
Araminta Edwards
Louise Pfieffer
Virginia Skeen

SECOND MANDOLIN
Maude Foster
Helen Bates

Lillian Clements
Sadibel Simonds
MANDO-CELLO
Rebecca Skeen
GUITARS
Frances Bitzer
Catherine Shields
NoNiE Peck
Corena Berman
Philippa Gilchrist
Lydia Ryttenburc
PIANO
Bryte Daniel

Martha Bowen
DRUM
Mary Ann McKinney

S I L H O'

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OFFICERS

Ruth Almond President

Lillian McAlpine Secretary

Miss Eunice Curry Director

MEMBERS
FIRST SOPRANOS

Lillian McAlpine Lucy Howard Louise Buchanan

Lillian Clement Vera Hickman Mary Hemphill Greene

Dick Scandrett Louise Mahoney Mary Freeman

Lillian Thompson Agnes Dinwiddie Polly Stone

Ruth Drane Mary McCallum Emmie Saxon

Eleanor Hyde Attie Alford Johnny V. Thompson

SECOND SOPRANOS
Victoria Howie Jane Knight Clar.\ Mae Allen

Helen Bates Annette Carter

FIRST ALTOS
Ruth Almond Elizabeth Hoke Imogene Allen

SECOND ALTOS
Frances Gilliland Mary Brown Martha Eakes Frances Bitzer

/

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3 U E T T E

V

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OFFICERS

Charlotte Keesler

President

Margaret Powell

Virginia Ordway

Vice-President

Lillian Thompson

Virginia Perkins

Secretary

Virginia Perkins

.X

OFFICERS

Elizabeth Ransom President

Elizabeth Flake Vice-President

Mary Stewart McLeod Secretary-Treasurer

MEMBERS OF EXECUTIVE BOARD

Miss Hearon Virginia Ordway Elizabeth Molloy

E 1' T E

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ICprtur? AaBnrtalton

OFFICERS

Emily Guille Student Chairman

Frances Bitzer Secretary

Sarah Belle Brodnax Treasurer

Miss Hearon Faculty Chairman

FACULTY MEMBERS

Miss McKinney

Miss Laney

Miss Davis

COMMITTEE MEMBERS
Hilda McConnell Eloise Knight
Janice Brown Edith Coleman

Mary Greene Frances Gilliland

Frances Bitzer Elizareth Askew
Elizabeth Cheatham
Sarah Morehouse

Sarah Belle Brodnax

Eleanor Hyde Member of College Council

Christine Evans Student Treasurer

Ruth Almond Auditor

Philippa Gilchrist Recorder of Points

Ruth Almond Fire Chief

T E

iFtrF Ingalir

Fire Chief . Ruth Almond

Rebekah Scott Hall

Captain
Mary Evelyn Arnold

first Lieutenant
Eunice Evans

Mary Mann
Mary Keesler

Second Lieutenants

Mary Ann McKinney

Walker Perry

Margaret Wood

Nancy Evans

Bucket Brigade

Chief Elma Swaney

Members of Brigade

Elizabeth Salters

Margaret Hyatt

Josephine Douglass

Susan Rose

Captain
Ruth Sanders

Frances Gilliland
Sarah Dunlap

Inman Hall

Second Lieutenants
Anna Meade
Sarah Tate

Rosaline Janes

Martha Bowen
Mellie Zellars

CORINNA BeRMAN

First Lieutenant
Euzabeth Henry

Frances Tennant
Lillian Thompson

Bucket Brigade
Chief Emily Spivey

Members of Brigade
Elizabeth Blalock Annie Wilson Terry Grace Augusta Ogden

Catherine Pitman Eleanor Gresham Ernestine Ponder

Main Hall

Captain First Lieutenant

Minnie Lee Clark Lucy Timmerman
Second Lieutenants

Helen Faw Sibyl Callahan Selma Gordon Elizabeth Little

Mildred Jennings Ethel Redding Florence Perkins Zona Hamilton

Bucket Brigade

Chief Kate Higgs

Members of Brigade

Louise Pheiffer
Elizabeth Hallem
Romana Galloway

Arnoldina Thornton
Verna Clark
Mildred Scott
Attie Alford

Chief
Marianne Strouss

Lydia Ryttenburg

White House

Second Lieutenants
Marion Albury

Leone Bowers

First Lieutenant
Julia Pope

Lillian Middlebrooks

Bucket Brigade

Chief Harriet Fearington

Members of Brigade

Johnny V. Thomason Elizabeth Gregory Louisa Duls

LUPTON

Captain May Reese

M--'

Jr^ttrlr Club

OFFICERS

Eleanor Hyde

Polly Stone Vice-President

Mary Palmer Caldwell

Mary Mobberly

Lillian McAlpine

Mary Jarman

Sarah Slaughter

. President
Hazel Bordeaux
Secretary

. Treasurer
Song Leader

Pianist

Bulletin Board

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Elizabeth Hoke

SUSYE MiMS

Jessie Dean Cooper

Elizabeth Hoke

CoR-A. Morton

Jessie Dean Cooper

orncERs

President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer

MEMBERS

Ruth Almond Louise Hendrix

Grace Bargeron Vera Hickmann

Catherine Carrier Anna Meade

T,. T n Martha Pennington

Minnie Lee Clarke ^ ^

^ Catherine Randolph

Eunice Evans y^^^^^ ^^^^

Philippa Gilchrist Melissa Smith

Kate Higgs Sara Tate

FACULTY MEMBERS

Miss Howson Mr. Rankin

Miss Gaylord Miss Stansfield

Miss Gilbert

\

S I L H C U

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FACULTY
Miss Lucile Alexander
Dr. J. D. M. Armistead
Miss Margaret Culberson
Mrs C. W. Dieckmann
Mrs. Margaret Fitzhugh
Miss Mary Elizabeth Goodwyn
Miss Muriel Harn
Miss Cleo Hearon
Mr. R. B. Holt
Miss Frances C. Markley
Miss Janef Preston
Miss Augusta Skeen
Miss Lillian Smith
Miss Martha Stansfield

1906
Ida Lee Hill (Mrs. L T. Irwin)

1908
Lizzabel Saxon

1909

Anne M. Waddell (Mrs. H. F. Bethea)
Ruth Marion (Mrs. L. E. Wisdom)

1911
Mary Wallace Kirk

1912
Cornelia Cooper
Anne McLane

1913
Janie McGauchey
Emma Pope Moss (Mrs. C. W. Dieckmann)

1914

Annie Jenkins

Louise McNulty

Kathleen Kennedy

Essie Roberts

Marguerite Wells (Mrs. Robert Bishop)

1915
Marion Black (Mrs. A. L. Cantelou)
Gertrude Briesenick (Mrs. J. H. Ross)
Catherine Parker

Mary Helen Schneider (Mrs. Ben Head)
Mary West (Mrs. S. E. Thatcher).

MEMBERS

1916
Laura Cooper

Elizabeth Burke (Mrs. W. C. Burdett)
Jeannette Victor (Mrs. I. C. Levy!
Grace Geohegan

Louise Wilson (Mrs. T. J. Williams)
Ray Harrison (Mrs. R. G. Smith)

1917
India Hunt

Katherine Lindamood (Mrs. R. K. Cotlett)
Janet Newton
Margaret Pruden
Augusta Skeen
May Smith
Frances Thatcher (Mrs. A. J. Moses)

1918
Katherine Seay
Emma Jones
Lois Eve
Elizabeth Denman (Mrs. P. W. Hammond)

1919
Dorothy Thigpen (Mrs. E.- B. Shea)
W. Marguerite Watts
Louise Marshburn
Frances Sledd (Mrs. J. W. Blake.)
Margaret Leech

1920
Lauka S. Molloy
Elizabeth Lovett

Mary Burnett (Mrs. Wm. Lord Thorington)
Alice Cooper
Rosamond Wubm (Mrs. A. A. Council)

1921
Anna Marie Landress (Mrs. W. R. Gate)
Janef Preston

Frances Charlotte Markley
Marion Lindsay
Sarah Fulton

1922
Ethel Kime Ware
Mary Barton
Ruth Scandrett
Helen" Barton

Catherine Dennincton (Mrs. C. Jervey)
Sarah Till

1923
Hazel Bordeaux
Quenelle Harrold

6

masr

CLASS OF 1916

Jea!\'ette Victor
Or A Glenn
Martha Ross
Maryellen Harvey
Louise Wilson
Eloise Gay
Alice Weatherley
Evelyn Goooe
Ray Harrison
Nell Frye
CLASS OF 1917

Gjertrud Amundsen
Inbia Hunt
Spott Payne
Laurie Caldwell
Louise Ware
Anne Kyle
Regina Pinkston
Janet Newton
A. S. Donaldson
Georciana White
Ruth Nisbet
V. Y. White
CLASS OF 1918

Margaret Leyburn
Samille Lowe
R. L. Estes
Emma Jones
Hallie Alexander
. Ruth Anderson
Katherine Seay
Olive Hardwick
Lois Eve
CLASS OF 1919

Lucy Durr
Frances Glasgow
Mary Brock Mallard
Claire Elliott
Amelia Hutcheson
Julia Lake Skinner
Margaret Rowe
Dorothy Thicpen
GoLDiE Ham
Llewellyn Wilburn
Elizabeth Watkins
Lulu Smith
CLASS OF 1920

Elizabeth Allen

Margaret Bland

Lois MacIntyre

JuLLA Hagood

Louise Slack

Laura Stockton Molloy

ViRi;iNiA McLaughlin
Marion McCamy
Anne Houston
Mary Burnett

CLASS OF 1921

Charlotte Bell
Margaret Bell
Aimee D. Glover
Ellen Wilson
Rachel Rushton
Anna Marie Landress
Alice Jones
Frances C. Markley
Janef Preston
^ Margaret McLaughlin

Jean McAllister
Fanny McCaa
Charlotte Newton
Dorothy Allen
CLASS OF 1922

Nell Buchanan
Cama Burgess
Ruth Hall
Laura Oliver
Lilburne Ivey
Ruth Scandrett
Mary McLellan
Althea Stephens
Ruth Virden
Ethel Ware
Roberta Love
Sarah Till
Elizabeth Wilson
CLASS OF 1923

Quenelle Harrold
Eleanor Hyde
Eloise Knight
Elizabeth McClure
Hilda McConnell
Alice Virden
Nannie Campbell
Mary Goodrich
Emily Guille
Elizabeth Hoke
LuciLE Little
Valeria Posey
Elizabeth Ransom
CLASS OF 1924

Beulah Davidson
Mary Hemphill Greene
Victoria Howie
Carrie Scandrett
Daisy Frances Smith
Polly Stone

i,iiii!i'"ir. iii|.

ililiii!ii!'l'!i:'::

'HiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiJsiiii

LH O

IT T

Y-^

1)? Atl|lrttr AHBonattnn

OFFICERS MANAGERS

i7,,,.,.^ u .. D -J . Weenona Peck . . . Basket-Ball

ELIZABETH HUKE . . . FresideiU r> r- c D L ;i

Daisy Frances Smith . . . Baseball

Lois McClain . . . Vice-President Lqis McClain Tennis

Mary Keesler .... Secretary Emily Guille .... Hiking

Lillian McAlpine . . . Treasurer Emily Spivey . . Lost and Found Store

Ellen Walker Track

rn A PHFC Anna Meade Hockey

t^UAUHts j^^^^Y Evans .... Song Leader

Miss Randolph Miss Haynes Mary Jarman . . Orche-Jra Leader

T"

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^ittiax ^atkt^ f am

V. Posey, Manager; H. McConnell, Captain; Center Forivard, H. McConnell; Right
Inside, V. Posey, N. Campbell; Left Inside, A. Meade, E. Guille; Right Wing, E. Wassum,
L. McClain; Left W^ing, L. Parham; Center Halfback, B. McClure; Right Halfback, E. Knight;
Left Halfback, L. Timmerman; Right Fullback, M. Goodrich; Left Fullback, E. Hoke; Goal
Keeper, J. Logan.

i>iipl|om0rf Ifnrkpg (H? am

J. Scheussler, Manager; M. Keesler, Captain; Center Forward, M. Keesler; Right Inside,
E. Kell; Left Inside, E. Thompson; Right Wing, J. Schuessler; Left Wing, E. Walker; Center
Halfback, N. Evans; Right Halfback, A. Thomas; Le/t Halfback, E. Griffin, I. Ferguson;
Right Fullback, M. McKinney; Le/< Fullback, G. M. Little, L. Phippen; Goal Keeper, S. Full-
bright.

T 1^-

(D

iiuntor l^crkrij (Hf am

E. Henry, Manager; D. F. Smith, Captain; Center Forward, L. McAlpine; Right Inside, M.
Mann; Left Inlide, B. Davidson, E. Ficklen; Right Wing, J. Brown, F. Swann; Left Wing,
D. F. Smith; Center Halfback, N. Peck; Right Halfback;. E. Henry; Left Halfback, E. Askew;
Right Fullback, D. Scandrett; Left Fullback, M. Powell; Goal Keeper, M. Eakes.

3FrfBl|man Ifnrkfij Q^mm

N. Tucker, Manager; E. Spivey. Captain; Center Forward, E. Carpenter; Right Inside,
M. Zellars, J. Smith; Left Inside, D. Owen, M. Bull; Right Wing, H. Hermance, V. Owen;
Left Wing,'L. Ryttenburc, N. Tucker; Center Halfback, E. Spivey; Right Halfback, S. John-
son, L. Brown; Left Halfback, E. Jones. N. Tucker; Right Fullback, E. Fain, R. Skeen;
Left Fullback, L. Thompson; Goal Keeper, L. Bowers.

vr T

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&fntnr laakrt lall-QIfam

E. Wassum, Manager; E. Parham, Captain; Centers, A. Meade, L. McClain; Side Center,
E. Hoke; Forwards, B. McClure, E. Parham; Guards, H. McConnell, E. Wassum.

E. Spivey, Manager; E. Kell, Captain; Centers, M. A. McKinney, F. Lincoln; Side Cen-
ter, B. Walker; Forward, E. Kell, E. Thompson, E. Walker; Guard-, M. Keesler, E. Spivey.

D. F. Smith, Manager; N. Peck, Captain; Centers, E. He^ry, L. Hendrix; Side Center, E.
Ficklen; Forwards, N. Peck, M. McDow, D. Scandrett; Guards, L. McAlpine, M. Eakes,
D. F. Smith.

iFr? 2l|man lask^l lall- (Uram

E. Carpenter, Manager; S. Johnson, Captain; Center, E. Redding; Side Center, E. Fain;
Forwards, N. Tucker, E. Carpenter, H. Fearrington, H. Atkins; Guards, S. Johnson, 0- Hall,
L. Bowers.

U E

c

Smor laarball (Seam

E. Hoke, Manager; J. Logan, Captain; Catcher, E. Hoke; Pitcher, L. McClain ; First
Base, B. McClure; Second Base, E. Knight; Third Base, E. Parham; Shortstop, M. Goodrich;
Right Field, N. Campbell; Center Field, E. Lockhart; Left Field, J. Logan, E. Wassum.

M. McKinney, Manager; E. Spivey, Captain; Catcher, E. Spivey; Pitcher, M. McKinney;
First Base, E. Blalock; Second Base, B. Walker, M. Strouss; Third Base, F. Brawley;
Shortstop, M. Keesler; /?ig/K Field, M. Jackson; Center Field, L. Phippen; e/f fieW, F. Alston

3 1 JL 1

Slutttor las? ball

D. F. Smith, Captain; Catcher. D. F. Smith; Pitcher, N, Evans; First Base. N- Peck,
L. Hendrix; Second Base, L. McAlpine, E. Ficklen; Third Base, C. Richardson; Shortstop, M.
Eakes; Right Field, E. Henry; Center Field, D. Scandrett; Left Field, M. Mann.

iFrfsliman las^ball

N. Tucker, Manager; E. Fain, Captain; Catcher, F. Turner; Pitcher, L. Bowers; First
Base, E. Carpenter; Second Base, B. Haslem; T/iirrf Base, E. Redding; Shortstop, E. Fain;
Right Field, N. Tucker; Cenfer Field, O. Hall; Le/7 fieW, C. Davis.

c

Ati)lpltr l^rorb 1925-19^3

HOCKEY

First Place Seniors

Seccnd Place JuNIORS

Third Place SoPHOMORES

Fourth Place Freshmen

BASKET-BALL

'First Place
Second Place
Third Place
Fourth Place

Sophomores

Freshmen

Seniors

Juniors

BASEBALL

First Place Sophomores

Second Place . . . . . F'reshmen

Third Place Juniors

Fourth Place Seniors

TRACK

First Place Sophomores

Second Place Seniors

Third Place Juniors

Fourth Place Freshmen

f ^ f

ETHEL

c

M. S.

DICIV

, VALERIA^

4>^

MAHY

FRANCES

BELLE,

N0F(1VIA

MAflGARET LUCY

JO

ELLEN

E T

r

>v.

lEULIE

UJeaveas

of

LOIS

si L li O U

COf\A

'^-r^ DAISY FRANCES

<-*^ \i^ ANNA -. ,

%1

i>^# a3

E.LOISE

OLIVE,

/'

H OU E T T E

V

^

^\

:'\

BookV

FEATURE

c n

t 2

^Ima ^y^Catej'

When far from, the reach of thy sheltering arms,

The band of thy daughters shall roam,
Still their hearts shall enshrine thee.
Thou crown of the South,

With the memory of youth that has floiun.
Dear guide of our youth,
Whose spirit is truth,

The love of our girlhood is thine.
Alma Mater, whose name ive revere and adore.

May thy strength and thy power ne'er decline.

Agnes Scott, when thy campus and halls rise to mind.

With the bright college scenes from our past.
Our regret is that those years can ne'er return more.

And we sigh that such joys cannot last.
Wherever they are.
Thy daughters afar,

Shall bow at the sound of thy name,
And tvith 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 lesson that's 'graven deep into our hearts,

Thou shalt 'grave on ten thousand and more
Fair symbol of light.
The purple and white.

Which in purity adds to thy fame.
Knowledge shall be thy shield.
And thy fair coat-of-arms,

A Record without blot or shame.

^y}fCiss Hopkins

Miss Hopkins, Miss Hopkins,

We greet you with our song.
Whose echoes resounding

The catnpus all along.
We' II tell you that Agnes Scott

Is singing now to you
With hearts and voices

Ringing ever true.

Just Our School T)ays

"Just my school days, happy and sad.

Bits of girl-ways, dreams I have had.

Come a-thronging down the winding road of years,

Rv ry one a-smiling through the mist of tears;

Mere' s a sad day , when I was blue.

Here's a glad day when dreams caf}ie true

Brighter than the glea?n of silver stars above.

Is your memory , school days I love.

"^B^presentathe Types

Athletic Nonie Peck

Vm a Hottentot from Agnes Scott,

A player of basket-ball.
I jump so high I scrape the sky,

And never, never fall.
When once I get that ball,

I toss it above them all;
I'll get it in, my side shall win

My foes shant score at all.

And so, you see, at A. S. C,

There's something every minute.

You surely have to hustle here,
Or else you wont be in it.

We're crazy 'bout the gym,

Theh ockey and the swim.

So now three cheers, and each who hears
Will raise it with a vim

Hi, rockety, whoopety, he!
What's the matter with A. S. C?
She's all right!
Who's all right?
A!

sa
cm

'1 u - *

'!h

i

Ti^presentative Types

Original Folly Stone

Agnes Scott, you re all right,

Tou're all right.

You re all right.

Agnes Scott, you're all right.

You bet you are.
Your girls are clever.
Both HOir and forever.
Agnes Scott, you're all right,

You bet you are.

Ti^presentative Types

Handsome Charlotte Keesler

Neat, ha! ha! Sweet, ha! ha!

Handsome and fair!
She is a daisy

The girls do declare.
She's a high-rolling lassie as well.

Here comes Charlotte Keesler
Say! don' t she look swell?

V'

/

^Representative Types

Disposition Dick Scandrett

It isn't any trouble just to S-M-I-L-E,
It isn't any trouble just to S-M-I-L-E,
If you ever are in trouble.
It irill vanish like a bubble,
J f you II take the trouble just to
S-M-I-L-E.

^^R^presentative Types

Brilliatit Margery Speake

Margery Speake, you're a wonder.
And when you are old and gray

We will all say, "Tes, by thunder.
She was some girl in her day.''

"^Representative Types

All-Roimd Hilda McCo?j?ieIi

Whooper-up, whooper-up,
Whooper-up sofne more.

Agnes Scott

Is the spot
That we do adore.

She's such a peach

She's won our hearts.

She surely plays the game.
She is not rough,
She is )iot tough.

But size gets tlure just tlie same.

The Purple and White

Home of virtue, faith, and knowledge,

Love and praise we bring to thee.
May our hearts be ever loyal.

And beat true to A. S. C.
Greetings to the winsome violet.

Cherished floiver of heart's delight:
Hail to the royal banner

Of the purple and the ivhite.

REFRAIN

May the white be ever stainless

And the purple ever bright,
Hail to the royal banner

Of the purple and the white.

'Mid the cotton fields of Georgia,

Where the flowers bloom fair and sweet,
And the soft and gentle breezes

Bend loiv the golden wheat;
Let us blend in loving chorus.

Voices ringing with delight.
Praise the banner floating o'er us

The purple and the white.

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^^Ilfl

Processional Hymn

Ancient of Days, who sittest ^throned in Glory;

To Thee all knees are bent, all voices pray;
Thy love has blessed the wide ivorld's wondrous story

With light and life since Edens dawning day.

O Holy Father, who hast led Thy children

In all ages, with the Fire and Cloud,
Thru seas dry-shod; thru weary wastes beivildering;

To Thee, in reverent love, our hearts are bowed.

Holy Jesus, Prince of Peace and Saviour,

To Thee we owe the peace that still prevails.

Stilling the rude wills of men's wild behavior.

And calming passion's fierce and stormy gales.

Holy Ghost, the Lord and the Life-Giver,

Thine is the quickening power that gives increase,

From Thee have flowed, as from a pleasant river.
Our plenty, wealth, prosperity and peace.

O Triune God, with heart and voice adoring.

Praise we the goodness that doth crown our days;

Pray we that Thou wilt hear us, still imploring
Thy love and javor, kept to us always.

For the joy is more than sorrow.

Of the years we spent in thy halls.
And I think, in a far off to-morrow,

Through the year mist that silently falL
That nought will be able to sever

The joy from our thoughts of thee.
And thus will we think of ihee ever,

''God bless our A. S. CI"

^^.r=^.

Do-icfi the long road 'u:he?-e all must go,

Take a song load lest shado-ucs blo-jc

'Cross the path\i:ay where the sun -was shining bright,

Toil u'ill need a candle for the dark of night;

Sing a fYiendsong to lighten the years.

Sing a u'ind-song to drive a-icav fears;

Sweeter than the trill of mocking bird or dove.

Is your echo, school-son^s I love.

f(

\

Book VI

THE PASSING OF
THE HOURS"

1 JL^ JI IL

>tmt Ntgl|t

OPHOMORE week falls upon us all without discrimination, for not only must the
combatants pass through many a harassing experience, but the innocent bystand-
ers suffer, too, through the thousand afflictions upon their aesthetic and sympa-
thetic natures, mainly aesthetic. They have to suffer in silence, though, and let the
law take its course, for they know that the sophomores are doing a noble work,
that of putting the freshmen through the process of becoming good citizens. It is
impossible to prevent a spasm of compassion, however, that comes over one at the
sight of a small freshman patiently toiling across the campus encumbered with placard, bells,
pigtails, umbrellas, hats, suit cases and other paraphernalia, meanwhile wearily trying to manage
a snappy salute for those who pass her way. There is again the desire to free the tresses so
tortuously and uncompromisingly plaited in pigtails, or to powder the bright young faces.

The worst ordeal of all, though, we have to admit, is that undergone by the five judges
who have to decide between the two stunts on the night when the sophomore-freshman situation is
brought to a clima.\, and after a contest of wits tVie winners of the black cat are announced. Ex-
citement is at white heat, and once inside the chapel you can't get out without stepping all over
your friends who are packed in the aisle and in every cranny and crevice. One freshman
after the stunts this year, was so hoarse next day that she could not speak above a whisper. She
said that she and a sophomore had been sitting on the same pillow on the floor and that she
got so excited that she couldn't keep from singing with the sophomore, too, and without stop-
ping she sang for both sides straight through. She was utterly exhausted at the end and it
took two people to carry her out of chapel.

Both stunts were so good this year that we were glad as never before that we were not
the judges, but could just sit back and enjoy them and laugh at all the local hits and marvel
that people living around us every day could write and act such clever plays.

T

^ E T T E

The freshman stunt, "A Brainy Discovery," dealt with a subject about which the uninitiated
have often wondered, namely, just what goes on inside a freshman's brain what her thoughts
are as she plods along her weary way. We were then shown '"one of the most startling phe-
nomena of modern science the working of a freshman's brain." When the curtain was drawn
back, a cross section of the brain was displayed, including the corpus collosum. the medulla, the
corpora quadrigemina, also the ears, bells and pigtails outside. The rapidity with which the
brain worked was revealed in the inspirited dance of the grey matter and the red corpuscles.
Ideas then began entering in quick succession, rather a tragic note being struck by the poor crazy
idea that "sophomores are all right after all." Other ideas were Dismal Thought, Happy
Thought, Fresh Idea. Fool Notion, Big Idea, New Idea. The New Idea was that Sophomores
really were all right because they were once freshmen themselves. The New Idea was favorably
received and the grey matter began to function normally, bringing the demonstration to a close.

The sophomore stunt, "The Taming of the Crude," was highly original and filled with
local hits not to say local color. The scene is laid in Africa at the court of the Hottentots,
ruled over by Aggie of ebon hue. Ku-Ku, a captive and a sophisticated young flapper, becomes
a member of the tribe on probation, but has a very supercilious manner still. Wlien the ter-
rified Hottentots begin a hectic search for the sacred wild-cat which has escaped into the jungle.
Ku-Ku remains calm and unterrified, and goes for a stroll in the woods. She falls a victim to
the wild-cat and is powerless until rescued by Sophistico who has been her protector from the
beginning. Her rebel spirit being completely tamed by this experience, she is fully admitted
into the tribe and all ends well.

The decision was made in favor of the freshmen by a vote of three to two, and Nan Lingle,
the president of the class, was presented with the b'ack cat.

SnupBtttur?

One of tlie most beautiful and most impressive services in the calendar of the Agnes Scott
year is that of Investiture. Especially Is this service dear to the heart of every Senior. To
her is its real meaning and significance most apparent. It is a transition the ambitious, toiling
student becomes the serious scholar with a full realization of her new responsibility. She has
a glimpse, as It were, of the merit of her efforts, near at hand an anticipation of the awful
solemnity of graduation.

On the day before Investiture as if to bid farewell to their carefree days and irresponsibilities
before assuming the dignity conferred by Investiture, the Seniors banished every thought of
work or care. Dressed as little girls again they ran about over the campus .iust as in their
earlv school days.

On the dav of Investiture everyone seemed iKissessed of the spirit, the enthusiasm of the
occasion. An immense crowd was assembled in the chapel and waited with eager anticipation
the all-important event. A feeling of awe and reverence svvept over those present as the strains

Sisters, dressed in white.

hicb the faculty came

(:nTyiTi;i- ihrii- IMPS in their

lie Mcblr's^ <.c ilic iirraslon was

iiiiii- ill rrlaiinn lo lirr academic

1 thai the true cud iil' education

his words, particularly to the

their highest duty and privilege, to do their own thinking ; not to

graduates do, but to become leaders as their career shottld lit

Sophomore

MiUl

"Ancient of Days" broke forth upon the ail
marched slowly down the center of the chapel f"
and, after them, the seniors in their gowned s
hands. The service was begun with a prayer by
made by Dr. Armlstead. He emphasized the respoi
work the duties and privileges connected with it.
was to know the truth, and the truth should make us fre
Seniors he exhorted them,
l.eciimi' followers, as many
them to do.

Dt. Gaines then addressed a few words to the Seniors in which he said the highest duty and
privilege of the Senior Class, as a whole, was to perpetuate the ideals of their Alma Mater, both
on the campus and in life after graduation. He pointed to them with nride as an encouragement
to those farther down the ladder of learning, but strugslirm evor iipwaril. to perspvere to the end.

After these remarks came the most impressive part "i iln - ivir,-, 'I'll.' Sri,i"i-i. une by one,
mounted the rostrum and knelt before the Dean who pl.n cd . ;i( li ^rndriit ^ (nji uim'Ii her head.
It was a moment sacred, never to Vie forgotten one wliirli <iirnd the iiiniinm^i drptlis of feeling
and bound the Senior with ties of love and loyaltv to li. i Alma .Mater forever. All the obstacles
and discouragements of her college career seeiih ,1 nhi:ii in comparison with the honor now
bestowed upon her. The arduous task had been i.i i liw liib and the reward was worth the effort.

As the procession marched out and the chap. I r,li. cd and re-echoed to the strains of the
Alma Mater, every student was inspired and filled with bnpe and encouragement. She resolved
towards greater and better achievements In anticipation of the day when she might experience
the same glory and honor of Investiture.

T

: T T- E

V

1

llarkfrtars

PRESENT

^tr latit& iHfara a (Eromn

Stewart Falker
A Sequel to "'The Six Who Pass fFhile the Lentils Boil."

CAST OF CHARACTERS

Memory Josephine Schuesster

The Prologue Mary Ben If'right

The Device-Bearer Louise Buchanan

YoU-iN-THE-AuDiENCE You and Others

The Population Isabel Ferguson

The Soldiery Polly Stone

The Mime Elizabeth Molloy

The Milkmaid . Margaret Powell

The Blindman Pocahontas Wight

The Ballad-Singer Frances Bitzer

The King's Trumpeter Carolyn Smith

His Majesty, the King Eugenia Thompson

The King's Councillor Frances Amis

The King's Great-Aunt Eleanor Hyde

The Headsman Georgia May Little

Her Majesty, the Queen Valeria Posey

Sir David Little-Boy Dell Bernhardt

His Mother Charlotte Keesler

The play is in one act.

The scene is a gateway to the King's Cast!e.

The time is when you will.

iQ TT "T

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llarkfrtarfi

PRESENT

(Doris F. Halman)
a play in one act

CHARACTERS

The White Faced Girl Beth McClure

The Countrywoman Quenelle Harrold

The Poet's Wife . . Charlotte Keesler

The Serving Maid Louise Buchanan

Scene An interior of a farmhouse at the End of Things.

w

SILHOUETTE

presents

(Handel)
Sunday, December 17th

SOLOISTS

Miss Margaret Battle ....... Soprano

Of the North Avenue Presbyterian Church

Miss Eunice Curry Contralto

Mr. a. W. Browning Tenor

Of the Ponce de Leon Baptist Church

Mr. Ed. A. Werner Bass

Of the North Avenue Presbyterian Church
Choruses sung by members of the Glee Club and the
College Community
Mr. Johnson ........ Director

Mr. Dieckmann Accompanist

C

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>^^

OIl|p (^in OIlub

'SI)r iEggpttan PrinrPBH" in io Arta

By Charles Vincent

CAST

Queen of Egypt Frances Gilliland

Princess Aida (Her Daughter) Lillian Clement

Princess Tabueu ( Sister to Queen ) Carrie Scandrett

Nyssa I r- \ Helen Bates

Phila \ Companions to Aida ....... ] ^^^^ ^^^^^^

Alva (A Favorite Slave) Lillian McAlpine

Queen Crania (Captive Queen) Elizabeth Lockhart

Herub (Soothsayer) Jane Knight

Dancers f Mary Freeman

I Gene Dumas

Slaves and Egyptian Girls
Under Direction of Miss Curry

T E

IFnutt&pra ian

Wj INCE February 22, to the minds of all Agnes Scotters, means not only
the anniversary of George Washington, but also of our own George
Washington Scott, who founded the college, the holiday we had on
that day was one of double celebration.

The dining rooms, both of Rebekah Scott and White House, were
gaily decorated in appropriate cherry trees and flags. The seniors, who occupied
a large table in the center of each, dining room, marched in, arm in arm. All were
dressed in quaint colonial costumes and every character from George Washington
himself to Daniel Boone was present with his wife. Another large table was reserved
for the sophomore sisters who, during the course of the meal, sang to their
senior sisters.

The occasion was enlivened by toasts and speeches from various distinguished
members of the assembly, speeches which put everyone into the atmosphere of '76.
When dinner was over, Francis Scott Key led the student body in singing the Alma
Mater. The crowning event of the evening was the dancing of the stately minuet
followed by the grand march.

The characters in the two dining rooms were:

George Washington Dorothy Brown, Emily Guille

Martha Washington Elizabeth Ransom, Jane Knight

Thomas Jefferson Lucile Little, Margaret Ransom

Benjamin Franklin Hilda McConnell, Jessie Dean Cooper

Patrick Henry Nannie Campbell, Beth McClure

Betsy Ross Eloise Knight, Geraldine Goodroe

LaFayette Hazel Bordeaux, Anna Meade

Francis Scott Key Ruth Almond, Catherine Shields

D 1 L "-" ^ ^ E T

6

PRESENT

(Florence Clay Knox)

CAST OF CHARACTERS

Miss Katharine Purton a young woman of the "'Smart Set" Sarali Belle Brodnax

Mrs. Jim Harding (otherwise Ethel) her friend Frances Harwell

Mary, Miss Purton's maid Frances AUston

Time The present. Scene Miss Purton's Living Room

"i|p (Hiima Pig"

(Evelyn Emig)

CAST OF CHARACTERS

Mrs. Elizabeth Maynard Marjorie Lowe

Elza, her older daughter Valeria Posey

Muriel, her younger daughter Mildred Pitner

Scene The Living Room of the Maynard Apartment

/

H O U E T T E

c)

\

Jntrrrnlkgtatf if bat?, Harris 23, 1323

Resolved, That the United States should cancel the debts oiced her by the Powers asso-
ciated with her in the World tfar.

Debated at Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.
AGNES SCOTT (Affirmative) vs. SOPHIE NEWCOMB (Negative)

Daisy Frances Smith Virginia Butler

Pocahontas Wight

Mary Stewart McLeod (Alternate)

LIla Milner

Beatrice Ford (Alternate!

Debated at Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Lynchburg, Va.
RANDOLPH-MACON (Affirmative) vs. AGNES SCOTT (Negative)

Allison Blodgett
Bowers McKorell
Maxie Stone (Alternate)

Quenelle Harrold

Valeria Posey

Eloise Knight (Alternate)

Debated at Sophie-Newcomb. New Orleans, La.
SOPHIE NEWCOMB (Affirmative) vs. RANDOLPH-MACON (Negative)

Janice Loeb Mary Virginia Kacey

WiLMER Shields Marye Love Greene

Beatrice Adams (Alternate) Anna Culver (Alternate)

A double victory was won this year by Randolph-Macon over Agnes Scott and Sophie-
Newcomb. The other victory was won by Agnes Scott over Sophie-Newcomb's negative team.

^^

k3 ii jL

H C

^ J TTT

iEag iag

I.

CROWNING OF QUEEN

Maids

May Queen Margaret Ransom

Elizabeth Molloy
Josephine Douglass
Lucy Oliver
Margaret Turner

Jane Knight

Mary Keesler

Christine Evans

Elizabeth Parham

II.

MAIZE MOON

(From the Indian Legend by Marjorie Lowe)

INVOCATION TO THE SUN GOD

Rising Sun, last of the descendants of the man and woman who came down
from the Sun, invokes the Great Father from the Burial Mound of his Ancestors.

EPISODE I.

T T E

Over the Sleeping Wigwams, Dawn ushers in the Day. The High Priest calls
to the Sunrise ceremony the old braves. Rising Sun brings the peace pipe, and blows
the smoke East, West, North and South to invoke the blessing of the Great Father.
Whirls of smoke eddy about as the old men perform the ancient ceremony of smoking
the calumet. Awakened, the Indian people join in the Sunrise Call. The young
warriors dance the dance of Good Hunting, and the maidens hang charms about their
necks to speed them on their way.

EPISODE II.

On the Islands of Eternal Verdure, the Daughters of the Sun feasting on the
luxuries of the Island but inaccessible to the footsteps of man, are dancing happily.
Morning Star is with them.. She is an earthly maiden of mysterious birth, who
has been given into their keeping until the time shall come for her destined marriage
with the last of the Suns.

In the midst of their play. Rising Sun comes upon them. The deer he has
been hunting is forgotten. He woos her, but in vain. To amuse her, he plays at
stalking the deer. Again he begs her to come with him, but she remembers her play-
mates and will not go. Sorrowfully he leaves her.

EPISODE III.

The Braves return in triumph from the Hunt. The spoils are placed in cere-
mony on the mound. It is the Festival of the Green Corn, and all join in the Dance
of the Maize.

Heralds of the night, the fireflies twinkle in and out of the bushes. The
Daughters of the Dusk creep in, and with them come the Evening Star with her
children the Stars, and the Rising Moon. At night come the Sun Daughters,
bringing Morning Star. They place her on the Mound and sadly take their leave.
The Spirits of Sleep surround her.

Again comes the Dawn. Again the old braves usher in a new day, and, smoke
wreathed. Rising Sun offers them the Calumet of his Fathers. Approaching the
mound, he finds the lovely maiden of his desire, and he calls in the Indians to re-
joice with him in his happiness.

Recessional.

CAST

Rising Sun Dorothy Bowron

Morning Star Hall McDougall

Day Louise Brown

Evening Star Elizabeth Ransom

Moon Louise Brown

Old Priest Mary Jarman

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^mor (ippra dompatty

ICuri if Slatunmouipr

A Socialistic Opera in Three Acts and Seven Scenes (in English)

King Tut RuTTi Almando

Queen of Sheba Lizini Lock-Hata

Princess Luci LiBBO Ran Somivetti

Proletario Dottine Bowri

Boozsella Luciglio Littello

Anti-Prohib Eloselle Di Knytise

SEXTETTE

Elizine Hokum Lucie Howardini Viole Hollise Jose Locagni

Myrtelle Murphi Marguerite Tourneur

INCIDENTAL DANCES BY LOUISA BROWNSKI AND THE D. T. BALLET

Louisa Brownski Evo Wasso Franz Harwelle

Elizabeth Molohi Halli Mack-Douge Hazelle Bordeaux

PALACE EMPLOYES

Nannette Camille, Emile Guilli, Anna Meda, Claire Allyn, Imoge Allyn, Maudo Fausterio,

LoiSE McBjlane, Hilde McKann, Marge Brennerski, Minnilea Clarkazza,

Loci Timmervitch, Fredave Ogeltri

Conductor I. Lean Doddora

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

L. Little Chairman

M. Goodrich E. Ransom

E. Knight H. Faw

D. BowRON - M. McIntosh

m

. H O U E T-T E

, ii*^

Oh, Agnes Scott,
Come out and play with lis!
Brm^ oat your doUied too,
iefs See what we can do,
5lide down our rain barrel^
5hde down.oar cellar doorj
/jnd lef5 be jolly friends
Forever more.

SILHOUETTE

Qlnrnm^nr^m^ttt OlalrttJiar

MAY 24, THURSDAY

4:00 P. M.: Annual alumnae baby show for Agnes Scott grandchildren.
5:00 P. M. : Faculty tea to Senior Class, in Alumnae House.

MAY 25, FRIDAY

10:00 A. M. : Annual meeting of Board of Trustees.

1:30 P. M.: Sophomore luncheon to Senior Class at East Lake Club.

3:00 P. M.: Annual alumnae council meeting.

7:30 P. M. : Junior banquet to Senior Class at Druid Hills Club.

MAY 26, SATURDAY

1:30 P. M.: Alumnae luncheon to Senior Class at East Lake Club.
8:30 P. M.: Concert by the Glee Club.

MAY 27, SUNDAY

11:00 A. M.: Baccalaureate sermon, Decatur Presbyterian Church by the Rever-
end J. M. Vander Meulen, D. D., President Louisville Theological
Seminary, Louisville, Kentucky.

2:00 P. M.: Senior Class entertains at after-dinner coffee for the faculty and the
visiting parents and friends.

6:00 P. M.: Senior vespers. College Chapel.

MAY 28, MONDAY

10:00 A. M.: Senior breakfast to the Sophomore Class at East Lake Club.
3:00 P. M.: Annual meeting of the Alumnae Association.
4:00 P. M. : Class day exercises.
8:30 P. M. : Recital presented by Spoken English Department. Presentation

by the Blackfriars of selections from "A Midsummer Night's

Dream," College Chapel.

MAY 29, TUESDAY

10:00 A. M.: Address to the Senior Class by the Reverend J. Sprole Lyons, D.D.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Conferring of degrees.

O U E T T E

Program :

Welcome Helen Wright

Song Lillian McAlpine and Frances Gilliland

On King Tut Mary Greene

On Excavations Dell Bernhardt

Dance A Favorite Slave

Farewell Victoria Howie

Toastmistress Helen Wright

''A

UL J , il

June Rhapsody Daniels

Solo Norwegian Spinning Song Saar

Lillian McAlpine

The Call of Home Ambrose

To a Wild Rose MacDowell

Reading In the Merry Month of May 0. Henry

Frances Amis

Silver Moonlight Harris

Obligato by Lillian McAlpine

Solo Lassie 0' Mine Walt

Frances Gilliland

(a. Eastern Song Shertvood
b. Heather Time Cox
c. Little Papoose Sherwood

Gondola Song Roberts

T T E

Theseus, Duke of Athens Frances Lincoln

Lysander, in love with Herniia Georgia May Little

Demetrius, his rival Isabel Ferguson

Egeus, an Athenian Noble, father of Hermia Frances Bitzer

Philostrate, Master of the Revels Marjorie Lowe

Nick Bottom, the Weaver Louise Ware

Peter Quince, the Carpenter Frances Amis

Snug, the Joiner LouiSE Buchanan

Flue, the Bellows Mender Margaret Powell

Snout, the Tinker Mary Anne McKinney

Starveling, the Tailor Pocahontas Wight

Hippolyta, Queen of the Amazons Mary Palmer Caldwell

Hermia, Daughter of Egeus (in love with Lysander) . Sara Belle Brodnax
Helena, in love ivith Demetrius Beth McCluke

FAIRIES

Oberon, King of the Fairies Floy Oliver Jeter

Titania, his Queen Frances Harwell

Puck, or Goodfellow Emma Jones

First Fairy Elizabeth Molloy

Peas-Blossom Mary Freeman

Cobweb Winona Peck

Moth Sarah Slaughter

Mustard Seed Isabel Clarke

Other Fairies . . Harriet Fearington, Rosamond Neisler, Frances Tennent,
Dell Bernhardt. Margaret Powell, Mildred Pitner

I L H O U

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CUnmrn^nr^mfttt Sag

May 29,1923, at 10:00 o'clock

COLLEGE CHAPEL

Prngramme

1. Processional Hymn.

2. Prayer.

3. Rest in the Lord Mendelssohn

Miss Eunice Curry

4. Announcement of Scholarships and Prizes.

5. June Rhapsody Daniels

Glee Club

6. Address to the Graduating Class.

The Rev. J. Sprole Lyons, D. D.,
Atlanta, Ga.

7. Conferring Degrees.

8. Announcements.

9. Benediction.

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Book VII

INKLINGS

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INSTRUCTIONS FOR HURDLING THE GYM HORSE

The process of hurdling a horse
Depends very largely on force.
But there's also a knack
In hopping his back,

Which one must develop, of course.
There's many a slip
'Twixt the cup and the lip.
As people

Have said till they're hoarse.

Don't let the poor beastie suspect.
For it makes him a nervous wreck;
But without hesitation
Please see illustration

(The method don't try to dissect) ',
Just give a big jump
And land in a lump
With your feet

In the back of your neck.

It's simple as simple can be
You've only to try it to see;
A brisk, dashing plunge,
A spasmodic lunge

That will all turn out quite merrily.
For someone will come to your aid
And gather you up on a spade,
And in three days, my friend,
You'll be walking again
As simple

As simple can be.

H OU E T T E

Miss Howson (while Seniors are rehearsing for graduation exer-
cises) : "Now, one girl is absent. How are we going to show that
she's supposed to walk between you two?"

Dorothy: "You might draw a chalk line on Lois."

Miss Hopkins: "Now, girls, what neck arrangements have you
for tomorrow?"

Commencement Speaker (warmly): "And now I want to congrat-
ulate all you noble young men and women who are gradtiating from
this college!"

Hectic Girl (who has waited long in department store, as clerk
finally saunters up I : "May I wait on some handkerchiefs, please?"

Mr. Lindermeyer waxes poetic:
"Agnes Scott
I wonder what
You will attain
Under McCain?
But I can see
That you will be
A splendid field
For Emory."

v9

THF

ROOK \immc.

SILHOUETT

Innk irntumtig

A FAREWELL

(WITH APOLOGIES TO CHARLES KINGSLEY)

loathed books, we had no fire to burn you;

No flame could rise to skies so dull and grey,
So we contrived to show how we would spurn you

Another way.

We drowned you in a tub 'midst gloating laughter-
Yes, cast you in and left you there for long

And so we made our years forever after
One grand, sweet song.

We have studied hard and long
Our life here has been no song
All because of this one book:
The hardest course we ever took.
Waves leap up, and seas devour
No more Physics from this hour.

Unsocialistic in my views,
Drowning these gives me no blues.
In studying Soc. I'd always snooze.
So vamoose and leave no clues.

These history notes take you the world around;

They've often led me astray.
One splash and the cursed thing is drowned.

And my worries depart this day.

That your reward is just, Trig,

It cannot be denied.
You've made me what I am today

I hope you're satisfied.

S I LH O U ^ ^ T E

Here's the thing that's been my bore;
Here's the thing that's kept me poor:
Now that I am through with Latin,
I pray the Lord that I may fatten.

Mathematics I, I'm glad we're done

(We never should have met each other),

But now we're through, I'm glad, aren't you?
No more we need to fret each other.

We couldn^t be parted after we started,

And that's the reason why
With a fiendish grin I throw you in,

Latin prose, good-bye.

You caused me many a pain and ache.
And now 'tis sweet revenge I take

You'll get your due!
You brought so much bad luck to me
I was even called "sweet vacancy"

Because of you!"
I'll hate you as long as I'm alive.
You wretched,

hateful,

terrible,

History Five ! ! I

,./

S I LH OU E T T E

iir^rtnrg of Q^fitr^rs of A^mtmstratton

3lnBlrurttnn atiii (Bvvttnmsnt

Alexander, Miss Lucile 52 Park Lane, Atlanta, Ga.

Armistead, Dr. -J. D. M. Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

Baker, Mr. Woolford B. Emory University, Ga.

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

Calhoun, Miss Franxes Spartanburg, S. C.

Culberson, Miss Margaret 265 Gordon St.. Atlanta, Ga.

Cunningham, Mr. R. B. S. Candler St.. Decatur, Ga.

Curry, Miss Eumce Wolfville, Nova Scotia. Canada

Daugherty, Miss Harriet 228 N. Broad St., Grove City, Pa.

Davies, Miss Lena Agnes Scott College. Decatur. Ga.

Davis, Miss Jean S. Agnes Scott College. Decatur. Ga.

Dieckmann, Mr. C. W. Decatur. Ga.

DiECKMANN, Mrs. C. W. Decatur. Ga.

Finnell, Mrs. Jennie D. Agnes Scott College. Decatur, Ga.

FiTZHUCH, Mrs. Margaret 0. Agnes Scott College. Decatur. Ga.

Gaines, Dr. F. H. Agnes Scott College, Decatur. Ga.

Gaylord, Miss Leslie Winchester. Va.

Glendenning, Miss Gwendolen Manchester, Mass.

Gibbons, Miss Lois 0. 1016 S. 45th St.. Philadelphia, Pa.

GoocH, Miss Frances K. Agnes Scott College. Decatur. Ga.

Gilbert, Miss Otto 118 Church St.. Decatur, Ga.

GooDWYN, Miss Mary Elizabeth 1319 Willow Ave., Louisville. Kv.

Hale, Miss Louise 710 Coster St.. Bronx. N. Y.

Hamff, Mr. C. F. Emory University. Ga.

Harn, Miss Muriel 2506 N. Calvert St.. Baltimore. Md.

Hearon, Miss Cleo Agnes Scott College. Decatur, Ga.

Hopkins, Miss Nannette Hot Springs. Va.

Holt, Mr. R. B. Decatur, Ga.

HowsoN, Miss Emily E. Agnes Scott College, Decatur. Ga.

Johnson, Mr. L. H. Decatur. Ga.

Laney, Miss Emma May 721 Jefferson St.. Tupelo, Miss.

Lewis, Miss Louise G. Agnes Scott College. Decatur, Ga.

Miller, Miss Emma R. R. 1, Breton. Ontario. Canada

Morgan-Stephens, Mrs. Theodora Atlanta. Ga.

McCaa, Miss Fanny 1025 Fairmont St.. Anniston. Ala.

McCain, Dr. J. R. S. Candler St.. Decatur, Ga.

McCurdy, Miss Sarah Stone Mountain. Ga.

McKiNNEY, Miss Louise S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.

Preston, Miss Janef Bristol, Va.

Randolph. Miss Isabel Decatur. Ga.

Rankin, Jr., Mr. W. W. Thomasville. N. C.

RoTHERMEL, Miss JuLiA 114 N. 9th St.. Reading, Pa.

Skeen, Miss Augusta 126 E. Ponce de Leon Ave.. Decatur, Ga.

Smith, Miss Jennie Agnes Scott College. Decatur. Ga.

Smith, Miss Lillian Agnes Scott College. Decatur, Ga.

Summers, Mr. L. W. Emory University, Ga.

Stansfield. Miss Martha Bradentown, Fla.

Stukes, Mr. S. G. ./Vgnes Scott College. Decatur. Ga.

Sweet, Dr. Mary F. S. Candler St.. Decatur. Ga.

Sy-denstricker, Mrs. Alma .4gnes Scott College. Decatur Ga.

SUTPHEN, Miss Katherine Van Dusen Dorloo, Scholarie County. N. Y.

Tart, Mr. J. C. Agnes Scott College, Decatur. Ga.

Torrance, Miss Catherine 623 Ashland Ave.. Muncie. Ind.

White, Miss Genevieve C. Agnes Scott College. Decatur. Ga.

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Aiken, Martha Pierce Jefferson, Ga.

Akers, Mabel 135 Simpson St., Atlanta, Ga.

Albukv, Sarah JMarion 820 S. Boulevard. Tampa. Fla.

Alford, Attie a. Bonifay, Fla.

Allen, Clara Mae 417 Clairmont Ave'., Decatur, Ga.

Allen, Emma Belle 229 E. 10th St., Atlanta, Ga.

Allen, Imocene 417 Clairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Almond, Ruth 469 Mcintosh St., Elberton, Ga.

Alston, Frances 56 Avery Drive, Atlanta, Ga.

Amis, Frances Ann Fordyce, Ark.

Arnold, Emily Stanford 102 Greenville St., Newnan, Ga.

Arnold, Mary Evelyn 428 E. 6th St., Anniston, Ala.

AsBURY, Sara Frances College Ave., Elberton, Ga.

Askew, Elizabeth Pinson 135 Jefferson Place, Decatur, Ga.

Atherton, Adelaide Nelson, Ga.

Atkins, Helen H. E. Main St., Marion, Va.

Bailey, Celeste Faunsdale, Ala.

Barceron, Grace Springfield, Ga.

Barr, Annice Lillian 265 E. 5th St., Atlanta, Ga.

Bates, Helen Adelaide 269 E. 4th St., Atlanta, Ga.

Beauchamp, Lorraine 301 Luckie St., Atlanta, Ga.

Bell, Mary Lee 506 S. Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga.

Benenson, Hannah Belle Moultrie, Ga.

Benenson, Nellie Mae Moultrie, Ga.

Bennett, Mary Louise 222 N. Moreland Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Berger, Eleanor 145 E. North Ave.. Atlanta, Ga.

Berman, Corena Tustin St.. Elberton, Ga.

Bernhardt, Ella Delight 211 S. Mulberry St., Lenoir, N. C.

Beverly, Elizabeth 119 Washington St., Thomasville, Ga.

Bird, Eunice Lee Rock Springs, Ga.

BiTZER, Frances Leland, Miss.

Bivings, Minnie Rebecca 314 N. Moreland Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Blalock, Elizabeth Jonesboro, Ga.

Bolles, Lois Adelaide 116 Feld Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Bordeaux, Hazel 1219 Center St., Little Rock, Ark.

BowDOiN, Mary Bess Adairsville, Ga.

BowEN, Martha Monroe, Ga.

Bowers, Sarah Leone 3D Highland Terrace Apt., Birmingham, Ala.

BowRON, Dorothy Louise 2175 11th Ave., S. Birmingham, Ala.

Brawley, Ida Florence Kenilworth Apts., Nashville, Tenn.

Breedlove. Mary Elizabeth Ill W. Adair St., Valdosta, Ga.

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

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

Brown, Fannie Virginia 465 Clairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Brown, Janice Stewart 403 N. Edgeworth St., Greensboro, N. C.

Brown, Louise Katherine 511 Adams St., Decatur, Ga.

Brown, Mary Anderson 511 Adams St., Decatur, Ga.

Brown, Mary Dudley S. Ellis St., Salisbury, N. C.

Brown, Mary Phlegar Box 760, Hendersonville, N. C.

Browning, Rachel Virginia Wytheville, Va.

Brunson, Bertha Bernice N. Third Ave.. Laurel, Miss.

Bryant, Josephine Idelle Person St., Fort Valley, Ga.

Buchanan, Louise Ryman 514 2nd Ave., S. Nashville, Tenn-

Bull, Margaret Gertrude Kunsan, Korea

Burnley, Marguerite 96 Springdale Rd., Atlanta, Ga.

Burt, Virginia Arnold Opelika, Ala.

Byers, Esther Katherine 152 Advent St., Spartanburg, S. C.

Caldwell, Luctle Vernon Road, LaGrange, Ga.

Caldwell, Mary Palmer 747 N. Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga.

SILHOUETTE

Calahan, Lillian Alice 1604 E. Broadway, Muskogee, Okla,

Callahan, Sybil 1604 E. Broadway. Muskogee, Okla

Callen, Mary Elizabeth 506 Union St.. Selma, Ala

Camp Edith P. O. Box 34, Clarkston, Ga.

Campbell, Nannie 1730-A Floyd Ave., Richmond, Va.

Cannaday, Katharine Gatewood 361 Walnut Ave., S. W., Roanoke, Va.

Cannon. Gwynne Jonesboro, Ga.

Carpenter. Edythe L. 141 Prado, Atlanta, Ga.

Carrere, Elizabeth 2666 Henry St., Augusta, Ga.

Carrier, Catherine Elva 93 Merrimon Ave., Asheville, N. C.

Carter Annette 334 Adams St.. Decatur, Ga.

Chapman, Elizabeth 74 Dixie Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Cheatham, Elizabeth 152 E. 10th St., Atlanta, Ga.

Christie, Jr., Mrs. S. R. V ^- / , 9';'^^."='' .^f-

Clark, Verna June 713 Main St., Arkadelphia, Ark.

Clarke, Isabelle Louise 87 E. 9th St.. Atlanta, Ga.

Clarke, Minnie Lee Windsor Spring, Augusta, Ga.

Clement, Lillian 128 Adams St.. Decatur, Ga.

Clinton Marjorie 63 Ponce de Leon Ave., .Atlanta, Ga.

Coleman, Edythe Nichols 551 Euclid Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Coleman, Willie May 41 N. Moreland Ave.. Atlanta, Ga.

CoLLEY, Mary Wood CentreviUe, Tenn.

COLYER, Mary Ellen 1751 Post St., Jacksonville. Fla.

Comfort, Helen Lane Kosciusko, Miss.

Connelly, Dorothy Eastman 28 Maple St.. Uniontown, Pa.

Conner, Mary Frances Eufaula St.. Eufaula, Ala.

Cook, Thelma 13* Ave., Cordele, Ga.

Cooper, Frances 86 Elizabeth St., Atlanta, Ga.

Cooper, Jessie Dean ;, ,-.. c Centrevnlle, Ala.

Cowan, Sara Will 211 N. Main St Conyers, Ga.

Crenshaw, Julia L. 226 W. Peachtree St., .Atlanta, Ga.

Culpepper, Eileen 57 Hull St.. Ozark, Ark.

Curtis, Lorene 1302 6th Ave. N Jasper Ala.

Daniel, Bryte ; \; ', " c ' c ' '-'- t ^

Dargan, Mary Louise 213 Maple St., Spartanburg, S. C.

Davidson, Beulah Lane -^ -^ Fo" /alley, Ga.

Davis, Clarkie 1526 3rd Ave. Columbus Ga.

Deaver, Agatha -^ Brevard, N. C.

Debele Margaret E. 1108 Barnard St Savannah, Ga.

Dennington, Jennie L. 610 Washington St.. Atlanta, Ga.

Dinwiddie, Agnes E. 115 Bickley Ave Glenside, Pa.

DiSMUKES, Helena 1515 3rd Ave., Columbus, Ga.

DoBBS, Marguerite Woodstock, Ga.

DoDD, Lucile Eileen Covington Road. Decatur Ga.

DocGETT, Elizabeth C. Kingsport. Tenn.

DOLVIN, Mary Key ;.,,," ;^,- <, r

Douglas, Elizabeth M. 29 College Plaza Clinton. S. C.

Douglass, Josephine Main St.. Murfreesboro, Tenn.

Drane, Ruth Ernestine ^^^ ^"'^ ,^'*^-^C"l""'''""-, G^-

DULS, Louisa D. 205 W. 11th St.. Charlotte N.C.

Dunn, Jeffie ^ ; . : "'*>,"T', " aV'

Dumas, Gene Inman 54 Michigan Ave Mobile, Ala.

Dunlap, Sarah B. 304 Kingston Ave., Charlotte, N. C.

Eakes, Maktha Nancy 204 Church St.. Decatur, Ga.

Edwards, Araminta 271 E. 10th St.. .\tlanta. Ga.

Elder, Zala W. 424 W. Broadway. Enid, Okla.

Evans, Christine ^^",?'"^S'-^ Foj-t Valley, Ga.

Evans Eunice P 414 N. McDuffie St., Anderson. S. C.

Evans,' Nancy Chenault W. Main St. Richmond Ky.

Fain, Ellen Ramey 338 Black St Rock Hill. S. C.

Farrar, Virginia 79 Highland View, .\tlama, Ga.

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

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Feagin, Nettie Simpson 105 Oak St., Atlanta, Ga.

Fearrington, Harriett Permelia ," , ' V ' w 11 wr

Ferguson, Isabel Walnut St Waynesville. N. C.

Ferrell, Dora Vernon Road, LaGrange, Ga.

Ficklen, Emmie Bounds Main St., Washington, Ga.

Flake, Elizabeth Ansley .-, \; ' ' / c "^''"1" ^h S"''T' S^"

Fleming, Ruth 104 N. Howard St K.rkwood Atlanta Ga.

Fletcher, Walker ^^419 E^ College St. Jackson, Tenn.

Fore. Euzabeth B. 707 N. College St., Charlotte, N C.

FoRMBY, Frances W. r' a ' ^^"'aT".'- c^^

Foster, Maud ;,; V' o : ^^^ Go^^^V^i " p f' r

Freeman, Mary Emmie 215 E. Princeton St., College Park, Ga.

Fullbright, Sarah r.o ir "W 'c; c' I c

Gallaway, Romana 508 E. Duffy St., Savannah, Ga.

Garrard, Margaret Wildwood, Columbus, Ga.

Cause, Helen Lucile o" ' u- "a" ' ^^?'"""\A'''-

Gay, Elise Shepherd Benachi Ave Biloxi Miss.

Gilchrist, Edith Martin Courtland. A a.

Gilchrist, Katie Frank Courtland, Ala.

Gilchrist, Phiuppa Garth W. r.\{ '^ ' C"l^"d, Ala.

Gilliland, Frances 334 Gorrell St., Greensboro, >l C.

Goldberger, Elise Blunea ^^''^^- !*^-

Goldbercer, Hilda Regina ; ,,, c' 'a 1 . r

Goodrich, Mary 268 Myrtle St., A lanta, Ga.

Goodroe, Geraldine Barbour St., Eufaula, Ala.

Goodwin, Lucy Toomer ;,. Marshallville Ga.

Gordon, Selma L. 711 Worthington Ave., Charlotte, N C.

Graeber, Catherine 122 Calhoun Ave.. Yazoo City Miss.

Graham, Carrie Augusta 416 Fairfax Ave. Norfolk, Va.

Green, Gertrude Moore Prospect Ave Bradentown. ! la.

Greene, Mary H. 38 Greenville St., Abbeville. S. C.

Greenlee, Alice 137 McDonough St.. Decatur. Ga.

Greer, Elizabeth Juanita 220 Park Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Gregory, Mary Elizabeth ,;. , ,' ". \;- ' ' ^'f""**' J^^"

Gregory, Vivian Keaton 79 Highland View, Atlanta, Ga.

Gresham, Eleanor S. 139 Green St Russellville, Ala.

Griffin, Euzabeth W. 320 W. Whitner St Anderson, S. C.

Griffin, Margaret 412 N. Troupe St., Valdosta, Ga.

Griffin, Sarah Elise Henderson Ave.. Covington. Ga.

Grimes, Brooks S. Main St.. Statesboro, Ga.

Grimes, Virginia S. Main St Statesboro. Ga.

GuFFiN, Ruth Leanna Mason & Turner Rd., Atlanta Ga.

Guille, Emily Egerton ;,^"fh'''^- ^''Y^^' r'

Hall Ouve 75 E. 12th St.. Atlanta. Ga.

Hallum, Elizabeth 103 Newnan St. Carrollton. Ga.

Hamilton, Zona 315 N. Crawford St., Thomasville, Ga.

Hammond, Mary Ella 605 W. Poplar St Griffin, Ga.

Hannah, Louise 200 Oakhurst Drive, Thomaston, Ga.

Harrison, Ruth Elizabeth Montezuma, Ga.

Harrold, Quenelle 301 College St., Americus. Ga.

Harwell, Frances Grace 211 Euclid Ave Atlanta, Ga.

Haslam, Blanche , ' Pi<:dmont. Ala.

Havis, Josephine 394 Williams St Atlanta. Ga.

Hendrix, Marian Louise Ball Ground, Ga.

Henry, Elizabeth 2627 Helen St.. Augusta, Ga.

Henry, Gertrude C. 336 Marion St., S. Jacksonville. Fa.

Henry Margaret V 1504 16th Ave. S., Birmingham. Ala.

Herm^nce Helena E 9 Thornwood Road, Toronto. Ontario. Canada

Hewlett, \l*ry Stewart Main St.. Conyers, Ga.

Hickman, Vera Elberta Oakland tla.

HiGGS, Charlotte Anne Charlestown, W Va.

Hiccs, Emma Kate Charlestown, W Va.

Hoke, Elizabeth Johnston Lincolnton. IN. ...

T T E

Mollis, Viola . . . Mad

HOLLINGSWORTH, VIRGINIA Lee St.,

Holmes, Mrs. I. H. 559 Church St.,

Hood, Hattie Elizabeth Route 7,

HoRTON, Marcia Ford 208 Church St., Decatur, Ga.

Horton, Sallie Elizabeth Aliceville. Ala.

Hosford, Hazel Annette 29 Rockyford Ave., Kirkwood. Atlanta, Ga.

Houston, Katherine Fairfield, Va.

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

Howie, Victoria 18 Pinckney St., Abbeville, S. C.

Hubbard, Anne Louise 20 Adair Ave.. Atlanta, Ga.

Huff, Hazel M.\rcella 891 Highland Ave., Atlanta. Ga.

Hyatt, Barron 123 Oak St., Norton, Va.

Hyatt, Margaret 123 Oak St., Norton. Va.

Hyde, Eleanor 1518 N. Carroll Ave.. Dallas, Tex.

IvEY', Martha College St., Americus, Ga.

Jackson, Martha Cobb 602 Church St.. Decatur, Ga.

James, Dorothy 115 McDonough St.. Decatur, Ga.

James, Rosalind 121 E. Chapel St., Griffin. Ga.

Jarmon, Mary Oxford, Ga.

Jennings, Lois Elizabeth West Point. Ga.

Jennings, Mildred L. 810 Crawford Ave.. Augusta. Ga.

Johnson, Annie Barnes 118 Church St., Decatur, Ga.

Johnson. Marion Rhea 904 E. North Ave.. Atlanta. Ga.

Johnson, Sterling 100 Briarcliff Place. Atlanta. Ga.

Johnston, Ruth Forsyth Road, Macon, Ga.

Jones, De Courcey Hobbs 532 Pine St., Albany. Ga.

Jones, Emily 611 N. Court St.. Quitman, Ga.

Keesler. Charlotte Washington St.. Greenwood. Miss.

Keesler, .Mary E. 212 E. Morehead St.. Charlotte. N. C.

Keith, Dorothy Sykes 329 N. Main St.. Greenville. S. C.

Kell, Eunice Cloud Pascagoula. Miss.

Kelley, Cloah 1 Church St.. Buford. Ga.

Kennedy, Evelyn N. Main St.. Statesboro. Ga.

Kennedy, Ruth Martin Monticello, Ky.

King, Mary Evelyn 542 Tazewell .\ve.. Cape Charles, Va.

KiNMAN, Sarah Aline Bartow. Ga.

Kluttz, Mary Elizabeth 213 W. Thomas St., Salisbury. N. C.

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

Knight. Katherine Eloise Safety Harbor. Fla.

Knox, Mary Elizabeth 101 Federal Terrace, Atlanta, Ga.

Kulkhe, Dessie Gray 1427 Stovall St.. Augusta, Ga.

Ladd, Margaret Cheraw, S. C.

Land, .Augusta Clark 217 Minturn Ave., Hamlet. N. C.

Land, Virginia LeGrande 217 Minturn Ave., Hamlet, N. C.

Landress, Ella Louise 913 E. 9th St., Chattanooga. Tenn.

Lawhon, Laura Lewis 334 S. Candler St.. Decatur. Ga.

Lazarus, Freida N. Court St.. Quitman. Ga.

Leonard. Martha Eugenia Talbotton. Ga.

Lewis, Mary Allen 315 Stewart .'Vve.. Atlanta. Ga.

Liggin, Ruth 502 3rd St., Cordele. Ga.

Lincoln, Frances Willard Church St., Marion. Va.

LiNEWEAVEB, FRANCES Kellar 275 S. Main St.. Harrisonburg. Va.

Lingle, Nan Russell 3410 Chamberlayne Ave.. Richmond. Va.

Lipscomb, Frances Elizabeth Demopolis. Ala.

Little, Elizabeth Louise 2010 Peachtree Road, .\tlanta. Ga

Little, Georgia May 158 Myrtle St., -\tlanta. Ga.

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

Little, Vivian 211 Berne St., Atlanta. Ga.

LocKHART, Elizabeth Wardlaw 220 Church St.. Decatur. Ga.

Logan, Josephine Bell Terashima Machi. Tokushima. Japan

LoTSPEicH, Margaret 333 Williams Mill Road. Atlanta. Ga.

Lowe, Marjorie R. F. D. No. 5. Macon. Ga.

/ladison, Ga. ^N,,^

Dawson. Ga. ^.

Decatur, Ga. C~^)

Atlanta. Ga. V^

"S I LH. O U E

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I vMirs Mapv Ormewood Park, Atlanta, Ga.

MrA,;iNF I ILUAN May B"^ 547, Winston-Salem, N. C.

MrrT,,y' EmxH 265 E. 4th St., Atlanta, Ga.

McCa l";, mIrv KATHER.NE ^;^415 W Howard Ave. Decatur Ga.

McCaskill, Georgia . . - 208 Maiden Lane, Fayetteville, N.^C.

McS EeJLbeth Lvle . . . . . . . . . . . . ". - 270 E.' Main 'su, -SpartangT's.^:

MCCOLCA., MARGARET .............. ^ R^yston, Ga'.

McConnell, Hilda a^ . , r,

^i r- A,r., I .,r-T, L- Stone Mountain, Ga.

SrA'^i^^A^^A^HTE .....;.. .203 Poplar St. Jackson Tenn.

McDow, Margaret Clarkso. - K-S Mountain St., Yo-rl. . C.

MclNTOSH, Martha :^'^]l ^ift St., Albany, Ga.

McKay, Anne LeConte 560 Orange St Macon Ga

McKmi^EY, Mary Ann \^r= R^^w Fl.

McLeod, Mary Stewart . ^^^ ^,T w'^' AtCa' Ga'

McMillan, Ruth 8 Peachtree Way, Atlanta, Ga.

McMurry, Edna Arnetta Hartwell Road, Lavoma, Ga.

Mackenzie, Sarah Elizabeth .^; V, ' ' '/"f'"^ Yl' x,t fa

Mahoney, Virginia Louise 667 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga

MAiniMi- Rfttv Hfifn River Front, Greenwood, Miss.

MrNLY,%.UR7H\ Lin"' 32 N. Thornton Ave., Dalton Ga.

Mann, Mary Lynder nJV^' I" n^^.n.r" cl'

Marbut, Willie Frances 246 Sycamore St., Decatur, Ga.

MahtI'T' HELErdARKE""" ' ' ' ' ' ' 156 Wentworth" St.,' Charleston, S. C'.

MrTN', N l\Te k/te". : : ,-, 133 McAfee St., Atlanta Ga.

Martin Margaret R. 1010 Pf^fl'^'^lh St TuVaul'a Ala

I^^rvIn' Sll^T*^"". :::::::::::::: :^^ i^S ^1%!^. p

mZ':: Mr's':"c"mortimer 182 McLendon Ave., Atlanta Ga.

MATTHEWS ALICE FRANCES -805 Sy-more S D ^a.

SrANNATARDEMAN ' '. - '. - . - . ^ ^ . ^ 2014 IftK Ave S . B, ^ H^^, Ma.

t^lTi:i^:^.r' ';;;.::::::::::: : ^ f .nK-^iwa';: ^^, p.

Sn; Ive^n'leo' 124 King's Highway Decatur. Ga.

^rr^^^A^EL'^^''^ ':'"^^ . ' ' .E.Main'st.,'Benn^3:\J:

MMtsusYE Margaret , ' ^. , ' ^-^,1"'^ ""c^'

MiNTkR, ANITA YVONNE 22 ^ast Ave., Kirkwood A^lan a,^Ga.

To~^r^^:. Hover' : : : : .':....... Tho-sv1l,e N C.

MoLLOY, Elizabeth Washington -^ Vl ' ^ fc'nr Ga'

Moore, Elizabeth Heidt 301 East Lake Dnve, Decatur, Ga.

Moore, Eva Sandifer 62 W 12th St Atlanta Ga.

Moore! Frances Carolyn Browns Mill Road, Atlanta, Ga.

Moore, L.la Margaret ....'.'.. 1127 E. ' Henry' St.,' Savannah, Ga!

trRTT'ELoZcE' AUGUSTA '.'.... '.n^^^^ Tf "^"^ \^''-'- ^^'T T nn

MORROW, Mildred ANNE .' ^"'^^ '"^. ^F.^t'lS^'Ga"'

Morton, Cora Frazer 302 Lad St., Louisville, Ga.

Ks^^R^rrCAROLiNE' : : : : : : : : - 112 Yamamato, dori, 4 Chome, Kobe Japan

Nash, Catherine Emery Sutherland Terrace, K.rkwood Atlanta. Ga.

Neisler, Rosamonde Walker Seneca S c'

NiMMONS, LuciA Lewis dn'n ' j i L Vc^^ ritv m;s'

NORTH, JOSEPHINE GARDNER 519 Grand Ave.. Ya^zoo^Ca^^Miss.

Norton, Eula Bloomfield, Ky.

Egden!' Jra^^ IZIZ '. . . . . . . . . " 33 Montauk Ave., M^l. AJa.

S^LS^^Slmer''"- :::::::::::::: : r.'f:d. no. 's: Montgomery: Aia:

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Ordway, Virginia Moore 1113 Christine Ave., Anniston, Ala.

OvERSTREET, GRACE Baxley, Ga.

Owen, Dorothy W. 46 Forest Park Ave., Springfield. Mass.

Owen, Ruth W. 46 Forest Park Ave., Springfield. Mass.

Owen, Mary Virginia 46 Forest Park Ave., Springfield, Mass.

O'Neal, Chloe Leuelle 419 Gordon St., Atlanta, Ga.

Parham, Elizabeth Bullochville, Ga.

Passmore, Clyde Davis Exchange Bank Bid., Albany. Ga.

Payne, Harryett 505 7th Ave. W., Springfield, Tenn.

Peck, Weenona 710 S. Lawrence St., NIontgomery, Ala.

Peeler, Virginia "Kildare," Huntsville. Ala.

Pennington, Martha Greensboro, Ga.

Perkins. Eugenia 1148 Monte Sano Ave.. Augusta, Ga.

Perkins, Florence E. 284 N. Moreland Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Perkins, Virginia Nacogdoches, Tex.

Perry, Mary Walker 512 S. Main St., Russellville, Ky.

Perry, Margaret Lane 237 Howard Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Pfeiffer, Louise 1800 Norwich St., Brunswick, Ga.

Pharr, Ada Lela 631 Clairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Pharr, Addie 631 Clairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Pharr. Sarah Montine 631 Clairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Phippen, Lucile W. 334 Church St.. Decatur, Ga.

PiRKLE, Ruth Janett Gumming. Ga.

Pitman, Katherine M. 212 Oak Ave., Huntsville, Ala.

PiTNER, Mildred Main St., Washington, Ga.

Pitts, Mildred Lee Mcintosh St., Elberton. Ga.

Plunkett, Mildred Frances 188 N. Main St., Conyers, Ga.

Ponder, Sara Ernestine Rutledge, Ga.

Pope, Julia Ficklen Spring St.. Washington, Ga.

Posey, Valeria Liberty. S. C.

Pou, Loulie Redd 11 15th St., Columbus, Ga.

Powell, Eugenia Louise Woodbury, Ga.

Powell, Margaret 1514 Summit Ave., Little Rock. Ark.

Proctor, Margaret Junction City, Ark.

Prowell, Margaret 1919 Broad St.. Tuscaloosa. Ala.

Ramage, Mary Allene 302 St. Joseph St., Mobile, Ala.

Ramsey-, Helene Louisville. Ga.

Randolph, Catherine 146 Hillside St.. Asheville, N. C.

Randolph, Elizabeth 146 Hillside St., Asheville, N. C.

Ransom, Margaret 54 N. Howard St.. Kirkwood. Atlanta. Ga.

Ransom, Sarah Euzabeth 400 Lucy Ave.. Birmingham, Ala.

Redding, Ethel Reece Jackson St.. Biloxi. Miss.

Reece, May I. Waldo. W. Va.

Rhyne, Lucy 280 Hardee St.. Atlanta, Ga.

Richardson, Cora 205 Dooly St.. Hawkinsville. Ga.

Richardson, Nellie 205 Dooly St., Hawkinsville. Ga.

Riviere, Elisabeth 2920 Eleventh Ave.. Columbus. Ga.

Roberts, Elizabeth S. 3602 Seminary Ave.. Richmond, Va.

Rogers, Margaret Frances East Lake, Decatur, Ga.

Rogers, Ruth Elizabeth 113 Trinity Place. Decatur, Ga.

Rolston. Jacqueline C. 409 Randolph Ave.. Pulaski. Va.

Rose. Maria Kibkland 314 Park Ave.. Charlotte, N. C.

Rose, Susan Murphy 693 Hillside Ave., Fayetteville. N. C.

Rosenberg, Bess Anita Social Circle, Ga.

Ruff, Edith Ray 119 S. Whiteford Ave., Atlanta. Ga.

Rugcles, Olive 73 N. Howard St.. Kirkwood. Atlanta. Ga.

Ryttenberg, Lydia Rose 232 Church St., Sumter. S. C.

Sadler, Floy Hilda Oakland, Fla.

Salter, Elizabeth 523 Cotton Ave. W.. E. Birmmgham, Ala.

Sanders, Ruth DeVall's Bluff. Ark.

Saxon, Emmie 227 Ponce de Leon Ave.. Atlanta. Ga.

Scandrett, Carrie Cordele, Ga.

Schuessler, Josephine E. Wynnton, Columbus, Ga.

o

S I L H

Scott, Mildred , ' ' ' c-' ' P'^kdale Ala.

Seacle, Alma Newland 103 Hibriten St., Lenoir. ^ . L.

Sewell, Montie 1 Church St., Buford, Ga.

Shadburn, Susan -Buford, Ga.

Shaw Elizabeth 101 Calhoun St., Quincy, l-la.

Sherma.n'. Ladelle X ; Haynesville. La.

Shields, Catherine 121 S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.

Simons, Sadibel l^th St., Columbus, Ga.

Sims, Leila Exley 709 Whitaker St., Savannah, Ga.

Sims Mary Stuart 18 Thornton Ave.. Dalton, Ga.

Sincletary, Frances 1120 W. College Ave., Atlanta. Ga.

Skeen Rebekah 126 E. Ponce de Leon Ave.. Decatur. Ga.

Slaughter, Sarah Quinn 16 S. Prado, Atlanta, Ga.

Smith, Carolyn .;,; A, " ^ '. ' Covington, Ga.

Smith, Charlotte 30 McClendon Ave.. At anta, Ga.

Smith. Daisy Frances 161 N. Whiteford Ave.. Atlanta. Ga.

Smith, Ella Blanton 188 E. 17th St. Atlanta, Ga.

Smith, Margaret Rose 819 W. 4.th St., Little Rock, Ark.

Smith, Martha Jane , ; WatkinsviUe. Ga.

Smith, Mary Louise 180 Meade Roa(L Decatur. Ga.

Smith, Melissa , Wauchula. Fla.

Smith, Pearl McWilliams 2nd Ave., Rome, Ga.

Smith, Sarah F. HO St. Charles Ave^ Atlaiita, Ga.

Smith, Viola Anna ;. Wauchula, Fla.

Snow, Mary Elizabeth 5 Rivers Road, Atlanta, Ga.

Speake, ^Largery Mayhew Eustis St., Huntsville. .\la.

Speights, Katherine Medlock Road, Decatur. Ga.

Spiggle Ellen 15 Pennsylvania Ave., Atlanta. Ga.

Spiller', Sarah Euzabeth 355 W. 6th St., Jacksonville. Fla.

Spivey, Emily Ann Jenkins Ave.. Eatonton. Ga.

Spratung, Frances Elizabeth 5 Connecticut Ave.. Atlanta, Ga.

Sprinkle. Evelyn 6 Sheffey St Marion, \a.

Stewart, Mary Emily ^ Prattville, Ala.

Stinson, Annie Peyton 416 Williamson Greenwood. Miss.

Stokes, Alice Louise 221 East Lake Drive Decatur. Ga.

Stokes, Susie Vallotton 705 Whitaker St., Savannah, Ga.

Stone Polly Blakely. Ga.

StovaLu IVUrgaret Emily 68 W. 13th St.. Atlanta. Ga.

Strouss, IVLVRIANNE W. 21 W. Alexander St.. Atlanta Ga.

Swaney, Elma 401 High St., Chattanooga. Tenn.

SwANN, Fannie ^^^ If"^?' ^'- Decatur. Ga.

SwANN, Olivia Ward 1616 Pike Ave Ensley, .\la.

Tate, Sarah ^.; V u - 't,- /^''"f- ^^

Tennent, Susan Frances ^^7 Johns Road Augusta. Ga.

Terry, Annie Mae 309 Randolph St., Hnt^ville, .\ a.

Terry, Annie Wilson ?M'Juf- -^l^'

Terry, Margaret W. ;,;; ' ^^Ibrook. Ala.

Terry, Margaret S. Hamlet Ave.. Hamlet b. G.

Thomas, Augusta ^- Prattville A a.

Thomas, Marie Cornelia Frost Proof. Fla.

Thomasson, Johnny V. 367 St. Charles .\ve.. Atlanta, Ga.

Thompson, Eugenia R. No. 5 Glen Ins Park Birmmgham Ala.

Thompson, Lillian 108 Vance St Hamlet. N. C.

Thornton, Arnoldina Heard St.. Elberton Ga.

Timmerman, Lucy McIver 340 Hampton Ave Sumter. S. G.

Tripp, Nancy K. 35 Stokes Ave^. Atlanta Ga.

Tucker, Florence Allen "n' " ;^ ', -Beautort. S. L.

Tucker. Norma 19 White Oak Ave., At anta. Ga.

Tufts, Margaret Anna ^ ' ^?""''*- f' ^r

Turner, Christine 304 Hand Ave.. Pelham. Ga.

Turner. Frances G. 82 McLendon Ave.. Atlanta. Ga.

Turner. Margaret 304 Hand Ave. Pelham Ga.

ViRDEN, Alice Mayes Gynthia. Miss.

^^'. HOUET, TE

Ordvvay, Virginia Moore 1113 Christine Ave., Anniston, Ala.

OvEKSTREET, GRACE Baxley, Ga.

Owen, Dorothy W. 46 Forest Park Ave., Springfield, Mass.

Owen, Ruth W. 46 Forest Park Ave., Springfield, Mass.

Owen, Mary Virginia 46 Forest Park Ave., Springfield, Mass.

O'Neal, Chloe Leuelle 419 Gordon St., Atlanta, Ga.

Parham, Elizabeth BuUochville, Ga.

Passmore, Clyde Davis Exchange Bank Bid., Albany, Ga.

Payne, Harryett 505 7th Ave. W., Springfield, Tenn.

Peck, Weenona 710 S. Lawrence St., Montgomery, Ala.

Peeler, Virginia "Kildare," Huntsville, Ala.

Pennington, Martha Greensboro, Ga.

Perkins, Eugenia 1148 Monte Sano Ave., Augusta, Ga.

Perkins, Florence E. 284 N. Moreland Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Perkins, Virginia Nacogdoches, Tex.

Perry, Mary Walker 512 S. Main St., Russellville, Ky.

Perry, Margaret Lane 237 Howard Ave.. Decatur, Ga.

Pfeiffer, Louise 1800 Norwich St., Brunswick, Ga.

Pharr, Ada Lela 631 Clairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Pharr, Addie 631 Qairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Pharr, Sarah Montine 631 Clairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Phippen, Lucile W. 334 Church St.. Decatur, Ga.

Pirkle, Ruth Janett Gumming, Ga.

Pitman, Katherine M. 212 Oak Ave., Huntsville. Ala.

Pitner, Mildred Main St., Washington, Ga.

Pitts, Mildred Lee Mcintosh St., Elberton, Ga.

Plunkett, Mildred Frances 188 N. Main St., Conyers, Ga.

Ponder, Sara Ernestine Rutledge, Ga.

Pope, Julia Ficklen Spring St., Washington, Ga.

Posey, Valeria Liberty, S. C.

Pou, Loulie Redd 11 15th St., Columbus, Ga.

Powell, Eugenia Louise Woodbury, Ga.

Powell, Margaret 1514 Summit Ave., Little Rock, Ark.

Proctor, Margaret Junction City, Ark.

Prowell, Margaret 1919 Broad St., Tuscaloosa, Ala.

Ramage, Mary Allene 302 St. Joseph St.. Mobile, Ala.

Ramsey, Helene Louisville, Ga.

Randolph, Catherine 146 Hillside St.. Asheville, N. C.

Randolph, Elizabeth 146 Hillside St., Asheville, N. C.

Ransom, Margaret 54 N. Howard St., Kirkwood. Atlanta, Ga.

Ransom, Sarah Elizabeth 400 Lucy Ave.. Birmingham, Ala.

Redding, Ethel Reece Jackson St.. Biloxi, Miss.

Reece, May I. Waldo. W. Va.

Rhyne, Lucy 280 Hardee St., Atlanta, Ga.

Richardson, Cora 205 Dooly St.. Hawkinsville. Ga.

Richardson, Nellie 205 Dooly St., Hawkinsville, Ga.

Riviere, Elisabeth 2920 Eleventh .^ve.. Columbus. Ga.

Roberts, Elizabeth S. 3602 Seminary Ave.. Richmond. Va.

Rogers, Margaret Frances East Lake, Decatur, Ga.

Rogers, Ruth Elizabeth 113 Trinity Place. Decatur. Ga.

ROLSTON, Jacqueline C. 409 Randolph Ave., Pulaski, Va.

Rose, Maria Kirkland 314 Park Ave.. Charlotte, N. C.

Rose, Susan Murphy 693 Hillside Ave., Fayetteville. N. C.

Rosenberg, Bess Anita Social Circle, Ga.

Ruff, Edith Ray 119 S. Whiteford Ave., Atlanta. Ga.

Ruggles, Olive 73 N. Howard St.. Kirkwood. Atlanta, Ga.

Ryttenberc, Lydia Rose 232 Church St., Sumter. S. C.

Sadler, Floy Hilda Oakland, Fla.

Salter, Elizabeth 523 Cotton Ave. W., E. Birmingham, Ala.

Sanders, Ruth DeVall's Bluff, Ark.

Saxon, Emmie 227 Ponce de Leon Ave.. Atlanta, Ga.

ScANDRETT, Carrie Cordele, Ga.

Schuessler, Josephine E. Wynnton, Columbus. Ga.

>)

O U E

Scott, Mildred . Oakdale AU.

Seacle, Alma Newland 103 Hibnten St. Lenoir, N. L.

Sewell, Montie 1 Church St., Buford, Ga.

Shadburn, Susan ^ -^ Buford, Ga.

Shaw, Elizabeth 101 Calhoun St., Quincy, Fla.

Sherman, Ladelle .o. \' r ' a, ' '^f^''^"'^^""^' L''-

Shields, Catherine 121 S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.

Simons, Sadibel ,---,k"''? ^c' Clumbus Ga.

Sims, Leila Exley 709 Whitaker St Savannah, Ga.

Sims, Mary Stuart 18 Thornton Ave., Dalton, Ga.

Singletary, Frances 1120 W. College Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Skeen, Rebekah 126 E. Ponce de Leon Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Slaughter, Sarah Quinn 16 S. Prado Atlanta, Ga.

Smith, Carolyn ;\; A/ j \ ' Covington, Ga.

Smith, Charlotte 30 McClendon Ave.. At anta, Ga.

Smith, Daisy Frances 161 N. Whiteford Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Smith, Ella Blanton 188 E. 17th St. Atlanta, Ga.

Smith, Margaret Rose 819 W. 4th St., Little Rock, Ark.

Smith, Martha Jane ' \; \ ' Wa'k.nsviUe, Ga.

Smith, Mary Louise 180 Meade Road Decatur, Ga.

Smith, Melissa Wauchula, Fla.

Smith, Pearl McWilliams 2nd Ave., Rome, Ga.

Smith, Sarah F. 170 St. Charles Ave^ Atlanta, Ga.

Smith, Viola Anna . Wauchula, Fla.

Snow, Mary Elizabeth 5 Rivers Road, Atlanta, Ga.

Speake, Margery Mayhew Eustis St., Huntsville. Ala.

Speights, Katherine Medlock Road, Decatur, Ga.

Spigcle Ellen 15 Pennsylvania Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Spiller^ Sarah Elizabeth 355 W. 6th St., Jacksonville, Fla.

Spivey, Emily Ann Jenkins Ave., Eatonton, Ga.

Spratung, Frances Elizabeth 5 Connecticut Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Sprinkle, Evelyn 6 Sheffey St Marion, Va.

Stewart, Mary Emily ^ -,.- Prattville, Ala.

Stinson, Annie Peyton 416 Williamson Greenwood. Miss.

Stokes, Alice Louise 221 East Lake Drive Decatur, Ga.

Stokes, Susie Vallotton 705 Whitaker St., Savannah, Ga.

Stone, Polly .o 'W , .^ u' c ' ^\t 7' r^'

Stovall, Margaret Emily 68 W. 13th St., Atlanta. Ga.

Strouss, Marianne W. 21 W. Alexander St.. Atlanta Ga.

SwANEY, Elma 401 High St., Qiattanooga, Tenn.

SwANN, Fannie 135 Fairview Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Swann, Olivia Ward 1616 Pike Ave Ensley, Ala.

Tate, Sarah A: \ [. , ' ^^ /'^i"f' ^a-

Tennent, Susan Frances 927 Johns Road Augusta, Ga.

Terry, Annie Mae 309 Randolph St., Huntsville, A a.

Terry, Annie Wilson l^-'nu",''' ^ ''

Terry, Margaret W. ;, ' ; ' a" ' MiUbrook Ala .

Terry, Margaret S. Hamlet Ave.. Hamlet S C.

Thomas, Augusta Pra"vdle, A a.

Thomas, Marie Cornelia . V, ' , ' -Frost Proof, Fla.

Thomasson, Johnny V. 367 St. Charles Ave., At anta, Ga.

Thompson, Eugenia R. No. 5 Glen Iris Park Birmingham Ala.

Thompson, Lillian 108 Vance St Hamlet, N. C.

Thornton, Arnoldina Heard St., Elberton Ga.

TiMMERMAN, LucY McIvER 340 Hampton Ave Sumter. S. C.

Tripp, Nancy K. 35 Stokes Ave^, Atlanta Ga.

Tucker, Florence Allen ,' '^ \ \' Beaufort. S. G.

Tucker, Norma 19 White Oak Ave., At anta Ga.

Tufts, Margaret Anna ^?"""^f- ^'r

Turner, Christine 304 Hand Ave., Pelham. Ga.

Turner, Frances G. 82 McLendon Ave., Atlanta. Ga.

Turner, Margaret 304 Hand Ave. Pelham Ga.

Virden, Alice Mayes Cynthia, Miss.

I LH O U E T T E

Waldrop, Clara Jonesboro,

Walker, Ellen Axson Summerville, S.

Walker, Mary Belle 558 Greene St.. .Augusta,

Wallace, Ladie Sue Rutledge.

Wassum, Eva Elizabeth 317 Orange St., Macon.

Watson, Annadawn Carolina Naval & Military Academy. Hendersonville, N.

Watterson, Frances Eatonton,

Watts, Virginia 129 Adams St., Decatur,

Wheeler, Pauline Cordele,

White, Frances 513 Boland St., Sparta,

Whittemore, Maud F. 75 Cooledge Ave., Atlanta,

Whittenberg. Catharine 215 Jefferson Place, Decatur,

Whitincton, Margaret E. 171 Oglethorpe Ave., Atlanta,

Wight, Pocahontas W. 3215 Seminary Ave., Richmond,

WiLKiNS, Rosa 420 Academy St., Kingstree, S

Wing, Virginia Cecile 237 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta,

Winn, Lucy Kathryn Clayton,

Wood, Margaret R. 323 West St., Bainbridge,

Wooten, Rosalie Elizabeth 245 E. 4th St., Atlanta.

Wright, Helen 1628 Pendleton St., Columbia, S

Wright, Mary Ben 17 Harralson Ave., Atlanta,

Wright, Mary Frances 3rd St., Jackson,

Young, Alicia Hart 213 E. Huntingdon St., Savannah,

Zellars, Emily Quinn Grantville,

Zellars, Mary Ella Grantville,

TURN OVER A NEW LEAF
TD

TyEAD

AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE

DECATUR, GEORGIA

A COLLEGE FOR WOMEN

The Beauty About Our Business Is
FLOWERS

JOY'S

TWO ATLANTA STORES
548 Peachtree Opposite Georgian Terrace Hemlock 4214

8 Peachtree Arcade Entrance Ivy 4422

JOY'S

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Glenn Photo Stock Co.,

ROUTSOS CAFE

Inc.

60 PEACHTREE STREET

GENERAL PHOTOGRAPHIC

SUPPLIES

^

DEVELOPING

We Cater To and For

183 Peachtree Street
Atlanta, Ga.

School Girls

H. L. SINGER CO.

The Wholesale Fancy Grocers
of Atlanta

Alpine Flax
Stationery

Fills every requirement for paper
suitable to the uses of Her Royal
Highness, the American Girl. Made

JOBBING DISTRIBUTORS

Gold Bar California Canned
Fruits, SchimmeFs Jellies and

of pure, white linen rags, in the
crystal spring waters of the Berk-
shire Hills. Get it in box station-
ery, tablets or envelopes, at the
stationery store.

Preserves, Thanksgiving Brand
Canned Vegetables, Wascott
Ginger Ale.

MADE BY

Montag Brothers, Inc.,

ATLANTA. GA.

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LIVER FOR SUPPER-UGH!

LET'S GO TO THE TEA ROOM AND
GET SOME GOOD FOOD.

The Silhouette Tea Room

ANNA YOUNG ALUMNAE HOUSE
SOUTH CANDLER STREET

::(2:>Ti=

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Prompt Service

ALWAYS GLAD TO SEE THE

Correct Prices

Agnes Scott Girls

DUNLOFS POINT LACE,

BEST and BRIDE ROSE

Come in as often as you can.

FLOUR. Also a full line

We are just up the street from

the

of High Grade Canned
Fruits and Vegetables.

Decatur car line.

AlbrigKt-Englana

'nsgs^-'

Company

THE DAFFODIL

WHOLESALE GROCERS

No. 1 Washington Street Viaduct

111 North Pryor Street

"What Every Woman

NEWEST CREATIONS IN

Wants"

MILLINERY

ALWAYS BEING SHOWN
AT

^-JotV^

GUARANTEED HOSIERY

Ellis Millinery
Compan};, Inc.

107-109 Peachtree Arcade,

32 Whitehall Street

Atlanta, Ga.

I

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COX'S

Prescription Shop

"Across from the jurniture store"

Convenient for Agnes Scott Girls

Courteous and Prompt Attention

HERFF- JONES CO. ^

Manufacturing Jewelers and Stationers

Indianapolis, Ind.

Official Jewelers for

Senior Class Rings

Everything in College Jewelry
H. S. CANFIELD, Representative.

Colonial Dining Room
and Cafe

21,4 Auburn Ave. at Peachtree

Breakfast Luncheon Dinner

Good Food Good Service

Good Music

W. P. BIGGENS, Mgr.

"Say It With Flowers"

WEINSTOCK'S

Atlanta's Favorite Flower Shop

JACK WEINSTOCK,

Atlanta, Ga.

Peachtree Street on the Viaduct
Phone Walnut 0908

PICTORIAL PHOTOGRAPHS

In This Annual By

REEVES' STUDIO

631/2 Whitehall Street,
Atlanta

Phone ( THING
Main 320 . L,^
for Anj< WHERE

Photos [TIME

McCullougli Bros.

Established 1894

WHOLESALE FRUIT AND
PRODUCE

9 Produce Row : Atlanta, Ga.

J. Grinnell Parry

"A Live Wire"
ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES
Decatur, Georgia
I

SCPPTI :

BAME'S, INC.

"Atlanta's Exclusive Talking Machine
Shop."

VICTROLAS SONORAS
RECORDS

107 Peachtree Street
(Opposite Piedmont Hotel)

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COMPLIMENTS OF

THE CANDY OF THE SOUTH

AGNES SCOTT GRADUATES,

Who are planning to enter business and are considering

MILLINERY as a vocation,

Whether expecting to engage in business for themselves

or seeking employment,

Will usually find it to their advantage to confer with

THE MILLINER'S BUREAU OF

Ernest L. Rhodes Company

"The South' s Largest Distributors
of Millinery at Wholesale"

67-69 S. PRYOR STREET . ... ATLANTA

A. B. C.

Taxicabs
Baggage Transfer

See our representative and have
your baggage checked direct from
college to your home.

Taxi Motor Rates

ALL PHONES MAIN 4000

Atlanta Baggage & Cab Company

cepTiz

=ir<s9j:

Thirst,

like love of sports,
knows no season

Drink

Delicions and Refreshing

3'

f

Lawrence's Pliarniacy

Opposite Depot

'"Little Dec."

PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST

Phones Decatur 0762-0763

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THE MIRROR

MILLINERY, READY-TO-WEAR
SHOES AND TOYS

Where It Pays to Shop

46 and 48 Whitehall Street

Atlanta

COMPLIMENTS OF

Tennebauin Brothers

Wholesale Confectioners
46 Wall Street

J. J. Bookout

JEWELER

DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY,

WATERMAN'S IDEAL FOUNTAIN

PENS, EVERSHARP PENCILS

Gifts That Last

114 Peachtree Arcade

Green and Milam

WE CATER TO AGNES SCOTT

Tlie Best In
FRUITS AND PRODUCE

8 Produce Row

IT PAYS TO BUY AT

SCOFIELD'S

Where you get
"everything in good eats"

Scofield Grocery Co.,

Decatur, Ga.
Phone Decatur 0145-0740

AFTER GRADUATION
A HOME

Let Us Furnish Your Home.

Haverty Furniture Co.

Corner Auburn and Pryor

COMPLIMENTS OF

Swift & Co.

Atlanta's Finest

TRIO DRY CLEANING

EVERY GARMENT CLEANED UNDER THE PERSONAL

SUPERVISION OF A GRADUATE DRY CLEANER.

Trio Laundry & Dry Cleaning Company

ATLANTA, GEORGIA

Out-of-Town Orders Have Our Prompt Attention

Belle Isle Auto Service

,*^Tsu.

OPEN AND CLOSED CARS

Atlantic Ice & Coal

FOR ALL OCCASIONS.

CoiT3oration

OPEN ALL NIGHT

Washington Street Viaduct

BELLE ISLE

Phone, Bell Main 1900

WINECOFF HOTEL

Ivy 5190

Ice, Coal

4 LUCKIE STREET

AND

Walnut 0484-0485

rLi V u

GARAGE

Cold Storag

e

Ivy 0166

40 Auburn Ave.

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1

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f

Mrs. Arabella Moore

DRESSMAKING
HEMSTITCHING

I39I/0 Sycamore St., Decatur, Ga.

Bell's Garage

53 Central Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

STORAGE CAPACITY 300 CARS

BATTERY SERVICE

GAS, OIL AND GREASES

New Process Washing, Drying
and Cleaning

Ladies' Rest Room 2nd Floor

Open All Night Phone M. 1411

jSJANNETTE

CHAPEAUX

M. Kutz Co.

WHOLESALE MILLINERY
Atlanta, Ga.

Atlanta Coffee Mills
Company

Roasters, Blenders and Packers of

HIGH GRADE COFFEES AND
TEAS

Wholesale Only
402 Edgewood Avenue

Decatur Bank & Trust Company

Capital .$100,000 Surplus $65,000

Depository of State of Georgia
Decatur, Georgia

^Y. E. JlcCalla, Chairman of Board of Directors

J. HowoU Orecn. Prcsidpnt and Trust Officer

\r. II. Wcokcs, President

S. R. Cliristie. Vice-President

('. M. Sanders. Casbier

J. W. Battle, Assistant Casbier

-GIFTS THAT LAST"

Nat Kaiser & Co.

1 liicm-iH)ral..(li

JEWELERS

3 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
Established 1893

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COMPLIMENTS OF

Fulton Market

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Araminta: "Eunice, what's a metaphor?"

Eunice: "It's a comparison in which you do not use like or as, isn't it?

Araminta: '"Why no; it's a place to graze horses and cows."

AT THE LIBRARY DESK.

"I want a Waddle."
"All right, go ahead."

Miss Warner: "Oh, Miss Randolph, your dress is ripping!"
Miss Randolph, excitedly looking herself over: "Where?"

Chapel Speaker: "I'm happy to see all these shining faces before me
this morning."

Beth: "Sarah, lend me your powder puff."

Wear-
Red Seal Shoes

(Made in Atlanta)

We appreciate your asking for them
your feet will appreciate the
result.

Manufactured by

J. K. ORR SHOE CO.

ATLANTA

For Sale Everywhere

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SILVER and WOODS

Manufacturing Jewelers

DIAMONDS, MOUNTINGS,

MEDALS, BADGES, ETC.
Made to Order

Repairing

PHONE
M. 1935

81/2 Whitehall St.,
Atlanta, Ga.

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? . .

Phillips & Crew Piano Company

181 PEACHTREE STREET

PIANOS VICTROLAS RECORDS

MANDOLINS GUITARS UKULELES

SHEET MUSIC BOOKS, ETC.

IN FACT
"EVERYTHING KNOWN IN MUSIC"

THE SELIG COMPANY has had the honor of serving
AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE for nearly twenty years,
and we must say that no college is more particular in
sanitation or for the welfare and more healthful sur-
rounding of the students.

THE SELIG COMPANY

"SERVES THE SOUTH"

Disinfectants and Sanitary Products

ATLANTA, GEORGIA

WE WISH TO THANK YOU FOR ALL THE BUSINESS YOU
HAVE GIVEN US AND HOPE TO SEE YOU ALL NEXT YEAR

WILSON & TUGGLE

325 E. COLLEGE AVENUE
Decatur 0929

Complete Drug Store Line

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If It's Good to Eat
You'll Find It At

KAMPER'S

492-498 PEACHTREE STREET
Atlanta, Georgia

Hemlock 5000

*-(^l

GEORGE'S

SHOE SHINE

PARLOR

For Ladies

GEORGE M. GIALELIS, PROP.

7 East Alabama Street

Atlanta, Ga.

Miss Smith: "We'll just read on till the bell comes all the way up-
stairs."

Elizabeth: "Set the alarm for two."
Emmie: "All right; you and who else?"

IN THE LIBRARY.

"Is Spenser's Queen in here?"

Lib: "Does the moon affect the tide?"
Lucie: "No; only the un-tied."

Notice flashed on screen at Metropolitan: "Coming next week Miss ,
lyric soprano "

Alicia: "Elma, does that mean she used to sing at the Lyric?"

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WILSON k CO.

PACKERS AND
PROVISIONERS

CHICAGO, U. S. A.

Wilson's Certified
Lard, Ham, Bacon

"Wilson Label Protects Your
Table."

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COMPLIMENTS OF

Piedmont Laundry &
Dry Cleaning Co.

Official Cleaner and Dyer for
AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE

Mary G. (temperamentally) : "I wanta fly."

Eloise K. (calmly) : "Well, there are several on the ceiling."

HAVE YOU HEARD THAT

The Constitution is basted on the Articles of Federation?
Poetry is man's most instantaneous way of expressing himself?
Herbert Spencer was an Agonistic?

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E. Molloy: "Did your watch stop when it fell on the sidewalk?"

M. Powell: "Why certainly it did. Did you expect it to keep on

throush?"

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"It is the

Close Observation of Little
Things That is the Secret
of Success in Business"

^^^^^^ HE eminent philosopher must have
fl '"^ had the printing business in mind,
^^^^^ for countless are the details that
must be reckoned with in the compiling
and printing of even the most modest vol-
ume. And we do lay all the credit for
what we have done in the College Annual
line to the painstaking care that we give to
the smallest details in their making.

From planning the Annual to the actual
mailing of it the Annual Staff works in
close co-operation with our Annual Experts
and Artists, profiting by their experience,
and thus avoiding blunders and loss
of time for all.

FOOTE ^ DaVIES COxMPANY

''The College Publication House'"
ATLANTA

MAY THE
aiLHOUETTE STAFF

REST HERE AT

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