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VOL. XXIV
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I^ebication
TO THE ALUMNAE
to those who have given four years of
their lives to Agnes Scott; and who have
in the giving, received something of the
inspiration that through them has become
a part of their Alma Mater
the Student Body lovingly dedicates this
volume.
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(^T* HE purpose of this book is a compre-
^^ hensive one, and the staff holds its
breath as you begin to turn the pages.
Dedicated to the Alumnae it attempts to
remind them tangibly of their Alma
Mater, and to present some from their
number who have along a few selected
lines made an appreciable stir in the
world; and compiled for the Student
Body, it endeavors to interpret for them,
we hope truly, one year of their four at
Agnes Scott. If our purpose is too am-
bitious for us, and we have failed, we ask
your pardon.
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Contents;
COLLEGE AND ALUMNAE
CLASSES
ACTIVITIES
ATHLETICS
FEATURES
HUMOR
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1 -
College anii Silumnae
MRS. J. S. GUY
(Allie Candler)
President of Alumnae
Association
MARY J. BARNETT
First President of
Alu:\inae Association
MRS. L. B. HAZZARD
t Julia Ingram)
Dietitian
MRS. F. G. BALCH
{Dr. India Hunt)
First Woman Professor of
Medicine at Umv. of Va.
JANEF PRESTON
Recognition in Field
OF Poetry
MARGARET BLAND
Recognition in
Poetry and Drama
TOMMIE DORA BARKER
Vice-President of
National Library Assn.
ELIZABETH McCARRICK
Work in Americanization
Compiler of Children's Poems
NAN BAGBY STEPHENS
Musical Composer and
Dramatist
MILDRED THOMPSON
School Psychologist
Social W'okkkr
EMMA WESLEY
Development of
Atlanta Normal School
VIVIAN LITTLE
WiNMER OF Scholarship
From French GovERNiMENx
QUENELLE HARROLD
Encouracemejn't of
Graduate Work
-VLICE LUCILE ALEXANDER
First Graduate to
Receive M. A. Decree
MRS. C. E. HARMON
{Bessie Scott)
First Alumnae Trustee
MARY WALLACE KIRK
Organizer of
Alum MAE Association
L^KIorqi
Twenty-seven
Tiventy-dgkt
Twenty-nine
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Board of Trustees
J. K. Orr. Chairman Atlanta
C. M. Candler Decatur p
*L. C. Man'DEVILLE .... 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. H.\rman Atlanta
Miss Mary Wallace Kirk Tuscumhia. Ala.
Geo. E. King Atlanta '(^^
D. P. McGeachy Decatur
R. 0. Flinn Atlanta
H. T. McIntosh Albany, Ga.
J. R. McCain Decatur
J. J. Scott Decatur
W. S. Bellingrath Montgomery, Ala.
D. H. Ogden Mobile, Ala.
W. R. DoBYNS Birmingham, Ala.
Neal L. Anderson Savannah, Ga.
G. Scott Candler Decatur
P. T. Sh.anks Selma, Ala.
E. D. Brownlee Sanford, Fla.
Jas. W. Jackson Tallahassee, Fla.
Chas. T. Paxon Jacksonville, Fla.
Mrs. D. B. Donaldson Atlanta
J. B. Campbell Atlanta
'Deceased.
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Thirty
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Officers of Administration
James Ross McCain, A.M., Ph.D., LL.D.
President
Nannette Hopkins. Pd.O.
Dean
S. GuERRY Stukes, B.D., A.M.
Registrar
Mary Frances Sweet, M.D.
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Resident Physician
R. B. Cunningham, B.S.
Business Manager
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J. C. Tart
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Treasurer
Jennie E. Smith
Secretary to the President
Carrie Scandrett. B.A.
Secretary to the Dean
Harriet V. Daugherty
Resident Nurse
i
Bessie McGinnis
Assistant Nurse
Emma E. Miller
1
1
1
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,
Frances M. Calhoun
Matrons
Jennie Dunbar Finnell
^
Lena Davies
Housekeepers
Martha Stansfield. B.A., A.M.
Cora Frazer Morton, B.A.
Postmistresses
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Thirty-one
Officers of Instruction and Government
1926-1927
(ARRANGED BY GROUPS IN ORDER OF APPOINTMENT)
James Ross McCain, A.M., Ph.D., LL.D.,
University of Chicago, Columbia University, Davidson College
President
Nannette Hopkins, Pd.D.
Oglethorpe University
Dean
M. Louise McKinney
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)
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
Thirty-two
Edith Muriel Harn, Ph.D.
Johns Hopkins University
Associate Professor of Romance Languages
Spanish
*0n leave of absence, 1926-1927.
Mary Stuart MacDougall, B.A., M.S., Ph.D.
Randolph-Macon Woman's College, University of Chicago,
Columbia University
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
Jean Scobie Davis, B.A., M.A.
Bryn Mawr College, University of Wisconsin
Professor of Economics and Sociology
John W. Good, A.B., Ph.D.
Erskine College, University of Illinois
Professor of English
Henry A. Robinson, B.S., C.E., M.A.
University of Georgia, Johns Hopkins University
Acting Professor of Mathematics
Catherine Torrance, M.A., Ph.D.
University of Chicago
Associate Professor of Latin and Greek
Frances K. Gooch. Ph.B., A.M.
University of Chicago, Graduate Boston School of Expression
Associate Professor of English
"Emma May Laney, M.A.
Columbia University
Associate Professor of English
^Isabel F. Randolph, B.A., B.S. 'L/
Barnard College, Teachers' College I ^
Associate Professor of Physical Education ' ^
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Thirty-three
Louise Hale, A.B., A.M.
Smith College, University of Chicago
Associate Professor of French
Elizabeth F. Jackson, A.B., Ph.D.
Wellesley College, University of Pennsylvania
Associate Professor of History
Emily S. Dexter, B.A., Ph.D.
Ripon College, University of Wisconsin
Associate Professor of Psychology and Education
Llewellyn Wilburn, B.A., M.A.
Agnes Scott College, Columbia University
Acting Associate Professor of Physical Education
Augusta Skeen, B.A., M.A.
Agnes Scott College, Emory University
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
Margaret Phythian, B.A., M.A.
Agnes Scott College, University of Cincinnati
Assistant Professor of Romance Languages
Leslie J. Gaylord, B.A., M.S.
Lake Erie College, University of Chicago
Assistant Professor of Mathematics
Annie May Christie, M.A.
Columbia University
Assistant Professor of English
Martha Stansfield, B.A., A.M.
Agnes Scott College, University of Chicago
Assistant Professor of Latin
Ruth Janette Pirkle, B.A., M.A.
Agnes Scott College, Emory University
Assistant Professor of Biology
Helen Eagleson, M.S., Ph.D.
University of Washington, Johns Hopkins University
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Mary Westall, A.B., A.M., Ph.D.
Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Columbia University,
University of Chicago
Assistant Professor of Botany
Thirty four
Gladys H. Freed, A.B., iM.A., Ph.D.
University of Pittsburgh, University of Chicago
Assistant Professor of Latin and Greek
Nan B. Stephens
Lecturer in Play Writing
Genevieve C. White. B.A.
Wesleyan College, Graduate Atlanta Library School
Librarian
"Margaret Bland. B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Instructor in Romance Languages
Janef Preston, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Acting Instructor in English
Harriette Haynes, B.A.
Randolph-Macon Woman's College
Instructor in Physical Education
Philippa Gilchrist, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Instructor in Chemistry
Cora Frazer Morton, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Instructor in Mathematics and Physics
Daisy Frances Smith, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Instructor in English
Vivian Little, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
One Year at Sorbonne in Paris
Acting Instructor in French
Roberta J. Hollingsworth, A.B.
Goucher College
Instructor in Spanish
Florence Edler, Ph.B., M.A.
University of Chicago
Instructor in History
Absent on leave, 1926-1927.
Thirty-five
Carrie Curle Sinclair
Graduate Virginia Interment, Student Teachers' College
Assistant in Physical Education
LuciLE Caldwell, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Fellow ini Biology
Sterling Johnson, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Fellow in. History
Margaret Whitincton, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Fellow in Chemistry
Louise Garland Lewis
University of Chicago, University of Paris
Art Institute Chicago, Academie Julian, Ecole Delscluse
Art and Art History
Lewis H. Johnson
Graduate Pomona College of Music
New York Institute Musical Art
Student of William Nelson Burritt, New York
Student of Alexander Heinneman, Berlin
Student of Arthur J. Hubbard, Boston
Voice Culture
Eda Elizabeth Bartholomew
Graduate Royal Conservatory of Leipsic
Piano
Mary Ogilvie Douglas
Graduate Mueller Violin School
Violin
Gussie O'Neal Johnson
Certificate in Voice, Agnes Scott College
Studied in New York and Berlin
Assistant in Voice Culture
Elizabeth Snow Tilly
Graduate Carnegie Library School of Atlanta
Assistant) Librarian
Elizabeth Lockhart Davis, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Assistant in Bible
Annie Barnes Johnson, B.A.
Agnes Scott College
Assistant in Sociology
Thirty-six
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Thirty-nine
Senior Class
Colors: Yellow and Black
OFFICERS
Elizabeth Norfleet President
Mamie Shaw Vice-President
Marcia Green Secretary-Treasurer
Mrs. Alma Sydenstricker
Mr. R. B. Holt
Faculty Members
Mrs. Svden'stricker
Mr. Holt
Forty
Forty-one
Eleanore Albright
Richmond, Virginia
Economics
Hockey: Class Team (1, 2, 3), Class Manager; Basketball: Class Team
(1, 2, 3, 4), Class Manager (1), Captain (2, 3), Varsity Team (1, 2, 3, 4);
Varsity Baseball (3) ; Varsity Swimming Team (3) ; Athletic Board: Camp Man-
ager (1), Swimming Manager (2), Secretary Athletic Association (4); Presi-
dent Bible Club (3) ; Student Industrial Commission (1, 3, 4); Southern Divi-
sion of National Student Council of Y. W. C. A. (4) ; International Relations
Club; President A. S. Letter Club; Hoasc.
Evelyn Albright
Atlanta, Georgia
Latin and French
Classical Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Bible Club (2, 3, 4) ; French Club (3, 4) ;
Math Club (1, 2) ; Baseball Team (1, 2, 3, 4).
EwiN Baldwin
Montgomery, Alabama
Latin
Forty-two
Louise Bansley
Atlanta, Georgia
French
Day Student Hike Manager (2) ; Day Student President (4) ; Class Base-
ball Team (1, 3) ; French Club.
Reba Bayless
Athens, Tennessee
Chemistry
Agnesi Mathematics Club (1) ; Classical Club (2, 3) ; Chemistry Club;
Chairman Program Committee (4); Bible Club (2); Student Treasurer (4).
Leila Bell
Dawson, Georgia
French
Bible Club (2, 3, 4) ; French Club (2, 3) ; Agnesi Mathematics Club
(1,2,3).
Forty-three
Bible Club.
Emma Bernhardt
Atlanta, Georgia
Mathematics
Blanche Carson Berry
Lexington. Virginia
Economics
K. U. B. (2, 3, 4) ; Glee Club; Choral Club; Class Swimming Team (3, 4) ;
Student Industrial Commission (2, 3, 4) ; Classical Club (3) ; Social Service
Committee Y. W. C. A. (4) ; Bible Club, (2, 3) ; Poetry Club (3, 4) ;
AGONISTIC Reporter (3, 4) ; Fire Captain (4) ; Virginia Club.
Maurine Bledsoe
Asheville, IS. C.
Mathematics
Glee Club (1. 2) ; Freshman Stunt; Sophomore Committee; May Day (1, 2,
3, 4) ; Bible Club (2, 3. 4) ; Poster Commhtee (1, 2, 3) ; Student Government
Association: Secretai-y (3), Second Vice-President (4); Agnesi Mathematics
Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Program Committee (3) ; Orchestra (2) ; Chairman Evening
Watch Committee (4) ; Executive Committee International Relations Club (4) ;
Hoasc.
Forty-four
Josephine Bridgman
Newport News, Virginia
Economics and Physics
Virginia Club; Bible Club; Agnesi Mathematics Club; Biology Club;
League of Women Voters (4) ; Y. W. C. A.: Social Service Committee (2, 3, 4),
World Fellowship Committee (3) ; Teacher Maids' Sunday School (3) ; Student
Government Association: Class Representative (2, 3), Third Vice-President
(4) ; Hoasc.
Frances Buchanan
Macon, Georgia
Latin and History
Classical Club (1, 2, 3, 4(, Chairman Program Committee (3); AGO-
NISTIC: Assistant Editor (3), Editor (4). I| )
Charlotte Boughton Buckland
Jacksonville, Florida
Biology
Orchestra (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Biology Club (2, 3, 4) ; Bible Club (2, 4).
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Georgia Mae Burns
Bay Minette, Alabama
Mathematics
Bible Club (2, 3) ; Agnesi Mathematics Club (2, 3, 4) ; Vice-President
(4); Blackfriars: Member (3, 4), Treasurer (4), Senior Council (4).
Louise Capen
Jacksonville. Florida
Chemistry and Biology
Bible Club (1, 4); Folio (1, 2); Secretary (2); Biology Club (2, 3, 4);
Undergraduate Assistant in Biology (3, 4).
Grace Carr
Bainbridge, Georgia
Psychology
Bible Club (2) ; Class Basketball Squad (2, 3) ; Senior Coui.cil.
Forty-six
Cephise Cartwright
Savannah, Georgia
Latin
Classical Club (2, 3, 4), Secretary and Treasurer (3); AGONISTIC Re-
porter (2, 3) ; Bible Club (2. 3).
Ruth Collier Casey
Atlanta, Georgia
Psychology
Bible Club (3. 4) ; Classical Club (2) ; Biology Club (4).
Dorothy Elizabeth Chamberlain
Maplewood, New Jersey
English
Folio (1, 2); Bible Club (2, 4).
Forty-seven
Frances Chambers
Dunwoody, Georgia
Agnesi Mathematics Club (2); Bible Club (3, 4); Blackfriars (2, 3, 4);
Day Student Treasurer (4); International Relations Club (4); Honor Roll (3).
Marie Elizabeth Clark
West Point, Mississippi
History
Class: Vice-President (1), Secretary and Treasurer (2); Sophomore Com-
mittee; Bible Club (1, 2); Assistant Photographic Editor SILHOUETTE (3);
AGONISTIC: Assistant Business Manager (3), Business Manager (4); Recep-
tion Committee Y. W. C. A. (4) ; Associate Advertising Manager AURORA
(2) ; Hoasc.
Susan Clayton
Atlanta, Georgia
English, French and Latin
Folio (1, 2), Secretary (2); Hikers' Club (1); Poetry Club ' (2,' 3.' 4)
Bible Club (2, 3) ; Classical Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; B. O. Z. (3, 4), President (4)
French Club (3, 4) ; AURORA Staff (2, 3. 4) ; Blackfriars (4) ; Class Poet (4)
Phi Beta Kappa.
M'
Forty-eight
i
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Lillian Clement
Decatur, Georgia
English
Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Orchestra (1, 2); Classical Club; French Club.
Willie May Katherine Coleman
Atlanta, Georgia
Chemistry
Bible Club (3, 4); Chemistry (3, 4).
Mrs. Annette Carter Colwell
Decatur, Georgia
Bible
French Club; Bible Club; Classical Club; Glee Club; Choral Society.
FoTty-nine
MiLDKED Cowan
Doraville, Georgia
Biology and Psychology
Biology Club (1, 2, 3, 41; Bible Club (3. 41
(1, 2, 3, 4,) ; Class Hockey Team (1, 2) ; Track (1).
Class Baseball Team
Martha Crowe
Atlanta, Georgia
Pi Alpha Phi (1, 2); Bible Club (3. 4); Class President (3); Member
Blackfriars (1, 2. 3, 4), Secretary (4); French Club (3, 4), President (4).
Marion Sterling Daniel
Charlottesville, Virginia
Psychology
Bible Club (1, 3); Biology Club (3); Virginia Club (1, 2. 3, 4); Class
Basketball Team (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Swimming Team (4).
Fifty
Margaret Emily Daughtry
Jackson, Georgia
Chemistry
AGONISTIC Reporter; Chemistry Club; Bible Club.
Louise Davis
Decatur, Georgia
History
Freshman Basketball Squad; French Club (3).
Mary Loyd Davis
LaGrange, Georgia
English
Folio (1, 2); Pi Alpha Phi (1, 2. 3. 4). Treasurer (3), President (4);
AGONISTIC Reporter (1) ; Poster Committee Y. W. C. A. (1) ; Member Execu-
tive Committee Student Government Association (2) ; Chapel Door Committee
(2); President French Club (3); Member College Council (4); Intercollegiate
Debate (3) ; Phi Beta Kappa.
Fifty-one
Ruth De Wandelaer
Ft. Plains, New York
Chemistry
Latin Club (1, 2) ; Biology Club; Chemistry Club.
Frances Dobbs
Woodstock, Georgia
Mathematics and Physics
Bible Club (2, 4) ; Agnesi Mathematics Club (2, 3, 4).
Eugenie Louise Dozier
Atlanta, Georgia
English and History
Violin Ensemble (2) ; Bible (2, 3) ; May Day Chairman (3, 4) ; French
Club (3, 4) ; Biology Club (4) ; Pen and Brush Club (4) .
Fifty-two
Mable Dumas
Atlanta, Georgia
Physics and Chemistry
Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4), Stage Manager (4); Bible Club (2, 3); Agnesi
Mathematics Club (2, 3, 4) ; Chemistry Club (3, 4).
Emilie Ehrlich
Savannah, Georgia
English
Bible Club (3, 4); Classical Club (1. 2, 3, 4); Orchestra (1, 2, 3, 4):
AGONISTIC Reporter (1, 2, 3), Society Editor (4); Track Team (1) ;
Senior Council.
Mary Reed Eerguson
Madras, India
Biology
Class Swimming Team (3, 4) ; Biology Club (3, 4) ; Orchestra (2) ; Hiking
Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Choral Club (2, 4) ; Bible Club (3, 4) ; World Fellowship
Committee Y. W. C. A. (2) ; Chemistry Club (4) ; Class Hockey Team (1, 4) ;
Lower House (1) ; Basketball Squad (4).
Fifty-three
Valerie Speed Folts
Ripley, Tennessee
English
Fire Lieutenant (2) ; Classical Club (2) ; Bible (3, 4).
Frances Freeborn
Decatur, Georgia
Mathematics
Agnesi Mathematics Club; Bible Club; Blackfiiars: Stage Manager (3),
President (4).
Katherine Gilliland
Atlanta, Georgia
Latin and Mathematics
Agnesi Mathematics Club (2, 3, 4); Classical Club (2, 3, 4); Bible Club
(2, 3).
Fifty -lour
Venie Belle Grant
Atlanta, Georgia
Mathematics a>.'d Physics
Mathematics Club 12, 3, 41 ; Chemistry Club (3) ; Bible Club (3. 4).
Marcl\ Green
Coriith, Mississippi
History
Assistant Business Manager SILHOUETTE: Y. W. C. A.: Secretary (3),
Chairman Religious Work (4) ; Secretary and Treasurer Class (4) ; Bible Club;
Vocational Guidance Committee (2) ; International Relations Club (4) ; Senior
Council; Hoasc.
Mary Heath
Augusta. Georgia
Bible
Glee Club (1, 2, 3. 4); K. U. B.; Chairman Wesley House Committee
Y. W. C. A.; Class Basketball Squad; Class Hockey; Assistant Circulation
Manager AGONISTIC; Secretary Bible Club (3) ; Student Volunteer: Secretary
of Atlanta Union (2(, Secretary of Georgia Union (3), Vice-President Georgia
Union (4) .
Fifty-five
Mary Hedrick
Bristol, Tennessee
English and Psychology
Circulation Manager of AURORA (4) ; Bible Club; Biology Club; Classical
Club.
Rachel Henderlite
Gastonia, North Carolina
English
Reporter AGONISTIC (3) ; Bible Club (2, 3) ; Pi Alpha Phi (3, 4) ; League
of Women Voters (4) ; Class Basketball Squad (4) ; Class Swimming Squad
(3, 4); SILHOUETTE: Assistant Editor (3), Editor (4); Hoasc.
Elizabeth Henderson
Brunswick, Georgia
English and French
AGONISTIC: Reporter (1), Exchange Editor (2); K. U. B.: Member
(1, 2, 3, 4), Secretary (2), President (3, 4) ; Pi Alpha Phi (1, 2, 3, 4) : Secretary
(3), Treasurer (2); Member Debating Council (3, 4); Bible Club; French
Club (3, 4).
Fifty-six
Ann Heys
Americus, Georgia
Spanish
Bible Club (2, 3) ; Hikers' Club (1) ; Classical Club (1, 2) ; AGONISTIC
Reporter (3, 4).
Marcia Horton
Decatur, Georgia
Psychology
Biology Club (4).
Fifty-seven
Mae Erskine Irvine
Florence, Alabama
Mathematics
Agnesi Mathematics Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Poetry Club (3, 4) ; Y. W. C. A.
Committees; SILHOUETTE Staff (3); AURORA Staff (4).
Anne George Irwin
Fort Gaines, Georgia
Biology
Classical Club (2) ; Bible Club (3) ; Biology Club (1, 2, 3, 4).
Maude Jackson
Lawrenceville. Georgia
History
Bible Club; Biology Club.
Fijty-eight
Elsa Jacobsen
Decatur, Georgia
Biology
Vice-President Class (1) ; Class Hockey Team (1, 2, 4) ; Class Basketball
Team: Member (1, 2, 3, 4), Manager (2). Captain (1); Baseball Team
(1, 2, 3, 4) ; Class Tennis Manager (1) ; Tennis Cbampion (3, 4) ; Class Swim-
ming Team (3) ; Y. W. C. A.: Industrial Commission (1, 2, 3), Undergraduate
Representative (3); Pi Alpha Phi: Member (1, 2, 3, 4), Vice-President (3);
Intercollegiate Debater (3) ; International Relations Club (3) ; Biology Club
(3); Lower House (1); Student Government Association: Member Executive
Committee (II, President Student Government (4); Secretary College Coun-
cil (4) ; Hoasc.
Martha Caldwell Johnston
Greensboro, Georgia
Bible
Track Team (1) ; Glee Club: Member II. 2, 3. 4). Business Manager (3) ;
Bible Club (1. 2. 3. 4), President (4); Classical Club (1. 2, 3); Blackfriars
(2,3, 4).
Leila Joiner
Albany, Georgia
Psychology
Bible Club (3, 4).
Fifty-nine
Pearl Kunnes
Thomson, Georgia
Psychology
Agnesi Mathematics Club (2) ; Biology Club (3) ; Bible Club (3, 4) ;
Hikers' Club (4) ; League of Women Voters (4) .
Ida Landau
Atlanta, Georgia
Chemistry
Chemistry Club (3, 4) ; Biology Club (4).
Louise Leonard
Spartanburg, South Carolina
Biology Club (2, 3) ; Bible Club (3, 4) ; Class Treasurer (3) ; Classical
Club (1).
Sixty
Helen Lewis
Maxwelton, West Virginia
History and English
Class Hockey Team (2, 3, 4); Pi Alpha Phi: Member (1, 2, 3, 4),
Treasurer (4); Intercollegiate Debater (41; AGONISTIC Staff (4) ; Poetry Club
(4) ; Class Testator; Treasurer Lecture Association (4) ; Fire Chief (4) ;
League of Women Voters (4) ; International Relations Club (4) ; World Fel-
lowship Committee Y. W. C. A. (4) ; Hoasc.
Ellen Douglass Leyburn
Rome, Georgia
History and English
Blackfriars (1, 2. 3, 4), President (3), Treasurer (2) ; Pi Alpha Phi (1, 2,
3, 4) ; President of Class (2) ; Sophomore Committee; Student Government As-
sociation: Member Lower House (2), Treasurer (3), First Vice-President (41;
Y. W. C. A.: Chapel Door Committee (2), Member World Fellowship Com-
mittee (4) ; International Relations Club (3) ; Poetry Club (4) ; Bible Club
(4) ; President of Hoasc.
Anne Elizabeth Lilly
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
English and History
Freshman Commission (1) ; Choral Society (1) ; Sophomore Committee (2) ;
North Carolina Club; Vice-President Class (2); Fire Lieutenant (2); Bible
Club (1, 3); Y. W. C. A.: Collector (1), Chapel Door Committee (2), Chair-
man Social Service Department (3), Vice-President (4) ; Member Lower House
(3) ; International Relations Club; President Poetry Club (4) ; Hoasc.
Sixty-one
^^M
Ethel Littlefield
Blackshear. Georgia
Spanish
Classical Club (2); Bible Club (3, 4); Biology- Club (3).
Helen Louise Lovejoy
Decatur, Georgia
Biology and Chemistry
Blackfriais (3, 4) ; K. U. B. (3, 4) ; Chemistry Club (3, 4) ; Biology Club
(3, 4); French Club (3, 4); Orchestra (2, 3); Day Student Hike Manager
(3) ; President Atlanta Student Volunteer Union (4 ; Bible Club (2, 3).
Lamar Lowe
Atlanta, Georgia
Latin
Classical Club (2. 3, 4) ; Bible Club (3, 4).
Sixty-two
Elizabeth Lynn
Clinton. South Carolina
Physics
Agnesi Mathematics Club: Member (1, 2, 3. 4); Secretary and Treasui'er
(3), President (4) ; Lower House (2) ; Athletic Board: Freshman Representative
(1), Basketball Manager (2), Treasurer (3), Tennis Manager (4). Vice-Presi-
dent (4) ; Varsity Basketball Team (1. 2. 3, 4) ; Class Track Manager (1) ; Class
Hockey (1); Class Baseball (1, 2, 3, 41, Captain (31; Senior Representative
Executive Committee Student Government Association (4) ; Hoasc.
Carolina McCall
Opelika, Alabama
English
Choral Society (1); Co-author Stunt (2); Fire Lieutenant (3); Glee Club
(3, 4) ; Poetry Club (3, 4) ; Bible Club (2, 3) ; Y. W. C. A.: Social Committee
(2). Chairman Religious Work (3), President (4) ; Associate Business Manager
AGONISTIC (.2) ; Hoasc.
Elizabeth McCallie
Atlanta. Georgia
Blackfriars (2. 3. 4), Vice-President (4); Lower House (4); Bible Club
(2, 3) ; Biology Club (2. 3. 4) ; Hiking Club (2. 3. 4) ; Honor Roll (3).
Sixty-three
Ruth McDonald
Atlanta, Georgia
History and English
Caroline McKinney
Decatur, Georgia
English
Blackfriars (2, 3, 4); Class Historian (4); Senior Council; Classical Club.
Cleo Mclaurine
Atlanta, Georgia
Psychology
Bible Club (3) ; Hockey Team (1) ; Hikers" Club (3) ; Biology Club (4) ;
Fire Captain (4) .
Sixty-four
'2
1
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Pauline McLeod
Bay Minette. Alabama
Bible Club (4).
Ruth McMillan
Psychology
Cotillion Club: Member (1, 2, 3, 4), Secretary and Treasurer (2); Class
Swimming Team (3).
HULDA McNeEL
Birmingham. Alabama
Mathematics and Physics
Hockey: Class Team (1, 2, 4), Varsity (4) ; Baseball: Class Team (3, 4),
Varsity (3, 4) ; Swimming Class Team (3, 4) ; Secretary A. S. Letter Club;
Agnesi Mathematics Club (4) ; Recorder of Points (4) ; Circulation Manager of
AGONISTIC (4).
I
I
I
I
Sixty-jive
k'
h
Kenneth Maner
Smyrna, Georgia
French and English
Classical Club (2, 3) ; French Club (3. 4).
Catherine Mitchell
LaGrange, Georgia
History
SILHOUETTE: Advertising Manager (21, Business Manager (3) ; Cotillion
Club: Member (1, 2, 3, 4), Vice-President (3) ; Vice-President Class <3) ; Class
Swimming Manager (3) ; Y. W. C. A. Committee (2).
Mitchell Moore
Moultrie, Georgia
History
J
a
Hikers' Club (1, 2) ; Bible Club (2, 3) ; Imernational Relations Club (4) ;
League of Women Voters (4).
Sixty-:
fjij[ ^^ 0t^
Mildred Morrow
Springfield, Tennessee
Spanish
Chairman Costumes May Day Committee (3, 4); Cotillion (1, 2, 3, 4),
President (3); Classical Club (1).
Emily Bean Nelson
Atlanta, Georgia
Chemistry
Bible Club (2, 3).
Margaret Stewart Neel
I , Huntington, West Virginia
I I I // Bible
Bible Club (2, 3, 4) ; Agnesi Mathematics Club (3) ; Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ;
Special Chorus (2); Blackfriars: Associate Member (3), Member (4); Senior
Council (4) ; Classical Club (2, 3. 41.
Sixty-seven
Lucia Nimmons
Seneca, South Carolina
Mathematics
Bible Club (2, 3) ; Agnesi Mathematics Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Glee Club (4).
Elizabeth Norfleet
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Biology
President Class (1); Member Lecture Association (1, 4); Poetry Club
(4); Fire Lieutenant (1); Basketball Squad (4( ; Glee Club Accompanist
(1, 2); Classical Club (1, 2); Bible Club (2, 3); Class Hockey: Team (1, 2,
4), Captain (2), Varsity (4); Orchestra Leader (2 ; Member Lower House
(1); Member Sophomore Committee; Y. W. C. A.: Member Social Com-
mittee (2); Chairman Music Committee (3); Cotillion Club (1, 2, 3, 4);
Advertising Manager SILHOUETTE (3) ; Track Manager (3) ; Hockey Man-
ager (4) ; President Senior Class; Biology Club (2, 3, 4) ; Hoasc.
Stella Pitman
Atlanta, Georgia
English
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Sixty-eight
Louise Plumb
Augusta, Georgia
Chemistry
Bible Club (3) ; Chemistry Club (3, 4).
EvALYN Powell
Little Rock, Arkansas
History and French
Chairman Freshman Class; Pi Alpha Phi (1, 2, 3, 4), Member Debating
Council (4) ; Athletic Board: Hockey Manager (2(, Song Leader (31, President
Athletic Association (4) ; Junior Representative Executive Committee Student
Government Association (3); Hockey: Class Team (1, 2, 3. 4), Varsity Team
(2, 4) ; Basketball: Class Team (1, 2, 3. 4). Varsity Team (3, 4) ; Swimming:
Class Team (3, 4), Varsity* (3); Baseball Class Team (3, 41; International
Relations Club (3, 4), Vice-President (3) ; Hoasc.
Miriam Wiley Preston
Soochun, Korea
English and French
Freshman Commission (1); Folio: Member (1, 2), President (2); Hike
Manager (2) ; Camp Manager (31 ; French Club (2, 3), President (31 ; K. U. B.
(2, 3). Vice-President (3) ; B. 0. Z. (2, 3), Treasurer (3 ; Member Lower House
(II; Member World Fellowship Committee Y. W. C. A. (1); AGONISTIC:
Reporter (1, 2, 3), Alumnae Editor (3, 4) ; Proctor Board (3) ; Sophomore Com-
mittee (2) ; Bible Club (2, 3) ; Grand-Daughters" Club (2. 3. 4). Vice-President
(3) ; Class Hockey Team (1, 2, 4) ; Class Track Squad (1. 4 ; May Day (1, 2.
3) ; North Carolina Club; Phi Beta Kappa.
Sixty-nine
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ik
Frances Rainey
Norcross, Georgia
Chemistry
Senior Represenative on Lower House; Photographic Editor SILHOUETTE
(4); Chemistry Club: Vice-President (3), Secretary (4); French Club (3);
League of Women Voters (4) ; International Relations Club (4) .
Douglass Rankin
Fajetteville, North Carolina
Biology
Bible Club; Biology Club; Chemistry Club; Assistant Circulation Manager
of AGONISTIC (3) ; Evening Watch Committee (4).
Marguerite Russell
Washington, D. C.
Physics and Psychology
Bible Club (2, 4); Agnesi Mathematics Club (1, 2, 3, 41; Hikers' Club
(1, 2) ; Blackfriars (3, 4), Property Manager (4) ; Pen and Brush Club (4).
IKll
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Seventy
rt
Elizabeth Eleanor Sanders
DeVall's Bluff, Arkansas
Latin
Evelyn Satterwhite
Decatur, Georgia
History
Glee Club (2, 3, 4); Choral Society (2, 3); Bible Club (1, 3).
Virginia Sevier
Heridersonville, North Carolina
Psychology
B. 0. Z.; Blackfriars (4); Poetry Club; Treasurer May Day Committee
(3, 4) ; Treasurer Y. W. C. A. (3) ; Chairman Lost and Found Department (2) ;
Athletic Editor SILHOUETTE (2); Swimming: Class Team (3, 4), All Star
Team (3, 4) ; Hockey: Class Team (l, 2, 41, All Star Team (4) ; Baseball Class
Team (L 3) ; Track Team (1).
^
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Seventy-one
Mamie Shaw
Gainesville, Florida
Biology and Chemistry
f1
Glee Club: Member (1, 2, 3, 4), Secretary and Treasurer (41 ; Poetry Club
(1, 2, 3), Secretary (2); Chemistry Club (3, 4); Biology Club (2, 3, 4);
Bible Club (2, 3); Choral Society (1, 2, 3, 41; K. U. B. (1, 2); Reporter
AGONISTIC (2) ; Associate Editor SILHOUETTE (2, 4) ; May Day (1, 2, 3, 4) ;
Choir (2, 3); Senior Council; Swimming Team (3).
Sarah Shields
Daivson, Georgia
Latin
Secretary and Treasurer Class (1); K. U. B. (1, 2) ; Cotillion Club
(1, 2, 3, 4); Poetry Club (2); Hikers' Club (1, 2); AGONISTIC Reporter
(1, 2) ; Bible Club (3, 4) ; AURORA: Assistant Business Manager (2), Business
Manager (3, 4); Classical Club: President (3), Chairman Program Commit-
tee (4).
Fire Captain (41
Class Tennis (4) .
Willie White Smith
Thomson, Georgia
Chemistry and Bioi.ocy
Biology Club (2, 3, 4
?1
Chemistry Club (3, 41 ; Manager
Seventy-two
Emily Stead
Decatur, Georgia
Chemistry
Chemistry Club (3, 4) ; Biology Club (4) ; Bible Club (3, 4) ; Blackfriars
(2, 3, 4) ; Senior Council.
Sarah Kathleen Stillman
College Park, Georgia
Bible Club (2, 3) ; International Relations Club (4) ; Hikers' Club (1. 2) ;
League of Women Voters (4) .
Edith Stapleton Strickland
Concord, Georgia
English
Bible Club (2, 3) ; Glee Club (2. 3, 4) ; Pi Alpha Phi (2, 3, 4) ; Special
Chorus.
i
Seventy-three
1^^ ^-^^ t^^
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French Club.
Elizabeth Vary
Decatur, Georgia
French
Margaret Wakefield
Banner Elk, North Carolina
Psychology
Y. W. C. A. Collector (1); Poetry Club (2); Class Hockey Squad (2);
Class Track Squad (1); May Day (2); North Carolina Club (2); Chairman
Finance Committee Y. W. C. A. (3) ; Class Basketball Squad (3, 4) ; Class Tennis
Manager (3) ; Member Bulletin Board Committee (3) ; Bible Club (3) ; Proctor
Board (3).
Mary Weems
McDonough, Georgia
Psychology
Qass. Basketball Team (1, 2, 3, 4), Manager (3, 4); Cotillion Club
(3, 41 ; Blackfriars (2, 3. 4) ; Bible Club (3, 4) ; Classical Club (2, 3) ; Hockey
Squad (4); May Queen (4).
IK li
Seventy-jour
I
Alice Weichselbaum
Savannah, Georgia
Psychology
Bible Club (1, 2) ; Classical Club (3).
Louisa A. White
Asheville, North Carolina
Mathematics
Agnesi Mathematics Club (1. 2. 3, 4); Bible Club (2, 3); Blackfriars
(1, 2, 3, 4), Electrician (4) ; Pi Alpha Phi (1, 2. 3. 41, Intercollegiate Debating
Team (3, 4), Secretary (4) ; Chairman Auditing Committee (4) ; President Lec-
ture Association (4) ; President League of Women Voters (4) ; International
Relations Club (4).
Courtney Wilkinson
Lynchburg, Virginia
Chemistry
Pi Alpha Phi; Chemistry Club: President (4); Honor Roll (3); Virginia
Club: President (4) ; Class Tennis Manager (3) ; Senior Representative Student
Government Association (4) .
Seventy-five
Judith Wilson
Prattville, Alabama
I Mathematics
I
Bible Club (3, 4) ; Hikers' Club (1, 2) ; Mathematics Club (2, 3, 4).
Roberta Winter
Leland, Mississippi
Mathematics
Blackfriars (1. 2, 3, 4), Secretary (3) ; Pi Alpha Phi (2, 3, 4) ; Cotillion
Club (2, 3, 4), Secretary and Treasurer (3); B. O. Z. (4); Glee Club (1);
AURORA: Assistant Editor (3), Editor (4) ; Hoasc.
A A
Grace Zachry
Atlanta, Georgia -r
PSYCHOLOOy
Day Student Member Lower House (3) ; Day Student Editor AGONISTIC
(3) ; Day Student Representative Executive Committee Student Government Asso-
ciation (4) ; Member College Council (4) ; Pi Alpha Phi (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Honor
Roll (1, 3) ; Classical Club (2) ; Bible Club (3, 4).
lM^^
Seventy-six
IB
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Seventy-seven
--^y^:--
'\l! Class History
"Ah. distinctly I remember
It was in one hot September"
x; four years ago that we arrived two hundred and twenty strong at Agnes Scott, each
'' }:^-y of us with the impression that ours was a great contribution to make to the world,
and that now during our college career was a very good time to begin making it.
In a word each of us would startle faculty and fellow students alike with the great-
ness of our importance. Ah me! The wonders time does bring to pass.
It is said that physical unfitness lies at the root of many cases of melancholia.
This would be sufficient explanation of the total change in the sentiments and views
of these Freshmen by the end of the first week. Exhausted by long hours of stand-
ing in line for the privilege of making a little financial contribution at the treas-
urer's office, and more waiting for that inaccessible little gathering known as the
Admission Committee who met in the dim cellars of Main building; crushed by
daily struggles with the other seekers after wisdom in other fruitless efforts to
reach the window where the priceless possessions books were to be obtained; it
is not surprising that these innocent young girls in whose hearts courage had burned
so high, now broken in body and spirit, should begin to slink around the campus
I 1 as so many little inferiority complexes. But even yet, little did they know of the
f',i|' agonies of History 1, or of that tedious and painful process known as the cuiltiva-
tion of "the daily theme eye." At least after this life could hardly be any more in-
tolerable.
I >rii| Ah, couldn't it! Why then that you-don't-know-the-half-of-it-dearie expression
%']; in the eyes of the Sophomores? Oh that week in the hands of those tormentors
^'jl rouge on our noses, cold cream on our cheeks, green ribbons on our hair a hor-
>i;,ii rible green that tried our beauty to the utmost.
Life during these feverish weeks ran from trial to tribulation. Stunt night was
upon us and gone before we could fully realize its great significance. And tho the
black Cat was not ours that year, we will beam with pride over memories of that
finished theatrical production we presented.
By slow degrees the year dragged by and eventually, of course, final exams
drew into sight. By now we had become philosophical, and in the light of past
experiences we could smile wearily and think: "Even this too shall pass."
Another September came around, and again we arrived on the scene this year
with real grounds for our feeling of superiority. Had we not lived and learned,
and was not worldly wisdom now ours? It was our turn to assume that Mona Lisa
smile in the presence of the newcomers. Being less burdened with the novelty of
education, we devoted great energy toward ensnaring the Black Cat. And, not in
vain. For with another stunt night, puss was ours. Incidentally, however, we did
study, this year substituting the joys of Bible 1 memorizing the kings of Israel
%
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Seventy-eight
and Judah for those of the daily theme eye. Finally came spring, and with it all
the joys of commencement teas, luncheons, and breakfas's for our Seniors. Truly,
it was great to be a Sophomore.
The Junior year began, continued, and ended with one all-consuming thought,
and that money ! Was not this the year wo had lived for that of the Junior-
Senior banquet? Ah, what worries had we had during those carefree Freshman
and Sophomore years? This indeed was real responsibility. We sold chocolates,
gave circuses. We schemed and worked. We painted countless Mother Goose de-
signs for menu cards. But after all the toil recompense was ours, when ) in the
spring the banquet night arrived. The music, the color of the flowers and gay
dresses were as if the rainbow had fallen and shattered into a thousand bits. And an-
other year was gone.
One more vacation, one more September, and Seniorhood with all its prestige
and privileges was ours. Could we ever have been those hurrying harried little
Freshmen of four years ago? We who now strolled so nonchalantly into meals at
all hours? Who burned lights far into the once forbidden hours of night? The
dignity of our position' was forcibly impressed upon us on the day we walked se-
dately down the chapel aisle, for the first time wearing our Senior gowns, and
kneeling before Miss Hopkins were duly invested with our rights. Time had been
so short that it all seems a dream. Christmas passed. Founder's Day came, and we
who for three years had watched with envious eyes as the lords and ladies danced
the minuet, realized that it was at last our time to don powdered wigs and brocades.
And finally Commencement day our Commencement. When we realize that next
September we will not be spending hours in fruitless efforts to see the Electives
Committee or sitting through History class in misery lest the bell should not ring be-
fore our lack of knowledge be discovered but that maybe we ourselves will be
teaching or washing dishes, we begin to be convinced of the truth of those words
we have laughed to scorn countless times : "Girls, you may not believe it now, but
college days are the happiest days of your life."
Caroline McKinney, Class Historian.
i
Seventy nine
fF-
Last Will and Testament
STATE OF GEORGIA
DEKALB COUNTY
E. the graduating class of Agnes Scott College, being of a sound mind
and amiable disposition, do make and publish this as our last will and
testament.
Item I. I, Eleanore Albright, do leave my term papers and great
love of them to Georgia Watson.
Item II. I. Evelyn Albright, do leave my spectacle guards to all future base-
ball referees.
Item III. I, Ewin Baldwin, do leave my mules to all House Presidents of
Gaines to soften their respective dispositions.
Item IV. I, Reba Bayliss, do will to Adah Knight my amoeba whose contrac-
tions gave rise to the Black Bottom.
Item V. I, Leila Bell, do leave my bass voice to Miss Gooch for future Spoken
English classes.
Item VI. I, Blanche Berry, do leave my peace and utter serenity to Mary Shep-
herd.
Item VII. I, Louise Bansley, do leave my joyous a'.tendance at the .
to Lucile Bridgman.
Item VIII. I, Emma Bernhardt, do leave my conversational proclivities exer-
cised in Education to Elizabeth Cole.
Item IX. I, Maurine Bledsoe, do bequeath my distinguished air and ripe wis-
dom to Harriet Williams.
Item X. I, Josephine Bridgman, do will my tendency to shun to Jack Ander-
son.
Item XL I, Charlotte Buckland, bequeath to Mary Linton Walton my antidote
for homesickness, which same antidote consists of a stay in the infirmary under Miss
Daugherty's solicitous care, to be taken only on week days.
Item XII. I, Frances Buchanan, do leave the cabinet room to all those who
have tried to take it from me. May its spell remain potent.
Item XIII. I, Georgia Mae Burns, Venie Belle Grant and Elizabeth Lynn,
do hereby will our individual attention and private classroom in Math 202 io Eliza-
beth Fleidner and Mary and Emily Ramage.
Item XIV. We, Louise Capen, Dorothy Chamberlain and Frances Dobbs, do
bequeath to Ches Fleidner, Rachel Paxon, and Sallie Abernathy our title of the
''unholy three," and the obligation to the Inman tradition.
Item XV. I, Grace Carr, do leave my ability to lose platinum frat pins to
Clemmie Nette Downing.
Item XVI. I, Cephise Cartwright, do leave my Wrigley's gum to Dorothy
Coleman.
Item XVII. I. Ruth Casev, do leave my boisterous hilarity to Chugga Sydnor.
To him that hath shall be given.
^:
Eighty
Item XVIII. I, Frances Chambers, do leave my ability to take Miss Hopkins
to Five Points and my poise in cranking a car to any aspiring chauffeur.
Item XIX. We, Elizabeth Clark and Carolina McCall, do leave our practical
jokes and complications therefrom for the entertainment of all assistants to the
Dean.
Item XX. I, Susan Clayton, do bequeath to the unknown moron my reputa-
tion. It may assist.
Item XXI. I, Marion Daniel, do leave my guard's uniform, consisting of one
yellow middy blouse four years gone to Lucile Bridgman.
Item XXII. I, Martha Crowe, do leave my conviction that one should follow
the path of least resistance, to Janet MacDonald.
Item XXIII. I, Mildred Cowan, do leave my standing with the library force
to Sarah Robinson.
Item XXIV. I, Emily Daughtry, do bequeath my ability to make home brew
to Sarah Marsh.
Item XXV. I. Louise Davis, do leave my blustering personality to Margaret
Ogden.
Item XXVI. I, Mary Davis, do bequeath my mincing gait and indolent dis-
position to Lucile Seay.
Item XXVII. I, Ruth De Wandelaer, do leave my nail polish to Lois McClel-
land. Shell pink is best.
Item XXVIII. I, Eugenie Dozier, do leave my versatility to Mary Riviere.
Item XXIX. I, Mabel Dumas, do leave my monkey fur to Bayliss McShane;
it will look natural.
Item XXX. I, Emilie Erhlich, do leave my classical inclinations, due to en-
vironment, to Mary Perkinson.
Item XXXI. I, Mary Ferguson, do endow Biology lab with any cooked ba-
nanas which my flies shall not have need of.
Item XXXII. I, Frances Freeborn, do bequeath my white nossie-noss to Jane
Grey. May it wax fat.
Item XXXIII. I, Katherine Gilliland, do bequeath my thermos bottle to Sarah
May Rikard, hoping that the contents will prove beneficial.
Item XXXIV. I, Marcia Green, do leave my religious inclinations, materializ-
ing in attendance at Central, to Margaret Rice.
Item XXXV. I, Mary Heath, bequeath my Christian conscience to Miriam An-
derson, hoping that she has need of same.
Item XXXVI. I, Mary Hedrick, do leave my composure during the recital of
ghost stories to Adah Knight.
Item XXXVII. I, Rachel Henderlite, do leave to Blanche Miller my aptitude
with the French Language.
Item XXXVIII. I, Elizabeth Henderson, do will K. LI. B. and all appendages
to Miss Mildred Phillips.
Item XXXIX. I, Ann Heys, do will my house parties at Georgia to Betty Reid.
Item XL. I, Katherine Houston, do bequeath my winning smile to Margaret
Gerig.
S
%
Eighty-one
Item XLI. I, Mae Erskine Irvine, do will my tart characteristics to Sallie Coth-
ran.
Item XLII. I, Anne George Irwin, do bequeath my modesty curtains, which I
paid for when a Freshman, to Lucy Grier, who likes them.
Item XLIII. I, Maude Jackson, do leave my obtrusive manners to Elizabeth
Davis.
Item XLIV. I, Elsa Jacobsen, do bequeath
and Felix to Nancy and Lila.
Item XLV. I, Martha Johnston, do leave my prima donna prospects to Mary
Ruth Roundtree.
Item XLVI. I, Leila Joiner, do bequeath my maritime conquests, including
brass buttons to Margaret Ferguson.
Item XLVII. We, Mitchell Moore and Pearl Kunnes, do will our nightly
football game to the future occupants of No. 6, Rebecca.
N ; Item XLVIII. I, Ida Landau, do leave my foreknowledge of German to Nan-
^^ nie Graham Sanders.
Item XLIX. I, Louise Leonard, do will my pull with I. G. to Lillian LeConte,
hoping she will become as expert on horseback as I have.
r;^^'.l Item L. I, Helen Lewis, do leave my vain efforts to be snooty to Sarah Town-
I'^n] send.
Item LI. I, Ruth McMillan, do will my space in Atlanta Life to Betsy Ben-
nett and Pat Rogers.
Item Lll. I, Mildred Morrow, do leave my marcels to Jo Huntley.
Item LIII. I, Margaret Neel, do leave my green galoshes to the incoming
Freshman class.
Item LIV. I, Emily Nelson, do leave my tendency to come in on the late
street car to any other deserving day student.
Item LV. I, Lucia Nimmons, do leave my calf-collar to any other "slave to
fashion."
Item LVI. I, Elizabeth Norfleet, do leave my mail box to whoever wants it. It
has done me mighty little good.
Item LVII. I, Stella Pittman, do leave my Congo convolutions in the latest
dance to Mary Crenshaw.
Item LVIII. I, Louise Plumb, do will my pull with Mrs. Sydenstricker to Alma
Metcalfe.
Item LIX. I, Evelyn Powell, do will my radical tendencies to Miriam Ander-
son.
Item LX. I, Miriam Preston, do leave my Phi Beta Kappa key to Elizabeth
Fisher.
Item LXI. I, Frances Rainey, do leave the photographic art to Josephine
Houston.
Item LXII. I, Douglass Rankin, do bequeath my familiarity with the Educa-
tion text books to the next class.
Item LXIII. I, Marguerite Russell, do will my flash light and alarm clock to
Margaret Armstrong, judging from the fact that she may need them in the future.
m
Eishty-two
Item LXIV. I, Elizabeth Sanders, do leave my place on the honor roll to Mil-
dred Jennings.
Item LXV. I, Evelyn Satterwhite, do leave my ability to sign up all the books
on reserve for History to Eleanor Lee Norris. May she fail to do likewise.
Item LXVI. I, Virginia Sevier, do leave one clown costume to the institution
of Mardi Gras.
Item LXVII. I, Mamie Shaw, do will my undergraduate medical ambitions to
Sarah Currie.
Item LXVIII. I, Sarah Shields, do endow Mary Crenshaw with my phone pad
space free of rent.
Item LXIX. I, Willie White Smith, do will my support of the Biology depart-
ment to Rosalthe Sanders.
Item LXX. I, Sarah Stillman, do leave my specs to Elizabeth Moss.
Item LXXI. I, Edith Strickland, do will my turn-coat to Sarah Douglass.
Item LXXII. I, Elizabeth Vary, do leave one front seat on each front row to
Sarah White and Anna Knight for a bone of contention between them.
Item LXXIII. I, Margie Wakefield, do bequeath my Wednesday night sup-
pers on Tuesday night to Elinore Morgan.
Item LXXIV. I, Mary Weems, do will my arms to all future forwards of the
Odds, hoping that the guards of the Evens will go insane.
Item LXXV. I, Alice Weichselbaum, do leave my ability to spell my own
name to any body who has perseverance to acquire it.
Item LXXVI. I, Louisa White, do will my prominent position on the black
list of Patriotic Societies to Dade Warfield.
Item LXXVII. I, Courtney Wilkinson, do leave my buxom figure and good
posture to Eugenia Gobere.
Item LXXVIII. I, Roberta Winter, do will my pale and interesting aspect to
Virginia Norris.
Item LXXIX. I, Emily Stead, do leave my frequently growing hair to Harriet
Alexander.
Item LXXX. I, Cleo McClaurine, do leave my fire hat to Rosa White. It goes
well with a hot mamma.
Item LXXXI. I, Grace Zachry, do will my two hundred word telegrams from
New York to the Associated Press.
Helen Lewis, Class Testator.
Eighty-three
I
''The Prophet"
(With Apologies to Kahlil Gibran.)
HMAJONA, the chosen and imposed upon, who was the goat of her
class, had labored four years in the city of Decatur for the Diploma that
was to evolve and bear her back to the village of her birth. And in
the fourth year on the thirty-first day of May. the month of rejoicing,
she climbed the tower of Main and looked toward the Auditorium: and
she beheld her Diploma coming with Dr. J. H. Finley. Then the gates of her heart
were flung open, and her joy flew all the way to Atlanta.
But as she climbed down from the tower, a sadness came over her, and she
thought in her heart :
How shall I escape in peace and without sorrow?
For as she walked from afar Freshmen and Sophomores and Juniors were leaving
the Tea Room and the Library. And she heard their voices calling her name:
Go not yet away from us. Disclose the next ten years to us.
And she answered:
Hottentots, of what can I speak save of the Seniors, of their achievements and
of their careers?
Then said a voice:
Speak to us of the inmates of Rebecca Scott Hall.
Therefore was her heart visited by mirth ; and she answered in a Broken English
m
t%
Eleanore Albright shall be distinguished as that woman who will first swim the
Atlantic Ocean. Great are the uses of Perseverance!
Reba Bayliss shall mingle a life of luxury with the practicability of a job as
motorcycle cop.
Leila Bell shall amass a large fortune designing, advertising, and modelling
artificial coiffures ( wigs ) .
Frances Buchanan, after the final break with "Broncho", shall devote her life
to serving neglected cow-punchers. Her victrola is to be her chief means of enter-
taining them; but often, beneath the strains of the music one may be able to hear
her sadly moan, "He was grand to me."
Grace Carr shall reach the height of her ambition in a partnership in the medi-
cal profession life partnership.
Cephise Cartwright shall serve humanity as an eminent paper hanger: no crepe
handled.
Elizabeth Clark shall sacrifice her youth to the investigation of the life habits
of the cheese mite. Untold benefits will be the result to posterity.
Mary Davis shall desert a diplomatic career to write testimonials: I reached
my marvellous position solely thru the use of (Fill in with any well-
known product) .
Marcia Green will not be able to withstand the strain of incessant guarding of
the Phone Pad. After recovering from the Nervous Breakdown which will result.
ryg?
Eighty-jour
she will take the vow of maidenhood, and will secure an excellent position with the
organization for Travelers' Aid.
Mary Heath and Mary Hedrick shall become notorious for the famous slogan,
'"Heath and Hedrick, Hair-Restorer for Hoary Hounds. When everything else fails.
Try Us."
Elizabeth Henderson shall become a first-class secretary; and also, elope with
her employer.
Ann Heys shall after vigorous campaigning win the much coveted title "Miss
America." She will attribute her success to four years of intensive concentration
at Agnes Scott.
Mae Erskine Irvine, having received excellent training in college shall reach
unheard-of fame as a Physical Education Instructor. Her success will be based on
the special Repetition Method which she uses on her pupils.
Anne George Irwin shall attain prosperity in a Chewing Gum Factory, by begin-
ning at the very bottom an analysis of the material itself.
Elsa Jacobsen shall astonish her friends by the seriousness of her career as a
mannequin for Jenny.
Ethel Littlefield shall be ranked among the world's greatest Psychologists.
Leila Joiner shall find supreme bliss in the management of a thoroughly nau-
tical house boat and Jock.
Pearl Kunnes shall put Paul Whiteman in the streets by her superb direction
of a world-famous orchestra.
Louise Leonard shall assume the profession of teaching in a deaf-and-dumb
school, as a matchless means for preserving the voice.
Mary Weems shall attain the pinnacle in the Expert Accountant line. She will
justly give the credit of her success to her four years of intensive work with Bills.
Sara Stillman shall raise the standard of the profession of Horse Doctor by her
able, sympathetic work in that field.
Peggy Rankin shall be decorated with every honor for her priceless contribu-
tion as General of the Woman's Legion in the next war.
Carolina McCall shall establish a nation-wide system of Day Nurseries per-
sonally supervised, where her baby talk and her "Baby Face" will have free vent in
a worthy cause.
Catherine Mitchell and Martha Johnston shall fill two dire needs in the Sal-
vation Army. Guess What?
Mildred Morrow shall be the most attractive feature iiH Barnum and Bailey's
best-known side-show, a Snake Charmer.
Ruth McMillan shall become fired with zeal for the study of insects and shall
tread the globe with a butter-fly net as her only weapon.
Mitchell Moore shall charm audiences the world over with her esthetic and toe
dancing.
Miriam Preston and Margie Wakefield shall continue their partnership on the
race track. Miriam shall be a famous jockey and Margie the keenest of intellectual
Bookmakers.
Ruth McDonald shall serve her native city as the most influential member of
its police force.
Eighty-jive
Mamie Shaw shall found and operate a Hospital for Distressed squirrels.
Elizabeth Lynn shall prove an invaluable asset to Ringling Brothers by her re-
markable Trapese Performances.
Marguerite Russell shall be able to make an excellent living as the "Radio An-
nouncer with the Personality."
Ruth De Wandelaer shall ably fill the position of Dog Catcher in a large Amer-
ican metropolis.
Evalyn Powell shall be noted as "The Edgar Guest of the Fairer Sex"; her most
touching themes shall be the victrola and Little Nell.
Smith, Willie White, and Rainey, Frances shall be renowned as "The Phurious
Photographers Pictures of Animals a Specialty."
Ellen Douglass Leyburn, Elizabeth Lilly, and Elizabeth Norfleet shall immor-
talize a vaudeville skit, "The Three Must-We-Bear-(it I's or Wisdom, Wit and Won-
der," which shall attract throngs of admirers from the four corners of the earth.
And her diaphragm gave out, and her co-ordination was destroyed, and she
sought rest and refreshment from Dr. Hewey. But the Hottentots pursued her, and
clamoured, saying,
Speak to us of the inmates of Inman Hall.
And she gulped her Coca-Cola, wiped her brow, and continued:
Blanche Berry shall lead a rich and helpful life as an official chaperone to
points all over Europe: Italian tours specialized in.
Josephine Bridgman shall do untold good as Prune Supervisor in a large or-
phan asylum.
Georgia Mae Burns shall fulfill all expectations as Walter Hampden's illus-
trious successor.
Louise Capen shall spend her summers as director of her own camp. During
the winter she will conduct walking tours to Alaska.
Marion Daniel shall succeed delightfully as a renowned County Demonstrator.
Frances Dobbs and Pauline McLeod shall build up a fine business as Radio
Experts, following the splendid slogan "All Knocks Answered."
Emilie Erhlich shall solve the problem of boredom in marriage by extending
her Chinese honeymoon indefinitely and taking advantage of the reasonable rates in
jinrickisha ws.
Mary Ferguson shall become well-known in circles earthly and celestial as a
spiritual medium.
Rachel Henderlite shall challenge the tallest Scotch Nobleman (see back num-
bers of the New York Times I to a Harry Lauder contest and come out winner by
a head.
Hulda McNeel shall live up to a prophecy foretold by one most suited to judg-
ing her capabilities: Huldy shall "make a good wife."
Courtney Wilkinson shall continue her studies at Johns Hopkins where the au-
thorities shall see to it that she has plenty of time to "mull over" the explanation
of the aversion oil and water have to mixing.
Helen Lewis shall startle the world with her ability as Chief Justice of the Su-
preme Court. She will re-adopt the use of the judicial wig.
yz?^
Eighty-six
i
Lucia Nimmons shall lead a modern Troubadpur's life with Mr. Riley ScoU
as her hero and example.
And her head dropped with weariness; and she longed to put up an Asleep
Sign. But the Hottentots crowded around her and demanded:
Tell us of the inmates of Main Building and of the Cottages.
Then she asked for a cup of coffee, and as she sipped it she found courage; and
she declared:
Maurine Bledsoe and Louisa White shall form a team of workers highly in de-
mand in all fields. Efficiency Expert ("Fish") and General Superintendent
I "Soup" I . "Follow our Advice" shall completely obliterate the word bankruptcy
from the American language.
Kitty Houston shall be noted as the foremost Prosecuting Attorney in Tennes-
see.
Charlotte Buckland shall gain fame as the most efficient Church Secretary in
Florida.
Emily Daughtry shall be leader of the most noted Fire Brigade in the Rocky
Mountains.
Virginia Sevier shall receive the death-bed instructions of Edna Wallace Hop-
per and Annette Kellerman, and will carry on their noble efforts.
Sarah Shields shall completely outshine Patrick Henry with her immortal
words, "Take your time, little girl; this is the honest truth!"
Louise Plumb shall go to Europe and make a name for herself as the conti-
nent's most famous wine connoisseur.
Cleo McLaurine shall create and fill a demand for graduate Scrub Ladies.
Judith Wilson shall defy her parents and run away to join the Russian ballet
under the noted Mordkin. Her interpretation of the Fire Bell at Agnes Scott shall
be the most talked of thing in America.
Alice Weichselbaum shall prove that the most precious possessions come in the
smallest packages by her excellent work as a furniture mover.
Ewin Baldwin shall desert the intellectual life for the adventurous uncertainty
of existence as Flagman on the C. & G.
Valerie Folts and Margaret Neel shall form a trust regulating campaigns
military, religious, social, and financial and shall thus contribute untold service
to the business world.
And the coffee having taken too much effect, she succumbed to acute nervous-
ness. And soda was administered; and as the crowds urged:
Tell us of the Day Students.
She continued:
Evelyn Albright and Louise Bansley shall bear witness to the fact that "it pays
to advertise": By constant use and testimony of the efficacy of Dr. Payne's Tooth
Paste, Evelyn shall attain a remarkable proficiency in skiing; Louise will find that
Murine for the eyes will bring about a marvelous accuracy in pole-vaulting.
Emma Bernhardt shall lend a zest to her married life by finding the equations
of spinach and angel food cake, and plotting the curves of the weather and the fam-
ily budget.
Eighty-seven
m
Frances Chambers, Susan Clayton, Elizabeth McCallie, Kenneth Maner, and
Grace Zachry shall establish a correspondence course in How to Go Through College
Without Studying.
Martha Crowe shall supersede Babe Ruth as King of Swat.
Ruth Casey shall become the moving spirit in Big Business for the next decade.
Dorothy Chamberlain shall become a designer of Komfortable Klass-room
Kouches: "Sleep in spite of misery."
Lillian Clement shall amass a million in the wholesale grocery business.
Mildred Cowan shall lead a happy though silent life as a prominent Florist
who will only say it with flowers.
Gene Dozier shall develop a dual personality; her days shall be employed in
the humble duties of Plain Sewing, while her nights shall be a round of gaiety as
a Female Gigolo.
Mabel Dumas shall combine psychology and business in a highly successful ca-
reer as Monkey Trainer in a zoo.
Evelyn Satterwhite shall open a new field for women by her breath taking rec-
ord as traffic policeman at Five Points.
Frances Freeborn shall make a record unthought-of by Barney Oldfield as an
eminent auto racer.
Venie Belle Grant shall be designated as Frances Freeborn's mechanic and the
most powerful influence in the latter's success. The two youna; ladies shall attrib-
ute their success to the excellent training afforded by their Fords in college days.
Katherine Gilliland shall astound the world in her chosen role as sword swal-
lower in Keith's circuit.
Marcia Horton and Louise Lovejoy shall add to the joys of the Decatur street
car passengers by beautifying the telephone poles to Atlanta decorations changed
weekly.
Maude Jackson shall make her mark in the world as an illustrious cigar sales-
lady in the Ritz-Carlton Hotel.
Lamar Lowe shall employ Taxi Driving as a stepping stone to greater achieve-
ments in the future.
Caroline McKinney shall wed the sole heir to the Brewster millions and man-
age her budget so that at the end of each month she may come to the rescue of de-
serving but short-sighted college girls.
Emily Nelson, Stella Pittman. Elizabeth Sanders shall choose the movies as
their sphere and delight untold audiences with false eyelashes and glycerine tears.
Emily Stead, Edith Strickland, and Elizabeth Vary shall sacrifice their earthly
existence to be sealed into a wonder projectile and shot to Mars to study the eco-
nomic situation on that planet.
Louise Davis and Ida Landau shall progress from unassuming modistes in an
obscure dressmaker's establishment to vast wealth and honor with Flo Zeigfeld.
Willie May Coleman shall lose her head and elope with an ice man and choose
as her motto from then on "Keep Kool."
And her posture fell from A- to G; and L G. could offer her no relief; for
nervous exhaustion was at the basis of her gestures. And the crowd melted away
its curiosity satisfied. But Miss Daugherty refused to allow her to faint and led
her off in triumph. And she boarded the train with all her belongings. And she
said:
If our hands shall meet at our next reunion, we shall see what we shall see.
Roberta Winter, Class Prophet.
Eighty-eight
Enchanted Ground
Open, beloved, swing the gates apart!
Do you not know my footstep, ground enchanted.
You, of ivhom vivid memories are planted
Firmer than mighty forests in my heart?
Assailed by rapture as your blossoms burst
With sweetness, I dream fairy Springs hereafter.
I ivarm to friendly hands and comrades' laughter
You teem- with fresh adventures for my thirst.
Lovely your graces ripple in the sun.
Lonely and skyward looms your dauntless tower.
Oh, let me capture^ this exquisite hour
When dancing joy and silent pain are one!
On tiptoe, wondering, I have caught my breath
As your enchantment like a fragrance drifted
Into my life. And then my eyes are lifted
To hills of beauty where there is no death,
Susan Clayton. Class Poet.
M'
Eighty-nine
Ninety
L (^'jtn
Ninety-one
Junior Class
Colors: Blue and White
OFFICERS
FIRST SEMESTER
Mary Belle McConkey President
Louise Sherfesee Vice-President
Margaret Rice Secretary-Treasurer
Miss Harriet Haynes . . . ,
Faculty Members
Miss Daisy Fr.\nces Smith
second semester
Margaret Rice . . . President
Lillian White . Vice-President
\IRCINIA Carrier . Seer-Treasurer
Miss Haynes
Miss Smith
^^^^
Ninety-two
i
Sallie Abernethy
Winter Haven, Florida
Harriet C. Alexander
Augusta, Georgia
Mary Elizabeth Allgood
Covington, Georgia
Leila Warren Anderson
Macon, Georgia
Miriam Louise Anderson
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
"JiMMiE Myrtle Bledsoe
Atlanta, Georgia
Frances Campbell Brown
Staunton, Virginia
*No picture.
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Ninety-three
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Martha Brown
Mt. Ulla, North Carolina
Mary Estelle Bryan
Miami, Florida
Virginia Carrier
Asheville, North Carolina
Elizabeth Cole
Atlanta, Georgia
Dorothy Virginia Coleman
Savannah, Georgia
Patricia Harriet Collins
Atlanta, Georgia
n
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^^^^^^^3^3^
Ninety-four
Lucy Mai Cooi^-
Minden, Louisiana
Emily Dasher Cope
Savannah, Georgia
Frances Craighead
Atlanta, Georgia
Mary Cabanis Crenshaw
Atlanta, Georgia
Nancy Crenshaw Crowther
Savannah. Georgia
Sarah Katherine Currie
Parkton, Georgia
ii
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Ninety jive
Helen Little Daher
Atlanta, Georgia
Betsy Davidson
Lexington, Virginia
* Elizabeth Davis
Eastman, Georgia
Elsie Bischoff Davis
Decatur, Georgia
HuDA Dement
Wartrace, Tennessee
Mary Ray Dobyns
Birmingham. Alabama
Mary Jewett Doyal
Rome, Georgia
*No picture.
'^
Ninety-six
It
Carolyn Hall Essig
Atlanta. Geor"ia
Helen Claire Fox
Nori'istown. Pennsylvania
Betty Fuller
Havana. Cuba
Mary Eloise Catnes
Atlanta. Georgia
Irene Grace Garretson
Decatur. Georgia
Margaret Gerig
Ocala. Florida
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Ninety seven
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Hattie Gershcow
Atlanta, Georgia
Louise Girardeau
Atlanta, Georgia
Sara Priscilla Glenn
Gastonia, North Carolina
Eugenia Gobere
Atlanta, Georgia
Myra Olive Graves
Nashville, Tennessee
Elizabeth Hemphill Grier
Suchowfu. Ku. China
Ninety-eight
Lucy Henrietta Grier
Sucliowfu. Ku, China
Frances Lee Hargis
Atlanta. Georgia
Annie Dorothy Harper
Albany. Georgia
Marion McClure Henry
Clarksville, Tennessee
Nell Hillhouse
Waynesboro, Georgia
Mary Mackey Hough
Lancaster, South Carolina
Ninety-nine
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JOSKPHINE PhiFER HOUSTON
Charlotte. North Carolina
Elizabeth Hardy Hudson
Atlanta, Georgia
Alice Louise Hunter
Atlanta, Georgia
^
Mildred L. Jennings
Augusta, Georgia
Anais Gay Jones
Atlanta, Georgia
Hilda Kalmon
Albany, Georgia
S
W^^^^'^i^^s^^^^^^^^^^^^W^^^^^^WW^^S^WP
One Hundred
^!
Kathryn KalmoS^
Albany, Georgia
Vera Waller Kamper
Atlanta, Georgia
Margaret Louise Keith
Greenville. South Carolina
Mary Hortense King
Fort Gaines, Georgia
Emily Coleman Kingsbery
Franklin, North Carolina
Adah Vivian Knight
Safety Harbor, Florida
^
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One Hundred and On
Anna Angier Knight
Atlanta. Georgia
Isabel Jean Lamont
Raeford, North Carolina
Lillian King LeConte
Atlanta, Georgia
Virginia May Love
Gastonia. North Carolina
Anne Irene Lowrance
Charlotte, North Carolina
Mary Leigh McAliley
Chester, North Carolina
m
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One Hundred and Two
A
Anna Mae McCollum
Thomasville, Georgia
Mary Bell McConkey
St. Louis, Missouri
Mary Jane McCoy
Washington C. H.. Ohio
Janet Lauck MacDonald
Keyset. West Virginia
Mary Elizabeth McEntire
Calhoun, Georgia
Gwendolyn Hardin McKinnon
Hartsville, South Carolina
.1
One Hundred and Three
^'
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Grace McLaurin
Lauringbuig, North Carolina
Ellot May McLellon
Charleston. West Virginia
Bayliss McShane
Greenwood. Mississippi
Ermine Dupont Malone
Quincy. Florida
Rlth Ev-4ns Masengill
Bristol, Tennessee
'Alma Metcalfe
Decatur. Georgia
LiLLA Kennerly Mills
Camden, South Carolina
"No picture.
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On:' Hundred and Foul
Virginia Miller
Huntington. West Virginia
Julia Osborne Napier
Decatur, Georgia
Virginia Norris
Greenville, South Carolina
Evangeline Thomas Papageorge
Atlanta. Georgia
Mary Louise Perkinson
Woodstock, Georgia
Ruth Elizabeth Perrine
Decatur. Georgia
"Mildred Kathryn Phillips
Atlanta. Georgia
"No picture.
Z[Z_L__Ji IM
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izimr
Ohc Huiidifd and Five
1
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^
Mildred Bruce Phippen
Decatur, Georgia
LiLA Porcher
Brookline. Massachusetts
Emily Vandiver Ramage
Decatur, Georgia
Mary Martin Ramage
Decatur, Georgia
Margaret Rice
Florence. Alabama
Martha Doane Riley
Atlanta, Georgia
/KJ-'
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One Hundred and Six
s
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Mary Richey Riviere
Fort Benning. Georgia
Elizabeth Roark
Franklin. Kentucky
Ann Elizabeth Ruff
St. Petersburg. Florida
ROSALTHA HaGAN SaNDERS
Decatur, Georgia
ROWENA GUNBY RcNNETTE
Tuskeaee. Alabama
Mary Fallansbee Sayward
Decatur, Georgia
:^
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One Hundred and Seven
_ ^' -'JW=--:%^i __
Frances Lucile Seay
Detroit, Michigan
Mary Waller Shepherd
Sewanee, Tennessee
Louise Sherfesee
Greenville. South Ciirolii
Mary Elizabeth Shevvmaker
Memphis. Tennessee
Virginia Skeen
Decatur. Georgia
'Florence Smith
Atlanta. Geors;ia
Louise Leyburn Sydnor
Charles Town, West Virginia
'No picture. en
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One Hundred and Eight
i
i
Ann McKinney Todd
Atlanta. Georgia
Edna Marshall Volberg
Atlanta. Georgia
Josephine Trenholm Walker
Sunimeiville. South Carolina
Elizabeth Blair Wallace
Tifton, Georgia
Georgia Doremus Watson
Thomson, Georgia
Lillian White
Buchanan, Georgia
Jife
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One Hundred and Nine
, 1 1 /
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Sakah White
Atlanta, Georgia
Nancy Elizabeth Williams
Selma, Alabama
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One Hundred and Ten
One Hundred and Eleven
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One Hundred and Twelve
U ff^erj^w
One Hundred and Thirteen
I
>ii
Sophomore Class
Colors; Yellow and While
OFFICERS
Marion Green President
Genevieve Knight Vice-President
Ruth Worth Secretary-T reasurer
Miss Louise Hale
Faculty Members
Miss Llewellyn Wilburn
Miss Wilburn
One Hundred iind Fourteen
i
^^^-^'-^v^'vs^
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One Hundred and Fifteen
si.fkx
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One Hundred and Sixteen
One Hundred and Seventeen
^^^^^M^^^'^i^\J-^^. l-'^^'^^i
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One Hundred and Eighteen
If
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Pa*on
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One Hundred and Nineteen
^/sso^
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One Hundred and Tiventy
twooo
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One Hundred and Twenty-one
One Hundred and Twenty two
u< ^JA.>v^
One Hundred and Twenty-three
Freshman Class
Colors: Red and White
OFFICERS
Margaret Armstrong President
Raemond Wilson Vice-President
Mildred Hutcheson Secretary-Treasurer
Miss Leslie J. Gaylord . . ,
Faculty Members
Miss Gladys H. Freed
I
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Miss Gaylord
Miss Freed
One Hundred and Twenty-four
One Hundred and Twenty-jive
Pauline Adkins
Jean Alexander
Helen Anderson
Marjorie Louise Anderson
Sara Pratheb Armfield
Margaret Louise Armstrong
Walterette Arwood
Louise Baker
Marie Ethel Baker
Sarah Frances Baldwin
Laura Kathrvn Barrett
Phyllis Marion Beavers
Flora Elizabeth Beck
Elizabeth Waller Bennett
Elizabeth Mobehead Bebry
Anna Pope Bland
Ruth Marion Boardman
Eleanor Bonham
Mary Elva Boutelle
Miriam Boyd
Maby Ruth Bbadford
Elizabeth Hebtzoc Bbanch
Louise Belle Brewer
Frances Brown
Mary Brown
Martha Elmina Caldwell
Ellen Cannon
Sarah Lucile Carmichael
Minnie Eleanor Castles
Margaret Elizabeth Catbon
Chabley Will Caudle
Mabion Elizabeth Chapman
Jean Todd Coffman
Gladys Claire Cole
Lucille Coleman
Lois Annette Combs
Lillian Opie Cook
Mary Lovell Cope
Kathbyn West Cbmghead
Katherine Crawford
Margaret Cbowell
Gladney Cubeton
Margaret Dallis
Muriel Grace David
Frances McRee Davis
Elizabeth Sims Dawson
Elsie Marshall Derickson
Freshman
Martha Elizabeth Eaton
Jane Anderson Eaves
Anne Ehrlich
Sarah Mildred Farris
Margaret Ferguson
Frances Josephine Fletcher
Elizabeth Floubnoy Flinn
Maby Patricia Flint
Dorothy Dumm Fooshe
Alice Louise Garbetson
Lauba Josephine Gillespy
Anna Kathebine Golucke
Maby Jane Goodrich
Maby Collis Gbegoby
Maby Elizabeth Gbimes
Flobence Ione Gueth
Jane Bailey Hall
Maby Elizabeth Hamilton
Mabgaret Ellen Hardway
Annie Laurie Harrison
Emily Kerlin Harvey
Mary Hunt Heeth
Helen Bolton Hendricks
Edith Helen Hughes
Mildred Carrington Hutcheson
Rose Warren Irvine
Alice Eleanor Jernigan
Myra Bacon Jervey
Leila Carlton Jones
Bessie Kaplin
Miriam Kaufman
Jean Tate Kennedy
Mildred Lamb
Kathebine Leary
Katherine Lovelace Lott
Mary Fairfax McCallie
Alicia Augusta McClintock
Frances McCoy
Martha Louise McCulloch
Katherine Wilma McGinnis
Helon Bingham McLaurin
Eula Mae McManus
Adelaide McWhorter
Sarah Nfely Marsh
Marian Meredith Martin
Sue Jane Maiiney
Frances E. Medlin
Elizabeth Waller DeSaussube Sarah Frances Messeb
Clabence Habgbove Dorsey
Elizabeth Collin Dodd
Mary Julia Dosteb
Clemmie Nette Downing
Dorothy Palmer Dudley
Emily Niola Duke
Augusta Lamar Dunbar
Virginia Alexander Earle
Mattie Blanche Miller
Mattie Rebecca Mitchell
Tassea Ernestine Mitchell
Edna Lynn Moore
Emily Paula Moore
Pauline Page Moose
Mildred Lee Morris
Carolyn Virginia Nash
Martha Helen Nelson
Margaret Ocden
Rebecca Oglesey
Fbances Caerington Owen
Juanita Caroline Patrick
Carolyn Christine Payne
Sallie Wilson Peake
Mary Ann Phelps
Mary Claire Powell
Annie Shannon Preston
Mary Eldridge Quinlin
Elizabeth Reid
Helen Eiidoba Respess
Elise Williams Roberts
Mabtha Worth Rogebs
Maby Ruth Rountbee
Lillian Adair Russell
Violet Scott
Virginia Hatcher Sears
Martha Cooper Shanklin
Nancy Lovick Siy'pson
Dorothy Daniel Smith
Mary Ferol Smith
Elizabeth Rebecca Sorbieb
Martha Catherine Stackhouse
Fsther Miriam Stephens
Ruth Elizabeth Stephens
Maby Shobter Stokely
Belle Wabd Stowe
BiNFORD Stuart
Mary Aiken Stull
Ruth Barker Taylor
Mary Norris Terry
Mary Louise Thames
Lillian Dale Thomas
Harriet Garlincton Todd
Sara Bissell Townsend
Mary Pauline Trammell
Mary Virginia Transou
Mary Tucker
Anne Dowdell Turner
Marion Russell Vaughan
Mary Linton Walton
Crystal Hope Wellborn
Melvina Wells
Evalyn Wilder
Haebiet Blackfobd Williams
Fbances Eugenia Williamson
Pauline Percival
WiLLOUGHEY
Isabel Footman Wilson
Raemond Bingham Wilson
Sara Knox Windham
Missouri Taylor Woolford
Louise Yeatman
Mary Isabelle Youngblood
^^m^wm^mmw
One Hundred and Twenty-six
One Hundred and Twenty-seven
t^^
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Ivtegulavs
THIRD YEAR IRREGULARS
Eunice Ball Decatur, Georgia
Dorothy Brown St. Petersburg, Florida
Christine Wolfle Decatur, Georgia
SECOND YEAR IRREGULARS
Bettina Bush Decatur, Georgia
Sally Lindsay Decatur, Georgia
Harriet Rylander Americus, Georgia
UNCLASSIFIED
Therese BarksdAle Jackson, Mississippi
'^v .1,1
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One Hundred and Twenty-eight
-^
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Lx^"""3^
One Hundred and Thirty-one
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
OFFICERS
Elsa Jacobse-\ President
Ellen Douglass Leyburn . First Vice-Pres.
Maurine Bledsoe . . Second Vice-President
Josephine Bridgman . Tliird Vice-President
Janet MacDonald Secretary
Nell Hillhouse Treasurer
CLASS REPRESENTATIVES
Elizabeth Lynn . . . Senior Representative
Courtney Wilkinson Senior Representative
Elizabeth Cole
Leila Anderson
Evelyn Wood .
Jane Gray . . .
Mary Terry . ,
. Junior Representative
Junior Representative
Sophomore Representative
Sophomore Representative
Freshman Representative
Mildred Hutchcson Freshma n Representative
Elsa Jacobsen, President
I' '^
LOWER HOUSE
ADVISORY BOARD
Ellen Douglass Leyburn,
Chairman
Mary Davis
HuLDA McNeel
Frances Rainey
Sarah Glenn
Lillian White
MEMBERS
Evalyn Powell
Frances Buchanan
Helen Lewis
Mildred Greenleaf
LuciLE Bridgman
Margaret Ogden
Belle Ward Stowe
One Hundred and Thirty-two
One Hundred and Thirty-three
y. w. c. A.
CABINET
OFFICERS
Carolina McCall President
Elizabeth Lilly Vice-President
Leila Anderson Secretary
Miriam Anderson Treasurer
Margaret Keith
Undergraduate Representative
Carolina McCall, President
W:,
Margaret Rice Chairman Social Committee
Georgia Watson Chairman Social Service Committee
Marcia Green Chairman Religious Work
Elaine Jacobsen .... Chairman World Felloivship Committee
Augusta Roberts Day Student Representative
One Hundred and Thirty-four
One Hundred and Thirty-jive
Student Officials
HuLDA McNeei. ... Recorder of Points
Louisa White Chairman of the Auditing Committee
Reba Bayless Student Treasurer
Mary Davis Member of College Council
Helen Lewis Fire Chief
One Hundred and Thirty-six
The Lecture Association
The Lecture Association is an organization for the purpose of presenting a
series of lecturers that will be of value and interest to the college community. The
program this year included four speakers:
Hugh Walpole: "The Victorian and Modern Novel Contrasted."
Gregory Mason: "The Lost Cities of the Yukaton."
Captain Amundsen: "Rome to Nome by Airplane."
Mrs. Maude Ifood Park: "This World of Yours."
OFFICERS
Louis.4 White President
Helen Lewis Secretary-Treasurer
Miss Hearon' Faculty Chairman
ADVISORY BOARD
>L\E Erskine Irvine Poster Chairman
Elizabeth Norfleet .... Senior Member
Georgia Watson Junior Member
Genevieve Knight Sophomore Member
Margaret Ocden Freshman Member
Miss Davis Faculty Member
Miss McKiNNEY Faculty Member
m
One Hundred and Thirty-seven
%
Pi Alpha Phi is an organization which seeks to promote debating as a local and
intercollegiate activity. Debating is unique as being the one intercollegiate activity
that Agnes Scott participates in, with the result that Pi Alpha Phi has become a very
active force on the campus.
OFFICERS
Mary Davis President
Helen Lewis Vice-President
Louisa White Secretary
Elizabeth Henderson Treasurer
EvALYN Powell .... . ... Member of Debating Council
Janet MacDonald Member of Debating Council
MEMBERS
*Patricia Collins Elsa Jacobsen *Mary Shepherd
Frances Craighead Margaret Keith Mary Shewmaker
Mary Loyd Davis *Helen Lewis Helen Sisson
*Carolyn Essig *.Ianet MacDonald Louise Sydnor
Elizabeth Henderson *Esther Nisbet Georgia Watson
Rachel Henderlite *Evalyn Powell *Louisa White
Grace Holding *Mary Riviere *Grace Zachry
Elaine Jacobsen *Rowena Runette Courtney Wilkinson
* On Tivelve
^1
One Hundred and Thirty-eight
Blackfriars
^
'^
OFFICERS
Frances Freeborn President
Elizabeth McCallie Vice-President
Martha Crowe Secretary
Georgia Mae Burns Treasurer
Mary Sayvvard Stage Manager
Marguerite Russell Property Manager
Louisa White Lighting Manager
MEMBERS
Georgia Mae Burns Marion Green Marguerite Russell Mary Weems
Frances Chambers Janet McDonald Mary Sayward Sarah White
Martha Crowe Elizabeth McCallie Emily Stead Roberta Winter
Frances Freeborn Caroline McKinney Josephine Walker
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS
Elizabeth Alcood Floyd Schoolfield
Margaret Armstrong Louise Girardeau Ruth Mallory Virginia Sevier
Laura Barrett Sarah Glenn Lois McClelland Belle Ward Stoup
Bettina Bush Frances Hargis Aileen Moore Louise Sydnor
Sarah Carter Marion Henry Lucretia Morgan Mary Louise Thames
Dorothy Cheeck Martha Johnston Margaret Neel Polly Vaughn
Susan Clayton Margaret Keith Mera Nery Josephine Wachtel
Sally Cothran Lillian LeConte Mary Riviere Lillian White
Margaret Gerig Louise Lovejov Augusta Roberts Christine Wolfle
ill
One Hundred and Thirty-nine
r^'
Day Students
K\
im\
Louise Ba.\sley President
FRA^'CEs CuAMBEiiS Treasurer
Lois Smith Hike Manager
One Hundred and Forty
Jean Dozier Chairman
Virginia Sevier Business Manager
MiLnRED Morrow Costume Manager
Anna Mae McCollum Publicity Chairman
LiLA PoRCHER Property Manager
Hazel Brown Poster Chairman
Mary Ray Doeyns Music Chairman
Miss WiLBURN Faculty Advisor
One Hundred and Forty-one
If
:1^^kt
^
m
OFFICERS
Martha Johnston President
Lillian LeConte Vice-Presidem
Virginia Miller Business Manager
Mamie Shaw Secretary-Treasurer
Mabel Dumas Stage Manager
Mrs. Lewis Johnston Director
First Sopranos
Jean Alexander
LuciLE Bridcman
Vivian Bryant
Emily Duke
Mary Heath
Vera Kamper
Lillian LeConte
Virginia Miller
SoNiA Roskin
Evelyn Satterwhite
Edith Strickland
OcTAviA Young
Second Sopranos
Pauline Brown
Lillian Clement
MEMBERS
Mary Jane Goodrich
Martha Johnston
Lucia Nimmons
Rachel Paxton
Sarah Robinson
Harriet Todd
Mary Ruth Roundtree
Dorothy Cheek
Carolyn Payne
First Contraltos
Pauline Adkins
Leonora Briggs
Mary Crenshaw
Ethel Freeland
Hortense Elton
Jean Kennedy
Mary Jane McCoy
Helen Nelson
Elizabeth Roark
Mamie Shaw
Frances G. Stokes
Second Contraltos
Miriam Arrington
Helen Brown
Mabel Daniel
Mabel Dumas
Ineil Heard
Charlotte Hunter
Jean Lamont
Margaret Neel
Louise Sherfesee
M
One Hundred and Forty-two
I
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Violins :
Sara Prather Armfikld
Marjorie Anderson
Sarah Currie
Lynn More
Anne Turner
Rosa White
Mandolins :
Mary Brown
Mary Ray Dobyns
Rachel Paxon
Banjos :
Eugenia Kirk
Mabel Robeson
Evelyn Wood
Saxophones :
Mary Riviere, Director
Sara Townsend
Orchestra Bells:
Helen Respess
Piccola :
Jean Kennedy
Drums:
Helen Anderson
Jack Anderson
Piano :
Marion Chapman
Pauline McLeod
m^
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One Hundred and Forty-three
m
B. 0. Z. is a writing club to encourage interest in short story writing among
upperclassmen. It attempts, by its rigid system of tryouts and by its austerity of
criticism, to develop a true conception and appreciation of the short story, and to
foster a more sincere literary effort among the students.
OFFICERS
Susan Clayton President
Carolyn Essig Secretary
Miriam Preston ... Treasurer
Miss Christie Faculty Member
MEMBERS
Virginia Sevier Emily Kingsberry Rowena Runnette
Roberta Winter Anna Mae McCollum Rosaltha Sanders
Virginia Norris Ella Mae Hollingsworth *Mildred Phillips
*No picture.
One Hundred and Forty-four
5
Folio Club
Folio Club is a short story writing club open only to Freshmen and Sopho-
mores. Its aim is to give helpful criticism to prepare its members for B. 0. Z., and
to foster the development of short story writing among underclassmen.
OFFICERS
Marion Green President
Mary Ellis Secretary
MEMBERS
Bettina Bush
Katherine Woodbury
Pearl Hastings
Mary Alice Juhan
Esther Nisbit
ii^
.y-^^^v^^ \>_
One Hundred and Forty-jive
K. [/. 5.
K. U. B. is a journalistic club whose purpose is to give wholesome publicity to
the college thru its contact with Atlanta and out-of-town newspapers.
OFFICERS
Elizabeth Henderson President
Miriam Preston Vice-Presid;nt
Anna Mae McCollum Secretary-Treasurer
MEMBERS
Blanche Berry
Mary Ray Dobyns
Mary Ellis
Louise Girardeau
Mary Heath
Louise Lovejoy
Irene Lowrance
Sallie Lindsay
Virginia Norris
Mary Perkinson
Helen Ridley
ROWENA RuNNETTE
One Hundred and Forty-six
Poetry Club
^
OFFICERS
Elizabeth Lilly
Blanche Bekrv
.... President
Secretary -Treasurer
m.
MEMBERS
Miriam Arrincton
Myrtle Bledsoe
Bettina Bush
Susan Clayton
Marion Green
Ella Mae Hollincsworth
Mae Erskine Irvime
Emily Kincsberry
Helen Lewis
Carolina McCall
Elizabeth Norfleet
Mary Riviere
Virginia Sevier
Mamie Shaw
Lillian Thomas
Evelyn Wood
m
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mm
One Hundred and Forty-seven
Pen and Brush Club
OFFICERS
Leone Bowers President
Myra Jervey Vice-President
LuCRETiA Morgan Secretary-Treasurer
Anne Ehrlich Chairman Membership Committee
Lois McClelland Chairman Publicity Committee
Miriam Arrincton
Hazel Brown
Helen Brown
Bettina Bush
Ruth Chambers
Jean Dozier
Jane Eaves
MEMBERS
Betty Fuller
Louise Girardeau
Annie Lloyd Liggin
Irene Lowrance
Alma Metcalfe
Shannon Preston
Mary Ruth Roundtree
Marguerite Russell
Rosaltha Sanders
Floyd Schoolfield
Sarah Southerland
Evelyn Wood
Botticelli, Mascot
One Hundred and Forty-eight
Classical Club
OFFICERS
Susan Clayton President
Leila Anderson Vice-President
Mary Belle McConkey Secretary-Treasurer
Sarah Shields Chairman of Program Committee
MEMBERS
Evelyn Albright Alice Glenn Julia Napier
Leila Anderson Elizabeth Grier Margaret Neel
Gladys Austin Muriel Griffin Martha Overton
EwiN Baldwin .. Ruth Hall Evangeline Papageorce
Thekese Barksdale Dorothy Harper Mary Perkinson
Virginia Branch Mary Heath Sarah Rikard
Lucile Bridgman Alice Hunter Elizabeth Sanders
Frances Buchanan Margaret Keith Mary Sayward
Cephise Cartwright Hortense King Martha Rilly Selman
Susan Clayton Louise Kelly Mary Shepherd
Lucy Mai Cook Lamar Lowe Sarah Shields
Frances Craighead Irene Lowrance Louise Sydnor
Annette Colwell Geraldine LeMay Helen Thompson
Emilie Ehrlich Julia McLendon Ann Todd
Hattie Gershcow Ruth Mallory Josephine Wachtel
Katherine Gilliland Julia Mulliss
One Hundred and Forty nine
w
French Club
:^
OFFICERS
Martha Crowe President
Miriam Preston ^ice-President
Elizabeth Cole Secretary-Treasurer
%
Pernette Adams
Evelyn Albright
Margaret Andreae
Louise Bansley
Blanche Berry
Frances Berry
Susan Clayton
Lucy Mai Cook
Emily Cope
Nancy Crowther
Louise Davis
Mary Davis
Sara Douglass
MEMBERS
Mary Ray Dobyns
Virginia Earl
Eloise Gaines
Olive Graves
Louise Girardeau
Marion Green
Emily Kingsberry
Anna Knight
Lillian LeConte
Geraldine LeMay
Louise Lovejoy
Ruth Mallory
Kenneth Maner
Anna Mae McCollum
Elinore Morgan
Julia Napier
Evangeline Papageorce
EvALYN Powell
Helen Ridley
Frances Rainey
Mary Riviere
Rowena Runmh'te
Floyd Schoolfield
Mary Shewmaker
Elizabeth Vary
Sarah White
One Hundred and Fifty
OFFICERS
Courtney Wilkinson President
Edna Volberg Vice-President
Frances Rainey Secretary
Louise Plumb Treasurer
M. Anderson
T. Barksdale
R. Bayless
F. Brown
M. Brown
V. Cameron
L. Capen
W. M. Coleman
M. Crenshaw
E. Dauchtery
M. Dumas
F. DOBBS
R. De Wandelaer
B. Ferguson
MEMBERS
P.
Gilchrist
E.
Hatchett
R.
B. Holt
E.
Hudson
I.
Landau
L.
Lovejoy
I.
LOWRANCE
B.
Miller
S.
McFadyen
E.
M. McLellon
E.
Papaceorce
L.
Plumb
P.
Rankin
F.
Rainey
E. Reid
S. Robinson
E. Rice
R. Sanders
M. Shaw
J. Smith
W. W. Smith
E. Stead
A. Skeen
M. Shewmaker
E. Volberg
M. Whittington
C. Wilkinson
R. Worth
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One Hundred and Fijty-one
^7
^x/X'--:'^!-^-^.'^-^
^
Bible Club
e^
OFFICERS
Martha Johnston President
Margaret Neel Secretary-Treasurer
MEMBERS
Sallie Abernathy
Gladys Austin
Emma Bernhardt
Ruth Casey
Annette Carter Colwell
Elizabeth Grier
Mary Heath
Martha Johnston
Alma Metcalfe
Margaret Neel
Evelyn Satterwhite
Mamie Shaw
Grace Zachry
There are also 155 associate members of the Bible Club.
^
One Hundred and Fifty-two
Agnesi Mathematics Club
OFFICERS
Georgia Mae Bukins
HuDA Dement . . .
President
Secretary-Treasurer
I
E. Ball
E. Bernhardt
M. Bledsoe
G. M. Burns
E. Davis
F. DOBBS
M. Dumas
H. Fox
F. Freeborn
I. Garretson
L. Gaylord
K. GiLLILAND
MEMBERS
V. B. Grant
H. Gershcow
E. HowsoN
A. Hunter
M. E. Irvine
H. Kalmon
G. Knight
J. Lamont
M. N. Logan
V. M. Love
E. Lynn
M. J. McCoy
E. McClelland
H. McNeel
L. Mills
C. Morton
L. Nimmons
M. Rice
E. Roark
E. Ruff
M. Russell
L. White
E. Williams
J. Wilson
E. Wood
One Hundred and Fifty-three
"TT
Cotillion Club
^
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OFFICERS
Sarah Shields President
Emily Cope Vice-President
Mary Mackev Hough Secretary-Treasurer
Helen Anderson
Josephine Barry
Therese Barksdale
Elizabeth Cole
Mary Cope
Mary Crenshaw
Nancy Crowther
HoRTENSE Elton
Frances Fletcher
Alice Glenn
Lesa Holofield
Josephine Houston
Josephine Huntley
Hilda Kalmon
Kathryn Kalmon
Anna Knicht
MEMBERS
Lillian LeConte
Katherine Lott
Emily McClelland
Lois McClelland
Ruth McMillan
Bayliss McShane
Catherine Mitchell
Mildred Morrow
Julia Napier
Euzabeth Norfleet
EvALYN Powell
Mary Prim
Eliza Ramey
Louise Robertson
Sarah Robinson
Harriet Rylander
Virginia Sears
LuciLE Seay
Louise Sherfesee
Virginia Skeen
Mary Gladys Steffner
Olive Spenser
Louise Sydnor
Elizabeth Tyson
Josephine Walker
Georgia Watson
Mary Weems
Sarah White
Roberta Winter
Christine Wolfle
Evelyn Wood
One Hundred and Fifty-four
Grand-Daughters' Club
^
The Grand-Daughters' Club is an organization composed of daughters of
"daughters of Agnes Scott" for the purpose of creating a closer relationship between
the Alumnae and the present student body.
OFFICERS
Lillian LeConte President
Anais Jones Vice-President
Eloise Gaines Secretary-Treasurer
MEMBERS
Vera Kamper Harriet Williams
Sallie Cothran Octavia Young
Miriam Preston Mary Isabelle Youncblood
Shannon Preston Mrs. Svdenstricker
Ann Turner Faculty Member
Elizabeth Flinn Polly Stone
Helen Nelson Facultv Member
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One Hundred and Fifty-jive
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One Hundred and Fifty-six
Hoasc
1916
Jeannette Victor
Ora Glenn
Martha Ross
Louise Wilson
Maryellen Harvey
Eloise Gay
Alice Weatherly
Evelyn Goode
Ray Harvison
Nell Frye
1917
Gertrude Amundsen
India Hunt
Scott Payne
Laurie Caldwell
Louise Ware
Anne Kyle
Regina Pinkton
Janet Newton
A. S. Donaldson
Georciana White
Ruth Nisbet
V. Y. White
1918
Margaret Leyburn
Samilie Lowe
R. L. Estes
Emma Jones
Halue Alexander
Ruth Anderson
Katherine Seay
Olive Hardwick
Lois Eve
1919
Lucy Durr
Frances Glasgow
Mary Brock Mallard
Claire Elliot
Almeda Hutchison
Julia Lake Skinner
Margaret Rowe
Dorothy Thicpen
GoLDiE Ham
Llewellyn Wilburn
Eeizabeth Watkins
Lulu Smith
1920
Elizabeth Allen
Margaret Bland
Lois MacIntyre
JuuA Hagood
Louise Slack
Laura S. Molley
Virginia McLaughlin
Marion McCamey
Anne Houston
Mary Burnett
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
1922
Nell Buchanan
Cama Burgess
Ruth Hall
Oaura Oliver
Lilburne Ivey
Ruth Scandrett
Mary McLellan
Althea Stephens
Ruth Virden
Ethel Ware
Roberta Love
Sarah Till
Elizabeth Wilson
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 Ranson
1924
Beulah Davidson
Mary Greene
Victoria Howie
Carrie Scandrett
D. F. Smith
Polly Stone
Francis Amis
Janice Brown
Nancy Evans
Emmie Ficklin
Frances Gilliland
Barron Hyatt
Wen ON A Peck
1925
Frances Bitzer
Louise Buchanan
Isabel Ferguson
Dorothy Keith
Frances Lincoln
Mary Ann McKinney
Emily Spivey
Mary Wallace Kirk
Elizabeth Cheatham
Margaret Hyatt
Mary Keesler
Martha Lin Manly
Margery Speake
Ellen Walker
Eugenia Thompson
Pocahontas Wight
1926
Virginia Browning
LuoiSA Dues
Ellen Fain
Catherine Grabber
Virginia Peeler
Sarah Slaughter
Margaret Tufts
Leone Bowers
Eloise Harris
Helena Hermance
Florence Perkins
1927
Elsa Jacobsen
Ellen Douglass Leyburn
Carolina McCall
Elizabeth Norfleet
Evalyn Powell
Roberta Winter
Eleanore Alrbight
Maurine Bledsoe
Josephine Bridcman
Elizabeth Clark
Marcia Green
Rachel Henderlite
Elizabeth Lilly
Helen Lewis
Elizabeth Lynn
1928
One Hundred and Fifty-seven
Phi Beta Kappa
CHARTER MEMBERS
Edith Mukiiol Hak>, Ph.D. Goucher, 1915
Cleo Hearon, Ph.D. Chicago. 1914
Robert Bentok Holt, A.B., M.S. Wisconsin, 1901
Lillian Scoresby Smith, Ph.D. Syracuse, 1904
Samuel Guerry Stukes, A.B., M.A.. BO. Davidson, 1923
FOUNDATION MEMBER
James Ross McCain, M.A., Ph.D., LL.D.
ALUMNAE MEMBERS
luA Lee Hill. '06
LizzABEL Saxon, "08
Ruth Marion Wisdom, '09
Margaret McCallik. '09
Lucille Alexander. "11
Mary Wallace Kiuk, "11
IsABELLE Clarke. '26
Louisa Duls. "26
Catherine Grabber. "26
JuANiTA Greer, "26
Nan Lingle, '26
Grace Augusta Ogden, "26
Margaret Whittincton, "26
Susan Clayton
STUDENT MEMBERS
Mary Davis
Miriam Preston
One Hundred and Fijlyeight
L l^'\^^^4'^
One Hundred and Fifty-nine
Rachel Henderlite
Editor
The Silhouette
The SILHOUETTE is part of the jigsaw puzzle of
every year when you fit around it the pieces that are
furnished by your own association, you'll have a pic-
ture from your experience. The SILHOUETTE hopes
merely to furnish some of the materials for you to work
with. And in the same way the Silhouette tries to pre-
serve something of the outward form of our days and
thereby to offer a key a symbol that unlocks gates to
private little paths of memory. When you turn these
pages, if you feel again the warm breath that somehow
persisted in blowing across your days, if your year-
book is at all suggestive of your small pains and "dear
delights," then only will it live.
The Silhouette hopes that it is not entirely unintelli-
gible to those who have not shared the varied doings
and beings it attempts to hold between its covers.
5AVLISS McShane
Manager
One Hundred and Sixty
^m^mm
:Mmm
The 1927 Silhouette Staff
Rachel Henderlite Editor
Elizabeth Grier Assistant Editor
Bayliss McShane Business Manager
Lillian LeConte Assistant Business Manager
Leone Bowers Art Editor
Frances Rainey Photographic Editor
ASSOCL\TE EDITORS
Mamie Shaw Associate Editor
Louise Sydnor Associate Editor
Genevieve Knight Associate Editor
Louise Sherfesee Joke Editor
Josephine Houston Assistant Photographic Editor
LucRETiA Morgan Assistant Art Editor
Josephine Huntley Assistant Art Editor
LiLA Porcher Cartoon Editor
Lillian White
ADVERTISING MANAGERS
Mary Crenshaw
Helen Sisson
i
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One Hundred and Sixty-one
The Agonistic
Frances Buchanan
Editor
You ask me who I am and I shall tell you.
I am published each week by the students of Agnes
Scott College.
I make my appearance on Wednesday afternoon.
I am published by an Editor-in-chief, and controlled
by a Business Manager who have their assistants, and
by a staff whose pictures you see.
I owe my being really, however, to faithful reporters
whose pictures you do not see, but whose work appears
every time I appear.
I try to give the college community and those who arc
interested in me the news of what is happening at this
college, as well as at other colleges.
I am the AGONISTIC.
Elizabeth Clark
Manager
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One Hundred and Si.xty-two
The 1927 Agonistic Staff
Frances Buchanan Editor
Carolyn Es?;ig Assistant Editor
Elizabeth Clark Business Manager
Sarah Johnston Assistant Business Manager
Evelyn Wood Exchange Editor
Elizabeth Merritt Exchange Editor
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Miriam Preston Alumnae Editor
Ruth Worth Athletic Editor
Emilie Ehrlich Society Editor
Louise Sherfesee Joke Editor
Hulda McNeel Circulation Manager
One Hundred and Sixty-three
*:
i
The Aurora
For many years the AURORA has been the literary
medium at Agnes Scott. Its ideals have always been
to publish the best work done by students, to stimulate
efforts along literary lines and interest in the best lit-
erature of all times, and to uphold the highest ideals
in writing. In the AURORA appear representations
of achievements in essay, short story, play and poem,
besides an editorial, a Book Review section and an
Exchange department. While maintaining this balance
the magazine attempts both to present the best efforts
of students and to preserve a high standard of values in
reading and writing. Realizing that even in writing
there is a "happy medium" and that this medium is a
quality of the outstanding literature of the past, there
is in the AURORA, for this reason, a desirable absence
of extremes either in attitude, in subject, or in stvle.
Perhaps because of this tendency towards conservatism.
the AURORA is a more worthy instrument of literary
activity than the ordinary college publication, which
tends to vacillate between the ultra-conservative and the
over modern. Thus it is an excellent demonstration of
the literary life at Agnes Scott.
Roberta Winter
Editor
irW4 !
^mmmmmH^^^c^^v^m^mmi^m^mmMn^m^
One Hundred and Si.xty-foiir
The 1927 Aurora Staff
Roberta Winter Editor
Emily Kingsbery Assistant Editor
Sarah Shields Business Manager
Charlotte Hunter Assistant Business Manager
Mae Erskine Irvine Exchange Editor
Mary Hedrick Circulation Manager
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Susan Clayton Associate Editor
Ella Mae Hollincsworth Associate Editor
Jean Kirk Associate Editor
Katherine Hunter Associate Editor
Mary Riviere 4ssistant Circulation Manager
^^^^^^
lS^ S^jt%^j^^2
One Hundred and Sixty-jiv
One Hundred and Sixty-six
\-.\'^birj.Vx
One Hundred and Sixty-seven
^M^m^m^^mi^
i
Caught by the Cautious Cossack
Presented by the
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Characters and Reputations as they appear and reappear:
The Very Prime Minister, Orrloff Marion Green
The Shameless Shattering Shadovitch . . Josephine Wachtel
Makewun. Healthy Rite-off Genevieve Knight
Watchful W hiteovitch Charlotte Hunter
Her Superior Omnipotence, the Czarina Hopkinski Floyd Schoolfield
Dickovitch Scandrowski, the Dear and the Doubtless Elaine Jacobsen
Ella the Priceless Augusta Roberts
The Freshski Ruth Worth
The Dame of the Doubtful Dilemma Edith McGranahan
Sophomorevitch, Commander-in-Chief of the Costly Cossacks Dade Warfield
Ivanitch Augusta Roberts
\st Sophski Cossack Ruth Mallory
2nd Sohpski Cossack Olive Spenser
3rd Sophski Cossack Helen Ripley
COURT PAINTERS
LaRue Berry Katherine Hunter
Hortense Elton Pernette Adams
Lesa Holifield
1st Elf Florida Richard
2nd Elf Sarah Johnston
Old Soldier Katherine Pasco
Freshski A Girl
Question Jane Grey
l'^-"
^AJk. ^ j-^ - A ^ -- A\-
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'l'^.
?5s
One Hundred and Sixty-eight
File and Comb-Us
Brushed up by
THE FRESHMAN CLASS
In the
Collegiate Jungle of Agnes Scott
BIG GAME. IN THE ORDER OF THEIR KILLING
Comb-Us Sophomore t temporarily at target Helen Respass
Freshman File {temporarily at bay) Raemond Wilson
Mr. Robin (the Square on the hippopotamus) Margaret Armstron'C
Miss Eagle (Psyche on the wing) Mary Tucker
Guardian Angel {Three down and one to go) Elizabeth Reid
Spirit of October the Ninth Polly Irvine
COMB-US ANIMAL
CRACKERS
Dorothy Smith
Helen Hendricks
Isabel Youngblood
Mary Ann Phelps
Belle Ward Stowe
Elizabeth Branch
Myra Jervey
Jean Kennedy
POWDER PUFFS
Mary Cope
BiNFORD Stuart
Polly Irvine
Carolyn Payne
Sara Knox Williams
Virginia Sears
GUARDIAN ANGEL'S
WARBLERS
Pauline Willoughby
Eleanore Bonham
Virginia Earle
Mary Ferol Smith
ZoE Woolford
Marion Martin
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One Hundred and Sixty-nine
^yi^^^
\4r "^
=1
[
Little Girl Day November 1
'-
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:;-"- ^^~-; -'""->-;'/":":; ; _ /V: : ^'v;'-- C-^;-- '
: :'~^..-
One Hundred and Seventy
One Hundred and Seventy-one
Anne of Green Gables
Dramatized by
Miss Frances K. Gooch
Presented by
BLACKFRIARS
Cast of Characters
Anne Shirley Martha Crowe
Gilbert Blythe Roberta Winter
Marilla Cuthbert Janet MacDonald
Mathew Cuthbert Georgia Mae Burns
Mrs. Lynde Mary Riviere
Diana Barry Christine Wolfle
Mrs. Barry Caroline McKinney
Jane Andrews Lillian White
Charlie Sloan Margaret Keith
Josie Pre Lillian LeConte
Fred Wright Bettina Bush
Ruby Gillis Sara White
Mrs. Allen Frances Hargis
Moody Spurgeon MacPherson Sarah Carter
1
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One Hundred and Seventy-two
l^^&gi^
I
Founder s Day, February 22
Rebekah Scott
Elsa Jacobsen
Elizabeth Norfleet
EvALYN Powell
Reba Bayless
Elizabeth Lynn
Eleanore Albright
Margie Wakefield
Roberta Winter
Elizabeth Lilly
CHARACTERS
George If ashington
Martha Washington
Thomas Jefferson
Betsy Ross
Daniel Boone
Benjamin Franklin
Francis Scott Key
Patrick Henry
LaFayette
Inman
Rachel Henderlite
>Lartha Crowe
Jo Bridgman
Louise Bansley
Hllda McNeel
Helen Lewis
Grace Zachry
Frances Chambers
Courtney Wilkinson'
THE MINUET
Elsa Jacobsen
Rachel Henderlite
Elizabeth Norfleet Martha Crowe
Evalyn Powell
Emilie Ehrlich
Elizabeth Clark
Virginia Sevier
w-?
One Hundred and Seventy-three
One Hundred and Seventy-four
Play Writing
Drama is beginning to mean something more at Agnes Scott than just an eve-
ning's entertainment. Through Blackfriars, and for the last two years through the
playwriting class conducted by Miss Nan Stephens, we are taking a definite stand in
the Little Theatre movement encouraging dramatic appreciation among the students
as a whole, as well as dramatic composition among those who feel a greater interest.
This is the second year that Blackfriars has presented a program of four one-act
plays written by the class in play-writing.
TRUMPETS
(Frances Freeborn)
Charlotte Knox Sarah Carter
Dick Richards Margaret Keith
Mrs. Knox Mary Weems
Aunt Kitty Mary Sayward
Mr. Hcndrickson Marion Greene
BLACK MOUNTAIN
(Lillian LeConte)
Charlie Moore Frances Freeborn
Zoie Moore Elizabeth McCallie
Creasy Carver, a neighbor Frances Chambers
Miss Price, the school teacher Marika Johnston
Jasper Moore Georgia Mae Burns
Burtha Duncan Sallie Cothran
TINKER TOYS
(Helen Lewis)
Bobbie Brownlee Isabel McCain
Mr. Brownlee Georgia Mae Burns
Mrs. Brownlee Elizabeth Allgood
Pcron Dohmer Marion Greene
Mary Dohmer Marion Henry
Stanley Dohmer Frank Roberts
BISHOP WHIPPLE'S MEMORIAL
(Roberta Winter)
Miss Louise Roberta Winter
Minna, a colored maid Augusta Roberts
Albert Jones Josephine Wachtel
Miss Laura Josephine Walker
One Hundred and Seventy-five
Nl
The Triangular Intercollegiate Debate
Louisa White
Janet McDonald
Esther Nisbet
Helen Lewis
EvALYN Powell
Frances Craighead
SUBJECT Resolved: That Mexico is justified in Enforcing Her Present Land Laws.
At Agnes Scott
A. S. C.
Esther Nisbet
Louisa White
Evelyn Powell, Alt.
Sophie Neivcomb
Fredeen Beard
Ruby Foster
Kathehine Hardesty, Alt.
THE DEBATERS
Affirmative
Negative
At Randolph-Macon
R. M. C.
Susan Cobbs
Laura Loving
Virginia Krebs, Alt.
Agnes Scott
Helen Lewis
Janet McDonald
Frances Craighead, Alt.
Agnes Scott lost the debate at home and at Randolph-Macon.
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One Hundred and Seventy-six
One Hundred and Seventy-seven
One Hundred and Seventy-eight
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^^SR^^JTT-^^S^^
^ne Hundred and Seventy-nine
One Hundred and Eighty
Acnes Scott Fire Department
One Hundred and Eighty one
Senior Opera Company
Presents
POLLIE'S ARCHIE
(In Two Acts I
CAST
Cherrio (Just a Fruit Vender) Mae Erskine Irvine
Sweeta (All That Her Name Implies) Martha Johnston
Townswoman Martha Crowe
Townsman Elizabeth Lynn
Libretto (Figure Him Out for Yourself I Ellen Douglass Leyburn
Donkey Eleanore Albright
Cameo (The Alamo of the Play I Frances Chambers
Polly (Cameo's Wife and Also Columbine) Carolina McCall
Archie (The Harlequin of the Play and Appropriately in Love with Polly) ....
Evalyn Powell
Crankio (Organ Grinder) Helen Lewis
Monkey Reba Bayless
Count Me Out Georgia Mae Burns
Attendant Caroline McKinney
Countess Chagrin Caroline McKinney
Attendant Marcia Green
Mysterioso Gene Dozier
Townspeople. Corps de Ballet. Maids (who work for the count). Policemen
(the maids' boy friends).
One Hundred and Eighty-two
Sndymion
s
By Evelyn Wood
Scene: A wooded dell on Mt. Latmos in Caria, Greece.
Time : When gods were many and beauty was worshipped.
PART I
It is the hour just before dawn. Darkness in the person of gloomy scarfed
maidens, hovers over the scene. Now Apollo with his chariot of flame rides
through the glen, dispelling dark clouds and bringing dawn to the world. He rides
off and joyous shouts are heard coming from all directions. A troop of little
children come in, and after them comes a procession of maidens, shepherds and
the high priest, all bearing sacrifices, for it is the occasion of a festival to Pan.
Last of all come the hunters with their leader. Endymion. The assembly ranges
itself about the shrine: the priest offers sacrifices, gives prayers and thanks. The
ceremony completed, there is a celebration in which a group of huntsmen try their
skill with bow and arrow, discus, weights and javelins. Endymion's prowess at manly
arts is greatest. At last the festival ends and one by one the people leave.
PART II
The scene is the same glen on another day. Through the woods comes Diana,
goddess of the chase, who calls to her maidens. Together they chase the deer
through the trees and slay some of the beasts. They linger in the woods awhile,
playing the lyre and resting, but finally leave. There remains only Diana, who has
caught a glimpse of the hunter, Endymion, coming through the trees and wishes to
see his valor. She watches from behind a tree as he spies a boar, creeps upon
him and finally gores him. She watches his dance of triumph and falls in love with
him, her usually cold heart being captured at his prowess in the art in which she
herself excels. She slips away through the trees as he throws himself on the ground
to rest. He rests; the day is quickly passing. In the background shepherds go by
with their flocks waving a greeting to Endymion. The dim-scarfed maidens bring
the day to a close. Then stars peep out and night claims the scene. Soft music is
heard and Diana appears to Endymion who gazes on her enraptured. He woos her
but she leaves him, dancing back through the woods.
PART III
The scene is again the wooded dell. Endymion appears, pining for his immor-
tal love, dangerous though he realizes this love to be. The dryads from their trees
and naiads from their streams come to assuage his grief. Still he is unhappy. Pan,
the wood god, sends a band of satyrs, who weave strange spells about him. but he
cannot forget his infatuation. Still yearning, he at last calls on Diana, his love.
She comes in her moon radiance. He is about to embrace her when there is a great
thundering and Mercury appears. The shepherds and maidens rush in at the noise.
Mercury bears the announcement that Jupiter is sending punishment upon Endymion
for his presumption in wooing and yielding to the love of an immortal. Jupiter
will allow him to live and remain forever young, but he must sleep perpetually.
Endymion and Diana are heartsick. Spirits of sleep appear drawing a low-wheeled
chariot covered with drooping poppies. Thereon steps Endymion ; he bids sad
farewell to the moon goddess. When all seems hopeless the spirit of eternal youth,
sent by Jupiter, enters to bring consolation and to triumph over the drearness of
perpetual sleep. Endymion and Diana are comforted. Slowly the procession moves
off, bearing Endymion to a cave on Mt. Latmos, where he sleeps to this day.
One Hundred and Eighty-three
One Hundred and Eighty-jour
MAIDS
Leila Bell
Helon Brown
Sara Carter
Elizabeth Clark
Helen Hendricks
Charlotte Hunter
Catherine Mitchell
Ruth McMillan
Sara Robinson
Martha Worth Rogers
Josephine Walker
Louisa White
One Hundred and Eighty-fit
One Hundred and EighlY-six
i
One Hundred and Eighty seven
One Hundred and Eighty-eight
attletits
.::-'; ^:v;^rv<?-r^r^
Athletics
When one starts to tell what athletics mean at Agnes
Scott, she is faced with telling what means something dif-
ferent to almost every girl. It does not mean intercolle-
giate athletics to any, for Agnes Scott has placed herself
among those colleges whose sports are purely interclass.
This does not mean that interest or excitement is lacking,
as any one who has ever gone to scream herself hoarse for
her class can testify.
Miss WiLBlIRN
Miss Hayimes
To one girl, athletics may mean the thrill that comes
when she chases a swiftly moving hockey ball down a large
field in the haze of a cold autumn afternoon. It may mean
the glad companionship of a long hike when one cooks
one's own supper or buys it at Child's. To another, ath-
letics may mean the joy of competing for a basketball and
the swift passing of the ball. There are those who go to
enjoy the relaxation of a week-end camp with the thought
that this is athletics; perhaps it means the exhilaration that
comes from the dive and the quick race down the swim-
ming pool; perhaps it is the delight of a fast game on the
tennis court.
Athletics at Agnes Scott may mean any one or all of
these to a girl. It is our purpose for this to be true. If
in any small measure it is, too much credit cannot be given
to the members of the Physical Education Department. No
matter how many classes they have had, there is never a
night that finds them too tired to coach a team, advise a
manager, or give suggestions to the Athletic Board. They
are always interested, always enthusiastic, always willing
to help. Athletics and all it means to each one is insep-
arably connected with them.
Miss Sinclair
.^''' i
One Hundred and Ninety-one
Athletic Association
OFFICERS:
EvALYN Powell President
Elizabeth^ Lynn Vice-President
Eleanore Albright Secretary
Gwendolyn McKinnon . . Treasurer
MANAGERS:
Elizabeth Norfleet . . . Hockey Manager
Hilda Kalmon .... Siiimming Manager
Genevieve Knight . . Basketball Manager
Charlotte Hunter .... Track Manager
Virginia Carrier .... Baseball Manager
Ruth Worth Hiking Manager
Eugenia Kirk .... Lost and Found Store
Louise Sydnor Song Leader
Mary Riviere Orchestra Leader
Mary Perkinson Camp Manager
Exali.n I'uuELL, President
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Hockey Field
One Hundred and Ninety-two
One Hundred and Ninety-three
Wearers of the'' A.S.C:'
Eleanore Albright
All-star; Basketball ("24, '25, "26, '27); Swim-
ming ('26); Baseball ('25). Class: Basketball
('24, '25, '26, '27); Swimming ('26, '27);
Hockey ('24, '25, '27). Camp Mgr. ('25).
Swimming Mgr. ('26). Secy, of Athletic Board
('27).
"Jack" Anderson
All-star: Baseball ("26). Class: Basketball
('25. '26, '27); Hockey ("25); Swimming ('25,
'26, "27).
Eugenia Gobere
All-star: Baseball ('25, "26). Class: Basebai:
('25, '26) ; Hockey ('25, '27).
Elizabeth Hudson
All-star: Baseball ('25, '26). Class: Basket-
ball ('25).
Elsa Jacobsen
All-star: Hockey ('27); Tennis Champion
("25, '26). Class: Basketball ("24, '25, '26,
'27); Hockey ('24, '25, '27); Swimming ('24,
"25, '26, '27); Baseball ('24, '25, '26, '27).
Hilda Kalmon
All-star: Swimming ("261. Class: Basketball
('27); Swimming ('25, '26, "27). Swimming
Mgr. ("27).
Kathryn Kalmon
All-star: Swimming ("25. "26).
ming ('25, '26, '27).
Class: Sv
Ife:
One Hundred and Ninety-jo
Wearers of the "A.S.C."
Elizabeth Lynn
All-star: Basketball ('24, '25, '26. '27). Class:
Hockey ('26, '27); Baseball ('26. '271. Fresh-
man Representative Athletic Assn. Basketball
Mgr. ('25). Vice-President of Athletic Board
('27). Treas. of Athletic Board ('26).
Gwendolyn McKinnon
All-star: Hockey ('25, '27); Basketball ('27).
Class: Basketball ('26, '27); Hockey ('25, '27);
Swimming ('25, '26, '27); Baseball ('25, '26,
'27). Hike Mgr. ('26). Treas. of Athletic
Association ('27).
HULDA McNeEL
All-star: Swimming ('24, '25, '26) ; Hockey
('25, "27); Baseball ('26). Class: Hockey ('24,
'25, '27); Swimming ("24. '25, '26, '27); Base-
ball ('24, '25, '26. '27).
Katharine Pasco
All-star: Swimming ('26). Class: Swimming
('26, '27) ; Basketball ('26, '27) ; Baseball ('26) ;
Hockey ('27).
EVALYN Powell
All-star: Basketball ('26, '27); Hockey ('25,
'27); Swimming ('26). Class: Baseball ('24,
'25, '26); Basketball ('24, '25, '26, '27); Hockey
( "24, '25, '27 ) ; Swimming ( '24, '25, '26, '27 ) .
Hockey Mgr. ('25). Song Leader ("26). Presi-
dent of Athletic Board ('27).
Miriam Preston
All-star: Hockey ('27). Class: Hockey ('24.
'25. '27) ; Hike Mgr. ('25).
Virginia Sevier
All-star: Swimming ('24. '25. '26); Hockey
('25, '27). Class: Swimming ("24. '25, "26, '27) ;
Hockey ('24, '25 '27).
All-star: Swimm
('26, '27),
Sarah Southerland
('26). Class: Swimming
One Hundred and Ninety-five
r
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AxjausTJK DuwaAR
m^H.
One Hundred and Ninety-six
^^^ll^^Sfe^^vs
^^^^^Pl
Hockey All Star Team
i
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Elizabeth Norfleet, Manager
Virginia Sevier Center Forward
Caroline Nash Right Inner
HuLDA McNeil Left Inner
Miriam Preston Right Wing
Elizabeth Norfleet
Left Wing
Virginia Carrier
Martha Riley Center Half
Elsa Jacobsen Right Half
EvALYN Powell Left Half
Gwendolyn McKinnon Right Full
Mary Sayward Left Full
Carrington Owen Goal Guard
:m
One Hundred and Ninety-seven
Junior Team
Josephine Walker, Manager
Martha Riley, Captain
Josephine Walker . . . Center Forward
Mary Reviere Right Inner
Elizabeth Grier Left Inner
Miriam Anderson Right Wing
Virginia Carrier Left Wing
Martha Riley Center Halt
Frances Hargis Right Half
Janet McDonald Left Hall
Mary Sayward Right Full
Gwendolyn McKinnon Left Full
Mary Crenshaw ^ , ^
Goal Guard
Eugenia Gobere
Senior Team
Miriam Preston, Manager
Virginia Sevier, Captain
Virginia Sevier Center Fonvard
Emily Erlich Right Inner
Hulda McNeil Left Inner
Miriam Preston Right Wing
Elizabeth Norfleet Left Wing
Evelyn Powell Center Half
Elsa Jacobsen Right Half
Eleanor Albright Left Half
Marjorie Wakefield Right Full
Elizabeth Lynn Left Full
Helen Lewis Goal Guard
One Hundred and Ninety-eight
M
Sophomore Team
Elinore Morgan, Manager and Captain
Genevieve Knight Center Foncard
Ruth Worth Right Inner
Elinore Morgan Lejt Inner
Dade Warfield Right Wing
Sarah Robinson
Lejt n ing
Charlotte Hunter
Katherine Pasco Center Half
Ruth Mallory Right Half
Esther Rice Lejt Half
Dorothy Hutton Right Full
Geraldine Le May Left Full
Mary Nelson Logan Goal Guard
Freshman Team
Myra Jervey, Manager
Margaret Armstrong, Captain
Margaret Armstrong . Center Foruard
Caroline Nash Right Inner
Miriam Kaufman Lejt Inner
Anna Pope Bland Right Wing
Mary Terry Lejt Wing
Mary Trammell Center Halj
Mildred Hutcheson Right Halj
Elizabeth Flinn Lejt Halj
Elizabeth Berry Right Full
Emily Harvfy Lejt Full
Carrington Owfn Goal Guard
'u%
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One Hundred and Ninety-nine
Ci^:^
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U
s
[^
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^
Cheer Leaders
Louise Sydnor
KvALiiN PoWKLL, Srnior
Louise Sydnor, Junior
Eugenia Kirk, Sophomore
Sara Townsend, Freshman
^mi
Two Hundred
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Basketball All Star Team
Genevieve Knicht, Manager
EvALYN Powell Center
Eleanore Albright Side Center
Eleanor Castles ,
forwards
Genevieve Knicht
Elizabeth Lynn _ _
Cuards
Gvfendolyn McKinnon
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Two Hundred and One
Basketball
Junior Team
Elizabeth Grier, Manager
Miriam Anderson, Captain
Leila Anderson Center
Miriam Anderson Side Center
Dorothy Harper
Forwards
Margaret Rice
Gwendolyn McKinnon
Guards
Elizabeth Grier
Senior Team
Mary Weems, Manager
Marian Daniel, Captain
Evalyn Powell Center
Eleanore Albright Side Center
Elsa Jacobsen
Fonvaras
Mary Weems
Marian Daniel
Guards
Elizabeth Lynn
K^^
'^;^^i%y4^>yims^.
Two Hundred and Two
Basketball
^m
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Sophomore Team
Charlotte Huntek, Manager
Katherine Pasco, Captain
Kathebine Pasco Center
Floyd Schoolfield Side Center
Genevieve Knight ....... Forwards
Jean Simms
Guards
Sarah Robinson
Freshman Team
Elizabeth Flinn, Manager
Caroline Nash, Captain
Li>N Moore Center
Martha Shanklin Side Center
Eleanor Castles
Foniards
Caroline Nash
Mildred Hutcheson
Guards
Missouri Woolford
Two Hundred end Three
Charlotte Hunter, Manager
Winners of First Places in Events
Miriam Preston Hop, Step, and Jump Hurdles for Speed
Geraldine LeMay Discus
Emilie Ehrlich Javelin
Elizabeth Hudson Baseball Throw
Elizabeth Grier 65-Yard Dash Hurdles for Form
v'v_^^-/-v - y-y
V i y^\-._j /^y-. j//^--_ ^Ms.^-_?y^
t^
Two Hundred and Four
//^,r//^-/,^-/f^/:_/A
Baseball All-star T^eam
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Virginia Carrier Manager
Margaret Armstrong Catcher
Eleanor Castles Pitcher
Elizabeth Hudson Shortstop
Elizabeth Lynn First Base
Sara Glenn Second Base
Rachel Paxon Third Base
Walterette Arwood Left Field
Ruth Worth Center Field
Augusta Dunbar Right Field
m
m
Two Hundred and Five
Junior Team
Sara Gleinn, Manager
Mary Mackey Hough, Captain
Hilda Kalmon Catcher
Virginia Carrier Pitcher
Mary Mackey Hough First Base
Sara Glenn Second Base
Gwendolyn McKinnon .... Third Base
Elizabeth Hudson Shortstop
Martha Riley Right Field
Margaret Rice Center Field
Frances Harcis Left Field
Senior Team
Willie White Smith, Manager
Elizabeth Lynn, Captain
HuLDA McNeel Catcher
Elizabeth Lynn Pitcher
ExsA Jacobsen first Base
Evelyn Albright Second Base
Mildred Cowan Third Base
Elizabeth Norfleet Shortstop
Willie White Smith Right Field
.Marcia Green Center Field
Louise Bansley Left Field
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Two Hundred and Six
Baseball
Sophomore Team
Elinore Morgan, Manager
Rachel Paxon, Captain
Rlth Mallory Catcher
Ruth Worth Pitcher
Elinore Morgan First Base
Helen Ridley Second Base
Sara Johnston Third Base
Etkel Freeland Shortstop
Katharine Pasco Right Field
Rachel Paxon Center Field
Elizabeth Tyson Left Field
u
Freshman Team
Carrington Owen, Manager
Eleanor Castles, Captain
Margaret Armstrong Catcher
Eleanor Castles Pitcher
Carolyn Nash First Base
Alice Jernican Second Base
Elizabeth Flinn Third Base
Miriam Kaufman Shortstop
Sara Townsend Right Field
.\UGUSTA Dunbar Center Field
Walterette Arwood Left Field
Two Hundred and Seven
i
!'1*?!l
Swimming
All-star Team
Hilda Kalmon, Manager
Mary Mackey Hough
Elsa Jacobsen
Hilda Kalmon
Kathryn Kalmon
Gwendolyn McKinnon
Katharine Pasco
Evalyn Powell
Martha Riley Selman
Virginia Sevier
Sarah Southerland
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Two Hundred and Eight
w
Xu
k
fj
ifeatures
MILDRED MORROW
1
r !'
cftmSTmi woLFi
Mi}st Beautiful
RUTH McMILI
M0$t Attracts
ELIZABETH NORFLEET
Cat est
ROBERTA
'Most Popular
^"-S
^.f^.m .s%
ELSA JACOBSEN
Best AlhRound
SARAH ROBINSON
ELIZABETH CLARK
U (V\^B>-J*>ft.
Two Hundred and Nineteen
PETER PAN
"The Boy who wouldn't grow up."
THE LITTLE MINISTER
"A gleam of color, a gypsy all poorly clad
berries stuck carelessly into her black hair."
a tWig of roman
ALICE-SIT-BY-THE-FIRE
"It's summer done, autumn begun.
A KISS FOR CINDERELLA
" (Little aware that she may have solved the question of the
ages.) Beauty's a grand thing."
QUALITY STREET
"Phoebe of the ringlets."
SENTIMENTAL TOMMY
"Meaning to be whatever kind of boy she seemed most in
need of."
PANTALOONS
"There is nothing that may be said which they can not express
With this leg or that . ... It is the loveliest of all languages and soft
as the fall of snow."
#umor
From a Freshman's Note Book
^<<"\
Mountain range A large cookstove.
Oxygen An eight-sided figure.
Dispel To spell incorrectly.
Frontpiece Headlight on a Ford.
Furlough A fur-bearing animal.
Monomaniac Man with only one wife.
Ascetic An interpretative dance.
Purgatory State of having more than one wife.
"What kind of marks is your daughter getting at college?"
"She got one long one on her left shin where a hockey stick hit her during one
of the games."
The well-dressed college girl doesn't
need much of this world's goods.
Twu Hundred and Twenty-nine
Tk c n (LtUe) a-n d TV O vaJ ([dUJ
Tuo Hundred and Thirty
Gentlemen Prefer:
BLONDES, BRUNETTES, OR WHAT ARE YOU?
Seems strange that the rising generation is seldom up till noon.
Miss Eagleson to class: "We have not much time left, so we'll finish up on
drugs."
I like girls who paint and use plenty of perfume.
I like to see girls eat candy and chew gum.
Girls who spend a lot of time over ice cream sodas and toasted sandwiches ap-
peal to me.
I enjoy seeing girls spend their fathers' money freely.
Girls who are forever needing more stationery on account of their voluminous
correspondence are a big consolation.
And fashionable underclassmen who need flashlights to finish their manicures
are my chief source of delight.
Girls who buy all the latest books and magazines are not to be censured.
Nor do I believe in frowning on girls who buy notebook paper and thumb tacks
in large quantities.
I own a drug store in "little Dec."
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Two Hundred and Thirty-one
m
"Did you know that George Washington, the father of om
country, had an impediment in his speech?"
"Why, no!"
"Yes, he could not tell a lie."
The ambition of the college miss:
To sweep some big Frat man off his
feet.
Tuo Hundred and Thirty-two
Awkard dancer: ''The Charleston
becomes rather monotonous, don't you
think?"
Unlucky girl : '"Well, try jumping
on my other foot a while.
IF FOR AGNES SCOTT
If you are flunking work.
If you are passing work.
If you are high meriting work. Idleness will cause you to lose your "boot-
lick."
If you've made Phi Beta Kappa stop work. You don't have to.
"Is she one of fashion's butter-
flies?"
"Considering the way she goes thru
her clothes, 'Moths' would apply bet-
ter."
Tivo Hundred and Thirty-three
ZV
M:.
DEAr Giddie,
From your letters I THINK you must
lead a FRANtically HECtic life at
COLlege, I mean I ACTually think you
must, but I'm all HOT and BOThered
over this IT question I mean I REAlly ^'O'^
am, because BAYliss McShane says I
have NOT got It and when I asked her
WHAT It REAlly was she said "IT is
that MYSterious thing which makes
girls LEAVE home, and boys FOLlow
them," and I think it's POSItively re-
VOLTing for people to keep TALKing
about it, I mean I ACTually do, and
GEORGE hasn't called me up this
week and I'm getting FRIGHTfully
BITTER about LIFE, when I first met
him I thought he was exCRUciatingly diVINE, and now I simply
LOATHE him I mean he's not ACTually a gentleman, they say he
said "I wonder who's the best looking boy at TECH, and WHY I am?"
and I think that's PoSitively aTROcious and Everything, I mean I
ACTually do, and I'm all HOT and BOThered over it I REALLY am,
and now I've told you ALL the NEWS so I think I ACTually ought to
stop, don't you HONEStly think so and everything?
Aggie
P. S. GEORGE just sent me his FRAT pin and I mean I think I
MUST have IT and DON'T you think it was exCRUciatingly DARling
of him I mean I REALly DO.
Two Hundred and Thirty-jour
00ol.
jv Kt;TI<.i
OwLr htroinc Coins"TCll<jfc
"Tnttli oillm SofViom.rt
l^urxi doun ^ kens
Our hro cVismei jiT"!*.*-!,.
COarJi Grs-GrT!
T'/ cu.f'4.
Ou.r heroin* "f*!!'
tn U6ve !
.-m-Ti '
5j, t Curses ' S-* ^"^
Two Hundred and Thirty-five
Therese Barksdale:
"Is it true that bleach-
ing hair causes insan-
ity?"
Miss Eagleson:
"Well, I know a boy
who is simply crazy
over a blonde."
X* f
Tech: "What's the
trouble between those
two golddiggers?"
Emory : "They've
been jumping each
other's claims."
Two Hundred and Thirty-six
i
THicvGS toe Hcf^P. ABOUT BUT coGvjeR see
Vou. mait. a.n6ttia,r A'f'
T^e'Di*." u.ot m,o<i.'D*r\;n3.
P%. C-/y,^
Ir uouldrir all <\o mllic bo
One .r. Evir^ Bu..li,
'1
The CliocolaTc C-aWe
-(-rorr. Homl.
AK Hi - Rnirtxr <li^!
n-i l>.r- Yo^.- sk.rt
1w l>.r
HtSj Hpk.ns
Juo Hundred mid Thirty-seven
In Conclusion
|T is with a strange mingling of feelings that we
conclude this our task for the year; some anxi-
ety lest it have fallen short of its goal; some
sadness at bidding farewell to a book that has
become like an old friend; and some joy at having finished
what we undertook. Yet we would not consider our pages
complete without a word of thanks and appreciation to the
many who have lent us their talents and inspiration. To all
those who, along a professional line, have made this book
possible, we acknowledge our gratitude; and also to the
Student Body, who have aided us by their cheerful coopera-
tion and sympathy. Especially do we wish to mention Mrs.
Dieckmann and Miss Stone, who were invaluable in their
work on the college and Alumnae section; and Miss Lewis
and Miss McKinney, who gave so unsparingly of their time
and interest in working out the "Fantasy from Barry."
We wonder, as you turn this the last page of the book,
whether you have actually caught a glimpse of the campus
life here at college. For the Alumnae, we hope that it will
bind you more closely to your Alma Mater by bringing her
nearer to you; and for the Student Body, we trust that it
will make to live again for you the happy experiences and
memories of the past year at Agnes Scott.
Two Hundred and Thirty-eight
AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE
Decatur, Georgia
A College for Women
WEAR
\ WRWHT\
FOR^DIES //
On all occasions wear
"Van Right" Triple
Stripe, Full Fashioned,
Chiffon and Service
Weight Silk Hose.
SIZES 8 THRU 10
COLORS
Alesan
Shell Gray
French N
ude Champagne
Grain
Evenglow
Blue Fox
Piping Rock
Beige
Gun Metal
Flesh
Atmosphere
Sunset
Nude
Sandust
Black
Pearl Blush White
The
Hosiery Shoppe
6 Peachtree St.
I
H. G. Lewis Co.
Blanche Marie Shoppe. Grand Bldg.
KING HARDWARE COMPANY
Headquarters for Sporting Goods in the South
ATLANTIC ICE &
COAL COMPANY
Ice, Coal and Cold Storag-e
ATLANTA
Phone Main 1900
DECATUR
Phone Dearborn 0096
Permanent Waving By Seven Men Experts
Bookhammer's Hairdressing Parlors
48 '/2 Whitehall
Biltmore Hotel
1 Ponce de Leon Avenue
Stylish, Exclusive
Models
Paris Millinery
Shop
136 Peachtree Arcade
Atlanta, Georgia
Edwards & Sayward
ARCHITECTS
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
Mr. Rich Says-
Smartness Demands Above All
Correct Hair Bobbing
The Artistic Bob Shoppe
Jacobs Main Store
Balcony
Headquarters in Dixie for Correct
Bobs and Waves
Jacobs' Pharmacy Co.
stores All Over Atlanta
Mail Orders Given Prompt
Attention
P. O. Box 1740
Small boy
called for
a
irink
of
water
at a
soda
fountain.
'Which kind?"
the
soda jerker asked.
The
boy
replied,
"The
kind
that
tastes
like
your
foot's gone
to
sleep, please."
Established 1882
Dobbs & Wey Company
Incorporated
Importers and Dealers of
China, Gassware and Art Goods
57 North Pryor Street
247 Peachtree Street
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
Wedding Presents and Graduation
Gifts
/ictrolas and Radios Victor
and Columbia Records
BAME'S INC.
107 Peachtree St.
Opposite Piedmont Hotel
AGNES SCOTT GIRLS:
KEEP YOUR HAIR AND SCALP
HEALTHY WITH
HARPER TREATMENTS
Phone Ivy 9071 for Appointments
Harper Method Shop
624-5 Forsyth Bldg.
Mrs. Gertrude Combs
TRADE MARK
WEAR RED SEAL SHOES
MADE IN ATLANTA
WORN 'ROUND THE WORLD
ASK FOR THEM
J. K. Orr Shoe Company
H. G. Lewis & Company
70-72 Whitehall Street
Atlanta, Georgia
Ready as never before with Fashion's newest from the Boulevards
and the Avenue Ladies' and Misses' SUITS, COATS
and DRESSES, at Lewis' modest prices
IIG. Lewis Ik Co.
DIAMONDS WATCHES
SILVERWARE
HENRY MUENCH
Platinum Work to Order
63 Peachtree St. ATLANTA, GA.
FROM A FRIEND
Etta Laseter Gift Shop
Handkerchiefs, Handbags,
Hosiery
Jewelry Novelties
5 Alabama St. ATLANTA
HEWEY'S DRUG
STORE
315 E. College St.
"Little-Dec."
Welcomes Old and Neiv Agnes
Scott Girls
SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT
Phone Dearborn 0640
Phone Dearborn 9110
Heed the little
thirsts -big tKirsts
take care of
tKemselves
The little thirst is nature's true
signal, letting you know that the
moisture in your system is about
to run low.
Nature reinforces thirst with taste
and appetite calling for Coca*
Cola.
The Coca-Cola Co., Atlanta, Gsu
I million a day
IT HAD TO BE GOOD TO GET WHERE IT IS
The Atlanta Conservatory of Music
Fall and Summer Sessions
CATALOGUE ON REQUEST
GEORG LINDNER, Director
The collegians were arranging the double quartet.
"Can you sing second bass?" asked the leader.
"Yes, and play it too," replied the freshman.
Compliments of
Ellis Millinery
32 Whitehall Street
ATLANTA, GA.
Youthful Styles
IN
COATS, SUITS AND
FROCKS
At Moderate Prices
^PEACHTREE CARCADE BLOG)
Smartness Without Extravagance
Agnes Scott Girls Want to Meet You
Agnes Scott Girls Want to Greet You
Morning, Evening, Afternoon
PLACE?
SILHOUETTE TEA ROOM!
Prompt Service
Correct Prices
Dunlop's Point Lace
Best, and Bride Rose Flour
Also a full line of high grade Canned
Fruits and Vegetables.
Albright-England Co.
Wholesale Grocers
No. 1 Washington St. Viaduct
Decatur Bank & Trust
Company
Solicits Your Banking
Business
Everything in Commercial
Banking & Trust Dept.
The Magic Sign
Of a Wonderful Time!
THE HOWARD
Is One of the Publix
Theaters
Exquisite
Creations
Feminine
Footwear
It* 25* 9VtoTAlABAM*|
"GOOD SHOES FOR EVERYBODY"
FRED S. STEWART CO.
25 WHITEHALL STREET
A Gentleman: "How did you enjoy Mardi Gras in New Orleans?"
Collegiate: "The best I ever ate."
The Smartest Fashions for the Petite
College Girl
Suits, Coats, Dresses, Millinery and Accessories
THE NEW THINGS FIRST'
Usual charge
courtesies
extended
HeMIRROR^
C^J 46-48 Whitehall
> *^ Reflects Greater Values
BALLARD GLASSES
Walter Ballard Optical Company
Those who already wear Ballard's
Glasses know, and the general pub-
lic is rapidly finding out, that the
nuality, service and style which en-
ters into every pair of our glasses,
repair work, adjustments of frames
and courteous attention to each in-
dividual patient is not always found
elsewhere. Why? Because every
man in our employ is an expert in
his particular work. We are ex-
clusive opticians no side lines of
any kind. Ask the better oculists
and physicians about our reliability,
accuracy and high-class optical
105 Peachtree St. (Clock Sign)
Branch Store, Medical Arts Building
ATLANTA
You II like
OUTH
''The Best Taste in Gifti
Miss Skeen: "It is said that paper can be used effectively in keeping people
warm."
Blanche Miller: "Yes, that's true. I remember a bill of mine that kept me hot
for a month."
See Byck's
DeLuxe Footwear
Second Floor
I. Miller Beautiful
Shoes
BYCK'S
27-29 Whitehall St.
Silvers & Woods
JEWELERS
311-312 Connally Bldg.
Cor. Whitehall and Alabama Sts.
ATLANTA, GA.
American Employers'
Insurance
Company
BOSTON
MASS.
605 Grant
Building
ATLANTA,
GEORGIA
Phones Dearborn 0762-0763
Lawrence's Pharmacy
Your Doctor's Choice
309 East College Ave., Opposite Depot
DECATUR, GA.
WE APPRECIATE YOUR PATRONAGE
Candies, Cakes, Cards and Wayne Knit Hose
Decatur Woman's Exchange
Mrs. Cooper, Manager
Graduating Gifts Flowers
Decatur, Ga. Dearborn 3343 Next to the Post Office
Miss Jackson: ''Tell me what you know about the Caucasian race."
Mary Crenshaw: "I wasn't there. I went to the football game instead."
Marbut- Williams Lumber Company
Laths Cement Hardwood
925-930 Marietta Street
Atlanta, Georgia
J. S. McCauley Company
INCORPORATED
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
ATLANTA, GA.
HATS
of Distinction, Style and Quality at
popular prices at
TIPP MILLINERY
COMPANY
130-132 Peachtree Arcade
A discount of lO*^, fo all Teachers and College
Girls.
GIFTS THAT LAST-
Nat Kaiser and Co.
INCORPORATED
JEWELERS
3 PEACHTREE ST.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
GREEN & MILAM
PRODUCE ROW
Wholesale Dealers in
Fruits, Vegetables, Poultry and Eggs
L.
CHAJAGE
DIXIE'S
LEADING FURRIER
220 Peachtree St.
Exper
t Remodeling Cold
Storage
Compliments of
Dr. S. L. Silverman
H. F. NIX
SHOE REPAIRERS
327 East College Avenue
DECATUR, GEORGIA
Miss Blanche Harris
Dressmaking
Hemstitching
Hemstitching- While You Wait
THE BLANCHE MARIE
SHOPPE
Exclusive Millinery and Hosiery
We specialize in smart hats and hosiery
for the college miss
ALEXANDER'S
WHEI\E QUALITY IS HIGHEI\ THAN PBJCE
STEIN WAY
THE INSTRUMENT OF THE IMMOPJTALS
Phillips Crew
Piano Company
T,stabUshed 1665
Herff-Jones Company
Indiana, Ind.
Your Official
Jeweler
for
SENIOR CLASS RINGS
We Manufacture All Kinds of College
Jewelry, Also Special Orders
63 >Vhitehall St
/^m^A
Grover Megaha
Ernest P. Tomlii
Megahee and Tomlinson
"The Best for Less"
JEWELERS
14 Auburn Avenue
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
PLANTERS SALTED
PEANUTS
Sold Everywhere
PHOTOGRAPHS
Live Forever
We Make
Studio Photographs
Home Portraits
Interior Views
Commercial Work
Copying Old Faded and Treasured Pictures a Specialty
ELLIOTT & LEONARD
231/2 Whitehall St. Atlanta. Georgia
^^
S*^^
/or superior service
C^ in the production
o fine printing
Phone Iv^ 5616
ANNUALS : CATALOGS
PAMPHLETS : BROCHURES
LEAFLETS : PUBLICATIONS
COMMERCIAL PRINTING
Ben^rantin^rtss
Successors to
The BLOSSER-WILLIAMS COMPANY
and the printing department of
JOHNSON-DALLIS COMPANY
128-142 Marietta St. Atlanta. Georgia