Athens State College - Columns Yearbook (Athens, AL)
- Class of 1928
Page 1 of 164
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 164 of the 1928 volume:
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y ?; Athens College Ijibrary A.t.bienR. Alabama •;.Vv%J-.-..... y ' ' -N.. ' ' ii; ; ' - ' ; r ' -v.,,,,,....f,-;,, - ' -■ .. , ,•.•ir il; ..... i,lM4, ' ;««l i- ►••■S ' ' •• ' ■■:■■■W t s y , . ..J , .■• .,.; ' . -«k ..,;-. - • -L i P i It ■■■' ' ' k- ■W fip mm THE MAID OF ATHENS Copyright. 1928. by Eunice Murphy and Marguerite Beeves , N I H m y g niiiiiiicpiiniiiMcpiiiiiiiiicpiiiniiiTg ' he maid €%thens 1928 Published by The Students of Athens College for Athens, Ala. Inlmiiiiinb llllcbl ' ii]!iiibiiiiiiiid.[imiiici:]irTTTln d Itiallllllll hd FOREWORD It is the purpose of the Staff to publish this edition of The Maid of Athens in order to place before the students of Ath- ens College a brief history of the year nineteen hundred twenty- eight. We have tried to include in this book the college activities and to arrange the sections so that in after years when we scan its pages we may find it a book of pleasant memories and may live again the many happy hours we have spent in our Alma Mater. If we have succeeded in ac- complishing this, we do not count our efforts in vain. rd CONTENTS Prologue ADMINISTRATION Act 1 CLASSES Act II ORGANIZATIONS Act III ATHLETICS Act IV FEATURES Act V RRERS ACADEMY Epilogue ALLlMNAE ASSOCIATION 4LLU k Jr 7 1 DEDICATION To Mrs. McCoy, our beloved President, we dedicate the 1928 Maid of Athens. We shall al- ways remember her as an exam- ple of that patient and loving kindness which is characteris- tic of a true Christian. Her personal interest in each girl makes her dearer each year. Our love for her cannot be ex- pressed in words. 1 : L MRS. JAMES H. McCOY President Hmss 1 lllllll lllfdL£ illllHm!! !liJ !!lllcJhlllilH II|l !llllllllldbli PROLOGUE ADMINISTRATION Ifgjgil IcJLgl THSm ig lllEJiallllr A spleiidof falls on Athens Halls, A scene of beauty, a joy forever. MARY COWPER PITTMAN, A.B., A.M. DEAN 17 Maid of Athens ' iii i M i ii i i iii miiirhiiiiiiiiimiiii iii rhliiiiiminiiiiiiirinimiiiiri ii nm i; FACULTY MRS. FRANK M. CHURCH. A.B. University of Illinois. Professor of Home Eco nomics MR. FRANK M. CHURCH Graduate of New England Conservatory : Ober- lin Conservatory : Organ Student of E. E. Glubb and George E. Whiting : two years in Europe with Guilniant, Widro. and Swayne. Professor of Piano Music and Pipe Organ MRS. M. E. BECKETT Graduate of Ntw England Conservatory of Music. Professor of Violin. L. PEARL BOGGS. A.B.. Ph.D. University of Illinois ; University of Hallo ; Honorary Fellow of Cornell University. Professor of Education and Psycho(o( y JESSIE CARR BOURNE. B.S.. A.M. George Peabody College for Teachers. Professor of Home Economics PAUL COOKE. A.B. Birmingham-Southern College. Instructor in English and Journalism LAURA E. DAVIS. A.B.. A.M. University of Alabama. Professor of Latin and Spanish DR. W. J. HAGAN College Physician MRS. ETHEL M. HAGOOD Nurse ALICE HEAP, A.B., A.M. University of Tennessee, Professor of Science FRANCES LeDOYT YEARLEY Graduate. Voice and Piano. Knox Conservatory of Music. Galesburg. Illinois. 1920; Pupil of Madam Hanna Butler, Chicago, Illinois, Voice; Pupil of Isaac Van Grove, Voice, Chicago Mudcal College. 1925. Professor of Voice ;friiinid.iiiniiiiid3iiiiiiMida[ii!im( 18 Maid of Athens ;illllllllllllirTrrriniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiimMiiiiiirhiimiiiiMimniir FACULTY EDWARD GOODRICH. A.B.. A.M. University of Virginia. Professor of History MARY L. HUNT Collins Commercial College, Greenville, Texas. Cominervial Instructor EDWARD G. MACKEY. A.B., Litt.D. Emory University ; Birmingham-Southern Col- lege ; Graduate work, Columbia University. Professor of Sociology and Religious Education MRS. ROBERT H. McCONNELL. B.S. Alabama State College ; Graduate Student. College Dietitian HATTIE MAE PARKER Academic Training. Littleton College ; Louis- berg College : Graduate. Boston School of Expres- sion ; Graduate. Physical Education, Boston School of Expression. Professor of Expression and Physical Education KATHERINE F. PEEBLES, A.B.. A.M. Vanderbilt University : University of Michigan. Professor of French GRACE ROWLAND. B.S. Peabody College for Teachers Instructor in Bible JOSEPHINE STONE, B.S., M.A. George Peabody College for Teachers ; Vander- bilt Universi;:y. Professor of Mathematics MRS. E. K. TURNER New York Art Students ' League; Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Professor of Art NELDA E. WERNEKE Graduate and Postgraduate of De Pauw Uni- versity School of Music ; Pupil of Severin Eisen- berger, Berlin. Germany ; Pupil of Howard Wells. Chicago, and of Madame Melville Liszniewska, Cincinnati. Professor of Piano MRS. ELIZABETH WHEELER. B.A. Hostess. Sanders Hall ;MiiiiiicLiiiniiind:iiiiiiiiiid.iminir 19 Maid of Athens llllTllllllllin MllrhlllllllimilllllllrlnllllllllllMlllllllrMimill limillll 1 jnjor) i hos e is i % iH ' f i ' (, - 5 . 3 jV -. -D (C ?u L C l ;niiiiiid.imminebi[iiniiicbmii![[( 20 m IieJL iI uilll Liiill lllll liaJlal ACT I CLASSES Hi HHiifa ll ' l EL llll J 5 mTTTTIriLgillllllllllllllliiirriidL inin-nTllllllMllllldb U£- SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Marguerite Reeves JiMMiE Fay Whitley Eunice Murphy . Sarah Ormak . . President Vice President . Secretary Treasurer 21 Martha Josephine Ayres, E)iglifih A.B. Emily Neville Member of Phi Si ma Literary Society. Member of Dramatic Club. President of Dramatic Club. Member of Latin Club. Member of French Club. Member of Art Club. Member of Tennessee Club. Member of Cosmopolitan Club. JCVVEL HULCAN Soph. Sister LuciLE Darby, A.B. English Member of Latin Club. Vies President of Latin Club. Member of Phi Si(jma Literar.v Society, Member of Dramatic Club. Member of Glee Club. Member of Tennis Club. Member of French Club. MN Soph. Sister 22 LouNETTE Faust, B.S. Home Economics Secretary and Treasurer of Home Economics Club. Member of Home Economics Club. Vice President of Sigma Delta Literary Society. Vice President of Student Government. President of Student Council. President of Home Economics Club. Member of Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Member of Art Club. Member of Glee Club. Maky Morelock Ethbl Cookg Soph. Sister Soph. Sister Rebekah Fennell, A.B. English President of Dramatic Club, ' 2. ' j. Certificate in Expres.sion, ' 25. Diploma in Expression. ' 26. President of Dramatic Club. ' 26. Vice President of Spanish Club. Sij;ma Delta. ' 25- ' 2H. Art Club, 28. Music Club. ' 25- ' 26. Hiking Captain. Horseback Riding Captain. Swimming Captain. 23 Evelyn Waldrop Annie Myrtle Mason, B.S. Hovie Ecmiomics Member of SiRma Delta Literary Society. Member of Home Economics Club. Member of French Club. Member of Art Club. Verba Simms Soph. Sister Soph. Sister Sarah Eunice Murphy, A.B. Andy Mui ' phy French Member of the Siema Delta Literary Society : Member of the Mathematics Club. ' 2!), ' 2G : Vice President of the Siuma Delta Literary Society, ' 2h : Varsity Basket- ball Team, ' 25. ' 26, ' 27. ' 28 : Captain of the Hasketball Ttam, ' 26 : Treasurer of the SlKma Delta Literary Society, ' 26 ; Member of th Latin Club, ' 26 : Vice President of the Athletic Association, ' 26 : Assistant Editor of The MaII) OP Athens, ' 27 ; Vice President of Le Cercle Francais, ' 27 : RidinB Captain, ' 27 : Editor of The Maid of Athens. ' 28 : President of Le Cercle Francais. ' 28 : Member of the A Club. ' 28 ; Secretary of the Seoior Class, ' 28 : Vice President of the Athletic Asso- ciation. ' 28 : Member of the BirminRham Club, ' 28 ; Member of the Spanish Cluh, ' 28 : Awarded the Sanders Scholarship Medal, ' 25, 26, ' 27. 24 Sarah Mae Orman, B.S., B.M. Mathematics Phi Sigma Literary Society. Glee Club. Class Secretary, ' 25. ' 26. ' 27. Class Treasurer, ' 28. Secretary-Treasurer of Glee Club. ' 2 ' Mathematics Club. ' 2.5. Rhythmic Orchestra, ' 27, ' 28. Erma Webb Mary Scott Soph. Sister Soph. Sister Edna Marguerite Reeves, A.B. Peggy English President oi ' Freshman Class : One of the Brauties of The Maid of Athens, ' 25 : President of Sophomore Class : President ot Latin Club. ' 2G : Cheer Leader of Sophomore Class : College Cheer Leader in Sophomore year; President of Junior Class: Junior Representative of Student Council : Member ot Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 27: President ot Sigma Delta Literary Society; President of Senior Class; Business Manager of The Maid of Athens, ' 28; Senior Representative of Student Council; College Cheer Leader in Senior year; May Queen in ' 28. 25 ■.y „ I ,- Mabel Orb Annie Beadles Sanders, A.B. Bebe Etiglish Member of Mathi ' matics Club. ' 25. Maid of Honor in May Court, ' 25. Member of Sigma Delta Literary Society. Member of Latin Club. Secretary and Treasurer of Latin Club. Mtmber of French Club. Senior Representative of Annual Staff. Sop.bi;S|ster LiLA Wray Sloan, B.S. English Member of Sisma Delta Literary Society. Member of Art Club. Member of Inter-Society Debating Club. Sojih. Sister 26 MKMORiii Gray Holt Mariebeth Tatum, A.B. E}igUsh Secretary of Student Board. ' 27. Vice President of Phi Sigma Literary Society, ' 27. President of Dramatic Club. Member of Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. ' 27. One of the Beauties in The Maid of Athens, ' 27. in Junior year. Senior Class Reporter to the Crow ' s Nest. One of the Beauties in The Maid of Athens, in Senior year. Mary Elizabeth Rutlediie Soph. Sister JiMMiE Fay Whitley, A.B. English Treasurer of Sigma Delta Literary Society. Secretary of Dramatic Club. 26. Member of Mississippi Club. ' 28. Treasurer of Sophomore Class. ' 26 ' . Treasurer of Y. W. C. A. ■. ' Vice President of Senior Class, Mtmber of Mathematics Club, ' 26. 27 Elizabeth Fason Tempie Wynn, B.S. Home Eco7iotnics Member of Phi Sigma Literary Society. Member of Home Economics Club. Treasurer of Y. W. C. A., ' 28. Member of Preachers ' Daughters ' Club. ' 2rt. Member of Art Club. Edith Dunawav Soph. Sister Frances Lucile Yarbrough, B.S. Home E conomics Member of Sigma Delta Literary Society. Member of Home Economics Club. Member of French Club. Member of Ar ' . Club. Sc.ph. Sister 28 Maid of Athens ' iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiri.imiiirMiiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiiiMiiinicbiimiiiiiiiiimiii ' JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Jean McCoy , Oni Allgood IvELLE Hamilton . President Vice President Secretar and Treasurer ;ifiiiiiiLbiiii:imicbiiiiiiindaii[mni; 29 Maid of Athens .m il iiiii iiiiirMiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiirUi iiiirMiiniiniiiiMijf . -T 3fc:;-..;C?y:;4 --:y..--i .. --i: i ' l-VSA ' ttmS ' ' ■JUNIORS Mary Elizabeth Bell Marguerite Phillips Briggs Nena Joe Cantrell Ruth Malone Chew Mary Ellen Cole Ivalee Faust ;niiiiiiLb[iiniiiiiQbi[iiiiMicbiimirii; 30 Maid of Athens .iiiiiiniiiimiiiriniiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiriniiiiimmriiimirhiiMimmimiiiii; JUNIORS Sara Elizabeth Gay Charlyn Godbey Ruby Jane Graham Elise Hall Carona Hargrove Mary Gladys Hughey i thene College I lbrary ;i[[lll[ldj[|||][iiiicbiiiiimirbiimirii 31 Maid of Athens ' iiHTiniiiinimiirhiiiiii iiriiiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiriniiiMr iiiiimiiii ' JUNIORS Nan Allen Jones Julia Exine Lovin Elise Lee McKensie Florence Archer Moore Effie Kathryn Ozley Mabel Ethel Philips liniiiiidjiiiniiiii iiiiMiiir iiimii; ' 32 Maid of Athens ' iiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiicinimiiirMiimiiiiri.iiiiiiiimiiiiiiiid iimiiimiiiiinii JUNIORS Janie Elizabeth Ragan Margaret Ross WiLMA Howard Rice Dorothy Lane Rutland Sarah Riggs Joeffye G. Streater l llllllll d l N l lllllllcblllllllllrNiilllL ' 33 Maid of Athens ' iiiiM i iiii ii niMiirhiiiiiiiiii i niii i i i ri.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriniiiimitamLin; 1 W JUNIORS Evelyn Swift Edith Tays JvLiA Pettus Totherow WiLLA White Pauline Wood BiRTiE Lee WoonROOF TTnii!id.[iinimid.iiiiiiiiiid3iimirir 34 Maid of Athens llllllllllllllllllrlnimillllllllllllllrlnllllllllllllllimirl.limillll lllimill SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS Mary Scott President Lucy Haywood Binford Vice President Janie Elizabeth Fason Secretary |nniiMdjniniiiiidjiiiiiiiiirMiimii; ' 35 Maid of Athens IIIMI II IIMnhlMIIIIMIMII rinllllllll MN,l,lin TTtm SOPHOMORES Cleo Barber Edith Mae Duxaway Dorothy Benagh Catherine Lorene Freeman Alma Bullington LeRuth Glaze Pauline Cagle Bertha Barker Mildred Caldwell Bessie Barker Ethel Cooke Li-tie Mae Eastep TrMiiiid.[iin!iiiid3iiimiiicb[iiiiim; 30 Maid of Athens llllinillllllllllrl.lllllllMllllllllllrIn Illll iirhminiimiiMiiiii SOPHOMORES Memorie Gray Holt Jewel Estelle Hulgan Martha Louise Hummel Margie Isabel Ikard ToMY Lou Levie Mary Lee Madry Nan Eleanor McLellan Emalice McWilhams Mary Louise Morelock Bettie Lou Horton ;friiiiM [iimmid.iimmid3ninirn; 37 Maid of Athens ' .i iiiT m ii i iiii iiiiirhiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiirhiiiiiiiiiiniimii.d iiiiiiiiMiTiiiiii SOPHOMORES Jean Adele Morris Helen Maye Nabors Ella Mae Neill Emily Stuart Neville Mable Claire Orr Evelyn Elizabeth Richards Mary Elizabeth Rutledge Tressie Sims Verda Sims Mildred Caldwell ;rrniiiiLb[iiniiiiiebminiiiLiqiiii!i[[( 38 Maid of Athens iiimiimiiiiiriniiiiiiiniMiiiiiiininiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiirhiiiiiiii miiimiii SOPHOMORES Annie V ade Street Augusta Turner Evelyn McTyre Waldrop Margaret Young Wall Erma Webb Mabel Pearlene Wilcoxson Mary Ruth Young , ' fnill[ldb[imiliiid.iimimrbiiiMirn; 39 Maid of Athens ' i iittii i ii i iiii iiiiirhiiriiiiniiiiiiiiii.:Lniiiiiiiiiimiimiriniiiiiiii nm iiiii; SOPHOMORE CLASS SON( We, the Sophomores of ' 28, Proclaim our loyalty. We ' re the best in the land ; Our class is a band; For right and learning we stand. Rah ! Rah ! We ' re the peppiest c ' ass. Sophomores; We lead Athens College in fun. Our spirit is best of all. Our service is at thy call, O, Athens, mother mine ! Unfurl our glorious colons — Red and White; Lead on our valiant classmates in their delight To love and honor always Alma Mater; We each and evei-y are thy daughters. We ' ll make the old halls ring with laughter bright, l ' ' or we have two more years with you in sight To love and cherish till our caps and gowns Take us from our college grounds. — Evelyn Neill, ' 29. JUNIOR CLASS POEM Three short years of working ' , climbing. Onward, upward toward our goal. Ever seeking, ever striving, Not for greed and not for gold. We have met along the pathway Many hardships, many cares; We have struggled to help others, Seeking always their burdens to share. Nearing the goal — ah, Junior sisters, Looking ahead to another great year. Let us be braver, truer fighters; No time for sorrow, nor for a tear. Let us look back on our failures and victories, Leaving them there with only a word: ' When we have fought and lost, it has been fair; When we have fought and won, we ' ve played it square. Lift our old torch up to its highest; You hear the last call, Carry on! Our records may not all be the finest; There ' s room at the top; Carry on! — Sara Riggs, ' 29. ;rriiiiiid.[iiniiiiicbi[iiiiiiiri.iiimrii ' 40 Maid of Athens ;illllimillllllllrlnlllllllllllllllllllrlnlllllllimillllMlrhlllll!limim!llli; FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS LoRA Lee DeLoacii President Dixie Young Vice President WiLDA Jane Garrison Secretary and Treasurer ' iniiiMc iiiniiiiid iiiiiiiiirMmim; ' 41 Maid of Athens ■i n iiiiiiiii i lll iiiiri,! iiiiiiiiiiiiriniiii mill III! HUM, iiiii mTTnT; FRESHMEN WlLMA AlLEX Elizabeth Berzett Marguerite Almon Mary Augusta Bibb Virginia Ball Virginia F. Caldwell Adelene Barnes Georgia Carter Brooksie Mae Bell Elizabeth Chambers Florine Bell ;rr!iiiiiLb[iiniiiiid.iimimcb[imirir 42 Maid of Athens mil iiiniiiniiiriniMM mill iii,i,i i i ii i rh li n illlliimTTTTir FRESHMEN Ruth Chunn Hazel Cornelius Margaret Clements Elizabeth Davis Gertrude Cleveland Bessie Mae Dawson Rose Coates Edna Eaves Faye Coates Dorothy Cooper Clara Copeland 43 Maid of Athens iiiitiiiiiiiiin mirhiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiirhiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiriniiiiiMi MiTiiii FRESHMEN Margaret Ellis Grace Elizabeth Haley Beatrice Brown Frazer WiLMA Harlow Ruby Gowens Ruth Mae Hayes Opie Lee Gray Pauline Henderson Bertha Gregg Marion D. Hill Dorothy E. Hagoou Floy Haney liriiiiiidjlliniiiii ' i iiiiinii iniimi ' 44 Maid of Athens ll ' I ' lllllimilllrlnlMllimilllllllllrlninTTTTTT FRESHMEN iRGiNiA Hinds Elizabeth Hobart Lucy Rivers Holmes Lillian McAllister JuANiTA Marie Johnson iRcixiA Johnson Mary Turner Kelly Edethan London Gladys Glyn Jenkins Lena E. McGregor Myra Windsor Milford I LA Mae Hudson ;iiMiiiid.iiiimiiid3i[iiiiiiir[.imim; ' 45 Maid of Athens i iiirii i ii imM inirhiiiiiiinMiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiimiimiiriniimii Mmni i FRESHMEN Jane Perry Nicholls ioLA Prince Inez Mabel Oden Rowena Reid Betty Pass Mary Rudisell Adelle Polytixsky Barbara Sarver Mildred Pott Jessie Mae Sandlin Margaret Pride l i i i i ii i idji miM i iicLii i i i in i rhimmil ' 46 Maid of Athens llllllIllllllimirlnlMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIrlnlllllllllllllllllllrbllimilllimimil ' FRESHMEN Catherine Margaret Scott Li la Tays Louise Seibold Esther Loventrice Turner Mary Lou Sentell Mildred Turner Minnie C. Sides Helen Margaret Yarbrough Christine Spearman Grace Roberts Mary Ellis Spotts Gladys E. Officer . ' lllllllldillllllllllci iiiiiiiiirhiiiiim; ' 47 Maid of Athens ' i iii n i i iiiiiii Mmpi-.iiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiimiiiii SPECIAL STUDENTS Mary Ellen Hexders Katherine Ivey Moore Mary Yarbrough Gracia Sanderson ;rTnii!id.[iiiTiinid.iiiiiiiiicb jMMim ' 48 m ra5T]Ti1 E 1 rraar — - ' . -. ■■-V- ' fcETTI mmm. ACT II ii biii; ORGANIZATIONS elJ Igiqi lllt iJil raan rra5mr7i Maid of Athens INI I III! rMiiiiiiiiiM ,.1,11111111111111 rhlliniiiiiinTTTnif Faust . STUDENT COUNCIL . President LOUNETTE Marguerite P lEEVES ' ice President BAN McCoy . . Secreta ry Mary Scott Treasurer LoRA Lee DeLoacii Freshman R( :presentative ;r[niiiicL[iinii|||d3milll[lda[TTTTTTTt 49 Hmn Maid of Athens miiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiimiiiiiirMiiiinnmm MAID OF ATHENS STAFF Eunice Murphy Marguerite Reeves Julia Lovin D ' Jot Streater . Emily Neville . Elise Hall Nan Jones Mildred Caldwell Louise Hummel Charlyn Godbey Evelyn Waldrop Mary Elizabeth Rutledge Florence Moore Dorothy Hagood Jean Morris Elizabeth Morelock . Louise White Annie Beadle Sanders Editor in Chief Business Manager . Assistant Editor Assistant Business Manager Sophomore Editor Junior Editor Sport Editor Sport Editor Art Editor . Art Editor Calendar of Events Editor Joke Editor Organizations Editor Freshman Editor . Poetry Editor . Rivers Academy Representative Rivers Academj ' Representative . Senior Editor 50 Maid of Athens IIIIIIHl ' lllll lllrlnllllllinilllllllllrln-IIIIIIIIIIIIIII IMIrhllllllllimiiniMi; 51 Maid of Athens iiiitmiiiiiim iiiri.il 1 1 iiiniiiiiiiiiirinim mil iMiiiiiiiri.iiiiiiiniiTrm THE CROW ' S NEST STAFF Mabel Claire Orr . Mary Scott .... Annie Wade Street Margaret Ross . Elise Hall Sarah Riggs .... Charlyn Godbey . Effie Osley Mariebeth Tatum Dorothy Lane Rutland Jean Morris .... Myra Milford Ruby Jane Graham Cherie Giers Oni Allgood Mary Turner Kelly Editor . Business Manager Assistant Editor Advertising Manager Religious Activities Editor Social Editor Jokes Editor Sports Editor Senior Class Reporter Junior Class Reporter Sophomore Class Reporter Freshman Class Reporter Exchange Manager Rivers Academy Reporter . Circulation Manager . . sistant Circulation Manager ;nMiiii.: [iinimicbiiiniiiir.biimii[i 52 Maid of Athens iiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiri.inimfiiiiiiiiiiipiniiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiirhmmiiiiiiiiiim 53 Maid of Athens ' l lllTll lH li ni lMllrl.il I I lllimill II lllrlnllllllimnillllllrlnlllllllM l i n i l II I Y. W. C. A. CABINET Julia Lovin Elise Hall Ethel Cooke Tempie Wynn Mary Elizabeth Rutledgk Janie Ragan .... Jean Morris Elizabeth Bell Sara Gay . . Mabel Orr Lounette Faust President ice President Secretary Treasurer Undergraduate Representative Chairman of Program Committee - Chairman of Publicity Committee Chairman of Social Committee Chairman of Music Committee . Chaiiman of Social Service Committee Chairman of World Fellowship Committee 54 Maid of Athens llimillll ' llllrlnlllllllMllllllllllrlnllllllllllll rinl 1 1 ! I I I 1 I I I ITTTTTTTr HOME ECONOMICS CLUB OFFICERS LouNETTE Faust . Edith Tays .... Tressie Sims .... Miss Jessie Carr Bourne . President ' ice President Secretary-Treasurer Sponsor MEMBERS Marguerite Almon Bertha Barker Bessie Barker Georgia Carter Elizabeth Chambers Gertrude Cleveland Edith Dunaway Edna Eaves LuTiE Mae Eastep Elizabeth Fason IvALEE Faust Lounette Faust Beatrice Frazer Ruby Gowens Ivelle Hamilton Floy Haney ' Wilma Harlow Pauline Henderson V irginia Hinds Lucy Rivers Holmes Mae Hudson Bettie Lou Horton Gladys Hughey Jewel Hulgan Virginia Johnson Annie Mason Nan McLellan Elsie Lee McKensie Helen Nabors Inez Oden Effie Ozley Rowena Reid Grace Roberts Louise Seibold Mary Lou Sentell Catherine Scott Mary Scott Verda Sims Tressie Sims Mariebetii Tatum Edith Tays Li la Tays LoVENTRICE TlRNEK Tempie VVy ' nn Julia Totherow Viola Prince Triiii[idbfiiniiMicbi[iiiiiiiri.imnrtr 55 Maid of Athens ' i iiirii i ii i i i ii nnirhimiiiniiiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiimiiiiiirMiiinii i i iiiiiii i ' PHI SIGMA LITERARY SOCIETY OFFICERS Sarah Riggs E fILY Neville . Julia Totherow . Elizabeth Davis ToMv Lou Le ie Miss Lau.ja Davi, VVilma Allen Marguerite Almon Martha Ayres Cleo Barber Adelene Barnes Elizabeth Bell Florime Bell Lucy H. Binford Marguerite Briggs Mildred Caldwell Hazel Cornelius Elizabeth Chambers Ethel Cooke Dorothy Cooper Nena Joe Cantrell Mary Ellen Henders Pauline Cagle Lora Lee DeLoach ME F DITH Dl ' NAXVAY Elizabeth Davis Li ' ciLE Darby Elizabeth Darby P ' lizabeth Kason Ruby Jane Graham Ruth Hayes Gladys Hughey Floy Haney Wii.MA Harlow iRGiNiA Hinds I LA Mae Hudson Jewel Hulgan Louise Hummel Gladys Jenkins Virginia Johnson Iuanita Johnson Nan Iones MBERS ' I ' oMY Lou Levie Julia Lovin Jean Morris Katherine Moore Florence Moore Nan McLellan Jean McCoy Helen Nabors Ella Mae Neill Emily Neville Inez Oden Sarah Orman Mabel Orr Viola Prince Mildred Pott Janie Ragan VVilma Rice . President V ice President . Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms Sponsor Grace Roberts NL rgaret Ross Sarah Riggs Jessie Mae Sandlin Christine Spearman Catherine Scott Louise Seibold Minnie C. Sides Evelyn Swift Mariebeth Tatum Julia Totherow Mildred Turner Evelyn Waldrop Pauline Wood Birtie Lee Woddrooe Tempie Wynn Ruth Vhtng ' iniiiiidaiiiniiiiicLiiiiiiMir dlliimi ' 56 Maid of Athens iiiiniiiiiiniirMiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiriniimiiimiTTTTmf SIGMA DELTA LITERARY SOCIETY Dorothy Rvtland Annie Wade Street Elsie Lee McKensie . Miss Alice Heap Oni Allgood Mary A. Bibb Elizabeth Berzett Dorothy Bexagh Brooksie Bell Virginia Ball Alma Bullington Clara Copeland Gertrude Cleveland Ruth Chunn Virginia Caldwell Rose Coates Faye Coates Margaret Clements Bessie Mae Dawson Edna Eaves Margaret Ellis Lutie Mae Eastep IvALEE Faust LouNETTE Faust OFFICERS MEMBERS I.ORENE Freeman Rebecca Fennel Jane Garrison Bertha Gregg Sara Gay Charlyn Godbey Memorie G. Holt Marion Hill Pauline Henderson IvELLE Hamilton Elise Hall Dorothy Hagood Elizabeth Hobart Corona Hargrove Lucy Rivers Holmes Margie Ikard Mary Turner Kelly Edethen London Eunice Murphy Annie Mason Myra Milford Mary Morelock Mary Madry Lena McGregor Lillian McAllister Emalice McWilliams Jane Nichols Elsie Lee McKensie Gladys Officer Effie Ozley Margaret Pride Betty Pass Ethel Phillips RowENA Reid Evelyn Richards Margaret Reeves Dorothy L. Rutland .Mary Rudisill Mary E. Rutledge Tressie Sims President ice President . Secretary Sponsor Verda Sims Mary Ellis Spotts Mary Lou Sentell Annie Wade Street D ' Jot Streater Mary Scott Barbara Sarver LiLA Wray Sloan Annie B. Sanders Edith Tays Li la Tays LovENTRicE Turner Erma Webb Mabel Wilcoxson Margaret Y. Wall Willa White Dixie Young Frances Yarbrough Helen Yarbrough ;rTriiHidb[iiniiiiid3iiiiiiiiiri3iiimrn; 57 Maid of Athens ' jiiiimiiimmmriniiiiiiiiiiimiiiiirhiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiimiiiii; THE OPERA BOXERS OFFICERS Jean McCoy President Sara Gay Vice President Oni Allgood . . . Treasurer Jean Morris Secretary IvELLE Hamilton Librarian Nan Jones Business Manager Miss Frances LeDoyt Yearley ' Director MEMBERS Oni Allgood Cleo Barber Marguerite Briggs Pauline Cagle Mildred Caldwell Virginia Caldwell Ethel Cooke Clara Copeland Ruth Chunn Lounette Faust Ruth Elliott Jane Garrison Sara Gay Charlyn Godbey Dorothy Hagood Grace Haley Memorie Gray Holt Louise Hummel IvELLE Hamilton Lucy Rivers Holm us Elizabeth Morelock Sarah Orman Marguerite Reeves WiLMA Rice Clara Mae Riley Dorothy L ' . Rutland Catherine Scott Mary ' Scott Gracia Sanderson Tri:ssik Sims Mariebeth Tatum Louise White Mabel Wilcoxson Erma Webb Janie Ragan Margaret Pride Lillian McAllister Annie Wade Street Lora Lee DeLoach Ruby Gowens . ' i[iiii[idb[iiniiiiici.iiiiiiiiir[iimiim ' 58 Maid of Athens IIIII ' llllllllllllrMlllllin iirNiimiiii ' ' ' Hi DRAMATIC CLUB OFFICERS Kmily Xevii.lk I ' rcsidcnl Ruby Jane Graham ice President Evelyn Waldrop . Secretary Rebekah Fenneli, , I reasurer Miss Haitie Mae Pakker MEMBERS Director Opie Lee Gray L RY RUUISILL . L RGUERiTE Reeves Oni Allgood XLabel Orr Evelyn Richards Wilda Jane Garrison Hazel Cornelius Margie Ikard Evelyn Waldrop Adelene Barnes Mary Turner Kelly Isabelle Simmons Pauline Woods Elise Hall D ' Iot Streater ' erda Sims Ruby Jane Graham Lora Lee DeLoach Virginia Caldwell Elizabeth Malone Mariebeth Tatum Bessie Mae Dawson Adelle Polytinskv Jimmy Fay Whitley Rebekah Fennell Nena Joe Cantrell Emily Neville Margaret Pride ;imillldj||iniliiid.iiiiiiiiiri.iiimrn; 59 Maid of Athens lllinimilllll Mllrhlllllllllllllllllllrlnllllllllimillllllrlnimini llllllltll ORCHESTRA Mrs. M. E. Beckett Erma Webb . Conductor Pianist Sara Gay Cl.ARA COPELAND Mabel Wilcoxson Pauline Wood OFFICERS MEMBERS College Orchestra Rosalind Boggs Clara Copeland Mildred Caldwell Rowena Reid Pauline Wood Evelyn McDonald Julia Lovin Harry Allen Carl Richter Pauline Walker Jimmie McCoy Ross Starkey Rhythmic Orchestra Sarah Orman Gracia Sanderson Ruth Elliot Mary Nelle Smith Jane Garrison Virginia Caldwell Mabel Wheeler Clara Mae Riley Minnie C. Sides Mary Yarbrough iLMA Rice I.oRENE Freeman ;fTniiiidb[iiniinicbiimiiiid.iiinirir 60 . President ice President . Secretary Treasurer Maid of Athens ' lllllllllllllllllrlnlllllll II llllrl-iMllTriT iidjiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiii APOLLO ART CLUB OFFICERS Charlyn Godbey Jane Nichols Clara Copeland . Marion Hill Mrs. E. K. Turner . President Vice President Secretary and Treasurer Reporter Sponsor Martha Ayres Cleo Barber Elizabeth Bell Pauline Cagle Mildred Caldwell Ivalee Faust LouNETTE Faust Rebekah Fennell Louise Hummel Florence Moore MEMBERS Marguerite Reeves Evelyn Richards Lila Wray Sloan Evelyn Waldrop Frances Yarbrough Ruth Chew Audrey Beason Clara Copeland Mattie Davison Charly ' n Godbey Marion Hill Jean McCoy Jane Nichols Elizabeth Salmons Mildred Potts Mariebeth Tatum LoRA Lee DeLoach Mildred Turner Irene Patten Mrs. Yearwood 61 Maid of Athens ' i i n T ni iiiiiiri tiiinhiiiiiiiimiimiiiriniiiiiiiiiimiimiriniiiiiiiiiinTTTTTT; LATIN CLUB OFFICERS Dorothy Bexagu President Ethel Phillips Vice PresideiU Annie Beadles Sanders . Secretary ' Barbara Sarver Treasurer Miss Laura Davis MEMBERS Sponsor Oni Allgood Martha Ayres Elizabeth Bell Dorothy Benaugh Memorie Gray Molt Louise Hummel Marion Hill ToMY Lou Levie Ethel Phillips Annie B. Sanders Barbara Sarver Minnie C. Sides Elizabeth Berzett Lucy H. Bin ford Marguerite Briggs Pauline Cagle Julia Lovin Jean McCoy Emalice McWilliams Florence Moore L RGUERITE Reeves Margaret Ross Mariebeth Tatum Mildred Turner Ruth Chew LuciLE Darby LoRA Lee DeLoach Sara Gay Eunice Murphy Ella Mae Neill Emily Neville Margaret oung Wall Ruth Young Mary Rudisill )riiiinLb(iiniiiiiLbi[iiiiiiir. Lllimi| ' G2 Maid of Athens ■miiHiJiiiiiiiii .iiii]rTriimiiiiiirininiiiiii!imi iniri mMii!immMiii SPANISH CLUB OFFICERS Elsie Lee McKensik President Rebekah Fenxell . . Vice President Margaret Ross ... Secretary and Treasurer Aliss LiuRA Davis Sponsor Oni Allcood V Freeman Cleo Barber v Howell Margaret Clements y . chey Virginia Caldwell y Dye Faye Coates y Novelle Rose Coates y Novelle Clara Copeland v Hh.derbrano Rebekah Fennell y Hicdon Gladys Jenkins y Pitchford Mary Turner Kelly y Phillips Mary Madry y Elkins Jean McCoy y Moore Lena McGregor y Johnson Florence Moore y Ivey Mary Morelock y Murphy Janie Ragan y Binford Wilma Rice y Howard Sarah Riggs y Taylor Grace Roberts y Wesson MEMBERS Mary Rudisill y Fendley Dorothy Rutland y Mahan Minnie Sides y Foster Annie Wade Street y McKissack Mary F.llis Spotts y Shelton Julia Totherow y Pettus Helen Yarbrough y Evans Mabel Orr y Taylor Evel yn Waldrop y Williamson D ' Jot Streater y Gargis Mildred Caldwell y Poor Eunice Murphy y Copeland Julia Lovin y Witty Evelyn Richards y Brock Dorothy Benagh Lucy H. Binford y Donnell Emalice McWilliams y Cole M. V. Wall y Griffis Nan Jones Elizabeth Bell Florene Bell Ivalee Faust Elsie Lee McKensie Edith Tays Elizabeth Davis Bessie Mae Dawson Lorene Freeman Jane Garrison Mildred Pott Margaret Ross y Woodward Barbara Sarver y Spain Christine Spearman Erma Webb Mabel Wilcoxson Pauline Wood KniniLbiiiniiiiidaiiiiiiiiicbiiiMirn; 63 Maid of Athens )l l Ml l l ll l li milllrl-.llllllllMlllllllllrlnlllllllllimilllllrlnllllllll l l l M i n LA CERCLE FRANCAIS OFFICERS Eunice Mukphv ... President Ethel Phillips ' icc President Marguerite Briggs Treasurer Sara Gay Secietary Miss Kathkuine V. Peebles Sponsor MEMBERS WiLMA Allen M.vzel Cornkiils M. r M. ukv .Annil H. Sanders Oni Allgood Lora Lee DeLoach Annii: Mason I arbara Sarver Martha Ayres Margaret Ellis Florence Moore M. rv Scott Cleo Barber I.orene Freeman Mary Morelock ' eri)a Sims Bessie Barker Ruby Jane Graham Jean Morris Christine Spearman Adelene Barnes Opik Lee Cray Ki.i.a Mae Weill Mary F.i.i.is Spotts Brooksie M. Bell Dorothy Hagood Family Neville D ' Jot Strfater Elizabeth Bell Grace Haley Jane Nichols Annie Wade Street Elizabeth Berzett Ivelle Hamilton Betty Pass Mariebeth Tatum Mary Augusta Bibb Ruth Hayes Adele Polytinsky Julia Totherow Alma Bullington Marion Hill Margaret Pr-de Frma Webb Pauline Cagle Memorif Gray Holt Janie Ragan Willa White Nena Joe Cantrell Louise Hummel Rovvena Reid Mabel Wilcoxson Ruth Chew Margie Ikard Sarah Riggs Birth: Lee WnnnRooi- Ruth Chunn Nan Allen Jones Wilma Rice Helen Yarbrough Ethel Cooke Iuanita Johnson Margaret Ross Dixie Young Dorothy Cooi-er Tomy Lou Levie Mary Rudisill Ruth Vot-NC Mary Ellfn Cole ;[r[miiLbiiiniimLbiiii!ii!id.[iiiiirn; 6 4 Maid of Athens llll ' lilllimilrlnlllllllMIMIIIIIIIrhlllllllimilllllllrJ mmilllllTTTTTTTT BIRMINGHAM CLUB OFFICERS Marguerite Briggs President 4ary Ellis Spotts . Vice President ouisE White ... - Secretary and Treasurer Miss Hattie Mae Parker MEMBERS Sponsor Katiierine White Mary Elizabeth Rutlkdge Nena Joe Cantrell Clara Mae Riley Charlyn Godbey Sarah Riggs Mabel Claire Orr Marguerite Reeves Eunice Murphy Josephine Brock Ci.EO Barber I5eatrice Frazer Rosamond Harllee ;rr[iii!iLi3[iiniiiiicLiiiiiiiiirbi[imrn; 65 Maid of Athens ;illlTIIIIIimilimrhlllllllllllllllllllrlnllllllimn!llllllrlnlll!IIIMlllllllir T SQUARE CLUB OFFICERS FACULTY Mary Morei.ock President Frances Huffman Vice President Virginia Caldweli Secretary and Treasurer Jane CjArrison Reporter Josephine Stone. _ Jessie Bourne. . Alice Heap Ruth Lassiter. . Frances L. Yeari. -Columbia, Tcnn. - Nashville. Tenn. _ Knoxvillc, Tcnn. _ Nas ' iville, Tenn. Galcsburg, III. MEMBERS Martha Ayres Spring Hill, Tenn. Frankie Brown Murfreesboro, Tenn. Cjladys Hughey _Elkton, Tenn. Elizabeth Morelock Nashville, Tenn. Mary Morlock Nashville, Tenn. France. Huffman Shelby vi lie, Tenn. Juliet Cannon Murfreesboro, Tenn. Frances Salmons Nashville, Tenn . Betsy Salmons. ._, Nashville, Tcnn. Jane Garrison -.Gallatin, Tenn. Katherine Allb right Gallatin, Tcnn. Virginia Caldwell Westmoreland, Tenn. Ruth Elliot Salisbury, Tcnn. WiLLA White Ardmore, Tcnn. ;frninid.iiiniiiiiLbiiiiiiiiirbiiiMinr 66 Maid of Athens ' iiiiiiiiJiiiiimiriTiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiirhiiiiimmiiiiiMirhmiiiiii miiniMi ' HUNTSVILLE CLUB OFFICERS Mildred Caldwell President ixiE Young Vice President Annie Wade Street . OTHER MEMBERS Brooksie Mae Bell Lucy Rivers Holmes Lillian McAllister Clara Copeland Louise Hummel Myra Milford ;iniiiiidbiiiniiMid.iiiiiiiiiriiJi[iim; ' Maid of Athens ' l ll H ll l i m il f lMllrhlllllUmilll rInlllllllllimilllllrlnllllllirTTTm LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE CLUB OFFICERS Nan Jones Mary Ellen Renders Katherine Moore Miss Mary Hunt . President Vice President Secretary and Treasurer Sponsor MEMBERS Lora Lee DeLoacii IvELLE Hamilton Mary Ellen Henders . Nan Jones Florence Moore Katherine Moore . Mildred Pott . . . . Edith Tays .... LiLA Tays . . . . Mildred Turner Jimmy Fay Whitley Miss Mary Hunt Atlanta, Georgia New Albany, Mississippi . Miami, Florida Marfa, Texas Hopewell, Virginia Hopewell, Virginia . Waynesboro, Louisiana . Booneville, Mississippi . Booneville, Mississippi Atlanta, Georgia . Boone ille, .Mississippi Cooper, Texas ;n[iiiMLbniniiiiid3iiiiiiiiid.iMnirir 68 mi ibii E ilE I IcJIjiI rn ian ACT III ATHLETICS n llli g l Idijil IfeJLsill ig wmr [7 Maid of Athens llllll ' lllllllllllrhlllllllMllllllllllrlnlllllllimillimirl.llllllli milimil ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Effie Ozley . Eunice Murphy D ' Jot Streater Miss Hattie Mae Parker OFFICERS . President Vice President Secretary and Treasurer Director , ' niiiiii biiii]iiiiici.iiiiiiiiiriiiiiimi; ' 69 Maid of Athens ' lllMlllllllllll llllrhll Hllllllllll lnllllllllllll nU lllli mTTTll ' HP 1 M ■k 1 JTw jS m i 1 - Umiij CHEER LEADERS Peggy Reeves Sara Gay Mabel Ann Farrington Jean Morris Jot Streater Mary Rudisill 70 Maid of Athens ' iiniiiniiiiiiiiiriniiniii MiiiiiiiiiipiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiridiiiiiiirMMiniiii ' Nan Jones Miss Hattie Mae Parker Miss Mary C. Pittman Effie Ozley Mary Scott THE A CLUB OFFICERS MEMBERS Oni Allgood AIary ' Ellen Renders . President Physical Director Sponsor Eunice Murphy Mabel Wilcoxson ;rniiiiiLbnin!mid3iiiiiiiiirbiiininr 71 Maid of Athens IIII I II I III I I M IIIIrlnlllllliniMlllllllrl lllllllllllMIIM I I rh Il l lllllll ■' ' ' . -y : ' - ' 7Mtf .! ' r,-;M £r Cu r fa 72 Maid of Athens )lllllilJlllllilllcLlll]IIIMIIIIIIIIIIrhlllllllllllMIIIMIrlnllllMIIILiiLim ' WE ' RE IN THE CAVALRY NOW! ] v-g- ES. we are seasoned troopers. One day near the first of October we were calmly enjoying lunch. I F when, after a heavy knock on the table. Miss Parker arose and made this announcement: Good L„ - news, trirls ! Mrs. McCoy has arranp:ed with Captain French for you to enjoy the preat sport of Bnsin horseback riding this year. Ten of you can ko at once. How many of you want to go this after- noon? She sat down amid a storm of applause. Everybody wanted to po that afternoon, but we had to await our turn. Every afternoon (except Sun- day) Captain French and the Sergeant brough t out ten horses, and there were always riders waiting to take the horses. We each asked the Captain, Which horse must I ride ? and. indicating a certain horse. Is this a good one? We always received the same reply: They are all good. I don ' t bring any out here but the good ones. After a few weeks. Miss Parker gava one of her student assistants charge of the horseback riding. Still the riding fever raged, despite the fact that novices stiffly dismounted and declared that they would never again ride a cavalry horse, because they have only three gaits, and walk- ing is too slow, trotting is too jolting, and galloping is too fast. It was really delightful galloping out the Wellswood Road or out one of the highways and cutting through neck of woods. Riding two and two where the road was wide enough, we felt very soldierly, even though the formation was not always regu- lar. Then riding as troopers (single file) through the brilliant autumn woods as the sun was sinking in the West, or splashing through the little streams, gave us the thrill of adventure and romance. November came, with colder weather and approaching winter. The interest in riding paled a little as allowances grew low, and the assistant could hardly find riders for the horses. So a club was formed of those who wished to ride regularly, and a party of ten went twice a week, Monday and Wednesday after- noons. It was after one of these rides that one of the crowned heads of Europe came on our campus in the person of Miss Heap. I can still hear her saying : Whoa, Cannon : whoa ! But Cannon kept on galloping. When Captain French raced up and stopped him suddenly, our Prince of Wales took her tumble over Cannon ' s head. Fortunately she was not hurt, or even frightened, and she gamely remounted. The next week and those following she rode Cannon again. One of these November afternoons seven of the girls were startled to see Captain French hastily give Hal a sharp kick and speedily disappear down the- road for no apparent reason. But the reason was, as the girls discovered when they gained the top of the hill, three certain young ladies who were exceptionally fond of riding fast were far out of sight. Even though these three were the best horsewomen in school. Captain French had become worried, because they had been far ahead for some time, and deemed it neces- sary to pursue them. When he had overtaken them, he found that all was well and that they were just enjoying a little race. Nevertheless, he rebuked them severely, and they promised never to run ahead of the crowd again. December came, and thoughts of Christmas filled the girls and emptiness their purses. The twenty regular riders dwindled to ten. The horses came on Monday afternoons only. It was in this month that one of the girls, a regular rider, attempted to wrench from Miss Heap her title. On the first attempt the horse and rider disagreed suddenly as to which direction they would take ; so their ways parted. The rider, sensing her loss of etjuilibrium. jumped and landed lightly on all fours without even soiling her hands. The next week this pretender to the crown made her second attempt. She was riding Joe, the dearest horse of all, when he became frightened by a dog and bucked, literally pitching his rider from the saddle. The rider was totally unconscious that anything unusual had happened until she landed with a thud on the ground. Joe, who had been trotting, stopped and politely waited for his uninjured rider to remount. We all mourned the sale of — you know, the nag that reminded you of a steam roller. We rejoiced that riding captains. Murphy and Morris, settled the question as to who would ride Dynamite by agreeing to take turns the rest of the year. Ride ' im. Cowboy! Kelley. you staged a rodeo of your own that afternoon you so gallantly rode the colt, but the spectators did not enjoy it any more than you did. No, indeed ! But we admire your courage and horsemanship. Several of the girls became infected with the desire to learn to hurdle. If they saw a measuring worm in the road, they would attempt to hurdle it. They hurdled everything, from ditches to bales of hay, and they succeeded admirably. We have some budding Buffalo Bills among us. An eventful month was December. We were greatly grieved when we learned that riding Captain Caldwell had requested Captain French to discontinue bringing our noble steed, the big black horse, because every time he brought him there was an argument as to who would have the privilege of riding him. January came, bringing colder weather ; and it impossible to beg, bribe, or persuade enough girls to go riding to order the horses. So we did not even see a horse. February came and went as January did. The March wind was lenient, and allowed us one exhilarating ride. In the spring a college girl ' s fancy turns to thoughts of outdoor sports. Riding being first in our hearts, there was a demand for horses every time we went during the showery month of April. Then came the glorious month of May- glorious in many ways. We went regularly once a week over the same roads and paths that we had traversed in the fall. Though everything presented a different aspect, nature was none the less beautiful. The green tr ees were peopled with birds of many colors and many songs. Where dry leaves had been, there were wild flowers. As we rode on those beautiful after- noons, we sang and talked — talked of many things. We talked of how we enjoyed riding this year and how much we appreciated this wonderful opportunity that had been given us. We spoke of what a suc- cessful riding year it had been, as every one had thoroughly enjoyed it and no one- had been hurt. Then we would lapse into silence; and as the May breeze stirred the leaves overhead. I would think of a little bit of a poem I learned several years ago : Leaf again, life again, love again, song again — Yes, my wild little poet. To this I added: And soon home again. Don ' t we know it ! Those who don ' t ride walk, and the roads and highways leading from Athens have taken their toll of college girls ' shoe leather, because the hikers are many and the hikes frequent. — M. L. C, ' 30. 73 Maid of Athens lllinilllllllll llllrhlllllllllMllllllllrlnlllllllllllllllllllrlnllllllll llllllll Above — Riding Club Below — Hiking Club RIDING CLUB CAPTAINS Mary-Ellen Henders Eunice Murphy Jean Morris Mildred Caldwell Effie Ozley Mary Scott Jean McCoy ' JiMMiE Faye Whitley Rebekah Fennell HIKING CLUB CAPTAINS Elizabeth Bell Tempie Wynn Florence Moore Julia Totherow Gladys Hughey Lounette Faust Elise Hall Rebekah Fennell Edith Tays JiMMiE Fay Whitley Sara Gay ' Elsie Lee McKenzie Janie Ragan WiLMA Rice Pauline Wood Ivalee Faust ;ifiiiiiid.iiinimid3iiimiiiri.ii!n!nr 74 Maid of Athens llll lllllMlllllllrlnimilirillllllllllrlnlllllllllllllllllllrblllllllimillllllll . - .k :; ffli:tjw i ii a s;- isas«fei i -i Jti. ' .s iJ U Hii i s iStSBs iy?.? S SS Above — Gymnasium Class Below — Tennis Club ;rrniiiid.[iinimiLbiiiiiiiiir.b[iimnr Maid of Athens ' i iii M i iiii i iii i TnipNiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiminiiimirMiiiiiiiii mTrm; SWIMMING CLUB Mildred Caldwei.i, Jean IMorris Mildred Turner Annie Wade Street THE LIFE GUARDS Captain Lena McGregor P ' rankie Brown Grace Wai.drop Louise Sarver Mattie Davison Rosalind Boggs Elizabeth Morelock ;i[iiiiMcbiiini!i i icb i iii i i ii idaiiiiiLm ' lIlEJhlllllllllMllillllllldL liilllllMllllllllllllcJblllllllllllllllllllllEJblllLl: ACT IV i FEATLRES i q f IIMIlin linl llllllllllll llllllidLsi TTTTF7I dblll T ELECTIONS Long, long ago, when another Athens held sway in an- other land of learning, men believed that the gods selected certain ones to whom they gave care and blessing. We, too, believe that there are those among us who rather truly typify the ideals for which we all strive. Accordingly, the student body has elected the girls who appear in the fol- lowing pages to represent the college types of 1928. Not as the select creatures of far-off marble gods and goddesses, but as daughters of the living principles of beauty, wisdom, and sportsmanship, we present these our chosen types in the Who ' s Who of Athens College. 77 NAN ALLEN JONES BEAUTY JANE PERRY NICHOLS BEAUTY FLORENCE ARCHER MOORE BEAUTY MARGUERITE PHILLIPS BRIGGS BEAUTY MARIEBETH TATUM BEAUTY MARY ELLIS SPOTTS BEAUTY JiiJffiSaSS ' EDNA MARGUERITE REEVES MAY QUEEN Maid of Athens ' iiiiiiniimiiiiiriniiiiMiriiiiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiimiiiii riid inimniiiniiiiii ' 85 Maid of Athens i ri M iiiiiiiiii iiiiirh fU iiiiiMii ,1,1 iii iiiiiii; UT-XLTLn nnr JlJUTJl-J ' 86 Maid of Athens llllHllllimilrlnlllllllMllllllllllrlnllllTTTTn IrlnmimillllTTTTTTTr 87 Maid of Athens iT!iiiiiiiirii!i icii.iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirMiiiiiiirii!i-n b S JI jV Ji GCS- 88 Maid of Athens IIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIri.lllllMflllllllllllplnlllllllimilllllllrli l GIRLS FROM EVERYWHERE Watch those Alabamians catch that L. and N., Bound for every corner of this State we ' re in, Each one with her hat box, pushing Georgians on. While the Virginians grumble and the Texans moan. There goes Mary Ellen from the Sunshine State; She ' s from dear ole Florida. Run, you ' ll be too late! Watch the pennants sparkle on the luggage there; Count Ole Miss among them, see her maidens fair. Big ones, skinny ones, tall ones, girls from everywhere. Girls from Colorado, dark-brown eyes and hair. Tennessee for musicians — can they catch the train? — Virginia grabs her hat box and calls to Pokey Jane. Well, they ' re almost baded, bound for Birmingham. Pack those boxes closer, give that door a slam! Every girl seems happy to be going home. I wonder if we ' ve missed one? Are there any yet to come? Wait there, Mr. Flagman; here ' re some more to go! Load up, Louisiana; don ' t be so awful slow! The engine surges forward with its feminine avoirdupois. Open the doors; stop that train; Boggs goes to Illinois! Down the tracks, ' tis too late, the engine makes the bounds. And the college will be silent — no sweet, girlish sounds. But before the summer ' s over and September ' s here at last. They ' ll all be facing Athens, wishing vacation were past. — Sarah Riggs, ' 29. 89 Maid of Athens ' i iiiTii i i ii i i ii iiiiirhi i n i mmi i m iii rhiiiiii i i i imiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiim iiii i ; CALENDAR OF EVENTS September 14. Opening exercises. Hello! Howdy! Hey, everybody! What did you do this summer? 16. Y. W. C. A. reception. 17. Real work. 19. New students still coming. 23. Faculty recital. 29 to October 7. Spink, spank, spunk! Initiating the Rats. Whoopie! October .5. Organization of the clubs. 7. Sophs doctor Freshmen ' s ills with a camp-fire picnic. 15. Mr. M. H. H. Joachim, from India, lectures. 24. Faculty reception. 28. Our first glimpse of Mrs. Chapman. (More later.) 31. Sh! Hush! Spooks and goblins! Halloween! November 9. Cherniavsky Trio, instrumentalists. 25. Phi Sigma-Sigma Delta debate. 26. Russian Cossack Chorus. 29. Scout dance. December 3. Inter-Society basketball game. 7. Examinations. Our doom! Many new signs unknown to the faculty. 8. Once in a Blue Moon — in Athens and in Huntsville, too. 14. Rah, rah, rah! Basketball Team leaves for tour! 17. Three Hi ' s for Santa Claus! 18 to January 3. Wonder where the gang is now? January 3. School again. What did give you? 7. New Year ' s party. 10. Polly ' s experiences while in Detroit. 15. Guilty conscience? Mr. Sullivan is unable to come to make pictures to-day. I hope none of us are responsible, announced Miss Pittman. 20. Dr. Dorsey speaks. February 13. Phi Signias entertain Sigma Deltas. 17. Phi Sigmas win over the Sigma Deltas in debate. 18. Andy Murphy requests that all faculty members please come dressed the fol- lowing day. 25. Coyote Basketball Team wins over Auburn. 24-26. Student Volunteers meet in Athens College. 26. Tony Sarg Marionettes. March 6. Late hours — not with a date. The.se awful exams! 13. Sudden change in schedule. 15. Our second glimpse of the famous author, Mrs. Katherine Hopkins Chapman. 16. Stunt Night. Faculty loses the cup to Dramatic Club. 16-18. Other glimpses of the famous author. 28. Earnest Hutcheson, pianist. 30. Organ-Voice recital, given by Misses Sara Gay and Sarah Riggs. 31. Miss Murphy announces in chapel: Certain Staff officers and the faculty ad- visor(s) (?), Miss Pittman and I, have made the following nominations for the ' Who ' s Who ' Section. Laughter. Wonder why? April 1. Good night. Annual gone to press and Staff to bed. 90 Maid of Athens imimilllllllllrMlllllllllMlllllllrln 1 1 1 III 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 d lll 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ITTTTTTTr F lvn i M L-t«-f. Athtni eolU ., M tktr itJrJ, WiUt Wf. t d, VoW. I I 5f A p o«Cf ' n Voor Work yrdo W -n -f 1- uoKrS L a hfttne.. ezB t ff Tzs: f=4= TliaT Wt Will Urt tKtt it-j i a? tt itvl r as wc do LoiJI Pthtej Ao ! ! TKe. § lit f s JJJJliJ s iS 5= E m g , ' K ' ' ljnj l iiJj l A ' ] g tko 5 SKoiv.Tkji.ftLnia l ile.t ,de«.r. tK T We a « trof to tK«€ m m m % J  - _ -f T- ;rniiiiiLb[iin!iiiid.iiiiiiiiir.biiimiii 91 Maid of Athens iiimimmii miphiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiriniiiiiiimnTn 92 Maid of Athens IIIIHIIIIIIIIIlrMllI iiiiiiipi.iiiii nimiiiiiiiir iimimiiiirTTTTTT 93 Maid of Athens i ii Mi i ii iiiiii iMiirhiiiiiiiimi i ini ii rhlliiiiiiiiniiimirMiiiiimimTTTTT ' ' - ' g J e 94 Maid of Athens lllllllllllllllJLLLLji- imiiiriiiiiiiiiiipinii iiiiii 1 1 iirbiiiiiiiimimtmi ' JOKES Virginia Caldwell: They giggled when I sat down to the piano; but when I began to play the lessons I learned from the Sure Fire Correspondence School, they laughed out loud. Doctor: Has there been any insanity in your family? Mrs. Church: Well, my husband thinks he ' s boss. Dr. Mackey walked up to a small negro boy who was sitting on the curb trying to eat an exceedingly large watermelon, but who was not making very much headway. Too much watermelon, isn ' t there, Rastus? ' he remarked. Nossuh, boss, responded the small black boy — not enough nigger. Miss Pittman: Who fiddled when Rome burned? Ruth Chunn: Hector. Miss Pittman: No. Ruth: Towser. Miss Pittman: Towser! What do you mean? It was Nero. Ruth: Well, I knew it was samebody with a dog ' s name. CAMPUS ECHOES Has the bell rung? Where ' s Miss Pittman? Is that the breakfast bell? Is the package list up yet? I haven ' t cracked the book. Lets go ts town. I know I passed — out. What ' s on at the show? Did I get a special? Isn ' t Dorothy Lane through eating yet? Martha, look in my box. Is Cleo going to open the store? What are we going to have for dessert? Let ' s dance at the gym. Save your forks for pie. Will the following girls please report to my office ? Sara: Pego ' s bet me fifty cents she ' d have a date with a football man. Dorothy: Well, did she? Sara: Yes, and she gets the half back. Miss Pittman: Who was Homer? Jot: Homer ain ' t a ' who. ' It ' s the ' what ' that made Babe Ruth famous. Professor Goodrich: The window should be opened. [Louder] Miss McWillians, will you open it? Eacie (waking up) : I ' ll open it for four bits. Elsie Lee: Mabel says she thinks I ' m a wit. Mag: Well, she ' s half right. Mary M.: Why did Mr. Cooke fire Mabel? Andy: He sent her for a list of all the men of note in town, and she came back with a list of musicians. Mariebeth stood on the railroad track; the train was coming fast; The train got off the railroad track to let Miss Tatum pass. Dell: What ' s the difference between a mouse and a co-ed? Mary Turner : One harms the cheese, and the other charms the he ' s. PROVERBS Love is like death. It either means heaven or competition. Pretty girls are rushed incessantly; others have hope chests. The hope chest — a relic of the days when a man married for a wife; when marriage was an institution, not a destitution. .iniiiMd.[iiniii iid. i i i i ii Miri lilllim ' 95 Maid of Athens i iiir i i i iiiiiir i iiiichimimmiiMiiiiriniiiiiiimniiiiriiriniMiiiiMi r rrTTTTT ' . THINGS WE ARE NOT SURPRISED AT Peg-gy ' s daily letter from Doug. Birdie Hamilton having ' indigestion. Lora Lee hailing Mr. Cooke. To meet Martha Ayres at the P. O. Wallace ' s invitation to basketball banquet. The Kappa Sig emblems on the campus. Mrs. Beckett announces orchestra practice. The Beauties looking beautiful. Miss Parker ' s frequent visits to Birmingham. Sara ' s special from Barney. Miss Werneke ' s endearing terms. Prunes for lunch. No hot water on Saturday nights. Grits for breakfast. Lila Wray ' s car refusing to be cranked. Beans for dinner. Dr. Boggs has adopted a Son (?). The faculty six on a party. Rat Hill winning the short-story prize. Mary Ellis hungry. THINGS THAT SURPRISE US Elsie Hall getting peeved. Memorie Gray Holt passed in French III. Professor Cooke settling down. Grace Haley closed a door when leaving a room. Mariebeth with her hair up at breakfast. Mildred Caldwell was ready to leave the table with the rest. Mag Briggs reducing. The Prince of Wales still likes to ride horseback. Becea Fennel in a hurry. Mamma can endure separation from her children. Dorothy Lane in a red dress. Sophomores let the co-eds make the highest grade in English. Professor Goodrich speaking in a soft voice. Three Seniors think they can patronize drug stores at night. Margaret Young Wall getting a permanent. Mabel Orr taking a holiday. Myra ' s physical condition permitting breakfast at 7 o ' clock. The Senior Class off their dignity. Dr. Mackey ' s interpretation of The Most Modern Girl. Faye Coates arrived at class on time. Red Richard ' s knowledge of operations. That Emily Neville likes Wordsworth ' s Ode on Intimations of Immorality. JOKES Lives of Seniors all remind us That they have not lived in vain; For although they ' re going to leave us, Their notebooks will still remain. Miss Werneke: What are pauses? Bo : They grow on cats. Clara: He looked terribly silly when he proposed to me. Virginia : No wonder. Look at the silly thing he was doing! When Cupid hits the mark, he usually Mrs. it. Noah was so opposed to gambling that he sat on the deck all day. Miss Bourne: What makes your room- mate look so sad? Mary M.: Well, she believes that ig- norance is bliss, and she is trying to imi- tate a w ise guy. Sara Gay: What would you give for a voice like mine? Miss Yearly: Chloroform. Nan: Mag looks like a million tonite. Jean: I know, but she ' s only nine- teen. ;frMiiiid.[m]imicbiiii!iiiid.ii[nmi 96 Maid of Athens ;iMlllllllllllllllrlnlllllllllllllllllllnlnllllllllinillll[l|d3llIllllllllllimill ' DOWNFALL fi EOPLE wondered — at least, people who had come to shady old Argenta in the past thirty years wondered. Some of the old people in the town understood why the  OB!d old Grosser house, back in the cedars, was so still, so gloomy, that even Betty Grosser, gay little eighteen-year-old butterfly that she was, could nit liven it up, and always sought her pleasures away from home. Those graybeards knew the tragedy in the Grosser family, and the reason for the strange friendship between Betty ' s dignified old father and the taciturn, soured man who, as James Sawyer, had eked out a spiall living there for years by practicing law. Yes, there was certainly something spooky ab ut that old house. School girls were inclined to run past, giggling at their own foolish fears, or else cross to the other side of the street, saying that it made them feel creepy. It was a very respectable brick house, of no particular style, but in keeping with Mr. Henry Grosser ' s high place in the community. The hedges looked moth-eaten, though, and the whole place had an air of sadness; even the shutters sagged on their hinges and the ivy drooped around the door as though it were trying to hide something within. Betty hated the place, especially since her mother had died five years before. When questioned why she seemed to abhor it S3, she said: O, I don ' t know. It ' s just so gloomy and — she laughed nervously — but you couldn ' t budge dad out of the place with dyna- mite. He ' s absolutely as fixed there as that old iron dog that ' s waiting for his master ' s return. The truth was that Betty knew that there was something that preyed on her father ' s mind that he would not tell her, and because she loved him so she was wor- ried. Of course she knew that her mother ' s death and the long decline that preceded it had broken him, and she had vaguely resented that mood in him, and somehow felt, young as she was when it happened, that it had been the cause of her mother ' s death. The whole atmosphere was so opposed to her mother ' s happy, loving, care-free nature that, after years of trying to dispel the gloom and throw sunlight into the darkened rooms of the old house and of her husband ' s heart, she had given up the task. But she had never complained; and when she died, she only looked into Betty ' s eyes and said: Remember that I love you always, and do try to make daddy happy. She was gone, and now there was only Betty to bring sunshine, though there was hardly any one better suited to do just that — Betty, who had always loved laughter, pretty clothes, parties. And now jazz, dancing, and fast automobiles she loved, with now and then a cigarette to settle her nerves, or a drink for excitement, as she said, though she really did it because all the I ' est of the crowd were doing it. The boys termed her a darn good sport, admiring her skill in driving seventy-five miles an hour and efl ' ectively dodging everything — of course, not counting chickens, and pigs, and such things that will get in the way. And then they fell in love with her beauty and charming ways. The girls said that she was adorable, and perfectly precious, and so on, and wondered how much she paid for her clothes. They sometimes became furiously jealous of her over Sam, or Bill, or some one else, but always forgave her and proceeded to invite her to the nexti luncheon, because, like flowers and decorations, she was needed to grace the scene, and then one really couldn ' t stay mad at a girl like Betty. One night Betty came in earlier than usual. She flung her fur coat across the bed and fell on top of it, her fists clenched. She felt that she had come to the crisis, and there was no one to turn to. She was tired, tired — tired of parties, tired of running, chasing pleasures, running to get away from the gloom that seemed to be ruining her home. ' There wasn ' t a car fast enough, not even Bert ' s new LaSalle roadster, that could outrun that gloom. Even Bert had protested at the speed she was going, where- upon she had gotten furious at him for objecting. O, how silly she had been ! Dear Bert, who had told her that he loved her, and whom she knew that she loved better than any one else in the world — yes, even dad — he was so queer. In a few more minutes the new roadster would probably have been over an embankment and she and Bert would have been killed. Yet she had gotten mad when he said: For gosh sakes. Bet, you can ' t keep the speedometer at eighty and keep on this side of the river! O, 97 Maid of Athens ' l llllll l ll l llll ilMlnhllllllllllllll rl- Ill mill Minn iiiiii i ; what was she to do? What was the matter with her? She felt that she wanted to scream and scream until she was hoarse and weak. She suddenly sat up in bed, tense, a peculiar gleam in her eyes. Morphine! That was the solution to her problem. Jean, one of her friends, had taken some once and had described it all vividly. Jean had done it just to see what it would be like and to get a new kick. Surely that would be a new kick, and then she felt she really needed it. Plans formed in Betty ' s quick brain. She would go to Nance for it! She gave an involuntary shudder at the thought of old Nance, who had been a dope fiend for years. O, but she ' d never be like that! It was only for this once. Betty jumped up, put on an old coat, and pulled down her rain hat over her wavy, black hair. She did not even take off her evening dress. With Betty, to think was to act. She slipped out of the house without any trouble, for her father was in the library with the strange Mr. Sawyer. And that is another queer thing, she puzzled. What can they have in common — two men so unlike? One, fine-looking, in spite of his break- ing, showing his once fine physique; and the other, a wizened little man with sparse, red hair, sprinkled with gray, who never has a smile for any one. She was glad that her father seemed to find some pleasure in his company, though they sat for hours and rarely spoke. It was just one more thing that she couldn ' t understand. But Betty did not have time to stop. She walked toward the worst part of town, where tumble-down shacks tottered on the river bank. She wouldn ' t admit to herself that she was frightened, but the shadows were unfriendly. She slipped along quietly, going across the muddy flats, when a dark form loomed ahead, and was all the more terrible because it was shapeless. She half suppressed a scream and turned to run, when at her outcry a head turned toward her, silhouetted against a wavery light from a shack — a head with horns. Betty almost fainted with relief. It was only a cow! Twice she stumbled and almost fell, her foot sinking into the soft ooze; but she finally reached Nance ' s hut. She stepped to the door and called softly: Nance! Some one gruniblingly pushed open the two planks used for a door and peered out. There Nance stood, the embodiment of all that was repulsive and the symbol of womanhood degen- erated to its lowest. For a moment Betty ' s resolution wavered, but she quickly pulled herself together and stepped in. Nance was under the influence of a recent dose, and she grinned, showing two long, discolored teeth protruding over one side of her lower lip. Her face was so shriveled that ;t resembled yellowed leather — rather soiled leather, too. For warmth she wore a long-, brown C5at that almost swept the floor and was stained and frayed on the edges. It looked ridiculous on her small body. Her dress was faded to no particular color, and was very muddy around the hem. She was such a thing as nightmares are made of as she stood grinning. In her hand was a bone she had found in some garbage can, while araund the room lay other refuse from the same source that had furnished meals in the past. Looking at her, Betty wondered if the woman were really human and had a soul. Could anything touch some forgotten chord in her heart and lead her to do a kind act? Was she capable of it, or had she descended so low that she was only a broken body with a fragment of mind still left to control it? Betty wondered. She tried to imagine this woman being kind to something, caring for a child, perhaps, and shuddered at the thought. No! She was not capable of it. Did Betty know, though? Nance looked at her, with the peculiarly wild gleam of a dope fiend in her eyes. Betty spoke nervously. Er — might I get some — she spoke hurriedly, trying not to see all the repulsiveness about her — some dope, you know? Please, I must have it — can you let me have just one shot? Betty was fast turning sick, and was on the psint of fall- ing, when with a screech Nance sprang to her and set her on a box covered with bright posters from a drug-store window. Nance quickly gave her the dose; and as Betty began to revive and the dope to take effect, she talked to Betty. Yes, she squeaked, they try to take me to a ' sylum, but they can ' t get me there. I ' m not long to stay here now, anyway. He, he! Nance rocked in her mirth. Then she sat in thoughtful silence, looking at Betty. To keep Nance from staring at her like that, Betty said: Nance, why on earth don ' t you patch that awful-looking hole in your roof? He, he! laughed Nance, in a cracked voice. Well, whin it ' s raining, I can ' t; so I jest sets in the corner — haven ' t got nothing to get hurt, anyway; and when the sun ' s ;trMiiiid.[iiniiMidamiiiiiidaiiimn( 98 Maid of Athens ;illlllllj|||lliiiirUiniiriniiiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiin[iiiiMiriDinii!iimiiiniiii ' shining, they ain ' t no use. And Betty was positively alarmed. Nance laughed at her own cleverness. Betty ' s courage and spirits now returned, and her head was beginning to whirl with excitement. Her pulses throbbed, and she was ready to dare anything. She rose, placed some money in Nance ' s shriveled hand, and was starting out, when Nance put her hand on Betty ' s own. Betty turned angrily to push her away. Nance said, quietly, pathetically, in quite a sane manner, Be careful, little girl. Don ' t let it get ' cha. I was once like you, and let her go. Betty laughed hysterically and rushed out. Betty ' s brain seethed, and it was no wonder that when a low-slung car stopped beside her as she walked home and a voice from within inquired, Give you a lift? she got in without hesitation. When the figure closed the door for her, she turned and recog- nized the manager of Argenta ' s new hotel. She despised him, though the rest of the crowd had taken him in. His face was too smooth-shaven, his hair too slick, and his manner too suave. He had seemed drawn t: her in spite of her dislike for him. He had asked her for a date the first time he had met her, and hardly ten minutes later. O, yes, a fast worker was Bailey! And he secretly considered himself so. But Betty didn ' t care now. She was supremely happy and wanted excitement. Smiling, Bailey turned toward her, slid his arm across her shoulders, and firmly drew her to him. He never wasted time. She nestled close and smiled up at him. Bailey was surprised and gratified. Never before had she been responsive. It filled him with a feeling of power. Where to, sweetheart? he said. O, it doesn ' t matter really, Betty laughed. 0, then, let ' s go to the devil! and he stepped on the gas. We ' ll go to the Blue Lantern. How about it, little one? O, let ' s do! They have such marvelous music, and — but Betty was interrupted unceremoniously by a kiss, and, instead of pushing him away, she submitted. They soon di-ew up in front of the Blue L antern and ran up the steps. Bailey whirled her away to the mad rhythm of the orchestra. A figure in the owner started when they flashed past, Betty ' s head on Bailey ' s shoulder. The figure was Bert, and with him was Betty ' s friend, Jean, to whom he had gone for solace after Betty ' s out- burst. Jean saw her, too, and realized that something was wrong. That wild light in her eyes startled her. Betty seemed absolutely unconscijus of their presence. Jean gave Bert a quick glance. The little fool! she whispered. Bert, do you realize that Betty isn ' t herself? I believe that I know what is the matter with her, though I never would have expected it. Bert, she won ' t last long. What can we do? The morphine was taking effect. The first sensation had left, and now she was becoming drowsy. When the significance of Jean ' s words came to Bert, he would have dashed in among the dancers and taken Betty away by force, but Jean stopped him. Bert, she said, guardedly — Bert, you can ' t do that. It would only cause a scene. The management would put you out before you could whistle, and the gossip would involve not only you, but Betty. She is safe in here now. You must wait, Bert, if only for her sake. Just then they saw Bailey, his arm around Betty to support her, go out the door. Bert, telling Jean to follow, paid the bill and followed the couple out. He came upon Bailey trying to help Betty into the car. Stop! Bert hissed at Bailey ' s shoulder. Betty sat down suddenly on the running board, and Bert pinioned Bailey ' s arms behind him. Bert ' s football practice served him well, for he quickly laid Bailey, groan- ing, on the ground. In the meantime Jean had come up and was leading Betty to Bert ' s car. Bert saw that Bailey was only stunned; and, getting Betty into the car, he quickly drove off. When they reached Betty ' s home, all the house was still and dark and the wind moan- ing around its corners. Bert picked Betty up in his arms, as he would have done a baby, and he and Jean quietly carried her up to her room. All his love for her swept over him as he laid her down. Suddenly he leaned over and kissed her on her forehead, and then turned and ran down the steps. Betty swore that she would never again take morphine, but after a few days a desire ;iriiiiiidbiiinimicbiiiiiiiii iimim; 99 Maid of Athens iiiiimiiiiiiii iMirhiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiirinim-mi iiin ' iirinimiiiniiTn for it became so verpowei ' ing that a second time she found her way to Nance ' s. And so it went. She drifted down. A thousand times she swore off, only to be forced to it again. One night, driven nearly wild as she realized how the habit was gripping her, with no power to stop, she made her way to Nance ' s shack. She found Nance very near death, for she had been taking larger and larger doses as she clung desperately to life. Scarcely had she stepped inside the door, when a car drew up in front, and three figures jumped out and filed into the door. Betty cringed. It was Bert, her father, and Mr. Sawyer ! Then she flung herself on her father, crying piteously. O, daddy, daddy! You ' ve come too late! It ' s already gotten it ' s grip on me, and I can ' t break loose! Betty! whispered the old woman on the bed, and they turned suddenly to Nance — Betty, I have something to tell you. I couldn ' t bear to see you go on as I have gone. Since the first few doses I have mixed some harmless stuff, and your last potion didn ' t have any dope at all in it. There was a beautiful smile in Nance ' s eyes, and for a moment they lost their wildness. She looked fir.st at Mr. Sawyer, then at Mr. Grosser. I have saved Betty far you, she whispered to Mr. Grosser. She stretched out her hands — one to her sweetheart and one to her brother — and the once lovely Nancy Grosser, the belle of Argenta, passed into her last sleep. After a few moments, Mr. Grosser turned to find Betty, but she had gone. Betty and Bert had slipped out of the door, and the fast roadster was going slowly along a moonlit road. Marion D. Hill, ' .31. :i[llimdilllllllind3llllllllld.irTTTTTT 100 lldLql IieJIjiI rasm H ACT V i ipj i RIVERS ACADEMY ««H)frjwnfc -■tg pii IdLsil lidl l TiMlTTr? w MISS CARRA RUTH LEE, B.S. Principal of Rivers Academy 101 Maid of Athens iii n i ii iiiiiii ininiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiirMiiiiiiMi m TrTTT ' . FACULTY CORNELIA S. RAMOS, A.B. Athens College; Graduate Student, George Peabody College for Teachers. Instiuctor in History and Modern Languages MARY MOSS WELLBORN, A.B. Mississippi State College for Women; Graduate Student, University of Virginia. Instructor i)i Latin MRS. MARY E. SIMMONS, A.B. Athens College; one year Resident Graduate Work, Columbia University Instructor in Mathematics and Science CARRA RUTH LEE, B.S. Athens College; Graduate Student, George Peabody College for Teachers. Instructor in English and Bible ;rrMiiiicL[iiiiiinid.iimiiiid3[iiniri( 102 Maid of Athens llll ' lllllllllllrl.lllllllMllllllllllrlnlllllllllinillllllrhimillimilimill SENIORS 103 Maid of Athens iiiiriiiimiiM mirhiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiiMmiiiiriniiiiiMiiirTTTn SENIORS Kathrvx Allbricht Louise Anderson Ruth Elliot Mabel Ann Farrington Elise Fusch iLbiiiniii!icLi[iiiiiiicbiiii!!ri( 104 Maid of Athens IIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIrl, Illlllllllllrl-, Ill I II I rhlilllllllMITmTnf I I r SENIORS Evelyn Reed Gray Mae Luker Elizabeth Malone Mary Lou Maples Elizabeth Morelock Louise White ;rTniiiiLL[iinimicLiiiiiiiiinb[ii!iiiM; 105 Maid of Athens ' H iirii i iiiiiiii iiiiri-.il 1 1 iiiimmiiiiiriniiii nil mm I miriniiiiiMni rrTTTTTi ' SENIORS Madge Ellen McDonald Margaret Rosenau Elizabeth Salmons Isabelle Simmons Louise White ;rT[iiirid.[iinni]id3mmmcb[iinmi, 106 Maid of Athens iiiii iiiiiimiiriniiiii[iriiiiiiiii!inhiiiiiiiimMiiiiiirbiimiiimiiimiii JUNIORS ;rTmiiidb[iiniimd3iiiiiiiiiLiqiiiiiii[( 107 Maid of Athens llHlllllllllll lHlrhlllllllimilllllllrlnllllllllllllllimirlnllllllli millll Rosalind Boggs Juliet Cannon Rosamond Harllee Louise Johnston JUNIOR CLASS Catherine Martin KiTTYE Belle McCormick Clara Mae Riley Frances Salmons Mary elle Smith Gladys Swafford Katherine White Josephine Brock ;friiiiiiLb[iimiMid.miniiiLbiimi!ii ' 108 Maid of Athens mHllllllllMlrlnlllll ll ' llllrl.MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIr hnilMlimillTTTTTr SOPHOMORES ;iiiiinidjiiiniiiii iiiiiiiiiruimiLm ' 109 Maid of Athens ) |II M I II III I I II|nich[llll[linillllllllrlnlllllllllimilllllrl-.IIIIIIIMi rTTTTTTr SOPHOMORE CLASS Audrey Beason Frankie Brown Cherie Giers Virginia Grasse Louise Sarver ;rriiiiiiLbiiinii|]|d3lll]lllllLb[lini[H no Maid of Athens iiiiii ' DiiiiiiiiiriniiiiiMriiMMiiiiipMiimiimi iirbiiimiiiiirrrTTmr j ,t — y( — i , r if(j FRESHMEN ;[r[iiiiiLb[iinimid.iiiiiiiiirbLijiim; 111 Maid of Athens llllTMIHimmitlrl-,lllllllllllllllllllrlnlllllllllllllllllllrlnlllllllini i m il l FRESHMAN CLASS LuELLA Chambers Martha Hightower Mary Miller Mattie Davison Joe Mae Humphries Pauline Walker Carolyn Frye Nellie James Nancy Malone Bessie Garrett Ball Anne Blythe Kirkland Grace Waldrop Zuleika Glaze Sadie Lawson Hyacinth Hicks Annie Frances Hightower Mildred Maples Maurice Officer ;nimiidj|iiiiiini iiimiii iiimrii; 112 Maid of Athens IllllmilllllllllrUlllll iiNiiininiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiir htiimiimiirTTTnr ORGANIZATIONS ;fr!iii[icb[iii]iiiiicLiiiiiiiiirLiiiin!rii 113 Maid of Athens i iitTii im iiii M iiirhiiiiiiiUMiiiiiiiirhiiiiiiiiiiniiimiriniiiiiiimnii IRVING LITERARY SOCIETY OFFICERS Evelyn Reed Gray Ruth Elliot .... Elizabeth Morelock . Misses Lee and Wellborn . President Vice President Secretary and Treasurer Sponsors Gladys Swafford .Madge Ellen McDonald Margaret Rosenau Evelyn Carter Catherine Martin Katherine Allbright Elizabeth Salmons Isabel Simmons MEMBERS Frankie Brown Louise Sarver KiTTYE Belle McCormick Grace Waldrop Rosamond Harllee Luella Chambers Carolyn Frye ZuLiEKA Glaze Anna Frances Hightower Joe Mae Humphries Ann Blythe Kirkland Nancy Malone Mary Miller Pauline Walker in 114 Maid of Athens l l lll l l l l l ini l ll l rlnl l lllllM llllllllllrlnlllllllimilllinirhllllllllirTTTTTTTnr HARRIS LITERARY SOCIETY OFFICERS Mable Ann Farrington . Frances Salmons .... Mabel Wheeler Mrs. Simmons and Miss Ramos . President Vice President Secretary and Treasurer Sponsors Mary Lou Maples Elise Fusch Clara Mae Riley Cherie Giers .Audrey Beason Elizabeth Malone Ruby Rogers Louise Anderson MEMBERS Mary Nelle Smith Louise White Rosalind Boggs May Lusker Virginia Grasse Kathryn White Juliet Cannon Louise Johnson Mattie Davison Bessie Garrett Hyacinth Hicks Martha Hightower Nellie James Sadie Lawson Mildred Maples Maurice Officer ;friiii!id.(iinimid.ii!iiiiiicbii!Mi[[i 115 Maid of Athens ' i ii!T Mi ii!i i ii iimrhiiiiiiiini i im ii irii ii m i in i ni]iiiiiriniiiiiMMn i ni ii i ; BASKETBALL TEAM Elizabeth Morelock Forward Clara Mae Riley Forward Mabel Wheeler Center Ruth Elliot Running Center Rosalind Boggs Guard Katherine White Guard Katherine Allbright Guard ' rTniwicbdiniimdjmillllldjnTTTTTTt lie Maid of Athens iiiii ' iiiiiiiiiiiiriniiiiinniiiiiiiiiini.i iiiiiiimiiiiiMicbiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiir Mabel Ann Farrincton Louise Anderson Louise White Miss Cornelia Ramos D. D. D. CLUB OFFICERS . President Vice President Secretary and Treasurer Sponsor Katherine White Rosamond Harllee Elizabeth Morelock MEMBERS Elizabeth Salmons Frances Salmons Clara Mae Riley Cherie Giers Frances Brown ldblimimidj|iiiiniia.iii[i!r i 117 Maid of Athens nimiiiiiini iiiiriniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirhiiiiiiimmimiiri.iiiiiiii niinii Above — Tennis Club Below — Horseback Riders ' Club ;rrniiiid.iiin!!|iidjmillllld3[nTTTTn: 118 Maid of Athens ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirNiiiiiiiimMiiiMirhiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiir Above — Hiking Club Below — Scouts ,iniiiMdb[iinimid.iiimiiirLiiiiiLm; 119 Maid of Athens ' lllHlllllllim MllrlnlllllllllllllllllllrlnllllllimnnillllrlnlllllMirrm RESUME OF ACADEMY ORGANIZATIONS X N RIVERS ACADEMY we go side by side in our athletics, clubs, and organizations with the college. There are two literary societies, the Irving and the Harris. The meetings are held bimonthly. Debates and other interesting features are held throughout the year. We think that we have one of the finest basketball teams ever. They are noted for their fair play and quickness. Many intere.sting games are held with out-of-town teams. The Academy boosters are ever ready with their pep and yells. The Tennis Club is composed of all who play tennis. At the end of the year an interesting tournament is held. The Swimming Club is one of the most enjoyable to the Academy girls. It must be because we have so many good swimmers. At one of the swim- ming contests the Academy came out victorious. Horseback riding is enjoyed by all, and the girls may be seen galloping over the country lanes on many a day when the weather is fair. Last, but by no means least, comes the Scouts. Every girl who wishes a good time is taken into this organization. We go on outings of all kinds ; and when the weather is good, we go to the Boy Scout camp on Elk River to spend the night. We are a wide-awake bunch of girls, who like both work and play. L. White, ' 29. Irmiiiicbiiinniiidjlllllllllxkinmni ' 120 Maid of Athens iiiniiiiiiiiiiirMiiiinniiiiiiiiiiri.Miiiiiimiiiiiiiid imiiiiiiiimiiiii o 5Jt - O h I o r c (oea • ' o- ' - A ;tMiiiiiL [iinimid.iiiiiiiiirbiiiiiirii 121 Maid of Athens iiiiriiiimiiiiiiii iiiiiiinmiiiiiiiriniiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiriniiiiiiinimni 122 Maid of Athens IlllllHllllllllllrlnini iiniiiirhiiiii iiimMiiiiiirhiimmiiiirTTTTTir 123 Maid of Athens JOKES Miss Lee: Mabel Ann, what is an allegory? Ann: A prehistoric animal. Evelyn Reed: I pulled a dumb one last night. Elise: What? Evelyn Reed: I asked Sid vi here he got that terrible tie he had on, and he informed me I gave it to him last Christmas. Here ' s to the teachers! Long may they live, Even as long as the lessons they give. Joe Brock: Who was Booker T. Washington? Clara Mae: It was George Washington ' s father. Joe Brock: H-m, I didn ' t think you ' d know. Mrs. Simmons: Name a liquid that won ' t freeze. Katherine Martin : Hot water. Frankie: I ' m sorry you ' re glad I ' m mad at you. Juliet: And I ' m glad you ' re sorry I ' m glad. Nellie James: 0, Pauline, I just saw Lindbergh go by! Pauline: 0, yeah! When did he swim the channel? Porter: Do you all wish to sleep head first or feet first? Kat. White : I prefer to take all of my sleep at once. Miss Lee: Stop pounding that typewriter! You ' ll drive me crazy. Ann: Well, if a girl can ' t typewrite in her own room, then I ' d like to know if a girl ' s room is her palace. Miss Lee: Yes, but who wants to typewrite in a palace? Lib Morelock: I lose all of my handkerchiefs playing the piano. Louise Anderson: That ' s where I get all of mine. Miss Ramos: Rosamond, what is a nature poet? Rosamond: One that is born that way. IrniinicLiiiniiiiidaiiiiiiiiiriniiimm; 124 En jm Y E M3iV iidbiin Ip I EPILOGUE Alumiiae Association ipiii IipJIjiI ll lll ldbil lll tg [ i 5t Wn1 Maid of Athens ' llllllLlllllllllllrhllllMirilMlllllllnlnlllllllimillllllld lllllllimiTTTTTTTf LOCAL CHAPTER OF THE ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION OFFICERS Mrs. James E. Horton, Jr President Mrs. R. H. Richardson, Jr First Vice President Mrs. Jack Grey ■Second Vice President Mrs. Winston Garth Third Vice President Mrs. Laura Chandler Treasurer A ' Irs. Edward Goodrich Recording Secretary Mrs. T. B. CoFFMAN Corresponding Secretary Miss Sarah .Malone ... Historian MEMBERS Mrs. Ada Mae Crutcher Mrs. Grady Davis Mrs. James E. Horton, Jr. Mrs. Earnest Hines Mrs. Mary .Vnderson Lecg Miss Sarah Malone Miss Martha Williams Miss Sarah Bandy Mrs. L. C. Hightower Miss Macca Martin Mrs. M. Hoffman Mrs. Winston Garth Mrs. William Tillman Mrs. R. H. Richardson, Jr. .Mrs. Homer French Mrs. Florry Turntine Mrs. Edward Goodrich Mrs. W. H. Nelson Mrs. Walter Wilson .Mrs. Opie Clements Gilbert Miss Ozie York Mrs. Ben Pettus Mrs. George Wood Miss Lula Hatchett Mrs. Thomas Izard Mrs. A. D. Carter Mrs. W. P. Horton Miss Lucile Grissom Mrs. Jack Grey Mrs. Laura Chandler Miss Clara Nolen Mrs. Joe Sarver Mrs. T. B. Coffman Mrs. Luther Glaze Mrs. Tom Eubank Miss Mary Martin Mrs. W. G. Martin .Mrs. W. W. Simmons Miss Jennie Yarbrough Mrs. Anne Berey The oldest living alumna of Athens College, who attended school in Athens in 1853. She is now enjoying excellent health at her home in Uniontown, Ky. 125 Maid of Athens ' i iiiTii ii i i iiii iiiiinhiiiiiiiiiiiiii ii i i irh ll lllimimi i n i lriniimiMMir TrmT; THE ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION IHE alumnae Association of Athens College, which is a very active or- ganization, is always ready to back the college in all of its undertak- ings. It is a very important agency in the development of the college. The local chapter of the Athens College Alumnse Association has held its monthly meetings on the first Tuesday of every month in the main recep- tion room of Founder ' s Hall. During the current school year extensive plans have been made to complete payment on the large pipe organ which this association chapter presented to the college four years ago. Their activities have included rummage sales, oyster and turkey dinners, Kiwanis meals, sponsoring the picture, The Fool, Birmingham-Southern Glee Club, a Christmas seals book, and an operetta. Something over a thou- sand dollars has resulted from these untiring efforts, and the total indebt- edness of the chapter has been cared for. Another evidence of their generosity is found in the prize of twenty dollars in gold given to the best music student at the close of the school year. Pledges to the endowment campaign of this college greatly facili- tated the local total. The chapter was divided into groups, which can- vassed the business section of Athens. Personal subscriptions and letters to friends who were interested supplemented the total. ;rTr]ii!id.iiii]Miud3ni]iiiiici._iim_im 126 Maid of Athens ;illlllllllllllllllrUllllinrillllllllllnlnlllllllllllllllllllrbllimillllllllllll - noniiinioiininnDii] - We Patronize Those ze us 127 IiiinrHiltMinMiuMnriiiuiiinMiiiMniiiiiMiiuMiniiiiMMiiMiiiiiiiiiiniriiiiriiirriiiiiiiirMiiriiiiMiitMiiNiiiMinMiiiiiiiiniitniHiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiintiiiitiniriiHiiiiMiiii HIGH IDEALS Young Ladies: Wc congratulate you on your good fortune in being stu- dents of Athens College for Young Women. You have chosen a school of high ideals. Wc. too. have high ideals and have enjoyed ?1 years of uninterrupted prosperity. Our business has grown from practically nothing to the largest department store between Nashville and Birmingham, and Chattanooga and Memphis. Won ' t you give us the pleasure of showii. you through our modern store. ' You will enjoy the displays of fine Ready-to-Wear. Mil- linery. Silk Underwear. Hosiery and Beautiful Shoes. The things you find in an up-to-date, big city store arc sold here at a saving of 25 ' . We will be delighted to have you as our guest. Cordially, og,ers department Store One Price FLORENCE. ALABAMA T. M. and B. A. Rogers Plain Figures riiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiriiiitiiiiniiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' itiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiti iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiliirtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiTiiirtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiniiitiiiiMiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiuiiiiriiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiniiiitiiiiiiiiriiiiMiitiiiiiiiiniiiniiitiiiiiiiKiiiiriiniiiiMiiiiiiiniiiiriiiriiiiri I G lfter Graduation, Tlien What? I SOME MARRY — and when they do, the wise 1 girl insists on hving where she can get Electric I Service from the — I c llaLama ower Compan} Safety Service [5 iiiiiiiiiniiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiniiiniiiiMiiiiiiniiiiiiiiii iiMiiiiiiniiiitiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiPiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiPiiiriiiiiiiiiniiiiMr; jiiriiiirniiiiiiiitiiiriiiiitiiiiMiiuiiirMiiriiiniiiiMiiniiiriiiiriiiitiiiniiiMiiitniHiiiiriiiniiiiMiitiiii Mill Mil MiiitiiitriiiMiiitMiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiUMiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiltiiiiiiiiriiiii Mill iiiiuiiiriiii I King ' s enlarged and better store makes Florence a still | I better place to shop. i = 3 = 3 I H. P. Kin Company | I FLORENCE ALABAMA I nlllUIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllUIIINIIMIIIIIIIIinilllllllllllMIIMIIIMIIMIIIinillHIIIIIIItlllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIII Thomas Catlyle said iiiiiiimjiii jjn niiiiimiiriini miimiii MijiMiiiMiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiimiirui i ■All lliat iii mkln.l lias done, Ihoiiiilil. ealni ' d ur l.ei-u, is lylns iis in maBi - inesenatlon in the - E pages or books. They are the chosen possession ol jnen ,■o ■i i I A Certificate of Membersfyip in Mirns ■Company Provides E 1st. That Ihlrly-sis books will be sent to you, one each month for thlrly-slx months = = 2n;l. That you can eet through Mlms Company any book that any publisher has In stork at = E cost, plus postage. 5 E 3rd. That for three years you will share in the iirnhls made hy Jflms Company just as though E = you owned stock in the corpor ation. = E BOOK PUBLISHERS E i MIMS « COMPANY I MUSCLE SHOALS. COLBERT COUNTY. ALABAMA I I ADVISORY BOARD I = Helen Keller. Marie ISankhead Owen, Maud Lindsay, Thomas Dixon. Jr., S. S. Minis .Tulia Talt Shearon I Katharine Hopkins Chapman, M.iry .Mims. Alice Alison Lide e ' ' iiii uiinniiiiiin iiiiiuiiiuiinMuniiniiiriiiniiii iiiimiimi iiiMiimiii niiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiniiinMiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiif iiiiiiniiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiinniniinMiniiiniiiiiiiniiiiuiiiMiouiinniiiiiniiiiniiiuiin-; V e Welcome You WE SHOE AND CLOTHE Tlje Entire Family SPEAKE, WARREN RATLIFF SECOND AVENUE DECATUR. ALABAMA READ THE ADS i tiiii liiMiiiiiiiriiniiniiiiiiiinriiimnitiiiriiiiiriiii iriiu LET LANDRUM I A afte Your Pfioto--He Knows How I KODAK FINISHING SPECIALTY I Florence. Ala. E MAIL US YOUR FILMS ' luui iiMiniiiltiiiu uiiiniiii i nut r riiiiiriiiiMin iiiiiu itiiiiiiiul i nun uiiiuiiii r g ' ' ' uiiiuiuiiiniiin n null i i i ini nun i i luinuiiiuiiiuiniiiniiiuiiiuiiiuiii A. Z. BAILEY GROCERY COMPANY Wfiolesale Distributors DECATUR, ALABAMA ■■' Uiiniiiii 1 luiiiiiiii iiini iiiHiuii luiiuinuiiE niiiiiuili i iiliniiin uuiiuiiiuiiiuin uiiiiiiiiiiiiii t r |iiUiinuiniiiiiriiuiiHi i uiiiiliiumuiiii riiiiriin iiiii: liiiiii uiiiiiiii niiiuiiiuinuiniiiiriiniiHiiiniiin iiiiiuiiiiriiiiiilliruni- Compliments of PIGGLY WIGGLY All Over the World ■■■■■! riiiiMiiiiiiiriiiitiiiniiniiiiriiiiriiiiMiiiriii iiiiiiiiiiii ' -iriiiiiiuriiiiiiiiitiiniiiiiiiiiriiir itiiii riiiiriiiiriiur Jiniutiiiitiiinf? jiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiirtiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiimtmiiimiimiiNnm iiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiniu ::iiiiriiir niiiiriiiiiiiiiiiinii 5 fn Huntsville — Visit = FOWLER BROS. I Ladies ' RcatJy-to-Wear, Slippers. i I Hosiery | I JEFFERSON STREET | .-illiiuiiuiiniiinuiniiiuiiniiliuiiiuiiuiiiuiiiriiiuiintiinuinuinuiiuuiuinuiiiiiiiiii Compliments of THE ACORN STORE DECATUR, ALA The Place to Eat HARMONY CAFE SHEFFIELD. ALABAMA ■■I iiiniiiiniiiiiiiiriiiriiiiriiiiiiiiniiiitiiiir Compliments of Howie Drug Company SHEFFIELD, ALA. CfA ' n tfW Wtf tf tfVWVtfV WWW VWV.-.-.-.-t cXumLer us Line Running from Huntsville to Sheffield via Athens. Rogersvilie and Florence Branch Line from Pulaski to Decatur via Ardmore and Athens Connections with L. Z-i N. Trains at Athens and Decatur: Southern Trains at Huntsville and Sheffield E When a Minute Means a Lot to You — Take a Bus ' l OPERATED BY TR. cv4. CKamlDers Sons Auto Accessories, Transfer and Taxi Service PHONE NO. 7 ATHENS. ALABAMA Athens College for Young Women ATHENS, ALABAMA EIGHTY-FIFTH YEAR A College With a Past and With a Future Nearl} ' one thousand feet above sea level. Splendid health conditions. Accredited by the Alaljama Association of Colleges and Departments of Education of other States. A.B. and B.S. Degrees. Pipe Organ. Excellent Department of Music, Home Economics. Endowment sub- scri])tions and annuities now amounting to $420,000. ' rite for catalog. AUTOGRAPHS ■P--. Atkeiif Oollec e Hiibrary y rc ' Xk.? v :%-|ii«i ;,f ii ,• ;j(5 ;,-j ,;v«.t;( ' , ' ' .-. ■■' ij, ' i ' k ' -- !:: ' -: f ' ,J. WWWW r ., r
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