Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS)

 - Class of 1922

Page 1 of 135

 

Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection, 1922 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1922 Edition, Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collectionPage 7, 1922 Edition, Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1922 Edition, Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collectionPage 11, 1922 Edition, Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1922 Edition, Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collectionPage 15, 1922 Edition, Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1922 Edition, Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collectionPage 9, 1922 Edition, Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1922 Edition, Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collectionPage 13, 1922 Edition, Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1922 Edition, Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collectionPage 17, 1922 Edition, Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 135 of the 1922 volume:

K Q' N D f 15' F ff 6 . . X 5 1 I I L - N , , 9, N ,, r f . ,. ,' .. 31- u?ff9lEE.n u-mf .n.im.! I Y 1 nam! was-'tru l 5 ' 4 Q1 - .sm A YT '- 2:-'-1,g3Q!4 gi ulilililil iir:':nu:EE La gy? 53555 g!1l.1+:sMmu'LQwwhn ,..,. ,3I...,.fMm-gl'IHML.-,E'11, ' SW-vs,-':fl,,mn.Ll.. 15 M, ,, hx M, ,w4.,,r sl .. 1 . 1 'E V Q N Y 1 ,, L V 'r' . , A ' IM .- N ' 15 ,W 12' M, dx, rr' f I , L 'A UW .- 1 -' iii' '--uf: ' Q fha in 'A' limbs nnntainvvr -J ' fxQQqyr'1 I 1 1 -x ,, ' 2 VOLUME TWELVE -:S ir ak!- X SI'UDI:lNT YEAR BOOK OF BLUE MOUNTAIN COI..L.E.GE BLUE MOUNTAIN, Miss. MISS MABEL HUTCHINS ioahfy mum Qahvl Dutrhinn Our modest, unassuming Miss Mabel, whose twink- ling little smile was ever the highest of rewards, who taught many life lessons in addition to her beloved Math, and who has done much to make her Alma Mater, and ours, what it is today, we affectionately dedicate this, the twelfth volume of the Mountaineer OFQWQF One I love, two I love, three I love, you say, turning from fore- word to finale in the soft, sweet twi- light time. Up from the printed page, back to your heart and brain, out of the dear, dim past they come, the fond, familiar faces of the long, long ago. See how they smile at you just as they used to smile. Time has not touched them. There they are, every one, still in the flush and freshness of youth, their mirth and their beauty immortal. Their wit, their words, their worth, all of these are there, just as they used to be. One I love, two I love, three I love. The Mountaineer slips from your happy, wrinkled hands. Bless her heart! Grandmothefs nodding there in her quaint easy chair. S A null, i :.,, ,N . .-'s':,. 1 ,J . vs- x - X f1 , .zpf-ks .' s . .. v. :N ,F - ,- -F 4 1 4 'I'-1' ',, . '3---3' N.. . ' .f:.f:r4 .. , .. .5 '--- ...ms-Q , 1-J. , -xi-1 8,80 -L df .1-T Malin'-I '-L1 .3 .'1.g 'rY A' -X L'.s2M251?. wr- , llflflf' ' 'III' V 'III WE IIT MIIQIIMINIMMIINIIEIXQIFN Would I could sleal ils echoes! You should find Such store of vanished pleasures bright lo mind. nine I IIIII . ..t .... .ffff H hz fl f dl WIWIWWlimiiilwlliiwlwIl l I ' I f I IN ' v s -:J , llllll lull lllnll I I1 . ll.'.l annul lllllll A I LINWIliWHWIWWiViIWIlif1lEI' ' ' I I ' ' ' ' 'un 'ml 1 ' L U S I I ' lnul ual: llllll nlllll unnl lllllll lllhi' L I .rg I .'- ' .af Qui Earth has not anything to show ll10l'C fair. -V .f-... f Miuiifaa f fu A:-1' 1- Page twelve l . 4: 35 .1 ,, . - rl' -Q hirlecn MRs. M. L. BERRY . DR. W. T. LowRr.Y . MRs. T. C. LOWREY . . MRs. LOUELLA GRISSOM MR. M. L. HAYNIE . . MRs. M. L. HAYNIE . Miss NQJRA ScoT'r . . MRS. EMMA MACKLIN . Miss RUBY MAY BROWN College Offxcials ' . . Lady Principal . . . . . . President . . . . Religious Director . . . Secrelary to the President . . . . Secretary-Treasurer . . . . . . . . . Bookkeeper . . Assislanl to the Lady Principal . ........ Head Nurse . . . . Assistant Nurse Page fourleen SWIIWWIWIWIiiwiiilwllillilw Page ffleen . ...... ..... . ill U .... . I l V ' I I r 11 7 A N I 'ul ' , 'tml Jlllu A 4 I nhl: . I - ll lr Mlss MABEL l'IUTCHlNS DR. W. T. Lowmzv . . Mns. W. T. Lowmzv . A. M. DoNNELL . . . Miss LUCY Hu'rcHlNs . DAVID E.. GUYTON . . Miss Nom LEE RAY . PERRIN HoLMn's Lowmav MISSVNANCY Mysns . . Facuit y . . Mallnemalics, Astronomy . . . . . Psychology, Elhics Social Elhics, Slucly Hall . . . . . . Chemistry . . . . . . . Laiin History, Political Science . . Assislanl in English . . . . . English . . French Mas. PERRIN H. LOWREY MISS GERTRUDE LowRY . MISS RUTH SLAYBACK . MISS ELIZABETH PURSER BOOTH LOWREY . . . MISS LINDA BERRY . . MISS PEARL LEAVELL . Mas. MARY BEcIcE'r . . MISS ELIZABETH HUDSON Faculty . . . . Piano Dircclar of Music Piano, Pipe Organ . . Expression . . Expression Voice, Harmony Home Economics . Violin. Piano . . . . . Ari Page sixlecn s ...... ..... . u. .Min .... Ls I' Page sevcnleen I Mlss MRS. MRS. P. F. Miss MRS. Miss Miss Faculty LYNN Lgwngy , , . . Assislanl in French, Hislory Boo'rH LOWREY . . ........ Librarian R. A. KIMBROUGH . . . . . Molllcrcrafl. Bible OUTLAW ,,...... . . . Physics, Ceomclrp ANNIE WALNE KIMBROUGH . . . . Assistant in English T. T. MARTIN ..... . . Assislanl in Lalin, History E-I-HEL LAY .,,, ....... A cazlemy EULA MCKINSTRY . . . . . Primary Melhods A 1 ,. .I A . . t l MINUS THEIR DIGNITY 1 w w , . .A , , 1 1 ' H Mlfmnlluflmlimmil IIHIIEQIEIW 1IJ '1 Y If 5 P1 55'55'QQlf'E1L I lvlrwf' ESF, ,. 'Www J My Wi? qwiigkvq 1v1r'1l'llMg'w is mm gn 'K f I ,-+.4,Ai..- ...s'..,f,,1.T3.n5,..'.:Y.s.q:n..:n..'.':a..n':..111..:r.n.nr:.Tr.f.5.'...'.....'...'-.....n.na:.n7.zi..n.T..Yi........r-.....T- H My gggiqng-Qi.-unigf-nu-32-gn-u-unIn-nn-glgnnun.nu--nu-uI-urn-ungnu--nuInnnn-nu-nn-U-nu-u--nu-In : :E 5.5 5: ' . :Ir . .,. g: .- 1v1 Rs. P. H. LOWREY Sponsor L3tllllllllililillilllliliIEHIIESWIREL Sail-- I ...... ..... . I III. ....... ...... . l - I,1w,qs, ' ,,,,Q Y, - ,W ,. -. ,-.-.--. - --,. -.e.-,f.- : I- EI5 Page lwcnly-llirce MABEL GODWIN B.A., B.M. BLUE MOUNTAIN. MISSISSIPPI Eunoniian President of Senior Class C 'I ' ' ' ' n-----.----n--un ' It is useless lo cndeavor to analyze lVlabel's compelling charm. lt is a charm spelled in capital letters, thus-C H A R M. lt is that will- o'-the-wisp of womanhood, lliis quality of charm. yet Bibble has contrived to capture it. Added to this, she has caught glints from the sun for her hair: and her eyes are blue-the sky's soft color after a spring rain. Perhaps Mabel was predestined to be our Senior President- anyway, we know she's the best one ever. Genuine graces in llrcmsclves spcalg what no Ivorzls can miller. . . . 5 t f It Senior Class MARGARET EMERSON BA. HERNANDO, MISSISSIPPI Euzelian Little and dainty with a wistful and irresistible appeal, is Margaret. But, although tiny in stature, she is great in aspiration, and is possessed of determination, opinionation, per- sistency and pluclc. Whether as leading lady in the Euzelian play. or president of the Athletic Asso- ciation, she is always Margaret, the beloved, with great hosts of ador- ing friends. To us she's Pep - Pep by reason of her vim and dash and endless joyful energy. Il is with flowers as with friends, Many may be loved, but few much loved. IVIARY CLEO KNOX B.L. OKOLONA, MISSISSIPPI Eunomian Cleo is distinctively modern-the sort of girl to whom one applies such adjectives as smart, dashing, chic--A product of twentieth cen- lury America. Her friends are legion. I-Ier ability as an actress was clearly demonstrated by her splendid per- formance in the Eunomian Anni- versary of last year. IVIay she act as well the part assigned her on the stage of life. I To see her is lo love her, And love bul her forever. Page twenty four QftlllfiillilllwlIWIIIEIIIIIIIIEHIHIWIL Senior Class MARTHA VIOLET HARAWAY B.M. OLIVE BRANCH, MISSISSIPPI Euzelian VioIet's beauty is a delightful contradiction-blue-black hair, eyes that remind one of blue lakes in a land of snow, and a sensitive, scar- let mouth. It rests one just to look at her: she is so tranquil, so un- moved by petty wranglings and dis- cords. Nor do we love her alone for her beauty, for beneath the serene surface of her being lies a nature so rare and beautiful and pure as to charm all who are permitted to withdraw the veil of her reticence and know her as the truly lovable girl she is. And she is fair, and fairer lhan that word. FANNIE C. KIMBROUGH B.E. MORGAN CITY, MISSISSIPPI Euzelian Fannie Curry is essentially femi- nine-as much so as a lace fan. Yet she might have been a goddess, a small and vivid goddess with her Mona Lisa smile, the dusky soft- ness of her hair, and the frank. laughing gray-blue deeps of her eyes. In disposition Fannie belongs to the supreme order of rainbow- chasers. The world was sad-the garden was a wild: And Man, the hermit, sighed-'till Woman smiled. Page twenty-five MttIl!ANlm,..tNlEE.EEW -31fII!If'Il 'I'fIf'1I f lllWlffIIffl 5 lll 55'55IflQiIf' I I Senior Class NORMA Lucius HEARD B.A-, B.E.. l INDIANOLA, MissIsslPPl ..- 4 Euzclian l l Norma is the kind of girl that other girls would like for their brothers to marry--and than this, there is no higher praise. She is pretty, clever, gracious, and with all of her youthful girlishncss she has something of the poise and dis- tinction of a woman of the world. There is about her a sweet reason- ableness, a wholesome saneness that endears her to all so favored as to , I enjoy her friendship. Her face betokcned all things dear and good, The light of something yet to come . was there Asleep and lvaitlng for the opening day. XX .MM,fz57.-aJ2c N,W.,lL EDIT:--1 IRENI-3 F :cc ' B.A. COURTLAND, MISSISSIPPI Euzclian I I i I 1 'LW' 1 . When we come to Icnow hdllll intimately, we experience the same l thrill of delight that one has on I . . , waking to find a spring day as - lovely as it promised to be. She 1 is satisfying: she fulfills completely our ideal of a delightful, whole- some American girl. In the class room she is a joy, responsive and capable of earnest, X intelligent work. We of the IVIOUN- TAINEER Staff are especially fav- ored in having Edith for our busi- 5 ness manager, for she is one of the 1 I V5 V ' few girls who can successfully un- ! NT1 ' Y ,--- derstand figures without losing any ,Q .E . - of her femininity. L E I it Q g,,M!W,nJ 3-'Vp ,-H, A happy soul that all the may 3 5 S ll 3 To Hemfcn, halh a summer clay. Page twenty-six .3llllllllllwilmllilIWIIEIIIEIWE., Senior Class EMMY ELIZABETH Bows B.A., B.E. MINERAL WELLS, MISSISSIPPI Euzelian One would always picture Em- mye surrounded by people, music and laughter. This doesn't mean that she gives the impression of being frivolous: on the contrary, there is an expression of serious- ness and sweetness in her face and manner that one never forgets. She is endowed, also, with a true dramatic talent: and her splen- did management of the Euzelian play proved to all that she is capa- ble of as great a success as stage manager as in playing a star role. Always in for work or fun, an ideal college girl is Em! When love and slgill worlg to- gether, expect a masterpiece. EUNICE LYLE SWETMAN B.E. BILOXI, MISSISSIPPI Euzelian Athletics is her first love, and she pours into her sports the same bubbling enthusiasm that has char- acterized her in every phase of her school life. Snippet is such a delightful, whole-souled personality that she imparts to all of us, a de- gree at least, of her high spirits, and her healthy, hearty love of liv- ing. From the top of her shining golden head to the tip of her shoes, she radiates energy, indomitable, and never-failing good cheer. ll was a glad 'Good morningf As she passed along the may, Bu! il spread the mornings' glory Over Ilia livclong flap. Page Ilvenlp-seven .JM lt!!ItlllilIltthlltillillfilmlfllllfi I I SCIIIOI' Class LILLIAN ELIZABETH l'lINES BA. RIPLEY, MISSISSIPPI Euzclian It is diflicult to express on paper the indefmable charm that pervades Lillian. 'Hers is the beauty of the noonday, gloriously honest, without a shadow of pretense or deceit. Versatility is her forte, and her honors and achievements are almost numberless. We who have seen the hard work she has lavished on this, the I922 MOUNTAINEEI1, rise up of one accord to testify to her helpfulness, enthusiasm, efliciency and never-failing good cheer. For she is wise, if I can judge of her, And fair she Is, if Ihal mine eyes be lrue, And Irue she is, as she hath provcfl herself. IVIARTI-IA LESTER WILLIS B.A. ELIZABETH, MISSISSIPPI Eunomian The sea hath its pearls, The heaven its stars and-Blue Mountain has Martha- rarer than all the constellations of the heavens, more to be desired than the treasures of the sea. Nor are we alone in this opinion-her beaux are many and devoted, flock- ing around her as bees swarm about the rose: and like the rose, she smiles on all alike. She is adorably girlish, deliciously spontaneous, bewitchingly modest, lovable, charming-in short, she is Martha, and therefore to be loved. Care smiles lo see her free of care, The hard hear! loves her unaware Age pays her July. . Page Iwenly crghl L3tlllliillllllWilliililitiltilliillilhIL S61 tiO1' Class WILMA LOUISE GRAHAM B.A. HoIvIE SCIENCE CERTIFICATE BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISSISSIPPI Eunomian Wilma looks as though she might have stepped from the pages of classic' poetry, so dainty and rehnecl is her beauty. She reminds us of the hrst star of evening, or of a narcissus, cool. lovely, fragrant. That she, however, is no mere shal- low beauty, but an intelligent, ca- pable young woman, is shown by her splendid record as a student and her delightfulniess both in and out of the class room. Tl1ouglItlcss of beauty. slic was Bcaulyfs self. ERIN GRAY GODWIN B.A. BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISSISSIPPI Euzclian Erin is so pretty and quiet that there is danger of one overlooking at lirst her liner and sturdier qual- ities. But when we are privileged to slip behind the barrier of her reserve. we lind a true and loving heart, and a hand ever ready to help. Pluck and dependableness characterize her, combined with an unswerving devotion to duty. A rosebucl sal with lilllc wilful lhorns, Aml .sweet as English air could make her, she. FUEL llvcnly-riine Ljvltll .,.... lllllllitllttltlitillilliilmm Senior Class GLADYS Lucius CARTER I BA. BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISSISSIPPI Modcnian Gladys is quiet, but when she does speak, she openeth her mouth with wisdom, for she can say vol- umes in a most laconic fashion. Her record as a student can not easily be surpassed and no one can ever take from her the unique place she occupies in our hearts. Her gentleness and her conscientious at- tention to duty make her admired and loved by all, from the Acad- emy students to her fellow seniors. A hig heart, always wishing to do right. And to be friendly with every- body. F Lossns CALLICUTT B.A. BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISSISSIPPI Eunomian Flossie provokes curiosity, for an elusive mystery enfolds her. Some- times we see her wearing a cloak, which is, of the senior, dignified- yet this is only camouflage, for to those who really know her, she is a jolly good pal. And too, there is a certain hill-top quality about Flossie which makes her indispens- able to Senior Comer. She says she is going to teach next year-but you never can tell! For nature made her what she is, And never made another. Page thirty 1 ' 'Ill' ' VW ' full iii titlfmlllsllntIIMIIEIIIDAIIEIMIW Senior Class NATALIE BROWN BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISSISSIPPI Modcnian Natalie cannot be called a golden blonde, but she is one of the de- lightful sunny light-brown sort. She is constitutionally incapable of see- ing any prospect in subdued colors, and has the enviable faculty of im- parting this optimism to all about her. Probably this is in a measure due to the fact that she dwells up in the Heights, With the teachers, Natalie has a gilt-edged reputation - yet that doesn't spoil her. She's not too grave, nor too gay, but just a jolly good pal. The Wisdom of many, and the Wil of one. LoIs WELLS MCFEAREN B.L. CLINTON, MISSISSIPPI Eunomian That Lois, for all her gracious dignity and poise, is a thorough good sport, is demonstrated by her zeal in chasing a refractory base- ball, or making a long slide into home-plate, when it is for the honor of the Seniors. In the brief Iwo years she has been with us. she has made an enviable record, and we prophesy great things for her in the future. She moves a goddess, and she looks a queen. Page thirty-one X .,. AT4'l7LLk 'X QL ..I-,,,.,. .. ., ' 5 if:-Ivssfv:1 +':.23.Lit22iv1f.i1, 1127i i'N -' runnnnnn-n-Iwr.e.1..,Ms.....nn-...... In---.-.s...I.K... ...L vga...- tf M Ulcfzrz evra LIItltllttlllllllilIEMHEMIIWIIEQEIHIREa Senior Class WILLIE WI-IITE PEELER B.A. BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISSISSIPPI Modenian Bill wears a broad smile for every occasion, and her antics soon bring smiles to other people's faces loo. Among many other things, she excels in pep, good nature and ball. Whether baseball or basketball, Bill plays with skill on the senior var- sity team, and her effervescent humor is always bubbling over. I grant I am a woman, but withal A woman Ivcll-reputed. CARLENE RIVERS PHELPS B.A. DREW, MISSISSIPPI Mozlcnian Carlene reminds one of a wise little wren-so gentle and unaf- fected, so sweet and so serious: yet we wonder if ever there was a problem so intricate but that her capable brain could find a solution for it. Always capable, always modest -good things grow where she walks because she helps them grow. There is none like her, none- Nor HHH bf. when our summers have deceased. Page lhlrly llvo tltIl!DllllIlNIlTlllVil'lIliliIFl'IWL A I ---.n ..... I. ......- ....... 1 l SCI'li0I' Class VALERIA WILLIAMS B.L. Home SCIENCE CERTIFICATE NI-:'rrI.I:roN. MISSISSIPPI Modenian You can easily picture Valeria in an old English garden, clipping roses- for, with her wealth of Titian hair, her soft. dark eyes with amber lights, and her air-de-duch- esse, she forms a picture suggestive of one of the old Florentine mas- ters. Yet Valeria possesses abounding good nature, and is always ready to enter gaily into plans for a sen- Ior party. Genuine graces in themselves speak Ivlral no words can utter. MARY LYDE ROBINSON B.A. WATER VALLEY, MISSISSIPPI Modcltian Lyde's charm lies in the rellec- tion of her own sweet and lofty temperament. She possesses that inclelinable and intangible quality which is shed by a lovely soul as fragrance is shed by a llower. Never too busy, with her own duties, to stop and help others with their problems--gentle. rehned, unpre- tentious, nevertheless one hundred per cent elhcient is Lyde. A very Dorcas of good works. The secret of being loved is in being lovely: And the secrel of being lovely is in being Ufl5Clf3h.n Page llurly-three V Q3 If ur ' rw ' 1 ' M QtIlMlNIImtlliINIlEl.IMIQ I f Senior Class Lo'rTn-1 MAE BRITT B.A. COTTON PLANT, MISSISSIPPI Morlcrzian Her dignity is delightful, her manner quiet, unassuming: and her intellect-but if you have ever been in any of her classes you can les- tify to the ease and accuracy with which she answers the most mysti- fying questions. But it is not only as a student that we find her charming-she is a most fascinating companion and lovable girl. And all hearts do pray, 'Cad love her,' Aye, and always, in good moth, lVc may all llc sure He 11oll1. Cassie ARDELLE BRITT B.A. COTTON PLANT, MISSISSIPPI Mozlcnian Cassie has the eyes of a dreamer, but the mouth and chin of a doer. There's something gallant and high- spiritecl, keen-witted and yet very lovable about her. She has just the qualities which make her ad- mired by the teachers, looked up to by the students, and loved by all. Something more than melody Dwell: ever in her words. Page lhurly four ills,- ' Ill ' l' W Fill E-A EDIILJIHQIIMIJIIPHIIEI. I f , ' lf Semor So-Taleslgffgf ' i- 1 ai! Violet: Don't you think that prevarication is an asset to every B. M. C. student Martha: You're wrong. Prevarication is Anot an asset--it's a lie-ability. Dr. Lowrey Cin Psy.Q: Is there any connecting link between the animal and vege- table kingdoms? Cleo: Yes, sir, hash! Herr: My heart's idol. Eunice Lyle: Put it to work! As You Luce IT Touchstone faecording to Shakespearejz Truly thou art damn'd, like an ill-roasted egglif Touchstone ,Caccording to Willie Peeler, as read in Englishlz Truly, thou art ' damn'd, like an ill-rooster egg. Bibble Godwin: Miss Trudie said I didn't do the Hungarian Dance very well. Cuckoo: Oh, is she your dancing teacher? Valeria: Have you read Kant? Lyde: No, but I've read Dont-for Girls. Miss 'Mabel fin Astronomyj : Now, since we last saw Capella and the Kids, Capella has traveled thousands of miles. Erin Godwin: Goodness! Miss Mabel, do the kids have to keep up? I stole a march on 'em all right, said Dodgie, as she walked out of the ten-cent store with a sheet of music in her muff. Pep: Something in my heart tells me that you are going to ask me for a date next Monday afternoon. 4 Ball: My dear girl, you mush have heart trouble. Mr. Perrin fin Englishlz Can you mention a case of great friendship made famous through literature? Lillian: Mutt and Jeff. Emmye: l'm writing to Harold. What is a clever P. S. to add? Fannie Currie: Please burn this at once. Page thirty-fue Il WE KNOW THEM AS- - N, -x . ws s . 'Q xl ' Q I v tf, ' A , z , .l 30 . . 3' .,. di,-L ' ,L 'K ' H 1:,,m ' Nm... M D L v A . 4 'jx ' A il 'i fx 3' It , 'XV' 1 A . J 1 z. - H jim- f..-M .BWV iid, Xml. M ww yz 1 4 74'I I Q V fa- 1' .. 5 - - '-' 'N' ' K . , . I. L Mv1U'- -V H Tv HS.. ..-.. .fd GT , 'fm , X - ff, I 1519, -N , mlm ., f'f?,' . M., gf R, '- A.: 7--Q. 5 SPS TW' 1 fx ,A ,I 51 . N 'vi , . 7 A V' - Q, -- ' I WV VAL H Lawn ' Vu-ww 5 I R1 I' Fuss H I ' 3,9 ' ' y'-53 A '4M.1 I fY'N Q Y I A1'4.?xP!LM it . .. .ww V H 'W -- gm -33,,,,h.L' 'V-Hr Page thirty-six i1f1I!II'IV l 'lI'f!If'II''I'W'iIff'!IIIl 5 F1I '95'FFIR HQ!f!,JNM1.WEM..I if ' , I My 1 s K xx - u X QA Mi K' m nw. 2 5-:ana 'Euan fx .P an 1' ,, Y, 1' f A Q A1 , E? I if L1 vw, 'A 1 A 's..,,,g Y- A x A I N .x , H Q-+1 fy H 3 :Ava-if m.,e v' fin ld?-'mgkis ' K-: 'uU'n N' Ergdmul .- Enlim' 9' I M ,Q A 'L X ,Q IQ' M -my 1.- ., ,,, , . sl f ' .. l u.n11nv.ss ,ann AN PXMX- vii -' ,, X?-X Jann ' jjmvv. mn- , nz Emu 504 Page lhirly-seven n. 44, , ....,-......, 'N' 11'fn'-'-:'v'f1', -1 .f .. Jeri:-' ' 1 '..'.' . ' 1: :ng-' - . ' v'.v-:.1w':.v- ..+,r.'+,w3'Gt?A' . 1' an-3153121355 ' L: a-'ZQEJPI 2-.n..-.s-s.-.-.-.aff-1. I.. .-..-EEA-2' 'fifkf-?f'5'.f.-.-Plrizzmfwfwf a1'?f5: ft'l?':5 'z '11-1,4-5? JWSAWZW g0.A M, '- apt, , A , 4 AN... , ',hhAa'M I ' QW 7'iG3M'3 ' in n JA' Won nh r 4 h9o 04 :'Q. M 1 1 ' .222-21:15 :Qatar u,4,1n,Q.-1,4 C 5 rhQ A4l:'44 gg.:-1:-tv :Mgr-cw ,.w4,V'1l. .3 JY 4' - ., f . - .,,,,fa,,,-LS, . ' ., Q 40 - TX -- U ' L, Mabel Godwin to Those with a Celtic strain: Her knowledge of the Irish-and especially her admiration of their patron saint--Pat-rick. Margaret Emerson to Blue Mountain Library: Her handsome copy of SL Elmo. Cleo Knox to Ruby Thomas: The glorious objective of a god Ctoj win. Violet Haraway to a Junior Music Student: The mastery of Hearts and Flowers. Fannie Curry Kimbrough to the worst-smitten senior of next year: The good favor of Annie Brown and the hospitality of the,Brown House. Norma Heard to Psychology Class of '23s Her equilibrium on camp stools. Edith Figg to Business Manager 1923 Mountaineer: The pleasurable task of divert- ing four dollars from its way to the corner store and peanuts to the bank and annuals. Emmye Bowe to the Freshman Class: An appreciation of Childe Harold. Eunice Lyle Swetman to Miss Ethel Lay: The proper uses of the possessive of the feminine personal pronoun. Lillian Hines to future Psychology sufferers: My book with all important passages marked, specially markings on Chapter IX, Hughs and tints. Martha Willis to Primary Methods: Her love of Mother Goose rhymes, especially Pat a Cake, Pat a Cake. Wilma Graham to her father: Her discovery that Brown is her favorite color. Erin Godwin to local students: My observations on how not to let college life inter- fere with good times in Blue Mountaiii. Gladys Carter to all who come after her: Her method of bluffing the Profs. Flossie Callicutt to one who wonders: My Capture of Big Game, or Diamonds in Captivityf' fHer latest work of fiction., ' Natalie Brown to the finder of her lost Harmony book: A pound of candy-any variety-City Drug Company. Lois lVlcFearen to the Patrons of Both: Her opinion of Hillman vs. Blue Mountain. Willie Peeler to Mrs. Ray: Her knowledge of poultry. Carlene Phelps to those romantic souls: Advice, gained from experience, on how to win Love from everybody. E Lyde Robinson to Mary Zee Adams: The time-hallowed tradition of being a per- manent fixture of B. M. C. Lottie Britt to That Cne without a Sense of Humor: Her excellent Witt. Cassie Britt to Lessie Sue Sherman: The distinction of being a younger sister. Valeria Williams to Pozz Collins: Her power'of upholding the dignity at senior table. Page thirty-eight n, xx , 4... ,. , , , A, ,, -fi. Wgrrir Y . - 'ASK igi W t I , . ,- .W fu, , - WKWQA- if ! M ,iw -W ,,,,Y,,- 7 151 .1 ,. Ti 1. , . fi MISS ELIZABETH PURSER H5 Sponsor EUS, V15 'I' II SI II 'gg f'E'., llllilllillilmliliili illmllllllmlm unior Class INEZ WI-IALEY Im-z ls. 1 l'l'lll'. l'lllSH cuqun-Llc. Anil hor vim-linis ure mummy, yuu huh Shu smile-N on Ul4'lTl ull, WlliI'II UHIISOS Lhulr full, But sho vows llhlli lu-Ilrl is whole gui. RUBY COLLINS With III-II, with I:hIII'm mul Iulzwli- lllilv. FlI:II'lIliIIp:' wil llml Iivvn-I' is vI'IIIlv, Ifm' lblll' Iuw:-Ilfll-Ill Fuzz XVI-'ll I:lvI- llll'L't' guml ruhs! Shi-'s III-llglILI'IIl ln uvury llllmll. MARGARET OTT ln ll'llllll'!4 shi-'s l'II.2'lll IIII lhl- Iqml. in III-IIIIIIIUI-:-I shi-'s ll0Yl'l' l'uI'gnlg III wurli ul' lII play Shu-'s jolly IIIIII gray: Ol' L-uIII':u-. this is Allll'l.fill'l'l Ult. SICILY SIMMONS Olll' Sis with hi-r l!lllll'lllill1.L' :III- lwul llzls IIIIIIIIII' shi- I-:III not I-mlm-Ill: With llll'Illj' nl' In-11, .Xml lll ll-IIIII:-I :I VI-lu, Xl'hllu suilurs I4IIloI'u In lll'l' km-ul. BESSIE STEPHENS llcri-'s mm In-vu-I' kll0Xl'll lu hu lmlul-, I-'III' lilo I'I-IIsnlI w0'x'I- fmlhcl ll l'lllt': xvlllfll nl' su-lmul work shv lin-s Allll :I V3ll'!lllllll Ill-:4lI'I-s. Shi- just :-Illlrs away Lu l':CI'll. ALGY KIEPATRIQIQ Ov- 'l'hI- julllm-xt Irll-I in our I-I-owml ls Algy, wilh l:IIII:lIlI-I' 1,-Iulowl-Il: Slim-'s uni- nl' :I lIIIIIl Wllh llllllvll hIII'1l lu IlIIII, And our lJl'3llS1! ill hui' l'IIvuI' is luud. KATIE LOIS STEVENS KIIIII- lmls in lllll' midst docs hc- lfluir, 'l'u II-lnlv hor goml lrnils would tnlu- lung: Shi-'s :I I-lll'l worth whlln. For shi-'s om- whim can smili- xvllflll avi-I'yllIlIIg' guns Iluml wrong. Page forty-one ,wp ,.--I A ,,,4, . .:4Qs.fj,,,.-,. . M-IA NLFWW' A .31 + Ie, W f . .n , I ,K ' ,LX an-'A ' ' Af .I Tlgi.. . . in Q. . Hfk'-If ' E - ,.g,'1:A,4a-V,.Q,j:r if-ITE' M. X -.,,P,j7,A,f wg pn - I P f ,,-. J , Y -H: - H ff' Uf RY' ' J-f '.f j.f' 4? f . 1. ,-Q unior Class RUTH PRINCE Ruth Prince is u princess ln truth And quite n good student forsuuthg liul such u flue xml Is thls womlsrrful gal Thur we ull slug the praises uf Ruth. MISSIE SPENCER Our Mlsale wllh swum-l wlnsume alr, Blue-gruy eyes and curly bluck hulrg So vusy to smile Ya-L an lllrt nll the while: Sure Mlssle's us aleur as she's fulr. LUCILE. THAMES Luclle ls n. hrlglmt, wlnsonw lass, The bc-:nuty ol' nll of her clnssp In the blue ol' her eyes Such tm-mlm-rncss lies As lo hold our love to the lust. GRACE TAYLOR Graco '1':lyl4u', su cute and sn quulnt, Ilur pluturc lu word:-1 we c:1n't pulnl, A Cl'l'1llLll'L! HU llq-ur, Sn full nl' proud cln-er Is thls lmd little, glad little salut. MARY MACK XVo'vc ll prlrl whose lnstlnumc is Muck. Oi' hor tnls-nts we cun nut km-ep truck: But this we rvcnll. She lllurs tn plny hull. And for slnglnl: possussl-s n lumck. ELIZABETH CAMMACK Ellznbetlrs 11 lull Saxon nmhl. Ol' work ox' ol' pluy not Zll'l'1l.lllQ So hom-st hur lwnrv., So true ln ouch part Our love nt her foot ls lnid. EVELYN DERRICK . ICvclyn's so qulvt and sweut, A glrl that we ull llks- tn meet: ller oyvx-I are so hruwn, Sho nl-ver docs frown: She sun-ly ls one hard to bent. Page forty-two L3lllliillililiilillllililiilliillwlkIZ., unior Class Lucius HALEY' A bewltchlng and bright little mnhl, XVhnsu 1-hnrm we prcallct will not fmlu: S0 versntih- qultc, And urllstlc-goucl nlghl! T.uclle's tuh-nts delight us ln- dude. LORA NEECE lVe'Ye n girl who comes from rxfnrq From the XVest enme our own Lnrni Sn gn-ntlo ut hm-nrt, And l'r0o from fnlse nrt. And wlthnl n muah-rn Dvhornlm. RUTH RAY A genius ln music-Ruth Huy, As full' ns ft morning.: in May: Wlth sllll just n hlnt Ol' dumure dcvllmn-nt, She llghtuns and nlluros nll the way. MAY HALL That MuSlc hath charms wc- nm-ec. And Mny u music-lun will he: NVILII trlu-, loyal henrt. Shu elm-th her pnrr, And from nll thul ls vnln sho Is free. MURIEL SIMMONS Wllh manner so gentle und sweet. With mnlhes she doth every one greet: Her eyes, softly dnrk. hunk rlnht ln tho hcnrt OI' ull lhnt she chances to moot, MARY MCRIGHT Mary, Mary, never contrary. llnw dues your uverngo gn? lt is not In C's, Nor even In R's. But In nil-u little Ns in u row. MARTHA KIMBROUGH Our lllnrthzfs n prodigy quite, She studios by day und hy night: On knowledge sho feeds, In classes she I1-mls, And nlwnys stands for the right. Page forty-lhree lllllltilliwlWillllllllliwllttllw i .. in .I ,Nu p- A S -:J ulul nn: ndhln I I . lilhl nun! lllllll A I Page forty One in the Dear Dead Days Beyond Recall BEFORE Inez Whaley aspired to be a Queen, Evelyn Derrick surprised Mr. Perrin by knowing everything f?J. Ruby Collins became Miss Susie's Mission Study Shark. Missie Spencer became a uprofessorettef' Lucile Thames discovered the possibilities in a History course. Muriel Simmons used Parker Pens. Elizabeth Cammack became the subject of Mr. Perrin's Daily Beauty 'lialks Mary McRight could uparlez-vous Francais. Ruth Prince began the practice of sending telegrams collect. Martha Kimbrough reached the Top, Grace Taylor had a sisterly affection for Venice. Ruth Ray claimed kin with Pozz Collins' family. May Hall talked incessantly. Katie Lois Stevens swapped sweaters with Clay. Margaret Ott was a cutter, Mary Mack thought of being a Galli-Curci. Bessie Stephens established a precedent for tardiness. Sicily Simmons became Silly. Lucile Haley became so fond of Nuts. Lora Neece made such a big Haul. Algy Kilpatrick learned to trip the light fantastic. Ill'Il ll 'lI'fII f'l 'fV fflfi f'5 i1 2s'::'QQ'lf'Ea M E! HllMliiiINIlEi.lEE.lW .nw ' 7 1 , s 1.iii:EF.i-E3-5 -se sf ' - . mes h'--' W Ne:-:marins gg,-jtff-T-Ti m f - -' .. ' M li ' '- , v-,, , ' 81 .., ... A --....-.-.. nam .. -' ..... -. ' ....-....- .... - ---W Q V ittlw ' 'Hiiillfilftiliillilllllltitltlt ' imilfltlililtiltililtlllililillllliliiilltillIilltilllnlltllllllllttltlfllitllllflitlllllinltlliillhhttllllll .! '.- 5, 1. 35-4 , s iii 5 F Eitfiii ini 4. 1' J . - :je E59 N this desert of words and pic- .1 iiligt-5 'T ',. - ' tures, clever though they be, we. E the Juniors, wish our page to be I. an oasis, where the reader rests is 115554 :Wit from the galaxy of beauty that has fs gone before and gains strength for i Mk K rh h f r th r r 1 e urricane o wi a is o come. f s Qfl Realizing as we do that a receptive mental attitude is the prime requisite S E h f 1 t t f th :aid if-A or a compe e enjoymen o is 5 book, and being as we are, heartily in sympathy with the overworked Q annual staff, we suggest, we entreat, that you, kind reader, pause here and for one fleeting second give , yourself up to the glory of a pro- GQ .- . . - . 5 :eg longed and satisfying smile. v Thank you. . 23:1 Ei r flf l W'W'iF?'!7,f 5'LfL'7J ',ILT1fL7 W l ' W 'Tl V ::7 T5 5 ' il im? ff' ' ps f- ' .... . ,.,. A ..,,... Page forly-six W HQMQRE Wm Y 'I I , AJ 421, ' ' - fa 1 ' ' ' ' m J ETLI- 'LV '5 x-ff 'I , V v A jf' Q5 . J I 'jwv fbi forly-seven 1 WIIEHIWI Ilmwliilwlliilwlw I U -I I ,I A s --J ' llllll lllll lllnll I It . lllhl nun! lllllll lnhl' unuuniliifixunn:Zinn-nnuniiuniu11151.fniun:Zin:Hiramuneniifflununssuuriiffiiun-Sin--Tun L I-ufnunnuinuuninlIii:-fin-iinnifufnfi-nifiunlTnnnnuiunnfuiinnHurfiuniiufuiuihunuuin-TH:--inn MISS LINDA BERRY Sponsor nn-fin'--un-'nffiunu'F'-nfniuniu'nu-nfuffnilinf-Qin-'HTF-uni-lfiln.-uinuu-ui:nunnuu'n-ni'-'unlufn-I H5515i-ifunlnlrfuufqunlTi-un--ni-liiunuun-nn-inn-in1--Th-IG---'iv-lhuuunuuu1lTuH1nuffnn-En-nii-Tn ' RUBY THOMAS MAURINE SMART MARY PEARCE MINNIE ABERNATHY BERTI-IA BYRD f0rly-nine Sophomore Class SADIE JACKSON IDA MAI MAUPIN ELIZABETH OWEN MARY THORNTON TELLIE MURFF U-Zj ' 'III' ' VW f5iil T5iil mlfmllulmlimm,iI!mllt2.IE3.Im ZELNO LINDSLEY ADDIE LEE BELL BERNICE GAEEOWAY Joy COCKRELL I.ou1sE Bom Sophomore Class LOUISE MYERS MILDRED BARNARD CLAY DAILY LILLIAN WEST JESSIE HOWELL Page ffly Quo-tigfyf mind Name Louise BOYD .... BERTHA BYRD ..... MILDRED BARNARD . ELIZABETH OWEN . JOY COCKRLLL .... ZELNO LINDSLEY . . . LILLIAN WEST .... MARGARET Pirrs .. CERTRUDE DURHAM RUBY Houck ..... SARAH KILPATRICK ELMA Lois RAY ESTELLE MAJORS .. LOUISE YOUNG .... jessua Howsu. .... CLAY DAILEY ...... MARY THORNTON .. 4- .- Known As Louiza Runner Many --Dip . -Jays Zennou Lill Mary ..-I-rudy.. Rub . . . . . . Sallie jess . Policy Sopho Disposi lion Conscientious IHOTC Char Diversion 3 ...Talking .. Unsellish ...... Reducing . . . . . . . Helpful ....... Sleeping ...... Witty . . . .... Harpers ...... . . . . Her own . .... . . Building air castles. . Sarcastic ....... Making up beds .... Calm . . . .... Eating ....... . . . . Rollicking ..... Gossiping . . . . . . . Wann Practicing Demure . Being Sweet Unusual ....... Library work ...... Talkative .... School ..... . . Easy going ..... Wvalking . . Candid ........ Expression ........ Cheerful ....... Xvatching Nina .... Good . . . .... Reading French . . . . Quiet .... Cooking .. cteristics Wants io Be A belle ........... A flyer . . . . . Ready ........... Front row chorus girl. In ease ........... At home ...... . . ln the world ....... Wise ............. Mistress of ivory. . . A P'h.D. ........ . Columbia graduate. . Something ........ Ambitious ......... Sweet girl graduate. . A success ......... Politician . . A bride . . . . . Lilfely to Be A poet ........ A Bird? ...... There ..... . . Suffragette ..... Anything ...... ln B.M.C. In Verona ..... Bachelor maid . . Ii .... . ....... . Mrs. ..... B.M.C. graduate . Older, if she lives. . just that ....... . A success .... ln love. . . . . One . . . . . . A matron .. .. Address Poplar Creek, Miss. Oak Grove, La. Nettleton, Miss. Ecru, Miss. West Point, Miss. Picayune, Miss. Verona, Miss. Pontotoc, Miss. Blue Mountain, Miss Booneville, Miss. Noxapater, Miss. Blue Mountain, Miss Union, Miss. Blue Mountain, Miss. Nettleton, Ark. Coldwater, Miss. Houston, Nliss. P4 - 5 up an 1 Q- 1 A A 1 1 1 luv-1. 3 t l ,1 Q - 77- Al 1 i-1 7 l gli i L. ln 1 IN .li-3 P4 I - U un U n u s I 1 I - l I I I l Al U I I - I M L 1 I I I - S I. - 1 A lg T A I I 1 . 1 - I J A 1 1 . 1 - n I n -i l U n 5-4 U I A U I i 1 x fl-it u 3 u . - - 1 5 - u g.: 1 I 1 n l 1 - l 1 K 1 Q I A - U' 2 - 1 - n --11 Av ocuy-6115! 03114 Name VERA LEE .......... . MINNIE ABERNATH1 ADDIE LEE BELL .. CALLIE D. C1-usM . . BERNICE GALLOWAY TELLIE MURFF .... MARY PEARCE ..... IDA MAE MAUPIN . . LUCY Woon ...... NIAURINE SMART . .. SHIRLEY LEAKE ...... Louise MYERs .... SADIE JACKSON .... RUBY Ti-roMAs .... MARY M. MAGEE .. MISSIE HAYNES .... ANTOINETTE SPARKS Addie -A .- .4 Knonm As Bernitien . . . . . Marie . . ldy . . . . . Miss Maurinen Lina ..... . Reb . . . . Aunt Vain . Sophomore Characteristics Disposition Co-operative Riotous ..... Excitable . . . Reserved . . . Optimistic . . . Winning .... Distant ..... Changeable . Matter-of- fact . . . Businesslilxe . Laughable .. Sweet .... Angelic .. Friendly .... Thoughtful . . Practical . . . Humorous Diversion Taking notes. . Vamping .... Singing .... Town ....... Amusing others Pranlcs ...... Playing ball . . Solid Geometry Being late? . . . Sewing .... Roaming ..... Arguing . . . Studying ..... Waiting . . . Missey . . Cutting class . . Weighing .... Wants lo Bc Missionary .. . . . . . . Married .... lnstructor . . . A sylph .... Good .... A favorite .. Babe Ruth Useful ..... Social worlrer ..... . Mrs. ...... . . . . . .Globe trotter Lawyer .... Famous ..... Prima Donna Dressmalcer . Heard .... Asleep .... Likely to Bc A good one. Mistaken . Librarian . Married . . . A comedian Nothing else . A teacher . . . Ornamental . A vamp '. . . Smart .... A nun . Man trainer. Chorus girl . . Seer ...... Coach ..... Heart broken Awake ..... Address Pittsboro. Miss. Columbus, Miss. Friendship, Tenn. Blue Mountain, Miss Clarendon. Arlc. Reid, Miss. Sarclis, Miss. Clarlisdale, Miss. Blue Mountain, Miss. Blytheville, Ark. Tupelo, Miss. Byhalia. Miss. Olio, Miss. Tupelo, Miss. Prentiss, Miss. Silver Creelc, Miss. Birmingham, Ala. P4 - n 1 - 1 l 1 l 3 1 i 1 3M- - M Z l 1 i - it M Q- MI U 'Ci 't i M ll? 7 M 1.1 ling 1 l 2 i 1 In ...M-.l 1 1. l 4 I - u un u n n - I u I - n 1 I I l 1-1 5 I I - I I L 1 I I I l Z ls 1 I 1 lug 1 l 1 1 I - l I A 1 - U n - g I l n - - - n g.: U I 11 in n i - n fl- : u - . - - n 5 :- u 4 .A - s i - n - l I 1 1 1 l 3 - I t u ur - -I -fl 1 'Q v WV ' '7 ll ' 7'1 ll fm V f1 f' v U-Quinn ,ll .Ilu. 'mg 'lI'!.1IIh.El3 MILQIMIMIIM1 IINIIEQIMZIW -V-M. M1-ff '-'- - A . ' ' ,Hg XT -I 'Q ,... ..,,. Q E! I A W g A ff A 1 2 4 'fx 4 M mi f 'Q 0551K ' 23 ESM' W. ' ff A M 9,7 I ' ' 4' V . H411-fi4' Q if I, 1- - vp Lg A :f,, 'Av'mq is-,Y ,. ,, J In Q . 1.1 v 4 V5 sv 214 ' li: 'g H Y. Page fifty-three X --I.-.......--..n.......-...I.lu-.nu...-........-.....U...nuul...In-TI.-if..-ul'u.ni-H.--.nl-....-... --:nun-uuuuufnunnun-n---n-unI-nun-u--nu-uu'uuunun:-nniuniuiurunun:-fnninniinn EE HE ' W ' EF: Ir: -' -1- :: :,: I- 4 E 5 ii X: lj 43 E E I fans . - I 4 MISS LUCY HUTCHIN5 E1 Sponsor 1+- F win...z'.T.a'..:...:.-..:...f..'.4.a...T.iff....'5...A..:..n'..T..'.xi....T..IT..T.a.-...:.'. ....-'....'.'...z.gg................T.T.. - A - - li LEI':':fII 'II 'I 'II 'II 'Til M !!ll!,lIMIimIiI!I!IlQZ.IEIm F1'CShlT1aI1 Class I MARY LACKEY Louxss. RAY KATHLEEN BowrIrN l.AMoN'r CLEMENTS OcIE MAXEY MAI-Y RILEY BETTIE MAY COLLINS CORINNIE KING ' LINNIE M. WILLIAMSON BIIUNELIE BI.ALocIc , LucILE GRISSQM ' MAY EVEI, ADAIR I oIA IvY SIvII'III ADDYE ZELLE OT1' I GLADYS l IlLL NELLIE I'lUGHEY EARL LEWIS I ELAINE SANDERS i I AGNES THOMAS f Page fifty-fue D L1I '::' 'I' 'I I 'II I21'3:'? MIKQQIIIIIIIMIIIMIEI iI!!llQE.ImIm ELIZABETH B I E LIDA LACIQEY KATHERINE MCGEHEE DOROTHY MUNSON LUCILE SCHILLING F1'6ShITl8.I'l Class MABEL McMILI.AN EJIHEI PRIME ANNIE KATE WHITE LESSIE SUE SHERMAN RUDELL SHERMAN JETTYE GuLI.E'I'r MACY LEE SANSING ETHEL LEWELLEN EUNA B. COMPERE LUCILE BOND VERA MAE SELMAN LACK MERLE JONES NANNIE BELLE WEBB l'lAZEL BRELAND Page Ally-six Crmvicls LAMONTE CLEMENTS BRUNELLE BLALOCK 1 MARY LACKEY ...... LOLA IvY SMITH . .. NELLIE l'iUCl'tt1Y ... OCIE MAXEY ..... . ADDYE ZELLE Orr.. KATHLEEN BOWDEN . ELAINE SANDERS . .. LEsslE SUE SHERMAN LUCILE BOND BETTIE MAE COLLINS AGNES THoMAs .... LOUISE RAY ....... DOROTHY MUNSON . MARY RILEY . .. LUCILE CRISSOM . . . MABEL MCMILLAN . . EARL LEWIS .... Page fifty-seven Freshmen Roguesi Misrlcmcanors Being so Dancy-fiedn.. Failed on History A ........... Forgot her importance as Presi- U dent of F. Class ............ Spent a week-end in Blue Moun- tain ................. . ..... . .. Restmg ................... ... Failed to appear at a ball game. . Forgot her weekly visit to the hos- pital ...................... Stealing midnight hours to study. . Agreed with ball team on minor matters .....,.......,...... Failed to write him at least once a day for a week ............ Stayed awake during a whole ser- mon .... . .... . .......... . . Didn't talk after lights last night. Appeared at church out of uni- form ............... Forgot to write home for a week. Appeared in public with her hair uneurlcd ................... ... Made D on Math test. . . . . . .. Played Victrola during study period ..................... Led the Boolsy list. .. .. Smiled . . . . . Gallery Sentenced To Attend no receptions. Attend night school for two years Sit down and look on. , Have a boss through life. Co without sweets for six months. Retire from athletics. Receive no more hoxes from home. Become a deacon in the Baptist church. Clever ideas thrown away. Choose another boy to write to. Rise at four o'clock for rest of her life. Ripley jail. Wear collef e cap during summer v Icatn n ,L z 'I . Never sec Pontotoc again. To wear a wig the rest of her lite. To prove that all freshmen are not groc- To live without music hereafter. Il. To prove to Dr. Lowrey that all students should carry twenty-one hours. Be joy-less forever. fill lmlllilllillllillillmlfillfi Convicts Freshmen Rogues, Misdcmcanors LINNIE MAE. WILI.lAMSON. . Cut roll call one mornino . . . . MAY EVEL ADAIR .... GLADYS HILL .... KATIIERINE MCGEHEE LUCILE SCHILLING MACY LEE SANsINc .. EUNA B. CoIvI.PERE ... ELIZABETI-I BLACK LIDA LACKEY CORINNE. KING ...... ANNIE KATE WHITE. . ETI-IEL PRINCE ..... ETHEL LEwIzLLEN VERA MAE SELMAN. .. MERLE JONES ....... NANNIE BELLE WEBB. HAZEL BRELAND . RUDELL SIIERMAN JETTYE GULLETI' Let one day pass without singing. Acted as poslman between M. l-l. A. and B. M. C. .......... . skipped Janie Monday night.. Cut study hall with Anna ...... Led freshmen to baseball victory over seniors Spoke lwo words in study hall. . . Made pongee handkerchief during chapel ..................... Slipped oft to corner store ....... Was heard boosting New Albany. Had the Homesick Blues ....... Danccd ............. .... Flirted in church ... .... Lost her temper ............... Failed to sit on local seat in church Purchased a dope for Il board- ing student ........ . .... . . . . Borrowed a one-cent stamp from herroommate Went riding with Honolulu . .. Nothing I ........... ....... Gallery Sentenced To Succeed Mrs. Lowrey as hostess of B. B. receptions. Lose her voice Have her own love letters censored by Mrs. Berry. To be a teacher in Blind Girls' Home. Incubator for life. Be a defeated senior some day. An afternoon of Mrs. Lowrey's society in No. 8. Attend chapel five hours daily. Be purchasing agent for life. Exiled in Blue Mountain. Become a Ray of light. To take Mission Study. Be chaperoned on Fool's Row by Miss Nora Lee. To spend a Speightless Monday. To lead the under-the-balcony choir. Bc a soda jerker for life. 74M on deportment. Be a hula dancer in Hawaii. Write up next freshmen feature for the annual. Page fifiy-eight CME 5 ?05PlmTiou5 l. ' Page fffly-him! SIEHIIEEIIQEUIHIWSEUIIEHIIEEEI IH ACADEMY KODAKS , MONTESSORI SCHOOL . mmexiliymlm . ..: .... .ffff ,- M A ' w ' Vri ,,, ., ' A I P.fu,,-'- .. ---me Mr 1 .'.. .f . , 'J'-f::f,' .QA 'up ff, ,ff 14,1 Q. ' 1 X W - , 'f f .-LL.J.:.-A -4.4 3 ,J-,ffl-J 17--':'5f3 lH1 X g- 'iyuyvy-v,:G-:.f,,z,h ' Q 1 .F J. an .,,,13,, -3' l , 'fJ, 754.-'A+ 1, X, x Wh'?iW.sI.'L'1!! ' ' ' W t 155- Lg, 1 ., ' -SML, A 4Q ' 'Ill' ' l 'li Sill 'iii titllttllttlntllmtltlillmllitlmlm '43 l--un-- . .. . ' I:......... Miss Annie Walne Kimbrough Piano Graduate PUPIL or Miss CERTRUDE LOWRY Among thc selections which Miss Kimbrough has successfully playccl in pulalic recilals are the following: Inventions fthree-part, C- minor and G major ........... . . . . . Buch Sonata. B flat-Allegro, anclantc cantabile, allegretto grazioso . .Mozart Crillen . ................ . SCIILIHTKLIIII Cavalier' Fantastique ............. . . Codartl Berceuse Op. 57, Etude Op. l0, No. 8, Ballade in A flat . . Chopin La Regata Veneziana ......... . . . . Liszt Tarantella ftwoipianosj . . . . Brull Other numbers in preparation are: Sonatas Op. No. 2, No. l and Op. 27, No. 2 .......... . . . . . Bcelhovcn Several preludcs and fugues, including those in C sharp major, B flat major and C minor, from XVell-Tempered Clavichordn . . ................ . . Bach Page .sixty-five i ...... ..... .. i. ill. i ....... ..... . . 0.3llilllillililllilillllllillillfillwm I IQQUQQ' -MA ,www iv. 4 - li gs' ' E .,- Ii: . ll l l .V . WCC , Wrfm. .f C, ff -' . L . Miss Violet Haraway Piano Graduate PUPIL or Miss GERTKUDE Lowm' 'llic following compositions have been artistically played by Miss Haraxway in a public recital, and ollicrs, including selections from the Well-Temgnered Clavicliordf' Bachg a Sonata'Op. 27 No. 2 from Beethoven, and some works of modern composers will be finished later in the year. Three-part inventions CD major and D minorj ........ . . Sonata in C minor, Allegro, Adagio, Allegro assai Romance Op. 28 No. 2 ....... Scherzo Opus 3l , . . Cavalier Fantastique On Wings of Song . Caprice lfspagnol . Concerto in D minor . . Bach . Mozart . Schumann . Chopin . Godard Melizlelssolln Moszlgowslfi Nlcndclssolzn Page xixly-.six O gitittilfwit littttttll ilwlk n ...... ..... l tllh ....... ...... l X f,Yi:'i:g Y, W 4 -....4... , .yet lg H A-Y--VA, YQ, 1-,Y Wh Wv- ,T-,Q ,7,,,,,, A , 'Yi gig :L 'r ': ,, . ,A ee ,. ,H -WH - V 1 T Y, V it ' A W U ' ' 'Y' 2' g'4 'W l'--'fi v I ii nn H -An -fiifnl nn-...un -U M - Y Miss Mabel Godwin Piano Graduate PUPIL or Miss CER'IRUDE Lowm The following is an partial list cf pieces which Miss Godwin has already delightfully rendered in a public recital: Inventions fthrec part-A minor and A major, . . , , I Baci, Sonata, Op. I4, Allegro, Allcgretto. Rondo .... , . L-fcc11,m,,,,, Du bist die Ruh ............. , 5c1,,,1,c,1,Lis:, Prelude Op. 45, Etude Op. 25, No. 9. Waltz Op. 42 . . , . l Chopin l..'Alouette ..... .......... . B,,1a1t,g,C,,, Country dance with second piano ..................., , Nevin Other numbers now in preparation include Caprice Espagnol by Moszlcowslci, selections from The Well-Tempered Clavichozdf' a Beethoven Sonato Op. 26. and others. Page sixty-.seven I n ...... ..... . n. Ildllh ....... ....... I ' U31PHIWIWIEHIWWEVIIHIIEWIWIH M unior Piano Recital Miss NATALIE BROWN Mxss KATHLEEN BOWDEN Assi:-:lvd lug Mlss Lois MAJOR, VIIOKIIIAM lnvvlxlinns QlhI'Ul'-1lill'l5 G I1 milmr .... ..,. , .... Suunto In A mzx,iur ......... 'I'In-mv annul Vnriulimns Mlmlvlm- Itnndu Q'l'lIl'kiSlI nmrulnl O, Littlc- Sungs lWnl'1ls by I,mvrL-yj ............. Mi:-as Alaljur Lu Filvllso ... ....... ..... . . Nnvvlvllv Up. 111. Nu, 1 . Sung ..................... ,, Bliss BI:1,iul' XVQ-ru I an Bird ....... NYnllz in li minm' . .. lllll'I'lNl'ZZO in nm-tzlvvs .. l'imm Alun, U.-Xl'lt'l'llIllU .,... Soprano !illul' :mul It lim-h .. Iizwll I' I,4'I'I'ill ll. Iilu-11 Sllhrlu Hull .. Sululmunn . ... Sn-lm-lucl . .. Ilvnsvll ... . . . .l'lmpin ...... I.n-au-In-lizky .............B1-vin Sm-mul pizmu. Miss Annil- xvllllh' liimhruux-:'h Asslslvnl hy Miss RU BY CoLLlNs l'1lUGIi.XM lnvm-lxllnlls 1llll'4'l'-lHll'lJ A ln m:n,1ur biuxlulal 1':1lh0lillm- Up, II! Gl':1vv :und .Ulm-um .-Mlznpqiu 1-unluhllu llnlulu lixtrau-t l'l'um Se-vm-nh-1-u ... Miss Wallin llww-11.4-A. I-Iludv Hp, 225 Nu. Up, -I0 Nu. 1 lh-:ullm-1' Miss Uulllll I,ivIn-sl1':1unu- Nu. :E .. .... .. Etmln- .............. Hl'lll'l'Zf!ll0, with sm-wnul plunu . .Q inm' :mel C llawh , . . .Run-llnovcn lhmllx 'I':1rklnglun 1, Pulunzlisv ...... Ulnopln . . Svlm-vlcll .... I . hlszt .. .. H.lllll'llSUJlll . . . . . .Muszlmwski -w Page sfxly-cighl . ...... ..... . . ll Il..n l ....... ....... ' -L3PHIIWIMEHIITWEWIEHIIEHIWR I f unior Piano Recital Miss MARX' TUCKER Miss GERTRUDE DURHAM Assiz-:lm-11 by Assists-sl by Miss ELIZABETH PURSER Miss MARGARET OTT, Reader ol' Lln- Fm-ully 1.m,,mM, IFIIOGRAM Inventions Qlllrou-pzwli A mlum- mul U lnvm-ul ions flllwm--p:11'U F m:1,Im' mul A minor .,...,....,.,,.............. l2:1L'll Illllllll' ............... ,,,., A ,,,,. . I nmlh Snnutu In IJ ITHLJUI' . . .. U:ll'll Fnnlnsin .......... .. Mnzuvt All:-urn Vaxlsv lmprfnnlrtu ......,.. . .......... ,. .R:1l'l' 'xndm'U' Ih-zulillz-T. Molly Uodmllc- ...... Nornm 1'zLllvl's0n Rumlu , I . Miss 1,t.l Rvuding, Ammo Lauri:- , ............... V X ,,..,,. , . . . . . , .. lqllzzllmc-th Stuart Plwllrs fV'f'fl 'W' ll' T' YWLIUI' ------------. . SUIIKIIIHUHI Miss Pm-Hl.,. Eludn- Op, 10, No, 51 tlihlvk Kvyj ...... Uhulmin lwvludc Op, -li, Etush- Up, 10 Nu S ...... Cfhupin H1-mlinzr. l'Q'lll'U1l --'------ .Bwmllx 'I'1ll'liiIl1-21011 llc-auling, 'I'um Sanvym-l s Luvo Ai'l'zxir ' .... Miss nu NMR Tw l I'1vlu1'1':L 'Hl'Hliillll XV,-h,-V Y MNH Img uwvk WWI 'l'Ill'illlll'l!2l ....................,.. . ltulu-nstoin Sparks ' ' ' ' ' ' U 4' X Svnund pizmu, Miss Gl'l'll'lll1l' L0wl'y Au Urml D'nnL- Sourmw . ...... Lnszl 'rl I It I I I ,4 K I U. . l l . - . H Lit ,AL mu :1 ww- we-1 an was pm-purm murlmr tho X 'ns' Imwmnmu H . ' I l I' H . NW Svhhrll yn-an' ni' 11120 :mul 1921. Miss lburlmm NVnllz twith sm-4-unfl piano party ...... X nn NX :lm will ,.,,mI,1,.l,. this 3-,.,,,. th.. g,.,,i,,l. mmm. work Miss Mnlwl Gmlwln rvquirf-rl for thm- ILM. dugrm,-u. Page sixty-nine 1 ...... ..... . In ....... ...... 1 l IEEIIWIIHIITWVIIEHIIEEJIWIR unior Pianb Recital Miss MAY HALL Mlss RUTH RAY Pupil ul' Miss G0!'lI'lll10 Lowry Plllfil UI' MISS Ul'l'U'lNll' LUWYT Assistvd by ASF1HU l 115' Miss RUBY COLLINS MRS. W. T. Lowksv, ja. luvn-nllnmx fll'll'k'l'-P11115 G minor and 13 1 ROGRA M mlnnr .......... , . . . . . . . ........ .. Unch lm-,.,,H,,,,5 ul,,.0,..lm,-U F nmlim. and A Sunnis: Up, 14. Nu, 2 ... Rm-llmvon V mu'1 ' ' ' ' UMW' Alhlmrn Sonata . .... .. ...... . . . . . . .... . ,. Muznrl A,,,1,mU. 'l'hl'lIll' und V:1l'i:1llnnS gl.hl.,.z,, Minum-lm 'I'h-- 'I':lh- ul' il 'I'uh- Spinnvr ...... Rug:-r l'url4-3' Hmmm Umlklsh march, MISS milling Itvmllnpr ... .. . .... .. Sn-ll-4-tml Capri:-f-in in I-I llnl fm' Hn- right hand K MIS, Lmvroy :Nunn ........ .... ... ... llmlulph flilllz UH H ings 0' s'm7'5' ' ' '- M 'Nl l53 hl1'T1'SZl I I A I I I U k Imlrrumlulu Up, EIU, Nu, ig -.,- ,HU-g1.1,,,l,0,.l n 4-run-zzu In rw :wa-s ...,.. . .... , .4-sv 14- z y ,, , I hu- lm: k ..... . ...........,. ,,, 11111411451-.-xv linhhy l'mvvlmnm- .,... Anno Ilumiltnn Ilmmlwll In-zmrlllm' .. -.-. , ........ . . ,, , , , g01,.,.l,.lI Miss 1 nlllns Mrs. I.0u,l-cy Hllltlt' Up, 25, No. H, l'l'l'llll1l' Up. 23, I-Ilmlv Up, 25, Nu. ln' Html.. Ol, 10. NU' 5 No, 115. Wzlllz Up. VIZ. 'l'm':1ntn'll:L..Uhupin tnmvk KNO vlmmn l'i:lnu'1Iun, :4p:mi:-rln llllanpsmly' ...... I. Alln-niz Val:-w qpizmn dump , .... . ...,,,,,,, lguln-,,gu.i,, Sn-vunul plzmu. Miss th-l'll'11dv 1NlI'hlllll S01-und plzmrr. Miss Vlulvt Ilnrslwzxy Page sevenlp seventy-one Mllmlllllmllmllllilllillillnlm Qgiygj 'ur gf ' ajuw gg Faq 'i2i'ii'1'lT' 1 Senior Expression Recital MISS MARGARET W. OTT AND ISS EUNICE LYLE. SWETMAN of Miss Elizabeth Purser and Mr. Booth Lowrcy Pupils Assisrzn BY Miss MABEL Gonwm, Pianist PROGRAM The Lizard . . ....... . . . Miss Sw:-:TMAN A Corner on William Miss Orr Molly Make-Believe Miss SWETMAN He That Hath Ears Miss OTT Caprice Espagnoln . .,...... . . . Miss Gonwm The Moth and the Flame .............. . Maidens, lilce moths, are ever caught by glare, And Mammon wins his way ere seraphs might despair. -Byron Moth . . .... Miss Ol! Flame . . . . llfliss Smclman Rila Weimar: . ........ . . . Funnic Kilbournc . . . . . . . . . . Eleanor Hallowell Abbat! . . . . . . . . Edlvina Slanlon Babcock . M oszlfo naslgi . Louis H. Clialif Page sevcnly-Iwo ,- Senior Expression Recital MISS MURIEI., SIMMONS AND MISS NORMA HEARD l'upils of Miss Elizabeth Purser and Mr. Booth Lowrey ASSISTED BY Miss LUCILE HALEY, Violinis! PROGRAM Snobs. . .... .4 . .,.... . . . Miss SIMMONS Twixt Sea and Sky, Extract from Mistress of Shenstoneu . Miss I-IEARD Berceuse, from Jocelyn . . ...... . . . Miss HALEY ln the Heart of the Mountains, Arrangement from David Vallory . Miss SIMMONS The Absent Guest . ....... ' . , Miss HEARD Mazurka de Salori . ...... , Miss HALEY Play, The Same Man ................ . . Characters: Ethel, Miss Heard: Claclvs, Miss Simmons Page sevenly-llwrec . . Cl lrxr les Bayes Florence Barclay . . Coalarrl . Frances Lynn Roy Ralph Cilson . . . Danbc . Lyla L. Coghlan 'lll' ' lull E il ll'il Mllmllulmllmilliillmllillmlm The The Valse Valse The The Senior Expression Recital MISS EMMYE. BOWET AND MISS FANNIE CURRY KIMBROUGH Pupils of Miss Ellzabelh Purser and Mr. Booth Lowrcy ASSISTED BY Miss VIOLET HARAWAY, Pianisl PROGRAM Broken Engagement . ........ . Miss Bows Only Way -Extract from The Rosary .... Mlss Klmanoucl-I -Op. 70, No. l . . ..... . . --Op. 34, No. l . . ..... . . Miss HARAWAY Triumph -Extract from The lVlasler's Violin . Miss Bows Lost Trousseaun. . ...... . , Miss KIMBROUGH La Mancha -Spanish Fantasy in Rhylhm . . . . . Miss Bows The Pollon Scene from Romeo and Julie! ..... Miss KIMBROUGH Roller! C. Bellalz Florence Barclay . Chopin . Chopin . . Myrtle Reed Blanche Brace Louis H. Chalif . . Shakespeare Page .seventy four 2.3ililfiillibllilliillliiiliiilliilliiillf I Page seventy-hvc . ...... ..... . I llllillull ....... ....... I l if Q 1, Kb MISS LUCILE HALEY junior A rt An Appreciation of Art Art is a great, universal refreshment. It is never arrogantg holds no parade for itself: Ive talge it or leave it alone. It never intrudes where it is not welcome. It is reverent to all dispositions. But it is willful-the atmos- phere of its influence, as it comes and goes, visits our minds at wandering moments, since in the presence of great Ivorlgs Ive are unable to lose ourselves. The rest it brings comes, we never know just how or lvhen- and is gone. But its coming brings a hovering spirit, blessing each of us, least and greatest, according to our powers. D-SHI! 'm' 'lll 'Il'1v ll i ' - mlfmllulmllmfJllnsllillmlm ' , Q , FROM THE ART DEPARTMENT 4- 2- J-F., :ax 'a 4 x . ...... ..... . . Il Il ln. M ....... ....... l K p .ky Xu SOME YOUNG LADIES STUDYING MOTI-IERCRAFT rl-hat oldest, slcaclisl, most satisfaclory vocation to women always and everywhere. made lnlelligeni, , I emcient and joyous. Mas. J. T. MARSHALL, Memphis, Tenn. to whom the college is indebted for the Department of Motlmercraft Page :evenly-seven Qjjggy' 'ur gg ' Vw 'gj Eiii1'fE3iii'3':' MIIQIILIINIIIIAIIIIIIIHIIEZMH 7- SENIORS IN HOME ECONOMICS A GROUP FROM FIRST AND SECOND YEAR CLASSES cnly-ei x v , IL! k X S 1' .V .I- ' . o na unz1mou .1 . , :h.v., . , A , x ,, ,ii 1. A ' 1 1, w . V, A 4 . ,- , 1 X, 1 5, v w 4 ' 1 N .4 QZHWWTBWWWWWEQ MMMNMMMQQH Page eighty-one Students-Alumnae Association of B. M. OFFICERS Mas. R. A. Knvlsnoucu. . . . . . l'resic1cn ' Miss MABEL HU'rcHxNs . . . . Treasurer DAVID E.. GUYTON . . Secrelary The Student-Alumnae Association of Blue Mountain College was or- ganized here last summer during the North Mississippi Baptist Assembly. llhe meeting was called by Miss Ella Wright, Oxford, Mississippi, an alumna of the institution. Much enthusiasm was manifested, which resulted in the organization. The purpose is: To preserve and promote the Blue Mountain college spirit, and in every way possible to prove our faith by our works. It plans a definite program of constructive work and hopes, through funds to be collected by the association, to advance the general material development of the college as well as to promote through the spirit of this body the spirit ancl ideals of the school. The organization invites to its membership all former pupils, as well as graduates. Ii lt 't'I t t ' 1 ' ' 'I l , I ,ul v J ' , 1 rlllil . ill. . .I ..lh. III.. A ' iiiti!l1iINIlEE.IElW ig tl llfilmlttlll L I. .E TH i 5 'mu-.-.itll I NE it E - .-s - Editorial Staff of Mountaineer 2.- -5 LILLIAN HINES .... . . . . Editor-in-Chief S' M: 2 r E EMMYE BOWE . . . Associate Editor :E-2 E MABI-:L GODWIN . . . . Associate Editor E E EDITH Ftcc . . . . Subscription Editor E 42 NATALIE BROWN . . Advertising Editor E RUBY COLLINS . . Literary Editor E E SADII: JACKSON .- . Literary Editor E NE LUCILI: HALEY . . . . Art Editor E, E VALERA CAMMACK . . . . Art Editor E E MARTHA WILLIS . . . . Manuscript Editor E Ng- MARGARET EMERSON . . . . Photograpti Editor E Miss NORA LEE RAY . . Literary Faculty Adviser E E Mtss ELIZABETH HUDSON , . Art Faculty Adviser E QE DAVID E. GUYTON . . . Financial Faculty Adviser .- ..- 1 N: 5 :I 2 I I Z S 0 wi , gx . DT 7 S 'f' W lllll lllllllll IIIQI IIIIIIIIIIIIQI ttttt lllll QIIIIIIIIIIIIIIQIIIII IKN Page eighty-two lllll H15 WIIEEIIWIIWIIWIIIEII IIEEIIWIWEL I' l r I I3 'S V s -I , llllll lllll lllllu I I E ll 'Il nun! ulull 'I' A I OFFICERS OF THE Y. W. A A SECTION OF THE MEMBERSHIP THE COLLEGE B. Y. P. U'S AND THEIR PRESIDENTS eighty-five n ...... ..... . n ....... ...... . L3igilfiilliwilliiliwwiIEHQIIEWIEEIH I Offxcers of the Eunornian Society FIRST QUARTER MART!-IA WlLl.ls .... . . . . .... . .President CLEO KNOX . .... . Vice-President Mlssls HAYNES . . . Secretary-Treasurer SECOND QUARTER MABEI. GODWIN . . . . .......... . .President Mrssla IAIAYNES .... . Vice-President lVllss1.E SPENCER . . . . . Secretary-Treasurer TI-IIRD QUARTER C1.Eo KNOX ....... ........ . . President Lols MCFEAREN .... . Vice-President ELIZABETH CAMMACK . . . . Secretary-Treasurer J FOURTH QUARTER WILMA GRAHAM ...... ........ . . President MARY PEARCE . . . . . Vice-President GERTRUIJE DURHAM . . Secrclary-Treasurer Page eighty-.six d llvrtas-6111330 aiu EUNOMIAN FLOAT SOCIETY DAY P4 JI iiffI'!!fT!IIQIIIIQIMIIIQ 5'lIf2I.QI It Z i 'Q u Offncers of the Euzelian Society MAY HALL, Financial Direclor FIRST QUARTER LILLIAN l'TlNES ..... ....... . . .... . President MARGARET EMERSON . . Vice-Presidenl EMMYE Bows. . ........ . Seerelary SECOND QUARTER NORMA HEARD . . ........ . . Presidcnl EMMYE Bows . . . Vice-Presidenl FANNIE C. KIMBROUGH . . . . . Secrelarp ' THIRD QUARTER EMMYE Bowl: . ...... . . . . President Imaz WHALEY . V iee-President Slcu.Y SIMMONS . . . Secretary FOURTH QUARTER MARGARET EMERSON ......... . . President ALGY KILPATRICK . . . . . Vice-President Eumca LYLE SWETMAN . . . . . Secretary Page cfgllly-efglll - .....- ..... . A n. nan I ....... ....... 1 ' L3igilfiilliwilliiiIWWEWIEHIIEEIIEEFIR -f-fi:-+A-f Wi: ,.,-..., L .,, ,, . N , , . ,, - A f'-'f 'W-., - 'fwfr' N-. V 7.1 Q 7f!Q - ff , 'I ' -3.45, A ...Viy5'g5.-L .Via L-f-'.-.::'-iEg'ff1N . -QQ-fp LW' Wifi -. E flffl ' vw' 'p f'1' . . .f.'.I,. 'j,L ' v m, N f , '41 '- - ' if Q .fxk 4. ' .-. Q '- ,A v . - - ' ' ' 1-'5'3. - M flip :I'T'7?f7 -3 . , I ,Q , - A. ' 'LUG , 3: V V-ff -wg 1. - ' : .-151.4-p,i.g' , ,. .- -5 1, 5.19 4- .5 f'2. ' f' fimgf.?:1f.4-:Q -.31 1.1. . ' 1. aw .-,,. 1 V' ' 4' 'La 4,,. 1':-','1- , V, ' -'.'- M ' , -L-11: '-'15-1112-. 4. 1-z ' 'lf 5, :ga 1 r--- r., K- V , .-,c..' ' E -.- 'V 1' ,ff X' Q' ?1'.' ':3'. TA ff-75' 'Q' 127- Q '15'?:f'5 '7zf!7'57 f'f3Jf . -I' '9':LF5f'l-?lf!Qfv2: F F714' .'3,Q:7 ' C2 V ' :N '-ixlw' ' 1151 '?Y1. jypv. L. ,-H111 .l-'11 . NL M- A,-JL j',5 xl yrlcxcliy A . V, , TA. .' .N ,. 4 b, Q. ,K Y W F-1 . . . 7 .f-Y-'U1Hc - rf-:qmcfy-qw Zagpzw,-PD.-,KX My ,N .WX ,WM Y- I m .Tv-5 1 . . ' '-'-f--- Y . ,. . .....-..., -,. ,,' ,N an mm W 1- :, ,..,-.,:.. ...' ,, . up Y Vu- k,.. 5. , I I , D - 4 ' N' ,Milf EUZELIAN HALL Page cfglzly-nfnc L3122211'If ' 'H 'l'I!I Ii f''Wi iIff'!IIIl ?''il'f? 5P'QQIQIT I N H W .IIT H ELIHIW 1 Gfficers of the Modenian Society FIRST' QUARTER RUBY COLLINS . .... ........ .... . I 'resident MARY ZEE ADAMS . . . Vice-President SHIRLEY LEAKE . . . . Secretary - GRACE TAYLOR Treasurer SECOND QUARTER MARY ZEE ADAMS .......... . . Prcsiflenl VALERIA NVILLIAMS . . . Vice-President SHIRLEY LEAKE . . . . Secretary CARLENE PHELPS . . . Treasurer THIRD QUARTER LORA NEECE . ........ . . Presidcnl CLAY DAILEY . . . . Vice-President RUDELL SHERMAN . . .Secrelary I MARY LEE PENN . ......... . Treasurer FOURTH QUARTER LYDE ROBINSON ......... President NATALIIE BROWN . . . . Vice-President MARY TUCKER . . . ..... Secretary MARY RILEY .... . . . . Treasurer Page ninclp - 1 FROM A MODENIAN PROGRAM ninety-one . ' H E! Hlltlltitr NIIEEIEIW itfllflfll Il 'l'fII f ? 'fWIffI!I f'5 Ei Fil 'Qliff Mfhe Country Cousinw A Comedy in Four Acts By BOOTH TARKINGTON and JULIAN STREET PRESENTED BY The Euzelian Literary Society ON THEIR FORTIETH ANNIVERSARY, APRIL TENTI-I, Mrs. Howitt . . Eleanor Howitt . Sam Wilson . . Nancy Price . . NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY-TWO CAST OF CHARACTERS . . , . . NORMA l'lEltRD . MABEL MCMILLAN . . INEZ WHALEY MARGARET OTT George Tewlcsberry Reynolds, 3ul . . . . VIOLET HPRAWYXY Stanley Howitt . Athalie Wainwright Mrs. Jane Kinney Cyril Kinney . . Mrs. Maud Howilt Archie Gore . . Pruitt . Blake . Sb '79 Mr. Bob A Comedy in Two Acts By RACI-IAEL E. BAKER PRESENTED BY SICILY SIVIMONS . . EUNICE LYLE SWETMAN . . . . RUBY THOMAS . . KATHLEEN BDWDEN . . . . . . EMMYE BOWE . . FANNIE CURRY KIMBRDUGH 'l'HELIvIA BARHAM . . EDITH Fics The Modenian Literary Society ON THEIR FTFTEENTH ANNIVERSARY, MARCI-I THIRTEENTH, Philip Royson Robert Brown . Jenkins . . . Rebecca Luke . Katherine Rogers Marion Bryant . Patty . . . NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY-TWO CAST OF CHARACTERS . . . . . CATHRYN MARSHALL, NATALIE BRowN . . . WILMA Bono . VALERIA WILLIAMS SHIRLEY LEAKE . GRACE TAYLOR . RUBY COLLINS Page Izinely-Iwo in 'HI rimoriam ff' ' QV x 4 , in - A 1 , 4.1 Q' N , ,dkgl 2,7 Q4 fr. ,1 y x j X N Xi 115511, ' ' 6 ,f Q P Ax' X ' f 4 ., l f ' L 4 X1 I, - llEEQIEEQIWIHIWFMIEHIIEEIIWIWIl, NJ Q5 -ni ..,,E1 '1- --:' ' L-IE Owlets CHIEF MOURNILR5 MARTHA XVILI.Is MARY ALICE Lowmzy ANNIE WALNI: KIMBROUGH ANNIE BROWN ' ffw F FN rw Lilahj Delta Epsilon CHIEF MOURNERS MARGARET EMERSON RUBY THOMAS M H R C PH uf WH W ,WWMI Y .QD Wil UI!! FFR ,WI wb i'7NTI ' 407' G ,III 5 I R - 5.,, . , A 'i ii A...,.LJ1nlw-, , Zeta Phi CHIEF MOURNERS WILMA GRAHAM ANTOINETTE SPARKS SHIRLEY LEAKE Pg ly c nfncly-seven ' 'III ' I' W 'ii'1 '5i I PHQIIEQIILMIIM1iI!HIlE2.lmIm ' FEW x f-T XT FN fKX. A-in I OWHISSSS CHIEF MOURNERS If.m'rl-1 FIGG Nomvm l'IEARD FANNIE CURRY KIMBROUGII BLANCHE FATHERREE Euzmzaru Cxuvuvmcx: VAl,ERA CAMMACK JWWIIEEIWIWIWFREEIIWIIEQQIWIW I V r I1 . A N I 'IJ 1 L f llllll llllll IIIIII l I lllill nun! lllllll lil 'I' FNQCW 2 4-LRG'-' ql I 4 , O 04' 7 A 2 5 5 L. Haley -W T,..i-L.....-....-.--- . .-.-.- . ------- Kappa Thetas CHIEF MOURNERS VIQLET HARAWAY EMMYE Bows SICILY SlMMoNs CLEo KNox THELMA BAR:-:AM 51ilfi5IIiWiIIi9ilWRiW'5IlEE1IFi'IW Q l I I l f I A ' v s --J lhlllll :ull llI.lu I I l lllhl nun! lllllll lllhl' A I f Q 69 K3 Squirrels CHIEF MOURNERS MABEL CoDwlN LILLIAN Hmas NA'rALlE BROWN CATHERINE MARSHAL MAY WALKER - v,o-+ v. u , WIA . , f. LATIN CLUB LE CERCLE FRANCAIS iq., Ff,9 9 K V lflll-ETIC-5 S Q1WilliwwlmlifwiiiEiilliillwilfllilff I f . ...... ..... J Ill- I ......- ..---- - I n Officers of Athletic Association FIRST QUARTER MARGARET EMERSON .......... . . President LoRA NEECE ...... ........ . Vice-Presfzlenl MISSIE HAYNES . ......... . Secrelary-Treasurer SECOND QUARTER MARGARET OTT ..... ........ .... . P resident SICILY SIMMONS . . . . Vice-President NORMA l'lEARD . ........ . . Secretary THIRD QUARTER RUBY THOMAS . ......... . . President MABEL GODWIN . . . Vice-Presidenl RUTH PRINCE .... . Sccrelary-Treasurer FOURTH .QUARTER LILLIAN HINES ..... .......... . . . . President ANTOINETTE SPARKS . . . . Vice-President LYDE ROBINSON . . . Sccrclarp Page one hundred, lhree 4 I 1 I 1 W - 1 W , SENIOR ATHLETICS I JUNIOR ATHLETICS V SOPHOMORE ATHLETICS ' FRESHMAN ATHLETICS .4 ACADEMY ATHLETICS . ..,, ., .4 .. , . ,- .nc rl- , -'5 'EFM v - - -'-nf J.. H' J ' 1' 9 -' :.l I-!fmL5'51:':' .' JM1 . -,tv ' ' .l 541 Q, , h . 1 il ' 'ni 5 , i -4 1 lI i 1 1fa11l1f11flfr1suf2 :ff' 4lL'p?g!2E ,,'L'3 T ' 1, ,- REASONS WHY SOME GIRLS LEAVE B. M. C. P g ne hundred eleven .,, n --...- ..... . u.. I ..... ....... .4 l ittlllillliwltilllllllliIEHIWIWIH ust a Little Bit of Laugh on the Faculty Eula May: Mrs, Berry, please lend me a dollar and I'll he eternally indebted to you. Mrs. Berry: Yes, I'm afraid so. as so as Miss Lucy: What is the Latin race? , Anna Hatcher: lt's a race between a 'Latin pony and the teacl1er's goat. as as as Mr. Guyton: Miss Shirley, what were the dates of Henry VIII? Shirley: I don't know, but he must have had a lot. Six wives! Just think of it. as as as THE OUTLAWS! My supper is cold! Pete swore with vim, - And then Mag made it Hot for him. as as as Mr. Donnell had written on the back of an exam paper of Evelyn Derrick's: Please write more legiblyf' Evelyn fnext day, : ML Donnell, what is that you put on my paperifl' as as as Mr. Perrin fendeavoring to impress on class the definition of an egoistlz Young ladies, what would you call a man who pretends to know everything? Soph: A professor. -as as as Dr. Lowrey Cin Psychology, : Young ladies can you define a human brain? Bright Senior: Oh! The matter in a nut-shell! fr- as as Have you ever seen the professor who continually shakes a piece of chalk in his hand with that distinctly seven, come eleven motion? as as as ' Mrs. Lowrey is the greatest stickler for etiquette: why, she won't even have a com- pass in the house! Why not? Because it points! Page one hundred twelve J 'IV lI 'lI W' ' 1 ' ii ,E - EQ mIIM!nil?HIlEE.ImIH ' l 7 1 ,..,- - ' Wgfv: Ave .f ' . ll-pf. ' fm. - 'N . In ', Ep . 9 - , 5- I I A f' H.: - A ' ' f'5 .'Q4-,L . 1 Q ' ' in Xin- l.f'l,-ig3.fE5T5xg:1x ? . ,f ':.' 9' ' . Age. ---Q ' ' -.,. Q- 'Ah' -- .L 1, -E -ji'jfk'Q G-, 'i:Q f 7 Luv: Rumi t 235fvl?l?fJ4i74:. K. 'LM' X Lifli TBM WN ' A qf 1 1 'f .f . ' I if h' H X V 4 Q Q. , y Q, , mg V-,,+'Rufn.z1E ' , ,Ax E , F -Rxivnmrs Thi. SMD --B Us WHO HASN'T HEARD OF THESE? Page one hundred lhirlcen I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 I 2 rettes, A General Information Test fWith Apologies to Mr. P. H. Lowreyl . Name three kinds of poetry. . What is a cosmopolitan? Define Mob instinct. . What was the earliest mention of finance you know of? . What is the name of the largest diamond? .' Who made up the Triumvirate? . Name a practical joker mentioned in the Bible. . Give an example of the law of Diminishing Returns. ' ANSWERS RECEIVED FROM SOME OF THE PAPERS . Lyric, dramatic and epidemic. . A Russian Jew living in England with an Italian wife smoking Egyptian ciga- sitting near a French window in a room with a Turkish rug on the floor, drinking American ice cream sodas while listening to a German band playing Come Back to Erin, after a supper of Dutch cheese made up as Welsh rarebit. 3. 4 5 6 7. 8. That which influences girls to break study hall regulations. Pharaoh's receiving a check on the banks of the Red Sea. Ace. Mrs. Berry, Dr. Lowrey, Mrs. Lowrey. Samson. His last joke brought down the house. Chemistry deposits. Page one hundred fourleen Calendar c one hundred fflccn . ...... ..... . :lin U ...... ....... . ' Q31QHIEWIWIiHIWiWIH!IlEi1IU5iI'QQllff I yi '1. . , ..,, ..,, A .-- . ,, , JQ Q' ziaiiff' f 1 ,.2 5 ' 313, 1 'L 'wr l , li 1- QQJL - 1: . is .. New 1 c . .K N. . ,, .. .,.- 9. 1-2 lvgylr M M Vx 'UL Lt. 1 . I yn.: .-'.1.-- 'zy mf, . 11 .V-L ' . ' -- gf: Q' - - M ' E ' P 1 ,Libs , 4 3... I A TX ..g 'Q f r. xr .. ,fx E5 XC , 3 x if SOCIETY DAY EUNOMIAN Gonnlass QUEEN EUZELIA MODENIAN QUEEN Page one hundred sixlecn F Dj - - 'ur ' f' ' Vw ' 'Hara 1 QMIIQIILJIHIIMEIJIMIIEQIMIM ' M' P,nnn3uw'R-u. Y. 'Dxniawis :uni .F4 nuhui Faq 'Exams 'Emi 4 4 Du'--9 Nw nwg i 'jfln-'Rnysnk25?3Qlu, Les my . , , t Ax - -' 1' PV 2? 144 L'ie's 'lf -7 Q,1i?:m.7 'LfQ j. . 2,11 ' 1 43- 1,5 X, - A , - 1 . .V , . A: ' I A I 6 4 .. i . I' 7 f SKSUUATW WE'L.L NEVER FORGET A age one frumlrcfl sevcnlccll I ' I JI Iv' I i ' E-J ' IIIIIEQIIIJIHIIIIEIILIIIMIIEEIMIH I Nunn flu Dununu Umm-1 Ixmng Ahh. 415 Y.nu.'L B I I Q Ds, I I 1, I I 3 'af T 'thier ' Eli, II ff,-my 'Z I ' f. 'cfs V , I: A., Li -X I v '. 1' -1 I 5 vi - fr' ' ,II I ' L I X' xI I ., I jk. A N J 1'f.,gv e' -' - f ' 'RL I-ian-,aug Kumi V I A I , ' W N K I . Tl! ff, . 'uf ..?, r I ---Q '- v 1' g x, V , - E f IQ DMM: A Us n I'Xm.f- I'Im.21xn1 1' TRL iURl!l1g - STDRL ? WMM RM. Agucfuns 10 'Yuwrl Gu FUN Page one hundred ciglrlecn Qnaa1r I 1 '1 HI n . .,.... LJIMIIMMIIMIIEEEIEIH ,Q f.w,,.'.u ,. ' --In --rw K f ,frt'-nnjv' f Ga 241.1 -1 X :LJ ,Q.,.f,J,f , 4. '. jQgf,Ilg':! L1 . I -' 'V'-rr' fu 1' ' V ' ' -':4,',M',wf.',. ' t , , - ':'11. . x . .,-51.sG,,...y . I 6 , ? 2' 5 4 Q' f l -N111 , 1 '- I ' .1 lu r , . , , az. A , . . I . .1 . , R fr N' HDNU W n F mmwxvvf gd Page one hundred nineteen ALL DRESSED UP -1 . --- .5 -. V , Lew - V ffiftf-:r.:,.. s Oh, it'.s May-lime! it's May-limel And all lhe world is bright! -M---W-1 Page one hundred llvenly llHilfiilliwliiIiWiViIiEillEE1lEi5IH 1. .....- ..... . u in HAL ,-.--.Eq-- ' LYWA . M 'Bum mm Bu-an.: -' , 2w..1L if 1 E. , 'L it '., N ' - E-'pimms Q J . ,few . rf! 6 I-if ' 'V xxl.. dv 11 , , A, A E ami ,ff 5 M i 'lun' H i 'KR -A 4i'?i'W A Q .V M .511 .2Q.-,M5.2.xO.f,Q. A . Slain 4, ' 'n ' Blum Sinn v.,.,k Q' ' 4 7 X H im , , S ' 1,4573-. 1 'Ni' Q V , S lv .igE -f 1 K ... . - ' ' S A 'Mk Nr--f41k, '1Q EPS? em: New :Bust Q ' ' A ' 'W 'S .,,- ..A:1s1f-? !' Donna ' WONDERFUL MOMENTS IN OUR SWEET YOUNG LIVES Page one hundred iwcnly-one Why Why Why Why Why Why Why Why l -----u ----- - lil ..... . ......, . l I ' Whimseys QUERIES is Claribel a crook? is Natalie brown? is Norma heard? is Lora a niece? is Maurine smart? is Voncile cold? is Miss Pearl level? is Annie Kate white? Why is Bertha a bird? ANSWER Because their fathers were, of course. as vt- rs Dit: lf you don't marry me, l'll blow my brains out. Annie: Oh, don'tl You might strain your lungs. Fl-Pl--5 She frowned on him And called him Mr. Because in fun he merely Kr. So out of spite The next good-night The naughty Mr. Kr. Sr. 21- sr- vt- At a recital, three seated in one desk. Thelma, moving over, asked Lois, who was sil- ling on opposite edge of seat: Are you falling off, Lois? Lois: I don't know, l haven't weighed lately ' 31- 31- 35 THE VIRTUOUS SENIOR This dressing in uniform ls really Fine. Makes them look Nice. Teaches 'em co-operation. Really it ' Does. l'm for it. l don't have to Wear it. vs vt- is We editors may dig and toil, 'Till our hnger tips are soreg But some poor fish is sure to say l've heard that joke before. Voncile Cole and Bess Martin were' looking through a Photoplay. Stopping at the picture of a motion-picture star, who inclined rather more to the avoirdupois than the usual willowy actress, Bess read' She ran for three hundred nights on Broad- way! Voncile: Ohl To reduce? M vs as Cling to me, pretty lvy, He whispered in accents thick, I certainly will, she answered, Archie, you're a brick. vt- is vs The Casual Acquaintance: So you've mct Thelma Barham? Mildred Stubblefield: Yes. We sleep in the same History class. vs Hr- as Ruth Prince: Oh, Mrs. Macklin, I forgot to ask about that eye medicine you gave me. Mrs. Macklin: Well? Ruth: Do I drop it in my eyes before or after meals? as as Ir- BEFORE There are meters of accents And meters of tone' But the best of all meters ls to meet her alone. AFTER . There are letters of accent. And letters of tone: But the best of all letters ls to let her alone. sr- dr- as Um Lee: Mrs, Berry, Mrs. Lowrey written this note. and she say will you please pronounce it at your talk? Qt- if as WHEN A BOY Is MENTIONED Freshman: ls he good-looking? Can he dance? Soph: What frat does he belong to? junior: Of what school is he a graduate? Senior: Where is he? Page one hundred twenty-two 5 -ff , f , fn f I 1 lf fu'4'f NA Vi' 3 ll ll IRD .Q fi, 2593 4.1- ,,9,,,- The Amex Korner LFXNLIY-.-. Pg III yy, WIIEEIIWIIIWIWiiiliilliillwlwIL ' ' ' 'I 'gn . ' N -I ,- llllll lull llllll I ll . llllil nun! lnllll III 'I' A ' M. H.!X. VA CU LT Y STAFFoF HEIGHTSREVIEW L3 : If ll 'n ' v 'w 'm2 :1 2e's1 Q! mlimnzfxiliillalliilmlm 1 . C -. v 1 4, Q Q OFFICERS THE BOOTI-IONIAN DEBATING SOCIETY THE ELLETONIAN DEBATINC SOCIETY Page one hunzlrcfl llvcnly-fvc M. H. A. FOOTBALL t flJ'IIfIf'Il 'I 'II'Y 5 51 '55'55 flflf' H QQIILJNMIIM IIIBQIIEMLIPR -. ' ,. -'fl ' A 1 - ' ' I , H ,, 55 rf . 3 'X rl M. H. A. BASKETBALL AND BASEBALL Page unc hundred lnwenly-seven ff1H5fzfqgwragf,' OUR FRIENDS--THE HEIGHSTERS! Page undrcd twenty-eigh - 0.- lSlQAiilZ7OZlfUi4fZGfZ!Q5.GKVOUIZIGXGLZLZQGZVQUIZIWGIZJQQW I B Q W Q - Q UI' F1611 S N Q g K S E N - I QEmmaQZn1m2JmUp21l2zJ17.m1l2QJZQJ12UfQ.21,12f05mJIZQJZJQUAZDKUJ N fo ' wigQjOfQ6 696550 3 T5 Y'- cccollege Annual Headquartersn Z' 111 More than ninety universities, colleges and schools of the South favored us with their Annual printing contracts for the year l922. Ill This phenomenal record is the natural result of the high quality of workmanship displayed in all our publications, coupled with the very complete service rendered the Staff. ill From the beginning to the end we are your counselor and adviser in the financing, collecting, and editing of your book. ill Surely if Experience is the best teacher, as an old maxim says, then our service must be supreme. Decide right now to know more about our work and service. Simply write for our proposition. Ljyr 'ur ' rw Ir Ia 1 IltllttlltllmlimtltlIilldlltlllhlflm I f BLLIE MOUNTAIN COLLEGE FOR YOUNG LADIES ' FIFTIETH ANNUAL SESSION OPENS SEPTEMBER I2, l92Z Regular Summer Term of ten weeks opens June I and closes August IO, I922. Prices for next session will be somewhat lower than 'prices for the past two years. Fifteen high school units required for entrance to Freshman Class, sixty-five session hours required for Bachelor's degree. ln addition to strong courses under specialists in the regular Arts and Sciences, up-to-date advan- tages will be given in Piano, Voice Violin, Pipe Organ, Theory . Harmony and History of Music ALSO IN Home Ecohomics, Art Expression and Physical Culture Dormitories to he renovated, new bath rooms installed and large swimming pool completed before the opening of next session. For additional information, address W. T. LOWREY, LL.D., president BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISS. BEAUTIFUL THINGS TO WEAR Specializing in Ladies' Ready-to-Wear Millinery and Footwear Our store offers exceptional opportunities to the stu- dents of B. M. C. for convenient shopping. We extend a most cordial invitation for Spring, 1922. HOUSTON DRY GOODS COMPANY NEW ALBANY, MISS. A D artment Store Right at You D TI-IE BROWN STORE RIPLEY, MISS. The Store That Gives You the Best in Goods and Service at the Most Reasonable Prices IT PAYS TO TRADE AT BROWN 'S MERMOD, JACCARD 8z KING EXCLUSIVE JEWELERS SAINT Louis, Mo. Manufacturers of Emblems, Class Pins and Rings, Invita- tions, Diplomas, Programs and Stationery. Official Jewelers and Manufacturers for the following Fraternities and Sororities: Alpha Sigma Pi Phi Lambda Epsilon Hi Gamma Delta Theta Sigma Theta Alpha Chi Sigma Phi Rho Omega Kappa Phi Theta Kappa Phi Sigma Theta Pi Lambda Sigma Phi Kappa Phi Nu Mu Sigma Rho Mu Epsilon Kappa Lambda Alpha Nu Kappa Tau Alpha Gamma Delta Gamma Tau Gamma Chi Delta Chapter Delta Tau Gamma Chi Lambda Sigma Chi Omega Pi Sigma Tau Gamma Alpha Mu Nu WRITE FOR INFORMATION AND SAMPLES SEE OUR EXCELLENT LINE OF Dry Goods, Clothing, Hats, Caps, Men's and Ladies' Furnishings , We Carry a Complete Line STAR BRAND ALL-LEATHER SHOES Style, Comfort and Service are reasons why Star Brand Shoes Are Better. We appreciate your business. T. F. MOORE, Quality Leaders I f BANK OF RIPLEY RIPLEY, MISS. SAFETY IS OUR HOBBY. SERVICE IS OUR MOTTO If You Want to Feel Sure That Your lVloney I Bank With Us We Pay Four Per Cent INTEREST ON TIME DEPOSITS s Safe- There is no greater Declaration of Independence than the your bank book.-Woodrow Wilson. If you want to succeed, SAVE.-Marshall Field. WITH OUR COMPLIMENTS figures in BANK OF BLUE MOUNTAIN BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISS. I have often been asked to define the true secret of suc THRIFT-especially thrift as applied to saving.-John Wamz, The man who saves will rise in his trade or profession st is inevitable.-Gladstone. cess. It is cwnalcer. eadilyg this ' ll' l'lY ' l ' ' If-, 1 illllllulhllmlllllill!IlEtIltlI.....gi I 1 MISSISSIPPI HEIGHTS ACADEMY A Training School for Boys Good Instruction by First-Class Teachers Good Moral lnHuence Athletic Training We Teach Your Boy to Be Manly and Self-Reliant FOR CATALOG, ADDRESS J. E. BROWN, Principal, Blue Mountain, Miss. MISSISSIPPI COLLEGE One of the Oldest and Best Equipped Colleges in the State 'A strong faculty, best moral surroundings, health conditions ideal. Clinton is first in contest for cleanest towns in Mississippi, in her class. Dormitory on co-operative plan. Best location for College in State. Send for catalogue. J. W. PROVINE, Ph.D., LL.D., President Clinton, Hinds County, Mississippi Union University JACKSON, TENN. 75 Years Old, Co-educational Attendance 7503 Faculty of 403 Rates Lowp Unique Boarding Plan for Girls Graduate courses leading to A.M. Degree, eight courses leading to A.M. Degree, Pre-Medical, Theo- logical, Home Economics, Educa- tional fdiplomas secure certificates in nearly all statesi, Piano, Voice, Violin, Expression, all Comlmercial Courses, Agriculture fusing the Experiment Stationl. Standard Academy. Address H. E. WATTERS, President The City Drug Company BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISS. The Place Where the Young People Are Welcomed We carry an up-to-date line of Stationery, Toilet Articles, Bristle Goods, Razors, Flashlights, Ther- mos Bottles, Cut Glass, Ivory Goods, and Athletic Goods. Agents for Nunnally's Candies, Eastman Kodaks and Supplies, So- nora Phonographs, Emerson Rec- ords, and Idlewild Greenhouses. COME TO SEE US .JHlfiiIlUIHIlii'ii I ull' ' l I I iff.. ...... .Fi.'f.I'.. TRIM J. W. GODWIN DEALER IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISS. COMPLIMENTS OF ROTH PRODUCE COMPANY MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE H. T. Caldwell JOB PRINTING Mail Orders a Specialty NEW ALBANY, MISS. IT'S TIME TO EAT AT ADAM'S CAFE ' ' I THE SOUTHERN COIIIIJRIIY RIPLEY, Miss. The Mus! Largielihilgtcsipfiguntry Weekly NEW ALBANY, MISS. First-Class Job Department Anything 'from a Visiting Ca a ewspaper Lj llI I l HW 'lII ' Win' 'll 'Ha'-A -----in ... I tim LlImllll......i.lI!lllEl.lQI...lQfi I f Hillman College Established l873 CL'Nj'jV SS- A. H. EETTING A Junior College for Manufacturing Young Ladies , Jewelry Co. Happy. home-like Hillman offers '-' exceptionally good advantages in Eiano. Voici Expression, Art, and MANUFACTURERS Ijf YWfT 'f S C Q I GREEK LETTER me mi es rom tate a lto. four blocks from Mississippi pCol- lege, in a classic, cultured, college community. Write for information. 213 N LIBERTY STREET M. P. L. BERRY. Vice-President BALTIMORE, MD. TUPELO FLORAL COMPANY. Tupelo, Miss. CUT FLOWERS AND PLANTS FOR EVERY OCCASION MRS. M. L. HAYNIE, Agent, B. M. C. COMPLIMENTS OF M. HUDSON, DENTIST BLUE MOUNTAIN, Miss. Where Will YOU Be At Sixty-Five? Statistics show that out of l00 average healthy men at the age 25: 36 will bc' dead at 654 l will be richg 4 will be wealthy: 5 will be supporting themselves by workg 54 will be dependent upon friends, relatives, or public charity. A policy in THE MUTUAL l..nfr-1 INSURANCE COMPANY of New York will solve you P 'b'em- P. H. LOWREY, Dismal Manager COMPLIMENTS OF R. W. STREET DENTIST RIPLEY, Miss. T. J. Coleiio? Co. Lacliesi Ready-to-Wear Next P. O. RIPLEY, Miss. I WW in-uf VYVV fTTq--'rn ing- COMPLIMENTS OF A K PlANo co o.K. H uc . W b i . L. R0 ertson A L i 41.-mt. in. . X .v..n..l. s,wia1.,at..w'.maurul in-0-An It p - Jeweler and st8.tl0l'lel' I J .1..f.,., i . ca- .- in.,-nu l'uanos-l'hurrh and l'arIur 0 g . - lla-mplu -- - .N'1mhl'ilIr -o- Lillll' If If ,Y-,vm QVLLLL-Ri.. tlgll .. ..-..t.,..... An-- COMPLIMENTS OF L. Finger 8: Sons The Store of Quality RIPLEY, MlSS. Blue Mountain, Miss. Newest Modes in Coats, Suits Dresses, Blouses Select Dress Materials Latest Creations in Footwear The Senora, Flapper and Pandorn Phoenix and Dixie Hosiery R. B. SMITH 8x SONS With Compliments and Best Wishes of Wagner Grocery Company MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE We Are Prompt LEE GODWIN Hardware, Building Material and Feedstuffg Caskets, Coffins Robes and' Furniture BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISS. COMPLIMENTS OF COMP!-IMENTS OF - s1'R1cK1.AND 8. Godwm Sz Dean HAZARD CITY MARKET Fancy Groceries, Meats, Short Lunches BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISS. Wholesale and Retail Lumber Dealers RIPLEY, MISS. COMPLIMENTS OF OWEN 8: RAY Dealers in Fruits, Cnndpes and Fancy Groceries BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISS. COMPLIMENTS CF T. D. HENDERSON Dealer in Fancy Groceries Blue Mountain, Miss. COMPLIMENTS OF RIPLEY LUMBER CO. BUILDING MATERIAL Lynn D. Spiizht. Manawor RIPLEY, MISS. coMPuMEN1's CF The Hoffman Pressing Shop BLUE MOUNTAIN, Miss. COMPLIMENTS OF T. O. HUDSPETH GENERAL MERCHANDISE Blue Mountain, Miss. COMPLIMENTS or J. M. NANCE SHOE SURGEON Blue Mountain, Miss. BON-TCIN CAFE J. D, Street, Proprietor Compliments of E. P. JOHNSON The Place to Eat When in Ripley FANCY GROCERIES RIPLEY, Miss. RiP'fY- WH- Compliments of COMPLIMENTS OF J D J. F. MERRITT, M.D. ' ' DENTIST BLUE MOUNTAIN, MISS. Ripley, Mississipp COMP LIMENTS OF SPIGHT 8: STREET Attorneyn at Law RIPLEY, MISS. COMPLIMENTS or W. M. MARSH, M.D. RIPLEY, Miss.


Suggestions in the Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) collection:

Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Blue Mountain College - Mountaineer Yearbook (Blue Mountain, MS) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936


Searching for more yearbooks in Mississippi?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Mississippi yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.