Gulf Park College - Sea Gull Yearbook (Gulfport, MS)
- Class of 1925
Page 1 of 168
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 168 of the 1925 volume:
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Q N Q l' M ' in Q 's v 3 ,S , A 4 'E+' I -.eryuk 'k N' v r Q a A 5 v 5 nn ,g ' 1 K' ' ', ' I.: 1 J V, A : 1 NNW N in .,4 1 3 d r txgvslul V xt! lf - cf- ' ' ' '-s' -A di? fu, Wm sasmwwfzas 3 +x XV, BX LJBRIS , gf S 0' g,.-qt.. 1:45 L, A J 9 'f ' A r f 'f Q P22257 X- N' I .4 :ia .. i IEEE!!! T ,,,,Q M5375 a a 'Im K, NON NOBlS 5os. um -D s 0' 4 l Y .. xx X X X Y .X l x 1 1 r I r A 'I 1 w C 'll 1 4 . 4 I fy ' ' l I - . V I h ' A I . ' , 1 5 i 4 l . L Y 0 Mal: I .. It I5 for the Herald of the Sea Gull to announce that we do not extrect our lzoolr to be an lmperxshalvle Ivor of literature We desire however that you should belzeve Ive have put forth our best eforts Because me agree nnth Mzlton that Boo s are not absolutely dead things we have garnered a few of lxfes most golden moments and present them here ln plc ture .song and story Wzll you be mdulgent ln your appraisal wzth us 3 !'T px., - -7 ' --..:- Q, VN AW, 'W X w ' 9 L1 - l 1 , A . Vx t s if eg E l 4 4 1. , k . 1 I OC k -1 ' -Q 1 ' . ' . N N and live these fem moments -.r 'Y1-'x'. '-'YK A AN X l, 'pp' ' tx nh ,ylyuxlnylt ,HIM f I. 5 - ee e ee J Xrx P fd fx Af BOOK ONE BOOK TWO THE CLASSES BOOK THREE ORGANIZATIONS BOOK FOUR Y- ATHLETICS BOOK FIVE FEA TURES Nw f Xf -12 . K kv- I N f- JN Qi! M if ' L, f X ' . 1 f - A K 4 K X aff ff I CX-Xxifflx 2 QV Y A T H E C O L L E C E L L , 'H C Lxqfqx 'QT fi' H If-XKXVLKXLKXJ LF' M C-5 3 I1 x,f,, -r 'Nf- ..,.' V V X 'ff KX 1 ' , ll A 41 x LA,XxxXh X430 dw X X THE SEA EMILJL -fi ' ' , , - vr . s ' 'H - 1 Q . D U ' v I I w Br - . , va:-61:51 :,-'av Ll, S. s,,'a . N.I oe-x.g Isl .'::sa '4' -5 I Q. 4 54 ' 4 - 'fa K - 4 - ' Q, I 1: xx. - S.. D ' 1 H JP' .Qb' 7 .. I I Q U, ', ' Qtl oil, 91 l 1 AY 1 ss x .,. l I 9 :H 'Ji' u O ,la 'AP' ' 1 UL , A F ls u s, ' J, r , :K '70 ' , I , , AQ I I ' ' I Q! 1.4 Q n 4: I: . lp '- s it lx. I AV uh' Q All n ,' 1. ,st ,Q I r . ' 'la 14' av ' , 4 V N, 4 xt ' r's. 5 l x gi ' 1 . . 1 L ' 'Ai' U5 ' : -I 1 ' I, ' , a 01' .U I ' 1 I5 QV , ' Miss WILLIETTA EVANS ' : ' Head of English Department 'S ' N.' 5 5 . .Q 5' ' Q ' iv. ' 1 r Zur A- f A -s,9',' su eng -Q -- -2--f v -em. -v . Q ' ' 'Il ' O I A g 'Q - ' -- I - pq -'- 1 ll Page six TH E IEUUJL. ASEE K1 ci , 1 X Y l Y 1 wy on DO ' 'U Y :?f.f1f.'3 C .21 .. 5: L:' S. 5'l .Q 0 If' ' e 'N o.' ,al ' 4' .4 - s 4 S A 4 - A S H 4 A x -M D ' t 4' JP' s 'L I -. 04 . ,'. 51:1 - 1' .K .O il' 'S' I A x N l'l - DEDICA I ION l O F54-4 I I' s'A,1 O D It -2 2- I I . :g ' 0 6 0 1 5 1 M155 mrllwtta fauna .wr Q Q Ig 4 Q 'S WHOSE TEA CHIIVO WE LIKE: C' ,- ,' C' WHOSE LOYALTY TO THE BEAUTIFUL, '- ' v I I , fw THE GOOD, THE TRUE, uf' lm WE ADMlREg :Q U - ' WHOSE UNSELEISH SPIRIT -I 74' 5' I ' WE LOVE. ' . ' Q. Q 'A Zu' T37 ' ,, ' I I 50 ' , l . IP fi D' I ' ' 3 I I1 1 'Zhi :BV 0 ' I I ' ' N ' Page se-'ven 4 ' 1 0 'nl lg Jn 4 401 O0 K THE SEA Y Gum 4 I. COL. J. C. was f sm Aeutt +21 u Q ' 13 Zin illivmnrmm Colonel . C Hardy whose wldely recognzzed abllzty as an educator and whose genlus for organzzatzon con trzlrued tn so large a measure to the establlshment and the lmmedzate success of Gulf Parlfj College was loved by all whose lzves he touched before hls death uly 2 924 Colonel Hardy was no ordznary man' big of stature equally bzg of mznd and heart prompted always by worthy motives. As the genlal business manager of the College and ln all hrs varzed relatlonshzps of life he won the hzghest respect and confidence Those who edlt and manage the Sea-Gull of 1925 express for thelr fellow students for the girls who were here durzng the first three years of Culf-Par s hlstory and for the faculty of the College their deep gratitude that they were privileged to now Colonel Hardy that thczr llves are ln uenced by the virtues of manhood which he exemplzfied and the ideals of womanhood which he taught and revered. His life was gentle and the elements . So mixed in him that nature might stand u'J And say to all the world This was a man . Q . . .. I . , . . . ... 1 .l . . L . . .- 9 . . ,f , I . . . Q 1 . . 9 . . . . . . . - 1 1 . . . y . . 9 . 1 - lf , . . 1 .. li? , . . . . s fl . . . 9 Cf , 7 I I ,if , Page nine THE SEA X EMLL Z , , X Y 1 1 NARGARTZT VAN DYKE 5 - Imux-IR CLAHIAN Pmrion ORLEZN HLJNOR BERGER VIRGINIA MILLER.. MARX LOIDISEKWAW' Lui. Isl. IIEIHUN MISS EVANS usea Gullu Staff FRANCES GREEN ........ . Editor-in-Chief ICATHRYN CLARIAN PATTISON . . . Business Manager MARGARET VAN DYKE . . . Assistant Editor-in-Chief ELLEN ERICKSON .... ..... A ssociate Editor MARIE LOUISE CLARK . . . . . Literary Editor ELINOR BERGER ,.............. Athletic Editor VIRGINIA MILLER . . . ......... Art Editor ENIIJ ROLAND .... . . Assistant Business Manager JOSEPHINE NICHOLS . . . .Advertising Manager LOUISE HoI.1'oN . . . . .Adfvertising Manager LUCILLE BURKS .... . . . Circulation Manager LUCILLE MANsoN . . . . Circulation Manager MISS SMITH . . . ..... . Staff Adfviser MISS EVANS . . . . Staff Adfviser Page ten P' I THE f SEA X Emu. KL, . Page thirteen Board of Directors J. J. HARRY . . . ....... Chairman J. C. CLOWER ...... . . . Vice'-Chzzirman RICHARD G. Cox ...... Secretary G. B. DANTZLER H. S. WESTON F. E. COTTRELL HANUN GARDNER B. C. BOWEN A. R. ROBERTSON R. H. HOLMES R. R. CULLINANE B. E. EATON E. P. ODENEAL C. H. CASTENERA J. F. PAYNE l-. 15'-H -I- ,.-. J-71 THE SEA , 1 i V r i Il W 1 5 Q si' .it Ai. in I , 1 ' I fi' I of gl .0 NV, n to Q QW ,I ,I 5-o 3 I ,Qil xx' -Y 1 'J vii I O ,CW N' l s st I .I ,JH fu r I mfg 1 0 '45 l Av' Q w kr 1 A -s 56 9 Q xl 'Q 1 S-. X Y , - ,, , sf wg Q: If ' 4 1 I - I I 1 t, -U v ' Ss lx--'a, Jnvie 1:,aa :b, 3' 2 aog1.S. -- 4 -' an - ' 4 Q Qs- 4 .- :IN ll I on f Y I I 1 17' 0 , L 1 s 'I . ga' 1 J 9 Q 9,5 I . I 3.5 al' U N 'Milli s ' 'll I n 0 Q S y I I og, 'l 's l S I C I 'llluu-an-49's AV. 'u 5 55 .f I ,WW ' 1 YQ' - I 1 'a vi'- RICHARD G. COX A I Prendent 5' r 1 yu rg' s , v .'x. V 'A . G h Q ,i S on X Q5 NUI. I ny N 'S' s.'- Nl 'sf 14 'n lQ,':j,yl i . 1 Q Q Q Q 1 Q N. IL -1. Page fo urteen THE SEA ' fa x ' 1 ' ' 1 , - Darn .'f r 'l Q, ' 5 ' - .4 ,P ls ,- K' A X -6' lx, - . Q u .-1 ' - - es, S- .5- ' sl I Y - Q , D v 1 ' D JP. 0 -N: ce Q S . , xx 5 , 'Q -L 9 Jo I , v Q ' I-ls' .,, 4 - ' ol I - I LK 7 V44 . 4 S ' sn 5 , 't S Q'- ' 1 n 'il gn ly I 5' , I 1 AY I , I S: 9 u 'J' 1' ' an 4 u'i6, I ' I 4 A ' NAU s Q , O f - U I' u, 1 I K s H ' ' N ,A9' I f ri. 'QQ ' s ,'t r. 1 1 l5: .FAI u 4 , 4 IQLI x I4 1: Q .4 1' s' ,. Y ' r 1 U u -4 :RJ .Qi 9 I ., .4 I I A 1 U 52' Ill. so l r 'O va r Nzn MRS .I -RIC A - Dea HARD ' uses 5 , 71 of the H G, COX I I I Q1 0111 'x I A 5 ' i, ED 1 . ,Q 0 - , Fpaftment I 'H :S QQ' - ' 5a'q ' .5 - I- A 'QQA' Su' lux J- I - -'-r-5 P ' . ' ' 'Q ' 5 '- 1 -IU F -- - o Q' -I P age .h-ff6'gn 1.-nl - ' -9- -m---:-1: - ' ' f - -- -'- - -'W ---W -- THE SEA Mgeuttgx 91 - ' is ulf Park ouege EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE DR Il I HARRY MR RICHARD G Cox MR G B DANTZLER MR J C CLOWUR MR J F PAYNE MR F E COTTRELL DR A R ROBERTSON ADRIINISTRATION RICHARD G Cox, AM Preszdent G E MCCASREY MRS RICHARD G Cox MRS BIRDIE HEAD BATES Bursar Dean o Home Department Hsstslant to Ihe Dean MRs L VIRGINIA ROGERS flsszslant to the Dean FACULTY Englzsh MathematIcs WILLIETTA EVANS, AB AB TrInIty Colle e Graduate Study Uni xerslty of Noxth Carollna and Umwexsity f Chlcago Englzsh, English History LUCILE CRIGHTON, A M AB BIISSISSIIJDI State College fox Women Graduate Studv Bxyn Mawr AM Columlna, Lnnersnty Graduate Study Johns HOPKINS Unx verslty Latzn Hzstory MAUDE FULSON, AB AB Tulane UHlXClSlty Gladuate Study Lnl wersIty of WIlSSlbSl1JDl and UHIVQFSIIY of Chlcago French ELIZABETH E SHEARER AB 3 AB Mount Holyoke College Gxaduate Study Lolumbla Unxvexsxty of DIJOH and La Sorbonne Spanzsh, French EDMUND M DE JAIVE BL Baoheller ES Lettres Instltut College Rache7 Gxaduate Study thxce vtazs Sorbonne P'1llS Offlclfr dAC1demIe Trtvtl and Study OCLI dental and ttntral Europe North Ind South AITlCllCl fhlna Japtn and NOIth Afxlca Member Modexn Language Assotnatlon f Amerlta. JANICE MAULDIN, AM AB Unlvexslty of MISSISSIDDI A M Unxverslty of Chlcago Chemzstry Bzology FRANCES HOWE LEIGHTON, B S BS 'leathers College of Columbla Un1versIty Graduate Study Columbla Un1versIty and School of Publlc Health Massachusetts Instl tute of Technology Lzbrarzan, Cztzzenshzp, Academzc Counselor MRS ESTELLE COTTMAN AB Graduate New Orleans Normal School A and Graduate Study Tulane UlllV9FSlty Englzsh MRS ESTELLE BUCHANAN HEISS, AB AB Mxsslsslppx State College for Women Grmcluate Study Tulane Umvelslty Pzano, 4dfvanced Theoretzeal Subjects, Dzrec tor of Conservatory ALBERT V DAvIEs Concert Plannst Composer Gxaduate wlth Hlghest Honors In Plano Um verslty of Duxham England Halgleaves Schol arshxp Student of Musxc and Graduate VIC toua UnIveIsIty Student Royal College of MUSlC England Gxaduate Pupll of DI Walter Carroll and of Egon Petrl Berlm Page szxteen I . . . . . . . . . . . I. . . . . . . . . . . . ., . . - . - - D I . - , . . V I . ' ', , O - ,I . . . I ' ' , I , . . . I . . , . '.-e I A 0' ' ' ' ' ' ' - I I I R. I ' 1 Q . . , I - I .I ,II . . I ' u J . , . . . . , . 2 . B. , -,,.- . . v - I . . - - , R , . . . . . . , I . . B , . ' 1 , , . I. .. v . I - v . , . . . ' -xI- I ' . ' ' - , , . I ,I . , . , . II I I I. I I . . . . - 5 . rf V C 1 1 'I ' .. - . , w ,' - , . . . - 4 I 1' X L ' 1 1 I . . ' ' ' . fl , 4 I . .ZI I I . I I . , I . . I 0 .I I , .I . , , . X EIIILI, n THE SIE A . fx .-fi g I Piano, History of Music MARIAM NE BYERS Student, Institute of Musical Art and Mannes Musical School, New York: Piano under Rich- ard Epstein: Private Pupil of Rosina and Josef Lhevinne. Voire, Glee Club, Chorus MARY CRAWFORD Four Years Student Hastings College: for Six Years Pupil of Clarence B. Shirley, Boston: Graduate Soloist and Teacher, New England Conservatory. Violin, Orchestra, Theoretifal Subjects HZELEN M. RICHARDS, A.B. and MU's.B. A.B. University of Missouri: Mus. B. Stephens College: Graduate Study New England Con- servatory: Pupil of Eugene GI'l1Pflb9l'S. Art SARAH K. SMITH Graduate Art Institute, Chicago: Further Study: Illustration with Howard Pyle: Composition with Frederick Richardson: Prize in Painting Class of William Chase in Florence, Italy, and European Centers: Portrait Painting with Frank Benson, Boston Museum: Etching and Interior Decoration, New York City. Member: Art In- stitute Association, Chicago: Plastic Club of Philadelphia: Association Women Painters and Sculptors, New York City. Assistant in Art CHRISTINE NORTHROP AN Student, Columbia Institute, Sophie New- comb Art College, Columbia University, and Gulf Park College. Expression GRACE CHEESEMAN, A.B. A.B. Meridian Collegeg Graduate Leland Powers School of Expression, Boston: Graduate Study University of Illinois. Page sefventeen Home Economics MRS. MARX' KNACGS STONE, B.S. B.S. Michigan Agricultural College: Author Original Recipes and Magazine Articles on Cooking and Sewing. Shorthand, Types-writing, Bookkeeping MRS. ETHEL TAYLOR Graduate Clogston Business College: Student University of Mississippi and University of Tennessee. Physiral Training GRACE C. BOWEN Graduate Chicago Normal School of Physical Education: Examiner's Certificate American Red Cross Life Saving Test: Graduate Study Uni- versity of Wisconsin. Riding EMMALINE COCKRILL Student Sayre College. Peabody College, and Middle Tennessee State Normal. S eeretary NETTIE WALKER Graduate Meridian College. Student Bank, Bookstore PAULINE BOYKIN Dietitian MRS. SUE B. KELLER Graduate Lewis Hotel Training School. MRS. E. C. BOYKIN, fHostessj MRS. MAUDE THOMPSON fNursej MRS. B. I. 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U , K A Q Q ,x 4 A , 1 In E1 I .O 5 A- ,Aawwg-asfaav W 3,40 0 Page twenty-15-vc I' i I, THE f SEA MQEMILL .21 - 'iii X ,il the Crossroads of Life By LYNEILLE BUTLER Looking flown the long, long road That is winding efver on, Thinking, wondering, and guessing, kyhere the others nzay'ha7Je gone. Planning, studying, and learning, For the things along the way, Hoping, fearing, and preparing, For the end to come some day. Turning, thinking, looking backward, 0'er the way that I have come, Knowing, feeling, and remenzhering .ill the deeals I oe alone, Loving, viewing, and regretting .lllany steps that I have matlej Smiling, wishing, then forgetting All the pain l paid. Standing, watehing, ever waiting, At the erossroarls for a while,' Ponflering, struggling, ever seeking flow to make my life worth while. Page tfwenty-six 1 . A W f f97f If ' W! f Q , 1 ll I' 'f .- W? WWW WW 3 . - . V A . L W 4440 by o W in A ll P! 9 u Jig' 1 X . 7 Y W I Liv J 1 , Hn Ps, 1 , . M. - aww- Wy'-2 my 'C ,Still XQN'f,czWf Qgltfsh. yt- I A I lill X A fx' ,! ilgl Elf A ' ill? 111, A ' Il. 9 i i lr .ll fa 11: i ii, :lil fi lin iw 4 iff fl ll 5 , All lil' in tl ll i ss f t .7 lqfszg f ' ' 'WM W '-'1f'3f x ,vN l,-I, U ,ul Gfy' - -1-,--QV? f It lf l its -3? lax V ,tl-E 'Hg' I :ll lp, o A ,xg , f ait 155' ,ig Exits, .., to 4 s A, A - ,,, , , gs.,-:,,::,.,, ...-u...1w NNNSNtS'wsiff:iv.2fsrf-Q - to - . ,A A of ! rs- LUCILE MANSON A A 2 NEW ORLEANS, LA. President of Senior Class, '25g Vice-President of Louisiana Club, '25, Hockey Team, '25, Bit and Spur Club, 'z5. Into this class the President has brought her charming, interesting, and unusual personality, her char- acter, that is typical of her New Or- leans home. S611i01' Class Miss EVANS ZAMA FRANKLIN Senior Class Sponsor A X Z ORLANDO, FLA. Glee Club, '25, Mississippi Clubg Vice-President of Senior Class, 725. Zama is friendly, kind, sincere, gentle, and has a strong character. We might class her as a genteel Gulf Park girl. IllIIIlllIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIllIIIIlllllIlIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIllIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIllIIIIIIIllIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIlllllIlllllIIIlllllIIIllIlIIlllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII? MARTHA MCGAUGHY A X 2 TUPELO, M ISS. Torch Bearer, Delta Chi Sigma Secretary, ,251 Senior Class Secre- tary, Vice-President of Glee Club, Martha Club, '24, Mississippi Club. A bit of the old brogue, a glorious disposition, a jolly, crackling laugh, and a clover leaf for good luck, will give to you Martha McGaughy. SCIHO1' Class HELEN FRENCH A A 2' LAKE ARTHUR, LA. President of Louisiana Club, ,252 Treasurer of Senior Class, Vice- President of Athletic Association, '25, Secretary of Y. W. C. A., 125, Chaplain Delta Alpha Sigma, Col- lege Hockey Team, '25, Y. W. C. A., '24, Athletic Association, YZ4, ,ZSQ Torch Bearer. Generous, big-hearted Helen-we all love her! She is not only good, but good for something. Helping someone else is the secret of her hap- piness, and she seems to know that one who pours out happiness spills some on himself. Can Helen sing? We'll never forget Red-Hot Mama. A FRANCES BOWERS A A 2 TRACY CITY, TENN. Tennessee Club, '24, Samovar Club, ,245 President of Samovar Club, '25, Track, ,24. A combination of the practical and the imaginative, the artist and the business woman, a splendid har- mony of both. That is the defini- tion of Frances. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIlllIlllIIllllllllIlllIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII , ,'-.r,. i SC1'1iO1' Cil-'ASS MILDRED BURFORD LUCILLE BURKS LYNEILLE BUTLER E XI' I A A E E KI' I TEXARKANA, TEX. Bit and Spur Club, '25, President of Texas Club, '25, Athletic Asso- ciation, '25. Mildred, Gulf-Park asks itself, where have you been all my life? I only wish you had come to me before your senior year, for you have become endeared to me by your own many and natural charms. LOUISVILLE, KY. Treasurer of Kentucky Club, '24.g President of Y. W. C. A., ,ZSQ Cir- culation Manager of SEA GULL, ,255 Torch Bearer. Lucy B. has won many friends by being a friend forever. To know her is to love her, for she has a sweet personality, full of rascality. Meet her, think she is charming, k r h h ' h ' now er, sure s e is c arming. She is sober but not serious, quiet but not idle. Jficxsox, Miss. Cotillion Club, y23, '24, Panther Hockey Squad, '24, Secretary of Sigma Psi Iota, '24, '25g Mississippi Club, Bit and Spur Club, 324, '25, Athletic Association, '23, '24, She is so intensely alive that she fairly radiates pep and energy. A dash of red pepper sauce into il liquid would make a delightful drink called Lyneille. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIllllllllllIIlllllllIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllIlllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHH 2 4 . SeI1i01' Class LUCILE FESLER 'VIRGINIA Fox MYRTLE FRANKLIN A A E E KI' I A X 2 CHICAGO, ILL. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, '23, jet Maskers, '23, Secretary of Y. W. C. A., '24, Bit and Spur Club, '24, President of Delta Alpha Sigma, '25, Secretary of Bit and Spur Club, '25, President of Illinois Club, '25g Samovar Club, '24, '25, Illinois Club, '23, '24, Athletic Association, '23, '24, '25, Member of Senior Life Saving, '25, Chicago Club, '24, Torch Bearer. The power of leadership, the for- tune of having numerous friends, the glory of being a Gulf-Park fa- vorite, are Lucile's honors, which she more than deserves. scoT'r, Ivnss. Mississippi Club, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, '25. Her Southern drawl is the keynote of a languorous, refined, and charm- ing Virginia, who glides through your heart and always lives up to what you expect of her. She won't Fox you. ORLA NDO, MISS. Glee Club, '25, Orchestra, '25, Athletic Association, '25, Missis- sippi Club. Footlights and fame for Myrtle, who has won us all by her talent in ye old dramatic art. Ability will ,make her successful-and could you ask for more? llIIIHIIIllIIlllIIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIlIIIIlIIIIIII FRANCES MONTROSS GREEN A A 2 LAGRANGE, ILL. Editor-in-Chief of SEA GULL, '25, Vice-President of Illinois Club, '25, Athletic Association, ,245 Chicago Club, '24, Samovar Club, '24, '25, Bit and Spur Club, y24, '25, Torch Bearer. There are good qualities and bad And both of these are usually had B a erson Y P - But there is an exception to the rule, One who, out of all this school, Seems good. Who is Editor-in-Chief of our An- nual Publication. And might be worthy of having a Delegation Praise her. For she has worked, inspired, and Been a guide to the entire staff, And has really grown into, and be- come one-half Of this book, Read it, and know Frannie. SCI1iOI' C1855 DEBORAH HEWES A X E GULFPORT, MISS. Coast Club. Deborah is a hard worker and a deep thinker. She is liked for her genuinely good nature and faithful- ness. ' IQATHRYN HEY A A E CHARLESTO N, MISS. Orchestra, '24, ,25 gAthletic Asso- ciation, '24, Mississippi Club. If you have ever been with her, talked with her, or even worked with her, then you know that Kath- ryn is an all-round girl, always considering the happiness of others before her own. Kathryn is truly a Mississippi girl, and we love her for it. , IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllIIllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIllllllIllllIIllllIIllllIIIllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllgg F' 1 l JOSEPHINE IXZLINGM Aix A A E INDXANOLA, Miss. Treasurer of Delta Alpha Sigma, '25, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, '24, '25, Mississippi Club, Tiger Hockey Team, '24, Captain of College Hockey, '25, Tiger Basketball Team, '24. Peppy, witty, congenial, attractive -that's Joe. What more could you wish? SCIITOI' Class DOROTHY MCDADE A X 21 TAYLORTOWN, LA. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, '25, Louisi- ana Club, '25. Dorothy has all the sweet reserve of a demure, old-fashioned maiden. Her calm, unruiiled manner has been the admiration and envy of the en- tire school. THEODORA M1LLo1T 2 slr I MADISONVXLLE, LA. Athletic Association, '24, Torch Bearer, Louisiana Club. Her voice was ever soft, gentle, and low, an excellent thing in wom- an. If she has a temper, it has not yet been discovered. Who will play college songs when she is gone? IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllrllllllllllllllIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIlIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII E l l JOSEPHINE NICHOLS A A E TERRE HAUTE, IND. Advertising Manager of SEA GULL, '25, Cosmopolitan Club. She is advertising manager of the SEA GULL, and, by her personality, brings home the nickels. Always interesting, and most capable, her road through life will surely be nickel-plated. SCI1iO1' Class CORALENE PARKER AXE HOT SPRINGS, ARK. Y. VV. C. A. Cabinet, '25, Bit and Spur Club, '25, Arkansas Club. Queer lisp, little girl, big eyes, wonderful attraction. All in all, we have Coralene. IQATHRYN CLARIAN PATTISON AXIS PEORIA, 1LL. Illinois Club, '24, '25, Jet Mask- ers, '24, President of jet Maskers, '25, Glee Club, '24, Treasurer of Glee Club, '25g Vice-President of Delta Chi Sigma, '25, Business Manager of SEA GULL, '25. Indescribable charm, Rare talents, Unusual personality, A convincing manner- Presto! we have Clarian! illllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIlllIIllllIIllIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIlllIIIllIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIllllIllllIIIllllllIlllIIIlllllIIIIHIIIllllllllllllllllllggieff 33' 1 ANNELU PURIFOY E X11 I BREWTON, ALA. Treasurer Sigma Psi Iota, '25, Vice-President Alabama Club, ,25. jazz on to the tune of the sax- ophone with Annelu, who will take you to Alabama, boys, wonderful dances, and glorious times. She is thoroughly likable. SGIITOI' Class ENID ROLAND 2 XII I GULFPORT, MISS. President of Coast Club, '25, As- sistant Business Manager of SEA GULL, '25, Hockey Team, ,23, ,243 Basketball Team, ,2I, '22, Life Saver. Enid looks most quiet, but have you ever noticed that twinkle in her eyes? We would like to have many more like her, for she's just capable, kind, quiet, and sincere. Enid, thy modesty is a candle to thy merit, and O, thy lovely, curly hair! CHARLOTTE SANDERS E XII I JACKSON, MISS. President of Sigma Psi Iota, '25, Cotillion Club, ,23, 324, Mississippi Club, Tiger Hockey Team, '24, Bit and Spur Club, '24, Torch Bearer. Delightfully tiny and cute, adora- bly funny and witty, a little bit of everything gay and bright -that is Charlotte. IllllIIIllIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Senior Class CLOTEAL SHERMAN RACHEL SWIFT JOSEPHINE XVALLACE A X 2 A A 2 A A 2 HAYNESVILLE, LA. Secretary and Treasurer jet Maskers, '25, Louisiana' Clubg Bit and Spur Club, '24, 'z5. Cloteal has been one of the most loyal and most dependable of our class. Her natural reserve covers a great deal of high and fine endeav- or. Some day, Cloteal, we expect you to be a great dramatic artist. MARVELL, ARK. Athletic Association, '24, Arkan- sas Club. She is the kind that you read about and you do not believe exist. She is the one who would help you in any emergency, upon whom you could depend at any time, and one whom you would term a truly fine girl. KNOXVILLE, TENN. Athletic Association, '24, Samo- var Club, '24g Treasurer Samovar Club, '25, Tennessee Clubg Torch Bearer. Sparkling humor, jolly personal- ity, delightful manner, and a gift for being a true friend-all mean jo VVallaCe. IllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIllIllIllIllIIIlllllIllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII? XX x e , V,,, W ss. :sm-W, .-T'37-IT f 'Fr-2 B Senior Class FANNIE MAE VVELLHOLTSE BEULAH MARY VVANZER A X 2 A A E MERIDIAN, MISS. CHICAGO, ILL, Glee Club, '25, Bit and Spur Club, '24, '25g Jet Maskers, '24, Athletic Association, '24, Missis- sippi Clubg Torch Bearer. jet Maskers, '24, '25, Illinois Club, '25, Bit and Spur Club, '24, '25, Chicago Club, '24, Torch Bearer. A grin-clothesg A A spark of wit, humor, and fun- A puggish nose, A Hash of something really genu- A car-a way- ine- That's Fannie Mae. I Beulah Wanzer. A thought of Chicago and a name-' ELIZABETH WILLIAMS A X E TUSCALOOSA, ALA. Samovar Club, '24, '25, Treasurer of Y. W. C. A., '25, Athletic As- sociation, '24, Alabama Clubg Torch Bearer. , She hurries not, she worries not, her calm is undisturbed. Lib is full of life and full of fun, and can she draw? Not only friends, but real honest-to-goodness pictures, as well. mlllllllllllIlllllllllllIllllllllIHIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllmlllIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIllIIlllIlllIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII TH E SEA IEUULIL .21 - ' S. , , x Y ,, uparadise Regainedn Tootl Vi7hat was that noise? Could it be that they had sub- stituted trumpets for bells at Gulf Park, or had I fallen asleep in the A 1 . . midst of dress parade at G. C. INI. A.? There it was again! VVhat A I could it be? I opened my eyes, only to have them filled with the dirt that was '-.....,..- 4 . falling about me on all sides. lVIy ever-present curiosity asserted itself, and I began to dig madly through the earth that I found around me, until I reached the light. I looked around me and saw white-robed figures ascending to the skies, seeing nothing else to do, and owing to a habit I had acquired at Gulf Park, I joined the crowd and began to climb. I had almost reached the top of the golden stairs when I found that one of my classmates of '25 had arrived before me. There, standing at the Golden Gates, was Rachel Swift, who had already rolled Gabriel for his job and was tooting madly on her trumpet. This was the noise that we had heard at intervals during our climb. Rachel told me that I was the last of the class to arrive, and she finally broke down and confessed that on earth she had been the saxophone player and leader of Swiftls Jazz Orchestra, and that even then, she had been assisted by her roommate, Theodore Milloit, at the piano. I was distracted from my conversation with Rachel by the voice of Cloteal Sher- man saying, Hurry up there, Helen, we've got to get those stars hung out before it gets any darker. Later I discovered that these two, during their earthly sojourns, had conducted f'French and Sherman-School of Dancing. However, the stars were a little late in getting out that night, as I stopped Helen long enough to End out that her roommate, Elizabeth Williams, after leaving Gulf Park, had entered politics, and later was elected governor of Alabama, and my old friend, Fannie llae Wellhoiise, had become a taxi driver. Cloteal volunteered the information that Clam-ian Pattison had joined the Sells- Floto Circus, and was their star lion tamer, and that Kathryn Hey and Frances Bowers, unable to be separated even after leaving Gulf Park, had joined the navy and had seen the world. I was very thirsty after my long climb, and as I heard water running, I began to look for it. I soon discovered Lucile Fesler, who now, instead of running a laun- dry, as she had on earth, was washing the celestial garments. I was startled by a terrible sound-it seemed to be a conglomeration of all the existing discords. On investigation, I found that it was only lllildred Burford tuning the Golden Harp Con earth she had been an opera singerj. lllildred called our Page thirty-sewn THE SEA UITMILIL ,gl - - fx X Y i 1 attention to the fact that Virginia Fox seemed natural for her to be dusting off things, since, as a mortal, she had been such an orderly Dean of Newcomb. It was a few aeons later that l came upon the rest of the class, who were excitedly discussing their earthly lives. From the jumble of conversation I learned that, after leaving Gulf Park: Enid Roland had let her curls grow, and had become Mary Pickford, the sec- ondg one of her biggest rivals was Lucile Burks, who was playing ingenue parts in the Franklin Sisters' Productions. lllabel Roberts had taken up medicine at Tulane, and had become one of the greatest specialists of the Southg Josephine Nichols had devoted the remainder of her life to mission work in -Africag Annelu Purifoy, dean of Gulf Park, had brought about the realization of the dream of Col. Langford's life by marrying him and unitinig G. C. lvl. A. and Gulf Park into a co-educational school: Josephine Klingman and Lucille llanson contested the title of champion wrestler of the worldg Dorothy lNfIcDade, in partne1'ship with Josephine VVallace and Frances Green, had made a fortune by inventing paper bags that wouldn't tearg Coralene Parker, after graduating from Gulf Park, married one of the wealthiest bootleggers of the gulf coast, and became his trusted assistantg lXfIartha lVIcGaughy, an ardent lover of athletics, finally joined a Wild West showy Deborah Hewes had been appointed ambassador to England, and the Prince of Wales, who had thus re- mained immune to feminine charms, fell madly in love with her, and in course of time she became Queen of Englandg Charlotte Sanders introduced football for women, and she herself became the most famous quarterback of her age. Strange to say, out of all this class, Lyneille Butler was the only one to marry her ideal and settle down to lead a quiet, uneventful life. Page ihiriy ezght K THE SEA 'Y Gum 7 41 ' ' S. X Y I Y , URS ' 1 MARE LOUISE CLARK DONNA BUFORD - , LlI'li0I' Class OFFICERS MARGARET VAN DYKE, A A E LUCILLE BURKE, E X11 I NEWPORT, ARKANSAS MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE President Junior Class: President Arkansas Vice-President Junior Class: Chaplain Sigma Clubg Assistant Editor Sea Gull. Psi Iota: Bit and Spur Clubg Tennessee Clubg Vice-President Jet Maslcers. NDONNA BUFORD, A X E GLENDORA, MIssIss1PPI Treasurer Junior Class: Treasurer Delta Chi Sigma: President Mississippi Clubg Bit and Secretary Junior Classg Literary Editor Sea Spur Club. Gul1. MARIE LOUISE CLARK, A A 2 JEFFERSON CITY, MISSOURI Junior Class ELINOR BERGER ' A X E NASHVILLE, TENN. Athletic Editor Sea, Gully Secretary and Treasurer Tennessee Club: Athletic Associa- tiong College Hockey Team: Bit and Spur. KATHERINE BIRNBAUM A X Z ' HOT SPRINGS, ARK. Arkansas Club: Bit and Spur Club: Ath- letic Association. SARAH VIRGINIA BRIGHAM A X E JACKSON, TENN. Tennessee Clubg Samovar Club. ELEANOR BRISKER A X E MARSHALL, TEXAS GERTRUDE BULLARD E XII I BASIC, MISS. Mississippi Club: Athletic Association: Win-- ner of Tennis Tournament. BEECYE CASANAS Z XII I NEW ORLEANS, LA. Louisiana Club. QQ aP4 44 ig? W , -, j -,ji 7 ,ag , 4. , .. Avi, -an-4 I.1l'lIO1' Class BARBARA CAMPBELL A A E CHICAGO ILL. I Illinois Clubg Bit and Spur Club. MARY NEIL CARR A X E FULTON, KY. Tennessee Clubg Athletic Associationg O chestra. CATHERINE CATES A X 2 INDEPENDENCE, KANSAS Bit and Spur Clubg Cosmopolitan Club. DOROTHY CURTIS A X E COAL Fms, ALA. Alabama Club. MARGUERITE MAXINE DEAM E KI' I DAYTON, omo Bit and Spur club. RUTH I. ELLIOTT 2 XI' I BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Alabama. Club: Glee Club. UIIIOI' C1855 ELLEN ERICKSON A Y E KALISPELL MONT Assoclate Edltor Sea Gull Blt and Spur Club Vxce Prcsxdent Cosmopolltan Club MARTHA FRAISER A A 2 GRIIENWOOD, MISS IVIISSISSIPDI Club E 1 I MARSHALL rnx HENRX LOUISE FURBY A A E ALIIXANDRIA LA I oulslana Club DOROTHY GRAHAM A A Z SHAW MISS DIIBSISSIDDI Club PEGGY GREEN A Y E IONIA, MICH Blt and Spul Club Cosmopohtan Club CAROL FRIEDMAN If Junior Class LILLIAN HANDY A X E DENISON, TEX. Bit and Spur Club. MARION HOGAN A X E BILOXI, MISS. Coast Club. LOUISE HOLTON A A E CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Advertising Manager Sea Gullg Bit Spur Clubg Tennessee Club. JAMES ALINE HORN A X E HORN SPRINGS, TENN. and Tennessee Club: College Hockey Team. HELEN FRANCES JOHNS A A E DECATUR, ILL. Illinois Club. MADALYN JOINES A A 2 SHREVEPORT, LA. Louisiana Club. llI'l1OI' C 8.55 LEILA ELIZABETH JONES A X E HOT SPRINGS ARK A1 an as Club B1t and Spux Club ELIZABETH KEMPSTER E X11 I NEW ORLEANS LA Loulslana Club MARY JO MATTHEWSON E XI' I MARSHALL TEX CAROLINE McALLISTER A A S' CHAITANOOCA, TENN RUTH MCELVEEN A A E NEW ORLEANS LA V1CEPlLS1C'iQHt Delta Alpha S1 ma Vme Presldent Y W C A Treasurer LOUISiana. Club Blt and Spux Club FRANCES IRENE MEE E NI' I ST PETERSBURG, FLA Cosmopolltan Club J ' 1 4 4 , . 'k s 3 ' ' . Y I , . , . 4 A . I . Tennessee Clubg Bit and Spur Club. , . - --I ' 'g 5 ' - I ' ' - Junior Class ELEANOR MINCHER A X E GU LFPORT, MISS. Coast Club. MARIE MOLDER E KI' I MEMPHIS, TENN. Glee Clubg Tennessee Club. DOROTHY NASH A A E SULLIGENT, ALA. Alabama Club. SARA LOUISE PARKES A X E LAWRENCEBURG, TENN. Te 1111 essee Clubg College Hockey Team. MERRIL JULIET PRATT E XII I COLUMBUS, Miss. Mississippi cmbg Auueric Association. LOUISE RALSTON 2 KI' I COAHOMA, Miss. Bit and Spur Club: Athletic Association Mississippi Club. l.1I1IO1' Class MARY SANDERSON 2 KI' I TEXARKANA, ARK. Vice-President Sigma Psi Iota: Secretary and Treasurer Arkansas Club: Athletic Associa- tion: Glee Club: College Hockey Team. JENNY WREN SCOTT A X E RIPLEY, TENN. 'IR-nnossee Club: Athletic Association. MARGERY SHARP A A Z ASH LA ND, OHIO Bit and Spur Club: Athletic Association: Cosmopolitan Club. LOUISE SIMPSON A A E RUSSELLVILLE, ARK. Arkansas Club. MARY GENE SMITH Z XII I SYLACAUGA, ALA. Alabama Club. DOROTHY ALWILDIA SWALLOW A X E ' LINCOLN, NEB. Athletic Association: Glen Club: Cosmopol- itan Club. Junior Class ROSE THOMPSON A A E LEESVILLE, LA. . C. A. Cabinet: Secretary Louisiana Club. HELEN MARR WADLOW E XI' I GULFPORT, MISS. Coast Club: Athletic Association EDNA EARLE WHITFIELD A X 2 GULFPORT, MISS. Coast Club. OLIVE WILLIAMS E XII I JACKSON, MISS. Vice-President Mississippi Club. ROSALIE WILLIAMSON A A E EL PASO, TEX. Athletic Association: Louisiana. Clubg Colle e Hockey Team. MARY THOMMASSON WOODALL E XI' I AUGUSTA, LA. Alabama Clubg Bit and Spur Clubg Athletic Association. rue sea X u emu., I2 S. . X A s . 1 Page forty-nine It Pays to Advertise BERGER-Children cry for it. BIRNBAL'hIiThC secret of fifteen minutes a day with Dr. Eliot's five-foot shelf of books. BRISKER-ThE kind you're proud to serve. BRIGHABI-VVS go a long way to make friends. BUFORD-The best by test. BULLARD-IIHDTOVCS with use. CAhIPBELL1N0 metal can touch you. CARR-just a real good car Crj. CASANAS-Service with a smile. CATES-Every little mouthful has a message all its own. CL.AXRK-ThCl'ClS nothing like it for herj. CL'RTISiCOV6TS the earth. DEAh'I-Cl0fhCS of quality. ELLIOTT-She ordered chicken salad again. ERICKSON--You've tried the rest, now try the best. FRAZIER-It satisfies. FRIEDBIAN-A sensible habit. FERRY-l'lOXV did your garters look this morning? GRAH.AbIiThC1'C'S a reason. GREEN-That skin you love to touch. HANIDX'-ShC drinks Carnation milk from contented cows. HOGAN-ThC mark of quality. HOLTON-Delicious and refreshing. HORN-CMCH VVantedj. JOINES-Ask the man who owns one. JONES-SLlCl1 popularity must be deserved. IQEBIPSTERL'-Fl'lC light that never fails. lkqATTHEWSON-l'lCZ1Cl, others follow. lh'ICALLISTER-That well-dressed look. lNrICELVEEN-VVhat men admire most in women. MEE1WC put the world to sleep. MINCHER-SH100th performance. MOLDER-I have discovered The Secret of Caruso's Voice. NASH-That schoolgirl complexion. PARKES-Have you a little fairy in your home? PRATT-QQ 44-100 per cent pure. THE SEA EMLL 2 - - 2. X Y A, RALSTON-Always ready for use. SANLJERSKJN-A fussy package for fastidious folks. SCOTT-CHVC your face a new thrill. SHARP-Have that athletic look. S1MPsoN-Good to the last drop. SNIlTPl1llAIltl she thought filet niignon was fishfl SVVAI.l,OYV-Vvllllf a whale of a difference just a niake. ,1iHUKIl'SON1VVll?ll a fellow needs a friend. XJAN IJYKE-57 Varieties. XVH1'1'ifIELn-3 in 1. XV1LLI.MXIS-Tl1e1'e is beauty in every jar. XK7II,I,I,'XNlSON-SHVC' the surface and you save all YVOOIJALI,-I became popular over night. few cents fsensej Page fifty H f SEA 'Y Gull XJ ALLEN IQATHRYN ALLEN College Special Class OFFICERS . ..... . . De Queen, Arkansas 2 'If I President College Special Class Arkansas Club Texarkana Arkansas JOSEPHINE TENNISON ....... . . , ' EXI-'I Vice-President College Special Class Vice-President Arkansas Club Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Glee Club 1 College Special Class KATHERINE E. ENGELSMAN A X E EVANSVILLE, IND. Samovar Club: Bit and Spur Club. HILAH MACKIE A A Z BILOXI, MISS. Coast Club. MILDRED MCGEE NEW ORLEANS, LA. Louisiana Club: Bit and Spur Club: College Hockey Team. RUBY AGNES MERKEL A X E CHICAGO, ILL. Athletic Associationg Illinois Clubg Glee Club. RUTH MORGAN E 111 I GULFPORT, Miss. Coast Club. MARTHA WRIGHT MORRIS A B1Loxi, Miss. Coast Club. 'Ax in College Special Class MARY LOUISE REUTTI E KI' I HAMILTON, OHIO Glee Clubg Bit and Spur Club: Orchestra. LOUISE PINCI-IARD ROSS ' A X Z MADISONVILLE, KENTUCKY Secretary and Treasurer College Special Class Glee Club. LETA SMITH A A E STEPHENS, ARK. Arkansas Clubg Glee Club. MARGARET SMITH A X E GULFPORT, MISS. coast Club. THELMA THOMPSON Z XI' I MEMPHIS, TENN. Tennessee Club, PAULINE ADAMS BOYKIN A X E WEST POINT, GA. Tennessee Clubg Glee Clubg Graduate Special A IEUULL Page fifty five vii Colle ZITI' C CFCVVS LLEX ATHERYN oaf IO GELSN AX N Somebody s star prec ated I1 IULISC H A T pert CX ID gli lg W C ng al' S H TP ERKEL cl hree 0 CI' lk tc Ba ORGAIN C2 armony H f weg VY C21 'S Q- U3 3ff10L1S IILTT OLISE d fidd ARGARET Sx TH fy I1 VCFS C C SCTCZUD w F ALLO W 1 HP SO IX SO 'NTY EIN Jo CC egr 1 per HP PSON YI HO A ELW p ge Specia Chart So Called :Imbilion Is To Be I5 Likely To Be Bliss In Her Extifnation A-A K A .. ..... A Pad ki ............. M id ................. G. P. C. r KITTY EN il JN ...... An artist ................. A bum .................. Time I A , PUD MCGEE ............. Ap i .............. ' ........... ome RUBY M ........... P. ' d li .... ....... C h ir . ....... -1- i i RUTH M Y ........... r ll ............... Ofhce girl ................ ' ock I1-11 INIARY L Y R4 ' I ..... F .................. ark P1ug's 'ockey ........ I ss - PINKIE Ross ............. A howling success ......... A h i ht ........... UA box o candy p TNI .11 ........ A Kreisler ............... Secon ler . .......... T rm. X DOT s ............ A Cuffs girl ............. A ................ N b. U i i if T U T ............ A Galli-Curci ............ A box orator .......... Mai TH .1 T . N ...... A modern H ......... A mode ................. lW.R.S. d THE SEA t jguuug x Y 71 The Builder By LYNEILLE Down in the great excavation, f In the dirt, the dust, and the mud, The Workman plies his weary pick- Raises it, then it falls with at thud. And, as he works, he sings his song, The words unwritten and unrhyma-dy The musif- unwritten and unsc-oi-ed, But with his song the pick is timed. I pick it up, I let it down, Sings the voive of the man: Lifting, then dropping. lifting, then dropping The pick that's in his hand. His not the drudging of the slave, Nor the dreary work just for pay. IIe's building a bridge for the universe, And thousands will pziss that way. BUTLER The merehant, the farmer, the banker, Children returning from school, XVill pass over this bridge he is building, Then, the lover, the tramp, and the fool. IIe's building' for future generations, His not the toil of those oppressed: A builder among world builders To be praised, to be Considered blest. NVork on, untiring builder, In the dirt, the wind, and the dust. You're doing 21 wonderful deed, Think of the wonderful trust. 1 pick it up, I let it down, His song without rhyme or verse, The song of the worker and toiler, The laborer for the universe. An Answer to an Accusation By LYN EILLE XVe loved in the days gone by, And with it lov:-rs' quarrel, we I'm sud and lonely now, But 1'm not broken-hezrrted. parted, For you swore you loved me truly, NVith a love that eoulil not die, But never :L tear you shed NVhen we Came to say goodbye. If your love was as you told me- An 1-ver-burning flame- You would regret the parting, Even though I ani to hlzinie. BUTLER But you do not seem to c-are That we have parted forever, Though we swore an undying love That only God Could sever. You go your way with a smileg You do not seem to regret, So why should I Care at all? I, too, can soon forget. So do not blame me rashly For a lightness of love and care, For to me and the world, it seems, You do not seem to care. 'Though we loved in the days gone by, 'Though with a lovers' quarrel we parted, NVe may be sad and blue, But we're not broken-hearted, A Mood of the Sea By MARIE LOUISE CLARK Before ine is a symphony Of gray and whiteg Gray sea, white-capped, And pale gray light. Gray winds :ind waters Mingle madly, To:-:sing elezin white Spray To sea gulls, sadly Flupping great gray wings: And the white sails Of boats toppling over the horizon Danef- to gray gales , Of wind, :ind proudly sail on. Page-fifty-szx SEA Y Gum is . x Al ATHE THE SEA Mgourtigh ,gl - - a X Y 1 xt Y 1 Sophomore Class QFFICERS lxIlI.DRl?lJ IJERRYIAERRY . ..... . Nashville, Tennessee AXE President Sophomore Class President Delta Chi Sigma President Bit and Spur Vice-President Tennessee Club Hockey Team ALJIJIIE Llzis LANDSTREET ...... . . Nashville, Tennessee A A E Vice-President Sophomore Class President Tennessee Club Y. VV. C. A. Cabinet Secretary Delta Alpha Sigma GRACE AICCUEN . ..... . .Chieago, Illinois A A E Secretary and Treasurer Sophomore Class Bit and Spur Club Illinois Club Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Page ffty-eight ERLENE KATHERINE M. -fi Sophomore Class RUTH ATCHLEY E KI' I EL DORADO, ARK. Arkansas Club: Gleo Club. ROSE JOSEPHINE BATTLE E XII I MARSHALL, TEX. Texas Club. FRANCES BIGGS A X E DYERSBURC, TENN. Tw 1111 essvo Club. FLOSSIE BLACK E KI' I ckowuzy, LA. Louisiana Club. A A E CAIRO, ILL. Illinois Clubg Glce Club. FLORENCE CLARKSON A A E . POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y. Cosmopolitan Club. Page fifty nme CARRICO 71 S0pl'10l'I101'6 Class ESTHER CUEVAS A X E PASS CHRISTIAN, MISS. Gln-Q Clubg Mississippi Club: Samovar Club. JENNIE TUCKER HEISS E XI' I GULFPORT, MISS. T1'0:1su1'1-1' Coast Cluh. BOBBIE HOLMES A A E CINCINNATI, OHIO Bit and Spur Clubg Athletic Association: Tenm-sseo Club. MARJORIE BELLE HOOPER A X E MEMPHIS, TENN. T e-11i11 qs. c,1 o Club: Bit and Spur Club. MARION LASSER A A E NEW YORK CITY, N. Y. 'I'x'easu1'ei' Athlt-tic Association: President Cosmopolitan Club. MARGARET MAYHER A X E CHICAGO, ILL. Bit and Spur Clubg Jet Maskei-sp 1lI1n':.s Club: Glcc Club. Page .nxly 21 . THE SEA X g il Sophomore Class BETTIE MULVEY A A E WILMETTE, ILL. Illinois Clubg Samovar Clubg Bit and Spur Club. CELESTE PAGAN E KI' I TEXARKANA, ARK. Arkansas Clubg Athletic Associationg Hockey Team. MARY EARLE PATTON A A E GULFPORT, M iss. Ser-rvtary Coast Clubg Mvmber Life Saving Corps. MARION PUGH E KI' I PORTLAND, ARK. Arkansas Clubg Glue Club. ZEITA REDFIELD E KI' I EDWARDS, MISS. Mississippi Club. FRANCES ANNETTIQRISING A A E ' EvANs1'oN, 1LL. Bit and Spur Club: Illinois Club. Page rixly-one , 1 .r 'Z' .ag- lcv- 49'- I n I THE SEA EMILIL ,gl - ' x X i Y, ophomore Class i l V RUTH RAINOLD E XII I PASS CHRISTIAN, MISS. Coast Clubg Samovax' Club. ' FRANCES SKILLMAN A X E DALLAS, TEX. Bit and Spur Plub: Glen Clulxg Athlf-tic' Assor-iation. 5 KATHERINE STAHEL I A A E NEW ORLEANS, LA. ViuP-President Coast Clubg Samovar Club. MINNIE ADELE STOKES AAE V LOUISVILLE, KY. l Y l 1 Glue Club. ig LUCILLE TAEOR A A 2 's E l PASCAGOULA, Miss. Mississippi Club. 1 I ' o FRANCES VVALLER 1 A X E ' i ' 4 HAYNESVILLE, LA. I l 'll Luuisifma Clubg Hockey Teamg Samovai' i Club. ,i i i i ii if ll NATALIE WHITE A A 2 l LAKE CHARLES, LA. Louisiana Club. l , - l i 5? I ll Ili 1 . I U, Q . I 3 Page sixty-tfwo l i I Li TH E SEA lEiMlL.lL 4 . . . 23 Station S. O. P. 5'2 S. O. P. H. now broadcasting. We will have a very interesting and 'QQ fi an unusual program this evening, for we will present to the Radio Fans, America's foremost people. Miss Mildred Derryberry, the recent Miss Nashville, and winner of the National Beauty Contest, will lead the list. She will impart to our W 'i-.-l women listeners a few beauty secrets. The next on the program will be Miss ...... Q ,,.1, Addie Iaee Landstreet, better known as Hap. You will know her as the first SQ woman in America to discard skirts. She will give a short talk on the comforts of man's attire. Miss Landstreet is to be followed by Miss Grace McCuen, the famous authoress, who will give you a brief review of her latest book. Oh, yes, before I forget it, let me remind you that there is to be a very thrilling and snappy picture at the Strand Theater this week. It is a revival of Nita Naldi's most famous picture, in which Miss Atchley is to take the lead. She plays the part that Miss Naldi once played, and the part that branded her the 'movie vamp! ' The next selection on the program will be a sure cure for the blues. The 'Dixie Ram- blers' will play a few of their own peppy compositions. These jazz wizards are none other than Adelle Stokes at the piano, and the well-known kazoo player, Zeita Redfield. Miss Frances Skillman strums a wicked banjo and Miss Frances Waller totes the Sax. Stand by, folks, and listen to their irresistible melodies. I could hardly keep from dancing while I listened to that music. How did it affect you? Now I must get back to business-business, did I say? If you could see what I see, you would all forget business and everything else. VVe certainly have an unexpected pleasure this evening in that Miss Erleen Carrico, the little lady that has danced her way to Broadway, has agreed to entertain you for a few minutes. S. O. P. H. will continue their program in a few minutes. Howdy, folks! Everybody happy? If you aren't now, you will be, for I've just been talking to Miss Patton, and she tells me that we are to be favored with the presence of the 'Buncum Sisters,' more commonly known as Bobby Holmes and Ruth Rainold. They will entertain in a way that only the 'Buncum Sisters' are capable of doing. 'tMiss Margaret Mayher, in response to a phone call which she has just received from Miss Rose Battle, will repeat her selections of last evening, and she will be accompanied by Miss Frances Rising. Now for something a little different-let us listen attentively to a debate between Miss Helen Wadlow and Miss Jennie Tucker Heiss, the subject being, 'Resolved, that Psycho- Analysis Can Be Applied To Everyday Lifel' The decision will rest with Miss Lucille Tabor. Following the debate, there will be a lecture given by Miss Marian Lasser, the athletic supervisor at Randolph-Macon. She will give some explicit directions for building up the physical body, and will add some reducing rules. This will finish our program for this evening, but before closing, I might suggest that no one miss the play, The Low Nest, that will be broadcasted from this station tomorrow at 8:15 p. m. To arouse your interest, I'll read the cast. The leading role will be played by Miss Betty Mulvey, supported by Miss Celeste Pagan. The other actresses are Misses Frances Biggs, Esther Cuevas, Marion Pugh, Katherine Stahal, and the friendly enemies-Misses Flossie Black and Natalie VVhite. The comedienne is Miss Marjorie Hooper. The play is to be directed by Miss Florence Clarkson. S. O. P. H. signing off. Good night, folks. Page sixty-Ilzrez TH IE SEA IEMHJL. 2 ' ' 3 x 7 1 x Y 1 S RCTII ATCHLEY . FRANCES BIGGS . ROSE BATTLE . FLOSSIE BLACK . . ERLEIEN CARRICU . . IESTH ER CUEVAS . . . FLORENCE CLARRSON . MILIIREO LJERRYBISRRY RIARJURIE HOOIIER . JENNY TUCKER HEISS BOIIIIIE HOLBIES . . . RIARION LASSER . . HAI, LANDSTREET . BETTY NIULVEY . . . AIARGARET RIAYHER . CIRACIE RICCUIEN . . NIARY EARLIE PATTON RIARION PEGH . . . RL'TH RAINOLD . . FRANCES RISING . . ZEITA RIEDFIELD . . AOELI, STOKES .... KATHERINE STAHEL . FRANCES SKILLMAN . LL'CII,I,E TAEOR . . FRANCES VVAI,I,ER . . ophomore Anthology U . . . The Kiss . To A fllouse . Soldier, Rest. U JJ 11 . . . Night Thoughts . . . . Aly lfeart Leaps Up . . . . . . . . . . . TheFog . . I Wyandered Lonely As A Cloud . . . . The Dairy lllaidu U Ode To fl Greeian Urn . She Pfalhs In Beauty . Chila s Garden of Verses J: ........ Saul . Little Boy Blue . . . . . . . New Voices . Ode To A Nightingale . . Hllltizzzatioizs of Immortality 1' 1: 11 U U . . .... holy Last Durhess . . . Luey Gray . . . Patterns . . . Gospel of Beauty . . . . To A Cuehoon . Three Years She Grew . ...... Auld Lang Syneu . Charge of The Niglzt Brigade .... . . . . . . Silenee 11 . Paradise Lost Page sixty-lou K THE SEA 'Y Gum 7 41 S , 1 X Y Y , '06 TIIIE SEA X EMIIII 5 , , , 1 x, V MW? QV ?. F1'eSl'lITlaI'l Class OFFICERS VIRGINIA MILLER, A X E .... Prfsidnzt MARY LAND, E XI' I . . . Secretary OLIVER PERKINS, E XII I . . . Vzce-Prrsidrnt JANET GLEN, A A E . . Tn-asurer MEMBERS DOROTHY HENDERSON, A A E HARRIETTE VVEAVER, A A E MARY JANE MI'I I'ENDORF, E XI' I ESTHER LANYON, A X E MARION LOUISE PFREVETT. A X ZZ EVELYN MORELAND, E XII I ANNIE LAURIE CORLEY, E XII I ELIZABETH KEMARD BOLAND, Z XII I BETTY GLENN, A A E ELIZABETH SCATES, A A E ANNA ODENEAL FOLKES, A X E RUBY MAE TERRY Page sixty-six THE SEA IEIMILIL 2 - - x X Y A 1 Page sixty-se-'uen Gulf Park Presents- ELEANOR PAYNE . . . . Daring Youth ELIZABETH BOLAND . . Till' Silrnt Strmzgrr EVELYN MORELAND . . . . Sim-lock, Jr. ESTHER LANYON . . ..... Untamwl Youth ELIZABETH SCATES . . . Wyhai Thru' fllwz W'111ztf'1l DOROTHY HENDERSON . . . . . y'lll'DII1lgl'l'0ll.Y Blmzzlf' BIARY JANE IVIITTENDQRF . . The Plumfonz Ridvr BIARIAN TREVETT .... .... I lot Stuff JANET GLEN . . . . Tlu' Night Ilflilf' VIRGINIA MILLER . . . . Jllonfnmrtc PIILDEGARDE LYONS . ..... Dixif ANNA FOWLKES . . .... Hliss Iilurlwznl OLIVER PERKINS . . . Uvlzy A1011 Ll'IliVl7 I'I0ll1l' JOHNNIE IVIAY RICE . . . The Gairty Girl ANNIE LAURIE CORLEY .......... Thr Pm-ferr Flnpprr HARRIET WEAVER . . The Pfonzarz IIYIIO Sillllfll Kami -was fanzpzzsvflj MARY' LAND . . ............ Cause for Difzrorfc' THE SEA IEMILIL 2 - 1 x x Y Y 1 'SI' MPX ,485 econd Year High School OFFICERS HARRIE1' MILLER .... ,.... ..... P r esident CYRAYCE NOTEBOOM . . . ....... Vice-Presidenl MILDRED RAINOLD . . . . Secretary and Treasurer MEBIBERS JENNIE LEE BEARDEN ALICE CAGLE BETTY GLENN HELEN GRAHAM SOLVEIG IQELLOVVAY EVELYN MILLER MARJORIE PEARCE THELMA RoBER'I's MARION TREvE'I'1' GEORGIA LEE WEATHERLY Page sixty-eight THE Gum fg SEAS 41 S x il I Page sixty-nina First Year High Schoo EMMA JENE HODGE DOROTHEA LYONS JACQUELINE RICHARDSON EMILY VVADLOW THE SE A J? ii l -l S ll ll! l-i 145 lx Qjlrl Zl A,-, -I 36 EN -. 324 Ill! 222 fill I'N 'ill ll 42 41: ll-4 45 411 4T -IN 511 Bl ..., 54 512 37 SN aiu bil viii 1512 lifl Tl ...I A., T-I 75 T01 TT X Emu. ' 1 2. 3 1- Tb' 6 7 I0 If 11. 35 5- 3 ,... 1'OSS'WOTd PUZZIC' llurizonhll N1-1-vssalry to snlvv this IDUZZIP. 'l'va1'l1l-1's vxp:-vt. XVH murdr-r it, Gull' Park by thi- -L- Vnfastun frvld Englislil. BlL'l'l'ly ll buy, lflxvlamation. Always frwsli. lf'avorill- flyv lSandvi'son's sm-4-iall. mintinent ralilnxj. Ilswl in Math. Hrwalcs your fall fgymj. Maki- twu right angles ot' yuurss-lf, Sh1rl'I vllt. Hui- 01' hi-allh. Symbol dear ln Ile-lta Alpha Signias. llwlw this dm-s not apply to marlcs. liailway lillllllll. Uni- thing' and thi-n anotht-r. Hui' 1-wiiiitry iZli!lll'.J, Pride ul' thi- South. l'lar-t- ol' many tri-es. HIT gon-s the 1'11if'li1'll'S hvad. Thus. Stall- illilillhi. Uur Cflllllllvlll fahlmh. Ni-ml:-ll fur all clit-ers, or Hi-li-n Fri-ncli snr vial lntu, lmstt-nl fur Sunday night. XVIIA-ru gffmrl l'i-lluws gut tmngwtlii-i', Gills name- fahlnxh. lfipqurv in !'2Ll'lllVill. Hrassy iitlld cold Englislii. 'l'rans1mi'latiun. 1lirl's name-, H2111-ly Si-1-11, IFl'Sli'l'li for liaskflthall. zxfl,il'l'liYI' di-sr-rihing' tainah-S. U NUI l'fvl'H.l-t to thank limi' fllni-c-ks. Iinfs llillllth l'rid4- oi' tht- r-ampus, 4,2111-vn nl' l'airim-s. l'nvl-- Sam at Gull' Park fablnxl. f'h1-rry rim-. Suriv-tliiiig lu draw. Railway lalflnzj, .lffirniatirt-. tabhizl, x- T9 N 0 X1 o ., .. 5 li T S fl 10 12 14 I., IT IEP 21 Ill 225 Lili IIT 31 32 Ili! 35 315 3T 30 42 -Hi 50 52 55 56 59 HH 431 li! 64 65 GT GH Tll T21 T-I T5 TIS. Tb, Latin fur sun. I-lot dog. Girl in popular sung. Vertical Part oi' the verb to bc-. Studio specialty. Tmvards. Railway system fabblhj. Latin pri-fix. XVQ all lovv tn do it XVe-storn State i2ibiJl'.i. Product oi' tht- laboratory. Be suri- that yours is high, llightvil. Vsed for sviciic-v. Our log cabin in the pint-S, Vlie-ers usa' it. 'Phe timt- to snlvv this puzzlv. Faire-st tirnc of all. Grassy land. A cnursv that you nt-ver look for. A slip in the mail box. Hai-monious sounds. Fat folks' folly. 1'll'f't'131Zll'it' for food. Fantastic too. Tin- play's tht- thing, 'Fest of knowledgm-. Some-hotly's boy. Part ol' verb lo han' A way out. Happy. On the blacklist. 'l'l1c- lim-s will do it. Necessary for horscmanship. Sign ol' i-nnui. The search for beauty. Typi:-al Gull' Park girl. All right tslangl. Morning falxblzl. Always nbliging. Engim- tu Gull' Park bus, Maki-s things run smoothly. liny's naman To hi-S01-c'll. Rvhulil. IH-t nanim-. Ailvrnfmn fabhixl . A vunlinvnt tablnzj. fmort- or lessj. Page .fefuenly Y 5 1 r 3 w K I 1 w A IEMILIL A 'C ,46 . +'FrW-luhinbbbvfvig-39 fur Innes?- :xr 1 !iA?5W '3 15 53945 wi Page seventy three X A-.fi i . f EA N N N N x w Q . FLM 7 ' A ' M X xiii Qsp' l x, f. 'S ' I L- Q ,F- Q ' - , 'Wy 'll' ff, 'A-,gf rz ' 1, L ml' V -P f V 5,-E . yr ' f ' 2-'74, ' I, - , 3 4 ' i . Y vi, W I :FH NX W 'Q39 ' .. , r f U f 1, in--v N ' , ,.-,... ha 1 ' id. 'L' E A W W W . 3 V . ' . ' Ls. - ' b W7'2 f iv' 4 X i 2 i W L f 3 K ' . X 9 N4 eggs- o W tm' X U J, , -N, -N I k ' ' x 4 ' .,, '1 Q , ' - THE SEA Lx EMLLI 41 . . X Y Y, L I F-EET 55? V g ,N W. I , - x' ,XJ sw 3 .2: If ' -CH 1: ' f X 4 G A t Ins, Eb., ' Tig A ,,.., Y. Cablnet OFFICERS LUCILLE BURK-s . . . . President HELEN FRENCH . . . . Secretary RUTH MCELVEEN . . . Vice-President ELIZABETH WILLIAMS . . Treasurer MEMBERS JOSEPHINE TENNYSON CORALENE PARKER JOSEPHINE KLINGMAN VIRGINIA Fox ADELE STOKES DOROTHY MCDADE EVELYN MILLER GRACE MCCUEN RosE THOMPSON HAP LANDSTREET Page sefvenly-four K THE SEA . IEMULIL. J23 I iQ 3-L Page seventy-fi-ve W SE X Emu, THE A Y, .yn- Q . 4 Off-f ELUOQ if FTQP-N 5 Y, - s xi 1 N ? ' ,fq7z+3gq9L' 4 , a Q , iam 'f . mi,f2g'k5jk7 X Qi I 3 If TH IE SEA GUILD, .-Cl QARIAN W Siu A 1951-SURE? TENNX5 'VC fs Smmw 45 f,14MON L04 SMWH WEU5 r F' wwse F20 ,QRS ff' 92? 'QA Mm CLE grcfv' KG J Page .vefventy-sefven K THE SEA EUILIL J? ix x Y I 2 -.- l i 1 -4E:L?.xz!k:1.S3ai3?-EEQE I L 1 , '4 new -V ,- -Q Q ' ,!a1. , - M S S PONSMOFKS Th rss ml ass or VO mss Lzsghfon P FrancesEovem-s Rhea Nhlsh U-OSEP ME MXIGCE Mbglhld M1lvEY f 311: fl QQ v iii is Q ' ,A 5 X ' ,. M .lf T MEMBERS J i w W f - fs FvancQSBw2Ps 5' I . gf Wrgnmavimer SaYO.x1BT'Vgx'10.YY'L X 'f b BETTHL muNy'g7 FlLucu. Cagha. 5 xx 111 -1 G-vayce Nofeboom E sikm- Dum as xg I Mary Em3a'Pa1'72n KaihmneEngpXsmahn , nl X fiuih 13a,n,,5,1 humagasler MQW I A gommnue. Nagymgi QV 0. raxSEY' D a guna Q Q Prancas Green, 1 ' May,,mT,wEr,-7- Max, MWYTMQWSOW h TOSEPhN'l2MfaDaQ2. Ndarecl NC 515- Franc ESVQHEY H0-'WET NWNET' Y Elmzabmmwlinams I lllflill-9-I-alrl.1'4 1 Page sefventy-eight A IEMILIL. fy yy . ' f5?f2'2 J GFFICERS 1 KATHRY N CLARIAN PATTISON Preszdfnz Page .sefueniy nine LUCILLE BURKE Vzrc Prmdcnt CLOIEAL SHERMAN Secntary and Treasurer ELINOR BERGER PAULINE Bos KIN BEECYE CASANAS CATHERINE CATES MYRTLE FRANKLIN JANET GLEN BOBBY HOLMES MEMBERS MARGARET MAII-IER EVELIN MORELAND DOROTHY NASH MERRILL PRA'Ir DOROIHI SWALLOW ROSE THOMPSON BELLAH VVANZER BEBE VVHARTON THE SIE Il . . A I 5 I I I H 2, x V If' -- I ff? . I X 5 . I 'Q . Lf' QS 5 R 1 f pi LHJIIII ' IEE SEA B ERIE 1 up ' weve View fu DVCR ' , 'Ai fx Qfilfii 3'Q. ISE, 3101016 - A - ' 9403507 I1 Ig. ngggq I A X gtgggz Ji, 510104 X 1 ' ' I DQ'.0I TfE'lI'il - bpm ,oggm I-AIEIII '- X011 J N I 'EM gill U I f w I igujt A - L S Lesser MRS. STONE, Tmrlzrr ROSE BA'I'TI,E SARAH BRIOHAM IQATHERINE BIRxR.xI'xI IERLEEN CARRICO IIELEN JOHNS ROLL MAOELYN JOINES MARIE MOLIIER CIRACE MCCCEX ROSALIE XVIIIIARISOX ELF.-XXOR IVIIXCHER NATALIE VVHITE FRANCES MEF I.L'CILE BURKE MARY XVOOOALI, FRANCES Bxccs VIRGINIA Fox CATHERINE C.-YHQS DoxxA BUEORII GERTRCOI-: BCEEARII JOSEPHINE KI.IxGMAN CAROLINE IVlC.ALI,IS'I ER MILIIRED MCGEE OLIVER PERKINS HALLY EVANS LOUISE HoLI'oN r11HELMA THOMPSON JOSEPHINE SAUCIER VIQHEODORE MH.I.OI'I' JOSEPHINE NICHOLS MARION PIIOH Page eighty TIHI IE SEA EUILJL. J? QNX if , ,,-f ,, A 14 II ,ff v- ,fv H 5 :I 1.., ll fi ' 21 vw: 4 , ,an ww if . . zz? f ,A ' f nw--fn W 'Nw-www wfy I , ,X .Q . can U 5 1, r 4 :skin .mu M en.-W... f- . Us ww fip,V-wQ59mr ,Q y ' ' 9 ., ,,:., -il y? -F . f. it ..5 .-'L v - F' Una- M11 V gh K 5 Page ezghty-one THE SEA IEUULL FESLER fl ,V RUTH MCEL If LEE LANDSTREET JOSEPI-SINE KLINGMAN MIS S RICHARDS Delta Alpha Sigma Sorority Mlss RxcHARDs, Sponsor OFFICERS LUCILLE FESLER ...... ..... ..... P r esident RUTH MCELVEEN .... . . Vice-President ADDIE LEE LANDSTREET . . . . . Szrretary J0'sEPH1NE KLINGMAN . . . . Treasurer HELEN FRENCH . . . Chaplain Page eighty-lfwo THE SEA EMLIL 5 , . X Y Y 1 I - ,ua .H , A: l 3 , 'EF' ' , 4- . , v U fi 3' X 7 Y , A in V '. . ' I f .. ,ff Q Ty . , , ft! ,,k W H I ,Y .1 I gf A Q J. I ,ying I I fikllfii KYVWVEF' LU 'ILLL 51'RY'I'5 HRRBARP FPWMTFEIH, IQLEIIN VREFICO 'MAME L'UX'2'f'.Cl.r3Hii FLOFLWL ClfMc 'W r-mmm Frimrrv HENW l'I.fx:,n-V T LXNET ULEH BETI'1Ai?LENN DCRUTYEY GRAHAM HEIIN GFMHAM TRANUFJ I IISEN TYJ1uWNi HE2?aDff29C'N III MERITS UTY HVFSHX H '1!.N'f' 1, 1137159 FTFLTPN NELEN Jf5ZW'5 Gif!!! !'lff ,WIN EVE LTN NXUXFC DEYUE. NI'LVE'Y UORUUIY Nfxfil -YFflU'F7Nh klL'l5OL'f 'mg MEKRWN LQWEN XHLAH Mbflfifi l.U LE.l NAVVSN C wt-:NF X1'a!.!!VTY!v MMCvEA1m.1j PAIILN MFQKIJILINF Fl IIARDSON ? I 1' . A FRAMES RIYING FTlV7M?ET1l muse Mnsumur 'rx-mm' LOUISE RIMPSYNN LETA SMITH ummm -'rwu ,wma zrrgxuts r 1 N ' if k ' ' f' 11 .. f 1 y., . , . , Y . Qs. ,. . f y w- 'M A - 'N' 1-A, if V , 1 ,.n - B ,QR ,v-,. , LT- 12' .A 1 -K -1 ,QE -.-, M V, R x Q 5 ' 8 SL 'I' 1 '37 'E' , , ,QV rt gf , 4 , 1 M Y, Q A . , z v ,. ' K 9- . 1 X' . It H , 'K ' . 5 ' W '-'W . ' H fb f Af ,. x ,A . ' 5 f 1 4 V , , , 8 ,mvv PA, ' I xAQH1:1. xwurr 'LUCILE 'muon ROSE mm4PvGN msmnw: WALLAPII unumerrr: weaver Mmm: mlm: RL-mme wkuuxucow mamma! VAN DWL' Page eighty-three THE SEA U Gum I A 5 ' cr-MRLOTTE , , if ' SANDFRS MARY SANDERSON 1.YNs1x.LE Bufnggg AN N BLU PUR1 FOY Q- BURKE MISS MAULDIN Sigma Psi Iota Sorority MISS MAULDIN, Sponxor OFFICERS CH.-XRLO'lA'l'E SANDERS . ..... .... P resident MARY SANDERSON . . . Vice-Presiden! LYNEILLE BUTLER . . . . Trz-asurvr ANNELU Pulurox' . . . . Secretary LUCILLE BURKE . . . C.'l1ap1'ain X Page nghzy- four THE X SEA X Gum ll . . S 7 7 l 4 J .4 - n- ' J' 4. ' 5 xl' X ' A . 7- . - ',f Q, wax? . LK - , . . . ,V 1 1 . A ,. ' w if , , J' 5? ff f f r Yagi' 5 ' L, f g V f z ' C r JAQ 1, A :gl v fu w' L va ww-1 vw.: as 1 e N NOTE mums Fwsizlt BLACK EL11.-x:1zmw.wxm acsfrac ng-HH L -.rn .93 xwxi, wi 3- -'lx ww:.'r1-'zz mmm 2217-' 5 X V-1 ln xy. ' ' K 'y ,f'f'yj '3 'JARS A'1'1 ',h 'H FRANFIV 31551 s-... Ywf Q- 1., K11,L'- T I I u1R.,m,, Mm MAR! law vs:tLr:DOY-1' N., L A N ey-1 wr-'x,.. 'K 5- 1.NII.'n'. 'fvG'l1J-Im fum ,-1-'msn 1,4-.1 1'-w'.': M,-av-HL Nav: .-Lzvgf, 'gy Nm: vgqggu muy . M I Sr ,lf K 4 -sw 3 N , ga -r ' fx, 'S 1 ,' X 4.6 . mmnru wwum mJm:KmNf1.n LCUITE RAZSTHN mu wnwxsmm nm uw wr REVTTI ings nm mv ,wx mem ms 1: . f' Lx' gig ' 5 'Af ., ' liv Q . X . K 5 K Jotfrnmr: Trmmori rmtxmrm-mvvma ox wx 'wmxxms' MARY WONNAH, EMILY wmwww' ncum uwmww Page eighty-hw II: N ' I 5 I I 1 I I QI 5 I I 'f fi li H 'I l I ,I IQ? 'I I I III Fir: Wi is II. K IIIIE SEA EMII 1 -QM? A3 9?-I MILDRED IIERRINIIRY I 4, A4 A CLARIAN MQGAUGHEY in DONNA BUFORD VIRGINIA FULLER MISS CHEESEMAN Delta Chi Sigma Sorority MISS CHEESEMAN, Sponsor QFFICERS MILDRED DERRYBERRY ..... .... P resident KA1'HRYN CLARIAN PA'rTIsoN . . . Viee-President MARTHA MCGAUGHY . . . . . Treasurer DONNA BUFORD . . . . . . Secretary VIRGINIA MILLER . . . Chaplain Page eighty-six THE ,fl ' ' ' X Y Y Y I wi Q x - N .261 H 'tv' x ' 3 1, -5 I 3 ' . ,X in-K .. 1 'As ' , V V ' , v 1 -, V X ' fin ,X X X PRX' Y' r Cf , f,,,,f -I N-A-, PW. rmzhrv mL1.vxw,-,v:.- rn nv v rumu 51.xp.n:Lss4.'.s:,-A4 ttnmmv. 1-mamma' uf-wv M11 ff-v-H ' f fx 1 - A ei r Q' X ' , 6 ,, . 'gy '91,-N 1 I uc H s Lf 3, ' 5 K '?f, 72,9a 'I P 59 ar 'Q Q' Q R , V 3 I ' 3 X? . - 5 - - 'f ' ' Q 4 ?f'f?1i, 1 ' + -b A ' .1 ' , A - wg P' V 'YN -X 9 7 . 1 -. ' ' , I, I 5 .. I . 1 ,, f r, I , 1 X Q: A, 3? Q f ' . N . g X .X X J Llfklf f X XYQPQX I 1 v 1 r-W1 -'f X wt: rxnsfwar -4 1r,:.aN Lx' 'fgmx Mvm In-,'L,xg , ,,-, , V .I r J Q. A- f ,L 4 ' . J Q :X ' ' F, -L. . 3 W . K :fa A I 6 -'-- 0 -X -H - Q-55, - fa W -X. f . X wifi M' V - 'vs' fs ' ' , fl f' X A ' ,C A . X 1 S 1 Nw 2 fr X , '. Zn, L1 A ' 'XS Q X ,1fXX,,BA Zflfi hHVYN y ww T+'AN L it N r 7 I YVXQ Y 'li 1 f IMJKN KIVIMXN YlX 'K1 X bds W: ff.. 'Q .Qs tim, Y, N H--yy: ,M Lg. -f xfygsi-if ra mnfx' 7-,w,f-w'- nm: XV, W' M nga. ,..,,. , W ,T x. ff: as 3 as Q Lx J ' 'EM ' IA 3 X A V f' 'P ev. r Q I ' U f-Q Qs ' ' ' f .X 4, X N S. 'fa 1 . y L V X I X, 4, AQ' 4 V X x I X yk S 7 H tx . px . x 4 in x Xxx? X 'DRJSLSIGYI ?'.-'xiii RYAN H-'-1' ,CW.'1 L 'U . JINNN NYJ HWY -'l- 34fI'.l QPISTTFNIP-N l'KJXNf :f 'xf1.l.53vWN NLUU LSQI: 494 . 4 P X XX ' I 'HG' 1 ' ' ' I , 'A .1 V, f ., F V 1 A ' xv. ,IJ I dsx R V A Q X W XM, 4 , qi X Y V X l 'f . , - 9 4 X, ' -1 R gs - X f ' 4 1 , ., ,, . ,X . f' . ' . wifi, 'S -A -X.. ' V . y guy - ga 5,11-,I X 19' ,vszgs kk u , , - ' A ,f 'fm ' U 'X - . , X - ,:1:p W X X ' N 15 ' vw -X I ' 1 ' KY ' 1 W , , A. KN 4 . v 37 vi. x x Q V N , X1 'X YQ Xia- .fs ' V . , PL'U4 zlY WJ Nl.1,0Yl' NIJUJY 'l'fl -'EET ll4GY :'f 111, r-A . fNNNlff5'r1l:WF..L.'i ITC IIFNF FA Rf f JHVUELP LW I, 'JVTV VV H, NIV 'PR AEVQWI Page eighty-se-ven nv' THE SIE A EMLl I 2 ' ' 'X P I l i , I I , l l l I 1 I l 'I I I I L 1 X Y I sfgf nmvg' 1'v1r'ffw 'i9.Pf0! 'f':2!S'- 1,:6f.mfsX,.Z9LgJ .fbzqpig-..5.s'Q 1 I' CWQ 1, . 44, Z! L , Q, 10 WI REIT! 151 ,sq 3 ,. . ,,.,,. J f W ,II Arlcansas OFFICERS MARGARET VAN DYKE ..... PI'1'5iL11'llf JOSEPHINE 'IXENNYSON . . . l'i4'e-1'1'rsiI1'r1II lvl.-XRY SANDERSON . Srrrffary and Trfasznw' Illinois Club OFFICERS LUCILE FEsI,ER . . . . . l'rf.Iidml FRANCES QQREEN' . ..., Viw-Prrsidfzzl VIRGINIA MII.I.ER . Smwtary and Treasurfr Alabama Club OFFICERS MARJORIE PEARCE ...... Presidf-ul ANNEI,U PURIFOY .... Vim-Presidznt OLIVER PERKINS . . .S'n'n'l1zr'y and Trfaszmv' ,W Ygwwf- - 6 ' EEE , .A ' Qofp .Tf 'mm af, of f DE 9 5 ll 07.99 QSO S, X 1 4? 'Q Q f 3 .. ' 'M f M . , . Q we ., J 1 Ur-1 0559 ff' Cosmopolitan Club OFFICERS MARIAN LASSER ....... l'r-esidrfzr FI.I.EN ERICKSON . . . If'in'-Presidmzl lUOR0'l'HY HPINIDERSON . . . Sffrftary CATHERINE CA'I'Es . . Trmsnrfr gum amuse ART uvtanrunf M ' 1 1 ,A 7h Y A 'ful O 1' 3 fi li. 151' - 5 -E ' I llI4'l.. ,Ja - GULF DANCING MEN SKVSCRAPER 'a',1f5. .,. L' 1 ' .. ll 7 A V I I f' X ' , 'A , Page eighty-eight THE SEA IEUULR, 2 - - -E x Y 1 I Mississippi Club OFFICERS DONNA BUFORD , ..... Prmident OLIVE WILLIAMS ..... I'irf-Presidmzt ZEITA REDFIELD . . Serrftary and Treasurer GMC Texas Club OFFICERS MILDRED BURFORD ...... President FRANCES SKILLMAN . . . . Vive-President CAROL FRIEDMAN . Secretary and Treasurer Pagz' figlliy-nine sf Y, LOUiSi8I18. OFFICERS HELEN FRENCH ....... Prcsidfnt LUCILLE MANSON . . prifl'-Pfl 5id1'llf ROSE THOMPSON . . . . Snrrtary RUIII MCELVEEN . . Trwasurvr ,Zi O! lf y 'Y-1-mygjgiifj :X - ' .'-I-Qt -M ff , ,sf L ' if 'ii ang II N I-SL 'I-F5353 , ' S 71' - IC i' A KI , I ! --:I In 4 F 2 W- 15 En A19 5 I U Z I fs: : Z4 X5 7 Q P? ,'I - ' E ',.' ' XI Ev' Q9 I 5 9: If F Tennessee OFFICERS ADDIE LEE LANDSTREET ..... Prrxidmzt MILDRED DERRYBIZRRY . . . I'ire-PrrsiI1rrz! ELINOR BERGER . . Sr1'1'I'!ary and TrI'a5urrr il V' I 1 W1 Qf KI I, I . i l Q E S i 1 , R1 i, L , TEE SEA D Gum Ki A Y' 'WF' ' H I I A I-11 f. fl' X ' ,!Qv1' S I' L ' , f W M ' 'XG Mx X .N ' f f u ! I' If PI L' I W My , MV 1 ,' W J ' we 5 4 Ply ,dj ,E QW ,, A N5 . ,EEE W, ffl? ,E N V! ' 1 R ' Wfyfff IN, ',1 Q3vxQC, vi 1 ff ,W Nez SN A ' f R Us MF R 'fn 7f WJ KZ KN 2311-5' 'X 'af V' ' M U fp Af ,gf 7 ,V R-df -A E - f-Z , E, ,A,, . Krug ,- : 'W ? U1 f M K V-'V V, ,I 1- ll I V fl f, 'R' f ,JW Vw' T' 45 2- if JW Eff eb C E W , Z F-d . ' wf'!Q,y!f 'X Yu M H ffw w E f I EW ,?f M YW R u E N YS' W Coast Club OFFICERS RNIB R0wI.ANn ........ ..... P residml K.A'I'flliRINE STAIIEI, .... . . Fife-Prfsidfnt MARX' EARLE PA'r'r0N .... . . . Sefretary JENNIE 'TUCKER IIE1ss . . . Trmsurfr AIIZIXIBERS ANNIE LAURIE CORLEY RUTH RAlNo1.n MILDRED RA1NoI.n JICNNXE LEE BEARDEN NIARGARIVI' SMx'1'H IEIu,AH MACRIE Emlm' NVADLOW HELEN VVAm.0W r1tHEI,MA RoBER'l's MABE1, ROBERTS FDNA IEARLE VVnx'r11'1EI,n GEORGIE LEE XVEATHERLY MARIQN IIOCAN ANNA Fol.Rs I':I.liANOR MINCHER DOROTHEA LYONS HII,lJl'IGARlJH Lvoxs JOHNNIE MAE RICE DEBORAH HUGHES RUTH MORGAN IELEANOR PAYNE RUBY MAE r11ERRY -IosEPH1NE SAUCIER ADELE BELEINBERG Page ninely X15 1 40 ,o v '04 M TIC , 9: 0 o 0 o ,'o'v, o 0 I 0.0 , 711, V ,V as x , C7 J 'Y' E5 43l:'s1zSX'l Q heb' nw Sw'-' I A arvkfjno g o., s of 'll Q1 V- ' ' ' '?f'f4?Swlj ,Z 4' o', ..,6 , ,Q ,Q 59 '21 Mann Hifi ,v 9' 1 L,ax:q1s ', J ,, 7 f4: 7I'.S5fQ - ' -i afllbvije ,nz 'R f s ,,s3v.4f9:xi6?x2'::: V I' ' ' 5 '91 1f2'Hg2u K 1020175 ' wr-'CV 1 . W-'gp' -- -xv' 52-wmv gl-f'f,mlaJ1IrfS2?i5:fqfJ..i2,1,4 I: 4 ' I Xf 11 'HW - wrxsv 'sv .:36 ?f' 4 ,-ff' s EQ v R '65x5VT 'Digg 'swf 1A ..'o -Q-Q10 36 '- ,-.1 -, X 9:65425 rv u-uv 'Gans 5 u 'r . 9 ,cf is , . 4 1 Q J 3 .4 gl fr sts 1 4 Qg 5 f f Wfiifi 1 'ms' ' an 'ga N 'yr-.m?LOg1'z' 0 ,F if Q Qld' earns! ,S-'J t6:x Sys.. xxip A ,QV ,f '45 It Mute ,W-6 .I Q A'kqe, 'u1a. Qo95', J 'A' ' VCV- X ggi' lkxxfghfh ' , ,. an W L? f Q E LU A 1' 4q l 1 sis ' t E, be ' 0608 -1 '?5S9:'h +.n Xxx I-lf:-RR ET rnuxm . 3 x ' fin ,.,'. Az, l I 'gb ': - , . ., , . . if '::::'2: of V I 2?1.'P2f' I ' - 5--,lk Q., A f' . ki? af- in ' . xff 'l ', Y fyfy 9 -X A. 3. 2 'X . , . 'l , Av y x Q 1 - ' . Q ' Jigga I65745.: Q 1 :ii 1 - u ' - 'fav gag ' 'P' '51 5'?1f.Z'G :.'..a'-VU. -V ':f:1+'?' 1 3 is f '13 Q ffvj-?'. 112' '14 rv: . 3.-.---4? 1:5 - 1, .2 .4 g'-Jflvfg 15 -.ff-f 'BF ag--1 iq, -fi- ifl X! '-pnj. Q- . di .f 'xml 'f 1 - 'SQ 5 : gf Q iw !fgwf ?k1f:4e'ff5'ff'f 'f..11:,g5m2TkgE.j,gffS,, Q Q 4 '. ' t.. f ' . .4 -, -Q.- -- ' '..,j,.' - hi-,'.2-5158! of . . ,5-We fm' ' 55529 M E fi? p':l'm-'55-.4'v' 4 - f.--,. -:Af-,. X-3:5 i? i ,, .. ' ft LY -, iff? 'j Y -ff,-8 -' ,7 45:1-f'i ' i J. .- -,. Fifi? 'i:'wnigi'.7i1'H ' ' H ix '.?,:'S ..-7? '. QL .1511 -'QI . ' '- L.:-' ,R Q4 bgfu-1,5 -1 Q' 'fr 5' ?. 9: . - e':.31'gjagg: A .ik Q OTA V . - ' :gi bl ' I w x ' ' ' H 'I , , .. fr I ' M my , K F' -f fin. A li, , THE SEA ,fl h Emu, U 71 x Y Pagn nmcly 1Lffc I AXDSIRPI I PRENLH Drum BFRRX I Assrk SCA rFS Athletw Assoclatxon Miss Quxu homx Spmmn Ilffldrllt lm Pfrm rlll Sfflffllij' Trrzulurr Gym Caplan: P xr xx Rfuuox BLU mn II: xm-Rsox IHRIIR lloz A11 Rzdmrz IQFIIIIIY lflllllll I raining I afflazn ajvlam llfflllll afwfam apfam Fl- ..,L,. L- l I l I I l l l 1 T H lr lf' P Il l. ls 1 I I Ra .,l fi l l 'W I I P 4 if l V lu 7 ll ll. 'ITIHIIE SEA EMM. .21 - - a X Y Y 1 flockey High School College M PIERCE . . . . R. VV. . . . L. MANSON M. LASSER . . . . R. I. . . L. RALSTON L. LANDSTREET . . . C. F. . . J. KLINGMAN D. HENDERSON . . . L. I. . . . . E. BERGER H. VVEAVER . . . L. W. . . . D. NASH C. PAOAN . . . . . R. H. . . . H. JOHNS M. DERRYBERRY . . . C. H. . . . M. MCGEE A. CAGLE . . . . . L. H. . . . S. PARKES G. WEATHERLY . . . R. F. . R. WILLIAMSON G. NOTEBOON . . . L. F. . . . A. HORN J. RICHARDSON . . . G. . . . H. FRENCH SUBSTITUTES B. HOLMES E. SCATES B. KEMPSTER S. KELLWAH' C. FRIEDMAN G. BULLARD F. WALLER M. SANDERSON R. THOMPSON GAMES High School . og College . . O High School . 45 College . . . o High School . IQ College . . . I High School . 35 College . . 2 High School . rg College . . . 2 High School IQ College . . . 0 High School . 23 College . . . 1 High School . 4g College . . I Page ninety-four THE SEA -........ , ., I 9- fv,.,3g . ,. J K- '.g, f1 v 'A R , 4 -'F 9-QMQQZ5 g g 'N ' 2 Fa f'w W34Xj'-T- f 51 ,1,, - n,. A . 4. , ,,. ,., , Page ninety-five Cham lon liz... .209 o o o o 'O:t.Z: ....z5sz.s x Q. r :Q O.. 3. Q Q o 9 Q 0 o 0 9 Q O 5 9 1-33.0 wr - . wzeev' .e 'fsfiiiw s',020,:v20z6Xf: f Q 0 9 ' 0 o 9 M2435 ' .Q'24'o'?4' Q 'Tialshn 'B'-in CWA Mfmneurs E . r'9'6'Q X ,Moat A- hz 59.539 9. ' 'oo s 'Q 'g.::'o:0Z?o39ozofi3 Q':'o'o'Oi'm Xt' 000 , O23 QW' O , 2 ' '0Q3'Q:.: .- 4 5 QI Q A A QA ' f .R f of X fDoubllLS ' TH E SEA X EMM, 1 44 X , x .ii i 7 -5 'W Q - , , ,W 5 V 1 ' ,Q -, 5 'QT I QQ NS , ..,,,, . ' 5 5 F, L 2 :Z S j 5 - - J' f ' I ' f n ,, I '- J f. - , 5 ' 5 QL he -Q. 1 f Y . ,, X N ' ,. , tg, Ygggigvggz-U5 jiizv 5 ,3 HI , rv , .:,: K f i'fbAla ,N X24- K ., -' - 9 ' Q ' L , -' , . r , ' .. , A . M. Q ' f A . I yy, , , : ZW X NX .W . ,5..,i? i, J . ml K- . i Q E Q l 5 ., , . K . 5 1 4 1 y 1 .QM i 1 E ,Z- 2 in Page nincly-six K THE SEA IEMILIL 4fi ' ' li -'r'-Y - -1...-'. ,.-.....-..,,... X ..-...3 o 'Q ff? A 7 fx W'-M ..., V N Q. 5. 1:-A ,...:,, I .L,,. ,. ,,5..'- K V, . -5 'flff Q , i f ?f:a ' ff' ' QM 'N ' f:1'?QfQ5,?'f K gg in .159 .. X 1 Page ninety-:wen QA f EEE Y Gum 7 2 ' ' 'S X Y I Y ' ' WW SPONSOR PMs5CocKRmL IDRESMENT' fqlDREDDERRVBERHY XflCE-PRESIDENT VIRGINIAMILLER SEcTw6ThEA5 LUULEFESLER THE SE A X Y 1 , 1 Vx 3 W, if 5 4 Wd v U ., Xi T, Q 6 . , . A 3, n 3, 3Qv.Q A N N2 L1 F 1 Page ninfry-nine THE SEA X Gum 7? 4-53 . . an - x A , 'P 5 f t A .f . ' -uk v'f .-A -f , - .--'Q I 1,3 ,, x s va' 'iii' , u , r , I AK ' 4 . 5 'P' ww- E+ - - .L--2.. ... I 'V 'H 1. ff k.,'iQ'Q1fi: 3'?1'4'g, -an W ' . M -1.1 'gpg ,L xi 739i7, A If K A 1 Q W . 'iw P A .2 .tif wx ' x wwgi ,W Riff - ' , 'A - ' , gig, JZ., ,ff v- , ,gk x ..k cv .X 1, . V- ' . ,K.y,: , '7E,fQ?s.x. ., ,gin ,-. 'fag W 508 yaedvp? , K - . M W ffM, gg4 ' 4 ' ww' '5fT1- NN.., .f': Q ., . - -M, ' HY' 3 , -1 ' -4 ., ff A fir .9- . l.w.v, b, 15,4 ,.,. ' ll VX H ' 1-if X K -'S geba If lg! J ,fx ,Ba Yifzmis -Mnaawveszaav H1klHff' 3 K4 L V. ,aw , N -,jenn A -5 V --fy 1 , f ,sf ' Rf ' 1 + .. A7 PKANKLWX I HPRENCH 5 0M '5a1f . LJQALST Y f '51, 1 Swimmifry -l.,PiISLER, ON li 'H V 2, U rm v . N' yn - 5 8 ' 'JM' .ff ff A 4, -2 1 - . s . x r ' . NT: gfifg1'..,,., ' any ,M ' S- - ,, :wiv Q X 1 2, - rx Jw 'A ff :M Q . . ,.,,K ,. - ww ww- - . ,ff on I Q , 3.52255 Q M . I K 1., Q Gi. sm. f V V ' Ie kc , X gf, ..,. ,.. I . : DN-ASH 1- ff1r2'l'f1y A El BE RGEK, fwl .Vx Pri N f' ,ff si f ., ' ' YMQ' 1-S Mx . , gh K .Af X , LC. ,gr W I 1 P5 'ffQfk'W' ATHLETIC CAPTAI NS Page one hundrml W OLIX F VVILLI LXlN1b Preitiest 5 gmt? 12395 www? MARGARET VAN DYKE A Most Original 111051 Illfllfllflllll FRANCES GREEN CHARLOTTE SAND ERS Culest i 5.133 ii- 4 , . , ' i t ffl 'K 'A 19 ,V , Af ' lg' X f' v W5 f rg' 1 , I ' 1 , 1 af 2 0 I, i . 1 f , a :- A A x 4 ,4 32. nan' , 1 '-,, 1. ' . fx 'nj 1 1, B .f.. 511 ap: A , ki JJ. -+5 1 .Q fif. fp . fi -Eff A 11. 13.4 ', 5. . , ,. A uf uzkf' .h 3,5 .qw i -A. 4 .I ., 'fp rw 551' . Kr ' fi 6324 Q I. It . ai-Q , :hy E .. ,1 3 4 4 ,I 2 -vf A, -u' ,. gm, S KATHRYN CLARIAN PATTISON Most Talented W. yi. .:r' -5-551'-.f'f':N2'. 'w 2:1-'WZ L' 4, 1' w... Q - H 4- nf M. . . '- .. -, ,.- .- .fa,5fff viizsf aff? w 5'149Sif2FfWi- aswgffmiffzfx-W'xwsgsmfzfAffwffaw'-frix ' 1 f 5 Wi' 1-'Z'f1?f9W'W'421 ' 'L' J.- W r f : N, Sli f 'wfwgf A- .,-'ai-vm-fo-: 'Qi '11-V. -Siqf1maf,,:1'i: M V- .HL Q, Za' J . . , :Z . .11 , 14'-'WAXJ' fig wi - ,Sfiffgwf ww w - .f I - -' ?1mQ 4 'ffl Wu . 1ifgfliwff-'zff',5x2f212-kaikfif-:2?:526'u:Vswfwf::ms:'13'if'e - 1' f 4 , 9 Mg. :Aw ,. ., .,,x . ,, , , , ,d., , W ., 8 X S :vw WN ' 1 5'f.w'mf'15mf :15':.,Q1f4 wwgpwwf 'a -34?ZQ1xfa5?2.,L's', 35519311 42:.:T'l1f.'..e I x 1 ' ', .. Mx z 'yj1'5f'mL?'v 2 ' Q1 4 'g ,f 35-4.4 fi v- ff: Q V 1 MARIAN LASSER Best Alhlele env-1 ren fl 'Q 'nr .Qx xx 7' Wfr.1,!!x'?5 .N AI 2' F7 I ,,,,4,!,,Q 'W mf bi' M ,2?A'ff:f ff,f'vv,g,,2,W' pi 'QSM 'wi A ' y.Cv,m'2Bf5M?M,ffW ffQfm1'f32fx9,uff4 w 4 f X x 'Q I 1 'J r .....-. M.-.... Q fra I 6 v if wg 1 Nu ADDIE LEE LANDST RFET Typzml Gulf PHIL Gu! w Y 3.,-1 ' .' ',,g ,' 125, 1, ,T54!!f Wa' ' :' , V, :W 1.37 ,y '3iq' 1 ' ' I ffi if .I y gl? 'f f y ,f , Liz ,5 341 .214 ' .?'. '. fb 5, 7 ' ff' 1- , f 'ff 1 4 r' f Q, 5 L ':, 53 , - L., f 1' 1. .ffm , 5 , f, 'ffzm 71-.5:q4J1!4:. up - f I , , ., TL W - 51 -5 3 s T ' . .. -' . ' ' ft, . ' 'z -- ' Q' I ' ffm E ' ., , . I -. . , .1 . - 1 3.7 1 3 , . A ff - ..' If ' EQ: f, ' ' W ,' ,r-Y m I , . l nf, 1.1 1 -, , -' ,, Q4 . fm i,,:1,ff37J - 4 1 1 u , ,Q 3211 3 l I - Ax .5 R VV .g Q A in ' Y ' ' ' 'H I . -x ' Q . 'f ' f '. 3' .f , in I N ir., V If W Y N. il L M ' - ' ' F 15- 4-1529 1 , . fb A ' V , ,T F , ' ' , , 'V 1, ' N f 1 ' . 4 V . . , D 5, 32141, , lk fy' - I X, I . . y 1 A VL, H? . ' I ' 93. ' N W. 'iw ft ' ' .-1' ' ' ' J AV - x ' 5 0 ' gg .q at fa 'A fl q - ' f 1 - rl -J 4 f '?Q',. ,1 ' , -Q ,. , 5 . U ,A ff 35, :N , - . f ,idx as . ' ' A ,bl . . 2, - .. . 9, ff f W.. N f ' ,, 5 ' , I l , I , gl , , L, Q -' 1 f 1 l E 5' 1 af' ' ' N ji , f - X E . N ef? , X X ' 1 1 , M ' 3 . - Fr ,H w Y , . its L - ' ? v v ' X H P . E I W 1 . L 1 . ' -, 1 1 W u ' X ' '. w Y ,li W I N lE Ei K THE SEA D lElllllL.IL I HK 9 - c Page me hundred ten I lA. , A K THE SEA IEMILIL , 0 X Y 1 More Attempts at Modern Poetry Page one hundred eleven Did You? I told myself it would not do For all my thoughts to he of you, But they are. I told myself it was not wise, On you to Waste so many sighsg But I do. I told myself that we would part, Because you would not claim my heartg And we did. I told myself I would forget, And try to think we'd never met, But--I didn't. Did You? MARGARET lvlarnma. Heavenly Hash Canal Street and Crowds, Great crowds of foreigners, Babbling, blurting people Knocking each other and pointing To the lhlississippi, to the river YVhere everything ends and begins- VVhere the trade of the South Comes in. And pointing to Royal Street- A medley of shops and shutters, Old Creoles and pralines, Palms and cathedrals, and bananas, Quaint tharm md strings of spig . ' 1 1 3 ' 5 5 2 h The Heavenly Hash of the South etti New Orleans. MARGARHI' VAN Dviclz. 'W' , V I I 1 O L, K me SEA b EMM Iage one hundrcl Ifuclfve K THE SEA e Gum 6 E J? 55 x Y 1 l A NXX x L X X 'X 'WU' IIIPFIC X W mxS O S wk? 'aix qu J Si m f V Q ,,,-. gag 'N -X 'X Z QW QA xv f i ff X Xgxxl 1 ff 1 WWW 5 t Ng W X Rf f' W iw X fd 'S PQ-Eff X 5 A xb f af? 3 X Aa- L AN ,. :mx ' 'TQ I Sag , I' im, 519,913 X X :Tv Q. L A 1' ,S 5 A fl! . S K F x NX . 1' I W7. ,455 N V o' NW? 25 - f M A Im W t X gi, '1 V-iw, 1 M N X X, O .,1xv.u':L5, Q1:,.,,,,..,Kf,wi- GVL Z S t N94 5:9 '7':- W ' 5 -3 -L X ii, I x X I ry I Q , xx P -was . 5 ,ff 4 Q ,ay WI ' 5-mf Nw of f w .i X u'M lH' 'Q- ,X fx v f- ' if W N ff M - 4 .,, is ag X, Rf? ' XQ 4 f f x ' f N X Z1 .- Q lsvfwk , 2- '-QNX -i 1 xi Y ,' -- :. W 552 222: Efiiflfeffi' K: . N ,-L- Izfg-f:-if: S: - Yi, f, '--' v -Q W s:r2:5? 3iff1l?ff2 F-ff' ' , ,IQ -MN N if I ' W' ', ' lf H A- ,'2'ff3?' - 1 wk f WI' f f If CL M- 'IU ry f 1' my ,cf Q 3: W , 1' I. 1 X X - 'IZ fl ww X mfwwi - wwf K 1- X , 1 ff ll!-'.-XSYi NX.. -i-J., X 5 Q I ff 'in X f W, fix I I ' I ' if '75 1. Q W f I mi rf .gf N N V 1' T-Finns . l n xx x . Q - NX E 2' XXX 'P ' ' 'NX X r-Q-3 N ,- ---- - N' x , t, YN no , -1 W ll1NX ff Page one hundred thzrlcm uve' l I 1 l Y I l r AMQ. K THE SEA EMILL ,fl - ' S x , 1 1 Black Rings of Smoke f'4'vU Wa, lf was born in poverty. He grew up to be literary, and, although lis poverty continued physically, it did not continue mentally. As the years the age of twenty-GHC, was in New York with one dollar in his pocket, and hundreds of dollars' worth of literary knowledge in his head. But f his was the mind that struggled with big things, while expelling the little ones. He hated work, for it was a minor aspiration in life, consequently, he did wall .7 lfnwf-ve., ,, 'PNN'-,F N X' lk al I 753 expanded and passed, gained and reduced, he grew with them, and at . .,,. 1 7. 7. .,.. .- -- li u'-avgigff not Work. At twenty-two, he was still in New York, with fifty cents in his pocket, and thousands of dollars' worth of literary knowledge in his brain. So passed the years. At fifty, the great revelation came. He read Vachel Lindsay's Gospel of Beauty, and it seemed to strike him. It brought to him all the fullness, simplicity, and beauty of life, and he was determined that others should see and feel the tre- mendous glory in living which was translated by the poet: VVhile each dear heart beats like a fairy drum, Then burn a new ripe wheat sheaf in my name- Out of the fire, my spirit bread shall come, And my soul's gospel swirl from that red flame. He followed the footsteps of his favorite and walked the world, selling his knowledge for a bite of bread. He usually was met with the heel of the bread, and then the heel of the shoe, but he kept on, struggling to place his ideals in a world of muddled and confused thoughts. He kept it up for ten years, and then he drifted, wandered, and arrived at the Gulf of Mexico, at Biloxi, that time-worn city on the coast. He was exhausted. At thirty, he was prematurely grayg at sixty, he was white. You might have thought that the Ancient Mariner had arrived to fasten his glittering eye on you, and to have a little tete-a-tete, when the Literary Soul knocked at your door. But, on to Biloxi! ' He came in with the evening, when the sun had just gone down, the moon was rising, and the stars looked red and green as they twinkled with the lighthouses out there in the vast, deep blackness. The man did not get the coolness of it all-he was too tired. His brain seemed so scorched and hot and clogged with dust that, as he looked at his grimy nails, he felt that the machines in his head were crashing together, and, rubbing dirt into the very pores of his ideal, his gospel, that Voltaire was blowing ugly, black rings of smoke on his clean Kansas wheat fields and making of them great, stalking scarecrows. Then, he thought of his comforter. He drew forth the volume of Lindsay's Poems. He knew them all so well, their ringing rhythm, which had Page one hundred fourteen K THE SEA EMILL X X Y l Y 7 1 stirred his pulses and made his blood rush through the black, cutting through the forest with a golden track. He stopped at a lighted billboard and began to readp he turned the pages, he dwelt on the moon poemsg he kept on reading them, and stopped suddenly. Here was a poem which had hitherto passed through his mind without causing a momentous stirg but now, it startled him in its extreme applicability. It was Bill- boards and Galleonsf' the poem written about and inspired by Biloxi. He sat down by the billboard and began to read. Galleons, Spanish galleons, bearing gold, romance, youth! On the marvelous, thrilling touch of that word Youth, of Spanish galleons bearing youth to him, of Spanish galleons bearing men who raped his hoary locks and threw armfuls of gold over his head, making him Hush with beauty, and youth, and romance! Golden romance! How gloriously he glistened against the blue sapphire sea, and how he roared over the waters as he sang, sang, and laughed great, golden roars of laughter at the twinkling red and green stars that winked and danced merrily with the lighthouses on the shores. Then he began to dance, to dance to the music of the waves that lapped, that swished, that whirled, that clashed, that splashed to the rhythm of the helmsman piper of the red-faced, jolly piper, Vachel Lindsay, who beat and pounded his blood into golden streams, singing and dashing through his body, making him dance and scream and roar against the tempest clashing around him! The waters grew livid in the beat and fury of the dance, they beat and foamed, they smacked and surged, and on they danced in their golden tracks! The man cried, and sang, and laughed, and winked at the golden stars and the red-balloon moon, and he danced, and danced, and danced. Then-he awoke. He gazed, he straightened, he looked. Blackness, the stars had gone outg only the electric lamp which shone over his head and the billboard were visible. He stared at the lamp, then at the billboard. A cloud of black smoke was circling 'round his brain. On the billboard was pasted a figure of an old man smoking a pipe, the old Velvet Joe Tobacco Man, puffing out the black fumes. The Literary Soul began to quiver. His iron limbs began to break in this extreme irony, and he shut his eyes and soul and brain to the blackness of this world, the wan electric lights, and the old Tobacco Man. He was dead. Page one hundred hftefn time sea X eaten n -fi E ' e 13 F , - 1 1 3 e Tl' xv 5- Q 5 56 ml XI-ggalsg -elglgve PEER ,as p Y i i wg . W bog Mid-Wa.Y if 37 W H H f - 1 0- is I.. lf P21 fs if -Y Q It rt 2 40 2 x--'Ya ' 9 Bale on nj? IZ if 41 f I 5 gm, , 41, E THE GOOD SHIP, SENIOR HALL 33 l - U 43 I Capmin-Billy. 7 2 sf 47' J, 1545 , Crew-Seniors. I 5- 0 A if Mascot-Mr. Taylor. W 0 Bound for Port- Great VVide VVorld. 546 47 Sailing from Port- Gulf Park. 3 4 I Sailors' Ditty- Lights Out at Eleven. eff ,ff CYOI Ho! Holj I 'Z ' I Captain's Mate-Lucile Fesler. AAS Ship Guns-Lyneille Butler, Helen French. 2-till Pilot-Lucille Manson. Anchor-Martha McGaughey. Limehouse District The Midway Little Broken Blossoms and Nobody's Child, Imbecilic Chingwoos and Dragons wild, Marvelous Pups and fearful Mice, Endless Chinks and Dens of Vice, Heaps of Lanterns and Kids of Chinatown- Oceans of all of these are found Up in the hall, called Limehouse Way, Seen at night, and never in the day. Ever savage, and prowling, and sly- Dodging the pupil of Mrs. Rogers' eye- Ignoring the ways of the Gulf Park world, Snatching one another in that wild whirl, Through the worst abyss in old London town, Rollicking, and cavorting, in their pajamas and gowns, Imping each other in their maddening games, Cavorting and grinning, like savages un- tamed- That is the t'Limehouse District. All thru the dark and daylight, 'Tween Mrs. Bates' and Mrs. Rogers' halls, Is the corridor known as the Midway- The one we love best of all. Sometimes it may fail on inspection- That's something of which we're aware, But, like the great place it was named for, The liveliest bunch is there. According to various signs you may see Posted 'way up on both the walls, You may take a bus any way you would go- Or drink water from Niagara Falls. And as for the advertisements- VVhy, they are simply rare- You may find just anything you wish From dog cakes to ready-to-wear. Now, I don't pretend to write poetry, So, pitying you, I will close- And think from this you will know our You ought to, goodness knows! hall? Page one hundred szxieen THE SEA IEMLIL 2 - - a S R I 1 I-M iw ' 8, .s .5-Vs el .-1 Q elif, 3 . E I '2 -:ff Nloalll l'la.vvl4. Alley rr I A I I 6+ l.-5 lawirlibms A Yi Q r llllf 90 ff. 2:23 A ' Q 21:53. 2 eil tb Blxltori A M A HI I-Ffa W 59 fl ov I 2 1 'T 1 I y Ui' 93 . No Man s Lane or 57 ' 51 WL g No Man's Lane is just a hall, - 'T C -N And doesn't soIInd so bad, 55 P Hut if a male shoIIld venture there, Z .M US- 'VY Oh, woe unto the lad! O ' I ,- A ' l ' S3 5-7' ' , Guns mav roar iII No Man's Land, ---TU Z M- r ' But what of No Man's Lane? For there the slippers fly and bounce 5' 51 I1 Enough, to drive a man insane. AXE So take Il warning, peres and freres- - And draw not so near- f lnlirmctrxi gr-A For your life will he endangered there- ' Endangered much, I fear. Hostesses' Delight The name is fitting, alright, from the number of hostesses parked oII it-and those who take it upon themselves to make their appearance from other floors. Although the infirmary is located here, this is far from being a sick hall. On the contrary, we are very much alive-a tact that we m0I'e than prove after light bell. VVho'll forget the not oIIly daily, bIIt also nightly, dozen fOliver, Coraline, Betty, Ev, Helen, Henry, Marion, Caroline, Leila, Alice, Peggy, and Solveigl? Hostesses' Delight-indeed!!! Night Hawk Alley .llzalyxis of C1!llll'lll'fl'I'5 by The Night Hawk MARY SANIDERSON-TCXHS ranger Qbold and fiercel. CELESTE PAGAN-One who gives moral C?l support. IQATHRYN AI.LEN-SHOdgf3'SS' only rival. MILDRED BURFORD-Crack bridge fiend. VIRGINIA Fox-One of best dancers in school. MARY LOUISE REU'l l'I-VVho represents her Alley in piano. MARGUERITE DEAM-The perfect blonde. MILDRED GOULD-The Slow Train from Arkansas fit took her three months to get herel. VIRGINIA MILLER-Artist and student. LUCILE BURKE-Df3m3tiC artist and Jelly, FRANCES GREEN-IDf8liCCILIHl high light. BETTY MULVEX'-HCT radio. Page one hundred srfucnfcerz DoRo'I'IIY HENDERSON-'Lili' athlete. JANET GLEN-The golfer. CATHERINE CATEs-The woman with the In- dependent Speech. FRANCES RISING-The Beauty. CARoI. FRIEDMAN and EI.EANoR BRISKER-The ladies with the mail fmalel. Louisia RALS'liON-MOFE athletes. FRANcEs MEE1A character all her owII. MARY NEILI. CARR-The social Hame. JENNY VVRENN SCO'I I'-.A real bird, a chick- eII CPD. NIERRII. PRATT-Long hair. TIIELMA THOMPSON-Red curly locks. LOUISE SIMPSON-Eatables and a sweet dis- position. nj I 1 56 Bw I TEHIIE SEA lE':ilLlllLIL 2 ' ' 3- x Y Y Aboard the Panama Limited girl is a student of a well known' Southern college-perhaps you have rf? gi heard of Gulf-Park College. She is, of course, pretty. I am not pro- itg ii ficient enough to try to interest you in an unattractive heroine, and no one could accuse Charlotte Gray of unattractiveness-no, not even her greatest enemy, and she has plenty of those, since she is unusually popu- ..,,.,.,.. - lar with the other sex. She is a petite brunette, with a little face that is 'far mostly eyes-great, round, questioning eyes-and a tiny mouth that easily lends itself to an adorable pout. Besides that, she is of average intelligence, and a typical product of the Jazz Age. The man is-but stop. That is my secret. The man is the Great Mystery. However, I will tell you something that you, with your natural wit, have already guessed-he is good looking, and tall. Have you guessed, too, that his eyes are blue? They are,-deep blue. And now I can tell you how it all came about. It was the nineteenth of October, 1924. Charlotte Gray was seated in section I2 aboard the Panama Limited-she had left Gulf-Park the night before, she was going home. Now, 'fess up, gentle readers, your thoughts are so far ahead of us that they are lonesome, and, anyway, you are mis- taken, Charlotte was going home to attend her sister's wedding. Home! She hadn't been home for over a year-her family, all her friends, probably her brother-in-law, whom she had never met, would be at the station. There would be teas, dinners, dances, for three glorious days, and on the fourth the wedding, with Charlotte as the maid of honor. By that time her thoughts had carried her to the picture of herself coming down the steps slowly, gracefully, serious-eyed, with just the trace of a smile flickering around her mouth-when, I say, her thoughts had reached this stage, she was sitting bolt up- right on the very edge of the seat, while her eyes, always saucer-like, were fast taking on the proportions of dinner plates-and right then her eyes fell to meet the amused glance of-the man. The Great Mystery. He was seated in section 13, one section up and across the aisle. Whereupon she became embarrassed. It seldom bothered Charlotte when men looked at her, even stared at her-hers would have been a hard life if it had,-but it is embarrassing to be caught day-dreaming, and it was a fact that Charlotte had been day-dreaming, and it was certain that the young man had caught her in the act. She squeezed herself over in the corner, where she could see only the top of his sleek head, and proceeded to powder. She didn't doubt for a moment that before I2 :IO tomorrow she would know his name, his fraternity, his alma mater, and all those several things that go to make up small talk. But, in the meantime, why didn't he move just the tiniest fraction, so that he could see her and-vice versa? -- indifferent, thought the lady. I love 'em indifferent --and forthwith powdered her nose, and as she powdered she soliloquized: Charlotte, my girl, I have a feeling that you have a big day ahead of you. Big 'bizness'-do your stuff, young lady, I depend upon you. Since he was so obviously indifferent, or maybe shy, Charlotte felt obliged to make the first move. She decided, however, to wait until after lunch, there was the merest possibility of their sitting at the same table in the diner. But the gods-disguised as the headwaiter-decreed otherwise. Charlotte ate her lunch in an abstracted, medita- Page one hundred eighteen time SEA b putt U I .fi e S x Y tive mood. I might, she mused, ask him for a match, but that seems a bit crude, like I was trying to impress him with my flapperishnessf' Thus she ate and pondered, till suddenly a morsel of shrimp toppled unheeded into her lap, and Charlotte sat trans- figured, cocktail fork poised halfway to her mouth-the perfect impersonation of the Great Solution, the Great Awakening, or Dawn. A half hour later they were seated side by side in section IO. How was it done? So simply that to tell it is pathetic. The lady returns from lunch, tries to raise the window, fails, turns to the man: Will you please help me with this? Certainly, says the man. They try to put up the window together. Together they call the porter, the porter advises both of them against putting up the window- and by that time Charlotte had no need of the window, so the porter left, but she saw to it that the nice young man stayed. At the end of an hour's steady chatter, Charlotte realized that he knew her name, school, home town, the facts that she loved blue eyes, Chesterfields, and horses, and that she was going home to be maid of honor in her sister's wedding. She also realized that she knew nothing about him- and wondered if he would never vouchsafe any information. She knew very well that with anybody else she would have made an impulsive gesture Cmost men seem to like girls whose movements were like firecrackersj, would have pointed a finger at him and said, Now it's your turn, ole man-talk. But she didnt' say this or anything like it, she dreaded his amused, patronizing glance, and Charlotte wished, as never before, to make a good impression. It was an awful strain, but she considered him worth it. Next morning at IO o'clock they were again seated side by sideg silence had fallen, and Charlotte mused thus to herself: My girl, you are just one great, big, false alarm. You've had a whole day to work in, and you've stayed one big mess. You know you are crazy about him, what's the matter with you? Oh, those eyes-I Aloud she said: I don't believe you like me a bit. You've been a perfect dear, an' all that-but you're so funny and different from other men, you're so-so-imper- sonal-and when you know I'm just dying to know your name an' everything, you sit here and tell me that Mencken is a cynic. Charlotte turned and looked out the win- dow and felt very childish. Her companion took hold of her by both shoulders, turned her around, and made her look into his blue eyes. Charlotte, he said, and her little heart went flip-flop- I'm going to get off this train when you do, and this very day you are going to hear all about me-you see, there is method in my madness. I know how intriguing mystery is to a woman, and I want to keep you interested. Two hours later, after an eternity of waiting for the porter to clear the vestibule of bags, and waiting for the usual quota of traveling men to swing leisurely off- Charlotte was at last in her father's arms, smothering him with kisses, when she sud- denly grew rigid and her eyes struggled madly to reach out of their sockets. For she saw her sister suddenly enveloped in two strong arms and saw her kissed o-o-oh! so sweetly, and right then the whole world turned over-but the voice of Charlotte's sister trilled out of the chaos: How nice that both of you should meet on the same train! Charlotte, dear, do you approve of your future brother-in-law? IXIARIE Louise CLARK. Iage one hundred nineteen THE SEA X BULL ' 41 ' 3 X Y Y , , I ,J S i r r- sh' V '- ' 4 K , 5 Ng If 4 ,, mga 7 ' A' -.,- ,,T:, ,X ' vii .Q95 .1 ,.a ' . : ,i 2 . - , X f - T. ' + , ww . W, . X, , , . Q-...Q A X, x,b,ig3,,. ,W P , h I qi Mly , .. J ,Ya if 1 , n NM . . , ., .-.AA.. , 4 xL'i.M A A V . 1 Q ' f? :?Q?Qiff w .. ,. P 9 I TM M . ' 13 2 ' ' ' e ' x':fil'7 ',l' T g3'4m.'JZ'g1 :': Q 5 1 X ' , g.IQ .LI . 'f . Mwik . wi W ' 5' ' . V my gy 9, X L -H 3 ' M, .A 53? ,Q I , bf ' ' ' he H ip: if 1 is 5 i ,, P, ., . ,. . -- X -' HQ A'- ' xwfh' fv- Page one hundrcd tfwenly A EMM. Alumnae Notes Miss Elizabeth Wills graduate 3 IS studylng at Vanderbilt I l'11XCl'blty Nashv1lle Tennessee Miss Griffin Dantzler, president of the 3 Class was abroad last summer and 18 now CllYlCl mg her time between Gulfport Mississippi 'Ind Mobile Alabama if The 4 president of Delta Alpha Slgma, formerly Miss Maxine Morgan has married Mr Robert Strlngfellow, of Shreveport Louisiana and after haung enjoy ed a delightful w eddrng tour of the South Mr and Mrs Strrngfellow have made thelr home III Shreveport ace use we 'Vhss Grace Blshop graduate 3 who halls from Cl11C21g0 came wrth her parents to open thelr home Bishop Manor between Gulfport and Mobile durlng the M'1rd1 Gras season She w as a guest at the Delta Alpha Sigma dance at Gulf Park X Sophie Newcomb is the school which Miss Marv Elizabeth Alderson chose 'lfter leaxxng Culf Park last spring In March she visited Gulfport is manager of the New Hork Life Insurance Companv in St Louis Enjoying my career immensely DOROIHX J Pick Bl? Of the germ that was started 'lt Gulf Park I 'lm making '1 huge bug by enlarging 'ind per fectrng my knowledge of foreign languages literature, philosophy housework secretarml dutles, 'ld xnfimtum Can you feature 1t?' EDIIH SCIIOYINFILIJ X' Greetings to Gulf Park from one who rs pursuing an A B at Galloway RL1111 Onrksr Im not 1 debutante not a musician not a working lady, but haung '1 good time VK hat am I? ust wait t1l next year and see' CHARLI NIL Rosl x nst finished mid term exams, Carnegle Institute of Technology Am studying to be ie President s private secretary Surely mrss Gulf Park CxERIRUDE' OVILRIIOI To rmsnos mo nsumons zvsnvwusne mmvso snrnv mo mo women vsnv mwpv ctw T0 sn uv mms wut es SIGNS CARE UR 8 URS tjg, Page one lzundnd ifumrzty om' X ' 2. 44 i i I . . . ,7 . V. . . .V Q. Y 1 . M W ' v 1 ' . 1 - 1 '- ' ' ' ' '2 U, ' . . : 5 ,. ' - 7 ! 'i Y L l ' ,Z . . 4' . . ' Lk . I . 3 , I. v L V. 'V .Y V . , . -. . . .3 ,T V . , U. A . , .., , . , Y I 1 . , Q , ' , . N .I .' ..: . v ' N r K - K - u 1 - ' I . 4 ' . L'Since finishing school in St. Louis last May, I have been employed as secretary for the U ' . 4. ' 4 ', L 1 4. 3' ' 1. ' y r v 5, 3 -lv, S v -Y 'L . L. L l i . -' ' .y 1 ' 'E . at . - V V 'w N . ' ,sy xt v ' ' , .' . ,' ' 1 . , L , 3 . . Q . . . . J ' li ' ll : : ar J . I ' - . ' . ' . M tl ' ' ' . '. f ' - '. I 3 ' xr. l l I I TH E SEA IEUULIL .2 3 , 1 U48 o K N Ik' 'E' N -of- -': as ,yi f MX-x,4-1 ,IW H. ' . 4 I I , . 1 ' ' T! HI, v 4 .T '.. b, ' . 'Cp Yew..- fQ. .3 L.. .ff -4 qnfiv , ag, 1 ' - A , I 4 9 g ' , Www- . N , ,V V A , , I ,-,hi W I 0? ,:, g:5,,1'ff , , Q? 'S 4-y...,,-J.: 3 -- X 1 K 4,5 .vt , ,QM v,,, ,, 1 'hu - af' .ff 1,2119 Ti i 1 ff,:vf1.s'I vt'-W -fy xg, ,NYE-Y-'-120:-Q - 1, ., ,4..,, .,,,,'. .. p. , fi 3' .-. ' .4' - f 4' .ln 4 ' W Y , A :,:Li f1- -fl' W ff-Ma' f kms.-V 5 ,254-f, x Z' if ll HU I ..- . , x Q . 5 .-, -1 ..- M. LM. ww 5.-1 1' 1 5' 'MQ K' ,N 'wb 64,1 , F' P 6? ,f 'R r-q.4,f+ f-n ,Q ,ik 4 f -s ,- 'Y J ' Q ew . 33 vw. A' 'f r M1 limb' ' wx 1 , . ' V gt JH. ,qfil--. ' '9!' :1X,Qi K XA., W-pl, -- '- -x'-,gp . v 4 Jil' P f, PM ' Q f ' , s x D RK SIDE OP COLLEGE Lure- Page one fllllldffhl ifweniy-tfwo Q25 Y UEMLL' Z X Yi, Y 1 DARKER SIDE OE COLLEGE LIFE CAMPUS LIST E l x ' S I La.. VQXXQQF-S A L e 4 ww j .L uv J X' T4 S DYHHA EXAMS me sm U Emmy .fl S. x, , , i if f Q XX g Rv E -xxx I 1 A' f - .75 . -59 1 nQ! ' , ,y- , v 4' -f'f5?99?ff 1 5 f 5. IZ .. 4 QX .2 ufqrf 1 f, .1' , ,,,, K ,. 4 . ' ,,., if fl Q - 1 , X 1 ik , . f 1 me 1 'M 4 'W' se f ' K ' fx T' N' Y f rv' 5 qs ' V I 3 'Tri LL1. 1 i E' V , K- S QW F1 4 ' J. vs. A fl x 'Wu 'X fx K' . ' 'X aww ' , -':fg'fM fQ - i. fa -. -1 ? . vp U . . V , V :in L ,Fx ,V .-FTA. ,Q A ., 5 A v J Xb ' ' mf-S A ,f 4 rl S-4 X , 'K A 5 v 41 ffm ' ' 9 ,. M 'X ,, Q9 We ,M 1 vga 0 1' NJN f J 1 K M N ag , X- ,M X 135 fl , 4:29 X .F WZ- . -Y ' ,, rZ 71 fi.-v if 4 0.5 ,I fs M MQ . . ,,, :gf-ul -1 . . 5 , . ,fy We D RKEST SIDE or COLLEGE LIFE Page one hundred tfwenty-four K THE SEA Y Gum Joggrg ADS In x TH E IEMILIL Y - 1 4 X X I X35 l 1- - L-- -,. -,ww il' Vi' ' .2 QM : . 1 , ,H I 3 Lflx- Q31 ,bwfglfolgmel md Can You Imagine? I. Clarian as a bachelor maid? 2. Lyneille Butler as a dumb waiter? 3. Gulf Park without a bell? CDumb-bells, school bells, etc.j 4. 5 6 7 8 9 IO II I2 Dinner without a meeting immediately after?'l Harriet llliller with an attack of laryngitis? Eleanor Brisker with an empty mail box? M1's. Cottman with a ponjola haircut? Louise Simpson in a bad humor? Hap without her Purple passion? Dr. Cox having his picture taken by Hoffman? Frannie Green without a Waste paper basket? Can the annual staff imagine lylary Louise Reutti a grouchy typist? Page one hundred twenty-six THE SEA ElllL.lL 2 - - x x Y Y' Head Lights Gas. . . . Self-Starter . . . Spark Plug . Brake . . . .4 ffelerator . Hub . . . Steering Gear Exhaust . . GULF PARK BUS Gulf-Parltis Bus . . FRANCES GREEN Cut-Out . . . . HELEN FRENCH Klaxon . . . MARGARET VANDYRE Safety Val-ve . . MARY LOUISE REUTTI Wheels . . . . . .MRs. RODGERS Spare Tire . . . HARRIET MILLER Engine . . . . CLARIAN PATTISON Tail Light . . . . . . . MRS. COX Universal Joint. . .Miss SHEARER Song of the Twilly Bird f0!herfu'i.ve Mrs. Poirot, fwlzom rice admire for her porsrfveran A rush Of dust, a mop, and dirt! Always dirt, and grime, and girls- Bells, dirt, broom, and cloth, Toiling, working, on I go, Baiting traps and cleaning floors- Finding rats behind the doors, Doors of girls, with grime and dirt, My bones all ache, my hands are hurt, It still crowds in, this dust and dirt, ' Oh, for a place where I could go Far from schools and sound of mop, Into a place where there is snow- Snow, that does not melt from hot Beams of sun that, gliding in, expose Spots of dirt my eyes had missed, My eyes that seem to burn and glow. I'm so tired, tired, tired of this, Of dirt, and grime, and girls. . . ELIZABETH ROLAND . . BEECYE CAsANAs . . MRS. STONE . . . . FAcU1.1'x' . . MRS. THOMPSON . . . . .DR. Cox . THELMA THOMPSON . . . MRS. COTTMAN te and good natural MARGARET VAN DYRE. Page one hundred twenty-sewn :rue f sea Aautigh 21 ' 'S s x L l Y, Jokes Short story having local color: Scene: Army camp. Time: Midnight. Place: Pass Christian. R Characters: Sentry on Guard: Private Christianne. Act I-Scene I Sentry: Who goes there P Private: Christianne. Sentry: Pass, Christiannef' 55 55 -'5 Sleepy's idea of what school should offer, to be ideal: First Period-Recreation Cmotion- lessj. Second Period-Repose Centirej. Third Period-Rest Cabsolutej. Fourth Period-Lunch fa la lazyj. Fifth Period-Cessation Ccompletej. Sixth Period-Oblivion Cnoblej. Seventh Period-Sleep Qforeverj . X 55 -55 In Miss Fulson's class, while studying ldylls of the King: Oliver Perkins: Wasn't King Ar- thur the one who was found in the bull- rushes? ' -W psi' iff I -'. LQ 4 ----- cs, az. sn, T - 'se- ., 5 .- 1-4 I- 51, f -ri 3985s 14:-.-., I .I 4 ' 'ximnzsf '- -1.-. g- fx 1' -1-' x -4 6'-4' de. w ife: -. We ,-sis. N Q-Elf? M 0:252 6 Martha Fraiser: And where is Mr. Lindsay? Miss Smith: Why, he is occupying the best Davenport in Spokane. 55 35 55 Captain De Jaive: I heard something nice about you today. Mr. Davies: Yes? Captain De Jaive: A friend of ours said you resembled me. 'f 5 T Yr . ,El i in fl' I ffl l.: l ff i 'Medi I 'iff' 5-QEQFLQL SAID IN FRONT or DAY's DRUG STORE Mary Land: I'm afraid it'fs going to rain. Ruth Atchley: Wouldn't it be darl- ing if we could have a cute little 'ole storm ? af- af- vs Guest: 'alt isn't often that I get as good a meal as this. Hap Landstreet: Neither do We. as vs as Lucille Burke Cto datel : You're the dumbest man I ever saw-Why don't you get an encyclopedia? Young and Well-meaning: I Would, but the pedals hurt my feet. as as as GULF PARK COLLEGE Bovs I. Jack Richardson 2. Bobbie Holmes 3- Teddie Milloit 4. Nat White 5. Jimmy Horn 6. Hap Landstreet 7. Bob Campbell 8. Henry Ferby 9. Oliver Perkins IO. Charlie Sanders Page one hundrfd twenty-eight K THE SEA lElLlILIL .fl A X L . 1 Key: r Guess--7777? Gorilla walk-wholesome grin, Lotta pep-original sin, Much 0' brains-comme il fautg Loved and laughed at-do you know? exe ae ae Neat, precise, sweet, and austere, Whom we of the staff love and fearg A smile, a clever word or two, Calm and brilliant-know you Who? Aw an exe Petite brunette-Chattanooga Twinkletoes-sweet as sugahf lj Laughing eyes-lots of mail, Guess this one now, please don't fail. are an we Exploded can of tomato soup, Breathless as the Loop-the-Loopg Attractive, brilliant, rather tall- That, I 'spec', is really all. an ek we Tall and stately-dravvly talk,- Practical-Mrs. Astor's walk, Calm, unrullled-generous, She isn't very hard to guess. ae we are Blonde and plump and mostly grin, Gurgling giggle-sure to win! Loved and teased-faculty pet: Susie, ain't you got that yet? . MARGARET VAN DYKE. 2. FRANCES GREEN. 3 . HELEN GRAHAM. 4. LYNEILLE BUTLER. 5. ALiNE HORN. 6. LOUISE Ho1:roN Page one hundred lfwenty-nine P' I .L - K THE SEA IEMILIL .fl 'X u x Y , J SQGQ EEWEPQQQ . -J i ltr aliajl. . L K, , 'F-I in .. mum . 1 mu. .. ,Im ll A ' Uni 1, ' Y 57: ni -I .lu 'eh J.-Li. 7, 1 M IL. '- :'1i?:igl' - avzflif lt. - ian 7 --. : ,T 'yi 7k mini . mn 'V 95 Ut Fame Y rn... ffl fe L., 1 if . i ll! Q5 img Gut Said Miss Cockrill to Marion- Young lady, do you know anything about this lesson?,' Yes, ma'am, a little-what part don't you understand ? olces ENGLISH EXCELLENCE!! By the Farulty Mrs. Cox: Open the window and throw out your chests. Miss Bowen: Girls, divide yourselves into halves for this game. Miss Leighton fin chemistry classjz VVe'll take bichloride of mercury this morning. lVIiss Cockrill: Tomorrow we will finish the war. Miss Shearer: Bettie, please go run up the shade. Bliss Bowen Cin basketball classlz Will the sophomores please go down to the other end of the field and shoot themselves ? Gooo DANCERS ? ? ?? Theo: 'AThey say the girls gave the Tulane boys quite a rush at the Louisi- ana Club dance Saturday nightf, Rachel: How could two lame boys dance ?', an ek exe Milly: Let's wire our mothers some Howers for Valentine Day. Hap: Ch, nog I looked at the Howers at Adam's yesterday, and they were all wiltedf' K THE SEA YMQEMLIL. 7 4 - px Uhr Svtglv Svhnp NES. 1 xiii 4:5 22- X In DS! X X mnmmfn Exrluuiur wearing Apparel 932 BILOXI MISS GULFPORT, MISS 1' X me sm W sunt v l .fi i W Y f li Q I Q . 2221, Effffi iff. I -f EP M' I 'Z Vrr' LL.- J. C. CLOWER FURNITURE CO. CIncorporatedD 1311 NINETEENTH AVE. GULPORT, MISSISSIPPI Mfssfssfbbf Coast,s Leading Stationery Store Offrce Equipment-Desks, Chairs, Steel Filing Cases, and Every Need for the Offxce See Our Gift Line. Always Something New Lustre Sets, Hand-Painted China, Party Favors, Greeting Cards All Magazines and Periodicals SOUTHERN STATIONERY CO. CALL 520 2504 FOURTEENTH STREET GULF PORT, MISS. K gms IEA ,sump Z g , Y Y STYLE FINDS ITS TRUE INTERPRETATION OF THE SEASON'S MODE IN THE FASH- IONS WE GATHER FROM EVERY AUTHENTIC SOURCE Philipi et Gaston Cheruit Premet Louis Boulanger Jenney Worth Anal Other Great Designers Contribute to Fashions We Cffer to the Women Hereabout GEO. E. NORTHROP CO. Everything A nybody Wanls f EEE Y Emu 7' X Yi A LITTLE LEARNING MAY BE A DANGEROUS THING BUT A LITTLE ACCOUNT WITH US WILL PROVE TO BE A VERY CONVENIENT THING IN HANDLING YOUR FINANCES A checking account will he such an easy method of paying your current expenses, and any surpIus that you may not have immediate use for, if placed on a four months, certilclcate, will draw four per cent Interest. We are always glacl to have you can and let us exffafn our different methods of being of servfce to you. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF GULFPORT ni f sim EMM, I:leii11priagI1am Shlrlevlxatolri THE SPECIALTY STORE Ne Orl Mbl Al qualty and econo y For the be t the most econo I th end You re cordially invited to shop by phon lette person when you e 1 tow JOHN PELLEGRINO S HEADQUARTERS FOR FINEST AND FRESHEST FRUITS VEGETABLES AND PRODUCE The Best of Everylhmg lllc Mailfcl Ajfords Opposite the Gulf 81 Ship Island Office Building Telephone 668 TELEPHONE 29 J E T Rlemann Undertakmg Company Funeral Directors and Embalmers FREE AMBULANCE SERVICE GULFPORT MISSISSIPPI OUR SERVICE Covers the Entire Field of Banking Trust and Investment Business Commercial Banlc fe? Trust Company GULFPORT, MISSISSIPPI li f Y f i o o ir i - H4 0 w eans, La. o ie, a. Apparel and accessories that appeal in their unusually distinctive style, their i - m . s-is mica in e . ' ' ' ' e, r or in 'r 'n n. 9 l I O 9 9 1 me f sea BANQUETS PARTIES SPLENDID CAFE COURTESY-QUALITY-SERVICE BERTUCCI BROS., Proprietors TELEPHONE 78 COR. 26TH AVE. AND 13TH ST. GULFPORT, MISS. HEWES BROTHERS Tl-IE MONEY BACK STORE OF GULFPORT In our DRESS FABRIC DEPARTMENT you can usually find the most sought-after materials and colorings in silks, woolens and cottons. A wide range of shades and prices in Silk and Lisle Hose. GOSSARD CORSETS. Front lacing, a corset of genuine merit, in twelve different models and prices. ' Let us supply your BATHING OUTFIT when the time rolls around: we will have the whole works. In our Sl-ICE DEPARTMENT you will find the best styles of the best makes-Queen Quality, Walk-Over, and Hamilton Brown's. FALL IN WITH US We Are pledged to Look After Your Interest as Carefully as Our Own K R SER Y EMM Qfqyu' 'WM a Ar Bqes FOR FRESH FLOWERS TELEPHONE 80 52 MAGNOLIA FLORAL CO 2604 TH1 E HST EET FP T s W SHOW THE LATEST EARLIEST KARL FASGLD JEWELER AND OPTICIAN Watch and Jewelry Repazrzrzg a Speczalty ANDERSON THEATRE BLDG. GULFPORT, MISS. T E ffl ii . . Y 3 J gg 0 O 99 l Unique and Artistic Colonials. Corsages nd m ou u t RTE NT R GUL OR , Ml s. E K THE SEA 'Y .Emma X Y l - 1 g Good Shoes and Hosiery f EEE F DEMLL' Y 44 Sa i x Y Y f Gulfport Steam Dye Works and Laundry Company A. C. BUXTON, Manager Telephone 280 2904-6-8 13TH STREET GULFPORT, MISSISSIPPI L. W. FULTON 8 COMPANY CLEANERSAND DYERS 2908 Thirteenth Street GULFPORT, MISS. TELEPHCNE 280 THE f SEA 'Y EUULIL. ffl u ' ' e To THE GIRLS AND THE FACULTY of Wonderful Gulf Park College on Our Beautiful Gulf Coast HAYS MASTER CLEANER GULFPORT me I SEA Y EMM 7 fire -is GULF-PARK COLLEGE GIRLS Demand the Very Best MERCHANDISE SERVICE Therefore They Will Get Entire Satisfaction BY SHCJPPING AT DAY'S The Store of Efficient Service Q25 E EUILIL' X Y 1 V Y I HOLMES-N EW ORLEANS A Department Store That Has Served New Orleans anal the .South Wen for 82 Years SHOP AT HOLMES For Everything Needed by a GOOD College Girl MODERATE MERCHANDISE PRICES D. H HOLMES CQ. LIMITED For 82 Years-The Best Place to Shop HOW NEAR IS YOUR MAIL BOX? Maison Blanche, the largest and best equipped department store in the South, is that close to you---as near as your mail box! Whatever you need, write to us and our eff'-lcient shoppers will make the selections for you. Just address your envelope, uThe Creat- est Store South, New Orleans, La. MAISON BLANCHE Greatest Store South f gli Y Euu. ,fl - ' S 7, X, IMPERIAL FOOTWEAR For Classroom or campus, for prom or promenade Girls, we've a display to conform with your ideas of style, Smartness and economy. Come and see us, or write for catalogue. IMPERIAL SHOE STORE NEW ORLEANS LARGEST SOUTH WE SPECIALIZE IN THE EQUIPMENT OF KITCHENS AND DINING Rooms OF SCI-IOOI.. CAFETERIAS The Louhat Glassware gf Cork Co., Ltd. 3l4 Chartres St., New Orleans. La. BUGN A BROTHERS The Quality Store FANCY GROCERIES, CAKES, FRUITS TELEPHONE 906-907 GULFPORT, MISSISSIPPI WH Y BE PLAIN ? VISIT THE MARINELLO SHOP rule f start IEMILIL 2 - - fs. , , X , Y rf' rf' rf' rf rrFf pfff pFfP pfff We Roo TIVELT New Orleans' largest and finest hotel. Located in the heart of the theatre, shopping and financial district. A hotel that combines homelike comforts with a service and cuisine that are unequalled anywhere in the South. '57ffZ31f5NV1L1L,5o Situated on New Qrleans' principal residential avenue- completely remodeled-only a five-minute walk from the commercial center of the city-excellent cuisine--garage service operated in connection with hotel. These hotels under the personal supervision of Mr. Arthur Benaglia, fomierly General Manager, Canadian Pacific Railways Banff Springs Hotels. K THE SEA Y Gull 7 D . A. S. H lc' s VISIT Plimes: Office 355 gclllls. DOCTORS' BUILDING AND fAcross fro Postofflcel GULFPORT 2406 THIRTEENTH STREET ANDERSON'S HABERDASHERY F itwell Furnishings GULFPORT, SSISSIPPI BOOKS MAGAZINES J effreys-Burton-Capps Co. AGENCY Eaton's, Crane 'id Pike's High-Grade Papers GULFPORT, MISSISSIPPI K rite sea X .suits x YY! Y -1 THE GULF AND SHIP ISLAND RAILROAD ROUTE OF THE MISSISSIPPIANH A new fast train between Jackson, lVlississippi, and Gulf- port, Mississippi, making only five stops Leave Jackson . . 6:50 A.M. Arrive Ciulfport . . . . l l :55 A.M. Leave Gulfport . . . . IO:45 A.M. Arrive Jackson . . 4:00 P.M. Southbound, this train takes Chicago Sleeper from the Panama Limited, and Memphis Sleeper from Train No. l of the Illinois Central. Northbound, it carries Chicago Sleeper for delivery to the Panama Limited at Jackson. er? K THE SEA F EMILIL 7 .fl ' ' S x Y - ' L,.AA A G ULFPORTIS BEAUTIFUL HOTEL TI-IE GREAT SOUTHERN EUROPEAN PLAN GEO. STURM, Manager t I f EEE E QM Z' x Y 1 P , 1 A Little uSI1unsI1ine', Every Day! Loose-Wiles Biscuit Company Makes We Distribute Every Store Sells SHUNSHIN E CAKES Asks for Shunshine Cakes and W afcrs When You Are Shopping FOR GOOD THINGS TO EAT GULFPORT GROCERY COMPANY Wholesale Dislrihulors GULFPORT, MISSISSIPPI x r e ' F H o so x Q. in A qv A Q bb-'NGA X COPVISKY :nn uv Mncvuvws con!! ca or urw om.nws.L1'u. 'pf z V K THE sm 'Y sum. 7 .fl ' ' S 71 x , ROSES Q CANDYAnd v OfCourse She p p fy SrlIlLlkes Them Q3 J 5 6'fi3?2aJ 0 o Em' v 9 Q N J and theiyi express your appreciation for her t oughtfulness in serving you ALAMEDA the always-the-same-and-always the-best of pure coffees. Merchants Coffee Co. of New Orleans, Ltd. I 5 Be Coffee Wise fgilju A Not Coupon Foohs I Z5 me f SEA 'EMQEMILILQX A g Y FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF BILOXI COMMERCIAL BANKING INVESTMENT BONDS Oldest Banff on the Mississippi Coast PEERLESS ICE CREAM COMPANY J. K. MILNER, Proprietor N XV xxxx X X gxwxxw A www Nwxxxxxx ww N www IE S X XX X S N Z fo 25.25 E -'D Qsmc: E :Dr-1 - an Z :U f'c: 5CD H 5341 E 2 5m OW 3 'U 5 59.3 5:1 -1 Emxm E2 H IT! C5054 FI Qatjm 'U ::s.-15 E5 0 Co Z 0 E If Q Q S X xxx KW X 9 X Nw X GULFPORT, MISS. TELEPHONE 3 01 was f SEA EMM ,Q Q - fx X Y Y 1 IN APPRECIATION OF LIBERAL PATRONAGE FOR GRADUATION FLOWERS AND CORSAGES DURING SEASON 1923-Z4 and Soliciting Future Orders ON THE MERIT OF OUR FRESH CUT FLOWERS AND PROMPT SERVICE ADAMS THE FLORIST GULFPORT-PHONE 561 PASS CHRISTIAN-PHONE 6 .Sa 'fc If e Xi' ,Zina-. '5- 1 Get the Latest Mississippi Coast News and Associated Press News IN DAILY HERALD EVERY AFTERNOON 65C a Month, Delivered by Carrier or by Mail K Irene SEA Q SIIIII u Fire, Marine, Auto Liability, and Bond Insurange THE SNEED INSURANCE AGENCY . Our Patrons Sleep Well TELEPHONE 170 GULFPORT, MISS WHERE TO GO FOR PHOTOS IF You DON'T KNOW WHERE TO GO Go Where the Gulf-Park College Girls Go TO HOFFMAN'S STUDIO GULFPORT, MISSISSIPPI f EEE bfsuusi. X x I SAENGER'S STRAND THEATER PRESENTING The Uftra Ultimate fn Plzotogilays OWNED AND OPERATED BY THE SAENGER AMUSEMENT CO., INC. W O 50 Theaters in Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, A BANK OF GULFPORT GULFPORT, MISS. A Good Bank to Put Your Money In Savings and Commercial Accounts Solicited The Bank of Friendly Service FOUR PER CENT ON SAVINGS THE BEAUTIFUL BUENA VISTA THE PEER OF GULF COAST HOTELS B1Lox1, Mississippi f sm not X Emu. . silt x A 1 Y Y 1 THE DIXIE BARBER SHOP Appreciates the Patronage of the Young Ladies of Gulf-Park 1Super'1SerU5Ce in Hair Dressing THE WHITE HOUSE BILOXI, MISS. A Modern Resort Hotel Overlooking the Sparking Waters of the Gulf of Mexico BOATING, BATHING, DANCING FISHING Adjacent to the best I8-hole golf course South. Excellent stable of saddle horses. New Annex absolutely fireproof, every room with private bath. Illustrated literature on request. WALTER E. WHITE, Manager The Coast's Best Store W. V. JOYCE COMPANY BILOXI, MISSISSIPPI Exclusive Modes, Costumes. Dresses. Frocks. Wraps, Ensemble Suits Millinery and Accessories Catering to the Miss or Matron Who is Satisfied Only With the Ultra Smart TIHIE f 1 SEA I X EMM 7 I -Qi OI ' ' O L3 Drs. Odeneal and McWilliams SERVICE Quality Courtesy and Serv' ' EYE' EAR' NOSE ' our Motto AND THROAT TELEPHONE 483 GULEPORT, M1ss1ss1PP1 PH 22 G FPOF-T, MISS- WE FURNISH MATERIAL FROM THE GROUND UP THE HOME LUMBER CO. GULF PORT, MISSISSIPPI TELEPHONE 381 I ORDER YOUR PROGRAMS, INVITATIONS, STATIONERY FROM THE DIXIE PRESS We Take a Personal Interest in Your Printing Needs K Tum SEA Y Gum 7 .fl - ' S xA ,I DANTZLER THIS NAME STANDS FOR MUCH IN MISSISSIPPI FE ' 119 I I X-Qariil :l .2 -- WMP .-I :in-:w,:1x, Y ' l If -. ' 'f'4? '-. l'k' E f3'f:-351 nu., . ' - 5-. , , , f t n B . e-- ' - . ft: r2i,. fvXk L. v s. I 41' f ul x 1 5 A 2' Us 'dw 'n 2 ,nu A-n' ul' .44-4 L S ll n . ..... A . , ', ', 4 ..-- - .S ,lung-.s,,,..-Lttx.-a,.' THE DANTZLER LUMBER CO. Has Been One of the Most Powerful Forces in the Development of the State 'ITIHHE f SEA F EMILII. 4 . C-ETITFROM SMITH-TODD HARDWARE CO Gulfport Printing Co RALPH E.. BRASH, Manager PRINTERS, BINDERS STATIONERS GULFPORT, MISSISSIPPI F. W. WOOLWORTH co. FIVE AND TEN CENT SPECIALTIES GULFPORT MISSISSIPPI KTRE SER Y Gull 4 , . ,if CULF PARK BY-THE-SEA A JUNIOR COLLEGE FOR GIRLS Outdoor Life the Year Round Charming Surroundings A Teacher to Every Eight Girls THE ACADEMIC COURSE COMPRISES FOUR YEARS OF HIGH SCHOOL AND TWO OF COLLEGE WORK FULL DEPARTMENTS OF MUSIC, ART, EXPRESSION HOME ECONOMICS SECRETARIAL AND NORMAL PHYSICAL EDUCATION National Patronage, Limited Enrollment For Catalog, Address PRESIDENT RICHARD C. COX Box B, GULFPORT, Miss, V ,, .. , ,,,,,,,, I. , .,,, . , ,,, ,V YV. YY, -: ,, , 7 ,-.....,,,,1,,, ,,.,..,,,,,,.V,.,. mwf- ,,,,i:h L ' ' - igm '-'LLQ?2.3...J':LL lL:s?f:Lf.r ' I' ,1...-f .. ,. .L ,Q , J f1iH1s ILBooK PRINTED BY BENSON K1 I Q3 LARGEST COLLEGEI ANNUAL PUBLISHERS 'IN THE WORLD Hxgx-nzsfr QUALITY WORKMANSHIP SUPERIOR EXTENSIVE SERVICE 613.234 1 PRINTING CO. , . NASHVILLE. I I I RTENN. I ANNUAL I-1EADQuAR'rERs . - - N . ,PL .U , ,,,,-,F-6 5 . .- f.. ., Vg.. - ,.., LL.: ,. ,....,, ,-,,,,...,..,,., , , ' ' -- A X--4--in 3-'fifiielff-XLLAL. WL. -wxnj ',,..',I . .4 ,I 34. ---I K THE SEA Y Gum 4fi w' Autographs f 1.'. n 1. Q A fi , , m ' 1 A 4' W L ,I K4 . UQ 'N 4 W P ' . J K , q...,,.. -,-, , , .
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