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Vfrf f?30 |__ U jXz— CREATIVE GRAPHICS, EUGENE. OR 1-800-368-3671 g C c g C . J s V. QII|e tubentB of pJarfc-JUlmont jidjooi jNashfotlle, Uermeseee present thr 1930 $L h timtz as representative of tljeir JVmbtttons, Acti tties, anh ( Ath f bemmt ■jBuring ®t{eir Hears pfere r 0 rv r jsa a aa ' -u xjss z c c c c c- c c w i k- ; fa DEDICATION $) To one who is not as well known as we who know him could w 1 ) wish, who with his insight and firmness of character M stands behind us in all we do, whose geniality v |-? and straightforwardness we all admire — to him we, the Milestones Staff f V of 1930, affectionately ded- yO- icate this book. y i 1 i 1 i ' j j y ov iK rs j ! fc tSc c cKUIc K . t : I I Andrew Bell Benedict Vice President 1 . K n ■xV? )- -s 4i r y r sf ? Ai l UfiS S Z i C C C IC iC k p r 3 ntt. JohnD. Si anton P L-tSTD.tNT CTd.D.Qt A D d£AN of f ACUITY ' D .Jom W. ' Sak to a Jfm£DNA 1 LI N J)£AN of £.£S D£NC£ ■. ■i .y jr FACULTY John Diell Blanton, B.A., LL.D. John Wynne Barton, M.A., LL.D. President Chapcroi ■President Andrew Bell Benedict .... Vice President Thomas D. D. Quaid, M.A Dean Annie Clayrrooke Allison. B.A., M.A. . . . Principal of High School HOME DEPARTMENT Edna Irvin, M.A. .... Dean of Residence Mrs. J. W. Charlton ) . . Mrs. Solon E. Rose L . . . . Assistants Mrs. Elizabeth Plaskett J Mary Neal Mrs. E. O. Tate Mrs. Allen G. Hall Mrs. Mary Lee Jeter Mrs. Charlie D. McComb Mrs. Minnie Powell Mrs. Bona A. Nichols ) Mrs. Hazle Padgett - Miss Lida Eddins 3 Susan Childress Rucker . . Graduate Nurse Ruby Van Hooser . Bible and Religious Education B.A., Athens College; Special Student, Scarritt College for Christian Workers ; Graduate Stu- dent, University of Chicago, Columbia Univer- sity Oscie A. Sanders . Bible and Religious Education B.A., Rice Institute; M.A., University of Chi- cago Alma Hollinger Biology B.A., M.A., University of Michigan ; Student, Michigan Biological Station and Marine Biolog- ical Station, Venice, Cal. Dorothy Elizabeth Nelson Biology and Physiology B.A., University of Iowa ; Graduate Work, Iowa State College Jessie Lee French . . . Assistant in Biology B.S., M.A., George Peabody College for Teachers W. H. Hollinshead Chemistry Ph.G., D.Sc, Vanderbilt University Catherine Berry . . . Assistant in Chemistry B.S., University of Missouri Ellen Wallace . . . Economics and Sociology B.S., George Peabody College for Teachers ; M.A., University of Chicago Olive Carter Ross . . . English, Art History B.A., University of Nashville ; Graduate Student, Vanderbilt University ; M.A., Columbia Univer- sity Theodora Cooley Scruggs English B.A., Wellesley College ; M.A., Vanderbilt Uni- versity Ellene Ransom English B.A., M.A., Vanderbilt University ; Graduate Student, Columbia University and Yale Univer- sity Anna Pugh . English B.A., University of Arkansas ; M.A., University of Chicago ; Graduate Student, Columbia Univer- sity Louise Loretz Herron English B.S., Vanderbilt University ; M.A., Columbia University Linda Rhea English B.S., Vanderbilt University ; M.A., Columbia University ; M.A., Vanderbilt University Katharine V. Lydell English A.B., Wellesley College Adelaide Merrill Drew English B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Radcliffe College Susan S. Souby English B.S., M.A., George Peabody College for Teachers Martha K. Ordway English Ph.B., University of Chicago; M.A., George Peabody College for Teachers Vera L. Hay English, History Ph.B., University of Chicago Gladys Brooks French B.A.. Elmira College; Special Certificate. Uni- versity de Lausanne ; Graduate Work, Univer- sity of Chicago Bertha M. Ruef French A.B., Vassar College; M.A., Vassar College; Diplome de professeur de francais, Universite de Toulouse Evelyn Ferry French B.A., Mount Holyoke ; Graduate Work, Univer- site de Grenoble, France, one year ; Smith Col- lege, one year ; Middlebury School of French Agnes Amis French B.A., Vanderbilt University ; Student in France ; M.A., George Peabody College for Teachers Lucy L. Fountain French A.B., Barnard College Margaret Roberson Hollinshead . . . German B.S. and M.A., Vanderbilt University Annie Claybrooke Allison Latin B.S., M.A., George Peabody College for Teach- ers ; Graduate Work, University of Chicago Martha Annette Cason Latin B.A., University of Chicago ; M.A., Columbia University Sadie Harmon Latin B.A., University of Kansas ; M.A., University of Nebraska Thomas B. Donner Spanish B.A., East Texas Teachers ' College ; M.A., South- ern Methodist University Thelma Campbell Spanish B.A., University of Arkansas ; Graduate Student, Universidad Nacional de Mexico Loretta Chenoweth History B.A., M.A., Northwestern University; Graduate Student, Vanderbilt University Caroline Leavell History B.S., Vanderbilt University ; M.A., Columbia University Wilmoth Dinning History B.A., Randolph-Macon Woman ' s College Gertrude Casebier History B.A., Western Kentucky State Teachers ' College ; Graduate Student, Vanderbilt University Frances E. Church Librarian B.A., Missouri State Teachers ' College ; Gradu- ate Student, Illinois University, Columbia Uni- versity Nellie Pyle Miser Mathematics B.A., Huron College ; Graduate Student, Univer- sity of Chicago Elizabeth Lowry Mathematics B.A., Tennessee College ; M.A., George Peabody College for Teachers Robbie Allison Shackleford . . Mathematics B.A., Vanderbilt University Nelle Major Mathematics B.S., George Peabody College for Teachers Mary Rachel Norris . . Psychology, Education B.A., M.A., Bryn Mawr College Thomas D. D. Quaid . . Psychology, Education B.A., M.A., University of Oklahoma ; Graduate Student, George Peabody College for Teachers FACULTY Martha Crockett School Tutor A.B., Vanderbilt University; M.A., University of Pennsylvania Mattye Smalling Thompson . Secretarial Course B.S., M.A., George Peabody College for Teach- ers ; Special Commercial Student at Simmons College Elisabeth Sutherland . . Foods and Cookery B.S., M.S., University of Wisconsin Helen Elizabeth Cobb . Textiles and Clothing B.S., University of Wisconsin ; M.A., Kansas State Agricultural College Frances G. Swenson Assistant in Home Economics B.S., Iowa State College Mary Wynne Shackelford Director School of Art Graduate, Art Academy of Cincinnati ; Graduate, Pratt Institute, Department of Fine and Applied Arts ; Special Student, New York School of Fine and Applied Arts in New York and in Paris Louise Gordon Art Graduate of the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts Gulnar Kheiralla Art Bachelor of Art Education, Art Institute, Chi- cago ; Student, University of Chicago Pauline Sherwood Townsend Director School of Expression Graduate, New England Conservatory ; Post- graduate, Boston School of Expression ; Special Courses in New York, Chicago, and Boston Catharine A. Winnia Expression Graduate, Vanderbilt School of Expression ; Special Academic Student, Vanderbilt Univer- sity and George Peabody College for Teachers ; Student, Pauline Sherwood Townsend Emma I. Sisson . . . . Director School of Physical Education Graduate, Sargent School of Physical Education and of Gilbert Normal School for Dancing ; Stu- dent, Harvard Summer School and Columbia University ; Special Student in Corrective Gym- nastics, Children ' s Hospital, Boston Catherine E. Morrison . . . Physical Training, Athletics, Swimming Diploma from Possee Gymnasium, Boston ; Spe- cial Student, Chaliff School, New York, and Co- lumbia University Jane Cabling Riding Graduate, Ward-Belmont School ; B.S., Univer- sity of Wisconsin Evelyn Jantzer Dancing Graduate, Savage School of Physical Education ; Graduate, Vestoff Serova School of Dancing, Artists ' and Teachers ' Courses Mary M. McEttrick Swimming Graduate, Bouve School of Physical Education Julia Warwick Assistant in Athletics and Swimming Graduate, Ward-Belmont School Margaret Frierson Hall Assistant in Gymnasium Lawrence Goodman . Director School of Piano Pupil of Ernest Hutcheson, Josef Lhevinne, and Sigismund Stojowski ; Student at Ferrucio Bu- soni ' s Master School for Pianists, Basel, Swit- zerland ; Scholarship Pupil, Peabody Conserva- tory of Music, Baltimore, Md. ; formerly Teacher of Piano, Von Ende School of Music, New York City ; has concertized extensively in United States ; Duo Art Recordings Louise Best Piano Pupil of Ernest Hutcheson and Sigismund Sto- jowski ; Pupil at Sterns University, Berlin ; Pu- pil of Rudolph Ganz ; Theoretical Courses in the Institute of Musical Arts, New York Alice Kavanaugh Leftwich Piano Graduate, Beethoven Conservatory, St. Louis ; Pupil of Arthur Foote and B. J. Lang, Boston ; three years in Paris with M. Moszkowski and Wager Swayne Hazel Coate Rose Piano Pupil of William H. Sherwood, Glenn Dillard Gunn, Victor Heinze ; formerly Teacher of Pi- ano, Cosmopolitan School of Music, Indianapo- lis, Ind. Estelle Roy-Schmitz Piano Pupil of S. B. Mills, Harold van Mickwitz, Jo- seffy, and Lhevinne, New York ; Silvio Scionti, Chicago ; Otto Nietzel and Steinhauer, Germany Amelie Throne Piano Pupil of Maurice Aronson, Vienna ; Josef Lhe- vinne, Berlin ; Sigismund Stojowski, New York Mary Douthit Piano Graduate, Ward-Belmont School of Music ; Pupil of Lawrence Goodman, Harold von Mickwitz, and Sigismund Stojowski Clemence Thuss Piano Graduate, Ward-Belmont Conservatory of Music ; three years, Institute of Musical Arts, New York ; Pupil of Estelle Roy-Schmitz, Sigmund Herzog, Louise Robyn, Silvio Scionti Henry S. Wesson Pipe Organ Graduate and Postgraduate, Guilmant Organ School, of New York ; Special Pupil of William C. Carl, W. I. Nevins, and Clement R. Gale, of New York ; Substitute Organist one summer for William C. Carl in First Presbyterian Church, New York ; three years Organist in the Church of the Holy Apostles (Episcopal), New York City Stetson Humphrey . Director, Voice Department Graduate, Columbia University and Rochester Conservatory of Music ; Private Work in Europe and America under Heinrich Jacobsen, of Dres- den and Vienna ; De Reske Studios, of Paris ; Ludwig Wuhlner and Max Heinrich, of Berlin ; Signor Morille, of Milan ; and Signor Tanara, Caruso ' s Coach ; formerly Director of Boston Music School, and Director of Fine Arts Depart- ment, Choate School Florence N. Boyer Voice Student of Music in Oberlin College ; Pupil of Signor Vananni, Italy; Mesdames de Sales and Bossetti, Munich ; Oscar Seagle and de Reszke, Paris Helen Todd Sloan Voice Pupil of George Deane, Boston ; Isidore Brag- giotti, Florence, Italy ; Gaetano S. de Luca, Nashville Irene Crane Humphrey Voice Studied at Boston University, New England Con- servatory of Music, Boston School of Music ; Private Work in Europe two years under Manno and Castellano in Milan and Morelli in London ; Private Work in America under Stetson Humph- rey and Oscar Saengar ; formerly with Philadel- phia Grand Opera Company Kenneth Rose Violin Pupil of McGibeny, Indianapolis ; Arthur Hart- mann, Paris ; George Lehmann, Berlin ; Souky, Prague ; formerly teacher, Metropolitan School of Music, Indianapolis, and Concert Master, In- dianapolis Symphony Orchestra Lawrence H. Riggs .... Musical Sciences B.A., Beloit College ; Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University, England ; Summer Courses : Chicago Musical College, Northwestern University School of Music, and American Institute of Normal Methods ; Graduate, American Institute of Nor- mal Methods Mary Venable Blythe . Sight Playing and Piano Graduate, St. Mary ' s Hall, San Antonio ; Pupil of von Mickwitz and Harry Redman, New Eng- land Conservatory Founders Hall and a Part of North Front The Historic Old Tower in Club Village. In This Tower the Alumna Carillon Was Installed in 1929, a Gift of the Alumnae and Friends of the School VGRsfii 9 SENIORS Dorothy Harrison Cate, ' 30 Seniors ! See our banners flying, With their stripes of white and gold, In the whisp ' ring breeze that softly Stirs each graceful silken fold — White that stands for truth and beauty, Love and faith unbroken yet ; Gold that bids us do our duty, Conquer disappointments met. Proudly, then, we stand and dauntless, Where have stood those gone before, Holding in our care traditions Handed down from days of yore. Then, when Senior days have ended And new duties call us on, We shall leave to other Seniors Our trust to guard when we have gone. So, like Arthur ' s knights with armour gleaming, Pressing onward, brave and bold, We shall seek the Grail of Wisdom ' Neath our banners, white and gold. 17 2 1 i £ 8 i A B rj frJS yn l ? 5tey?5 f i si tlWft C c C C c C C C C f I z § y i SENIORS T. c. DOROTHY BLACK President Senior-Middle Class, ' 28- ' 29 ; Orches- tra, ' 28- ' 29, ' 29-30 ; Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; President Senior Class, ' 29- ' 30 ; President Orchestra, ' 29- ' 30 ; Choir, ' 29- ' 30 ; Advisory Board, ' 29- ' 30. White candles ; black chiffon ; thin teacups and wafers ; tiny frosted cakes ; a faint perfume ; a violin heard in the distance. ISOBEL GOODLOE Angkor President Sophomore Class, ' 26- ' 27 ; Bowling Manager, ' 26- ' 27 ; Treasurer Day Student Council, ' 26- ' 27 ; Advertising Manager of Hyphen, ' 27- ' 28 ; President Angkor Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Vice President Senior Class, ' 29- ' 30 ; Hockey Manager, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30. Old-fashioned gardens ; lavender and white lilacs ; violet sachet ; big lace picture hats ; dreams. VIRGINIA BACON X. L. Treasurer Senior Class, ' 29- ' 30. Bronze ; a Titian ; green willow trees ; a riding habit ; a rock garden ; tapistry ; Carthaginian roses ; old English silver. DOROTHY CATE Triad Hyphen Reporter, ' 28- ' 29 ; Secretary Triad Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Associate Editor Hyphen, ' 29- ' 30 ; Secre- tary Senior Class, ' 29- ' 30 ; Day Student Editor Hyphen, ' 29- ' 30 ; Wordsmith, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30. Lazy summer days ; brown velvet and old lace : a log cabin, hidden in the woods ; a squirrel ; a bed of pansies. DOROTHY BURDETTE F. F. President Illinois Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 29 ; Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30. Excitement ; a bad child ; tennis rackets ; smocks ; sea-green water ; giggles ; a white sail. MARY COMER F. F. President Alabama Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; President F. F. Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Advisory Board, ' 29- ' 30. An easel covered with splashes of bright color ; a Southern drawl ; house parties ; a fraternity ring ; L ' Heure Bleu. 18 M V N? i i n , S5 1 S!iStOK ? S c m SENIORS HELEN DONKER X. L. President X. L. Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30 ; Advisory Board, ' 29- ' 30. Old lace ; tapestries ; wine-red velvet on high- backed chairs ; a cameo ; a casement window ; can- dles. ... X. L. Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; EUGENIA BROWN ... Secretary-Treasurer Oklahon French Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30. Monks in supplication; fur on a circular skirt; carved ivory ; Spanish moss ; a white sailboat. MARIANNA BROWN Agora Secretary Eastern Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary Agora Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Martha Washington, ' 30. Blue collars and cuffs ; a yellow sweater ; chip- munks ; a loon call at night ; bookshelves ; firelight. AMANDA CALDWELL Ariston Day Student Treasurer Senior-Middle Class, ' 28- ' 29 ; Milestones Day Student Business Manager, ' 28- ' 29 ; President Athletic Association, ' 29- ' 30 ; Varsity Basketball, ' 30 ; Varsity Volley Ball, ' 30 ; Varsity Hockey, ' 30 ; Varsity Bowling, ' 30. Basketball ; a slim poplar tree ; a canoe shoot- ing rapids ; campfircs glowing in the dusk ; Gala- had. NANCY BELLE CAMPBELL .... Ariston Brownies ; leather jackets ; mittens ; military school dances ; striped pajamas ; crisp fall days ; a rainy-day pal. CAROL COMBS X. L. Style shows ; haughty mannequins ; pouring tea on a summer afternoon ; aristocracy ; satin dresses ; grace. 19 I i xW ' t)? V5?6V 5 fXi Pi 7 $ y SENIORS VIRGINIA LOU SAMPLE Penta Tau Proctor Pembroke, ' 29 ; General Proctor, ' 29 ; Treasurer Penta Tau Club. ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Mem- ber Athletic Association, ' 30 ; Wandering Blues, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30. Tuck-in skirts ; Gene Austin records ; Student Council ; imps darting about like sunbeams on dusty windowpanes. . . . Agora Advisory Board, LEUNA TATHAM .... President Agora Club, ' 29- ' 30 ' 29- ' 30. Daring revealing evening dresses ; mischief ; shining brown hair ; wild flowers ; canoes ; outdoor life. DOROTHY WALLACE Agora Starched aprons ; W. C. T. U. ; long, low, com- fortable farmhouses ; strawberries ; daffodils. VIRGINIA ANDREWS Del Ver Custodian Del Vers, ' 29- ' 30 ; Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 29- ' 30. Maple leaves ; smoke ; French windows ; a crumb- ling stone wall ; cat-calls ; a wedgewood urn ; tooled leather ; bayberries. CHARLOTTE BARTLESON X. L. French Club, ' 29- ' 30. Autumn ; red velvet and white rhinestones ; lark- spur at dusk ; uniforms ; a blue leather jacket ; calendars. MILDRED BISHOP Anti-Pandora Treasurer Anti-Pandora Club, ' 29-30. Walnuts ; apple blossoms ; a still, moonless night ; a shawl ; a stiletto. vhite furs ; swans ; white embroidered 21) e rg wrcxr? c c ( ■o ] y i SENIORS LOUISE LATIMER Anti-Pandora President Anti-Pandora Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30 ; Advisory Board, ' 29- ' 30 ; Varsity Volley Ball, ' 30. Satin slippers ; dinner guests ; shaggy black spaniel ; toe slippei feet ; grace. marcasite ; a ; slim, flying ALICE MEYER Osiron President Oklahoma Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Vice President Osiron, ' 29 ; Choir, ' 29- ' 30. Tiffany and cut-steel buckles ; onyx rings set in marcasite ; grand opera ; executive ability. AMELIA MOORE Osiron Tall grass bending in the breeze ; candlelight at tea ; a painted fan ; a Southern Woman ' s Club. MARTHA OZEE Anti-Pandora Short, red dresses, with gay-colored bandanas ; a merry-go-round ; ripe, red apples ; Four H Clubs. DOROTHY SCHULTZ F. F. Clean middies ; a high dive ; one tall tree against the skyline ; a cool, fresh drink ; limes. HELEN SELDOMRIDGE F Treasurer F. F. Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Hyphen Reporter, ' 29- ' 30. Raisin cookies ; a new set of bowls, with bright, blue bands ; steadiness ; the stuff that dreams are made of ; a windy day. S ' A k - i j ' rtte ' K n sj fxa t u cs csp crt c t as a - ■7 1 SENIORS MARGARET CARTTER Penta Tau Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Choir, ' 29- ' 30 ; Treasurer Penta Tau Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; President Texas Club, ' 29- ' 30. Red book covers ; white canoes and green pil- lows ; lamplighters ; Pierrette ; Chinese jade ; on tiptoe. CAROLYN DECKER Osiron Leopard coats ; black hats, with veils ; France ; villas near the Mediterranean ; chocolate drops ; poodles. LOUISE HUDDLESTON A. K. Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 29- ' 30 ; Hyphen Reporter, ' 29- ' 30. Black chiffon dresses and crystal beads ; con- tentment ; fairy tales ; little girls ' tea parties ; good grades. LOUISE HOLLINGSWORTH .... Osiron Clear water ; cool verandas ; wild roses painted on an old portrait ; a blue glass spoon. RACHEL HOLLAND Agora Vice President North Carolina Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Proctor of Senior, ' 29. Hollyhocks ; Rose in Bloom ; soft lavender and twilight ; loyalty ; four poster beds and chintz chairs ; gray velvet. HELEN HART F. F. Treasurer Nebraska Club, ' 29- ' 30. Soap bubbles ; green ink ; yellow and white china ; meaning silence : twinkling eyes and dim- ples ; charm. 22 m p - $ t i % SENIORS FRANCES COOPER A. K. Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Orchestra, ' 28- ' 29 ; French Club, ' 28- ' 29. Fresh fruit ; blue and white china ; ruffled cur- tains : stability ; a straight line ; shineness. JOAN CLINTON T. C. Blue-flowered chiffon ; a wax doll ; pale-pink can- dles ; baby ' s breath ; a crocheted shawl. REBECCA CLENDENING Triad Assistant Day Student Editor Milestones, ' 29- ' 30. French poetry ; long organdy dresses ; tiny yel- low rosebuds ; The Doll Dance ; afternoon tea on the terrace ; L ' Aimant. ESTHER CONGER Osiron Secretary Kansas Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; President Y. W. C. A., ' 29- ' 30 ; French Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Advisory Board, ' 29- ' 30. Stained-glass windows ; organ music ; a deep river in the evening ; narcissus ; white chiffon ; coolness. MARGARET CORWIN Osiron Wordsmith, ' 29- ' 30 ; Copy Reader Hyphen. ' 29- ' 30. Nordic legends ; white sand and blue water ; red bathing suits and surf boards; blue ice; a flash of color ; the Bohemian Art Center. SARA ELIZABETH COTTRELL ... F. F. Organdy aprons ; pink satin slippers ; angel- food cake ; cream puffs ; white frosting. 23 )V v - y c M c c c g c e c rc SENIORS MALAVON DENNIS A. K. Orchestra, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30. Starched curtains ; black letters on white pages ; a meadow lark ; jonquils ; yellow china ; an aster. ELIZABETH ELLIOTT Tri-K. Second Vice President Student Council, ' 29 : Treasurer Tri-K. Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Y. W. C. A. Cab- inet. ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30 ; Varsity Hockey, ' 30. Rain at night ; white ice ; a rocky shore ; blue water and a Jantzen bathing suit ; a husky laugh ; charm. PAULINE FELDER Triad Orange sweaters and sox ; a tiny stream steadily winding its way to the sea ; daisy fields ; a Euro- pean travel party. ROSE FLENTYE Tri-K. George Washington, ' 29 ; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 29- ' 30 ; Orchestra, ' 29- ' 30. Paris shops ; smart luggage, with foreign stick- ers ; a mannequin in Vogue ; Saks Fifth Avenue. MARION GAIRING F. F. Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30 ; Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30. Blue knitted suits, with wooden beads ; jumping jacks ; carnivals ; straw ; Deauville sandals. ANN GAIRING . . . Active Member Athleti Association, ' 30. Sophomore Prom ; orange bathing suits ; to- bogganing on a crisp winter day ; woolly sox ; dogs. 24 I£S V ) % SENIORS MARY EMILY GARVEY X. L. Glee Club. ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Choir, ' 29- ' 30 ; Vice Pres- ident X. L. Club, ' 29- ' 30. Pink rosebud bouquets : green grass growing on a warm hill in the sun : old lace ; blue porcelain. ELIZABETH GERST Eccowasin Sport cars ; fur coats ; dignity ; chrysanthe- mums ; football games ; autumn. ELIZABETH GILBERT A. K. Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30. Musical comedies ; Gentlemen Prefer Blondes ; Blue Steele ' s Orchestra ; house parties ; Buick road- sters. MARY GOSS Del Ver President Minnesota Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; French Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30. Snake-skin shoes ; school-girl complexion ; dark- green suits ; S. A. E. house parties. HARRIET GRAYBILL T. C. Orchestra, ' 28- ' 29 ; Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30. Rag dolls ; tap dancing ; Kansas plains ; checked gingham rompers ; Red Riding Hood ; stick candy ; a long mirror. HELEN GREENE A. K. Hyphen Reporter, ' 28- ' 29 ; French Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; President of A. K. Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Advisory Board, ' 29- ' 30. Jazz ; fast time and whirling figures ; horses and red riding jackets; camping; mischief; speeding roadsters. 25 !? f JP  ! ) ) , rv)3 r y urs lU{t S£QC Si C T C O C C ? . . i SENIORS LORAINE GREGORY X. L. Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Choir, ' 30. Finger waves ; portrait of an old-fashioned lady ; moires ; conservative pleasure ; sleepy villages ; a white cottage. SUSAN GROVER X. L. President Kentucky Club, ' 29- ' 30. Representative of the Old South ; darkies croon- ing spirituals ; plantations ; going to a ball in a coach with white horses. MARCELLA HAMILTON Ariston Sunlight through amber ; a tiger ; cat tails ; a bunch of autumn leaves ; a fall wind ; gold paint. RUTH HAGGENJOS Penta Tau Sunday-school entertainments ; charity bazaars ; jars filled with spice cookies ; Y. W. C. A. work- ers ; the honor roll. ROBERTA HARRINGTON Ariston Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30. Green satin evening gowns ; talk around a tea table ; soft velvet on a winding stair. ELOISE HAWKINS Osiron Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30. Texas cowboys ; rambling frame houses, with large porches ; hospitality ; ouija boards ; fortune- tellers. 26 f i . V i j ' g T f X gS S y) SENIORS FRANCES HOFFMAN T. C. President Missouri Club, ' 28 ; General Proctor, ' 29 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30 ; President Student Council, ' 29- ' 30. A colonial staircase ; a beloved queen ; bright sunshine on tall windows ; the Woman ' s Club ; rare old china. BONNIE HOWARD Triad Secretary Triad Club, ' 29- ' 30. Spring starlight ; haunting dreams ; a glow of eampfires ; sweet wood violets ; satisfying compan- ionship. NELL HOUSLEY Triad Black georgette evening dresses ; diamond- studded heels ; orange and black roadsters ; June proms. MARTHA HUNT Penta Tau Photographic Editor Milestones, ' 29- ' 30 ; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 29- ' 30. Butterfly skirts ; lollypops ; a colored mammy ' s adoration ; sponsor of a regiment at a military ball ; daisies. SARAH ISON Penta Tau Old colonial homes ; college proms ; popular song hits ; a white cloud drifting across an azure sky. GRETTA KRAUSS Agora President Michigan Club, ' 29- ' 30. Dimples ; deviltry ; Halloween parties (bobbing for apples) ; Gay Nineties; stiff lace curtains; deep-blue water. 27 l ) Y J ] S5? y i y c x c c c (c c kic v V d f SENIORS LOUISA LaBOUNTY Agora Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 29 ; Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Treasurer Agora Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Vice President French Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Choir, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Mem- ber Athletic Association, ' 30. A business executive ; a willing worker ; a quiet lake : a bed of blue and white four o ' clocks ; se- renity ; wide-open meadows in the sunlight. FRANCES LaMAR Penta Tan Penta Tau All-Round Athlete, ' 28 ; Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Varsity Swimming, ' 29; General Manager Baseball, ' 29 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30. Paris boulevards ; jet earrings ; an orange flame ; a fox ; a white riding habit ; a modernistic draw- ing. KATHLEEN LaRUE A. K. White throats and long black velvet ribbons ; a full-blown rose ; musical symphonies ; lacy valen- tines. HELEN LOUTHAM Triad Yellow tea roses ; perfume ; tea for two ; tur- quoise against white satin ; yellow crepe. ALICE LAW A. K. Soft, modulated voices ; the dean of girls ' school ; nun-like quietude ; narcissus. MARJORIE LEOPOLD F. F. President West Virginia Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Secon d Vice President Student Council, ' 29- ' 30. Authority ; laughing eyes omen in legislation ; lecture tours ; Peck and Peck knitted suits. 28 • . F i T r I VIRGINIA LLOYD X. Secretary-Treasurer Wordsmiths, ' 29 ; Vice Pres- ident Y. W. C. A., ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary Indiana Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Hyphen Reporter, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 29- ' 30. Green-leather jackets and sports sox ; beach par- ties and burning sand ; laughing seriousness ; a friend. KATHERINE LOONAN Penta Tau Wide leghorn hats : a corsage of sweetheart roses ; a new moon ; Cadillacs with colored chauf- feurs ; a tinted photograph. NANCY ELIZABETH LYBROOK . Anti-Pandora President North Carolina Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 29- ' 30. Culture of the South ; soft, drawling voice and tapering hands ; travel and Saks shoes ; an office on Wall Street. FLORENCE McANDREW T. C. Pearls ; history courses ; a walking dictionary ; sportsmanship ; quietude ; earnestness. HELEN McBROOM Agora President Minnesota Club, ' 28- ' 29. Red sweaters ; football games ; crisp, cold air ; snow fights ; gingerbread men with raisin eyes ; old swimming hole. MARY CATHERINE McCONNELL . Penta Tau Secretary Arkansas Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; President Ar- kansas Club, ' 29- ' 30. A head on a Greek coin ; lines ; long organdy ; proms and stag lines ; a blonde Spaniard. t 29 • j y rii iP : i c Uc . t .c t kK SENIORS MARION McMICHAEL Osiron Vice President Nebraska Club, ' 29- ' 30. A clear stream ; little sister ' s ideal ; quiet winds ; a sunset on a Nebraska plain. RITA MILLER Tri-K. Secretary Wiscon sin Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; President Wisconsin Club, ' 29- ' 30. Little Boy Blue; girls ' boarding schools; dogs: wise cracks ; page at a court ; sweaters and skirts. MARGARET MONTGOMERY . Proctor Orchestra, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30. . . . A. K. Fidelity, ' 29 ; Rare old books ; tea ; contentment ; blue and white tiles ; i blue teacup. NANCY O ' CONNOR Eccowasin President Freshman Class, ' 24- ' 25 ; President Ec- cowasin Club, ' 27- ' 28 ; Treasurer Day Student Council, ' 27 ; Proctor Day Student Council, ' 28 ; First Vice President Day Student Council, ' 28 ; President Eccowasin Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Water Polo Man- ager, ' 29- ' 30 ; Varsity Hockey, ' 30. An aquaplane cutting through the waves ; the Russian Ballet ; a rainbow after a storm ; a heavy silver costume ; blue. BETTY O ' DONNELL T. C. Assistant News Editor Hyphen, ' 29- ' 30 ; Vice President Athletic Association, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary T. C. Club, ' 29 ; President Kansas Club, ' 28- ' 29 : Varsity Water Polo, ' 29 ; Varsity Volley Ball, ' 30. A fox hunt ; faint paths through autumn leaves ; a little deserted puppy ; solitude ; a pan- eled room ; shadows from a campfire. LILLA LOU PEEPLES Del Ver Proctor Pembroke, ' 29 : Vice President Student Council, ' 29- ' 30 ; French Club, ' 29-30. Dotted swiss ; a character from Jane Austin ; straightforwardness ; a silver star ; Mozart ' s so- nata. . frya r 5r ijo i £% 7 SENIORS MARGARET REUTHER Triad Active Member Athletic Association, ' 29 ; Sec- retary Senior-Middle Class, ' 28- ' 29 ; President Triad Club, ' 29- ' 30. Rcd-wingcd blackbirds in flight ; springtime in the South ; a shiny new chair ; deep-red roses ; a spotless middy. EVELYN REYNOLDS .... Anti-Pandora The family fireside : dark-pink roses ; dainti- ness ; family reunions ; a fluted cloud. DOROTHY RICH Triad Gay curtains blown by summer breezes; friendly greetings ; quiet evenings in summer ; laughter ; MARGARET ROTHERT Tri-K. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 28- ' 29 ; Vice President Indiana Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Treasurer Y. W. C. A., ' 29- ' 30 ; President Indiana Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30 ; Varsity Bas- ketball, ' 30. A hockey stick and a red lumber jacket ; every- body ' s friend ; a winding brook through a sunny field ; sleigh rides. MARY JANE ROWE Anti-Pandora Business Manager Hyphen, ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary Anti-Pandora Club, ' 29- ' 30. Green water ; silver slippers ; a flame ; electric- ity ; a gold penny ; sprites ; a pagan altar. VIRGINIA LOU SAMPLE .... Penta Tau Proctor Pembroke, ' 29 ; General Proctor, ' 29 ; Treasurer Penta Tau Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Mem- ber Athletic Association, ' 30 ; Wandering Blues ' 28- ' 29- ' 30. Tuck-in skirts ; Gene Austin records ; Student Council ; imps darting about like sunbeams on dusty windowpanes ; a fine edge. • . • v ov l v p  cX ' t Cv ( C W SENIORS ELEANOR SAPP X. L. Secretary Illinois Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Treasurer X. L. Club, ' 29- ' 30. Bronze statues ; portrait of a lady ; ivory satin ; brown fox furs ; pouring tea in shaded rooms ; the sun. EDITH SCHEUFLER F. F. Wordsworth, ' 29- ' 30 ; French Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Hyphen Proof Reader, ' 30 ; Secretary Wordsmith, ' 30 ; Associate Editor Milestones, ' 30. Indian blankets ; big city newspaper offices ; de- bates ; sheer chiffon hose ; intellect ; sharpness. FLORENCE SELLEVOLD X. L. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 29- ' 30 ; General Manager Archery, ' 29- ' 30 ; All-round Athlete X. L. Club : ' 29. Girls ' athletic association ; smoky wood fires ; toasting marshmallows ; train letters ; happiness. VIRGINIA SHOWALTER . . . Anti-Pandora Treasurer French Club, ' 29- ' 30. Powder blue berets and blue jersey dresses ; con- servative suits, with stiff collars ; idealization of Buddy Rogers ; a bright-colored scarf. EUGENIA SMITH Triad Active Member Athletic Association, ' 29- ' 30 ; President Day Student Council, ' 29- ' 30 ; Varsity Hockey, ' 30. Hockey ; picnics and blue wood smoke ; spring flowers ; tall mountains and friendly skies ; a scarf flying in the wind. REBECCA SMYTHE Osiron Simplicity ; a golden wand ; a Southern sweet- heart ; the girl on a magazine cover ; Valentine candy. 32 l h r - lK ' J rZft S3 fXA m N V 3 SENIORS COLBERNE SPENCE Del Ver Treasurer Del Ver Club, ' 29- ' 30. Daring dresses ; slow to anger and plenteous in mercy ; big stone houses ; sedans with wire wheels ; costume jewelry. VIRGINIA STRANDBERG Osiron Secretary Y. W. C. A., ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary Osi- ron, ' 29 ; French Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30. Coffee and doughnuts ; old-fashioned lockets ; antique furniture ; a gray kitten with a blue bow ; lace. MARGARET THOMASON T. C. Mellow, brown velvet ; a little, brown house ; a stick of cinnamon ; candied dates ; lily of the val- ley. EDNA MAE WIENOLD Tri-K. Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 29- ' 30. Ice clinking in tall glasses ; sweet spices ; yellow lollypops ; beret and huge pompoms ; brown elves in dark-green forests. ELIZABETH WILLIS Del Ver Rose-colored tapers and softly shining silver ; wisteria ; Sunday nights at home ; old-fashioned dignity. LAURETTE ABERCROMBIE X. L. Secretary X. L. Club, ' 29- ' 30. A tailored coat ; a new school book : a neatly trimmed lawn ; a calm lake, with a single sailboat drifting by. 33 J ' ' y uX j tlWrt c C C C C C C k -7 7 - § : , SENIORS MARION ALLAN . Tri-K. A gray tweed coat ; a green slip-over sweater ; ginger ale ; yellow roses ; pencil sketches. ELIZABETH BARR Penta Tau Vice President Penta Tau Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Vice President Kentucky Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Hyphen Rs- porter, ' 29- ' 30. Blue feathers ; leaves ; laughter ; black and white key notes ; a winding stairway. JEAN BARRY X. L. Secretary-Treasurer Kentucky Club, ' 29- ' 30. An arched doorway ; flamingoes ; a grand piano ; a Rockwell Kent woodcut ; stepping stones. KATHRYN BAUGHAN Osiron Saturday-afternoon movies ; half sox ; fairie sto- ries ; a good sport ; water in the sun. ELEANOR BINFORD Tri-K. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 29- ' 30. Arbutus ; reeds ; floppy sox ; storms at sea ; a scrapbook ; orange toboggans and mittens. KATHERINE BLAIR Angkor Long, black cars : tennis rackets ; a road wind- ing up a hill ; fraternity songs ; sports outfits. 34 JANE CLARK Penta Tau President Penta Tau Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Choir, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 29- ' 30 ; Manager Archery, ' 30 ; Ad- visory Board, ' 29- ' 30 ; Varsity Volley Ball, ' 30 ; Varsity Water Polo, ' 30; Third Place Swimming Meet, ' 30. Pine trees ; campfires ; wood smoke and crack- ling leaves ; mist ; geniality ; a Teddy bear. MILDRED CLARKE Anti-Pandora Vice President Anti-Pandora Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Pres- ident Eastern Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 29- ' 30. Evening wraps trimmed with white fur ; dances at Annapolis ; corsages ; some one ' s adoration ; blue granite. ROBERTA COLE A. K. Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary-Treasurer Ne- braska Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Choir, ' 29- ' 30 ; French Club, ' 30. A plume ; a single poplar ; odd earrings ; a glid- ing river ; mahogany. RUTH CURRY Anti-Pandora Organdy collars and cuffs ; little French school girls ; a gingham bound book ; a blue satin bow. JEANNE CUMMINGS Osiron Vice President Oklahoma Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Second Vice President Y. W. C. A., ' 29- ' 30. New paint ; patent-leather slippers ; a winter sunset ; bloodhounds ; parchment paper. BETTY DYSON Del Ver Proctor Pembroke, ' 29. Kindergarten ; sand tables ; checked blue bath- robes ; Newfoundland dogs ; picnics ; kids again. 35 i ! y ' jr tei tt v 2P a t I s v 9 u s SENIORS ELIZABETH EBERHART Tri-K. Y. W. C. A. Hyphen Reporter, ' 28- ' 29 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 29- ' 30 ; Varsity Hockey, ' 30 ; Editor in Chief Milestones, ' 30 ; Ad- visory Board, ' 29- ' 30. A red feather ; Robin Hood ; a cliff above the sea ; spring beauties ; a deer ; late autumn woods ; Northern skies. 41- f% EVELYN FALKNER Triad Day Student Editor Milestones, ' 29- ' 30. Serenades ; Italian sunny days ; a Roman striped scarf ; new novels ; a sailboat. FRANCES FAUST T. C. Vice President T. C. Club, ' 29 ; Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Proctor Senior, ' 30. Hair ribbons : a pink dress ; a high swing ; strawberry ice cream ; blue marbles ; a green com- pact. DOROTHY FLOYD A. K. President West Virginia Club, ' 29- ' 30. Diana ; a thoroughbred ; waffle suppers ; a flame- colored evening dress ; Patou ' s Adieu Sagesse ; a water lily. LILLIAN FRANCEZ T. C. Vice President Council, ' 28- ' 29 ; President Lou- isiana Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 29. A pirate ship ; red-heeled slippers ; castanets ; a high window behind an old wall ; a raven ; Creole days. MARY RACHEL GASTON Triad Dawn ; wistfulness ; mignon ; lavender and old lace ; sweetness ; blue cloissonne. 36 yo- i i )ri i iP fVLS, iU( K tJ t : t ' t M V : s SENIORS VIRGINIA GERDL T. C. Wordsmith, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 : President Wordsmiths, ' 30 ; Literary Editor Milestones, ' 30. A quill pen ; a marble fountain bathed in moon- light ; candor ; long, white gloves ; an etching ; a parrakeet. BUNNY GILLIS Tri-K. Secretary Ohio Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Choir, ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary Student Council, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30 ; Varsity Hockey, ' 30. An old desk by the fire ; shaded lamps and shad- ows ; slim heels ; surety ; dignity. ELBERTA GOOCH T. C. Treasurer Senior-Middle Class, ' 29 ; Treasurer French Club, ' 29 ; Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Assistant Photographic Editor Milestones, ' 29 ; Vice Presi- dent Western Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Business Manager Milestones, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic As- sociation, ' 29- ' 30 ; President Western Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Tennis Manager, ' 29- ' 30 ; Choir, ' 29-30 ; Wander- ing Blues, ' 29- ' 30; Varsity Bowling, ' 30. An arrow ; firecrackers ; twinkling eyes and a whimsical grin ; a big wool sweater ; splashes of color. JUNE HARALDSON Osiron Vice President Alabama Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; French Club, ' 29- ' 30. Sun bonnets and calico dresses ; tranquillity ; Hansel and Gretel ; Let not your heart be trou- bled ; peace. MILDRED HARRIS Ariston Crinoline ; a handful of rosebuds ; a doll house ; a ballet dancer : pale-green tapers. VIRGINIA HINN X. L. A white kitten ; a round gold compact ; tiny, black patent-leather pumps ; stories by Booth Tarkington. ' ■-. A i V 1 A s sc SENIORS EVELYN IRWIN Agora Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic As- sociation, ' 29- ' 30. Steadiness ; square dances ; patchwork quilts ; quilted slippers ; samplers. FRANCES JENKINS Penta Tau Secretary Penta Tau Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Assistant Photographic Editor Milestones, ' 29- ' 30. Kid parties ; confetti ; tiny hats, with rose veils ; half-moons ; a Guerlain lipstick ; somebody ' s only girl. CHARLOTTE KEIN Triad Active Member Athletic Association. ' 29- ' 30. Baby blue ; organdy ruffles ; rosy cheeks ; Alice in Wonderland ; a big, striped stick of candy. BETTY LANE F. F. Vice President Wordsmiths, ' 29- ' 30 ; Editor in Chief Hyphen, ' 29- ' 30 ; Advisory Board, ' 29- ' 30. Sleeveless dresses ; tangled curls ; nymphs danc- ing in dark, shady forests ; worship of beauty ; a teeter-totter on a playground. NANCY LANG Tri-K. Vice President Senior-Middle Class, ' 28- ' 29 : President Florida Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Y. W. C. A. Cab- inet, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30 ; Varsity Water Polo, ' 29. Vanity Fair ; a marble terrace and dark pines ; sophistication ; moonlight on a cold, green sea ; yachts ; white orchid. LEAH LINDLEY T. C. Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; French Club, ' 29- ' 30. Tea roses ; the Indiana hop ; silver bracelets ; lawn parties ; white organdy dresses trimmed in black velvet ribbon. 38 ) - . N a r )- TC K C ' C g SENIORS GERALDINE MANSON T. C. Treasurer T. C. Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Vice President Indiana Club, ' 29- ' 30. Gay house parties ; old ivory and lace ; a child of the ' SO ' s ; Cinderella ' s coach ; sweeping skirts. LOUISE McMURRAY Osiron President Tennessee Club, ' 29- ' 30. Red evening dresses ; rhinestone buckles ; high heels ; Dixie ; the boy back home ; long letters. CAROL MILLER Del Ver Treasurer Wisconsin Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Vice Presi- dent Wisconsin Club, ' 29- ' 30. Plaid sports coats ; generosity ; Northern pines ; a cat lying in the sun ; a paper clip ; level-headed- ness. FLORENCE MILLER T. C. Vice President Nebraska Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; President T. C. Club. ' 29- ' 30 ; Big Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 28- ' 29 ; French Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Advisory Board, ' 29- ' 30. Parchment in old books ; costume jewelry ; a Packard roadster ; manicures ; jade. LUCY MAE MILLS Agora Kindness ; white bungalows ; Mother Carey ' s Chickens ; realness ; a calm sea. VIRGINIA NEIL Ariston President Sophomore Class, ' 25- ' 26 ; Secretary Athletic Association, ' 28- ' 29 ; Active Member Ath- letic Association, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 : Varsity Bowling, ' 30. Summer camps ; a sunrise coloring all the earth ; sorority houses ; a treasure chest ; school stickers. 39 ) 5I V : ysi sfyy i hi i SENIORS MARION NICHOLSON Tri-K. Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Choir, ' 29- ' 30. White fox furs ; small, pouting mouth ; spoiled child ; unveiling monuments ; magnolia blossoms ; a slim canoe. EVANELL NIXON Anti-Pandora Pink organdy dresses, with blue bows ; reading circles ; a single star at twilight ; sunlight and shade. KATHRYN PARKER Eccowasin Bridge parties ; red slippers ; royal purple and ermine ; pussy willows ; a gray squirrel. MARY BERNICE PERKINS A. K. Hair tumbling down on white shouders ; white carnations ; English teachers ; concerts ; Baldwin pianos. DOROTHY PICKENS T. C. Secretary Missouri Club, ' 28- ' 29. Spoiled children ; Ward-Belmont bracelets ; or- gan grinders ; salted nuts ; Topsy ; portable victro- las. CATHERINE POOLEY Agora Black net evening dresses ; horse shows ; smooth, clean, glistening pavement ; feather beds ; Coty ' s powder. 40 ) .  X i !F -1 7 m t t C i mL 5] n SENIORS LOUISE PORTER Triad Twilight ; lace valentines ; old-fashioned bou- quets ; secrets ; a woodland trail ; blue satin. ANTOINETTE REDWINE Osiron horses Pep ; vitality ; hot tamales ; Texas ; thundering over smooth plains ; red jewelry. ADALYN SHERWOOD A. K. Active Member Athletic Association, ' 29- ' 30 ; President French Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Art Editor Mile- stones, ' 29- ' 30 ; General Manager Swimming, ' 30. A bow of beaten gold ; chimes in an old tower : miniatures ; Yardley ' s lavender ; a cool little brook ; sunshine. JANE SIPHER A. K. Secretary A. K. Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; News Editor Hyphen, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Associa- tion, ' 29- ' 30; French Club, ' 29- ' 30. Tiny collie puppies ; gay yellow daffodils ; pig- tails and starched school dresses ; snowball fights ; brownies. ROSALIE SPITZ Penta Tail Charged batteries ; one foot on the rail ; bargain sales ; sparkling jewelry ; older brothers. BETTY STORCK F. F. Vice President West Virginia Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 28- ' 29. Yachts ; the skyline of New York : shamrocks ; a portrait by Titian ; skiing under a Northern sun. 41 -: ? r 4 ' s ysfvy hi z 7 V ' ; v % SENIORS MIRIAM WOODSIDE Del Ver Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Treasurer Western Club, ' 28- ' 29; Choir, ' 29- ' 30 ; President Del Ver Club, ' 29- ' 30; Advisory Board, ' 29- ' 30. Picnics by the river ; impromptu plays ; rough tweed coats ; a naughty little girl ; violets wet with dew ; unspoken sincerity. MARGARET YODER Oiiron Active Member Athletic Association, ' 29- ' 30 ; Glee Club ' 28-29 ; President Osiron Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Advisory Board, ' 29- ' 30. Sun-backed dress on a golf course ; bathing suits and a bronzed skin ; bare legs and a laugh- ing mouth ; a puppy. 42 ) .V Q ) ) t I i V ■fcC C Lc Mr. C VAAL £ ' BeuA Dottv cT£ V OA, A 11 43 Ms Ji o A. s Jac ft S di r T in± C£l 7 MNEY °Wt WONM L 3 Jb I y fyct ABL £ M k 44 ) 5 F M I 45 [ ■ai - i X ( cc r c u-.c . l 46 ' a . Wxt W ' 59 ry r ivs g jj t u tM u; £St zj z l x fl( 7 I 7. v . c e JUNIOR MIDDLE POEM By Frances Gibson Four white columns, strong, majestic, tall, Each one the symbol of a finished year ; A singing tower whose clear, chiming call Carols the work, the joy, that we ' ve known here. Long, smooth halls, whose shining surface shows The work of hastening feet, swift, sturdy, young ; High walls, where even now resound echoes Of youthful voices and the songs they ' ve sung. An old magnolia, ' neath whose shelt ' ring shade, On days when through its branches sunlight gleamed, We found a surcease, saw our troubles fade, And there we planned, and thought, and hoped, and dreamed. Quiet classrooms where, beneath the guiding hand Of wisest counsel, we have knowledge gained ; A chapel filled with girls from all our land, Where reverence and harmony have reigned. All these, Ward-Belmont, you have brought to us ; These we accept, but with a grateful heart. Four years your gallant soul has fought for us ; The world ' s here now, and into Life we start. But if when from your portals we depart, One deed of ours is worthy to remain ; If of your dauntless spirit one small part We leave, yet keep, these years have not been vain. 47 1 r . %j- o o)r J 3. t MC Z C tS. .C r t JE p JUNIOR MIDDLES JANE SUTHERLAND Ariston Treasurer Day Student Council, ' 28- ' 29 ; Vice President Ariston Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; President Penstaff, ' 29- ' 30 ; President Junior Middle Class, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30. Camping on Lake Michigan ; shirts and skirts ; a canoe ; a tramp through a pine forest ; ragged robins and marigolds ; sincerity. ANN NEWMAN Tri-K Treasurer Tennessee Club. ' 28- ' 29 ; Secretary Junior Middle Class, ' 28- ' 29 ; Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Vice Pres- ident Junior Middle Class, ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary Tennessee Club, ' 29- ' 30. Dimples ; a June bride ; sweetheart roses ; organdy bows ; baby blue ; picture hats. NANCY NEWMAN Tri-K Treasurrr Junior Class. ' 28- ' 29 ; Secretary Tennessee Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Vice President Tri-K Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Vice President Tennessee Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary Junior Middle Class, ' 29- ' 30 ; Active Member Athletic Association, ' 30. Gainsborough ' s Blue Boy ; morning dew ; red ties ; naturalness ; hockey sticks ; wild blue violets. HARRIET WOODS Angkor Treasurer Junior Middle Class, ' 29- ' 30. Black-eyed susans ; tap dancing ; bog hats ; Halloween ; leather coats ; green sports clothes. ANNE LEE AKERS Angkor Junior Middle Class Prophet; Penstaff, ' 26- ' 27- ' 28- ' 29- ' 30. Naivete ; gay-colored parasols ; flowered chiffon ; garden parties ; rippling laughter ; lavender. ELVA SALOME BOYD Ariston Caracul ; Oriental festivals ; informal dances ; Stutz cars ; water polo ; French heels. CONROSE BUCHANAN Eccowasin Pink hair ribbons ; tulip time ; portrait of a Dutch girl ; window seats ; archery. 48 ; V) j! r rvc Tvj w vgF g a c cy« JUNIOR MIDDLES HELEN CANDLER Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary Georgia Club, ' 28- ' 29. Week-ends ; Swing Low, Sweet Chariot ; generosity ; fun ; brown eyes. MARY CANDLER • Tea at the Hunt Club ; soft blue chiffon ; lace shawls ; cosmos ; an Angora cat. Osiron Ariston RUTH CARLIN • Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30. Fraternity dances ; chiffon ; tea ; cameos ; ermine ; antique jewelry ; tinted evening slippers. MARY DEAN CLEMENT Angkor Penstaff, ' 27- ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary-Treasurer Penstaff, ' 27- ' 28 ; Business Manager Penstaff, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary-Treasurer Angkor Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30. Forget-me-nots ; white muslin with a blue sash ; daguerreotypes : twilight vespers ; old libraries ; a hearth fire. JANICE DRUMMOND T - C - Blazers ; Teddy Bears ; a silhouette evening dress ; primroses ; lace handkerchiefs. MARY ALICE FARR Ariston Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Sergeant at Arms Freshman Class, ' 26- ' 27 ; Vice President Sophomore Class, ' 27- ' 28 ; Hyphen. Reporter, ' 28- ' 29 ; Penstaff, ' 26- ' 27- ' 28- ' 29- ' 30. A symphony in blue and gold ; the Annapolis June ball ; orchids ; dinner at the country club ; harvest moons. HELEN FAWCETT Del Ver Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Vice President Del Ver Club, ' 29- ' 30. Magnolias ; Toujour Moi perfume ; white organdy ; maroon town cars ; dinner at the Ritz-Carlton. 49 v w t rY t): t y r Ml E S jS 3£ft « C C L X- ( .( Ul L e f I JUNIOR MIDDLES LOIS CRAWFORD Triad Quietness ; Dickens ; friendliness ; a cup of tea before the fire ; olden days. VIRGINIA FELTUS Agora Silhouettes ; modernistic stationery ; costume jewelry ; short vamped shoes ; college pennants. GRACE GARDNER A. K. Secretary-Treasurer Michigan Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Glee Club, ' 29- ' 30. Gardenias ; moonlight ; serious joy ; high ideals ; West Point. NANCY HOTCHKISS Tri-K Proctor of Heron, ' 2U. A dark-blue beret ; a ukelele ; a cheer leader ; laughing eyes ; Lake Michigan. TOMMYE MURPHY Agora Turquoise ; brown beaver ; a tea dance ; a tinted satin negligee ; pansies. JANE NOWELS T. C. Vice President Western Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Proctor of Heron, ' 30. Stately pines ; severity ; crystals ; friendliness ; red chiffon ; animation, a Western prairie. 50 ri c xr .cvc c c c . y; JUNIOR MIDDLES Agora DONNA MARJORIE OVIATT usiron English tweeds ; expensive luggage ; hammered silver ; thoroughbred horses. MARY HELEN PUTMAN Agora The Indiana hop ; snappy blue eyes ; short brown curls ; profusion of colors ; College Humor. WINOGENE RAYNER • Anti-Pandora Impulsiveness; masquerades; a fair, and kewpie dolls; a yellow jacket; hard candy. FRANCES DEAN SMITH Treasurer Tennessee Club, ' 28- ' 30. Plaid hair ribbons ; Majollica pottery ; dahlia chiffon ; Soliloquy ; cut-steel buckles. FRANCES JANE SEARS Kora Indigo blue ; beach pajamas ; gay parties ; luncheon dates ; a dinner dance ; newness. Del Ver SYLVIA STEWART Miniature ladies ; tiny shoes ; sparkling eyes ; mischief ; forget-me-nots ; excitement ; candy ; sandstorms. „ . . Agora JOSEPHINE SMITH Proctor, North Front, ' 30. Pink and blue baby ribbons ; LaSalle roadsters ; Dreamy Melody ; Queen Elizabeth collars ; opals. 51 v r r yo t C C C C K- C ' Q i f . JUNIOR MIDDLES BETTY GASTON Osiron Moonstones ; black velvet ; French heels ; a low-slung roadster ; Styx ; mystic naivete. HARRIET GRIFFIN , A. K. President Iowa Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Choir, ' 29- ' 30. Happy-go-lucky ; giggles ; red hair ; sunshine ; fun and frolic ; middies and skirts ; a mountain seen in the distance. SARAH LOUISE GUERIN Angkor A Vogue mannequin ; fox hunts ; marionettes ; black pearls ; Palm Beach ; a black fox scarf ; nonchalance. ETHEL BEEKEN HAMILTON F. F. Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30 ; Choir, ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary Tennessee Club, ' 28- ' 29. Sunset clouds ; an Irish smile ; lavender and old lace ; primroses ; Bye-lo-Baby dolls. MARY HELEN KINGSTON Anti-Pandora Texas; fine horses; chili; Brother Bill; a summer camp counselor; contagious laughter; feasts. FLORENCE WEBB MARTIN Triad Secretary Freshman Class, ' 26- ' 27. Misty chiffon shawls ; shepherd dogs ; ensembles of hunter ' s green ; a cap of white rabbit ' s fur. CHARLEY MERRILL Osiron Fraternity houses ; roller coasters ; Lake Placid ; holly ; sportswear from Best. 52 j %i o $r$ J c ' w(cvc c t c K- .cA : 3 JUNIOR MIDDLES BETTY TAYLOR A rosy apple ; bubbles ; a yachting party ; white ducks ; an admiral cap. LOUISE WINDAM Vice President Michigan Club, ' 26- ' 27- ' 28 ; Secretary Del Ver Club, ' 29. Burnt orange ; a foreign car ; zenias ; a Pepsodent advertisement ; Guerlain ' s L ' Heure Bleu. BARBARA ALEXANDER AngKor Crystals ; black velvet ; poinsettas ; silhouettes ; wolf hounds ; Jade perfume. GRACE ELLEN GLASGOW Eccowasin Secretary Eccowasin Club, ' 29- ' 30. Circuses ; a beret ; Goldilocks and the Three Bears ; a bit of fern growing beside a mountain stream. ELEANOR DeWITT Tri-K President Junior Class, ' 28- ' 29 ; Vice President Eastern Club, ' 29- ' 30 ; Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- ' 30. A cameo ; old ivory ; Priscilla ; dreams ; a London fog ; candlelight and gardenias. FRANCES DOROTHY GIBSON Angkor Treasurer Sophomore Class, ' 27- ' 28 ; Secretary-Treasurer Penstaff, ' 28- ' 29 ; Penstaff, ' 26- ' 27- ' 28- ' 29- ' 30. Pale pink crepe de chine ; poke bonnets ; sweet peas ; a green lace handkerchief ; a still, deep, blue lake. MARY STEWART BURGHER Tri-K Distance ; sunshine ; a sport roadster ; bright colors ; acquamarines ; nonchalance ; a piece of ice. 53 xV? )- - 4 ! ) 3 5r r yjtt rjKxm i ut u; £s c c c x c H V w  JUNIOR MIDDLES CLAIRE ROBERTS Angkor Extreme styles ; a bright-red lipstick ; a dancing doll ; a moonlight night in Spain. KATHERINE SEAGER F. F. Sapphire blue ; poetry ; jewels ; adventure ; sailing ships ; wild iris ; clouds. JESSIE DEANE SIMMONS Tri-K Glittering buttons on a uniform ; Deauville sandals ; sparkling eyes ; sophistication ; keenness ; the sea. SARA MAY SMITH Del Ver Spanish portraits ; a red room ; sincerity ; an evening sky ; fresh clover fields. ANNABEL STOKES Anti-Pandora Big coon collars ; a bright umbrella ; a jolly week-end ; class rings ; picnics. HELEN CAROLYN THOMAS T. C. French dolls ; a dream bungalow ; cook books ; inquisitive eyes ; wide taffeta skirts ; quaintness. MARY EVELYN THOMAS T. C. Sachet ; Pierrot and Pierrette ; violets ; soft gray fur ; dusky silence ; soft music. 54 JUNIOR MIDDLES MILDRED PIRTLE eccowasin Secretary Eccowasin Club, ' 28- ' 29. Fifth Avenue shops : new novels ; a string of matched pearls ; a corsage of violets ; summer resorts. MARGARET HUTCHINSON POTTER Angkor Drooping big straw hats ; tea at the club ; delicate lace ; a frail colonial lady ; China asters ; amiability. ANNIE KATE REBMAN Amber; mellow lights; evening shadows; a slow Southern drawl; sensitiveness; wistful eyes. Angkor HENRIETTA SPICER Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29- - 30. A pink tulle evening dress ; week-end parties ; fraternity dances ; peach blossoms ; an old love story ; rhinestone heels. ELEANOR TOWNSEND Anti-Pandora A woolly little dog ; a blue tulle evening dress ; Senior Class Day ; daisy chains ; Culver postmarks. SARA CATE ARMISTEAD Eccowasin Sapphires ; beige sports coats ; polo at the country club ; a wind-swept hill ; a rock garden. WENDELL EWING AUSTIN Angkor Naivete ; laughing brown eyes ; a scarlet tanager ; costume jewelry ; the joy of living. 55 . v a rv . r TU i ? r s 1 JUNIOR MIDDLES CATHERINE HARDY DORRIS ' Triad Green sports suits ; golf at the country club ; slave bracelets ; the sunset sky ; flowered chiffon ; teas. ANN ELIZABETH HALES Triad Gypsies ; American Beauty roses ; grapevine swings ; rubies ; four-o ' clock tea in England. MARGARET HAYS Osiron Autumn leaves ; a brownie ; sunny ; joyousness ; Coca-Colas ; feasts ; roadsters. DANICE JORDAN Angkor Vivacity; rosy apples; ice skates; St. Moritz ; innocence; a soft, cuddly puppy; gay scarfs and mittens. BERTHA OAKLEY LUBECK Tri-K Russian peasant dresses ; carved ivory ; smoked pearls ; poppies ; Dobbs hats. MARY AVON MOTLOW Del Ver A carnival ; deck chairs ; larkspur ; an ivy-covered chapel. JANE RAYBURN F. F. Poetry ; gardenias and black velvet ; Cleveland ; Dans la Nuit. 56 Ic A CK C tz-C C L JUNIOR MIDDLES CORDA REDFERN ■Night clubs ; Spanish hibiscus ; onyx ; a yacht ; red berets ; State Street Sadie. KITTY RUSSELL T ' C Kitten on the Keys ; nut-brown curls ; a shimmering lake ; quiet happiness ; pink roses. Del Ver RUTH RYMER Crocuses ; a swan : Lowenstaft china ; ruffles and shirrings ; a lace valentine. HELENE SWEENEY A- K ' Secretary-Treasurer Florida Club, ' 2Y- ' 28 ; Secretary Florida Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Secretary A. K. Club, 28- ' 29 ; Glee Club, ' 28- ' 29 ; Treasurer A. K. Club, ' 29- ' 30. A Newfoundland dog ; woolly blue mufflers ; reeds : a mountain lake ; sweeping eyelashes ; sailing. SHELBY WARWICK Trlad Second Vice President Day Student Council, ' 29- ' 30 ; Secretary Triad Club, ' 27- ' 28. Rose dance frocks ; dinner dances ; black-eyed susans ; a gypsy love song ; a coquette. DOROTHY ZAUG W-iz-c-o-nzin ; Northern camp fires ; willow trees ; blue lakes ; goldenrod ; shyness ; simplicity 57 Anti-Pandora r ov frvy. .-v i r o ' ,-yJ A i | . Ufi$ CSt(i 0 F (C?? i v SENIOR MIDDLE CLASS OFFICERS Charlotte Twitty . Lelia Johnson . Carolyn Hogue Eleanor Neckerman Helen Grizzard Miss Lydell President Vice President Secretary Boarding Treasurer Day Student Treasurer Sponsor SECOND-YEAR COLLEGE CLASS OFFICERS Ellen Mitchell President Ann Ryther Vice President Ruth Evans Secretary-Treasurer Miss Drew Sponsor 58 JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Margaret Thompson Betty Williams Miriam Hotchkiss . Miss Lowery President Vice President Secretary-Treasurer Sponsor SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS _ . President Jeanette Caldweli Vice President Betty Townsend Secretary Beverly Stone Treasurer SusieHughes ■Sponsor Miss Casebier FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS Hulda Cheek ■President Eleanor Sherwood Vice Pres.dent Angela Anderson becretan Virginia Miller Treasurer Miss Dinning S P onsor A ? i 7 ■r £ll ££. i 60 K Sft , . : i S;£ C g- , W; (CW6 k w % 61 ? . : W TF ftC ftC C [ i i v) D McroA School or IJ oun CHeNRY J? V£fJO V DW£CTO SCHOOL ° 0 ? ?Atf 62 •d i syfr riteirt ' fi i S5? S3 P 1 i u,z± s zs urc !t K ;c%sC ' 1 y .  CERTIFICATE MUSIC STUDENTS Ellen Mitchell, Kathleen LaRue, Lavelle Thompson, Mary Bridgeforth, Weldon Hart DIPLOMA STUDENTS Leonora Amberg, Lois Stout, Louise Cook 63 Ith J yo jP J J J 1 f Uc t t .C%i .C . LA) i 1 1 v 64 r u- i( uce z t cKt c f ( . 65 B ) j pijs yrtii ?i v i rj i y i WitsauxQCSi ic c c - c- c c a •- 7 1 v. V ? v VIEW oe INTERIOR DECORATION. STUDIO THE LIEE CLASS 66 f V . V l S Aii ' ?[ m. i CERTIFICATE ART STUDENTS Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Katherine Hammond, Helen McBroom, Lilla Lou Peeples, Marion McMichael, DorothyBurdette, Marifrances Norviei. Martha Hunt, Virginia Lloyd, Adalyn Sherwood, Dorothy Shelly (.7 ft I W V r ' 5 l U t U; £S C C Ul L a k;. S y ■■■■% :;.? ;M : :€::- :::; ::i - ' - ' . . ' . ■■' ■■■' ' m m ' ' ' : ' ? ' ■' ? On Wt Steps of Senior. . , „ Oun. a g All (rfAlS 70G£TH£8. fAM ltAA fACES COHTEJVTMEMT Co LIES ATE HH iiiJ Ife A £ S£V£M Toiiow AS6 mtSbtf 4mmo 68 AW . n i i ) jCC V tc tC C Q .CSLC . C C C ' C iCV C-fO £ 8 1 xraion 69 t xV rsQ rvS ' tv)i rv5 5 51 ; t uas i t c ' C c vc x (« Interior of Expression Studio j sisz -i i n F . 1 CERTIFICATE EXPRESSION STUDENTS Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Ann Gairing, Bernice MacGregor, LaVenia Tinnon, Martha Evans, Melavon Dennis Marian Gairing, Dorothy Pickens, Eunice Hill, Lucille Goolsby, Catherine Whelan DIPLOMA EXPRESSION STUDENTS Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Louise Huddleston, Elizabeth Colean, Amelia Moore, Dorothy Floyd Miriam Woodside, Frances Jenkins, Frances Faust, Helen Seldomridge, Katherine Blair Nancy Bell Campbell, Margaret Cartter, Evanell Nixon 71 £ n ) 5i y4 ) yjrteWsr txA C7 I L( oucation 73 ' i 2 s ' S xVj ) s  r 7 rg s ysr v i - ■■c . •j, % Gymnasium Swimming Pool 74 ith J JP J wfc c .c O g 75 x s r i r t) ( s Si 3 i i x:. ► : v 1 JUNIOR AND SENIOR PHYSICAL EDS. Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Barbara Reed, Dorothy Sellars, Emma Lou Garthoffner, Margaret Miller Martha Collins, Mildred Schaefer Gayle Hinton, Ethel Krieger, Louise Latimer, Jessie Burcin, Amanda Caldwell 76 lU X C £t W y ■A % y ® 77 • ■i ri r Fm r ? w(c c c -  ] t I 1 . 4 D N TY Ih GlAP I A TRhK A IE YOt $£ADY? Bach to A atme A 6 ioi e of Pm CAi £ts A Sweet Yom Thmg- 7k E F AtAL MOC CEY W£ The Tm£ G-jhaces P aates 78 v ws ynteirt ' ss- i jgsfrs sr i i f V ' . ' K k conomics 79 ) . - . ) ) t  O .V , . . cv t c CERTIFICATE HOME ECONOMICS CLASS Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Miss Cobb, Miss Sutherland, Miss Swenson Mary Comer, Betty Storck, Louise Porter Frances Cooper, Melen Louthan, Mable Woolard ' Wj intei i ' j w i f, 1FSZ c !ZSlC l f i 81 ' £ k i ■i .v r i ;vJ y r y j % N 7. - . 82 x h j - K y R t( c t c Y : ctrdaria 83 S ' C , 5 Vj t w - 5 rv) ) )yov oll I - j W. 7 ■7 l DIPLOMA SECRETARIAL STUDENTS Reading from left to right: Addie Hayes Kerrigan, Mary Ruth Martin Interior of Typing Room lZh - %z- J i 3Wtey . A r tt J SECRETARIAL STUDENTS Reading from left to right. Begin at bottom. Emilou Fenker, Gracellen Holdeman, Jane Frantz, Natalie Haspel Vera Schlenker, Dorothy Gourley, Georgia Lee Ruth Haggenjos, Jean Haggenbuch, Gretchen Kolliner, Arlene Crissman, Lola Bacon Addie Kerrigan, diploma student; Mary Ruth Martin, diploma student; Mary Eberhardt Bettie Shannon, Margaret Rothert, Sadie Louise Morris, Evelyn Ulmann Emily McKenzie, Judith McCormick Sara Petway, Mrs. Thompson, Jean Spencer, Kathryn Mitchell Katherine Clarke, Marion Fox, Elizabeth Richmond 85 s ■Y y vi I MtMf XSl i C t t CUC C a - ■i rAlAMO AM GQN(?£P ■k m font A. TuitAwmiAKi. Af)PQu{£yQt tN£VE(L£. Zrx. z ? ,4W ■jy ? W . THB 86 f . v?) ) . , ! ! FflAtfC£S j£NK NS Assr fmroMAP f cSo. 87 ft ! i i v 5 rv rw r yy fts r i . U i t c iF ( is: V ST. , T Af C S OfMAN d°k£J P£NT £ UA lou fiEPLES f W V C£ SktflDEMT dtfARJOR ElfOVOiB Second V a PmMAtr 4ft ■H0H9 ti Gff School £PA£j£mw£ Bl NNY Qll S j£C l£rA lY ) -- i . a -6 L c 5 W(Cv c c - ( . 0 1 BOARDING PROCTORS, 1929-1930 Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Nancy Hotchkiss, Heron, ' 29; Betty Dyson, Pembroke, ' 29; Virginia Lou Sample, General, ' 29; Jean Gibbs, Pembroke, ' 30; Jane Nowels, Heron, ' 30. Katherine Hammond, General, ' 30; Frances Faust, Senior, ' 30; Rachel Holland, Senior, ' 29; Jean Cuykendall. Chapel, ' 30; Martha Mannington, Founders, ' 30. Margaret Montgomery, Fidelity, ' 29; Elizabeth Phillips, Fidelity, ' 30; Sara Cottrell, Founders, ' 29; Josephine Smith, North Front, ' 30; Eugenia Candler, North Front, ' 29. i - rv r ? y a sr -si 1 U; CS Cs C YX- C Cs7 u 7 i JLutst tA ii ry Gl Y£ M.487 M Jftll Y IVAM ' CfiL fWr V C£ J .fJ fi£U7 MOM tiC£ £J D£ J7 UlAHYSfol Bf cf£C%£-Y4A.Y MJCtftioi p£PMS£MW£ ft CY YtfAE Bo ' .NP P iocro L Y929 ' (JM fi VA ££AN PYIOCTOR 950 90 %p- i w) Uc .c .c i c { Q5} Y, Y. W. C. A. CABINET OFFICERS Reading from left to right. Marcaret Rother, Treasurer; Virginia Lloyd, First Vice President; Esther Conger, President; Jeanne Cummings, Second Vice President; Virginia Strandberg, Secretary. 91 M r r Si i ufi$ sxs csi k ' c c c c jc p i v y Y. W. C. A. CABINET Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Mildred Clarke, Chairman Old Ladies Home; Elizabeth Elliott, Chairman Social Service Tours; Edna Mae Weinold, Co-Chairman Social Service; Ann Ryther, Chairman Social Service; Florence Sellevold, Membership; Eleanor Binford, World Fellowship. Louisa LaBounty, World Fellowship; Nancy Lybrook, Membership; Nancy Lang, Advertising; Rose Flentye, Chairman Entertainment. Louise Huddleston, Hyphen Reporter; Eleanor Peterson, Assistant Sunday School Chairman; Martha Hunt, Publicity. 92 W J - f itttemte ' S d. i WrtMC c ir t c vc cu c I f i • Ward -Belmont Hyphen AMPUS COLUMN DIARY OF MliXJ ' ! B4T STODBp DITOB.; SENIOR M1DD1.1 „„, ENTERTAIN Sl-,,i CLASS AT ANNUa ' 1 j BANQUt HNNEGAN DA COUNC J F i V Physical Ed. Department PtSiiWS ' t Demonstration JGOOCH-FRANCE WIN CLUB TENNIS SIRONS ENTERTAIN CHAMPIONSHIP WITH ANNUAL t i.,, ' ... .-h ih.- i«r. .UB DANCE  -■- ■■■■V T10NAL SCHO R .ASTIC PRESS AS- .,, SOCIATION RATES ' ■™. HYPHEN AS GOOD % ' Ward-, bsjtT O ' DOBBSLL ' 1 EJ N PASSiSS ' I. SE S SDITCR., LIFE-SAVING TESTS, • 93 Kor 6 c c wrcv c c - g K . O HYPHEN REPORTERS Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Peggy Corwin, Copy Reader; Naomi Saip, Features; Jean Cuykendall, Society; Elizabeth Proctor, Proof Reader and World Events. Katherine Hammond, Chapel; Violet Lyles, News Flashes; Clara Grace Peck, Sports; Virginia Lloyd, Editorials. Elizabeth Phillips, Sports; Louise Huddleston, Y. W. C. A. Reporter; Helen Sellomridge, Academic Notes; Edith Scheufler, Proof Reader and Features. 94 Y i v r i KJitS S iCSi C C O C 33 I V f 7 8 7) OFFICERS ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Jessie Burgin, General Manager; Barbara Reed, Treasurer. Betty O ' Donnell, Vice President; Amanda Caldwell, President; Olive Martin, Secretary. 95 )i 5 V ?O- l i 0 .V 1 l MANAGERS SPORTS Nancy O ' Connor, Water Polo; Roberta Harrington, Bowling; Grace Cavert, Baseball; Isobel Goodloe, Hockey; Elberta Gooch, Tennis; Irene Cochran, Basketball; Florence Sellevold, Archery; Eleanor Peterson, Riding; Helen Candler, Volley Ball. 96 vy i W t ) t)r 5 ) M1 b c ?x c-v C . C C C C- .C C FRENCH CLUB MEMBERS Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Elberta Gooch, Virginia Strandberg, Victoria Spaulding, Lorainne Gregory Mable Gardner, Elizabeth Richmond, Sara Ison June Harralson, Annie Colard, Hope Guenther, Eugenia Brown Elizabeth Proctor, Margaret Burnett Edith Scheufler, Adalyn Sherwood, Virginia Showalter, Carolyn Decker, Dorothy Pheiffer, Mary Lovell, Leah Lindley OFFICERS Adalyn Sherwood Louisa LaBounty Eleanor Neckerman Virginia Showalter Miss Gladys Brooks President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Sponsor 97 I. x YS rv r ftoyofw i g c c a 7 vS WORDSM1THS MEMBERS Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Dorothy Cate, Marion Cox, Naomi Saip Sally Props, Rebecca Ainsworth, Peggy Corwin, Jean Cuykendall Edith Scheufler, Virginia Gerdl, Virginia Lloyd, Juliana Bollen, Betty Lane, Elizabeth Lee Haynes OFFICERS Virginia Gerdl President Betty Lane Vice President Edith Scheufler Secretary-Treasurer To write, to critize, and to read, is the triple aim of the Wordsmiths. They endeavor to produce one big piece of work during the year. Another of their projects is their new club room, the Smithy, which they are endeavoring to establish as a place to write and read. 98 % W i . TF |E ; c xr cx ? .c A; PENSTAFF MEMBERS Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Harriet Merrick, Jane Sutherland, Sarah Bryan Eleanor Peterson, Frances Gibson, Mary Alice Farr Marjorie Sherwood, Anne Akers, Mary Dean Clement OFFICERS Jane Sutherland Milbrey Wright Av is Olmstead . Mary Dean Clement President Vice President Secretary-Treasurer Business Manager The Penstaff Literary Society was organized three years ago to further creative writing in the high school. Since then, with the co-operation of our sponsor, Miss Pugh, the society has gradually grown until now it is composed of an enthusiastic group of amateur writers, all of whom are interested in the progress that is being made today in the literary world. We hope that as we, the older members, leave Ward-Belmont, determined to continue our literary efforts, our successors may be as ambitious and as enthusiastic as we have been. 99 y ' r iwo i| y X. . : Eh u 100 It h l i i LL Li 101 S x 5 V Ed « pq j -) ° w w a S EH 2 2 £ |J OS w £ PQ w Q n o £ o w n M W Q ) 5 rv3 ) ) j 5 y 9 Sf si ' k The Postgraduate House, Where Students Specializing in Art and at the Conservatory of Music Live POSTGRADUATE STUDENTS Reading from left to Right. Begin at top row: Mildred Ann Smith, President; Lavelle Thompson, Mildred Schaefer, Elizabeth Lee Haynes, Gibson Trotter, Mrs. W. LaRue Cresap, house mother; Miriam Roberts, Dorothy Shelly. 102 lO Wjll J) ANTI-PANDORA CLUB Louise Latimer . Miss Gulnar Kheiralla Mildred Clarke . Mary Jane Rowe Mildred Bishop . . President Sponsor Vice President . Secretary . Treasurer s l U( s£$ CS t c C C 7R t iC C i § 7 ■■■. $ ms m¥ ANTI-PANDORA CLUB .. FIRST ROW Mildred Bishop, Kentucky; Bonham Bush, Tennessee; Mildred Clarke, District of Columbia; Irene Cochrane, Michigan; Josephine Cohn, North Carolina. SECOND ROW Marion Cox, Indiana; Ruth Curry, Michigan; Mabel Gardner, Ohio; Elizabeth Hadley, Louisiana THIRD ROW Betty Hamilton, Kentucky; Evelyn Hill, Wyoming; Mary Helen Kingston, Texas; Mignon Lindsey, Louisiana. 104 S Wi N i . ' 1 SX .cKt K ( Q =n z: 3 ANTI-PANDORA CLUB FIRST ROW Mary Long, Tennessee; Betty Lybrook, North Carolina; Betty Manning, South Carolina; Reba Mauer, Kansas; Marinell Mitchell, Texas. SECOND ROW Evanell Nixon, Kansas; Avis Olmsted, Ohio; Martha Ozee, Illinois; Sadie Louise Morris, Alabama. THIRD ROW Jane Perkins, Minnesota; Winogene Rayner, Michigan; Evelyn Reynolds, Kentucky; Virginia Rigdon, Indiana. 105 l . ) fr i fr s2 Tyj a y sr i I UH 1LS 2CS, «!CsX C t SSi c% v 7 S£ s 1 ANTI-PANDORA CLUB FIRST ROW Arabel Rowe, Texas; Mary Jane Rowe, Michigan; Helen Ruth, Ohio; Ann Ryther, Nebraska; Genevieve Sallee, Arkansas. SECOND ROW Eleanor Sherwood, Montana; Virginia Showalter, Kansas; Nancy Schumacher, Tennessee; Anna Bell Stokes, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Margaret Snydor, Kentucky; Jean Thomas, West Virginia; Genevra Thome, Wisconsin; Betty Townsend, Texas. 106 ys o- hs yj yy. UXc mK .c t c t .c t i ANTI-PANDORA CLUB FIRST ROW Eleanor Townsend, Texas; Erin Vaughn, Tennessee; Lucille Wallin, New York; Dorothy Zaug, Wisconsin; Mildred Bemis, Arkansas. SECOND ROW Carolyn Brooks, Kentucky; Nell Capel, Illinois; Margaret Hughes, Kentucky; Hattie Gwaltney, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Mary Ruth Martin, Alabama; Elizabeth Shirk, Pennsylvania; Nancy Schumacher, Tennessee; Isabel Smith, Ohio. 107 s xV r - y -MI fV t c c evc cuc f s TWENTIETH CENTURY CLUB Florence Miller Jane Barton Miss Mary Shackelford Frances Faust Betty O ' Donnell Geraldine Manson President Who was featured in the T. C. Snow Carnival Sponsor Vice President Secretary Treasurer . • . f l - ) W. 1 TWENTIETH CENTURY CLUB FIRST ROW Dorothy Benton, Kentucky; Dorothy Black, Missouri; Naomi Black, Indiana; Gratia Bell Blackman, Colorado; Helen Blood, Missouri. SECOND ROW Mary Elizabeth Borneman, Indiana; Margaret Burnett, Colorado; Joan Clinton, Michigan; Alys Macie Cochrane, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Elizabeth Colean, Illinois; Jean Cuykendall, Nebraska; Frances Dix, Indiana; Elizabeth Dowdy, Illinois. 109 [Zh - -s3 y ri r i ■uc .c :c Kt .c .t LA] t i TWENTIETH CENTURY CLUB FIRST ROW Janice Drummond, Oklahoma; Martha Evans, Minnesota; Ruth Evans, Minnesota; Frances Faust, Virginia; Lillian Francez, Louisiana. SECOND ROW Jessie German, Oklahoma; Harriet Graybill, Kansas; Elberta Gooch, Colorado; Virginia Gerdl, Illinois. THIRD ROW Mary Hickman. Indiana; Katherine Hammond, Nebraska; Irene Harnett, Missouri; Norma Henderson, Texas. 110 Y .W t ) J - 9 t)? T rg y - I TWENTIETH CENTURY CLUB FIRST ROW Frances Hoffman, Missouri; Rosalie Hulberg, Illinois; Jui.ia Isaac, Indiana; Louise Koch, Iowa; Leah Lindley, Indiana. SECOND ROW Mary Lovell, Iowa; Florence McAndrew, Illinois; Geraldine Manson. Indiana; Martha Mannington, Colorado. THIRD ROW Jane Nowels, Colorado; Betty O ' Donnell, Kansas; Dorothy Pickens, Missouri; Kitty Russell, Colorado. Ill nVY . - NT i 0 ! Ut t c s j c :c i c i TWENTIETH CENTURY CLUB FIRST ROW Naomi Saip, Kansas; Alice Sprague, Nebraska; Dana Smith, Tennessee; Virginia Sargent, Missouri; Lois Stout, Kansas. SECOND ROW Margaret Tomason, Texas; Mary Evelyn Thomas, Michigan; Helen Thomas, Michigan; Julia Callahan, Texas. THIRD ROW Miriam Carter, Missouri; Herma Guillet, Tennessee; Dorothy Goodman, Indiana; Doris Mitchell, Louisiana. 112 jn ir Ts r xfo py fKl r± ft 2iS? Se4( - Sc$k - s 5 Miriam Woodside Grace Benedict . Miss Alma Hollinger Helen Fawcett . Louise Windham . COLBERNE SpENCE DEL VER CLUB President Who appeared in the Del Ver Club dance Sponsor Vice President Secretary Treasurer 113 l l ' r y 7 i u cs cs c k ; i Vs -; DEL VER CLUB FIRST ROW Virginia Andrews, Pennsylvania; Amelia Barlow, Kentucky; Sue Barton, New Mexico; Lucille Beasley, Tennessee; Glen Bogue, South Dakota. SECOND ROW Eleanor Browne, Iowa; Arlene Crissman, Michigan; Helen Doran, Nebraska; Betty Dyson, Illinois. THIRD ROW Helen Fawcett, Illinois; Julia Ford, Tennessee; Emmy Lou Garthoffner, Missouri; Jean Gibbs, Kansas; Mary Goss, Minnesota. 114 IQ V tC M551 tA i DEL VER CLUB FIRST ROW Natalie Haspel, Louisiana; Judy Hughes, Ohio; Wilmena Kennedy, Nebraska; Velma Kundert, Wisconsin; Gretchen Koi.liner, Minnesota. SECOND ROW Ethel Krieger, Kentucky; Margaret McKenzie, Wisconsin; Pearl Lewenauer, Wisconsin; Judith McCormick, Indiana. THIRD ROW Carol Miller, Wisconsin; Beatrice Miller, West Virginia; Madge Miller, Indiana; Virginia Milligan, Indiana; Katherine Moulton, Michigan. 115 . j  - y v5! i j r r ' Si stw i 5l - DEL VER CLUB FIRST ROW Tennessee; Lilla Lou Peeples, Texas; Eleanor Peterson, Michigan; Mary Avon Motlow, Corda Redfern. Illinois; Ruth Rymer, Tennessee. SECOND ROW Ada Roach, Michigan; Cassie Royster, Tennessee; Allison Saxe, Wisconsin; Sylvia Stewart, Kansas. THIRD ROW Sarah Smith, Tennessee; Colberne Spence, Missouri; Elizabeth Wilmot, Illinois; Emily Squire, Ohio; ElizabethWillis, Oklahoma. 116 . W D i TF i2X i s 1 ' w DEL VER CLUB FIRST ROW Jane Stripling, Texas; Louise Windham, Michigan; Elizabeth Asbury, Louisiana; Marjorie Eipper, Ohio; Julia Ford, Tennessee. SECOND ROW Wunice Hill, Ohio; Geraldine Kennedy, Nebraska; Elizabeth Miller, Indiana; Rena Morgan, Missouri. THIRD ROW Patricia Morrison, Illinois; Julia Paris, Wisconsin; Mary Ramsey, Louisiana; Emmalee Thomas, Indiana. v i v TRI-K CLUB Marion Lyles President Miss Catherine Morrison Sponsor Nancy Newman . Vice President Harriet Merrick Secretary Elizabeth Elliott Treasurer Margaret Miller Treasurer t c tSC C C . t .C 2. i TRI-K CLUB FIRST ROW Marion Allan, Iowa; Janice Baldwin, Minnesota; Eleanor Binford, Indiana; Juliana Bollen, Iowa; Marion Brown, Minnesota. SECOND ROW Vivian Brown, Minnesota; Mary Stewart Burgher, Texas; Beth Chamberlain, Colorado; Cathleen Cummings, Indiana. THIRD ROW Eleanor DeWitt, New Jersey; Elizabeth Eberhart, Illinois; Elizabeth Elliott, California Rose Flentye, Illinois; Terry Fiske, Michigan. 119 v ; r k - SH-yi k ai TRI-K CLUB FIRST ROW Bunny Gii.lis, Ohio; Nancy Hotchkiss, Michigan; Esther Johnson, Iowa; Nancy Lang, Florida; Mary Franke Lemmon, Illinois. SECOND ROW Bertha Lubeck, Michigan; Margaret Miller, West Virginia; Harriet Merrick, Michigan; Florence May, Iowa. THIRD ROW Rita Miller, Wisconsin; Emily Monks, Pennsylvania; Gloria Morris, Colorado; Helen Murphy, Indiana; Rosemary Murphy, Ohio. 120 r J %Z }P 3) J m i • xt vm I BBBHHHHHH TRI-K CLUB FIRST ROW Eleanor Neckerman, Wisconsin; Ann Newman, Tennessee; Nancy Newman, Tennessee; Marion Nicholson, Illinois; Elizabeth Proctor, North Carolina. SECOND ROW Helen Rogers, Indiana; Margaret Rothert, Illinois; Marion Shindel, Pennsylvania; Jessie D. Simmons, Virginia. THIRD ROW Mary Taylor, Ohio; Mary Van Dyke, Iowa; Jane Von Seggern, Nebraska; Margaret Walling, Colorado; Edna Mae Weinold, Illinois. x ' r j r r ' xxf?r ?4. t- W c c c - e c c a c c- ic 33 I 7. ■■TRI-K CLUB FIRST ROW Florence Whitfield, Florida; Lora Gillis, Ohio; Martha Lubeck, Illinois; Harriet Amter, Colorado; Olive Cameron, Ohio. SECOND ROW Sally Jane Fairhead, New York; Marion Fox, Minnesota; Katherine Funk, Indiana; Jean Holtsinger, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Mary Frances McKelvey, Illinois; Gloria Morris, Colorado; Louise Rash, Kentucky; Margaret Scheumann, Indiana; Florence VonDervort, Illinois. 122 } j J i$£krtt $Wte J 3 g t c g? l nanBBBHMHBUoan PENTA TAU CLUB Jane Clark President Miss Thelma Campbell Sponsor Elizabeth Barr Vice President Frances Jenkins Secretary Margaret Cartter Treasurer 123 s xVj y i r y s a? - I Z PENTA TAU CLUB FIRST ROW Christine Goolsby, Texas; Lucille Goolsby, Oklahoma; Ruth Haggenjos, Missouri; Carolyn Hogue, Alabama; Martha Hunt, Texas. SECOND ROW Sara Ison, Georgia; Frances Jenkins, Georgia; Virginia Kohlhausen, Texas; Frances LaMar, Texas. THIRD ROW Shirley Legge, Texas; Kathryn Loonan, Iowa; Mary Catherine McConnell, Arkansas; Ellen Mitchell, Alabama. 124 •J J iP x P PENTA TAU CLUB FIRST ROW Rosa Moore, Mississippi; Mary Pittman, Texas; Mary Purnell, North Carolina; Annie Kate Rebman, Alabama; Antoinette Redwine, Texas. SECOND ROW Virginia Lou Sample, Kansas; Camille Sanderson, Texas; Dorothy Shelly. Missouri; Nell Skaggs, Texas. THIRD ROW Rosalie Spitz, Tennessee; Anna Bob Taylor, Texas; Anease Volkmann, Texas; Billy LIolley Watson, Texas. 125 } %3 J S }y1 )J J ) . I Y, fl c g PENTA TAU CLUB FIRST ROW Sue Yaeger, Texas; Florence Affleck, Texas; Ellyn Baughman, Louisiana; Elizabeth Bunn, Georgia; Helen Cline, Texas. SECOND ROW Delys Estep, Louisiana; Alice Falconer. Kentucky; Elizabeth Langford, Texas; Ruby Mae Baten, Texas. THIRD ROW Mary Jo Moore, Texas; Mary Elizabeth Morgan, Louisiana; Ruth Staten, Texas; Clair Nell Woods, Texas. 126 W xY - rY J ryfft ystv l w c n!C c c ' i( rc%(c ;, L PENTA TAU CLUB FIRST ROW Elizabeth Barr, Kentucky; Martha Candler, Georgia; Margaret Cartter, Texas; Mildred Coy, Texas; Frances Crain, Texas. SECOND ROW Jane Crane, Georgia; Sheila Conley, Texas; Katherine Clarke, Michigan; Elizabeth Davis, Texas. THIRD ROW Virginia Diffee, Arkansas; Elizabeth Downie, Pennsylvania; Katherine Dunn, North Carolina; Dorothy Emrich, Arkansas. 127 Va Ol i g c w(c c c - ! g s: i X. L. CLUB FIRST ROW Laurett Abercrombie, Indiana; Mary Rose Allen, Ohio; Gladys Anderson, Michigan; Virginia Bacon, Texas; Jean Barry, Kentucky. SECOND ROW Virginia Barry, Oklahoma; Charlotte Bartleson, Kansas; Eugenia Brown, Oklahoma. THIRD ROW Emily Campbell, Virginia; Marion Crawford, Michigan; Carol Combs, Ohio; Dixie Daniels, Canada. 129 ) 5 rY4 - 4 r SfrSyS i s X. L. CLUB FIRST ROW Mary E. Davis. Indiana; Sara Ferer, Nebraska; Susan Grover, Kentucky; Loraine Gregory, Kansas; Mary E. Garvey, Illinois. SECOND ROW Ruth Goldmann, Wisconsin; Jean Hagenbuch, California; Charlotte Henschel, Wisconsin. THIRD ROW Virginia Hinn, Texas; Mildred Kipp, Nebraska; Maurine Le Neveu, Texas; Gladys Lindsay, Ohio. 130 . - ■ND I rVT r l BMHW X. L. CLUB FIRST ROW Virginia Lloyd. Indiana; Ruth Peterson, Indiana; Eleanor Sapp, Illinois; Florence Sellevold, Wisconsin; Jean Simmons, Kentucky. SECOND ROW Dorothy Smith, Ohio; Virginia Stotler, Illinois. THIRD ROW Charlotte Twitty, Indiana; Rebecca Ainsworth, Texas; Gayle Baker, Wisconsin; Jane Frantz, Wisconsin. 131 ' -Av r r 3 £ % 7 -7 I X. L. CLUB FIRST ROW Margaret Hair, Indiana; Elizabeth Holcomb, Michigan; Rosemary Insull, Oklahoma; Clarabelle Jacobs, Wisconsin; Jeannette Kircher, Illinois. SECOND ROW Georgia Lee, Kentucky; Marjorie Semans, Oklahoma. THIRD ROW Marion Schrubb, Wisconsin; Virginia Sheafe, Iowa; Dorothy Standifer, Oklahoma; Willamae Vinson, Iowa. 132 [Ch - yo ' J l J r . I i OSIRON CLUB Margaret Yoder President Miss Mary Douthit Sponsor Alice Meyer Vice President Virginia Strandberg Secretary Eugenia Candler Treasurer 133 •x I TV A i j y s LL£s frfc SOl Mfr C C C C R C C C W a 0 I v ' • ' Si 1 ip OSIRON CLUB FIRST ROW Kathryn Baughan, Ohio; Virginia Barr, Missouri; Eugenia Candler, Georgia; Helen Candler, Georgia; Mary Candler, Georgia. SECOND ROW Annie Colvard, Tennessee; Esther Conger, Kansas; Peggy Corwin, California. THIRD ROW Jean Cummings, Oklahoma; Carolyn Decker, Indiana; Betty Gaston, Alabama; Dorothy - Glenn, Tennessee. 134 $ OSIRON CLUB FIRST ROW Sarah Glover, Tennessee; Hope Guenther, Tennessee; Eloise Hawkins, Texas; Margaret Hays, Arkansas; June Haralson, Alabama. SECOND ROW Florence Hoffman, Missouri; Louise Hollingsworth, Alabama; Gertrude Lasater, Tennessee THIRD ROW Jean McLean, Michigan; Theron McFari.and, Arkansas; Marion McMichael, Nebraska; Louise McMurry, Tennessee. 135 ) A ! h r 5f 1 l UtMLsXS H C C t X C a s 7 § % l0 4 OSIRON CLUB FIRST ROW Charley Merrell, Tennessee; Alice Meyer, Oklahoma; Amelia Moore, Alabama; Donna Oviatt, Ohio; Lola Ralls, Alabama. SECOND ROW Dorothy Rose, Ohio; Vera Schlenker, Ohio; Rebecca Smythe, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Jeannette Spann, Alabama; Marjorie Stevens, Ohio; Virginia Strandberg, Missouri; Evelyn Ulmann, Missouri. 136 Vh sy - w p ym ggg g fc OS1RON CLUB FIRST ROW Catherine Whelan, Oklahoma; Lola Bacon, Ohio; Roberta Carroll, Texas; Cora Nell Fundis, Oklahoma; Virginia Gardner, Tennessee. SECOND row- Lillian Goldstein, Virginia; Addeleen Hawkins, Tennessee; Daphne Horner, Virginia. THIRD ROW Lillie Lee, Alabama; Kathryn Mitchell, Oklahoma; Dorothy Spurr. Oklahoma; Helen Louise Warmath, Tennessee. 137 frw vr ! 2yv i yjTft rjr Wi I W t C C C C C I 7 i 7 k: - - Leuna Tatham Miss Gertrude Casebier Caroline Rankin Marianna Brown Louisa LaBounty AGORA CLUB 138 . President Sponsor Vice President . Secretary . Treasurer ■■M rtte ' J ' TSZ? 5 S c t 5 ?t Wtc c c I 3 AGORA CLUB FIRST ROW Lucy Anderson, Oklahoma; Marianna Brown, Pennsylvania; Jessie Burgin, Georgia; Roberta Downer, Kentucky; Margaret Dunlap, Ohio. SECOND ROW Mary Eberhardt, Ohio; Pauline Eilber, Michigan; Johanna Ellis, South Dakota. THIRD ROW Virginia Feltus, Indiana; Lucille Francis, Tennessee; Elizabeth Gilbert, Texas; Gladys Hamilton, Kansas. 139 ) 5 V 5r -S 1 l uts s z i c c o c x j X I AGORA CLUB FIRST ROW Patty Harral, Texas; Kathryn Harvey, Tennessee; Katherine Heflin, Texas; Rachel Holland, North Carolina; Jean Ivins, Nebraska. SECOND ROW Evelyn Irwin, Alabama; Greta Krauss, Michigan; Louisa LaBounty, Illinois. THIRD ROW Violet Lyle, Michigan; Helen McBroom, Minnesota; Lucy Mae Mills, Oklahoma; Edith Nell Montgomery , Louisiana. 140 ■$ - %i o r} j i yfi x s£$ i c c c evc c - r c c % 7 k I V AGORA CLUB FIRST ROW Tommye Murphey, Texas; Barbara Myers, Colorado; Catherine Pooley, New York; Mary Helen Putman, Indiana; Caroline Rankin, Michigan. SECOND ROW Barbara Reed, New York; Mary Ryan, Indiana; Cecelia Scott, Oklahoma. THIRD ROW Elizabeth Scott, Nebraska; Frances Sears, Indiana; Dorothy Sellars, North Carolina; Virginia Spangler. Indiana. 141 P - %3 J y t x c r ' A AGORA CLUB FIRST ROW Frances D. Smith, Tennessee; Josephine Smith, Tennessee; Dorothy Wallace, Illinois; Ann Coleman, Virginia; Dawn Hancock, Georgia. SECOND ROW Morlais Householder, Illinois; Edith Jones, Iowa; Juanita Morphew, Oklahoma; Nancybelle Moss, Kentucky. THIRD ROW Dorothy Stebbins, Louisiana; Vilma Tietjen, Wisconsinj ' ELEANOR Thornton, Oklahoma; Louise Toombs, Georgia. 142 P fr l S S M c C C C C kC- l ' I !y I O, J g Helen Greene Miss Gladys Brooks Jane Sipher . Dorothy Stewart Helene Sweeney A. K. CLUB . President Sponsor Vice President . Secretary . Treasurer ? S51 i I  A. K. CLUB FIRST ROW Maurine Hoadley, Ohio; Jane Beeson, Indiana; Mary Helen Brown, West Virginia; Isabel Barrus, Michigan; Frances Claypool, Michigan. SECOND ROW Roberta Cole, Nebraska; Gladys Cook, Texas; Frances Cooper, Illinois. THIRD ROW Malavon Dennis, Ohio; Scottie Dwyer, Illinois; Heila Fishman, Michigan; Dorothy Floyd, West Virginia. 144 xVj ' r r r y t y i ■( (cvcx. c -c . y; fj A. K. CLUB FIRST ROW Harriet Griffin, Iowa; Grace Gardner, Michigan; Clementine Holman, Georgia; Frances Hubbell, Ohio; Louise Huddleston, Kansas. SECOND ROW Virginia Jarrett, West Virginia; Jerry Knight, Indiana; Sue Kunkle, Ohio. THIRD ROW Kathleen LaRue, Illinois; Dorothy Lassers, Illinois; Alice Law, Illinois; FIelen Leyse, Wisconsin. 145 V § : b)W - 5 4 )r r j?s?wx: ffit cj gg c Si : , ...,; A. K. CLUB FIRST ROW Bernice MacGregor, Michigan; Sara Elizabeth McClain, Illinois; Emily McKenzie, Georgia; Harriet Miller, Virginia; Margaret Montgomery, Kansas. SECOND ROW Florence Moss, West Virginia; Elizabeth Phillips, Indiana; Mary Bernice Perkins, Kentucky. THIRD ROW Wilma Roge rs, Illinois; Virginia Selby, Indiana; Adalyn Sherwood, South Carolina; Jane Siper, Ohio. 146 - ■F ai r T r c c x Cvc c c . i % 1 A. K. CLUB FIRST ROW Jane Smith, Ohio; Victoria Spalding, Canada; Dorothy Stewart, New York; Helene Sweeney, Florida; Hazel Wade, Texas. SECOND ROW Jeannette Caldwell, Tennessee; Willa Ekel, Kansas. THIRD ROW Virginia Fox, South Carolina; Gracellen Holdeman, Indiana; Marian Prinz, Kentucky; Elinor Woolf, West Virginia. 147 J J J X 5 5T 5 F. F. CLUB Mary Comer Miss Helen Cobb Ione Calhoun Mary Elizabeth Boatner Helen Seldomridge . . President Sponsor Vice President . Secretary . Treasurer J] F. F. CLUB FIRST ROW Mary Elizabeth Boatner, Mississippi; Ruth Brandon, Tennessee; Dorothy Burdette, Illinois; Ionf. Calhoun, Mississippi; Maria Evans, Mississippi. SECOND ROW Ann Gairing, Illinois; Marion Gairing, Illinois; Ann Gayden, Mississippi; Dorothy Gourley, Pennsylvania. THIRD ROW Ethel Hamilton, Tennessee; Kathryn Hammond, Michigan; Helen Hart, Nebraska; Florence Hurston, Alabama. 149 n l lv r r rfSftWS W, t UitM sZQ i c C C R C t V i 7 ■7 s f «• ' F. F. CLUB FIRST ROW Betty Lane, Nebraska; Betty Lyons, Michigan; Lois May, Nebraska; Frances Mitchner, Mississippi; Mary Elizabeth Morgan, Missouri. SECOND ROW Jeannette Peak, Illinois; Clara Grace Peck, Michigan; Jane Pheiffer, Indiana; Mary Frances Pope, Illinois. THIRD ROW Jane Rayburn, Ohio; Elizabeth Richmond, Georgia; Franchon Sayler, Ohio; Helen Seldomridge, Nebraska. 150 m j K . h tt m j ij ' s F. F. CLUB FIRST ROW Helen Sellars, North Carolina; Betty Storck, West Virginia; Betty Taylor, Wisconsin; Lucille Zarne, Wisconsin; Warrene Barber, Alabama. SECOND ROW Sara Cottrell, Mississippi; Betty Johnson, Illinois; Marjorie Leopold, West Virginia; Mary Pray, Michigan. THIRD ROW Katherine Seager, Ohio; Edith Scheufler, Kansas; Dorothy Schulz, Michigan; Marion Silverman, Missouri. 151 B J ) ' i ' J ? ' S ' y i fi CSiCV . K WCtf?i S i F. F. CLUB FIRST ROW Isabell Bauman, Ohio; Marguerite Boomhower, Michigan; Miriam Davis, Mississippi; Virginia Davis, Mississippi; Louise Dills, Oklahoma. SECOND ROW Marceline Feltus, Mississippi; Elizabeth FIawkins, Tennessee; Dorothy Hockey, Ohio; Alice Kirkpatrick, Alabama. THIRD ROW Mary McCoy, Ohio; Ann May, Mississippi; Martha Walker, Arkansas; Allie W atkins, Mississippi. 152 ■) . %} J ) J !P 1 U7 U( C . C ( S O)} Grace Cavert Miss Molly McEttrick Jane Sutherland Jane Hall . Ten Finnegan ARISTON CLUB 153 . President Sponsor Vice President . Secretary . Treasurer j- jn irx T tJ v - l t U CS.CS! S? CJ C a VX CA( 7 m a $ ' . K. 7 ARISTON CLUB FIRST ROW Elva Boyd, Tennessee; Frances Buchanan, Tennessee. SECOND ROW Amanda Caldwell, Tennessee; Nancy Bell Campbell, Tennessee; Hulda Cheek, Tennessee; Mary Daniel, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Ann Elder, Tennessee; Mary Alice Farr, Tennessee. 154 f V x . XJ.V flF tSc S t cKt .c tS W ARISTON CLUB FIRST ROW Jen Finnegan, Tennessee; Helen Grizzard, Tennessee; Marcella Hamilton, Tennessee. SECOND ROW Roberta Harrington, Tennessee; Mildred Harris, Tennessee; Virginia Neil, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Alice Springer, Tennessee; Jane Sutherland, Tennessee; Evelyn Brandon, Tennessee. 155 I Y tW - ' Ty r 95i 5rv3?7 fl l UfiVX XQCSi Of t tS - z 1 a mcociMV ff£Lf IT 156 v j %D i i ' ri j } A l Wit s ZCSi C C C MC U- a yj 1 Sarah Bryan Miss Virginia Smith Jeannette Caldwell Mary Dean Clement ANGKOR CLUB 157 . President Sponsor Vice President Secretary-Treasurer re3fc fc g5 , ANGKOR CLUB FIRST ROW Anne Akers, Tennessee; Barbara Alexander, Tennessee; Wendell Austin, Tennessee; Katherine Blair, Tennessee; Mary Berry, Tennessee. SECOND ROW Lillian Brew, Tennessee; Mary Catherine Briley, Tennessee; Jeannette Caldwell, Tennessee; Ella Lou Cheek, Tennessee; Mary Dean Clement, Tennessee; Frances Gibson, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Isobel Goodloe, Tennessee; Sara Guerin, Tennessee; Betty Howe, Tennessee; Danice Jordan, Tennessee; Peggy Loveli , Tennessee. 158 v xW t - ' y j j j s a 2 k5 s 1 ANGKOR CLUB FIRST ROW Carolyn Maddox, Tennessee; Marjorie Melton, Tennessee; Willa Moore, Tennessee; Margaret Potter, Tennessee; Henrietta Spicer. Tennessee. SECOND ROW Claire Roberts, Tennessee; Beverly Stone, Tennessee; Evelyn Thompson, Tennessee; Margaret Thompson, Tennessee; Elizabeth Walters, Tennessee; Helen Wilkerson, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Mary Lloyd Wilkerson, Tennessee; Betty Williams, Tennessee; Sara Colton, Tennessee; Dorothy McCarthy, Tennessee; Sarah Taylor, Tennessee. 159 J l J ) e c C CC C C fi 0P£,fA 7tf, Q AMTY . a iv t ygKys fl ft • Mft - y - - ■-7 3 ECCOWASIN CLUB Nancy O ' Connor President Miss Martha Crockett Sponsor Elizabeth Gilbert Vice President Grace Glasgow Secretary-Treasurer 161 -w -AW r ' r r s v s ECCOWASIN CLUB FIRST ROW Sara Armistead, Tennessee; Lucy May Bond, Tennessee; Conrose Buchanan, Tennessee; Ruth Carlin, Tennessee; Martha Collins, Tennessee. SECOND ROW Nancy Edwards, Tennessee; Elizabeth Gerst, Tennessee; Grace Ellen Glasgow, Tennessee; Elizabeth Hutchison, Tennessee; Addie H. Kerrigan, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Douglas Levine, Tennessee; Martha Morgan, Tennessee; Jane Neil, Tennessee; Kathryn Parker, Tennessee; Ann Perry, Tennessee. 162 nV W . S Wl t , KS f,i ECCOWASIN CLUB FIRST ROW Mildred Pirtle, Tennessee; Eleanor Peed, Tennessee; Reba Rutland, Tennessee; Mary Erwin Stoves, Tennessee; Ruth Strohm, Tennessee. SECOND ROW Muriel VanDyke, Tennessee; Martha White, Tennessee; Catherine Woods, Tennessee; Milbrey Wright, Tennessee; Treva Pirtle, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Eunice Allen, Tennessee; Laura Duke, Tennessee; Elizabeth Hutchison, Tennessee; Claudine Smelser, Tennessee; Portia Ward, Tennessee. 163 t - j )r r ' sfrs sr fl y V i i Ci 3 164 V . N i W  5 % Margaret Reuther Miss Martha Ordway Bonnie Howard Elizabeth Hyde . 165 President Sponsor Secretary Treasurer s s % i 9, ■f w ' ' ' b ' nK k I TRIAD CLUB FIRST ROW Amelia Baskerville, Tennessee; Frances Bevington, Tennessee; Dorothy Cate, Tennessee; Rebecca Clendening, Tennessee; Lois Crawford, Tennessee. SECOND ROW Catherine Dorris, Tennessee; Evelyn Falkner, Tennessee; Pauline Felder, Tennessee; Mary Rachel Gaston, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Bonnie Howard, Tennessee; Ann Elizabeth Hales, Tennessee; Lelia Johnson. Tennessee; Charlotte Keim, Tennessee. 166 V TRIAD CLUB FIRST ROW Helen Lanthan., Tennessee; Olive Martin, Tennessee; Florence Martin, Tennessee; Mary Louise May, Tennessee; Mary Elizabeth Oman, Tennessee. SECOND ROW Louise Porter, Tennessee; Dorothy Rich, Tennessee; Katherine Rutherford, Tennessee; Anna Siegrist, Tennessee. THIRD ROW Virginia Marie Sloan, Tennessee; Eugenia Smith, Tennessee; Shelby Warwick, Tennessee; Mabel Wooiard, Tennessee; Audrey Noblin, Tennessee. 167 VJ ;v ro ' 3 W5rvy 1 L S 1 C C C M ' v  ) . i S Jt c t t .c r j i STATE CLUBS ALABAMA CLUB Ellen Mitch eli President June Haralson Vice President Carolyn Hogue Secretary-Treasurer Miss Swenson Sponsor ARKANSAS CLUB Mary C. McConnell President Mary E. Morgan Vice President Mary E. Morgan Secretary-Treasurer Miss Leavell Sponsor EASTERN CLUB Mildred Clarke President Eleanor DeWitt Vice President Mariana Brown Secretary Sally Jane Fairhead Treasurer Mr. and Mrs. Humphrey Sponsors CEORGIA CLUB Jessie Burgin -- .President Eugenia Candler Vice President Martha Hunt Secretary-Treasurer Miss McEttrick Sponsor ILLINOIS CLUB Dorothy Burdette President Lillian Foote Vice President Eleanor Sapp and Mary F. McKelvy Secretary-Treasurer Miss Irvin Sponsor INDIANA CLUB Margaret Rothert President Gereldine Manson Vice President Virginia Lloyd Secretary Ruth Peterson Treasurer Mr. and Mrs. Rose Sponsors IOWA CLUB Harriett Griffin President Eleanor Browne Vice President Mary Loveli Secretary-Treasurer Miss Plaskett Sponsor KENTUCKY CLUB Susan Grover President Elizabeth Barr Vice President Jean Barry Secretary-Treasurer Mrs. McComb Sponsor KANSAS CLUB Lois Stout President Naomi Saip Vice President Will a Ekel Secretary-Treasurer Miss Cobb Sponsor LOUISIANA CLUB Lillian Francez President Elizabeth Williams Vice President Elizabeth Morgan Secretary-Treasurer Miss Smith Sponsor MICHIGAN CLUB Gretta Krauss President Harriet Merrick Vice President Terry Fiske Secretary-Treasurer Mrs. Schmitz Sponsor MINNESOTA CLUB Mary Coss President Gretchen Kolliner Secretary-Treasurer Miss Nelson Sponsor MISSISSIPPI CLUB Mary E. Boatner President Ann May Vice President Frances Mitch ner Secretary Allie Wat kins Treasurer Miss Am berg Sponsor MISSOURI CLUB Virginia Sargeant President Miriam Carter Vice President Virginia St randb erg Secretary Miss Chenoweth Sponsor NEBRASKA CLUB Ann Ryther President Miriam McMichell Vice President Kathryn Hammond Secretary Helen Hart Treasurer Miss Kheiralla Sponsor NORTH CAROLINA CLUB Betty Lybrook President Rachel Holland Vice President Betty Manning Secretary Elizabeth Proctor Treasurer MissLydeli Sponsor OHIO CLUB Dorothy Rose President Dorothy Hockey Secretary-Treasurer Miss Boyer Sponsor OKLAHOMA CLUB Alice Meyer President Jean Cummings Vice President Eugenia Brown Secretary-Treasurer Mrs. Quaid Sponsor TENNESSEE CLUB Louise Mc Murray President Nancy Newman Vice President Ann Newman Secretary Frances Smith Treasurer Miss Pugh Sponsor TEXAS CLUB Margaret Cartter President Mary Pittman Vice President Helen Ci.ine Secretary-Treasurer Miss Blythe Sponsor WEST VIRGINIA CLUB Dorothy Floyd President Helen Brown Vice President Vircinia Jarrett Secretary-Treasurer Miss Ross Sponsor WESTERN CLUB ElbertaGooch President Jane Nowels Vice President Dixie Daniels Secretary Martha Mannington Treasurer Miss Campbell Sponsor WISCONSIN CLUB Rita Miller President Carol Miller ..Vice President Claribel Jacobs Secret ary Jane Frantz Treasurer Miss Carling Sponsor 169 oV t)? I -M1 i s SENIOR REVERIE We pledge now our love for our old W.-B. : We vow to be ever true. Sunshine fell in dancing patches through the shedding trees on to the porch of the club. I had drawn my chair out there to study, but it was impossible to study that day ; it was a day for dreaming. Lightly the breeze lifted the folds of my chiffon dress; pages of the book lying open and neglected in my lap flut- tered and were still ; occasionally a small pile of leaves would scurry across the stones, urged on by a play- ful wind. Then the wind would die, and all would be silent save for an occasional bird ' s twitter, the rus- tle of falling leaves, and the myriad soft whisperings of a fall day. The air was pregnant with those sounds — nature ' s farewell before the silence of winter oppressed the world. We pledge, too, our love for our dear Senior Class ; God bless them, the old and the new. My gaze sped upward through the trees, already showing bare patches through which the sky shim- mered. Slowly, silently, tranquilly, great puffy clouds floated high above, silhouetting the bare branches and the curled, tinted leaves against their virgin whiteness. Through the balustrade of the tower bits of sky like porcelain gleamed. Dreamlike flocks of birds winged their silent way across the sky, while my mind flew to the girls who last year had watched the scene with me. I felt a lump in my throat. Mo- mentarily the sky was obscured by a film, but I blinked my eyes quickly. We ' ll hold high those colors, The gold and the blue ; Our banners will kiss the sky. Our faith all-resisting, Our goal for life ' s best, Our motto to do or die. lemory. Not worldly gain, but the fulfill- Life ' s best — ideals intangible, inexpressible, fleeting as ment of a perfect hope and dream. The joys we have here Will not fly as the leaves ; They ' ll last us life ' s journey through. Silently, gently the leaves drifted down on my book, my hands, my dress. Curled, browned, burned, they looked. They had lived their time, and now they fell to be crushed under unheeding feet, brujhed from the steps and burned. Cupping a tiny one in the palm of my hand, I examined its seared edges and pon- dered. Memories are such fragile possessions ; too many go the way of summer leaves. Thank fortune, some are of the evergreen variety. They return now — hours fragrant and bright with happiness, laughter, and content. And the love we have now For the friendships we ' ve made Will live in our memories, too. Most of these memories center about just a small group. Quiet hours when we talked of things that puzzled us, long walks in the late afternoons, dinner at the club — all flooded my mind in a mighty tide as my eyes closed. Farther, farther down the lane of memory I wandered. Like fairy tears, recollections gleamed at me. Darting hither and thither I went, picking out incidents. And though we must part from each other some day, As Seniors have parted before, The glorious spirit of 1930 Will linger for evermore. Slowly, slowly my mind came back to the present. Birds whistled, leaves rustled, the wind caressed me. I turned to look at Betty. Her eyes, half shut, were on far distances. Betty, I said, don ' t you hate to think that this is our last fall here? She gazed at me ; a wistful smile touched her mouth. Two new girls walked up the steps. Virginia Gerdl, ' 30. 173 •!M j y vh s s j i c t ( W(Cv c t c . 0 1)] i A CHILD ' S SWINGING SONG Swinging through the treetops, High, high up I go. All the gods and all the trees Look so very low. Oh, that swaying feeling, Swinging up so high, To see the other side of things, And hear the tired wind sigh ! Looking at the gay birds, See them turn and stare; How could they ever know I ' m flying through the air? Far above the city, While other children dream, I kick high the Stardust, And shatter silver beams. Swinging through the treetops, And flying through the air, Let the sun shine through the leaves, And wind blow back my hair. Naomi Saip, ' 31. Bleary-eyed And old, that cold, Gray moon stares down; And I, one black speck Trudging homewards Through black pasture land, With tired and hastened feet, Ignore it as I stumble over ugly brush clumps. Marion Cox, ' 31. 174 ■n sr ' j r rvj s stvv - M ggC C C Wt X C%SC i i N 7 7 y HONEYMOONS My friends think I am a harsh, cold realist because I laugh about honeymoons. Well, perhaps if I liked either honey or moons, their compound would appeal to me more. But alas ! to me the moor is only the earth ' s airless, waterless satellite, and honey makes me wish for dill pickles. The first time I really ever thought about honeymoons was when I saw Johnnie with Jane in a trig tan traveling ensemble dash for the car with us — their friends — shrieking and throwing rice close behind. Then I thought, Ye gods, but we ' re barbarians ! and as I watched their car diminish down the Lincoln Highway, I wondered who invented honeymoons, anyway. Perhaps they began when Jason and Medea fled with the golden fleece, or when Paris and Helen took ship for Troy. The first flight recounted in the Bible that might be considered a forerunner of honeymoons is in Genesis, when Jacob takes Rebecca and Leah and escapes from their father: Then Jacob rose up, and set his sons and wives upon camels, . . . and stole away unawares to Laban the Syrian, in that he told him not that he fled. I suspect stern fathers like Laban and Skylock of precipitating the hasty action which the world has euphoniously called honeymoons. Perhaps the Venetians were polite enough to say, Yes, Lorenzo and Jessica are honeymooning in Genoa, when that worthy pair fled there with Shylock ' s ducats. Certainly the old shoes, tin cans, and rice that follow the bridal car on its way to the station are faintly reminiscent of the days when dashing gentlemen carried their brides away against the family ' s wishes. N0W4 in Huckleberry Finn when the daughter of the Grangerford ' s and the son of the Shepherdson ' s married, they discreetly honeymooned on the other side of the Mississippi River, while their fond relatives on the opposite bank shot up each other. And I cannot doubt that a honeymoon was quite necessary for Lochinvar and the fair Ellen, when I read: There was mounting ' mong Graemes of the Netherby clan — Forsters, Fenwicks, and Musgraves, they rode and they ran ; There was rasing and chasing on Cannobie Lee, But the lost bride of Netherby ne ' er did they see. I wonder if Lord Musgraves, when quite worn out by the hot chase, at last in a fit of exasperation flung an old shoe at young Lochinvar ' s retreating back ! But whatever the origin of honeymoons, I suppose the point of having them is that the bride and groom want to be alone together and have their first transports over in private. If so, that is perfectly natural and understandable. But what I want to know is : Why go to such tourish-haunted spots as Niagara Falls or Europe? When people are least interested in anything but each other, why go to places where there is most to admire? Imagine standing in the Coliseum trying desperately to call up all your ancient history, or Byron ' s lines about butchered to make a Roman holiday, so that you can get into the spirit of those old, unhappy, far-off things and battles long ago, when you have a perfectly charming and alive man at your elbow ! No, though Byron himself was a great lover, he did not mix business with pleasure. Childe Harold was not written on his honeymoon ! There are places you could enjoy, I suppose. You could go to Alexandria, near where the b attle of Actium was fought, and sigh over Antony and Cleopatra, who also understood love, or go to the south of France and remember the romantic Queen Eleanor and her troubadours. And, of course, there is always the Taj Mahal. Yes, in taking her husband to the Taj Hahal. the bride is really showing a little of the much-talked-of woman ' s guile. Think of the times in after years when she can cry : This isn ' t the way Shah Jehan treated his wife. In America the honeymoon seems as necessary to a marriage as the ring. In fact, the extent of the honeymoon trip is used as a gauge of the husband ' s wealth. If they go to Coney Island for the day, he is young and-penniless ; if they go to Niagara Falls or Washington, D. C, he is a rising young busi- ness man ; and if they go to Europe or the Orient, he is the wealthy scion of the Kilpatrick family or a millionaire oil king. It must be almost entirely an American institution, however. The French are too great realists to countenance such sentimentality ; the Chinese are too wise ; while probably a shrewd eye on the expense of the thing restrains the Mohammedans from honeymoons. Imagine how it would run up in hard cash for the Sultan to take each member of his seraglio on a wedding trip. Of course, short trips to Black Sea watering places would do for the lesser beauties, and these could be managed economically ; but for the favorites nothing less than a trip to Mecca would be in keeping. Seven trips to Mecca would break any Sultan. Perhaps honeymooners are not entirely wrong. Certainly while the marriage lasts the participants do take a great pride in their honeymoon journey. When Cairo is mentioned, tne wife of the millionaire oil king is ready with her : Quite, my dear, my husband and I went there on our honeymoon. Fascinating and Oriental, but, my dear — dirty. The bride of the boy who is young and penniless will say : I never will forget the day Tom and I spent at Coney Island after we were married. Lord, I never had such a good time ! And mother still shows us the honeymoon pictures that she and dad took in Washington, D. C. ! I do approve of one kind of travel for a wedding trip. I should like to spend my honeymoon on a yacht. On a yacht there would be no distractions from the world, but only wide water and the misty line of the mainland in the distance and an island or two so beguiling that they simply invite shipwrecked lovers. But alas ! only Lindberghs can afford yachts ! My second choice is some secluded country place like Hor- ton, where Milton lived with mirth in unreproved pleasure free and heard the lark begin his flight and singing startle the dull night. But if I should go to such a place, every one would say, pityingly: Isn ' t it a shame that Betty ' s husband can afford nothing better than that little old farmhouse for their honey- moon? So tedious! No, rather than that I shall join the other brides who have sacrificed themselves to convention. And whether it be to Coney Island or to the Orient, I ' ll go — with only one wistful glance at my lost Horton. Betty Lane, ' 30. 175 cK « m c S; . THE TECHNIQUE OF TEAS Virginia, you received an invitation in the mail this morning to the Kirby girl ' s tea at the Woodstock Country Club. Really? How nice! I walked over and picked up the starched white formal invitation and dubiously looked it over. Pshaw ! Teas are a pesky nuisance, anyway, I thought. They ' re always the same — stiff, obviously gracious, rigidly formal — the pampered pet of society. At the home-coming or departing of a cherished infant, the fond mother hastens to flaunt her social graces and repay her social indebtedness by giving a tea. What could be more simple? And, alas! what is more complex? No wonder I was dubious. I had been a tea trotter for several years. And, of course, being a true female, I had nothing to wear. But though I sighed and racked my brain for decent apparel, there was no doubt at all that I would go. Oh, no ! One must always go to a tea, you know. To be in the social whirl at all, one must go places and be seen. People must be shown what a charming and popular young person you are in the younger social set. And so the afternoon of the tea I sauntered gracefully into the clubhouse at about five o ' clock. Of course, the tea was from three to six, but one must never be so gauche as to come early. Nor is it wise to come very late, for the receiving line tires toward the end and turns reproachful eyes on you for coming so tardily. Thus your welcome is not so pleasant, and it is slightly embarrassing to arrive just as a great many of the guests are leaving. But if you come right between the two extremes, your entrance is an assured success. You sweep graciously in, with your long dress trailing rhythmically behind, and smile and murmur in your low, cultured voice as you pass slowly and easily down the receiving line. You are well received, because the hostesses have had time to wear off their initial nervousness and still they have not yet tired of greeting their guests. Thus leaving behind you an assured impression of your charming poise, you languidly glance around and speak to the friends and acquaintances you chance to see. Observ- ing that you are alone, they will naturally draw near to you, and any interesting strangers present will at once perceive that you are a young woman of personal magnetism and charm. You are served ; and as you sip your tea and daintily refuse the cakes, you laugh softly and generally convey the impression of spirit and gracious good humor. The musical tinkle of your laughter is enchanting, and the handsome young man whom your eagle eye perceived early in the afternoon is now glancing over toward you with flatter- ing frequency. Time whiles on, and still you have not yet met the man in question. Now is the time to resort to feline ingenuity. With tactful maneuvering, you manage to approach the friends conversing with your prey, and the desired introduction is met with innocent surprise and sophisticated indifference. The combination proves irresistible, and your man is soon hanging on your words and reveling in your wit and womanly charm. As you note his condition, you glance casually at your watch, and are dismayed to discover it is almost five-thirty. Immediately he echoes your surprise and finds that he must also leave. The two of you then say adieu to the increasingly more rigid smiles of the tiring hostesses and descend to the lobby. When you have put on your coat and made some rapid repairs on your waning complexion, you go out only to find him waiting. Since I was alone, would I not beguile his loneliness and allow him to escort me home? I would. And so we leave the tea together, and I find the afternoon has been a success. You say mine were the studied, cold-blooded actions of a designing female? Perhaps, but such is the technique of teas. Virginia Lloyd, ' 30. 176 y - - r ' S5KV?5 tXi p) 4 i v 177 4 )W ' ? ' 7 J I i rt c c K c c c i :- c tc C- a M W l 179 iW i y siT t u e H7 WCS ZsK srtrW i % « v S a 180 H it l If OS EL QgODlO£ '  JfAY-QVEEffZ Mrk Vm %ip Maid 181 Jj s r s K ij s af y ft c JC , c j or.ciic r Ls,vx n.Ksi i V GEORGE AND MARTHA WASHINGTON Marianna Brown as Martha and Dorothy Rose as George led the 1930 minuet as a grand climax to the Washington birthday dinner which is one of the most beloved traditions of Ward-Belmont. 182 tfx ! j s v v i m y j x y VARSITY VOLLEY BALL Reading from left to right. Begin at top. Shirley Legge, Amanda Caldwell, Betty O ' Donnell Jessie Burgin, Jane Clark, Virginia Kohlhausen, Louise Latimer VARSITY WATER POLO Reading from left to right. Jane Clark, Nancy Lang, Helen Cline, Betty O ' Donnell, Martha Candler 183 o- - xWt)? rXteW 5 JXil f I VARSITY HOCKEY Reading from left to right. Amanda Caldwell, Bunny Gillis, Irene Cochrane, Elizabeth Eberhart, Elizabeth Elliott, Jean Holtsinger, Jessie Burgin, Eugenia Smith Nancy Newman, Nancy O ' Connor, Grace Cavert VARSITY BASKETBALL Reading from left to right. Gladys Cook, Margaret Rothert, Amanda Caldwell Jessie Burgin Margaret Miller, Grace Cavert l . SZ J J dXii ■c Jt S t c t c i m WINNERS OF SWIMMING MEET Reading from left to right. Martha Candler, second; Mary Newton, first; Jane Clark, third VARSITY BOWLING Reading from left to right. Amanda Caldwell, Elberta Gooch, Ethel Hamilton, Virginia Neil 185 ) i a w ? ' Tv3 5TK y The Bored Well-mont Syphon Volume 1929-30. Nashington, Tennissippi, April 1. Circulation — Sluggish BORED WELL-mont SYPHON Published every 1 Saturday by the students of Ward-Belmont STAFF Editor in Chief Betty Lane Associate Editor E. Lane News Editor Elizabeth Lane Circulation Manager Betty A. Lane REPORTERS Rita Miller Marian Gairing Leah Lindley Sylvia Stewart June Haralson Jane Smith Dorothy Pickens Dorothy Spurr DIARY OF MISTRESS BELLE MEAD Monday, April 1. Dear little book of Secrets: I got up at five-thirty this morning to read ahead in Emma, a very interesting novel of Jane Austen ' s. It seemed to be just the thing to start the day right. I had all my lessons, including history notes and art outlines. Three teachers were so sweet, and told me I gave excellent recitations in class. I studied hard all evening, and was able to turn my light out promptly at ten- thirty. Wednesday, April 3. A lovely day all through. We had delicious liver for lunch and the usual steak and mushrooms for dinner. I do wish we ' d have more chow mein like we had last week. I paid the rest of my club dues at the meeting tonight, and also gave the club four new rec- ords. Studied very hard, and finished a book review. It isn ' t due until after finals, but I wanted to get it out of the way and start reviewing for my final exams. Friday, April 5. I went to the tea room for the first time this week and took some bars and apples up to my suitemates. There ' s to be a lovely illustrated lecture in chapel tonight on The Philosophy of Modern Morons. It ' s a three-hour lec- ture, and I can hardly wait for it to begin. Had to prepare all my lessons before the lecture, though. Would have enjoyed it if the girl on my right hadn ' t cracked her chewing gum so noisily. Some people have no cultural elevation. is here again. We could sleep through breakfast, but I got up and cleaned my trunk and desk drawers. A beautiful rainy Sunday. Services were held in the chapel, and lasted a little longer than usual. Caught up on all my cor- respondence in the afternoon. We had a singsong in Rec Hall this evening. I would really have preferred vespers. Tea was served, as usual, in the club- houses, and I offered to stay and wash the dishes ; so am quite tired and will say good night, diary. It has been such a gay, exciting week, hasn ' t it, diary, dear ? Sunday, April 7. It seems like Stay-At-Home Sunday FACULTY RECITAL STUPENDOUS AFFAIR One of the most enjoyable artistic presentations which Ward-Belmont stu- dents have had the privilege of attend- ing was given at the Ryman auditorium last night, April 5. The program opened with a dramatic reading by Dean T. D. D. Quaid, entitled Would That I Were a Skylark, How I Would Soar ! Mr. A. B. Benedict followed Dean Quaid ' s modest refusal to reap- pear in an encore by a piccolo solo, An Evening in Paris. Unexpected vocal powers were re- vealed when Mr. Berry favored us with a tenor solo, Casey at the Bat. And a clever interpretative ballet was worked up and presented by the teach- ers in the English Department, featur- ing new and graceful steps to the tune of Aunt Dinah ' s Quilting Party. A ukelele duet, composed of Mr. Don- ner and Dr. Hollinshed, played three popular numbers, Moonlight on the Ganges, On, Wisconsin, and My Blue Heaven. Miss Theodora Cooley Scruggs followed in a short lecture, which added much to the tone of the proceedings. Her subject was ably presented and entitled, The Ferocious Atrociousness of the Monosyllables of Today. Miss Morrison, Miss Sisson, and Miss Carling, assisted by Miss Warwick, Miss McEttrick, and the other mem- bers of the Physical Education Depart- ment, presented a clever light opera, Seeing Helen Home. The opera was followed by a chorus of popular songs with dramatic inter- pretations, presented by the remaining members of the faculty, directed in a very capable fashion by Gladys Brooks and Miss Annie Allison. Among their theme songs were, The Lost Chord, Death, Where Is Thy Sting? and I ' m Forever Blowing Bubbles. The evening closed with another dra- matic monologue by Mrs. Charleton, Discipline, O Discipline. This made a fitting close to an unexcelled and thoroughly enjoyable evening, almost professional, it seemed, with its display of brilliant, but not totally unexpected, revelation of talent — nay, even genius. CHICKEN PLUME Roses are red, Violets blue, Gasoline ' s dear, And so are you. G. Cook, ' 51. ESSAY ON THE FLY A fly may be found roosting high and dry on a piece of golden-brown chicken, or perhaps one can see it taking its daily dozen in the gravy boat. Who knows ? The morals of the fly could hardly be termed as of benefit to its fellow man, for the way it rubs its nose with its two front hands is just real cute. What with a small amount of training, the fly may be taught to hurdle, make question marks, and to choose a livelier place of abode than a common roost like a freshly fried sau- sage — yea, verily. We have a great lit- tle animal in the fly ; why not respect its absence ? F. Sellevold, ' 39. A NEW AGENCY THE WRIGLEY GUM COMPANY HAS APPOINTED MISS CATHERINE MORRISON Division Superintendent Page 2 THE BORED WELL-mont SYPHON April 1, 1929-30 The eagle is the bird to soar, The hawk is king of the woods, The mocking bird can sing the score. But the hen delivers the goods. I. Goodloe, ' 37. There ' s no time like the pleasant. Kathkyn Loonan. Take care of the pennies and W.-B. will take care of the dollars. Dr. Barton. Join the intelligentsia and sneer at the world. Betty Lane. A straight line is the shortest dis- tance between two joints. Lillian Francez. LOWE ' S VENDOME ' WOMEN WITHOUT MEN An All-Star Cast AND NANCY LANG SUBMITTED IN JOURNALISM A habit of forgetting to replace the cap on tubes of toothpaste was the cause of Mrs. Smythe Van Smythe ' s death late last night. Mrs. Van Smythe and her husband were on the way to a party. Suddenly Mr. Van Smythe dis- covered that his wife had forgotten to replace the cap on his flask when she filled it some minutes before. He promptly shot her, at the same time ruining her evening. Corwin, ' 45. Birds of a feather knock together. Goocn. Perseverance g e 1 1 e t h everything. Therefore, when Miss Rucker won ' t give you an excuse, be persistent. That always helps, anyway. Once there was a little boy named Percy Vere. Yes, he did, too ! Anyway, I know you ' ll believe me when I say he was quite a pest. Such persistence, in- sistence, and what not — to no end. Anyway, Poicy went down town and tried to evade the red lights and the green ones, too. But Percy found that he who hesitates is run over. Yes, the funeral was nice. The keenest band, Madge, ya ever saw. Poor Percy ! Ever dependable. Asbury, ' 86. SPORTS IN LETTERS TO MUSSOLINI Dear and Dearest Beni : So sorry to have missed you at the picnic at St. Peter ' s last week, but I rated a bid to the Senior Prom with Rachel Holland, which is not to be sneered at or taken lightly. Well, the time seems to have come when all good sports get together. Pingpong, bobbing for apples, tennis, baseball, skipping rope and classes, joining the bicycle club, hopscotch and crocheting, and all sorts of sports have become the vogue among all the elite. One of the favorite sports is called Bringing Home the Bacon. Now, Miss Lester, you really didn ' t see this, you know. Say, by the way, have you a grandfather rat in your palace, Beni ? Give rat a free voyage ticket. Rat will go to Bruns- wick town. People will know rat is first to be there, since the Pied Piper led the others out. People will be amused with the rat. Will catch rat, who will become homesick. Move into one of your other palaces, the one at Venice. When rat returns home, there will be no one to greet him. Will die of disappointment. Josephine says it ' s rough on rats, but sure to work. Devotedly, Nap. EDITORIAL Esther had only a dime. It was worth two nickels or ten pennies, and would buy a pair of shoestrings, two ice-cream cones, or a tin monkey that would run up nnd down a string when pulled. She decided to buy three cents ' worth of pretzels and two cents worth of cream puffs. Yet she still had a nickel, which she thought she would save for a rainy day, and thusly get more for her money. But halt ! Who is that great grotesque person obtruding our dear little Esther ' s path- way ? His great black mustache gently wiggles up and down when he shouts at the passing children. He has large, golden rings in his ears, which usually proclaim him to be a gypsy. But those are lovely, round, red balloons he car- ries. So finally, after much discussion with her inner self, Esther decided to purchase a great big balloon. Now, having a color scheme firmly fixed in her mind, Esther started homeward, and, after having reached Senior Hall, proudly hung up her balloon in the doorway that all who should enter might see it and admire her taste. Moral : Spend your money when you have it. CAMPUS COLUMN Did you ever see such nice itti bitti roses just a-climbin ' and a-climbin ' up their little trestle ? Aren ' t they the bravest posies ever? To climb so high, and just to think they ' re doing it all by themselves ! Now, aren ' t ' at just too grand ? My, my, I should say yes and yea ! How they ramble and ram- ble. About what do they ramble? And why must they ? Let them ramble ; who cares? But aren ' t they sweet? And aren ' t they darlin ' ? And I think they ' re just too precious for words. They really are. Reminds me of brave little roses cimbing up their trestle, it does. By the way, my roommate has a gold- fish and is just too negligent of it. Shame ! Shame ! So I must feed it. And the other day I sent in to Just Jinny for advice. This is her reply. Tee-hee : you ' ll laugh. For the littie uninteresting third party ; subtitle, the little fish in your aquarium. Method one is to tell fish to follow tail. He will become dizzy and bump into the side of aquarium, stunning himself and dying for lack of air. Method two is to buy water castle for the fish, who will wish for the days of old when knight- hood was in flower. Fish will imagine himself a terrible dragon, and will eat a pebble thinking it is a princess. Fish wiil then choke to the tune of ' My troubles are over. ' Now, I ' ve heard Gayle Hinton was a nice little girl, but she wanted to get into the movies. Her family had no serious objections, so she decided to fol- low her inclinations. Now, Gayle knew that there were other girls who wanted to get into the movies, too, and some were as pretty as she. Well, finally, after waiting for her turn, Gayle did get into the movies. But the greatest dis- appointment in her life came when the horrid old usher gave her a back seat in the balcony. But, then, life is like that ! CALENDAR OF EVENTS May 1 Coming : A new month. May 5 John Gilbert will lecture on The Greater Frigidaire. May 9 Beethovenisky, African pianist, with Accompanist Alice Meyer. May 30 Lecture on Matrimonial Tactics, for Seniors only, by Margaret Cartter and Elinor Glyn. June 4 Last assault on bacon. LOOK A BOOK ON The Angelic Aspirations of My Youth BY JESS BURGIN t UjtMLs J t e C t t it tiC u f Si i 188 D . ' - i r M tc COUNCIL REPORT Student Council met February 22, Washington ' s birthday, and reported the following for telling falsehoods: Gertie Casebler and Gladys Brooks . Eaoh receives indefinite loss of Senior and Walking privileges. Edna Irvin was reported for using a ourling iron in the room of Mrs. Rose . She reoeives four days restriction ' from June 10 to June 14. Mrs. Rose receives a severe reprimand and one day of restrict- ion from June 10 to June 11. Caroline Leavell was reported for sleeping through breakfast. Her case was considered explained as she had been out late the night before. Virginia Smith was found sitting up in her cubby after light bell. She receives four days restriction, five days absolute campus, six days plain campus, and seven days loss of social privileges beginning May 31 and ending June- 10. Mrs. Charlie was reported for having a feast in her room at mid- night, for operating a pop-corn popper in her room, and for playing the victrola during Sunday quiet hour. Her case was considered explained as she was entertaining a guest from Kentucky. Mrs. Charlton was reported for over-connecting. Her case was re- ferred to the Governing Board as tttere was no precedent for handling this case. Susan Rucker was reported-for reading the house mail notes of her patients, and for playing practical jokes. She receives notice to grant all future requests for excuses from attendance at church. Catherine Morrison was reported for frightening Freshmen and im- itating ye nymph Pan. She receives four days restriction and five days loss of social privileges, date to be decided later. Venable Blythe was reported for crossing the campus in dancing hose. Her case was considered explained as her other hose were at the laundry. Loretta Chenoweth was reported for riding downtown with a young man unchaperoned. She will be required to have all future dates in Rec Hall. Loretta is a holl monitor, so she. automatically loses her monitorship. Pauline Townsend was reported for wearing rouge and lipstick to class, for being out of regulation dress, and for wearing a purple hat to church. Her case was considered explained as to regulation for Mrs. Powell had worn them home for the week-end. She automatically loses her general monitorship. Submitted respectfully, ;ted respectruiiy, £— 1 . 189 i Revised A.B.C. ' s Bl Adequate Council Beaming Miss Morrison Critical Delirious Merne Nicholson Dot Pickens Elfish Cherub Borneman Futile ' Fran Hoffman Gruesome Exams. Horsey Rayburn Gerdl Improbable Spring Vacation Jubilant Bartleson Katty Berta Gooch Loafer Betty Lane Maligned Monitors 190 , )W y- t r f s sj ys s ' ■k Revised A.B.C. ' s N l « Of Pf CM R§ S T VI Yr Z Nuisance Signing Out Opinionated Dot Cate Pedigreed Donker Quoted Hyphen Rational Bobby Spitz Safeguarded All of Us Taciturn Nixon Unbalanced Jess Burgin Vital Pooley Worried Leah Lindley X-tensive Cartter Yearning Saip Zestful Peavine 191 ' -6 t i ON EATING CINNNAMON ROLLS Why do I suffer at least once a week? I am in agony when they are brought and the torture increases. I haven ' t the will power nor even the pride to resist. There they are, stacked high in that shiny tray, and I can smell the gentle aroma of cinnamon, spices, and sugar. How delectable they look, all covered with nice gooey sugar icing! If only I had the will power! As the dish passes around the table, my heart sinks lower and lower. Is some one else looking at that big one with the same covetous eyes as I? I pray to the gods and my guiding spirit that it will be mine. It comes to me; and as I snatch it from the dish, my fingers burn and my mouth waters at the sight. Now, to lick my fingers and procure that first alluring taste. Those little flakes melt on my tongue, and I have a wild, irrational desire for more and more. All reason is scattered to the winds, and I dive into that delicious roll with a relish not even human. After the first has disappeared where all good cinnamon rolls go, others follow until the cold fact dawns upon my feeble brain that I have lost all count. Heavens! The pounds I must have gained! Well, I ' ll not do it again. Then I sigh and reach for an- other with the very joy of eating. The rest of the afternoon is spent in much outward groaning, but inward satisfaction. Nevertheless, it was all worth while; so I wish to propose a toast to the best of all food, the light and delectable cinnamon roll. May it remain forever in my diet. Martha Lubeck. Would have had snapshots —  ) xV3 t)r r r oi 5 £ THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF LESTER X MARKS THE SPOT Clattering footsteps approach. Miss Lester pops head out of package Is ' t the thundering herd? No — ' tis only the two-o ' clock shop- They approach Miss L. and stamps fare ? Alas ! but not one cent Alack ! Scene: Middlemarch after lunch. Characters: Bad. [A loud clamor is heard without, room window and stares.] Miss L. : What is this I see before me ' ! ping party. [Hastily bars window.] [Enter a bevy of sweet young things clad tastefully in sackcloth and ashes, cry piteously.] Mob: Prithee, gentle soul, give us bus money! We must have bus money! Miss L. : What! Bus money? Mob: Yes! Bus money! Miss L. (leering evilly over glasses) : Then get it at the bank! Millions for for bus fare ! Mob (drawing back, aghast, with loud outcries of distress) : What? No bus are undone ! Mercy ! Grammercy ! Miss L. (flourishing old shoe above head) : Never! Mob : Down with the tyrant ! No taxation without correct change ! Give us our bus money ! Fran Hoffman, the champion of the people (accusingly to Miss L.) : Out upon you! Fie upon you! Who are you to oppose us? [Miss L. approaches window with pencil in her hair.] Franny Aha ' She defies us! [Mob tears well-known Hyphen box from wall; Fran mounts it to harangue crowd] Friends, shoppers, and fellow sufferers, lend me your ears! Fourscore and seven days ago there was brought forth upon this spot a new student body, conceived in slavery and dedicated to the purpose of resisting education. [ Hear, hear! ] Today we are met here to consider whether this body, or any body so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure that which has been our lot. What is your answer ? Mob (amid weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth) : We can endure it no longer! We demand bus money, liberty, and the pursuit of knicknacks ! Franny (eloquently) : Is a taxi too dear, or the bus too cheap to be purchased at the price of the noble greenback? Forbid it, Almighty Barton! Give us bus fare, or give us death! Mob (wildly) : Hear, hear! Aye, give us bus money! Long live ' Fran ' Hoffman! Franny (turning theateningly upon Miss L.): It is the will of the people! (Darkly) Yield up the money, or else — ! Miss L. (heroically) : Shoot, if you must, this old gray head— but I ' ll guard my package room change till I ' m dead ! [Mob prepares to attack package room. They tear at the iron bars, crying loudly.] Mob : Bus money ! We will have bus money ! [Miss L. cowers in corner, clutching cash box. Enter Mrs. Nichols. She trots up and taps Franny on the shoulder.] Mrs. N. : Girls, girls ! Are you ready? Girls! The bus is waiting ! [Enter Miss Susie Rucker, led by two ravenous bloodhounds.] Miss R. : What ' s this? A revolt? I ' ll fix ' em! (Urges bloodhounds on lustily.) Sic ' em, Pete! Salts, girls — salts! Franny: Foiled again! Mob (scattering wildly) : Oh, not salts, Miss Rucker! Not that! Anything but that! [Exit in stampede, pursued by bloodhounds, trampling Mrs. N. underfoot. Miss L. glances into compact and faints gracefully into box of old shoes.] Miss R. : ' Chunky! ' ' Chunky ' Candler! Where are you? Come here at once! Chunky (from a distance) : Aw, Miss Rucker! Miss R. (menacingly): Reduce, will you? You poor, emaciated little shadow! Get yourself out here and drink this glass of milk ! [Bloodhounds stand absorbed in council reports. Chunky emerges from large can labeled Waste. She has a wasted appearance; her cheeks are hollow.] Chunky (pleadingly) : Aw, Miss Rucker, I gotta reduce! Nobody loves a fat girl! I— Miss R. : Reduce! Br-r-r-r-r-r-r ! [Thrusts glass of milk toward Chunky. ] Bloodhounds (disinterestedly) : Gr-r-r-r-r-r ! [ Chunky seizes milk in despair. Gulps it down. Gradually expires upon floor in slow agony, kicking feebly, while Miss R. looks on with malicious grin.] Miss R. : Reduce, will she? I ' ll fix her! Br-r-r-r ! [Exit, triumphant.] [Bloodhounds approach curiously to view the remains. Finally link tails and exit merrily, singing Three Little Maids from School — ! ] [Curtain] 193 Sic ' em, Rosie ! I oik; , ' ; s :. i Y ' v r i j j s F 1 7 ■' f 194 . i . r fjjfc rfff l Whoopee! Smior-M ds! The Dead ave R sau FomMutr-GtT-THEm TM£ 5aS£BALL flELD £ - ' Senm-M ds 195 v rv r ?s ?s rs 7 X; (a ACKNOWLEDGMENT We wish to gratefully acknowledge the assistance of the following girls in the work of the Literary Department and to the members of the Art Department who have striven to make this book a success : Carol Miller Virginia Lloyd Ann Newman Ethel Hamilton Polly Parrish Harriet Merrick Naomi Saip Katherine Harriet Hammond Marion Cox Alice Kirkpatrick Jane Sutherland 196 X h - y y l l LL lLi ADDRESSES SENIOR ADDRESSES Laurett Abercrombie 607 North Perdins, Rushville, Indiana Marion Allan 2216 McDonald Avenue, Sioux City, Iowa Virginia Andrews Adamsville, Pennsylvania Virginia Bacon 1620 Broadway, Lubbock, Texas Elizabeth Ellis Barr 109 West Seventh Street, Owensboro, Kentucky Jean Barry Glouchester Avenue, Middlesboro, Kentucky Charlotte Bartleson 304 East Main Street, Beloit, Kansas Kathryn Baughan 62 East Dixon Avenue, Dayton, Ohio Eleanor Binford Hickory Heights, New Albany, Indiana Mildred Bishop Bickner Lane, Paducah, Kentucky Dorothy Black 642 North Missouri Street, Liberty, Missouri Mary E. Boatner Sumner, Mississippi Eugenia Brown 210 North Watkins, Elk City, Oklahoma Marianna Brown 103 Rosedale Circle, Greenville, Pennsylvania Mary E. Bryan Nicholasville Pike, Lexington, Kentucky Dorothy Burdette 300 Poplar Street, Waycross, Georgia Margaret Cartter Route 8, Box 224, San Antonio, Texas Jane Clark 2210 Calder Avenue, Beaumont, Texas Mildred Clarke 8 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland Joan Clinton 16535 Edinborough Road, Detroit, Michigan Roberta Cole Motor Route A, North Platte, Nebraska Elizabeth Colean Pawnee, Illinois Carol Combs 16 East Water Street, Troy, Ohio Mary Comer 326 East Seventh Street, Anniston, Alabama Esther Conger 2600 North Twelfth Street, Kansas City, Kansas Frances Cooper Route 6, Sumner, Illinois Margaret Corwin 2525 Larkin Street, San Francisco, California Sara Cottrell 103 Commerce Street, West Point, Mississippi Jeanne Cummings 610 West Fourteenth Street, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Ruth Curry 216 Day Street, Ironwood, Michigan Carolyn Decker 801 North Sixth Street, Lafayette, Indiana Malavon Dennis Ashley, Ohio Helen Donder 412 Wesley Avenue, Oak Park, Illinois Betty Dyson 460 West LaFayette Street, Rushville, Illinois Elizabeth Eberhart 7505 Calumet Avenue, Chicago, Illinois Elizabeth Elliott 5915 Vista Trail, Hollywood, California Frances Faust 207 Oak Street, Bristol, Virginia Rose Flentye L 919 Central Avenue, Wilmette, Illinois Dorothy Floyd 306 Ninth Avenue, Huntington, West Virginia Lillian Francez Crowley, Louisiana Ann Gairing 5500 Lakewood Avenue, Chicago, Illinois Marion Gairing 5500 Lakewood Avenue, Chicago, Illinois Mary Emily Garvey 1221 Catalpa, Chicago, Illinois Virginia Gerdl 2736 Broadway, Evanston, Illinois Elizabeth Gilbert 2006 Speedway, Wichita Falls, Texas Bunny Gillis 216 Washington Avenue, Elyria, Ohio Elberta Gooch 1130 Wood Avenue, Colorado Springs, Colorado Mary Goss 4645 Emerson Avenue, South, Minneapolis, Minnesota Harriett Graybill 307 West Seventh Street, Newton, Kansas Helen Green 216 North Eagle Street, Marshall, Michigan Loraine Gregory 403 North Campbell Avenue, Beloit, Kansas Susan Grover Georgetown, Kentuckv Ruth Haggenjos 3907 Sullivan Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri June Haralson 300 Forest Avenue, Fort Payne, Alabama Helen Hart 2309 Sixth Avenue, Kearney, Nebraska Eloise Hawkins 1401 Grant, Wichita Falls, Texas Virginia Hinn 829 Baltimore Street, Plainview, Texas Frances Hoffman 500 Morth Street, Hannibal, Missouri Rachel Holland Brookdale, Statesville, North Carolina Louise Hollingsworth 59 Bradford Avenue, Mobile, Alabama 197 . Y 5! x- i )r r 5 6! i S£ Louise Huddleston 312 North Jordan, Liberal, Kansas Martha Hunt 1024 Third Avenue, Columbus, Georgia Evelyn Irwin 602 Walnut Street, Decatur, Alabama Sarah Ison 1793 Ponce de Leon Avenue, N. E., Atlanta, Georgia Frances Jenkins 1514 Seventeenth Avenue, Gretta Krauss 314 Owen Street, Saginaw, Michigan Louisa LaBounty 8134 Essex Avenue, Chicago, Illinois Frances LaMar 114 East Craig Place, San Antonio, Texas Betty Lane 2242 Fowler Avenue, Omaha, Nebraska Nancy Lang 2290 Euclid Boulevard, St. Petersburg, Florida Kathleen LaRue Erie, Illinois Louise Latimer 2210 Fifth Street, Port Arthur, Texas Alice Law 301 West Elm Street, Fairbury, Illinois Marjorie Leopold 435 Walnut Street, Fairmont, West Virginia Leah Lindley 400 West Washington Street, Sullivan, Indiana Virginia Lloyd 5725 Washington Boulevard, Ka thryn Loonan 403 West Clarinda Avenue, Shenandoah, Iowa Elizabeth Lybrook Ariston, Advance, North Carolina Florence McAndrew 6438 North Oakley Avenue, Chicago, Illinois Helen McBroom Colony for Epileptics, Cambridge, Minnesota Mary Catherine McConnell 2100 Marshall, Little Rock, Arkansas Marian McMichael 421 South Vine Street, North Platte, Nebraska Louise McMurry Garmer Avenue, Springfield, Tennessee Geraldine Manson 25 Monroe, Terre Haute, Indiana Alice Meyer Prague, Oklahoma Carol Miller 219 State Street, Marinette, Wisconsin Florence Miller 1 107 Grove Avenue, Crete, Nebraska Rita Miller 522 Edgewood Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Lucy Mae Mills 605 South Chestnut, Bristow, Oklahoma Margaret Montgomery Hoxie, Kansas Amelia Moore 551 Government Street, Mobile, Alabama Marion Nicholson Abraham Lincoln Hotel, Springfield, Illinois Evanell Nixon 520 West Third Street, Eureka, Kansas Betty O ' Donnei.l 504 South Jefferson Street, Junction City, Kansas Martha Ozee 1601 Edgar Avenue, Mattoon, Illinois Lilla Lou Peeples Tehuacana, Texas Jane Perkins 1008 Sixth Avenue, Windom, Minnesota Dorothy Pickens 3201 Washington Street, Kansas City, Missouri Catherine Pooley 161 Beard Avenue, Buffalo, New York Antoinette Redwine 401 North Marshall Street, Henderson, Texas Evelyn Reynolds Cave City, Kentucky Margaret Rothert Camden, Arkansas Mary Jane Rowe 215 Day Street, Ironwood, Michigan Virginia Lou Sample 812 South National Avenue, Ft. Scott, Kansas Eleanor Sapp Wy anet, Illinois Mildred Shaefer 1932 Dartmoore Court, Ft. Worth, Texas Edith Scheufler 3009 West Broadway, Great Bend, Kansas Dorothy Schulz 83 Cedar, Wyandotte, Michigan Helen Seldomridge 3639 Curtis Avenue, Omaha, Nebraska Florence Sellevold 1318 Prescott Street, Marinette, Wisconsin Adalyn Sherwood Lake Side Drive, Conway, South Carolina Virginia Mae Showalter 2723 North Tenth Street, Kansas City, Kansas Jane Sipher 161 West Main Street, Norwalk, Ohio Rebecca Smythe Collierville, Tennessee Colberne Spence 1814 Chestnut Street, Hannibal, Missouri Rosalie Spitz Warner Place, Belle Meade, Nashville, Tennessee Betty Storck 1623 Washington Avenue, Parkersburg, West Virginia Lois Stout 215 West Third Street, Junction City, Kansas Virginia Strandberg 11 Morningside Drive, Kansas City, Missouri LeunaTatham Andrews, North Carolina Margaret Thomason Huntsville, Texas Dorothy Wallace 100 East Maple Avenue, La Grange, Illinois Edna Mae Wienold 1409 Dial Court, Springfield, Illinois Elizabeth Willis 616 South Bixby, Sapulpa, Oklahoma Miriam Woodside 609 South Tenth Street, Rocky Ford, Colorado Margaret Yoder 1056 Summit Avenue, Barberton, Ohio 198 ■%z o j i)) J SENIOR DAY STUDENTS ADDRESSES Mary Claire Archibald 2+13 Garland Avenue, Katherine Blair 166 Kenner Avenue, Frances Buchanan 339 Chesterfield, Amanda Caldwell 1929 Twenty-first Avenue, South, Nancy Bell Campbell 2006 Twentieth Avenue, South, Dorothy Cate 507 North Fourteenth Street, Rebecca Clendenning 1037 West Greenwood Avenue, Evelyn Falkner 914 Fifteenth Avenue, South, Mary Rachel Gaston 1920 Blair Boulevard, Isobel Goodloe 1735 Sixteenth Avenue, South, Mary Graham Washington Apartments, Marcei.la Hamilton 1 303 Woodland Street, Roberta Harrington 2500 Belmont Boulevard, Mildred Harris Hillsboro Court, Bonnie Howard 2001 Blair Boulevard, Helen Louthan • Lauderdale Road, Virginia Neil 2100 Belmont Boulevard, Nancy O ' Connor Westminster Apartments, Kathryn Parker 1704 Eighteenth Avenue, South, Louise Porter 1433 Stratton Avenue, Margaret Reuther 1403 Ashwood Avenue, Dorothy Rich 1802 Russell Street, Eugenia Smith Hillsboro Road, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Nashville, Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee 199 Y xy A w r y 5 9 5r J si I ADDRESSES Florence Affleck 3320 Avenue R, Galveston, Texas Rebecca Ainsworth 846 Milam Street, Amarillo, Texas A-Iary Rose Allen 718 North Wayne Street, Piqua, Ohio Harriet Amter 844 Lafayette Street, Denver, Colorado Gladys Anderson 2585 Cadillac Avenue, Detroit, Michigan Lucy Eastman Anderson 1104 North Broadway, Shawnee, Oklahoma Judy Applegath 108 Lane Street, Portland, Oregon Elizabeth Asbury 1922 State Street, New Orleans, Louisiana Elizabeth Atwood 605 Preston Street, North, Ennis, Texas Margaret Augustine 1336 North Water Street, Decatur, Illinois Lola Bacon 1322 North Main Street, Dayton, Ohio Gayle Baker 5828 Washington Boulevard, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Janis Baldwin 601 Woodland Avenue, Duluth, Minnesota Margaret Balsiger 442 West Sixty-seventh Street Terrace, Kansas City, Missouri Warrene Barber 1625 North Twenty-ninth Street, Birmingham, Alabama Amelia Lee Barlow Bardstown, Kentucky Virginia Barr Cedarcrest Farm, Independence, Missouri Isabel Barrus Carleton, Michigan Sue Barton 140 Greening, Las Cruces, New Mexico Ruby Mae Baten 2175 Calder, Beaumont, Texas Ellyn Baughman Farmerville, Louisiana Isabell Bauman 17882 Lake Road, Lake wood, Ohio Lucille Beasley 3913 Gallatin Road, Nashville, Tennessee Jane Beeson 703 East Main Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana Mildred Bemis 401 East Elm Street, Prescott, Arkansas Dorothy Benton 50 Oak Ridge, Ft. Thomas, Kentucky Virginia Berry 502 Duck Street, Stillwater, Oklahoma Naomi Black 1725 N Street, Bedford, Indiana Josephine Blackburn Camargo, Oklahoma Gratia-Belle Blackman 1806 Wood Avenue, Colorado Springs, Colorado Helen Blood 31 South Rock Hill Road, Webster Groves, Missouri Maxine Blustin 1700 Bayard Park Drive, Evansville, Indiana Mary Eiizabeth Boatner Sumner, Mississippi Glen Bogue Parker, South Dakota Juliana Bollen 506 East Tremont Street, Denison, Iowa Marguerite Boomhower Bad Axe, Michigan Mary Elizabeth Borneman 1126 East Jackson Boulevard, Elkhart, Indiana Ruth Brandon 211 McComb Street, Martin, Tennessee Carolyn Brooks South Eighth Street, Mayfield, Kentucky Eleanor Browne 412 North Fourth Street, Marshalltown. Iowa Mary Helen Brown Fincastle, Ohio Marion Brown 4537 Dupont Avenue, South, Minneapolis, Minnesota Vivian Brown 4537 Dupont Avenue, South, Minneapolis, Minnesota Mary Elizabeth Bunn 427 Williams Street, Waycross, Georgia Mary Stewart Burgher 3800 Shenandoah, Dallas, Texas Jessie Burgin Buena Vista, Georgia Sarah Burgin Buena Vista, Georgia Bonham Bush Fort Wood Apartment, Chattanooga, Tennessee Jeanette Caldwell 315 Twenty-fourth Avenue, South, Nashville, Tennessee Ione Calhoon 615 Main Street, Grenada, Mississippi Julia Callahan Box 214, San Saba, Texas Olive Cameron Eighth and West Jefferson Street, Greenfield, Ohio Emily Campbell 251 North Main Street, Suffolk, Virginia Eugenia Candler 20 Houston Street, Druid Hills, Atlanta, Georgia Helen Candler 1260 Briar Cliff Road, Atlanta, Georgia Martha Candler 1260 Briar Cliff Road, Atlanta, Georgia Mary Candler 20 Houston Street, Druid Hills, Atlanta, Georgia Roberta Carroll Claude, Texas Miriam Carter 632 West Fifty-ninth Street, Kansas City, Missouri Beth M. Chamberlain 849 Garfield Street, Denver, Colorado Merle Christensen 6140 North Mozart Street, Chicago, Illinois Mildred Cirkle , 161 Lake View Avenue, Whitfield Bay, Wisconsin Kathryn Clarke 1414 Howard Street, Port Huron, Michigan Frances E. Claypool 404 Tinsley Avenue, Crawfordsville, Indiana Helen Cline 3100 Hamilton Boulevard. Wichita Falls, Texas 200 ) . a )- Np- Alys Macie Cochrane 820 Windsor Avenue, Bristol, Tennessee Irene Cochran Bessemer, Michigan Josephine Cohn 802 West East Boulevard, Winston-Salem, North Carolina Ann Coleman Gate City, Virginia Annie Colvard 101 South Crest Road, Chattanooga, Tennessee Sheila Conley 306 Pearl Street, Terrell, Texas Gladys Cook 41 8 North Rose Avenue, Breckenridge, Texas Marian Cox 312 West Seventh Street, Jasper, Indiana Frances Crain 201 East Methvin Street, Longview, Texas Jane Crane 763 Cobb Street, Athens, Georgia Marian Crawford 700 Seward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan Arlene Crissman 607 West Fifth Street, Rochester, Michigan Cathleen Cummings Brownstown, Indiana Kathryn M. Cunningham Milan, Tennessee Jean Cuykendall 1350 Main Street, Fremont, Nebraska Dixie D. Daniel Box 183, Coaldale Road, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada Elizabeth Davis Box 556, Clarendon, Texas Mary Eleanor Davis 34 Maple Court, Indianapolis,_ Indiana Virginia Davis Moorhead, Mississippi Eleanor De Witt 1 Hollywood Arms, Lincoln and Norwood Avenues, Elberon, New Jersey Edna Dickson Route 1, Erin, Tennessee Virginia Mae Diffee 1021 Culberhouse Street, Jonesboro, Arkansas Louise Dills 409 South Thirteenth, Muskogee, Oklahoma Frances Dix 2229 College, Terre Haute, Indiana Frances Virjean Dix 1442 Jonquil Terrace, Chicago, Illinois Janet Donker 412 Wesley Avenue, Oak Park, Illinois Helen Doran 1525 Linden Street, Sidney, Nebraska Miriam Dorney 2401 Allen Street, Allentown, Pennsylvania Elizabeth Dowdy 72 West Fifteenth Street, Chicago Heights, Illinois Roberta Downer 1308 Water Street, Hopkinsville, Kentucky Elizabeth Downie 573 South Market Street, New Wilmington, Pennsylvania Janice Drummond 323 North Price, Hominy, Oklahoma Margaret Dunlap Williamsport, Ohio Annie Katharine Dunn 2436 Cherokee Road, Charlotte, North Carolina Elizabeth Scott Dwyer 1400 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois Mary Eberhardt 216 Eaton Avenue, Hamilton, Ohio Pauline V. Eilber Yale, Michigan Marjorie Eipper 120 Brighton Road, Sniingfield, Ohio Willa Ekel 734 North Washington, Liberal, Kansas Dorothy Emrich Tyronza, Arkansas Delys Louise Estep Marberc Hotel, New Orleans, Louisiana Maria Evans 609 South Meridian Street, Aberdeen, Mississippi Martha Evans 812 South Elm Street, Owatonna, Minnesota Ruth Evans 812 South Elm Street, Owatonna, Minnesota Sarah Jane Fairhead 11 Edgewood Avenue, Albany, New York Alice Cary Falconer Anchorage, Kentucky Helen Fawcett French Lick Springs Hotel, French Lick, Indiana Marceline Feltus Somerset, Natchez, Mississippi Virginia Feltus 519 North Walnut Street, Bloomington, Indiana Sara Ferer 5101 Davenport Street, Omaha, Nebraska Heila Fishman 307 South Fuller Avenue, Grand Rapids, Michigan Terry Fiske 180 Eason Avenue, Highland Park, Michigan Julia Ford 1412 Chamberlain Avenue, Chattanooga, Tennessee Marian Fox 610 Lansing Avenue, Austin, Minnesota Virginia Fox Clarks Hill, South Carolina Lucile Frances 1207 North Broadway, Knoxville, Tennessee Jane Frantz 357 Maple Terrace, Wauwatosa, Wisconsin Cora Bell Fundis Trousdale, Oklahoma Kathryn F. Funk 1403 Old Orchard Road, Vincennes, Indiana Grace Gardner 613 Michigan Avenue, Albion, Michigan Mabel Gardner 3308 Westside Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio Virginia Gardner 236 University Street, Martin, Tennessee Mary Kathryn Garrett 820 Furman Avenue, Corpus Christi, Texas Emmy Lou Garthoffner 4438 West Pine Boulevard, St. Louis, Missouri Betty Jane Gaston 2821 Bush Boulevard, Ensley, Alabama Anne Gayden 106 Deer Creek Drive, Leland, Mississippi 201 i - ry r y Mi ti w c c c c c rc ic c ■7 Jessie German 1360 East Twenty-sixth Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma Jean Gibbs 1302 Fillmore, Topeka, Kansas Lora Gillis 216 Washington Avenue, Elyria, Ohio Dorothy Glenn Collierville, Tennessee Sarah Belle Glover Cheatham Street, Springfield, Tennessee Ruth Goldman 1575 Lake Drive, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Lillian Rosamont Goldstein 71V Marshall Avenue, Southwest, Roanoke, Virginia Dorothy Goodman 136 South Illinois Street, Monticello, Indiana Christine Goolsby 149 North Twenty-seventh Street, Paris, Texas Lucille Goolsby Idabel, Oklahoma Dorothy Gourley 231 Spruce Street, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania Mary Harriet Griffin 2219 Grand Avenue, Cedar Rapids, Iowa Hope J. Guenther 121 Ridgeside Road, Chattanooga, Tennessee HermaGuillet Mancos, Colorado Hattie Gwaltney Tiptonville, Tennessee Elizabeth Lancaster LIadley Ruston, Louisiana Jean Hagenbuch 2867 Sunset Place, Los Angeles, California Margaret Hair 4121 Central Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana Helen Elizabeth Hamilton 1601 Broadway, Paducah, Kentucky Beverly Hamilton 1601 Broadway, Paducah, Kentucky Ethel B. Hamilton 1618 Jefferson Avenue, Knoxville, Tennessee Gladys Hamilton - 405 South Hillside, Wichita, Kansas Katherine Hammond 1336 North Nye Avenue, Fremont, Nebraska Kathryn Hammond 311 West Shiawassee Street, Lansing, Michigan Dawn Hancock 809 Church Street, Marietta, Georgia Irene Harnett 5171 Waterman Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri Patty Douglas Harral P. O. Box 157, Fort Stockton, Texas Kathryn Harvey 419 Highland Drive, Fountain City, Tennessee Natalie Haspel 16 Fountaine Bleau Drive, New Orleans, Louisiana Addeleen Hawkins 2238 Lipscomb Street, Ft. Worth, Texas Elizabeth Hawkins Franklin, Tennessee Elizabeth Lee Haynes Marion, Kentucky Margaret Hays 625 North Washington, El Dorado, Arkansas Sammie Joe Hays 625 North Washington, El Dorado, Arkansas Katherine Heflin 622 Birge Street, Sherman, Texas Norma Henderson 1226 Avenue J , Huntsville, Texas Charlotte Elizabeth Henschel 325 Fifth Avenue, Wauwatosa, Wisconsin Mary Hickman 41 Gilbert Avenue, Terre Haute, Indiana Eunice Hill 1039 Delmonte Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio Evelyn Hill 1820 Central, Cheyenne, Wyoming Katheryn Hinson 721 Callahan Street, Muskogee, Oklahoma Gayle Hinton - 218 North Fourth Street, Watseka, Illinois Maurine Hoadley 27 Central Parkway, Warren, Ohio Dorothy Hockey 1440 Belle Avenue, Lakewood, Ohio Florence Hoffman 3716 Benton Boulevard, Kansas City, Missouri Caroline Hogue 910 Montgomery Avenue, Sheffield, Alabama Elizabeth Holcomb 33200 Grand River, Farmington, Michigan Gracellen Holdeman 411 South Third, Elkhart, Indiana Clementine Holman 606 North Jackson Street, Albany, Georgia Jean Holtsinger 627 West Main Street, Morristown, Tennessee Juanita Hormel Fairview Place, Austin, Minnesota Daphne Horner 304 Lindsay Street, Bristol, Virginia Tomasine Horton 1420 East Eighth Street, Okmulg ee, Oklahoma Nancy Hotchkiss 314 College Avenue, Houghton, Michigan Morlais Householder Fairbury, Illinois Frances Elizabeth Hubbell 417 East Avenue, Elyna, Ohio Julia Elaine Hughes 1103 West Main Street, Van Wert, Ohio Margaret Hughes 303 Fountain Avenue, Paducah, Kentucky Rosalie Hulberg 1333 Lunt Avenue, Chicago, Illinois Gail Hunt 15621 Terrace Road, East Cleveland, Ohio Florence Major Hurston Cullman, Alabama Rosemary Insull 1145 East Sixteenth Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma Jane Irwin 601 Canal Street, Decatur, Alabama Julia Isaac - 1248 South First Street, Evansville, Indiana Jean Ivins Crawford, Nebraska Clarabelle Jacobs 331 Seventh Avenue, Wauwatosa, Wisconsin 202 sp . i y n 7 S 3 7 W(Cv c t l C 1 i I Virginia Jarrett 900 Broad Street, Dunbar, West Virginia Betty Johnson Fair Acres, Route 1, Moline, Illinois Esther Jane Johnson 1639 First Avenue, East Cedar Rapids, Iowa Edith Jones Farmington, Iowa Geraldine Kennedy 1241 Ninth Avenue, Sidney, Nebraska Wilmena B. Kennedy 1241 Ninth Avenue, Sidney, Nebraska Mary Helen Kingston 1210 West Gandy Street, Denison, Texas Mildred Kipp 815 North Lincoln Avenue, Flastings, Nebraska Jeannette Kircher 2229 Cleveland Boulevard, Granite City, Illinois Alice Margaret Kirkpatrick 456 Eustis Street, Huntsville, Alabama Helen Louise Knight 9907 Lake Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio Mary Jane Knight 1217 East Main Street, New Albany, Indiana Madeline Knox 318 South Durand Avenue, Jackson, Michigan Louise Koch 1058 Forty-fourth Street, Des Moines, Iowa Virginia Kohlhausen 606 Colquitt Avenue, Houston, Texas Gretchen Kolliner Sunnycrest, Stillwater, Minnesota Mildred Koy 321 Texas Avenue, Texarkana, Texas Ethel B. Krieger 4464 South Sixth Street, Louisville, Kentucky Velma Kundert New Glarus, Wisconsin Susanna E. Kunkle 1804 East High Street, Springfield, Ohio Phyllis Krowarz 3178 West Ninety-fourth Street, Cleveland, Ohio Elizabeth Lanfgord 2290 Euclid Boulevard, St. Petersburg, Florida Alice Gertrude Lasater 404 North Poplar, Paris, Tennessee Dorothy Lassers 1828 Euclid Avenue, Chicago Heights, Illinois Ruth Marcella Lauer 374 East Northwood Avenue, Columbus, Ohio Georgia Lee Harlan, Kentucky Lillie Hudspeth Lee 834 Chestnut Street, Gadsden, Alabama Shirley Lege 5302 Swiss Avenue, Dallas, Texas Mary Franke Lemmon 719 Fordale Avenue, Winnetka, Illinois Mauri ne Le Neveu 1606 Jackson Street, Amarillo, Texas Josephine Leonard 2514 Market Street, Youngstown, Ohio Pearl Lewenauer 530 Marion Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Helen Leyse 1003 Milwaukee Street, Kewaunee, Wisconsin Gladys Lindsay 806 North Gay Street, Mt. Vernon, Ohio Mignon Lindsey Bernice, Louisiana Mary Pillow Long Mt. Pleasant, Tennessee Mary Lovell Monticello, Iowa Bertha Lubeck 180 Delaware, Chicago, Illinois Martha Lubeck 180 Delaware, Chicago, Illinois Violet Lyle Bridgeport, Michigan Marion Lyles Okolono, Mississippi Betty M. Lyons 912 First Street, Jackson, Michigan Sarah Elizabeth McClain 623 Gilbert Street, Danville, Illinois Judith McCormick Albany, Indiana Mary Carolyn McCoy 630 Third Street, Marietta, Ohio Theron McFarland Bentonville, Arkansas Berenice McGregor 1119 Woodside Drive, Flint, Michigan Mary Frances McKelvey 1023 Woodland Avenue, Springfield, Illinois Emily McKenzie Ashburn, Georgia Margaret McKenzie 2028 Main Street, La Crosse, Wisconsin Mildred McKinstry 509 East Forty-first Street, Savannah, Georgia Jean MacLean 528 South Prospect, Grand Rapids, Michigan Elizabeth Manning 24 Lamboll Street, Charleston, South Carolina Martha Bell Mannington 5325 East Seventeenth Avenue, Denver, Colorado Mary Ruth Martin P. O. Box 56, Pell City, Alabama Reba Mauer 847 Barnett Avenue, Kansas City, Kansas Ann May Sumner, Mississippi Florence May 1322 West Seventeenth Street, Davenport, Iowa Lois May 1129 Nye Avenue, Fremont, Nebraska Juanita Catherine Mays 1101 Van Buren Street, Amarillo, Texas Charley Merrell 2801 Acklen Avenue, Nashville, Tennessee Harriett Merrick 725 South Warren Avenue, Saginaw, Michigan Polly Miles 512 Houston, Kaufman, Texas Beatrice Miller Elkhorn, West Virginia Elizabeth Miller 238 East South Street, Winchester, Indiana Harriet Miller 135 Court Street, Covington. Virginia 203 y i r r imw iW, i ? . Madge Rosalynde Miller 410 West Washington Street, Lebanon, Indiana Margaret Miller P. O. Box 503, Culpeper, Virginia Virginia Mabel Miller 1128 West Stephenson Street, Freeport, Illinois Virginia Milligan Route 3, Attica, Indiana Dorys Mitchell 420 Avenue I and Fifth Street, Crowley, Louisiana Ellen Mitchell 730 North Wood Avenue, Florence, Alabama Kathryn Mitchell Wynnewood, Oklahoma Marinell Mitchell Marfa, Texas Frances Mitchener Sumner, Mississippi Emily Monks 164 South Water Street, Kittanning, Pennsylvania Edith Nell Montgomery Wisner, Louisiana Mary Jo Moore 1420 Market Street, Mobile, Alabama Rosa Moore Lula, Mississippi Mary Elizabeth Morgan 2601 State Street, Little Rock, Arkansas Mary Elizabeth Morgan Rayville, Louisiana Rena Morgan Route 1, Box 163, Independence, Missouri Juanita Morphew 212 West Seminole Street, Seminole, Oklahoma Gloria Morris 758 Franklin Street, Denver, Colorado Sadie Louise Morris P. O. Box 35, Demopolis, Alabama Patricia Morrison 719 Noyes Street, Evanston, Illinois Florence Halbert Moss 99 North Kanawha Street, Beckley, West Virginia Nancybelle Moss Mt. Sterling, Kentucky Avon Motlow Lynchburg, Tennessee Katherine Moulton 14 Frelinghuysen Avenue, Battle Creek, Michigan Helen Murphy Brownstown, Indiana Rosemary Murphy 536 Claremont Avenue, Ashland, Ohio Tommye Murphey Barnhart, Texas Barbara Myers 2083 Clermont Street, Denver, Colorado Elinor Neckerman 206 Forest Street, Madison, Wisconsin Ann Newman Mascot, Tennessee Nancy Newman Mascot, Tennessee Mary Cathrene Newton 6151 Winthrop Avenue, Chicago, Illinois Mary Frances Norviel 1107 Arrow Avenue, Anderson, Indiana Jane Nowels 1528 Wood Avenue, Colorado Springs, Colorado Avis Olmsted 2256 Frances Lane, W. H., Cincinnati, Ohio Donna Oviatt 3052 Huntington Road, Cleveland, Ohio Jane Owens _ _r 6701 Turtle Creek Boulevard, Dallas, Texas Julia Margaret Paris 508 South Church Street, Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin Jeanette L. Peak 606 North Iona Street, Albion, Michigan Clara Grace Peck 225 Puritan Avenue, Highland Park, Michigan Mary Bernice Perkins Hodgenville, Kentucky Eleanor Peterson New Baltimore, Michigan Ruth Peterson 4400 North Pennsylvania Street, Indianapolis, Indiana Dorothy-Jane Pfeiffer 807 North Mulberry Street, Muncie, Indiana Elizabeth Phillips 513 South Main Street, New Castle, Indiana Mary Pittman 715 Furman Avenue, Corpus Christi, Texas Mary Frances Pope 2036 Ninth Street, East Moline, Illinois Mary Adele Pray 339 West Wesley Street, Jackson, Michigan Katherine Prince 735 North Grand Avenue, Waukesha, Wisconsin Marian Prinz 2311 Village Drive, Louisville, Kentucky Elizabeth Proctor 1516 Elm Street, Lumberton, North Carolina Sara Props 911 East Jackson Street, Muncie, Indiana Mary Carter Purnell 902 East Boulevard, Charlotte, North Carolina Mary Helen Putman 2301 Fairfield Avenue, Ft. Wayne, Indiana Elizabeth Ragon 404 North Main Street, Bolivar, Tennessee Lola Ralls 1143 Sixth Avenue, Gadsden, Alabama Mary Ramsey P. O. Box 7, Farmerville, Louisiana Caroline E. Rankin 501 Thompson Street, Saginaw, Michigan Jean Rankin 1007 Kensington Road, Grosse Point, Michigan Louise Rash North Middletown, Kentucky Jane Rayburn 1241 Thoreau, Cleveland, Ohio Winogene Rayner 1817 Jerome Street, Lansing, Michigan Annie Kate Rebman . Courtland, Alabama Corda Redfern 1649 Greenleaf Avenue, Chicago, Illinois Barbara Reed 20 Lakewood Avenue, Schenectady, New York Elizabeth Richmond 2017 Drayton Street, Savannah, Georgia 204 W . N l t TF IUHSSLS Z 6 C O C IC C C % k t 9 ? X . Virginia Lee Rigdon 301 East Broadway, Danville, Indiana Ada Roach Newport, Michigan Miriam E. Roberts 505 Wabash Avenue, Marion, Indiana Annette Robertson 191 Lancaster Avenue, Buffalo, New York Helen Rogers 506 South High Street, Bloomington, Indiana Wilma C. Rogers Webster Hotel, Chicago, Illinois Dorothy Rose 2737 Endicott Road, Cleveland, Ohio Elizabeth Leslie Ross 90 West Depot Street, Concord, North Carolina Arabel Rowe Kaufman, Texas Cassie Allen Royster Riddleton, Tennessee Katharine Russell 1206 Seventh Avenue, Jasper, Alabama Helen Ruth 3225 Harvest Avenue, Pleasant Ridge, Cincinnati, Ohio Mary Ryan 451 Harvard Terrace, Frankfort, Indiana Ruth Rymer 2620 Ocoee Street, Cleveland, Tennessee Ann Ryther Army Building, Omaha, Nebraska Naomi Saip 2020 First Street, Belleville, Kansas Genevieve Sallee 302 Bettis Street, Pocahontas, Arkansas Camille Sanderson 201 North Gaines Street, Ennis, Texas Virginia Sargeant 3700 Charlotte, Kansas City, Missouri Allison Saxe 207 West Carroll Street, Portage, Wisconsin Fanchon Sayler 313 Fifth Street, Marietta, Ohio Sue Schaeffer 324 Richmond Avenue, Dayton, Ohio Margaret Scheumann 4029 South Harrison Street, Ft. Wayne, Indiana Vera Schlenker 721 Lexington Avenue, Dayton, Ohio Marion Gertrude Schrubb 459 Second Avenue, Wauwatosa, Wisconsin Marjorie C. Schott 335 West High Avenue, New Philadelphia, Ohio Nancy Schumacher Franklin Road, Nashville, Tennessee Elizabeth Scott 1122 West Division Street, Grand Island, Nebraska Cecelia Scott 2308 South Cincinnati, Tulsa, Oklahoma AIary Scott 415 West Sycamore Street, Kokomo, Indiana Betty Seager, West Lake Hotel, Rocky River, Ohio Katherine Seager West Lake Hotel, Rocky River, Ohio Frances Sears 5008 North Meridian Street, Indianapolis, Indiana Virginia Wallace Selby 312 North Main Street, Fairmont, Indiana Dorothy Sellars 422 Park Avenue, Burlington, North Carolina Helen Sellers Tyler Hill, Anniston, Alabama Marjorie Semans 727 West Twenty-third Street, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Helen Senn 910 Cherry, Green Bay, Wisconsin Dorothy Shel ly 452 West Point Court, University City, Missouri Eleanor Isabella Sherwood 717 Fourth Avenue, North, Great Falls, Montana Marjorie Sherwood 717 Fourth Avenue, North, Great Falls, Montana Marion Shindel 841 Wyoming Avenue, Kingston, Pennsylvania Elizabeth Shirk 200 Walnut Street, Hanover, Pennsylvania Helen Siess 903 Broad Street, Lake Charles, Louisiana Marian Silverman 5837 McGee Street, Kansas City, Missouri Jean Simmons Smiths Grove, Kentucky Jessie Deane Simmons 915 Hanover Avenue, Norfolk, Virginia Eileen Simon 1130 Alameda Drive, Portland, Oregon Nell Skaggs San Saba, Texas Dana Smith 1308 Windsor Avenue, Bristol, Tennessee Dorothy Smith 3199 West Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio Frances Dean Smith 107 West Washington Street, Fayetteville, Tennessee Isabel Smith 502 Second National Bank Building, Warren, Ohio Jane Smith 351 Franklin Street, Marion, Ohio Josephine Smith 107 West Washington Street, Fayetteville, Tennessee Mildred Ann Smith Box 596, Weslaco, Texas Sarah Smith Tiptonville, Tennessee Victoria Spalding 134 Bridge Street, East, Belleville, Ontario, Canada Virginia Spangler Lizton, Indiana Jeanette Spann 602 West Main Street, Dothan, Alabama Jean F. Spencer 549 Gladstone Avenue, Southeast, Grand Rapids, Michigan Alice Sprague 1505 South Third Street, Beatrice, Nebraska Dorothy Spurr 401 North Park, Seminole, Oklahoma Emily Squire 11428 Cedar Road, Cleveland, Ohio Dorothy Blanche Standifer 502 West Broadway, Elk City, Oklahoma Ruth Staten 4009 Pershing Drive, El Paso, Texas Dorothy Stebbins Gary ville, Louisiana 205 KO W . - N i Wggg ( C C t C .C f O ] Elsie G. Stern 6020 Drexel Ave., Chicago, Illinois Marjorie Stevens S3 Barton Avenue, Akron, Ohio Dorothy Stewart 722 Lakadair, Orlando, Florida Sylvia Sue Stewart 603 Sixth Street, Garden City, Kansas Anna Belle Stokes Briceville, Tennessee Virginia Stotler 120 West Bluff, Streator, Illinois Jane Stripling 515 North Street, Nacogdoches, Texas Helf.ne Sweeney 268 Morris Avenue, Southeast, Grand Rapids, Michigan Margaret Sydnor 211 North Seventh Street, Mayfield, Kentucky Anna Bob Taylor 3710 Mt. Vernon, Houston, Texas Betty Taylor - 1844 South Wisconsin Street, Racine, Wisconsin Mary Taylor 33 West Fourth Street, Elyria, Ohio Iane Terry St. Paul Hotel, St. Paul, Minnesota Emmalee Anne Thomas 28 Kenmore Road, Indianapolis, Indiana Helen Carolyn Thomas : 348 Berwyn Road, Birmingham, Michigan Jean E. Thomas -• 1417 Virginia Street, Charleston, West Virginia Mary Evelyn Thomas 348 Berwyn Road, Birmingham, Michigan Genevra Francis Thome 562 West Main Street, Sparta, Wisconsin Lavelle Thompson Hartsville, Tennessee Eleanor Thornton -- T 715 Elm, Pawnee, Oklahoma Vilma Tietjen 4668 Thirtieth Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Louise Toombs Washington, Georgia Betty Townsend 4100 Broadway, San Antonio, Texas Eleanor Thornton Townsend 4100 Broadway, San Antonio, Texas Gibson Trotter Main Street, Monticello, Arkansas Charlotte Twitty 3319 North Meridian Street, Indianapolis, Indiana Courtney Thompson .-- 181 Congress Street, Bradford, Pennsylvania Jean Thompson 181 Congress Street, Bradford, Pennsylvania Virginia Throgmorton - - -6225 Kenmore Avenue, Chicago, Illinois Evelyn Ulmann ' 5917 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri Florence Van Dervort 205 East Oglesby, Salem, Illinois Mary Elizabeth Van Dyke 1902 Jackson Street, Sioux City, Iowa Erin Vaughn Tiptonville, Tennessee Willamae Vinson 301 Oakwood Avenue, Ottumwa, Iowa Anease Volkmann Box 37, Menard, Texas Jane von Seggern Wayne, Nebraska Hazel Wade San Benito, Texas Martha Walker Magnolia, Arkansas Peggy Wallace 3872 Broadview Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio Lucille Wallin Sidney, New York Margaret Walling 727 Marion Street, Denver, Colorado Helen Louise Warmath 1625 Main Street, Humboldt, Tennessee Allie Estelle Watkins 205 South Franklin Street, Aberdeen, Mississippi Billie Holley Watson 1612 Sixth Avenue, Ft. Worth, Texas Catherine Whelan Yukon, Oklahoma Florence Gordon Whitfield Thirty-third and Indian Beach Road, Sarasota, Florida Mildred Wiggs 87 North Belvedere Boulevard, Memphis, Tennessee Betty Williams 7003 St. Charles Avenue, New Orleans, Louisiana Emma Jeane Willis 913 East Taylor, Harlingen, Texas Elizabeth A. Wilmot 1406 Park Avenue, Pekin, Illinois Louise Windham 302 North Michigan Avenue, Saginaw, Michigan Clair Nell Woods 1912 Wentworth, Houston, Texas Elinor Woolf 2114 Kanawha Street, Charleston, West Virginia Bessie Mae Yeager 516 Northwest Second Street, Mineral Wells, Texas Lucille C. Zarne 1325 Prospect Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Dorothy Zaug 635 Wyman, New London, Wisconsin 206 W t ) i 4 ) r r rfrfrtt Ry l LW t c C C t C - i § 7 c fe ■? I A. A C H At L ir AYgA i 207 t . - -x g ' Exclusive Apparel C7eatu? ' i?ig DOBBS HATS for Women S i t Ji Slpp for Louies 214 6 AVE,N. NASHVILLE SEYBOLD BUILDINC MIAMI Music Will Complete the Joys of Your Home saza AGNIFICENT furniture, rare paintings, and exquisite drapery are evidences of affluence and good taste; but what do these things, beautiful as they may be, con- tribute to the culture and happiness of the owner? That a house is wonderfully fur- nished does not by any means indicate that it is a happy home. Something more is re- quired, and that is music. Music from time immemorial has always been and still is the greatest entertainer the world has ever known. In the most beautiful homes, in the humblest abode, its influence is recognized. What a sad commentary to see a home without a musical instrument ! Then let us not forget the importance of a fine piano, a Duo-Art Reproducing Piano, Orthophonic Victrola or dependable Radiola. All of these as well as every musical requirement are available at Music Head- quarters upon most con- venient terms. O.E.HOUCE FMMO C© 611 Church Street — Vendome Building Our Honor Roll of Leading Pianos Steinway Weber George Steck Vose Kurtzman Ludwig Stroud The Duo-Art Reproducing Piano AND Others LITTLE ROCK 309-311 Main St. MEMPHIS 103 So. Main St. SHREVEPORT, LA. 211 Texas St. jfgv man dettjfet fc eitfefiaurri inc. Founded ie62 The Original Belle of Ward-Belmont Had a passion for trinkets — a sense of propriety — a memory book (and mem- ories). But haven ' t we all! She wore lace mits — knew her skirt lengths — looked forward to shopping days — and spent them in Loveman ' s. But don ' t we all! KLEEMAN ' S TEA ROOM and CANDIES W r P F 329 Union Street NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE at LEBECK ' S Where the Smart Can Be Thrifty •■l||1 ' - ' l||| I||l r,| l|| l||l ' -l|||l ' - ' l|||l ' - ' l|||l ' --l||||l-M|||l -l|||p- ' l|||p- ' l||||i-M|||r ' l||||i-M|||l ' - ' l||||i-t||||l ' When you send your dollar on a shopping errand, you, as a student, are concerned with what that dollar will bring you in modernism, alertness, progressiveness, fashion and economy supremacy in the store the shopping is done. Lebeck advertisements, carefully com- piled, give you the new spirit of the day . . . are in key with the spirit of tomor- row, and detail in stories of fashion, dili- gent search for economy and intense merchandising reasons why this institu- tion, more than 56 years successfully pro- gressive in Nashville, is supreme in the department store field. Dedicated to youth, we are conscious of our obligation to the young women of Ward- Belmont, and invite your patronage — whether you shop in person, by phone or mail. MORE MERITS for the Student by Eating Plenty of TRU-LI-PURE DAIRY PRODUCTS DAILY Our Cream Crest milk, cream, butter and cheese — along with healthful recreation — provide a high standard of efficiency — ZZubti. Nashville Pure Milk Co. Phone 7-6501 14th and Church Street NASHVILLE. TENN. The CASTNER-KnOTT Co. NASHVILLE Apparel for moderns .he faultless taste of conception which char- acterizes Castner ' s apparel and accessories has retained for us the favour of younger fashionables. ACCOUNTS SOLICITED PARCEL-POST ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION SWISS CLEANERS NASHVILLE ' S LARGEST and BEST DRY CLEANING ES TABLISHMENT NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE Baird-Ward Printing Company Specializing in Publications : : Catalogs : : Booklets 150-152-154 Fourth Avenue, North NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE A Printing House of Proven Service HALL BENEDICT iETNA INSURANCE SERVICE Nashville Trust Building Newest and Largest Hotel Andrew Jackson 400 ROOMS — 400 BATHS SO Rooms $2.50 90 Rooms .... $3.00 1X5 Rooms .... $3.50 75 Rooms $4.00 20 Suites . . . $10.00 up 40 Sample Rooms Circulating ice water. Every room outside exposure. Indi- vidual bed lights. A hotel -where you -will meet and eat the belt. Direction Dinkier Hotel Company Dispensers of True Southern Hospitality. Special Attention Given to Students of Ward-Belmont and Their Parents E. E. GAMBILL MANAGER Chiffon Frocks For Now and All Summer Wear Delightful summery affairs in exquisite pastel shades and gay floral designs — fash- ioned in the newest modes along girlish lines. I(ich, Schwartz Joseph C. T. Cheek Sons WHOLESALE GROWERS iiiiiiiiiiiiim mi iiimimiiiiiiiimiii . ' I ■No. 5 Cummins Station H. J. GRIMES CO. 215 Public Square a i minim PA.MOUS FOR ' ' - | Fine Linens | iiiiiiiiii mi i iimii mi tun j 1 1 1 1 mi nun 1 1 1 1 1 itiu i iniii 17 Always Glad to Serve You Nashville - Tennessee Foster Parkes Co. DANCE PROGRAMS CLUB BIDS MONOGRAM STATIONERY WEDDING INVITATIONS and ANNOUNCEMENTS SOCIAL ENGRAVING For All Occasions 215 Third Avenue, North • ' A BOVE ALL QUALITY Style First McCallum and Golden Art Hosiery Quality Always Price Range $8.75 to $20 It ' s a real pleasure to serve Ward-Belmont students and your friends, and we appreciate your patronage. Feminine Footwear 504 CHURCH STREET Southern Maid •COFFEE- Ask Your Grocer for It LAHART COFFEE COMPANY Nashville, Tenn. for FLOWERS Atlanta — Chattanooga — Nashville Compliments of BENSON PRINTING COMPANY YOUNG WOMEN ' S NOVELTY FOOTWEAR A Most Complete Hosiery Department Mail Orders Solicited MEADORS 408 Union Street Nashville, Tennessee Nashville City Transfer Co., Inc. Owners and Operators of YELLOW CABS :: RED TOP CABS BROWN BAGGAGE TRUCKS OFFICIAL COMPANY FOR ALL RAILROADS AND LEADING HOTELS Seven-Passenger Touring Cars for Sightseeing. . . . $3.00 per hour BAGGAGE AGENTS FOR WARD-BELMONT SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN STUDENTS BAGGAGE CHECKED THROUGH TO DESTINATION WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE REDUCED CAB RATES No Charge for Extra Passengers PHONE 6-0101 {} Now Ride for One Fare T. D. ANDERSON R. J. ANDERSON M. D. ANDERSON TELEPHONE 6-1189 for Oysters, Fish, Celery and Lettuce ANDERSON FISH OYSTER CO. Wholesale and Retail 320-322 Fourth Avenue, North NASHVILLE TENNESSEE I BURN I | ST. f ! BERNARD | | coal r 1 1 FROM OUR OWN MINES DIRECT TO THE CONSUMERS SINCE 1870 JAMES R. LOVE, Manager ST. BERNARD COAL COMPANY PHONE 6-3101 33-35 ARCADE NASHVILLE. TENN IF YOU WANT FIRST-CLASS MEAT YOU CAN REST ASSURED THAT WE HAVE IT Alex Warner Son Stall 17 Market House Phone Us When You Want It Again H. P. Murrey Co. WHOLESALE GROCERS NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE Distributors of Register of Merit Food Products Vanderbilt University Nashville, Tennessee The University Offers Courses Leading to Degrees in the Following Six Schools: I. Thl College of Arts and Sciences II. The School of Engineering III. The School of Religion IV. The School of Law V. The School of Medicine VI. The School of Nursing Send for Catalogue, stating the department in which you are interested. Address the Registrar. James H. Kirkland, LL.D., D.C.L., Ph.D. Chancellor Keith-Simmons Company INCORPORATED 412-414-416 UNION STREET SPORTING GOODS Hardware — Paint — House Furnishings Mill, Mine, Factory Supplies RADIO Our Hardware Wears Paints — Glass — Ladders — Brushes WARREN BROTHERS CO. Now Located 1146-48 Broadway A. J. THUSS Photographer Studio Beautiful ' IIIP ' - ' IIII ' -MIII ' - ' III 1805 West End Ave. For Campus, Parties, Dates or just good times — get your shoes at Chandler ' s. Always HANDLERS SHOES cqt 506 Church Street Bibles Fountain Pens Good Books Stationery Spend Your Leisure Hours with . . . Good Books WE CARRY A COMPLETE STOCK OF THE LATEST Fiction, Biography, Theology and Miscellaneous Books Lamar Whitmore 810 Broadway Nashville, Tenn. IF IT ' S TO (On EaV With Cootf In or to VOr {.With Drink J Out Of WE HAVE IT HOTEL, RESTAURANT. CAFETERIA, COLLEGE AND INSTITUTION EQUIPMENT A SPECIALTY REFRIGERATORS HOTELS, INSTITUTIONS, BUTCHERS AND GROCERS McKay Cameron Co. -We Sell for Less 214 Third Avenue, North Nashville, Tennessee Phone 6-2822 WHITE ' S Truriks and Leather Goods Two Stores 609 Church Street 21 Arcade ALLOWAY BROTHERS COMPANY DISTRIBUTORS OF MILK FED POULTRY Table Test Eggs FANCY CREAMERY BUTTER 150 Second Avenue. South Nashville, Tenn. Bradford ' s Known in Nashville Over 4 1 Years ! Everything in FURNITURE RUGS, ETC. At Lowest Prices T i 168-170 Third Ave., N. (Just South of Church St.) ICE CREAM The Best Since 1890 THE FLAVOR ' S THERE IN as h v ill e IR aitw-ay Eli pTit Co. «, ch .ch s, nt. ,-«! A Nashville Institution of Service Extends Its Greetings to Ward-Belmont And to the Classes Past- Present-— and Future Ladies ' S porting Goods and Accessories Nashville ' s Leading Clothiers Since 1843 416-422 Church Street Next to Maxwell House HOTEL HERMITAGE A Robert Meyer Hotel NASHVILLE ' S FINEST Fireproof 250 Rooms European 250 Baths Rates $2.50 Per Day and Up T. J. SMITH Celery and Iceberg Lettuce Every Day in the Year Throughout the Years-— Its uniform goodness delights and pleases. ICE CREAM Made Its Way by the Way It ' s Made All Kinds Fruits and Vegetables 62 City Market NASHVILLE, TENN. HARRISON BROS. Florists B. H. STIEF JEWELRY CO. Church Street at Capitol Boulevard JEWELERS OF DISTINCTION SINCE 1858 EXQUISITE GIFTS SIMPLE OR ELABORATE T i 6 17 Church St. NASHVILLE. TENN. SMART ACCESSORIES FOR PARTIES BEAUTIFUL STATIONERY ENGRAVING SOCIALLY CORRECT Use Our Engravings . . .Your Annual Will Lead the Field in Quality
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