Samford University - Entre Nous Yearbook (Birmingham, AL)

 - Class of 1922

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Samford University - Entre Nous Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1922 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 226 of the 1922 volume:

KM librU .-v -, i I I ♦ ==  r= «Kr=XKz K==  c= «oc== « c= «K=  = 0 ? s I a 5 5 Bjafimrb ' s (Alma fflxtet fjgmn By DR. GEORGE MACON, Alumnus of Howard College I (Eune, ©lj ,iftotijer ,3B ar Seruaalem O j, Howard Alma Mater, true, I love thy glorious name. Deserving every honor due. To an unsullied fame. I ' ll love thee through each fleeting breath, For all that thou hast done. And in the agonies of death. Re still thy loving son. Oh, Alma Mater dear, thy life A treasure is to me. Thou, Phoenix fair, through flames and strife, Hast shown thy right to be. Since poverty has made thee rich And struggle made thee strong, I view thee in thy self-made niche, And burst to filial song. Oh, parent true, the future fair Must hold but good for thee. For hope ' s fruition waits thee there, In blest reality. And sons like thine will make thee shine With glory all thine own, And bring to thy maternal shrine Not gifts of gold alone. I I I I I 0 = MOO =40000 0OMO =X0OK= « v Xv v : e Izntxt-lSmx % gfatoad Jirtfm  JJSoftrarb (Cnllcqc 192 2 P n BUSHED BY V V V, v,V j 1 1 I lurntiuujiam, Alabama  i i u ill S iHHiMliili $ £ty 5 r DWH1T1 -£ V W.WTON OH. 1M IIE.F %J5 D D 1 n Sponenr I I I c L JLoJibfe D D iEPfciBi L i c 3 n □ 1 i i m D D diaftys lU:itliiuikui D D ft 19 ffigw 4| ' l Rw nKttRllMm MIM «S 1W MYERS IR.MG . o;a vw 19 r v c D D umtsor D D □ i i 1 □ □ D 1=1 C =1 I i I I 1=1 H H [====5|[=31fpl ][g][ ][c D flj 1 : nt;i Karris □ M=i D D S tratimt Because: lUe lumen- anb revtere his tu ' liaritu, ooob cheer, happu heart anb truocr sympathy; Because: lite are oeeplu grateful fur the inestimable ser- iiiee lie has unselfishly poureb nut for mithcrn illaptists anb fhr Alabama Baptists ttl particular; Secause: lUe are acutely atuare that, hut fur his efforts, ilniuiarit College coulb not exist as it ones fobau; Because: lite are oesirnus that Iiis name shall liue in the hearts aub minos anb mi the lips nf iliomaro hogs anb girls; (The Untie- : nus § taff of iljnluarb College affectionately ocoicates these paqes to Dr. lHashtuytnu Urtjatt (Eruuiptan Sjorefaord the mil tins Annual will b ■ill fully as withii . The College I . • FflCU LTy IIII11IIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIII 3lbc:ils 3for Hutu arii i I I I I I I I i l i 1 I I I I I I I 1 E 1 ! I £ I I I I I I Ideals for an institution of learning are necessarily both physical and spiritual. On the physical side, it is our dream to have in the near future a practically new set of buildings which shall possess architectural beauty and which shall be in harmony with the best traditions of academic construction. These buildings should not only be beautiful, but they should conform to the most modern demands in arrangement and equipment. I he success o] a college depends very largely upon the number of its instructors and their scholastic preparation. .Is the colic grows, it is our purpose to bring into the faculty an increasing number of teachers already successful in the art of instruction and in creatwe ability. It is our hope that the level of study and scholarship in our stu- dent-body may be increasingly hit her; that our students may always exercise a spirit of common honesty in their daily relations to each other, and in their conduct in class and on examination ; that their lives may be guided by a spirit of gentleness and courtesy; that they max become more responsive to generous impulses and noble aspira- tions. It is our desire that Howard College may increase in educational spirit, and that it max become a place in zvhich interests are created, enthusiasms kindled, love for truth inspired, and ivhere learning rather than information is the goal of the teaching. —JOHN C. DAW SOX. Dr. Job n C. Daw son ' . i lent oj Howard Collet □ D Hud v£ $Tz mrM k 3 DC i J feint It u John C. Dawson, A. B., A. . !.. Ph. D . LL. 1) President of the College and Professor of Ri unani M.. I! I : P i . Pero Pratt Burns, A. B., . M. Professor of English Literature A. i;.. i 04-MO; P of Howa ! of English; ( ommandant ' 11 versity of | ' 1- ' . I l.wi es I [orton Chapman V ! ' , . A. M., I ' ll. M. Pri if Religious Education i - Religi i nsm DH WM 1922 d □ 3 DC 3 □ □ i Hsl fl U(c Od Erg|rNous2p □ □ iFacnltu Sumner Albert Eves, A. I!.. S. I ' ... S. M. Professor of Bioloffj A. 1!.. Wake Forest ollegi ' 03; .Marine ' Biolog i oi ' liicago, summe s S. 15., 1 of bicago ' 09; S. M.. Universit; of Natural Sciences. Chowan i i of the Department of Natural Sciences and Profi Liio i i College ' 09- ' 12; I ' i i I liege since June. 1 91 8. Stonewall Jackson Pulliam, A. ! .. A. M. Professi ir of Gr e itin V I!, renin- College, Danville, Ky., A. M.. ibid Instructor and Assistant P . town College Kj .. ' 90 ' 11 ; so] of Greek and Latin in tru I I 50r of Creek- and Latin in Howard ' HI D 11 d □ m Theophilus Randolph Eagles, A. I!.. A. M. Professor of Mathematics tl i i . r... i in i ' i of Mathematics, Profi t Mathematics, Bethany V l.li i North t olina, ' 10 ' 1 . ; Acting P ifess t Mathe 13. 1 ML 3 DC 1922 n II c M L  Vy n D |i ilfblli =l|!M,|l =J|n||n mm o $££Ja N 5s31 3 DC DID Jfamltu William Everett Bohannon B. Sc, A. B., A. M. Director i the Summer School and Professor of Education B. S . Southei n Noi mal Colli B. (CI in Normal Col Life Certificate Graduate, Wi tern Kentuckj Stat) Normal; Institute Instructor; Vu it Educational Survey, Kentucky; A I ' ... (Psy- chology, Indiana Stati University, 1915; A. M. (Education), Indian,! State University ' 16; liraduate Studenl I and Psychology), University f Chicago (six quarters), ' 16- ' 17: President of Association ..i Alabama Colleges ' 20- 21; Professoi of Education, Howard College since June I, 1918. James B. Tram. M. Accts., A. II.. A. M. Acting Professor of History and Economics l. Accts., Camnbell Institute, 1912; A. B., II. .war. 1 Col- 10; . M., Princeton University ' 21; Superintendent of Instruction, (ami. lull Institute ' 12- ' 14; Head of Corn- Department, Baptist Collegiate Institute ' 14- ' 16 i i,. the Presiaent, I owe. allege, ' 19- ' 20; Act- : History and Economics ' 21. Roger W. Allen, B. S.. M. S.. A M. B. S.. Vlabama Polytechnic Institute ' 18; l. S., Ala- bama Polytechnic Institute ' 1 ' ' : M. A.. University of Mi - : Special Graduate Work, University of Illinois: Member Ami ' aemical Society; Member Phi Kappa Phi I Imi. .vary Fraternity, m i □ □ c □ c 3 n c 1922 D DlC 3 DC 3ID 3 DC D □ □ n J- ' arultu French 1 1 nes, A. B., A. M. Assistant Professor of English Graduate of Haywood Institute, X. C; A. B., Meredith College, ' 20; A. M., Cornell University ' 21; Instructor in English and Latin, Lee Baptist Institute, Va., ' 16- ' ! ' : In- structor in English and Latin, Watauga Academy, Tenn.. ' 19 ' 20 Gladstone Jackson, A. B. Instructor in Voice and Director of the Glee Club A. 11. . Howard Collegi I; Student of Robert Lawrence. Birmingham; Graduate Student. Bush Conservatory of Music. Chicago; Director, Glee Club, Howard College, ' 18- ' 19, 19- ' 20; Instructor in Voice since ' 21. Ben mk Spinks, A. B. Instructor in Romance Languages A. I!.. Howard College ' 19; Instructor in Modern I i .( ounty I ligh Scf 1 ' 1 9- ' 21 . n ME u 1922 I 3 □ C □ C □ ID . I IK F. VI N J. Edmund Bri ,lish Instrui vmes Jkii erson Bell Chemistry Instructor J. C. Vaughn Instructor Annie I.. I ' English Ins I Iomer L. Casey an I S9p a asses ■ ' ■• ' ■• ' 3EMI0R3 □ wm I I Senior (Class All D. O Cari la. 1 I  . I - run 3 All INGTON I ' .in Via. A II at will - - - fl 01 □ D 3HD 3 □ C I 922 H Dill 3 DiC UilII □ □ Dili OdXIHrggNouOJOt :□: H =1 □ □ hui uu- CL ' i ass I Gussie Mae Brasfield Dora, Ala. A A II Her step is music and her voice is son Gussie Mac ' s dramatic abilitj has won much fa vorable comment. She lias been the ' lady for two Senior plays, (in-- is somewhat of a heart breaker and sh ' ' she certainl) can trip th fantastic. etarj I reshn an ( lass ' II a Tan Delta ' 18- ' 19; Maid, Howard-Birmingham-Southern Basketball ■ l s ■ i ■ i : Senioi Plaj ' is ' i ' ; Glee Club ' 19- ' 20; 20 !0- ' 21 ; 1 1 ' ■ i ' ■ Rusim VI Vlaid, I ! all ,.-iiiic ' 21- ' 22; Howard Sponsor, Birmingham I; Shelburne Litei lety; V. W. C. Jam es Jefferson Bell Easonville, Ala. l K N Let us not break with him, for he will follow anything that other men begin. - inn i notable characteristics are initiative and pep He is such a Jackal all-trades that it is difficult in keep up with him, but he is generally far in the had. iei Fn hman-Sophomoi e I ' ■■ bal i rig Medal ' If I 1 9 ' ' . .i |ub President, Franklin I iteran Soi Squan and Compass i Hellenic Council ' 20 Pri nli nl . Squan and I pa ■ II ! Fri Angular I te- bating ream ' 20 II ' 21- ' 22 rracl ream ' 20- ' 21 I [onorary Membei rd Club; Instructor, Chemistry ' 19 ' 0 ' 20- ' 21, ' _ ' I - ' _ ' _ ' : Business Manager, l- ' 21, ' 21 22; 1 1 ' ' Y. M . ( ' A. N e n a Harris Birmingham, Via. A A II II hut more than mirth would mortals havi I he i heei fill man ' s a king. Xena is one of the few people who can tell a joke without marring it. She also attained quite a bit of fame as an inventor of juke ami a French litera lure i ' ill. tin pi ator. Reporter, Sftelbui ne Liti rarj Saciet] II i ini. 19 10; Howard ( i knson Stal E ' 20- ' 21 tral-Howard Club; secretai fui CI !0 ' I ; Entri staff ' 21- ' 22; Historian, Senioi Class l- ' 22 I ' y, w. c. . ' 2i I um 3 DC □ 192-2. U □ 3 DC D riunr (L ' l: tss l |- I II l.l X.WIH U I ' .ir! la mark with :i nail) i tl witt retort. Hei J. C Babcock ' Hi n Man . Term. A . man l5al)cock i one of 1 1 1 • -«.- quiet, cheerful fellows whom (iiu- can always count t do tin- right he right time. I ' ri Mam n I-, i ii ii Burton l.i. w. ( □ I 922 m ii°j Hd uu E D D fD@[=]0 ro am oaXJErg g rouTTlP UUI □ Hutmr (III ass Bertha [rene Bates Ensley, Ala. A II . inward sincerity iv ' tll influence the outward I IllCllt. Bertha is quid and sweet, never says much (ex cepl well?). She loves Fish and Fish Io l- her. Shelburne 1 iirls ' ilee l lub ' 20 ' 21 ; iirer, Y. W. C. Club. ' •Hermes ' 20- ' 21. ,A LER F. W.VI S(). Furman, Ala. he dignity oh, keep ii we ' ll. en. l K N iihin info your hands is with yen il sinks or lifts itself to Wat is at once a poet, a scientist, a farmer, a professor, ami, ahove all. a perfeel gentleman. o matter what Ik- undertakes he will be itccessfu! famous and dignified ' . i lass ' 21- ' 22; Poet, f Cla I ouncil ' 21- ' mi... inselor, ] . . . ' innei I ' iblii Spc Rum Catherine Barton Royles, Ala. ATS Hi ith ni.nl, Rul ' I girl a musician of p ise, a fin ent athlete and a u oman ly w oman Sin alw a pa i irses, no mat IJ □ I l □ C 3 DC 1922 □ c MIC D □ □ GUI 0rCClHrBErNous2p 1 3 DC Senior (Class Sum ii r I i a 1 1 1 Birmingham. la. 1 ■i heart and Sumter is in pn md of tw hich sufi thai he is at last heginnii spell. He is an accompli ist, a cheerful fellow, and a LYDIA [LLIAMS Fernhank, Ala. est minds are often th dia came to i in h late to establish herself firmly in the minds and hearts of her classmates. She i- an earnest worker, a cheerful companion, and an all-round athlel Claude E. Matthews Scottsboro, la. A Poets arc all who ■ and tell them. Matty is of the matinee id l type — curly black hair and all that. His thoughts have a philosophical Mini and his tennis racket a dangerous twist Matt believes in rhyme and reason. I ; II Club; Bio Dining anklin Liti V . M. C. . : Poet. nior i la- . □ « 1 I □ □ C 3 DC 3 DC 1922 ]0[1 WE lU i a 1 Jieninr Class I Clarence I). Cox Birmingham, Ala. i Xothiug that ' s plain but may be witty, if thou hast the vein. Clarence always insists on two things — being in love with a pretty girl and never oh never, omitting tla- !) in In- initials. IK- is the greatest l ' Howard has yel produced and is universalh liked. I ' m -i ' li i. Stutlenl IJody ' . ' I; President, Dining mittee; President, Phi!o Lkerari - i , , Leadei i _ ' _ ' : I ' an Helletii ' ' ouncil Gladys Falkner Knsley, Ua. A T i The world must have (treat minds even as spheres situs. Gladys is indeed the sun of all those mortals who inhabit the Latin sphere darkened 1 dread and bewailed Bennett, She is destined and foi d ' ained to become a greal Latin scholar and teacher. But her most outstanding characteristic is her gentle modesty and sweetness. Freshman Marshall ' 18 ' 19 Sophomon Marshall 1 Head Marshall Jn- ' JI; Shelburne Literary .- E. E. Cox Boaz, Via. S K A uozvledgc is power. Mr. ( ox is the most popular man on the campus at exam time, for In has an uncannj ability students understand Mathematics II. cores oi math, students. Mr Cox receives A ' s to ing extent. W inner, A. I) Smith Mi rial I oi l itl i mati ' 19 10 ' i -.i idi mi 1 - ' ' ' ■ Phil ii - 0 i i ; ci ' ' I; Deba I 21 Debate w , ( i imson ni.nl ' . ' : student from M l i Honoi Roll !0, ' l dent, Student Hodj ' □ 000 H □ C HOC 1922 □ c 3 DIE H D J. P. II VI 1 K li- ..rk i- alu.i i pew i WlI.M A IS I A Al Wilma matic al)ilil H URL I : s Binning! K x K ; ll i am, Ala. A I In ' ol man. I It- Mllili n m IdIIoIIE 3 a c 3 DC 3 192.2. Huttnr (CI ass 7T M if 1 1 Bean ( uzts Bessemer, la. Haste thee Xyinph, and b ity. Mattie Bean i know n .- slant smile and good humor. She will chal- lenge Terpsichore for her r i ■_; I t to roll by. ! I. X. Patterson $ K manage t keep a strai ' ass Via. All drill run. alon loreni i to ething, « • know it w ill he d ' i 1922 3 DC 3 DC l n □ □ wmi XIHrgg NOuOP 3 n c n ID 1 heritor (Class J. Ford Robinson idwatcr, Ua. K I ' lr He ' s - little Edna Pate Birmingham, Ala. Edna is a girl upon whom one can always rely. - an i xcellenl student and the epitom md style. She is also, famou charming ilushi William Gregory Sm i Birmingham, Ala. l- K N ■ mily that is d fry the most petu Billie is one of these folks one ban- to argue with ' cause he has a way of making you sei vide. He has quite a reputation as a debater and i s a c, speaker. In track events Billie shines forth. I le can even outrun the I : - Place in Publi □ □ □ C D □ C 3 DC 3 192.2. H m £ U □ C H □ □ D UU(g oiCnESgHNou$2p 3 a c i [01 junior Class John Edmund Brewton Andalusia, Ala. I K X l ' ii w) ite well is at oni rightly and to render properly; it is to have, ii the same time, mind, soul, taste. .11 is the literarj light of Howard College. Hi has alreadj achieved success and fame with his 1 lo no! only excels in hi Id bu( in main well. Vssistant Edit ' Critic. Philomatluc Literary Sociel lis]? ' 19- ' 20; Trea 10; Phi 1 [nstructor, 1 ' . ' ] ; Treasurer, Sho ( !lub, ' Hermi i ' Franklin Phi ] Scholai , Pirst Qua i ool, ' 22. A Distim tii at in nnii ' is student. She well. English, ' 20 ' i ! ] 3 o | h I . Howard nior CI N NIE LOUCASSIA BOY] i Birmingham, la. a r 2 ' he consequent e, ne a faithful and persistenl w irkei ha-- won distinction as a v riter, as Marshall, Ci Assistant ni l Crim : Sophi more Class 1 n 10 Vlarshall, Con mi neni 10 i l ■ esident, lub, I lermes, ' 20- ' 21 ; Vssistanl in, ' 21- ' 2 : I . I- ditoi I rRE-Nous ' Critic, Shi I S ci t i Report ' Howard Club; Cabinet, V. W, I- Ever i Pan I Club. Fran ki.ix ( . ( ' aklisle Birmingham, ia. N ■ That made him quit hile- rank is a heart-breaker as well as a student, likes him. i ■ Literal EH 3 DC 3 U m 1922 hoc 3 DC HDD 3n iltemnrtam iflhises Auihrru lilrlnuro {Irrsiornt of our (Class of ' 21 - ' 22. dim □ $ : nUe otCCIH2aENous2P J luia THutiT A L M A J DC mbition plays no little part the li Ee of every man. e ran climb to lofty heights I f we only think we can. ife to some may be quite sad, To others, bright and gay, Bui when the call to duty comes, May all join in the fray. arch ye on, and take your place, ' I he world cries out begin ! The unprepared are dropping out, The world s in need of men. las. alas, a little pause, To whisper each dear name. Each one we know, each friend we ' ve made. We wish both wealth and fame. i r=i n n i [□lfDifc 1V1 onihs and years may pass away But time can ne ' er sever The friendships dear we have made. 1 es, they go on forever. J nd may we meet from time to time, Throughout a long, long life, I low ' s the world been serving you? old fellow, how goes the strife? 1 ime alone shall prove to all I hal in our heart- we yearn I see our dear old Alma Mater And some day we ' ll return. L. very place musl have its beauty Ever) place ha- its worth, Bu1 I loward, dear old I loward Is the grandest place on earth. l eturn, fond memories gone by, A thousand joys to tell. We ' ll need ihee much, in future years, fter this sa d farewell. - laudi i iii w s. Poet, Senior Clasi 3 □ c 3 DC 192.2. [1 31P Hi I 5][5](5] □ □ 01 La i im oiCOE2 nous2P 3 DC cnior Class iiistorg :oOo : 3jO ' l , | [ING is impossible! I he rats who timidly plodded their kelly green way up the Howard campus in September 1918 are the lordly, the self-possess- ed, the- worthy, the dignified and, yes, the self-satisfied SENK RS of 1922. comprehend this miraculous transformation requires that we imagine unimaginable, accept as credible the incredible, believe the unbelievable and swallow the unswallowable . However, the fact remains that we ARE Seniors and the unraveling of this monstrosity has fallen to my all incapable lot. This recorder lacks not inspiration for the task and hence, half the burden is lifted. We worthy pilgrims who. in 1918, set out on the rocky road to Diplomaville havi countered and nobly defeated every adversary. Mow, ours i ling of con- tentment which comes only with the knowledge of having faced trials and of hav- ing overcome them. But, the budding author must proceed and unfold as faith- fully as possible the history of the class of twenty-two. Amid the blare of bugles and the rumble of drum ;, the Freshman class of 1918 came into existence. Only a few survivors of tha ;tuous period in our history remain. The Student Army Training Corps was located at Howard for a hall year and the military atmosphere added - ' color - ' to our fir t month rathood. We were forced to march in files to class lest the romantic ladv rati should be swept off their feet at the sight of uniform. These trying times were short lived and by the beginning of the second half of our first year, we had shed our timidity and restraint as a snake shed; its skin. We were full fledsjed Fresh- men then, and as such, enjoyed life to the fullest. Y e s, we were per eculed and low-rated on every side for our boldness hut we plaved on, caring little. Righ; here, lei me call attention to the cruel fact that when we were rats, there were no rules to protect us and our greenness. According to our iniquities, we were re- warded; that is, we were not rewarded at all. What cared our light hearts for the knocks and threats of the upper classmen ? Their opinion was nil to us W regarded them as narrow, depraved creatures who knew little and boasted much who neglected to recognize in us true intellect. Can there be any combination more pathetic than ignorance coupled with conceit ' We were less than the dust under the mighty Sophomore ' s foot and felt ourselves to be superior to our pro- lessors. Ihe first year was not a complete failure, however for we met and defeated a formidable foe, Indifferent Ignorance. We entered the Sophomore class with humble and contrite hearts but human beings are naturally changeable and we changed ! Our advent into the Sophomore class was unheralded, we felt lowly— for about two weeks. This time was essentially consumed in learning the names oi the new Freshmen and in dropping hints | ?, thai it was our second year hollowed then, a period (.1 depression in which we discovered win required subjects are required it they were not required, they would he taught to empty Sioir™ °I M ' mr r f aSOn P Ur res P° nsil iHtie3 bore down on us in the year 1 M -1920 and we found ourselves studying. We have retained some few reasons tor taking Latin, Religious Education, Biology, etc. Our professors informed us that I. aim exercises the mind, Religious Education exercises the good intentions Biolog) exercises the optic nerves; we were not told exactlv what Trig exercises unless il is the temper 1 We poor Sophomores suffered a plague of required sub- jects and had it not been tor the jovial, good-humored fun (don ' tcha know | that we derived Iron, tin- rats, our lot the second year would have been a hard one mdeed. Dunn- the s ro„d year, we applied ourselves lo our studies (as a rule) rj D Oil u □ c 3 DC 192.2. I I cuTd||c mm odXIHTggrNour2p 3 DC n o and i the torment of the Freshmen (as a diversion), [ncidentall) we learned the who ' s who of the facult) ; an) l l Sophomore can tell you that. We v knit ourselves more closeh together a and to understand other and the authorities better. In short we ■ ei the bombastic, fearful Soph, preparing ourselves to I ilous in the | i |919 worth) i to know i 1 thai pi ful ( 1! known n is the Junioi ind( red h we had ii. and u hen o i actual!) championed The Junior cla ed a! way In our third year, i lively ini shin I their ra the whole student bod) One Junior woul tl abilit) r would cann then I may ha had and u ere pursu own that critical attitude concerning our in pi to manil in our third year. We showed n interesl in tl 1 ll1 the student ha l and So] cern ' e alnn her than individuals, Hut. r iward th call i reward whi ■ i with th 11. w d and dii all. ur exalted position. tiled Senior. N ' ow when it ( too lat Bui students, , hrough mrmoun diff y task well done in i I he c institutii in u c all loi l. HARRIS 3D 3 □ C I 922 H 101 IP D ' n H DC in □ am odXIHxB gviourTiP Senior Class Jruphecy 3 DC □ □ October 31, 1935. Vii: A r. Matthews: It ' s such a pity you have to stay down there in Borneo trying to convert the tiresome heathen when everything is so nay in Birmingham. Thank Goodness! The Exposition is over — my nerves are shattered. Absolutely everybody that ' s anybody at all ivas in Binning during the last six months to see the World ' s Fair. I ' ve heard that quite a few people went to Paris in 1925 when it was held there, but those who thought they had ten more years of life saved their money to come to Birmingham in 1935. Why Mr. Frank 1 at who runs the Carh the Second line Cigar Stare, said that they had to rent moms for eight hours at a tune, a man had to sleep eight hours, run around eight hours, and stand in trout oj Caheen ' s eight hours — quite a satisfactory arrangement, I am told; and just like thai enterprising Mr. Babcock to think of it. Everything from a lip stick to a horsi Hurley Knight patented the ho collar) teas on exhibit. ' The one outstanding feature of the show was the Prise Winning three-act comedy, Step On the das. written by the Hozvard College 57 work shop, and put on by Miss Wilma Waggoner, who is Cecil B. DeMille ' s deadliest rival these days. Gladys Watlington was a stream as the irate mother who refused to let her daughter enter lilt- Ionise after her name had appeared in the papers as one hurl while joy-riding. Yes, she talks lis fast as she ever did. I remember one day at the fair a large crowd gathered around Mr. Jeff Bell, who ;eas demonstrating something. It was too deep for me but he called it a Tellumnothin, and said Mr. Lawler liaison invented it. It is a tube thing that a man can attach to a telephone and can talk as loud, long, and leisurely as he pleases to a xvillowy blonde without anybody listening from half closed doors being able to hear a word, lie told a heart-rending tale about hoix Mr. Watson came to find the need of it. but it is not mi ' to repeal gossip. Anyway, I thought this invention should have gotten the blue ribbon, but thai went to Mr. E. E. Cox, who perfected a Prevaricator, a little instrument about the size wrist watch that makes it possible for small boys to go swimming on Sunday mornings and come home and tell their mothers what the preacher said in his sermon. It eau be laid under a hymn book, or hidden iii the organ, and it records perfectly all that is said (including the whisperings on the back seat.). I am sure you agree with me that this invention will prove a great boon to all small boys as well as to Mr. ( ox. .Iml speaking oj inventions, lattie Bean Ousts has invented a perfectly marvelous toe dance. It ' s different from any I ever saw befori . and she is truly magnificent when she does it. I saw her tit the Jefferson the other night. She was dressed in a skimpy a) tray sequin and well, you know it was good it the seats sold Five Dollars. How my mind wanders! I was talking about the World ' s Fair until I went into ecstacies aver a sequin gewn. You know if there ' s anything more alluring than cosmetics, it ' s more cosmetics so I was anxious to see the latest additions in that line. I thought there would be free samples and I was right. When I left the Exhibit Beauty Parlor, my face till dressed up in Four Flowers, a new powder invented by Miss ena Harris, who has spent her life in the rejuvenation 0) despairing damsels. The unexpected always happens. Did yon know that William Smith is ,i dancing in- structor? I didn ' t either until I saie him demonstrating his ability the othci day. Vfiss Gussie Mae Brasficld is his partner. Iftei showing people how to dance without da 0) falling backwards, 01 spraining one ' s ankle doing curves, Miss Brasfield made a short i DDE 3 DC 3 I 922 H □ c 3 lie 5]fh] D D H D : L Oti NTg NOuS p 3 DBC talk. She almost moved her audience to tears when she made a plea for the innocent, old- fashioned Scandal Walk, and condemned the now popular Put and Take. Ruby Barton :eou a price for making the best onion soup. She succeeded Ho as the Nation ' s Chief Food Conserver and. with the aid of Miss Edna Pate, has published a famous cook book containing a long list of economical, if not palatable, dishes. Miss Pate tells me she has a unique position. All she has to do is to visit expensive restaurants, order everything on the menu, and . and tell Miss Barton what it ' s made, of. Then Miss Barton substitutes something else for everything i ud gets rich. She actually confided to me that her onion soup was not made with onions at all hut with narcissus bulbs. Speaking of eating reminds me of the tunny way my husband used to hold his u. paper at breakfast until I divorced him, and that reminds me that John Brcwton is editor of the Birmingham Owl, and has as his city editor Miss Annie Boyett. .It the recent ex- hibition his editorial. Sights Seen at Pershing Pier, won commendable praise from Mr. Sumpter Lea. the eminent critic, who evidently saw the sights, t And have you heard the latest. ' The Sloan Speedster has the blue ribbon for being the fastest ear made. You ought tt see Eunice rushing to her office every morning tit a hundred-ten per hour. I suppose she got this habit from trying to get to Eight-thirty elasses. The most attractive feature about her ear is the little silver bell in front. Miss Falkner suggested that to Eunice and made herself enough to go through Columbia out of it. By the way, did you ever see anything of Florence Pass? She married some man and they went as Missionaries to Korea. How far is Korea from Borneo anyway? I thought you might have seen her as you hare a highly specialised ability for keeping up with every- body. If you ever see her. tell her Mr. Ogle was asking about her the other day. ) ' ou talk about being frightened when an ape threw a cocoanut at you— why, Joe Hall nearly seared me to death when he hung by his teeth from an aeroplane. I never knew how soon he or his teeth would give way. But he nets his picture in Pathe ' s news all the time. Really. I ' m afraid he ' s going to be as rain as Miss Bertha Bates (now Mrs. ). ;eh has long been famous as a dii ' er. I was amoitg those present at a lecture she the other day How to Remain Attractive Tho ' Married. If I ever marry aaain, I shall remember what she says and dire into everything. I know somebody who does dire into everything — that ' s William Wright. He ' s a travel- ing salesman for Patterson Company and sells everything from carpet tacks to laec shawls. Patterson says that next to his private Secretary, Miss Williams, he is the most reliable and alert of all his employees. I see where President Marshall of Marshall College made a famous speech at the Convention of the Inter-National Association of Colleges, lie was speaking of his in- stitution. It is a college of absolute liberty and there are no front seats in our chapel — no wonder it ' s popular. I ' m not the first man a hair pin has ruined. That ' s an awfully popular saying around here. Pord Robinson said that when Ethel Burton used a hair pin to open a lock which he invented. But he says next time he ' s going to leave hair pins distinctly alone. Umhuh! lie ' s as optimistic as ever. Good Gracious! Pre been writing to you all this time when it ' s time for me f see Clarence D. Cox in Pair, Please. I know it ' ll be fine — he ' s always wonderful. Well, write me occasionally and tell me how all the wild women in Borneo are. 1 never heard of wild women PROM Borneo, so I reckon they stay there because you ' re there. Temporarily yours. Ruth Alexander. ' . S.—Pid I tell you about D. 0. Carlyle driving a laundry wagon.. Well, he is. I I 3 □ C 3 DC 1922 31D □ C I □ JUNIORS 101 lEd OEQClNTggrsouQp IDE lo w Junior (Class (Officers 5IE L. FREEM X NALLIE M F C SI - CARLENE WYATT M VBEL HODGES R. E. LAMBERT, Jr. C. W. GR SS C. L. KELLY (Offiau-s R. E. LAMBERT, Jr I. KELLY rice President M P.KI. HODGES Secretary C. W. GROSS X M.I.IK MAE CASEY Poei JESSIE FREEM ;., . C KI.I-AI VY VI I ' •■,. . ;,■ i i □ P DUE 3 P c 1922 D □ c :□: H P □ □ ID 0[ 113£nNTg|rNoys2p 3 DC m 1 jjmiior (Clnse ( ). T. Alford Birmingham, Ala. IT K A Philomathic Literary Society; Letter man, Football, Basketball, Baseball, ' 19 20 21; Captain Basketball, ' 20- ' 21; Letter man. Football, Basketball, ' 21- ' 22; President, II Club: Cup as best all round athlete, ' 21 . Clarence Allgood Birmingham, Ala. n k a Philomathic Literary Society; Zekes Club; ( ;ie Club, ' 20, Walter L. Bentley Birmingham, Ala. i inklin Liti - ciet] Scrub Basketball ' 20- ' 21; Glei i lub ' 20- ' 21, 21-22; Secretan Glet Club ' 21- ' 22; Derby Club. James W. Britton nniston, Ala. K N l i anklin Literary Societ) ; V. VI. C A. Burnett C. Cow art Haleyville, Ala. N Glee Club I9- ' 20- ' 21- ' 22; President, Glee Club, ' 21- ' 22; l9- ' 20- ' 21 ' 22; Pan-Hellenic Council; ' 21- ' 22; V. M. c. A.; Secretarj and Treasurer, Philomarmc Literarj x t; ' 21- ' 22; Assistant Cheer Leader, ' 19- ' 20- ' 21- ' 22; Dining Room Council, ' 21- ' 22; Derb) Club; Dining Room Council, ' 22. I lll l E8 I ASIA Birmingham, l;i. II k A Zekes Club [nstructoi Biology; Central-Howard Cli ID D [ilii=ii[ni fi ii faif s] I 922 LI 5To ir== 3 i rpin ==]i r ]|n D fo lUfg 0dXIHTggrHou$2P H □ C • D .1] in u or Class Nallie Mai. Casey Birmingham, Ala. All urne Literary Society; Poet, Junior Class; Lteauty, Junior Class; Glee Club ' 19- ' 20; Secretary ' Cent! al I toward Club. Vesta Carlisle Birmingham, Ala. A II Clara DeShazo Birmingham, Ala. s ' .1 .-c.- Club, ' 20- ' 21; Volunteer Band; President, Volunteer Band ' 2 - ' 22 Shelburne Literal - Vice President, V. M. C. A. ' JI ' JJ: Student Council ' 2 Basketball; 1 1 ar I Players. Jessie I-. Freeman Birmingham, Ala. Shelburne Literary Society; Historian I and in surer, So| Historian, [unior Class ' J! ' .J: Declamation I Girls ' .U Club ' 19- ' 20- ' 21; Senior Play ' 21; i Editor, I ,1 Club; Y. C. A. A. M. ( rLOVER Dothan, Ala. Divinity Club. C. W. Gross Wedbwee, Ala. Philomathic Lit i Treasurer, [uni 21- 22; Assistant ( ' • ' 20- ' 21. i i m £ DDE 3 □ C 1922 5MC 3 DC mn □ ID I HU! odXISg£Nour2p 3 DflC D HJmttor Class A. L. I I HAD Oneonta, Ala. II K A Varsity Football, ' 19- ' 20; Varsity Baseball, ' 20- ' 21; Alternating Captain Football, ' 21; Assistant Coach, ' Jl- ' 22; Dining Room Council, ' 21- ' 22; Philomathic Literary Society; Clec Club ' 20- ' 21; Jazz Quartette ' 20- ' 21- ' 22. Samuel L. Heath Equality, Ala. Robert Y. I [erring Sumterville, Ala. $ K N Franklin Literary Society; Hermes Club; Student Coun- cil, ' 21- ' 22; Dining Room Council; Debating Team: Assistant Librarian; Exchange Editor, Crimson; Junior ( ' las. Report- er; Reporter Franklin Literarj Society; Howard Players; Howard Representative for Rhodes Scholarship award. Mabel I [odges Birmingham, Ala. Marshall, Shelburne Literary Society; Secretary, Junior Class; Girl ' s Pan-Hellenic Council ' 21- ' 22; Ensley-Howard ( lub; (nil. ' Gi ee Club ' 20- ' 21. Charles M. I [urst Bessemer, Ala. vl A Glee Club ' 19- ' 20- ' 21- ' 22; Varsity Quartette ' 19- ' 20- ' 21- ' 22; Football ' 20; Varsity Football 21; Derby Club; Frank I in Literarj Soci 1 1 . E. E, Johnson Samson, la. l k N I )i iniiy Club; Philomathic I ,iti b I n D m 3 DC 3D 3 1922 3D 3 ID C 3l( '  ] O D nun 3 DC OdXlNrggrsoUnp j □ c I □ D D U : .IJuuinr t£lass Brad R. Justk I. Hartford, Ala. P ball i i i . i Clarence I.. Kelu Talladega, V A 3 - A. M. King Citronelle, Ala. Phi], Band; Janitors ' Club. R. E. Lambert, Jr. Darlington, Ala. A in- ner. New M mathic l , Council ' Ju- ' Jl. Presideni Philomathic I President, Pan-Hellenic Council, ' 21- ' 2 t. Debating Council -M ' -- ' : Student Council ' 2l- ' 22 ' Jl- ' JJ; II I liil.. IIklvn Lane Birmingham, la. z n ent Bod 21 ; W. (, ' ,, Club ' 19- ' 20; Student Council ' 20; : Literary ntral-Howard t ' lul : i iirl- ' uncil Mildred McDow ell Birmingham, Ala. tiirl- Glee lnl : Y W ( V.; Central-H helburne I ierj . IE 3 DC 3 DiC 1922 DC DC [1 51fDlfDl i DUE deK3nSEnoUs2P JH i □ junior Class 1. W. Myers Clio, Ala. Divinits Club; Volunteer Band; Philomathic Liti Society; Howard Players; Square and Compass; Debating [ in. President, Philomathic Literarj - President, olunteei Band; President, Divinitj Club; Chairman Over- sight Committee; Chairman, Pulpit Supply Committee; Rec- ording Secretary, Square and Compass; Corresponding lary, Squan and Compass; Secretary, V. M, C. A. Ik win J. QuiNN I lartsellc, Ala. Divinitj Club; Non-fral Men ' s fraternity; Biology Club ' 19- ' 20 Baseball Team ' 21; Preachers ' Baski Team ' 21 ranitors ' Club; Philomathic Literarj Socii Dee Sapp Arkadelphia, Ala. Girls ' Hee Clul ' 19, ' 20, ' 21 ; Sophi ' ' ophi I . 20- ' 21; V. VV. C. V.; Shelburne Literary Society. KI. SCHOGGl S Eden, Ala. Biology Club; Glee Club ' 22. A. V. Smith ( Ciiicr. Ala. A Philomathic Literary Society; B iology Club; Derby Club C. E. Stone Leeds, Via. 1 k Vice President Philomathic Literal-} Societj ' 19- ' 20; Y. M. ( ' . A.; Captain Track Team 20- ' 21; ssistant Man ager, Football ' 20 I o c 3 DC alDic 3 1922 no c :d: rill ! D □ □ 101 duu DtiX!NT§g7Jou$2P 3 D C DID Hjuuinr (Class II. I). Thomas I lanceville, Ala. l K lie Liters Philomathic i Stud) ni Plaj ' 20 . i . ice President, V. M. ( Players; Business Manager, Howard P ball ' 20- ' 21, ' 21- ' 22; Managi II Team ' 2 - ' 22 Thir- irstj T7 ugs ' Club; Vice President, II I Mam ii. ( IaRLENE WYATT Roebuck Springs, Ala Glee Clul 19- ' 20; Shelburne Literary Society; Y W. C. A. I F. Martin sville, Ala. R. . Webb Birmingham, Ala. II K Zeki II Club; Basketball and Baseball ' 20- ' 21; Captain Basketball ' 21; Gle Club ' 20- ' 2 - ' 22. U. B. Sims Vernon, Ala. N Philomathic Literary Societ) : Squa mpass; Y. M. ( A.; Student Treasurer, Dining Hall rporal, S. A. T. C. ' 19; Glee Club ' W 9 20-2 - ' 22 Director ami ess Manager, Glee Club ' 20- ' 21; Varsity Quartetti ' 2X-22; Chorister, Philomathic Literary Society; Scrub Baseball ' 21. D  DID 3 DC 3 DC U 1922. 3ID C 3 DC 3D 1 u □ □ DUll 0rCdHrg|rNouT2p a n ic Junior Class tstoru Tn the Fall of 1919, a class was created which was called Freshman, or firstman. It lived in awe of its surroundings and the beings which were made before it, encountering new things at every turn. Soon it discovered its superiority over all other living beings, but it wanted friends and craved companionship. It radiated a know-it all air. and thus hand-in-h ' and, these wire known as Freshman and Rat. Indeed, they were so charming and delightful that they were given several warm, oh I so very warm receptions. The Freshman found the College to be a clearing house for learning, and by an in- describable magnetic force compelled the attention and won the unreserved mental submis- sion of both upper classmen and faculty. But the Rat fared not quite so well. It led a flighty life. It was overpowered by its inferiors and routed from beds, dresser drawers, obscure cracks and crevices and was brought to light at all hours of the night for Rat In- spection. Thus the class was greatly humbled. It happened, however, that individuals sprang from this class — individuals who be- came foremost in every phase of College life, and who dazzled all by their matchless splen- dor. Hence arose the name Sophomore — a name which to this class signified power and ' authority, both mental and physical, over their successors and predecessors. By varied forces they reached a Revolutionary Period of Demerits, Campus Rules and Petitions. In this period several helmed faculty members and classmates were lost. Thru all this tirade, however, they reached a brilliant sphere which no Soph has ever attained, before or since. Their power was almost beyond human knowledge — and all others knew it. Certainly one must be reminded of a few historical details to appreciate the true value and significance of these brilliant lights as they were about to attain the Junior age. The Junior class is, truly, a very living thing. It is intrinsically a unit in itself, re- volving about 1 Inward and enjoying a very favorable list of honors. The details need no rehearsal, but a few points call for emphasis. The roll call of those who. by common consent, have won in athletics permanent fame is: Alford, Lambert. Thomas and Hurst. Many a musical critic would linger fondly and appreciatively over the names of Hurst, Sims, Cowart and Head. , If we should institute a comparison in quality alone between Juniors and other classes we would simply point to Robert Herring, who was Howard ' s representative for the Rhodes ' Scholarship Award. ( . . (ifoss is ever ready to make a motion we send a committee to the faculty. We have not nearly exhausted when we mention our wielders o f word Sam Heath, Willie Myers, and Brady Justice. And our class beauty, Miss Xallie .Mae Casey, cannot be surpassed. lor one year the Junior class hovered ' on the brink of oblivion and unrenown, Inn suddenly it sprang forth in brilliance and unparalleled fame. The world, contemplating its greatness in the future years, will behold and receive it as a precious jewel. Jessie 1.. Freem v , Historian. l DDE a dc DC 3 1922 DID IIC a nc D 3M 0d NrggrNoU$2p □ ic ax m a a i ilrieniislrjj ' • colleg days arc flying fast, . Inother year and zvc depart I caz ' ing Hoxvard in the past. To enter life ' s duties ami tasks. Our days will fly and years be pas ' . Our lives will be quickly spent; II e ' ll zcish for the return of the years in rain .hid long for only a flattering smile; But each joy took wing ne ' er to return again. For pleasures last for only awhile. When the evening shades appear May lies of friendship bind us closer; ■ hid we ' ll meet fate without a fear. Living in peace and fellowship forever. — X alii i; . l. i: Case . I D_ D [°E 3 DC 3 DC I] 102.2. HOC 3 □ c 9 ' Officers CLARENCE R. P.I ' .N ' E I I RALPH 1). CLARK WILLIE HUGH KIRK GERTRUDE YORK ERSKINE BRASWELL 1). B. RICHARDSON J. D. MALLORY FRED WHITE (Officers CLARENCE R. BENNETT President RALPH I). CLARK Vice President WILLIE HUGH KIRK Secretary GERTRUDE YORK Treasurer ERSKINE BRASWEL1 ' ,„■ I). I!. RICHARDSON Historian J. D. M LLORY Crimson Repo FRED WHITE Class Editor, Entre-Nous 01 HH □ c HOC 1922 uun UH 3D □ D lol O0(£ Lid NrggrsoUs p □ c 00 D « Jiophomore (Class Euna Abrams Ohatchee, Ala. A A II Shelburne Literary Society; Y. W. C. A.; Sponsor, l- ' oot- ball ' 20; Girls ' Glee Club; Beauty, Sophomon I la-?. EURA A CRAMS Ohatchee. Ala. a a n Shelburne Literary Society V. VV. ( ' . A.; Sponsor, Foot- ball ' 20; (iii Is Glee Club; Beauty, Sophomore Class. Ruby Arnold Ensley, Ala. Z n Shelburne Literary Society; V. M. C. A.; Ensley-Howard Club. Edward Anderson Prattville. Ala. Divinity Club; Y. M. ( ' . A.; Franklin Literary Society. W. T. Bains Blountsville, Ala. A 1 -ewis Askew Alexander City, Ala. Lillie Barnes 1 Walls Bluff, Ark. Girls ' Glee Club; Y. Y. C. a.: Pianist. Shelburne Liter- 01 U ' tv. II. II. Barfield Ashland, Ala. ( ' •■ T. Bradley Birmingham, Ala. i N i ranklin Litei ai s Society. ( !laren i Hi i n Louisville, la. II K l ' 1 ; ' ' ' ■ Sophoi (lass; President, Pan Hellenic Louncil; Assistant Manager, Football ream MM □ c 1922 =1 □ c :□: 3D JjTg NOUsTfi Qf • npluinmrc (Class E. M . Brasm i i i Demopolis, Via. 1 RGl ON BrI MU. I S Blountsville, la. •h K N II Fool RANZ ! '  (•( KNER Prattville, Ala. Divi in ' . Club; Square and ( i ' rank ' B. F. Caused I lealing Springs, Via. Hi n i.i. C ' lark Falkville, Ala. A A II ball ' 22; Ho s; Maid, B Girls ' ■ V. W. V. R. I ). Clark Wetumpka, Ala 1 I ootl all ' 21. Lee L. Clayton Fori Payne, Via. •i A ES( HOLS S. Darden ri iod ' « ater, Ala. I ANIEL ( i.W LORD Birmingham, Ala. II K Baseball ' 21; Football ' 20- ' 21 ; Basketball Ji ( rLENN ( ). rIBBS Ensley, Ala. K N D □ □ c □ c 1922 HUH 3 DC m □ □ I UUl odXHH EB np 3 DC DSLIJI] 1 Wi jsaiuluimorc (Class Nellie Gibbs Ensley, Ala. A r i Shelburne Lhterary Society; Ensley-Howard Club; Girls ' Glee Club; V. W. C. A. J. P. Gillespie, Jr. Boaz, Ala. K X Track Team ' 20- ' 21; Glee Club ' 20- ' 21- ' 22. Evolyn Graves Falkville, Ala. Siielburne Literary Society; Girls ' Glee Club; Crimson Reporter; Ensley-Howard Club. AlLEXE GlILLAHORN Ensley, Ala. Z n Siielburne Literary Society; Ensley-Howard Club; Cabi- net, V. V. C. A. VV. C. Hake Tuskegee, Ala. A Assistant liaseball Manager ' - ' J; Derby Club ' 21. Ethel J I ark is Birmingham, Ala. APS Shelburne Literary Society; Central-Howard Club; V.  . . . A. Jewell Hagood Birmingham, Ala. I ARL E. I [EARN Birmingham, Ala. W . T. I [enderson Elmore, Ala. l K N President, Eresbman ( lass ' 20- ' 21, Loyce Hendrix Hartford, la. ATS Shelburne Literarj Society; Y U i . , . ; Girls ' Glee ( lub; Secretary, Howard Players ' 21- ' 22. 1 mm 3D D 11 1922 J □ c :□: u □ II 1 1 0[=]O HUIg OdXIHrgg ousSP 3 DC J n I D iipl|iinuuT (Class Marshall I [ogan Birmingham, l.i. Bertha I [oward Fairfield, Ala. Shelburne Litei - Ensley-Howard Club; V. ( . A. J. I IKK I IdU II. I . Hartsetfe, Ala. Bull-pups -I. J A M es Jarrell Lineville, Ala. 1 N Turner Jordan Birmingham, Ala. I K N Treasurer, Central Howard Clul ; Athletii I ilHo son ; Athletic Kditoi . Eni ri Noi s. 1 1. ( rRAm Ketch um Eufaula, Ala. Divinity Club. John K i r k Tuscaloosa, Ma. 1 Willie Hugh K irk Birmingham, Ala. All mrne Literal-) Society; Central-Howard Club; A d c 3 DC 3 DC 3 1922 ; Y. W. C. A.; Girls ' I !li . ( ik.w ES K o LES Headland, Ala. Crimson Staff ; V. M. C. A. |. E. Lambert [ : 1 )arlington, Ala. A I 1 f 1 L c J ] |l ifDHl 3||D||C== HPl ] D □ [=1 C I OH odXl ggNous p :nc i=i □ Iff opluimnrc (Class J. B. Lamberth Alexander City, Ala. 2 N J. C. Lee Birmingham, Ala. A Secretary, Franklin Literary Society; Central-Howard Club; Math Medal ' 21; Honor Roll ' 20- ' 21, ' 21- ' 22. Arvel Logan Ensley, Ala. II K A President, Ensley-Howard Club. E. AI. LOWERY ( )neonta, Ala. J. I). M.U.l.MKY Anniston, Ala. S N C. IM Ilk A I WASCO Townley, Ala. Baseball ' 21. F. A. Alri.i.i s Clanton, Ala. II k A Julian Newman Dadeville, Via. Maurice Norwood Cullman, Via J. ( )rlando ( )gle Albertville, Via. A Ticket Manager, [Toward Players. □ □ D m. 1 N C 3 arc lol 192.2. [| inm umo 3 an 3 DC 03£CIHTg£Nous2p =1 DIE □ □ □ □ . E. Pres m Birmingham, Ala. vj A Crimson Rerjorter; Central-Howard Club, ' 21- ' 22. Vernon Purnell Red Level, Ua. I). B. Richardson Aritnii. Ala. II K hi. Sophomore Class, C. 1). Riddle Birmingham, Ma. 1 N Robert Shelton ( )neonta, Ala. A T. E. SWEARINGEN Pine Hill, Ala. ROBERTA I RECHSEL Birmingham, Ala. A I ' i Dliici State ; Howard Players; Central-Howard Club Entri i — i . t f f . GUSSIE LIPCHURCH Birmingham, la. Shelburne Liti iety; Volunteer Band; Cabinet, V. V. C. . I I [LTON l . UPTON Magee, Mi--. C..ll « ' Press Went; Associate Editor, Howard Publicity Director, Howard Summer School, □ □ c :dI ' i 3 DC U 1922 m £ :□: i GObE i0 1ld £lNS|rsou$2]Pc □ □ □ I J oplmmnrc Class J. C. Vaugh n Camden, la. K N [nstructor, Chemistry Laboratory ' 21- ' 22; Howard Players; Philomathic Literary S  Carolyn Webb Birmingham, Ala. A A II Sbelburne Literary Society; Girls ' Basketball; Girls ' Glee Club; Y. Y. C. A. Sarah Webb Tuskegee, Ala. Shelburne Literary Society; Y. W. ( ' . A. Fred J 1. ' ii i j i; Birmingham, Ma. 4 A Captain, Bull-pups ' -1 : Entre-Nous Staff; Central- Howard Club. Gladys W ' ii itlock Birmingham, Ala. ( rRADY (i. Williams Birmingham, Ala. W. L. Williams Birmingham, Ala. Central-Howard Club. Nelson A. Willis Russellville, Ala. I K N Crimson Staff; Franklin Literary Society; Divinity Club; Debater, Triangular Debate, Howard s. Mercer; Entrj Nous Staff I ,ewis Walker Camp Mill. Ala. II K Baseball ' 18- ' 19; Secretary, II Club. Gertrude York Birmingham, Ala. A A II Shelburne Literary Society; Girls ' Basketball; Howard Players; Y. Y. ( ' . A.; II ir Roll ' ! ! D l m. 3RD C 3RD 1922 DDE H □ C D □ □ □ ID 1 30[g Qd gNTg g o sTjp u □ c nuluuuove (EIhbs iiyictoru CHAPTER ' NE The Fall of 1 (, 20 saw the birth of the class of 1924, and an illustrious class ii was. For lo! even in the Eirsl year of our existence, great deeds were dune 1 us; hut withal we were found meek, courteous and quiet in demeanor and ( v- portment. The class roll would seem like a directory of school celebrities, for the Freshman class furnished quite a few stars for this year ' s teams: Spurgeon Brindley, Millie Mare. Dan Gaylord and Little Jumbo representing us in basket- ball; Shelton, Manasco, Brindley and Howell representing us in baseball. Quite a few receptions were given throughout the year in which the Fresh- men always took their part of the enjoyment. Chapter Two Ah, how good it feels to be a Sophomore— or rather. NOT to be a Rat! Nev er did pioneers struggle with greater difficulties or accomplish more surpris- ing results than the class of 1 ( ' 24. ( hir work in the past year has been quite SUC cessful. We are quite sure that the reader will excuse US from singing out our honors, hut we cannot refrain from mentioning the fact that this year our class was well represented in main- phases ot College life. Spurgeon Brindley, Ralph I). Clark. Daniel A. Gaylord, Billie Marc and Little Jumbo Lambert represent- ed us in basketball. The Sophomores are. also, furnishing quite a few members for the Glee Club, among the most notable being James Jarrel, James Mallory, Brooks Speer, and also Carl Mearn. accompanist. We are glad to note that the girls have organized a girls ' basketball team, in which we are represented by Misses Webb, York and Clark. Although our class has not been active socially, we have been determined to keep out of the clutches of the Automatic. I). B. Richardson, Historian. Din 3 DC 3 □ C 1922 J □ lc n □ c m 1 □ n cz=] c OHd D D odX3Njg|2ous2p 3 QIC = CT j ophontores Wi There are many things that I could say About our Sophomore Class. Tho ' in some things we fall below, In others we surpass. This is a fact we must admit: Our reports are not so good, They would be very much better If we studied as we should. In athletics we ' ve done our part. This, too, you all must know, Tor proof of it I assure you Just to a ball game go. In all the expanse of the Southland. 7 here are few our teachers, like von. Patient ever, and ready to help. H e hare found you, staunch and true. A ow here ' s a toast to our . lima Mater May its name with honors be dressed May its morals, its standard, i s system Always rank with the very best. — Class I ' oet. 3 1922 ooac D A ra= id L □ Dl □ □ I =1 □ I =] □ C I 922 [1 □ I IDC ]0 I QdXIHxg g ousTlP 3 DC allBlIl gj I THE! AN V A KEN DA ■I ' in V WIM.kl ORD I LEY [ILL (Off tClTS AXNIE LEE MAS( IN TIM THOMPSON Ml ' RI ' l I ORD ANNA KEN DA JAM I ifhct 0E 3 DC 3 DC 5] I 922 H m± 3 DC i 3 D D 1J □ 5H5IE oiaXlHiggrNour2p 3 DC D ifresbman Class Hugh II. Awtrev Sir.]. l;i. Philoma fnii Lit Paui W. Ausi I linsley, Ala. S. ( i. Brasw Ensley, Via, J. E. Bains Via. 1 1 ii r.i. rt . Brow n ( )nei nta, Via i N Sara C. Bj n i ley Rockford, Via. A A II Sh el bin ne I. iu i i 1 1. Buford Bledsi n Easl Lai tl-Ilowaril William R. Britton Vnniston, Via. K Eva Burson ilhonn ( ' in , Mi Shelbui in I ) m i. V. Burson Birmingham, Via. Deryl Bulling! Ailu us. Ala. Roland P. Carrek P II City, Ala. Sh, Fred I rter Birmingham, K 1 i lub ■ ' l Vtmore, Via A m IE ML 3 U C 3 i) i: 3 1922 E ME SH I 3 □ D p D i O0(c od HSgrNour2p DC P D I 1 OlUlKUl (Gl- ass s|| WI.H Ann ii Jan eli Ma. 1 N 1 N l A II Via. Sll Y it I WORTH 111 ' Via. OMOS I. I. Eowai Wil l ( M i. I. nil ii. Ezi . Via. 1 m 3D C DPIC H 192.2. H Dfc 3 DC l DP a □ I Olid [DCfXiHTggrNous3p 3D IfiTsrnuan Class I [ERBl RT . l- ' l.nw i irk, Ala. Eliz vbi ni M . Foster Birmingham, Ala, Shelbui in I M.i .11 j Socii Lee Ford I lamilton, la. II k P, T, Falleti Birmingham, Ala. . S. Fuller Dadeville, Via vJ A Philomathic Liti f.ii lub. Mary Bun n 1 Ensley, Ala. Z 2 Shelbui ne I Howard I lub. J, I .. ( Iregor Birmingham, Ala. II k A J. F. ( ' .. Griggs Mai Inn , ]a. A V. B. lULLETT Flon nee, Ala. 1 Philomathic Liti Howard Playei ( I lull J. II. ( iREGGS Stanton, la. 1 ' iiii. Grace I [arris Birmingham, la. SI i Virginia II n.i. i Lake, Ma. A II 111 11)111 II, I |h; V W i I i Flori i II M.uiii) Birmingham, Via. a r i Sliellmi in i II i i ' . W. I M VKTIS I loin. I s Sylacanga, Ma. D ID m D □ C m 192.2. Dl D ijtm 3 n c m KCClN rNour2P hoc □ □ i 3j if sh man (Class J. S. I [OLBRI Xkl ' .il, la II. S. HlGDON J. Grady I h in- Kauvoo, la. F. P. | llMlV ika, Ma. I .. I .. I - (aiioc. la. I .. i. Joil NSON Sam-. .|i, ];i K • hit,. I HI l . fOHNSTON Dadeville, Ala. Ki i. Pratt City, la Howarrl ( lub; ( T. I ). Kl M BROUflH Dadeville, la -i.i 1 1 In. i w Kim i r Ensley, Ma. i lub, W. II. Kl.lWll; Maplesville, Ala. I I sse I. Lackey i:.. a . !a. i I lull. Ralph C. I Furman, Via. W . I .. I .1 NDERM Birmingham, la. II K V i lub, Miki i Thorn ton Birmingham, D =1 192.2. JO 3 DC DID D [imsE @ mm 0d HxggrNous2p 3 DC □ □ reslmmn (Class Rub I. nil. i Morris, Ala. All i ; [!ask tball I cam. An n ii Lee Mason Easl Lake, Ala. A A II Vice P i simian ( I., ittee, ic Presidi nt, C« ntral Howard Club . C. A. Virginia Minter Birmingham, Ala. Society; ( entral I toward Club. I ,ola Mae Moody Birmingham, Ala. Sbclburnc Literarj Sociel Howard Club; i C. A.; Basketball. A I [LDRED A I URRAY Ensley, Ala. Margaret McBride Ensley, Ala. Shi linn ni i .11. ra: d ( ' lub; i W C LARENCE Mc( -ALL Birmingham, Ala. 1 N l ' lui W. ( ' . McIntosu Dadeville, Ala. Fran k McKissac Birmingham, Ala. f A Julia M. Nelson Newton, la. Shell in ii. I mi i i J. Fran k Norris Easl Lake, Via. 1 (lul ; Sheik ' [rma Eliz i;i.i ii Parsons Easl I .aki . Via. a r 2 I entral llu I. G. Riddle rmanvillc, Via. W. I. Rogi RS Ensley, Via □ C 3 DC =3 ML 3 192.2. DUE J rue I 11 in d jfri ' slmwui (Class I ' . E. Ri t.i Vylesworth. I |. Boyd Runyan Ashland ' , l.i. 1 i  rgb l . Saxon Albertville. Via K Jon n T. Shepparu I i ■ shurg, Ma, Robi k i M . S i ■ Birmingham, Ala. t n Ellie Earli Sn Birmingham, Ala. i ii Frang s Smith Birmingham, Sliclburne Lili Paul C, Smyli ille, l.i. C. II. Si Birmingham, Ala. Thi.i.ma Stao lingham, Via. All I ' kkio I .. Stone Birmingham, Via. W . M. Stubbs Birmingham, Ala, 1 Virgin ia ( aroli i. Si m m . Via I. [ones Si i: ah i Mobile, Via. - lub. R y ioi EH 3 D C 3 n c |] 19 2.2. [I :o: 1 3 D D 0U1 ■idXIHr g grffouSTlp I m £ D_ O ro Ifrcslmmn Class 1 1. E. Tiidm pson Ubertville, Ala. l K N ■ Mabel Willoughby ■do, Ala. All . . Ti; w Ma. Clarence S. 1 la. n. e. v Ua. II K |. M. Vandb km lie, Ala. Waiters . R. Willing Ua. James II. Wn i r W. la. I In. E. mi II K |. F. Wiii i W. J. Willi vm - c ' nili V. .. s i Ha. 101 mm u n c 3 DC 192-2. [1 3 DC I 3 DC 5]yiD] □ □ I nm odXlSggNousSp nic an irrcslmum (Class Historu I ' I he son rose early September sixth i so did the daughter) for this was the da) of days for than. The long aspired-for day had at last arrived and the) were about to become College students. Through push and jam they made their way, finally arriving safely at the- little red school house on the top of the hill. In an exasperating effort they filled their blanks and bought the privilege of be- coming full-fledged Freshmen. Thus ended the first college das for the noble, aspiring entrants. Then things began to happen in earnest. ( lasses must be attended, but where to attend them? Observation, perseverance and indomitable courage car- ried them thru the crises of the beginner. After the anchor was drawn up, they found thai the sailing wasn ' 1 so bad. Soon the son and daughter found that they were only a part of a greal host of other young hopefuls who had conn.- forth to enlist in the first year of the at intellectual tournament. They became vital factors in this organization and began to tr to do their part in working for the interests of the school. The) rejoiced that the) were members of a group who could send forth able representa- tives in every phase of college activity. In athletics they were especially well represented. The plucky little halfback, Jess Lackey, was a Freshman- whoin they could claim for their own. There were other Freshmen, too: Lee Ford, Little Willie Brown. Pat Shore-. Bull Cooper. Papa Garrett and Toby Stubbs, some i the ablest men on the team, who caused heart- to swell with pride. Then, too, the basketball crew- boasted of stars from the Freshmen ranks As Spring drew near, and with it the baseball season, the team inevitably felt a need for such men as Pat Shores, Snake . Bains, Jess Lackey, Papa G rett and Preacher I [yde. In the Mall of Knowledge they were wall represented by a Freshman, Miss Annie Lee Mason, who sun 11 the rest of the student bod) in scholastic achievement for the first quarter. They also discovered, to their greal delight, that they had member- of their splendid organization working in ever) club • ty : in fact, wherever there was anything to nibble there was always a Rat on hand. And. finally, tin -on and daughtei I at having the honor of bet meml the largest Freshman clas Howan t pride also in the assurance that, though they were not making the loud in time thev would become the Alexander.- of modern da fi i D olio WE u a c 3 192.2. lUE Ul°jH i 3 □ n Mg][m][ =]0( =ldXI£2  Jjresrjnmt of ' Ifocntg-©ne Fair Howard, we ' re the Freshmen Who ' ve been loyal, tried, and true In this illustrious session Of Twenty-one ' and Two: ' As such we ' d like to linger And live a life sublime, But ambition leads us onward To a higher, nobler clime. Our preparation ' s just begun For the life we hope to lead. Howard, Howard, mother mine ' lor your honor we ' ll succeed! Fair college, this we ask you; To mold us staunch and true And all the virtues teach us For all that we may do. We ' ll leave you men and women Ever steadfast, brave, and pure. To meet the tasks before us With hearts and minds full suit ( hir hope ' s a life of service. Not that of wealth nor strii Bui one that helps our fello To lead a better life. — Murph 3 1922 I ' ilf51[ =T lf51f r==n fa1fn D D 1=3 c 1 al 110[ 3]tfONTggrNou$2p |DHl _ I C=3 [D olfol M ' l [51 H H fnl f S] 192.2. !■ l i [511 S]ral li=51 [olfD □ □ Dl mm cd33H2§grsou$2p la] I ID Mill 51 idr i U lizziHalDl B. F. Atkins Jasper, Ala. I K N Divinity Club; Franklin Literary Society; Glee Club; Square ami Compass. R. L. BONNEK Reform, Ala. Divinity Club; Pliilomatliic Literary Society. C. E. Com pton Putnam, Ala. Divinity Club; Pliilomatliic Literary Saciety. W. F. Laumer Birmingham, Ala. Pliilomatliic Literary Society. R. E. ( hvi-.xs Enterprise, Ala. II K A Divinity Club; Y. M. C. A.; Student Volunteers; Square and Compass. W. 1 .. Robertson Bessemer, Ala. Divinity Club; Pliilomatliic Literary Society. V. B. Ross East Lake, Ala. Divinity Club; Pliilomathic Literary Society; V. M. C. A. Mrs! V. L. yat Easl Lake, Ma. D DDE 3HQ 1= 1922 HUH 3RD C uu [5][g][=]rj xtc nsinn (£1 ass The department of education under the direction of Prof. William E. Bohannon has instituted a most helpful course of extension work on Saturdays. These courses are open to all teacher- in the district and offer them the Oppor- tunity ot extending their certificate- and at the same time gaining college credit toward obtaining a degree. The courses offered include all branches of education, courses in biology, a special course in English under Prof. P. I ' . Burns and other college courses which may he utilized by the teachers at their free hours. The teachers ot the Birmingham schools and the adjoining districts have evinced great enthusiasm in taking advantage of this very real opportunity. They are not only aiding in raising the standard of efficiency throughout the dis- trict, hut they are also accomplishing work toward a degree. This plan has proved of advantage in making Howard familiar and help- ful to local teachers. The teachers have also added much to the life of Howard broadening the viewpoint of the students and introducing many helpful idea-. I U 0H J DIE H DC U 192.2. □ C unit 3 D D jq i K V U if Vi ft w ' ' SS 1 1 s y mfBmm mbm ™ m Z mWr ml mm ===== — — — D U0£ 0dXlHTggrsoU$2p □HC eih i ■■ STUDENT BODV OFFICERS CLARENCE D. COX RALPH I). CLARK CLARENCE D. COX E, E. COX . . R. E. LAMBERT, Jr. NEN HARRIS . R. I). CLARK R. E. LAMBERT, Jr. (Rfftrrrs I ' .. E. COX NENA HARRIS President Preside nt I ' ice President Secretar y Treasurer n I M n □ □ c 3 192.2. H U □ C inn WILMA WILLIE KIRK ROBERT HERRING W. (i. SMITH NENA II VRRIS (.LARA DeSHAZO CLARENCE D. COX R. I) (.LARK I-:. E. O X J tuftcnt Cmmctl Howard has endeavored to keep abreast of the times in all matters. As the old forms of strict discipline and demerit systems passed out with tin old era of pedagogy and the new honor system was ushered in with the new vision of efficient and satisfactory educa- tional training, so Howard, in step with this new movement, laid aside the old demerit tern for the modern honor system. - a result the student council was organized and was composed of representatives from the student body organization as follow-: President of student body, vice-president of student body, secretary of student body association, representatives from each of the four classes — a hoy and a jiirl. The function of this body is to deal with all matters re- quiring disciplinary treatment and to settle them in a- efficient a manner a- possible. The council i- guided largely in it- act- by the constitution of the student body organization. Tin- work of the council for tin- past thre . years ha- been most praiseworthy. Excel- lent cooperation has been maintained between student- and council and council and faculty. Matter- requiring the attention of tin council have been dispensed with efficiently, quietly and helpfully. The honor system at Howard, though, as yet, not a perfected organization in the strictest sense of the word has proved itself of real worth and value in the live- of the students and with increased experience and success will certainly continue to function with increasing forcefulness. □ n c 3 DC □ C 1922 J □ c OEH H 1 51 D □ 101 3 DC odXIETg5Hou$2p 3DC fg] R. I ' . (IVbfc H. fl. B e Sumter Lea Herbert Brown W. F. Ltnimer Carl Hearn S. G. Braswell S. . Cn C. R. Bennett L. I.. Cla J. E. Bains II. II. BarfieM R. ! . Wright C. I:. Complon B. F. Causey Orlando Ogle J. C. Kirk- II. Awtrey . ' . (. Vaughn J. L. Gri F. F. Martin ( . T. Alford J. K. Howell J. B. Lambert h J. F. A reel Logan M. P. Hogan W. C. Melntosli I . I.. Johnson Lee Ford Will R R. L. Bonner ( ' . .. McColl .1. V. Smith I ' . L SmyPie Toby Stubbs II. R. Upton P. E. Roberts i i DC 3 DC 192.2. HUH miii m □ Edward Anderson J. H . A J. J. Lackex Leroy Elliot II. I:. Watlington R. .. Lambert, Jr. S. I.. Heath II. E. Thompson I. If, Glover II. I . I homai .1. II. King p ( . R. Bennett .1. S. Hatters I. W. 1 D. I. Caylord I . Roberts J Fred Carter li. II. c ospe |i Ketchum Pat Shores M. A ' ■ Trawck .1. I.. Head I . B. Rost C. W. C. n. Riddle S. G. Kti R. If. Shellon II. H. Gullett J. J. Stewart . R. Saxon T. J. Quinn I., if. H ..■ .. G. Walker Ralph Lee Spurgeon Brindley II ' . C. Hare l. n. Kimbrougli I. Edwards If. Vanderford li. C. Cowart C. D Fred White J. G. Hyde C. E. Stone I. X. Pott, E. E. I R D. lark J. . Wise, R. B. Sims J. F. Norrii I). H. Richardson 101 HUH 3 DC HOC 1922 DC 3HD C l 3 D D 0[ [ 0[ ]dXiy5g£NOU$2lP dpi i 1=1 d llulnnuilliir tL it entry Society :o :0 :o : In the infanc) of the College there was seen a necessity for literary train- ing and development other than thai given the students in the class-room. To meet this deficiency, the Philoniathic Literary Society was founded in 1S44. This society enjoys the distinction of being the oldest of its kind in Alabama and has senl OUl marly fifteen hundred trained speakers and ready-thinker- throughout the country. I lie Philo offers t its members invaluable training in all the lines of public speaking- namely, in debating, declamation, oratory, and reading. There young men have the privilege of familiarizing themselves with the action- of de liberative bodies, of acquiring ease and grace in the art of speaking and of exert- ing their personality to the fullest. In such a society as this a student learns to convince others that his opinion- art ' worth while. [f he has any talent it is discovered and cultivated. The more he puts into his society, the more he will get OUt of it. His experience in the society will aid him in playing a successful game when he gets out in the arena of life; for we strive to train men to he able to render the greatesl possible service to their fel- lowmen and to themselves. li would he a pleasure here to name men of fame who have gone out from our hallowed old Society hall — hut space and time would not permit. A thing of extraordinary interest is that for half a century this old Society ha- held the championship in debating in the College between the two societies the Philoniathic and Franklin. We are justly proud of this brilliant record, and we certainly will not do less than maintain in the years to come an equally high record of oratorical achievement. m i m o n fDi ii .1 i q 2. 2. ii iP ii siP ii m □EtsE DDE mm SSJBr§g f 3 n lie Watlington K. Alexander G. Whitl S. Bentley I ' . L. Wyott H. Arnold J. Dillworth I . Stacy W. K. Kirk R. I.. Trechsel I . Summers L. H, (, ' ) M. Brasfield I.. William M. Thornton A. . ' Connell K. I • v - U If. B. Ousts .1. . ' ■. M. H. Gay S. Webb F. Pass I ' . Minter A I.. Mason (,. ' . ,• C. DeSha (,. C. Watlington M. II II ' . W. II . •. . ' . .. Freeman .1. Gnllai I. ( ' . Harris M. Willoughby C. I: ' .. U. Upchurch C. Wyatt Jul,, Nelson ' Hill I 3 DC 3IDIC 1922 B 3 DC 3 DC ana a □ li. Abrams E. Sloan M. .. Ezcl) N. Gibbs A. Kendo I. Parsons G. I E. Burson (,. Falkner I . II II. Lou,- L. Moody L. Barnes li. Burton li. Foster li. Horn- Dee Sapp R. Barton li. DeSfuuo E. E. Sidei . ' . Hi K. Little E. Pate B. Bates V. Carlisle li. Graves M. Hodges M. McDowell U. Murray li. Abrams I ' . Caver B. Howard G. Harris if, McBride C. Smith DID C 3 DC DBD a 192.2. I Din c DDE 10 Q a on mm 0dXIH grNou$2p 3 n Jilfelbimre Itterarg octeto :o :():( : The increasing number and enthusiasm of co-eds in Howard created a de- mand for a literary society for girls. As a consequence, the Shelburne Literary Society, named in honor of Dr. Shelburne, former president of I toward, was re- vived in the Fall of 1921. At the beginning of the session l921- ' 22 the following officers were elect ed: Gladys Watlington, president; Florence Pass, vice-president; Edna Tate, secretary; W ' ilma Waggoner, treasurer; Annie Boyett, critic; Gussie Upchurch, chaplain; Mabel Hodges, sergeant-at-arms. Miss llaynes and Miss Spinks were appointed advisors. With Florence i ' ass in charge, many interesting programs have been given and a good spirit of cooperation has been shown by the girls. mi ID IE 3IDHC 3 IDIC 1922 H 3 DC 3BDHC 01 Hfsl n iniii=iiii==iibi ( ==iiri ( A - d m Wt 1 M i ' L L jjL H -1 V B V k v ' 3H5s £?Nour7]m o 3 QIC mom ' . O. Carlisle E. I ' J. ( B I U. n f C. .. Lenderman ■ ' ■ C L. Kelley P. Falletta . ' . P. Gillespie, Jr. J. Newn II ' . If i ,, Z 7 ' . W, A . B. Mallory I . M. ( . . F. . ' C. .. Purnell Waller Bentley E. 14. Lottery W. .. Williams J. G. Shtppard If ' . . Klinner II. H. Flowers Carter Manasco W. G. Williamson ' . .. 5 B. B. Bullington J. H. Knighl J . S. Holbrook W. M. Pr escort, Jr. J. Keller C. E. Thi i i □ DC 3 DC 3 192.2. 3 DC 3 DC H D □ an I aim LldX|Njgg5ous2P 3 n«c m i f R. I Owens IV. R, Britton J. G. Ri, i Fred Whit I I MuIUhs I F. II atson 1 I Brewton C L. Bradh I Swearingen .. i . I n v  ,■, . ' . . Greggs R, ' . oi I arter R. II . Hen ing !. If. Britton i ; Brasvell R. Bncknei B. • . Atkins . . p, „ ; ■ ' . ' . Bell V, .. i ,„.., F. U . ( timniin-; Paul . I list in II I Cast I . . Boi ' nj 1 . ( . Bui rou ( I . l„- 1 LJ n DC 3 DC 3D 1922 3 DC 3 DC I m m nun ildXlNTggrNous2p UUi □ D jffrattkHn Litrrnnj ncudu :« : :o: rhe Franklin Literary Society was reorganized at the beginning of the session { 2 -22 along tin- lines that have won the societ) so much lame in the past. Excepting one unfortunate year the Franklin Societ) has a splendid re- cord covering sixty five years of continuous activity. Now, as of yore, the society lias enrolled main leader- in literary activi- ties. Three-fourths of this year ' s varsity debaters and substitutes are Franklins. In ever) tryout Franklin leads. Bui Franklins art ' not onl) debaters; some ex- press their literary ability in other fields. The Howard Crimson and the Entre Nous are edited and managed by Franklin men. An ardent Franklin among the alumni members is Prof. I ' . I ' . Burns, Pro- fessor of Literature at Howard. Prof. Burns was a very active Franklin in his college days and is still a strong supporter of the Franklin Society. Another alumnus on the faculty i Prof. Gladstone Jackson, director of Music. Two of our present seniors will he added to the summer school faculty, John E. Brewton and Lawler F. Watson. The Franklin Society possesses a past crowned with literary achievement and honor. True to this heritage the society moves quietly along, leading in the literary activities on the campus, thus accomplishing tin- purpose for which it was founded. 1 □ □ c □ c U I 9 2-2. H ilE 3IDI C DO I □ Nineteen hundred twenty-one — twenty-two has been the most active year in debating at Howard since the days of the S. A. T. C. This is true in both int er- collegiate and local debating. The Philomathic and Franklin literary societies have resumed activity as in days of old, while a third organization, the Shelburne, has been initiated by the co-eds. [nter-collegiate debating has been placed under the control of the Debating Council to which each of the three literary societies elected three representatives to membership and additions have been made during the year by vote of the coun- cil. At the first of the session the membership was as follows: F. F. Martin, S. I.. Heath, and R. I-;. Lambert, Jr., of the Philomathic; J. J. Bell, 1.. F. Watson, and W. G. Smith, of the Franklin; and W ' ilma Waggoner, Kathvrn Craig, and Flor- ence Pass, of the Shelburne. Additions were made by the council as follows: E. E, Cox, A. Nelson Willis, I. W ' . Myers and R. W. Herring. Officers of the council are: J. J. Bell, president; R. E. Lambert, Jr., vice-president; F. F. Martin, treasurer; W ' ilma Waggoner, secrctan ; W. G. Smith, undcr-sccretarv ; and Flor- ence I ' ass, Crimson reporter. The work of the Debating Council has been laborious with sessions of many hours duration in which subjects for debates have been proposed, accepted, or rejected and where the inter-collegiate classics have been fought in advance. But the work has been successful and Howard students may well boast of this Organization as their own creation. It is the Debating Council which represents the college in the selection of judges and making other preparations for inter-collegiate debates, including the appropriations from the student body for debating activities. n fDlfnirc 3 o c 3 DC 3 1922 3 DC 3 DC I 3 D D □ D i°ii=iii D D □II □ DSd id GH2ggNou$2p 3 DIC ]H PARADE PARALYZE THOSE PANTHERS 3D 3 DC m 192.2. ami 2J 1 H D 3ID1 I =3 D D Dl D nir jpmisor ] l □ D D 1=3 1==J I I D D n a 1 101 D D 3 ' ' □ D D □ E I l===]l jRttrghua fflxvXtl D D in E 3 Q C oi£CIBIa£Noor2p 3 DIC PEP MEETING TONIGHT Everybody Reads ' eij . , u „uu uefeals Bulldogs 34 To On Soaked Fi |tf eek S i t planned . OOl 1 jumierville Boy Named By Howard,. ffl ,fl Ho V;ir,IV Sard ' s HOW KI) I ( I II 1 I AIM IN IIIMOKY () Ptof. T. J. York Brings Helpful M. P° r «nf K,, , pftR I INS I I II I ION ftpT} S ■ - « y Christmas 1 □ □C 3 DC EH 1922 □ n lie D D □ ponsor D D I c □ □DPI IE I IE I D CD D D I □ iC I I D D D Roberta Trpchsel D D n D 51 |i ■! fai r== P== l | C) 2. 2. h i| 5] [l==i1 i l[ = =5] Pf5 □ □ HIE V£SJ TB £?noUsJ$ 3 DC □ □ 101 l°J • (The Homarb piauers :o :0 :o : The Howard Players is an organization which was founded in the year ' 20- ' 21 under the leadership of Miss A. Bess Clark, head of the English depart- ment of that year. She chose as a starting point a group of students from En- glish III. an expression class and with these as a nucleus built up a strong and ac- tive club. The aim of this club is threefold, namely: the development of dramatic talent of the students; the development of appreciation of better drama; and a promulgation of interest in Howard throughout the state. During the year of ' 20- ' 21 the Howard Players presented several plays to the Drama League of Birm- ingham, also to large audiences in almost every suburb of Birmingham and met with great enthusiasm and success. A Farce, Escapades of Esmeralda, written by Miss Clark was given under the auspices of many civic and social clubs of the city and was repeated by request in some of the suburbs. The profits of the year ' s work were invested in dramatic hooks for the Library. The year of ' 21- ' 22 found The Howard Players determined to make their club one of the best in Howard College. In the fall they presented The Dramatic Club of Montevallo in several one act plays. This visiting club was received enthusiastically. During the spring quarter the club directed its atten- tion to the presentation of Jerome K. Jerome ' s Fanny and the Servant Problem . This was done under the direction of Mrs. E. Walter Anderson, graduate of Don- ald Robinson of Chicago, and a woman prominent in dramatic circles both of the North and South. ©fftcers President WIEMA WAGGONER Secretary FLORENCE PASS Treasurer BRADY JUSTICE Business Manager HERMAN THOMAS Manager ORLANDO OGLE Stage Manager GUSSIE MAE BRASFIELD Publicity Manager RUTH ALEXANDER Reporter J. J. STUART i ' ftoll of Wofuarh jllaurrs Tessie L Freeman Orlana Clara DeShaso W. B. Gulletl Gladys Watlington Willie Kirk I. W. Myers II. D. Thomas H. Whitehead Ethel Clark ence Pass William Willingham Wilina Waggoner Gertrude York Mable II; J. . ' . si. I echsel Gussie lat Brasfield II ' . T. Henderson Ruth Alexander B. R. Justice J. C. Vaughn R. II . Herring Loyce Hendrij J. II. Wise ■ ' . J. Rfll 1 DDE 3 n c 3 n c 1922 £ u □ c u □ c i Utel □ J. J. BELL E ] ' .. COX X. R. WILLIS W. G. SMITH I. W. MYERS K. W. HERRING i Howard won second place honors in the second annual debate between Miss i Hp] i College, Mercer University, and I Inward College for the Baptist debating championship of tin- three state- when it- affirmative team lost to Mercer in Birm- ingham and triumphed over Mississippi in Clinton. As a result of the debate Mercer is champion of the Triple Debating League for 1 22. Howard boasts second honors, and Mississippi holds the third place. The question used in this debate was. Resolved tha t the Modern Tendency Toward Direct Action by the People is Inadvisable. Judges of the Birmingham contest were Hunter Armstrong. 1- ' . I). McArthur. and S. C. Bow- man, prominent local attorneys. It is the negative team which Howard is especially proud of, since with this representation Howard won second place in the League bv eliminating Miss i sippi College on the Clinton campus. J. J. Bell, president of the Debating Council debated against this Baptist college for the second year. He was ably assisted, so the Mississippians say, by W. G. Smith, also of the Senior (lass and an officer of the Council. Howard ' s affirmative team, composed of A. Nelson Willis and I. . My- ers, were unable to prevent Mercer from winning the championship of the League and lost the decision before a Howard audience. Howard has on its debating schedule for the Spring a contest with repre- sentatives of the Oklahoma Baptist University, to be staged in the Howard audi- torium. 1 ' .. E. Cox and R. Y. Herring have been chosen as Howard ' s team for this debate. Each of the two is an Upperclassman with a record in public speak- in- and scholarship. It is also rumored that Birmingham-Southern College may accept the Howard challenge for a double debate in the Spring. Interest in debating, both in intercollegiate and local contests, is rising on the Howard campus and there is no reason why Howard will not win the inter- collegiate triangular classic in 1923. □ □ c 3 DC d n 192.2. H D E 1 IDHC 3 DC J □ □ O D □ C K I OHl£ OdX3HxggrNous2p □ c d 1=1 an D . . P. , C. D. Coa- ■jjau-itidlnuc (Council . : . Brewton C. E. Matthews II. A. Casey R. •:. Lambert, Jr. B. C. Cotvart L . R. Bennett (Off tccrs CLARENCE BENNETT R. K. LAMBERT, .In. . J. I ' .. BREWTON . . President I ' ice President Secretary lol M°l ± HE 3 □ c I 922 DID C 1 D_ 1H1 3B l Igl 5itfON rgg|2p no I IDC j q i i □ IU[ D □ i QZLZL n ii|pTcz si p= i r5i n d 1=1 c mm OdXIBT§grsou52p n ale a  1 ' tarles D. A ' i, . ■■ ■ . Boyd A ' hhvciii A ' . B. .s,.„.,- (f. . j„M., . I- , ' ' ' ' ' Mallory 1 . D. Wogan o in C. Kir . H. Lambert h James Jarrell Tr D. O. Carlisle s R. (,,,. i ' !! ell W. i Bentley C. I.. Bradley H. II. Brown B i ■ ' ■ ■ ' ■ s Warn Gullelt R. D. Clarke F. 0. ( artiste J. II. II i Clarence • ' II [] I I M[ MijE -i n 1922 3 DC 3 U C l 3 D D £Signta : w FOUNDED AT VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUT1 l N ' COU  RS '  ■■• ' I v and White. FLOWER W ' h,:. R 3[ounber8 .1 . ll S I HOPKINS JAMES M. RU JOHN V. HOPSON GRE1 M II I.I ' QU KI.I S Eighty Eighl Active Chapters 3ota (thaptrr erf iqma 5fa rg EST VBLISHED l 1879 tres In i CL SS ( IF 1922 CLARENC1 D. COX Gulf port, Miss. DAVID I . CARLISLE G Iwater, Ala. FRANK O. CARLISLE Birmingham, Ala. SIM II R LEA, III East Lake, Ala. CLASS OF 1923 V. L. BENTLY Birmingham, Ala BURNETT C COWART Haleyville, Ala. RICHARD I!. SIMS Vernon, Ala. CL VSS OF L924 GRAHAM L. BRADLEY Birmingham, Ala. ERSKINE W. BRASWEL1 Demopolis, Ala. RALPH D. CLARKE Wetumpha, Ala- STEPHEN R. CREW Goodmater, Ala. JAMES JARRELL, Jb Lineville, Ala. JOHN C KIRK Tuscaloosa, Ala. J. BROUGHTON LAMBERTH Alexander City, Ala. JAMES D. MALLORY inniston, Ala. CHARLES 1). RIDDLE East Lake, Ala- CL VSS OF 192S HERBERT W. BROWN Oneonta, Ala E BRAXTON COSPER Sterretts, Ala. OLIVER M. COOPER Gadsden, LEROY ELLIOTT Vincent, Ala. WILLIAM GULLETT Florence, Ala. JESSE .1 LACKEY Boas, Ala. .1 FRANK XORKIS Birmingham, Ala. .1. VLPHAEUS PEKE Ensley, Ala. J. BOYD RUNYAN Ishland, Ala- J. JONES STEWART Mobile. .11,,. WILLIAM II. STUBBS East Lake, Ala- JAMES H. WISE LaFoyette, Ala. i i 1 1 ' i| ir 1 [5i r r=n | Q 2, 2. H li fplf irni f Sl fnir Xoll of QHjaptcrs University of Virginia Bethany College Mercer University University of Alabama I low anl College North Georgia Agricultural College Washington and Lee University University of Georgia University of Kansas Emory University Lehigh University University of Missouri Vanderbilt University University of Texas Louisiana State University University of North Carolina De Pauw University Purdue University Indiana University Alabama Polytechnic Institute Mount Union College Southwest Kansas College University of Iowa Ohio State University William Jewell College University of Pennsylvania University of Vermont North Carolina College of Agricultural and Mechanical Arts Rose Polytechnic Institute Tulane University Leland Stanford University University of California Georgia School of Technologj Northwestern University Albion College Stevens School of Technology Colgate University Maryland State College Trinity College Lafayette College University of Oregon Colorado School of Mines ornell University University of Kentucky University of Colorado University of Wisconsin University of Illinois University of Michigan Missouri School of Mines University of Washington University of West Virginia University of Chicago Iowa State College University of Minnesota University of Arkansas University of .Montana Syracuse University Case School of Applied Science Dartmouth College Columbia Univf rsity Penn State College University of Oklahoma Western Reserve University University of Nebraska Lombard College State College of Washington Delaware College Brown University Stetson University University of Maine University of Nevada l ni er ity of Idaho George Washington University ( lolorad ' o Agricultural Collegi Carnegie Institute of Technology Oregon Agricultural College Bowdoin College University oi Arizona Drury College Weslev an University University of Wyoming Oklahoma Agricultural College University of Florida University of Tennessee I ' in v i rsity i f Si mth William and Marv College Massachusetts Institute of fechn 1 D D UH DDE 3 ID C 3 1922 3 DC I HDL m I D D .V. I . Suddeth I.. G. l ' ,lkcr .( ' . ' l- ' nril W. I. Logan R. If Webb R. E. Owens F. A. Mullins II . .Hi IK 8. Richardson II. . . Casey D. .1. Caylord . ' . L. Gregory O. T. Alford H. F. Whitehead II . I.. Lenderman C. II. Sli .1. I.. Head C. R. Bennett R. .1. Nunnelley II : Wellington DC 3 DC HG 1922 H □ c jolQ =i □ □ 1 omg od O JagNouTjp 3 PUC JMplja |Jt (Uljapter of i ;Kappa JMplja O[S]0 D t FOUNDED AT THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA IN 1868 COLORS: Garnet and Old Gold FLOWER: Lily of the Valley. PUBLICATION: The Shield and Diamond. Sixty Active Chapters. F. S. TAYLOR J. E. WOOD Jfounbers ROBERTSON HOWARD Alplja p Chapter ESTABLISHED IN 1911. ■ ' rater In Facilitate ROGER W. ALLEN Fratres In Collegio L. W. TAZEWELL J. B. SCLATER O. T. AI.I ' ORD C. W. ALLGOOD C R. BENNETT II. A. CASEY R. H. DRAKE LEE FORD D. A. GAYLORD J. L. GREGORY A. L. HEAD W. L. LENDERM . W. A. LOGAN marvin McCarthy f. a. mullins r. a. nunnelley •R. E. OWENS D. B. RICHARDSOX C. H. STEVENS N. I). SUDDETH L. G. WALKER II. E. WATLINGTON R. W. WEBB H. I-:. WHITEHEAD a a a fnl □ c 3 P IIC □IC H 1922 3LD C M 3D i D D D D □ D n □ D D m p o n % o r 7 D D □ D □ D C (RIabus plallinijton 31 D D iin==== [o1B [d] Bfni n— -T in H i=i m D D D| 0[ 5ldXJNTg|rNOu$2P 101 I a i i M H E O d im m Dl DC 3] 1922 [ Et l I si □ □ 101 mm QdXlNjBgN ousTil Dij 3 DC l D . V. Smith J. E. Lambert W. C. Hare J. II. Knight J. ( ' . Lee I.. I.. Clayton Fred Carter ( ' . .. Kellev 0. Ogle Frank I ' . McKissac Fred White If. s. Fuller C, E. Matthews J. C. Babcocb R. E. Lambert. Jr. J. • ' . C. Griggs, Jr. ' . : . Preseoit, Jr. W. T. Bains R. W. She! ton C. M. Hurst .. ( □ I D □ C □ C 1922 U □ C 3 QIC i Hum od OHJ§g2ous2P fat Jelia LOCAL FOUNDED 1900 COLORS: Purple and Gold. FLOWER: Violet. JFmtnhers MELL DURANT SMITH THOMAS VALENTINE YL I WILLIAM L. CRAWFORD FLAVIUS HATCHER WATKINS ALBERT LEE SMITH Fratres In Facilitate PERCY PRATT BURNS GLADSTONE JACKSON I- rat res In Collegia CLASS OF 1922 JAMES CLARENCE BABCOCK . . . r ,„ u T JULIUS HURLEY KNIGHT ! G JT ? ? ' T CLAUDE EMMETT MATTHEWS 7 7!™ ' J? Scottfboro, . . CLASS OF 1923 charles Mckinley hurst . ,, CLARENCE LEIGH KELLEY . ' tmST ' 1 ° ' ROBERT EUGENE LAMBERT, J R ' ' ' ' TaUadega, Ala. ALMUTH VANN SMITH Darlington, Ala. C entre, . tla. CLASS OF 1924 WILLIAM TALLY BAINS, Ik. . n , , ... ,, LEE LIOYD CLAYTON ' ' - ' f ountsmlle • ; ' WILLIAM CRUMPTON II RL ' ■ ■ ■ ■ tort Payne, Ala. JAMES ERNEST LAMBERT ' ' ' ' n-r ' J? ' JOSEPH CARLTON LEE ' ' ' Darhngton, Ala. FAMES ORLANDO OG1 E • ' Birmingham, Ala.. WILLIAM ERNEST PRESCOTT, Jr ' a Albert f le A ' a - ROBERT WHALEY SHELTON ' Birmingham, Ala- FRED MOLLIS WHITE ' . () ' ' ' - , - ■ Birmingham, . ila. CLASS OF 1925 NICHOLAS L. CARTER . WILLIAM SHEPARD FULLER ' ,,, ' ■ ' ,? ' ' }? ' I AM IS F. C: (.KILLS |k Uadevxlle. Ala. FRANK ADELBERT McKISSAC ' • ' - • ' .v. . lla. Koanoke, . Ila. Pledge FRED CARTER . Birmingham, . , . i 3 192.2. [1 DC :nl 1 iicCCiNJa£Now2P luistrr nf }jsi Delta 3 QIC D D i 2 fBlfnl W BREY, .1 M. VSHTON, ID VMBRES l IK. J. II. n VB i CK, I c BAINS, W. T.. Jr. B ISORE, J, v. B II- s. i. B, l:i Kin . E. .1. BE RRY, U BLACKSHEAR, I T BOOZER. C. I . BOOZER, M. W. BRANNON. C. M BR o . W. II. BRY NT. F. B. BROCK, I.. I . BLACK, L. J. BURNS, P. P. BURDEN, C. S. BUCKALEW, V. M. BLACK, .1. l. .Ik. BLAKE, T. A. ( ARR, C. K. C VRTER. X. L. ' CATON, . W. CLAYTON, HUBEB I (LAN TON. M. | . CLAYTON. S. P. CLAYTON, LEE L, COOK. JESSE A. COWAN, S. O. COUNTS. W. A. COMPTON, P. G. CRENSHAW, T. I.. CRENSHAW, J. C. i R VWFORD, V. L. I Rl ISS, J. I-. CROSS, II. K. CROSSLAND, C. E. n wis, ;. ii. DAVIS, JON. II. DAVIS, C. HARRY DAVIDSON, MARION T. DUNAWAY, BEN ELLIS DUNNAWAY, J. E. DUNSMORE, G. I FAULKNER, W. B. I LOREY, C. C. FULLER, W. S. GARNETT, S. M. GREENHILL, FED B. GREER, II. W. 11. GILDER, C. K. GILCHRIST, . — . GRIGGS, .1. F. ( ' .. Jr. •GUNN. T. A. GORDY, J. T. GULLAGE, JAMES ( ' .WIN. ] . K. HAGGARD, K. M. HAGGARD, T. A. HALL, S. W. HARRIS. LEON I KRISoN. r.KN.I MIN ased. mm D □ C II VRRY, T. A. HASTY, (II S C. HASTY, CURTIS B II RE, W. C. HARRIS, G. M. HAWKINS. M. C. HAYNES, F. I.. II RI. AN. C. L. HESTER, E. R. HICKS. F. C. III! I I KD. R. II. HODGE, E. .1. HOLLINGSWORTH, J. C HUDN LL. .1. R. HUEY, TIK IS. E. HUFF, J. A. HUTTO, JASPER C. HUGGINS, Ii. J. HURST, C. M. JACKSON, GLADSTONE JACKSON, GEORGE JACKSON. JAS. D. JACKSON, P. S. lACOIiS. E. P. JONES, EUGENE JONES, FRANK KiNKS. SPARKS [ONES, SPURGEON T. JEFFERS, JOE JOHNSON, A. M. KELLEY, C. I.. KENDRICK, C. M KINGRY, (HAS. B. KNIGHT, J. II. LAMBERT, .1. E. LAMBERT, R. E., Jr. LAIRD, H. (1. LEE, .1. C. LEONARD, FRANK LILES. J. T. LOWERY, II I MALONE, ALBERT MARTIN, B. I. MARTIN. HENRY J. MATTHEWS, C. E. MOBLEY, A. J. •MOODY, W. A. MOODY, C. E. MONTAGUE, H. C. MORRIS, O. G. MOTLEY, GEORGE MOTLEY, G. I). McCLUNG, S. Z. McCORD, CAREY P. McKISSAC, I . A. McN R()N. E. I.. NKAI.. T. B. NETTLES, MALCOLM K. NETTLES, BOBBINS NETTLES, W. R. N HUMAN. M. C. NEWMAN, W. I). NEWMAN, W. K. NICHOLS, K. C. 3 192.2. NICIIOI S. J. ( o ' HAR V I.TKR T. OGLE, J. 0. PAYNE, E. C. PAYNE, F. M. P] l TARD, C. R. PRESCOTT, J. A. PRESI I il I. E . Jr. PI ( KI-.I ' T, E. P. RAUS HEN BURG. FRED R VUSCHENBURG, W. I RAY, THOS. D. RAM SKA. ( I RECORD, LEO REYNOLDS, C. E. REYNOLDS, R. L. ROACH, VIRGIL T. ROH LIN. KINAR C. R( i ELL. PHIL S. SARGEANT, I ' KI.IIAM SALTER, R. L. SHELTON, R. W. SLAYTON, W. W. SESSIONS, L, II. SHELBY. WALLACE II. SMITH. ALBERT LEE SMITH. . V. t SMITH. FRANK SMITH. L. L. SMITH. MKI.I. Ii. SMITH. PAT II SMITH. R. J. SOWELL, W. W. SPRUELL, W. A. STEWART, JOHN W. STEWART, T. S. STRICKLAND. K. M. STROUD, E. L. STROUD, J. L. SWANN, I ' . I ' . TATE, ROBT. LEE TAYLOR. I K. TERRY, J C. THOMPSON, J. n. TODD. J. W. UNDERWOOD, (HAS. P. VICE. K. L. TKI.N ' S. F. II. WATT. II II. WATT. W. II. WEAVER, HARRY WEAVER, II. T W I - I MORK.I.AND. M. L. WEBB, J. T. WINCii. W. T. WHITFIELD, W B W ILLIAMS, F. M. WOODALL. W. I!. WOOLSON, C. P. WRIGHT, J. C. WRIGHT, J. II. WRIGHT, W. II. WHITE, FRED HUH H0E Q nj alDlfol mm LldXIH5g£NOyT2p 3D Jlczilnl D n □ □ I UPC 3 DUE 192.2. 3D i J an 3D a D □ □ mss ocGCIE2ggNous2P 3 DIC DID s L. P. Watson J. S. Brindley 7. Jordan J. W. Britton I. X. Patterson II. E. Thompson J. P. Hall . J. F. Robinson J. I ■ ' . Bremton ( ' . 7. Henderson C. E. Stone J. P. Gillespie L. G. Johnson P. II ' . Herring J. C. Vaughn G, R. Saxon J. J. Bell B. P. Atkins A. X. Willis E. E. Johnson (,. (). Gibbs P.. P.. Cox II. D. Thomas ll G. Smith If ' . R. Britton D_ n DC 3 DC 3ID C 192.2. 31 D|C 3 D.C i 3 DID □ □ D DC 0[ 5]d CiHTg|rNour2P USE □ □ Phi appa 5to LOCAL FOUNDED AT HOWARD COLLEGE IN 1919 COLORS: Gold and Black. FLOWER: Pink Rose. Jfomtbers JAMES J. BELL WALTER G. PLEDGER J. FORD ROBINSON BOLIVAR I!. O ' REAR DEWEY II. McMEANS (£l|artev .iHnubcrs Si JO I IX I-.. BREWTON GROVFR C. O ' KELLY JAMES W. BRITTON WILLIAM G. SMITH LAWLER F. WATSON HERMAN 1 . THOMAS T. E. O ' REAR GROVER C. O ' KELLY JAMES J. BELL JOHN E. BREWTON E. E. COX JAMES W. P.RITTOX F nitres In I ' rbe Fratres In Collegia CLASS OF 1922 JOSEPH P. HALL J. FORD ROP.1XSOX WILLIAM G. SMITH CLASS OF 1923 EARLE POWELL LAWLER F. WATSON I. X. PATTFRSOX ROBERT W. HERRING C. E. STONE HERMAN D. THOMAS i-:. i-:. johnson CLASS OF 1924 SPURGEOX BRINDLEY J. P. GILLESPIE, [k. WILLIAM T. HENDERSON TURNER JORDAN J. C. VAUGHAN A. X. WILLIS I ' ,. F. ATKIXS GLENN O. GIBBS CLASS OF 1925 L. G. JOHNSON G] I RGE R. SAXON WILLIAM R. BRITTON H. R. GARRETT, Jr. II. E. THOMPSON 3IDHC 3 DC 1922 Z3UD C D HEB E O d o □ D i lg] mm 3D I I □ C 3 192.2. g i idc 101 m 3HDHD □ □ i mm CtCgEjg grsogs- ]}[}i liappa u tatistirs ,H, m NAME NICK NAME PET SAYING CHARACTERISTIC B. F. Atkins Parson Yah suit dot ' s it Brasso Projundo . ' ■ J- Bell Darling Cheer up the worst is yet Indolence to come . ' ■ K - Brewton Johnnie S ' umthing in it Independence • ' ■ xv - Britton Jimmy -I.uk out dar now Laughing W. R. Britton Parson Bill ' Goin ' up thar Parasitic Fun S. Brindley Bo McSpurgeon At a way a ' n feels Shootin ' the Pig Skin E. E. Cox Dear I know, I ' ve been there!!! - ' times 2 e |iial -t II. R. Garrett, Jr Papa Don ' t cry now dinning G. O. GHjbs .. Paderewski Goin ' to see sweet mama Tickl { ng ,, 1Ie Ivon .1. I. Oillespie, Jr. You can ' t get around the Nonsense N est ce pas argument, gentlemen • ' • P- Hall ..Tumulty Da-a-a-ad blame! Talking in His Sleep W. T. Henderson Bill Hot ' og! ' Pestering Wimmen R. W. Herring ..Fish Vat frets me Fory E. E. Johnson Jean I don ' t know Tout it. hoys Jelly Bean ' - ; - Johnson ..Windy Shot Lying Late Turner Jordan Pinkie Yell! boy Any Little Thing ' ■ ■ Saxon -Georgie Yes-yes-yes- yes Modesty J. F. Robinson . ..Flivver Hot-daug! rieart-breaker II. E. fnomijson Gus - ' I got it on you this morn- Seeing His Point ing J. C. Vaughn Mr. Wavn Pee wee X. R. T. Singing L. F. Wats,,,, ., u S-u-r-e bet yer life 4tl Dimension A • bill ' s Caruso I think you will Philosophising W. G. Smith Billj ' Cording to Roberts ' Messing Around Rules of Order ■ ' ' • S Stumpy I ' ve had enough of that Arguing ' Tl  ; ' ...Fatty You know what? ' Midnight oil HOBBY Pipe Wimmin t rimson M 2471-J, : Bijou Shovelling Spuds • - Army Athletics Jazz and Art Jazz Sanitary Jokes Wontevallo Tidewater Line Sliding Thru Nurses Sport Newsettes I ates I ts t . i urses 1 Ion, e made Candy Taking Washing Mason-ry Singing Before lireakfast i.i ing Bung-a-low To Be Popular □ DC 3 DC 3 DC U 192.2. - 3 □ XtLT E-NOuS □ I I Ij] : : : z - 1922 DC i i n _z_ ii0[ 5]d33Sgg£Nou$2P [g[o][aJh===i||Dir r_ iEU TR e-NOuS ffiL flJ H lDllc I I Square aub Compass Believing in the high destiny and purpose of Ancient Free and Accepted Masonry, as witnessed by their membership as Master Masons in just and duly- constituted lodges of Free and Accepted Masons, and with the sublime purpose of continuing the interest and affection of Masons in Free Masonry while they are absent from their home Lodges at a College or University, the incorporators have petitioned the State of Virginia to be incorporated under the name of SQUARE AND COMPASS in order to carry on more easily and successfully the purposes for which they have joined together. A corporation was duly organized under the laws of the State of Virginia on the 12th day of May. 1917. The Howard Square of the Square and Compass was organized at Howard College. February 11. V)2 , with the following Master Masons as Charter mem- bers: II. L. Nipper, James J. Bell, W. T. Edwards. A. M . Glover, V. 15. Ross, V. M. Gardner, B. Lawrence, W. M. Kelly and R. I ' .. Sims. The Howard Square has witnessed a continued growth since it was or- ganized. This growth is largely due to the interest shown in Masonry on the campus. It is not an uncommon thing for men to make application for member- ship in the Masonic Order when they become eligible. The social life of the Square has been a most pleasant one. Besides the social benefits received in the regular meetings every Thursday afternoon the Square has enjoyed several formal receptions. :oOo : (iHcmbcrB of Square atib Qlompass l . W. Burson I. II ' . Myers A ' . E. Owens J. . ' . Bell Dayton Riddle L. II ' . Weaver F. F. Martin Ratisy Bucktter A. ' . Sims S. I.. I Icutli 11. F. Atkins . A ' . Justice .1. M. Glover J. II. Greggs E. . . Trawick ' . It. Ross I ' . I.. Wyatt mH O n fsi ii ii [Dif p=n 1922 i ' i i faif jfDirE a I U D w 1 f I m mm LldXlNTggN s p QIC Who Ffai Buna Ethel Cl Kathryn I ■ Hill Virginia Carsxvell Gussie Mai .Sarah Hen I lev Annie Lee a nm 3 DC 1922 3 a c Jlfalli ilfDlfa n OdXJHrggrsou$2p gl.D i. i|ii=i| ie 1 I i FOUNDED AT WESLEYAN COLLEGE, 1851. COLORS: Light Blue and White. FLOWER: Single Violet. 3faunbets AIRS. FITZGERALD MRS . BUSH Kappa Chapter of Alpha Delta Pi in Howard College, Installed in 1919. Sorores In Collegio CLASS OF 1922 GUSSIE MAE BRASFIELD Dora Ua XFXA HARRIS ' Birmingham, Ala. GLADYS WATLINGTON Birmingham, Ala. CL SS OF 1923 VESTA CARLISLE Birmingham, Ala. VIRGINIA CARSWELL . . . Albany, Ala. CLASS OF 1924 EUNAABRAMS Ohatchie, Ala. EURA A.BRAMS 0hatM AUl ETHEL CLARK Faulkville, Ala CAROLYNEWEBB Birmingham, Ala. GERTRUDE YORK Birmingham, Ala. CLASS OF 192S SARAH BENTLEY Rock ford, Ala. KATHERINE CRAIG Birmingham, Ala VIRGINIA HILl Birmingham, Ala ANNIE LEE MASON Birmingham: Ala rjy j= 0Hll =][i][ =5][p][l =l i c 2. 2. h i] [Di rL =ni rDi rF=n r5iro- 51f51| a | |i= == [51 [c== ld LiiilBE ?NOuO P ' l | == : ' l ' ' 5 ' fS ff D JUulfn Helta }ji Kelt at (Chapters VVesleyan Female College, Macon, Ga . Salem College, Salem, Mass. Mary Baldwin, Baltimore, Md. University of Texas, Austin, lex. Newcomb College, New Orleans, La. Southwestern University, Georgetown, Tex. University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Ala. Lawrence College, Appleton, Wis. Florida State College, Tallahassee, Ma. I Inward College, Birmingham, Ala. Brenau College, Gainesville, Ga. Woman ' s College, Montgomery, Ala. Randolph-Macon, Lynchburg, Va. Ohio State University, Athens. ( ). Trinity College, Durham. X. C. Iowa State College, Ames. la. Boston University, Boston, Ma--. University of Lee, Urbana, 111. Kansas State University, Lawrence. Kans. Washington State College, Pullman. Wash. Hanover College, Hanover, Ind. Wittenburg College, Springfield, ' . University of California, Berkeley, Cal. Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La. University of Colorado. Boulder, Col. Iowa State Normal, Iowa City. la. University of Missouri. Columbia, Mo. Colby College, Waterville, Me. University of Nelire, Lincoln. Neb. Southern Methodist University, Dallas, ' lex. Kansas State College, Manhattan. Kans. University of Washington, Seattle. Wash. University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, La. University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. THIRTY-NINE ACTIVE CHAPTERS SIXTEEN ALUMNAE CHAPTERS TW STATE ORGANIZATIONS R i I D [Di l i H fn1[ r =n fD| f 1 | €) 2. 2. I l fDl f lfDl li i| fn1|Dl 101 nni£ OdXIHTggrNous2p 3 DC 3 czzrnn llnl I D 101 HE 3IDUC 3 II L H 192.2. DDE HI! 3D n □ A 1 Hchn Lane Ruby Arnold Marv Hiinii Gay DDE 3 DC 3D 1922 Mabel II Ailene Gu Halioni Mary Lucille Esell I I [ ] I : li  I5|i= — _j|fOi[ =J||U|L ] □ □ mm 03£CIE £n s2P 3 ale □ □ Zeta (Omega LOCAL FOUNDED, 1916 COLORS: Green and Gold. FLOWER: Red Rose. JFiumbers K VfliLF.LX CLARK HAZEL XEWMAN FRANCES M KTIX CECILIA CAIN XAXCY MABEL HODGES AILENE GULLAHORX .MARV i ' .lXX GAY ANNIE MERLE HAGGARD Soror Iu Faeultate BENNIE SPINKS Sorores In Collegio CLASS OF 1923 CLASS OF 1924 CLASS OF 1925 HELYN ALLISi L XL Rl ' IlY ARN( ILD MARY LUCILE EZELL S i fol 1 a m 3 a c a c 1922 a c 3 a.c 1 3 DID a □ i mm ciiONTggrNous p 3 DC a d [51 i Mable Willoughby lyn Craves Gladys Falbner ll ' ilnia Waggoner Ruby Bai Irma Parsons Ruby Little Thelma s Roberta Trei hsel Bertha Bates Willie Kirk Ethel Harris Loyce Hendrix Eunice Sloan Florence Pass Nallic Mae Casey Nellie Gibbs Annie Boyett 1 _D m a c 3 DC 1922 3 DC 3 DC UH _D D ]0[ i]dXIH5g|rNous2P □ □ □ cz n fc= n„A LTPr- nSHs TIIJ i ' at 1 Eblta (Smttma j igtna Jiurorttg LOCAL FOUNDED AT HOWARD COLLEGE, 1919. RUTH .MORRIS VERA MADGE DUMAS RUTH BRIXDLEY CASEY COLORS: Green and White. FLOWER: Whi{e Rose. Sorores In Collegia CLASS OF 1922 RUBY BARTON Boyles, Ala. BERTHA BATES ... Ensley, GLADYS FALKNER Ensley, Ala. AXXIE BOYETT .... BimkSgham, Ala. EUNICE SLOAN . . Ensley, Ala. FLORENCE PASS Blountsvitle, Ala. WILMA WAGGONER Evsley, Ala. CLASS OF 1923 NALLIE MAE CASEY Vorth Birmingham, Ala. CLASS OF 1924 EVOLYN GRAVES Fairfield, Ala. NELLIE GIBBS Ensley. Ala. ETHEL HARRIS Birmingham, Ala. WILLIE HUGH KIRK Birmingham, Ala. LOYCE HENDRIX Hartford, Ala. CLASS OF 1925 THELMA STACY West End, AU. ROBERTA TRECHSEI Birmingham, Ala. MABLE WILLOUGHBY Rockford, Ala [RMA PARSONS East Lake. Ala. RUBY LITTLE Morris, Ala. Sorores In . llumnae CLASS OF 1920 RUTH .MORRIS Birmingham, Ala. ANADELLE PATTERSON Port Arthur, Texas CLASS OF 1921 VERA MADGE DUMAS St. Petersburg, Fla. ORENELAMMERT Birmingham, Ala. RUTH CASEY Birimingham, Ala. D | Hi .| fal fczzz=l fa1 [ r=fl | 9 2. 2. i l fal l zzzzzJI fDl l. al falfa MsI lol m I L°J i □ DC DDE 3D H 1922 DDE 3 DC l HOD [51 odXIHTg iourT] 3 DC Belia (JSamnta jS ' tgma llKmbrr lUhu Evolyn rushes heme in the afternoon when a certain Phi Kappa ' u is going out in his automobile? Bertha is so anxious to teach in the city next year? Ruby isn ' t applying for a school? Pcco enjoyed her trip to Auburn so much? Eunice was so sleepy on Thursday morning after Wednesday night? Annie is so faithful to the Crimson? Florence needs an assistant in her coaching ? Freshman couldn ' t find where the perfume was on Stacy? Roberta buys men ' s socks? Nellie is so crazy about rain? Jap dodges Spears? The Dean of Women calls [rma over the phone? noon . Nallie Mae doesn ' t want to practice for the Senior play on Sunday after- Lunches and fruit disappear in the Delta Gamma Sigma room? Ask Wilma. Ethel requested her remains to be interred at I lanceville ? Gladys devotes so much time to a campus course? Mabel is SO religiously inclined? Bill wants to major in History? Florine likes to go on hikes? r51 ' 1 ' ■■IF= ; Fir= 5i | Q 2. 2. I5|B| mil ID mm otCgEjs g osrTlP IOIC D □ □ c V Clip . Imk Club FOUNDED: January 28, 1921 PURPOSE: To bind together the members in a fraternal union fostering their social and scholastic interests. MOTTO: Not for ourselves only. SONG: The Sheik. COLORS: A ' .-. and White. (Officers J MI.S H. WISE . . . President J FRANK NORRIS Vice-President ; BRAXTON COSPER Secretary and Treasurer LEROY ELLIOT Business Manager J. JONES STEWART Social Manager ROLAND P. CARREKER Reporter J. BOYD RUNYAN Sergeant-at-Anns z irei r Pi n 3 1 9 2, 2. ii i , [D] f L=j i rni[ = H I 1 RELIGIOUS I DUE iKlXlNT5grNou52p nnc □ □ 01 ©tfrmitg Club (Officers FIRST QUARTER S. I. HEATH V M. GLOVER GR VDY KETCHUM GR I Y KETCHUM R WZV BUCKNER EDWARD AXDERSI  N SE( OXD QUARTER President 1 ' ice President Secretary President I ' ice ' resident Secretary A. M. GLOVER I. . MYERS A. II. KING C. E. ( IMPTON 77 A7 QUARTER PULPIT SUPPLY COMMITTEE I. W. MYERS. Chairman E A. TRAWICK I ' resident ' ( v ' resident etary I reasurer for Year B. R. J IS I KT HH 3 DC □ C 1922 H i g | r =i I5iE 5]{g I 10 mi£ OtlXIBTg grNousTlp 300 □ □ (Eoitgratulattons! I : oqo: All the preacher-students are to he congratulated upon three things: their college, their club and themselves, and some of them are to he congratulated upon two other delightful blessings — their wives and their children. It has been ?hyly urged that a few of the young divines are also to he congratulated upon their sweetheart . That, however, will not he further discussed here, for it is vet un- certain whether their sweethearts are destined to produce smiles or tears. The -preachers are to he congratulated upon their college because it helps them climb to an altitude of wider vision and clearer view, and because it flings lovingly around them the charm of the cosmopolitan spirit and the softening in- fluence of comradeship of man with man. They are to be congratulated upon their club because it gathers them all about its hearth as children of one home to share the sympathies of each other, and because it has. from time to time, brought to them the counsel and encourage- ment of sonn of the best ministers and churchmen of the state. They are to be congratulated upon themselves because in a reasonable measure they have kept their hands upon the plow and their eves upon the fur- row. Many of them have grappled with circumstances in an effort to stay in school, and have won. Many have continued pastoral work during the whole ses- sion. Some have held B. Y. 1 ' . I . Training schools; others have creditably iden- tified themselves with student activities. All have made commendable progress in the direction of graduation in spite of the fact that they have made themselves a basketball and tennis court behind the club house. May their progress continue in all directions and may their visions grow ever clearer as they multiply their footprints upon the campus sod. Congratulations ! I 1 HE 3 DC 3 DC 3 1922 H HUH 3 DC i □ □ 1=1 [ D iic== r =iti Li!±fgg D0H 3 1=1 D D p o n □III iHall i i IIdIR 10 1922 I D alfal i Qd gN grHQusTfi Ol Uttmntu (L ' inb IRoII a V. B. Ross T. II. Swearingen 1. X. Patterson S. L. Heath L. W. Weaver E. .1. Trawick L ' ■ Myeri • ' ■ M Gl ' ' • L - Wyatt D. W. Br C. E. Matthews Williams C. Hyde R. ■:. Owens L. C • ' ■ ' • V. Willis R. L. Bonner .,. .v. ,, . S. Higdon I. J. Q„i,„. E. E. Johnson Ransy Buckner F.F.Martin W.L.Robertson C. E. Compton J.I. B. R. Justice A. H. King Grady Ketchum R. I), ll j Greggi 01 mm 3 DC 3 Idle 3 1922. G :nc 3 DIE D □ i a Dl mm orCONTg|rNour2p 3 DC DJ HDD § tnoent Volunteers c I 11 . Weaver Lydia H ' illiams I. II i I. A. Patterson R. I.. Owens Myrtice Hodges i. 1. Edwards . • ' . Martin B. R. Justice Beatrice Caver I. . II C. E. Compton 7. II. Svsearingen I. M. Glover . I. . King Cussie Upchurch II. S. Higdon Dl D m m. 3 DC HUH 3 1922 DID C DID C 1 II lfDl fnlfalEflfi IDI omn odX3EiggNour2p 3D R IczjHdIdI (Eije J ubent Volunteer Jbnb .MISS CLARA DeSHAZO President J I. EDWARDS Vice-President ROSWELL OWEXS Secretary MISS GUSSIE UPCHURCH Treasurer .MISS HELEN EVANS Reporter MISS MYRT ICE HODGES Corresponding Secretary JW embers I. W. MYERS B. R. JUSTICE MRS. T. E. SWEARINGEN T. E. SWEARINGEN ARTHUR KING I.. W. WEAVER F. F. MARTIN C. E. COMPTON A. S. WATTERS 11 S. HIGDON A. M. GLOVER MISS BEATRICE CAVER .MISS LYDIA WILLIAMS m 01 The Baptist Student Volunteer Band of Alabama was organized at Howard College in December, 1919. Today there are eight active chapters located in the different schools and ' colleges of the State with a total membership of about three hundred. The purpose of the organization is to further christian work of everj kind among the students of the State and to give especial impetus to the mission cause and help to those who are interested. 1 here is held, annually, a state convention at some college where the members receiv in- spiring messages from returned missionaries and other leaders of our denomination. I here has been, since the date of organization, an active chapter at Howard College where the members endeavor nol only to engage in the systematic study of the mam problems of the christian worker, but also are active in the practical side of Christianity. I he city of Birmingham offers numerous opportunities in this respect mid the Volunteers have found much pleasure in visiting the juvenile court, jails, almshouses, the Boys ' Indus- trial School, hospitals, etc. Our aim is always to help in any way that we can The mem- bership here has been stcadih growing and now numbers most of the sfudents who are interested in christian work. Members have shown an enthusiastic spirit in the work this co-operating in everj waj and at the same tim enjoying the outside work and the il functions intended to promote a Feeling of better understanding and fellowship the i ollege stttd nts. i 0UH nac 3UD C 192.2. 3U0 HHf i 30 P[D][a]G wm 03iONTggrNoU$2p j □ c m p lnmt3 JW ' (Christian Association rh Y. .M. C. A. here is like a baby ' s head; it is young; ii is spasmodic in its move- ments; its contents arc not yet thoroughly developed; and it is possessed of infinite pos- sibilities. It is young, because the Y. M. C. V of former days died here on the cam,.,. the spring ol 1920. and nol until considerably more than a year afterwards in the early autumn of 1921, was horn the Y. M. C. A. of today. ovements partly from extreme youth and parti} from a lack It is spasmodic in its high . ' a ln - h opinion -I its own importance. Like a baby ' s head filled with vaporable enthu siasms and unforeseenable notions, our Y is given to unpremeditated sallies into tin land of Pep and to irregular bobbing up and down, as a top on the agitated surface of ; pool. I he meaning of the foregoing statement is that our Y did not meet regularly and did not always have a generous appropriation of pep. And further, owing to its modest opinion ol itself, the Y. M. C. A. often benevolently permitted the Lyric and Bijou et cetera to stand in its place and to consume the hours which justly belonged to itself Wherefore it is said that our Y is spasmodic in its movements. Its contents are not thoroughly developed for three reasons; firstly, its life has been short, secondly, its spasmodic activity has not thoroughly occupied the time given it; and thirdly, it has wanted a teacher. The first two of these reasons have already been discussed- the third will now be touched upon. The Y was organized under the oversight of Mr Oliver, former secretary of the Birmingham Y. M. C. A. As long as he remained in the city we had his counsel. When he left for Mississippi in October, he left us without a teacher. Wherefore our Y is not yet thoroughly developed. . ' ' , is Possessed of infinite possibilities because it has much to achieve and much of the s,„dent ability to achieve with. The ' Y is the cosmopolitan club of the campus If fraternities were nations and societies confederations then the Howard college ' A ' might appropriately he called The League of Nations! What does it matter if it resembles 1 baby ' s head. ' Is not a baby ' s head the dearest and most talked of membe r of society anil the forerunner of genius and great deeds- Let us all pledge our service to the Baby Y (■oil bless tin ' baby ! □ m nun n c 3 192.2. H D □ C 3 DC 3H@ D D 1=1 C § imn 0dXlN2ggrsoys2p 3 DflC n ii=illaira1 A ' « ' i .ri- . . .V. II alln.y C. W. Gross M. Hoi ir. .v. •„ ,•, II ' . L, Robertson J. If. Britton If. C. Hare R. ! . Clark R. E. Lambert, Jr. d Anderson ' G l We . ' ■ V Bnnil ' y ■ ' • ' ■ Ketchum L. L. James II. E. II Mn . ' . ' ■, ' : ■ ' ; ' ' ' «•   W Shores J. II. C«„, C . R. ,„,,,„ ■ ' . ' • s u - ' •  ■ ' - - ' . . ?.- . c. o. ca.fr,. ' • ■ ,V V ' ' ' ' ,. , ( ' ( : ' ' ' ' • ' • ' • c ■ ' ■ ( - ' ■■ ■ ■ f M. C ings .I ' ' ■ ' [, R ■ ' • ' • ' • ' ■ St • 7. W. Myers ' • ' ■ ' . , ■ ■ W.B.Cullett W.T.HenJer j.j.s, 1 Lamberl ' ■ Ktmbrongh Carl He S G. Knowles □ DC n c 3IDIC 1922. 3 DC =K!j[ D 3DD [5i ic ii = i i5i f l == l iriX iBT gr5g5r2lPr I IDC AIlENE GW-LAMORU CUf2A OE SUAZO ' ft fl k ETHEL. mL W b .- OTU . „._ p « M ■ k. BURTON W BERTHA BATE «£«?« Afl BURTON m F SERTHA BATES -r« .t ANNIE L SOfETT NENA HARRIS -P« J R.U8Y ARNOLO MAfcY SUNN GAV GUSSlE UPCWURCU WILUE KiRKL [ ft pi n n rDi fc=i rni n=T i 1922 t EL M L E 00 I H0(c i]icnHj§g2ou$2p 3 QIC i i (Mirers of f . p. QI. J . NENA HARRIS . CLARA DeSHAZO ' ' ™stdent ETHEL BURTON ice-President BERTHA BATES . ' ' ' ' ' Sccrctar y Treasurer Cabinet RUBY ARNOLD GUSSIE UPCHURCH BERTHA B ATES GERTRUDE YORK ANNIE BOYETT MARV B UNN GAY CLARA DeSHAZO WILLIE KIRK AILENE GULLAHORN VIRGINIA SUMMERS Jtf inn hers GUSSIE MAE BRASFIELD L0LA MOO DY ethel U ?lSk MILDRED McDowe ETHEL (LARK , r , [A XKIS()X VESTA CARLISLE ,, ATTI| , |!KAX Q MARY LUCILE EZELLE EDNA PATE JESSIE FREEMAN FLORENCE PASS LOYCE HENDRIX J)K| , SApp MYRTIS HODGES wtt tibt iutxt a ■,, , ... MABFI iiodcttq WILHELMINA SHACKELFORD MAI, EL HODGES THELMA STACY l!KRT,IA ' o ARM VIRGINIA SUMMERS DAISY HOONER Erx[rK S[()VV ER vvv ' XV - 1 ' ROBERTA TRECHSEL HELYnSTe GLADYS WATLINGTON ' vv , CAROLYN WEBB ANNIE LEE MASON ,, ]Mh ursrrmwv VIRGINIA MINTEE SrLENE WYATT MURRAY GLADYfwH CK On January 19 1922. .he Co-ed ' s of Howard College organized a Student Y W C . with practically all the girls in school as members. lis.,. uI!iv;;nT;;!;; ;; ; ;; , T fi ' u ' ' c% A, TM R ' n ; ' r -ft™ Prof ■ - fr , ' ciuer in iiu i. w. C. A. at Meredith ( ollege wh e a student then ' I l„- ;: ,i ; r r r M were as f,, ,,ws: Nena Harris - president = cia -  ■ ■■-. l Kl . l ' rl - secretar y- and B tha Bates, treasurer. The cabinet for the guidanc o he „. . The ' ■ ■ ' ■• o campus life have been interesting and helpful to evi - SerV,C V  «ee has planned a program for interesting social -k L the itv A young Women ' s Christian Association was not organized ai ll , J-s because the number of Co-ed did not Justify the «S « 2 ' bul w.th approximateb seventy-five girls enrolled success seems assured. I Ik- N is anxious to send a representative to the Blue Ridire o.mu -,-, • ,i • ; ■• e close of another sc 1 year there should be e, ' , ™ m ™ r organization. al re P r e s entatives from this It is the purpose of the Y. . C. to brins the c„ ,j -i a high moral life among the students. ' ' together ;m l maint ™ I5I51IE D DIC 3 DC 3 192.2. [S □ n n 1=1 c ID 5 m D vSSJErsgrHoZsJNk 3D Hnluarii Dames ( DIVINITY AUXI] (Dffim-s I RY i MRS MRS. MRS MRS ROBERT I). WRIGHT TIIOM S E. SWEARINGEN B. F. ATKINS FRED F. MARTIN I ' resident I ' ice President Secretary Treasurer life. 1 Mini pari ' i OLORS: White, Blue, Gold. HYMN: ' May I Be Faithful. WATCHWORD: Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown Rev. 2:10. AIM : The aim is to develop a symmetrical Christian womanhood; to bind together the sterial students ' wives of Howard College for world-wide service for Christ, to pre- for consecrated, efficient leadership a pastors ' wives. (flobennni I will be true for there are those who trust me; 1 will be pure for there are those who care: I will be strong for there an those who suffer; I will be brave for there i- much t dare; I will be friend of all. the foe, the friendless; I will be giving and forget the gift; 1 will be humble for I know my weakness; I will look up and laugh and love and lift. iuill MRS B. I ATKINS MRS. R. L. BONNER MRS. FRED F. M R I IX MRS. V. L. R( SS MRS. THOMAS E. SWEARINGEN MRS E. A TRAWICK MRS. G. (i. WILLI MS MRS. V. L. WYATT MRS ROBERT 1 . W ' RK.IIT D 1 mm 3 DC 3D 1922 DDE mo n GLEE CLUB e m mm 3llXlNTggrNous2p 3 DC 3 0D n i - — . . i, - i 1M 3 DC DUD I 9 2. 2. !■ .p i 5I5i iE i m □ DUd B. C. COWART Y L. BENTLEY B. SIMS icQCIH nouOP Pjrofaarb Cnllecje (fylte Club a nic PROF. GLADSTONE JACKSON, Tenor. ©fficers 3CDDD Secretary and Business ' resident Treasurer Manager JM embers First Tenor S ■■-. ond Tenor FR W ' K ATKINS C M. rlURST j. B. RUNYAN First Bass R. B. SIMS F. o. CARLISL1 I. . MULLINS II. S. HIDGON R. ENS II. B. BLEDSl l R. W. WEBB II. K. WATLINGTON I. P. GILLESPIE W. I.. BENTLEY JAMES rARRELL, Ik. ( ' . SC (GGINS W. B. GULLETTE J. I- ' . C. GRIGGS Second Bass I ' .. C. COWART R. II. SPEER W. S. FULLER C. M [THEWS i □ i l°J 3 DC a QWc 1922 300 3 DC a OUia] □ m J □ I J PIC m 19 2-2. !■ i . [n1[ 51[ai |i i o m □ lol HIE OtCS NTg gTNQusTlP :□: Gltfe Jmsdug ptofcrarh Club COLORS: Gold and Blue. PURPOSE: To Interest Prospective Students in Howard. (Offu-lU-5 ARVEL LOGAN President MISS KATHRYN CRAIG Vice-President MISS WILMA WAGGONER Secretary GLENN O. GIBBS . . Treasure! MISS EVOLYN GRAVES Repo J H nutters ARVEL LOGAN KATHRYN CRAIG GLENN GIBBS WILMA WAGGONER EVOLYN GRAVES EUNICE SLOAN GLADYS IAI.KXKK BERTHA BATES NELLIE GIBBS THELMA STACY RUBY ARNOLD MARY I ' .l ' .W GAY MARY l.l ' i II. K EZELL AILENE GULLAHORN M M ' .KI. HODGES MARGARET M BRIDE MILDRED MURRAY LOL MOODY VIRGIN! SUMMERS K VI HLEEN I ' tSTER LILLIE B VRNES BERTHA ll ARD BENNIE SPINKS ANNA KEND MATTIE BEAN OUZTS HULAN WHITEHEAD WILLIE LENDERMAN GEI IRGE ECONOMOS SYDNEY BRASWELL HILTON UPTON o. i). cash ( . K. WEIR CARL HEARN PAUL AUSTIN JULIAN KELLER ALPHEUS PEKE KATHLEEN SLOAN NORA I-..YKTI □ ID □ D During the first quarter of the school term 1921-1922 some Enslej students met in the Chapel and organized a club with the purpose of interesting high school graduates in I Inward and, particularly, those from Ensley. Mr. Vrvel Logan, a young man of wonder ful executive ability, was unanimously chosen president, and the club gradually grew iron, the handful into the now large enrollment of nearly fifty. The C ' luli gave a program to the Enslej High School seniors in January and enter tained them on the Campus a few days later, being assisted by the various collegiate organ ' izations. In February another program was presented to the Jefferson County High School students which was verj successful. It is the intention of the club to give a series of on act plays at the various high schools in the city, I In- club recognizes the value of the denominational school, both to the student, and. the student to it. and during those times of business depression is striving to build a greater Howard with the choicest of home talent. Any Ensley student is eligible for membership and 1 1 1 ; i present his name to any officer at any regular or call meeting. D DDE 3 DC DC 1922 iimn U[gJ0 3in d fDlfal fal| I=n fnl fal iU i 1 0ifiO5xgg? oUs7iP[ lo l l H f (D][n] ]DCZ iIc H 192.2. D 101 3 □ C 5l°l l i ' In! □ i mm ioaXlNTg5Nou$2P (Die Central Sofaarh Club □ c . llexander, Ruth Alford, O. T. 11, G. . Bledsoe. Buford Boyett, Annie Carlisle, Vesta Carter, Fred Casey. Homer Casey, Nallie Mae Caver, Beatrice i omiell, Annie Jane C x. C. D. DeShazo, Ethel Falctta, Pasquilino Freeman, Jessie Hagood, Florine Hagot d, Jewel Harris. Ethel Harris, Netia Hill, I ' irginia Hogan, Marshall Jordan, Turner Kirk, Bill Knight, J. H. Lam-, Helyn Lea. Sumter HI Lee. Carlton McDowell, Mildred Mason, . innie Lee M inter. Virginia Ni rris. Frank Nunnelly, R. A. Larsons. Irmu Pate, Edna Prescott, W. LL. Jr. Reakouries, Ceo. Kiddle. Dayton Sides. Ellie Earl Smith, Wm. G. Stone. P. L. Stubbs, Jl If. Thomas, C. S. Thornton, Miriam Trechsel, Roberta ( ' pchurch, Gussie Watlington, Eugene II ' a lini ton. Gladys Watson, L. F, Webb, R. W. White, • ' . R. Il ' illiams. W. L. □ Dozens of the men one sees wandering around Howard College and every other girl is a former student of Central High School. Gradually as we became aware of this fact, we awoke to the possibility of continuing associations and friendships begun in our high school years. Pleasanl as this continued association was, there was one big draw- back. There was no organization among ib, therefore small chance for co-operation. Now, as you know, organization and co-operation were two things thoroughly drilled into everj Central ite, ajong with lessons in the correct way to stand and hold a book (always in the left hand i and to drive a laundry wagon (in ease one failed to make the dummy squad) This disorganized state of affairs was so distasteful to us that one day in December, 1921, we took advantage of a golden opportunity and, in memory of happj days spent at Cen- tral, in mimon of potato chips consumed in the high school dining room, of marshals evaded in the halls and of song books left in lockers, a Central-Howard club was formed, with the following officers: president, W. G. Smith; vice-president, Annie Lee Mason; secretary, Fred Carter; treasurer. Turner Jordan. Our present membership numbers fifty. Even though we are the youngest club on the campus, we have already had some jolly good times. In January, for the sake of old times and new friends, a number of Us went back to Central on a isit, and they gave us a most enthusiastic reception. Returning ten tral ' s hospitality, we entertained the Senior Class at a spend-the-day part) on February 4. By organizing this club, we feel that we have strengthened tin bond between Central and us. and that we can thus extend a warmer and heartier welcome to future students from He Central. i i lUGl ' E 3 DC 3IDHC 1922 2 □ C □ C mi □ D C=l C UU(£ £SJBr mrj[ :□: 3 C=] D D i S. I.. Heath I. N. Patterson B. R. Justice I.. If ' . II . . .U. Gl R. D. II J. (,. II ingen C. G. Williams Mable Willoughby Julia Nelson m @ □ □ c 3 DC 3 DC 15)2.2. UEH laH D □ □ Jfofoarb $. C. 3. (Club B. R. JUSTICE MABEL WILLOUGHBY JULIA NELSON T. E. SWEARINGEN ©ff trers President Vice President Secretary-Treasurer Crimson Reporter -iH embers A. M. GLOVER ' I . E. SWEARINGEN MABEL WILLOUGHBY I. X. PATTERSON G. G. WILLIAMS B. R. JUSTICE L. W. WEAVER R. W. WRIGHT SAMUEL L. HEATH JULIA NELSON GRADY HYDE PROE. JAMES B. TRAY Iltnnorary iWembers $aicmtb ' §. fl. 1. OJlub MRS. R. W. WRIGHT Anticipating a much larger student body at Howard College in the years to come the Howard I ' .. C. I. Club was organized. As time bounds ahead and the present great tide continues to swell, it is desired thai our own Baptist Collegiate Institute shall furnish a bonus in the Howard constituency. It is hoped that each year Newton will send mote of her loyal sons and daughters to Howard. The club, instigated by Miss Mittie K. Hayley, the eldest tutor in our college and one who is beloved, has been constituted for the purpose of establishing a more intimate and friendly relation between Newton and Howard. Legall} we want to have and to hold the hoys and girls from away down East. The club has as honorary members Prof. James I!. Trant, who j now professor of social sciences a1 Howard, and Mrs. Robert D. Wright, for four years principal of the elementary department of the I!. C. I. Many prominent men have come from B. C. I., in- cluding Dr. W. P. Wilks, pastor of the First Baptist Church, Albany, Ala.; Rev. J. R. Rigell, Pastor of the hirst Baptist Church, Gadsden, l.i ; Rev. Jesse M. Rodgers, Presi dent of the Baptist Theological Seminary in China. l jmi i i DC HOC HDL 1922 I ' lE ' j ' il 1 3D mm xSSSS- hssC 3 DC [Dl n f D mm u stratum School 7 Ruth Morris. A. B. Assistant Supervisor of Practice Teaching I ' ... Howa itral High , -i Poii ill Point, Ga., 1920-1921; Instructor, Howard College Simmer I. 1921. m Allie Grace Bennett Frances Bohannon Alma Cardwcll Jo Cox Jonnie Mae C Jean Graham Ebbie Green Nancy Lea I. aura l.ott Alice Moody Edith MeDanal Danal Bonnie McVeigh Archer Sims Hankins Sloan Oxeietc Smith Central Stanfield John Tarrant Richard Tarrant Elizabeth Thacker Bertha lines Helen lli ' t Lucile Wright □ DC 3 DC 3 DC 3 192.2. 3 DC 3 DlC H D □ □ PI DUG 0d NTggTNOu$2l5Q[ □ c □ § □ Silting IWm Caunrtl MRS. HARRIS R. E. LAMBERT, Jr. . . J. C. BABCOCK C. W. GROSS A. M. GLOVER R. Y. HERRING Matron President Ma Secretary I ' .. ( ' . COW i; i I.I l HE i C. I. KELLEY a I DDE =!5fi 3 1922 una c 3 DIE m 3DD p p O0H od nHxggNour2P 3 QIC DtsM J Mrs. E. K. Cox Chr (Sir Is ' pm-niitnru In the year 1°2()-1921 Howard established for the first time in it- history a girls ' dormitory. i this time the home of Dr. J. A. Hendrix was converted into Hendrix Hall— a dormitory for boarding girls. Mrs. E. O. Thompson was dean of women, and Mrs. llarri- was matron as the girls took their meals at Renfroe Hall. The first year nineteen young ladies availed themselves of this opportunity. They were Lucy Lagow, Ollie Young, Virginia Cleaver, Bessie Ruth Steele, Malvena Sowell, Ethel Clark. Caroline Webb, Mary Gladys Hogan, Jane Tate. Elizabeth Haynes, Loyce Hendrix, Dola Pate, Elizabeth Herring, Mary Shirley. Knna and Hunt hram-. Gladys Mount. Annie Knight and Florence Pass. Then, with the coming of the year 192M922 came many changes. It was so ar- ranged that meals could he served in Hendrix Hall, making it unnecessary for the girls to have to go to Renfroe Hall for meals, a- originallj thej had done. Mrs. I-;. E. Cox became the matron, while Mi-- French Haynes succeeded Mr-. E. ( ). Thompson a- dean of women. Owing to the limited capacity of the building, it was deemed advisable to limit the boarding girl students to twelve. The twelve were Lydia Williams. Ethel Clark. Florence Pass, Euna and Eura Abrams, Thelma Stacy, Loyce Hendrix. Pearl Turner. Gertrude Tidwell, Mabel Willoughby, Mildred Smith and Virginia Carswell. The girls maintain that the dormitory life is fine, that it i- just like a big family, that the meal- are just like mother u-ed to cook (?), that perfect harmony rules oxer Cox ' - rmv. □ 1 □ □ PC 3D C 3 192.2. H P C hid lie 3PP . ' v U ' M sAK tV, n n N !l ' 2. fi..H - Athletics □ □I ID M a [01 Co II R. C. M VRSH I.l. Lai 1 ' 1 I 9 2. 2. I S][n]i i[D]i 3][g] 3 a d c=i c I wim mm 3D 3 DC 1922 3 DC 3 DC Ell □ □ IE 0TlXlBTggNOU$3P 1 DBC □ □ (Die if (Club For some years Howard !ui- been attempting to have an II Cluh composed of those athletes who have made their letters in somt branch of sports here at Howard. It was not until this year that a successful result occurred for the men met together and formed an organization that from the start was destined to function for the hest interest of athletics at Howard. The 1 Inward letter men tin ' s year have proven to he in earnest and have been pushing things forward in an athletic way here at the college. (Dfftcero 1921-22 OATHAR T. ALFORD 11. D. THOMAS L. G. WALKER . President Vice President Secretary-Treasurer embers I BOILER ALFORD BO BRINDLEY STUMPY CLARK BELL COOPER ROWDY CREWS LEE FORD •■PAPA GARRETT DAN GAYLORD LEE HEAD CHARLIE HURST ZEKE KNIGHT JESS LACK ICY LITTLE JUM LAMBERT JUMBO LAMBERT CARTER MANASCO FRED MARTIN MATTY .MATTHEW ' S BOB SHELTON PAT SHORES TOBY STUBBS FAT THOMAS ' LOUSE WALKER SHORTY WEBB ] ® 1 WE 3 DC 3IDIC 192.2. H mo 3 DC i • i • . BT1AM.- SOUTHERN vs HOWARD. GAT- i ■4 U_ isV ) f 11 1 D a 3 DC 3 ID C 1922. d 3 DC 3;d c 5] n I 1 1 n □ □ C=D C 01 ($ HlKg OdXSrggrsoUnp 3 DC Dusm Ihirciitu 3jooiball Pqirad Top row left to right : Bottom row left to right: 1 Inward 14 1 toward 3 I Inward 45 Howard 59 1 toward 3 1 toward 1 1.. ward _ ' l I toward (i How ard 14 I I. .war. 1 139 l. Hurst, ( o ole Roberts, Big Brown, J. S. Brindley, Alabama 4 Auburn 34 Millsaps Jacksonville 7 Chattanooga 26 Florida M Marion Spring Hill 7 Birmingham-Southern 16 ( )|)pi mentJ 151 curetneter Lackey 8 Ford 5 Oaylord _ ( a N i|ur _ ' R Brown Captain Mford 1 Clark I Shore- 1 48 37 14 13 9 6 6 6 □ i i □ D C 3 DC 3 DC 3 I 92.2. B d □ 3 DC 1 s SID D ® £ 0TlXlNTggrNous2p 3 DC □ □ football {esume Nineteen hundred and twenty-one was rather an unsuccessful year for the Howard Bulldogs on the gridiron, as the record only contains three victories for the varsitv eleven with six defeats, thus winning just one-third of the games played. However, it must not be thought from this, that Howard did not have a team. On the other hand they had one of the best squads at the institution in years, only there were six schools that had better playing teams against Howard Such men as Capt. Boilermaker Alford. Lee Ford. Bo Brindley. Jess Lackey and others, are few, and far between. At the first of the year there were only five of the 1920 letter men hack. Perhaps having so many new men accounts for so many losses. Alabama was the first team met. and Howard came so near licking the Crimsons, that they were shaky in their hoots. The score at the end of the first half was 14 to 13 in favor of Howard. But a football game has two halves and, so, Howard lost. Not, however, until they had gained the distinction of being the first team to score on ' Rama on their own grounds in some years. Only Flor- ida and Spring Hill blanked the Bulldogs. The annual fracas with the Methodists of Birmingham-Southern was a hard game to lose. Critics said that Howard had the best team on the field, but the fact that the Panthers fought all the time and the Bulldogs didn ' t accounts for the final outcome. Bo Brindley deserves especial mention since he won a place on the Bir- mingham News ' Football Honor Roll for 1921. Ro ' s work on the line at center this year was nothing short of spectacular. Jess Lackey led the team in points scored, and is another man that has played exceptionally well for Ole Howard. I IE hoc □ c 1922 3113 c 3 DC □ 1 D_ U □ D 1=1 C ms£ orlXlNTggrNouQp 3D HSH Scrub (Ream n ID1 ' .- • rote left to right: Lee Head, Coach; Fred Whtle, N. D. Suddeth, Smith, J. (i. Hyde, C. li. Stone, Harwell Wen, II. E. Whitehe, Putt. mi row lilt to right: Nick Carter, . ' . li. Jackson, Fred Albritton, J. II ' , Brkton, II A. Flowers, Kirk Howell, . ' . M. O ' Rear. n o D m HOC 1922 HHH 000 n ODitr piitckg J suirants A new line of football endeavor at Howard this session was the Grass- CUtters. Under Coach Lee Head, an old Howard end. the hoys conquered a few honors throughout the state, not once being defeated. Many times they played the varsity to a standstill during scrimmages. It is hoped they will continue next year, and no doubt some of them may be found higher up. ©Ije Qirasscutters Coach Lee I lead Fred White Suds Suddeth Houston Smith Preacher Hyde Charley Stone Red Allen W ' hitev Whitehead Nick Carter Red Roberts Jackson Fred Allbritton Jimmie Britton Buck Mowers Kirk Howell Joe O ' Rear Marvin McCarthy 2§tctnrtes Reserves 7 Reserves $5 Reserves 13 Leeds High 6 Hueytown High 7 Oneonta Outlaws Reserves 55 ( )pponents 13 i m 3 DC 3 DC 1922 31D C 3 DC H I u □ 1=1 III — =3 ] E===3]3lXIgN DPI ] tZ=l D 1 _□ □ i i □ i in i U I 922 ic=i| [o]E 3 DC Basketball Resume All things considered the Howard varsity five basketeers, etc., had a very successful season. The students had high hope- at first of having a winning team, hut time proved You are a better man than ' us ' Gungaden, meaning of course that there were better teams than I ioward ' s. Out of fourteen contests played five were won and nine lost making a percentage of thirty-five per cent. The five games won were from North Birmingham, Jacksonville. Hat tie-burg Y, Y. M. C. A. and Avondale mills. The team gave Alabama a big -care in their first game. The -core went neck and neck up until the last few minutes and then the University forged ahead hut not until they were convinced that Howard had ' a very good squad. The Varsity five lost the city cham- pion-hip to the Birmingham Athletic Club in a series of names in which the final winner had to take two contests, and the B. A. C. won the first two. Howard entered their cage squad in the S. T. A. A. tournament in Atlanta held the la tter part of February. It so happened that they drew the first clay of the meet the team that won the S. I. A. A. championship, but Howard ' - strength wa- evidenced in the fact that North Carolina had the hardest time of the entire menu there in doing away with Howard, a- the varsity five played their best against the champs. Rowdy Crews led the team in scoring, with Toby Stubbs pushing him all the while- the former had 155 points and the latter 131. The team was composed of two good shot- at forward-, an all-round man at center and two of the best defensive men to be found. The regular line-up was: Crews and Shores, forwards; Stubbs. center; Capt. Alford and Lackey, guards . An interesting thing about the squad was that two letter men of the previous year, a forward and a guard, failed to make the regular squad but made letters. is corcmcter □ 1 low aid 36 I I o ward 31 I toward 20 Howard 28 Howard 13 Howard 23 Howard - 25 Howard .• 2( Howard 29 Howard IS Howard 422 I loward 45 I loward 69 Howard 22 North Birmingham 3 Jacksonville 3 B. A. C. .. $3 Alabama 37 Alabama 26 Springbill... 37 .Mobile S. G. Co 26 Springbill $2 Hattie-burg V 22 Hattiesburg Y 31 I!. A. C 43 Y. M. C. A. 26 Avondale Mills _ 14 North Carolina - . 35 I loward 422 ( pponents .. $68 iLlnrsitu JHen IxoWlA CREWS 155 TOB - } STUBBS 131 PAT SHORES JESS LACKEY CAPT M.I ' ord I) CAN LORD SHI IRTY WEBB 92 3o 4 4 2 □ I □ Ed ill DDE 1922 n o c mm I E 51|d][d1 I ' Miami Carolyn Webb Wilma Waggoner Anna Kendo Gertrude York The nut Sim Florinc Ha Ruby Barton Lola Moody Ethel Chirk Ruby Little Luna Abrains Eura .-I brains (Eu-to (Quintet Howard 9 I Inward I low aril 13 I [oward 13 I [oward 7 I [oward 8 50 Central College 56 Jeff rson Count} I [igh 7 Auburn 17 Birmingham Southern 4 Birmingham-Southern 8 Auburn ..... 17 109 C I ' T. I HELMA ST ( MISS ETHEL CLARK MISS RED WAGGONER MISS GERTRUDE YORK MISS FLORINE HAGl K D jSroremctcr 30 8 6 4 2 DDE D D C 1922 Din lie HI! m i a a □ D ID D Mti£ od CIExgeNouOP 3 DIC llarsity Baseball {Team Shorty Webb, Papa Garrett, J. B. Runyan, Boilermaker Alford, Jess Lackey, Rowdy Crezvs, Dan Gaylord, Pat Shores, Robert Shelton, R. C. Marshall Rittetiberry, Louse Walker ™F= ilfolfc a 192.2. D n 1 I a 3 DC 3 DC 3D L 3 Itlasrliall Btrpe Big league baseball writer- say thai such and Mich a team i- going to win the pennant before the first game of the season i- played, but little can be said right now concerning the Howard baseball team, for with -til! half tin- schedule to go at this writing, there is no telling but what the team might show a reversal oi form and prove to be Mire winners. Up until the time of this writing the Bulldog nine had won only one game, and that from a High School. Central, of tin- city. I he baseball squad started off the season by making an impressive showing against the Birmingham Barons of the Southern League. In the two games with the professionals the Bulldogs displayed good batting strength and a coming, al- though weak pitching staff. After a game with Birmingham-Southern followed a road trip including two games with Marion and a like number with Alabama. Three of these games were lost by one point margins, and the other was a heart-breaker and by a close margin at that. Alabama had not anything to brag about, hut the old jinx -till pursued old Howard in her efforts toward victories over the University and we lost two games JUS1 by one point in each affair. .Marion flashed a couple of good luirler- against the Varsity that baffled our nine and turned them hack in del eat. Birmingham-Southern won the first of a five-game series early in the sea- son, hut by no means considered the ultimate determining factor of the set of con- tests consisting of five. The players and students think Howard has the best team which is true, hut the Panthers have a better hunch of hitter- I towever, in the four remaining games, there is plenty of room for the Bulldogs to cop the -cries, needing only three of the five games. Louse Walker consistently leads the field in batting during the first part of the season with the team average as a whole around the .300 ' mark. He is also leading with total bases, tied at this writing with Dan Gaylord for runs scored, the first to -teal a base and accredited with the first (and only thus fan victory ot the year. There wa- a deal of good material for the team, in fact, so much that some ot last year ' s men lo-t out on the regular berths. The roster include-: Pitchers— Jimmie Rittenberry, Capt. Shorty Webb, Louse Walker and Dan Gaylord; catch- er—Rowdy trews. Boiler Alford and Papa Garrett; inf ielders — Pat Shores, Louse Walker. Dan Gaylord, Jess Lackey and Preacher Hyde; out- fielders— Bo Brindley, P.oh Shelton, Papa Garrett, Boyd Runyan and Carter Manasco. Some men are mentioned more than once, but hecansc they served in these divers capacities. D 1 I , , _ , , NHRSr. r % □ 1=1 c on ild NTg gri sT I I DC □ □ I I I □ □ I I m we 51511 il 102.2. 3HD II I IIP C Hi D D 1=1 C a I i m £ od C£NTggrNour2p nm 001 Senior (Class llUautu (6nsste iflae 3@raeftdb □ □ i in i i dc U 192.2. [Di ll l| [DirC ==31 P[Dl 101 Junior Class Bcautg Gallic JHsc (Casiui I g i id DC U 192.2. D I I P I I P I I DP □ 0[ O0(c [515] InSet NOUS n c JSopbomore (Class Brautirs (The (Tluins — luna anb Jlura ,Abrams D □ c 1 1922 H H ]F 1f51 | l =zz=z5] fDlfDl aac UPt gjl£ClNj§ g : nqus TiP 3 D 1 J 9 .Sfresljman Class Beauty J5 ara (E. Bentleo n1 |t= l fn1 [c= | [Dll ST | 92.2. I  i i ra1 f 1 P n=T l [D- r □ Ud i OdXgHjg grNQuTTjp 3 DC 1 i s 3 cp ®lmu . chapel I sit in middle E fourteen Willi eye keen for the stage, And watch the faculty as they file in. Men, women, of every age. Who is this coming now to the center With rhythm in all o ' his turns. Announcing Old Hundred with reverent voice. ' .lh! my dear Professor Burns! And first to the right, a bald-headed man. Without spectacles to see he can ' t; Pathos in his smile enough for us to know His wishes havn ' t come true this Mr. Trant. Then the ugliest man on the faculty. But, Gee, what a powerful brow! It brings bach Browning ' s description of Napoleon, Mr. Bohannon: I wanted to know him right now. 1 ' here ' s a piquant little lady sits by him Wearing blue coat and cap, I ken; Hoot, Mon! she might ha ' been a Scotch lassie, Miss llayues, who never had love affairs with men. Next her. the other woman of the faculty, Is she as formal as one thinks. ' I don ' t believe she ' d even use a contraction. This dignified Miss Bonnie Spinks. Then a man whose smile is so contagious It would drive away anybody ' s wrath; None but the man who took my fifty-two; Mr Eagles; he ' s bald; suppose ' twas math. ' Directly in the center, a man so tall, I. ting John, some call him; I don ' t yet; But he ' s so much like a brother of mine, I i ould love him as well as respei t. Sumner Albert Ives? Yes, he ' s silting next. I know so little about him : Does he grant his wife ' s wishes as quickly As mine when a favor I asked him? There ' s the tall dark man over on the left; Pid you ask who. ' Take off your cap, man; Bci ause that is our ozvn Lord Chesterfield . Man o ' my heart, s;eecl Jiuimie Chapman. Alid who is it that leans his head far back And searches with eyes the ceiling. ' Can it be that during the exercise Professor Allen a nap is stealing. ' e ' s only one more, he ' s out here with us Qffii ml . lo ■ oated chapel cop ; Our teacher oho o) Greek and Latin, Professor Pulliam. Golly Whop! — .M n dr] d Smith, □ □ C 3 DC DC 19 2.2. E HID C 3 DC DID D D C=) C Dl um %£SJ za HoUs3[$ 3 DC nfc ifni H o d 10 3 DC 3 DC 3 192.2. DC 3 DC 3D 1 _D 0H1 odXIHrggNous p □ c D (,i,k OVATION CLUB •Jack Kirk Pink Mallon Corn Mullins ' Sk c w Askew Mutt Lamberth Dad Sims Ollie Jarrell Stumpy Clark I ( i- it Braswell DAD ' S BLACK AND WHITE JAZZ HOUNDS B. C. Cowarl C. M. Hurst A. L. Dead R. B. Sim, THE BOYS WHO MADE SYNCOPATED HARMONY FAMOUS MAX HATERS ' CLUB MEMBERS Vesta Carlisle Katliryn Craig Evolyn Graves Sarah Bently Gladys Watlington Virginia Carswell Eunice Sloan Carolyn Webb Gertrude York Motto: Love no man not even your brother; if girls must love, love one another. Aim: To leave ' em alone ' cause they ain ' t what they are cracked up to be. Song: We Ain ' t Nobody ' s Fools. Flower : Bachelor Button. Place of Meeting: Montague steps (in good view of the Boys ' Dormitory). Time of Meeting: When nohod has a date. OFFICERS Chief Mater — Vesta Carlisle Vice Mater— Sarah Bently Cash Registrar — Kathryn Craig Sister Maters: Virginia Carswell Euna Abrams ITtra Abrams Ethel Clark Mrs. K. E. Cox E. E. Cox COX ' S ARMY Virginia Carswell Miss llaynes Loyci I lendrix Florence P Thelma Stacy Evolyn Graves I ' ll rine Hagood Eunice Sloan Gladys Watlington Carolyn Webb Mildred Smith Gertrude Tidwell Lydia Williams Mable Willoughby 1 I nun DOUBLEFOUR CLUB i ilors : Blue and White. Flower : Whiti eyed Susan. Motto : Block the Game. Vim : Make Thirty-five each play. Favorite Expression: Well, gime Pass Word: K racking. Place i if Meeting : I oubl Blank. Purpose : Popularity . Cummings, Boots, Doorkeeper. blowers. Buck, Biggest l-iar. Gross I ozen Dozen ' ic President I low ell, kirk. Reporter. Jumbo, Little Lambert, President, Runyan, Bo Peep , Treasurer. I In impson, in-. . Of! icial Marker, Waiters, Preacher, lhaplain. whatcha got. 3 DC 3 DC 1922 DID D I DID IIC 3 DC IE D D 1=1 C 101 Dug orCClNTagrsous2p HHl P pw r ERO CLUB V 8 1. ' M A CLUB ' LJ 1 1 H  Ml fcJ! s L FsftM r Vk f y m rw -f t I3-THTR5TY-THUC3 ' i IE J □ I I o c H 1922 I I DC IDC i rs ra rez si m ittiX EN t g ous7fiQi ][g] r ][ [°]i° I 1 UNITED CONFEDERATION OF JANITORS OF HOWARD COLLEGE Union Number 26Z38XS9B Motto: I. W. W. i I Won ' t Work). Put and Take (Put Out Work and Take In Dirt). Purposes: A Cleaner Howard: To Worry Prof. Eagles; Conservation of Brooms and Coal and to make as little hot air as possible. Aim: Four A. M. and Pay Day. Flower : Bitter Weed Edward Anderson, President. R. L. Bonner, Vice President. Edwards, J. I.. Chairman Soap and Rag Supply Committee. L. G. Johnson, Secretary. E. E. Jphnson, Assistant Janitor of the Union. A. H. King. Treasurer. 1. J. Quinn, Business Manager. Robertson. W. L.. Chairman of Oversight Committee. R. B. Speer, Coat. f PROFESSIONAL LATIX ORGANIZATION Colors : Black and White. Motto: Nihil. Aim : To make Zero because nothing is better than a hundred. Coat of Arms : ( Big Zen Pin : ( Circle in a square. ) Pa s Word : Xeseio. Song : We go to class We sit around. Prof, calls on us And calls us down . Sponsor; Prof. Pulliam. Phone Xo. One Zero, Two Zero, Zero. CHARTER MEMBERS Bradley, C. L. Jordan, Turner Hill, Virginia Smith, W. G. MEMBERSHIP Bradley, G. L Justice, B. R. Glover, A. M. Smith, W. G. Hill. Virginia Willis. A. X. Jordan, Turner Till . BOW-LEGGED CLUB. Askew, I-. M. .MOTTO: Britton, W. R. I [onesl ( ' rooks Brindley, Spurgeon l 1 . £ ,ark ' £ ' -. To Straighten Things Up. ( in iss, ( . . Kirk, Mm S ING: Gillespie, J. P.. Jr. When Shall They Meet:- ( i ; , nll ' , ,U ' W V?- T MASCOT: I !•• ' . ' ' ' • ' -- ' . ' ' ■ W- ' ■ Little I!- Pe« Simih, . (i. Si. .ne. C. F. FLOWER Thompson, 1 1. E. Spj rogj rie. I I ma o d u o q u o o 1922 o===i]©[i==i][ii==][°] WDi a i ic==5i rDi c = 3 DC 01 i i Sloob (ZTurbltng Spectacle! I .ineups : Intellects: Laumer and Hall, ends; Lowery andJDarden, tackles; Gullette and Owens, guards; P. I.. Stone, center; Watson and Bilh Smith, halves; Her- ring, full; E. E. Cox (Capt.) quarter. Jellies: Richardson and Paul liitc-. ends; Bledsoe and [arrell, tackle-; Frank Carlisle and Kelly, guards; Stuart, center; Bentley and Braswell, halves; Clayton, full; Mallory (Capt.) quarter. Substitutions : Intellects — Sivley for Herring, Gibbs for Smith. Jellies-Lamberth for Bentley, Morris for Stuart, Askew for Clayton, (hi lespie for Carlisle, Peke for Jarrell, Cosper for Paul White. Referee: Long John Dawson. Umpire: Percy Prat! Burns. Mead Linesman: John (alley (Birmingham Musical Conservatory). The sponsors for the game were Miss Vesta Carlisle for the Jellies and Miss Evolyn Craves for the Intellects. The colors of the two teams were ; Jellies, heliotrope and yellow ; 1 ntellects. baby blue and pink. Nov. 28. — A battle that would have made the most brutal person ' s hones melt like paraffin wax under an intense heat was viewed last Saturday after- noon by a mammoth crowd. The Xnnnallv Jelly Beans and the Learned Intel- lects, hoth of Howard College, met in a hotly contested fracas. The game began with a rush when Captain Mallory of the Jellies kicked off six and three-quarter yards to 1 ' . L. Stone, who ran the hall fourteen yards hack towards his own goal. He could have gone farther, hnt he saw the umpire watching him closely and so. thinking that he could get in an argument, he paused and was tackled fiercely around the neck by Stuart. Time out was called for the Xnnnallv cowboys, while Bledsoe rearranged his disheveled locks of vaselined D| hair. When the game was resumed. E. E. Cox. quarterback, for the gents from the fount of knowledge threw a long pass of twenty-one yards to Lanmer. left end. who allowed the pigskin to hit him on the finger instead of catching it. Time out for the Pimps, while Stone and Cnllette explained a highly technical part of the game to the referee. Cox then called a line buck, and Herring smashed through his right guard for three quarters of a yard. Billy Smith was called hack to kick and punted the hall fifty yards ( forty yards up in the air and ten yards down the field). Bentley caught the hall, hnt failed to return it any on account oi having to straighten his head gear. The Jelly Leans tried an end run which was unsuccessful and the quarter ended with the score. to 0. Lee Lloyd Clayton, the smashing Jelly fullback, then cat-walked through center for one and two-thirds yards. Jarrell retired from the game after this play because of a rent that was torn in his beautiful heliotrope jersey. Play was re- sumed, and Captain Mallory was forced to kick. He made a brilliant punt of seventeen yards which Paul White caught signalling for a fair catch. On the next play the hall was fumbled, and Norris recovered hut turned the hall loose when Hall twisted his foot. The Jellies punted and Bentley fumbled. Herring recov- ered on the Jelly Leans ' five-yard line. The half ended at this point and saved the Lounge Lizzards from being scored on. Score. and 0. P li n Prc =ff5i rai rc 51 IQ2.2. Ic =1|d1Ii iHulj 1 -pr Steaming tea and vanilla wafers were served to the cowboys during the intermission, but the know-it-alls studied the rule hook and quoted Shakespeare to relieve the tedium. Sivly, who went in for Herring, kicked off to the Jellies ' forty-five-yard line. Gillespie caught it and raced hack three yards. On the next play Braswell caused the Jelly Beans to he penalized fifteen yards for biting. Lamberth was knocked out early in the third quarter, hut was brought around when given a stimulant (a chocolate milk). The cowboys then jazzed along for a first down. Time was called out for the Jellies, several of whom wanted fresh pieces of chewing gum. Society Sam Richardson then made two yards on an end-around-end play. Cosper caused his team to he penalized fifteen yards for roughing it when he pulled J. P. Hall ' s hair. The hall was lost on downs to the Pimps. Cox gave the hall to Watson, who calculated the acceleration needed to pass around left end, hut forgot to include the forces of inertia and friction and was, therefore, downed behind his own lines. The third quarter ended with the hall in the possession of the scribes on their own forty-three-yard line. Score. and 0. The Pimps opened fire with a brilliant aerial attack to start the last quar- ter and made one pass (out of three attempts ) for four yards. They tried another pass which was intercepted by I ' eke, who toddled hack two yards with the ball. The Jellies threw a long pass which hit E. E. Cox on the leg and fell into the outstretched arms of Doc Kelly, who was lying on his hack. The Tea-Hounds attempted another pass, but Billy Smith caught it and tried to sidestep Sweet William Prescott, hut fell heavily on his side. Gibbs was then sent in to relieve Smith, who was perspiring freely. Harden was called back to kick, hut tripped over his left foot when he attempted to take the customary step forward. Askew recovered the ball for the Jelly Beans. Frank Carlisle got his hair-net torn in this play and so Gillespie went in to relieve him. Mallory then hurled a forward pass over the goal line between the posts. The hall struck the umpire on the head and bounced over the fence. The Jelly Beans claimed a goal, hut the whole Pimp team raised a howl, led by Cox and Stone. The referee stood firm and threatened to forfeit the game to the Soft Drink Artists, hut was argued out of it by the silver-tongued orator of the scribes, namely Laumer. Play was resumed, but the whistle blew and ended the game before any further gains were made. The final score was and 0. Fred White. □ 1 □ DC 00 3 □ C D 1922 3 □ C 3 DC U □ □ D D (ZZZ) C □l OSd oijXIETg grNourTiP □ c n I j K CI □ c 3 □ I ] □ c 192-2. 3 DC H0 i n ADVERTISING SECTION WATCH YOUR STEP I ' ljtht ' r: How is it. sir. that I find you kissing ray daughter? How i it? A ut : Great ' Great ! i iMiiiinii liiuiiiiiiii Hunt Miiiiii iimniHMi it miimi tun nnnnuniiii muni m minim ■ MlllllllllllillllllMIIIIHIMIhlllllll . .. ' r wfr: - - -- Collegians find the newest styles and best values at Porter ' s Our service to College Men is based on an intimate knowledge of correct, refined style — notable for its elegance rather than bizarre treatment--. In Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, Louisiana, Porter ' s is headquarters for College Men. who look to us for their clothes in a matter of fact way that tells of their absolute confidence in our stores. We are exclusive agents for: EDERHEIMER-STEIN CLOTHES KNOX HATS HIRSH-WICKWIRE CLOTHES BOYDEN SHOES all of which are lines famed for their quality and style distinction. Moderate prices prevail. Make Porter ' s your headquarters -glad to have yon drop in any time. BIRMINGHAM •JACKSONVILLE | NEW ORLEANS NASHVILLE fi i i i i mi mi mini i i inn minimum i I liiiimilinniii I I I   mini I mi III! Prof. Chapman: Look up the chapter of Leviticus. Perry .. Stone: Gosh, another fraternity I never heard of. ylllllllllllllll nun I Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimi in liillilllllM unit I nil III in llllllllllllimillllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIH ' lllll IIIIIIIIMIIIIIIHItllMHIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHmlllllllC Stratford Clothes Kingly Shirts Fashionknit lies The New Shop for High School and College Apparel Van Heusen Collars 2009 Second Avenne Next to Burgers llllll Mill III III IIMIIflHinillllMI III MINIMI III MINIMI III Ml MIIIIIMHMIIMIIIMM I Ill MIIMIMItl I II I lllllllll I I II I III II II I lull IIHI I lllll II I II I ' I ll I h I II 1 1 1 II I II 1 1 1 II I II 1 1 1 1 1 1 IHI I II I II 1 1 1 II III II I II III II I II III ll I II Ml II III IIUI ! ll I .1 , •till MM II i II I III llll Ill till II I Mill llllll I II Ml I Mill IIUIUIII 111 Mill III Mil II lllllllll II III 111 II III III II ll.lll II III III) hi II MI NIM III III liillilllllM lllllltl I 111 111 II Mllll 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ■ 1 1 1 1 1 1 II I M 1 1 1 If I II I III • 1 1 1 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 J I II 1 1 BESSEMER COAL, IRON LAND CO. Miners of high-grade steam and domestic COAL 1312 American Trust Bldg. Phone Main 1105 iMNIUIMMIMI llllll III Ml I IMMM lllllllll llll lllllll III I I llllll Ml MIMMIIINMIMIMIMIMIMIMIM IMIMMIMIMIMIMIMI MHIIM Mllll Ml Ml I II I II It I Mill IMIM I M III III III II III III II I II Ml II I III Mil . Tin ;t w ritcr ' What ' You an author? Nol exactly an author — 1 write insuranc i ' H ' M • ' • nmiii i HiiiiMiiHiniiriiiiii iiimiimiiiii i u ■ nil i ii i ii ii ii ii i ii i iiiiiiimmmiiiiiiii iuiiiiimiii IllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllC HYNDS-UPSHAW PAINT GLASS CO., Inc. Wholesale and Retail Dealers 2118 SECOND AVENUE : : PHONE MAIN 8049 BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Gold Stamps with Cash purchases. ■ ' ' ' ' I ' ' I I IHIIIIII i in. in nil illinium I mi i i mi mi nil? itlllllllim i n mmii ii in in n in nimnini in ii m mm n inn mmininmimni ••_ ' J ' ' • iimiiimiiimini mi i,n ( mn m iiiimmmn in VISIT US at our new location 308 North 20th Street Reid Lawson, Inc. Jewelers What we say it is It is Wearing One Of HIRSCH ' S HA TS is an incentive to the College Girl ' •iHiiiiiiiiiiiiiii mmnii i llllltliniHIIMIIlin kiiiiiiiiihiiiimh iilllllMlllllll. - jmi Will MMII until in. mini I I i mill MlllHlllllllMIIMMllllllliMin Some people never gel anything hut hungry. . ' I I II till 1 Mil It mill,, III IIMIIIII Ml III Hill I Mill ll II l III inn II Ml III III II II I IIH . ' IIIIIIMMIIIII HIIMIMIIIIIIIIMIIII {Ill 1 1 III IN I I M 111 I 1 1 1 IM 1 1 1 III II M I iiiiii lib Say It With Flowers The Alabama Baptist 317-18 Jeff. Co. Bank Bldg. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. PUBLISHED BY THE Tutwiler Flower Shop Main 447 niMMHIIIIIHIIIIIIIIMI IIIIII t Mill IIMIMM Mill! Ill 111111111 III I I ' ll Ml Mill IIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHNIIIINIilll IIHMIIIIHI III 11111111111117 ' . ' in niiiitmiiiiiiiiniiiiiiimiiiiiimmii.iiiiimtmiHiiiiitmiiiiimmmMi lllllilliliil Ill IlllllllllltllllU: N. B. PARKER State Baptist Convention L. L. GWALTNEY, Editor Subscription price $2.00 per year per copy Budget Churches $1.50 per year per copy riiiiiiitiiMhitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiMiinnitiiiitiiiiiiitiiMiMiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiMiiiiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiliiiHiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiih- sjiifiiiiitiiiiiiiiitiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiifiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinc BIRMINGHAM PAINT GLASS CO. Small Lots Car Lots Contract Lots REAL ESTATE - INVESTMENTS PHONE 100 415 REALTY BUILDING BESSEMER, ALA. riMltlllllMIIIMIIIlllllHIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMMIMIIMtllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllinillllllllllltlllllMlllllllllllllllllMlllllli: JIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIItllllllllllllllMIIIMIMII 1 1 1 111 I 1 PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS, 1 SASH, DOORS, ROOFING AUTOMOBILE FINISHES WINDSHIELD GLASS 2016-2018 Third Avenue BIRMINGHAM, ALA. rillllMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIiniMIIIIHUIIIIMIIItllMUiniUIIMIIMIMIMtllMMIMIIinillllllllMllllllllllinillllllllllMinini IIMIIIII1inilllMIIMMMillMIMIIIIIMIIIMMIIIMII[llinilllMlllilllll!IIMillllllllMllllllllillMIIII1tlllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIMMI. Distinctive Portraits That Please TURNER STUDIO COMPANY UNDER PERSONAL DIRECTION OF CHAS. R. HATCHER CLARK BUILDING, TWENTIETH STREET AND FOURTH AVENUE Birmingham, Alabama .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini, i i i i i iiiiiiiiininiiiiiiNiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiii iiiiin immmimmil mi i t i , minimum mini i Visa: Has he ' -: t ;i lol t dough? Versa: lla he? Why even lii face is pasty. Kis dtvtuidl Illustrated bij the Alabama engraving Company BIRMINGHAM THE BO M C MILLANS OF THE COLLEGE V ENGRAVING BUSINESS BOM c MILLAN) BEItOG TACKLED BY AM AlLIMlflN PLAYER. Prof. Eagles: Brittdn, what were you doing last night when I saw you? Britton: Plotting a curve f r Five Points. ji niiiiiitu mi mi i i i km mi i mi r mi i mi i i i linn minimi i mi i ; Our Stores Are Your Stores Sellers Drug Company 400 North Twentieth Street Make our two stores your headquarters Greene Drug Company Corner Empire Building 1 1 1 J i j r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 e i r 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 ■ 1 1 1 1 i j 1 1 1 1 1 1 l : i i t J 1 1 j i ' : 1 1 1 : 1 1 1 r r i [ r 1 1 r 1 1 r 1 1 p 1 1 ! i l 1 1 1 1 r Mr 1 1 j 1 1 1 1 l j 1 1 ■ i j 1 1 j i j J i 1 1 J ■ r 1 1 j 1 1 ■ . i j M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 i i r i r [ p i i 1 1 i l 1 1 1 1 l i f 1 1 ■ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ■ i : i i i j 1 1 1 1 1 jT _ lllllll till Ill MlllllNllllllltlllllll III! llllilllllllll imilllll I Ill I ' I ■ II. Ill Clothes quarters for young men niMiiiiiiitiitiii The House of Service Our attitude of real friendship and our improved facilities en- able us to render you superior service. See us about Birmingham real estate investments, rentals, or mortgage loans. Long Term Loans to Home Builders | Jemison Company, inc. Corner Third Avenue and Twenty-First Street LESS EXPENSE MORE VALUE KlotKes Slwpe Y lr corporatTrt] Y Ml II 1 1 IHIMMIMMHMMIMMMMIIMIMIMIIMII Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllll II lllllll Illlllllll- (MINIMUM INM III IMMMMMMIIM1MM MNINIMII Ml I MUM I M MMIMiMlill ' , , ks thai will never • ■ written: Meditations of a Man With the [ oolhache. and Reveries Under the Shades of Ether. .•Mini ii mil Illllllll ti inn Iltlllll nun hi mi hi • mi •■ in ! mil ' 1 nun in in mil miihiitlli muling J ••jr TRANSPORTATION A Gateway to Progress There it stands — a simple forty-foot gateway but unlike any other in theentire world. Through it have come many of the engineering ideas that have made this an electrical America. The story of electrical development beginsintheResearchLaboratories. Here the ruling spirit is one of knowledge — truth — rather than immediate practical results. In this manner are established new theories — tools for futureuse — which sooner or later find ready application. The great industries that cluster around Niagara Falls, the electrically driven battleships, the trolley cars and electrified railways that carry millions, the lamps that glow in homes and streets, the householdconveniencesthathaverelieved women of drudgery, the labor- saving elec- trical tools of factories, all owe their ex- istence, partly at least, totheco-ordinated efforts of the thousands who daily stream through this gateway. LIGHT | HEAT Geneirc electric ►any General Office Schenectady, N. Y. MATERIAL HANDLING FAP.M ELECTRISATION HOME rONVENIENCES fiinini iiiMinnini i in ii .nun iiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiii i urn i i ' ii inn ' i minim mi i ' immmh. - First love is proof positive that things are not what they seem You Have The Opportunity- Grasp It! Remember, this great Business University is right at your do ors. In addition to the Commercial and Steno- graphic courses we teach the following special courses. Which are not offored by any other Business College in the South: Public Accounting and Auditing Business Organization Salesmanship Parliamentary Law and Public Speaking Advertising Wheeler Students Get The Best Positions. Wheeler Business College BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA W1LLARD J. WHEELER, President 1909 to 1929 First Ave. I Siim Heath: Don ' l you consider mj views on the subject sound! Justice: Yes. mostly sound. J ' Illlni m i uii i ii 111 ii ill! in iiiiniiiuiuiui ill ill II I I I inn i II 111 ill ih 1 1 111 1 ii i ill 111 1 1 111 ill i ii i null umuinuiininuimnullir Key. Cream of Ice Creams and fl@ST IITI Are Birmingham ' s QUALITY Ice Cream Products. NOTE Special prices to Churches and Organizations. CHAPIN-SACKS CORPORATION Main 2562-508 700 South 18th Street ? i nn Minimi ii minimi i i imiiiiii urn iiiiiciiiiiimmiimmiiiimimiimii imiimmiiimiimimmiiummmm i i nuHmiiiiiimiiiiiimmniiiiiiir luimill i in i ii in ill ii i ii i M II I ii 1 1 i r i s : : 1 1 1 : i 1 1 1 1 1: 1 ii I • i mill il I mum nil ill I lllimiiiiiimiiiiui i i Illllimilimilllll I i nun | Insure With Howard Men | See oui NEW POLICY. It pays for the insured Ten Dollars per $1,000.00 per month during his lifetime, with no further premiums required, in the event of total and permanent dis- ability by any disease or accident. In addition to this, it pays twice the face value of the policy for accidental death. The Jefferson Standard ' s Rates Are Right BERRY SMITH GENERAL AGENTS FOR ALABAMA [ 401-2 Jefferson County Bank Bldg. Birmingham, Alabama | 7,1,111,1111 nun in nn, nut inn mlllll iiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniumi uiiliiiiiiiniiiiuiiiiiini iiiniiiiiini , iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Hard: Thai girl over there is a live wire. Warner: Inrod ' uce me, I want to he shocked. ' I H I Ml MM I I 1 1 ll l ll ill l | Ill Ml III 1 1 1 II III III III I III! Illllllllllllllllll Illlll I Mill III I II I II II I II I Illlimilllllllll This impressive 1922 edition of Entre Nous is another impressive exam- ple of the high degree of per- fection attained by us in the printing of Annuals for the South ' s foremost Colleges and Universities. We desire to express our ap- preciation for the privilege of cooperating with the edi- tors of Entre Nous in the very handsome edition of the cur- rent year. Printers Engravers Lithographers Stationers IbBtRTS SON THE BIG ALABAMA HOUSE ' PRINTERS IOI2 THIRD AVE STATIONERS LITHOGRAPHERS ENGRAVERS BIRMINGHAM, ALA. I III Mil II I Mill I lllimHIllllllll.lll MM IIMIM I I Illllllllllll I Illlll II MIIIIMIMIMIMIMIMIMIMIMMIMI ill! Illlll Mill I Mill HUM MM Famous lines Hit Bee Uoll Car Par-Excellence A wise coach selects with consummate skill the best of his Athletes for hi- tram: the dis- oerning athlete i- just a- particular to see thai hi- Equipment i- the best. For hah ' a century SPALDING ha- equipped the great athletes of the world that ' - win we -ell and the athlete buys SPALDINGS. Everything For Every Sport BIRMINGHAM ARMS CYCLE COMPANY This space donated by Lift ' J ' ■ ' ' iiiiiiiiiii.ini iiiii mi hum ' ji i i i i iiMiMiiuiiiiii milium li Collins Co. Wholesale Grocers 2329 First Ave. The Birmingham Home of A. G. Spalding Bros, famous Athletic Goods. ' -miiiiimiii ' iiiiiiimmiimiii i i t r -iiihiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii n mi immi mm immmiiimmiiiiimmiiimmmmmmmmiiiiii iimm. Truthfully Told Jrttbman Sfiop Tk Skop of f - i Truthfully Sold 6 1 DISCRIMINATING women and misses of every walk of life are turning - S this shop as the one place in the south where the very height of fashion is faithfully portrayed without excessive cost. The variety is exceeding large and the size range from 1 1 up. If you are not acquainted with this shop your neighbor is — ask her. Birmingham ' s Only Shop For Women Operated By a Woman [J 103 NORTH TWENTIETH STREET L L. ll? 1 ., .. l O Ef kTTIT%TJ . . I. ' ' rill ' 1 1 p W 1 T CD Exclusive !n Style and Appointment Prices Guaran- teed Less A color scheme: A boy with a black eye and a red face who felt blue was looking at a girl with brown eyes li« was tickled pink. 1 1 II II II Mill! Mil 1 1 H IN I 111 Hilt I!ll mini I IIHHHHI 1 1 1 1 1 II M I U 1 1 1 1 _ jiiiiHiiiiiiiniiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimmiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimii imiiiiimiiiiiiiiiitiiimiiii nmiiimiuiimuiili ' . Phone Main 4224 Compliments of MRS. A. B. DENNERLE 2010 Fifth Avenue BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Perfection Mattress Spring Company Nestle Permanent Hair Wave 8 31 North 24th Street -. ■ ■■■■■■ in II n urn iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiimiiiiiniiiiimmii i mini . =„,„,„, Illll( niiitiiiiiiniii HniiiiniMMitnM.MM.Mn ti miiiifi ' JIHIHIHIIIinilMUIHIIMtMHIHinHMMHtHMIMMHIHintlHIIHII MJtlJIIJ llltllJIliltllilllMMIMIMlllllliltllllllMMIIIIIIlltlllllMlllltlllllllllllllllllMMIIIIIILIlMl JIIIIIM 11MIIMI1III1IIIIILIII1IIII ir llltllllllllllllllltllllirilMlllllltJ: | Southside Baptist Church | Congratulates Howard College upon its splendid history; its high scholastic standing; its enlarged faculty of Christian teachers; its great student body; its unique literary publications; its growing equipment and endowment; its Christian atmosphere; and its hopeful future, bright as the promises of God. J. E. DILLARD, Pastor iniiiimiiiiiiiimmim iiiiiiimimMiMiiMlllMiniiMMM m mn i mm m imimiimiiHiimimmiiiinimi mm mininmimmm n i i nun ( iiniiu Pete: What ere you doing after the acci lent ? Oh, scraping up an acquaintance. 1 ■ I ' • 1 1 1 1 • I • • I t I M 1 1 1 1 H I M II • 1 1 • I • 1 1  M 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M • I II • 1 1 f 1 M I M 1 1 1 1 • 1 1 M 1 1 1 M I • 1 : IIIIIIMIIMIIIMIIIMIMIMIItllllMIMIIIMIIIIII Mil Illllll III! Ill I n II 1 1 II I II I II 1 1 1 1 1 H II I III II I III 111 Everything To Wear The Shop of Courtesy The Newest Things First and the Best Values Always 1919 3rd Avenue CASH STORE U-J BIRMINGHAM Smart Apparel For the Co-Ed ' ,ii!Hiiiiiiniiiiiii!i iiiiiiiiiiiilUlllinillllliliilliiill!linilllliMiMliliiniiiiiiiiiiiii[||iiHiiiiiiiiiniHlliiliiliitiiMllliilllllir - illlllll I III I Ill II milium Illllll IIIII1IMIMI I llllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllllHl M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 • 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 J M 1 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 • I • 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ) 1 1 • 1 1 • 1 1 ) I M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 • 1 1 1 M M M I Illllll 1 1 1 141 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 H 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 1 U 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 • ' . J. T. Rhodes J. Elmer Rhodes First Avenue Coal and Lumber Co. Long Leaf Pine Lumber All Kinds of Building Material Laths, Shingles, and Domestic Coal Office and Yards 6424 First Ave. East Lake Car Line Phone Woodlawn 56 =.■• mi i minimi i iiiiin inn I ml limn i mi I II I I inn nil Illllllllllllllli The only thing some men make is love. _.„„„„ ,„„ „„ , | „„ ,|M MMMMMMMM.MIMMI I IIUII HIMj. g HUH MM, ,1 I I IIIIIHI I j Ten Years After You Graduate Looking for a job, or prospering in business ? That will depend on whether or not von have learned to save your money. The best way to save money — Our Savings Stuck pays 8 per cent at maturity. Withdrawals before maturity at 6 per cent. The best savings proposition in the United States. Jefferson County Building Loan Association 113 North 21st Street F. M. Jackson, President W. A. Pattillo, General Manager HEADQUARTERS FOR HOWARD STUDENTS Candies Supreme Excellent Sodas SHE LIKES IT BEST WHEN YOU BUY IT FROM NUNNALLYS 218 N. 20th St. 212 N. 19th St. . i l 1 1 1 1 1 ill :i ' illinium i hi ii i M I II I tn i nun ii i ii in ii i mi limn -iniMIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIMIItlitlllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIMM 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 II [ 1 1 Ml I . iNimiiiiinii 1 ' .nuuiiiinuiuimiin uiiiiiiimiimmiiiiiii IIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIII ;. inn, inn. ;n. in iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiimiMiiiiHiiniM iiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiJ A. J. Koenig Son Florists Rex Billiard Parlor 2006 Fifth Ave. North 2006 4th Ave. and 20th St. Upstairs Flowers of all kinds for all occasions at popular prices. Best equipped Billiard NOTE OUR NEW ADDRESS Parlor in the South .11.1 i i i hi miiMiiiiini u i ii hi ii 1 1 nun n ii mi: iMiiiiiiimu.iim mm i II illinium i HiiiiiiiMill mum I I i. ' I )jil you ever lie i n ;i si fa ? llllll 1 1 Illi IMII 111 1111 IIIIIMIIIHIIIIIIIIIMIIIfll HI II Mill lllllt. J Ml MINI HI III Ml II IMIIMMMMMMMMIMIMMMMMMIMMIiIMIMIMIMIMMIMMMMMMMIMIMMII In surance FIRE LIABILITY AUTOMOBILE SURETY B( NDS ACCIDENT HEALTH BURGLARY WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF BIRTHDAY CAKES A. D. Smith, Hamilton Glover Insurance Agency 221-225 Jefferson County Bank Bldg. Birmingham, Ala. 2113 2nd Ave. Phone 7947 miiii!ii iiiiiiiinii ii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiuiiiiiHii i i mi HiiHiiiiiii mi i iHiiiiiMiiiiiiHitiitin urn mi mini mil mii iiiiinuiiin UUllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIHItlllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illlllllll Htu ' iJHHIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIII IIIIHIHIIIIIIItlMlltllltlUII Illllltlllllllllllll II I inn II ' £ ALBERT ASH AARON ASH 1 Miss Gussie Mae Brassfield A. A. ASH Diamonds, Jewelry and Silverware The Best Place to Buy After All Phone 2842 Repair Work a Specialty 1921 Second Avenue Birmingham, Alabama IIIIIIIIMIHI Illlllllll IIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIMII Illlllllllllllllll II Beauty of the Senior (. ' lass adds much to the attrac- tiveness the Entre-Noi - We know, of course, that the- frock i- of but secon- dary consideration, but still we arc rather proud thai she chose it in the Love- in a n. Joseph Lo e b French Room. Miss Brassfield, like many other Birmingham beauties. recognizes the aid of prop- erly designed apparel and therefore looks to us when the need for apparel of ex- ceptional attractiveness is required. ! Loveman , Joseph Loeb j MIHI I II Ml I Illlllll II Ml Mil Hill! INI mi on i I ' MiniMi. Have you ever seen water drunk? JMIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIHIIlllllililMllinillllMtlltllilllll IIIIIIIIMIIHIII ihiMiiiiiiuiniiiiilhl ' - Ml Illll Illllllllll: I Mil Illlllllllll _ : Dispatch Printing and Stationery Co. PRINTERS RULERS : : BINDERS Blank Book Makers Birmingham, Ala. 2113-19 Morris Ave. Phone Main 634 Reliable printing House ■ 1 1 M J 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 j I IIHIIIIUIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMNIIIIII ««S OF it ' J ' llllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII.I Ill ! II Illll II I II III III I IllltllU We carry a complete line of | D M Baseball Goods Lawn Tennis Supplies Fishing Tackle When You Think Of Drinks Think of B UR CHFIEL 1 1 X= 0 l 1 I A complete line of 1 Drugs, Stationery, and Toilet Articles Fountain Pens | Fine Candies | 1 K3X 1 E. G. BURCHFIEL I Woodlawn 1003 100 South 77th Street j - ■ ' ! I II H 1 1 U M I M f 1 1 • M 1 1 1 M M 1 1 1 ■ T I t H 1 1 r • I M 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 M I M 1 1 1 1 • I M I U I U 1 1 1 • M II 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 ril 1 M 1 1 1 • I i 1 1 1 M f ( 1 1 1 M I lT iHNiiiii M r M j 1 1 1 1 1 1 r r i it j in u mi ii i it i it 1 1 milium Hiiiimimm. mnimmi ' Everything fot the college Sportsman COMPLIMENTS OF W. B. EMOND SON MAGNOLIA POINT Wimberly Thomas Hardware Co. 2011 First Avenue -llliltlltlillil IIIIIHIMIMI Iilrliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini ■ Illll I - • IMIIIIIIIH llllltllllllllt il IIMIIIMIIII u mi = my [sun eying his tale d twin sis:. ±111 1 1 iiiiiii in mi i mti it ii ui ti i h 11 1 iii i h i ii iin ii i in iiiitm miitinni 11 in ininii nu nnun imnntuntii intnui u m i iti u m i n Avoid That Cold We mend the rips, We patch the holes, Build up the heels and Save the soles. Jake Rose Shoe Shop Phone Woodlawn 1403 iMIUIIilMMIMIHMIIllMMMMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlMIIIINIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIilllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIHIItllllltllllllMIIIIIII. t I II I II It I M 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 1  1 1 1 1 I II I II 1 1 1 1 II II 1 1 J I tl II II 1 1 1 1 1 II I II 1 11  M II I M M I II I M I II I M I • 1 1 II I rl 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 II I  II 14 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II mi J 1 1 . i 1 1 II IMIIU SIVLEY ' S l HOME-MADE CANDIES ALWAYS SOLD FRESH 20th Century Bakery Did you get them cheaper by taking two, papa? ' ■ Ml II J M IM 1 1 Ml I M M I 111 Ill 1 1 J Mil J Mil M IM 111 I M r 1 Ml [Ill III! t Alabama ' s Leading Style Store 2117 Second Avenue | Birmingham Ideal Millinery, Cloak and Suit Store Robert Aland, Prop. Ladies Ready-to-Wear and Millinery l 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M M 1 1 IIIIIII 1 1 1 1 J 1 1 1 M 1 M M I M I Mill M l7 Jlllllllll Illllllllllll IIIIIIMMIII I llllllllim Mill) MIMMMIIIIIIMlMIM.IIIIHIIIIIIIIIIMIMIM Illllllll ' . The Best of Everything For the Kitchen SOLD BY I ROBT. PROWELL I STOVE CO. Alabama | I 2011 3rd AVENUE ' IIIIIIIIMIIlin Illllllll Ml III IIIIIMI II IM Ml MIIIIIIMII Illllllllllll III III llllllllll. ' lllllllllll III Illllllllllll llllll Illllllll III IIMIMII III! ' 1 1 1 1 1 • 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 • 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 M M 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 il f M M I II 1 1 1 . 1 M 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 M M I L M 1 1 1 1 1 M M I M 1 M I ■_ ! Keep This Thought With You- « JLT HEN you shop at ■ Odum, Bowers White you are secure in style, service and satis- faction. More than a decade in serving the most exacting men in Birmingham has made us competent to meet your desires. 1915-1917 Third Ave. —•IIIIIIMMIII 1 Ill MM III IIMIIMMIfllllMIMIIMIMI III Mill Mil Mill Ml III Ml IMIM III III MUM III Illllllll III MUM IIIIIIMIIIIINI.- JIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIUIIIIMIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIiniMII,.l,IIIIIIIIIMMIMIIIM 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 III III ll«_. 1 Everything For Out-Door and Indoor Sports BASEBALL -Everything from mit to mask. | G( )LF — The best of ;ill in clubs, balls and togs. | FOOTBALL — Everything from the pigskin | to pads. | 1 TENNIS GOODS— Croquet sets. All Priced Rightly. B. M. CHENOWETH CO. THE WINCHESTER STORE | 2130 Third Av-. Title Guarantee Bldg. i:illllMIIMIIIIMIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIHlll!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIHIIIIIIMIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIII Ilfj ' iiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuii niiiiimiiiiiiniiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiMifiiife J. H. TINDER SON Manufacturing Opticians OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined 1927 FIRST AVENUE Broken Lenses Duplicated ' ' ' ' ' ' , 1 ' HlliiniBIII =, , „„.„ ,.„ , , , .,;,„.., mi, , „„ |,|„,||| „l MM, Willis: The sa) that some of these professors lead a fast life. Gillespie: I doubt it; none of them have passed me thi- war. ' HOWARD VS JACKSONVILLE J J II Illlllllllllll Illllllll in Illlllllllllllll mi mi 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ■_; £ii||||l i iii Illlllillllll mi. in i mi i lllllllllllllll i i mi: When College Days are Over And v acation time begins, you must keep a record of those happy days with a Kodak. Bring your films to us as we know bow to make good pictures, for we graduated in picture- making a long time ago. ENLARGING AND FRAMING Terreson s Camera Shop 403 North 20th Street Selling Medicines for Over Thirty Years o— — .-— o ! ! THE HIGHLAND PHARMACY Phone M 1080 Five Points BIRMINGHAM .llllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIKIII. i II I llllllll HI ! Hi I Mill Jill II I llllll [II ill II til Hi ii IM III Illlllillllll IIIIIIMIIHIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIir ' ' ' J ' ■ ' ' r ■ ' l ( 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 j i i ■ j r ■ i m ii 1 1 1 1 j 1 1 1 m ] l i it 1 1 1 ■ r ■ 1 1 1 1 ri 1 1 1 j 1 1 j 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 j 1 1 1 1 1 m 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 (T i tt 1 1 m f 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 j j 1 1 l i j 1 1 j ri i 1 1 1 1 ■ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 c i ■ m i ■ i IIIIIIHIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHINIIinillllllMj Zac Smith Stationery Co. PRINTING— ENGRAVING OFFICE FURNITURE Fifteen North Twentieth Street The makers of your invitations for 1921-1922 We operate one of the most modern Engraving plants in the country. All our plates and dies are hand engraved by the best artists obtainable. We gladly furnish samples and quote prices on any job no matter how small or large. .nlininininiMininiininii ii in in inni n limn innnni iiiiniininniniiiinininiMiniiiiMiiiiniiiiiiiiuiiMiiiMiiiiiiiinininiiiininniiiiiiniii inn iiiiiiimiiiiiiii inn itiimimiiimmilli n iiiiiiik inininii iiinini in iiinini in iininininHininini in iiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiininiiiiiinini iniiiiiiiiiMiHiiiiiiiinumiiiiiiiiiii i n iininiiiiiMii nn n inininninnininiiiiiininmi i n n MACKIN BROTHERS GROCERY CO. Staple and Fancy Groceries DHONES MAIN 79,145,252,625 BIRMINGHAM, Ave. G B e tw e e n 17th and 18th Sts. •• m m m L J - Illllllll iiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiii t i i itiiiiiiinii in iiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiii i iiiihiiimiiiiiiiiiimm i Some people are like clocks, thej are always running but never get anywh | I I I I  I mmii.hi. ._ , , , , , , ||1MU(|| H _ Caheen Bros, Quality Service Where The College Boy Shines BETTER STYLE QUALITY SERVICE Birmingham FOR LESS Alabama HO MAKCP TD VVCAQCP 321 North 20th Street | i iiimiiii i mini 111 mi mini mum inimmiii i imp limmmii minimum 11 inn i mi mm iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 11 i. 1 i I l I m t mini t ii nil linn I Ililllllllllll mini i i m IIM Mllllllllllll i urn Bread Adds a New Joy to Bread Eating American Bakeries Company .11 t Hit Hit lit lllllt HlHl I HIIIIHIMIHHII.IIIIHIIIIIHHI • Ill lit: I ' ll Illltll I HIimillHIHIIIIIHII I Hit HIHIHIIIIHIM IIIHIHIIHIIIIIIII I : e square yard of leaf surface produces one gram of sugar per hour, how much would a front yard produce? jtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiMimiiiiiiimmiiiiHHi iiikii mil u i .Hi! i n. mum MIMIIIIItllillMlillllllllMIIHiliitiHMilMllllllllllliiiiltiiliiimi.il m m.,nm: i m. immmmmi i iiimimi mmm WARREN BROS 2012 2nd Ave. Birmingham, Ala. If It ' s Groceries- - Say Wholesale and Retail LEE Brothers Everything in the grocery line. Delivered as ordered and on time. Base Ball, Tennis and All Athletic Supplies LEE BROTHERS Wholesale Grocers 2202 Morris Avenue Birmingham : : Alabama HlllllimiilM MlllMIIMIIIIIIIIIIi:tllllllllMltl!IIIIHMIIHIIIIHIHMMIIMtMMIMIMIIIMIIIIMMnill|IMtHIM[HHIIHIIIIH- =111111 rl [ tl 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 [ H 1 1 M 1 1 1 It 1 1 M 1 1 f 1 1 1 II 1 1 M I II r 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II M t Ml 1 1 1 1 • I r M H 1 1 1 1 1 J I • 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 • 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 C t II ii jh 1 1 1 1 r ii m t iii r 1 1 iimi J M t M M 1 1 1 1 ti 1 1 1 n 1 1 ti t m m j n i ii r ii 1 1 ) I m 1 1 1 J t ■ J m 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 m m 1 1 1 ti t m 1 1 1 1 u 1 1 1 m 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 n • u n 1 1 1 u 1 1 1 « i ( 1 ■ 1 1 1 n I H 1 1 1 1 1 1 m 1 1 i l 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 t t ■ 1 1 1 1 m L 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 : 1 1 1 l i m 1 1 1 1  1 1 1 1 r ; 1 1 1 r n 1 1 m 1 1 m 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 m r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 . ti i n 1 1 1 4 m f ■ P. C. RATLIFF SON INSURANCE THEPENN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA ASSETS OF OVER $225,000,000 P. C. RATLIFF SON, General Agents 1003 Jefferson County Bank Building, Birmingham, Alabama A Penn Mutual Premium, less a Penn Mutual Dividend, purchasing a Penti Mutual Policy containing Penn Mutual values, makes an Insurance Proposition which, in the sum of All Its Benefits, is unsur- passed for net low cost. an l care of all interest f all members. It is best not just one way, bul all ways, and always. Hack of ii is a seventy-two-year reputation for fair dealing with all its policy holders, whether continuing, withdrawing, maturing or dying. ' M HI IIIMIMI UK MM Mill I MIIIMMMMMMIIMMIIMI MIIIMIMMIMII I MM I MM I Mil I Ml I I IMIMIMI Ml MM . = - Ford: What ' s a silent majority? Billie: It ' s n men trying to entertain ;r- woman. i ' ' •••■•••■• I IIIIMMIIIII.IIMI | | | | ,_ JIMMIMMMIMIIMI I II I | II. Illl | | ml I C Earle Brothers Gifts Thai Last from Wholesale Grocers J 801 -1802 First Ave. Birmingham, Ala. Bromberg Co. for Graduation Remembrances 1 | Never-Ending Reminders of the Giver and 1 I 1 the Expression of Sentiment Conveyed. 1 iiihiimimmiiiiimmimimmmmmiimimmimimmimimimimimmimimmimmmmmimimimimmimiiiimmimimmiimimmimimhiimm? = ,hnimmmimimimimmmmmimimimimimimimimimimimiimmimmmimmimmmmimimimiimmimmimhmimmhmniimimmmimim7 MIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllll Ill Mil MIIMMIMMMIMIMMMMIIMIMMIIIMIMIMtlllllMI MIMMIMMMMIMMII MM Illl ' . (El]e flapper I ' m the flapperingest flapper there is. I know an awful lot. I can tell whether a man is married by the way his trousers set at the knees, and I know whether to weep over him or storm at him by the odor of his cigarettes. 1 know by his month whether he ' s a hick lover or not, that if his hair sticks np on end right! i)n top of his head he ' s a perfect lover; the way he wears his hair will tell one whether it will be Liggett ' s or Martha ' s, Britling ' s or Hoopers; Loew ' s or the Jefferson; and if his ears are cnrlv-like lie puts out a lot of cash. If he has a small nose he ' s bound to be a lot of a bum joker, the kind I always laugh at and tell. You are so clever; that ' s the funniest thing I ever heard. And if he has lung eyelashes lie ' s sure to he fond of Augusta Waves Wilson and Smoke House Poetry. How do I know? ' Cause I ' ve been everywhere, seen everything, met everybody, and done everything. I ' m so wickedly sophisticated — everything bores me — nothing new — never — I have drunk of the hitter dregs of disappoint- ment, my heart has been broken in 57 different ways by ?7 different men. I have looked forward all my life to staying up till ? a. m. only to find thai il doesn ' l make one feel romantic at all hut stupidly sleepy. Champagne, that I thought would he s, , sparklingly thrilling, isn ' t much better than lemonade after all. So there! — Ruth Alexander. •I I Ml II I II Mill HUM III MIIMMMM MMIM: ' MIMIMIMIMIM Illl Illllll lllllll I III II I II I III III III II I III Illl I I MM 1 1 II I II I III III I II I II I II Illl I Ill III III III I II IIIIIIIIIIIMIIMMIIl Lighl of my life. Mazda! he sighed. Sole of my soul, Neolin! she cried. uilllllllllllllllUlllllillUUIIIIII iiMiiiiiiiiiitimiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiniii i in in in nun illinium inn ii ■ ' miiiimmiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lllllllllllllllflllllll i mi llllilllllllllllltlllllitttlllllllll Mills Conservative Banking It Pays To Buy At BURGERS American Trust Savings Bank Member of Federal Reserve System ' Everything for the College Girl ' s Attire ' Howard Students Especially Welcomed Capital $500,000.00 Surplus and Pi of its $490,000.00 -I III III III 111 III III llllll III III III II I III III III 111 III III MINI III III III III llllll III II III Mill llllllllllll III HIM I II III II I II mm III III III II I ii nu: iiMiiniiiiiiiiiiiiii in iiiiiiiii 111 ii 111 mm 111 ii 111 iiitii i ii 111 111 iiiiiiiiiiiiii 111 Mini 111 111 111 iiiiiiiiiimmiiimiinii 111 11111111111111 ' Colleges Annuals Bulletons Catalogs Programs Birmingham Printing Company Printers, Rulers, Binders and Loose Leaf Manufacturers Office and Plant 1701-1703 Third Avenue Birmingham, Ala. ;illl(MIIII III llllll IIIIIIMIHIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIMIIIIIUnlltlltllll III tllllllfltllllMllllllllllllltllMII Hill tlltllllllllllllllllllllllllllr =, Burger Dry Goods Co. 2013-2015 Second Avenue North fMMIIIMMItllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlTl MininiiiiMMiiiiiiiniiiMiiiiiiiiiiMninniiMiuiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHMiiiiiiK O ' Neill ' s 2020 Second Avenue Birmingham, Alabama China and Glass Merchants China Dinner Sets $6.95 to $235.00 j Cut Glassware 50c to $50.00 | (Win. A. Rogers Celebrated Silverware) Rogers Tea Spoons, per set 75c to $6.00 ! Rogers Table Spoons, per set, $1.50 to $12.00 ! Rogers Knives, extra plates, per set $3.00 j Rogers Forks, extra plate, per sei $3.00 I We carry the largesl stock of dining room and kitchen equipments for Colleges and Hotels in the South. IIIMIIIIIinilllllMIIIIIMIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMUIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIMIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII? :n man i verj different from an obstinate one; you are obstinate; I ' m firm. i n i i i i n inn mm, .111,11,, in. n _ •_ I I Illllll I mi mi I I i II • I II M III Hi HI School Furniture and School Supplies Everything for the School GET IT at ; lesks : Ann Ch Auditorium Seatings, ;ill s ' l lesks and i liaii s bles and Book i 1 1 niture irts I ' n i n M ' m, I Apparatus 1 i ' | .ii.ilns Maps, ;ill kinds and mount ' ings, and Charts. and mount- ings. Vtlascs and I Actional ies Qlackboai ds 1 1 ) loplate ms, Ei asei -. Poin Pencil Shai pi Pencils, Pens, Inks. Papi i aste Baskets Sanitary Drinking Cups Sanitar) Drinking Fountakis Kindergarten Supplies DRENNEN ' S «= o WRITE FOR PRICES Birmingham ' s Best Store for over half a Century Dewberry Montgomery Stationery Company Next Door to Brown-Marx Bldg. 2014 First Ave. Birmingham, Ala. (X= 0 Everything that Men, Women and Children Wear -IIH.HIHIMIIIItlim . [ 1 1 r 1 1 1 -nil Mill i 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 II IM It 1 1 1 1 M iri r 1 1 II I ri 1 1 1 1 1 1 mil III III III II III Htlllll MM i Tun, mi mi II I in II KM t MiiiMlillil i IIII1IIH I uilltlimilllllllllHlllllI mi, - MIIIIMIIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiii tilt illllll tiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiMiini: IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIflHIIIIHIflHIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIItllMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIHIIIIHIIIIIIIlllIllllltlllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIMIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIItlllllMltllltlHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIItlllllllllltt The Southern Homes of Southern Cooking B ritling Cafeterias No. 1 Birmingham No. 3 Atlanta, Ga. No. 2 Birmingham No. 4 Memphis, Tenn. Tii im inin in mim hi urn i ii i miiii.imuii t iiimniimn urn i -llllil.it i i miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiimii ■inn llltu tit i n mil l iniimi! 1 1 in i ii- Miss After-Taking: Have you been down to the big hose sale ' Miss Before-Taking (indignantly): No! I ' d have you understand ! don ' t wear that kind! iiiiii illinium iiiiiiiiiiiiiiin i i Hum imiiiiiiniii I I ■■ £11111 lilliillii Illlllllllllllll I nil I Illlllllllllllllll I m m K A handsome man demands attention A well-dressed man commands admiration | Do Yourself Justice by buying STRAUSS ' ROCHESTER HAND TAILORED SUITS Young Men ' s Suits ' oVr pecTalty 8 From Factory to Consumer Low Prices Highest Qualities J. B. STRAUSS CO. 2007 Third Avenue North Factories: New York and Rochester niltllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllHtllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllJIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli: ■J lllllllllllllllllll III III HIM Mill Illlllllllllllll III lltMlltlMllllllltlflllllllHIl III IIIIIIIIII III III MMIIMM III Ml MIMMIM III III lltlllllL | Insurance Rentals Real Estate i = Of All Kinds Apartments, Homes, Stores Sales. Loans College Men Are Particular Fellows The American Laundry likes to launder for particular people does the kind of work good dressers ap- prove — Call Main 3715 or hail The American Wagon. THANKS. ii iiiiii in in in in in in ii i in in in ii in nil in ii iiiiiitni ii m iiiiiinniiiniiiii illlllllllllllll in iniinin i ii mtiiniiii m in in linn in in in in in in in iiiiiiiii in iiiiiiiiiiiiiiin in i ii m in ii i m ii in m i ii in in in ii in in n m m i ii in in in ii in l Up-to-Date Millinery at Popular Prices. Phone Main 8292 Mrs. T. H. Sentiney Sample Milliney Shop 201-2 Jefferson County Bank Bldg. 2nd Avenue and 21st Street Birmingham, Ala. i r i r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r m 1 1 1 1 m 1 1 j i  1 1 1 j 1 1 j 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 : i j 1 1 j 1 1 1 ■ 1 1 ri i r i r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 1 ii 1 1 1 m 1 1 1 ii m 1 1 1 1 m 1 1 ■ 1 1 1 1 m i ' .llllllllllllltllllllMIMIIIIIIillllllllMMIMIIMIinMIMIinilllllllllllllMtinillllilillilllMIIHIIIIIIMIIMIMIIIIIIIMIIII ' . Moseley, Henderson Davis Realty Company Office 310 N. 21st Street Phones Main 791-792 Insurance and Rentals ;ilHMMIMMIMIMIMtlUIMIIMIIIIII!IMIMIMMHinill1IMMMIMIMUIIHIIIHI]IIIIIIIIIIMIMIMMIIMIMIIMlMMlMIIMIMIMIIItlllll. IIIIIIIllllllllUHIIIIHIIIllllllllUllllllllllltlllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllltllllIlltlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHItllllHIIIIIII1l£ Select Jewelry for Select People For delicious wholesome foods bake with g - QATTERTON-s BAKING POWDER mmXXtttd Ate to $U(V  Tec A., i ti -u to 6cJb BATTERTON COFFEE CO. BIRMINGHAM P. H. Linnehan Jewelry Co. ; 107 North 20th St. Phone Main 94 IIIIMIIIMIMI I IIIIIIIII I II Ml Mill Ml III 1 1 1 1MMIMIIIIIMIMIMIIIMIMMIMIm5 IMMIIMMIlMIMIIMIMIMIMIIIIIMIMIMIMIMMMIMMIIMMMIMIMMIMIMMMMMIMIMIMIMMMIMIIMIMMIMII ' MIMIMItMinill ||t Mother ' s Favorite Bread ENSLEY BAKERY McQ. MORRISON, Proprietor 1915 Ave. E Ensley, Ala. rill : mi iiiiiiiii inn ininii Illinium I i i mi n n,- ' , i | nil iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii, Uppcrclassinan : Mow man) studies arc you carrying? Fresh : I ' m carrying one and dragging four. - ' ' ' in ! I iiiiii. nun i mil mi iiiiiiiiiin_ a m Illllllll mull i i |||| , , mmiiiimim _ Glad to See You In Our Store Anytime The Stopping Place for Howard Students nor m H0 HnL;iAvi-:: lll Urmfru.. i T-ma Delicious Candies Drinks Supreme | ' O ' | LEWIS-ROBINSON CANDY CO. Birmingham ' s Newest Confectionery 2010 Magnolia Ave. LOVEMAN-JOSEPH LOEB Five Poinls 1st Floor 3rd Ave. Entrance airaiiiiinii mm , , i in hi , , ,„, „„ ' ' jllMIIIIIIIIII ' iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiHiiiiMiiniiiiiiniHiiiiiiiiMilililiiiiiiinmmmmiiimiiiiiimmmmiimmmmllllliliiiimmimmM iimmmmn mmmmmmmmimmmmmii ' immmmmmm i nmmimimmimr.: Modern Furniture for Fashionable People at popular prices DEBUTANTES ' SUITES CLUB ROOM SUITES FRATERNITY SUITES Our Specialty EXCLUSIVE FURNITURE CO. 815 South Twentieth Street .11 1 -M-r M ,-■ i- | r i WIN ' I Ill ' ■ it i iiiiiiu i iL i minimi imiMiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiii tin:: uimmmiiiimi imimmimimimiimiii.: Breathes there a man with soul so dead, who never to himself has said. Guess I ' ll cut and ' stay in bed. iiHiiiiiiiiniiiii i i mi i iii .iimiiiiiiim mi hum i illinium mini i i mini mmmmiim mi mini i HOWARD COLLEGE A STANDARD COLLEGE FOR BOYS AND GIRLS OWNED AND CONTROLLED BY THE BAPTISTS OF ALABAMA In choosing a college the graduate of the high school naturally prefers to go to an institution that is alive and progressive. Howard College is growing steadily each year in numbers and influence. This is due to the character of the college life and to the splendid instruction afforded in the class rooms. Howard College prides itself on being the best institution for general educa- tion in this section of the South. For Catalogue and other information, address JOHN C. DAWSON, President BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Mil I Ml II I III III III I I Ill HUM lit III II III III II II I illllHIHIMIHIIIHIHIiniMMIH HIHIIIIIIHIHIHIHIIIHIinillMIHIIIHIIIIIHIIIHIIIHIIMIIIHimi Ml Illlllllllllll II II Mil 1 1 II I II III h = Ford will go anywherci except in society! Illllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllll illHIHIIilllllllllrllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIflllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIM .MIMHIIIHItlllllll Ill I HIIIIIIIHI I IIHIMIMIItl Ill llllllllltll 1 1 II I II 1 1 1 Ml 1 1 1 1 II I M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II I II I II 1 1 1 lll_ DISTINCTIVE FASHIONABLE |( IOL )] The Comforts and Value of Your Home are Increased by A MODERN PLUMBING SYSTEM CENTRAL PLUMBING HEATING CO. 107 North 21st Street o-JAFFE ' S-o HEADQUARTERS FOR Class Rings and Pins Football, Baseball and Basketball Charms Everything in School Jewelry We Always Have A Large Stock of Loving Cups to Select From GRADUATION GIFTS Our Specialty HOE SANITARY SERVICEABLE .IIIIIMIMItllMI|]|llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllNlltll1IHI!lll!lllll!IIIHIIIiniHllli:illlMlllllMllii;nilMllltlNMI, aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiii V 0t l . For More Than Sixty f 1 Years the Leading AMERICAN BUSINESS COLLEGE j Trains thoroughly for Office Work and ohtains em- I 1 ployment for students who can be recommended for |. | efficiency and good character. | There is no better time to prepare for business, | | to begin a course of study which accomplishes the | 1 important purpose of giving a Start in Life, than | MOW. New students enroll at Eastman any week | | dav. ' i acation. | Intensive vocational courses in Accounting, Busi- | | ness, Civil Service, Secretarial and other studies | | leading to dignified positions, good salaries, rapid | = promotion, and tin best chance to use to advantage § 1 a high school or college education. Experienced, efficient, faithful teachers. Strong | | lecture courses. Ideal location. Moderate expenses 1 I $185 pays total cost of tuition, books and hoard for | 1 three months (13 weeks). Exceptional opportunities | Self-help to young men and women of the right i 1 sort. | If you want to fit yourself for a good position, 1 | write for illustrated prospectus. | CLEMENT C GAINES M. A., L. L. D. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Jaffe Jewelry Company Cor. 2nd Avenue and 19th Street BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA .iinillltlllllMIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIItlllllillltlllllllllllllUllinillllltlMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIUMIIIIIIi i|iliiiiiiMiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiii iitiiili i m 1 1 1  1 1 • 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 r • 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 m 1 1 1 ii 1 1 1 1 m 1 1 _ Meet Your Friends a t ... WAHOUMA DRUG CO. The Store of Quality Bell Phone 913 Woodlawn, 6510 First Ave, BIRMINGHAM, ALA. iliiiiiliillllllllillllMlllllil i ii mm i ii 1 1 II I Ml III III III I II III I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIHIIII I llllll.llllHlllllim. Prescriptions Carefully Compounded by an Expert Pharmacist. ' .IMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illl 1 1 11111111:11 1 Mil I Illlllllllllllllllllll Outside, rain fell drizzlingly ; inside, lovers quarreled she concluded. No, my dear; only a rain. tin- fire. Monsieu r, it iim-t adit Alabama liaptist Ash Jewelry Co, American Bakeries Co. Alabama Engraving Co. Batterton Coffee Co. J. Blach Sons Britling Cafetei ias Burchfiel Drue, Co. Bromberg Co. Bessemer Coal Co. Birmingham Paint V Glass Co. I iii i Sinitli Insurance ( . Birmingham Arms Cycle Co. Burgers Dry Goods Co. Birmingham Printing Co. li. M. Chenoweth Co. Caheens Chapin-Sachs Corp. c ollins ( o. Dewberry - Montgomery Dispatch Printing I o Drennen Co. Emond, W. I!. Son. Ensley Bakery Eastman College Exclusive Furniture Co. Eai l Bros., holesale Groci I ' . II. Clothing Co. First Ave. ( !oal I o Highland Pharmacy Hinds-Upshaw Paint Co. Hirsch Millinery Co. [deal Millinery ' Co. Jemison Real Estate Co. Jaffe Jewelry Co. .lake Rose Jefferson County Building I. nan Ass ' n. Kessler-1 [after Klothes Shoppe Kaufman Simpson Loveman, Joseph Loeb Lee Bros. Linnebam Jewelry Co. M. a eh in Bros. VIi l lough ' s Bakery Mosley, Henderson Davis Kunnally ' s Candy Co. i )dum, Bowers S hite O ' Neill Glass I Parker, X. B. Prowell Hardware I ' m lei i llothing I o. Pizitz Clothing Co. Perl ection Mattress i o. Reid- Law son Jewelrj I o Roberts Son Rex Billiard Parlor Ratliff insurance Co. Ri ibinson ' andy ( ' o. Strauss Clothing Co. Zac Smith Stationery ( ' . . Soufnside liaptist Church Smith, Hamilton Glover Sellers Drug C . Sivley Candy Co. Sample Hat Shop I ' m eson Kodak Co. Tinder, .1. H. Son Tutwiler Flower Shop Turner Studio Warren l!rns. W 1- Fruitlicher Wheeler Business College W imbei Ij Thomas Walmuma Drue E. I.. Barlow, Tech High Sel I, Atlanta. Ga. W. C. Grig Superintendent City S Gadsden, Ala. J. I). McPhi Pharmacist, Andalusia. Ala. .1 . E. Lambdin, B. Y. 1 . C. Stati Si i MontgonK-i . Ma. .1. M. Head, Montgomery, Via. I . O. Thompson, Bridgi poi t Co! Bridgeport, Via M. M. ' [, Ree. See.. Slate Baptist Birmingham, Ala. I C. Bradley, Rec B. K I.. P. C Birmingham, Ala. Homer Nabors, 718 Peyton St. Birmingham, Ala. Mrs. R. A. Harris Ashland, Miss. John R. Sapmey, So. Baptist rheological Seminary Louisville, Ky. . C. Crowder, Pastor Boaz Baptist Church, Ala. W. R. IlillKud. Central Shoe Co. 40. ' Com. BIdg., B ' ham. W. A. Berry, Jefferson Standard Life In-. Co. Birmingham, Ala. Albert Lee Smit ' n, Jefferson Standard Life L Birmingham, Ala Russell II. Drake. Haleyville, Ala. I tola Pate, Hartford, Ala. W inslow C. I lensiui. Pastor Baptist Church, leneva, Ala. W. G. Pledger, Pittsburg Testing Laboratory, Kingsport, Tenn. chools, Henry .1. Willingham, State Normal School, Florence, Ala. J. C. Maxwell, 5917 First Ave. Birmingham, Ala. •tary. Dr. L. ( ). Dawson, Pastor. First Baptist Church Tuscaloosa, Ala. Dr. .1. E. Dillard, Past .i -. Southside Baptist Church. Birmingham, Ala. Nicholas Lamprinidi s, R. 783, Birmingham, la I Senior B. Y. P i Ragland, Ala. Ethel: Say wonder whj the academic procession i so slow? Nellie Because they ' re coming in by degrees. _• ■ , ■! Ill IMlU I NIIIIIHIIIMIIII IIIHIIIIIII lllllimilll.il 1 IIIHIIIIIMimillllllllin. ill I I XI III III MM II Mill 1. 1 III I Itl Ml III MM 1 1 1 1 II II 1 1 II 1 1 II I Ml 111 I M I II I Mil 1 1 1 H I ■ 1 1 ! II I M I Ml I Ml III II D iTumu lli nu Oft ' in the nigh) when the moonbeams plaj On the lapping waves of the shadowy bay, I it with m dog li the campfire ' s glow ii ' l dream of a flower that I used to know. The flower was fragrant with a perfume as rare As the wild honeysuckles that sweeten the air ' Round my tenl on the edg ot the water. Once 1 sat thinking tlms of that beautiful maid When I found myself lost in a cool forest glade. The wood nymphs wore dancing on velvet as gi As iln shimmering veil tliat was worn by their queen. I covertl) looked at this queen of the danci Twas the wonderful one I had seen in ni trance l ' . M fire on the edge of the water. Iler hair la in CUrls, her eyes black as night, And she threw i v a smile coquettish and bright. I cried out to her. Oh! come back to me — To your comfort and eas I shall certainlj see! She replied with a laugh You is sho out o ' luck, l s rooks ' on a strike and ain ' t ' lowed to wnek. Then 1 ' woke bj the side of the water. — Fred II. White, ' .IMIMIMMMMMMMHIMMMMIMMMMMMIMIMIMMMMI III in III III I ' HIMMMIMMMMMIMIMIMIMMIMIMMIMIMIMIMIMMIMIMIIIMIMIMIIII MIMIMMIMIMMMMIMIMMMMMMMIMIMIMMMMIMIMIMMI ' 1 1 ' l 1 1 tIJ ril Ml II Olllll (Ill Mill I I Ill MM III I. ,. . |ll|l|l ' IMIMIMIIIMIMMIMIMIMIMIMIMMIMIIMMIMIMIIIIMMIMIMIMIMIMIMIIMMMIMIMIMIMIMMMMMIMIMIMIMIIMMIMIMMMMIUIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIItlUIIMIMIIIIIMHinillllllllll ' Phone Main 8114 We make a specialty of Hotel and Cafe supplies Wood-Fruitticher Grocery Co. Wholesale Grocers 2035 MORRIS AVE. Birmingham .IMIMIMMIIMIMIMIMil Ml II I Ml III I II MUM III II I III IM I II Ml II I II I II I HIIIM I I IMI II 1 1 Ml IIMI11IIII IIMIM r Til IMIIIIIMMIMIIIIIMIMIMIMIMIIMMHIIMIMMIMIMIiM.- First Ed: Win do you call her a silenl belle: Second Ed: I kissed her the other ni ht and she never told. -iiimiiliMliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiminiiii iiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimMiiiiimmNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiim ml Illlllimill mi liiilllil ' lt ' lllllllllll til i i mil: M. B. GOTTLIEB OF THE STUDIO BOOK SHOP ■{iiiriiiiirifiiiTiitiiriifiiiiiiJii ii4iiiriJiii iiinitiiin miiimiiiiif mriifiiMir iniittifiiiiiiiitiiMiJiiiiiiiiiirii itiiiiiiiiii)iriitit iiiiiiiJiiii(iiiiitifiifiiMiiiiJi(iiiiiiit ii(iriijiiriiiiiiiit ' iiiir[MiMiiii[tiiMi[iiitfifMiitiitit i)riiiiriiriiinii . THE NIGHT BEFORE iiuiiMiMiii iiMJiiiriiiiiiiiMiMiiiiiiiii rriri 111 iitriiiiiMJii ' iiMitiititiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiJiiTiiiiiriiMiiiiMiMtiifiiiiiririitMrMtiiMir jimi tiiiiiiiiiiji)itiJiiri]Mi)it)ij)itiJ[)iiiiJiiii i ;nm in mini: ;m mi iiiiiiiiiuiiiniiinmiii minium DRINK IN BOTTLES 5 Cents CRAWFORD-JOHNSON CO. DISTRIBUTORS ' I thill lluiiNiiMNiu m Ill flllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllltlltlllllllHIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIMIIIIMMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllHIHIIIItlllllHIIIUIiaillllllltlllllllllllllllHItlllllttllllllllM mm n minim Ill it u , « w H


Suggestions in the Samford University - Entre Nous Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) collection:

Samford University - Entre Nous Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Samford University - Entre Nous Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Samford University - Entre Nous Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

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Samford University - Entre Nous Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

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Samford University - Entre Nous Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

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Samford University - Entre Nous Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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