it &Js r' '7? 1 AT AV - . - f. A ' : ,7 L ' 'if 1 1 ,-: S - y - 0F 'tv-v's.L '-, ii i . -.T MISS STELLA LEWJS, OF TEXAS w NtTCMLCM FLOYD OF MISSISSIPPI MISS CHARLIE SCOTT. OF MISSISSIPPI CSuck PhokO) Dy Campbell MacLeod. ONK of the truths that the Houth- ern trtrl Imbibes with her mither's milk IB that a woman's stronieHi weapon Is her femininity. Man is made nol ti mourn. In swi. of the poet's melancholy lament, but to wait on and make things eny for her. He expects to do It, and she fcrmefully lets him shoulder the burden. t MranKers speak of the charm of the huutneru K'rl us something Illusive li.de tinahle. Llless you, It's the simplest thing In th- world. It Is not always bounty, though that Is an excellent card to hi Id. It Is her strange hypnotic power of sug gesting, conveying clalrvoyantly to man, he he from the North, Kant, Houth or West, that-she needs him. And not a mother's son of them all can resist the Cattery of her apparent helplessness. She needs ' him Lord love her! and he hos never fulled her yet. What's the use of spoiling her pretty elbow s eeve arm ul-, tlvutlng muscle when he has such super-; abundance of strength going to wr.ste, r added to a knightly yearning to show her how easy It Is for him to sloy all the wild ( l'ants In the world's arena for the re uurd of her fluttering handkerchief ap plause? Who ever heard a Southern girl lament ing the fact that chivalry has gone? bhe doesn't tielleve It, not for one moment, or If It has withered away under rlgh' talk and suffrage notions It has a wny ot reviving, like those curious resurret lion plants our grandmothers brought home from the Philadelphia Centennial, when he appears on the scene. tonie wise one hni otwerved that a pretty girl generally tulies an optimistic view of the world's, gallantry. Not all the pretty girls live on Popular street In this playground or so ciety hut the average Southern girl un derstands what constitutes the ground work of social success. In superabund ance she has Inherited tai t and culti vated the social graces until her manner Is a Joy forever. TIIU SECRET OF CHARM. A little debutante asked a Creole grande damp, who Is still a lelle In aplie of her eighty years and snowy locks: "Tell me i the sec ret of yourpower, madame. Teach me to fascinate people as you do." J "My child," was the smiling response,! "rememlier this. In the alphabet of charm 1 there Is no such letter as I, it Is all you." 'lhls is but a pretty echo of Mme. Re. I nniler's famous reply as to her power over men: "It is sympathy, sympiwhy." Itnmantlc? Of course they are. Wasn't ,1 ii lil t a Southern girl? rf young love ate mirrored In every Southern girl's Imagination, if Juliet hud Im'cii other than she wus Impulsive, ten der, loving and romantic Komeo iiifl I Mm I '4 MISS SALLIC WYNN WHITE, OF LOUISIANA. : ' , . v " . . ' . : . t .y r : : "': V-'' - 'r-'M. V 3 - ' " V' ". , S" . ' -' --v -.k' . : ' ' -. . ', i .' . V: ' '',''' Cr MISS KATHERINE AVEreY, FLORIDA A.J,'- MISS SARAH HILL OF TENNESSEE MDnvicl Pnoto) 7 MISS MAY BOL1NGER," OT AR.KAN5AS wm ISS SALLIE HAIiR-IS OF MISSISSIPPI (Sweeny PHoto) 'Ml If i'Tr'' V '7 VV. - j tJ,4 f.mmtT' Iff : 1 '.V MISS CLTCENIE LA COUR., ACHAimiNG CREOLE TYPE MISS LYNN COUNCIL. OF MISSISSIPPI recite poetry so that she can convince, any man that he's a poet and that she And her dreams le the one divinely appointed to convey the. discovery to him. tlxcepllng the stars In the Eastern harems, there Is probably no feminine would creature In the whole world to-day brought have sung his loves ts'iicath another hal- up In such Indolence as the bouthern cony. Sle was the very esseni e of feral- girl not the Southern girl of yesterday, nlnlty the type that can drive any man, for she had slaves t6 attend her lmpe from the most phlegmatic to the most rlous demands and there was no poverty politic, to do dcMpcrute deeds, to count to gainsay her Idle extravagances, but the world well lost If by losing It lie gain the Southern girl of to-day. bhe Is as Idle his love. as the flowers of the field, and as rare The Southern girl as a rule does not go tree. Why, a stranger naturally asks. In for higher education, but she Is no lens does the Southern girl Ignore the homely alluring because she didn't get to quad- little household duties that her Northern mlli s in algebra. Who cares If she and Western sisters delight In? She dues uuchii i nmm me iiimiipticniiuii moil r ui ifiu'iv iiieiu. 11 imii prooamy never wny not let muiiuny and her brood go, The big world Is teeming with men to do entered her foolish little head that she and then take her place In the l:lti hen, her sums. The chain es are that before would tie doing anything commendable If assisted by perhaps one energetic Swede she la thlrty-rlve she will have married she were to rise one morning and sweep servant girl and a hundred labor devh es tny tenderness, and have a son at the I'nlverslty of Vlr- and garnish the house and busy herself never found In a Bouthern kitchen? Why, There are fev flnia carrying on: ail sorts of honois in witn ine nunarea menial tasks or clean- Indeed? For the simple reason, if the in.ti hematics. mg up ror ine day. ir she were to do mistress of the house were so disposed. mammy could not be dispossessed. Her "left" school. The age at which she uu-1 ally decides that she has had enough edu- . cation Is about seventeen or eighteen. At , twenty, If she husn't married her o n true love, who Is clerking In the corner drug store, or met the one man at the "Springs" In short. If love hasn't appealed to her as the one end and aim of her existence course of three young sisters growing like weeds and no money In the home treasury with which to educate them. There was no one for her to advise with. She knew her family would oppone her going to work. What could she do teach school? No. She could not figure It out that In li.e bidding and "make way wld de scraps lrum de table." HER ROSE LEAF LIFE. Hut, this same curious stranger will ask. fche Is the village belle, with her number less social responsibilities of entertaining and being entertained and following her c areer at "boarding sc hool." Hut once she Is married she adopts with easy dignity the role of matron and develops into a little sister to her mother and a beautiful example of all wifely devotion and muth- she Is waking to the realization that life ils real life is earnest, lly this time she jhas grown to be her mother's contldunte and the acknowledged authority on eti quette for the younger girls In the fam ily. Not thet she has altogether es chewed the frivolities of life herself, but she Is beginning to wonder, to feel that somewhere deep hidden within her are profit talents greater than all these social gifts. For the first time she begins to see with understanding eyes .that tier mother Is not so young as she once was, and she hears for the first time that long time she enough to raise the mortgage the other money needed. HER UTTER INNOCENCE. could h.ive and bui ply Then, sgaln, she II glance at the columns this the little negro maids and the old of political news and frankly tell you negro mammies, to say noihlnc of the over the morning paper that she hasn't horde of small negro boys whose duties suspicion ever, even after she has read sie to sweep, dust, carry water and make It, what It la all almm. liut just let her themselves generally useful, would stand get her head set to have a certain man aghast at her usurpation of their duties, hualiaiid, brother father or lover elected; They have been doing these things as the doesn't have to mount a stump, but iong as she can remember. Even her she carries her point Just the same and mother does not recall the time when he gets (he office, on the level, now, who mammy did not queen It over the kitchen ares about woman knowing any politics, and nursery, with always a kaleidoscopic especially the bouthern woman? She can procession if sable satellites to do hex white folks are her while folks, she will tell you plainly, and "only po white trash ever ferglts." These are the Southern servants. There Is nothing fur a girl to do but live a n-se leaf existence until the days of her childhood and young woman hood are passed. What, then, does the Southern girl do? She is. If you please, a mere butterfly until sue marries or reaches twenty. The average Southern girl marries before then. gage on the plantation Is what Is whiten- few married belles In the lug her father's hair She feels vaguely South. The role of Madonna Is more unl- that those years of playing have stored vcrsally admired. After a girl marries UP within her the strength to set every, she comes forth, as a rule, adorned with thing right, however linposHlble II may "tlreslde qualities" hitherto unsuspected, .look. Hut there Is another side of her char-1 A Mississippi girl who had been the ac One thing suggested Itself her music. I!er training had been exi client. Her voice was glorious. She realized, how ever, that without further study It would her nothing. She borrowed the money, signing the notes herself. In the towering Ignorance of nineteen she didn't know it was customury to have sui h a thing as "security," and the kind hearted the inert- u!d friend of the family would have given l.er the amount ss willingly as he would have given It to his own daughter. She didn't dream that the plain business prop- iterest, the old home restored tolls former glory and the three sisters are being Ulnlliml npnruaBliinnl'.ir '1' 1. . i , mother and invalid brother fondly point to the erstwhile butterfly as "the man of the family." This is but the same blood that flowed .in the Southern girls after the war, those 'girls and young women whose lives hud i licen as the lilies of the field before that time. Many of them donned rublier boots and, with a handful of old servants, set ;to work to run plantations the war had robU'd of owners uud overseers. Some times thene same girls did not make a : fi.rtune the exc eption was when they made anything more than a bare living, but they did this and provided food after a fashion for their dear ones. To-day you may find these same women, now grown 'olu and wise, In a business world. They arc managing cotton and soger planta tions and making lots of money out of their ventures. When the time comes to work the Southern girl cheerfully puts her hand to the plough. The girls of yesterday are keeping boarders In many a little university town. Home of thesn ure the mothers of the working girls of to-doy girls who have been forced from babyhood to face a future that looked dark, but they have brought no gloom to their work. It Is the radiant Irre sponsibility of youth and gayety that has counted for the success of the Southern girl as much ns anything else. The Southern girl has made her mnrk In the world of letters. She has written music that has girdled the world with Its gladness and Its sadness. She hss climbed to dizzy pinnacles In Northern Journalism, Hhe has added her name to that of the great teachers of the coonlry, 'she h:is run hotels and sheep ranches, i but she bus. In spite of It all, preserved ell those feminine qualities that make her , first of all the ludy. I A flirt? Muylsv Many have accused her of being (.'lipid's stepsister. What of It? To love her Is a lllieral education, t.nd nobody hus ever proved that every Southern girl Is engaged to hulf ado7.cn j or so men at the same time. Surely It ls a privilege to be engaged to her for je'iiashorl time. The Southern woman run no more help being u lielle than she icun help breathing. She Inherited it from 'her grandmother and her great-grand-mother, both of whom, no doubt, had a habit of marrying early and often. fhvorre is piintleally unknown in the for South, but the average Southern girl can marry any day she is a widow, and the maturity of them do marry keep on 'i.arrylng, as one Alalwiina lieauty wit tily explained, "to have a mun aliout the place, you know." A delicious story that will benr retell, leg unent this pulnt Is told by a debu tante of last year. She was walking vll h her fiance In the family burying ground on the old plantation homo. Fi nally the group, composed of her maiden aunt, her grandmother and mother, herself and escort, halted lieslde the grave of Arthemlse Uepew, an aunt of the maiden who told the story. This grave Is flanked on eai h side by the graves of two hus bands. "Her life was like a leautiful lower garden," breathed the seuilmeuiul grande dame. "Full of bridal bouijueis," whispered the Irreverent young inun to l.li lieloved. The Southern girl, (iod bless herl If acter to be observed. Take the girl of twenty who does not marry. She rarely Is content to fritter away In Idle pleas ures her life after she baa reached that age. She la not a college girl the average knowledged belle of the whole State for several years and the spoiled and pelted durliug of her home circle tuddenly had It brought to her, several years since, that something had to be done flnari- Suuthern girl seldom has the right to clally for her family and that she was write any scholarly Initials after her the one to do it. The plantation was name. She will tell you that she "flu- mortgaged, the father growing old, the lsued" at the eoavent or Uutt ah just only brother la the family an Invalid and i she Imii t serious she s mighty sweet. In Southern parluiK e. With her red rose hut and her wild rose face, her fluttering itlihnns, her filmy gowns, her tact, her lieauty and her Indefinable charm she believes tn and loves the whole wurid, and the whole world, cvnlc though ihe lug In the conservatory where she stud- experienced ones aver It, quick to r ied. She made good. Her rise as a con- spond to the heart that really trusts It, cert singer waa phenomenal. To-i'.ay the doffs Its cloak to keep the mud from her w.irld Is at her feet. The mortgage on feet, and she, confident of Its continued the plantation has been cancelled, the gallantry, strolls serenely ou phanloiu money site borrowed paid back wluh In- of delight. osition she lay liefore him seemed a childish air castle, Impossible of rialla tlon. She took the money uud went to New York. She worked, she economized, she that had heretofore Ik-cii a veritable "scatter cash." Three years liter, with toe same wonderful voice, she was teuch i