Bulletin of The LaGrange College, LaGrange, Georgia, May 1912

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Volume G7 MAY Number 1

1912

BULLETIN OF TH E

LAGRANGE COLLEGE

Established 1833 Chartered 184(i

La Grange, Georgia

The High School Department

The College Departments

The Department of Pedagogy

CONTENTS:

Calendar for 1912-13
The Board of Trustees
The Officers of Administration
The Faculties
The Expenses
General Information
Requirements for Graduation
Courses of Study-
Certificates and Diplomas
The Alumnae
Registration for 1911-12
Statistics
Programs of Recitals

The February issue contained a full outline of the work in Music,
Art and Expression. If not received, it will be sent upon request.
The next issue will be in July, which will contain the announce-
ments for next session which are too late for this issue.

Published Four Times a Year, in May, July, November and February

Entered as Second-Class Matter June 2. 1910. at the Post-Office at I<aGrange.
Georgia, under Act of July lo, 1884.

P.illinghurst-Raudall Ptg. Co.. I,aGrange, Ga.

CALENDAR FOR 1912-13

1912

Tuesday to Friday, May 28-31, Final Examinations,

Friday, May 31. Annual Concert.

Saturday, June I, Annual Meeting of the Board of Trustees',

Sunday, June 2. Commencement Sunday.

Monday, June 3. Literary and Graduating Exercises.

Annual Meeting- of the Alumnae Association,

Friday, September 13. Next Session Begins. Registration.

Saturday, September 14. 7 Examination and Classification of
Monday, September 16, ) Students.

Monday, September 27. The Birthday of Mr. A. K. Hawkes,
one of the College's Benefactors.

Thursday, November 28. Thanksgiving Day a Holiday.

Thursday, December 19. Christmas Holidays Begin at the close
of this day.

1913

Thursday, January 2. College Exercises resumed at the be-
ginning of this day.

Saturday, January 24. End of the First Half of the Year.

Tuesday, January 27. Beginning of the Second Half of the
Year.

Wednesday, April 9. Benefactor's Day the birthday of Mr.
Wm. S. Witham, founder of the Loan Fund a holiday.

Saturday, April 26. Memorial Day a holiday.

Friday, May 2. Annual Debate between the Irenian and Mez-
zofantian Societies.

Tuesday to Friday, May 27-30. Final Examinations.

Friday to Monday, May 30-June 2. Commencement Exercises.

All New Student* Should Get Their Principal to Fill Out and Send to the
Dean the Admission Certificate Before They Enter. This is Required
of all Students, Regular and Special, and may be Done Some Months
in Advance of Entrance.

LaGrange College

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Major John M. Barnard, LaGrange, President; Rev. J. B.
Wardlaw, Fort Valley, First Vice-President; William S. Withain,
Atlanta, Second Vice-President; Arthur H. Thompson, La-
Grange, Secretary and Treasurer; John D. Edmundson, La-
Grange; Rev. A. Parks Jones, Rome; William V. Gray, La-
Grange; Cornelius V. Truitt, LaGrange; Otis A. Dunson, La-
Grange; Rev. George W. Duval, Marietta; Walter W. Wisdom,
Atlanta; Joseph E. Dunson, LaGrange; Rev. J. Wiley Quillian,
D. D., Oxford; Rev. M. J. Cofer, Atlanta; Frank Harwell, La-
Grange; Rev. Beverly P. Allen, Athens; Rev. R. Frank Eakes,
Elberton; Rev. S. R. Belk, Atlanta; J. T. Neal, Thomson; John
D. Walker, Sparta; Rev. Walker Lewis, D. D., Rome; Ashton
H. Cary, LaGrange; Rev. William C. Lovett, D. D., Atlanta;
Rev. Thomas J. Christian, Elberton; James G. Truitt, La-
Grange; Edward K. Farmer, Fitzgerald; Rev. John S. Jenkins,
Atlanta; J. S. Betts, Ashburn; Rev. S. B. Ledbetter, LaGrange;
W. C. Jones, Elberton: Frank M. Ridley, Jr., M. D., LaGrange.

ADMINISTRATION

1. Officers of Administration

Rufus Wright Smith, President.

Alwyn Means Smith, Director of Music.

Leon Perdue Smith, Dean and Registrar.

Miss Maidee Smith, Lady Principal and Librarian,

Rev. H. L. Edmondson, Atlanta, Financial Agent.

4 LaGrange College

II. The College and High School Faculties

Rufus Wright Smith, A. B., A. M., Professor of Metaphysics.
President Smith graduated at Emory College in 1856 with first hon-
or, and received the degree of A. M. from the same institution in 1873.
For several years before the war he, with the assistance of his wife,
conducted a large school in Sparta. From 1872 to 1879 he was Princi-
pal of the Academic Department of Emory College, and from that time
to 1885 President of Dalton Female College. He has presided over the
LaGrange College for the past twenty-seven years.

Leon Perdue Smith, A. B., Dean, Professor of Sciences.

Graduated at Emory College in 1892; studied for five summers at
the University of Chicago and has taken correspondence courses from
the same institution for three years, completing courses in Qualitative
Analysis, Quantitative Analysis, in Geology, Biology, and in Latin and
German. Instructor in Geology at the University of Georgia Summer
School in 1904. For three years Geologist and Chemist for the Indus-
trial Department of the Seaboard Air Line Railway.

Miss Marcia Lewis Culver, A. B., Professor of Latin and
French.

Normal College Diploma, '99, from Georgia Normal and Industrial
College, A. B., LaGrange College, 1912. Studied at the Summer School
of the South. Knoxville, in 1902, where she completed a course in
Chemical Qualitative Analysis and a course in French. Studied during
the summers of 1904, 1905 and 1907 at the University of Chicago, com-
pleting their French Courses 3, 4 and 6, and one year's work in ad-
vanced Latin (3 majors), and a major each in History and Psychology.

Miss Margaret Elizabeth Shepard, A. B., Professor of
History and German.

Graduated at Judson College in 1891; studied Methods of Teaching
at Monteagle during the summer of 1895; took a course in English at
Chatauqua, N. Y., in the summer of 1899, and completed three majors
in History at the University of Chicago during the summer of 1902.
Studied at the University of Tennessee in summer of 1911. Miss Shep-
ard was Principal of the Academic Department of the LaGrange College
for a time, and subsequently was Professor in the Kentucky Confer-
ence College during 1905-07. Since then she has been continuously at
LaGrange.

Miss Maidee Smith, A. B., Mus. Grad., Professor of Greek.

Graduated at LaGrange College in 1887 and received a Diploma in
Music in 1891. Subsequently she took a course at the Valparaiso, Ind.,
Normal in the Department of Music; Missionary in Brazil from 1900
to September, 1906; studied in the New York School of Philanthropy
during one summer; took work in Bible under Dr. Campbell Morgan

LaGrange College 5

in New York; had two years of post-graduate work in LaGrange sub-
sequent to graduation. While in Brazil Miss Smith took an extensive
course, equivalent to three years' work, in the Portugese language
and literature. Studied at the University of Tennessee in the summer
of 1911.

Miss Buford Jenette Johnson, A. B., Professor of Mathe-
matics and Pedagogy.

Graduated at LaGrange College in 1905. Previously attended the
Georgia Normal and Industrial College, taking work in Pedagogy espe-
cially. Studied one summer in the Columbia University, New York,
doing work in History, Geometry, and Analytical Geometry. Com-
pleted a course in Calculus from the University of Chicago. Miss John-
son was an instructor of the Thomson High School for a time and sub-
sequently in the Brunswick High School; has been in the faculty of
the LaGrange College since 1908.

Miss Ernestine May Dempsey, A. B., Professor of English.

Graduated at the LaGrange College in 1901; took two years of post-
graduate work at LaGrange, studied English at the Columbia Univer-
sity, N. Y., during the summer of 1906, and at the University of Chi-
cago during the summer of 1908. Was instructor in English and His-
tory at the Jackson High School and subsequently taught in the War-
then College for one year. Miss Dempsey was instructor in English
at the LaGrange College in 1908-09, and she became Professor of Eng-
lish in 1909.

Alwyn Means Smith, Mus. Grad. (Leipsic), Professor of the
Theory of Music.

The literary education of Prof. Smith was secured by a residence for
three years at Emory College and by subsequent work at the Valpa-
raiso University. Extensive work in music was covered in leading
American Conservatories and by a residence of two years and a subse-
quent summer at the Royal Conservatory of Leipsic, Germany. Prof.
Smith is a member of the College Faculty proper, and his theoretical
studies are with literary credit.

Miss Jane Allison, Director of Expression and Gymnastics.

Miss Allison is a graduate of the Curry School of Expression of Bos-
ton, Mass. She also studied at Sullins College, Bristol, Va.-Tenn.,
and at Virginia College, Roanoke, Va. She was a private pupil of
Mrs. Anna Baright Currry and Mrs. Harry Otto Packard, and was in-
structed by Dr. Samuel Silas Curry. She has been teacher of Ex-
pression in Willie Halsell College, Vinita, Okla., Columbia College,
Milton, Ore., and McAlester City Schools, Okla.

Miss IIallie Claire Smith, A. B., Mus. Grad., Instructor in
German, Latin, and Science.

Graduate of the LaGrange College in the class of 1909. During the

6 LaGrange College

past three years she has been Instructor in the High School Latin and in
First Year German. For two years instructor in Botany, and previously
Assistant in Chemistry. Studied at the University of Tennessee in the
summer of 1911. Miss Smith also received a Diploma in Voice in 1911.

Miss Effie Eugenia Etter, A. B., Instructor in Mathematics.
Miss Etter graduated from the LaGrange College in 1908. She had
previously graduated from the Sacred Heart Academy of Augusta, and
followed this by three years of work at LaGrange. During the sum-
mers of 1910 and 1911 she studied Mathematics at the Summer School
of the South at Knoxville, Tenn. Assistant in Physics, 1910-11.

Miss Estelle Lois Jones, A. B., Instructor in English.

Graduate of LaGrange College, 1907. She previously graduated
with honor at Tubman High School of Augusta. Previous to coming
to LaGrange she was Professor of English in Young Harris College.
During the summer of 1911 she studied English in the Columbia Uni-
versity.

Miss Susan Willard Brown, Assistant Instructor in Latin.

Miss Brown will graduate with the A. B. degree this year and re-
ceived a Certificate in Latin in 1911.

III. Department of Music

A full account of the preparation and experience of the teach-
ers in Music and Art appears in the February, 1912, Bulletin,
which will be sent upon request.

Alwyn Means Smith, Mus. Grad. (Leipsic), Director, The-
oretics, Voice Culture, Musical History.

Mrs. Alwyn Means Smith, Mus. Grad., (Leipsic), Voice
Culture.

Mrs. Ethel Dallis Hill, A. B., Violin.

Miss Bertha Louise Burnside, A. B., Mus. Grad., Piano,
Pipe-Organ, Theory.

Miss Edith A. Poole, Mus. Grad. (N. Y.), Pipe-Organ, Piano,

Theory, Sight-Singing.
Miss Alma McDonald Bagby, B. S., Mus. Grad. (Cincinnati),

Piano, Theory, Sight-Singing.
Mrs. Maude Parsons, Mus. Grad. (N. Y.), Voice, Piano,

Theory.
Miss Ada Mildred Gane, Mus. Grad. (Leipsic), Piano and

Theory.

LaGrange Collegk 7

Miss Maidee Smith, A. B., Mus. Grad., Piano, Theory, Sight-
Singing.

Miss Sallie Florence Few, Supervisor of Practice.
IV. The Department of Art

Miss Rachella Killinger, (Corcoran School of Art, Wash-
ton), Instructor.

V. Household Administration and Special Officials

Mrs. Minnie Moss, Matron.

Mrs. Mary Eliza Rakestraw, Housekeeper.

Miss Addie Frazier, Assistant Matron.

Paul Branham Smith, Bookkeeper,

Miss Margaret Elizabeth Shepard, Librarian.

Mrs. Euler B. Smith, Miss Rachella Killinger and Miss
O. LaVerne Garrett, Assistant Librarians.

Miss Frederica Sylvester Westmoreland, Instructor in
Gymnastics and Office Assistant.

Miss Rubie Marie Newsom, Supervisor of Practice in Ex-
pression.

Miss Overton LaVerne Garrett, Assistant to Registrar.

Miss Martha Edith Hamilton, Office Assistant.

EXPENSES
These Rates are for the College Year

Board, Laundry, Lights and Fuel $150.00

All rooms for two are at the rate of $5 per year extra for each
occupant, except the corner rooms for two, which are $10.00 per
occupant extra, and rooms in Hawkes Building, which are $15 per
year extra.

Literary Tuition 50.00

The charges for only partial work in literary studies will be pro-
rated in proportion to amount taken.

Voice Culture under Prof. Alwyn Smith 72.00

Voice Culture under other instructors 50.00

Piano under any instructor 50.00

Pipe-Organ (with use of electric blower) 72.00

The rate for Pipe-Organ includes use of Organ for Practice.

Harmony or Counterpoint in class 15.00

Harmony or Counterpoint private lessons 72.00

8 LaGrange College

Use of Piano for Practice 10.00

Students in Piano or Voice use Piano for one and one-half hours
per day at this rate and those in both Piano and Voice two and
one-half hours.

Use of Piano for extra time for each additional honr per

day 5.00

Violin (students furnish their own instruments) 50.00

Pencil, Charcoal or Crayon Drawing 40.00

Pastel, Water Color, Oil or China Painting 50.00

Expression for private pupil 50.00

Special course in Gymnastics 5.00

Ordinary Gymnastics is free to all students, but there is a Gym-
nasium fee of $1.00 for all.

FEES

Certificate in any department $3.00

Diploma in any department 5.00

Laboratory fees in Chemistry, Physics, Biology. 5.00

Library fee 1.00

Gymnasium fee 1 .00

STIPULATIONS

Students in Literary Departments who enter for less than full
work will be charged to the amount taken, but this rate will not
be diminished for subsequent changes before the expiration of a
half year.

Students in Voice Culture under Prof. Alwyn Smith are re-
quired to pay $1.00 per lesson, if they enter for less than one-
half year. Students under other music instructors will pay 75
cents per lesson, if they enter for less than one-half year. In no
case will charges for less than one mouth be made.

Visitors to the College will be charged Board at the rate of
$1.00 per day, unless they are the invited guests of the President.
Those who invite guests will be responsible for their board.

The extra charge for certain rooms specified above are to be
paid in advance of entrance.

All charges for the First Half of the College Year must be paid
or suitably secured at entrance and for the Second Term at the
beginning of the Second Term. In case of providential causes
which necessitate the student to leave College, such amount as
may have been paid in excess of date of leaving will be remitted

LaGrange Collkgk 9

within four weeks after the student withdraws.

New students are charged from time of entrance to the end of
the year or term, except that a fee of $5.00 extra is charged for
the trouble of special examinations, etc. If former students en-
ter late, the tuition rate for the year will be charged. However,
no deduction is made for absence during the First Two or the
Last Three weeks of the session.

Daughters of clergymen living by the ministry are charged no
tuition, but are assessed an incidental fee of $5.00 per year.

All dues must be settled in cash or by note before students can
receive certificates or diplomas.

Students absent from class examinations during the year with-
out excuse satisfactory to the Registrar will be charged a fee of
$1.00, credited to the instructor, but charged on regular account,
for special examination. For examinations on work done in
private under instructor other than here there will be a like fee.

All dues should be made payable to Rufus W. Smith, President.

BOOKS, SHEET MUSIC, Etc., are sold for Cash. Board-
ers, on entering, should deposit sufficient money to pay for these
articles. Books and Stationery for a College student will cost
from $5.00 to $15.00 per year.

UNIFORM, DOMESTIC ARRANGEMENTS

Students wear black skirts, black or white waists and black
cloaks on Sundays and other similar public occasions during the
colder part of the year, and Oxford caps during the whole year.
Plain cloaks in the prevailing style, costing at retail about $10,
should be secured, as more costly clothing is not allowed. These
may be secured here or at home. The caps cost $2.00 each and
should be secured at the College. In the spring the uniform will
be the cap, black skirt and white waist. The Senior class wear
( )xford gowns in the graduating exercises. For ordinary wear,
parents are requested to dress their daughters plainly. At com-
mencement plain white dresses are worn on the stage by t all ex-
cept as mentioned above.

Each boarder, teacher or student, is expected to furnish her
own sheets, covering, pillow cases and towels, and rugs are de-
sirable, but not essential.

10 LaGrange College

LAGRANGE PUBLIC SCHOOLS

Students who are not prepared for the courses in High School
work of the LaGrange College may board at the College Dormi-

ries and attend the Public Schools of LaGrange. They will
be able to attend a school about four blocks away from the Col-
lege, which maintains all the Grammar and High School Grades.
The tuition rates there for non-resident students will be $4.00
per term. Students who are less advanced than the Eighth
Grade will find this an excellent plan. They will have the super-
ion of the College administration and may take music, art or
expression at the College.

THE LOAN FUNDS

lents may be able to borrow from certain special funds of
the College enough money to defray a large part of their expen-
ses. This money, when loaned to a student, begins to bear in-
terest at 6 per cent at the end of the year in which it was used.

Mr. William S. Witham. Second Vice-President of the Board
oi Trustees, and a well known banker living in Atlanta, dona-
ted to the College some time ago the sum of $10. 000 (which has
since increased to over $24,000), to be loaned to poor or de-
pendent girls. He gave this year an additional sum of $5,000
to this fund.

Mrs. J. C. Davidson, of West Point, Ga.. gave the sum of
51.000 in memory of her husband, to be used in a like manner.

Mr. Hatton Lovejoy. a prominent lawyer of LaGrange, loans
|S per vear upon similar conditions.

Circulars of Information concerning these funds can be se-
cured from President Smith. The decision as to who will be
accepted is vested entirely in a Committee of the Board of Trus-
tees, to whom all applications will be referred.

LAGRANGE COIXEGE 11

GENERAL INFORMATION

Location

LaGrange is seventy-one miles from Atlanta on the Atlanta
and West Point Railway, one hundred and five miles from Ma-
con on the Macon and Birmingham and about half way between
Brunswick and Birmingham on the Atlanta, Birmingham and
Atlantic Railway.

The city of LaGrange has about 8,000 population, with five
churches of the Methodist Church, South, three regular Baptist.
one each of the Presbyterian, Episcopal, Christian and Primitive
Baptist Churches all for white people. Six large cotton fac-
tories and several other large manufacturing enterprises are sit-
uated on one side of the town, while fine homes and other scenes
of architectural beauty, such as the Ferrell Gardens and the
McLendon Park, both near the College, make the city quite
attractive.

The College is situated upon a hill 142 feet above the depots,
one-half mile from the business portion of town, and twelve acres
in extent. The Campus is S32 feet above the sea-level in a re-
gion on the upper side of Pine Mountains, with natural drain-
age in all directions. The extreme cold of the higher mountains
and the heat of the lower country are both avoided.

Sixteen passenger trains enter the city daily. Through tick-
ets may be bought from LaGrange to all points, and the students
can reach College or go home to any point in this section in a
few hours.

Buildings

There are three principal buildings, called respectively the
College, the Oreon Smith Memorial Building, and the Hawkes
Building. The College Building contains eleven large rooms,
one of them being used exclusively as a Laboratory for Phvsics.
another as a Laboratory for Chemistry, another for Botany and
Physiography, two for Art Studio, and the others for various lit-
erary departments. Besides these there is a large storage room
for Scientific apparatus and supplies, the College Auditorium
with an extensive gallery, in which is the Pipe Organ I one of
the largest in the state >, and 40 music rooms. This building is
three stories high and is heated bv steam.

12 LaGrange College:

The Oreon Smith Memorial Building is exclusively for dormi-
tory purposes. It contains the Hardwick Assembly Hall, used
for the Y. W. C. A. and religious services, double parlors, a
reading room, a large Dining Hall, and fifty bed rooms, about
half of which rooms are for two students and half for three and
four. This building has electric lights, water works, and is
heated by steam.

The Harriet Hawkes Memorial Building was completed in
1911, and is one of the finest College buildings in the South. It
contains a large Library and Reading Room, office room for the
Librarian, offices for the President, Bookkeeper, and Registrar,
each separate, two large rooms, one used for Geology and Biol-
ogy, and the other as a recitation room. These are on the floor
opening upon the inner court yard. The upper floors contain
dormitory rooms for about 80 students, nearly all of them for
two, and most of them have single beds. Each room has two
closets and two windows. All floors have wide verandas. The
lower floor is extra high and contains one of the largest gymna-
sium rooms in the South, and adjoining, a swimming pool,
which holds 30,000 gallons of water. There are numerous
rooms for shower baths and lockers. It also contains an office
room for the Gymnastic Director and an apparatus storage room.
This building is steam heated, lit by electricity and has water
works with handsome tiled bathrooms throughout. The build-
ing cost $50,000.

Grounds

The College Campus occupies twelve acres, which occupy the
top of a considerable hill, which slopes in all directions, but
with a considerable part fairly flat, which is partly used for the
new play grounds. A basket ball ground is available and tennis
courts have been laid off, but were not ready at tfye time of the
issuance of this catalogue. A running track of of 220 yards is
also laid off. When these grounds are finished, they will form
an excellent place for the out-door gymnastics of the students.
The Campus is capable of being made one of the choicest places
in this section for beauty and utility.

Equipment

The Chemical Laboratory is provided for two years' work in

LaGrange College 13

Chemistry and to a large degree for a third year's work. The
Physical Laboratory has apparatus for teaching one year's work
in College Physics. The equipment of the Biological Labora-
tory is more limited, but several compound microscopes are
available and other suitable supplies. In Geology there are am-
ple supplies for laboratory work.

The Library contains about 4,000 books. It is now in the
new handsome Library Hall, and is arranged into suitable sec-
tions for the various departments. There are special libraries
in English, Science, History, Mathematics, Pedagogy, Refer-
ence, Fiction, and the Y. W. C. A. Religious Library. It is en-
larged every year and is becoming one of the most effective arms
of the educational work of the College.

Societies

Secret societies are not allowed, as they tend toward extrava-
gance and an exclusiveness, which is based upon wrong princi-
ples. There are two literary societies, the Irenian, established
during the early 70's, and the Mezzofantian, established in 1887.
They meet weekly, and have exercises consisting of readings,
recitations, debates, essays, criticisms, music, practice in par-
liamentary usages, etc. Monthly one of the societies or jointly
they give a public debate on Saturday evenings.

The Young Women's Christian Association, affiliated with
similar organizations all over the United States, holds weekly
services on Sunday afternoons and is developing among the stu-
dents a zeal for the cause of religion at home and abroad. Un-
der its auspices Mission study classes are regularly conducted.

The following were the officers of the Association for the year
1911-12: President, Miss Estelle Jones, Augusta; Vice-President,
Miss Rubie Newsom, Union Point; Recording Secretary, Miss
Ruth Trammell,Apalachee; Corresponding Secretary, Miss Sallie
May Kennemur, Jasper; Treasurer, Miss Pauline Fox, Hoschton;
Chairman Missionary Committee, Miss Lessie Lewis, Sylvania;
Chairman Devotional Committee, Miss Mildred Eakes, Elber-
ton; Chairman Social Commitiee, Miss Linnie Wilson, Hamp-
ton; Chairman Temperance Committee, Miss Helen Griffin,
Griffin; Chairman Poster Committee, Miss Marward Bedell,
Burnt Fort.

14 LaGrange College

Health

A close supervision is exercised over the health of boarding-
pupils. All cases of sickness are required to be immediately re-
ported to the Lady Principal. In case of serious sickness a phy-
sician is called. The perfect sanitary arrangements, good water,
elevated country free from malaria, and close supervision over
the health of boarders have prevented serious sickness to a de-
gree unsurpassed by any similar institution in the state.

Regulations

Pupils must receive their visitors only in the reception rooms,
must make no debts at the stores, must pay for damage done
College property, arrange rooms before leaving in the morning,
be neat, promptly obey prayer, study and school bells, and be
prompt at meals. They must observe the Sabbath and attend
Sunday-school and church. They are not permitted to spend
the night out in town, communicate with young gentlemen
without permission of the President, leave the grounds without
permission, send or receive anything by means of day pupils,
visit sick or exchange rooms without permission, borrow money
or jewelry, or clothing from each other, or visit music and art
rooms without permission.

Reports

Formal reports, based upon semi-annual and final examina-
tions, together with the daily record of work, will be issued as
soon as practical after the end of the First Half and after Com-
mencement. It usually takes about two weeks to prepare and
to issue these grades. Upon these the system of credits for fin-
ished work is based.

The instructors will endeavor to help students make up work
from which they were absent because of sickness. Unnecessary
and unexcusable absences seriously affect the standing of stu-
dents.

Conditions

When a student does unsatisfactory work in any study or
class, she is said to be conditioned in that study or class. A
student may be conditioned because of so much time lost by

LaGrange College 15

sickness or other cause that she is unable to remedy her defi-
ciencies. To be conditioned does not, therefore, necessarily im-
ply lack of industry or intelligence.

To Patrons

When you enter a pupil, it is clearly implied that you sub-
scribe to the conditions herein contained. Pupils are expected
to observe the rules prescribed, and patrons should not ask us to
permit a violation of the same.

Discourage visits home, since each absence impairs scholar-
ship and class standing. Absence of one day each week is a
loss of twenty per cent. What business can sustain such a loss
and prosper? When necessary for pupils to go home, patrons
should communicate directly with the President. The Presi-
dent reserves the right to refuse all requests for pupils to visit in
the city or elsewhere during the session. Pupils should not re-
main after Commencement free from College restrictions. Such
a course is usually damaging. Parents, consider the interests of
your children and do not allow it. The association of College
Home, together with the musical and literary entertainments
given, afford as many social advantages as are good for them
while in school. Pupils are not allowed to receive visitors, ex-
cept in rare cases, and then at the discretion of the President.

Write your children encouraging letters. If any complaints
are made, write us promptly, If your daughter is sick, she will
be properly cared for; if seriously ill, you will be promptly no-
tified. The health record of the College should remove all solic-
itation in regard to this matter. Do not send your daughters
boxes of eatables, such as sweetmeats, cakes, etc. Most sick-
ness arises from this cause. The fare of the College is ample
and the same for pupils and teachers.

Boarders keeping money in their own rooms do so at their
own risk. Money should be deposited with the President, who
will then be responsible for it.

To succeed we must have prompt payments. As long as dues
are unpaid, we, not you, are bearing the burden of your child's
education.

Entrance Examinations

All students, old and new, are examined in Grammar, Geog-

16 LaGrange College

raphy and Arithmetic. The graduates of the accredited high
schools are otherwise admitted without examination upon such
courses as the certificates show that they satisfactorily comple-
ted. Students from other schools are examined at entrance so
far as may be needful.

Certificate for Entrance

Every student who enters, for music, art, literary or otherwise,
is expected to present a certificate from the last school attended,
covering her work. This rule may be abated for students in
music or art only, who do not enter the College Dormitory and
are not seeking any certificate. Students should secure from
their Principals the formal certificate usually sent out by the
University of Georgia or the form sent out by the LaGrange
College, which should be sent in before the summer vacation.
Credit cannot be granted upon printed Diplomas or the like,
which do not show fully the amount and character of the work
done by the student with full details.

Accredited High Schools

All the Accredited High Schools of the University of Georgia
are accredited to LaGrange as well, by express agreement with
Prof. Joseph S. Stewart, Professor of Secondary Education of
the University. This embraces nearly all the better graded
High Schools of the state. We also accept the work of the Col-
leges which grant degrees, and the certificates of Young Harris
and Reinhardt. For College units of credit but few of these in-
stitutions offer any work that equals in amount what LaGrange
College requires as a minimum year's work in the given course.

Requirements for Admission

This institution maintains four High School grades, equiva-
lent to the Eighth, Ninth, Tenth and Eleventh Grades of the
accredited High Schools, and also conducts a full College course
leading to the A. B. and B. S. Degrees, with numerous special
courses leading to certificates and diplomas without degrees.

Students who have thoroughly completed the work in the
Grammar School, which takes seven years (and in some schools
eight), will be prepared for the LaGrange College. However,
the policy of the institution is to seek for mature students and

LaGrange College 17

not mere children, who can best be safeguarded at their own
homes. Wherever there are well equipped local High Schools,
students will be able to cover the work up to the Eleventh Grade
or the Fourth High School year at their homes, and this we ad-
vise them to do, as the LaGrange College does not desire to com-
pete with the local school. The High School Department is
provided for those who may be inaccessible to a High School
and for those who wish to take up special work in art, music,
expression, etc., which courses may not be adequately provided
at their home schools.

The Admission work for any one grade implies the comple-
tion of all the work of the preceding grade. In a few cases
other subjects may be offered as substitutes in the upper grades.
All of these are the units set forth by the Carnegie Commission,
to which strict adherence will be made.

OUTLINES OF COURSES OF STUDY
Classical High School Diploma Course

First Year

English 1A, Mathematics 1A, Latin 1A, Botany, Drawing and
Sight-singing. In place of Drawing and Sight-singing,
Piano or Art.

Second Year

English 2 A, Mathematics 2A, Latin 2A, History 1A, Drawing
and Sight-singing. In place of the last two subjects, Piano
or Art.

Third Year

English 3A, Mathematics 3A, Latin 1A, History 3A, French 1A
or Greek 1A, Bible I. In place of History 3A, Piano or Art.

Fourth Year

English 4A, Mathematics 4A (including Mathematics I. of 191 1 -
1912), Latin 4A, History 2A, French 2A or Greek 2A, Bi-
ble II. Piano or Art may substitute History 2A.

IS LaGrange College

Scientific High School Diploma Course

First Year

English 1A, Mathematics 1A, Latin 1A, Botany, Drawing and
Sight-singing:. Piano or Art may substitute Drawing and
Sight-singing.

Second Year

English 2A, Mathematics 2A, Latin 2A, History 1A, Drawing
and Sight-singing. Piano or Art may substitute the last
two.

Third Year

English 3A, Mathematics 3 A, History 3 A, French 1A, Physiog-
raphy. Bible I. Piano or Art may take the place of His-
tory 3A.

Fourth Year

English 4A, Mathematics 4A (including Mathematics I. of 191 1 -
1912), History 2A, French 2A, Physics, Bible II. Piano
or Art may take the place of Physics.
The completion of either of the above courses of study will

entitle the student to a High School Diploma.

Classical College Course

The completion of the Classical High School Diploma Course
is required for entrance upon this course, though a few substi-
tutions for certain subjects may be allowed, provided that all
such conform to the Units of Admission to College laid down by
the Carnegie Commission and by the Board of Education of the
M. E. Church, South. In addition to these the following addi-
tional work:

Freshman

English I., History I. or Pedagogy I., French III., Latin I.,
Bible III., Mathematics II. and III.
Sophomore

English 11., Physics, German I., Latin II, Bible IV. (including
Evidences of Christianity), Mathematics IV. and V.
Junior and Senior
Another year of English and of German, and eight other

LaGrange Collkgk 1 ( >

courses lasting- each one year (two half-year courses counting
as one), selected from the courses not already taken, which are
shown under the fuller statement of courses to follow.

The completion of the Classical College Course will entitle the
student to the A. B. degree.

Scientific College Course

Freshman

English I., History Lor Pedagogy I., French III., Bible III.,
Mathematics II. and III., Physics, if not taken in High
School, (full laboratory work required for credit). If
Physics has already been taken, then German I. in Fresh-
man and German II- Sophomore.
Sophomore

English II., Chemistry I., German I., History II., Mathematic>
IV. and V., Bible IV. (including Iwidences of Christian ity >.
Junior and Senior

Another year of English and of German. ( unless German
II. was taken Sophomore; in that case, NINK other courses',
and eight other courses lasting each one year (two half-courses
counting as one), selected from the courses not already taken,
which are shown under the fuller statement of courses to follow.

The completion of the Scientific College Course will entitle
the student to the B. S. degree.

Special College Course

First Year

English I., History I. or Pedagogy I.. Latin [., Bible HI.. Math-
ematics II. and III.. German I. or Physics.
Second Year

Knglish II., Latin II. (including Kvideuce> of Christianity),

German II. or Chemistry, Metaphysics, and any one other

course not already taken, which lasts for one year I two

half-year courses counting as one L

The completion of this course will entitle the student to a

Special Diploma.

20 LaGrange College

Junior College Course

Students who desire to graduate at some other institution, but
wish to complete the first two years of their College work at
LaGrange College, should pursue the Special College Course
above, but may so modify or change it as to adapt them for en-
trance to the institution chosen for the last two years. In most
cases this would make French III. advisable to be taken, and
Chemistry may be omitted, and History I. would be preferred to
Pedagogy. This course may be arranged for the two years in
advance on consultation with the Dean, submitting at the same
time the catalogue of the College where the final work is to be
done. A Junior College Diploma will be granted upon the com-
pletion of the course.

Literary-Music Course

For this course, intended for students who are specializing in
Music, see page 18 of the February Bulletin of 1912.

Literary-Art Course

For this course, intended for students who are specializing in
Art, see page 19 of the February, 1912, Bulletin.

Literary-Expression Course

For this course, intended for students who are specializing in
Expression, see page 20 of the February, 1912, Bulletin.

OUTLINE OF COURSES OFFERED IN 1912-13
PHILOSOPHY

Metaphysics. Steele's Rudimentary Ethics; Baldwyn's Psy-
chology and Education; Candler's Christus Auctor. Three
hours per week. President Smith.

Logic. Creighton's Logic. Two hours a week. Miss Er-
nestine M. Dempsey.

SCIENCE

Botany. Field, Laboratory and Text study, Microscopical
work; Practical Herbarium work in plant analysis and classifi-

LaGrange College 21

cation; the Cultivation of flower yard plants. Four hours per
week. Miss Hallie C. Smith.

Physiography. Field and Laboratory course in Physical Geog-
raphy. Acquaintance with soils and common rocks and climatic
changes are studied by actual observations by the student and
recorded in note book. Text: Hopkins' Elements of Physical
Geography; Hopkins-Clark Laboratory Manual in Physical
Geography. Three hours per week for the year, with supple-
mental field trips on afternoons and Mondays. Miss Hallie
C. Smith.

Physics. Millican and Gale's Physics; National Physics Note
Book. The student is given a considerable amount of Labora-
tory work, which takes up about two-thirds of her time. The
Roentgen Ray and the practical utilization of electricity in the
treatment of disease, with a general study or the static electric
machine is given by Henry R. Slack, A. B. (Harvard), Ph.
M., M. D., at the LaGrange Sanatorium. None but well
equipped Colleges offer courses which are the equivalent of this
course. Laboratory fee, $5.00. Four hours laboratory and
two hours recitation and lecture per week. Prof. Leon P.
Smith.

Prerequisites: All Admission work, but Plane Geometry,
may be taken at the same time.

Chemistry I. Hessler-Smith: Essentials of Chemistry; Atlas
Laboratory Note Book. Four hours of laboratory work and two
hours of recitation or lecture each week. Laboratory fee, $5.00.
Prof. Leon P. Smith.

Prerequisite: Physics.

Chemistry II. Steiglitz' Qualitative Analysis. The first half
of the year is spent in the study of methods of Qualitative Anal-
ysis, with considerable reading matter, largely from the Science
Library, with considerable laboratory work. The second term
is almost entirely confined to laboratory work, and the student
will be required to analyse 20 unknown compounds and mix-
tures. Six hours a week. Laboratory fee, $5.00. Prof. Leon
P. Smith.

Prerequisite: Chemistry I. and Physics.

22 LaGrange College

Geology. A course in Geology which embraces laboratory
and field work, with numerous collateral readings. Various
texts, largely found in the Science Library, are used for refer-
ence. The vicinity of LaGrange is rich in minerals of the crys-
talline belt. While this is an advanced course, it will be help-
ful to those who may desire to teach Physical Geography. Two
hours a week. Prof. Leon P. Smith.

Prerequisites: Chemistry I., but both may be taken at same
time.

Biology. A course in Biology, two hours a week. The work
is mainly microscopical, with collateral readings from the Sci-
ence Library. Laboratory fee, $2.50. Prof. Leon P. Smith.

Prerequisites: Chemistry I., but both may be taken at the
same time.

Astronomy. Young's Elements of Astronomy. The course
will be largely mathematical, as the College is not supplied with
a satisfactory telescope for observations. Yet a general knowl-
edge of the heavenly body will be gained by learning the posi-
tions of the constellations, etc. Three hours a week for one-
half year. Miss Buford J. Johnson.

ENGLISH

English 1A. A course in Grammar, designed for students who
are deficient in the principles of grammar. This course is not
iutended for elementary students, who are not received at La-
Grange College, but for students who have, upon examination,
been found lacking in the fundamentals of English. Three
hours a week. Miss Estelle L. Jones.

English 2A. Sykes' Elementary English Composition: Spell-
ing. Parallel Readings: Hawthorne's House of Seven Gables*,
Stevenson's Treasure Island, Irving's Sketch Book, Stevenson's
Inland Voyage and Travels with a Donkey. All these read-
ings are carefully studied. Three hours a week. Miss Estelle
L. Jones.

English 3A. Gardiner, Kittridge and Arnold's Composition
and Rhetoric. Parallel Readings: Shakespeare's Merchant of
Venice* and Macbeth, Scott's Ivanhoe, Hawthorne's Twice
Told Tales, Selections from the Idylls of the King. All of these
are used for careful study. Three hours per week. Miss Es-
trlle L. Jones.

LaGrange College 23

English 4A. Gardiner, Kittridge and Arnold's Manual of
Composition and Rhetoric. Special attention to Theme Wri-
ting and the study of Classics. Parallel Readings: Weber's
Southern Poets*, Bellamy's Twelve English Poets, Gaskell's
Cranford, Burke's Speech on Conciliation with the American
Colonies, Carlyle's Essay on Burns. This part of the course
two hours per week.

Emerson and Bender's Modern English, Book II. A review
of grammar from an advanced standpoint. Students who pass
this course must have a thorough knowledge of paragraphing
and punctuation. All students in English 4A take this as a
part of their course, and no students will be admitted to Eng-
lish I. who have not had an advanced course in English Gram-
mar late in the High School course. This part of the course
two hours per week. Miss Estelle L. Jones.

Special English. A course intended for those whose advance-
ment in English is otherwise up to one of the courses above,
but who lack the Parallel Readings required, or have not taken
them in a manner fairly equivalent to their study in this insti-
tution. Hours adapted to student's needs. Miss Estelle L.
Jones.

English I. Genung's Working Principles of Rhetoric; John-
son's Literary Criticism; Pancoast's American Literature; Page's
Chief American Poets; Selected readings from principal prose
writers; Reference work, usually "American Men of Letters Se-
ries." Themes, weekly and monthly, covering the four forms of
discourse. List of Readings used in 1911-12: Selections from
Mather's Ecclesiastical History of New England; Selections
from Mrs. Bradstreet's poems; Wiggleworth's "Day of Doom'':
Edward's "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God", and selec-
tions from "Freedom of the Will"; Franklin's Autobiography;
Selections from Federalist, Freneau, Hopkinson, Key; Selec-
tions from "Wieland" and "Edgar Huntley"; Irving's "Sketch
Book", Cooper's "Last of the Mohicans", Emerson's Essays,
Hawthorne's "The Marble Faun", Holmes' "Autocrat of the

"These readings may be substituted by others on the list of approved
readings, as adopted by the various Associations of Colleges, but the
amount read must equal in character and extent these readings.

24 LaGrange College

Breakfast Table," Selections from Poe's Tales, Selections from
Taylor's poems, Page's "Mars Chan", Selections from Mark
Twain. Poems from Bryant, Poe, Emerson, Longfellow,
Whittier, Holmes, Lowell, Whitman, Lanier, read in "Chief
American Poets." Three hours a week. Miss Ernestine M.
Dempsey.

Prerequisite; English 4 A, and a thorough knowledge of
grammar, paragraphing and punctuation.

English II. Pancoast's History of English Literature; Manly's
English Poetry; Monthly Themes; Reference work, usually
English Men of Letters Series. Selected readings from the prin-
cipal prose writers. List of Readings, outside of Manly's Eng-
lish Poetry, used in 1911-12: Selections from Mallory's "Le
Morte d'Arthur"; Selections from Hooker, from Bacon's Es-
says, from Walton's Complete Angler, "Pilgrim's Progress,"
Selections from Steele and Addison in "De Coverley Papers";
"Robinson Crusoe," Selections from "Tale of a Tub" and
"Gulliver's Travels, " Selections from Samuel Johnson, from
Burke, from Lamb's "Essays of Elia," DeQuincey's "Joan of
Arc" and "English Mail Coach," Macaulay's Essays on "John-
son and Addison," Carlyle's Sartor Resartus, Ruskin's "Sesame
and Lilies," Selections from Matthew Arnold; Dickens' "David
Copperfield" and "Vanity Fair"; Thackery's "Henry Esmond,"
Eliot's "Silas Marner"; Selections from Stevenson's "Travels
With a Donkey." Three hours a week. Miss Ernestine M.
Dempsey.

Prerequisite; English I.

English III. Anglo-Saxon Grammar; Bright's Selections from
Old English; Emerson's History of the English Language.
Taken on alternate years. Two hours per week. This course
will be given in 1912-13. Miss Ernestine M. Dempsey.

Prerequisites: English I. and II., but may be taken at the
same time as English II.

English IV. Baker's Principles of Argumentation; Oral de-
bates weekly; Written debates monthly; Study of the Essay.
Representative Essays read and studied. List of readings used
in 1911-12: Bede's Ecclesiastical History; Bacon's Essays;
Walton's Complete Angler; Steele- Addison's De Coverley Pa-

EaGRANGE College 25

pers; Selections from Coleridge; Lamb's "Essays of Elia," De
'( Juineey's Joan of Arc and English Mail Coach; Macaulay's
Milton and Addison; Carlyle's Sartor Resartus; Rusldn's Se-
lections; Arnold's Literary and Critical Essays; Thackery's
Selections from English Humorists; Emerson's Essays; Selec-
tions from Holmes: Lowell's "My Study Windows." Taken
on alternate years. Will next be given in 1913-14. Two hours
per week. Miss Ernestine M. Dempsey.

Prerequisite: Same as English III.

English V. Study of Narratives; Walker's "The Age of Ten
uvson"; Symond's "introduction to English Fiction"; Cross'
"Development of the English Novel, " Critical study of repre-
sentative novels; Themes in connection with study; note book
work on all novels studied. List of Readings used in 1911-12:
Morte D'Arthur, Rosalind, Pilgrim\s Progress, Robinson Cru-
soe, Roderick Random, Clarissa Harlowe, Tom Jones, Vicar of
Wakefield, Castle Rackrent, Pride and Prejudice, Talisman,
Deerslayer, Scarlet Letter, Pelham, David Copperfield, Vanity
Fair, Barchester Towers, Jane Eyre, Adam Bede, Ordeal of
Richard Feverel, Return of the Native, Treasure Island, Light
That Failed, Silas Lapham. This course is on alternate years,
and will be next offered in 1913-14. Miss Ernestine M.
Dhmpsey.

Prerequisite: Two previous courses in English not lower than 1.

English VI. Study of the Drama: Saintsbury's "Elizabethan
Literature"; Woolbridge's "The Drama: Its Law and Tech-
nique"; Dowden's Shakespeare Primer; Study of representative
plays; Note-book work. List of Readings last used: Twenty-
four of Shakespeare's plays (Cambridge edition.', eighteen or
twenty plays from "The Chief Elizabethan Dramatists" (Wil-
son). Offered on alternate years, next in 1912-13. Miss ER-
NESTINE M. Demsey.

LATIN

Latin 1A. Potter's Elementary Latin Course. The work For
the year is mainly intended to give the student a good founda-
tion in the paradigms. Three hours a week. Miss SUSAN W.
Brown.

Latin 2A. Potter's Elementary Latin Course reviewed and

26 LaGrange College

completed, and at the same time a careful drill in Latin form,
using Caesar's Gallic War, Book I., which is completed. Three
hours a week. Miss Susan W. Brown.

Latin 3A. Three additional books of Ceesar (the first book
already completed for entrance); Three Orations of Cicero;
D'Ooge's Latin Composition, Part I. (based on Caesar) weekly;
Allen and Greenough's Latin Grammar for reference. Three
hours a week. Miss Hallie C. Smith.

Latin 4A. Three additional Orations of Cicero (three already
completed); D'Ooge's Latin Composition, Part II. (based on
Cicero) once a week; Three Books of Vergil's Aeneid; Study of
the Dactylic Hexameter; Allen and Greenough's Latin Gram-
mar. Four hours a week. Miss Hallie C. Smith.

Latin I. Livy, Books XXI. and XXII.; Cicero de Senectute
or de Amicitia; D'Ooge's Latin Composition, Part III., once a
week; Gayley's Classic Myths. Four hours a week. Miss
Marcia L. Culver.

Prerequisite: Latin 4A. But the Latin Prose 4 A may be
taken at the same time as Latin I., and Latin Prose I. may be
taken later. A deficiency of one-fourth of a year's work in
Latin for those entering from other High Schools will not pre-
vent a student from entering Latin I. though the deficiency
must be made good before Latin II. is entered.

Latin II. Shorey and Kirkland's Horace's Odes, Kpodes, Sa-
tires and Epistles; Lyric Metres of Horace. Three hours a
week. Miss Marcia L. Culver.

Prerequisite: Latin I., but the Prose of Latin I. may be taken
in this year, and a shortage of not more than one-fourth of a
year's work in text may be made good later.

Latin III. Tacitus's Germania or Agricola; Terence s Phor-
mio; Plautus' Captivi; Mackail's Latin Literature: Sight Read-
ing based upon more elementary texts. Three hours a week.
Miss Marcia L. Culver.

Prerequisite: Latin II.

GERMAN

German I. Collar's First Year German; Thomas' Practical
German Grammar, Part I. ; Stern's Studieu und Plaudereien, First

LaGrange College 27

Series; Storm's Immensee; Poetry Memorized. Three hours a
week. Miss Hallie C. Smith.

German II. Thomas' German Grammar; Bernhardt's German
Composition: Teusler's Outlines of German Literature. Read-
ing: Lessiug's Minna von Barnhelm; Schiller's Wilhelm Tell;
Schiller's Das Lied von der Glocke; Goethe's Hermann and Do-
rothea; Sight Reading-. German Conversation. Three hours a
week. Miss Margaret E. Shepard.

Prerequisite; German I. or its equivalent. (Two years of
High School German usually cover about the work of German I. )
A small deficiency in the text matter of German I. may be rem-
edied privately.

FRENCH

French I A. Aldrich and Foster's French Grammar; from the
beginning training in conversation; abundant written exercises;
memorizing French poetry; at least 200 pages of elementary
text matter selected from Musset, Daudet, Guerber and one com-
edy from Labiche and Martin. Three hours a week. Miss
Marcia L. Culver.

French IIA. Study of the works selected from Dumas, Hugo,
Loti, Gautier, Lamartine; work conducted largely in French;
original theme writing; French Prose Composition based on the
text read. Three hours a week. Miss Marcia L. Culver.

Prerequisite: French I. or its equivalent. If students lack
only a small amount of text matter, they may be admitted and
make the shortage good later for full credit on French IA.

French III. Canfield's Lyrics; French Versification; texts se-
lected from Racine, Corneille, Moliere; Composition, including
essays on literary subjects. Class conducted largely in French.
Three hours per week. Miss Marcia L. Culver.

Prerequsite: French IIA.

BIBLE AND MISSIONS

Bible I. Steele's Bible Outlines. Part I. One hour per week.
Miss Bufokd Johnson.

Bible II. Outlines. Part II. One hour per week. PRESIDENT
Smith.

2$ LaG RANGE COLLEGE

Bible III. Outlines, Part III. One hour per week. PRESI-
DENT Smith.

Bible IV. Outlines, Part IV. One hour per week. Presi-
dent Smith.

Missions. A course of study in the Rise and Development of
Modern Missions. This course is intended for mature College
students. Turkey was taken as a field of study last year, and
the courses will be so varied that a student may take it in suc-
cessive years without covering the same work. Two hours a
week. Miss Ma idee Smith.

GREEK

Greek IA White's First Greek Book; Translaiton of easy
prose based upon Xenophon's Anabasis. Three hours a week.
Miss Ma idee Smith.

Greek HA. The first four books of Xenophon's Anabasis::
Greek Prose Composition. Three hours a week. Miss Maidef:
Smith .

Greek III. The first three books of Homer's Iliad (omitting
il. 494 end); the Homeric constructions, forms and prosody
Sight translation; Prose Composition. Three hours a week.
Miss Maidee Smith.

Prerequisite: Greek II.

MATHEMATICS

Mathematics IA. Wells' Algebra for Secondary Schools com
pleted to Simultaneous Equations; a thorough review of such
portions of Arithmetic as the class is found to need, using
Wentworth's Practical Arithmetic. Four hours a week. Miss-
Kfeie E. Etter.

Mathematics 2A. Wells' Algebra for Secondary Schools from
Simultaneous Equations down to Progressions. Three hours
per week. Miss Effie E. Etter.

Mathematics 3A. Wells' Algebra for Secondary Schools com-
pleted; Completion of Three Books of Wells' Plane Geometry.
For the session of 1912-13 the class will begin at Quadratics in-
stead of Progressions, and will meet four hours per week instead

LAG RANGE COLLEGE 29

of three hours, as will be the time after this year. Miss Effik
E. Etter.

Mathematics 4A. Wells' Plane Geometry completed; Stone-
Millis Commercial Arithmetic completed. Both of these courses
will occupy only the First Term, the Second Term being taken
by Mathematics I. During the session of 1912-13 the class will
meet four hours per week, beginning with Plane Geometry, and
will endeavor to cover this course, omitting the Commercial
Arithmetic, which was taken in 3A the last session, except thai
some attempt will be made to give this course extra to those who
may enter as new students without having had the equivalent
of this study of Advanced Arithmetic. MlSS Effie E. Etter.

Special Mathematics. This work will be suited to the individ-
ual needs of students who are lacking in the originals of Plane
Geometry and for those who lack Commercial Arithmetic and
are as far advanced as Mathematics 4 A otherwise. Hours ad-
justed to suit. This course will be given only in the Second
Term during 1912-13. Miss Effie E. Etter.

Mathematics L Wells' New Solid Geometry, completed, with
original work. Four hours a week during the Second Term.
Miss Buford J. Johnson.

Prerequisite: Plane Geometry with all originals of that course,
though the student may make up a small part of the originals
with a special class at the same time.

Mathematics II. Phillips and Strong's Trigonometry. Four
hours a week during the First Term. Miss Buford J. Johnson.
Prerequisite: Mathematics I.

Mathematics III. Hawkes' Advanced Algebra. Three hours
a week during the Second Term. Miss Buford J. Johnson.

Prerequisite: Mathematics II. and an examination on Quad-
ratics and the general principles of High School Algebra, such
as is given in Mathematics 2A and 3A.

Mathematics IV. Smith and Gale's Analytical Geometry.
Three hours a week First Term. Miss Buford J. Johnson.
Prerequisite: Mathematics III.

Mathematics V. Osborne's Differential and Integral Calculus.

*0 LaG range College

Three hours a week during the Second Term. .Miss Buford J,
Johnson.

Prerequisite: Mathematics IV.

HISTORY

History 1A. Myers' Ancient History, Revised; Ivanhoe Note
Book. Library work and the writing of topics; Collateral read-
ing selected from such works as Lew Wallace's Ben Hur, Plu-
tarch's Lives, The Last Days of Pompeii, Stoddard's Lecture on
Rome, Kingley's Hypathia. Three hours a week for the year.
Miss Margaret E. Shepard.

Prerequisite: The completion of a Grammar School text on
Fnited States History, such as Field's.

History 2A. General review of the entire period of American
History with special attention to the Continental Congress, the
Confederation, the making of the Constitution and growth of
political parties. Text: Montgomery's Students' American His-
tory; Hart's Source Book; Ivanhoe Mote Book; Library refer-
ence w r ork and the writing of topics. In connection with this
course Boynton's Civics; the American Federal State; Note
books kept containing written topics and reports on readings.
Three hours a week during the entire year. Miss Margaret
E. Shepard.

Prerequisite: History 1A.

History 3A. Walker's Essentials in English History; Ken-
dall's Source Book. Parallel Readings: Stoddard's Lecture on
London; Ireland; Scotland; Dickens' Tale of Two Cities; Bul-
wer-Lytton's Harold, the Last of the Saxon Kings; Yonge's
Prince and Page; Green's Legends of King Arthur and His
Court. Three hours a week. Miss Margaret E. Shepard.

History I. Robinson's History of Western Europe: Robinson's
Readings in European History; Ivanhoe Note Book; Collateral
Reading; Selections from such works as Stoddard's Lecture on
Paris; on Berlin; Hodgkin's Charlemagne; Abbott's Cromwell:
Carlyle's Frederick the Great; Yonge's Marie Antionette: Muhl-
bach's The Merchant of Berlin; Dickens' Tale of Two Cities.
Three hours a week, Miss Margaret E. Shepard.

Prerequisite: History 2.\.

LaGrangk College 31

History II. J ud sou's Europe in the Nineteenth Century:
French History. Parallel Reading: Stoddard's Lecture on Pa-
ns: Bartlett's Joan of Arc; Abbot's Napoleon; Yonge's Marie
Antoinette: Abbot's Madam Roland. Three hours a week. Miss
Margaret E. Shkpard.

Prerequisite: History I., though they may be taken simulta-
neously.

PEDAGOGY

Pedagogy I. Page's Theory and Practice of Teaching ( Bran
son); Roark's Method in Education; Dinsmore's Teaching of a
District School; Nature Study; Debates; Discussion of Educa-
tional Themes. This is the first of two normal courses for those
who wish to prepare to teach. Three hours per week. Miss
Buford J. Johnson.

Prerequisite: Students should be well advanced in High
School work to properly master this course.

Pedagogy II. Froebel's Education of Man; Hodge's Nature
Study; Dutton's School Management; Review work in methods
of teaching common school branches; Writing of Essays. A
continuation of the normal course for teachers as begun in
course I. Three hours per week. Miss Buford J. Johnson.

Prerequisites: It is preferred that students should have fin-
ished Pedagogy 1. before beginning II., but in exceptional cases
of well advanced students, it may be allowed to take both simul-
taneously.

MUSIC

Full account of the many courses in Music will be found in
the February, 1 ( >12, Bulletin. It has been already sent to those
who received catalogues, unless omitted by oversight. Copies
will be sent upon request.

The completion of Piano or Voice through the Third Grade,
Second Grade Theory, and one year in Sight-Singing, will
entitle the student to a credit for High School work equal to one
year three hours a week.

The completion of advanced musical courses, so that the stu-
dent is qualified for a Certificate in Music, will be equal in
amount to one literarv course three times a week, but mav onlv

32 LaGrange College

be credited for the Electives of the Junior and Senior year in
the courses leading to degrees, and in other courses only where
it is specifically allowed for credit.

The completion of a musical course which will entitle the stu-
dent to a Diploma in Music, will give an additional credit equal
to one study for one year of three hours a week.

The Director of the Music Department is Prof. Alwyn M.
Smith.

ART

The completion of the regular Art course through the Third
Grade (see February, 1912, Bulletin) will be accepted as an
Elective in High School work equivalent to one literary study
for one year, provided that it may only substitute studies already
so indicated.

Likewise a Certificate and a Diploma in Art are allowed Col-
lege credit in exactly the same cases as in Music, provided that
not more than a total of two such units may be allowed from
both departments combined. Miss Rachella Killinger,
Instructor.

EXPRESSION

A complete outline of the work of this department is given in
the February, 1812, Bulletin. A credit of one-half year's work
in literary work is allowed for each grade completed, to be cred-
ited only in place of certain specified courses. In the classical
and scientific courses for degrees this work counts as Elective
College work. Miss Jane Allison, Director.

PHYSICAL CULTURE

The work in Physical Culture is under the immediate charge
of Miss Frederica S. Westmoreland, and all students who
are not especially excused by the President are expected to take
it. It is planned to have a special training course for those
who may be called upon to teach Physical Culture in the schools.
Some further information upon this subject may be found upon
page 18 of the February, 1912, Bulletin.

CERTIFICATES AND DIPLOMAS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS

A certificate will be granted upon the completion of the work
specified in any one of the cases mentioned below:

Literary-Music Certificate Course see February, 1912, Bui-

LaGrange College 33

letin, page 18.

Literary-Art Certificate Course see February, 1912, Bulletin,
page 19.

Literary-Expression Certificate Course see February, 1912.
Bulletin, page 20.

Pedagogy, including the completion of the Classical or Scien-
tific High School Diploma Course, and History I., the remain-
ing Bible courses, English I., Mathematics II., Metaphysics,
the courses in Pedagogy proper, with Sight-Singing and Free-
Iland Drawing for one year.

A Diploma will be granted upon the completion of any one of
the following courses:

Literary-Music Diploma Course see February, 1912, Bulletin.

Literary-Art Diploma Course see February, 1912, Bulletin.

Literary- Expression Diploma Course see February, 1912,
Bulletin.

Classical High School Diploma* Course see page 18 of this
Bulletin.

Scientific High School Diploma* Course see 18.

Special College Course, covering two College years-see page 20.

Junior College Course, preparing for the completion of an en-
tire College course in two additional years' time see page 20.

A Diploma with a degree will be granted upon the comple-
tion of the following courses:

Classical College Course, leading to the degree of A. B. see
page 19.

Scientific College Course, leading to the B. S. degree see
page 19.

*The title Diploma instead of Certificate is given here in accordance
with the recommendation of the Georgia Teachers' Association to distin-
guish them from those issued by three year high schools, which are called
Certificates. However, the LaGrange College shall not enroll these a-
Collegiate Alumnae.

34 LaGrange College

ALUMNAE

Please inform us concerning - marriages, deaths, omitted alum-
nae, or any errors in the names below. Informination con-
cerning addresses, occupations, etc., will be thankfully re-
ceived. If married, state husband's name, title and ad-
dress. Send us catalogues issued prior to 1886. Deceased
alumnae are indicated thus *.

1846

Maiden Name Married Name Maiden Name Married Name

Elizabeth L. Burk* Sarah T. Cameron Mrs. Hill*

Sarah B. Cameron Mrs. Swanson*

1847

Adelaide E. Bigham* Sarah C. Morgan Mrs. Barber

Sarah H. Cooper Mrs. Newton Ophelia A. Osborne Mrs. Weeks

Tabitha E. Hill Mrs. Howard* Susan J. Presley Mrs. Buneley

Martha R. Hill Mrs. Potts* Mary A. Saunders*

Rebecca V. Marshall*

1848

Mary A. Broughton Mrs. Montgomery* Frances J. Greenwood Mrs. Perry*

Eliza J. Bryan Mrs. Martin Sarah J. Kidd Mrs. Camp*

Amarintha C. Cameron Mrs. Gibson* Sarah E. King Mrs. Rice*

Sarah Clayton Mrs. Jeter Pauline Lewis Mrs. Abercrombie*

Catharine P. Dozier Mrs. Willis Elizabeth Parham Mrs. Tigner*

Jane E. Gilbert Mrs.

1849

Josephine H. Akin Mrs. Tatum* Mary P. Griggs Mrs. Neal*

Georgia C. Bigham Mrs. Williams Susan A. Maddox Mrs. Johnson

Henrietta Broome* Nancy Meaders Mrs. Leak*-

Sophronia S. Campbell Mrs. Ferrell Acadia E. Mitchell Mrs. Dowell

Dorothy H. Chappel Mrs. Matthews* Ann E. Pitts Mrs. Dozier

Amanda A. Dubose Mrs. Ivey Elizabeth A. Stinson Mrs. Radcliff*

Frances A. Favor Mrs. Goldsmith Mary A. Thompson*

1850

Frances E. Broughton Mrs. Long* Martha F. Harvey Mrs. Harper

Antoinette P. Burke Mrs. Gartrell* Ann E. McGehee Mrs. Akers*

Martha E. Dixon Mrs. Glanton* Susan M. Meadors Mrs. Brown*

Isabella E. Douglass Mrs. Amoss Sarah C. Newton Mrs. Dozier

Narcissa W. Douglass Mrs. Bailey Cordelia A. Redding Mrs. Jones

Rebecca G. Forbes* Rebecca A. Slaton Mrs. Nicholson

Margaret A. Gilliam Mrs. Goodman Caroline S. Stevens Mrs. Banks

Mary E. Griffin Mrs. McGehee Catharine C. Stinson Mrs. Neal*

Sarah C. Griggs Mrs. Long Helen A. Tate Mrs. Mitchell

1851

Mary C. Alford Mrs. Heard* Mary M. Douglass

Tallulah Carter Mrs. Wells* Susan W. Douglass Mrs. Gunn

Mary J. Cox Mrs. Kener Mary E. Drake Mrs. Phillips

Ann Davis Mrs. Mary Graves Mrs. Lee

Jane A. Davis Mrs. Weston

1852

L. C. Hampton Mrs. Davis Ann Reid

Sarah Harris Mrs. Lockhart* Mary F. Reid*

S. Celestia Hill Mrs. Means Rebecca A. Rutledge Mrs. Boynton

LaG range College

35

[1852 continued]

Susan McGehee Mrs. Hampton

Jane Newton Mrs. Hall

Eliza J. Kidd ^_Mrs. Lane*

Roxana Sharp Mrs. Jones

Catherine Spicer Mrs.

1853

Lorine C. Acee Mrs. Smith

Sarah A. Ayers Mrs. Potts*

Alberta V. Amoss Mrs. Heard*

Isabella Baldrick*

Louisa Bryan*

Anna Calhoun Mrs. Martin

Emma Cameron Mrs. Leonard*

Sarah B. Cameron Mrs. Waters*

Ellen Cline Mrs. Gaffney*

Catherine Colman

Mary Eliza Colquitt Mrs. Dix*

Caroline Craven Mrs. Sappington*

1854

Sarah M. Barnes Mrs. Burney

Mary Colquitt Mrs. Green

Ann E. Cooper

Margaret Cunningham Mrs. Smith*

Amanda Edmondson Mrs. Newton

Harriet Edmondson Mrs. Anderson

Frances H. Harris Mrs. Kimball*

Mary A. King Mrs. Scott

Florida C. Key Mrs. "Ward

Mary M. McKemie Mrs. Craven

Lucy A. Morrow Mrs. Smith

Susan Newton Mrs. Bennett

E. S. Edmondson Mrs. Malfu

Mary Fall

Nancy Hall Mrs. Hall

Missouri Jones Mrs.

Mary Lee Mrs.

Mary Loyd Mrs. BradfieM

Elizabeth Pace Mrs.

Marietta Peeples*

Susan Presley Mrs. Pearson

Harriet Spivey Mrs. Marcuf*

Caroline Ware Mrs. Gay

Mary Whitfield Mrs. Boyd

Lucy Pace Mrs. Scaife

George Patrick Mrs. Allen

Missouri Pitts

Sarah F. Reed Mrs. Grant

Susan Skeen

Sarah O. Smith Mrs. Wilson*

Sarah J. Stembridge Mrs. Herring*

Mary Stevens Mrs. Cary

R. T. Taliaferro

Cornelia Tyler

Mary Yancey Mrs. Young*

1855

Letitia J. Austell

Martha A. Coghill

S-trah A. Dawkins Mrs. Pace

Virginia E. Edmondson Mrs. Field

Margaret E. Griffin

Sarah J. Harris

Mary II. "Holland

Melissa N. Lancy

Phoebe G. Mabry*

Henrietta B. McBain, Mrs. Kimbrough
Margaret K. McDowell

1856

Melissa A. Appleby Mrs. McCraw

Martha F. Blackburn Mrs. Judge

Laura E. Cameron Mrs. Kirby*

Martha C. Carter Mrs. Weaver*

Sallie Craig

Litzie W. Cunningham

Elizabeth A. DeLoach

Ellen B. DeLoach

M. J. Edward Mrs. Thompson

Louise D. Ellis Mrs. Herring

Susan E. Harrell Mrs. Smith

Anna M. Haynes Mrs. Renwick

Camilla P. Meadors

Margaret A. Moone Mrs. Ezzell

Blanche Morgan Mrs. Johnson

Mary E. Redwine

Sarah W. Reese Mrs. Lovelace

Kate I. Selleck Mrs. Edmondson*

Eliza O. Shepherd Mrs. Morgan

Mary F. Steagall Mrs. Dent

Susan E. Tooke*

Emma J. Tucker

Sarah E. Ward Mrs. Davidson

Nancy C. Hill Mrs. Morgan

Harriet N. Lipscomb Mrs. Kirby*

Martha P. McKemie Mrs. Craven

Anna H. Meadows

S. Indiana Pitts Mrs. Stow*

Mary A. Powell

Rebecca O. Powell

Sophia L. Saunders

Frances C. Tennison

Mary C. Tyler Mrs. Bynum

Philo Ware -Mrs. Witherspoou*

1857

Margaret E. Alford Mrs. Heard

Frances Andrews

Mary Y. Atkinson Mrs. Mallory

S. A. Cameron Mrs. Colbert

Mary C. Cole*

Laura A. Garlington Mrs.

Susan V. Harrell Mrs. Mayberry Anna E. Swanson Mrs. Swanson

Addie R. Powell

Hattie A. Schumato

*Deceased.

G. A. Baldrick*

Mittie E. Berry Mrs. Oglesbr

Haddessa Byrd Mrs. Traywick

Elizabeth Smith Mrs. Smith

Anna Steagall Mrs.

Mary J. Stinson Mrs. Tigner

Martha Tooke

Fannie A. Ward Mrs. Johnioo

36

LaGrange College

1858

Georgia Bonner Mrs. Terrell*

Lydia II. Brown Mrs.

Sallie Bull Mrs. Park*

W. H. Clayton

Julia A. Cooper Mrs. Van Epps

Margaret A. Cox Mrs. Tuggle

Rebecca G. Crowder Mrs. Boddie

I. F. Gordon

A. S. Greenwood Mrs. Slatter*

E. A. Hamilton

Mary A. E. Hamilton

Mary J. Hamilton

A. C. Hanks Mrs.

Mary C. Reese

May E. Speer Mrs. Winship*

1859

Mary L. Akers*

Susan E. Bass

Martha E. Beall Mrs. Ridley

Hattie Carlton Mrs. Dozier*

Mary J. Carlton

Alice R. Culler Mrs. Cobb

Fletcher Hardin Mrs. Flournoy

C. McKemie Mrs. Craven

Sue C. Means Mrs. Griffin*

A. Moreland Mrs. Speer*

Anna Morgan Mrs. Flournoy

R. M. Moss Mrs. Moss*

Bettie Nelson -_

M. R. Pullen Mrs. Russell*

Mary Shepherd Mrs. Kirksey

Mattie B. Shepherd Mrs. Russell

Aley Smith Mrs. Boddie

Carrie Stinson Mrs. Ogletree*

Achsah Turner Mrs. Marsh

Ophelia Wilkes Mrs. Tumlin*

Tinsle Winston Mrs. Winston*

Sarah Womack Mrs.

R. K. Woodward Mrs. Harris*

1860

Emma L. Bostick Mrs. Edmondson

M. Abbie Callaway

Claude V. Carlton

Eliza J. Cox Mrs. Akers

Mary E. Evans Mrs. Edwards*

F. C. Fleming Mrs. Dixon

E. Cornelia Forbes Mrs. Waltermire

Augusta M. Hill Mrs. Thompson*

Fannie Jeter !

M. Fannie Johnson Mrs. McLaw

N. A. Johnson Mrs. Maddox

Lizzie S. Laney

Janie M. Laney

Alice Ledbetter Mrs. Revill

S. Cornelia LoVejoy

Mollie J. Miller Mrs. Mooty

Fredonia Raiford Mrs. McFarlin

Aline E. Reese Mrs. Blonduer

Polly Robinson Mrs. Hammond

Edna M. Rush Mrs. Callahan

Sallie Sanges Mrs. Mullins*

Laura J. Sassnett Mrs. Branham*

Sallie Shepherd Mrs. Shorter

Mollie J. Smith

Sallie Talley

Isabelle C. Winfrey

1861

Lavina A. Bird Mrs. Craig*

Julia C. Bohannon Mrs. Witter*

George A. Broughton Mrs. Hayes

Cordelia C. Cooper Mrs. Fields

Klla M. Cunningham Mrs. Smith

France's M. Douglass Mrs. Lowe

Mollie J. Hunnicutt Mrs. Turner*

G. M. Ledbetter Mrs. Ellis*

Lucy M. Lipscomb Mrs. Harwell

Levecia G. Maddox Mrs. Kendriek

Nuda M. Ousley

Emma J. Page Mrs. Hunnicutt*

Ellen R. Pattillo Mrs. Callaway

E. C. Phillips Mrs. Jelks

L. C. Pullen Mrs. Morris

Charlotte E. Reid Mrs. Ware

Genie Reid Mrs. Cameron*

M. A. Story Mrs. McDonald

S. Elmira Wilkes Mrs. Shuttles

Emma C. Yancey Mrs. Bryant*

1862

Mary A. Baldrick

Frances A. Bass.

Fletcher Birch

Vandalia E. Boddie*

Lizzie Burge

Anna E. Evins Mrs. Wisdom*

Mattie Field

Lucy A. Fleming

Hettie Howell Mrs. Bailey

Sallie A. Knight Mrs.

Sallie A. Little Mrs. Williams

Anna Lyon

C. P. McGehee*

Kate O. Merritt Mrs. Joiner

Mary Mooney

L*n O'Neal

Mary F. Gilmer

Lizzie Goodwin Mrs. Cotton

Jennie Goodwin Mrs. Bailey

Rebecca Harrison Mrs. Bookhart

Mary A. Haynes

Eliza Hill

Georgia Hodnett Mrs. Ward

Susan A. Hogg Mrs. Davidson*

Kransillian Owens Mrs. Tafft*

Clara O. Packard

Fletcher Pitts Mrs. Marshall

Mattie D. Pitts Mrs. Harris

Mattie O. Taylor Mrs. Wright

Mollie White

Mattie E. Wimbish Mrs. Abraham*

LaGrangk College 37

1863

KUiio Bull Mrs. Tomlinson* Annie Martin Mrs. Freeman

ilattie E. Callaway* Belle McCain

Lizzie Leslie Geraldina D. Moreland Mrn. Speer

Sallie Leslie Mrs. Beasley Anna Turner

Mattie Marshall Mrs. Turner

18(34

Eliza Akers Mrs. Bowden il3ry E. Curtright Mrs. Rakestraw

Ella Broughton Fannie Hall Mrs. Caadle

l<la Burk Mrs. Hay* Nora Owens Mrs. Smith

Mary Cunningham Fannie Pullen Mrs. Audi

1865

Kate Beall Mrs. Hornady Achsah Maddox_ Mrs. Pace

Alice Bryants Mrs. Willis

1871

Janie Barber Mrs. Truitt Lula Culberson Mrs. McCoy

.Nannie Callaway Mrs. Wylie* Mary Hill Mrs. Ficklin

1872

Mattie Strother Mrs. Barksdale ^.

1873 *

Sallie Cotter Mrs. Reeves Willio Pitman Mrs. Bradfield*

Anna C. Curtright Mrs. McClure Mary L. Poytkress Mrs. Barnard

Carrie Pitman Mrs. Truitt*

1874

Maria O. Bass J. Lulu Ward

Dora Boykin Mrs. Maffet Maggie Whitaker Mrs. Foote

Mollie Belle Evans Mrs. Seals* Addie O. Wimbish Mrs. Anthonj

>allie Lou Haralson Mrs. Cobb

1876

Aldora Gaulding Mrs. Thomasson Jennie McFail Mrs. Warlick

1877

Mary Alford Mrs. Hogg Emma Palmer Mrs. Williams

Julia Connally Mrs. Rosser Clodissa Richardson Mrs. Connally

Annie Crusselle Mrs. Vaughan

1878

Lizzie Baugh Mrs. McDonald* Mattie T. McGehee Mrs. Park

Sallie F. Boykin Mrs. Jones Ola M. Simmons Mrs. Simmons

F. Virgie Buice Mrs. Morley Lizzie A. Traylor

Leila Hudson

1870

L'lla Jones Fannie White Mrs. Clay

Mattie Traylor Mrs. Northen Sallie Williams Mrs. Re id

1880

Jennie M. Atkinson, Mission'y to China Ida Lee Emory Mrs. Trammel]

Mattie Cook Mrs. Zellars Ilattie Handley II r>. R

Sallie Dowman Myrtlo McFarlin Mrs. i:

Fannie Dowman Mrs. Zither Kmma Stipe Mr--. Walker

1 8S 1

Lula A. Brannon Mrs. Knapp tagosta Vaughan Mrs. Matthews

Stella Burns Etta Vaughan Mrs. Fitzpatricl

Ella L. Crusselle Mrs. Laker Lula Walker Mr-. .

Ilattie B. Driver Mrs. Smith* Loulie Watkins.-. . Mrs. Overs!

Myrtle Gates Mrs. Smitb Mollie U. Whitaker Mrs tfattl

;.. iiaxter Mabry Mrs. Brboki

Deceased.

38

LAGRANGE COIXEGE

1882

Alice R. Boykin Mrs. McLendon

Lily Howard Mrs. McLarin

Ida Palmer Mrs. McDonald

Mollie E. Stipe Mrs. Walker

1883

Helen Baldwin

Carrie D. Ballard Mrs. Sasser

Annie Bradley Mrs. Park*

May Candler Mrs. Winchester

Susie Candler

Ginevra Gholson . Mrs. Cantrell

Carobel Heidt Mrs. Calhoun

1884

B'eulah B'. Arnold Mrs. Pringle

Ellen E. Barry Mrs. Carney

Mary G. Broome Mrs. Gresham

Mary L. Revill , Mrs, Atkinson

1885

Pauline E. Arnold Mrs. Wright

J. Bessie Barnett Mrs.

Emma P. Bullard Mrs. Smith

Katie D. Cooper Mrs. Culpepper

A. Ethel Johnson Mrs. Puckett

Daisy Knight Mrs. Abererombie

1886

Emma Barrett g Mrs. Black

Willie Burns Mrs. Davies*

Mary Lou Dansby

Lizzie L. Dyer Mrs. Duke

Lucy L. Evans Mrs. Banks

Bessie Jackson Mrs. Boyd

Mattie Magruder Mrs. Amnions

Willie Miller Mrs. Cook

Mary Ruth Mixon Mrs. Dobbs

' 1887

Jessie G. Burnett

Glenn Camp Mrs. Carpenter

Annie L. Cole Mrs. Wolf

J. Winona Cotter

Lucy A. Heard Mrs. Jones*

Bertha V. Henry Mrs. Thomas

Susie H. Jarrell

E. May Johnson Mrs. Harmon

Blanche McFarlin Mrs. Gaffney

Maude McFarlin Mrs. White

1888

Lizzie I. Arnold

Dora H. Beckman Mrs. Schvrettman

Lou G. Camp Mrs. Brannon

M. Jennie Cooper Mrs. Mabry

Fannie Covin Mrs. Shirah

Minnie L. Crawford Mrs. Jenkins*

Pearl Crawford Mrs. Maddox

Ollie Ellis Mrs. Trippe

M. Jennie Evans Mrs. Bradfield

Mamie II. Hardwick Mrs. Purvis

Lillie Jarrell Mrs. McClenny

N. Grace Johnson Mrs. Twyman

1889

Annie H. Chambliss Mrs. Wooley

L. Abbie Chambl6B

L. Dora Cline 1

Mary Fannie Turner

Bertha Walker Mrs. Furher

Irene WaTd Mrs. Lupo~

Maude Howell Mrs. Brook-
Carrie Parks Mrs. Johnson

Nellie Revill Mrs. O'Hara

Effie Thompson Mrs. Smith

Janie Wadsworth Mrs. Irvine

Lilarette Young Mrs. Matthews

Eugenia A. Simm& Mrs. Redwine

Mamie Spears Mrs. Wicker

A. S. Wadsworth Mrs. Copeland

Mary Lizzie Wright Mrs. Stevens

Lollie E. Lewis Mrs. Harris

Olivia V. Macy Mrs. Crusselle*

Mattie May Morgan?; Mrs. Johnson

Mollie C. Simms Mrs. Ward

Annie K. Worley Mrs. Kimbrough

Persia Wrightg Mrs. Thomason

Jessie Pitraan Mrs. Sutton

Nelie Smith Mrs. Dorsey

Belle Poer

Leman Poer Mrs. Lanier*

Ida B. Smith Mrs. Gay

Bunnie Trimble Mrs. Johnson

Ella Walker* 1

Minnie Ware Mrs. Woodyard

Clara L. Meriwether Mrs. McMeekin

Amy Moss

Lillian O. Ridenhour Mrs.

Maidee Smith

Mary K. Strozier Mrs. Barnett

Jimmie Lou Thompson Mrs. Goodrum

Maude S. Tompkins Mrs. Perry

Carrie Y. Williams Mrs. Baker

Annie Wilson

Ora Wing Mrs. West

Fannie Bet Jones Mrs. Quillian

Cecile Longino

Annie M. Moate Mrs. Scot( +

Minnie Moore Mrs. Lithgoe

S. Lizzie Parks Mrs. Betterton

Maude M. Scroggins Mrs. Dent

Lillie Sullivan

A. Lois Turner Mrs. Wilcox

Maggie Van Zandtg Mrs. Scott

Ruby Ware Mrs. Searcy*

Pearl White Mrs. Barnes

Lallie A. Witherspoon Mrs. Johnson

C. Lillian Moate Mrs. Rives

Julia P. Moate

Bettie D. Parker Mrs. Davenport

LaGrangk College

-39

[1839 continued]

Lula Dickersong Mrs. Maxwell

M. Oorrie Dickersou Mrs. Lee

Oona E. Haralson Mrs. Smith

Mary N. Hurt Mrs. Loyd

M. Lily Jackson Mrs. Tigner

A. Maude McDaniel .

Minnie E. Mclntire _ Mrs. Tribble

Julia P. Ridley Mrs. Willett

P. Eugenia Shephcrd

E. May Swindall Mrs. Logan

Fannie Teasley Mrs. Hutchinson

Kate Truitt Mrs. Young

Minnie B. Wilkinson Mrs. Tatum

1S90

<lrace L. Aiken Mrs. Mitchell

Mira Will Brantley Mrs. Tye

S. Paralie Brothertong Mrs. Walker

Kate D. Daniel Mrs. Polhill

Maggie W. Dean Mrs. Morris

Maggie E. Evans Mrs. Riley

Clara N. Graves Mrs. Smith

M. Loulie Hardwick Mrs. Candler

Sallie Hodges

D. Newtie Ingram Mrs. Merrill

Willie E. Jones

Pearl Lee Mrs. Trimble

Ttuth T. Marsh Mrs. Le

Mamie C. McGebee

Ada McLaughlin Mrs. Jones

Annie G. Robertson

S. Corinne Simril

M. Gladys Sims Mrs. Ponder*

Claire L. Smith Mrs. Hill*

Minnie L. Smith Mrs. Wall

Una T. Sperry

Connie V. Stovall

Minnie \Villingham

M. Emma Wilson Mrs. Turnipseed

1891

Frankie M. Arnold Mrs. Lyles

Rosa O. Atkinson

Myrtle G. Beaucharnp Mrs. Dickersou

Lillie Brady Mrs. Fish

U, Quie Cousins Mrs.

Jennie Lou Covin Mrs. Wooding

Lucile Covin Mrs. Glanton

Mamie Zach Crockett Mrs. Haynes

Addie C. George

Ora A. Gray

Georgia O. Heard Mrs. Fields

Music Diplomas.

Rosa O. Atkinson Minnie L. Smith Mrs. Wall

Maidee Smith Mattie E. Walcott

Hettie O. Hearn Mrs. McCalla*

C. Walton Hollinsheadg Mrs. Robie

Mattie E. Johnson Mrs. Dillard

Arizona B. Liles Mrs. Hinex

E. Montana Liles Mrs. Summit

Pearl Long Mrs. Smith

Jennie Lou McFarlin Mrs. Mattingly

Florence Smith Mrs. Stone

Lizzie Tucker Mrs. Gale

Mattie E. Walcott

Leila Winn Mrs. Miller

1892

ElTie S. Agncw Mrs. McCrary

Maud L. Bailey Mrs. Richardson

Annie F. Baxter Mrs. Smith*

Annie E. Bell Mrs. Shenck

Sallie S. Boyd Mrs. Sims*

Lady E. Boykin Mrs. Segrest

C. Lorraine Bradley Mrs. Jarrell

Ruth Camp

Clarabess Crain Mrs. Fambro

Ti. Maude Ellis

fennie Smith

Talitha Speer Mrs. Ezzard 1

Honnell L. Strozier Mrs. Bivins

Forrest L. Strozier

Jennie F. Foster? Mrs. Mason

Maud Freeman

Winnie V. Hearn

Clara E, Hodges Mrs. Linder

Lucie W. Hunt*

Ella R. Johnson Mrs. Sykes

F. Lillian McLaughlin Mrs. McGehee*

Lizzie M. Parham

Sallie M. Quillian Mrs. Jones

Rosa Sharpe*

T. Antoinette Ward

Edith West Mrs. Harris

M. Louise Wimbish Mrs. Beach

Mary Wooteng Mrs. Moss

Juliet Tuggle

Music Diplomas.

Clara X. Craves Mrs. Smith Claire I.. Smith Mrs. Hill

Mary L. Park Mrs. Fowler

18911

M. Bird Baxter Mrs. Gentry

B. Mae Brady Mrs. Burtlett

8. Amanda Britt Mrs. Lewis

Mattie Bulloch

Blonde B. Capps Mrs. Mason

Bene M. Covin Mrs. Farmer

Meta V. Dickinson Mrs. Daniel

I ..-lira Edmundson Mrs. Warner

* Deceased.

Mary /,. LathamS Mrs. Co*

Mary F. Liles Mrs. Nelson

M. Lula Lovelace Uri, Hog;;

Liiiie S. Lupo __ __ Mrs. IfcGrew

Fredouia it. KaddoxS Mrs. Webster

M. Ora Martyn Mrs.

Angie L. Maynard Mrs. Sell

If. Kate Moss Mrs Oleckler

40

LaGrange College

[1893 continued]

Ruth Evans! Mrs. Dallis

M. Edna Ferguson Mrs. Tate

Fannie Harrell

Maymie B. Hendrix Mrs. Anderson

Annie Gertrude Henry! Mrs.

Leila B. Kendrick

Dolly Hooks

Nellie B. Kirkley! Mrs. Campbell*

Music Diplomas

Nellie B. Kirkley! Mrs. Campbell* T, Antoinette Ward.

M. Lula Lovelace Mrs. Hogg

1894

Annie F. Reid Mrs. Roberts

Lelia A. Shewmake*

Macie E. Speer

Estelle Strozier Mrs. Ravenell

Mary Tomlinson Mrs. Tuggle-

Jennie W. Williams Mrs. Miller

Vela C. Winn! Mrs. Hawkins

Louise Anderson , Mrs. Manget

V. Eula Beauchamp Mrs. Meacham

Lula Belle Bird

Lina S. Brazell Mrs. Trimble

Mary L. Brinsfield Mrs. Rogers

Sadie Bess Bryan Mrs. Heard

Fannie II. Clark! Mrs. Maynard

Etta I. Cleveland Mrs. Dodd

Edda Cook Mrs. Pitt

Clara M. DeLaperriere! Mrs. Lanier

Susie Harrell

A. Estelle Harvard Mrs. Clements

Eula M. Hines! Mrs. Johnson

Nettie C. Howell _Mrs. Lane*

B. Adella Hunter Mrs. Pike

Irma O. Lewis Mrs. McElroy

E. Lula Liles Mrs. Radney

Cora L. Milam!

Mary E. Mitchell Mrs. Glower

Bessie G. Moseley

Minnie O. Moseley! Mrs. James

Lizzie A. Moss Mrs. Cleckler*

Lucie M. Pattillo

Mamie W. Paulk Mrs. Bickerstaff

Amy I. White : Mrs. Wisdom*

Pearl W. White Mrs. Potts

J. Kate Wilkinson!

M. Bird Baxter.

Music Diplomas
.Mrs. Gentry Gene M. Covin.

1895

.Mrs. Farmer

Myra L. Bruce Mrs. Glasure

Oallie O. Burns! Mrs. King*

Rosa E. Callahan

Hunter M. Carnes Mrs. Harvard

Lily Coggins Mrs. Jones

Lora Edmundson! Mrs. Lovejoy

Alice I. Harp Mrs. Young

M. Evans Harris Mrs. King

H. Estelle Hutcheson Mrs. Harlan

Annie Kate Johnson*! Mrs. Parks

Buford J. Johnson

Lillian Johnson Mrs. Burkhalter

Annie I. Key Mrs. Walker*

Julia Manning Mrs. Holmes

Eva J. Mashburn Mrs. Lamback*

Music
Lina S. Brazell Mrs. Trimble

Gussie R. McCutchen

Birdie Meaders Mrs. Dowda

Daisy L. Morris Mrs. Smith

Clara M. Parks Mrs. Featherston

Tallulah E. Quillian Mrs. Thrasher

Alice M. Robins Mrs. Cunningham

Mattie L. Schaub

Flora E. Seale Mrs. Thorpe

Effie J. Shewmake

Daisy C. Taylor Mrs. Rumble

Annie C. Thrasher

L. Kate Trimble Mrs. Davis

N. Romania Welchel*

Lula A. Welches Mrs. Smith

Annie F. Wiggins Mrs. Meadows*

Diplomas.

Effie J. Shewmake

1896

Lizzie Ayres Mrs. Little

Morah T. Bailey! Mrs. Martin

Clara J. Baker!

Mary E. Beasley! Mrs. Chenoweth

W. Belle Brantly Mrs. Rodenbury

Lula Bulloch! Mrs. Bulloch

Annie R. Callahan Mrs. Hutchinson

P. Estelle Chappie Mrs. Chaudler

Jessie R. Cotter! Mrs. Richards

Tosie H. Daniel! Mrs. Hogan

Eleanor C. Davenport

Sullic F. DeLamar Mrs. Poer

Pattic II. Dixon

Mattie Lee Dunn! Mrs. Sloan

Annie Clyde Edmundson! Mrs. Ridley

Beuna M. Harris

M. Helen Hendrick! Mrs. Mattox

Lucy J. Hill Mrs. Anthony

Music I iplomas
W. Belle Brantlev Mrs. Rodenbury Sallie F. DeLamar Mrs. Poer

E. Tallulah King Mrs. Norris

Bessie Longino Mrs. Vickers

Gussie Meriwether! Mrs. Winn

Myra O. Meriwether Mrs. Bulloch

Ola E. "Miller! Mrs. Johnson

Blanche E. Murphy Mrs. Speer

L. Inez Murrah Mrs. Knott

Eoline W. Price

Hallie J. Quillian Mrs. Ashford

Mary Will Smith! Mrs.

Cecelia E. Thompson! Mrs. Wimberly

D. Florence Traylor Mrs. Orr

Nannie Ware

Evelvn Whitaker!

A. Maude Williams Mrs. Trotter

Mary Lou Woodall

Mittie Wright Mrs. Harber

LaGrange College

41

1897

Leah W. Baker Mrs. Moon

Julia H. Bradfielil

Annie E. Campbell

Mary R. Carraichael Mrs. Lively*

I la K. Chuppg Mrs. Carroll

S. Eleanor Cloud Mrs. Bryan

Etta Cook Mrs. Pitts

Irene E. Florences Mrs. Green

Clara Freeman

Leila F. HoodS*

Kate S. Ingram Mrs. Gordy

Kate Jenkins Mrs. Alon/.o

liena Mai Ledbetterg Mrs. Graves

Ruby L. McElroy Mrs. Born

Ozella B. Roberts Mrs. Ross

Mary I. Seale

Henrietta O. Sinithg Mrs. Faust

S. Alma Stroudg Mrs. Hancock

.Julia B. Tiguer

Ghissie M. TignerS Mrs. Wiggins

Gertrude Touchstone

Cora Tuck Mrs. Morton

Alice J. Turner*

O. Lillian V enable Mrs. Shaw

Bertha H. Wilson Mrs. Upshaw

Montana M. Winters Mrs. Hall

Willie C. Maddox Mrs. Holloway

Music Diplomas

Eleanor C. Davenport Mamie Dozier Mrs. Davis

Carrie Davidson Kate S. Ingram Mrs. Gordy

1898

Irene Adair

Lutie Blasingame Mrs. Sams

Mary Will Cleveland Mrs. Thompson

Nettie Lee Cook Mrs. Campbell

Clara Dallis Mrs. Turner*

Emily C. Dickinson Mrs. Smith

Bessie Farmer Mrs. Lockhart

Emmie Ficklen

Annie Fulcher Mrs. Turner

Sallie Myrt Gilliam Mrs. Durham

Flora Glenn Mrs. Candler

Ward R. Hardwickg Mrs. Gailey

Sallie Fannie HodnettS Mrs. O'Neal

Laurie C. Lanier Mrs. Mallory

Eva Mann Mrs. Thomas

Mary D. Maiing Mrs. Howell

Dana D. Marchman Mrs. Wooten

M. Hortense McClure Mrs. McCleskey

Evelyn McLaughlin Mrs. McGehee*

Ruth Miller

Anna Belle Pendleton

Mary Ray Mrs. Shurley

Louise Rosser Mrs. "Warren

May StoryS Mrs. Parker

Ruth TuggleS

Rosa WriehtS .Mrs. Boyd

Sophie Wright _Mrs. Brown

Gordon Hudginsg Mrs. Miller

Music Diplomas
Id . W. Cleaveland Mrs. Thompson Lillian Johnson Mrs. Burkhalter

Art Diplomas
Nona Harris Alma Nesbit Mrs. Willingham

1899

Allie M. Beall

hlella Bellah

Annie Kate Bondurant Mrs. Jones

Aurena Evans Mrs. Burgess

Lillias Fleming Mrs. Graham

Lizzie A. Gray

Willie Hardy Mrs. Lovelace

Helen Huntley

Alice Jenkins Mrs. Sherman

M. R. Kimbrough Mrs. Guttenberger

Mattie Loflin Mrs. Smallev

Lillian Nealgg

Lela Newton*

Lila Park

Music Diplomas
Annie Cheatham (Voice) Mrs. Whiddon Marilu Ingram

Annie L. Bynum Mrs. Davis

Kola Dickinson^ Mrs. Wheeler

May Belle Dixong Mrs. McKenzie

Mary L. Park Mrs. Polhill

Leila Parks Mrs. Erwin

Anna Quillian Mrs. Dillard

Mary E. Quillian

Mary Rosser

Pearl SewellSS Mrs. Holbrooks

Carlie Smith Mrs. Dozier

Anita Stroudg

Mabel ThrowerfiS ; Mrs. McDonnell

Sallie Tomlinson Mrs. Ivey

Mattie Byrd Walson Mrs. Chunn

.Mrs. Letcher

1900

E. (ilenn Anderson Mrs. Boswell

Mary Lizzie Anderson Mrs. Watson

Estey Askew Mrs. Kelley

Clyde Bruce Mrs. Williams

Ethel Brysong Mr^. Thompson

Coral CappsSS Mrs. Stapler

Marion Cliftong

Willie Crawford . Mr 8. Johnson

Rosebud Dixongg Mrs. Callahan

M)eceaeed

Ethel Livelygg Mrs.

Jessie L. Manningjg __.Mrs. Sternea

Lottie Maxwells g Mrs. Robertson

A Louise Moateg

Rebie Neese Mrs. Mix. re

Flora Quillian Sirs. VanHorn

Louise L. Knyg Mrs. Burefa

Ruby Sliarpg Mrs. Rosser

Mary Howard Smith Mrs. Johnson

42

LaGraxge College

Virgil Harris Mrs.

Marie Harrison Mrs. Wilson

Annie Lou Hood Mrs. Robertson

Sadie Smith

Exa Stewart

Annie Stone Mrs. Powell

Eva Sutton Mrs. McLendon

Leone J. Tucker Mrs. Burton

Nellie Johnson Mrs. Wilkerson'

Clyde Lanier

Music Diplomas

Irene Dempsey* Fannie Smith Mrs. Ricks

Leila M. Irvin Mrs. Barnett

1901

Stella Benton Mrs. Jones

Kate Bradfield Mrs. Brown

Stella Bradheld

Ella Bus'sey

Irene D. Butler Mrs. Daniel

Lou Ella Davis Mrs. Drane

p]rnestine M. Dempsey-

Jessie Mallory Mrs. DeLamar

Mary Barnard Nix

Pauline Norman

Sarah Quillian Mrs. Baldwin

Effie C. Smith*

Lilla Tuck

Leila Williams -Mrs. Tucker

1902

Mary Bateman

Robie OIiiton

Janie Brown Cofer

Emma Lois Cotton Mrs. Ellis

Sidnor Davenport Mrs. Hammings

Annie Margaret Dunson Mrs. Davis

Elizabeth T. Ferrell Mrs.

Leila Jernigan

Nellie Marchman Mrs. Flynt

Bertie Pennington Mrs. Campbell

Edna PhiIpot Mrs. Trippe-

Cleta Quillian Mrs. Cleveland

Nancy Lee Shell Mrs. Norman

Nellie Tickers Mrs. Harvey

1903

Lillie Royal Brown

Lena Vashti Daniel

Annie Margaret DunsonJ Mrs. Davis

Annie F. Fanninl Mrs. Blanchard

Music Diplomas
Maude Ragland Piano) Nina Winn (Voice)

1904

Linnie F. Malone Mrs. Smith

Annie Lou McCord

Susie lone Strickland Mrs. Dasher

.Mrs. Stubbs

Mary Lou Drane Mrs. Jordan

Lucy Ray Freeman Mrs. Edwards

Mary Griffin

Emma Quillian Mrs. Singleterry

Music Diplomas

Eleanor C. Davenport (Voice) Leila M. Irvin (Voice) Mrs. Barnett

Vera Lee Dyal (Piano) Mrs. Ryals* Omie H. Ryals Piano) Mrs.DeLoach

1905

Etta May Burnside Mrs. McDonald

Annie May Conner

Lillian Martha Garrett

M. Catherine Hogg Mrs. Prather

Nancy Burnie Legg

.Mrs.

Kate Vivian Long Mrs. Coan

Maggie Lillian Means Mrs. Conner

Vesta Pirkle

Eva Ophelia Ramplcy? Mrs. Little

Mattie Dora Rampley

Music Diplomas

Brown Leona Anderson Wood (Piano)

1906

Carrie Moore Fleeth Mrs. Cook

Lillian Hicks

Mrs. Stipe Lillie Pennington

Music Diplomas

Rertha Louise Rurnside( ,> iano'Mrs. Forney Juelle Ella Jones( Piano)

Vera Vashti Edwards (Voice)

Rosa A. Logan (Piano).

May Dell Cleaveland__

Mary Boyd Davis

Annie Zuleika Dillardg

1907

Glenn Antoinette Allen

Oncta Seals Askew Mrs. Ward

Marie Barnett*

Bessie Boyd Mrs. Stone

Palmyra Burnside Mrs. Burks

Mamie Alexandra Fenley

Mary Adelaide Hall

Lucile Hicks

Etta Mae Hobgood Mrs. McNiel

Bessie Lou Johnson

Estelle Lois Jones

Emmeline M. Parks Mrs. Quillian*

Estelle Pittsf Mrs. Lucas

Alverda Ragsdale

Blanche Loyd Sims Mrs. Golden

Yula May Smith Mrs. Carter

Evelyn Rushin Stokes Mrs. Evans

Eva Lou Sutton Mrs. Curry

Teressa Viola Thrower

Martha Reese Tonilinson Mrs. Ivey

Bula Edna Warner Mrs. Morgan

Eugenia Watkins Mrs. Clements

LaGrange College

43

[1907 continued]

Allie Kennon

Music Diplomas

Glenn Antoinette Allen Piana) Nellie Brown (Voice; Mrs. Newman

Maggie May Anderson (Piano) Lizzie Belle Murphy (Piano)

Belle Arnold (Piaiio) Fletcher Fay Shannon (Piano)

Marie Barnett* (Piano) Nora Magrada Simmons (Piano)

Gertrude Brown ( Piano )__Mrs. Cowen Sara Frances Thomason (Piano)

1908

Sallio Bohannon

Bertha Louise Burnside Mrs. Forney

Sarah Luna V. Cook

Elfie Eugenia Etter

Mary Elizabeth Fox

Kllie Gray

Mary Camilla Green

lanie Hearn

Annette Mayo

Willie Belle Moncrief

Music Diplomas

Leila Jackson Dillard Mrs. Edda Cook Pitt

Barbara Florence Dye Mrs. Ivey Dura Merle Upshaw

Ellie Gray

Expression Diplomas.

Leila Jackson Dillard Eddie Rampley

Janie Hearn

Mary Ridley Murphy Mrs. Bugg

Eunice Pauline Powledge Mrs.Wootten

Leta Price

Christine Reynolds

Lillian Adelaide Rollins

Mary Frances Stanton Mrs. Gardner

Dura Merle Upshaw

Lula Kelly Willingham

Loola Adele Woolbright Mrs. Nicholson

1909

Maxie Marinda Barron

Eugenia Lewis Christian

Leila Jackson Dillard

Corinne Virginia Jarrell

Emmie Maybelle Matthews.

Hallie Claire Smith

Ida Ruth Smith

Arminda Elizabeth Smithwick
Ava Cleo Widner

Mayne Katherine Archer.

Ruby Dallis Beall

Florence Dunson

Vera Vashti Edwards

Ella Amanda Godwin

Sara Lovelace Hogg

Margaret Frances Bakes

Annie Mae Lazenby

Lois Rives

Piano Diplomas

Annie Lucile Jones __

"Wilmer Alice Loftin .

Pearl Jarine Simmons

Pearl Watson

Allena Dcmorest Stone

Mrs. Cliatt

1<U0

T'L'lene Thrower

Martha Donovan Ware

Talladega Becton (Piano)

Carrie May Brownlee (Piano) ...
Natalie Holmes Cooper (Piano)

Florence Dunson (Voice)

Hallie Claire Smith (Voice)

Natalie Holmes Cooper

MUSIC Diplomas

Cleo Smithwick (Voice)

TT/lene Thrower (Piano;

Mary Jeannette Wilhoitc (Piano;

Theo Pauline Woodward (Piano. Voice)

Mrs. Austin

Expression Diplomas
Lois Rives

1911

Susie Rae Jones.... ...

Flossie Luelle Mayo.

I.enoir Henderson Burnside

Overton LaVerne Garrett

^ara Lovelace Hogg Mrs. Cliatt

Music Diplomas

Sara Ann Christian (Piano, Voiced ... . Mary Hill Moore (Piano,

Lillie Elizabeth Harris (Voice) Claire England Shannon ( Piano |

Nyui Tsung Lee (Piano. Voice) Cleo Smithwick [ Piano]

Edith May Lupton fPianoj

Art Diploma
Lenoir Henderson Burnside

Vindicates the B. S. degree. Vindicates the B. I,, degree. All College Alumnae since
1S80 were graduated with the A. B. degree, unless otherwise stated. Total auntbei of
Alumnai

44 LaGrange College

The Alumnae Association

The Alumnae Association holds its annual reunion during
Cornna en cement. Its dues are $1.00 per year. All of the Alum-
nae are invited to become actively identified with it. The full
name, post-office, and other interesting data concerning all the
alumnae, is desired for a permanent record.

The officers for 1911-12 are Miss Effie E. Etter, 1908, Au-
gusta, President; Miss Estelle L. Jones, 1907, Augusta, Vice-
President; Miss Martha D. Ware, 1911, LaGrange, Secretary;
and Miss O. La Verne Garrett, 1911, Alexander Citv, Ala.,
Treasurer.

LaGrange College

45

REGISTRATION, 1911-12

COLLEGE

*Students marked thus an- slightly behind the class in which they are
placed.

Senior

Susan Willard Brown
Martha Edith Hamilton
Eunice Hill McGee
Ouida McClure

Alice Claire Beckwith*
Roberta Florence Brinkley*
Mildred Eakes
Willie Pauline Fox*

Annie Maude Patrick
Mattie Pauline Sharp
Ethel Lila Smith
Ruth Walker

Junior

Rosa May Murphy
Ruth Robb Trammell
Frederica S. Westmoreland'
Linnie Idahlia Wilson*

Sophomore and Freshman

Many of these students are quite irregular,
are not fully up to the Freshman Class.

Those marked

Daisy Louise Boney
Leita Chewning
Sarah Inez Davidson"'
Eddie Dickert
Louise Freetnan*
Susie May Green*
Nellie Clyde Hammond'''"
Sarah Elizabeth Hammond*
Mary Butlord Hunter

Sallie May Kennemur
Eunice McGhee
Rubie Claire Moss
Vera Rawls*
Frances Robeson*
Florence Glenn Smith
Nell Smith*
Mary Bess Walker'
Louise Young*

Special Students

Jane Allison, Ex. Grad.
Calera Pauline Becton
Mar ward Bedell
Lottie Bond

Margaret Louise Bryant
Minnie Dora Bryant
Rosa Ferrell Burks
Mrs. Lester C. Busch
Merle Caldwell
Martha Leo Cannon
Ethel Clark-
Bessie Lee Cleaveland

Julia Elizabeth Linson
Adelia Eloise Linson
Louise Loehr
Latham Longino
Martha McCaine
Miriam Marree Marshburu
Nicholas Edward Marshburn
Mrs. Cotter S. Martin
Sarah Colton Mayo
Louise Mills
Mildred Mills
Annie Louise Moor

46

LaGrange College

Echo Corless

Julia Corless

Bonnie Crews

Marcia Lewis Culver, A. B.

Dovie Daniel

Carrie Davidson, (Summer)

Kate Davis

Ernestine May Dempsey, A. B.

Mattie Katherine Dozier

Sara Pearl Dozier

Claude Dunson

Evelyn Louise Evans

Dora Ferrell

Sallie Florence Few

Nell Lou Foster

Lena Fowler

Addie Frazier

Genevieve French

Elizabeth Amanda Fuller

Sada Galbraith

Wilmer Ethel Gardner

Overton La Verne Garrett, A.B.

Helen Griffin

Minnie Godwin

Cora Lee Harrell

Frank Harwell, Jr.

Willa Clyde Holmes

Julia Elizabeth Linson

Vera Coleman Jenkins

Virginia Lee Johns

Buford Johnson, A. B.

Dollie Palmer Jones

Lillie Nora Jordan

James Quincey Kaney

Thomas Kaney

Mrs. Robert F. Kellum (Sum.)

Rachella Killinger

Maureen Lassetter

Emma Morene Ledbetter

Jennie Eulalia Ledbetter

Mrs. Leone Floyd Leith

Lessie Oree Lewis

Cecile Moore (Summer)

Lucile Brown Moore

Rosina Moss (Summer)

Rubie Marie Newsom

Frances Peeples

Bessie Hope Perry

Edna Arlia Peterson

Esther Pierce

Ethel Saphronia Pike

Ruth Elizabeth Pike

Edith Amanda Poole, Mus.Grad.

Ola Gainey Powell

Luta Armstrong Powers

Annette Quillian

Miriam Jackson Ricketson

Nannaline Beryl Rives

Bessie May Roberts

Sarah Isabelle Satterwhite

Lois Loraine Schaub

Margaret E. Shepard, A. B.

Louise Slack

Carrie Ethleen Smith

Mrs. Euler B. Smith, A. B.

Hallie Claire Smith, A. B.

Leo Smith

Leon P. Smith, Jr.

Mary Elizabeth Smith

Rufus Eugene Smith

Cleo Smithwick

Grace Spencer

Annie Lucy Tankersley

Rosa Tanner

Susie Tanner

Inez Clarynda Teasley

Mrs. A. H. Thompson (Sum. )

Meredith Louis Thomson

Pearl Todd

Martha Donovan Ware, A. B.

Martha Louise Webb

Robbie Annette Williams

Sarah Elizabeth Witcher

W T u Yoeh N200

High School

Those marked F are taking work that will qualify them feu-
Freshman or Conditioned Freshman in the 1912-13 session.

LaGrange College

47

Those marked S are chiefly engaged in Special work, but have

High School literary work.

Sannie Cornelia McKenney F
Olive Ruth McLaughlin F
Nina Kmily Maxwell

Josie Inez Allen
Julia White Aiken S
Jean Jennette Archer
Lucia Mahlon Bedell
Irene Butenshon F
Johnnie Caldwell
Inez Caudle
Eddie May Chastain
Maria Elizabeth Cotton 1
Ada Blondine Cooper F
I^mily Eliza Dunn S
Essie May Floyd
Pearl Irene Goggans
Dorothy Annie Harrist F
Mary Kate Heard F
Emma Henderson F
Marie Lewis Hendry F
Annie Clara Hines F
Lois Hogg S
Josie Ulldeane Hurst
Alice Ruth Johns S
Inez Johnston
Vera Alice Jordan
King Kellev F
Mary Witt Kelley F
Grace Keithley Kemp F

Ethel Steele Milner

Eloise Lillian Mooty F

Grace Keithly Murphy

Nora Marie Owens

Mattie Peacock S

Lucile Pierce

Pauline Pierce

Julia Corinne Prentiss

Katherine Reid Randall

Lottie Erselle Reynolds

Ruth Richards

Mary Estelle Rivers F

Lyda Rogers F

Ruth Elizabeth Rucker

Frances Rumble

Ruth May Scruggs

Annie Julia Shingler F

Ruth Estelle Shingler

Louise Eleanor Strother

Sara Crawford Tatum

Bettie Thornton

Annie Tuttle

Lucy Jim Webb F

Maude Hudspeth LivingstoneS Tessie White F
Zora Blonnie Lovern F Mary Leola Woodal]

Tonimie Louise McDonald F

STATISTICS

Xumber of Students in the High School 57

Number of Students in College 34

Number of Students in Special Courses 107

(The majority of these have some College work)

Total Enrollment 19S

Number in Music Department 1 5 2

Number in Art Department 4s

Number in Expression Department.. 22

Number in Pedagogy 16

Boarding Students 148

Local Students 51

48 LaGrange College

CERTIFICATES AND DIPLOMAS, 1912

This list is published before the close of the College session
and some changes may occur in it, which will be too late for
correction in this issue of the Bulletin. There are a few stu-
dents who have finished courses leading to Diplomas or Certifi-
cates in Music or Expression, who have not yet completed cer-
tain literary qualifications. To these the Diplomas and Certifi-
cates will be given when the literary qualifications are filled.

A. M. Diploma. Marcia Lewis Culver, Sparta.

A. B. Diplomas. Susan Willard Brown, Pinehurst; Martha
Edith Hamilton, Piracicabo, Brazil; Eunice Hill McGee, La-
Grange; Ouida McClure, Canton; Maude Patrick, Newborn;
Mattie Pauline Sharpe, Ogeechee; Ethel Lila Smith, Luthers-
ville; Ruth Walker, Cass Station.

Piano Diplomas. Marward Bedell, Burnt Fort; Roberta Flor-
ence Brinkley, Thomson; Mildred Eakes, Elberton; Nell Fos-
ter, Hampton; Willa Clyde Holmes, Vidalia; Sarah Colton
Mayo, Social Circle; Carrie Smith, Greensboro; Florence Glenn
Smith, Ypsilanti; Annie Lucy Tankersley, Rochelle; Martha
Donovan Ware, LaGrange; Sara Elizabeth Witcher, Union
Point.

Expression Diplomas. Carrie Smith, Greensboro; Ruth Robb
Trammell, Apalaehee.

Piano Certificates. Calera Pauline Becton, Swainsboro; Rosa
Ferrell Burks, LaGrange; Eddie Mae Chastain, Atlanta; Sallie
Florence Few, Watkinsville; Lena Fowler, Apalachicola, Fla.;
Genevieve French, Vidalia; Elizabeth Amanda Fuller, Thom-
son; Wilmer Alice Gardner, Ideal; Helen Griffin, Griffin: Mau-
reen Lassetter, Luthersville; Mrs. Leone Floyd Leith, La-
Grange; Lessie Oree Lewis, Sylvania; Eunice Hill McGee, La-
Grange; Grace Keithley Murphy, Shawmut, Ala.: Luta Arm-
strong Powers, Franklin: Sarah Isabelle Satterwhite, Chipley:
Lois Loraine Schaub, LaGrange; Nell Smith, Hartwell: Mary
Elizabeth Walker, Cass Station; Robbie Annette Williams, Sau-
tee; Wu Yoeh Ngoo, Soochovv, China.

Voice Certificates. Marward Bedell, Burnt Fort; Mrs. Leone
Floyd Leith, LaGrange; Rubie Marie Newsoni, Union Point;

LaGrangk College 49

Mattie Peacock, Kite; Sarah Isabelle Satterwhite, Chipley; An-
nie Lucy Tankersley, Rochelle; Linnie Wilson, Hampton.

Certificate in Post-Graduate Work. La Verne Garrett, A. B.,

Alexander City, Ala.

Certificates in Latin. Mattie Pauline Sharpe, Ogeechee; Kthel
Lila Smith, Luthersville.

Certificates in Mathematics. La Verne Garrett, Alexander City,
Ala.; Mattie Pauline Sharpe, Ogeechee; Ruth Walker, Cass
Station.

Certificates in History. Miriam Marree Marshburn, LaGrange;
Mrs. Emily Persons Smith, LaGranee.

The Commencement Preacher for 1912 is Rev. W. R. Ilendrix,

Atlanta, Ga.
The Commencement Speaker for 1912 is Rev. Marvin Williams,

Douglasville, C*a.

A CORRECTION

On page 19, under Special College Course, Second Year,
P>ible IV. should appear just after Latin II.

50 LaGrange College

RECITALS

The programs of all the recitals of the present session preeeed-
ing those presented below appear in the February, 1912, Bulletin.

RECITAL NO. 11

MARCH 28, 1912

Piano Certificate Recital ...: Miss Helen Griffin, Griffin, Georgia

Miss Robbie A. Williams, Sautee t Georgia

Voice Certificate Recital Miss Linnie Wilson, Hampton, Georgia

Graduate Piano Recital Miss W. Clyde Holmes, Vidalia, Georgia

Miss Mar ward Bedell, Burnt Fort, Georgia
Bach, Sarabande from Suite IV.; Mozart, Four Variations from Sonata

IX Miss Williams

Bach, Menuet from English Suite IV.; Mozart, First Movement, Sonata

XIV Miss Griffin

Beethoven, Allegro from Sonata, Op. 14, No. 1; Bach, Air from Suite II;

MacDowell, Shadow Dance Miss Holmes

Lynes, O Come to me, Mavourneen, Op. 46, No. 3; Piccolomini, Ora pro
Nobis Miss Wilson

Bach, Menuet I. from Suite III.; Beethoven, First Movement, Sonata, Op.

10, No. 1; Reinhold, Concert Etude, Op. 19, No. 1 Miss Bedell

Mendelssohn, Venetian Boat Song; Mayer, Etude, Op. 61, No. 3

Miss Williams
MacDowell, To a Wild Rose; Chopin, Mazurka, Op. 33, No. 4 .Miss Griffin

Trotere, Asthore; Zardo, To-Night Miss Wilson

Mendelssohn, First Movement, Concerto in D Minor .Miss Holmes

Mendelssohn, Rondo Brilliant (Two Pianos; Miss Bedell

RECITAL NO. 12

APRIL 11, 1912

Certificate Piano Recital Miss Rosa Ferrell Burks, LaGrange, Georgia

Miss Maureen Lassetter, Luthersville, Georgia
Miss Eunice Hill McGee, LaGrange, Georgia
Miss Wu Yoeh Ngoo, Soochow, China

Graduate Piano Recital Miss Carrie Smith, Greensboro, Georgia

Lysburg, La Fontaine, Op. 34; Clementi, Rondo Miss Wu

Mozart, First Movement from Sonata XVI; Grieg, Spring Dance,

Miss Lassetter

Bach, Invention in F Major; Mozart, Allegro from Sonata in G Major

Miss McGee

Bach, Two Part Invention; Grieg, To Spring Miss Burks

Hemberger, Melodic Sketch; Leschetizki, Mazurka de Concert... Miss Smith

Reading, Kat Less Miss Sannie McKenney

Bach, Two Part Invention; Thome, Tarantelle, Op. 43 Miss Wu

MacDowell, Scotch Poem; Chopin, Polonaise in A Miss Lassetter

Whelpley, Serenade; Nevin, Goodnight Miss McGee

Reading, Boneset Tea Miss Rosa Tanner

Chopin, Mazurka, Op. 33, No. 3; Chopin, Scherzo, Op. 31 Miss Burks

Mozart, Last Movement (Presto) from Concerto in A Miss Smith

LaGrangk College 5J

RECITAL NO. 13

APRIL 25, 1912

Graduate Piano Recital Miss Florence Glenn Smith, Ypsilanti, Georgia

Miss Annie Lucy Tankersley, Rochelle, Georgia
Miss Sara E. Witcher, Union Point, Georgia

Piano Certificate Recital Miss Virginia Lee Johns, Katonton, Georgia

Voice Certificate Recital Miss Mattie Peacock, Kite, Georgia

Expression Graduate Recital. .Miss Carrie E. Smith, Greensboro, Georgia
Beethoven, First Movement from Sonata in P Minor; Koelling, Lark's

Morning Song Miss Tankersley

Raff, Cachoucha Caprice; Weber, First Movement from Concerto in C

Miss Johns

Meyer-Helmund, Cuckoo Miss Peacock

Grieg, I Love Thee; Dennee, Finale Characteristique Miss Witcher

Jean Webster, Just Patty, Part I. (Original Arrangement). ..Miss Carrie Smith
Bach, Prelude, No. 17; Weber, First Movement, Sonata, Op. 23; Mac-

Dowell, Polonaise Miss Florence Smith

Gluck, Eurydice (Orfeo) Miss Peacock

Mendelssohn, Last Movement from Concerto in D Minor ..Miss Tankersley

Jean Webster, Just Patty, Part II Miss Carrie Smith

Weber, Concerto in C, Second and Third Movements Miss Johns

Sconzia, Al Ballo, Valse; Shelley, Love's Sorrow Miss Peacock

Mozart, First Movement from Concerto in D, Allegro Miss Witcher

Jean Webster, Just Patty, Part III Miss Carrie Smith

Mendelssohn, First Movement from Konzert in G Minor

Miss Florence Smith

RECITAL NO. 14

MAY 2, 1912

Piano Certificate Recital Miss Wilmer Ethel Gardner, Ideal, Georgia

Miss Sara I. Satterwhite, Chipley, Georgia

Piano Graduate Recital Miss Roberta Florence Brinkley, Thomson, Ga.

Voice Certificate Recital Miss Annie L. Tankersley, Rochelle, Georgia

Bach, Three Part Invention, No. 15; Schubert, Impromptu. ..Miss Gardner
Bach, Two Part Invention, No. 8; Bachmann, The Swallows, Valse Ca-
price Miss SatterwhiU-

Bach, Prelude and Fugue, No. 21, Well Tempered Clavichord; Chopin,
Prelude, No. 20 and 10, Op. 28; Chopin, Nocturne, Op. 9, No. 1

Miss Brinklrv
Saint Saens, Fair Springtime Beginning; Foote, Irish Folk Song

Miss Tankersley

Liszt, By the Sea; Vogrich, Staccato Caprice Miss Gardm-r

Mendelssohn, Spring Song; Meyer-Helmund, Ballet Music

Miss SattervvhiU-
Hahn, Were my Song with Wings Provided; Delibes, Maids of Cadiz

Miss Tankersk-v
Mozart, First Biovement from Konzert in A Major Miss Brinkle\

52 LaGkange College

RECITAL NO. 15

MAY 9, 1912

Piano Certificate Recital Mrs. Leone Floyd Leith, LaGrange, Georgia

Voice Certificate Recital Miss Marward Bedell, Burnt Fort, Georgia

Piano Graduate Recital Miss Mildred Eakes, Elberton, Georgia

Expression Graduate Recital Miss Ruby M. Newsom, Union Point, Ga.

Chaminade, Amoroso; Nevin, Doris Miss Bedell

Haendel, Harmonious Blacksmith; Bach, Two Voice Invention, No. 14

Mrs. Leith

Irene S. Capwell, Mrs. Alderman Casey, Part I Miss Newsom

Wagner-Liszt, March from Tannhaeuser Miss Eakes

J. Strauss, Voc di primavera Miss Bedell

Joseffy, Serenade; Raff, Tamborine Mrs. Leith

Irene S. Capwell, Mrs. Alderman Casey, Part II Miss Newsom

Beethoven, First Movement from Konzert in C Minor; (Cadenza by Rein-
ecke) Miss Eakes

Meyerbeer, Robert, toi que j'aime (Robert le Diable); Gounod, Au prin-
temp Miss Bedell

Irene S. Capwell, Mrs. Alderman Casey, Part III Miss Newsom

RECITAL NO. 16

MAY 16, 1912

Piano Certificate Recital Miss Genevieve French, Vidalia, Georgia

Miss Lois L. Schaub, LaGrange, Georgia

Piano Graduate Recital Miss Meredith Louis Thompson, Swainsboro, Ga.

Expression Graduate Recital Miss Ruth Robb Trammell, Apalachee, Ga.

Bach, Invention in C Major; Mozart, Last Movement from Sonata in F
Minor Miss Schaub

Bach, Prelude in G; Mozart, First Movement from Sonata in E Minor

Miss French

William Dean Howells, The Sleeping Car, Part I Miss Trammell

MacDowell, To a Wild Rose; Wachs, Ballet Mignon Miss Thompson

Lacome, Estudiantina (Chorus) Sight-Singing I.

Paderewski, Minuet Celebre; Bohm, Polacca Brillante Miss Schaub

Sinding, Voices of Spring; Schuett, Capriccietto, Op. 34, No. 7

Miss French

William Dean Howells, The Sleeping Car, Part II Miss Trammell

MacDowell, To a Water Lily; Weber, Last Movement from Concerto in
E-flat Miss Thompson

William Dean Howells, The Sleeping Car, Part III Miss Trammell

Reinecke, Bolero (Two Pianos)....Misses Nora Owens and Marward Bedell

LaGrange College 53

PRESENTATION OF "A PRECIOUS PICKLE" AND "A LOVE OF A

BONNET" BY THE MEZZOFANTIAN SOCIETY

THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1912, 8 P. M.

Dennee, Forest Sounds; Konski, Ladies Gossip (Etude characteristic)

Miss Nellie Hammond

A PRECIOUS PICKLE By George M. Baker
Scene Miss Pease's best room.

Miss Rebecca Pease, an old maid Miss Ruby Newson

Mrs. Gabble, a gossiping neighbor Miss Mary Walker

Sissy Gamble, her daughter Miss Ruth Richards

Jennie Frost 1 Miss Lena Fowler

Bessie Snow > City Girls in the country Miss Annie Hines

Sadie Bean J Miss Florence Smith

Juno, Miss Pease's colored help Miss Lessie Lewis

Zardo, Tonight Miss Grace Spencer

Shuett, Valse, Op. 59, No. Miss Julia Linson

A LOVE OF A BONNET By George M. Baker

SCENE Drawing room in the Clipper residence.

Mrs. Clipper, a widow Miss Mildred Eakes

Kitty, her daughter Miss Maureen Lassetter

Aunt Jemina Hopkins, a little inquisitive Miss Marward Bedell

Mrs. Hortensia Fastone, very genteel Miss Sara Hammond

Dora, her daughter Miss Ruth Walker

Kate Doolan, Irish help Miss Ruth Newsom

ANNUAL CONCERT

MAY 31, 1912, 8:00 P. M.

Haendel, Sixth Organ Concerto, First Movement Miss Edith A. Poole

Liszt- Wagner. Spinnerlied Miss Maidee Smith

Meyer-Helmund, Canzonetta (Margitta) Mrs. Maude Parsons

Massenet, Meditation from Thais ^

(Marsick transcription) Violin Mrs. Ethel Dallis Hill

Drdla, Souvenir J

Henry Kirk, Miss Blake's Advertisement (Reading) Miss Jane Allison

Verdi { . $ Ce ' : Mzati! . . .) (Un Ballo in Maschera)
I Ana. En tu che macchiavi J v

Mr. Alwyn M. Smith

Schumann, Papillons (Piano) Miss Edith A. Poole

Henry Geehl, Enchantment Mrs. Alwyn M. Smith

Liszt, Concerto, First and Third Movements; (Miss Maidee Smith, second
piano) Miss Alma McDonald Bagbv

Allitsen, My Soul unto thy Heart is Given; (Violin obligate, Mrs. Ethel
Dallis Hill) Mrs. Maude Parsons

Paganini, Witches' Dance (Piano) Miss Ada Mildred Gane

34 . LaGrange College'

SENIOR DAY EXERCISES

MONDAY, JUNE 3, 1912, 10 A. M.

Alfred Hollins, Spring Song (Organ) Miss Cleo Smitfrwick

Prayer

Schumann, Novelette in F Miss W. Clyde Holmes, Vidalia, Georgia

Longfellow, Hiawatha's Departure Miss Carrie Smith,. Greensboro, Ga,

Class History Miss Ethel Lila Smith, Luthersville, Georgia

Jaell, Waltz from Faust, Op. 129 Miss Mary Elizabeth Walker

Bevignani, The Flower Girl Miss Sara Tatum

A Dream Miss Ruth Walker, Cass Station, Georgia

Schubert- Tausig, Military March Miss Nell Foster, Hampton, Georgia

Arditi, I/incontro, Waltz Song Miss Marward Bedell, Burnt Fort, Ga.

Jeffy's Wedding Trip (Reading). ...Miss Ruth Robb Trammell, Apalachee, Ga,

Class Prophecy Miss Susie Willard Brown r Pinehurst, Georgia

Mendelssohn, Konzert in G Minor, First Movement

Miss Florence Glenn Smith, Ypsilanti, Georgia

Dudley Buch, When the Heart is Young Miss Grace Spencer

Last Will and Testament Miss Eunice Hill McGee, LaGrange, Georgia

GRADUATING EXERCISES

MONDAY, JUNE 3, 8 P. M.
Faulkes, Tocata in F (Organ) ...Miss Helen Griffin

Marston,Come May with all Thy Flowers,

Misses Marward Bedell and Florence Smith

Guy d'Hardelot, The Bee's Courtship Miss Ruby Marie Newsoin

Liszt- Wagner, March from Tannhaeuser Miss Mildred Eakes

Dorothy Dix, Virtues of a Fat Man (Reading) Miss Ruby Marie Newsom

Address, The Country Girl Rev. Marvin Williams, Douglasville, Ga.

Baccalaureate Address. Conferring Degrees President Rufus W. Smith

Benediction

LaGrange Colurgk 55

REVISED LIST OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES, JUNE 4, 1912

Major John M. Hamard, LaGrange, President; Rev. J. 1>
"Wardlaw, Fort Valley, First Vice-President; William S. With am,
Atlanta, Second Vice-President; Arthur If. Thompson, La-
Grange, Secretary and Treasurer; John I). ' Kdmundson, La-
Grange; William V. Gray, LaGrange; William L. Cleaveland,
LaGrange; Cornelius V. Truitt, LaGrange; Otis A. Dunson,
LaGrange; Rev. George W. Duval, Marietta: Walter W.
Wisdom, Atlanta; Joseph E. Dunson, LaGrange: Rev. J. Wiley
Quillian, D. D., Oxford; Rev. M. J. Cofer, Atlanta; Frank
Harwell, LaGrange: Rev. R. Frank Hakes, Elbertou; Rev.
S. R. Belk, D. I)., Atlanta; J. T. Neal, Thomson; John D.
Walker, Sparta; Rev. Walker Lewis, D. D., Rome; Ashton H.
Cary, LaGrange; Rev. W r m. C. Lovett, D. D., Atlanta; Rev.
Thomas J. Christian, Elberton; James G. Truitt, LaGrange:
Hdward K. Farmer. Fitzgerald; Rev. John S. Jenkins, At-
lanta: J. S. Betts, Ashburu; Rev. S. B. Ledbetter, LaGrange:
W. O. Jones, Elberton: C. R. Fitzpatrick, Warrenton.

COMMITTEES

Insurance. W. L. Cleaveland, O. A. Dunson, Frank Harwell.
Buildings and Grounds. J. G. Truitt, J. I). Kdmundson,

A. H. Thompson.
Laura Haygood With am Loan Fund. C. V. Truitt, J. K.

Dunson, W. L. Cleaveland.
Sinking Fund. J. I). Kdmundson, J. U. Dunson, J. M.

Barnard.
Davidson Loan Fund. J. K. Dunson.

56

LaGrange College

INDEX

Accredited High Schools.. _ 16

Administration 3

Admission Certificate 16

Admission to College IS

Alumnae 34

Alumnae Association . ..44

Art Department 7, 32

Bible and Missions 27

Board and Laundry 7

Board for Visitors 8

Books 9

Buildings 11

Calendar 2

Campus 11

Certificates 16, 32,48

Classification of Students 45

College Courses 18, 20

College Faculty 4

Commencement 2

Conditions 14

Date of Opening and Closing 2

Degrees 19

Diplomas 32, 48

Domestic Arrangements 9

English 22

Entrance Examinations 15

Equipment 12

Expenses 7

Expression 32

Extra fee late entrance 9

Extra fee Rooms 7

Faculty 4

Fee for Special Examination 9

Fees 8

Free-Hand Drawing 17, 18

French 27

Freshman Class 45

General Information 11

German 26

Greek 28

Grounds 12

Gymnasium 22

Health 14

High School 17, 47

History 31

Holidays 2

Junior Class 45

Laboratory 12

Latin 55

Library 12

Loan Funds 10

Location 11

Mathematics 28

Metaphysics 20

Ministers' Daughters 9

Music Department 6, 31

Officers 3, 7

Officers Y. W. C. A 13

Outline of Courses 17, 20

Patrons 15

Pedagogy 31

Piano 31

Pipe Organ 31

Physical Culture 32

Program of Recitals, etc 45

Railroads 11

Rates in City Schools 10

Reading Room 12

Recitals 49

Registration 45

Regulations ..14

Reports 14

Requirements for Admission 16

Requirements for Graduation 18

Science 20

Senior Class 45

Sheet Music 9

Sight-Singing 17, 18

Societies 13

Sophomore Class 45

Special Students 45

Statistics 47

Stationery 9

Stipulations S

Study in City Schools 10

Supplies for Rooms 9

Swimming Pool 12

Time for Payments 8

Trustees 3, 55

Tuition 7

Uniform 9

Use of Piano 9

Violin 9

Visitors 8, 14

Voice Culture 31

Y. W. Christian Association 13

S* <~

II

o

V in

*J *

3

c ^

O h/i

(52 a

W 30

=

H t/.

views of rooms occupied by students in the Hawkes Building:. Note the single beds in

the middle view. (Most of the rooms have single beds.
Note ihe double windows in all the views.

)

Locations