Bulletin of LaGrange College, LaGrange, Georgia, Catalogue Number 1921-1922

Volume LXXVI

Number 1

BULLETIN

OF

LaGrange College

LAGRANGE, GEORGIA

CATALOGUE NUMBER
1921.1922

ESTABLISHED 1833

CHARTERED 1S46

En<red aa Second-olaan Matter at the Post Office at
LaGrange, Georgia. leaned Quarterly^.

LaGrange College

1921-1922

LaGrange, Georgia

CONTENTS

Page

Academy 45

Administration 8

Admission of Students 17

Alumnae 48

Alumnae Association 76

Board of Trustees 4

Bureau of Appointments 14

Calendar 3

Committees 5

Courses of Instruction 28

Definition of Entrance Requirements 20

Expenses 46

Faculty and Officers 6

General Information 15

LaGrange College 9

Officers of Administration 8

Reports 17

Requirements for Admission 18

Requirements for Degrees 26

Roll of Students, 1920-1921 77

Schedule 3

Student Activities 13

CALENDAR
1921

September 13, 14, Examination and Classification of
Students.

September 15, First Chapel Exercises.
November 24, Thanksgiving Day a Holiday.
December 21, Christmas Holidays begin.

1922

January 3, College Exercises resumed at Chapel Hour.
January 25, End of Eall Term.
January 26, Beginning of Spring Term.
April 14, Benefactors' Day Field Events.
^Iay 28-29, Commencement.

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

G. W. DuvALL Conyers, Ga

W. S. WiTHAM Atlanta, Ga.

S. R. Belk Atlanta, Ga.

W. L. Cleaveland LaGrange, Ga.

J. E. DuNSON, Jr LaGrange, Ga.

O. A. DuNSON LaGrange, Ga.

W. V. Gray LaGrange, Ga.

A. H. Thompson LaGrange, Ga.

C. V. Truitt LaGrange, Ga.

J. G. Truitt LaGrange^ Ga.

H. Y. McCoRD Atlanta, Ga.

S. A. Harris Cartersville, Ga.

Claude H. Hutcheson Jonesboro, Ga.

R. J. Reaves Bowdon, Ga.

Hatton Lovejoy LaGrange, Ga.

H. J. FuLLBRiGHT Atlanta, Ga.

S. P. Wiggins Atlanta, Ga.

Ely R. Callaway LaGrange, Ga.

W. S. Davis LaGrange, Ga.

W. S. DuNSON LaGrange, Ga.

Miss Mary Nix LaGrange, Ga.

W. H. Turner Brooklyn, N. Y.

OFFICERS OF BOARD

Hatton Lovejoy President

H. J. FuLLBRiGHT Vice-President

J. E. DuNSON, Jr Secretary-Treasurer

COMMITTEES

Finance Ely R. Callaway, Chairman ; J. G. Truitt, C. V.
Truitt, S. A. Harris, J. E. Dunson, Jr.

Executive Hatton Lovejoy, Chairman; J. E. Dunson, Jr.,
Miss Mary Nix, W. S. Davis, C. V. Truitt, Ely R. Callaway,
W. S. Dunson, J. G. Truitt.

Insurance W. L. Clcaveland, Chairman ; A. H. Thomp-
son, J. G. Truitt.

Laura Haygood Witham Loan Fund and Davidson Loan
Fund W. L. Cleavcland, Chairman; C. V. Truitt, A. H.
Thompson, W. S. Davis, W. S. Dunson.

Sinking Fund J. E. Dunson, Jr., Chairman; C. V. Truitt,
W. S. Davis, Ely R. Callaway.

FACULTY AND OFFICERS*

1920-1921

W. E. Thompson, A.B.

President

Emory College

O. B. LowMAN, A.B.
Dean and Registrar
Professor of English
University of Virginia

Maidee Smith, A.B.

Professor of Bible and Religious Education

LaGrange College; graduate student University of Tennessee;

Emory University; New York School of Philanthropy

Eunice Meadows, A.B.

Professor of English and History

Louisiana State University; graduate student Columbia University;

Chicago University

Alice MacFarlane, A.B.

Professor of Latin and Mathematics

Southern College; graduate student Peabody College for Teachers;

Columbia University

Daniel A. Prescott, B.S.

Professor of Science

Tufts College

Christine Broome, A.B.

Professor of French and Spanish

Wcslcyan College; graduate student Columbia University

Stella Bradfield, B.S.

Professor of History and Education

LaGrange College; graduate student Columbia University

^Provision has been made for two additional professors, one of
whom will have work in the Science Department, the other in the
History and Education Department. These two professors will be
announced shortly.

L

Pearl Elsie Treen

Director of Home Economics

Mississippi Woman's College; student Louisiana University;

Columbia University

Georgia Atkinson Bradfield

Instructor Secretarial Course

Graduate Georgia-Alabama Business College

Cora Elizabeth Potter, B.O.

Director Expression and Physical Education

School of Expression, Boston; New England Conservatory

of Music

Annie B. Matney, A.B.

Director Drazving and Painting

Radnor College

Alwyn Means Smith, A.M.
Director Music Department
Professor of Voice
Valparaiso College; New England Conservatory of Music-
Metropolitan College of Music; Royal Conservatory
of Music, Leipzig, Germany

Alice B. Hobart

Violin and Piano

Oberlin Conservatory of Music

Margaret Bodman, B.]\L

Piano and Theory

Oberlin Conservatory of Music

Ada Mildred Gane, B.M.

Piano, Theory and Pipe Organ

Fargo Conservatory of Music; Oberlin Conservatory;

Leipzig Conservatory

Sarah Tatum Reed
Choral Director
LaGrangc College

OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION
1920-1921

W. E. Thompson, A.B President

O. B. LowMAN, A.B Dean

Ora M. Abbott, A.B Secretary

John S. Dodd Bookkeeper

Eleanor R. Prescott Librarian

Flora Franklin . .Student Assistant in the Library

Valena J. YouNGBLOOD Dining Room Matron

Carrie C. Barbour Dormitory Matron

Addie Frazier Dormitory Matron

LaGrange College

HISTORY

The history of LaGrange College is interesting. Instituted
in 1833*, it was, even in its infancy, an academy of high grade.
Its first teacher of note was the Reverend Thomas Stanley. At
the time of its founding, there were few institutions in the world
devoted solely to the higher education of girls and young women.

In the year 1846, under the presidency of Mr. J. T. Alont-
gomery, a charter was procured*, and LaGrange Institute became
LaGrange Female College, with all the rights of conferring
"degrees, honors, and other distinctions of merit"* accorded
other colleges and universities.

After several years of prosperity often two hundred and
fifty girls being in attendance the entire property was sold to
the Georgia Annual Conference of the I\I. E. Church, South. In
September, 1857, the College began its distinctive work of Chris-
tian education, under the presidency of the Reverend W. C.
Connor. In the ensuing years it received patronage from every
section of the South.

Under the presidency of the Reverend W. M. Harris, D.D.,
in 1859, it took precedence over all church schools in sending
out the first resident graduate class in the South. Of this class,
Mrs. Alice Culler Cobb, afterwards a successful teacher in Wes-
leyan Female College, was an honored graduate.

The work of the College was arrested by a most disastrous
fire in 1860. However, after the close of the Civil War, the
Reverend James R. Mason, through his perseverance and in-
domitable energy, succeeded in rebuilding, and the College started
on a long and successful career.

In 1885, Rufus Wright Smith became president and served
until his death in 1915. During his administration, the property
was nearly quadrupled in value, and its curriculum was advanced
to that of a standard college. No man ever engaged in educa-
tional work in Georgia was better known, and certainly none ever
rendered more consecrated service to education. A scholar, a

White's Historical Collection of Georgia, pp. 651-2; LAWS OF GEORGIA, 1847,
p. 120.

philosopher, a statesman in thought and constructive work, he
was not less in his services to his State than Arnold of Rugby
was to his countrymen. To Rufus Wright Smith, LaGrange
College owes, largely, its great history and fine traditions.

In May, 1915, Miss Daisy Davies was elected to succeed
Dr. Smith, who died on January 2nd of that year. After five
years of service, Miss Davies resigned in May, 1920.

Upon the resignation of Miss Daisy Davies in 1920, W. E.
Thompson was elected to succeed her, and is now president.

LOCATION

LaGrange College is located in the City of LaGrange, Troup
County, Georgia. LaGrange is seventy-one miles from Atlanta
on the Atlanta and West Point Railroad, one hundred and five
miles from Macon on the Macon and Birmingham, and about
half-way between Brunswick and Birmingham on the Atlanta,
Birmingham, and Atlantic Railway.

The College is situated on a hill, one-half mile from the
business portion of the town. The campus, which is twelve
acres in extent, is 832 feet above the sea level, in a region on
the upper side of Pine Mountain, with natural drainage in all
directions. The extreme cold of the higher mountains and the
heat of the lower lands are both avoided. Mr. Sears, agent
of the Peabody Fund, said, 'T have travelled extensively in
Europe and America, and I have not seen LaGrange equalled
for beauty and adaptation."

BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT

The principal buildings of LaGrange College are the Audi-
torium, the Oreon Smith Memorial, the Harriet Hawkes
Memorial. The Auditorium Building is three stories high. It
contains the Department of Music, the Art Studios, the Science
Department, the Department of Home Economics, the Audi-
torium, and various class rooms.

The Oreon Smith Building contains Hardwick Hall, used
for evening prayer, literary societies, student meetings, and
Y. W. C. A. services; the college parlors, the social rooms, the
Y. W. C. A. room, the dining hall, the infirmary, and the presi-
dent's suite, on the lower floors. The entire upper floor is used
for dormitory purposes.

10

The Harriet Hawkes Building was completed in 1911. It
contains the library and reading room, class room, the sales
room for books and stationery ; oflices of the dean, registrar, and
secretary. The upper floors contain dormitory rooms, fitted
with single beds and all equipment for two students each. The
floors all have broad verandas. All buildings are electric lighted
and steam heated.

Last spring the citizens of LaGrange gave the College
$250,000.00 for improvements. Another $250,000.00 is in pros-
pect for additional buildings and endowment.

In the last few months about $40,000.00 has been spent in
improvements and equipment. The interior of the Oreon Smith
Building has been practically rebuilt, all the rooms having been
provided with new flooring, plastering, wiring and fixtures. The
woodwork has been repainted, the heating system repaired, and
a new plumbing system installed which provides ample baths
and toilets and conveys hot and cold water into every bed room.
The dining room has been refurnished, lavatories have been
placed in all bed rooms of the Hawkes Building and the plumb-
ing equipment has been made adequate for all its occupants.
The school room equipment has been greatly improved by the
purchase of teachers' desks, blackboards, globes, and additional
apparatus and supplies for the chemical and physical laboratories.

GYMNASIUM

The first floor of the Harriet Hawkes Building is devoted
to physical education. The Gymnasium is equipped with the
best modern apparatus, and adjoins a swimming pool which has
a capacity of 30,000 gallons. Adjacent to the pool are dressing
rooms and shower baths.

ATHLETIC GROUNDS

To the rear of the Gymnasium, there is an athletic field
where provision has been made for tennis, basket-ball, croquet,
team and track work,

LIBRARY

The Library contains about 3,000 volumes which represent
carefully selected reference books for the different clei)artments
of the College.

11

r

Reference work is aided by means of an efficient card
catalogue system, which furnishes an index to any volume or
subject that may be desired. Newspapers and magazines for
general reading are kept on the tables, and the students are
encouraged to keep in touch with present day events.

LABORATORIES

Three separate laboratories are provided in the Depart-
ments of Physics, Chemistry, and Biology.

The Chemical Department is supplied with lockers, Bunsen
burners, chemicals and apparatus for individual work in the
various branches of chemistry.

The Physical Laboratory, accommodating twenty pupils at
a time, is well equipped with high-grade apparatus.

The Biology Department is equipped with microscopes,, and
needed appliances for making and mounting sections, and mak-
ing cultures.

HOME ECONOMICS

The Home Economics Department has been thoroughly
reorganized and refurnished. Two large and well-lighted adjoin-
ing rooms are devoted to this work. Both of these rooms are
equipped according to the most modern ideas.

In the Domestic Science Laboratory are to be found individ-
ual sani-steel cooking desks, thoroughly fitted out with all neces-
sary utensils. A gas range, as well as small gas stoves for each
desk, has been installed. In addition to this, an oil stove is used,
thereby making the work as practical as possible.

The model dining room is very attractive and homelike.

12

STUDENT ACTIVITIES
LITERARY SOCIETIES

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 parlia-
mentary usage, etc.

Secret societies are not allowed, as they tend toward
extravagance and an exclusiveness which is based upon wrong
principles.

THE YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION

The Young Women's Christian Association is developing
among the students a zeal for the cause of religion at home
and abroad. Besides conducting weekly meetings for prayer
and religious instruction, it promotes an intelligent interest in
social and moral problems. Graduates of the College in both
the Home and Foreign Mission fields are a compensating evi-
dence of inspiration from this organization. A number of Bible
and mission study classes are carried on under the direction of
the faculty and more mature students. There is an attractive
library and prayer room on the first floor of the Oreon Smith
Building. '

HISTORY CLUB

The History Club is open to all students in the College.
With the co-operation of the head of the History Department,
weekly meetings for the discussion of the historical and economic
questions, biography, and current events are held. Monthly
open debates on present-day subjects add much interest and
enthusiasm.

ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION

An Athletic Association, composed of the members of the
student body under the supervision of the physical director,
has control of outdoor sports. It assists in equipping the out-
door courts and track, formulates the rules for eligibility in
class and college contests, and constantly encourages participa-
tion in all outdoor games, maintaining always a high code of
honor and true sportsmanlike conduct in all forms of athletics.

13

DRAMATIC CLUB

The Dramatic Club is for the purpose of studying plays,
ranging from Shakespeare to modern comedies. Public per-
formances are given at intervals throughout the year.

MODERN LANGUAGE CLUB

The Modern Language Club meets v^eekly to promote
interest in the respective language studied". Under the guidance
of the head of the Modern Language Department, current litera-
ture is studied, the language is spoken, and songs, readings, etc.,
given in the original.

THE ORCHESTRA AND GLEE CLUB

The Orchestra and Glee Club give public performances at
the recitals of the College.

STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION

The Student Government Association, based on powers and
laws granted it by the president and faculty, has control of all
matters pertaining to the conduct and social life of the students.
The life and work of the College is based on the honor system,
and this system applies not only to the rules and regulations
concerning conduct, but to mid-year and final examinations,
monthly and weekly tests, and to all written work such as note-
books, and themes.

Upon entrance each student is furnished with the Student's
Hand Book so that she may familiarize herself with the rules
of the Student Government Association.

BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS

The College, through the faculty, assists such graduates
as wish to teach to find positions. This service is rendered
without charge.

14

GENERAL INFORMATION

By enrollment with us, students pledge themselves to abide
by the rules of the College.

No student will be enrolled in any subject unless she pre-
sents a registration card properly filled out and duly signed.

Parents desiring their daughters to come home or to visit
elsewhere during the session must first send request to the presi-
dent. Such request must not be included in letter to the daughter,
but mailed directly to the president. Our experience has proved
that visiting while in school is usually demoralizing.

Students are not allowed to send telegrams or telephone
messages without special permission.

We encourage our students to be economical, and we ask
parents to co-operate with us in discouraging needless expendi-
tures.

Students who keep money in their rooms do so at their
own risk. Provision is made for taking care of the spending
money of students.

Books, sheet music, and stationery are sold for CASH.

Students are not allowed to charge purchases at LaGrange
stores, except on written permission of parents or guardians,
endorsed by the authorities of the College.

Students must pay for damage done College property.

Students are required to attend Sunday School and the
church of the parents' choice.

Students are not permitted to spend the night out in town,
communicate with young men without permission of the presi-
dent, leave the grounds without permission, borrow money,
jewelry, or clothing from each other.

HEALTH

A close supervision is exercised over the health of board-
ing pupils. All cases of sickness are required to be reported
immediately to the matron ; in case of serious sickness a physi-
cian is called. The perfect sanitary arrangements, good water,
and elevated country free from malaria have prevented sick-
ness to a degree unsurpassed by any similar institution in the
State.

Students must send with admission blank physician's cer-
tificate showing successful vaccination and inoculation.

15

DRESS

Parents are urged to co-operate with the administration
in encouraging simple and inexpensive clothes.

Every student must be provided with rubbers, umbrella
and raincoat.

Each student must be supplied with several middy blouses,
a pair of black pleated bloomers made of soft serge or other
woolen cloth, and black tennis slippers for gymnasium work.

For ordinary wear, parents are requested to dress their
daughters plainly.

The Senior Class wear Oxford gowns in graduating
exercises.

FURNITURE

The College supplies the students' rooms with heavy fur-
niture. Each student is expected to furnish her own towels,
sheets, blankets, counterpanes; also napkins and napkin ring
(plainly marked), and any other articles desired for her own
room; as, pictures, curtains, rugs, a spoon, tumbler, knife, fork,
etc.

GUESTS

Patrons and friends of the College are always welcome to
its hospitality. As all visitors are guests of the College and
not of individuals, a student who wishes to have a guest must
consult the matron to know whether a guest room is available.
Students may not entertain guests in their rooms. No charge is
made for the entertainment of visitors. However, we cannot,
without serious inconvenience, entertain guests longer than from
Saturday till Monday. All guests are expected to conform to
the dormitory regulations.

LOAN FUNDS

Students may be able to borrow from certain special funds
of the College enough money to defray a large part of their
expenses. This money loaned to a student begins to bear interest
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
of Trustees, donated to the College the sum of $10,000.00 (which
has increased to over $24,000.00), to be loaned to poor or
dependent girls.

16

Mrs. J. C. Davidson, of West Point, Georgia, as a memorial
to her husband, gave $1,000.00 to be used as a loan fund.

Circulars of information concerning these funds can be
secured from the president. The decision as to who will be
accepted is vested entirely in a Committee of the Board of
Trustees, to whom all applications will be referred.

, REPORTS

Formal reports, based upon semi-annual and final exam-
inations, together with the daily records of work, will be issued
as soon as practical after the end of the first term and after
commencement. Upon these, the system of credits for finished
work is based.

The instructors will endeavor to help students make up
w^ork from which they were absent because of sickness. Unnec-
essary and unexcused absences seriously affect the standing of
students.

ADMISSION OF STUDENTS

Students may be admitted by certificate or by examination.

Graduates of the accredited high schools are admitted with-
out examination upon such courses as certificates show they
have satisfactorily completed.

Students from other than accredited schools are examined
at entrance.

CERTIFICATES FOR ENTRANCE

Every student who enters, for music, art, literary work or
other course, 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 the College the blank certifi-
cate to be filled out and signed by the principal of the school
they are attending. This should be sent in before the summer
vacation. Candidates will find it much easier to attend to this
before their schools close for the summer.

If the work of a student who has been admitted by certifi-
cate is found unsatisfactory, such student may be placed in a
lower class or grade.

17

REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION

1. For Unconditional Entrance Into Freshman Class. The appli-
cant must offer subjects amounting to fifteen units. The units as-
signed to the subject indicate the number of years, with five recitations
(of not less than forty minutes in length), per week, which will be
required in the secondary schools to make adequate preparation; that
is, the total amount of time devoted to the subject throughout the year
should be at least 120 "sixty-minute" hours.

The candidate must offer:

Required for A.B. Degree: Electives:

Units Units

English 3 English 1

History 1 Latin 1

Algebra 1 ^ History 1 or 2

Plane Geometry 1 French 1, 2, 3 or 4

Latin 3 Spanish 1, 2, 3 or 4

Optional (from list Greek 1 or 2

opposite) 5^ Physics * 1

Chemistry 1

Total 15 Biology 1

Botany J^

General Science >2

Physical Geography J^

Solid Geometry Yz

2 yrs. Domestic Science .... 1

Physiology ^ or 1

Trigonometry Vi

For admission to the B.S. Degree course, the same units are
required as for the A.B. Degree, save that for any or all of the
units in Latin, units in Science and Modern Languages may be
substituted, at least one unit in Science being required.

A candidate wishing to offer Science or Domestic Science as
one unit for entrance must present notebooks endorsed by the
instructor who supervised the work, before being admitted to
examination or accepted on certificate.

2. Conditioned Freshmen. Applicants offering not less than twelve
of the above units, three of which must be English and two Mathe-
matics, may be admitted to the College as conditioned Freshmen.
This deficiency must be made up before the student passes into the
Sophomore class. All college conditions must be absolved before the
end of the Junior year.

^Two units if two full years are given to this subject.

18

3. Special Students. Teachers and other mature persons, not less
than twenty years old, desiring special courses, may be admitted with-
out formal examination, upon satisfying the requirements of the
departments which they wish to enter. It is understood that such
persons will be able to satisfy entrance requirements in such subjects
as English, history, and mathematics.

4. Advanced Standing. Students who are prepared to enter classes
higher than Freshman can do so upon presenting satisfactory evidence
of such preparation to the Committee on Classification.

5. College credit for work done in high school will be given only
on examination. Special examinations for this purpose will be held
during the first week after the opening of college.

6. No student may enter Sophomore Class without having nine
hours of college credits.

19

DEFINITION OF ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS

Required Subjects

English (three units). The recommendation of the National
Conference on Uniform Entrance Requirements in EngHsh for 1920-
1922 is in substance as follows. The study of English in school has
two main objects: (1) command of correct and clear English, spoken
and written; (2) ability to read with accuracy, intelligence, and appre-
ciation, and the habit of reading good literature with enjoyment.

English Grammar (one-half unit) ; Composition and Rhetoric (one
unit). The first object requires instruction in grammar and composi-
tion. English grammar should ordinarily be reviewed in the secondary
school, and correct spelling and grammatical accuracy should be rigor-
ously exacted in connection with all written work during the four
years. The principles of English composition governing punctuation,
the use of words, sentences and paragraphs should be thoroughly
mastered, and practice in composition, oral as well as written, should
extend throughout the secondary-school period. Written exercises
may well comprise letter-writing, narration, description, and easy
exposition and argument. It is advisable that subjects for this work
be taken from the student's personal experience, general knowledge,
and studies other than English, as well as from his reading in liter-
ature. Finally, special instruction in language and composition should
be accompanied by concerted effort of teachers in all branches to
cultivate in the student the habit of using good English in his recita-
tions and various exercises, whether oral or written.

Literature (one-and-one-half units). The second object is sought
by means of reading and study of a number of books from which may
be framed a progressive course in literature. The student should be
trained in reading aloud and should be encouraged to commit to
memory notable passages both in verse and prose. As an aid to liter-
ary appreciation he is further advised to acquaint himself with the
most important facts in the lives of authors whose works he reads and
with their place in Jiterary history.

A. READING

The aim of this course is to foster in the student the habit of in-
telligent reading and to develop a taste for good literature by giving
her a first-hand knowledge of some of its best specimens. She should
read the books carefully, but her attention should not be so fixed upon
details that she fails to appreciate the main purpose and charm of what
she reads.

From the five following groups at least two selections from each
group must be made, except that for any book in Group I a book from
any other group may be substituted:

I. Classics in Translation. The Old Testament, comprising at
least the chief narrative episodes in Genesis, Exodus, Joshua, Judges,
Samuel, Kings, and Daniel, together with the books of Ruth and
Esther. The Odyssey, with omission, if desired, of Hooks 1-V, XY,
XVI. The Iliad, with the omission, if desired, of Books XI, XIII,
XIV, XV, XVII, XXI. The Aeneid. (The Odyssey, Iliad, and
Aencid should be read in English translations of recognized literary
excellence.)

For any selection from the above group a selection from any other
group may be substituted.

20

II. Drama. Everyman. Shakespeare: Midsummer Night's Dream;
Merchant of Venice; As You Like It; Twelfth Night; The Tempest;
Romeo and Juliet; King John; Richard II; Richard III; Henry V;
Coriolanus; Julius Caesar*; Macbeth*; Hamlet*. Goldsmith: She
Stoops to Conquer. Sheridan: The Rivals. Two Modern Plays.

III. Prose Fiction. Malory: Morte d'Arthur (about 100 pages).
Bunyan: Pilgrim's Progress, Part I. Swift: Gulliver's Travels (voy-
ages to Lilliput and to Brobdingnag) ; Defoe: Robinson Crusoe, Part
I; Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield; Francis Burney: Evelina. Scott's
Novels: any one, as Guy Mannering, Ivanhoe, Old Mortality, Quentin
Durward, Rob Roy, The Talisman. Jane Austen's Novels: any one,
as Pride and Prejudice. Maria Edgeworth: Castle Rackrent or The
Absentee. Dicken's Novels: as, David Copperfield, A Tale of Two
Cities. Thackeray's Novels: as, Henry Esmond. George Eliot: Adam
Bede, The Mill on the Floss, Romola, Silas Marner. Mrs. Gaskell:
Cranford. Kingsley: Westward Ho! or Hereward, the Wake. Reade:
The Cloister and the Hearth or Griffith Gaunt. Lytton: Last Days
of Pompeii. Blackmore: Lorna Doone. Hughes: Tom Brown's
School-Days. Stevenson: Treasure Island, or David Balfour or Kid-
napped or Master of Ballantrae or Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Kipling:
Kim or Captains Courageous or Jungle Books. Cooper's Novel: as.
The Deerslayer, Last of the Mohicans, The Spy. Poe: Selected Tales.
Hawthorne: The House of the Seven Gables or Twice Told Tales or
Mosses from an Old Manse. Howells: The Rise of Silas Lapham;
A Boy's Town. Wister: The Virginian. Cable: Old Creole Days. A
collection of short stories by various standard writers.

IV. Essays, Biography, Etc. Addison and Steele: Sir Roger de
Coverley Papers or Selections from the Tatler and Spectator (about
200 pages). Boswell: Selections from Life of Johnson. Franklin:
Autobiography. Washington's Farewell Address, Webster's First
Bunker Hill Oration, and Lincoln's Gettysburg Address. Burke:
Speech on Conciliation with America. Irving: Life of Goldsmith,
The Sketch Book. Southey: Life of Nelson. Lamb: Essays of Elia.
Lockhart: Life of Scott. Thackeray: Lectures, on Swift, Addison,
and Steele in the English Humorists. Macaulay: any one of the fol-
lowing essays: Lord Clive and Warren Hastings, Milton, Addison,
Life of Johnson, Speeches on Copyright, History of England, Chapter
III (England in 1685), Essays on Goldsmith, Frederic the Great,
Madam d'Arblay. Trevelyan: Selections from the Life of Macaulay.
Carlyle: Essay on Burns, with a brief selection from Burn's poems.
Ruskin: Sesame and Lilies or selections (about 150 pages). Dana:
Two Years before the Mast. Webster: First Bunker Hill Oration.
Lincoln: Selections, including at least Speech at Cooper Union, the
two Inaugurals, the Speeches in Independence Hall and at Gettys-
burg, the I.ast Public Address, the Letter to Horace Greely; together
with a brief memoir or estimate of Lincoln. Parkman: The Oregon
Trail. Emerson: Compensation, Manners, Self-Reliance. Thoreau:
Walden. Lowell: New England Two Hundred Years Ago, Democ-
racy. Holmes: The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table. Burroughs:
Selected Essays. Warner: In the Wilderness. Curtis: Prue and I,
Public Duty of Educated Men. Stevenson: An Inland Voyage and
Travels with a Donkey. Huxley: Autobiography and Selections from
Lay Sermons, including the addresses on Improving Natural Knowl-
edge, A Liberal Education, and A Piece of Chalk. Hudson: Idle
Days in Patagonia. Clemens: Life on the Mississippi. Riis: The
Making of an American. Pjrycc: The Hindrances to Good Citizenship.

*If not chosen for study under "B."

21

A collection of essays by Bacon, Lamb, DeQuincey, Hazlitt, Emerson,
and later writers. A collection of letters by various standard writers.
Arnold: Wordsworth's Poems. A collection of prose writings on
matters of current interest.

V. Poetry. Palgrave: Golden Treasury (First Series): Books
II and III, with special attention to Dryden, Collins, Gray, Cowper,
and Burns. Palgrave: Golden Treasury (First Series): Book IV,
with special attention to Wordsworth, Keats, and Shelley. Milton:
L'Allegro, II Penseroso, Comus, Lycidas. Pope: The Rape of the
Lock. Goldsmith: The Traveller and The Deserted Village. A col-
lection of English and Scottish ballads, as, for example, some Robin
Hood ballads. The Battle of Otterburn, King Estmere, Young Beichan,
Bewick and Grahame, Sir Patrick Spens, and a selection from later
ballads. Coleridge: The Ancient Mariner, Christabel, and Kubla
Khan. Byron: Childe Harold, Canto III or IV, and The Prisoner
of Chillon. Scott: The Lady of the Lake, Marmion. Macaulay: The
Lays of Ancient Rome, The Battle of Naseby, The Armada, Ivry.
Tennyson: The Princess, The Coming of Arthur, The Holy Grail,
Gareth and Lynette, Lancelot and Elaine, and The Passing of Arthur.
Browning: Cavalier Tunes, The Lost Leader, How they Brought the
Good News from Ghent to Aix, Home Thoughts from Abroad, Home
Thoughts from the Sea, Incident of the French Camp, Herve Riel,
Pheidippides, My Last Duchess, Up at a Villa Down in the City,
The Italian in England, The Patriot, The Pied Piper, "De Gustibus ,"
Instans Tyrannus, One Word More. Arnold: Sohrab and Rustum,
The Forsaken Merman, Balder Dead. Selections from American
poetry, with special attention to Bryant, Poe, Lowell, Longfellow,
Whittier, and Holmes. A collection of contemporary verse (about
150 pages).

B. STUDY

This part of the requirement is intended as a natural and logical
continuation of the student's earlier reading, with greater stress laid
upon form and style, the exact meaning of words and phrases, and the
understanding of allusions. The books provided for study are arranged
in four groups, from each of which one selection is to be made.

I. Drama. Shakespeare: Julius Caesar. Macbeth. Hamlet.

II. Poetry. Milton: L'Allegro, II Penseroso, and either Comus
or Lycidas. The Coming of Arthur, The Holy Grail, and the Passing
of Arthur. Selections from Book IV of Palgrave's Golden Treasury,
First Scries, with special attention to Wordsworth, Keats and Shelley.

III. Oratory. Burke: Speech on Conciliation with America.
Macaulay's Speech on Copyright. Washington's Farewell Address,
and Webster's First Bunker Hill Oration and Lincoln's Gettysburg
Address.

IV. Essays. Carlyle: Essays on Burns, with selections from
Burn's poems. Macaulay: Life of Johnson. Emerson: Essay on
Manners.

MATHEMATICS (Two and One-half Units)

Algebra (one and one-half units). Factors, common divisors and
multiples, fractions, simple equations with applications to problems,
involution and evolution, theory of exponents, surds and imaginarics,
quadratic equations (including the theory), systems involving quad-
ratic and higher equations, inequalities, ratio and proportion, varia-
tions, arithmetical and geometrical progressions, binomial theorem for
positive integral exponents.

22

At least two years with daily recitations should be given to alge-
bra. The use of graphical methods and illustrations, particularly in
connection with the solution of equations, is required.

Plane Geometry (one unit). The subject as presented by any
of the best text-books. Much attention must be paid to original
exercises.

At least one year with daily recitations should be given to
geometry. Recent review of subjects studied early in the preparatory
course is urged.

Solid Geometry (one-half unit). The subject as presented by any
of best text-books, and numerous original propositions and numerical
problems.

Trigonometry (one-half unit). This course should be preceded
by a short review course in algebra.

Students not pursuing the subject of mathematics in college will
be given credit for the above unit only by examination,

LATIN (Three Units)

Latin Grammar and Composition (one unit). A thorough knowl-
edge of all regular inflections, and the common irregular forms; the
simpler rules for composition and derivation of words; syntax of
nouns and verbs; structure of sentences, with special emphasis upon
relative and conditional sentences, indirect discourse, and the uses of
the subjunctive. Exercise in prose composition should be written
throughout the entire course of preparation. The student should be
able to write continuous prose of moderate difficulty based on Caesar
and Cicero.

Caesar (one unit). Gallic War, I-IV, or an equivalent amount of
Latin selected from the following: Caesar: Gallic War, and Civil
War; Nepos: Lives. Latin Composition.

Cicero (one unit). Seven orations, or six if the Manilian Law
be one. Preferred orations: the four against Catiline, for Archias,
and for the Alanilian Law. For a part of the orations, an equivalent
amount of Sallust, Catiline or Jugurthine War may be substituted.
Latin Composition.

Virgil (one unit). Aeneid, six books, or five books of the Acneid,
and selections equivalent in amount to one book of the Aeneid from
Ovid's Metamorphoses, or from the Eclogues. Special stress should
be laid upon the subject matter and literary structure of Books II,
IV, and VI. So much of prosody as is necessary for a correct reading
of the text by the quantitative method. Translation of poetry at sight.

HISTORY (One Unit)

For entrance in history each of the following four subjects is
counted as one unit. Each unit represents the amount of work which
can be covered in five recitations a week during one year, or in three
recitations a week during two years.

(a.) Greek History to the Death of Alexander, and Roman His-
tory to 800 A. D., or Ancient and Mediaeval History.

It is strongly urged that every student offer Greek and Roman
History for entrance.

(b.) Mediaeval and Modern European History, from 800 A. D. to
the present time, or Modern European History.

23

(c.) English History.

(d.) American History and Civics.

Of these four units the student must offer one unit, and may offer
two additional units. Based upon modern high school text-books.

It is strongly recommended that the preparation in history
include, besides the study of a text-book, parallel reading, use of
notebook, taking of notes, and practice in the filling in of outline
maps.

ELECTIVES (Five and One-half Units)

French (two units). The preparation for this requirement should
comprise:

Minor Requirement (two units)

1. A thorough knowledge of the rudiments of grammar, including
the essentials of syntax with mastery of the regular verbs and of at
least twenty-five irregular models.

2. Abundant exercises in prose composition.

3. Careful drill in pronunciation and practice conversation. It is
essential that the candidate acquire the ability to follow a recitation
conducted in French and to answer in that language questions asked
by the instructor.

4. The reading of at least three hundred duodecimo pages of
simple French from four authors.

Note. If the time given to the preparation is less than two years,
with four or five recitations a week, an examination will be required
even from students who present certificates from accredited schools.

Major Requirement (three units)

To meet this requirement the candidate must present the whole
minor requirement and, in addition, the following:

1. A thorough knowledge of French grammar and syntax.

2. Ability to translate a connected passage of English of mod-
erate difficulty into French at sight.

3. Ability to read any ordinary French.

4. Ability to understand a lecture given in French and to speak
correctly in French on topics bearing on every-day life, as well as the
ability to discuss the texts read.

5. The reading of at least seven hundred duodecimo pages from
as many as five authors.

Students are admitted to French 2 by examination only.

SPANISH

Minor Requirement (two units)

Hill and Ford's Spanish Grammar in full, or the equivalent in
grammar and prose composition, and the reading of at least three
hundred duodecimo pages. The work should comprise:

1. A thorough knowledge of the rudiments of grammar, including
the conjugation of regular and irregular verbs, the inflection of articles,
nouns, adjectives, and pronouns, and the elementary rules of syntax.

2. Exercise in prose composition.

3. Careful drill in pronunciation and practice in conversation.

4. Practice in translating Spanish into English and English into
Spanish.

24

Major Requirement (three units)

In addition to the minor requirement the candidate must present
the following:

1. A thorough knowledge of Spanish grammar and syntax.

2. Continued translation of Spanish into English and English
into Spanish.

3. Ability to read ordinary Spanish.

4. Ability to understand a lecture given in Spanish and to speak
correctly in Spanish.

5. The reading of about seven hundred duodecimo pages from
various authors,

GREEK (Two Units)

Elementary grammar, with special attention to forms and prac-
tice in prose composition. A first year book may be used. One unit.
Reading: Xenophon's Anabasis. First four books. One unit.

SCIENCE (Two Units)

Candidates wishing to offer any Science for entrance, must present
notebooks endorsed by the instructor under whose supervision the
work was done. Each unit presented should represent the work of
one year, and should include a large amount of individual laboratory

PHYSICS (One Unit)

The amount of work required is represented by such texts as Gage,
Milliken and Gale, or Hoadley. The laboratory work must include at
least thirty-five selected exercises.

CHEMISTRY (One Unit)

This course covers general inorganic chemistry, embracing a
study of non-metals and metals. Remsen, Williams, McPherson, and
Henderson are acceptable texts.

BIOLOGY (One Unit)

(a) Botany. This course should include the study of the general
laws of plant physiology, the fundamental principles of plant mor-
phology, the classification of phanerogams, and an investigation of
the typical plants of the chief divisions of the plant kingdom. The
laboratory work must occupy at least half of the time devoted to the
study. The work may be founded on such texts as Coulter, Bergen,
Stevens, or Leavitt. One-half unit.

(b) Zoology. Eighteen types representing the principal divisions
of the animal kingdom should be studied and the study of the living
animal should always precede dissection. The course embraces both
invertebrate and vertebrate forms. Davenport and Herrick are
recommended as texts. One-half unit.

GENERAL SCIENCE (One-half Unit)

A study of a modern text-book, as ElhufT or its equivalent, with
laboratory notebook endorsed by the instructor under whose super-
vision the course was given.

PHYSIOLOGY (One Unit, or One-half Unit)

A course based upon Martin's Human Body, or Foster and Shore.

25

REQUIREMENTS FOR DEGREES

The College confers two degrees, the A.B. and the B.S.,
the courses leading to which are indicated below.

The requirements for either degree call for a four years'
course.

The minimum work required for graduation is sixty session
hours, exclusive of laboratory work, and gymnasium.

The minimum year for a regular literary student in the
Freshman or Sophomore class is fifteen hours a week. (This
means fifteen recitation periods a week for thirty-six weeks, or
the equivalent, each one hour long). The maximum year for
Freshman or Sophomore students is eighteen hours a week ; with
one special, fifteen.

The minimum year for those in the Junior or Senior class
is fifteen hours a week, the maximum eighteen hours a week;
with one special, fifteen.

COLLEGIATE COURSES LEADING TO A.B. AND B.S.

FRESHMAN

Required Hours

English 3

Mathematics 4

Bible 2

Latin 3

Modern Language (any one) . . 3

Science (Freshman or Sopho-
more) 3

SOPHOMORE

Required Hours

English 3

Science (Sophomore or Junior) 3

History or Science 3

Bible 2

Modern Language 3

JUNIOR AND SENIOR YEARS

History, Philosophy 1, Bible 3 and Science, unless two
Sciences have already been completed, are required in the Junior
or Senior year. The remaining hours of work are to be made
up of the elective courses.

26

Electives
English 3 or 6 hours
Sociology 3 or 6 hours
Philosophy 3 or 6 hours
Science 3 or 6 hours
Latin 3 or 6 hours
French or Spanish 3 or 6 hours
Mathematics 3 or 6 hours
History 3 or 6 hours

History of Music and Art 1 or 2 hours
Harmony 1 or 2 hours
Bible 2 hours

SENIOR

Upon completing the work of the second year, students
select the line of their further study according to their special
aptitudes.

Before the beginning of the third year each student will be
expected to select a leading subject from the following: English,
English Literature, Latin, Greek, German, French, Philosophy,
History, Mathematics, Chemistry, Physics, Biolog>% or Soci-
ology. She will be required to complete nine hours of elective
courses in her leading subject. Other courses will be arranged
after conference with her adviser, the head of the department
in which she elects her principal work.

No College credit will be given for a first course in Modern
Language until the second course in that Language is completed.

27

COURSES OF INSTRUCTION

ASTRONOMY

Professor

Astronomy 1. Descriptive Astronomy Two Hours

This course deals largely with the descriptive phase of the subject
and is intended to give general information concerning celestial phe-
nomena. Methods of determining time, positions of stars, motions
of planets, etc., are fully discussed. A knowledge of trigonometry and
some knowledge of physics are prerequisite.

BIBLE

Professor Smith, M.
Bible 1. The Life of Christ Two Hours

A survey of the life of Christ in its historical relation; the appli-
cation to present day problems of the teachings of Jesus.

Texts: The Bible, Stevens and Burton's Harmony of the Gospels,
Burgess' Life of Christ.

Collateral Reading: Stalker's Life of Christ; Speer's The Man
Christ Jesus, and various reference works. Maps, notebooks, papers.

Bible 2a. The Apostolic Age Two Hours, First Term

The origin and expansion of early Christianity. A study of the
Book of Acts, the Epistles, and of Revelation. Reference work,
papers, maps.

Texts: Gilbert's Apostolic Age, the Bible.

Collateral: Stalker's Life of Paul, Robinson's Paul, and other
works.
Bible 2b. Progress of the Christian Church. .Two Hours, Second Term

This course will include a study of the development of the Church
from Apostolic times. Christian Evidences, and Christian Missions.

Texts: Walker's Great Men of the Christian Church, Candler's
Evidences, and books on the development of Christian Missions.
Reference work, papers.

Bible 3. Hebrew History Two Hours

A survey of the origin and development of the Hebrew race ; of the
origin and growth of the Missianic hope. The prophets are studied in
relation to their respective historic backgrounds.

Texts : Sander's History of the Hebrews ; Bailey and Kent's History
of the Hebrew Commonwealth.

Collateral readings, papers, maps.

Bible 4a. Literature of the Bible Two Hours, First Term

A consideration of the literary elements of the Bible lyric, epic,

story, idyl, oration, history. Also a study of the wisdom literature and

of apocalyptic writings.

Texts : Moulton's Introduction to the Literature of the Bible.

Bible 4b. History of Religion Two Tours, Second Term

A survey of the origin, spread, and decay of ancient religions; their
influence on society; the claim of Christianity as the only universal
religion.

*To be announced shortly.

28

Texts : Menzies' History of Religion.

Collateral: Barton's The Religions of the World, Specr's Light of
the World.

Bible 5. Religious Education Two Hours

The religious development of the child, teacher training and methods
for Sunday School work, the organized Sunday School and its adminis-
tration.

BIOLOGY
Professor Prescott

Biology 1. General Biology Three Hours

A study of the general laws of life and the fundamental relationship
of living things. The principal facts of the structure and functions of
typical plants and animals are given, together with a discussion of general
biological problems.

Six hours a week devoted to lectures, laboratory and field work.

Biology 2. Botany Three Hours

The structure, physiology, and genetic relations of plants.
Six hours of recitation, lectures and laboratory work a week. Biology
1 is prerequisite.

Biology 3. Zoology Three Hours

A comparative study of animal types, both invertebrates and verte-
brates.

Six hours of recitation, lectures, and laboratory work a week.
Biology 1 is prerequisite.

Biology 4. Human Physiology and Hygiene Three Hours

Open to students who have had Biology I. Recitations, laboratory
work and lectures on the normal activities of the human body, including
digestion, circulation, assimilation, metabolism, excretion, respiration, mus-
cular contraction, body heat and nervous system.

CHEMISTRY

Professor Prescott
Chemistry \. Inorganic Chemistry Three Hours

A study in theoretical and descriptive chemistry as illustrated by non-
metals and metals. Especial attention is given to the demonstration of
fundamental principles and the practical applications of the subject.

Two lectures and one three-hour laboratory period weekly.

Chemistry 2. Quantitative and Qualitative Analysis Three Hours

For the detection of metals, mineral and common organic acids,

developed from the vantage points of ionization, equilibrium and mass

action. A few of the most important gravimetric and volumetric methods

of analysis are selected for study.

Three two-hour periods a week for recitations, lectures, and laboratory

work.

Prerequisite: Chemistry I.

Chemistry 3. Applied Chemistry Three Hours

A course dealing with the more important applications of organic and
inorganic chemistry to manufacturing purposes and in the home.
Two recitations and one three-hour laboratory period a week.
Prerequisite: Chemistry L

. 29

Chemistry 4. Organic Chemistry Four Hours

The study and preparation of the typical compounds of carbon and
their more important derivatives.

Three lectures and one three-hour laboratory period a w^eek.
Prerequisite : Chemistry 1.

Chemistry 5. Theoretical Chemistry Three Hours

The subject is presented from a theoretical and physical-chemical
viewpoint.

Two lectures and one three-hour laboratory period a week.
Prerequisite: Chemistry 1.

EDUCATION

Professor Bradfield
Education 1. History of Education Three Hours, First Term

A survey of important ancient educational systems and a full treat-
ment of the modern systems of education with emphasis on the permanent
factors in the present educational theory.

Elective.

Education 2. Pedagogy Three Hours, Second Term

A course in the principles and practice of teaching and the art of
study.

Elective.

Education 3. School Alanagement Three Hours, First Term

A study of general principles of school management organization,

administration, methods of supervision, and management of the public
schools.

Elective.

Education 4. Observation and Practice Teaching,

Three Hours, Second Term

Observation work. Through the courtesy of the superintendent of
the schools of LaGrange, the classes in Pedagogy do observation work in
the city public school.

Practice teaching. Actual work in the class room with the pupils is
the purpose of this course. All work is done under the strict supervision
of the head of the Pedagogy Department. Fifty-six hours of observation
and practice teaching are required.

Education 5. Child Study .Three Hours, First Term

This course is a specific study of the development of the mental
processes of childhood.
Elective.

ENGLISH

Professor Low man

English 1. Language and Composition Three Hours

Foundation course in English Composition.

1. A study of style, diction, the sentence, the paragraph. Weekly
themes. 2. The composition as a whole, with particular attention to
description, narration, exposition, and argumentation. Weekly themes and
term paper.

Required for either degree.

30

English 2. The Essay and the Short Story Three Hours

1. A rapid review of the Hterary types, followed by a study of struc-
ture and practice in the writing of the essay. Collateral readings and
term essay required. 2. The short story: problems of narrative structure;
types of the short story, organization of material, construction and criti-
cism of plots. Collateral reading and term short story required.

English 1 and English Literature 1 are prerequisites of this course.

English 3. History of the English Language Three Hours

1. Origin and structure of the English language in vocabulary, gram-
matical inflections, and syntax as the basis of modern usage. Reading
of extracts from Old English prose and poetry. 2. Chaucer.

Open to Juniors and Seniors.

ENGLISH LITERATURE

Professor Lowman
English Literature 1. General Survey Course Three Hours

Study and criticism of representative writers of the different periods
of English literature. Careful study of the development of literary forms.
Considerable parallel reading and frequent written reports are required.

Open to students who have completed English 1.

English Literature 2. American Literature Three Hours

Not an introductor}^ course, but a more intensive study of American
authors. Parallel reading and frequent written reports required.
English 1 and English Literature 1 are prerequisites.

English Literature 3. Shakespeare Two Hours

All of Shakespeare's plays are read. A critical study is made of
structure, plot, and delineation of character, with especial attention to
Shakespeare's development as a dramatist. Notebook and theme work.
Three hours' credit.

English 1 and English Literature 1 or 2 are prerequisites.

English Literature 4. Development of Prose Fiction. . .Three Hours

A study of English prose fiction from the first prose romance to the
modern novel. Critical study of representative novels. Notebook and
theme work.

Open to students who have had English 1 and English Literature 1.

English Literature 5. English Poetry of the Nineteenth Century,

Three Hours

This course considers the work of the Georgian and Victorian poets.
Especial study is given to Wordsworth and Coleridge, Keats and Shelley,
Tennyson and Browning, Scott, Landor, Byron, Clough, Arnold, and
others.

Open to students who have completed English 1 and English Litera-
ture 1.

English Literature 6. The Drama Three Hours

1. The Elizabethan drama. 2. The modern drama.
English 1 and English Literature 1 are prerequisite.

31

FRENCH

Professor Broome
French 1. Elementary French Three Hours

Elements of grammar, simple exercises in composition, reading of
easy prose, common idioms, constant oral practice.
Open to all undergraduates.

French 2. Intermediate Course Three Hours

Review of grammar, drill on idioms, oral reports and summaries,
selected readings from modern authors.
Prerequisite : French 1.

French 3. General Survey of French Literature Two Hours

Outline history of French literature, selections from representative
writers, original themes, collateral reading.

This course is to be accompanied by French 4.
Prerequisite: French 2.

French 4. Advanced French Composition One Hour

This course is to be accompanied by French 3.
Prerequisite: French 2.

French 5. French Drama of the Seventeenth Century. . .Three Hours

A study of the drama as represented by Corneille, Racine and Moliere.
Prerequisite : French 3 and French 4.

French 6. The Nineteenth Century in French Literature. .Three Hours

A study of the principal poets, essayists, and novelists of the nine-
teenth century; extensive reading of the representative works.
Prerequisite : French 3 and French 4.

GEOLOGY

Professor *

Geology 1. General Geology Three Hours

Fundamental principles of geology, including a general discussion of
dynamical, structural, physiographical, and historical geology, with prac-
tical work in the laboratory and excursions in the field.

Two recitations and one three-hour laboratory period.

Prerequisite : Chemistry 1 and trigonometry.

GREEK

Professor Smith, M.
Greek 1. Elementary Greek Three Hours

First Greek Book, selections from Attic prose writers, prose compo-
sition.

This course is open to all who have not offered it for entrance. It
may be counted toward the A.B. degree if the candidate has presented
Latin and one modern language for entrance.

Greek 2. Xenophon and the Book of Mark Three Hours

Texts: Xenophon's Anabasis, Books I-IV; Pearson's Prose Com-
position, The Gospel of Mark by Drew.

*To be announced shortly.

32

Greek 3a. Homer Three Hours, First Term

Iliad, Books I-VI ; selections, Homerice construction, forms and
prosody.

Greek 3b. Plato Three Hours, Second Term

Plato's Apology, Crito, and selections from the Phaedo (Kitchel).

Greek 4. New Testament Greek One Hour

Texts : Burton's New Testament Aloods and Tenses.
Prerequisite: Greek 1.

HISTORY

Professor Bradfield
History 1. Mediaeval and Modern European History. ,. .Three Hours

This course includes a survey of the period between 375 and 1815,
and is the foundation for further study of history.
A prerequisite for all other courses in history.

History 2a. Modern Europe Three Hours

A study of the constitutional development of Western Europe from
1815 to the present time. This course covers the internal organization
and problems of each leading nation, emphasizing the conflicting national
aspirations, colonial rivalries, and militaristic and imperialistic programs.
Considerable attention is given to the social and economic conditions of
the period.

The World War and Reconstruction.

Open to Sophomores,

History 3. The Making of Modern England Three Hours

The political, social, and economic development of England from
1066 to the present date. Especial attention is given to the literary his-
tory of the period studied.

Elective.

History 4a. History of the United States from 1492 to 1800,

Three Hours, First Term

This course is divided into three parts : Discovery and Colonization,
Revolutionary History, and the Adoption of the Constitution,

Open to Juniors and Seniors.

History 4b. History of the United States from 1800 to the present time,

Three Hours, Second Term

This course treats of slavery and its conditions, reconstruction, and
America as a world power, with emphasis on the Monroe Doctrine in
recent world politics.

Open to Juniors and Seniors.

Elective.

History 5a. Greek History Three Hours, First Term

A survey of the political history of the Greek states; studies of the
activities of Greek civilization, based upon reading in translation of
Greek historians, orators, philosophers and poets.

Credit: One and one-half hours.

History 5b. Roman History Three Hours, Second Term

A study of the political and institutional development of the Roman

state, based upon reading in translation of ancient Greek writers.
Credit: One and one-half hours.

23

History 6a. Political History Three Hours, First Term

Municipal government. A study of the development of the institutions
from ancient times, with emphasis given to our government. Municipal
lower rule, popular participation in city government, municipal legisla-
tion, public courts, and finance are among the topics treated.

Elective.

History 6b. Citizenship and Parliamentary Law,

Three Hours, Second Term

A brief course in citizenship and parliamentary law. A summary of

the most vital things needed by those who will take part in government.

History 7. Contemporary History One Hour

This course is planned to present the most important problems of
the times. Newspapers, magazines, and all other current sources of in-
formation are used for discussion of present day questions and conditions.

Credit : One hour.

LATIN

Professor MacFarlane
Latin la Three Hours, First Term

Prose authors; Cicero's De Amicitia or De Senectute ; Sallust's
Catiline.

Latin lb Three Hours, Second Term

Latin poets ; selections from Metamorphoses of Ovid ; Odes and
Epodes of Horace; Latin prose.

Collateral reading: Roman and Grecian Mythology.

Latin 2 Three Hours

Tacitus Agricola; Pliny's Letters; Horace's Satires and Epistles.

Latin 3 Three Hours

(a) Short Stories.

(b) Selected Plays.

Latin 4. Review for Prospective Teachers One Hour

Discussion of methods of teaching vocabulary, paradigms, syntax,
translation, and composition. Discussion of points to be emphasized in
the four years of high school.

Credit : One hour.

Open to those who have had Latin 1 and Latin 2.

MATHEMATICS

Professor MacFarlane

Mathematics 1 Four Hours

(a) Advanced Algebra.

Beginning with a fuller treatment of ratio, proportion, variation,
the three progressions, surds and imaginaries than is usually given in
the preparatory schools, this class will take up in order the theory of
quadratic equations, permutations and combinations, binomial theorem,
logarithms, series, undetermined coefficients, probability, determinants,
and the theory of equations.

(b) Solid Geometry.

34

Lines and planes in space, dihedral and polyhedral angles, projec-
tions, polyhedra, including prisms, pyramids, and the regular solids, cyl-
inders, cones, spheres, spherical triangles, and the measurement of sur-
faces and solids.

(c) Plane Trigonometry.

A careful study of the properties of right and ol)lique triangles and
their solution; trigonometric analysis.

Mathematics 2. Analytic Geometry Three Hours

The straight line, circle, parabola, ellipse, hyperbola, the general
equation of the second degree.

^Iathematics 3. Differential and Integral Calculus Three Hours ^

A study of the elementary principles and applications of the calculus.

PHILOSOPHY

Professor Bradfield
Philosophy \. Psychology Three Hours

Introductory Psychology. This course treats of the general prin-
ciples of psychology. Its purpose is to furnish the student with some
fundamental ideas of mind as part of a general education.

Text : Pillsbury's Elements of Psychology.

Philosophy 2a. Ethics Three Hours, First Term

A study of the evolution of morality and the theories derived from
it, with special reference to their practical application both in private
and in public life.

Philosophy 2b. Logic Three Hours, Second Term

Deductive and inductive reasoning, especial attention being given to
the methods of science.

Philosophy 3a. History of Philosophy Three Hours, First Term

The aim of this course is to present the history of thought from

the earliest philosophers of Greece to the beginning of the modern

period. A careful study is made of the sources, and emphasis is placed

on the writings of Plato and Aristotle.
Credit : One hour and a half.

Philosophy 3b. History of Modern Philosophy,

Three Hours, Second Term
Emphasis is placed on the problems of philosophy as presented in
modern philosophical thought. This course is a basis for comprehending
the Kantian and post-Kantian movements.

PHYSICS

Physics 1. General Physics Three Hours

A study of mechanics, sound, heat, electricity and magnetism.

Two lectures and one three-hour laboratory period a week. Value :

Three hours.

Physics 2. Mechanics, Molecular I^hysics, and Heat,

Three Hours, First Term

Machines, liquids and gases, thermometry, properties of vapors and
gases, transmission of heat, the steam engine.

Two lectures and one three-hour laboratory period a week. Value :
One and one-half hours.

Prerequisite: Physics 1.

35

Physics 3. Electricity, Sound and Light. . .Three Hours, Second Term

Magnetic and electric fields of force, the study and use of instru-
ments for the measurement of current, potential difference and resist-
ance, electro-magnetic induction. Resonance, interference of sounds,
musical instruments. Phenomena of dispersion, interference, diffraction,
and polarization of light.

Two lectures and one three-hour laboratory period a week. Value :
One and one-half hours.

Prerequisite : Physics 1.

SOCIOLOGY

Professor Smith, M.

Sociology 1. Principles of Economics Three Hours

This course deals with the rise of modern industry and its expansion
in the United States ; production, distribution, and consumption ; value,
price, and the monetary system of the United States; tariff, labor move-
ment, natural and legal monopolies. American railroads, and trusts; eco-
nomic reform; government expenditures and revenues; taxation and
economic progress.

Elective.

Sociology 2. Introduction to Social Science Three Hours

The first part of this course is a brief study of the nature of
society and of the various theories of sociolog>\ The last half of
the course deals with the family, crime, immigration, the negro, charities.

Wide collateral reading is required; also theme work and visits
to local institutions.

Open to Juniors and Seniors.

Sociology 3. Labor and Industrial Problems. .Three Hours, First Term

A history of organized labor and modern labor movements ; boycotts,
strikes, injunctions, the sweating system, woman and child labor; wages,
hours of labor, sanitary and safety devices.

Elective.

Sociology 4. Money and Banking Three Hours, Second Term

The history and principles of money, evolution of the gold and silver
standards, bills of credit, greenbacks. Confederate currency, financial
panics, growth and development of the banking systems of America,
Canada, Scotland, England, Germany and France, and the practical dis-
cussions of financial investments. The theory and practice of taxation
is taken up, also public finance with special reference to the United
States.

SPANISH

Professor Broome

Spanish 1. Elementary Course .Three Hours

Fundamental principles of grammar; composition; easy reading; oral
reports and conversation.

Open to all undergraduates.

Spanish 2. Intermediate Course Three Hours

Continued study of grammar; composition; special study of idioms;
reading; oral and written summaries and reports.
Prerequisite: Spanish 1.

36

Spanish 3. Advanced Course Three Hours

Conducted in Spanish. History, civiHzation, and Hterature of Latin
America; current periodicals and Bulletin of Pan-American Union; col-
lateral reading-.

Prerequisite: Spanish 2.

ART

Miss Matney

The classes in Free-Hand Drawing are free of charge to all students
connected with the institution, and are reciuired of all students.

Courses in China Painting and Arts and Crafts are open to students
who do not wish to pursue the course leading to a diploma in art.

Course of Study in the Art Department

First Year. Drawing in charcoal, block, hands, feet, fruit, leaf,
geometrical forms from casts. Still-life groups, and simple fruit
studies from nature in charcoal.

Second and Third Years. In charcoal, hands, feet and heads from
casts. Still-life studies, copies after the best artists, and studies from
nature in crayon, oil, water colors, and pastel. Sketches in pen
and ink.

Fourth and Fifth Years. Studies from nature in oil, water colors,
and pastel. Flower studies from nature.

Sixth Year. Oil, water colors, and pastel portraits from life.
Water colors and oil copies from the best fac-similes.

CERTIFICATES AND DIPLOMAS

Required for Certificate: The above course in art completed
through the fourth year, four years accredited high school. Nine
hours of literary work a week must be done in residence.

Required for Diploma: The completion of entire course in art,
four years of accredited high school. Nine hours of college literary
work a week must be done in residence.

EXPRESSION

XIiss Potter

The study of Expression is not merely a training for the plat-
form. It is a training for life, and seeks to awaken the student to
the highest possibilities of mind, body and soul. Attention is given
to the harmonious training of the mind, the voice, and the body,
developing the mental action and training the voice and body to
respond spontaneously to the conceptions of the mind and the emo-
tions of the soul.

First Year. Responsiveness; problem reading; fundamentals of
training criticism story-telling; lyric; narrative and descriptive studies
of vocal expression; dramatic rehearsal; harmonic gymnastics; normal
adjustments.

' Text-Books: 'Curry's Foundations for Vocal Expression; Curry's
Classics for Vocal Expression.

Second Year. Qualities of voice-resonance; development of
imagination; literature, the drama and studies from standard writers;
Bible readings; dramatic rehearsal; comedy; criticism; original work

37

in arranging short stories for reading; public speaking; harmonic
gymnastics pantomimic problems.

Text-Books: Curry's Imagination and Dramatic Instinct; Curry's
Classics for Vocal Expression.

Third Year. Qualities of voice emission; dramatic rehearsal;
vocal interpretation of the Bible; platform art; life sketches; mono-
logues; impersonations; extemporaneous speaking.

Text-Books: Curry's Browning and the Dramatic Monologue;
Curry's Vocal and Literary Interpretation of the Bible.

Required for Diploma: Candidates for diploma must present three
years' work in expression, and must give a full evening in public
recital.

Literary Requirements: Four years' accredited high school, three
years of college English, one of history, two of French, and two of
Bible, and one other elective.

PHYSICAL EDUCATION

Miss Potter, Director

It has long been an accepted fact that mental states are directly
influenced by one's physical condition. Hence, an educational insti-
tution cannot furnish efficient, systematic development for the mem-
bers of its student body unless it makes adequate provision for
physical training and the study of personal hygiene. There is an
acknowledged tendency on the part of many young women to take
too little exercise. Round shoulders are all too prevalent. Lowered
muscular tone, and control of the nervous system are danger signals
of impending ills and disorder. Accordingly, the purpose of this
department is to acquire by systematic exercise the co-ordination
of the mind and body, and to overcome by corrective gymnastics
any physical defective conditions of the body.

Before taking active work in the gymnasium every student is
given a careful medical and physical examination by the college
physician and the physical director.

Two hours a week is required of every student unless she is
pronounced physically unfit by the examining physicians.

(N. B.) Two years work in physical education is counted as one
college unit.

The courses ofTered in physical training are:

I. Personal Hygiene (required of all new students). This course
includes a series of lectures and practical talks.

II. Gymnastics: Required of all first-year students. Swedish
gymnastics progressing from free-standing to heavy apparatus, such
as rings, ropes, ladders, bars, etc.; rhythmical movements of the body,
aesthetic drills, marching tactics, and hiking.

HI. Gymnastics: Required of students who have completed
Course II. A continuation of the first year's work.

IV. Normal Course in Gymnastics: A course offered largely for
seniors specializing in pedagogy and expression.

Once a week throughout the year.

This course covers a wide range of adaptability, both for the
directing of physical education in public schools, and for the chil-
dren's playground.

38

HOME ECONOMICS

Miss Trekn

1. Home-Maker's Course. 1. The principles of household man-
agement, including work in purchasing, preparing and serving simple
foods; household sanitation and household chemistry. One hour a
week, first semester.

2. This course is designed to give general knowledge of plain
sewing by hand and machine, the repairing and care of clothing,
darning, patching, simple embroidery stitches. Various articles are
made. One hour a week, second semester.

II. Domestic Science. 1. General methods of food preparation;
equipment, location, plan, and furnishing of kitchen. Utensils and their
care; fuels; general food value; the preparation of the following
groups of foods: Beverages, soups, quick breads and yeast breads,
fruits and vegetables, eggs, milk and cheese, meats, fish, and simple
cake. Text-book: Kinne and Cooley's Foods and Household Man-
agement. Three hours a week throughout the year.

2. Preservation of foods; preparation of salads, meats, desserts,
candies, pastries, cake making. Attention is paid to the planning of
menus with thought as to the nutritive value, proper selection, com-
bination, and cost. Special emphasis is given to table service. Text-
book: Greer's Text-book of Cooking. Three hours a w^eek throughout
the year.

III. Domestic Art. 1. Hand Sewing. Fundamental stitches ap-
plied to a suit of underclothes, household linens, and a dress. Study
of the textile fibres, home-decoration, and house furnishings. Text-
book: Kinne and Cooley's Shelter and Clothing. Four hours a week
throughout the year.

2. Garment Making. Hand and machine sewing. A study of
commercial patterns, their uses and alterations. Making of fine
lingerie, waists, and several dresses of cotton or linen. Guide-book:
Clothing for Women, L. I. Baldt. Four hours a week throughout
the year.

3. Advanced Dressmaking. Drafting of simple patterns; dress
trimmings; costume designs; making of various garments. Each stu-
dent makes two or more garments for small children. Four hours
a week throughout the year.

IV. Hygiene. 1. Personal Hygiene. This course deals with the
subjects of muscular exercise, food and eating, fresh air and vocal
organs, the skin, bathing and clothing, hygiene of the special senses,
nervous system, daily living regimes as to work, study, recreation,
mental habits, etc. Three hours a week, first semester. Open to
Juniors. Prerequisite: Anatomy and Physiology.

2. Educational Hygiene. The range of subjects dealt with in this
course is broad. It treats of methods of safeguarding civic health
and maintaining sanitary surroundings. Epidemics, infection, quaran-
tine. Proper construction, furnishing, heating, lighting, and ventila-
tion of school buildings. Use and necessity of play grounds. The
health of school children and teachers. Diseases caused by school
life. Mal-nutrition. Medical and dental inspection of schools. Instruc-
tion in simple emergencies and first aid. Three hours a week, second
semester.

Required for Certificate of Graduation: Candidates for Certificate
of graduation in home economics must complete the following course

of study:

39

First Year. Freshman: English, three hours; modern language,
three hours; mathematics, three hours; chemistry, three hours;
domestic science, three hours; domestic art, four hours; free-hand
drawing, one hour.

Second Year. Sophomore: English, three hours; biology, three
hours; Bible, three hours; modern language, three hours; domestic
science, three hours; domestic art, four hours; free-hand drawing,
one hour.

Third Year. Junior: English, three hours; household chemistry,
three hours; modern language, three hours; domestic science, three
hours; domestic art, four hours.

Note 1 : All pupils registering for domestic science must provide
themselves with two plain long white aprons, and two white caps.

Note 2: One- half credit up to six hours is allowed on domestic art
and domestic science each, for B. S. degree only.

SECRETARIAL COURSE

Mrs. Bradfield

A course in typewriting and stenography.

Entrance requirements : Same as for conditioned Freshman.

Students who take this course must give satisfactory evidence of
possessing a good foundational preparation in all the grammar school
subjects and a general fitness for holding secretarial positions.

No college credit is given for this course.

MUSIC DEPARTMENT

Alwyn M. Smith, Director

This department offers thorough courses in voice, piano, pipe-organ,
violin, sight-singing, sight-reading (piano), theory of music, including
harmony, counterpoint, and history of music.

Semi-monthly recitals in music give training for public work. The
courses of theory and sight-singing are deemed essential to an intelligent
comprehension of voice culture, piano, pipe-organ, or violin.

THEORY

A. M. Smith, Misses Gane, Bodman, and ^Mrs. Hobart

Course of Study

First Grade. Notation, rudimentary principles. Scales, signatures,
intervals, etc. Written exercises adapted to pupil.

Second Grade. Drills in signatures, scales, intervals, etc. Thor-
ough bass. Marks of expression. Written exercises adapted to pupil.

Third Grade. Emery's Elements of Harmony. Emery's Addi-
tional Exercises. Original modulations.

Fourth Grade. Emery's Elements of Harmony with Additional
Exercises continued. Original modulations.

Fifth Grade. Emery's Elements of Harmony completed. Jadas-
sohn's Harmony. Double chants, chorals. Harmonizing melodies.
Acoustics.

Sixth Grade. Bride's Simple and Double Counterpoint. Jadas-
sohn's Counterpoint. Figuration. Simple composition in rondo form.

40

HISTORY OF MUSIC

A. M. Smith

Course of Study

First Year. Lessons in Musical History (Fillmore), with outlines
and sketches.

Second Year. The Great German Composers (Crowest). Bio-
graphical sketches of each composer. History of Music (Gantvoort).

PIANO

Misses Bodman, Gane, Mrs. Hobart

Course of Study

First Grade. Bichl's Technical Exercises. Kochler, op. 249, Vols.
I., n. Duvernoy, op. 176.

Second Grade. Biehl's Technical Exercises. Bertini, op. 100.
Duvernoy, op. 120. Czerny, op. 821. Lemoine, op. Zl . Diabelli's,
Lichner's and dementi's Sonatinas.

Third Grade. Biehl's Technical Exercises. Beren's, op. 61. Ber-
tini, op. 29, 32. Czerny, op. 636. Bach's Preparatory Studies. Heller,
op. 45, 47. Schumann, op. 68. Classic and modern sonatinas. Smaller
works of good composers.

Fourth Grade. Bcringer's Technical vStudies. Czern}-, op. 299,
740. Cramer's Fifty Selected Studies. Loeschorn, op. 66. Bach's
Inventions, Preludes, and Easy Fugues. Chopin's Waltzes. Mendels-
sohn's Songs Without Words. Mozart's, dementi's, Beethoven's
Sonatas. Selected Solos.

Fifth Grade. Tausig-Ehrlich's Exercises. Clementi's Gradus ad
Parnassum (Tausig). Kullak's Octave Studies, Bk. II. Bach's Well
Tempered Clavichord. Jensen, op. 7i2. Seeling's Concert Etudes.
Beethoven's, Haydn's, Schubert's Sonatas. Chopin's Polonaises,
Nocturnes. Selections from modern composers.

Sixth Grade. Tausig-Ehrlich's Exercises. Chopin, op. 10, 25.
Bach's Suite Anglaise. Reinccke, op. 121. Mendelssohn, op. 104. Con-
certos of Hummel, Weber, Schumann, Field. Pieces by Raff, Jensen,
Moszkowsk'i, Weber, Schumann, Grieg, Liszt, Chopin, MacDowell,
and others.

ORGAN

Miss Gane

Course of Study

First Grade. Rittcr's Organ School. Schneider's Pedal Studies,
Bk. I., II. Easy pieces by European and American composers.

Second Grade. Extempore playing begun. Accompaniments for
Congregational Singing. Bach's Preludes and Fugues, Vol. I., II.
H. R. Shelley's Modern Organist.

Third Grade. Extempore playing. Accompaniments for chorus
and solo singing. Mendelssohn's Preludes and Sonatas. Schumann's
Fugues ueber B. A. C. H. Selections from Reinberger, Piutti, Richter,
Guilmant, Rossini, Raff, Gounod, Schubert.

41

Fourth Grade. Thomas' Etudes. Bach's Masterpieces. Eddy,
Church and Concert Organist. Concert pieces from Buck, Wagner,
Schumann, Guilmant, Flagler, Sonatas of Reinberger, Lemmens,
Rittcr.

VIOLIN

Mrs. Hobart

Course of Study

First Grade. Schools: Gruenberg, Dancla, de Beriot, Sevcik.
Easy Major Scales. Solos: Sitt, Gabrielli, Bohm, Reinecke, Wohlfahrt.

Second Grade. Scales, major and minor keys, Gruenberg. Etudes:
Meerts, Kayser (Book I.), Sitt, Winternitz (Book I.) Solos: Papini,
Huber, Schill, Dancla. Sonatinas, Hauptmann.

Third Grade. Scales and arpeggios, Gruenberg; Foundation
Studies, Gruenberg; Velocity Exercises, Sevcik; Bowing Exercises,
Casorti, Study of first three positions. Etudes: de Beriot, Winternitz
(Book II.), Kayser (Book II.), Ries, op. 28. Easy double stopping.
Concertinos: Seitz, op. 22, Sitt, Huber.

Fourth Grade. Scales and bowing exercises, Schradieck. Third
to seventh positions. Etudes: Dont, Kayser (Book III.), Mazas (Book
I.), Meerts. Sonatas: Corelli, op. 5, Dancla. Concertos: Accolay,
Seitz.

Fifth Grade. Scales, bowing exercises, Massart; Trill studies,
Sevcik; Mazas (Book II.); Leonard, op. 21; Kruetzer. Solos: Becher,
Bach, Godard, Hubay, Brahms. Sonatas: Haydn, Haendel, Mozart.
Concertos: Rode, Viotti.

Sixth Grade. Difficult double stopping and bowing exercises,
Sevcik, Schradieck, Etudes: Fiorillo, Rode. Concertos: Viotti, Mozart,
Kruetzer, Bruch. Selections from Bach Sonatas for violin alone.

SIGHT-SINGING

Every pupil in the institution has the advantage of a thorough
course in vocal music, enabling her, without the aid of an instru-
ment, to sing ordinary music at sight. Pupils taking this course in
sight-singing make more rapid and intelligent progress in voice as
well as in instrumental music. The aim of this department is to
develop among our pupils a musical taste and ability. Sight-singing,
fundamental principles, glees, church music, choruses, as well as
harmony, are taught daily except Thursday.

Course of Study in Sight-Singing

First Grade. First and Second Reader (Educational Music
Course). Notation. Major Scales, Ear training. Drills in intervals.
Music Dictation. Two-part singing. Selected glees.

Second Grade. Third and Fourth Reader (Educational Music
Course). Major and Minor Scales. Accidentals. Modulation. Musical
Dictation. Three-part singing. Selected glees and choruses.

Third Grade. Fifth and Sixth Reader (Educational Music
Course). Choruses selected from standard operas and oratorios.
Church music. Four-part singing.

42

VOICE

Alwyn Smith, Director

Course of Study

First Grade. Technical exercises adapted to pupil. Conconc's 30
Lessons. Bonoldi's Exercises. Panofka's A. B. C.

Second Grade. Breathing and technical exercises. Marchesi,
op. 1. Concone's 50 Lessons. Panofka, op. 85. Simple solos.

Third Grade. Breathing and technical exercises. Concone's 25
Lessons. Vaccai's Italian Method. Marchesi, op. 15. Italian pro-
nunciation. Selected songs.

Fourth Grade. Breathing and technical exercises. Marchesi, op.
21, 32. Panofka, op. 81. Conconc, op. 17. Arias, selections from oratorio,
concert singing. English, Italian and German songs.

Fifth Grade. Breathing and technical exercises. Preparatory
exercises for trill. Bordogni's 36 Vocalises. Concone, op. 12. Lam-
perti's Exercises. Concert singing. Study of aria, recitative and
cavatina. Operatic selections in English, Italian and German.

REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTIFICATES AND DIPLOMAS
IN THE DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC

Certificate in Piano:

Fourth Grade Theory (Harmony).

First Year History of Music.

Prima Vista.

Fourth Grade Piano.

First Year Sight-Singing.

Four Numbers in Public Recital.

Certificate in Voice:

Fourth Grade Theory (Harmony).
First Year History of Music.
Four Numbers in Public Recital.
Fourth Grade Voice.
First Year Sight-Singing.

Diploma in Piano:

Fifth Grade Theory.

Second Year History of Music.

Prima Vista (at least two years).

Sixth Grade Piano.

Sight-Singing (at least two years).

Three Numbers, one to be a concerto, in Public Recital.

Diploma in Voice:

Sight-Singing (at least two years).

Fifth Grade Voice.

Four Numbers in Public Recital.

Second Year History of Music.

Fifth Grade Theory (Second Year Harmony).

43

Certificate in Violin:

Fourth Grade Theory (Harmony).

First Year History of Music.

Sight-Singing.

Prima Vista (Violin).

One- Year Orchestra.

Four Numbers in Public Recital.

Fourth Grade Violin.

Diploma in Violin:

Fifth Grade Theory (Harmony).

Second Year History of Music.

Prima Vista (Violin).

Two-Year Orchestra.

Fourth Grade Piano.

Sixth Grade Violin.

Second Year Sight-Singing.

Three Numbers, one a Concerto, in Public Reci'al.

Certificate in Organ:

Fourth Grade Theory (Harmony).

First Year History of Music.

Fourth Grade Piano.

First Year Sight-Singing.

Third Grade Organ.

Four Numbers in Public Recital.

Prima Vista (Piano).

Diploma in Organ:

Fifth Grade Theory (Second Year Harmony).
Second Year History of Music.
Prima Vista (Piano).
Second Year Sight-Singing.

Three Numbers in Public Recital, one a Bach number of heaviei
class.

Literary Requirements for all Certificates and Diplomas in the
Department of Music: High school entrance units. Nine hours of
literary work a week each year, subjects to be selected from Freshman
and Sophomore courses.

THE CERTIFICATE AND DIPLOMA RECITALS MAY NOT
BOTH BE GIVEN IN THE SAME YEAR.

Every boarding student must take nine hours of literary work a
week with one special, or six hours a week with two specials.

Students cannot receive Certificates and Diplomas for less than one
year of work done in residence. Before Diplomas are given, both Certifi-
cate and Diploma Recitals are given.

44

ACADEMY

LaGrange Collec:e maintains two high school grades, equivalent to
the tenth and eleventh grades of the accredited high schools.

ENGLISH

English 3a. A stud}' of the forms of discourse; practical work
in the main principles of style. Daily themes. A study of classics
required for college entrance. Three hours a week.

English 4a. An introductory course to the study of American
literature. Monthly themes. Three hours a week.

LATIN

Latin 3a. Cicero's Four Orations against Catiline, The ]Mani]ian
Law and Archias. Latin Prose (based on Cicero). Three hours a
week.

Latin 4a. Virgil's ^neid. Books L-VL Latin Prose. Three hours
a week.

FRENCH

French 3a. Elementary principles of grammar; easy reading;
constant oral practice. Three hours a week.

French 4a. Grammar complete with special study of verbs;
about 250 pages of reading. Three hours a week.

HISTORY

History 3a. Mediaeval and modern history. Three hours a week.
History 4a. American history and civics. Three hours a week.

MATHEMATICS

Mathematics 3a. Algebra and three books of plane geometry.
Three hours a week.

Mathematics 4a. Plane geometry completed and solid geometry.
Three hours a week.

SCIENCE

3a. Biology. Recitations, laboratory and field work. Three hours
a week.

4a. Physics. A study of elementary mechanics, sound, light,
heat, electricity, and magnetism. A selected set of laboratory experi-
ments forms part of the course. Recitations, three hours a week.
Laboratorv, two hours a week.

45

EXPENSES FOR 1921-1922

Payable on entrance in September, one-half amount due
for year; remainder at beginning of Spring Term.

Expenses for the Literary Course for resident students for
College Year are as follows :

Board, literary tuition, and all fees except laboratory and
diploma $400.00

When itemized, this sum of $400.00 per annum is divided
as follows : board, $270.00 ; literary tuition, $90.00 ; maintenance
fee, $10.00; room fee, $20.00; infirmary fee, $5.00; g>^mnasium
fee, $5.00.

Room reservations will not be made until a fee of $10.00 is
paid, this amount being credited on the board bill.

SPECIALS

Piano $ 80.00

Pipe-Organ 80.00

Voice 100.00

Violin 75.00

Harmony in Class 25.00

Harmony or Counterpoint, private lessons 100.00

Art, China Painting, Arts and Crafts, each 60.00

Expression 75.00

Domestic Science 40.00

Domestic Art 40.00

Stenography and Typewriting 75.00

FEES FOR THE YEAR

Laboratory Fees

Chemistry 10.00

Physics 5.00

Biology 5.00

Domestic Science 10.00

Domestic Art 2.00

Fee for Firing China 5.00

Piano for Practice 1>^ hrs. daily 10.00

Each additional hr. per day 6.00

Pipe-Organ for Practice 1 j/2 hrs. daily 20.00

Use of room for violin practice 1 j/4 hrs. daily 10.00

Use of room for vocal practice 1^ hrs. daily 10.00

Diploma in any department 5.00

Certificate in any department 3.00

46

Day students must pay maintenance fee of ten dollars and
ninety dollars per year for literary tuition. Laboratory, pipe-
organ and piano practice fees must be paid by those who enter
classes in chemistry, biology, physics, home economics, and music.

Sight-Singing and free-hand drawing are free. Besides,
the above, there are no incidental expenses.

The cost of the regular literary course with piano, art,
expression, etc., may be found by adding the figures laid down
for each under the head of "Specials" to the amount for full
literary course. The sum does not include room and laboratory
fees. These two items may be found under the head of *'Fees."

NOTES

Checks should be made payable to LaGrange College.

Two Hundred Dollars must be paid upon entrance in Sep-
tember. Dues for special courses are payable November 1st.
All dues for second term are payable February 1, 1922.

In case of deviation from this regulation, it is a require-
ment of the Board of Trustees that notes for the full term's
expenses be taken bearing six per cent, interest from date.

No reduction will be made for pupils w^ho enter within
one month after the term opens.

No student will be received for less than a term except
by special agreement.

No discount will be allowed for absence from any cause
except sickness, and that only when the absence is for as
long a period as ONE MONTH.

In the event of withdraw^al on account of sickness, the
amount paid for board in advance of date of leaving w'ill be
refunded, but not amount paid for tuition.

No reduction will be made by reason of a change in the
course made during the term.

Written permission must be sent by the parents or guar-
dian, directly through the mails addressed to the Dean and
not to the student, before any subject may be dropped.

All dues must be settled in cash before students can
receive certificates and diplomas.

Ministers may arrange with the President of the College
for special discounts for their daughters.

47

ALUMNAE

Please inform us concerning marriages, deaths, omitted alumnae,
or any errors in the names below. Information concerning addresses,
occupations, etc., will be thankfully received. If married, state hus-
band's name, title, and address. Send us catalogues issued prior to
1886. Deceased alumnae are indicated thus *

1846

A.B.

Elizabeth L. Burk

*Sarah B. Cameron (Mrs. Swanson)

*Sarah T. Cameron (Mrs. Hill)

1847

A. B.

*Adelaide E. Bigham

Sarah H. Cooper (Mrs. Newton)
*Tabitha E. Hill (Mrs. Howard)
*Martha R. Hill (Mrs. Potts)
*Rebecca V. Marshall

Sarah C. Morgan (Mrs. Barber)

Ophelia A. Osburne (Mrs. Weeks)

Susan J. Presley (Mrs. Bunkley)
*Mary A. Saunders

1848

A.B.

*Mary A. Broughton (Mrs. Montgomery)

Eliza J. Bryan (Mrs. Martin)
*Amarintha C. Cameron (Mrs. Gibson)

Sarah Clayton (Mrs. Jeter)

Catharine P. Dozier (Mrs. Willis)

Jane E. Gilbert

Frances J. Greenwood (Mrs. Perry)
*Sarah J. Kidd (Mrs. Camp)
*Sarah E. King (Mrs. Rice)
*Pauline Lewis (Mrs. Abercrombie)
*Elizabeth Parham (Mrs. Tigncr)

1849
A.B.

*Joscphine Akin (Mrs. Tatum)

Georgia C. Bigham (Mrs. Williams)
*Henrietta Broome

Sophronia Campbell (Mrs. Ferrell)
*Dorothy Chappel (Mrs. Matthews)

Amanda Dubose (Mrs. Ivcy)

Frances A. Favor (Mrs. Goldsmith)
*Mary P. Griggs (Mrs. Ncal)

Susan Maddox (Mrs. Johnson)
*Nancy Meaders (Mrs. Leak)

Acadia E. Mitchell (Mrs. Dowdcll)

Ann E. Pitts (Mrs. Dozier)
*Elizabcth A. Stinson (Mrs. RadclifT)
*Mary A. Thompson

*Deceased.

48

1850

A.B.

Frances E. Broughton (Mrs. Long)
Antionette P. Burke (Mrs. Gartrell)
Martha E. Dixon (Mrs. Glanton)
Isabella E. Douglass (Mrs. Amoss)
Narcissa W, Douglass (Mrs. Bailey)
Rebecca G. Forbes
Margaret A. Gilliam (Mrs. Goodman)
Mary Griffin (Mrs. McGhee)
Sarah Griggs (Mrs. Long)
Martha Harvey (Mrs. Harper)
Ann E. McGhee (Mrs. Akers)
Susan Meadors (Mrs. Brown)
Sarah C. Newton (Mrs. Dozier)
Cordelia Redding (Mrs. Jones)
Rebecca Slaton (Mrs. Nicholson)
Carolina Stevens (Mrs. Banks)
Catharine Stinson (Mrs. Neal)
Helen Tate (Mrs. Mitchell)

1851

A.B.

Mary Alford (Mrs. Heard)
Tallulah Carter (Mrs. Wells)

Mary Cox (Mrs. Kener)

Ann Davis (Mrs. )

Jane Davis (Mrs. Weston)
Mary M. Douglas

Susan Douglas (Mrs. Gunn)

Mary E. Drake (Mrs. Phillips)

Mary Graves (Mrs. Lee)

1852
A. B.

L. C. Hampton (Mrs. Davis)
Sarah Harris (Mrs. Lockhart)
S. Celestie Hill (Mrs. Means)
Susan McGhee (Mrs. Hampton)
Jane Newton (Mrs. Hall)
Eliza Kidd (Mrs. Lane)

Ann Reid
Mary F. Reid
Rebecca Rutledge (Mrs. Boynton)
Roxana Sharp (Mrs. Jones)
Catharine Spicer (Mrs. )

1853
A. B.

Lorine Acee (Mrs. Smith)
Sarah Ayers (Mrs. Potts)
Alberta Amoss (Mrs. Heard)
Isabella Baldrick
Louisa Bryan

Anna Calhoun (Mrs. Martin)

Deceased.

49

Emma Cameron (Mrs. Leonard)
*Sarah Cameron (Mrs. Waters)
Ellen Cline (Mrs. Gaffney)

Catherine Coleman
*Mary Colquitt (Mrs. Dix)
Caroline Craven (Mrs. Sappington)

E. S. Edmondson (Mrs. Maffett)

Mary Fall

Nancy Hall (Mrs. Hall)

Missouri Jones (Mrs. )

Mary Lee (Mrs. )

Mary Loyd (Mrs. T. S. Bradfield)

Elizabeth Pace (Mrs. )

Marietta Peeples

Susan Pressley (Mrs. Pearson)
Harriet Spivey (Mrs. Marcus)

Caroline Ware (Mrs. Gay) LaGrange, Ga.

Mary Whitfield (Mrs. Boyd)

1854
A.B.

Sarah Barnes (Mrs. Burney)

Mary Colquitt (Mrs. Green)

Ann E. Cooper
Margaret Cunningham (Mrs. Smith)
Amanda Edmondson (Mrs. Newton)

Harriet Edmondson (Mrs. Anderson)
Frances Harris (Mrs. Kimball)

Mary King (Mrs. Scott)

Florida Key (Mrs. Ward)

Mary McKemie (Mrs. Craven)

Lucy Morrow (Mrs. Smith)

Susan Newton (Mrs. Bennett)

Lucy Pace (Mrs. Scaife)

Georgia Patrick (Mrs. Allen)

Missouri Pitts
Sarah Reed (Mrs. W. D. Grant) 427 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.

Susan Skeen
Sarah Smith (Mrs. Wilson)
Sarah Stembridge (Mrs. Herring)

Mary Stevens (Mrs. Cory)

R. T. Taliaferro

Cornelia Tyler
Mary Yancey (Mrs. Young)

1855

A.B.

Letitia Austell
Martha Coghill
Sarah Dawkins (Mrs. Pace)
Virginia Edmondson (Mrs. Field)
Margaret Grififin
Sarah Harris
Mary Holland
Melissa Laney
Phoebe Mabry

Deceased.

50

J

T

Henrietta McBain (Mrs. Kimbrough)

Marparet McDowell

Camilla Meadors

Margaret Mooney (Mrs. Ezzell)

Blanche Morgan (Mrs. Johnson)

Mary Rcdwine
i Sarah Reese (Mrs. Lovelace)

*Kate I. Selleck (Mrs. Edniondson)

Eliza Shepherd (Mrs. Morgan)

Mary Steagall (Mrs. Dent)
*Susan Tooke

Emma Tucker
*Sarah Ward (Mrs. Thomas L. Davidson) Atlanta, Ga.

1856
A.B.

Melissa Appleby (Mrs. McCraw)

Martha Blackburn (Mrs. Judge)
*Laura Cameron (Mrs. Kirby)
*Martha Carter (Mrs. Weaver)

Sallie Craig
Lizzie Cunningham

Elizabeth DeLoach

Ellen DeLoach

M. J. Edwards (Mrs. Thompson)
*Louise Ellis (Mrs. Herring)

Susan Harrcll (Mrs. Smith)

Anna Haynes (Mrs. Renwick)

Nancy Hill (Mrs. Morgan)
Harriet Lipscomb (Mrs. Kirby)

Martha McKemie (Mrs. Craven)

Anna Meadows

S. Indiana Pitts (Mrs. Stowe)

Mary Powell

Rebecca Powell

Sophia Saunders

Frances Tennyson

Mary Tyler (Mrs. Bynum)
*l^hilo Ware (Mrs. Witherspoon)

1857
A. B.

Margaret Alford (Mrs. Heard)

Frances Andrews

Mary Y. Atkinson (Mrs. Mallory)

S. A. Cameron (Mrs. Colbert)
Mary C. Cole

Laura Garlington (Mrs. )

Susan Harrell (Mrs. Mayberry)

Addie Power

Hattic Shumate

^Deceased.

51

*G. A. Baldrick

Mittie Berry (Mrs. Oglesby) Dalton, Ga.

Hadessa Byrd (Mrs. Trawick)

Elizabeth Smith (Mrs. Clark)

Anna Stegall (Mrs. )

*Mary Stinson (Mrs. Ben Tigner)
*Anna Swanson (Mrs. Swanson)

Martha Tooke

Fannie Warde (Mrs. J. D. Johnson) West Point, Ga.

1858
A. B.

*Georgia Bonner (Mrs. Terrell)

Lydia Brown (Mrs. )

*Sallie Bull (Mrs. John Park)

W. H. Clayton
*Julia Cooper (Mrs. Van Epps)

Margaret Cox (Mrs. A. J. Tuggle) LaGrange, Ga., R. F. D.

*Rebecca Crowder (Mrs. Boddie)

I. F. Gordon
*A. S. Greenwood (Mrs. Slatter)

E. A. Hamilton

Mary Hamilton

A. C. Hanks (Mrs. )

Mary Reese
*May E. Speer (Mrs. Winship)

1859

A. B.

*Mary L. Akers

Susan Bass

Martha Bell (Mrs. Ridley)
*Hattie Carlton (Mrs. Dozier)

Mary Carlton
*Alice Culler (Mrs. J. B. Cobb) Nashville, Tenn.

Fletcher Harden (Mrs. Flournoy)

C. McKemie (Mrs. Craven)
*Sue 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 Shepherd (Mrs. Russell)

Aley Smith (Mrs. Boddie)
*Carrie Stinson (Mrs. Ogletree)

Achsah Turner (Mrs. Marsh) 7 Peachtree PI., Atlanta, Ga.

Ophelia Wilkes (Mrs. Tumlin)
Tinsley Winston (Mrs. Winston)

Sarah Womack (Mrs. )

*R. K. Woodward (Mrs. Harris)

Deceased.

52

1860
A. B.

Emma Bostwick (Mrs. Edmondson)

Abbie Callaway

Claude Carlton
Eliza Cox (Mrs. Akers)
Mary E. Evans (Mrs. Edwards)

F. C. Fleming (Mrs. Dixon)

Cornelia Forbes (Mrs. Waltermire)
Augusta Hill (Mrs. Thompson)

Fannie Jeter

M. Fannie Johnson (Mrs. McLaw)
N. A. Johnson (Mrs. Maddox)

Lizzie Laney

Janie Laney

Alice Ledbetter (Mrs. Revill) Greenville, Ga.

S. Cornelia Lovejoy

Mary Miller (Mrs. N. A. Mooty)
Fredonia Raiford (Mrs. McFarland)

Aline E. Reese (Mrs. Blondncr)

Polly Robinson (Mrs. Hammond)
Edna Rush (Mrs. Callahan)

Sallie Sanges (Mrs. Mullins)
Laura Sassnett (Mrs. Branham)
Sallie Shepherd (Mrs. Shorter)

MoUie Smith
Sally Tally
Isabel Winfrey

1861

A.B.

Lavinia Byrd (Mrs. Craig)
Julia Bohannon (Mrs. Witter)

George Broughton (Mrs. Hays)

Cordelia Cooper (Mrs. Fields)

Ella Cunningham (Mrs. Smith)
Frances Douglass (Mrs. Lowe)
Mollie Hunnicutt (Mrs. Turner)
C. M. Ledbetter (Mrs. Ellis)

Lucy Lipscomb (Mrs. T. J. Harwell) LaGrange, Ga.

Levecie G. Maddox (Mrs. Kendrick)

Nuda M. Ousley
Emma Page (Mrs. Hunnicutt)

Ellen R. Pattillo (Mrs. S. P. Callaway) LaGrange, Ga.

E. C. Phillips (Mrs. Jelks)

L. C. Pullen (Mrs. Morris)
Charlotte Reid (Mrs. Jos. Ware)
Genie Reid (Mrs. Cameron)
M. A. Story (Mrs. McDonald)

S. Elmirs Wilkes (Mrs. Shuttles)
Emma Yancey (Mrs. Bryan)

Deceased.

53

1862

A. B.

Mary Baldrick

Frances Bass

Fletcher Birch
*Vandalia Boddie

Lizzie Burge
*Anna E. Evins (Mrs. Wisdom)

Mattie Fleming
*Lucy Fleming

Bettie Howell (Mrs. Jennie Bailey) Newnan Ga

Sallie A. Knight (Mrs. )

*Sallie A. Little (Mrs. Williams)

Anna Lyon
*C. P. McGhee

Kate Merritt (Mrs. Joiner)

Mary Moonery

Lou O'Neal

Mary Gilmer

Jennie Goodwin (Mrs. Bailey)

Rebecca Harrison (Mrs. Bookhart)

Mary Haynes

Eliza Hill

Georgia Hodnett (Mrs. Ward)
*Susan Hogg (Mrs. Davidson)
*Kransillian Owens (Mrs. Tafft)

Clara Packard
*Fletcher Pitts (Mrs. Marshall)

Mattie Pitts (Mrs. Harris)

Mattie Taylor (Mrs. Wright)

Mollie White
''Mattie Wimbish (Mrs. Abraham)

1863

A.B.

*Addie Bull (Mrs. Tomlinson)
*Hattie Callaway

Mary Elizabeth Godwin (Mrs. W. C. Cotton),
*Lizzie Leslie West Point, Ga., R. F. D.
*Sallie Leslies (Mrs. Beasley) LaGrange, Ga.

Mattie Marshall (Mrs. Turner)

Annie Martin (Mrs. Freeman)

Belle McCain

Geraldine Moreland (Mrs. Speer)
Anna Turner 7 Peachtree PI., Atlanta, Ga.

1864

A. B.

Eliza Akers (Mrs. Bowden)

Ella Broughton
*Ida Burk (Mrs. Hay)

Mary Cunningham

Mary E. Curtwright (Mrs. Rakestraw) LaGrange, Ga.

Fannie Hall (Mrs. Tom Caudle) LaGrange, Ga.

Nora Owens (Mrs. Smith)

Fannie Pullen (Mrs. Amis)

*Deccased.

54

1865
A. B.

Kate Bcall (Mrs. Hornady)
Alice Bryant (Mrs. Willis)
Achsah Maddox (Mrs. Pace)

1871
A. B.

Janie Barber (Mrs. Truitt)
Nannie Callaway (Mrs. Wylic)
lAila Culberson (Mrs. McCoy)
Mary Hill (Mrs. Boyce Ficklin) Washington, Ga.

1872

Mattie Strother (Mrs. Barksdalc) Aonia, Ga.

1873
A.B.

*SalHe Cotter (Mrs. Reaves)

Annie Curtwright (Mrs. W. J. McClure) LaGrange, Ga,

*Carrie Pitman (Mrs. Truitt)
*Willie Pitman (Mrs. Bradfield)
*AIary L. Poythress (Mrs. Barnard)

1874
A.B.

Maria Bass
*Dora Boykin (Mrs. Maffett)
*iMollie B. Evans (Mrs. Seals)

Sallie Lou Haralson (Mrs. Cobb)

Lula Ward LaGrange, Ga.

Maggie Whitaker (Mrs. W. R. Footc) Forsyth, Ga.

*Addie Wimbush (Mrs. Anthony) .

1876
A.B.

Aldora Gaulding (Mrs. Thomasson)

Jennie McFail (Mrs. B. A. Warlick) 128 E. Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

1877
A.B.

Mary Alford (Mrs. Hogg)

Julia Connally (Mrs. Luther Rosser) . . .305 Gordon St., Atlanta, Ga.
Annie Crusselle (Mrs. Vaughan)
*Emma Palmer (Mrs. Williams)
Clodissa Richardson (Mrs. Connally)

1878
A.B.

Lizzie Baugh (Mrs. McDonald)

*Sallie Boykin (Mrs. C. C. Jones) East Lake, Birmingham, Ala.

F. Virgie Buice (Mrs. Morley)

Leila Hudson
Mattie McGhee (Mrs. John W. Park) Greenville, Ga.

Ola Simmons (Mrs. Simmons)

Lizzie Traylor

Deceased.

55

1879

A.B.

Lula Jones

Mattie Traylor (Mrs. T. H. Northen) . .Forest Home, LaGrange, Ga.

Fannie White (Mrs. Clay)

Sallie Williams (Mrs. Reid) LaGrange, Ga.

1880

A. B.

Jennie M. Atkinson Missionary to China

Mattie Cook (Mrs. Zellars)
Sallie Dowman
Fannie Dowman (Mrs. Zuber)
Ida Lee Emory (Mrs. Trammell)
Hattie Handley (Mrs. Reade)
Myrtle McFarlin (Mrs. Russell)
Emma Stipe (Mrs. Walker)

1881

Lula Brannon (Mrs. Knapp)

Stella Burns Hotel Clement, Opelika, Ala.

Ella L. Crusselle (Mrs. Baker)
Mattie Driver (Mrs. Smith)
Myrtle Gates (Mrs. Smith)
E. Baxter Mabry (Mrs. Brooks)

Augusta Vaughan (Mrs. Matthews)

Etta Vaughan (Mrs. Fitzpatrick)
Lula Walker (Mrs. Ware)

Loulie Watkins (Mrs. Overstreet)

Mollie Whitaker (Mrs. Matthews)

1882
A.B.

Alice Boykin (Mrs. Millard McLendon) LaGrange, Ga.

Lily Howard (Mrs. W. S. McLarin) Fairburn, Ga.

Ida Palmer (Mrs. F. I. McDonald) .. .30 Glendale Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Mollie Stipe (Mrs. F. R. Walker) Decatur, Ga.

Mary Fannie Turner (Mrs. ) Juniper, Ga.

Bertha Walker (Mrs. Furher)
Irene Ward (Mrs. Lupo)

1883

A.B.

Helen Baldwin 25 Baltimore Block, Atlanta, Ga.

Carrie Ballard (Mrs. Sasser)
Annie Bradley (Mrs. Park)

May Candler (Mrs. Winchester)

Susie Candler

Ginevra Gholson (Mrs. Cantrell)

Carobel Heidt (Mrs. Andrew E. Calhoun) Atlanta, Ga.

Maude Howell (Mrs. Brook)

Carrie Parks (Mrs. Luke Johnson^ Griffin, Ga.

Nellie Revill (Mrs. O'Hara) Lakeland, Fla.

Effie Thompson (Mrs. A. J. Smith)

Janie Wadsworth (Mrs. Irvine)

Lilarette Young (Mrs. Matthews)' Thomaston, Ga.

Deceased.

56

1884

A.B.

Beulah B. Arnold (Mrs. Pringle)
Ellen Barry (Mrs. Carney)

Mary Broome (Mrs. Young Gresham) College Park, Ga.

Minnie Revill (Mrs. R. J. Atkinson) Greenville, Ga.

Eugenia Sims (Mrs. Thomas B. Akridge) Atlanta, Ga.

Mamie Spears (Mrs. Wicker) Warrenton, Ga.

A. S. Wadsworth (Mrs. Copeland)

Mary Lizzie Wright (Mrs. Stevens) Savannah, Ga.

1885
A.B.

*Pauline E. Arnold (Mrs. Wright)

J. Jessie Barnett

Emma F. Bullard (Mrs. Smith)

Katie D. Cooper (Mrs. W. F. Culpepper) Senoia, Ga.

Ethel Johnson (Mrs. W. A. Puckett) Tifton, Ga.

Daisy Knight (Mrs. Hugh Abercrombie) Watkinsville, Ga.

Lollie Lewis (Mrs. Harris)
Olivia V. Macy (Mrs. Geo. Crusselle)

Mollie C. Simms (Mrs. Ward) Carrollton, Ga.

Annie Kate Worley (Mrs. E. E. Kimbrough)

B.S.

Hattie Mae Morgan (Mrs. Johnston)

Persia Wright (Mrs. J. H. Thomason) Opelika, Ala.

1886
A.B.

Lizzie L. Dyer (Mrs. Duke) LaFayette, Ala.

Lucy Evans (Mrs. Chas. Banks), 335 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Bessie Jackson (Mrs. Boyd)

Mattie Magruder (Mrs. Robert Ammons) LaGrange, Ga.

Willie Miller (Mrs. B. R. Cook) Gabbettville, Ga.

Mary Ruth Mixon (Mrs. Sam Dobbs) Inman Park, Atlanta, Ga.

Nellie Smith (Mrs. Isham Dorsey) Alabama

Belle Poer Texas

Leman Poer (Mrs. Henry Lanier)

Ida B. Smith (Mrs. Gay)

Bunnie Trimble (Mrs. Clarence Johnson), Peachtrec Rd., Atlanta, Ga.
Ella Walker

B.S.

Emma Barrett (Mrs. Black)
Willie Burns (Mrs. Davis)
Mary Lou Dansby Alto, Ga.

Jessie Pitman (Mrs. E. M. Sutton) Decatur, Ga.

Minnie Ware (Mrs. William Woodyard)

1887

A.B.

Glenn Camp (Mrs. Starling Carpenter) Newnan, Ga.

Annie L. Cole (Mrs. L. H. Wolfe) 2617 Maple Ave., Dallas, Texas

Deceased.

57

J. Winona Cotter (Mrs. W. H. Cotter) Valdosta, Ga.

*Lucy A. Heard (Mrs. Jones)

Bertha V. Henry (Mrs. Thomas)

Susie Jarrell (Mrs. Henry Turner) Quitman, Ga.

Blanche McFarHn (Mrs. H. F. Gaffney).1339 Third Ave., Columbus, Ga.

Maud McFarlin (Mrs. Jas. White)

Clara Merriwether (Mrs. A. C. McMeekin) . .R. F. D., Washington, Ga.

Amy Moss Prince Ave., Athens, Ga.

Lillian O. Ridenhour (Mrs. Payne) Macon, Ga.

Maidee Smith LaGrange, Ga.

Mary K. Strozier (Mrs. James P. Barnett) Greenville, Ga.

Jimmie Lou Thompson (Mrs. Thos. Goodrum) Newnan, Ga.

Maud S. Tompkins (Mrs. Perry)

Carrie Y. Williams (Mrs. Chas. Baker) Atlanta, Ga.

*Annie Wilson Luthersville, Ga.

B.S.

Jessie G. Burnett (Mrs. P. J, Williams) Montgomery, Ala.

E. May Johnson (Mrs, Neal Harmon) Odessadale, Ga.

Ora Wing (Mrs. West)

1888

A.B.

Dora H. Beckman (Mrs. Schettman) Charleston, S. C.

Lou G. Camp (Mrs. Robt. Brannon) Moreland, Ga.

M. Jennie Cooper (Mrs. Springer Mabry)

Fannie Covin (Mrs. J. C. Shirah)
*Minnie L. Crawford (Mrs. Jenkins)

Margaret Crawford (Mrs. Jno. H. Maddox)..116 Hurt St., Atlanta, Ga.

Ollie Ellis (Mrs. Trippe)

M. Jennie Evans (Mrs. J. L. Bradfield) LaGrange, Ga.

*Mamie Hardwick (Mrs. George H. Purvis) Atlanta, Ga.

Lily Jarrell (Mrs. W. J. McClenny) Thomasville, Ga.

N. Grace Johnson (Mrs. Twyman)

Fannie Bert Jones (Mrs. Augustus Quillian) Cartersville, Ga.

Cecile Longino Fairburn, Ga.

*Annie M. Moate (Mrs. Scott)

Minnie Moore (Mrs. Lythgoe) Newnan, Ga.

S. Lizzie Parks (Mrs. Thomas Betterton) Chattanooga, Tenn.

Lillie Sullivan

A. Lois Turner (Mrs. Wilcox)

Pearl White (Mrs. R. L. Barnes) Abbottsford, Ga.

Lallie A. Witherspoon (Mrs. Johnson)

B.S.

Lizzie L Arnold

Maude M, Scroggins (Mrs. J. E. Dent) Newnan. Ga.

Maggie Van Zandt (Mrs. Rufus Scott) Paris, Texas

*Ruby Ware (Mrs. Chas. Searcy)

1889
A.B.

Annie H. Chambliss (Mrs, Wooley) , . .76th St., and 1st Ave., E. Lake,

T Aiu- r-\ \.^ Birmingham, Ala.

L. Abbie Chambliss *

*L. Dora Cline

C. Lillian Moates (Mrs. Wm. Rives) Sparta, Ga,

* Deceased.

58

Julia P. Moate Devereux, Ga.

Bettie D. Parker (Mrs. Chas. Davenport) Fairburn, Ga.

M. Corrie Dickerson (Mrs. Lee)

Mary N. Hurt (Mrs. A. Loyd)...281 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

M. Lily Jackson (Mrs. Albert Tigner) White Sulphur Springs, Ga.

A. Maud McDaniel

i^Iinnie E. Mclntire (Airs. Sam Tribble) Athens, Ga.

Julia F. Ridley (Mrs. Elbert Willett) Anniston, Ala.

E. May Swindall (Mrs. John G. Logan) Elberton, Ga.

Fannie Teasley (Mrs. Hutcherson) Canton, Ga.

Kate Truitt (Mrs. \Vm. Young) LaGrange, Ga.

B.S.

Lula Dickerson (Mrs. Maxwell) The Hill, Augusta, Ga.

Dona E. Haralson (Mrs. Smith)

F. Eugenia Shepherd

*AIinnie B. Wilkinson (Mrs. Frank Tatum)

1890

Grace L. Aiken (Mrs. Mitchell)

Mira Will Brantley (Mrs. Tye)

Kate D. Daniel (Mrs. Joe Polhill) Hawkinsville, Ga.

Maggie W. Dean (Mrs, Warden) St. Petersburg, Fla,

Maggie E. Evans (Mrs. Robt. Riley) ... .Smart Ave., Kansas City, Mo.

Clara N. Graves (Mrs. Oscar Smith) Valdosta, Ga.

M. Loulie Hardwick (Mrs. M. L. Candler) .255 Ormond St., Atlanta, Ga.

Sallie Hodges

Willie Jones 607 20th St., Columbus, Ga.

Ruth Marsh ( Mrs. Thos. Lee) (Thickamauga, Ga.

Mamie C. McGhee White Sulphur Springs, Ga.

Ada McLaughlin (Mrs. Wm. R. Jones) Greenville, Ga.

Annie G. Robertson

S. Corinne Simril Newnan, Ga.

Claire L. Smith (Mrs. Frank Hill)

*AL Emm.a Wilson (Mrs. Sam Turnipseed) Griffin, Ga.

B.S.

S. Paralie Brotherton (Mrs. Geo. W^alker) Lee St., Atlanta, Ga.

D. Newtie Ingram (Mrs. E. L. Merrill) Turin, Ga.

Pearl Lee (Mrs. Wilbur Trimble) Trimble. Ga.

*M. Gladys Sims (Mrs. Ponder)
Minnie L. Smith (Mrs. Wall)

Una T. Sperry (Mrs. E. Rivers) Rt. A., Box 183, Atlanta, Ga.

Connie \'. Stovall
Minnie Willingham

1891

A.B.

Frankie M. Arnold (Mrs. J. D. Lyles) Jonesboro, Ga.

Myrtie G. Beauchamp (Mrs. Dickerson)

U, Quie Cousins (Mrs. Brown) Jonesboro, Ga.

Jennie Lou Covin (Mrs. Howard Wooding) LaGrange, Ga.

Mamie Zach Crockett (Mrs. J. C. Haynes) Jonesboro, Ga.

Lucie Crouch (Mrs. Dr. Thrash) Atlanta, Ga.

Georgia Heard (Mrs. Fields)
*Hettie O. Hearn (Mrs. L. McCalla)

Deceased.

59

Arizona B. Liles (Mrs. Hines)
E. Montana Liles (Mrs. Summit)

Pearl Long (Mrs. Clifford L. Smith) LaGrange, Ga.

Jennie Lou McFarlin (Mrs. H. H. Mattingly) 509 Jackson St.,

Atlanta, Ga.
Florence Smith (Mrs. Stone)
Mattie W. Walcott

B.S.
Rosa O. Atkinson

Lillie Brady (Mrs. W. G. Fish) 414 W. 72nd St., Lawrence, Kan.

Lucile Covin (Mrs. Glanton)
Addie C. George
Ora Gray

C. Walton Hollinshead (Mrs. Robie) Milledgeville, Ga.

*Mattie E. Johnson (Mrs. Dillard)
Leila Winn (Mrs. Miller)

Music Diplomas

Rosa O. Atkinson

Maidee Smith

Minnie L. Smith (Mrs. Wall)

1892

A.B.

Maud L. Bailey (Mrs. Arthur Richardson) LaGrange, Ga.

*Annie F. Baxter (Mrs. Smith)

Annie E. Bell (Mrs. Shenck)
*Sallie S. Boyd (Mrs. Pierre Sims)

Lady E. Boykin (Mrs. Robt. Segrest) LaGrange, Ga.

E, Maude Ellis

Jennie Smith Hanford, Calif.

*Talitha E. Speer (Mrs. Ezzard)

Bonnell L. Strozier (Mrs. F. J. Bivens) Moultrie, Ga.

Forrest L. Strozier Greenville, Ga.

Juliet Tuggle LaGrange, Ga.

Lucie W. Hunt

Ella R. Johnson (Mrs. Sykes)

Sallie M. Quillian (Mrs. John Jones) Cartersville, Ga.

Rosa Sharp

T. Antoinette Ward New York City

Edith West (Mrs. Harris)

M. Louise Wimbish (Mrs. Beach) Inman Park, Atlanta, Ga.

B.S.

Effie S. Agnew (Mrs. McCrary)

C. Lorraine Bradley (Mrs. Jos. Jarrell)

Ruth Camp (Mrs. ) , Fla.

Clarabess Grain (Mrs. Jno. Fambro) Rockmart, Ga.

Jennie F. Foster (Mrs. Mason)

Maud Freeman

Winnie V. Hearn

Clara E. Hodges (Mrs. J. E. Linder) Hartwell, Ga.

*F. Lillian McLaughlin (Mrs. Jos. McGhee)
Lizzie P. Merritt

Lizzie M. Parham
Mary Wooten (Mrs. Moss)

Deceased.

60

Music Diplomas

Qara N. Graves (Mrs. Oscar Smith) Valdosta, Ga.

Mary L. Park (Mrs. M. D. Fowler) LaGrange, Ga.

*aaire L. Smith (Mrs. F. H. Hill)

1893
A.B.

M. Bird Baxter (Mrs. O. A. Gentry) Eastman, Ga.

S. Amanda Britt (Mrs. Lewis) Columbus, Ga.

flattie Bulloch Bullochville, Ga.

Blonde Capps (Mrs. Clarence E. ^tason)

153 Maplewood Ave., Gtn., Philadelphia

Gene Covin (Mrs. E. K. Farmer) Fitzgerald, Ga.

Meta Dickinson (Mrs. J. B. Daniel) LaGrange, Ga.

Ruth Evans (Mrs. Roy Dallis) LaGrange, Ga.

M. Edna Ferguson (Mrs. Tate) Fairmount, Ga.

Fannie Harrell

Leila B. Kendrick

Dolly Hooks

Mary F. Liles (Mrs. Nelson)

M. Lula Lovelace (Mrs. Robt. N. Hogg) West Point, Ga.

Lizzie S. Lupo (Mrs. McGrew)

M. Ora Martyn (Mrs. H. E. Abbott) College Park, Ga.

Angie L. Maynard (Mrs. Sell)

M. Kate Moss (Mrs. R. C. Cleckler) LaGrange, Ga.

Annie F. Reid (Mrs. Roberts)
*Leila A. Shewmake

Macie E. Speer (Mrs. E. M. Copeland) McDonough, Ga.

Estelle Strozier (Mrs. S. D. Ravenell) Valdosta, Ga.

Mary Tomlinson (Airs. A. J. Tuggle) LaGrange, Ga.

*Jennie \V. Williams (Mrs. Miller)

B. S.

B. Mae Brady (Mrs. Frank R. Bartlett)

237 Brooklyn Ave., Brooklyn, X. Y.

Ledra Edmondson (Mrs. Chas. J. Warner) Rome, Ga.

Maymie B. Hendrix (Mrs. Anderson)

Annie Gertrude Henry (Mrs. )

Nellie B. Kirklev (Mrs. Campbell)

Mary Latham (Mrs. Gus Cox) 128 E. 11th St., Atlanta, Ga.

Fredonia Maddox (Mrs. W. A. Webster) Cordele, Ga.

\'ela C. Winn (Mrs. Hawkins)

Music Diplomas

Nellie B. Kirkley (Mrs. Campbell)

M. Lula Lovelace (Mrs. Robt. Hogg) West Point, Ga.

T. Antoinette Ward New York City

1894
A.B.

Louise Anderson (Mrs. Manget) Missionary to Oiina

v. Eula Beauchamp (Mrs. Meacham)

Lula Belle Bird LaGrange, Ga.

Lina Brazell (Mrs. W^ill Trimble) Hoi^ansviUe, Ga.

Sadie Bess Brvan (Mrs. O. M. Heard) Cordele, Ga.

Etta Cleveland (Mrs. F. J. Dodd) LaGrange, Ga.

Deceased.

61

Susie Harrell
*A. Estelle Harvard (Mrs. E. E. Clements) Havana, Cuba

Adella Hunter (Mrs. C. N. Pike) LaGrange, Ga.

Irma O. Lewis ( Mrs. McElroy ) Conyers, Ga.

Mary Mitchell (Mrs. G. W. Glower) Lawrenceville, Ga.

*Lizzie Moss (Mrs. R. C. Cleckler)
*Amy I. White (Mrs. Wisdom)

Pearl W. White (Mrs. Fanning Potts) Gabbettsville, Ga.

B.S.

*Mary L. Brinsfield (Mrs. Wallace Rogers) Atlanta, Ga.

Fannie H. Clark (Mrs. Maynard) Tyler, Okla.

Edda Cook (Mrs. Pitt) .McRae, Ga.

Clara DeLaperriere (Mrs, Lanier) Winder, Ga.

Eula Hines (Mrs. Johnson)
Nettie C. Howell (Mrs. Lane)

E. Eula Liles (Mrs. Radney) Roanoke, Ala.

Cora Milam (Mrs. Wren Coleman) Noxapater, Miss.

Bessie Moseley (Mrs. Brown) LaGrange, Ga,

Lucie Patillo

Kate Wilkinson LaGrange, Ga.

Music Diplomas

Bird Baxter (Mrs. O, A. Gentry) Eastman, Ga.

Gene Covin (Mrs, E. K. Farmer) Fitzgerald, Ga.

1895
A.B.

Myra L. Bruce (Mrs. Glasure)

Rosa Callahan (Mrs. James M. Lassiter) Conyers, Ga.

Hunter M. Carnes (Mrs, Virgil Harvard)

Lily Coggins (Mrs. Jones) Canton, Ga.

Alice Harp (Mrs. Young)

M. Evans Harris (Mrs. Wm. P. King).,, 503 Sycamore St., Decatur, Ga.

H. Estelle Hutcheson (Mrs. Harlan)

Buford Johnson Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, Md.

Lillian Johnson (Mrs. Burkhalter)
Annie L Key (Mrs, Walker)
Eva Mashburn (Mrs, Lamback)

Gussie R. McCutcheon

Birdie Meaders (Mrs. Dowda)

Daisy Morris (Mrs. Smith)

Clara Parks ( Mrs, Jos. Featherston) Newnan, Ga.

Tallulah Quillian (Mrs. John Thrasher) Columbus, Ga.

Alice Robins (Mrs. Geo. Cunningham) Atlanta, Ga.

Flora E. Seals (Mrs. E. W. Thorpe) DeFuniak Springs, Fla.

Effie Shewmake (Mrs. O. G. Singleton) Fort Valley, Ga.

Daisy Taylor (Mrs. G. P. Rumble) Forsyth, Ga.

Annie Thrasher (Mrs. W. B. Parham) Watkinsville, Ga.

Kate Trimble (Mrs, Steven Davis) Hogansville, Ga.

Romania Welchel

Annie Wiggins (Mrs. Meadows)

B.S.

Gallic Burns (Mrs. King)

Lora Edmondson (Mrs. Hatton Lovejoy) LaGrange, Ga.

Annie Kate Johnson (Mrs. G. E. Parks) Newnan, Ga.

Deceased,

62

Julia Manninp: (Mrs. E. A. Holmes) Birmingham, Ala.

Mattie Schaiib LaGrange, Ga.

Lula Welchel (Mrs. Milton A. Smith)

24 W. College Ave., Tallahassee, Fla.

Music Diplomas

Lina S. Brazell (Mrs. Will Trimlile) Hogansville, Ga.

Effie J. Shewmake (Mrs. Singleton) Ft. Valley, Ga.

1896
A. B.

Lizzie A. Ayers (Mrs. Leland Little) Carnesville, Xja.

Belle Brantley (Mrs. Rodenberry)

Lula Bulloch (Mrs. Bulloch)

Annie Callahan (Mrs. A. S. Hutchinson)

309 Crawford Ave., Augusta, Ga.

Estelle Chappell (Mrs. H. H. Chandler) Sardis, Ga.

Ellen Davenport (Mrs. J. A. Hamm) Ft. Pierce, Fla.

Sallie DeLamar (Mrs. B. M. Poer) Broxton, Ga.

Pattie Dixon Woodbury, Ga.

Beuna Harris

Lucy Hill (Mrs. Anthony)

Tallulah King (Mrs. J. O, Norris) Decatur, Ga.

Bessie Longino (Mrs. Vickers) Fairburn, Ga.

Myra Merriwether (Mrs. Bulloch)

Blanche Murphy (Mrs. J. R. Speer) Whitesburg, Ga.

Inez Murrah (Mrs. Knott) Atlanta, Ga.

Eoline Price

Hallie Quillian (Mrs. W. H. Ashford) Athens, Ga.

Florence Traylor (Mrs. J. C. Orr) 14 Oak St., West End,

Birmingham, Ala.
Nannie Ware

A. Maud Williams (Mrs. J. M. Trotter) Lookout Mt., Tenn.

Mary Lou Woodall

Mitt'ie Wright (Mrs. Harber)

B.S.

Morah T. Bailey (Mrs. Rovvrer) Fla.

Clara Baker LaGrange, Ga.

Mary Beasley (Mrs. Chenowith) LaGrange, Ga.

Jessie Cotter (Mrs. Richards) New Orleans, La.

Josie Daniels (Mrs. Hogan) Hogansville, Ga.

Mattie Lee Dunn (Mrs. R. A. Sloan) McDonough, Ga.

Annie Clyde Edmondson (Mrs. J. B. Ridley) 273 E. North Ave.,

Atlanta, Ga.
Helen Hendrick (Mrs. Mattox)
Gussie Merriwether (Mrs. Winn)

Ola Miller (Mrs. Jno. Johnson) West Point, Ga.

Mary Will Smith (Mrs. )

*Cecelia Thompson (Mrs. Wimberly)
Evelyn Whitaker 40 W. North Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Music Diplomas

Belle Brantley (Mrs. Rodenberry)

Sallie DeLamar (Mrs. B. M. Poer) Broxton, Ga.

Deceased.

63

1897
A.B.

Annie Campbell 1532 Gwinnett St., Augusta, Ga.

Mary Carmichael (Mrs. H. M. Lively)

S. Eleanor Cloud (Mrs. Bryan) Crawfordsville, Ga.

Clara Freeman
Leila Hood

Kate S. Ingram (Mrs. Gordy)

Willie Maddox (Mrs. Holloway ) Dallas, Tex.

Ruby McElroy (Mrs. W. H. Born) McRae, Ga.

Ozella B. Roberts (Mrs. Ross)

Mary Seale Greenville, Ala.

Julia B. Tigner White Sulphur Springs, Ga.

Gertrude Touchstone

Cora Tuck (Mrs. W. H. Morton) Athens, Ga., R. F. D. 1

Alice Turner

Lilian Venable (Mrs. John Shaw) LaFayette, Ga.

B.S.

Leah Baker (Mrs. Moon) 97 W. Baker St, Atlanta, Ga.

Julia Bradfield LaGrange, Ga.

Ila E. Chupp (Mrs. Carroll)

*Etta Cook ( Mrs. Hopkins ) Chipley, Ga.

Irene Florence (Mrs. Green)
Kate Jenkins (Mrs. Alonzo)
Rena Mai Ledbetter (Mrs. Graves)

Henrietta Smith (Mrs. Jos. G. Faust) Greensboro, Ga.

Alma Stroud (Mrs. Hancock)

Gussie Tigner (Mrs. Sterling Wiggins) 174 Lee St., Atlanta, Ga.

Bertha Wilson (Mrs. Jno. Upshaw) Social Circle, Ga.

Montana M. Winter (Mrs. John L. Hall) Young Harris, Ga.

Music Diplomas

Eleanor Davenport (Mrs. J. A. Hamm) Ft. Pierce, Fla.

Carrie Davidson LaGrange, Ga., R. F. D.

Mamie Dozier (Mrs. Davis)

Kate Ingram (Mrs. Gordy) Waleska, Ga.

1898

A.B.

Irene Adair Greenville, Ga.

Lutie Blasingame (Mrs. M. B. Sams) Waleska, Ga.

Mary Will Cleaveland (Mrs. A. H. Thompson) LaGrange, Ga.

Nettie L. Cook (Mrs. Campbell)
*Clara Dallis (Mrs. Sterling Turner)
Bessie Farmer (Mrs. Lockhart)

Emmie Ficklen Washington, Ga.

Laurie Lanier (Mrs. Horace Mallory)

Hortense McQure (Mrs. H. L. McClesky) .Station A, Hattiesburg, Miss.

Evelyn McLaughlin (Mrs. J. O. McGehee) Greenville, Ga.

Annie Bell Pendleton Augusta, Ga.

Louise Rosser (Mrs. Warren) Griffin, Ga.

Sophie Wright (Mrs. Brown) Griffin, Ga.

Deceased.

64

B.S.

Emily Dickinson (Mrs. J. D. Smith) Five Points, Ala.

Annie Fulcher (Mrs. Fred Turner) Tampa, Fla.

Sallie Alyrt Gilliam (Mrs. Durham)

Flora Glenn (Mrs. Howard Candler) Inman Park, Atlanta, Ga.

Ward Hardwick (Mrs. Charles K. Gailey) Conyers, Ga.

Sallie Fannie Hodnett (Mrs. Ranee O'Neal) West Point, Ga.

Gordon Hudgins (Mrs. Miller)
Eva Mann (Mrs. Thomas)
Alary D. Mann (Mrs. Howell)

Dana Alarchman (Mrs. W. A. Wooten) Eastman, Ga.

Ruth Aliller Rt. 3, Hogansville, Ga.

Alary Ray (Airs. Shurley) Alacon, Ga.

*AIay Storey (Airs. Parker)

Ruth Tuggle LaGrange, Ga.

Rosa Wright (Airs. Boyd)

Music Diplomas

Alary Will Cleaveland (Airs. A. H. Thompson) LaGrange, Ga.

*Lilian Johnson (Airs. Allen Burkhalter)

Art Diplomas

Xona Harris (Airs. Buford Carter) LaGrange, Ga., R, F. D.

Alma Xesbitt (Airs. Willingham)

1899

A.B.

Allie Beall (Airs. )

Idella Bellah Bolton, Ga.

Lilias Fleming (Airs. Carroll Graham) Bainbridge, Ga.

Lizzie Gray (Airs. Robert L. Adams) LaGrange, Ga.

Willie Hardy (Airs. Lovelace)

Helen Huntley

Alice Jenkins (Airs. J. N. Sherman) .1722 Arlington Ave., Bessemer, Ala.

Alattie Loflin (Mrs. Smalley)

Lela Xewton

Annie Bvnum (Airs. Davis)

Alary Park (Airs. T. G. Polhill) LaGrange, Ga.

Leila Parks (Airs. Erwin)

Anna Quillian (Airs. Thos. Dillard) Bishop, Ga.

Alary Rosser

Carlie Smith (Airs. W. P. Dozier) Thomson, Ga., Winfield, Rt.

Sallie Tomlinson (Mrs. Ivey) Hawkinsville, Ga.

* Alattie Byrd Watson (Airs. W. L. Chunn)
Annie Kate Bondurant (Mrs. Jones)
Aurena Evans (Airs. Burgess)

Alary Rosser Kimbrough (Airs. Guttenberger) Alacon, Ga.

Lila Park

Kola Dickinson (Airs. Wheeler)

Alary Belle Dixon (Airs. AIcKenzie) Thomaston, Ga.

Alary E. Quillian (Airs. Harrell) St. Alarys, Fla.

Anita Stroud

Deceased.

65

B.L.

Lillian Neal Carnesville, Ga.

Pearl Sewell (Mrs. J. C. Holbrook) Carnesville, Ga.

Mabel Thrower (Mrs. George N. MacDomell) 218 Nichols St.,

Waycross, Ga.
Music Diplomas

Annie Cheatham Voice (Mrs. H. P. Whiddon) Atlanta, Ga.

Marilu Ingram Piano (Mrs. Letcher) Copenhagen, Denmark

1900
A.B.

Glenn Anderson (Mrs. Boswell)
Mary Lizzie Anderson (Mrs. Watson)

Esther Askew (Mrs. J. H. Kelley ) Brooks, Ga.

Clyde Bruce (Mrs. Emmett Williams) Bullochville, Ga.

Willie Crawford (Mrs. Johnson)

Virgil Harris (Mrs. Harvard) Arabi, Ga.

Marie Harrison (Mrs. Wilson)
*Nellie Johnson (Mrs. Wilkerson)
Clyde Lanier
Lottie Maxwell (Mrs. Robertson)

Rebie Neese (Mrs. L. M. Moore) Milledgeville, Ga.

Flora Quillian (Mrs. J. T. VanHorn) Monroe, Ga.

Ruby Sharp (Mrs. George Rosser) Wesleyan College, Macon, Ga.

Mary Howard Smith (Mrs. Green Johnson) Monticello, Ga.

Sadie Smith (Mrs. Phinizy) Forsyth, Ga.

Exa Stewart

Annie Stone (Mrs. Clifford Powell) Woodbury, Ga.

B.S.

Ethel Bryson (Mrs. W. C. Thompson) Madison, Ga.

Marion Clifton
A. Louise Moate

Louise L. Ray (Mrs. C. C. Burch) Eastman, Ga.

Leone J. Tucker (Mrs. Rush Burton) Lavonia, Ga.

B.L.

Coral Capps (Mrs. Stapler) Commerce, Ga.

Rosebud Dixon (Mrs. Oscar Callahan) W^oodbury, Ga.

*Annie Lou Hood (Mrs. Fred Robinson) LaGrange, Ga.

Ethel Lively (Mrs. )

Jessie Manning (Mrs. R. E. Stearnes) Baton Rouge, La.

Eva Sutton (Mrs. S. B. Savage) Rayle, Ga.

Music Diplomas
*Irene Dempsey

Leila Irvin Piano (Mrs. Meriwether Barnett) Rome, Ga.

Fannie Smith (Mrs. F. A. Ricks) Reynolds, Ga.

1901

A. B.

Stella Benton (Mrs. Harry Jones).. 1331 Monte Sano Ave., Augusta, Ga.

Irene Butler (Mrs. Daniel)

Ernestine Dempsey Jackson, Ga.

^Deceased.

66

Jessie Mallory (Mrs. James DeLamar) Columbus, Ga.

Pauline Norman 87 Oak St., Atlanta, Ga.

Lilla Tuck Athens, Ga., R. F. D. No. 1

B. S.

Kate Bradfield (Mrs. Jno. S. Brown) Locust Grove, Ga.

Stella Bradfield LaGrange, Ga.

Ella Bussey

Lou Ella Davis (Mrs. W. E. Drane) Buena Vista, Ga.

Mary Barnard Nix LaGrange, Ga.

Sarah Quillian (Mrs. W. W. Baldwin) Madison, Ga.

Effie C. Smith
Leila Williams (Mrs. O. W. Tucker) LaGrange, Ga.

1902

A. B.

Janie Brown Gofer (Mrs. )

Emma Lois Cotton (Mrs. P. W. Ellis), 603 Whitaker St., Savannah, Ga.
Sidnor Davenport (Mrs. Hammings)

Elizabeth T. Ferrell (Mrs. )

Nell Marchman (Mrs. H. L. Flynt) .803 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Bertie Pennington (Mrs. Sherrod Campbell) Mansfield, Ga.

Cleta Quillian (Mrs. Harry Cleveland) Elberton, Ga.

Nancy Lee Shell (Mrs. Pierce Norman) Alpharetta, Ga.

Nellie Vickers (Mrs. Chester R. Harvey) Fairburn, Ga.

B.S.

Mary Bateman (Mrs. Larry Lankford) Dallas, Texas

Robie Clifton (Mrs. Christine Williams) Lyons, Ga.

Leila Jernigan Decatur, Ga.

Edna Philpot (Mrs. Trippe) Hogansville, Ga.

B.L.

Annie Margaret Dunson (Mrs. Frank Davis) LaGrange, Ga.

1903

A. B.

Vashti Daniel

Susie Strickland (Mrs. C. A. Dasher) Moultrie, Ga.

B.L.

Lillie R. Brown (Mrs. J. E. Davidson) Fort Valley, Ga.

A. Margaret Dunson (Mrs. Frank Davis) LaGrange, Ga.

Annie F. Fannin (Mrs. Blanchard)

Linnie F. Malone (Mrs. L. P. Smith) 104 Gayton St., Macon, Ga.

Annie Lou McCord Jackson, Ga.

Music Diplomas

Maude Ragland Piano

Nina Winn Voice (Mrs. Darcy Stubbs) Oaxton, Ga.

Deceased.

67

1904
A.B.

Mary Lou Drane (Mrs. E. R. Jordan) Ellaville, Ga.

Lucy Ray Freeman (Mrs. W. L. Edwards) Claxton, Ga.

Mary Griffin

Emma Quillian (Mrs. R. C. Singleterry) Blakely, Ga.

Music Diplomas

Eleanor C. Davenport Voice (Mrs. J. A. Hanner) . . . .Ft. Pierce, Fla.
*Vera Lee Dyal Piano (Mrs. Ryals)

Leila Irvin Voice (Mrs. Meriwether Barnett) Dahlonega, Ga.

Omie H. Ryals Piano (Mrs. DeLoach) Lumber City, Ga.

1905
A.B.

Etta May Burnside (Mrs. Jno. McDonald) Yatesville, Ga.

Annie May Conner

Lillian M. Garrett (Mrs. E. P. McDaniel) Conyers, Ga.

Nancy Burnie Legg 64 Granger St., Atlanta, Ga.

Kate V. Long (Mrs. Ira Coan) Columbus, Ga.

*Margie L. Means (Mrs. Conner)
Vesta Pirkle

B. S.

Catherine Hogg (Mrs. Judson Prather) West Point, Ga.

Eva Rampley ( Mrs. J. C. Little) Carnesville, Ga.

Mattie Rampley Carnesville, Ga.

Music Diplomas
Rosa Logan Piano (Mrs. John Brown)
Leona Anderson Wood Piano Hapeville, Ga.

1906
A. B.

May Dell Cleaveland (Mrs. W. A. Briggs)

Hampton Ave., Greenville, S. C.

Mary Boyd Davis (Mrs. D. A. Howard) Dearing, Ga.

Carrie Moore Fleith (Mrs. Austin P. Cook) LaGrange, Ga.

Lillian Hicks (Mrs. J. R. Webb) Blackshear, Ga.

Lillie Pennington Covington, Ga.

B.S.

Annie Zu Dillard (Mrs. J. G. Stipe) Emory University, Ga.

Music Diplomas

Bertha Louise Burnside Piano (Mrs. A. K. Forney) .. .Thomson, Ga.

Vera V. Edwards Voice (Mrs. Roy McGinty) Chatsworth, Ga.

Juelle Jones Piano (Mrs. Henry A. Willy) Griffin, Ga.

1907
A. B.

Glenn Antoinette Allen (Mrs. Quillian L. Garrett) Waycross, Ga.

Oneta S. Askew (Mrs. S. Ward) Hampton, Ga.

*Marie Barnett Greenville, Ga.

Bessie Boyd (Mrs. Emory Stone) Boydville, Ga.

Palmyra Burnside (Mrs. Robert Burks) Birmingham, Ala.

Deceased.

68

Mamie A. Fenley

Adelaide Hall

Lucile Hicks

Etta Hobgood (Mrs. McNeil)

Bessie Johnson (Mrs. )

Estelle Jones (Mrs. Wilson J. Culpepper) Mayfield, Ga.

Allie Kenon McRae, Ga.

Emmeline Parks (Mrs. Quillian)

Alberta Ragsdale

Blanche Sims (Mrs. E. Z. Golden, Jr.) Langdalc, Ala.

Yula May Smith (Mrs. J. T. Carter) LaGrange, Ga.

Evelyn Stokes (Mrs. Frank T. Evans) 1544 St. Johns Ave.,

Jacksonville, Fla,

Eva Sutton (Mrs. W. G. Curry) 909 Jefferson St., Savannah, Ga.

Teressa Throv^er (Mrs. James B. Buchanan) Atlanta, Ga.

Martha Tomlinson (Mrs. Ivey)
*Beulah Warner (Mrs. T, Morgan) LaGrange, Ga,

Eugenia Watkins (Mrs. Clements)

B.S.

Estelle Pitts (Mrs. Lucas)

Music Diplomas

Glenn Allen (Mrs. Quillian L. Garrclt) Waycross, Ga.

Maggie Anderson

Belle Arnold (Mrs. Bryant) Americus, Ga.

*Marie Barnett

Gertrude Brown (Mrs. R. B. Cowen) Bainbridge, Ga.

Nellie Brown Voice (Mrs. Newman) Fla.

Lizzie Murphy Teacher in Brazil

Fay Shannon (Mrs. N. P. Burke) Millen, Ga.

Nora Simmons (Mrs. ) Claxton, Ga.

Sarah Frances Thomason Chipley, Ga.

1908

A. B.

Sallie Bohannon (Mrs. E. E. McConnell) . . . .430 Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga.

Bertha Burnside (Mrs. A. K. Forney) 220 Broad St., Augusta, Ga.

Luna Cook Carrollton, Ga.

Effie E. Etter 1727 Walton Way, Augusta, Ga.

lone Ellis Monticello, Ga.

Alary Fox Alpharetta, Ga.

Ellie Gray Alissionary to Korea

Mary Green Kirkwood, Ga.

Janie Hearn Eatonton, Ga.

Annette Mayo Social Circle, Ga.

Willie Belle Moncrief (Mrs. Boyd N. Ragsdale) LaGrange, Ga.

Mary Murphv (Mrs. Robt. Bugg) 31 N. Mayson .'\vc., Atlanta, Ga.

Pauline Powledge (Mrs. W. O. Wooten) .212 Brignoli St., Talladega, Ala.

Leta Price Montana

Christine Reynolds Fredonia, Ala.

Adelaide Rollins (Mrs. ) Kingston, Ga.

Mary F. Stanton ( Mrs. E. G. Gardner) Anthony, Fla.

Dura M. Upshaw (Mrs. Leon Young)

Lula Willingham (Mrs. Wallace N. Neal) Thomson, Ga.

Adele Woolwright (Mrs. J. J. Nicholson) .... Bron wood, Ga., R. F. D. 1

Deceased.

69

Music Diplomas

Leila Dillard (Mrs. L. A. Whipple) Cochran, Ga.

B. Florence Dye (Mrs. Ivey)

Ellie Gray Missionary to Korea

Mrs. Edda Cook Pitt McRae, Ga.

Dura M. Upshaw (Mrs. Leon Young)

Expression

Leila Dillard (Mrs. L. A. Whipple) Cochran, Ga.

Janie Hearn Eatonton, Ga.

Eddie Rampley (Mrs. Tim Sullivan) Royston, Ga.

1909

A. B.

Maxie Barron Atlanta, Ga.

Eugenia Christian (Mrs. Tom M. Swift, Jr.) Eberton, Ga.

Leila Dillard (Mrs. L. A. Whipple) Cochran, Ga.

Corinne Jarrell (Mrs. J. B. Keough) Atlanta, Ga.

Maybelle Mathews Talbotton, R. F. D. 3, Ga.

Hallie Claire Smith LaGrange, Ga.

Ruth Smith (Mrs. G. W. Hammond) Bowdon, Ga.

Elizabeth Smithwick LaGrange,, Ga.

Eva Widener (Mrs. D. B. Holderfield) Stroud, Ala.

Music Diplomas

(Piano)

Mayne Archer (Mrs. Jos. Aycock) Carrollton, Ga.

Ruby Beall Carrollton, Ga.

Florence Dunson (Mrs, Robert Hutchinson) LaGrange, Ga.

Vera Edwards (Mrs. Roy McGinty)

Ella Godwin (Mrs. ) Bullochville, Ga.

Sarah Hogg (Mrs. C. E. Cliatt)

Lucile Jones (Mrs. W, G. Partin) LaGrange, Ga.

Alice Loftin (Mrs. )

Pearl Simmons (Mrs. P. M. Anderson) Claxton, Ga.

* Pearl Watson
Allena D. Stone (Mrs. Graham) Decatur, Ga.

1910

A. B.

Margaret Fakes Decatur, Ga,

Annie M. Lazenby Harlem, Ga.

T'L'lene Thrower 584 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Martha Ware (Mrs. R. A, Gondy) LaGrange, Ga.

Music Diplomas

Talladega Becton Piano (Mrs. J. A. Cork) Millen, Ga.

Carrie May Brownlee Piano Calhoun, Ga.

Natalie Cooper Piano (Mrs, E. C. Buchanan) Atlanta, Ga.

Florence Dunson Voice (Mrs. Robt. Hutchinson) LaGrange, Ga.

Hallie Claire Smith Voice LaGrange, Ga.

Cleo Smithwick Voice (Mrs. Grady Traylor) LaGrange, Ga.

T'L'lene Thrower Piano 584 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Jeanette Wilhoite Piano LaGrange, Ga.

Theo Woodward Piano (Mrs. G. F. Austin) Blackshear, Ga.

* Deceased.

70

Expression

Natalie Cooper Atlanta, Ga.

Lois Rivers Sparta, Ga.

1911

A. B.

Lenoir H, Burnside Thomson, Ga.

La Verne Garrett

Sarah Hogg (Mrs. C. E. Cliatt)

Susie R. Jones (Mrs. \V. S. Norton) Grovetown, Ga.

Flossie Mayo Social Circle, Ga.

Manie ToAvson Eastman, Ga.

Music Diplomas

Sarah Christian Piano, Voice (Mrs. J. A. Cromartie) .Hazelhurst, Ga.

Lillie Harris Voice (Mrs. Reeves) Atlanta, Ga.

Nyui Tsung Lee Piano, Voice (Mrs. Yang, Pao Ling) .Soochow, China

Edith Lupton Piano (Mrs. Frank Hunt) San Diego, Calif.

Mary Hill Moore Piano (Mrs. Harry E. Neal) Canaguay, Cuba

Claire Shannon Piano (Mrs. J. C. Smith) Jefferson, Ga.

Cleo Smithwick Piano (Airs. Grady Traylor) LaGrange, Ga.

Art

Lenoir Burnside Thomson, Ga.

1912

A.M.

Marcia Culver Gordon St., Atlanta, Ga.

A. B.

Susan Willard Brown Springfield, Ga.

Martha Hamilton (Mrs. Frederick Travis) . .Boldenhurst, Saskatchewan

Eunice Hill McGhee LaGrange. Ga.

Ouida McGure (Mrs. Edward Yonkmon) Detroit, Mich.

Maude Patrick (Mrs. J. C. Baker. Jr.) Manchester, Ga.

Mattie Sharpe (Mrs. Henry D. Mincey) Ogeechee, Ga.

Ethel L. Smith (Mrs. C. B. Culpepper) Cordele, Ga.

Ruth Walker Cass Station, Ga.

Music Diplomas

(Piano)

Marward Bedell Kingsland. Ga.

Florence Brinkley Murf reesboro, Tenn.

Mildred Fakes Decatur, Ga.

Louise Evans (Mrs. M. T. Lawrence) Irwinville, Ga.

Nell Foster 230 Gordon St., Atlanta. Ga.

W. Clyde Holmes (Mrs. J. O. Rountree) Vidalia, Ga.

Sarah Mayo Social Circle, Ga.

Carrie Smith Greensboro, Ga,

Florence Smith Ypsilanti, Ga.

Annie L. Tankersley (Mrs. W. J. Williams) Bostwick, Ga.

Martha Ware (Mrs. R. A. Gandy) LaGrange, Ga.

Sarah Elizabeth Witcher

71

Expression

Carrie Smith Greensboro, Ga.

Ruth Trammell (Mrs. H. R. Chestnutt) Lawrenceville, Ga.

1913
A.B.

Alice Claire Beckwith Mansfield, Ga.

Mildred Eakes Decatur, Ga.

Pauline Fox (Mrs. Claude Sitton) Toccoa, Ga.

Music Diplomas
(Piano)

A. Claire Beckwith Mansfield, Ga.

Lottie Bond (Mrs. J. E. Phillips) Lithonia, Ga.

Katherine Dozier LaGrange, Ga.

Elma Warlick (Mrs. Elbert D. Hale) Woodbury, Ga.

Leone F. Leith Voice

Lessie Lewis Sylvania, Ga.

A. Eloise Linson

Ruby Newsom Voice (Mrs. Thos. Campbell) Augusta, Ga.

Sarah Satterwhite Voice Chipley, Ga.

Nell Smith (Mrs. Elbert Nicholls) Hartwell, Ga.

Art
Hallie Claire Smith LaGrange, Ga.

Expression

Ruby Newsom (Mrs. Thos. Campbell) 115 Broad St., Augusta, Ga.

1914

A.B.

Susie M. Green 44 N. Howard St., Kirkwood, Ga.

Mary B. Hunter LaGrange, Ga.

Ruby Moss 431 Grand Ave., E. Las Vegas, New Alex.

Prederica Westmoreland (Mrs. H. H. Heisler) Smithville, Ga.

Music Diplomas

(Piano)

Pauline Becton Piano and Voice (Mrs. V. W. Perkins") ...Millen, Ga.

Bessie L. Bryant Chipley, Ga., R. F. D. 2

Gladys Cantrell

Eddie Mae Chastain (Mrs. Thos. H. Lang) Calhoun, Ga.

S. Pearl Dozier LaGrange, Ga.

Florence Few (Mrs. C. N. Moon) Shirland, Scottsville, Va.

Frances Waddell Woodbury, Ga.

Ethel Gilmore

Dolly Jones Voice Augusta, Ga.

Sarah Satterwhite Chipley, Ga.

Lois Schaub (Mrs. A. B. Brooks) Macon, Ga.

W. Ruth Sparks

Sarah Tatum (Mrs. Harvey Reed) LaGrange, Ga.

Expression

Sarah Satterwhite Chipley. Ga.

12

1915

A. B.

Bessie Blackman West Point, Ga.

Daisy Boney Fitzgerald, Ga.

Irene Butenschon 1 121 Wilmcr Ave., Anniston, Ala.

Nellie C. Hammond (Mrs. J. M. Lazenby) Vidalia, Ga.

Lura Lewis Waleska, Ga.

Vera Rawls (Mrs. Clifford McBride) Alston, Ga.

Music Diplomas
(Piano)

Bessie Blackman West Point, Ga.

Florence Foster Hampton, Ga.

Marie Griffin (Mrs. George B. Goldsmith) Greenville, S. C.

Nellie C. Hammond Leary, Ga.

Dolly Jones Augusta, Ga.

Ouida Parish Piano and Voice (Mrs. J. F. Bowman) .Thomasville, Ga.

Ruth Pike ( Mrs. W. C. Key) LaGrange, Ga.

Lois Schaub Organ (Mrs. Albert Brooks) LaGrange, Ga.

Frances Waddell Voice Woodbury, Ga.

Expression

Daisy Boney Fitzgerald, Ga.

Annie Hines Mountville, Ga.

Frances Robeson Waynesville, N. C.

Art

Annie Moore (Mrs. Dennis S. Smith) Buena Vista, Ga.

1916

A. B.

Annette Patton 801 Keogh St., Greensboro, N. C.

Jennie Vaughan (Mrs. ) Wilmington, N. C.

Music Diplomas

(Piano)

Sarah Segrest LaGrange, Ga.

Olive Bradley Carrollton, Ga.

Expression

Annie Belle Hutchinson Senoia, Ga.

Jennie Vaughan (Mrs. H. C. Xewsome) Mooresville, N. C.

Home Economics

Ruth Richards (^^Irs. E. Robeson)

227 Fiftj'-sccond St., Newport News, Va.

Katharine Shaver (Mrs. James Blanton) Griffin, Ga.

Ephie Butenschon (Mrs. Tarleton) Anniston, Ala.

Annie Fennell (Mrs. A. M. DeMedici) Manchester, Ga.

Art

*Dora Lane LaGrange. Ga.

Deceased.

73

1917

A.B.

Evelyn Hale Barnesvllle, Ga.

Josephine Hurst (Mrs. J. B. Whitaker) Monticello, Fla.

Ruth Ehzabeth Pike (Mrs. W. C. Key) LaGrange, Ga.

Annie Belle Rodgers Hampton, Ga.

Mardel Taylor Covington, Ga.

Music Diplomas

(Piano)

Marian Hollis Edmondson LaGrange, Ga.

Helen Lyle Harris Piano and Voice (Mrs. Wyman P. Sloan)

McDonough, Ga.
Lollie Maude Harris Cartersville, Ga.

(Voice)

Frances Elizabeth Black (Mrs. W. T. Edmonds)

Broadway Apts., Augusta, Ga.

Lucius Mahlon Bedell St. Mary's, Fla.

Mary Rampley (Mrs. Lovick Swint) (Thipley, Ga.

Home Economics

Mary Lee Edwards Claxton, Ga.

Mary Bacon Osborne (Mrs. T. Moncrief ) LaGrange, Ga.

Julia Samuels Muse Maysville, Ky.

1918
A.B.

Duane Campbell LaGrange, Ga.

O'Lura Campbell LaGrange, Ga.

Mary Connally ( Mrs. Robert C. Frost) Miami, F^a.

Maude Harris Cartersville, Ga.

Music Diplomas

(Piano)

Alary Kate Clements Woodbury, Ga.

Nellie Humber (Mrs. F. F. Thompson ") Lumpkin, Ga.

Mary Lizzie Wright Elberton, Ga.

t

(Voice)

Jennie Mae Erwin Calhoun, Ga.

Mrs. W. C. Key LaGrange, Ga.

Expression

Helen Clark . LaGrange, Ga.

Mrs. Harvey Reed LaGrange, Ga.

Mardel Taylor Covington, Ga.

Art
Dorothy Bledsoe (Mrs. R. E. Brown) 69 Park St., Atlanta, Ga.

Home Economics

Clara Evans Walnut Grove, Ga.

Harriet Rains Maysville, Ky.

74

1919

A.B.

Dorothy Bledsoe (Mrs, R. E. Brown) Atlanta, Ga.

Lodiisky Cotton Hamilton, Ga.

Iris Fullbright Atlanta, Ga.

Elmira Grogan Washington, D. C.

Lois Hall Marshall, Mo.

Ruth Henderson (Mrs. W. V. Pentecost) Monroe, Ga,

Mary Sue Rutland LaGrange, Ga.

Music Diplomas

(Piano)

\>ola Jarrell Greenville, Ga.

Robbie Lee Thompson Hazelhurst, Ga.

Marion Van Gorder Fitzgerald, Ga.

Ruth Hardy Stovall, Ga.

(Voice)
Ruth Hardy Stovall, Ga.

Expression

Irene Combs (Mrs. Ridley Whitaker) LaGrange, Ga.

Lois Hall Marshall, Mo.

Willela Osborne Maysville, Ga.

Leila Scarborough Columbus, Ga.

Home Economics

Florence Blanton (Mrs. Marion Eakes) Rome, Ga,

Iris Fullbright Atlanta, Ga.

Sarah Ruth Henderson Bravvley, Calif.

Gladys Vickers Ocilla, Ga.

1920
A.B.

Georgia Haley Elberton, Ga.

Allene Mayfield LaGrange, Ga.

Beatrice Ola Stephens Danielsville, Ga.

Coretta Teasley Bowman, Ga,

Music Diplomas

(Piano)

Anbery Amos (Airs. Randolph McCullous)

16 Virginia Circle, Atlanta, Ga.
Luclla Ford Nashville, Ga,

Expression
Ruth Hutcheson Buchanan, Ga.

Home Economics

Lura Frances Johnson West Point, Ga,

Alma Mixon , . . Ocilla, Ga.

Total number of Alumnae, 1,138

75

ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION

The Alumnae Association holds its annual reunion during"
Commencement. Its dues are one dollar per year. All of the
Alumnae are invited to become actively identified v^ith it. The
full name, postoftice, and other interesting data concerning all
the Alumnae, are desired for a permanent record.

The officers for 1920-1921 are:

President, Mrs. Boyd Ragsdale, LaGrange, Ga., ; Vice-
President, Mrs. Jesse Carter, LaGrange, Ga. ; Treasurer, Miss
Eunice McGhee, LaGrange, Ga. ; Secretary, Mrs. T. Moncrief,
LaGrange, Ga.

76

ROLL OF STUDENTS, 1920-1921

COLLEGE

Mary Ella Ansley Georgia

Dora Emily Armistead Georgia

Martha Ruth Baker Georgia

Emmie Batson Georgia

Thelma Louise Bilbrcy Georj^ia

Lois Brand Georgia

Jerradine Brinson Georgia

Alartha Brooks Georgia

. Sarah Brown Georgia

Maude Annie Burt Georgia

Claire Carroll Georgia

Nell Reese Chambers Georgia

Thelma Chunn Georgia

Elizabeth Clark Georgia

Geneva Clark Georgia

Nancy Lillian Clark Georgia

Sarah Moss Cleckler Georgia

]\labcl Cline Gcor.i^na

Leila Cotton Georgia

Ruth Cotton Georgia

Kate D'avis Georgia

Sarah Davis Georgia

Varina L. Dunbar Georgia

Flora Franklin Georgia

Maggie Freel Georgia

Eloisc Fullbright Georgia

Maedelle Greene Georgia

Louise Hairston Georgia

Grace Hale Georgia

^ Catherine Harman Georgia

Arline Harris Georgia

Arabella Hayes Georgia

Mary Elizabeth Holland Georgia

___JCatherine Holmes Georgia

Edna Jefferson Georgia

Lura Frances Johnson Georgia

Elizabeth Jones Georgia

Ruth Jones Georgia

^ ^Nellie Jordan Georgia

Nina May Knott Georgia

Mary Lane Georgia

Mary Clem Leggitt Georgia

'Hazel Lipscomb Georgia

L. C. Lovelace Georgia

Jennie L. Lumpkin Georuia

Margaret AIcDonald Georgia

Lois McGarity Georgia

Hallie McRee Georgia

Lady Zue McWilliams Georgia

Hannah Mangham Georgia

Emmie Lou Mann Georgia

.Corinne Martin Georgia

^^r Musette Martin Cieoreia

Tommie C. Martin Georgia

11

Grace Millican Georgia

Rebecca Moore Georgia

Susie Murphy Georgia

Mamie Northcutt Alabama

Susie Render Ogletree Georgia

Emily Park Georgia

Ora Reece Georgia

Marie Robertson Georgia

Lillie Smith Georgia

Margaret Smith Georgia

Mary M. Sullivan Georgia

B. A. Teasley Georgia

Mary Turner Georgia

Lizzie Lou Veale Georgia

Frances E. Verdery Georgia

Patti Ware Georgia

Pauline Watts Georgia

Mabel White Georgia

Fay Woodward Georgia

Amelia Zobel

IRREGULARS

Mary Consuelo Anderson .Georgia

Mary Sue Andrews Georgia

Mary Virginia Bailey Georgia

Winnie M. Bassette Georgia

Janie Bedell Georgia

Pauline Betterton Georgia

Anna Biggers Georgia

Loula C. Booker Georgia

Lucille Caldwell Georgia

Helen Carlisle Georgia

Dorothy lone Cato Georgia

Mrs. J. J. Childs Georgia

Nell Childs Georgia

Helen Clark Georgia

Leslie Dallis Georgia

Louisa Dallis Georgia

Sadie Decie Georgia

Jessie de Jarnette Georgia

Mary de Jarnette Georgia

Odel De Loach Georgia

Katherine Dozier Georgia

Edna Duke Georgia

Alice Gertrude Ebrite Georgia

Margaret Edmondson Georgia

Marian Hollis Edmondson Georgia

Sarah Edmundson Georgia

Dorothy Ferguson Georgia

Dora Ferrell Georgia

Dera Gladney Georgia

Oaire Hill Georgia

Alys L. Holmes Georgia

Allie Hopson . Georgia

Grace Home Georgia

Mary B. Hunter Georgia

Julia C. Key Georgia

Mrs. Sarah Ridley Lane Georgia

78

Cornelia Lee Georgia

Elizabeth Lester Georgia

Lamartha McCaine Georgia

Helen Ray Mizell Georgia

Jewell Iris Moncrief Georgia

Erma Warde Mooty Georgia

Isabelle Morgan Georgia

Laura Norman Georgia

Rubye Norman Georgia

Louise Perry Georgia

Mary Elizabeth Reeves Georgia

Sarah Evelyn Scarborough Georgia

Annie Moore Smith Georgia

Ola Smith Georgia

Cornelia Solomon Georgia

Marie Stanley Georgia

Mrs. R. K. Stanley Georgia

Alice Sutton Georgia

Fanny Sutton Georgia

Donald Thompson Georgia

Lulline Tompkins Georgia

Mattie Turner Georgia

Ruth Whatley Georgia

Eli White Georgia

Bonnie Alice Williams Georgia

Mattielu Wilson Georgia

ACADEMY

Bessie Vivian Barrett Georgia

Mary Vera Barrett. . Georgia

Vera Baxter Georgia

Sarah Elizabeth Clements Georgia

Agnes Combs Georgia

Ethel Ruth Edwards Georgia

Jeannette Farmer Georgia

Mary Velma Folds Georgia

Virginia Pauline Gorman Georgia

Gladys Gray South Carolina

Lucille Hilsman Georgia

^---^mogene Jackson Georgia

^^-^^rancine Jolly Georgia

Beva AIcMillin Georgia

Dora Merrill Georgia

Willene Pearce Georgia

Lois Roper Georgia

Madelyn Stovall Georgia

Sarah Tate Georgia

Alice Turner Georgia

Biby Turner Georgia

79

ELLIOTT. PHILA., PA.

/

Locations