VOLUME LXXXIV
Number 1
La Grange College Bulletin
La Grange, Georgia
CATALOGUE NUMBER
1929-1930
ESTABLISHED 1831
CHARTERED 1847
ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AT THE POST OFFICE AT LA GRANGE,
GEORGIA. UNDER ACT OF AUGUST 24, 1912
La Grange College
1929-1930
La Grange, Georgia
CONTENTS
Page
Admission of Students 22-24
Alumnae, Alphabetical Index 85-93
Alumnae, Chronological Index 48-80
Alumnae and Matriculates Association 5, 18
Art Department 36-37
Board of Trustees 4
Bureau of Appointments 22
Calendar 3
Committees of the Board of Trustees 5
Committees of the Faculty 9
Courses of Instruction Outlined 28-43
Discounts 47
Expenses 44-47
Physical Education 43
Faculty and Officers 6-8
Grades and Credits 27
Guests 21
History of LaGrange College 10-11
Information to Prospective Patrons 20
Music Department 39-43
Needs of LaGrange College 19
Notes Regarding Expenses 46-47
Officers of Administration 9
Register of Students, 1928-1929 81-84
Reports 22
Requirements for Admission 23-24
Requirements for Degress 25-27
Scholarships 47
Student Activities 14-17
Student Officers 17
Student Publications 14
CALENDAR
1929
September 11, Dormitories and Dining Hall open to Students
and Faculty.
September 11, 12, Examination and Classification of Students.
September 13, First Chapel Exercises.
November 28, Thanksgiving Day a Holiday.
December 20, Christmas Holidays begin Friday morning.
1930
January 2, Christmas Holidays end Thursday night.
January 22, End of Fall Term.
January 23, Beginning of Spring Term.
April 5, Benefactor's Day Field Events.
May 23-26, Commencement.
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
W. S. Witham Atlanta, Ga.
W. L. Cleaveland LaGrange, Ga.
J. E. Dunson, Jr LaGrange, Ga.
C. V. Truitt LaGrange, Ga.
H. Y. McCord Atlanta, Ga.
Rev. S. A. Harris Tucson, Ariz.
H. J. Fullbright Waynesboro, Ga.
Rev. S. P. Wiggins, D.D Atlanta, Ga.
Ely R. Callaway LaGrange, Ga.
W. S. Dunson LaGrange, Ga.
Miss Mary Xix. LaGrange, Ga.
W. H. Turner, Jr LaGrange, Ga.
W. E. Thompson LaGrange, Ga.
James W. Morton R. F. D., Athens, Ga.
Rev. E. F. Dempsey, D.D Oxford, Ga.
Rev. W. P. King, D.D Nashville, Tenn.
Rev. R. C. Cleckler Rome, Ga.
Robert Hutchinson LaGrange, Ga.
Judge John S. Candler Atlanta, Ga.
Samuel C. Dobbs Atlanta, Ga.
Mrs. James B. Ridley Atlanta, Ga.
J. J. Milam LaGrange, Ga.
S. C. Candler Covington, Ga.
I. S. Hopkins Atlanta, Ga.
Cason J. Callaway LaGrange, Ga.
OFFICERS OF BOARD
Samuel C. Dobbs President
Rev. R. C. Cleckler Vice-President
J. E. Dunson, Jr Secretary-Treasurer
COMMITTEES
Finance C. V. Truitt, Chairman; Ely R. Callaway, J. E.
Dunson, Jr., H. Y. McCord, Cason J. Callaway.
Executive W. H. Turner, Jr., Chairman; Robert Hutchin-
son, W. E. Thompson, W. S. Dunson, J. E. Dunson, Jr.
Insurance W. L. Cleaveland, Chairman ; Robert Hutchin-
son, W. E. Thompson.
Laura Haygood Witham Loan Fund and Davidson Loan
Fund W. L. Cleaveland, Chairman; C. V. Truitt, James W.
Morton, W. H. Turner, Jr.
Sinking Fund J. E. Dunson, Jr., Chairman ; C. V. Truitt,
Ely R. Callaway.
Endowment J. E. Dunson, Jr., Chairman; S. C. Candler,
Robert Hutchinson, I. S. Hopkins, W. S. Dunson, W. E. Thomp-
son, Mrs. J. B. Ridley, R. C. Cleckler.
Building and Grounds W. E. Thompson, Chairman; Miss
Mary Nix, Cason J. Callaway.
The President of the Board is ex-officio a member of all com-
mittees.
ALUMNiE AND MATRICULATES' ASSOCIATION
President, Mrs. S. C. Dobbs, Lakemont, Ga.
First Vice-President, Mrs. T. G. Polhill, LaGrange, Ga.
Second Vice-President, Mrs. Thomas M. Campbell, 1957 N".
Decatur Road, X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Treasurer, Miss Kathren Young, LaGrange, Ga.
Recording Secretary, Miss Lena Terrell, LaGrange, Ga.
Corresponding Secretary, Mrs. J. B. Buchanan, 846 Ponce de
Leon Ave., X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Publicity Chairman, Miss Evelyn Whitaker, 1463 Fairview
Road, X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
FACULTY
1923-1929
W. E. Thompson, A.B.
Emory College
President
E. A. Bailey, A.B., M.S.
A.B., University of Georgia; M.S., Emory University; graduate student,
Johns Hopkins University and University of Chicago
Dean and Registrar and Professor of Mathematics
Maidee Smith, A.B.
A.B., LaGrange College; graduate student, Columbia University,
University of California and Northwestern University
Professor of Bible and Religious Education
Maude Helen Duncan, A.B., A.M.
A.B., A.M., University of North Carolina; graduate student, University,
de Poitiers, Institut d' Etudes Francaises de Touraine and
University of Chicago
Professor of French and Spanish
Helen Harriet Sales, A.B., A.M.
Bates College, two years; A.B., Randolph-Macon Woman's College;
A.M., University of Virginia
Professor of English
Jeannette Alexander, A.B., A.M.
A.B., Converse College; A.M., Cornell University; graduate student,
Columbia University and University of Paris
Professor of Latin
Gottlieb David Lixdexmayer, A.B., A.M., B.D.
A.B., Mississippi College; A.M., University of Pennsylvania; B.D.,
Crozer Theological Seminary; graduate student,
University of Chicago
Professor of History
Belle Katherine Stewart, A.B., M.S.
A.B., Waynesburg College; M.S., Cornell University
Professor of Science
George Warhlaw, A.B., A.M.
A.B., Erskine College; A.M., University of South Carolina
Professor of Education
Mrs. L. II. Traylor, A.B.
A.B., Agnes Scott College
Assistant in English
Frances Dotjghman, B.S.
B.S., LaGrange College
Assistant in Science
Mary Margaret Chester
Graduate of the School of Expression, Boston; student, American
Academy of Dramatic Art, New York
Director of Expression and Physical Education
Lultj Darrington Jones
Graduate of Judson College; student, University of Colorado; New York
School of Fine and Applied Art; Academy of Art, Chicago; Art
Institute, Baltimore; pupil of Kneeland, New York;
Pabet, Chicago; Manchester, Boston; two sum-
mers, Chautauqua, New York
Director of Art
Cornelia Brownlee
Strassberger Conservatory, St. Louis; pupil of Win. H. Sherwood.
Chicago, and Rafael Joseffy, New York
Director of Music and Teacher of Piano
Rosa Muller
Graduate of Leipzig Conservatory; private student of Carl Piutti,
Bruno, Zwintscher, Robert Teichmuller
Teacher of Piano
NTeenah Woods
Graduate of Peabody Conservatory, Baltimore; pupil of Pietro Menetti
and Baron Berthold, Baltimore; Frank Bibb and Aturo
Papalardo, New York
Teacher of Voice
Beva A. McMillin
LaGrange College; Atlanta Conservatory of Music; Chicago Musical
College, Chicago
7 eacher of Violin
Carrie Fall Benson
Cox College; Library course, University of North Carolina
Librarian
Oba Martyn Abbott, A.B.
A.B., LaGrange College; graduate student, Radcliffe College
Secretary
Yale x a J. Youngblood
Dietition
Julia D. Sims
Matron
Carmel Glass
Manager Booh Shop and Post Office
ADMINISTRATION AND OTHER OFFICERS AND
ASSISTANTS
W. E. Thompson, A.B President
E. A. Bailey, A.B'., M.S Dean and Registrar
Oka Martyn Abbott, A.B Secretary
Carrie Fall Benson Librarian
Julia Sims Matron
Valena J. Youngblood Dietition
Carmel Glass Manager Post Office and Bookstore
Mary Alice Holbrook Bookkeeper
Mae Eatcliffe . Undergraduate Music Proctor
Robbie Hadley
Carolyn Hariston |^ Undergraduate Assistants to Librarian
Ruth Hill
Mattie Jo Pullin
Martha Jane Estes ) Undergraduate Assistants in Bookstore
Barbara Jones ) and Post Office.
Manita Hall. Undergraduate Press Correspondent
Mildred Stipe Undergraduate Assistant in Deans Office
J. D. Waller Night Watchman
STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE FACULTY
Classification Professors Bailey, Duncan, Sails and Brownlee.
Anniversaries and Entertainments Professors Brownlee,
Muller, Woods, Stewart, Jones.
Social Activities Professors Alexander, Duncan, Chester.
Religions Activities Professors Smith, Lindenmayer, Ward-
law, Traylor.
Alumnae Professors Smith, Abbott, McMillin
Catalogue Professors Bailey, Abbott, Duncan.
Library Professors Bailey, Sails, Benson, Abbott.
Athletics Professors Chester, Doughman, Stewart.
Student Publications Professors Sails, Wardlaw, Jones.
Note. The President is cx-officio a member of all Standing
Committees.
LA GRANGE COLLEGE
HISTORY
At the time of the founding of LaGrange College in 1831,*
there were few institutions in the world devoted solely to the
higher education of women. Even at that early date, however,
LaGrange Institute was an academy of high grade.
In the year 1847 a charter was granted by the Legislature of
Georgia and LaGrange Institute became LaGrange Female Col-
lege, with all the rights of "conferring degrees, honors, and
other distinctions of merit" accorded to 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 M. E. Church, South. In
September, 1857, the college began, its distinctive work of Chris-
tian education. In the ensuing years it has received patronage
from every section of the South.
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. When well
established in a career of ever-increasing usefulness, its work
was arrested by a most disastrous fire on the 28th of March,
1860. The college property at that time consisted of a mag-
nificent building, ample chemical apparatus, a complete equip-
ment of costly musical instruments, a large and well-selected
library, and the best dormitory furnishings in the State. It
was said by one of the historians of Georgia that a small fortune
was at that time consumed in the way of fine old mahogany and
black walnut furniture. But fire was not to destroy this in-
stitution which had been dedicated to the advancement of South-
ern women. The friends of the college especially the generous-
hearted citizens of LaGrange and of Troup County rallied to
the institution dear to their hearts. The Civil War again in-
*Wbito's Historical Collection of Georgia, pp. 651-2; LAWS OF GEORGIA,
1847, p. 120.
10
terrupted, and for four years the old college stood an appealing
monument on the lofty hill that overlooked the desolated streets
of the beautiful town of LaGrange. At the close of the war,
its friends, with loyal perseverance and indomitable energy,
succeeded in rebuilding, and the college started on a long and
successful career. Since that time, umh'V the presidency of
some of the most prominent lay and clerical members of the
M. E. Church, South, the college has sent forth from its halls
hundreds of scholarly women who have occupied prominent
positions in the various walks of life.
PURPOSE
LaGrange College strives to provide for its students an atmos-
phere permeated with the friendliness of congenial companions
and enriched by association with sympathetic teachers ; to bring
them into contact with a type of scholarship which will arouse in
them a desire for the culture which such scholarship imparts ; to
develop in them the highest and noblest impulses of Christian
womanhood, that they may become teachers of all that is beauti-
ful in nature, best in books, and highest in character.
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 Kailroad, one hundred and five
miles from Macon, and about half-way between Brunswick and
Birmingham on the Atlanta, Birmingham, and Coast Railroad.
The College is situated on a hill, one-half mile from the busi-
ness portion of the town. The campus, which is nine 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 : "I have traveled extensively in Europe and Amer-
ica, and I have not seen LaGrange equaled for beauty and
adaptation."
BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT
The principal buildings of LaGrange College are the Audito-
rium, the Oreon Smith Memorial and the Harriet Hawkes Me-
morial. The Auditorium Building is three stories high. It
11
contains the Department of Music, the Art Studios, the Science
Department, the Department of Home Economics, the Audi-
torium, and various classrooms.
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, the post office,
bookshop, and the president's suite, on the lower floors. The
entire upper floor is used for dormitory purposes.
The Harriet Hawkes Building was completed in 1911. It
contains the library and reading room, classrooms, and offices
of the dean and registrar. 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.
In the summer of 1920 about $10,000.00 was spent in im-
provements 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
bedroom. The dining room has been refurnished; lavoratories
have been placed in all bedrooms of the Hawkes Building, and
the plumbing equipment has been made adequate for all its
occupants. The schoolroom equipment has been greatly im-
proved 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 18,000 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, team and track
work.
12
ADDITIONS
During the last year, through the generosity of Dr. S. C.
Dobbs, Chairman of the Board of Trustees, nine lots adjoining
the campus on the west have been added to the campus. These
lots are a valuable acquisition to the college, serving the double
purpose of increasing the campus acreage and providing loca-
tions for future buildings.
Dr. Dobbs has also presented to the college a radio, five up-
right pianos and one grand piano, thus providing for the present
needs in our musical equipment.
Mr. J. E. Dunson, Jr., has presented to the college seventy
Simons single beds. This generous gift makes it possible to
furnish a single bed for every occupant of the dormitories.
LIBRARY
The Library contains over eight thousand volumes which
represent carefully selected reference books for the different
departments of the College.
Xewspapers and magazines for general reading are kept on
the tables, and the students are encouraged to keep in touch with
present-day events.
LABORATORIES
The Departments of Physics, Chemistry, and Biology are
each thoroughly equipped with apparatus and supplies for in-
dividual work.
The Chemistry Laboratory is large, well lighted and airy,
with supplies for a large number of students.
The Physical Laboratory is well equipped with high-grade
apparatus for accurate work.
The Biology Laboratory is supplied with excellent micro-
scopes, slides, and specimens.
13
STUDENT ACTIVITIES
THE LA GRANGE COLLEGE SCROLL
The LaGrange College Scroll was organized in January, 1922.
This paper is designed to be a medium through which the best
thought of the student body may find expression, and to serve as
a bond of union between the College and former students and
alumnae.
THE STUDENTS' HANDBOOK
The Students' Handbook is issued by the Student Government
Association. This is a manual of the student life of the College
and a guide to daily conduct.
THE QUADRANGLE
The Quadrangle is the College annual issued near the close of
the scholastic year.
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 re-
ligious 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 evidence
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 Y.
W. C. A. room on the first floor of the Oreon Smith Building.
SCIENCE CLUB
The Phi Beta Chi i* an honorary society composed of high
average students from the Physics, Biology and Chemistry
classes. The purpose of this society is to acquaint the student
of one branch of science with the other branches by first hand
information from our local resources. There are three chapters
of the Phi Beta Chi Society: first, the Apprentices, who are the
beginners; second, the Journeymen, who are striving to be mem-
bers of the last chapter, the Science Guild.
14
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 outdoor
courts and track, formulates the rules for eligibility in class and
college contests, and constantly encourages participation in all
outdoor games, maintaining always a high code of honor and
true sportsmanlike conduct in all forms of athletics.
DRAMATIC CLUB
The Dramatic Club is for the purpose of studying plays, rang-
ing from Shakespeare to modern comedies. Public perform-
ances are given at intervals throughout the year.
THE QUILL DRIVERS' CLUB
The Quill Drivers' Club gives its members training in jour-
nalism, and also keeps the College in touch with the outside
world. A weekly report is made through its members to the
prominent newspapers of the State.
LE CERCLE FRANCAIS
Le Cercle Francais is an honorary society, the membership of
which is made up of the best students of the different classes in
French. French is the language of the weekly meetings, and an
opportunity is thus given to develop a knowledge of practical
French outside of the classroom.
EL CIRCULO ESPANOL
This club is composed of the best students of the classes in
Spanish. The bi-monthly meetings are conducted in Spanish.
THE ORCHESTRA AND GLEE CLUB
The Orchestra and Glee Club give public performances at the
recitals of the College.
THE ENGLISH CLUB
The English Club is composed of those Juniors and Seniors
who have English as a major or a minor subject. In the spring
term, it is open to the best literature students of the Freshman
and Sophomore classes. The purpose of the club, which meets
seven or eight times during the year, is to consider various
phases of contemporary literature.
15
LATIN CLUB
Societas Minervae is open to all students taking advanced
courses in the Latin department. The club endeavors to supple-
ment the work of the classroom and to awaken in its members
a keen and stimulating interest in ancient civilization. The
monthly meetings deal with live discussions and projects from
Roman life.
THE INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB
The International Relations Club, known locally as the Forum
of Democracy, is made up of those students making History
their major or minor subject. It has for its main purpose the
study of international relationships. The programs include not
only round table discussions, but formal debates and lectures.
THE MATHEMATICS CLUB
The Mathematics Club is made up of students choosing
Mathematics as their major or minor subject. Meetings are
held monthly.
HONOR CLUB
In January, 192-i, the Faculty recommended that an Honor
Club be established. Eligibility to this club is conditioned upon
the literary hours taken and the character and academic stand-
ing of the student. Members are elected each year from a list
of names submitted to the Faculty for consideration. Election
to the Honor Club is the highest distinction that can be con-
ferred upon a student.
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 midyear 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 Students'
Handbook, so that she may familiarize herself with the rules of
the Student Government Association.
16
OFFICERS OF STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
1928-1929
Student Government Association President, Eloise White;
Vice-P 'residents. Catherine Chesnutt, Julia Alice Johnson; Sec-
retary, May Beall Yancey; Treasurer. Martha Jane Estes.
Y. W. C. A. President, Sarah Barrett; Vice-President,
Pinkie Craft; Secretary, Catherine Chastain ; Treasurer, Sara
King; Undergraduate Representative, Sara Thompson.
Athletic Association President, Rosalie Kamper ; Vice-Pres-
ident, Ruth Hill; Secretary, Barbara Jones; Treasurer, Julia
Teasley.
Quill Drivers' Club The officers of the Quill Drivers' Club
are the members of the Scroll Staff.
Tile Scroll Editor-in-Chief, Kate Smithwick; Advertising
Manager. Louisa Leslie; Assistant Advertising Manager,
Dorothy Xeal ; Business Manager, Mildred Stipe; Circulation
Manager, Cole Wheeler; Joke Editor, Gordo Davis; Exchange
Editor. Marie Dix; Alumnae Editor, Cole Wheeler; Proof
Reader, May Beall Yancey.
The Quadrangle Editor-in-Chief, Manita Hall; Assistant
Editor, Sara ~Kmg ^Business Manager, Virginia Smith; As-
sistant Business Manage)-, Julia Teasley; Advertising Manager,
Mildred Traylor; Assistant Advertising Managers, Eloise
White, Louisa Leslie; Circulation Manager, Alice Tharpe ;
Photographic Editor, Catherine Chesnutt ; Literary Editor,
Alice Cohen; Club and Feature Editor, Helen Walker; Art
Editor, Mary Grimes; Joke Editor, Dorothy Neal.
Dramatic Club President Evelyn Powell; Vice-President,
Sara Thompson; Secretary-Treasurer, Mildred Stipe
Honor Club Lurii,. Cassels, '28; Gordo Davis. '31; Manita
Hall, '29; Elizabeth Loyd, '29; Mary Radford, '28; Edith
Traylor. '31; Mildred Traylor, '30; Mary Frances Wiggins,
-)
S ; Gertrud
17
ALUMNA AND MATRICULATES' ASSOCIATION
The object of the Association is to preserve and quicken the
interest of the alumnae and former students, to keep alive girl-
hood friendships, and to create a helpful relationship toward
the College. The highest purpose of this organization is to keep
intelligently informed of the needs and welfare of the institution
and to seek opportunity to express this interest by voluntary
services for the College.
At the reunion in 1921, all matriculates were made eligible to
membership in this Association. The dues are one dollar per
year. All alumnae and former students are invited to become
actively identified with it.
The general Association has given over five thousand volumes
to the College library, over $2,000.00 in money for purchasing
new books, given six scholarships to students, and has done
much toward beautifying the College campus.
It is earnestly desired that in every place where as many as
five alumnae or former students may reside a local chapter of
the Association shall be formed and so report to the President
of the Alumnae and Matriculates' Association headquarters.
The annual reunion is held during Commencement each year,
and all who are eligible to membership are warmly invited to
return to the College for that meeting.
For officers of the Association, see page 5.
L8
THE NEEDS OF LA GRANGE COLLEGE
For more than three-quarters of a century a steady stream of
cultured young women has been going out from the halls of
LaGrange College to bless the world in all phases of life. No
accurate calculation could be made of the good the institution
has done through these hundreds of women. Its graduates and
former students are in almost every State in the Union and in
many foreign countries. They have become teachers, nurses,
doctors, home builders, missionaries in fact, there are no walks
of life which they have not enriched and elevated by lives and
services.
There are many upon whom the Lord has laid the respons-
ibility of wealth, some of whom are anxious to find religious in-
vestments. Can a more profitable investment be made than in
some phase of the life and work of a Christian college, in this
way multiplying itself a hundred fold in the lives and character
of Christian womanhood ?
No denominational college is conducted for gain. Indeed, 1<>
every student who attends a church institution, the church makes
to that student a contribution of a part of her expenses. The
church college is dependent upon its friends and the friends of
Christian education not only for its upbuilding, but also for it-
very existence.
The greatest need of LaGrange College is a large increase in
its endowment. A gift for this purpose could take the form of
a memorial by the endowment of a chair or professorship, or the
endowment of the library or a section of the library. A build-
ing on the campus would be a splendid memorial to a parent, a
daughter, or other relative.
There are other needs which could be met by gifts in any
sums, either large or small, information concerning which will
be cheerfully furnished.
Make a donation to LaGrange College now.
Leave the College a -urn in your will.
With reference to any matter relating to the needs of La-
Grange College, write W. E. Thompson, President, LaGrange,
Georgia.
19
INFORMATION TO PROSPECTIVE PATRONS
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 presents
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 pres-
ident. 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 will not be permitted to accept invitations for week-
end visits. By request of parents, permission will be given to
visit students living outside of LaGrange for a holiday of
more than three days' duration. ~No student will be given per-
mission to visit local students during holidays.
Students are not allowed to send telegrams or telephone mes-
sages without special permission.
We encourage our students to be economical, and we ask
parents to cooperate 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 in the Bookshop
for CASH.
Students must pay for damages done College property.
Students are required to attend 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 pres-
ident, leave the grounds without permission, borrow money,
jewelry, or clothing from each other.
HEALTH
A close supervision is exercised over the health of boarding
pupils. All cases of sickness are required to be reported im-
mediately to the nurse ; in case of serious sickness, a physician is
called. The perfect sanitary arrangement, good water, and
20
elevated country five from malaria have prevented sickness 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.
DRESS
Parents are urged to cooperate 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 daugh-
ters plainly.
The Senior Class wear Oxford gowns in graduating exercises.
FURNITURE
The College supplies the students' rooms with heavy furn-
iture. Each student is expected to furnish her own towels,
pillow, sheets, blankets, counterpanes ; also napkins and napkin
ring (plainly marked) ; and any other articles desired for her
own room for use or ornament as pictures, curtains, rugs, a
spoon, tumbler, knife, fork, etc. Students must not bring elec-
tric irons: these are furnished by the College.
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 invite a guest must consult
the matron to know whether the guest room is available. Stu-
dents may not entertain guests in their rooms. Guests may be
entertained only from Saturday afternoon until Monday morn-
ing. No charge will be made parents and sisters of students.
Payment will be required for the entertainment of friends at
the rate of one dollar and a half per day. Ml guests are ex-
pected to conform to the dorm i lory 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
21
expenses. This money loaned to a student begins to bear interest
at six per cent at the end of the year in which it was used.
Mr. William S. Withani, of the Board of Trustees, donated
to the College the sum of $10,000.00 (which has increased to
over $24,000,000), to be lent to dependent girls.
Mrs. J. C. Davidson, of West Point, Ga., as a memorial to
her husband, gave $1,000.00 to be used as a loan fund.
Mrs. Frances Clementine Tucker, of Atlanta, Ga., left in her
will provisions for a loan fund. This is now available to La-
Grange College students.
Circulars of information concerning these funds can be se-
cured 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.
BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS
The College, through the faculty, assists such graduates as
wish to teach to find positions. This service is rendered with-
out charge.
REPORTS
Formal reports, based upon semi-annual and final examina-
tions, together with the daily records of work, will be issued as
soon as practical after the end of the first term and after com-
mencement. Upon these the system of credits for finished work
i9 based.
The instructors will endeavor to help students make up work
from which they were absent because of sickness. Unnecessary
and unexcused absences seriously affect the standing of stu-
dents.
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.
22
All students entering College must meet the regular entrance
requirements, whether or not they expect to take the full amount
of work leading to a degree.
Literary requirements for those wishing to specialize may be
found under the head of the desired special, as Art, Expression,
Music.
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 certificate
to be filled out and signed by the principal of the school they
are attending. This should be sent in before the summer vaca-
tion. Candidates will find it much easier to attend to this be-
fore their schools close for the summer.
If the work of a student who has been admitted by certificate
is found unsatisfactory, such student may be placed in a lower
class.
STATE CERTIFICATION
Students who receive the Bachelor's Degree and who have also
completed our courses in Education in accordance with State
prescription will be given the Provisional College Certificate by
the State Board of Education. This gives license to teach with-
out examination for three years in the high schools of Georgia,
and at the expiration of three years is subject to renewal for
seven years.
REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION
For Entrance into Freshman Class. The applicant must offer subjects
amounting to fifteen units. The units assigned 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.
23
For Admission to the A. B. Degree Course. The candidate must offer:
PRESCRIBED UNITS 9i/ 2 ELECTIVE UNITS 5'/ 2
English 3 Latin 1, 2, 3, or 4
Latin 4 or English 1
Latin 2 and Social Sciences 1, 2, 3, or 4
Modern Languages 2 French 2, 3, or 4
(In the same language) Spanish 2, 3, or 4
*Algebra \y 2 Greek 1 or 2
Plane Geometry 1 Physics 1
For Admission to the B. S. Degree Chemistry 1
Course Biologv 1
PRESCRIBED UNITS 9!/ 2 General Science 1
English 3 Physical Geography y 2
Foreign Languages 2 or 3 Two years Domestic Science . . 1
Science 1 or 2 Trigonometry y 2
Algebra \y 2 Solid Geometry y 2
Plane Geometry 1 Arithmetic y 2
*Two units if two full years are given to this subject.
Condition may be allowed for two units of a Modern Lan-
guage. This condition may be removed by one year of college
work in a Modern Language.
A candidate wishing to offer units in Science or Domestic
Science for entrance must present notebooks endorsed by the
instructor who supervised to the work before being admitted to
examination or accepted on certificate.
1. Conditioned Students. Students graduated from accredited high
schools with fifteen units and lacking two or less of the prescribed units
may be admitted as conditioned students. All students, however, must
present three units of English and two of Mathematics. All conditions
must be removed before registering for the second year of college work.
2. Special Students. Teachers and other mature persons desiring
special courses, may be admitted without formal examination, upon satis-
fying the requirements of the departments which they wish to enter. It
is understood that such persons shall be able to satisfy entrance require-
ments in such subjects as English, History, and Mathematics.
3. 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.
4. No student may enter Sophomore Class without having twelve
hours of College credits.
DEFINITION OF ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS
For definition of entrance requirements, reference is made to
the definition by the Association of Colleges and Secondary
Schools of the Southern States at the meeting in 1928 in Jack-
son, Mississippi.
24
REQUIREMENTS FOR DEGREES
The College confers two degrees the A.B. and the B.S.
the courses leading to which arc indicated below.
The requirements for either degree call for a four years'
course.
The minimum work required for graduation is sixty-two ses-
sion hours, two of which may be physical education.
The minimum year for a regular student is fifteen hours a
week, exclusive of Physical Education, except for Freshmen,
which is fourteen hours. (This means fifteen recitation periods
a week for thirty-six weeks, or the equivalent, one hour long.)
The maximum year for Freshmen is fifteen hours; Sophomore-,
seventeen hours; Juniors and Seniors, eighteen hours.
The prescribed hours for the A.B. Degree are as follows:
FRESHMAN CLASS
Biology 3 his.
English 1 3 hrs.
Modern Language 1 or 2 3 hrs.
Latin 1 or 2 3 hrs.
Physical Education M> hr.
SOPHOMORE CLASS
English 4 1 hr.
English Literature 1 3 hrs.
Modern Languages 2 or 3 3 hrs.
Physics 1 3 hrs.
or
Chemistry 1 4 hrs.
Elective or Latin 2 3 hrs.
Physical Education Vz hr.
In addition to the above, all students are required to take the
following during the first three vears:
Bible 1, 2 3 hrs.
History 3 hrs.
Of these, three hours must be taken during the Freshman year.
and at least three hours during the Sophomore year. Math-
ematics is elective.
JUNIOR AND SENIOR CLASSES
Bible, or Bible and Religious Education 3 hrs.
Major subject (elective I 6 or hrs.
Minor subject (elective) 3 or 6 hrs.
Physical Education 1 hr.
Electives to make up a total of 62 hrs.
If two units of Latin are offered for entrance, then two years
of Latin shall be taken in college for the A.B. degree. If three
or four units of Latin are offered for entrance, then one year of
Latin shall be taken in college for the A.B. degree.
The prescribed hours for the B.S. degree are as follows :
FRESHMAN CLASS
Biology 1 3 hrs.
English 1 3 hrs.
Mathematics 1 3 hrs.
Modern Languages 1 or 2 3 hrs.
Physical Education ^ hr.
SOPHOMORE CLASS
English 4 1 hr.
English Literature 1 3 hrs.
Physics 1 3 hrs.
or
Chemistry 1 4 hrs.
Modern Language 2 or 3 3 hrs.
Physical Education y 2 hr.
In addition to the above, all students are required to take the
following during the first three years :
Bible 1, 2 3 hrs.
History 3 hrs.
Of these, three hours must be taken during the Freshman year,
JUNIOR AND SENIOR CLASSES
Bible, or Bible and Religious Education 3 hrs.
Science 3 hrs.
Major subject (elective) 6 or 9 hrs.
Physical Education 1 hr.
Electives to make up a total of 62 hrs.
REMARKS ON REQUIREMENTS FOR DEGREES
The six hours of required work in Modern Languages must
be taken in the same language. If two units of Modern Lan-
guage are offered for entrance, courses 2 and 3 of the same
language must be taken in college. If no Modern Language is
offered, courses 1 and 2 of one modern language must be taken.
Credit will be allowed for a single year of a foreign language
only when it is the third language taken.
The elective hours are distributed as follows:
Before the beginning of the third year each student will be
expected to select a leading subject. When the required work
26
in such a subject is six or more hours, six additional hours in
that department shall constitute a major. When the required
work is less than six hours, nine additional hours shall constitute
a major.
A minor is defined as three hours beyond the required work
in a department where the required work is six hours or more;
in a department where the required work is less than six hours,
six hours of additional work shall constitute a minor. The minor
is to be selected by the student after consultation with the brad
of the department in which she is taking her major.
GRADES AND CREDITS
Grades are as follows.
A indicates superior work.
B indicates work above the average.
C indicates satisfactory work for the average student.
D is the lowest passing grade.
E indicates a condition, A conditioned student has the priv-
ilege of re-examination.
F indicates failure. A grade of F means that the work
should be repeated in order to obtain a credit.
At least half of the work credited must be of grade C or better.
27
COURSES OF INSTRUCTION
Note to Freshmen. Upon entrance, all Freshmen are given a brief
course called "How to Study". This helps the new student to find her
proper bearings and relations to college aims, principles and methods
of procedure.
BIOLOGY
Professor Stewart
Miss Doughman
One or more of the following will be offered as the demand arises:
Biology 1. General Biology 3 hrs.
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 gen-
eral biological problems.
Two hours of lectures, one laboratory period weekly.
Required of all students.
Biology 2. Invertebrate Zoology 3 hrs. 1st term
A study of the structure and adaptations of some of the more import-
ant groups of invertebrates, with dissection of types in the laboratory.
Prerequisite: Biology 1. One lecture and two laboratory periods.
Elective.
Biology 3. Vertebrate Zoology 3 hrs. 2nd term
This course begins with the simpler vertebrates and proceeds to the
higher forms through study and dissection of types in ascending order
of complexity.
Prerequisite: Biology 1. One lecture and two laboratory periods.
Elective.
Biology. 4. Human Body 3 hrs.
A study of the skeletal, muscular, digestive, circulatory, excretory,
and nervous systems.
Prerequisite: Biology 1. Two lectures and one laboratory period.
Elective.
Biology 5. Bacteriology 3 hrs. 1st term
A study of bacteria, yeasts, and molds in the home.
Prerequisite: Biology 1. Two lectures and one laboratory period.
Biology 6. Genetics 3 hrs. 2nd term
A course in heredity and social hygiene.
Three lecture periods. Elective.
Biology 7. Embryology 3 hrs. 1st term
The embryology of several vertebrates will be studied.
Prerequisite: Biology 1, 2. One lecture and two laboratory periods.
Elective.
Biology 8. Botany 3 hrs. 2nd term
Structure, physiology, and genetic relations of plants.
Prerequisite: Biology 1. One lecture and two laboratory periods.
Elective.
CHEMISTRY
Professor Stewabt
Chemistbt 1. Inorganic Chemistry 4 hrs.
A study in theoretical and descriptive chemistry as illustrated in
non-metals and metals. Especial attention is given to the demoli-
tion of fundamental principles and the practical applications of the
subject.
Three lectures and one laboratory period weekly.
Chemistry 2. Qualitative Analysis 3 hrs. 1st term
Tests for acids and bases; analysis of simple salts; analysis of un-
known compounds, alloys, complex mixtures, and commercial products.
Prerequisite: Chemistry 1. One lecture and two laboratory periods.
Elective.
Other courses will be offered as the need arises.
EDUCATION AND PSYCHOLOGY
Professor Wardlaw
Psychology 1. General Psychology 3 hrs. 1st term
An introductory course. Open to Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors.
Psychology 2. Educational Psychology 3 hrs. 2nd term
This course deals with psychology in its relation to the teaching
process as practiced by the home-maker and classroom teacher.
Prerequisite, Psychology 1 or Junior classification.
Psychology 3. Adolescent Psychology 3 hrs. 2nd term
A study of the age of adolescence and its characteristics.
Open to Juniors and Seniors.
Education- 1. Principles of Education 3 hrs. 2nd term
Open to Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors.
Education 2. History of Education 3 hrs. 1st term
A survey of important educational systems of the past with a full
treatment of the modern system of education.
Open to Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors.
Education 3. High School Methods 3 hrs. 1st term
A general-methods course for prospective high school teachers.
Open to Juniors and Seniors.
Education 4. Observation and Practice Teaching 3 hrs.
Through the courtesy of the superintendent of schools of LaGrange,
the classes in Education do observation, participation, and practice
teaching in the city schools.
Students prepare for their observation work by reading reference as-
signments on organization, method of instruction, and material for
curriculum. Notes are taken on all observation, and weekly conferences
held with the students in class.
Practice teaching begins in the second semester of the senior year,
and is done under the supervision of the class teacher of the city
schools and the head of the Education Department of the college.
Open to Seniors.
Students who have had three hours of professional subjects and
receive a Bachelor's degree receive also a Provisional College Certificate
29
from the State Department of Education. This gives them license
to teach in the high schools of Georgia.
After three years of experience, if the teacher has credit for nine
hours of professional subjects, including Education 2 and 3 and
Psychology 2 and 3, earned either at LaGrange College or in summer
schools, she may receive a Professional College Certificate.
Psychology 2 and 3 are classed as professional subjects.
ENGLISH
Professor Salls
Mrs. Traylor
English 1. Language and Composition 3 hrs.
Foundation course in English Composition. A study of (a) style,
diction, the sentence, the paragraph; (b) the composition as a whole,
with particular attention to description, narration, exposition, and argu-
mentation. Weekly themes and conferences in the second semester;
study of essays and short stories which relate to the above principles
of diction.
Required of all students in the Freshman year.
English 4. Oral English 1 hr.
Training in reading and effective speaking.
Required.
ENGLISH LITERATURE
Professor Salls
English Literature 1. History of English Literature 3 hrs.
A careful survey of the periods of English Literature, with especial
attention to the Elizabethan and Victorian eras. Extensive readings re-
quired. Intensive study of selected masterpieces. Formal and informal
reports.
Required of all Sophomores.
Prerequisite, English 1.
English Literature 2. Shakespeare 3 hrs.
(a) A study of representative plays of the two earlier periods of
Shakespeare's dramatic development. This course includes a rapid
survey of pre-Shakespearean drama.
Prerequisite, English Literature 1.
(b) An intensive study of Shakespeare's later plays.
Prerequisite, English Literature 2 (a).
English Literature 3. The British Novel of the Nineteenth
Century 3 hrs. 1st term
This course comprises the critical reading of representative novels of
the nineteenth century, following a rapid survey of the development of
English prose fiction prior to the Victorian age.
Prerequisite, English Literature 1.
English Literature 4. British Poetry of the Nineteenth-
Century 3 hrs. 2nd term
A study of the greater Romantic and Victorian poets, with emphasis
on Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, Tennyson, and Browning. The aim of
this course is to develop in the student a keener appreciation of poetry
as the "rythmic creation of beauty" and as a medium of truth.
Prerequisite, English Literature 1.
30
English Literature 5. History of American Literature 3 hrs.
(a) A survey of our country's literature from the Colonial period to
1870. Critical study of Poe, Lanier, Hawthorne, and Emerson.
Prerequisite, English Literature 1.
(b) A survey of the development of our literature from 1870 to the
present time, with emphasis on Whitman, Howells, Edith Wharton,
Robinson, and O'Neill.
Prerequisite, English Literature 1.
English Literature 6. The Teaching of High School English. . . .2 hrs.
This course, designed for those students who expect to teach English
in the secondary school, includes a study of the aims and methods of the
high School English teacher, and a careful consideration of the methods
of presenting the various types of literature to the classes of the second-
ary school. The purpose of this course is to acquaint the prospective
English teacher, in advance, with some of the specific problems awaiting
her, and thus to make it easier for her to do sound, constructive work
from the beginning.
Open to Juniors and Seniors.
Courses essential to the major are 2, and 5.
FRENCH
Professor Duncan
Associate Professor Alexander
French 1. Elementary French 3 hrs.
Elements of grammar, simple exercises in composition, reading of easy
prose, common idioms, constant oral practice.
Open to all undergraduates.
French 2. Intermediate Course 3 hrs.
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 3 hrs.
Outline history of French literature; selections from authors of all
periods; original themes; collateral reading.
Prerequisite: French 2.
French 4. Development of the French Drama of the Seven-
teenth Century 3 hrs.
A study of the drama from the seventeenth century to the present
time.
Observation and special methods in French.
Prerequisite: French 3.
French 5. The Nineteenth Century in French Literature 3 hrs.
A study of social and literary conditions of the century, with exten-
sive readings from the principal poets, essayists, and novelists. Ad-
vanced French composition.
Prerequisite: French 3.
HISTORY
Professor Linden mayer
History 1. Europe from 1500 to JSl.'j 3 hrs. 1st term
The Renaissance and the Reformation, the Renaissance to include not
only the so-called "Revival of Learning" in the latter half of the
31
fifteenth century, but all the changes, political, religious, economic, and
social, which made the transition from Mediaeval to Modern History;
the Reformation to deal with the Protestant movement in France,
Germany, and England; the counter Reformation; the evolution of
the political institutions of the nations of modern Europe. Class dis-
cussions, with occasional lectures.
History 2. History of Modern Europe 3 hrs. 2nd term
England and France in the nineteenth century; the development of
the nations in Central and Eastern Europe to world powers; the
World War. Mainly a lecture course. Approved texts and original
sources used in connection with lectures.
History 3. English History 3 hrs.
A brief survey of Ancient Britain; the Norman Conquest to the
present time; Imperialism; England in the World War. Use of pri-
mary and secondary sources.
History 4. History of the United States 3 hrs.
Colonial history, the War of Independence the development of the
Constitution, territorial expansion; the growth of the United States
into a world power. Lectures, topical work, class discussions; a study
of both primary and secondary sources required.
History 5. Expansion of Europe in the Nineteenth Cen-
tury 3 hrs. 1st term
History 8. The Near-East Question 3 hrs. 2nd term
The rise and fall of the Turkish Empire; racial problems in the
Balkan Peninsula, and the rivalry of the Great Powers. The course
begins with the end of the fifteen century, but emphasis is laid on the
modern period.
History 6. Imperialism and World Politics 3 hrs. 2nd term
History 7. Pan Americanism 3 hrs. 1st term
History 8. Teaching of History 3 hrs. 2nd term
LATIN
Professor Alexander
Latin 1 . . ( 3 hrs.
(For those offering two or three units in Latin.)
(a) Sallust's Catiline.
(b) Selections from Vergil and Ovid.
(c) Latin Prose. This course presupposes a knowledge of all regular
forms, syntax of cases, and the more common .dependent clauses.
Hence, emphasis will be placed on principles of indirect discourse,
conditional and relative clauses, with review of all other dependent
clauses. A careful study will be made of the structure of the Latin
sentence and the derivation of words.
Latin 2 3 hrs.
(For those offering four units of Latin.)
(a) Selections from Livy.
(b) Lyric Poetry; Odes and Epodes of Horace.
(c) Grammar and Prose Composition.
Collateral reading: Roman and Grecian Mythology, historical and
biographical assignments.
;V2
Latin 3 3 hrs.
(a) Cicero's Philosophical Essays, two hours.
(b) Review for Prospective Teachers, one hour.
Collateral reading.
Open to those who have completed Latin 1 or Latin 2.
Latin 4 3 hrs.
(a) Tacitus' Agricola; Pliny's Letters.
(b) Satirical Literature: Selections from Horace and Juvenal.
Collateral reading.
Open to those who have completed Latin 1 or Latin 2.
L ati x 5 3 hrs.
(a) Short Stories: Cupid and Psyche and other selected stories
from Apuleius.
(b) Roman Comedy: Selected plays of Plautus and Terence.
Collateral reading.
Open to those who have completed two courses above.
Latin G 3 hrs.
Lyr^'c and Elegiac Poets: Catallus, Tibullus, Propertius, Ovid. Greek
and Roman Mythology.
Open to those who have completed Latin 1 or Latin 2.
MATHEMATICS
Pkofessob Bailey
Mathematics 1. Introduction to College Mathematics 3 hrs.
The purpose of this course is to show the meaning and purpose of
mathematics and its general usefulness in various fields of intellectual
activity.
Required of B.S. students. Elective for A.B. students.
Mathematics 2. Solid Geometry 3 hrs. 1st term
Open to those who have not had solid Geometry in high school.
Mathematics 3. Trigonometry and Analytic Geometry . .3 hrs. 1st term
An extension of the principles of trigonometry and analytic geometry
treated in Mathematics 1.
Prerequisite: Mathematics 1.
Mathematics 4. College Geometry 3 hrs. 2nd term
A course extending the results of geometry as taught in high schools.
Prerequisite: Mathematics 1 or Junior classification.
Mathematics 5. Calculus 3 hrs.
The first semester is devoted to differential calculus, the second
semester to integral calculus. Numerous applications are taken up.
Prerequisite: Mathematics 1.
Mathematics 6. College Algebra. Theory of Equations 3 hrs.
During the first semester a rapid review of certain fundamental con-
cepts of algebra, followed by a study of such topics as complex num-
bers, probability, determinants and theory of equations. During the
second semester a more thorough study of the theory of equations is
taken up.
Prerequisite: Mathematics 1.
33
Mathematics 7. Teaching of Mathematics 3 hrs. 2nd term
A study of the materials and methods of high school mathematics.
Mathematics 8. Differential Equations l 1 /^ hrs.
The solution of differential equations of the first and second orders,
and of linear differential equations.
Credit: One and one-half hours.
Mathematics 9. Solid Analytic Geometry \y 2 hrs.
Points, planes and line in space; quadric surfaces.
Credit: One and one-half hours.
Three hours a week for one semester.
PHYSICS
Professor Bailey
Physics 1. General Physics 3 hrs.
An introduction to the more important phenomena and laws relat-
ing to the mechanics of solids and fluids, heat, sound, light and elec-
tricity.
Two lectures and one laboratory period.
DEPARTMENT OF RELIGION
Professor Smith
Bible 1. The Life and Teachings of Jesus. 3 hrs. 1st term
A survey of the Life of Jesus based on a harmony of the Synoptic
Gospels and on the book of John. Jesus' teachings applied to modern
life. Required.
Bible 2. History of Christianity in the Apostolic Age. .3 hrs. 2nd term
The origin and expansion of the early Christian church, being studies
in the book of Acts and the Epistles. The course also takes an Intro-
duction to the Literature of the New Testament. Required.
Bible 3. Hebrew History 3 hrs. 1st term
The origin and development of the Hebrew race and its religion.
The Old Testament itself is the main text. Outlines and other outside
helps also used.
Open to Juniors and Seniors.
Bible S is required, but Religious Education 5 or 6' may be sub-
stituted, provided Bible 4 is taken.
Bible 4. Old Testament Literature 3 hrs. 1st term
Following a short Introduction to Old Testament Literature, this
course emphasizes such lessons from the Hebrew writers as may be
applied to modern problems.
Open to Juniors and Seniors. Required, though Religious Educa-
tion 5 or 6 may be a substitute if Bible 3 is studied. Not offered 1929-
30.
The Religious Education courses below are not open to Freshmen.
For completion of certain of these courses, in addition to college credit,
students may also get credit with our General Sunday School Board at
Nashville, Tennessee.
Religious Education 1 3 hrs. 1st term
This course comprehends:
(a) Principles of Religious Education. An Introduction to the Study
of Religious Education.
34
(b) Organization and Administration of Religious Education.
Stress is laid on the importance of a definite program of religious
education in the local church. A study of the methods and principles
necessary to a successful program is included in this course.
Religious Education 2. Moral and Religious Development of
the Child and Youth 3 hrs. 2nd term
A presentation of the inherent religious nature of the child; of the
main principles of Christian nurture.
Prerequisite: Religious Education 1.
Religious Education 3. Teaching the Christian Relig-
ion 3 hrs. 1st term.
This study comprises Methods, Observation and Practice. The aims
and principles of religious teaching, endeavoring to discover the best
methods for the realization of these aims.
Prerequisites: Religious Education 1 and 2.
Religious Education 4. The Curriculum- 3 hrs. 2nd term
A study of the principles determining selection and organization of
lesson material. Evaluation of materials at present available.
Religious Education 5. The Christian Religion 3 hrs. 2nd term
The fundamental message of Christianity as related to every phase of
society; the transforming power of the gospel in the world.
Religious Edu< ation 6. Moral and Religious Conditions of
To-day 3 hrs. 2nd term
An investigation of the more important problems of society involving
moral issues, the Christian's attitude toward law enforcement, nation-
alism, war, industrial problems, the family.
Not offered 1929-30.
Bible 1, 2, 3 (or 4), and nine hours of Religious Education constitute
a major in Religious Education. Similar Bible requirements and six
hours of Religious Education make a minor. Educational Psychology is
a prerequisite for a major or minor in Religious Education.
SOCIOLOGY
Professor Linden mater
Sociology 1. Introduction to the Student of Society . . . .3 hrs. 2nd term
Designed to give the student a working system of thought about
society, human nature, social contact and isolation, social forces, etc.
Not open to Freshmen.
Sociology 2. Immigration 3 hrs. 2nd term
The immigrant as a factor in American life and history.
Prerequisite: Sociology 1.
Sociology 3. The Modern City 3 hrs. 2nd term
American Government 3 hrs. 1st term
SPANISH
Professor Duncan
Spanish 1. Elementary Course 3 hrs.
Fundamental principles of grammar; composition; easy reading;
oral reports and conversation.
Open to all undergraduates.
35
Spanish 2. Intermediate Course 3 hrs.
Continued study of grammar; composition; study of idioms; read-
ing; oral and written summaries and reports.
Prerequisite: Spanish 1.
Spanish 3. General Survey of Spanish Literature 3 hrs.
Outline history of Spanish literature with class and assigned read-
ings from representative authors of the classic and modern periods.
Spanish 4. Latin America 3 hrs.
Spanish commercial correspondence; history, civilization and litera-
ture of Latin America.
SPECIALS
CREDITS FOR SPECIALS TOWARD THE LITERARY DEGREE
A maximum of nine hours will be allowed for specials toward the
literary degree. For example, if both Music and Expression be
elected, not more than nine hours in these two subjects combined may
be counted toward the degree.
ART
Miss Jones
Art is a subject that is practical and necessary, as well as cultural.
No one can escape from displaying taste or the lack of it. Students
should become increasingly sensitive to the aesthetic elements of their
surroundings, and it is the aim of this department to cultivate such
sensitivity. A sense of the beautiful increases resistance to the strain
of modern tension and adds to the inner reserve power. To know art
is, as some one has aptly said: "To know history, biography, myth-
ology, literature; to feel religion and to respond to the gentle teaching
of nature."
The classes in Free-hand Drawing are free of charge to all students
connected with the institution.
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.
Pupils in China Decoration are not required to take regular art,
except when studying for an art diploma.
COURSES OF STUDY IN THE ART DEPARTMENT
History and Theory of Art. Text: Goody ear's History of Art.
Topics for study: Development of architecture, sculpture. Painting
and Decoration from the Egyptian through Greek, Roman, Gothic Re-
naissance, and Modern periods. Albums of reproductions are col-
lected by each student. The amount of collateral reading is extensive
and report of it is made in albums and oral discussion.
STUDIO PRACTICE
First Year. Charcoal drawings from detached features and heads
from casts and from objects. Proportion, construction, line, light, and
shade are studied. Painting in pastel. Theory of color.
Second Year. Charcoal practice in drawing heads and figures from
the cast in full light and shade. Painting from still-life and pastel
and water color. The aim of the instruction is academic, to help the
36
student to observe accurately and fully, truthfully and artistically,
what she sees. Composition and perspective are studied. Theory of
color.
Third Year. Painting in oil, water colors and pastel from casts of
figures and heads, artistic anatomy, theory of color, costumed models,
still-life and landscapes. Composition and technique of painting.
Fourth Year. Paintings in oil from casts, life and still-life. Original
composition. Intensive study of color.
APPLIED ART
COSTUME DESIGN
The object of the course is to develop good taste in dress by cultiva-
tion of the ability to select suitable color, line and material for the
figure in question. Practical work in the rendering of costume de-
signs is given.
INTERIOR DECORATION
The practical working out of homes and public buildings, with care-
ful study of light and color, wall covering, tones for ceilings and
floors, and improvement of unattractive conditions.
POSTER DESIGN
A course preliminary to illustrative or commercial advertising. The
compositions are worked out in a flat decorative manner, with opaque
water color as the medium.
ILLUSTRATION
Illustrating will be found an interesting subject and one which
may be put to practical use. Newspapers and magazines, as well as
large departmnt stores, now employ illustrators on their regular staffs.
Medium employed: pen and ink, water color.
CHINA PAINTING
The instruction includes the study of conventionalized ornament, the
effect of repetition and contrast in the use of colors. It covers the
practical application of designs to ceramics and the properties of flat
painting, enamels, lustres and golds.
PUBLIC SCHOOL ART
Elementary drawing, black board drawing, construction work, de-
signs, block printing, poster making in cut design, crayola and water
colors, lettering and sand tables, clay modeling, picture study. Theory
and practice of teaching.
COURSE FOR CHILDREN
This work is given Saturday mornings.
REQUIREMENTS FOR DIPLOMA IN DRAWING AND PAINTING
Candidates for a diploma in drawing and painting must in addition
to the four-year course in Art take the following literary work:
English, 1, English Literature 1, English Literature 4, Bible 1, Bible
2, six hours of French, and three hours of History.
Two hours a year college credit is given for full work in practical
art.
High School entrance units must be presented by all applicants for
Art Diploma Course.
Work done in the studio must be left in the college until after the
Art exhibit at commencement.
37
EXPRESSION
Miss Chester
This department aims to awaken and develop the innate powers of
the individual student, and through training to bring voice and body
into a spontaneous and sympathetic response to the conceptions of the
mind and the emotions of the soul.
The methods of the department are scientific; based on principles,
not rules. The student is not 'taught" expression, but is awakened to
a sincere and natural expression of her own soul through a sympa-
thetic voice and responsive body.
Vocal Expression. Attention, observation, discrimination, logical rela-
tion of ideas; these form the mental impressions which must precede
the vocal expression.
Vocal Training. Diaphragmatic breathing, voice placement, voice con-
trol, flexibility of voice; strengthening of the individual mental im-
pressions and establishing a co-ordination between these and an
adaptable voice.
To this end is stressed the interpretation of good literature, lyric,
epic, and dramatic poetry, and prose impersonation.
Pantomimic Training. Special exercises for normal adjustment and
Physical response. The agents of the body are not "taught" to act,
but are awakened to a harmonious response.
Once a week all classes meet together for public recitation and
criticism, thus giving the students an opportunity to present their
readings before a larger audience.
Freshman Year 2 hrs.
Logical relation of ideas; primary conditions and qualities of voice,
articulation; rhythm, harmonic response of voice and body; recitation
and criticism. Dramatic rehearsal.
Texts: Curry's "Foundations for Vocal Expression" and Curry's
"Classics for Vocal Expression."
Sophomore Year 2 his.
Qualities of voice-resonance, tone color; development of imagination;
interpretation; literature; the drama and studies from standard writ-
ers; original work in arranging short stories from readings. Dramatic
rehearsal. Recitation and criticism.
Texts: Curry's "Foundations for Vocal Expression," Curry's
"Classics for Vocal Expression."
Junior Year 2 hrs.
Range and adaptability of voice; impersonation; monologues; ex-
temporaneous speaking; recitation and criticism. Dramatic rehearsal.
Text: Curry's "Imagination and Dramatic Instinct."
Senior Year 2 hrs.
Finish in platform art; original work on subjects for debate; dra-
matics and dramatic rehearsal; recitation and criticism; advanced
repertoire.
Texts: Curry's "Imagination and Dramatic Instinct" and "Brown-
ing and the Dramatic Monologue. " Supplementary reading Curry's
"The Smile."
Required for Diploma: Candidates for diploma must present four
years of work in Expression (class and private lessons), and give a
full evening in public recital.
38
Literary Requirements: Three years of college English, one of
History, two of Modern Languages, two of Bible and one other elective.
Students in this department are required to carry the regular fifteen
hours of study, the courses in Expression being reckoned as three-hour
courses.
MUSIC DEPARTMENT
Miss Bbowni.ee, Director
This department offers thorough courses in Voice, Piano, Pipe Organ,
Violin, Sight Singing, and Sight Reading (piano) ; Theory of Music,
including Harmony, Counterpoint, and History of Music.
Weekly recitals in music give training for public work. The course
of Theory and Sight Singing is deemed essential to an intelligent com-
prehension of Voice Culture, Piano, Pipe Organ, or Violin.
A special normal course of one year has been arranged for diploma
students.
THEORY AND HISTORY OF MUSIC
Course of Study
Theory
Freshman 2 hrs.
Notation, rudimentary principles, scales, signatures, intervals.
No credit is given for this course.
SoriiOMORE 2 hrs.
Orem's Harmony for Beginners; Tapper's First-Year Harmony.
Junior 2 hrs.
Elements of Harmony; Tapper's First-Year Harmony. Also supple-
mentary exercises.
Senior 2 hrs.
Appreciation of Music; supplementary exercises continued; Jadas-
sohn's Harmony.
History ok Music 2 hrs.
Oriental Music.
First Ten Centuries of Christian Music.
Guido of Arezzo to the Netherlanders.
Epoch of the Netherlanders.
Rise of Dramatic Music.
Beginning of Oratorio.
Italian Opera.
French Opera.
German Opera.
Sacred Music from 1700 to the present.
Biographical Sketches.
History of Music covers one year, and is required for graduation.
Special students may register for this subject.
PIANO
Miss Brownlee, Miss Muxler
Course of Study
Preparatory 1 hr.
Kohler op. 299; Duvernoy op. 176, op. 120; Lemoine op. 37; Czerny
op. 821; Bertini op. 100; Sonatinas by Lichner, Diabelli, Clementi; easy
pieces.
39
Freshman 1 hr.
Biehl, Technical exercises, op. 30; Czerny op. 636; Bertini op. 29 and
32; Heller op. 45, op. 46; Bach preparatory studies, Little Preludes;
Schumann op. 68; classic and modern Sonatinas, solo pieces.
Sophomore 1 hr.
Beringer Technical Studies; Czerny op. 299; Cramer-Bulow Fifty Se-
lected Studies; Bach Two-part Inventions; Sonatas by Mozart; Haydn;
Chopin; easier compositions; selected solos.
Junior 1 hr.
Beringer, Hanon, Clementi, Gracilis ad Parnassum, Bach Three-part
Inventions; French Suites; Sonatas by Beethoven; Schubert; Chopin;
Nocturnes, and Polonaises, etc.; selections from classic and modern
composers; easy accompaniments.
Senior 1 hr.
Chopin studies op. 10, op. 25; Bach Well-Tempered Clavichord, Suites
Anglaises; Concertos by Mozart, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Schumann,
Grieg, etc.; solos by classic and modern composers; accompaniments.
Piano Normal Methods 1 hr.
Pedagogical principles; technic; interpretation; sight reading;
history of music; ear training; transposition.
Practice teaching under Director.
ORGAN
To be supplied
Course of Study
Freshman 1 hr.
Ritter's Organ School. Schneider's Pedal Studies, Bk. I, II. Easy
pieces by European and American composers.
Sophomore 1 hr.
Extempore playing begun. Accompaniments for Congregational Sing-
ing. Bach's Preludes and Fugues, Vol. I, II. R. H. Shelley's Modern
Organist.
Junior 1 hr.
Extempore playing. Accompaniments for chorus and solo singing.
Mendelssohn's Preludes and Sonatas. Shumann's Fugues ueber B. A. C.
H. Selections from Reinberger, Piutti, Richter, Guilmant, Rossini, Raff,
Guonod, Schubert.
Skxior 1 hr.
Thomas' Etudes. Bach's Masterpieces. Eddy, Church and Concert
Organist. Concert Pieces from Buck, Wagner, Schumann, Guilmant,
Flagler. Sonatas of Reinberger, Lemmens, Ritter.
VIOLIN
Miss McMillix
Course of Study
Preparatory 1 hr.
Schools: Gruenberg, Dancla, de Beriot, Sevcik. Easy Major Scales.
Solos: Sitt, Gabrielli, Bohm, Reinecke, Wohlfahrt.
40
Scales, major and minor keys, Gruenberg. Etudes: Meerts, Kayser
(Book I), Sitt, Winternitz (Book I). Solos: Papini, Huber, Schill,
Dancla. Sonatinas, Hauptmann.
Freshman 1 hr.
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.
Sophomore 1 hr.
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.
Junior 1 hr.
Scales, bowing exercises, Massart; Trill studies, Sevcik; Mazas (Book
II) ; Leonard, op. 21; Kruetzer. Solos: Becher, Bach, Goddard, Hubay,
Brahms. Sonatas: Haydn, Handel, Mozart. Concertos. Rode, Yiotti,
Senior 1 hr.
Difficult double stopping and bowing exercise, Sevcik, Schradieck.
Etudes: Fiorelli, Rode. Concertos: Viotti, Mozart, Kreutzer, Bruch.
Selections from Bach Sonatas for violin alone.
VOICE
Miss Woods
Course of Study
Preparatory 1 hr.
Breathing and technical exercises; Marzo's Elementary Voice Exer-
cises; Concone's Fifty Lessons.
Freshman 1 hr.
Marzo's Elementary Exercises; Sieber op. 85; Concone's Fifty Les-
sons; Panofka 85; easy songs.
Sophomore 1 hr.
Studies from Concone's Twenty-five Lessons; Marchesi; Sieber; Bor-
dogni; Lamperti; Panofka; Vaccai Exercises (Italian words); English
and Italian songs.
JYnior .1 hr.
Further studies from Concone, Marchesi, Sieber, Bordogni, Lamperti,
Panofka. Study of Aria, English, Italian, and French songs.
Senior 1 hr.
More advanced studies from Concone, Marchesi, Sieber, Panofka, and
Nava. Recital programmes, including songs in English, Italian, and
French. Arias from opera and oratorio.
CHORUS CLASS
Fikst Year: Sight singing; ear training; dictation; scale and inter-
val singing; part singing, rhythmic problems (elementary); easy
choruses.
41
Second Year: Complicated rhythm; exercises in two and three
parts; simple modulation; various forms of cadence; more advanced
choruses by standard composers; chorus conducting.
Classes meet one hour a week. Open to all students. Credit, one-half
hour for each year.
REQUIREMENTS FOR DIPLOMAS IN THE DEPART-
MENT OF MUSIC
Diploma in Piano:
Senior Theory.
History of Music.
Prima Vista two years.
Sight Singing two years.
Pour numbers, one to be a concerto in public recital.
One year of Voice or Violin or Organ.
Diploma in Voice:
Sight Singing two years.
Senior Voice.
Four numbers in public recital.
History of Music.
Senior Theory.
Freshman Piano or Violin.
Diploma in Violin:
Senior Theory.
History of Music.
Prima Vista (Violin).
Two year Orchestra.
One year Piano.
Senior Violin.
Second-year Sight Singing.
Four numbers, one a concerto, in public recital.
Diploma in Organ:
Junior Piano.
Senior Theory.
Second-year History of Music.
Prima Vista (Piano).
Second-year Sight Singing.
Senior year Organ.
Four numbers in public recital, one a Bach number of heavier class.
Literary Requirements for Diplomas in the Music Department:
Three years of English (except A.B., and B.S., degree students) ; one
year of Bible; two years of a Modern Language. Students who
are candidates for the diploma in Piano, Violin, or Organ are required
to take each year in addition to the practical instruction at least
nine hours of literary work, including Harmony and History of Music.
Students who are candidates for the diploma in Voice are required to
take at least twelve hours of literary work. Candidates for the diploma
in Piano or Violin are required to practice three hours daily.
Credits for Music Toward the Literary Degree
A candidate for a degree may take music as a free elective. Two half-
hour instruction periods a week and practice for one and one-half hours
daily, with satisfactory progress on the part of the student, will give
her a credit of two hours. She will receive credit for work in theory
and history of music on the basis of one hour of credit for each hour
of recitation work. In order to receive credit for practical music the
student will be required to take one hour of theory or history of music
42
for every two hours of credit in practical music. The maximum credit
allowed for practical music, theory, and history of music toward a
degree is nine hours. No credit is allowed for courses labeled "prepara-
tory" in the catalogue.
In general, unless a student is exceptionally well prepared in music
upon entrance, she will not be able to obtain a diploma in Piano or
Violin and a literary degree in four years without doing summer work.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
Miss Chester
It has long been an accepted fact that mental states are directly
influenced by one's physical condition. Hence, an educational institu-
tion can not 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.
Two hours a week is required of every student, unless she is pro-
nounced physically unfit by the examining physicians.
Two year's work in Physical Education is counted as one college
hour.
43
EXPENSES FOR THE YEAR
In order to facilitate finding the expenses for the year, the
following illustrative tables are appended:
Table 1
DAY STUDENTS
Literary tuition, including the use of the library $125.00
Payable on entrance, $65.00 ; at beginning of second sem-
ester, $60.00.
Table 2
BOARDING STUDENTS
Board, room, literary tuition, attendance of college physician,
and other fees, except laboratory and practice fees, $400.00.
Payable on entrance, less room reservation deposit, $210.00;
at beginning of second semester, $] 90.00.
A deposit of $10.00 must be paid before a room is assigned.
This fee is deducted from the $210.00 required on entrance in
September. If the reservation is canceled prior to August 15,
or if the entrance credits are insufficient, this deposit will be
returned.
Table 3
REGULAR LITERARY COURSE WITH MUSIC DIPLOMA COURSE
Board, etc., as in Table 2 $400.00
Piano lessons 100.00
Harmony . . . . 25.00
Use of piano for practice one and one-half hours daily. 10.00
Total for the year $535.00
Harmony is required for a diploma in any branch of music.
A practice fee is also charged for any branch, as shown under
"Fees."
In like manner the cost of other combinations may be found
by adding to Table 2 the cost of the desired special.
Note 1. The $400.00 charge embraces a fee for the attend-
ance of the college physician, ordinary care and simple house-
hold remedies in temporary illness. This does not include the
employment of a special nurse or consulting physician. Phy-
44
sicians' prescriptions and medicines ordered from the drug
store must be paid for by the student.
Note 2. The reservation fee of ten dollars paid in advance
to secure a room is deducted from the September payment, but
ean not be used in payment of laboratory or practice fees.
specials
Art:
Fine Art $80.00 a year
Applied Art Any one of the foil. .win- $65.00 " "
China Painting
Costume Designing
Illustrating
Interior Decoration
Poster Designing
Public School Art
Expression $75.00 a year
Music :
Piano $100.00 a y< ar
Pipe Organ 80.00 " "
Violin 75.00 " "
Voice 100.00 " "
Harmony, in das- 25.00 "
Harmony or Counterpoint, private 100.00 " "
Chorus Class 5.00 " "
FEES FOR THE YEAPv
Laboratory Fees Charged in the year when the subject is
taken :
Chemistry $10.00
Physics 5.00
Biology 5.00
Fe< for Firing China (according to number of pieces fired I.
Piano for practice 1 \ L > hours daily LO.O0
Each additional hour per day fi.00
Pipe Organ for practice L% hours daily 20.00
Use of room for violin practice L% hours daily L0.00
1 3e of room for vocal practice 1% hours daily 10.00
Diploma in any department 5.00
Certificate in any department 3.00
45
EXTRA STUDENT EXPENSES
While we have listed in the above schedules every item of
necessary expense, there are some items, the aggregate of which
is small such as literary society and student association dues
which, though not absolutely necessary, are advisable. A young
woman is sent away to college to be educated, not only in books,
but for life, and she should be taught to give systematically to
the church, Sunday school, and other organizations, in order that
she may return to her community with convictions as to her
individual duty.
We suggest to parents the advisability of requiring their
daughters to keep an itemized account of personal expenditures.
Young women should be taught the golden mean between nig-
gardliness and extravagance.
The habitual indulgence in confectionery and soft drinks is
not only expensive, but is frequently injurious to health.
NOTES REGARDING EXPENSES
Checks should be made payable to LaGrange College.
Two hundred and one dollars must be paid upon entrance in
September. Dues for special courses are payable October 1 of
first term; for second term are payable February the first.
Students are not allowed to register until satisfactory fin-
ancial arrangements are made.
ISTo reduction will be made for pupils who enter within one
month after the term opens.
ISTo student will be received for less than a term, except by
special agreement.
No discount will be allowed for absence from any cause ex-
cept sickness, and that only when the absence is for as long a
period as ONE MONTH.
In the event of withdrawal on account of sickness, the
amount paid for board in advance of date of leaving will be
refunded, but not the 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 guardian,
directly through the mails, addressed to the Dean, and not to
the student, before any subject may be dropped.
46
All dues must be settled in cash before students can receive
certificates and diplomas.
Students are entitled to the first transcript of their records
free of charge. For other transcripts a fee of one dollar will
be charged.
No transcript of credits will be given until all dues are settled
in cash.
A deposit of fifteen dollars must be made in the Bookshop
at the opening of the term, for the purchase of books and sta-
tionery. No accounts are open on our books for charges in the
Bookshop; books, stationery, and art materials are sold for
CASH only.
The college will be closed for the Christmas holiday-.
DISCOUNTS
When two or more boarding students are entered from the
same family, a discount of ten per cent for board and literary
tuition will be allowed, provided payment are made in advance,
and provided both sisters remain the whole semester.
A discount of $125.00 will be made to ministers regularly
engaged in their calling who enter their daughters as boarding
students. All "Specials" will be charged at the regular rates.
To ministers regularly engaged in their calling who send
their daughters as day students will be given a discount of one-
half the literary tuition. Branches under the head of "Special-**
will be charged for at the regular rates.
SCHOLARSHIPS
The Board of Trustees authorizes the Presidenl to offer
scholarships to the value of one hundred dollars in the Board-
ing Department for one year to the first honor graduates of
accredited high schools.
Students holding college scholarships will not be given further
discounts in that vear.
47
ALUMNiE
any errors in the names below. Information concerning addresses, occu-
pations, etc., will be thankfully received. If married, state husband's
name, title, and address. Send us catalogues issued prior to 1886. De-
ceased 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)
*Rebeeca 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)
^Catherine 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. Tigner)
1849
A.B.
* Josephine Akin (Mrs. Tatum)
^Georgia C. Bigham (Mrs. Williams)
^Henrietta Broome
Sophronia Campbell (Mrs. Ferrell)
*Dorothy Chappel (Mrs. Matthews)
Amanda Dubose (Mrs. Ivey)
Frances A. Favor (Mrs. Goldsmith)
*Mary P. Griggs (Mrs. Neal)
Susan Maddox (Mrs. Johnson)
*Naney Meaders (Mrs. Leak)
Acadia E. Mitchell (Mrs. Dowdell)
Ann E. Pitts (Mrs. Dozier)
"Elizabeth A. Stinson (Mrs. Radcliff)
*Mary A. Thompson
Deceased.
48
1850
A.B.
*Frances E. Brought on (Mrs. Long)
*Antoinette 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. )
Lorine Acce (Mrs. Smith)
*Sarah Avers (Mrs. Potts)
*Alberta Amoss (Mrs. Heard)
'Isabella Baldrici
*Louisa Bryan
Anna Talhounn (Mrs. Martin )
*Emma Cameron (Mrs. Leonard)
*Sarah Cameron (Mrs. Waters)
*Ellen Cline (Mrs. Gaffnoy)
Catherine Colemean
1853
A.B.
49
*Deceased.
*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
Susa Presley (Mrs. Pearson)
Harriet Spivey (Mrs. Marcus)
Caroline Ware (Mrs. Gay)
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)
Susan Skeen
Sarah Smith (Mrs. Wilson)
Sarah Stembridge (Mrs. Herring)
Mary Stephens (Mrs. Coory)
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 Griffin
Sarah Harris
Mary Holland
Melissa Laney
Phoebe Mabry
Henrietta McBain (Mrs. Kimbrough)
Margaret McDowell
Camilla Meadors
Margaret Mooney (Mrs. Ezzell)
Blanche Morgan (Mrs. Johnson)
Mary Redwinc
Sarah Reese (Mrs. Lovelace)
Deceased.
50
Kate I. Selleck (Mrs. Edmondson)
Eliza Shepherd (Mrs. Morgan)
Mary Steagall (Mrs. Dent)
*Susan Tooke
Emma Tucker
*Sarah Ward (Mrs. Thomas L. Davidson)
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 Harrell (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)
*Philo Ware (Mrs. Witherspoon)
1857
A.B.
'Margaret Alford (Mrs. Heard)
Frances Andrews 419 East First Ave., Rome, Ga.
*Marv Y. Atkinson (Mrs. Mallory)
*G. A. Baldrick
Mittie Berry (Mrs. Oglesby)
Hadessa Byrd (Mrs. Trawick)
*S. A. Cameron (Mrs. Colbert)
Mary C. Cole
Laura Garlington (Mrs. )
Susan Barrel] (Mrs. Muyberry )
Addie PoweT
Hattie Shumate
Elizabeth Smith (Mrs. Clark)
Anna Stegall (Mrs. J. II. Orr)
Jennie Stinson (Mrs. Lee Tigner)
'Anna Swanson (Mrs. Swanson)
Martha Tooke
Fannie Ward.' (Mrs. J. D. Johnson)
1858
A.B.
'Georgia Bonner (Mrs. Terrell)
Lydia Brown (Mrs. )
'Sallie Bull (Mrs. John Park)
'Deceased.
51
W. H. Clayton
*Julia Cooper (Mrs. Van Epps)
*Margaret Cox (Mrs. A. J. Tuggle)
*Rebecca, Scott (Mrs. G. V. Boddie)
I. F. Gordon
*A. S. Greenwood (Mrs. Slatter)
*E. A. Hamilton
Marv 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)
Fletcher Harden (Mrs. Flournoy)
Julia Hunt (Mrs. Peyton Colquitt)
C. McKennie (Mrs. Craven)
*Sue Means (Mrs. Griffin)
*A Moreland (Mrs. D. N. Speer)
Annie Morgan (Mrs. Flournoy)
*B. M. Moss (Mrs. Moss)
Bettie Nelson
*M. R, Pullen (Mrs. Russell)
Mary Shepherd (Mrs. Kirksey ) Columbus, Ga.
Mattie Shepherd (Mrs. Russell) Columbus, Ga.
Aley Smith (Mrs. T. A. Boddie) Route 2, LaGrange, Ga.
*Carrie Stinson (Mrs. Ogletree)
*Achsah Turner (Mrs. A. F. Marsh)
*Ophelia Wilkes (Mrs. Tumlin)
Tinsley Winston (Mrs. Winston)
Sarah Womack (Mrs. Garrison) Texas
*R. K. Woodward (Mrs. Harris)
1860
A.B.
Emma Bostwick (Mrs. John Edmondston)
*Abbie Calaway
Claude Carlton
*Eliza Cox (Mrs. Akers)
*Mary E. Evans (Mrs. Edwards)
*F. O. Fleming (Mrs. Dixon)
*Cornelia Forbes (Mrs. Waltermire)
August Hill (Mrs. Thompson)
Fannie Jeter
M. Fannie Johnston (Mrs. W. S. McBride) 188 Cooper St., S. W., At-
lanta, Ga.
*N. A. Johnson (Mrs. Maddox)
Lizzie Laney
Janie Laney
*Alioo Ledbettor (Mrs. Revill)
*S. Cornelia Lovejoy
Mary Miller (Mrs. N. A. Mooty)
*Fredonia Raiford (Mrs. McFarland)
*Deceased.
52
Aline E. Eeese (Mrs. Blonder) Nashville, Tenn.
Polly Kobinson (Mrs. Hammond)
*Edna Bush (Mrs. Callahan)
Sallie Sanges (Mrs. Mullins)
Laura Sassnett (Mrs. Branham |
Shepherd (Mrs. Shorter)
*Mollie Smith (Mrs. Eli Blount)
Sallie Tally
*Isabel Winfrey
1861
A.B.
*Lavinia Byrd (Mrs. Craig)
*Julia Bohannon (Mrs. Witter)
George Broughton (Mrs. Hays) Louisville, Ky.
"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)
Levecie G. Maddox (Mrs. Kendrick)
Nuda M. Ousley
*Emma Page (Mrs. Hunnicutt)
Ellen R. Patillo (Mrs. S. P. Callaway) LaGrange, Ga.
E. C. Phillips (Mrs. Jelks)
*L. C. Pullen (Mrs. Morris)
"'Charlotte Reid (Mrs. Joseph Ware)
*Genie Eeid (Mrs. Cameron)
A. Storv (Mrs. McDonald)
*S. Elmira Wilkes (Mrs. Shuttles)
"Emma Yancey (Mrs. Bryan)
1862
A.B.
Mary Baldriek Alabama
Fiances Bass
Fletcher Birch
" Vandalia Boddie
Lizzie Burge
"Anna E. Evins (Mrs. Wisdom)
Mattie Fleming
*Luey Fleming
Mary Gilmer
Mary Elizabeth Godwin (Mrs. W. C. Cotton) LaGrange, Ga.
*Jennie Goodwin (Mrs. J. L. Bailey)
Rebecca Harrington (Mrs. Bookl
Mary Haynes
Eliza Hill (Mrs. Davis)
Georgia Hodnett (Mrs. Ward)
*Susan Hosjg (Mrs. Davidson)
*Bettie Howell (Mrs. H. C. Bail
Sallie A. Knight (Mrs. )
Sallie A. Little (Mrs. Williams)
Anna Lvon
C. P. McGhee
Deceased.
Kate Merritt (Mrs. Joiner)
Mary Mooney
Lou O'Neal
*Kransillian Owens (Mrs. Tafft)
Clara Packard
*Fletcher Pitts (Mrs. Marshall)
*Mattie Pitts (Mrs. Harris)
Mattie Traylor (Mrs. Wright)
Mollie White
*Mattie Wimbish (Mrs. Abraham)
1863
A.B.
*Addie Bull (Mrs. Tomlinson)
*Hattie Callaway
*Lizzie Leslie
*Sallie Leslies (Mrs. Beasley)
Mattie Marshall (Mrs. W. W. Turner)
*Annie Martin (Mrs. Freeman)
Belle McCan (Mrs. ) Virginia
*Geraldine Moreland (Mrs. W. Speer)
*Anna Turner
1864
A.B.
*Eliza Akers (Mrs. Bowden)
*Ella Broughton
*Ida Burk (Mrs. Hay)
*Mary Cunningham (Mrs. George Forbes)
*Mary E. Curtwright (Mrs. Rakestraw)
*Fannie Hall (Mrs. Tom Caudle)
*Nora Owens (Mrs. Smith)
*Fannie Pullen (Mrs. Amis)
1865
A.B.
Kate Beall (Mrs. L. C. Beall) 1425 Hemphill St., Ft. Worth, Texas
Alice Bryant (Mrs. Willis)
*Achsah Maddox (Mrs. Pace)
1871
A.B.
Janie Barber (Mrs. J. B. Truitt) Cornelia, Ga.
*Nannie Calaway (Mrs. Wylie)
Lula Culberson (Mrs. McCoy)
Mary Hill (Mrs. Boyce Ficklin) 106 Water St., Washington, Ga.
1872
A.B.
Mattie Strother (Mrs. Barksdale) Aonia, Ga.
1873
A.B.
*Sallie Cotter (Mrs. Reavis)
*Annie Curtwright (Mrs. W. J. McClure)
*Carrie Pitman (Mrs. Pruitt)
Willie Pitman (Mrs. Bradfield)
*Mary L. Poythress (Mrs. Barnard)
*Deeeased.
54
1874
A.B.
*Maria Bass
*Dora Boykin (Mrs. Maft'ett)
Antoinette Curtright (Mrs. W. A. Candler)
1653 N. Decatur Koad, N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
*Mollie B. Evans (Mrs. Seals)
*Sallie Lou Haralson (Mrs. E. H. Cobb) Villa Rica, Ga.
Lula Ward LaGrange, Ga.
Maggie Whitaker (Mrs. W. B. Foote).239 King's Highway, Deeatur,Ga.
*Addie Wimbush (Mrs. Anthony)
1876
A.B.
Aldora Gaulding (Mrs. Thomasson)
Jennie McFail (Mrs. B. A. Warlick) ... .55 Onnwood Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
1877
A.B.
*Mary Alford (Mrs. Hogg)
Julia Connally (Mrs. Luther Eosser) ..139 Oakdale Eoad, Atlanta, Ga.
Annie Crusselle (Mrs. Vaughan)
*Emma Palmer (Mrs. Williams)
Clodissa Eichardson (Mrs. Connally)
1878
A.B.
*Lizzie Baugh (Mrs. McDonald)
*Sallie Boykin (Mrs. C. C. Jones)
*F. Virgie Buice (Mrs. Mozely)
Leila Hudson Jonesboro, Ga.
*Mattie McGhee (Mrs. John W. Park)
*01a Simmons (Mrs. Simmons)
Lizzie Traylor E. F. D., LaGrange, Ga.
1879
A.B.
Lula Jones (Mrs. Bilbrough) Cartersville, Ga.
Mattie Traylor (Mrs. T. H. Northen)
766 Piedmont Ave., ST. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Fannie White (Mrs. A. S. Clay) Marietta, Ga.
Sallie Williams (Mrs. Eeid) Bullochville, Ga.
1880
A.B.
Jennie M. Atkinson Missionary to China
*Mattie Cook (Mrs. Zellars)
Sallie Downer (Mrs. J. T. Bright). 451 Peachtree St., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Fannie Dowman (Mrs. Zuber) Ben Hill, Ga.
Ida Lee Ernory (Mrs. Trammell)
Battie Bandly (Mrs. C. S. Reade) Svcamore St., Decatur, Ga.
Myrtle McFarlin (Mrs. W. D. Russell) Hogansville, Ga.
Emma Stipe (Mrs. J. P. Walker)
*Deceased.
55
1881
A.B.
Lula Brannon (Mrs. Knapp) Ala.
Stella Burns Hotel Clement, Opelika, Ala.
*Ella L. Cruselle (Mrs. Baker)
*Mattie Driver (Mrs. Smith)
Myrtle Gates (Mrs. Smith)
*E. Baxter Mabry (Mrs. Brooks)
* Augusta Vaughan (Mrs. T. H. Timmons)
Etta Vaughan (Mrs. Fitzpatrick) Culloden, Ga.
*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)
Ida Palmer (Mrs. F. I. McDonald) 346 Glendale Ave., N.E., Atlanta, Ga.
Mollie Stipe (Mrs. F. E. Walker) 355 Brooks Ave., N. E., Decatur, Ga.
Mary Fannie Turner (Mrs. John M. Taylor) Juniper, Ga.
*Bertha Walker (Mrs. Fuhrer)
* Irene Ward (Mrs. Lupo)
1883
A.B.
Helen Baldwin 25 Baltimore Block, Atlanta, Ga.
Carrie Ballard (Mrs. J. A. Sasser)
401 Ponce de Leon Ave., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
*Annie Bradley (Mrs. Park)
*May Candler (Mrs. Winchester)
Susie Candler (Mrs. B. B. Perry) Dawson, Ga.
Ginevra Gholson (Mrs. F. D. Cantrell) Union Point, Ga.
Carobel Heidt (Mrs. Andrew E. Calhoun) 106 Inman Circle, Atlanta, Ga.
Maude Howell (Mrs. Brook) Alpharetta, Ga.
Carrie Parks (Mrs. Luke Johnson) 10 Emory Drive, Atlanta, Ga.
Nellie Revill (Mrs. C. M. O'Hara) P. O. Box. 1247, Orlando, Fla.
*Effie Thompson (Mrs. A. J. Smith)
Jane Wadsworth (Mrs. Irving) Birmingham, Ala.
Lilarette Young (Mrs. Matthews) Methodist Hospital, Fort Wayne, Ind.
1884
A.B.
*Beulah B. Arnold (Mrs. W. B. Pringle)
*Ellen Barry (Mrs. Carney)
Mary Broome (Mrs. Young Gresham)
Minnie Revill (Mrs. B. J. Atkinson) Greenville, Ga.
Eugenia Sims (Mrs. Thomas B. Akridge)
1007 Columbia Ave., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Mamie Spears (Mrs. Wicker) Augusta, Ga.
A. S. Wadsworth (Mrs. Copeland)
Mary Lizzie Wright (Mrs. Stevens) Savannah, Ga.
*Deceas(M].
56
1885
A.B.
*Pauline E. Arnold (.Mrs. William Wright)
*J. Jessie Barnett (Mrs. W. II. Everett) Vienna, Ga.
Emma F. Bullard (Mrs. Fred B. Smith) Palmetto, Ga.
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) Sparta, Ga.
"Olivia V. Macy (Mrs. George Crusselle)
*Mollie C. Simmg (Mrs. Ward)
Annie Kate Worley (Mrs. E. E. Kimbrough) Gainesville, Ga.
Lizzie L. Dyer (Mrs. Duke) LaFayette, Ala.
B.S.
M hit tie Mae Morgan (Mrs. Johnston)
Persia Wright (Mrs. J. II. Thomason) Opelika, Ala.
1886
A.B.
Lucy Evans (Mrs. Charles Banks) Sarasota, Fla.
Bessie Jackson (Mrs. James Baker) Dallas, Ga.
Mattie Magruder (Mrs. Robert Ammons) LaGrange, Ga.
Willie Miller (Mrs. B. R. Cook) Gabbettville, Ga.
Mary Ruth Mixon (Mrs. Sam Dobbs) Lakemont, Ga.
Nellie Smith (Mrs. Isham Dorsey) .Opelika, Ala.
Belle Poer Llano, Texas
*Leman Poer (Mrs. Henrv Lanier)
Ida B. Smith (Mis. Gay) Dadeville, Ala.
Bunnie Trimble (Mrs. Clarence Johnson) . .21 Collier Road, Atlanti .
*Ella Walker
B.S.
Emma Barrett (Mrs. Black)
* Willie Burns (Mrs. Davis)
*Mary Lou Dansby
Jessie Pitman (Mrs. E. M. Sutton) 209 X. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.
"Minnie Ware (Mrs. William Woodyard)
1887
A.B.
Glenn Camp (Mrs. Starling Carpenter) Xevrnan, Ga.
Annie L. Cole (Mrs. L. II. Wolfe)
J. Winona Cotter (Mrs. W. H. Cotter) Valdosta, Ga.
*Lucy A. Heard (Mrs. Jones)
Bertha V. Henry (Mrs. H. M. Thomas)
Susie Jarrell (Mrs. Henry Turner) Quitman,
Blanche McFarlin (Mrs. H. F. Gaffney)
H-2 Dimou Courl Apts., Columbus, Ga.
Maud McFarlin (Mrs. James T. White) \t\-
ra Merriweather (Mrs. A. C. McMeekin) . . R. F. P., Washingi
Amy Moss Route 7. Wes1 Point .
Lillian O. Ridenhour (Mrs. .J. \\\ Payne)
Maidee Smith La
Mary K. Strozier (Mrs. James P. Barnett) Green* Llle, I ra.
Jimmie Lou Thompson (Mrs. Thomas Goodrum) Newnan, Ga.
Maud S. Tompkins (Mrs. Perry)
Carrie Y. Williams (Mrs. Charles Baker)
"Annie Wilson Luthersville, Ga.
B.S.
Jessie G. Burnett (Mrs. P. J. Williams) 31st St., Columbus, Ga.
E. May Johnson (Mrs. Neal Harmon) Odessadale, Ga.
Oro Wing (Mrs. J. E. West) 191 Grant, St., Atlanta, Ga.
1888
A.B.
Dora BE. Bechmon (Mrs. William Schettman)
127 Ashley Ave., Charleston, S. C.
Lou G. Camp (Mrs. Eobert Brannon) Moreland, Ga.
M. Jennie Cooper (Mrs. Springer Mabry) Dallas, Texas
Fannie Covin (Mrs. J. C. Shirah)
*Minnie L. Crawford (Mrs. Jenkins)
Margaret Crawford (Mrs. John 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)
Lily Jarrell (Mrs. W. J. McClenny) Thomasville, Ga.
N. Grace Johnson (Mrs. Twyman)
Fannie Bert Jones (Mrs. Augustus Quillian) Texas
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. H. H. Wilcox) Hartwell, Ga.
Pearl White (Mrs. R. L. Barnes) R. F. D. 3, LaGrange, Ga.
Lallie A. Witherspoon (Mrs. Johnson)
B.S.
Lizzie I. Arnold (Mrs. W. B. Pringle) Newnan, Ga.
Maude M. Scroggins (Mrs. J. E. Dent) Newnan, Ga.
Maggie Van Zandt (Mrs. Rufus Scott) Paris, Texas
*Ruby Ware (Mrs. Charles Searcy)
1889
A.B.
Annie H. Chambliss (Mrs. Wooley)
76th St. and 1st Ave., E. Lake, Birmingham, Ala.
Lu Abbie Chambliss 7608 First Ave., Birmingham, Ala.
*L. Dora Cline
Corrie Dickerson (Mrs. Lee)
Mary N. Hurt (Mrs. A. Loyd)..281 Ponce de Leon Place, Atlanta, Ga.
Lily Jackson (Mrs. Albert Tigner)
White Sulphur Springs, R. F. D., Chipley, Ga.
Maude McDaniel Dalton, Ga.
Minnie E. Mclntire (Mrs. Sam Tribble) Athens, Ga.
Julia P. Moate Devereaux, Ga.
Doroasod.
Lillian Moate (Mrs. William Rives) Sparta, Ga.
Bettie D. Parker (Mrs. Charles Davenport) Fairburn, Ga.
Julia F. Ridley (Mrs. Elbert Willett) 1130 Leighton Ave, Anniston, Ala.
E. May Swindall (Mrs. John G. Logan)
1259 Metropolitan Ave, Atlanta, Ga.
*Fannie Teasley (Mrs. Hutcherson)
Kate Truitt (Mrs. William Young) LaGrange, Ga.
B.S.
Lula Diekerson (Mrs. Maxwell) 1306 Troup St., The Hill, Augusta, Ga.
Dona E. Haralson (Mrs. Smith)
F. Eugenia Shepherd Commerce, Ga.
Minnie B. Wilkinson (Mrs. Frank Tatum)
1890
A.B.
Grace L. Aiken (Mrs. Mitchell)
Mira Will Brantley (Mrs. M. W. Tye) 3531 17th Ave., Birmingham, Ala.
Kate D. Daniel (Mrs. Joe Polhill) Hawkinsville, Ga.
Maggie W. Dean (Mrs. W. A. Warden) LaGrange, Ga.
Maggie E. Evans (Mrs. Robert Riley)
305 Belief ontaine, Kansas City, Mo.
Clara N. Graves (Mrs. Oscar Smith) Yaldosta, Ga.
M. Loulie Hardwick (Mrs. M. L. Candler) 240 Angier Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Sallie Hodges
Willie Jones 607 20th St., Columbus, Ga.
Ruth Marsh (Mrs. Thomas Lee) Chickamauga, Ga.
Mamie C. McGhee White Sulphur Springs, Ga.
Ada McLaughlin (Mrs. William R. Jones) Greenville, Ga.
Annie G. Robertson R. F. D., Greenville, Ga.
S Corinne Simril Xewnan, Ga.
*Claire L. Smith (Mrs. Frank Hill)
*M. Emma Wilson (Mrs. Sam Turnipseed)
B.S.
S. Paralie Brotherton (Mrs. George C. Walker) Atlanta, Ga.
D Newtie Ingram (Mrs. E. L. Merrill) Turan, Ga.
Pearl Lee (Mrs. Wilbur Trimble) Trimble, Ga.
*M. Gladvs Sims (Mrs. Ponder)
Minnie L. Smith (Mrs. Wall) 208 B. S. W., Ardmore, Okla.
Una T. Sperry (Mrs. E. Rivers) Route A. Box 183, Atlanta, Ga.
Connie V. Stovall Washington, Ga.
*Minnie Willingham (Mrs. )
1891
A.B.
Frankie M. Arnold (Mrs. J. D. Lyles) Jonesboro, Ga.
Myrtie G. Beauchamp (Mrs. Diekerson) Williamson, Ga.
U. Quie Cousins (Mrs. S. A. Brown) 2035 Boulevard Drive, Atlanta, Ga.
Jennie Lou Covin (Mrs. Howard Wooding) LaGrange, Ga.
Mamie Zach Crockett (Mrs. J. C. Haynes) Jonesboro, Ga.
Lucie Crouch (Mrs. E. C. Thrash) .. .Bouldercrest Drive. E. Atlanta, Ga.
*Georgia Heard (Mrs. Fields)
*Hettie O. Ilearn (Mrs. L. McCalla)
*Arizona B. Lilies (Mrs. Hines)
E. Montana Liles (Mrs. Summit)
Pearl Long (Mrs. Clifford L. Smith) LaGrange, Ga.
Jennie Lou McFarlin (Mrs. H. II. Mattingly)
734 Prederiea,, X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Florence Smith (Mrs. C. L. Stone) .",1.1 Flood St., Norman, Okla.
Mattie W. Walcott (Mrs. Tom Moore) Oluster, Okla.
*Deceased.
59
B.S>
Rosa O. Atkinson Texas
Lily Brady (Mrs. W. G. Fish) 414 W. 72d St., LaAvrence, Kan.
Lucile Covin (Mrs. Clanton)
Addie C. George Texas
Ora Gray (Mrs. L. P. Davison) Dallas, Texas
C. Walton Hollinshead (Mrs. Robie) Milledgeville, Ga.
*Mattie E. Johnson (Mrs. Dillard)
*Leila Winn (Mrs. J. W. Miller)
Music Diplomas
Rosa O. Atkinson Texas
Ma idee Smith LaGrange, Ga.
Minnie L. Smith (Mrs. Wall) 208 B. S. W., Ardmore, Okla.
1892
A.B.
Maud L. Bailey (Mrs. Arthur Richardson) LaGrange, Ga.
*Annie F. Baxter (Mrs. Smith)
* Annie E. Bell (Mrs. Schenck)
*Sallie S. Boyd (Mrs. Pierre Sims)
Ladv E. Bovkin (Mrs. Robert Segrest) LaGrange, Ga.
E. Maude Ellis
Jennie Smith
*Tabitha E. Speer (Mrs. Ezzard)
Bonnell L. Strozier (Mrs. F. J. Bivens) Moultrie, Ga.
Forrest L. Strozier Greenville, Ga.
Juliet Tuggle (Mrs. John H. Nelson) Rt, 3, Cleveland, Ga.
*Lucie W. Hunt
Ella R. Johnson (Mrs. W. M. Sykes) Rose Apts, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Sallie M. Quillian (Mrs. John Jones) Cartersville, Ga.
*Rosa Sharp
T. Antionette Ward
Van Dyck Studio, 8th Ave, and 56th St., New York City
Edith West (Mrs. Gus Harris) Decatur, Ala.
M. Louise Wimbish (Mrs. Beach)
B.S.
Erne S. Agnew (Mrs. John McCrary) Royston, Ga.
C. Lorraine Bradley (Mrs. Joseph Jarrell) Athens, Ga.
Ruth Camp (Mrs. W. Smith) Mount Dora, Fla.
Clarabess Crain (Mrs. John Fambro) Rockmart, Ga.
* Jennie F. Foster (Mrs. Mason)
Maud Freeman Griffin, Ga.
Winnie V. Hearn Texas
Clara. E. Hodges (Mrs. J. E. Linder) Hartwell, Ga.
*F. Lillian. McLaughlin (Mrs. Joseph McGlico)
*Lizzie P. Merritt
Lizzie M. Parham
*Mary Wooten (Mrs. Moss)
Music Diplomas
Clara N. Graves (Mrs. Oscar Smith) Valdosta, Ga.
Mary L. Park (Mrs. M. D. Fowler)
*Claire L. Smith (Mrs. F. H. Hlil)
'Deceased.
60
1893
A.B.
M. Bird Baxter (Mrs. O. A. Gentry) Eastman, Ga.
S. Amanda Gritt (Mrs. Leon O. Lewis) Clarendon, Texas
Mattie Bulloch Bullochville, Ga.
*Blonde Capps (Mrs. Clarence E. Mason)
Gene Covin (Mrs. E. K. Farmer) LaGrange, Ga.
Meta Dickinson (Mrs. J. B. Daniel) LaGrange, Ga.
Ruth Evans (Mrs. Roy Dallis) LaGrange, Ga.
M. Edna Ferguson (Mrs. Philip M. Tate) Fairmount, Ga.
Fannie Harrell R. F. D., Cummins, Ga.
Leila B. Kendrick Columbus, Ga.
Dolly Hooks
Mary F. Liles (Mrs. J. T. Nelson) Roanoke, Ala.
M. Lula Lovelace (Mrs. Robert N. Hogg) West Point, Ga.
Lizzie S. Lupo(Mrs. J. H. McGrew)
364 Highland Ave., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
M. Ora Martyn (Mrs. H. E. Abbott)
213 W. Princeton Ave., College Park, Ga.
Angie L. Maynard (Mrs. L. F. Sell) Hoschton, Ga.
M. Kate Moss (Mrs. R. C. Cleckler) Rome, Ga.
Annie F. Reid (Mrs. Harry Roberts) Bonham, Texas
*Leila A. Shewmake
Macie E. Speer (Mrs. E. M. Copeland) McDonough, Ga.
Estelle Strozier (Mrs. S. D. Ravenell) . .639 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
Mary Tomlinson (Mrs. A. J. Tuggle) LaGrange, Ga.
*Jennie W. Williams (Mrs. Miller)
B.S.
B. Mae Bradv (Mrs. Frank R, Bartlett)
237 Brooklyn Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Ledra Edmondson (Mrs. Charles J. Warner).. 307 S. 8th St., Rome, Ga.
Maymie B. Hendrix (Mrs. Andrew Anderson) Tampa, Fla.
Annie Gertrude Henrv (Mrs. George Wicker) Trenton, S. C.
*Ncllie B. Kirkley (Mrs. Campbell)
Mary Z. Latham' (Mrs. Gus Cox) 919 Courthouse, Atlanta, Ga.
Fredonia Maddox (Mrs. W. A. Webster)
567 Blvd. PL, N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Vela C. Winn (Mrs. W. W. Hawkins) 231 Hancock St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Music Diplomas
*Nllie B. Kirkley (Mrs. Campbell)
M. Lula Lovelace (Mrs. Robert Hogg) West Point, Ga.
T. Antoinette Ward
Van Dyck Studio, 8th Ave., 50th St. New York Ctty
1894
A.B.
Louise Anderson (Mrs. Frederick P. Manget) Missionary to China
V. Eula Beauchamp (Mrs. W. H. Meacham)
7 Lake View Ave. Atlanta, Ga.
Lula Belle Bird LaGrange, Ga.
Lina Brazell (Mrs. Will Trimble) Eogansville, Ga.
Sadie Bess Bryan (Mrs. O. M. Heard) Cordele, Ga.
Etta Cleveland (Mrs. F. J. Dodd) LaGrange, Ga.
susi ( . Harrell R. p. T). Cumming, Ga.
\\. Estelle Harvard (Mrs. E. E. Clements)
Decea
61
Adella Hunter (Mrs. C. N. Pike) LaGrange, Ga.
Irma O. Lewis (Mrs. T. B. McKleroy)
Mary Mitchell (Mrs. G. W. Clower) 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)
Fannie H. Clark (Mrs. Maynard) Tvler, Okla.
Edda Cook (Mrs. Wm. H. Pitt).. 2633 St. John Ave., Jacksonville, Fla.
*Clara DeLaperriere (Mrs. Lanier)
Eula Hines (Mrs. Johnson) Albertsville, Ala.
*Nettie C. Howell (Mrs. Lane)
E. Eula Liles (Mrs. J. P. Radney) Roanoke, Ala.
Cora Milam (Mrs. Wren Coleman) Noxapater, Miss.
Bessie Moseley (Mrs. Brown) LaGrange, Ga.
Lucie Patillo (Mrs. Logan Jones) 210 E. 39th St., Savannah, Ga.
Kate Wilkinson LaGrange, Ga.
Music Diplomas
Bird Baxter (Mrs. O. A. Gentry) Eastman, Ga.
Gene Covin (Mrs. E. K. Farmer) LaGrange, Ga.
1895
A.B.
Myra L. Bruce (Mrs. Cleve Glasure) Commerce, Ga.
Rosa Callahan (Mrs. James M. Lassiter) Conyers, Ga.
*Hunter M. Carnes (Mrs. Virgil Harvard)
Lily Coggins (Mrs. R. T. Jones) Canton, Ga.
Alice Harp (Mrs. Young) Florida
M. Evans Harris (Mrs. William P. King) Xashville, Tenn.
H. Estelle Hutcheson (Mrs. Harlan)
Buford Johnson Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.
*Lillian Johnson (Mrs. Burkhalter)
*Annie I. Key (Mrs. Walker)
*Eva Mashburn (Mrs. Lamback)
Gussie R. McCutcheon Columbus, Ga.
Birdie Meaders (Mrs. Dowda) Texas
Daisy Morris (Mrs. W. L. Smith). . .810 Cotton Ave., Birmingham, Ala.
Clara Parks (Mrs. Joseph Fetherston) Newnan, Ga.
Tallulah Quillian (Mrs. John Thrasher)
Alice Robins (Mrs. George Cunningham)
Flora E. Seals (Mrs. E. W. Thorpe) DeFuniak Springs, Fla.
Ernie Shewmake (Mrs. O. G. Singleton) Fort Valley, Ga.
Daisy Taylor (Mrs. G. P. Rumble) Macon, Ga.
Annie Thrasher (Mrs. W. B. Parham) Watkinsville, Ga.
Kate Trimble (Mrs. Steven Davis)
^Romania Welcnel
"Annie Wiggins (Mrs. Meadows)
B.S.
*Callie Burns (Mrs. King)
Lora Edmondson (Mrs. Hatton Lovejoy) LaGrange, Ga.
Annie Kate Johnson (Mrs. G. E. Parks) Newnan, Ga.
"Julia Manning (Mrs. E. A. Holmes)
'Deceased.
C2
Mattie Schaub (Mrs. Williams) LaGrange, Ga.
Lula Welchel (Mrs. Milton A. Smith)
24 W. College Ave, Tallahassee, Fla.
Music Diplomas
Lina S. Brazell (Mrs. Will Trimble) Hogansville, Ga.
Effie J. Shewmake (Mrs. Singleton) Fort Valley, Ga.
1896
A.B.
Lizzie A. Ayers (Mrs. Leland Little) Carnesville, Ga.
Belle Grantley (Mrs. Rodenberry) Folkston, Ga.
Lula Bulloch (Mrs. O. C. Bulyloch) Warm Springs, Ga.
Annie Callahan (Mrs. A. S. Hutchinson)
309 Crawford Ave., Augusta, Ga.
h Estelle Chappell (Mrs. IT. H. Chandler) Sardis, Ga.
Ellen Davenport (Mrs. J. A. Haram) 821 Division St., Orlando, Fla.
Sallie DeLamar (Mrs. B. M. Poer) Arlington, Ga.
Pattie Dixon Woodbury, Ga.
Beuna Harris Union Springs, Ala.
Liny Hill (Mrs. Anthony)
Tallulah King (Mrs. J. O. Xorris) Decatur, Ga.
Bessie Longino (Mrs. Vickers) Fairburn, Ga.
Myra Merriweather (Mrs. C. E. Bulloch)
320 Farmington Ave., Hartford, Conn.
Blanche Murphy (Mrs. J. R. Speer) 229 Tattnall St., Macon, Ga.
Inez Murrah (Mrs. Knott) Candler Road, Atlanta, Ga.
Eoline Price (Mrs. H. Trigg Sheffey)
3215 First Ave., Shandon Annex, Columbia, S. C.
Hallie Quillian (Mrs. W r . H. Ashford) Athens, Ga.
Florence Traylor (Mrs. J. C. Orr)
14 Oak St., W r est End, Birmingham, Ala.
Nannie Ware Lincolnton, Ga.
A. Maud Williams (Mrs. J. M. Trotter) Lookout Mountain, Tenn.
Mary Lou Woodall (Mrs. Caudle) Decatur. Ga.
Mittio Wright (Mrs. W. Y. Harber) Commerce, Ga.
B.S.
Morah T. Bailey (Mrs. Rowrer) Florida
Clara Baker LaGrange, Ga.
*Mary Beasley (Mrs. W. J. Chenowith)
Jessie Cotter (Mrs. Charles Roberts, Jr.) New Orleans, La.
Josie Daniels (Mrs. Hogan) Hogansville, Ga.
Mattie Lee Dunn (Mrs. R. A. Sloan) MeDonough, Ga.
Annie Clyde Edmondson (Mrs. J. B. Ridley)
624 Linwood Ave., X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Helen Hendrick (Mrs. M. X. Mattox)
Gussie Merriweather (Mrs. Winn) Orlando, Fla.
Ola Miller (Mrs. John Johnson) West Poii
Mary Will Smith (Mrs. .1. M. Williams) Dublin, Ga.
lia Thompson (Mrs. Wimberly)
Evelyn Whitaker '....140;-! Pairview Road, Atlanta, Ga.
Music Diplomas
Belle Brantley (Mrs. Robenberry)
Sallie DeLamar (Mrs. B. M. Poer) Broxton, Ga.
i >..,-.
63
1897
A.B.
Annie Campbell 1532 Gwinnett St., Augusta, Ga.
*Mary Carmiehael (Mrs. H. M. Lively)
S. Eleanor Cloud (Mrs. B. L. Bryan) Greensboro, Ga.
Clara Freeman (Mrs. J. T. Bush) Bush Court, Valdosta, Ga.
* Leila Hood
Kate S. Ingram (Mrs. Kate Gordy)
502 Greenwood Ave., X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Willie Maddox (Mrs. Holloway) Dallas, Texas
Ruby McElroy (Mrs. W. H. Born) McEae, Ga.
Ozella B. Roberts (Mrs. James II. Ross) Americus, Ga.
Mary Seale (Mrs. R. S. Thompson) Autaugaville, Ala.
Julia B. Tigner White Sulphur Springs, R. F. D., Chipley, Ga.
Gertrude Touchstone (Mrs. Dunne)
Cora Tuck (Mrs. James W. Morton) Athens, Ga., R. F. D. 1
*Alice Turner *
Lillian Venable (Mrs. John Shaw) LaFayette, Ga.
B.S.
Leah Baker (Mrs. J. T. Moon) 844 Yedado Way, X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Julia Bradfield LaGrange, Ga.
*Ila E. Chupp (Mrs. Carroll)
*Etta Cook (Mrs. Hopkins) Chipley, Ga.
Irene Florence (Mrs. J. Howell Green).. 645 Sycamore St., Decatur, Ga.
Kate Jenkins (Mrs. Alonzo) Cuba
Rena Mai Ledbetter (Mrs. Graves) Cedartown, Ga.
Henrietta Smith (Joseph G. Faust) Greensboro, Ga.
Alma Stroud (Mrs. Hancock)
Gussie Tigner (Mrs. Sterling P. Wiggins)
1270 Oxford Road, X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Bertha Wilson (Mrs. John Upshaw) Social Circle, Ga.
Montina M. Winter (Mrs. John L. Hall) Royston, Ga.
MUSIC DIPLOMAS
Eleanor Davenport (Mrs. J. A. Hamm) Fort Pierce, Fla.
Carrie Davidson (Mrs. J. L. Paulk) Ocilla, Ga.
Mamie Dozier (Mrs. T. H. Wynne) Griffin, Ga.
Kate Ingram (Mrs. Kate Gordy)
502 Greenwood Ave., X T . E., Atlanta, Ga.
1898
A.B.
Irene Adair Greenville, Ga.
Lutie Blasingame (Mrs. M. B. Sams) Ringgold, Ga.
Mary Will Cleaveland (Mrs. A. H. Thompson) LaGrange, Ga.
Nettie L. Cook (Mrs. John Campbell) Bradentown, Fla.
"Clara Dallis (Mrs. Sterling Turner)
Bessie Farmer (Mrs. Milledge Lockhart)
2423 Walton Way, Augusta, Ga.
Emmie Ficklin Washington, Ga.
Laurie Lanier (Mrs. Horace Mallory) Sylvania, Ga.
Hortense McClure (Mrs. H. L. McClesky) Station A. Hattiesburg, Miss.
Evelyn McLaughlin (Mrs. J. O. McGhee) Greenville, Ga.
Annie Bell Pendleton State Hospital, Milledgeville, Ga.
Louiso Rosser (Mrs. L. C. Warren) Griffin, Ga.
Sophie Wright (Mrs. J. L. Brown) 297 S. Hull St., Athens, Ga.
*Deceased.
C>4
B.S.
Emily Dickinson (Mrs. J. D. Smith) LaGrange, Ga., R. F. D.
Annie Fulcher (Mrs. Fred Turner) Tampa, Fla.
Sallie Myrt Gillian (Mrs. William Durham) Max.
Flora Glenn (Mrs. Howard Candler)
980 Briar Cliff Road, N. E., At Inula, Ga.
Ward Bardwiek (Mrs. Charles K. Gailey) Conyers, Ga.
Sallie Fannie Hodnott (Mrs. Ranee O'Neal) West Point, Ga.
Cor. Ion Hudgins (Mrs. G. E. Miller)
1064 Dickson Place, N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Eva M;inn (Mrs. Thomas) Atlanta, Ga.
Mary D. Mann (Mrs. Howell)
Dana Marcliman (Mrs. W. A. Wooten) Ea tman, Ga.
Ruth Miller Route 3, Hogansville, Ga.
Mary Ray (Mrs. Shurley) Hardeman Ave., Macon, Ga.
*May Storey (Mrs. Parker)
Ruth Tuggle 2083 DeKalb Ave., X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Rosa Wright (Mrs. Emory Boyd) Tignall, Ga.
Music Diplomas
Mary Will Cleaveland (Mrs. A. H. Thompson) LaGrange, Ga.
*Lillian Johnson (Mrs. John T. Burkhalter)
Art Diplomas
Nona Harris (Mrs. Buford Carter) LaGrange, Ga., R. F. D.
Alma Xesbitt (Mrs. Willingham) Xorcross, Ga.
1899
A.B.
Allie Beall Carrollton, Ga.
Idella Bellah Fulton County Court House, Atlanta, Ga.
Annie Bynum (Mrs. George B. Davis) Dublin, Ga.
Lillias Fleming (Mrs. Carroll Graham) Bainbridge, Ga.
Lizzie A. Gray (Mrs. Robert L. Adams) LaGrange, Ga.
Willie Hardy (Mrs. Lovelace)
*Helen Huntley
Alice Jenkins (Mrs. J. X. Sherman)
15 Indianola Court, Apt. A. Columbus, O.
Mattie Loflin (Mrs. J. F. Smalley) .Thomson, Ga.
*LeIa Newton
Mary Park (Mrs. T. G. Polhill) LaGrange, Ga.
Leila Parks (Mrs. J. P. Erwin) College Park, Ga.
Anna Quillian (Mrs. Thomas Dillard) Arnoldsville, Ga.
Mary Rosser (Mrs. A. S. Holcomb) Washington, Ga.
Carlie Smith (Mrs. W. P. Dozier) Winfield Rte., Thomaston, Ga.
Sallie Tomlinson (Mrs. William Ivev) Box 399, Jesup, Ga.
"Mattie Byrd Watson (Mrs. W. L. Chunn)
B.S.
Annie Kate Bondurant (Mrs. L. D. Jones)
128 Currier St.. X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Kola Dickinson (Mrs. E. A. Wheeler) R. F. D., LaGrange, Ga.
Mary Belle Dixon (Mis. McKenzie) Thomaston, Ga.
Aurena Evans (Mrs. Burgess)
Mary Rosser Kimbrough (Mrs. Curtis Gutter
* ' 123 Oak Haven Ave., Macon,
Lila Park
Mary E. Quillian (Mrs. Harrell)
Anita Stroud
*Deceascd.
B.L.
*Lilliam Neal
Pearl Sewell (Mrs. T. C. Holbrook) Carnesville, Ga.
Mabel Thrower (Mrs. George N. McDonell)
218 Nichols St., Waycross, Ga.
Music Diplomas
*Annie Cheatham Voice (Mrs. H. P. Whiddon)
Marilu Ingram Piano (Mrs. Marion Letcher) .. .Copenhagen, Denmark
1900
A.B.
Glenn Anderson (Mrs. T. E. Boswell) Siloam, Ga.
Mary Lizzie Anderson (Mrs. Watson)
Esther Askew (Mrs. J. H. Kelley) Brooks, Ga.
Clyde Bruce (Mrs. Emmett Williams) Bulloch ville, Ga.
Willie Crawford (Mrs. Johnson)
Virgil Harris (Mrs. A. W. Castlen) Culloden, Ga.
Marie Harrison (Mrs. J. H. Wilson) Lincoln, Ala.
*Nellie Johnson (Mrs. Wilkerson)
Clyde Lanier Millen, Ga.
*Lottie Maxwell (Mrs. Robertson)
Rebie Neese (Mrs. L. M. Moore)
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. T. H. Phinazee) R. F. D., Goggansville, Ga.
Exa Stewart (Mrs. B. W. Bonner) Buffalo, Ala.
Annie Stone (Mrs. Powell) Towns, Ga.
B.S.
Ethel Bryson (Mrs. W. C. Thompson) Lavonia, Ga.
Marion Clifton
A Louise Moate (Mrs. Reeves)
Louise L. Ray (Mrs. C. C. Burch) Eastman, Ga.
Leone J. Tucker (Mrs. Rush Burton) Lavonia, Ga.
B.L.
Carol Capps (Mrs. Stapler)
Rosebud Dixon (Mrs. Oscar Callahan) Woodbury, Ga.
*Annie Lou Hood (Mrs. Fred Robinson)
Ethel Lively (Mrs. )
Jessie Manning (Mrs. R. E. Stearns) Goldenrod Ave., Baton Rouge, La.
Eva Sutton (Mrs. S. B. Savage) Rayle, Ga.
Music Diplomas
*Irene Dempsey
Leila Irvin Piano (Mrs. W. M. Barnett) LaGrange, Ga.
Fannie Smith (Mrs. F. A. Ricks) Reynolds, Ga.
1901
A.B.
Stella Benton (Mrs. Harry Jones) 2429 Williams St., Augusta, Ga.
Stella Bradfield LaGrange, Ga.
Irene Butler (Mrs. J. W. Daniel) Chapel Hill, N. C.
Ernestine Dempsey 1125 Greenwich Ave., S. W., Atlanta, Ga.
^Deceased.
66
Jesse Mallorv (Mrs. James DeLamar)
10th Ave. and 19th St., Columbus, Ga.
Pauline Norman (Mrs. W. H. MeLariu) 114 S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.
Lilla Tuck Athens, Ga., R. F. D. No. 1
B.S.
Kate Bradfield (Mrs. John S. Brown) MeDonough, Ga.
Ella Bussey Atlanta, Ga.
Lou Ella Davis (Mrs. W. E. Drane) 1345 2d Ave., Columbus, Ga.
Mary Barnard Nix LaGrange, Ga.
Sarah Quilliau (Mrs. W. W. Baldwin) Madison, Ga.
*Effie C. Smith
Leila Williams (Mrs. O. W. Tucker)
1902
A.B.
Janie Brown Cofer (Mrs. Frank Skinner)
Emma Lois Cotton (Mrs. P. W. Ellis) Thomasville, Ga.
Sidnor Davenport (Mrs. Fred Hemmings) Fort Pierce, Fla.
Elizabeth T. Ferrell (Mrs. )
Xell Marchmon (Mrs. H. L. Fiynt)
1050 Ponce de Leon Ave., X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Bertie Pennington (Mrs. S. R. Campbell) Mansfield, Ga.
Cleta Quillian (Mrs. Harry Cleveland)
1209 Aquila St., Coral Gables, Fla.
Nancy Lee Shell (Mrs. Pierce Norman) Alpharetta, Ga.
Nellie Vickers (Mrs. Chester R. Harvey) Fairburn, Ga.
B.S.
Mary Bateman (Mrs. Larry Lankford)
Robie Clifton (Mrs. Christine Williams) Lyons, Ga.
Leila Jernigan 204 W. College Ave., Decatur, Ga.
Edna Philpot (Mrs. Trippe) R. F. D., 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.S.
Lillie R. Brown (Mrs. J. E. Davidson) Fort Valley, Ga.
A Margaret Dunson (Mrs. Frank Davis) LaGrange, Ga.
Annie F. Fannin (Mrs. W. G. Blanchard)
13th and Phoenix Ave., Jacksonville, Fla.
Linnie F. Malone (Mrs. L. P. Smith) 104 Clayton St., Macon, Ga.
Annie Lou MeCord Jackson, Ga.
Music Diplomas
Maude Bagland Piano (Mrs. W. A. Thompson)
L266 Euclid' Ave., X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Xina Winn Voice (Mrs. Darcy Stubbs) Claxton, Ga.
Deceased.
6'
1904
A.B.
Mary Lou Drane (Mrs. E. B. Jordan) Ellaville, Ga.
Lucy Ray (Mrs. W. L. Edwards) Claxton, Ga.
Mary Griffin (Mrs. J. M. Mullins) Durand, Ga.
Emma Quillian (Mrs. B. C. Singleterry) Blakely, Ga.
Music Diplomas
Eleanor G. Davenport Voice (Mrs. J. A. Harnm) Ft. Pierce, Fla.
*Vera Lee Dyal Piano (Mrs. Eyals)
Leila Irvin Voice (Mrs. W. M. Barnett) LaGrange, Ga.
Omie H. Eyals Piano (Mrs. DeLoach) Lumber City, Ga.
1905
A.B.
Etta Mae Burnside (Mrs. John McDonald) Yatesville, Ga.
Annie May Conner Social Circle, Ga.
Lillian M. Garrett (Mrs. E. P. MeDaniel)
Nancy Burnie Legg 400 IS T . Jackson St., Atlanta, Ga.
*Kate V. Long (Mrs. Ira Coan) Columbus, Ga.
"'Maggie L. Means (Mrs. Conner)
'Vesta Pirkle (Mrs. Lawrence)
B.S.
Catherine Hogg (Mrs. Judson Prather)
Eva Eampley (Mrs. J. C. Little) Carnesville, Ga.
Mattie Eampley Carnesville, Ga.
Music Diplomas
Eosa Logan Piano (Mrs. John Brown) Mountville, Ga.
Leona Anderson Wood Piano Atlanta, 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. E. Webb) 861 First St., Macon, Ga.
Lillie Pennington Adams St., Decatur, Ga.
B.S.
* Annie Zu Dillard (Mrs. J. G. Stipe)
Music Diplomas
Bertha Louise Burnside Piano (Mrs. A. K. Forney)
409 Eeynolds St., Augusta, Ga.
Vera V. Edwards Voice (Mrs. Boy MeGinty) Chatsworth, Ga.
Juelle Jones Piano (Mrs. Henry A. Willy)
1907
A.B.
Glenn Antoinette Allen (Mrs. Quillian L. Garrett) Waycross, Ga.
Oneta S. Askew (Mrs. Charles S. Ward)
432 Langhorn St., S. W., Atlanta, Ga.
*Marie Barnett
Deceased.
68
Bessie Boyd (Mrs. Emory Stone) Boydville, Ga.
Palmyra Burnside (Mrs. Robert Burks)
1630 12th Ave., S., Birmingham, Ala.
Mamie A. Fenley (Mrs. ) Brazil
Adelaide Hall (Mrs. Harry Plum) 442 First Ave., Upland, Calif.
Lueile Hicks (Mrs. L. V. Holman) ('on vers, Ga.
Etta Bobgood (Mrs. G. L. McNeil) Fairburn, Ga.
Bessie Johnson (Mrs. ) Oglethorpe, Ga.
Estelle Jones (Mrs. Wilson J. Culpepper) Chiekamauga, Ga.
Allie Kenon McBae, Ga.
*Emmeline Parks (Mrs. Quillian)
Alverda Ragsdale( Mrs. William J. Rowc, Jr.) Decatur, Ga.
Blanche Sims (Mrs. E. Z. Golden, Jr.)
Vula May Smith (Mrs. J. T. Carter) LaGrange, Ga.
Evelyn Stokes (Mrs. Frank T. Evans)
1544 St. John's Ave., Jacksonville. Fla.
Eva Sutton (Mrs. W. G. Curry)
Teresa Thrower (Mrs. James B. Buchanan)
846 Ponce de Leon Ave., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Martha Tomlinson (Mrs. Ivey) Atlanta, Ga.
*Beulah Warner (Mrs. T. Morgan)
Eugenia Watkins (Mrs. J. L. Clements) Bay City, Ga.
B.S.
Estelle Pitts (Mrs. Joseph L. Lucas) Waverly Hall, Ga.
Music Diplomas
Glenn Allen (Mrs. Quillian L. Garrett) Waycross, Ga.
Maggie Anderson
Belle Arnold (Mrs. Bryant)
*Marie Barnett
Gertrude Brown (Mrs. R. B. Cowen) Bainbridge, Ga.
Nellie Brown Voice (Mrs. Newman) Florida
Lizzie Murphy Bartow, Ga.
Fay Shannon (Mrs. N. P. Burke) Millen Ga.
Nora Simmons (Mrs. Chapman) Savannah' Ga.
Sarah Frances Thomasson Chipley,' Ga.
1908
A.B.
Sallie Bohannon (Mrs. S. E. McConnell)
!258 Springdale Rd. N. E. Atlanta, Ga.
Bertha Burnside (Mrs. A. K. Forney) .. .409 Reynolds St., Augusta, Ga.
^ na ^ Co ^ k Carrollton, Ga,
Effie E. Etter (Mrs. Frank F. Lazenby) 1727 Walton Way, Augusta, Ga
lone Ellis Monticello,' Ga.
Mary Fox Alpharetta, Ga.
S he 5 ray LaGrange, Ga.
)' ;!; : v 2on 84 Kirkwood Rd., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
' :i!1!l> He Eatonton Ga.
Annette Mayo
Willie Belle Moncrief (Mrs. Boyd N. Ragsdale) LaGrange Ga
Mary Murphy (Mrs. Robert Bugg) 8hawmut/i
Pauline Powledge (Mrs. \V. (). Wooten)
1 . |, ' i '" p -"--;- Montana
* tme Reynolda Predonia, Ala
*Deceased.
Adelaide Rollins (Mrs. B. F. Neal) Montezuma, Ga.
Mary F. Stanton (Mrs. E. G. Gardner) Anthony, Fla.
Dura M. Upshaw (Mrs. Leon Young) McComb, Miss
Lula Willingham (Mrs. Wallace N. Neal)
1124 Alta Ave., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Adele Woodwright (Mrs. J. J. Nicholson. .. .Bronwood, Ga., R. F. D. 1
Music Diplomas
Leila Dillard (Mrs. L. A. Whipple) Cochran, Ga.
B. Florence Dye (Mrs. Ivey)
Ellie Gray LaGrange, Ga.
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 Eampley (Mrs. T. M. Sullivan) Jackson, Ga.
1909
A.B.
Maxie Barron Atlanta, Ga.
Eugenia Christian (Mrs. Tom M. Swift, Jr.) Elberton, Ga.
Leila Dillard (Mrs. L. A. Whipple) Cochran, Ga.
Corinne Jarrell (Mrs. J. B. Keough)
1355 Peachtree St., Apt. C-l, Atlanta, Ga.
Maybelle Matthews Talbotton, Ga., R. F. D. 3
Hallie Claire Smith LaGrange, Ga.
Ruth Smith (Mrs. G. W. Hammond) Bowdon, Ga.
Elizabeth Smithwick LaGrange, Ga.
Eva Widner (Mrs. D. B. Holderfield) Stroud, Ala.
Music Diplomas
(Piano)
Mayne Archer (Mrs. Jack Aycock) Carrollton, Ga.
Ruby Beall (Mrs. Meeks) Carrollton, Ga.
Florence Dunson (Mrs. Robert Hutchinson) LaGrange, Ga.
Vera Edwards (Mrs. Roy McGinty) Chatsworth, Ga.
Ella Godwin (Mrs. Clifford Hill) Tignall, Ga.
Sarah Hogg (Mrs. C. E. Cliatt) Winfield Route, Thomson, Ga.
Lucile Jones (Mrs. W. G. Partin)
Alice Loftin (Mrs. P. M. Adams) .. .4319 Sansom St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Pearl Simmons (Mrs. P. M. Anderson) Claxton, Ga.
*Pearl Watson
Allena D. Stone (Mrs. Graham)
1910
A.B.
Margaret Eakes 204 Church St., Decatur, Ga.
Annie M. Lazenby Harlem, Ga.
T'L'lene Thrower (Mrs. R. L. Brannen) Box 786, Havana, Cuba
Martha Ware (Mrs. R. A. Gandy) LaGrange, Ga.
Music Diplomas
Talladega Becton Piano (Mrs. J. A. Cork)
*Carrie May Brownlee Piano
Natalie Cooper Piano (Mrs. E. C. Buchanan) Atlanta, Ga.
Florence Dunson Voice (Mrs. Robert Hutchinson) ... .LaGrange, Ga.
^Deceased.
70
Hallie Claire Smith Voice LaGrange, Ga.
Cleo Smithwick Voice (Mrs. Grady Traylor) LaGrange, Ga.
T'L'lene Thrower Voice (Mrs. R. L. Brannen) Box 786, Havana, Cuba
Jeannette Wilhoite Piano LaGrange, Ga.
*Theo Woodward Piano (Mrs. G. F. Austin) Blackshear, Ga.
Expression
Natalie Cooper (Mrs. E. C. Buchanan) . .907 E. North Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Lois Rives Sparta. Ga.
1911
A.B.
Lenoir H. Burnside Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, Md.
LaVerne Garrett 93 Greenwich St., Atlanta, Ga.
Sarah Hogg (Mrs. C. E. Cliatt) Winfield Route, Thomson, Ga.
Susie R. Jones (Mrs. W. S. Norton) Lithonia, Ga.
Flossie Mayo College Park, Ga.
Manie Towson Missionary to Japan
Music Diplomas
Sarah Christian Piano, Voice (Mrs. Alex. Cromartie) Hazlehurst, Ga.
Lillie Harris Voice (Mrs. James M. Reeves)
766 St. Charles Ave., N T . E., Atlanta, Ga.
Nyui Tsung Lee Piano, Voice (Mrs. Pao-Ling Yang)
62 Via Ermanno Carlotto, Italian Concession, Tientsin, China
Edith Lupton Piano (Mrs. Frank Hunt) San Diego, Cal.
Mary Hill Moore Piano (Mrs. Harry E. Neal)
Pinson College, Apartado 34, Camaguey, Cuba
Claire Shannon Piano (Mrs. J. C. Smith) Jefferson, Ga.
Cleo Smithwick Piano (Mrs. Grady Taylor) LaGrange, Ga.
Expression
Sarah Estelle Moore (Mrs. J. C. Sirmons) Tifton, Ga.
Art
Lenoir Burnside Thomson, Ga.
1912
A.B.
Susan Willard Brown Missionary to China
Marcia Culver 135 Gordon St., Atlanta, Ga.
Martha Hamilton (Mrs. Frederick Travis) .. .Riverhurst, Saskatchewan
Eunice Hill McGhee LaGrange, Ga.
Ouida McClure (Mrs. Edward G. Yonkmon)
4984 Maplewood Ave., Detroit, Mich.
Maude Patrick (Mrs. J. C. Baker, Jr.) R. F. D., Hogansville, Ga.
Mattie Sharpe (Mrs. Henrv D. Mincev) Ogeechee, Ga.
Ethel L. Smith (Mrs. C. B. Culpepper) Cochran, Ga.
Ruth Walker (Mrs. P. H. Walker)
2403 South Ave, Niagara Palls, N. Y.
Music Diplomas
(Piano)
Marward Bedell Folkston,
Florence Brinkley Goucher College, Baltimore, Md.
Deceased
71
i
Mildred Eakes Decatur, Ga.
Louise Evans (Mrs. M. T. Lawrence) Ocilla, Ga.
Nell Foster 230 Gordon St., Atlanta, Ga.
W. Clyde Holmes (Mrs. J. O. Rountree) Vidalia, Ga.
Sarah Mayo College Park, Ga.
Carrie Smith Greensboro, Ga.
Florence Smith Fort Valley, Ga.
Annie L. Tankersley (Mrs. W. J. Williams) Bostwick, Ga.
Martha Ware (Mrs. R. A. Gandy) LaGrange, Ga.
Sarah Elizabeth Witcher Union Point, Ga.
Expression
Carrie Smith Greensboro, Ga.
Ruth Trammcll (Mrs. H. E. Chestnutt) Gastonia, X. C.
1913
A.B.
Alice Claire Beckwick (Mrs. S. L. Crane) Dixie, Ga.
Mildred Eakes 204 Church St., Decatur, Ga.
Pauline Fox (Mrs. C. B. Sitton) 364 Brooks Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Music Diplomas
(Piano)
A. Claire Beckwith (Mrs. S. L. Crane) Dixie, Ga.
Lottie Bond, (Mrs. J. E. Phillips) Lithonia, Ga.
Katherine Dozier LaGrange, Ga.
Elma Warlick Hale (Mrs. Elbert D. Hale) Hapeville, Ga.
*Leone F. Leith Voice
Lessie Lewis (Mrs. L. T. Baughman)
Eloise Linson (Mrs. Frank Haines)
Ruby Newsom Voice (Mrs. Thomas M. Campbell)
1957 N. Decatur Rd. Atlanta, Ga.
Sarah Satterwhite Voice (Mrs. Carl H. Harris)
Nell Smith (Mrs. Elbert Nicholls) Hartwell, Ga.
Art
Hallie Claire Smith LaGrange, Ga.
Expression
Ruby Newsom, (Mrs. Thomas Campbell)
1957 N. Decatur Rd., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
1914
A.B.
Susie M. Green 44 N. Howard St., Kirkwood, Ga.
Mary B. Hunter (Mrs. W. O. Lindsey) Raines, Tenn.
Ruby Moss Colony, Wyo.
Fredrica Westmoreland (Mrs. H. H. Heisler) Ellaville, Ga.
Music Diplomas
(Piano)
Pauline Becton Piano and Voice (Mrs. V. W. Perkins)
Swainsboro, Ga.
Bessie L. Bryant Chipley, Ga., R. F. D.. 3
Gladys Cantrell (Mrs. ) . . , Bradenton, Fla.
Eddie Mae Ch;isi:iin (Mrs. Thomas H. Lang)
S. Pearl Dozier LaGrange, Ga.
t Deceasod.
Florence Few (Mrs. C. N". Moon) Shirland, Seottsville, Va.
Frances Waddell (Mrs. W. E. Pafford I Columbus, Ga.
Ethel Gilmore Rebecca, Ga.
Dolly Jones Voice (Mrs. K. L. House)
1925 Leigliton Ave., Anniston, Ala.
Sarah Satterwhite Chipley, Ga.
Lois Schaub (Mrs. A. B. Brooks) LaGrange, Ga.
W. Ruth Sparks
Sarah Tatum Piano and Voice (Mrs. Harvey Reed) .. .LaGrange, Ga.
Expression
Sarah Satterwhite (Mrs. Carl II. Barris) Statesboro, Ga.
1915
A.B.
Bessie Blackmon West Point, Ga.
Daisey Boney
Irene Butenschon 1121 Wilmer Ave., Anniston, Ala.
Nellie C. Hammond (Mrs. J. M. Labenby) Vidalia, Ga.
Lura Lewis Waleska, Ga.
Vera Rawls (Mrs. Clifford McBride) Alston, Fa.
Music Diplomas
(Piano)
Bessie Blackmon West Point, Ga.
Florence Foster 1441 N. Morningside Drive, Atlanta, Ga.
Marie Griffin (Mrs. George B. Goldsmith) Greenville, S. C.
Nellie C. Hammond (Mrs. J. M. Lazenby) Vidalia, Ga.
Dolly Jones (Mrs. R. L. House 1925 Leighton Ave., Anniston, Ala.
Ouida Parrish 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 (Mrs. W. E. Pafford) Milieu, 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 136 Paisley si., Greensboro, X. < !.
Jennie Vaughan (Mrs. H. ( '. Newsome ) Mooresville, X. C.
Music Diplomas
(Piano)
Sara Segrest (Mrs. Cantwell W. Price) Knoxville, Tenn.
Olive Bradley (Mrs. Boy Bass) L315 E. North St., Greenville, S. <'.
Expression
Annie Belle Hutchinson (Mrs. Henry E. Drapei Lake Wales, Pla.
Jennie Vaughan (Mrs. H. C. Newsome) Mooresville, X. C.
Home Economics
Kuth Eichards (Mrs. E. Eobeson) 227 52d St., Newport News, Va.
Katharine Shaver (Mrs. Paul E. Greenfield)
1007 St. Charles Ave., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Ephie Butenschon (Mrs. Tarleton) Anniston, Ala.
Annie Fennell (Mrs. A. M. DeMedici) Aiken, S. C.
Art
Dora Lane
1917
Evelyn Hale Barnesville, Ga.
Josephine Hurst (Mrs. H. B. Whitaker) Koute C, Cordele, Ga.
Euth Elizabeth Pike (Mrs. W. C. Key) 1007 30th St., Columbus, Ga.
Annie Belle Eodgers Hampton, Ga.
Mardel Taylor 1403 W. Peachtree, N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Music Diplomas
(Piano)
Marian Hollis Edmondson LaGrange, Ga.
Helen Lyle Harris Piano and Voice (Mrs. Wyman P. Sloan) . . .
1284 Oakdale Ed., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Lollie Maude Harris (Mrs. W. M. Boyst)
1607 Lyndhurst Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
(Voice)
Frances Elizabeth Black (Mrs. W. T. Edmonds)
443 Broad St., Augusta, Ga.
Lucius Mahlon Bedell Folkston, Ga.
Mary Eampley (Mrs. Lovick Swint) Chipley, Ga.
Home Economics
Mary Lee Edwards Claxton, Ga.
Mary Bacon Osborne (Mrs. T. Moncrief) LaGrange, Ky.
Julia Samuels Muse . Maysville, Ky.
1918
A.B.
Duane Campbell Americus, Ga.
O 'Lura Campbell Americus, Ga.
Mary Connally (Mrs. Eobert C. Frost) High Point, N. C.
Maude Harris (Mrs. W. M. Boyst)
1607 Lyndhurst Ave., Charlotte, N. C.
Music Diplomas
(Piano)
Mary Kate Clements (Mrs. Benjamin Key)
2846 Peabody Ave., Columbus, Ga.
Nellie Humber (Mrs. F. F. Thompson) Lumpkin, Ga.
Mary Lizzie Wright Elberton, Ga.
(Voice)
Jenie Mae Erwin Calhoun, Ga.
Mrs. W. C. Key 1007 30th St., Columbus, Ga.
^Deceased.
74
Expression
Helen Clark (Mrs. John C. Grady) Stroud, Ala.
Mrs. Harvey Heed LaGrange, Ga.
Mardel Taylor
Art
Dorothy Bledsoe (Mrs. R. E. Brown)
1-317 S. Gordon St., S. W., Atlanta, Ga.
Home Economics
Clara Evans (Mrs. A. M. Brooks, Jr.). . .209 Melrose Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Harriet Rains Maysville, Ky.
1919
A.B.
Dorothy Bledsoe (Mrs. R. E. Brown)
1517 S. Gordon St., S. \V., Atlanta, Ga.
Lodusky Cotton (Mrs. J. C. Sorrells) Sharpsburg, Ga.
Iris Fullbright East Lake, Decatur, Ga.
Elmira Grogan 340 West 55th St., New York, N. V.
Lois Hall (Mrs. Cary Huston) 423 E. North St., Marshall, Mo.
Ruth Henderson (Mrs. W. V. Pentecost) 266 11th St., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Mary Sue Rutland (Mrs. W. C. Page) Ashboro, N. C.
Music Diplomas
(Piano)
Veola Jarrell (Mrs. E. H. Estes) Gay, Ga.
Robbie Lee Thompson Hazlehurst, 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 (Mrs. Cary Huston) 423 E. North St., Marshall, Mo.
Willela Osborne 270 Glenn St., Atlanta, Ga.
Leila Scarborough (Mrs. Prank B. Boyce, Jr.)
P. O. Box 1541, Sarasota, Fla.
Home Economics
Florence Blanton (Mrs. Marion Eakes)
Iris Fullbright East Lake, Decatur, Ga.
Sarah Ruth Henderson (Mrs. Fred Tinney) Carrollton, Ga.
Gladys Vickers (Mrs. William Spell) Ocilla, Ga.
1920
A.B.
Georgia Haley Elberton, Ga.
Allene Mayfield LaGrange, Ga.
Beatrice Ola Stephens (Mrs. Clarence E. Adams) Danielsville. Ga.
Coretta Teasley (Mrs. J. B. Stroud) 1326 E. 57th St., Chicago, 111.
Music Diplomas
(Piano)
Anbery Amos (Mrs. Randolph McCullous) . .226 Davis St., Decatur, Ga.
Luella Ford (Mrs. Cyril Chandler) Camp Gaillard, Canal Zone, Panama
7.-,
Expression
Ruth Hutcheson (Mrs. Thomas Whitaker) Tampa, Fla.
Home Economics
Lura Frances Johnson West Point, Ga.
Alma Mixon (Mrs. Gilbert Harper) Wray, Ga.
1921
A.B.
Ruth Baker (Mrs. E. P. Moody)
Sarah Davis LaGrange, Ga.
Flora Franklin (Mrs. George W. Burkhalter) Hickory, N. C.
Expression
Ruth Baker (Mrs. E. P. Moody)
Voice
Anna Biggers (Mrs. H. S. Howie) Abbeville, S. C.
Lulline Tompkins (Mrs. C. L. Hodges) Dublin, Ga.
Art
Ruth Whatley 300 Gordon Ave., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
1922
A.B.
Marie Askew Childs (Mrs. J. J. Childs) LaGrange, Ga.
Thelma K. Chunn (Mrs. B. M. Woodruff)
1669 S. W. Rogers Ave., Atlanta. Ga.
Mabel Cline Waleska, Ga.
Leila Cotton (Mrs. R. E. Rutland) Gainesville, Ga.
Eloise Fullbright (Mrs. Theron White) Lawrenceville, Ga.
Lura Frances Johnson West Point, Ga.
Mattie Mark McGee LaGrange, Ga.
Ethel Pike LaGrange, Ga.
Mabel White Stovall, Ga.
B.S.
Margaret McDonald (Mrs. R. B. Brown) Bolton, Ga.
Art
Annie Lula Nelson (Mrs. Lewis E. Warlick)
203 Acadia Apts. Farifield, Ala.
Expression
Lura Frances Johnson West Point, Ga.
Mary Alice Sutton (Mrs. Arnold B. Clyatt)
106 Webster St., Valdosta, Ga.
Piano
Jerradine Marilyn Brinson (Mrs. James R. Rowland) Wrightsville, Ga.
Violin
Beva Aline McMiilin LaGrange, Ga.
Voice
Jerradine Marilyn Brinson (Mrs. James R. Rowland) Wrightsville, Ga.
Mary Clem Leggitt (Mrs. M. L. Shadburn)
4016 9th St., Gulfport, Miss.
Mary Alice Sutton (Mrs. Arnold B. Clvatt)
' '.106 Webster St., Valdosta, Ga.
(Mrs. J. G. Walb) 1005 Hart St., Clearwater, Fla.
1923
A.B.
Mary Lois Brand Koyston, Ga.
Myrtle Margaret Cline (Mrs. Lamar W. McLarin) Clio, S. C.
Varina Leslie Dunbar (Mrs. Harold Alniand)
108 6th St., N. W., Atlanta, Ga.
Mary Wessie Hodnett 316 W. Wisconsin St., DeLand. Fla.
Elizabeth Jones Monroe, Ga.
Jennie Lu Lumpkin (Mrs. D. A. Few)
211 Douglas St., New Smyrna, Fla.
Susie Render Ogletree (Mrs. Jasper N. Denny) LaGrange, Ga.
Emily Park (Mrs. E. C. Herman) LaGrange, Ga.
B.S.
Lillie Irene Smith ."514 Broad St., Augusta, Ga.
Piano
Mary Lillian (Mark LaGrange, Ga.
Ruth Cotton (Mrs. Thomas Butler) Punta Gorda, Fla.
Mary Wessie Hodnett 316 W. Wisconsin St., DeLand, Fla.
Mattie Lou Wilson Ocala, Fla.
Voice
Mary Lois Brand Royston, Ga.
Susie Render Ogletree (Mrs. Jasper N. Denny) LaGrange, Ga.
Art
Odel DeLoach (Mrs. Claude Whatley) LaGrange, Ga.
HOME ECONOMICS
1924
A.B.
Sarah Brown Warrenton, Ga.
Nancy Lillian Clark LaGrange, Ga.
Ruth Cotton (Mrs. Thomas Butler) Punta Gorda, Fla.
Grace Hale 731 Ave. A., Rome, Ga.
Mary Ethel Lane Rockmart, Ga.
Tommie Carolyn Martin LaGrange, Ga.
Mamie Cockrell Northcutt (Mrs. D. I. Dcramus) Selma, Ala.
Mildred Pinkerton (Mrs. A. E. Shearer) Butler, Ga.
B. A. Teasley (Mrs. Thomas Cooley)..216 S. Clayton St., Mt. Dora Fla.
Piano
Sarah Leonora Watkins (Mrs. J. E. Moore) Atlanta, Ga.
Willie Rebecca Presley (Mrs. Clyde L. Brown) McCamey, Texas
Voice
Margaret Cantrell (Mrs. William Amos) LaGrange, Ga.
Expression
Emmie Lanier Batson (Mrs. G. V. Gorman)
Whitley Botel, Montgomery, Ala.
Annie Merle Clark (Mrs. D. L. McCormac)
2529 Cypress St., Columbia, S. C.
Tommie Carolyn Martin LaGrange, Ga.
Mamie Cockrell Northcutt (Mrs. D. I. Deramus) Selma, Ala.
77
1925
A.B.
Margia A. Beard LaGrange, Ga.
Sue E. Craft (Mrs. W. W. Howell)
Monita Elliott Eoute 1, Chamblee, Ga.
Allene Gable Antreville, S. C.
Bonnie Hale 731 Ave. A, Rome, Ga.
Cornelia Haley Elberton, Ga.
Lucile Hilsman (Mrs. Frederick Gard) St. Cloud, Fla.
Annie Joe Johnson Abbeville, Ga.
Willard Jones West Point, Ga.
Marion Lee LaGrange, Ga.
Lillian Phillips Chipley, Ga.
Mary Timmons (Mrs. M. T. Barksdale) Chatsworth, Ga.
B.S.
Amanda Glenn Route 1, Chipley, Ga.
Miriam Spruell (Mrs. Robt. H. Downs) R. F. D., Bishop, Ga.
Art
Eunice Akin Huzlehurst, Ga.
Marie Askew Childs LaGrange, Ga.
Bess Cline (Mrs. John M. Shields) Enfield, S. C.
Expression
Agnes Porter (Mrs. Roy Wiggins) Barnes Apt. 5, Macon, Ga.
Gertrude Strain (Mrs. A. M. Aubrey) Roanoke, Ala.
Christine Stubbs (Mrs. Guy P. Carmichael)
959 Todd Rd., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Home Economics
Elizabeth Williams Monticello, Fla.
Piano
Elizabeth Butler Wilson, N. C.
Eva Cribb (Mrs. E. S. Winn) Fitzgerald, Ga.
Voice
Lucile Hilsman (Mrs. Frederick Gard) St. Cloud, Fla.
Miriam Spruell (Mrs. Robt. H. Downs) R. F. D., Bishop, Ga.
1926
A.B.
Ellen G. Corn (Mrs. F. G. Nelms Young Harris, Ga.
Jewell Dunn Tunnel Hill, Ga.
Edith L. Foster Carrollton, Ga.
Louise Leggitt Unadilla, Ga.
Lamartha McCaine LaGrange, Ga.
Corinne Martin Woodbury, Ga.
Mabel Morrow Carrollton, Ga.
Mildred Pendergrass Jefferson, Ga.
Gertrude Strain (Mrs. A. M. Aubrey) Roanoke, Ala.
Lena Terrell LaGrange, Ga.
Elizabeth Tuck Winterville, Ga.
B.S.
Ruth Davis LaGrange, Ga.
Evelyn Newton (Mrs. Earl I. Lewis) Gretna, Va.
Mary Sams Ringgold, Ga.
78
Margaret Trundle Ringgold, Ga.
Elizabeth Williams Monticello, Ga.
Kathren Young LaGrange, Ga.
Art
Jewell Dunn Tunnell Hill, Ga.
Expression
Nancy Smith Gainesville, Ga.
Home Economics
Josephine Glenn "Route 2, Chipley, Ga.
Piano
Thelma Chunn (Mrs. B. M. Woodruff)
1669 S. W. Rogers Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Frances Woodside Havana, Cuba
Voice
Evelyn Newton (Mrs. Earl I. Lewsi) Gretna, Va.
Nancy Smith Gainesville, Ga.
Lena Terrell LaGrange, Ga.
1927
A.B.
Clara Louise Arwood LaGrange, Ga.
Rachel Ann Beard LaGrange, Ga.
Nelle Clifton Childs LaGrange, Ga.
Martha ITettie Dunn Tunnel Hill, Ga.
Mary Fisher Floyd LaGrange, Ga.
Elizabeth Grace Gibson LaGrange, Ga.
Harriet Hortense Hughes Bolton, Ga.
Sara Bernard Jackson LaGrange, Ga.
Mildred McWhorter Royston, Ga.
Deryl Manning Alpharetta, Ga.
Mary Jeannette Morrow Carrollton, Ga.
Tommie Dora Quarles Canton, Ga.
Jessie Louise Ray Calhoun, Ga.
Annie Eugenia Smith LaGrange, Ga.
Ruth Strain Dalton, Ga.
Sara Glenn Swanson Fairburn, Ga.
Margaret Althea Yarbrough Milledgeville, Ga.
B.S.
Myrtle Jean Cannon Fitzgerald, Ga.
Josephine Glenn Chipley, Ga.
Elizabeth Denmark Hodges (Mrs. George Mavo Livingston)
'...Third St., Albany, Ga.
Fiances Woodside Havana, Cuba
Expression
Myrtle Jean Cannon Fitzgerald, Ga.
Nelle Clifton Childs LaGrange, Ga.
Martha Hettie Dunn Tunnel Hill, Ga.
MUSIC DIPLOMAS
Piano
Deryl Manning Alpharetta, Ga.
Carolyn Polly Smith (Mrs. J. J. Evans) Warrenton, Ga.
Ruth Strain Dalton, Ga.
Mabel Frances White Villa Rica, Ga.
Voice
Sara Bernard Jackson LaGrange, Ga.
1928
A.B.
Lucrete Adams Franklin, Ga.
Sylvia Martini Adams Covington, Ga.
Wilma Coleman Young Harris, Ga.
Margaret Edmondson LaGrange, Ga.
Mary Grace Gardner Decatur, Ga.
Violet Catherine Hampton (Mrs. Homer G. Brinson, Jr.) . . .Brinson, Ga.
Claire Smith Hill LaGrange, Ga.
Wilma Jeannette Hunter Colquitt, Ga.
Sarah Lee Leonard Chatsworth, Ga.
Mary Susan Lumpkin Franklin, Ga.
Willie May Mangham Zebulon, Ga.
Virginia Arnold Mooty LaGrange, Ga.
Pauline Elizabeth Norman Alpharetta, Ga.
Mary Augusta .Radford Dublin, Ga.
Mary Drucilla Teasley Bowman, Ga.
Katherine Sutton Wheeler Chickamauga, Ga.
Mary Frances Wiggins 142 Georgia Ave., S. W., Atlanta, Ga.
B.S.
Lucile Mallard Cassels 250 X. E. Howard St., Atlanta, Ga.
Elizabeth Frances Cheatham Beaufort, S. C.
Georgia Echols Cobb LaGrange, Ga.
Frances Anderson Doughman 43 Howard St., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Lily Imelda Evans Baconton, Ga.
Mary Virginia Havs Douglasville, Ga.
Georgia Frances Knox 1206 N. E. Mansfield Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Lura Lifsey Atlanta, Ga.
Alice Frances Matthews 805 Sycamore St., Decatur, Ga.
Hattie Selena McDougald Gaddistown, Ga.
Mary Elizabeth Reaves LaGrange, Ga.
Louise Elizabeth Scoggins Gainesville, Ga.
Expression
Wilma Coleman Young Harris, Ga.
Frances Anderson Doughman 43 Howard St., X. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Lura Lifsey Macon, Ga.
Art
Carolyn Haves McLendon Clarkston, Ga.
Ruby Simpson LaGrange, Ga.
Kate Wisdom LaGrange, Ga.
Piano
Elizabeth Hallidav Lumpkin, Ga.
Mildred Ruth Hurst LaGrange, Ga.
Catherine Ingram Sharpsburg, Ga.
(Total number of alumnae, 1,300)
80
MATRICULATES FOR THE SESSION OF 1928-1929
Senior Class
Sarah C. Barrett Augusta, Ga.
Silvey Bond Waleska, Ga.
Marie Genevieve Pix Talladega, Ala.
Pearle Dunson LaGrange, Ga.
Rachel Griffith Buchanan, Ga.
Minnie Griggs LaGrange, Ga.
Ma nit a Hall Royston, Ga.
Evelyn Ruth Hill Manchester, Ga.
Ruby Gene Hughes Palmetto, Ga.
Ruth Mildred Hurst LaGrange, Ga.
Rosalie Nicholes Kamper Pecatur, Ga.
Louise Kent Xorcross, Ga.
Ruth Landrum . Waleska, Ga.
Mary Lehmann LaGrange, Ga.
Mary Lou Linn Waleska, Ga.
Elizabeth Loyd LaGrange, Ga.
Mildred Mooty LaGrange, Ga.
Annie Lucile Murphy LaGrange, Ga.
Virginia Pugh Lumpkin, Ga.
Mattie Jo Pullin Locust Grove, Ga.
Fannie Lou Smith Buford, Ga.
Virginia Fields Smith Atlanta, Ga.
Kate Smithwick Orange, Ga.
Ruby Sorgee LaGrange, Ga.
Eloise White Chipley, Ga.
Junior Class
Carolyn Allan Atlanta, Ga.
Isabel Cannon Brady .LaGrange, Ga.
Catherine McDonald Chesnutt Lenox, Ga.
Anna Mae Dean Danielsville, Ga.
Elizabeth Dozier LaGrange, Ga.
Louisa Dozier Memphis, Tenn.
Nancy Gaines Grantville, Ga.
Mary Rebecca Head LaGrang , Ga.
Mary Alice Holbrook Royston, Ga.
Julia Alice Johnson Abbeville, Ga.
Barbara Jones Chickamauga, Ga.
Sara Julia King Rome, Ga.
Martha Lee Grantville, Ga.
Louisa Leslie LaGrange, Ga.
Elizabeth Moss Waleska, Ga.
Margaret Partee Cedartown, Ga.
Evelyn Powell LaGrange, Ga.
Agnes Richardson Fairmount, Ga.
Isabelle Smith LaGrange, Ga.
Sara Sorgee LaGrange, Ga.
Mildred Stipe Decatur, Ga.
Julia Teasley Bowman, Ga.
Sara Thompson Marietta, Ga.
Mildred Trnylor LaGrange, Ga.
Helen Walker Carrollton, Ga.
May Beall Yancey Carrollton, Ga.
-1
Sophomore Class
Aurelia Adams Danielsville, Ga.
Frances Adams Home, Ga.
Elizabeth Anderson LaGrange, Ga.
Mildred Mae Blackmon Greenville, Ga.
Mary A. Branton East Point, Ga.
Chrystal Carley LaGrange, Ga.
Catherine Louise Chastain Manchester, Ga.
Alice Cohen Jesup, Ga.
Evelyn Copelan LaGrange, Ga.
Margaret Dallis LaGrange, Ga.
Virginia Gordo Davis LaGrange, Ga.
Martha Jane Estes Senoia, Ga.
Vina Griffith Buchanan, Ga.
Betty Kate Grow Colquitt, Ga.
Bobbie Hadley Chipley, Ga.
Carolyn Hairston LaGrange, Ga.
Doris Lumpkin Franklin, Ga.
Katie McLaughlin Senoia, Ga.
Dorothy Gordon Neal West Point, Ga.
Janie Mae Quillian LaFayette, Ga.
Dorothy Reddick Hapeville, Ga.
Mary Elizabeth Rutherford Austell, Ga.
Eleanor Simpson Cartersville, Ga.
Alice Tharpc Ashburn, Ga.
Edith Traylor LaGrange, Ga.
Mary Walker Stone Mountain, Ga.
Madeline Elizabeth Walters Atlanta, Ga.
Lucy Cole Wheeler Chickamauga, Ga.
Freskman Class
Dorothy Abercrombie Douglasville, Ga.
Ruth Adams LaGrange, Ga.
Ann Ansted Clarkesville, Ga.
Mary Ellen Aycock .Farmington, Ga.
Maudie Barker Gabbettville, Ga.
Lucy S. Barrett Augusta, Ga.
Ora Mae Bowles Fairfax, Ala.
Susan Alleyn Boyle .East Point, Ga.
Alice Brooks Logansville, Ga.
Netelle Carley LaGrange, Ga.
Winnie Clark Ellenwood, Ga.
Katherine Terrell Cline LaGrange, Ga.
Nell Cole East Point, Ga.
Bertha Cox Butler, Ga.
Dora Jean Cox Hapeville, Ga.
Irene Craig Graniteville, S. C.
Martha Alice Growder Milner, Ga.
Lorene Daniell Villa Rica, Ga.
Pauline Dickerson Vanna, Ga.
Sara Newton Dozier Carrollton, Ga.
Elizabeth Dunbar Byron, Ga.
Matilee Dunn Warm Springs, Ga.
Bessie Louise Dvsnrt Cartersville, Ga.
Elizabeth Christine Floyd Oxford, Ga.
Julia Elizabeth Fort .Hamilton, Ga.
Evelyn Galloway Waverly Hall, Ga.
82
Hixie Louise Gentry Dublin, Ga.
Anna Belle Harwell Cartersville, Ga.
Eula Mabel Henslee East Point, Ga.
Dorothy Howard Tifton, Ga.
Augusta Jones Montezuma, Ga.
Helen Juanita Jones Hastman,
Aldyne Jordan Royston, Ga.
Erma Ruth Kemp Spring Place, Ga.
Mary Frances Kimbrough LaGrange, Ga.
Lena \^>yd LaGrange, Ga.
Gladys Mason Eoyston, Ga.
Annie Sue Mathison Five Points, A la.
Kathleen Morse Mansfield, Ga.
Virginia Moseley Danielsville, Ga.
Essie Pauline Oglel ree Chatsworth, Ga.
Louise Priddy LaGrange, Ga.
Pauline Eoberts Winder, Ga.
Helen Eobertson Bowersvillc, Ga.
Eubye Nell Robertson Bowersville, Ga.
Mary Clyde Eobinson LaGrange, Ga.
Jewell Irene Stephens Manchester, Ga.
Mary Adelyne Tilly Chamblec, Ga.
Louise Traylor LaGrange, Ga.
Mary Weatherly Winder, Ga.
Christine Marie Webb Carrollton, Ga.
Mary Ruth Wheeler . .Canton, Ga.
Aline White Villa, Eiea, Ga.
Jack Wimbish Five Points,
Irregular and Special Students
Mary Ellen Baker Tifton, Ga.
Inez Bartley LaGrange, Ga.
Maysel Coburn Cato Alachua, Fla.
Pinkie Julia Craft Toccoa, Ga.
Frances Doughman Decatur, Ga.
Mary Grimes LaGrange, Ga.
Katherine Gudger Chatsworth, Ga.
Helen Harden Hogansville, Ga.
Verna Harden Hogansville, Ga.
Lucy Margaret Harris China Grove, X. I !.
Margaret Hunter Kensington, Ga.
Carolyn Virginia Leman LaGrange, Ga.
Julia Mayne Marlin Alpharetta, Ga.
Elizabeth Merritt Emory University, Ga.
Dorothy Morton Athens, Ga.
Mary Pierce Temple, Ga.
Mae' Eateliffe Lakeland, Ga.
Frances Saunders Montezuma, Ga.
Emilie Sewell Tallapoosa, Ga.
Lilla Louise Sutton Ocilla, Ga.
Ehvyn Wallace LaFayette, Ga.
Sara Wan- Hogansville, Ga.
The following students are registered for work in the special depart-
ments indicated, but do not live in the dormitories and attend no
literary classes:
Elsie Bailey, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Mary Nell Bailey, Art, Piano .LaGrange, Ga.
Ann Birdsong, .1/7. LaGrange, Ga.
Mrs. F. G. Birdsong, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Marjorie Caldwell, Expression LaGrange, Ga.
Loula Callaway, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Alice Ebrite, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Mary Rosetta Ebrite, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Isabel Emory, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Mary Florence, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Leonora Gaillard, Voice LaGrange, Ga.
Mary Jane Hill, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Ruth Hopkins, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Madeleine Jacob, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Stella Cole King, Art, Piano .LaGrange, Ga.
Mary Leslie, Voice LaGrange, Ga.
Dorothy Lindenmayer, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Winnifred Milam, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Betty Ragsdale, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Meredith Turner, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Emily Wilson, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
Marion Wilson, Piano LaGrange, Ga.
M
ALPHABETICAL INDEX OF GRADUATES
Abbott, Mrs. (O. Martyn), L893
Abercrombie, Mrs. (P, Lewis), 1848
Abercrombie. Mrs. (D. Knight), 1885
* Abraham, -Mrs. (M. Wimbish),
Adair, Irene, 1898
Adams, Mrs. (I.. Grav). 1899
Adams, Mrs. (A. Loftin). 1909
Adams, Mrs. (O. Stephens), 1920
Adams, Lucrete. 1928
Adams. Sylvia, 1928
Akers. Mrs. (A. E. McGhee), 1850
AJc< is. Mary U, 1859
"Akers, Mrs. (E. Cox). 1860
Akin. Eunice, 1925
Akridge. Mrs. (E. Sims), 1884
Allen, Mrs. (G. Patrick), is", I
Alonzo, Mrs. (K. Jenkins), 1897
Almand, Mis. , V. Dunbar), 1923
Amis, Mrs. (F. Pullen), 1864
Ammons, Mrs. (M. Magruder), 1886
Amos, Mr^. ( M. Cantrell), 1924
Amoss, Mrs. (I. Douglas), 1850
.Anderson, Mrs. (H. Edmondson). 1854
Anderson, Mrs. (M. Hendrix), 1893
Anderson, Mrs. (P. Simmons), 1909
Anderson, Maggie, 1907
Andrews, Frances, 1857
*Anthonv. Mrs. (A. Wimbish). 1874
Anthony, Mrs. (L. Hill), 1896
Arwood, Clars, 1927
Ashford, Mrs. (H. Quillian), 1896
Atkinson, Jennie, 1880
Atkinson, Mrs. (M. Revill), 1884
Atkinson. Rosa, 1891
Aubrey. Mrs. ( G. Strain). 1925, 1926
Austell, Letitia. 1855
^Austin. Mrs. (T. Woodward), 1910
Aycock. Mrs. (M. Archer). 1909
*Baker, Mrs. (E. Cruselle), 1881
Baker, Clara, 1896
Bailey, Mrs. (X. W. Douglass), 1850
*Bailev, Mrs. (J. Goodwin), 1862
*Bailev, Mrs. (B. Howell), 1862
Baker, Mrs. (B. Jackson). 1886
Baker, Mrs. (C. Williams). 1887
Baker, Mrs. (M. Patrick). 1912
*Baldrick, Isabella. 1853
*Baldrick, G. A., 1857
Baldrick, Mary, 1862
Baldwin, Helen. 1883
Baldwin. Mrs. (S. Quillian), 1901
Banks. Mrs. (C. Stevens), 1850
Banks. Mrs. (L. Evans), 1886
Barber, Mrs. (S. C. Morgan), 1847
Barksdale. Mrs. (M. Strother). 1872
Barksdale, Mrs. (M. Timmons), 1925
"Barnard. Mrs. (M. L. Povthress), 1873
Barnes. Mrs. (P. White), 1888
Barnett. Mrs. (M. Strozier). 1887
Barnett, Mrs. (L. Irwin), 1900, 1904
*Barnett, Marie. 1907
Barron, Maxie, 1909
Bartlett. Mrs. (M. Brady), 1893
Bass, Susan, 1 -
Bass, Frances, 1862
*Bass, Maria. 1874
Bass. Mrs. (O. Bradley), 1916
Bau?hrnan. Mrs. (L. Lewis), 1913
Beach, Mrs. (L. Wimbish), 1892
Beall, Mrs. (K. Beall), 1865
Beall. Allie. 1899
Beard, Margia, 1925
Beard, Rachel, 1927
Beasley, Mrs. (S. Leslies), 1863
Bedell, Marward, L912
Bedell. Malilon, 1917
Bellah, Idella, 1899
Bennett, Mrs. (S. Newton), l -
Betterton, Mrs. (L. Parks), 1888
*Bigham, Adelaide, 1847
Bilbrough, Mrs. (L. Jon.
Birch, Fletcher, 1862
Bird, Lula Belle, 1894
Bivens, Mrs. (B. Strozier), 1892
Black, Mrs. (E. Barrett), 1886
Blackmon, Bessie, 1915
Blanchard, Mrs. (A. Fannin), 1903
Blondner. Mrs. (,.\ Reese), 1860
Blount, Mrs. (M. Smith). 1860
*Boddie, Mrs. (R. Scott), 1858
Boddi*', Mrs. ( V. Smith), 1859
*Boddi(>. Vandalia, 1862
Bonnev. Daisy, 1915
Bonner, Mrs. (E. Stewart), 1900
Bookhart. Mrs. (R. Harrison). L862
Born, Mrs. (R. McElroy), 1897
Boswell. Mrs. (G. Anderson), 1900
*Bowden. Mrs. (E. Akers). 1864
Bowman. Mrs. O. Parrish), 1915
Boyce, Mrs. (L. Scarborough). 1919
Bovd. Mrs. (M. Whitfield), 1853
Bovd. Mrs. (R. Wright), 1898
Bovnton. Mrs. (R. Rutledge), 1852
Boyst, Mrs. (M. Harris), 1917. 1918
*Bradfield, Mrs. (M. Loyd), 1853
*Bradfield, Mrs. (W. Pitman), 1873
Bradfield, Mrs. (J. Evans), 1888
Bradfield, Julia, 1,^97
Bradfield, Stella, 1901
Brand, Lois, 1923
*Branham, Mrs. (L. Sassnet). 1860
Brannen. Mrs. (T'l. Thrower). 1910
Brannon, Mrs. (L. Camp). 1888
Briggs, Mrs. (M. D. Cleaveland). l" 6
Bright, Mrs. (S. Downer), 1880
Brinkley, Florence, 1912
Brinson, Mrs. (V. Hampton), 1928
Brooks, Mrs. (M. Howell), 188
*Brooks, Mrs. (A. Mabry), L881
Brooks, Mrs. (L. Schaub), 1914. 1915
Brooks, Mrs. (C. Evans). 1918
*Broome. Henrietta, 1849
*Broughton, Ella, 1864
Brown, Mrs. (S. Meadors). 1850
Brown. Lvdia, 1858
Brown, Mrs. (Q. Cousins), 1891
Brown, Mrs. (B. Moselev), 1894
Brown. Mrs. (S. Wright), 1- -
Brown, Mrs. (K. Bradfield). 1
Brown. Mrs. (R. Logan). 1905
Brown. Susan Willard. 1912
Brown, Mrs. (D. Bledsoe). 1918. 1PP
Brown. Mrs. (M. McDonald). I
Brown, Mrs. (R. Presley). 1924
Brown, Sarah, 1924
*Brownlee, Carrie May. 1910
' Bryan, Louisa. 1 B53
*Bryan, Mrs. (E. Yancey),
Bryan, Mrs. (E. Cloud). 1897
Bryant, Mrs. | B. Arnold I,
Bryant, Bessie, 193
Bynum, Mrs. (M. Tyler),
Buchanan, Mrs. (T. Thro*
Buchanan, Mrs. (N. I I 910
Mrs. ( m. Mnrphj .
Bulloch, Mattie. 1893
Bulloch, Mrs. (L. Bulloch), 1896
Bulloch, Mrs. (M. Merriweather), 1896
Bunkley, Mrs. (S. Presley), 1847
Burch, Mrs. (L. Ray), 1900
Burge, Lizzie, 1862
Burgess, Mrs. (A. Evans), 1899
*Burk, Elizabeth, 1846
Burke, Mrs. (F. Shannon), 1907
*Burkhalter, Mrs. (L. Johnson), 1895
Burkhalter, Mrs. (F. Franklin), 1921
Burks, Mrs. (P. Burnside), 1907
Burney, Mrs. (S. Barnes), 1854
Burns, Stella, 1881
Burnside, Lenoir, 1911
Burton, Mrs. (L. Tucker), 1900
Bush, Mrs. (C. Freeman), 1897
Bussey, Ella, 1901
Butenschon, Irene, 1915
Butler, Mrs. (R. Cotton), 1923, 1924
Butler, Elizabeth, 1925
Calhoun, Mrs. (C. Heidt), 1883
*Callahan, Mrs. (E. Rush), 1860
Callahan, Mrs. (R. Dixon), 1900
*Callaway, Abbie, 1860
Callaway, Mrs. (E. Patillo), 1861
*Callaway, Hattie, 1863
*Cameron, Mrs. (G. Reid), 1861
*Camp, Mrs. (S. J. Kidd), 1848
*Campbell, Mrs. (N. Kirkley), 1893
Campbell, Annie, 1897
Campbell, Mrs. (N. Cook), 1898
Campbell, Mrs. (B. Pennington), 1902
Campbell, Mrs. (R. Newson), 1913
Campbell, Duane, 1918
Campbell, O'Lura, 1918
Candler, Mrs. (N. Curtwright), 1874
Candler, Mrs. (L. Hardwick), 1890
Candler, Mrs. (F. Glenn), 1898
Cannon, Myrtle, 1927
Cantrell, Mrs. (G. Gholson), 1883
Cantrell, Gladys, 1914
Carlton, Mary, 1859
Carlton, Claude, 1860
Carmichael, Mrs. (C. Stubbs), 1925
*Carney, Mrs. (E. Barry), 1884
Carpenter, Mrs. (G. Camp), 1887
*Carrol, Mrs. (I. Chupp), 1897
Carter, Mrs. (N. Harris), 1898
Carter, Mrs. (Y. M. Smith), 1907
Cassels, Lucile, 1928
Castlen, Mrs. (V. Harris), 1900
*Caudle, Mrs. (F. Hall), 1864
Caudle, Mrs. (M. L. Woodall), 1896
Chambliss, Lu Abbie, 1889
*Chandler, Mrs. (E. Chappell), 1896
Chandler, Mrs. (L. Ford), 1920
Chapman, Mrs. (N. Simmons), 1907
Cheatham, Elizabeth, 1928
Chenowith, Mrs. (M. Beasley), 1896
Chestnutt, Mrs. (R. Trammell), 1912
Childs, Mrs. (M. Askew), 1922, 1925
Childs, Nelle, 1927
*Chunn, Mrs. (M. Watson), 1899
Clanton, Mrs. (L. Covin), 1891
*Clark, Mrs. (E. Smith), 1857
Clark, Lillian, 1923, 1924
Clay, Mrs. (F. White), 1879
Clayton, W. H., 1858
Cleckler, Mrs. (K. Moss), 1893
Cleckler, Mrs. (L. Moss), 1894
*Clements, Mrs. (E. Harvard), 1894
Clements, Mrs. (E. Watkins), 1907
Cleveland, Mrs. (C. Quillian), 1902
Clifton, Marion, 1900
*Cline, Bora, 1889
Cline, Mabel, 1922
Cliatt, Mrs. (S. Hogg), 1909, ]'M!
Clower, Mrs. (M. Mitchell), 1894
Clyatt, Mrs. (M. A. Sutton), 1922
*Coan, Mrs. (K. Long), 1905
*Cobb, Mrs. (A. Culler), 1859
*Cobb, Mrs. (S. Haralson), 1874
Cobb, Georgia, 1928
Coghill, Martha, 1855
*Colbert, Mrs. (S. A. Cameron), 1857
*Cole, Mary C, 1857
Coleman, Catherine, 1853
Coleman, Mrs. (C. Milam), 1894
Coleman, Wilma, 1928
Colquitt, Mrs. (J. Hunt), 1859
Connally, Mrs. (C. Richardson), 1877
Conner, Annie May, 1905
*Conner, Mrs. (M. Means), 1905
Cook, Mrs. (W. Miller), 1886
Cook, Mrs. (C. M. Fleith), 1906
Cook, Luna, 1908
Cooley, Mrs. (B. A. Teasley), 1923, 1924
Cooper, Ann, 1854
Copeland, Mrs. (A. Wadsworth), 1884
Copeland, Mrs. (M. Speer), 1893
Cork, Mrs. (T. Becton), 1910
Cory, Mrs. (M. Stevens), 1854
Cotter, Mrs. (W. Cotter), 1887
Cotton, Mrs. (M. E. Godwin), 1862
Cowen, Mrs. (G. Brown), 1907
Cox, Mrs. (M. Latham), 1893
Craig, Sallie, 1856
*Craig, Mrs. (L. Byrd), 1861
Crane, Mrs. (C. Beckwith), 1913
Craven, Mrs. (M. McKenzie), 1854
Craven, Mrs. (M. McKemie), 1856
Craven, Mrs. (C. McKemie), 1859
Cromartie, Mrs. (S. Christian), 1911
*Cruselle, Mrs. (O. Macy), 1885
Culpepper, Mrs. (K. Cooper), 1885
Culpepper, Mrs. (E. Jones), 1907
Culpepper, Mrs. (E. Smith), 1912
Curry, Mrs. (E. Sutton), 1907
Culver, Marcia, 1912
*Cunningham, Lizzie, 1856
Cunningham, Mrs. (A. Robins), 1895
Dallis, Mrs. (R. Evans), 1893
Daniel, Mrs. (I. Butler), 1901
Daniel, Vashti, 1903
Daniels, Mrs. (M. Dickinson), 1893
*Dansby, Mary Lou, 1886
Dasher, Mrs. (S. Strickland), 1903
Davenport, Mrs. (B. Parker), 1889
*Davidson, Mrs. (S. Ward), 1855
'Davidson, Mrs. (S. Hogg), 1862
Davidson, Mrs. (L. Brown), 1903
Davis, Ann, 1851
Davis, Mrs. (L. Hampton), 1852
*Davis, Mrs. (E. Hill), 1862
*Davis, Mrs. (W. Burns), 1886
Davis, Mrs. (K. Trimble), 1895
Davis, Mrs. (A. Bvnum), 1899
Davis, Mrs. (A. M. Dunson), 1902, 1903
Davis, Sarah, 1921
Davis, Ruth, 1926
Davison, Mrs. (O. Gray), 1891
DeLamar, Mrs. (J. Mallory), 1901
DeLoach, Ellen, 1856
DoLoach, Elizabeth. 1856
DeLoach, Mrs. (O. Ryals), 1904
DeMedici, Mrs. (A. Fennell), 1916
*Dempsey, Irene, 1900
Dempsey, Ernestine, 1901
Dent, Mrs. (M. Steagell). 1855
Dent, Mrs. (M. Scoggins), 1888
Denny, Mrs. (S. Ogletree), 1923
Deramus, Mrs. (M. Northcutt), 1924
Dickerson, Mrs. (M. Beauchamp), 1891
*Dillard, Mrs. (M. Johnson), 1891
Dillard, Mrs. (A. Quillian), 1899
86
*Dix, Mrs. (M. Colquitt), 1853
^Pixon, Mrs. (F. Fleming), 1860
Dixon, Fattie, 1896
Dobbs, Mrs. (R. Mixon), 1886
Dodd, Mrs. (E. Cleaveland), 1894
Dorsey, Mrs. (X. Smith), 1886
Doughman, Frances, 1928
Douglas, Mary, 1851
Dowda, Mrs. (M. Meaders), 1895
Dowdell, Mrs. (A. E. Mitchell), 1849
Dowens, Mrs. (M. Spruell), 1925
Dozier, Mrs. (A. E. Pitts), 1849
Dozier, Mrs. (8. C. Newton), 1850
*Dozier, Mrs. (H. Carlton), 1859
Dozier, Mrs. (C. Smith), 1899
Dozier, Katherine, 1913
Dozier, Pearl. 1914
Drane, Mrs. (L. E. Davis), 1901
Draper. Mrs. (A. Hutchinson), 1916
Duke, Mrs. (L. Dyer), 1885
Dunn, Jewell, 1926
Dunn, Hettie, 1927
Dunne, Mrs. (G. Touchstone). I
Durham, Mrs. (S. Gilliam), 1898
Eakes, Margaret, 1910
Eakes, Mildred, 1910, 1912
Eakes, Mrs. (F. Blanton), 1919
Edmonds, Mrs. (F. Black), 1917
*Edmondson, Mrs. (K. Selleck), L855
Edmondson, Marian, 1917
Edmondson, Margaret, 1928
Edmondston, Mrs. (E. Bostwick), 1860
Edwards, Mrs. (M. E. Evans), 1860
Edwards, Mrs. (L. Freeman), 1904
Edwards, Mary Lee, 1917
Elliott, Monita, 1925
*Ellis, Mrs. (C. Ledbetter), 1861
Ellis, Maud, 1892
Ellis. Mrs. (L. Cotton), 1902
Ellis, lone, 1908
Estes, Mrs. (V. Jarrell), 1919
Evans, Mrs. (E. Stokes), 1907
Evans, Mrs. (P. Smith), 1927
Evans, Lily, 1928
*Everett, Mrs. (J. Barnett), 1885
Erwin, Mrs. (L. Parks), 1899
Erwin, Jennie Mae, 1918
*Ezzard, Mrs. (T. Speer), 1892
Ezzell, Mrs. (M. Mooney), 1855
Pall, Mary, 1853
Fambo, Mrs. (C. B. Crain), 1892
Farmer, Mrs. (G. Covin), 1893, 1894
Featherstone, Mrs. (C. Parks), 1895
Faust. Mrs. (H. Smith), 1897
Penli v. Mamie, 1907
Ferreil, Mrs. (S. Campbell), 1849
Ferrell. Elizabeth, 1902
Few. Mrs. (J. L. Lumpkin). 1923
Picklin, Mrs. (M. Hill), 1871
Ficklin. Emmie, 1898
*Field, Mrs. (V. Edmondson), 1855
Fields, Mrs. (C. Cooper), 1861
*Fields, Mrs. (G. Heard), 1891
Fish, Mrs. (L. Brady). 1891
Fitzpatrick, Mrs. (E. Vaughan), 1881
Fleming, Lucy, 1862
Fleming, Mattie, 1862
Flournoy, Mrs. (F. Harden ), 1859
*Flournoy, Mrs. (A. Morgan). 1-
Floyd, Marv. 1927
Flynt, Mrs. (N. Marchman), '
Foote, Mrs. (M. Whitaker), I -
' Forbes, Rebecca, l 850
* Forbes. Mrs. ( M. Cum . 1864
Forney. Mrs. (B. Barm de . i 901
Foster, Nell, 1912
Foster, Florerfce, 1915
Fester, Edith, L926
Fowler, Mrs. I M. Park), 1892
Fox, Mary, 1908
Freeman, Mrs. (A. Martin), 1863
Freeman, Maud, 1892
Frost, Mrs. (M. Connally), 1918
"Fuhrer, Mrs. (B. Walker), 1882
Fullbright, Iris, 1919
Gable, AJlene, 1925
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Gailey, Mrs. (W. Hardwick), 1898
Gandy, Mrs. (M. Ware), 1910, 1912
Gard, Mrs. (L. Hilsman), 1925
Gardner, Mrs. (M. Stanton), 1908
Gardner, Grace, 1928
Garlington, Laura, 1857
Garrett, Mrs. (G. Allen), 1907
Garrett, Laverne, 19 11
Garrison, Mrs. ( F. Womack i . L859
*Gartrell, Mrs. (A. P. Burke), 1850
*Gay Mrs. (C. Ware), 1853
Gay, Mrs. (I. Smith), 1886
Gentry, Mrs. (B. Baxter), 1893
George, Addie, 1891
*Gibson, Mrs. (A. C. Cameron), 1848
Gibson, Grace, 1927
Gilbert, Jane, 1848
Gilmer, Mary, 1862
Gilmore, Ethel, 1914
*Glanton, Mrs. (M. E. Dixon), 1850
Glasure, Mrs. (M. Bruce), 1895
Glenn, Amanda, 1925
Glenn, Josephine, 1926, 1927
Golden, Mrs. (B. Sims), 1907
Goldsmith, Mrs. (F. A. Favor), 1849
Goldsmith, Mrs. (M. Griffin), 1915
Goodman, Mrs. (M. A. Gilliam), 1850
Goodrum, Mrs. (J. L. Thompson), 1887
Gordon, I. F., 1858
Gordy, Mrs. (K. Ingram). 1897
Gorman, Mrs. (E. Batson), 1924
Grady, Mrs. (H. Clark). L918
*Graham, Mrs. (L. Fleming), 1899
Graham, Mrs. (A. Stone), 1909
Grant, Mrs. (S. Keed), 1854
Graves, Mrs. (R. M. Ledbetter), 1897
Gray, Ellie, 1908
Green, Mrs. (M. Colquitt), 1854
Green, Mrs. (I. Florence), 1897
Green, Mary, 1908
Green, Susie, 1914
Greenfield, Mrs. (K. Shaver), 1916
Gresham, Mrs. (M. Broome), 1884
Griffin. Margaret, 1855
Griffin, Mrs. (S. Means). 1859
Grogan, Elniira, 1919
Gunn, Mrs. (S. Douglas), 1851
Guttenberger, Mrs. (M. R. Kimbrough),
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Haines. Mrs. (E. Linson), 1913
Hale, Mrs. (E. Warlick I, 1913
Evelyn, 1917
Hale. Grace, L924
Hale, Bonnie, 1925
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Haley. Cornelia, 1925
Hall, Mrs. (J. Newton), 1852
Mrs. (N. Hall),
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Hamilton, Marv, 1858
"Hamilton, E. \\. 1858
Bamm, Mrs. (E. Davenport), 1896, 1904
Bammond, Mrs. (P. Robinson), 1860
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Hammond. Mrs. (R. Smith), 1909
Hampton, Mrs. (S. McGhee), 1852
Hancock, Mrs. (A. Stroud), 1897
Hanks, A. C, 1858
Harber, Mrs. (M. Wright), 1896
Hardy, Ruth, 1919
Harlan, Mrs. (E. Hutcheson), 1895
Harmon. Mrs. ( M. Johnson), 1887
Harper, Mrs. (M. Harvey), 1850
Harper, Mrs. (A. Mixon), 1920
Harrell, Fannie, 1893
Harrell, Susie, 1894
Harrell, Mrs. (M. Quillian), 1899
Harris, Sarah. 1855
*Harris, Mrs. . (R. K. Woodward), 1859
*Harris, Mrs. M. Pitts), 1862
Harris, (L. Lewis), 1885
Harris, Mrs. (E. West), 1892
Harris, Beuna, 1896
Harris, Mrs. (S. Satterwhite), 1913
*Harvard, Mrs. (H. Carnes), 1895
Harvey, Mrs. (N. Vickers), 1902
*Har\vell, Mrs. (L. Lipscomb), 1861
Hawkins, Mrs. (V. Winn), 1893
*Hay, Mrs. (I. Burk), 1864
Haynes, Mary, 1862
Haynes, Mrs. (Z. Crockett), 1891
Hays, Mrs. (G. Broughton), 1861
Hays, Mary, 1928
*Heard, Mrs. (M. Alford), 1861
*Heard, Mrs. (A. Amoss), 1853
*Heard, Mrs. (M. Alford), 1857
Heard, Mrs. (S. B. Bynum), 1894
Hearn, Janie, 1908
Hearn, Winnie, 1892
Heisler, Mrs. (F. Westmoreland), 1914
Hemmings, Mrs. (S. Davenport), 1902
Herman, Mrs. (E. Park), 1923
*Herring, Mrs. (S. Stembridge), 1854
*Herring, Mrs. (L. Ellis), 1856
*Hill, Mrs. (S. T. Cameron), 1846
*Hill, Mrs. (C. Smith), 1890, 1892
Hill, Mrs. (E. Godwin), 1909
Hill, Claire, 1928
Hines, Mrs. (A. Liles), 1891
*Hines, Annie, 1915
Hodges, Sallie, 1890
Hodges, Mrs. (L. Tompkins). 1921
Hogan, Mrs. (J. Daniels), 1896
*Hogg, Mrs. (M. Alford), 1877
Hogg, Mrs. (L. Lovelace), 1893
Holbrook, Mrs. (P. Sewell), 1899
Holcomb, Mrs. (M. Rosser), 1899
Holderfield. Mrs. (E. Widner), 1909
Holland, Mary, 1855
Holloway, Mrs. (W. Maddox), 1897
Holman, Mrs. (L. Hicks), 1907
*Holmes, Mrs. (J. Manning), 1895
*Hood, Leila, 1897
Hooks, Dolly, 1893
*Hopkins, Mrs. (E. Cook), 1897
House, Mrs. (D. Jones), 1914. 1915
*Howard, Mrs. (T. E. Hill), 1847
Howard, Mrs. (M. B. Davis), 1906
Howell, Mrs. (M. D. Mann), 1898
Howell, Mrs. (S. Craft), 1925
Howie, Mrs. (.A. Biggers), 1921
Hudson, Leila, 1878
Hughes. Hortense, 1927
Hunnit-utt. Mrs. (E. Page), 1861
Hunt, Lucie. 1892
Hunt. Mrs. (E. Lupton), 1911
Hunter, Wilma, 1928
*Huntley. Helen, 1899
Hurst, Ruth. 1928
Huston, Mrs. (L. Hall). 1919
*Hutcherson, Mrs. (F. Teasley), 1889
Hutchinson, Mrs. (A. Callahan), 1896
Hutchinson, Mrs. (F. Dunson), 1909,
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Ingram, Catherine, 1928
Irving, Mrs. (J. Wadsworth), 1883
Ivey, Mrs. (A. DuBose), 1849
Ivey, Mrs. (S. Tomlinson), 1899
Ivey, Mrs. (M. Tomlinson), 1907
Ivey, Mrs. (F. Dye), 1908
Jackson, Sara, 1927
Jarrell, Mrs. (L. Bradley), 1892
Jelks, Mrs. (E. C. Phillips), 1861
*Jenkins, Mrs. (M. Crawford), 1888
Jernigan, Leila, 1902
Jeter, Mrs. (S. Clayton), 1848
Jeter, Fannie, 1860
Johnson, Mrs. (S. Maddox), 1849
Johnson, Mrs. (B. Morgan), 1855
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Johnson, Mrs. (C. Parks), 1883
Johnson, Mrs. (B. Trimble), 1886
Johnson, Mrs. (L. Witherspoon), 1888
Johnson, Mrs. (E. Hines), 1894
Johnson, Buford, 1895
Johnson, Mrs. (O. Miller), 1896
Johnson, Mrs. (W. Crawford), 1900
Johnson, Mrs. (M. H. Smith), 1900
Johnson, Bessie, 1907
Johnson, Laura Frances, 1920, 1922
Johnson, Annie Jo, 1925
* Johnston, Mrs. (H. M. Morgan), 1885
Joiner, Mrs. (K. Merritt), 1862
Jones, Mrs. (R. Sharp), 1852
Jones, Missouri, 1853
Jones, Mrs. (C. Redding), 1850
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*Jones, Mrs. (L. Heard), 1887
Jones, Willie, 1890
Jones, Mrs. (A. McLaughlin), 1890
Jones, Mrs. (S. Quillian), 1892
Jones, Mrs. (L. Patillo), 1894
Jones, Mrs. (L. Coggins), 1895
Jones, Mrs. (A. K. Bondurant), 1899
Jones, Mrs. (S. Benton), 1901
Jones, Elizabeth, 1923
Jones, Willard, 1925
Jordan, Mrs. (M. L. Drane), 1904
Judge, Mrs. (M. Blackburn), 1856
Kelley, Mrs. (E. Askew), 1900
Kendrick, Leila, 1893
Kendrick, Mrs. (L. Maddox), 1861
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Kenon, Allie, 1907
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Kimbrough, Mrs. (H. McBain), 1855
Kimbrough, Mrs. (A. K. Worley), 1885
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Kirksey, Mrs. (M. Shepherd). 1859
Knapp, Mrs. (L. Brannon), 1881
Knight, Sallie A, 1862
Knott, Mrs. (I. Murrah), 1896
Knox, Georgia, 1928
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Lane, Mary. 1924
Laney, Melissa, 1855
Laney, Janie, 1860
Lanev, Lizzie. 1860
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Lanier, Clyde, 1900
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Lawrence, Mrs. (L. Evans), L912
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Lazenby. Annie, 1910
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Lee, Mrs. (R. Marsh), 1890
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Leonard. Mrs. (E. Cameron), 1853
Leonard. Sarah, 1928
Leslie, Lizzie, 1863
Letcher, Mrs. (M. Ingram), 1899
Lewis, Mrs. (A. Britt), 1893
Lewis, Lura, 1915
Lewis. Mrs. (E. Newton), 1926
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Linder, Mrs. (C. Hodges), 1892
Lindsey, Mrs. (M. Hunter), 1914
Little, Mrs. (L. Ayes), 1896
Little. Mrs. (E. Bampley), 1905
Lively, Mrs. (M. Carmichael), 1897
Longino, Cecile. 1888
Livingston, Mrs. (E. Hodges), 1927
Lockhart, Mrs. (S. Harris), 1852
Lockhart, Mrs. (B. Parmer), 1898
Logan, Mrs. (M. Swindall), 1889
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Long. Mrs. (S. Griggs), 1850
Longino, Cecile, 1888
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Lovelace. Mrs. (W. Hardv) 1899
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Lumpkin, Marv, 1928
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Lyon. Anna. 1862
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Mabry, Mrs. (J. Cooper), 1888
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Maddox, Mrs. (M. Crawford), 1888
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Maffett. Mrs. (D. Boykin), 1874
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Manget, Mr-. (L. Anderson), 1894
Mangham, Willie May, 1928
Manning. Deryl. 1927
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Marsh, Mrs. (A. Turner), 1859
Marshall, Rebecca, 1847
Marshall. Mrs. (F. Pitts). 1862
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Martin. Mrs. (A. Callahan), 1853
Martin, Tommie, 1924
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Matthews, Mrs. (L. Y011112:). 1883
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Mattox, Mrs. (H. Hendrick), 1896
Maxwell. Mrs. (I.. Dickerson), 1889
Mayberry, Mrs. (S. Harrell), 1 -
Mayfield, Allene, L920
Mavnard. Mrs. ( P. Clark ), 1894
Mayo, Annette, 1908
Mayo, Flossie, L911
Mayo. Sarah. 1912
Meacham, Mrs. (E. Beauchamp), 1894
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Meadows, Anna, 1856
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Merritt, Lizzie, 1892
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Moss, Amy, 1887
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Moss, Rubv, 1914
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McBride, Mrs. (V. Rawls), 1915
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McConnell. Mrs. (S. Bohannon). 1908
McCord. Annie Lou, 1903
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McCrary, Mrs. (E. Agnew), 1892
McCraw, Mrs. (M. Applebj I,
McCnllohs, Mrs. (.A. Amos). 1920
McCutcheon, Gussie. 1895
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McDaniel, Mrs. (L. GarretM. I
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McDonald. Mrs. (L, Bangh), 1878
McDonald, Mrs. (1. Palmer),
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McDougald, Hattie, 1928
McDowell, Margaret
McFarland, Mrs. I P. Raiford^. -
McGee, Eunice, 1912
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McGee, Mrs. (M. Griffin), 1850
* McGhee, C. P., 1862
McGhee, Mamie, 1890
McGhee, Mrs. (L. McLaughlin), 1892
McGhee, Mrs. (E. McLaughlin), 1898
McGinty, Mrs. (V. Edwards), 1906, 1909
McGrew, Mrs. (L. Lupo), 1893
McKenzie, Mrs. (M. R. Dixon), 1899
McKleroy, Mrs. (I. Lewis), 1894
McLarin, Mrs. (L. Howard), 1882
McLarin, Mrs. (P. Norman), 1901
McLarin, Mrs. (M. Cline), 1923
McLendon, Mrs. (A. Boykin), 1882
McLendon, Carolyn, 1928
McMeekin, Mrs. (C. Merriweather),
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McMillin, Beva, 1922
McNeil, Mrs. (E. Hobgood), 19.07
McWhorter, Mildred, 1927
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*Neal, Mrs. (C. Stinson), 1850
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Nelms, Mrs. (E. Corn), 1926
Nelson, Bettie, 1859
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*Newton, Lela, 1899
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Nicholson, Mrs. (R. Slaton), 1850
Nicholson, Mrs. (A. Woodwright), 1908
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O'Hara, Mrs. (N. Revill), 1883
O'Neal, Lou, 1862
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Orr, Mrs. (F. Travlor), 1896
Osborne, Willela, 1919
Ouslev, Nuda M.. 1861
Overstreet, Mrs. (L. Watkins), 1881
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Packard. Clara. 1862
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Page, Mrs. (M. S. Rutland), 1919
Parham, Lizzie, 1892
Parham. Mrs. (A. Thrashed, 1895
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Park. Mrs. (M. McGhee), 1878
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Park, Lila. 1899
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Partin, Mrs. (L. Jones), 1909
Patton, Annette, 1916
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Payne. Mrs. (L. Ridenhour), 1887
Pearson, Mrs. (S. Presley), 1853
Peeples, Marietta. 1853
Pendergrass, Mildred, 1926
Pendleton, Annie Belle, 1898
Pennington, Lillie. 1906
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Perkins, Mrs. (P. Becton), 1914
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Perry, Mrs. (S. Candler), 1883
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Phillips, Mrs. (L. Bond), 1913
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Pike, Ethel, 1922
Pitt, Mrs. (E. Cook), 1894, 1908
Pitts, Missouri, 1854
Plum, Mrs. (A. Hall), 1907
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Polhill, Mrs. (M. Park), 1899
Ponder, Mrs. (G. Sims), 1890
Potts, Mrs. (M. R. Hill), 1847
Potts, Mrs. (S. Ayers), 1853
Potts, Mrs. (P. White), 1894
Powell, Mary, 1856
Powell, Rebecca, 1856
Powell, Mrs. (A. Stone), 1900
Power, Addie, 1857
Prather, Mrs. (C. Hogg), 1905
Price, Leta, 1908
Price, Mrs. (S. Segrest), 1916
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Pringle, Mrs. (L. Arnold), 1888
Pruitt, Mrs. (C. Pittman), 1873
Puckett, Mrs. (E. Johnson), 1885
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Quillian, Mrs. (F. B. Jones), 1888
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Radford, Mary, 1928
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Rakestraw, Mrs. (M. Curtwright), 1864
Ramplev, Mattie, 1905
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Ray. Jessie, 1927
Reade, Mrs. (H. Handley), 1880
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Redwine. Mary, 1855
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Reese, Mary, 1858
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Reid, Ann, 1852
Reid, Mary F., 1852
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Ricks, Mrs. (F. Smith). 1900
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Rives, Lois, 1910
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Robertson, Annie. 1890
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Robeson. Frances, 1 1 5
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Rodenberry, Mrs. (B. Brantley), 1896
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Rogers. Mrs. (M. Brinsfield), 1804
Rowe. Mrs. (A. Ragsdale), 1007
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Rowland, Mrs. (J. Brinson), 1922
Ross, Mrs. (O. Roberts), 1897
Rosser, Mrs. (J. Connally), 1877
Rosser, Mrs. (K. Sharp), 1900
Rountree, Mrs. (C. Holmes), 1912
Rowrer, Mrs. (M. Bailey), 1896
Rumble, Mrs. (1). Taylor), 1895
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Russell, Mrs. (M. McFarlin), 1880
Rutland, Mrs. (L. Cotton), 1922
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Sams, Mrs. (L. Blasingame), 1898
Sams, Mary, 1926
Sappington, Mrs. (C. Craven), 1853
Sasser. Mrs. (C. Ballard), 1883
Satterwhite, Sarah, 1914
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Saunders, Sophia, 1856
Savage, Mrs. (E. Sutton), 1900
Scaife, Mrs. (L. Pace), 1854
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Schettman. Mrs. (D. Beckman), 1888
Scoggins, Louise, 1928
Scott, Mrs. (M. King), 1854
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Scott, Mrs. (M. VanZandt), 1888
Seale, Mary, 1897
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Searcv, Mrs. (R. Ware), 1888
Sell, Mrs. (A. Maynard), 1893
Segrest, Mrs. (L. Boykin), 1892
Shadburn, Mrs. (M. Leggitt), 1922
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Shaw. Mrs. (L. Venable), 1897
Shearer, Mrs. (M. Pinkerton), 1924
Sheffey, Mrs. (E. Price), 1896
Shepherd, Eugenia, 1889
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Shewmake, Leila, 1893
Shields, Mrs. (B. Cline), 1925
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Shorter. Mrs. (S. Shepherd), 1860
Shumate, Hattie, 1857
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Simpson, Ruby, 1928
Simril, Corinne, 1890
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Singleterry. Mrs. (E. Quillian), 1904
Singleton, Mrs. (E. Shewmake), 1895
Sirmons, Mrs. (S. E. Moore), 1911
Sitton, Mrs. (P. Fox), 1913
Skeens, Susan, 1854
Skinner, Mrs. (J. Cofer), 1902
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Sloan. Mrs. (H. Harris), 1917
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Smalley, Mrs. (M. Loflin). 1899
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Smith, Mrs. (L. Morrow). 1854
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Smith, Mrs. (X. Owens), 1864
Smith. Mrs. (M. Driver), 1881
Smith, Mrs. (M. Gates). 1881
Smith. Mrs. (E. Thomp on), 1883
Smith, Mrs. (E. Bullard), 1885
Smith, Maidee. 1887, 1891
Smith. Mrs. (T>. Haralson), 1889
Smith, Mrs. (C. ' 1890, 1892
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Smith. Mrs. ( \. Baxter), 1892
Smith, Mrs. (R. Camp), 1892
Smith. Jennie.
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Smith, Mrs. (L. YYelchel), 1895
Smith, Mi'-. I B. Dickinson I, 1898
Smith, Eflie, 1901
Mrs. (L. Malone), 1903
Smith, Bailie, L909, L910, L913
Smith, Mrs. (C. Sliannon), 1911
Smith, Carrie. 1912
Smith Florence, 1912
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Smith, Lillie, 1923
Smith, Nancy, 1926
L Annie, 1927
Smithwick, Elizab
Sorrels, Mrs. (I,. Cotton L919
Spell, Mrs. (G. Vickert , 1919
Speer, Mrs. (A. Moreland I, i -
Speer, Mrs. (G. Moreland I, I -
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Stapler, (C. Capps). 1900
Stearns, Mrs. (J. Manning), 1900
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Stipe, Mrs. (A. Z. Dillard), 1906
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Stone. Mrs. (B. Boyd), 1907
Stovall, Connie, 1890
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Strain. Ruth, 1927
Stroud, Anita, 1899
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Strozier, Forrest L.. 1892
Stubbs. Mrs. (X. Winn), 1903
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Sutton. Mrs. (J. Pittman), 1886
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Swanson, Mrs. (A. Swanson), 1 ".
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Taliaferro. R. T.. 1854
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Tatum, Mrs. (M. Wilkinson). 1889
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Tennvson. Frances, i
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Terrell, L<=na, 1926
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Thompson, Mary. 1S49
Thompson, Mrs. (M. J. Edwards), 1856
Thompson. Mrs. (A. Hill). 1860
Thompson, Mrs. (M. W. Cleaveland),
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Thompson, Mrs. (E. Bryson), 1900
Thompson. Mrs. (M. 1903
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I
Mrs. (L. Jackson), 1889
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Tinin . (A. Vaughan), 1881
Timmons, Mary, 1925
Tinney, Mrs. (S. R. Henderson), 1919
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Tooke, Martha, 1857
Towson, Manie, 1911
Trainmell, Mrs. (I. L. Emory), 1880
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Travlor, Lizzie, 1878
Traylor, Mrs. (C. Smithwick), 1910,
1911
Travis, Mrs. (M. Hamilton), 1912
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Trimble, Mrs. (L. Brazell), 1894
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Trippe, Mrs. (E. Philpot), 1902
Trotter, Mrs. (M. Williams), 1896
Truitt, Mrs. (J. Barber), 1871
Trundle, Margaret, 1926
Tuck, Lilla, 1901
Tuck, Elizabeth, 1926
Tucker, Emma, 1855
Tucker, Mrs. (L. Williams), 1901
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Tuggle, Mrs. (M. Tomlinson), 1893
Tuggle, Ruth, 1898
*Tullev, Sallie, 1860
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*Turner, Anna, 1863
Turner, Mrs. (M. Marshall), 1863
Turner, Mrs. (S. Jarrell), 1887
*Turner, Alice, 1897
*Turner, Mrs. (C. Dallis), 1898
Turner, Mrs. (A. Fulcher), 1898
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Tye, (M. W. Brantley), 1890
Trier, Cornelia, 1854
Twvman, Mrs. (G. Johnson), 1888
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VanGorder, Marion, 1919
Van Home, Mrs. (F. Quillian). 1900
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Walker, Mrs. (M. Stipe), 1882
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Walker, Mrs. (R. Walker), 1912
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Ward, Mrs. (F. Key), 1854
Ward, Mrs. (G. Hodnett), 1862
Ward, Lula, 1874
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Ward. Antionette, 1892, 1893
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Warden, Mrs. (M. Dean). 1890
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Ware, Nannie, 1896
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Warlick, Mrs. (A. L. Nelson), 1922
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Webb, Mrs. (L. Hicks), 1906
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Whatley, Mrs. (O. DeLoach), 1923
Wheeler, Mrs. (K. Dickinson), 1899
Wheeler, Katherine, 1928
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Whipple, Mrs. (L. Dillard), 1909
Whitaker, Evelyn, 1896
Whitaker, Mrs. (J. Hurst), 1917
Whitaker, Mrs. (I. Combs), 1919
Whitaker, Mrs. (R. Hutcheson), 1920
White, Mollie. 1862
White, Mrs. (M. McFarlin), 1887
White, Mrs. (E. Fullbright), 1922
White, Mabel, 1922
White, Mabel, 1927
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Wicker, Mrs. (A. Henry), 1893
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Wiggins, Mrs. (G. Tigner), 1897
Wiggins, Mrs. (A. Porter), 1925
Wiggins, Mary Frances, 1928
Wilcox. Mrs. (L. Turner), 1888
Wilhoite, Jeanette, 1910
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Wilkinson, Kate, 1894
Willett, Mrs. (J. Ridley), 1889
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Williams, Mrs. (J. Burnett), 1887
Williams, Mrs. (M. Schaub), 1895
Williams, Mrs. (M. W. Smith), 1896
Williams, Mrs. (M. Bruce), 1900
Williams, Mrs. (R. Clifton), 1902
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Williams, Elizabeth, 1925, 1926
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Willingham, Mrs. (A. Nesbitt). 1898
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Willis, Mrs. (A. Bryant), 1865
Willy, Mrs. (J. Jones). 1906
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*Wilson, A.nnie, 1887
Wilson, Mrs. (M. Harrison), 1900
Wilson. Mattie Lou. 1923
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Winn, Mrs. (G. Merriweather), 1896
Winn, Mrs. (E. Cribb). 1925
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Winston, Mrs. (T. Winston), 1859
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Wisdom, Mrs. (A. White), 1894
Wisdom, Kate, 1928
Witcher, Sarah Elizabeth. 1912
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Wood. Leonora, 1905
Wooding, Mrs (J. L. Covin). 1891
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Woodruff. Mrs. (T. Chunn), 1922, 192<
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Woolev, Mrs. (A. Chambliss). 1889
Wooten, Mrs. (D. Marchman), 1898
Wooten, Mrs. (P. Powledge), 1908
Wright, Mrs. (M. Tavlor). 1862
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Wright, Mary Lizzie. 1918
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Wynne, Mrs. (M. Dozier). 1897
Yang. Mrs. (N. T. Lee). 1911
Yarbrough. Margaret, 1927
Yonkmon. Mrs. (O. McClure). 1912
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Young, Mrs. (A. Harp), 1895 /..liars. Mrs. (M. Cook), 1880
Young, Mrs. (D, Upsliaw), 1908 Zuber, Mrs. (F. Dowman), 1880
Deceased.
03