USA > Indiana > Johnson County > Franklin > Franklin College, Franklin, Ind. : first half century jubilee exercises, June 5 to 12, 1884 : addresses, historical, biographical and statistical matter, poem, hymn, general catalogue, etc > Part 10
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116
FRANKLIN COLLEGE.
Who fell, martyr-like, 'neath the foe's battlements. The soil of old England, and the Continent, too, By old battle-fields is scarred and seamed through ; By Marathon, Hastings and dread Waterloo. In great pilgrimages of armies she marched The long mediaeval years through, till she reached And bowed around Christ's holy sepulchre, void ; The "Cross and Crusade " was her watchword and guide. Our country so free in her progress may halt At graves of her fall'n, at the tomb and the vault, To shrond the brave thousands who fell on the fields Of Brandywine, Lundy's Lane,-ah, what appeals !- Of Vicksburg, and Gettysburg, and Murfreesboro, too; The price that they cost, how few ever knew ! The blood and the deeds of our brave boys in blue.
%
The surge of events then rolled on but to end In tragedy dark, none could searce comprehend. The Nation rocked back and her armies stood still, Struek dumb by the shock, and pierced through by the thrill Of the cry which went up over all the broad land :
"Our President 's dead, struck down by the hand Of Booth, the assassin, who shot where he planned." The flags drooped at half-mast as they stood out to sea ; The muffled drum beat a slow, sad melody. Our country in grief paused to shroud and entomb, And wreath the dark bier with the laurel's bright bloom. The grave was closed up, like the vortex at sea, By the flood of new issues, and the tide's energy. The Nation sailed on, with her banners afloat, And lifted herself off the roeks which she smote, And rode o'er the billows which broke 'gainst her hull, And rescued herself by a force wonderful ; Till the sea's Iridden treachery snapped cable and chain, Her mast-head fell splintered and broken again ;
Again came the cry of her terrified crew, . Again bowed a Nation, her grief to renew, Again the assassin her President slew. For Garfield lay dead, and his country in gloom Paused te weave him a shroud, and to hew out a tomb Befitting the slain and his sad martyrdom.
*
* The legend another sad phase may present, Which finds an analogy quite pertinent In life, and life's restless and sad discontent.
117
PENELOPE'S WEB.
-
Penelope weaving on her web all the day, Unraveled at night, and the woof threw away, Despising the work, and unfinished it lay. Ah! who has not toiled with great fervor and zest, The glow and the ardor which burned in the breast Illumining the task, which their own light impressed ; Till night, in her calmness so cold and so real, O'ershadowed the glare of the day, to reveal How fruitless the toil, how misspent was the zeal ? What days of strong effort and hope's burning thrill Have ended in night, and her gloom and her chill ! Ah! how have all spun and have wove all the day, To skillfully mingle, midst somber and gray, The gold threads and sunbeams they caught on the way ; To fashion the warp and the woof of their lives In beautiful webs, such as free fancy weaves ! When night hushed the clatter which deadened the sense, Distracting the judgment from wiser intents ; Her silence revealing the sweeter, small sounds, Which speak to the innermost soul in rich tones. Her soft and mysterious light then reveals To the soul blots and blemishes the soul only feels, Which day from the eye so strangely conceals. For night's meditation and silent review, Prove vain and all unsatisfactory, too, The work which had cost so much effort to do. Then, with trembling fingers, hearts hopeless and sad, They stop to unravel the tangles they made ; To undo the whole web which at first seemed so bright, Beginning again with the morn's newer light. The idols once worshiped devoutly and true, Whose shrine bore the off'rings which love would renew,. The after years mar with the mould of neglect. Their pure whiteness gone, how plain to detect They were but of clay, fit to break and reject. Moulding, and carving, and mounting to-day Rejecting with scorn, on the morn's survey ; Iconoclasts all, broken forms strew our way. Life's great and broad altar-steps covered and strewn. Are with the idols which we have thrown down. In fronting the mysteries met on the way, The claims and allurements one can not gainsay, The hopes, disappointments encountered each day, How hard to take up, with a steady, true hand,
118
FRANKLIN COLLEGE.
The thread of existence and weave, as we planned, Life's web, smooth and even in every strand. So much to undo and weave over again, Each night bringing weariness and bitter pain. With questioning gaze in the darkness we peer, And find naught but darkness, impenetrable, drear. Ah! what graver faces the hours of the night Turn toward us then, than when circling through light. The sweet, shutting flowers bend their heads to receive The kiss of the dew, benediction of eve. ( Night, what a purpose, so holy and true, You nurse in your bosom, so calm and so blue, As you, in your soft and dark mantle, enfold A great, sleeping world, by the stars patrolled ; In whose deep'ning gloom one may think all alone, And weep all unseen o'er the hope that has flown, And pray all unheard, save by God on his throne. 'Twas night when the Savior Gethsemane sought, And prayed to the Godhead if he would not Let the cup pass. But the darkness was still, The solitude mute. He was left to fulfill "The promise of God ; such atonement seemed diod's way. A lost world was redeemed. Life's weavers pass nights of sad watchings, which bode The day's coming grief ; yet none dare ask of God Why mortals must pass in his plan 'neath the rod. The forehead of Christ bled and ached 'neath the thorns, But a purpose divine was fulfilled, and the scorns Of mockers were hushed. Sublime heights, if attained To cross first Golgotha, 'twas planned and ordained.
*
The day's bitter warfare is waged through the heat, Sustaining a route here, and there a defeat, Till night brings cessation, though the strife be not through, And morn's bugle-call the same strife would renew,
And like the old warfare, where warriors slept On their arms and their shields when the night-watch was kept, The tented field guarded by the veteran Mars, Whose bright, blazing helmet led her cohort of stars. When the fight has been fought and night's deep'ning gloom And lengthening shadows across the field come, The spared chieftain enters alone his far tent, And drops its long curtain, with serious intent, "Tween him and the great white encampment without ;
119
PENELOPE'S WEB.
And asks of his soul, with that questioning doubt, If the sacrifice made had been needed or not. What a time to review, to regret and reflect, So vividly now comes that act of neglect : That lost opportunity, wasted, spent zeal, That moment of destiny, whose strange appeal Was unheard till it passed, and its echoes came back, And with the wind's moaning and whisp'ring voice spake. In life there are moments of quickening thrill, Which only the deep, inmost soul can e'er feel. Of swelling emotion, whose high surges sweep ('er the soul. leaving floodmarks so high and so deep. No future scaree reaches again, and the heart Feels cheated, betrayed in its righteous desert, And asks the fulfillment of pledges and dreams, Which life, ne'er so promiseful, seldom redeems. Then with outstretched hand, like Penelope's art, So much is torn up, the unsatisfied heart Builds a future of fragments, complete in no part.
*
Penelope weaving and waiting through years. How like many lives and their checkered careers, With plans unmatured, and designs unfulfilled, Of working, and then tearing down to rebuild, Of wrestling with fate, and yet unreconciled. Perpetual, yet vain efforts till up each year : The end unattained, waited for, how sincere ! Till blinded by tears from the depths of despair. Like Moses of oll leading on the grand march, The promise of God writ on high heaven's arch, Awaiting for years the fulfillment of hope, Then shut out at last, and from Nebo's high top, A distant, far view of that loved promised land Was all that was given, he touched, ne'er attained, And died. He was laid in the grave by God's hand. The day's glare and sunshine reveal to our sight. Her peneiling sunbeams outline with their light The shadow which follows, its form and its hue, Follows like a warning all the day through, Till lost in the wide, deeper darkness of night ; Penumbra which blends with the darkness the light, Surrounding, coneealing the approaching sure fate, As we walk in the light but to weave and to wait. The years, sweeping on through their cycle of time,
120
FRANKLIN COLLEGE.
Completing youth's round, and then passing life's prime. Are filled with the weaving of round after round Life's destiny ; and waiting, though oft to despond, Still waiting, ne'er attaining, hope lies beyond. The past lies forgotten and lost to the view, In grasping the future, inviting and new ; So worthless it seemed, when reached and attained, Though earnestly toiled for and longed for till gained .. Yet no effort true, nor toil spent with true aim, Is lost to the weaver, though unfinished the scheme. Each deed, every life has a mission to fill In building the future of the world ; time will The purpose, now hidden, then clearly reveal, Of triumphs, reverses, and work incomplete, The weaving, and waiting, and hoping so great.
No life of the millions, not one is e'er lost, Though weak, and no power of its own can boast. The dew-drop so tiny reflects in its face Heav'ns beauty and brightness, each star in its place ; And atoms make up the great, broad universe.
The might of each life acting constant, its force Uniting with others, is felt in the course. Of Eternity's roll, and the world's throbbing pulse May stronger and steadier be for the impulse. The past of each life is worth what it cost, Though unsatisfactory, its worth is ne'er lost ; In deep, hallowed silence, then, lay it within The tomb of true memory, and gently entwine The violets, roses and sweet jassemine.
Not every one weaves with a texture so fine As Penelope's web, of the richest design ; Some coarser or finer, some dark and some bright, Some hiding their hue until turned to the light ; All weavers of destiny are, and our lives According as skill, opportunity gives, The stamp and the mark of the weaver denote, And prove if the soul be fine-fibered or not. (iod fashioned the loom, and left man to go weave, Whether shroud or a white bridal robe he would have, To bury a lost and a ruined life, Or wed him to angels, when through with the strife .. Life is a mystery ; scarce can we see What all of this weaving, and our web is to be, So blindly we turn to the present, and grope
121
PENELOPE'S WEB.
Through the future, to weave, and to wait, and to hope. Ah! brave is the soul who can steadily face To-day, and its off'rings, with boldness and grace. A greater than Franklin is he who will dare Go forth in the fiercest of life's tempest, there To snatch from the bosom of the storm-cloud dark The fire and electric light, whose flaming spark May quicken the soul to activity new, And, like the fabled fire which Prometheus once drew From Heaven, and to mortals, despite the gods, gave, May kindle aspirations for deeds noble, brave.
Penelope stood, weaving day after day,
Before her great loom, there to watch and pray ;
A shroud she did weave, to check Time in his stay. Yet all unfulfilled when the night came on
Was the promise she'd begged of the rising morn, Till with desp'rate hand she undid what she'd done. The longing was writ in her sad, tearful eyes, The sorrow of waiting was borne in disguise,
But ached in her heart, and was breathed in her sighs. A picture of life in the abstract was she, As printed, outlined by the strange chemistry Of the prophet's great camera and imagery.
. The past of each life, with its hopes and its aims, Which lie unfulfilled, or are lost like vanished dreams, Must be shrouded, entombed, while the pale altar flame May hallow the future with its sacred gleam. Each life has passed nights in review of its work, In deep retrospection, shut in by her dark, Deep solitude, when disenchanted the view, So unsatisfactory, when seen through and through, The wrench of the desperate hand will undo. The unseen, although formless, takes form in the brain ; Its whispers entice, though again and again The hand would reach forward, but ne'er could attain, The echo of sorrow comes ringing again. And all that is left is so meager and small, And what is denied will impoverish all Life's future, a dearth which no gift can enrich. Desire and unrest goad forever, and such Unsatisfied hearts, waiting on, feel a chill Benumbing the brain and deadening the will.
*
122
FRANKLIN COLLEGE.
Go weave, is the cry which rings in the brain : Go weave, the cry comes still again and again ; Go weave, the stars whisper and throw back the ery, Like kisses, as they sink and fall from the sky ; Go weave, writes the Sun, in words of burning light. As he on his throne rises to his great height, Then sinks. And the call is the whisper of night, Review and repent, with hand trembling with doubt, The faults and mistakes, if you can, ravel out. Make earnest the effort the knots to extract, And to disentangle from fancy hard fact. The night wind brings whispers again in tones sad As moans of the dove whose lost mate is found dead ; Soft whispers, go wait, weave and wait, only God Man's work can perfect, from mistakes bring forth good. To weave and enshroud, to undo and to wait, Midst tears and midst passionate yearning so great, Make up life's realities, though gilded with dreams, Which fancy and hope bathe in richest sunbeams.
Jubilee Ayının.
By Rev. G. H. Elgin, A. M., Indianapolis,
TUNE, "AMERICA."
Loud let the trumpet sound, And all the hills resound Throughout the land : With notes of Jubilee Exalt the Trinity, For glorious liberty Of heart and hand.
For two-score years and ten: Thy hand, O Lord, unseen. Hath led us on ; Believing, true and brave,
Our noble youth to save,
Thy servants wrought and gave - Themselves, Thine own.
Behold what God hath wrought. Through teachers and through taught, For Church and State. Though some have gone before, To that eternal shore, Their works rise more and more, Enduring, great.1
May every coming year More gracious still appear, Dear Lord, we pray ; Oh, may our College stand. Enriched at thy command, To bless our state and land To endless day !
And when we've fought the fight, And faith is changed to sight, Gathered to Thee - Where taught by Christ alone, To know as we are known, Thy will shall then be done Eternally.
GENERAL CATALOGUE
-OF-
STUDENTS IN FRANKLIN COLLEGE
-FOR THE -
First Fifty Years, up to and Including the Academic Year 1883-84.
EXPLANATORY NOTE .- This Catalogue is intended to be al -. phabetical, both as to the principal names and the initials. The names of those known to have died, are marked with a star. The figures indicate the last year of the student's at- tendance. The present address is given, if known; also, the address at the time the student died. Literary titles are indi- cated by the proper letters. The letter " M" designates those . known to have been, or to be, in the ministry. " Att'y " desig- nates those in the practice of law. " M. D.," is attached to the names of those who have taken a degree in medicine.
Married women have their present names in parenthesis.
Besides the names recorded here, there were at least three hundred and sixty-five students whose names nowhere occur. Probably twice as many students entered the various profes- sions as the Catalogue would indicate.
It can not be hoped that the Catalogue is free from mis- takes ; the records were so brief and scarce. In the main it is correct.
W. T. STOTT.
N. Abbott, '45.
(. Abbott, '57. - Adams, '58.
A. Adams, '43.
C. Adams, '84, Covington, O. - Indianapolis.
F. Adams,* '71,
G. W. Adams, '57.
J. 11. Adams, '47.
P. Adams, '39. S. W. Adams, '83,
Cleveland, (.
125
STUDENTS.
W. H. Adams, '49. A. C. Adkins, '57. B. F. Adkins, A. B., A.,M., M. D., '61, - Midford, Oregon.
C. Adkins, '59.
M. V. B. Adkins, '56, - : Indianapolis. T. A. Adkins, '55. W. H. Adkins, '55.
Y. (. Alden, # '59, - Herman. C. Alexander (Lagrange). '79, - Vinton, Iowa. Franklin.
C. A. Alexander, '79, - D. Alexander, '68.
G. Alexander, '68. (. Alexander, '68.
J. K. Alexander, '50. J. P. Allee, '70,
Stilesville. Indianapolis. Des Moines, Iowa.
1. Allen, '70 (Meigs). B. F. Allen, '39, B. F. Allen, '46, D. Allen, '43.
II. S. Allen, '71. Washington.
I. Allen, '49. J. Allen, '59. J. Allen, '39. J. Allen, '70 (Chamberlain ),
Humboldt, Kan.
J. Allen, '52.
J. P. Allen,# '5S.
J. P. S. Allen, '71.
J. S. Allen,
Pendleton. Terre Haute.
M. Allen, '71 (Stimson), M. A. Allen, '71.
T. C. Allen," '55.
W. Allen, '54, M. D., - Rochester, Minn.
W. A. Allen, '55. W. M. Allen, '43.
I. Allison, '45.
J. B. Amos, '78,
Michigantown.
C. L. Anderson, '49, - M. D.
W. H. Anderson, '61.
1. Applegate, '48. A. D. Applegate, '49.
J. Applegate, '56. W. M. Armstrong, '58.
Gi. Arnold, '45. G. M. Arnold, '45. J. C. Ash, 'S0, -
Ottawa, Kan.
126
FRANKLIN COLLEGE.
T. A. AAspy, '84, Flat Rock.
I. S. Athon, '64. G. W. Atkisson. '74. Somerset, Kan.
R. Axt, '83. Franklin.
1 .. Ayers. '84.
-
Seymour.
D. Babcock, '71.
II. C. Babcock, 62.
J. C. Babcock, '72. J. P. Baird,* '50.
Att'y. -
Terre llante. Mitchell.
V. T. Baker, '60.
C. Ball,# '57,
D. Ball, '49.
Crown Point.
J. H. Ball, '59.
T. H. Ball, A. B , A. M., '50, M. - - Crown Point.
T. Baley, '52.
J. J. Ballard, '78, - Worthington.
M. D. Ballard, '50.
J. B. Banker, '81, - M.,
- Benton Harbor. Mich.
D. Banta, '47.
D. D. Banta, '53, - - Franklin.
(. Banta, A. B .. A. M .. '75, Att'y. - Franklin.
HI. Banta, '45.
J. W. Banta, '53.
L. Banta," '82, - Franklin. Franklin.
M. Banta, '82,
W. H. Banta, '60. Banta, '43. - Banta, '43.
S. Barber, '49. W. G. Barnard, 'S4, Franklin.
D. C. Barnett, '71. Att'y, Harrisonville, Mo.
G. T. Barnett, '70, Franklin.
H. C. Barnett, '70. Att'y, Franklin. J. Barnett, '68.
J. S. Barnett, '70.
M. L. Barnett (Tront), '82,
Whiteland.
L. Barney, '48.
E. E. Barnum, '70. L. Barnum, '68. M. A. Barnum, '70.
C. II. Barth, 62. C. N. Barth, '62. C. R. Barth. '63.
B. Bass, '70.
Att'y,
-
127
STUDENTS.
F. Bass. '83. Noah.
W. E. Bass. '84. - Noali.
T. C. Batchelor. '59. - -
Att y. Vernon.
T. L. Bates, '58. W. Baxter, '71.
C. Beall ( Huston , '08. Richmond. Franklin. - -
W. Beall,* '68. W. Bealls. '68. W. R. Beaman. 53.
J. Beard. '63, J. E. Beard, '84. -
Franklin. Franklin.
.J. G. Beard, '72. E. J. Beardsley, 'S3. -
- - - -
Dale.
(i. M. Beckley, '49. J. Beebe. '72, .
Whiteland.
.G. M. Beechley, '48. W. Bell. 'GS.
A. Benbow. '71. J. Benbow, '70.
J. Benjamin. *
M., Foreign Missionary. Burmalı.
D. Bennett, '51. W. Bennett. '49.
M. Benton, '68.
Franklin.
A. Bergen, II. Bergen, '51. I. Bergen, '49. P. Bergen. '46.
A. E. Betts, 'S0. Middlefork.
R A. Betts. - 1, '70.
W. C. Betts, '71,
M. M. Bettys# (MePherron). '70,
Middlefork. Prairieton. Maria Creek.
E. Bicknell.# '59.
HI. M. Billings'ey, '59. Crawfordsville.
J. J. W. Billingsley, '50, - Editor Drainage Journal, Indianapolis.
1. W. Billingsley, A. B., A. M. '02. Att'y, Lincoln, Neb.
A. Bishop, '54.
F. 11. Blackledge, '70, Indianapolis. C. H. Blanchard, '44. - M .. Wolcottville. F. D. Bland, D. D., '44. - - MI., - Camden. - L. Blasdell, '57.
L. C. Blasdell, '53.
E. Blood, '63. J. Blunk. '62. A. Boaz,# GS. 1
C. Boaz, A. B .. A. M .. SO, M .. Clifford. l'tica, 11.
.
-
128
FRANKLIN COLLEGE.
C. Boaz,# '68. Clifford. Peterville. Peterville.
ĮI. Boaz, '76, M. Boaz, '82,
S. Boaz, '76, Clifford.
S. C. Boaz, '84, J. W. Bodley, '54.
Clifford.
L. Bolton, '56.
W. S. Bondurant, '49.
E. Bonham, # '75, Wright.
E. Bonham, '82,
Wright. Wright,
(1. Bonham, '75,
E. A. Bonham, '76, Sheriff Green County, Bloomfield. Wright.
M. S. Bonham, '76, - A. A. Boone, '57.
D. R .. Borland, '55.
(i. F. Boswell, '59. J. E. Boswell, '61, F. Bowen, '76,
Indianapolis. Franklin.
J. Bowen, '54. M. E. Bowen, '82,
-
Vincennes.
1. Boyer, '53.
A. Brand, '68.
J. S. Brand, '61.
W. T. Brand, '54. E. J. Branham, '57. II. Branham, '52.
H. C. Branham, '51.
J. C. Branham, '57. J. V. Branham, '51. P. E. Branham, '59. W. Branham, '49.
W. C. Branham. '44. L. Branson, '61. W. M. Breazeale, '51.
W. IT. Brevoort, '55. A. Brewer, '59. E. G. Brewer, '68. F. Brewer, '70,
Southport.
J. W. Brewer, '59.
T. Brewer, '68.
(. T. Bridges, '49.
W. W. Bridgford, '70, 1. M. Bridgman, '81, (i. Bright, '49. M. Briney, '62.
-
Indianapolis. - Salem,
-
129
STUDENTS.
M. A. Bristol (-), '76,
- Zionsville.
J. W. Bristow, '61.
A. Brittan, A. B., A. M , '50, Att'y.
A. R. Brooks, '73, 1 II. Brooks. 73, A. P. Brown, '84. -
Whiteland. Whiteland. Greenwood. E. Brown, 70.
E. D. B. Brown, '83, - M., Clayton. F. M. Brown,# '79, - M . Lett's Corner.
F. W. Brown, A. M , '6%. - Perryville, Ky.
II. C. Brown, '57.
II. S. Brown, '57. J. II. Brown, '71, -
J M. Brown, '78.
M. Brown, '61.
P. T. Brown, '75, -
R. A. Brown, A. B., 'S4, -
Franklin. Franklin.
R. II. Brown, '83,
- Canfield, O. Franklin. -
S. C. Brown, '70, - Att'y, -
B. Browning, '56.
B. C. Browning.
E. Browning, '75, - Greenwood.
G. F. Browning, '48.
R. C. Browning, '48, - Judsonia, Ark. J. F. Bruce, '55.
E. J. Brugh, '62.
J. Brumback, A. B., A MI., '56, Att'y, .
Boise City, Idaho.
L. M. Bryan, '68.
M. Bryan, '76,
Franklin.
N. Bryan, '55,
M. D., - Indianapolis.
J. Bryant, '56. J. L. Bryant, '77, Franklin.
- Bryant, '68. . ..
A. Buchanan (Betts), '71, Middle Fork. A. J. Buchanan, '68, M., Indianapolis. Yankton, Dak.
J. Buchanan, '68, M.,
R. Buchanan, '55.
E. D. Buckingham, '82, - Indianapolis.
T. M. Bucker, '58.
C. C. Bulger. '50,
Delphi,
A. Bumgarner, '57.
A. J. Bumgarner, 58. I. Bumgarner, '56. G. A. Burchard, '49. L. A. Burk.
-
- Mitchell.
130
FRANKLIN COLLEGE.
L. P. Burke, '51.
W. C. Burke, '50.
G. Burnett, '60. J. Burnett, '55. J. Burns, '49.
W. Burns, '51.
I. Burr, '60.
J. M. Burris, '59.
L. C. Burt, '53.
C. H. Burton, '71,
Att'y,
Petersburg.
Abilene, Kan.
C. W. Burton, '74,
H. Burton, '70,
H. A. Burton, '71,
1. Burton, '61,
J. Burton, '59,
J. A. Burton, '60,
J. R. Burton, '71,
Att'y, Abilene, Kan. Georgia. Mitchell. Mitchell. Mitchell.
W. G. Burton, * A. B., A. M., '62, - W. II. Burton, '71, Orleans.
Z. T. Burton, '73. Att'y, - Washington, D. C.
L. A. Bush, '77, - Walesboro. -
J. T. M. Butler, '46.
T. W. Butterworth, '60, - Laporte. Kewana.
S. Bybee, '80,
D. Byers, '50.
J. Byers, '50.
N. Byers, '50.
C. Byfield, '68, - C. Byfield, A. B., A. M., '60, Atty,
Franklin. Indianapolis. Alder, Col.
J. W. Caffyn, '50,
T. Calloway, '54,
J. P. Calver, '44. N. B. Calver, '44.
L. Campbell, '46.
R. M. Campbell, '83, -
Willshire, O.
W. H. Campbell, '61.
J. S. Carle, '71, Indianapolis.
W. H. Carleton, '50.
J. Carnine, '78, Franklin. G. W. Carothers, '79, Trinity Springs.
Mitchell. Mitchell. Mitchell. Georgia. Mitchell.
J. W. Burton, '80,
M. P. Burton, '72,
S. Burton,* A. B., A. M., '60, M.,
11. Byfield, '55,
Cobb's Fork. Madison.
131
STUDENTS.
J. Carson, '53, Franklin.
J. F. Carson, '45. C. A. Carter (Applewhite), '70,
Brownstown.
C. M. Carter. '82, G. T. Carter, '61.
M., Livonia.
J. A. Carter, '72. J. H. Carter, '70, -
M. D., -
- Needham Station.
J. M. Carter. '73. J. W. Carter, '56. M. II. Carter, '56.
S. F. Carter, '70.
A. Casper (Wood), '75, Concordia, Kan.
C. F. Casper (Harvey), '80. Foreign Missionary, - Africa.
E. Casper (Rice), '80, West Liberty, Ill. J. W. Cass, '62.
H. Catoy, '56, -
Leesburg.
J. Cavette, '44. J. E. T. Cavette, 45. E. T. Chaffee, '62,
Hartford City.
W. C. Chaffee, '56, M. D .. Huntington. Lebanon.
J. V. Chaille, '77, C. M. Chaille, A. B., A. M., '72,
Business Manager Indiana Baptist, Indianapolis.
G. B. Chambers, 45.
J. Chambers, '70 (Moore),
Indianapolis. -
J. M. Chambers, '54. S. N. Chambers, '60. -
Att'y. - Vincennes. Franklin. Lebanon.
T. J. Chariton, '63, Superintendent House of Correction, Plainfield
W. Cheatwood. '60.
W. W. Cheshire, '54. J. Y. Chestnut, '68. - Chinn, '47.
J. P. Chinn, '48.
J. Chinoweth. 59.
C. Chittenden, 'S1.
S. Chord, '80,
F. D. Churchill. '81, Superintendent Schools,
Anderson. Spencer. Aurora.
D. R. Clark, '54
E. Clark, '70, - Franklin.
E. Clark, '6S.
E. A. Clark (Ensley), '76, . Columbus.
E. W. Clark, '56. G. E. Clark, '76, - Columbus.
.
W. Chambers, '8,
O Charleton,
132
FRANKLIN COLLEGE.
G. W. Clark, '53. 4
HI. J. Clark, '59. H. N. Clark, '59. IL. S. Clarke, '58 I. N. Clark, '54, M, -
Indianapolis. J. E. Clark, '59. L. G. Clark, '74. M. A. Clark, '79, -
R. C. Clark (Fisher), '71,
S. S. Clark, '54, M .. -
S. Clemens, :84,
C. W. Clements, '84,
HI. W. Clevenger, '84, J. W. Clevenger, '84, L. A. Clevenger. '83. M.,
M., -
Center Square. Center Square. Crown Point. - Markland. Kingsbury.
W. Clevenger, '82, D. P. Closser, '53, J. 1. Closser, '57. R. D. Clowser, '63 J. J. Cobb, '84, S. H. Cobb, '56, T. Cobb, '53.
J. K. Cochran, '55.
II. Cockrell, '84, - -
-
Tobinsport.
A. Coffey, '52.
A. Coffey, '59, M .. -
Independence, Kan. Spencer.
A. Coffey, '58.
A. J. Coffey," '51.
C. Coffey,# '57, Vernal.
C. C. Coffey, '54. C. V. Coffey, '79, M .. Ellettsville. Ellettsville.
E. M. Coffey, E. T. Coffey, '60. I. E. Coffey, '79, -
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