Page image

E.—l2

16

Girls' College. £ c. d. £ s. d. Boarding fees .. .. .. 1,003 1 2 House expenses .. .. .. 933 17 11 Tuition fees .. .. .. .. 1,318 8 3 Tuition expenses .. .. .. 1,002 13 0 Scholarships— free tuition .. .. 258 6 0 Governors' and auditors' fees .. .. 37 6 8 Examiners' fees .. .. .. 25 5 0 Stationery .. .. .. .. 53 2 7 Prizes .. .. .. .. 14 14 3 Printing and advertising .. .. 37 14 8 Gas .. .. .. .. .. 59 8 9 Rates and taxes .. .. .. 15 0 0 Insuranoe .. .. .. .. 26 0 0 Repairs .. .. .. .. 207 2 0 Furniture .. .. .. .. 61 2 8 Subscription to magazine .. .. 3 3 0 Secretary .. .. .. .. 58 7 0 Sundries .. .. .. .. 9 0 0 Improvements to grounds .. .. 29 18 6 Capital Account. On account of enlargement of Boys' College 250 0 0 Nil. Purohaae 2 aores land, Boys' College .. 525 0 0 7,269 9 1 I 8,211 12 7 To bank balance brought forward from By balance in bank, 31st Dβprevious year .. .. .. 1,040 11 4 oember, 1901 120 210 Loan on mortgage account 762 11 4 Less outstanding cheques 21 15 0 Working account .. 278 0 0 98 710 £8,310 0 5 £8,310 0 5

Statement of Loan on Mortgage Account on 31st December, 1901. £ s. d. £ s. d. Amount outstanding on loan at 31st De- Amount outstanding on loan at 31st December, 1900 .. .. .. 5,864 0 0 cember, 1901 .. .. .. 5,864 0 0 J. Holloway, Secretary. We hereby certify that we have examined the above accounts, and have found the same correct; and have duly examined all deeds of mortgage and other securities, and have found the same in full force and virtue. John King, ) . •,-, Ambrose E. Moore, j Audltors -

3. Work op the Highest and Lowest Classes. Boys' College. Highest. —Science —Chemistry (Newth's Inorganic Chemistry) ; statics, dynamics, and hydrostatics (Loney). Mathematics—Euclid, 1.-VI. (Hall and Stevens); algebra, to binomial theorem (Todhunter and Loney), and Hall and Knight's Higher Algebra; trigonometry, Hall and Knight, and Ward's Trigonometry"Papers. Latin—Livy, XXII.; Virgil, iEneid, VI.; unseens; Bradley's Aids; Bamsay's Antiquities ; Horton's Eome. French—Wellington College Grammar ; Duhamel's Advanced Prose; Cinq Mars ; unseens. English—Nesfield's Grammar, Nichol's Composition; Eomola ; King Lear; Tempest; Chaucer's Prologue ; Anglo-Saxon Primer. Lowest. —English—Mason's First Notions of Grammar; Longmans' No. 1 Geography; Bansome's Elementary History of England, pages 1-100; Junior Temple Eeader ; New Graphic copybooks ; spelling, dictation, and composition. Arithmetic—Pendlebury's Shilling Arithmetic, to include simple and compound practice, but excluding decimal fractions. Latin—Morris's Elementa Latina, to the end of the adjective. French—Oral lessons taken from Hogben's Natural Method. Science —Object-lessons. Girls' College. Highest.— English—Eomola; Sweet's First and Second Middle English Primers; Sweet's Anglo-Saxon Primer; Mason's Grammar; Morris's Grammar; The Tempest; King Lear; Period, 1558-1625. Latin—iEneid, VI.; Livy, XXII. ; Bradley's Arnold; Abbott's Latin Prose ; Merivale and Puller's History. French—Bossuet, Funeral Orations; Athalie; Andromaque; Wellington College Grammar; Brachet's College Grammar; Bue's French Idioms; Blouet's Composition. Science—Wright's Physics. Mathematics—As set for the B.A. degree. Lowest. —English—Mrs. Wood's First Poetry Book ; Macmillan's Sixth Eeader; simple analysis and parsing, spelling, and dictation. French —The " Natural Method "of teaching has been adopted for half the beginners ; Chardenal, Book 1., for the others. Latin—The Via Latina is used. Arithmetic—The simple rules ; the compound rules. Botany —Simple lessons illustrated from nature.