Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 26, 1915, Page 6

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THE 1\ BEE: MONDAY bl ; ]I RS . I o CM——CE () S—— 5 GWOEITT § (NORTRAR @ SNCRAUSL o GEVREW O SHATTUCK. \UNIVERSITY’S HiGH RANK The Omaha School of Orchestral Instruments §|+ scveor spectans vorea ror 1 AN HENRY COX, Director. H Colleg: lhny‘ Other Schools n?mn e Guarantees the quality of the progress of its students. This achool, located at Faribault, Minn., Middle West's Reputation as | 18 designated by the United States War | department as an “‘honor school. | Its college entrances include Marvard, Yale, Princeton, Johns Hopkins, Colum- | bia, eta, It makes a speclal point of recognizing | the boy's tndividuality and devsloping his initiative, self-contro) and leadership. During July and August communicate In writing only. Center of Learning. THEORETICAL AND PRACTICAL THE KEARNEY MILITARY ACADEMY XBARNTY, NEBRASKA. TWENTY.-FOURTE YEAR. | Nebraska is justly proud of its state university. No other state can Jook | down upon it in the matter of equipment, Ann To provide thorough mental, morul und physical training high standards of scholarship, number at the lowsst terms consisient with efficient work. ¥or ||| of students or any of the other standards 200ATION csbefit o § '"‘:m"Ku';::‘;'Tn oy m““ van by which great educational institutio 35 mcres of land. Four bulldings. Gymnasium, swimming are measured pool. Separate lower achool bullding Within the last decade it has at least FACULTY College graduates with business n-nnmcn doubled Its capacity and its faculty and COURSES College preparatory; commercial law and busitess meth- | the number of students is constantly in- el iy Meehwmen drawliig; airicditore and SL John’s |creasing until today they number into APELETIOS ootball, basebail., basketball, track, tennis, swimming, the thousands. calisthenica. CATAIOGUR Address Harry Roberts Drummond, Ifeadmaster, “EFrFICIENCY IS THE TEST OF EDUCATION". Its faculty is made up of men who are famed throughout the country and some of them all over the world. Some | them are the authors of textbooks that Mllllary Academy | are in use in many of the eastern in | stitutions. THE AMERICAN No university has finer bulldings and RUGBY | tew have more bulldings than the Uni | versity of Nebraska. lows | The graduate college, | arts and sclences, the teachers’ | the college of agriculture, the | of enmineering, the college of law, the | college of medicine, the college of phar- | macy, the school of commerce, the school of fine arts, the school of agriculture and tlie teachers' college high school. | 1t is thoroughly co-educational and as |open to women as to men, which is a | point in which it differs from most of | the older universities, some of which are entirely closed to women and others of whi¢h allow women to take only certain TRAINS the boy for ife. Edu- cational fads are avoided and stress is laid upon old-fash- ioned ideals. The result is an improved body, a trained mind and strengthéned moral fibre. The boy is prepared to take his Proper place in the world—and make good." St. John's is classed b, as one of the ** Honor al, college, the Government ichools, " Episco g but all other denominations received. Situated on high, well - drained land. Our catalogue will tell more of our successiul methods. ST. JONN'S -Mll' lclm Box-'144 Delatield, Waukesha C e Wis courses, .....‘.’:‘.‘fl.‘fi.fl.’“ l":flvlm'"" The university's next term opens b Wednesday, September 15, The University School of Music 1ith and R Streets, Lincoln. Pianoforte, Organ, Volce, Violin, *Cello, Flute, Clarinet, Saxophone, Cornet, Trombone and all Theoretic Branches. Public School Methods, Plano Tuning, Two Orchestras, Aesthetic Dancing, DRAMATIC ART Complete Courses in all departments leading to degree. Fall Term Begins September 6. ‘Write Department A for New (atalog. WILLARD KIMBALL, Director. | Doane’s New Conech, | As has already been announced through the press, Paul J, Schissler of Hastings | has been engaged as athletic coach for Doane college for the coming year. He |15 a graduate of Hastings High school | | and has studied in Hastings coliege, Uni- versity of Nebraska and Annapolis Naval | academy. In all this experience he has been ac- 1877014 Established School—1915 Chaffee-Noble School of Expres ion 89 Mancock Ave, . Detroit, Michiga: Mrs. Bdna Chaffee Noble, Direotor. Will Open sept. 22 Three Terms of Nine W Special ana Individual Diplomas Given, Write for Catalogue, ‘lnd intimate acquaintance with school and college athletics over the country. ‘The last two years he h efficlent coach of Hastin High school, | developing successful teams in the vari- ous lines of school athletics and espe- Bach. B —— [ ! 3 of Nebraska mvemtl The University of Nebraska includes the following Colleges and Schools: The Graduate College, The College of Medicine, The College of Arts and Sciences, | The College of Pharmacy, The Teachers’ College, The School of Commerce, The College of Agriculture, The School of Fine Arts, The College of Engineering, The School of Agriculture, The College of Law, The Teachers’ College High School. ' The University opens for the first semester on Wednesday, September 16th. One may enter also at the be- giuning of the second semester (about February) or the Summer session (usually the first full week in June). On any point of information, address THE REGISTRAR, within the school, He comes to Doane, not only with this successful record, but also with very high recommendations from responsible men in Hastings, who are also friends of Doane. Doane college has always stood the highest ideal of clean letics and welcomes M1, enthusiasm, for Schissler with The last week Prof. Taylor has been ! covering the territory from Clay Center to Fairfield, Edgar and Beatrice, touch ing some intermediate points. He found several students for Doane this fall and | more for next year. Brownell Hall, Brownell hall, the famous school for girls at Omaha, has issued an excep- tionally fine year book announcing its fitty-second year It was founded in 1863, less than a de- cade after the first white person came to live in Omaha. Its founder, Bishop Talbot, as & church school for girls. designed it Much of the money was raised In the diocese of | Connecticut, and it took its name from Thomas Church Brownell, third bishop of Connecticut, The first building was north of the city of Omal at Saratoga. In 1868 the It includes schools and colleges as fol- | school was moved to the corner of Six- |teenth and the college of |bullding was begun on the site given by Jones street. The present | Herman Kountze in 18%. The building college |18 of stone, brick and fron. | braska tive in athletics and has gained a wide | SOUNtze, Willlam been the | | It has three great stairways and several independent exits from the building, and there is a fire escape extending from the top floor down the outside of the east end of each wing. It has & gymnasium sixty-five feet long, |forty feet wide and twenty-feet high, glving ample room for indoor basket ball, captain ball and other games, and Is equipped with Swedlsh apparatus, The infirmary consists of a suite of rooms and private bath. A trained nurse is in charge. The bullding has recently been reno- vated and new furniture and equipment have been added. The bishop of Ne- is president and the following are trustees: The Right Rev. G. A. Beecher, mis- slonary bishop of western Nebraski | Very Rey. J. A. Tancock, Rev, Hayes, Lincoln! L. D. Richards, mont; C. W. Lyman, F. H. Davi Millard, €. 8. Montgomery, Clement |Chase, Charles C. George, John W. Towle, Gurdon W. Wattles, Abraham L. Reed, Arthur C. Smith, Charles T, A. Redick, Ward M. |Burgess, Luther Drake and W, H. Bue- holz of Omaha. Mount St. Joseph. Situated on a picturesque eminence overlooking the city of Dubuque, Ia., is Mount 8t. Joseph college and academy, cially cultivating the athletic interests | conducted by the Sisters of Charity and affiliated with the Catholic University of Ameriel It commands a beautiful panoramio view of the surrounding country, the towering bluffs on the Illinols shore, the ‘air hills of Wisconsin, the wooded up- 'ands of Towa, and between, the broadly- lowing Mississippl. On the grounds of the college which cover about fifty acres, every inducement to healthful exercise Is found—tennis, archery, golf, natural Sroves and fragrant pineries. Beyond the grounds, to the north and west of the college, hills, valleys, olifts and woods stretching away for miles afford deal conditions for walks, outings and 'Xcursions. A supplement to the year book, containing views of the buildings, heir different departments and their sur- CENTRAL BUSINESS COLLEGE {ffers the best opportunities: 24th Lar| &n. today for o !PN‘ grcgoulllon o x PREEEy Stanley College niver: of Minne opens 26 Certif rights at all collenl for women. Suc- l Stan- cossfully fits for Bryn Mawr College Examina- '.tor, tions. Normal Course in Home Economica. Sec- Music, retarial and Vocational Courses. New Buildings 4 and enlarged grounds in the best renldential ala- ey trict of the eft; Art and Northwestern Begins 30th year in Sept., 1916, Over 30 instructors ua n enrollment Ex res- of over §00 students each year. Public school P a music and public school art. For munm.a wuo. of either school, address sion nu.nn M An::n'. Minneapolis. 16 Buildings 1000 feet above sea lovel. 50 miles south of St. Paul Nationally noted for its acsdemic work and clean sports. bag " Hanor sroiem bml 'J “« Nuvfllflh’ develops initia- For catalog and particulars, address COL. VASA E. STOLBRAND, C, E., Headmaster -Iwfi.'nk“-"-‘. el A ks S School=—June to A college ath- | MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Twn years' :un" eouq.' ‘Work fully accredited ola, fl - (0101:) [N (C- oo m. 1)) [roundings, ls published each year by the faculty. ‘The buildings have a frontage of nearly | |600 feet, and include the college, the | academy, the chapel, and the conserva- tory of music and art. The plan of the bulldings {s such that every room has & | sun exposure for some hours each day, and there are thorough tems of | electric lighting, heating and ventilating. | THIRTY YEARS OLD. \nflhwtilorn Conservatory of Mu- sie, Art and Expression. Minneapolis is the location of this in- stitution, with thirty Instructors and -n Iel:rnllrre)ll of 700 students. With it is affi!lated Stanley college and Stanley hall, which nas a record of a quarter of a century of success and use- fulness, It givea certificate sights at all colleges for women, College Notes. Bellevue | Prof. Albert Snare, principal of the Bellevue Union High school, left| Wednesday for a short stay at his farm at Beaver Crossing, Neb. From he expects to go to Wyoming, IIl, to join Mrs. Snare, who left Bellevue, Tuesday, for that place. After visiting relatives in Illinois they will return by way of St. Joseph and Kansas City and Shick- ley, Neb., where they will visit their sons. Dr. Charles A. Mitchell has been visit- ng his brother, Archibald, in Iows dur- ing the last week. Dr. and Mrs. Theodore Morning and family of three daughters from Inde- pendence, Ia, arrived in Bellevue, Wednesday, and took up their residence in Fontenelle hall. Dr. Morning grad- uated from,Bellevue in 1886, The family came in thelr automobile by easy stages of & hundred miles. Coach Benjamin spent the week-end in Bellevue after a successful trip through southeastern Nebraska. He left | again Monday on another route. | The contract was let last week for a | large amount of papering to be done in | the college bufldings before the begin- ning of school and work has already be- | gun in Hamilton, | Walter Webb, president of the De- | baters' league, has put the debate room | in working order and expects no delay | in the beginning of work for the coming season. At present debate prospects are very hopetul, for all except one of last years squad are expected back and a number of new members are expected. KEARNEY MILITARY. | “Efficlency is the Teat of Educa- tlo is Its Motto. Entering its twenty-fourth year, this in- stitution at Kearney, Neb., has an en-| viable record in the tralning of boys from 9 to 3 years of age. It is located on thirty-five acres of ground, two miles out of the city, and has four bulldings, with a gymnasium, swin- ming pool, ete. Its courses include commercial law and business methods, manual training, me- chanical drawing, agriculture and animal husbandry, Among its athletic activities are foot ball, base ball, basket ball, track, tennis, swimming and callsthenics. Hospital Builds Addition. A new addition to the Wichita Hospital and Training School for Nurses will be opened this fall. The addition will pro- vide accommodations for fifty additional patients. One of the features of the building will be a finely equipped and thoroughly up- to-date operating room. In construction the addition will be the “last word"” in hospital sclence. “The largely increased capacity of our | hospital will mean that we will have 1 1918 Northwestern Conser- ear September 21, 10165, 200 Acres by U. 8. War Department an “Honor mmmum-dumu—u Drawer T, Faribault, Mina, Conducted by Fathers Practical Spalding College Spalding, Greeley Co., Neb. of 8t. Francis. Where Your Boy Gets a Therough and Up-to-date Methods. Modern Conveniences. Healthful Location on the beautiful Cedar River, Courses: Elementary, Classical, Commercial, Agriculture. Send for Oatalog. of Third Order, Regular Education there | f-uzaenu for college, university, room for a much larger number in oer nurses' training class,” said Dr. B. M, Truesdell, superintendent of the hospital. NESS COLLEGE. BOYLES BU Tts Studen Demand Among Leading Employers, Boyles' college reports an activity greater than ever before in its prosperous history. In this commercial age the de- | mana for woll-trained business employes is great and the helghts to which the | @oundly grounded can climb is almost | without limit Many Boyles graduates today have businesses of their own, or hold high ex« ecutive positions with largs cofcerns. “It is more difficult to find good eme ployes for waiting positions This year than ever before,” said President Boyles. ““The young person who gets a good busineas education such as we give them here is on the high road to success and is bound to get there. “Our courscs are the open sesamo to the wor'd of business, with its big re- wards for competency and faithfulness. These courses give the equipment to the big positions and the sure ability to hold them and to rise to higher things. | “We go even further, giving special ine spiration courses in character-building, personal efficiency and personal worthi- | nesa” Hastings College. One of the strong and growing Chris« tian colleges is that at Hastings, Neb., which shows the remarkable record of a 100 per cent Increase in the last two years. It is equipped splendidly for the physi« |cal as well as the educational well-be~ |ing of its students, having dormitories for both young men and young women | students and its student body is marked by true loyalty to the traditions of this bigh class institution. Its next term opens September 1L Wentworth Military. At Lexington, Mo., is the oldest mili« | tary school west of the Mississippl river and one that successfully prepares its technical schools and business, This is Wentworth Military academy, just forty-tiree miles from Kansas City. It is a school with high academic stand- ards and is noted for scholastic honors. Theories are made practical in field maneuvers, fieid telegraphy, bridge build- ing and so on. st. Olat College. The institution located at Northfield, Minn., is Lutheran and co-educational. | Last vear it had an enroliment of 65 | students. It has thirty-four teachers, It maintaine standard four-year courses leading to the B. A. degree. It has also an academy with courses preparatory to college entrance. Its equipment is of the finest and its location exceptionally healthful. ) Nebraska Wesleyan. This institution under the Methodist church, located at University Place, Neb,, a suburb of Lincoln, hes had an un- interrupted career of increasing success for many years. It Includes a college of liberal arts, a teachers' college, an academy, conserva- tory of muasic, school of expression and oratory and school of art. Immaculate Conception. This academy at Hastings, Neb.,, is accredited to the University of Nebraska and has also commercial, preparatory and primary courses, All departments are furnished with modern improve- ments in lighting, heating, sanitation and ventilation. The campus is extensive, furnishing every facllity for outdoor sports and exercise, School of Expreasion. The Chaffee-Noble School of Expres- slon, 8 Hancock avenue, E. Detroit, Mich,, will open September 22 for three terms of nine weeks each. This school was known for thirty-eight years as the Detroit Training School of Elocution and English Literature, but adopted the new name given by the alumni association of the school. Heolyoke-Dox School. This school offers instruction in Xin- dergarten and firet four grades to doys. In addition to the regular work there are classes in French, music and folk dancing. Children are received in the sohool at the age of 4 years and even younger, where mental development makes this desirable. St. Catherine Academy. The Sisters of the Order of St. Dominle conduct this high grade class sohool for girls at Jackson, Neb. It is accredited to th University of Nebraska, has normal training course for teachers and excep- tional advantages in music. The next term opens September 7. In Philadelphia is the Pennsylvania Orthopedic institute, which gives instruc- tion In massage, corrective and medical gymnastics, electro and hydro-therapy. It has the finest equipment in the eoun- try and its instruction is considered of especial value to nurses. In Chicage. Beautifully located on Drexel Woule- vard, Chicago, is the Stevan School for Girls, of which Mrs, Luella M. Willgon is | principal. Tt is & schocl of firmly grounded worth and a constantly growing student vody. Mount St. Mary. The Servants of Mary conduct tlu school at Cherokee, la., and aim to give & thorough religious uM secular train- Ing for girls and young ladies. Home life is combined with school life In » practical manner. Outdoor School. l Down in S Augustine, Fla., where | balmy breeses blow in the winter time, 1s the Keewatin School for Boys. This is its mid-winter home. Charles Carey, Prairie du Chien, Wir., is its registrar.

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