Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 14, 1916, Page 5

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A i \ i ( THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, AUGUST 14, 1916. 6 Brief City News “Townsend’s for Sporting Goods.” Have Ruot Print It—New Beacon Press. Electrio Fans $7.50—Burgess-Granden Co. Hulf Karat White Diamonds $76—Edholm. Need More Elbow Room for your office? Try The Bee building—the building that s known to all. Socialist Lecture Tonight—Dr. H. 8. Kent will lecture this evening at 8 o'clock at 308 Lyric bullding, Nine- teenth and Farnam streets. Keep Your Money—ana valusbles in the American Safe Deposit Vaults, 318 South 17th St. Bee Bldg. Boxes rent $1.00 for 3 months. Open from § a. m. to 6 p. m. “Today’s Movie " classi- fled section today. It appears in The Bee exclusively. Find out what the various moving picture theaters offer. Four Fined for S’)eedlnc—l"our of- fenders of the traffic regulations ap- peared before the police magistrate and were fined $1 and costs for their miscalculations, I Can Use your old piano. Will pay you cash. Trade you a Talking Ma- chine, or trade you u Player Piano. Telephone your address to A. Hospe Co,, 1613 Douglas street. Victor Place Sales—Considerable activity is reported in sale of Victor Place the last week. The Willis Realty company report the following sales: E. W. Beerman, modern bungaldw, !:.ggg; Charles Dann, residence lot, oyal Implement Shows Not Up to Fremont Tractor “For practical results, the Fremont demonstration beat any Royal agri- cultural implement show I ever saw abroad in the seventeen years I have spent there in the implement game,” said W. V. Couchman, a visitor at the Fremont show yesterday and until re- cently European manager of the In- ternational Harvester company’s busi- ness. with headquarters at Brussells, now division manager of all sales for his' company both foreign and do- mestic. _“Each European country,” con- tinued Mr. Couchman, “has its agri- cultural society under direct supervi- sion of royal government, and these organizations are in direct competi- tion with each other, not only for the 4 purpose of improving agriculture, but also vie with each other in putting on large exhibits and demonstrations. With all this, however, Fremont is a revelation to me in showing so com+ pletely the rapid development of the tractor especially and the implement de in general, as well as the inter- est which the farmer shows in the tractor. “Qne of the things most pleasing to me about this demonstration is that tractor manufacturers are showing how their machines can be adapted to all kinds of field work in addition to plowing. This appeals to me as the practical system of demonstrating to the farmer just what he can get out of a farm tractor, “The great interest which has been manifested in the tractor is due to the appearance of the smaller units of this new farm power. There will always be a demand for the heavier tractors, but the light tractor solves the prob- lem of power for the average size farm. Like the automobile the tractor will become more standardized than it is at the present time and this will be of benefit to the trade in general.” Big Night Tonight At Ak-Sar-Ben Den King Ak’s cohorts and torture in- flicters are oiling up their mysterious machinery for one of the biggest nights of the year, tonight, when members of the Rotary club from the Tenth district and worthy pilgrims from Tekamah®and. other towns will trek into Omaha for 2 session at the stly famed Den. The Rotarians have signified their intentions of creating, all sorts of dis- turbances, averring that if Samson’s varlots get the better of them it will be only after a titanic struggle. In addition to the Rotary contin- gent there will also_be hosts of in- itiation candidates ¥rom Tekamah, Craig, Oakland, Herman, Blair, Fort Calhoun and Bennington. They will come in a special train and in auto- mobiles. . Keith Neville, democratic nominee for governor, has informed King Ak that he will be at the Den tonight to participate in the festivities. Death Comes to Bride While on Honeymoon Death interrupted the honeymoon of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Brown, 844 South Twenty-first street, yesterday afternoon, when Mrs. Brown, a’ bride of a week, died at the Swedish mis- sion hospital as the result of peri- tonitis, which resulted from an oper- ation. She was 20 years old a week ago Saturday, and was married to A. G. Brown, connected with-a local col- lection agency. She was formerly Nina May De Forrest of Dunlap, Ia. The body will be sent there Monday or burial, Harvest Hand Says He Was Deftly Robbed Although he had §117 in his pockets, and jewelry worth a consid- erable sum, E. T. Wade, harvest hand from Fayetteville, N. C, could not “#esist the temptation of getting some- thing for nothing, Saturday after- noon, when he learned that a barber college at Twelfth and Douglas streets offered its services at bar- gain rates. He became a patron and promptly went to sleefi in a chair. Several hours later he awoke in an alley back of the place, with his hair partly cut. His money and jewelry were missing, he said. Effort of Young Woman To End Her Life Failure Mrs. Minnie Stewart, aged 29, liv- ing at Twenty-second and Howard streets, formerly a stage attendant at the Orpheum theater, took poison last night in an effort to end her life. Dr. D. B. Parks was called in time to save her life. She has separated from her husband and became despondent. Dangerous Bronchial Cough. pr. King's New Discovery will give quick rellef In bronchial irritation and bronchial asthma; allays Inflammation, eases sore spots. All Qruggists.—Advertisement. FATHER M'DERMOTT HOLDS HIS VIEWS Resigns Because of Relentless Opposition to Any Sort of 8ecret Society. ONCE STATIONED IN OMAHA Rev. Daniel 1. McDermott, pastor of Old St. Mary's Catholic church, Fourth and Spruce streets, Phila- delphia, has tendered his resigna- tion because of a difference with his superior, Archbishop Prendergast, in regard to the opening of the Ancient Order of Hiberians’ state convention at Pottsville, Pa., tomorrow, with a solemn high mass. Sanctioned by the church authorities, Philadelphia papers say this is the third time Father McDermott has tendered his resignation because of his opposition to the Ancient Order. Action on the resignation rests with the archbishop who was abzent from Philadelphia at the time it was tendered. Once Located in Omaha. Omaha Catholics whose memories run back to the later 70s, when St. Philomena’s cathedral at Ninth and Harney streets, was their chief house of worship, will remember Father McDermott as a pastor who stirred up a hornet's nest in the congregation by his fierce opposition to Irish secret societies. e was_brought to the cathedral by Bishop O'Cennor in the summer of 1878, and was pastor of the cathedral parish and vicar gen- eral of the diocese of Nebraska until October, 1879. During his fifteen months at the cathedral, Father Mc- Dermott assailed Irish societies, particularly the Ancient Order of Hibernians, with great force and a volume of invective rarely heard from a pulpit. On one occasion, while ad- dressing the congregation at the morning mass on his favorite theme, he was stopped by Bishop O'Connor and the sermon left unfinished. It is said that this particular sermon was concluded at the evening service, the bishop having left the city on. the afternoon of the day. The accuracy of this impression is doubtful, for the reason that Father McDermott is noted as a stickler for authority and would not_ignore the lawful orders of a superior. Whether true or not, it is church history here that Father McDermott's condemnation of Irish societies impaired his usefulness as a pastor and led to his retirement from the cathedral and the diocese. Recalls the Mollie Maguires. Father McDermott's opposition to the Ancient Order of Hibernians grows out of his experience as pastor of the Pottsville (Pa.) church in 1875, during the rise and fall of the “Molly Maguires,” a secret organization of miners who were members of the Ancient Order. The crimes charged against the Mollie Maguires lead to the conviction and execution of sev- eral of the leaders. The priest mini- stered to the spiritual needs of the condemned, heard their confessions and consoled them on the gallows.|P: con- The knowledge thus gained 5 of vinced him of the great danger secret societies in general and aroused an opposition on his part which passing years failed to modify. Father McDermott was born in In-| P! niskillen, Ireland, around seventy years ago, He came to the United States as an infant with his_parents who settled in Norristown, Pa. He was educated for the priesthood at the seminary of St. Charles Bor- romeo and was ordained in 1868. Old St. Mary’s where he held the pastor- ate for the last thirty-one years, is located near the business geart of Philadelphia, and its churchyard is the resting place of many distin- guished Catholic dead, among them the remains of the famous revolu- tionary hero, Commodore John Barry. Archbishop Harty to Come to Omaha in Fall Archbishop J. J. Harty, who was appointed by the pope, on Mag' 16, as syccessor to the late Bishop Scannell as bishop of the diocese of Omaha, will leave Manila, Phil\l})pine Islands, where he is now located, November 1 on the Empress of Russia, according to a cablegram received by the Right Rev. Monsignor Colaneri, editing officer of the True Voice Publishing Co., of this city. Archbishop Harty will reach Vancouver, B. C,, Novem- ber 18 and will come directly from there to Omaha. Christian Endeavor to Give Dinner for Rev. Mr. Price The executive committee and the 1916 conyention committee of the Omaha Christian Endeavor union will give a dinner complimentary to the state president, Rev. H, H. Price, at the Young Women's Christian asso- ciation Tuesday ' evning. Mrs. E. Lynne Kilgore is in charge of the ar- rangements for the affair, Following the dinner the Omaha union will elect officers for the ensu- ing year at the First Christian church, Twenty-sixth and Harney streets. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. Mrs. Minnle H. Bexten and daughter, Agnes, have returned from a trip to Chi- d at din- Moron of en. cal Miss Dorothy Colliny entertal ner Saturday for Mis# Charlot Covera were lald for E. F. Riley and son Clark, have gone to Scranton, Pa., where they will join Mr. Riley and the J. R. Fleming family, to make a tour of the Great Lakes. G. A. Rohrbough has gone to Van- couver, B. C., for a visit and at other western points. He will join Mrs. Rohr- bough at Vancouver, Was! Mr, and Mrs. Frank D, Field and sis Mrs. Earl Brink, left Tuesday for St. ™ where they were called by the death of their cousin, George K. Smith, a promi- nent lumberman of St. Louls, Mr., and Mrs. Beecher P. Higby left last night for Youngstown, O., where 3 goes to become wholesale mana branth of the Ford Motor company. Mr. Higby, whose home has been in Omaha or years, has been associated with the Ford company in this city for four years. Cure for Cholera Morbus. “When our little boy, now seven years old, was a baby, he was cured of cholera morbus by Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem- edy,” writes Mrs. Sidney Simmons, Fair Haven, N. Y. “Since then other members of my family have used this valuable medicine for colic and bowel troubles with good satisfaction and I gladly endorse it as a remedy of ex- ceptional merit.” Obtainable every- where. MANY HORSES BURN WITH SMITH BARN Twenty-Eight Animals Lose Lives in Fire at Brick Plant. CARETAKER'S CLOSE CALL Twenty-eight horses perished in a fire which destroyed the barns of the Smith Brick Manufacturing company, at Twenty-fourth street and Wool- worth avenue, Saturday night. Daniel Rupp, caretaker, who lived in the barn with his wife and three small children, had a narrow escape with their lives. The fire started in the south end of the barn from some undetermined cause and worked its way through hay and other inflammable material in a remarkably short time. The building itself was of brick, but the interior was finished in wood, and in less than an hour the big structure was reduced to smouldering ruins. Fire Warden Morris has already commenced making an_investigation of the cause of the fire, which is believed to be of an incendiary na- ture. e Neighbors in the vicinity of the brickyard had been before the city council in various instances to reg- ister protests against the brickyard as a neighbor and requested its re- moval. Arrangements were made last week for a change. The objec- tion was made on the ground that the brickyard was a rendezvous for itinerants, besides being a nuisance on account of the constantly littered streets. t| Plan Mass Meeting To Hear Statement 0f the Revolution A number of Irishmen met last evening at the Paxton hotel to ar- range for a mass meeting to be ad- dressed by Dr. Richard Ebbitt, who was exiled from Ireland by the Brit- ish government a few weeks ago. Patrick Duffey, John Hopkins, Patrick Heafey and George Parks were named a committee to confer with other societies and the public in general who are desirous of getting a thorough statement about the recent Irish revolution. Mr. Duffy was elected president and Mr. Hopkins, secretary of the meet- ing. There were numerous talks on the Irish question. H. L. Cohen, 0il Man and Former Cmahan, Visits Here H. L. Cohen, who was in business in Omaha thirty years ago and who left for Guthrie, Okl, at the time of the opening of the territory to settle- ment, is in Omaha for a few days to visit with his brother, Ben F. Cohen, 404 North Sixteenth street. Mr. Cohen is now connected with a com- any engaged in developing property in the oil fields. “In Drumright, Okl., we walk in oil, we buy oil, we sell oil, and even eat and drink oil, which gets into the water,” Mr. /Cohen said. He ex- ressed surprise at the many changes in Omaha. “Why, when I left here, Farnam street ran into a big hill at Nineteenth street and stopped, and now I go out to Thirty-sixth street and find them building the big Blackstone hotel. I thought I was going into a new country in Okla- homa where there would be a chance for growth, but Omaha has offered just as many opportunities.” Hastings College Notes. Summer school closed last week and a large number of the faculty have gone on brief vacations. Miss Hornaday i taking a trlp through Yellowstone park. Mrs. Logsdon Is on her way to Californfa. Mr. and Mrs. Fuhr are at the latter's home in Fairtleld, and will spend the remainder of the summer In Chicago. Prof. Anderson and Prof. Ferguson are taking short vaca- tion trips. L President Crone and family returned from Estes park, Colorado, where they spent two weeks, The Young People's Summer conference, organized by the Department of Young People's Work, Philadelphia, is now in ses- sion In the college bulldings. A large num- ber of young people, representing the varfous churches of Nebraska, Colorado and Kansas, are in attendance. Rev. Willlam Ralph Hall of Philadeiphla {8 in charge. Among the other workers and leaders are Rev. Calvin H. Laufer, New York City; Matthew B. Mc- Nutt, New York City; Mildred J. Haggard of the United Soclety of Christian Endeavor, Minneapolis; Rev. James H. Nichol, Tripoli, Syria; Mrs. Guy 8. Davis of the Woman's board, Chicago; E. B. Gates, secretary Illi- nofs Christian Endeavor union, Chicago; Dr. Willlam Hiram Foulkes, Philadelphia; Dr. James H. Salsbury, Aurora, Neb.; Rev. Ralph H. Houseman, educational superin- tendent of Nebraska, and Ruth J. Easterday, Lincoln. Several music recitals were given at the close of the summer term at the Presby- terian church parlors, Miss Frieda Busboom of Glenville, Neb.,, and Mrs. Stacla Walker- Hoerner of Hastings, Neb.,, were each heard in a song recital, the former assisted by Miss Merle Peterson, planist, of Hastings. Miss Peterson and Miss Bernice Newbecker of Ord, Neb.,.were also heard in plano re- citals, Charles Bltner, who graduated at Hast- ings two years ago, was recently elected superintendent of schools at Loup City, Neb. Mr. Bitner had charge of the Elm Creek schools last year. Mlss Nellle Cook was married last Mon- day to Don Brook. Both were former stu- dents of Hastings college. SUMMER GARDEN and Outdoor Terrace Cool and Refreshing Place to Dine Writs for Resersation Todog FRED STERRY. Managing Director ROOMS WITH BATH $3.50 UP WS of S Kearney State Normal. The Kearney State Normal school closed & very successful term of eight weeks July 2. The enrollment was 970, including nineteen registered in music only. One of the most attractive features during the session was the chautaugua which occurred the last week of the term. Classes were #0 arranged that students were able to take advantage of the excellent numbers on the program. The Recreation club gave fine opportunity for students to combine hard study with outings and trips, bathing and boating. In connection with this, systematio instruction was glven teachers for carrying on success- fully games and sports suitable to public school work. Addresses were delivered at the chapel period during the term by Sup: Intendent W. tendent P. M. Superintendent A. L. Caviness of Kearney, Superintendent A. H. Waterhouse of Fre- mont, Superintendent H, M. Baton of Emer- son, Prof. Woods of Columbla university, H, W. Foght and H. O. Benson of Wasl ington, D. C., President W. H. Clemmons of Fremont college, A. V. Teed, rural school specialist from the State department, and R. D, Moritz, inspector of normal training in high schools, from the State department. Bpecial assistants engaged for the summer term Included Superintendent W. J. Braham of Sidney, Neb.; Principal John F, thews of the Grand Island(Neb.)High school, Miss Grace Sylla of Hastings, Miss Fannie R. Conkling of Albion, Miss Frances Dear- born of Red Oak, Ia., Troy Welper of La Grange, Ore,, Miss Effie Miller of Kearney, Neb,, Ralph Henline of Kearney, Miss Alice Florer of York, Neb., and Charles Hetrlck of Potter, Neb. The auditorium will be ready for occu- pancy by October. The walls of the gym- nasium are rising. The city of Kearney has done much in the past year for the school. Lincoln way has been paved and beautified by center street parkings for elght blocks, and the fall will see the completion of pav- ing around Ninth avenue and the entire south side of the campus. Fremont Colvege Notes. Work at the college closed Wednesday noon in order to give the students a half day for the tractor show, which was at- tended by a large number. Commencement exercises began with the | . baccalaureate sermon August 13. The an- nual luncheon to visiting students and taculty will be next Wednesday, followed by the alunmi banquet the same evening. The commencement address will bo delivered Thursday morning at 9:30 o'clock in the college auditorium. Several hundred students of early and recent years, who were in attendance at the tractor show, called at the college during the week. President Clemmons dellverod an address at the annual encampment of the Grand CENTRAL COLLEGE For Women, Lexington, Mo. S s S Ca lew senf [EN¢ jonal faculty. bfl toit with fln Ivantages. Catalog and Book sent. Address, Z.M.WILLIAMS, A. M.D.D., President, @ State St., Lexington, Me. START AT $900 AYR. That 1s what Uncle Sam his Rallway Matl clerks Life posi- tion and sure promotion. No high school work necessary. Attmd on credit. Pay us from your salary. Bend for catalog HOOL OF CIVIL SERVICE % MaNaity St Chillostho, Mo, FOREST PARK KROEGER, PIANO. Nordstrom - Carter, Voice, 56th year. Se- nlor and Junior Colleges. Preparatory and Graded school. Certifl admits to Wellesley, Smith, Mt. Holyoke, Chi and all state_universities. Expres- son, Violi Gymnasium, ' Dom. _Bclence. Bible. Publio Bchool, Music. ; ANNA . CAIRNS, President, 8t Louls. E Army of the Republic at Central City last Tuesday. He also visited Osceola” and Fullerton institutes Miss Hazel Davis of the shorthand de- partment fs filling a position in the office of the Ribbel Woodenware and Paper com- superintendent of Nance nd a former ‘“sclentific,” Thursday morning. Class da one. The teachers, “classics” each had & morning set apart, displaying their colors and giving class week programs In the way of class histories, prophecies and F. Wilson, president of the teach- class; Miss May Boydston of the " and Mlss Estella Johnson of “classica” each presented their classes in ably delivered addresses. Never in the history of the school has more enthusiasm and_happler college spirit prevailed than lr;ll.h'lt closing days of the school year of 1916, A. Kate Glibart entertained the cs” at her residence Wedneaday eve- ere they read their term thescs, soclal time after which de- D Mixer and Marjory Anderson, at the home of Miss Davies last Thuraday evening, was & delightful occasion. C. J. Ryan, Leo M. Fitspatrick and sev- eral of the other students “sprang” a sur- rise on the chapel crowd Thusrday morn- thelr president ng In the way of & boos! who 18 a candldate for s vf public instruction. adroitly planned that only a few were let into the secret. Suddenly the band struck up at the entral and in marched the pro- motoers of th after which followed an eloquent Ryan. They nonpartisan Clemmons Boosting club. Thomas Long of Alblon, & former com- merclal who was In attendance at the traotor show, visited the college this week ! FINLAY iz 10th and Indians Ave, Kansas City, Mo Only sohool of the kind in the west. Eleo- PAY US WHEN EMPLOYED 26 years' prestige. Students now on rallroads, Over 300 students each year. o Earn from $60,00 to §10. Btation work tauy wire. Car fare pald. CHIL!'POTH! LEGR, 727 rving Ave., Chilli Twenty-five Years of Success Second Floor VAN SANT of BUSINESS.... o on The Best School York College York Business College College, Commercial, Academy, Normal, Stenography, bxfireulon. Music, Art, Agriculture, Domestic IS_cience—everything in the school ine. Write for Catalogue. M. O. McLaughlin, President York, Neb. Oldest Millitary School West of Mississippl River. ted by the War Department as one of the *Ten Honor Schools” in U.8. New gymnasium, Swimming pool. 43 miles from Kansas Clf talog address The Secretary, 1§50 Washington Ave, Lexington, Mo. MILITARY ACADEMY LEXINOTON, MISSOURI. ty. For caf THE YOUNG MEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Offers Day Commercial Courses, Beginning Monday, September 11. Business, Banking, Civil Service, Y. M. C. A. SCHOOLS. Shorthand, Ty itin, ASK FOR CATALOG. Combined Business and Shorthan Elementary English. OMAHA, NEB. BROWNELL HALL OMAHA, NEBRASKA. rd! and Day School for Young Women and Girls. Preparation for B Boarding Mawr, Ladcliffe, Smith, Vassar, Wellesley and other colleges. ADVANCED COURS! FOR HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES. Exceptional advantages in Household Arts and Musie. Gymnasium. Elementary Day School for Little Girls and Boys. For Catalogue, Address the Principal, Miss Euphemia Johnson. The University of Nebraska The University of Nebraska includes the following colleges and schools: THE GRADUATE COLLEGE THE COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES THE TEACHERS COLLEGE THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE THE COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING THE COLLEGE OF LAW THE COLLEGE OF MEDICINE THE COLLEGE OF PHARMACY ‘The university opens for the first semester on Wedn may enter also at the beginning of the second semester THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF EDUCA-~ TION THE SCHOOL OF COMMERCE THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS THSJ‘Z;IIEAEHERS COLLEGE HIGH 100 THE SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE THE NEBRASKA SCHOOL OF AGRI- CULTURE (Curtls). lay, September 18. One ut February 1), or the Summer Session (usually the first full week in June). On any point of information, Address THE REGISTRAR Station A. Lincoln, Nebraska. Mount St. Joseph olleg DUBUQUE, IOWA CONDUCTED BY THE SISTERS OF CHARITY, B. V. M. Affiliated With the Catholic University of America, Washington, D. C. Chartered by the Legislature of lowa. Excellent facllities for the edueation of young women. College Cours ing to Baccalaureate Degrees. ind Supervisors' Training Cours Training Course in Art; Department of Hous ind Commercial Cougses; uiflwd hul.ldln}l- “alla. four years, I School of Music; Teachers’ School of Fine Arts; Teac Arts and Science; Norm Fifty-ncre Campus, pineries, finely with Omaha, Sioux City and Sioux For Yeur Book, address, four y Academy Coursen, Behool M in old Preparatory Department. Direct railroad connections SISTER SUPERIOR. an did also the parents of Miss Rose Stark- jehn of Norden, Neb, who were also here {o attend the show and see their daughter who (s attending college J. J. Kollha of Dodge waa a guest lunch at the coliege this w. the graduates and facuity in their apac| purlors Saturday evening at 8§ o'clock. Liver Trouble. “T am bothered with liver trouble about twice a year,” writes Joe Ding- man, Webster City, Iowa. “I have pains in my side and back and an awful soreness in my stomach. I heard of Chamberlain’s Tablets and tried them, By the time I had used half a bottle of them I was feeling 8t For Girls and Young Women. 49th Three years beyond H tical two years' course in Home Econom. ics and Applied Housekeeping. Art school, Swimming tries. Miss EMMA PEASE HOWARD, Principal $t. Mary's School KNOXVILLE, ILLINOIS, Frae- h_School. o8 in all branches of Gg t mathod of 3 ent m ure. Gymnasium, ‘leln(. Pool, Dancing, Fencing, ete. udents from twenty states and advan OGONTZ SCHOOL Founded In 1850, A country school for oung ladles. Near Philadeiphia and New fine and had no signs of pain.” Ob- o » - tainable everywhere. A'.'"'m’.?{.fiifl'.‘i estate, |‘u.|. seres County, Pennaylvania. ATTEND ON CREDIT. pay us whe In position. " restdy 1,400 from 30 l’:|‘n fi rmlm.r'(‘nn 4 b ings, 160 . 3 C ks, C “EFFICIENCY IS THE TEST Literature and Science, Music, best and most cultured home-infiuences. PREPARES BOYS FOR COLLEGE @ Recent grad- ¥/ uates now in Yale, Har- vard, Prince- ton, West Point, and g’ twenty-seven " other col- leges. Also thorough courses for business life. PHYSICAL TRAINING FOR !‘:VEI:Ii BOY: Fouf euchet gymnasium, ng pool out-door and in-door track, wide reputation for clean sports. JILITAKY DRILL ynder reg- ular army officer. 'Rated an Honor School é’flu hl{hut clllll by U. 8. War Dep SIXTEEN BUILDINGS, 200 acres, 31 experienced teachers, free medical at- tendan NOT RUN FOR' PROFIT: Every cent you pay goes into the education f your boy. Aadress box 52, Shattuck School FARIBAULT, MINN, Rev. F. A. McElwain, Rector THE KEARNEY MILITARY ACADEMY mental, moral and physical training at the ng; mechanical drawing; agrieulture KEARNEY, NEBRASKA. T id e lo:v:::'n:m?n:: tent with eficient work. 9 to 1 50.00. LOCATION: Two mi rney, 36 land. Four bulldi EQUIPMENT: 1" Separate lower achool bullding. FACULTY: Colle raduates with business COURSES: Collel &r:&nnwn: commercial manual Il husbandry. ATHLETICS: Football, baseball, basketball, calisthenies. CATALOGUE: Address Harry Roberts Drummond, Headmaster. SYNODICAL COLLEGE, FULTON, MO. An Accredited Junior College for Girls, A long-established, well-known institution off all modern advantages in Art, Expression, and Charges reasonable. For eal Address JOHN JAMES, President. e College of Liberal Arts Conservatory of Musiec, free bulletins, address \ ellevue TWENTY-FIFTH YEAR. For boys in the Platte Valley. Gymnasium, ewimming I:I‘fl business methuds ; and ani track, tennls, swimming, OF EDUCATION.” ysieal Culture, under the o talogue, 5 LS ) i '!'.HHPU L - S, NEBRASKA WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY Teachers’ Celloge Academy School of Expression and Oratory School of Art. For further information and THE REGISTRAR Nebraska Wesleyan University, University Place, Linceln, Neb. e Sainf Thoma., OP ARCHBISHOP TRBLAND OTAv _ ACATHOLIC MILITARY COLLEGE RANKED A8 AN ONOR SCROOL BY THN WAR DEPARTMENT Collegiate Commercisl Academic Prepavasory by ey “‘?Yw%-u Prom Twenty: Btates Last Year FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUR ADDRBSS Very Rev.H.Moynihan,D. D, President —128 pages. ation for fi clerk, bookkeeper o: you a good position You can't get your business Therefore, you can’t attain ness men desire. It gives you JOB—HOLD THE JOB, an HERE 1S THE MAN who has built States, He has always maintained his wor! H. B. BOYLES, Pres. 1801 Harney St. HERE IS THE BOOK which opens the door to the business world for you. FREE—send for it. Boyles Coll teaches you shorthand, stenotypy, ing, bookkeeping, telegraphy or c{vi overnment mail carrier, railway-postal men—they’re too busy succeeding to stop to teach. you obtain a business education. Training teaches you how to think and do as busi- largest institution devoted to business in- struction in the western half of the United school a standard of efficiency that has made lgfldullel sought for in the business Fall Term Opens September 5. Boyles College Omaha, Neb. “An Accredited Commercial ;:‘bo:‘l." ! Boyles College Year Book touch typewrit- 1 service prepar- r stenographer, and promises after you graduate. training from business your full success until Boyles College the ability to GET THE d TO ADVANCE. up the in his H. B. BOYLES, Pres.

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