THE BEE: OMAHA. MONDAY, JULY 22, 1912 Fi& Nsws of. Schools and Goli&g BRIEF CITY NEWS He Boot Frla Xt Eleotrlo rens Burfees-araaaen Ca St&ck-rslooner Co 24th and Harney, undertakers, embalmers. DourlM aw. Omaha Plating" Co 1220 Harney. V. 2535. IToonday Club to Plcalo Members of the Noonday club, an organization of business and professional men, with their families and friends, will picnic in Elm wood park Monday afternoon and even ing, July 29. Barren Committed to Kearney Arthur Sargent, a 16-year-old lad, who is charged with incorrigibility, has been committed to the Industrial school school at Kearney by Judge Ken nedy of the Juvenile court Auto Wreck Victim Improves Ray mond Low, who was severely Injured In an automobile accident near Logan, la., Friday, Is . much Improved. Attending physicians say they think he Is not In ternally injured, as first thought "Tate" Murphy, who was with Low when the car plunged over a thirty-foot embank ment was uninjured. Polio Sold Tonus; Green Court Of ficer Glover arrested George Green, Jr yesterday afternoon upon the complaint of Juvenile authorities who charge him with aiding and abetting the delinquency of a minor girl. The name of the girl Is withheld by the police, and the youth Is being held without bond until -his trial In police court Monday morning. Singers to Stop Here Three carloads of state people going to the annual meet ing of the Sangebund to be held at St. Paul, will arrive from the west over the Bock Island Tuesday afternoon and in the evening depart over the Omaha road. The singers expect to come up town. If time will permit, make a parade along Farnam street and render several vocal selections. Old Buildings to Be BemoTed All the old shacks east of Ninth street will e torn down and new buildings gradually will replace them, says Commissioner McGovern, who has received promise from the Burlington railroad, individuals, business firm and corporations that not only will a sidewalk be built on Ninth street wherever needed, but the uniightly structures will be demolished. ' Motion for Rehearing Motion for re hearing in the matter of the late Count Crelghton's bequest of a fund for - a working girls' home has been filed In the supreme cour in Lincoln. The supreme-court's decision. MW- that the-be-,' quest ? was , valid .. and V the fusd.fi now amounting, to about $100,000, should be placed in the hands of trustees, who should establish the home. Army to Hve Oil Paintings The bill boards for the United States army re cruiting are to be made more lasting than they have been In the past The old paper signs pasted on wooden frames are to be torn down and Oil paintings on the face of the wood work Is to take the place of them. These signs aro located in the cities in which the War depart ment maintains recruiting stations. There are five such boards In Omaha, and the contract for the painting of the feign and pictures has been let Special Deliveries Cost Omaha $5,867 Messenger service for speoial delivery letters and parcels received at the Omaha postofflce during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1912, cost 95,867.92. Each special delivery messenger gets 8 cents for delivering a letter. If lie carries five let ters on a trip, he gets 40 cents for the trip. Thirteen regular messengers are employed at the local office. The total number of special delivery letters that came to the Omaha office was '79,628. Only 3,996 failed of special de livery. They were taken to the given ad dresses when there was no one there to receive them. The average time con sumed In making a special delivery was nineteen minutes. Following Is a summary of facts concerning the special delivery service during the year Just closed: Substi tute carriers . employed as messengers, none; regular messengers employed, thirteen; special letters and parcels re ceived from other postofflces, 73,217; special letters and parcels deposited ' for local delivery, 6,411; special delivery let-' ters and parcels, 79,628; letters and par cels that failed of special delivery, 3,996; paid to messengers and others, $5,867.92; average time, consumed in making-delivery, nineteen minutes. Dakota Grain Crop -to Smash Records Sam North of the Illinois Central re turned yesterday from a trip Into South Dakota that took him up the Sioux valley as far as Sioux Falls, across to Mitchell and down the Jim river Valley to Tank tun, thence down the Missouri to Sioux City and home. Throughout : the entire section visited by Mr.. North he says the crops are the best in ten years.' In South Dakota the harvesting of small grain has not been commenced, but farmers are predicting from twenty to twenty-five bushels of wheat and forty to fifty bushels of oats ppr -acre. Corn, says Mr. North, Is far advanced ind Is growing rapidly, giving promise of setter than an average crop. All through South Dakota, especially in the Sioux md Jim river valleys, there has been an abundance of rain and It has come at limes when it would do the most good. It is now well Known that hot ' more ban one case of rheumatism in ten re- utres any Interna treatment whatever. VII that is needed Is a free application of Chamberlain's Liniment and massaging the parts at each application. Try it and see how quickly it will relieve the pain and soreness. - Sold by all druggists. SCHOOL ANDJOLLEGE WORK What is Going on in the Realm of Higher Education. PERSONALITY IN PROFESSORS Difference Between American and German Profeasors Debated, with, Some Comment on the Modern Tendency. The outstanding superiority of the German to the American professor, ac cording to one of our distinguished visi tors from Berlin, Is his rich and in dependent Fersonlichkelt. The Ameri can educator at his best is not without a certain dry Intellectual vivacity and specialized efficiency, but he lacks the breadth of beam, the exuberant and con tagious enthusiasm, and the spiritual intrepidity that mark his Teutonic col league. He occupies his chair with some thing too much of official preciseness; his voice has a hard professional twang; he deals himself out sparingly in social Intercourse, like a commodity that may soon be exhausted. This unflattering foreign opinion of. the American profes sorate seems to be seconded, with a dif ference, by Mr. Charles Warren in his "Plea for Personality In Professors," published In a recent issue of the Har vard Advocate. He would agree that our professors are not what they ought to be; but he insists further that they are not what they were they have fal len from a former state of grace. At Harvard, for example, the great genera tion of the Childs and Nortons and Shalers Is passing away, and the man tle of education has descended to un equal shoulders to men of good train ing and some parts, no doubt yet with out the girth and stature of the elder day and the amplitude of personal power. The proposition is obviously Incapable of demonstration, and should be taken with a liberal allowance of salt We all know that every graduate who returns to his alma mater after an absence of twenty or thirty years Mr. Warren is of the class of 1889 is struck by the removal of ancient landmarks and the vanishing of the old familiar faces, and is prone to declare that things have de generated since his day. We all know how the elder alumni stroll through the yard or campus and exclaim at the growth of luxury among the younger generation. "The old college was . a group of teachers; the new college is a group of buildings." "Steam heat in the old dormitory, and bathroom for every suite! We used to split our own kindlings and wash under the pump. I remember how my roommate used to duck his head under the spout in De ceber, and call out, 'Come on, boys, this is what makes character.' " We know, too, the Inevitable turn the conversation takes at the, reunion banquet "Well, there's been a great change since our time, and I'm afraid it's not entirely for the better." "Not a bad address the new president gave us, but he Is not the man his predecessor was." "No; and with old Wells gone and Smith and Huntington and Jones, and Stone and Walworth retiring, -L It's not the same place at all." "Not at all. I called on Stone today, and he says the outlook Is very gloomy; they can't find suitable men to fill the vacancies. These young fellows are" cast In another mould; they aren't of the caliber of Wells and Smith.". "Old Wells was a character. though, wasn't he?" "But he did put us through our paces, and you couldn t get around him." "Old wens was a war horse, but he meant business, and I don't believe there are many like him In the new brood." When all deductions are made for the glamour of reminiscence, there Is un doubtedly a substantial basis for the dis content of the old graduate and the pointed criticism of Mr. Warren. "Old Wells," though something of a Doctor Busby, was a thoroughgoing teacher, the terror and delight of the classroom. He touched a vital spot In every student Who sat under him. He spoke as one clothed with authority, and his obiter dicta were passed on by tradition. . He furnished his disciples with a constant measure of the difference between the callow adolescent and a formed and purpose ful man. in a world of men; and he taught them to prise with Montaigne "a strong and manly familiarity and converse, a friendship that flatters itself in the sharpness and vigor of Its communica tions." His great prestige on the faculty and in the community he held In his own right and not as a loan from the Institution which employed him. So for as we knew, he had not a drop of Ger man blood in his veins; yet he was a big and permanently Impressive person ality. Now, "Old Wells" as a type of the undergraduate college teacher is fast passing away. Apparently, he is passing away for the economic reason that there is no demand for him on the part of the administrators. Other virtues than ef fective' teaching, and strength of person ality seem now to be at a premium; and ;we agree with Mr. Warren that' it is time to be harking back to something that we have lost ,' Probably nearly every one will admit that the spot where our educational In stitutions have suffered most deteriora tion from loss of vital personalities is at the heart of them-in the colleges of liberal arts. Among the various rea sons which may be brought forward to account for this decline, two stand out conspicuously: First, administrators dur ing the past generation have directed a ., large proportion of their energy and their funds towards advancing the gradu ate and professional schools. Inevitably, the attraction of pecuniary reward and scholarly distinction has drawn the more ambitious men into professional and graduate work, where successful research rather than teaching-effectiveness is the desideratum. Presidents protest that tho exceptional undergraduate teacher Is as precious to them as the exceptional re searcher; but they open their purse strings to the investigator; and every one wno hears university club gossip is familiar with the contemptuous, "He's well enough for an undergraduate teacher." The second reason for 'the de cline is that the attendance at the uni versities has multiplied faster than the endowments. As a consequence, vast classes of 500 to 1,000 are vaguely lectured at by wholesale, or cut up into small sections and turned over to a battalion of teething assistants and instructors, who are not infrequently far below the level of the average high school teacher In per sonality and in general intelligence. Be- , tween the graduate school above, with its emphasis upon investigation, and the "slavt-labor" below, with its character less semi-tutorlai function, the high call ing of the teacher is belittled, and the field tends to be left to somewhat weak kneed Laodlceans. Drop "Old Wells" among them, and they would retreat like rabbits from the presence of a man. The protest against these conditions is certain to Increase; for though the ad ministrative watchword may be "the ad vancement of science," the rank and file of the akimnl continue to demand "the formation of character." New York Post. CHADRO. NORMAL NOTES. School Closes This Week, with Joint Session with Institute. The summer term of the Chadron state normal school will close this week with a joint session with the Dawes county teachers' institute. The Alice Freeman Palmer society entertained the new students of the sum mer session at an informal reception early In the term. The upper corridor, where punch was served, was decorated with pennants and society colors. A musical program was rendered by mem bers of the 'music department under the direction of Miss Elliott The faculty spent a most delightful Saturday quite recently at the ranch home of Mr. Charles W. Payton and Mr. Lewis H. Wright, where the bounteous dinner and picnlo supper, the informal recreations out of doors and the beauti ful songs of Mr. Wright's sister, Mrs. Seaver of New York City, and of Miss Elliott, made a perfect day of pleasure. The automobiles were furnished by friends In town. The last professional meeting of the year was held at the normal building during the summer session. The even ing was pronounced by those present as the most enjoyable of the year. Dinner was served at 7 o'clock In the corridor of the second floor, the tables, arranged In the form of a hollow square, In the large recess near the office door. The decorations were pink and white rosas and white harebells, with place cards of wild roses painted from nature by Miss Driscoll. 1 The address of the evening was given by President Sparks. NOTES FROM KEARNEY NORMAL Summer Chnntanqvn Affords Oppor tunity to Students. A large number of the students have taken advantage of the Chautauqua dur ing the present week. The cool even ings have made attendance upon the various attractions delightful and the students have appreciated the oppor tunity afforded to hear some of the best talent In the country. Thursday morning at chapel President Thomas announced there would be ai meeting of the juniors who would be In next year and also a meeting of the seniors following chapel on Friday morn ing. As a result, about sixty juniors and seventy seniors attended the meet ing. Most of the students are new and will augment the classes next year very largely. From present Indications tho senior class of next year will number from 130 Jo 150, and the junior class will be exceptionally large. . A large number, of former graduates visited the normal . during ' the week. Among them were Miss Kate Schaper of Mlnden, the Misses Beryl and Hazel Kilburn of Battle Creek, Miss Beulah Ward of Overton, Miss Fern Soloman of West Point Miss Margaret Covey of St Paul, Miss Myrtle Agnew of Wood River and Catherine Hackman of Shel ton. Mrs. West of St Paul Is visiting her daughter. Miss Edith West who is at tending the summer session. Chancellor C. A. Fulmer of Wesleyan university was a visitor at the normal Friday afternoon. The summer quarter will close July 26. Regular class work will be over Thurs day evening, July 25. Regular uniform examinations follow the close of school work. Between thirty and forty former graduates of this school and others are taking work on their bachelor's degree. In point of members and also in the strength of the work done and general interest manifested, this Is the best summer term of the Kearney normal. With an enrollment of over 800, 400 of that number are matriculants. The at tendance has been exceedingly uniform, only forty students of the entire en rollment having withdrawn up to the close of the seventh week. This Is a remarkable showing and is very gratify ing to the management of the school. New Building at St, Thomas College The College of St Thomas, situated midway between St. Paul and Minne apolis, offers exceptional opportunities to boys and young men who desire to fit themselves for all that Is best in life Whether the object be a professional or a commercial career, St Thomas Is well equipped to present a course of study that will appeal to all educators as just what a young man needs. A comprehensive experience of twenty-seven years has en abled the college fully to appreciate the needs of the young men of the northwest. These years of studious observation and the application of the best pedagogical methods place It today in the front rank among the Cathollo educational lnstltu tlons of the country. Its professors are graduates of the leading universities both of America and Europe. The last year has marked an important advance In the history of St. Thomas. Indeed, in many respects It has been the most successful year In the history of the Institution. The attendance during the year just closed was 683 students from nineteen states. The magnificent residence hall erected and completed during the year gives un excelled accommodations. The entire building is finished in fumed oak. It is electric lighted and - has iot and cold water In every room.' MANY GOOD TEACHERS AT LUTHERAN SCHOOL RED WING, Minn.. July 2L-The Lutheran Ladles' seminary closed a very successful school year in June. The pres ident preeented diplomas to the nine graduates from the seminary course (a four-year high school course), two gradu ates from the post graduate course in piano and to nine who had completed the regular conservatory course. One re ceived a diploma from the normal course in household science and three received diplomas from tire commercial' - depart ment. . There . were in - all 166 students enrolled. Twenty-three teachers had charge of the work in the following de partments: Literary (college, seminary,' preparatory), domestic economy (normal course in household science, cooking, needlework and dressmaking), commercial branches, elocution, art and the conserva tory of music (piano, voice, organ and violin). For this year the conservatory of music has been materially strengthened. Miss Bertha Schrelter of La Crosse, Wis., will have charge of the vocal Instruction. Miss Schrelter has studied voice with Frl. Pivoda and O. Blakely In Prague, Bo hemia, and she has had four year' ex perience in prominent schools In this country. Miss Anna Lee has been se cured as first assistant teacher of piano. The director. Dr. B. F. Laukandt, will have a very able first assistant In piano in Miss Lee. Miss Baumgart continues as second assistant and Miss Lillian See bach and Miss Clara Allen have been chosen third and fourth assistants. Miss Harriet W. Deuel, who for the last eigh teen years has had charge of the art department continues In her position. The household science department has received well qualified teachers In Miss Roverud and Miss Dalen, graduates from Stout institute and the University of Minnesota. Pern Normal Notes. Last Tuesday evening a graduate re cital was given by Miss Alice Lints of the elocution department Dr. Beatty of Cotner university gave the students a chapel talk recently on "Social Factors in Education." The speaker is a former president of Peru Normal. The normal team defeated the Brock team on Saturday last by a score of U to L On Wednesday of this week they took the measure of the Verdon team by a score of to 1. On Friday of this week the chapel hour was given over to a concert by the Glee olub, assisted by Miss Rita Thomas, a pianist from Nebraska City. Miss Thomas is a graduate of the University of Ne braska conservatory and was later a stu dent at the Chicago university school of music. She played Chopin's Polonaise In A flat and responded to an encore with an etude by the same author. COUNTY LIBRARY PLAN GOOD, SAYS MISS LONG Miss Harriet Long, In charge of the county circulation department of the Santa Barbara library, Santa Barbara, Cal., visited a few hours yesterday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. F. A. Well man, 2302 South Thirty-third street She was on her way to the home of her oar ents. Dr. and Mrs. F. A. Long at Madi son, Neb. Miss Long Is a graduate of the Univer sity of Nebraska and of the Albany Li brarian school, Albany, N. T, She has been engaged In the library work at Santa Barbara for the last two years, where she has had charge of the county exten sion work since its Initiation. Santa Barbara is the second county In the country to put this plan into opera tion, and, according to Miss Long, it has proven a great success. During the last year 35,000 volumes have been read by county readers, who have eagerly tuken advantage of the opportunity afforded them. The county library is eupported by a tax levy of one-third of a mill. Last year the Board of County Supervisor, Deing somewhat short of funds, decided the county library work would have to be discontinued. The people protested. and the board at once appropriated J8.000 to continue the work for the year, and made arrangements for a levy to raise the necessary funds. POLICE MAKE THREE RAIDS AND NINE ARE ARRESTED Led by Police Sergeants Madsen and Slgwart, police officers last night made raids on three alleged disorderly houses. ai s:w tne Dwyer saloon was raided by the two sergeants and Officer Flynn and the bartender and a' couple of In mates arrested. The second vtalt was made an hour later at Mae Kelly's place at 508 South Thirteenth street. Here two girls and two men were taken. The last raid of the evening was on a colored re sort operated by John Bell at 1304 How ard street. The proprietor and one woman were taken and three cases of beer con fiscated. "CHIP" LEE LOSES CHIP WHEN PUT UNDER ARREST "Chip" Lee, a 175-pound hulking bruiser, was arrested last night at Osthoff s chile parlor on North Sixteenth street, by Patrolman Wilson, a man half his size. Lee was creating a disturbance and re fused to be quieted until the little police man engaged in a test of strength. When Patrol Conductor Dillon unloaded the disturber some moments later at the sta tion, Lee was so docile and tame that he addressed everybody as "mister" and said "sir" whenever spoken to during the course of being booked. COPPER GETS LONELY CRAP SHOOTER IN RAID Patrolman Robert Emmet Ford while walking his beat In the south part of the city heard peculiar noises Incident to a lively crap game and, after sleuthing around for a few minutes, made a dash Into a gang of twenty-five boys and gathered an armful of them. By the time he reached the patrol box all but Howard Riley had squirmed away from him. Riley was afterward released upon his promise to be good. Dynamite Wreokn Rnlldlnita as completely as coughs and colds wreck lunga Cure them quick with Dr. King's New Discovery. 50c and $1.00. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. , ' The Persistent and Judicious 1'se of Newspaper Advertising is the Road to Business Success. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. THE NORTHWESTERN CONSERVATORY "MUSIC ART The only conservatory In the northwest that offer speoial eoarses leading- to Artists' Diplomas and Teachers' Certificates. The 88th Tear Opens September 3, 1912. Voice, Piano, Organ, Violin, Orchestral Inetrumenta School of opera School of Dramatic Art Normal Courses for Teachers and Supervisors of Public School Music, Art and Piano. Special Summer Courses for teachers. OLIVE ADELE EVERS, Pres. 804 Nicollet Ave, Minneapolis, Mian. Hardin The best endowed slrla' achool la the Central West. rVeparatory and Juntoi Col lege. Highest rank at ODlTarsltles. Courses In Art, Elocution, Music, Domestic oktnoe and Business. German-Amerlcaa Conservatory Oerman Standards. Modem Equipment. Catalog. Address John W Million. Surprise Planned For South Omaha at Den Tonight More than fifty foaming, snorting steeds will charge up to the moat before King Ak's castle this evening and South Omaha business men, their riders, will smile broadly as the king's hench men drop the draw and bid them enter. The castle has been prepared for them and Samson has outlined the date on the calendar and marked It theirs. He will stand with outstretched arms as Mr. Everett Buckingham and his string from the stock yards approach the gates. Ah, he will do more than that. In the grand entree parade of the grandest circus that ever honored a universe, he will allow thtse riders to march to the rhythm of 2,000 welcoming applauding hands. They will be allowed this privilege, to lead the parade about the big ring two (count 'em), two times. And yet, that Isn't all. Artificer Gus Rens has been cudgeling his brain over something that would do as a surprise to these buccaneers, and when Gus Rens cudgels his brain the world knows a mighty something Is about to be pro 'duced. Of course, just what that some thing Is the folks close to the king won't tell. They just smile superciliously and murmur a little about a big grand thing. That It Is going to be something star tllngly entertaining Is proven by the re luctance with which two other circuses are entering the city. The managers already have been to feee Dad Weaver to ask If It's any use to bring their shows here and what Dad told them made them go away downhearted. It's just over this sort of matters that the board of governors will talk when they meet Tuesday night at the Omaha club. The board usually meets on Monday nights, but It is thought the discussion will take too long for com pletion In time for them to get out to the den, hence the postponement They will attend the big show to be given the South Omaha cltiiens because they know there's something unusual In store for the southerners. The membership of the knights Is expected to go over the 2,000 mark when they are taken into the realm as loyal subjects. POLICE RECOVER MONEY STOLEN FROM MARIT0 John Murphy is being held by the po lice upon a charge of robbery preferred by Justo Marlto, who Is being held also aa complaining witness. Marlto appeared at headquarters yesterday afternoon and stated that his pay check of $25 and L50 In money had been stolen from him In the Hub hotel. Officer harta recovered the money a few minutes later when he arrested Murphy, who had the check and money In his pocket. SIX DISTANCE RUNNERS ARE OVERCOME BY HEAT ST. LOUIS, Mo July 21.-J. W. Ken Miniirl Athletie club, won the lieu J i Missouri Athletic club's modified mara thon race of 11.6 miles here this after noon In 1:15:20. J. Kayslng of the Young Men's Christian association was second and Joe Bantle of the Missouri Athletic club wu third. Thirty-nine runners started. Six of them were overcome by the heat PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. . t u,imi r,f Crawford 111 Aran u. Ji""n" . " - ... " stopping at the Rome hotel. He reports cronm in very good condition in western Nebraska ....... J. Trultt Maxwell, pnysicai Director or the local "Y" association, Is now direct in.. h iiiniMr nhvalcal culture sohool for young men In Estes Park. F. A. Turner, assistant boys' work director of the Omaha "Y," left for Evanston, 111. last week and expects to take charge of the physical work at the ' y association were. Fred A. Cuscaden has returned from mr-il vhar. ti nnnferreil with W HBII1I1B W" " " ' ' ' ' ' ; , officials of the Treasury department re garding niS recent npyuiiliiuem. h national bank examiner. . SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. Mount St. Joseph College Academy DUBUQUE, IOWA Conducted by Sisters of Charity, B. V. M. follesrlate Decrees. Academic Depart' mnt. University Affiliation. Excellent facilities offered for the education of young women. Conservatory of Music and Art Training Department for Teachers of Vocal and Instrumental Mualc. Domestic Science. One mile from Dubuque. Four and one half hours' ride from Chicago. Direct railroad connections with Omaha, St Paul and 8t Louis. Extensive grounda Pineries. Private Rooma Normal Course. Grammar Department Bus! neat Course. Private pupils received. For Catalogue address Sister Superior. fr- COTNER UNIVERSITY The Sohool of low Expense and . High Grade Work. Collegiate, Academy, Commercial, Music, Art and Biblical Courses. Sum mer School, June 11 to August 3. Certificates granted by State Depart ment of Education for work done in Summer School. TABLE BOABS, $3.35 A WEEK. Fall semester opens September 16. For catalog write Chancellor WILLIAM OSSCKOES, Bethany (Linooln), sTebraska. EXPRESSION COLLEGE ai CONSERVATORY op Young Women A It., Pres., t College Place, Meileo. Mo 1 1 1 sf! 1 I ill The Position of Boyles College the largest business college in the United States, west of Chicago, was cot gained by accident. IT WAS WON 8Y MERIT. No school in the west evet attained the record maintained today ment of over 1,200 students. A curriculum surpassingly greater than tnai ever attempted by even the best business colleges. A faculty that Is truly the envy of every business training Institution in the west. The 1912 Year Hook is how read. It tells you Just precisely why you should prefer Boyles College if you are desirous of becoming a successful Stenographer, Bookkeeper. Private Secretary, Salesman or Telegrapher, or if you wish to Qualify for United States Government position aa Railway Mail Clerk, Departmental Clerk or Government Stenographer or Bookkeeper. Send for it today. Address Boyles W 'II sws Formerly the Wlaoa. Seminary 10113. jHfanefiOta CONDUCTED BY THE SISTERS OF SAINT FRANCIS YEAR BEGINS FIRST WEDNESDAY IN SEPTEMBER College confer degrees ol B. A., B. S., Lltt B., Mu. B. Saint Clare Seminary Classical School and College Preparatory. Secretarial Count. Saint Agnes Grammar School For littli girli. . Conservatory of Saint Cecilia Piano, Violin, Voice, Organ, Harp, Harmony, Composition, Normal Mutlc. . r WRITS FOR CATALOGUES llUS U J I. Ul I KEARNEY MILITARY ACADEMY Our aim is to develop mind and body together, to promote at once scholarship, manliness and self re liance. To do this we combine Military Training with Academic and Business courses. We ufl'er the refinements of -home life, with th restrictions of spmi-military discipline. Our Classic and Scientific courses prepare for all col leges. Our Commercial courses prepare for business. Athletic facilities are extensive and outdoor sports are made a feature. Our athletics are carefully supervised. r Write for Ilustrated Catalogue. HARRY N. RUSSELL, Head Master. KEARNEY, - - - -NEB. io6T j. a TfVTTVtr V j) Offers bore in the Northwest tha educational tl l ssaadavda ef the best eastern schools, with advantage of traiaiaf few of taeza poseeaa. Graduates eater Harrard, Tale, Priaoeton, aad meat otaer first elan eollegea. Bt Junes Scteol for Boys proTidea a ny. ante boo a&4 school for boys of I to IS. If iatereeted write for Catalog explaining advantages aad reqairo niaata. Addreso REV. JAMES DOBBIN, D. D., Faribault, Minnesota College of St Thomas t ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA Under the Control and Dir.- "n of ARCHBISHOP IRELAND 8 rLe Faculty of Thirty A CathoBe Military Co'lcv. of the ten "Da'.inpu ?.v.v. r . ; - : Situated In bcautilulail ost i: New Residence Building oorK'rsj ousting $130,000 Jus', cobp'tt1.. Cantor moral and reU:oii . iu:.v: ce' and physical development. - CoUeinate. Academic, Commeroiat .'-(' Bix hundred and :gtty-two stn..'a. t last year. For illustrated ce.tc.loz srid. .. ! ii an in 1 1 1 mini 'i mi i iii MILITARY ACADEMY OLDEST AND LARGEST MILITARY SCnOOL IN THE MIDDLE WEST, fjovemntent supervision, in tins! -a." its memrai reach and develop, both mentally and phyticallv, boya-whomthe ordinary dareobooldoesnotlnterMt. Men teachers from best LalveniUiM. Preparation for College, uniTersmee, Aationai Aoaaemieeor dubidcps lih. iniaaiiy, aniuvrT, and CaYalrr. System el Athletics teaches emy student. Sonarato department (or boys 11 to Is years. Forty-three miles from lfansas City. For Catalog address THE SECRETARY. 1 80 a Waehinfltoa Ave, LEXINGTON. MO. r STaNLEY HALL - FOR GIRLS Twenty-third year: Regular and Speci Academic and College Freparatory Courses. 27 Specialists. Diplomas and Certificates con ferred in all departments. Certificate admits, without examination, to all colleges and universities. Strong home Economics Depart ment. Affiliation with Northwestern Conservatory. 40. instructors. Offers advantages in Music, Art and Expression unequalled by any other college preparatory school in America. $500 and up.' Send for Illustrated catalogue to OLIVE A. EVERS, Principal, r 212 PLEASANT AVE. . MINNEAPOLIS, MINN, J :i business": fETi ,, i iE by Boyles College. An annual enroll College, 1807 Harney St., Omaha, Kefc. Departmenti of Art, Normal Art, Drama tic EitpresiioD, Household Economics. Strong (acuity of spccialista; splendidly equipped laboratories and gymnesium; moderate pricea; students from thirteen statet; normal department log students preparing to teach. Direct linea ol railway from Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul. St. Louis. - Only earnest, capable students who have a purpose in study are solicited. AND DEPARTMENT BULLETINS III Inotriiirs, Prieets and Laymen "-tl by t War Department aa" on j r.: tae country, oc thu t."rk o tho Miesiaaippl. h..jdrl ttiJ aeventy-eix nxuca anc '. ytrttw best nuthodi oi meats : T t vietwTO Statet, regbterer Moynman,U.V.,rrf i i i ; -- ileum ! i