'niR RKE: OMAHA, MONDAY JULY 20. 1909, 5 " ' " , ' ' ' ' 1" - i i, , , , -- -i . . m i , . i .,. . ,. . i .. , ,i . , . ,, ., a. . ,. .i i -i i . o SCHOOL AND COLLEGE WORK Gratifying Exhibit of Progress in the Common Schools. ARGUMENT FOE MEN TEACHERS How High School Fraternities fttlreu. 1st the Sporty lmetlnet M14- anmsner Activities of Varl-Schools. Work la progressing steadily on the new Nebraska Military academy building In Lin coln. By the opening day next September the building will ba finished and folly quipped for the houelng and achoollng of the boys. Anxious Inquiries are coming In from former cadets regarding the location of their rooms, while frequent trlpa are made to. the building by cadets who live In Lincoln and vicinity. A handsome Illustrated catalogue will aoon be ready for distribution. From the picture alone one ran gain an Idea of the varied activities of the academy, of the enlor and Junior teama In foot ball, baae ball and bkt ball, of the debating squads, of the military band and the several other organisation which vary the routine of academic work and aid In both mental and physical development of cadets. Nothing Is done at random In the Nebraska Mill tary academy. Membership on athletic teams Is conditioned on excellence In scholarship, and all athletics are under the direct supervision of faculty members. During the last year the academic work of the academy has been honored by aecredlt mont In the University of Nebraska and In the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools the highest marks of approval a preparatory school can win. . The manual (raining department won high fa r villi both Junior and senior cadets, r'o .settling made by themselves whloh can i i' .t. i ,cd and seen and exhibited to ii t.iu." appeals to the peculiar constructive I cf a growing boy. This impulse . :i utxely directed develops the quall i i i,t accuracy, patience and attention to u lull. ("'niiets who work well during the week nre rewarded by some healthful diversion on Piitlny evening, and to this end a series musical, literary and social entertain ments have been planned for the coming i tr. NEW TBACIIEn AT TABOR. 1'rof. FMtvIn Ott F.leeted to Chair of History anil Geonomles, TABOIl. Ia.. July 25.-(Speclal.)-Prot. Kdwln Ott ' has Just been elected to the chnlr of history and economics In Tabor college, to take the place of Prof D. Fred Grans, who, with his family, Is spending a year on the Pacific coast on account of Mrs. Grass' Ill-health. Prof. Ott Is a grad uate of the University of Wisconsin, with tho degree of A. B-, and took a post graduate course at Harvard which confer ' r"V liporl hlrn trie' master's degree For eign travel and experience as a teacher have further qualified him for the work at Tabor. Last year ha taught in St. Slovens' college, st Armandale, N. T., and Is highly recommended as an Instructor and disciplinarian. Mr. Ott Is 28 years old and la engaged to be married In a few v k to a young woman, a graduate of tho New England Conservatory of Music. A new director of aihlrtles hns also been secured for Tabor In tho p , eon of Mr. W. D Morsnvllle of Shens cell, vho has had sumo years experience as pli . sical director for Young Men's Christian association or ganizations In Wichita, Kan., and River side, Cal. i President F. W. Long Is vigorously push in t,' the summer campaign for Increasing the endofi ment of Tabor college to secure the plvdees neressary to meet the condi tions of Mr. Carnegie's conditional offer of $'3,003. and Is being ably assisted In the ,N BUSINESS COLLEGE THOUSANDS of our jrraduates (establish ed 1884) are Ailing highest positions ol trust and f'gg- profit. We put young " men nnd women ia the way of true success lu life. Ours Is a thotoughly equipped , working school with a school atmosphere and advan ces second to no other. Practical, thorough. All courses. 900 students. No -tloons. Write for prospectus. L H-OLK tUSMSSS OOLLtSf .t'rtS 13!k KtMl IMMla, S). Are You Looking for a Good School? Y... will bf pirated with the Woman's College at Jacksonville, HI. WkrtsSMtttCollfRWoatar Mete sre tail Collcg si4 Prcaafalatr Coaiaaa, ana mat a nii is Matlt. Ait, Domartc Silases, as Siplaaaieo. liptlHI KMOUblt. SatlMSSIkfl kaaUalat. Has lilt idaal. Uuln (antral la M 144 la Ww. Vary cannkt la ararr fan el ika Mmlwlpat Valla?. Siaevnta tree) awralkas tarsal? tiaiaa. Caialofaa lias. Aaaiaaa PrMldemt Harker, Sat IS, Jaaksaaallla, III. A (tinksll Halt. American y&. Conservatory Tka Laaalat trkoai at Mni aaa Draaiail: An. temrr "amlaaat iartnkrtata. Vaasipaaare roam e ateoy. Tae tbai'a Timlalaj Daana4ai. rakilc kcaesl Man. Saca tloa, rkraieal Collar, kiaeers Uoaaae, School of Actiag -HaH Ceaway, Director. Mimrfrm Afr.ml.,.,. 0 p, StktUrtktp, Amtrd'4 It tuttl, v Limu.i Mrasi. Htk Sttum - $" TkmnUf, it. . CtUl; f'M tm AkpUtmtitm. JOKH j. MArrtTASOT, rnaMaat. OUSIl TEMPLE '"s IB taai fnhltw kSi-r Eminent iagw na ITuVaI When enusi state department ia wbfca yon The Bash IsmU Co.Tur. tfSm aw AL work by Rev. F. V. Martini of Chicago and Rev. V. B. Hill of Alcester, 8. D., who Is an alumnus of Tabor college. Rev. K. C. Wolcott of Sioux City, whose services here last May were effective In securing upwards of $10,000 to the fund, is also to take a hand in the good work again, and there is good reason to expect that 140,000 will be raised In this Immediate community as many substantial pledges have already been secured. MAISPIIIXQ OF DEMOCRACY. Boys In Their Teens Should Taught hr Men. Be The August American Magaslne contains an artlole entitled. "The Schools-The Main spring of Democracy," by William A,llen White, which deals with the question of our system of public school education and Its Importance to national progress. Mr. White thinks that one of the grave faults with our publlo schools Is that they haven't bet ter teachers. He says: "The boy goes to the pool room and the saloon primarily because there he finds men. At school he Is surfeited with fem inity. Given men teachers for the boy after he gets Into his teens, and the boy will not be so ready to leave school as he is. But teaching Is a profession that men use as a stepping-stone to something better. It Is not a man's profession, and wages of teach ers are so low that men cannot afford to make teaching a career. And It the statis tics of the census bureau are correct no extravagance of our people Is so disastrous to us as the economy we are practicing In our schools In the seventh and eighth grades. For there the boys fall out by the millions. And the fact that their sisters who can earn as much at that age as their brothers, remain on an average a few years longer, Indicates that the boys leave school because they are boys, and because the schools are designed for the girls. In some haxy, indefinite way we seem to be realis ing this as a people; for In ten states Massachusetts, Utah, Indiana, Virginia, New Jersey, Illinois Connecticut, Mary land, Ohio, California and Michigan we have passed laws of more or less value providing for pensioning school teachurs. Given a pension, and a man can afford to make teaohlng a profession, and the man teacher will appear In the seventh and eighth grades, and the boy will be saved to good citizenship. If the laws permitting school districts to set aside pension funds spread over the states as the laws author ising manual training schools have spread slpce 1IO0, by 1920 the million pupils s-ho reach the high school every year will be greatly Increased If there Is any ground for prophecy In statistics. "As conditions now exist there comes into the life of the average boy or girl four or five waste years the years between IS and 18. These waste years hold In them the real dangers of our democracy. "Ten millions of 14-year-old boys and their sisters who are really worth some thingare out Of school In America today. Partly they are out for economic reasons; the family needs their support; but the state needs a clear mind In the ballot booth "even years later, worse than the family needs support, and might well afford to pay the family the errand boy's meager wages, nut apart from economic forces which keep the boy out of school during the waste years of his life, there are soclnl reasons why he Is not In school. And those social reasons are his studies and his teachers. and at the bottom of all, the selfishness of the taxpayers." HIGH "CMOOI. I'RATEIIJIITIES. Story of Their Development and the Sporty Instlnet. niscusslng the absurdities of hi?h school fraternities In Everybody's Magazine, Wil liam Hand draws thts picture of their de velopment: A couple of western boys go east forj vacation. They meet seme other bovs and karn that there Is such a thing, really, for practical purposes, as the Greek alpha bet. They also leArn that their new friends, organised Into a company, own three cf the letters, which are certainly good to look at much resembling chewlnd gum trademarks. The new friends offer to lend them the letters, teach them how to shake hands In a complicated way, write the translations of the letters down on a slip of paper so that they Won't mislay them In their minds, and send them back west to found a chapter of PI Phi Psl. Returning home, the boys pick out a few agreeable assoclstes of their own eoHal specie, hold an Initiation, teach the new members the principles of Pl-Phl-Psl-lsm by dropping oysters at the end of strings down their throats and then Jerking the strings and pulling the oysters up Again, devise a few new complications In the art of hand-shaking, have their coats cut five Inohea lower in the front than at the back, have buttons aewed on the flaps of their pockets, turn up ten Inches of their troiisei legs, take a pair of scissors and clip off the whole breadth of the rims of their soft felt hats all the way around, silt holes In the remaining fragments of the hat and twine their fraternity ribbons through the holes. Invest some of father's money In an enamel, gold and diamond PI Phi Psl label, hook the label to their waistcoats, and paralyse the high school eorrldors be tween classes with a tjurlesque of a stage 4mltatlon of a college boy's Imitation of a human walk. Those PI Phi Psl boys, for Instance (to take the history of a certain fraternity In one of the Chicago high schools for an Illustration), soon observe that almost everybody eats lunch In the school lunch room. And many of the persons there have brought their lunch with them from home In paper bags and old shoe boxes. 8uch persona are not Interesting associates. The members of PI Phi Psl, all of whom used to eat In the lunch room, now go down the street at the noon hour to Qlanakocenotou- los' fruit store and purchase an exclusive CONSERVATORY NORTH CLARK STRUT AMD CHICAGO AVL. CHICAQO WN. LINCOLN IUSH, Founds KENNETH M. BRADLEY. Director Toe management announces the exclusive teaching engagement mt iiata, wuv mi m bow included . Awr Atl "Wr J . J i .... ww. - va paiiuMi reputation: MMK, IUUI RlW-KINa ' M. BAUJMANN The Worli-IUaowne4 Pianist j Orchestral Conductor WM. AWILLaTT IDW1SS nvasis end Instructor I Director School of Actios? ,ri.,A' ni icir act.no and br.uui.ur Isl V LANGUAGES are loferaVted! . frsorelarr. , pt 4, Qsxw PUaos. lunch of stale peanuts and anlllne-dyed Ice cream. Pretty soon, however, the Central Cryptic Conclave of the national organisation of Mu Mu Mu establishes a local chapter In the school, and the new Mu Mu Mil's come tagging along and endeavor to hobnob. A farther remove becomes necessary. This time It Is half a mile down the street to Kelly's stew store, well known as "The Blink," where one can vibrate quite fa miliarly for a few minutes around the free lunch counter. What now Is the dietetic, hygienic, etc., dairy lunch served at cost In the school lunch room by the local Wo man's club? Whst, even, are Qreek pea nuts and Ice cream? A tub of arsenlcated suds for us, and a couple of condemned meat wlener-wursts! Life Is on the wing! It Is curious how exciuslveness runs to sportlness, when one Is very young. Rut It always has done so, and It always will. EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS. Steady Expansion of the Common School Sstem. One of the most gratifying features In American progress is the extension of the common school as shown In Volume II, Just Issued, of the 1908 report of Dr. Elmer Ellsworth Drown, United States commis sioner of education. The comparative fig ures are: 1S70. 1907. Children of school age (5 to IS) 12.0rS.44lt H.2K2.930 Pupils enrolled 6,871,522 16.S90.81S Average dally attend ance 4,077,247 11,925,72 Percentage of enroll ment 69.8 70.g Annual school term idays) J32.2 151.8 Days attended by each person, average 44 7 74 8 Male teachers 77.R29 104 414 Female teachers 122,886 876W2 Number of school- houses 116.S12 859,858 Value of school prop erty 8130.SS3.0OS tscs.W5.jno Revenue C1S90) 143 184.806 8fi5.m.17S Expenditure 61.3S6.IWI 83(i.9.S33 Salaries paid 87.832.5fl6 202.047,814 Country's population... 88,558,871 88,526,761 Expenditure per capita of population 1.64 8 90 Expenditure per pupil.. 1.04 28.25 The commissioner says: "The significant fact Is found not In the larger gross fig ures of attendance, expenditures and the like, but rather In the fact that the facili ties provided have more than kept pace with the Increase In demand due to the growth of the country. There are. commu nities In the United Ptates today which are spending more than $Tp0 per pupil each year In the education of their children. The education of today Is undoubtedly better than the education of even only twenty years ogo. The Increased cost has meant higher salaries for teachers, fewer pupils a teacher, better buildings and more and better books and other educational equip ment In the words of President Eliot: 'Our forefathers expected miracles of prompt enlightenment, and we are seri ously disappointed that popular education has not defended us against barbarian vires like drunkenness and gambling, against Increase of crime and Insanity, and against Innumerable delusions. Impostures and. follies. We ought to spend more pub llo money on schools because the present expenditures do net produce all the good results which were expected and may rea sonably be aimed at.' " Nevada has the highest yearly expendi ture. 172 15 a pupil, followed by New York with 151.50. Montana with 840.40 and Cali fornia With 849.29. In the south the per pupil expenditures range from 86.87 for South Carolina to 820.36 for West Virginia. The new state of Oklahoma spends 81B79, New iMexIco 819.46, while Arizona, with 840.41. spends 85.16 a pupil a year more than Oklahoma and New Mexico combined. One-third of the states spend from 825 to 840 a pupil. The fact that one-fourth spend less than 815 and one-fourth spend more than 835 is an Indication, says the com missioner, "of the great variety In support or punuc education, and, I believe. In th opportunity afforded for school training In our various commonwealths," WKNTWORTH MILITARY1 ACADEMY Made a Post of the National Guard of Missouri. The superintendent of the academy has recently received a letter from Adjutant General Rumbold, stating that the Went worth Military Academy had been made a post of the National Guard of Missouri under the new law passed at the last ses sion of the legislature. Wentworth has fof many years been a post of the National Guard of Missouri, In fact It was the first military academy in the state to be made a post of the Netlonal Guard and have Its faculty and graduates to receive commis sions In the state mllttla. The recent act of the legislature, however, made It neces sary for all military academies to be re appointed posts of the National Guard, and the requirements of the law were so strict that only a very few schools could fulfill their requirements; there was never any doubt about Wentworth fulfilling every requirement of the law, since It Is the oldest and by far the largest military school In the state and generally recog nlsed by the United States government Inspectors as one of the first military schools In the United States. Captain H. M. Peck, a member of the Wentworth faculty for two years, Is spend ing his vacation at the academy. lie Is practicing law at Oklahoma City and Is recognlxed as one of the most prominent lawyers of the city. Messrs Madison Welsh and Irving Chap man, both of Kansas City, spent the night at the academy on their way to St. Louis from Kansas City. They went by way of the Missouri River In a canoe and made the trip In six days. The new Wentworth catalogues are Just out and are even handsomer than those gotten out last year. The requests for catalogues are coming in In large numbers and the academy expects an unusually large attendance next fall. One of the many things that makes Wentworth so attractive to Its cadets is the unique system of athletics which the School has had in force for several years a sys tem so arranged as to have every cadet take an active part In games of all klnd.s. This system develops all the cadets and enabled Wentworth to turn out a foet ball team last year that scored fig polnta and was never scored upon. The academy haa just enlarged its cavalry equipment by purchase of fourteen additional horses. These horses are well adapted to cavalry use. They are of uni form color and an exceptionally fine im The Wentworth troop will be unsurpsssed oj any troop in the middle west. Captain Q. B. Piitchard. Jr.. ornfe..r military science and tactics at Wentworih military academy, la apendine- the week . Camp Hadley. Nevada, Mo., at the request oi ueneral ltumbold. It will be of Interest to the Wentworth alumni and cadets to know that Brigadier General Clark, who Is figuring conspicuously at the encampment. Is an alumnus of Wentworth. W. C. Jackman of Enid, Okl., male a visit to the academy this week and en rolled his son for another year. Captain H. M. Peck of Oklahoma City, for two years a member of the Wentworth faculty, has been visiting the academy the last week- and returned to his home Sun day. Mrs. Hoge of Pt. Louis, mother of Colonel Hoge, associate superintendent of Went worth, Is visiting the academy. Requests for catalogues continue to come In daily In larger numbers than heretofore, and there is every reason to believe that the attendance will be even larger than that of last year. COLUMBIA'S SIMMER SCHOOL. Record-Breaking; Attendnnce from All Parte of the Country Nearly. 8.000 students are taking part In the summer session of Columbia university, a record breaking number for universities in this country. Of these 1,930 are up on Mornlngskle Heights and twenty-one are at the College of Physicians and Burgeons. The students have come from nearly every state and territory In the union, from Canada and Nova Scotia, and from many foreign countries. Almost all professions are represented and a larger number than usual have matriculated In the university. The increase over last year about 400 is due to several causes. One is that under ' the new regulations It Is possible for men and women to got the university degree In a shorter time. Four summer sessions, or two summer sessions and one regular term being all that is necessary to accomplish the result, and hundreds are taking ad vantage of the opportunity. Another Is the arrangement of the courses. The direc tor of the session has made a careful study of the applications In the last few years and. having worked along the line of the greatest demand, has made oppor tunities for all to make progress along the line they have been studying. Then the teaching staff has been greatly improved and those at the head of the various de partments are the best In the country, other universities having been drawn upon for their best teachers. One of the features of the ses.slon InV the past haa been the large numbers of school superintendents, and each year has seen an Increase In their numbers. This year many have brought their teachers with them to benefit by the Instruction In modern methods. Even the superintendent of schools of Panama has brought teachers with him, and thero Is such a large delega tion of superintendents and teachers from Indiana that they have formed an asso ciation of students at the session from that state which is for mutual advantage, and they take their outings together. There is an especially large delegation from Nova Scotia and from Canada there are many. There is also a large increase in the number coming from the southern states, the representation from these points having been light lij.the past. Ohio and West Virginia have imany representatives, while not a few are regular students of tho university who are taking the oppor tunity to advance themselves. Among the new courses offered this year are those in theology and public speaking and both have fully Justified their estab lishment. In the latter Course there are fifty who are In charge of Prof. Winter of Harvard. The graduate work being done exceeds anything In other years by a large percentage. If people with symptoms or kidney or bladder trouble could realize their danger they would without loss of time commence taking Foley's Kidney Pills. This great remedy stops the pain and the irregulari ties, strengthens and builds up these organs and there Is no danger of Brights' disease or other serious disorder. Do not disregard the early symptoms. Sold by all druggists. BOY LEAVES THE "HOSPITAL Jnllna Genial, Mho Had Sknll Frac. tared July 1, Una Entirely Recovered. Julius Gaglnl, the 8-year-nld boy who was hurt on the night of July 16 by being struck on the head by a rock which one man threw at another. Is so much Improved thai he was allowed to go from 8t. Joseph's Hospital to his home Saturday afternoon, and his recovery seems assured. Julius was standing Inside his home when two men engaged In a fight in front of the house. One of them threw a rock, which missed its mark, crashed through a screen doer and struck the boy. He was operated on the same night by Police Burgeon Harris, who found a bad fracture of the skull, and it was necessary to remove a quantity of bone, but the operation proved to be entirely successful, and the boy is apparently almost as well as ever. The men who were responsible for the accident have not been Identified. The Baltimore Ohio Kallroad. Low round-trip fares from Chicago to New York City, Atlantic City, Boston and other eastern destinations during July, Au gust and September, 1909. Return limit thirty days. Stopovers at l'lttsburg, Wash ington, Baltimore and Philadelphia. For Information address W. A. Preston, T. P. YOUNG MAN KILLS "HIMSELF George Hlebolt, Who Roomed at TOD North Sixteenth Street, Takes Big Dose of Strychnine. George Rlebolt, who has been rooming, at 709 North Sixteenth street, committed sui cide about 12 o'clock last night by taking a large amount of strychnine. Rlebolt, who was single, had been drink ing for three or four days, and early las; night made threats to end his life, but ins friends thought nothing of It. He was a years of age and had beea working for the Stevenson Roofing com pany. He had lived in Omaha for many years. .Neither w. It. Moody, 801 North Sixteenth street, who formerly roomed with Klebolt. nor Mrs. W. II. Mills, who con ducts the place where he was rooming, were able to assign any reason for his desire to die other than the fact of his excessive drinking. The body was taken In charge ly the coroner. His father. Fred Rlebolt. who lives at Laurel, Mont., has been notified. A Hloodr Affair Is lung hemorrags. Etop It, and cure weak lungs, coughs and colds with tr. King's New Discovery. 60c and $1.00. Sold by Beaton Drug Co. Bee Want Ads are Business Boosters. i I TlVc"" -r 4ST-" TT2hTi-K A.caidl(2inniy A place where manly boys are made into manly men. Our system of training com bines the refinement of home life with semi-military discipline. Our academic standards are high, but we aim specially to de velop and build up character and create habits of order, neat ness, promptness, industry and apreciation of responsibility. We also aim to build up a sound body and a love of fairness In sport. Our athletic facilities are extensive, and all athletics are carefully supervised. Gymnasium Instruction for all. Our Classical ajid Scientific courses prepare for all colleges, and our Com mercial course for business lite. The location of the school Is healthful and beautiful, and the building Is fireproof. Wrile for lllvMratti Catalogue. HARRY N. RUSSELL. Head Mailer, Ktarnty, N.b. I mil UJit ni!iiSKAbU.A MILITARY ACADEMY A Boarding School Home for manly boys. New fireproof build ings, splendid location, forty acres of campus, oue Instructor for each ten boys. Academic, Military, Manual Training, Business Courses. Pre pares for college or business; school accredited by the University of Nebraska and North Central Association of Colleges. Small boys' de partment from 8 to 14 years. Number limited. School opens Septem ber 16th, 1909. For informaton or catalogue address, B. D. HAYWAHD, Superintendent, Office 14th and U Sts. Lincoln, Nebraska. Kail Term ol tlie Mosher-Lampman Business College Begins September 1 winvZV?., - - - - v .r.?n utmiiiran ,a TVC. k . m. ner """nsnu and Touch Tj'pwrltln will Drenara vou to hold the host stenographic positions In Nebraska. prepare you Thorough court.es In Business, EnjllKh and Special PenmanshiD Plenty of (rood positions for araduatna "nmansnip. Our teaching Is not done by advanced students, but by the most exner. lenced and skilled corps of Instructors in tho west exper- Our 1 ttle booklet, entitled "(JLTARANTEED STATEMENTS" Is brimful rts-hf1'; lntt0r-ma.t,?n r-ard'P Rainess education. You should , published'7" contain" " or the finest specimens of penmanshTp eve? 5 .t ,.ir. 8 w. . ? If you do thl at ono we will credit your account with 11.00. payable to you to hooks and stationery when you Tenter our School It will pay you to real this booklet before you decide what school to auend. Address. Work lor Board B rownell For You Women And Girls Episcopal school accredited to Eastern Women's Colleges, Universities of Chicago, Nebraska, Etc instructor. Attractive home life care fully supervised by experienced house mothers. For illustrated year book, Address EDITH D. MARSDEN. B. A., Principal. Beoinners IN ANY BRANCH have the firmest of foundations Learn well the funda mentals and we can assure you your success. Writ for Cataloguo "B" University School oi Music mrcoLir, niiBiitA Wentworth military Academy Oldest and Largest in Middle West. Government Supervision. Highest rating by War Department. Infantry, Artillery and Cavalry Drills. Courses of stuJy prepars for Universities, Government Academies or for Business Life, Accredited by North Central Association of Schools and Colleges. Manual Tralnlne. Separate Department for Small Boys. For catalogue, sJdress The Secretary, Boa A. leslnytoa. Ma. KANSAS CITY VETERINARY GOLLEQE Western IVItlltarv Ideal, location near fit. Loula. Fix modern ally. Immediate appUo.tloa 'advlslC -. -sp y 7.4, h mit mi in HT'h riufjtit n v u rn in "1 neral business studies pusiuun. MOSHEH a LAMPMAN, 17TH AND FAUNAM STREETS, OMAHA, NEB. aaall C3T3. I60J Omaha. . Nebraska pAOULTY composed of col lege graduates, all exper- lenced teachers. Native F renrh and German instructors. Thorough courses offered in Music, Art and Domestic Economy. Well equipped gymnasium. Out-door sports, tennis, field hockey, etc., under competent OF MUSIC SHOULD 3SHI JS6S Ket ut Street, leasee City, Me. Acnri em fppsip Alton bulMl.,,. i t m A,Jino.,a caIVl?" "" il ""I- EVERY parent has ideals in regard to the kind of training his boy should receivo when he goes away to school. Racine College has a remark able record in the matter. Write tor our little book "The right school for your boy." We send it and our catalogue free. Racine, College Racine, Wis. Summer camp affiliated. T5i Winona Seminary WINONA, MINNESOTA FOR YOUNG WOMEN Conducted by the Sisters of St. FYahois. Academic Department, Con snrvatory ot Music, X)epartment of Voice, Dramatlo Expression, Art. Household Economics. Home life of the student Is Ideal. Indoor and Out door Athletics, Literary, Musical, Dramatic Relsnces. Catalogue, book let of information, department bulle tins mailed on application. Semin ary is accredited to the University of Minnesota. WHAT SCHOOL Information concerning the ad vantages, rates, extent of cur riculum and other data about the best schools and ooileges can be' obtained from the School and College Information Bureau of (he Omaha Bee All Information absolutely free and Impartial. Catalosue of any particular sohool cheerfully fur nished upon request FOREST PARK xroeger. Piano, Stockhoff I'iano. 4Mb Tear. Oollere and Colleg-e repertory. Certificate admits to Wellesley. flmlth. vunnn. ana jni. noiyose. 24 Instructors. UNIVERSITY slon. Prompt applica tion necessary. Board and tuition IS6S-I285. HU. AJTVA SVXBD OAIKKS, Pres't ST. LOUU. MO. GRAND ISLAND COLLEGE Regular college preparatory courses Music, Art, and Commercial oourses of fered. IWIthful location. Expenses mod erate. Catalogue sent on request. Ask ui about the school. Address, bi. Oeorre Sutherland, President, GRAND ISLAND.. NEBRASKA ASK us about a school We will semi yea catalogues and sskeol la. formation of anr kiae which yoa esnnat obtain eaally ia anr other way, The service ia ABSOLUTELY rkLE. No charts bow ee a4 ear other time. Educational Informatlonfiureau Klnloch Building, St. Louie, Mo. Pennsylvania, Msrcersburf. Mercersborg Academy lor Boys Oollere Preparatory Oourses Personal Interest taken, with aim to Inspire In pupils lofty Ideals of scholarship. sound Judgment ad Christian manliness. For catalogue sdlress. William Mann Irvine. Ph. X.. Pres. Zilnooln, Nebraska. GOOD A k,h srad acheol eonavotac kr a irons fKuicr and praparing lor ti POSITIONS teal p;llloni Meal location. No luitTniia Mloona In Lincoln. Fall Opanlni An Al IUUI Sapt. 1. Wriia for baiutlful aaU. HBtlilliTrt lofu- Adnroia w. M. Brjanl. rraa.. ATTEND Tabor College Tabor, Iowa. THE WOLCOTT BCHOO', Pouneeath Avenue and Marion St., jscvor, Colorado. Not a low priced school, lxsl equipped private school In the west. Highest standard of scholarship. Diploma admits to Wel leMey, Vasssr, Smith, In addiilon to western tin! verMtlpe. Introductory references required. York College Strong, Ptrst Class, lowest Bates Collegiate, Normal, Business, Muslo, Expression and Art Departments. Issues all grades of state certifi cates. Year nf,n MnA.nhkAs 1 . v - ' K ..ww , ,IU. Wnc. B. smrsi.T. x. I - wv, M OS., SBV