Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 23, 1919, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    s V
THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1919.
9
CHOOl
LEGE
LEARNS OF DEATH
OF OFFICER WHO
ATTENDED 1) HERE
tieut.-Col. Sherman Avery
White of Class of '98
Died in France of
Double Pncjimonia.
Lincoln, Neb., June 22. (Special.)
--After considerable difficulty and
much letter writing, Miss An'nis
Chaiken of the alumni office at the
state niversity has se'cured news
concerning the last days of Lieut.
Col. Sherman Avery White w'ho re
reived the degree of A.B. from the
university in '98." A fellow offirer
wiiies: "He was, at the time of his
death in command of all trains, of
the Sixth division, regular army in
the Argonne. He had worked day
and night for weeks under almost
iirporsible conditions in a country
where the roads were mired down
i lv incessant rains. When he
left this country he was still quite
unfit fcllowing a severe illness with
double pneumonia. Brother officers
speak of his exceptional qualities as
an officer and a man, never sparing
himself. The country lost in the
deaMi of Colonel White an officer
of unsurpassed ability and soldierly
qualities." Lieutenant Colonel White
died of disease, November 3, 1918,
-and was buried ' November 4 . in an
open space on the hillside near
where the 6th sanitary train was lo
cated. His grave is marked with a
ctcs and one tag No. 94!. The
'" widow and two sons of Lieutenant
Colonel White are now at Falo
Alto. Cal
Capt. C. J.j Frankforter went to
Camp Dodge, Ja., '.this week to re
ceive his discharge from the themi
call warfare service.
Ordnance Sergt. William J. Allen,
who has been at the state university
for three years and has had 33 years'
service in the regular army, will re
tire about June 30, to make his home
in Missouri where he has agricul
tural interests. I
War Memorial Scholarships
to Two Grinnell Students
Grinnell, la., June 22. War memo
rial scholarships, a tribute to the
three members of the class of 1919
who gave their lives in the military
service, were selected as" the class
gift by the senior class of Grinnell
college at a meeting held last eve
ning. The Grinnellians to whom the
scholarships will be dedicated are:
Wayne Kauffman of Union, la., who
died at the Detroit Naval Training
Station; Karl McGlothlen of Shel
don, Ja., a member of the 168th In
fantry who .was killed in action, and
Harold Rayburn of Newton, la., who
died at Camp Dodge.
The memorial scholarship take.!
the form of a living endowment, and
is a part of' the Loyalty Endowment
Fund which is being Organized here.
Election Would Qecide
T v $400,000 Bond Issue
l Sale City, Ga. The county com
missioners of Mitchell county have
called an election for the approval
of a $400,000 bond issue. The
money will be used for concrete
road paving. The election will be
held July 3.3
3
EARN FROM
$90 to $200 per month.
Be an Operator and Agent.
Position secured or tuition
refunded.
NO POSITION, NO PAY
We qualify you for a posi
tion and permit you to pay us
out of your earnings when em
ployed. Station Work and
-Block System taught. Stu
dents go DIRECT FROM
SCHOOL into positions.
Largest and Best
Equipped
TELEGRAPHY
COLLEGE
in th
WEST or SOUTH.
Wabash R. R. Wire,
i
Oyer 500 students each year.
Write for catalrgue.
CHILLICOTHE TEL
EGRAPHY COLLEGE,
' 27 Irvinf Ava., Chillicothe, Mo.
LsyMBeMLM l,M.lM,lM.WIM,1,,,p j JjpjiiilTn i P S 1 1 1 ! 1 HI 1 10 j 111 I j ! Dili !lf ffijllffi i I j 11 j 1 1 M I M M d'i i l!Tf!Wi 'P! illffi! Ill !' 1 1 1 i i i ! j i i 1 1 j'j i j j ' jl ! I lip fill ilrtliii 111! i I H 111 ' " 1 1 , P j P u 1 1 i i liHlI j ii i'j jj i ! I i'i i il I j n Ai j lOl : i ! i i . '. " 1 1 1 H ! 1 i ) i i ii i ' i i j ! i ; j j'jji j! 1
' fcvery tiling in the way ot standard Lducation in College or Liberal Arts
TEACHERS' COLLEGE SCHOOL OF EXPRESSION. . v
University
News Briefs
1 Lmcoln, Neb. June 22. (Special.)
Curtiss C. Grove left the university
a ytn.r ago last May to enlist in the
nav.ii officers' training school. Feb
ruary he received the rank of en
tign. He writes the university au
tnonties of the strenuous training
which men received in 'that school
and states that he will re-enter the
university next fall. The university
illows two hours credit tor each six
months spent in service and to those
who receive commissions an addi
tional nine hours is given.
Pi of. L. B. Tuckcrman, who holds
the chair of theoretical physics at
the state university, writes from
Washington, D. C. that he is just
getting started in his work with the
bureau of standards. ' He s in the
material testing section and is work
ing on an aeroplane fabric. The gov
ernment seems to be working up
thoroughly the technique of aero
planes. Word has been received at the
alumni office of the state university
of the gallant death in service of
McKinley Pound, who was a stu
dent at the university previous to
his enlistment. Mr. Pound dashed
through a heavy barrage to pick up
a wounded companion who had both
limbs literally torn off. A 'ieutenant
then followed and helped Mr. Pound
carry off the man. Mr. Pound's
relatives live at Mt. Vernon, S. D.
Prof. B. E. Moore of the physics
department at the state university is
working hard on some research
problems this summer.
Prcf. C. A. Skinner of the physics
t'.epartment at the state university is
spci ding his vacation at Rosseau,
Ont., where Mrs. Skinner's people
reside After July 1 Prof. Skinoer
will take up work with the bureau
of standards at Washington, D. C.
A. S Pearse, who graduated from
the University of Nebraska ahd in
'04 received the degree of M.A., is
now professor of zoology in the
University of Wisconsin. He has
recently sent to the alumni office
at the state university a list of bis
publications, amounting to 60. The
first of these dates back to 1896. His
earliest works dealt with subjects
he worked upon in Nebraska .The
subject of a recent book ot his is
"Fishing in Venezuela."
Prof. C. A. Turrell who received
the decree of B. Sc.. in the Tlni
ty of : ebraska in 1896, is now pro
fessor bf romance languages in the
University of Arizona. He has mst
published a translation of seven con
temporary Spanish plays with an in
troductory sketch of modern Span
ish dramatists.
One hundred graduate students
are pursuing work in the summer
school at the state university. Some
are taking undergraduate work as
public school teachers; the rest are
mosrly working for the masters' de
gree. One-half are registered with
out reference to a degree. The sub
ject: they are carrying and the
number areas follows: Economy
1, botany 1, physics 2, chemistry 6,
American history 7, .education 7,
English literature 13. European his
Saint Joseph Academy
FOR
DES MOINES, IOWA.
BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL
Conducted by the Sister of Charity, B. V. M.
Affiliated with the Catholic University, Washington, D. C, and accred
ited' by the State University of Iowa.
MUSIC, ART, HOME ECONOMICS
Academic Department, Classical, Scientific and Commercial Courses.
Special Commercial, Courses of one or two years.
' Intermediate Grades.
IDEAL LOCATION MODERN EQUIPMENT
LARGE CAMPUS AND RECREATION GROUNDS
Address lister Superior.
NEBRASKA WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY, UNIVERSITY PLACE, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
FALL QUARTER COMMENCES SEPTEMBER 16
tory 1, philosophy 1, Latin 1, mathe
matics 3.
Kent K. Kimball, University of
Nebraska, has just been called again
to a position in the United States
geological survey. Mr. Kimball first
sereJ in Oklahoma as an oil geol
ogist and during the war was en
listed in aviation service from which
position he was sent to Washington
to ao geologic and military mapping-
Miss Letta Clark, supervisor in
English in the Temple High school,'
has gone to Wyoming to spend her
vacation.
t
Mrs. Lucile Shields, secretary in
the Ttmple High school, has gone
to spend two months with her
mother in Denver.
Prof. J. P. Senning was ap
pointed by the governor as the dele
gate to the national conference in
t?Ni:tion at Chicago and attended
last Monday and Tuesday. Repre
sentatives of all the states were
thtre to discuss the various forms
of taxation. The idea of the confer
ence is to promote an intelligent
system of taxation.
C. K. Morse, superintendent of
the schools at Nelson, Neb., is just
bpek from war service in France.
He has not yet received his dis
charge from the army. He i a
graduate of the University of Ne
raska. Jamesf H. Pierce and Walter
Glaser, former students at the state
university, visited their alma mater
this week. The latter saw overseas
service and the former served in the
army on this side.
Savage Opens Summer
School in Penmanship
In the capacity of supervisor of
writing of Omaha City schools J. A.
Savage for the past five years has
come into personal contact with
over one thousand teachers and thir
ty thousand students ranging from
the first grade through high school.
Mr. Savage has been in the com
mercial school work for the last
18 years and during that time has
been connected with the old Omaha
Business college and the Grand Is
land Business college.
"The importance of writing," said
Mr. Savage, "is said by business
me-i to be one of the most import-in:
subjects taught and every one
who applies for a position in a busi
ness office finds it greatly to his ad
vantage. My summer school is only
a temporary term of seven weeks
but from the outlook I will have a
large class throughout the summer."
Harp Playing Is Growing
Fast Into Popularity
"The revival of the harp in the
social and musical circles is the
greatest evidence of a development
in culture and refinement," said
Miss Loretta DeLona, who had
many brilliant pupils in New York,
Philadelphia and other large cities
bcoie coming to Omaha. "I am
proline! to say that Nebraska has
many talented young harpists now
following the summer school in the
I.yri. building."
Recently, the head of the leading
harp firm in Chicago, remarked that
he wished other harp teachers would
advance their pupils as much as
Miss DeLona is doing.
GIRLS
Q NFRRASKANS
V 111 Ullll viiiiiiv
s-r-rrim nm i rnr
A I ItnilUULLCbC
NOW IN FRANCE
Former State U Student
Writes From Montpelier,
France, That He Attends
University jThere.
Lincoln, Neb., June 22. (Special.)
Dean W. G. Hastings of the state
university law college has received a
letter from Sergt. Carl E. Geiger, a
former student in the law college.
Sergt. Geiger writes from the uni
versity of Montpellier, Fraiue, that
Nebraska is there represented by
nine students out of a body of 500.
He finds himself associated with
students from each of the 48 states
and also from all parts of France
him an ample opportunity to get the
general attitude towards the ''future
America", and Mr. Geiger believes
this may be very valuable informa
tion some day. He is planning to
return to the college of law in the
state university next fall.
Members ot the graduating class
of '19 at the state university are
gradually being located in high
school positions in the state. The
following will go to the places
named: Jeanette Miller, Tecumseh;
Elizabeth Babcock, Geboa; Matilda
Strasser, Wood River; Ruth E.
Berry, Exeter; Elva Kokjer, Carle
ton; Hannah McCorkindale, Supe
rior; Orville Lee Hedrick, Tecum
seh. Ti.e latter will carry the work
of vocational agriculture, for which
the teacher's employment bureau of
the university has many calls.
The department, of physics at the
state university has the largest at
tendance in any summer session in
its history. Many premedics who
have been in war service are making
up requirements so that they may
enter the medical school regularly
next fall.
Omaha Business College
to Have Summer Classes
The Omaha Business college,
seventh floor of the Bee building,
has been having such great demand
for stenographers writing the
Mosher system of shorthand that it
is impossible to supply the demand.
In addition to the regular day
school classes, meeting at the resi
dental college all the year around,
the college now teaches all the
branches by the home study method,
through the extension college
Wherever possible to organize
classes of six or more in the smaller
towns and cities, an instructor visits
the students at stated intervals to
go over the work and help them.
Two special summer classes in
shorthand are to be held at the col
lege June 30th to August ISth.
Help! Help! Help!
P We are deluged with calls for competent commercial help,
P and the demand is becoming more and more insistent as the pp
p season advances. N sp
P Why not begin your training now, and be ready for a good gp
H position by January 1? g
m CATALOG FREE. fl
NEBRASKA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
Corner O and 14th
The MISNER SCHOOL
OF THE SPOKEN WORD
Prepares Students for Chautauqua and
Lyceum Circuits.
Special Coaching for Public Appearances.
Available Studio for Plays and Recitals.
Complete Courses in Oratory, Dramatic
Art, Public Speaking and Expression.
For Information Write
iiiu iriiui luxi kj s,f JUt M
of the bpoken Word
Division B, Omaha, Nebraska. 11 ' II Iffl
Studio, 17th and Farnam Sts. Telephone Walnut) 3132. 1 H
I Many Noted Speakers at
T J C J O L 1
lndlal wnday bchoo
Meeting at Marion, Ind.
(By International News Service.)
Marion, Ind., June 22. Many
prominent speakers from various
parts of the United States are on
the program of the Indiana Sunday
School association's annual con
vention, I which opens here tomor
row and continues through Wed
nesday and Thursday. Among
them are:
Dr. Henry F. Cope, secretary of
the Religious Educational associa
tioi and author of a number of Sun
day School books.
Mrs. Maud J. Baldwin of Chicago,
international superintendent of the
children's division.
Mrs. Georgia Lee Young of Tole
do, O., superintendent of the adult
federation work of the Ohio Sunday
school association.
Dr. George R. Grose, president
of De Pauw University, Greencastle.
Ind.
C. W. Shinn of Chicago, secretary
of the Cook County Sunday School
association.
H. Augustine Smith of Boston,
Mass., professor of music and uni
versity and extension lecturer.
Prof. R. A. Waite of the Interna
tional Sunday School association,
Chicago.
Miss Pearl L. Weaver, children's
division .superintendent of the Ill
inois Sunday School Association.
Ann Gifford Now in Work
of Relief in Serbia
Ann GifTord recently accepted the
secietaryship of a unit sent to Ser
bia on relief work for the War
Csn;p Community service. She de
termined several years ago that she
was going to do her part in the war
a;:d although the daughter of a
prominent Omaha physician and not
in need of the finances that the
work brings, she went to school at
Boyles college, completed the work
and with her diploma in her hand,
annlied for work with the national
organization of the War Camp
Community service. She has been
in Washington a great part of the
time and sailed a short time ago on
foreign service.
Miss Barstow's School
A boarding and day school for
girls. Will begin its thirty-fifth
year September 25. College prepar
atory and academic courses. Has
many graduates in Smith, Vassar,
Wellesley and Bryn Mawr colleges.,
Indoor and outdoor gymnastics and
sports. Write for circular to
IS Westport Avenue,
KANSAS CITY, MO.
T. A. BLAKESLEE, President. f
Sts., Lincoln, Nebraska.
Write
Omaha Film Students
to Be Seen in Picture Here
Omaha is to have a dramatic col
lege devoted especially to photo
play training under the direction of
De Wolfe Couts, who has estab
lished offices and a studio in the
Lyric building. Almost the entire
third floor will be devoted to a
model motion picture studio.
Mercury lights, sets, dressing
rooms and all the paraphanalia of a
motion picture studio are on hand
and applicants will be put through
a regular course of training in
motion picture work. Couts is an
ex-director and a capable- camera
man himself and contends that half
of the people who apply for motion
picture work are unfitted for it
or are unfitted for the parts they
aspire to play. He proposes to
train and prepare students so that
when they really have an oppor
tunity to work before a camera
they will know the fundamentals of
what is required.
One of the things that will be
taken up when the school has been
organized for some time will be a
short film, with students of the
school in the cast and arrange
ments will be made for it to be
shown in an Omaha theater.
"Fay" Has Tooth Capped
by Real Gold Crown
New Castle, Pa. "Fay," an Aire
dale dog, is a classy animal. One of
her teeth was broken recently and
a local dentist capped the molar
with a real gold crown. The old
tooth was ground down and the
gold 'cap mounted without the
slightest protest by Fay. The dog
is owned by Harry G. Riser, a
prominent dog fancier.
HRISTIAN 8u"?
OLLEGE MiM0Url
and Conservatory of Music
"An Ideal Junior
Cellsss for Women"
86th year. Offers eioep-
nomicfi. Journalism.
Five modern buildings In
cluding $n,C00 Academie
Hall and Gymnasium, Dor
mitory with individual
rooms, hot and cold run
ning water. New 125.000
Katatorium. 20-acre camp
us. All advantages of a
pf great educational center.
-ra. witb care of a real college
home. For catalogue aud
vlew-bonlt. address
Mrs. L. W. St. Clalr-Moii. Pres.
Box 314. , Columbia. Mo.
mmm
liillili '!:illll!lilili!IHI!lllll!ll!T
Is a Standard Christian College
MEMBER OF THE NORTH CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
(Only two others of like standing in Nebraska)
It has a strong Conservatory of Music, also, with an equipment and Faculty of
the very best.
Hastings gives to those desiring to teach, Normal Courses leading to the various
grades of certification.
It supports an Academy of high rank.
Hastings College is located in a city which offers the best advantages literary,
religious andcultural.
It has a fine student body and clean, wholesome student activities for all. These
are musical, literary, religious, athletic, etc.
Its Bible Chair is endowed. It is Christian to the core.
It has dormitories for both men and yyomen, and board and room are given at
cost. '
' i
The only practice house in the state In connection with a course in Household
Economics is located on the Hastings College campus.
In athletics it has won its share of victories in the past four years; in oratory
and debating it has been in a class by itself. Hastings College has won 14 out of 16
inter-collegiate contests in debate the past four years. In the state oratorical con
tests it has carried off four firsts, and three seconds during this same time.
REGULAR COLLEGE YEAR OPENS SEPT. 9TH
Expenses Light. Work for All. Instruction, the Best.
and sciences.
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
Registrar, Division B, for Literature
Hastings College Notes.
Summer school enrollment Is the largest
Haxtlngs college has ever had and It Is
constantly Increasing. A reception to the
summer school studnnts and other stu
dents In the city was given In the li
brary by the college faculty last Tuesday
evening. A short program of music and
roudlngs was given and addresses of wel
come by Dean Weyer and President Crone.
Light refreshments with Ice cream were
served and. the whole affair was delight
fully Informal so that everybody got ac
quainted. President Crone led the "first
chapel on Wednesday morning.
Dr. Knauer reports a very helpful con
ference at Estes Tark where more than
a dczeh representatives of the T. M. C. A.
hnvo cone with him to prepare for making
the ' Y next year the beat In the history
of the Institution. A number of the young
ladles will represent the Y. W. C. A. at
the Laic Geneva conference In August,
thus both, of the Christian organizations
of the college will be well prepared for
their worl- beginning In September.
The Bummer conference put on by the
national board gives promise of being the
moat lergely attended of any of our con
ferences here the last half dor.en years.
William Ralph Hall of Philadelphia will
a?utn huve charge. Churches are send
ing from two to ten delegates. The fac
ulty will consist of Dr. Venner. ftev. Frank
V. Oetty of New York; Miss Florence
Norton and William Ralph Hull of Phila
delphia: Dr. S. S. Hllscher'and Dr. L. D.
Young of Lincoln; Rev. J. frank Young of
Omtth.i; Mrs. Mary It. Doollttle of the
foreign missionary board, and Mis Helen
Streeler of the women's home board.
Mis Mary Bryant remained at the col
lege until the summer school was wll
started and then left for her home In
Eoiters. Ark.
President Crone occupied the pulpit i
Cotner B,e,!ha,n7
jf. (Lincoln)
(LoIIege Nebraska
College of Liberal Arts, Teachers' College,
Bible College, Academy, Conservatory of Music,
School of Commerce, School of Expression, School
of Art and School of Home Economics.
OUR AIM: To give to youth a thorough academic training
with special outlook on the pergonal equation."" We seek to put
character behind a trained mind.
The fall semester begins September 15th. For catalogue or
information, address
J. H. BICKNELL, Secretary, Bethany, Nebraska. "
Write for Catalog or other information
R. B. CRONE, President, Hastings, Neb.
the Christian church 'last Sunday morn
lng on account of the Illness of the paiton
It J .K. Farmer la spending the weeli .
In Chicago.
T-
Read The Bee Want Ads for th
best opportunities in bargains.
"irflTT on the school quastiol
unless yon have ra4
A nri XTArp the catalog of th
AKtj JNU1 Jackson University ol
Business, Chillicothe.
INFORMED Mo- th '
vwuliu school and collect
prospectus ever printed. An education
within itself. After reading the book care
fully you will be able to separate thf
clover from the thistle, the wheat from the
chaff, in the school' and college field.
SHORTHAND, BOOKKEEPING. BANK.
ING. TYPEWRITING. PENMANSHIP,
ENGLISH. CIVIL SERVICE, and ADVER
TISING are the chief courses taught
Don't be like a sheep that follows blindly.
Investigate. Give Jackson University a
chance. Only independent business college
in the West.
YOU
CAN
SAVE
four months of tim
and 1100 or more in
cash by mastering the
principles of short
hand and bookkeeping
at home through the
Correspondence School and coming to Chil
licothe later to put . on the finishing
touches. Address
WALTER JACKSON, Pres.,
CHILLICOTHE, MISSOURI.
ACADEMY