Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 18, 1919, Page 3, Image 3

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    7
THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, AUGUST 18, 1919.
CHOOL
AND
CO
REGISTRATION
OF STUDENTS AT
HASTINGS LARGE
Outlook for Biggest Year in
History of College Is Good
Many Improvements
Under Way.
Hastings college is planning for
great things the next few years.
The number of students who have
already enrolled indicates that the
college is going to have the biggest
" enrollment in its history. New
LEARN BANKING
Bit dm&od fo ynanc m9 and J
Woman at good safari la booking, '
corporation buia work. Lt I
uatniayoa. Py ua &itr rcployd.
No potrtlon, no pay. A bin buildiam
on beautiful etmpui; 2000 tudww
yaarly. lUilroad far paid. Writ (or !
catalog;
CHiLLlCOTHE BUSINESS COLLEGE I
1937 Monro St. Chlllloottto, Mo. I
BwnaiaBaBaiHnnaiaBaiai
buildings have been purchased for
dormitories and nearly every avail
able space is now filled. From all
over the state as well as from
Colorado, Wyoming and Kansas
students are coming in large num
bers. During the last year of stu
dent activities the city has more
than held its own with other insti
tutions and the coming year prom
ises even better material for ath
letics, oratory and debating than
during the past
The building campaign fund is
moving along very rapidly; the
Bible home is already under con
struction; and the prospects tor
Liberty Memorial hall, the central
building, to cost $200,000, and the
Taylor dormitory, to cost at least
$60,000. are such that the authorities
are planning to' break ground for
the new buildings early next year.
Funds are available for the Pratt'
chapel to cost $50,000. This will
follow immediately the building of
the Liberty Memorial hall and the
dormitory. President Crone, who
has been with the institution more
than seven years, feels that the col
lege never has had half such an im
portant place in ' the educational
field as it possesses today. .Students
from all parts of Nebraska, includ
ing Lincoln and Omaha, are to be
enrolled the coming year, also from
1 Cheyenne, Wyo., and from Denver,
Waiting - Wishing -- Regretting
p Is this your program? Is it satisfactory? Is it profitable? P
g Those who begin one or more of our result-getting courses now, sp
i will have nothing to regret in after years p
jjgp Decide Now Begin at Once.
p Illustrated Catalog Free.
I NEBRASKA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
gH T. A. BLAKESLEE, President
P Ga and Electric BIdg.
Trinidad, Wray, Yuma and other
places in Colorado.
A strong faculty has been pro
vided for the year which will open
September 9. A number of addi
tional faculty members jiave been
secured. Professor McDill, who has
been connected with the Fremont
college for 12 years, will take
charge of the mathematics. Miss,
Luella Carter, who has been with
Bellevue college almost a dozen
years in the modern language de
partment will have charge of
French and Spanish. Miss Edith
D. Mattoon, head of the English
department of the Lawrence, Kan.,
high school, will assist in English;
and a physical director will be em
ployed for all forms of physical
education soon.
Corner O and 14th Sti., Lincoln, Neb. p
HARDIN JUNIOR COLLEGE
FOR YOUNG WOMEN
MEXICO, MISSOURI.
In continuous and successful operation since its founding,
1873.
A standardized Junior College.
A standardized II itrh School Department or Academy.
A department of Fine Arts, including Piano, Voice, Violin,
Music Appreciation, Orchestra, Public School Music, Theory,
Art, Expression, etc.
A vocational department, including Home Economics, Busi
ness, and Nownal Courses leading to a three years' State Cer
tificate. Gymnasium. $40,000. Natatorium, $25,000.
Hot and cold running water in dormitory rooms.
Refectory fitted with modern equipment.
Additional dormitory room being provided.
Session opens September 16.
Catalogue and View Book de luxe sent on request.
J. W. MILLION, A. M., L. L. D., President.
. Omaha Business College.
As a closing celebration of the summer ses
sion of the Omaha Business ColleKe a visit
was made by members of the school Fri
day afternoon to see the U, S. Army dis
play from the battlefields 6f Europe, and
to the city water works plant at Florence.
A very thorough Inspection was made of
the wonderful machinery and the scientific
methods by which nearly a quarter of a
million cf people and hundreds of fac
tories and places of business are constantly
supplied with splendid and abundant
water.
A new period of progress and develop
ment of the rollepe Is about to be marked
by moving Into larger and better quarters.
The growth has been so rapid since It was
originally organized as the Mosher Short
hand Institute In June, 1917, that this will
be the fourth change necessitated by ei
pandlng needs. While delightfully situated
in the Bee building, there have been times
when the large attendance taxed the ac
commodations to the point of cramping.
The college has been fortunate in securing
a new location with much more spacious
class rooms and other facilities that will
be greatly appreciated. At the opening
of the fall term, September I, the old and
new students will be welcomed In these
beautiful, well lighted rooms on the third
floor of the I.yrlo building, Seventeenth
and Farnam streets. With the added room
th' 'college win be able to care for a larger
enrollment In the well known courses
upon which an enviable reputation has
been built. Also there will be opportunity
for expansion along contemplated lines
which will prove even more attractive for
those wishing a complete business train
ing. The present offices In the Bee build
ing will be retained until the opening of
the fall term for the convenience of those
wishing to register.
Nebraska School of Business.
Miss Louise Reed has accepted a posi
tion with the American Poultry company
and Miss Battle Elliott with the Claflin
Printing company.
Miss Carrie Stewart has taken a position
In the office of Miss Nelson, county super
intendent, of Lancaster county. v
Supt J. A. Doremtis of Aurora and Rev.
A. G. Foreman of AVoodriver were among
the visitors of the week.
Miss Mynetta Henderson was a caller at
the college Wednesday. Miss Henderson
has recently taken a position with Uie
Western Electric company of Omaha.
A large normal training class is prepar
ing for the Gregg examinations which will
come next week. This Is the third and
last examination scheduled for the summer
session.
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Zoolt have gone to
Ansley, Neb., where Mj. Zook has a posi
tion as a cashier in a bank, and Mrs.
Zook is stenographer for a garage com
pany. Among the normal training students re
ceiving appointments to teaching positions
within tho week axe Miss Marie Tewks
bury t Creston, la.; Mabel Foreman at
f'cottshluff. Neb.; Miss Doris Hostetter at
llurneil. Neb.; and Miss Ruth McNutt at
Giltner.
During the first week of August the
number of calls coming to the college of
fice for commercial help was 92 per cent
greater than the demand for the same
period in 1918. At the close of business
Saturday night, August 9, sixty calls re
mained unsupplied.
Columbia
Missouri
HRISTIAN
OLLEGE
and Conservatory of Mnnc
"An Ideal Junior
Collent tor Womn"
0U year. Ortut exesp-
Art. Music. 0"ierre.
.rrBl-7 Kxpressiuu. Heme fcco-
nciulca. Journalism.
Five modern buiklinsa in
chiding $40. 00(1 Academic
Hall and Gymnasium. Dot
mitory with lii(IWldu;n
rooms. r.;it and cold nut
emu water. New J2.V000
NaUtoriurn. 20-acre camp
us. All advantaitca of
great educational eenlpr
with care of a real college
home. For catalogue and
riew-book, address
St. Clair-Mn, Pres.
Columbia, ft"
wmm
m mi
"Mrs, lVW
Rex 314.
ORTH
MILITARY ACADEMY
LEXINGTON, MISSOUt,
Oldest Military School West of the Mississippi River. 50-acre-grounds
with new buildings and equipment. Plenty of good
wholesome food. Separate small boys department. Gymnasium
and swimming pool. 43 miles from Kansas City. For Catalog
address, COL. S. SELLERS. 1843 Washington Ave., Lexington, Mo.
Bfl3arittTVsJ.fl.THopo'Xl).IX,Tarlv,&,1"P
IX. The Physical Man.
Athletie Coach, an Olivet end
Michigan University man.
Five Major Sports Foot Ball,
Basket Ball, Base Ball, Track, Ten
nis. Two "Gyms." Five-acre field.
Four five-lap. fully cindered track.
Notable "Tri-State" High School
Meet. Member State Athletic Asso
ciation. Financial foundation for athletics.
Physical training required.
Saint Joseph Academy
FOR GIRLS
Midland College to
Be Ready to Open at
Fremont in September
The Lutherans in Nebraska con
nected with the United Lutheran
church in America are not satisfied
with their past victory in securing
the renioval of Midland college
from Atchison, Kan., to Fremont,
Neb., by the raising of a subscrip
tion of over $175,000.
They are now planning to com
plete the campaign for $500,000,
which is to be used for campus ex
tension, for new buildings and tor
increased endowment. Rev. S. II.
Yerian, Ph. D., of Omaha will man
age the campaign, while Rev. C. H.
Lewis of Emerson will have charge
of the publicity connected with the
campaign.
This month the merger of the
Midland college and Fremont Nor-'
ma! college will be completed, and
in September Midland college will
open at Fremont.' Many of the dis
tinctive features of Fremont Nor- !
mat will be continued as before,
and there will be added the strong
faculty of Midland college, so that
there will be at least 21 on the fac
ulty of the new institution.
Midland college was a college of
high ranking in Kansas and will be
an acquisition of value to Nebraska
educational circles and with the
raising of the $500,000 or more con
templated by its friends it will have
a still higher ranking in Nebraska.
25 Complete Courses
Offered Omaha Young
Men byY. M. C. A.
The local Young Men's Christian
association is perfecting plans for
going into the night school work
much more extensively than here
tofore and announces that at the
opening of the school year, Monday,
Sentember 8. instruction will lip
9C j:.:..:..N
11111 111 i-J VUllllli;iC U1M1ULU1
courses. It is said that this will
be one of the largest, if not the
largest night school in the central
west.
The Young Men's Christian asso
ciation course will be open to all j
men of good moral character who
are between 15 and 45 years of age.
Instructors who are specialists in
their respective lines of work will
be employed. Among the subjects
to be taught will be the languages,
commercial law, show-card writing,
and free hand drawing. Then there
will be the three-year course in
accounting and business adminis
tration, commercial and railroad
telegraphy.
This year there will Jbe a school
of public speaking and English, con
ducted by Edwin Puis, and a school
of refraction, optometry and the
science of fitting eye glasses, under
the direction of Dr. Ethan Adams.
Rockford College
to Open New Course
for the Coming Year
A feature of Rockford college for
the coming year will be a Training
School for Social Workers. Its aim
will be to prepare young women to
go into the various phases of tnu
"cippl and rural welfare work,
thereby answering a great need in
the middle west and putting Rock
ford to the front as a center of
t '" o time!v activities. The college
vail seek to co-operate with the
various splendidly organized agen
cies already in this city.
Unusual opportunities for social
contacts and the development of
sane technique will be offered by
specialists through courses in
psychology, mental hygiene, sociol
ogy, comunity service, social medi
cine, child welfare, etc. An expert
director of this work has been found
in Professor Seba Eldridge, now a
professor and an assistant to the
director of the Smith college school
for social workers, Northampton,
Mass., a graduate in sociology of
Columbia university, and a former
agent of the United Charities of
New York City. Mr. Eldridge is a
thorough student of social problems
and is expected; therefore, to con
tribute much to community service.
LABOR BUREAU
AT UNIVERSITY
HAS BUSY YEAR
4,500 Towns Sent Calls for
Help, Involving in All
7,271 Persons, Re
port Shows.
The labor employment bureau at
the University of Nebraska has
completed i busy and helpful 12
months of work.
The record for the year ending
July 1 has been summed up. About
4,500 towns sent calls, involving in
all 7,271 persons.
More than 10,000 candidates were
recommended and it is known that
1,746 were employed.
This employment bureau activity
wa started by the government as
a war measure and the one at the
University of Nebraska was the
first located. Then an office was
opened up in Iowa university.
After that Prof. A. A. Reed was
called to Washington, D. C, and
plans were laid to put bureaus into
operation in all the state institu
tions where teachers were being
trained.
Professor Reed spent part of
January and 'February of the pres
ent year working in Georgia, Mis
souri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Wisconsin,
Michigan, Minnesota and the Uni
versity of Pittsburgh in the interests
of the government employment
bureaus. He also visited several
state superintendents of public in
struction to see about the relation
of the work to the state depart
ments. The plan was worked out to have
five zones corresponding to the ex
isting educational organizations
the northeastern, the middle Atlan
tic states, the south central, the
northern and the western associa
tion of colleges and secondary
schools. Each zone was to have
had a central office at a state uni
versity if possible. Arrangements
had been made for opening offices
in 15 of the states when the filibus
ter bill tied up the matter.
Try Bee Want Ads for business.
BE A TELEGRAPHER:
EARM (1 OH Tlh CM A aaAuvu I
Bit i.iud lor train 1 moo aw J
Wonen: Railroad and Wtra Union Work. I
PWiiuins. iiKHikinCl'niiM.eie, Stndrale I
onJ rmilro..l;W.h,l, H R. wire Wl
to School. NO POSITION NO PAY. Z
Attend on oraUt, Kr it.R. far..
writ lor eatahie. CHILLICC
tclcgbapht College
Mf tmlnf Av. Chllllaoth, M. I
iiiiiiiiiiiiMiiii!:ieiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiina
I ROCKFORD COLLEGE
Education of Individual
Standard Woman's College 70 years' fine traditions,
E high scholarship degrees first rank. Expert fac-
E ulty, greatly augmented this year.
E Strong courses in all liberalizing subjects taught in
their human relations Modern Languages, Classics,
History, Sociology, Philosophy, Sciences, Political
E Science.
E Special courses in Music, Art, Education, Home Eco-
nomics, Social Workers, Business, etc., leading ta
E degrees.
E Modern equipment' attractive location interesting
and wholesome social life.
1 WM. A. MADDOX, Ph. D.,
E , President. E
Box X, Rockford, Illinois. E
I
LEARN
The Tire Repairing
and Retreading Trade
Courses Include detail study of tire
construction and rebuilding, under the
tutelage of Mr. Clyde Eller, former in
structor of National Auto Training
School.
THREE WEEKS' TUITION $25.00.
For further information, writ
NATIONAL TIRE SHOP,
17th and Capitol Ave. Dept. B.
Omaha Nebraska.
FRANKLIN
ACADEMY
A Class "A" Accredited
Boarding School, Co-Educational,
College Preparatory
and Normal Courses, Fine Con
servatory of Music, Business
and Expression.
$250.00 per year.
Send for catalog.
Address,
Principal,
Franklin, Neb.
-Z. -
PL
DES MOINES, IOWA
(Epitcopal)
Saint Mary's School
Knozville, Illinois
rV Standard Preparatory School
and Junior College.
For Girls 12 to 20.
52d year commences Sept. 24.
Individual attention. Home life.
Athletics and physical culture.
Thorough training.
For information write: Rev.
F. L. Carrington, LL. D., Rector,
Box B, Knoxville. III.
BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL
Conducted by the Sitter 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 Sister Superior.
FOR BEST RESULTS TRY BEE WANT ADS
The University School of Music
Lincoln, Nebraska.
TWENTY-SIXTH YEAR
BEGINS SEPTEMBER 8TH
MUSIC
DRAMATIC ART
Playground Supervision and Story Telling
Complete Courses in All Departments.
Degree. Diploma. Teachers' certificate. Anyone may enter.
New catalog on request. Address
ADRIAN NEWENS, Director, 1103 R Street.
iiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiifitiTniTTimiiiiiiiiiihi.iihinimiMiu.i.iiimi.'iiiiiiiiiKii iiiiiiiuiiiimuiiinmnimiimimiH 1
"Come to
Omaha University"
- . .
N ron-Sectarian Co -educational
OMAHA University points to a record of over ten years of
thorough work. Created and made possible by men of
this city Omaha University offers exceptional opportu
nities to those who wish to secure an education at a rea
sonable expense. Under fine moral and spiritual atmosphere.
Highest class co-educatior.cd college in Omaha. Every facility
possible for the physical development of the individual excel
lent gymnasium and wholesome athletic spirit.
COURSES INCLUDE:
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. School of Law.
Teachers' Training School. Pre-Medical Department.
Department of Fine Arts. Home Economics Department.
Preparatory Department. Extension Department.
NIGHT SCHOOL
Well organzied campaign for $500,000 endowment now under way.
105
Fall Term Begins September Fifteenth
9
ENLARGED FACULTY AND WITH IMPROVED iuRRlCULUM
"For further information write Presildent Jenkins, Dept. B,
Omaha, Nebraska.
Tumi iiiiiiiii,iiiiiiiiii!ii:iiiiiiiii!i!i:i(!!ii!:ni?ii)iii, , mm ii! ii;!iiiiinmiiii!:ii milium inn nunm
ni:iiiiiiiiiliiliiliilitlliltiliiltiliiliiliiliiliiiii;iliilliniiiin
Boys Under Fifteen Years Should Be Boarding at
Conducted by ?
Sisters of Mercy I
rpH O ROUGH t
L grade and high -
ichool courses. Music,
Elocution. A pnel$ .
zquipped gymnasium.
Roller Skating Rink, 2
56 fr 80. New hall !
jiAl completed. 'z
Catalog on Request ?
Address j
ST. BERCHM AN'S SEMINARY, Marion, Iowa Sister s"Perio)r
,
r
NEBRASKA WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY, UNIVERSITY PLACE, LINCOLN, NLBRASKA
Everything in the way of Standard Education in College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
TEACHERS' COLLEGE SCHOOL OF EXPRESSION. SCHOOL OF MUSIC ACADEMY.
FALL QUARTER COMMENCES SEPTEMBER 16
Write Registrar, Division B, for Literature