The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, July 26, 1908, SECTION THREE, Page 6, Image 28

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    THE SUNDAY OREGOXIA
PORTLAND
ACADEMY
PORTLAND, OREGON
Twentieth Tear Opens
September 21, 1908
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EATON HALL
The gift of Hon. A. E. Eaton, of Union, Oregon,
to Willamette University. Mr. Eaton gave a great
address at the commencement exercises of the
University. President Homan, Salem, Or., will
gladly give information concerning the University
HILL
MILITARY
ACADEMY
A boarding and day school for
young men and boys. Accred
ited to Stanford, Berkeley, Cor
nell, Amherst, and all state uni
versities and agricultural col
leges. Make reservations now.
For illustrated catalogue and other literature
address J.W. HILL, M.D,, Principal and Proprietor
P OVR T L A N Pi OtR E G O N
9
."THE SCHOOL, OF QUALITY
Tenth and Morrison, Portland, Oregon A. P. Armstrong, LL.B., Principal
We occupy two floors 65 by 100 feet, have a $20,000 equipment,
employ a large faculty, give individual instruction, receive more calls
for office help than we can meet Our school admittedly leads all
others in quality of instruction. It-pays to attend such an institution.
CSoid Business Man : " Keep hammering away everlastingly on thorough;
work. It will win out in the end." Said, an Educatort "The quality of instruc
tion given in your school makes it the standard of its kind in the Northwest"
C.Open all the year. Students admitted at any time. Catalogue free.
References: Any bank, any newspaper, any business man. in Portland.
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BUSINESS COLLEGE!
WASHINGTON AND TENTH STREETS
PORTLAND. OREGON
WRITE FOR CATALOG
The School that Places You in a Good Position
The Academy fits boys and
girls lor EaBtern and Western
colleges. Well - equipped labor
atories In Chemistry and Physics.
A Gvmnasium in charge , of a
skilled director.
A Primary and Grammar School
Under the same management re
ceives boys and girls as early
as the age of S and fits for the
Academy, giving Bpecial atten
tion to the essentials of an ele
mentary training.
The Academy Wagon will
make Its tour as formerly
through the northwest part of
the city to bring -and return
children of the first and second,
years of the primary depart
ment. Reliable caretakers will
take charge of the children of
those years coming and return
ing on the Irvington and Mount
Tabor carlines.
Office hours for the Summer, 9
A. M. to 12 M., and a to 4 P. HI.
CATALOGUE ON APPLICATION
Pacific College
Newjberg, Oregon
Tne "Quaker" College
Coeducational
Preparatory and College
Courses
An Ideal
College Town
Opportunities
for Self-Supporting
Students
Tuition for Year
COLLEGE $44.00
ACADEMY $35.00
OPENS SEPTEMBER 28
Mills College
FOR YOUNG WOMEN
Only woman' college on Pacific
Coast. Chartered by the State of
California, and controlled by strong
Board of Trustees. Four years' col
lege course leading to degree. En
trance requirements to freshman
class the same as at Stanford and
University of California. For three
years only the three upper classes of ,
the Seminary Dept., offering prepara
tion for Mills College, the universi
ties and Eastern colleges, will be
continued. (Accredited.) Special
advantages offered in Music. Art and
Domestic Science. Earnest Christian
Influences; non-sectarian. Ideal loca
tion in beautiful Oakland hills.
Grounds comprise 150 acres. Fall
term begins August 1J, '08. For cat
alogue and brochure ot views, address
MILLS COLLEGE
Mills College P. O.. California.
Columbia University
PORTLAND, OREGON.
Boarding and Day School for Young
Men and Boys.
Collegiate Coarse in Arts, Letters,
History and Economics and Philosophy.
Coarse Preparatory fcr General Sci
ence, Electrical. Mechanical and Civil
Engineering. Architecture, Arts, Letters
and Economics.
Commercial Coarse affords thorough
preparation for Business.
Location unsurpassed. Eighty acres
of Campus.
Largest Gymnasium In the West.
For Terms and Entrance Require
ments apply for Catalogue.
Catalogue Free on application to the
President.
11 .III..IIH.. I IIMII.I I I I ..HI 11 MMNMBt
CAUSE OF EDUCATION HAS HAD
SPLENDID PROGRESS ON COAST
Great Institutions of Present Day, Among Best in Country, Had Small
Beginnings in Early Pioneer Life.
HARDLY had the first pioneers made
homes for themselves In the Oregon-
country than they began plan
ning to give their children something of
the educational advantages to which the
parents had been accustomed in the
East. Small schools soon sprang up where
several families had settled near to
gether, and where this was Impossible,
the parents themselves became teachers
within the home. But the pioneers
caught some glimpse of the future of
the country they had chOBOn and began
laying plans for schools that should
teach more than the elementary
branches. Academies' were soon started
out ot which have grown the splendid
Institutions of today.
Willamette University at Salem is
the oldest school In the Pacific North
west. It was' first established as a
mission school for the Indians in 1835,
' by Jason Lee, a Methodist missionary.
In 1842 the school was moved from Its
first location on the Willamette to
Salem, where It became known as Ore
gon Institute, and six years later was
Incorporated under Its present name.
Pacific University at Forest Grove,
ranks as the second oldest college In
the Northwest. It was founded as an
academy In 1847 by Tabitha Brown and
the following year was chartered by
the state through the efforts of Rev.
George H. Atkinson and Rev. Harvey
Clark. The next Institution, McMinn
vllle College, was organized by the
Baptists in 1865. The first' Catholic
school In Oregon was St. Mary's Aca
demy, founded in 1859.
Soon after this the need of a stafe
school became recognized and the Ore
gon Agricultural College was founded.
For Its support Congress in 1862, ap
propriated 90,000 .acres of land on con-'
dltion that the school should be in
operation by 1867. A denominations?
school of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, South, at Corvallls, was
charged with the management of (he
new college, which grew rapidly to a
great Institution.
The University of Oregon, at Eugene,
was organized about 1870, with J. W.
Johnson, a Tale man, the first presi
dent. Advanced education was taken up In
Washington later than In Oregon. The
first higher school to be founded In
that state was the present University
of Washington, at Seattle, which waa
organized in 1867, as the Territorial
University. Whitman College, at Walla
Walla, was founded by the Congrega
tionalists two years later.
At first the history of these early In
stitutions in the Northwest was a rec
ord of constant work and effort to
overcome the many obstacles and hard
ships Incident to the establishment of
schools in a wild and sparcely settled
country. . But the men behind the va
rious academies and colleges were men
of determination, and progress, though
slaw, was steady.
How great the advancement of edu
cational facilities has been these latter
years can tie realized by anyone familiar
with the present situation. Modern meth
ods and thorough courses prevail and
young people are more and more com
ing to realize that nothing is to be
gained by leaving their home schools
to attend those of the East.
WILLAMETTE SHOWS GAINS
Methodist School Will Soon Have
line Building.
Willamette University, at Salem, under
the auspices of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, is experiencing the most prosper
ous period of its existence. Not only has
the registration been Increasing rapidly,
but the equipment of the school Is also
being added to. Under the direction of
Fletcher Homan, the new president, the
next school year Is expected to be a rec
ord one.
Construction is soon to begin on Eaton
Hall, which, when completed, will become
the main building of the institution. It
will be of brick nd stone and will cost
J5U.000. The money for this much-needed
building was donated by A. E. Eaton, of
Union.
Willamette is the oldest educational in
stitution in the state, having grown out of
a school founded among the Indians by
Jason Lee, an early Methodist mission
ary. The campus lies in the center of
Salem and Is one of the chief attractions.
University f Idaho
MOSCOW, IDAHO
The University comprises Four Colleges and Schools: 1, College
of Letters and Sciences; 2, College of Agriculture; 3, The School of
Applied Science; 4, The State Preparatory School.
THE TUITION IS FREE IN ALL DEPARTMENTS.
THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
grants a B. S. degree upon completion of four-year course. It also
offers a short course in Dairying and in Winter course for farmers.
Students can take up Agricultural instruction in the. preparatory
schooL , ,
For detailed information address the Director of Experiment Sta
tion, Moscow, Idaho, or Francis Jenkins, Bursar.
PACIFIC UNIVERSITY
FOREST GROVE, OREGON. .
An ideal school for the young men and women of the Northwest,
Full college and preparatory courses.
Conservatory of Music well equipped. f
Clean athletics encouraged.
Finest women's dormitory in Oregon.
A loyal and enthusiastic student body.
Surroundings unsurpassed.
Expenses moderate. ' Write for catalogue.
Oregon Agricultural College
COURSES OFFERED:
AOIUCTLTCRE Including courses In Horticulture, Agronomy. Animal
Husbandry, Dairy Husbandry, Poultry Husbandry, etc
DOMESTIC SCIENCE AND ART Including courses In Cookery, Launder
ing. Home Nursing, Home Sanitation, Household Decoration, Dress
making, Millinery, eto.
ENGINEERING AND MECHANIC ARTS Including courses In Civil, Elec
trical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering, and such work In, Mechanle
Arts as carpentry, forging, plumbing, steam fitting, etc
COMMERCE Including courses in Accounting and Business Administra
tion. Banking and Finance. Trade and Transportation. Political Science,
Political Economy, Stenography, Typewriting, etc
PHARMACY A thorough course preparing students for licensed pharma
cists. FORESTRY A thorough course preparing students for position In the
Government Forestry Service.
MUSIC Including; courses in Voice Culture. Piano, Violin, Musical History,
Harmony, Theory, Counterpoint. Band Instruments, etc
The Oregon Agriculture College provides a liberal, thorough and prac
tical education; prepared for efficient service; has IS buildings with modern
equipment: 77 members of the faculty; tuition free; annual registration
fee, 15; board and room In College Dormitories, 13.00 to IS. SO per week; In
private families, S.50 to $4.00 per week. The College opens for the ad
mission, of students September 25th. ,
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Oregon's Scientific. Tecnnical Institution of Higner Learning
FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE AND FURTHER INFORMATION, ADDRESS
REGISTRAR, OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE, CORYALLIS, OR.
MANY PRIVATE SCHOOLS WITH
WIDE RANGE IN THEIR COURSES
All Leading Denominations Conduct Institutions on Pacific Coast,
Including Colleges, Academies, Technical and Business Schools.
nvi SIDE from the public educational
J system that has been provided
' - by the several states on the Pa
cific Coast, there is no lack of facilities
for those who prefer private institu
tions. The range of private Institu
tions Is very wide. Including primary
and preparatory schools and colleges,
as well as business and technical
.schools. Many of the institutions are
co-educatlonal, but there are others ex
clusively tor men and for women.
A large proportion of the private
schools are conducted by the various
denominations, and those who desire
an institution where church influences
prevail will find nearly all leading de
nominations represented. The Cath
olics have perhaps more schools than
any other sect. Besides the numerous
parochial schools, they conduct both
academics and colleges. Columbia
University in Fortland. and Mount
Angel College, at Mount Angel, are
among the advanced schools for boys.
Other Catholic schools In Portland are
St. Mary's Academy and College for
girls, and the Christian Brothers' Busl.
ness College, which is to open In new
quarters this year.
Throughout Oregon there are numer
ous denominational schools. Among
these are the following: - Pacific Uni
versity, Forest Grove, under control
of the Congregationalists, although not
strictly a denominational school; Wil
lamette University, at Salem. Methodist,
and Pacific College, Newberg, Friends.
In Portland there are several prepara
tory schools of high standing, includ--ing
Portland Academy, a Presbyterian
Institution, and Hill Military Academy,
under private auopices. Vashon Col
lege, at Burton, Wash., Is another mil
itary school of advanced standing which
bears an enviable reputation.
Few private schools for girls have- yet
been established on the Pacific Coast,
but those that are here rank with the best
institutions in the East. Among the most
prominent of these is Mills College, of
Berkeley, Cal., the only chartered school
for women In the West; Miss Parker's
School, Pelo Alto, Cal., and Irving In
stitute and California Conservatory, of
San Francisco. San Francisco also has
an excellent technical college In the Van
Der Nalllen School of Engineering. The
Berkeley Business College Is another lead
ing California institution In Its particular
"line, while prominent among the local
commercial schools Is the Portland Busi
ness College.
In many ways the private schools of
Oregon, Washington and California offer
advantages that cannot be duplicated
elsewhere. In their faculties these In
stitutions have attracted many of the
most competent educators of the country
men who have the spirit of optimism
and progress characteristic of the West.
As the attendance at these institutions
is comparatively small, students are
brought into direct contact with the fac
ulty. In most Instances these institutions
also have the best of equipment.
In their social life the Western schools
are particularly free from undesirable in
fluences. Most of the institutions are in
cities of small population and those lo
cated In larger places have a community
life of their own that is most pleasant.
Fraternities, which have drawn factional
lines so distinctly in Eastern colleges,
are not numerous in the West. In schools
where fraternities have been formed on
the Pacific Coast, the organizations have
not taken up the features that have
brought them into disfavor in the East.
The broad democracy of the West is to
be found in the schools perhaps more
than elsewhere.
GILLESPIE
SCHOOL OF EXPRESSION
Devoted to jreneral culture & well as
to special expressional training.
Courses arranged for students and
teachers of expression, t)ubllc school
teachers, public readers, clergymen and
other public speakers, and those desiring
vocal, physical or personal culture.
Advanced methods and progressive In
structors. ' Fall Term Open September 15.
For information apply to the, principal,
MR& EMMA WILSON GILLESPIE.
534 Morrison St., Portland, Or.
Phones: X 4872 and, Pacific 688.
State Normal Schoo
BELLIXGHAM, WASH.
Tenth school year opens Sept. 9.
Graduates this year, 44.
Enrollment past year, 379.
Faculty of 24 members.
Library of 10,000 volumes.
Four science laboratories.
Courses In manual training.
Museum of 5000 specimens.
Well equipped gymnasium.
EDWARD T. MATHES, Principal.
SCHOOL MAKES RAPID STRIDES
Oregon Agricultural College Is Ideal
State Institution.
Oregon Agricultural College, at Corval
lls. the leading state institution, has had
a remarkable growth. Founded in the
early 60s, this school has always taken
an Important place in the educational
history of Oregon, but at no other time
has its Influence been so great or Its
progress so rapid as during the past few
years. Last year the college had an en
rollment of 1156. a gain of 40 per cent
over any previous year, and It Is confi
dently expected that at least 1300 stu
dents will register next Fall.
In accordance with the policy of im
provement that has always characterized
the management of the Oregon Agricul
tural College, the standard of the insti
tution has just been advanced one year,
Increasing the requirements for admis
sion to the freshman class to two years
of high school work. This will strength
en the degree courses in many ways,
and enable students to carry the work
In which they are specializing much fur
ther than has hitherto been possible. At
the same time the advantages of the In
stitution will not thereby be further re
moved from the people in need of the
training it affords. For persons who de
sire work relating directly to their voca
tions, but who are not able to pursue an
advanced college course, elementary in
dustrial courses have been established
in agriculture, mechanic arts, forestry,
commerce and domestic science and art.
Students may be admitted to these
courses from the eighth grade of the
public schools, providing they live in
parts of the state where no provision Is
made In the high schools for industrial
work.
The general government of the college
is vested primarily in the board of re
gents, which consists of 13 members.
Under this board are four subordinate
administrative bodies, the administrative
council, college council, college faculty
And experiment station staff. The college
endeavors to provide a liberal, thorough
and practical education. While the in
dustrial or technical work is emphasized,
the Importance of a thorough general
training, of mind development and cul
ture, is recognized In all the work
throughout the institution.
The work therefore covers a broad
field. Including technical courses along
the different lines of agriculture and for
estry, commerce, pharmacy, engineering
and household technology; with the nec
essary training in the basic subjects of
mathematics and the natural and physi
cal sciences, and also the general train
ing in language, literature, history and
civics.
School Book Depository.
The J. K. Gill Company, Third and
Alder streets, Is the general depository
for supply of all text books used in
the schools of Oregon and Washington.
A large space In the second story of
their store is devoted to this depart
ment, where all educational and medi
cal books are handled. You are cor
dially invited to inspect their stock.
Take the elevator.
II II vi II If li I t ! I 1
THE FALL SE
EUQ
WILL OPEN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22; TH
Courses Are Offered in
GRADUATE SCHOOL.
COLLEGE OP LITERATURE, SCIENCE
AND THE ARTS:
General (bourses in Liberal Arts.
Special Courses, including .
Course Preparatory to Medicine,
Course Preparatory to Law.
Course preparatory to Journalism,
School of Commerce.
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING:
Civil Engineering. -Electrical
and Mechanical Engineering
Mining Engineering.
Chemical Enginering. ; j :!- -.
THE STATE UNIVER
For Catalogues and General Information A