TIIE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JULY 37, 1913. ATHLETIC PROWESS NOT OVERLOOKED IN SCHOOL TRAINING OF NORTHWEST In Track and Field Sports Preparatory and Finishing Institutions of Learning Now Hold Their Own With the East and Indications Are for Even Greater Activity in Future. FOR many years past the entire Na-' tlon has been bowing at the shrine of Pacific Coast college and pre paratory athletics, and from present Indications the future will see no ces sation of the incense-burning, as plans for rehabilitating and Improving: the athletic departments at the various In stitutions will attest. In the Northwest athletics are wax ing: stronger every year. Departments are becoming more and more system atized; better instructors and coaches are being secured and conditions . are being ameliorated. At the Oregon Agricultural College Dt. E. J. Stewart, an Eastern athletic director of note, has been placed in control of athletic affairs, and already his master hand has worked miracles in all branches. The University of Ore gon also will have a noted football tu tor on the gridiron next .'all, Hugo Bes dek, the famous Chicago star. At Wil lamette University Dr. G. J. Sweetland, Jr., still holds over, and the eminent coach is now in the East studying the trans-Mississippi methods. Other State Advance. In Washington and Idaho similar ad vancement is noted in all branches of sport. The University of Washington crew gained lasting fame recently by getting third place in the Intercollegiate re gatta at Poughkeepsie, N. Y., defeating several of the crack Eastern eights, Washington also had a good year In football and track, winning both titles in the .Northwest. Johnny Bender Is in charge of ath letics at Washington State, the famous sprinter, Archie Hahn, at Whitman, and "Pink" Griffith at Idaho. Pacific University, Whitworth Col lege, McMlnnville and a host of other well-known institutions all help swell the advancing tide. Football, baseball, track, tennis, wrestling, golf, basketball these are some of the branches of athletics in which the Northwestern college boys are being drilled every season. At Reed College In Portland inter collegiate contests are taboo, but ath letics are on the boom there just the same. Columbia la' Promising In the preparatory and high schools this same athletic activity is noted. Columbia University had a particularly notable collection of track stars this Spring, winning all the interscholastic meets on the calendar. In the preparatory football field Washington High, of Portland, had an eleven which ranked with the most formidable in the country. Their over whelming rout of the Wendell Phillips High, of Chicago, by a margin of over 0 points shows how strong the local school really was. Hill Military Academy, Portland Academy and a dozen other training schools also go in strong for the de velopment of the physical as well as the mental. . This is why athletic experts believe that past standards will be lived up to, for it is in the high and prepara tory schools that the first lessons In athletics should be assimilated. iff ;W fel lit i 3 i"- W ,v - JJ t' j ' 'SLA ' ' I i1 V ; 3 it"' ' OKEGOX WOMAX FRESIDEST liuella Clay Carson, Late of IT. of O., Now Head of Mills College. Mills College is the one woman's col lege on the coast, and its work in all departments is recognized as contribut ing to high Ideals of character, scholar ship, culture, and efficiency. Mills Col lege does no preparatory work is not a "finishing school," but is a standard woman's college ranked by the United States Commissioner of Education in his report of 1910 in division A among the 16 leading women's colleges of our country. It is not a. denominational in stitution, but it is distinctly Christian In customs and Influence. This college for women emphasizes the value of all the standard college courses: the language and literatures, history, education, philosophy and the sciences; it provides for health and grace in physical education. It also gives to young women the excellent op portunities for culture and refinement, for peculiar helpfulness in the home and community offered through courses in home economics, library study, oral expression, drawing, painting and mu sic. Students working for a degree may major or minor in home economics or .music, as In any other academic sub jects. Mills College, with its 150 acres, In the suburbs of Oakland, Cal., accessible to all parts of the Coast, Is not outdone in beauty of situation by any American college for women. Its president Is an Oregon - woman, Luella Clay Carson, Litt. D.. LL. D. Mrs. Carson was for many years dean of women and head of the English de- . partment in the University of Oregon leaving that institution about six years ago to assume direction of the affairs ' of Mills College. Mrs. Carson Is an edu cator of national repute and is recog nlzed as a woman of strong executive ability. Thoroughness was the most characteristic among the demands she made upon her students in the state university and this characteristic she has carried into her new sphere of work. Graduates from Mills College are able to boast a training as compelte and ef ficient as can be secured In any of the women's colleges in the East, and a de gree from Mills College makes possible a. step directly into advanced post graduate work for women who desire to specialize in the post-graduate schools of the East or in other countries. SEATTLE SCHOOL WELL KXOW' JZ&'Czcr-'T?- 7?o greyer culture. Is a source of interest and In spiration to the growing youth,' in many cases being the real impetus that finally leads to the desire for a higher education.. The instructors of Manzanita Hall rank among the foremost in the state. The course of Instruction is directly preparatory to either Stanford Uni versity or California. In addition to the efforts which are made to keep the courses up to date and on the highest plane, decided at tention is paid to the character de velopment of the boy.,- During the coming semester, which commences on August 26, a limited number of applications will be consid ered for boarding pupils. All applica tions should be addressed to W. A. Shedd, head master. 1 IW'AWWtf-iWW WW, ' )My.:.-; IH'IMS J I I. VV rl f 1 - Nt, . i $ J t - i i. , "V J A. ' X: to ographers which has been for years a strong feature of the college curricu lum. both in the Gregg and Pitman systems. Instruction is carried beyond the technical study into the field of practical routine, which - enhances earning power. The faculty is further increased by the coming of Henry H. Kloepping, a former proprietor of the Globe Busi ness College In St. Paul, to the com mercial department. Object of Founders Has Been Raise Standard of Course. Seattle College and Seminary has become widely known for the thor oughness of Its work. It has been the object of the founders from begin ning to pay special attention to Qual ity rather than quantity. With this end in view, they have never sought for an attendance beyond the equip ment and ability of the faculty to guarantee first-class results. One of the features of this institu tion is its Christian tone. While un der the auspices of a denomination. It is in no sense a sectarian institution. During the 20 years of its existence ' it has produced many efficient men and women. A large endowment fund is now being raised, and the future of . this institution is most promising. Alexander Beers, the president, has been in educational work for 25 years, and Is one of the men who has kept abreast of the times, along educational lines. PACIFIC HAS SUCCESSFUL YEAR Forest Grove Institution to Have New President. Pacific- University, at Forest Grove, Or., has rounded out a successful year, and the commencement was marked with a spirit of optimism for the future of the institution. The committee of control, consisting of Professors F. C. Taylor, H. L. Bates and William G. Harrington, reported that a saving of $4393.09 had been made in current ex penses, as against the previous year. The most important feature of the com mencement season was the celebration of the 60th anniversary of the gradua tion of Harvey W. Scott, the first grad uate of the institution. Dr. C. J. Bushnell, who received his Ph. D. degree from Chicago University In 1901, was elected president of col lege on June 26 and has accepted the position. He will take charge of the affairs of the college on September 1, at which time President W. N. Ferrln's resignation takes effect. Dr. Bushnell Is a speaker and writer of wide repu tation In the Middle West and the friends and alumni of the college feel satisfied that a strong executive has been chosen to lead Pacific University into a large place in the educational system of Oregon. Aside from the resignation of Presi dent Ferrln there will be but one change in the faculty for the coming year. Professor W. M. Proctor has been elect ed to the chair of economics and educa tion, following Professor L. B. Shippee, who resigned to accept the chair of so clal science at the Washington State College at Pullman, Wash. Professor Alexis Ben Korl. who has held the chair of modern language for the past seven years, was granted a year s leave of absence to study In Paris and Berlin. MANZASTTA HALL RANKS HIGH Proximity to Pulo Alto and Leland Stanford, Jr., Advantageous. Probably no other training school In California offers so many decided ad vantages in combination with .the op portunity for the most careful instruc tlon as does Manzanita Hall, at Palo Alto. Situated within a few minutes' walk of Leland Stanford, Jr., University or the beautiful town of Palo Alto, its lo cation Is at once unique and advan tageous, ine neignDoring campus, with its many activities and air of ACCOUNTING IS SIMPLIFIED Business College Principal Invents New Practical System. A great deal of Interest has been shown throughout the country in an invention of the principal of Holmes Business College, designed to teacn practical accounting in an unusually short time. The device is in the form of a game. Students at the college use the game for introductory study, and make phenomenal progress, .the course having been greatly shortened by its use, while the efficiency has been doubled. Special evening classes will be con ducted this year for business men, cov ering scientific accounting briefly in a practical manner. These classes will be strictly limited to a small number and the work adapted to the individual needs, making the study an actual ac counting service to each man enrolled. The course will start with the funda mentals; but no one will be admitted except those actually in business or engaged in keeping books. Conspicu ous service of this nature has been rendered by the college for a number of years, but the scope will be greatly Increased. The shorthand department is greatly strengthened by the addition of Ed ward E. Coad, former superintendent of Hood River schools, who will give spe clal attention to broadening the work in actual business practice for sten EXPRESSION IS EFFECTIVE Principal" of Portland Institution Discusses Speech Arts. A school that has done effective work in Portland for a number of years is the Gillespie School of Expression, of which Km ma. Wilson- Gillespie is prin clpaL In outlining the aim of the course. the principal says: "The development of the individual to its highest and best is the first requisite of any vital educa tion, and a course in the true art of expression, which is perhaps more ac curately designated by the newer term of 'speech arts, is broadly educational In a vital way. 'By life study and pantomime, ob servation all sense perception 1 quickened. By the association of ideas, the memory is strengthened. ;'By freeing and rendering respon sive the vocal apparatus, together with the entire physical body, the voice is cultured, poise is gained and health is Improved. - . An acquaintance wltn the .master minds of literature enlarges" the vocab. ulary and widens the thought range, while the corresponding growth of the imagination and of the emotional na ture broadens the life vision and the heart sympathies. "Finally, the imperative need, in in terpretative rendition, . of self -adjustment and self-control, develops - inhe rent capability, personality and will power, which tends toward that aim of all true education the building of character. "Thus it' is that a thorough course In the art of expression is not conducive to the spectacular or the merely orna mental, but furnishes practical equip ment for the augmenting of success in the social, business and professional worlds." - NORMAL HAS BIG SESSION More Than 400 Students Enrolled at Monmouth During Past Year. ' The Oregon Normal School has just closed its year's work, having enrolled during the. Fall and Winter term 201 students, and during the Summer term 280. The interest and spirit of the school has been all that one could wish. " All members of the faculty are es pecially, trained for their respective positions, and well equipped for- the work of training teachers. Four courses of study are offered. all leading to state license for life without examination. The courses are professional, supervisory, rural and primary. The S60.000 girls dormitory is just completed, and it is one of the best equipped dormitories in the United States. All bedding and equipment are furnished to the girls, who are not required to provide anything except their toilet articles. The school proposes to train teach ers for the every-day, practical school room work, and every means is brought to bear to accomplish this. , The city of Monmouth, has just In stalled an up-to-date water system, the water being secured from a deep well which insures its absolute purity. Catalogues will be furnished on application to the Registrar, Mon mouth, Or., and complete information can be secured from these regarding the work of the school. MANY COURSES AT MT. ANGEL College Established by Benedictine Fathers in 1887 to Reopen. Since 1887 the college at Mount An gel, which was founded by the Bene dictine Fathers, has played an impor tant part in the educational work of the state. The college is situated about five miles from Woodbum, in one of the most attractive sections of the Willamette Valley. , The courses offered are most compre hensive. Preparatory work, commer cial training, classical courses, an aca demic course, theological and scientific work and many special courses are available to students. The college Ts authorized to grant the usual academic degrees and honors. Many social, literary and athletic or ganizations are maintained in the col lege and the publications of the stu dents in Mount Angel are rated among the best in the colleges of the Pacific Coast. Situated' near Mount Angel College Is the Mount Angel Academy and Normal, conducted by the Benedictine Sisters, first-class boarding school for girls and young women, offering normal, academic, grammar, - commercial, pre paratory and primary courses. Special courses in art and - music are also available. The normal course offers an especially strong preparation for the teaching- work In the state, leading' to the state certificate and life diploma. BUSINESS COLLEGE POPULAR Student Encouraged to Do His Best From Time of Enrollment. Behnke-Walker Business College, lo cated at Fourth and Morrison streets, is an institution where hundreds of young men and women are learning the principles of business education. "Business men know," says the pros pectus of the college, "that by phoning Behnke-Walker they can secure compe tent help. Few, however, even those within a stone's throw of tiie college, realize its magnitude or the importance of an institution which takes the boys and girls in their formative period, when they are most susceptible to en vironment, and molds their characters so that they may be able to see an op portunity when it presents itself. From the time he first enrolls the student is encouraged to do his best to aim high." Behnke-Walker is only 10 years old, but its policy of honest dealing with students and the public; the thorough preparation insured those who enroll; the watchful care exercised over the students during their school life, and the placing of them in good positions as Boon as they are capable, has put Behnke-Walker in the front rank as an educational institution. University of Oregon FOUR WINNERS GREGG SHORTHAND The great, commercial system SUCCESS SHORTHAND (Pitman) The great reporting system BLISS BOOKKEEPING Actual business practice from the start TELEGRAPHY Railroad, Commercial and Wireless You can cross the success line with either if yon have Behnke Walker training. Write - BUSINESS COLLEGE Portland, Oregon WILLAMETTE UNIVERSITY Founded 1844 High-Class College of Liberal Arts STANDARDIZED, ENDOWED, FINE LIBRARIES, ' IDEAL LOCATION, HIGH STANDARDS IN SCHOLARSHIP AND MORALS For Information Address PRESIDENT FLETCHER HOMAN, Salem, Oregon ST. HELENS HALL RESIDENT AND DAY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS Park Avenue and Ford Street, Portland, Oregon An old established school with modern methods. A Western school with Eastern teachers and right of certificate to t Eastern colleges. College Preparatory. general and Special Courses. Advantages in Music, Art and Elocution. Gymnasium. Aesthetic Dancing. Domestic Science. Send for Catalogue. EUGENE The University includes the following Schools and Colleges: COLLEGE OF LITERATURE,, SCIENCE AND THE ARTS, including the groups of LANGUAGES and LIT ERATURE: NATURAL SCIENCES; HISTORY, JOURNALISM, POLITICAL and SOCIAL SCIENCES; ' PHILOSOPHY, MATHEMATICS and education, lead ing to the BACHELOR'S degree; and special courses preparatory to LAW, MEDICINE and COMMERCE. COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING CIVIL, ELECTRICAL, CHEMICAL, RAILWAY and ARCHITECTURAL leading to the degree Bachelor of Science in Engineering. SCHOOL OF EDUCATION, preparatory to HIGH SCHOOL ' TEACHING, PRINCIPALSHIPS and SUPERIN TENDENCIES, leading to the Bachelor's degree. SCHOOL OF MUSIC PIANO, VOICE, VIOLIN, THEORY and HARMONY leading to the Teacher's Certificate orthe degree Bachelor of Music. SUMMER SCHOOL Six weeks each Summer. SCHOOL OF CORRESPONDENCE STUDY. Blank applications for admission may be secured from the Registrar or from your high school Principal. Send for a general or special catalogues. Address, The Registrar University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon. MILLS COLLEGE SUBURBS OP OAKLAND, CAL. A col,l,ec;e for. women, char tered IN 1S85. Faculty represents Vassar, Wel lesley. Mount Holyoke. Bry-n Mawr, Radcliffe. Colgate. Har vard, Columbia, Stanford Univer sity. State Universities of "Wis consin and California. Entrance requirements equivalent to those of the University of California, Confers degrees A. B., B. L... B. S. Twenty-one departments. Well equipped laboratories for sci ences, biology, botany, chemistry, geology, psychology. Library of 14.000 volumes. speoiai, opportunities in MUSIC, t'ISkE ARTS, HOME ECON OMICS. Scientific and practical work for thorough preparation in Home Kconomtcs. Graduates of this department eligible to go immed iately into hiKh schools to teach . this subject. Drawing and Paint ing under well-known Instruc tors. Music, practical and theo retical, in an excellent Music De partment well-known for thirty years, may be counted toward a degree. A COLLEGE OF1 HIGH STANDARDS IN AN IDEAL CLIMATE. Modern Gymnasium under di rector from Boston School of Gymnastics. Outdoor life In beautiful grounds of 150 acres. High standards of scholarships. Christian influences. President, Luella Clay Carson, Litt. ID., LL. D. For catalogue, address Registrar, Mills College P. O., California. PACIFIC COLLEGE Newberg, Oregon A liberal education, under the best Christian influence, at a minimum expense COLLEGE ACADEMY MUSIC DEPARTMENT BIBLICAL DEPARTMENT Located in a town of exceptionally high moral tone GOOD BUILDINGS STRONG FACULTY DORMITORY LIFE A guarded education under the auspices of the Society of Friends, in a safe environment For further information, inquire of LEVI T. PENNINGTON, President Newberg, Oregon i! !3 (f it M-m " W; 1 ti y. -.i.:,'L.!c-l-.-.: I nra n- St. Mary's Institute ST. MARYS, OR. Conducted by the Sisters of St. Mary 12 miles from Portland on West Side branch of S. P. R. R- OREGON STATE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE TRAINS FOR EFFICIENCY IN EVERY FIELD OF INDUSTRY BEGINS its forty-fifth school year September 19, 1913. DEGREE COURSES offered in General Agriculture, Agronomy, Animal Husbandry, Dairy Husbandry, Hor ticulture, Bacteriology, Poultry Husbandry, Entomol ogy, Domestic Science and Art, Civil Engineering, Elec trical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Mining Engineering, Logging Engineering, Forestry, Com merce, Pharmacy and Teachers' Courses in Manual Training, Agriculture, Domestic Science and Art. TWO-YEAR -COURSES are offered in Agriculture, Domes tic Science and Art, Commerce, Forestry, Pharmacy and Mechanic Arts. MUSIC Thorough courses offered in JMusic, including piano, band and string instruments, and in voice cul ture. THE EXTENSION DIVISION aims to bring the College to the people by means of farmers' institutes, correspond ence courses, movable or itinerant schools, demonstra tion trains, co-operation with public schools, educational and industrial exhibits. A BEAUTIFUL BOOKLET, entitled "The Enrichment of Rural Life," and a catalogue will be mailed free on application. Address H. M. TENNANT, Registrar, Corvallis, Oregon V I it ' "'1 (GRADUATES CAN BE FOUND EVERYWHERE POIVTrVGTOlS K -TV - f THIS SCHOOL A3 THE REASON FOP. THEIR REMARKABLE SUCCESS- I EFFICIENCY ' VJ and n SERVICE VI INVESTIGATE ?fc I '''' ' OPEN ALL THE YEAR V' V DncrnAN? secured for students when WfrtTntW HA M1rUMtt'Al. COHPETEWT WITHOUT CHJUKEgjJ , BELMONT SCHOOL (For Boy . " BELMOJIT, CALIFORNIA SS Mllea South of Sao Frandaco Prepares boys for the best col leges and schools of Eng-lneerlng:. Write to the President for Cata logue giving detailed information. H MILITARY ACADEMY The school that gets results. Accredited to all lead ing colleges and universities. A select, non-sectarian boarding and day school for boys. Military disci pline; small classes; men teachers. Careful super vision secures results that are not attained else Avhere. Send for catalogue. PORTLAND, OREGON