Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1925)
10 JTIIURSP AYLIOIINING. ! JULY 23, 1025 f-- ..,- 't&r.'f- Sfc'Wf-.; TRIAL OR A EDUCE RODUCT . INDUS egon i ir"?M ii ijij' i'Sfr" mi J I .This cot Is used by courtesy of th Associated Industries, of Oregon. Dates of Slogans in Daily Statesman (la Twtee--Week Statesman Following Day) I With a few possible changes) Loganberries, October 2 Prunes,' October Dairying. October 18 v . .( f!x, October 2S niberta, O'tober 80 Walnuta, November Strawberries, November IS . Apples,' November 20 Raspberries,' Noyember 27 Mint, December 4 - - Great Cows, Etc., December 11 Blackberries, December x8 Cherries,, December 25 Pears, January 1, 1925 Gooseberries, January 8" , Cora, Januai 18 'Celery, January 22 Spinach, Etc, January 29 ' Onions, Etc., February 5 Potatoes, Etc., Feb-uary 12 Bees. February IV Poultry and PeL Stock, Jb. 28 City BeautlfnU etc., Ma.-ch T. -Beans. Etc.. March 12 Paved Highways, Mrrb 19 : Head Lettuce. March 28 ' Silos, Etc.. April 2 Legume. April 9 1 Asparagus, Etc., April 18 , Grapes. Etc., April 23 , Drug Carden, April $0 .j v Sugar Beets, Sorghum. Etc, . May 7 ' . Water Powers, May 14 Irrigation. May 21. " --LZ-.: ;' Mining. May 28 ' - . Land, Irrigation, Etc.. Jun4 i Floriculture, June li"ft t:tib'.J Hops, Cabbage', Ec ."June 18 " Wholesaling and J o b. 1. o g. June 25 !:?'; . if rMMmKin Vt ! In. 9 ' 4 'if It .logs, vuiy 9 .-.j- rj i ?.n-.i a'.:; Goats, July 18. f i v .r,,,r r.,i Schools, Etc.. July 23" Sheep. July 30; MWVWJi'H National Advertising. August 8 Seeds, Etc.; August M ':' Livestocks August 20 V Grain and Grain Products. Au " gust 27,:i::;:? 'V'iiiju.a'; Manufacturing September 2. Automotive Industries,, Sept em. ber, 10 -:U:i:H- ri-nr: v . -r: Woodworking Etc. Sept. 17 Pap.- Mills, LtO 'SepU,24,j 'N I MirM kiaC'i ; .- . ' ; -j fiack ec plea -of the, Thursday ;Ml1tJon8 Of The Dally Oregon StateBmanrare in 'hand J ; They are i; for . sale a " 1 b cents each, mailed l" any address. Current I copies Sr.) i ! f r "OREGON QUALITY" products are establishing themselves" in world markets; they make our pay rolls they build our cities; they attract new capital and new people; they provide a market for the products of our farms. Oregon farms produce a wider variety of profitable crops of "Oregon Quality" food than any other spot on earth. : Working Force of the Capital Business College nf enoh . etiiHant. ' not Onlv while. in J school, to the end that their tinip I and money may be well Invested. but after the course is completed, as-well. . . . " A. W. Cooper has charge of 'the business department; Mrs. Ora F. Mclntyre has charge of the short hand and typewriting department; The Capital Business College Is One of the'Pioneer Insti- MMoi-Yodr nas, charf ; j . .1: x f . i 4.i m. mm a im Lnirnr II c " " - IUU0.S -Gl.aaieill, UIIU Hie IIHIUCllUCi ui raumui, ln botQ business and BETiyEEH EIGHT AND TO! THOUSAND : PUPILS HAVE ATTEIIQED THIS SGHDQL ' r . , , . '!.--. '!'" -- . 1 1 : : ' k stenographic Work Reach Far and Are Great :Ai Good Teaching, departments. Cnrn ,,"'',- 1 The school is In session through- j The Cspital BuaincRs college Is one of the pioneer institutions Ir alem, having been established rfhere in 188. W. I. Rtaley hay owned the school during all of the period since 1830, one year after it was established. Durlnf all of this time it has served the community . faithfully and pf fi- ifIentlyvOuns: people, in prepar ing them for lucrative positions a? . stenographer and booklrecpers, and the business men of thecity and state hy furnishing them com petent, young people to do( office work. . ' During the life of the school be I out the entire year, closing only , I for the week dp ring the holiday ween' 8.01)0 and 10.000 pupils MO . . , aAAfi,n tn .vla have , pa fised;;; through Itsdoors. )" " . t praduatea ' maj? be found in Houy. rur mx raumaa nearly every community of the'cf the year, October to April, the tate and, in every case, they are the school's Htest1 Is advertisementi They recognize i the value of the 'service whirh, Jtbe scho.ol has Ten-. dered; and ; they are duly appreci ntlvet and are f always ready and anxious l to i speak words of com mendation for the school. .Mr. Staley has always ma,de it a point to employ teachers Who were not; on!y i experienced aiid skilled,1 bjaiiteachers who take a personal interest In ; the welfare school conducts night sessions for the accommodation of pupils who work and cannot take advantage of the day sessions, t ' Much of the work. is individual, yet there is a happy combination of Individual and class work which tends to bring out the! best efforts hof each pupil. , There is sufficient Individual work in the various de partments and classes; in the vari ous subjects started j sufficiently often so that it is possible for students to enroll at any time with practically equal advantage. . The- regular fall work and new classes will be" organized . on Oc tober 5. Many inquiries are now being received from prospective pupils, and it is expected that there will be a large; attendance the coming season ... t . Citizens and Schools PACIFIC COLLEGE XevTerSt Oiigoa. Maintained by the Friends (QuakcrsK but open to all student3 oi good cnaracter. CViHose Preparatory School. Omimerckil School of Music ; ii I Ponnitoilos for both spxcs, under competent supervision Department, A liberal education, under the best Chr , a minimum expense. -, , .-j i ri For Catalogue ami Tiill Informatlodlitdress LEVI T. PENNINGTON Preli'dent "r. j COLLEGE OPENS SEPTEMB 1 stiaa Influence, at ;r nth By li e. T3CHANZ I Through critical eyes as if tak ing an inventory;- there are citi zens looking at Our Schools, anal yzing and asking: Are they good enough for our children? How can I make them better? What is my individual duty towards them? Every thinking citizen already knows that schools are the back bone of citizenship, the framework of our democracy an oligarchy of Brains. It is the school, as a brain and citizenship factory, that is the best builder of the nation, the town and the home, through sowing the seeds of wisdom. thought, tolerance, moral living and social being. And to these. Our Schools, we given our richest treasures, those for whom we care far more than for ourselves, name- IJoilh Pacific College- of Oregon Schools : of Dentistry and Pharmacy ; , PORTLAND, OEEGO , . 1 . I., . ... - - .-- :i L-Ur rrT ,,; , xv - - . , - l- '.; ..- -, n i f'umii-.--" ,-, .n --'-r1 I - Tr minnrr-Ti mir-i i" - rf r ..J The Annual Session Begins September 24th, 1925 . . . '. RKQl'IREMKXTS -POU AlIlKsiOX , Graduation' from an accredited high school or: academy or an equivalent education. 15 units, 30 credits. , io conditions on the foregoing entrance requirements are allowed. COURSES OF INSTRUCTION 1 ,, The course in dentistry", is four yearsi. ".1- '.ij" i-i fj-ii Ir"'"-..-The courses in pharmacy are three and four years. The length of the annual session U eight months. Beginnlng with 1928 the course of instruction leading to the dental degree will be advanced to five years presents credits covering one year of college FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOG THE REGISTRAR East Sixth and Oregon Streets unless the applicant pre-dental training. ADDRES3 Portland, Oregon The Northwestern -.1 ECoDegebflawi Portland, Oregon offers a four-year, course ln Professional Law leading to de gree of IX. B. Faculty of Twenty . ' - Instructors Caso System Employed ". For information and catalog apply to J. H. Hendrickson, A.B., LL.B. Dean , 6lO Spalding Building Portland, ; Oregon : ly, our children. , The citizen as father or mother has all his hopes. oya and aspirations! centered in the child; hence he cannot ignore an active Interest in the commun ity schools unless he breaks faith with them. ! Ouf schools not only train the child but to them la given the power to build or destroy; to kin dle the! living potential spark of childish curiosity the basis, of learning into a blazing flame .of knowledge and wisdom and ac complishment,-or else to smother and destroy It, thereby making out of the child a sluggard, an aim less plodder, broken ln spirit much like the wild young; ra&ge horse that hangs its head tragically, be cause subdued. The school life of a boy or girl may be made longing joy vto which the child eagerly looks forward, or a hated dreaded burden which must be car ried on its slender, tender young shoulders against its will. Does not the spirit of youthful enthus iasm towards progress and sue cess . live , or J die according to the breath breathed into the childish minds. and spirits by the .teachers of Onr Schools. j Citizens, teachers, equipment, these are the. tools of the school that, working together, turn out the finished product of the brain- factory the educated child, elth er a success or a failure. And l( is the voice of the first, the citi zen, that determines the nature of the other two the teacher and equipment. Whether these are good or bad for the child depends on the citizen's interest. Insistence and support. Every active child that .wee bit of clay in the potter's hand is susceptible to and moulded by his surroundings. Will you torture your child by forcing him into a poorly equipped school to daily breathe impure air because puri fying costs money; sit in au out-of-date uncomfortable old bench because you and your grandfath er had to endure it and, well, it costs less than a modern one; let light glare ruin his sight because class-room must be designed by a cheap botcher rather -than by an architect that knows his business; sit perfectly still against his active nature, because a new gymnasium properly equipped is too expensive; daily endanger his young live by contamination from his fellow pu- pils'because proper medical inspec tlonj by experts means money out of the tax-payers' pockets; waste his time in the class-room because the implements with which he must work are out of date, and new ones are too costly? But.no! Such a thing can never be! That which was good enough for my grandfather is no longer good enougji for my child, for the world is ever moving onward on the flying wings of progress. Let China haul her grain to market in a wheelbarrow to save the expense of building highways or railroads or to Imitate her ancesters, but for me . and my child, red-blooded Americans, the best teachers and time-saving equipment are none too good. After all my child must today begin where I leave off so that with tomorrow's dawn be may be fully prepared to lead the onward march of the world. . And the leader after whom he patterns. is his teacher; she Is his example. and ideal during most of bis faking day from, eight to six teen years in me most impression. able period of his life. And the longing desire of wanting to know and do and lead;, these aims instill ed Into his young mind during this plastic age, will follow him or lead him through all the days of his life. "As the twig Is bent so is the tree Inclined." Again, as "wa ter will not rise above its source so the child mind is not apt to at tain a higher level of accomplish ment that the source of his aim his teacher and leader. She with father and mother leads him in the formation of ideals, habits, character and attitudes of life. "Hitch your wagon to a star"- the teacher Is that star. . Hence, she must be . better than merely "good enough." 'She must be highly trained in vision and out look upon life; her character must be unquestioned, unassailable so that the , child cannot answer. "Teacher does it, too," when cor rected for a bad habit; lastly, she must teach because she loves it and not merely because it is "Job" because then oly will she lead, teach, by suggestion rather than by dogmatism. Oh, for. the interested teacher who teaches the child to teach himself; for the teaaher that has that contagious element called enthusiasm, so that the child never , sees the broken in-splrit plodder who drags one day into the next while watching clock and calendar; for a leader with a winsome, happy, smiling personality who loves work. -And thus the child will catch some of this spirit as he learns to be mod est, genial, tactful and moral develops a winning personality. And as citizens having secured the "best teacher" we are going to pay her enough to afford the companionship of good books, pa pers, magazines, summer schools and 'travel so that she may have a fund of information, a well- spring of inspiration, a social background, a mental attitude and ; outlook, with large vision obtained . from contacts with other peoples and other lands and cultures. As i , This cut is usd by courtesy of th Associated Industries, ot Oregon. THIS WEEK'S SLOGAN DID YOU KNOW That Salem is an educational center of great and growing importance; that this city is the home of historic Willamette University, larger now than ever before, with an addition recently of a million dollars to its endowment fund, $350,000 of which was contrib uted by the General Education .Board (Rockefeller), besides a quarter of a minion dollars added to its build ing and other funds; that all our other educational institutions are growing substantially; that this city is becoming widely known as a music center and as such is attracting students from all over the coast; that we have a splendid system of public schools, and the people in 1922 voted bonds for $500,000 in order to provide additional buildings and facilities as fast as the growth of the population shall demand; and that this growing reputation as an educational center is one of the great business assets of Salem, which was born a school town and has made progress as an educational center through out all its history? Sacred Heart Academy Salem, Oregon Conducted by the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary . Complete grade and academic courses. Music department: Piano, violin and harpx- Re fined moral. Intellectual and practical training .in- all womaly accomplishments. Resident and Day Students Willamette University she )s our co-worker she shall have proper community interest, leader Ship and respect. ;J i To bring about these things as citizens, we shall take an Interest ln Our Schools and what goes on there. If we are interested and talk school to the child, the child and his teacher will be more able and interested in doing their best. To this end we, the citizens, will support their work, games, plays and programs, realizing fhat child and teacher cannot do it all alone. ( Continued en pagt 11) y JOHN R. SITES Director f Salem Conservatory of-Music . Teacher of Voice Old Italian Method ' Correct Breathing. Tone-Placing. Bel -canto. Coaching lor Concert, Oratorio and Opera. Diplomas' and High SchooFi . credits granted. Phond G20. 1150 Court St. 77th Year of Work at Pacific University Will start September 21. 1925. One of our oldest institutions, with excellent record. A gen eral college course or prepara tion for professional fields. Splendid music and athletic opportunities. A college of close contacts for each individ ual. Come and Let Us Help You For catalog or information Address JOI1X F. 1KRRS. President St. Mary'. College J2? ""5 343 Fourth Street Portland, Oregon Conducted by Sisters - the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary of Boarding and Day School, and Art Departments. Music The next semester opens Septem ber 14. 1925. St. Mary's Academy 345 Fourth Street Portland, Oregon Preparatory School to St. Mary's College and Marylhurst Normal School. Secondary and Elementary Educa tion. Boarding and Day School. Music and Art Departments. Sixty-seventh year opens Septem ber 9, 1925. For catalog apply to Secretary - St MARY'S ACADEMY 345 4th Street; Portland, Oregon .'A "It has kept the Faith" Founded 1842 A Christian University de" votexT to higher; education. ' ! , College of Liberal Arts College of. Law School of Music Fan semester Registration and" .enrollment examination Septembef 21 to 23 Instruction begins'Septenv ber 24th. Writ to the ftegiatrar or Ittone 317 for' information CART O. DOXEY,; Isklnt, The Oregon State Agricultural College Offers "Science for Service" In the several pursuits and professions in life through the following schools and departments ' The School of Basic Arts and Sciences (Art, .English, public speaking, modern languages,: iistory. and the sciences). Providing the foundation training upon which technical specialization is built.: The Ten Technical Schools Agriculture thirteen depart- Commerce four departments Capital Business College Salem, Oregon v A live business training: school, strong, up-to-date courses in bookkeeping and stenography. School in ses sion throughout the entire year. Students may 'enter jit -any time.. . '; . . " Experienced, skilled teachers who take personal interest in the, welfare of each pupli. Our graduates are successful. Mount Ahg el College and Seminary ' , St. Benedict, Oregon 1 ' - x- Collegiate Department A four year course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Arts. A two-year pre medical course. A two-year pre-engineering course. A two-year journalism course. Academic Department Classic course. Science course.' English course. Commercial course. All work of the-Academic and Junior College departments recognized by the Northwest Standardizing Association Write for Catalog Registration .Date September 8 Formal Opening of School September 9 ments (B.S., M.S. degTees) Engineering seven depart ments (B.S., M.S. degrees) Home. Economics fire depart ments (B.S., M.S. degrees) Pharmacy (B.S., Ph.C. degrees) Chemical Engineering ' ' (B.S. degree) " (B.S. degree) - ForeMtry two departments (B.S.. M.S. degrees) Mines three departments (B.S. degree) Vocational Education fire de partments (B.S., M.S. de grees) Military Science, and Tactics five units (B.S. degree) The training Includes physical education. Industrial Jour nalism, social sciences, and music. Entrance and graduation! requirements are standard. Through the usual rating organiza tions the College is accredited to the best graduate schools In America. Student life is exceptionally well organized to develop 1 ideals of leadership and service to the commonwealth. Admission of Freshmen September 21, 1023 For illustrated booklets and specific information write to THE REGISTRAR ' OREGON AGRICUITVRAL COLLEGE ' I , CORVALLIS, OREGON OREGON NORMAL SCHOOL MONMOUTH, OREGON The Oregon. Normal School: is superior to! other similar institutions in: . 1. The specific training it gives preparatory to the teaching process. . 2. The emphasis it places upon acquiring skill " in classroom technique. ...... 3. The professional spirit it inculcates' into its ... students. " -V 4. The result secured by its graduates in actual teaching. 5. The rapid growth it has experienced within the last four years. . The work is organized on the four-quarter . basis and school is open practically the entire year Students may enter with equal advantage at the begin ning df any one of the four quarters. Second half of summer term July 27, 1923 Fall term .September 28. 1925 Winter term . January 4, 1926 - Spring term ; ., March 29, 192G V For catalog and further details of courses, address The Registrar, Monmouth, Oregon Kb A A:9 1 l IW t i ': V