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30

STATE SUPERINTENDENT'S REPORT

 FINANCIAL STATEMENT, 1910.

Alliance
Alms
B'k'n Bow
Geneva
McCook
N. Platte
O'Neill
Valentine

Total

State appropriation.

Salaries

$1,290.74

$1,019.19

$891.73

$1,052.56

$1,037.92

$1,022.37

1,155.00

$954.40

$8,423.91

Other expenses

875.57

$9,099.48

Local funds. Receipts:

Enrollments

226.00

200.00

265.00

230.00

224.00

204.00

232.00

120.00

1,701.00

3/4 Inst. funds

170.85

257.76

393.27

313.00

389.15

226.00

324.84

242.25

2,317.12

1/4 Inst. funds and counties

   uniting

140.75

50.50

38.40

160.00

85.00

113.70

588.35

$537.60

$508.26

$696.67

$543.00

$773.15

$515.00

$670.54

$362.25

$4,606.47

Expenditures:

Instructors . .

$309.36

$402.31

$558.27

$447.44

$495.88

$469.59

$495.00

$340.60

$3,498.45

Lecture course

113.70

113.70

Supplies

21.48

28.90

20.38

30.75

56.00

5.25

48.44

15.95

227.15

Music

26.00

.

26.00

*Expense

66.01

26.55

94.35

64.81

35.27

40.16

13.40

25.70

366.25

Union normal institute

140.75

50.50

23.67

160.00

374.92

$537.60

$508.26

$696.67

$543.00

$773.15

$515.00

$670.54

$362.25

$4,606.47

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----------

----------

----------

----------

----------

----------

----------

----------

Cost of junior normals

$1,828.34

$1,527.45

$1,588.40

$1,505.56

$1,811.07

$1,537.37

$1,825.54,

$1,316.65

$13,705.95

     *Express, drayage, telegraph, telephone, etc.


ENROLLMENT, 1910.

Alliance
Alma
Broken Bow
Geneva
McCook
North Platte
O'Neill
Valentine

Box Butte

74

Harlan

85

Custer

219

Fillmore

163

Red Will'w

93

Lincoln

127

Holt

182

Cherry

64

Banner

2

Butler

1

Blaine

12

Clay

5

Chase

7

Dawson

3

Boyd

1

Brown

5

Cherry

4

Franklin

10

Buffalo

I

Dundy

1

Dundy

7

Frontier

2

Knox

2

Cuming

1

Cheyenne

26

Furnas

8

Cherry

1

Jefferson

1

Frontier

15

Garden

2

Madison

1

Holt

1

Dawes

8

Phelps

7

Dawson

2

Frontier

2

Furnas

20

Hooker

1

Rock

2

Keya Paha

2

Garden

3

Webster

10

Fillmore

1

Johnson

1

Hayes

2

Keith

24

Wheeler

4

Sheridan

11

Grant

7

Unclassifi'd

10

Gage

1

Madison

1

Hitchcock

48

Knox

1

Thomas

1

Hooker

2

Hooker

4

Nuckolls

2

Lincoln

1

Logan

3

Unclassifi'd

1

Kimball

1

Loup

5

Saline

12

Phelps

1

McPherson

9

Morrill

7

Sherman

1

Lancaster

1

Richardson

I

Perkins

9

Scottsbluff

4

Thomas

9

Seward

3

Sioux

1

Sheridan

7

Unclassifi'd

1

Saunders

1

Unclassifi'd

1

Sioux

15

Thayer

7

Thomas

1

Unclassifi'd

2

Unclassifi'd

7

168

131

257

202

197

181

192

86

Total

J. N.

1,411

Including
Including
Including
Including
Including
Including
Including
Including
Inst. only
Inst. only
Inst. only
Inst. only
Inst. only
Inst. only
Inst. only
Inst. only

Box Butte

18

Harlan

27

Custer

101

Fillmore

76

Red Will'w

48

Lincoln

54

Holt

76

Cherry

23

Unclassifi'd

37

Unclassifi'd

4

Unclassifi'd

17

Unclassifi'd

11

Unclassifi'd

37

Unclassifi'd

25

Unclassifi'd

0

Unclassifi'd

3

55

31

.118

87

85

79

76

26

557


32

STATE SUPERINTENDENT'S REPORT

ALLIANCE JUNIOR NORMAL.

W. R. Pate, Principal,

     The Alliance junior normal is located at Alliance, in the central part of the western end of the state. Alliance is easily the most accessible town in this part of the state, on account of location and railroad facilities. Railroad lines extend to the north, to the east, to the south, and to the west, thus making Alliance convenient to reach from any of the surrounding counties.

      The western end of the state has settled rapidly in the last five years. Educational facilities for teachers have been few and the junior normal has done a great work in preparing teachers for the surrounding counties. It has, in fact, been the only means of increasing the efficiency of the rural teachers in this region. The nearest normal school was at Kearney, almost three hundred miles distant, and there are only seven normal training high schools in the panhandle of Nebraska, two of which are situated more than seventy-five miles from Alliance.

      The faculty has always consisted of men and women of ripe scholarship and broad experience. Most of the students have been young men and women who were teachers and who wished to increase their efficiency as teachers. No immature students enroll in the junior normal. The city of Alliance has always assisted the school by liberally patronizing the lecture course and by opening their homes at reduced rates to the teachers. Two buildings are used for the school, the high school building, modern in every respect and equipped with a gymnasium, where classes recite, and central building, where a dining hall is conducted, and a reception room for social intercourse provided. Board has always been furnished students at reduced rates, as the dining hall is conducted as a department of the school with the object in view to furnish board at cost.

      The enrollment for the 1910 session was 163, of which 113 were enrolled for the entire time and 55 for institute only. Box Butte, Hooker, Sioux, Grant, and Cheyenne counties united for institute, at which time not only the junior normal faculty gave instruction, but two additional instructors were provided, Miss Myrtle Kauffman, who had charge of the work in domestic science, and President C. A. Fulmer of Wesleyan University, who had charge of the work in pedagogy and school sanitation. The faculty for the 1910 session was as follows: Principal, W. H. Pate; registrar, Della M. Reed; I. G. Wilson, Charles Philpott, B. P. Wilson, W. H. Gardner, Celia M. Chase, Susie Frazier. Miss Frazier, in addition to giving instruction in the junior normal, was preceptress at the dining hall.

      The daily program for the 1910 session was as follows:


JUNIOR NORMAL SCHOOLS

33

DAILY PROGRAM ALLIANCE JUNIOR STATE NORMAL, 1910

Period
Pate
Gardner
Phllpott
I. G. Wilson
E. P. Wilson
Chase
Frazier
Reed
8:00-8:40
Office
Review Algebra 4
Geography 1
Assembly
U. S. History 6
Consultation 3

Office
8:40-9:20
Mental Arith'tic 2
Beginning Algebra 1
Assembly
Grammar 4
General History 6
Orthography 3
Model School 5
Office
9:20-10:00
Office
Pedagogy 2
Geography 1
Arithmetic 4
Rhetoric 6
Assembly
Model School 5
Office
10:00-10:40

Chapel

10:40-11:20
Reading C
Bookkeeping 2
Review Geometry 1
Arithmetic
Assembly
Model School 3
Consultation 5
Office
11:20-12:00

Assembly
Trigonometry 2
Grammar 4
U. S. History 6
School 3

12:00-1:20
Noon
Intermission

1:20-2:00
Assembly
Physiology 4
Physical Geog'phy 2
Botany 1
Civics 3
Drawing and Pen. 6

2:00-2:40
Office
Agriculture 4
Advanced Physics 2
Latin 1
English Literature 6
Composition 3
Primary Methods 5

2:40-3:20
Psychology
Music

3:20-4:00

Gymnasium

     EXPLANATION--The maximum amount of work a student may take is four full subjects and two drill subjects. Drill subjects are drawing, penmanship, and such subjects as do not require study outside of the recitation period. They are printed in black face. The figures denote the number of the room in which the class will recite. Attendance for at least thirty days is necessary for junior normal credit.


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