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Show rently been made, which will great-lv great-lv ;idd to t'ne facilities of the in.-ti- ' tution I'ur advanced collegiate work. .The Preparatory school "nas been 1 emoved from the Laboratory building to rooms secured in the j Stake Tabernacle, and the large j room which has Iieretnfoie beeq ' used for it has been converted into & physical and biological labora-torv. labora-torv. The chemical and physical and biological laboratories are furnished fur-nished with cases, desks, and neces-sarv neces-sarv apparatus for practical experimental experi-mental work in the natural and physical sciences. A large room in the main building has also been luted up for a museum, and the extensi ve collection of minerals, geological? pecimens,smelting products, prod-ucts, woods, shells, and curios, which arc being thoroughly classified, classi-fied, are of easy access. For prac- fir-il ivnil.- in riivvp vl n cr mid :K- j tronomy there is an engineer's ; transit, with solar attachment and all accessories. There has also been provided kindergarten and other material for practical work in the department of pedagogy. The Library has been removed to one of the largest and most pleasant rooms in the main building. build-ing. This room, which has been furnished with new shelving, reading read-ing slopes for current papeis and magazines.and with reading tables, will accommodate one hundred students. It is well lighted and ventilated, and is provided with steam beat and electric lights; it will be open to the public as a Reading Room. There are in the Library upwards offifteen hundred volumes, including encyclopaedias, scientific, historical, general and statistical works, and additions will be made during the year to meet the requirements of students Tie BiliaiD Yoie dep. The Brigham Young College will open on Monday, the 17th of (September. (Sep-tember. The following courses are offered: 1. Course in General Science, four years. 2. Course in Letters, four years, o. College Preparatory Course, t hree years. 4. Normal Course, three years. 5. Business Course, three years. in the different courses. Professor Miller's valuable collection of history his-tory and political science will be placed in the Library, and' the students will also have access to t'ne President's private library of about four hundred volumes,moslly on mathematics, philosophy, and general science. LOCATION. The College is situated in one of the most desirable parts of Logan City, at the corner of First and College Col-lege streets, on the north fork of: Logan River. Being only one block from Main Street, it is in a central yet quiet location, -within easy reach from all parts of the city. KXI'EXSES. : Tuition is free to students with j scholarships .and to students in the . M. I. A. Course. To all others, the tuition in the College Preparatory, Normal and Business courses, and : in the courses in General Science and Letters, is $20. The annual tuition fee in , the Preparatory school is $S. Good rooms and hoard can be obtained in private families at from $2.50 to $3 a week. By renting rooms and boarding themselves f.tudents can reduce their expenses to from $1.50 to $2 per week for board and room. Rooms can be rented at from twenty-five to fifty cents per week. A number of rooms in the College dormitory are rented at these rates. For further information address. Wm. J. Kkkk, B. S., D. B., President. G. Advanced Normal Course, one year. The first two of these courses lead to degrees; the others, to certificates certi-ficates of graduation. The College Preparatory, the Normal, and the Business Course are open to all qualified students over fifteen years of age. Graduates of the courses are admitted without with-out examination to the courses in General Science and Letters, graduates grad-uates of the Normal Course are also al-so admitted without examination to the Advanced Normal Course. In addition to Ihesecourses there is 11 special M. I. A. Course, which extends through twenty weeks, beginning November 5th and ending end-ing April 3rd, One student from each ward association in nil the Northern stakes of the Church, be- ginning with Weber and Morgan, is admitted to this course free of charge. A Preparatory School is also conducted under the direction of the College faculty, which is open to qualified students under twelve years of age. The course of study in this school extends through three years and includes all the subjects required for admis-siun admis-siun to ttte College Preparatory, the Normal and the Business Courses. COCliSE OF INSTKl'CTION. In addition to the work in the Preparatory School and the M. 1. A. Course, the College offers: Fight courses in biologioai sci- nee, including botany, physiology, and zoology; six business courses, including bookkeeping, phonog- , raphy, typewriti ng, commercial arithmetic, and commercial law ; live courses is chemistiy, extending : through three years: six courses in : the science and art of teaching, including in-cluding kindergarten; nine courses in Knglish language and literature; three years each in Latin. French and l ierman ; three courses in geology and mineralogy ; fourteen courses in history and political sci-! sci-! euee; seventeen courses in niatlie-; niatlie-; n.atics ar.d astronnmy: three ourscs i w physics, extending through three yenr; eight courr-es in theology a nd ph ilo-nphy ; and coiir-e? in drawing. elocution, vocal and instrumental music, and diysi-eal diysi-eal cu:'nr . r.. ii.iriF. I A number of changes have re- , |