fe, ,') Containing the uauafcfe Re f trance kti " Library of the School ! m B, W I ! " CAGE-COVERED ROOF jfc Practically every outdoor game but golf E can fc played on thie roof 'It " ' -gg jggB-HAPKLrHTA, THURSDAY, ATIQTTBT?" 5. 1915, -it,. ' -LIBRARY AND READING ROOM BS P ' GYMNASIUM K, ; Containing tn valuable Reference jJiS? JmiiilB3S$P&3!&Z giw Kk Library of the School t , t& gggjTnBTiTfri- ( America's Foremost Business School Signalizes its fifty-first year by acquiring the finest structure for its purpose in this country: The De Lancey School Building, Pine Street, West of Broad. Peirce School's half-a-century of work in the field of Business Education, in which it was a pioneer, has naturally and logically brought to it leadership, not only in the numer ical strength of its graduating classes, but also in the authority of its teaching. Peirce's, by right of long service and in the light of the attain ments of its thousands of alumni, has become greater than a School it has become an Institution. As such, it has outgrown its former fine quarters, and now sig nalizes its progressive advance into its second hal-century by the acquirement of that splendid seven-story school building an Pine street, west of Broad, formerly occupied by the distinguished De Lancey School, now combined with the Episcopal Academy.. There is great promise of more effective work than ever for mind and body in the fine new building, with its wonderful facilities for teaching, its choice location, its hundreds of windows, its gyn nasium, its roof ball-field, its electrical equipment, its students' restaurant, its libraries, offices and class-rooms. But there is, in the acquirement of. this great building by Peirce's, a still deeper significance.. Time was when the businesT school was looked upon as the avenue to positions of "immediacy'' the posts that were easiest to attain and that offered only meagre opportunities. Peirce's took business study out of the "typewriting- and book keeping" class and put it on .a plane as high as any achieved in the classical or professional studies. The fascination and distinction that were supposed to attach only to the more graceful attainments, Peirce's made manifest as inalien able factors and features of business life. America had become a country of Business. Its cry was for Business Men. Pcirce s helped to shape this demand and to fill it. And that Business has its Romance no less than Law, Science, Medicine, Art or the Classics, Peircc history, reflected in the success ful, helpful lives of thousands of its graduates, testifies. And so now Pcirce School comes into its own. Teaching still the art or science of business, it takes on rich, new surroundings, hallowed by the work of a distinguished scholastic institution. The practical instruction that best fits men to face- a practical world will be 'made to the learners doubly attractive by- school building of which theprtU I be .proud afstXts' and prouder still in their strong days of success when thcy.kok back upon it as-thc home of their Alma Mater. . Send for 51st Year Book, with illustrations of the school-room and" a special booklet "Laying the Foundation for Better Business. ( PEIRCE SCHOOL Established 1865 America's Foremost Business School Will Open the Fall Term in its New Building Physical development heepe paxm: uiith mental at Peine School , ii ' '"I I'M N H I DINING-ROOM Conducted" Bar- the- convenience- of Peirce School Student I ll I II1 M"1!1 ' "' CLUB-ROOM f Tto ft davottd to roctfixn purpo of stud ants U U U FINE STREET, West of Broad ASSEMBLY ROOM -cKjr.rWfcr'' PHILADELPHIA fat fit I WII. I &mv8 ii3X 2fl ,; . sA.t iviSteii..!-:-iWi.Tlii&;i;''. ;. SB IpjjrHn )SffijSli I' ft' U VJ U 0f Butfntu Sto1, mir-iri1 Tffin-i rii ' "'"'"