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Attendance from Weiser and the country is even larger than ever before, and from letters and inquiries, the out-of-county attendance will be unusually large.
The Weiser Academy will open on September 22, 1903, offering special advantages in music, college preparation, and the gymnasium. It now has three buildings up on the hill (present golf course).
The academy also had a record attendance on the first day, the biggest ever, and several academy students had to seek living quarters in the city.
Students of the Weiser Academy held a moonlight picnic on the hills north of the academy on Friday evening, and a mighty fine time was had singing the old romantic songs before a sagebrush campfire while the wieners sizzled and the marshmallows softened and, in some cases, blackened.
Following the Athenian Literary Society of the Academy meeting, they all came over to the Mariam Lee Hall where a novel form of entertainment had been planned by members of the faculty. Silhouettes of friends and members of the academy were arranged on the wall, and the students had much fun trying to guess who was who.
At the annual meeting of the Congregational Churches of Eastern Oregon and Southern Idaho at Huntington, the members passed a resolution of appreciation to the Weiser merchants who so speedily pledged the money to pay off the mortgage of the Weiser Academy buildings and property.
Another financial snag brought the announcement that owing to the lack of funds, the Weiser Academy was closed on Monday by the order of the trustees for the remainder of the term. Opening the school depends on certain contingencies. The money subscribed by the citizens of Weiser to pay off the Metcalf mortgage is still in the hands of the committee and will not be paid over until certain arrangements are settled. Any subscriber may get his money back.
The Weiser Academy has reopened on a better financial basis. There are 18 students from the city and about that many outside the city waiting for the opening. Dr. D.R. McDonald is volunteering his services until the close of the term without pay, as are Miss MaryAnna Jones and Miss Thompson, C.G. Dohman, and Flournoy Galloway. The Congregational Church has donated $1,500 to the academy to pay off back indebtedness.
Miss Beulah Haas returned from Walla Walla where she has been attend…