Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905, August 01, 1901, Image 2

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    Harrison Press-Jonrnal
GEO. D. CANON, Publisher.
HARRISON.
NEBRASKA
sa at rre:"ei. sea
etsbt miles from Paris, is the largest
ia the world.
Andrew Carnegie Intends to erect
monument to James G. Blaine at Pitts
burg, probably in Schenley Park, near
the Carnegie Institute.
A memorial of Rosa Bonbeur, pre
sented by Senor Gambart, the Span
ish consul at Nice, has been unveiled
at Fontainebleau, near which town she
dwelt for many years. The memorial
consists of a bronze bull, an enlarged
fac-simile of one of her sculptures; the
bas-reliefs of the pedestal give her
portrait and representations of three
of her principal paintings.
The women of the German city of
Magdeburg will honor the memory of
Queen Louise by the erection of a
statue of the venerated queen. Jo
hannes Goetz was intrusted with the
task of creating in Carrara marble the
figure of the beautiful queen. Tne fig
ure stands on a massive cubical base,
bearing on one side the inscription:
"Louise, Queen of Prussia," and on the
opposite side: "Dedicated by the wo
men of Magdeburg."
State Geologist Dumble of Texas has
disclosed sources of mineral wealth
that are astounding. He says that In
one county alone, that of Cherokee,
there are 600,000,000 tons of rich Iron
ore In sight, and that in east Teias.
as a whole, there are 3,000,000,000 tons.
And by the side of this ore lies all the
coal necessary to work the ore into
shape. The geologist makes the flat
statement that "no country in the
world has cheaper material for smelt
ing iron than east Texas."
In order to appreciate the extreme
ilaai..iaia of tViA Mnnl In the ROllftl-
east of Europe, it may be mentioned
that Mme. Karaveloff, wife of the
prime minister of Bulgaria, continues
to pursue her avocation as school
teacher, and every morning when her
husband leaves home to attend to his
duties as premier she takes her de
parture for the public grammar school
to fulfill her duties as one of the
teachers. She is a very remarkable
woman, and has been imprisoned and
tried on charges of treason and of lese
majeste while the political foes of her
husband were in office.
Now that Rostand's play, "L'Aig
lon," has aroused so much Interest in
the melancholy story of Napoleon't
eon, there will be some interest in the
death of the last considerable actor In
the abortive conspiracy to restore the
empire with the Duke of Reichstadt in
his father's place. This person was
VarabowskI, a Pole, who was a lieuten
ant in the grand army and fought at
Waterloo. The conspirators In 1822
took pr session of several towns In the
west of France in the name of Napo
leon II., hut at Saumur the movement
was stopped and the small force they
had gathered rapidly scattered, Vara
bowskI escaped and returned to Po
land, where he has just died at War
saw, at the age of 105 years. .
The brown-tailed" caterpillar has
been officially considered by the Bos
ton board of health, whose members
are ready to acknowledge that this pest
can produce the skin irritation com
plained of by some residents in the
suburbs of that city. The insect is
destructive of fruit trees. The hair of
the worm brittle and barbed, and
its action op the skin is regarded as
purely mechanical, rather than poison
ous. It is yet to be determined wheth
er actual contact with the worm it
necessary to cause the irritation, or
whether this may result through the
blowing about of the hair or fur by
the winds. The doctors incline to the
latter belief. However produced, the
irritation and resultant sickness are
described as being severe.
King Carlos of Portugal has become
passionately devoted to yacht racing,
and has announced his decision to
have a racing yacht built for the ex
press purpose of enabling him to win
back from the English Royal Yacht
Squadron the Vasco de Gama Cup in
the third international race, which
takes place next year over a course ex
tending from Southampton to Lisbon,
that is across the dangerous Bay of
Biscay. The king is now in consulta
tion with naval architects with regard
to the designs for his new racing
yacht, and is disposed to have the lat
ter built in the United States, rather
than In England, the victories of the
American defenders of the America
Cud and the recent mishaps to the
Shamrock Inclining him to the belief
that boats built on this side of the At
lantic unite a greater degree of
strength, with lightness snd delicacy
of lines, than those of English con
struction and design.
It cannot be too often repeated that
the secret of German success In so
many branches of human activity Is
specialisation. And It may fairly ha
asked whether in many cases they do
Mt "say too much tor tnelr whistle."
Tas days are lone gone by when Schil
ler eoald venture to condemn the ex
clusive pursuit of what ha called
"tcaaa aad-bnttor" studies. Nowadays
atarljr srsry om ia Oermany keeps
liwl aad batter" steadily la view.
Ti aext ftaarattoa of Qsrmaas will
U avast aon tyeeisJUad than (Mr
the white slaves.
STRIKE AGAINST THE TOBACCO
TRUST.
DaO? rapars Bapprea wi l-ow Wag-e
at lilrla fcinptayad im hin Kiaamiwa
Factorial One of th Kviii Tbmt Cry
lor VMiraack
From Binghamton, N. Y., Independ
ent: Last week Wednesday sixty-five
girls working at the Trust Cigar fac
tory struck for an increase. On Sat
urday about S00 more were locked out
of the same factory. It is now more
than a week since the strike started
and not a mention of the matter has
appeared in the daily papers. Brief re
ports have appeared in a few papers
outside, and the silence of the home
papers is causing much comment, and
a great deal of adverse criticism.
The American Tobacco company,
commonly known as the Tobacco trust,
after having secured a practical mon
opoly of the chewing and smoking
tobacco business, has now turned its
attention to the cigar making branch,
and an attempt is being made to con
trol this also. As Binghamton Is next
to New York as a cigar center the
trust decided to open a factory here.
Barlow, Rogers & Co., sold out their
large factory to the Trust about two
months ago. When the change was
made Mr. Barlow assured the em
ployes that no change would be made
in wages and that it would be a good
thing for the men and women work
ing. A superintendent from Kingston,
where the trust has a large factory,
was put in charge, and several foremen
from the same place installed.
Very soon a change was made in
the system. Girls were paid the
amount they had averaged under the
old system while they were learning
the new and then their pay was by the
hundred. Rolling machines were part
of the new method. What are known
as bunch makers were paid seven and
one-half cents a hundred, the same
price that was paid by Barlow. But
while before they could make from
1,000 to 1,200 bunches a day, under the
trust system they could make but 700
or 800. Rollers were paid twenty-seven
and one-half cents per hundred, or
the same as before, but Instead of
being able to make 700 or 800 a day
they could make only 300 or 400.
The effect of the change was to re
duce wages nearly one-half, and in
stead of making from $1.75 to 12.25 a
day, the girls could make only seventy-five
cents to $1.25. After working
from two to five weeks under the new
system the girls were convinced that
they could not make enough to sup
port themselves decently, and when
their request for a higher price was
refused, they struck. About 300 em
ployes were still working on the old
work, but as they understood that it
was but a question of a few weeks
when they would have to do the work
under the new system they agreed to
help the strikers.
In addition to the increased amount
of work they are compelled to do, the
strikers complain about the way they
are given tobacco. Out of each pad
they are required to get 100 cigars.
They say that the pads have been
made so small that they can get but
about eighty, and as they are docked
for all they use over at the rate of 30
cents a pad, this still further reduces
their wages. Another thing they com
plain of is the practice of taking out
of each hundred from 3 to 17 cigars
as defective, for which they get no
pay. These cigars they say are put up
in hundred packages and sent to the
packing room.
The work that the trust wants is
practically hand made cigars. At the
prices paid the clgarmakers would get
$4.50 per thousand for doing the work.
The same work at the union scale
would come to $16.50 a thousand. The
trust claims that the same work is be
ing done at Kingston for less than the
price offered here, and that the girls
are making big wages. Those who
know the conditions at Kingston
know that the wages there are very
low, and that the girls make barely
enough to pay expenses. A few speedy
operators may by working long hours
get what would seem to them to be
fair pay, but on the average the pay
is not what girls should have in or
der to live respectably.
A DANGEROUS DECISION.
Some years ago a Chicago woman
was engaged in a labor strike. She
was no worse than all the others par
ticipating In the same strike. After
the strike was over and peace was
declared she attempted to get work,
but could not do so'. She applied to
Ann after firm and always met the
same answer. Nobody would give her
employment. She could beg, steal or
starve, but she couldn't work. There
was no way by which she could make
an honest living. She had been black
listed. The decree had gone forth that
no employer should give that woman
a Job. A brand had been set on her
brow. She was a paralah among the
people helpless and homeless. She
wss like Csin, a fugitive and a vaga
bond on the face of the earth.
In her dire extremity she was in
duced to sue the cowardly scoundrels
who blacklisted her. She proved her
case all right There was no question
about the facts. Everything was es
tablished as above set forth. But the
court decided that employers bsd a
right to blacklist employes and pre
vent them from getting work else
where. It practically decided that
slavery still exists la America. Not
the mild kind of slavery that existed
In the south before the war, but a
condition a tbomnd times nwn ter
rible. Black slaves were sure of a
comtortabW support-they were usu
ally well treated they were not over
workedthey had their holidays and
their simple pleasures. The slavery
established by this corrupt court has
none of these ingredients. This poor
wage slae is entirely helpless she
can find no work she can earn no
wages she can only starve, live on
charity or do worse. This ia all ac
complished by ti-e order of a tyrant,
backed up by the decree of s court.
What hope is there for a laboring
man or woman who Is blacklisted
when the law sustains that form of
slavery? He or she had better get
out of the world or else procure a gun
and learn how to use it
No intelligent man believed that any
court would ever make such an out
rageous decision, but It is made and
it will be sustained by the higher au
thorltlea.
Our judges are daily advancing In
infamy. They are making decisions
now for which they would have been
impeached twenty years ago and If
any judge had made a decision so dls
reputable a generation ago he would
not have had the privilege of an im
peachment, for the people would have
hung him up on the nearest lamp post.
Central Farmer.
THE TRUSTS MUST BE PRO
TECTED.
Wilbur F. Wakeman is secretary of
the American Protective League, and
as such is of course opposed to the
entry of any foreign goods into this
country that would compete with our
trust made products. He also, by the
grace of the President and the Repub
lican majority of the Senate, holds
the important office of appraiser of
merchandise of the port of New York.
This occupation of these two offices
by the same person accounts for the
universal ruling of the appraiser
against the importers of foreign goods
and the stretching of the tariff law, al
most to the breaking point, to make
such goods subject to the highest duty
that can be assessed against taem.
That Mr. Wakeman is most active In
this matter and more Intent on lobby
ing to prevent a revision of the tariff
and to protect the trusts from com
petition than he Is in fairly carrying
out the law, will be seen from the fol
lowing Interview: Speaking of the
threat of certain Republicans to sup
port the Babcock movement to place
trust made articles on the free list.
Mr. Wakeman says, the league will
make a strong fight against any emas
culation of the protective tariff sys
tem. "We do not propose," said hs,
"to allow the system to be used as a
stalking horse for the purpose of doing
work which should be done by state
legislatures. These bodies have the
power to deal with trusts doing busi
ness within the borders of their states.
Let them apply the remedy."
That's it No national legislation
against the trusts, tbey are, to quote
Hanna, good things and must not be
disturbed.
HE WOULD NOT.
Suppose one monopolist owned the
whole country, would he let things go
on as they are at present?
Would he spend millions every
month for advertising?
Would he pay rent and clerk hire for
one thousand stores In one city when
six would do?
Would he keep 50,000 drummers
traveling about?
Would he give away franchises and
land to irresponsible corporations?
Would he let individuals run his
railroads, and refuse to carry blm If
be could not pay his fare?
Would he let them own his wheat
fields, and refuse him bread if he
lacked a nickel for a loaf?
Would he let them manage his fac
tories, and refuse him clothes unless
ho would pay them their own pries
for the suit?
Would he let them take his own
house and turn him out on the street
because be couldn't pay the rent?
No, he would not allow any such ab
surd things. Yet this is just what the
people have permitted and voted for.
Herbert N. Casson,
WAGES FALLING IN ENCLAND.
Last year It was quite the usual
thing In England to see each month
that numbers of workers varying from
100,000 to 300,000 had obtained sub
stantlal increases of pay, whilst those
who had sustained s'tght reductions to
talled np to only a few hundreds
In November, however, the figures t3
gan to tell a different tale. The num
ber of those who had received addition
to their wages were, It is true, still at
many as 137, but the reductions had
risen to 11,038. In December the In
crease had diminished to 18,353, and
the reductions were 8,216. But it I
January that shows whither we are
drifting. During last month only
3,061 workers received Increases of pay,
whilst, on the other hand, the decreas
es had risen to the large total of 51,631.
Justice, I,ondon, England.
Cuba Is spoil that can be handled
at leisure. Just now the administra
tion Is Making the refractory child
understand that the velvet glove cov
ers the hand of steel. Poor deluded
Cuba roust first swallow the Piatt
amendment in order to prove that It
baa acquired a sufficiently meek and
contrite spirit to fit it for dealing with
the United States; then other things
will happen to It not Independence,
by a long way, either. San Francisco
Star.
If endowing one man with unre
strained power over the lives, liber
ties and property of 10,000,009 people
lacks a single faatnra of aa ideally
perfect despotism, then oaa never ag
isted oa m rth. Con gressmsa McCsJI.
AGAINST THE PEOPLE
REPUBLICAN PARTY HOPELESS
LY FOR TARIFF LOOT.
lldae That Toay laUad to rrotekt
tfca Trots s3 Tcrpctaste T-'"
Making tb luna tot tfcva IKaxt
Campaign.
That the Republican party does not
Intend to legislate against the trusts,
however much individual members
may proclaim that it Is necessary. Is
shown by the evidence of Hon. Robert
Taylor, member of congress from the
18th Ohio district, given before the
Industrial commission. In his opening
remarks he declared that any attempt
to take the tariff off even trust made
goods would be bad in its effects. The
tariff principle, he said, should not be
abandoned.
As a general proposition, Mr. Tay
lor announced himself as opposed to
trusts. "I am one of those," he said,
"who have not been able to bring
themselves in harmony with the idea
that the trusts are good things."
"The trusts," he declared, "put too
much power In the hands of a few
men."
Speaking of dealing with trusts, he
said he knew of no remedy for that
evil, if it is an evil. Publicity might
be a good thing, but it would be a
mere scratch on the surface. He
knew that a trust has power to re
duce the price of an article, but he
did not think the public would get
much benefit from that. In order to
pay dividends on securities of the
United States Steel Company that
company would have to extract a
great deal from the public.
The witness said that apart from
any other question he thought that it
would be exceedingly unfortunate to
introduce any elements of unrest In
the country by discussing the tariff In
congress or opening up the tariff for
any revising. .
Now, Taylor, is chairman of Election
Committee No. 1, and was selected as
such because he could be relied on to
do the bidding of those who rule con
gress and being a friend and follower
of the administration, his evidence
makes It certain that there is "no rem
edy for the evil" as far as the Republi
cans Intend to discover one and that
even to discuss the revising of the tar
iff "is to Introduce elements of unrest
in the country."
If Mr. Tsylor represents the Repub
lican policy on the trusts and the tariff,
nothing will be done to abate the
evils.
He admits there Is robbery being
committed when he says the steel
trust will "have to extract a great deal
from the public," but be and the large
majority of protection Republicans In
tend to sit still and see the steel trust
and the other combines "extract a
great deal from the public." A very
cool proceeding on the part of those
who have been selected as the ser
vants of the people to protect their In
terests. The Democratic position Is entirely
the reverse of this. They believe that
there is a remedy to prevent the
trust from carrying out their plan
of robbing the people and that Is to
revise the tariff by placing trust pro
ductions on the free list except what
duties may be necessary for raising
revenue for the support of the govern
ment a tariff for revenue.
This will not kill the trusts but It
will allow the world to compete with
them by withdrawing the protection
that now gives them a monopoly.
A ROBBER TRUST.
The law under which corporations
are organized in the state of New Jer
sey cerUi&iy ought to be amended or
repealed. Minority stockholders have
no protection and from appearances
the law was created especially to
swindle them. Public Policy says:
By Its charter the United States steel
corporation may deal in Its own se
curities, which has not usually been
regarded as a proper function of corpo
rations. It may or may not pay any
dividends on the common stock, no
matter what the profits may be, and
the recalcitrant stockholders will get
ao consideration; he can see the books
as much as the statute, the board of
directors or the whole body of stock
holders permit
Now Is not that a nice corporation
to own stock In? If any one buys any
of It and knows of these restrictions
and loses his money he has only him
self to blame, except that rascally leg
islature that passed a law that allows
such a trust to be organized.
There are millions of stock on thu
market and the trust Is trying to push
It off on the public and doubtless many
an Innocent purchaser will buy it, not
knowing the way the steel trust may
rob him.
And yet the Republicans say the
trusts are all right
RECIPROCITY AND TARIFF RE
FORM. The attempt of President McKinley
to - reform the tariff by reciprocity
treaties was stopped by the United
Btates senate refusing to ratify them
and yet there Is strong evidence that
the president will persist In that line
Of action. Reciprocity Is a back-handed
way of revising the Dlngley tariff that
can os better accomplished by
straightforward methods. We cannot
make a reciprocity treaty with one
country that does not virtually make
It apply to nearly all the others. This
la brought about by the clause which
allows the same rights aad rates as
the most favored nation Is given. If a
treaty to Bade with Ftsaoe that allows
certain of her productions to be im
ported Into the United States at a less
duty than the rate provided In the
Dlngley tariff, Germany, who pro
duces the seme articles, under the
most favored nation clause must be
granted the game rate.
There Is also another obstacle to
these reciprocity treaties, a constitu
tional objection, that has not been ad
judicated, but is believed by most of
the constitutional lawyers to be a bar
to such legislation. Congress cannot
delegate its power to raise revenue,
which is a constitutional province of
Congress alone and such revenue bills
must orginate In the House of Repre
sentatves, thus keeping the taxing
power in the hands of the direct repre
sentatives of the people.
To revise the tariff law by making
reciprocity treaties ia a makeshift that
does not touch the protection granted
the trusts and monopolies and those
who advocate It are attempting to still
protect these giant corporations. As
the trusts are selling their produc
tions In Europe for less than they are
obtaining from our own people, they
no longer need protection and their
products should be put upon a tariff
for revenue basis or even placed on the
free list that competition may benefit
all alike.
TARIFF LEGISLATION AND THE
TRUSTS.
The Democratic tariff doctrine has
always been "tariff for revenue."
Sometimes it has swerved further to
ward free trade by saying "tariff for
revenue only" and then once the pen
dulum swung backwards and Inciden
tal protection was added. This was
before the era of the trusts and com
bines. The last Democratic platform de
clared the following doctrine: "Tariff
laws should be amended by putting
the products of trusts upon the free
list, to prevent monopoly under the
plea of protection."
As soon as the 57th congress meets,
therefore, a bill must be Introduced
lines; that is, by placing articles on the
lines, that Is, by placing articles on the
free list that are monopolized by the
trusts and reforming other schedules
to a tariff for revenue basis in a way
that will be acceptable to the legiti
mate business Interests.
Such a bill should receive support
from those Republicans who really In
tend to curb the trusts and are not
merely Intent on making political cap
ital by pretending to legislate against
tbem.
POLITICAL COMMENT.
A Canadian newspaper tells us that
the French statesman, M. Jules Sieg
fried, says not long ago when he was
at the White House, President Mc
Kinley admitted that he was no longer
an ultra protectionist, "the time for
heavy protection has passed," are his
quoted words. The president evidently
sees that the tariff must be revised,
but how to do It, that Is the question.
What a row it will raise. The Ameri
can Protective League and the Home
Market club will be on the warpath
and the protected trusts. Well, we
shall see.
And now comes Senator Chauncey
M. Depew and joins In the third term
chorus, he says McKinley Is the only
man against whom there is no opposi
tion. There is no doubt some truth in
this, the trusts, combines, corpora
tions, especially the railroads, want
McKinley as long as he is so complai
sant to their Interests. A strong gov
ernment that will put down strikes
under the name of a republic but
really an empire, Just suits them.
Tbey are under the present adminis
tration the oligarchy that controls the
United States and the senator Is their
mouthpiece.
The Cubans do not take kindly to
the dictation of Secretary Root, but a
little more "Influence" brought to bear
on some of them by a careful distri
bution of the secret service fund will
probably round up a majority for all
that Is wanted .
Perhaps it would be advisable for
the American Protective Tariff League
to keep an eye on Brother McKinley
unless they rely on Hanna to keep him
In the straight and narrow protection
path.
The Home Market club Is in a bad
way, being an annex of the Protective
Tariff League, they have always cried
"give us the home market and we
care nothing for the world." But now
the Republican newspapers and spell
binders, even McKinley himself Is
shouting for the world's markets and
even the protected Infants are boasting
of their competition with foreigners
and the trusts are shouting with glee
of their conquest of the markets of
the world. The logic of the situation
would seem to demand a revision of
the tariff to meet the new conditions
but this does not suit the protection
ists. Here Is another traitor to the pro
tective tariff, Hon. W. P. Hepburn of
Iowa, who at a dinner in London giv
en to the visiting members of the New
York Chamber of Commerce, said:
"The chairman of the Republican cam
paign committee has announced that
the tariff will be taken from all so
called trust commodities, and our abil
ity to produce has so largely outgrown
our capacity to consume that the 'open
door la rapidly becoming the shlbbo
leth of America." This Is brave talk
but It will take more backbone than
moat Republican members have shown
la the past to refuse to obey the cau
cus dictation that Hanna and the
trust! will bring to bear on them
Artlatla Tlaaraaapar.
Phil May. the London artist, tells
how at the age of 12 he became a
timekeeper In a large Iron foi'ndrj.
Says he: "I was delighted wi-titha
office, but Hie foundry masterl"rasjs
not quite so satisfied. At first they
were surprised at the great punctuality
of the entire saff of workmen; later
. zxsrvclcd it? continu
ance, and' finally they discovered that
I kept the tlinebook on a system of
my own."
gT. MARY'S ACADEMY,
JHotra Dame, lodlaaa.
We call the attention of our readers
to the advertisement of St. Mary's
Academy, which appears In another
column of this paper. We do not need
to expatiate upon the scholastic advan
tages of St. Mary's, for the catalogue
cf the school shows tb" grope of work
included in its curriculum, which Is
of the ime high standurd as that of
Vaasar end Bryn Mawr, and is carried
out faithfully in the class rooms. We
simply emphasize the spirit of earnest
devotion which makes every teacher
of St. Mary's loyally strive to develop
each young girl attendant there Into
the truest noblest, and most Intelligent
womanhood. Every advantage or
equipment in the class rooms, labora
tories and study rooms, every care In
the matter of food and clothing, and
exceptional excellence of climatic con
ditionsall these features are found at
EL Mary's, In the perfection of develop
ment only to be obtained by the con
secration of devoted lives to educa
tional Christian work in a spot fa
vored br the Lord.
You can rely on a man keeping
bis word when it is to his advantage
to do so.
Ask your grocer for IjEFIANCE.
STARCH, the only 16 oz. package for
10 cents. All other 10-cent starch con
tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran
teed or money refunded.
ArcDiad of Too Much Zaa I.
It Is charged by the opopsltlon InAI
toona, Ia., that the anti-satoon ioague
has employed minora to solicit drink
at bars, misrepresenting their ages,
and that the theological students have
been Imported to work up evidence
against gamblers. One of the stu
dents is said to have been so well up
in the game of poker that he took all
the money in a big game played at
one of the political clubs. Tho cru
saders, of course, deny all these stories.
GREATI V RKDICED KATES
via
TV A BAKU K. B.
113 OA-Buffalo and return $13.00.
:si00 New York and return 131.00
The Wabaah from Chicago will sell
tickets at the above rates dally. Aside
from these rates, the Wabash run
through trains over Its own rails from
Kansas City, Ht. Louis and Chicago and
offer many special rates during the
summer months, allowing stopovers at
.Mugara rans am nuuaio.
Ask your nearet Ticket Agent or ad
dress Harry IC. Moore, General Agent.
1'uss. Dept., Omaha, Ntb., or C 8.
Crane, G. P. & T. A., 6t. Jxuis, Mo.
China has a coast line of over 2,500
miles.
EDUCATIONAL
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME,
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA.
Oatriri, Lett era, ecotmalc aad History,
Journatttat, Art, Mtm, Pharancy, Law.
Cvll, rirchantcal awl Electrical a, teetering.
Arch It ret iir.
Thorourh Prepantory and CaanuwcUl
C Vu. Ecctaiisttfcal stuusnu at k--.;l mum
UaoaM Frae. Junior or Senior Year. (.'olUwials
Counu. RocaM to Rent, modern lo charge.
84. 1 dwara". Hall, for boy's under IX
The SSih Var will open September iotb.,1901.
Caialof ura Free. Address
RfcV. A. MORUISSfcV. C S. C, Prtsldtat.
ST. MARY'S ACADEMY
Notre Dame, Indiana.
Conducted by the Sisters of the Holv
Cross. Chartered 1SS.V Thorough
Englipth and Clastlval education. Reg
ular Collegiate IVjrrees.
In Preparatory Department students
carefully prepared for Collegiate course.
1'hvslcal and Chemical Laboratories
well equipped. Conservatory of Muaio
and School of Art tiymnaiuni under
direction of graduate of Ikxiton Normal
School of Uymnastics. Catalog-uo free.
The 47th year will open Sept 5, ItfOl.
M.rM DIRECTRESS OF THE ACADEMY,
St. Mary' Acaimmy, Notre Dacac, ladlaaa.
Buy of
thj Brier
Kiw rata.
tamp aud we will n.all ou on.
THE H. D. FOLSOM ARMS CO..
SI4 Broadway, RRW VORK.
Siturt ' PrleatMt .
OR. 0. PHELPS BROWN'S
PRSOIOUS
ttZRDAL
OIXTKENT
II Carat Taraaah Ik. San.
RhwiaillM), Mearll.
J It. Weak Rack, aaraini,
u", lor ana ail Pain.
OIRCIll drunrl.t. ,..
II Uf d,mm not l It, VIU
a. lit. Mm., ei.d far yMr
tr.,l,w w. will C...
and Vo,i alnai rill.
B wa,Mwuurrb,M. T.
l"a Dr. O. T Browa, SS
SCALE AUCTION
Wats Aas.crisa dvertlwsst UMlf
fleatioi This riper.
W.N.U-OMAUA No. 30-1001