Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905, August 29, 1901, Image 2

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    CjTIsci Press-Jcrrcal
o. a. raitr. reuaar.
HJUUnaON, - HSBRASKA
Re latest eensss "bows that there
are 4J6.I74 hone in Denmark, 18 for
every 100 seres under cultivation and
19S per 1,000 inhabitant! ; the sheep
aamber l.OM.tes, which U 281 per 100
acre and 4M per 1.000 Inhabitants.
Denmark la an agricultural country.
About three-fourth of the population
are encaged in the cultivation of the
oil. Copenhagen it the only city of
nay sixe. .
Princes Clementine d'Orleans, who
Is now the only survivor of the large
family of Louis Philippe, baa cele
brated her eighty-fourth birthday at
Schloss Ebenthal, her seat near Vien
na, whither she has just returned after
a long stay at Mentone. Princess
Clementine married Prince Augustus
of Saz-Coburg-Gotha, a brother of the
late king dowager of Portugal, and a
first cousin of Queen Victoria and of
the prince consort
The Missouri egg factory of Spring
field handles about 50,000 dosen eggs a
day, all of which are candled before
entering the factory. About tnre
wagon loads of eggs are rejected each
day and hauled outside of the city
limits where they are dumped. A man
living near the dumping ground hai
collected enough chickens batched by
the weather from eggs thus thrown
away to stock a chicken farm. Every
day for a month or more he has been
carrying a number of chickens home
from the dumping ground, where they
had been hatched by the unprecedented
. Persona interested In wild flowers
are endeavoring to create aiid" to or
ganise a sentiment for the protection
of oar native plants, especially near
Urge cities. The pond-lily, trailing
aruutus, native orchids, fringed gen
tian and many of the evergreens have
been gathered in Massachusetts for
sale In such quantities, and so steadily
sought by frequenters of suburban
woods, that their extinction is threat
ened. The remedy suggested is that
care be used to cut rather than pull
the flowers, so that the roots need not
be disturbed; and that those who
gather rare plants for the market
should be discouraged by lack of
patronage.
Bishop Philpotts of Exeter early
earned his reputation for saying sharp
things. One of the guests at an under
graduate's party, in Oxford,- sang a
song much out of tune. Then Philpotts
was called upon. I haven't a note in
my voice," said he. "Well, if you can't
a Ins, yon must make a speech or tell
a story!" declared the host "If I am
to tell a story," said th future bish
op. "I think I should say that I should
like to hear sing that song again!"
Much later In life he went to pay a
viait in Devonshire "It's a beautiful
place, isn't It?" asked a guest. "Yes,"
said the bishop, "bat if it were mine I
would pull down the house and fill up
the pond with it That would remove
two objections. I
The value of a recipe lies partly In
its being accurately set down and fol
lowed. Harper's Magazine has the fol
lowing directions for making a break
fast delicacy called pop-overs, as they
were imparted by the Chinese servant
to a lady visiting in the family: "You
takes him one egg," said the master of
the kitchen, "one lit' cup milk. Tou
flxee him one cup Sou' on sieve, take
pinch salt you put him In lump. You
move Dim egg lit' bit slow; you put
him milk In, all time move. Ton makee
him Boo' go in, not move fast, so have
bo spots. Makee but'led pan all same
wa"m, not too hot Puttee him in oven.
Now yon mind you business. No like
woman run look at him all time. Him
doa all same time biscuit"
During month If July thousands of
yovng peopia gathered in Cincinnati
and Baa Francisco, in Christian En
deavor and Eaworth Leaga eon van
tlsns, Kmthnsiasm In large measure
M theirs. But the public, always
tnttartaa, asks: "What have these
yfta people actually loser A few
aasong the "best things" reported by
ta Junior Endeavors alone, chil
dren under 14 years of age, are a suf
ScJent reply: Clothed and paid board
af a crippled boy la school. Gave a
tkanksgtrlng dinner to thirty-five poor
eaUdren. Earned money to give poor
ehUdrea aa outing in July and Au
t"Bt Kept a crippled old lady In
food ail winter. Fur-
all winter to oar
cfiareh. Kaw scrap books for borol-
fcix giiwrtad two colored boys.
, , Hps! a nek la depot ana kept It
. C":t m cwai reading. Gathered two
gaad books tor the prison
' C to raw la Ms wore. Bwacat
i ' fcw wMca 1mma m
fjln f Z- - swsfsSy aa astasjrtsjai rlv-
y'i" t tr Cft (mm af aalpfal aartlat
- -C ti kacXats la aaO pmSt tree
Vi ' '
" f$ tiatnm adrte ta tae
tSstr
rtfcarrra tm tas
Tr OJ, area la Cm fir.
"r'rycty.
1 f
TRUSTS KUN THINGS.
IN ABSOLUTE CONTROL OF THE
FEDERAL ADMINISTRATION.
Am Ami Eleetl Bargela that Ha Ho
rsamad Oat to tfce Adnata- of th
Wnft Karaers Tke Steal Warfcan
Strike a fair Illastiatiae of Tnut
Sometime before the election of 1900
Mark Hanna as chairman of the Re
publican committee, was reported to
have made an arrangement with some
of the labor leaders to support the Re
publican ticket The leaders of or
ganised labor at that time were un
easy at the trusts that were formed
or being organized, fearing that they
boded so strong a combination that
labor would be at their mercy. At a
conference then held, at which Mr.
Shaffer, the leader of the Amalgamated
Association, was present, Mr. Hanna
assured those present that the trusts
were well satisfied to see a strong la
bor trust and that the industrial trusts
and the labor trust must work to
gether and support the Republican
party which through protection kept
up wages as well as aiding the trusts.
Mr. Shaffer being a Republican, was
perhaps the more easily convinced
that this program was to the advan
tage of the laboring men he repre
sented. But now a change has come
over the spirit of his dreams and he
finds that the labor lamb cannot lie
easily beside the trust lion. In a state
ment made by him, says the Washing
ton Times, he declared it to be the
duty of President McKinley and the
administration to sit down hard on
Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan and his asso
ciates, and compel them to submit to
the demands of the strikers. He ar
gued that the administration is "all-
powerful" and that were it to threaten
the steel corporation with anti-trust
legislation next winter the Wall Street
magnates would be obliged to come to
terms at once. The language em
ployed by Mr. Shaffer evidently was In
tended as a threat to the Republican
managers that unless they busy them
selves to support the men their party
will lose the labor vote. There is no
doubt that shrewd, practical politi
cians like Mr. McKinley and Mr. Han
na are greatly worried over the con
dition of affairs and would be only too
glad to exert their influence for a set
tlement and peace if there were any
way by which they could secure such
a solution. They understand as well
as Mr. Shaffer can that the strike is
liable to affect the Ohio elections ad
versely to their political interests.
They know, also, that there is little
they can hope to do in the premises.
Unfortunately for tbem and their
party, what the strike leader says
about the "all-powerful" administra
tion is arrant nonsense. It does in
appearance dominate the legislative
branch of the government, but Is only
able to do so when acting, as the politi
cal agent of the real masters of con
gress and the country, who are Mor
gan, Rockefeller, Havemeyer, Still
man, and a few others of that ilk.
Should the executive branch attempt
to procure legislation unfavorable to
their monopolies it would soon be seen
that tne complete ownership and con
trol of congress is in the hands of
the trusts and not of the administra
tion.
Aside from that consideration, Mr.
Shaffer should remember that he ad
dresses an incredulous public when he
threatens the Republicans with ven
geance at the polls. The history of
the anthracite strike of 1900 is sig
nificant in this connection. After see
ing clearly that the administration was
hand in glove with the coal barons,
with whose Interests and purposes
Marcus A. Hanna was closely identi
fied in a general way, being a bitumin
ous coal trust magnate himself, and,
although knowing that temporary con
cessions were granted only because a
continuance of the strike menaced the
prospects of Mr. McKinley for re-e lec
tion, the miners struck their flag, and
voted like abeep for the state and na
tional candidates of the trust There
is no assurance that the steel workers
would not do the same thing. It Is
not aa unknown thing to see labor
leaders extremely placable about elec
tion time, and several former ones of
mack prominence are now comfort
ably settled in federal offices of more
or less importance. Mr. Shaffer Is on
tb wrong track If be thinks to gain
anything at the expense of the Morgan
combination by trying to secure Mr.
McKinley Into coercing that coterie of
multi-millionaires. The administra
tion does not control the trusts. The
trusts owa and operate the adminis
tration. TKE POWER OF THE TRUSTS.
Tae trusts are so powerful that they
eaa make or break the fortunes of
aay maa. bat act only that, they can
faaai dttos and likewise destroy them
ar taoa of prosperity. A
writer la tae Scraatoa Trots, aader
the eapttaa of a "Kamble throaga tae
Pocsakaa Workings of what was taa
ladaatrtel Pride of aVraatoa." says:
"It was oace the aooae of taa vary
activity. Its BMssiv srav
la ft rawjtottt ttvolatloM
shock ta onrtX aa4 as try faraaaas
lwvnrt taa eMjr and faai Cfcs
mUzzz itattm wtm ta ticfai Cat
wars t'sJtig twits' fat wtja jst
martM aery. It to aa t
rO jO E ZS tTaorwaztt Ca
C :n O fclacSy wan ftcri, r3
a rc'iM scTj aai
tj c.i t4 ft- ft fcrCT-.c-r:.
way.' The one-time mammoth mill
will soon be but a memory. Its equip- ,
meat la being fast taken apart ana
akipped to Lake Erie's distant shore."
This scene is being repeated la
thousands are being ruined by the
loss of value which the dismantling
of their Industries cause to their prop
erty and business. The giant steel
and other trusts tear down the values
in many places and build them up In
places where they and their friends
have previously bought the real estate.
It Is confiscation by Indirection, but
none the less confiscation. Gloom
prevades what was once a thousand
happy homes. The workmen will have
to leave sad the cottages they bsva
built with their savings will be unsal
able and worthless. And yet Hanna
and the Republican leaders sre band
and glove with the trusts and will not
aid in legislation to deprive tbem of
their monopolies.
KEEP THE TARIFF OUT OF
POLITICS.
The non-chalant, it not Impudent
way in which the tariff trusts sell
their products, in this "protected"
country, for nearly twice what they
get for them in "unprotected" coun
tries, may again force the tariff ques
tion into politics. This would be un
fortunate, for business is always dis
turbed, so the protectionists tell us,
when the tariff is being discussed. It
would also be unfortunate to have the
farmers and laborers understand what
a heavy burden the tariff places upon
their backs and how it is slowly but
surely dividing our people into classes
the rich and the poor. When these
citizens realize the wrong and injus
tice in "protection" they are likely to
become discontented and to begin that
political division into parties mention
ed by ex-United States Attorney-General
Wayne MacVeigh In his recent
address at Harvard. He said; 'The
alignment of two great political di
visions of American voters, who will
sooner or later struggle against each
other for the possession of the gov
ernment will inevitably be upon this
basis: The party of the contented will
be ranged under one banner and the
party of the discontented will be
ranjjod under the other, and the align
ment will steadily develop, increas
ing sharpness and division, until the
party of the discontented being the
majority, has obtained the control of
our government, to which, under our
system, they are entitled, and then
they will be sure to remodel the pres
ent system for the distribution of
wealth, unless we have previously
done so, upon bases wiser and more
equitable than tcce now existing. The
one man party will be, under what
ever name, the party of capital and
the other party will be, under what
ever name, the party of labor." Byron
W. Holt.
The steel trust barons have a one
sided idea of the rights of the work
men. In substance they say to the
strikers: Tou may combine, but we
must be free to employ men not in
your trust You may combine, but
not to the extent of destroying com
petition among workingmen. A3 em
ployers of labor we must hive the
benefit of competition, but we reserve
the right to combine so as to prac
tically eliminate competition when we
come to sell our products in the Amer
ican markets. Combination destruc
tive of competition Is the prerogative
of capital." Nobody need be surprised
when the president of the labor trust
responds that the working men pro
pose to see about that The men can
hardly be blamed for thinking that
they have as good a right to monopo
lize labor and make their own price
for it as their employers nave to
monopolise the products of labor and
make their own price for them. The
Iron aad steel men would be la a bet
ter position to command public sym
pathy if they ware not la a conspiracy
to throttle competition and get the en
tire pound of flesh allowed them by a
40 per cent monopoly tariff.
The high-handed measures of tb
city of Ansoala, Conn, to beat a strike
that Is oa there should lead to another
Judge being selected when election
time cornea. The other day, while a
quad of non-union men were march
ing under police tteort to foundry, a
hotel employe on the sidewalk shouted
"Scabs." He was Immediately picked
up by the police, taken into court aad
fined $50 for disorderly conduct Tb
police magistrate announced that the
next ease would be punished with im
prisonment as well as a fine.
This Is certainly an abridgement of
the right of tree speech, and It Is
hardly pooslbl that' the stsrdy New
Engtaaders will endorse Its suppres
sion to aid corporations aad combines
to defeat their workingmen whatever
taa merit of tae strike may be.
According to tae Republican phil
osophy of taa tariff, taa highly paid
Ajaarleaa workssea to oat-compatlag
aad starving the pauper labor of Eu
rope. Taa Aatsrieaa treats threaten
taa Xuropeaa BMrketa witk deatrne
tioa by flooding tbem with an tae
good tkiaga af iff at a tower price
tkaa (Mr owa worksaea eaa pradaea
tDmm aad yat the treats aad maaafac
tanrt meat be protected from foreign
IcaortaUoaa. To radao tae tartar and
atapsi taa ti-aatgtoasll taetr procact
bare as lasaply as tbey sett tbem la
Care woU rata Ca paar treats aad
tsty weaii est ka.wCag ta pat ap
KTToaa ta ts? & ZC-mm party
fa tm a tat sgtagt fca Cattat
fig ri wt a tzi Oey wCl
ttrrar grcr;.:3 crdr to Om toxs
n tz"i r ri cr tsa cj
if -iCitrrrrj.
flTJfjJ) DIDNT SEE.
MAKES POINT AT THE EXPENSE OF
THE TEXAN.
raaay laeidaat af the A4alkMnlt Oathcr
lag af 1SST aa Oaa That Has
aa MaeaUaaai Vatee Haary Oaorg
ZVagle.
The death of ex-Gov. Hubbard of
Texas recalls an amusing Incident of
the Adullamlte convention at Cincin
nati in February, 1867.
Preceding the conference out of
which grew the Union Labor party a
great meeting under the auspices of
the Knlgbts of Labor wss held' in
Music HalL Over 10,000 tickets at 15
cents each were sold for this meeting,
which was in honor of Henry George.
When the latter rose to speak be faced
one of the greatest crowds that was
ever gathered In that vast auditorium.
Thousands of people had not been able
to get Inside the doors.
Mr. George was at bis very best that
night There was antagonism enough
in the crowd to arouse him to his
keenest efforts and he spoke with tre
mendous effect At the very first
word he had caught the vast crowd.
Dr. DeBeck presided over the meeting
and In Introducing Mr. George be
made an allusion to the forthcoming
conference of men who were gathering
to find out what they wanted. The
doctor said that the man who was about
to sneak knew what be wanted and
how to get it
"Dr. DeBeck is right," cried Henry
George, as he stepped to the front of
the stake amid a tumult of applause.
"We do know what we want We want
the earth!" The effect was electrical
and It was fire minutes before the
speaker could proceed.
Mr. George spoke for an hour and a
half and then called for questions. In
stantly a score of people were on their
feet clamoring for recognition. Mr.
George recognized each in his turn, as
fairly as possible, beginning at his
right. But there was one individual at
the left of the center aisle who was
not content to wait his turn. He was
tall and lank. A white neck-tie gave
him a clerical aspect He stood upon
a chair and howled at the top of a
rather squeaky voice:
"Mr. George! Mr. George! Mr.
George!"
Mr. George tried to wave him down
while he was answering questions from
the right of the center aisle. But the
man on the chair kept yelling:
"Mr. George! Mr. George!! Mr.
George!" Friends pulled at his long
coat-tails In vain.
Finally Mr. George turned to him
with, "Well, what Is it?"
"Mr. George," shouted the man on
the chair, while the audience strained
eyes and necks and ears. "Mr. George,
I want to ask you a question."
"All right," said Mr. George. "What
Is it?"
"Mr. George," he said, speaking with
tremendous impressivencss, "suppose
that I owned all the money In the
wprld and that you owned all the land.
I would like to ask you, sir, what you
would do?"
nuick as an electric flash came the
reply:
"I'd give you notice to quit!"
That was all. The questioner, who
was ex-Gov. Hubbard, was the only
man In the big audience who failed to
catch the point The house roared and
yelled and shouted and let pandemo
nium loose. The scene was extraor
dinary. Hubbard still stood on his
chair and waved his bands until friends
pulled him down by main strength. It
was not until next day that the Texan
caught on.
Mr. George did not attend the Adul
lamlte conference which tried to find
out what it wanted.
JOHNSON'S OOOD MOVE.
Youngstown (O.) Vindicator: The
effort made by Tom I Johnson as
mayor of Cleveland to compel the rail
roads to go upon the tax duplicate of
Cuyanoga county as other property,
and assist in bearing the burdens of
city and county government Is gain
ing force daily among the people.
Farms and bometiteads are rated at
two-thirds their value, or two thirds the
selling or market price of such prop
erties, while the great railroads with
special privileges, are entered upon the
tax duplicate tban ii-t-nili
their market value. Why 1 this tol
erated? Are farmers and homestead
owners so rich' and generous, so fond
of labor, so anxious to bear burdens
tbxt they willingly bend their backs
to toll that millionaire monopolies
may go untaxed?
Corporations are without souls or
conscience. They are aggresMve, con
tinually encroaching upon and stealing
from the people both their liberties
aad profits from productive Industry,
The encroachments of monopolies are
Insidious, insolent aad tyrannical, and
under methods today prevailing, es
pecially la regard to taxation, escape
with a minimum, leaving the burden
ta bo carried by the bread winners of
tolL
CABXMir BLOOD-If OWET.
la speaking of tae $750,000, which
Garaaglo aas offered Sat Francisco
tar library purposes. The Star says,
la part:
"Mr. Canwgia'a lacosa rant up Into
mRIloss of dotlara a year. This Is not
taa malt af fcto aatarprlat or Indus
try . Trt of the apactal privileges wkleb
ha oajaya, The Catted CUtea govern
Mat 'protects kin la ato baslaees
vaataTM, far iaataaee, by payiag aha
ftwtot as saaea for armor ptata aa fca
gUrxa tat Itaaaiag rrveremaiL Wt
gat ttoaj Tela tbr taUag fm.
f'nti r 1 13, d ta trrri,
far endeavoring to perpetuate uajaaTJ
conditions. W blame him for hla In
human attitude toward the men by
whose sweat and upon the marrow of
whose bones be has waxed fat We
bold aim responsible for the wanton
murder of tbo men at Homestead,
whoaa despairing cry and piteous ap
peals for wages enough to sustain Ufa
be would not hear or, bearing, an
swered with Pinkerton guns claim
ing that the profit of the business
would not warrant It although at that
moment be was drawing fabulous div
idends from it and resolutions were
being adopted by a dozen communi
ties lauding his 'benevolence' for dona
tions of money that had been earned
by the very labor he was exploiting
then, and be has exploited ever since.
"We may be flying in the face of
public opinion, and taking a most un
popular stand that we have done be
forebut nevertheless we protest
against the acceptance of this Carnegie
gift by San Francisco.- No matter
what other communities have done, or
may do, let us decline It Frisco Star.
BARBARIC WARFARE.
Chicago Public: Another witness
comes forward to testify to the bar
baric character of the American war
in the Philippines. He is Dr. Samuel
L. Steer, a surgeon in the United
States army, lately stationed with the
Twenty-third Infantry In the Philip
pines. As reported by the Chicago
American of the 30th, Dr. Steer told
of an incident In illustration of army
methods in dealing with the natives.
A party of natives had treacherously
murdered four American soldiers. This
is stated at least in explanation of the
retaliatory acts of an American cap
tain of the name of Cloman, which Dr.
Steer thus describes:
"When Capt Cloman heard of this
treacherous assault he did not wait for
orders. With a little party he started
at once to the scene of the late en
counter. He took the dato, or chief,
prUoner, and told him he would nave
to surrender the men who had been
guilty of the assault upon his soldiers.
There were nine of them In all. Clo
man then did something that brought
him some criticism, but which also
won him the love of every private in
the army. He selected a good husky
sergeant and a squad of his best men.
He told the sergeant to take these
prisoners out into the woods and gather
fuel for a camp fire, and also instruct
ed him that in case the prisoners at
tempted to escape they should not al
low them to carry out their object. In
a little while the sound of firing was
heard, and the sergeant came in.
gravely saluted, and reported that the
nine prisoners having tried to escape
they found It necessary to fire upon
them. In this way Cloman avenged
the treacherous assault There you
have a good idea of the Philippine
war."
Thissummary vengeance mightread
lly be excused if the American soldiers
and the Philippine tribesmen belonged
upon the same plane of savagery. But
Inasmuch as the soldiers are from a
civilized country it does not redound
to the credit of civilization. It may be
a human impulse to revenge the acts
of savages with savage acts, but It Is
not civilized to do It The Philippine
war appears from this account to be
doing more to make savages of Civil
ized Americans than to make civil
ized, subjects of the Philippine sav
ages. The attention of Major McKinley is
called to the surprising effect of big
proclamation opening certain Indian
lands to settlement Over 150,000 ap
plicants have filed for 13.000 claims
and the press dispatches tell us that
of this vast number many are almost
penniless and that few are artisans.
Tbey are simply homeless people seek
ing homes. Yet the major assures ns
that the country Is well employed;
that labor Is everywhere busy at good
wages. Then whence come taese 1M,
000 poverty-stricken creatures who are
already suffering deplorable privation?
And woat becomes of the theory that
dlsemployed labor will not use land
even when land is available? The
Philadelphia Inquirer might gnaw on
this file for a moment, but it will not
It will talk about the weather. But
we hope that the significance of tb
scenes now enacting In the west will
not be lost upon thoughtful people
r bo have hitherto accepted the. mon
strous notion that' men would rather
tramp than work. There Is ample
proof of the utter falsity of this stupid
proposition in the pitiful attempt of
these 150,000 homeless souls to And op
portunity to toil where opportunity ex
ists for but 13.000.
Five years sgo the Baltimore A Ohio
railroad was turned over to Uncle Sam
a financial wreck and he was requested
to run It, as the stockholders were not
satisfied with the way tb directors
were handling the matter In fact. It
was not paying dividends. Uncle asm
kindly consented to do the thing for
the discouraged firm, and a few days
ago, when It was turned over to taa
new owners, it was found that Uncle
Bam, through bis hired man tb re
ceivershad Increased the mileage
from 2,000 to 1,600; net earnings had
been doubled, while the business had
been Increased nearly twofold. And
still we ar told that Unci Sam can't
do things Appeal to Reason.
A falvatloa Amy artist wrote oa s
billboard In letters a foot high: "Waal
shall I do to ho saved r A patent
BMdlelae painter answered It by pa,
tiag RBdernsata It: "Tabs Carter!
Little Liver Fills." TV aWvatloaM
saw the Joks sad agala seed hto brass
af actively undr the craat Joke of tat
BMdtclao faker by palstlag, "Aad nra
tun to BMt thy Cod;-
FEAGHAMT
TcoSZ Pout!:?
in a handy Patent Box (new) op.
MZOOOTfT LtOUlO 2Ss Jriy
Larg LKrb aK)wTtCR,7fc LjU
At all Stcma, or by Mail t at Uw price,
HALL d nUCKEL, NEW YORX
SEAFARING MEN
01ED CL0TOC
IT WILL
KEEP YOU DRY
IN TMB
WETTEST CTATXZ3
roaAsoveTtAoenux
ON SALE eVCRTWHCBC
CATALOGUE) FREE
swwiMfi run tmt or fiARfimn amomata
A.J.T0WEC CO.. B03TON. f1A33.
1 tmmr uiin aawa.
unMTikM.fiNHMr Aff auntm
The rnratation of W. 1. Douglas 3.00
and I3.SO shoes for style, oooilort and
wear ha excelled all other makes sold at
thai prioa. This excellent repuUllon has
bean won by merit alone. WT ! Doualaa
hoes hav to give better estlaf aeUon (baa
other S3 .00 and I3.AO shoes becsoae bfc
reputation for the best 13.00 and 30
shoes must b maintained. The standard
baa alsrare been placed so bi(h that the
wearer reosivas mora value for hi money
la the W. I. Douglas 3 .00 and S3 -AO
noes than ha an get lsewhere. .
W. h. Douglas sella more S3 .00 snd f 3.80
shoes than any other two manufacturers.
m. L (Mapa t V(l '( i'9 Lim
cannot tqaallrt at mna price. '
mm mm mmmm mi thm mmmm mm
mm Bmmtumm mmmml tm M I
mm mm mrm tmmt mm mmmm.
Sold by the bent aho dealer c vrrjwhen.
Int)Ut upon ha vlna; w . i. guBiB -rim-
wtlh nasinn Md prUte rstuipMl un bntiotn.
tHaw to Orwrr by tts.il.ir W. f. DougltM
afoot an nM sold la four lwn. gd oW Ant to
frtnry, ftiioM a m unjmUitn on rrrt?isi u! mm arwl
a to. bjsmj-1 "tusi iw t-ir n j
jnaUJtn iriiimit win nkToo a
Jr lltsu mil flu! a i B nts
rut atatV- thtw. m ti. fit ar4
ft MKmn Nt fillet ; mtwm
(VrStrrd ; MMfUHlrrUlB
y wutn; fiigan or
tuui or light of.
St giivan'i--i.
try a j.
bTbsb Ca)fr CyrsawB
taVsatJ ft". W. sU Ipwirina, MsratSa, 1
EDUCATIONAL
THE UNIVERSITY OF PCOTRE DAI.E,
IW7TKB DAME, BfDtANA,
Obsaatea, Lrttart,
CtvS, rtofcaakai aad
Taafaaa-B
Ciatsss. tm
KaaawPr.
tmmTJC&mmmt4i MudeBU fat Ipecial nlsML
rrisi JMnLsatMr fiaMnlr.e Vf 'dtaaaviutab
tWnrsM. ta Rrnit, mnalefats rfhama
M. mmm Ha41sfor j'b ttotlar IS.
- ay .. . . . . . Aa- bj
CsMBaVWaWal Fftts AaatBeSa
w. a. SMHoasacv. . a. pthisssi.
Ull UUJJ ,g UUilU.U I
Notre Dame, Indiana.
Conducted by the Sisters of the Ilolr
Croas. Chartered 1951. Thorough
English and Classical education. Bag
alar Collegiate Degree.
In Preparatory IVpartment stndenu
carefully prepared for Collegiate course.
I'bvslcal and Chemical Laboratories,
well eouipped. Conaervatorv of M uaio
and Srliool of Art. Uyinnaaluut under
direction of graduate of Hoaton 'ormal
bchool of UrinnsstU-s, Catalogue free.
The 7th year will open 8ept 6, ltfOU
Maraw DIKECTKCtt OF TNE ACAICIY,
SC Marr's Acaatair.
rIDAL( COLLgoa.Rsassl.0.:sta)sfr.l
s sua w asm U ; U. K. lars Mi an rautxj.
V.Cmi, VmHl M Uumk a rstast! SsVXk.
sail tssicn
Vast Asawtriat MnrtlMsnati geaflf
Itoataa Tbts rapar.
ff.N.U-OLIArlA H. 44-iaai
c -"i
mm
Kr a v J l,
yiv XI I NVL00K
ii
It tss
I'r tig AAVW
f. a
Mass.
Eciaiailci aad HUtar,
aravrarft. Ptaaarwaaarv. Laa.
BT ill suail