Harrison Press-Journal O. A. FHIPF8. Pubtlaner. HARRISON, . - NEBRASKA road Is being built in the htgh Alps, which passes the great St Bar nard and also the hospice of that name. This great engineering eat will be finished and opened to the traf fic in July of next year. The biggest gorilla on record has been bagged by a German commercial traveler in West Africa and is now on exhibition in the Cmlauff museum at Hamburg. The animal measures 6 feet 10 inches in height and Its spread of arms S 9 feet i inches. The day of the week to be selected for the coronation of Edward VII, in the coming year, is a subject of specu lation. No sovereign of that realm has been crowned on Sunday since the time of Queen Elizabeth, and only one coronation In English history took place on Friday. It is safe, therefore, to exclude those two days from any prediction concerning the stately ceremonial. I0STEIUNG TRUSTS. PROTECTIVE TARIFF LEAGUE, OFFI CIAL REPUBLICAN ORGAN. ,my, tfai Tru.U Cusaot Be WfFd Oi By Free Trade I'olnta to Kng-lUb. Trust aa Proof Tariff Competition the Remedy. must be provided for England, which RAIDING THE PEOPLE has the lowest tariff or any nation, e- TRUST CORPORATIONS ACT LIKE MASKED HIGHWAYMEN. tbe L'auae, acta duties on twenty articles on which 8,000,OGO ar) paid, but the duty on these articles Is all laid with the Intent to produce revenue and not protection to her manufacturers, whereas 1,200 ar ticles were on the list iu furulef tiuirS, The United Slates is approaching the same conditions and must soon resort to a tariff for revenue only. "The Paris Messenger" says that an attempt to resuscitate the old Roman amphitheater near the Jardin des Flantes, Paris, is about to be made. This ancient arena, which is now used partly as a playground for poor chil dren artf partly for omnibus stables, has a remarkable history. . It is one of tbe largest known Roman arenas, and dates back to the first century. There is evidence that the Emperor Julian held sports there. Woo-Tong, a Chinese merchant of New York, left New York the other day for the Pan-American Exposition. Soon after the train started he saw Grace Bradsbaw, of New York, a pretty American girl, paid her some slight attention, rapidly became ac quainted and finally asked her to d his wife, and after two hours of argu ment won her consent They alighted at Wilkesbarre, Pa., to be married, but being unable to obtain a license went to New York state and were wedded. The sword, which has had so long and so distinguished a military record, has been placed on the retired list British army authorities have decided that in the future unmounted officers shall carry carbines instead of swords during manoeuvers and in active serv ice. The decision is the result of ex perience gained in the war in South Africa. The sword is not only use less as a weapon, except in close quarters, but it serves as a mark to distinguish the officer from his men. He thus becomes a target for the en- emv's sharpshooters, and when the private soldiers have small power of initiative, as is the case in most Euro rean armies, the loss of a large num- Kr nf officers mav mean disaster. The passing of the sword is one of the signs of the changed conditions ol war. An automobile savings bank Is the latest French novelty. The authorities of Mezleres, wishing to encourage thrift among the peasants, have had it built to specifications. . It is an elec trie motor-car containing four seats, one for the driver and three in the rear arranged arouno a small table, Folding shelves make a convenient desk for a person standing beside the vehicle. Under the table is a small safe. The passengers are two clerks from the local treasury department and a cashier. The car travels about the country, making short stops in the villages on prearranged days, and re ceiving such sums as the citizens or fanners of the neighborhood may wish to deposit So far, however, the inno vation nas met little encouragement The peasants seem distrustful of the agility of the bank, and disinclined to draw out the old stocking irom its ma ing place under the hearthstone. There Is a reverse side to the sera blance of luxury expressed by the mir rors, the gilding, the velvet carpeU of many apartment and boarding bouses. The bead of tbe lace department in a great store recently spent her two weeks' vacation in a hospital. She laughed at the Idea of being 111 or even nervous; but she was tired, and for ten rears had not slept in a real bed. In one apartment house, in order to keen her room fitted to receive callers, she slept on a sofa that opened in the middle, and had neither sides nor foot board. Six out of seven nights the covers pulled off her feet At another nlace her folding bed fell on her and nearly killed her, so she traded It for a narrow divan, from which pillows and blankets slipped off nightly. At tbe hospital she finally found a bed wide enough to sleep In crosswise, a bed by day as well as by night, a bed tuckable, with a bolster and counter pane; and she stayed In It for two weeks. In countless case the make believe bed la the symbol of a sham and comfortless existence for which apartment life Is largely responsible. A tanner living at the village of , iio-asT France, was seen to fall to tte ground. and on a subsequent tx . aaslaatloa by a medical man he was wotinrod to be dead. Arrangements far Ma funeral wort In progress, and Um ataa hai been placed In bis oof tM, irate be taddaaly recovered eon akinesias Wtttef P in his cofin, M m ttrrtSs Um watchers that they tag shrift Tata la tan seems to ft united ts Mt, for be was Md mm resales, 1 elottst etafe a mtorimg weed, gaetlcs- The Protective Tariff league, whose publication bureau is just cow espe cially active in denouncing any repub licans who favor a revision of tbe tar iff is also informing its devotees that there are trusts in free-trade England, and therefore it can not be protection that breeds trusts or fosters them so that something else must be looked tor i that is the "mother of trusts." This view of the matter is comment ed on by the Washington Times, which says: "The champions of the tariff pampered trusts in the United States have been in the habit of meeting the demand for the removal of duties from trust-controlled products by pointing to England, where, it is said, there are many trusts flourishing under the ban ner of free trade. That sort of argu ment may be satisfactory to those who are anxious to be satisfied, but it ought not to be to one who is honestly seek ing a remedy for what is undeniably a very great evil. 'If the claim has ever been made that there are and can be no trusts at all without the aid of the tariff, the claim has been thoughtlessly urged by only a few not very well-informed peo ple. Large capital and combinations in business are nearly always an aa vantasre to those who combine. Ob iouslv an Individual with a million- dollar capital can make many profit able turns in business that are impos sible to a man whose capital is only five or ten thousand dollars. This is true In England as it Is anywhere else. 'But the circumstance that large capital has an advantage In and of it self does not prove that it is wise to Increase the advantage by relieving it of all comnetition and giving it a com lt mnnnnnlv hw tariff laWS Which operate directly to that end. To lllus trate: If an English trust unreason ably advances the price to the con sumer, foreign goods will at once come in and bring the price down again. In the United States the price may be set un 25 or 30 per cent and still the for eign goods can not compete for the protection of the American consumer The result is that the English trusts are forced to content themselves with Drofita no greater than flow naturally from the advantageous working of their larger capital; while the Amerl can trust not only has this advantage, but a very much greater one In tbe tariff which enables them to charge the American consumer 25 or 30 per cent more than the same goods are worth in the world's markets. The man who does not see the difference between the two cases must be either wilfully blind or most woefully stupid It is the artificial bolstering of the tar iff that has literally made the United States the home of the trusts, and has swollen them to such proportions that the greatest combinations in England look like babies by comparison. REPUBLICAN POLICIES AND PBOS-PKKITY. .. i m Tbe Abolition of the "Protective Would Be Some Belief Hanking; Power Aid the Work of OrenlMtlon for tbe Pnrpoie of Itokblug tbe People. FRKE TRADE A REPCBLICAN MYTH. The standing charge of the protec tionists against the democratic policy of tariff reform is that it is free trade and the manufacturers would be ruined by it by the influx of foreign goods made by pauper labor and that the wages of our woiklngmen would have to be reduced to the same level to be able to compete with them. This charge has been so persistently made that many people who do not do their own thinking have been led to believe It. But the platform of every demo cratic convention from the first one in 1840 to the present time have all de clared for a tariff for revenue, except in 1868, when "Incidental protection was added. In 1872 the tariff questioa was remitted to congress, that being the year that Mr. Greeley was the candidate, he always having been a protectionist. The last democratic piatrorm ae clared for placing the products of the trusts on the free list, which so far as the steel trust Is concerned has been approved by many republicans, and such a bill was introduced in the last congress. From this It will he seen that tbe democratic party has never declared for free trade, for such a policy Is Im possible without a most radical change In raising the necessary revenue for the unnort of the government Free trade would mean to close the custom houses and either greatly Increase the Internal revenue taxes or a direct tax on the states. The Wilson tariff bill, which Is the only democratic legisla tion on the tariff since 180, reduced the tax on necessities and added the Income tax, which was declared un constitutional by the supreme court. though Its previous decisions had been uniformly the other way. Democratic tariff reform, as condi Hons at present exist, would place th? productions of trusts on the free list and would reduce the tariff on artlclei that are necessities of lfe and con tinue the present tax on luxuries. That I a nlaln business proposition and should Injure no buslneas that to not nVvrlnc nrotectlon and therefore mnnonolr that allows tha people to he robbed under the guise of law. That Is what the present rspoMlean tariff does end tbe democrats would wipe oat the enormity. Free trad to an lposatblllty as ?on as the nation of tbe world are bent on keeping large amis ana aa f and aa fa oar own cane, hare an mormons pension list la addition that It is a Standing argument of the Republican spellbinder and Republican newspaper that when their party is in control the country Is prosperous, while disaster always follows In th wake of a national Democratic victory, says the Washfngtoj Times. The great OuJcvUuU to ihiS argument that it is not true. It is a claim that will not bear scrutiny in the light of the country's pat history. There have been some exceedingly unfavorable conditions In the United States with the Republican party in absolute con trol of national affaire. The panic of 1873 came with the Republican power at its height, and Republican policies in full force. There was not even a remote prospect of any change. Gen eral Grant had just been re-elected and had nearly a full term to serve. Apd yet the financial storm swept the coun try like a tornado, and there never was a complete recovery until consid erably more than a score of years had passed. 1 There was another smaller panic In 1881-82, and the whole period between 1S73 and 3S93 was one of very general depression, subject only to temporary and spasmodic revivals. This Is a matter of economic history, and the cause of the troubles has been made the subject of the most exhaustive in vestigations on both sides of the At lantic. During all of this period the policy of the country was exclusively Republican, for the Democrats never controlled both houses of congress and the presidency at the same time, and consequently were unable to place a Democratic measure upon the national statute books. The panic of 1893 likewise came with every vestige of our economic legisla tion of Republican enactment The only Democratic measure we have had since the civil war was the Wilson tariff, and this was not enacted until about fifteen months after the financial storm broke. The great moneyed In terests of the country Insisted that the panic was caused by the Sherman law, a distinctly Republican measure, and during the debate on the repeal bill Senator Sherman declared in the senate that If the law were repealed (that. Is. the purchase clause of it) prosperity would return In t?n days. The repeal bill passed, but prosperity did not return in ten days, or in ten months, or in five years. And when the campaign came on in 18&6, forget ting their former declarations, the Ke publlcan leaders asserted that the con tinued bard times were owing partly to the Wilson tariff, and partly to the silver agitation: but they conveniently omitted to explain what caused the trouble before the Wilson law was enacted and before the silver agitation began. The panic of 1893 was, In fact, a forced one, brought on by President Cleveland and Secretary Carlisle, in r-iinninn with the New York bank ring, for the express purpose of giv ing the country an "object lesson," and thus forcing a repeal of the Sherman law. The effort was eminently suc cessful in all respects except in restor ing prosperity. In carrying out this delectable scheme, as Is well known, Mr. Cleveland put himself outside the pale of true Democracy, and straight In line with the current of Republican thought There might and probably would have been some irouoie even without this artificial forcing of the panic, for the business stagnation was almost world wide, ana we couia uoi reasonably hope entirely to escape; but the panic would not have come when It did or have been so severe. When the revival came, that also was ntprnatlonal in character, the cnange appearing in Europe about a year be fore It did here. But our main puryi now Is merely to show how unfounded is the claim that we always have pros perity under Republican policies. It used to be an axiom that compe tition is the life of trade, but now that competition has been eliminated in many lines of business It will be nec essary to revise the truism and say that monopoly is the only trade condi tion that will assure good profits. The manufacturer is fast being absorbed into the trust, the small trader is ba ir .in,(j o" y th (lnari ment store, the competing railroad is a thing of the I past and even the high seas are to be , controlled by the transportation com bine by the purchase of all the steam ships. These combinations are all being perfected and some like tbe steel trust and tbe bard coal trust are ronsumat ed and the work of robbing i.e peo ple under the guise of the law is w?r under way. The people have be:n too busy try ing to adjust themselves to this new order of things that they have so far given but little attention to the changed political conditions that have accsmpiished this economic revolu tion. They have allowed their repre sentatives to enact laws under which these combined are organized and are maintained as monopolies. It vill be a long and arduous task to undo the harm already done.but it can be accomplished by reversing the lever and repealing the laws that authorize these gigantic corporations or by ta king from them the special privileges and immunities they now enjoy. The tariff protection can be revised. That will Introduce competition against such as the steel trust. The Interstate commerce law can be amended to compel all lines of trans portation to give equal rights to alt shlnners ereat and small and that charges must be reasonable. Taxation can be equalized so that corporations may be assessed at the cash value of their stock and fran chises so that they may be taxed the game as the farmer and the small trader and householder. To accomplish this the people must elect nubile servants who are their friends instead of as now the compli ant tools of the corporations and the rich and powerful. The President must be an anti-trust man and thus an at torney general will be found who will prosecute the trusts. Whereas dur ing the republican administration he has been selected from the chosen trust lawyers. Congressmen and senators who have shown themselves to be the willing tools of the corporations must be de featcd and friends of the people elect ed in their stead. Moreover, as the trusts and corpora tions are the creatures of the states, the laws under which tbey are organ lzed mugt be repealed or modified, thi is the sole business of the state legis latures and is quickly accomplished the people are determined to protect themselves. Without tbe sovereign power of the state of New Jersey the steel trust could not exist, unless some other state should be equally subserv lent to the money and power of tbe trusts. The trusts and corporations have not begun to put forth all their power, they are feeling their way until they can he sure of maintaining their mo nopoly. As it Is now the few who control them have absorbed more than half of all the wealth of the country and are rapidly gathering In the ma jor part of the remainder. Every day the coming battle Is postponed, the procrastination of the people makes the fight more difficult to win. Money is power, and the trusts and corporations know It. Their avarice, rapacity and greed will irrease as their power expands. Now or never Is the time to strike for economic freedom. this office was indorsed by Ooitnw Dietrich and every other republ can tat officer, also by R. B. Schneider, republican national committeeman and the leaders of every faction of tne republican party In this state. "Further, upon the promotion ot Governor Dietrich to the senate, be took up my case and enlisted the sup port of E-nator Millard, who bad ne' er met me prior to the time of his election, March 28. " 'In view of the fact,' continued Mr. Deaver, 'that the party leaders were a unit in supporting my application, Senator Millard's assent was cheerful ly given. I have about perfected my bond and expect to assume the duties nf fhn office.' "During the last presidential cam paign Mr. Deaver went up and down the country urging the populists to nave noimng iu "-" - and the republican newspapers spoke of Mr. Deaver as a populist who 'stood by his principles.' Rut now ail me re publican leaders ak for and secure a valuable aDKointment tor Dim. proves. If indeed proof was necessary, that there was secret fusion between the republicans and the middle-of-the-road populists. In 1896 the republicans and gold democrats denounced fusion between demorrau and populists, am. t when tbe election was over prora ent democrats like Bynum and Irish applied for and received appointments from the administration, snowing m there was a secret understanding be tween the republicans and those who were in charge of the Palmer and Iluckncr movement. The cry of "down with fuMon uo?s not come with good grace from popu list and gold democrats who have bsen affiliating with republicans. With even poorer grace does the cry come irom republicans who have made use of the two extremes, gold democrats on the one hand and middle-of-the-road pop ulists on the other. 'Honest eo-oneration between tne reform forces is natural and necessary, and such co-operation will be advo cated by those who are earneet in their efforts to overthrow republican poli cies. Secret and dishonest co-operation will still be indulged in by those fair and open meth ods." 46 BrhBilut, f'fctlo Kia She. Private Schmidt, of Company -,,rtnth I'nlted State infantry, now ramped at the rifle range near Mount Clemens, Mich., made a score at shoot Ing at 600 yards that the broke tbe record of the whole army. The target wss a dummy man. Nineteen out of twenty of his shots took effect any 0f whleh would have caused Instant death in a living n.n, while the twen tieth shot would have inflicted a seri ous or fatal wound. Schmidt's achieve ment is said to be not only unparal leled in United State arm rifle shoot ing records, but also without precedent Another Oeen riyer. Another new ocean greyhound will soon start on her maiden trip to New York, and great things are expected of her. The vessel is the Kronprin Wilhelm, and Is owned by the North German Lloyd lino. She will leavo Bremen on September 17, and there wm be umuj new '- --' ----will reach her American dock. The Norther German Lloyd company sets the date for September 24, but they secretly hope that she will reach hero before that time, and there are many. to wager that she will, i ne ivronpriuz W'Ubulm. while built as a sister ship to the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse. Is. ten feet longer, and varies also in other oroportlons which count for speed. It . . . - . U- ir-rsin-, Wil- jS expected inai me mwi""" helm will beat the time of the Deutsch land, of the Hamburg-American line, which now holds the rocoru across ma Eastern seas. A Out for the Silly Seon. Professor Gatitier, a member of the Instttut de France, has propounded a theory on the subject ot perpeiuai youth. In Isolating the oacieria oi physical fatigue, ne nos iuuuu, u hjb, that It Is a poison strongly resembling ptomaine poison in nature. From this be argues that ratlguo can, uy iuo u of disinfectants, be avoided like any other poison, and consequently man need not weaken or age. Couldn't Wer Shoe. Bumnter. 111.. Sept 9th. Mrs. J. B. Flanigsn, of this place, had suffered with dropsy for fifteen years, sne was so very bad that for the last three years she has not been able to wear her shoes. She had doctored an tne time, hut was gradually getting worse. Last winter Mr. Flanigan. wno wss very much discouraged, ui some medicine at Mr. J. J. Dale s drug store In Cannl. Mr. Dale persuaded blm to have bis wife try Dodd's Kid ney Pills, and he bought six boxes. His wife used five out of the six, before she was entirely cured. She Is now as sound and well as ever she was, com pletely restored to health, and free from any symptom whatever of dropsy. To say that Mrs. Flanigan is pleased at her wonderful deliverance does not half express her feelings, and she and Mr. Flanigan are loud In their praises , of Dodd's Kidney Pills, and of Mr Dale for recommending this wondcrf4 remedy to tbem. Tbe fact that Dodd's Kidney ruin cured Mrs. Flanigan of such a severe case of dropsy, after the doctors bad given her up, has made them the most talked of remedy ever known in v mie county. If TAKIFF A FAIL! KK. The National Association of Manu facturers, which has IIS neauquanens In Philadelphia, Is about to Issue a call for a national reciprocity convention. The diBpatcb, which announces this, also says that this action is taken as the result of dissatisfaction among manufacturers who are In the export trade, and that congress at IU next session will be ashed to give the de sired relief. The dispatch goes on to conclusion In these words: The sentiment of the manufacturers, says Pr.itiiont Senrch. Is In favor of se curing treaties of commercial reciproc Ity with other countries, with a view to the extension of America's trade In foreign lands. "Within the paBt few months, be gays, Russia, Italy, and some other countries have dealt a heavy blow to our foreign trade by the levying of a countervailing duty. It will be en deavored to show to congress that American industries have suffered by the present tariff laws and their Inter pretations, and congress will be asKea to give the required remedy. The president of the association must know that the senate is required to ratify reciprocity treaties and that the representatives of the people, wno alone under the constitution have the power to initiate' tariff legislation, have this power usurped from them bv the executive and the senate by revising the tariff under these treaties. The manufacturers' association la i . , . u t . , tA largely composeu m iun-j uiuawi , r .n nrrwiuet and although they Devoe readv Daint none, ua were generous contributors to the fa . kbel: Tm,iiifnn Hanna corruption fund. f e Oreateat Codflab Caleb. What Is reputed to be the larg'-st catch of codfish In the Puctflc waters Is credited to the crew of the parsen- tino Fremont, which arrived ai Francisco last week with I77,uw oi us fish stored away. Most of the catch was In Bering sea. PAINT RISKS The risks in painting are three; materials, mixing, put ting on. With best lead and oil you take two; with ordi nary mixed paint three; with Are we acting in a "hoggish man- . .i with fnr- ner in our ixue iciotiu.. - elgn countries? Senator Cullom has discovered that they think we are and for expediency's sake would nave ratify a few reciprocity treaties. But as the senator had Just left the porch at Canton when he made this an nouncement it Is probable that he im bibed this idea from tbe president who is working tooth and nail so find some plan to protect the protective tariff snd reciprocity is the only way he has been able to discover. Of course H would never do to revise the tariff ana withdraw protection from the trusts, that might be our "plain duty, out cannot be thought of especially as 11 is tbe Democratic program. The tin plate trust to one of our youngest Infant Industries protectea from all competition from abroad and is a monopoly at home. This baby trust managed, however, to squeeze from the American people last year about $40,000,000 of profits snd th:s waa accomplished by seeing sheet Iron covered with a composition of lead, which the trust called tin. Have you noticed since the truth was forced that there fci very little real tin on the market f , Wall street Is figuring on how aracli the steel trust will lose by the Strike. Thr forget that when tbe price ot proa tuts of the trust are advanced to get eaa. It to tbe American people who will ba tha losers. HARK II ANNA AND CORRLTTIOX. Just before the last national elec tion Mark Hanna visited Nebraska for the avowed purpose of beating Mr. Bryan in his own state. The extraor dinary prosperity that suddenly fol lowed his visit and the number of po litick strikers of all parties that ex hibited bank rolls was noted at the time. There Is no doubt that the strumpet of corruption stalked In na ked horror through tbe land and the democrats claimed that the middle-of-the-road populists were some of the strumpets. The evidence that at least tbey were In tbe market and were will ing to accept offices at the hands of Hanna has now come to light, for the Commoner says: "In tha last cam palgn Kie republican pspers denounced democrats and populists for co-oper ating against the common enemy Both parties were accused of sacrific ing principle to 'get office. The sub Ject Is mentioned at this time because D Clem Deaver, a Nebraska politician who had charge of the middle-of-the- road populist csmpslgn In the west, has recently received at the hands of PresltOnt McKlnley a substantial re ward for opposing fusion. A republic an by tbe name of Dickson severely criticised Mr. Denver's appointment on tbe ground that Mr. Deaver wss not a republican. In reply Mr. Deaver gave this explanation of hi appoint meat: t have no desire personally to an war the strictures of Mr. Dlckion, but aa a matter of record I with to say that mr application for apno3tmant to the? have not participated to any great extent in the promised prosperity that the trusts are enjoying. Hanna nas persuaded them that under reciprocity they will get their share of tbe good thines going and that they must bring nrefcstire to bear on these recalcitrant Republican senators who oppose the nlan. Of rrmrse the legitimate ana consu tutlonal plan of revinlng the tariff by the representatives of the people can not be thought of for that would open un the whole tariff robbery to discus sion and would "disturb business" and perhaps lead to the elimination of the protf.tion that, the trusts are now get ting rich under, in an wis mere is no word said of what would be for the interest of the people. It Is all how will It suit the trust or will It benefit the manufacturers? But the people that pay the tax are never consulted. Tbe stock argument of the blgb protectionist has been that when the tariff built up an Industry, competi tion among the Americans themselves would then brins down the price. Whatever may 1m i'ne theoretical force Of this argument, It Is perfectly clear that it cannot hold good with the tructs In lull control of our Industries snd competition utterly strangled. From thi It follows conclusively that so far as trust controlled products are concerned there Is no longer any ar gument In favor of the tariff, which Instead of being beneficial to the coun try as a whole. Is simply an Instru raent whereby the trusts are enabled In enrich themselves enormously at the expense of the American people. If too haTe anv fault to find with thi paint at anf time, either now In palatine- or alter In the wearing, tell your dealer about ii. We authuriM him to do what la right about M at oar exptnue. lint do Tonraelf and oa tbe jtutica tolullow lntra:!iona. F. W. Davoa A Coatrairr. in Paint-safety for you Devoe as in no other. Pamphlet on painting free if Jtt mention this paper. nvinoiTVT rufvnr1 fwrrAGO. -4 mm -En Whhr IVY JsVbj. y THE ORIGINAL That transport that shipped water through her portholes enough o put out ber fires directly she weathered the Golden Oat, can hardly bo con- aldered a safe boat to carry Undo Barn's soldiers, though she did cost a barrel of money, which no doubt someoM got a commission out ot POMMELJ aLAcaartuea 1 PtaTKTJ MTU , 7 CCtS AK9 Hu,HAKtJT STORM, UWiejejTUU. LINE UT tiAMncn I J r 'T A aUOtVEB CO. ROSTOH.MA33 jl EDUCATIONAL, ST.UAfiTSAOADEUY Notre Dame. Indiana Conducted by the Nisters of the Ilolr Cross. Chartered 1.V Thorough Kngllah and Classical education. V nlar Colleariate iK-oreca. In Preparatory Department students carefully prepared for Colleftata course. Physical and Chemical Laboratories well equipped. Conservatory of Music and School of Art. Gymnasium under direction of graduate of Boston Normal chool of Oymnastlos, Catalogue free. The 47th year will open Hept. , 190L assrsei OHIICTtttt OF TNI UmOt, at. Maty! AeaSaav News taaw lauasda