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2 ANOTHER TRIP TO CAPITOL Br PlItKT WOMAN IS APP(>|\TKI>. Practically Pertain Mrs. .1. Borden Harrison Will Im> Member ot? pri Industrial Pomniis.sion. "o i?d Washington, Juno 18.?Presideut Co Wilson made another trip to the uu Capitol today, and this time did not sei get away as inconspicuously as on Pa previous occasions. ap A largo crowd had gathered to aft hear a band coucert on the Cast it front of the Capitol, and wlieu the Wl President arrived there were cheers up and applause reminiscent of campaign days. gi\ The President rose in his autouio- to bile ami waved his hat to the crowd, as As he went through the corridor rai just in front of the senate chamber, members of the upper house caught mi a glimpse of him. It was the first ho: time the President had visited the tio Capitol when the senate was actu- pej ally in session. ed Later the Sergeant-at-Arins, ell' scouring corridors for senators to of make up a (luorum, did not hesi- pei tate to enter the President's room cal where he thought a group of sena- as tors had congregated. Senator na Bacon, the only one who happened Br to b'1 there ended his conference th< quickly and returned to the senate ngi chamber. shi SAW THEM ALL. cai The President had on his list 20 senators. Republicans are well as T( Democrats, and saw them all within 11 hour. He consulted them about appointments of all kinds in their home states. It had been thought \|(, he would take advantage of the opportunity to sound his callers on their attitude toward currency legislation. "Appointments only." smiled the President as he left the room and chatted a moment with the waiting ' correspondents. He said he had not talked legislation with the senators. ^ 1 While no list was made public, it " is understood that the President con- . 1 suited the Nebraska senator about " the appointment of Robert L. Metcalf, editor of The Commoner at Lin- ' coin, to be a member of the Panama canal commission; with Senator La- , r Follette about the appointment of Albert Schmendemann, treasurer of . the Democratic state committee of !u> Wisconsin, to be minister to Norway, " and with several senators about the (?' new industrial commission, which is ?|.) to investigate disputes between cap- '! ital and labor. cl.a Of the nine commissioners, it is N.1' known that Charles Barrett, of 4 e Georgia, president of the Farmers' ,-n Union, and Frank P. Walsh of Kansas City, and Mrs. J. Borden Harri- '"N man of New York will represent the 1 nnn.nartisan nf tin. pnniniiuuinn ' ' Frederick K. Blano of Illinois, and K. Thurston Ballard of Kentucky, ,ls will represent employers and John B. Leunon of Illinois, will represent \\employes. The names of the three other commissioners, two of whom are to represent labor, and the third, em- Co ployes, were not made known. It ws is expected that all will he sent to sei the senate Saturday. N'a he WILSON TO READ ft MESSAGE MONDAY V" te? Currency Hill Will Follow It ^ Closely?President Denies That liryan is Opposed to It. Washington, June IS President Ta Wilson now plans to read his currency message to Congress next Monday and the Owen-Glass bill tiapi s,uoiiHjjstuitupt? eqi itm ajjr.> sei on currency reform will he intro- ,01 duced soon thereafter. By post- OVl poning presentation of the hill a few ''r: days the President hopes to have He absolute harmony. Pei Tlie President today specifically denied that Mr Bryan had inter- '>r jected a note of opposition to the currency hill. Mr. Wilson declared l,n there was "not a shred of truth" in reports of friction. floppotnrv Hrv'ati Icul u h it li.. cni<l was his first long talk on tin* question today when In- mot Secretary Mr.Adoo just outside of the cxcpu- '*r 1 live offices. The two men stood nearly an hour leaning against the '':l iron fence along Kxecutive avenue, fai Chairman ('.lass of the house currency comn.ittee, however, was not sure that the hill would be introduced next week. He seemed to re- tai gard it "subject to delay" and it die was indicated that the delay had ju? been caused by conferences at the White House last night. wa Samuel i'nterinyer of New York, hicounsel for the i'ujo money trust investigatlng committee, conferred today with Representative Henry on the congressman's movement to re- Ion open the "money trust" hearings dej Representative (Jlass called at the tin White House tonight to submit the wll results of another day's work on the Hu draft of the administration currency r?'t bill; it was said that the ('resident W< probably would begin tomorrow his proposed conference with the mem- nic bers of the senate and house bank- wit Ing and currency committees inc foi Railroad Inquiry Brings Out an I ntisiial IMinse. hu New Haven. Conn., June 18 The inquiry into last week's wreck on l*'o the New Haven Railroad disclosed a to w phase yesterday which was said by railroad men to be quite un j i usual. The second section of the |)(. express which ran into the rear of s!l, mi- iir i onion last I iiur ilay was nf) mad< up again with tin- am* engine , i, and equipment and sent from Now js Haven to Stamford to reproduce a |,jt nearly as possible the renditions which existed when the wreck oe- nj, curred sp) As on the day of the wreck two ,|., service applications of the breaks were followed by an emergency ap- no plication. Th?' stop was made in :'>K seconds when the train was running f>2 miles an hour and was made within 2.10f? feet \ir brake exports said the stop w is a very good i.n one. ? ' THK LANCASTKK NKV ?NOTHKK PRKCUENT: SPURNS (lIF T [ ^ y 1111 Appeals to Ambassador Bern sloll to Have German Government CAKNK(?IH DONATION ItKJKCTMl) Represented ut Panama. h Washington, June 19.?Another 1M.<M>0.000 to \ underbilt ecedent was set by the administra- University Shrewd .Move to Get n, when Secretary Bryan appeal- Control. Bishop Says. to the German ambassador, unt Bernstorff. to have the Ger- Atlanta. Ga., June 19.?Charges in government and people repre- that the recently announced gift of ited at the approaching Panama- 11,000,000 by Andrew Carnegie to 1 cific Exposition. The ambassador the Vanderbilt University at Nash- 1 peared at the state department ville, "is not a donation, but a n er a visit to the White House and shrewd attempt to get control of j, was understood tha*. President pnrt of the university property." and j. Ilson expresed a desire that ne call that the retired iron master is on Secretary Bryan. ("dangling money before the public Count Bernstorff will acquaint his with the purpose of influencing liti- p eminent with the request, adding gation pending over the university," p it such personal representations are made in a statement given out j he believes the situation war- here yesterday by Bishop W. A. its. I Candler, of the Methodist Episcopal Tiiic mnwo r,., ?,? ?i,., ?.i I church. South. Bishou Candler V nlBtration was inspired' bv the ! characterizes Mr. Carnegie's offer s stile attitude towards the expos!-| of a donation to the university to es- h n of several of the great Kuro- tablish a medical school, as an "iin- (j in powers. This attitude is credit- j pudent proposal of an agnostic steel h to apprehension as to the adverse monger," and "not so much a dona- b ect upon trade of certain features ' tlon as an attempt to denature the c the administrative action of the institution." a nding tariff bill, especially the so- "This loud heralded gift," bishop p led inquisitorial sections as well Candler's statement recites, "on b to a desire on the part of some <*lose Inspection of its terms, appear t] tions to sympathetica! support of no ^ift at all, but a shrewd atitish government in its protest tempt to get control or a part of the b ' British government in its protest property of Vanderbilt I niversity in (-> linst the exemption of American order to set up a medical school ( ipping from tolls in the I'anuma fashioned according to the peculiar f. ial. ideas o?' Mr. Carnegie. 1, BKLONGS TO CHURCII. ? 3 RENEW STRIKE "Vanderbilt University belongs to ' b ttvt TT/'T'Cl'T1 T> O TVT A Methodist Kpiscopal t hurcli, n 1JN VV ?jb 1 V llvijrlr* IA South. The church's ownership s I having been denied, suit was ; s! ii Will be Called Out Next ?>ro?Kht 80 nu; u*? to thV . question, and the ( hancery C ourt k Week in the New River decided every point in tile church's ia Coal Field. favor. From that decision an appeal |. ... , . was taken and is now pending in the a hut les nil. \\ \ .. June 18. A SUprP|ne court of Tennessee. ly ueral strike of miners in the New . To lhls Mr CurneKle m;lkPS ul- ]j V? P i xtV o' i. * lusion in his letter, putting his of-i p I ed Mine Woikers ol America. |)>r j? SU(.b relation to this suit as to f, II be called next week, according make u tantamount to dangling ? an <iiinouneement tonight of money before the public with the i, omas Haggerty, member of the purpose influencing this case." ? ternational Miners board Fif- Bishop Candler quotes Mr Car- r houaand aro employed in upgjp's letter in which the latter t< 1.' <>v% . , T states his objection to denomination- < ie < ec sion to call a general aj ,.ontrol of colleges and universi- i) 1 w reache<i today at Heck- tb,s amj imposes conditions on his v ,a' ' r; Uaggert> attended donation consequent upon determi- J. i t"1'' \\''iK #iin /- : n> VJi nation of the question of denomina- )j ?ht Whether 15.000 miners will Uona, contro, of th(1 university. n Idle depends, it is said, upon what ..Th<1 (lulw>st mlnd ran SfM. co., ncessions may be granted by the tiuuo(, thp bishoi) S ^ateim-nt. "that fTdiors. 11 is iieneved that some Carnegie does not propose to give s the operators within the next few a ,y to Uu, vanderbiU Ui.iveisi- i vs \\ i grant terms agreeable to jJU| distni tuber t'toin it one of Ms " elr employes. It is rumored the departments. worth about *f,uO.OOO. ] w River operators are confer- !.u appear8 also lhot th(. Rpisco- I \ trtV v ui a palians see in this affair an elTort t A strike in the New River field is {n M t th(. propo8tM, lmM,ical 0 pected to result in a renewal of partnilMlt OI lhl. miversity of the 1e strike on ( abin and Paint |,outh ,, ,,u . are rorn>(.t iM lh,.ir eks where an attempt was made , , Mr (;arn,.Kh, is proposing v meet ngs of miners to eaM a strike blow {UJroy ,h(! J school ot the lOpiscopjilians, and tie- h nature the medical school of the ii ill Restore the Old War Vessel Methodists, and raise on the ruins p , ,, of both a Cariiegieized establish- . f t onstellation. .. , . i in i . llieilt ot Ills own image and Ilk*3- > Newport. It. I., June IS.?The old ness." 'I irvette Constellation, a relic of the d ii ot 1 ,n 1 _, which tor years has llo<*> Knlco Protest. * training ship at the Xashvlll?. T,.ni, . Juno ?. Vi v v l?n' %V Hishop K. K. I loss of the College of ' r " ... N'7 i ? ??.i.VaVy Waliops of the Southern Methodist " rd soon. Hear Admiral Will,am (.hun.^ wMch w|? takt. artion ,,ri. , > erton. commandant o the sta- ?? ,(t(.s, of four rs > n has received on ers to that ef- of , Vall(|,.rl)llt rniversitv Hoard ' t iron, the navy department. It (). T r,dative to accepting Anplanned to restore the Constella- drew <.urn,.Rie.s Rift to m,.dit.al ''! J? l'., or,glnal aPPearanee as department of *l.?ou.o,)0. yesterday ' a published the protest. The four * ? trustees question the board's right ! v ft to Deliver Principal Address at to accept the conditions attached; j (Gettysburg question the fairness of the proposition toward Carnegie, with suit Gettysburg, Pa., June 18.- It was pending contesting the rights of the .. ni-officially announced today that board of trust, and allege that this riner President raft would preside is in fact giving away a department ^ cr the great gathering of Con fed- of the university. Hishop I loss in ite and I nion veterans at the a statement specifies two serious ol>ttysburg celebration. He is ex- jections: rted to deliver the principal ora- Mi -"The university does not \ n July 1 It was planned to have R?.t a dollar but gives away its medesiilent Wilson preside but it was ical department to a new governing . nounced a few days ago that he hoard without restrictions." >hahly would not attend. (2t?"Mr. Carnegie makes no promise to give the $800,000 as en- t Success dowment unless the trustees succeed .... 0. in eliminating the church." nsas City Star x' , 11 Rob WORLD IIKCOMINtt DEMOCRACY. I Wood of the I nited States r.rmy tomes chief quartermaster of the Vice" President Marshall 1' nama canal zone Not onlv the nilv hut the people of this" city, in Washington ere he was brought up, are proud Washington. Juno IS In an adhis achievement dress at a high school commence- ' Now, Captain Wood has not at inent here yesterday Vice President ned a great financial success. He Marshall warned the graduates not I not go in for that He worked to '?ok hook learning to guaran-t as hard for service as lie would fee the making of a career. ve worked for reward Service ''Anybody," he declared, "who is | s hi> reward. The result is that willing to cast principles to the wind success outranks a money sue take advantage of the weak and is. to ride roughshod over his neigh- * It is entirely possible to recoil- hors can make a career, hut from lute the fabric of "success." As 'be higher standpoint, he gains e ig as success in any line of en- nothing by that. I, avor is measured by the money T,|e Vice President pleaded for ,. it is made, of course many men 'he maintenance of the old common (| II he controlled by that standard, school and cultural education as i( t almost all who win at it would against an over-abundance of tech- ? her win in the way that Captain "hal instruction Kducation. he de- , >od has won. dared. especially of the cultural q About the only satisfaction that k,"d. does not go to make a career, p in ov m n1/ i n or hvlnira lint rather In malro anlan/ttit ....... iil?- men is when it comes as an !l"'' women, a greater task. p *i<1 < 111 to siimc tiio* servlfc, VV'iiat, Sinn* the revolution, he added, y example, is James J. Hill proud "U,G l'?Ued States has set the pare v His money? No; his "empire ,or lUv world in progress and olvili- r ilding." zation and in two centuries more the fl world will he a democracy. I he'ieve tiiat tills age is the crowning nr Thousand ( Inldrcn For Sane .r|orv ()f aj| .lK(,s llli July. ' J, * Washington, June Hi More than MHHHCH IN I > \ 11 lv ( WFItV ,, Hio school children have asked to n allowed to man h in tie- "safe and odd < ereuioiiy Willi Tinkle or , ie" pageant July 4, it was an Water as Wedding Music. ..need by the civic committee in , Va.. June 18. -Diving be- . urge I he re.,.,est of the children ,h(> sur,(>f lhf, f,.irlb taken by the committee as a w ,, J(.nk|ns of Konilok#., Va.. Hi'y encouraging sign that the am<> ) i(., Miss L?athia ildri n or the country are begin ()f N?wport N>Wfl. Va . at the r ,g to realize the advantages of oh- , as, <)ff spllist).rh00(, ai?, P rving Independence Day without (h? |w<) |(ift tf)(1 as ||r,||o , n ngerous indulgence in fire crack- m fop J( hom,ymoon th? KaHt y . toy pistols and miniature can- [)r j?nkinH and woro i exploring the Durav caverns when s 7T - , , _ ? tliey decided to marry. A minister n to cure a Cold in One Day wa summoned and with tlie tinkle r Icet.axativhiiromoQuinine, it stops the of trickling waters as their wedding y i^h f11?<I llcaufictii and works off th^ Cold. ?i < . r ret money If ? fail* to euro. music. the ceremony was performed. I w GROVE > signature in eu<-h box. 25c. rs, JUNE 20, 1913. HISS S. B. ELLIOTT ? AWARDED DEGREE uutliern Author Mwlo Doctor of Civil Law by 1'nivcrsity of I the following H 'hursday's State: Sarah Barnwell Elliott, novelist, laywright, poet and president of IK V he Equal Suffrage League of Tenessee, was yesterday awarded the onorary degree of doctor of civil aw by the University of the South, ewanee, Tenn., according to dis A HV v/11 atches received last night in CoLimbia. Miss Elliott has residences Koy 11 New York city and at Sewanee. Miss Klliott, as the late B. Lawtou (] Viggins, chancellor of the Univerity of the South, was wont to say, ol max i a South Carolinian by descent, a leorgian by birth and a Teunessean <COSt? y adoption. It might be added that y development and travel she be- Die ante a cosmopolitan also. She is ? (laughter of the late lit. Rev. Stehen Elliott, the first (Episcopal) ishop of Georgia, and a sister of lie late Rt. Rev. Robert W. Barnell lOlliott. the first (Episcopal) ishop of Texas. ller mother was . ^ harlotte Bull Barnwell of South SEEK TRAIN 1 arolina. Early in the seventies the iniily moved to Sewanee, where is Police Hunt Perpetn rented the University of the South, ,, , . liich he father helped to found. Miss , Elliott was educated at Springfield, 111., oine, studying occasionally under masked men who ear lie professors at Sewanee. In 1886 the express car on lie spent some time in Baltimore, Special." the Illinois tudying under Dr. Bright of Johns train between St. Lou lopkins University. In 1887 Miss were sought in this c llliott went abroad, where she spent being interrupted in year traveling on the continent, in police, the bandits ft higlnml and in the East. In the neer to run past the utunin of 1895 she, moved to New when they finally f ork city, where she continued to safe with dynamite, ve until 1902; usually returning engine into Springfl > Sewanee's "heaven-kissed hill" ed. :>r the summer months. She spends The safe, accordiu inch time each year in New York express agent, conta lit the pleasant academic commu- than $500. In their ity of Sewanee has been always her the sum the robbers eal home. Long ago she dedicated engine crew with dei 3 her best novel, "Jerry," to the log ed the express niesse abin in rear of her dwelling, which niiscuously at passer as been her workshon for mnnv ears. She has been engaged in litrary eraftsniauship the pub cation of her story of "The Felleros" in 1880. Her greatest repu- WT utton was buiided, however, on I m# Jerry," first brought out as a I W i erial in Seribner's Magazine in I VI t ^ I 890-hl. "John Paget" followed. A The Ibirket Sperrett" saw print in 5 8! 7 as a ScriUner's serial. "An Don't you 1< ncident and Other Happenings" is maaeof thoi he title carried by a collection of J mass OI inei ight stories, published by the liar- ir&graiice . :iliolt wen abroad, where she spent Wouldn't yt reviously appeared singly in liar- with you GV< erks and Scribners. "San. Ilous- perfume?to i Dii was written lor tne Hoason 1 - f, ,u . iography series and was published trie Jiesn-C n lfiOft. Miss lOlliott wrote and ublished in llfdl, just a year be- 1 VIOLET DULC ore she returned to Sewane.e from lew York. "The Making of Jane." Violet Dulce "his work and "Jerry," though very Violet TJnlce ( liferent, are Miss Klliott s two Violet Dulce rl trongest novels. .v.! , , f* } -i Miss Klliott has been highly sue- VlOlet UUlCe 1 essful in her essays in dramatic Violet Dulce L riting Her play. "His Majesty's Violet Dulce S ervant." written in collaboration Violet Dulce T itli Maud Hosford, was presented y Lewis Waller at the Imperial ^ lieatre, London, October ti. 1 !>04, | ,as enthusiastically received atid an there for inn nights. Short *11111 lories Miss Klliott has produced by kJlan-Ha* he score, and the editors have alays demanded more fro in her pen. ler work has graced repeatedly the ages of Harper's. Seribner's, The ^ ndependent, Youth's Companion, ~~ ???~~?" lie Smart Set, ltook News, The Pllrini Progress, Lippincott's, The hitlook and the Sewanee Review. 'lever bits of verse have also apeared from her pen from time to i in * *. Miss Klliotl's foreign letters ? -ii The Louisville rourier-Journal i ere marked by a freshness of ex- rl ression, an artistic catching of IIV:: lOffi?iL^Mj alient features, an utter absence of v^frrv.jlaHSHPSrS! uidehooklshness, which would on- Jt, p itle them to be considered as mod- If olonial Dames, of the 1'nlted faughters the onfederaey and t' the Historical Society of South [| B 11 ^ ?] * 'aroliua; also of the following iBHBHBBMHHSHI hilts: Laniard and Wednesday IIm since 1894 giver ifternoon, in Mew York; and Ly- Influences at the 1 e""I. i? London. RESULT: It is U its student l>ody of 4 GREAT SMALL GRAIN CROP. THE LEADING $150 pays all charj heat, laundry, medic larvest of This Summer Has Iteen except music and e Largest Ever Made in State. I REV XHOS 'olumbia State. "South Carolina has just harvestd the largest small grain crop in er history." said 10. J Watson, ominissioner of agriculture, yester- ^11 ay. "The acreage tiiis year was at TUC I Intfin aast 60 per cent in advance of that Int. I IflllV f last year, and the yield per acre his year was exceptionally large. "he farmers experienced little ditli- Enrollment over ulty last fall in gathering the cot tli on crop w hich was small in com-i dEGKEE COURS1 arisen with that of the previous chanical and El ear he weather was mild, and d?stry, Archltec .hen the cot ton picking season ?HOI,T rnritsK' Insed earlier than usual, the farm i SHOKI . i, ,.' rs lost no time in putting in heavy I . Z rops <d' grain Then the month of | Grading, rour Ia> was partieularly suitable for COST?Cost per s< mail grain- All these thtnera luliiix llorV.* " . ... .. v?,Iln,. | ?? a WV1 , l/'i ngcther enabled South Carolina to Tuition, if able reduce a 'bumper' crop of wheal. the one year A| ats and rye. The thing for the all expenses, $1 armors to do now is to sow the SCHOLARSHIP A nibble land in peas." maintains 167 f and 51 one-yeai Ulcer* and Skin Troubles. $100.00 per sesi ed Clemson Coll If you are suffering with any old, eligible for the mining or fever sores, ulcers, boils, plicants.) czema or other skin troubles, get qcholarshins box of Hucklen's Arnica Salve and n" , ,, ou will get relief promptly. Mrs. County truce Jones, of Birmingham, Ala., NKXT uffered from an ugly ulcer for nine "t ? | lonths and Bucklen's Arnica Salve " nil' III ured her in two weeks. Will help Clemson College, 5 ou. Only 25c. Recommended by d ,anoaster F'harmacy and Standard __ )rug Company. r / ~ [7 Baking Powder ISOLUTELY PURE ly Baking Powder made from al Grape Cream of Tartar lelicious home-baked foods imum qualify at minimum Makes home baking asant and profitable ? tOllHKKS. one detective and exchanged shots with another. No one was hurt. ? . The. holdup took place ten miles i ois o ai ng south of Springfield. A danger sig' nal brought the train to a stop and juno is. Two enginemen were "covered" by ly todav robbed : revolvers. the "Diamond After tiring a fusillade of revolver i Central's fast fhdts-along the sides of the coaches lis and Chicago to intimidate the passengers they itv'todav vftrr ' ?'(?inpelled the ^engineer to uncouplo their work bv ?xPre8S car from the train and arced the engi- to Pr?reed two miles down the track. bluecoats and Five charges of dynamite were orced open the an ineffectual attempt to they ran the ?P?n sa'?eld and escap- | Many a love letter has come home ig to the local to roost, ined not more ?? 'threatened' the PI,CS Curcd ln 6 to 14 Day8 nth. overpower- ,wt111 rcfun'1 monry " p*zo . OINTMENT (ails to cure any ease of Itching, nger, nreu pro- lUind.Blf^Uitiiror Protruding Pile* in6to Hdnya. Igers, disarmed The first application gives Kase and Rest. 50c ou Love Violets? ave to gather them?to bury your face in r sunkissed petals?to revel in their divine >u like to carry that delicious fragrance erywhere?to make Violet your favorite ilways be certain of the subtle sweetness ut flowers? Then use only E PERFUME AND TOILET PREPARATIONS Talcum Powder (white and flesh)... .25c yomnlexion Powder (white and flesM ."He ?oilet Soap 25c liquid Face Powder 35c R Sxtract, oun?e 50c ? iachet, ounce 50c oilet Water 75c ^ Sold Only at Our Store. ard l)ni{? Company "The Rexall Store." t "Thorough Instruction under positively Christian owest possible cost." v-day with its faculty of 33, a boarding patronage of 3t>3, 113, and its plant worth J160.000 TRAINING SCHOOL FOR GIRLS IN VIRGINIA ?ea for the year, including table board, room, lights, steam al attention, physical culture, and tuition in all subjects locution. For catalogue ??iid application blank address, . ROSSER REEVES, B. A., Principal. IlLACKSTONK, VA. A ?: li i r n I uii Agricultural touege JO??value of property over a million and a ilrd?over DO teachers and officers. R8? Agriculture, (seven courses), Chemistry, Moectrical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Textile InAural Engineering. 4?One-Year Course in Agriculture; Two-Year le Industry; Four-Weeks Winter Course in Cotton Weeks Winter Course for Farmers. *sslon of nine months, including all fees, heat, tare!, laundry, and two complete uniforms, $133.46. to pay. $40.00 extra. Total cost per session for uricultural Course, $117.55, Four-Weeks Course, M> ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS?The College | mk our-year Agricultural and Textile Scholarships, r Agricultural Scholarships. Value of Scholarships on and Free Tuition. (Students who havo attend -* au/ ?j?.ii?i ^ant-Bo or university, are not Scholarships unless there are no other eligible apand Entrance Examinations will be held by the dent of Education on July 11th, at 9 a. m. SESSION OPENS SEPTEMBER 10, 1013. onto lo \V. M. KIMiS, President J. C., for Catalog, Scholarship Planks, etc. If you lelay, you may he crowded out.