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* % HAVE PLAN READY ? MAIN ISSUES OF PEACE PROBLEM LAID BEFORE PRESIDENT WAIT FOR THEIR ASSENT ? Ail the Larger Questions Have Heen Solved and the Presidents of the i Two Countries Must Now Approve < Them Hefore Smaller Questions i Will bo Entered Into. 1 Plans for the pacification of Mex- 1 ico through mediation virtually have * l>een completed. The major issues are before President Wilson and Gen. i liuerta for approval and when this is { obtained secondary questions will be 1 taken up. A protocol covering the * basic principles will be signed, the * mediation conference will close, dele- 1 Kates will return to their homes and ( the mediators will complete details A of the undertaking in conjunction with the authorities at Washington 1 and Mexico City. 1 This work may require several ( months. It is expected that the re- ( sponsibility for dealing with the Constitutionalist clement will be thrown upon the United States. Among the points still to be disposed of are be- ( iieved to be the selection of persons * to comprise the new provisional gov- 1 eminent and the exact manner by ^ which it will take ollice in succession to the liuerta regime. (Mediators and delegates said a protocol probably would be signed within a week. Just how the transition from the present administration to a ( pew provisional government can be effected is being given close attention. 1 The intent of the American dele- 1 Kates is understood to be that the i new provisio nal executive shall not h appear to have been chosen by Iluer- 1 ta. If the Mexican constitution be < followed literally it is necessary that 1 the office of minister of foreign af- < fairs, now vacant, shall be filled by i tlio individual whom the mediation coifference expects Gen. Huerta to ^ turn over the reins of government, i The constitution provides that in case 'of a vacancy in the office of president, the minister of foreign affairs shall succeed to the position. The American delegates recognize that an irregular method of choosing a provisional president might evoke opposition. The American government wishes the Huerta government to give way to a commission of five, or possibly three. The Mexican delegates hold a commission would be unpopular, be- ( cause the people might resent it as of foreign suggestion. They urge that a minister of foreign affairs automatically succeed Gen. Huerta. This successor then could name as ( 'cabinet members those persons who already had been agreed upon. Such an arrangement might be construed as permitting Gen. Huerta to choose Iiis successor, but the fact that those ! who will comprise the list from which the provisional president 1 would be elected will bo named in 1 advance and approved by the United 1 States, in the opinion of some would prevent this impression from being widely credited. "Neither the American nor Mexican delegates consider this point a stumbling block. That there should be a governing body of five individuals is virtually settled. On this group 1 would devolve the responsibility of making arrangements for a general 1 election and carrying out other de- 1 tails of the program arranged. 1 Though one of the group probably will he called provisional president and the other members of his cobinet, there will be tacit understanding that these men will have an equal voice in the government's operation. Questions of personnel are absorbing the attention of all. ? ? ? MINISTER KIDNAPPER. + Halms llo Was Carried Around in Auto for Thirty Days. The Rev. Louis R. Palmont, prohibition advocate, who disappeared from Westville, 111., March 31, reiterated at St. Louis Saturday his claim that lie was kidnapped and says that he knows the persons responsible for his detention. A big red automobile owned, he says, in Danville, will play an important part in the minister's story to the jury. It was this machine in which lie alleges he was carried half conscious from one hiding place to another for GO days. Mr. Palmont was brought to St. 1 I^ouis by the Rev. John L. Brandt of the First Christian church of St. ILouis, who went to Columbia as soon as he heard that Palmont had been found. Palmont's identification was made complete by Mr. Brandt, who has known him for years. Before being brought to St. Louis he had been Identified by half a dozen residents of Vermillion county. i ? Irish Home Rule Passes. Homo rule for Ireland practically tore, a me certain Monday when the! f COTTON CROP CONDITION NEW YORK JOURNAL OF COMMERCE'S ESTIMATE. Crop for This Year Seems to be Slightly Oflf Conditions of the Past ?Drought Hurts East. The condition of cotton on an average date of May 23 was 78.2 per cent., as compared with 80.5 per cent, a year ago, 7 6.0 in 1912 and 83.8 in 1911. Owing to continued rl i*aii rvh f 4 o AtrAvi* 1 ^ i i LU uu^ut 111 out U1 til Wl llltJ K> Lit IfS cotton is very late in germinating, and estimates of condition are incomplete. This is particularly true of the CJarolinas and Georgia, and to a lesser degree in Alabama and Arkansas. The comparatively low condition In Texas and Oklahoma is largely ittributable to excessive rains, which j :iave rendered conditions in largo secdons very bad. The season in Texas s unusually late, averaging 2 4 days, while in Oklahoma it averages IS lavs. The whole belt is about two veeks late. Conditions by States, as compiled 'rom over 2,000 replies of special correspondents of the New York Journal >f Commerce, bearing an average late of May 23, follows: 3914 1913 1912 3911 1910 SL C. . . .79.4 78.0 84.1 S2.3 74.7 3. C. . . .77.9 G9.9 79.0 74.0 77.3 Georgia . .S2.0 75.3 74.0 S9.3 79.3 Florida . .88.0 79.9 72.4 97.6 76.7 Mabama .80.7 79.6 71.S SG.O 81.2 Miss. . . .SO.O SO.5 70.6 81.7 75.7 La. . . .81.5 81.6 71.0 83.5 71.5 Texas . .75.0 82.7 81.8 83.1 82.7 \rkansas .78.0 85.3 72.3 S2.4 78.6 Tennesso .S2.1 S3.3 73.5 81.3 79.6 Missouri. .84.5 83.0 73.3 79.5 81.6 Oklahoma 77.0 S9.6 78.7 S7.2 85.1 \verages. 78.2 80.5 76.9 83.8 80.2 Continued rains in Texas and Oklahoma have rendered the season so backward that a great many corre,1A.? ir. ~ ~ r ? : ? m ' ? ~ }(iuuucu is 1 ui rmu iruiil iDilKing dOOnite estimates on acreage. The same feeling exists among our correspondents in the Carolinas and Georgia and to a lesser extent in some other states swing, to continued drought causing retarded germination of seed. Estimates on acreage, therefore, Rill be subject to revision next month, and the present estimate can only be regarded as tentative and incomplete. The results thus far obtained suggest an increase of 1 per cent., made up as follows: North Carolina, 9 8 per cent.; South Carolina, 101.1 per cent.; Georgia, 100.5 per cent.; Florida, 108.2 per cent.; Alabama, 100.8 per cent.; Mississippi, 102.4 per cent.; Louisiana, 108 per cent.; Texas, 100.2 per cent.; Arkansas, 102.4 per cent.; Tennessee, 103 per cent.; Missouri, 105.5 per cent.; Oklahoma, 100 per cent. Average for United States, 101 per cent. ? NEGRESS SHOT TO DEATH. ? Timmonsville Woman is Killed at Home of Another Negro. Chessie West, a negress, was shot Sunday morning by Hamp Goodwin. The shooting took place at Ilamp Goodwin's home near Timmonsville. She went there about 9 o'clock and asked Goodwin for some meat. Some words passed and Goodwin shot her with a shntfrnn tlln 1r\nr1 *VUV* tuning CUCUl In the spinal column. There were no witnesses present except the slayer's brother, who says he happened to visit his brother about the time of the quarrel and hearing the noise stopped on the front porch. The gun was fired 011 the Inside of the house and the woman ran out on the porch and fell dead. The slayer is a tall one-arm negro and was last seen on a bicycle going along the railroad toward Columbia. ? ? SINKS TWO IlAltGES. Vaterland Creates More Havoc as She Steams Out of Berth. The great steamer Vaterland which took nearly four hours to dock when she came to New York on her maiden voyage recently, sank two coal barges as she steamed out of her berth Tuesday. Backing out under her own steam, her momentum carried her across the Hudson and sho slipped in between two piers, where the coal barges, carrying 500 tons of coal each, were tied. Both barges went down almost at once, but no lives were lost. The Vaterland cut her wnv tntn tU r> slip almost to tho shorn. In the backing out the water churned by her screws snapped tho lines which held two Morgan liners. These vessels crashed against the sides of the pier, damaging their rails and woodwork. i ? ? Should Make More Powder. A naval appropriation bill provides for an increase in She. capacity of the government powder factory at Indian Head, Md., so that all smokeless powders for the navy may be manufactured there. ? ? ? Augusta Wins Site. The encampment which was originally placed for the Isle of Palms has been sent to Augusta. # ? ? ?? Like aii demagogues, Mayor Grace \ STUDENTS FIGHT GANG. Some Woflford Boys and "Midnight Crew** Have Feud There is some expectation of further developments in the feud which has developed between the student body of Wofford college and a gang of town boys known as the "Midnight Crew", several of whom are becoming well known in the Spartanburg police court. As a result of a sanguinary encounter between several students and about a dozen of the gangsters Saturday night, nearly one hundred of the collegians, it is reported, scoured the city Sunday night in search of their enemies, but were unable to And them, even in their familiar haunts. The "Midnight Crew", t is said, began the war by attacking lone collegians from ambush near the campus as the students returned to the dormitory late at night. Two of the students were insulted on East Main street Saturday night by members of the "Mi mi edit. Crew" Tltov ofionV ? 0 ? W - V .? A IVVIUV.IV od their tormentors and as a result Clarence Stiles, an alleged member of the gang, was carried to a hospital, suffering from knife wounds alleged to have been inflicted by one of the students. When the case was tried in police court so many conflicting accounts of the dflicultv were given that Mayor John P. Floyd discharged all the defendants. / VETERANS PARADE. ? Close Annual Reunion at Anderson With Monster Pageant, After selecting the city of Columbia as the next meeting place and reelecting all oillcers for another year, the business session of the State reunion of Confederate Veterans at Anderson came to a close early Thursday afternopn. The officers re-elected are: Gen. B. H. Teague of Aiken, division commander; , Gen. U. R. Brooks of Columbia, commander of the First brigade; Gen. C. A. Reed of Anderson, commander of the Second brigade. More than 15,000 persons witnessed the grand parade, which closed the State reunion of Confederate Veterans. The parade was led by a cordon of police, followed by the marshals, the First Regiment Band( the Palmotfft Piflornon floor >\nt>no V.TT T> I u vvy *.V IUV4UVU 1114 5 U \J JL 11U U J X A. McDavid of Greenville, and four ladles, the remnant of Palmetto Riflemen (twenty in number), about 700 Confederate Veterans, the Second Regiment Band, the local military company, the Boy Scouts, Zion school band, trucks of the fire department, decorated automobiles, veterans in automobiles, Sons of Veterans and many decorated buggies and carriages. School children to the number of 3,500, each carrying a Confedflag, were banked against the curb to review the parade. ? CLARK COMES OUT. Thinks Presidential Term Should be Six Years. Speaker Champ Clark in an address Tuesday night to the graduates of a commercial school at New York declared lie would like to have the president elected for six years with the provision that after that he be "eternally ineligible". "As it is now," he said, "a president spends most of his first term trying to get back again. We should do away with the custom of inaugurations, particularly on March 4. They are merely spectacles for sightseers. Elections should bo held on the last Monday in October. This should be don<r*not before nor later than 1 920. This would give Roosevelt, Wilson and Taft an opportunity to got anntlior form linfm-n tl,n ~ ' vvuva ?vi u? uviuic ill'" win: li 'I 111 ltlW went into effect." ? ? SENT. UP FOU LIFE. Prisoner laughs at Way He "Put One Over" on Alienists. J. E. Baxter, charged with the murder of the father, mother and brother of his wife, and who since his arrest in Kentucky several months ago has been feigning insanity, Thursday was convicted at Memphis, and sentenced to life imprisonment. The jury reached the verdict without leaving the box. Immediately afte the verdict was announced, Baxter dropped his role of insanity and laughed over the way he "put one over," as ho expressed it, on the commission which passed on his sanity. .? ? ? Another Conviot Freed. The governor lias granted a pardon to J. H. Vomer, who was con victeci in Anderson county In January of this year of larceny and sentenced to one year. , ? ? Negro Killed at Church. During service at Shaw's Creek church in Edgefield county Sunday a negro by the name of Simmons shot and killed another negro named Jesse Scurry. I ? ? ? Four Lives lx>8t in Fire. Four members of the family of Patrick O'Brien were burned to death when fire destroyed their homo at CANDIDATES ROUTE I ? EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ANNOUNCES CAMPAIGN ITINERARIES { ? c WILL BEGIN ON JUNE 17 < t Two Parties Are to Tour tlio State? Candidates for Senate Begin Meet 1 ings at St. Matthews, While State Ollice Candidates Will Open in Sumter. I The itineraries for the senatorial \ and State campaign parties in their a canvas of South Carolina have been t announced by Gen. Wilie Jones, \ chairman of the sub-committee of the \ State executive committee, which pre- r pared the itineraries. 1 The canvass for United States sen- \ ator opens at St. Matthews on June 17 and closes at Sumter on August t 2 0. f The canvass of the candidates for v governor and other State ofiicers opens at Sumter on June 17 and s winds up at Greenville on August 2 0. r The first primary election takes place \ August 2 5, and the second primary 1 September 8, two weeks later. t The itinerary for the senatorial i campaign follows: l St. Matthews?Wednesday, Juno 17. Orangeburg?Thursday, June 18. St. George, Friday, June 19. j Charleston?Saturday, June 2 0. Walterboro?Monday, June 2 2. Beaufort?Tuesday, June 23? Ridgeland?Wednesday, Juno 2 4. Hampton?Thursday, June 2 5. f Barnwell?Friday, June 2G. Bamberg?Saturday, June 17. Winnsboro?Monday, June 2 9. Chester?Tuesday, June 3 0. Lancaster?Wednesday, July 1. Yorkvlllp Tlmrflrlav TnUf O . . . vy A *1 V4 ? ?->V4H J f U UIJ dJ 9 Gaffney?Friday, July 3. Spartanburg?Saturday, July 4. Union?Wednesday, July 8. J Newberry?Friday, July 10. Greenwood?Saturday, July 11. Abbeville?Tuesday, July 14. ' I Anderson?Wednesday, July 15. 1 I Walhalla?Thursday, July 16. * I Pickens?-Friday, July 17. Greenville?Saturday, July 18. ,t T,aurens?Wednesday, July 22. 1 Columbia?Thursday, July 23. j Lexington?Friday, July 24. 1 Saluda?Saturday, July 25. i Edgefield?Wednesday, July 29. < Aiken?Thursday, July 3 0. 1 Camden?Tuesday, August 4. ^ | Chesterfield?Wednesday, August t 5. c Rennettsville?Friday, August 7. 1 Darlington?Saturday, August 8. c Rishopville?Monday, August 10. f Florence?Tuesday, August 11. ? Dillon?Wednesday, August 12. I Marion?Thursday, August 13. 1 Conway?Friday, August 14. s Kingstree?Saturday, August 15. Georgetown?Monday, August 17. Monck's Corner?Tuesday, August 18. < Manning?Wednesday, August 19. Sumter?Thursday, August 20. The itinerary for governor and other State oflicials in their canvass i follows: * Sumter?Wednesday, Juno 17. Manning?Thursday, June 18. Monck's Corner?Friday, June 19. Georgetown?Saturday, June 20. 1 Kingstree?Tuesday, June 23. Florence?Wednesday, Juno 2 4. 1 Marion?Thursday, June 25. Conway?Friday, June 2G. Dillon?Saturrlnv Tunn 97 * Darlington?Monday, Juno 2 9. Bishopville?Tuesday, Juno 30. Bennettsville?Wednesday, July 1. 1 Chesterfield?Thursday, July 2. Camden?Friday, July 3. I Columbia?Saturday, July 4. Leyington?Thursday, July 9. Saluda?Friday, July 10. Edgefield?Saturday, July 11. Aiken?Tuesday, July 14. Bamberg?Wednesday, July 15. Barnwell?Thursday, July 1 G. Barnwell?Thursday, July 1G. Hampton?Friday, July 17. Beaufort?Saturday, July 18. Ridgeland?Wednesday, July 22. Walterboro?Thursday, July 23. Charleston?Friday, July 24. St. George?Tuesday, July 2 8. Orangeburg?Wednesday, July 29. Newber l * i 111 I Vlt IT"'* "^* ,t, OA, * ^-w ' ?< AV- ??* I, *** ] A Full Literary, Sc I^^^^Mr^n^younfMuon 0? tho South the best tinder positive Christian influences, at tho mini in 1 x'A\ and holds a rocogni/od position among ti of the South. Provide* the usual Literary Course leading to the Ancient and Modern Language*, English, Hist and Political Economy. Oratory and Nntural graduate courso leading to tho Dogroo of Masto Offer* a four-year Course in Electrica land Mechan buildings, with fully equipped Hhops and lnbor paratns and appliances, under a separate corps o lias tho groat advantage of boing connected wit k' | urfy I r i ' ^pBWB^^SWWKa MHflHRBRr^nKR3i9BM| EQUALS SUFFRAGETTES. tegro in Jasper JaU Refuses to Eat ^ Anything or to Work. The Jasper counly chain gang has ust been reorganized with ten convicts, as a result of the recent court ; >f general sessions, each of the convicts being able bodied men, capable >f doing good work. Their sentences ange from life to 30 days. When ne guards witn the assistance of the leputy, went to put the men to work j ill of the convicts were very peaceful \ 'xcept the well known desperado, , darion Bi?own. , When ordered to step out of his < :ell he would not come or give any ] eply whatsoever. Deputy Sheriff 1 fioyd started into the cell to bring , llm out when Ilro\vn made at him < vith a quart bottle filled with water, \ ittemptlng to strike the deputy with < he bottle. Immediately the guards vent to Mr. Floyd's assistance and it \ vas necessary to beat the negro al- { nost to unconsciousness over the s lead before they could do anything vith him. . Brown says that he never intends ( o work a day on the public works < or Jasper county, saying that he j vould die first. lie begged them to ? till him after they had him down, aylng that he was ready to die. He < efuses to eat and it Is Impossible to i vork him In his present condition. 1 ^he county officials have a problem i ?efore them in how to work this des- ? -erate negro, which so far they have 1 een unable to solve. \ ? ? < PLUNGE TO DEATH. 1 ? i *assengers Drop Into Water as ( Steamer's Gangplank Breaks. The steamship Frederick VIII- was ibout to start on her voyage from loboken, N. J., Friday when a gang- 1 dank between her main deck and the )ior broke without warning to a score >r moro of passengers hurrying icross. Men, women and children? risltors returning ashore and several lassengers?were precipitated into he Hudson river. A few others fell lack on to the pier and were hurt. The list of victims contained two cnown drowned, a child missing and lelieved to be drowned, two other persons missing and at least ten suffering from injuries. Men with grappling hooks were jearching for others who might be Idst as the body of three-year-old \nnette Feldschau was recovered, although she had not been reported as missing. Those in the hospital include a junk man known as "Junk" ' Peterson, who, the physicians said, vent temporarily insane after failing o rescue the Feldschau girl, daughter )f a friend. The child slipped from lis grasp while in the water. Ho was Iragged upon the pier, but seeing a loating box, mistook it for the child ind threw himself overboard again. Vfembers of the ship's crew dived from the decks and saved the lives of leveral persons. ? BAGGING IS WATERED. Senator Tillman Writes Commissioner Watson About Practice. Senator Tillman has written Commissioner of Agriculture E. J. Watson ldvising him of certain reported swindles being conducted by manufacturers of cotton baeainer. and ng him to take any apparent steps toward preventing the South Carolina farmers being injured. His letter sets fourth that certain manufacturers of cotton bagging increase the weight sf bagging necessary to recover a bale of lint cotton afbout 15 pounds by soaking it in water. He figures that this costs the farmers in the end about twenty-five cents a bale. St. Matthews?Thursday, July 30. Winnsboro?Monday, August 3. Chester?Tuesday, August 4. Lancaster?Wednesday, August 5. Yorkville?Thursday, August G. C.affney?Friday, August 7. Spartanburg?Saturday, August 8. Union?Tuesday, August 11. Xew.bcrry?Wednesday, August 12. Laurens?Thursday, August 13. Greenwood?Friday, August 14. Abbeville?Saturday, August 15. Anderson?Monday, August 17. Walhalla?Tuesday, August 1 8. Pickens?Wednesday, August 19. Greenville?Thursday, August 2 0. r\ll - O w " o lentlfic and Technical Sch< educational advantages, tution. This course leadi mum oxponso. Foundod nooring, and constitutes a 10 liigh-grado institutions Tho Coilcgo owns !t i thorough OQuipmont. It* Dtgrtt of A. B. including and tutors is largo enough ory, Mathematics, Social and individual attontion s Sciences. Also a post- Tho Campus lifo is mo r of Arts. morality aro high. There ica! Engineering in seporate carefully supervised hy th rtorios, all nocessary ap- Tho athlotic work of Nei f experienced instructors, nmong tho South Carolina h n rogular literary insti- moral and spiritual welfax cates from accredited high-schools admit without OX. f.hool department for high-school undor grad* uatos. Next sossion opens Soptemhor 17, 11)14* For cataloguo and particulars, addrosg Rev. J. Henry Harms, D. D., ^ El # lrwraj , -% V*' LOSES HIS EYESIGHT / V 4TUDEXT OF CHEMISTRY VICTIM OF AX EXPL1SION Sew York Clerk Was Working at Xigltt ami Stutling by Day In Ills ^ Eager to Ijeurn. A mistake in the handling of a flesh filled with a concentrated solution of caustic potash resulted in an sxploaion that will probably cost Edwin Carol of Mount Vernon his sight. Carol is a night student at City College in New York. The accident took place Thursday night, with the other Al members of the night class in advanc- Bj 3d organic chemistry, wero engaged in the experimental production of synthetic indigo. The experiment roquires the mixLure, under high air pressure of dyestuff with the potash solution. Just is Carol turned on the compressed sir, the rubber tube connecting the lir line with the flask of potash be- ^ :ame kinked. Without stopping to shut off the air, Carol seized the tube in both hands and tried to straighten it out. Heforo the students working on dither side of him realized what ho was doing, there came a loud report, Followed by shrieks of pain from ^ Carol and a student named Ochs, working beside him. The flask had burst, throwing the burning caubtic into Carol's face and splashing it 3ver Ochs. Dr. Prayer, director of the laboratory, and Dr. Rreit.hut, an instructor, quickly prepared dressings and used r\t It or f 1 t*C? f ?) I /I ni nn on ??/\ri 1* 1 1 n i/v?vi in pi. tiiu iiicuouiuo ? nut; tiw nil[ng an ambulance. Ochs' burns, though painful, were found not to be severe. The ambulance surgeon, however, aRer taking one look at young Carol's seared face hurried him in the ambualnce to the Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital. It was found there was but little hope of saving the eyes, but all possible remedial measures were taken, and at the hospital the young man was resting comfortably. Young Carol has .been a student in the night class at City College for five years, and expected to win his degree in applied science this year. He has been earning his education, being employed as night clerk in the General Post Office. For five years ho has been attending classes until 11 o'clock, leaving college nightly to go to the post office and perform his duties there during the rest of the "J r,ght- ? 41 SENATORS PLEASED. Smith and Tillman Comment on Primary Regulations. When asked what impression had been made on him by the new rules ^ adopted for the Democratic primary^ by the recent State convention, Senator Tillman said: "I was very much pleased at the action of the convention. It went farther in the direction of safeguards than I had even hoped it would go. It is all right to screw the cap down J tight, provided it is not screwed so ^ tight as to snap the threads; and it has not been screwed that tight in this case. I wish the convention had adopted my suggestion of having each ballot stamped. On the whole, however, I can say tliet I am delighted." Senator E. D. Smith, when the same question was put to him, re-^ sponded as follows: "I a in gratified to see that the convention was so unanimous and harmonious and that their action in modifying the primary rules was by such a tremendous ma jority of the convention. This would indicate an overwhelming sentiment in the State foi^ modification of the existing rules governing the primary. Every effort should be made to acquaint every voter with the new rules in order that ho may enroll himself and be prepared for the primary." ? A report says Walter Johnson 1 going to jump to the Federal league . next year. About that time some of ^ the best hitters of the aforementioned league will wish they had stayed with organize 1 ball. ? ? Tie who says that he has forgiven 1 but can not forget shows that he has f f\y*cvs\t f V* 4-r>. ? - IUI {jUklcu UUW IU IU1 JjlVGi _ Ncwbcrr\i S5 SoutKC&roliiv^ j, l.:A.i>w.iLi ?v.... a. . .> |..f_f--Tf|--|.-f..^jol for Young Men ! ?to the dopro? of Haehelor of Seionoo In Engl- * " |il Round start for almost any industrial pursuit, splendid buildings of largo porporilons and || i Faculty of fifteen college-trained specialists J to insure tho amount of personal instruction o ossontinl to tho host rosults. A >st wholesome, and tho traditions of honor and ejL > is no hazing. Athlotics aro ondorsed and 0 Faculty. Gymnasium work js compulsory. ' ivborry College in lato years 1u?h heon foremost 1 Col leges. The roligious life is ideal, and tho e of tho Htudont is tho school's cliiof concern.