chroniclingamerica.loc.govchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1894-10-10/ed-1/seq-9.pdf ·...

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EDUCATIONAL n WASHIXUTOX. COLl'MBlA O i.NSEI'VATi «KV OF Ml'Sir. '.«) K ST. N'.W. PIANO. OKliAN. VHK.I.V. VOHTC. &c. ItlMif EDWIN 11AUT. rKlN'll'AI. ¦X'.I.IMl. FKKNrH. 1.ATIN. M ATIIKMATIl X < ill Monk- triamo l»y collect trt'fH-r; best rtf*.; fTm* iiHjilmtf: wfll nix' teAt h for btfii*-. Miss WHCWH. star nfl»r«. oolO-St* . illYATE I.BWINS, DAY AMI EVKN I NU rlamri. in liwruases. iMithenwtic*, Knclisii hran- ;:es. EVA V HLT11, A.M., WN 12th st. B.w.; f reference*. iwl£>-lM* BANJii AM" «;tTTijL TWt«fc;h Instructions. E. L HOWES. Startt'. 1223 15th st. n.w. w^-Sw* (IV. Mass. a»c.l Bi baktiin or kn'.lami wnjL nfiw to ITwblmtMi «n)^_ri*s m«e b-r rlanra at hi-r art stiulio. lilt) 3m h »t. n.w., tlve flr*t wet* in 1 *.- toher. l"rtrate lessons by .1 rmli^. TiM-nt. s»-:T»l tn" Mr. George J. Becker Will resume lessors in piano and theory of music. Em? method. Studio, H>5 lltli st. ti.tr. hocr. o to 6 p.m. se24-3m ~oLney iNsmmi, imt i nr.. worn yoi ng~~ ladi and little girls. Sjwrial :t4TiMrta|ni for frftnly of art and BrtiTt languages. MWn Virginia Mavm Dowy, Mfc« 1-1 urn Lcf lV>r>«»r, I*rimipals. ocS-tf Miss Susan Pollock, 8426 Q St. N. W., School and Kindergarten. Every advantage lYimrj, preparatory am! ad- ram--d i lasses. (;«Tm:.n aiol Latin. Froebel and National Normal Kindergarten Institute*, teachers* tniiiioK class. ocS-lm* Washington Female Semi= NARY. 1226 15TH ST. N.W . .NtAtt MASS. AVE. Boarding and diy f -bool: primary. intermediate ami advanced departments; efficient twhfrs. Special instruction given each pniul; no extra charge for French. elocution a ml class singing. se«*-au* Mtm ClAl'IMA STUART. Prlnci]*l.__ Mrs. L. fl. Cleveland's Kindergarten ami Primary School will ojten Octoi er 15. in her parlors, 1407 Ubapln St., Co¬ lumbia 11ts. o«-b-Mt* Mi Hi >BKKT A. SMITH RESUMED li>>« »NS <piano, organ* for th»* 2SHb season. October 1. Hpeclal attention given to vo«*al music, with ac«*ouipuniments for orgau ami piano. lnstru- m< nts at i«3»> French st. ocl-lui* iouhTiltike. MMK. DE ST. CUIK BUXTON, only certifi¬ cated pupil of Mate. Cappiaui. late of Milan ami NVw York, will receive a limited number of pupils. MUSIC ROOM. H2i* 2f»TlI ST.. Dui>out circle. where applications may be made daily bet, the hours of 2 ami 4 p.m. OdJ-lw* LANGUAGES. THE KEKMTZ SCHOOL OB1 LANHIAI.ITS, 72S 141b si. n.w. Branel.e* in the <* laclpal American ami Euro¬ pean cities. Send for cir-ulara. Kref.rti, Oerman. S|wni*Ji, Italia a, Latin, Greek. MISS EVA MILL-H.VIRAL l.EXSON*. Ml'flC RikiM. i»m XZTH ST. X.W. M^tho-l of .lear enmniafkm ami pare ti>ne. Pntills i»rppaie4l fur opera. 'hnrt ti or eoneert enicair*-iiM nts. issi-fit* ltniiAMK A. rax. FK'IM i'ARIS FKKNCH clasMf^ aial prlvat« lessou*; ls*st referem-es. l:;rj 14th st. n.w. Eleven Tears of successful tenchlny. o.vV3m* Mrs. Harriet Mills, L^^'a 1115 Htb st. Mis* LOTTA MILLS, liamst.* Norwood Institute 1435 K. AND ULI-U 14TH N.W. The i»o:inlinK department and residence have be*»n transferred to 1435 K st. n.w. All reeitn- tl«is ami rlass work will !h» r«.mluct»*<l as hereto¬ fore in th*' two school Uuildiiis^. l-lil ami 1214 14th st. n.w. Mrs. \VM. 1>. 1 AlilXL, rriscipal. >ii» iv\ iNsrrri TE IVY INSTITUTE IVY INS1 ITl TE IVY INSTITUTE IVY INSTITUTE i\ \ INSTITI TE IVY INSTITUTE BUSINESS I I>|.Ii:i }E. business « »>lle«;e. BI SINUS?* ro|.l>:tiE. BIMMXS roi.LECE. Bi'slN K"SS i'MLLEiiE. BUSINESS nHXMtK. BUSINESS umij»;e. rwirae, day or ni^ht, fii5 a yea*. Th- typewriting ami shortlMtid <-«Hirse. fl5. Bookkot'pin2r. arithmetic, apeilinu. Enciish. pen¬ manship. H^raf>lish»"d is"»i. Send for catalogue. IVY INSTITUTE BUSINESS «»»|J»,E, S.W. -or. 8th ami K sts. U.W., S. W. FLYNN, A.M., l'ria. aulH.tm FKAL AND FRAEi LEI \ PUES*:UE. (iLltMAN CLAM8E3S, .rft-lB* 1224 12TH ST. N.w. NEW TKKM J»» Fit EN < 'II LESSi »NS--litMJD proniii!>'<at1«H'. To leani to *i»eak well, rea«l and URile-staml. lnmw. Wploina for two courses. MI.LE. V. FtttDilOMME. 3u7 D at. n.w. «'4 1m* TU E W EST KXD ICHOO>L Ofc^EXFilESSU »N. W 17th st.. over Art Students' La ague. I ikUt the persou:il direction of Mr*. J. It. WALTMN. Will open October 15, lsw. Expressive r»-atllna. «ra«-e an>l ee^tnre, by Mi** iSAltELLE S. NESMITH. Vocal techni«ine ami dramatic actkm. by Miss liel»*n OdfKNtn. Fhvsit-al cnltnre ami d in. ing, by Mis* M. B. STEUAKT. oo4-«lt Ml» I1A1-STEADS URINATE II«miL WILL ltE- op»»ii for the sixth year on Monday, t>rt. 1, at 142S» 2»»t»» n.w. Appii<-ati»ii may k made at the s«-h4Mi|, and at 3*^24 y st. n.w. se4-2m Washington Seminary, ]&ls-4o 17 st. tvoaniins day prhool for girls. O lleglate ami preparatory dvpts. 0<>nnan-Eugliah Klml«>r^«rtHU. Mr. and Mrs. G. I. SMALLVVUOD. k# 2m* DBA. . TAU«;in EVEN INOR MBCHAN1- cal. architectnral. topograpliical and naval, with ttio nei »'«»rjr math* iuati«-s tor d»*sigm*rs. In- ¦tnh'ttons Lt-jjiu September 24, at 531 7th St. n.e. au4 :trn- AKT STUDENTS* LEAGUE. N* 17T1I ST. Day ami c\»»tting chs»s 1n drawing and paint¬ ing. 7phb east ami life, nmler Mr. C. H. L. Mac- don.«i*l ami Mr. Edward II. Slebert. Comp«*i- tiou. Mr. E. C. Mraser aial Mr. IL N". Bmoke. Waur *-*»lor. Mr. De Lam ey W. Gill. Pn«|Kira- tory an'i«{ue. Miss Alma de Mier. Special terms by ih« year. o«.'i-tf GEi». W. I.AWRKNCE, VOU'E CULTURE AND PIANO. PITWO. 1<¥C OTII N.W. Shakespeare Method. Weak vui« es a spei*ialty. Kxamiiiaiiou free. o>3-in* SBAUHER WOULD LIKE A FEW GIRLS. AB«M*T lt» years t»kl. to >«»n a rlass for the study of history, literature, rhetoric a ad lAtln or French. Addr#»s^ Rrn S4). Star «tti<-e. o<*2-lm* MR. J4IHCF KASHAR. LESSONS IN THE ART M vMin Haying; Mme. KASUAK. lessons in sing- imr. Ir.srriKthHi n*sumed October 2. 1217 M Of. n.w. oe2-l m * THE Vl'KMY OF T IE HOL\ CmOSSi 1312 MASS. AVE.. FOR YOUNG INDIES AND CHILDREN. The Fn-Iisih rrsirse «»rPers every opportunity for obtaining a th< rough literary cdneation. while .}>«. ial attentkH. is giveu to the natural sciences. Y»wal ami in>trnm. ntal music, drawing and paiut- lnFr«m-b. liernvan. I^ttin. eits-ution and phys¬ ical eiiltui t- are taught by competent instructors. o.-1-if Hartyn College of ORATORY. . TNCt >RPOR A TED . 1223 to 1231 G st. n.w. The largest and best eipilpifcd institution of Its kind In the world. 1'ii it giieat nrrvirrMENTS: J. ELOn~l I< in. 2. ORATOKY. S. r>ltA>tATIO CX'LTt HE. 4. rt-IYSH'AL, CLXTI UB. PROF WEBSTER EimEItLY. PRESIDENT. ItBV. FRXNKLIN J MlU.Elt, A.M., PRINCITAL. -O.- HON". E&niv R. HAY. CHAIRMAN OF TUB BOARD OF TRl-STEES. XSACBER.^ AND IFl-TtKFTtS IN* SrElTAL DEPARTMENTS. Spi'i inl Features for l«!M-t». 1. A wwratf yrs'liatini; roano la Litentnre; fne !o all r»*«lar juiDiis. 2. The use «f ihc new Practice Rooms for Indi¬ vidual praetire. 3. Every jsipil In the college will hare the nrlv.ivg. of taking i»art Id an entertainment at lea ^t once u « »4t 4. In a<b?ition to the regular Instruction, the rla»»MS w^l t:.nght by Genevieve Sr««!»bips (the greatest !»flsjirt.« t»*a"her livtnsi, N'eHon Wheat- croit, Ai.«I A liyroil King and others of national fa:ue. Clasps are tilling rapidly. First lessons October 4. Graduarinu i »ur»es begin October 15. oel-tf M;ss Burbage, Gndu.iie I^eipzig Royal Uonservatory. Piano, llarimmy ami iV^iLttrtioint. m m9I1 MB I iL PRIV ATE LfS-iONS ELEVEN I VKT OK^ADVAN'O- ed s'odie». HspeHul ati«ii;i«>n to *»a<%war»l. un¬ willing ?ti«T adult p;:pils. Ui»i.»rsltv graduate. Prof. .1 I «.: llopkius p!:;« e, near 2Uth and I* sts. a TIIF MI.»E>- IIFFEY. 14.V. c«»K« «»RAN ST. N.W* v.ill r-«p n *Tr sch«f»l for e»r*s and l»oys Sep?. 1'». i>. effort r :<»!.. to :».!«.»» jjp the ftplls. V ml laftica .«, af^ly nt thdr t d--t. r. i" . SlKS. t.ftf » A K >TEELE. EXPERT IN VOICE buildim: s*-«-ures p«ir t»»n" and clear ..u«ni- i.t' ion. No sore throat. No M-reaOiiug. No tr»-ii' Ii;it»it. Res*«»r» s mlsoseil ro!--ea. Onen to «*hui' a. <«nt -i't ami society en.'age:n« iiii. St?i<!io, 1522 1} st. ooO w&s2m* |qD'res>ion. i hys»7al uultui:i: jf\nTneite SIOKEL. Instru< tor at St. J«.si*t»!.*s t.'ollege. Eni- metsb-rrg. i.oluate of Roster. S< hoo! of Lxt»res- .ion iS. S. Oirrf. D-an>; classes on Wednesdays, 924 F -r. n.»v., betrir.nin^ Oct. 17. Address 2107 N » -r Bait".. %fd. se27-3w* IxsTItt 1-riON" BY MISS MaY H MEAD, (fttiii itHl t'Upil of ilerr Raif of the Royul Cou- ieriatorv or Br I In. Addrcis 2001 1 si. u.w. lai* EDUCATIONAL. I\ KASIIHGTOS. The Columbian University, WASHINGTON, D. C. rev. s. ii. greene, d. d., president. The Preparatory School opens September 24 The Columbian O^lfge opens S^ptomber 24 The Medlcnl SHiocl opens October 1 The I»eut*l Sch«w»! bp MM October 1 The Corffjwn Scientific School opens. .. .October 2 The Iaw school oj»ens October 3 The School of Graduate Studies opens. .October 4 The Preparatory School, 1335 H street northwest, gives tbofOQrt prepara¬ tion for college, for the Naval ami Military Acad¬ emics aid for business. A corps of ten professors awl instructors. Untitling open for inspection and a teacher present daily after September 9 to answer Inquiries from 0 to 2 o'clock. Session begins SEP¬ TEMBER 24. For further informal ion address ANDREW 1\ MONTAGVia. Ph.D., Principal. The Oelnmblan College opened September 24. Full etofstcal and scientific courses are offered leading to the degree of A. 11. and U.S. respective¬ ly. Students seeking admission are required to pre¬ sent certificates of the work done in the institu¬ tions at which they hare previously studied. The College Is open to*l>oth sexes. For further infor¬ mation address PROF. A. T. MONTAGUE, Ph.D., Dean. Corcoran Scientific School. Forty-seven professors and instructors; twenty- three "full d.-i«»rtm-nts: twelve full courses of study in General Science, Civil and Electrical F.ngInher¬ ing, Chemistry, Meteorology, Geography, Geplogy aihI Mineralogy, Arr'iitetture, Finance and Eco¬ nomics, Language and Literature, leading to degree of B. S. Fee for full course, fUO a year Sp^-lal students admit tcil. Fee for single studies, fSO per year. laboratory, designing and field worm extra*. Opening exercises Tuesday, October 2, at S p.m. Addresses by l*rof. G. 1*. Merrill and Asst. Pi of. Edward Farquhar. DEPARTMENT OF APPIJED MATHEMATICS Prof. F. R. FAVA, Jr., C. E., llend of Department. Courses in Dcstriptive Geometry, Perspective, Mechanics, etc. Si* , lal courses for teachers. DEPARTMENT Ol' ARC11 ITECTt*RE, Prof. C E. HARRY, A. R. I. B. A.. llend of Department. Full course. Special courses in all branches. 1 >EJWRTmE.NT OF CI 11:MISTRY. CHARLES E. MUNROE, Ph. D., Professor of Chemlstrv, liead of Department. H. CARRINGTON BOLTON. Ph. 1>., Lecturer on History and Philosophy Chemistry. T M. CHATARD, Ph. D., Lecturer on Chemical Engineering. CABELL WHITEHEAD, B. M., Assistant iu Assaying. PETER FIREMAN, Ph. D., Assistant in Quantitative Analysis. J. S. MILLS, A. M., Assistant In Quantitative Analysis. lest ruction iu General Chemistry, Chemical Prac¬ tice. Qualitative, Quantitative ami Technical Anal¬ ysis and Industrial Processes, Assaying and Metal¬ lurgy of Precious Metals, Ac., Ate. Dr. Flt«>man will conduct a course in Organic Chemistry. DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING, Prof. F. R. FAVA. Jr., C. E., Head of Department. Full course. Si>ecial courses In all branches. DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE AND ECONOMICS, A. F. CRAVEN. Ph. D., Professor. Send for circular. DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS AS APPLIED TO ARCHITECTURE. i Prof. AMATEIS, Head of Department. Mf. MEYER, Assistant in Freehand Drawing. This department has l»eeu organised for the train¬ ing of superior draftsmen in architecture and civil ergiiiecriug and for all who seek instruction in free- ii^.ud drawing. DEPARTMENT OF FRENCH, LEE DAVIS I/>DGE. A. M. Ph. D., Professor. Full course in the French language and literature especially designed for scientific students. DEPARTMENT OF GEltLOGY AND MLNERALOGY, GEORGE P. MERIULL, lt». D., Head of Department. GEORGE V. CHANDLER, B. S., Assistant. Full and special coarse* in Geology and Mineral- ogy, systematic and iiffllii IjKI'ARTMENT of GElUf-YN, HERMAN SCIIoENFELD, Ph. D., Professor. Full course in the German language, literature, history and science. A course in the Polish language is offered. DEPARTMENT Ml MATI 1EM AT ICS. M. L. llols KINS, Ph. I>., Professor. H. G. llomiKINS, A. B., Assistant. Algebra and Geometry (preparatory and advanced). Trigonometry, Analytic Geometry, Calculus, Dif¬ ferential Equations, Least Squares, Determinants, Quaternion*. DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY, LEE DAVIS LODGE, A. M., Ph. D., lYofesaor. Physiological nnd Rational Psychology. Ethics, Pedagogy, Istfw on the History of Philosophy. Gourse esp«*eially adapted to teachers. DEPARTMENT OF PlIVSICS AND ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING. E. P. LEWIS. B. S., Pr« fesror. J. E. BLoMEN", Ph. D., Instructor. lectures on General Pinnies, Theory and Practice of Electricity; enlarge htl*>ratory equipment. Send for circular. INSTRUCTION TN RUSSIAN. PETER FIREMAN. Ph. D.. Instructor. A full course fn the Russian language and lit¬ erature is offered this year for the first time by the University. The course consists of grammar, con¬ versation and the reading of popular Russian tales, the masterpieces of such prose writers as Gog<d, Tourgeniev and Tolstoi aiul poets like l'oushkln and Lermontov. DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING, EDWARD A. MUIR, Assistant. Mechanical Drawing, as applied to machine shop practiee. Projections, Working Drawings and Gen¬ eral Practice. For further Information address PTof. CHARLES E. MUNROE, Ph. D., I>ean. The Law School Faculty: 'lte Hon. JOHK M. HARI.AN, I.L. D., (Associate Justice of the Suprem\ C«*irt of the United States!, Professor of the Constitutional Jurt*f>:Vlence of the United States. i»f the Law of Dom\tle Re¬ lations. of Commercial Paper nnd «»f Torts. The Hon. WALTER S. COX. LL.D., (Associated Justice of the Swpceme Court of the District of Columbia), Professor of the Law of Real and Personal Prop¬ erty, of Coiitmeta and Of Crimes and « Misdemeanors. 1 The Hon. WILLIAM A. MAURY, LI.. D., (Sometime Asslstaut Attorney General of United States', Professor of Equity Jurisprudence, of Common Law and Equity Plfudit*. and of the law of E* Menee. The Hon. DAVID .!. BREWER. IX. D., (Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States*. Professor of the Law of Corporations. Prof. H. H. KMMOTT, A.M., 14* M., (of 'the John^ Hopkins University), 'Lecturer the (Ivil Law. HENRY E. DAVIS. A.M.. LL. M.. (Sometime Assistant Attorney of the District of Onhntiitte), lecturer on the History of Law. WILLIAM F. MATTINGLY". Ifrq., (of the Washington Bur), Lecturer on Practical Commercial Law. The Hon. WILLIAM EDGAR SIMON DS. A.M., I.L.B., (Sometime United States Commissioner of Patents), Professor of the Law of Pateuts. The Hon. ANDREW C. BRADLEY, (Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the District of CwlmuMa), Lecturer on Criminal Law and on Criminal Plead¬ ing nnd Practice. WILLIAM G. JOHNSON, J.L.M., (of the Washington Bar), Professor of Legal Catechetics and Judge of Moot Court. The books are now open for the registration of students. The Law School opens on Wednesday, Oct. 3, at 6 p.m.. in the Lecture Hall of the University, when the rtrst lecture will be delivered and an- notnicements for the ensuing session made. Stu¬ dents desiring to enter the Iaiw School are re¬ quested to register prior to the day of owning. The books are now open for the registration of students. Graduate School. Courses of advanced instruction are offered, which lend to the degree* of Master of Arts. Master of Science, Civil Engineer, Electrical Engineer and Doctor of Philosophy. A schoo1 of original r.*scarcli nnd bibliographic Infinity". Owning exercises Thursday, October 4, at 8 p.m. Prc>f. CHARI.ES E. MUNROE, Ph. D., Desn. To^* catalogue di>erlptive of these several schools address ROBERT H. MARTIN. e-.V'f Secretary. Medical Department ~ or The Co-uinriibigLrt University The se^'enfr third ses?aon l»egin* OetoJ»er 1, 1WI4. Regular daily le«-tiirc*s are de livered at 5:80 n in. For anncuoeement apply to Dr. D. K. SI I PTE, Dean. 13111 Q st. n.w . telephone .115, hours to 10:34) a.m.. 4 to .; p.m.. or Dr. E. A. de Sc'HWEI- NITZ. Se«Tetary-Tr.*asu!cr, 13i"» H st. n.w., 5 to p.ni 7 to v i* in ec8t31 WASHixirrriK conservatory or murk; m 10th st. n.w. Twenty-fifth year. Piano, organ, voice, violin, flute, comet, etc. Free advantages to pupils. <». p.. BIT.LARD. Director. se2S-lm* REOPENING OF GAII.LAUD SCHOOL OF LAN- guages, !M)H F st. n.w. Founded 1888. Principal, Prof. J. I). Gniliard, B es I,.. Paris; oflieier d*:icade?.»ie and :*;itl:c»r of a new, ientilic and progressive ut.'thod. indorsed by S«rl>oune and leading edu«*afors of I ranee, England and Amer¬ ica (Mt cinolsra), an |m a itafl ot" yll- fied prof.->sors for all m««l«-rn iauguages. se22-lm MR. ERNEST LENT, Pi« no, violin, theorv of music. N»... ERNEST LENT PIANO. sel5-lm* Kesiden'-e, l."»2>» Con-oran st. MRS. Z. D BI HER. Instructor of Piano, Voice and Harmony, s.-l". 1 ni-». 14-7 Q st. n.w. won nn\ ANP PHYSICAL CULTURE. Miss fteulah «Jrlbert. teach»r in W. -stern Man land College, will rcecivc a few pupils In Washingtou at ?XI4 I* st. n.w. se2T-lm* FRENCH LANGUAGE. PROF. PALL E. Vol NOT, 1426 New York nre. Rend for circulars. S*27-lm* DU. JO*IN P. i AI LI IKLD Will resume lessons at his residence, lo42 New York are., se27-lm* Oeto»»er 1. LESSONS IN GERMAN. Experienced Gcnium lady wishes pupils of any age, at houie or iu school, iu German language and literature and music (university preparation); lessons in exchange fo- board and room. Ad¬ dress Miss A., 1023 lit ii at, #el4-lm educational. II* WASHINGTON. HOWARD UNIVERSITY MEDICAL DEPARTMENT . CLINICS. IV ill' 'orglcal, Obstetrical anil Dental, win .w .C ,,r Howard University «"<¦; *£« following cllnlfs during the winter fitter {5. Fre«dmen s Hospital, beginning after *'tJ" «nV at 4:30 p.m. by Prof. N. F. ,My. °* Wednesdays at 4:30 p.m. by Prof*, lam* K,'Thurn. C. B. Purvis or Dr. Daniel Will- C IVrW»_FOr ..auate* "nd »enlors, by rrof. J«bn^E.BmH^tf" " 10 am' by Prof' a'pSJ,1Pf ^turn-Once a week by Prof. C. Eye and Ear.Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturday at 1 o clock by Dr. E. Oliver Belt. ' E. A%iUrt''~TOwdays an* Thursday* by Dr. nisnenmry-Datly, from 12 to 2 o'clock cm bv Drs. Vans. 11111 and WUUftoo. P ' * Lamh* IUOrteni declt",3,n,,lon» by Prof. D. S. Oiit-dTor Midwifery -By Dr. Ernest Kin*. Dental Infirmary-Open every week day from 2 to 5 o clock p. in. ^a®^rt^L4? "t"'n<J 'hose clinic's must fit! , B' M.D., Secretary, 1118 sf- 8cl4-lm Sanatory QyrmnascMnri FOR WOMEN" AND CHILDREN, 812-G14 12th at. n.w., opens Octobcr 1. CLARA J. HORTON, Director. Apply for circulars. spl.'l-lpi* PROF ARN0I.I1 W. MEYER, UMN C.IIADC- . theorv, psychological system-of voire culture; cue vocal lesson and .Hi-ec'ltns for 2H lesson. '..eluding ixaA*. *5. Iboi vt uve. n.w oi'r,»-ini* THE COLUMBIA SCHOOL OP OITICS A thorough course on tl»e eye and the art of ?rJ.iw SET *cl"J ""d e»«*lasses. An Independent profession acquirisl in three months, at mod- crate cost. A diploma Issued to each graduate at the end of the course. Call on or address . 1C , J O. RKED, M. D selRlni 1S»; H st. n.w. WIMODACGSli 1328 I ST. N.W.-CLASSES BR JCinnlug I reneh organize Sept. 17; other classes. October 1 lerms, $1 a month to infiniters; nicrn- " * >car. ADA L. SMITH. Supt. Where to Attend School.~ MKirri?.pol4.?rv,,i2rough knoK>edgo of the COM- Mr RCIAL STt DIES at the cost of less lime rnd ttcney than1 otb.?.- achooia. HUNDREDS owe their "'e Iso thev say) to tbe training they re¬ vived here. We made BREAD-WINNERS of them waut jou to kmw ut; write and we will -ell you all a Unit this L1VK SCHOOL. N.B..Wa assist graduate* to positions. Tenth year opena Monday. September 3. Day and evening sessions WOOIi'A COMMERCIAL COLLBUB, tlf Lat tiipRol rtt uu24-tf MR. PUTNASTS SCHOOL, 1426 Q ST. N.W RK- opens September 17. 1X'J4. Preparation for uni¬ versities. technical school* and business nur- suits; private l.-ssons If desired; lie*t of refer- rn'''"-.. *or 4inular* and Infoimatiou apply to »u25-tf WM. B. PUTNAM, ill. The Hisses Kerr's School _ . For Young I-adles and Little Children. rni ^ns September 27. selS to no2sr 14SS N *t. MISS RAMI'S CIVU. SERVICE INSTTTTTE ATO> Business College. 1311 11th n.w. Pupils prepared Successfully for civil service, departmental and reLsus examinations. St. nograpto taught. se2-tr THE BERKELEY SCHOOL, 925 1STH ST., WILL reopen September 24. Puplla prepared for West Point, Annapolis. for all universities and aclen- flnj schools, fur direct commissions in the army and navy and for the civil service. Dnrlng the Sf.1 j'*?r twelve student* have been successfully ¦ttea for various examination*. Arrangements ¦lay be made for nrlvate lessons in all hranchea. CHARLES W. FISHER. B. S. "">.» Headmaster. . «. . EMERSON INSTITUTE, 2f; 7, <-'-as-s'!'aL ANI> MATHEMATICAL SCHOOL H'K YOU NO MEN AND BOYS. . ., ¦ st.. Franklin saiiure. tBrty-third annual aesaloi un.br the prescct nrla- _. ,, f'l*" begins Septembei 24. V?I''"^en-kuown preparatory sehoil for Harrard. V T*. "!. a"'," f"r United States Military ckV'i Al'»',emies. and for the beat teehnologZ cal schools enjoys a repuiaiion s. -ond to no school ! i 1v' " r""ter 'he graduate* con- pro"esak« 01 bijudfeda distiugulsU-d In every For ilrciibira, A-e., address the princ ipal. CHAS. B YOUNIJ. AM, Ph D FRENCH. 1. Trlvate and class lesson* . . Pn»f. A. UONARD, ae22-lm« loll Marlon st. MMK. J. BVUTA DALY. TEACHOF VOICE 5?5e cliain system for reading E?, I I ,S*i' Trr'" begins Septeuil»er 15. Studio. His New lork are, se4-3m MRS. L. O. TAI.BOTT WILL REOPEN CI VSSF-i In English. French and m^lc Vk toii-r l at »27 P st. Natural biatory aud culturo classes for adults. s«12-lm* MiSS AMY C. LKAVITT, 1121 VERMONT AVE. N. W. ... PIANO AND HAR\fo.\T sel-dtf LESSONS ON THE JANKO KEYBOARD. MISS TACIE A. DANIEL. 715 6TH ST. N.W uud In",ruu,,'n"'1 1864. Wyoming ave. n.w. WASLINfSTON llEl'iHTS SCIliHiI. FOR niRIA sit sT »lr <';1-v scholars. Reopens Ort. 1. ,* i . i,,vANlES martin, pitiNcirAL. lift. \\. EDWARD HFalMENDAIiL OF BAL'fT- inore will reHiune vocul lastru< tk»a TilmVivs him! IrUlAVM, %t ** n*l* ra& 8*uj iuiuj sf 034 F »»t.. <m Friday, Septeiul»er 28. rff lmm C. MATII.DA MIX KB. EXI'KUIhixCKD TKACHKH of piano nrvl twirumiiy, Kraduate of Now hito* Conservatory of Movie. Bovtoo Kmrna L. Minkc, teach4»r of voice; Luuipi-rti'a Italian metiiod. S12 Del. ave. n.e. mUW . °R WITHOOT "»HNismOX. T1,Ea Beclun.-m on Plnno at half rates. set-3m Boston School off Eilocution. 1217 F ST. N.W. Elocution. Dramatic Art and Fencing classes now f< ru ing. Fall term bi-glna o tober 3 Call or *. n l for jjr^u.jr. sel5-lmo« Special VOCAL, Vli ILIN, PIANO Leswins. J. F. Itl ECKERT, 140U Fourt.vnth st. n.w. Terms liberal. ae3 2m' t. Vernon Seminary, 1100-1104 M *t. and 1124-1128 11th *t. m?TrchiM^ dny *lbou' for 5UUB« ¦pw'trOU*bly u"'d''rn ,cd PTOKressive In method and Primary, Preparatory and Oi.lb*iate de|«rtment* hulldings perfectly cniiliipud with every ap¬ pliance for health and coipfort of uunli* "l'wtn- tkth year of>em Oetol.er neisind. For further Information upplv to t)»o principal. _se7-tr _ Mr*. ELl£.\flETH J. SOMfeRS. MRS, .MANN S KINDERGARTEN AND SCHOOL Si*?. F! its bet h Pi a body Kindergarten Normal IValnlng SWi.sil 19U Sunderland place, will lie- *l>d "inter Melons October L 1804. auSlgm MISS VALIANT OP BALTI il ilTE, I'CITl, OF Prof. Bunnelster, will give b^son* tplnno) |n wasblnclon on Tuewlays and Friday*, l-cglnnln* r 1«. For terms, Ac., n.l.lreis !«l F st ¦ w.. or 221." Calvert St., HalVliore. se'Jt*,-3w# MISS ROSAMOND M. WARD. PIANO LESSONS Experience In tenchlng l*egluners. FRANK E. WARD. PIANO, ORUAN AND n \R- Mt)NY. ise21 1m»> 214 lit!? st. s w DR. 11. C. SHERMAN. 2H2B I ST N W 1'IANO hours from 12 to 2. after October 8. l'res nt ud- d'es* OLNEY, *e."-l m* Montgomery co., Md. The Department off Archi= tecturafl Drawing In Spencerbin Rnslnes* College Is now open for the reception of students. Cai|>ontcrs, builder* me¬ chanics and Student* In draughting who have born trained here have achieved remarkable au-s csa lu Ilr'r "v.',;;ral ?.*a dlr,,<'t rM,">t»' tt>o pmc ti<*al skill ami intelligence tliua acciuirtHl I>a. partn.eiit ofrs Tuesday and Tbunslay eventnir* of each week from Octolier 2 to July 1. Further information clven at college otBce, 708 D st n w Selr. In. MRS. SARA A SITIvrER. rllni^Tj H. DONCfl, VIOLIN IJCSSONS. SiHflal nttertioD given to beglnicrs as well as aavan<*»Hj pupils. siUDm R-sid nee. 608 II *f. n.w. MR. HERMAN O KAKEMANN will l'ESC\IE lietructi.-r on tbe violin the 1st of Octolsr Studio and ri-sldence, 1221 12th st. n.w. *e2«.ira friends- s::i.ect school, an elementauv AND Hllill SCHOOL, FOR BOTH SENES 1M1 Start'lmr T? ?!! M". tnre,f'h T"»r Scptvmtier 27. Starting it. the primary department, a child mar continue under ex,s-rie.c si i-ollege-tralued te. h- Soi'ii to."'ery seve'jteen slmb-nts, SfnftentL V,"l«' j"', c,,'lege or for graduation. Students prepared by m are now cnrolbsl at Yale, Colombia, I orn. 11. Princeton, Jolius Hop- kliw, Massachusei ts Institute of Technology Lafnyette, Lehigh and others. The l.uil'llng-ls especially arranged for school pui and equipped with every l.ccfsau:.> appliance. Including a chemical and physical laboratory. Instruction Is adapted to the "needs and capacity of Individuals. No charge for text Colognes at Ballantyne-s, Brentano's and at the M'bool. Office hours, from 10 1 0 clock, at M'iinoi. - c .. W SIDWELL. Principal, .*8-tr Home, 804 21st *t. n.w. Qonza^a CoJaege. direction of fbo FATI1 ER.S OF TFIL S4M'IETY OF JESl*.^. Vusfcicrl, scientllic and business courses of uS'i* a' 2*'h001* reOjnn^l TtESDAY. .^EITEM- PfcK 4. h|»tKlal coiirs. for »»lder students wishing ' r!T!d l,roK«**» clawlca. For par¬ ticulars a«l<fre»w ^ juv. cx>UNEi-rrs gillespte, s. j.f President and Treasurer. hKJT1 !JF.S TO NT'RSKS WIIJ~ BE HESl MKD IriwC ' J I'rovkfeaoe Honpital; inrsons 1 n V furnish letters of pmkI in.,ml char*< fer rJiL T r,r,',ved a*. ou Payment of fl(); thr« Irt tnres a week will he s!r«>n hy the dlffer- ent inejiih. . of m^lir^i ,,n«i burghal ataffs. For further Ititori.uition applv to *e2S 1 r.f Dr. T. F. MALLAN, 117 B *t. *.e. BBS BAItTON OF ENGLAND WILL RETURN to Washington anil resume her classes at her art st ml io, SH0 20th St. n.w., the Hint week In Oc! t"l>er. Private lessons by arrangement. «e2Ti-2w* ST. CECILIA'S ACADEMY.~mi EW C.IHM' St..Young ladies and cl.iblren not ntten.line th- academy are admlttisl to the classes of art tnuslc typewriting, j.houjgraphy, Lalln ami tnoch. oultKfm EDUCATIONAL. iw WAsrijprofroH. COLUMBIA COLLEGE OFjboMMEItCH. 623 La. are., bet. 6nr and 7th sts. n.w. O. K. UHNER, A.M., C.E., Prill. The leading school of business and shorthand. Highest attainable grade of Instruction at moder¬ ate cost. Thorough and practical courses In business, English, (ItU service, accountancy, shorthand and typewriting. Superior and en¬ thusiastic teaching- UraiUuatss of rare excellence and distinguished success Situations when com¬ petent. Catalogue. so SO .Mr. Henry Xaeder Wishes to Inform big i»ui»ils that ho will resume lessons In PIANO and CfUEUkY of MUSIC on October 1. Office hour: 11.12 o'clock. 51 Music room: 807 11th st. n.w. sc20-lm Education for -Real Life 1864. FOB BOX8 AND DAUUHTKK3. INK. The Spcncerlan Business Collt'KS, National Bank of the Republic building, cor. 7th and O n.w. Day and night sessions. 8PENCERIAN, In the national capital and throughout the country, la a household word, asaoclaited with thorough busi¬ ness training and a prosperous career. The thirtieth scholastic year of thla popular In¬ stitution I* gun Monday. September 3. 18SH. Five departments, Tlx: Practical Business, Including complete bookkeeping course, English, rapid calcu¬ lations. rapid wilting, moral and social lulture, Dclsarte system of expression, cities, political economy anil commercial law; Practical English, with Initiatory bookkeeping; Shorthand and Tjpe- writing, including English; Spen.-eri.tn Rapid Writ¬ ing; Mechanical and Architectural Drawing, rull corns of thoroughly trained teacher*. Location ten- tral. Spacious, brilliantly lighted. handsome halls and class rooms. Serrlcos of graduates a s-ays In de¬ mand Terms moderate, but no competition with cheap schools. The leading business men of Wash¬ ington wore tralucd in this college, nml send their sons and daughters and candidates for employment here for training. This college received from the World's Oo.umblan commission a diploma for "Excellence ef Students' Work" In all of the above departments. Twe.vs of lta graduates received diplomas from the Expo¬ sition for suiH-rlor general written examinations, and four ot tnem won silver medals for "valuable service" In the living educational exhibit. Office open every business day ami night. Writs or call for new nnuual aaawnccment. MRS. SARA A. SPENCER, ii)6 tr Principal and Proprietor. Ql'NSTOX INSTITUTE.A BOARDING AND DAY school for girls. WWS, 40 and 42 Cambridge place n. w., niteus September 26. sul7-2m Mr. and Mrs. B. R. MASON. OIT OK WASHIXWTOI*. MA PI.K WOOD INST1TITK, CONOORIIVII J.E. PA. $1115 |ht year. A successful school; one of the host to Infuse with energy utul to wake lip boys to the duties of life. lli>ys under IS, $174. J. SHOKTIJDCE (Yale), A.M., Principal. jHiW.sicTUiHll* NATIONAL PARK SEMINAR* For joung women and glrlsj 20 minutes north of Washington, at Forest Glen, Md. Collegiate a»l preparatory courses. Excellent faculty. 40-acr campus. f7B,000 boltdings. A cultured borne. Senu for illustrated catalogue. au22 tf ST. GEORGE'S FIAIJ, FOR BOTS. ST. GEORGE'S. Md.. J. 0. KIN EAR, A.M., Prln .College or business; l!»tb year: established reputation for training, health, kindiess, comfort; $210 to $258. au2t> -m PENNINGTON (N. J.) SEMINARY, BOPNTt B.ook R R., between Phlla. and New York. Fo. l*oth sexes Fifty fifth year. \>ry healthful, beautiful and accessible. TvreWe courses of ln- stinetloo; nineteen t«achetj; cost moderate For catalogue, Ac., address TH08. 1IANLON, D. D-. President. »y!l-78t AFFAIRS IN ALEXANDRIA Colored Bepublicans in Beyolt Against 80- C&lled Leaders. A Mass Meetlnie to He Held.The Meet' Inn; of the City t'ouuell.>'ote» of Pcrannnl Inlrre»t. a1 A conference was held oh Monday night by some of the leading colored republican voters, looking to the steps to be taken In the November elections, etc. The meeting was called to order by J. M. Buckner, who acted as president. Tr-^l. Watson acted as secretary. The conferrtice decided to hold a mass meeting Friday, the 12th Instant, at Shiloh Hall, on West street, to inform the voters, as stated by members of the con¬ ference, of the advantage that is being taken of them by the leaders w ithout con¬ sultation, and to let the candidate for Con¬ gress know where his strength lies, etc.; also to make it known that no one or two men hold the colored voters in their hands or control them. A committee was ap¬ pointed to invite Col, P. H. McCaul to the mass meeting. At the regular semi-monthly meeting of the city council held last night an ordinance was passed taxing express companies re¬ ceiving and forwarding goods in the state $l!iO. A proposition received from the Dick¬ son Crematory Company to put In a crema¬ tory for destroying the garbage of the city was referred to a special committee for in¬ vestigation. An ordinance granting per¬ mission to J. M. Hill, manager of the Gen¬ tlemen's Driving l'ark. to build an electric railway through the poor house grounds to the park was passed. Mr. 1»ill, in asking this grant, assured the members of the council that the road would be completed in ten days. Some other unimportant busi¬ ness t\as referred to llie various commit- tew. The marriage of It. Lee Field to Miss Allie Hamilton took place at the Second I'resbvterian Church yesterday afternoon. Rev. T. H. Ilice. pastor of the church, officiated. The groom was attended by I .outs Bendhelm of this city, and the maid of honor was Miss Kuima l.ang of Fred¬ ericksburg. After the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Field left for a northern tour. Messrs. Albert Field. Isaac Field, Wm. Maicholr and Guy Manders acted as ushers. Mrs. Virginia *K. 1 >alngertteld has quali¬ fied as administratrix of the estate of the late Henry Daingertieid. Thos. I.. Waters of this cltv and Miss Kmtly V. Southall of Charlottesville will be married at the bride's residence tomor¬ row. The remains of the late Mrs. Ellen Smith, who died in Baltimore, were brought to this city yesterday and Interred. Rev. .1. I. Vance, formerly p.istor of the Second Presbyterian Church In tills city, l.ut How of Norfolk, has reconsidered his declination of the call to Nashville, and will accept It. He will take charge in Nashville in February. Spencer Davis, a car Inspector on the Southern railway, was crushed between two cars at Ashevllle yesterday and instantly killed. Nettie, the little fiar.ghter of Policeman Ferguson, entertained a number of her lit¬ tle friends at a birthday party on Monday- night. The regular meeting of the board of su¬ pervisors of Alexandria county was held at the old court house yesterday with all of the members present. Judge John Crltcher was allowed $75 for professional services. The county treasurer was directed to refund to Mrs. Hugh Smith the amount she had deposited when she made application for a liquor license, which license was relused. C. A. Trout. superi^lemVjht of the poor hi use, tendered his resignation, which was accepted, and Randolph Birch was appoint¬ ed to succeed him. '* Several hills were audited and ordered to be paid. The question,of moving the court house was not broughr tip. The Washington, Alexandria and Mount Vernon Klectric Railway Company are now waiting for the Metropolitan Hallway Com¬ pany of Washington to del ermine the best system of insulating its electrical power. Both will adopt the same system, and when this is done the work of 'juilding will be commenced. Owing to the indisposition of the common¬ wealth's attorney tht+e will be no grand J fry at this term of the corporation court. John Smith, who for some time past has- been a special officer &t the local depot In this city, has been removed \>y the Pennsyl¬ vania railroad company for causing the ar¬ rest of Yardmaster Meyers. The schooner Dennis Simmons of Wash- ll-gton. N. C., arrived at this port yesterday with a cargo of lumber for J. H. D. Smoot. Olicrrs rjcctcil. The Grand Commandery of Knights Tem¬ plar, at their hall. Virginia avenue and 5th street southeast, last evening elected and Installed officers as follows: L.. H. Wayne, R. K. G. commander (fourth term); E. P. Minor, V. E. D. G. commander; P. B. Mer- ridith, E. generalissimo; P. H. Simmons, E. G. captain-general; W. H. Severson, E. G. prelate; H. C. Harris, E. G. senior warden; G-.W. Phllipps, E. O. junior war¬ den; M. H. Robinson, E. G. treasurer; D. F. Seville, V. E. G. recorder (fifth term); J. H. Pendergrass, E. G. warder; Julius Warren, E. G. guard. After the conclave the sir knights repaired to the residence of Sir H. C. Irving, 4W D street southeast, where a synkl was given them. The Vice President Discusses Tariff Legislation. DEFENDS THE LAW LATELY PASSED Much Preferred the Original Wil¬ son Bill. [as to the sugar trust LINCOI.X, 111., October 10..Vice Pres¬ ident Stevenion addressed his democratic fellow citizens here today on the political issues. The greater part of his address was devoted to the tariff. \ ice I'rmldrat Stevenson's Speech. Vice President Stevenson said, In review- inn the tariff legislation of the recent ses¬ sion of Congress: "The democratic Congress has Increased the tax from ninety cents to one dollar and ten cents pt-r gallon on distilled spirits. This will Increase government revenues an¬ nually twenty millions of dollars. Do you. In the Interest of the whisky trust, desire this law repealed? The democratic Congress haa placed a tax on playing cards, which, as you know, were untaxed under the McKin- ley law. This will bring to the treasury three million dollars per annum. I>o you wish this provision of the new law repealed and the old law restored? If so, your path¬ way of duty is clear. Vote to return to Congress the republican law-makers who opposed the tariff upon playing cards and the increased tax upon whisky. "But again, what has this democratic Con¬ gress accomplished? You will bear In mind that the "blllion-dollar-Congress" con¬ trolled by the republicans, created more than twelve hundred new federal offices at a total annual cost to the people of more than two million dollars. The present democratic Congress, by a series of wise and well-con¬ sidered enactments, greatly simplified and Improved administrative methods In the sev era! departments of the government by means of which irore than six hundred use¬ less federal offices have be»n abolished and governmental expenses thereby lessened an¬ nually to the extent of near one million dol¬ lars. "One section of the democratic tariff bill Just enacted provides for the payment of an Income tax. Individual Incomes of less than four thousand dollars are wholly exempt from the tax. Savings banks and building and loan associations are exempt from this tax. This wise exemption Is In the Interest of smt.ll Investors and depositors. I'pon ether corporations and upon Individual In¬ comes exceeding that amount, a tax of 2 per e«nt is to be collected. As this feature of the bill has encountered fierce hostility both from republican legislators end press, it is well to give It consideration. Two questions pt once arise: Is this a Just en¬ actment? Was It necessary? its enactment became a necessity because of the bankrupt condition In which the passage of the Mc- Klnley law and the extravagance of the re¬ publican Congress had plunged the country. Its enactment was the logical result of the vicious republican legislation that had brought a deficit instead of a surplus to the treasury. "The duty of* the democratic Congress when It came into power, to provide. the necessary revenues with which to meet the current expenses of the government, was imperative. How could this be done? Eith¬ er by continuing or possibly Increasing to the people the cost of the necessaries of life by tariff taxation, or by Imix.slng a moderate tax upon the earnings of the wealth of the country. The democratic party was solemnly pledged to the reduc- 2£.taxat,on *he necessaries of " "Is pledge could be made good, and sufficient governmental revenues at the same time secured, only by the imposition of the tax 1 have Indicated. Just In pro¬ portion as the burdens of taxation were removed from the shoulders of the poor they were to rest ut>on those more able to war them. A democratic Congress removed the tax wholly from salt, from lumber.from binding twine, from agricultural imple¬ ments. and greatly reduced the tax upon nf ^ 11*" woo'Vn *,K>ds- *nd other articles !!? .hS<\ OW was thlB to ** made good to the treasury? A democratic Con¬ gress thought It wise to do so by a tax utx.n annual incomes exceeding This en- "p^ofX^;;.'",n fom- °,,iv ror ihe The \rw Tariff. "I now ask your attention to a considera¬ tion of other sections of the tariff hill which has passed both the House and the Senate and is now the law'of the land. I state to you in all candor that it is not all that I desired. There never was a moment that I wotiM not gladly have given the casting hn! I, Senate in favor of the tariff 15 Pa**'*'1 «'ie House of Representa- from l>eginnlng 1 have been a firm believer in the doctrine of free raw material But it must not be forgotten that while the House of Representatives contained a democratic majority of near one hundred, our majority was but one In the. Senate. In fact, with every state fully te,.resented In that body, there would prob- u ,Pen no democratic majority at al!. The Senate contained but forty-four democrats, and with the republican Senators voting solidly against the bill at every stage, it can easily be seen that In a body so nearly balanced, tariff reform had no easy battle to fight. At one critical mo¬ ment of the struggle, the biH was only saved by the casting vote of the presiding onioer of the Senate." Mr. Stevenson mentioned as benefits of the new tariff bill the repeal of the sugar bounty, which he denounces as "odious class legislation;" the placing of over one hur.dred articles, highly taxed under tile McKinley law, on the free list; the freeing from duty of wool, salt, lumber and agricul¬ tural implements. A tajt on raw sugar was made necessary by the expenses of the gov¬ ernment. Regarding this duty he said: The Snirnr Trust. "You have heard much of the 'sugar trust,' and of the benefits It will derive under the new law. I am free to say that could my vote have controlled. It would have received none of the l>eneliis against which complaint has been made. I favored the bill as It passed the democratic House, placing sugar of ail grades ui>on the free list. But. objectionable as some features or the sugar schedule are, it must not be lorgotten that they are a great Improve¬ ment upon the McKinley law. How' The .sugar trust sprang into existence under the McKinley law.was, in fact, a necessary outgrowth of that law. The McKinley law admitted raw sugars free of duty. This was In the Interest of the refiners.In other words, of the sugar trust. Was this in the interest of the people? Of the consumer' Not at all. It was solely In the interest of ths refiner, for the reason that the 'free sugar' of which you have heard so much was wholly unfit for domestic use It was the raw material that passed first Into the hands of the refiners.of the 'trusts . It was not the sugar used upon your tables Before It reached jour table the refiner had added to its cost to the consumer ex¬ actly the 'tariff' that another clause of the McKinley law had provided. How? l*pon the sugar used at your homes. In cooking and upon the table, the tariff tax was place.! at 50 cents upon every hundred pounds. This provision, coupled with that allowing free raw sugar to the refiner gave the trust* opportunities for gain hitherto without parallel in legislation. Its profits have been enormous. I'nder Its concessions granted by the McKinley law. it has become the gigantic monopoly of the age. You can¬ not be too often reminded that all of the trusts and monopolies that are now the bane of this land are the offspring of re- publican high tariff enactments. If it had been the Intention under th-» McKlnl*y law to give free sugar to the people, why "a tax of 1-1! cent per pound on that rea.1v for domestic use? Why not. as in the bill which has Just passed the democratic House ad¬ mit all sugars free? Meet of the Sew Law. "The true test of the value of the new law Is by contrasting it with the old. The merits of the sugar schedule of the new bill can only be determined by Its compar¬ ison with those of the McKinley law.whlch It has displaced. "How, then, stands the account? The new law takes from the trust two-fifths-almost one-half.the benefits It received under the McKinley law. The new law totally repeals the provision of the McKinley law which gave to the sugar planter a bounty of two cents per pound for fifteen years upon his product. The cost of this darling feature of the McKinley tew *as twelve million dollars annually to tb« federal treasury and the people. But this I* not all. The sugar schedule of the McKlnley law was a charge upon the treasury to the extent of the bounty thus paid the planter. tinder the new law the bounty Is abolished, and by careful estimate of the Secretary of the Treasury under the new schedule the rev¬ enues coming Into the treausry will for the current fiscal yeai amount to forty-three million dollars." Mr. Stevenson .tald that the dom<vratlc party would continue to fight monopoly and would go on In the direction of lower du¬ ties. He closed with praise for Franklin MacVeagh, the candldite for the Senate, and Mr. Springer, the congressional candi¬ date. PARTIES IN MASSACHUSETTS Gnrrent Issues as Treated in the Platforms Just Adopted. Am Otalloa Tendered to Senator Hoar .The A. P. A. an aa Issue.The Democratle Stale Ticket. Correspondence of The Evening Sttr. BOSTON. Mass., October 0. 1RTX. With the demicratic state convention of Monday and the republican convention of Saturday over, the campaign In Massachu¬ setts may be said to be fairly opened. The contest does cot promise the excitement af¬ forded when Russell the First headed the democratic ticket and led the way to vic¬ tory. For the governorship. Greenhalge and John E. Rubs all are opposed to each other, just as they were last year, but with the odds overwhelmingly In favor of the re¬ publican nominee. Gov. Greenhalge counts on his side the prestige of his victory last year, backed up by an able and every way successful administration of the executive office, while John E. Russell Is obliged to shoulder what Is considered the Inevitable handicap which Is imposed upon him by the doings of the last democratic Congress. The platforms of the two parties are of more In¬ terest. as showing the trend of Massachu¬ setts thought cn the debated and contro¬ versial questions of the hour. Chief among the principle enunciated by the republicans are these: An equal share in government for each citizen; best p .sslble wases for every workman; the American market for American labor; every dollar paid by the government, both the gold and rhe silver dollars of the Constitution, and their paper representative, to be honest and unchanging In value, and ^"a' °^lla_ other; better Immigration and «*^.il'»a tion laws; no tramp, anarchist, pauper to be let In. so that cltUenshlp shall Sot be stained or polluted; with liberty and republican goveriunentath and abroad; Americanism everywhere, the flag never lowered or dishonored, no render in Samoa; no barbarous heading men in Hawaii; no punishment without trial; faith kept w'jjj the pensioners; no deserving old 1 the |>oor house; the suppression of 4ram drinking and dram selling; a school, at the public charge, open to all the children, and free from partisan or sectarian conrol.no distinction of birth or religious creed in the rights of the American citisenship. cUan politics; pure administration; no lobb> . re¬ form of old abuses; leadership along -TI paths; minds ever open to the sunlight and the morning, ever open to new truth and r.ew duty, as the new years bring their les¬ sons. . _ Democratle Prlaelplea. The democratic platform Is longer than the republican, and rather surprised the business men of this section by coming out with an unequivocal Indorsement of the principles of the Income tax. The platform reiterates the loyalty of the Massachusetts democrats to President Cleveland, congratu¬ lates the country on the repeal of the fed¬ eral election laws, the Sherman law and the McKinley law; the abolition of bounties; the conduct of foreign affairs; reform of abuses In the pension system, and the re¬ duction in the appropriations of ^on^res*. The principle of the Income tax is appro\ eU. the extension of the civil service system is favored and the administration is asked to formulate a plan by which the post offices will be brought within Its scope. .Any ganizatlon which claims to Introduce dis¬ tinctions of birth or religious ^eed lnto politics Is opposed, and any part> which tacitly accepts an alliance with such an or¬ ganization" Is condemned. I^foport representation and the adoption of voting machines are favored. _ith.r The most significant incident ' convention wm the ovation .tor Hoar. The A. P. A. de¬ feat the senior Senator as delegate to the convention. but he was there by ^ur esy and save a stirring addreiw. It , I that the unusual warmth of £,s. was due to the opposition he had encoun- tered from the A. P. A. . # Thomas J. C.argan. in h's speech at the democratic convention, delmed the A. t". *. question as the only Issue in politics this year. He said: All other Is sues must be relegated to the rear until this matter is settled. I appeal to the honor and the men of Massachusetts, this great commonwealth, whether at thf fti.l of the nineteenth century a partj that J"* speak out boldly on this Issue is deserving "Vhe^'repubMcans have renominated their an tiro «iate ticket, as well as all their Congressmen. Few democratic Congress¬ men have yet l>een named. The democratic itate ticket Introduces some new names, and In its entirety, is as follows: For gov¬ ernor. John K. Russell of l^eicester; for lieutenant governor. Charles K. Stiwtton of Boston; for attorney gener^ Henry F. Hurlbiirt of l.ynn; for secremrj of state, Charles De Courcey of Lawrewca; for ,,-.r and receiver #renerml, James 8. < rln- nell of GreenfleM; for auditor, t'apt. Alfred C. Whitney of Boston. . The congressional contests, when fairly men will be cf much Interest, and will be noted as the war tactics develop. COLOBBD C.lTHOlir*. Complaint la Ma4r of l>l»«-rlmln« tloa .a Arrnaal of I'olar. The principal subject discussed at the congress of colored Catholics and the con¬ vention of St Peter Claver's Catholic Vnlon. In session In Baltimore, yesterday- was the report of the committee on griev¬ ances, which made the allegation that un¬ just discriminations arc made against col¬ ored Catholics In thf churches of their faith. Numerous instances of such dis¬ criminations were mentioned tn the ""eport. The report declared that the colored Cath¬ olics ask no unusual prl\ lieges and that they wanted simply to be treated as earn¬ est. honest Catholics, and that no discrim¬ ination be made against them on ac-ount of their color. The report Is to be sub¬ mitted to the meeting of Catholic arch¬ bishops, which convened at Philadelphia today. The president of the convention, nr. W. S. l»ftus. referred to iliis matter In his annual address. He said that he had long advocated the establishment ot an indus¬ trial and training school in tills city. He said that liecause the skins of the African race were of a darker hue than that of the Caucasian nice colored youth were de¬ barred I rem entering a Catholic college, ^nd that they were discriminated against by trade unions. He liojied to MS he day when caste distinctions will lie vanished and that the negro will no longer be rated by the color of his skin. He trusted to see the time when th? American ]>eople, the hierarchy of the Catholic Church and the laity shall rise in their might and stamp out this prejudice. A number of addresses were made, and Rev. John A. de Ruyter, who has estab¬ lished an industrial school at Wilming¬ ton, l>el., criticised severely the trade unions for discrimination against the col¬ ored people. The visiting delegates v.er< entertained at a banquet last night by the delegates in Baltimore. The Trial of the Maine. The board to conduct the trial of the Maine consists of Chief Kngineer S. L Ayers, president; Chief Engineer H. 8. Ross and Passed Assistant Engineer fJ-orge Cowle. The board will have ten assistants, chosen from among the junior engineer officers. It will meet at New l»n<lon Mon¬ day at 10 o'clock a m., and Capt. Francis M. Bunce will cor»T«and the ship on her trial. As this will not be a speed, but a horse power, trial, the engineers will con¬ duct It, and the Instructions ls«-ued for their guldanc* are generally similar to those governing the engineers on ordinary trial trips. IS A STATESMAN Li Hung Chang Not a Great Soldier. OPINION OF AMBASSADOR PATENOTRE He Intimates That China Cannot Furnish a Strong Army. DEFENSES OF P E K I Jf Anibasrador Patcnotre. the representative of th? French republic In the f"nited States. Is regarded as owe of the bMt-infurmM men Ip diplomatic life on China and the scenes of present conflict between that country and Japan. A rood part of hl« life In the French diplomatic service has been spent at Pekln and Tien Tsln, where he was In constant communication with IJ Hung Chang. His views on eastern affairs, there fore, are of interest. He was Inter¬ viewed last night. "At the time the Tlen- Tsln treaty of peace was signed." he said, "I was brought In contact with L.1 Huns Chang almost daily for six weeks, and while I had known him before, the close Intercourse In negotiating so Important a treaty gave mt opportunity of a somewhat personal acquaintance with him. He does not speak English, French or any other language than his own. all Intercourse with foreign officials being carried on through an interpreter. There appears to be a set- tied [oiiqr among the Chinese diplomat* and officials to adhere to their own lan¬ guage. so much so that a Chinese diplomat at l'arl/i, who became proficient in making French bon mots created something of a sensation and was afterward recalled. Vice¬ roy U impressed me, however, as cne of the very few Chinese officials who at least desired to adopt the modem ways of Eu¬ ropean countries, and If he had not been held back by the overwhelming sentiment of China against eastern civilisation, he would have modernised China long ago. As It Is he has Introduced quite a Euro¬ pean atmosphere Into his private house¬ hold. He has a French cook to serve htm French dishes, fcme of the dinners hs gave me were what he termed 'double din¬ ner*,' as there would he a Chinese dish and then a French one. thus alternating courses throughout the dinner. Ssl a Varrlar. "Li strikes one as a student and states¬ man rather than as a warrior. His tenden¬ cies are all those of a scholar, although his great authority as viceroy of the met¬ ropolitan provirce of China, and speeMI guardian of the emperor, have made him the head of the war power. But lie Is not a genius of war as he Is of statesmanship. He has sought to modernise the Chinese army an<i navy, and such strength as these arms of defense have are due to his Intro¬ duction of foreign officers, including Gen. Gordon, and his- adoption of modern arms and orinance. The artillery he has secured Is fairly good, but com pi red with the equip¬ ments of European and American troops, which improve constantly, they are far out of date." IVkis'l Defenses. M. Patenotre was asked as to ths de¬ fenses of Pekln. which the Japanese now threaten to strike, and the roads over which the invaders will have to |>ass If they march on Pekln. "The defenses are very primitive," said the ambassador. "The outer wall Is a huge affair, completely encircling the city. It Is about the height of a six-story building and wlifr enough for travel by horses and car¬ riages. Hut as a means of defense it would amount to nothing against modern artil¬ lery. The walls aliout Tonkin were even stronger, being built by skilled engineers, but th"y quickly gave way before big guns. Th.-re is hardly any such thing a* roads about Pekin and Tien Tain, so that travel Is very difficult. There are occasional stretches of good roads, paved with large stone blocks, but these are exi-eptlooal." "Tne climate will lie the greatest difficul¬ ty," continued he. "It gets Intensely cold about Pekln the latter part of October and everything Is frosen up In November. The cold is so severe that It almost puts a stop to travel and communication. The Japans. are from a warm country, entirely unused to sex * re cold. and. as far as we hear, with¬ out special provision of clothing for the In¬ tense cold coming on the latter part of this month. That promises to be the greatest difficulty they will hsve to contend against." (irrtt Utferesee. The ambassador was asked If his observa¬ tions of the great latent resources and eoor» nious population of China led him to be- lleve that they would ultimately be aroused and prove reslstlesa. "Undoubtedly the population is vast. something like KHMMMMftM," said be. "But,"*- added the ambassador, significantly, "ther® Is much difference betweeu a great popula* tion and a groat army." (.ALK AT PKX8AOOLA. The Wind Blew KB miles si H*<r an* i iiii.nl t'ssiMrrakle Damage. The tropical hurricane that had been cen¬ tral In the gulf for several days struck Pensacola, Fla., Sunday li ght. Ths wind blew from the northeast and was accom¬ panied by rain. The hurricane Increased IB fur>- as morning approached, and all day Monday It raged with terrible fury. Fall¬ ing signs and roofs made It dangerous to ap|>ear on the streets and business was practically suspended. The average velocity of the wind all day was 48 miles. Dtmw 2 and 3 |>.m it blew steadily at the rats ot miles an nour, and several times b*> tween 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. It reachsd m va- |ocity of S3 miles. At 2 p.m. the llSTtllUStSC fell to iSi.28, the lowest ever recorded at that station, being .19 lower than during the great storm of last October. The center of the hurricane was not . great distance southeast of Pensacola, but everj' tel-graph wire leading from ths city went down before 11 a.m and nothing could be heard from other points. The British bark ScammelL newly load¬ ed with timber, dragged her anchor ovsf four miles across the bay and went aahort In seventeen feet of water at a point ap¬ posite the life-saving station. She will have to discharge a part of her cargo. The Swedish bark Antonette. not loaded, dragged her anchors half wray di bay and was saved from capslslng by cut* ting away her foremast. The little schooner Two Sona, of Orleans, had her masts cut away to from capslslng. Th? !i»hing smack Mar}- Potter her anchors from Town Point and ashore on Santa Rosa Island, oast of thd life-eu vtng station, where she lias dry. Tl.e tide rose over th* quarantine and damaged the crib. Th* tide high that It broke clear ov*r Santa lsisnd, and th* life-saving crew w*r* la water up to their waists. On* houa* blown down at th* station, th* wharf swept away, and th* supply sloop swamped and sunk. Th* track of ¦lummy line, from Big Bayou to th* navy j iird. is twisted out of ahai*. and in somt places Is burled two feet under sand. IVnencolfc. Is much damaged. Fence®, trees and small outhous** were blown down In every part of '.h* city. A part of th# r of was torn off the opera house. Th* *«j tire roof w s tjrn off the large Blount aM Watson building on Pacific street, and all the tr.ores uii offices in it were flooded with water. A part of th* roof of Creary * Mo- cimtock's ma-hlne shop* was blown IntQ the <>ay. The I'nion Baptist Church (color* <>0> was bkwn down and comptetely wreck¬ ed. Several plate glass fronts w«r* smasU* ."1 by falling signs and swring poles. So far cs learned, no on* was lujur*4. The storm ceased at midnight, and th* weather was bright and much cooler y*a* terday. in Jacksonville th* wind r*acli*d a gr*at*r velocity than It did during th* Saptambac storm, but beyond unrooting a few houa*Q no seri' us damage was don*. neral of Sir. !¦>>!»*. The funeral of Alfred X. D. Boppl** Mt cirrei this afternoon Ic Baltimore. Surplee died In this city Monda} 11.- was lifty-two year* of uge Filled here since 1M1. He and six sons. donda) vvealna» uge and had rS laavaa « wldof

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Page 1: chroniclingamerica.loc.govchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1894-10-10/ed-1/seq-9.pdf · EDUCATIONAL n WASHIXUTOX. COLl'MBlA Oi.NSEI'VATi«KV OF Ml'Sir. '.«) K ST. N'.W

EDUCATIONALn WASHIXUTOX.

COLl'MBlA O i.NSEI'VATi «KV OF Ml'Sir.'.«) K ST. N'.W.

PIANO. OKliAN. VHK.I.V. VOHTC. &c.ItlMif EDWIN 11AUT. rKlN'll'AI.

¦X'.I.IMl. FKKNrH. 1.ATIN. M ATIIKMATIl X < illMonk- triamo l»y collect trt'fH-r; best rtf*.;fTm* iiHjilmtf: wfll nix' teAt h for btfii*-. MissWHCWH. star nfl»r«. oolO-St* .

illYATE I.BWINS, DAY AMI EVKN INUrlamri. in liwruases. iMithenwtic*, Knclisiihran- ;:es. EVA V HLT11, A.M., WN 12th st.B.w.; f reference*. iwl£>-lM*

BANJii AM" «;tTTijLTWt«fc;h Instructions.

E. L HOWES. Startt'. 1223 15th st. n.w.w^-Sw* (IV. Mass. a»c.l

Bi baktiin or kn'.lami wnjL nfiwto ITwblmtMi «n)^_ri*s m«e b-r rlanra at hi-r artstiulio. lilt) 3m h »t. n.w., tlve flr*t wet* in 1 *.-toher. l"rtrate lessons by .1 rmli^. TiM-nt. s»-:T»l tn"

Mr. George J. BeckerWill resume lessors in piano and theory of music.Em? method. Studio, H>5 lltli st. ti.tr.hocr. o to 6 p.m. se24-3m

~oLney iNsmmi, imt i nr.. worn yoi ng~~ladi and little girls. Sjwrial :t4TiMrta|ni forfrftnly of art and BrtiTt languages.MWn Virginia Mavm Dowy,Mfc« 1-1urn Lcf lV>r>«»r, I*rimipals. ocS-tf

Miss Susan Pollock,8426 Q St. N. W.,

School and Kindergarten.Every advantage lYimrj, preparatory am! ad-ram--d i lasses. (;«Tm:.n aiol Latin. Froebel andNational Normal Kindergarten Institute*, teachers*tniiiioK class. ocS-lm*

Washington Female Semi=NARY. 1226 15TH ST. N.W . .NtAtt MASS. AVE.

Boarding and diy f -bool: primary. intermediateami advanced departments; efficient twhfrs.Special instruction given each pniul; no extracharge for French. elocution aml class singing.se«*-au* Mtm ClAl'IMA STUART. Prlnci]*l.__Mrs. L. fl. Cleveland's

Kindergarten ami Primary School will ojtenOctoi er 15. in her parlors, 1407 Ubapln St., Co¬lumbia 11ts. o«-b-Mt*Mi Hi >BKKT A. SMITH RESUMED li>>« »NS

<piano, organ* for th»* 2SHb season. October 1.Hpeclal attention given to vo«*al music, withac«*ouipuniments for orgau ami piano. lnstru-m< nts at i«3»> French st. ocl-lui*

iouhTiltike.MMK. DE ST. CUIK BUXTON, only certifi¬

cated pupil of Mate. Cappiaui. late of Milan amiNVw York, will receive a limited number ofpupils.

MUSIC ROOM. H2i* 2f»TlI ST..Dui>out circle. where applications may be madedaily bet, the hours of 2 ami 4 p.m. OdJ-lw*

LANGUAGES.THE KEKMTZ SCHOOL OB1 LANHIAI.ITS,72S 141b si. n.w.Branel.e* in the <* laclpal American ami Euro¬

pean cities. Send for cir-ulara.Kref.rti, Oerman. S|wni*Ji, Italia a, Latin, Greek.

MISS EVA MILL-H.VIRAL l.EXSON*. Ml'flCRikiM. i»m XZTH ST. X.W. M^tho-l of .learenmniafkm ami pare ti>ne. Pntills i»rppaie4l furopera. 'hnrt ti or eoneert enicair*-iiM nts. issi-fit*

ltniiAMK A. rax. FK'IM i'ARIS FKKNCHclasMf^ aial prlvat« lessou*; ls*st referem-es.l:;rj 14th st. n.w.

Eleven Tears of successful tenchlny. o.vV3m*

Mrs. Harriet Mills, L^^'a1115 Htb st. Mis* LOTTA MILLS, liamst.*

Norwood Institute1435 K. AND ULI-U 14TH N.W.

The i»o:inlinK department and residence havebe*»n transferred to 1435 K st. n.w. All reeitn-tl«is ami rlass work will !h» r«.mluct»*<l as hereto¬fore in th*' two school Uuildiiis^. l-lil ami 121414th st. n.w. Mrs. \VM. 1>. 1 AlilXL, rriscipal.

>ii»iv\ iNsrrri TEIVY INSTITUTEIVY INS1 ITl TEIVY INSTITUTEIVY INSTITUTEi\ \ INSTITI TEIVY INSTITUTE

BUSINESS I I>|.Ii:i }E.business « »>lle«;e.BI SINUS?* ro|.l>:tiE.BIMMXS roi.LECE.Bi'slN K"SS i'MLLEiiE.BUSINESS nHXMtK.BUSINESS umij»;e.rwirae, day or ni^ht, fii5 a yea*.Th- typewriting ami shortlMtid <-«Hirse. fl5.

Bookkot'pin2r. arithmetic, apeilinu. Enciish. pen¬manship. H^raf>lish»"d is"»i. Send for catalogue.IVY INSTITUTE BUSINESS «»»|J»,E, S.W. -or.8th ami K sts. U.W., S. W. FLYNN, A.M., l'ria.aulH.tm

FKAL AND FRAEi LEI \ PUES*:UE.(iLltMAN CLAM8E3S,

.rft-lB* 1224 12TH ST. N.w.NEW TKKM J»» FitEN < 'II LESSi »NS--litMJD

proniii!>'<at1«H'. To leani to *i»eak well, rea«l andURile-staml. lnmw. Wploina for two courses.MI.LE. V. FtttDilOMME. 3u7 D at. n.w.«'4 1m*TUE WEST KXD ICHOO>L Ofc^EXFilESSU »N.W 17th st.. over Art Students' La ague.

I ikUt the persou:il direction ofMr*. J. It. WALTMN.

Will open October 15, lsw.Expressive r»-atllna. «ra«-e an>l ee^tnre, by

Mi** iSAltELLE S. NESMITH.Vocal techni«ine ami dramatic actkm. by

Miss liel»*n OdfKNtn.Fhvsit-al cnltnre ami d in. ing, by

Mis* M. B. STEUAKT. oo4-«lt

Ml» I1A1-STEADS URINATE S« II«miL WILL ltE-op»»ii for the sixth year on Monday, t>rt. 1, at142S» 2»»t»» n.w. Appii<-ati»ii may k made atthe s«-h4Mi|, and at 3*^24 y st. n.w. se4-2m

Washington Seminary,]&ls-4o 17 st. tvoaniins day prhool for girls.O lleglate ami preparatory dvpts. 0<>nnan-EugliahKlml«>r^«rtHU. Mr. and Mrs. G. I. SMALLVVUOD.k# 2m*

DBA. . TAU«;in EVENINOR MBCHAN1-cal. architectnral. topograpliical and naval, withttio nei »'«»rjr math* iuati«-s tor d»*sigm*rs. In-¦tnh'ttons Lt-jjiu September 24, at 531 7th St. n.e.au4 :trn-

AKT STUDENTS* LEAGUE. N* 17T1I ST.Day ami c\»»tting chs»s 1n drawing and paint¬ing. 7phb east ami life, nmler Mr. C. H. L. Mac-

don.«i*l ami Mr. Edward II. Slebert. Comp«*i-tiou. Mr. E. C. Mraser aial Mr. IL N". Bmoke.Waur *-*»lor. Mr. De Lam ey W. Gill. Pn«|Kira-tory an'i«{ue. Miss Alma de Mier. Special termsby ih« year. o«.'i-tf

GEi». W. I.AWRKNCE,VOU'E CULTURE AND PIANO.PITWO. 1<¥C OTII N.W. Shakespeare Method.Weak vui« es a spei*ialty. Kxamiiiaiiou free.

o>3-in*

SBAUHER WOULD LIKE A FEW GIRLS. AB«M*Tlt» years t»kl. to >«»n a rlass for the study ofhistory, literature, rhetoric a ad lAtln or French.Addr#»s^ Rrn S4). Star «tti<-e. o<*2-lm*

MR. J4IHCF KASHAR. LESSONS IN THE ARTM vMin Haying; Mme. KASUAK. lessons in sing-imr. Ir.srriKthHi n*sumed October 2. 1217 MOf. n.w. oe2-l m

*

THE A« Vl'KMY OF T IE HOL\ CmOSSi1312 MASS. AVE..FOR YOUNG INDIES AND CHILDREN.

The Fn-Iisih rrsirse «»rPers every opportunity forobtaining a th< rough literary cdneation. while.}>«. ial attentkH. is giveu to the natural sciences.Y»wal ami in>trnm. ntal music, drawing and paiut-lnFr«m-b. liernvan. I^ttin. eits-ution and phys¬ical eiiltui t- are taught by competent instructors.o.-1-if

Hartyn College of

ORATORY.. TNCt>RPORATED .

1223 to 1231 G st. n.w.The largest and best eipilpifcd institution of Itskind In the world.1'ii it giieat nrrvirrMENTS:J. ELOn~l I< in. 2. ORATOKY. S. r>ltA>tATIOCX'LTt HE. 4. rt-IYSH'AL, CLXTI UB.

PROF WEBSTER EimEItLY. PRESIDENT.ItBV. FRXNKLIN J MlU.Elt, A.M., PRINCITAL.

-O.-HON". E&niv R. HAY. CHAIRMAN OF TUBBOARD OF TRl-STEES.XSACBER.^ AND IFl-TtKFTtS IN* SrElTAL

DEPARTMENTS.

Spi'i inl Features for l«!M-t».1. A wwratf yrs'liatini; roano la Litentnre;fne !o all r»*«lar juiDiis.2. The use «f ihc new Practice Rooms for Indi¬

vidual praetire.3. Every jsipil In the college will hare the

nrlv.ivg. of taking i»art Id an entertainment atlea ^t once .» u « »4t

4. In a<b?ition to the regular Instruction, therla»»MS w^l t:.nght by Genevieve Sr««!»bips (thegreatest !»flsjirt.« t»*a"her livtnsi, N'eHon Wheat-croit, Ai.«I A liyroil King and others ofnational fa:ue.Clasps are tilling rapidly. First lessons October

4. Graduarinu i »ur»es begin October 15. oel-tf

M;ss Burbage,Gndu.iie I^eipzig Royal Uonservatory.Piano, llarimmy ami iV^iLttrtioint.

m m9I1 MB I iLPRIV ATE LfS-iONS ELEVEN I VKT OK^ADVAN'O-ed s'odie». HspeHul ati«ii;i«>n to *»a<%war»l. un¬willing ?ti«T adult p;:pils. Ui»i.»rsltv graduate.Prof. .1 I «.: llopkius p!:;« e, near 2Uth and I* sts.a

TIIF MI.»E>- IIFFEY. 14.V. c«»K« «»RAN ST. N.W*v.ill r-«p n *Tr sch«f»l for e»r*s and l»oys Sep?.1'». i>. effort r :<»!.. to :».!«.»» jjp the ftplls.V ml laftica .«, af^ly nt thdr t

d--t.r. i" .

SlKS. t.ftf » A K >TEELE. EXPERT IN VOICEbuildim: s*-«-ures p«ir t»»n" and clear..u«ni- i.t' ion. No sore throat. No M-reaOiiug. Notr»-ii' Ii;it»it. Res*«»r» s mlsoseil ro!--ea. Onen to«*hui' a. <«nt -i't ami society en.'age:n« iiii. St?i<!io,1522 1}st. ooO w&s2m*

|qD'res>ion. i hys»7al uultui:i: jf\nTneiteSIOKEL. Instru< tor at St. J«.si*t»!.*s t.'ollege. Eni-metsb-rrg. i.oluate of Roster. S< hoo! of Lxt»res-.ion iS. S. Oirrf. D-an>; classes on Wednesdays,924 F -r. n.»v., betrir.nin^ Oct. 17. Address 2107N » -r Bait".. %fd. se27-3w*

IxsTItt 1-riON" BY MISS MaY H MEAD,(fttiii itHl t'Upil of ilerr Raif of the Royul Cou-ieriatorv or Br IIn. Addrcis 2001 1 si. u.w.

lai*

EDUCATIONAL.I\ KASIIHGTOS.

The Columbian University,WASHINGTON, D. C.rev. s. ii. greene, d. d., president.

The Preparatory School opens September 24The Columbian O^lfge opens S^ptomber 24The Medlcnl SHiocl opens October 1The I»eut*l Sch«w»! bpMM October 1The Corffjwn Scientific School opens. .. .October 2The Iaw school oj»ens October 3The School of Graduate Studies opens. .October 4

The Preparatory School,1335 H street northwest, gives tbofOQrt prepara¬tion for college, for the Naval ami Military Acad¬emics aid for business. A corps of ten professorsawl instructors. Untitling open for inspection and ateacher present daily after September 9 to answerInquiries from 0 to 2 o'clock. Session begins SEP¬TEMBER 24. For further informal ion address

ANDREW 1\ MONTAGVia. Ph.D.,Principal.

The Oelnmblan College opened September 24.Full etofstcal and scientific courses are offeredleading to the degree of A. 11. and U.S. respective¬ly. Students seeking admission are required to pre¬sent certificates of the work done in the institu¬tions at which they hare previously studied. TheCollege Is open to*l>oth sexes. For further infor¬mation address

PROF. A. T. MONTAGUE, Ph.D., Dean.

Corcoran Scientific School.Forty-seven professors and instructors; twenty-

three "full d.-i«»rtm-nts: twelve full courses of studyin General Science, Civil and Electrical F.ngInher¬ing, Chemistry, Meteorology, Geography, GeplogyaihI Mineralogy, Arr'iitetture, Finance and Eco¬nomics, Language and Literature, leading to degreeof B. S. Fee for full course, fUO a year Sp^-lalstudents admit tcil. Fee for single studies, fSOper year. laboratory, designing and field wormextra*. Opening exercises Tuesday, October 2, atS p.m. Addresses by l*rof. G. 1*. Merrill and Asst.Pi of. Edward Farquhar.DEPARTMENT OF APPIJED MATHEMATICS

Prof. F. R. FAVA, Jr., C. E.,llend of Department.

Courses in Dcstriptive Geometry, Perspective,Mechanics, etc. Si* , lal courses for teachers.

DEPARTMENT Ol' ARC11 ITECTt*RE,Prof. C E. HARRY, A. R. I. B. A..

llend of Department.Full course. Special courses in all branches.

1>EJWRTmE.NT OF CI 11:MISTRY.CHARLES E. MUNROE, Ph. D.,

Professor of Chemlstrv, liead of Department.H. CARRINGTON BOLTON. Ph. 1>.,Lecturer on History and Philosophy Chemistry.T M. CHATARD, Ph. D.,

Lecturer on Chemical Engineering.CABELL WHITEHEAD, B. M.,Assistant iu Assaying.PETER FIREMAN, Ph. D.,

Assistant in Quantitative Analysis.J. S. MILLS, A. M.,

Assistant In Quantitative Analysis.lestruction iu General Chemistry, Chemical Prac¬tice. Qualitative, Quantitative ami Technical Anal¬ysis and Industrial Processes, Assaying and Metal¬lurgy of Precious Metals, Ac., Ate.Dr. Flt«>man will conduct a course in OrganicChemistry.DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING,Prof. F. R. FAVA. Jr., C. E.,

Head of Department.Full course. Si>ecial courses In all branches.DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE AND ECONOMICS,

A. F. CRAVEN. Ph. D.,Professor.

Send for circular.DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS AS APPLIED TO

ARCHITECTURE. iProf. AMATEIS,

Head of Department.Mf. MEYER,

Assistant in Freehand Drawing.This department has l»eeu organised for the train¬ing of superior draftsmen in architecture and civilergiiiecriug and for all who seek instruction in free-ii^.ud drawing.

DEPARTMENT OF FRENCH,LEE DAVIS I/>DGE. A. M. Ph. D.,

Professor.Full course in the French language and literature

especially designed for scientific students.DEPARTMENT OF GEltLOGY AND MLNERALOGY,GEORGE P. MERIULL, lt». D.,Head of Department.GEORGE V. CHANDLER, B. S.,

Assistant.Full and special coarse* in Geology and Mineral-

ogy, systematic and iifflliiIjKI'ARTMENT of GElUf-YN,HERMAN SCIIoENFELD, Ph. D.,Professor.

Full course in the German language, literature,history and science.A course in the Polish language is offered.

DEPARTMENT Ml MATI1EMATICS.M. L. llols KINS, Ph. I>.,

Professor.H. G. llomiKINS, A. B.,

Assistant.Algebra and Geometry (preparatory and advanced).Trigonometry, Analytic Geometry, Calculus, Dif¬ferential Equations, Least Squares, Determinants,Quaternion*.

DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY,LEE DAVIS LODGE, A. M., Ph. D.,lYofesaor.

Physiological nnd Rational Psychology. Ethics,Pedagogy, Istfw on the History of Philosophy.Gourse esp«*eially adapted to teachers.DEPARTMENT OF PlIVSICS AND ELECTRICALENGINEERING.

E. P. LEWIS. B. S.,Pr« fesror.

J. E. BLoMEN", Ph. D.,Instructor.

lectures on General Pinnies, Theory and Practiceof Electricity; enlarge htl*>ratory equipment. Sendfor circular.INSTRUCTION TN RUSSIAN.PETER FIREMAN. Ph. D..

Instructor.A full course fn the Russian language and lit¬

erature is offered this year for the first time by theUniversity. The course consists of grammar, con¬versation and the reading of popular Russian tales,the masterpieces of such prose writers as Gog<d,Tourgeniev and Tolstoi aiul poets like l'oushkln andLermontov.DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING,EDWARD A. MUIR,

Assistant.Mechanical Drawing, as applied to machine shoppractiee. Projections, Working Drawings and Gen¬eral Practice.For further Information address

PTof. CHARLES E. MUNROE, Ph. D.,I>ean.

The Law School Faculty:'lte Hon. JOHK M. HARI.AN, I.L. D.,(Associate Justice of the Suprem\ C«*irt of theUnited States!,Professor of the Constitutional Jurt*f>:Vlence of theUnited States. i»f the Law of Dom\tle Re¬

lations. of Commercial Paper nnd «»f Torts.The Hon. WALTER S. COX. LL.D.,(Associated Justice of the Swpceme Court of the

District of Columbia),Professor of the Law of Real and Personal Prop¬erty, of Coiitmeta and Of Crimes and «Misdemeanors. 1

The Hon. WILLIAM A. MAURY, LI.. D.,(Sometime Asslstaut Attorney General of UnitedStates',

Professor of Equity Jurisprudence, of Common Lawand Equity Plfudit*. and of the law

of E* Menee.The Hon. DAVID .!. BREWER. IX. D.,(Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the

United States*.Professor of the Law of Corporations.Prof. H. H. KMMOTT, A.M., 14* M.,(of 'the John^ Hopkins University),'Lecturer the (Ivil Law.HENRY E. DAVIS. A.M.. LL. M..

(Sometime Assistant Attorney of the District ofOnhntiitte),lecturer on the History of Law.

WILLIAM F. MATTINGLY". Ifrq.,(of the Washington Bur),Lecturer on Practical Commercial Law.

The Hon. WILLIAM EDGAR SIMONDS. A.M.,I.L.B.,(Sometime United States Commissioner of Patents),Professor of the Law of Pateuts.

The Hon. ANDREW C. BRADLEY,(Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of theDistrict of CwlmuMa),

Lecturer on Criminal Law and on Criminal Plead¬ing nnd Practice.

WILLIAM G. JOHNSON, J.L.M.,(of the Washington Bar),

Professor of Legal Catechetics and Judge of MootCourt.

The books are now open for the registration ofstudents.The Law School opens on Wednesday, Oct. 3, at

6 p.m.. in the Lecture Hall of the University,when the rtrst lecture will be delivered and an-notnicements for the ensuing session made. Stu¬dents desiring to enter the Iaiw School are re¬quested to register prior to the day of owning.The books are now open for the registration ofstudents.

Graduate School.Courses of advanced instruction are offered, which

lend to the degree* of Master of Arts. Master ofScience, Civil Engineer, Electrical Engineer andDoctor of Philosophy.A schoo1 of original r.*scarcli nnd bibliographicInfinity". Owning exercises Thursday, October 4,

at 8 p.m.Prc>f. CHARI.ES E. MUNROE, Ph. D.,

Desn.To^* catalogue di>erlptive of these several schools

address ROBERT H. MARTIN.e-.V'f Secretary.Medical Department

~or

The Co-uinriibigLrt UniversityThe se^'enfr third ses?aon l»egin* OetoJ»er 1, 1WI4.Regular daily le«-tiirc*s are de livered at 5:80 n in.For anncuoeement apply to Dr. D. K. SI I PTE,Dean. 13111 Q st. n.w . telephone .115, hours to

10:34) a.m.. 4 to .; p.m.. or Dr. E. A. de Sc'HWEI-NITZ. Se«Tetary-Tr.*asu!cr, 13i"» H st. n.w., 5 to

p.ni 7 to v i* in ec8t31WASHixirrriK conservatory or murk; m10th st. n.w. Twenty-fifth year. Piano, organ,voice, violin, flute, comet, etc. Free advantagesto pupils. <». p.. BIT.LARD. Director. se2S-lm*REOPENING OF GAII.LAUD SCHOOL OF LAN-guages, !M)H F st. n.w. Founded 1888. Principal,Prof. J. I). Gniliard, B es I,.. Paris; oflieierd*:icade?.»ie and :*;itl:c»r of a new, s« ientilic andprogressive ut.'thod. indorsed by S«rl>oune andleading edu«*afors of I ranee, England and Amer¬ica (Mt cinolsra), an |m a itafl ot" yll-fied prof.->sors for all m««l«-rn iauguages. se22-lm

MR. ERNEST LENT,Pi« no, violin, theorv of music.N»... ERNEST LENT PIANO.

sel5-lm* Kesiden'-e, l."»2>» Con-oran st.

MRS. Z. D BI HER.Instructor of Piano, Voice and Harmony,s.-l". 1 ni-». 14-7 Q st. n.w.won nn\ ANP PHYSICAL CULTURE. Miss

fteulah «Jrlbert. teach»r in W. -stern Man landCollege, will rcecivc a few pupils In Washingtouat ?XI4 I* st. n.w. se2T-lm*

FRENCH LANGUAGE.PROF. PALL E. Vol NOT,

1426 New York nre.Rend for circulars. S*27-lm*

DU. JO*IN P. i AI LI IKLDWill resume lessons at his residence,

lo42 New York are.,se27-lm* Oeto»»er 1.

LESSONS IN GERMAN.Experienced Gcnium lady wishes pupils of any

age, at houie or iu school, iu German languageand literature and music (university preparation);lessons in exchange fo- board and room. Ad¬dress Miss A., 1023 lit ii at, #el4-lm

educational.II* WASHINGTON.

HOWARD UNIVERSITY MEDICAL DEPARTMENT.

CLINICS.IV ill' 'orglcal, Obstetrical anil Dental,

win .w .C ,,r Howard University«"<¦; *£« following cllnlfs during the winter

fitter {5. Fre«dmen s Hospital, beginning after

*'tJ"«nV at 4:30 p.m. by Prof. N. F.,My. °* Wednesdays at 4:30 p.m. by Prof*,lam* K,'Thurn. C. B. Purvis or Dr. Daniel Will-

C IVrW»_FOr ..auate* "nd »enlors, by rrof.

J«bn^E.BmH^tf" " 10 am' by Prof'

a'pSJ,1Pf ^turn-Once a week by Prof. C.Eye and Ear.Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturday

at 1 o clock by Dr. E. Oliver Belt.'

E. A%iUrt''~TOwdays an* Thursday* by Dr.

nisnenmry-Datly, from 12 to 2 o'clock cm bvDrs. Vans. 11111 and WUUftoo. P ' *

Lamh* IUOrteni declt",3,n,,lon» by Prof. D. S.Oiit-dTor Midwifery -By Dr. Ernest Kin*.Dental Infirmary-Open every week day from 2

to 5 o clock p. in.

^a®^rt^L4? "t"'n<J 'hose clinic's mustfit! ,

B' M.D., Secretary, 1118sf- 8cl4-lm

Sanatory QyrmnascMnriFOR WOMEN" AND CHILDREN, 812-G14 12th at.n.w., opens Octobcr 1. CLARA J. HORTON,Director. Apply for circulars. spl.'l-lpi*PROF ARN0I.I1 W. MEYER, UMN C.IIADC-

.

theorv, psychological system-of voireculture; cue vocal lesson and .Hi-ec'ltns for 2Hlesson. '..eluding ixaA*. *5. Iboi vt uve. n.woi'r,»-ini*

THE COLUMBIA SCHOOL OP OITICSA thorough course on tl»e eye and the art of

?rJ.iw SET *cl"J ""d e»«*lasses. An Independentprofession acquirisl in three months, at mod-crate cost. A diploma Issued to each graduateat the end of the course. Call on or address. 1C ,

J O. RKED, M. DselRlni 1S»; H st. n.w.

WIMODACGSli 1328 I ST. N.W.-CLASSES BRJCinnlug I reneh organize Sept. 17; other classes.October 1 lerms, $1 a month to infiniters; nicrn-

" * >car. ADA L. SMITH. Supt.

Where to Attend School.~MKirri?.pol4.?rv,,i2rough knoK>edgo of the COM-Mr RCIAL STt DIES at the cost of less lime rndttcney than1 otb.?.- achooia. HUNDREDS owe their

"'e Iso thev say) to tbe training they re¬

vived here. We made BREAD-WINNERS of themwaut jou to kmw ut; write and we will -ell

you all aUnit this L1VK SCHOOL. N.B..Wa assistgraduate* to positions. Tenth year opena Monday.September 3. Day and evening sessions WOOIi'ACOMMERCIAL COLLBUB, tlf Lat tiipRol rttuu24-tf

MR. PUTNASTS SCHOOL, 1426 Q ST. N.W RK-opens September 17. 1X'J4. Preparation for uni¬versities. technical school* and business nur-suits; private l.-ssons If desired; lie*t of refer-rn'''"-.. *or 4inular* and Infoimatiou apply to»u25-tf WM. B. PUTNAM, ill.The Hisses Kerr's School_ .

For Young I-adles and Little Children..»

rni ^ns September 27.selS to no2sr 14SS N *t.

MISS RAMI'S CIVU. SERVICE INSTTTTTE ATO>Business College. 1311 11th n.w. Pupils preparedSuccessfully for civil service, departmental andreLsus examinations. St. nograpto taught. se2-tr

THE BERKELEY SCHOOL, 925 1STH ST., WILLreopen September 24. Puplla prepared for WestPoint, Annapolis. for all universities and aclen-flnj schools, fur direct commissions in the armyand navy and for the civil service. Dnrlng theSf.1 j'*?r twelve student* have been successfully¦ttea for various examination*. Arrangements¦lay be made for nrlvate lessons in all hranchea.

CHARLES W. FISHER. B. S."">.»Headmaster.

. «. .EMERSON INSTITUTE,

2f; 7, <-'-as-s'!'aL ANI> MATHEMATICALSCHOOL H'K YOUNO MEN AND BOYS.

. ., ¦st.. Franklin saiiure.

tBrty-third annual aesaloi un.br the prescct nrla-_. ,,

f'l*" begins Septembei 24.V?I''"^en-kuown preparatory sehoil for Harrard.

V T*. "!. a"'," f"r United States MilitaryckV'i Al'»',emies. and for the beat teehnologZcal schools enjoys a repuiaiion s. -ond to no school

! i 1v' " r""ter 'he graduate* con-

pro"esak« 01 bijudfeda distiugulsU-d In everyFor ilrciibira, A-e., address the princ ipal.

CHAS. B YOUNIJ. AM, Ph DFRENCH. 1.

Trlvate and class lesson*. .

Pn»f. A. UONARD,ae22-lm« loll Marlon st.

MMK. J. BVUTA DALY. TEACHOF VOICE5?5e cliain system for reading

E?, i£ I I ,S*i' Trr'" begins Septeuil»er 15.Studio. His New lork are, se4-3m

MRS. L. O. TAI.BOTT WILL REOPEN CI VSSF-iIn English. French and m^lc Vk toii-r l at »27P st. Natural biatory aud culturo classes for

adults. s«12-lm*MiSS AMY C. LKAVITT,

1121 VERMONT AVE. N. W....

PIANO AND HAR\fo.\Tsel-dtf LESSONS ON THE JANKO KEYBOARD.

MISS TACIE A. DANIEL.715 6TH ST. N.W

uud In",ruu,,'n"'1

1864. Wyoming ave. n.w.WASLINfSTON llEl'iHTS SCIliHiI. FOR niRIA

sit sT »lr <';1-v scholars. Reopens Ort. 1.,* i .

i,,vANlES martin, pitiNcirAL.

lift. \\. EDWARD HFalMENDAIiL OF BAL'fT-inore will reHiune vocul lastru< tk»a TilmVivs him!IrUlAVM, %t ** n*l* ra& 8*uj iuiuj sf 034 F »»t.. <mFriday, Septeiul»er 28. rff lmm

C. MATII.DA MIX KB. EXI'KUIhixCKD TKACHKHof piano nrvl twirumiiy, Kraduate of Now hito*Conservatory of Movie. Bovtoo Kmrna L. Minkc,teach4»r of voice; Luuipi-rti'a Italian metiiod. S12Del. ave. n.e. mUW

. °R WITHOOT

"»HNismOX. T1,Ea

Beclun.-m on Plnno at half rates. set-3m

Boston School off Eilocution.1217 F ST. N.W.

Elocution. Dramatic Art and Fencing classesnow f< ru ing. Fall term bi-glna o tober 3 Callor *. n l for jjr^u.jr. sel5-lmo«

SpecialVOCAL, Vli ILIN, PIANO

Leswins.J. F. Itl ECKERT,

140U Fourt.vnth st. n.w.Terms liberal.

ae3 2m'

t. Vernon Seminary,1100-1104 M *t. and 1124-1128 11th *t.

m?TrchiM^ dny *lbou' for 5UUB«

¦pw'trOU*bly u"'d''rn ,cd PTOKressive In method and

Primary, Preparatory and Oi.lb*iate de|«rtment*hulldings perfectly cniiliipud with every ap¬pliance for health and coipfort of uunli* "l'wtn-tkth year of>em Oetol.er neisind.For further Information upplv to t)»o principal.

_se7-tr _ Mr*. ELl£.\flETH J. SOMfeRS.MRS, .MANN S KINDERGARTEN AND SCHOOL

Si*?. F! its bet h Pi abody Kindergarten NormalIValnlng SWi.sil 19U Sunderland place, will lie-

*l>d "inter Melons October L 1804.auSlgm

MISS VALIANT OP BALTI il ilTE, I'CITl, OFProf. Bunnelster, will give b^son* tplnno) |nwasblnclon on Tuewlays and Friday*, l-cglnnln*

r 1«. For terms, Ac., n.l.lreis !«l F st¦ w.. or 221." Calvert St., HalVliore. se'Jt*,-3w#

MISS ROSAMOND M. WARD. PIANO LESSONSExperience In tenchlng l*egluners.

FRANK E. WARD. PIANO, ORUAN AND n \R-Mt)NY. ise21 1m»> 214 lit!? st. s w

DR. 11. C. SHERMAN. 2H2B I ST N W 1'IANOhours from 12 to 2. after October 8. l'res nt ud-d'es* OLNEY,*e."-l m* Montgomery co., Md.

The Department off Archi=tecturafl Drawing

In Spencerbin Rnslnes* College Is now open for thereception of students. Cai|>ontcrs, builder* me¬chanics and Student* In draughting who have borntrained here have achieved remarkable au-s csa luIlr'r "v.',;;ral ?.*a dlr,,<'t rM,">t»' tt>o pmcti<*al skill ami intelligence tliua acciuirtHl I>a.partn.eiit ofrs Tuesday and Tbunslay eventnir* ofeach week from Octolier 2 to July 1. Furtherinformation clven at college otBce, 708 D st n w

Selr. In. MRS. SARA A SITIvrER. rllni^TjH. DONCfl, VIOLIN IJCSSONS.

SiHflal nttertioD given to beglnicrs as well asaavan<*»Hj pupils.siUDm R-sid nee. 608 II *f. n.w.

MR. HERMAN O KAKEMANN will l'ESC\IElietructi.-r on tbe violin the 1st of OctolsrStudio and ri-sldence, 1221 12th st. n.w. *e2«.ira

friends- s::i.ect school, an elementauvAND Hllill SCHOOL, FOR BOTH SENES 1M1Start'lmr T? ?!! M". tnre,f'h T"»r Scptvmtier 27.Starting it. the primary department, a child marcontinue under ex,s-rie.c si i-ollege-tralued te. h-Soi'ii to."'ery seve'jteen slmb-nts,SfnftentL V,"l«' j"', c,,'lege or for graduation.Students prepared by m are now cnrolbsl atYale, Colombia, I orn. 11. Princeton, Jolius Hop-kliw, Massachusei ts Institute of TechnologyLafnyette, Lehigh and others.The l.uil'llng-ls especially arranged for school

pui and equipped with every l.ccfsau:.>appliance. Including a chemical and physicallaboratory. Instruction Is adapted to the "needsand capacity of Individuals. No charge for text

Colognes at Ballantyne-s, Brentano'sand at the M'bool. Office hours, from 10 u» 10 clock, at M'iinoi.- c ..

W SIDWELL. Principal,.*8-tr Home, 804 21st *t. n.w.

Qonza^a CoJaege.direction of fbo

FATI1 ER.S OF TFIL S4M'IETY OF JESl*.^.Vusfcicrl, scientllic and business courses of

uS'i* a' 2*'h001* reOjnn^l TtESDAY. .^EITEM-PfcK 4. h|»tKlal coiirs. for »»lder students wishing

' r!T!d l,roK«**» clawlca. For par¬ticulars a«l<fre»w ^

juv. cx>UNEi-rrs gillespte, s. j.fPresident and Treasurer.

hKJT1 !JF.S TO NT'RSKS WIIJ~ BE HESl MKDIriwC ' J I'rovkfeaoe Honpital; inrsons1 n V furnish letters of pmkI in.,ml char*< ferrJiL T r,r,',ved a*. ou Payment of fl();thr« Irt tnres a week will he s!r«>n hy the dlffer-ent inejiih. . of m^lir^i ,,n«i burghal ataffs. Forfurther Ititori.uition applv to*e2S 1 r.f Dr. T. F. MALLAN, 117 B *t. *.e.

BBS BAItTON OF ENGLAND WILL RETURNto Washington anil resume her classes at her artstmlio, SH0 20th St. n.w., the Hint week In Oc!t"l>er. Private lessons by arrangement. «e2Ti-2w*

ST. CECILIA'S ACADEMY.~mi EW C.IHM'St..Young ladies and cl.iblren not ntten.line th-academy are admlttisl to the classes of arttnuslc typewriting, j.houjgraphy, Lalln ami

tnoch. oultKfm

EDUCATIONAL.iw WAsrijprofroH.

COLUMBIA COLLEGE OFjboMMEItCH.623 La. are., bet. 6nr and 7th sts. n.w.O. K. UHNER, A.M., C.E., Prill.

The leading school of business and shorthand.Highest attainable grade of Instruction at moder¬ate cost. Thorough and practical courses Inbusiness, English, (ItU service, accountancy,shorthand and typewriting. Superior and en¬thusiastic teaching- UraiUuatss of rare excellenceand distinguished success Situations when com¬petent. Catalogue. so SO

.Mr. Henry XaederWishes to Inform big i»ui»ils that ho will resumelessons In PIANO and CfUEUkY of MUSIC onOctober 1.

Office hour: 11.12 o'clock. 51Music room: 807 11th st. n.w. sc20-lm

Education for -Real Life1864. FOB BOX8 AND DAUUHTKK3. INK.

The Spcncerlan Business Collt'KS,National Bank of the Republic building, cor. 7th

and O n.w. Day and night sessions.8PENCERIAN,

In the national capital and throughout the country,la a household word, asaoclaited with thorough busi¬ness training and a prosperous career.The thirtieth scholastic year of thla popular In¬

stitution I* gun Monday. September 3. 18SH. Fivedepartments, Tlx: Practical Business, Includingcomplete bookkeeping course, English, rapid calcu¬lations. rapid wilting, moral and social lulture,Dclsarte system of expression, cities, politicaleconomy anil commercial law; Practical English,with Initiatory bookkeeping; Shorthand and Tjpe-writing, including English; Spen.-eri.tn Rapid Writ¬ing; Mechanical and Architectural Drawing, rullcorns of thoroughly trained teacher*. Location ten-tral.Spacious, brilliantly lighted. handsome halls and

class rooms. Serrlcos of graduates a s-ays In de¬mand Terms moderate, but no competition withcheap schools. The leading business men of Wash¬ington wore tralucd in this college, nml send theirsons and daughters and candidates for employmenthere for training.This college received from the World's Oo.umblan

commission a diploma for "Excellence ef Students'Work" In all of the above departments. Twe.vsof lta graduates received diplomas from the Expo¬sition for suiH-rlor general written examinations,and four ot tnem won silver medals for "valuableservice" In the living educational exhibit.

Office open every business day ami night.Writs or call for new nnuual aaawnccment.MRS. SARA A. SPENCER,

ii)6 tr Principal and Proprietor.Ql'NSTOX INSTITUTE.A BOARDING AND DAYschool for girls. WWS, 40 and 42 Cambridge placen. w., niteus September 26.sul7-2m Mr. and Mrs. B. R. MASON.

OIT OK WASHIXWTOI*.MAPI.KWOOD INST1TITK, CONOORIIVIIJ.E. PA.

$1115 |ht year. A successful school; one of thehost to Infuse with energy utul to wake lip boysto the duties of life. lli>ys under IS, $174. J.SHOKTIJDCE (Yale), A.M., Principal.jHiW.sicTUiHll*

NATIONAL PARK SEMINAR*For joung women and glrlsj 20 minutes north ofWashington, at Forest Glen, Md. Collegiate a»lpreparatory courses. Excellent faculty. 40-acrcampus. f7B,000 boltdings. A cultured borne.Senu for illustrated catalogue. au22 tf

ST. GEORGE'S FIAIJ, FOR BOTS. ST. GEORGE'S.Md.. J. 0. KIN EAR, A.M., Prln .College orbusiness; l!»tb year: established reputation fortraining, health, kindiess, comfort; $210 to $258.au2t> -m

PENNINGTON (N. J.) SEMINARY, BOPNTtB.ook R R., between Phlla. and New York.Fo. l*oth sexes Fifty fifth year. \>ry healthful,beautiful and accessible. TvreWe courses of ln-stinetloo; nineteen t«achetj; cost moderate Forcatalogue, Ac., address TH08. 1IANLON, D. D-.President. »y!l-78t

AFFAIRS IN ALEXANDRIA

Colored Bepublicans in Beyolt Against 80-C&lled Leaders.

A Mass Meetlnie to He Held.The Meet'

Inn; of the City t'ouuell.>'ote»of Pcrannnl Inlrre»t.

a1

A conference was held oh Monday nightby some of the leading colored republicanvoters, looking to the steps to be taken Inthe November elections, etc. The meetingwas called to order by J. M. Buckner, whoacted as president. Tr-^l. Watson acted as

secretary. The conferrtice decided to hold a

mass meeting Friday, the 12th Instant, atShiloh Hall, on West street, to inform thevoters, as stated by members of the con¬

ference, of the advantage that is beingtaken of them by the leaders w ithout con¬

sultation, and to let the candidate for Con¬gress know where his strength lies, etc.;also to make it known that no one or twomen hold the colored voters in their handsor control them. A committee was ap¬pointed to invite Col, P. H. McCaul to themass meeting.At the regular semi-monthly meeting of

the city council held last night an ordinancewas passed taxing express companies re¬

ceiving and forwarding goods in the state$l!iO. A proposition received from the Dick¬son Crematory Company to put In a crema¬

tory for destroying the garbage of the citywas referred to a special committee for in¬vestigation. An ordinance granting per¬mission to J. M. Hill, manager of the Gen¬tlemen's Driving l'ark. to build an electricrailway through the poor house grounds tothe park was passed. Mr. 1»ill, in askingthis grant, assured the members of thecouncil that the road would be completedin ten days. Some other unimportant busi¬ness t\as referred to llie various commit-tew.The marriage of It. Lee Field to Miss

Allie Hamilton took place at the SecondI'resbvterian Church yesterday afternoon.Rev. T. H. Ilice. pastor of the church,officiated. The groom was attended byI .outs Bendhelm of this city, and the maidof honor was Miss Kuima l.ang of Fred¬ericksburg. After the ceremony Mr. andMrs. Field left for a northern tour. Messrs.Albert Field. Isaac Field, Wm. Maicholr andGuy Manders acted as ushers.Mrs. Virginia *K. 1 >alngertteld has quali¬

fied as administratrix of the estate of thelate Henry Daingertieid.Thos. I.. Waters of this cltv and Miss

Kmtly V. Southall of Charlottesville willbe married at the bride's residence tomor¬row.The remains of the late Mrs. Ellen Smith,

who died in Baltimore, were brought tothis city yesterday and Interred.Rev. .1. I. Vance, formerly p.istor of the

Second Presbyterian Church In tills city,l.ut How of Norfolk, has reconsidered hisdeclination of the call to Nashville, and willaccept It. He will take charge in Nashvillein February.Spencer Davis, a car Inspector on the

Southern railway, was crushed between twocars at Ashevllle yesterday and instantlykilled.Nettie, the little fiar.ghter of Policeman

Ferguson, entertained a number of her lit¬tle friends at a birthday party on Monday-night.The regular meeting of the board of su¬

pervisors of Alexandria county was held atthe old court house yesterday with all ofthe members present. Judge John Crltcherwas allowed $75 for professional services.The county treasurer was directed to refundto Mrs. Hugh Smith the amount she haddeposited when she made application for aliquor license, which license was relused.C. A. Trout. superi^lemVjht of the poorhi use, tendered his resignation, which was

accepted, and Randolph Birch was appoint¬ed to succeed him. '*

Several hills were audited and ordered tobe paid. The question,of moving the courthouse was not broughr tip.The Washington, Alexandria and Mount

Vernon Klectric Railway Company are nowwaiting for the Metropolitan Hallway Com¬pany of Washington to del ermine the bestsystem of insulating its electrical power.Both will adopt the same system, and whenthis is done the work of 'juilding will becommenced.Owing to the indisposition of the common¬

wealth's attorney tht+e will be no grandJfry at this term of the corporation court.John Smith, who for some time past has-

been a special officer &t the local depot Inthis city, has been removed \>y the Pennsyl¬vania railroad company for causing the ar¬rest of Yardmaster Meyers.The schooner Dennis Simmons of Wash-

ll-gton. N. C., arrived at this port yesterdaywith a cargo of lumber for J. H. D. Smoot.

Olicrrs rjcctcil.The Grand Commandery of Knights Tem¬

plar, at their hall. Virginia avenue and 5thstreet southeast, last evening elected andInstalled officers as follows: L.. H. Wayne,R. K. G. commander (fourth term); E. P.Minor, V. E. D. G. commander; P. B. Mer-ridith, E. generalissimo; P. H. Simmons,E. G. captain-general; W. H. Severson, E.G. prelate; H. C. Harris, E. G. seniorwarden; G-.W. Phllipps, E. O. junior war¬den; M. H. Robinson, E. G. treasurer; D. F.Seville, V. E. G. recorder (fifth term); J. H.Pendergrass, E. G. warder; Julius Warren,E. G. guard. After the conclave the sirknights repaired to the residence of Sir H.C. Irving, 4W D street southeast, where asynkl was given them.

The Vice President Discusses TariffLegislation.

DEFENDS THE LAW LATELY PASSED

Much Preferred the Original Wil¬son Bill.

[as to the sugar trust

LINCOI.X, 111., October 10..Vice Pres¬ident Stevenion addressed his democraticfellow citizens here today on the politicalissues. The greater part of his address wasdevoted to the tariff.

\ ice I'rmldrat Stevenson's Speech.Vice President Stevenson said, In review-

inn the tariff legislation of the recent ses¬

sion of Congress:"The democratic Congress has Increased

the tax from ninety cents to one dollar andten cents pt-r gallon on distilled spirits.This will Increase government revenues an¬nually twenty millions of dollars. Do you.In the Interest of the whisky trust, desirethis law repealed? The democratic Congresshaa placed a tax on playing cards, which, asyou know, were untaxed under the McKin-ley law. This will bring to the treasurythree million dollars per annum. I>o youwish this provision of the new law repealedand the old law restored? If so, your path¬way of duty is clear. Vote to return toCongress the republican law-makers whoopposed the tariff upon playing cards andthe increased tax upon whisky."But again, what has this democratic Con¬

gress accomplished? You will bear In mindthat the "blllion-dollar-Congress" con¬trolled by the republicans, created morethan twelve hundred new federal offices at atotal annual cost to the people of more thantwo million dollars. The present democraticCongress, by a series of wise and well-con¬sidered enactments, greatly simplified andImproved administrative methods In the severa! departments of the government bymeans of which irore than six hundred use¬less federal offices have be»n abolished andgovernmental expenses thereby lessened an¬nually to the extent of near one million dol¬lars."One section of the democratic tariff bill

Just enacted provides for the payment of anIncome tax. Individual Incomes of less thanfour thousand dollars are wholly exemptfrom the tax. Savings banks and buildingand loan associations are exempt from thistax. This wise exemption Is In the Interestof smt.ll Investors and depositors. I'ponether corporations and upon Individual In¬comes exceeding that amount, a tax of 2per e«nt is to be collected. As this featureof the bill has encountered fierce hostilityboth from republican legislators end press,it is well to give It consideration. Twoquestions pt once arise: Is this a Just en¬actment? Was It necessary? its enactmentbecame a necessity because of the bankruptcondition In which the passage of the Mc-Klnley law and the extravagance of the re¬publican Congress had plunged the country.Its enactment was the logical result of thevicious republican legislation that hadbrought a deficit instead of a surplus to thetreasury."The duty of* the democratic Congress

when It came into power, to provide. thenecessary revenues with which to meet thecurrent expenses of the government, wasimperative. How could this be done? Eith¬er by continuing or possibly Increasing tothe people the cost of the necessaries oflife by tariff taxation, or by Imix.slng amoderate tax upon the earnings of thewealth of the country. The democraticparty was solemnly pledged to the reduc-

2£.taxat,on *he necessaries of" "Is pledge could be made good, and

sufficient governmental revenues at thesame time secured, only by the impositionof the tax 1 have Indicated. Just In pro¬portion as the burdens of taxation wereremoved from the shoulders of the poorthey were to rest ut>on those more able towar them. A democratic Congress removedthe tax wholly from salt, from lumber.frombinding twine, from agricultural imple¬ments. and greatly reduced the tax uponnf ^ 11*" woo'Vn *,K>ds- *nd other articles

!!? .hS<\ OW was thlB to ** madegood to the treasury? A democratic Con¬gress thought It wise to do so by a tax utx.nannual incomes exceeding This en-

"p^ofX^;;.'",n fom- °,,iv ror ihe

The \rw Tariff."I now ask your attention to a considera¬

tion of other sections of the tariff hill whichhas passed both the House and the Senateand is now the law'of the land. I state toyou in all candor that it is not all that Idesired. There never was a moment that IwotiM not gladly have given the castinghn! I,

Senate in favor of the tariff15 Pa**'*'1 «'ie House of Representa-from l>eginnlng 1 have been a

firm believer in the doctrine of free rawmaterial But it must not be forgottenthat while the House of Representativescontained a democratic majority of nearone hundred, our majority was but one Inthe. Senate. In fact, with every state fullyte,.resented In that body, there would prob-u

,Pen no democratic majority atal!. The Senate contained but forty-fourdemocrats, and with the republican Senatorsvoting solidly against the bill at everystage, it can easily be seen that In a bodyso nearly balanced, tariff reform had noeasy battle to fight. At one critical mo¬ment of the struggle, the biH was onlysaved by the casting vote of the presidingonioer of the Senate."Mr. Stevenson mentioned as benefits of

the new tariff bill the repeal of the sugarbounty, which he denounces as "odiousclass legislation;" the placing of over onehur.dred articles, highly taxed under tileMcKinley law, on the free list; the freeingfrom duty of wool, salt, lumber and agricul¬tural implements. A tajt on raw sugar wasmade necessary by the expenses of the gov¬ernment. Regarding this duty he said:

The Snirnr Trust."You have heard much of the 'sugar

trust,' and of the benefits It will deriveunder the new law. I am free to say thatcould my vote have controlled. It wouldhave received none of the l>eneliis againstwhich complaint has been made. I favoredthe bill as It passed the democratic House,placing sugar of ail grades ui>on the freelist. But. objectionable as some featuresor the sugar schedule are, it must not belorgotten that they are a great Improve¬ment upon the McKinley law. How' The.sugar trust sprang into existence underthe McKinley law.was, in fact, a necessaryoutgrowth of that law. The McKinley lawadmitted raw sugars free of duty. Thiswas In the Interest of the refiners.In otherwords, of the sugar trust. Was this in theinterest of the people? Of the consumer'Not at all. It was solely In the interest ofths refiner, for the reason that the 'freesugar' of which you have heard so muchwas wholly unfit for domestic use It wasthe raw material that passed first Into thehands of the refiners.of the 'trusts . Itwas not the sugar used upon your tablesBefore It reached jour table the refinerhad added to its cost to the consumer ex¬actly the 'tariff' that another clause of theMcKinley law had provided. How? l*ponthe sugar used at your homes. In cookingand upon the table, the tariff tax wasplace.! at 50 cents upon every hundredpounds. This provision, coupled with thatallowing free raw sugar to the refiner gavethe trust* opportunities for gain hithertowithout parallel in legislation. Its profitshave been enormous. I'nder Its concessionsgranted by the McKinley law. it has becomethe gigantic monopoly of the age. You can¬not be too often reminded that all of thetrusts and monopolies that are now thebane of this land are the offspring of re-publican high tariff enactments. If it hadbeen the Intention under th-» McKlnl*y lawto give free sugar to the people, why "a taxof 1-1! cent per pound on that rea.1v fordomestic use? Why not. as in the bill whichhas Just passed the democratic House ad¬mit all sugars free?

Meet of the Sew Law."The true test of the value of the new

law Is by contrasting it with the old. Themerits of the sugar schedule of the newbill can only be determined by Its compar¬ison with those of the McKinley law.whlchIt has displaced."How, then, stands the account? The new

law takes from the trust two-fifths-almostone-half.the benefits It received under theMcKinley law. The new law totally repealsthe provision of the McKinley law whichgave to the sugar planter a bounty of twocents per pound for fifteen years upon hisproduct. The cost of this darling featureof the McKinley tew *as twelve milliondollars annually to tb« federal treasury

and the people. But this I* not all. Thesugar schedule of the McKlnley law wasa charge upon the treasury to the extentof the bounty thus paid the planter. tinderthe new law the bounty Is abolished, andby careful estimate of the Secretary of theTreasury under the new schedule the rev¬enues coming Into the treausry will for thecurrent fiscal yeai amount to forty-threemillion dollars."Mr. Stevenson .tald that the dom<vratlc

party would continue to fight monopoly andwould go on In the direction of lower du¬ties. He closed with praise for FranklinMacVeagh, the candldite for the Senate,and Mr. Springer, the congressional candi¬date.

PARTIES IN MASSACHUSETTS

Gnrrent Issues as Treated in the PlatformsJust Adopted.

Am Otalloa Tendered to Senator Hoar.The A. P. A. an aa Issue.The

Democratle Stale Ticket.

Correspondence of The Evening Sttr.BOSTON. Mass., October 0. 1RTX.

With the demicratic state convention ofMonday and the republican convention ofSaturday over, the campaign In Massachu¬setts may be said to be fairly opened. Thecontest does cot promise the excitement af¬forded when Russell the First headed thedemocratic ticket and led the way to vic¬tory. For the governorship. Greenhalge andJohn E. Rubsall are opposed to each other,just as they were last year, but with theodds overwhelmingly In favor of the re¬publican nominee. Gov. Greenhalge countson his side the prestige of his victory lastyear, backed up by an able and every waysuccessful administration of the executiveoffice, while John E. Russell Is obliged toshoulder what Is considered the Inevitablehandicap which Is imposed upon him by thedoings of the last democratic Congress. Theplatforms of the two parties are of more In¬terest. as showing the trend of Massachu¬setts thought cn the debated and contro¬versial questions of the hour.Chief among the principle enunciated by

the republicans are these: An equal sharein government for each citizen; best p .sslblewases for every workman; the Americanmarket for American labor; every dollarpaid by the government, both the gold andrhe silver dollars of the Constitution, andtheir paper representative, to be honest andunchanging In value, and ^"a' °^lla_other; better Immigration and «*^.il'»ation laws; no tramp, anarchist,pauper to be let In. so that cltUenshlp shallSot be stained or polluted; withliberty and republican goveriunentathand abroad; Americanism everywhere, theflag never lowered or dishonored, norender in Samoa; no barbarousheading men in Hawaii; nopunishment without trial; faith kept w'jjjthe pensioners; no deserving old 1the |>oor house; the suppression of 4ramdrinking and dram selling; a school, at thepublic charge, open to all the children, andfree from partisan or sectarian conrol.nodistinction of birth or religious creed in therights of the American citisenship. cUanpolitics; pure administration; no lobb> . re¬form of old abuses; leadership along -TIpaths; minds ever open to the sunlight andthe morning, ever open to new truth andr.ew duty, as the new years bring their les¬sons.

. _Democratle Prlaelplea.The democratic platform Is longer than

the republican, and rather surprised thebusiness men of this section by coming outwith an unequivocal Indorsement of theprinciples of the Income tax. The platformreiterates the loyalty of the Massachusettsdemocrats to President Cleveland, congratu¬lates the country on the repeal of the fed¬eral election laws, the Sherman law andthe McKinley law; the abolition of bounties;the conduct of foreign affairs; reform ofabuses In the pension system, and the re¬duction in the appropriations of ^on^res*.The principle of the Income tax is appro\ eU.the extension of the civil service system isfavored and the administration is asked toformulate a plan by which the post officeswill be brought within Its scope. .Anyganizatlon which claims to Introduce dis¬tinctions of birth or religious ^eed lntopolitics Is opposed, and any part> whichtacitly accepts an alliance with such an or¬ganization" Is condemned. I^foportrepresentation and the adoption of votingmachines are favored.

_ith.rThe most significant incident 'convention wm the ovation.tor Hoar. The A. P. A. de¬feat the senior Senator as delegate to theconvention. but he was there by ^ur esyand save a stirring addreiw. It

, Ithat the unusual warmth of £,s.was due to the opposition he had encoun-tered from the A. P. A.

.#Thomas J. C.argan. in h's speech at thedemocratic convention, delmed the A. t". *.question as the only Issue inpolitics this year. He said: All other Issues must be relegated to the rear until thismatter is settled. I appeal to the honorand the men of Massachusetts, this greatcommonwealth, whether at thf fti.l of thenineteenth century a partj that J"*speak out boldly on this Issue is deserving

"Vhe^'repubMcans have renominated theiran tiro «iate ticket, as well as all theirCongressmen. Few democratic Congress¬men have yet l>een named. The democraticitate ticket Introduces some new names,and In its entirety, is as follows: For gov¬ernor. John K. Russell of l^eicester; forlieutenant governor. Charles K. Stiwtton ofBoston; for attorney gener^ Henry F.Hurlbiirt of l.ynn; for secremrj of state,Charles De Courcey of Lawrewca; for,,-.r and receiver #renerml, James 8. < rln-nell of GreenfleM; for auditor, t'apt. AlfredC. Whitney of Boston. .

The congressional contests, when fairlymen will be cf much Interest, and will benoted as the war tactics develop.

COLOBBD C.lTHOlir*.

Complaint la Ma4r of l>l»«-rlmln« tloa.a Arrnaal of I'olar.

The principal subject discussed at thecongress of colored Catholics and the con¬vention of St Peter Claver's CatholicVnlon. In session In Baltimore, yesterday-was the report of the committee on griev¬ances, which made the allegation that un¬just discriminations arc made against col¬ored Catholics In thf churches of theirfaith. Numerous instances of such dis¬criminations were mentioned tn the ""eport.The report declared that the colored Cath¬olics ask no unusual prl\ lieges and thatthey wanted simply to be treated as earn¬est. honest Catholics, and that no discrim¬ination be made against them on ac-ountof their color. The report Is to be sub¬mitted to the meeting of Catholic arch¬bishops, which convened at Philadelphiatoday.The president of the convention, nr. W.

S. l»ftus. referred to iliis matter In hisannual address. He said that he had longadvocated the establishment ot an indus¬trial and training school in tills city. Hesaid that liecause the skins of the Africanrace were of a darker hue than that ofthe Caucasian nice colored youth were de¬barred Irem entering a Catholic college,^nd that they were discriminated againstby trade unions. He liojied to MS he daywhen caste distinctions will lie vanishedand that the negro will no longer be ratedby the color of his skin. He trusted tosee the time when th? American ]>eople,the hierarchy of the Catholic Church andthe laity shall rise in their might andstamp out this prejudice.A number of addresses were made, andRev. John A. de Ruyter, who has estab¬lished an industrial school at Wilming¬ton, l>el., criticised severely the trade

unions for discrimination against the col¬ored people.The visiting delegates v.er< entertainedat a banquet last night by the delegates inBaltimore.

The Trial of the Maine.The board to conduct the trial of the

Maine consists of Chief Kngineer S. LAyers, president; Chief Engineer H. 8.Ross and Passed Assistant Engineer fJ-orgeCowle. The board will have ten assistants,chosen from among the junior engineerofficers. It will meet at New l»n<lon Mon¬day at 10 o'clock a m., and Capt. FrancisM. Bunce will cor»T«and the ship on hertrial. As this will not be a speed, but ahorse power, trial, the engineers will con¬duct It, and the Instructions ls«-ued fortheir guldanc* are generally similar tothose governing the engineers on ordinarytrial trips.

IS A STATESMANLi Hung Chang Not a Great

Soldier.

OPINION OF AMBASSADOR PATENOTREHe Intimates That China Cannot

Furnish a Strong Army.

DEFENSES OF P E K I Jf

Anibasrador Patcnotre. the representativeof th? French republic In the f"nited States.Is regarded as owe of the bMt-infurmMmen Ip diplomatic life on China and thescenes of present conflict between thatcountry and Japan. A rood part of hl« lifeIn the French diplomatic service has beenspent at Pekln and Tien Tsln, where hewas In constant communication with IJHung Chang. His views on eastern affairs,therefore, are of interest. He was Inter¬viewed last night. "At the time the Tlen-Tsln treaty of peace was signed." he said,"I was brought In contact with L.1 HunsChang almost daily for six weeks, andwhile I had known him before, the closeIntercourse In negotiating so Important atreaty gave mt opportunity of a somewhatpersonal acquaintance with him. He doesnot speak English, French or any otherlanguage than his own. all Intercourse withforeign officials being carried on throughan interpreter. There appears to be a set-tied [oiiqr among the Chinese diplomat*and officials to adhere to their own lan¬guage. so much so that a Chinese diplomatat l'arl/i, who became proficient in makingFrench bon mots created something of asensation and was afterward recalled. Vice¬roy U impressed me, however, as cne ofthe very few Chinese officials who at leastdesired to adopt the modem ways of Eu¬ropean countries, and If he had not beenheld back by the overwhelming sentimentof China against eastern civilisation, hewould have modernised China long ago.As It Is he has Introduced quite a Euro¬pean atmosphere Into his private house¬hold. He has a French cook to serve htmFrench dishes, fcme of the dinners hsgave me were what he termed 'double din¬ner*,' as there would he a Chinese dish andthen a French one. thus alternating coursesthroughout the dinner.

Ssl a Varrlar."Li strikes one as a student and states¬

man rather than as a warrior. His tenden¬cies are all those of a scholar, althoughhis great authority as viceroy of the met¬ropolitan provirce of China, and speeMIguardian of the emperor, have made himthe head of the war power. But lie Is nota genius of war as he Is of statesmanship.He has sought to modernise the Chinesearmy an<i navy, and such strength as thesearms of defense have are due to his Intro¬duction of foreign officers, including Gen.Gordon, and his- adoption of modern armsand orinance. The artillery he has securedIs fairly good, but compired with the equip¬ments of European and American troops,which improve constantly, they are far outof date."

IVkis'l Defenses.M. Patenotre was asked as to ths de¬

fenses of Pekln. which the Japanese now

threaten to strike, and the roads overwhich the invaders will have to |>ass Ifthey march on Pekln."The defenses are very primitive," said

the ambassador. "The outer wall Is a hugeaffair, completely encircling the city. It Isabout the height of a six-story building andwlifr enough for travel by horses and car¬

riages. Hut as a means of defense it wouldamount to nothing against modern artil¬lery. The walls aliout Tonkin were evenstronger, being built by skilled engineers,but th"y quickly gave way before big guns.Th.-re is hardly any such thing a* roadsabout Pekin and Tien Tain, so that travelIs very difficult. There are occasionalstretches of good roads, paved with largestone blocks, but these are exi-eptlooal.""Tne climate will lie the greatest difficul¬

ty," continued he. "It gets Intensely coldabout Pekln the latter part of October andeverything Is frosen up In November. Thecold is so severe that It almost puts a stopto travel and communication. The Japans.are from a warm country, entirely unusedto sex * re cold. and. as far as we hear, with¬out special provision of clothing for the In¬tense cold coming on the latter part of thismonth. That promises to be the greatestdifficulty they will hsve to contend against."

(irrtt Utferesee.The ambassador was asked If his observa¬

tions of the great latent resources and eoor»nious population of China led him to be-lleve that they would ultimately be arousedand prove reslstlesa."Undoubtedly the population is vast.

something like KHMMMMftM," said be. "But,"*-added the ambassador, significantly, "ther®Is much difference betweeu a great popula*tion and a groat army."

(.ALK AT PKX8AOOLA.

The Wind Blew KB miles si H*<r an*i iiii.nl t'ssiMrrakle Damage.

The tropical hurricane that had been cen¬tral In the gulf for several days struckPensacola, Fla., Sunday li ght. Ths windblew from the northeast and was accom¬panied by rain. The hurricane Increased IBfur>- as morning approached, and all dayMonday It raged with terrible fury. Fall¬ing signs and roofs made It dangerous toap|>ear on the streets and business waspractically suspended. The average velocityof the wind all day was 48 miles. Dtmw2 and 3 |>.m it blew steadily at the rats ot

miles an nour, and several times b*>tween 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. It reachsd m va-|ocity of S3 miles. At 2 p.m. the llSTtllUStSCfell to iSi.28, the lowest ever recorded atthat station, being .19 lower than duringthe great storm of last October.The center of the hurricane was not .

great distance southeast of Pensacola, buteverj' tel-graph wire leading from ths citywent down before 11 a.m and nothingcould be heard from other points.The British bark ScammelL newly load¬

ed with timber, dragged her anchor ovsffour miles across the bay and went aahortIn seventeen feet of water at a point ap¬posite the life-saving station. She will haveto discharge a part of her cargo.The Swedish bark Antonette. not loaded,

dragged her anchors half wray dibay and was saved from capslslng by cut*ting away her foremast.The little schooner Two Sona, of

Orleans, had her masts cut away tofrom capslslng.Th? !i»hing smack Mar}- Potter

her anchors from Town Point andashore on Santa Rosa Island, oast of thdlife-eu vtng station, where she liasdry.Tl.e tide rose over th* quarantine

and damaged the crib. Th* tidehigh that It broke clear ov*r Santalsisnd, and th* life-saving crew w*r* lawater up to their waists. On* houa*blown down at th* station, th* wharfswept away, and th* supply sloopswamped and sunk. Th* track of¦lummy line, from Big Bayou to th* navyj iird. is twisted out of ahai*. and in somtplaces Is burled two feet under sand.IVnencolfc. Is much damaged. Fence®,

trees and small outhous** were blown downIn every part of '.h* city. A part of th#r of was torn off the opera house. Th* *«jtire roof w s tjrn off the large Blount aMWatson building on Pacific street, and allthe tr.ores uii offices in it were flooded withwater. A part of th* roof of Creary * Mo-cimtock's ma-hlne shop* was blown IntQthe <>ay. The I'nion Baptist Church (color*<>0> was bkwn down and comptetely wreck¬ed. Several plate glass fronts w«r* smasU*."1 by falling signs and swring poles.So far cs learned, no on* was lujur*4.

The storm ceased at midnight, and th*weather was bright and much cooler y*a*terday.in Jacksonville th* wind r*acli*d a gr*at*r

velocity than It did during th* Saptambacstorm, but beyond unrooting a few houa*Qno seri' us damage was don*.

K» neral of Sir. !¦>>!»*.The funeral of Alfred X. D. Boppl** Mt

cirrei this afternoon Ic Baltimore.Surplee died In this city Monda}11.- was lifty-two year* of ugeFilled here since 1M1. Heand six sons.

donda) vvealna»uge and had rSlaavaa « wldof