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Show ROOSEVELT BOYS' SCHOOL TO BE STARTED SOON On the Utah-Nevada ranch, near Baker, is to be established a cavalry caval-ry school for boys, to be opened next September for its first term. It will be known as the Roosevelt Cavalry School for Boys, and will be under the direction of Prof. Demmon wiio i? a Harvard man. The Roosevelt Cavalry School for boys will be devoted entirely to the out-door and educational ideals of Theodore Roosevelt, which are. of course, the ideals of New England and of America and of all democracies democra-cies throughout the world. This school is not for boys from small towns. It is for sons of rich parents who live in large cities in the Eat. but who are not dobust in health. Exactly such a boy as Theodore Theo-dore Roosevelt was when he left his home in New York to go to the Chimney Chim-ney Butte Ranch on the head waters of the Little Missouri, in North Dakota, Da-kota, in 1SS3. and where he gained a mental and moral vigor and a deep understanding of human nature which later made his name one of the most illustrious in American history his-tory and the achievement in self government gov-ernment in the history of the world. The tuition of this school is $3000. However, a number of the parent? have expressed the opinion that a higher tuition would be very agreeable agree-able to them. This ranch lends itself for the Roosevelt Boys' Cavalry School to such a great extent that the most ambitious am-bitious plans are justifiable. The productive lands stretching for many miles in all directions are of powder soil, which with an amnTe simvlv of water, make- nossible pro- ' duets of field, orchard and garden In larire volume and of superior excellence. With the peaks ten to twelve thousand feet high, perpetually covered cov-ered with snow, glaciers, mountain lakes, trout, streams and open vistas of lit'ly to one hundred miles, furnish furn-ish an environment for a curriculum of great accomplishments in mental moral and physical development. These conditions only briefly mentioned men-tioned above are coupled with the hard physical life of mountains, farm and ranch, which environment and development has produced such outstanding out-standing leaders or men as Andrek Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt and Jan Sniutts. Courses will be offered in Forestry, Forest-ry, Agriculture. Horticulture, Equation. Equa-tion. Live Slock Hnsb"lry, Natural Natu-ral History. Manual Training. Music. Voiee and College Preparatory for the larger Eastern Colleges. The subjects sub-jects of manners and deportment will be majored to the fullest extent. All ert'orls will be made to develop devel-op i hose beys into out-standing leaders lead-ers of men wherever fate may place them. P.oys from representative Institutions Institu-tions in the commercial and financial ."fiairs of the country will constitute the first unit of Ihe student body. a |