UNITED STATES INDIAN SCHOOL 5999 



UNIVERSALISTS 



Lee, Richard Henry Sherman, John 



Lincoln, Robert T. Sherman. Roger 



Logan, John Alexander Smith, Hoke 

 Mallory, Stephen Russell Stanton, Edwin 

 Marshall. Thomas Riley McMasters 



Morgan. John Tyler Stephens, Alexander 

 Morris, Gouverneur Hamilton 



Morton, Julius Sterling Stevens, Thaddeus 



Morton, Levl Parsons Stevenson, Adlai Ewing 



Morton, Oliver Perry Sumner. Charles 



Olney. Richard Tilden, Samuel Jones 



Otis. James Tillman. Benjamin Ryan 



Parker, Alton Brooks Toombs, Robert 



Pinckney, Charles Trumbull, Jonathan 



Cotesworth Tweed, William Marcy 



Platt. Thomas Collier Underwood, Oscar 



Quincy. Josiah Washburne, Elihu 

 Randolph, John Benjamin 



Rankin. Jeannette Watson, Thomas E. 

 Reagan, John Henninger Weaver, James Baird 



Reed. Thomas Brackett Webster, Daniel 



Root. Elihu Welles, Gideon 



Rutledge, John Wheeler, William Almon 



Schurz, Carl Williams, John Sharp 



Seward, William Henry Wilson, Henry 



Sherman, James Wilson, William Lyne 



Schoolcraft Yates, Richard 



UNITED STATES INDIAN TRAINING 

 AND INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL, a great school 

 for the education of Indians, existing at Carlisle, 

 Pa., from 1875 to 1918. There seemed no neces- 

 sity for continuing the school, for Indian civili- 

 zation is practically completed. The remaining 

 students were transferred to other schools of 

 like nature in various western states. During 

 the life of the Carlisle school thousands of 

 Indians were graduated and sent back to their 

 people, to whom they taught the arts of the 

 white people. The average yearly attendance 

 was nearly 800. 



UNITED STATES MILITARY ACADEMY. 

 See MILTTAICY A \ni.\n, I "MTKD STATES. 



UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY. 

 See NAVAL ACADEMY, UNITED STATES. 



UNITED STATES STEEL CORPORATION, 

 largest industrial corporation in the world, 

 was organized in 1901 under the leadership of 

 I I'icrpont Morgan (1837-1913). It represented 

 tii< consolidation of a number of powerful in- 

 dustrial corporations, including the Carnegie, 

 the Federal Steel, the National Tube, the 

 American Steel and Wire, the National Steel 

 and the American Tin Plate companies. In the 

 process of organization the Rockefeller ore 

 mines and ore-carrying fleet were purchased, 

 and when the gigantic organization was ready 

 to place its stock on the market its capital was 

 fixed at more than a billion dollars, in addition 

 to $366,000,000 of bonded and mortgage debt, 

 corporation was chartered under the laws 



of the state of New Jersey. Judge Elbert H. 

 Gary was made chairman of the board of direc- 

 tors and Charles M. Schwab was chosen presi- 

 dent; among other prominent officials were 

 Abram S. Hewitt and George W. Perkins. 



It is difficult to visualize the holdings and 

 operations of this mighty corporation. It owns 

 the largest American fleet of ships under one 

 management, hundreds of miles of railroad 

 trackage, scores of blast furnaces, whose fires 

 burn day and night, and iron-ore mines of un- 

 told value. In the words of one of its his- 

 torians, "It makes more steel than either Great 

 Britain or Germany, and one-quarter of the 

 total amount made in all the countries of the 

 world. To feed its ceaseless fires it burns in a 

 single year ten million tons of coal, eleven 

 million tons of coke, and fifteen billion cubic 

 feet of natural gas. It can make anything in 

 steel from a carpet tack to steel rails, from a 

 tin can to armor plate, from a wire nail to an 

 Eiffel Tower." 



The United States Steel Corporation has a 

 commendable reputation in regard to treatment 

 of employees, interesting thousands of them in 

 the purchase of shares of stock. On the other 

 hand, it has been accused of unlawfully restrict- 

 ing competition, and in 1911 the United States 

 government brought suit to dissolve it on the 

 ground of violating the provisions of the Sher- 

 man Anti-Trust Law. In June, 1915. a 

 cision in favor of the corporation was handed 

 down by the United States District Court at 

 Trenton, N. J., and in October the government 

 filed an appeal to the United States Supreme 

 Court. 



UNITED WORKMEN, ANCIENT ORDER OP. 

 See ANCIENT ORDER OF UNITED WORKM 



UNIVERSALISTS, u ni vcr'salists, the name 

 applied to those who believe in the ultimate 

 salvation of all mankind. They reason to this 

 belief from the premise that Truth and Right- 

 eousness are the controlling powers in the uni- 

 verse. From this it follows that Good must 

 iin.-tlly triumph over F.vil, and so all men must 

 ultimately be brought into harmony with God. 

 As a belief Universalism has an important place 

 in the thought of the Christian world to-day, 

 and it has been taught in one form or an< 

 almost from the founding of the Christian 

 Church. 



pa is an organised Univeraalist Church, 

 the members of which are f< :!y m t In- 



United States and Canada. The first attempts 

 at establishing the denomination were made 

 late in the eighteenth century in Massachu- 



