Abandoning ths Missouri, ' There ar Indications that the lone: tad ooetly atriifrjrle to keep th Mia otirl. river a. flreat highway of com taerve ta to be abandoned and that the liver will be permitted hereafter to pursue. It erratic course to the Mia sdsalppt without attempts tiy United mates engineers to keep It 4b order. Millions of arrea cf land hare been wept away and deposited elsewhere la one place a tract of 1,700 arrea wa transferred In a slnelo night from Iowa to Nebraska by a change In the" course of the p.ver. Horse Power. A horse power ta the force reon'red to lift a dead weight of 83,000 pounds one foot a minute. To find the horse jiower of an engine multiply the area of the piston In inches by the aver age steam pressure in pounds per quare Inrh. Multiply the product by the travel of the piston In feet per minute and divide that product by 83.000. If an engine la rut ml at 73 tiorse power It wil raise 33.000 pounds one foot 73 times In one minute. Ball's Catarrh Cure l liquid and Is taken Internally, nnd acta upon tho blond and rnunoue snrfs'KS of the srntrm. Bond tor testimonials, fren. Rolil by dniRglrts, 7tV. F. J. ('nissT A Co , Props, Toledo. O. Engiiah ahipbuildera get their guns and toilers in CSerniany. FITS permanently cured. No (Its or nervous, aaaa after first dav sme of Dr. Kline's (I rest KarveBestorer. dt rial bottle and trestlsef rea r. B.H. Kirns, 1,M,, 991 ArohHt., f hlla., Pa. The average salary of clergymen in tha United States is tX a year. Vra. Wlnslow's Seething 8ymp for children taathlng, soften the gume, reduces Inflamma tlon.aUayspaln.eureswiudeolle, Uo. abottla Tha first tracklpM trolley in America will be run in Krankhn. N. II. I do not believe Flao' Cure for Cansnmp. tlon has an equal for oounlw and rolds Joan f. Bona, Trinity Hprlnnn, Ind.. Feb. 15, 1909. It'a usually youth and not learning that makes young people ao anmrt. SURGICAL OPERATIONS IIow Mrs. Bruce, a Noted Opera Singer, Escaped an Operation. Proof That Many Operations for Ovarian Troubles are l'n necessary. " Dear Mbs. Pixsni.it l Travelling or years on the road, with irregular beals and Bleep arid damp beds, broke down my health ao completely two years ago that tha physician advised a complete rest, and when I had gained i IV v MRS. Q. BRUCE. nfilclsnt vitality, an operation for ovarian troubles. Not a very cheerful prospect, to be aure. I, however, wns advised to try Lydiii K. IMhUIiiuii'm VejfPtnhle Compound nncl Han - attivo Wusli; X did so, fortunately for me. Before a month had passed I felt that my general health had im proved! in three months more I win cured, and I have been in perfect health since. I did not lose an engage merit or miss a meal, " Your Vegetable Compound ia cer tainly wonderful, and well worthy the praise your admiring; friends who have been cured are ready to give you. I always apeak highly of it, and you will admit I have good reason to do ao." Mrs. O. Bbdck, Lansing, Mich. 4009 forfait If stows Uttlmonlal It not fnulnt. Tho fullest counsel on this ubject can bo secured without cost by writing- to Mrs Plnkliam, Lynn, Mass. Your letter will bo entirely conflder. Jal. Good Things ! to Eat from Ubby'i famoua Hygienie klKih.m. n purity pnvalU. All oi.au ntag la LIBBY'S Natural Flavor Food Products X mr V. 8, Coremaetvf pacfatf. Iwp la th nous for iBnraalt for uppers, for MBdwtohttt. for any Urn who you want omattUof good and wank It aulck. 6am dIv turn a kv and tha em.a i U opao. Aa appUiioi lunoa to raady la t aa buUnt, ; LIIIT, IcIEILL 4 LIBIT, CHICAGO. i i Writ tot our tree booklet, "How to Make ' . Ooo4 Thlnsa to Kal" Saaclat stamped C C C. lever sold la NUk. bfin of the sealer who tries to sell "eaMtalaf ast ugosi." f. M. U. as, DJ. fT "7 fl D fa Y "F BMOOTIETI ffe eaiak rellal aaS aurae won. toaaS IQeays' ! it L-a. aa. a, a V C VH DV CATMAWTI C --jjaS WOMEN FOREST GUIDES. A NEW PHASE OF LIFE IN THE ADIRONDACKS. Bow Their fcervlees t amo to Ha la ! tnaml ConTenl.nr.a or Mnilern I.lfe In the Wllilerneaa What It Is Meresaary for s Woman ta know la This Vocation. This la the time of year when the crimps of the North Woods, Canada, and the Adirondack receive tho health-seeker and sportsman. Of late years women have come to tho fore in the management of primitive Insti tutions In these regions, and In many eases they arc tho sole heads of quaint and romantic little ( establishments. The reason Is not far to seek. It. Is po so long ago that the wilderness was sacred to men, and seldom .trod den by the feet of the weaker sex. This Is not tho rule today. In the great tide of people that sweeps every ytar Into the northern foresta Ihere are as many, If not more women than men. Their wants are more numerous and complex than those or their broth ers, and only ono of their own sex can supply them, satisfactorily. The development or ramp life Is shown by needs which bring the women Rilldea to New York City. There la fame In every calling, and of the several guides nnd camp managers In the North Woods three have attained high emi nence In their calling. Eac h of these I a marksman, a skilled angler, a mas ter of woodcraft, an authority upon the geography of her district, a home keeper, and a camp chef a rare but Interesting combination of virtues. In commenting upon forest life for women, one of them said recently: "Nothing amuses me more than tho talk of people about the discomfort of routing It. whose idea of the woods are the treva In Central park. As a mniter of fact, modern life In the wlldcrneps is plcaramer and easier tha:. I i a big city. Il was not always o. Twenty years ago, any one who tprnt a summer- In the Adlrnndacks or North Woods had to undergo con ildeiahle annoyance and vexation. Put the very trials aroused the Amer ican inventive spirit, nnd brought labor-saving contrivances, which did away with first one bother nnd then another, until there was nollilng left but pure enjoyment. At the present time you can have nnytliing yon please in the North Woods, provided It does not weigh to:i much. Thnt Is the only limitation. The light buck board wagon will carry goods up to ar, upright piano, but beyond (hat It Is difficult to transport anything on account of the roughness of tho road, the high gradients, and marshy reach es. This practical limit shuts out grand pianos, massive furniture, and hotel safes. "Everything else we have. At one tlmo our canip stove manufacturers kept on making them lighter and lighter, using steel In place of wrought and cast Iron, and having Interchange able parts, so that hundreds of camps now employ French ranges enunl to anything In first class hotels. There bns been the same progress In wanh ing.mnrhlncs. Ice cream freezers, bed frames, and tho general equipment of the log cabin or lean-to. "The externals of tho camps are as primitive now ob ever. Tho walls and ronfs are of rough timber and the windows are small and filled with lit tle panes of glnss. The virgin forest comes close up to the s'.iaily porch or to the window-Bills. Hut within ihe cabins are fine linen nnd all the para phernalia of comfort and civilization. A curious Illustration may bo found In a city belle dressed with heavy walking boots and a flannel suit, broil ing, over a French range, a two-pntt.i.I trout she drew from the water half an hour previous, or roasting the game which she herself killed a week be fore in the underbrush, a 100 yards from the porch. With sensible wom en who spend their vacations In the woods, much of tho time is devoted to practical education. The first thing to learn Is woodcraft, which Is not a mysterious science belonging to a few Indians and trappers, as is commonly believed, but simply com mon sense applied to forest life. The greenhorn must learn how to tell the points of the compass fs-o-n the aim by day and the stars by night and by the trees and shrubbery, when neither sun nor stars are visible. This Is acquired more rapidly by womi?n than by men. The former are better gift ed In vision or perception, and mas ter the matter in almost no time. Next comes learning a trail, a deer run. or the lay of the valley. In the great wilderness of the north there are vPry few roads, but any number of thoroughfares which are aa old as Columbus and older. Most of them were made by the wild animals, and follow the lines of least resistance. Others are blazes made by hunters and trappers. Both of these are eaa i) arned, unless the student is hope lessly stupid, absent-minded, or for getful. "There Is a dear old college profes sor who comes to the Square Lake country on the great Moose run and who Invariably celebrates his vacation by getting lost once a week. Former ly he worried over It, but now he Bits down and waits until we find him. We have an understanding with him whereby when he does not appear for 12 hours we start out and hunt him. Formerly he gave us more fun than a moose or a caribou, but after a time we understood the laws which Impelled his legs and then had no trouble In rescuing him on an hour's notice. With persons of that sort, the old - animal Instinct comes out which prompts a hunted creature to describe a circle or spiral around Its home. This rule holds true with col lege professors and women, but not with boy. Tbey are like bear cubs or fawns, liable to go off on a series of tangents without the slightest rhyme or reason. "The (bird course Is learning tho habits of the children of the forest and lake. Each feathered and finny creature has Its own ld-as, customs end peculiarities, each its own diet, each Its own system of defence, or escape. These constitute all the es sentials of woodcraft, and make a very hrb-f curriculum for a bright woman. Beyond this are almost end less fields where study, exercise, and happiness may be combined. Botany, soology, and entomology are fields in each of which a person may spend a life of hard thought and labor. "Most people, I notice, tend to spec ialize. Among my friends. I must have !if realons specialists. One, who comes from New York, devotes her summer to mushrooms, of which there are more than 3no varieties In Maine, Nova Srotla, New Brunswick and Canada. I do not know the figures of my own knowledge, but lake them from her. There Is a Yas-.ar graduate who Is a f rn collector, and who has been my teacher In this regard, t never knew until I met her how many different kinds of ferns and brakes there weio within a mile of our camps. Almost every day during the summer she would bring back treasure trovo and plant It now In a sardine box and' then In a mustard can. She bad marsh brakes In a tomato tin. and Katahdln maiden's hair In a cigar hox." New York Tost. COVERNMHNT EMPLOYES. What Would Itraiilt If All Shonl.t io on Strike. "While Washington haa had several strlkre recently among its wage earn ers of more or less seriousness, these were mere pigmies compared with the glnnt. strike or all the governmrnt em ployees In the executive departments of Washington for a raise of salary which could be inaugurated If the price of beef nnd other foods continue to rise," snld an old government clerk who has weathered many political storms and department tempests. "Hut this is no Joke. The clerks of the government have the government at their mercy rather than the govern ment having the clerks at Its mercy, as Is popularly supposed, If they only realized It. and acted concert ly and as a unit. Of course, the Idea of a strike on the part of the employes of the gov ernment in Washington Is entirely new, and would be of radii al effec tive ness If carried Into operation. It would not be impossible of realization If every ono of the 28,000 employes formed a union and obeyed Its man dates. The rresident would not only have Congress upon his hands, but an army of disgruntled employes and a lot of vacant public buildings. He would certainly be up against a hard proposition. "The high price of meat and food Is felt by government employes an keen ly aa by any other class of wage earn ers, yet they seem to hovo been over looked In the general discussion at tending the impending mcnt famine. Thousands and thousands of them re ceive from $ll to so a month mnxl ni mn pay, and this la about tta nver age monthly pay of the avcrago wage earner. A strike on the part of every government employe In Wash ington would be a catastrophe to tho country and government alike. Tem porary employes could not be put In their places, ns neither tho President nor Congress can override, the law. Their vplaces could not bo filled, as would bo commonly supposed, by a host of outsiders unless the entire civil service commission were abolished end the entire civil service act re pealed. Chaos would reign. The va cancies would have to be filled through the civil service, upon the dismissal of the regular clerka, except Congress wiped it out of existence, as would bo probable In the event of the contin gency I suggest. "There will, however, never be a strike of government employee In Washington for many reasons, and on ly the major ones I will consider. One is that of any body of workers none can be found where harmony of thought and unison of action are utter imposlhlllticB. I have never seen In ten years' service any three clerks who could ogree upon any ono point. If ono of the three happened to bo a woman employe. I have seen men agree among themselves, and women hold to gether for a time at least, but never a concerted agreement on the part of both sexes. Why? Mainly because the women wanted to dominate their views, and as the men would notsuh mit, disagreement resulted. Women as a matter of fact are poor organizers, but consider themselves past masters at tho art. The relief associations of the different departments are well pa tronized by women employes, but they are managed by men, or they would have disrupted long ago. "So, if all the men to a man agreed to strike, all of ithe women to a woman would disagree, and vice versa. Thus, the safety of the government, as It wore, Is In the taper-fingered hands of our fair friends tolling within the walls of our public buildings. Were all of the employes men, and they unanim ously agreed to strike for higher wages, force action on the part of Congress, they could tie up the gov ernment in twenty-four hours as a baby Is tied up In Its crib. Another leaf In the wreath which bedecks the brows of our fair co-workers; they are saving the government" Many Hooka. The largest library In the world Is the National Library of Paris, which contains 40 miles of shelves, holding 1,400,000 books. There are also 175,00 manuscripts, 300,000 maps and charts and 150,000 coins and medals. The pond far llnrhllaea. Duckling will , perish If allowed In ponds of cold water, but after the wa ter becomes warm they will enjoy tho exercise and find rnnsiderahle food. It Is claimed that the Pekln variety thrives without ponds, which Is true; but all varieties prefer water In which to swim, and will keep In more thrif ty condition If given such privileges; hut young ducks should not be permit ted on ponds until they are well feath ered. Farm ftxperlmente. No farmer wants to be uncondition ally tied to the principle of never try ing anything unill It has been proved an lndnbltahlo success, nor, on the tither hand, should he be so bigoted as never to credit the experience of others, but regard bis own trial as the only conclusive one. The extent to which a man may Indulge In experi mental works should be determined by his resources. If his credits each year he only equal to his debts he may well be conservative In hazarding his Income on uncertain experiments; but If he bs a man of means, tho luxury of experimental work on the farm seems justifiable, for without causing hardship to anyone, he may save oth ers less favorably situated from fu ture failure. But whoever performs experiments let him give his neigh bors the benefit of the trial; If success r'sult It usually finds Its way to the public eye. but failure not so often. Ocorge P. Williams, In the Epltomlst, llena on n Smtill l,ot. We are often asked IT It Is possible to keep hens successfully on a small town lot. To the question we would answer: Certainly, yes; If not too many are kept, in fac t, we have of ten wondered why so lew people In cities and towns, who are really so comfortably gltuntcd, do not ke"p 10 or 15 hens. This number ran easily be provided for In a yard 20 by 40 feet, and this much can easily be spared and still leave plenty of room for other pur poses. One roll of five-foot poultry netting will serve for a fence, and ar rangements for housing will coat but a tri lie. Two piano boxes, with barks taken out and set against each other, will keep them comfortable, and. In the ab sence of something better, will do sur prisingly well. During the late fall buy early hatched pullets or one-year-old hens, and look carefully after them, and they will supply the family with eggs throughout the winter. It will be an easy matter next pprlng to raise a few broods of chicks, the moles for the table nnd the pullets for I ho layers. You will find the cost very Uttlo and the pleasure very much If you make the attempt. Home and Farm. Well Itrokeii Iforae.. Has anyone ever noticed that a si lent man has usually the brit broken horses? It may not bo true, but all the men of my acquaintance who do not talk much have well broken horses. Drive with thrm and you will wonder bow they manage their homes. No lunnngement Is visible. The horse goes where ho Is wanted without apparent effort on the part of tho driver. One famous turfman at least has been noted for his art In driving a horse to the limit of his speed without making a move, while his rivals were lifting and yelljng and whipping theirs. How did he do It? Don't know, but he waa a man of few words. Probably there Is a lesson In this. The average horse understands but a ftw things thoroughly, only a few v.ordB, signs or commands. Tho si lent man gives only a few. and he dors not confuse hla horse. The horse is n-ade to know them thoroughly. He understands the man who under stands him. It Ib a pleasure to drive a horse that understands. Few pleas ures in life can equnl it If the horse I.-, a good, cheerful driver. There would be more of this kind If they wt re made to know a few things thor oughlythe right things. National Stockman. Itearlne; Cnlvea. Having noticed a complaint from furmers a number of times of loss of calves from Bcours, I feel It almost a duty to tell a little of our own expe rience In the rearing of calves. At one time a heifer was so badly par alyzed by the birth of her calf that she could not suckle It, and we undertook to raise It by hand. It was a large, strong, hearty calf, and we fed it with milk from rows that had been giving milk threo months. At flret It seemed all right, but after a few days It be gan to scour; at one time It would be ravenously hungry and again would not eat at all, and a tew days later was dead. At the same time a calf was purchased that had sucked once, per haps twice, as it was taken from Its mother the day of Its birth. We fed It on the same kind of milk that the firtt calf was fed, and In a short time it grew sickly and did not thrive, al though a calf of the same age, which had run with Its mother until It was a week old, ate from the same pail and grew apac e. We felt Bine It would die, when a calf about 24 hours old, slipped over a bank and drowned, and we put the ailing calf on the latter'a mother. It lived and got all right, and made a fine steer. Another calf that we undertook to raise the same way nearly died, but we put It on a fresh cow Juat in time. The result was as tonishing; the calf waa so weak they held it to the cow the first time, but In a week It was as playful as a kit-1 ten, and Is today a fine calf nearly year old. Our experience has taught 1 us to believe tho first milk of the , fresh cow Is essential to the new-bora calf, and that It Is best for the calf to suckle Ihe cow until It la a week old. If people will follow this plan 1 am assured they will have no trouble . from scours If Ihe calf Is born healthy. I Miss Resale Gross, in Agricultural : Epltomlst. frlenie In Asrlrnltare. Pome Important and Interesting prints on the planting, breeding and if lec tion of seed corn are given In a bulletin by the Illinois agricultu ral station, and while our corn crop It .lust now one of the most Important In the country. It Is timely to call at tention to the best conclusions of the best experts In corn culture. Special attention Is given to the selection of seed corn, which will make sll thH dlf- J fcrence In the world In the annual , crop of the country. A little more I wlwlom and Intelligence are required In tho uniform selection of right seed corn, so that In lime every enr will be full and plump, and a large number on each cob. The yield per acre could In this way be Increased greatly with out planting a single additional grain of corn. Home of the best varieties of seed corn aro today far better than anything planted 10 or 15 years ago, and this Is due to the fact that they have been carefully selected and cul tivated for 23 years, past until their type and characteristics are pretty well fixed. Argument Is given for pedigreed corn. Not much of this Is ticed yet, hut more of It may be nec essary to teach all farmers the great value of using the finest seed corn. Pedigreed corn traces its ancestry 1 ac k to remote ancestors, but the se lection of each year's seed .forms an eMalillnhed record which goes to show that rertaln qualities can be depended vpon. Practically tho bulletin advises r.gnlnst leaving seed corn exposed In cribs to winter cold weather, which Is sometimes robbed of half Its vitality. Seed corn should be selected in the fall and carefully kept. Only the best ears and (trains should tie used, and those of uniform stze and fullness of ker nels. The grains on these ears should test an average of 95 percent In ger mination In the spring. If they will l.ot there Is something wrong, and It I 'i doubtful policy to attempt to use them for planting. Prof. S. N. Doty, in American Cultivator. Fllllns I'nlrr Animate for Know. The modern tendency la to make the animal conform to an arbitrary f I iincla ill of excellence, or scale of points, and Its ability to win prizes aros directly as do the conceptions of tho various Judges who pass upon l ho conformity to that scale. One of t he.- primary requisites of all dairy an inihls rrganl'ess of age or sex, is ca- I parity. A Judge likes an animal with I a large paum-h as It Is very essential ! In economically converting a lnrge amount of coarse feed Into milk. How an v.e develop this capacity? 11. Is done by feeding coarse bulky 1'iod. in a manner best suited to the individual tastes of the animals. Many l.ave had good success by giving cut or chaffed hay and straw, with a mixture of ground oats and bran, a little salt, and a hand full of oil meal, a small amount of tho concentrates, and all t'ne c oarse food she will eat. Tho prin cipal objret is to make her eat much to get a small amount of grain. The next thing that appeals to the rye- of tho Judgo is the temperament e l' tho animal, which Indicates wheth er or not she is using In the right way the food sho has consumed. All dairy cattle should be free from tendency to lay on llesh, thin, and tinder condition rather than too fleshy. A show ani mal should possess quality also, but tills to a large extent Is determined by nature, although we can assist by keeping her In perfect health, the hair veil groomed and protected from the run, which makes it harsh and dry. Kerosene should never be applied to the hair. Whero great stress Is laid on secretion dispense with the use of water for cleaning animals, as It makes the skin appear pale. There is a great diversity of opin ion among Judges as to the importance of under development. However, when a heifer Is developing an udder we Ehould help her on all we can, as the time to assist nature Is when she Is doing her liest work. Many advocate Increasing the grain ration of a heifer at this Ftage, even though she becomes fleshy, us ehe will soon milk it off again. All cattle should be handled and wrll broken to lead, It is also good practice to stand in a position that will show her to the best advan tage. Polishing of horns and hoofs, grooming, watering from pails, etc., should be practiced before leaving for the fairs, as there are enough new conditions to become accustomed to even when greatest care has been tak en. This may seem a trivial affair, but many prizes have been lost by leading Into the ring a shrunken ani mal which has refused to drink from a pall, or a strange tank. I would commence feeding about six oi eight weeks previous to starting for the fairs. Do not hurry or the stock will have reached their bloom before the exhibition. Avoid feeding corn to show animate, as It Is heating to the blood, makes grease Instead of bone and muscle, and upon the first exertion the animal will wilt. A dairy ai.lraal should not be fed heavily on a grain ration, at any time, as she will bo very easily upset. Ralph Trott, In American Agriculturist. A man turns 112,000 spadefuls of etrth in digging an acre of ground, and tbs soil he has moved during his work weighs 850 tons. '- V Competition for Standard Oil. Consul F. W. Mahln writes from Ilelrhenberg. June 18. 1902: "The Austrian refiners of petroleum have effected an organization for export purposes. It Is announced that they Intend to Invade Franco, Germany, Switzerland and Italy, and wrest those countries. If possible, from the Amer ican company which row supplies their demands for petroleum, and that they also propose contesting certain markets with Russia" Rents are falling In Buenos Ayres. The Okspl. The okapl, the strange animal a short time ago discovered In Central Africa by Sir Henry Johnstone, Is now thought to have been known to the ancient Egyptians. The old monu ments show a socallcd "animal of set," a desert quadruped variously supposed to have been a fox, a musk rat, a dog, a camel and even a fabul ous animal. A study of the pictures convinces Prof. WHdeman that this creature was the okapl, which early hunters exterminated in Egypt. In Humbolt and Mendocino coun ties, California, there are 80 sawmills at work upon the famous redwood for ests, which are gradually disappear ing, the value of the output of the year 1900 being nearly $5,000,000. Half- Sick "I first used Ayer's Sarsaparilla in the fall of 1848. Since then I have taken it every spring as a blood purify in g and nerve strengthening medicine." S. T. Jones, Wichita, Kans. If you feel run down, are easily tired, if your nerves arc weak and your blood is thin, then begin to take the good old stand ard family medicine, Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It's a regular nerve lifter, a perfect blood builder, ii.wukhii,. AiKraiiiiti. A.k ynnr doctor what ha thloka of Ayer'a SaMapnrllla. Hn know, nil atout tht. grand old fnmtly medicine Follow hla adrlceaad wa will ba Ktlifl.d J. C. A vsa Co., T-owell, Maai. c ross c Poor man 1 He can't help ii. It's his liver. He needs a liver pill. Ayer's Pills. Want your moustache or heard a beautiful brown or rich black ? Use Buckingham's Dye SOeti.ot drueiiatioiR. P. Ha l it Co . Nuhu,,N.H I have been a great sufferer with piles for years, nnd 1 have tried cv. erythlng I heRrd of, nutl have been In the hospital (it times. 1 have hud bleeding plies, niid felt terrible. Aa aunt of mine cnuie from the country to see me nnd she made me take Iiipuns Tnbules. I first took two four times a dny, then I took one at each meal, nnd then one every clay. At the end of two weeks I felt a great change. I thank Itlpaos for reliev ing mo of ull I suffered. At druggiati. Tha Five-Cent packet ia enough for so ordinary occaiion. Tha family bottle, 60 cents, contain! a supply for a year. THIS IS A TYPE of the bright, up-to-date girl who Is not afraid of sun, wind or weather, but relies on Cuticura Soap assistedjby Cuticura Ointment to preserve, purify and beautify her skin, scalp, hair and hands, and to protect her from irritations of the skin, heat rash, sunburn-, bites and stings of insects, lameness and soreness incidental to outdoor sports. HT-Uaoh that all should know about tha skin, scalp, and hair Is told la tha circular with Cimcu&a, 8oa. King Edward VI L Is to establish new order, It Is said, which will con fer honor on distinguished women. Since the Itaroness Burden Coutts re ceived her title no woman has been elevated to the peerago ticcaiise of her philanthropic benefactions. Concessions have Just been granted to construct and run 27 branch lines of the Swedish railways. The new lines will cover a distance of 260 miles In alj, and It means that Sweden will again have occasion to purchase a large quantity of rolling stock. v THE DE.ST j WATERPROOF CLOTHING m me. WORLD J BEARS THIS TVADE MAM HA Of M BLACK M VtLliW TAM NO SUBSTITUTE) ONSALencRnmue CaTAUOSUttraU SHOWINtcfULl. UNEOP GARMENTS AND NATA w. L. DOUGLAS $3&$3S SHOES S W. I. Dwtfainhon art tht slarnnrd nf lh uvrH. W. I.. Itoualaa mad and oll mora aica'a Oaod jr.ar Wnll (Hand Sowed Prnrewal ho In tha Seat Ii month, of IIW2 thnn anr othar wnnofaftarar. t 1 h nfSfl KKWAHIt wlllhannldto anroaowha. J I UiUvU ran dUprnTa thin Matrmcnt. W.'L. DOUGLAS 4 SHOES CANNOT BE EXCELLED. flfttf fmpnrtttt an Amerlrrtn lrtitrn. Nyl' PatnntCalf. fwfiwff, Bx Calf, Calf. Vicl Hid, Cororm Cof. Nat. Kanwroo. Flint ( nlor KyHaH rtwd. rn lit Inn t Th renutnfl hY W. T. D0T7OIA-r Villi i mi. i nMn) nnd rricsj ntumpM on bottom, frfW fcy mm, V.V. rxtra. . aintog frtt, W. U DOUGLAS. BROCKTON, MASS. E Ei iJ it rt r.- 4i ' w ra. THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME NOT UK lft AM E, INDIANA. FV1J, f OI'HSi: IV 1if4i.r, T.Mtiff, Kronoinir- nntl Hintury, Joiintnlitm, Art. Hr.nrn J'lmrmnry, Taw, Civil. .Uri-liunU ml mid Klrr trJc.il J-.nuliieerinjr, Arrbltec fur. I lioronajh Preparatory and Co mm or rial Ifonmv Vrio to all PtiMtnt who hav com- S )!'! tho lumiion rer.uliwl fur a.liiii,-n Into the iinlor or Hen.or Yoar of any of tUo Coiltgtmf iinom to Rent mod rat a Chanr to nturVntt ovt-r -wvpnteMi 1-roi.arjiiir ft.r CnlliiriatA fours. A lintitffl imtiir of ranrlMntn. for th Eccloal I Mttral Hat will Ik rrwelvM fit nixx-lal rat. I Mc. KiUi'nrt. Hall. fr boys uii.r lyrm, to i nnitino In the roniplrontw. of Ira t'liuH'mfnt. Thf Aftih Year will n September 1 1809. I CaialoaurM Free. Afldrran ! KKV.A..WKH?t:v, C.M.tf?.. I'rfa.oVat. ' (kaMr.luxnfer8?.H,an V JyrMlu olvll war.ld44Juillcatlula!tua.attjatii6a HN UUKiS WHtHt ALL Hit FAIIS. fid Beat I'miKh Bjrup. Tanaa Oou4. ISJ In lima. Hold hr rirtiaalKta. -fe) " 1 X .' '.t sS Jfl lltL f Eh1 3