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' Three Kinds of Pie, All Apple. The following story was told by the late Hon. E. P. Carpenter, of j Poxboro, Mass. A few years before , his death he had occasion to visit a j village in Maine, and put up at its one hotel. At dinner he was waited i on by the landlord's daughter. After | he had finished the early course she j | asked him if he didn't want some i pie. To nis inquiries as to what var- j ^ ieties she had, she replied: "Wall, j / we got three kinds o' pie?open- I faced, cross-barred and kivereu, all ; apple." HIS ONE WEAK SPOT. Prominent Minnesota Merchant Cured to Stay Cured. O. C. Hayden, of O. C. Hay den & ; Co., dry goods merchants, of Albert j Lea, Minn., says: "I was so lame that i, - , I could hardly walk. | t There was an unaccountable weakness of the back, and constant pain and aching. I could find no rest and was very uncomfortable at night. As my health was good in every other way I could not understand i this trouble. It was just as if ail tb6 strength had gone from my back. After suffering for some time I began using Doan's Kidney Pills. The ; remedy acted at once upon the kidneys, and when normal action was restored the trouble with my back disappeared. I have not had any return of it." For sale by all dealers.- 50 cents a box. Foster-MiIburnCo., Buffalo,N. Y. f Boy Stretched Two Inches. Among those successfully passing tho mental examination for admission to the Naval Academy at An- j napolis, Md., was Luther Welsh, of Kansas City, who, finding during his preparatory work that he was too shrot to meet the requirements, which demand that those entering the academy must be at least five feet two * 1 * * ?w/lAt.?fAn+ Q incnes m uejgiu, uuuu ~ stretching process, in which a specially devised machine figured. "Welsh gained the needed two inches. The Domestic Tien a Wonder. Scratching a liviug here and there, killing thousands of bugs and worms which would cause much loss of crops if allowed to live, the ordinary barnyard hen is a wonderful combination of productive forces. lu five years' time she will lay 700 eggs, each containing 630 grains of water, 125 of fat, 308 of lime, SO of albumen, 2G of sugar and 10 of ash?the most condensed and strengthening form of food offered to man. Every person having a little plot of ground is able to keep from half a dozen to many dozen of these wonders and so add to the family Income. To do this to the greatest advantage, one must know how to care ! frvw l,io frtirrlc?tn ?rimrrl nrrninst. de- I tect and cure disease; which fowls to J save for breeding purposes, etc. Thu j simplest and most satisfactory way ol securing this kuowledge is to buy i? I from some person who has made & j success of fowl raising as a business. Such a book, giving the experience of twenty-five years, is obtainable for 25 cents in stamps from the Book Tublisbing House, 134 Leonard St., New York City. It is an invaluable work. The life of one chicken saved would pay for the book several times over. Potash From Granite. Again the fact is being published in some of the agricultural papers that finely pulverized granite is a valuable fertilizer that can be furnished at a very cheap rate. It is reported that tobacco, a plant that requires high fertilization, succeeds as well with the granite powder as with German potash, by using double the amount of the former; and while the potash costs $100 a ton the granite can be sold at the low rate of $3 per r\f if ic oniml LUli, OU tilcit v v nwi va v/4. in fertilizing value to $100 worth of German potash. It is time the farmers who use commercial fertilizers are made acquainted with these facts, if they are such; such statements were reported years ago, and nothing further came of them. This time the report is that extensive preparations are under way for developing the new industry thus made possible. In the near future the establishment of many mills for producing granite potash may possibly be expected. We are not told where these mills are to be set up but will keep on the lookout for them. What a great blessing it would be to the farmers in the worn out sections of New England, If it should be found that the granite rocks that cumber the ground there contain the very elements needed to restore them to fertility! But we are not as sanguine about such wonderful finds as we were once.?Indiana Farmer. Talk of Politics. "Mark Twain," at a dinner in New York, was talking about political leaders and the undue credit they take for their country's prosperity. He told of a certain Senator, Senator Dash, who war always on hand to receive the praise for any blessing that had befallen his State. He I nointed out several benefits for which the Senator took undue credit, and then looking gravely around the table, he said: "But what Senator Dash more particularly prides himself on is the late excellent harvest." Harvard Student to Seek Pole. Vilhjalmur Steffanson, now a student at Harvard, has been appointed a member of the newest expedition in search of the North Pole, which will leave Vancouver early in i.Iay under command of Capt. Ejner Mikkelsen. Tho Harvard student will i? +v. ^ vnnnfffiet msmher of thp pv U J IIIC J -- pedition. London barber stops now provide accommodations for and welcome the many men who prefer to shave themselves, among other things, keeping their shaving utensils in order. They also teach the inexperienced who want to learn how to shave themselves properly. ~~ 1 HE PULPIT. ' A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. DR. D. G. DOWNEY. Subject: The Full-Oi-bed Life. Brooklyn, N. Y.?At St. John's M. E. Church, the pastor, the Rev. Dr. D. G. Downey, preached Sunday morning on the subject, "The Fullorbed Life." His text was John xiii.,part of the first and third verses: "When Jesus knew that His hour was come," and "Jesus, knowing that He was come from God and went to God," and he said: To Jesus of Nazareth life was never merely a chance. It never was "just hapened so" ;o Him. To Him it was always opportunity. He conceived Himself, I ^hick, from very early life, as a man of destiny with a work to do, a task to be accomplished and a trust to be fulfilled. In the morning of His life He said: "Wist ye not that I must be about My Father's business?" All through His career there was the evidence that He thought and felt that some important work would surely come to Him. Frequently He gave expression to this in some such form as when Ho said, "Now am I straightened until it is accomplished." Nevertheless, we are told that He "set His face steadfastly toward Jerusalem." Now, while U is true that Jesus conceived Himself as a man of destiny, with a word to do and a task to be accomplished, it is noticeable that He never allowed Himself to be hurried toward the accomplishment of His task. If you have ever noticed that, I think you will be a little surprised to see how often it is said that His hour had not yet come. - He Himself said, "My time is not yet." "My hour is not yet come," "The time is not rinp." and iust as He did not allow Himself to be hurried, so He never permitted Himself to '?e diverted from the main purpose of His life. Men tried to make Him king by force. Many of them expected that at that time Ho would set up the kingdom of Israel, overthrow the Roman power and be the Israelite leader, and He told them plainly that He would not be diverted from the saying, "My kingdom is not of this world." But with all this, Jesus knew that His hour would surely come and th > entirety of His life was the preparation for fulfilling His hour, for meeting that hour when it came, and for completing His life. Every man's hour, it seems to me, comes when he can freely and fully express the thoughts and convictions that have been growing and deepening in His soul. It is surely a great moment when some voice sounds in me soui una sajs. is thy hour; this is thy opportunity. Reveal thyself; show the world what is in thee; express thy nullity or capacity; now is thy time to speak and to do." Self-expression and the outspeaking of what is in a man, his truo inner and deeper self, this is the joy and glory of life. It is sad that many never achieve this. Some, we must admit, do not seem to get tho opportunity, but others through cowardice, t.me servers, trimmers, who are always wondering what the world will think and what their fellow men will say, not asking what is tho truth and the right thing to do, not daring to stand before the world and speak their word and do their deed without thought of consequences, rever achievo this joy and glory. Jesus came to His supreme opportunity toward the close of His life, ?aw it coming and met it with the high courage and the gay cheer of the valiant soldier. It seems to me mat we misconceive very iart?riy these last acts in the life of Jesus. We have dwelt so much upon the cadness and the suffering and looked at the sentimental side, and these have had, I think, sometimes too large a place in our thoughts; for, after all, we must see that it was for this very purpose that He came into the world, and that His life would have been an utter failure but for this glorious culmination. To Jesus the cross was not merely a matter of sadness and sorrow. I think that, somehow, as He faced t'aeso closing acts of His life that He faced them with joy and cheer and strengthened courage. He recognized that after all this thing was the crowning joy and glory of His career. Hero and now as never before had the opportunity come to Him, not only to think His thought, but to r.peak His word and do His deed and live out Hi? life and glorify Cod and to have God glorified :n rim). I said that His life was a preparation. It was. Years of silence and meditation, of mystic communion with nature and God, in wisdom growing: up to His task. To my mind His life was perfectly natural. He was not ready for His task be_ foro His hour had come. He could not have achieved His destiny at the ago of twelve or twenty or twentyfive, cot until the Lour and the man met. There were times when He might have put Himself in the power oi His enemies, but He hid Himself, and by and by He saw the elements gathering and, recognizing His own strength and knowing the will of God and seeing that the storm was about to break, the storm of hatred, anci jeaioucy, ana envy, ana iaise pride, with the step of the soldier and the mien and aspect of a moral and spiritual hero, Ho went up to Jerusalem, and men marveled. He tfnew His hour was come. He was about to be glorified, and God was to to glorified in Him. He had been thinking and speaVing and teaching, and now Ho was to exemplify and illustrate and give special proof of the truth of all that. He had said. He was destined to be cast out, yet Ho thoroughly understood that the time was coming when His spiritual supremacy and kinghood would be acknowledged to the limits of the earth and to the bounds of time. Ami how stands it this morning? Do wo "not see that He is the spiritual ideal of the race? The race is ..ot turning to O* fucius, or Buddha, or Mahomet, 'ihey have elements of truth, but the highest good and the supreme irunj art' wii.ii mt juuug P. opnet of Nazareth. He is the spiritual king and the spiritual leader of tho race, and all turn to Him as flowers turn sunward to derive beauty and life. I am su:<\ also, there must have been great joy in the mind of Jesus when He, at last, could speak the words He wanted to speak. In the temple He stood alone?one against the city. He must have had rich joy when lie was aoie to give ampie expression to His thought concerning t-iie simplicity of the way of approach unto God?the right of every man, without the intervention of synagogue, or church, or priest, or lit e ual; to come Himself, in His own personality, unto God: "God i"? a Spirit, and they that worship Him must worship Him in spirit and in truth." Again, when His disciples had been quarreling among themselves as to who should he the greatest, once more He had an opportunity to express Himself, not only to teach, but to live out. His thought. He girded Himself with a towel and washed their feet, and said: "Let him who would be great among you be your servant." What high joy He must have had as He not only revealed His word, but by His action, for all time?for the generations yet unborn?taught the truth of the dignity of service; and if to-day the world is moving toward a wider brotherhood, if we are thinking not so much of ourselves and more of our neighbors, it is because He performed that lowly service. He had been talking, also, about faith; that God was their Father and that He would never desert those who put their faith in Him. In the hour of awful blackness, of excruciating physical and mental agony, His faith rose triumphant. Ah! there was the supreme tnumpn ot ms faith. Not in the words He had spoken, but in the life He lived and in the way in which He met the awful tragedy and in the glorious culmination of His earthly life. The practical application of all this is not difficult. All men have some sense of destiny, some consciousness of a call, some feeiinf with respect to conduct. Every man has moments of Godlike aspirations. Surely, there come to us in moi ments of high, spiritual endowment, when the soul knows what it ought to do for its triumph or undoing, and man's time shall come when he is true to the revelation of triith that is in him, when he expresses in his speech and life the convictions that have grown in moments of supreme inspiration and insight. The mighty men of the world are the men who hive been able to do this. There was Paul and Martin Luther and John Wesley and Abraham Lincoln. God pours into some men more t-Jian He is able to pour into others, because they are able to receive more. While it is true that we cannot all be geniuses and giant '., it is also true that every man may live his complete, fuli-orbed life. He may feel first that he has come from God; fcic rips-tinv is to return to God, and his business is to breathe in the teaching and love and spirit of the infinite Father, and day by day be true to the beautiful, pure and noble suggestions that God will breathe into him. If a man will do this there is no question of his influence. The history of Jesus is proof positive on the point. He lived His life truly and loyally, and His world, which is the universe, swings around in obedience to His truth. Ah, friends, if we will be as loyal in our place and limited sphere, the world will be lifted up by us just as Christ's life-world was lifted by Him. It is (?n this sense that we are to follow Him and recognize that He is our example day by day as we go forth to the work and duty cf our life. The Only Safe Attitude. I remember some years ago climbing the Weisshorn above Zermatt Valley with two guides. There bad been a series of severe storms and ours was the first ascent for some weeks, consequently we had a great deal of stepcutting to do up the main arete. We had left the cabin at 2 in the morning, and it was nearly 9 before we reached the summit, which consisted, as did so many peaks in the Alps, of splintered rocks protruding from the snow. My leading guide stood aside to let me be first on top. And I, with the long labor of the climb over and exhilarated by the thought of the great view awaiting me, but forgetful of the high gale that was blowing 011 the other side of the rocks, sprang eagerly up them and stood erect to see the view. The guide pulled me dowu. "On your knees, sir. You are not safe there except on your knees." My young friends. God lifts us all to summits in life; high, splendid, perilous. But these are nowhere more splendid or more perilous than iu our youth; summits of knowledge, of friendship, of love, of success, declares (ieorge Adam Smith. Let us, as we value our moral health, the growth of our character and of our fitness for CJod's service, use every one of them as an altar on which to devote ourselves once more to His will. . "What Seekest Thou? Clearest vision if often gained in deepest darkness. A true standard of earthly values is not infrequently found just as all earthly gain seems impossible. Dr. R. F. Horton, of London, had some such experience when for weeks he lost his eyesight. Since then he has written: "Success i3 the last thing in the world that you need desire. They who lastingly benefit the race are not the men whom the race claims and crowns. They are found 011 crosses and at stakes, dying often in great poverty. The world crowns those who amuse it, ignores those who instruct it, and hates those who better it." -\To?-r O nfictnr will fin Well tO de fine his purpose for the year along these lines. What is it?to amuse, to instruct, to better? But, let him as he chooses his goal hear iu mind the price.?Pacific Baptist. Make Much of Your Blessings. We are too prona to forget oui present blessings. We seldom appreciate them until they are gone. Blessings seem to multiply as they take their flight. When they become memories we doubly priza them. Why not give them welcome while they are present with us. "Do not let the empty cup be your first teacher of the blessings you h*d when it was full. Seek, as a plain duty, to cultivate a buoyant joyous sense of the crowded kindnesses of God in your daily life."?Christian Intelligencer. As a Man Thinkcth, So is He. I The government of thought means Heaven or Hell. For if a man fias disciplined himself to crush that thought?which may come to the purest and holiest mind?still better, if he has acquired the power to change the current and to turn his thought instantly into other and nobler channels, temptation is baffled at its very start and the man stands upon his feet victorious. A :r.an will never regulate his passions who has never learned to regulate his thoughts.?G. H. Morrison. Parts of All That Was, Is, or Shall Rc It is the thought of an eternal God that really gives consistency to the fragmentary lives of men, the fragmentary history of the -*-orld. A Christ that liveth redeems and rescues into His eternity the broken, temporary lives and works of His disciples.?Phillips Brooks. v " > '- >. . // .V .V - New York City.?Every fresh variation of the lingerie blouse is certain to be met with enthusiasm, for no woman ever yet had a sufficient supply. This one is as simple as it is dainty, and is exceedingly attractive, while at the same time it in volves comparatively little labor in the making. As shown the material is Persian lawn with trimming of embroidered banding and frills, but all I ? ?w ? the lingerie materials are appropriate with trimming of lace or embroidery, as liked, while also the model will be found desirable for the thin silks that are made after the same general style as the wash waists. The Jines givnu by the tucks and the trimming are exceedingly becoming ones, and the sleeves are in the most comfortable of all lengths, terminating just below the elbows. The waist is made with front and backs, the backs being tucked from the shoulders to the belt, while the front is tucked to the yoke depth only. There is a regulation collar at the neck and the closing is made in? ? i /\ nlAAirne o f A VlblUiy ctt Lilt uau\. i lit aiccv^o a-i ^ simply full, gathered into bands. The quantity of material required for the medium size is three and onefourth yards twenty-one, three yards twenty-seven or one and seven-eighth yards forty-four inches wide, with two and one-half yards of insertion two inches wide. Hats a:id Age. There are few women between forty and fifty years who look as well in a hat lifted at the front as they do in one that is built high at the back and tends downward over the face. And under no circumstances draw the hair so tight as to have it appear strained. Make it fluffy. Blue and White Suit. A shirt waist suit of blue and white striped material is so put together that the color of the half-inch stripe | forms the trimming, and the result is very pleasing. The ruffle around the bottom of the skirt is laid in pleats with the blue stripe on top, stitched down a little way, so that the effect is of a blue band heading a fluffy blue and white ruffle. The same idea ' is carried out on short slieeve and at the neck, while 'the belt is formed by laying the fulness of the waist in pleats. A very simple costume, but. un enecuve one. Bailor Hats For Girls. Sailor hats of the good cld-fashioned kind, with a mediumly high crown and a wide brim, says Vogue, are being used entirely for nautical wear by young girls with the best developed ideas of the eternal fitness of things, and as most of the yachtswomen are of the smart set, the example will readily be followed by others for cither or both reasons. ;?i /' -/ ;r Inexpensive Trimming. An inexpensive mode of trimming a summer gown for her whose time is not a marketable product is the use of tiny gathered ruchings arranged in festoons or otherwise on skirt and bodice. The material is cut about two inches wide, hemmed on both sides, gathered through the middle, and sewed on in any preferred design with very decorative effect. The narrowest of lace sewed to each edge adds to the daintiness of the trimming. Fancy Matinee. The i>.ncy matinee is always in demand, but especially so during the warm months, when every form o? negligee is raucn 10 oe aesirea. mis one is graceful, attractive and becora-' ing, and can be made either from plain material or from ribbon held by bands of insertion. As shown white ia.wn is simply trimmed with Valenciennes lace, but both the Pompadour and striped ribbons make exceedingly charming effects and the model is so designed that they can be used with perfect success. In addition to serving for the always needed breakfast jacket, the matinee becomes a most desirable garment for wear in one's own room and for the slipping on between the changes of toilette that so often occur. The jacket is made with the fronts, back and the sleeves, and is simplio ity itself, the fitting being accomplished by means of shoulder and un der-arm seams only. The quantity of material required for the medium size is two and thre? fourth yards twenty-one, two and one-half yards twenty-seven or one and one-fourth yards forty-four inrhpc widp! rir r.ine vai'ds of ribbon four inches wide with fifteen yards of insertion and nine yards of edging. Grace of Embroidery. Ribbon embroideries lend grace and beauty to a variety of dainty coats and blouses, says the New Album of Modes, quite the prettiest effect being brought, about by the introduction of flower baskets, thesa being filled with the tiniest of blossoms in pink and blue ribbon and a handle suggesieu uy more riouun ui | filoselle. Motifs such as these decorate a dinner blouse of ring spotted net, with a pelerine of baby Irish lace and a round yoke of narrow Val insertion. Sachets of Lir.cn. Sachets for dresses are much used. The shops are showing them made of fine linen, embroidered, some threecornered and some square. The covers can be taken off and washed, as the sachet is in little colored silk bags. Parasols to Match. Match your beaeh parasols to your bathing suits. " " ' r- - ' - I,,' ' ' V"V : 'i Used Old Ledgeri.. II. Smith, who has peddled fish in the vicinity of Oxford, Me., for lorty years, 'always kept his accounts on the fence or pump nearest the house of the other party. The side of a house or a newly-shingled barn also served him. It is not recalled that any one ever altered or disputed one of the accounts thus kept. Explained. When a man wears a drooping mustache it is a sign he thinks he is handsome.?Atchison Globe. Letters in Alphabets Vary. The letters in the alphabets of the different nations vary in number, ^he Sandwish Islanders have twelve; he Burmese, eighteen; Italian, tweny; Bengali, twenty-one; German, Dutch and English, twenty-eix each; Arabic, twenty-eight; Persian, thir.y-two; Armenian, thirty-eight, and Russian, forty-one. HANDS RAW WITH ECZEMA. Suffered For Ten Years?Spread to Body and Limbs? Cured by the Cntlcura Kennedies. "I had eczema on my hand^ for ten rears. At hist it would break out Only m winter. Then it finally came to stay. 1 had three good doctors to do all they ;ould, but none of them did any good. 1 then used one box of Cuticura Ointment and three bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, ?nd was completely cured. My hands were raw all over, inside and out, and the eczema was spreading all over my body and limbs. .Before 1 had used one bottle of Cuticura Resolvent, together with the Ointment, my sores were nearly healed imo I hnrl iioprl thp third JVCI, U1IU Ujr SUV, tuuv A UWU bottle 1 W33 entirely well. 1 had a good appetite and was fleshier than 1 ever was. To any one who has any skin or blood disease 1 would honestly advise them to get the Cuticura Remedies, and get well quicker than all the doctors in the State could cure you. Mrs. II. E. Falin, Speers Ferry, "Va., May 19. 1905." Women use calling cards in playing the social game. ? TO HOLDERS of U. S. 4s of 1907 Your bonds will be paid off by the Government at par on July 1.. 1907, or less than one year from now. Owing to the demand for Government bonds, due to the appointment at the present time of a large number of temporary public depositaries, we are in position to pay you for your bonds almost as much as you will receive from the Government in principal and interest, even though you eLjuld hold them to maturity. We can pay 103%, or at the rate of $1032.50, for a $1000 bond. To retain your bonds when you can sell them at this price is equivalent to your investing your funds at a rate of less than three-fourths of one per cent, per annum. Conditions are unusually favorable t-> the reinvestment of your funds. Railroad bonds of the highest type are much lower than they have ruled for several yeAra. If you are interested tri taking advantage of the peculiarly favorable opportunity to sell your maturing Government bonds, we oUoil ho nlennpd to hare vou write us. In fcnse you have $5000 or more of bonds, we sball be glad to bare you wire cu at our expense. THE NATIONAL CITY BANK 32 WALL STREET NEW YORK Glenn's Sulphur Sosip I.V Hot Weather For redness, chafing-, prickly heat and all skin annoyances incident to the heated term, no remedy gives the same grateful relief and comfort as Glenn's Sulphur Soap. Unequaled for bathing and toilet purposes. Sold by all druggists. . lull's Hnlr and TThlikor Dje ! Black or Ilrorrn, SOc. { iO wn T[ * IT SHOULD BE IN EVER\ ** BE NEEDED A Slight Illness Treated at On + Long Sickness, With Its He, * BBSIBintl Bf III llll >feV?K7 IT?Alt nit * . . By J. HAMILTON J * fc This is a most Valuable Book for fc easily-distinguished Symptoms of diff< # of Preventing such Diseases, and tha ^ or cure. 508 P?go8e Profi \ ?s, * tioBf, Explanations of Botanical Pra ^ New Edition, Revised and Enlarged ? Book in the house there is qo excuse w ergency. Don't wait until you have illness ^ send at once for this valuable volum Send postal notes or postage stamps * 5 cents. * BOOK PUBLISHING HOI * * ** * * ? ' ' - ? . .. Brain Mast Be Kept Active. f;||l Just as we use our muscles if wa wish to retain their strength, so likewise must we continue to use th? brain in order to preserve it In workirg order. Use brings blood to the, v$j| organ, and so its nutrition is up and its healthy state is retained. As a result of this it may be said that, as a rule profesisonal men or v,-.w| judges or legislators, whose minds are continually active, live longer than those who retire from business ?+ ota aorlv atro nnfl have no OCCU cil aa tiuij mqw _ pation to employ their leisure. ' , jW A floating bottle dropped in the 9 Gulf Stream as it leaves the Gnlf of J Mexico will cross the Atlantic In J3I about 180 days. N.Y.?31 FrrS,St.Vitus'Dance:NeryousDi8ea6esper- -'|j? manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerro Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. j Dr. H. K. Kline, Ld.. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. j Never judge a man by the opinion he /|8j has of himself. j Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Symp for Children teething, softens t he^nms,reducesinfiamma- \ tion, allays pain, cures wind colic,25c a bottle 1 Five meals are served daily in the Ebcurial palace. I wm , Prevented! m ' (||!j To treat Pimples and Blackheads*' I Red, Rough, Oily Complexiows, gently smear the face with Cuti- , H cura Ointment, the Great Skin Cure, but do not rub. Wash ofl: U the Ointment in five minutes Cuticura Soap and hot water, and ? bathe freely for some minutes, fl Repeat morning and evening At other times use Cuticura Soap for bathing the face as often as agree- fM able. No other Skin.Soap so purea-jJW so sweet, so speedily effective. M Cuticura Amp combine! delicate medicinal and emol> licnt proper, .es derived from Cuticura, the mat Skin ''- 'MH Cure, with the purcit ot cleantiiig inzredltrta and d? " iflH moitrofroebi.JK 'A flower odora. Two Soapi lnoneatooa price, viz., a Medicinal and Toilet Soap. Depoi?i Lon- flfl don, 27 Charlerhouee Sq.: Paris, 5 Rue de la Paiii Bdtton, 137 CoIu-nbu? Ave. Porter Drug Sl Chem. Corp., Holt ?njp#. Trte, " jw to ieautll/ Jia Skin." J j^Q Tlie tircatent Boarding Collej# f H in tbe World. I University of I Notre Dame 1 NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. I H We gwiramee two points : Our student* I study n j<J our students behave themselves. 18 foldings. 75 Professors. 800 StBdants. I Courses in Ancient and Modern Linguagos, English History and Economics, Chemistry, I Biology, Pharmacy, Civil. Electrical and lis* chanical Engineering, Architecture, Law,Short- * hund, Book-keeping, Type-writing. I SPECIAL DEPARTMENT FOR BOYS UND^R THIRTEEN. I {TERMS! Boara, luiuuu auuwuwf^ $400. !?eiid len cents to the Secretary |<H lor Ciitnloscue. NEW DISCOVXET; H f r% W I W I yi??? quick rolUf lad rront eixi. Book of tntlooolaii ud lO Days' InataMt trrf. Dr. H. IL CHEEK'S bUVs, Boi B, AtUaU, 60 Bushels Winter Wheat Par Aci%^H I'lu.T s the yield of Salzcr'sRed Cross Hybrid Wlntez Wheat. Send 2c In stamps for free sample of uune,4M^^I alpo catalogue ofWInterWheats, Rye, Barley, Cl0TCC%^^H| Timothv. ft rami's. Pu!hv,Tre<"-. <t<\. for fall planting,. 8AL/.ER SEED C'?.,Box A.C., LaC'ro?e,Wii^BBj rlENSIONn'"hln?7o?a?S% f Successfully Prosecutes ClainrML IH Late Principal Exarnlcer U S Penalon Barewh 3 vT? in civil war. liatliudicatlagclaims. attT *,>* ******* iss Bookt* r HOUSEHOLD AS IT MAY ?ji ANY MINUTE. *1H ce Will Frequently Prevent a avy Expenses end Anxieties, SOWN DOCTORM 1 VERS, A. 31., 31. O, ^ the Household, teaching as it does the :rent Diseases, the Causes and Means Jf Simplest Remedies which will alleviate usely Illustrated. rv This Book is written in plain \ flH erery-day English, and is free from the technical terms which render most doctor books eo valueless to the generality of readers. Thit Book is intended to be of Service fin the Family, and is so worded as to be readily understood by all. 60 Cts.Pofaia. ?fl The low price only being made * a/iitmn '.JIH ij possible Dy ine inuuoiK 0 printed. Not only does this Book " contain po much Information Relative to Diseases, but very properly "v gives a Complete Analysis of every* thing pertaining to Ccurtship, Marriage and the Production and Rearing of Healthy Families; together "with Valuable Recipes and Prescripctice. Correct Use of Ordinary Herbs. with ? Complete Index. With thia ^ HI for not knowing what to do in an em* in vour family before vou order, but e. 'G*rLY 60 CENTS POST-PAID. : of any denomination not larger than SSE J34 Leonard St., N0Y. * Hi ******** W ********* >HH m