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-f'$ CATHOLIO NEWS. The Polish Catholics of Berlin, Wis., will build a new church. One-half of the enlisted men of the United States army and navy are Cath olics. v. The congregation of St. Lin, Mon treal,, Can., are about to build a new church. The sisters of Notre Dame have opened a Kindergarten school at San Jose, Cal. On July 20, the Rt. Rev. Abbot Edel brock blessed the new church atMeler's Grove, Minn. Ground will soon be broken for a new free school in SS. Peter and Paul's par ish, Detroit. Mich. The Church of the Holy Spirit at Prague was struck by lightning, Sun day, July 11. Since its organization in 1872, the diocese of Ogdensburg has lost twenty one priests by death. All Hallows, Ireland, has sent out nearly 1,300 priests, chiefly to the Irish colonies and the United States. The improvements in progress on St. Mary's Catholic church at Jeiferson ville, Ind., will cost nearly $20,000. The Rt. lite r. Bishop de Goesbriand recently dedicated a new church for the French Catholics in Bennington, Vt. Cardinal Moran's palace at Manly, near Sydney, New South VVales, is now ready for occupation. Its erection has cost £10,000. At the request of Bishop Gilmour. Jesuit Fathers from Buffalo, Is. Y.. will open a college in Cleveland, Ohio, in September. Ou Sunday, August 15, the IU. Rev. Bishop McMahon will lay the corner stone of the new St. Joseph's Church, Poquonoek, Conn. The Rt. IA'JV. Egidius Junger, Bishop of Nesqu.al.iy, W. T„ recently dedicated the new church of out* Lady of Lourdes at Spokane Falls, W. T. Oji August 1-5, feast of the Assump tion of the Blessed Virgin, Archbishop Heiss wiii dedicate the new St. Mary's Church at Racine, Wis. The corner-stone of a new Catholic church—the second in that place—was recently laid in Hot Springs, Ark., the very Rev. M. M. Halliman officiating. The corner-stone of the new parochial school of Holy Trinity, Philadelphia? Pa., was laid on Sunday, July 25, the rector, the Rev. E. O. Hiltermann. offi ciating. A new Polish church is to be built in Chicago, 111., under the patronage of St. Albert. It will cost $6,000, and will be arranged to serve both for church and school. Bishop Spalding of Peoria dedicated the German Catholic church at Dan ville, 111., Sunday There was a pro cession, headed by a band, and a lecture by the Bishop. 'Hie Rev. J. W. Maloney, rector of the Church of St. Mary Star of the Sea, Jackson, Mich., has purchased the ground on which he will soon begin the erection of a parochial school. The corner-stone of a new chapel for the Home ol! the Aged, conducted by the little Sisters of the Poor in Cincin nati, Ohio, was laid by Archbishop El der, on Sunday, July 25. The Church of the Sacred Heart, Brooklyn, X. Y., of which the Rev. John A, McCallum is rector, is free of debt and the congregation have raised $8,461 toward a parochial school. The Brothers of the Holy Cross, of the University of Notre Dame, Ind., have been engaged to take charge of the just-completed parocial schools of St. Columbkill's parish. Chicago, 111. Last week Cardinal Gibbons received a letter of congratulation on his eleva tion to the cardinalate which was writ ten by the late Cardinal Guibert of Paris a Tew days previous to his death. The corner-stone of a new church, St. Vincent de Paul's, was laid at Los Angeles, Cal., on Sunday, July 25. Plans are drawn for a college to adjoin the church. It will be under the same invocation. The corner-stone of a new Catholic church at La Crosse, Wis., was laid Sunday, July 25 by the Rt. Rev. Bishop Flasch, of Lake Ross, Wis. Five thou sand people marched in procession to the grounds of the new church. The corner-stone of a new church un der the patronage of the Blessed Vir gin, at Glossop, Eng,, was recently laid by the Rt, Rev. Bishop Bagshawe. This church was founded and endowed ty the heirs and relatives of the late Francis James Sumner, on a site given by Lord Howard, of Glossop, and his son.. ..'i- The Catholic Total Abstinence Union of America closed its annual session at Notre Dame August 5 by re-electing unanimously the old officers. Arch bishop Elder of Cincinnati and Bishop Ireland of St. Paul were present and addressed the convention. The next meeting will be held in Philadelphia on1 the first Wednesday in August, 1S87.' The. Rt. Rev. Tobias Mullen, Bishop of Erie, Pa., lately blessed thenew church at Tionesta. Forest Co., Pa. This is the first and only Catholifc church in Forest County. Every county of the 13 comprised in the Dio cese of Erie can now boast of its churches.!' vForest1 Coitnty stood out' last, because it was but thinly popu lated. *J r. DAINTY DEVICES. Transparent Bonnets, Parasols and F»m for Fashionable Women. New parasols show two large hand kerchiefs of lace on figured, yet trans parent grenadine, laid one over* he other and forming eight points Two rows of lace, one above the other, make a rich, deep fall the color, ruby, cream or black, matching the tint of the cover. The handles are the slender, natural hoofs of goats or deer or they are of natural wood, covered under and upon the surface, so as to produce white (pith) bark brown and cameo ef fects. The straw sailor hats, rather higher in the crown, rather broader in the brim, than the sailor hats formerly' used, are an English production and: are not to be found in Paris, where thei high, steeple-crown towers, as high as ever, hut are improved in shape andi in the brim, which is still narrow, but! now slightly rolled up and widened to1 one side. Recent imported bonnets are daintyi affairs, made up of tinted tulle or very light gauze, embroidered with gold or! with great refinement in colors, and finished with embroidered edge to! match. The trimming consisted of ttp-j right loops of "love" ribbon, with picotj edge and spray of small flowers, very! fine and light, on stems that quiver! with every motion. Materials and! trimmings are all of the same delicate! tints—shades of sand color and gold,, wood brown and pale pink, ivorv audi water green, lilac and cream or violet' and grey. The most distinguishing items olj dress just now are three—transparent bonnet, transparent parasol and trans-i parent fan. The whole either in cream! shades and brown and black. The first! is for the young women the latter fotf their mammas. Black and gray arej the uniform of women who are no Ion ger young custom obliges them toj wear mouning for their departed youth.: A notable example was, however, re-J centlv set by the mother of a bridey who "instead of the regulation ash* pearl or steel gray, wore a lovely dress of brown and amber brocade, com bined with amber satin, covered with! exquisite brown and amber beaded em broidery. Dressy watering-place toilets are dis-i tinguished by a novel arrangement of drapery which stimulates an "order."j It consists of a scarf of embroidered, tulle, lace or tissue, which crosses one| shoulder and is carried down upon thej skirt where it forms a part of the en-j semble. A toilet displayed recently! produced a similar eiie.ct in astillrnorej novel and highly artistic manner. The! dress consisted of cream wool, in the form of a princess polonaise, caughfcj rather than draped upon one side withj an enameled clasp, over a skirt braided, in a wide-geared, panel, in dull blue and silve.r. One shoulder of the undress' and the sleeves wore braided to match the workmanship so fine that it looked like embroidery. The polonaise was sleeveless, and its one shoulder was gathered and held by a clasp similar to the one which held the sides of the skirt upon the left hip.—Jenny June, in Chicago Journal. ENGLISH RAIN-CHARMS. A. Few of ttie Pleas Chanted by Children Interrupted In Their I'lays. There are many bits of verse still re peated in England and Scotland to make the rain cease. This usage is mostly confined to children, and prob ably it is not now practiced with any serious thought of effeetiug the pur pose. Like the custom of wearing beads, which has lived on from a time when beads were regarded as amulets, having the power to keep off disease or other bodily evil, this practice of re peating rain-charms ha3 come to us from very early times. B'air weather, come ag-ain." This hearty wish for a good and final'( riddance of the disagreeable rain is always accompanied with an impreca- tion of the evil upon some unpleasant,' neighbor. Spain of course was chosen as the unfortunate country, because of. the jingle of the rhyme with rain. Here are some lines repeated during a: hail-storm. They are clearly of Scot-r tish origin: "Rain, rain, rattle-Btanes, Diuna rain on me But rain on Jobnnie Groat's house, Far ower the sea." There is one of these rain-charms more amicable than the others, since it? wishes no ill to any one else, reported^ frm Northumberland. From the child ish good nature of its plea, it oughfc certainly to prevail: "Rain, rain, go away, Come again another day When I brew and when I bake, I'll grie you a little.cake." Sometimes in the summer, rain falls' fast through the sunshine. At suchj times, when the boys have their sportj broken off by this peculiar and beauti-' ful exhibition, they call out: "Sunny, sunny shower, Come on for half an hour Gar a' the hens cower, Gar a' the sheep clap 4 Gar ilka wife in Lammermuir Look in her kail-pat." The Scottish origin of this is evident from,its dialect... The reason for look-] ing in the "kailpat" (cabbage-kettle)' must be easily understood by many." The rain generally washes down some particles of soot from a wide chimney, of the old cottage fashion of Scotland. The pot, simmering oyer the fire, with its lid half raised, is of course, apt to receive a few of these, which it is the duty of the good housewife to look for and remove.—Youth's Companion. —Twenty-three million eggs were recently shipped from St. Louis at one: time, only nine hundred of which were jbroken during their journey to New York. **ny&t rnXTTi T-DTGTX OrpA*mABT^. A STYLES IN RINGS.. Singular Combinations Recently Intro duced by Covers of Genuine Jewelry. The smart finger ornament just now (is composed of three rings, each con taining three or more stones set in the .same manner, but differing in kind. hfhe most elegant specimens are plain gold bands set with five gems apiece the first containing rubies, the second ^diamonds and the third sapphires. Each .ring is a fac-simile of the others in ^mounting and in the size of the gems. It is generally supposed that the rings are joined, but they -are entirely sepa rate, although never worn singly. A singular combination is shown in a' band of emei'alds, one of pearls and one .of sapphires, the ring containing the' emeralds being worn in the center.: The oddity of this is its chief charm,' for the greatest beauty is noticeable in: combinations of gems which are of the: same order and do not contrast so de-, ,eidedly as do the pearls and emeralds.] A band of lapislazuH, one of white! !pearls and one of pink pearls form ait 'artistic combination. The gems are not embedded in t-ha ^settings as was formerly the fashion,j iand for this reason they emit greater1! •brilliancy. A diamond or sapphire iring (when only one is giA~en) is fancied [for a betrothal, as the sapphire is be-i ilieved to have power to drive away all .demons and protect the beloved one 'from magic and poison. Old seal rings,1 .with the family crest engraved-thereon, are attached to the end of the short ,watch chain, and so become, a procia-j Ration, even when, one is gloved, of. •the possession of a grandfather who sealed his letters with something more! aristocratic than a thimble. The fanci '.fullv carved gold ring are seldom seen —indeed, it is about concluded that jthey were forgotten during the craze: for gems. The saving up of one's gold and sil-» .ver to obtain one really beautiful and real jewel is much more commendable' than the buying of imitation pins, bracelets and brooches that are, appar lently, gold to-day but very evidently a base metal to-morrow.—Buttericfc's Del lineator. PAINTED PRESSES. Straits to Which Artists Are Reduced by the Exigencies of Traile. Art and fashion are involved withj each other now as never before. Notf only do the designers of elaborate toil-! •ets reasonably claim to exercise artistic! taste, for much originality and beauty [are often put into the work, but genuine painters are employed to decorate dresses. Usage in the most pretentious New York circles authorize the wear-' ing of exceedingly fine gowns at din ners, and the appar« 1 at the best balls! ihardly shows such unique garments as !are seen in dining-rooms on occasions' 'of fashionable eating and drinking. The aim is to wear something unlike •anybody else's garb, and to effect this the silk or satin of a dress is often painted by hand in water color or oil. :An artist acquaintance of mine, whose iworks on canvas have frequently been Igood enough to be admitted to the iAcademy of Design, was bemoaning the fact that American buyers prefer jforeign to native pictures, irrespective :of 1 We know that in Greece, some two thousand years ago, the children ati play used to call out to the sun to come back again whenever it was hidden by a passing cloud. In England, where rains are more frequent than in Greece, and where theyj interfere seriously with out-of-door! pastime, the children bawl out in! chorus, during a shower, this rude/ couplet: "Rain, rale, g-o to Spain dresses as a means of subsistence, and that he was retained by a leading dressmaker for that sort of work. But be declared that be would never again do what he had done in one instance, which was to use his brush on fabric that at the time inclosed the owner. The belle had insisted that the figures painted on the waist of her dress, though they looked well in themselves, were" not shaded so as to be effective when she had it on.. Therefore, she wished the artist to come to her house and touch up his work while it was on ilier person. That he regarded as hu miliating. He could paint a gown in 'his studio, but professional pride for fbade him to apply his brush to the per sons of the patron.—N. T. Cor. Phila delphia Press. BRICK PAVEMENTS. Said to Be the Best and Most Durable in the World. A reporter called on Rev. Dr. Ryan to learn from him the relative value of wood and brick pavements, Dr. Ryan .being well qualified to speak on the1 subject. Dr. Ryan said: "I have had considerable experience in pavements,, having traveled over the worst and best in the world, including the Appian way." "What is the best pavement you have found?" "Brick. There is nothing equal to it, and it will be the pavement of the future. The road it makes is as smooth as a floor, and it holds just enouglr debris to make it noiseless." "Is it durable?" "Yes, indeed. I formerly lived at Charleston, W. Ya. Fourteen years' ago they laid the first brick pavement, 'and twelve years after it seemed to me, to be in as perfect condition as when! first laid. Tires do not brea,k or crack! it, as they roll along as if on a floor." "How does it cost in comparison to wood?" "I can not tell, but is cheaper when wear is taken into consideration. Wooden pavements are only an expe dient, having to be constantly repaired. •Then cedar blocks will, not last for ever. There will have to be a change' soon." "What kind of brick is used?" "Either common red brick or fire brick. At Wheeling fire brick is used, and, by the way, are patented. They •are wider at the bottom than at the top, thus permitting sand, to work into the interstices/'. '-'How are they laid?" "With the edges up, on a bed' of ,sand, below which is a framework of timbers. There is a fortune for the in an who introduces, brick pavements rinto this city, and I will show him how ,to lay them.myself. .There is no use 'talking, brick is to be the pavement of the future."—Detroit Tribune. vvv merits. "When a man has to go to painting ilive women instead of his own creations,1^ he bitterly growled, "I ^roCjuce. fJSh women, ranged in vows, think it is tune for him to throw down d„.,h BJWMPtr*# i* rPTTPTAV^ATTriTTRT THE IRISH STANDARD: SATURDAY. AUGUST 14f l886. MASCULINE MEDDLERS. Why a Snappish Woman Carried a Flake of Soot on Her Cheek. In one of the parlor cars on a west bound Northwestern train sat a woman' Who was not as young as she had beehj and whose temper was, apparently,1 not as sunnvas itmight.be. For she! scowled and looked sour and tried to! read a bit and slammed the book doWni and banged, the window up and then! banged-it down again when.she found the wind played hob with the carefully! trained bangs on her forehead. Taking, it all around she was in a fine state of] mind, and there was a big piece of soot? on her cheek of whose presence she! did not seem to be aware, but which] was observed and commented on by all* of the passengers, Soon a traveling man came out of the smoking-room, took a look at thei state of things and accosted her in so low a 'tone that his fellow-passengers! were bitterly disappointed in not being! able to hear his remarks or the repbj thereto. The reply, however, was apJ parently very short and quite conclu-j give, for the traveling man retiredj about as quick as he knew how and with something on his face which re-| semblcd ablush remarkably close, con-^ sidering that he was a traveling man. Presently an oldish gentleman—not too old to snooze in public when it isj warm, but yet. old enough to be labor ing under the delusion that he is yet' something of a lady-killer —presentljj an oldish man of this sort woke out of a nap, looked about the car to see if1 there was anybody he could scrape! an acquaintance with, spied the soured and spluttering female, and immedi-' ately began arranging his necktie and mopping off his face. Then he hap pened to notice the piece of soot, and,' as he left his seat and approached the woman, the passengers all watched him' expectantly. "I beg pardon, miss," he began with a smile meant to be charming, 'but did you know there was a flake of soot oiv your face?" "Yes, I did," was the reply, snapped out like the cracker on an old whip. This rather staggered the old party,' but he partially recovered-himself and remarked: "B-but don't vou want to wipe it off?'' "No, I don't," the snapper-like jaws rattled out again, as the passengers1 tittered. "And may I ask why you wish to cav ry that soot on your face, madam?" "Because you are the fourth aied-i dling old fool who has told me it was, there since I left Chicago, and I want) to keep it on long enough to find out a a Chicago Herald. QUAINT OLD LUBECK. A Visit to the JIarket-Place of the Once Famous llanseatic City. The market place is a large quad-, rangle, entered only by narrow pas sageways at the corners, and through 'the colonnade under the llathhaus. The scene in this enclosure is, every !morning of the week, a very charac teristic and lively one. The pavement as covered with farm produce and mer-' ichandise of all descriptions. Eobusti 'peasant women sell the freshest of vegetables and the most delicious dairv T.rui, the brush and take TIP a shovel. .'tucked away in a box to keep the! He explained that he had taken sev- .'draughts off, attract by their vigorous! eral commissions to decorate women «, 'each with her feet and petticoat hem cr[0.s'(' a customers to select from their: 0f ]ive fish swimming about in' !trays carts are crowded together in' [one corner, piled full of great loaves ofl •bread pigs squeal and fowls clatter inS !pyramids of cages tables creak with a •burden of quivering cheeses that thicken the surrounding air it is a.! Babel of sights and sounds and odors, which the multitude appear to enjoy land thrive upon, while the stranger, if at all fastidious, holds liis ears and his nose, or takes a speedy flight. At noon time the .shadows of the house gables fall upon a clean swept pave-' ment, with only a couple of fruit booths to remind' one of the tumult ofl the early morning. This is the hour toj sit on the well-worn bench under somej overhanging story, and imagine the1 scene when merchants of every im portant town, from Novgorod to Ber gen, from Wisby to London, sought this their commercial capital, .in the days before the discovery of the New World, with its immeasurable re sources, gave a new direction to trade, and. made the greatest commercial partnership in history no longer a necessity. A Lutheran priest in long black robe and high ruff hurrying through the colonnade, completes the illusion of the past induced by this unique picture of its grandeur. Two little children in latest Paris fashion trip along with their nurse, and the spell is broken.—Christian at Work. A. Paying Enterprise. I know a rich man New York whose office rent is $2,500 a year, every penny of which is paid sheer by another man who for the expenditure contents himself with a desk room in a far-away corner. The name of having an office with the millionaire, the rep utation of hobnobbing the day through with a. magnate—that is what he gives his money for. Silly? No it pays. Two years he went into the scheme as a speculation. He hadn't $100j then: how he can draw his check for} $100,000. He has been trading oh the: prestige of his" office friend, and, credited with a good many secrets and! lots of information that he doesn't, possess,. 'be coins money, out ..of thef crowd, who try to "work" him in seek ing inklings of the millionaire's stock! market plans. There are enterprises! and enterprises in this world.—N-. YJ Times. —According to the Kievlanen, inj Pereislavl there lately died a Jew., named Sriljnyi, aged one hundred antf seventeen, who up to his last remainedi hale and sound, possessed an acute1 •memory and a sane intellect, and even a few months1 before his end, contem-i vplated marrying a ninth time. .Hii eld- 'est son was only., eighty-two years.old, but looked much older. 'W tOTffifK^Pgtt# ,.««' K-t e* *"44'"' e*Svrw* PmmmJuJ, m, in,*6:15 m, fJ:30 1A0H ftttft ^V 2 JOS. R. HOFFLIN, The Druggist of Minneapolis, Where You Will Always Find the Purest Drugs and Medicines, Competent Clerks, Accuracy and Moderate Prices,. 101 WASHINGTON AVE. SOUTH. The only open all-night Pharmacy in the City. Fine line of Imported and Domestic Cigars. Box trade solicited.) Soda water and all the leading min eral waters. Pure Fruit Juice Syrups our specialty. Sole manufacturers Hof fliivs Liebig's Corn Cure (guaranteed.) Liebig's Sarsaparilla (the great Blood Purifier.) Liebig's Eng. Cherry Balsam, Hofflin's Quinine Hair Tonic, the celebrated Egyptian Pain Wonder. Rose Cold Cream and Glycerine, and sole importers of the Isdahl's Famous Pure White Norwegian Cod Liver Oil. PAINT AJSJD OIL DEPARTMENT, Comprising White Lead, Colors, dry and in oil, Varnishes, all makes and grades, Japan, Turpentine, Shellac, etc., etc. Glues, Paris White and Whiting, pre pared Kalsomine and Alabastine. A full and complete line Painters' and Kal sominer's Brushes always in stock. Call or write for prices of any goods in my line. A full line of the rarest Drugs and new Chemicals. All the late Per fumes, including Rimmel's, Wright's, Lautier's, Lubin's. Seeley's and Atkin son's specialties. Complete line of Face and Toilet Powders. Largest assort ment of Fine Toilet Soaps in the city, comprising Lubin's, Pinaud's Coudray's Pear's, Kirk's and Colgate's. A great variety of styles in Tooth, Nail. Hand. Hair, and Clothes Brushes. All playing cards sent post paid on receipt of price. Poker chips being heavy, require 20 cents extra for 1£ and If inch, ami 25 cents for inch, per 100 to cover postage. Respectfully. JOSEPH R. HOFFLIN, 101 Washinffton Avenue South, Minneapolis, Minn, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway. FAIIGO SIIOMT LINE, ONLY RAIL LINE TO WINNIPEG AND CANADIAN NORTHWEST TIME TABLE I Leave Leave Morris, Wiilniar, Brown's Valley and limiken ridge *7:30 am- 8 05 m| Fergus Falls, Moorhead, Fnrgo, Crookston *8:05 ami 8:55 am fet. Cloud accommodation, via Mcntieello nndCiear- Sl:. Cloud accommodation, via Anoka and Elk ftiver' Breclr.euridg'e, Wahxeton, Casselton, Mope. Port-' land, Mayvillo, Croekston. Grand Forks, Devil'tf. Lake and St. Vincent and Wimiiiit^i' Ferjrus Falls, Moorfeead, Fargo, Gre.nd Forks, Devil's Lake. Larimore, Siecho 11:30 a in, 12:30 m, 1:30 m, 2:S0 m. 2:40 tn, 8:80 pm, 4:00 m, FRUIT AND CONFECTIONERY, St. Paul. iMf ueapo 7:30 nu S:00 in, C:30 m, :|.10:C0 in, 11:15 ru, 11:30 p'ni. LEAVE MINNEAPOLIS—3:80 a m. !:30 am, 7:00 am, 7:20 am, 7:30 a. in. *8:15 a in, 3:30 am 9:30 a in, 10:30 a m, 11:30 a m. 11:50 a m. 12:00 m, 13:30 m, 1:00 in. :30 in, 2:30 in, 3:30 4:30 in, 5:30 m, *5:45 m, 6:30 m, *0:45 in, *7:50 ra. 8:10 in, 10:80 in. All trains daily except as follows-—* Daily except Sunday. $Bunriay only. TICKET OFFICES—St. Paul, corner Thii and Jackson streets: Union Depot. Minneapolis— tJnion Depot, Eridge S'. uarc: No. 10 Nicollet Hou.se Block BOOTS AIMD SHOES PRICES ALWAYS LOW. Goods Warranted to Give Satisfaction. Ee Sure to Call when Wanting "Foot iwear Before Purchasing Elsewhere. 2SO ISTIOOXjLIGT .A."^7"ID. The Thompson Harness Company, Successor to J. Bchulte, Dealer in all kinds of Crackers and Confectionery AND JOBBERS OF NUTS, 13_ 15 174? 19 Third Si. South MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. ERIN GO BRAGK! FAUGH A BALLAGH! Phenomenal Success OF THE IRISH STANDARD THE ORGAN OF THE NORTHWEST, During the past two weeks a large number of names have been added to our already large subscription list. Advertisers would do well to make a note of this. Everywhere the paper is meeting with unbounded success. IRISHMEN WANTED! To act as agents in every part of the Northwest. No trouble to take subscriptions. -BIG COM MISSIONS. Arrive Arrival J' kliVoaplia 6 :ft" til 5:41) in *T:U0 mi *0:.io vp *3:30 in 3:30 .i mi 8:0" [i::: *13:00 u\ •10:55 a mi 11:20 a 10:20 a v* -1:05 pin 7:30 pm S:05 m, 7 -SO a iiij 8:30 pm! ST. PAUL A!ND MINNEAPOLIS SHORT LIXE. LKAVE ST, PAUL—6:45 a m, *7:05 a in, 7:80 a in. *7:55 a m, *S:05 a m, 9:10 pin! 7:00 a m' fi:30 a n:, 9:30 a in. 10:"( rn!4:SG m, 5:30 in, 5:17 miis, ism AND TRAVELLING BAGS, No. 3 Pence. Opera House Block. IIe.anerin Avenue, MinneJ apolis, Mimt. O. H. THOMPSON, Manager. J. W. Fitzgerald DEALER, IN H. F. LILLIBRIDCE & CO., MANUFACTURERS OF 422 HENNEPIN AVE. mm miinwt 11