o SHPITHL CITY COURIBR. EVKHY WOMAN liOVKS. 01)1 HiR LOVE IS SOMETIMES MIS PLACED OK WASTED. ' Kiln tt lireler Wllrm 'l..l Hum Iho l.i.nlt lit Crrnllim l.llto In lln I.iimiI I hit lilcul Rurrlliri.rt lne Nnl Alm.js Jliiltn n Model Wire. CVp lulit. INU, li) AluiTli itn l'ri"w Ahmk'Iii Hon. All rlahto rescned.l r trnj1 M & ovnioaij I'Viii'iiiiiiui inn I wWmui, "Tho wonmn wliiun ft M I wo lvti U only ilutiKcrmiH, fl i. ..i ii ...i... ... t ""I IIIU WIUIUUI WHO IIIVI'S Hi Is lurrllilo," to which a irrentvr cynic milled, "Forluimtoly hIik iiovcr loves us " Thin wns moru witty than true, for every woman lop.i. has loved or o.icctn to lovo roiiio man Man has a horror of bolnu; loved-wllh n tnorcounry motive So Kirat Is U horror today that It amounts to morhid expectancy Nino young men out of ten speak of a wlfo as a possession only to bo purchased Hut if man had never boon nlKKiudly. woman would nover have become mercenary. And mercenary wo men nro few. .Men aro far moro stereo typed in mind than women. Therefore their Ideas ri'Kiirillnj; tho jirntnl passion nro more uniform. While almost every woman likes a dramatic element In n man's lovo for her, tho normal man has a dread of thu dramatically disposed woman, especially In tho role or a wife. This Is tho reasoii wo find ho many phlegmatic women who nro wives. Intensity worries n man uu less It Is kept well under check, and tho tragic lie finds Insupportable In dally life. Less romantic than woman by nature nml with less Idealism, yet soniewhern in his heart every man hides a dream of that earthly trinity father, mother and child In which ho Imagines himself the chief element. Sooner or later, to greater or less de gree, every man passes through tho ro mantic phase Unfortunately for woman, his Idea irf n Hweetheart Is essentially different from hU requirements for n wlfo later In life. Tho nverago young bachelor is at tracted by tho girl whom other men ad mire. He likes to carry olT tho belle of tho season before tho eyes of rivals. lie ianuiused by her caprices, llattered bv her jealous exactions and grateful for tho least expression of her regard for him. lie Is lavish with compliments and praise. But sentiment in man tho nvorngo man springs wholly from un nppoasod appetites. Tho coveted but unpossessed woman can manifest hei lovo for him in almost any manner, and It will bo agreeable and pleasing. Whether she Is coy, shrinking, coquet tlshorplayful.demonstrativeor reset ved, his Imagination will surround her with every charm. A man's imagination is the flower of Ids passions. When those passions aro calmed, ttm Untvur r,,,!. Ouco let him possess the object of his do-' oiru, mm ma uieas uccomo entirely changed. He grows critical and dis criminating and truly masculine in his Ideas of how ho wishes to bo loved. Wo nil know the story of tho man who compared his courtship to a mad race lifter u railroad train, and his married life to the calm possession of a seat with tho morning paper at hand. Ho no longer shouted and gesticulated, but ho enjoyed what he had won nono tho less for that. It was n very quick wltted husband who thought of this little simile to ox-' cuse his lack of sentiment, but there are very few wives who nro satiwilod to K considered in the light of a rallwav ' compartment, for tho soul of tho wife J has nil tho romantic feelings which the soul of tho sweetheart held. It is only the exceptional man (Uod blew him and ' Increase lilml) who can feel sentiment and romanconfter K)scssiou is an estab lished fact. Unhappily for lxitli sexes. j M'titlinent is just as much u part of wo-1 man's nature after Mio surrenders her- ' wlf us before. A well timed compliment, a tender caress given unasked, would avert iiianv corespondent case If husbands were wiser. I After marriage a man likes to bo loved ' practically. All the affection and demonstrations ' of lovo possible cannot render him hap-1 py if his dinner is not well cooked and ! if his homo is disorderly! Grant him I the background of comfort and ho will I bo contented to accept tho lovo ns a ! matter of course ' Grant u woman all tho comfort life j may offer, yet she is not happy without the background of expressed love. When men and women both learn to ) realizo this Inborn difference in end. I other's natures and to respect It. mar-1 ringo will censo to bo n failure. In this. I think, women aro ready to limko their part of tho concession moro ' cheerfully than aro tho men. Women who loatho housework and who jtossess ! no natural tasto for it become excellent ' housekeepers nml careful, thrifty man- ngers, becnuso they realizo tho linpor-! tiinoo of theso matters in relation to the husband's comfort. But how few men cultivate sentiment, although knowing it so dear to the wlfo. Man Is forever talking eloquently of woman's sensitive, refined nature, which unfits her for public careers. Vet this very sensitiveness ho crucifies in private life by Ignoring her need of u different heart diet thaiitheoue which ho requires, Wives throng the cooking bohools hoi ,' to make their husbands happiei thuroliy. Why not start a school of ben i tmeiit whep'lu bust amis nhuuld 1m oaehed in paying graceful compliment I Hid showing dellcato attentions, so dear In their wlci? A man likes to bo hived cheerfully. A morbid p.isslon bores him Inexpressibly, no matter how loyal It may be. He llkei tact rather than Inopportune expression of affection. He likes tube loved In private, but to bo treated with dignity in public. Nearly all women are llattered ami pleased If the man they adoro exhibits his lovo before tho whole woild. If ho defies a convention for their sake, they feel It Is u tribute to their worth and chnrni. I have found this to be true of tho mint dignified and correct women. Hut I have yet to seo tho man who Is not averse to having thu woman he loves provoke tho least comment in public. Ho seeiim to feel that something is Inst to him if the public observes his happiness, however legitimate and cnmiuenilalile, Tho woiii uu who is demonstrative when ho wants to read, and who contradicts him beforo people an hour later, does not know how to make u man happy. I lo is better sat Isllcd to have her show deference to his opinions and suppress her demonstra tions if ho were obliged to choose. A man likes a woman to hIiow her love in occult ways, to agree with him in his most cherished opinions, to follow his counsel and to ask his advice. He will not question her lovo if alio docs this. Hut a woman needs to bo told in words how dear she Is, no matter what other proofs a nun; may give. Yet few men live who do not appre ciate a little well timed expression of love, and every man Is made happier mid stronger by praise anil appreciation of tho woman nearest to his heart. Tho strongest man needs sympathy and is made better by It, though ho may not confess It. The tendency of the age Is to give nil tho sympathy to woman, tho tendency of wivnan Is to demand sympathy. Hut not until woman sym pathizes with inau in his battle with thu world and himself, and not until man sympathizes with woman in hot- soul hunger, will tho world attain to its best. It Is u queer fact that while women are without doubt the most lovable objects in tho world, yet on man is lavished thu greatest and most eudiiiing passions. A great many women go through lifu without ever having been loved by any man. I doubt if any man ever reached old age without having been adored by soinu woman. Uu.. Wiu:i:i.i:it Wilcox. THE LETTER DOOK. A Hi'lii'iun lu CiinilriiMt nml rri'm'riu Olil Letter. "Hero la something I don't show ti. everybody, but 1 know how you will look at It," said my hostess as she hand ed mo it thlu booklet In pretty covers. "It Is homo of my brother's letters that 1 have arranged in this convenient way for safe keeping." I touched tho book reverently. Max and 1 were friends from our school days, and n cloud went over tho sun when that bright head went down In tho gulf of Mexico. "1 want my little girl to know some thing of her only uncle, and, as Cardinal Newman says, 'The true life of a man is In his letters,' I have selected some of tho most characteristic from tho many writ ten by dear Max and had them typed, us you tee, and some time tho child wll) value tho book not only as a remem brance, but because It shows tho charac ter of a bright and noble man." As 1 glanced at tho simple volume I saw It answered an end I had long do sired that of condensing and preserv ing manuscript in n readable condition and compass at a small expense. Most of us have a few old letters too dear to throw away, and whoso uncompromising bulk brings iKTploxity in stowing them among our treasures, but the advent of tho typewriter lias made it easy to put theso Into tho form of a neat booklet with clear typewritten pages and pretty cardboard backs, and wo have the pre cious messages made plain for our own oyes and at tho same time lit tod for nimble hiding beyond the gaze of others where most old letters should bo. Let those who have no sentiment in their souls ask why wo keep old letters. A true letter Is a very part of the writer. Aro not tho words still warm and breath ing, though tho ink is faded and the hand that wrote them Is cold? Then let us keep theso beautiful words that give us help and strength; these tender loving words that makes us tender and loving. Literature is full of old letters. We are all familiar with the package al ways tied with a blue ribbon that wn meet mi often in thu novel of our daily reading And will it hurt us if in the far future when we nro done with words the little story in these letters of ours be taken to adorn a l.do that shall soothe a weary hour What Is history but old letters, and where would all tho delightful biog raphies be if no ono kept their friends' letters? What an interesting book of family history for family reading could be made from letters of brothers and sisters where correspondence Is unre strained and the as-uranco of apprecia tion brings out the best from each one, and where tho Individual traits that em phasize each character is most clearly shown! There aro father's letters, grave and dignified, but with an undercurrent of freshness that shows his heart is still young with his children. Mother's ten der missives, with her heart in every line theso aro too sacred for other eye than our own. Then the baby's letters, warm and sweet as his own rosy lipt nml altogether unique in style, for baby is tho only one of us who Is truly orig inal. Hut a Iviok of wider interest will be tho ono containing our letters from men and women of uuowii and those whoc names stand in authority on tho subjects discussed, And the best of this bookmakiug is that it adds one more tie to the family bonds, it cultivates the homo feeling and affection Unit is the anchor of our lives and gives us one more resource for a rainy day, M . iauct Ii. Ilouiros. . M)TAIHiK ADMiKSS. ;LEVELAND'S INAUGURAL DELIVCNED UNDER ADVERSE CONDITIONS. Hit Appcnreil liniii.llil.i o Ilm lliiiri-llnt-n (if Ilm littler Miirrli Wind- Mi-mlier nf (lie Ailliillilnlrillliili Itenli'Uiil hy ) 111 in Heeliern t.Hiiiiiiit'ft Artful Minilpiiliitlnii. H'i lul ('irii"ipmiilelifn. Wahiiinciion, .March Itl.-One of tho most remarkable scenes I have ever wit uesied was tho manner In which CI rover Cleveland delivered his inaugural ad dress nearly two weeks ago. You have long ago read accounts of the Inaugura tion and seen tho pictures thereof that were printed in the dally and tho weekly Illustrated papers, but as yet, I daresay, you have seen nothing that gives you an adequate notion 01' tho singularly slrlk- now rarsmcNT cuivixand i:t.ivi:m:i ins i.vAvnviiAi. aiiiu:ss. Ing figure presented by tho hero of flint occasion. Since tho inauguration I have heard scores of men say that they will nover forget Mr. Cleveland's delivery of that inaugural address. Tho day. you know, was bitterly cold. A strong wind swept over tho capitol hill from tho north, and though tho snow had censed falling every gust car ried a shower of frozen pal tides with it. As .Mr. Cleveland rose from his chair beside the chief justice to deliver his ad dress a Hurry of wind, that evidently had been lurking around tho comer for that very purpose, struck him full in the face and nearly blinded him with Its dash of fine, hard snow. Mr. Cleve land paid no more attention to this rude interruption than if it had been a gentle breath from a balmy springtime zephyr. Never before under similar eiroiiin stances probably was a man so oblivious to his surroundings us .Mr. Cleveland ap peared that hour. Tho weather appar ently was tho thing furthest from his thoughts. It was a climacteric which ex-1 eluded every consideration but that of' consecration to tho great business in hand. With Ills left baud holding llis silk hat ami his right hand plunged into the pocket of his big coat, Mr. Cleveland faced the crowd and tho storm. Ills face was turned half toward tho sky, as if ho felt himself uplifted by the transcendent importance of the moment. It was noth ig to him that others were Buffering ith the cold, shrinking within the col lars of their coats in hopes of escaping the severity of tho winds. Ho heeded not tho fact that tho lock of hair which still remains like an oasis in the desert just above his forehead was flaunting about like a flag in a gale. Ho did not know that his breath, frosted in tho icy atmosphere, was seen emerging tlrst from one side of his face and then from tho other like the escaping steam from thu cylinders of u locomotive. BnciurrAiiY niti:ii.M at his t.asi:. There was not a trace of self conscious ness in his milliner. Ho upHnred even to be oblivious to the great throng sur rounding him and hanging on his every word. Ho gave un complete an illustra tion as the world ever saw of a man talking not to his environments, but to IM.OOO.OOO of sovereigns, to tho world at large, to history. His voice was full and strong, though he talked into tho teeth of the north wind. Not a word did ho skip, not uu Inflection of a syllable was slighted. For once in his life G rover Cleveland was surely majestic. There is a tradition in Washington that Mr. Cleveland, though a moral hero, is a physical coward. I have heard no end of peoplo talk about his timidity; his employment of guards; his failuro to walk the streets of tho city as other pres idents huvo done; his entrunco during his former term of railway stations by the back door. I do not believe there is the slightest foundation for the gossip. If ever iiiuan gave evidence of possession cf physical courage of the highest sort, Mr. Cleveland did in his inauguration day performance. Not only did he stand for '.'." minutes with head bared to tho storm during the delivery of Ids Inaugu ral and taking the oath of oflleo, but dur ing the remainder of the afternoon ho faced a howling blizzard on tho review ing stand, when even tho newspaper re porters were frozen out, and doffed his hat every time he was saluted or tho American flag was dipped. Tho fear that ho would not come out of this ordeal sound nml well happily proved groundless Tho day and even ing after tho inauguration Secretary Uresham was with the president ut tho Whito Houso, and Mr. Cleveland was ' I ' - never in better physical torm or happier ipirit". Not so much as a cold troubled him. "He is as strong as a mule," said decretory (Iresham In that graphic west ern way of his. Secretary (Ireshaiu, despite tho pecul iar circumstances attending his appoint ment, Is already pno of tho most popular of all of Mr. Cleveland's cabinet minis ters This is due as much to his charm ing manners ns to anything elm', Hois simplicity Itself. Ho has a great fui..l oi humor nml a largo repertory of theso homely sayings which helped to make Abraham Lincoln fatuous, Urcsham is a good deal such a man as Lincoln was, depending for his strength less upon learning than upon common sense, wholly without affectation or ceremony in his contact with men, naturally rather than by cultivation gentle and courteous, nml his sympathies always with tho common people. If you want toseoGreshani at his best, call on him at his private rooms. You will find him perchance lying on sofa, uirroundeil by friends, smoking the ci gar, which Is his inevitable companion except during oflleo hours, and with his feet thrown about in the most lazy and comfortable of ways. The old time Dem ocrats wheat first were inclined to growl about his appointment talk differently after they have seen and talked with tho new secretary. "How that man could huvo over been anything but a Demo crat," they say, "is more than 1 can un derstand. Ho Is a natural born Demo crat." I confess 1 don't know what that moans, for as far as my observation goes n natural Democrat Is very much like a natural Itepublican. It nil depends upon the man. All tho members of the new adminis tration are head over heels in work. They get up early in the morning and stay up till after midnight. They are besieged at their olllces, in their private rooms and even at their dinner tables in tho hotels at wh'ch they stop. No way has been invented of suppressing the oflleo seeker. Hois u necessary evil in any political party. Hut tho busiest man of them all Is tho now secretary of war. Daniel Lament, It is pretty well un derstood, is the political innuager of tho administration, under Mr. Clevelaiul's orders, of course. Ho knows tho poll- 8KCIU;TAY 1.AMONT AM) TIICOITICi: SCIIK- r.its. tlclans; ho can distinguish the drones from tho honey workers; ho is not easily imposed upon. In addition to all this ho knows his chief's personal likes and dislikes better than any other man in Washington. If you come to Washing ton during tho next two or three weeks, don't fail to go over to tho war depart ment and see how the office seekers gather nrouud tho doer marked "Secretary of War." And if you can got inside take a look at the little colonel "handling" his callers. Ho Is easy and sleek. A thou sand words aro said to him for every one that ho says in reply. And how olllly ho disposes of his caller and sends him nwuy wondering what in the deuce he came there for! Lament is tho smallest man in thecabi net.which is distinctly a ministry i f large men. Some ono has said, paraphrasing the old maxim, "Young men for war und old men for counsel," npplying it to Lament's case, "Big men for counsel and little men for war." Tho thinnest man in the cabinet is Secretary Carlisle of tho treasury department. It Is funny to seo tho lank Mr. Carlisle sandwiched in be tween tho giants of tho cabinet, Secre tary Smith and Postmaster General Bis sell. Theso two are enormous men, but unlike many largo men with a predisjio sition to fat they are both physically and mentally active. Hoke Smith is olio of tho quickest men in the business. Old timers say they never before saw a sec retary of tho interior who could compre hend a caso so readily or decide it so promptly. There is not an atom of ti midity iu this man's composition. TOO THICK AM) TOO THIN. Over at the treasury department tho newspaper men sadly miss diaries Fos ter. While ho was at the head of tho de partment. Mr. Foster held every day a wrtof reception f newspaper men, chat ting and gossiping with them very free ly. At times he said rather too much, us men are likely to when they becomo loquacious, but Secretary Carlisle cannot bo licensed of this fault. Ho believes In keeping still, and een the most expert newspaper man can get nothing out of him but uninteresting monosyllables. Wai.tehWkij.mvn. r jfcfeU P-Jt y2j lA i (g) lffi M 1 1! jI HOW CHOLERA KILLS. in i:M'H .MIi'rn.rnpLt (iliptSmnn lulrr- mlliiK I'lirtn. Sprcliil (.'nrrixpnliilctict'. O.MAll, March 10. There nro few of tis who have not in some corner of the mind a little nook or pigeonhole labeled "Cholera," where wo have stored u mis cellaneous ami more or less fenrsonio collection of fads and fancies relative to the plague which has been promised m ns a feature of life's variety jcrforiiinnec for tho coining summer. For mnny years I have studied this mid kindred diseases, with the aid of tho microscope, and huvo grown to terms of intimacy with the lltt!e scoundrels which are just now disturbing our peace. I want tc tell you in a plain I'.nglish way just how It Is that cholera, typhoid fever and the rest of that family of discuses briny about tho dread result of death. I'pon my table stands u row of littll phials containing a rich preparation ol lueutjolly.orbecf tea, all tightly stopped with cotton wool. Upon looking closely It Is easy to seo upon tho surface ol each of the jellies Btntill patches of va rious colors looking not unlike the mold which sometimes collects upon the housewife's preserves. Theso p.itche nro living and growing colonies of the organism which wo know as "bacteria,'' which aro the so called "germs" of many diseases. Hach colony is made up of but ono kind of bacteria tho seed of out particular variety of ill. You might pick and choose your death. From till bottle you could draw cholera; that holds typhoid fever; the next, consuuip Hon. Tho bacteria aro almost infinitely lit tle. It would take a congregation of 11,000 or -1,000 of one of the larger species to make n speck largo enough to bo oven dimly discerned by tho straining of tho sharpest eyo unaided. Tho creatures can hnrdly bo said to bo "organized," for in their truly Infinite simplicity they arc made up of but a single cell the very simplest form in which life can exist. Tho bacterium has, though, a truly won derful capacity for growth and increase. It does not multiply in tho orthodox ways, but a tiny wall will appear to form through tho middle of the body, n division uikcs place where this wall formed, and presto! where wo had one wo now have two, then four, then eight. until, if thero is food and warmth and nothing to interfere with the process, a single cell will so increase that at the end of even :M hours thero will bo lTi.OOO.OOO or moro of descendants! It is this that makes the epidemics of disease so dread ful, and which makes them spread and run their hideous courso with a rapidity nml certainty which it has seemed al most beyond the power of tho physician to control until within a short time. Now that wo begin to know something about tho bacteria wo are not without hope. The real seat of operations of cholera or typhoid fever is the bowels, where the specific bacteria of tho disease must find an actual lodgment beforo tho troublo can possibly begin. It makes no differ ence how much of tho disease thero may bo around you, it cannot possibly affect you iu any way unless the bacteria which ctiuso it enter your own system and take up their residence in tho intes tinal canal to grow and multiply. There is nothing ethereal about the 'bacteria. They aro actual entities. These diseases aro not communicated by a miasma "iu ' the air." ns malaria seems to lie. You can no moro dio because your neighbor has cholera or smallpox than you could as a result of his having taken nrussio acid unless the germs of disease from his sickroom tiro permitted to become your tenants. Now, suppose that the bacteria pecul iar to cholera have entered tho system and taken up their abode iu that chosen seat ot activity, tho bowels; what comes of it? How does the disease act to pro duce death? Tho process is simply this: The functions of life iu tho bacteria re sult iu tho production of a poison known as "ptomaine," much as tho process of life in tho human body results in the formation of carbonic acid, etc. This "ptomaine" attacks the delicate lining of tho bowels, destroying tho cells and breaking down the tissues, and is ab sorbed and carried to various other parts of tho body to create tho local disturb ances which wo have learned to recog nize as "symptoms" of tho disease. When this destructive ojieration be gins, nature is quick to bo on hand with her favon.o process of repair and heal ing by sen iiug a myriad of new cells from the ever ready blood to build up new tissues and make new walls and lin ings for the injured regions. If you cut your linger, the process of repair is the wime. If tho bacteiia present aro not too many or have not obtained too much of u start, so that tho "ptomaine" is too rapidly evolved, and if prompt measures have been taken by tho physician to head off the "varmints," nature will accom plish her purpose; otherwise tho tissues, both old and new, continue to give way until they are reduced to almost a sieve like condition, and hemorrhages make it another case for the death cart and the mortuary column. Medicines can hardly be said to cure tho disease. All the phy sician can do is to put a stop to tho growth of tho bacteria; nature will "do the rest." Now, when you know that tho bacteria can only live and carry on their business iu the actual presence of decomposition, it Is not so difficult to understand tho in listenco of tho health boards and physi cians regarding absolute cleanliness if wo aro to avoid disease. Tho most common means of contagion is drinking water in which waste materials from badly or un intelligently drained neighborhoods have been allowed to accumulate, and iu which tho bacteria or their spores from hick room waste find lodgings. To be e'are less now in regard to these matters is simply to cry; "Long livo tho bacteria! Long livo tho cholera, and death to him who gets it!" William Lkiiiton. rrKrt'M Iii I.oinliiii, London oinnihubOH nro now lighted by electricity. Tho buttery from which tho current is obtuined in placed iu u wooden box under ono of tho scuts. Hood's Cures MIhs Etlnn Kyle Chamberlain, South Dakota. Works Like Magic Blt.llMntlMI.lH.ABMnl V1.Kl.aaB k .a M i r-iiuMiiiui-iBiii .Miuiriui i-uin una Ach08 Porfoctly Cured " I limit say Hint Hood's Banaparllla works llko iiukIc. I havo for two years been vcr scrlouily troubled with rheumatism, stitlcrlna Ititcuso pains mid aches. 1 tried nil tho rcmo dies I could got, but nil failed, until, lmlug heard so much about Hood's Sarsaparllla, I thought I would try It. Tho very first bottlo .11.1 ... .lHHl .. 1 I 9 .1 ... I uiu iiiu it fcti:.tt ui.il i'l KUijti, aim J uiuilgut 1 1 must continue. I have been using Hood's Sarsaparilla regularly, nnd nm now nw ell mnnronr." Miss i:ii.va Kvi.k, Chamberlain, South Dakota. Hood's Pills euro liver Ills, constipation blllousaoss, Jaundice, sick headache, Indigestion. PHOTOGRAPHER lliix nt crciit ex- wnut' reiiueeu nil ll.ll liistriiincnU ultli ii new I mil j. myer, direct frinn Lnmlnii.nnil Is now bolter nrepiireil Hum over lo do linn work, from locket up to lire size. Open from III u iii.tcH p. m.Hiitiilnys Mtiilln, 12 I I Stirot, Ladies' and Children's HAIR CUTTING SHAMPOOING A. Specialty AT SAM. WESTERFIELD'S BURR BLOCK. DR. T. O'CONNOR, (Successor to Dr. Clmrles Sunrlho.) Cures Cancers Tumors Wens iimt KMiilus without Mio use of Knllo Chloroform or Kther. Illllee IPOI O Street-Owen block. LINCOLN NEB. DR. HENRY A. MARTIN'S Medicallnstitute I'OIt Tlint'l'UKOI-' Chronic Diseases SPKCIALTIKh: Diseases of Worn Catarrh, Morphine and Opium Habits. Cure Guai anteeil. Consultation Kieo. OiTices, 141 South 12th Street Is WHIH.lin Another Mil 00. a UIV work. '"r Uvr "rNl " Wo ulvi. you exeluslxc lerillory. nml pay liiriio eomiiilsHliuis on the kuUh ol'siih au'lit. rl i. ut onee for the nu. ,.., ,r j , r Juiintv! Address nil c imiinlentloiiH to lul""J- II.V.Ml. MiNAI.H .VCO. C'lllt'.VIiO. Weak Men S Curo In 15 dnya. Never lleturna. I will wodlseujeJ) FItKB to my rullowtiufrm-Taa a. WJUUiiNQTON, Buffalo, N. T. PLANS FOR 25 CTS. Bond for tho National llmi.ii. r..., .1 1 ii mmy jnnriml Uoiote lo hulldiliK interest. Kiieh hUIlltmr n. ntnl.. .. n. I. . w.tof iiIiuih wwly to build froin. i'rlnOil.Vii,"; jMrii.iiiKlociu.ii.Ha.JctH. Bend for hook, "Hem. ilful Home," cimtiiliiliiK 91 plnnH In colors. Hon I for cntnloKiio of plans, fr,.. Tn Nationai! UviMiMi, AiIiuiih Eiprw HuIIiIIdb Chic. jrif7Vysy4 "T , WAX TFI) A "',KiiJViTivi:r., ,n'UI'"' "iir I'.lMII.V TICi:.si'Ul Hie ureateht liouli exer olleied to thu nubile OtllTommii i.y.li'111. which ,. i.0 Ills" IIiik '. O'ffl """'"'S ,,,," l'"hiiM.r til B" t liu I1011K 1 Kl.l., so every oiie iMiri'liiiu.w Kor his tlrst w.-iVk umL- ...A ."..', .'..: aCit) Jt, aSA Sl.HI. mA(