THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDAY , JANUARY 19. 1800. SIXTEEN PAGES 7 x H r nnPTflD IA PnDC < oi to H3 south thirteenth street KlJUblUll JMUUDO OMAHA , NEBRASKA I MEDICAL AND STJR < $ CAL DISPENSARY I DISEASES OP WOMEN A SlKCIATTY Book , clrculnrs and question list sent i free , for stamp , on Norvouincss , Con Btlpation , Neuralgia , L.cucorrhoonlnln . ? In the Back , Prolapsus , Uteri , Pllos , Fomiilo 'Wenkncss , Dyspopsin , Skin 1 Pimples , and all blood diBenses , ( Jailor ' writu * • _ _ _ . . J CATARRH f This department is in chnrgo of ono ol tbo most experienced physiclnnswho applies the euro In a most scionttflo manner , by which he instantly rollovcs and speedily cures Sneezing or Head Colds , called ncuto Catarrli ; Thick , Yellow , mid Foul Matter Accumulations in the Nn nl Passages , called Chronlo \ Catarrh Hotting and Sloughing of the \ Bones of the Nose , with discharges of ' Loathsome Matter tinged with lilood , nnd ulcerations often extending to the Eye , Ear , Throat and Lungs , called . Ulcoritlvo | Cnlnrrli 1 Also Hay Fever , Nervous Hcndacho , . Dhzipcss , Clouded Memory IMHmA tVa if \ & y \ ISitinfejjlfi OIiTJB FEET Our Improved Ball and Socket Club Fo6t Apparatus can bo worn with no into convenience , is in no son so unot sightly , nnd speedily corrects thiocomm mon malformation REMEMBER Wo make a specialty of Braces , Apu pllancos for Doformitics nnd Trusses , 1 , Club Feet , Curva uros of Spine , Piles , 1 Tumors , Cancer , Inhalation , Paralysis , ' Kidney , Bladder , Skin and Blood , and ( all Surgical Operations 1 IKAI X CO ATTEXDAA T. < 5. est Invalids Home in the West Ul the MoBt Diflloult Surgical Opor- > I " " * * ' ationa Performed iVITII SIC 11,1 , AND SUCCESS TO YOUNG MEN Vho may ho suffering _ from the ofTects ( youthful follies or indiscretions will 1 0 well , . to avail thomsolvcs of this , the Toatost boon ever laid at the nltr.r of f uiToring humauity Dr Jacobs will 1 EARLIEST BIRCH WIELDERS [ low They Arose , Flouriahod and I Survived Vicissitudes HE MAN AND LITTLE SPADE ' Vlicrc tlio First Classes Were Held ' Iho rrlvuto and Fubllo In- struotors ' Down • to the First lllgli School Mon nnil Women of Hooks At the session of the State historical looloty held in the chnpol of the state university Tuesday evening , January , 14 , the following interesting historical sketch of the public schools ot Omaha I was road by Mrs M. B. Newton of the Castollnr school of this city : There is very llttlo doubt that the first school in the city of Omaha was hold in the basomunt of , the old brick church creeled by the Congregational socloty in the winter of 1855-0. The church stood on the lot which is now in the roar of the Young Mou's Chris ! ' 1 tlan association building A Mrs ' | Au Smith enmo from Now York * " ' PP s tate , rented the northeast basement I- mont room nnd there taught ' * ' a private school Very soon after , a Miss Sarah Rock wood , who afterwards became Mrs Purple , and her sister , Miss Lucy Rock wood , had a prlvalo , school in ttio old state house building on the corner of Ninth and Farnam streets These lndios formed a part ot thp Governor Slado shlpmont of lady school tonohors to the west Almost from the ; fl rat , there were moro ohildron in the city than could bo accommodated ( in the schools Many of the early sot tiers were people of oducutlon and culture and they organized classes among thomsolvcs for mutual improve r raont 111 uifforent Btudlos Ono person after another would Instruct People 1 who wore able sent tholr children to St , 1 Louis and ether cities , but this involvoa an oxponslvo und tedious trip Fnoill- ies for travel in these days were llmltod nnd therefore this was not 1 n " t popular method Others omptoyod caohors in tholr homos The cliildron , t thoao days , however , sponk well in , hojr lntor development for the charac- or of the instruction received , There still romuiuea it largo class of children who dnmauded the Amoricnu right of oducatiou Omnha wnB incorporutod in 1857 , hnd was then divided into three wards A school direotor was elected from enoh ward The llrst were A. D. Jones , ( J. C. Monoll and Mr Kollom , , Mr Mouell had known Howard E. Kennedy in the east , aud his services as superintendent of public Instruction were engaged , Mr Kennedy arrived in 1858 and nt once began his ' work IIo found plenty to do Not t a building or a book could the city claim lie rented rooms In the stnto houbo and Noyembpr J , 185,9 , aftpr personally at- tondtng to every arrangement , opened three 6ohoo1s < Ho , himself , Uught in fjitxa stnto liouso , assisted by Mrs Nye A llttlo ono story Iramo building ou Thirteenth btroot , uear Douglas , was in tfcharge of Mrs Rust , nnd a similur school 011 Cuming street , near the old military bridge , was taught by a Mrs Terry For years tboso tcaouorsdtd excellout work The 6ohools were it- gunrnntco to cure any case ot seminal . weakness or prlvnto disease of uny klnil or chnrnctor which ho undertakes Ho would , thuroforo say to the unfortunate sufferer | who mny read this notice , that you _ are treading upon dangerous ground when jou longer delay In seeking - . ing , the proper remedy for your com plaint ] , , Yon may bo in the llrst stage romombcr > you nro approaching the j last If you are bordering upon the last , and are suffering Mine or all of Its edects [ , , rcmombor that If you obstinate ly ] persist in procrastination , the time must come hen the most skillful phy sician can render you no assistance , when , the door of hope has boon closed , against you , when no nngol of moicy can , bring joti relict In no case has the doctor ] failed of success Then lot not dospalr work Itself upon your Imnglnn- tion but avail yourself of the beneficial results of his treatment before jour case is bo von d the roach of medical skill ] , or before grim death hurries you i to a prematura grave j MIDDLE-AGED MEN j There nio many ot the ages of thirty to sixty who nro troubled with too fro qucnt evacuations of the blnddor , often accompanied by a slight smarting or burning sensation , unci wonkening the system in a manner the patient cannot account for Ou examining the miliary donosits n ropy scdimont will bo found , and ' sometimes small particles of nlbu- mon will appear , or the color bo of a thin or milkish hue , ngalu changing tea a dark and torpid appearance There are many who die of this dilliculty , ig norant of the cause , which is the second sago of somiuul weakness Dr J. will gunrnntco a perfect cure in all such cases , and a healthy restoration of the genito-urlnury organs TO ALL MEN Suffering from Nervous Debility , Lost Manhood , Falling Memory , Exhausting Drains , Terrible Dreams , Head and Buck Ache , and all the eHocts loading to early decay and perhaps consumption ot insanity , treated sciontilically , by now methods Consultation free Ca tarrh , Kliouuiatism , Poisonous Dis charges , milky urine , painful swellings quickly relieved and radically cured Illustrated book "Lite's Secret Errors 4 cents Send for Question List on any Chronic Unease Dr V cure * Piles without llic use ot'llic knife or ligature co.\sui/i'ation rmi : : a rmr.Mn.v CHAT COSTS NOTHINO JCcmciiilicr , the Doctor iinilor- lukcN 110 case unless confident or effecting : n Cure TO THE AFFLICTED A SUSlICIOX The majority of sufferers lrom sexual diseases are disinclined to seek relief from familv practitioners ; lest in an un- guarded mumont ho might inadvort- antly disclose his condition "Wo hava I talnments Efforts were made to follow a system of grading , which Mr Konj nody planned ; but In schools like those were \ this was found to bu impossible The year of 1800 was an unlucky ono for Omaha schools The linancial troubles 1 of the approaching war nffocted the city greatly Public sohool funds j were exhausted Classes formed at intervals - torvals by people whoso occupations uf- forded sufficient loisuru were again resorted - sorted 1 to Mr Kennedy loft for the east 1 , expecting to return soon and resume - sumo 1 his work , but changed his plans later and did not return for several years In that year Samuel D. Bonis , a gentleman who still rosldes here , came from the oust , rented rooms in the state house and organized a private school , whichhocouauctcdfornlnoyears Itwas extensively advertised as the Oraalm high school und , is mentioned by that niuno in the report of W. E. Harvey , the territorial commissioner , in his ro1 port for 18G0. This report gives the number of pupils in all the schools of the city as 208 , or a fraction ever CO per cent of the school population From 1800 to 1803 there were no schools in the city , although n tow ef forts were rando to establish them In 1802 a Mr McCarthy , the school diroc- tor from the first ward , made nppllcn- tion to the city council for permission to erect u school building on .Tollerson square , which was granted Raising - ing the bonds for that build ing , however , was not oasv , nnd sufllciont money could not bo obtained until 1803. Then the llrst sohool building ever owmjd by the elty was erected ou the southwest corner of Jefferson square It was a frame bulld- Ing of medium size , containing at first only ono room This sohool was erected under the personal supervision of B. E. B. Kennedy , and was opened in Sop tombor , 1803. It was crowded to excess from tbo llrst day The unhappy teacher first engaged was utterly unable tocon- crol the crowd , nnd wns dismissed at the end of the first month A gentle man was employed whoso methods of discipline appear to hnvo been original at least Ho fashioned a woodon'in- Btrumont somowhnt like a small spade with a long handle , and with this ho alternately spatted and punched dis- orderly pupils , oven at quite a dlstanco from him , Hisroign lastedbut a month , and ho was sucscodod by a Mrs Cooper , under whoso care the school llourlsnod ' In a very short time , the room was IIdivided , tliorobyuccomodating a larger number of pupils und a Mr Hutcninson L was employed as principal The fol- ; lowing your , ground was purchased on Cass btroot , between Fourteenth nnd Ftftoonth and the building mo vod there iowhoro itromuinod until 1878 when it ( was lomovod to Burtnnd Tivonty-sac- \ end streets aud is now used us a stable , From this second start , Omaha schools have progressed stondlly In lbtU Lincoln'sdeclsion that Omaha should bo the tormlnusot the Union Pa- clllo railroad gavongroatimpotustotho growth of the city and what had before : been a struggling western vlllago , ho I came an ambitious town School ne connnodntions , however , were limited , und In 18U ( , the Episcopal church or- ganized a school for young ladies out on 1 Saunders street , in what is now known 1 as the Sarntogf district Its llrst pupil 1 was Mrs Fiomon Drake Pupils who acould not bo accommodated in the public sohools were thus afforded an- other chunCQ for homo education whieh they were not slow tp grasp , The school was removed to Sixteenth'and Jonoa strcots in lbOT and l roinaluod tlero ) in care ot the Rev , J. n. IoughdrU ) : until I860. , A beautiful 1 building wus thou erected on South To nth street aud the school removed I thither It is under a board ot tlfieon 1 itdlroctors , ot whom the bishop of this OUT SHOWING PORTION OF DISPENSARY BUILDING Braces for Deformities , Surgical Appliances In this dopnrtmont wo trent successfully many of the most hideous deformities , human beings whoso distorted limbs render them an object of pity and loathing to all with whom they come In contact By the use of apparatus , some of our o\n inanufneturo , and others that ltavo received the endorsement of the leading Burgeons of Europe and America , wo can confidently assure jou of complete restoration in many deformities supposed to bo beyond the reach of human skill Ilcnco , to these suffering with any deformity or mnlformntion of the bodj ; yours is possible ; by a case that is nmonablo to treatment , nnd though you may have boon defrauded or trcatod by an incom petent porMm , do not despair ; call andsoo mo , or write a full history of jour case , and rest assured I will euro you it it can bo done by science and skill I will gladly answer all questions vou may ask as this branch of my business has enlisted my heartfelt sympathies . To parouts and guardianfl You will bring upon your gioy hairs the curses of your child if you fail to atail j oursolf of this opportunity to restore jourotTspring to honlth and piopor dovclopmont and correction of any malformation 1 perfectly adjust all apparatus so that it can bo worn with as little inconvenience as posbiblo The patient only re mains , In most cases , for a few duys at the dispensary , and thou returns homo , following balance of treatment by cor respondence Usunlly the wearing ot the upplianco does not interfere with one following the ordinary tuocations of lifo diocese is president Several small parochial j schools were Btarted about this t same time by the Catholic sooiotios of the town ' From 1801 to 1809 the schools were largely 1 under the care of B. E. B. Ken nedy 1 , John Evans , Dr Miller , J. M. Woolworth ' , John Rush and many others who are still rosidcuts of i the city The buildings were inferior but 1 the care bestowed upon their in- mntes 1 was uperior Full records of these i schools were kept and turned ever < by B. E. B. Kennedy to the board of < oducatiou in 1872 , but these records have j unfortunately everyone boon lost In 1808 , the Catholic rcsidonts of the cltv 1 mndo a request for a portion of the public ] school money to bo used in main taining 1 the parochial schools This the board ' of directors refused to pay , even after i an ace to give thorn $1,000 had boon passed by the legislature To compromise 1 tbo matter , the directors rented the building owned by the Catholic 1 church on Eighth strcot " near Harnoy , paying $1,000 rent This wise arrangement uvorted all trouble at that time and the rooms were occupied until the church socloty waa obliged to retain them for Its own use Slnco then there hn3 been llttlo or no effort in this direction There are now about oightcon hundred pupils enrolled in the twelve Catholic schools , including nenrly two hundred students of Croigh- ton college In 1808 the capitol was vacated and the legislature of 1809 prcsontod the grounds * and building to Omaha for a high sohool Six gentlemen - tlomon constituting the board of regents organized by the leg islature hold their llrst mooting in the otllco of ono of the members , Mr J , M , Woolworth A Chicago architect , G. P. Rundolph , examined the building and pronounced it unlit for use , The tronsuror of the board was qualified by law to rocolvo the $38,810 duo from the state , The regents also thought $12,500 was duo from the bonrd ot sohool direct ors aud roqucsted the payment of that sum John Evans was then the treasurer of the directors und , uf tor consultation with his colleagues , refused to pay it on the ground of illegality After several efforts to obtain it the board of regents resolved to suatho board of directors ' for $2,600. Early In 1870 , the directors ; offered to pay the regents the sum of $ .2,000 , on condition that the suit thou pending should ho withdrawn and the 1 pupils from the city schools who could pass oxamlntitlou should bo admitted into the high school and that there 1 should bo 0110 general and harmonl- ous system of grading throughout ' These conditions worn accepted The directors , Mossrs B. E. B. Kennedy , John Evans and Simpson mndo also uu- ether change nnd ono thoroughly in harmony with Nebraska enterprise and i I justice They established the custom 1 of paying for the work itself without ; regard to the box of the tenohor , Oinnhu being the llrst city In the United States to do so Money mnttors being now adjusted at the request of the board of regents j and the bqnrd of dlroctors , Mr S. D. ' Heals arranged ' a system of grading , Children were permuted to otitor at Jive , j ears of nge The * child [ so entering was placed in the ) flr t or "A" class of the first I grade , each year of forty weeks making a grade Each year was divided I into three terms named "A , " "B" nnd 1 "O , " "A" being the drat and , lC" the third and highest Four years finished the primary grades and four years moro 1 the giummur , Tno pupils ot the eighth L "C" who were able to pabs the roqujrqd examination were then admitted to the 1 ninth grade , the lowest eluss ot the > High school This course enables a pupil of avorngo ability to finish his high 1 school course at about the ago of seventeen It has proved a most satis factory arrangement nnd is the Vnsis of the school system of this day [ Another chapter on this subject will appear iu next Sundays Biu ] Winter liotttm Courier Now blustorinjr is tlio winter day For 1 sunsluno and tor waruith wo pray Como are tlio wintry Jays bo drear ; Mo sunshine bright , no warmth Is hero Wo 1 gaza upon the hillsides bare Wo 1 breathe the keen and , nipping air , And -j wish again the days wo linew When wo were naked , "Js't hot enough for you ' sir > Gui/wui.ii5. A sponge eight foot In circumferouco is on exhibition ( at a store in Now York , While digging In his ear with a pin Charles Mowers j of Shippcusburg , Pa , did himself an 1 injury which resulted la lockjaw A hen at Chnmborsburg , Pa , began the now 1 year by laying an egg wolghlng four and > a lmlf ounces , with 11 sort of bay-win dow ' attachment on althor Ride , Antrim , N. II , with a population of about ,1,300 , boasts of four nonogonarlans and twonty-tivo octogonariuns Twenty-one' of these twcDty-nino old people are womun A iJellnlro , Mich , tailor has made a pair of pants out of U0O different Ulnds ot cloth for a fortune-bunting youth , who wants to create the impression that lie is tbo most economical man on oartli The pants cost $100. $100.A A Berlin professor while dissecting a shark found In its stomach u dolphin weigh ing 128 pounds , forty-tbrco fish , a decom posed seal , a human arm and four human legs Notwithstanding this • • feed tbo brute was probably after a bait when ho was cap tured , Jerry Givens , a young man of Martins vlllo , Ind „ while hunting on Islands formed bv tbo swollnn river , came upon a largo ball of snauus which bad boon driven from their winter quarters by the wutor and the pleas ant weather Ho killed all at a singles shot , und on disengaging thorn found monster blacksnakes und live gurtcrsnakes As an illustrution ot the qucor blundora 1 sometimes made by compositors tbo follow • ing is noted ; A country t correspondent in ' giving on account of u cortam pastors ' able ' uddresss to a Moadvlllo paper , wrote that ho was full of flro anil yjgor 1' When the \ proof came In it pava the somewhat startling J information tbut the minister wus ' full of j pie and vinegar " 1 111 The incessant barkihg'df his dog induced I John Drown of Lorlmeria „ to Investigate , und as ho emerged frimtrtho kitchen door and passed Into tbo yard { IP was seized by a big bear with which no had a tussle , ffo linally oscupeu from tho.jmlmal's clutches , As Brum were s inurzfd ll Is thought ho qicapcd from traveling Italians Charley Sprouso , wli6Tjfyes in Vest Fork , near Parltorsburg , caughra big plko which J wuighod twonty-nine poalAls , In a strange manner , a day or two ug TUorlso In the ICinuwha overflowed tliojjlcket fence around 1 Sprouso's garden , Wiiftn the wato fell the pflio winch hud got JijijU'Iillo It was up couldn't gut out and wAscpturcd , 1 A young lady In the toy/A of Minsk ItussU , ' purchased A pair of gloves a la Sarah Bern ; hardt Immediately after putting them ou her hauds beuun to itch Tbo next day nor arms were covorcd with sores , und a week later alio died of blond poisoning Tbo doc tors suppose tbut tbo skfn belonged to an animal that had some cnutaglous , malady In the wine cellar utfddr tbo Hotoldp VUIe , Bremen , tlioro arc twelve cases of holy wine , ouch case Inscribed with the name of one of the apostles , It was deposited in Its present resting plueo 2W jours ago Ono case of this wine , consisting of ffvoox hefts of 201 I bottles , cost 500 rix dollars In 1W. ( Includ- ing the expense of keeping up the collar , In tcrest on the original outlay , and upon later , est , ono ortliosoox bolts would today cost 65.va > T,0t0 rnc dollars , or about FlUOO.OOJ a bottle Muie Scmbrlch lus been singing ia Her lln , and it Is said that the quality and range of her voice are soaiowhal Impan ou THE SINS OF YOUNG WOMEN Dross , Manners and Morala Con sidered by The Duohosa " THE FRIPPERIES OF FASHION ! They are Entirely Too Prevalent Ainonc ; the Girls of Today Over ilrcssinjr and Tight Ijaciue Manners to bo Mendml Direct Words From The Duchess " ( CovurtuM ) Sins thcro nro of omission , scarcely less worthy of condemnation than these of commission , o\ \ which many girls and young women are guilty Mild sins , some of thum , no doubt , yet deserving of censure The tight-lacing question is so old that wo have all decided on consigning it to limbo And a good thing , tool In splto of all the doctors who have sworn onmlty nguinst it , , I ' dent bellevo tlght-laoing hns created the havoo uraong growing girlhood that It is supposed to have The real sin ot the present ago with regard to dress is tlio desire to overdo itl They overdo ovorytlilng nowadays , but in the'mattor of dress they quite , distinguish thoinsolves Bo the girl or young married woman never so poor , she will still gown herself according to the latest fashion and in the latest , the most expensive texture , whether her purse will run to It or not , This means vice of 11 sort , If you * cant afford to stand up in raiment that makes your richer friends glorious , you should mnko up your mind to the fact that such luxuries nro not for you You should tnko a lower seat , und confess yourself beaten To the ordinary mind such confession is painful It battles with it , argues with it , und finally gives way to the lust ot the eye , and orders the dainty FariBinn gown , • with tv sure if suppressed knowledge that the whore withal to pay for it will never bo forth coming Ilonco arises that dull ( loud called . debt a llond that swallows up not only ' , ones Bolf-respcct , but ones pence of mind If girls would only bollovo that { they can look as lovely in a well mndo cotton as in u chef d'ouuvro of Worth's 1 half the heart burns of bocicty would bo . done away with But to establish this > belief would be a task before which that o ( Sisyphus would sink Into Insignlfl- canoe , . Too sternly bent on fashion is the young woman of the present day Laces , llouucos , tripporios of all sorts occupy the time that might bo moro advantageously glvou to study , or even to these lighter arts that upraise and render bonutitel the mind And yet to bo too accurately a la mode has its ad- vantages A charm lu a young girls dross is the freedom from constraint that Itshould suggest the embodiment of nil the sweetness and light that belongs of right to youth and youth only ! A careless shoe string , in who a tlo I see wild civility , Do moro bewitch 1110 than when art Is too proclso in every part Thus hung Horrlck , bwootost of poets , ever two hundred yours ago , Debt Is a fault of commission , but as we'fiio 01 ; the subjoet , lot us look at the faults of omission , where dross is still the matter on hand Some women too often the young women go to the other extreme , and mot family physicians w ho made it rule to nuvortloo thoinsolves by refer ring to their patients But it rcliablo tpoclallst never indulges in this kind ot business Ho pays for his ndvorliso- montq lu the papers just its any business man does 1 11 All communications con lid on 11 al Medicine or instruments seat by mall or express , securely packed , no marks to indicate contents or Bender Ono 1 personal intorvlow preferred Call nnd consult us or send history of tlio case , and wo v111 solid our BOOK TO MEN FBBE , Upon So.Mial , Special NervousDisensns , lmpotcncy , Bad Blood , lileot ami VnrlI cocolo " " " " " " " " " \Vc 11111U0 a speiinHy or PRIVATE : - : DISEASES . CONTAGIOUS DISEASES Such as Syphilis , in all its fearful stages primary , secondury , torttarj ; Ulcerous lltroetlotis of the Throat , Nose , Bones , and Los of the Hair , as well as Gonorrhcoa , Cicely or Contagious Dis charges , Stili'tui'o , Cistith and Orchitis , all resulting fi0111 exposure AVohiuo so arranged onr treatment for the above diseases that it will not only afford immediate rcliof , but purV mnnentcuro WE TREAT Club 1 cot Curvature ot flplne Nasal , Tnroat litiiifr Kidney , lllmliler , and Nervous Ultou cs , Stricture , l'llei , 1 unions Cancers , larnlysls KpUopiy , nnd nil Skin and Hlooil Dlseiim Trusses , llr.icos and all Appllancoj I'orty elegant rooms for the nccoinnuiUutlou ot pa11 tleuts _ _ _ _ _ _ KIDNEY DISEASE Ihn klilnejsnro the only orguns In the body wlili h purify the Wood , Ci gallons ot which mss througn them oiery 1 hours Any disorder allotting thorn Is ulnn > s diingerous and serious 1 becuusc It prov onts them from fully do in&lug Hie blood ot the \\aste mid toul matter , tlicurlc arid , iwhlch Is constantly belli ? formed ) lu a largo portion ot the cases ot kidney disease there are but few Indications lit lift thntxuch Is the tase for the reason that there are no sensitive nerves or sensations In the kidneys , hence there is usunlly no palu or uncuslncss ; rofcrable to tills locality SVMPTOM8 Hcailnche , flcklo anpetlte fail ure of eveslght , tube costs In the urine , frequent - quent desire to urinate , especially at night , tiger claw cramps In the calf ot the legs , gi-ucluat loss ot tleih nnd dropsical silnlllng , ettrcmo wakefulness , distressing nenousnoss , chJonlc rheumatic pains sclauca , nouralgla , constipation , followed by Ottul dlarrhwa and almotlng pams 1n the breasts , drawing-down aching pains nnd burning sensations in the small of the bacK , scanty , dark colored urine while taking credit to themselves for being bojond the palo that marks the oxtrnvngant dame , fall into an error not t less despicable than the ono they conI domn Extrnvaganco is one thing , slovenliness another No true woman 1 should despise adorn mon t. What 1 makes her lovely in the sight of her follows should bo dear to her Adorn ment , that is , within certain limits But often the eye is olTondcd by the clover , the interesting woman the woman whoso intellect is "fnr above the average the woman , in fact , whoso mind ls-so delightful that ono feels her body should bo akin to It , and yet who so unmercifully uoglocts the Inttor that ono is compelled to shudder at her want of taste as ono gazes at her To admire the beautiful is a common instinct implanted in all breasts To desire it is nn acquired taste And money is not every thing where personal 1 adornment is in question : as 1 hnvo said before , the young girl the young per son , " as they call her In England can u if bhe has a sense of harmony born within her , so mnnngo a slender in como that she may present to the passing eye as fair a vision as her sister , the milllun- nlre , who moves languidly hlthor and ( thither through the crowd , clad in priceless silks and laces Enough of di ess ; a fur moro important fault rcmaiiiB bolilnd 'iho question of dress is in a racasuro trilling , when compared with that of ( manners Hero comes the brusque girl ! who thin its honesty , " as she doslgnatos > t'udoncss , a real vtrtuo To Bav what you think to live in ' an eternal "palaoo , of truth is , she imiigines , to bo nbovo the nvorngo , and to soar in a rotilm from which less virtuously minded pee plo are excluded This girl , as a rule , forgets that to bo rude is not always to bo Inmost Bettor nro the slovunly oiiob of the earth than these last , for though , as Thooprnstus hns it , "Sloven- lyness is a liuy and beastly nogligouco of a mans own parson , whereby ho bo comes so sordid as to bo offensive to these about hun , " still it is not so un- forgivable a fault as the curllsh deter niliiatlon to square all the cornorn of f life , and forbid a kindly curve any wnoro Iho clover girl , who poses as a social solon , and aspires to give wisuom to nil mon , is only if she but know it nso- olal bore "A word to the wlso is suf- llctont , " and therefore I would say to nil would-be savnutos that to place tholr clovemoss too much on evidence is n fault hcarcoly to bo condoned by the prosout generation Wo all like to think oureolvoo clever , aiiu to bo put down and made to fuel small by a chit , of a girl raises wrath irroprosslblo in the bosoms of most of us Of nil girlish typos , however , the loud und noisy ono is among the most inox- eiibablo , The noisy girl makes a room nil her own , She onturs it with u loud laugh and loaves it with n scream mount fciMiiorrimoutbut suggestive only of dU- comfort to the unhappy listeners She is Invnrlnbly n pursuer of men , She cultivates the saying of fast things und believes herself singularly succosstul when she hns brought the blush I uhdino to the cheek of the very yoUng man , who has just luiiuohud himself upon the hutors of sociuty and is hardly prepared for nuvnl onga omonts of ths | kind Nobody cares for her ] und gen erally she winds up her enreor by mar rying a uuruto ot the mildest Kind , who bus nccoptcll liar nroiwsal of marriage bocuuso he has ( icon afraid to say her uny Horo,1s. , Jigwpver , omptliJng wpr&o than the fast and noisy girl This is the fust , but insidiously silent , married womun I The inornl blot ! who creeps through society with a demure and mmmmmmmmmmmmmm wlilchsntld < iniiii\t ] nnl mty depo lt sand HH | mucus or tube cnsls and bo roered w 1th creasy _ wimi a Rrndiulfiillnro of strength and oiilroiuo HH | inllor ] ot face , pulllncss under tlio e > e < , pernl t- _ l vnt swelling ot the ntiktcs , abdomen nnd Ior * . HHH unaccountably Minrp pains In tlio lu-art , thort- _ H _ uessof brmtii caused bythnlunKS llllim : with waterwiilih the klducis full to puss oir fiilliiia H ot peritplriil'oii , freiiuont chills nuil fovui , H uspeiliilly ] nt night , etc etc H KIDNEY DISEASES INHERITED M Kldnov j dlsenso taints the liloo.l . , nnd blood H Itnlnt is trniisuilsslble from parent to clillu , H l'eirons whose pnrouts die or kidney disease ) H should ' bo pirt Irulnrly carorul to prevent tlm HH | dtsenso from nnlnlntc n hold ou llicir system , _ 1 It you lui\o nuy ot these Initlrntlons of Mint H weiiKiiessdo not wntt until yoiu health ts com pletely shattered B BLADDER DISEASE H Nine persons out of owry ten ha0 at sonin HH | time ' ' eipeiioucedsomo form of bladder trouble , HH either , , , liilllatnnintlon.citnrrh or yin\el Tlicio B nronrloil < stages ot hlmldcr discus , tno nio < t H common belni ; mtlnimiiiitory or ncuto tnlurrli tiouule t , , which is oxeetdlnKly pnlurul , ofloa _ leadliii ; to ulceration , nbress or kidney dlsenso Unless ' removed > em sot sufterltiK nu < l toituro H am ; sure to fellow . . . . . i fn.Ml'oMs Dull nclihiR nnlns In the lower H partsnf the bodv lront and biiik , tiuiiuelitde- B sire : to pnss water , w hlch Is of v-arlablo color _ xcildlnu dsehnrio | ot minus mid pus , furred HBJ toiiKite bad t isle In the inornliiK , cnllly sensa- H tlous , fererlshliess , luniisclie mid ililrst , tel B J lowed ' by cold extremities Intense piiu dlsteii- § slou , ot the blndtli r , tetchlng nnd Krontprostri- § Hon , passage ot thick , tennilous niattei H / /a ! ' e9 , V $ > fy " If UHETCR3 SN H [ * \ I 11 VJ * * * / YYsTnic'njRE h | OLADDEP VIA H The Kidneys aud Bladder H NOTE M Dr Jacobs Is hlRlily 10c ) 'iimendedoinicount M ot . uls honesty of nurposo unit profound knout * M edge , IIo coitus lilsnly recommendeit nud do- selves ( nil uucouiiigoment and conll lonco lUmalia llco M " HH OUB RELIABILITY M Cr Jacobs is a director and stockholder lu the H _ Commonwenlth lliilldlnK nnd f.cian Association ot Kansas City , Mo ; capital * jOJ,0 W. The U. Commercial Union nn Juno 1 , lw , n recognized commerclnl nuthorlty , hajs : Ur C , w. Jacoos , of 111. . Main street , Kcuisas City , 11 I Mo , Is conuuctlnc a i'rlvnte Dlspensaiy , has Ir ample capital , and Is re imled food IIo owns H p I vnlunblo teal estate lu Kntisas City " VVUAUH 11 ItKI.IAUIiEANO INVITE 1NQU1UV. § ) HI seemingly i innocent fnco , but with a fl soul i cankorcd and vile No ono is safe H from I her evil iulluonco Unfuithful to M the I man she has sworn before heaven to M respect i , she is still moro unfaithful to U herself , and a very pit of destruction to U thojoungor ' members of the opposite M sox : whom alio may elect to honor with M her regard M Hundreds of these Dolilahs conUuni- M nnto our centers year after j car Im- B morality grows among the lowornud the H higher classes ; the middle class ulono M can • hold its own wliero virtue Is in quos M tion This .souiKiH severe , but the in- H tolllgont observer will acknowledge H that there is truth in the remark H The factory gill , minus education , H minus food very often , may bo forgiven H for moral doliuquouciou , but the womnu H of good birth , with nil the accessories of H wealth and comfort round her , who do- H libcratcly betrays her huBbaud , what is H to bo said of herV Who is there to find H excuse for horV Yet , like a leprous H spot , she settles , now here , now thuru , H as chaiico loads lior , and spreads conl.i- H gion whorcvor she goes H From nil such mny heaven defend us ! H But it is Idle to suggobtthatsuch things I may not bo The tendency toward Im- H morality in the prosout ago is unhappily I strong The tide drifts that way Wo H should all men and women ullko so I sot our faces against It , build so many I piers , breakwaters , barriers agiiiuet it , I tbut presently nothing should How Into I our qulot harbors save fnith nnd police I and love Tnu Duciuc s. An Absolute Cure ' I ThoORIOINALAUIKTINDOlNTMBNl1 is only put up in larao two-ounco tlu boxes , and Is an absolute euro for nil sores , burns , I wounds , chapped hands and all skin orup * I 1tlons. . Will positively cure nil Kinds of piles Aslt for tno OUIOINAL AUIliTlNK OINT- MKNT Sold by Goodman DrUK company A ut ! J5 cents per box by mall 30 coats FnrelRn Srntumnnn's Kulnrlrs , London Court .Idtirnal : In Portugal peers and deputies tocolvo W35 a * year in Holland members ot the lower 1house rocolvo $83(1 ( per annum In Donranrk members of both Iioumjs receive $ ; i.7o a day during the sosslou In Franco senators and deputies are * paid $1,780 per annum , und the same rate obtains In Austria In Belgium onclimomhor of the chnin- her of roproeontatitoH rocolves 9Ht per month If bo dnos not live in Brussels In Swlt/orland members ot the pa tioniil council got 92.60 a dayand mom bora of the stnto counoll $1.60 to $2.r , ( ) . In Italy neither senators nar doputins nro paid , bdt they trnvol free and ro colvo other concessions in tuxcb and patronugo , Tired Citizen ( to stranger who lias helped him home ) Much bilged fron' in need and she forth bilge ino wlz jour name St , xPaul Mini Uh well , call mo St Paul , Tired Citizen Deut shay she ! Here , saint , did she ever Kot uny auiwor to that 'plstlu jou wrote to the 'Phlslansl ' ' - = = - ( - CLOTHING /1 /1 \gJ > _ _