THE OMAHA DAILY BEE , SUNDAY , APRIL 13 , 1800.-TWENTY PACiES. TIIIv WORLD OF FAIR WOMEN , Don't ' Depend on Merc Personal Charms for * Your Happiness. THE ADVIOE OP DR , TALlfAOE , AVlml i IH ; fjftillcH If live Done for Suit IMcKo-llllllnrilH In 1'aHl'H Hem- dolr How lo I.lvo I.OIIK Kcinliilnc Council men. Young women nro often loil to de-pcml for hnpplncs upon personal chiinn. . Do not bo beguiled Into such a belief. Ueuuly is mieh n Hiihtlo thlnj , ' ; it dons not seem to depend upon faciul proper- tlons or upo'u the npnrklo of the eye or upon the llunli of the check. You some- tiinr-H Hnil it umoiif , ' irregular feature. " . It Is the froul shining through the face that makes ono beautiful. But alas for these who depend upon more personal charms ! They will como to disappoint- jiicnt and to a grout fret , writes Rev. T. DeAVilt Tulmngo in the Ladies'Home Journal. There are so many di Huron I opinions about what are personal ( 'imrins ; and then sickness and trouble und ngo do niako'HUuh nivuftod. The poorest god that a woman over worships IB her own face. The saddest sight in all the world is the woman who has built everything on good looks , when the 7-liarins begin to vanish. O , how they try to cover the wrinkles and hide the ravages of timol When Time , with iron-shod feet , stops on a. face , the hoof- marks remain and you cannot hide them. It is silly to try to hide them. I think the most repulsive fool in all the world Is an old fool 1 I never could understand why a woman eliould be ashamed about getting old. It Is a sign , it is prima faeio evidence that you have behaved tolerably well or you would not have lived to this time. The grandest thing , I think , is eternity , and that is madeupof countless years. When the book of books would set forth the at tractiveness of Jesus Christ , it says : "His hair was as white as snow. " llut when the color goes from the cheek and the hwler from the eye , and the spring from the stop and the gracefulness from the gait , alas for those who have built their lime and eternity upon good looks. Hut sill the passage of years cannot take out of one's face benignity and kindness nnrt compassion and faith. Culture your heart and you cultivate your faco. AVIint , AVoinen Can Do. A writer in the Boston Traveller tells of u visit to the Ladies' Annex to the chamber of commerce in San Diego , Cal. It is probably the only organization of the kind in the country or in the world , und its success has been as marked as its existence is unique , says the Philadel phia Press. It has a membership of 700 , mid meets regularly every Tuesday afternoon for the transaction of business. The organization grew out of a proposi tion to make ono day in the week "ladies' day , " by which it was hoped to interest the women in the prosperity and progress of the city of San Diego. The prospect has succeeded far beyond ( ho hopes of these who originated it. Kvery scheme for promoting the pros perity of the place is discussed at the weekly meetings of the Annex. Be fore it was organized it was im possible to keep up a respectable 'exhibit of the products of the county 'In the rooms of the chamber of commorco. Now a variety of excellent Hpecimens of fruits and vegetables are always to bo seen the improvement having resulted from the Annex arous ing emulation by offering a hand-painted banner to the district or locality that maintained the most creditable display of its own products , The example sot by these California ! ! women could bo followed in other cities nnd localities with admirable results. There are countless ways in which woman can make her inlheiue felt inlhtj over widening life of these times. Every city does not need u horticultural dis play in its chamber of commerce , but there is not a city in the county that has the parks it needs , or if it has the space it Is not properly improved. San Diego was in a similar situation with a nominal city park of 1-100 acres , but without an iicro improved. The annex of the cham ber of commerce obtained the liberty to inako.a beginning , and by taking ten- nerpjilolB at a time , steady progress is being made toward supplying San Diego with tjn admirable park. All the work lius-bgcti done with money , trees , plants nnd-shvubs. obtained by the women. ' TJip.ecrct ol'a lun\K I'lfe. You sometimes sco a woman whoso old ngo 18 as 'oxq'uisito as was the perfect 'Wooin 'oMior youth ; says the Ladies' 3Iomo.Tpurnul , You wonder how this ,1ms como about , ; you wonder how it is lier life has- been a long and happy one. Hero arc Homo of the reasons : She know how to forget disagreeable things. She understood the art of enjoyment. She kept her nerves well In hand , and Initiated them on no one. Slip beJIoV'ed In the goodness of her own daughters and in that of her neigh bors. She cultivated a good digestion. She mastered the art of saying pleas ant words. " She did not expect too much from her friends. She made whatever work come to her congenial. She retained her illusions and did not believe that all the world was wicked und unkind. She relieved the miserable and sympa thized with the sorrowful. She retained an even disposition and iniido the best of everything. She did whatever came to her cheer ful and well. She never forgot that kind words and u smile cost nothing , but are priceless treasures to the discouraged. .She did unto others as she would bo clone by , and now that old age has como to her and there is a halo of white hair , about her head , she Is loved and conuld ored. This Is the secret of a long life and a happy one. Dainty Not only docs the French woman buy Iho materials for her dinner , Bays a writerin the Wavorly Miigu/.ino , but tiho helps to cook it when bought. In that marvelous place , a French kitchen , where two or thrco little holes in a steve cook such dclicato dishes , and per form such culinary feats as our great roaring coal tires have no conception of , who flits about like a fairy , creating magical messes out of raw nmturinl of the most ordinary description. Yes , though u lady born and bred , rellned , elegant , and ngreeablo in society , a iKfllo in her way , yet hho docs not think- it boncatli her dignity to lighten the house-hold expenses by practical economy und activity. The dinner of a French family ischeap nnd simple. There is always a boup , the moat of u titowimii ; sometimes , if not strict in expenditure , another pinto of iiic'U ; goncrally two vegetables , dressed nnd oaten Bopilratoly , and sometimes , not ulwavri , a Bwoet dish ; if not that , a little fruit , such us may bo the cheapest nud ripotit iu the BOUSOU , Uut there is on Bridgeport , Alabama. ' ( BRAND PUBLIC SALE of BUSINESS and RESIDENCE LOTS BY THEX ORT Land and Improvement Col Commencing Tuesday , May 6th JS90 , to Continue Until Saturday , May 10th. . HALF FARE RAILROAD RATES - FROM CHATTANOOGA AND'NASHVILLE. Brideport is situated on a plateau , one hundred and fifty feet above high water mark ; a most charming panoramic view , valley surrounded by mountains. Complete drainage , and health resort of the south. It is the key to the Sequatchet Valley. We are at the head of navigation on the Tenessee river. Six feet of water at the landings at the lowest stage of river. Free wharfage. Railroad freight rates contracted same as at Chattanooga. Look at the profitable investments for manufacturers. We have the best coking coal in the surrounding country. Coal delivered on the track in Bridgeport at about 90 a ton. Our SOOOO . , acres otmineral _ _ _ , _ coal . , and , _ iron lands , are covered with large sized timber , hard and soft va- i i i j. i * „ ! i „ ! . soft maple and persimmon. and of good quality. Fine deposit of clay for , - , . . - . , OOO hotel , office building , water works and electric light plant. Sale Tuesday , May 6 , countmuing until Sat r y ayJ.0 1890. _ For full particulars , plats , maps , etc. , address LAND & IMPROVRMEXN'T GO. , We submit report of Mnjor J. W. Kelley , mineral on. eng.nee.on . ou , . A. very little in each thing and it is rather in arrangement than in material that they appear rich. 'I'lio French may i boa trifle epicurean in their tastes , but they are not gor- mands. They spend little in eating , and thov cat inferior things , though their cookery is rather , a science than a mere accident of civilization. At homo the great aim of the French is to save , and any sclf-sacrilico that leads to this result is cheerfully undertakenmoro especially in the eating than the mere luxury of idleness. No French woman will spend a cent to save herself trouble. She would rather work like a dray-horso to buy nn extra yard of ribbon or a now pair of gloves than lie on the softest sofa in the world in placid , fine ladyism , with crumpled gauze or bare hands. Darned Hose , Darned Had Cooking. An intensely practical vein has lately been developed among the witching Bal timore belles. Ono _ of the very loveliest debutantes is an indefatigable darner of stockings , for it must bo known that our girls , unlike the "Queen of Spain , " have use for the daintiest and finest hosiery. This "bud" darns all of her own webliko blockings and besides all of these of her relations , who arc , as she terms it , too lazy to do It themselves. But the pro posed cooking classes so strongly advo cated by Dr. Richard Grady aro. being hailed 'with great enthusiasm by the ambitious young girls who have already learned that Wo may live without poetry , music and art , "Wo mav live without conscience and live without heart. AVe may live without friends , wo may live without books , But civilized man cannot live without cooks. Therefore they have adopted the prac tical fad in order to bo able to preside intelligently over their own establish ments''some " day. How DOCH She Kscnpo ? Just how the fashionable woman who appears night after night clad in a tulle dress , kid gloves and slippers and a pearl necklace manages to escape pneumonia must over remain a problem to vex and bother tho. doctor and philosopher. These lovely creatures are certainly endowed dewed with great endurance , whatever may bo said of their sense. Perhaps , as C'arjylo said : "Vanity is warmer than down , and pride rivals the robe of ermine. " But to get at facts the ques tion was put to a pretty little creature , who never read a line of the sago : "I never feel cold at all , " she said , "in evening dress. Just before dressing I bathe my neck , arms and shoulders in glycerine and rosewater and after dry ing with a coarse towel I have my maid rub mo down with alcohol. I don t need this at all , but I do it to please papa. I think , howos'er , it is a good idea , for my flesh never gets goosey , and this Is my second season , and I haven't had u cold yet. Then I always wear a very warm wrap in the carriage , and when I get homo I take a warm bath and go to bed. " lUlliarils In I'alti'H Hnudoir. Adoliim Patti , the queen of song , is an enthusiastic devotee of the game of bil liards. Her famous Welsh castle at Ciaig-y-Nois is fitted up with a hand some billiard parlor , anil she often en tertains the wizards of the cuo. George Slosson , Iho champion billiardist , was a guest at Mine. 1'atti's several years ago , when ho went over there to play Vig- naiix , the French champion , and George never tires of showing a handsome joint ed cue which Patti had made for him. The famous prima donna has not had much chance to Indulge in her favorite pastime while on her American tourbut she is going to make up for lost time while in New York. A number of work men from a billiard manufactory were ordered to the HolTinan house yesterday to transfer ono of the handsome pool ta bles from the billiard room up to the diva's apartments , says the Now York World. Patti plays the English pocket billiard game , and two dainty black spots were pasted on tly ) bed cloth for her special bone-lit. The table was ta ken to pieces and carried up to her sit ting-room where it was carefully put up and properly sot. Women \Vlio Dress in Two Seconds. The woman who Can dress for the street in two seconds , and boasts of it , has very nearly cured hoivelf of not fast ening the belt of her cloak , so that there is not much fun Iu walking behind her us there was a few years ago , but a now source of pure delight is opened by the narrow velvet bands' which servo as bonnet strings tills winter , says Uio Bos ton Transcript. She never remembers to fasten them and sails along with the two tape-like ends dangling behind her ears and suggesting Ascimth'ti compari son in "Hitherto'until somebody puts an end to the exhibition by telling her of her error , and then the scramble which she makes to finish her toilet is some thing to see. By the way , why is it that persons who go about the world saying , "Beg pardon , nm'am , but you are losing" this , that or the other , never have a pin or hairpin with which to repair damages. Airs. l ( ' ' . < aiiji'y's Money Hump. George Keogh iiiniiigor } forMunsllold , said to a t'hlcago Tribune reporter : I was manager for Lily Ijingtry when she made her debut and.for some time after , t'rltlcs may differ about her ability to act , but there is no question uniong financiers and real estate men about her ability to know a bargain and turn a nimble penny. She ims natural talent for making money. Whoa wo were in Salt Lake C'ity once she was standing in front of the hotel. Turning to me she said : "l'all a cab. I K-llovo I will go and look up some real estate bargains. I think this is a good town in which to invest. " Wo were driven about the city until the Lily saw u tract of land which pleased her. She halted the horse her self , jumped out , looked over the ground , returned to the hotel , sent for the agent , and before night the title of that prop erty was in Lily Langlry. Tlio price paid was $20,000. The other day she was offered three times the purchase price. She has never lost a dollar in any investment she 1ms made in this country. _ How to Keep Your Krlcnds. A girl I know said : "I'm a great ono for making friends. " It sounded as if she ought to bo very happy , but when I had a moment to reflect I wondered if she were- good at keeping them , says a writer in the Ladies' Homo Journal. flaking friends is easy to the girl who is bright and happy , whose society gives pleasure and who is genial. But the Keeping of them demands moro than this. If you want to keep a friend don't get too intimate with her. Have your own thoughts and permit her to have hers. Do not demand too much of her in the way of confidence. And do not bo too aggressive want ing to know why she hasn't done this and why she doesn't think as you do. If you think your friend's style of dress isn't beautiful , don't tell her ; you only olTend her , because deep ; n her heart she is convinced she knows a great deal more about it than you do. Do not find fault with your friend's friend and do not expect to bo the only ono given a corner in her heart. Bo as consulerte of her feelings as if she were a stranger and remember that politeness is an evory-day garment and not ono intended only for high-days and holidays. To sum it up in ono sentence , preserve the courtesy of the beginning if you wish to keep your friendship to the end. Kate Field' * n'aaJitngton. O , how I wish you wouldn't , Bob You're such an awful tease ; Jsow don't you know all women like Thq men who try to please ) Do take your hands from off your book ; Don't tread upon Iho eat ! Will you , sir , let my curls alone ! What next will you be all Don't ! don't ! don't ! Because I was n little goose , And said "Yes , " as you plead , You need not think I'm sure to go Where'er 1 may bo led. I'vo been engaged before , friend Bob , To Hal , und Tom , und Bill , And if you don't behave I'll turn You oft indeed 1 will I Don't don't don't ! Don't touch me ! When I liked you best , 'Twas on your manly knees ; Get down again , sir ; 'tis a pose Tlmt with you most agrees. What I Dare refuse , unless , forsooth , I pay you with a kissi O , Bob , you naughty , naughty man And lias it como to this ! Don't ! don't ! don't KATI : Fnu : > . coxxviiT.t C Bride ( complacently ) "Yes , I've really had very little practice. " At a wedding at Lancaster , Pa. , the groom was presented with a cemetery lot by his father. Girl friend nt n Chicago wedding ( kissing the bride ecstatically ) "Oh , Fan , you did splendidly at the alter , and this Is only your second. " It was Michelet who said that "woman is the suit of a man's life.1 It may have been noticed , too , that sonio young men are not half so fresh after they get a wife. Thu Grand Duke Nicholas has just been ordered out of Hussia in disgrace for giving n mduablo Jewel belonging to his wife's family , to his mistress Mine. Scbisslave. Mrs.V. . S. Twedell , of Bowden , Ga. , who Is now In her ninety-first year , span the thread and knit her husband a nlco pilr : of long-wristed fingered woolen gloves last weelc. Charles Mcltohcrts nnd wife , who lived two miles south of Northvillo , Pa. , were born Saturday , married on Saturday , celebrated their golden wedding ou Saturday , took their last sickness on Saturday and died lust Satur day. Sunday they were buried iii ono grave. Ceorgo W. Laney , a nlntcen year old boy of St. Joseph doped with and married Ida' L. Davis the .fourteen year old daughter of a prominent grain merchant. The obdurate father fol owed , ruptured the young Komeo on a flat boat and had him placed under ar rest. rest.Govoner Govoner Hill of New York , Is said to have once been an unsuccessful sultur ( Vjr-the hand of a Miss Margaret Hunter , the , pretty and accomplished daughter of a Chomung"county. . Now York farmer who afterward married another young man and came to Lincoln to live. The feat that the bachelor govenor now avoids tlie society of women Is interesting In connection with this story. A gay bachelor of Philadelphia has n curi ous decoration over his sitting-room mantel. A largo frame Is filled with photographs of girls and women , most of them pretty. At the bottom of each picture Is pasted n news paper clipping. "Why , Mr. Brown , what do they mean I" be was asked recently. "They nro pictures of the only girls I ever loved , " ho replied , "and these clippings am their mar- rlago notices. " A devoted couple , husband and wife , com mitted sulcldo recently at St. Ktlcnne , in France , becaiiso the husband was attacked with a fatal malady. They took the usual sui cidal precautions to stop up all the chinks und crevices before starting up the carbonlo pas , bat only the husband got a sutllclent dose to tuko him oft , and his wife was resuscitated. On recovering herself fully she remarked that she felt as though she .mil waked up from u deep und long sleep. The examination papers of the American college of musicians ithoso that were used for the examination held in New York lust July ) may bo obtained from the secretary , Robert Homier. No. IK ) Williams street , Prov idence , H. I. The publication of these pu ] > crs after each examination Is over utTords candi dates for future examinations un opportunity of learning about whut grade of proficiency hi the various brunches will bo miulred , nuil Is a valuable cuIUu Iu the process of picjiura- tlou , PEOPLE WHO CANNOT SLEEP Some of the Gauges anil the Cures of In somnia. WEIBD FANCIES OF THE NIGHT. Unpleasant Tliouglit.s Which Present lvcH ID the Wnkiil'iil llrahi Kent Voi * Hotly and Itralit Curious Suggestions. Emerson says iii his essay on behavior : "If you have not slept or have slept or if you have headache , or sciatica , or leprosy , or thunderstroke , I basocch you by all angels to hold your peace and not pollute the morning : by corruptions and groans. " Now , if wo wore allictcd by any trivial calamities like the two last named , perhaps a breakfast table dis cussion of them might bo inopportune and inexcusable , says n writer in the New York Sun. But the man or woman who has lain with wide-staring eyes through the long night watches , while all the trials and worries incident to liv ing , exaggerated to twice their natural importance , have danced about in ghoul ish glee and passed and ropasscd in end less grotesque , demoniacal procession , such a person is very little lower than the angels who does not attempt a re- heursul of the horrors the next morning tor the first sympathetic listener en countered. It isn't the lying' awake , but the in- on"ietiwl ! > -exasperating , < attempt to bleep , which w > mo power within you seems to compel you to continually make , that brings you to the verge of infanity and thoughts of suicide. Ton evolve long liiicti'of wooly sheep out of your inner consciousness and compel them to tumble over a fence , one after the other , and just as you really have them in line working order doesnt one perverse ewe trot sedately off to some verdant hillock ; followed by her lamb kins , and rjfusa to como back to the fence at all , thus-breaking the continu ity':1 : or else , despite youiv efforts , the procession will come to an end , or the clock strikes , sounding like the report of a howitzer through the stillness , and vou are wider awake than be.foro. Then there is the counting forward , back ward , by threes , bixesnines , and all the time you are making your tired head follow feverishly the dancing figures you know that on the footboard , laughing in ilendish delight , sita your particular pot worry , like a grinning , gibbering ani mated skeleton , waiting until the weari ness begins to stupify you to rattle his bones and waken you again. "Night's the time for worrvin' , ' ' "ays .losiah Allen's wife , In her quaint dialect , "and 1 have only to lie awake a little while to imagine that mo and .losiah is bein' burgled of all our worldly store.1 After four hours' wakcfulness your best girl is sure to have engaged herself to the other fellow , the horse you have bet on has gone lame , the bank where you deposit has suspended , vow new spring bonnet " isn't becoming , "or , if it is , you are mire of a stormy castor morning. And then comes the kindly friend who suggests the particular narcotic that puts him to sleep. You take it. It works like a charm. Presently you can't sleep without it. It has worn itself out.and the last state of that man IB worse than the llrst. Not only this , but thoughtful physicians claim that the sleep produced by artificial means is not restful , and that the free use of narcotics is the first hton in the dissolution of will power , which leads ultimately to disastrous ends. The use of any drug , whether narcotic or stimulant , which makes a person surrender his will power oven for a limited time , takes away a certain line something which makes it easier for that person to surrender his will to any other individual who may tempt him to the doing of that from which his hotter nature shrinks and would recoil if not thus vitiated. And it is claimed that the iniquity in high places in the social world IH largely duo to the unlimited and continuous iio ! of stimulants in the hours of activity and narcotics in the periods of rest. Insomnia may bo distressing , but not at all dangerous. You frequently hear people say that they have not slept a wink all night , which statement , if lit erally true , would indicate serious con ditions , but the fact of the matter usu ally is that such a person has snored three hours to lying awake one.Vhon a person doesn't manage to sleep even five or ten minutes during nn entire night , though trying to fall asleep , there Is danger requiring the physician's hkill , but many simple remedies for sleeplessness or less severe and pro tracted persistency have been suggested by physicians and individuals which may be interesting , and possibly bene ficial , to the great army of the alllicted. Ur. William 15 ; Wood , who has some advanced and original theories on this subject , says : Vliibomnia Is almost In variably a symptom of some functional or organic disorder , and implies the ex- Ibtenco of causcH that have been opera tive for some considerable timo. As wo ordinarily speak of eleiMilesMicsH , func tional dlhordir.Sionly niv the rrspuiisible ciuibes wo have In mind. It is a condi tion warning us'of more H-rious compli cations to follow. .Sleep Is the period in which the nervous system lb culled upon for the least expenditure of energy anil ' the time when the greatest re-in'foreo' meiit of the system takes place. NatureV storage battery is recharged through the activity of the nutritive system. This re-enforcement process is interfered with by any degree of sleeplessness , be cause perfect functional cerebral rest is nature's law of repair. In the consider ation of questions of practical hygiene it is often forgotten that from one-third to one-half of our time is spent in our Bleep ing apartments , ami that this period is one in which nature demands that the individual should bo in the condition that best conduces to nerve repose and tissue repair. So far as the treatmentof the various degrees of insomnia is con cerned , it is a question of the ut most importance. The conditions of our civilization arc such that overexcilement and overwork are almost n law of daily "being. In the life of our cities great numbers of people are daily expending more nervous energy than their vital forces can re place. They are expending more than their income and making inroads upon their capital. The nervous system is usually the last to break down and the hist to recover. How far it is safe and wise to use narcotics , sedatives , and stimulants is by no means certain. Sleep artificially produced by whatever means does not result in genuine functional rest nor bring into full play the normal re storative powers of the system. Under these conditions the daily sleeping potion becomes a too easy habit and soon a necessity , and only seems to defer the day when exhausted nature will exact her penally and demand her only remedy rest. " Dr. William A. Hammond recom mends as therapeutical measures of re lief for insomnia , first , "those which by their tendency to soothe the nervous sys tem or distract attention diminish the action of the heart and blood vessels or correct irregularities of function and les sen the amount of blood to the brain , " and among these he suggests music , mo notonous sounds , gentle friction of the surface of the lody , soft , unduliitory movements , a repetition of u series of words , etc. Ho also recommends a sup per of plainly cooked and nourishing food. Ho assorts that people , especially women , are often underfed , the tone of the system is lowered and local congestion of tlie different purls of the body is the result. If the brain bo ono of these wakefulness is the result and many cases of insomnia of the passive variety re quire food and stimulants , whisky being preferable , as loss1 likely to disagree with the stomach , Coffee , 'though , in some cases of passive wakefulness is a speedy cure. When an individual is strong , the heart beating with force and rapidity and great mental excitement bo present , ice water upon the head is a good sleep producer. Mothers in Thibet are said to place their wakeful children where a small stream of cold water falls on their heads. Then individuals who by excessive mental exertion have lessened the eou- tractability of the cerebral vessels al most always experience great dilliculty in getting to sleep while lying down , be cause the position has a tendency to send more blood into the head and in crease the congestion and general functional activity. Pope was wont to ring for pens and paper in the night at Lord Bolingbroko's to record poetry. Margaret Duchess of Newcastle kept young ladies about her all night ready'to write at dictation the thoughts which ciimo to her directly she laid her head upon the pillow. Hrindley , the great engineer , always went to bed a day or two to think out a great scientific project , and Sir Walter Scott said the [ nut half hour in bed was the best think ing time in the whole day. All of this goes to show , as the doctor says , that "those positions of the body which tend to impede the flow of blood from the brain , and at the same time do not ob struct its passage through the arteries , while causing hypernmiia , produce in somnia , and should bo avoided. " Dr. Kecloston advocates the food treat ment for insomnia , on the ground that animals and babies always eat and then sleep , and concludes that not only does the process of digestion aid sleep , but vice versa sleep aids digestion , because during digest ion the stomach requires more blood , and what more natural than that the supply bo furnished by the dor mant brain , which is the most muscular organ of the body ? The fact that indi gestible food causes wakefulness ho ex plains by saying that insomnia comes from the discomfort of the labored pro cess of digestion , which discomfort would have been felt if the per- hon had remained awake , only that oc cupation would have given less time to roaliy.0 the distress. Dr. Kceleston rec ommends a hot bath just before retiring , in a bath room at a temperature of < ! , " > = , gradually raised during the bath to 7. ) = . The patient should stoop and have the head and face drenched with water at 100 = to dilute brain vessels , Next the whole body , except the head , Immersed in a bath at OS5 , the temperature In creasing to I0r > = or 110Vhontho first accelerated pulse has fallen to slow , steady beating the patient should bo put to sleep with warm blankets over the ox- Ireinllles. Of course liiMinniu is most often found uniting brain workers , whoso brain activ ity causes the flow of too great an iimounl of blood to the head. The nerves I'ontrolllng the contraction of the blood i-ells through wonrlncsK fail to perform llieir duty , and a temporary passive i-ongcstion it * established , which olVcetu- iillj previ-ntu sleeping the early part nl the night. The tu-lun should lie- rtltli lho head raised very high wilh pllluws. I'YiHiut'iitly the hulftn'er who Lus counted hluiaolf ufl into drcumluud after hours of misery is awak ened toward morning again , and sleep seems more hopeless than over. This awakening is duo usually to the sudden and violent contracting of these malic ious little nerves who failed to perform their duty in the early part of the night , and wakefulness is caused by lack of blood in the brain. It requires strength to sleep , and this burning attack of wakefulness is usually relieved by a cup of beef tea , or a glass of cold water may refresh you and set the blood again in the right direction. " As for the number of hours of sleep re quired , that is a question which each in dividual must answer for himself. Ono man finds ho can do more work in a day by sleeping nine hours than by sleeping only seven and working during the other two. Another man may require but seven hours' rest , and between these hours the average must be reached. Of course , as people grow older they seem to require less sleep , but this may bo due quite as much' to their lessened ac tivity as to their incensed years. - * KItVC.lTlOX.tK. There is n innrkcd revival of interest in se cret societies at .Johns Hopkins university. The Philadelphia Soc-ial university Is Riv ing a scries of bunilay lectures anil concerts. Amhcrst was the llrst college in the coun try to make regular Kymimstics compulsory. The proportion of lazy anil dull students is saiil to bo less this year than ever before at Yale. Dr. McCosh of Princeton lias just passed his seventieth year. Its arrival found him well. well.President President Washington visited Brown uni versity 100 years tie this month , receiving the honorary degree of LU U. . The library of Cornell university contains 100,000 volumes. A new library building is to bo built at a cost of $ -JOOUO. ( Many of the students of Johns Hopkins went homo to enjoy the Easter vacation , but most of them .spent the time in Ualtimoro. The llrst 'varsity race over rowed in west- cm New York will take pluco in KakoCayufta Tune IS. Cornell and Uowdoiu will bo the contestants. "The Poet's Mission" is the subject which has been announced for the best essay on KiiKlish literature for the alumni prize of $50 at Fordham university. The University of Pennsylvania has begun the issue of a scries of ineiiOKniphs repre senting work done in the fields of philosophy , psychology und ethics. CImrlos P. Hiddlo of Omnlm , fi-lio died hero recently , was a member of the Thctii Dcltii Chi fraternity of Dickinson college , and reso lutions of respect wore passed on his death. Susannah Warlleld , u wealthy lady who died recently in Carroll county , Mai-viand , has loft all her property to found an liplsco- pal college , which is to'bo mimed after her. Dr. Simon N. Patten , professor in the Wharton school of finance and economy at the University of Pennsylvania , has in press a book entitled ' -The Economic Uasis of Pro tection. " Dr. 1C. .1. .Tames , professor in the \Vharton school of finance and economy at the Univer sity of Pennsylvania , is preparing for the American economic * conference -paper on the "Canal Question in the United States. " The University of Ilelsingfors , Kussln , has nt the present time l.T.Ti students , among whom are IT women. These are divided into the following faculties : Onolmndivd and cfghty-nino theological students , til ( ) law , I IS medical , -IDS philological , and Ji'J'J natural sciences and mathematics. Paris public schools are overcrowded , and the authorities propose to help to remedy the dilliculty by forbidding this attendance nt them of children of foreigners. There are I liO.OOO foreign children in the city , ami at , least 5,000 of them are getting a French cdu- | cation free at the public schools. The catalogue of the college department of the university of Pennaylvaiiia for ISSIMHJ has just boon issued. There Hi'J professors and assistants , an Increase of ten over the number hut year. The number of electives has been largely increased , so that with u judicious supervision a student can now se lect almost anv course lie desires. A recently issued catalogue of tlm Theolo gical Seminary of Kntgorx shows that Ibero are at Murt/.og hall fifty-eight students , thir ty-eight of whom are in the various classes , while the other twenty are preparing for en trance into the first , or junior class. The cat alogue shows ono fact that lias been a matter of considerable xiimiK'iit , und Unit is an un usually large number of students who are not graduates of any college. The university of St. Petersburg numbers 1,75'J students. Divided Into their classes In society there are 1,1-15 either noble or the sons o'f olllclals , MS suns of notable eltl/ens or * of merchants of the lirst guild , 111) ) sons of clergymen of the orthodox church , 2SO of cltl- zeds , merchant ! ! of tlm second guild and In dustrials , fil peasants , t > Cossacks uml Ul of foreign origin. At the Columbus , O. , penitentiary every Sunday morning MJIUO twenty gentlemen from the various churches ( if the city spend an hour teaching the iiiicrnuilonal lesson to little groups of men , ' 100 of whom are In regu lar attendance. At tlm preaching services In the afternoon conqci'sions frenuently occur. Night schools , a library of 1,00(1 ( volumes and a bible placed la every cell , contribute to the goud work of reformation. "When the world's fid r project was first In augurated , " said Chief Clerk HheeM of the Smithsonian Institution , "wo at once began preparations for making MI exhibit , no mat ter what locality was fixed upon. Estimates prepared , bancd upon previous experiences at the centennial exposition at Philadelphia in 1HIO , and the New Orleans cut ton exposition a few years ago , shnw tb.it * about --WO.OOO would bo required for 1 ' .KI. This hum , if placed at our. dbpi'Md ' , wo.ilil enable us to ijivo the people of ibis iiml other countries u very good Illustration of the wurli Unit Is lie- ing accomplished by the Smithsonian institu tion. " A church fair Is like n Had scnijio. It's easier to get into It than it l > > to get oui. "It Is sail , " they say , -that , tdniieis should no so sweet andsalnU should Iw so sour. " The church loves a cheerful giver - and was never Itnowu to relusc.L gift from u gim' who WUSH'I hi-fi-fill Tbo piuui malt unit " > n'li' ' ' always lull ; of ivlijfluu iliouiio uf whnt In .u > - uu J iho other of whut ho ft-ari The next world s fair w > u Uavo wiugs , but she won't hover around Chicago to niiy alarming extent. Tom Tucker -Why Is n kiss like a uerinnn ? Jack Homer -Heeauso It requires two heuila and tin application. Though cleanliness next to godliness is , Don't think your soul you can save Merely by donning your best suit of clothe a Anil pitting a Sunday shave. Hey Preacher I think of taking a rest after my arduous labor of two score \eara. Bishop Wherefore , my soul Hey I'rcaclier To restore my youth. The I'rcacherWell , Sam , how have yon been getting along since your conversion' ! Sam Oh. furst rate , sail , fust rate. Me iiml do whole family has quite lyln' , swounu' ami stealin' In a great measure. ' The Angel Gabriel ( with Ills tiiiiniwt at Uin lips ) Toot ! Tool ! Too-oo-oo Member o ( Knglish Syndicate-I say , there ! Stop that ! My lease ou this pluiiel doesn't expire fotf lifty years yet ! Co ! and join the glad procession On the way to church , ' Think not of papa's expression , He Is in the lurch. Sweetest thoughts thy musings fill , You've the honnot lie the bill. fiostoii Mother You won't go to heaven Willie , if you are such a naughty boy. U'llllo Oil , well , 1 don't expect to go ever1 , where. I went to the circus yesterday and to tli theater the day before ; Besides , I'm m Boston. v "L" road conductor , absent mimledl.v in the throng-Step along lively , both gates' ' ! ! , St. Peter Hi there , young man , step ; usUV Thorp's only ono entraeo here. You have worried my passengers too much already. Your ticket must bo for the other place. If wo understand the position of the good brethren of the l'rot < v.stnnt Episcopal chmvh In South Carolina they are perfectly willing to accord to their colored members a pliiei * iu the kingdom of heaven. All they ubji-et to is associating with them here on earth. Little Johnny W Is four years old. and formerly lived in Hanger. His parents now reside in Augusta. Tlm other day .lolmnv's natural aptitude for fun and mischief led him to commit some trifling misdemeanor , which war promptly rebuked by lii.s mother. She dwelt upon the fact of God seeing us and always knowing what wo ro doing. The idea seemed to Impress Johnny forcibly , anil for several moments ho remained silent. At last ho broke out with : "tiny , mother , dm-s God sco everything in Augusta1Yes ; , " was the solemn reply. "Ho sees our every act. " Whereupon the young sinner i-x- elainied : "Good gracious , mother ! Let's move bade to Hanger ! " Dr. IMriuiy , catarrh specialist , Hco lldj. ) { A blnek fan of turkey's feathers is consd | > cred chic with the mo t delicate ovei.ing teL > let. let.Drs Drs , Belts H08 1'AiixAM STIIW.T , OMAHA , NLU. lOinioslto L'aMoii Hotel. ) nnii'c linur-s U n m to p. ni. SuriiluirB. 10 a m tt > K'ni. H'Hill.itl | ; In Chronic , NITTOIIH , Skin uml Illnoii I > l i > n i' . ! K * l'MiiHiillntlnn ut olllco or l > y null fin > . Mrdl * rlnc"ii > ciit li ) ' mnll or o | ui'n , ncuiiri'ly luu-biMl , frMi fiomnliHcrvntlon. ( iiinmnlius tucutc iiili | kr > , tutu- Iiiml iicniiunently. fiimriiiiitorrliu'H.i't'mt" IN Cl - \OUS IKMllliy.llii.cH.si'HNlisl.t ) } ) . | . : mlf. dons , riiynli-nl decay , iirlxltiit from Imllnrrrllnn. c . ri'HH or IniliilKriire , iiroilui'liiK flci.pcMsiii' | | H. ilrhi cm , ili'iicy , MMIJIM | | on tfio fniv , urchin In urli-ly. vta\\t \ \ illnrniiriiiitM. Inrlc of rulhlnncc , clull. iiiilll fi > rnlii4F or liiisliiuKn. iiml llml.1 llfnu Ininlmi. Sulrly. IIITIII- nt'iitty uml prlvntuly ruri'il. l'un uH lr . Ik'iu ft lletlH , HIM rnriiiim Htrcct , Oinnlm , Nub. niooduml Skin Diseases. SK1,1.1,1. ! ' . , , , ; , . , . . . . . ( prrlblii In IIH rr.tiiltn. riini | > K-IPly prnillrutcit without - J > . lh ( > iilil f mi-miry. Hrnifuln , eryHlpi'luii , fuvi'r rorvy ] " " l > lntflii > , ulrurH , | uiln/i / In tint hi'Oil Mini lior.i'n. > ) ' | ilill. Itli > uru tliro.'it , inuiilli iiml tongue * , cuhiriU , t-U ; . , lierinant'iitly fiiri'tt whuro ulliurH liuvu fuHvl. 1'i'iiniMt ' and Illailili'i-JuiriplirvJTiln ( / Kt/1imir , Ullllill ) I'ainfnl , Illlllrnlt. lee fri'iii'nt | liurnliiKor lilnoily nrlnii. urine lilfb tuloli-il nr H llh milky Kuillliii'iit on MniHllnn. wu k l'fiiKUII ' < iirilin-u , ulci'l. ry tlll.4. i > lr. 1'rouiytly uJ cilli'il. Cluirxe ) K-liniiimahlo. I U T IVJ I innrnl rnniplnlo without riittlnit , nuitllr nr illllutluu * l'mr iircctc"l ! at linriic liy | > ntk nta wllliuul u uio- < * mi'lit'ii ( mill iirunnniinru. Men and Middle-Aged Mm. I'lvM' "I'lVI' ' 1'l" > nwful HTi-i-m ne A ' ( A .1L IVI. V. I I\L. Ply ! , | vi , . , , , wlili'h hrliiKit ili'Hlniylnu l" > lh nilnil mid liuily , with nil lit ilri'ailful IIU. | > i-riiiuiii > iilly cuml. nivs ( IWI 's ' Aililri'Hi tliosi ) ulio liiivr tin- iwm's I imlred tlii'iiiiiilii-s hy Im- ruii'ii liululKfliiTft mill milltury halillx , Hhlili ruin. iwm hnily tinil nilnil , unlltllnu I hum fur LiKliiuin , luily or iimrrliiKO. M.uum.li Mt.nr Ihnio cnlrrlnK mi Unit l.n | > i > y Hit ; u H urn nt | iliy lc.il ilcblllt ) . qiili kly u > "i u-il. OUR SUCCESS Ibtiancil IIIKIII fai-lii. llrst. priirllrul uipi'rli'rii * rrc- onit. rviry ( Mm1 U i rfpiM'liill ) Ktiiilti'il , ihiiH klnrllnif mlulil : Ihlrit , uii'illHiii'H MM' 1'ii'l'mi'il ' In nur i. n IK- luiriilnry innctly In ult rat-li vun > , linn fiiri'n wit ) , nut Injury. t& * . * < i-liil U rviiU poiUpi fur rolflirulril riiriintf , NiTVtiiiN unit Ik'llrutu l > i * > i'a ' * . TiiintMiiil * rurul ; fA Irlfiiilly li'liur r mil mny tiivniuu fiiliiru utriTlnit ami liumo nml ml'l ' iinlili'ii H'iir ID lifo Irf Nu li-uuri miiHi'ri'il unli'iit uicuii | | > auitill/r / 4 cunts In ftnuipi Aihlri-im ur cull un Lil/i'TH t Ul.'lTS. 1(08 VMILNAU SIIIKKT , OUAlil , M.U.