Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Plattsmouth weekly journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1881-1901 | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1896)
JESUS STILL EEIGNS. A THRILLING SERMON BY REV. DR. TALM AGE. C Men Tett for Iat Sandari "Unto Him Shull the Gathering: of the Peo ple He" Cien.. xlix, lO Getting Near , the CbrUtUn Standard. HROUGH a super natural lens, or what I might call a prophescope, dy ing Jacob looks down through the corridors of the centuries until he sees Christ the cen ter of all popular attraction and the greatest being in the world, so everywhere acknowl edged. It was not always so. The orld tried hard to put him down and to put him out. In the year 1200, while xcavating for antiquities fifty-three tr.iles northeast of Rome, a copper plate tablet was found containing the iath-warrant of the Lord Jesus Christ, reading in this wise: "In the year 17 of the empire of Ti rius Caesar.and on the 25th of March, I. Pontius Pilate, governor of the Prae tore, condemn Jesus of Nazareth to die Vtween two thieves, Quintius Corne lius to lead him forth to the place of "execution." The death-warrant was signed by veral names. First, by Daniel, rabbi Pharisee; secondly, by Johannes, rabbi; thirdly, by Raphael; fourthly, by Capet, a. private citizen. This capital punish ment was executed according to law. I The name of the thief crucified on the I right-hand side of Christ was Dismas; the name of the thief crucified on the i left hand side of Christ was Gestus. j Pontius Pilate describing the tragedy i stys the whole world lighted candles j from noon until night. Thirty-three years of maltreatment. They ascribe his birth to bastardy and his death to excruciation. A wall of the city, built about those times and recently ex posed by archaeologists, shows a cari cature of Jesus Christ, evidencing the rcntempt In which he was held by nany in his day that caricature on the all representing a cross and a don fcer nailed to-It, and under it the In scription: "This is the Christ whom the people worship." But I rejoice that that day Is gone by. Our Christ is com ing out from under the world's abuse. The most popular name on earth today I the name of Christ. Where he had one friend Christ has a thousand friends. The scoffers haye become wor shipers. Of the twenty most celebrated r.fldels in Great Britain in our day, sixteen have come back to Christ, try ing to undo the blatant mischief of their lives sixteen out of the twenty. Every man who writes a letter or signs a doc ument, wittingly or unwittingly, hon ors Jesus Christ. We date everything a? B. C, or A. D. B. C, before Christ: A. D., Anno Domini, in the year of our Lord. All the ages of history on ths p!vot of the upright beam of the Cross of the Son of God, B. C, A. D. I do not :jre what you call him whether Con queror, or King, or Morning Star, or 5un of RightPousness, or Balm of Gll--ad, or Lebanon Cedar, or Brother, or Friend, or take the name used in the verse from which I take my text, and call him Shlloh, which means his Son, Sr the Tranquilator, or the Peacemaker, Shiloh. I only want to tell you that jnto him shall the gathering of the people be." In the first place, the people are gath ering around Christ for pardon. No sensible man or healthfully ambitious man is satisfied with his past lift. A fool may think he is all right. A sens ible man knows he is not. I do not care who the thoughtful man is, the review of hl3 lifetime behavior before God and man gives to him no especial satisfaction. "Oh," he says, "there have been so many things I have done I ought not to have done, there have r-een so many things I have said I ought rever to have said, there have been so many things I have written I ought sever to have written, there have been io many things I have thought I ought nver to have thought, I must somehow get thing3 readjusted, I must somehow have the past reconstructed; there are Jays and months and years which cry out against me In horrible vocifera tion." Ah, my brother, Christ adjusts the past by obliterating it. He does cot erase the record of our misdoing with a dash of ink from a register's pen, but lifting his right hand, crushed, red at the palm, he puts it against his bieeding brow, and then against his pierced side, and with the crimson ac cumulation of all those wounds he rubs out the accusatory chapter. He blots aut our iniquities. Oh! never be anx ious about the future; better be anxious about the past. I put it not at the end of my sermon; I put it at the front; Mercy and pardon through Shlloh, the ?in-pardonIng Christ. "Unto him shall 1 the gathering or tne people be." "Oh!" ; says some man, I nave ror iorty years been as bad as I could be, and is there any mercy for me?" Mercy for you. Oh!" says some one here. "I have a grand ancestry, the holiest of fathers and the tenderest of mothers, and foi my perfidy there is no excuse. Do you think then Is any mercy for me?" Mercy for you. "But," says another man. "I fear I have committed what they call the unpardonable sin, and the Bible says if a man comnrit that sin he is neither to be forgiven In this world nor the world to come. Do you think there is any mercy for me? The grace of God! Let us take the surveyor's chain and try to measure God's nvsrey through Jesus Christ. Let one surveyor take that chain and so to the aorta, and another surveyor take 5 that chain and go to the south, and another surveyor take that chain and ...i m oiiraAvn take that chain and go to the west, and then make a report of the square miles of that vast kingdom of God's mercy. Ah! you will have to wait to all eternity for the report of that measurement It cannot be measured. Paul tried to climb the height of it, and he went height over height, altitude above alti tude, mountain above mountain, then Bank down in discouragement and gave it up, for he saw Sierra Nevadas beyond and Matterhorns beyond, and waving his hands back to us in the plains, he says, "Past finding out; un- ; searchable, that in all things he might have the pre-eminence." You notice i that nearly all the sinners mentioned i as pardoned In the Bible were great ! sinners David a great sinner, Paul a great sinner, Magdalen a great sinner, ' the Prodigal Son a great sinner. The : world easily understood how Christ . could pardon a half-and-half sinner, but what the world wants to be persuad- , ed of is that Christ will forgive the ! worst sinner, the hardest sinner, the oldest sinner, the most inexcusable sin- ner. To tne sm-paraoning duhuu et all the gathering of the people be. But, I remark again, the people will gather round Christ as a sympathizer. Oh! we all want sympathy. I hear peo ple talk as though they were Independ ent of it. None of us could live without sympathy. When parts of our family are away, how lonely the house seems until they all get home! But alas! for those who never come home. Some times it seems as if It must be Impos sible. What, will their feet never again come over the threshold? Will they never again sit with us at the table? Will they never again kneel with us at family prayer? Shall we never again look into their sunny faces? Shall we never again on earth take counsel with . . t OLllVi 1 them for our work? Alas! me, who can stand under these griefs? Oh! Christ, thou canst do more for a bereft soul than any one else. It is he who stands beside us to tell of the resurrection. It is he that came to bid peace. It Is he that comes to us and breathes into us the spirit of submission until we can look up from the wreck and ruin of our brightest expectations and say: "Father, not my will, but thine be done." Oh, ye who are bereft, ye anguish-bitten, come Into this refuge. The roll of those who came for relief to Christ is larger and larger. Unto this Shlloh of omnipotent sympathy the gathering of the people shall be. Oh, that Christ would stand by all these empty cradles, and all these desolated homesteads and all these broken hearts, and persuade us it is well. The world cannot offer you any help at such a time. Suppose the world comes and offers you money. You would rather live on a crust in a cellar and have your departed loved ones with you, than live in palatial surroundings and they away. Suppose the world of fers you its honors to console you. What is the presidency to Abraham Lincoln when little Willie lies dead in the White House? Perhaps the world comes and says: "Time will cure it all." Ah, there are griefs that have raged on for thirty years and are rag ing yet. And yet hundreds have been comforted, thousands have been com forted, millions have been comforted, and Christ had done the work. Oh, what you want is sympathy. The world's heart of sympathy beats very irregularly. Plenty of sympathy when we do not want it, and often when we are in appalling need of it no sym pathy. There are multitudes of peo ple dying for sympathy sympathy in their work) sympathy in their fatigues, sympathy in their bereavements, sym pathy in their financial losses, sympa thy in their physical ailments, sympa thy in the time of declining years wide, deep, high, everlasting, almighty sympathy. We must have It, and Christ gives It. That is the chord with which he is going to draw all nations to him. At the story of punishment a man's I eye flashes and his teeth set and his ! fist clinches, and he prepares to do j battle even though it be against the heavens; yet what heart so hard but It j I will succumb to the story of compas- sicn! Even a man's sympathy is pleas i ant and helpful. When we have been j In some hour of weakness, to have a ( brawny man stand beside us and prom : ise to see us through, what courage it gives to our heart and what strength it gives to our arm. Still mightier is a woman's sympathy. Let him tell the story who, when all his fortunes were gone and all the world was against him, came home and found in that home a wife who could write on the top of the empty flour-barrel, "The xord will ro vide;'' or write on the door of the empty wardrobe, "Consider the lilies of the field; if God so clothed the grass of the field, will he not clothe us and ours?" Or let that young man tell the atory who has gone the whole round of dis sipation. The shadow of the peniten tiary Is upon him, and even his father says. "Be off! never come home again!" The young man still his mother's arm findg outstretched for him, and how she will stand at the wicket of the prison to whisper consolation, or get down on her knees before the governor, begging for pardon, hoping on for her wayward boy after all others are hopeless. Or let her tell the story who, under villain ous allurement and impatient cff par ental restraint, has wondered off from a home of which she was the idol into the murky and thunderous midnight of abandonment, away from God, and fur- ther away, until some time she Is tossed on the beach of that early home a mere splinter of a wreck. Who will pity her now? Who will gather these dishon ored locks into her lap? Who will wash off the blood from the gashed forehead? Who will tell her of that ChrUt who came to save the lost? Who will put that weary head upon the clean white pillow and watch by day and watch by night until the hoarsa ' T0C of sufferer becomes the whisper, and the whisper becomes only a faint motion of the lips, and the faint motion of the lips is exchanged for a silent look, and the cut feet are still, and the weary eyes are still, and the frenzied heart is still, and all is still? Who will have compassion on her when no others have compassion? Mother! Mother! . Oh! there is something beautiful in sympathy in manly sympathy, wife ly sympathy, motherly sympathy; yea, and neighborly sympathy. Why was it that a city was aroused with excite ment when a little child was kidnaped from one of the streets? Why were whole columns of the newspapers filled with the story of a little child? It was because we are all one in sym pathy, and every parent said: "How if it had been my Lizzie? How if it it had been my Mary? How if it had been my Maud? How If it had been my child? How if there had been one unoccupied plMow in our trundle-bed to-night? How if my little one bone t 0f my hone and flesh of my flesh were to-night carried captive into some den of vagabonds, never to come back to rre? How If it had been my sorrow looking out of the window, watching and waiting that sorrow worse than death?" Then when they found her why did we declare the news all ' through the households, and everybody that knew how to pray said, "Thank God!"? Because we are all one, bound by one golden chain of sympathy. Oh! yes, but I have to tell you that if you will aggregate all neighborly, manly, wifely, motherly sympathy, it will be found only a poor starving thing com pared with the sympathy of our great Shiloh, who has held in his lap the sorrows of the ages, and who is ready to nurse on his holy heart the woes of all who will come to him. Oh! what a God, what a Savior we have! There are people who think Christ will come in person and sit on a throne. Perhaps he may. I should like to see the scarred feet going up the stairs of a palace in which all the glories of the Alhambra, and the Taj Mahal, and the St. Mark's, and the Winter Palace are gathered. I should like to see the world pay Christ in love for what it did to him In .maltreatment. I should like to be one of the grooms of the chargers, holding the stirrup as the King mounts. O! what a glorious time it would be on earth if Christ would break through the heavens, and right here where he has suffered and died have this prophecy fulfilled. "Unto him shall the gathering of the people be." But failing in that, I bargain to meet you at the ponderous gate of heaven on the day when our Lord comes back. Garlands of all nations on his brow of the bronzed nations of the South and the pallid nations of the North Europe, Asia, Africa, North and South America, and the other con tinents that may arise meantime from the sea, to take the places of their sunken predecessors; Arch of Trajan, Arch of Titus, Arch of Triumph in the Champs Elysees, all too poor to wel come this King of kings, and Lord of lords, and Conqueror of conquerors In his august arrival. Turn out all heaven to meet him. Hang all along the route flags of earthly dominion, whether decorated with crescent, or star, or eagle, or lion, or coronet. Hang out heaven's brightest banner, with its one star of Bethlehem and blood- , striped of the cross. I hear the pro- ! cession now. Hark! the tramp of the feet, the rumbling of the wheels, the , clattering of the hoofs, and the shouts j of the riders. Ten thousand times ten . thousand, and thousands of thousands, i Put up in heaven s library, right be- j side the completed volume of the j world's ruin, the completed volume of j Shiloh's triumph. The old promise ! struggling through the ages fulfilled at last: "Unto him shall the gathering of the people be." While everlasting ages roll, Eternal love shall feast their soul. And scenes of bliss forever new Rise in succession to their view. PHILOSOPHY. The love of money keeps many men from vice. The locomotive builder Is noted for his engine-ulty. The proper thins for a Jury Is to be firm, but not fixed. The fetter of propriety should be worn as an ornament, not a chain. The surest way to become poor In earnest is to try to 1- ep all you get. The trouble with cheerful people Is that their cheerfulness is too hard to snub. If you don't want your boy to turn out bad, don't bear down too hard on the grindstone. There ought to be a law passed that railway restaurant keepers shall date their apple pies. The more worthless a man is when he leaves a town, the greater probability that he will come bar k. We learn that ministers are eriously disturbed over the innovation known as the automatic coupler. A fish diet Is said to be good for th brain Probably this is because the fish go so often in schools .man flnile nut Via Via The moment """. T- : ; i in making a fool or nimseu ne ua , learned something valuable. The stingier a man i uu"i .u. things the more apt he is to give advice, i wageSf he will either discharge him en Comparing your Jlns with those of oth- tlrely or lay him off part of the time, cr people won't make your sinning any , Thu3 the wage WOrker comes in for his ?afer. MANNERS OF GREAT MEN. Fox would never stand covered In the presence of ladies. Calhoun was so absent-minded that he often forgot he was in company. Bancroft was rather reserved than otherwise with most persons whom he met. a Burglar (Just acquitted, to his coun sel) I will call shortly arid see you at your office, sir. "Very food; but In the ayUm. please." TO THE PRODUCERS. AN ARTICLE INTENDED THE FARMERS. FOR Jlovr They Are 'Forced Crop for Half 1'rtces to Sell the Their Money Combine Ilack. -Free Silver Would Hreak It "Willett & Grey's statistical review places the consumption of sugar in the United States at 1.945,406 tons during the year 1S95, against 2,012,729 tons in 1S94. This means that the people bought less sugar by 67.323 tons in 1895 than in 1S94. Yet the price of raw sugar averaged lower during 1895 than throughout any other year of which commercial history takes notice." The above is from the Inter Ocean, and is made the basis of an argument in favor of protection, the idea being that the cheapness coming from free trade will not bring prosperity. Whether the Inter Ocean is right or wrong upon that point, we shall not consider. The statement is reproduced for another purpose. In some cases cheapness may be a good thing, but when the cheapness is caused, not by superabundance of the commodity, but by a scarcity of money, it is an unmiti gated evil so far as the masses of the people are concerned. Under such cir cumstances, to talk about the "con sumer's" benefit is the very refinement of cruelty. The source of all human prosperity is industry, and the very basis is that particular Industry which is applied to production. Without "pro duction no other business could live, and man himself would disappear from the face of the earth. Production is the primary work of man. while everything else is secondary and subordinate. The producer is also a consumer, but if he make anything more than a bare living he must sell more than he buys. Take the case of a farmer. Suppose that of his crop he can sell $1,000 worth each year, while his expenses, including grocery bills, help on farm, doctor bills, taxes, etc., amount to fSOO. He saves $200. Now suppose that prices fall one half all along the line. His crop for sale sinks to $500, his expenses to $400, and instead of being $200 ahead, he only has a balance of $100. This, though, is upon the supposition that all things have fallen in the same ratio. But we know that all things do not cheapen uniformly. Taxes, for ex ample, have not been reduced at all. On the contrary, in many cases, they have actually increased. Presidents, governors, congressmen, judges and lo cal officers continue to draw their sal aries as of yore, while those who pay the salaries sell the products of their labor for half price. Doctor's bills, lawyer's fees, traveling expenses and other things remain substantially the same. The hired man stoutly resists (and properly) a cut in his wages, while the manufacturers, the middlemen, and the merchants by combinations do every thing in their power to keep up retail rates. The great farm staples are usually sold at wholesale prices. Bearing these facts in mind let us now make another calculation. Sup pose his taxes, doctor bills, etc., amount to $100 of his total expense. These stand as before. Upon the remaining $700, which includes the hired man's pay, groceries, drugs, etc., we will sup pose that there is a reduction of say 30 per cent. This represents a saving to him of $210, leaving his expenses on those lines $490. In the meantime his $1,000 has fallen to $500. The account now stands as follows: Income. (Crop for sale . . $500.00 Expenses. (Taxes, doc- $100.00 490.00 tor's bills, etc.) Other expenses Total expenses 590.00 Deficiency $ 90.00 Instead of having a profit of $200, we find that he has suffered a loss of $90 on his year's work. Now, suppose further, what is true in multitudes of cases, that the farmer is $1,000 in debt on his farm. Falling behind at the rate of $90 a year, how long will it take him to pay the debt? The above figures are given not as representing strictly the exact ratio at which different prices have fallen, but for the purpose of emphasizing the fact that should be obvious to producers generally, that when the prices of their products fall, they do not realize a full compensation in the decline of other things. Hence the conclusion, that a general fall in prices injures the producers more than it injures any other class. The very men who should be injured least are injured most. When a policy is pur sued the tendency of which is to harm the producer, it strikes at the very foundations of national prosperity. This was the Inevitable effect of de monetizing silver, and the bulk of the complaints to which we have listened during the last twenty-two years has come from that class. In the case given as an illustration, it stands to reason that if the farmer can not reduce expenses in any other way, he will economize in consumption. He will use less of sugar ana any otner v nn nr,sn1iitplv inriis uuu&s maw - - pensable. If he cannot induce tne nirea man to accept a pro rata reduction oi I share of the injury, i While the farmer will reduce his con ! sumption of sugar, spices and the like, ! poor people dependent upon their daily toil must reduce on all lines. They will consume less bread. Accordingly we find that in seasons of great business depression there is usually a reduced consumption of al most everything that contributes to the sustenance of man. For example, in 1893. a very disas trous year In business, we consumed 62,000,000 bushels less wheat than In 1892. In 1894. which, as a whole, was even worse than in 1893, the consump tion was nearly 102,000,000 bushels less than in the latter year. Thus we see that the alleged overpro duction so persistently brought for- ward by the gold people as an explana- tion of the falling prices is in fact un- der-consumption. With prices lower than ever before, the people have . . . bought less, and consumed less. It has been simply because they have not had the money to buy with. The Idea that people can be made prosperous by making money scarce i3 preposterous, and the belief that sil ver can be displaced without making a scarcity of money is equally so. GOLD AT A PREMIUM. And Tt Wall Street lias Survived ths Shook. Gold is at a premium. On Thursday last it was iyt per cent. How Wall street survived such a shock is one of those mysteries that will probably never be explained. For two years past the appalling picture of "gold at a premium" has been kept In the very focus of the public gaze. True, the gold people never specified particu larly just how we were to be ruined by it. They left that to the imagination. Gold has been at a premium over com modities and other forms of property for more than twenty years. That, however, has given the gold worship per no concern. The fact that the pro ducer had to labor twice as long or twice as hard to get a dollar, was a good thing for the man who already had the dollars. But at the idea of some importer or Wall street specula tor having to pay one or two per cent premium in order to get gold for export, he actually stood aghast. But the dread moment came. Gold went to a premium of a cent and a quarter, and except for the telegraphic mention of the fact we should never have known the difference. It is now in order for the gold standardists. whose whole soul has been wrapped up in the idea of "parity," "one dollar as good as an other," etc., etc., to rise and explain. It will probably be said that the pre mium was small and that it was only temporary. Well, how great must the premium be and how long must it last to hurl us down the awful abyss of j financial ruin. If 1U per cent is not enough will 2 per cent do the work, or 3 or 4 or how many per cent must it be? The profits of the syndicate on the first secret bond deal, represent a premium of 16 per cent on the gold furnished to the government. Even that, bad as it was In every respect, did not ruin the country. It only disgraced It. We expect to see a premium on gold a good many times within the next year, and we expect to see the goldite shift his position concerning It as often as he has with reference to the "danger point" of the treasury reserve. The reader will remember that for a long time the line was sharply drawn at one hundred millions. Then the line was lowered to ninety millions, then to seventy-five and now it seems to be alto gether indefinite. So will it be with the premium on gold. MAY ACT WITH POPULISTS. rovrerfal Illmetalllc Orgnizatlon Would Make Victory Certain. Referring to the consolidation of the American Bimetallic League, the Na tional Bimetallic Union and the Na tional Silver Committee, the Weekly Tribune of Callawaj-, Neb., says: "The new organization resolved to support the party declaring in its favor; but declares that in the event of non support by either of the great parties, the Union will put its own ticket in the next campaign." Then that paper waxes indignant over the supposed fact that the American Bimetallic Union has turned the cold shoulder on the Populist party. The National Bimetallist is anx ious that no misapprehensions may arise with reference to the attitude of the consolidated organization, and it will therefore say to one and all of its readers, that it has taken no such action as that mentioned above. It has adopt ed no 6uch resolutions, made no such declaration and in fact has thus far proposed nothing in the world but a campaign of education. It has no dis position to ignore the Populist party, or any other. There are populists, re publicans and democrats connectea with it and they are all working to gether in perfect harmony for the com mon cause, namely, the complete resto ration of bimetallism in the United States. The Hanks Circular. This one afterward issued by New York bankers to the national banks: Dear Sir: It is advisable to do all in your power to sustain such prominent daily and weekly newspapers, especial ly the agricultural and religious press, as will oppose the issuing of green back money, and that you also with hold patronage or favors from all appli cants who are not willing to oppose the government issue of money. Let the government issue the coin and tne hanks issue the naper money of the country, for then we can better protect j each other. To repeal the law creating national bank notes, or to restore to circulation the government issue of money will be to provide the people with money, and will therefore seri- : ously affect your individual profit as bankers and lenders. See your con gressman at once, and engage him to support our interests that we may con- , trol legislation. j "Ilesirlnjr' Hi Stock. j Let the United States keep all its sll- i ver at home, and there will soon come a scramble for that metal. But so long as Uncle Sam, the principal silver pro ducer of the world, bears his stock, how can he expect the big nations to bull it? Peoria Journal. ; The invention of the bridge was prob ably suggested by the trunk of a tret which had fallen acrose a stream. Cake for a Child's Birthday. The following receipt will tell how to make a nice birthday cake for a child: Cream together one cup of trot- ti.r and three cups of sugar; ine of four eggs beaten thoroughly with one cup of sweet nk:hc four cups of finely-sifted Jour, three l nf bakincr Dowder. TaQcnnnncTii n i j l uatviut: uv spice, a cupful of seeded raisins, and lastly, the well-beaten whites of four eggs. Tut into a rather shallow cake tfn and bake in not too hot an oven. Just before putting in the oven drop m the ring, thimble and the sixpence. j Infests the blood of humanity. It j appears in varied forms, but is forced to viold to Hood's Sarsaparilla, which piini'.s arid vitalizes me umou aim cures all such diseases. Head this: " In September, 1S94, 1 made a in instep and injured my ankle. Very soon afterwards, sr two inches across formed and in walking to favor it I sprained my ankle. The sore became worse; I could not put my boot on and I thought I should have to give up at every step. I-could not get any relief and had to etop work. I read of a cure of a similar case by Hood's Sareaparilla and concluded to try it. Before 1 had taken all of two bottles the sore had healed and the swelling had gone down. My is now well and I have been greatly bene fited otherwise. I have increased in weight and am in better health. I cannot eay enough in praise of Hood's Sarsapa Tilla." Mrs. II. Blake, So. Berwick, Me. Thi3 and other similar cures prove that nn hOQ Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. AH druggists. $1. Prepared only by C.I. Hood A Co., Lowell. Mm. wm - the best family cathartie nOOCI S HlllS and liver stimulant. 25C The Greatest fledical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrbfuia down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benelit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is war ranted when the right quantity is tiken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the samewith the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will czuse squeamfsh feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you ca.i get, and enough of it Dose, one tablespoonful in water af bed time. Sold by all Druggists. You Can Set Your Watch by the Bur;ington'9 "Denver Limited, ' it's so rezular. Leaves Omaha, at 4 :35 p. m. EXACTLY. . Arrive Denver, 7:30 a. m. EXACTLY. Fastest and most comforta ble train from Omaha to all points in Colorado. Sleepers chair car diner. Ask the local ticket agent for tickets via the I'urlinston and BE SURE YOU (JET THEM. J. Fbascis, Gen'l Passr Agt, Omaha, Neb. f Kino Army Duck, wlih Md; sj la , 91. OO. Good Heavy Duck, with Buckles. 5c. f-ent prepaid on ivet'lpt Of price. Send nir.e of boe anil mennurv of tall of leu. I C. HUNTINGTON A BON, Omaha. HAYDEII BROS..ota. eb..scs. ,,ww,lterlck' FatternB. offer to anyone pending 99.00 for nine aubacripCloiM to tb lKLINEATOR." the standard f&xhUm magazine, one additional subscription FKKK Write for catalogue of Mprlas Fushlona Free. Patents. Trade-Marks. Examination and Ad-rice as to Patentability of Invention, tiend for " Inven tors' Uatde, or How to Get al'ateut" PAT2ICI 0TASEILU WASHntMCiT. 5. 0. Boat Cough Syrup. Taste Good. Uae In Mmw. Sold by drugytate. EE VV. N. U., OMAHA10 1890. When writing to advertisers, kindly mention tbia paper. a r 3 1ml