r AGL1i1 S SERMON. "THE CHIEFTAIN" SUEJECT OF DISCOURSE. F I The Golden Text : "Tito Chlcfest Among Ten Thousand"-Cantlcles , Chnptcr V , Verge 10-Jesus Cttrlet Is Chief of Ileavea r . } , r _ i\ \ I ! r 1 HE MOST CON- splcuous character of history steps out upon the platform. The finger which , diamonded w i t h light , pointed down to him from the Bethlehem sky , was only a ratification of the finger of t prophecy , the finger - ger of genealogy , the finger of chronology - elegy , the finger of events-all five fingers - gers pointing in one direction. Christ is the overtopping figure of all time. He is the "vox humana" in all music , ( the gracefulest line in all sculpture , the most eiulsite mingling of lights and shades In all painting , the acme of all climaxes , the dome of all cathedral grandeur , and the peroration of all lan- guage. The , Greek alphabet is made up of twenty-four letters , and when Christ compared himself to the first letter and the last letter , th Alpha and the Omega , he appropriated to 'himself' all the splendors that you can spell out either with those two letters or all the letters between them : "I am the Alpha and the Omega , the beginning and the end. " What does that Scripture mean which t says of Christ , "He that cometh from above is above all ? " It means after you have piled up all Alpine and Himalayan - alayan altitudes , the glory of Christ ' would have to spread its wings and descend a thousand leagues to touch those summits. Pelion , a high mountain - tain of Thessaly ; Ossa , a high mountain - tain , and Olympus , a high mountain ; but mythology tells us when the giants warred against the gods they piled up these three mountains , and from the top of them proposed to scale the heavens - ens ; but the height was not great enough , and there was a complete fail- ure. And after all the giants-Isaiah and Paul , prophetic and apostolic giants ; Raphael and Michael Angelo , artistic giants ; cherubim and seraphim and archangel , celestial giants-have failed to climb to the top of Christ's , glory they might all unite in the words of Paul , and cry out , "Above all ! Above all ! " But Solomon in his text prefers to call Christ "The Chieftain , " and so today - day I hail him. First , Christ must be chief in our preaching. There are so many books on homiletics scattered through the country that all laymen , as well as all clergymen , have made up their minds what sermons ought to be. That sermon - mon is the most effectual which most pointedly puts forth Christ as the pardon - don of all sin and the correction of all evil-individual , social , political , na- tional. There is no reason why we should ring the endless changes on a few phrases. There are those who think that if an exhortation or a discourse have frequent mention of justification , sanctification , covenant of works and covenant of grace , therefore it must be profoundly evangelical , w.lr.e ' they are m suspicious of a discourse which presents - sents the same truth , but under different - ent phraseology. Now , I say there is nothing in all the opulent realm of Anglo-Saxonism , of all the word treasures - ures that we inherited from the Latin and the Greek and the Indo-European , but we have a right to marshal it in religious discussion. Christ sets the trample. His illustrations were from the grass , the flowers , the barn-yard fowl , the crystals of salt , as well as from the seas and the stars ; and we do not propose in our Sunday-school teaching and in our pulpit address to be put on the lim s. I know that there is a great deal said in our day against words , as though they were nothing. They may be misused - used , but they have an imperial power. They are the bridge between soul and soul , between Almighty God and the t human race. What did God write upon t the tables of stone ? Words. What did Christ utter on Mount Olivet ? Words. Out of what did Christ strike the spark for the illumination of the universe ? Out of words. "Let there be light , " and light was. Of course , thought is the cargo , : nd words are only the ship ; but how fast would your cargo get on without the ship ? What you need , my friends , in all your work in the Sabbath-school class , in your reformatory institutions , and what we all need , is to enlarge our vocabulary when we come to speak about God and Christ and heaven. We ride a few old words to death , when there is such illimitable source. Shakespeare employed - ployed 15,00 different words for dramatic - matic purposes , Milton employed 5,000 different words for poetic purposes , Rufus Choate .employed over 11,000 different - ferent words for legal purposes , but the ' most of us have less than 1,000 words that we can manage , and that makes 14 Us SO stupid. When we come to set forth the love d t of Christ u-0 are going to take the ten- derest phraseology wherever we find it , and if it bas never been used in that direction before all the more shall we use it. When we come to . .peak of the glory of Christ the Conqueror , we are going to draw our similes from triumphal - phal arch and oratorio and everything grand and stupendous. The French c : navy have-eighteen flags by which they give signal , but those eighteen flags they can put into sixty-six different Combinations. And I have to tell you 7 that these standards of the cross may be lifted into combinations infinite and varieties everlasting. And let me say to these young men who come frcm the 1f 1 IF , theological seminaries into our services - ices , and are , after awhile , going to preach Jesus Christ : You will have the largest liberty and unlimited resource. You only have to present Christ in your own way. Brighter than the light , fresher than the fountains , deeper than the seas , are all these gospel themes. Song has no melody , flowers no sweetness , sunset sky no' color , compared with these glorious - rious themes. These harvests of grace spring up quicker than we can sickle them. Kindling pulpits with their fire and producing revolutions with their power , lighting up dying beds with their glory , they are the sweetest thought for the poet , and they are the most thrilling illustration for the orator - tor , and they offer the most intense scene for the artist , and they are to the embassador of the sky all enthusiasm - asm ; complete pardon for direst guilt ; sweetest comfort for ghastliest agony ; brightest hope for grimmest death ; grandest resurrection for darkest sepulchre. Oh , what a gospel to preach ! Christ the Chief ! His birth , his suffering - ing , His miracles , His sweat , His tears , His blood , His atonement , His interces- sion-what glorious themes ! Do we exercise - ercise faith ? Christ is' its object Do we have love ? It fastens on Jesus. Have we a fondness for the church ? It is because Christ died for it. Have we a hope of heaven ? It is because Jesus went there , the herald and the forerunner. The royal robe of Deme- trius was so costly , so beautiful , that after he had put it off no one ever dared to put it on. But this robe of Christ , richer than that , the poorest and the weakest and the worst may wear. Where sin abounded , grace may much more abound. " "Oh , my sins , my sins ! " said Martin Luther to Staupiz , "my sins , my sins ! " The fact is that the brawny German student had found a Latin bible that made him quake , and nothing else ever did make him quake ; and when be found how , through Christ , he was pardoned - doned and saved he wrote to a friend , saying : "Come over and join us great and awful sinners , saved by the grace of God. You seem to be only a slender sinner , and you don't much extol the mercy of God ; but we that have been such very awful sinners praise His grace the more now that we have been redeemed. " Can 'it be that you are so desperately egotistical that you feel yourself in first-rate spiritual trim , and that from the root of the hair to the tip of the toe you are scar- less and Immaculate ? What you need is a looking-glass , and here it is in the Bible. Poor and wretched , and miserable - able and blind and naked from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot , full of wounds and putrifying sores. No health in us. And then take the fact that Christ gathered up all the notes against us and paid them , and then offered us the receipt ! And how much we need him in our sorrows - rows ! We are independent of circumstances - stances if we have His grace. Why , lie made Paul sing in the dungeon , and under that grace St. John from desolate Patmos heard the blast of the apocalyptic trumpets. After all other candles have been rjtuffed out , this is the light that gets brighter and brighter - er unto the perfect day ; and after , under - der the hard hoofs of calamity , all the pools of worldly enjoyment have been trampled into deep mire , at the foot of the eternal rock , the Christian , from the cups of granite , lily-rimmed , puts out the thirst of his soul. Again I remark that Christ is chief in dying alleviations. I have not any sympathy with the morbidity abroad about our demise. The Emperor of Constantinople arranged that on the day of his coronation the stone mason should come and consult him about the tombstone that after awhile he would need. And there are men who are monomaniacal - omaniacal on the subject of departure from this life by death , and the more they think of it the less they are pro. pared to go. This is an unmanliness not worthy of you , not worthy of me. Saladin , the greatest conqueror of his day , while dying , ordered that the tunic he had on him be carried after his death on his spear at the head of his army , and then the soldier , ever and anon , should stop and say : "Be- hold all that is left of Saladin , the emperor - peror and conqueror ! Of all the states he conquered , of all the wealth he accumulated , nothing did he retain but this shroud. " I have no sympathy with such behavior , or such absurd demonstration - stration , or with much that we hear uttered in regard to departure from this life to the next. There is a commonsensical - monsensical idea on this subject that you need to consider-there are only two styles of departure. A thousand feet underground , by light of torch , toiling i'i a miner's shaft , a ledge of rock may fall upon us , and we may die a miner's death. Far out at sea , failing - ing from the slippery ratlines and broken on the hilliards , we may die a sailor's death. On mission of mercy in hospital , amid broken bones and reeking - ing leprosies and raging feverswe may die a philanthropist's death. On the field of battle , serving God and our country , slugs through the heart , the gun carriage may roll over us , and we may die a patriot's death. But , after all , there are only two styles of depart- ure-the death of the righteous and the death of the wicked-and we all want to die the former. God grant that when that hour comes you may be at home. You want the hand of your kindred in your hand. You want your children to , surround you. You want the light on your ph- -low from eyes that have long reflected your lore. You want your room still You do not want any curious strangers standing around watching you. You want your kindred from afar to hear your last prayer. I think that is the wish of all of us. But is that all ? Can earthly friends hold us up when the billows of death come up to the girdle ? I Can b.uman voice charm open heaven's gate ? Can human hand pilot us through the narrows of death into heaven's harbor ? Can any earthly friendship shield us from the arrows of death , and in the hour when Satan shall practice upon us his infet nal archery - ery ? No , no , no , no ! Alas ! poor soul , if that is all. Better die in the wilderness - ness , far from tree shadow and from fountain , alone , vultures circling through the air waiting for our body , unknown to men , and to have no burial - ial , if only Christ could say through the solitudes , "I will never leave thee , I will never forsake thee. " From that pillow of stone a ladder would soar _ heavenward , angels coming and going ; and across the solitude and the barrenness - ness would come the sweet notes of heavenly minstrelsy. Gordon Hall , far from home , dying in door of a heathen temple , said : "Glo- ry to thee , 0 God ! " What did dying Wilberforce say to his wife ? "Come and sit beside me , , and let us talk of heaven. I never knew what happiness was until I found Christ. " What did dying Hannah More say ? "To go to heaven , think what that Is ! To go to Christ , who died that I might live ! Oh , the love of Christ , the love of Christ ! " What did Toplady , the great hymn-maker , say in his last hour ? "Who can measure the depths of the third heaven ? Oh , the sunshine that fills my soul ! I shall soon be gone , for surely no one can live in this world after such glories as God has manifested - ed to my soul. " So , alno , Christ is chief in heaven. The Bible distinctly says that Christ is the chief theme of the celestial ascription , all the thrones facing His throne , all the palms waved before His face , all the crowns down at His feet. Cherubim to cherubim , seraphim to seraphim , redeemed spirit to redeemed spirit , shall recite the Savior's earthly sacrifice. Stand on some high hill of heaven , and in all the radiant sweep the most glorious object will be Jesus. Myriads gazing on the scars of His suffering , in silence first , ditarward breaking forth into acclamation. The martyrs , all the purer for the flames through which they passed , will say , "This is the Jesus - sus for whom we died. " The apostles , all the happier for the shipwreck and the scourging through which they went , will say , "This Is the Jesus whom we preached at Corinth , and at Cappa- docia , and at Antioch , and at Jerusa- lem. " Little children clad in white will say , "This is the Jesus who took us in His arms and blessed us , and , when the storms of the world were too cold and loud , brought us into this beautiful - ful place. " The multitude of the bereft will say , "This Is the Jesus who comforted - forted us when our heart broke. " Many who wandered clear off from God and plunged into vagabondism , but were saved by grace , will say , "This is the Jesus who pardoned us. We were lost on the mountains , and He brought us home. We were guilty , and He made us white as snow. " Mercy boundless - less , grace unparalleled. And then , after - er each one has recited his peculiar deliverances and peculiar mercies , recited - cited them as by solo , all the voices will come together in a great chorus , which will make the arches echo and re-echo with the eternal reverberation of triumph. Edward I. was so anxious to go to the Holy Land that when he was about to expire he bequeathed $160,000 to have his heart , after his decease , taken to the Holy Land , in Asia Minor , and his request was complied with. But there are hundreds to-day whose hearts are already in the Holy Land of heaven. Where your treasures are , there are your hearts also. Quaint John Bunyan caught a glimpse of that place , and in his quaint way said : "And I heard in my dream , and lo ! the bells of the city rang again for joy ; and as they opened the gates to let in the men I looked In after them , and lo ! the city shone like the sun , and there were streets of gold , and the men walked on them , harps in their hands , to ring praises withal ; and after that they shut up the gates. which when I had seen I wished my. self among them ! " PHILOSOPHY. Fame Is an undertaker that pays but little attention to the living , but bedizens - dizens the dead , furnishes out their funerals and follows them to the grave. -Colton. Quick is the succession of human events : the cares of to-cay are seldom the cares of to-morrow ; and when we lie down at night we may safely say to most of our troubles , Ye have done your worst , and we shall meet no more.- Cowper. Believe me , sir , those who attempt to level never equalize. In all societies consisting of various descriptions of citizens - izens , some description must be upper- most. The levelers , therefore , only change and pervert the natural order of things ; they load the edifice of society - ety by setting up in the air what the solidity of the structure requires to been on the ground.-Burke. It is a good plan , with a young person of a character to be much affected by ludicrous and absurd representations , to show him plainly , by examples , that there is nothing which may not be so represented. He will hardly need to be told that everything is not a mere joke , and he may thus be secured from falling - ing into a contempt of those particular things which he may at any time happen - pen to find so treated.-Whately. Cicero says that "to study philosophy Is nothing but to prepare a man's self to die. " The reason of which is , because study and contemplation do in some sort withdraw from us and deprive us of our souls , and employ it separately from the body , which is a kind of learning to die , and a resemblance of death ; or else because all the wisdom and reasoing in the world does in.the end conclude in this point , to teach us not to fear to die. When the prodhal started back to hie father's house he didn't have to go all the way alone. God's help is all the weakest man needs , and what the worst may have if he will repent. NOT ALL KILLED BY SHOT. 6pilntcrs Were Iirore Destructlve Than Mlesiles in the Eaalcrn War. The recent war between Japan and China has taught the officers of the American navy at least one new thing in the construction of vessels. There will be scarcely any woodwork In the Oregon , that Is ra Idly nearing completion - tion at the Uni .Iron works. This is due to the fac .at there were more people killed ainjured : In the naval battles in the , sit by flying wooden splinters than be bullets or exploding - ing shells. 1 . .c of the cruisers and battle ships that took part In the war were constructed with steel hulls , and all of them were more or less protected with heavy armor plates. The interior fittings and furnishings of the quarters and the deck coverings , however , were of wood. When a shot pierced the hull of a vessel and tore through the wood in the interior of the ship splinters were sent flying in all directions. In most cases the shot passed through the vessel without injuring any of the crew , but the shower of wooden splinters filled the sick bay and kept the sailmaker sewing up the dead in canvas sacks for burial. On the battleship Oregon practically - tically no wood will be used. All the bulkheads and partitions dividing the rooms in the officers' quarters are to beef of iron. No wood will be used on the decks , but instead linoleum will be cemented to the iron deck to prevent slipping. All the doors will be of iron , and all those leading to the decks will be made watertight. What rakes a Man Di , This' . What makes a man of 30 or 40 take a sailboat when he can't sail it , put in his friends or family for ballast , and go right out to capsizing and tragedy ? You can't answer that any more than you can explain how such a fool has made out to survive to his present age. Why didn't he reach his deserved fate long before ? No one can say. Enough that it does overtake him and he gets from ten lines to a column in the paper , according - cording to how big a fool he was. At the shore we see sailboats run away out into the wound , until they can hardly be seen , and when the clouds come up and it begins to thunder the venturesome - some amateur who is away out there is the last to start for shelter. He doesn't know enough to know his danger. So it goes each summer , and each summer has its long string of drowning tragedies - dies for a part of its history. But , as we said before , no one summer does it up completely , so as to give civilization a fresh chance. A lot of people are drowned for their folly this year who lived through last year , which was just as good a year for drowning , and a lot will live through this year and go out and drown in 1896 as readily as if they were led.-Ex. Ventilate at Nifiht. though contrary to the usual practice - tice , night air will ventilate a cellat more thoroughly and cause less humidity - ity than the hot air of midday. Open the cellar windows at sunset and leave them open until 6 in the morning , and the air will be cooler and drier than if the cellar is closed at night and open during the day. The screens or gratings should be so arranged that the windows can be opened and closed without moving them.-New York Evening Post. A Mutual Service. ' He-I am very unfortunate ; it seems I can please nobody. She-Come , cheer up ; I have no one to admire me , either. He-Tell you what-let's found a society - ciety for mutual admiration ; I , for instance - stance , admire your beautiful eyes ; and what do you admire in me ? She - Your good taste.- Brooklyn Life. NEWSY MORSELS. Emily Soldene has been appearing with success in "La Fille de Mme. Angot" at Sydney , Australia. The latest information from the moon is that 132,856 craters have been counted on its surface , all dead. Oregon has just passed a law against fishing in the Columbia river on Sun- day. It is intended to give the salmon a rest. There is a warm controversy in Utah over the right of women to vote in that territory next November , when the constitution will be presented for rati- fication. After an existence of twenty-two years the English Palaeographical society - ciety has come to an end. During its existence it published 550 fac similies of manuscripts and inscriptions. The butchers of Bridgeport , Conn. , have decided to revive an old custom among members of their trade. They will , this year , hold a barbecue and roast a lot of oxen and sheep. A thief in New York set himself to chase and catch a thief. He succeeded and made off with the booty , while the victimized pilferer of the first part was arrested and locked up. On the day of the feast of St. Theodore - dore , observed annually at Helmagen , Roumania , all the young married women - men go about the town kissing the men and offering them a drink of wine. Japanese postmen whose routes carry them into the country use bicycles. Their wheels are made by local manufacturers - facturers , who have appropriated improvements - provements from both British and American patents. In the Danish budget a curious tax entitled the "rank tax" is calculated to produce 3,261. Social rank is highly prized in Denmark , and everyone of any consideration has his clearly defined position - sition in the social hierarchy. A valuable Greek inscription has recently - cently been added to the Louvre. It comes from the neighborhood of Djerach , in Syria , and contains portions of an ancient law concerning the maintenance - tenance of vineyards and their protection - tection against thieves. t . ; y , - v .t , a Highest of all in Leavening Poarc : . Latest U. S. Gov't Report DtVA1 BLiking , , f1 IAlU D111A . rwu& ABSOLUTELY PIE Wise Old Sing Ceerops. Did I say that the people who lived there ( Athens ) at that time were simple-minded ? Rather childlike they were in some ways , and not so worldly- wise as they might have been had they lived some thousand years later ; but they were neither simpletons nor altogether savages 't'hey were the foremost people in Greece. It was all owing to their king , wise old Cecrops , that they had risen to a condition supe rior to that of the half barbarous tribes around them. lie had shown them how to sow barley and wheat and plant vineyards ; and lie had taught them to depend upon these and their flocks and herds for food , rather than the wild beasts of the chase. tie had persuaded them. to lay aside many of their old cruel customs , had set them in families with each its own home , and had instructed - structed them in the worship of the gods On the top of the Acropolis they had built a little city , and protected it with walls and fortifications against any attact front their warlike neighbors - bors ; and from this point as a center they bad , little by little , extended their influence to the sea on one side and to the mountains on the other. But , strange to say , they had not yet given a name to their city , nor had they decided - cided which of the gods should be its protector. Piso's Cure is the medicine to l.reac ! up children's Coughs and Cods.-3r ! $ . M. G. 13Lr T , Sprague , Wash. , March S4. , An Antoinette Wrp. If there is no new dress under the sun , Aaron's linen coat being worn today - day by women and pantaloons having been found from the stone epoch , there are at least designs that reappear like comets at such long intervals that they are new to some consecutive generations - tions 't'hus it is with a certain Marie Antoinette cloak , that has appeared and seems destined to a career. Not so very old in its design it is so extremely - tremely odd and its carcer.was so short in its day that it comes with all the effect of surprise. This hood is exceedingly - ceedingly wide and ishooped round the opening , and when on the head stands out like an inflated half balloon somewhat - what flattened on top and leaving a wide space on each side of the face , that may be filled with hair or shadows - ows The width of this hood reaches out to that of the widest sleeves ever made. Attached to a long cloak it is bound to figure in evening wraps next winter , but forstalling the time , they are occasionally seen on hotel piazzas at night. and made of taffeta beruched or of satin lined with cloth ; one or two travelers have worn them coming fromn Paris to the beech. The effect is truly marvelous The Nickel I'late road has authorized its agents to sell tickets at greatly reduced - duced rates to Albany , N. V. , on occasion - sion of the meeting of the German Catholic Societies of the United States in that city , Sept. 15th to lath. For particulars address J. Y. Calahan , Gen'l Agent , 111 Adams St. , Chicago. Stock in ohi < , . The auditor of the state of Ohio has completed his annual tabulation of time returns of animals made by the various counties. It shows a notab'e decrease in the number of sheep in the state , there being - ing only 3,005,40 ; this year , against 3,555,1S2 in ISO-I. A decided reduction in the number of horses is also shown. In 1SJ4 there were S24,540 , and this year there are but ; J.SJ5 , a decrease of 2w- 945. There are 1,2 : 2,901 cattle in the state , decrease . of 13.204 from last year. An increase is shown in the number of hogs , there being L4 3i9 : this year , against 1,331,1GJ in 1bii4 , an increase of 100,234. " $ anEOn's Magic Cori Su1ve. " Warranted to cute or money refunded. Asa you iruggist for it. Price 15 cents. The First horse that Ever Lived. There is a Greek legend tellling how Athens came by its name , and there is a noble horse who plays a prominent part in the legend. If we are to believe - lieve the story , he was the first real flesh-and-blood horse of which we have any account. Some men say that he was the firstanimal of the kind that ever lived , but this is doubtful. Snowy white , without spot orblcniish from the tips of his ears to the tips of his amber hoofs , how he must have astonished the simple-minded follc of Cecropin when he leaped right out of the earth at their feet ! If you should evergo to Athens and climb to the top of that wonderful hilicalled the Acropolis look arouud you. You may see the very spot where it all is said to have happened - pened Horeseekers' Excursions. On Aug. 2ath. Sept. 10th and 24th , IS ! ' : , , the onion Pacific System will sell tic et from louncii Bluffs and Omaha to point south and west in Netraska and Kansas also to Colorado. Wvomin _ , Uhh and Idaho. east of Weiser and south of Beaver Canon , at exceedingly low rates. For ful : information , as to rates and limit , apply to A. C.1Jt'ss. City Ticket Agent , 1302 Farnam tit. , Omaha , Neb. GREAT BOOK FREEG When Dr. R. V. Pierce , of Buffalo , N. 'V. , published time first edition of his work , The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser , he announced that after GSooco , copies had been sold at the regular price , $ m. o per copy , the profit on which would repay him for the great amount of labor and money expended in producing it , he would distribute - tribute the next half million free. As this number of copies has already been sold , he is now distributing , absolutely free , $ ooooo copies of this ' . most complete - plete , interest- COUPON ing and valuable - uable common . No.111 sense med- icalwork ever : rpublished- the recipient only being required to mail to him , at the above address , this little Courov with twenty-one (2I ( ) cents in one- cent stamps to pay for postage and packing - ing only , and the book will be sent by mail. It is a veritable medical library , complete in one volume. It contains over Iooo pages and more than See illustrations. The Free Edition is precisely the same as those sold at I.5o except only that the books are bound in strong manilla paper covers instead - stead of cloth. Send row before all are given away. They are going off rapidly. The Largest Elk on Iecord. , The largest elk of which I have an t 1 authentic record was formerly owned j I by Mr. G. IL McKenzie , of Sullivan ' li county , New York , and kept in his j park until it had to be killed for j 1 viciousness It measured as follows : I Length of head and body , 7 feet 8 inches ; tail , 64 inches ; height at the shoulders , 5 feet 4 inches I am glad to be able to add that its skin is now iii the possession of the American Muse- urn of Natural History , and will soon be mounted by Mr. Rowley-which guarantees the quality of the finished specimen. The weight of that animal could scarcely have been less thau 1,000 pounds , but the weight of a full-grown 1 cow elk sometimes is as little of 400 pounds.-St Nicholas. ' ' ' " ' ' 0l'1"arker'sGinger 'ronlo 't'he revlvlna powers t fender It inois ensabo ! In every home. toraaeh , troubits , colds and every form of , : lstressileld toll. 1. One consequence of the battle of the Yalu is the proposal made in Europe of establishing a naval Red Cross society - ciety , whose vessels , painted in some I distinctive color , shall accompany hos- f the fleets and pick up the crews of yes- eels sunk in action. Get Illndorcorn. . and ; * .e it If If you Want to realiz. the comfort of lelux without corns. It takes them out m , rattly. l5c , at drugds.s I A mustard plaster made according to the following directions will notblister 'the ' most sensitive skin : 't'wo teaspoon- full mustard , two teaspoonfuls flour , two teaspoonfuls ground ginger. Do / not mix too dre. place between two pieces of old muslin and apply. If it ' burns too inuch at first lay an extra piece of muslin between it and the skin : as the skin becomes accustomed to the heat take the extra piece of mus- tin away. THE NEBRASKA STATE FAIR. t Special Bates nud Trains via the Ilnr- 1Inmton Routc. Round trip tickets to Omaha at the one way rate , plus 50 cents ( for admission cou- Ion : to the State Fair ) , will ho on sale Sop- teinher 13th to 20th , at Burlington Route stations , in Nobrashit , in Kansas on the Concordia , Oberlin and St. Francis lines and in Iowa and Missouri within 1C0 miles of Omaha. Nebraskans are assured that tho'95 State Fair will ho a vast improvement on its predecessors Larger-more brilliant-bet- ter worth seeing. Every one who can dose so should spend State Fair week , the whole of it , in Omaha. 'i'he outdoor celebrations will ho particularly - larly attractive , surpassizi anythingef the hind ever before undertaken by any western - ern city. Every oveuiri , Omaha will be Minnie with electricc lights and glittering I ageants will parade the streets. 'rho program - gram for the ovoninti ceremonies is : Monday , Sept. 10th-Grand Bicycle Car- nival. I Tuesday , Sept. 1Tth-Nebraska's parade. Wednesday , Sept. ISth-Military and civic parade. 1 hursdav , Sept. lath-Knights of Ak-Sar- 1 en Parade , to be followed by the "Feast of Mondamin" Ball. Round trip tirkcts to Omaha at the re- dnced rates above mentioned , as well as lull information al out the Burlington l lOates : train service at the time of the State Fair , can be hind oft application to the nearest P. & M. It. It. agent. n H 1 I ED -E Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many , who live better - ter than others and enjoy life more , with less expenditure , by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being , will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy , Syrup of Figs. ! Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas- I ant to the taste , the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative - ative effechiall } cleansing a time system , dispelling colts , headaches and fevers an permanently curing constipation. It has riven satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical 1 profession , because it acts on the Kid- net's , Liver anti Bowels without weakening - ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs i , for sale by all dre' ! gists in 50c and Si bottles , but it is maan- ummfactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only , whose name is printed on every A package , also the name , Syrup of Figs , ! and being well informed , you will not accept any substitute if ofiered. WELL iAcHIwERY ES' mustrated catalorno showing WELL AUGERS. ROCK DRILLS , IIYDI4AALIO AND JETTING MACHINERY , etc , i SENT PBES. Have been tested and am warranted , Stout City Engine and iron works , Successors to Pech 31g. Co. Sioux : City. Iowa. - s ? i Tan nowrtt.t CIIASE MACIIISERY CO. , lull west Eleventh Street , Kaa'ar Clty v"- Omaha ors Stove repair. for 40,000 . and ran re. . 1200 Dou lax St. , Omaha , Seb .A : .T IFIC I.AL FreeCatalogur. Geo.E.r 'uiler , Box 2146 , Rochester , N. Y. 13. 1. Ili. , Ontaha--37. When answering advertisements kindly mention this paper. s - co y IHE : au Faas. Best CottYh t3yrup. Tastes Good. IIse in time. Sold by drnemtist' . . . Y