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About The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1896)
H P 1 TALMAGE'S SEBMON , HBf'kA > " & ftf r THE CITIES SAVED/'LAST SUN' B Hi L DAY'S SUBJECT. B BV | p ) | * An' ! the SlroeU cr the Cltle < Shall Be Hfe > Si * ° 11 ot n ° T * and Gtrl * riuylnc In Er re © t , , ° srcot8 Thereof" Zacharluli , Ver * ' B1 jfr V4 > LIMPSES of earn n cities redeemed ! Jw r vfiK K/lf Sifesr Sj Now , boys and girls kLV ' in the § * / /who play / BiH JPv J Ww streets run such H : ItYk. Wmzffi rIska that muIti" H ftslTJ 55 % % tudes of them cnd 'Iw ' slliSj * In ruin * But'in tbc / ; k * , M. | \ iiSiS coming time spok- vLviC' A en ° ' our cit e3 V/1J1 K iCw be so mora * -hat b h k1 'ads and lasses F W nFoi < hall be .is safe in tne public thorough * L | r wl lares as in the nursery. Bk V A \ Pulpit and printing press for the most H J my\ part in our day are busy in discussing AMh \ ilie condtIon , oi the cities at this time ; HfcSik J * J but would lt not be healthfully encour- B ' Itl' Sing to all Christian workers , and to 9a i. ljl wbo are tolling to make the world kf - H * better , if wo should for a little while K \vXh \ ! ook forward to the time when our cit- 9 & % ies shall be revolutionized by the Gos- if ? el of the Son of God > and aI1 the dark * 9 ijffb v leS3 of sln and trouble and crime and R At ) i Juffering shall be gone from the world ? Hfe rll Every man has a pride in the city B $ Ivv Jf his nativity or residence , if it be a HttT42lty distineulshed for any dignity or PMyf/ prowess. Caesar boasted of his native HlMilf Rome , Virgil of Mantua , Lycurgus of H' ' Wk. Sparta , Demosthenes of Athens , Arch- Hf ij w imedes of Syracuse , and Paul of Tar- Hrfv iJ 5US- * should have suspicion of base- fr Ml heartedness in a man who had no es- H /wfi pecial interest in the city of his birth mfYfH Dr res ence no exhilaration at the Hjtli | evidence of its prosperity or its artistic Hf fJ ( } embellishments , or its intellectual ad- BV&W vancement HpfrH % \ I have noticed that a man never likes Ki i M\ a c'tj' ' " " "here he has not behaved well ! H 'jr' f 'y People who have had a free ride in the v 9 < Vfl1& f prison van never like the city that fur- * RlSfaif nishes the vehicle. When I find Argos , K' $ and RIlodes' and Smv"ia trying to > 3 Hrl Mf prove themselves the birthplace of Ho- HfH'twi ' ' mer * conclude that Homer behaved twi Byi ! | l well. He liked them and they liked HrJ Jj J him. We must not war on laudable HpBMi \ citPride. . OJ * 'ith the idea of building BAp | | • ourselves up at any time , try to pull B' wt others down. Boston must continue to mSPwtK point to its Fanueil Hall and to its Hiw \ Common , and to its superior educa- MSdfTr tional advantages. Philadelphia mu3t K / * j continue to point to its Independence B * * ji ifk Hal1 , and its mint'and its Girard coi- P iMlfC lege * Washington must continue to B lcMatls point to its wondrous Capitoline lmild- mWi > \ " mgs. If I should find a man coming K Hft \ from any city , having no pride in that HmM * 4 T St ci ' ' tbat' citj" having been the place E- % * $ ° f his nativity , or now being the place HM flmf- of his re6idence ! "would feel like ask- - K / flfliSX ng : "What mean thing have you done iaiw there ? What outrageous thing have H0 > 2& \ - * ou heen guilty of that you do not like Hi the place ? " [ . m m HP % $ Jf i j I know there are sorrows , and Lhere Billff are sns- and there are sufferings all jgPj jv around about us ; but as in some bitter. B vyJv co d "winter day , when we are threshing HBI ' iilr 0Ur arms around us to keep our thumbs Kfiif from freezing , we think of the warm Kili \ spring day that will after awhile come ; Jj//jLc | or in the dark winter night we look up B ! ? and see e northern lights , the winK - K /nlsl dews of heaven illuminated by some K & jl great victorj' just so we look up from Jf-IHt tbe ns t ° suffering and sorrow and If \ wretchedness in our cities , and we see JBT t a I'Sht streaming through from the jM f/i / other side , and we know we are on the W B | i "way to morning more than that , on W H n\ the way to "a morning without clouds. " MW'Jj ) I want you to understand , all you KJpL'vH wbo are toiling for Christ , that the IPl vt castles of sin are all going to be cap- Bypi | k % tured. The victory for Christ in these KaE vl great towns is going to be so complete kSw jp # that not a man on earth , or an angel in HSy 1F § heaven , or a devil in hell will dispute Xrl it. How do I know ? I know just as B * ? ( < ( certainly as God lives and that this is BflP % . holy truth. The old Bible is full of it. Kk & If a nation is to be saved , of course all BjBrftK the cities are to be saved. It maxes wntfw a Sreat difference with you and with f a Vjf me whether we are toiling on toward K 'ln r a de eat' or tolling on toward a victory. > ral \ Now , in this municipal elevation of E Vftn which I speak , I have to remark there B ) Wt "will be greater financial prosperity Vi felm than our cities have ever seen. Some S , \ people seem to have a morbid idea of rBKijI' ' the millennium , and they think when EjEpPUl * * ke better time comes to our cities and EnrW - ne "R'orld people will give their time ylil'Cii * UP to psalm-singing and the relating B& w3fc of their religious experience , and , as He % ffl $ a1150ciaI Ufe wil1 te Purified there will R Pfe be no hilarity , and , as all business will KE il l3e Purified there will be no enterprise. B fei . There is no ground for such an absurd KhctI anticipation. In the time of which I mSP | § | & speak , where now one fortune is made , * twMr\ there will be a hundred fortunes made. B fts \ We aH know business prosperity de- BilP pends upon confidence between man HPml and man. Now when that time comes Kfe'vis , ° * which I speak , and when all double l'l % dealing , all dishonesty , and all fraud B Maawti&'S are S ° ne out of commercial circles , H ylin/ii thorough confidence will be established , J f and there will be a better business HflH done , and larger fortunes gathered , HraPBFk nd mightier successes achieved. I P k T e great business disasters of this P > v S country have come from the work of Hj' F godless speculators and infamous stock B" , > gamblers. The great foe to business Brwig' s crime. When the right shall have- K > - ' * mki hurleH back the wrong , and shall have iJ'SU purified the commercial code , and shall Br/JJisu , have thundered down fraudulent es- m WffifK tablishments , and shall have put into m pmf the hands of honest men the keys of • m x&m business , blessed time for the bargain- r l M makers. I am not talking an abstrac- B Jb y ° n * J am not maJclng a BUessI am ' > ' telling you God's eternal truth. H ' % L In that day of which I speak , taxes V 9- fiil he a mere nothing. Now , our busi- 1 ni tiimiBiBT > niit fi 'Trwiwm > Tftniiitii "T ! nesB men are taxed for everything. City taxes , county taxes. State taxes , United States taxes , stamp taxes , li cense tax , manufacturing taxes taxes , taxes , taxes ! Our business men have to malce a small fortune every year to pay their taes. What fastens on our great industries this awful load ? Crime , individual and official. We have to take care of the orphans of those who plunged Into their graves through sensuaj indulgences. We have to sup port the municipal governments , which are vast and expensive just in proportion tion as the criminal proclivities are vast and tremendous. Who suDDort the almshouses and police stations , and all the machinery of municipal govern ment ? The taxpayers. * • In our great cities the churches are not to-day large enough to hold more than a fourth of the population. The churches that are built comparatively few of them are fully occupied. The average attendance in the churches of the United States today is not four hundred. Now , in the glorious time of which I speak , there are going to be vast churches , and they are going to be all 'bronged with worshippers. Oh , whai rousing songs they will sing ! Oh , what earnest sermons they will preach ! Oh , what fervent prayers they will of fer ! Now , in our time , what is called a fashionable church is a place where a few people , having attended very carefully to their toilet , come and sit down they do not want to be , crowded ; they like a whole seat to themselves and then , if they have any time left from thinking of tfieir store , and from examining the style of the hat in front of them , they 6it and listen to a sermon warranted to hit no man's sins , and lis ten to music which Js rendered by a choir warranted to sing tunes that no body knows ! And tnen after an hour and a half of indolent yawning they go home refreshed. Every man feels bet ter after he has had a good sleep ! In many of the Churches of Christ in our day the music is simply a mock ery. I have not a cultivated ear , nor a cultivated voice , yet no man can do my singing for me. I have nothing to say against artistic music. The two or five dollars I pay to hear any of the great queens of song are a good investment. But when the people assemble in reli gious convocation , and the hymn is read , and the angels of God .step from their throne to catch the music on their wings , do not let us drive them away by our indifference. I have preached in churches where vast iurns of money were employed to keep up the music , and it was as exquisite as any heard on earth , but I thought , at the same time , for all matters practical I would prefer the hearty , outbreaking song of a backwoods Methodist camp- meeting. Let one of theee starveling fancy songs sung in church get up before the throne of God , how would it seem standing amid the great doxologies of the redeemed ? Let the finest operatic air that ever "went up from the Church of Christ get many hours the start , it would be caught and passed by the hosanna of the Sabbath School chil dren. I know a church where the choir did all the singing , save one Christian man , who , through "perseverance of the saints , " went right on , and , after ward , a committee was appointed to wait on him and ask him if he would not please stop singing , as he bothered the choir. Let those refuse to sing "Who never knew our God ; But children of the Heavenly King Should speak their joys abroad "Praise ye the Lord : let everything frith breath praise the Lord. " In the glorious time coming in our cities , and in the world , hosanna will meet hosan na , and hallelujah , hallelujah. In that time also of which I speak , all the haunts of iniquity and crime and squalor will he cleansed and will be illuminated. How is it to be done ? You say , perhaps , by one influence. Perhaps I say by another. I will tell you what is my idea , and I know I am right in it : The Gospel of the Son of , God is the only agency that will ever { j accomplish this. | A gentleman in England had a theory - i ry that if the natural forces of wind and tide and sunshine and wave were rightly applied and rightly developed it would make this whole earth a para dise. In a book of great genius , and which rushed from edition to edition , he said : "Fellow-men , I promise to show the means of creating a paradise within ten years , where everything desirable - f sirable for human life may be had by every man in superabundance without i labor and without pay where the whole face of nature shall bo changed J i into the most beautiful farms , and man may live in the most magnificent palaces - i aces , in all imaginable refinements of luxury , and In the most delightful gardens - t dens where he may accomplish without - out labor in one year more than hitherto - ! erto could be done In thousands of years. From the houses to be built" will 1 be afforded the most cultured views that can be fancied. From the galler ies , from the roof , and from the turrets - | rets , may be seen gardens as far as the eye can see , full of fruits and flow ers , arranged in the most beautiful order - der , with walks , colonnades , aqueducts - ' ducts , canals , ponds , plains , amphi- theatres , terraces , fountains , sculptur ed works , pavilions , gondolas , places of popular" amusement , to lure the eye and fancy. All this to be done by urging - ( ing the water , tae wind , and the aun1 shine to their full development" • . In that day of which I speak , do yon believe there will be any mid-night carousal ? Will there be any kicking ; off from the marble steps of shivering 1 mendicants ? Will there be any nn- { washed , unfed , uncombed children ? ; Will there be any inebriates staggering j past ? No. No wine stores. No lager j ! beer saloons. No distilleries , where ; ' they make the three X'a. 2Jo bloodshot eye. No bloated cheek. Nof instruments 1 I IIUMIIMMI i i m i Ill I i I ? " ' J * I " " ' of ruin and destruction. No fistpoundj ed forehead. The grandchildren of that woman who goes down the street with a curse , stoned by the boys that fol low her , with the reformers and phil anthropists and the Christian men and the honest merchants of our cities. OH , you think sometimes It does not amount to much ! You toil on ln your different spheres , sometimes with great discouragement People have no faith , and say : "It does not amount to any thing ; you might as well quit that" Why , when Moses stretched his hand over the Red Sea it did not seem to mean anything especially. People came out , I suppose , and eald , "Aha ! " Some of them found out what he wanted to do. He wanted the sea parted. It did not amourit to anything , this stretch ing out of his hand over the sea. But , after awhile , the wind blew all night from the east , and th waters were gathered into a glittering palisade on either side , and the billows reared ae God pulled back on their crystal bits ! Wheel into line ; 0 , Israel ! march ! march ! Pearls crashed under feet Flying spray gathers into rainbow arch of victory for the conquerers to march under. Shout of hosts on the beach answering tie shout of hosts amid eea. And when the last line of Israelites reach the beach , the cymbals clap , and the shields clang , and the waters rush over the pursuers , and the swift-fin gered winds on the white keys of the foam play the grand march of Israel delivered and the awful dirge of Egyp tian overthrow. So you and I go forth , and all the people of God go forth , and they stretch forth their hand over the sea , the boil ing sea of crime , and sin , and wretch edness. "It don't amount to anything , " people say. Don't it ? God's winds of help will , after awhile , begin to blow. A path will be cleared for the army of Christian philanthropists. The path will be lined with the treasures of Christian beneficence , and we 6hall be greeted to the other beach by the clap ping of all heaven's cymbals , while those who pursued us , an 'd derided us , and tried to destroy us , will go down under the sea , and all that will be left of them will be cast Jj * " " * and dry upon xhe beach , the splintei d wheel of a cbariot , or thrust out from the foam , ' the breathless nostrlKof a riderlet/ charger. SPOKEN LANGUAGE. The Sanskrit language is said to have about ; 500 foot-words. The word "language" comes from the Latin ; "lingua , " the tongue. The rabbis taught that the language spoken , by Adam was Hebrew. The Chinese language has 40,000 sim ple words and only 450 roots. Philologists agree that all languages are developed from one root Geiger says that "all words are de veloped from a few simple sounds. " Jager , Bleek , Muller and many others assume < language to be an evolution. The speech of the aborigines of Afri ca changes with almost every genera tion. i Very rapid speakers enunciate about two words per second , or from 120 to 150 ; per minute. In 1801 there were only 5,000 Italian- speaking , people In the United States ; now there are 460,000. Of the leading dialects , 937 are spok en , in Asia , 5S7 in Europe , 276 in Africa and ; 1,624 in America. Elihu Burritt , the learned black smith ] , is said to have understood from forty to fifty languages. There * vere , in 1801 , 230,000 persons in : the United States who spoke French ; there are now over 1,000,000. In ninety years the Spanish-speak ing ; people of the world have Increased from 26,190,000 to 42.800,000. The German and Spanish languages are ' remarkable for one fact , that every letter has a uniform sound. It is estimated by Grove that the idea of ' the pipe organ was borrowed from the human chest , mouth and larynx. SOUTHWEST BREEZES. Calamity is man's true touchstone. It is a waste of time to watch a hypo crite. ' The white daisy is emblematic of in nocence : , A hen-pecked husband has very little to crow over. The "bump of destructiveness" A railway : collision , There is a charming elasticity about a girl of eighteen springs , No man should so act as to take advantage , vantage of another's folly. The only justification for debt Is the Immediate ( prospect of profit . It becomes man , while exempt from woes , to look to the dangers. It is often a good thing that men do not practice what they preach. When one is low enough to insult you , be too high for him to reach. O , friend , as long as I study and practice 3 humility , I know where I am. Even * one knows that these hard , close-fisted ' times will not last forever. Blessed be he who hath a clean shirt on < for he may wear his vest unbut toned. 1 There are several ways to pay bills , but the majority are paid with reluc tance. ' Moderation is the silken string run ning through the pearl chain of all virtues. A woman rarely designs to open her husband's letters unless they are marked private. The Southwest Of all pests the man who has noth ing to tell , and tells it in a whisper , ia the worst minim in urn ii unima i iiMwm j nnilml I mi inimr i ! . j HILL OBJECT& 1 fh New Tork Senator Decline ! to B Bound by Instructions. Albast , N. Y. , Sept. 11. United States Senator Bill telegraphed as follows to-day to Norton Cha e , chair man of the Albany county Democratic convention : "J observe in a morning paper that I have been elected a dele gate from the Third Albany district to the State convention under instructions to vote for the in dorsement of the Chicago platform and candidates. This action is taken in opposition to my wishes and judgment , as expressed to you yester day , and I decline to accept the elec tion upon the conditions imposed or upon any condition which would re strict my freedom at Buffalo to act in such manner as I consider best for the interest of my party. " Of the twelve delegates in the coun try seven , in eluding- Senator Hill , are considered as eold men , but the en tire delegation is instructed to sup * port Bryan and SewalL FRANCIS FOR PALMER. .Declares Strongly for the Indlanapoll * Convention Nominees. Washington , Sept iL To-day Sec retary Francis sent the following1 tel egram to Mr. Bynum : ' 'Regret that I cannot accept your invitation to attend - tend the notification of Generals Palmer and Buokner at Louisville Saturday evening. These old heroes have fought valiantly for their con victions on many a battlefield , but no patriot ever enlisted in a nobler cause than that which they have consented to lead. It is the maintenance of the country's honor and the preservation of the integrity of Democratic princi ples on whose perpetuity depends the survival of our institutions. May the nominees receive that earnest and zealous support which their high character - acter and the National Democratic party's pure aims so richly merit D. R Fhancis. " Coal Men in Combine. Kansas Crrr , Mo. , Sept IL Evidences - dences of the existence of a combination - tion of coal miners and coal dealers to force lip coal prices and maintain them are multiplying daily , and this morning an operator admitted that such an agreement existed. From his standpoint a combination seemed to be a good thing , for it had already secwred an increase of S8 for each car load of the product of his mines. Ioli's Natural Gas Carolral. Ior.A , Kan. , Sept 11. The natural gas carnival , which is being held in Iola every night this week in connec tion with the Allen county fair , is at tracting visitors from all over Kansas and many from other states. The gas is supplied from eight wells , with an aggregate output of 60,00uu00 cubic feet daily , and it is estimated that not less than 10,000,000 feet are burned each eveninjr. Kansas Cattle Company Attached. Ellsworth , Kan. , Sept 11. Twen- ty-six attachments for ST.000 has been pla ' on the Ellsworth Land and catti , company of the county , of which W. C. Wornall of Kansas City , Ma , is president The company owns about 6,000 acres of land here and wintered 200 head of cattle , on which they have lost money. Actor James Lewis Dead. New York , Sept 11. James Lewis , the comedian , long a member of Augustin Daly's company , died to-day at West Hampton , L. I. Another New Orleans Bank Closed. New Orleans , La. , Sept 11. The Mutual National bank closed its doors this morning. The capital stock was only S00,000. LIVE STOCK AND FKODCCE MARKETS Quotations Troni New 1'ork , Chicago , St. Lout ; , Omaha and .Elsewhere. O iAHA. I5uttcr Creamery separator. . 16 © 13 Butter Fair to good country. 1 > @ 16 E-g Fresh 11 @ 1W Poultry Live hens.per E > 5'/i@ 6 prins .Chickens 8 f < a 9 Iprin Ducks 7 © 7H Lemons Choice Messinas 6 00 © C 50 Honey ! -ancy White 13 to. 15 I'otatoes New 20 a 25 Jranges Per bos 5 00 © 6 0 Hay Upland , per ton 4 50 © 5 00 Potatoes New 20 © 25 Apples-Perbbl 1 50 @ 2 50 SOUTH OMAHA 3TOCK MARKET. Hoes Lipht Mixed 2 90 @ J 00 Uops Heavy Weights 2 70 @ 2 80 Beef Steers 2 60 © 4 25 Bulls 2 0J © 3 00 Milkers and suringers 22 03 © 30 00 " Siacs . 1 50 © 2 00 Calves. 3 00 @ 5 CO Cows 10' © 2 90 Heifers 2 00 © 2 90 Ftockers and Feeders 2 50 © 3 40 Cattle Westerns 2 60 © 3 30 fheep Native Feeders 2 00 @ 3 25 sheep Lambs 3 00 © 4 00 OHICAGO. Wheat No. 2 Spring 5G4f4 56 Corn Per bu 19 © lO Oats Per bu 13 & 13J ; Pork.- 5 Co © 5T0 - Lard.- 3 72 © 3 75 Cattle Western Hangers 3 20 @ 3 SO Choice Calves 3 00 © 5 50 Hogs Medium mixed 2 65 © 3 35 Sheep Lambs 3 25 © 5 00 Sheep Western ranee. 3 03 © 3 10 NEW YORK. Wheat No. 2 , Bed Winter C2& ® ra Corn No. 2. 25 © 2i * Oats No. 2 With 20 Pork . J125 © 10 25 Lard 4 10 @ 5 00 ST. LODIS. Wheat No. 2 red , cash 5" > W& 5C-J Corn Per bu 17 © 17 Oats Per bu 16 © lfi } } Hogs Mixed parkinsr 2 50 © 3 25 Cattle Native Ship'ng Steers. 3 CO © 4 60 KANJsAa CI l 1" . Wheat No. 2 hard - " 0 © 51 Corn No.2. _ IS © 1SH Oats No.2 17 @ 17fj Cattl Stockers and feeders. . 2 50 © 3 05 Hogs Mixed 3 00 © 3 15 Sheep Lambs 3 00 St 4 2D Sheep Muttons 2 00 © 3 25 2fo Southern Tear by Palmer. Sprixgfield , lit. Sept 11. The presidential candidate of the gold standard Democrats , General JohnM. Palmer , will not make a Southern tour next week. He will leave to morrow for Louisville and return Monday to try two lawsuits in Clay county , 11L Connecticut Gold Democrats Act. New Haves , Conn.Sept It At the meeting of the executive committee of the gold Democrats of Connecticut here , it was decided to put a full state ticket in the field , including Presi * J clential electors. J } Effect at Good Honalng- Upon the Poor. Lord Shaftabnry , who practically in terested himself for more than sixty years In improving the homes of the masses , said time and again that many of the people who were in a filthy and deplorable condition had been made i so by their surroundings , and that where their homes had been improved , they had been rescued from such con ditions. Human nature is imitative ; ; the force of good example is catching. Lack of opportunity to lead a more i civilized existence , not the inclination to remain as they are , largely explains the situation of the poorer elements imong city dwellers. Sir Sidney AVat- iprlow cites the punctuality with which the rents are paid his corporation as evidence that people having good rooms are anxious to keep them. He believes there is a growing desire for comfortable , homes. September Cen tury. That Joyful. Feeling v7ith the exhilarating sense of renewed health and strength and internal clean liness , which follows the use of Syrup of Figs , is unknown to the few who have not progressed beyond the old-time medicines and the cheap substitutes sometimes offered but never accepted byhe well-informed. lile School of Porpoises. The steamer Dlunda , which recently arrived in Halifax from Liverpool , encountered [ countered an enormous school of porpoises poises pursued by about two dozen large whales just before it came into port It was estimated that there was over < 1,400 poises in the school. They were seen about 15 miles east of Hali fax , and jumped the vessel's sides in their evident terror of their pursuers. The sea was black with them and they rushed through the water like mad , with the great puffing whales in close pursuit Old salts say they never saw anything ; like it on the American coast < FITS stoppwl frrc and permanrntlv cured. No Dts j af tr first day's use or Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Keslorer. Free $2 trial bottle and treatise. Send to Da. Kunk , 931 Arch St. , Philadelphia , Pa. One of the profitable results of the present j agitation of the silver question is a concise statement in the September Review of reviews of the pros and cons of \ the question , "would American Free Coinage i Douqle the Price of Silver in the i markets of the world ? " The affirm ative-view i is supported by Charles B. Spahr , Ph. D.ofXew York , and the negative by Prof. J. Laurence Laugh- J lin , of Chicago. Each of these writers is ' a recognized authority on the ques tion 1 of the standards. : j I I [ j j I ! Has ( for a Fifth of a Century . j. Cured all forms of . . . g KIDNEY and LIVER DISEASES. I THE DREAD I BRIGHT'S I Disease I Is but incipient Kidney Disease. B Either are Dangerous. Both can be Cured 9 if j treated in time with Warner's R Safe Cure. M large bottle or new style smaller B . one at your druggist's. Ask for J/F either and accept no substitute , r . An African' * Cat a Terr lit * Ornnmrnts * I Soon after you jfet started on a jour- I ' ney with black follow rs all your break- I : able property cupv saucers , etc. , ) I • will be smashed or leaS , but the gentler I African , notwithstanding , will wear I around his ankle a thin thread of beads I ; for three years ; he will ttar his way I through matted grass , and follow a I wounded buck through tangled jungle I without injury to his ornament It is I remarkable how nn ornament sticks to I a native. September Century. I Yob Are Not "Shaken Ilnforo Taken" I With malarial disease , but with prodigious M violence af lurwards , if you neciect ImmedIate - ate mensure of relief. The sureit preventive - ivo imd medical form of medication is llos- tetter'u Stomach Bitters , the potency ot which as an antidote to miasmatic poison has been demonstrated for over forty years past The llrcr when disordered and con- pested , the bowels If costlpated , and the kidneys if inactive , are promptly aided by It , and It is invaluable for dyspepsia , uerv- ous debility and rheumatism. Harper's Kound Table published I September 1st will continue the first installment of a new serial story enti- I tied "In the Old Herrick house , " by Ellen Douglas Dcland. To the same number Dudley D. F. Parker will contribute - I tribute an interesting paper on the art I of sailing small boats. The article will be fully illustrated and will be found I to contain many useful suggestions and directions for young yachtsmen. I It the Baby is Cnttlnp Teetn. 3c and that oW and well-tried - . suns use - remodjMm. HJ ( VisELOw'sSooTinvoSniurforCMldrcnTcetlUncH In most cases men who marry beneath I them live to regret it Take I The best when you need medicine. For blooo , I appetite , nerves , stomach , liver , nothing equals H Hood's I Sarsaparilla I The One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $ U Hood's Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25 cents. % s t t h MISSOURI , I The best fruit section in the West. No drouths. A failure of crops never known. H Mild climate. Productive soil. Abundance ot H good pure water. H For Maps and Circulars Riving full description - S tion of the Rich Mineral , Fruit and Agricultural - H ral Lands in South West Missouri , write to H JOHN M. I'UKDV. Manager of the Missouri Land and Live Stock Company , Neosho , New- H ton Co. , Missouri. li.WiUnJlli ! ilRJluWH ] , . Council Bluffs , PATENTS , TBAOE MARKS I Examination and.AdTlc as t > l'atentabi.lty of In- H vemlon. Send for "Inventor ? ' Gai < i < \ cr Ho w to Get H Patent. " O'KAIUtELL & SON . Wa.hlnijton. D. C. ' ' ? SA F WE PAY CASH WEEKLY and I S'S'E Q Ha W want men everywhere to SELL Htamay * QTinif TDrro millions te-t- a . , -v _ . , - OlArirv lnr.tO.-d , prorea lAilOl"absolntelybe , t. "Snperbontflt , \/\I 1/JrV rV newaystem-STAnKBHOTIIERS , LOC1SIAJ.A , MO. , EOCKPOaT , ILL. H XKflRT HANfl XSANTS School of Short- I OIIUlll liriilU hand.jl3X.Y.LlfeI5Idfr.Omaha. Only one la Omaba taught by practical stenographer { PATFHT 20 ? * " " ' " = "P'rK'ncc. Send sketch forad. ' L . Jri : ' .V1' " - < L.l > ' - ui' ' .li t > pnn. examiner DA ! l\it.Oaice ) Deaiie&\\eaver,3IcGIllIJId . , Wash.l > . & IB QPIBISyS nni WHISKY < " > < > " < " " " ! • B k r.i II H I Win "HFE. Dr. U. it. HOOLLKT , ATLAST1 , CI. | H 'S& ' Thompson'sEye Water. 1 M 4 i - KM " CURES WHERE AIL ELSE f AILS. " Taj I m Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. TJso fH | Lgj In time. Sold by druggists. Ki _ I W. N. U. , OMAHA 38 1890 I WrTen writing to advertisers , kindlj I mention this paper. "The added pleasure of riding a I Columbia is worth every dollar I of the $ 100 a Columbia costsI The supremacy of Columfcias is ad- I mitted. They are Standard of the I | World. If you are ahle to pay H00 I for a bicycle , why buy any other ? IHi Foil information atout Colambias and the H - different Models for men and women and B * ) { * t\Jjt for children , too is contained in the hand- ! cw h f K \ / " somest art Book of the year. Free from any 9 VjiU § \ q our Branch Houses and Agencies or by H N H A mail for two 2-cent stamps. S kSS * POPE MFG. CO. , Hartford , Conn. 9 rp J HBn JKyn - ' > 0 Branch . Stores and Agencies in every city and M l * > * i K Jrf/syi& , town. If Colurnbias are not properly represented m feV ] HBL//77/5n ? = * l \ . " * y0UT vicinity , let us know. jH T BfllW ii A ! ! Colnnbia Bicjcs ! are fittsd with 9 | Jp > H YVi * / / HARTFORD SINGLE-TUBE TIRES 9 • 35 * < r WE MOW SO TIRES SO G0QD AS HARTFORDS. 9 * '