THE SCRIPTURES CONFIRMED Dr.’ Talmajre Preaches on His Sail Up the Nile. Murh W h\h Convince* film of the Trulli of tho Script urr*~ A Sermon llcplfto With Facta mid Con. Tlnclng l’roof*. Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 25.—The rendering of the first sonata m I). minor, liy Guilmant, on tlic great or gan of the Brooklyn Tabernacle this morning by I’rofcssor Henry Eyre Browne, tho organist, held the vast congregation spell-bound with pro found emotion. Dr. Talninge preached on "Sailing Up the Nile," the second sermon of the senes, entitled "From the Pyramids to the Acropolis, or What I Saw in Egypt and Greece, Comflrma tory of the Scriptures” His text was Ezekiel 20:0: "The river is mine and I have made it.’’ Ahul This is the river Nile. A brown, or yellow, or silver cord on which ure hung more jewels of thrill ing interest than on any river that was ever twisted in the sunshine. It rip ples through the Hook of Ezekiel, and flashes in the Hooks of Deuteronomy, and Isaiah, and Zecliariah, and Nulium, and on its hunks stood the mightics of mnnv ages It was the crystnl cruille of Moses, and on its tanks Mary, the refugee, carried the infant Jesus. To find the birthplace of this river wus tho fascination and defeut of expedi tions without number. Not many years ago Hnynrd Taylor, our great Ameri can traveler, wrote: "Since Columbus first looked upon Sun Salvador the earth has but one emotion of triumph left for her bestowal, and that she re serves for him who shall first drink from tho fountains of tho White Nile under the snow fields of Kilimanjaro.” But the discovery of tho sources of the Nile by most people was considered an impossibility. The malarias, the wild beasts, the savages, the unclimable steeps, tha vast distances stopped nil tho expeditions for ages. An intelli gent native said to Sir bamuel W. linker and wife as they were on their way to accomplish that in which others had failed: "Give up the mud scheme of the Nile source. How would it tie pos sible for a lady young and delicate to endure what would kill the strongest man? Give it up.” But the work went on until Speke, and Grant, and Baker found the two lakes which are the source of what was called the White Nile, and baptised these two lakes with the names of Vic toria and Albert. These two lakes, filled by great rainfalls and by accu mulated snows from the mountains pour their waters, laden with agricul tural wealth such as blesses no other river, on down over the cataracts, on between frowning mountains, on be tween cities living and cities dead, on for 4,000 miles and through a continent But the White Nile would do little for Egypt if this were all. It would keep its bunkB and Egypt would remain a desert Hut from Abyssinia there comes what is called tho Blue Nile, which, though dry or nearly dry half the year, under tremendous ruins about the middle of June rises to great mo mentum, and this Blue Nile dashes with sudden Influx into the White Nile, which in consequence rises thirty feet, and their combined waters inun date Egypt with a rich soil which drops on all the fields and gardens as it is conducted by ditches, and sluices, and canals every whither. Ihe great est damage that ever came to Egypt came by the drying up of the river Nile, and the greatest blessing by its healthful and abundant flow. The famine in Joseph's time came from the lack of sufficient inundation from the Nile. Not enough Nile is drouth, too much Nile is freshet aud plague. The rivers of the earth are the mothers of its prosperity. If by some convulsion of nature the Mississippi should be trhen frem North A merit n, or the Amazon fvgm South America, or the Danube from Europe, or the Yenesei from Asia—what hemispheric calamity! otiu mure lire oilier rivers mat couid fertilize and save these countries. Our own continent is gulched, is ribboned, is glorified by innumerable water-cour ses Hut Egypt has only one great river, and that is harnessed to draw all the prosperities of reals in acreage semi infinite. What happens to the Kite, happens to Egypt The nilometer was ro me very suggestive as wo went up and down its damp stone steps and saw the pillar marked with notches telling just how high or low aro the waters of the Nile. When the Nile is rising, four criers every morning run through the city announcing how many fret the river has risen—ten feet, fifteen feet, twenty feet, twenty-four feet—and when the right height of water is reached the gates of the canals are flung open and the liquid and re freshing benediction is pronounced on all the land. As we start where the Nile empties into the Meditcrranncan sea we be hold a wonderful fulfillment of the prophecy. The Nile in very ancient times used to have seven mouths. As the great river approached the sea it entered the sea at seven different pla ces Isaiah prophesied: “The Lord shall utterly destroy the tongue of the Egyptian sea and shall smite it in the seven streams.” The faet is they are all destroyed but two and Herodotus said these two remaining are artificial. Up the Nile we shall go; part of the way by Egyptian rail train anj* then by boat, and we shall understand why the lliblo gives such prominence to this river which is the largest river of all th<> earth with one exception. But before we board the train we must take a look at Alexandria. It wa~ founded by Alexander the Great and Was once the New York, the Paris, the London of the world. Temples, pala ces, fountains, gardens, pillared ami efflorescent with all architectural and Edenic grandeur and sweetness. A pol ios. the eloquent, whom in New Testa ment times some people tried to make a rival to I*nul, lived here. Here Mark, the author of the second book of the New Testament, expired under Nero's anathema. From here the ship sailed that left Paul and , the crew struggling In the breakers of Mellta. I’ompey's Hllur is here, about 100 feet high, its base surrounded by so much tilth and squalor I wasglad to escape into an uir that was breatha ble. This tower was built in honor of Diooletiun for sparing the rebel lious citizens. After having declared that ho would make the blood run to Ills horse's knees, and his horse fell with hitn into the blood and his knees reddened, the tyrant took it for granted that was a sign he should stop the massacre and hence this commem orative pillur to his mercy. This is the city so wiiich Omar came after build ing 1,400 mosques, and destroying4,000 temples and 35,000 villages and castles, yet riding in on a camel with a sack of corn, a sack of tigs and a wooden plate, all that he had kept for himself, and the diet to which he had limitciL him self for most of the time was oread and water. Was there ever in any man a commingling ol elements so strange, so weird, so generous,so cruel, so mighty, so weak, so religious, so fanulical? In this city was the great est female lecturer the world ever saw —Hvpulia. liut the lesson of virtue that she taught were obnoxious and so they dragged her through the streets and scruped her flesh from her hones with sharp oyster shells and then burned the fragment of the massacred body. And here dwelt Cleopatra, pro nounced to be the beauty of all time alt hough if her pictures are correct I have seen a thousand women in Brook lyn more attractive—and she was ns bad as she was said to bo handsome. Queen, conqueress, and spoke s^ven languages, although it would have been better for the world if she had not been able to speak any. Julius t'aisar conquered the world yet she conquered Julius ( to-nr. liut Alexandria, fascinating for this or that thing, according to the taste of the visitor, was to mo most enter taining because it had been the site of the greatest library the world ewer saw, considering the fact that the art of printing had not been invented. Seven hundred thousand volumes and all the work of a slow pen. liut down it all went under the torch of besiegers. Built ugain and destroyed agafti. liuilt again but the Aruba came along for its final demolition nud the 4,0u0 baths of the city were heated with those volumes, the fuel lasting six months, and were ever fires kindled at such fearful cost? What holocausts of the wor.d's literaturel What martyr dom of bocks! liut all aboard the Egyptian rail train going up the banks of the Nile! Look out of the window and see those camels kneeling for the imposition of their load. And 1 think we might take from them a lesson, and instead of try ing to stand upright in our own strength, become conscious of our weakness and need of divine help be fore we take upon us the heavy duties of the year or the week or the day, and so kneel for the burden. Wo meet pro cessions of men and beasts on the way from their days work, but alas, for the homes to which the poor inhabitants are going. For the most part hovels of mud. but there is something in the ! scene that thoroughly enlists us. It is {the novelty of wretchedness, aqd a scene of picturesque rags. For thou sands of years this land has been un der a very damnation of taxes. Noth ing but Christian civilization will roll buck the influences which are “spoiling the Egyptians.” There are gardens and palaces, but they belong to the rulers. About here, under the valiant Murad Bey the Mamelukes, who are the finest i horsemen in all the world, came like a hurricane upon Napoleon's army, but they were beaten back bv the French in one of the fiercest battles of all time. Then the Mamelukes turned their horses’ heads the other way, and in desperation backed them against the French troops, hoping the horses would kick the life ont of the French regi ments. The Mameiukes. failing again, plunged into this Nile and were drowned, the French for davs fishing out the deud bodies of the Mamelukes to get the valuables upon their bodies. Napoleon, at the daring of these Mamelukes, cxclaraed: “Could I have united the Mameluke horse to the French infantry, 1 would have reck oned m.vseif master of the world.” According to the lead pencil mark la in my iiib.o it was Thanksgiving Day morning, November 28tli, 1881), thut with ray family and friends we step ped aboard the steamer on the Nile. The Mohnnunedun call to prayers had been sounded by the priests of that re ligion, the Muezzins, from the 400 mosques of Cairo as the cry went out, “God is great. I bear wit ness that there is no God but God j bear witness that Mohammed is the apostle of God. Come to prayera Come to salvation. God is great. There is no other but God. Prayers are better than sleep ” Tlio sky and city and palm groves and river shipping were bathed in the light It was not much of a craft that we boarded. It would not be hailed on any of our rivers with any rapture of admiration. It fortun ately had but little speed for twice we ran aground and the sailors jumped into the water and on their shoulders pushed her out Hut what yacht of gayest sportsmen, what deck of swift est ocean queen could give such thrill of rapture as a sail on the Nile? The Pyram ds in sight, the remains of cities that are now only a name, the vil lages thronged with population. Both banks crowded with historical deeds of forty or sixty centuries. Oh, what a book the Bible is when read on the Nile! As we slowly move up tho majestic river I see on each bank the wheels, the pumps, the buckets for irrigation, and see a man with his foot on the treadle of a wheel that fetches up the water for a garden, and then for the first time 1 understand that passage in Deuteronomy which says of the Israel ites after they had got back from Egypt: “The land whither thou goest in to possess it is not as the land of Egypt, from whence ye came out. where thou 60west thy seed.and water edst it with thy foot.'” Then 1 under stood. how the land could be watered with the foot. While sailing on this river or stop ping at one of the villages, we see peo pie on the banks who verify the Bible description for they are now as they were in Bible times. Shoes are now taken off in reverence to sacred places. Children carried astride the mother's 'boulder as in Hagar's time. Women with profusion of jewelry as when Re ■>ecca was affianced. Lentils shelled into the pottage, as when Esau sold his birthright to get such a dish The sae* habits of salutation as —, whin Joseph and hla brethren fell on each others' necks. Courts of law held under big trees as in olden times. 1’eo plo making bricks without straw, com pelled by circumstances to use stubble instead of straw. Flying over or stand i%T on the banks as in scripture days tire flamingoes, ospreys, eagles, pell | cans, herons, cuckoos and bullfinches, tin alt sides of this river sepulchres. | Villages of sepulchres. Cities of sep I ulchres. Nations of sepulchres. And one is tempted to cnli it an empire of tombs. 1 never saw such a place as Kgypt is for graves. And now we un derstand the complaining sarcasm of the Israelites when they were on the way from Kgypt to Cunaan: "because there ore no graves in Kgypt hast thou taken ns away to die in the wilder ness?" Down the river bank come the buffalo and the cattle or kine to drink. And it was the ancestors of these cattle that inspired l’haraoh's dream of the lean kine and the fat kine. liere we disembark a little while for Memphis, off from the Nile to the right. Memphis founded by the first king1 of Egypt and for a long while the caoi tal, A eity of marble und gold. Home of the Pharaohs. City nineteen miles in circumference. Vast colonnades, through which Imposing processions marched. Here stood the Temple of the .Sun, itself in brilliancy a sun shone ! on by another sun. Memphis in power over a thousand one hundred years, or nearly ten times as long as the United States have existed. Here is a recum bent statue seventy-five feet long, lironzed gateways. A necropolis called “the haven of the blest.” Here Joseph was prime minister. Here l’haraoh received Jacob, llosea, Ezekiel, Jere miah and Isaiah speak of it as some thing wonderful. Never did I visit a city with sttch exalted anticipations, and never did my anticipations drop so flat., Not a pillar stands. Not a wall is unbroken. Not a fountain tosses in the sun. Even the ruins have been ru ined, and all that remains arc chips of marble, small pieces of fractured sculp ture and splintered human bones. Here and there a letter of some elaborate inscription, a toe or ear of a statue that once stood in niche of palace wall. Ezekiel prophesied its blot ting out and the prophesy has been fulfilled. “Hide on,” 1 said to our party, “and don't wait for me.” And as 1 stood there alone, the city of Mem phis in the glory of past centuries re turned. And I heard lllc rush of her chariots and the dash of her fountains and the conviviality of her places and saw the drunken nobles roll on the floors of mosaic, while in startling con trast amid all the regalities of the place I saw Phuroah look up into the face of aged rustic Jacob, the shep herd, saying: “How old art thou?” ltut back to the Nile and on and up till you reach Thebes, in scripture called the City o"f No. Hundred-gatod Thebes. A quadrangular city four miles from limit to limit. Four great temples, two of them Karnac and Luxor, once mountains of exquisite sculpture and gorgeous dreams solidi fied in stone, statue of Rameses II, eight hundred and eighty-seven tons in weight and seventy-five feet high, but now fallen and scattered. Walls abloom with the battlefields of cen turies. The surrounding hills of rock hollowed into sepulchres on the wall of which are chiselled in picture and hieroglyphics the confirmation of Uiblo story in regard to the treatment of Israelites in Egypt so that, as explora tions go on with the work, the walls of these sepulchres become commentaries of the Bible, the scriptures originally written upon parchment heio cut into everlasting stone. Two great nations, Egypt and Greece, diplomatized and almost came to bat tle for one book, a copy of AOschylus. • l’tolemy, the Egyptian king, discov j ered that in the great library at Alex andria there was no copy of yEscliylus. The Egyptian king sent up to Athens, Greece, to borrow the book and make ; a copy of it. Athens demanded a de posit of #17,700 as security. The Egypt | ian king received the book, but re | fused to return that which he had bor i rowed and so forfeited the #17,700. The two nations rose in contention concerning that one book. Beautiful und mighty book indeed! Hut it is a book of horrors, the dominant idea that we are the victims of hereditary influences from which there is no escape, and ttiat fate 'rules the world, and although the [ author does tell of Prometheus who was crucified on the rocks for sym pathy for mankind, a powerful sug gestion of the sacrifice of Christ in later years, it is a very poor book com pared with that Hook which we hug to our hearts because it contains our only guide in life, our on y comfort in death, and our only hope for a blissful immortality. If two nations could afford to struggle for one copy of [ .Eschylus, how much more can all nations afford to struggle for the possession and triumph of the Holy Scriptures? Hut the (lead cities strung along the Nile not only demolish infidelity, but thunder down the absurdity of the modern doctrine of evolution which says the world started with nothing nnd then rose, and human .nature be gan with nothing but evolved into splendid manhood and womanhood of itself. Nay; the sculpture of the world was more wonderful in the days of Memphis and Thebes and Carthage than in the days of ltoston and New York. Those blocks of stone weigh ing 300 tons high up in the wall of Karnac imply machinery equal to, if not surpassing, the machinery of the nineteenth century. How was that statue of Rnmeses, weighing 887 tons transported from the qarriesUOO miles away and how was it lifted? Tell us, modern machinist. How ivcro thoso galleries of rock, still standing at Thebes, filled with paintings sur passed by no artist's pencil of the pres ientday? Tell us, artists of the nine teenth century. The dead cities of Egypt so far as they have left enough piilars or statues or sepulchres or temple ruins to tell the storv—Mem phis, Migdol, liierapolis, Zoan'Thebes, lioshca, Carthage—all of them develop mg downward instead of upward. They have evoluted from magnificence into destruction. The gospel of lesus Christ is the only eleva tor of individual Bnd social national character. Let all the living cities know that pomp and opulence and tem poral prosperity are no security. Those incicnt cities lacked nothing but good morals. Dissipation and sin slew them, tnd unless dissipation and sin are lalted, they will some day slay our modern cities and leave our pal.ves of merchandise and our galleries of art and our city halls as flat in the dnst as we found Memphis on the afternoon ol that Thanksgiving day. And if ths cities, go down the nation will gc down. 1 notice that the voice of those ancient cities is hoarse from the exposure o: forty centuries, and they accentuaU slowly with lips that wefe palsied foi ages, but all together those citiei along the Nile intone these words “Hear us for we are very old, and it ii hard for us to speak. We were wise long before Athens learned her firs’ lesson. . We sailed our ships while ye’, navigation was unborn. These obe lisks, these pyramids, these fuller pillars, these wrecked temples, thesr colossi of black granite, these wrecked sarcophagi under the brow of th< hills, tell you of what I wai in grandenr, and of what I am coming down to be. We sinned and we fell. Our learning could not save us: Set those half-obliterated hieroglyphics os yonder wall. Our architecture could not save us: See the painted column) of Philos, and the shattered temple ol Ksneh. Our heroes could not salve us' Witness Menes, Diodorus Kamescs, and Ptolemy. Our gods Ammon and Osiris could not save us: See their fuller temples all along the four thousand miles of Nile. Oh, ye modern cities gel some other God; a God who can help, a God who can pardon, a God who can save: Called up as we are for a little while to give testimony, again ths sands of the deserts will hury us. Ashes to ashes, dust to dust!” And as these voices of porphyry and granite ceased, all the sarcophagi under tho hills responded, “Ashes to ashes!” and and tlie capital of a lofty column fell grinding itself to powder among the rocks, and responding, “Dust to dust!” An umiun'a (irutitudo. Col. Broaden, lute Attornev-Genera! of Now Mexico. was mien retained t» defend# Mexican and a Navajo Indian enurged wiili the murder of a soldier oil a street in Santa Fu one night. Two Mexiran women testiliod iliai they witnossed tiie imtrderaml thought they could identify the prisoners as the persons who committed it. Bn oilier evidence favored the licensed and the court and jury thought the women were mistaken. Some lime after the acquittal the Navajo turned up, in the seventh heaven of intoxication, ami sought out Brcodeu. In his expansive gratitude he told the attorney that, although moneyless, as usual, lie wanted to perform some groat service in part payment of the debt lie owed him for securing his acquittal. ‘'Come to my house,1' said the attor ney. "anil try your hand on my gar den.” “But,” said the Navajo, "give mo something bardur than that to do some groat thing for a brave. Don't you want somebody killed? If you do I'll serve hiui as we did tiie soldier!” “Did you kill the soldier?” “Of course we did. I thought you knew that.” Society in Cincinnati and St. Louis. A good story, like a motion to ad journ. is always iu order, so I pause just here to tell one. It introduces the ‘-•hup from St. Louis. Thu oilier dav, as half a dozen Americans were sitting in the smoking-room of a Swiss bote” one of them remarked, “I saw in a recent number of the Palis -New York Herald' a letter from a man who wrote to inquire if the United States’ cele brated Society of Cincinnati was still iu existence. Do any of von g-ntle men Happen to know whether it’s alive or nol?’ The chap from Si. Louis puffed vigorously at his cigar for a few ninmeiits aud theu said: • Well. sir. I kuo.v Cincinnati pretty well, and while it contains a good many nice people (my wife lias a cousin living there), it ain't got no society to speak of. No, sir, if yon want to see real tip-top so ciety in tiie West, you’ve got ter come to St. Louis. I’ve half a mind to write to the Herald and (ell ’em that while Cincinnati may have somethin’ which she Hallers herself is society, a til-omen's picnic, or an afternoon lea. tiie real genuine arliclc, what you might call tliu Four Hundred, is run mil West by St. Louis.”—Sisw York Tribune. Little Curious Things* Thu manufacture of false teeth for horses is a now industry just opened in Paris with a capila'l of 2,1100.1)110 fra ucs. A Liverpool, England, man was re ceutly sentenced to live years' penal servitude for obtaining a snilling under the pretext that it was to be used for a charitable purpose. There is a mountain of coal in Wild Horse Valley, Wyo., which lias been burning for more than thirty years. It scuds up dense volumes of smoke, and ut times tne gas from it is almost suffocating, even at a distance of fifty to seventy-live miles from the buruiug coalbed. “ Probably tho most remarkable rail road iu the world is that running from Gloggintz to Louneriog, near Vieuna. It is only twenty-live miles in length, but cost $9.000 000. It begins at nil elevation of 1 400 feet uml has its ter minus at 13 000 feet. * It has tifteon double viaducts, seventeen tunnels,uml crosses itself mine times.—M. Louis liepubuc. Pins. .A curious fact in tlic early history of pius is tlmt when they were first sold in “open shop” there was such a great demand for them that a code was passed permitting their sale only on two days iu tho year—the 1st and 2d of January. Mr. Romanes, of I.ondnti, has an ape that he has taught lo count—not very far up. indeed, hut as far as live, lie knows the numbers and the words that indicate them, llis method is to take straws one by one into his mouth until one less than the required num ber havo been collected; then. taking up an additional straw, lie hands it over, together with those in his mouth. In eastern Now Mexico nearly COO - 000 acres of fruit and farm lands havo bm*u reclaimed by the construction of storage reservoirs and irrijruUusr cuuais during the last two years. MISSING LINKS. A Wichita (Km.) woman straps hrn bahy on her back wlieu she goes on he' bicycle. A New York man Inis attended i swimming bath regularly every daj for twenty-eight years. Third-class passengers are incroas log in England at tne expense of tin lirst and seeond class. They arc beginning to talk nboir permitting English clergymen to g< about in ordinary citizens’ 'dress. John Penn, who has jmt beet elected to the British Parliament, is i descendant of the great William Penn, it lias been estimated recently by a shoo tnan that the people of tne Unitei Status spend $160.000,01)0 annually foi ■nucs. A Georgia melon grower, after pay ing freight ami oilier charges on three carloads of mcluus, iiuij just 11 ccul! for himself. Ellison lias a notion that the aver ago dwelling of llmt future ivill lie lighted and heated at a coat of leas that a dollar a year. Jnles Verne has a son. Michel, wlic Is developing a talent for writing sto ries very iiincli iu his fatlier's higliljl imtiginalive style. Tlte New Jersey man who secured a patent on his idea of |ii:icing runner oc dm tips of imiicils is said to have real ized $2d0.0U0 from it. A new invention for carrying the baby, in tlm form of n net suspended from the neck, is tlm latest novelty al lite fashionable resorts. _ Tito chair of oratory in the Univcr *i ty of Hoindiilii. Sand when Islands, lias lieeii offered to Miss Norma 0. Crawford, of Minersvilie, Penn. Annie Ilesant makes Iter namr rhyme with ••peasant." Imt Wallet Besant pronounces his name, accord* iug to Into information, as Bessanf. Tlm census men fouml in tlm United Stsites 14 066 750 horses. 2 2!K> 532 .. lG.Ul'J AU1 emvs. 30 873 648 oxen anti cattle. 43.431.136 slteep. S0.6J5.1U6 swine. Itinerant musicians are not allowed to sojourn in 81. Petersburg, anil those who are of foreign nationality are not permitted to pass the froulier of the empire. The old Duke of Nassau, who, nt seventv-live, is halo and netiro. has a fortune of $25,000,000, and is conse quently set dow n us the richest Prince iu Europe. A German has invented an incan descent lamp with two lilnments. an automatic switch bringing the second filament into uctiou ou Lite failure of tiie lirst. Instantaneous photography has heeti used to r< coni the movements of the lips iu speaking, and liy putting tlm photographs in a zoetropo a deaf mute can easily read the words. Nellie Arthur, dantrliter of the ex President, has u well-rounded figure, sparkling brown eyes. dark, sleek hair tolled back from a low brow, a sweet smile uud a pretty girlish man ner. Vermont is boasting about her innrai status. Since 1880 tin- population of the State lias decreased 2 per cent, but membership iu the churches mis in the meautime increased nearly & Der cent. Regarding female mode’s for artists the clitics say that the French are un dersized and have bad shouldey.; the Germans have not classic faces and loo broad hips; the Iia inns are not well rounded; tlm English are loo tall; and the Spaniards are anatomically de licto tit. '1 wo remarkable old ladies are Mrs. Hannah Kustis and Miss Sarah Barr, of \\ akeliuld. Mass. They are tw'in sisters, horn in 1800. auii are still bright and iu active health. So great is their resemblance iu figure. Voice and manner, that ono is frequeutly mistaken for the otner. By placing two iron bars at seven ot eight yards distance from each other nud putting them in communication on one side by an insulated copticr wire and on the other side with a telephone it is said that a storm can lie predicted twelve hours ahead, through a certain l„...l *,>>,•>.I Ii.-iiiI in il|.. r?.,., Health rs that state when u 1 the organs of the body per orm vlieir functions in regular and effl nent manner; and to remove any obstruct! n to such action is the proper duty of medicine Hood’s Sarsaparilla 3ives health by purifying the hood, toning the stomach and bowels, and invigorating Un Kidneys and liver. Therefore, if you are in poor health take Hood s Sarsaparilla. HOOD'S PILLS —Best liver invigorator and cathartic. Reliable, effective, and gentle Price 25c. A Dog Without a Tail I* not half a; absurd as a Farmer with no So*R Jhl'",1'.™1 U" b'iliriplfs—t(„y and fcnlt’whl*\L|11' t'"1 Wh?n >'.'U “ Sca*e buy til* bent, which i* hIwhvh the chrupeKt. lor Circular* free address only JONES OF BINGHAMTON, Bingham ton, N. V. Common Soap Rots Clothes and Chaps Hands. IVORY SOAP DOES NOT, It is an oW-fashiorTnotiJ that medicine has to taste bad to do any good. Scott’s Emulsion is Cod liver oil with its fish-fat tas* lost—nothing is lost but the taste. This is more than a mat ter of comfort. Agreeable taste is always a help to di gestion. A sickening taste is always a hindrance. There is only harm in taking cod-liver oil unless you digest it. Avoid the taste. Nfi°vro?kBOWK!I,ChemUU' ,3,Sou"'SthAWBIS Your druggist keeps Sean's Emulsion of codJi_ Oil—all druggi«»s everywhere do, f». ) THE SMALLEST PILL IN THE WORLD!® 9 -- 0 TUTT’S •tiny liver pills• ■k >>»▼« all the virtues of the larger oiipI. I0»900««Saa DR. C. GEE WO, Tie Great Clese Panaceist who has performed so many wonderful cares Id ana around Omaha for the past three vears, am) has rescued the sick mid afflicted from the jaws of death and restored to health and happiness hundreds of others le't to die by other physiclniis, has concluded to extend bis practice to the ureal northwest, and for that purpose h" has eatab* llshed a system of treating patients at a distance by milli and curing them without obliging them to leave their homes and come long is'anres to consult him at his office. He offers a rare oppor tunity for the relief of their troubles and desires to say that ny one requiring his treat nientoi remedies can correspond with him nt his office la Omaha with the greatest confidence and satis* factlou. It is a well-known fact that China has abont half the population of ihe globe. They huv* ieen practicing and perfecting medicine over 4.000 * EARS. Chung Nung (see Kncy. lirit.) disco?* •red seventy-two poisons and their antidote* i,4b3 years before Christ, and Marco Pola, who orought. tlie com*pass. Campl'd, one of the first Europeans who en ten d Chinn, says. “Their physicians have * thorough knowledge of the natu.e of herbs and an admirable skill in diagnosing by the pulse.’' (See Willard's Middle Empire.) It is well known that gunpowder, steam and electricity are old in China, and tlmt the chines* were printing their delicate books IKK) years beiort Gu; ten berg was born. Rut it was to medicine the Chinese gave their Attention, and when the emporor Chin Wonm»r jered all the books to be burned lie excepted th* medical works, and It wiis only by the merest a<* cident that the great works of Confucius himself were saved, he having placed a set of bis work* in the corner-stone of his residence, which was found 2.( 00 years nrter. The celebrated Dr. Hobson states that one of the Chinese dispensatories gives 14-12 HKitHAL REMEDIES alone. Can you wonder then at th* doctor's success? The Caucasian physicians all ose the v-*rv same Remedies and wbcu you eh«•»»•**» don-or-. in tour disappoiui/itient nnd disgust, .,ou merely onauite ‘aces and assertions but not medicines. When an American doctor discovers n new remedy all the other doctors know about- It mmediatel.v. Now, you know the Chinese Doctor comes from :m al most unknown country, containing nearly half of the people of the world, where oil the medicine* tre entirely different, and Dr C. Gee Wo offer* s reward of $50) 00 to any on* who can duplicate any one of his Chinese At'dn ines. Do you not :ompn*hend that after giving up all hope of being 3ur«d by y*»nr doctors, that in taking the Chines Doctor's Remedies, 4.000 in number and absolute ly unknown outside of China, that be lias » won derful advantage over nil other physicians, lb* flew i*-medics have nevor before eirered ynut blood and act on it as 11 by magic, curing thedis* tase and rendering th* complexion clear a> * child’* Among the thousands of testimonials onfll* ta.hi* office the foil wing, which are true copies will serve to show that his efforts are attended With success and that a cure follows his treat ment In all cases. Michael Cane who has worked for the Union Pacific Railroad for over twenty-tiv years, says: “I had an immense growth on my chest, wine* had been developing for thirteen years, and fitdiy confined me to my lied The doctors, after ex peri men t log and ’using their instruments, pro* non nee I it dropsy and heart di-ease I come kept telling me to try the Chinese doctor, aiiui was carried up to his office. In three days urn* I win able to go to work. If any one wishes u> find out the particular* of my case, call auu se? me at auv time.” MICHAEL C.\NK. c< . UOr, Chicago Street. I wu troubled with Heart Disva-e an * Con sumption; was told nothing more could be done for me. Finally last spring was in the las* My heart lumped terribly. Acknowledged 10 *“>* •eif that I must die; tofd my mother so. A»i«*y family had congregated around my beu to the end. My brother-in-law said that Atg An derson had been cured of Consumption •»> V* Chinese physician after the doctors uad irivm ap. My wife went after medicine and in twenty Minutes after taking I was fitting up eating. * now weigh 1S5 pounds and am the P"*tl*r®.; health. I know l owe my life to Dr. <'. * and feel as though I must not be ashamed to it. I will gladly make nffldavit if it be neceseur). JOHN lt.\ILK\, . 472-1 Elm Street. Omaha I wai troubled with Heart Disease and Weakness. Could get no relief here, owned • nable property near postoflice. Sold ami w**” Europe. Returned wltii Consumption ”,' h siciau, who sent for my brother. He «*ai j. most prominent doctors in town. who. <*a • B. said the lady would not live till »n> ..j for Dr. C. Gee’ Wo. who. after examing. san •, will have heron her feet In a week.* H,,“ Jj his promise nobly. I have gained o'-[ 1 pounds, and am entirely cured. 7IS >. tJlu w Yours Truly. , Mrs. Nicholson. In order to convince the public that Dr- • Wo can cure any case he undertakes, ne ■ tj|e the following olt«*r: A guarantee to n- AUy money, if after a fair trisil the patient is way dissatisfied with tre atment. ’fhe Doctor has always on hand the » remedies which are his own pn-oarit which are the result of years ef study a ;,> tifle research. uud which be wiirrun-* * p> every Instance:—Rheumatism, 0ii male Weakness. Lo-t Manhood, ^‘v1' Catarrh and Kidney and Liver Mfdntn j (Ur 91.00. Cadi or write for question blanks, ther particulars, nr repre N D. Dr. C. Gee Wo has an a cm** or^ F||1 sent stives and all correspondence »n‘-1 tffe» direct to his main office at 519 N°rtJ *’doat*^ Omaha, Neb., as he is the only fag»W *n Chinese physician in Iht wot. follow! nC ration ‘,,1“ an.I