ca,pi;pa,l city courik k , SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1H92 CIPITIL $200,000.01, American i Exchange National Bank. L tCaWynoafi. . La wis Oratory PtwfdMt. Vloi PrVstdsat . at. atanham, 'D. O. Wine, Oatllltr. AssuKuhlt Uhmhk Mmi Lincoln, : Nebraska Capital, $250,000 Officers and Directors,' John H. WrlKlit, 1'rcs. T. R. Handers, V.-l J. II. McOlny, Cashier. PiE Johnson, 111' I.uii, Thus Cochran. K ;ll8lor, TWIowny, W I. Dayton General Hanking Business Transacted Collection n Specialty. 'German National Bank l.tNCOl.N, NEli. Capital . . . '. $100,000.00 Surplus .... 20,000.00 Joseph Uochmcr, President, Herman II. Schabcrg, Vice I'rct. Chns. E. Wnltc, Cashier, O. J. Wilcox, Asst. Cashier The Mist National Bank O and Tenth Sts. Capital, $400,000 - Surplus, $100,000 OFFIOEllS: ft. S. HAItWOOD, PrtnUUnt. OUAti. A. UANNA, Vtu-PrtUUnt. F. M. CUOK, OuMtr. U S. LlPVlNCOTT.AM'tCatMcr. It. D. MIUjFAI, A'l CcuhUr. O. V. Mohiikr, H. J. Wai.hh, President, Vlco-I'rcs't. H. O. Outoai.t, Cashier. fHPITHL- NATIONAL BANK Capital $300,000. LINCOLN. NEBR H. Almena Parker, dramatic Header Teacher of Elocution. 505 HllACK IJUIMlINO. REAL ESTATE LOANS On farms In oastorn Nobrnskn mid Improved proporty In Lincoln Tor u torm of years. Lowest Current Rates R. E. & J. MOORE. MOHAU-DS I1LOCK, Corner t th A O StreotH, Lincoln. Real Estate and Loans Bargain. In HaWthome. ""offeY.y Havelock, nl,mv r,,lt'H i&ftCTini. University Place T. C. K6RN, D. D. S. Rooms 35 and 26, Ihirr Block, LINCOLN MBit. PHOTOGRAPHER Has nt ureal ox penso replaced hi 0 1 1 1 Instruments with 11 now HhIIi- ee myor, direct from London, anil Is now hotter prepared limn ever to do tine work, from a (oekot up to life size. Open from 10a. m, to i p. in. Hnndavi.. Studio, 1214 O street. TTRJ7F Tuition! fall term, In seven dltrer. 1'llUlw ont oonr('H. Only high radu In dependent Normal In tho stnto. The KlncM HnllillnK", Equipment, nd Ablest Normal Kamilty, Nn experiment, hut an ctithllhed miiUHKument. 4 count's, :v teachers nnd lee Hirers a live school for llio masses Wrlto orcutnloguu to K. K. HOUSE. MauiiKer. Lincoln, Neb. Ripnns Tannics euro tho blue." Ilipans Tubules euro indigestion. Ripans Tnlmloa euro torpid liver. Ripnns Tabules : gontlo cathartic NM lUoiMt deck of C4nl. you ry lianUlvd. a vau mer Ml uuo ur iuuj S(UV& QprmJ AT THE TABBKNACLL DR. TALMAOE QIVE9 AN OF HIS ODSERVATlONS ACCOUN'. ABROAD. flosn llnllier Novel View of llio Csnr nl Hussln mill AR'nlrs Oenernlly In Thin Kmtlre Tim llrrHilful finnlnr lllt-r-,, m om America. Bihmikun, Oct, 10. Unusual Intercd nt Inched to the sermon preached by lltiv Of. Tnlmngu this forenoon, It havhiK Ixrn announced that lie would devolo the entire discourse to a review of hU summer's Jour ney. The (treat Tnlernaole building wan crowded early by an expectant audience. Professor Drown, the organist, during the service rendered the Russian nntloual air, tho English nntloual air and our own nit Clonal air. Among other hymns sung was My country, 'tis of thco, 8vvcot Innd of liberty. The subject was, "Observations In Hum sin nnd Mrent Hritnln," the text selected being Psalm cxxxl.x, 0, "If I take the wings of the morning and dwell In the Uttermost parts of the sen, oven them shall thy hand lend me." What an absurd bonk tho lllblo must he to u man who has no poetry luhissoiill "Wings of thu morning." Wlint kind of a bird In it, nnd how long are Its wings nnd of what color Ah, somo of us have Men and felt Its wings. They are golden. They nro buoynnt. They are swift. They are widespread. Thu ICtli of last June I took "tho wings of tho morning" nnd started for Europe. Juno SO, on "the wings of tho morning," I started from Liverpool. July 1'.', on "the wings of thu morning," I entered Germany, tho laud of Martin Luther and many of that Ilk, living nnd dead. On "the wings of tho morning" I entered St. Petersburg, Hussla. On "tho wings of tho morning" I entered Moscow. On "the wings of the morning" I entered thu pub nccs of Hussla, greeted by tho emperor nnd empress, surrounded by a lovely brood of princes nnd princesses. On "tho wings of the morning" I entered Inverness, tho cap ital of the Scottish highlands, country of Robert Hums and Thomas Chalmers thu ono for poetry, tho other for religion. Sept. 21, on "tho wings of tho morning," I en tcrcd tho Attest haven of all the earth Now York harbor and looked oft toward the most interesting place I had seen in three months I South Oxford street. Brooklyn. Ob. I like "the wlmrs of tho inoraimr." I am, by nnture nnd by grace, n son of the ' morning. I think I must have been lxirn In tho morning. I would like to dlo In thu morning. I have n notion that heaven is only nn everlasting morning. In tho sum mer of 18yj my text wits fulfilled to me again nnd again. "If I tnku tho wings of the morning nnd dwell in thu uttermost parts of the Ken, even thoro shnll thy hand lead mo." Yes, ho led me as ho always bos led mu since I took my first walk from tho cradle to my mother's lap nt Hound I J rook until this pulpit where I now stand, and ho will lend mu until I stop for all Urne aliout threu miles out yonder, where the most of you will bo my fellow slum be rent. THE CUV FOU ItKMKF. You nil know why I went to Hussla this summer. There arc many thousands of people who have n right to say to mo, as was said in thu Dlblu parable, "Givo an ac count of thy stewardship." Through The Christ iun Herald, which I have thu honor to edit, wu had for months, in publisher's, In reportorlnl nnd editorial column, put before the people thu ghastly facts con cerning twenty million Russians who were starving to death, and subscriptions to thu relief fund had come by letters that seemed not so much written with Ink as with tears, somu of thu letters practically saying, "Wu find it hard to get bread for our own families, but wo cannot stand thlscry of hunger from be yond the seas, njd so plensu to receive the inclosed." And others had sent Jewels from their hands and necks saying, "Sell these nnd turn them into bread." And another letter said: "Inclosed is an old gold piece. It was my mother's. She gave It to mu and told mu never to part with it except for bread, and now I inclose it." Wo had gathered thlrty-flve thousand dol lars in money, which wo turned Into three million pounds of (lour. When I went down to the board of trade at Chicago and left Ave thousand tlol of the amount raised with a prominent Hour merchant, taking 110 receipt and lenving all to him to do the !cst thing, and returned, It was suggested that I bad not done things in a business way. How could we know what sort of flour would be sent? Thoro nro styles of flour more (It for thu trough of tho swine than tho mouths of hungry men and women. Well, as is customary, when the flour came to New York Itwns tested, and wo found indeed they had cheated us. They gave us better flour than we had bought. I bought in Chicago fine flour, but they Kent us superfine. God bless the merchants of Chicago! Now wo know nothing about famine in America. Tho grasshoppers may kill the crops In Kansas, thu freshets mny destroy tho crops nlong thu Ohio, tho potato worm may kill thu vines of Long Island, thu rust mny get Into the wheat of Michigan, yet when there has been dreadful scarcity in somo parts of thu hind there has been plenty In other parts. Hut In districts of Hussla, vast enough to drop several nations Into them, drought for six con Bccutlve years has devastated, 'nnd thosb districts were previously thu most pra ducttvu or an thu umpire. It was like what we would have In Amer ica if the hunger (lend somehow got out of hell and alighted In our land, and swept Ills wing over Minnesota and said, "Let nothing grow here," and over Missouri ami said, "Let nothing grow here," and over New York state and said, "Let iiothlmn grow here," and over Ohio and Georgia and Massachusetts unit I't-nnsylvanla and No- hroska and Dakota and the Carolina anil said, "Let nothing grow here," and thu bun-, ger (lend had Hwcpt thu snmu withering and blasting wing over the best parts of Amer-1 lea In thu years I88T. ItfcS, IBSU, IbOO, 1831 mid lBttt, and Anally all our families weru put on small allowance, and we all had ilsen from the table hungry, and ufter awhile thu children had only quarter enough, and after awhllu only ono meal a day, and after awhile no good food at nil, hut a mixture of wheat and chaff nnd bark of trees, and then threu of thu children down with hun ger typhus, and then all the family unable to walk, and then crawling 011 hands nnd knees, nnd then one dead In each rixim, nnd nulghhnrs, pot quite so exhntistid, coming In to bury them, nnd nlieiward thu lioiisu becoming thu tomb, with none to carry thu dead to more appropriate Hcpulchcr-whole families blottid out. OSK IIUNimi;i AND TWIINTY-FIVr. THOU HASH b Will). I That was what occuircd In Russia In homes more than were ever counted, In homes that vterumicu as comfortable mid ' happy and bountiful as you is or mine, iu u .... ... I u'Miirn nn Yirtuim lis jours or Ulllll', in homes where Ood Is worshiped as much as In yours or mine. It was to do n little something toward beating back that arch angel of wretchedness and horror that we went, nnd we have now to report that, ac cording to the estimate of tho Russian famine- relief committee, wo saved the Uvea of l'AOOO people. As nt tho hunger relief stations thu bread was banded nut for It Was made Into loaves and distributed many people would halt before taking It and religiously cross tbemwlves and utter a prayer for the donors. Some of them would come staggering back and say, "Please tell tis who sent this bread to us." And when told It came from America they would sayt "What part of America? 1'lcase give us tho names of those who sent It." Ah, (list only knows thu names of those who sent It, but hu cer tainly does know, and tunny n prayer Is going up, I warrant yon, day by day, for those who sent flour by the ship Leo. Per haps somo of us nt our tables rattle 11IT a prayer that may mean nothing, although wo call lt"saylng grace," but 1 warrant when thosu peonlu who received the bread which saved their lives "said grace." it meant something. Our religion may not demand that wo "cross ourselves," hut I have learned that while crossing onu's self in somo cases mny mean nothing but mere form I belluvu in most cases It means, "Oh, thou of tho suf fering cross of Calvary, have mercy on mu and ncccept my gratitude." Prefer your own form of religion by nil means, but do not depreciate the religious forms of others. From nil 1 can learn there wero several good people before wu wero born, and I rather expect there will bo several left after we aru dead, I have traveled in many lands, but. I tell you plainly, as I told Km pernr Alexander III In the palace at l'eter hoir, that 1 had never la-en so Impressed with thu fidelity to their religion of any peoplo as by what I had seen in Hussla, and especially among her public, men. I said respectfully to n Russian when I saw him cross himself, "What do you do that for." "Oh," hu said, "when I do that I always say, 'God have mercy on met' " I hold in my hand something very suggest ive. Whnt does that black and uncomely thing look llker That Is what Is called hunger bread from Russia; that Is what millions of peoplo lived on for months Imi fore help came from Kngland, Scotland, Ireland nnd America; that Is a mixture which seems to have in it not ono grain of sustenance. It is a mixture of pig weed and chaff and the sweepings of stables. That Is something which, If dropped in the street, your dog or cat might sniff at, but would not eat, That was tho only food on which millions of men and women lived. You must look nt that hunger bread of Russia before you can get proper apprecia tion of whnt nn attractive and benutiful tiling a good loaf of bread Is. It is so com mon to us we cannot realize its meaning. Stop and look nt It in a bakery window or see It on your family table I mean an hon est loaf of bread, white ns a ball of packed snow, with a crust brown as the autumnal woods, and for a keen appetite more nro mntlo than flowers a loaf of bread ns you remember it in childhood, when thu knife In thu hand of your father or mother cut clean through, from crust to crust, and put lieforo you, not a quarter of a slice ore half a slice, but a full, round slice, and an other and another, just suited to a boy al ways ready to eat nnd for tho most time hungry, even in a well supplied house. I remember and you remember, if you bad a healthy childhood, just how It tasted. My! Myl Plum pudding does nottuste ns good now as that plain bread then. It, was then bread nt the table, nnd bread between meals, and bread before breakfast, and brend beforo going to bed. Till: STAFF OF I.I KK. Why does not somu poet ilng a canto on n loaf of bread, or Mime modern Raphael paint It, or somu lilstorinn tell its history r Noticed nil over liku wedding cake, or (lot ted llku many articles of food, pretentious nnd with fantastic Ingredients, but that grandest product of the earth; that richest yield of the flour mill; that best benediction of a hot oven a God given loaf of bread. Hut thu rhythm of it, thu luxury of it, thu meaning of it, tho benediction of It, tho divine mercy of it, only those know who havo seen n famine. No wonder Christ put this food Into tho sacrament mid said of a broken loaf of brend, "This is my body." Thank God that I ever saw that trnnscendent nnd compact klndn.-is of the Infinite God n loaf of bread. And it was our joy this summer to hand over a ship load of material for gladdening many thou sands of Russians with such n licatitude. Hut I have been ntked by good peoplo in Great Britain and America, again and again, Why did not the prosperous people of Russia stop that suffering themselven, making it useless for other nations to helpf And I nm nlways glad when I hear the question asked, because It gives mo an op portunity of explaining. Hnvu you any idea whnt It requires to feed twenty mil lion people? There is only one being in thu universe who can do It, and that is the Heing who this morning breakfasted sl. teen hundred million of thu human race. Tho nobility of Russia hnvo not only con tributed most lavishly, but many of them went down nnd stnld for mouths amid the gluihtlinsss, and tho horror, and the typhus fever, and tho smallpox that they might i administer to tho sulfering. i I sat nt the dining table in tho house of 1 ono of our American representatives be 'side a baroness who had not only impov 1 cribbed her estates by her contributions to I tho suffering, but who left her own homo and went down into thu worst of thu mis- J try until prostrated with fever, then re- vlvltiK nnd tolling on until prostrated by I the smallpox. She had come homo to get 1 a little strength, and In n few days sho was going down again to thesulTeriiig districts, 1 and she commissioned me to execute in America a literary enterprise by which she expects with her pen more money, nil of which Is to go for 1 1 read to thosu who lad; it. Then there are tho Hohriiiskies, They nro of thu nobility not only thu nobility of earth, but the nohlllty of heaven. You know we have In Ainerka certain names which are synonyms for benevolence George Peabody, James Lenox, William K. Dodge, Mr. Slater and soon. What their names mean iu America liobrlnskl means In Russia. The emperor has tnado Inrger contribu tions toward this relief fund than any monarch ever made for any cause since the world stood, and thu Mim-rli kindness written all over thu faces of emperor and j empress nnd crown prince Is demonstrated in what they havo already donu and are doing for thu sufferers in their own coun try. When a fow days ago I read In thu papers that the emperor nnd empress, hearing nn explosion, stopped thu royal mil train to find out what accident had occurred, and the empress knelt down by tho side of a wounded laborer and held his head until pillows and blankets could be brought, and the two wounded menweie put upon thu royal train tube carried ton place win re they could bu Itettcr cared for, 1 said to my wife, "Just like her." When I saw n few days ago In thu papers that thu emperor anil empress hud wnlktMl through Urn wards of tho most virulent cholera, talking with the patients, slinking hands with I hem and cheering them up, It was hOMurpilso to me, fori said to myself, "Thnt Is Jtut like Ihem." Any ono who has over seen the royal family will bellovo anything In the way of kindness nscrllied to them, and will join mo in tho execration of thnt too prevalent opinion Hint a tyrant la on the throne of Russia, If God spare my life I will yet show by facts beyond dispute that the most slandered nnd sys tematically lied nlsttit nation on earth Is Russia, and that no ruler over lived more for tho elevation of his peoplo In education nnd morals and rullglou than Alexnnder thu Third. So I put nil tho threu prayers together God savo tho president of tho United States! God savo tho queen of Knglnndl God savo tho emperor nnd em press of Russia! I will, whether in sermons or lectures I have not yet decided, show that n'neteon twentieths of all tho things written and published nualhst Hussla nre furnished by men who have been hired by other coun tries to "wrlto up" or rather wrlto down Hussla, so as to til vert commerce from that empire or because of international jealous ies. Russia being larger than nil tho rest of Kuropo put together, you can seo how natural would Imi tho jealousies. I know of two prominent European nowspapers thnt keep men on salaries to catch tip everything unfavorable In Russia nnd ma-Ay I fy tho Incident, And thu stereo typed stories of Siberian cruelty in one case out of n hundred is true, but in nine-ty-nlno out of n hundred cases they nre fabrication. And In tho one caso ns soon as It Is reported tho ofllclnl Is discharged, They who havo liven sent "to wrlto up" Russia and Sllierla havo donu as that man would do, who, sunt to "wrltu tip" New York, should write up thu slums ns a sjmjcI men of what New York Is, or, sent to wrltu up the American congress, should wrltntip somo depraved politicians ns n specimen of American statesmanship, or, sent to write up tho sanitary condition of this country, should send n kodak picture of nil thu wnrts and carbuncles ha could find ns n specimen of American health, I believe I can rev rsu thu opinion of any man antag onistic to Russia who will glvu mo nn honest hearing, as my own opinions hnvu been reversed by whnt I recently saw ami heard. Heforo passing to tho other field of my summer observation I glvo you one little specimen of the falsehoods about Russia. I stood In London with my tickets for St. Petersburg, Hussla, In my pocket. It was two o'clock in the afternoon, nnd nt three o'clock I was to take the train. An Amer ican physician camo In nnd said, "You cer tainly are not going to Hussla." I said, "Why not?" Then a morning paper was shown me, saying thnt In St. Petersburg thoro weru two thousand, cases of virulent cholera; the city had been divided Into bospltnl districts, nnd thu doctors weru nt their wits' end what to do with thu number of patients. The population was flying in terror. It was almost as bad In Moscow. While reflecting on thesu accounts two messages arrived frotnothei friends protest ing ngnlnst the fool hard In ess of my rushing Into the presence of two thousand cases of cholera In one city. Of course I halted. I halted for four days. Meanwhile n telo gram from St. Petersburg encouraged me to go. 1 went. Tlieru was not a single caso of cholera in St. Petersburg or Mos cow, nnd there was not n slnglu case In either city until four weeks after I left those cities. Hut the continental false hood had done Its commercial errand. Tens of thousands of Americans and Englishmen who proposed to summer iu Russia turnid in other directions. At the large hotel Iu St. Petersburg at which I Mopped, though capable of hold ing live hundred guests, and mouths beforo every room and every hallway nnd every mattress nnd every pillow had been en gaged by telegraph by sightseers, all the orders were canceled, and instead of live bundled guests I should think about thirty, and thnt Including our party. And so It was In nil the hotels Iu northern Rus sia, and the subtraction of that amount of commercial profit from thosu cities you may imagine. Hut that whole subject of systematic fabrication I adjourn to somu other hour. Yet 1 must tell you of 11 pic ture of pathos and moral poier Impressed upon my mind, mj that neither time nor eternity may ctl'aco it. Thu ship Leo swung to thu docks a few miles below St, Petersburg loaded with flour from America. Tho sailoi 4 on board huzzaed as they camo to the wharf. From a yacht on which wo had descended thu river to the sea tho prominent Icltl.ens of St, Petersburg disembarked. The bank wns crowded by prosperous citizens, who stood on thu wharf, and back of them by poor laborers, who had come down to oiler their services f reu of nil charge for thu re moval of thu breadstuffs from tho ship to thu Imperial freight train that took the Hour to tho interior freo of chnrgu. While wu stood tlieru thu long freight train rum bled down to thu docks, thu locomotl vo nnd each cur decorated with a Hag thu Amerl can flag and the Russian flag ultcrnatlng. Though n (lag to somu eyes Is only a floating rag, you ought to see bow the American flag looks live thousand mile from home. It looked that day like 11 Mo tion of heaven let down to clfeer mortul vision. Addressesof welcomunnd responses were made, and then thu work began, the only contest helug who should lift the hardest nnd be most expeditious. From ship to rail train. From rail train to knead ing board. From kneading board to oven. From oven to thu white nnd quivering lips of tho dying. Upon nil who, whether by contribution smnll or lnrge, helped make that scenu possible may there comu the benediction of him who declared, "I was hungry nnd ye fed me." oui:at mkktings in oheat diutain. Hut I must also glvu a word of report concerning my other errand-tho preach - lug of the Gospel In Great llrituln Jan summer. It was a tour I hud for many years aiiuciptuvu. uu 1 no memos 01 me 1 Gospel 1 confronted nioro people than ever before In thu same length of time multi tudes after multitudes, nnd beyond any-' tiling I can describe, Thu throngs in nil thu cities weru so great thnt they could be ' controlled only by nlatoons of police, ho that nono should be hurt by thu pressure, . each fcervlce imlmirs followed by a service ' for tho waiting throngs outdoors, and both by handshakings to the last point of phu- teal endurance. I From thu day iu which I arrived at noon in Liverpool, and thnt night addressing two vast assemblages, until I got through ' my evangelistic journey, it was u see no of 1 blessing to my own soul and I hnpu to others, I missed but threu engagements rt nil tliikUf.iitilii.it 11 till tliiM tsittlt lutltur' .ii. . 1 iti.i .1 .1 ., ' UI Hit IIIUPIIIIIIMVII t"W (! FK , too tiled to stand up, At all llie assem blages large collections wero taken the money being given to local charities, feeblu churches, oiphan asylums or Young Men's Cliristlnn associations my ncrvlces being entirely gratuitous. Hut what asummerl There must have been much praying hcru nud elsewhere for my welfaic, or immor tal could have gone through nil 1 went through. In every city and town I had message poured into my ears fo: families In Ameri ca, Oh, pons of Scotchmen, Englishman, Welshmen and Irishmen, thorn nre htnrta on the other sldu of the sea lientlng In affec tion for you nnd praying for your present and eternal welfare. They wanted mo to give you their love, and here It Is by tho Wholesale, for I cannot give It by retail. Dis appoint not thu old folks on thu other side tho Atlantic. You will probably nuvcr see them again In this world. Their hair Is whlten'Mg, and their step Is not ns firm ns when ) ,1 saw them Inst, So live thnt you may meet them In heaven. Wrlto home often, nnd while you know they are pray lng for you, do not forget to romcmlier In your prayers thosu who wero your llrsl friends, and friends than whom you wll! never havo liettor I mean your old fnthei and mother, l)y tho memories of the old Scotch kirk, where you were haplUcd, and of tho Eng lish fireside, by which you played, nnd ol thu Welsh hills nnd valleys, among which you roamed, nnd the old hoiios on th( banks of thu Tweed and the Shannon ami thu Cl de, I charge you Imi honorable and true and Clulstlan. You have good an cestral blood In your veins. Prove yoitrsell worthy, It seems to mu that tho Gospel It making mighty strides over there. Only ono thing I saw In thu chapels nnd churches I did not like. That Is a lack til npireclatlou of each other as between the nntloual church mid the dissenters. Now each Is doing iv great work that thuothci cannot do. God speed them nil they ot the episcopacy nnd they of tho dissenters. Somu need the ritual of tho national church and others thu spontaneity of tht Wesleyan, In thu kingdom of God there is room for nil to work and each iu Ills own way, Somo people are Inirn Episcopalian nnd others Methodists and others Haptlstt and others Presbyterians, and do not let us force our notions on others, As for myself, I was born souenr tin lino Hint I feel as much at homo In onu de nomination as another, nnd when In tht Episcopal church thu liturgy stint my soul so that I cannot keep hack tho tears, nnd It overwhelms mo with Its solemnity nnd its power. When In an old fashioned Mcthodlstchurch the responses of "Ameul'' nnd "Hallelulahl" lift me until, like Paul lam in blessed bewilderment as to "wheth er In the body or out of the body, GimI knoweth." Andns for the Haptlsts, though I havo never Imcii anything but sprinkled, I hnvu Immersed hundreds andcxJH'ct to tin niorsu hundreds more In the baptistry tin tier this pulpit where I now stand. NO DOUHTFUL DIBI'UTATIONH. What is the use of controversy about anything except how woshnll keep close tc tho cross and do thu most for helping peo ple for this world nnd the nextf May there come in England more cordiality between the nntloual church and the dlssontefs. Although 1 would be called a dlssentci there, almost my llrst step in Kngland wai into a banqueting hall tho lord mayor't banquet, given to tho bishops nnd high of ficials of the national church, tho grunt and good nnd genial archbishop of Canterbury at their head, and n more magnificent group of folks, intellectually and spiritually, I never got among, and I found that though wo had never met beforo tho arch bishop and myself weru old friends. Hut all up and down Great Hrltalti I found 11 niultitudu that no man can number en listed for God and eternity, and I tell you the kingdom Is coming. If the pessimists would get out of the way the people who snivel and groan and think everything has gone to tho dogs 01 is about to go 1 say if these pessimist! would only get out of the way, tho world would soon see thu salvation of God. Christianity Is only another nmu for ele vated optimism. Was Isaiah an optimist! S-o his deserts Incarnadined with red roset and snowed under with white lilies and bis lamb asleep between the paws of 11 lion. Was St. John nn optimist? Read the uplifting rfplendors In the Apocalypse and tho halleluiah chorus with which tht old book, which they cannot kill, closes. The greatest thing I can think of Would bu to hnvu n.trlplu alliance of America, Kngland mid Russia in complete harmonl Eutlou, nud then to have upon all of them comu u deluge of thu Holy Ghost. Let the defamation of other nations cease. Peace and good will to menl For that glorious consummation, which may I hi nearer than we think, let us prny, remembering that God can do morn iu live minutes than man can do In llvu centuries. If the consuim motion Is not effected In our day 1 shall ask tho privilege of coming out from heaven a llttlo while to look at this old world when It shall have put on its mil lennlol beauty. I think God will let ui come out to see it at least onco iu Its per fectcd state before it is burned up. I should not wonder if all heaven would adjourn for 1111 excursiou to this world tc see bow n shipwrecked planet was got oil the breakers and set afloat again amid the eternal harmonies. Meuuwhlle let ui do all we can to make it better, and It will somehow tell In tho filial result, though it bo only a child's sob hushed, nt a trickling tear wiped from a palo face, 01 a thorn extracted from 11 tired foot, or a sinful soul washed white ns the wool. May God help us to help others! And so these lessons of gratitude and sympathy nnd helpfulness nud vindication I have brought you on the wings of this morning. I'rrmiitliMiH Tlmt Should lie Taken. The world was never so small as It is to day. Means of rapid transit aro bringing nil quarters of thu globu closer and closet together. This result lias Its dangers as well as its advantages. The recent out break of cholera In European Russia, of. whoso dally advance we are mudu aware by cable, warns us that wu have dangers to fear from u too close International rein tloushlp. Tlio grave resiKinslbillty of keeping from 1 ,;,"', ,, ,",!", L. . .. ... .. 1 our land the dreaded scourge of cholera thu sanitary inspectors of 0111 for It Is only through a fow great talcs of commerce that wu hnvu rea sou to fear Its introduction. Reieut exiM-rieuces with typhus fever Iu tho port of New York havo shown that there are weak ihdIiiIm in our quarantine defenbes which should bu remedied, When once these bulwarks aru passed, thu laboi of disinfection Is Increased a thousandfold. It should bu tbu duty of thu nuthorltlc ' to prepare beforehand for thorough Inspeo , tiou of all arriving vessels and for complete disinfection of nil suspected freight and ' paxiicugers. 1 Tho usually easy going American should not allow his good nature to modify the stringency of his maritime sanitary regu , lations. Europeun oflklals are to he com-, mended for their increasing vigilance iu this respect, for it is by their etTorlsthat the dlsrasu may bu kept fiom shipping ports, v hence, It might be distributed by commerce. Youth's Companion. ; The Kind of sv Man Needed. "Why have on discharged your isjok- ( keeper? 1 thought you told mu ho worked liku a trooper. ' ! "Ho did. Tlsit wns the trouble. I didn't 1 want my btKikn kept by a trooper, but by a bookkeeper." I InrjH'r'H ilnzar. MAX MEYER & bro. co; lle"nblo Ivnlors 1 11 Flrst-Cliiss Pianos & Organs Wo carry llio Inrircst and Im-sI selected stoak In Imi roll nil In any house In Ilia went, nud self t uinuiimcliirers1 price, for cnih or tin easy terms. j SMumiy if' A'(IM.f Win, Knnbf it-Co. PIANOS PIANOS liehr Ilros, Vote if- Sons Sterling .Sfrii(riOrtWMnl lied Hock prices nnd on ensy terms .sVcijimI fiinrl Oiyivm, Jin lip, .SVrnihl anil Hnmis, $M up Instruments rented nud mil allowed If pur chased. Cheap stencilled tnisll so ortoil lin posuiluiKin buyers wo do not handle nor roe omiiieml, A kooiI standard ninko second-hand Instrument Is to ho inferred to much of llio new cheap trssh sold, (.'all slid sen us or wrltu for catalogues and prices. Your patron nice solicited and lilithly appreciated. Max Meyer & Bro. Co., 16th and Far nam, Omaha. DR. HENRY A. MARTIN'S Medical Institute FOR TIIK CUIIK OK Chronic Diseases SPECIALTIES: Diseases of Women, Catarrh, 1 Morphine nnd Opium Habits. Cure Gunrnntced. Consultation Free. Offices, 141 South 12th Street DR. T. O'CONNOR, (Huccestor to Dr. Charles Buurlso.) Cures Cancers Tumors Wens and KM11I11 wtllinnl 'lie use of Knl'e Chloroform or Ether, Otllce iro6 O Btreel-Owrn block. LINCOLN NEB. TALES FROM TOWN TOPICS. 2d vesr of the most successful Oasrtertr ever published. More than ll.OOO LEADING NEWS PAl'I'.KS in North America have complimented Uiis publication during its first year, and uni versally concede that iu numbers aflofd the brig-titcst and most entertaining reading that can be had. 1'ublittied 1st day of September, December, March and June. Atk Newsdealer for It, or send the price, 50 cents, in stamps or postal note to TOWN TOPICS, 21 Wett 23d St., New York. XW This brilliant Quarterly is not made up from the (urrmt year issues of Town Tones, but contains the best stories, sketches, bur kvpict, poems, witticisms, etc., from the Au-4 mut'iit'i ol that unique journal, admittedly Ihc critpekt, raciest. mot complete, and to all 3IICV ANI WOMKN ihc most interest inff weekly ever issued. Subscription Price: Tors TojIci, fr ysir, 1 1.00 Tills froa Tmra Toplet, par risr. 100 TsitvgclaHJ, - - 0.00 Town Tories sent 3 months oa trial for l.oo. N. II.- Previous Nos. of -Tales" will be pro o promptly forwarded, postpaid, ca rccatot of rents each. FIIUJT ADDITION TO NORMAL The most beautiful suburban prop erty now on the market. Only three b'ock from the handsome I lu coin Normal University and but three blocks from tht proposed leclilo railway. These lota are now being placed en the market at I bceedtOc'.y Loi Prices and Easy Terms tsar plat, terms and Information, call nn M. W. FOLSOM, TRUSTEE:, Insurant), Heal Estate and Loan Broki 1 fUom so, Ntwman Block. IMS Obi imi sbT bshssbm j, c. HBaHl 3iPSSTHBVgjSSJSBBBBBBBSpS--p-'- I EisH4lBlalaB iaiBiBiBiBiBflP- .$? ?,' ;s;. I I