The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, March 12, 1897, Image 3

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    TALM AGE'S SERMON.
FESTIVITY THE SUBJECT OF
SUNDAY S DISCOURSE.
from the Toil: Bring Hither the Fst*
Ieel Fair nnil Kill li i.nke lfli*a
Wlion sin hiiiI Sorrow shall llr Su
More Cate* of I’uratllif.
■lage. However much on other days of
he year our table may have stinted
•upply, on Thanksgiving Day there
mist be something bounteous. And all
he comfortable homes of Christendom
'lave at some time celebrated Joyful
■■vents by banquet and festivity. Some
hlng has happened on the old home
stead greater than anything that, has
•ver happened before. A favorite son
whom the world supposed would be
■otne a vagabond ami outlaw forever
ias got tired of sight-seeing and has re
lumed to his father's house. The
world said he would never come hack.
The old man always said Ills son would
ome back. He has been looking for
dm day after day and year after year,
lie knew he would come back. Now
having returned to his father’s house
the father proclaims celebration. There
» in hi' jiu'iuuc n • .in uiiti iitin i;* * n
kept up and fed to utmost capacity, so
is to be ready for some occasion of Joy
.hut might come along. All! there nev
*r would he a grander day on the old
homestead than this day. I-et the
butchers do their work, and the house
keepers bring to the table the smoking
meat. The musicians will take their
places, and the gay groups will move up
and down the floor. All the friends and
neighbors are gathered In and an extra
supply is sent out to the table of the
servants. The father presides at the
table and says grace, and thanks God
that his long-absent hoy Is home again.
Oh! how they have missed him. how
glad they are to have him back.
One brother standH pointing at the
tuck door and says, “This is a great ado
about nothing; this bad boy should
have been chastised instead of greeted;
veal is too good for him!" But the
father says. "Nothing Is too good, noth
ing is good enough.” There sits the
young man. glad at the hearty recep
tion, but a shadow of sorrow flitting
across his brow at the remembrance of
the trouble he had seen. All ready
now. Let the covers lift. Music. He
was dead and he Is alive again! He
was lost and he is found! By such bold
imagery does Hip Bible set forth the
merry-making when a soul comes home
to God.
First of all, there is the new con
verts Joy. It is no tame thing to be
come a Christian. The most tremen
dous moment li1 a man’s life is when he
surrenders himself to God. The grand
est time on the father's homestead Is
when the boy comes hack. Among the
great throng who in the parlors of our
church professed Christ one night was
a young man who next morning rang
my doorbell and said: “Sir, I cannot
contain myself with the joy 1 feel; 1
came here this morning to express It;
1 have found more Joy in five minutes
in serving God than in all the years of
my prodigalitv, and I came to say so."
You have seen, perhaps, a man run
ning for his temporal liberty and the
officers of the law after him, and you
saw him escape, or afterward you heat
the judge had pardoned him, and how
great was the glee of that rescued man;
but it is a very tame thing that com
pared with the running for one’s ever
lasting life, the terrors of the law after
him. and Christ coining in to pardon
and bless and rescue and save.
lou rememiier jouii uunyan in hi*
great story tells how the pilgrim put
his Ungers to his ears, anil ran. cry
ing: "Life, life, eternal life!" A poor
ur driver some time ago. after years
having had to struggle to support hi*
family, suddenly was informed that a
large inheritance was Ills, and there
was a Joy amounting to bewilderment:
hut that is a small thing compared
with the experience of uno when he
has put 111 his hands the title deed to
y the Joys, the -jptlire*. the splendors of
' heaven, anil he eau truly say. "It* man
sions are mine. Its tempi's are mine.
Its songs are mine. Its Cod w rolua!**
Oh. It Is n» tame thing to become a
Christian. It U a tuerr> making. It
Is the killing of (he fatted calf. It U a
Jubilee. You know the llible itorf
.umpare.1 It to u funeral. !>u* always
'Otupatea It to something delightful. It j
Is more apt to be tomparwd to a tun- i
0 ici than aavihtng e'se |> u mm- i
pared In the Hlhle to w iter, bright,
dashing staler, to ih<- morning ru- 'its. j
Hr wurxed. mountain tiauiAgured
m.inning I wish I -nutd today take all [
the Hlhle expressions about pardon, f
P'-aro, and life, and comfort, and hope
*n<4 kratxx, and **ta ikrai into ope I
gsflohd and put it on the brow of th* I
k ihklwl eht I of tbi-t In Ikts tur*' I
uiig*. afd erg d* it it, wear II now
wear II lurexor. sow of Cud da tghter ul |
the U*|J Cud A) Might! Uk I he Jay '
of the heo *«w**r IH, the gladness j
the t‘hr tails* aerskao You aoi*
seen xuHxetlw-a o assn In o religion*
esse mbit got Up g -e hls expert
i tl'X Hill Hhet g*«s h « «xpo-tea s. ,
lie ornoe lw the prwsea w of iwv
1 hur-'hoo, the iksirk uw earth sad lb«
-hur«h to hwotow. «»4 h« ug
lh * M Ml experts* # smcruwfwl. >«<
stoats »sf-M mg put ret mahiog
wist rWh hXMwg xuthtwg cat poo
■ •wtxi all thtsp# If the p sap to to
thkt bouts hesw the |ags of Ik* duka
tssh ixItlHM I hoi s sold si. pass nit
Is'* I ho hmg-ie« if (Jut h« wen mo- (
»
I meiit. When Daniel Sandeman v.aa dy
ing of cholera, his attendant laid,
“Have you much pain?" "Oh,” !-.e re
plied, “since I found the Lord I havp
never had any pain except sin." Then
they said to him, “Would you like to
send a message to your friends?" “Ye
I would; tell them that only last night
the love of .Jesus came rushing into my
soul like the surges of the sea. anti I
had to cry out, 'Stop. Lord, it is
enough: stop. Lord, enough!’’’ Ob, the
Joys of this Christian religion. Just
pass over from those tame Joys in
which you are indulging, joys of this
world, into the raptures of the gospel.
The world cannot satisfy you; you huve
found that out. Alexander, longing for
other worlds to conquer, and yet
drowned in his own bottle; Byron
whipped by disquietudes around the
world; Voltaire cursing his own soul
while all the streets of Paris were ap
plauding him; Henry VIII. consuming
with hatred against poor Thomas a
Becket all Illustrations of the fact
that this wori 1 cannot make a man
happy. The very man who poisoned
the pommel of the saddle on which
Queen Kllzab-dh rode shouted In the
street. "God save the Queen!” One mo
ment the world applauds, and the next
moment Hip world anathematizes. Oh,
come over Into this greater Joy, this
sublime solace, this magnificent beati
tude The night after the battle of
Shiloh, and there were thousands of
wounded on the field, and the ambu
lances had not conic, one Christian sol
dier lying there a-dying under the
btarliglit, be.<an to sing;
“There is a land of pure delight,”
II IM « O III': iw ur ••• -.
there were m oron of voice* singing:
"Where saints immortal reign.’*
The *ong was caught up all through
the ih id among the wounded until it
was said there were at leant 10,000
wounded men uniting their voices aa
they came to the verse:
"There everlasting Spring abides
And never-withering flowers;
’Tis but a narrow stream divides
This heavenly land from ours."
At the opening of the Exposition In
New Orleans I saw u Mexican flutist,
and hp played the solo, und then after
ward the eight or ten bands of music,
accompanied by the great organ, came
in; but the sound of that one flute as
compared with all the orchestras was
greater than alt the combined Joy of
the universe when compared with the
resounding heart of Almighty God. For
ten yrars a father went three times a
day to the depot. Ills sou went off in
aggravating clrcumstnces, but the
father said: "Ho will come
back.” The strain was too much
und his mind parted, and three times a
day the father went. In the early
morning h», watched the train, its arri
val, the stepping out of the passengers,
and then the departure of the train.
At noon he was there again watching
the advance of the train, watching the
departure. At night lie was there
again, watching the coming, watching
the going, for ten years. He was sura
ills sen would come back. God has
been watching and waiting for some o£
you, my brothers, ten years, twenty
years, thirty years, forty years, per
haps fifty years, waiting, waiting,
watching, watching, and if now tho
prodigal should come home, what a
scene of gladness and festivity, and
how (he great Father's heart would re
joice at your coming home. You will
come, some of you, will you not? You
will, you will.
1 notice, also, that when a prodigal
comes homo there is the joy of the
ministers of religion. Oh, it is a grand
thing to preach this gospel. I know
there has been a great deal said about
the trials and the hardships of the
Christian ministry. I wish somebody
would write a good, rousing book about
the Joys of the Christian ministry.
Since I entered the profession, I have
seen more of the goodness of God than
I will be able to celebrate in all eter
nity. I kuow some boast about their
equilibrium, and they do not rise into
CUttlt niaouii j »• v# out ut vun
down with emotion; but I confess to
you plainly that when 1 see a man
coming to Cod and giving up his slu
I feel iu body, mind and soul u trans
port. When 1 see a man bound hand
anil foot In evil habit emancipated, I
rejoice over It as though it were my
own emancipation.
Warn In one communion service such
throngs of young and old stood up and
In the presence of heaven and earth
and he!) attested their allegiance to
Jesus t'hrUt. I felt a Joy something akiu
to that whl h ihe apostle describes
when he say* "Whether In the body
I cannot tell: Cod hnoweth.” Oh. have
not ministers a l ight tu rejoice w hen a j
prodigal comas home’ They blew tn« j
trumpet, and ought they not b« glad
of the gathering of the host? They j
pointed tn ihe toll supply, and ought j
they not to rejoiie when thirsty soul*
plunge S» the hurt lor iho ws *r !
brooks’ Th*y > ini'* forth, faytbg:
•*All tfcl**#* But tr*4>‘ uu|ht ?
thry nut lu r*M«« iii** i»ru4tgAl
sits down at tbs IsagM? Lit* tn
sursno men will tell you that minis
tern of teltglo'i, as s class. I:*e lunger !
than any other It i• ihe nsiltii.y
of all those whu . tl utale upon n ikon i
luffci dy that m in taler* of rritgiss.
M t rssae ll »* longer than an> other
Why n It’ fbeto la more J si- upon
the nervous system than If, Spy other
and their toil ts nun as* 1
n., .stung I have seen mtwtat*rt kept 1
en mioMUkie stipends h pa, oa< aom
vt.MglsgvIiens sill nundetsd St Iks
dullness of the sermnn a hats the ntetr
It! dull S»| P* pi* V •! vlmva, to dsath
hv goeolsHss of Itvsith wd so l had ant
s sough f iitulM load to h<mp any §»•
In i hair tsio pat ament ks feat no Sts
I have so men me s seen tba inside at the I
Me of moot of Ike An%**< Sh • leig»
meo sever a sptiaa the): k vagilaiiir
tosso tb«y aaaot aford It hut t
have sees them struggle »a with dl<
S'i»a of i«a * atf bnofrsd d*s i v a
year the average less than that their
struggle well depleted by the western
missionary, who says in a letter
"Thank you for the last remittance;
until it came we had not any meat ia
1 our house for one year, and all last
i winter, although is was a severe win
ter. our children wore their summer
i clothes " And these men of God I find
i In different parts of the land struggling
against annoyance and exasperations
j innumerable; Some of them week
1 after week entertaining agents who
have maps or lightning rods to sell,
slid submitting themselves to all styles
of annoyance, and yet without com
plaint and cheerful of soul. How do
you account for the fact that these life
Insurance men tell us that ministers, as
a class, live longer than any other? It
Is because of the joy of their work; the
Joy of the harvest field, the Joy of
greeting prodigals home to their Fath
er's house. Oh. we ure In sympathy
with all innocent hilarities. We can
enjoy a hearty song and we can be mer
ry with tbe merriest; but those of os
who have tolled In the service are
ready to testify that all these Joys are
tame compared with the satisfaction of
seeing men enter the kingdom of God.
The great eras of every ministry are
the outpourings of the Holy Ghost, and
I thank God I have seen sixteen of
them. Thank God. thank God!
l^ook, look! There Is Christ. Cnyp
painted him for earthly galleries, and
(ViPKilrol/i an I 'I'intnunlln uml H*»n 1am in
West and Dors painted biin for earthly
galleries, hut nil those pictures are
eclipsed by this masterpiece of heaven.
Christ! Christ! There is Paul, the hero
of the Sanhedrim, and of Agrippu's
court room, and of Mars Hill, and of
Nero's Infamy, shaking his chained fist
in the very face of teeth-chattering
royal.y. Here is Joshua, the fighter of
Bethorau and Gideon, the man that
postponed sundown. And hero is Vash
tl, the profligacy of the Persian court
unable to remove her veil of modesty
or rend it. or lift it. And along the
corridors of this picture gallery I find
other great heroes and heroines—David
with his harp, and Miriam with the
cymbals, and Zecharlali with the scroll,
and St. John with the seven vials, and
the resurrection angel with the trum
pet. On further in the corridors, sen
the faces of our loved ones, the cough
gone from the throat, the wanness gone
from the cheek, the weariness gone
from the limbs, the languor gone from
the eye. Let us go up and greet them.
Let us go up and embrace them, ljet
us go tip and live with them. We will!
we will!
Once more I remark, that when the
prodigal gets back the inhabitants of
heaven keep festal. 1 am very certain
of it. If you have never seen a tele
graph chart you have no Idea how many
cities are connected together, and how
many lands. Nearly all the neighbor
hoods of the earth seem reticulated,
and news Hies from city to city, and
from continent to continent. But more
rapidly go the tidings front earth to
heaven, and when u prodigal returns
it is announced before the throne of
God. And if these souls now present
should enter 'he kingdom there would
be some one In the heavenly kingdom
to say, "That's my father,” "That’s my
mother,' “That's my son,” “That’s the
one I used to pray for,” "That's the
one for whom 1 wept so many tears,”
and one soul would say, “Hosanna!”
and another would say, ''Hallelujah!”
Pleased with the news, the saints bo
low
In songs their tongues employ;
Beyond the ski’s the tidings go.
And heaven is filled with joy.
Nor angels can their joy contain,
But kindle with new fire;
Tlie stnner lost is found, they sing.
And strike the sounding lyre.
From this hilltop I catch a glimpse
of those hilltops where all sorrow and
sighing ahull be done away. Oh, that
God would make that world to us a
reality. Faitli in that world helped old
Dr. Tyng when he stood by the casket
of Ms dead son whose arm had been
torn off in the threshing machine,
death ensuing, and Dr. Tyng, with in
finite composure, preached the funeral
sermon of his own beloved son. Faith
ic that world helped Martin Luther
without ono tear to put away in death
his favorite child Faith in that
world helped the dying woman to see
on thp sky the letter "W," and they
asked her what ahe supposed that let
ter “\V” on the sky meant. •'Oh.” she
said, "don’t y .n know? *\V* stands for
'Welcome. " Oh. heaven swing <>:>ru
thy c.tte*. oh. beaten, roll upon u.t
some of th« sunshine anthem*. Oh,
heaou. Ilttbh upon ua the vision of thy
luster. An old writer lella ua of a ship
comm* trout India to France. The crew
was mad* up ■ f French aatlora who had
been Ion* fruit home. and aa the ship
.attic son* the coast of France, the
men skipped the deck with *le*. and
thw pointed to the spires of the
thurvhes »l.*-re they ouce worship*'I
and to the hit s where they had played
in boyhood Mu< when the ship .viue
Into port and thetw sailors saw father
and mother sad wife and toted ones on
the wharf, they apian* ashore *rd
rushed op the hank# lata thw city, nu t
the . sp an, had to **t another crew to
brut* the ship I" h* r ntoofia** Pa
In «»• u w ill after a white .ihm sw fwiiy
in at*M w* ran **w Ms lowers. Ms man
atona its httu and sa w i *o into p»rt
and wr l«*»o sows »h*U nil from that
shinut* shorn and speak our name* w*
will aprta* to the beach test In* this
«M ship of * world to he mtuatef by j
awe‘b*' crew tot »ou*li *»?**■-*.* of i
the n*w* suited foresee.
tnwMss r.ss fuosi awd »*»*■*•
Dot t the t’uohtes that are pwwt. nsat
the irsrohhm of the pmai, do wot ,
*«♦** about the iroohtaa of the fwtt «w '
k» «t *»* h trtht as It •settee, sat IW a
n>ah*‘tir of • Sees the hoot aairs Wtp
he to nans it h« awd i«a>s it with tied
. the tk-ta'isn I
I T STANDS AT $200,000.
^THC TCANS-MISSISSIPPI EXPO
IS1TION BILL.
J.fTorf* for an Additional \pproprI»tlon
of 9* 7.1,000 Not Surreal fill—Cn»i|{rp«i*
limn Morcrr Present* Kraaoni Why It
Mioiild lt«* Made Senator Allen to
Malto Another I iijlit.
The Trana-MitaUalppi Appropriation.
\V asiiinotox, March ft.—The ques
tion of appropriating 875.000 additional ,
for the Trans-Mississippi Exposition i
eume up in the consideration of tiie
sundry civil bill, and the house refused
to concur in the senate amendment, l>y
a Vote of 41) yeas toll".’ nays. Representa
tive Mercer represented the reasons
why this additional appropriation
should he made, citing that the treas
ury department has suggested that the
additional sum should be appropriated
in view of the larger cost in making
the .-vliit.it on account of the distance,
and that the original bill had failed to
provide for the return of the exhibit,
in addition to outlining what, was ex
pected of the government, lie sold:
• Now. tliis amendment. No. 4H. says,
‘including the return of said govern
ment exhibit." of course, in Omaha
we have a disposition to take every
thing wliieh belongs to us, hut do not
rare to keep this exhibit any longer
than it, will serve tile purpose of tile
exposition, and the treasury depart
ment has informed me, and the expo
sition managers have informed me,
that 8ftu.ooo of the amount originally
provided is entirely inadequate to eon
struct a building for the fish eolimiis- '
• inn and also to construct the adminis- 1
1 rat ion buildings. 1 do not think the :
members of this liouse desire to see a i
peanut show or to see a peanut build
ing there, and I think they are great ;
enough and magnanimous enough to
give the appropriation that is provided
in these amendments, providing for the
return of the government exhibit to
the city of Washington and wherever
else it comes from.
"Mr. Speaker, there will be an ex
position of no mean proportions, it
will represent the resources, industries
and capabilities of twenty-four states
and territories, and I desire that for
once the people of tin* l idled States
may look over the Allegheny moun
tains and may travel there and take
notice of tiie resources of that grand
Trans-Mississippi country. We expect
tiie east to come there with its capital
and with its knowledge, and we expect
that after that exposition has been
seen by the people of tiie t'nited
States, those grand states and terri
tories beyond the Mississippi will have
an opportunity to grow and prosper
the saint as eastern states have done.
I trust that members of this house. ,
irrespective of polities, will help us on
these three amendments. "
Mr. Cannon, chairman of the appro- '
priation committee, fought, the senate
amendments at every turn, taking the
ground thiiJ the bill only called for
«■.'()<).0(10. Although Cannon was nr
rayed on the side of no increase, it is
thought that Mercer would have car
ried liis point had not Hepburn of Iowa
asked t lie question us to what Nebraska
had done for the exposition. Mercer
was compelled to say that nothing
definite bud been enacted by the stub c
legislature. The vote being taken tin '
senate amendment was not agreed to.
This, however, did not settle the
matter, for the senate conferees have
for ten hours stood for 3.‘.,75,O0(). Sen
ators Thurston and Allen are working
hand in hand to secure this amount. I
Two conferences have been had and a l
third will In- ordered if necessary be 1
fore the senate recedes to the house. I
hater in the evening the senate re
ceded from the additional amount. ,
Senator Allen immediately announced
that he would make a fight for u third
conference.
The exposition amount of 8200.(KM1 3
lias been agreed to hy both houses,
although tiie senate insisted upon its ]
amendment us long as it could con
sistently without endangering the pas |
sage of the bill.
Indian I’ullt-p Arrest Hogan. (
l’KNDKIt. Neb.. March ft.—Some ex
citement prevails in Thurston county
over the removal of one J. S. Hogan 1
and his family from their allotment se- "
lection within the limits of the Farley i
pasture, on tiie Omaha reservation, by j1
Capt. ileek’s Indian police, under com .,
maud of John Hilchet. I'nder instruc r
lions from the Indian commissioner al J
Washington to the former agent. Ash |
ley, Hogan and a few others were ill l
lowed the privilege of milking selec
tions for future allotments for theii
minor children, and this is the lam
"in now niiipj. ini' imiiuu pullet
laid in iiuihmsh. exprctinur lluirun am
Ills wife, \\ Im is an Omaha imllan, ti i
return, which they did. A Hjpht tisik
plui'i'. anil il was with ciiiiMilcnibU
11 i tti«-ii I tv dial lh >1*1111 wanoverpowiieil
lie was ImiiiiiiI ill iron:, ami taken U
the ajfclicy.
Itreuiint I inn in is* Inn He* ill * Unrh.
I,l.\i oia, March ,1. N t iiniphell
I h >[ hi I ist of Num-e county. was select*',
as chairman of the eoinuiissioii. mnl J y
Oherfeliter of N ilnry. om* of the • lento
entile memtiers. was inuile secretary
After iiiiieh deliUrtitioii it was ilc
cull'll to proceed with the count will (
opii th sirs, ns h>ag an there was in •,
disposition on the |«art of olltshlers !• (
unduly enn»>1 the mom I he lomniis |
sion will not pi,e nut any of the daily
lesnlt* ilf itn labors, giving as the re,1
'irm I tie fact that fir eonttties ha,»
tailed to forward lire ballots ami that
there might la- dangr r that these tail
u»ls may Is tamp red w ith if partial .
< suits are ifiieit out in u.taanc, Th*
fir mriitiis, not yet repot,.I a««
iylu* I«tn, a.I. r. \ a, y, I,, sher.a u t ^
and he, a I'a ha
ttHN tik t tat I s.
laath , tatmrd tsm hoy , la the fits, 1
of I ,1 \ a*t Hud rh Ut Ik ah l- *mu
Varhrt h 'r» was th» mala It
'» atWaigk aa* ma t, twruh l arkrt % |
hpli at M*r*n*» It* (he outer ihm ,,| ■
th. «*h was Wo*a nfaa hat Me b*ry
lays •*»» enable ofww the ImtX
'ts a s 111! tw ace failed Iw get aay ttttag *
■MMnMMnMHHMHHni
A WONDERFUL SHRUB.
[irowii on th* I'.mk* of thf» (.ungr* :mil
Carr* M;my litvlily 111*.
One of the latest botanical discov- 1
?ries of Interest to seekers for health 1
? called Alkavia. from the Kav.a-Kava
ihruli of India. It is being imported by 1
ihe Church Kidney Cure company of 1
Sew York, and is a certain cure for 1
several bodily disorders. The Kava- 1
Kava shrub, or, as botanists call it, <
'Piper Methystfcnui," grows on the
Janka of the Ganges river, and probab- <
y was used for centuries by the natives <
Defore its extraordinary properties bo- 1
’amp known to civilization through •
Christian missionaries. In this re- '•
tpect it resembles the discovery of qul- •
nine from the peruvian bark, made 1
>nown by the Indians to the early
nlsslonaries In South America, and by
hem brought to civilized man. It Is a
wonderful discovery, with a record of
1,200 hospital cures in thirty days. It
icts directly upon the blood and kid
leys. and Is a true specific, just as qul
llne is In malaria. We have the strong- '
?st testimony of many ministers of
he gospel, well known doctors and
justness men cured by Aikavis. So far j
he Church company, No. <22 Fourth
ivenup. New York, are the only 1m- ,
sorters of this new remedy, and they
ire ho anxious to prove its value that
'or the sake of introduction they will h
tend a free treatment of Alkavls pre
paid by mall lo every reader of this ,
>aper who Is a sufferer from any form
)f kidney or bladder disorder, Bright's ,
llspase, rheumatism, dropsy, gravpl,
lain In hack, female complaints or oth- f
■r afflictions due to Improper action of -
he kidneys or urinary organs. We ad
’Ise all sufferers to send their names
ind address to the company, and re
•elvp the Alkavls frep. It Is sent to
'ou entirely frpe. to prove Its wonder*
ul curative powers. i
f8t\
1
I
Smith—“This lx my la*t cigar.”
Jones—“That's good; J was afraid
'on had one for me.”—Up-to-Date. j
I tttarrh Cunnot l>n Cured
rith LOCAL APPLICATIONS, um they |
anno! reach the* »nut of the dlnenHo. < a
arrh Is ti blood or const It ut tonal dlscanc.
nd In order to cure It you must take in
frnal lemcdleN. Halls Cut art’ll Cure Is ■
alien internally and acts directly on the \
lood and mucous surfaces Hairs ( a- J
anli Cure Is not a quack medicine. It I
'ns prescribed by one of the best phy- I
Iclans in ti<is country for years, and Is J
regular prescription. It is composed of *
he nest tonics known, combined with fie* |
est blood purifier*, aelInK directly on the I
menus surfaces. The perfect corn bln a- |
Ion of the two ingredients u wliat pro- •
u es such wonderful results In curing 2
ntarrh. Send for testimonials, free. A
I . .1. rilKNKV \ < < >. Prop- , Toledo, O. I
Sold by druggists, price <5c. !
Hall's I'amily Pill- are tiio best.
Completely Lxtlngui«tier|. A
The passenger In the tweed clothes «
;ot tip to take a drink and when he *
;ot back lie foumi his seat occupied by t
he man in the $7.88 suit, who had been "
itting on the wood box. “
“I'd like to have my seat, please,”
aid the tweed man.
“Your seat?” repeated <7.88. “When
lid you get a reserved seat? Where are
ou Irom, anyway?"
“New York,” answered the tweed, im
iressively.
"New York? New York? Huh! I'm
rom Canton, Ohio."
And the train rolled on with the New
fork man sitting on the wood box.—
:incinnati JSnoiiirer.
Over tbe Prn lplrt
lost* of invalids tumble to destruction
Imply bocuu.se they will exercise no dis
tent (on In tlie matter of eating, <1 rink lug and
lie itvoiduiu'c of exeltlna causes, aud, above
II. In the Item of tnedieutiou. They persist
i dosing themselves in season and out of
i*usou wltli drastic and violent remedies,
plates and mineral poisons. The la st, the
it feat, the pleasantest substitute for snob
urt ful nieis-nit tiles Is Hostetler's Slonuu'li .
litters, isitent for niulttrlul. rheumatic. d> s- ‘
.’|»Ue, nervous ami bilious complaints. a
1‘rlsouer* a* Itoiueslln srrvsnti. t
Hawaii is not the only place where
irixonorx have been known to i»e
tired out for domestle service. It was J
lUoovmttl some years ago that long- t
•inn ttonvlets In jail at New fustic, *
tel.. wen. commonly suit on errands d
ibout town, ami even life prisoners J,
sere slightly watcited. A murderess \
•as employed in the jailer's family ,
md |s*rwltted to go alxmt the street*. t
K Ilia l.rsss seed Older. .
•IiiIiii tul/vr toeeil •<».. I.u ( nxM'.
\ is tli«> Ittrjfrsl jfii*s I-lover mnl Turin |
••<1 wohit* iii Aiwrlmi. mwnlly re
rivet! .in onter fur t «<-iil\ live ihnu
inti |»nliiil>. ilrt'erenl k inis of elover
> n tiioiisuml |hhiiiiIs "ijlter* Mi|u<rior
IliK'lhl wol Hint ten tiiiuisuint imumls
1 it.lti -rent kitnl* nl Kmmw fr. in u
»|*V*' M>ilil.ui.I *1.1. 1 litis. I w**lm* i
. ,**U if row umt intuitive ami it |stt > to
IOV I Iw III
* »»»*•* wtgtui.
kn l>ii>vi ilii|4i' I u!»at*
n» \w t.uil Mr. IMiljiH wuniisl • man
I I < i1 “ ms u
.» i 1 ’
I tin . lev \i lw . ii nh«l'
M iMii 'U'i I » I .1 » r >»|. •ill
U* (fOM*» (nr a t until H 4‘Uki I HU
I*., li.t »« Ilf 11... * • w»« »n» I Itoi.-.iuto
• ■* I '•! km tot * 1*1 .uaa tt«no4* Mi*
Mt auk. In*iiu« t ml Murvfc 'M. t«*i.
tout tfc» nmi * »• (
t*« l» KV m> aaitl 1 * «s , |.ut vl
' I* ■ -1 i. I ..... : • i j
I
l'u*t K" V >1 to n lUsu 'itA '
k i*m r iui i
'll
• i if
I in Mi.
*a«» MB tout i «>. *ai • i . . |
. * » «.. i* imtMMal
*1.0(1 roil 14 ( KMP.
Millions now plant Salzcr's seed*.
>ut millions more should; hence offer.
pkg. Bismarck Cucumber ..15c
pkg. Round Globe Beet.10c
pkg. Earliest Carrot .10c
pkg. Kaiser Wilhplm Lettuce.15c
pkg. Earliest Melon .10c
pkg. Giant Yellow Onion.15c
pkg. 14-Day Radish .10c
pkgs. Brilliant Flower Seeds.15c
Now all of above 10 packages, ln
lading our mammoth plant and seed
atalogue, are mailed you free upon
eeeipt of only 14 cents' postage.
5 pkgs. Earliest Vegetable Seed.$1.00
1 Brilliant Blooming Plants.$1.00
lobn A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse,
Vis. w.n.
Ixift a soft Tiling.
“My hair." remarked ch* bald
leaded man, as he rubbed his bare poll
n a reminiscent way, "was the most
imbttioiiH thing about me.” (
“Ah?" responded bis companion,
(uestlonlngly.
"Yes. It always came out on top.’*
Jrsr try a ll)c Ixut of ('iiscaretx, < nody
athartlc. llie tluest, liver and bowel regu
itor made.
Dn unt permit your slaying ipmlities to
lake a bore of you.
Every fnilure carries u guide book to
access in its inside pocket
Mrs. Winslow's Monfhlng Sirup
oprbtldit*n t+#»thlnir, ■often* theirmn*. rfflue*** Inflam
lot Inn allavs tmln curai wln.l cnllc "f. cents a bottle
Do not permit your kindness to stop with
our friends
The wheat moth lays one egg mul but
lie ill n single grain of when!
Cure
dl spring humors, scmfiils taints, bolls, plm
les. eruptions, mid (lehUlly. by thoroughly
urtfylng and enriching the blood with
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
ne True nlood r urlfler. Prepared by |.
kind A Co., Lowell, Mass. $1. six for |fi.
W.
;o nfort to
California.
Every Tliursony afternoon
a tourist sleeping ear for
Denver. Halt l ake City. Hsu
Eranclseo. and Los Angeles
leaves Onialui and Lincoln
i in the Burlington lioute.
it Is earputed. upholstered
In rattan, has spring seats
and barks and Is provided
with curtains, bedding, tow
els.soup.ele. Anexperleneed
I excursion eoiiduelor and a
_H n nl formed I oilman mirier
itecnnipany It through to tlio
I’uclttc Coast.
While neither ns expen
sively llnlshetl nor as line to
look at as a palace alceper.lt
Is Just as good to ride In. heo
otol class tickets are honored
and the price of a berth, wide
enough and big enough for
two. Is only
lor a folder giving full
particulars write to
Fit a N< is. Gen’l I’ass’r Agent, Ontahu.Neh.
1TR0NG AGAIN! «
THE ANAPHRODI8IC!
mm I’HtlF. lilt ItiroBIiof Carls Is the only
>nied\ for restoring strength under gnaran
•e. uhd will bring hurlc your lost isiwcrs and
,o|i forever the dangurous drains on your
(stem. Tltei not i|iih'kly. create a leauthy
!g> •.li.iii. piin\ rli'li firm rmi-lr-..
"tr' iiylli. *»• Jt‘Jy i*« rv** ami r|«»*r
rnIt* l noun *»*«l «ltr**rt from V**tri* Prirw
> r Iihi. iIiUhIIimi* nn*UMr<i. l or *i*U»
v uli ri.%piM*tnlilt' <lrumii»tv Vial I «»r«l**r<
■oai au> |M r»m *lmll rwrvtvt* prompt uiu*u«
KUHN A CO.
liclutlw Agents The l>r»i|rift*t*.
Sth anti Douala*. OMAHA. NCB.