THE NORTHWESTERN. BI'.X.SCIIOTKK tt OIIWON, Kdutnd J’ulxi LOUP CITY, • - NEB. «. - 1 - 1 - '•*« In four-fifths of the hotels and res oeive no pay, and are expected to live taurants of Germany the waiters rc on their tips. The railroads of Holland are so care fully managed that the accidental deaths on them average only one a year for the entire country. The Raskin commonwealth of social ists at Waycross, Ga., has failed, ac cording to a dispatch to the New York Sun. Only three families remain, the others having departed for the North and West. Their printing outfit is ad vertised for sale and the land will go the same way. This will wipe out the last vestige of the colony, which went from Tennessee two years ago. The compliments of the Companion to fifteen millions of boys and girls who again take their seats in tho schoolrooms and pick up their books! A most respectful bow to the four hun dred thousand teachers whose summer vacation should send them back to their sacred task with freshened energy nnd joyous enthusiasm! And throe times three for the public schools of America! A lively scrap between a clergyman and a layman was witnessed at a bap tizing ceremony in Stancbfield I^ake. Minn. George Tomlinson had agreed to be baptized there by the Rev. Mr. Orrock, but his nerve deserted him at the last moment. The clergyman at tempted to use force, and there was a struggle, the convert angrily resisting. After a prolonged contest, the minister succeeded in ducking the unwilling convert in three feet of muddy water. The death is announced at Genoa, at j the age of 98. of Pierre Maurier, a Frenchman, who lived on the Island of Elba when Napoleon took up his com pulsory residence there in April, 1814. Pierre remembered hearing the news towards the end of Februaiy, 1815, that the Emperor, with over 1,000 followers, had sailed away in feluccas bound for Provence. The lad used to carry eggs and fruit to the kitchen of the Em peror and one day that famous poten tate caught him stoning a dog and sharply reproved him. Maurier was presented to Victor Emmanuel in 18(53 and the King was much interested when he heard from Pierre’s own lips his memories of the great Napoleon. Figures may not lie. hut they are often disappointing. Ceusus figures, especially, are apt to fall below what is expected of them. The recent cen sus of Canada shows a population of 5,338,833, which is an increase of 505. 594 over the total of 1891. The gain of about ten per cent lu ten years seems to many Canadians a meager result of a decade of prosperity, and of energetic efforts to promote immigration. But it is the rule nowadays mat city popu lations grow faster than rural, and Canada has few cities. Only eighteen places in the Dominion have more than ten thousand inhabitants. But. I there remains the consolation that not 1 all the elements of national greatness are measured by a count of heads. Several articles of jewelry embedded in the flesh were discovered in the making of on autopsy on the body of Paul Shirvell, a Russian, who was killed in a mine in Pennsylvania. In the leg was a miniature dumbbell, about the size of a cuff button. In each instance the jewelry had been fastened in the man's flesh, which had grown over the article, completely Hid ing it from view. On the body of Frank Lorenz, who committed suicide at White Haven recently, was found similar ornaments embedded in the flesh. It is believed latrenz and Shir vell were politic al exiles from Siberia, and that the fastening of jewelry ir. their bodies was a part of the punish ment inflicted by prison authorities. Commodore Perry is a name high in honor in the United States navy, hav ing been the title of two famous broth ers—Oliver Habard and Matthew Gal braith Perry. On September 10th, eighty-eight years ago, the elder broth er. a young lieutenant who had never seen a naval fight, fought that fierce Hattie of l,ake Erie, which saved the Northwest to the United States and gave the world the dispatch: “We have met the enemy and they are ours." Forty-eight years ago last July the younger brother landed in Japan with a message from the president which practically opened that country to the world. The Matthew Perry monument recently unveiled at Kurihama, Japan, is a shaft thirty-three feet high made of a rare native stove and bearing an inscription in gold written by Marquis lto. A dense crowd of natives wit nessed the ceremonies, both Japanese and American battleships fired salutes from the harbor, and one of the speak ers was Rear Admiral Beardslee, who as a midshipman under Perry, was present at the original entry. Henry J. Furber, Jr., professor of political economy at the Northwestern University, Evanston. 111., has been decorated with the Cross of the legion of Honor, in recognition of his interest in the educational affairs of France. About five years ago Prof. Furber sug gested to the French Minister of Public Instruction certain changes in the rules governing foreign students at tending the French universities. The suggestions were yidopted, and the change was folioweX by a marked in crease in tii.* numhV of American TAI,MAGES SERMON. ________ DEFEATS OF OBLIVION LAST SUN DAY S SUBJECT. "He Shall He No More Remembered"— Job. xxlv. SO—"The Righteous Shall 11« ht Everlasting Remembrance”— realms exlL 0. [Copyright. 1901, by l.ouis Klopsch. N. Y.l Washington. Sept. 29— In this dis course Dr. Talmage shows how any one can be widely and forever recol lected and cheers despondent Christian workers; texts. Job xxiv, 20, "He shall be no more remembered." and Psalms cxll, 6, "The righteous shall be in ever lasting remembrance." Of oblivion and its defeats 1 speak today. There is an old monster that .swallows down everything. It crunches individuals, families, com munities, states, nations, continents, hemispheres, worlds. Its diet is made up of years, of centuries, of ages, of cycles, of millenniums, of eons. That monster is called by Noah Webster and all other dictionaries "Oblivion. ’ It is a steep down which everything rolls. It is a conflagration in which everything is consumed. It is a dirge which ail orchestras play and a period at which everything stops. It is the cemetery of the human race. It is the domain of forgetfulness. Oblivion! At times it throws a shadow over all of us, and I would not pronounce it today if I did not come armed in the strength of the eternal (lod on your behalf to attack it, to route it, to de molish it. wny, jusx looK at me way mo iauu Iies of the earth disappear. For awhile they are together. Inseparable, and to each other indispensable, and then j they part, some by marriage going to j establish other homes, and some leave i this life, and a century is long enough to plant a family, develop it, prosper it and obliterate it. So the generations vanish. Walk up Pennsylvania ave nue, Washington; Broadway, New York; State street. Boston; Chestnut street, Philadelphia; the Strand, Lon don; Princess street, Edinburgh; Champs Elysees, Paris; Enter den Linden, Berlin, and you will meet in this year, 1901 not. one person who walked there in the year 1801. What engulfment! All the ordinary efforts at perpetuation art dead failures. Walter Scott's Old Mortality may go round with his chisel to recut the faded epi taphs on tombstones, but Old Oblivion has a quicker chisel with which he can cut out a thousand epitaphs while Old Mortality is cutting one epitaph. Whole libraries of biographies devour ed of bookworms or unread of the ris ing generations. All the signs of the stores and warehouses of great firms have changed, unless the grandsons | think that it is an advantage to keep j the old sign up because the name of j the ancestor was more commendatory than the name of the descendant. The city of Rome stands today, but dig down deep enough, and you come to another Rome, buried, and go down still farther, and you will find a third Rome. Jerusalem stands today, but j dig down deep enough and you will ' find a Jerusalem underneath and go on and deeper down a third Jerusa- I lem. Alexandria. Egypt, on top of an Alexandria, aud the second on top of the third. Many of the ancient cities are buried thirty feet deep or fifty feet deep or 100 feet deep. What was the matter? Any special calamity? No The wind and waves and sands and tijing dust are all undertakers and gravediggers, and if the world stands long enough the present Washington j and New York and London will have on top of them other Washingtons j and New Yorks and Londons, and only I after digging and boring and blasting . will the archaeologists of far distant | centuries come down as far as the highest spires and domes and turrets ; of our present American and European cities. The Roll of Armies. Call the roll of the armies of Raltl win I. or of Charles Martel or of Marl borough or of Mithridates or of Prince Frederick or of Cortes, ami not one answer will you hear. Stand them in lino and call the roll of the 1,000,000 men in the army of Thebes. Not one answer. Stand them in line, the 1,700,000 infantry and the 200,000 cav alry of the Assyrian array under Ni nus, and call the roll. Not one an swer. Stand in line the 1,000,000 men of Sesostris, the 1,200,000 men of Artaxerxes at Cunaxa, the 2.641,000 men under Xerxes at Thermopylae and call the long roll. Not one answer. At the opening of our civil war the men of the northern and southern armies were told that If they fell In battle their names would never be forgotten by their country. Out of the million men who fell in battle or died In military hospitals you cannot call the names of a thousand, nor the names of 500 nor the names of 100 nor the names of fifty. Oblivion! Are the feet of the dancers who at the ball of the Duchess of Richmond at Brussels the night before Waterloo all still? All still. Are the ears that heard the guns of Bunker Hill all deaf? All deaf. Are the eyes that saw the coronation of George II. all closed? All closed. Oblivion! A hundred years from now there will not. be a being on this earth that knew we ever lived. In some old family record a descend ant studying up the ancestral line may •pell out our name and from the fad r goat-like sheep, and :-7t goats." To care for all these would require great skill and executive ability. Slxlli Lesson: Bclf-t'otitrnl. - For nearly ten years Joseph was a slave, rising from lilt- lowest position to the highest. Then i ann- one of Ids severest temptntlons from the wife of Ids master Potlphar. We are- to remember that there was much more than passion to tempt him. “An intrigut with l'otiphnr's wifi might lead In tin- very advancement in- sought.'' Jo seph wa lonely, lie desired to please. Seventh la ss in: Patience and Faith. Vs. 20-23. 2k. “And Joseph's master * • * j.iii Mini in* |u r-"ii jim i in mi •< mu it result of his faithfulness was a loss of reputation, suffering under falsi- accusa tions, a slur upon his religion and worse sufferings than he had hitherto endured. So centuries later Moses' effort to secure the release of the Israelites from Pharaoh brought severer bondage. Joseph's Im prisonment siims to have been at first very severe iPsh. tor*:17. IS), He was bound In fetters. Klghth Lesson: Knowledge of the Court and Government. Vs. 1-t. 1. The butler. The chief of the liutb-rs tv. 2). The cup bearer, was a councilor, statesman, court ier and favorite. Put it was not a polit ical oilier, lie was a man of great abil ity, wealth and Influence. "Herodotus (2:24) (-peaks of the office (It tile court of Cambyscs. king of Persia, as 'an honor of no small account.' Ninth Lesson: A Lesson of Insight Vs fi-S. These men dreamed a dream both of Ihent. Joseph noticed the ru-xt morning that they were sad. and Inquired the n-n son. They told their dreams, and Joseph Interpreted them, asking as a return fa vor that the chief butler who was to bt restored should remember him and pro cure his release. FIGS AND THISTLES. Men easily choke on mere crumbs of comfort. Rooting out malice may lie repress ing murder. Nothing is harder to forgive thun forgetfulness. | It requires gospel grace to make gospel methods succeed. | The cultivation of the heart spares the cudgeling of the brains. I Men of character are the conscience of the society to which they belong. The Past GUARANTEES The Future The Fact That St. Jacobs Oil Has cured thousands of cases of Rheumatism, Gout. Lumbago, Neuralgia. Sciatica. Sprains, Bruises and other bodily aches and pains Is a guarantee that it will cure other cases. It Is safe, sure and never failing. Acts like magic. Conquers Pain Price, 25c and 50c. BOLD BY ALL DEALERS IN MEDICINE. Sozodont Good for Bad Teeth Not Bad for Good Teeth 4 Sozodont . . 25c Sozodont Tooth Powder 25c ' Large Liquid and Powder 75c • HALL & RUCKEL. New York. MORE JUAN HALF A CENTURY; OF EXPERIENCE.* AND . OUR GUARANTY AKS BACK OF EVERY WATMPRCOF OIL» FLICKER OR COAT BEARING TWSTPAPEMABK. " A J.TOWERCO" BOSTON,MASS. 4.1 ENORMOUS CROPS North Dakota has Just harvested a won derful crop of wheat and flax. Report* from the various railway points along the "Soo” Line show yields of 25 to 28 bushels to the acre of wheat, and from 15 to 20 bushels of flax per acre. Flax Is now bringing $1.25 per bushel. Most of the crop was raised on newly broken land, so that the first crop pays for the farm and all the labor, and leaves a handsome profit. There la still plenty of good free govern ment land open for entry; also good open ings to go into business in the new towns along the "Soo” Line. For descriptive cir culars, maps and particulars, write to D. \V. Cassrday, Land Agent, "Soo" Lint*. Minneapolis, Minn. ^ the nan who w«tp Sawyer's ^iirttrri. They’re made of specially woven goods, double throughout. double and trlplo stitched, warranted uuior proof • / Sawyer’s ) Slickers [ are soft and emonth. WW not crack, peel ofl or become JJsilcky. Catalogue free. IjH. W. Sawyer & Son. Solo Mfrs. / East Cambridge. Mass. LIFE OF WM. Kl’KINLEY JJ5WSSE2 Inentmen. Large, fully Maturated. Extra tennt* Freight paid. Credit given. Big pay for quick work. Outfit ready; FHEE. bend 10 cent# for p<»»tage to ZEIGLER CO<• 324 Dearborn 8t««Chlca|go* DlDODCV NEW DISCOVERY; B^ lf7k W ■ v!¥ ¥ quick relief and rureawont cft«ei». Book of testimonials and 10 DAYS* treatmeiu liikfc. Dll. M. H. UUKKVII tiOBiH. ii»x K. AUacta. U*. Cheaper Than Passes. • HI.10 to Indlannpolte and Return. % On Bole Sept. 16, 23, JO; Oct 7. ■’ f •31 IS to Loolavllle, Kjr., and Return. On *ale Sept. 16. 23, 30; Oct 7. SKI.15 to Clnrlnuatl, O., and Ratara. On sale Sept. 1G, 23 . 30; Oct 7. • 31.1ft to Columbus, Ohio, and Iteturn. On aale Sept. 1C, 23, 30; Oct 7. 031.13 to Springfield. o„ and Return. On *ttle Sept. 15, 23. 30; Oct 7. 631.11.7 to handunUy, <>., and Return* On Bale Sept 16, 23. 30; Oct 7. 641.70 to New York unci Iteturn, Hally, 030.73 to Uaffnlo and Return, Hally, 01 1.0(1 to Kt l.oule. Mo., and Return. On ante Oct. 6 to 11. nOMKMKKKKRN' RXCURAtOlf*. On aale 1st and 3rd Tuesday of eaeb month. Tourist rnt'-s on rule l>A fT,Y »o all Burn rner resorts allowing atop yvere e* trnlt, Nlngui a bulk lluffalo end other point*. For i ate*, lake trip*. Tun Aroert Uon WT'*' •nd “ WwmI uriY tiukft nrrioa, 3410 Vernain Street, (Retton Hotel RlkJ er write HARRY K MOOItyt, " A- •" •> . Omaha, Not,, When koBurrini) Advertisements Hinfljr Mention Thin toper. W.N. U—OMAHA No. 40 .06.