The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, October 03, 1890, Image 3

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.Bafmbject of a lata aM t twaO
:JZ5V.T WlttTalm,,i was:
Rooked Thimga" tfext, Isaiah xL 4:
The crooked shall be made atrairht"
Dr. Talmage said:
Geometry, from the tine-it waa dia
coTerod on thebaakaof the Nil, whtah.
by its overflow annually obliterated the
landmarks, and the restoration of these
landmarks made aueh a science xeces
amry I say, geometry, erer aiace them,
has boon busy with lines, straight limes,
curved lines, lines in angles aad cornea
and sphores, but has never boon able to
evolve any beauty from a line that was
merely crooked, The circle and the
aqnarowero always considered" admir
able. Isaiah recognizes the circle, and
says: "Tho Lord sits upon the circle of
the earth." The altar of anciemt tab
ernacle was "four square, "mnd Heaven,
according to John, is "four square "
But the Bible has no admiration for
lines that are merely crooked. Indeed,
my text in prophesying the world's com
plete rectification, declares:' "Tho
crooked shall bo made straight"
There have been -so many moral
earthquakes that maay ithimgs have got
into a terrible twlst crooked laws,
crooked governments, crooked fortunes,
crooked depositions and many of tho
efforts to straighten things havo only
ma2e thom more crooked.. And some
good people sit dawn in despair aad be
come pessimistic and give up lifo and
the church and tho world as dead fail
ures. With such lachrymoao.behaviorl
havo no sympathy. It is a promise of
tho Lord Almighty: "The crooked shall
Im) made straight" I propose, as I may
bo divinoly helped, to mention some of
tho crooked things that are going to be
straightened.
Much of the wealth of the world is in
tho hands of the profligate, while many
of tho host people are subjected to dis
tressing privation; and there is going to
bo a redistribution of property. If it
were possible it would be a bad thing to
havo things divided equally. Some men
aro ablo to onduro more success than
others, and prosperity that might not
unbalanco you might destroy mo. Tho
Declaration of American Independence
declares that all mon are borne equal,
but ttio opposite is tho truth,
for tiicy aro born unequal In
no resect is this moro evident than in
their capacity to endurojsuccuas, finan
cial or social. I have soon men, by tho
acquisition of S50,000, mado arrogant
and ovorbnaring, and I have known
other with tltcir millions of dollars
childlike and unassuming and Christian.
We would all bo aflluent but tho Lord
can not trust us. 1 am glad there aro
those Ho can trust Much is said against
capitalists, hut the world would bo a
very shaky world without thom. Who
built tin: great railroads which, while
they give such fac. lilies of travel, em
ploy tuns of thousands of laborers, sup
porting them and thoir families? Capi
talists. Who built great ships that stir
tho rivers and bridgo tho ocean? Capi
talists. Who reared the thousands' of
factories all over the land in which
hundreds of thousands of employes
earn their daily bread? Capitalists.
Who ondowed your colleges, and opened
free libraries, and built asylums for tho
orpbfin. the crippled and tho insane?
SJalists. Hut for thorn taerd would
. . ,. , .
uo an auauemy 01 music.
or a picturo gaiiery, or a iree
library, or a steamboat, or a rail
road in America. Who put the world on
scventy-iivo years beyond what it would
have been in enterprise; in comforts, ia
educational advantage, in good thipgs
without number? Capitalists! Tho
more money a man gets the better, it it
cotno honestly and js employed right
eously. Nevertheless we all see that
thoro needs to be a redistribution of
property. Comniunismproposostomako
that distribution by toecli and, digger
and dynamite. Throw the midnight ex
press train off tho track and put tho
factory into conflagration. Disrupt so
ciety. Kurgl arize. Assassinate. Such
peoplo believe neither in(!od nor man
nor woman and they know how to make'
things worse, but never havo mado and
never can make amy thing bolter.
I tell you how there will cotno a re
distribution of property. Under tho di
vino blessing good peoplo will get moro
alertness and acumen and assiduity.
Many good peoplo are kept in strait
ened circumstances because they have
been indolont or lacked -tho courage to
tako honest advantage of c.rcumstunccs
and were too stupid to got on. With
the very samo surroundings others
went on to tompotency. 'In tho
better days to coiuo good men will
havo their faculties wakouod.and will
in conscqucnco rise to larger shares of
prosperity. On tho other hand estates
wrongfully accumulated will dissolve.
If not the sons, then tho grandsons, will
mako tho money fly and It will gradually
scatter in their hands and become a part
of tho general wealth. Taeniae -to vast
properties righteously gathered and
thero are thousands of; them such es
tates will contribute toward helping the
unfortunate, not moro by charities than
by holping struggling people into lu
crative business, and the man who has
amassed enough and a surplus will say:
"There is a young merchant without
any capital, I will start him on Fulton
street" and "there is a young mechanic
who has no moans of his own, and I will
put him on a career of prosperity," and
"thero is a farmer with too big a mort
gago on his land, and I will help him
lift tho incumbrance." Tho fact is that
if tho kindliness and generosity mani
fested by moneyed tnorf toward the
struggling during tho hist fifty years,
increases in tho samo ratio for tho next
fifty years, there will bo a condition of
society paradisaic.
Mind this: God never yet undertook
a failure. Tho old book, which is worth
all other books put together, makos it
plain that God has undertake to regu
late this world by Gospel influences and
If He has tho power He will do what
Uo says Ue will, and mo one who
amounts to any thing .will . demy liis
" power.
In your business concerns thero aro
influences perplexing. Tour affairs
may seem all right to outsiders, for
business firms do not advertise their
.-private troubles, . bat where earn firm
as every thing just as taoywant it
arc a hundred firms at their wit's
...what to do with that partner who
ws more than bis share of the .profits,
tritli that shareholder who comes ia
just often enough to upset things, or
with that disappearance of funds which! J
you can not. accouBC lor, aiwoaga yom
have suspic ons you can not eaeatiom,
or with that iavestaaeat which, .was
made contrary lo'your jdmea4'Wcase
them was a determination to push it
throvrb. or becauso yom are going be
hind month by momtm wieheet.aay'
prospect of extrication. The trembleJa
putting a wrinkle on your forehead that
mmght mot to appear therefor tern, years
ijg-TOt .and you will be forty Year old
r- when you ought to be only thir, or
?&, sixty wnen you
ought to be fifty, or
-rt A a m ! T uin ...
3-MT- .- 17 v. TUU
ought to be omlv
- AOzf "I t-mr
. jSvj, HMI.
Stop worrying.
-jpt never yet asked God' to do any thing.
mm it, 11 a were best, mad in mil
where m. j prayer has mot beem
Pw.mw
- C.-? -w .- -s.
'
I bare foamd emt
that it waa best sot to bare
winI im viy way. Bet some of Behave
tested the fall power of prayerr It ia
ferae Terj like some of the forces of
aatmce, that were ia -eiitemcemat aot
enploved. For area? eleetrielty waa
BfeaiJllttoiujtffCMdfor aothfaf.bat to barm
and kill 'people with fell stroke.
Tmellgbtmiag rod on tfp of homses was
the spear with which the world; charfed
m.the thnnder storm,, ma mnskjas to
say: 'If yom dare to eoaae this way 1 1
will hurl you into the groumd." Bat
mow electricity lightens hostee, aad
chmrches, aad cities, aad Christemdoai,
andmioves rail oars, mad Be is a rash
saam who atemtioaa amy tfetoffma hmpos
slble to this natural energy.
So the power of prayer was to the
world rather a frightful mo wern if it was
any power at all.' tft thafhas beem
changed, and memilfegim touse it im
some things, and; the timierill come
whem it will be used in all things, and
there will be a Bible im every counting
room and supplication will ascend from
every commercial establishment, and
when business firms aro formed the
quostion jvili not only be asked as to
how much this one and that one put im
of capital, but tho question will be
asked: ttDo you know how to pray?"
Mightier agent than any natural force
yet developed will be this gospel elec
tricity, flashing heavenward for help,
flashing earthward with, dlvinero
sponse. God in busimesa life. Gjtt ia
agricultural life. Got toT mechaitcal
life. God.laartistillle.GodineTory
kind of life. g H g - ai
Washington Allston. whose namo yon
recognize as that of a great American
painter, waa reduced to extreme pover
ty, and one day got on his Jcnees and
asked for a loaf tbread.for himself and
his starving famUy.V.hila ho waa
bowed in that prayer there was a knock
at tho door and a man came in and said:
"How about your painting, tho 'Angol
Uriel,' that received tho prize at thol
Royal Academy? lias it been T sold?"
"No," said Allston. "How uch do,
you want for it?" Allston replied: "I
am done fixing a price for I can not get
it" "Will 400 be enough?" asked tho
stranger. "Why, that ia more than I
asked," said Allston. Tho 400 ($2,000)
were paid and the purchaser introduced
himself as Marquis of Stafford, who
thereafter was one' of the most; liberal
patrons of the rescued artist "O, that
all Just happoned so!" Did it? Tell
that to somo ignorant man, some be
nighted woman, who has never read
tho promise: "Call upon mo in the day
of trouble, I will deliver thee," or that
other promise: "Tho "crooked shall bo
mado straight" ,
"Well," says one, "you don't apply
this in every direction?" Yes, I do.
Take the most uncertain thing on oarth
tho weather. Tho Bible distinctly
says that prayer controls the weather.
James v. and xviiL: "Elijah was a man
subject to liko passions as wo aro, and
he prayed earnestly that it might not
rain, and it rained not on tho earth for
the space of three years and six months;
and ho prayed again and the heavens
gave rain." .Do you say that, was tho
woathcr of olden timo? Thero havo
been instances in modorn timos just as
marvolous. Thero is net a Christian
ship captain but could givo you in
stances of divino interference with tho
weather in answer to prayer. It has
been my good fortune to know many
ship captains. They aro in all our ser
vices. They leave thoir vessels on Sun
day morning and join us in worship.
Whondver I havo heard them testify it
has mightily confirmed mo ia what I
knew before, that God answors prayer
concerning the weather. '
John Easter was maay years ago an
evangelist in Virginia. A large out
door meeting was being hold in that
state. Many thousands had assembled
m tho open air and heavy storm clouds
began to gathor. Thero was no sholtcr
to "which the multitudes could retreat
The rain had already reached "tho ad
joining Holds whon John taster cried
out: "Brcthron, bo still whilo I call up
on God-to stay tho storm tUl tho gospel
is preached to -this multitude" " Then
ho,knelt and prayed that the ajudicmco
wight be spared from, tab raimimd that
after they had gone H6hehbcfaosheir
might ""como refreshing showers "Bo
hold tho clouds parted as thoy came
near and passod to either sldo of tho
crowd and then closed: again, leaving
tho placo dry whore th6 audience had
assembled, anil tho noxt day tho post
poned showers catuo upon tho ground
that had boon tho .day before omitted.
Do you say it only happened so? I
can not see what you keep your Bibles
for, and tho God you worship is not my
God. Your God is an autocrat and Ho
is so far off and so far up that tho world
can not touch Ilim.and His thrbajb is an
eternal iceberg. ' MyL God Jt a father,
here and now, and a father will give his
child what ho asks for if it is best for
him to havo it I'ray aboutovery thing
that concerns youi secuilarities aaTwoll
as spiritualities. 'Tako to God all your
annoyances 'and; - perplexities. The
crooked shall bo mado straight '
It is remarkablo how many crooked
things are in the providence of God be
ing made straight About thirty years
ago our National affairs were as crooked
as depraved American politics and bad
mon and Satan eouldTnalwthenxr'From
tho top of Maino to the -foot of Florida
tho Nation was red with'wrajkh It was
wrangle and fight all the way through,
and ono of tho mildest things" that tho
North and South promised each other
was assassination. During this sum
mer I have traveled through Newpfqrk,
and Ohio, and Illinois, and Indiana, and
Minnesota, and Kaasas, and Nobraska,
and Missouri, and Texas, and Louisiana,
and Georgia, and North and South
Carolina, and Virginia, ejid Pennsyl
vania, and I havo shakem hands
with tens of thousands of ' people.,
and r talkedwith. anmt.of ailacc-
tions and degrees, and I have to tell
you it is all peace, and in all the States
of tho Union yom could not now marshal
a military company of a hundred sol
diers to fight against tie United States
Government, unless you got your men
out of the penitentiary. Did the cor
rupt and gangrened political parties do
this work of rectification and pacifica
tion? No! It was by Divine interposi
tion that the crooked has been made
straight
On December 1851, Louis Napoleon
Bonapartojrpdeowmjheichtwys Elysee
of Paris, aad under the hoofs of his
horsoa Bepablio was? tram pled aa the
rider went to take a thromd. It was the
outrago of the ceatnry. For nineteen
long years the wrong triumphed. The
will of one mil who wamted to rtom&lm
Emperor kqptdown a matioa wharant
ed a IlepuhHeV But WptemberfftO,
arrived., and Sedan unrolled ita crimson
scroll. The Emperor surrenders with
83,000 troops, 419 field guns, 6,000 horses
and 60,000 ataskets. From that day tho.
ballot box was. mo amd the thman wan
30waTrnPree"imstitatioms have beem sub
stituted for mm imtemous aaom
Thank jOod! jEmtf crooks
.adeBteghtsi ?
x Bat why go so far to tad fmliUmwmt
ot my text. Im all oar Uvea there aim
crooked things that meed to he mad
straight amd each hearer or reader wiU
mmaaterate for mimaaltcAeraalt With
h il fcdiUpdatdlphfstoalhJmlth amd
you are smyimg: "Why cam mot I be im
good health whem I hare
Aaa,for tho.mick hssamshes amd tho
rheaatatie; jeimts, aad tho neuralgic
tkwMts'aad-tbe lame feet! Bat yom
will be well soon. Litojat tholsag ami
U am abhreviated darsmam.,. Tmoro.to m
." .-- t- . im ..ST. A"
mbok moeier tmrni wui
meople call his
over able to stamd before h!
all the BMaaa afforded for
oamoratfom, bmt if they fail tho
release to mot far. away.
mo imonrables. Therm to
Hemvmm earn mot omre.
ImaianyadomiesticUfethermmrmdif
momlttos to bo removed. Thoro arm
thomsamds of sBatchoa that worm mom
made im Heavem. ' 8oaw of the loreUoss
womom have beem mmlted to mosao of tho
t aaem, amd some of ahegramdeot
to tho moat' worthlees womom.
There may he mo smmoiomt oammr of di
vorcement, but thero ham merer boom
any accord. For them tho wedding
march ought mover to havo beem played.
Tho twaim divergent Im semtimemt, tho
Neetk-Pole and the South Pole might
just" mil well havo beem married. A
twist jof mottles would have been moro
appropriate tham a garland of ormmgw
bloasoma. The mmattormble mlatako
wmm made to please miremta or for tho
motulaitrom of estate, or for heigh temimg
of Hascial positiom, or through thought
lesmmoaa. I call" tho attention of such
to tho rapid dlasolaUom of familiea.
Thto thought which to m sadness to a
hafpy marital stale, might be a coasol
atory to those unequally yoked. A very
short path to tho path of life. The rollimg
years will givo quick emancipation.
Every body, for discipline, must havo
somo kind of troub.e, and that
is your trouble. Put in m
song, now aad then to cheer
your spirit Mako the best of things.
Find im God that peace which no ono
else cam bestow. Tho days and months
and years are crowding past and the
last of the procession so far as you are
cemoerned will soon have gone by. Re
member that some of the best men aad
women who ever lived have had the
samo lifetime misfortune They bore
up undor it and so can you. It is a mat-
tor of congratulation that tho unhep
plest xcomjugal .rolatiom will JterminatQ,
The crooked shall be mado straight
But to those who wore once, happily
united on earth, but aro now separated,
tho same thought comes in a good cheer.
Not only separated! Tradition says that
two bells were molded and sent from
Spain for a distant land to chirao in a
church tower. But while in "a storm at
sea ono of these bells wss wrecked and
only ono reached the shore and waa
hung in tho church tower. Amd some
people thought that, when standing om
tho land, they heard that boll ringing
for worship or ia a wedding peal, they
could at the same time bear from the
sea tho lost bell ringing as if in re
sponse. Somo of our friends and kin
dred have crossed the stormy sea and are
in tho tower of God on high. But we
aro still in tho tempest and sometimes
tho surges beat over us, but our souls
aro stiil in accord with those who are
gono, and thoy ring down to us and we
ring up to them and thero is a sympathy
between us that can never die.
"O," says some ono, "tho crook in my
lot you havo not montioned and I sit clear
outside of all the consolations you havo
offered." Well, I will tako after you
with gospel comfort and reach you be
fore I close. Do 3'ou 'think your wound
is so deep tho divino Surgeon can not
treat it? Have you a trouble that ovots
masters God? Is your annoyance of
such a naturo that 3'ou must suppress
it? Ah, that is what is killing you.
Troublo must bo told or it stings to
death tho one who carries it If there
is no man or woman that you can trust
with tho secret, you can trust God. Hie
away to llini. Toll Him all about it
Lock your door and toll Ilim aloud, and
if you do not get reliof you will, bo tho
first soul in tho six thousand years of
tho world's ex'stonce, and the only one
of tho hundreds of millions of the hnmam
race who evor called on God for help and
did not got it In all tho universe, in
all eternity thoro is not an exception.
Stop brooding and commenco praying. I
bless my God that, whilo thoro aro so
many crooked things in life, thero are
somo things so straight that God Him
self could not make them straighter.
Divino help comos straight to those who
will have it Tho angels of mercy fly
straight when thoy undertake a rescue!
The hour of your final deliverance
marches straight out of tho etornitlea.
And as tho carpenter puts down his
rule on a pieco of timber, and with his
axo hews away uutil tho last inequality
and irregularity disappears, so when
God in tho last great day shall put down
His unfailing measuringrule beside that
event which seemed tho most twisted im
our lives or in the world, it will be
found out that the last discrepancy haa
vanished, and the last wrong has been
righted, and tho last crooked thing haa
been made straight
USES OF ASBESTOS.
A Queer Mineral Tat I Eatpteyeo' Far
Many Industrial ParpM
"If ore is a towel that ia never washed
and yct'is always kept cleam," said a
chemist handing to tho reporter at 'the
samo timo what appeared to the eye and
touch to bo nothing more nor less tham
an ordinary pieco ot coarse cotton towel
ing. "What sort of a laundry do yon semd it
to?" was the natural inquiry.
"This kind," repliod the mam of
science, going ovor to the corner of his
laboratory and stuffing the towel into a
small stovo that was burning brightly
there for chemical purposes.
"I understand," said the visitor; "you
nover use such towels moro than once."
"You are very much mistaken there,"
responded tho chemist "I uso such
towels almost forever, aad they almost
never wear out" ,
With that he lifted, off the lid of the
stovo and took out tho towel with the
tongs, dipping it in cold water and then
banding it onco more to the newspaper
man.
- ,wbjrV exclaimed the latter, "it is
mot even injured. What is It made of?
"It is made ot rock," aaswered the
chemist; "but a very peculiar kind ot
rock so peculiar, indeed, that tho an
cients supposed the stuff of which thto
towel is wovem to be of a vegetable aam
nre. They used to wrap the bodies
that were to be burned in eloths made
ot tho same flax-like anhstanee im order
to keep the ashes from being loot among
tao charred wood 01 the immoral pyre.
Also they nsedit for mapkima amd for
lamp wicks."
"Bat what is it called?"
"You have oftem heard ot it mmdertho
name of 'asbestos, though very few peo
ple appareatly have amy motioa am to
what it really is. Enormous deposits
ot it exist ia Canada amd elsewhere. It
is a form ot a very hard rock called
hornblende, and ia fommd im atratm of a
fibrous consistemcy readily diviaible imto
milky straadsresembliagflax. ThtoUke
mees haa given it the mamo of dearth,
flax.' Yom cam see for yourself from
this towel how much it looks liko a
vegetable fabrie whem wovem. Am as
bestos towel may be used for pretty
acarly the same purposes aa am ordimary
towel, amd, whem it to dirty, all yom move
to do ia to throwit imto tho ire amd rake
itomt attermlittle while perfectly elemsv"
pomes ia these mayor
"Oh, yea. It to employed Jot
material, boiler feitimg, paper
amdia the mixing of
fermtage aeeaery-
mem amd gloves to ham
with are made of It
mineral to fommd im thim 1
It;
J,sr w-i
mfmyom. mmsmm
Daath. WaJluasmwas
Ciomek. Urns
mhvalaml
.
THE TABIFF BILL
it
WaJmiKGTow, Sept ST. After torn days
f hard work the conference committee
om the Tariff bill completed ita work
Imte yesterday afternooa amd reported
the result to the Homme. The commit
tee had to deal with 44 amendments,
maay of them iavolvlag eardimal differ
ences of principle im treatment amd
maay the subject of bitter controversy
betweea conflicting interests.'
Tho date when the bill is to take
effect was made October a. February 1
mext to fixed as the ultimate date upon
which goods deposited im bond before
October 1 may bo withdrawn at the old
rates of duty.
In the case of sugar, the coafereace,
im place of the amifona bounty of two
centa om grades of 80 aad above pro
vided by the House, included maple
sugar and adopted tho following pro
vision: "That on and after July L
1891. and nntil July i, 1005. there shall
be paid from any moseys in the Treas
ury, not otherwise appropriated utjder
the provisions of section 3,689 of the
Revised Statutes, to tho producer of sugar
tosting not less than 90 degrees by the
pplariscope from beets, sorghum or sugar
caae grown within tho United States,
or from maple sap produced within the
United States, a bounty of 2 coats per
pound; andnpon such sugar testing less
thsn 90 degrees by the polariscopc aad
not less than 89 degrees a bounty of 1
cents per pound under such rules snd
regulations as the Commissioner of In
ternal Revenue, with tho approval of
tho Secretary of the Treasury, shall
prescribe."
In tho caso of imported sugars the
Houso line of 10 Dutch standard, below
which sugar is to be free, is adopted,
and on higher grades the result was a
compromise as follows: "All sugars
above No. 10 Dutch standard in color
shall pay a duty of flvo-tenths of ono
cent per pound; provided that all sugsrs
above No. 10 Dutch standard in color
shall pay one-tenth of ono cent per
pound in addition to tho rate herein
provided for when exported from, or the
product of any country when and so
long as such country pays or shall here
after pay, directly or indirectly, a
bounty on tho exportation of any such
sugar which may be included in this
grade which Is greater than is
paid on raw sugars of a lower character
and strength; and tho Secretary of the
Treasury shall prescribe suitable rules
and regulations to carry this provision
into effect And, provided further, that
all machinery purchased abroad and
erected in a beet sugar factory and used
in the production of raw sugar in tho
United States from beets produced
therein shall bo admitted duty free un
til the first day of July, 189-2, provided
that any duty collected on any of tho
above described machinery purchased
abroad and imported from the United
States for tho uses abovo indicated sinco
January 1. 1890, shall bo ro funded.
On glucoso tho House rate of three
fourths of a cent a pound is retained.
Whereas the Senate provided that the
sugar schedule and bounty provision
was to tako effect March 1 next, tho con
ference fixed upon April 1 as the date
of operation, with a proviso that No. 1H
sugar may bo meantime refined in bond
without duty.
In tho caso of fresh or frozen fish
from American fisheries mado froot by
both housos the conference ha-J imposed
the limitation that they must bo caught
by American vessels in fresh water.
Other fish aro mado dutiablo at three
fourths of cent per pound, a split Ihj
tweon tho Houe and Senato rate.
On binder twlno the rate is fixed at 0 7
cents, but on other manilla cord ago the
rate Is Advanced from l cents to i
cents per pound moro than was agreed
on by either house.
All of the paragraphs inserted by tho
Senate providing for a "customs com
mission" were stricken out by tho con
ference. In the caso of glass bottles, whore the
Senate reduced tho rates, tho confer
ence adopted a medium, fixing tho rates
on sizes above one pint and moro at 1
cent per pound and on smaller sizes
down to pne-quartor pint at cents
and on sizes beiow at 50 cents per gross.
Spectacles and eyeglasses or frames
aro to pay AC por cont instead of 50
cents and SO per cent. a compromise.
'Reductions were made on tho internal
revenue duties on tobacco.
In the case of tin-plate the Houso rate
of X coat per pound above sheet Iron
rates up to July 1 next and 2 2-10 cents
af tor that dato is retained.
The Senate rate of a farther addition
al duty of 25 per cent on manufactures
of tin-plate is replaced by an absolute
singlo duty of .15 per cent, and its stip
ulation for free s.xtv-tbrco pound tin
after I8VC in case of failuro of domestic
works to prouuoe one-third or tho con
sumption is retained.
In the caso of sawed boards and lum
ber ot white pine tho Houso recedes
from its SI. 50 rate, tho Senate rate of SI
is adopted and the provision for the re
tention ot the old duties to cover a for
eign export duty is reta:ned.
Tho Senate struck out the bounty pre
visions proposed in the silk schedule of
the bill as passed by tho House. Other
amendments which restore the language
and rates of the present law were made.
Im these the committee coacurred.
In the liquor schedule the Senate
mado increases on the various forms of
wines and liquors. Tho House rates
were restored except on chsmpagno and
spirits, leaving still wines and malt
liquors at the existing rates of daty.
The conferees agreed to the Seaate
reciprocity and retaliation amendment
making but ono change, which was im
tho date made January, 1892, instead
of July next
On the changes made in tho agricult
ural schedules tho conferees' report
says: "In the agricultural schedule the
Houso rates aro maialy retained. Garden
seeds havo beea reduced from 40 per
cent, -as proposed by tho House, to 20
per cent, the rate substituted by the
Seaate. aad turnip seed, which the Sea
ate placed en the free list transferred
to the dutiable list On oranges,
lemons aad limes, which the Hoase
made dutiable at' double the present
rates in order to afford protection and
eaooeragemeat to the planters of CaU-
formia amd Florida,- the Seaate
the rates somewhat above the
law. The Houseccomfereea yielded
lactaauy to this redmetioi
memt was added to that of the Seaate
imposimg am additional daty of' SO per
cent om the packagea im which oranges,
lemoma amd limeo seJmportod.
The parmgrmphe imeerted hy the Sen
ate Imposimg a diacrlmiaatimg daty of
4t per eemt em sac , the product of
countries east of tho Game ot Good Borne,
were struck out
The mdmimtotrmUme ss attorn jetotiro
to imported artlclea bmimg fimbiMom
entry where the bsmtmeea'mmrk of m do
mestic mamafactmre to
as fellows em
after
Im tmaSS I
' f 1
Tho eemferees im their report speak
!mff.ef tho effect of tho MU om the rev
oanoa, amy thoy do met believe that
there to may material dlfferaaee between
Hoase amd Seaate bills im the matter of
im tho dutiable
their eetiom has eet materially affected
that estimate exeept Im the restoration
of tho lmtermml revenue provisiema of
the Heaee amd om that aoimt they amy:
"Tor the-year ended Jame SO, 1899, the
reset pt from spestal taxes om the class
of persona to bo relieved by the Wll
were $1,515,481, from taxes om
tobacco tlS,S9S,463 and from
mmafff7S7,7SL By the passage of the
Mil the redaetlom im revenue from to
bmooo will be$4,Sel,ST0, amd from seat
S1S4.4, meklar from these two sources
am aggregate of K765.993. Addiag
these figures to the redaetlom whtoh
would follow in the abolition ot special
taxes would make the total reductioa ia
the internal roveaae receips $6,281,984.
The probable reductioa by the customs
schedule will bo sboat f90o.O90,
which would give aa'aggrega to reduoUom
by the bill of about 966. O99.009.
SUICIDE OF A
YOUTH.
Vmvm m4
c
Mother tha rohUm Caaw.
Nxw YoitK, Sopt 26. Victor L John
son, nineteen years old, Bhot himself
through the heart at ISO nendrieks
street Brooklyn, early this moraiag.
Last night shortly before eleven o'clock,
he entered his home and went directly
tohUaroom. He lived with his graad
father, B. R. Wheeler. The young maa
spent an hour or more in his room bo
fore he divested himself of bis coat vest
and white shirt 'Carefully unbuttoning
his undershirt and turning it back so
that the spot over his heart could be
plainly seen be went to a bureau drawer
and took out a 29-caliber revolver. Thto
he pressed close to his heart aad thea
pulled the trigger. He fell like a log
and died instantly. His grandfather
and tho other people In the house heard
the shot and the falL The boy waa
dead when they entered the room.
Mr. Wheeler reported tho matter at
tho police station. Ho knew ot no cease,
be said, and he reiterated this when a
reporter called oa him. He denied that
tho boy had had any trouble in bis life
or any love affair. Thero are reports,
however, to tho contrary, and that the
youth was much depressed on account
of the dissolute lifo of his mother.
DEATH OF A PHYSICIAN.
A Kara Form of ManMMM Coaaaaiaa Hta
Hat mm-tr for ScUaea.
New York, Sept 27. After moaths
of enforced starvation Dr. Stephen De
Wolfe, an eminent physiciaB, died at
his home. No 1S9 West Thirty-fourth
street yesterday morning. He wss re
nowned for his treatment of pulmonary
complaints. Dr. De Wolfe's ailmeat waa
a puzzlo to himself and his physieisns.
Ho was unable to retain nourishment
and waa absolutely without appetite
for food It is believed gener
ally among the medical fraternity
that his dlsoaso was an extremely
raro caso of marasmus. His mus
cular tissuo wasted away gradually, and
the wasting of those tissues, together
with his inability to eat blood and
muscle-making food, caused a dimin
ishing of his vital (towers and the de
crease of his adlposo tissuo to such an
oxtent that when ho died littlo else
than skin and bonos remained. Ho waa
a largo man in life and when in full
hoalth was as vigorous as an athlete in
training. He was devoted to medical
science, and whon be recognized that
his disease would cause bis death ho
dedicated his body to tho causes of man
kind. MISSOURI UNION LABOR.
Nomination ot m HtmU Ticket Kcaetatloae
Indenting farmer and Laborera Plat
form. Skiiai.ia, Ma, Sept 27. The Union
Labor party held thoir Stato convention
here yesterday.
Frank McAllister was temporary
chairman. D. M. Cowan, of Christian
County, was permanent chairman.
The committee on resolutions report
ed in favor of adopting the Farmers'
and Laborers' Union platform adopted
in St Louis in December last, after
wbich the following State tlckot was
nominated: Supremo Judge, O. II
Jones, of Knox County; Railroad Com
missioner. Samuel F. Boyden, of New
ton County; Suporlntendont of Public
Instruction, Robert S. Brownlow, of
Dallas County.
Hon. Cbarlos Nolaad, of St Louis,
wasdoposed as national commltteman
and S. A. Wright of Saline County,
chosen his successor, after which the
convention adjourned.
ladiaa Troubles Feared.
PjTTsncnon, Pa., Sopt 27. Captaim
Trimbleton. of tho Seventh United
States cavalry, commandant at Fort
Sill, passed through Pittsburgh yester
day. He says the greatest Indian up
rising of recent t mes is certainly to
como soon. Too Indians,, bo says, have
got tho idea that the great medicine mam
is coming to wipe but the whites and
restore to them tho ownership of the
country. The result is that they
have entered with the fervor of fanatics
upon a series of iacaatations and re
ligous orgiea The 5,000 Indians at
Fort Sill have renounced Christianity
and he is certain that in a short time
somebody will preload to be tho expect
ed great medicine man and then the
trouble will begin. Ho thinks all tbo
United States garrlsoas should be
doubled
PepvlaUeaa of Virioa Tawa.
Wasiuxgtox, Sept 27. The Census
Bureau announces the populations ot
cities and towns as follows: Council
Bluffs, la., 21.393, increase 8,325; Cres
ton, Ia, 7,195, increase 2,114; Dcs
Moines, la., 50,087, iaerease 27,059; Ko
komo, Ind., 8,224, increase 4,182; La
Porte. Ind, 7.122, increase 927; Logans
port Ind., 13,798, increase 2,000; Michi
gan City, Ind., 10,704. increase S.33S;
Peru, Ind.. 6,731, increase 1,451; South
Bead, Ind.. 21,786, increase 8,506; Val
paraiso, lad., 5,083. iaerease 622; Oak
land, CaL. 48.500. imcreaee 14.085; Sacrm-
I meato, CaL ,26,273, iaerease 4.853; Stock- 3
torn. Cat, 14,376. iaerease 4.094
ia Uwaamter
Crt or Mexico, Sept. 37. A aiar
riea daiaxmter of Gemeral Barramdia,
wko muaie mm atteapt em MimUter Mia
mer'a life mas arriTei im tme citj of Oax
aca to aee mer mjetmer amd faatil y be
fore leariaf far the Uaitem SUtea,
waere eke geea aritk m larrm baadle of
docaaeate eomeermiaf her fataerm
aiBrder. te preaeat to Pree.deat Har
riaom.
o--nwwawaoawaaoBBMao
WA8enxTtm,,Semi ST. Tme Cememe
Bareaa ammeamcea meemlatiema of eitioa
amd tomrna me fellewa: Lea Amgelea,
CaL, se,am, imcreeae, Sf.SU; Sem Dieg
CaL. l,ia. imermmee, U.J14; Smmtm Bn
emrmr Cal.. a,Sdt,: imcreaee. 3,91b.
-ii -T.-";
-. m-Mmr.t
e.1-
' .ar AioMa rvav:
KV. ,
Seec ST. All
r- -w " -- -
flora aatoilhUomel
tA- ir " " .
:V
imm aamier mm' i ibj iTTal
ms -- - - '.-mm-m .,- ,--m--mMr-mvmmMsr -,- : .WfaMa.aaaoaTWWW ' T ' .- - - -;
iwXX
Jtfti
NtmftASKA MCTHOOWTS.
m WMrfc SJmVi
At the tote oreatom of the Methodtet
Comferomea, held at IfaaUagt, Biahem
Bewmam made tbo telle wleg apeafmt-
aasJams DMirt-W. m, Jaae. rreatdlea
gtder. JMesaairla. W. Wltlard: Ayr, J. .
Oarartt; mtaa Hill. O. X Barbaaka; CtrUoa.
K. J. Bird; Caftr. C. B I,-a fort: Ctav Cta.
ttr. OavM fcts; Cewtea, U. L Welte; Uavoa
port C. W. Walla; Doelphaa. J. A. Car-
ataa:IMtar, W B mJaxaeder: Batitd. It
Kwall:
A. J. Mm; Berdy.
A L rod -a;
It-rvard. U M. Jone: llat
imm'.U W. Brw.Utmmk, A a. ataman ; tan
valV, J. r. MeVer; Jaalata, Hiram Cartl;
Keacaaw. M. IfeMott; ttwrea. G. . Ve.
rUoa ; X loa X W. Koye; ramie, rraacla
Ifeel: tfed deed, t Jl m,taU; myoW.,
St ML IlTdnaa; taperlar. C St smapari;
sattoa. C ti Bewawn
Beatrice District-. T. Davla, tToMlaa
Elder. Adam. M. C. Smith; Beatrfe. H. T.
tavla; Caateaarjr, X W. Ptewart. Writ Bat
rice, J. St Darby; Cirralt. to bo ear-ptted;
Btae Oprtaaa. Tmaaaat Fowler; Crete. T. B.
Mlltoa; DaWMt aad WUbar. U. a tfiaer;
Ikircareter,.!. U ItI; K tlrn. J. G. fit
ard;gxter, P. K. Worlry; Felrtiury. J. K.
Woo-tnek; Felrajoat. B (2. AiUm; FIHry,
J. U. Beery ; Friend. K U. Jubnaoa , iieacva.
J. A. larkr; Orrtoa, Grr SSuaaan;
Hotaeerlile, W. J react; Litwtiy. A. B.
Chad wick; OOell, to be nufplleo. Steele
City. J. K. Trett; eUaay, B- W. McMillan;
Tobtaa.J B-TwU, WeUern, It M. Laary;
mVmorv.'Wi K. Va.'
Ltnrofa Dtertlahlaed, W n. Milter;
B-aaoit. It Cltalyaiple; OUnr llluff. O. H.
WfoiUor; Cbnoy, U bj auppll. J; lavpjr, o
bsBUppt.rd; ;tmwo 0, U IL Gllmcirr. Tm
.t.,10. r. A htMfl; ;rcrnoHl. M. r. tJullO;
ltbaea, UHImmw l-araa; Aahbary. tuwr
Intrmlcnt K. W.UiUwrn, Ititttol. lo ht
uppireal;, Kmamna I, W. J. Cllr; ;-. o.
O. W. IUaw, St Paul. K. H Mhc, IrnUy.
6. l. Uobrrt. I'n rrltr I'tarr. Aa Jtctli,
mb btiiic. J. T , Mil rr; Mnnly. J. I. Merp r.
Meat! W. K. WJIUm. Ml. I'ii-.ant. I. O.
I'h Ulp. Pal in jrra. I. ; ltkcr. Italt-
ut )Utti, J. U. Itucanrr. Kaynunl. J. V. Kirti-
iiiuiiu. n, nrt. ,. 11. nenn, ?niron, k. 11.
Crlppen, Va para . J W. Mil Iff. Waboo
II. K Wjritt. Wavvrly. I. C 1. mon; Wr.p
ln Wat r. I.A. Hull; H'cton. J. HruiMt..n:
Valley Vl.iw. Cly Ctx; I'an im, Nuprin
IrmWnt r". II KtTt.
.Ncbrak:i City It.alrlct 1'rraltl n r.lilt-r.
U. A. Suiitk. Aubara. A. It. Wbltmrr. Iltuck,
U II. Smith; HrownYl Ir, V Ilium lvtc.
Crab Orcb rd, I'.Vm VWrt, laboK J C
Hot.b; Klk Crrrk, J. U.N wan: TatN t'lty,
luko elavcna; lliiinbotat. O. Y. llawlcy;
Ntbratkit City. G. IL VoiiUon. Piiwntu diy.
Richard fearvon; Peru, J. IL rrmm. tiuto,
J. G. !.ty; alcm, O. II. It .latvr; c-iella, J.
XV. WnrDoll; t r Inj:, Jaiuv H'IIIUiii;
Ryracti'ir. G. M. Gate; Table K ch, J. r
Kenper; Talwatte, Kla.trU !iiw. Teum
eli, Jotin Gatlaacr; L'nlnn, J. A. MiIkI.
Veta, M'Veaa, supcrlnti'hUaiif.
York U.alrlet ArbuiTiilf. lender M rrl
n: Aurora, G. M. CoaB.r;lt..vorCr lnir,
K. I. Walla;'M'llwood. J. K. M xrleta. Unit
haw. V. 8. Kathan: Itialnatil. M An!?rou.
Iavll City. G. W. .Mitiil. t;urtion. I. K
buiitli; Gcrinnntowii, l SI. Iturknur. (rmh
in. Alvlli Mnilol. Ilauip on, II K S w.nn
l.n(Miil, W. II. Tresroti; Marjuttt. tl M.
lla i.llton: Hrl'u l. . . Ili.(..rtl. Iillort).
Willi .in Cowley; 0v(ilt, J. H". S-ubrooV ,
aWalna; City. F. M. :-itrbn.ik; owJrl. J, K
W. Duan, bhi'lliy. r- llollun I, Hockhitm, ..
K. Alicm;S romxbiir;!i (X II. Mor y;Tay r,
Jamra H. . Lobb; lltv . ti. K liarU
Clio, II. C lliriimn, Wuro. It. Minx ,
V-rk, A A Cut lnr;i to.Slnpii'tiuiHl, J.miic
Ilarr; II nvcr rliiK. U I. WolN; ur.
prlr, G. A. Hob ion.
Oltl lat ip lut 'rti-nts for tlm H'ri oynn
Un verity t Lincoln: c K. CrclK''"'.
ctiancllir; I. Iih. pnifoiaor of iiumIi r 1
lungiiiKtn; V. V. V ln, pr.nclii.il of, prep 'r
ntoiy lU'pnrlmi nt; (1 M. LI Ihw.m d, pro r
wir of rlit'iniatry mhI pliy ;; II. Iliirrli,
Unancliil aicnt, G fc. ! tin, nttl.tutit.
Ntimbi-r ot lull incur m. 1-?,7P, local
pitic"M)iKt I.V.i'liiirclU'M VA, paltl for btil il
in. '.7,itli; ml ilcot 1111I I, f 10.751 . niimli-r
or Miinlty ciioo ! Jl; iiliolr. t,m.
XOUTII NKIIttASKA.
At tho North Ncbra.nku Confcrrnr.
hld at Wuyni', tlie iSUhop niatlo the
following nppointuieiits:
Oniihii IHilrlcl T. C Clrndrrmlni,', I'n.
IdiriK Kl u-r. Arl ngt-n. J. ( A. Kli-lmrtr;
Klkliorn, II. Trczonu; t'ul x w. J. a. eiulib;
Frotnont. J. W. ltiililiion; Grotn 1, to bu
Huppllid l.y C II. K.i. i. Ifoor. O. !(!
ton; Sort 1 lU'tiil, C U WlUon, u imlin,
First Clin cli I H. li rM; tUmilia. r.-wnnl
Klroit, II. A. Crtino; m:ilia. Trinity. W K.
IIHfii: Omaha, South Tontli utrcl. A llixi
CuIh. Omaliii. ILiier 111 r.rk, G II llrown,
Oiiml.ii, Now in in, V. V. hvI1k; O.i.alin.
clictile, lo b mpplii-U; Monmouili Park. I.
W llroa. 'iititbOinalin, C S. Diwxm, Al
li!llii,' V.n I'.ttrvn: ruplllinn, 10 bo .up
pi led by -V. w. Ware; Klctil.imt. T lllihi-l.
hpiincli lil, T. W. .M-itHirns; .-clmyl.-r. T. II.
KitilN b'uti;; Mnpb.v IU-. J, T. Cro k; Nick
vrnn. It J. Corklna; I'nrpln ( n, C
Snivrly. Vi'lb-y. It. S. C'ranford; Srr bmr,
J. T. Kim k y; .1. K l.inUi, iitnnt tilllor
I .N'tbr.iMkaClirlMl.iii A'lTocilc; J. w (bank,
aicunt vbrak Wia.uy.in IJilvjrilly.
Si rfolk llNtrk! .;. It. xttvlil, ITealJIng
KtlT. CulrrM, J. K Giar tnrt; Crnltf. J
Cuailfra; lllalr, II. IJ. Millar I , mor, A. W.
II bon; l;iho:a. I. U". MtGn i r. Urcutur
J.W. Miller; ll:twk!yr,U. , f.tviir; Home ,
C. K. Ailutai. npily: lluiiijilirry, to be nop
pliul: Vic. in j, tMlli.nn Kiplln; Koiiiinr',
A. J You i; lixli. J. lflKli; l.yonn, J.
It. rr..t: Maillon, J. ei. Clair; Sorfo.k.
J. W. JunnlnK; Onklan-I. to Im auppllvil;
1'endor, to liosiippluxl; rinttt Center. J. II.
Johnson; loncn, to In siipj ll;'i:.-iniln!plt,
G. A. Luc ; eta n ton, l. X Hlnnhlp; -ioili
tsloux C.ty, II. W. Conly; tt. June. W. II,
arii-r; Tckamali. II. C IMyhnff; Wakunld,
X V. Ilojfiii, opp'y; W.iyn-, II. ti Myrra;
WUncr. J. II. i:rook; Wurnrravlle, aup
plicil; U'iniUIr, ippllcd.
Craad Itlaad I trict-J. E Moore. lVu
aldln Klilcr; Albion, J, It. I.dntn; Albion
circuit, ti be mppll 1 RolraJc, uppli..,i
by II If. Foatc; Calm an I Cainsnm; nun
pi I m! In- K. W. Rarttioloiuow; ( lar Mapltl..
K C Hnrper; C ntrnl City; I- K. Tymla I
Ch prnun ntnl Flr'lw. c F. Hywtm
CI itk-t. wuppllnl by K K. I'lrrcu; Coln-nbti
V. M IV rlcj-; Fultrrton.Jk'A. Martin. Genoa
T. W Owen; Graml tl nl. Flrat chord, VT
II II. IMHibnry, Trinity. II X. Power..
t;rrely Ccater. tipplleU by U. 31. Hetxier
ana; I'almcr, to be upplicd; VrAlrln Iitaad.
to lo Mippllrd; r?t. Edwarda, I). T Olrott;
HCfatil. II. A Itirton; N-otla. L. Campbell;
HIlTcr Creek, A. LMlckrI; Wood Blver, U.
C Worts; G N. Martin. chaplain.
Klkhom Valley District 1. Marine te.
Fret Id Inf Elder; llartl.lt, lo be supplied;
Battle Crrek. to be tup.u !; CrolRi.tOR, C.
M.Grlffllb; KUIn. II. K. I'.ck 1, Kwlajr. to
ba upalie l; Kmrrirk, John Crewa; Iaman.
VTllllana llatcli; Ivintieit. G. P. Bennett;
Ime Tree, Wliriatn Bnrt; Nrlfgh, Wllasi
Gorat; SrrthSellxb W. II. Xcwinaa; Sew
man GroT. W. Manner; Slobrara. F. B
Ham; Oakda'e. P. OcCUrk: O'Sc II, to ba
applied; Paddock. W. A. Wllaori: Pierce.
B. K. eil; llainview. B. Blaln; Itaiavlew
clrcalt,'aapptlc!; Peterabttra, W. M. Pbelpe;
PwotKX. H. l:iarkar;Taiea. C G. Eoe
INDUSTRIAL AND SCIENTIFIC.
Caxada doea am extenaUe atulaees ia
momeeoadc cbeeae. Ia 189S4 ita export
amioaated to 69,ie,ei poaada.
Anew dlacaae eallod photo-electric
ophthalmia ia deacrfbed ma dae to the
eoatiaaal acttom of the eleetrie liffht em
theorem.
Moms tham a millloa meree im the
Korthweat are amauaUjr plaated with
flax, chiefly foraecd, of which obu 13.
000,099 baabela are produced every year.
It U amid that the hop rime ia the beet
abetitmee for rage im the ataaafactare
of paper. Tme Time maim ammaaaamergi aat
lemfth, ammaffth. SexihUiry amd deli
eaey. It haa beem aaggeeud that the mhem
egrmph email be amed aa a caah reriater.
ETeryammtthe cmahier.reealrtm atifht
be called la the phemofrmpm. amd them
reeerded aa m check om the aooeaata.
Bbsibcs heimg mtach atereexptdittoea
im ita eerhiaga, the electrical
omt
per memt. xmef
J
im ChiriBBiti which
each jeer SMB1 geld wMlmrm late
gold leaf, aad ma each moumr earn me hea
ImtomemeettmmtwiBemrmeC tare reaaee
WK feet mtmace, aaeae Idea aaay be
farmiHefiwitemmHy.
imtfea
X &.
Imm;
a There are tome pater med
ictnes that arc more marvel
lous than a dozen doctors
prescriptions, but they're not
those that profess to xure
vtrytking.
Everybody, now and then
fccJs 'run dow-n," "played
out" They've the will, but
no pow2r to generate vitality, j
incyrc not sick cnongn to
call a doctor, but just too
sick to be well. That's
where the right kind of a
patent medicine comes in,
and does for a dollar what
the doctor wouldn't do lor
less than five or ten.
We put in our claim for
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery.
We claim it to be an un
equaled remedy to purify
the blood and invigorate the
liver. We claim it to be
lasting in its effects, creating
an appetite, purifying the
blood, and preventing Bilious,
Typhoid and Malarial fevers I
taken in time. The time,
' to take it is when you first j
I feel the signs of xtvartntss and j
wcahtss, the time to take
it, on general principles, is
NOW.
LIFE'S HISTORY:
luamlbv.andTara. Bwhaiehi imw wT
Itfe. wtodo up nf Mwalktoe ood skuaa. )-.
and aurrvw. rlchoa mmmt awverty,
awddlaeaoa. Wo away daif ltaetM.l
ah tho aorrwar ond awJe) rWewei haw aloh
WHI overtake aa. n nawr or later, lee.
Uly, that enemy caw ho eaeanlahod; walna
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Twtra Blver rtlle. Iw waaa
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thry havo weovew ow haoatliwahla hooa. aa
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Tntt's Liver Pills
1 SURE ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA.
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RELIEVES INSTANTLY.
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HAVE A CAB?
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aadtfca Amtrfei a waa akaa. oa wi3 ad wW he
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IMPMTMOEOKWEIY.
"VASELIME"
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