The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, February 06, 1891, Image 3

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Dr. Tttteac on th DomrfWlof
Mbylon.
Clty-The Hw4-
'"H- tkiWaHIrt Bnmt ud
f,Ita IaeriwbtoSeMlt-Praiwrtas
Far Um Last Dajr.
In a reeent sermon delivered at
Brooklyn and Kew York Rev. T. Do
Witt Talmage took his text from Daniel
t. 9fe "In that night was Belshazzar,
the King of the Chaldeans, slain." Dr.
Talmage said:
After the rite of Babylon had been
selected two million of men were em
ployed for the construction of the wall
and principal works. The walls of the
city were sixty miles in circumference.
They were surrounded by a trench, out
of which had been dug" the material for
the construction of the city. There
were twenty-live gates of solid brass
on each side of the square city. Be
tween every two gates a great watch
tower sprang np into the heavens.
From each of the twenty-five gates, on
either side, a street ran straight through
to the gate on the other side, so that
there were fifty streets, each fifteen
miles long, which gave the city an ap
pearance of wonderful regularity.
The houses did not join each
other on the ground, but between
them were gardens and shrubbery.
From house top to house top bridges
swung, over which the inhabitants were
accustomed to pass. A branch of the
Euphrates went through the city, over
which a bridge of marvelous structure
was thrown, and under which a tunnel
ran. To keep the river from overflow
ing the city in times of freshet, a great
lake was arranged to catch the surplus,
in which the water was kept as in a
reservoir until times of drought, when
it was sent streaming down over the
thirsty land. A palace stood at each
end of the Euphrates bridge; one palace
a mile and three-quarters in compass,
and the other palace seven and a half
miles in circumference. The wife of
Nebuchadnezzar, havin? been brought
up among the mountains of Media,
ceroid not stand it in this flat country of
Babylon, and so, to please her. Nebu
chadnezzar had a mountain 400 feet
high biiiltjn the midst of the city.
The mountain was surrounded by ter
races, fox the support of which great
arches were lifted. On the top of these
arches flat stones were laid; then a lay
er of reeds and bitumen; then two rows
of bricks closely cemented; then thick
sheets of lead, upon which the soil was
placed. The earth here deposited was
so deep that the largest trees had room
to anchor their roots. All the glory of
the flowery tropics was spread out at
that tremendous height, until it must
have seemed to one lelow as though
the clouds were all in blossom and the
very sky leaned on the shoulder of the
cedar. At the top an engine was con
structed which drew the water from the
Euphrates far below, and made it spout
up amid this garden of the skies. All
this to please his wife! I think she
must have leen pleased.
In the midst of this city stood also
the temple of Ileitis. One of its towers
was one-eighth of a mile high, and on
the top of it an observatory which gave
the astronomers great advantage, as
being at so great a height one could
easily talk with the stars. This tem
ple was full of cups, and statues, and
censers, all of gold. One image weighed
l.O(K) Kaltyluiush talents, which would
be equal to $.V2,O0Q,O00. All this by day,
but now night was about to come down
on ltal3'lon. The streets and squares
were lighted for dance and frolic and
promenade. The theaters and galleries
of art invited the wealth and pomp and
grandeur of the city to rare entertain
ments. Scenes of riot and wassail were
mingled in every street; godless mirth
and outrageous excess and splendid
wickedness came to the King's palace
to do their mightiest deeds of darkness.
A royal feast to-night, at the King's
palace! Hushing up to the gates are
chariots, upholstered with precious
cloths from Dcdan. and drawn by fire
eyed horses from Togurmah, that rear
and neigh in the grasp of the char
ioteers; while a thousand lords dis
mount, and women, dressed in all the
splendor of Syrian emerald, and the
color blending of agate and the chastc
ne.ssof coral, and the somber glory of
Tyrian purple and princely embroid
eries, brought from afar by camels
across the desert, and by ships of
Tarshish across the sea.
Open wide the gates and let the guests
come in. Fill the cups. Clap the cym
bals. Blow the trumpets. Let the
night go by with song, and dance, and
ovation, and let that Kabylonish tongue
Ihj palsied that will not say: "O, King
Belshazzar, live forever!"
Ah! iny friends, it was not any com
mon banquet to which these great peo
ple came. All parts of the earth had
sent their -richest viands to that table.
Brackets and chandeliers Hashed their
light upon tankards of burnished gold.
Fruits, ripe and luscious in baskets of
silver, entwined with leaves plucked
from royal conservatories. Wine
brought from the royal vats, foaming
in the decanters and bubbling in the
chalices. Gorgeous banners unfolding
in the breeze that came through the
open window bewitched with the per
fume of hanging gardens. Fountains
rising up from inclosures of ivory, in
jets of crystal, to fall in clattering rain
of diamonds and pearls. Music, ming
ling the thrum of harps, and the clash
of cymbals, and the blast of trumpets
inonewaveof transport that went -rippling
along the wall, and breathing
among the garlands, and pouring down
the corridors, and thrilling the souls of
1,000 banqueters.
The signal is given, and the lords and
ladies, the mighty men and women of
the land, come around the table. Hoist
every one his cup and drink to the sen
timent: "O King Belshazzar, live for
ever!" Away with care from the palace!
Tear royal dignity to tatters! Pour out
more wine! Give ns more light, wilder
music, sweeter perfume! Lord shouts
to lord, captain ogles to captain. Gob
lets clash, decanters rattle. There
come in the vile song, and the drunken
hiccough, and the slavering lip, and the
guffaw of idiotic laughter, bursting
from the lips of Princes, flushed, reel
ing, bloodshot; while mingling with it
all I hear: "Huzza! huzzal for great
Belshazzar!"
What is that on the plastering on the
wall? Is it a spirit? Is it a phantom?
Is it God? Out of the black sleeve of
the darkness a finger of fiery terror
trembles through the air and comes to
the wall, circling about as though it
would write, and then, with sharp tip
of Came, engraves' on the plastering the
doom of the King. The music stops.
The goblet falls' from the nerveless
grasp. There is a thrill. There' is a
start. ThereuathoasaadToicedahriek
horror. Let Daniel be brought in to
read that writing. He comes in. He
reads it: "Weighed ia the balance' and
found wanting."
Meanwhile the Assyrians, who for
two years had been laying Beige to that
city, took advantage of that carousal
and came in. I hear the feet of the
conquercrs on the palace stairs. Mas
sacre rushes in with a 'thousand gleam
ing knives. Death bursts upon the
scene; and I shut the door of the ban
queting hall, for I do not wast to look.
There is nothing there but torn banners,
and broken wreaths, and the slush 'of
sosel tankards, and the bloo" mux-
SSB "A- V -C" J -
women, and the kicked smd
Wed carcass of a dead King. For "In
WlWttwMfcttr,tfc,BDo(
the Cnaldcans, alaln."
I go on to learn teat when God writes
any thmgon the wall a nun had better
read it as it ia. Daniel did not misin
terpret or modify the handwriting on
thewalL irk all foolishness' to expect
a minister of the Gospel to preach al
ways things that the people lfke or the
people choose. Young men, what shall
I preach to.yoa to-night? Shall I tell
yon of the dignity of human nature?
Shall I tell yon of the wonder that onr
race has accomplished? 'O, no," yon
say, 'tell me the message that came
from God." I wilL If there is any
handwriting on the wall, it k thk les
son: "Accept of Christ and be saved.
I might talk of a great many other
things, but that is the message and a
I declare it Jesus never flattered those
to whom he preached. He said to those
who did wrong and who wore offen
sive -in bis sight: "Ye generation of
viper! ye whited sepulchres! how
can ye escape the damnation of bell!"
Paul, the apostle, preached before
a man who was not ready to hear him
preach. What subject did he take? Did
he say: "0! you are a good man, a very
fine man, a very noble man?" No; he
preached of righteousness to a man who
was unrighteous; of temperance to a
man who was the victim to bad appe
tites; of the judgment to come to a man
who was unfit for it So we must al
ways declare the message that happens
to comes to us. Daniel must read it as
it is.
A minister preached before James I.
of England, who was James VI. of
Scotland What subject did he take?
The King was noted all over the world
for being unsettled and wavering in his
ideas. What did the minister preach
about to this man who was James I. of
England and James VI. of Scotland?
Ho took for his text (James, i. o): "He
that wavcreth is like a wave of the sea,
driven with the wind and tossed"
Hugh Latimer offended the King by a
sermon he preached, and the King said:
"Hugh Latimer, come and apologize."
"I will," said Hugh Latimer. So the
day was appointed; and the King's
chapel was full of lords, and dukes,
and the mighty men and women of the
country, for Hugh Latimer was to apol
ogize. He began his sermon by saying:
"Hugh Latimer, bethink thee! Thou art
in the presence of thine earthly King,
who can destroy thy body. But bethink
thee, Hugh Latimer, that thou art in
the presence of the King of Heaven
and earth, who can destroy both body
and soul in hell fire?" Then he
preached with appalling directness at
the King's crimes.
Another lesson that comes to us:
There is a great difference between the
opening of the banquet of sin and its
close. Young man, if you had looked
in upon the banquet in the first few
hours, you would have wished you had
been invited there and could sit at the
feast. "Oh! the grandeur of Balshaz
zaf's feast!" you would have said; but
you look in at the close of the banquet
and 3'our blood curdles with horror.
The king of terrors has there a ghastlier
banquet; human blood is the wine and
dying groans are the music. Sin has
made itself a king in the earth. It has
crowned itself. It has spread a ban
quet It invites all the world to come
to it
It has hung in its banqueting hall the
spoils of all kingdoms and the banners
of all nations. It has gathered from
all music. It has strewn, from its
wealth the tables, and the floors and
the arches. And yet how often is that
banquet broken up and how horrible is
its end! Ever and anon there is a hand
writing on the wall. A King falls. A
great culprit is arrested. The knees of
wickedness knock together. God's
judgment like an armed host breaks
in upon the banquet and that night is
Belshazzar, the King of the Chaldeans,
slain.
Here is a yonng man who says: "I
can not sec why they make such a fuss
about the intoxicating cup. Why, it is
exhilarating! It makes me feel well.
I can talk letter, think better, feci bet
ter. I can not see why people have
such a prejudice against it" A few
years pass on and he wakes up and
finds himself in the clutches of an evil
habit which he tries to break, but can
not; and he cries out: "Oh, Lord God!
help me!" It seems as though God
would not hear his prayer; and in an
agony of body and soul he cries out:
"It bitcth like a serpent and it stingeth
like an adder." How bright it was at
the start! How black it was at the last!
Here is a man who begins to read cor
rupt novels. "They arc so charming,"
says he, "I will go out and sec for my
self whether all these things are so."
He opens the gate to a sinful life He
goes in. A sinful sprite meets him with
her wand. She waves her wand and it
is all enchantment Why, it seems as
if the angels of God had poured out
phials of perfume in the atmosphere.
As he walks on he finds the hills be
coming more radiant with foliage and
the ravines more resonant with the fall
ing water. O, what a charming land
scape he sees!
But that sinful sprite, with her wand,
meets him again; but now she reverses
the wand and all the enchantment is
gone. The luring songs become curses
and. screams of demoniac laughter.
Lost spirits gather about him and feel
for his heart, and beckon him on with
"Hail, brother! Hail, blasted spirit
hail!" He tries to get out He comes
to the front door where he entered, and
tries to push it back, but the door turns
against him, and in the jar of that
shutting door he hears these words:
"This night is Belshazzar, the King of
the Chaldeans, slain." Sin may open
bright as the morning; it ends dark as
the night!
I learn farther from. this subject that
death sometimes breaks In upon a ban
quet Why did he not go down to' the
prisons in Babylon? There were people
there that would like to have died. I
suppose there were men and women in
torture in that city who would have
welcomed death. But he comes to the
palace, and just at the time when the
mirth 'is dashing to the tiptop pitch
death breaks in at the banquet We
have often seen the same thing illus
trated. Here is a young man just come
from college. He is kind. He is lov
ing. He is enthusiastic He is eloquent.
By one spring he may bound to
heights toward which many men hare
been struggling for years. A profes
sion opens before him, He is estab
lished in the law. His friends cheer
him. Eminent men encourage him. Af
ter awhile you may see him standing
in the United States Senate, or moving
a popular assemblage by his eloqnence
as trees are moved in a whirlwind.
Some night he retires early. A fever k
on him. Delirium, like a reckless char
ioteer, seizes the reins of his intellect
Father and mother stand by and see the
tides of his life going out to the great
ocean. The banquet is coming to an
end. The lights of thoaght, and mirth,
and eloaaenee are being extinguished.
The garlands are snatched rfrom the
brow. The vision, is lfn. Deah at
thehnnqnet! ." 4
We saw the same thing, -on a larger
scale, .illustrated iathd last war of this
country. Oar whotrKatkn had been
sitting at n National banqat--Nocth,
Soath, East and Weat What graia was
there, bat we grew it on onr hills.
What invention waa'there, batour
rivers mast tarn the new wheat Jod
rattle the strange shuttle.. 4 What
furs, bnt onr traders i
-WZ.-1.1?-'ir?5:LfR. gS,
from the Artie
jVtK-
What music, bt ft nun ek In
anile. What cloqnenea, be ft mint
speak in onr Be tea Ho! to the
National banquet, reaching from
tain to mountain, and from sen to
To prepare that banonet, the aheenfolde
and the aviaries of the country sent
their best treunrea. The orchards piled
np on the table their sweetest fraita
The presses burst with new winea.
To sitat the table earn the yeomanry
of New Hampshire, and the lemhermiin
of Maine, and the Ceroiinaa f rem the
riee fields, and the Western emigrant
from the pines nf Oregon, and we were
all brothers brothers at n banquet
Suddenly the feast .ended What meant
those mounds thrown up nt Cnlcka
manga, Shiloh, Atlanta, Gettysburg,
South Mountain? What meant those
golden grain fields turned into n pastur
ing ground for cavalry horses? What
meant the corn felds gullied with the
wheels of the heavy supply train?
Why those rivers of tears those lakes
of blood? God was angry! Justice
must come. A handwriting on the
walll The Nation had been weighed
and found wanting. Darkness! Dark
ness! Woe to the North! Woe to the
South! Woe to the East! Woe to the
West! Death to the banquet!
I have also to learn 'rom the subject
that the destruction of the vicious and
of those who despised God will be very
sudden. The wave of mirth had dashed
to the highest (joint when the Assyrian
army broke through. It was unexpect
ed. Suddenly, almost always, comes
the doom of those who despise God and
defy the laws of men. How was it at
the deluge? Do you suppose it came
through a long northeast storm, so that
people for days before were sure it was
coming? No; I suppose 'the morning
was bright; that calmness brooded on
the waters; that beauty sat enthroned
on the hills; when suddenly the heavens
burst and the mountains sank like an
chors into the sea that dashed clear
over the Andes and the Himalayas.
The Bed sea was divided. The Egyp
tians tried to cross it There could be
no danger. The Israelites had just gone
through; where they had gone, why not
the Egyptians? There can be no dan
ger. Forward, great host of the Egyp
tians! Clap the cymbals and blow the
trumpets of victory! After them! We
will catch them yet and they shall be
destroyed. But the walls begin to
tremble. They rock! They fall! The
rushing waters! The shriek of drown
ing men! The swimming of the
war horses in vain for the shore! The
strewing of tin great host on the bot
tom of the sea, or pitched by the angry
wave on the beach a battered, bruised
and loathsome wreck! Suddenly de
struction came. One half hour before
they could not have believed it De
stroyed, and without retnedj-.
I am just setting forth a fact which
yon have noticed as well as L Ananias
comes to the apostle. The apostle says:
"Did you sell the land fpr so much?''
He says:
as quick
comes in. "Did yon sell that land for
so' much?" "Yes." It was a lie; and
quick as that she was dead! God's
judgments are upon those who despise
and defy Him. They pome suddenly.
The destroying angel went through
Egypt Do you suppose that any of the
people knew that he was coming? Did
they hear the flap of his great wing?
No! No! Suddenly, unexpectedly he
came.
Arc there any here who are unpre
pared for the eternal world? Are there
any here who have been living without
God, and without hope? Ict me say to
you that you had better accept of the
Lord Jesus Christ, lest suddenly your
last chance be gone.
If there be one in this presence who
has wandered far away from Christ
though he may not have heard the call
of the Gospel for many a year, 1 invite
him now to come and be saved. Flee
from thy sin! Flee to the stronghold of
the Gospel! Now is the accepted time;
now is the day of salvation.
Good night, my young friends! May
you have rosy sleep, guarded by Him(
who never slumbers! May you awake
in the morning strong and well! But 01
art thou a despiscr of God? Is this thy
last night on earth? Shouldst thou ho
awakened in the night by some
thing, thou knowest not what
and there be shadowy floating in
the room, and a- handwriting on the
wall, and you feel that your last hour is
come, and there be a fainting at the
heart and a tremor in the limb and a
catching of the breath then thy doom
would be but an echo of the text: "In
that night was Belshazzar, the King of
the Chaldeans, slain."
Hear the invitation of the Gospel!
"Ho, every one that thirsteth! Come
yo to the waters. And let him that
hath no money come, buy wine and
milk without money and without price."
"Come unto Me, all who are weary and
heavy laden, and I will give you rest"
O! that my Lord Jesus would now make
Himself so attractive to your souls that
you can not resist Him; and that if
you have never prayed before, or hare
not prayed since those days when yon
knelt down at your mother's knee, then
that to-night you might pray, saying:
Just as imii, without one pica
But that Thy blood was shed for mr,
And that Thou bid'st me come to Tlieo,
O, Lamb of God, I come!
But if you can not think of so long a
prayer as that 1 will give you a shorter
prayer that you can say: "God be mer
ciful to me, a sinner!" Or, if you can
not think of so long a prayer as that I
will give you a still shorter one that
you may utter: "Lord save me, or I per
ish!' Or if that be too long a prayer,
you need -not utter one word Just look
and live! -
pryy -
ALLIANCE
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PLATFORM.
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UNWELCOME
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1.1 iJBinwi jWi
REPLIES.
iv i o it rwn.it
as that! Sapphira, his wife.
to
Ovaju, Nek, Jan. as. When
Farmers' Alliance convention
its session yesteniay the revision of the
Constitution was begun.
An amendment proposed making all
laboring men eligible to membership
provoked a heated debate, during the
course of which President Powers said
that such an amendment would break
np the organization, lie said: "We
want to carry the newt election, and if
we extend the qualifications beyond
farmers the cities will take advaatage
of that point New York City could
send 81,000.000 to Omaha to pay initia
tion fees, and in a few months design
ing politicians would hire enough men
to yoin the order so that Nebraska
would be In the Hand. of the ring. The
same will be true in other States. It
would result in the capture of the Na
tional Alliance, body and souL This
movement started among farmers and
should be kept there." The amendment
Was tabled by a large vote.
In the afternoon the report of the
committee on resolutions was pre- i
sented and was considered by para
graphs. The following were adopted:
Whereat, Owing to the oppression that
baa hern heaped upon us by moaopolUU,
trust 2nd combines, we bellcvo il Is time
for action.
Wlirrca, The National FarmriV Alliance
in (intention fjiiblrl dors not eui
pliatfrully declare ajcalnt the preitrnt sys
tem of 4i eminent aa manipulated by the
Coiitfress of the L'hitcd fctalr and the mem
ben of the Legislature of the several States;
therefore.
We declare in favor of holding a conven
tion February 2J, 1W2, to fix a date and place
for the holding of a convention to nominate
candidate for the office of President and
Vlce-I'iesldent of the United Mate.
Wi: declare that in the convention to be
held on February 22, 10, that representation
shall bo one delegate from each State in the
Union.
Kesolvrd, That we favor the abolition ot
all bank and the surplus fund he loaned to
individuals upon laud security at a low rate
of intercut.
ltt solved. That wo are unable to areo In
favor of the Australian ballot law.
Ilesolved, That we demand the foreclosure
of mortgages that the Government holds on
railroads.
Kesolved, That we discountenance gam
bllng in stocks and shares.
Resolved, That this is an administration ot
the piople, Mild in view of that fact the
J'resident and VIce-1'retldent of the United
Kates should he elected by popular vote in
stead ot by an Klectoral College.
Itusolvcd, That us.furaier of the United
Mates largely outnumber nny other class of
citizens they demand the passage ot law ot
reform not us parly measures but for the
good of the Government.
. KesolTCd, That the Alliance shall take no
part ns partUans in r. political struggle as
adUlating w ith ICepublieans or Democrats.
Uesolted.Tliat the National Farmers' Al
liance demand thtt the Interstate com
merce law be so amended and enforced as
to allow all railroads a reasonable Income
on the money Invested and we demand that
the mortgages on the Union and Central Pa
cific railroads be foreclosed nt once and the
roads tnktn charge of by the Government
and nw In the interest of the prople with a
view of extending both lines to the Eastern
seaboard.
Uesolred, That we favor the free and un
limited coinage of silver, and that the vol
ume of currency be Increased to S&O per cap
ita. Wo further demand that all paper
money be placed on un equality with gold.
Ilcsolvcd. That we as landowners pledge
ourselves to demand that the Government
allow us to lKirrow money from the United
Ptate at the same rate of Interest as do the
banks.
Hcsolvcd, That all mortgages, bonds and
shares of stock should.be assessed at the
fare value.
Kcsolved, That .Senators of the United
States sanuld be elected by vote of the peo
ple. Resolved, That the laws regarding the
liquor traffic should be so amended to pre
vent endangering the morals of our children
and destroying usefulness.
Kcsolved, That we favor the passage of the
Conger lard bill.
Id-solved, That we believe women have the
same rights ns their husbands to hold prop
erty and we are ;ln sympathy with any law
that will give onr wive, sisters und daugh
ters full representation at the polls
ltesolved. That our children should be edu
cated for honest labor and that agricultural
colleges tdiould be established In every State
Resolved, That we favor a liberal ystcm
for pensioning all survivors of the late vu.
' v-"3&
aa9UMBnrna'"-v
Mat whan he gHna tm e4her etta a
snsm nsi vsvmvbwy
tS 2.
to
eiaifjmae. who hoped that three noted
mnnwmsn. in whom ha believed, anight
"all
THE MINE DISASTER.
!-ir
Qnlck Kves.
i"he experienced railroad conductor
easily locates and keeps in mind all the
passengers on his train. lie seldom
asks a passenger twice for his ticket.
(lie goes without doubt or hesitation
straight to those who get on at way sta
tions, no matter in what car they may
be. Brakemen, intelligent and with an
eye to the future, acquire the same hab
it of accurate observation. The man
who walks briskly through the car, ap
parently intent only on reaching the
brake at the other end, may take as he
goes a quick mental photograph of all
the passengers. At n station the other
day a woman who had just stepped on
a car exclaimed: "I have lost my pock
etbook!' A brakeman who stood on
the car platform looked at he'rfor am in
stant, and then, with more than n mud
reader's celerity of movement, and
with greater certainty ek action, he
walked widejewake straight to the seat
the ladr .had occupied. He wan not
confused by the fact that it was now oc
cupied by other passengers; he simply
asked them to let him look for the
pocketbook. It wan thereVou the Hoot
where the lady had dropped it, and il
was restored to her within n minute af
ter her discovery that she had lost it.
N- Y. Sun.
An Canton Bcmarfc.
Sirs. Jones (a New York lady) takea
in sewing to maintain herself und a
worthless hnahand, and she ia getting
rather tired of the job. A few days
ago he applied for financial aid, an
usual.
"Sbee here; Mariar, can't you let ma
(hie) have a quarter tfakh morningr
"No, Josiun, I abaU hare, to
your request If I keen
all your wants rm afraid the board of
health will harem
the Mst of Victims in the Ijle Pennsylva
nia Mine Kxploslnn Grow larger.
Youxowoon, Pa., .Tan. 2'.. One hun
dred and seven bodies had been taken
from the Mammoth mine. No. 1, of
Frick t Co., at Mammoth, up to noon
yesterday. It i estimated that the re
mains of at least forty more victims of
the explosion are still in the pit, but it
is thought that all will be out in a few
hours.
This catastrophe, while involving
more than five times the loss of life oc
casioned by the Dnnbar disaster, differs
in many respcets from the latter. At
Dunbar the explosion set fire, to the
mine and the shaft for days and weeks
was a roaring furnace. Here the fire
was put out as soon as it .started.
Never in the history of American coal
mining has there been such an unex
pected accident, with such a complete
annihilation of all within its reach.
The Mammoth mine has liecn noted
always as being particularly free from
gas. Fire ltoss Smith, a man who had
worked in mines in Great Britain and
this country for thirty years, made his
usual careful inspection of all the rooms
and headings at the customary time be
tween 1 and 3 o'clock in the morning.
His duty was to enter every place where
men worked and to mark upon the wall
of the room or heading the sign of his
approval the figures of the day of the
month.
Monday there were 198 miners at
work in the part affected by the explo
sion. It is not known exactly how
many were there Tuesday, but there
have been found 110 bodies and it is
thought the total number will be over
15a
A Toaa; Slant Operator aa4 His Wife
Struck By a Train.
Kaxsas Cnv, Mo., Jan. 28. S. A.
Hoy, the night operator in the employ
of the Santa Fe Railroad Company at
Holloway, Kan., a small station about
twenty-five miles south of this city, and
his yonng wife were struck by the en
gine of the Olathe "pha? passenger
train on the Santa Fe tracks shortly af
ter 7 o'clock this morning.
Mrs. Hoy was killed instantly. The
entire train passed over her body and it
was frightfully mangled.
Young Hoy was severely injured, but
it is not thought fatally.
beref the
"I mean
the they may
and concord.
"It doeant matter what sort of a
cord it is." was the Immediate reply.
A Russian gentlemaa'af emact'm
once dined with Sir Stafford Northcota,
at a time when Eagiand waa supposed
to aim at interfering between Rnnsia
and Turkey in their disagreement. Ia
the course of conversation the Baiaa
became very loud in abase of England,
and Sir Stafford made no response until
his guest exclaimed: "You Englishmen
are like the, pigs which hunt ia dirt for
truffles."
"Say rather, monsieur," remarked
Sir Stafford, 4the dogs which drive the
pigs away."
Dnring the rest of the dinner En
gland's sympathy for Turkey was a for
bidden subject.
"I have at least one mercy to be
thankful for," said an irate Englishman
one day, in the course of a dispute v ith
n patriotic French niau. "and that i that
I was born on this side of the chan
nel!" The Frenchman looked him over with
n dawning smile.
"I, too, am glad, monsieur," said he,
sweetly. "We are the most civilized
nation on earth. You would have died
of homesickness." Youth's Companion.
Jool rise for Itoctor.
A South Carol iua physician, asked
why he located at Monelova, said: "It
is a first-rate place for a doctor. If a
man is sick all you hare to do is to tell
bis friends (no matter whether the af
fair is serious or not) to go to a priest
and hare him confess and prepare for
death. If he dies tbey will say, Vhat
a good doctor he is. He knew he most
die and so he had his spiritual interests
attended to.' If he recovers they will
say, 'What a capital physician he must
be. The man was in the last extremity
and prepared for death and h cured
him.' So in cither event it is a first-rate
place in which to achieve a medical
reputation." Medical Record.
!!
Napoleon Ilonapurte dictated and
afterward signed his love letters to Jo
sephine' a somewhat formal method of
love-making, surely.
Deanisw Cant Ito Carol
by local applications, as they can not reach
the diseased portion of the ear. There Is
only ono way to cure Deafness, and thai is
by constitutional remedies. Deafness Is
caused by an inflamed condition of the mu
cous lining of the Eustachian Tube. Wiiea
this tube gets inflamed you hare a rumbling
sound or imperfect hearing, and when it Is
entirely closed Drafsvm Is the result, and
unless the inflammation can bo taken out
and this tube restored to its normal condi
tion, hearing will be destroyed forever;
nine cases out of tea are caused by catarrh,
which is nothing but aa inflamed' condition
or the mucous surfaces.
Wo will give Ono Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by Catarrh) that
we cannot cure by taking Hall's Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CncxET A Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 73c.
The wife of a man who spent all bis time
and money la following the National gamn,
got adlvorre on base ball grounds. Texas
lftlngs.
SARSAPARILLA.
4t l
Dea'tutUcit
j. ,, j
Mat. JMt !l
M
it far a awst !
M. If ft 11 111 an! B'sPfMycilU, Assaaad
Mae tune ue eOier. It ruflml iacmii
that are am foeed la aar
Barilla. These rtrr lasy ertjeata
tt 41 nerval from mer
CcTBw tosj erMTi ?! Colter
;j " " --. -wp r- rt fr-.
pHC V I jv and M LaM m 1
T rwa.tt;s: l 3i $ wnfrt t ag i
I
at h giraS . WaJS4tr ret ,
MPpafcfcWgWfcfciMWWi ll .1 1 '! kit HUM n n 1fl M H I Hi,
s&
ITs
neetfie
the!
waajeiw
teetacsss
ar U
tnpertaat. la fact, oieaMsl Xo lu j
iTujrirtse. Usui inass aan aar-
weM be an Inert at Un
tomrwr nreanralloas eff aarse- Ait.Tewswiip3mafH3i, "rw
vend ia many drg ntoras. SrirrsKi 4 u- ?f ;? rtx.
SurjseperUia coi!a!as ae uns-" sUpalM Ct' UuJUtTrU r--
IsHfTcfJiel. Race larraawai isresrwT4siasjBTpai itaks,;x.
eeBni
iaMls
I
for It hraearvat effsc apea
aassaa svsbcm. CotalMtKtl. taerraert
:
harsjiaii'ilif lnBueaes upoa ervry fssdieu
ef 1st uodv. iswoTlfcc diresikm. sirvecta-
ealacUe hver aad kbigej s, ckaaa? utx
Mean ef aeisoaou sutler, seaUdaa; ta
aerveuaarstas. eaUrslje tfee uweui fac
ulties, aad ia a word, by lafssiac
streaata and life. cvt4cilT rclvraawn
every part aad snakes t feci altpfvthrr
Use a bow ncrsoa.
Elmer HoJaca. Atramto, Tea., writes:
"My strmih aad hUii bad beta faint.
me for several Tears. Mr bivol was ia a
wry itnporeriftbcd coaiilUou asd very Im
pure.,, Jfy limb felt Urae, rickety aad
rheumatic, and 1 coald col walk wUhoal
toitertaf I felt mjwif growing prr
tarciy old. and ar face btra to look
pinched ami shnTrllcd. I scfiVmt ccid
erablr, was rrU at night, very nervous
aad rrowleif vrry meUncbolv " Mr ej-
were sore and I hid caUrrh I tried su.r
tealr. and bitter ami bVvl tmrtOcr, bat
failed U Rvt better I flnsuj- tvafttl la
bottle of Hall's K.raparilU, and he tore I
had used it all I Ml lUe IVt man. My
strength and health improved, plmpir and
sore disappear! from my T4i. ache
aad stiff joint left me, and "1 couaUlcr uy
self a well rvo."
A ctjrmttvR merchant adrrriltrU a tea.
dollar suit for five dollar ll Ua'l a ac
suit. A t-ttdUi.r lawsuit ob troiy
dollars - Uuffaio Time.
MT noople think that thn word "Hit
ters" cau bo uh1 only n onnvoU;n with ,
an IntoxlcatiUH' bvveruge. Thi 1 a ai
take, ns th b-st rrmrsjy far all dse- of ,'
the blood, l.rrr, kidnej ,eu- .isTrtoklrAh j
Bitter. It is purely a mcdiclm al evry j
article usod lu It manufacture I of vrgcl- '
abh: origin ' known cumin u (juallucs.
Evsat fUrr lik Ufcerv $ (V
Si bJrT.t?d 3 ik? &-r ?!- at? 44
6 tat Ks'jar-f.
CsirtsaMs.
fafst vt jtso m
r vftf
Jfe"" fa wwfst mi
' rsw
III B-f . I
?at I (a
Wv1!'h?,. SH
ff ft mt fc Vf
a pS $
twr ri
e$i$ nst
caanui a aaatiM en.
S. Se S.
"Do tuc know who trnllt this tJrll;er,
said a nersou to l!ok. 'N" tvplbxl lUk;
"but If you pp over j pu'll to vlJcd.
Ki'tiurx Outer or U'cathkh cano
Throat Disea- There l tto mure effect
ual rrmtsSj tr Coughs, Colds, etc , ilian
Ban w.s ItsoMiiUL luOinca. J vnS-j m
biurt. Price 3S .
- -
It is ra!cr to tnu-o flcurr that Ito In
kNlerrs than tr.ue lies that figure iu society
I'iV-aburnh Dikpatch
11 m
HcsT, ea!rt to use and cheapest. l'Ijs
Keaicriy for Catarrh. ItyUrusl
I'l.ATS
chest ra..
b ibe mosf popular remedy
tor boils, pimples, blotchy etc.
ar 1 1 a
Because, wnuc it Never lath to
cure.
It acb gently.
buildMip the vMcm.
tncrcASc tiki Appetite.
and improves tlie general health.
instead of subMmitim: one disrobe
for another, as 15 the case w ith
potash and mercury mixtures
Seeks en nlnest ansa a in ei vm
TM .nf tartaric c.
CURE BlliOUaWMM.
iCfc HweUJftCh,
Malaria
nnrnhvaa,
aL3L.tfh
second flddlctho man In the or--llail
nnd Hzpreas.
The world is full of shoddy and shams, but
real merit is always recognized. Thirty years
ago Dr. Shallcabcrccr discovered an Anti
dote to the poison of Malaria, which has had
an immenso sale, although until recently it
has not been advertised in a single aewspa
tier. Merit alono has sold it all these years,
because it cures when all else fail, and is
Just what is claimed for it it iifMUli de
stroys Malaria and could not harm uu in
fant. Bold by druggists, or sent by mall
for one dollar. Address,
Dr. A. T. bUALLENBEaoBH, Rochester, Fa.
Wbkic a man is lalured In a railroad
that
try
wreck the managers of the road know
if be fails to recover his relatives will
ta Atchison Globe.
If Keasete from Medical Help,
Doubly essential is it that you should be
provided with some reliable family med
icine. Hostcttcr's Stomach flitters is the
best of Its class, remedying: thoroughly as
it does such common ailments as indhcs
tion, constipation and biliousness, audaf
fording safe and speedy help in malarial
cases, rheumatism and inactivity of the
kidneys.
It seems to bo an undisputed fact that a
married woman is a better shot with a roll-inr-ptn
than sho Is with a stono. Yonkers
Statesman.
m t"lEBE is one chill remedy whoso ef
fect is a certainty, it has been tested in
many thousands severe cases and never
kaowa to fail. It is called Smith's Tonic
Syrup. Take ao other.
' '
PABUAMK.TT.eT. "I rise for Informa
lion," said the f resbmen at the debating
club, filed you did replied the presi
dent; "yoaneed it." Yale Record.
No one doubts that Dr.
Sage's Catarrh Remedy really
cures Catarrh, whether the
disease be recent or of long
standing, because the makers
of it clinch their faith in it
with .1 $500 guarantee, which
isn't a mere newspaper guar
antee, but "on call" in a
moment.
That moment is when you
prove that its makers can't
cure you.
The reason for their faith
is this:
Dr. Sage's remedy
proved itself the right
for ninety-nine out of
hundred cases of Catarrh in
the Head, and the World's
Dispensary Medical
tion can atTord to
risk of your
hundredth.
The only question is
you willine to make the
Tata neb, rH si, aaea4 tm 4 naa
J. P. SMITH A CO.,
Makrrs ef -a ."
255 4 257 aVmnnteh tt. . V. Ore.
BILE BEANS.
frr WATERPROOF COLLAR " CUFF
w I TsTOt
I
THK iJAatt I
THAT CAN BK KELtKO OH
isTot to Piaooiort
EARS THIS MAIIIC.
TRADE
EUULOID
Mark.
MKIOt HO LAUNDf ftlftO. CAM M WfTtO Clin M A
THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF
COLLAR IN THE MARKET.
has
cure
one
being
Associa-
take the
the one
are
if the makers
take the risk?
If so, the rest is easy,
pay your- druggist 50
and the trial begins.
If you're wanting
you II get somcthin
a cure
-are
test,
willing to
VASELINE
ianai fmnn aaBmnj lnALn, auf ffaee lka. f 4W
WW ww pTsPWJ vwTsN wl rWl wmsPsHnVe fW sPanU
Om hj. Mast Mfc Vatnem Nam, It '
QMJft4VatwteCiCrnw . .IS"
Owsjsi(VsmCwfermi ..f"
For One Dollar
J HJ fi4 alt tlHfM, h f
HH HJ S I Mat, .i it M'
HH HJsBJ fSJ UtM l raw! ftswtrj U
aw aaam an i.,
Ito mm if rmatm Urn. aeataeml II .
HWmT sanW W wnsWmi 4m npMmmmj (V
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1 may sss)n ejtmej a -
J.
fl !t VrllK Is AHJ ( fi f-t s f ' - !
i i -s r r
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urliliiai ixixn A i,l Kiat nll it. mix u mnu Unl U I
I'"! "f JVJ intwr. a .- ,... !. I. l.l )ij. UK M
.h 1 juttrtit. Au-m. r si 1. 1 ksk.i. imuDK ui s u
CHEtCBROUCH M'F'C CO.. : 24 flat
nsMlsMw
mfi magKm
i-i. rar mamjfs
Toft.
pi.-)- itirur.tiv rn rATAKitiL-nt. ittit
4Teatt. i-t 1 ltmbtaUI, A CUt is tSN
t'iM hi tlio I Ira. I iitt4tl-fv,uii.
It l an ntro-nt. rf Mh a rrs!l iHln ! .-ii L) U
A04U, KTJIwMT'jj, Sifftu,!'.
mt
a
You
cents
the $500
better
Thkre is nothing i unless it be the sewing
machine) that has lightened woman's labor
as much aa Dobbins' Electric Hoap. ennantly
sold since 18M. AH CToccra hsvc it. Have
you made its acquaintance I Try it.
M.ireBTVXB we have always with us. Ia
the auauaer it's the !awu-mower's ezasper
sting click, and in the winter it's the snow,
aaorel'a dismal scrape. Homer v lUeJou mai
Foa ancase of nervousaess, sleepless
aess, weak stomach, indigestion, dyspepsia.
iruet u sure ia vener's lAiue iiver nus.
"German
Syrup
For Coughs & Colds.
99
A nan. deserted by bis friends, is apt
save aaaU-foaefeellBg come over elm
tintee. Drake's Ifagaxian
Is no other remedr sa nlaar.t
to take and so sure in it effect as Dr. Ball's
is orm Asesiroyers. xncem
"Did the doctor give your husband send
advice!" "5o; liquid. Re advised him te
step drinkiBg.'' Detroit Free Free.
Cru your coaga with Bale's Heney ef
awrenound aad Tar.
rike'a Toothache Drop Cart ia one miasm.
OraVrvtt t Iavs
TVooDTtixB, Mits.. Jan.' S. A.
Bradford, who some weeks ago wrecked
the pnv train on the LonisviUe. New
Orleans A Texas railroad, has been: ac
quitted and escaped paniahment
through n technicality of the law,
which was dtscassed at a mass meeting
of ehisens of WHldns County held here
last night, when n resolat&m wna
adopted orderimj him to leave in. me
diatelj and never to come again within
the limits of the county, with the ae
sarance that if he does he will be in
stantly pnt to death.
15. D,
ayeermrsv
fan.
Moody has reletee the
TTom tarther allesriance toaia.
view of theaterhonelesaneeaof hf
Yesterday on the Jamthsdb
Mooqy receirea only e votes.
jrettinr; 2t Tripp 24, doss 17 and the
remainoer scattemuj.
Oxaxa, eb Jan. :. Railroad
Txamc on au the roada from the
almost mmnrmlfal aa a reenlt e the
THE GENERAL MARKETS.
KANSAS CTTT. Feb &
CATTIXShlpptna: steers.. ..fiat 4
Batchers tcrs... 3 M 1 M
Native cesra ate m M
MOGSCooU to caoic heavy IS R
WHEAT Nt 3 red 91 B at
5a3 hanL M at
CO!r-No. 3 4Te sf
Unllr50. ? MsV Hv
ma m""";! tm HJH sV
IOAX-atsaa. per sack.... 3
raaey )N a 111
Aj-Salea. ;m mum
MV lTfcE Caoiee ereaaery.. a 7
CnEBSK Tall cream. fftje 19
QG-Choic.j .. rnn a
atAtXW-JlasM W u
sHHHHHUQvam 9 HJ V9
7
ssn en
rCTATOCS. m 1
sT.xocia.
CATTU-4mrpflBstcsWs.... 4M 4
am am
l IK
tecaatea. ...'.. am a
FIAHTaV-Caelee ... , m in
WMIAT-Jfa 2 ran. it as
OOKN 5e.3 Crwnamj
OATS 3fv t. l. j- j" jh
STaV-yv 3 ...... ..... 74
3ff
tfntnmm
John F.Jones, Iulom.Tcx., writes
I have usc4 Gcrmaii Syrup fur the
past six years, for Sore Throat,
CourIi, Colds, Pains in the Chest
and Lungs, and let me say to any
one wanting such a medicine
German Syrup is the best
B.W. Baldwin, Carnesville.Tcim.,
writes : I have used your German
Syrup in my family, and find it the
best medicine I ever tried for coughs
and colds. I recommend it to every
one tor these troubles.
R. Schmalhauscn, Druggist, of
Charleston, HI., writes: After trying
scores of prescriptions and prepara
tioas I had on my files and shelves,
without relief for a very severe cold,
which had settled on my lungs, I
tried your German Syrup. It gave
me immediate relief and a perma
nent cure. (L
G. a GREEK, Sete MksatActarrr,
Waanenry, Sew Jersey, U. S. A.
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