Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1895)
.FMY-J F AL i . r ' , lT 4L I Vl 1 DANIEL , THE COEUR-DE-LION OF ALL AGES. Golden fex ; : "Ills Windows Being Opined in IIis Chambcr Toward Jerusalem"-Danlcl , Vi : 10-Delivered Ct New York Sunday , September 3. j G ; . . l to , . H E scoundrelly princes of Persia , urged on by political - cal jealousy against Daniel , have , ' succeeded - ceeded in getting a law passed that whosoever prays to God shall be put under the paws and w , teeth of the lions , who are lashing themselves in rage and hunger up and down the stone cage , or putting their lower jaws on the ground , bellowing till the earth trembles. But the leonine threat did not hinder the devotions of Daniel , the Coeur-de-Lion of the ages. His enemies might as well have a law that the sun should not draw water , or that the south wind should not I sweep across a garden of magnolias or that God should be abolished. They could not scare him with the red-hot furnaces , and they can not now scare him with the lions. As soon as Daniel hears of this enactment he leaves his office of secretary of state , with its , upholstery of crimson and gold , and comes down the white marble steps and goes to his own house. He opens his window and puts the shutters back and pulls the curtain aside so that he can look toward the sacred city of Jerusalem - lem , and then prays. I suppose the people in the street gathered under and before his window , and said : "Just see that man defyng . . the law. he ought to be arrested. And the constabulary of the city rush to the police headquarters and report that Daniel is on his knees at the wide-open window. "You are my prisoner , " says the officer of the law , dropping a heavy hand on the shoulder of the kneeling Daniel. As the constables open the door of the cavern to thrust in their prisoner , they see the glaring eyes of the monsters. But Daniel becomes the first lion-tamer , and they lick his hand and fawn at his feet , and that night he sleeps with the shaggy mane of a wild beast for his pillow , while the king that night , sleepless in the palace , has. on him the paw and teeth of a lion he cannot tame-the lion of a remorseful conscience. What a picture it would be for some artist : Darius , in the early dusk of morning , not waiting for footmen or chariot , hastening to the den , all flushed and nervous and in dishabille , and looking through the crevices of the cage to see what had become of his prime minister ! "What , no sound ! " he says. "Daniel is surely devoured , and the lions are sleeping after their horrid - rid meal , the bones of the poor man scattered across the floor of the cav- ern. " With trembling voice Darius calls out , "Daniel ! " No answer , for the prophet is yet in profound slumber. But a lion , more easily awakened , advances - vances , and , with hot breath blown through the crevice , seems angrily to demand the cause of'this interruption , and then another wild beast lifts his mane from under Dariel's1 head , and the prophet waking up , comes forth to report himself all unhurt and well. But our text stands us at Daniel's window , open toward Jerusalem. Why in tnat direction open ? Jerusalem was his native land , and all .the pomp of his Babylonish successes could not' make him forget it. He came there from Jerusalem at eighteen years of age , and he never visited it , though he lived to be eighty-five years. Yet , when he wanted to arouse the deepest emotions and grandest aspirations of his heart , he had his window open toward - ward his native Jerusalem. There are many of you to-day who understand that without any exposition. This is getting to be a nation of foreigners. They have come into all occupations and professions. They sit in all churches. It may be twenty years ago eince you got your naturalization papers - pers , and you may be thoroughly Amercanized , but you can't forget the land of your birth , and your sympathies go out toward it. Your windows are open toward Jerusalem. Your father and mother are buried there. It may have been a very humble home in which you were born , but your memory often plays. around it , and you hope some days to go and see it-the hill , the tree , the brook , the house , the place so I sacred , the door frcm which you started' off with parental blessing to make your own way , in the world ; and God only knows how sometimes you have longed to see the familiar places of your child. , hood , and how in awful crises of life you would like to have caught a glimpse of the old , wrinkled face that bent over you as you lay on the gentle lap twenty - ty or forty or fifty years ago. You may have on this side of the sea risen in fortune , and , like Daniel , have become - come great , and may have come into I prospe.-t 'ties which you never could have reached if you had stayed there , and you may have mvrrv WinutnWe tO and sky- your house-bay-windows , light-windows , and windows of conservatory - servatory , and windows on all sides- ! but you have at least.one window peen toward Jerusalem. When the foreign steamer comes to the wharf , you see the long line of i sailors , with shouldered mail-bags , coming down the planks , carrying as f letters might suppose to many as you 1 be enough for a years' correspondence , i and this repeated again and again during - ing the week. Multitudes of them are letterer from home , and at all the post- offices of the land people will go to the window and anxiously ask for them , hundreds of thousands of persons finds - . . - - - s s . ing that window of foreign mails the open window toward Jerusalem. Messages - sages that say : "When are you coming home to sce us ? Brother has gone intc the army. Sister is dead. Father and mother are getting very feeble. We are having a great struggle to get on here. Would you advise us to come to you , or will you come to us ? All join in love , and hope to meet you , Lf not in this world , then in a better. Goodbye - bye , " Yes , yes ; in all these cities , and amid the flowering western prairies , and on the slopes of the Pacific , and amid the Sierras , and on the banks of the lagoon , and on 'the ranches of Texas there is an uncounted multitude who , this hour , stand and sit and kneel with their windows open toward Jerusalem. Some of these people played on the heather of the Scottish hills. Some of them were driven out by Irish famine. Some of them , in early life , drilled in the German army. Some of them were accustomed at Lyons or Marseilles or Paris to see on the street Victor Hugo -and Gambetta. Some chased the chamois among the Alpine precipices. Some plucked the ripe clusters from Italian vineyard. Some lifted their faces under the midnight sun of Nor- way. It is no dishonor to our land that they remember the place of their na- tivity. Miscreants would they be if , while they have some of their windows open to take in the free air of America and the sunlight of an atmosphere which no kingly despot has ever breathed , they forget sometimes to open the window toward Jerusalem. No wdnder that the son of the Swiss , when far away from home , hearing the national air of his country sung , the malady of homesickness comes on him so powerfully as to cause his death. You have the example of heroic Daniel of my text for keeping early memories fresh. Forget not the old folks at home. Write often ; and , if you have surplus means and they are poor , make practical contribution , and rejoice that America is bound to all the world by ties of .sanguinity as in no other na- tion. Who can doubt but it is appointed - pointed for the evangelization of other lands ? What a stirring , melting gos- pelizing theory that all the doors of other nations are open toward us , while. our windows are open toward them ! But Daniel , in the text , kept this porthole of his domestic fortress unclosed - closed because Jerusalem was the capital - ital of sacred influences. There had smoked the sacrifice. There was the Holy of Holies , There was the Ark of the Covenant. There stood the tem- ple. We are tempted to keep our windows - dews open on the opposite side , toward the world , that we may see and hear and appropriate its advantages. What does the world say ? What does the world think ? tWhat does the world do ? Worshipers of the world instead of worshipers of God. Windows open toward - ward Babylon. Windows open toward Corinth. Windows open toward Ath- ens. Windows open toward Sodom. Windows open toward the fiats , instead of windows open toward the hills. Sad mistake , for this world as a god is like something I saw in the museum of Strasburg , Germany-the figure of a virgin in wood and iron. The victim in olden time was brought there , and this figure would open its arms to receive him , and , once enfolded , the figure closed with a hundred knives and lances upon him , and then let him drop one hundred and eighty feet sheer down. So the world first embraces its idolaters , then closes upon them with many tortures , and then lets them drop forever down. The highest honor the world could confer was to make a man Roman emperor ; but , out Of sixty- three emperors , it allowed only six to die peacefully' in their beds. But , mark you , that good lion-tamer is not standing at the window , but kneeling , while he looks out. Most photographs are taken of those in standing or sitting posture. I now remember - member but one picture of a man kneeling , and that was David Living- stone , who in the cause of God and civilization sacrificed himself ; and in the heart of Africa his servant , Maj- wara , found him in the tent by the light of a candle , stuck 0n the top of a box , his head in his hands upon the pillow , and dead.on . his knees. But here is a great lion-tamer , living under' ' the dash of the light , and his'hair dis- hevelcd of the breeze praying. The fact is , that a man can see further on his knees than standing on tiptoe. Jerusalem - rusalem was about five hundred and fifty statute miles from Babylon , and the vast Arabian desert shifted its i sands between them. Yet through that onen window Daniel saw Jerusalem , saw all between it , saw beyond , save time , saw eternity , saw earth , and saw heaven. Would you like to see the way j through your sins to pardon , through' your troubles to comfort , . through temptation to rescue , through dire sickness - ness to immortal health , through night to day' , through things terrestrial to things celestial , you will not see them till you take Daniel's posture. No cap of bone to the joints of the fingers , no cap of bone to the joints of the elbow , but cap of bone to the knees , made so because the God of the body was the God of the soul , and especial provision ! for those who'want to pray , and physio- logical structure j oins with spiritual I necessity in bidding us pray , and pray , and pray. In olden time the Earl of Westmore- land said he hadd no need to pray , because - cause he had enough pious tenants on his estate to pray for him ; but all the prayers of the church universal amount. I to nothing unless , like Daniel , we pray for ourselves. Oh , men and women , bounded on one side by Shadrach's red- hot furnace and the other side by devouring - ' vouring lions learn the secret of courage - age and deliverance by looking at that Babylonish window open toward the southwest ! "Oh , " you say , "that is the I direction of the Arabian Desert ! " Yes ; t . . . - . ' t but on. the other side of the desert Is God , Is Christ , Is Jerusalem , Is heaven The American aborigines look forward - ward to a heaven of illimitable huntIng - Ing grounds , partridge , and deer , and wild duck more than plentiful , and the hounds never off the scent , and the guns never missing fire. But the geographer has followed the earth round , and found no Homer's elyslum. Voyagers have have traversed the deep In all directions - tions , and found no Hesiod's islands of the blessed. The Mohammedan's celestial - tial debauchery and the Indian's eternal - nal hunting-ground for vast multitudes have no charm. But here rolls in the Bible heaven. No more sea-that is , no wide separation. No more night-that is , no insomnia. No more tears-that is , no heart-break. No more pain- that is , dismissal of lancet and bitter draught and miasma , and banishment of neuralgias , and catalepsies , and con- sumptions. All colors in the wall except - cept gloomy black ; all the music in the major-key , because celebrative and jubilant. River crystalline , gate crystalline - talline , and skies crystalline , because everything Is clear and withoutdoubt. White robes , and that means sinless- ness. Vials full of odors , and that means pure regalement of the senses. Rainbow - bow , and that means the storm is over. Marriage supper , and that means gladdest - dest festivity. Twelve manner of fruits and that means lucious and unending variety. Harp , trumpet , grand march , anthem , amen , and hallelujah , in the same orchestra. Choral meeting solo , and overture meeting antiphon , and strophe joining dithyramb , as they roll into the ocean of doxologies. And you and T may have all that , and have it forever through Christ , if we wil' let him with the blood of one wounded hand rub out our sin , and with the other wounded hand swing open the shining portals. Day and night keep your window open toward that Jerusalem. Sing about it. Pray about it. Dream about it. Do not be inconsolable about your friends who have gone into it. Do not worry if something in your heart indicates that you are not far off from its ecsta- sies. Do not think that when a Christian - tian dies he stops , for he goes on. An ingenious man has taken the heavenly furlongs as mentioned in Revelation , and has calculated that there will be in heaven one hundred rooms sixteen feet square for each ascending - cending soul , though this world should lose a hundred millions yearly. But all the rooms of heaven will be ours , for they are family rooms ; and as no room iii your house is too good for your children , so all the rooms of all the palaces of the heavenly Jerusalem will be free to God's children and even the throne-room will not be denied , and you may run up the steps of the throne , and put your hand on the side of the throne , and sit down beside the king according - cording to the promise : "To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne. " But you cannot go in except as con- querors. Many years ago the Turks and Christians were in battle , and the Christians were defeated , and with their commander Stephen fled toward a fortress - ress where the mother of this commander - mander was staying. When she saw her son and his army In disgraceful retreat - treat , she had the gates of the fortress rolled shut , and then from the top of the battlement cried out to her son , "You cannot enter here except as conqueror - queror ! " Then Stephen rallied his forces and resumed the battle and gained the day , twenty thousand driving - ing back two hundred thousand. For those who are defeated in battle with sin and death and hell , nothing but shame and contempt ; but for those who gain the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ the gates of the New Jerusalem will hoist , and there shall be an abundant - dant entrance into the everlasting kingdom - dom of our Lord toward which you do well to keep your windows open. 6a1SSING LINKS. The lamest Bible in the world is a manuscript Hebrew Bible in the Vatican - can , weighing ; 2'0 pounds. In the gardens around London there are more specimens of the cedar of Lebanon - anon than on Mount Lebanon Itself. In some parts of south Africa much damage is done by baboons , which go in large marauding parties to rob gar- dens. In Albania the men wear petticoats arid the women trousers. The women do all the work and their husbands attend - tend to the heavy standing round. In the British Museum there is a beauti.ul piece of stained glass , with an engraved emblazonment of the monarch Thothmes III. , who lived 3,400 years ago. Nevada is the most sparsely settled State. There are nearly two and a halt square miles to each inhabitant ; next comes Idaho , with one inhabitant to each square mile. Montana and Wyoming - ming each have less than one. As the supply of ivoryis becoming short billiard balls of cast steel are being - ing used in Sweden. By making them hollow the weight is made to correspond - spend with that of ivory balls. The Mexican torch thistle , growing tea a height of fifty or sixty feet , looks more like a candelabra than a tree. Another variety- the same species has long gray bristles , which give it the appearance of the head of an old gray- haired man.- A Pennsylvania railroad train recent. ly went 5S.3 miles from Camden to Atlantic - lantic City in forty-five minutes , an average - erage rate of 763 miles an hour. This Is considered the fastest time ever made by a railroad train in this country. The fastest single mile was made in forty- one seconds. The practice of ringing the curfew bell appears to have prevailed through' out Europe long before the Norman conquest - quest of England , its object being the laudable one of preventing fires , which on account of the houses being built chiefly of wood were at that time quite frequent and destructive. Belgium's revenue from the drink habit has grown in forty years from 4,000OCO to 33,000,000 francs , crime increasing - creasing 200 pr cent at the same time and insanity 128 per cent. .f 1 ' , TD D PARTY. LIVING TRUTHS OF THE REPUBLICAN - PUBLICAN POLICY. Sclcctlons from Various. AutlrorILios Whlcrt Servo to Prove tho'Wisdom of the People in Calling the Party Back to Power. t ' r President Clevebnd on the irnin Issuc. "The millions of our countrymen who have fought bravely and well for tariff reform should be exhorted to continue - tinue the struggle , boldly challenging to open warfare and constantly guarding - ing against treachery and half-heart- edness in their camp. "Tariff reform will not be settled until - til it is honestly and fairly settled in the interest and to the benefit of a patient - tient and long-suffering people. " These bold , brave words were penned by Mr. Cleveland less than eleven months ago. They were thought worthy to be incorporated in the campaign text book of the Democratic Congressional Committee last fall. What has come over the spirit of Cleveland and his Democracy that they have ceased to "exhort to continue the struggle" and are not "boldly challenging to open warfare ? " It can mean nothing more nor less than that , their record of tariff reform and their promises of more of the same kind of reform having been repudiated by the voters , they now desire - sire to escape the issue of their own and their President's making , In this respect - spect they display g6od political judgment - ment , and if they were permitted to make the issues which shall be fought out before the people all would be well with them. - But the Republican party and the people will not permit them to escape from the issue that was so bravely marked by President Cleveland when he told Catchings that their party "should be exhorted to continue the struggle , boldly challenging to open warfare. " That the Republicans mean to accept that challenge and wage the great battle of nest year on that line was plainly manifested at the Cleveland - , land convention. Republicans everywhere - where are hoisting the banner of the party , which is inscribed "Protection .o American Industries and American Workingmen , " and in that sign they will conquer. When the President's declaration of last August is recalled , and then the spectacle is witnessed of he and his party putting forth such tremendous efforts to make the money question the , issue to the exclusion of all other questions - tions , it must become apparent to thinking - ing men that what they behold is but a great Democratic conspiracy to abandon - don "tariff reform" and force a false Issue before the people. Their newspapers , even , appear to be parties to the conspiracy , for they are constantly declaring that the tariff question is settled and woe to the party that attempts to open up that question. They are forever sneering at "McKin- leyism , " which they have made a synonym - nym for protection , in the hope of malting - ing it odious before the people. But the more they sneer the stronger the principle - ciple becomes with the Republican party and the greater becomes the probability - ability that the man whose name has been coined into a synonym for protection - tection to American labor and American - can industries will be chosen to lead the Republican army to victory next year. The Republican State Central Committees - mittees of Ohio , Kentucky and other states where elections are to be held this fall could , with great profit to the party , circulate the Catchings letter. The two paragraphs quoted above should be printed in bold-face ty'pe' Democrats would not relish having it thrust upon them , but that is only an additional reason why it should be done.-J. L. IC. , in the Dayton Daily Journal. Our Insnnn Tariff Policy. The report of the first y'ear's exports and imports under the Wilson bill is at hand. It is interesting. During the fiscal year of 189.4 we imported silk to the value of $16,234,1S2 , and in 1595 , the fiscal year ending June 30 , to the value of $92,626,056that ; is to say , we paid about $6,400,000 more to foreign silk manufacturers and artisans for the year ending June 30 , 1395 , than during the corresponding prior twelve months. We imported cotton gods to the value of $22,3.46 , 5.47 in 1394 ; and to the value of $33,195,338 in 1895 ; this represents a loss to American ii Custry of about $11,000,000. Our imports of woolen goods were worth $19,391,850 for the fiscal year of 1894 , and $36,542,396 for that of 1895. This represents more than $17,000,000 taken from American 5.11(1 paid to European capitalists and workmen. The list of increased imports - ports might be extended indefinitely. The shrinkage in American wages and profits must have been immense. The free traders told us that what we lost in wages under a low tariff we should gain in the reduction of prices. The treasuy report .foes not confirm this statemeai. It confutes it. A sure test of the prosperity of the Americans is their consmption of the almost necessary - sary foreign luxuries , tea and sugar. We import all of our tea and most of _ . - , . - . . 4" , our sugar. If the new tariff had brought prosperity It would have brought increased - creased imports of tea and sugar. But the Imports of sugar 'exceeded $126,000 ; 000 in 1894 and fell short of $77,000,000 In 1890. Our tea imports were worth $1.4,000,000 in 1894 , and $13,000,000 in 1S95. The conclusion is unavoidable ; while we are importing , and paying gold for , silks , woolens , and cottons that we ought to have woven for ourselves - selves , we had to stint ourselves on sugar and tea. Thd free traders also told us that what we paid out for Imported manufactures - factures would be returned to us for grain , meat , and other products of agri- culture. For , said they , the foreigner must eat , and the more American money he gets for his work in Eltro- pean factories the more American- raised food he will be forced to buy. The secretary of the treasury's report destroys its fiction. In the same year , from June , 1S94 , to June , 1895 , in which we so wonderfully increased our imports - ports of manufactured goods , we most woefully decreased our exports of farm products. Europe tooft less of our cheese by about $2,000,000 in the year in which it increased our purchases of its silks by more than $6,000,000. While we added $11,000,000 to our bill for European - ropean cotton cloths , Europe cut down its bill for American breadstuffs , exclusive - clusive of wheat flour , from $59,407,0.41 in 1894 to $43,805,663 in 1595 , and its bill for wheat flour from $69,26S,829 to $51,651,928 in the same period. There was a shrinkage of about $4 ; 000,000 in our lard exports , of about $5,000,000 In our seed exports , of nearly' $2,000,000 in our butter exports , and so on all alcng the agricultural line.- Chicago Inter Ocean. Protection the Issue. Despite all Democratic efforts to befog - fog the , issue , the political battle of 1896 will be in the cause of protection. Complicated questions of currency that cannot be settled by a campaign , but rightly belong to a conference of expert financiers , callable of separatrngt the false from the true , cannot displace the great policy of protection to American - ican industries. leis assertion is purely dispassionate - ate and logical. Since 1892. the time of the present administration's rise to power , disaster has involved the entire country , throttling enterprise and stagnating prosperous business ventures - tures on every hand. -A healthy treasury has become an empty one and the national debt has been increased by millions of dollars. Not only this financial distress , but every day-adds an appalling quota to a monstrous treasury deficiency. Government - ment receipts lag far behind government - ment expenditures , and revenues have decreased to an alarming extent. Common sense tells the people that the tariff policy of the dominant administration - ministration is at the root of all these commercial and industrial woes. Under - der protection everything flourished exceedingly - ceedingly ; under moderate free trade everything has depreciated.-Daily Saratogian , Saratoga , N. Y. Situation of the Tin Plate Trade. The trend of affairs in Wales will probably afford a partial relief to the strained condition in the American tin plate trade , but the greatest relief that can be expected will hardly place the industry here on a proper footing. There is a great difference between the inducements needed to keep in the business - ness a manufacturer who has his trade built up , and his works running on the most economical basis , and the margin of profit to be secured to a beginner who must build up his trade and spend money in experiments necessary to get the works down to economical and efficient - cient operation. For this purpose an increase in the protective tariff is absolutely - solutely necessary. A return to the McKinley - Kinley duty is not now needed. For the first introduction of the industry into the United States profits had to be assured to pay for costly experiments which have been made , and need not be made again , but a protective duty' of 1 % cents is really needed to put the in- dustry' on a fair plane , and it is hop"d that proper steps will be taken to tlo justice to the tin plate industry as soon as the party favoring protective duties again comes into full power.-Tin and Terne. The Itencfrt of Free Wool. Goods are being brought in here , according - cording to trustworthy testimony , at prices which do not cover more than the cost of yarn out of which they are made. The grossest -frauds in under- valuation are being perpetrated upon the customs laws , and these goods fraudulently imported are placed in competition with domestic goods and with foreign goods honestly imported. The magnitude of this curse is little appreciated by the average manufacturer - turer and commission merchant , but it is probable that the present lightweight - weight season will furnish object lessons - sons which will strike home and open the eyes of those who now see dimly. Already' the cry is heard through the goods district that the foreign mane- ' facturer has obtained the goods market - ket on special grades of worsteds-it is frankly admitted that the domestic manufacturer has lost the market on worsteds from $1.25 to $1.75.-Textile Manluacturers' Journal , July 20 , 1895. The Free-Tr.tders Yor et It. While our free-trade friend are pluming their feathers over what they choose to call an increase in wages , let them bear in mind that it is not an increase - crease of wages , but a restoration of wages ; and there is one point in this connection that should not be overlooked - looked , and that is that , in most cases , the restoration has been only partial. In but few cases where the wages of mill hands have been raised are they as high as they were in 1892. Don't forget - get this.-Gazette , Trenton , N. J. , July 16 , 1S95. 1. 1 . , Cornparifnns. Wanted No IntidIOUR members of congress . t One of the new judge to I l eras , n tv years ago , a county I : he from which he hails ( says the , , t ' On one occasion 1n tl'ashlnnton Stun ) . , r case his court , a lawyer was pleading a . stirred and was maig a speech which In . the jury to its profoundest depths. v the course of his peroration , he said : { and , gentlemen of the luny , aslstand - at this bar today , in behalf of a pris- , goer whose health is such that at any be called before a r , munent he may t4 neater judge than the judge of this ' n bench court I- " The judge on the rapped sharply on the desk , and the looked at lawyer stepped suddenly and him questioningly. "The gentleman. "will said the court with dignity , please confine himself t o the case be-- to. fore the jury , and notpermit himself indulge in invidious comparisons. " + r In tints \Forit a.11ay World Brain ; and nervous systems often give v8y under the pressure rind anxieties of busint s I'aresls , wasting of the nervous tissues , a sudden and inforwarnod collIJtso of the mental and physical faculties aroo daily occurrences , as the columns of t ; daily press show. Fortify the system when . 1 I cxhtusted against such untoward even / with t ostetter'stonlachBitters.thatmost , , helpful medicine of the weak , worn out and ittlirm. L ' .o It in rheumatism. dy'speps a , , coastlpatlon and malaria. . - Bees lu a California Church. f r + ( I Four swarms of bees have taken pos- 4 I 1 session of the Mcthcdist church in r , I , East San Jose , Cal. , and it is estimated ; , i lI l that there are at least three hundred ' I pounds of honey deposited between the - outer and inner walls of the church. , It is proposed to hold a honey carnival ! tin ito i t in the church and in that way secure t enough money to pay for the damage ? ) ' done in securing the honey. 1 i II + is a Fact : i - - 1)I ) ' r That Hood's Sarsaparilla has an uncqnallc f . record of cures , the largest sales fu tlic ; y t ' f Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the Only ' i ' True Blood Purifier. Prominently ill the public eye today. $1 ; i I six far 3. Be sure to get IIooo's , . i . ! actharmonlousl't > < ! th : i Hood Pills s Tiuv d's barsapa Ina. I , 1 - f + t Largnt Dfnnufacturen o ! I rc PURE , HIGH GRADE ( I OCOASand'NOCOIATES t 4 On thin Continent , ha.ereeeireti 1 HIGHEST from the great AWARDS . iI i I . ' - ; I , w lndastrial and Food r. , I 1 1 k t t it I EXPOSITIONS , i. , ! , , ' ' IEUROPE 1 AND AMERICA. t ,1 y t s I'- ; ICaUtlOrt.la . ley Imitations of the : I f _ ' of the labels and wrappers on our I ' goods , eruhould make sure I t 'r y Y that our of memfacture. I - amely.llorchester.3laea. 1 is printed en each package. I SOLD 8Y GROCERS EVERYWHERE 1 r I I NAtTER BAKER & CO. LTD. OOACAESTEA , MASS , i " t f , tp fi f t s e 9 t l , I 1 d U. I Regulates the bowels : assists dentition ; cure ; dia- rha and dysentery in the worst forms ; cures cankersoretlrroat ; isacertainpreventive ofdiph , thcria , quiets and soothes all pain1 invigorates the t stomach and bowels ; corrects all acidity ; will cure griatng in the bowels and wind colic. Mothers , try , this good safe Syrup. Prepared by the EMMERT s PROPRIETARY CO. . CHICAGO. y - , , PROFITABLE DAIRY WORK Can only be accomplished with the very best I of tools and ' 3 appliances. b' 11'ithaDavis Separator - rater on rho farmyou are ' ' , sure of morn v and better butter , while the skhuned milk isaval- noble food. Farmers will make no mistake I take to get a I. Davis. Neat i Illustrated Ma''y catalogue mailed rnnE Agents wanted DAVIS & J3ANSIN BLDG. & 1dE'G. CO. Cor. Randolph & Dearborn Sis. , Chicago. TAKEN IhrEflNdtLY ' Cored AND the Dr. in 1870. ' nag cured thous- ' . USED ands since and wtll ' Cure you. Send i It LOCALLY f or free book , and l , I ? / - eymptomblaok. i t .1 : o NlTil Pkge by mail , N X1'0 ° a:4i : Insnffiator.X1'0 ' e. LL SYKE'S SURE CURE CD. . U cAxrci 8LDD. , CfICLC7. Eoid by all dtuFelty f , . . . , M.r OL DttT. LAROWr & 1'1f1h5T In Tlil _ Wh5E r G7tA.OGU _ F Ca I l c rannarw n p l 1 BA.SAM I . - CIccnsea and beautifies the hair. + ° Promotes a Itrslriant I ' - 2tever Pails to Bentore G h ' . Hair to its Youthful Color. t , , Cures scalp direnses & hair tntling. - , uiiOcand3LWat Drugists , i nts , 0 1 ! Examination and Advice ae to Patentability of lnretuor : . Sad for' Inventors' Guide. or how to Get araert" r.ii o'r.2szLL , WA5BI a 3 : : , D. w 1 S 9 D D G & ( ! PWARDS , easily made with emaltcapt , tar bycafe method of rystematie speculation In ; : rain. L'cok amt full particnlsr ± free. Karl Bunk References , i'.rrr50 : : . Co. . 612 Omsha 1iIdg. , Chicago. ) ZaCh&yTB I Wholesale - sale UBDEfi0000S Dealers send for Catalogues , Omaha Neb. L ' tJ Naha Works l Stove repatra for 40,01'0 different atovet r and ranges. 1209 Douglaa St. , Omaha , Neb 1 V 'w. iV. . , Omalsa--3S , 1895 'hen answering advertisements kind ] y I I mention this paper. . ' CU WHERE All ELSE FAII . , Best Cough Sprnp. Tastes Good. Uli6 ! n ttmo. Sold by druggtsts. . J t . fi r