b bt bbbi bibbH " H ' TAIM AG S SERMON. H "DESTINY OF NATIONS , " LAST H SUNDAY'S SUBJECT. H ' 'Tlmro Toll u Great Star From Heaven BJ IStirnlnc h It YTnro a Lamp , unit It H Jr < > tl Upon the Third Tart of tlio H Klvors" Rot. 8:10 11. B H 'Sfflffif ? AN ST commenta- B H /MmiL tors' 1IIiC Patrick lW a ll (1 L ° W Jl B BH y 7 A\ ' H tyrJzxW TIlomas Scott , MatH - H ! s , jyjjjrh lliew Henry and H -cS f Albert Barnes , H HfA h Y agree in saying $ $ that the star Jfe j Wormwood , incn- S ? * tioned in Itevela- H * S # tion' was Attila' H king of the Huns. H H He wnH'so called because he was bril- H llant as a star , and , like wormwood , he H embittered everything he touched. We H I have studied the Star of Betltlehem , H j and the Morning Star of the Revcla- H tion , and the Star of Peace , but my H j * present subject calls us to gaze at the H star Wormwood , and my theme might H be called "Brilliant Bitterness. " 1 A more extraordinary character his- H tory does not furnish than this man 1 this referred to , Attila , the king of the B Huns. One day a wounded heifer came H limping along through the fields and H a herdsman followed its bloody track H on the grass to see where the heifer H was wounded and went on back fur- H thcr and further , until he came to a H sword fast in the earth , the point H downward , as though it had dropped | from the heavens , and against the H edges of this sword the heifer had H been cut. The herdsman pulled up H that sword and presented it to Attila H Attila said that sword must have H fallen from the heavens from the grasp H of Mars , and its being given to him H meant that Attila should conquer and H govern the whole earth. Other mighty | men have been delighted at being H called liberators , or the merciful , or H the oed , but Attila called himself , and H demanded that others call him , the H Scourge of God. At the head of 700,000 B troops mounted on Cappadocian horses. < , , c swept everything from the Adriatic J to the Black Sea. He put his iron heel B on Macedonia and Greece and Thrace. H He made Milan and Pavia and Padua H and Verona beg for mercy , which he | bestowed not. The Byzantine castles , H to meet his ruinous levy , put up at | \ auction massive silver tables and vases H of solid gold. A city captured by him , H the inhabitants were brought out and | put into three classes : the first clas3 , H those who could bear arms , who must H immediately enlist under Attila or be H bui.cherdd ; the second class , the beau- H tiful women , who were made captives B to the Huns ; the third class , the aged H men and women , who were robbed of | I everything and let go back to the city H to pay heavy tax. H • It was a common saying that the H ' grass never grew again where the hoof H of Attila's horse had trod. His armies H reddened the waters of the Seine and B the Moselle and the Rhine with car- B nage. and fought on the Catalonian H Plains the fiercest battle since the i B world stood 300,000 dead left on the H field ! On and on , until all those who H could not oppose him with arms lay H prostrate on their faces in prayer , and , H a cloud of dust seen in the distance , a H bishop cried : "It is the aid of God ! " H and all the people took up the cry , H "It is the aid of God ! " As the cloud H H of dust was blown aside the banners H of re-enforcing armies marched in to H help against Attila , the Scourge of God. H The most unimportant occurences he H used as a supernatural resource , and H after three months of failure to capture H it lie city of Aquileia , and his army had H given up the siege , the flight of a stork H | and her young from the tower of the H city was taken by him as a sign that R be was to capture the city , and his H army , inspired by the same occurrence , H | resumed the siege , and took the wails B t a point from which the stork had B emerged. So brilliant was the conquer- H or in attire that his enemies could not Hj look at him , but shaded their eyes or H turned their heads. H ' Slain on the evening of his marriage Hfl | by his bride , Ildico , who was hired for H the • assassination , his followers be- H wailed him not with tears , but with H blood , cutting themselves with knives H and lances. He was put into three H coffins the first of iron , the second of 1 silver , and the third of gold. He was Bl Iniricd by night , and into his grave H were poured the most valuabe coin and | ineciouf stones , amounting to the B "wealth of a kingdom. The grave dig- B gers and all those who assisted at the VaVaVJ burial were massacred , so that it would never be known where so much wealth I - was entombed. The Roman Empire -conquered the world , but Attila con- , H -qucred the Roman Empire. He was , | right in calling himself a scourge , but , B instead of being the scourge of God , HBB lie was the scourge of hell. Because | of his brilliance and bitterness the . | 1 -commentators were right in believing | him to be the star Wormwood. As the B Tegions he devastated were parts most B opulent with fountains and streams H 4ind rivers , you see how graphic is this H reference in Revelation : "There fell B a great star from heaven , burning as H It were a lamp , and it fell upon the H third part of the rivers and upon the H fountains of waters , and the' name of B the star is called Wormwood. " BB Have you ever thought how many H embittered lives there are all about us , H misanthropic , morbid , acrid , saturn- B ine ? The European plant from which H wormwood is extracted , artemisia ab- fl H Binthium , is a perennial plant , and all H the year round it is ready to exude its H oil. And in many human lives there B is a perennial distillation of acrid ex- B peri ' ences. Yea , there are some whose B \-hoIe work is to shed a baleful infiu- B * nce on others. There ars Attilas of B5 - S * , * * * , * , ! , * * * , ' * " ' ' , " ' ' ' , l ' ' " " " " * ' A the homo , or Attilas of the social cir cle , or Attilas of the church , or Attilas of the state , and one-third of the waler3 of all the world , If not two-thirds the waters , are poisoned by the falling of the star Wormwood. It is not compli mentary to human nature that most men , as soon as they get great power , become overbearing. The more power men have the better , if their power used for good. The less power men have the better , if they use it for evil. Birds circle round and round and round before they swoop upon that which they are aiming for. And if my discourse so far has been swinging round and round , this moment it drops straight on your heart and asks the question : Is your life a benediction to others , or an embitterment , a blessing or a curse , a balsam or wormwood ? Some of you , I know , are morning stars , and you are making the dawn ing life of your children bright with gracious influences , and you are beam ing upon all the opening enterprises of philanthropic and Christian en deavor , and you are heralds of that day of Gospelization which will yet flood all the mountains and valleys of our sin-cursed earth. Hail , morning star ! Keep on shining with encourage ment and Christian hope ! Some of you are evening stars , and you are cheering the last days of old people ; and though a cloud sometimes comes over you through the querulous- ness or unreasonableness of your old father and mother , it is only for a mo ment , and the star soon comes out clear again and is seen from all the bal conies of the neighborhood. . The old people will forgive your occasional shortcomings , for they themselves sev eral times loat their patience when you were young , and slapped you when you did not deserve it. Hail , evening star ! Hang on the darkening sky your diamond mend coronet. But are any of you the star .Worm wood ? Do you scold and growl from the thrones paternal or maternal ? Are your children everlastingly pecked it ? Are you always crying , "Hush ! " to the merry voices and swift feet , and their laughter , which occasionally trickles through at wrong times , and is sup pressed by them until they can hold it no longer. , and all the barriers burst into unlimited guffaw and cachiuna- tion , as in high weather the water has trickled through a slight opening in the mill-dam , but afterward makes wider and wider breach until it carries all before it with irresistible freshet ? Do not be too much offended at the noise your children now make. It will be still enough when one of them is dead. Then you would give your right hand to hear one shout from their silent voices , or one step from the still foot. You will not any of you have to wait very long before your house is stiller than you want it. Alas , that there are so many homes not known to the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children , where children are put on the limits , and whacked and cuffed and car-pulled , and senselessly called to order , and answered sharp and suppressed , until it is a wonder that under such processes they do not all turn out Modocs and Nana Sahibs ! * * * 1 But I will change this and suppose you are a star of Worldly Prosperity. Then you have large opportunity. You can encourage that artist by buying his picture. You can improve the fields , the stables , the highway , by introduc ing higher style of fowl , and horse , and cow , and sheep. You can bless the world with pomological achievements in the orchards. You can advance ar boriculture and arrest this deathful iconoclasm of the American forests. You can put a piece of sculpture into the niche of that public academy. You can endow a college. You can stocking a thousand bare feet from the winter frost. You can build a church. You can put a missionary of Christen on that foreign shore. You can help ransom a world. A rich man with his heart right can you tell me how much good a James Lenox or a George Peabody - body or a Peter Cooper or a William E. Dodge did while living , or is doing now that he is dead ? There is not a city , town , or neighborhood that has not glorious specimens of consecrated wealth. * * * What is true of individuals is true of nations. God sets them up to re vive as stars , but they may fall as wormwood. Tyre the atmosphere of the desert , fragrant witih spices , coming in cara vans to her fairs ; all seas cleft into foam by the keels of her laden mer chantmen ; her markets rich . with horses and camels from Togarmah , her bazaars filled with upholstery from De- dan , with emerald and coral and agate from Syria , with wines from Helbon , with embroidered work from Ashur and Chilmad. Where now the gleam of her towers , where the roar of her chariots , where the masts of her ships ? Let the fishermen who dry their nets where once she stood , let the sea that rushes upon the barrenness where once she challenged the admiration of all nations , let the barbarians who set their rude tents where once her pal aces glittered answer the question. She was a star , but by her own sin' turned to wormwood and has fallen. Hundred-gated Thebes for all time to be the study of the antiquarian and hieroglyphist ; 'her ' stupendous ruins spread over tweny-seven miles ; her sculptures presenting figures of warrior and chariot , the victories with which the now forgotten kings of Egypt shook the nations ; her obelisks and columns ; Carnac and Luxor , the stu pendous temples of her pride ! Who can imagine the greatness of Thebes in those days when the hippodrome rang with her sports and foreign roy alty bowed at- her shrines and her avenues roared with the wheels of pro cessions in tfee wake of returning cpn- i / i ii quorors ? What dashed down the vision of chariots and temples and thrones ? What hands pulled upon the columns of her glory ? What ruthlessness de faced her sculptured wall and broke obelisks and loft her indescrlbablo temples great skeletons of granite ? What spirit of destruction spread the lair of wild beasts in her royal sepul chres , and taught the miserable cot tagers of to-day to build huts In the courts of her temples , and sent desola tion and ruin skulking behind the obe lisks and dodging among the sarcoph agi and leaning against the columns and stooping under the arches and weeping in the waters which go mourn fully by as though they were carrying the tears of all ages ? Let the mum mies break their long silence and come up to shiver in the desolation , and point to fallen gates and shattered stat ues and defaced sculpture , responding : "Thebes built not one temple to God. Thebes hated righteousness and loved sin. Thebes was a star , but she turned to wormwood and 'has ' fallen. " Babylon , with her 250 towers and her brazen gates and her embattled walls , the splendor of the earth gath ered within her palaces , 'her hanging gardens built by Nebuchadnezzar to please his bride , Amytis , who had been brought up in a mountainous country and could not endure the flat country round Babylon these hanging gardens built , terrace above terrace , till at the height of 400 feet there were woods waving and fountains playing , the ver dure , the foliage , the glory looking as if a mountain were on the wing. On the tiptop a king walking with his queen , among statues snowy white , looking up at birds brought from dis tant lands , and drinking out of tank ards of solid gold or looking off over rivers and lakes upon nations subdued and tributary , crying : "Is not this great Babylon which I have built ? " * * I pray that our nation may not copy the crimes of the nations that have perished , and our cup of blessing turn to wormwood , and like them we go down. I am by nature and by grace an optimist , and I expect that this country will continue to advance until Christ shall come again. But be not deceived ! Our only safety is in right eousness toward God and justice to ward man. If we forget the goodness of the Lord to this land , and break his Sabbaths , and improve not by the dire disasters that ihave again and again come to us as a nation , and we learn saving lesson neither from civil war nor raging epidemic , nor drought , nor mildew , nor scourge of locust and grasshopper , nor cyclone , nor earth quake ; if the political corruption which has poisoned the fountains of public virtue and beslimed the high places of authority , making free gov ernment at times a hissing and a by word in all the earth ; if the drunken ness and licentiousness that stagger and blaspheme in the streets of our great cites as though they were reach ing after the fame of a Corinth and a Sodom are not repented of , we will yet see the smoke of our nation's ruin ; the pillars of . our national and state capitols will fall more disastrously than when Samson pulled down Dagon ; and future historians will record upon the page bedewed with generous tears the story that the free nation of the West arose in splendor which made the world stare. It had magnificent possibilities. It forgot God. It hated justice. It hugged its crime. It halted on its high march. It reeled under the blow of calamity. It fell. And as it was going down , all the despotisms of earth from the top of bloody thrones began to shout , "Aha , so would we have it , " while struggling and oppress ed people looked out from dungeon bars with tears and groans and. cries of untold agony , the scorn of those and the woe of these uniting hr the exclamation , "Look yonder ! thera fell a great star from heaven , burning as it were a lamp , and it fell upon the third part of the rivers and upon the fountains of waters ; and the name of the star is called Wormwood ! " St. James the Less was thrown from a pinnacle or wing of the temple and then beaten to death with a fuller's club. St. John was put into a caldron of boiling oil at Rome and escaped death. He afterward died a natural death , at Ephesus in Asia. WOMEN OF NOTE. The Countess of Dunraven sings in the village choir. Taine's only daughter has married M. Dubois , son of the late director- the Eeaux Arts. Though brought up is a Protestant , Mile. Taine was married in a Roman Catholic church. Mrs. Sarah Frances Dick has been cashier of the First National Bank of Huntington , Ind. , for fifteen years. She was also chosen a director at the time she succeeded her father as cashier in 1S81. 1S81.Miss Miss Emma Thursby , the delightful singer , wears a handsome decoration consisting of a splendid turquoise in a quaint gold setting , which was pre sented to her as a token of admiration by the Czar of all the Russias. Miss Frances E. Willard , Iady Henry Somerset and Mrs. Pearsall Smith will be the central figures at the coming meeting of the British Woman ' s Tem perance association. Miss Willard , who is the guest of Lady Somerset , is re ceiving pressing invitations to visit numerous English towns. Mrs. Alice Freeman Palmer , ex-presi dent of Wellesley College , is now in Venice. She has accepted the invita tion of the American Missionary Asso ciation to be one of the speakers at the jubilee of the association in Boston . next October. Her subject will be "Edu-1 cational Equipment for Missionary i Service. " mmnmKKKsmmmmmmmmeaBammmmgmmmmmmmtmxzcx ' DONE BY DEMOCRACY. RUM AND DESOLATION ALL OVER THE LAND. Coiigra smun ( Jrojvonor of Ohio Arr in < i the Administration for It * ' Atmso of I'oner During the Last Tlirco Year : ! Rushing Into Debt. r g. And you ( the democratic party ) have gone on , with the treasury bankrupt. You have borrowed $202,000,000 upon the bonds of the government. You are attempting to put yourselves in con trast with a republican administration that paid ? 250,000,000 of the national debt in four years , that left the treas ury solvent and plethoric. You stand here to-day confessedly borrowing $202,000,000 and trembling as each tele graphic report comes from the markets in New York lest that money you have borrowed under the pretense of uphold ing the redemption fund shall be again drifting , under democratic administra tion , across the water into the banks of London , Germany and France. And you stand up here and attempt to criti cise the administration of the republi can party. Hon. Charles H. Grosvenor , M. C , of Ohio. \ ( • rcat Opportunity Lost. The last Congress might have used free wool as a mighty lever to open the markets of the wool-growing countries to the agricultural and manufactured products of the United States. On the this city. I , of course , have no authority to speak for him. I have had no com munication with him for twelvemonths. If business men of this city will possess their souls in patience for a llttlo more than thirty days , all their doubts will vanish at the deliverance that I believe will be made by the Republican Nation al Convention , and then they may ex pect a letter from McKinley. He ought not to write one until that time. Cor nelius N. Bliss , in the New York Herald , May 13,1S0C. Th "Sound money' " Scheme. The annual interest charge of ? 114 , - 000,000 on the National debt was re duced to $23,000,000 and the interest- bearing debt was reduced from $3,000 , - 000.000 to about $ G00,000,000. This was done by the Republican party. In three years Grover Cleveland has created a debt of $520,000,000 , the an nual interest charge being over $10,000- 000. He is eager to add $15,000,000 more of interest annually by issuing five hun dred millions of 3 per cent , bonds to cancel the greenbacks and , incidentally , make a gift of the power to coin money to the National banks. Such is his fatuous "sound-money" humbug in a nutshell. N. Y. Press , May 1,189C. Senator Mantle Looks 1Vo < t. The recent enormous advance made in the industrial development of Japan , and which is now spreading to China , has demonstrated to reflecting men who have given the subject thoughtful consideration , that a protective tariff will no longer alone successfully guard our manufacturers and wage earners from the stream of cheap manufactured products which has begun to flow from those countries to our shores , and which is at last exciting the serious alarm of great numbers of our citizens engaged in the manufacturing indus tries. This is evidenced by the fact that boards of trade , chambers of com merce , and other organizations are ap pointing committees to investigate the nature , character and extent of this Asiatic industrial invasion. Hon. Lee Mantle , United States senator , of Mon tana. HOW THE "TONIC" HAS ACTED. < r \ " . Wi < # ' : * : : X > i : - \ OSr & % * \ Cleveland's nomination wllT act as a up" " wonderfully. The Democratic pa- tonic on the Democratic party. It will perstell ns how Presidential candidates brace it up and make it the attractive are Anting each other for the honor of representing it. The donkey is quite for of and party young men intelligence . . , A , , . , , . , , „ _ skittish , and the old Dame is such an principle to ally themselves with.W - attractrve party for TOlins men of in _ Howard Gilder in the N. Y. Times , June and telligence principle to ally them- 24,1892. selves with. " They look as if the The Democratic party has "braced "tonic" " had sourer ! on their stomachs. contrary , the Democratic party not only repealed the reciprocity laws but it con ferred upon the wool-growing countries the benefits of free access to the mar kets of this country for their wool.with- out exacting a reciprocal benefit of any kind in return. Free wool was a free gift to the foreigners , without gaining from them the benefit of an additional market among them for a single pound of American pork or a bushel of Amer ican wheat. IIoiv They ' "Come Down. " The next President must be a Demo crat. The worse than war taxes must come down. N. Y. World , June 24,1892. McKInley's Sllenco Commended. Mr. M Kinley's nomination seems to be practically assured , said Cornelius N. Bliss , and it is in the highest degree im politic , as well as discourteous , for Re publicans to continue the attacks that have , been made upon him , especially in Jloro Chine-to Wool. It is safe to say that whatever ex tension of the woolen industry has oc curred in this country in the last year has been in the view of developing the use of fine wools in the place of Turkish , Russian and Chinese wools. New York Evening Post. We have not the figures of the im ports of Turkish or Russian wools for 1S95. but those relating to Chinese wools show that we imported 10o33,599 pounds in 1S91 and lf,8S 9,957 pounds in 1S92. But under Free Trade in wool , our 1895 imports amounted to 2G,0S9.4IS pounds of Chinese wool , more than double : he average of the two McKinley Tariff years. Godkin's ability as a Free-Trade liar must be deserting him when he tells such a commonplace lie as that. What "It" Wui in 'OH. It ( the Democratic party ) has become in a true sense the party of the people , the exponent of equal rights and it has planted itself upon a principle which is impregnable. Edward Atkinson at Boston , June 28 , 1892. About as "impregnable" as the posi tion of a Spanish general before the ! Cuban republicans. "It" is about . "planted" in its grave. Carter for Fair Play. We do not credit the rumors that any unfairness will be practiced in seating delegates to the St. Louis convention , i Hon. Thomas H. Carter , United States ! Senator , who is chairman of the Republican - lican National Committee , would not be a party to any such schemes. Democratic Trade Situation. The general trade situation throughout the country may be re garded as less satisfactory at the mid dle of March , 1896 , than had been an ticipated. Even prices of staples have refused to make and maintain ad vances. Bradstreet's. M BBJ JCow Inventions. j H Among1 the inventors whe received _ H patents last week wore the 'ollowing M Nebraskaiis : A. II. Erfgrci and U. 1 | Elmeu , Lincoln , Improvmner j in bieyCiflBfl clcs and B. F. Smith . Valparaiso , ) H Nebraska , the latter receiving-a patent SbBbI for an improvement in car couplings. H A mono the other noticeable iuven- M tions is a candle lamp patented to a ' VH Boston inventor ; n burglar proof bnfu ' | in the form of a revolving cylinder ; an M improved method of making bieycio t H tubing cloth , patented to a Cleveland , < H Ohio , inventor ; a color screen to enable l photographs being * taken in colors issued - / | sued to a ISrookryn inventor ; a kitchen / , | implement patented to A. Sehlieder of * i | Sioux City , Iowa ; a pinlcss clothes / < BIb1 line , tlie creation of a Texas inventor ; i * " | a collapsible cooking * utensil made in t M the form of a telescope drinking cup , y H patented to Miss Estelle J. .Jennings of " H Chicago ; a combination neck and car / H warmer patented to Mary E. Wiggin of S , M Hartford Connecticut ; a soft tread i H horse-shoe invented by James Freyne | of Philadelphia ; an elevator mechanism M comprising two parallel vertical tracks BFv | having elevator cars which pass up ( Bj fl one track and are switched over and . , Kfl pass downward on the other track , ' ' | these combined elevators being in the > - H form of an endless chain ; a new fashion - } | ion hook and eye for garments patented - H ed to James J. Springer , of Philadelphia - M phia ; a maehin efor easing and flavor- B bI ing tobacco patented to a North Caro- j H lina inventor. ' H The most curious invention issued * " H for some time , however , secures a fer- H tnent for ripening milk consisting of , H practically pure culture or flavor pro- ' - * - . H ( hieing acid bacteria , the patent being H issued to William Storeh , a Dane. B Any information relating to patents < H may be obtained from Sues & Co. , ' , H Patent Solicitors , Bee Building , Omaha , ! i | Nebraska. "BBbI ; < BBBJ firand Kxi-tir.slou to llulTulo July nth - , H The National Educational Assoeia- ) M tion will hold its next annual meeting { H in Buffalo , and the Michigan Central , JBBJ "The Niagara Falls Route , " has made- 1 H a rate of one fare for the round trip * H plus& . ' .00 , association membership fee. fi H Send stamp for "Notes for Teachers , " / H containing valuable information rcia- ' . | H tive to Iluir-ilo and Niagara Falls , and , / | 10 cents for a summer note book , fully H descriptive and profusely illustrated of > SH the Summer Resorts of the North and , H HH Citv Ticket Oilice 110 Adams street , j H Chicago , 111. O. W. ItUGGLES , H Gen 'l PassV and Tk't Ag'L H . / BBBJ Many a tioy lias turned out had hecuusa -BBbI his fnth''il.oro down too hard on. the i > - H grindstone. f H Fortunes are made in speculation : SIQ0 aVAV invented in one investment system will earn j H you fJ per day. Write for particulars. t H Chandler & . Co , brokurs. 100-102-101 K'asota M Female hootb.acks are numerous on the _ / H streets of I'aiis. \ H = = r < H Think .vhat a Ion' ; train of iHeascarnc from H impure blood. Tlifn ie"i > the blood pure utb ; - k > | \ Sarsaparillafl The One rue Blood Purifier. All druggists. 31. H Hood's Frills are always reliable. ' > crntt. f H The coobicss is refreshing ; - H the roots and herbs invigor- H ! citing ; the two together ani- H mating. Yon get the right H combination in HIRES B ) Rootbeer. M Ji l unJ .v hf TfeCb rl' H. niret Co. , Plih x 'trlphli. 9AVJ A 2jc. package maiC4 * 5 cal'ons. Sold eTert'Vb - . jj BBJ 9 SMOKING TOBACCO , 9\ M % 2 oz. for 5 Cents. f V H ? CHEH00TS-3 for 5 Cents , f ' H 9 Give a Good , Mellow. Healthy , f H © Pleasant Smoke. Try Them. * 6 VJH LY05 k CO. TOBtCCO WORKS , Darbaa , 5. C. fi H How would you like to M bathe in a bath tub 250 , ' - M feet long and 75 feet wide ? M You can at Hot Springs , | H South Dakota. M Book about Hot Springs free if you writs | H to J Francis , Gen'l Pass"rAgeat. Burlington - * H ton Route , Omaha , Neb. flVJVJ DlpfOMAHA * RUBBERS ! ' Wi ° 3i PMPPHI-P ! Jfi Bl Illnstrated cataloene ebcmlns WELL 7/ / ; , AUGERS. BOCK DRIL1S. IIVDEAOLICJ I j J JBBJ AND .IETTEJG MACHINERY , etc. f/J j \ BBBJ Sent r bzz. Have been tested and / / I i BBBB all icarranled. JfJ J j BftBJ Sioux City Knglne and Iron Works , * j00&a \ A BBBfl Successor * to Pech Mfc. Co. SrvtSss aS 1\ BBBI Sioux City. Iowa. j < si = > § iUj BBB1 THER0WELI..VCJttsrMACHJsr.iiTCO.3&4 pBHI Kit Wet EIenti > tre.U Kin-ai f'i- B BB nENSiowiAssiKSfffa ESuccessfully Prosecutes Claims. bVBB Late Prlndpa. afominer O.S. Pension Bureau. BBBj E 3yra jahut war. lSa juihcatingclaimi. atty since. 'SBBJ flDIIIII HaMtCured. Est. in 1871. Thousand ! * AVfll Ll I 11J III cured- Cheapest an J best cure. Free Tkiai. 'S - 9fl | wi twin statecase. Db.Maesh , Quincy , Mich. w TBI 0jM { ! "d WHISKY > " ' ' " • ' " " • ' B"S Iflfffll UrlUtfl FBEE. Dr. E. 3. MOOLLET. ATLANTA , CA. r | | W. > \ U. , OMAHA 2.n 189(3 ( 1H When writing to advertisers , kindly j H mention this paper. - ' fl CURES WHhRc Alt tlSL FAILS. E3 flfffll Best Cough Syrup. T&stesOood. Tj&Qgg BSBf In time. Sold by druggists. eg- } H J ' bVbVbI