Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 12, 1887, Page 8

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| 1 t T —— T e T — e ——— THE OMAHA DAILY 'BEEK: MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1887 THE DANGERS OF DOMESTICS. Rev. Bavidge's Startling Words From His Pulpit. HELL HURLED AT DEBAUCHEES. Awful N.(Ill in Homes ¢ Refinement a Palaces of Wealth and Supposcd Purity Rev. ‘Harsha on Labor. A Sermon to Employers. Rev. C. W. Savidge addressed his lust evening's discours t M. E. Church to the employers of domestic s vants. The text was taken from Collosians, 4:1: “Masters give unto your servants that which is just and equal; knowing also that ye huve u master in heavel od here speaks in behalf of the lowly and needy. He speaks for those who cannot speak for themselves. He said his mission to carth was to heal broken hearts and to open prison doors, And we know he has a great field even in our midst. God speaks these words to you. People are 8o liberal of the gospel. They pive it all away. Let every person here who hak @ servant, weigh these words of the Great Teacher well. God looks down on this eity to-night and sees that the scrvants are mistreated and wronged “The moat of our servants come from across the water, and when they land at Castle ¢ den their ' trouble be Many @ runne and agent at this gateway fo have to account for the wrongs don ignovant und helpless. Remember, Keeps a record. Again, that they are servants in yo idea is forced upon them at every turn They are made to know what a stingiug thing itisto be poor and utterly depenc The mistress of the house has her servint has her proper pluc ence of position gives no one the right to en strangers will to the God slave the human soul. It is our mi: iere 10 help and 1Lift up, rather than to sadden, de grade. Some are made to do unnecessary work. Muny fecl that the servant girl must work fifteen hours a day seven days in a weelk, or she will ot carn'the paltry sum she gets. When she fiuishes the long round of daily work she is told “to wash the doors or windows,” or something of that sort, though the work is not needed. Aw 1y girl said to one of our ladies the other d; “1want to come to your honse and re Take it to yourself. How would you enjoy life if it were one eternal grind Your work would be done better if your scr vant had an hour or two 1o rest every d Others have poor and insuflicient fpod. Tt servants wait till the second tuble, but often the first table cats up all the food. 1 know of one family in this town who cannot keep servants from this one fact, that they won't give them enough to cat. And these arc folks who put oir' lots of style, too. It seems 1o me, if 1 were u brass-collured dog, I would try to it out in better shape than that, poor girl in this town has been cheated —cheated out of woney she cock stove and h tub. A man who will cheat his washerwoman or his servant is getting pretty low. But this is & thing which many society and ehuseh peo ple do in this city.” If some of you sur- prised that chureli members showld do_such # thing as this, T would say that the man who only mukes a profession of religion will do as mean things us the devil wants him 10, Again, as the servants work is now ar- ranged, in m s she has no time togo 0 worship ¢ The majority of the ser- is have no Subbath, The people whomi they serve slecp lute on Sabbath mori t th mg, 0 tl 3 giuning their waorl y wre of necessity late in b And the Sunday dinner 1s the affair of the Hundreds of girls in our hotels and privaie homes never go to church, and many cannot go. The employers £0 ingome o W are ap ory do- vout, but a piety which will allow its ~pos- sessor to seep so late that the servant is kept 3 little from the house of pruy worth. And last, but not least, the servant has her ' good name and che taken from her by her emplo you doubt what I'say on thi come to me and 1 will prove it to you. Knows it is tru Some of you know that among the neighbors that the reason your wife has to change girls so often is that” b husband is such a low bred cur. The s ants won't stay in the house with you. Not very far from this church is s beduti- ful ks within the past year, a trusty servant girl had charge of the house, und ‘a man had charge of the grounds and the stubles. "This man_offered one insult after another, till she finally told her empioyer, and he said to he he handed her a' pistol: “Blow the top of his head off.” The man in the stable had nothing ore to say L would to is of precions Point, God id 80 do you know it it has gotten out d it were only with the Let Yy this ¢ many homes. A most respec lent servant gi churche She wealth and so- stable men T uin of poor u o typical ried on in ble and excel 1 unites with one of the city is employed in a_home of led refinen The oceu- place and a name I hly The girl attends the services s 10 get 1o rest of heart., ssed shnce she united with d's people. She «un stand it no longer, She tells her pastor that for two years she has been compelled to_ be the mistress of her cmployer, und asks 1n the name of God what she shall do? He tells hier to bring her trunk to his house and he will find her a good place. This minister takes hier to a phice which he believes to bo above reproach. Tho owner of that home punts of that home hay n the church of Jesus, spected veople. faithfully, but Wo years have stands well n society and in the church. At the end of two years that servant girl is sent to Chicago to give birth to his child. And do you know that this awful wickedness is going gn ull through ou gociely aud our chiurcliost T kndw now what Josh Billings meaut when he said, “The more business 1 have to do with men, the better opinion 1 have of dogs.” ~These two reasons are given for the moral ruin of so wre dependent and they are ignor; But I add a third and it is the supreme reason: The awful depravity of the employe Looking again into the text we see plainly the way they should be (yeated. lasters, give unto your servunts’ thut whl and equal.” That means humane, Christian treatment and God expec our hands. They should look upon our ser ants as our cquals before God, however un- equal they may _be in education and intelligence. . We should treat them w8 having immortal and us those who will stand at the us. And to bring this about let the pre nd churches speak out. In the name of ( i8 this state of things right or wrong! If it is right, let us applaud it, but if it is wrong, let aloud and gpare not. Many a soul is going down to hell, and th achers ure us still us th Ve as 1o the iee8, They s, “I'he people i delicate o points,we cu h upon them.! et men stop these sins and 1 will shut my mouth, but not till then. The devil just Iaughs when a preacher takes up some ol dead issue, but when he strike: e living, awful sins, he is frightened. Then, too, your homes must be converted God says to-day, “Come thou and all thy house into the ark.” ~ And this invitation is addressed to the man of the house. iis. d will go to hell if the men arenot saved pure religion bestowed by Jesus, can root out this supreme selfishness in the'sin- ful heart. God send us u wighty revival in our churches. In clusion this text tells us the reason which I gave for treating the servaunts well. - “Ye have a master in heaven. The recording angel has been writing, You will stand before the Judge und the poor seryy you have cheated or degreded will stand your side, and with infinite shame and morse you will hear the awful word 1 part,” and you will take your way to the regions of the “damned.” Iu the name of Jesus 1 ask you to turn your cack on siu und set your fuce as a flint toward heaven 8o to Workingmer DRev. W. J. Harsha preached last night the second discourse in his eries to working men and women. After acknowledging. his obli gation to certain books, whose fucts and ures he would refer to freely, he took for his text Exodus 2:15: “He sat down by the well.” Those words refer to Moses. Oue day he walked out from the Palace of the Pharaohs, where was his home, and saw one of his Hebrew brethren grievously aficted and abused by an Egyptian. - The labor ques tion then was as g a8 it is today. Moses lovked about him cautiously lo see that 10 one was looking and then he rose against the oppressor and slew him. He hid the body in the sand and thought no one would know of the oceurrence. But it was discov- ered and Moses was compelled to fiee for his life. He came to a cool, shady spot, beside one of those wells which are such a blessing in a hot country, and there he rested him- self. No doubt he was deeply pondering the burdens of toil, the complications between capital and labor, and all the dark problems which have engaged the minds of men from Homer to Henry George, It was a v de: lightful place for rest and- meditation. Our Lord afterwards found it so when he talked with the woman of Syclhar at the rim of Ja- cob's well. Letus go a little more minutely into the labor question to-night. We are interested in the moral uspects of it just as Moscs was, ‘That hour's meditation at the well may have pared him for understanding God's wise provisions for the good of laborers after- wards given from Mount Sinai. And we may Le profitted by our study to-night. Iintimated to you last Subbath evening that one of the eausesof the present diffieulty between capital and labor, one of the reasons Wwhy we have such a unemployed cluss, is found in the remarkable growth’ of citic Undoubtedly the building of a city calls for a large amount of skilled and unskilled labor, yet such vast multitudes flock to the modern cities that it is impossible to supply them all with work. This is un age unlike any that has gone before, Upon the Nineteenth cent- ury have fallen certain changes in the social and industrial conditions of mankind that al- most amount a revolution. We live in the age of great citics. In olden times Rome was the only great centerof population in the world. ~ Now that city is left quite in the shade by London and Paris and Canton, while our own metropolis is fully her equa loscly at London, for Three hundred years ago she ‘'was considers bly smuller than . the present Boston: 200 years ago she had about the population’ that is now cluimed for Chicago; to-day you must pile torether New York, Philudelphia, Brook- Iyn, Chicago, Boston, St. Louis, Baltimore, Cineinnati and San Francisco to make a Lo don. It has been said: “More people live in London alone than in the whole of Holland; more than in Sweden; more than in Portu’ more than in Ireland or Canada: more L000.000 than in Scotland.” What an 1 nicnse concourse of people in an few square miles. Maccaulay bousted that in his duy he walked through every street in the ¥, but to do thut now it would be neces- sary to walk 2,500 miles. Three hundred and fifty more persons may be expected to sleep in London to-night than there last night, 2,500 more tha ago to-night, ry month adds acity of 10,000 uhabitants X y roneof 1 M0 inhabitants, This may be taken as a fair sample of what is going on in a small scale on the continent new republic of Ame » great drift of population is toward And it will be more and more i men have a stronger man. and a crowd of men mpl attraction th more than ten, — So the larger a_city becomes the more will it draw men into its busy vor Thomas Jefferson called cities s body politie,” and they are sores that will never be healed Mach 'y has lesser men needed in the count; d the number of , and consequently we have flocks of in_the citic What shall we do with them? What do they demand to have done! Now among the u employed there are some who are archists, and these simply demand that capital shall be destroyed and capita killed, Sueh persous set fire to Paris in A 1871, and destroyed immense amounts ailway property in’ Pittsburg and other & in 1877, Aind threw the bomb a year ago that caused such death in Chicago. Every ctable workman is opposed to s, und we may simply t they are to be re e are gome who demand thut all be changed so that in some way workingmen all beona par with capitalists. These are called commun ists. They would have all things in cornmon. They agree to this extent, though they differ greatly as to the means of accomplishing this end. “Communism abroad has sometimes taken the assin's knifc or pistol in its hand. On the 11th of May, 1878, it attempted to take the life of the emperor of Germany. Now it is possible for governmental enact- ments to remove a portion of the burdens upon pure an- such Wy of anarch d tothe pol ists tl Then the governments shall the working classes. The enormous armies abroad might be lessened, forexample; and so the taxation of the poor might be reduced, In our own country certain w money circulation might be devy the need ployed. hen there . is the anti-poverty socicty, which claims that there is somcthing radi: cally wron, fundamentdl principle measures of d to help and give employment to the unem- of property. Georgo would have the use of the soil as e a8 the of the at- mosphere and claims that it can be. His ble, but it seems AN ne lized'in any state ¥ less than the ange there are the var associations and for m: the union and the Knights of L very worthy associations, men like Mr. Powderly and more of a dispo- sition to heed bis wise dircetions gud re- quests, the labov problem would not by dark a8 now it is. 3 But I haven't time to attempt « solution of the problem to-night. That will come up in the course of our discussion. 13ut meanwhile 1ilds and labor them I have Engineer's hor seem o me If we had more there are two or three things which work- ingmen need to know. The first is, just what labor is, Briefly it is the employment of the strength and ingenuity of man to make the thin id conditions of nature better. Then they need to know that a man has an abso- lute right to the fruits of his toil, whether it be a silyer dollar or a piece of land or what not. This gives labor as the foundation of capital and propeity as it undoubtedly is, Then they need to be disabused of the old notion that labor is the creator of all _values. abor would never make thistle-down as valuable as cotton. There must be an inher- ent value 1 a thing before labor can bring it out and in se it. Kven in the clay which the potter uses there is an_antecedent possibility of ha ing under fire that makes the clay with the trouble of moulding it into a jar. Labor augments but does not create all values. Above all, the laborer needs to know and ctice Christ's command, “Love thy shbor as thyself.” This will go far to ve the labor problem. Diebold Safes., nd see the large stock Meag- n’l A have on hand t., Omaha. DEP THE MAYOR The Board of Public Works Will Wait pr r Mr. Broatch, Mr. Balcombe, chairman of the board of public works, was scen last night by a BEg reporter. “What have you to say regarding theaction of the city council in re-awarding the con- tract to Regan Brothers to finish the work on the city hall busement £ was the first in- terrogation. By the terms of the new contract,” re- lied Mr. Balcombe, “the mayor, contractors and board of public works must consider be- fore anything more can be done," “De you think that the board of public s will coneay 1 As tothat I cannot say. T have made no anvass of the members und therefore don’t know. Besides I am not prepared to speak vegarding what my own action may be.” “Possibly the conduct of the mayor in the matter may have g ral to do with that of the board,” suggested the “Yes. that may be possible. rd are but creatures in’ a le sense to the mayor and ¢ bound to conform 1o the wishes and latter. Itis understood that the mayor will take immediate cognizance of the action of the council Saturday night, and that the aunoy- ing and vexatious subject will be ended forthwith und forever. cidenberg’s Figaro, the only 10¢ cigar for 5 Ask your dealer for them, Max Meyer & Co., wholesale depot. Young People's Society. The union meeting of the' Young People's Society of Christian Endeavor will be held St the First Poesbyterian church ou the 13th of December, It is expected that an interest- ing sessiou will be beld. SENSIBLE PRESENTS. Reoogxizing the special intgnixg which is alwafis made at this season of the year for Boys’ ar ew Year’s Gifts, we have decided to meet ! fying to economical parents by offering ys’' and Childrens’ Department. The large au%‘})leasant room Suits and vercoats suitable ¥ this want in a manner which must be highly grati soecial inducements in our Bo hristmas and devoted to this department and the excellent li usually attractive assortment and our prices will for this week *Childrens’ Good Overcoats, i s 4 to 10, at §1. , for which other dealers ask § ht makes selection easy. eave all competition out of sight. 50, Very nice Childrens’ Ulsters, brown plaid, neatly made, sizes 4 to 10, at $2.25. A splendid CassimereiOvercoat, with adjustable cape.of same material, at $2.50. Another good Overcoat, value for In finer grades we have a few small lots of very chorce styles which we offer at marvelously low prices. hese goods compeld us to mark them at less than one-half their actual value. milar to the above, is with Ast One lot of little Ulsters made of fine Chinchilla and beautifully trimmed with braid, sizes 4 to 10, at $5.75. One lot of very fine / achans, with satin lined cape, a beautiful garment, for $7,50. " Another very fine little Kersey Coat, with beautiful fur trimming, for $7.25. No more and appropriate and useful Holiday present for Boys cain be suggested than one of these garments, and we guarantee th.nt these styles could not be duplicated in any first-class establishment for less than double the price. A large variety of Boys' Overcoats aud Ulster s In Boys' and Childrens’ suits we have an immense vari ety of styles and qualities from $1.60 up. s, from 12 to 18, at equally low prices. able. The figures were sceming low enough hefore, but we want to sell them out before the season closes, There Mens' Furnishing Goods and at lowest prices. Omaha, and we guarantee our prices lower than asked in any other house for like qualities. Among the many articles which we carry and which would wake useful presents for gentlemen, we enumerate a few All Silk Sus d at 75¢, usually sold at $1.50, Silk Mufllers, in elegant patterns, at 75¢, worth double. ‘Wool Mufllers in great varieties, Japanese Silk Handkerchiefs, at 25c, 35c and 50c. Silk Umtb las at all pric Fine Jersey and Cardigan Jackets. re also some splendid suggestions for presents in other departments in our large establishment. In Neckwear we have already won a wide reputation for selling high grade and choice styles at most popular prices. 15¢, 25¢ and 50c¢ can not be hought for less than 50¢, 75¢ and $1.00. wchan cape and cuffs, a very stylish looking garment, also, at $2.50. Some of the fin (-] For theHolidays we have made extraordinary preparations in this department. All goods marked in plain figures and at strictly one price. Nebraska Clothing Company, Corner Douglas and 14th, Streets; Omaha. have an un- Weoffer It would Le excellent The brief season left for the disposal of grades we have reduced consider We carry the most complete Stock of An ingpection will prove more foreibly than ever before that we are the leading Mens' Furnishers of The Prince Teck Scarfs, which we gell at Caught a Confidence Man. Tom Lacy,a confidence man and crook, who has been makinghis headquarters at the City hotel, was arrested last night while try- ing to work a young country fellow out of & large roll of moncy. Lacy made his boast that on the night before he had *‘done agreeny for §200," und asked “Big Fan,” a bawdy house keeper, to help him i the pres ant job, his scheme being to drug the liquor he gave his victim, Fan refused to help him nd OMcer MceCarty getting wind of the af- fair, nipped it in the bud and lodged Lacy in jail. Death of Alexander Cruickshank. Alexander Cruickshank, aged fifty-five years, died at Pasadena, Cal., on the 32 inst. He was at one time a resident of Omaha, and was acti S\fig d inthe dry goods busi- ness. About fi ago he went to Pasa- where he le a wife and two sons. POWDER Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A mardel of purl- ty, strength and wholesomeness, More econom- ical than the ordinary kinds, and cannot be sold in competition with the multitude of low gost short welght alum or phosphate pawders. Sold_only incans, Royal Buking Powder 126. Wall St., New York, Pianos, CHICKERING, KNABE, Vose&Sons Instrumente exchanged, rented and sold on Easy Payments, below FACTORY PRICES. Instruments slightly used GREAT BARGAINS Max Meyer & lim.,l Omabha, Neb. Omaha Medical and Surgical Institute AL o1 h N. W, Corner 13th and Dodge Streets, FO I THE TREATMENT OF ALL Chronic and Srgical Diseases Braces. Appliances for Deformitis & Trusses Hest facilities, apparatus and remedies for suceoss- £l treatment form of disease requiring Med- ical or Surgical Treati Forty new rooms for patients; best hospital accome modations in the west. WRITE FOIt n Deformites and Braces, Club Tumiors, Cancer, C: ty, Paralsys Eye, Kar, Skin, Diseases of Woman a Specialty. BOOK ON DISEASES OF WOMEN FIEE. ONLY RELIABLE MEDICAL INSTITUTE MAKING A SPECIALTY OF PRIVATE DISEASES! All Blood Diseuses successtully treated. Syphilitic moved fro without mercury. oss of Vital Power. ny be treated at ho munications confid s sent by mail or press, securely pucked, no marks (o indicut tents dor. One personsl interview preferred. Call and consult us or send history of your cuse, und we will send in plain wrapper, our’ BOOK FREE TO MEN Vous Diseises, Tmpo- 118, Gleet and Varicocele. Address, ¥ nha Medical and Surgical Institute, or I Nekeyga, o, 1y Do, The 010 Reliable Speo inlistof many ex anco y institution in this 1oke Wh con- koing o Hot Springs for treatment of Private or Blood can be cured [or rd st At our Private Dispensary. By hia reatmantn Pure, Lovely Gom A oxim, free from sallown ket cruptions, 0 perfect heaith dan Ot Yiire Teling and all oy cutvd: Bloating Hend Tkt Goneral Dewlty, S B T ‘Gvan icleration ¥allingan R ldne, fe ‘b1 Doclor ete., spincements, Spinal weike ud Chisnge of Lite, C; Acute or Chron on of the Evelide and Kar or Near on of the Lids, Scrofulous Ey e TR At Abaos : Dinuness ot th e e, mors of Lid. D mummtion of the kar. Ulceration or Catarh, Intarnal or Kxterual Deafness, o Paralysis, Siogiog or Roaring noises. Thick bru NERVOUS for Study or I Permunently BLO0D'A 50 the outh and ' itho | . : e and strictly contidantial. Medicine sent free from obServaiion to all parts Iy Cured When Consultation of the United States. Correspondence receives prompt attention. No letters answered unless ecompaniod by four cents in stamps Send ten cents in stamps for pamphlet and lst of ques- tlons upon. private. special and nervous dis eases. - "Perms strictly cash. Call on or address, DR. POWELL REEVES, No, 824 Cor. 15th & Harney Sts..Omala, Neb Display at thelr warerooms, 1305 and 1307 Farnam Street, the largest assortment of Plnos and Organs to be found at any establishment west of Chicago. The stock embraces the highest class and medium grades, including STEINWAY, ORGAN FISCHER, LYON & HEALY PIANOS BURDETT, STANDARD, LYON&HEALY Prices, quality and durability considered, are placed at the lowest living rates for cash or time payments, while the long established reputation of the house, coupled with their most liberal interpretation of the guarantee on thelr goods, affords the purchaser an absolute safeguard against loss by possible defects in materials and workmanship. LYON & HEALY, 1308 & 1307 FARNAM STREET* Plows, Markers, Hooks,| Grapples, Siide iron| - Book - Keeping, Penmanship, Commercial Law, Shorthand, Telegraphing M)atioati On THE CAPITOL HOTEL Proprietor Omaha Business Callege, IN WHICH 18 TAUGHT and Typewriting. nd for Suilege Journals 2 §. E. Cor. 16th and Capital Ave. haBes LINCOLN. NEB. HIMEBAUGH & TAYLOR, 'ICE TOOLS, | Wire Rope, | Buffalo Scales, . Scale Repair Shop. | AT | rons, Clydesdules s of their get ¢ and ¢ ‘ms. of 1l & ~ OMAHA. | l e lor i selected with refer nd pedigree. first prize at the No All our hors: be showr N <. &0, FRY & FAHKRBAH, York, Neb. stute, B, & The best known and most state. Location cential AT Hendguarters Tor ¢ AND 5d public gatherings, E.P ROGGEN Proprietor. HORT-HANDY it here ‘Best and shortest ay . Free. Frol. 4. N.GABBLEB, Box 404, Bl.Lovia | I A BOONTSMEN ER EVILS MAGICAL PECIAL NOTICES. b o <8 Omah 17 108 f in_Albright's anne N2t st ~and wilid lands ¢ WM. Harris, ov Hr eity prop- 1hth st 5 1 JARYS to excliange for (mata propert W acres 0 western lown, o e erty. nber- ance 20 acres i Pawnee Co., Nebraska, 100 in cultle vation, Niacres In Buena Vista Co., ance lowa, 1o incume in b WNeb, 00 in cultivation, in B mberance, 100 ucres in Na proved. 160 ueres in Cass ¢ wa, improved. 100 weres i Osborne Co., Kansus, no incumbers ance, ston ada, rabam, Creleliton Dls, 29 14 MICKNEY & CO. make a speciaity of iy n North Omalia, for sle ot rent at Citizens' bank, 2408 ¢ ing k) We offer us a special birgain 160 land four miles from stock yards, ¥ acre, on line of U, P. R. R. .\h'a'uguu; JOR SALE o) at 4125 > perty for sale with Charles O, 's B 16th st L) A st corner, uham, Creighton b l Tots and hiouse, corrier Walnut hill, #8003 sell or trade, - Grabam, Creighton bl i i ¥ LU ) TE 3, bave anything to sell o exchange 11t it with C. C. Spotswood, 30t 8 16th, 064 00.00 cash wanted in n f Omaha's best realt, o) 3 : will d large profit, - Address O, 1 Bee 120% OR_trade or sale at o bargain, lot 11, bk G Sl Sndudd.” Graham, "Crelghfon ik, BUFFAL® BILL, Carbolic Smoke Ball Co : 1take Kront pl xtating that Thavo used r- bolie Smoke Bail. 1 would not be without one. ‘For a sudden cold or throat trouble it is inval: URDIO- N fhet worth ten times ite W fat nun%rlr‘aaf some Catarih, Neurnlin, ( Tung Troubles colds, otd, Tostanitly relieved und Fpeedily ‘cured.” One ball erally suiticient. Mail orders: and dcents fonal. A gIvon AL OUT Omce b BN rists, BETWEEN EW YORK AND Clasgow via Londonderry, Liverpool via Queenstown. Are Strictly First-Cla; and amo T A A and stoorage Passenger Unexcelled, Evi Fegtd for tho comfortand conventence of page sengers studiously cousidered and practiced Steamers every Saturdny for Glusgow. City of Rom #nils for Liverpool October 1t 18 the Inrgest and finest passenger stenmer attont. Rates of pnssage for il clans s line. Hae Joon exci Drafis for Fr booka tickets, or SON BROTHE Omnba, J. B. HAYNES, % B ——OFFICIAL; STENOGRAPHER, Third Judicial District, 87 CHAMBER OF COMMERCE. SteckPiano Remarkable for powerful sympa. thetic tone, pliable action and ab- Kol Tnrability, 30 years record, wiurantce of th il X Tence of these instruments, WOODBRIDGE BROS. T proscribe and fully en- dorte Bl 3 as the only Specific or the cortaiu cure o Tty dis G HINGIA TTAM, "Auisterd We nave sold 11k G for many Gnd It e iVen’ the best of satie MDY e & €0 Chicago, $1.00. Sold by Druggiste raas Chamical Co. e SCIENTIFIC = TREET, GLUCK & WILKINSON. _ “WEAK,UNDEVELOPED PARTS OF tlie od¥ cnlarged and strengthened, Full part Tataent scated free, EILE MED. OO Tt vy ot N. ¥ SUFFERERS rroMNERVOUSNESS Jxx ot Sifcr: Teault of over-Work, fudiscretion, clce, address abovey A MAN UNACGUAINTED WITH THE GROGRAFNY OF T 086 relation to lines on of fle central ponit & i Wion &t torminkd Chicago, and conth West, Northwest and Bouthwest, s the true link'n that transcontinenta, system which itates travel and traflic between the pol middle invites i Davenport, Muscatine, Washington, Wost Ll erty. Towa City, tle, Knoxvill Cotncil Bluff The Great Rock Island Route Guarantecs speed, comfort, certainty 1 distinguished for ite atone ron. t. It pa 1a accomm: rains consist of superior Uay 1an Falace Parior and Bies ining Cars, providing deliclous Tiicago aBd AL Joscph, Atchison ang 1 Reelining Clalr Cars. 103 mane The Famous Albor‘t I.o‘a Rou'» i polis an Diid Past ¥ pr ta for touriste crtown and Sioux g lands of inte tho Iock [sland ofTers superior velers between Cincinnatl, indian. CABLE, 1 Nasagur. £ 87, JoNN, AoV Manasr. o

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