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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 5. 1886.~TWELVE PAGES. T SAN FRANCISCO OVERDONE. | stutet it b weoncony e st vt s eron i | WETHODISM 18 NEBRASKA, : A Great Rush at Omaha’s Lowest Price Boot and Shoc 1 8 VICEW e 1e party departed with | is ever burning on their altars before the R Housg_ the conviction of an evening mis-spent, | wooden image of Confucius (Confuschia, G THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: T wanted 10 see anything naughty the bowers in wood n Orowded, and the Men Are Underpaid would w Fay Templeton and the AN OPIUM DEN Early Days a L Mascoite” amd get the worth of their | proved to be a small, dimly lighted ro | (o) TAKING IN THE TOWN AT NIGHT. | Monts . { s L r snoring prosirate | |1TS TRIALS AND TRIBULATIONS. | z M All the Avennes of Oconpation Are Over- | and determined that the next time they | the guide called it), and hisright and left Tho Struggles of the Ohurch During the | ¢of the most fourishing products | forms gave eviden f the potency of of the coast is i the drug, while two others were busy A Doy at a Watering Place—A French FLEA CTi smoking 'themselves into oblivion, One | The Ploncer Proachors—The ftin o " - ‘lll «‘ r' \\In ; |»' with His Knifc "“‘ b dadeuiio, of then, miio was vory communicative, ~Ihe Methodist Work — Church 1318 | e et e g - R 4 e bk b i tends to the belief that the t s 0 s that he smoked six-bits worth a day b A Bandolined Bundle of Blank Nt QINariHIRALING. 1%, K8 « ani | and ho went (hrough the whol process Buildings apd Col- Honest Goods at Low Prices always wins., Everybody enthusiastic css— “The B « hina- | prefers to taen his attenu meth of preparing the opium and ting " h & b plication to those who the drug costs £15 a poun vic [ Written for t tay Bee.] SN AN B or his presence dt « 3 t 10f it must be con il le e I'he wonderful i ¢ ol 1odi - o U e fowg, | 1 e Fpan e o il | enee OF S0 BBeREAbID (AR, | thronghont he worid e s SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR THIS WEEK. miles of the dusty, dreary gebrus interrupted - the midst of a pretty 1oug rinutes will exhaust it. Th town—General Howard, ocieties by John We: | 109 Pair Ladies Slippers at 1 ) Pair Ladies’ Kid Button Shoes, worked bu tton holo 1330, iy phenomenal | 800 Pair Laties' Kid Toe Slippersaf 30 A only €1 per pair, of « ounder of t t 200 Pair Ladies” Kid and Goat Stippersat 50and 60, WO Pate Workingmen's Shoes at 5 $1 and i country, makes the green valley | speech by the sndden exit or nervous | ¢ all men, some of them female | great founder of s seet charac ( ¥ Ba e Qentine: Dabile TN Nliooy 0 ) g A 3 A P s of Saeramento doubly welcome to the | elutching of his luly-love asshe discovers | impersonators, They haven'tthe remotest | the new departure from the forms and “.,H‘.]|'|”.,'|v|"'|l bl {.:”.”“;"\‘ T ""I"“ Goat Batton Shoes 1000 Pair Men's Dress Shoes at $£1,50, §2, $2,50, &e., &e Siirwec 1inveler as 1o 160ks about him tho [ & bite. It is enongh to rob him of all in- | iden of s business, and their gro- | customs of the estaplished chureh as i A el R e ot of e oy “Avproney | S ARG | R e S o | b b e e o | Childrens” School Shoes in Endless Variety at Astonishingly Low Prices, BIE of the peeuliar orcepiing onil that | AR doal of wisreprescntation s | ko i i constant Jangt of meaningliss | saw the need of w beter fite, and o wore | [t will be a mistake to buy anything in the Line of Boots, Shoes or Slip- indicates the proximity of the city of fog | been done concerning the sounds like the noise of a hundred tin | thorough consecration to the calls and g it Goriatics ATTIRE OF THE SAN FRANCISCO LADIES, | pans being pounded. There is no scen cods of christianity o mado for 1 o) . ’ el 0 and st As thoforrybont touchos the | ARG i oSO o agen. | SV o are Eurtain, and whon 8T8 15 | St und or hix followers, rorgor s | PEFS before inspecting our immense stock and Low Prices. wharf, and- lic.is borne along wi ® | ingly loud, with striking contradictions | killed he s flat for a sceond or two, ok e (i, T 4 $ ) A ost of the surging, serambling crowd, | in costume, such as a parasol and te | and then gets up and walks off, This in: | Personal matter, a living issuc to govern ) <] ‘INg [o) . T ouling of Steangencas Is augmontod | (ross with & sealskin eoat, -Dhis 18 uttorly | eltdes nearly all that is to b scon i the | 81l the ucts of Life. The ostablished Our facilities for securing and offering baiga'ns a e unequalled. by the bubel of noises that bursts on his | untrue. Of course sealskins are worn; | Chincse quarter, althougn the guide told | church rgpudiated his methods, some of " . SiouBtbed. baf, wnil comparod with | 1N fach IRy, rG, So commot 8110 geeln |, BEE et QU s IRAAOR O | thent o e i GLIS work, anc Chlcago Bal’galn Sh oe CO'T‘ pany: which tho sound of the locomotive was u [ 354" iy ‘hite drossos, how. | thuy, tamie over without the lative e | then trusting in providence, and guided vor never scen, or any of the blue low_ them tho dotails, whatever | yy 51i'the good fnflucncos that he could mere whisper, He 1s searcely reassured | and pinks with which women usually de- | that term implied as 1o Bi locality until « gap in theerowd | lyght to adorn themselves. Neat tallor. | No one thinks of leavingSan Francisco | control, he started out almost uncon il = e gl o S = =l reveuls to him that he is walkin, ¢ | made suits are worn the year round, and | Without a visit to Prosidio, sciously to find a new brauch of the e it only noticeable thing about a § GENERAL HOWARD'S HEADQUARTERS. | Church of God i rather is being pushed, along a double | § b g : ) wureh of God 3 5 o] neiseo woman's toilet is its nattiness he ofiicers are all quartered in sueh | How wo i Ao s Franciteo mamity tllt o s tos | i otlors 7o il uaecaion In oo | ow wel o sucosedod. tho wh ampions of Low Prices. Home of the Shoe on Wheels. BRAZEN-THROATED CABMEN, sot well forward over the head so that the | seldom fall to their lot, and the well kept | Mistory of the church with its millions of — whoso stentorian lungs, as they clamor | front is on a level with the face. Wraps | lawns and tropical wealth of tlowers | communicants, and its 25,000,000 of ad = AT dhiroh | hemlbre Ik AN SRR neAn tioas | hea ? o % i (ol ke o Recessry adjunet Ko | KD IC plate 1o b Fomembored Wih | heronts, tolls o the world. - itinerant | trisives whe e caro of the ghtiel | e Hom 1 St SR it oy | Uil i comfort, and a grate fire is the consum- | longing, Genetal Howard's is an ideal | motto was *“I'he World is My Parish,” | {laios that meet weekly, The bishops | fully up to them in numbers. Like all | at them. They Were very long, and out- mutiol of I 3 The trade ds, | home, sitt i a perfeel r h + " > WOl " i 5 . RSB Ce; A0 S1GI0NE HIBIRBIE, 00 HEIE | oy o e e a.f,'.?.-'.‘..i“»”"‘i home, sityted 1nu perfeet labyrinth of | i he tried to mstil this motto into_the | go to the smail and conforences | fronticr work, Nebraska, to some extent, | lined in detail the wook's (utics, such as rapacity, lie is more than human if he | constant and penetrating, and drive Was Sorved by an imamaeulnte Chinaman, | hearts and lives of all nis preachers, This | alike as will be seen fron the_names of | i still mission y ground, as these men | the amount of salt, pepper and other 1 4 ] | T Al b L FoULBeU tlie TnoEnnt Wor ko {hose who presided heve in Nebraska | conld not be supported and churches | condiments to be placed in certain arti- n sottic his bill without venting a few | society to uter the “linglish style, chasre in its produced the itinerant work of that | (WS W o PECCERE (hlbeely 0 dozen | built by the people who are often b cles of food; the amountof flour required RIRNGIAIBEY Yomuths on. the Gxorbit THE WATERING PLACES, spointments, but entirély homelike and | ehurel. Al its bisnops and ministers [ V) o [ HItE 4 HbhTos st . . ejnculatory rem ks on llnv um}m THE L o ol 0va B URGUS R oIl FoRizad. | Wit ni s REmbRliers ot tie SORBORLANCCGIE Wit ! S preachers to meot them. Bishops Ames, | ning life anew on the homestead, o for biscuits and rolls for each meal rates for conveyances. Hackmen are | N\ S HUF TG Stands th old S T e et atts from a consent in their work to be itinerants | Scott, Morris and the peerless Simpson | emption or the tree claim. when butter was to be nsed, ete. Ther Fhent th only. ymes who luve chanes | ALt houd of thoso stands thy okd Span- | pitahty tit is Inscpacable feom with no settled place of abode_or Tabor, | eame’ by stage, and - wagon, and “hovse | L cnukan uibisg was a plice for overy pan and pot, and BRSOt TN RUE R NGO U5, PO | HGRE ONEL CIBIRMOBLS & i v i | (FoR AT NAId kDT R 6 S1GREH i Iias; || DR N mRSIBHHITEs ¥B/EOI0 nny pRibBY, | noiito clie FembtostRre jBfSUICAWOLL {ans LAoR CAtiGt TOLIRKE L Brmimosty| SRCIWHS RRonIHetl Slyaltiie Ao of except the street-car lines, which are | itsclf, though vast and tuxurious, is best | which overlooks the bay of San the work, in any country where they are J"i;l:'*'v""' a8 “""“'.“‘“‘"“'.”"l'l‘. e | 1 e e d for a use in the Srobably the most numerous and complote | described by the word homelike,” An e | cisco, visible beyond a hédge of gloy most needed. The bishops, unlike any | gIgioD K er D e seps el e LU OGN el LRI S R vl it L ! yt LU s et Gt iees e Po the lof ] P B Y | Omaha conference after the sey ion | have a place of worship, and the ehurch [ a speeial injunction that everything was to be found anywhere, there is no other | OF fIeer A brightness pervades it, f”"{ goraniuns, To the left is tho band stand, | others, have no diocese in the sense of from Kansas, and met a feoble band of | extension soeiety has aided many strug- | to be kept neat and elean, and any failure mode of getting around, and the driv SHiticaN HeWeritions: muies 1hos ante bl | inents bo s saats OF |SASsbEILAB] |..‘.'.[:u Episcopal bishop, but from year to yea en who had cons ed_themselves to | gling churches.” This socicty 15" located | to do so would be deteeted by the master tako advantage of the mononoly to | onrthly paridise, ahd ono. that no tray. | and on both sides are cory sumnier hionse | are assigned work tho world over. Now | this great work, but thiey wore strong in ‘,‘,'.' ’,'v Lulpha undor tho "‘l i 0 of Rev. | of the house, who would “inspect the $10 for u two or three hours drive around | bloods congregate and where urs f isturbed by 1 ; 3 RS RO RTiaL [ CVen over the te wd | as . Its objeet s two fold, to | allowe ceelve company one n never scen here, and it scems as though | Modjeska was n central figure there dur- | visions that arc apt to be invoked in such ters in a restricted sense follow the same | the heat and storm, the wild beasts and | and loan for the same purp L small | Sunday night to herself provided sho some one might' confer a boon on the | ing mid-summer. Last week there surroundings, MINNIE RATHL ruly. unless in cducational institutions,or | the wilder men that roamed oyer the vast | amount on, the chureh at ‘\_lm\‘mw of | would” return by 10:30 p. m. Violation A g ApRbTiB Ak W1l s ToNTLIBTH A2 | Gunte, G5 CONREroRs o ERORIbION R O s Noting as chaplains in public mstitutions, | PIins, and they went wherever a family | interest, The funous Chaplain MeCabe | of the rules was punishable by her being snaire residonts, and roup o sub. | Amorioan dootor, who. lind spont alt. wis A Ti6 oT ADRbE, o1 T ity ok (hoy met move | WS ound o preachy the zospel of WJesus | Of e Union aring, was lomug corneeted | Kept o duty Sunday and refused con: Ireward for himself, by introduc- | life in Japan and who is over in the in- [ Detroit Free Press: “They may say | every three years to a new locality. Chist to the people. - Among Jibieniy S i el o OGS G BROEUS IR, ing them in San Francisco. terest of the government, taking a brst [ what they please,” snida Mount Clomens | , This method of work transfers them widnling XA Rl R oo U Y onth B \'”“11‘“1”““ i LIS I CHELL LY There is probably no country in the | look at his native land since infaney, and | belle, “abot t the nuisance of bangs frequently from the Atlantic to the Pa- | w Revs, Duvis, Smith, Lemon, Tlart, | MUCH more on five yenss fune e uilt l”:l!"*- e world that nas bee inclimed to be disgusted withat; Grune- | the aony of ears sawed oft with milli cifie coast and from the extreme north to reh, Giddings, Miller, Roberts, Whit 'j!l.: iis \\I.-]\‘u.m_x.»_‘_wlv il nl}\g I “jl arshness of the paterfamilias wag HaEIRE Uonish o 6T s et [ g necnyctionts sawerlo i el AV o ot ior vico verss il emintie iea [ FItalintd s a0 vy Guora e cthiots. (L et lonna yoeg not oonfined to Hissel i rought IntGRfal plivy i lionflio ey el noble lord from England, snda Freneh | me was just pure fun to swh sultof this constant chango i8 thut on | Thescoamd to stay as Mothorism usunlly | SmOunts, but each church stood onits | the rules for the bidehambor which hig u every ro. | reputed baron, who leans over the tabio | theotgn ‘with Sinday with one of | #ll the frontier, in plam and mountain, | docs. 2 BT et for i Sbihcl. | owm merlts, but this wasthe faorite plan | to. daughiers “occupicd.” The' lacard spect as co. It has its merits | and eats with his knife, while he sits side- | those ashioned bustles,” wherever civilization gains the slightest | tor toconsult him about the introduction | Of Bt. Aetuage 1o alC sn churches | was of the same pattern as those in other and demerits the same asany other place, | ways in his chair and scans the occu QAR BN tE NS Sy bRrS e epotonoh foothold, and, indeed, among the sav- | of Methodism to hisestate. He suid he had “"““.-"‘.";'filv'“"“" $2,000. | reoms - thronghout — the house—twelve hut whilo its drawbacks have heen, fof | pants of the dining.room with u persist | e Y he many rentders of U Froo [ ages the Methodist preacher 1s found, | used every efiort to keep the heresy as b ;‘J'l"_"‘—'f‘_'l_‘,'f L o bt Al Lo IR TS s Aty he most part, curiously ignored, its ad- | ent stare that might be considered 5 with hns horse and saddle bags, his bible | called it out, but he betieved it had e e s \ A LI SIS s (gl have been e »d'In daz- | impudent in anyone but a scion of no 0,10, she interrupted, frowning, | 2nd hymnbook to progeh the doetrines of | a slight foothold, and he wanted o erush R : placard was suspended by ribbon zling colors by le; lowine | bility. His manners are not more outre | “you musn’t yut 1t in the paper now. | Methodism to the pioneer, the miner, [ it. s solicitor mquired if he » R AT s e e ont D word-painter r ad with | than the rest of his personnel, His morn- | But it was really too dreadful Yon see, | and in the tent of ‘the savs 3 | that the hated dissenters were ther LG Gl DUl that he could | card covered the top of the gluss. Tt was the won-drous ereations of their imugina- | g costume is suit of white flannel | 1 had gone to Chicago. to visit my friond | Kansas and Nebraska we rie: was answered in the affirmative, i IChR DIGE IR eRbI AL At Lo el 8l pchably Blated i WiRtIpoRitlon By sty tion rather than deal with commonplace | with & coat of enormous plaid, bnt his | Katie B, and the first thing she told me THE [TINERANT d e, shaking his head decidedly, | Ministration and I believe also since he | father 1o insure its being scon long and facts, and who delight in layimg the foun- | ehef d'oevre is a black o suit spotted | was that I needed building old me | o5 hore with the first white covered | “thero is no help, Had you consulted [ 1S left to s WA s o "'," yitimo thutioithior ofitliosy dation in the minds of the ummnitiated for | with white polka dots, which fascinatod You were i delicate healths” we jn. | wagons, and when there were not enot me earlior we might have prevented it, [ S secre Wiz i L DR EEE i S R B IR s O ENDLESS CASTLES IN SPAIN, the eyes of all present, and_even threw | quired e o in this territory to form w_respectable | but once here they come FoTpig | ve churches a day throughout the United | ranges her hair or gazes into the depths destined to be rudely overthrown by | the waiters out of their usual professional | + “Oh!no,” she answered impatiently, of " minmsters, Kansas and | this aggressive, tenacious charict States, Rev. Dr. MeCabe is one of the | of her blue eyes, she” cannot help secing rough collision with the reality. Many | immovability. These little cccontricitios | “I didn't set out cnongh. and . where 1 were united Vi purpase; | lie markod the! progress ofithe denom): | oSt tircluss uilisuccugstuliof men, Hisf thut plioard, Any young dudy, mivst ROl r B HGTOibs GAE T ABIEBE SenottinL | [ ILmBt e BN Tahr R el e Gl e A yorolunited Somb Do ; i L the denomi- | jiyq work was to labor far hospitais and | know how often, then, those rules meet 1 o i Baron from get- | did set out 1t wasn't in the right place. corrcetly informed, the fivst | nation from the first, and Nebraska was | b 3 lod 1dicr o H y a good luc rtune hitherto un: | ting neck and neck with the swells al- | What I neede amhe riehtvlace | conforanco was itdiin. Nobtaskw, Gity | moiexception® o/t rule. Somajof the [ homes for woundud soldiors, bis noxt to | the oyes of tho fair ocoupuits af - tho known, but one or two days’ trial is con- | most the first day of his arrival, cithor | new syl bustles: bt it Urday | about 1 L e Juvisdiction of this | strongust breachers of the denomination | pUI Lo chiurelies porday, And i s | rogus. ey o thiss i vinemg proof that there is not clbow | owing to_their accessibility to anything | mght and too late to buy one, and I | ¢onference extended oyer both territor have hren sent to this territory and state. | 8, GG REREY, KPR N aushiers i llinelrain ot room in any of the various professions or | not Ameriean or the Frenchmun's assuts | eouldn t have. gone to chusen the nest | like the population! which was ve D Weatwood. and Do Le Matyr, and | Nebraska Methodism, “and his present | cosmetics, paint, powder and other such trudes. ance, which was cnormous, and it 1s £ Kute hadn’t offered ay home | Sharee, so w e iatian Binnian | Millertiadn akiEne eI e, aad (S0l (st ERloE BLUDD DI0TRIS okE il ST On e eny O on e \ vhicl ormous, and it 15 | day if Kato hadn't offered to stay home | sparee, so wore the wdist_organizi | \ rig lintnay for Methodist missions, and he scems Tight-lueing is prohibited, : probable that by this time the entire park | and lend me her bustie. The next morn- | tons, but still in 1858 there were fventy- | Lemon, and Shughter, and - Phelps, ard o\ it i one of the. most overdone of any pro- | of Kl Monte resembles a junglo. Spoeak. | e sho eame ihto my room holiing s | tWo - organizations of the . Methodiet | MeKaig, and Thompson, and Britt, and | Ky tbesuecessiul. ) o R R cLconanicl 1ty must be worn fession in Francisco, Men come | ing of tl < hitish-brown b S WP | ehureh within the terrritory of Nebras ghton, und othors compare favorably | , Kov. Dr. Lomon has bultin wis work | {ilose-water s the only porfuniory por- from Ex . Ireland, Scotland and | . SAN FRANCISCO BLOODS, O aia T "Tha aow | Moro thantthroc-fourthstof tiiase: ware | with thallsame numbsriof. preschors:in || S suuerintandont of misslons n wostorn i mittad, Germany, as Well a5 all points of ‘the | it might be interosting to know that they | patent, olastio, adjustable, India rabber, | South of the Platto river, us that portion | any. conforence, and there are many | SEPRERG WUN AR CHGURE I G 0 | United States, and at once make for the | are the most common stock that San b ot ey i bbers | gettled more. rapidly than the morthern | others scarcely o whit behind these prom: | framed corps of assistant SOUCRAILYE ab] astibivico newspaper oflic v mode of employ- | Francisco can pr and indicate \ worn once, and its perfectly spien: | torritorv. Plattsmouth, Nebraska ¢ ment men. L e L LG e ment somewhat gentecl and not over- aces thy aristocracy is that | did. You'll be certamn to like it.” Table Rock, Brownville, Beatr i "o adncationsl work of the Methodist ) 1t notthern Noraska whore Rev. Bhelvs, ) primeordur, 0 e ol fatigning, During the Grand Ariy ex- v © than of lineage. They what makes it stick ont®' said I. | other places in the south and Omaha | ehurch in G S TS| PR, T o0 || e LR T Gl L PO cursion the applicants averaged three | have the Anglo-mania as bad as their ir,said she, ‘Look here! ¢ [ and Bellevue and Calnoun other | lected. There have been some failures, [ 404 many 1 hiosontharnoontorlullowod. day. Many of the resident ladies castern cousins, and the most populr o s Dt et mouth v the Tittlo | dlaces in the north, had oranizationsat | such as are incident (o now statos, as to | $1e¢ where, thab puncy of mon s o Eaemoniahionidiboithroivn thabg Cronse their exchequer in this way, young man at EI Monte appeared to be | pipe aud began to blow and blow, and THAT EARLY DAY, location, and needs, but these are bemg | V¥ by Mo charti ol ol satrdionitigigh oy sevoral of tho ‘actresses. earn addisjonal | an Knglisinan, who, by tho wiy, was | Wben the el pafed away abous httoen | 1f the preachers wore engagad in some | romedied. Tho first. vluce soleoted for | 218 othis Dol whose | *The lights in this room must be ex- e onayiby 5 B b ! ¥y nen she ha ed away about fiftcen | I I guged in some | ror ; eted for | o do not oceur to us just now. This | tinguished at 11 p. m. promptly. ) cy b- ly shabby in his attire and whose | minutes the had swelled out to the | secular employment during the weck, | a school was the new city of Orcopolis, & ling. T Sl i disposcd of ot often | chief accomplishnient appeatcd o bo | S of & mesl sack. ey s Hght ag s | 48 he must be it the commencement, 16 | situated at the interscction of the 1. & M. | 13 011 e W I wimentnhe, by Tl e g for {ts merit, but because the business | lawn tennis, though sometimes ne would } he, siving. it a Title tap | gain. a livelihood, they held services on | Tailrond with the Lincoln branel, just £ T T i | G S g QUL RRRgIiefl ) managers, with the discrimination char- | gratify the urtistic eye of the dudine i Pl i bbath, ahd often during the week FosaithotRlivttoy in Oassicoumtysy It was || /OF the, Methodists tin Nobraska, bub it frotiring af and after rising in-the acteristic of their kind, buy it for its | Whose inseparable attuchment he was, by L Ehutd 1ike Siich | and formod olassos, Which moetings ard | oo previous and died. The siitution | SyGNS thie Sherky anthe (Hetialion | WS | L Jie cha cheapness. The lying full length on the beach, face down- | an_animated background.’ 1 objected, | the first in o fn all new Mothodist | at Peru followed, enginered by Rev. Mr. | 9f the younzest of the denommalio DAL 08 T yaodanilioohemy CHURCH CHOIR FIE ward, rooting in the sand with his nose, | *It's rather too lively for me.’ * | churches. Roev. H. T. D. now of and others, but. whon at tho m- | HoW. oy, sbout o contury old, whils | bor ocgupied b Horiandimothicr, is another unyielding one. To quote the | perhaps scenting erewlish, while a group |~ ‘Non id’she; ‘when strapped | York, und one of the most Successtul i oti tho ibishop i theyMestiodist| nosiotiho otlicrs nuimberieyera) sontiits n tho fon g not axompt, and hois Syords of who was questioned on | of girls, lofling in the sand regardloss of | on it's as firm as & rock. Sxran] e T U D aclimad to. adone | 168 in H.f.x, tovush_the work unul | told how often o shave, whit kind of the sul » don't go muh: | white fianmiol dresses, SULvoyaa. him with!| ool e foe K ing on me and|| Was first stationod ¢ Omaha: In_ thoss | tho. child it was turniod over tothe state, | Shereshall bau churchiin every VIUAES | cravata to wear, oto on churches, and the result 1s they are in | ¢ Imlventning thabworlaihavais - Aa 5 ) LELBDR: K . B HoncORN B OmplinAEINSLhogo and hamlet from the rising to the sctting e cy are in ul yearning that would have made | said it made me look like another being, | days the ministers changed every two i hool, and sun that shall honor the » of poor condition. Mostof the clivirs are | Osear Wilde writhe wath cest B o R thin brososas ea oo el e A danas inf thn i no Wharo (acel| (o s Lo AL Dol OEE 0 AT AIROTIOS Literature of tho Higs, voluntary.” This was rather astonishing | . THE YOUNG LADIES o, i sho, “only, perhaps, is n | Zontloman charge of very many of the TWO COLLEC Chrsttip sadioriotmon, mponIEr G, ::x‘ A\:lrnlhu nn‘lm:ix‘:h{l!”»lh wealth, :\Il4l1l‘|s of ll!x» r:ewn BauIre their {ullllnns to [ hittle—-a ry little too” big. But you | most important churches” in - the state, | now started in the state, one at York, | strumentality the millions of men on_the ) e asmistaken, | make them pass muster, for not m a | needn’t mind that; lots o' girls wear | #and is u good illustration of the working th of tie Platte, and the other at C nCe sarth, thr 1 the \ but in a city where ay is_ the gala | single instance would the face of any | them even bigs By itmorant_ system of Methodism. Rev. | tyal City. o i, an 4| Zuo0.0LLIGOBKTL LITOREA LU0 PF day and the time for excursi tic 3 e et J g 3 > A 2 Aev. | teal City, on the Union Pacifie. The col- | of his gospel t shall “make them wise 1as0d o Ng 7 i : e ay an r exeursions and noticed he hier fortune, and the S0 L wo a8 it was, and I| Willinm M. Smith was the first presiding | oee ot York has been under the ehargo et Gronar W, Firo | kissed on ‘the fect, and later to huve tho pléasuring of every deseription, people | male vortion is what young men nsually | must say swhen I Jooked at my shadow | elder of the district. He is now of the | of Rev, Eidwa e L A ALHPNE HOST- | ground before them kissed. are apt (o be borne with the curtent and | are when they required to put forth | going to ehureh, and suw how stylishly it | ehureh south e R s T RUNNING BY RULES. The Bible many tender and some reely hesitate to ponder whether there | no- eflort for themselves, dunimies in.| poketl ont behind, [ folt protty lofty ny- THE METHODIST WORK i the ninber that have been entolled as — terrible passages concérning kissing, the a right or a wrong way, or trouble to | white flannel suits, their brains run to’| seif. When I got'to church I had to sit | is divided into what are termed_ confer- | students on its books and the work it | Curions Plac in a Balti- [ extremes of which are that of Mary Mag- give u thought to aigbt but the present | flirtation and their “energies to Tawn | on tho very wdge of the seat, for, as Katie | ences, Theso embraco all the itine I e o T Sl more Man's Home (thos, Kissing moment, Ih faet, life in a large city, and | tennis, One young fellow, who was | had suid, the ‘patent i iatabie’ was chers, and they mect once o year to | it ha’s been, us most young institutions [ There are a good many queer people in e Savior, and that of Judus, especially such a ety as San Francisco, | mentally put down Tor a dressed up dry | firm as a rock- ! But it was such a | receive their appointments to their f aro, somewhat ombant bt the elec. | this world. Just at y timore | betraying him, s goods clerk taking his summer outing, | comfort to_know that 1 was properly | Of lubor from the bishop, and to attend | tion ot Rev. R. N. McKaie, of this city, | contains as odd a person s Charles | To kiss one’s sister is not purticularly A JTLBUL, (VANISHING VISION, turned put to be a wealthy banker, one | built up. Well, w ongthe bustle | 0 the spiritual and temporal affairs of | gs prosidont, and. the enlisting of several | Dickens’ Mr. Dick. He is i book-keeper [ unpleusant, but it is only a bread and short and profitless, with nothing fo indi- | of the high eligibles, but dven ater this | and I—protty comfortably,all things con- I The preachers are stationed | pich mon into the board of trustecs, | Who runs his house by rule butter allair.Good, but not sweet, T cate after it has gone out that it ever ex- | mformation it seemed impossible to iden- | sidered, uniil the sermon was nearly | at the will of the bishop, for only one gy ¢ life to the instituti 55| of the News who recently visited his r Kiss one’s cousin 18 somewhat difli isted. To take a stroll around the city | tify that bandolined bundle of blanknoss | through. | But just as the ministor wis T, but tho minfstors moy by his ap. | Becireasain * Tt debte will b pai idence ¢ I T (TS 0 OOy T "[:“- z:'fi'h all Sunday ,“_‘w'finhf or a peep | with anvthing but a ribbon counter. Sat- | singing ‘Finally, Brethren,” I teard (oh! | pointment stay three yo In the same | o fund of $100,000 raised toputitin fivst- | Placards of rules were placed in every | particularly if she comes unde the de- o, iha ¢ um’l‘i‘;-ul .llwbjl_‘l\:\on. ono '."d‘p.’." I'4 uh:»a:,. llwll‘hllllllflrls' i1 roy) I heard-=-a sound.” o= way the presiding elders are appointed | cluss condition. The number of students | room for the guidance of its oceupant nomination dangerous. But to kisssome- W to believe that the | concert in the El Monte music hall, fol- " we exclaimed *“That was | with the e at they may remain | ] vonr or three huadred, @ and for their violation sundry penalties | body elst sister or cousin, tha Sabbath s wppropriated by the clildren | lowed by the weekly hop. " Only a'fow | strange indeed. Did the preacher drop | four years in their we B Conter | e o e oo | are provided. Tn the ball the forlowing | passcs the other as 1 ; ‘:l“m"-iln as & day of carnival. Every wuylus (f’.".k~l"“ Illou_r. s the men, as | hi Bibler” , ence again divided into districts each | not quite what the present condition of | rules were posted, the pl 1t being | cake surpasses bre P usual, were in the minority. The Cali- | - “Oh, no,” she answered shaking her | in charge of a presiding. elder or sub- | the institution demands, Mach is o rod in the crevice of the mirror in | first and the re T & SEMENT fornians still adhero to tho old-fashionod | hoad. " Te ik most dveadful sound. 1 s | bishop to whom are committed the tem- | basted from. the onerey. and wopuiarity Tat-rack: ad blood with an ar hin ful , from the comic opera hall | mauner of holding their partnors in a | ~-the—hissing of u teakettle,” = ™ poral and apiritunl care of. all the | b tha mew prosidant Sand it 15 eortaty h inside."” of :lul\‘lu.v‘x,l":-s|)(‘l_x!‘3| ny‘lurme uud_«-}r ulgln <~|nl»|x\‘cPl||slm'u.l u[lmun-l touching “That must have been horrible, we | ¢hurches in ‘his district, including the conscientious, hard work and se wipe yonr feet Sydney Simth says: “We are in favor round ¢ t dives, many of which | hands in the approved castern style. Tho | eried. memb the oficers and the Joeal flity o n N hn il i . do not take away our um- | of a cert amount of shyiess wh lve tho added inducorhent of being free, | ladies of Kl Monte set very good oxam. | O, you vor k Everyboay. | proachors, - Thoso men travel ovor their | Seeh £ slace the coloie on a fivm foot. | bre R R hng where the straggler 18, expoota e ChI0 18080 FArY & - you can never know. Everybody | P! [lese me over their | much to vlaco the college on a firm foot- g 4 : kiss is proposed, but it should not be too geler 15 expected to | ple in the simplicity of their dr turned round—everybody, 1 mean, but | districts four times a_year and usually . se put yeur umbrelln in the rack, | jong, and when the fair one gives it lot it order liberally trom o women who serve | ilannol is the & mo. - 1 lookod straight at tho miniater, 1 | spend Saturday and Sabbath g each ap. | ik GOLLEGE AT CENTRAL OIT the Dorlor by the first door 0 | o “aiministorod with warmth and e around the drinks, San Francisco has | wea y | suspected, L knew, T felt, what was going | pointme They thus -know the exact o N g ry; let there be sonl in it. If she close cc or four cozy theatres, but no mag- pret 1 of inex- | on and T didn’t dare to move for fosr of | condition of every church and they counsel | ©f the North Nebraska couforence, has arlor he found a similar poster. | W yos and. siel B B, cont ones, i fow ghoap places hat aro | por i, t i a worse oxplosion. 1 1ooked s cool as T | Wit the preacher, and witk the quarterly | §Pout the, samo endowment ws that at 08 _fastonod. o tho suade of & Arop: | s clust s Krontor. Bhb shotld bo.aaro f low varlety divos rot degroos | by the ghters of millionaires, al- | I'd burn to a_cinder, Seford that awful | stewards, loaders of clusses, local preach f fot Several Biner o8 of | brougsht into conspicuous promincnce by | o humming.bird runs is bill info & ho of “worthlessness and obscenity, ~ The | though any onc of them could buy' out | sound at last died uway in & long, long | ors, Sabbath school superintendents and | Dited t the college, and with individ the fight under it. The placard reads e Dt ]l oa T AT A e Tiyoli is resort for tho ma Astock | half “a dozen of the over-d I fro- | T wadd T fomd mysolt stid alive s"5 | trustoes, Lha presuling olders men | Subscriptions, fof s new enterprise, T y syaucklo=dsgp, - bus dalloais have company brings out popular operas the | quenters of other resorts it AR alive, T Iy B osted. menin | good showing. The trustecs are men of “Wleuse do not soil the photograph ‘}; Mo ;" ARG FAROLYAG LML AN Y ar round, and though the pertormance | — The Californian excels m the grace of | “Oh, 1 shonld say it wa 7[R MR e Pl Tocal: | standing and’ character, und will do all 1y 10" READ | IOl MO IS HOFEY S OREI BRETR e uent i L s 5 served us u sor OSPITALITY, encil | i 5 by ros 5 and O] ik 0 5 oy AL g e, for they ar - . 9t compansation betwoon aots. Tho | ns ‘tho onthusiastio recaption given the | il te na suralight e o tead ponoll | theao months by eirond ) sraims ahd | professors and the teachers is highly | . SULAYSTAIRRODIIER, JOE S ks ; 7 2 Bella Union is a notorious place, fre- | G. A. R. visifors testified, Tho' city was | selves. Mer tkilling thom- | Iu privato couveyances i tha, rursl dis | spoken of, und tho location is quito favor | i,ons o th side-table A How to Keep the Boys at Howme. quented only by men, and the storfos of | u picture that pen cannot do justice to, | about military co 't talk tome | teicls brings thotyln contuet with nearly | yple, ™ T citizens aro enthusmstio in | PRI G Thove your ohair from [ St Paul Globo: “how shall ¥ koop my its daring and license huye been such | with its endloss vista of bright colorad | both ears sawed off than to o throueh | Perhaps no men in & year answer so | 40108 their utmost to muke the college | (hq position it ocenpies bove at hom ked a matron of ai that feminine curiosity could stand it no | flngs strung from one side of the stroot | the viewsitudes of one. of those ‘putent | muny Juttors of infuiry from emigrants | Sugeesstul. Bt Glase. the piano after using it 1 and experienced head of a tamily longer, and occasionally a party of ladics, | to the opposite. Every place elasti in. S0 et | arsons not piily seeking Jocation m | , Lhere iz another institution in Red Wil- [ g put the music where you found it [1 To thoy, madsmy! Inter disgmsed in ulsters, and with veils thick | itself the “headquarters ot the ( e 2 e e hrese Duon o o wel. | Jow county still younger than the others. | YO0 found it out of its | put it whoro e, before committing him- onough to hido thd hottest blushos, has | from the Y. M. &, A. {0 the Vienna' beer —— SIS A (Y e IO, IR M| b York™ colls supported by “the | {0006 boen known to snesk into th buck re- | gardens, and evon the city prison and | StHdY the Tastes and Habits of Your | 208 5001 Tund of the comntry over | Nebraska conference. |Itcontaing ill the | *Ny yisitors entertained in this cosses of a box, giggling and fluttering | morgue declared their reddiness to re- Uhlidron, o ovel No tuan ornbably | territory south of the F 88 | ofore 8p. m, and. batweon th Hou with the halt-delighted, half-timorous con- | ceive them. Pittsburg Dispatch; Parents should | have contributod more than these. to. the | 1% a8 the limits of “the We Gand 8 p.m. and after 10:30 0w, Any selousne su{dn}llr{-w)llh’l]ung“n ughty 3 DOING CHINATOWN study the tastes and habits of their chil- | settlement of the conntry, conference, which occupies the whole | Gisiior culling at any hour when no o wnd full of frightened oxpoctancy “for | is wbout the lirst of the many sizht-sco- | dron mor fully than they do. By so THE PRESIDING ELDERS wostorn part of the state tertainment 1% atlowed will be compeiled Mhat might, b rovenlod to them of the | ing infhiotions that the visitor indortakes. | aoing thoy muy, in mujority of - | B the annuat conferonce become thycab- | THE MALEAVIED UNIERSIY to await the arrival of the honr when | X% s our usband is not able to rent ¢ i ) ey arts out full of gay expectancy and f inet of the bishop in ‘stutioning preach- | is the child of this latter conference. It | some mewber of the family s permit e us'‘and have it in the b ho . are destined to be disappomted of any- | ready for unything, but after he has | Stances, save th s in after | o Phoy judge of the fitness and tal- [ is situated in Red Willow county, near | to enter. Aciveansng usve 1610 Hiohousgng. Xoar thing very shocking. A'duo of burit | tranived a few” miles through a maze of | life. Indeed, the o few individuals | bnts of the reseliers in thoir quarterly | Indianola, in the township of Bartley, | “Young men will pleass observe the | "UNC" 0\ 1 ory moderate eiroun :‘.’;;fi:'flm sitions aphoar, 'm(‘;mm\» sonlo | narrow courts :.;..1[(\;"1!1 lars and s who cannot trace whatever wrong habits | visits and of the wants of the peoplé. | named for Rev. Allan Bartley, who hiis | rule that ro visitors are entertained after | gepeel = B e elligible rubbish, and disuppear, to reways, and inhaled the compound un- 4 i "ghaw “ 5 ~ Vi ese advisers the DPS WC rivel 00 acres of l or gifts ) p. m. Wl . 5 arofollowed by succtssive song-and. | town till ho is ready 1o tambie over, he | Under which they were trained. Thoy | soarcely bo able, WEGEHIEY I8 ROV, I | 0 R0 N oDy state as yet, but it | from occupying this parlor except to on- | oSt SGOMOY ical, at the same time the dance females, who are only remarkablo | pays the guide §2.25 for his services. in. | M8y also be able to trace whatever of | {0 OLS S G FCHeY Gy itten | will doubtless, with the patronage of the | tertain calers.” Mas trodYe hiun, lo piace rsiolioson for their entire absence of talent. One | vests another dollar in a Turkish bath | good there may bein them to the same | patiently to all representations and then | W obenske contoronan. a oody of | ‘e rulos aro rough on visitors, hut the | it boye' trawers, make the ratolies of after anotiier course woman comes for- | and packs himself in ehloride of Hme fill | cause such mistakos as putting children | Meir desision is fnal, Of course thero | active, earncst, bard workiug men, como | reportor learncd from a regular visitor to | 1 FELG TR o, T0Bk 08 K0 _fiaee ward and bawls, without any voice what- | he thinks he is fumigated. Then he tries | to the study of music_or fine arts, when | are a few preachers in every conference the Gthor tustitu | ono of the yours ladies of the house that | [heith sod place then whera thoy will be ome sentimental ballad. It is | to reason himsclf into the belief that he | they possess no genius for them, are in- | that are popular, and ail the stations they are rigidly ¢nforecd JRM BaM hen. fie. DA 8ie Aaaled, curious how the of these | has spent the evening very picasantly | excusable. Not only is the ehild’s energy | would ¢ ito secure them, but th Thé Jittle band of mimsters assembled ended from a clindelior which | J08 Witk keon them at hame sud may in. people inevitubly embraces the patl and profitab) e el e b A, but it is dlsgusted with the dis. | must be judiciously placed in the several | at Nevraska City at the first conference | overhangs the dimng-table in the dining- | FE¢ FEH ¥ ad stacious Ak, 1f 8r the sentimental rathor thun the brigut | of Lighbinders and all tho things ho | cipline'to w is subjected, loses in. | districts in places where they will have | hus just grown into u sturdy company of | room was & placard which reads thus; fus faia with (ue yolingeal, €o & sub aud rollicking. No less than three of the | didn'Csee. ‘The Chinese seem a peaccable, in that for which it Las a taste, and | the greatest influence und do the most | cariest, thoughtful men wore than wo ‘Pleass take your time in eating. Sagheban his head~tio 1 Gght, 80 Lo dreary spociimens who appeated that | industrious people, whose ¢ ¢ | finally becumes indif as to what it | good. Just here let me correct an errof | huudred strong. ‘They literally “com- | pliice the different articles in | fait. |3 05 A8 IORE 48 tho sunbonnot evening shouted out some «ismal plaint | appews to lie in the fuct of their exist- | does.” It is perfectly natural for chuldren | that gets into_ximost all secutar pape pass the whole Tand” with the net work x {20t G Wil Ay A8 30500, Noking cnb about Ner mother. It seemed a positive | ence. People rail at them, but continue | to teel that, 1f they cannot get to do that | They talk of Methodist “deacon.” There | of their appomtments, und with the other wse do not place your elbows on e e oA sacrilege, and set one {o speculating on | to employ them, which is conclusive evi- | which they would like tode, they will not | is, except as an order in the ministr denominations work for the common ble. A daughter of Jeuny Lind s coming to the various stages of transformation that | dence that they are satisfactory servants. | do that which is appointed fur the such oflicer in the church he officers | good. We have not the figures to show - ase sit upright in your . this country 10 sing. She is not described as must have oecurros Their joss houses contain wonders of | They may perform whatever tasks are | are stewards, who lcok after the the numbers of the chureh, but it mum- ‘Please cat with your fork : @ great singer, but being the daughter of ages of womaukind were evolyed from [ carving in wood that show their great | given them, but under protest, and with | poral interests und collect and pay mou bers first except the Catholics and the In the kitchen the servant girl kept | her mother will doubtiess prove o be b ale r jonocent childhood. The performance | mechanical skill and patience, These fiulc benelit in the end. or currcnt expenses of the church, l Lutherans, and if it registered its chur ¢ such a close wutch upon the reporter that traction. for a victim, would fill an auctioneer with envy. If heis overcome by their e o S— Sam Shek said u kiss was like c it was made out of nothing and w \c Roman emperors demanded to be “My eldest,” she replied, “is thirteen and 1y baby'boy will be six years old the 30th of S ber.” HOf course vould not like to ehain them np, woald you “No.""