Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 15, 1890, Page 13

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gy ~ N 5 OOV LCOODIOCROVIOVIGOPSC>POTRP>>DO > [S THIS HOT ENOUGH FOR YOU? DD DD D DD TD D D D D WD WD P D DD D DD D @ B> @D PO DO DG DO OB D GG Now don't get hot, for we are not Talking about the Weather, but we wish to remind you that the prices we are now quoting on e CLOTTHNG == Saved From the Kire are no prices at all, for all you have to do is to tell us what you will give and the clothes are yours. Of course we haven’t so large an assortment of fire goods as we once had, but you will be perfectly satisfied to buy at our prices, for our prices are your prices, any price, take them away. If you remember, the fire in our Douglas street store did not reach the front end of our basement where we had a number of cases of goods stored preparatory to the summer trade. Now, among these goods were summer coats and vests, boys” Star shirt waists and other summer goods which this week we place on SALE AT 1216 FARNAM STREET. The summer coats and vests we will sell at from $2.50 up. The white vests you can have for most any price. The boys Star shirt waists can be had for less than half the regular price. Now the only thing in the world the matter with these goods is that that they have been wet, and DBPODIPDTOBDVDDODODET OO > DB one washing will make them as good as ever. A special lot ot boys” and children’s hats at 25¢. BROWNING, KING & COMPANY, 1216 FARNAM STRERT. WORSHIPPED BY EVERY RACE. How Omaha's Colored Baptists Have Reared a Temple to the Lord. TWO PASTORS CALLED TO PREACH. The Kountze Memorial Invites Rev. Mr. Turkle and the Second Pres- byterian - Rev. Mn Ware— Other Religious News. Zion Baptist church in North Omaha was organized among the colored people of this city in July, 1883, by Elder G. W. Woodbey, with but seven members. Upon the 24 of that month, a room on Cass street was rented and the church organized. The few members met again upon the 11th of the same month and elected Rev. G. W. Woodbey pastor. He served in the church until November 7, 1884, when he resigned. During this time the church had increased only twelve in member- ship and after the resignation of Elder Wood- bey it sank into oblivion until march 5, 1885, when a meeuing was held in & Twelfth street barber shop and a call was extended to Rev. A, M. Lewis of Kansas City, who became the pastor, On the church was received into wship of Baptist chu es, On Octo- ber, 1885, the church rented a littie house on Seventeenth and Izard streets, whi put into ropair and on the last du same month the congregation was shipped thero with great rejoicing, The deacons de- cided that the church should join the No- braska district association, and it did, but re- colved no benefit. Rev. Mr. Lewis was ordered by the association to Morgan Park, I, leaving Zion church without & pastor. Elder Woodbey was called 10 the vacancy at a meeting when but seven members were present. This caused much ssatisfaction among those not present at the meeting, and finally the elder was_called upon to resign, which he did, Rev. J. P. Har- s, n member of the congregation, being in- stulled as pastor On May 20, Elder T. H. Ewing of Leaven- worth, Kan., was calléd to take charge of the parish. Under his energetic management of affairs the church began to prosper, In his initiatory sermon tho elder said that within fiftéen months the congregation would have purchased a lot und built o church of their own. Many laughed at this, but the pastor said nothing but went to work. On May 23 o largo store room on Burt street was rented as a place to worship in, On the first Sunday tho room was packed and the energetic elder preached’ on- every Subbath to large con tions. His parish- foners became enthused with his zeal and lent him a helping hand On July 97, 1888, the pastor led the church into deep water by purchasing a lot for 2,200 when there was but $87.70 in the troas- ury, but they suceeeded in paying $100 down, and §19 three months later. On the 2nd of September the pastor began the erection of o parsonage at his own expense, und on November 19 of the same year tho construction of a temporary chapel was begun. Oun August 2, 1359, the chapel was mwoved to the rear of the lot and the erection of the present handsomo edifice, to cost §12,- 000 was begun, The congregation now num: bers 143 persons; the collections for two years have amounted to 4, the in- Jebtedness on the lot has 'beer reduced to 8557, on the building to $164.44, Aul this has been accomplished under the energetic ad- ministration of Eld wing. . The present officers of the church are as ollows Elder T. H ing, pastor; D, A. Thomas, clerk; R. Phenix, treasurer; deacons, G. Young, A. W. Parker, A. Chapman, H. Baxter Thomas; trustees, T. H Ewing, 8. H. Dorsey 0. Wood, T. T Walker, H. Rose; ushors, T, T. Walker, H. H. Taylor, A Pastor for Kountze Memorial, The m wrs of the Kountze Memorial Lutheran church met n larg @ tumbers at the church last Wednesday ovening to select a Goodsbye to the Peoples'. pastor. Rev. M. C. Huber, traveling sec After toduy the Peoples’ church will be last Sunday. Bishop Newma dodicatory sermon before a ation. Twelve thousand dollars proached tho | 4! il S ME Y | Come traditions true and awful, which have been hung upon the walls, givin, large con- LAKE AND lTb MLT"ODS. That did sot, them all to thinking, the apartments a cheerful appearance. oy o around thom, J5bar, ; ; ry for Nebraska was hose present. | g church has beon in opera- . ere e 3 pictures belong to the classes, and as they Gy dax Nobraslosyas famons ioas proo e ho chureh has been in opera- | 1pioq ag the morning, afternoon and eveni Shafs alas s hiset pass from room to room they are taken Tho only name presented to the meeting | tion nine months and has done a good deal of s for the completion of the edifico. P wholnsuady slasandiiig B was that of Rev. J. K. Turkle of Hillsboro, | good. Il Mr. Turkle passed through the city | = go about & month (ago and, upon invi- At cifferent times the pupils have contrib- : uted large sums to help the afflicted in other oolroom palitios on tho yeilow fever roged gl localities, as when the yeilow fever ragoed in v weelc's edition of The Midland, the ucoessful Carcer of tl It was this that Tured thelr re Presbyterian paper published in this (Clio]fuosea of i il R Turned it, so could ne'er be very full and lucid report of End Institute. Fausittwis Inovery, . C. W. Savidge. who has been the efii- J asked why the church had | City, contai cient pastor, w: tation, preached before ~ the congre- the meeting of the gencral assembly held at I 1 the south, although the school was then gation’ of “this * church, Those who | been abandoned. <5 . | Buffalo, N.'Y., on May 23. Tho roport fills P Blinscdiintaitil '.’(\-(nf'.'f.'fxflfx‘x;“'um.m"g, small, 870 ' was forwarded to the relief com- DRl e e e asnEan ool | Aot n o R O e [ ewonioolumnss LIST OF THE SUCCESSFUL TEACHERS. | Spinfkineut tho thiue kround thorn, mitteo; ad aguin, to help tho suflorors fn " y 88 | he, “for seven three of them as pastor R Hanning, on the lines they’d strengthen— Dakota. the pupils contributed $150 in cash, a preacher, that a movement was 4t Onco | iy, gy M. . chureh,three as pastor of tho RELVGIOUS. Whether this one, whether that one— besides a large amount of clothing. inaugurated to extend to him a call. The Tais wis why they lost their reason o i adt 5 SR o o 3. church and nine ma he s ) Y While thelr minds foreve; dere e T matter was placed in the hands of the church street M. B. church and nine months | o ! . | The High School Class—The Lake | )Y 3 of wundored; = : = o % T X v [ 258 , <3 general synod of the Reformed church This is why they talked so wildl, EDUCATIONAL, council, tud us w result of theiv labors thev | as pastor of the Peoples! church. At our cou- | jn America meets at Asbury Parl, N. J., this | Button and the Liberal Contribu- QI the variots Xhapos of objects, Wodnosday night that Mr. Turklo had sig- | [orence last fall T told Bishop Vincont that if | year, the sossion opening June 4. tions to Deserving OF tho oyemior the potatoos, The commencement at Tabor colloge, Tas nified his willingness to accept tho pastorate | 11© Would let me 1 would covor the field in this | Ouo of the graduates of Talledoga (Ga.) Nt P on This is why thoy thonght and pondered bor, Ta., begius June 22, and lnsts threo da; of the church at £,000 & year and to present | city east of Fiftcenth strect and bear my own | colloge—an institution for colored young men y Ones. Q0% the blas maa s ur Hiram collego hus just arranged for the ude sion was —§0es as & missionars to the Congo. Of the jug, the OF the Sphere, tl; to the congregation lefters from eminent | expenses. The per ; churchmen, acquainted with Mr. Turkle, | on September I began A Grand Rapids e there are many o i Of tholr anglos, faees, o highly commendatory of his character asa | ing —services on ' Sunday in Boy countics in northern Michigan without a siti- | Situated at the corner of Ninctcenth and | Pfthelr un ,,‘r",",‘l‘,_‘,.‘;.;flfi"‘ji”dm AL The movement for the establishment of a gontleman und ability as a preacher. A | opera house, paying §5 for each Sunda; gle church and thousands of people growing | Lake stroets, occupying half a block of ground | Thus tradition tolls tno. story; 50 fund for the medical education of women at ballot was then taken to decide the mattor, l‘m.\v“'k--h. ces T ronted the little | up heathens. and surrounded by a row of large, leafy | Yet traditior tolls us— Johns Hopkius university gives great promise and it was unanimously voted to extend to | church at the corner of Thirteenth and | 4 jewish snyagoguo to be erected in Balti- 1 o PR EE YT I G0 B OO d minds wander, of success. him a call at §2,000 a yea Dodge streets. - My purposo was to reach the | norg wwill, it is said, be the only spocimen of | M2PIes stands the Lake school, which, for from the drawing, Pi r 5 i 3 5 said, 1 anos are being introduced into English b and sauocer, dition of a musical department under Prof, cube. the prism, Alfred Arthur of Cleveland. ot 5 - gre ol f 3 " satness, convenience and architectural de- most artist Mr. Turkle is a graduate of Yale and of | Breat mass of =~ people who —do 1ot { ure Byzantine architecture in the United | Deatuess, R boarding sl i B . 1 i te of 1 ofi| Exen a0 8 3 e ol < ; e 4 v« they for 1 wing. oarding scheols, hich all sorts of de- the Wittenberg, O., divinity school. He is «‘w‘)i\::‘illutv’-n'lm .,}\“"1,’.':-.; ’“"(‘,‘;" l“:u“ kllu"h_ States sign is surpassed by no school in the city. In addition to this the or, asemi- | vices for accompaniment have beon used pro- married and bas two childr By The fifty-cight annual assembly of the Con- | The structure and the manuer in which it is | monthly pubucation, is is by the pupils, | vious : foat | 0 i Ono teacher complainod that the Ry it Sontions. onth torbed | atiln | ragational wnion of England aud Wales was | run is the pride of the people in whose midst | those of the S ghth’ grados con | whistling of the boys froquently was too Y. P. 8. 0. E. Delegates. chorus. The church filled up at once held in London last month. The Rev. John | it s located. tributing. shrill and drowned the girls’ voice Do undred delogates of tho socictics of | Ju, aviags of 130 pertons a o aor., | Brown, 5.1, of Bedfond, was chosen ehait | T yoars ago th sie of the prosont buita- | | i Tiile ouraal b s boon in existenco leo | No stronger ovidenco of tho worth of tho histian Endeavor in Nebraska left this | vicos and 500 children ' in our Sunday school.” FARS T s ing was occupled by threo smatt wooden | MONtHS, and ssue contuing editorial mat- | institutiony for the colored people can bo fur- city by speciol train over the Missouri Pa- | Tho peoplo ~contributed liberally. Even | Rev. Virgll Muxoy, o Baptist ministor and | (W0 OCRES 8 LR T, IO Lot of the day pertaining te the school, | nished thun is offerod in_their catalogues a nepheyw of Texas, is and the st 3 weelc and prei The work of preparing a commentary on the New Testament, which was begun four- teen years ago, under the auspices of tho an Buptist public oy, by Dr. axey . cache ( i Mited | north side began to buitd up, the school fa- | Nty hits ul e akianhoaiondipuplisy L B'ho | eilities became inadequate and the beautitul | S5 G Poos und ore andcostly building Wwhich contains sixteon | &aF the v rooms wis erected in time for the beginuing ben/in attendanoo That term twelve rooms wore opened and i A 700 pupils were enrolled. A3 time pussed on through the record of the work which their sspondence. graduates aro now doing. A cataloguo of iz the enroll- | Fisk university just issued, shows that mora %0. The greatest | that more than nine-tenths of its graduates one time was | arceither preachers or teachers, ere boys and 340 | The society for the extension of univorsity teaching, at the university of Pennsylyan cific road last Tuesday for the national con- | amblers and lewd women sent moe moa; vention of the socioty in St. Louis. Lelp in the work, and all tho expensc "The officers of the Nebr ciety who | me say here, amounting to 5,000 a year, v were with the party w . R. Boyd, | bepaid up’in full, including the services state president, R. W. Lane, y, | of Sunday. I made out of my work u and Miss Lane} Miss Philb otary of g, just suflicicnt to pay for my the Omaha city union; T. C. K. Wilson, T. | house and my food. z0ing to try to unite th color line is not draw: o Omaha i oxeoutive oms | “We hud as an uitimate object the ercction | Amer ¢ ot e g A ; a8 fifteon | about which 5o much has: been he | P, Kolmer and A, Bird of the excoutivo com- | "W i ue b wlimato obloot the erdation | fiovey, tin ben comploted. " 1t iy allod tho and that portion of tho city incrsed in pop: nogto children avo in attendanco, and in allof | Luid from o onibne boen hegrdlately) a0 i i o wont, | Sctaring. churoh Tto witlon teemeonreu | #Amorican Commentary on tho New Testa- | Ulation, other rooms wore put in g 1| the aports and gamos they take part and oo | fus an aetus foct e T b The members of the committeo who went churg chly peo. | AMC other tachiers omploved. Now soventeon fa- | gy Tospociad by thele Mssoiaicor hag | Lok 0UIRL fact. Tl orgunization il i Mr. | ple would go. The times are hard, and it Donne and Misses Avery, Lindorholm, Halle, | Bually appoared to us that the erection of Koller, Hoel, Thirst Bohort und Mbore of | this church would be impossible and we hac prmed i aug 4 RKI0.Ane 6;‘1}:!!:;-. Misses Cook, Roed and_ Wainright of | 1o abandon the project; the heavy finunces | 5¢ Redjilo ctiths 108,031 f,’n“" Joxo pora S Blair; Miss Lula Biyant of Chadron; Miss [ called for extraordinar and upon in- | ConETeRAtions icoplreh anon ; Metta Portal of Central City, W. A. Hills of | quiry I found that B a‘housaioonid)| | ClUrChee Syrikh apali BRcapactty of 2 Miss Emma_Whitmore, the principal, has | | | Crete, Miss Ivy Reed and . H. Morvis of | not be secured after September 1,as the Sun- | 8nd valued at 5,04 the Conererational | #eneral supervision over the school and is s KLU favibplances Uhas s punishimant beeu | mens of snakes and oth Fremont, U. P. Caldwell of Girand Island, | day theaters will open then, and so when the | ''he annual meeting of the Congregational | gisgaq by Mrs. A. J. Webb, while the principlo that it is ousior to govors by love | £: Wickham has also p were Rev, H. W, Smith, Mr. Rode; structresses are cmployed in teaching the fu- The United Presbyterian church has con formed its statistical inquiry this year to the these colored children ave intelligent there | pjyg i i ve vome: 3 p L ival of the stive work w ¥ ture men aud women of ti can be little question, as they out rank many | commene utumn uctive work will at once The instructresses were carofull lected € D L, of tho white ones of the same age. EY ¥ At rank high -among_ the touchers of tho | ° During the time the school ias boon in op- | | Tie museum at tho Towa stato unive y. oration not a scholar hus been expelled, aud | b st received from ¢ ity nt B. I, Osborno fty alcoholic 0 animals, Mr. onted @ collection i » i Ve scho ic pciety was held in i Miss Alice Nowlan of Hastings, C. A, Murch | bishop asked me if I would | school and publication socicty was ot | other teachers instruct the pupils of L e t of coleoptera, or beetles, to the of Koarnoy wnd C. W. Nichoths and C. D, | continue —the work for another | Boston recently, ‘e, roport stated that 531 | fhooitowing i Eighth grado, | RSSO DY thorod, L o | alonk with his alcoholic collection of Chandler of Lincoln. year I told ~him that 1 would | new Sunday schoals fere organized during |'niss Georgia Valentin { iss Ella i FY: ReArE 10 | Inall there are about seven bund hildren is somothing that has ys been regarded as remarkable In dismissing the school a bell in the lower ballway taps, Miles Hawk and Harry Cran- i3 to bo prosented by Gilman dall take tholr positions in the north end of enior class, at the lowa stato the lower hall, and with their drawms beat | University. 1t is in two large quarto volumes, and two inches thick,illustrated by drawings rather mot and the work was abandoned | the year. The receipts for tho year wero A Foreign Ecclesiastic. Then tho trustees of the Newman church larger by $0,000 than in the preceding year. ifth, Miss ~ Ett Rev. Y. Honda of Japan was in Omaha | tended me a cull through the appointing | The treasur report of the American | Powers; Fourth and 1ifth, Miss Holen Nave; furing the visit of the Muthodist conference | POWer, and I accepted it and will begin | tract socicty shows that the total roceipts | Fourth, Miss Li Elcock; Third and GIFLNR: WO VI81Y 0 Alethodist conference |y oclling there next Sunday, and will take | for the year were £322,203 and that the bal- | Fourth, Miss Magg aughlin Third, commission, nmlonl-'yv«lln'\'wu to all the re- v of my workers from' the Pcople's | ance on'hand was &, ,'n. The society has is- | Miss Fmily Robinson; Second, Miss Lizzio ligious_and _educational nstitutions in the o wo. Rov. J. k. Ensign, the | sued 7,435 distinct publications. It has six | Whitman and Miss Nova Turnel; Fivst, Miss ; : ; ! : v city, Rov. Y. Honda is anative Japaneso | formor pastor, will go cast.” riodicals with an aggregate circulation of | Bdith Goodspood, Miss Lida Hann, Mrs. | roiqich taps again and the pupils ariso | fid photogruphs of the wmusscls, or olams, minister of the Methodist church and not s o F A R AP i e et rom their seats and step into the ai AL IR RRR R YOIINAG0n The bell taps onc bes the species, and the second treats of bley and ns in this donation, y s of Towa'! is the subject of an 1t only that but is an eminent statesman in his T e T e (| | O T T e g o 0 once more and tho pupils | SCribes the specics, an country. Fo s u man of great learning and | e societies of Our Young Poople of the | has Just celebrated o tonth anaiveasary of | ing school, the pupils are placed under tho | areh 04 of tholt twoms, two abroust, cuch | Hhe 7. S04 Bl cuergy, Howas oue time speakor of the Tm- | " tnited Presbyterian churches in this | tho landing of the army in this country.” At | caro of Mrs. Carnoy, who is vegarded as ono | Sooms aanioi'k W sdua Otound ouywhos | poL. de Mdlarca: rocontly informed the periulissombly and has filled other positions | thiee United Presbyterian chure hia {£49 18 Now A Cro A A X Joung soldiers as” may bo found auywhere | Freich Academy of Scionces that tho. use of vequirtug ability und integeity. o fas dano | city will hold theie fourth quarterly union | b6, ESGIEA CXQVRER G e (Sfosates | g1 G0, Mot shecesgint udougaiuen tosebars | dn i land. " * bl the same | U1 MEUFC systom hud 'in 1557 become com- much in his chirch work i Japan, having | meeting on Thursday evening next in the | podae a Buidnist, prlost a5 horiee g deiliod G objoct " lessons ‘unly | o,k MG fnto the school buildide tho samo | pulsory fn countrics having' an agkrogto v of churchos. > otween Dodgo street and Capitol | Thore was held in New York city recently, | to spell words of ono and two sylubles by | 3 d 3 | of 53,000,000 persons “obliged to use it in ten He left Omahi on the samo train as Bishop | Jiteenth, between Dodgo street and Capitol Thore was held in Now '}I:x‘l‘(’ ’:‘)L:I‘\:L‘l"l‘l‘- {0.a0el) worda ot oo Wnd. tyo. x‘““u‘lz" ~“:.'l“ Two 5 ago the school sent its first | years; use was optional in countries having ot for discussion will be | the ann of Our Young Peopl tists, or Newman and they will journey together to ;‘\"l‘\:‘:;:"; the Orlont ' - - — opened by Rev. Mr. Fronch of the Iirst | tendanc e b pfrom this ro Rev. 8. M. Ware Called, United Prest an church, after which an | convention was chié¢ly taken up in discussion | taken ”',,' IArge |“n‘ ; James, }\14- they The Second Presbyterian church, Saunders | opportunity will be given to any one to makoe | of the “new scicnee, as it is called, and in R or o Hlou lomonn, Ater wilah 3 o ar | suigestior arration of the ionderful cures effected 80 to Miss Hauva, whoro they receive 1088 conalata of the' fallow street, has extended a call to Rov. S. M, | SURRSEEUR 0 oo i mooting in | by ib. thelr frst, {nstructions from boocs, hei | s class consists of the following Ware of Clinton, Mo., who ofticiated in the | wyargo 53 s follows: Miss Nettie (ibbs, | The different Métlodist mission agencies advanooment then becoms moro rapid until | 8197, Whom aro expostad to pass 8 ¢ pulpit of this church on several occasions this | from the First church; Miss Elsie William: | in' Japan have agrosd o unite undor the | ey reach tho eighth grade, when they aro 3 Aot LR g thaamalill 4 ssic Bowie, summer ana mado an extremely favorablo im | son, Centralj Mr. Joba Westertlold, Park | namo’ of “tho Mebhadist church of Japan,” | PERAEE] for enteriu tho hikh schoels biawing | i i class to the high schoc six pupils. This ) thirty-scven, th city, with the ex ,amere handful, only | nearly it wvill sent cligs of | ally admitted and partially applicd in ¢ st of the kind in' ti s having an aggrogate population of ption of the class from | 000,000 ,000,000 inhabitants; and it w of drawing g from this room, t begin tho There was i li at U and the two days occupied by the After pa: oy are Formerly the schools of medicine, law, and mines’in Columbia colloge, have ha 0s; but the trustees of the ars ago, decided to consoliy mmencements into ono, This pupil ditab) May Burgland, My n, Carri all v P, vl o ' ol » 3 8K 14 ot th considerable oppositio ong < e 4 rrogation- | avenue i onferences e y » h X 4 plan met with ¢ ™ pposition smong pression upon & majority of the congregation R R L\--x‘: Sunual oo ot giatricts, and A | the graded schools. Rioa B Sallie King, Mit- | tho studonts, and was not carried into effoct, 50 much 5o that at a meeting held last Tuesday " L er ¢ 9 in In this o0ol, drawing is regarded as an | P! Martis, Hormie 2 Neal, Lulu | But the trustees h now determined that after tho meeting. ted church will be the bokushi or passokoter | . b g . Tompsett, Amy Soule, Rosa Worthy, Ros v evening tho vote to extend the call to Mr, or_ superintendent, or bishop, This lutter | uPortant factor in tho education of the chil- | ORISRy, Ay Houlo, Rows Worthy, Ross | this year shall mark the be g of tho Ware was made unanimous after the first Religious Notes. will b chosen by the general conference for | Grém it beiug taught in every grade, and by eham, Willis Hanine oo Walter | now systom, a ot has beon the time the vupils have reached the eighth lo they have become very proficient Mr, Ware res ade that th ol ballot, on which chools of medicine, arts, mines o6 Votay | o(ME: A C. Specht s boeu clo cienco will bhave ' their com at y-oight votes cast. The adverse votes | oo the Kountze Memorial chur ed an el rm of twelve yoars, and be not eligible for peoe- 1yn, Eranko Polglase any and political of fo ), vice J re-election \ ’ ) were i favor of & wan of ultra-pronivition | 58,18 Reffed h viced, 4 A\ Pg: . £ them baoin ablo to sketeh and draw fn a | HO% T s \Yhrnax :Shario Yan Courd: iheho | Mencoment oxorclios logothor, Next your ASEmIIN. ; Jormick theo- | . Rev. J. E. Ensign will lecture at York next | _Sevoral years ago the soclety for psychical | “RAtiiiiie eI o0 | Kllingwood, Kate Notson, Mattlo. Dang L e y 1‘\:;"1\:.:&::‘ ld«“t‘xfl.iv‘.? }};1].:\.:.1;‘1:"[1);‘“ Tuesday ovening on *“The Last Aualys:s.” soarch began & gensus of hallucinatlons. | 1" tne eco! 4 ‘grador and ot only . thy | Otto Bolln,' Byram Luce, Robbio Morrison, s penilise sighb e Jrisaed ai Malh refined and cultured gentloman of Hno pres: | Amoug the contributions sent to the sufter- | Frofessor Willium James of Hurvard univer- | pupils taught to write' but each day they aro | imer Platz, Mabel Musor 8bont 0 0'0look.. Tt was'Whiab maikht he styitd gice aud great persoual magnetism. Howill | ors at Bradshay was & box of clothing from | et 3" 00 A tliFica, saya thababout. elghy | Hiven sublocts for compositions. Kach mouth | O'Fhe school button of Lake s a novelty, as | gPQilt 8 owiogte, T wis Wiial imlelit b stylo6 be a worthy successor to Rev. William Hen- | the Omaha city mission thousand persons huve already returried an | WO @88Y8 are cad, corrocted ‘and placed on A & wing of joy and pride hours. Tho alr was completely filled with derson, if lic should nccopt the call, and it is | A noonday prayer meoting has been estab- | gngwer to tho following question: «Have | 1l Whero they aré kept among other school | DA button fund hus beon created, and small pors | copper bronze buttons procured, each bearing | the lusocts. Thoy med to come out of the is deemed probable that he will, us Lo has ex- [ lished at the Young Men's Christian associ g d P ar p 4 J shed at the ing A an assoc you ever, when completely awake,had a vivid : o wion * ¢ ongr . ground. At one place & the postofico pressed himsolf much pleasod with Omaha | tion building. The moetings are conducted | {mprossion of RaSingia ey AWARD,uAG S Tivid l‘.-\lv{y‘"-'“ the prizo essay, entitled A | 4o 1 rpen), aket headly. | raved: | they fssuod forth in a stream five inches wide and its people and regards the field as prom- | by the secre and last from 12:30 t0 12:50. | living being or inanimate objest, orof hearing Pa ‘I\, was written by Jh..:u Notson, o girl [ N s Wear one of these buttons. aud sg | A% 5001 85 they reachod the nent th ising goop results. Rev, W. T. Smith, presiding elder of the | a voice, which imp ession, 5o far as you could | J0Urleen years of age, and is as follows proud are they of the badge that w L would take to their wings, T atie out Should y 1 usk me whonee these storles, A 4 Council Bluffs district, Des Moines confer- | discover, was not due to any external physi 10100 those BLrange and sad traditior ave been transferved to other scho no | 0long tho street for 100 yards, and aftor Blshop Newwan Leaves for Japan. | gnce, came over from the city ncross the | cal causai It is hoped thaf at thenextmuet. | Wi shci o atraneo wnd sad traditions, TALD Hatlon & ML focg ey ckals 80| ol araund in £ho mx d.in 8- hody Bishop Newman loft the city on Monday | river last Saturday and attended the meet- | ing of the psychical research congress, which | Falling sideward, falling buokward, membrance of the mauy happy hours passed | 40Wn the strect. They lently had midaie for Now York and from there he will sail | ing of citizens of Omaha with the conference | will bo held in England 1e 1 as many as | With their curiou and outlines beneath tho roof of their favorite school, | COMDALs, lLof dead and for Japan, and will be goue the remainder of | commission Saturday evening, and remained | 50,000 answers will bo collected. Professor | Lshould answer, I d tell you nerosity s another marked feature |1 unfort unatos the summer. = Mys, Newman did not accom | over to the dedication of the' First M. E. | James asks for volunteer canvassers in every | hfom the wide aud rolling priirics, the school,as in each room the littlo ones hay pany her husband, but will speud the sum- | church on Sunday town, to whom he will supply the necessary | From the Liade of the Neteayard | contributed money to bay what ar ™ Torchants’ hotel,Omaha, 92 to $3 por mer in New York state. The uew First M. E. church was dedicated | blanks and instructions on wpplication, " | From the banks of the Great Muddy clase pictures, beau steel el u, Nat.Browu,propr,[va I’ H mge,

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