Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 14, 1892, Page 8

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8 10 YOUNG MEN ESPECIALLY Evangelist Mills Talks About the Dangers That Besct the Path of Youth, ABSALOM FURNISHES A PRECEDENT Downfall of That ¥ Tustration Mo Dicultie 1g Prince Cited as an of the “Where is My Wandering Boy | was the musical preiude that Mr the choru sermon preached Tonight? Hillis and | nigh the M rnished last by Evangelis ¢« Men. choir ipon angers to Young Exposition ha with people and man Mr. Mills read t Absalom as a scr the theme of the « found in the ci and the the on bearing ening His text chapter of Samu Kin; David was Is the ond ver s son | reat earnest 1d e in the Mr. Mills jed to man, audience There were to whom he this question indulging his bascr Were such young thought not of i ral elasses of young men wished particularly” to appl Iirst the young man who was appetites and _passions wen safer Mr. Mills Lead Doubld Lives, Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Mills believed, in the The evangelist s of the remark Vire men in this audience who as cfute daily with pure women and innocent children, and then they turn away and com mit sins that ought to make hell blush if such o thing could he The speaker related several i dark and sinful deeds committed who had voluntarily surrendered themselves to the devil a little” at a time until they had passed the point of safet man was sife for a moment who eherished a lustful or sin t the d who scemed o b mind was be at « The iconoclast was miserable creature, essed wi the man who attempted to build up, but the man who spent his time in breaking down could not be happy. Organized infidelity had never built a hospital or a college or tablished litary institution that 1y benefit to the human race. unced hastily at the lives Hume, Voltaire, Thomas oted infidel: They were melancholy specimens of the genus’ homo Hume wus filled with doubis and fears, Voltaive wished that he had never been born and Thomas Payne wis forsaken dur ing his last days by his infidel friends. Others Who Are Not fe. simply moral you fndividual who was n less morality was the de down which thousands of you into hell The man who postponed the day of his reformation was 1 he devil | didn't want o surer I young man than to Ihe nega that could had and works of Payne and othe r man was another 1 slide s men slippe d a better 1if Enified ‘their willlig s by 1ising to their The ev elist offc red o for those who ha and desire to live Christia for those who had not vory interesting aftermee which a large number cating their desive to turn About the will be a The The ti t prayer intention i also > start, A | ng was held, in | wed - cavds indi way from great mai. mectings o'clock. first will be n prayer m Then at 9 o will be meetings in all of the a Everybody is invited to ings. AL10 0'clock there meeting at Expositi body is invited 7 will b will be a general w y hall to which eve Men and_women, boys and s o prayer ist chureh for men and o'clock there will be a xposition hall for the ss men and their em- ployes, butany one can attend, The usual evening service will be held at 7:30 at Ix position hall, rounding out the most witn ing at the women. Again meeting at il benefit of busi Tt is not w Hood's Sursi of its merit. IfC. W.J. v but what Is the story ——— B. Moore is in the city Moore, Chicago. Everybody eats mql.rn buy N. Y. Counts per can, Extra Selects per ¢ Standards per cun Favorites per Also bulk \lel.u'ds, solid meats, wanted, and cele bunch. Send your Christmas orders at once to Ih\\'ixl Cole & Co., “Tk Anti- Monopoly Ovster Hou Goods the very best, No firm allowed to undersell us. 819 So, 10th street, Omaha, Neb, Frescoing and interior decor signs and ostimates furnished. Lehmaun, 1508 Doug Douglas D The Doug lature will probably ap the Lincoln hotel Some of the memb o condition th dguarters th 05 that the and as 0 Lincoln t headquart b anecial Standpoint 1 do not Reniedy have others in stock o larger profit,” says Al Magwin druggist of Braddock, Pa., * beciuse many of our custoners have spoken of it in the highest p sell more of it than lany similar’ ) ion we have in the N sale by druggists. nt, for we Omaia Thomson-Houston Blec trie Lighting company has filed amende eles of incorporation, showing that the tal stock has been inereased £1,100,000 This i allowi pxtend its bu ompiny rgze amount of money in the extension andescent system iuto the residence portion of the ci L Your Own Conclugion, 3 snport, m : of the Fort Bragg Redwood Co., 1’ < this to say of Chumberlain's Cough 1 “Tused it for a_severo obtained immediate relief. Bragg Redwood (¢ large quantities o cines.” " For salo by druggists. dy and congh and In the Fort tore we sold Viethn, A brother of ¥ caped asphyxiation at the ‘I'va Sunday night, arvived in the city and took Parks aund the Charles Shuckner back with kim, of Gas 1 B, Parks who narrowly s yesterday body of - A Cure for Croup, It your children are subject to croup always keop a boitle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy at hand. Ivisa prompt and certain cur f given as soon us the croupy cough appears it will prevent the attack. For sale by druggists. | stock to select from, lowest prices. | lenses inserted without | sccond special varty will leave | bound for Houston, | their trip and with the | ductive count, write to Dealers can | | of | 1893, to return, | poiuts | IPortick: | write, tlowe | THE OMATHA TOOK ADVANTAGE OFTHE SNOW HAVDEN NROS, Toys and Hollday Home. The time is short now before Christ- mas and you can’t afford to wait any longer. Prices are being cut now at Hoyden’s on toys. Lot after lot will be cloged out regardless to cost or value, and those who wait will have to take their chances on what is lelt, Doll folding beds, price, 25¢, 50c and $1.00, reduced to close to 103, 15¢ and 25¢, Thut's the way we are going to make them go. Iron banks, made to sell duced to close at 25c each. oods - Santa Clans at And Came in on Time ns Previously An- nounced, A WELCOME GUEST IN THE CITY Something About Mis Arrival and the Re- ception at His Court Mis Regal Sur- roundings and Marvelous e tion at Nis at $1.00, re- dquarters, DATLY [ 10 [ dnily High wooden bed, iron axle express wagons worth $2.00, nnwtv'n-: . ¢ games now 10¢ ¢ do!ls reduced !n 10¢ tree orn . You never saw such cutting of prices on toys richt before Christmas, but we have too many of them and they must be sold. Handkerchiefs and glove sachet cases half their v Musical instru- mente in great varic t prices never heard of before in Omaha. Christmas cards, all new, just in, ic, 3e and He, each in quantities to suit, Folding writing desks made to sell at 00 cur down to Plush toilat ts, manicure sets and smoking sets are going lively at the reauced pric Now is the time'to make your selectic Autograph albums 25¢, bie, 21,00, Large size serap books 47¢ and $1.60. Fancy haskets of every deseription at abouf half their value. Picture and A, B, C Among the distinguished arrivals on one of yesterday morning’s trains from the north was an individual who is per- haps better known and 3 mnore friends in Omaha than any one of the many thousands who visit this city from one yoar's end to another. That individual was & | jolly, rollicking old Saint Nick, and he came just ns he has come year in and year out since the memory of man run- neth not to the contrary, to see his odd self's warm friends, the boys and giris, | and bring to them the countless treas- ures on which have been centered for | months their hearts’ keen des L and the possession of which will keep ever green in their activeiy throbbing breasts the memory of this patron suint of the | little folks. While Santa is such a merry, gool- natured old fellow, he is ono of the most jealous of beings, so far as the friend- &hipof the youngsters is concerned, and will no more tolerate a division of it than he would part with his gred cont or one of the beautiful at- tached to his immense s load of toys, for he could not get along without 1y mora than he could without the But Santa will never forget the little ones as long as they remember him, and he will not pass from their memory until time fur all shall be no more and Christmastide is no longer known on earth, But the hohiday saint is not alone Luman in his feelings, for his require- wents are of the material kind as well, and it is just necessary for him to have placo for a dispensing bureau as it is for him to have the desire to distribute his limitless prescnts among the delighted members of the rising generation. Whilo always on the alert to discover novelties and to have everything of the latc and most apvroved and desirable make, | he seems to be opposed to making | changes in his stopping plac and that | is why it is that he is maicing his Omaha | headquarters this year with Hayden | Bros.. just as he did twelve months ugo. The thousands of little folks who found him there last Christmas will find him there again now: that is, ho was there yeste |d.n and last evening, but wascom- belled to leave for a few da to look after his little friends in some of the i southern and eastern cities, but will re- turn and spend the week before the grrent holi W that location and per- sonally superintend the distribution of the almost endless stock of pretty things that he brought in with him und left for the Omaha bo and for their pavents and friends as well, He made a parado through tho prinei- pal streets just after his arrival, just to let his young friends know that he w { here, and tooik around with him cigh- teen great two horse loads of samples of what he proposed to leave in Omaha, and even then he unable to show half of the things that he has specially designed for Christmas presents for 18 Santa has begun to regard him- Il as something of a_commarcinl grim, but cannot join the order of trav- ching men that limits itseli to this coun- try, for he is a tourist of the world, and has a host of friends in Furope and | South America, just as ho has here in | the United States. He does not believe in the usual sample room sty of doing business for he knows that not one-tenth of his little friends could get in to s him, so he has adopted the plan of going out in publie, and he finds that he isable to recognize his old nc- quaintances so much better by daylight, for his sight is failing a little and it is probable that by another year or two | he may have to use glasses. Butthe | most pleasant thi about it all is the fact that the older he gets the more ho thinks of the little folks, and that is v ame a little earlier than usual this year in order to givo them vlenty of time to look over his stock and find just what they wanted, so that when ho re- turns he “can hand the things right out and will be able to attend to them all and no ono will be slighted. He has taken the entire top floor of Hayden Bros.’ great emporium av Six- | teenth and Dodge streets, and the hun- dreds of youngsters who called there last night wero bewildered with the marvelous display, as indeed were the children to manhocd and womanhood grown, who found just as much to please and interest them as did the more re- nt graduates of the nursery. One couldn’t begin to tell of all those won- derful products of the inventor’s mind | and the skilled hand of the mechnnic and artisan. There was a miniature clectric motor railway, complete in all the most minute defails, even to the dainty little motor, trolley and overhend | wire, with the occasional flashing of an eleet 'k, just as seen on the full- frown onthe streets a hundred little carisn’t much bizger than your fist, but it buzzed around the track just us industriously Claus, | lie 75 and books,the largost toys arrived today on sale tomor- row It will pay you to come often to Santa * healdquarters and inspect the rgest digplay in Omaha, and get the All at HAYDEN BROS., Hendquarters on Loys. PIANO DEPARTMENT. Sole agents for the Chickering the piano with the best reputation of any high grade instrument manufac- tured. I’ianos and organs atdry goods profits, Al prices. IMive different makes of Dinnos. as a HAYDEN - Nz BROS. Holiday goods, ¥ ew’r, opp. p.o. al estate, rguins only. My word is good. W, G \lhn-vh! N. Lifo bld g, - Water rents dus January 1, pay at company’s office, BEE building: s pe cent discount_allowed if puid on or b foro Jaruary 1. Oflico open Wednesdays Complete New Stock of Furnit All goods marked low in plain fi CHAS, SHIVERICK & Co 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam St Holiday goods, Frenze - An appropriate xmas present Wl never out of stylo, jew’r, opp. p.o. b and girls, ties purchasing gold stacles for pres- grown-up | ents will be given a card entitling the holder to lave their ey rofully ox- amined after the holid ud the proper iy additional refractionist gold frames from up. Tudor Optical Co., wholesale opticians, corner Farnam and 14th strects, Omaha, Neb. o ge. Buy our Holiday goods, Frenzer, jew’r, opp. p.o. Sageos RATE LOW XCURSION, To Housto On Tuesday, Decsmbe 0, 1892, my Omaha, Tex. On November 251 took my first special excursion, a purty of twenty. This party 1 con- ducted in person and hope to be able to do like > with the next. All of the first party were so much pleased with rich and pro- y they went to sco that ty who tent fifteen havo ade arrangements to move down and live there. I can’t tell you about the advantuges of the' place, «Spaco does not permit. Suflice it to say, every one who went eame to me and remarked, “1had not wold the half.” it is the place v. All kinds of business v is greatly in demand. ave high, The climate is por- “The lands are deeply rich and as omely low in pried and_torms acres, ent points, n vailronds, with timber or without, and all with good Can suit you or no harm done. hing that cin be grown in Ne- or lowa can be grown on thes nds; besides many things can rown there which cannot be grown here. The most excellent results are obtained without fertilization. Kemember the time we go, néxt Tues- duy, December 20. We will leave Omaha abouv 9:30 p. m. und arrive in Houston in forty-eight bhours. Both chair and Pullman cavs run all the wa, The rutes for the round trip, fir class, will be cheaper than you ean buy any railvond company, and I wiil give you fifteen days to go in, fifteen diys” to come in"and until Junuary 1, IPor further information s to lands, ito, cost of living and all particu- | meats are sold, 1s 1o tho purchaso of your tickets, Wl on or address, . O, 5 Ramgo butldy — EAST ¢ us you pleuse, hen there was another railroad that | ted by a spring, with switchos and depots, and ull around were mechan- ical toys of all sizes, kinds and descrip tions. There were dancers that pounded | off the liveliest kind of jigs, bears and other animals that would walk, turn around and seratch their heads or cut up antics of the funaiest kind, There were dolls for the girls, and such ward- robes us no dolls ever had be- fore. ‘There were tiny bedroom | sets, with beds, dvessers, com modes and everything complete, and they were in all sizes to suit dolls, big and little, There were doll Luggics,toy trunks, tables, dishes, cabinets, writing desks with sliding or folding tops and innumerable pigeonholes, musicul toys from a pinno to a jewsharp, stoves, kitchen utensils, and everylbing on s from a bieyele to a moving eir- There was everything that delighted a child’s heart, and it seemed that for every old or familiar ro were a dozen ngw ones | But don’t think that ther® is nothing there for grown folks, for be it known that under that voof 15 kept every- thing that man or woman wanis RPRICE’S SRl The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia; No Aluw Used in Milli-as of Homes—40 Years the Standard, PATTERSON, o, Omahn, Neb, SOUTI Qi the Wabash Ro The short line to St. Louls est route south, Only 87 hours to Hot Sy Only 39 hours to New Or!lex Only 383 hours to Atlunta. Only 52 hours to Jacksonvillo, With™ corresponding fast time to all east and south, Round trip tickets to Hot Springs, New Orleans, Laise Charles, Galveston, San Antonio, City of Mexico, Los Angeles, San Frans eisco, Mobile, Jacksonvil! , Ha- vana and all the winter r south and west, Reclining chair cavs free to 5t Louis, Toledo and Detroit. Pailljuan buffet sleeping cars on all \wggage chocked from hotels to destination rcommodation call at Wabash arnam strect, or N. CLAYTON, Agent, Omaha, and quick- and pr and further ticket oftice, BEE: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 114 1892, eat or or use in round of household life. the Thirty departmemts, and in nearly all | purest that can be made, from pure fruit of them a largeror more completo stock | Jutces and sugar, and the firm puts up than is kept in mmny of the exclusive {!um\n fruit juices and flavors in the specinlty housemthat deal only in a cor- | fruit season from the finest quality of tain line of goodss Tn the depart fruit that can be secured. Eight men are found fancy ggoods, draperios work day and- night in this de- tains and fixturas, wall paper, carpets | partment, and some idea of the magni- and rugs, sewing machines, pictures | tude of the whole establishment can and art goods, men’s and boys’ clothing, | gained from the fact that it gives em- hats and caps, millinery, clonks and | ployment to 830 people the year round, shawls of all grades and sizes, | whilo now that the holiday trade is on boots and shoes underwear, all the | the number has been incrensed to a lit- departments of a first class dn\ goods | tle over 500. The firm could not other liouse, & completo crockery and china | wise handle a stock that foots up nearly store, o hardware and stove | a half million dollars, doing a business store, a harness store, a market [ of $1,500,000 a year, which equals the where all kinds of salted and cured | solling of everything in t! reat estab- acandy factory that is | lishment every four 1 It requires located out under the sidewalk, whoro | thirteon cashicrs to t the busi- all the candy sold by the house is made, ness on the five floors, and with the vast id let it be understood that for the [ amount of holiday trade that the im- eight days preceding last Christmas tho | mense installment of Christmas goods amount of candy sold was a littie over | will bring, even this number will more two tons per day, and they were not the [ than have their hands tull. the ) kind of tona that some of the coa ers handlo ofther. Tho candy deal- is GENTLEMEN who are good dressers—who appreciate really fine clothing—who enjoy wearing garments that fitand hang on a man as if they belong to him-—"are inVited to step into “The Nebraskas’ suit department today and inspect the elegant new Lline of fine suits designed especially for the holiday trade. lere are the ever popular sack-—the dressy cutaway--the single-breasted square cut—the stately Prince Albert—double=- breasted square cuts, did you ask? Well, we SHOULD We are showing a line ot these Ll\hmn- able suits in cheviots —bedford cords assi- meres and homespuns__in foreign and nlumos- tic weaves—that for style -tone—and var.ety ot patterns would be hard to matchat any exclu- sive merchant tailoring establishment, Wae show them in blacks - blues—browns grays— tobacco-—slate-fancy mixtures; in large and small plaids-—-checks—cords—str ipes—plain col- ors; with binding and without. Thirteen fifty for an elegant bedford cord cheviot is a fair sample price. If you want asuit to DRESS UP in—here's the always correct worsted, in clay and corkserew—cheviots, plain and fancy-—cassimeres, all wool and silk and wool; cutaways in biack and dark rich colors; in stripes-—plaids—checks—mixtures; a line of goods designed by some of the most noted makers of fine clothing—at such prices as four- teen fifty for a genuine clay worsted-—fourteen seventy-five [()-l'_.f—:rllli[W()l ted cheviot, and soon* If you want to buy a handsome suit for father— for husband—for one of the boys FOR CHRISTMAS m\'\_: the time to Dbuy it—while ther lots to pick from— plenty plenty of sizes. Our line of sack suits in fine was never in better condition to select from. All the popular fabrics—made up with some little extra attention as regards linings and workmanship-—with prices from four to six dollars less than you'd expect them to be for such suits, vo smile. Are you in doubt Usce IRaymond’ Shopping Memoranda for storling silver ontations to gontlomen, Folding rules, Pen wipors, i Cloth brushes Cutlele pushers, Chinmpagne opencrs, Soap boxes. N rbuckles, ng Military brushes, Yloustaotic brusiios, cutaway in Paper knlyes, Whisk brovms Open Evenings. S. E. Cor. 15th and Douglas. DrDOWNS 316 l)ou(rl()&. Strecet, ()n).rhn, Ach. vnte, blood, skin C. S. RAYMOND, of suits goods orrespondence. Medleine or instruments se antents or s One personal interview p by no marks to indicato er. A\ 00k (Mysteries of Life) sent free. Otfice Tetly private sendstamp for reply “A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR- GAIN.” MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES SAPOLIO OUR SHOE DEPARTMENT offers today GENUINE kan av roo cork-sole shoes, just the thing for damp weather—at $: —the six-dollar kind in shoe stores. Open Bvenings ull v o'clock, The last year has been the year of largest growth in the Sixty-five years of Tiir Compaxion's history. It has now reached a weekly circulation of 550,000 subscribers. This generous support enables its publi to provide more lavishly than ever for the coming Volume, but only a partial list of Authors, Stories and Articles can be given in this space. Prize Serial Stories —$6,500. The Prizes offered for the Serial Competition of 1892 were the Largest ever given by any periodical. First Prize, $2,000. Second Prize, $1,000. Third Prize, $1,000. Fourth Prize, $1,000. Larry; “Aunt Mat’s” Investment and its Reward; Armajo; How a very hard Lesson was bravely L Cherrycroft; The nt; by Sam; A charming Story of Brotherly Love and Se Amanda M. Charl by ted; by Douglas. es W. Clarke. :. Stowe. McClelland. Old House and its Ten Sacrific Ly Prize Folk-Lore Stories. Slow Joe’s Freedom, $1,000; Mother's Doughnula. $300; SEVEN OTHER SERIAL STORIES will Le given during the year, by Pictured by Their Children. A Group of Four Pen Pictures of Famous Mcn at Home. How Mr. Gladstone Works ; by his daughter, Mrs. Drew. Gen, Sherman in his Home; by Mrs, Minnic Sherman Fitch. Gen. McClellan; by his son, George B. McClellan. President Garfield; Ly his daughter, Mrs. Molly Garficld Brown. The Silver Tankard, $200. C. A. Stephens, Homer Greene and others. The Bravest Deed I Ever Saw, A Scries of Four Papers in which deeds of remarkable vividly described by United Correspondents. By General John Gibbon. Captain Charles King. bravery are ates Officers of the Army and by famous War General Wesley Merritt. Archibald Forbes. Interesting Articles. How 1 wrote ¢“Ben Hur.’”” Describing the origin and growth of ‘The Origin of ¢ Rudder Grange;'’ by the popular Story Writer, ‘The Story of My Boyhood; by How College Men are Trained for Foot-Ball, Base-Ball, and Boat-Racing. Three New Sea Stories. 1. The Bristolman's Trap. I, The Jungle Kingdoms of India. Chdracteristics of the Conflict, popular Book, Gen. Lew Wallace, Frank R. Stockton. Rudyard Kipling. By Four College Crew Captains. By W. Clark Russell. HI, Suakes. By Sir Edwin Arnold, By II. The Romance of a Shoal. 11, A Desperate Capture. L. The War between Man and Beast. The World’s Fair. Col. George R. Davis, the Dircctor promised to contribute articles, and Mrs. Potter Palmer will describe the proposed “Children’s Palace.”” TiE CoMpanioN will also have special correspondents at the Fair, Among the subjects to be treated ar In Foreign Lands How to Sec St. Paul's Cathedral; Ly The Dean of St. Paul, How to See Westminster Abbey. The Dean of Westminster. ‘Windsor Castle. A picturesque description by The Marquis of Lorne. A Glimpse of Russia; by The Hon. Charles Emory Smith, A Glimpse of Belgium. The American Minister at Brussels, Adventures in London Fogs; Ly Charles Dickens. Your Work in Life. What are you going to do? eneral of the Fair, has .. How to Economize Time and Money. How to Prepare for a Visit to the Fair, What can best be Scen in a Given Time. These and other similar articles mav offer you some suggestions, Journalism as a Profession. By the Editor-in-Chief of the New York Times, In What Trades and Professions is there most Roon by Shipbuilders Wanted. Chats with great shipbuilders on this Subject; by Why not be a Veterinary Surgeon? An opportus by Dr. Austin Peters, Young Government Clerks at Washington. Opportunities in the State, Treasury, War, Na wd Interior Departments,”and in the Department of Agriculture, By the Chicf Clerks of these Departments, Charles R. Miller, Hon. R. P, Porte, Alexander Wainwright, for Recruits? for Boys; Every Number contains impartial Editorials on current events at home and abr and Anecdotes, the latest discoveries in Science, Aticles on Health, a Charm FREE Specimen copies sent fre on application, , al Poetry by the lest writers, choice 5 [ 18! , Origi 1 and many other well-k i features, to 1893 Send Check Pest.Ofica Grder at our risk, New Subscribers who kend $1.35 now will recelve The Companion FIEF and for & full year frd to January 1, including the Double Hollday Numbers o ibing the New Buildiug in all its departments, will be or free to any one requesting it who sends a subscription. Fleise me THE YouTH's COMPANION, 1503, s this paper. or Boston, Mass.

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