Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WANTED TO RENT OMAHA, THURSDAY, Aparimen a Fints. |ONFURNISHED room In modern home, FOR RENT-New 3-room apartment; dje-| DY lady employed. A 37, Bee. ___ appearing beds: pneumatio elevator; | TWO or three sho B‘l‘:%—gnt”l*lljll n !sv‘"' wlk;"— Central school h e, ors . ones o === — 2 WANTED TO BUY & ROOMS, MODPRN, %08 Mason bed e, best condition, on one rents ¥ Bt 3 fioor; RE INVRSTMENT COMPANY, 1623 Farnam 8t. D. 88 . #T. CLARE, %ith and Hamey Sts. 1 OFFICE_furniture bo T apd_woM. 3 O, Reed 137 Farnam. 616 Strictly high D no ‘tb._m ale buya everything pleasant apartment. Tel. Harney 6. |WiLi buy & rd. SM t'l_Be Board Roema. HIGHEST prices for oid_clothing. D. @14 Furnished Rooms that offer every mod- convenience and comfort in privat ymilies or boarding houses of the m::d- clase will be found in the Furn WE _pay_Chioago_prices for aluminum serap castings. Paxton-Mitcheil Co. —= e ey ooluma of The Bee. Phone Tyler REAL ESTATR 3 FARM & RANCH LANDS FOR SAL?Y BPROIAL LOW RAT Arkanaas, HOTRL BANTORD. 1th And Farnam. | 90 ACRES black land, 4 fni, from boguti- HARLEY, 20th and Farmam. N.: to! ] B tt, Ark. $ acre, $1.000 m% 1. 8. B, room, steam beated, | Saeh. 8 C Bt Bo. Omaba, New ta bath, Food board, Dh: Har. 1000 o niirerata, & Oak ‘olontes, n better. ., 3 > N R ;A‘ th Co.. $I834 Clty Nab Mk, D ik =~ Conada. o&z\ .‘l-:k". Itw‘u:" :1 oals and ! And cerine vory saay. Frank Oraw WEST FARNAM. ford e Ron or Rosstown, Sask. Furnished or unfurnished home of 7 rooms, $40 and | Missourl, Dou 1S or Colfax 1485, 3 S S bt Farm for Sale oo acres, close to. market; Vernon fine 5308 Webater St county. Missour; tree and clear: 8 acres Harney | In cultivation, balance in vaiuable pecan En- Fm. Prite entrance. 2113 Cass. R, 7%, | timber and ideal stock farm; t STass, | and three cuttings of hay o IN DUNDER, | sets of good | vements, it ong or two large. lght, wellkept and hoise; Siree good mever failing wels: well-heated rooms, in_ strictly Wodern| fenced and cross fenced; within thres pome, fof {raveling Selosma? Pelerences | flies of two raliway stations. Will divide nfi?g@‘b‘“ i, Toereneet | furm i Qeaired, selling b acren or 1. LiGHT, nicely furnished recm Tor couple WELSH, two gentlemen, in_Feld Club R. ¥. D. No. 4, Rich Hill, Mo, et Privite tamily. Meals if desired. ._.:_.n_ References required. Harney TI67. NICELY furoighed room; ciose in; ail modern, 031 5. 224 St room in new home for two youns men, cheap. 3978 Harney. W0 So 2ist Ave. modern, fur Close in. _Quiet phone. Cal ot 7 8. 23d, furnishell room private_home. _Telephone 7 Harney, rms. for gentiemen. $.50 wk. Furnished Heusekeeping Rooms. ISHRBD '1?1:"'. 26th St., 815; 4 rooms, .d.,‘ private’ bath and Housckeeping Rooms. bJ housekee rooms. Houses and Cottages. North. Walnut 3658 ROOM _house, modern, $22.50. Call at 1809 Lothrop. —_— le, 5 and 6-room oo FOR colored people, al R, B tly modern. PDoug. 610, modern , small m hot buil suc . Florence boulevard; wn.er. ‘Telephone Colfax 965 South. 8-ROOM _HOUI 1108 ;An A All modern and in .m &:Cl is near Park of both lines Ideal «\KM%TRONB-WALBH C Tyler 3 State for roomers, 'OMPANY, asked for It STRONG-WALSH COMPANY, State Bank Bidg. Tyler &. yith and_Douglas. Troom houss, best ot Hrney shoe: 4 PARK AVHE.—Brick, modern. Srooms modecn. hee.. Proiy ern _home, POTIRS TRUST. CO. 1629 Bt Do corner. Mincellancoas. PER MONTH, five-room old house, but a neat, at time it F. 8. TRULLINGER. $15.00~6-r. cot! bath, 2107 Ohlo. 16.00—6~r. cot“u“:: 3304 Frankli 8.00—5-r. cottag: .00—8-r, cottage, bath and elec. Ave. H0.00-5r. flgt, 1 Park Ave. Walnut 600. L3 per hr. mo. Satistavtion guar. D. 435 LOOK AT THESE BUNGALOWS. and 3004, Lafayette Av with beamed cel place, book nished room. il Doug. 7819, gn ¥m., mod. suitable for 3. 1% Dous. Georgia_Ave. elght rooms good fure for reat, in | h Hod " 6108, rooms for light housekeep- | 8cre in orchard, well fur- | ol entrance; mwo OR THREB -,}lc%“a; FURNISHED HKPG. ROOMS. NEW BRICK FLAT. AM—Nios, odern, steatm- | bue rooms, 2427 Charles, $19. l’homr‘h,‘x t ‘tn. house; mod. ex. heat. D. 6686 $100 1807 Lothrop, Yol $-rooi use, partl venient for small family, T-ROOM, modern, 2060 Poppleton Ave. MODERN 7-room house, 1519 Park Ave., 5. Phune Harney 156. .gofl'.flo a}l cll”u (CAN MNT water, = D,,C,,‘{.‘:b..flm_.,' paer, Weet. 9-r. mod., house, 3614 Leavenworth. W. 2500 89%8—0. mod., 2208 ()l:n AV‘:. 8 modern house, 1681 Gedrsia &7 Omaha Nai. Bank Bidg. Dous. 134 &ROOM modern cottage for rent. Phone y one ?mh west Crelghton coliege, Phone GimobeVan&Storage e, 5 and nge, I buffet, china 120 Acres on Paved Road | to above, No. 6. 1T and I™™ N. 3th St. South- ek msem—sommx 2| PRA, HITTERS Don’t Forget| PRAY FOR HAYOR Big AUttion Sale of i e e re No. 24th St. Rental ‘ ‘:-?_g’g"m:." ; Properties PRAYER FOR MAYOR DAHLMAN| TuesdaY, October ‘Never has the Sunday Tabernacle | 26th, 10 A. M. seemed more charged with spiritual power than at the union prayer meet- ing held there yesterday morning. Fully 1,600 people, most of them women, were present. Hundreds gave' thelr testimony of conversion and fathers, brothers, sisters, loved ones, neighbdors. Homer Rodeheaver was the leader and Mre. Sunday sat on the platform also. After more than 100 had risen and testi- saked people to make their those for whom they want wasnt taken for each even a sentence. They : “A brother,” “my “my boy," “my | hbora, Several rose and asked prayers for the weat corner Mth and th and 1% on ni et S b R lor vl ey . on No. l-uup to tenant. Can Mmguht for $800 or moved off in 3 daye. All these are free and of encumbrance. munst be de) with auctioneer on sach parcel. 108 of first payment within 10 days. Ab- ready for delivery on day of sale MR. BARGAIN DO! FAILTOAWDT% WA A GBOQD INVESTMBENT ON 40 feet on foot mayor. ‘I have been praying that Mayer Dahlman might come to Christ ever since these meetings started,” sald one woman. Pray for Scheo) Board, Several others asked prayers for the wohool board. An aged woman asked prayess “for a lot of people and the | mayer espocially.” Three persons re- | quested prayers that the oity officials stracts are If you want one of the best located {arma, close to Omaha, you shot look over this we are lering fo ta con ouse, orses great d § Tt b, piped to the house and m’ R potnt 0 1 ‘!:n. !outt {;t‘h? .3 ! 'y one o best larms in Do Alan‘zounty. Just -ouam:‘nll for &o0d 0. It is located on the West Center road to Millard, on the cross road from Ko to the Millard road; 11 miles from the iness district of clty % minutes’ nam Sts. A few thousand dollars’ pay- ment will buy it this week, the balance 4 to 9 vna with § rr cent interest. rice 1l be made right. See K about ft. Farms on West Dod same distance out are selling for over re higher than the price asked ted at a by an for this Hastings & Heyden x 1614 HARNRY ST. - | CHOICE farm for sale—A snap; ‘and will sell at a sacrifice; Omaha; well improyed 160- ayson Bros., Kiron, la. t- it be led to hit the trall. it the mayer only knew how many | are sonoerned about his soul uldn’t help coming,” sald Rode- \ one woman rose and said he know it, for she had told him. hite-bearded man in a front row, tears streaming down his cheeks, prayery for “my boy." g fellow asked prayers for “the 8, 'WD AUCTION €O, Auctioneers. N, P. DODGE &.00, AGENTS classes of people with special pe- for the mayor, school board and ity officiela, meeting opened with quotations of promiscs. Young snd O1d. they oame from every part of sometimes several speak- A little girl 6 yeara old and was followed N R Get Settled FOR THE OCTOBER 21, Shall Be Called Wonderful.”’ “Billy” Sunday's sermon yesterday aft- erhoon was as follows Text: Isalah ix His name shall be called Wonderful, In olden times all names meant, or #tood for something, and this s still the oase among Indians, and all other people who are living in a primitive way, Whenever you know an Indian’'s name And the meaning of it you know some- thing abuut the Indian Such names as Klldeor, Eagle Eye and Buffalo Face, Sitting Bull, tells us some- thing about the men who possessed them. This tendency to use names that are expreasive atill orops oot in eamp Iife, and whenever men are thrown together reconsecration. Many sobbed as they in an unconventional way. In mining, [make out'of them enouth animals rose and asked prayers for husbands, | Miltary and lumber camps nearly every fill Noah's ark, but you must have the man has & nickname that indicates some pecullarity or trait of character. Usually & man’s nickname Is nearer the real man than his right name, All of our family names today had thelr origin In something that meant something. There are 3568 names in the Bible for the Lord Jesus Christ, and I suppose this is because He was Infinitely more than any one could exprosa, Of the many names given to Christ i is my purpose at thia time to brielly con sider this one: “His name shall be oalled Wonderful," Let us look iInto It somewhat and see ‘whether He was true to His name, which was given to Him by the prophet 800 years before He was born. Does the name fit Him? Is it such & name as He ought to have? ‘Wonderful means something that s transcendently beyond the common. We say that the Yellowstone park, Niagara falls and Grand canyon of the Colorado are wonderful because there ls nothing else llke them. Whon David killed Gollath with his sling he did & wonderful thing, because nobody else ever &id any- thing lke it. still for Joshua. Lot us wee whether Jesus fits His name. Birth Among Lowly Weanderful. man ang the nature of p: King of Kings, and yet His birth looked forward to In slad expectation, the birth of a prince usually is in royal palace, and celebrated with marked expressions of joy all ever the country. ‘There was ne room for Him and He had to be born in & oradled In a manger; and yet proclaimed ft with joy from the sky, to & few humble shepherds iIn sheepskin coats, who were guarding the flocks by night. Mark how He might have come, with ¥ large h-grade priced land ‘in, N n ‘money red C. Bradley, Wet ek R o S Uregon. under cultivas of th i ; one -u.r}v e 0o8Y tr. NM:..:.. umuwc.. 0 8, 1Wth ool 3 4 FOR house now listriot; per a., long tim me_from Ii 00, 'will tak ‘busin i 7 reoms rch; - entrance be oy Bank Blag. &R, mode: § cottage, $ul. Tel. Har. 1M6 : : ] 1 mao' ‘.32‘: Coar. " House has - All m NeAr oar. [ouse been newly decorated th out and in ‘_ogboollnm tip-top condition. It is worth the money % send Jt to Bloux of your > o P u}% or §; or .‘:‘ol::. ), 000, fi&"- four great REAL ESTATE LOANS MONEY TO LOAN. W. T. Smith Co. Otty National Bank Building. REAL ESTATE—WEST SIDE Near 27th and .&ai “I wes a backslider . My Httle S-year-old , *Why should I go to Bunday school when you and dad don't go to church?” We'll set him an example §8,8% Apartments, flats, ean be rented quickly and cheaply by & TGHT-ROOM house. strictly modern, | 2°® “For Rent. REAL BESTATE-—~WANTED Two Bargains Will Be Sold sroom bungslow, big I Toom, dining. room, kitchen, bed room, tollet and lavatory on first floor, Three fine bedrooms and " New, 5 Rooms $50 Cash Baplfdt‘luce $20 Month wf:’:‘l“hfl.“‘ T k 'k to car line. in in one of the from owner; WANTED—At once, residence, Dundee, &“? .rnAmo or cathedral bor- m’:‘lin. wl!l‘ g:;’n}ofi l”ln-ulh. par- in the village. Bargain. Move into home. ~Mnlufluhr-l."&y rom Park wants an offer on this fine Practi; with all Krug H rtunity; 't overioek it Bhione 'owner. Lir. Rysns | REAL ESTATE-FOR EXCHANGE BARGAIN other_roo; re rge in Fine brick largs tireplace, tures, plumbing, heat. | , south front, oak and close in, just east owner A H. i ontolatr, Call nd terms. and Gordon Van Co. _P.EN'I‘AL LI vecant houses apartments. aiso fof storage, moving. 1°th snd Jacksom Sta Moving, Packing. the C-n'g{l Furniture Store’'s FREE dmw Oraaha, $16,000, clear. Will trade for &ood clear city Address whar, Do 8. o, STul Yelve- REAL ESTATE—ACREAGE 19 N. 1ith 8L Tol, D 194 or Hae 2.8 ACRES IMPROVED %2 35 5 . g | BOOM HOUSE ON PAVED reasol rent. Tel. X AD ard’ fi": ‘call rnmns Owner listed for sale a well E‘ ng, shipping. M3 bat ‘: :‘y}fl:‘h hes l:nervwn‘ m‘l’l’l N and five-room Ho 901781 Lake, § rooms 20002588 Jones, § rooms lxx;k <o, pac! & stol 1 V‘:!nlm » J.Gi ; modern; ing distance. Dou f ases G parts of the A o T moving, very nearly what lone without the HASTINGS & HEYDEN. 1614 Farney Bt. 73 AC. 6-ROOM HOUSE, KEY. STONE PARK. High and s'ghtly location, rich soll. has 4 rooms on floor, 2 on ! second floor. Will sell on small cash L A "For Sale” ad will turn second-hand Lusniture into cash. yment. Can secll house with more or less lnnd. Fee us at ongs about it | HASTINGS & HEYDEN, W4 Warney, b for Omaha residence. n‘fih %rvw?film COMPANY, Fifth Flook Omaba uu}u. Bids, D. 1?5‘. rooms and large sleepin; . “Tot 80mis, Beautitul shade. ne to car line. Armstrong-Walsh Co. Tyler 1586, State Bank Bldg. “REAL ESTATE—INVESTMENTS '\ Farnam Street A Growing Street ‘-mmwu t‘wr‘»n feot near 3ist B . fest Dear this, so feet east of Farnam school, §18,20. Harrison & Morton 85 Omahsa Nat. D, 84, —0 How’s This? Incumbrance, or trading price, but o Investment nl: every way. Investigate at once. Glover & Spain Dougla. Wi 99 Ciy Nation¥t Apartments, flats, houses and cottages | ean be rented quickly and cheaply by & 4 all the pomp and all the glory of the upper world. It would have been a great condescension for Him I H e 4 T !E i§; s £ i § ! 8 ?§§§§ 3[ i 5 i 3 a time, and such & ocoumtry, and such people should have produced Jesus Christ, oan be accounted for om mo other grounds than His divinity. Coming from Sweh Pesple Wonder- ful. i “‘and for this rewson: of people are living there today s In the time of Jesus, and they are the worst specimens of humanity I ever seen anywhere. Lexy, lustful, i rant and wicked, and to think of coming out from such & people is to a sure preof of His divinity, Had not been a bellever in His divinity be. fore going there, I would have to be- Heve In ft now." His lite was wonderful. Wonderful for its sinlessncss and for ite usefulness and His unselfishness. Even his enemies could mnot bring against Him any graver charge than that be claimed God for His father, and that He would do good on the Sabbath day. Not the slightest evidence of wseifish- ness, of wself-interest, can be found in the story of His lite. He was always heiping others, but not once did He do anything to help Himself. He had the power to turn stome into bread, but went hungry forty days without a morsel of food. While escaping from enemies who were determined to put Him to death He saw & man who had been blind from birth, and stopped to wive him sight, doing so at the risk of His own N He never sought His own in any wi but lived for others every day of His Iife. His first mirncle was performed not before a multitude to spread His own fame, but in a far away hamlet to save s peasant’s wife humiliation. He had compassion on the multitude had any mercy on himself. Jesus Oreated Farables. Wonderful for the way in which He tanght; for its simplicity and olearness, and adaptation to the individual. You improvements, | a5 not anywhers find Him seeking the |Proclaimed to all the terrified tnabitants multitude, but He never avolded the ndividual. they understood what He said, He|the opening of the buds in May, and the put the oookies on the lower shelf. No man bad to take s dictionary wit! by the most wonderful word pictures. We are tol that without & parable spake He not to any man. He made people see things and see them clearly, It ts wonderful thet this humble Gal- flean peasant who may never have gone . | hood has always been on the firing line. and wept over Jerusalem, but He never| have imagined such & scene. Had some t Iln-;u:nn ln'l:olaumn:; His ot Oy - thought and made plain His meaning |17 Placed. & single one of His enemies got to Him, 1 know that the story of the resurrec- tion is true, because nons but God would have had things happen in the order that they did, and in the way In Which they oocurred. Had the story been false Jesus would have been made to go to Pllate and the bigh priest, and to the others who had a part in His death, to prove that He was Sunday Preachn“Hia N to sohool & day in His Iife should have made Himself & teacher of teachers for All time. The pedagosy of today i modeling after the manner of Christ clower and closer every day. Let me also say in passing that the originality of Jesus s & proof of His divinity, The human mind cannot create anything fn an absolute senwe. “t oan bufld out of almost any kind of material, but it cannot oreate. There 18 no such thing as out and out originality belonging to & man. You | cannot imagine anything that does not | resemble something you have previously | lustrious in all history. Looked at from the human side alone, how great was the probability that avery- thing He sald would be forgotten within & fow years. He never wrote a sermon, He published no books. | doctrines have endured fér 2,000 yearw: T i o oy b 3 (L4 LT e e e o, " P 4| v s sutns o ot There is said to be nothing new under m.'m.‘m;::: :‘ u:.:‘u-;: the sun and there ia a sense in which | It ts true. Bverything is the outgrowth of something else. The first rallway oars looked ke the old stages and the first automobilea looked like fages. It Is that way about everything. No man ever made a book or aven a story that was altogether uniike all others. ‘The stories we hear today on the Irish and Dutoh are older than the Irish and Duteh., You find stories like them in the earlflest literature, but you oan't find any stories anywhere in any literature that even in the remotest way resemblo the parables of Josus. Such parables as the good Samaritan and the prodigal son are abmolutely new creations and so proolaim Jesus as di- vine because He could create. Things that He Tought Wenderful. His teaching was wonderful in what He taught, as much as In the way He taught. He taught that He was greater than Moses. Think of the audacity of ft! Mak- ing such clalma as that to the Jews, who regarded Moses as almost divine. weighty or so wel Think of the audacity of & man stand- | wy, ing before us Amerioans and trying to !4, la; make us think he was greater than| rne George Washington. at Mis feet He also declared that He fulfilled the|been compell and the law of Moses, and the | “Never only effort He ever made to prove His| Fis claims was to point to the works that|into every kno' He aid. rled healing The first thing an imposter always does | they have is to overprove his ocase. Jesus never| No other turned His hand over to try to convince | of the circul His enemies that He was the Christ. You taine His have to explain & coal ofl lamp, but you | His thoughts and don’t need to waste any breath in giving | Information about the power of the sun. [If & man shouid " The springtime will do that, Sober pray- [ Bible, and yet ing men and women explain Jesus, oould not remain ignorant of Jesus taught that He was equal to God.| You have only to lift He sald: “He that hateth Me hateth | lobk about you to ses that His wonder My Father also.” (John xv. Did | ful salvation ia rowe. When Jesus began his ministry Rome ruled the world and her invineible le- wlons were overywhers, but now, through the teachings of the humble Galflean peasant, whom her minfons put to death, her power end her religion are gone. The great templo of Diana of the Ephesians is in ruins and no worshiper of her ocan be found. When Jesus fed the 5,000 with a few lonves and fishes, and healed the poor woman who touched the hem of His ment, there wasn't a church or pital or an insane asylum or other monsynary Institution in the world, now they ‘are nearly as countiess a8 sands upon the seashore. Spread of His Toashings Was Wene dertul. When the cloud hid Him from the i1 it 24 :!,3 it E o | q i iit vl is i i H H 3 i ! " ! i £ { i! & 5 t if it i : H g8 i | L £ i if o 8 i HHH gEa¥ ¥ Ep2i¥ it His life, by one rusted disciples, and wonderful tha #hould have been sold for se low a 3 Wonderful, too, that He should have been condemned to death in the way in which He was by both the religious and civil authorities, and on the testimony of false witnesses, in the name of God, when all the laws of God were defiled in the i - o B g i And now I eome to the last will give you that He fs true (o His and that is: l:'! Attending Death om Oross. He ls & K e great publicity of His death was Also wonderful, 1t is doubtful if any other death was ever witnessed by su many people. Hundreds of thousands of people were in Jerusalem, who had come from everywhere to attend the passover. The sky was darkened and the sun hid its face from the awful scepe. A great earthquake shook the city, the dead came out of their graves unto many, and the vell of the temple was rent, from top to bottom. 1 do not know that I am mother any more certainly |that I am a child of God, and I do not know that I have been na way any more convincingly (han I that I have been born of the Spirit. And now let me ask you this: Hus this wonderful Saviour saved you? Do you know Him as your Saviour? Have you ever given Him your case? ‘When the proot is so overwhelming that He does save and has been saving for centuries, and that none have ever besn saved or ever expect to be saved through And remember that up to that time no eye had been allowed to look Lohind that vell except that ef the high priest, und then only once & yesr, on thy great day of atonemént. L He had foretold it to His disciples, and | has done so frequently, always saying | ‘whenever He spoke of His death, that He | ‘would rise again on the thiri day, and get all about it, and not one of mem‘“Bmm—f{ke to Write Poem About Man Without a Soul thought of going to the sepul:hre on tb morning of the third day except t The audience which gathered to hear “Billy’ Sunday at the Brandels women, and they only to prepare His body more fully for the grave. Woman. | This shows how fully they abandoned all hope when they saw Him deal. Sore left the c¢ity, for we are told of two who went to Fimmaus. i The manner of Mis resurrection waa |Yosterday filled the seats of the floer and sod-like. No human mind would ever |PSICODY and most of the Eallery. and much standing room was ocoupled. “Billy” talked on "The Man Without & ,|man described it in the way in which he Country,” He re: the - thought it should have ocourred he would N nted by gyt Faiity have earthquakes and thunderings and & | 0!8 Who was compelied to live for great commotion in the heavens. A sound warship without news like that of the last trump would have mmhm'r: of Jerusalem that He was risen. But see “Billy” said he would how far different it was. be entitled, “The Man Ma, * of Resurrection More Than eltizenship—in . world to come— he urged his hear- care of their rights women who were early there found no "‘"'.‘.:"“ b i £ ¥ And then how wonderful wers the re- corded appearance after the again so different from what man have had them! He appeared to every one of friends and jo His best friends, but