4 BRIEF CITY NEWS IMadaaJst, Tsilor too raxton Blk. Orffse percolator, $5, Burgess-Ursndsn, Boot Prlat It Now Beacon Prsse "Today's Complete Mart TTorTm elaaslf:ed section today, and appears la The Be EXCLfSlVKLT. Find out whal th various moving picture theaters offer Chlropraetlo Adjustments Incur health quickly and permanently. Dr. Bur horn. Wend building. D. &S47. eateaced for Bobbery 1L Bell, ntri was aenlem-ed to ninety days In Hie ounty Jail for robbing a. Gromberg. 2M3 Capitol avenue, of $. oath Btde ProgTssslvss Entertain The South Side Progressive club will en tertain next Friday evening at Ha hall, Fourteenth and Cstellsr streeta. Keen Ton Mo.. .nH .i.ki.. in the American Safe Deposit vaults Jilt 8. 17th ft. Bee Bldg. Boxes rent tt for three month. nMn rrnm t . m r. m Morrow Talks to Philosophical Uty Harvey W. Morrow speaks to the Omaha Philosophical society at S p. m. today at Labor temple on subject, ance and Anarchy." "Vnn.liB.i.i. Dual meeting of the Assoc iated Charl- tlea of Omaha will be held at the office of the society at Gardner hall, 1718 Dodge street, at t p. m. Monday. a.e... . tie. t ent siate of Worces - .? 71 vaa?l st. .1 ears. aee W. H. Indoe. general a Mutual Life Assurance Co, ter. Mass. one of th. i,l,lpt and boat comnanles on enh The State Bank of Omaha pays 4 per cent on time deposits and 3 per cent on savings accounts. All deposits In this bank are protected by the depositors' guarantee fund of the state of Nebraska. Order of Stags Charter fee, $3 ... . IT . ' , monthly dues, 75c; weekly benef Its. $7;. . , ... ' . ... funeral benef ts, $125; free phys c ans, free legal advice, free employment bureau; 700 members ln Omaha. Join now. Of fice 308 Brandeis theater. Douglas 3684. Prisoners Appreciate Papers Mrs Paul Getxschmann has received a letter of thanks from German war prisoners who are being held ln Toklo by Japan. The letter is in appreciation of some pa pers which Mrs. Getxschmann sends each week. Brockton Wants Sunday A call was received for a "Billy" Sunday campaign In Brockton, Mass., which Is the center of the shoe industry. Brockton Is on Cape Code and would be the farthest east that "Billy" has ever gone In preach ing. Honolulu, whither he goes next summer, will be the farthest west. Pern Club to afeet The Peru club oi Omaha will hold its annual session for the election of officers Thursday at t o'clock at the Toung Men'a Christian as sociation. Besides the election of ol fleers other matters of business will be con sidered. Miss Mattle Cook Ellis, dean of women at the Normal school at Peru, will speak. All former students and friends of the school are invited. Z'tt Mnn Sunday Trains Beginning Sunday the Northwestern road will run Sunday as well as week-day trains be tween Omaha and Oakdale, via Albion and Scrlbner. This will afford through train service between those points dally, Instead of dally except Sunday, as here tofore. Trains Noa. 309 and 310 will make thla schedule: Leave Omaha 5:30 p. m., arrive Oakdale 1:15 p. m. ; leave Oakdale 6 a. rru, arrive Omaha 1:35 p. m. Father Burrows on Visit to Creighton The Rev. A. J. Burrows, S. J., formerly an instructor at Creighton university, and , now provincial of the Missouri province of the Jesuit order, visited the college je cently on his way to the Indian missions controlled by the Jesuits. Father Bur rows la on a tour of Inspection, during whioh he will visit the Indian mlrslns at Pine Ridge, S. D. ; Holy Rosary mis sion. South Dakota, and St. Stevens', Wyoming. L C. NASH GOES TO NEW YORK WITH BUYERS U C. Nash, vice president and general ,anarer of the Burge.s-Na.h company. .n..i.j ... . . . ' manager accompanied by a corps of department buyers, left last night over the North western for New York on a buying trip. Mr. Nash stated before leaving that everything pointed to a wonderful fall and winter business, everything is right for it, and business all over the country seems to be on a more steady and sub stantial foundation. The present trip Is for reorders of fall merchandise and holiday goods. Those who went with Mr. Nash are: T. 8. Kelly, men's furnishings; H ram Jones, silks and dress goods; A. W. Hunt, rugs and draperies: Miss M. Doris, gloves, and Mrs. Agnes Rogers, muslin under wear. Girls! Women! Take Cascarets If Constipated They liven your liver and bow els and clear your complexion. Don't stay headachy, bilious with breath bad and sour stomach. Tonight sure! Take Cascarets and en Joy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced. Casca rets will liven your liver and clean your thirty feet of bowels without griping. You will wake up feeling grand. Your head will be clear, breath right, tongue clean, stomach sweet, eyes bright, step elastic and complexion rosy they're wonderful. Get a 10-cent box now at any drug alore. Mothers csn safely give a whole Casca ret to children any time when cross, fev erish, bilious, tongue coated or consti pated they jvro harmlsss. AdvsrUsv. Look to Yourselves that You Receive Full Reward from Jesus "Billy' Punday preached Sunday on "A Full Reward" as follows: A great many people suppose that after they have accepted Jesus Christ as their Savior, made a public acknowl edgment of Him as such and Joined a church, that that Is all there Is to a Christian life. Well, there Is something more, that cornea by way of experience. I am one of the kind that believes that there are consistent and Increasing bless- Ings to be had If you pay the price, but! It costa something to know the fullness' of God's power and to be ablo to have I Uoi answer your prayer. I Thpr te something more, and It comos wtlcn lt we stand In the presence Of Him who. havlns not ,en lv. in u John, part of the eighth verse, I reaa Look to yourselves that we re- celve a full reward " Th. mn,..i. I hould be placed on the word Jonn seems desirous of Impressing the , followers of Jesus with the fnct that i thrT are rewards. There are those who w'" be Mtiafled with Just getting Into ana as joo says, "Hy the skin, 1 of 'our teeth." John seems desirous of j i Impressing the followers of Jesus with thal fact' and he " "I-ok to your. ' etlvM tnit lv f" reward." Do ' ur l,tmo-' your best. You are r,v.rAaA ,u. K.... I not oln" to bo rewarded on the basis of comparlson. God isn't going to com- j Pare what 1 do with what you do. God won t ludge you by what Solomon, or David, or John did. but God I. going to Judge every man and woman according hi. - , . to his or her own ability. "Look to your- selves. Never mind what I do. Never . ' ' l mind whether you can do as much as the . ,.,, -rM ... preacher. "Look to yourselves that we , - i ja uiiftiii as well receive a full measure." j bring a baby Into the world, tie It hand Re word ts Promised. 1 and foot and fasten it to a cake of Ice I am not surprised at all to hear John ""d 'xpect it to live and grow physically ay In the nineteenth chapter of Mat- t0 Pct that the new converts will thew. "We have forsaken all and fol-1 make any progress ln religious matters lowed Thee. What shall we have then?",f have to go into a godless, worldly. Possibly you have found yourself pon- j rcat big refrigerator of a church. 1 know derlng over that same question. I know tht If some one who has taken their I have. I have said many a time "Well. tand would slip and fall tomorrow some Lord, I have made great sacrifices for ! '. vou would say, "Ha, ha, Just as I ex- You. I have sacrificed the delight which It would give me to be at home with wife and children. I have sacrificed hours and nights of sleep and tiave had days of worry and long nights or labor: I have done a great deal. I have been in the thick of the fight. I have been on the firing line for you when I have thought I was tho only one standing for God's truth. I have been In fields white under the harvest and have labored in the bar ren spots." It is not a good thing simply to think of the remuneration. You be lieve when you work In the mill or on the railroad or In the public school that you will fee paid your wages, therefore 1 you have faith to believe, and God aays, "Now, I will reward you." 80 remem ber that God has promised and He that promises Is faithful. Look to Yoorselres. "Look to yourself that we receive a full reward." A friend of mine told me that he ac cepted the pastorate of a church, and when he preached his first sermon down the aisle came an eld man, hobbling on a crutch, and he aald, "I am afraid you are going to make a failure out of this. You're the first young man that has ever been pastor here." (They thought that success, was synonomous with gray hairs and decrepitude and that youth and fail ure were inseparably connected.) "But," he said. I listened to you and I'm going I to help you." The pastor thought, ' Poor old soul, what can vou do -to heln m.- He said, "Four men c.tme to my home and on our knees we promised God and signed a pledge that every day you are faster of our church we are going to priy for you." And my friend aald It was the first word of encouragement he had re ceived. But he saw the four grow to ten. then Jump to twenty-five, then to fifty, then to 100, then to 200, S0J and 400. and many a Sunday morning before he would go Into the pulpit he would be ln the church parlors with 400 men and on their knees they would pray, "Bless our minis ter, will you? Make him a soul-winner. i'7. M af "'V'?"" 'PB, JT??J?h "d rUh,t eousness. and he said that as he woulc would preach he knew there were 400 men that would die for him and for Jesus Christ, and while he was pastor of the church over 1,200 pressed their way to the king dom and over half of them were men. Btrlkrs at the (runiblers. I don't kaow what the power of the ministers who have served In Omaha haa been. I don't know what the power of the men you have here now Is, but there never was a man, there Isn't any now and there never will be a man who will serve you as pastor, but that that man's power for Jesus Christ will be multiplied if he only has a prayer behind him. But a lot of you will go to church and ait there and grumble and growl and go home and pick the preacher and hla ser mon as dry as you do the chicken on the rlatter for your Sunday dinner and then wonder why your church doesn't grow. I wonder why it doesn't sink Into hell, with a prayerless, beer-drlnkinir, dancing, card playlng crowd like many of them have. Sat Prenrhtngr for Money. Oh, I can tell you of church members that haven't come to this tabernacle ln seven weeks, whS haven't lifted a little finger or sweat one drop to bring old Omaha to Its knees. Then whit right have they to claim anything from Ood? What right have you to walk up and In sult God by tilling Him you are His child when you have done all you can to pre vent the success of these meetings? GoJ pity such miserable people! It any of them are here and have given me any money, come up and I'll givo It back if you want It. You can't charge me with preaching for your mcney. If I was working for some f Tow's pocketbook I wouldn't throw as many rocks or thlr-teen-lnch shells aa I do. Why lh Tabernacle. Paul says: "This one thing I do." I tell you. I think that would be our state of intud if we only realized that people without Jesus Christ are lost. I tell you. the church Is all wrong, by whatever name or denomination she la known, if she simply says. "Come and hear the preacher preach and the choir sing, and If you don't, why go to the devil." That doctrine has paralysed the activities of the earth. This is what I call going to the multitudes, and I have never seen the community that was willing to go into their pockets to put up a tabernacle that failed to get a blessing. I have had preachers say "We hav a church that holds so many." I say, "Then get some other man; I'm not the one you are look ing for.' I won't go to a town and hold a revival ln a church, for several rea sons. There are lots of fellows who will never darken a church, and therefore God has seemed to call me be the apostle to reach the fellow outside, that the church never touches, and they moan and groan and sigh and they didn't touch him, then when God Almighty had been pleased to honor me, they denoune me. To perdition with such fools! They make 1TIKKKK: me sick, I have no patience with them If there la one word on tkxl a earth that la uttered In connection with religion that I hate. It la that word "conserva tive." They say. "Mr. Sunday, thla I a conservative community. Our paa tor, our people are conservative." That nieana they have taken the devil a opiates and have gone to sleep. That means their church Is a great Mg dor mitory; don t stir them up. I would as ,ol,n be P"str ' h graveyard. "" ! til-HaH. We hve tmo crowds. th ruts and the .anti-ruts One crowd wants things dono l: (Jeccnc' order. There are some f'op'? afr"'J f innovntlo,'- fr"IJ f sonieining. ior ir you illil you might get a fellow that would g to hell If you didn't. If I were pastor of a u".u church I would put a brass band In front and I'd give the devil the best run for his money that he ever had. Don't be afraid of Innovations for God and Qod'a truth. "They that trlve for the mastery are temperate In all things. Feela No Hatred. ...v,ry PundftV hl tescher and every "1r mu"1 ,ert the rwP"n.lblllty to do T ,r P0Wer' "W ,h" th't n,e l' ,n' tl,;w,n to a close. I know what Bom" P'0ll8 ln Omaha think about revl- vlvalUta. and especlaUy ?Z tTV'' I "til !f" " 1 11 T,th 1"" "V'wlV" "ly "a" r'l,nmt. ha ent 'dloJd m o T'ous'y1 na navent dipped my colors to anybody; h.v. t hnM . ...ki.. , .;.w ' rlrh or nnnr wku. rlcn or Poor, white i God's truth t i,n UCMJ tr"th. I know or black. I preach mrh.t t . . think ,,. ...... ,. pected It." You miserable old wretch, listen to me. "If a man be overtaken In a fault, ye that are spiritual restore such a one In the spirit of meekness, consider ing yourself lest you also be tempted." And If you are a miserable old card player you will be a miserable old sneer ing, turned up. crooked nose (If God didn't spare you the trouble when be made your old proboscis) hypocrite. "If a man be overtaken in a fault ye that are spiritual restore such a one In the spirit of meek ness, considering yourself lest you also be tompted." "If a man be overtaken In a fault let him alone." "If a man be overtaken In a fault tele phone to the newspapers." "If a man be overtaken In a fault call up 'central' "and tell her to get everybody on the line. Don't speak to him, you might help him back again. Push him ana see if you can't help him to hell. Walk on him and see if you can't trample him deeper. Let him alone, even tub stands on its own bottom. "Ye that are spiritual rertore such a one, considering yourself lest ye also be tempted," Btody the Bible. Now. then, get down Into the old Mother book. Go to the old Bible and read It for yourself. One of the pro lific sources of unbelief and back-sliding today la a bottle-fed church, where the whole membership lets the preacher do the studying of the Bible for them. He will go to the pulpit with hla mind full of hla sermon and they wl.l come to church with tr.elr minds f.llol with society and last night's card play ing, beer and wine drinking and mvel reading party and will sit there hair asleep. Great God, it would take fo ty thousand Gabriels with trumpets to arouse a crowd like that! It's a hard thing for a man to be eloquent to a lot of corn shocks. If you want your preacher to be eloquent you have to be In sympathy with what he la trying to teach you. Secret of Earnestness. You will agree with me. In closing, that I'm not a crank; at least I try not to be. I have not preached about my first, second, third or hundreth blessing. I have not talked about baptism or Im mersion. I told you that while I was here my creed would be. "With Christ you are saved; without Him you are lost," Are you saved? Are you lostT Going to heaven? Going to hell? I have tried to build every sermon right around and answer those questions and steer clear of anything else, but I want to say to you thla morning, in closing, that it Is the Inspiration of my Ufa, the secret of my earnestness. , "V Kaow Not the Hoar." If John were here and I would Invite him to preach, he would preach about the love of God. If James were hero and I would say. "James, will you pray?" he would say "Faith without works Is dead." James would aay: "Get a move on you." James would preach the Gospel of works. If Peter were here and I would say, "Peter, preach us a sermon," he would preach about the Holy Ghost. If Paul were here and I would say, "Paul, preach us a sermon," and Paul would get up and talk about the resurrection. He would talk about Jesus when He comes to this old world. I would say, "Luke, will you preach us a sermon," and he would talk along a similar strain, as you will read It In Acts. Now, then, I say to you. "Watch, for ye know not the day or hour." In Revelations I read: "Around about the throne were four and twenty seats and I saw there four and twenty elders sitting clothed in white raiment, crowns of gold on their heads, fl know some elders that won't wear crowns unless they get converted. They don't live In Omaha, these fellows I'm talking about.) "I saw four and twenty elders, clothed In white raiment, on their heads crowns of gold, and they cast their crowns at His feet." That's a picture of the glorified church. Hero It is the church militant; there It ts the church triumphant. I sometimes think here It Is the church somnamhiilcnt. Here we call It the church militant, there the church triumphant, where all things have passed away and we atand before God to receive the record of our labors and our tolls for Him there. Wha a grand thing! That was a wonderful time. In 18'?, when the soldiers returned to Kngland from the Crimean war and assembled on a given day In the Crystal palace. and the queen gave out, through her assistants, medals. I'pon them were the names of the principal battles and sieges la the Crimean war. A man named Trowbridge, when a ball shattered one of hla limbs, threw his arm around a tree and supported himself, and another cannon ball came and shat tered hi other limb, and he fell. They carried him, aa they supposed, dying, to OMAHA. MONDAY, (HTOHKU lY. 1 !!.. (he rear, but stranse as It seems he sur vived the ortli-at. nen the day of awarding came the llmhs hadn't healed to enable htm to wear wooden legs, and four of Ms comrades bore him on a stretcher. When her majrsty saw thru coming she turned to her chief chamber lain and said. -What Is his name?" and "What was the battle?" He replied. "Ills name Is TrowbrMse and Inkerman the battle. " She said. "Give me the medal." She arose, walked down the steps, went down the aisle and met the soldiers hearing the wounded comrade on the stretcher. Thee stopped, she leaned over and brushed the hair back from his forehead. The tears trickled down her cheeks and fell on his upturned face and she said, "Poor fellow, hew you (must have suffered! How I grieve for you: How terrible are the ravages of war that they leave mn like this! God i speed tne day when they shall be no more.' And with hrr own hand she pinned tho .medal on his tirenst, and the royal musicians trlrd to play, but they broke down. The royal singers In the gallery tried to sing and their song ended with a sob. and then all. seemingly simultaneously, cried out. "God savs the queen!" 1 saw an old tYlmean veteran out In Iowa who showed me his medal and ho said It was a marvelous sight. I met him ten years ago and he was then S years old. He said, "I wish you could have wit nessed It." I wish I could mvself. but I thought it would have been more wonder ful If every soldier had pulled the medal from his breast, walked past the throne and thrown them at tho queen's feet and said, -Your majesty. It la reward enough for us to look Into your face and stand In your presence and feel the power of your personality. We are Klad ws rn. JdureJ all we did. Just for the blesxlng and honor of standing In your presence." I think, when my eyes to earth's glories grow dim and I have gone to the last city and preached my last sermon and offered my last prayer and have given the last Invitation to the unsaved, and the death dew gathers on my brow and the death rattle in my throat, and my wife and little ones stand around my bed side and I look Into their faces, I want to tell you, ln a tlmo and an hour like that, when the world recedes and heaven opens and I burst through the gates Into the city and look Into the face of Him who, having not seen. I love, whatever reward Jesus feeU I have earned. I will feel like taking the crown off my head and throwing It at His feet and atand and gase on His face and say: "Jesus, It Is reward enough for me to look Into Yo.U face. It la reward enough for me to know that the pearly gates have swung behind my back on their Jeweled hinges and I will go In and out no more forever. I just want to stand and look at you, Jesus." "Look to yourselves that you receive a full reward." (Copyright, W. A. Sunday.) "Billy" Sunday Is One Who Likes to Crack Good Joke "Billy" Sunday. Ilka Torlck, la "a fel low of Infinite Jest" when he Is at home. He always has some droll word for the newspaper men snd "Bob" Mathews, his secretary, knows Just how to take him. He bustled Into the office yesterday with the quick query: "la Mr. Sunday In?" "No." said "Bob." "You can't see him now." "Well, I have to sea him. I Just want about an hour of his time." "Well, he can't see you," aald "Bob." "I might get him to see you for fifty- five minutes, but an hour is out of the question." "All right, all right." aald "Billy," pretending to get angry, "Aa soon as one of you fellows gets to be secretary to a great man you think you're the whole cheese." "Now, see here," said Mathews, also pretending to get angry and rising from his chair, "aa long as you were courteous I treated you like a gentleman, but If you're going to get rough you'll have to get out, that's all. Come back when you're sober." Thereupon 'Billy." with a grin, turned up the collar of his coat and went out muttering. Harvey Green Buys Getten Drug Store Harvey Green, who has been a regis tered pharmacist in Omaha for twenty years and formerly conducted Green's pharmacy at Park avenue and Pacific ! street, has purchased the Getten Drug company. Sixteenth and Howard streets, which will be known In the future aa Green's phramacy. The consideration wss $30,000. Mr. Green has long been well known as one of the leading druggists of the city. Ed Getten, partner In the firm of Getten & Wick ham cigar stores and formerly owner of the Getten Drug company, will devote his whole attention to the cigar business here In the future. He will open a wholesale cigar and tobacco Jobbing house here In the near future. It Is also his Intention to open another retail cigar store soon if he succeeds In obtaining a lease which he Is now negotiating for. Mr. Getten, who was formerly a traveling cigar and tobacco aalesman, will go back on the road for hla own Jobbing house ln tho Nebraska and Black Hills terri tory. TWO MEDICAL FRATERNITY CHAPTERSJWLD SMOKER With about a hundred young men and prominent local doctors In attendance, the Kta chapter of Creighton Medical college and Iota chatter of the medical depart ment of the I'nlverslty of Nebraska, both chapters of the National Phi Rho Big ma Medical fraternity last night held a Joint smoker and celebration at the I'nlverslty club. The sffair was ths first Joint cele bration given by the two chupters aul niaikcd tho anniversary of ths found'ug of the fraternity, October II. 10, being tho date when tho Phi linos came Into existence. LYMAN CRYS0N WINS IN SHORT STORY CONTEST In Its short story contest Life this week prints a little talo, entitled. "Presump tion of Innocence," which Is entered by Lyman Bryeon. former Omaha boy. who used to work on The Bee and who has been parti-'ularly successful with his literary efforts from the time he was ktudying at the Michigan university, where he was one of the editors of the student publication. It Really Does Relieve Mhennaatlans. Bloan's Liniment does give almost In stant relief. Nothing better for Rheu matism. Backache and Sciatica. Only Sc. All druggUU. Advertisement, Be Thou Strong and Show Thyself a Man" Is Topic of Men's Sermon Mr. Sunday preached yesterday after- noon to men only on the subject. "M.tn or a Mutt, Gasoline or IMMiwster, Heads or Tails." He said: Text: I Kings. II 2. "lie thou strong and show thyself a man." No one can read the Hlhle In a thought ful way without being Impressed with the ract that it makes much of manhood and , UuUls It up as something thst should b ; sought after with diligence and perse- I vera nee. 1 In fact, the Bible exalts and emnli.- slies manhood In a rmikhi. . .,,.1 shows that real manhood la the greatest thing in the world. The book of Genesis contains sixty chapters snd covers 2.3"n years of human history, snd yet one-half of It Is devoted to telling us about the cohssal manhood of Abraham and a third to that of Joseph. The story of creation Is dismissed In X won!, but a great deal more space la given to the etory of Caleb's rugged manhood. It shows that God thinks the making of a man more Important than the maklmr I of a world. A whole book Is occupied with the story of Job. and another with that of Daniel. Hundreds of others are passed up aa unfit In the same way that a tramp passes up a pay car or a hum ming bird flits by a swlil barrel. Hear His admiration of the character of Job. In the strongest language that even God can use. In declaring, "He is perfect!" That's double A O. Some people look all right, but It's character that counts. You cant hide character. A fool may havo a knowing look, but when he opens his mouth It s all off. All that some peo- pie cere about Is the appearance thy ran keep up. They're all front door, but when you open the door, you're In the back yard. It s character that counts every time. Whenever gold's around you'll find brass around trying to shine up and Imitate the gold. You can do like a woman who went Into a Jewelry store to buy a gold ring. Kvery ring passed out tor her Inspection she put to her lips. The Jeweler asked her why site did that. "You can't taste gold.", he told her. "I know I can't." she said, "but 1 can tasU brass." Old Framenp Didn't Work, Sham battles don't kill; neither does sham character count. Look at Joaeph, when he was ln the house of Potiphar. how he stood up and shewed his character. Potlphar's wife tried a frame-up on him. When her hus band was away ahe went after Joseph, but he pulled away from her and ahe grabbed hla coat and held It, But Jo seph pulled out of his coat. Then when her husband came home she showed him the coat and said. "I have the goods on him." But Joseph looked her square In the eye and said, "Nothing doing." ! They tried a frame-up on Joseph, but It didn't work. And the old gang haa been trying a frame-up on you ever since Joseph's day. And yet you'll run out after aome fusxy-halred, callcoed little chicken Just the same. And Abraham towers like a mountain above molehills when he pushed aside the rich spoils that the unrighteous king of Sodom tried to force on him. But Abraham pushed them aside bees use he would not be dependent on a king of Sodom and his unrighteous treasure. Stand up, you God-forsaken, hog Jowled, peanut-brained ward heelers, grafting politicians, and see how a man can be a man. Look at Daniel keeping himself pure ln the pestilential palace of Babylon and refusing to hit the boose I Look at Moses turning away the scepter of Egypt, the greatest country In the world at that time, so that he could tr what God wanted him to do! There's rati an over thla country for strong innsuan men. The Bible applauds real manhood. So arm for Christian manhood. It la the grandest thing ln the world. If It pleases God, be a man, not a mutt! Let me ask you to note thnt n.M wanted Solomon to be anchored to a noble purpose. He didn't want ths! young man to drift along In an aimless way, like a log In a whirlpool, but he wanted him to have his eye set on something for which it would be worth his while to strain every energy to reach. Ktnrubled to Throne Didn't Stay. He told him that a dead fish drifts with the stream, but that It takes a live one to wriggle up against tha stream. David himself had been a man of high and lofty purposes. His own life must have been greatly Influenced by the character of Moses and the other mighty men of God who had preceded him. That his aim was high and his purpose lofty Is clearly evident from hla life and his writings. Saul stumbled to tht throne of Isreal, and he didn't stay there. A young man that Inherits hla money has It aoout that long. A fellow that's got to earn every cent he has won't part with it for a gold brick. David was faithful to all hla duties aa a shepherd, but he looked higher than that humble calling, and made of It a supping aton. He wouldn't sit on a limb of a tree and saw between him and the tree. He wouldn't stick hla head In a lion's mouth unless there were a hundred chances to one that he could get It out again. Half the failures in the world come from men attempting to do some thing that's not In their line. And no man can be a man who Is not a Chris tlon. The manliest man la he that ack nowledges Jesus Christ. David was anxious that Solomon should havo a hUh aim. He wanted lilin to reach out for the top of the mountain He didn't want him to b content with a summer house in the valley, Tower Finds sslous Everywhere. Have a high aim. You get out of this life what you want to get out of it. A vulture Is looking for carrion, no mat ter how high ho soars. A toper sjes a saloon on every corner. A C'hrlstlun sees the church on the corner. A humming bird doesn't learn to sing hy taking les sons from a crow or a hoot owl ft.ms politicians see no more of public good than the good they can get for them selves out of ths public criu. A plumber smiles when It Is forty beluw xro. Ths Kiasier prays ror a hailstorm. The u dcrtaker is happiest when he Is tacking a crepe on a door. The m ser gi is a barrel of money and prays for a famine, j i.very man looks at life from h s own jiandpoliit. A dog turns around before he lies down because dogs did it thousands of years ago. The habits of youth will be the ropes to hang you by or balloons to lift you with when you are old. It's because the murderer went with th wrong crowd that they're shooting I.0u volts of Juice Into him. Your life today la determined by whether or not you sa d yea or no yesterday. Your lira tomorrow depends on what you aay today. Life la full of the failures who are let ting buckets down Into empty wells and pulling up nothing but hot air. Be a man, brace up! Without thla your blood will turn to Ice water. You'll be dishwater Instead of gasoline. Be a man, not a frame to hang clothes on. Some fellows go around the world disguised as a man In a suit of hand-me- down clothes. To know rome men Is an Invitation to he decent. To know others Is sn Invitation to go to hell. Iits of men In our day lead boya and girls astrsy, and give large sums to char ity to cover up their wrong doings. Men like that must be taught that nothing they can do In giving money to charity can blot out their rotten, atlnklng deeds. David wanted his son to raise his chin hlKh enough to look the sun In the face. nd so he said, "Solomon, be a man! J Manhnod-true manhood-princely man hood, like that of David, Is one of the grandest things In the world, and it Is something that counts as nothing else does. It does not depend upon the slse of the body, but the soul. There are men of small stature, like St. Taul and Napoleon, who tower above other men aa the moun tains tower above the plain, and there are phj steal giants who are midgets In man hood. St. Paul was only a little red-headed, freckled fellow; but he could run rings around the rest of the preachers in his day. For his soul was great. Napoleon was Just a little fellow, five feet, five Inches tall; but he had the dynasties of Kurope trembling and staggering until y n1 t0 end him to St. Helena, I Men ,,k" Shakespeare, pale, wlsened, enemlc, have the world at their feet j General Grant, and men like him, tower llk mountains above other men. ... ....... Me" of M Mahosrany. ( n vTrr ,tr,M!t eor oa cn f,nd a "owd of the nlckel-a-bunrh fellows, ' nut ,h'r" Ar m'n 'H11 Moses who "'""y lived. What the world, and Omaha Nebraska need la mora men of solid I mahogany. We have too much veneer these days. Too many only look like men across the street. They don't weigh any more In the balance for morality and good government and good living than their hat rack. There are some who say: "Bill, a young fellow must sow his wild oats." All right, but let me tell you when to sow your first crop. Put out your first croi whsn you are between to and JO years old. By that time your ardor for cheap boose will be about aa warm as two cold feet In your back at Christmas time. The Chautauqua lecturer, who. for about fifty per tells a young man to sow his wild oats, has aa much sense aa Balaam's aas when he tried to kick the rim off the milky way. It you are not willing to deliberately 1 take the risk of becoming a good-for-nothing sot, settle the question at once and finally that you will never take your first drink. Not to do this la to havo about half decided that you will yield when the temptation comes. j If you are not willing to take the risk of becoming a social outcast, decide as Joseph did long before ha reached Pott-j pher's house, that you will live a white life. Soma fathers are woefuly deficient. Their spark or and gasollns don't work together. They can't make the grade. If every man lived right today no boy would go to hell tomorrow. Like Water on Dark's Bsek. David s counsel to Solomon would have been like water on a duok'a back If 'Jt hadn't lived It. Solomon know what hla father meant by hla father's Ufa when he told him to be strong and ahow him self a man. To train a boy In the way ha should ' l ' '. " -"t your boy to go to heaven, go that way yourself. Kvery boy tries to ba Ilka some man. Every man la a hero to aome boy. The trouble la that wa are trying to make a living, and not a life. A whisky barrel is more dangerous than a gun bar rel. We reach the wrong conclusion be cause our vision la wrong. Don't be a moral tramp, afraid to go to God's bathhouse because ha will turn the hose on you and clean you up. area fJolleth, "Main Cheese." With his sling, bing! and David had Goliath on the ground. David was tha youngest of the brothers, and had to herd sheep and wear hla brothers' old clothea. Being the youngest eon. he got the hand-me-downs. One day hla father told him to take aome food to his oldur brothers who were fighting the Phllle- tlnes In Saul's army. When David tot to tha battlefield he saw Goliath coming out. David asked, "Who'a that big lobster?" They told him, "That's aollath, thu main cheese of the Philistines." And they told him how strong ha was. David said, "Ari you fellows letting that guy pull a bluff Ilka that? Does he think he can get away with that? Let me at him." Then King Saul sent his armor to David and David got Into It and felt like a fel low with a suit four sixes toa large for him. 80 he threw off the armor, went down to the brook, picked up four or five smooth little stones and went out to get Goliath. When Goliath saw him, he laughed: "Well, who are you?" But David Just took that sling, whirled It around and soaked him on the coco be tween the lamps, and the giant went to the mat and took the count. Then David took the sword, chopped off Goliath's head and the gang "beat It." That's dressing Old Testament atorles In twen tieth century tanguage, so we ran all gt ! next David never practiced any gumshoe methods. Ths great men of the Bible were made of the same stuff that we are. But they didn't wait for hot temptation to draw them Into evil. The man today 1 let his manhood stay burled under doubt I and beer. Dig It out. Manhood must sign 1 Its own declaration of Independence, fight j Its own revolutionary war before you can celebrate your Fourth of July. A Urtyhnrm In Kvery Life. There's a Gettysburg in every man's dfe which he has to fight. Having rll or no oil In your lamp I the difference between light and dark ness, between happiness and despair. If you are not willing to run the risk of losing your soul, take the only step that make it safe by taking Christ Into your heart and life at on e. Jjln th) inunn 01 your rnuicv muu vviiumi uur- elf to a religious life. If you do not want to deliberately build your house on the sand, where It la only a question of time as to when destruction will come, decide that you will never go In bad company. Tha man who lets tha dsvll choose his company for him will soon do any thing the devil wants him to do. Strive for self-control by forming good (habits before bad ones fasten them selves upon you. A thread can be broken but a rope will hang you. Before you get Into the hopper take a look at the grist that Is coming out. Before entering a life of sin sit down and have a talk with yourself. Before n!n-r to sleep on the railroad track take a look at tha fellow the train Just iau over. Before you go Into a boose Joint by the front door go around to the back alley door and take a good look at the lobster Just staggering out. Before taking blood upon your hands take a look at the fellow In the electrlo chair, with an electrode on his head and leg, waiting for the high sign. Illttlna- Trail Shows ( nam are A prudent man won't swsllow a po toto bug and then eat Paris green tu kill the bug. Boys, you can t rids blind baggage on the gospel train. The f i low that comes down that trail shows courage! I'll know In a few minute' whether you are a mutt or a man. whether you are a four-flusher cr n t If you want honey on your flarjac a. you've got to go where the giants aio Don't lock for a sift spot or an eay cushion. If you want to et y ur m: g In God's house of fame A fellow w o wants to be helped over the rough spots might aa well not have ary lets. We don't worry about the chicken that die In Its shell. It's the one tho own g.tt from the roost that we worry about. Better be a bleeding conqueror than a bleeding slave. The devil Jibs his own arithmetic, which shows great dividends from the wages of sin. Hut In real !1 c It la an arithmetic that sends you to hvl. The Christian life Is an adldtlon; tlu 11 e of sin Is subtraction. A tadpole, when It sees a frog. Is never content until It can wrluxle out of being a tadpole Into being a frog. Get out of It, you tadpoles. If you want to be a real man. be a Christian. If Christ had not been the Son of God, I'd love Him any how, for He Is such a real man! Study the purpose of Christ and notice that He never once swerved from the business for which He came Into the world, although Oethaemane and Calvary lay directly ln Hla way. By a very little veering to one side He could have missed them both, hut He set Hla face like a flint and went up to Jerusalem when He knew that to go would mean suffering and death. Study Ills prudence and courage and you will also find H true of His self control, faithfulness, charity, unselfish ness, benevolence and sympathy. Find anything In any man anywhere that everybody considers noble and manly and then look for the same thing In Jesus, and sea how It shines out In Him as the day above the twilight. Ha never shows the white feather, and never In Hla whola life does He speak one single unmanly word, think an un manly thought or do an unmanly deed. Men of Omaha, crown Him. Come on, you merchants, bankers or whatever you are. Bow ln humility before this Divine Man. tha Man of Oalllee. (Copyright, W. A. Sunday.) Beanty Mora Thaa Skin Deep. A beautiful woman always has good digestion. If your digestion of faulty. Chamberlain's Tablets will do you good. Obtainable everywhere. All druggists. Advertisement. Bosy Posy Girls Make Merry for a Throng at Gayety A mighty snappy show Is offered at tin Gayety this week by tho "Rosy Pony Girls," and the big audience that saw th first performance last night gave them a very snappy response, There Is vim nni sparkle from start to finish In the dm clng, music and fun, and a generous supply of those three requisites n.akes In j entertainment a winner. The oompany la well balanced, and c m tains some good voices, several pleuslnj dancers and some sura flra comedians, s that the crowd last evening found nmplo grounds for demanding numerous en cores and awarding generous approval. Clara Evans. Harry 8. LeVan and Harry Bentley create laughs that mer j Into an almost continuous uproar, their Individual efforts aa well as their team work being of tha kind that takes well. Walter Pearson, who wrote the skit, and Madeline Whitney, who leads several of tha moat catchy song hits, both have exceptionally pleasing voices, and In a duet they produce a charming harmony. Mamie Mitchell and Jane Pearson round out the big program of musical selections In the main part of tha burletta. whlla the Sherlock Sisters present a number of specialty duets that are well done. Karl and Marie Gates, a pair of dancera who made friends here In past seasons, furnish several popular numbers. A "Broadway Review" In tha second aot In troduces impersonations of almoat a dosen stage favorites that art wall re ceived. WAS MrSERABLE COULDN'T STAND Testifies She Wa Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Lackawanna, N. Y. "After my first child was born 1 felt very miserable and could not stand on my feet. My sister-in-law wished ma to try Lydia. E. 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