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The Evening Herald from Ottawa, Kansas • Page 6

Location:
Ottawa, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE. EVENING HERALD, OTTAWA, KANSAS, MONDAY, JULY 10, 1905. Page Six. SCORED LISON BEAUTIFUL PICTURES IN COLORS E1MIMIS Rackets, DR. CRAFTS COMMENTS ON LAWSON AND JEROME.

Size, 10x14 inches. Just right for a frame. Nets, Balls DR. PEARCE TALKS OF, LOVE a vesper service was. led by Dr.

William Colledge. The exercises of the day closed with a sacred concert. The program follows: Selection from Passion Gormly's Band Chorus Selection from the Orator- io, "The Holy City Assembly Chorus. Recitation "Little Wild Rose" Miss Laura Bellamy, of Cherry vale. Selection n.

With Me" Gormly's Band. "One Sweetly Solemn Thought" Laurance Powars Smith Baritone Solo With Me" Gilbert Cox, of Baker University Chorus Selection from the "Holy City" Choir Baritone Solo, "Sing Me a Song of the South" W. P. Felix Selection Baker University Quartet Solo Miss Pyle Selection "Joy to the World" Chorus. Here is the Place to Buy Them.

FREE CAGD WITH THE CHI TRI A Good Crowd at the Services Yesterday The "Quiet Sunday" Was1 Observed as the Assembly Board Would Have It. Franklin Co. Hardware Co. SUNDAY BUN 230 MAIN STREET -ar- ii 3 Commencing Sunday, May 28, 1905. Between two and three thousand people enjoyed the "quiet Sunday" at the Chautauqua yesterday.

The gates were thrown open and the entire day Order in Advance from Your Newsdealer Song "America." CITY NEWS BRIEFS. Toilet Refreshments. Hill's toilet preparations are winning popular favor and they'll soon be on every dressing table because the name and the bottle aren't the particular thing with Hill quality comes first. Standard perfumes and powders for the summer season at HILL, PHARMACY Not the biggest drug storer-but one of the best ft Yes, We Have Seen the "20 th Century. only The 20tH Ceiitury" is sanitary, up-to-date soda James Bell of Richmond has been added to the force of salespeople at the Jones clothing store.

The forester team of Camp 499, M. W. A. is arranging for a dollar round-trip excursion to Kansas City on August 2. The foresters of the Modern Woodmen are requested to meet at the lodge hall Thursday night by order of the chief forester, G.

Grimes. In a wreck at Republic, Kansas, on Saturday night, Dr. A. A. Allen was injured quite severely.

The Topeka papers say that it is Dr. Allen of that place. He formerly lived in Ottawa. Dr. and Mrs.

E. K. Chandler who are spending their vacation in the west are now at Glenwood Springs. where they are having a pleasant time They will be joined this week by Dr. and Mrs.

J. D. S. Riggs andiMiss Lou was given over to spiritual services. All the churches in South Ottawa, with the exception of the First Baptist, held no services in the morning and the congregations united ii) the assembly services.

At 9:30 o'clock in the morning, President Chaffee led a fellowship service in the tabernacle at which many were present. This lasted for one hour when the morning sermon was preached by Dr Pearce, the great London preacher. He spoke from the parable of the "True Vine" and the theme of his sermon was love. "It is' all right," said the speaker "to have costly church edifices and to have eloquent sermons, but what the world needs is love. 'The world is dying for a little bit of "What is love?" he asked, and then gave as the best definition he could find that love was the giving of one's selfT A little giving gives us joy and the ability to give more," he said.

"The joy of heaven will not consist in walking on streets of gold. I would rather walk on Ottawa roads. It will be the joy of a larger ministry not preaching, thank God, there are no preachers in heaven but the chance for larger service." Some years ago Dr. Pearce established the West London Mission to reach people whom the churches could not and he gave several illustrations of the wonderful power of love as seen in the mission work. Dr.

Pearce has a wonderful personality which gave emphasis to the truths he spoke. His sentences were The syrups are all stored in glass bottles, and there is absolutely no danger of metallic contamination of the syrups as with the old style fountains. Cleanliness is our motto. The "20th Chntury" is right up to the present time. We are always glad to serve you.

Our refreshments are "served, in the coolest room in town. WAY, The Confectioner Cheap excursion to the Peach Belt of Arkansas. Ju3y 18th the Santa Fe will sell excursion tickets to Horatio, LeQueen and Locksburg, Arkansas, at $11.65 for the round trip, final return limit, July 28th. Stop-overs allowed at and south of Rich Mountain, and Mount Mineral S. CAMPBELL, Agent.

We Do Not Deny that other grocers sell good groceries. We do not assert that noou sell better goods than we. Few sell as good at as low a price. That's why we have the trade. We quote a list of lunch goods very suitable for Assembly Campers.

You would do well to let us attend to he Southwest Limited Wafers and Sweet Goods Five o'clock Tea 10c Zu Zu Uneeda Biscuit 5c Lemon Biscuit 10c Saratoga Flakes Nabisco Wafers Box 25c Oat Meal Wafers oc Social Tea 10c Butter Thin Wafers 10c Graham 10c Walnut Cream, lb 20c Iced Raspberry, lb 20c Canned Meats, EtQ, -Broiled Mackerel, can 25c "Vienna Sausage, can 10c Pork Sausage, can. 10c Corned Beef, can 15c Roast Beef, can 15c Veal Loaf, can. 10c Beef Loaf, can 10c Chicken Loaf, can Dried Beef, can 10c Oil Sardines 5 and 10c Mustard Sardines. 10c Potted Tongue. 10c Is the electric lighted train between Kansas City and Chicago that took first place in its first year, and holds it.

Its route is via the short line of the Chicago, Milwaukee St. Paul Railway Kansas City, Union Station, 5.55 p. mM and Grand Avenue Station 6 107 p. m. Arrives Union Passenger Station, Chicago, 8:55 a.

m. the next day. Carries compartment and standard sleeping cars, dining car, observation-library car, reclining chair car and coach. It is electric lighted, steam heated and perfectly ventilateh throughout, and runs 'through a track pio- tected by the absolute block signal system all the way. If you aie contemplating a trip east or nbrth, and will forward the attached coupon with blanks, considerable information about rates, routes and train service will be forwarded by return mail, free.

G. L. COBB, Southwestern Passenger Agent, 907 Main KANSAS CITY, MO. Goods Delivered to the Park Promptly, Phone 18, WATTS GRAIN. Chaney.

In the account of the fast ride of Walter Scott, the Death Valley miner, on his special car the Kansas City Journal says: "It is thought possible that Scott may be "flagged" by the Ottawa Chautauqua if they can get to the track in time." i The remains of Miss Emma Scott ar rived here yesterday morning from Colorado Springs. The funeral services were held at Valley. Chapel yesterday afternoon and the interment was made in a cemetery near Baldwin. H. Church was taken sick yesterday afternoon and while feeding his horse in the evening received a fall which resulted in a severe wrench to his back and bruised the back of his head.

He was quite sick during the night but much improved this morning. 1 Fred Melluish has a new savings bank for accumulating dimes. The bank is made of steel and is in the shape ota bushel basket. When the first dime is put inthe bank it is locked and it cannot be opened until fifty dimes have been placed in it. It holds thirty dollars and can be opened at each five dollar division.

The amount in the bank is indicated by a dial on the top of the basket. W. C. McCreary and wife and Mrs. McCreary's mc-ther, Mrs.

Chalmers-, are at the home of W. L. Roseberry at 219 North Cedar. They have been living in Kansas City for some time but are now returning to Ottawa to They will not be able to get possession of their own property on South Main for three months and during that time will live at 221 North Cedar. F.

M. Harris and Mr. and Mrs. J. Harris left Ottawa yesterday and will rusticate on the Ha'rris-Crane ranch in Barber county during the next month.

They will be joined next week by a party composed of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Harris, Earl Armstrong, Walter Caldwell, Jack Harris and Misses Gertrude Harris, Jessie Corinne Adler, Frances Harris, Claire Harris and Eulah Gray of St. Louis, who will spend about two weeks at the ranch. SI jh Bo Outdoors the forceful and clear cut and many of them were gems in themselves.

The sermon was one of the strongest ever delivered from the tabernacle platform. At the beginning of the service, Mrs Belle Brockway Warner and Prof. M. Edwin Johnson sang the duet "No Hope Beyond" and at the close Miss Ida E. Pyle sang a selection dedicated to Dr.

Pearce, 'A Little Bit of Love." Took Exceptions to Lawson. At three o'clock Dr. Wilbur S. CralVs preached the annual sermon on the subject "The Strong and the Fair." Dr. Crafts made a strong plea for symmetrical development, taking as his text "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength and thy neighbor as thyself." Incidentally he took occasion to state some frank opinions regarding some of the big speakers of the past week.

"Success," he said, "consists of getting the fullest development of one's powers. A child should be developed according to the bent of his nature. It is better to be a carpenter who can hit the nail on the head than a preacher who can't. We cannot see God's plan for the whole life, but we can see and fulfill it for the present day. The first quarter of full-orbed manhood is a well-developed body.

People must come to see that even in matters of recreation and diet, God is to be glorified. The second quarter is the development of the mental faculties. Our schools must reach reasoning and rhetoric, to resist the sophistries of evil." In this connection Dr. Grafts attacked some of last week's "sophistries." "Mr. Jerome," he said, "is trying to keep the lid on on the gambling side the side of Jittle political influence and to keep it off on the Sunday closing side.

Mr. Lawson, in turning state's evidence, is all right while he sticks to the witness stand, but is wrong when he tries to turn the 'judge on the bench and talk of surplus and distribution of wealth. There are no ten million paupers in the United States, and. if. there were, the liquor traffic is responsible for far more of them than the trusts.

Since hearing Mr. Lawson I half suspect that his remedy that will be revealed in "Everybody's" will be an attempt to rally the west and south about him like another The sermon closed with an appeal for social and spiritual culture. Last Night's Concert. Yesterday afternoon at five o'clock Name Address City State Time of j. Probable Nelson's big furniture Emporium is filled with lawn and porch furniture, hammocks and swings.

Some job lots in outdoor furniture at a bargain to Colorado? Going All diseases start In the bowels. Keep them open or you will be sick. Cascarets act like nature. Keep liver and bowels active without a sickening gripins feeling. Six million people take and recommend Cascarets.

Try a 10c box. All druggists. 633 WVcan sate you money if you are. Very low rate for the internationa Epworth League Convention in July. Chair Cars and Pullman Sleepers, fast time, block, signal system, Harvey meals.

The only line to Denver passing en route through Pueblo and Colorado Springs. Summer service better and faster than ever. Low rates tor trips to interior points after the convention also Grand Canyon of Arizona. Write for descriptive literature and other information. Won't You Go Santa Tc Way? If you want a real pleasure trip you will.

S. M. CAMPBELL, Agent, The Atchison, Topeka Santa Fe Railway. For Gilt Edge Butter go to Grocery company. CHENOWETH w.

Are you hungry? Go to trv rail our Phares Day, Insurance of mil kinds. Offlce under People's Bank. Eat at 334 South Main.

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About The Evening Herald Archive

Pages Available:
37,810
Years Available:
1896-1914