Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 20, 1909, Page 6

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CHURCH 0 BURN MORTGACE First Methodists to Celebrate Free- dom from Debt During Week. SPECIAL THANKSGIVING EVENTS| Debt of $60,000 Has Been OCanceled— Entire Week to He Devoted to Services of Thanks—Church ’ is Independent. Thanksglving week will besof marked importance tc the members of the First Methodist fl2piscopail chureh of Omaha. ni will be a period of jubllation, for the| church has been liberated from the bond- azs of debt and the mortgage of $60,000 that has been hanging over the congregation wiil e burned to ashes. The church will proclaim its Independ- | (reo and give thanks for the prosperity | that it is now cnjoying. 1t has been the | rupreme hope of the workers in the church to gather In & harvest of dollars and now that they are able to pay off the last penny on the mortgage it Is a fitting week > thanksgiving for them and for thelr pastor, Dr. Frank Lafayette Loveland. The: First Methodist church has enjoyed marked growth. It is now on a sound {nanctal basis with all its figures on the credit side of the ledger. The church is absolutely unencumbered and the mag- wilcent edifice at Twentieth and Daven- port streets is the sole property of the congregation. The week's jubilation will begin Sunday, but the real day of special Thanksgiving lias been fixed for Sunday, November 28, when the moftgage release will be read and the bonds cancelled. This will be done by C. A. Goss. Bishop John L. Nuel sen will deliver the sermon at the special praise service. The Final Celebration. In the evening of the final day of the | celebration the jubilee consummation will be held. Rev. Dr. William J. David- on, chancellor of the Nebraska Wesleyan uniyersity, will deliver the address, and a special song service will be rendered. Tomorrow the following program ls av- nounced: 10:3 a. m.: Public praise and worship; germon by Rev. Dr. D. W. C. Huntington, chancellor emeritus Nebraska ' Wesleyan university. 12:10 p. m.: Sunday school rally; Mr. T. F. Sturgess, superintenderf. & m,: Omaha District Ipworth league, in church parlors; address by Dr. C. ' Clark 7: p, m.: Evening jubllation; address by Rev. Frank L. Loveland, D. D.; choral service by vested choir. Tuesday - evening & musical jubilee will be given by Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Kelly, \ssisted Ly the vested choir of the church. Ihis will be followed by a congratulatory | hour In the church parlors. i Wedhesday evening will be devoted to ‘a {terary program with & lecture on ““Ghos vy Raev. Dr. Frank Crane of Chicago, lormer pastor of this church. Thurkday, Thanksgiving day, Is set apart tor spéclal observances in the morning and wening. A union service will Le held in ihe ayditorium of the church with a ser- mon by Rev. Dr. Frank Crane and music sy thelfull cholr. An oftering will be taken st this service for charitable purposes. In the evening a reception will be tendered by the members of the official Loard and their Wives ito the former pastors, members ind friends of the church. Young People to Celebrate. Fridey evening is set apart for the cele- bratloh of the young people of the church. The Bpworth league cabinet and the Sun- day school board will tender a reception i0 Rtev. Dr. Stephen J. Herben of Chicago, cditor ‘of the Epworth Herald, and to the Epworth leaguers and Sunday school work- crs of Om The reception is announeed for 70 o'clock In the church parlors and will be followed by a lecture’in the audi- torfum at $:30 by Rev. Dr. 8. J. Herben. Bose Want Ads are business boosters. Trade Journ. There are about 0 trade journals pub- lished this country. In the grocery buriness alone there is a combination of twenty-seven separate publications known ax the Grocery and Allied Trade Press. of America These are published in nineteen differsnt cities. According to American Industrie the estimaled aggregate circulation of ,this combination of trade pubiieations is almost 117,600 an issue, or an average of 5,000 each, comprising weeklles, -semi-monthlies ‘and monthlies. There is another combination of =svan trade papers in the engineering and mining | field LAVINE A (OlAl CTOURLOD 0L ou,¥8 coples an issue. A third chain of papers concorned with textile interests was sold | not long ago for $1,600,000. HER BABY BOY & MASS OF ERUPTION Pimply Rash Spread Until Head, Face and Body were Covered with Eczema — Hands Bandaged to Keep from Scratching—Was a Fearful Sight and Defied Cure, CUTICURA MADE SKIN CLEAR,AND HEALTHY My baby’s eczema came on when he was three months old, like a rash on his face and then spread over his head. Then there began to form a lot of small pimples over his head from which a ‘watery substance came out and formed SrOlE e o oot S dvec his head, face and ML; 1 had to tie woolen cloths ‘on his hands to keep him from scratehis himself. He was a fearful sight to lool at. I went to a drug store and tried some of their remedies for eczema but they did not do him uns good. 1 thea called in one of our leading physicians ‘“‘3 he tried m'o‘r:.lmkln‘dl wa. ic&,n and gave me D ptions, bul only made him worse. ‘“At this stage a lady friend of mine vame in and advised me to try the Outi- cura Remedies. That afternoon I sent for a cake of Cuticura Soap, & box of Cuti= cura Ointment and one vial of Cuticurs Pills, and in less than a week I could see » vast jmprovement in him. 1 washed him -::? morning with the gave him an ap) of the Cuticura Ointment his bath. I kept on using the Cutioura "1-\.'.“., feie. gfl".‘m %’%"gm{h e e 1 Ty avee menr T é""‘.u Cuticura o all . te Bmu{: ., Ben Vi e n, Jan. 17 To08" PIMPLES CURED 1008 |hundred towns. Thes: |the downfall of the church, | Some Things You Want to Know The Thirteenth National convention of the Anti-SBaloon League of Amerioa will meet in Chicago on Monday, December 6, the same day congress convenes In Wash- ington. Fur & week before the assembling of the caivention the superintendents and field woikers of the league will be in con- | terence, preparing campaign plans to be submitted to he national body. The de- termination of the INlinols league to force the anti-saloon issue to a finish fight In Chicago will provide a local interest greater than ever before aroused by such a convention. The reports of the officers of the league, covering the two years since the last convention, will show a wonderful advancement of the work undertaking by the organization. The Anti-Saloon leagde is a remarkable institution. It is the most potent organiza- tion in politics, outside of the regular political parties, ever known in the United States. It is avowedly and openly a political institution, yet I{ has so localized its activi- ties that It works with either or both of the two principal parties, as its best inter- |ests dlctate. It does not hesitate to change from republican to democratic overnight, and sometimes it forces both parties to accept its men and measures. The league, by the adoption of these tactics, has had much to do with the growing tendency to settle local political battles without regara to national issues. Powerful as it has become, the Antl- | Saloon league is not, strictly speaking, an organization. In the language of its gen- eral superintendent, the Rev. Purley A. Baker: “It Is a league of organizations. It is the federated church in action against the saloon. Its agents are of the church, and under all circumstances loyal to the ehurch. It has no interest apart from the church. It goes just as fast and just as far as the public sentiment of the church will permit. It has not come to the king- dom simply to build & little local sentiment, or to assure the pas: of a few laws, nor yet to vote the saioons from a few are mere incidents in ita progress. It has come to solve the liquor problem While the Anti-Saloon Jeague does not represent the churches by virtue of any ecclesiastical authority, it Is nevertheless true that the league is, In fact, a con- federation of churches and churchmen opposed to the saloon. It is made up alto- gother of men prominent in the pulpit and the pews. In its political work it often allles itselt with politieal organizations which are distinetly not of the church, and such alllances Invite. the wholesale con- demnation of the opposing alllance between some other political organization and the saloons. Practically all churches are represented in the league. The Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians, Lutherans, Diseiples, Uni- versalists, Congregationalists, United Bréthren and soveral smaller bodies hdve endorsed the league by formal action, and have appointed delegates to its counc The Protestant Eplscopal church is repre- sented by Bishop McVicar of Rhode Island, who Is one of the vice-president's of the national league, and by many clergymen in all parts of the country. The Roman Catholic church has no ecclesiasti- cal connection with the league, and many of its leaders have opposed the organiza- tion in politics. The catholic Total Abstin- erce union, however, has a formal alliance with the league. Archbishop Iréland was one of the first vice-president’s of the national'league, and the Rev. Father James M. Cleary of Minneapolls is now a natlonal vico-president. Whilé there are many leaders, both cleri- cal and lay, /n all the churches who are compelled by their consclences to oppo the work of the Antl-Baloon league, it re- fmains a fact that this organization more nearly approaches a federation of the churches than ever before has been seen in this country. Leaders in the movement declare that thoke pessimists who weep for and who de- clare that rellgion has lost its influence, would do weil to consider the power mani- fested by the federated churches in the tight against the saloons. Certainly the Anti-Saloon league, whether for good or evil, has proved itself a powerful factor in politics in the past decade. The most remarkable feature of the work of the league, as contrasted with other anti-liquor fights, is that the Anti-Saloon league is not always for prohibition. It “goes just as fast and just as far public sentiment of the church will per- mit.” For this reason the league sometimes | comes into direct opposition to the prohi- bitionists. or Instance, at this moment the ultra-prohibitionists in Missouri are insist- ing upon a state-wide referendum vote ou the question of absolute prohibition. The Anti-Saloon league leaders are not con- vinced that Missouri is yet ready for such & radical step, and they are fighting to maintain the present status of the local option law. The late Bishop Charles B. Galloway of Mississippl was opposed to state-wide prohibition for a long time, but when the hour came he turned the influ- ence of the Anti-Saloon league In that The Anti-Saloon League. direction and the state went_dry. Anti-Saloon leaguers are all for prohibition, eventually, but they are willing to take a little bit at a time and to bide a wee. The campaign waged by the Anti-Saloon league is unique in the history of so-called “moral reforms” in that it takes into ac- count the essential value of expediency. The “abolitionists” who fanned the fires of antl-slavery agitation before the war | are comparable to the straight-out “prohl- bitionists” of today. Neither accomplished much in practical results. But the issue of the “abolitionists” when adopted by an organization with a regard for expediency resulted In the republican party. The Anti-Saloon league In one state may bo fighting with the regular republican or- ganization for stralght prohibition. Across the border in the next state It may be fighting with the democratic orzanization for a county-unit local-option bill, saying never a word about prohibition. In one city it may be allied with a “ecitizen’s” movement to oust a regular party organi- =ation from municipal power. In another it may be allled with one of the regular party machines for fighting for nothing more radical than a®tight Sunday ‘ld" as ity fssue. It is inevitable that an organisation which thus seizes every opportunity to ad- vance any part of its propaganda should make alllances with forces which Invite the severe criticism of the opposition, and often of the prohibitionfts. It is also in- evitable that a movement which has mani- fested such great power should attract to it & certain type of self-seeking politician whose conduct brings the league Into bad odor. The leaders of the Anti-Saloon league say they realize these things, but that in thelr great fight they are willing to accept ald from any source. What the league wants is results. At the convention in Chicago the prin- clpal feature on the program will be the call of the states. The names of the states will be called in alphabetical order, and the league workers from each will re- port the progress of the campaign in his baliwiok, Nine state will report “all dry." Of these, Tennessee, North Carolina, Geor- Alabama and Mississippl voted out the sa« loons as the direct result of the campaign waged by the league. From every state in the union the league workers will report victory in the majority of battles in which the organization has engaged. Twenty- three governors of states, half of all the governors in the union, are committed in part or in whole to the support of the league. More than half the people of the United States live in prohibition territory, and a great deal more than half of the land area of the county I8 “dry”, so far as the legal sale of alcohol beverages is con- cerned. During the two years since the Just meeting of the National league, the organization has won political victorles of one sort and another in every state, and in the whole country, has won more than three-fourths of the fights in which it has engaged. A striking f2ature of the propaganda of the organization is that, in its fight on the saloon, it devotes more argument to the economic and political phases of the question than to the so-called moral issues. The evils resulting from the con- trol of political machines by the saloons, and the cconomic losses involved in the business are dwelt upon, while there is nof nearly so much said about ‘drunkards” and “horrible examples.” Thus far the league has done very little in nationel politics. It has been fighting for certain federal legislation, and his put congress oh notice that is must sooner or later deal with the question of prohibition for the District of Columbia. If the league should take up an active campaign in favor of the proposed legislation by which congress resigns to the states the right to regulate interstate shipments of liquors, then the fight will become national. At this time the leaders of the league are divided In opinion as to whether or not the time has come to enter the national field as an aggrossive political force. Interests opposed to the Anti-Saloon league, and organizations fighting it in politics, are confident that the league is at the high-tide of its power and influence, It is believed that an era of re-action will follow the prohibition wave, and that the saloons will come back to the towns from whence they have been driven. The leaguers declare that the hopes of the opposition are groundless, and that the leaguo s stronger and more potent today than ever before. Whether one belleves in prohibition or not, whether one belleves in sumptuary leglslation or not, whether one belieyes that “blind tigers” are worse than licensed saloons or not, whether one may bell with relation to the lssues revolving about the saloon, the meeting of the National Anti-Saloon league in Chicago Is fraught with interest to every American. By Frederio J. Maskin. Tomorrow—National Corn Exposition. CARPENTERS HAVE TROUBLE Union Men Object (o One of Their Number Heing Let Out by 4‘ Contractor. Union carpenters at work on the annex being buflt to the Auditorlum for the Na- tional Corn exposition and their employer, Willlam Meyers, had same misunderstand- ng about union ethics and the union men, of whom one was Nels Jensen, quit work. Also the union carpenters and nonunion men came near having trouble at Fifteenth ana Howard streets Friday morning when Jensen was arrested. The carpentery work on the annex being of the rough kind Contractor Meyers has been hiring some unskilled laborers at 2 and % cents an hour, paying the skilled mechanics and carpenters 45 cents an hour. Because he refused to pay members of the union who appeared to him to be unskilled the same money as he did those more proficlent, Contractor Meyers fiu- curred the displeasure of the union. He finally discharged J. D. Sawyer, who held a union card. Incensed at this acflon between fifteen and elghteen union members walked out. Trouble then arose and Officer Chapman arrested Jensen. who lives at 3914 Arbor street. LAWYER DUNN IS STILL BUSY Atten to Usual Duties—Next Move is Expected from the Court Ttselt, According to the understanding end present plans of the lawyers who, as “friends of the court,” have sought an I congratulate Cuticura upon m) speedy gepaveey ?&mgh “hich opening to have Assistant City Attorney Dunn reinstated by the supreme court of Nebraska, the next move will come from e brief in some case in which the city is interested. He has nothing to say for publication touching his case, Intimating that if he does conclude to make any pub- lle statement concerning his disbarment it will be done later on. UNION AFFAIRS ARE TANGLED Omaha Electricia: tion of Look to Federa- abor to Stralghten Out Matters. Omaha electriclans say American Federation of Labor will be able to straighten out their affairs, which are now In a state of ch: They are called seceders because of a convention held in St. Louls some time ago to oust the offi- cers of the National Assoclation of Elee- trical Workers. Nebraska was one of the states which was represented at that con- vention and as & result there are now two tactions In the national body and Nebraska belongs to what Is called the Rice faction, or the seceders. Omaha electrical workers cannot take cards from thelr local union and be admitted to logals In Chicago, or scarcely any of the large center: An attempt was made some time ago to take away the charter of the Omaha local, but this failled and the matter is now be- ing threshed out at Toronto. Both the MeNuity and Rice factions are represented at Toronto and the contro- versy has been referred to a board of re- view to decide, SAVIDGE ASKS FOR FUNDS Plans Good Thanksgiving Dinner at House of Hope and Asks Charitable to Ald, Rev. Charles W. Savidge plans to make bappy more than one needy person on Thanksgiving by providing a real old- fashioned supper for the deserving. To this end, and with a view to raising funds the court itself. Their motion having been made, and Mr. Connell's brief on contempt submitted, the court will In due time, it Is expected, signify what It considers the correct proceeding in the matter. In the meantime Dunn s attending to his duties o the city attorney's office, He 15, In fact, engaged In preparing a long for the aged Inmates of the Fouse of Hope, he has fssued an appeal to the people of Omana for assistance. There are sbout thirty aged and ill people at the House of Hepe, and it is Mr. Savidge's de- sire to make them as happy as possible on Thursday of next week. the day of thanks- wiving. The they hope the | the dull brass, on satin finish, on the bright finish—2 ft. 6 in. and 4 ft. 6 in., genuine French lacque! Spectal for Saturday only ... SOLID OAK BUFFET With beautiful carved top and Fre: plate beveled edge mirror, has 2 drawers, one lined for silverware, new and attractive design, which must be seen to be appreciated. Special for BALUPARY +.vooesrsserasnseranne . LARGE and hai some trimmins, tra spec Rare Thanksgiving Offerings for Saturday Only at Hartman’s The Store That Keeps the Prices Down. e large has 2 leaded glass door compartments. They're & 3% OAK HEATER g8 ~ Ornamental for Saturday. | carved claw feet. nch PATENTARPLED FOR have paid 49¢, 39¢, 29¢ e price within reach of all. oo [0 ) GRS TR beater at the price The Brownie Roaster, family size, will go in a 16-inch oven, made of the finest rolled steel, locking end han- dles, self-basting, self-browning, sanitary. Those who Hartman’s effort in securing these roasters at a all day Saturday, 3,000 of them, at the unheard of 1!1(_:—‘ The A world 14 NS ST China - I v - R R 3 Dinner — K3 Mattress {| Rogers Sels, Complete Guaranteed | |51 Pleces, Siiverware, | Complete In the For French Sk Gray orsons, Finish, " ! v On 00 Sl || paEsE TABLES ARE EXTRA MAS- Salp > ] Saturday || sive andlnre stronfly con:;r'uct;d, Saturday They have large round tops, nches ALL BRASS BEDS Only in diameter, fitted ""“;‘ l’“;{‘l‘ ‘bm‘m'l“ M In this spectal combination offer ts in. Made ith 2-inch heav t. Extra large running extension slides. e base is cluded a heavily ehamiled fron bed, hest Tubing. Braced and rivited. " We have them in extra massive, with heavy s59. soft top mattress with heavy ticking, IE ROASTER | ° Self-Baster Size 15 in. 10 in. x6% in. 19 On Sale Sat. Only Hi33P *S1LNIOd 38 Isewhere will ‘appreciate None délivered. On sale in design, made with durable fire Rz box and 22 GREAT 8TORES THROUGHOUT THE U. 8. heavy cast- - . ings, thor- oughly - guar- nteed, mnew- it improved, screw draft registers, pat- ent gra'tes, ornam ental mountlnsl nd- nickel Ex- fal 1414-1416-14/8 DOUGLAS STREET ing and'1s & most powerful do ble nickel mings. thi Saturday only with fmperial stitched edges and spr of best very comfortable. may be had in any sired, The bed alone special price at which this P Beautiful golden oak or mahogany finish; has serpentine top drawers and ¢ commodious ones below. French s as plate mirror set in carved standards, Gl Saturday only BASE BURNER that ever sofd in Omaha at woven fabrie, very durable a Bed is full color of el is worth t size a te outfit sells—Saturday ELEGANT DRESSER very Special for LINCOLN he biggest burner It surface price for Too Handy With ' That Stilletto Gian Batista Gn;t;_n Far Too Skill- ful to Please Andrew Maurcelli. Gian Battista Gatto owns a stiletto, ac- cording to Andrew Maurcelll, and is alto- gother too handy Wwith it. Signor Maurcelll has been long enough in America to wish to invoke the law to right his ills rather than to follow the practice In his native Calabria of securing private vengeance. Also he wants the money. He has brought suit in district court for 43,000, saying that August 17 of this year Gatto inflicted five wounds on Hhim. One of these was on the left side of the neck, according to the petition; two slices were made in his scalp, another was “on the left flank” and the fifth between the shoulder and elbow on the left side. Signor Maureelli is of the opinion that Signor Gian Battista Gatto was trying to get under the fifth rib on this last thrust. HOW TAFT JOLLIED THE CROWD Some Incidents of the Presidential Party from Ocesn to Ocean and Back, When Mr. Taft began the trip, he was| sometimes taken off his feet by the ef- tusive Introductory orators, who, with fingers pointed at him as he sat defense- less on the grandstands, would assure him that he was the greatest, grandest, most | patriotic and most statesmanilke citizen | ever elevated to the “highest office in the | gift of our glorlous country'—with a ris- ing inflection on country. But by the time he had reached the coast, he was able to hold his own at the pleasing game, and | before he struck Texas he had most of the introducers en the run. If the mayor had | introduced him, he would forthwith nomi- | nate his honor for congress; if the con- | gressman had thrown bouquets in his direc- | physiclans, and, in order to entirely elimi- nate dangers from this source, it was necessary to use the same table water on the president's train throughout the tmp. Down in the arid lands of the southwest the amount of water used at meals and between meals was astonishing, but the fact that not a single member of the party was made 1ll, from the start to the finish, proves that the water-wagon policy was one worth following. If one trait of the president has seemed to develop more than another during his record-breaking trip, it has been that of “nerve.” Of course, no one ever aceused him of being a coward or of lacking in personal bravery, but until he started on the journey to the coast the subject of his individual courage Had never been con- sidered. The life he )id led on the bench and In one executive post or another had never brought him in direct contact with those who might wish him bodily harm, and not only wish that harm, but in- fiict it. As soon as he started westward, however, the subject of his personal bodily safety became a matter of prime import- ance. In addition to the secret service men who traveled with him, every stopping place found Mim surrounded by ‘“plain- | clothes men,” police in uniform, soldlers or militiamen, and, quite often, at more im- | portant points, he was guarded by all the fifty-seven different varietles of protec- tors. Bayonets, sabers, slung shots and revolvers fairly hedged him round, and all | the gun-toters chorused their disapproval whenever he made a move that looked llke ‘taking a chance.' ex-| “Oh, you fellows make me tired!" claimed the president, time and time again | during the jourfey, as he found himself walled off from the érowd he wanted to shake by the hand. “But it's dangerous; that's a bad-look- | Eight Bankers Are Indicted in Indiana Men from Institutions in Five Cities Charged with Embezzlement and * Falsifying Books. INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 19.—The federal grand jury of this district today returned tndictments agairst elght men charged with embezziement or complicity in em- bezzlements of the funds of national banks. Willlam H. Marker and Noah Marker, brothers, formerly cashier and assistant cashier of the First National bank of Tipton, Ind., are charged with having em- bezzled $100,000 of that bank's funds and with having covered their abstractions for ‘many months by making false entries and talse reports. ert W. Shirk, a capitalist of Chicago, president of the Tipton bank, who was ar- rested In Chicago soon after the arrest of the Marker brothers, and who was eharged with a misapplication of cash of the bank, was not indicted because of in- sufficient evidence. Max P. Emmerick, a bookkeeper of the Capital National bank of Indlanapolis, was indicted ¢n the charge of having empbeszled 30000, and Paul C. Gall and Harry C. Prinzler, depositors in the bank, are charged with complicity with Emmerick in making falee entries. Indictments on charges of embezzling ing crowd,” Captain Archie Butt, his mili- tary ald, or Secret Service Detective Sloan | would say. | “What's bad about it?" Mr. Taft would . demand, and then, before his faithful body- | guards would know what was happening. the president would slip away from them | and be in the middie of a laughing, cheer- | ing mob, pump-handling by wholesale. | Butt and Sloan would storm in vain, while they struggled to keep the handshakers | away from the president, and by the ||m.~‘ tion; he assured the people that the M. C. would some day ornament the senate; and If | the senator had done the deed, why, it looked to him as though only a few years | intervened between the solon's present job | and a place still higher in the gift of the | people. Every town he came to had prob- | ably more beautiful women and more | chubby-legged children than any other on his trip-and every man, woman and child | who heard, believed him. He probably be- they got him iInto his automobile or from | | the automobtle into the hotel where he was to stop, as the case might be, they would be perspiring like haymakers.—Arte Ess in Leslie's Weekly MAKES BREAK FROM COURT | Harry W. Trumbull, Former Crefgh- | ton Student, Has Wrestling Mateh with Policeman. lieved himself. Up to_the time that the Fourth regiment's prohibited beer was ioaded surreptitiousy aboard the baggage car, the president’s train was known along the line of march as “the water wagon.” It had gained the name for two reasons: First, there were no liquors provided by the com- | and other high-class table wate: chief ftem were the on the expense acoount. The were remarkable as it may seem, larger than the bills for all the food eaten by the members of the presidential party and train crew combined. \s recognised as Poor heaith policy by all because | quieted. Trumbull bills for table waters throughout the trip |amination as to his sanity Changing drinking wnulul the public schools. Harry W. Trumbull created somewhat of a stir in polics court wh he attempied to escape. Grappling with Officer Jensen the champion wrestler of the force, Trum bull, who is believed to be demented, sirug |gled hard to break away, but was finally whose home Is belleved where his parents re to be In Cambridge, missary; and second, becauss White Rock |side, was picked up Thursday on a charge |of being drunk He was returned to jail pending an «x The young man was at one time & student in Crelgh- ton College of Pharmacy and alsp took a course in music In the department of musie His faiber i3 John Trumbul) KOST Greatest Invention Ever Known in the Heating Art The praise of more than 100,000 satisfied weers & the weeret of it ales. Comfort on tap these chl days It you have o Kost Heater. Don't go (o the treublé pee of starting the steves or hest) Bt et & Koot Heater snd BRANDEIS STORES CHINA DEFPT.~WEST ARCADE ] . PATEN GAS-JET e i HOTELS, Hotel Rome 16TH AND JACKSON Unexcelled For It's Beauty and Modern Appointments. ROME MILLER amounts ranging from $,000 to §15,000 were returned against Howard Phillips, assist- ant cashier of the Terre Haute Natfonal of Terre Haute; Frank H. Nicholai, as- sistant cashler of the First Natlonal bank of Auburn, and E. N. Deitzer, teller of the First National bank of Fort Wayne, LAKE STORM_HAS ABATED Estimated Marine Interests Have Suffered to Extent of $500,000. CLEVELAND, 0., Nov. 19.—The second, severe storm of the autumn season on tho Great Lakes abated today and marine traf- |fic was resumed. While it Is estimated | that $600,000 damage was suffered by ma- | rine Interests, yet the loss was not so |great as in former scasons when like storins have swept the lakes. KEEP WARWM DON'T START YOUR HEATING 7 PLANT YET PRICE : $1.50 : CHEARER THAN COAL 'y T Fits Any Gas Fixture Throws the beat down to the floor. Warms & in 6 mismtes. Ex ue-balt cent pe Baves you money-—che than cosl. Burgs beturel or artifelal Kus po Iy withaiit _odor Bold st department and pardware stores o 8, daye trial or sent by Ua. exprows propaids free In your ows b Wl today. Ageats, wrlte for exclusive teiritorys) oo

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