Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PART TWO EDITORIAL FOR ALL THE NEWS THE OMAHA BEE PAGES 1 TO 8. BEST IN THE WESI A VOL. XXXIX-NO. 29 OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, .l,\\'l'.\l’ti’ 2 lN“(iIAI'I COPY FIVE (I;;h ; =] “ J Our entire line, consisting of . A anuary Silk Clearance With Astonishing Bargain SHEE T (o tuvoried prin ’ Broadcloths at Half January Clearance—Sheets, Pillow etchlugs. engravings, water col- N . Prices on Best Selling Lines PICTURES * teriome e oo rice imported Plain and Fancy Effects Cases and Blaakets These are the silks now in greatest vogue and selling in stores at two and three imes Embracing our entire splendid stooks, wort Substantial markdowns to interest Hennett's prices for Monday. You are absolutely certain (o find something that just suits you to $3.50. Broadoloths are always in fasiiion, hence | (1 .. in these lots. a haif price sale is important to all wemankina. | thrifty people. Thy are rich in finish and ft in texture, with a PILLOW CASES o Shed S1x00 Fancy Silks and New Moires, in widest range of Imported Silks, worth $3.00—Novelty silks =ich bty 7 75 5B 1.75 16 Cases, 42x35 11e ' b e choice colors: also white Habutal as Crepe de Meteor, Cashmere de Sole, 52-inct g R Yt 3 P4 890 Nheats, $1x6) 4 Wash Silke—surprisingly priced ch Dordered dress chiffor, ik MeranIns : $3.00 Broadcloths .......81.50 105, Chsen, 1NE86 e rvettetn R L wilks worth 76¢ yard, at gl e ot exquisiic 08¢ $2.50 Broadcloths . ... ...81.25 e 124c | o150 BLANKETS by us; for 2 2.0 S 3 00 Nt | $1.30 Riankets, " Poau de Oygne and Mossalines, Peau do NyiDil | pregy Goods Tess Than Half—is and 50-incli fal :1 :1 '»:'.fi':fi:'.fl‘.:: ey o B L "ieh: emstitened. . 13€ | 3600 Blanke SL.19 and basket weave sliku—the most beautiful new | Drioe atvilsh stripe And eheck combinations, & COATINGS 818 ABTRAXEANS--For ch wear | 20¢ Cases, 45x35 “gae | *lfore et R o ] soft dress and walst silks, in evening and street | inch Homespuns, in all the newest shades. pretty fur fabrics, closely fesembling - ineh..... $7.50 Blankets, nhuld;-T ‘:.]; ‘M‘n({nyn, I\\ ||-Ily| ;‘Ilnl(r« 39c ";"‘I:: ;v’!“” I‘V‘\R”fl"l" ’l'n‘l(}hx‘:;:l\\ tha ch (Thl' Winter |,’llu"l(‘l|\ Style Book, lnl]ll(”ll\{ real animal furs and bearskins: also 98 SRERTS colors, plaids ss ’s and ac! abutal; splendid ] 8a a o8 e show » Ladles' Hec 3 P, arn O Astrakhans in green, blue and red— c 63c Sheets, 72x90 | $2.00 Comforters values, at . “tssisesinnns all at. . . any 15¢ Ladi Home Journal Pattern 0“ regularly sold for $4.00 to ,fl}'fl‘ at, yd |ml|‘.. % . "c ‘ "nfl 4y 3 sl 98 January Sale Office Supplies Start the new year with new office re- quisites, Bennett's feature strong values on the wanted and much-needed lines. BLANK BOOKS--Bound with leather backs and priced lower than elsewhere Great January Clearance All $25 Long Coats $1 5 Bennett’s take the initiative tomorrow and begin the Jan- 100-page Journals and Ledgers.....19¢ s e Y PRV 2 [t WS T N A YA . SUGGAEE Tourtiale asd Ledgers. . ... K¢ uary clearing sales with vigor by offering the splendid 300-page Journals and Ledgers 35¢ ymorrow the January Linen Sales beg Months . afd Winter Coats that have been so greatly admired, at a ten 400-page Journals and 600-page Journals and CARTER'S WRITING FLUID. Quart, g0¢ Pint 350 % Pint 25¢ Box Letter Files...... Card Tndex Trays, with covers. . Wire Letter Baskets. months of preparation are devoted to these events—oue of the pnost important on the storve’s calendar. Way back last summer we were searching European centers for the best offerings with this particular sale in view. We believe it never was the good fortune for Omaha house- keepers to look upon a finer assemblage in this city. Importing linens d t saves for us, and you, all the in- dollar markdown. They are the fashion- able full length garments, straight line and pleated styles, in blacks and eolors, just your fancy dictates. Commencing Monday; choice of an) 19 r $25.00 coat in the house........ Postal Scales c sl 25 8$2. 25 between fits most dealers pay. ENVELOPES | Receipt Books ...... &, 100 and 19¢ Tomorrow you see the culmination of our endeavors. The Lot Fancy Cloth Coats, in full lengths, heavy, warm, ser- No, 4 Baroniai, package. 1¢ | pencils-—American Pencil Co's. stocks are here in all their crisp, immaculate snowiness. Beau- > ‘o ¢ hox ©f X " s 3 viceable garments, worth $15.00—now B0 18 Sominarctal, bog oF Capitol, per doz. . teee. 850 tiful table damask and napkins, towels, toweling and fancy linens g , worth $1 no $5.00 No: 6% Commercial, box of 260 at @80 | Beats All, per dozen .......... 160 of all sorts Here It Is—The Choice of B ey DMt it wid e 11 & wale of prowising bargains and the best time of the ere % S— e Lhoice o year to replenish. the tock s.'c Big Clearance of Enamelware i i Pattern Cloths Any Suit, An A B ADHIGINR ooty esi : ny Suit, Any ¢ good, substantial linens. You must see Napkins to Match Coat, Aay D Hundreds of nieces of fine enamel kitchen utensils to be hurried thigth o Fally apbresiete. tHalr: gooamnhs Rt dvaet viiGa ; ay l'ess' out Monday. All first quality ware, with prices less than half. di-SholEE BlenHiod” DatHiAsK: 800 auality. | i o o oespatcetng select/ 1vihly Worth to 350 Blué, and: Whita Distiins, 17-gusrt size— SEBENEN L L STl 226 | linens, at almost one-third under ac- sclling regularly for 98c; will be. .. A% fe:inch Bleached Damask, 30c quality, | tual values BIUE GA Whito BarBh Jattion, S-duars alsbs yard . AT T 390 The chofce of the stock sale that DAL CoVEre: TORHIT $20 QALY . 49 > Inch Bleached ~Linen ' Damask, ue vard Cloths, $2.75 values for $2.00 offers bigger quantities of garments Covered Enameled Palls, 3-quart slze— %e Tfl\'ehnl and Crash (R NN or s e vard Cloths, $2.50 values for $2.60 and better styles than any of our pre- selling regularly at 68c; reduced to...... ooy o5 Vquality, s ; : s yard Cloths, $1.25 values for $3.00 vious events. Without a single excep- Covered Enameled Pails, 4-quart size— 304 Special bargains on these staple hou 72-inch” Bleached Linen Double Damusk Fine $4.25 Napkins to match, per tion the entire lines of tailored w v So11IDg TeRUIATLY &t 886; TEAUCEA. L0, . . r. ..., SOC hold necessities. Read each item | "$1.50 quality, vard g sllalg 4 i 2.00 n the entire lines of tailored wool Fnameled Coffee and Tea Pots, No. 0% size— 8f Hemmed S%c Huck Towels, red borders, | 15-inch All Linen Napkins, $1.25 quality $3.00 valuves f a5 ERITIOntA, Tegardiess oal ive: ireguiny selling regularly at 72c; reduced to...... c cach \ s IS Lot doen/{ e BT L N e R L - 4 price, be it $50.00, $45.00 or $35.00, ‘ Enameled Coffee and Tea Pots, No. 11% size— 5 Hoémmed 12%c Huck Towels, red borders. 19-inch All Linen Napkins, $1.3 Fle R BRI LN, 08 you get it now for $25.00. ROITIRG PaEUIATEy &f 180; reduosd to, o .o uerr. .. S9C (N R e L R R AR SRR TR SRR SL 0 RURIES (Eup W0 A Few More Base: Barnsey and. Hoaters. Hemmed _Huck Towels, 46 inches, 4‘;’7‘23‘. o NapkinKS v Al““‘“! oo ) :a;; ; ew ) R Ll B : hes, sen " | et e value, dozen YR ¥ sk s L d \ Will not carry one over. While | Kitchen Ranges, all reduced. Well | jiemmad ioe Momie Tinen Toweis.. 160 | iopen 1, 1N Navkine, 5225 qualfts, 24-inch Napkink (o inatoh, $4.60 inner Satin Line - these last, choice for. % OFF known makes for., ... . % OFF Bleached and Unbleached Turkish Towels, 24-Inch All Linen Napking, $3.50 quality, value, dozen . $3.50 4 ] 25¢ kinds .. T dozen : B 8348 | 2x2 yard Double Damask, $4.00 Clofhs, ) an 50 s“lts m’;sm hed and Unbleached Turkish Towels, a1 ot o O e Monday’s Best Inducements in the Grogery | coiionmvui v criin am 2000000 B PENE i i ik ol R e i came. oAERy | { > H‘e:;&/ (‘ol\on 8%c Crash (like “Tv:‘ ’lhu\w]fll\dn\ln{jplul- in the sale 2x3 yard Double l‘am-lk OG 00 Cloths, fi:ndznt lz\l:ery“;l}il : 4 b ¢ 5 3 . B340 hand made doyMes. centers, tray Ra 8 ' | b s Do vl Y e g g e o4 “:.’.f.:': B su::‘; 18-Inh Union 8¢ Crash, yard........8%0 cloths, fearfa, Ionch cloths, table Sl Napkins| to matel- £ ‘:,"" 0' these suits touches the < And 30 stamps Hartley's Pure Orange AR Bleached Linen 113c Toweling, yérd 8¢ iy, o L ‘“‘l‘“e f laiitan s ooy ridy 4ot highest pinnacle of tallored Bennett's Challenge Cof- [ Marmalade . [N sy gy e Bleached Barnsley 15¢ Toweling, yd. 1134e TP e i 0 24-inch Nepking N Maieh, §9.00 suit style and quality that $25 or Y000 10 atanpe | Badded Kaiutna pofind | Craskers, 18 b, box, Blsachedq all Hnén. 200, Toweling, yaedil0o value A e g Vv $29.50 will buy ordinarily. There are Pure Ground Pepper, %-| DK ........... 38%0| at .........A... 3116 several hundred, all sizes and colors, Ib. can ... 10¢ And 10 stamps T now $19.50. And G stam; " | Bennett's Capitol Mince |DoUble Stamps on Gran- . ’ . ons, Siportod: e 4sc |Gt 3 fof\or.x Bea| ulated Sugar ; . Green Trading Stamps With Capitol Coal o \ And 50 stamps d 10 siamps Asparagus Sale chldren s CO‘ts [} Stollwerck's Cocoa, %- |Chstile Tollet Soap, ten [§go cans Richlieu Ase b, :-n 30c | cakes i 880 | 1 oragus 300 Monday only, with every ton of Bennett's Capitol Tn e I a Bo y o /Sy 3 A w43 Y A e January Clearance. Diamond 8 Chili Sauce, |Golden Bagle Currants, |60c Batavia Asparagus, Coal at $6.50, we will give 100 5. & H. Stamps. 3 i X% hollAlld....“‘,.... 12%¢ pou?d‘m‘(g, fanes 1%¢ “0-« o sl une Either personal or telephone erders accepted. Capitol All $5.00 Coats, 6 to 14-yr. sizes.$2.05 R L T oy TR IRRRL D L e B i et coal is a satisfactory coal. Burns up clean, lasts All $9.00 Coats, 6 to 14-yr. sizes.$5.00 J-m;.dn:o..‘ ... 280 l’or‘..l Mo ataiiss 880 |80c Thomas French AS- longest and gives out most heat, All $13.50 Coats, 6 to 14-yr. sizes $7.50 nd 20 stamps Ab stamps paragus . 38¢ All $10.00 Coats, 2 to G-yr. slzes. $5.00 IHREE SOLDIERS 01‘ I‘OR[L\h nessee. He'd Lad very little schooling and | most remarkable man of the threq in my |friendly relations existing between the - v | Wwas glad to get a job on the railroad as a opinion. I was In the Mexican state of | United States and ' Mexico and warned Some hlngs 4 ou Want to KnOW | fireman. In tme he became an engineer. | Sonora, when he turned up therc about|them of the results of a scrap. I saw him ! T But Lee wanted to see the world, He | fifteen years ago. ‘He might have dropped | myself, and his courage and coolness in i Hustlers Who Won Out in Latin-|# n“u‘;l:::lu\!\ 8 b and quit dn the toat | nlnm the sky for all that any one knew |a trying. situation were super! i o 4 sensa ay eve hea of on a Ten-| abou o | ‘Late he ches B e ers ‘ 5 s American Kepublics. nessee railvoud. He threw the throttle of | fir I:.::-':I«e very littie Spanish and when | H»l::u.. :I:n:lluihi‘l"l‘:' 'I:FJ.'.'E‘, “lln (‘;l‘:m s a . perse. ‘ World’s Sunday School Convention ‘ lils enging wido open ono fine duy and let | asked i name. gave & barbhrous com. | Wheh tho. end ot Shat time. tound ihems EACH MADE GOOD IN HIS OWN WAY | "er 8o full specd ahead. e tore past|bination of sounds that no Mexican could | still heolding their ground he ordered a { Pl x ¢ statlons and through towis (0F Htty miles | e expected to pronounce. The goseip cf | volley to bo fired that killed nearly forty Today 30,00 Sunday school scholars be- | be thousands of Interesting exhibits of the| The lessons which are to be studied this newsee Locomotive” Engineer Who ,::“m‘;',“;“;h".:1,‘,“d‘,‘,’dh‘.‘[‘,’.‘“,,,l,:,,‘,;‘,' Jibed | the cantinas decided that he' was @ Rus- |men. There was.no Cananes strike after 8in & new year of Bible study. They will | ways hat are used to cyitivate (e spirit |vear were not produced in haste. fven| g : Ekersn1t0.1 ca \ slan. . o same reason evary forolgner in |the Iast ‘schoss hiad.aled away. all study the same lessons, no matter what |of giving and o stimulate the spirit of |now, while the Sunday school scholar fs| PeCn™® ® Gemeral in Honduras | JESERCC 0 0 ean (ell you how he didn't|Mexico. who is mot American nor yet a| “Oh, yes, Kosterlitzky, the Polish ad- language they speak or to what denomina | selt denial, and all the other things, which | studying the first lesson for 1910, those | and a British Tar Who Wa [ I'il:n( lx‘f \‘ll'v‘.ll"ul‘l“l’,x?‘. JUAL AN vhy | Spaniard nor a Frenchman is put down us | venturer from nowhere, is quite a tigure 1 ‘ tion they belong. The story of how the [help to lead the child into a fuller un-|for 1912 are being prepared. and those for | Mads -4 asi I ‘“ {*‘l‘l[': ‘” M“"““‘ Lee Cnrlst- | 4 Russian. Kosterlitzky is sore about the |In Mexico. His career husn't been quite wholo Protestant world has become united | derstanding of the fundamentals of true |subsequent years are belng mapped out | gt day, the mame reskions [[stake to this very day, for I don't need [as metcoric as those of Christmax and {hrough Its efforts to teach the Bible to |picty and Christian living. It Will be an|by the great committees upon whose| ... g s Ehing devhl he had. aiee abcckioss. | 1o tell you that a Pole would much rathsr | BiIl Moore, but it has been bullt up on a {hg,children of he natlona constitutes one | exposition absolutely devold of commercial- | shoulders fall thé duty of guiding the| N©W YORK, Jan. 1—They had been dis. |laughing devil he had always beén. But|pe callell a thief or a murderer than a |sounder basis. Ho's a man to be reckoned Y the most interesting chapters of rell- |lsm, a mere labor of love on the part|world's thought in Bible study, Iven ax | U¥5IN8 the situation in Nicaragua. The ‘yH\ i il them, 1ot | Russian. with,! * Jkious history, and reminds one of the say. |of those who devise and maintain it. far back as 1907, At the meoting of the | X-Consul had grown cloquent gver the | '<”°“» t. He was the power behind | “He Joat po_time in enlisting fn tha — fus that “a little child shall lead them.” | At the Home convention all kinds of | British and Amerlcan scctions of the In- | M%000ds of Central American dictators. |thE throne tn (he lide repubi local rurales, @ force not uniike the French |MOTHER CAT FOILS A PLOT ‘ Hore the llon of veliglows controvcrsy does |Sunday school lterature and musie were |ternational committec, it was decided that | 118 friend had mourned the shooting ot | “f ean see him now as he xat on & corner | Koregn Leglon. ‘1t numbers In Its ranks —— v eed 1lio down with the lamb of unity and |shown. There were no less than sixteen |the British committce should prepave a | CANNOD and Groce. e e ot e e story. 1S fmen from the four corners of the earth. | Brave Effort (o Save Lives of. Coue stsbarlan strife is forgotten in interde- | different classes of exhibits. One of u.rg-u- of lessons from to 1917, with the| 1 never knew those boys,” said the ex- | clgarette hanging out of one corner| s recrult is asked no questions. His past dewmned Kittens n nominational co-operation {mcst interesting of all the exhibits, was |11 lessons worked out in detail, and the | O"Sul “They scem to huve been on the |Of 1":' mouth like @ Central American iy hix own affalr Success. » The' interest in this year's Bible study |® little “do without it bag, intended for [ones trom 1915 o 1817, welusive, i broad | M1t 81de, but they must have known the e Ty e I:“”N: g M oo | But Kosterlitaky was not an ordinary e will be heightened by the fact that before |the pocket of man, woman or child. It foutline. The course for the 1810 lessons |E3Me thoy were up against. Cenuar WiL (o oI Tennesser drawl in his “uoe: | swashbuckler. e showed such courage | Dr. Jumes McDonough of 4 Portland the year has run half its course there |&Ppealed In its silent way only for the Was approved before that date, and the "l""‘“‘“' in {1““ OF M A St Ral 1) o e Il T o Atk 'u-\':,.m::ml-i“"d PRI e, I8 the' Jieat campaign | plece; Wontelad i has & oat, Iucy by Nl Do held in the oity of Washinglon a |moneY its owner was about o spend for | Amerlan committes wax acked o work | UL NAUiVes have no sort of use for them. | UL on the losing side of six i s | against the Yaqui Indians that he was at |name, which understands the human lan- great triennial conclave of all the Sunday |$omething he could as well do without. [out the detalls of the 1911 lessons Walker, the biggest filibuster of all, is R s I‘ *'\“ SRR lunl"- Jumped to the rank of captain. Five | guage. That was shown today by tl school interests in the world. From the |Maybe It was only a cigar or & cup of | The 107 conference of the British and o recent a memory [T e o :H;‘ u\"“: :H“"“”‘:‘a“ _‘l{d | years later he was chief of the rurales|skill she displayed in saving her kittens ends of the carth will come those who [chocolate. This “do without It" bag, with | American sections of international lesson | V'V come In contact with scores of| b (1 00 BIE REC COMRE OHE B DR toP | of Sonora from being drowned. Willard Bush of have reports to maké of things accom |the Spirit of seif-denial it inculcates, has | writers will result in the lessens of the [tNeM: Thexr'd beg me to save thelr skins| o\ U G0 0 (SEER (O COURIAR | “He was then able to give his talents | Newark, who had drowned a. previous lit plished and of things to be undertaken, |becn @ great support of the work In|next few years being gradcd. On both | ¥heR they'd,made the country oo hot to|CHef MUty adviser (o 'd ] tull play. Before his day the rurales were | ter, went to the doctor's office this morn- Riben then S48 deltanton fopisesating the | England. sides of the Atlantic it was found thas |B0Md them.’ Shiftless and uninteresting brave but inefficlent, a lax body of adven- [ing. Dr. McDonough told him Lucy had Sunday achool workers of the whole world, | The development of the world Swnday | (here was a demand for graded lessons, | Yo8abonds they wero with the axception Bill Moore’s Nerve, turers who did not know what the word |more kittens, which she had secreted In * Will transact the business of the meeting |school is a remarkable story of religious |and resolutions were adopted looking to | °F three: Who were geniuses. “The second adventurer 1 have in ing | USCIPlne meant. He "drifled them "and | the haymow, and he. wished he would and carry back to the covntries from |activity. First an organization of a few |that end, but it is not probable that these| 'That S0 aueried his friend, who had|is Aqmiral Bill Moore of Salvador. During | !I°ked them into shape, until they became | drown them. Nelther noticed the cat was whenea they come -the inspirations they |schools, then state-wide, then national, then [ will be introduced before 1912 The Ameri- | 'OVCF been south of Sandy Hook. “T|ijc Boer war he was in the British navy | 1€ MOSt valuable fighting force in Mex- |in the room. Shortly afterward the two , ) Eather and the lessons they learn. The |irternational, and then world-wide. until |can section is elected by the international [ {OUENt that all adventurers were pic-land carries a royal medal for life saving |\ 1t 13 alleged that he made a special | men went out driving. When they were vocasion will b the meeting of the sixth now thirty-seven countries and fifty-three association, and consists of fifteen mem- | ‘UeHdue |and two others for distinguished service 14 for the bad men qf Texas and Arizona | gone Lucy went to the huymow, plcked trlennfal meeting of the World's Sunday |denominations are united by the great tie |bers, who hold their position for six years, | ~Listance throws a false glamor round | . promotion under his own flag scemea |8 Yecruits. He wanted gun fighters who [up « kitten, climbed & picket fence and Sehwol assoclation. It will be the second [of common Bible study. The movement |or for one of the cycles of Sunday school | N¢™: But, as I xald before, L have met|(, pe a Jong distance ahead, und at the | ¥OUld be afraid of neither Gor nor man. |took her baby into the cellar of Wililam Umie that this great convéntion of conse- |toward this world-wide co-operation has | Bible wtudy. Thice of them are from | '@ Who Were out of the Ordinary rufi.!cigse of the war BIll quit and went to| WHBever they might have done across the | Tentzlof's home, next door Mrs. Mo- crated Chrlstlan workers has met on Amer- |proved successtul, because of the desire | Canada and twelve fiom the United States, | DI You ever hear of Lee Christmas, oF fsajvador. Thete he pulied off the biggest | €. he promised them protection if they | Donough and Mrs, Tentzloff watched hee Youn soll. the othor oceaslon being the [for a definite program of study, in which | Twelye are ministers and three are lay- | Bill Moore, or Kosterlitzky, the Pole bluff 1 have ever heard of. Dressed in | WOuld enlist under him. ‘\:mn she had moved all six kittens to a meeting at St Louls in 183 In 188 it |dll could unite. The American Sunday |men, and they are proportionately dividea | The other silently filled the ex-consul's'y papty suit of white duck, with goid | ““Whether true or not, this story gave |pile of old papers in the Tentzloff coal bit met at London. Its next meeting was at |School Union was the first important ex-|among the leading Protestant churches |5!@ss and handed him a fresh cigar. He|praig on the shoulders, he made an carly |N8 name a sinister meaning along the| An Your afterward the doctor and Buat Jorusalem and its last one at Rome in 1907, | pression of the larger desire for co-oper- | which use the international lessons. | knew that the story would be toidy What- [afternoon call on the president frontier. It became a proverb among the |returned from their drive. Lucy met ther ‘, What_ fevliug the dclogates must have [ation. The New York Sunday School Unlon | mhe mible must be covered in aix years, |V “B9Wer he might make | Bain'. a6 ow' You " ave revolution | WOrst element. ‘Dof what you please, then |in the front y ard, looked at Bush, nrchr: had when they stood In the Collscum and |tirst expressed the desire for national o- | witn 25 jessons. There must be & tem.| .. M Come from Tennessee. on your ‘ands,’ sald Bill, ‘Hl've come to|Join Kosterlitzky. He won't gmive you |her back and spat savagely at him. When praised God, by permission of Roman au- (operation in 1820. The American union has | porance 1dason every quarter and a num. | 11} besin with Lee Christmas. He and [notfer my services. Hi'm Hadmiral Moore | 8WaY the men had entered the office the cat tharities—in the very place where once |been one of the greatest of all the forces (1o’ or otner special lessons. After (|1 WEFe Taised in the same village in Ten-|of the British navy Kosterlitaky's Pleasant Way. {returned to the haymow to witness the those who belleved as they belleve w at work for the upbuilding of the Sunday | .ompittee has gone over the lessons for & ' o F A i Y. | “He showed the life saving medal, | “Kosterlitzky ldissoms : L it X ssons for a — — | 3 o ky sprang into prominence at | discomfiture of Bush, Her wait was in thrown into the arena to be devour:d by |school in the United & The first | gyven vear they are sent to the publishers and explained in an offhand way that|the time of the riots at Cananea se | | vain, because Mrs. McDonough had told wild beasts. When they meet in Wash- [national Sunday sehool convention WaS | .ia'loeeon writers of the aworld. whe thraugh the agency of the Bunday school, |y way 'the star of the Garter. He had |yesrs sgo. The Mexics 3 s e E the re g TR ington in May Mhere ‘will be no Calvary, |held in New York in 1832, aithough there | sil (V00! Witers Of the world, who Are | which s really the Fecruiting station of [y iitten ‘the word Admiral across is | o 50 The Mexican lahorers at the T Pemovel -4¢ she Mittenn Mount of Transtiguration or Holy Sepul- (had been several interstate conventions be- |y ot W0 (0T ORE D €E "““"" 100k~ | tho chureh, it meems strange that eccle|qiscnarse papers, and stated 'that It was P‘ ";‘“" SAmD Stmick for higher wages. |84 sald it would De & shawe to drown cher to which to make pllgrimages; nor |fore that time , o 1e committec | 5iaute.could have falled to gauge its Pos- | hix commission from th ORIy NN fauicoieod and the livey of e sftar Kair i ade ok s biATE P KRR ey Bt e Clorial convention henadened | TR the ensuing yoar thesc wuggmetions [ginilities to such an extent as to try 1o commission from the king Americans were menaced effort for their lives. The doctor thought "tomb of the apostle of the Gentlles, but “m: ,‘_:'N"";‘"y'.:“"_"'l:l ko “m:r ity :Ail-fl u'I‘Hmmu dre exumined carefuly. In| ki) the movement, even after it had Thero wasn't a soul n tlie _president's | “The rurales were at the other end of |80, 100, b b e preparation of the lcssous for 186 | pumbered 500000 followers under Its ban. | €Stablishment who could read English sut- | Sonora, and the urgent needs of the case| Iaicy waited at the barn until 'she grew there will be a welcome from & natoi | participating, and here was begun 1he | there were about 13 suggestion R | O 1 S0 4 UBOSE 18 DN ol wall (o - diarite b Bill caused th 3 " which has more Christlan people than any | work of preparing the world’s Bible stud | resulted in the c mm"” .-“-.;';1 <_*J”‘“ I *‘ ners, vet it less than 100 years sinc s 15y Wb o i 2 ||'- e H‘”' e was | A he authorities to appeal to the :H'vl of the suspense. She went to the L dvr ol g g e ia e T Torimnioeit] Fian | INONEA in: the Shangd o meding ,...l,,i, les '@ Teligious authority (hau the arch- | Pldced L.i““..“:.d.»vmvy“ nay m‘ ,‘q\mlw ‘:,;\ ‘ml"d i Arizona for asslstance. He | house o find out what hud caused the Already the preparations for (his great|songol lessons. - The convention Which | puxys twenty-two los ol .. ‘:t““h\m«m.;. of. Canterbury couvoked u council| ¥eh lr‘ s uu: v ;y tramp | responded by sending a detachment of the de Ihe doctor called her to him and gathering of workers are under way. The \adopted the International lesson ldes Was | committal verses, and the sybstitntion o |CF PDOPS (0 consider wuys and means | SEEHEE O by crp S Salled | FRIgSIR.N0 CRBANIS. . ey werw (natrugted | DA has - t start wa ade by the World's Sunday |heid at Indiunapolis, and it i sald that | g\ lossons for i "- he substitption of | 1o put an end to Sunday schools | down the coast to attack the rebels not to fire on the strikers, but to walt | “Well, Luc: he sald, “if you really ; Sehoo!l Visitation, a great missionary 10ur [much feeling entered into the debate on | & o six that were eliminated The first Bunday school, under Robert| 'He bombarded several smail villages. | Kosterlitaky want those Kkittens you may keep them. B the world by evout workers, who pald [the subject The home department of Sunday school Raikes, had paid teachers. who received | 18ter, he landed u party of marines and | “The latter arrived after a forced march | Bring them right here In the office and thelr own exp-nses and travelled to T The first international lessons were pre. “OTK 18 of American origin, the creation|a shilling & day for their services. But |Sallors, and placing himself at their head, | that had tested the endurance of his men, |I')l Bive you a box and a warm bed mcter nations to strengthen those there [pared by a eommittee of twelve, five min. | °f PF W:. A. Duncan of New York state, | it was not many years before the idea of |he attacked the main body of revolu- | The rurales were drawn up on one side of Where tey can be comfortable.” cuguged 1n the work, and to lead them 10 |isters and five laymen ‘from the Uniteqs| ¥NO ©stablished it in 1881 As only % per!pald teachers was eliminated, and with | Uonists. He defeated them easily, and the | the plaza, the rangers on the other. The Lucy purred, rubbed herself aguwinst Mc- press on (v greater and better achieve- |States, and one minister and one layman | °*P of church members attend the regu-|it the general objection that the Sunday |8rateful president confirmed him in ‘.lw‘Arlxnnn boys were spoiling for a fight. | Donough's leg and then went out. In a ments, Each member paid his own ex-lfrom Canada. It was to formulate a|'ar Sunday school servic the home de-|school tended to secularize the Subbath. |Position as commander in chief of the |They thought they recognized some bud |lttle while she returned with a black kit- pepses. Practically all of those who went | seven-year Bible study course. Since then | PATtment has a great fleld. This phase | It was long after the beginning of the|Navy, at a salary of $40 a month men who had slipped through their fingers, | ten in her mouth. She did not cease hwr on this great world tour will attend the |there have been some changes in - the |©f Sunday school work has grown with|Sunday schaol that any comprehensive Bill held down the job successtully and it began to look as if they would at- | trips until all six kittens were at the fest Washington convention In May. formation of the committee, and some in | 8798t rapidity. Atlanta has a police home | system of Bible study was outlined everal years. But he grew tired of Centrul |tack their Mexican allies, of the doctor. Then she looked In his face One of thé most interesting features of |its work, but on the whole its task today | d°Partment and Loulsville one for trolley BY FREDERIOK J. MASKIN, |America and returned to England a year | "Kosterlitzky alone prevented a clash, |&nd meowed for him to carry out his part the convention will be an exposition de- |is not casentially different from what i | mPloyes. Tomorrow—AMERICAN COAST DE- | OF 50 g0 He rode up and down the plasa. He jetlied |Of the bargaln. lie did iL—New York ' With all the greal good lhat is done | PENSE. ‘The both sides. { voled o Sunday school work. There will | was thirty-seven years ago. e | I third fellow, Kosterlitzky, I the He reminded them of mel“’mm