Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FOR RENT T Furnished Rooms, PLIESSANT rm., Bemls park, priv. home 1 bik. to oar; ref. required. V 304 TARGE front room, el new fui niture: also 2 or i enauite: fireplaces, n all rooma. steam I R M Farnam St FARNAM, Modern. exposure Unr p N. 18TH, US—Three modern housekoeping rooms, hot water neat; walkir® distance. room gentioman Houses and Coting North, BEMIS PARK 25.00-Seven-room, modern, dauble hotuse 00—Five-room, modern, fuel furnished "hone_Walnut 6-R. mod., $19. N. %th Ave. Web_ & FURNISHED ‘oom, modern bungalow Call_Web. 68437 after § o'clock 6-ROOM cottage. 111 8. 3th St $15. Water paid WITETECTE | TR N $10.00—Fine, brand new, 2-story dwelling, 3 bed rooms and sieeping porch, Field club district; entirely —modern, 15 Pacific St.. paved street. 5,00-Good_6-rm., entirely modern dwell ing at 201 N. 2d St, paved street Another dandy dwelling, 6 rooms, en- tirely modern, at 3840 Frankiin st same rental SCOTT AND HILL CO,, Douglas 1008, FOR RENT—A small house, thoroughly furnished; Omaha's choicest locality; until April 1, 1916; rent reasonable, cast and south | | dium REAL ESTATE | FARM & RANCH LAND FOR SALE | Wiseunsin UPPER WISCONSIN-Best dalry and general crop state in the union. settiers wanted; jands for sale at low prices on easy te Ask for booklet M on Wiston- | #inc Land Urant. Excellent lands | for stock raising. 1f interested in fruit lands ask for booklet on apple orchards. Address Land and Industrial Depart., Soo Line Raliway. Minneapolls ‘dinn Miscerimncons. HAVE YOU A FARM FOR RALEY Wrlte & good description of your land ard send Jt to the Sloux City, 1a., Journal, “lowa's Most Powerful Want Ad Me. " Twenty-five worda every Friday evening, Saturday morning and ev |Baturday ‘evening and Sunday morning | for one month, FIVINE sixteen ads on | twelve different’ aaye for §2; or 5 words, | W, or 1 words, % T.ergest circulation of any Towa news- | t paper, 20,00 reuders daily in tour | atutes | FOR SALE—M40 acres of la d in Logan Co.; wiil_trade for clity property or 4 cash: balance (o suit purchaser: % actes | of ‘good farm land; balance pastufe Genrge McCarter, 3316 Miami, Phone Wal 11% or call between 7 and § p. m. | REAL ESTATE LOANS |#1® TO $Low made promptly | Wead, Wéad Bidk., I5th & Farna CITY and farm loans, 5, 6%, 6 per cent 418 State Ulllk‘ J. H. Dumont & Co. A “For Sale’ ud will turn second-hand turniture into_cash. 1 -r, fully modern house; ist fir., | CITY property rgo_loans a_specialty. onk; 24 floor, enameled mahogany;| W. F ate_Bank Bldg built-in “furniture; on car line. Tel. D.|{ANTED= and city 1oana &t o) Wal._315 lowest rates. n_house. 1 [ PETERS TRUS1_CO.. 162 Farnam. 117 Hickory, Tyler {OMAHA ho Cast Nebruska (arms. hardwood floors, new decorations; mod. Tel. H. 2134 | FOR RENT—Modern, 6-room cottage; furnace heat, electric light, full eement basement. 709 h St. Apply at & Howard St FOR BALE—6-r. cottage, 2 line; price reasonable. 304 ‘Walnut St. 11 Leavenworlh. W Went. COTTAGE—4 rooms and heat: good neighbortood Harney 1963, ©OZY cottage in Bensom, 6 rooms, $1 near car line and school. Tel. Wal. 318 0] LAFAYETTE-6 rooms; modemn ex- cept heat: handy three car lines; nice place to live; ch H. 53%0. Miscellaneons. Gordon Van Co. e torage. 29 N. luth 8t Tel D 38 or Har. 1937, GOOD auto les room _on Karn st nab A blocks from Phone Har bath, 120 no M4th St gas, Very resso le rent. Tel. Doug. 40R9. }) Jan_ana Storage Maggard’s ¢ siiierss: acking, shipping. 1713 Webster St glan 149, FIDELITY Eo¢Ak FREE Phone Douglas 288 for complete list of vagant ho nd apartments; aiso for moving, 1ith and Jackson Sts '(:zlgbeVan&Storage' Stores, moves, packs, ships; 3-lorse van w:nd 2 men, §1.25 per hr.; storage § per mo. Satisfaction guar. D. 4338 & 230, Crelgh Sons & Co., Bee Hou!efl In all parts of the Q“"‘,, 240 Capitol Ave., 7 rooms modern, § 1505 N. 20th, 4 rooms. $14. 2220 Clark, 4 rooms, $12.60. 19 8. 28th, 4 rooms, $10. RINGWALT Brandcls Theater Blig | S-room modern, park district, $35. 7-room, downtown, $27.50. WRIGHT & LASBURY. D. 182 _ mod- "LOSE IN—SL5 8. %th; seven room ern; hot water heat; rent, $28.5 111 ‘8. 2th Ave; seven rooms; nearly new; best of everything; rent, $3.50; save car fare. Harney 590, 7-R. new house and barn, hts d furnace, $12. 155" Douse, strictly modern, $30. electric $-R. apartment, strictly modern, 3% wnd ¥ ] AND & TRUMBU! 48 Bee Bidg. Douglas €707, o e T the Central Furniture Store's FREE !lE(ENTAL LIST. Exp. Co., moving, packing & storage. Il C' Re 127 Farnam. D. 6146, “R. house, miod. ex. heat. Tel, Web. 1594, 'KEEF + BSTATE CO, 1016 Omaha National. Phone Dovglas TS MONFEY on hand for city and farm loans. Binder, City’ National Bank Bldg |MONEY to loan on eastern Nebraska | _farms. Immedate action, United States T Company. Omakh Jeb. i MONEY on hand _for city and farm loans. H. W. Binder, City National Bank BIdg a0+ 564, O LOANS. . Cariberg, [(’/" i2 Brandels Theater Bldg. | == REAL FERTATE—FOR EXCHA WILL trade Oregon land for Nebrask e land or first-class auto. B 167, Bee. ! FOR SALE OR TRADE ! 441 acres, Linceln Co, Neb.; fenced, windmil!, sma | bufldings. Want small Wi, | property. In_good school t BOX R, NEB. b 203, SCHUYL HAVE $0v ecquity in_a iine acre lot at | Bengon; mortgage $00, Will take clear vacant lot or equity in cottage. Address F 641, care Bee. 5-ROOM, strict change $1.500° equity in Kimtall or Ba Address G €42, ca - s | ¢ modern bungalow, north | at o Wil exe on quarter section iner counties at its true | Il ex- %8| po tmwurance Meeting—A party of ten or fifteen of the Omana “members of the Northwestern Underwriters' associa- tion leave for Chicago Sunday night | over the Milwaukee, golng to attend the annual convention of the assoclation, which convenes Monday. Go to Races at Lexington—Charles ~ 5 FOR RENT OR SALE. Two or four acres with water; rent or sell; for feeding; half from stock yards. e==———— ——— will one mile and 14689 N 39th Ave. Wehater 4134, | HOUSE for sale; 6 rooms, bath, recep- It taken at once can get it from owner. 3900 cash. balance $22 per month. Call 3007 Fowler Ave. = ] e e REAL ESTATE—SOUTH SIDE B-r. house, full lot; good condition; well, , cistern; elec, lights; paved sidewalks; close to school and car; $1,100; $200 cash, $12 per mo. 1620 Washington. South 2108 BEST OFF TAKES THIS Six-room, fully modern, practically |new; 3 rooms downstalrs, 3 rooms and bath upstairs Near Hanscom park and Stores and Office within twenty minutes’ walk of dow MODERN store, near postoffice, low rent. | town district. Must be sold by Novem- G, P. Stebbi 1610 ChlclrquS!. ber 1. See Owner, Tyler 2227, A "For Sale” ad will turn second-hani | eFIELD CLUB DISTRICT. 13 . 36th St 5,50; S-rm. modern, b et sl $1,00 cash, bal. $0 mo.; oce. by owner: = == = WANTED TO BUY )FFICE turniture bought and sold. J C. Reed, 127 Farnam. Dour. §l46. ‘ale buys evervtring 2nd hand. Web, 1904 ATGHEST prices for old clothing | W, Apartments, flats, houses and cottages :an be rented quickly and cheauly by a 8ee “For Rent.” FARM & RANCH LANDS FOR SAL?T REAL ESTATE Culitoraia, dve Oak Colunice, none better. W, T. Smith Co., 3:3-1¢ 'City Nat. Bk. D. 2815 O "OR SALE OR LEASE—Any part of 4,000 acres near Rosetown, SBaskatchewan. ralsed 150,000 bushels of oats wnd ¥,000 »ushels of flax on land this year. Price theaj, and terms very easy. Frank Craw- ord, Omaha, Neb., or Rosetown, Sask. Towa. #-ACRE farm near Council Bluffs, with fair bulldings, for $4,00. See Day & Hess Company, 123 Pearl St, Council Bluffs, I for payment: Minnesota, #0 ACRES, & miles from Minneapolls, one mile from town; 160 acres under sultivation; balance used for pasture: san practically all be cultivated: heavy wil; good set bulldings, consisting of §- room house, large barn, iunuy. corn tribs, wind mills, etc.; the land will pro- fuce 8 bushels of corn r acre; tele- phone in house; country thickly settled; Domfilele set of machinery; 7 head of stock, consisting of 11 cows, balance 1 and %-year-olds; six good horses. % hog chicke! one-half of this years cr and everything on the farm goes ger acre, half cagh Rehwab e lymouth Bidg.. Minneano FOR SALP—Fairview Farm, the finest improved 181 acres in southern Minne- REAL ESTA\TE—WEST SIDE "7 TTNBW 5-ROOM COTTAG $1,00 takes my equity of $.3¥0; would | consider auto part payment. Wal, 2480, RESIDENCE ' FOR SALE Seven rooms—2-story and attio—at 114 8. 57th St., one and che-half biocks fromn Farnam car line, Tiled_vestibule. LIVING ROOM, 15x80, i Beamed celling—bullt-in bookcases and window seats—brick fireplace, burns wood or coal. DINING ROOM. Paneled walls. Downstairs finished in | white quarter-sawed oak, except kitchen | pantry, KITCHEN, Built-in dresser—outside opening to re- frigerator. | JUR BEDROOMS. | Finished in white enamel | two | each. | BATHROOM. Tiled fioor and walls—full lenth closet. Broom, coat and linen closets. Front and back porch, also dining and sleeping porches. Large attic, § full-sized windows—heat | and light. Full cemented basement. Call on Robert Hunter, office. New b-r_ cottage, strictly mod., hot water furnace, $2 50", %th and Bovd St. W | WALKING distance, 238 Dodge, 8-room modern house, first-class _condition, ready to move into; key at 2640, Don't | | fall to look it through. W. W. Mitchell, owner. 1'wo have closets each, two have one closet Good furnace. | Bee Business Phone Webster 476, | REAL ESTATE—SUBURBAN, sota; located 60 miles south of Minne-| ™ apolis. As a real farm home it has no Florence. equal. For full particulars write to|See Nethaway for that farm. Florence 228, owner, Edw. E. regor, jr., Route 2, — — -3 Kilkenny. Minn, REAL FSTATE—MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE-Six highly improved south- . ern Minnesota farms. Also unimproved Minnesota prairie land. “Small ; easy terms. Jas. A. Larson, State Capi- tol, St. Paul, Minn. Missourl. STOP! Listen! 120-acre farm, §1,800; other farms. McGrath, Mountain View, Mc $10 PER ACRE and upwards. farms on line Iliinoils Central. climate, rich soil, alfalfa, corn and cot- ton. Apply G. P. Stebbins, Omaha.* Nehraska. W. G. TEMPLETON-—City property, lands everywhere, farms, ranches, loans snd Insurance. Ask abo rd Provosition &8 Bee Bldg. FOR SALE—By owner, 120 acres well Im- proved farm in central Nebraska. For price and description write M. T. Kear- ney, 22% Douglas St, Omaha My orch A FARM THAT WILL HILP YOU GLT PART OF THAT FIVE HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS. 160 acres, 24 miles from Primsore, half nile from school. Every acre good rich slay soll, clay subsoll, no waste land; 12) acres In cultivation, 22 acres alfalfa, % mcres pasture and natural hav. House of G rooms barn, r.om for 8 horses, ample mow room; cattle shed, hog house, chick- 0 _house, coru crb, gianary,. ele. (bood cellar and storm cave, well, windmill and tank: farm well fenced. 'Improvements are all prectically new. If sold al once. price $85 por acre: $4.00 by March 1, your terms on balance at 5% per cent. Wh vou see this, will ‘want to jolu army ¢ ous Boone county ors. Bros., Primrose, Investigate This 1,200 baskets of grapes off 700 vine apples, plums. peaches. c'.erries, currants, rasrberries, gooseberries. Brand new, strictly mod. 6-room house just being fin- | ished: cemented cave connect:d with full basement; 2 acres land, $4,500. Will take small cottage for part. Owner, Silas| W ue Sts. Telephone Three full “lots, good 7-room ‘house, splendid well. good cistern and barn’ lenty of frult and shade trees, #ix Dlocrs north from Krug park on paved street, Corner of 52d and Pratt streets, In a district where property is very valuabie |52 cash buys For particulurs see the vi Mrs, ert, on propert Walnut 709, bl A CANDID FACT GUARANTEED COAL, NO 80OT, DIRECT FROM THE MINE, FOR £ B8 AND 8 A TON AT THE MINE LET US SEND YOU A TRIAL CAR. I M. COX NORTH PLATTE, NEB -ROOM house, modern except heat; Jais | ¢ fruit: only § Small payment | l\hmn balance £ per month MYR EUEL {5121 N. 5. Fhone Web, 1052 after 11 . m. |{1-governed house, tion hall and full basement; all modern, | BRIEF CITY NEWS Wedding Ringe—FRdholm, Jeweler. Lindquist, Taler—i00 Paxton Bk Y Moot Frant It~ Nrw viea: n Press Masda Lamps, 880—urgess-Granden company. “Aeday's Oemprets Syovie Fregramt olassified section today, And ppears in The Bee EXCLURIVELY, Find out what the variens mavine picture nters affer Improvement Club to Mest—Omaha View Improvement elub wili hold & meet- ing at Howard Kennedy school Frida: evening Dip Gef 238 Capitol aven n Dollare--1.. A. Yonker, . had his pocket picked of §7 Friday night while enroute the Sunday Tabernacle to his home Clara White Fined--Clara White, 917 Caplitol avenue, arrested for keeping an was fined $0 and costs when arraigned In police court Clothing is Stolen—Thieves broke a tront window of D, Rosenbaum's cloth- ing store at 1120 Douglas street Friday night and stole a large quantity of wear- ing apparel Buys Harvard Notel Leawe—\rs Philbin has purchased the business and lense of the Harvard hotel, Twenty- fourth and Farnam streets, throukh J, D. Youngman, For mafety First in Life Insurance see W, 1. Indoe, general agent State Mutual Life Assurance Co. of Worces- ter, Mass, one of the oldest, years, and best compan'es on earth To Mold Business Mesting—The board of trusteea of the Old People’s home will hold ita monthly business meeting Tues- day morning at 10 o'clock at the Young ‘Women's Christian association. Towes Fifteen Bucks—Willlam Shriner, a South Side farmer stopping at the Northwestern hotel, let a stranger stay in his room Friday night. When he awoke $15 and the stranger were gone. Tce Box Plundersd— When Mrs. Adolph | neer street went to the | Brandes, 2118 & fce box she found that one fresh baked ham, side of bacon, A box of sausage and a dozen packages of cheese had been stolen. New Camera Shop—The Kamera Shop Is the name of a new establishment, lo- cated at 507 Brandeis Theater building, where will be found a complete line of 1916 Ansco cameras, as well Kodak | fintshing. Palmer Talks Today—J. P. Palmer speaks today to the Omaha Philosophical soclety on ‘The Municipal Court for {Omaha.” The soclety meets at 3 p. m. every Sunday In Lyric hall, Nineteenth |ang Farnam, | _ REAL ESTATE—NORTH SIDE Creighton, Omaha; E. D. Gould, Kear- | NBW 7 T Iy modern, bullt by \mey; Bud Latta, Tekamah, and Nick owner for home, Miller pk. dist. Open for | Ronan, Fremont, have gone over the Insnection today. 437 Crown Point Ave. | Mjiwaukee for Lexington, Ky., where NEW. stri~tly modern, 6-room bunkalow. | they will attend the rmees that start | LB N, Sist, Webster S8 Monday and continue two weeks. | &R 1oL i, hathi ahade; fence: 315 postoffics Reosipts—Recelpts at the 1 e 1 N. ‘Sl::rr‘m‘r-llh“rnnmn "li2o N 17tn Omaha postoffice continue to increase C. D. HUTCHINSON, 1623 Farnam. _|the gain for September over the month Ofl in Utah—Drilling for oil in the i vicinity of Leroy, Utah, in the Spring ‘\'nlk',\' flelds, about 100 miles northeast jof Ogden along the line of the Union Pacific, discontinued some years ago, has been resumed. It s re- ! ported that during the iast two months |five companies have entered the field and have struck oil in three wells that |have been plt down. ‘The flow was struck at a depth of from 50 to 1,23 feet, WOMEN! HERE'S ONE Says you save $5 In an hour by dry cleaning everything % with gasoeline. Dry cieaning at ple as laundering clean five dollars’ nowe is JusL us Any woman worth in fifteen min- drug store two ounces of solvite and put this in two gallons of gasoline, where it quickly dissolves. Then immerse ar- ticles to be cleaned; rub a little and in & few moments the gasoline evaporates and the articles look bright and fresh as new. You can dry clean silk waists, dresses, coats, ribbons, kid gloves, satin shoes. evening slippers, shawls, belts, yokee, turs, boas, muffs, neckties, lawns, dim- ity and chiffon dresses, draperies, fine laces, lace curtains, woolen garments, in tact, everything that would be ruined by soap and water as dry cleaning doesn't fade, shrink or wrinkle, making pressing unnecessary. Your grocer or any garage will supply the gasoline and you can obtain two ounces of solvite at the drug store, which is simply a gesoline soap. Then a wash boller or large dishpan completes your dry cleaning outfit.—Advertisement. —_—m——————— CIRCULATION STATEMENT Blateiicul 0L Ui OWRErsilp, manage- ment, cliculaton, etc., of ‘Tae Umaua Lulily Bue wnd Omaha Bvening Bee, puo- dshed daily nt Uinana, Neb., required by ithe act of August s, 1l kditor, Viciur loseéwaier, Omaha, Neb. Managing editor, T. W. McCullough, Omaha, Neb. Fusiness inanagers, C. C. and N. P. Feil Neb. Publishers, Publishing com- pany, Omaha, > Owners. The bee Publishing company. Stockholders. Vietor Rosewater, Omaha, Neb.; Charles C. Rosewaier, Omaha, Neb.; Estate of Leah Rosewater, Umaha, Neb.; Victor Rosewater, trustee, Omahs, Neb.; N. P. Feil, Omaha, Neb.:'Stella R, Fell, Omaha, Neb.: Blanche R. Newman, Omaha, Neb.: H. A. Haskell, Omaha, Neb.; F. L. Haller, Omaha, Neb.: Joseph Rosewater, Cleve- land, O.; Ida Rosenwasser. Cleveland, O.; Paul Rosenwasser, Cleveland, O.; Herman Rosewater |B. Rosenwaaser, Cleveland, 'O.; Alice R. Cohm, Cleveland, O.; 5. Meyer Estate, New York City; Antoinette Gerber, Omaha, Neb.; Alice Meyer, Omaha, Neb. A. L. Meyer, trustee, Omaha, Neb.; Eu- kene L. Gelsimer, Cleveland, 0. Known bondhoders, mortgagees and other security holders, holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mort gages or other securities None. Average number of eoples of each issuo of this publcation, sold or distributel through the malils or otherwise, to paid subseribers, during the six months pre- ceding the date of this statement Paid Da lv Bee LB Pald Evening B 17,670 Unpaid Daily Ree, inciuding ~ em- ploves, charitable Institutions, re- turns, et coioeesisenes 2888 Unpaid Evenine Hee, incivding e ploves, charitable institutions, re- turns, ete. Totnl ! N. P FRIL Husiness My and subgsert before me this M, Notar expires July Public 1949, from | can | utes at little cost by getting from the |4, OMAILA, MONDAY, OCTOIL JER 4, 19135, LAID AWAY AT REST Scores of Friends and Associates of Veteran Physician Crowd House | to Attend Funeral BURIAL IS IN FOREST LAWN cnasa | Funeral ices for Dr. & K. Spald | ing, veteran Omaha physician who dicd | In Washington Wednesday while attend- | | Ing the national encampment of the | Grand Army of the Republic following a | stroke of apoplexy, were held from the home, 2604 Charles sireet, yesterday | afternoon at 2:3 o'elock Rev. M. V. Higbee, pastor of the North Presbyterian church, of which Dr, Spald- Ing was & prominent member, conducted | the services. Dr. D. E. Jenkins, presi-' dent of Omaha university, of which Dr Spalding was a direotor, delivered the prayer, | The house in which Dr. Spalding had lived for over m quarter of & century! was crowded with friends and assoclates who had known the physiolan during his long residence In Omaha. Many large and beautiful floral offerings covered the | casket. | Among those from out of the city who ! oame to attend tho funerat were George Spalding of Osceola, Ncb.; Harry Spald ing of Chicago, Alfred Willlams of { Villlsea, la.; Dr. and Mrs. Frunk Will i Jams of Villlaca, Mrs. K. J. Rohrbaugh of | | Carthage, 11l.; Mr. and Mre. Howard T Ochitres of Newark, N, J.; Wil Dalsell | of Peru, Neb, and Mrs, Easteay of Lincoln. | Interment was in Forest Lawn oceme-| ! tery n the family lot in the Grand Army| plat, where Dr. Spaiding's father and mother are both buried. The funeral | was an automobile funeral. The honorary pallbearcrs were Judge Lee Estelle, John Trench, Josenh T. Reatty, Dr. D. C. Bryant | Willlam Baird, br, George Tiiden, R. 8 Wiltox, AN, Eaton, H. J. Hughes, Charles R The active pallbearers were Harry Herzog, Bryce Crawford, Ed McEachron, Robert 8mith Earnest Hoel Dy Honry To the ranlle, feel that! owo the manufacturers of Chamberlain's Colfe, Cholera and Diar- rhoea Remedy a word of gratitude,” writes Mra. T. N. Witherall, Gowanda, N. Y. “When I began taking this medi- cine I was in great pain and feeling ter- ribly sick, due %o an attack of summer sel complaint. After taking a dosh of it I had not long to wait for relief as it benefited me almost Immediately.” Ob- tainable everywhene. | vertisement. Sunday Preaches Famous Sermon on “Booze" to the Men (Continued From Page All druggists. Ad- i ) la o TR T — ANDY NToW ™ |a year ago being 7.3 per cent. Recelpts | watched his lips become parched and DANDY NEW BUNGATOW {4 ceptomber were $122,459.6, and for | eracked, and his eyes roll, snd little 6 ROOMS, all modern, full basement, | geptember, 1914, $114,064 The increase | Jim gasped and died .t i equity $1,000 0 : gl a :‘n‘:g.& n:r‘l':"mlent'(‘:r"d(o;g ot 'SW fi( amounts to $8.34.79. The father took him in his arms, car- ried him over by the side of the rattler, got on his knees and sald: “Oh, God, I would not give little Jim for all the | rattlers that ever crawled over the Blue | Ridge mountains.” , And I would not glve one boy for | every dirty dollar you get from the hell- | moaked lquor business or from eve: brewery and distilery this aide of hell. | Tisten! In a northwest city a preacher | sat at his breakfast table one Sunday |'morning. The doorbell rang, he an- | swered {t, and there stood a little boy, |12 years of age. He was on erutchess | Might leg off at the knee, shivering, and !he sald, “Please, sir, will you come up | to the jall and talk and pray with papa? | He murdered mamma. Papa was good and kind, but whisky did it, and I have to support my three littie #lsters. 1 sell newspapers and black boots. Will you g0 up and talk and pray with papa? And will you come home and be with us when they bring him back? The gov- ernor says we can have his body after | they hang him." The preacher hurried to the fall and talked and prayed with the man. He ad no knowledge of what he had done, | he said: “I don't blame the law, but it breaks my heart to think that my ‘chil- dren must be left in a cold and heart- less world, Oh, sor, whisky, whisky aia 1t Fight the Saloon Until the Under. toler Comen, The preacher was at the little hut when up drove the undertaker's wagon and they carried out the pine coffin. They led the little boy up to the coffin, he leaned over and kissed his father and sobbed, ard he sald to his sisters: “Come on, sisters, kiss papa's cheeks before they grow cold”” And the little hungry, ragged, whisky orphans hur- ried to the coffin shrieking in agony. Pollce, whose hearts were adamant, buried thelr faces in their hands and rushed from the house, and the preacher fell on his knees and lifted his clenched | fist and tear-stained face and took an oath before God, and before the whisky | orphans, that he would fight tha cussed | business unti! the undertaker carried | him out in his coffin You men now have a chance to show your manhood. Then In the name of your pure mother, In the name of your manhood, In the name of your wife and the pure, fnnocent children that climb up in your lap and put their arms around your neck, in the name of all that is good and noble, fight the curse. Shall You men, who hold in your hands the | ballot, and In that ballot hold the d-s tiny of womAnhood and children and manhood, shall you, the sovereign power. refuse to rally in the name of defense less men and women and native land No! 1 want every man to say: “God, you can count on me to protect my wife, my home, my mother and my children and the manhood of America By the merey of God, which has given to you the unshaken and unshakable confidence of her love, I beseech you make a fight for the women who wait tonight until the saloons spew out their DR. S. K. SPALDING |Sunday Says Atonement Is Cause of Religious Arguments Ra W, A Sunday preached last night on ™ Atonement He sald “For It the blood of bulls and goats and the a helfer aprinkling lhn’ unclean, sanetitioth to the puritying of | the flesh” (Paul argued in his letter to| the Hebrews) how much more shall the blood of Christ, who, through the Eternal | Bpirit of Himselt without to God, dond | shes of tered purge your consclence from works to serve God? " ad of topleal, A lesson inste ton This is sermon The of Je A text. My textical | subject of it I8 "“The Atoning Blood 18 Christ,” the thing about all else centers. 1 believe that more log- | feal, illogleal, fdiotie, religlous and irrc liglous arguments have been fought over | this than all others. Now and then when | A man gets & new idea of It, he goes and | starts o new denomination. Ho has a perfect right to do this under the thir- teenth amefdment, but he doesn’'t stop here. He makes war on all of the other | denominations ghat do not interprot as he does. Our deninations have multiplied by this menthod until it would give one brain fever to try to count them all, but 1 can name on the fingers of my hands all of the denominations that belleve in the ght s not which atoning power of the blood of Jesus Christ as the only means of salvation, %0 at ono sweep of the sword of t spirit, 1 have decapitated % per cent of the otheérs and swept them on the junk heap where they belong God never Intended to give you a pic ture of the world In one panoramic view, From the time of Adam and Kve down to | the time Jesus Christ hung on the cros He was unfolding His views. When 1| seo Moses leading the out of bondage where they for years had bared their backs to the taskmasters lash, | when I seo the lowing herds and the high | priest standing before the altar severing | the Jugular veln of the rams and the bul- | locks until Christ cried out from the | cross, “It 1s finshed,” God was prepar Ing the picture for the consummation of | it in the atoning blood of Jesus Christ A sinner has no standing with God. God became reconclled with the world only through Jesus Chriat. If the sinner comes through Jesus Christ, he can shake hands with God under the cross. God and the sinner must meet through Christ or not at all. 1 have sometimes thought that Adam and Bve didn't understand as fully as we do when the Lord sald: “Eat and you surely shall die. They bad never seen anyone dle. ‘The§ might have thought it simply meant a separation from God. But no mooner had they edten and seen their nakedness than they sought to cover themselves, and it is the same today. When man sees himself In his s#ins, uncovered, he tries to cover himself in philosophy, phil-| anthropy or culture. But God looked through the fig leaves mnd the follage | and God walked out into the field and slew the beasts and took thelr skins| and wrapped them around Adam and| Ive, and from that day e tonight when a man has been a sinner and has cov-| ered himeelf it has been by and through{ faith int he shed blood of Jesus Christ Abel Offered Cholee of Flooks. Every Jew covered his sins and re celved pardon through the blood of the rams and bullocks and the doves. The reason God accepted Abel's sacrifice and | refected Cain's was because Abel offered | the chofce of his flocks, filled with the blood of life, while Cain gave only crops from the field. And from then on through blood is the only way He will deal with sinners. An old Infidel said to me once, “But I don't belleve in atonement by blood. It doesn’t come up to my ideas of what is right” T sald, ““To perdition | with you and your ideas of what is right. Do you think God is coming down here and consult you with your great intel- lect and wonderful brain, and find out what you think s right before He does 1t He said, “But I ean't’ belleve that the| innocent must suffer with the gullty;| it 1sn't justice.”” Great God, man! We're not looking for justice; it's mercy we're crying for, If we'd had justice, we would have all been in hell long axo. As for your opinion, what does it amount to in the sight of God? Your opinion doesn't count anything with the laws of Nebraska. They're supreme. Men go to the penitentiary sometimes because of their opinion. 1 have read a great deal-mot every- thing, mind you, for & man -would go “bughouse” if he tried to read every- thing—but I have read a gvod deal that has been written against the atonement from the infidel standpoint—Voltaire, Huxley, Sponcer, Didereau, Volney, Bradlaugh, Paine, on down to Bob In- gersoll—and I have never found an argu- ment that would stand the test of eoms mon sense ‘and common reasoning. And if any one tells me he has tossed on the scrapheap the plan of atonement by blood, T say, “What have you to offer that is better?’ And until they can show me something that is better I'll nail my hopes to the cross, You say you dom't believe In the innocent suffering for the 7uiity. Then 1 say to you, you haven't seen Iife as I have seen it up and down the country. The innocent suffer with the guflty, by the gulity and for the gullty. Look at that old mother waiting with trembling heart for the son has brought into the world And see him come reeling and stagiering to bed, while his mother prays and weeps and soaks the pillow with her tears over her god- loss boy Who suffers most? Walty for Man She Loves, Look at that young wife, walting for the man whose name she bears, and whose face is woven in the fiber of h heart. The man she loves, and walts for him in fright, and when he comes, recking from the stench of the breaking )t hie marriage vows, from the arms of infamy, Who suffers most? Who suffers most, that woman man- feuring her nafls over a washboard to keep the little brood together, or that drunken bum in Bridewell getting his Sust deserts from his act You have only to be the wife of & man like that ty know whether or not the innocent is Boing on. IUs (he plan of lite every where. Jesus gave His life on the cross for any who will believe, We're not redeemed by siiver or gold. Josus pa'd for it with His lood. A good deal of hymnology and so-called theology preaches about the clarifying blood. 1 dun't believe in that I think that the blood from the wour would stain your clothes mine 1 it 1d touch them When surse ono tells you that your re liglon s & bloody religion and the Bible % a bloody K. teil them yos, Chris tianity is & bloody religion, the Gospel 18 & bloody Gospel, the Bible is & blotdy | bock, the plan of redemption I8 bloody 1t fs. You take the blood of Jesus Christ out of Christianity and that book fsn't worth the paper it ia written on. It would be worth no more than your body with the blood taken out. Take the blood of Jesus Christ out and it would be a meaningless Jargon and Jumble of words. Only One Way Open (o Sianer, It it weren't for the atoning blood you might as well rip the roofs off the churches and burn them down. They aren't worth anything. ?sm aa long as the Blood is on the merey seat, the sinner can return, and by no other way There s nothing else. It stands for the redemption. You mre not redeemed by silver or gold, but by the blood of Jesus Christ. When a man says to read good books, do good deeds, live & good life and you'll be saved, you'll damned. All the books In the world won't keep you out of hell without the atoning blood of Jesus Christ. It's Jesus Christ or nothing for every sinner on God's earth Without it, not a sinnet in Omaha ever will be saved. Jesus has puid for you sins with his blood. The doctrine of universal salvation is a lle. 1 wish every one would be eaved, but they won't. You will never be saved If you relect the Wood. You can’t argue against sin. 1t's here, You can be as black as the blackest of anything, and yet Jesus Christ can make you ms white as snow. Though your sins be as searlet, they shall be as white a8 snow. erished Withe Merey. And God saye everyone who Is not un- | der the blood is & sinner, and if you' not under the blood, Got pity you. And what are you golng to do, you that de spise the plan of redemption? He that desplsed Moses' lnw died without mercy under two or three witnesses. How much sooner, then, shall you die if you refect the blood of Jesus Christ? If the Je were killed under two or three witnesse for treading under foot M law, how much sooner, then, shall we be for tread ing under foot the blood of Jesus Christ? There is no other way. s God can't you If you reject the blood of Jesus Christ. Ninetéen hundred years ago this old world sprung u leak. God naked for volunteers to stop it, and all of the angels and seraphim stood back. Noah, Abraham, Elijah, Isalah, David, Jere miah, Solomon, none would go, and then forth stepped His won and sald: “Father, U'll g0, and descended and died on t cross, but up from the grave He aro with n mighty triumph o'er His foes, arose a victor from the dark domain He lives forever with His saints to relgn. Hallelufah, Christ arose! He burst th bands of death and the gates of hell and flew through the gates of heaven, while the angels sang and would crown Him He said it wasn't time to crown Him yet. “Let Me stand hetween God and the people,” and there e stands foday, the medlator, with salvation, full, free, per- He and fect and eternul In one hand and the sword of Inflexible justice in the other. The time wil come when He'll come with His ankels; sc day He will withe draw His offer of salvation en—God pity you! It's up to you-and you, and you, and you (pointing here and there about the audience). What are you going to do About it? Aw for me and my house, we Wwill serve the Lord (Copyright, Willlam A, Sunday.) Heard at th;'—l‘ab 3 Emily Pergquist and Jennie Murray ef Atinnta, Neb. and Nedora Bergauiat and Roy Bergaquist of Holdrege, Neb,, at- tended the mecting last evening, Congrossman Lobeck and M. ¥, Funk- houser were on the platform at the Sat urday evening meeting. One of the trall-hitters la ening was a mi who gave to 'e"”!-“ Jones the name of James O Brien. r. O'Brien sald he had just come in from Chicaro and when asked for his address siid he did not know where he would stop. He also sald he was from Tipperary, 1reland, und had been In this country only (hree months. M thoughtfulness at the “Tab" is ever getive. When “Billy” placed his cont o¥er the back of a chalr last evening he unwittingly covered some class colors of one of the high schools represente “Ma” quickly discovered the eggregious action and saved the day by waking the coat unto herself, Two ushers started to carry a fainting woman {rom & row near the front to ihe rear of the ““Tab,” whereupon Mr. Sun. day stopped his ' sermon and told the ushers to take her out the short way, which they did, A man with a megaphone and a strong pair of lungs helped to ‘“‘brighten the corner’’ wherein the University of Omaha delegation reposed last evening, To the tune of A Eirls of the high school and Twentie Avenue school of Councll Bluffy san: “It's a Long Way to Prohibition.” The paraphrase read as follows It's a long way to prohibition But it's the right way to go It's a long way to prohibition To the fafrest land we know But it's good bye to old boze joints The suloons will have to ko * boys and ! Jobs Handed Out | | No One Yet Knows Who Is Gainer hy Althoug en land office appointment |have Just been Jarred loose from the deral plum tree, folks may have to [walt for the big fight to find out whether [these favored democrats line up with Bryan or Hitchcock, and whether the SOMALOF OF ex-secretary state has gotlen the better of the break. None seoma to know for certain whether the 'new land off receivers and registrars are appointed as Hitchcoek mien or Bryan men Accordng to Information which comes from the senator's office, he claima all but one of them by sayin that he had recommended them, and therefore they must have been made uj on hie recommendation. The exception which he concedes is the appointment o ltoss J. Moore to be registrar at th Broken How office. He was avowedly n Bryan man and an anti-Hitchcock man Whether Mr. Bryan claims to have put over others besides Moore is not ¢ clored, the presumption being that some |of them may have haa endorsements {from both sides. | Could Not Walk with Rhenmatiam A satisfied patient writes: “Sloan’s Liniment cured my rheumatism; an wratoful; 1 can now walk without pain Only %ie. Al druggista.—Advertisement MRS. J. A. SAVAGE GIVES A KENSINGTON FOR SISTER Mre. J mally A. Bavage entertained infor Saturday afternoon for her slater-in-law, Mrs, W. J. Gorst of Min neapolis, at a kensington. Late In the afternoon a three-course luncheon was Decorations consisted of fall and white. Mr, anc just recently move: home near Mille were Madame: Tsakson, Nelson v, Tebbins, Gorst and and Isak on worve flowers in lavender Mrs, Savage have into their own new park. Those present Dishong, Krepps, spencer, Quisenber and the Misses Gorst Saval won. PROMINENT MEN INDORSE TANLAG | Master Medicine Is Accom- | plishing Good In Many i States | People Everywhere State That ! Preparation Is Some- thing Unusual. | Prominent among people who have re- cently indorsed Tanlac, the remarkabl new medicine that is being Introduced i Omaha, are a number of Kentucky's best known business men. In that state alone u quarter of a million of its residents ar- tak ng nlac today and expressing abiding faith in it as a medicine of un usial powers, Many prominent people from other atates, too, have praised (i new medic J. 1. Rightmeyer, general manager and chier t'l\rlm-m‘ of the Kentucky and In- dinna Terminal Rallway company, Louix- ville, sa; “I have used Tanlac to cor- rect nervous debllity. 1 was run dowr and less energetic than in former yvears when I began taking this preparation The results with Tanlac have been highly satisfactory and 1 Indorse and recommend the medicine. Willilam Martin of 324 and Center, Den- ver, Colo., the most popular plumber in town, saya: The human system reminds me con- siderably of the plumbing business. You ®et out of order like the old pipes In « building, and everything goes wrong un- til you locate the cause, a “I was all run down, suffering princi- pally from nervousness, stomach trouble and catarrh, and knew that I needed | something, but what to take was the auestion. My neighbor recommended | Tanlac, and I thought T might as wo!l | try that as anything . 80 bought a | bottle, and it seemed like this medicin- | had been made up particularly for m: cus “My. stomach is now in fine condition, and I am not troubled with my nerves | a8 before. My head is as ¢lear as a bel! {and all symptoms of catarrh have dis- appeared.” . V. Cohn, vice president of the Lomuville Anzelger Co. (publishers of the iargest and most influential Ger mun newspaver in the south), says: “It klves e great pleasure to recommend Tunlne. 1 have taken same the past two weeks and have found a wonderful [ Improvement in my health Tanlac, the “Master Medicine,” refe:- red to by such men of unquestioned hoy | esty. and integrity, ts now sold in Omah- at the Sherman & McConnell Drug Co.1- pany's store, 16th and Dodge streets where representatives of the prepara tion are meeting the public and eceurto ously explaining Tanlac.—Advertis: ment | [ Put something into | the bank every week, even if the amount is | small You will find that such regular sav- ings accumulate rap- Jt's been a lorig long wiy to pruhlhhlnn' {dly and the money ut we're almost there € ’ thus saved will come ;r-- we ll-v'ncnrly 2 prohibition in very handy some n our good staté I-o-wa | not ery when lowa goes dry time when you need I eheer the livel day it worse than you do along siste ha now. But we are getting there. suffer with the gullty. So when you don't like the plan of re- husbands and their sons, and send them home maudlin, brutish, devilish, vomit ing, stinking, blear-eyed, bloatedfaced drunkards. * | (Copyright, W. A. Bunday.) — Indgestion t Appett Dr. King's New Life Pills stir up your liver, nids digestion. You feel fine the next day. Only %c. Al druggists.—Ad- vertisement. Misg Gertrode Porter left Saturday evening for Miss Meson's school at Tarrytown-on-the Hudson Mrs. J. Weekes of O'Nelll Is at the home her pa Tudee and Mra oy Fort street. ®he will woeks rema demption becnuse the innocent suffef with the gullty, 1 say you don't know what Apartments, flats, houses and cottages can be rented quickly and cheauly by a Bee “For Rent."” ,i PACK;RS NATIONAL BANK 50 OMAHA NEBR Phone Doug. 1306 or 2108