Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 21, 1915, Page 1

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N News Section PAGES ONE TO TWELVE THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE THE WEATHER. Unsettled b VOL. XLV-—NO. OMAH A, SUNDAY MORNING, | CAMPBELL DIES " FI NF WOUND GIVEN BY HOLDUP MEN Lincoln Man Shot by One of Two Robbers Dies Following Re- moval of Bullet from Abdomen. DRAGNET OUT FOR MURDERERS Smaller of Two Bandits Said by Vie- tim and Eye-Witnesses to Have Fired the Fatal Shot. DESCRIPTIONS GIVEN TO POLICE C. D. Campbell, aged 50 years, a drainage contractor, who was held up and shot at Tenth and Farnam etreets Friday night, died at noon at St. Joseph's hospital. After being shot by one of the highwaymen, the authorities were | immediately notified, and lhe( wounded man was hurried to \hei hospital. A steel-jacketed bullet | was removed by surgeons from the abdomen. According to detectives it was fired from a small caliber au- tomatic revolver. The body will be taken to Lincoln by two of Campbell’s brothers, who are in Omaha. Campbell's wife and five children are frantic with grief. Authorities in surrounding towns and cities, train dispatchers, train crews and every person who may assist in the ap- | prehension of the holdup men, have been | notiffed of the description given the local police by Campbell immediately after the shooting aud substantiated by V. 1 Kins, a jitney driver, 1112 South street, who witnessed the crime. Hankins | appeared at police headquarters to look over twelve men arrested on suspicion, but falled to identify any of them. Smaller Holdup Murderer. “The smaller fellow, of the two shot Campbell and didn’t give him any sort of a chane. It looked deliberate,” said Hankins. He asserted that they ran to Eleventh street and went south on that thoroughfare after Campbell dropped. B. | Larnes and Joe Schwartz of San Antonio, | Tex., have been held until they give an account of their whereabouts at the time ¢f the shooting. Charles Wagner and Frank Miller, who juct previous to the Campbell shooting ! Feld wp and robbed H. R. Baltzer, 918 Ecuth Thirteenth street, and Roy Simp- scn, §pring Garden, Mo., walved prelimi- rary hearing in police court and were 'SUNDAY T0 ATTACK Canadian Drys Think Evangelist May Bring About Triumph for Prohibition. FOUR THOUSAND TRAIL HITTERS SYRACUSE, N. Y., Nov. 20.— (Special Telegram.)—"Billy" Sun- day was more than ordinarily busy tonight. He was loading his gatling guns with shot for his coming attack on the “booze” citadels of Toronto, Canada. If the present plans are car- ried out, the Canadian town's liquor jramparts will be cannonaded all day Monday by the Anmierican evangelist and his aldes across the border. bound oever to the district court on a charge of Lighway robbery, with bonds | 1ixed at §1.000. The two ‘men wers ar-!| 1coted less than five minutes after they robbed Roy =impson by Officers Barta s pockets to the value of $3,700 and cash. Wilson Asks Mann and Gallagher to Confer With Him WASHINGTON, Nov, 20.—President Wiison today asked benator Gallinger and Representative Mann, republican leaders of the senate and house, respec- tively, to confer with him before the opening of congress on legislation for na- tional defense. The time of the con- ference will be arranged to suit the two leaders, The president sent the invitations in ac- cordance with his announced plan of making the fight for military prepared- ness along nonpartisan lines. Just before the opening of congress the president will confer with republican members o> the senate and house milit- ary and naval committees, Mexico City Mail Service Restored WASHINGTON, Nov. 2).—Regular mdl' service with Mexico City has been re- | stored and no more private letters will be forwarded by tue State department. Dispatches today from Tampico said Carranza forces had made great headway in the state of Tamaulipas since the defacto government was recognized by the United States. Villa forces have been driven into the state of San Luis Potost. Americans at various points report that the Carransa forces have given guaran- tees and were “treating them as wel could be expected in the circumstances. Carransa forces are operating against bandits in San Luls Potosl. The Weather "orecast till 7 p. m. Sunday :-'n: Omaba, Council Blufts and Vicinity —Partly cloudy and colder. Tewmpernture ut Omoha Hours. $ Yesterdnye Por.| [ . m s M1 ! | m 7p. m. a Comparative Lovai Record. ! 1915. 1914, 1913, 1912, | Mighest yesterda o 8 B T i Lowest yesterday. . H Mean temperature.. FPrecipitation - 18 Temperature and precipitation depar. tures from the normal: N £ ® i Tol Normal precipitation ........ Deficiency for the day Total rainfall since March i Deficiency since March 1 Deficlency for cor. period, 1913. 7.72 inches feports from Stations at 7 P. M. Station and State Temp. High- Rain- of Weather. Tp.m. est fall Omaha. cloudy % ® L A, WELSH Forecaster v 48 Local The first crash will come in the, sy ab Tovonto' ynivarsity, when “Billy" will speak to 8 of students. The real battle, hi i start in Monday afternoon at the Arena, when the evangelist will open with & broadside on ‘“The Trail ** before more than 10,000 persons, including the pre- mier of the dominion and other gov- ernment officials, To carry on the fight Sunday has cleared the, K way, bundreds of ‘key-men,” from towns in the province of Ontario will attend the meetings, to receive thelr orders for the battle. The feclings of the people of Ontario and of Canada will be tested and the temperance workers claim that Ontarlo is the heart of Canada, and if “Billy"” Sunday can swing it to prohibition, it wil mean the triumph of the temperance cause throughout the domin’on. Sunday goes to Toronto through the efforts of Newton Wylle, general chair- man of a Canadian committee of 100, What s belleved to be Mr. Sunday's greatest sermon against the liquor traf- fie, “Battling With Booze,” wil be de- Jivered at the arena at 7:30 o'clock Mon- day evning. Premier to Meet Party. In the Sunday party at Toronto will be Mr. and Mrs. Sunday, Mis Milier, Mrs. Willam Asher and Homer Rode- heaver. The party will leave here Mon- day morning, arriving in Toronto at 9:30 o'clock. The visitors will be met at the stibfon by the premier and other officialse and conveyed to Toronto uni- versity, where Sunday will deliver his firet sermon on foreign sofl. The evangellst returns here Tuesday evening. That afternoon Rev, Isaac Ward of Philadelphla, Penn., will speak in Sunday's place at the local tabernacle. Four Thousand Cpnverts. The present week has seen hundreds of trall hitters, ranging from the college and high school students to Indians and down-and-outers addcd to Sunday's roll, until the total is 4,044. It is estimated that 333,00 have attended the revivals to date as compared with 234700 period at Omaha. Excursions from near- by citles and towns brought crowds this week. Sunday forgot to pray for the Syra- cuse university team this afterncon, and the orange was held to a scoreless tie by Dartmauth. Homer Rodeheaver and George Sunday, however, rooted for Syra- cuse technical this morning and that school trimmed Syracuse North High. DWOOD CITY, Cal, Nov. % ~Fires set In many places, under cover of dark- ness, swept the Lahonda volley redwood forerts, south of here today. A man, caught with a torch {h his hand, stabbed Willlam MeClellan, a ranch foreman, to death and escaped. A posse captured a man said to be the sayer and brought bim to jall here. Ald was sent to the ®1tire fig" ters. LSON TO EAT DINNER WITH FAMILY AND FIANCEE WASHINGTON, - Nov. Wilson will take Thanksgiving dinner with his family and his flance, Mrs. No: man Galt, at the White House. A thirty-five peund -turkey, fattened by South Trimble, clerk of the house of Wi representatives, on his Kentucky farm, | will be shipped Monday for the occasion. for the same | 20— President I SUBSEA PURSUES Wireless Message Says Sister Ship of Ancona is Being Followed by Large Submarine. SHIP IS WEST OF SARDINIA BULLETIN, MADRID, Nov. 20.—(Via Lon- don.)—A later wireless message from the Verona states that it eluded the submarine in the fog. MADRID, Nov. 20—(Via Lon- don.)—A telegram received here to- day gives a wireless message sald to have been.sent out by the Itallan being pursued by a large With. two periscopes. ' - - . According to this telegram the sub- marine is accompanied by a steamer. The position of the Verons was as iatitude 40, longitude 6, off Cabopalo, The telegram was recelved from. the town of Soller, on the Majorca Island, in the Mediterranean, off the Spanish coast, 110 miles south of Barcelona. submarine’ The Verona was scheduled to sail from Genoa, November 6, touching at Naples, Novembet 10, and Palermo, November 11, on its way to New York. No word of its salling, however, has been received. Latitude 40, longitude 6, is a point in the western Mediteranean, about 110 miles west of Sardinia. The Verona is owned by the Italla Societa DI Navigazione a Vapore, which algo owned the Ancona, sunk recently by a submarine in the Mediterranean. It has been engaged for several yei In passenger service between New York and Itallan ports. It was 8121 tons gross, 452 feet long, and was bullt in Belfast In 1908, Body of Hobo Taken South by a Morbid Young Woman Buried CHICAGO, Nov. 20.— The body of the unidentified hobo which served for a time as the hero of an Atlantia girl's morbid fancy, was burled with cere- mony here today. Over the body a sermon preaching charity to the unfortunates of the world was preached at the Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul. From the casket the name of “Dr. Al- leyne Hensley”” bestowed on her phantom lover by Miss Julia Crumley of Atlanta had been erased and there was no other iname to take its place. A pinched little houquet of chrysanthe- mums and rose geranneums alone adorned the coffin. It was a gift from hobos of Chicago. Hobos, headed by Joft Davis, president of the hobos union of America, were the pallbearers. Expenses are said to have been paid by Miss Grum- ley's family. “Oh, fudge! “Oh, T think it's just too mean!" “The stingy old government!" That's what the girls at the postoffice are saying about the latest order from headquarters atill further curtalling the privileges and appurtenances of their lunch room | Six months mgo Custodian Taylor, un- der orders from Washington, deprived | them of the use of gas in their gas stove | Saturday Custodian McCune notified | them that, starting December 1, the gov- | ernment will cut off the supply of ice for their foe box, at least until the robins nest again, that is to say, until the weather gets warm. Boone Kelly, assistant custodian and generalissimo of janitors, broke the news e girls. He expressed sympathy, but advised bowing to the inevitable, Custodian McCune stated decidedly that [it's “all foolishness” to have ice in the winter time. The girls, said he, cun set ll.bflr salads and milk and cream on the NOVEMBER steamship Verona stating that it was | 21, IX SECTIO ORTY-FOUR P NGI ( \GE MANN SAYS WILSON CAN'T CALL HIM TO THE WHITR HOUSE Republican Leader Asserts Presi- dent Not Going to Summon Him to Reocive Orders Like Democrat. IS INVITED TO SEE EXECUTIVE Illinoisan Declares He Is Willing to Confer on the Subject of Defense. WANTS FACTS ON PROGRAM | WASHINGTON, Nov. 20.—Presi- |dent Wilson today asked Senator Gol- linger and Representative Mann, re- publican leaders of the senate and house, respectively, to confer with him before the opening of congress on legislation for national defense. The time of the conference will be arranged to suit the two leaders. | The president sent the invitations | | FIERCE BATTLE FOR BOOZE IN TORONTO, STEAMSHIP YERONA| MONTE SAN MICHELE Italians Take Position on Slopes for Becond Time and Repulse Seven Counter Attacks. FIGHT FOR GORIZIA STILL ON ROMB, Nov. 19.—(Via Paris, Nov, 20.)—The Italian bombardment of Austrian positions in and around Gorizia continues with unabated vigor, according to the official state- ment issued today at the headquar- ters of the general staff. The text of the communication follows: “All along’ the front the artillery duel qontinues. Our gups disparsed enemy marching columns in the Astico zone and in the, ypper Cordevoll, it destroyed shol- mxumm (Gall), It bombarded ‘at Gorivla’ and also swept nu- merqus énemy barracks posted on heights to the epst of the olty and others hidden in orchards ang gardens near the city. Finally it shelled & column of troops ‘which retreated hastily into Gorisia. ‘On the Carso plateau our infantry re- hewed ity attack yesterday with success | win in accordance with his annonunced lan of making the fight for military preparedness along nonpartisan lines. Hold Conferences. Just before the opening of congress the president * will confer with republican members of the senate and house milt tary and naval committees While it was being made known at the White House that the republican leaders had been invited to a conference, Repro- sentative Mann, who was at the State department asking for protection of American planters who have been driven out of Mexico ,made a statement on the president's proposal. “The president may give orders to the democrats in congress,’ he sald, ‘‘but he certainly cannot call me to the White House to give orders. Won't He Dictated To. “I am perfectly willing to consult with him, but not to &o up thore to be told to do what he has decided upon. Bvery- body is for preparedness, of course, but I am not willing to say what attitude the republicans In the house will take | toward the administration’s defense pro- ram until I know just what it is from he documents, not from the newspa- pers." Mr, Mann sald he had heard that the president (had -written a letter to him. but that he would not discugg it until after he had seen fit. {Burleson Urges All. to Mail Christmas Packages Early WASHINGTON, Nov. 20.—Co-operation {of the public in the handling of Chriet- !mas malls ts nought by Postmaster Gen- 'eral Burleson, whe in anticlpation of an- and ‘lrfilly in the Monte San Michels sone,” where the Perugin brigade suc- ceeded in conquering ail the ground which slopes from the third summit of the moun= tain to the Isonzo between Petsano and Boschinl. Aftrward, driven fram that po- sition by 'a violent counter attack, it counter attacked in fts turn and recon- ‘other rocord-breaking rush of holiday ! parcels, today sent out instructions to ‘postmasters for the quick ang effective (dispatch and dellvery of such matter. Persons are advised to do their Christ- mag malling early. Mr. Burleson 1s confi- !dent that if the public will ald to that | extent the hollday malis will be promptly LAY CORNERSTONE MENORIAL AT NILES | Impressive Ceremonies Reminiscent of Former President McKinley Held at Birthplace. HERRICK AND DYER SPEAK NILES, O, Nov. 20.—The corner- stone of the National MeKinley Eirthplace Memorial was laid here at noon today with ceremonies remi- niscent of the former president's life. |"“Lead Kindly Light,” the hymn | which clung to the murdered presi- dent in his dylng moments, and the | 8trauss waltz, “On the Beautiful ! Blue Danube,” a favorite of Mrs. Mc- Kinley, were played by the United Etates Marine band, and James H. Hoyt, an Intimate friend of the FIVE 0Py CENTS. ENTENTE ALLIES ARRIVE TOO LATE T0 HELP SERBIA Impression Prevails in London that the Situation is Rapidly Go- ing from Bad to Worse with Kingdom. SERBS ARE SLOWLY GIVING WAY {Anglo-French Troops Based on Saloniki Are Only Able to Main- tain Their Positions. WEATHER A FACTOR IN RUSSIA LONDON, Nov. 20.—Although no official confirmation has been re- |former president, recited personal | reminiscences. President Wileon was forced to decline an invitation to lay the cornerstone, but he sent a representative of the national | administration and promised to be pres- | ent at the dedication of the bullding later. Qther giests of the day included Senators Atlee Pomerene and Warren G. | Harding of Ohio; Representatives Wil- llam A. Ashbrook of Johnstown, O.; J. G. Schmidlap of Cincinnati, one of the trustees of the memorial fund; Governor | Frank Willls of Ohlo, Myron T. Herrick of Cleveland, former ambassador to France, and L. C. Dyer ol St. Louls, & member of congress and commander of the United Spanish War Veterans: Gov- ernor Willls, Mr, Herrick and Congreas- man Dyer being the principal speakers. Troops and Veternna Parade, | The day's program began with a parade In which state. troops, veteran organiza- | tions, Masons and other organizations | {in which MoKinley was interested took |part. Camps of Spanish war veterans (and posts of the Grand Army of the Re- |public from Cleveland, Alllance, Canton |and Akron, O., and Pittaburgh, Sharon and New Castle, Pa, were in the line of marchers. Half music for the parade. After the Masonic part of the program | o tablet was affixed to the stone bear- ing this inseription: | ERBCTED 1915 | To - perpetuate the name and | mchlevements of Willlam McKinley, twenty-fifth president of the United States of Amerion, Born January 29, 186, Died September 14, 190L Deseription of Buildi | ‘The bullding itselt, when complete, will !be a two-story structure of severe colonial’ design, flanked ' by one-story Wings of almost equal length with the main structure. The tnain portico:is to Ibe suppor by six Jotilo columns and | the ‘facade of each wing will carry s |mny similar supports in seotional form. | The cornfce’ will be plain wnd restangu- |ar doors -und ‘windows will emphaaise the straight lines of the desisn. ‘Stanton- Stookmen Brands Cattle by Tatt_oi_ng on Ears CHEYENNE, Wyo., Nov. 20.—(Epecial.) —State Veterinarian A. 'W. Fwénoh and is force are awaiting with interest the rrival here of the first consignment of dozen bands made | quered the lost ‘trénches. Throughout the night the enemy renewed furnous as- saults, succeeding seven times In reach- ing our lines. He was mowed down seven times by the accurate fire of our artillery anq rifle fire and was hurled back In dis order with enormous losses. The worn- out, but indomitable, the brave fusilliers of the 120th regiment, thel" feet swathed in sandbags, burst into the enemy trenches in the darkness, cogm- pletely dispersing the defenders and tak- ing 175 prisoners besides abundant war material. “Enemy aeroplanes yesterday threw bombs on Verona, where four citizens were wounded, and on Grado, where there were neither victims nor damage. Another enemy squadron threw fifteen bombs on Udine, killing twelve persons and wounding nineteen civillans and eight unimportant. Cat Farms and Fur | Shops in New York Will Be Examined NEW YORK, Nov. 20,—Inspectors of the state bureau of industrial hyglene today began an examination of 200 fur- making shops, most of them in the lower East Side of thls city, as a precaution |against anthrax. The inquiry results |trom the death of Miss Sofia Rosen, who {13 belleved to have been infected with anthrax germs from a neck plece made of cat's fur. Cat farms on Long Island and other sections nearby will be ex- amined and any infected animal will be killed. Girls Have Their Gas Sup;:ly’ Shuat Off and Now Lose the Ice window ledge. Why spend 800d money for ice when all the outside world’s an fce box? Mr. McCune is even having the foe cooler removed from his office for the winter as well as from at least two other offices in the bullding, In hot weather as much as 1,00 pounds of ice & day I8 used in the federal bufld- ing. This is too much But a ray of light Is plercing the dark- | neas of the giris' Junch room. The ral- |1¥ing cory of the former fair patrons of the lunchroom, “Gas for girls, effect. The department has electrical “You buy an electric stove and we'll supply the electric current.” says the de-| partment. ! 8o the girls are civ g s the! electrical contrivance when it's ap- ple blossom time in Nebraska they'll have fce again. With ice and an clectric siove they'll be able to set up hLousekeepin | [in style. soldiers. The material damage done was | is having | ade a pro- | posal to the girls—not matrimonial, but| SAN FRA {and efficlently handled. ! Placards urging the public to mail par- ! cels early, etc., will be posted in all post- |offices about ,December 1. Parcels mailed arly may bear the words, “Not to be | opaned until Christmas." Postmasters are advised that clerks and carriers may be required to work over- time during the holiday scason, aithough ' of live stoc as a means of identification | Inot to the extent of working a hardship |18 & new wrinkle to Wyoming, which | |on them. Police at Wichita Hauser to Omaha WICHITA, Kan., Nov. 0.-Arthur Wau- | zer. wanted in Omaha for the murder of W. H. Smith, a natlonal officer of the | Woodmen of the World, will be taken to | Omaha for trial, the Wichita police an- { nounced _today, following @ conference i‘“h Omaha authorities. Italy Will Declare | War On Germany | Within Few Hours | TONDON, Nov. 20.-(2:3% p. m.)~The |correspondent at Berne, Switzerland, of the Uentral News agency telegraphs: | Announce Release of | “Diplomats undersvand that an Italian | declaration of war on Germany is only & matter of hours.” iGhicago Embezzler Taken in California OAKLAND, Cal, Nov. 20.—John Brok- for ten years a trusted employe of | | | | man, | the General Electric company at Chicago, | was arrested here today accused of the | embozzlement of %6,%0 while head of the company repair shops. | tessed, according to the police i “I got In with some fellows who had a | great deal more money to spend than 1 had and 1 lived beyond my income,” he is reported to have sald. Padding the payroll was Brokman's method, the po- lice say. | Divorced Wednesday, Married on Saturday NCISCO, Cal Nov. 20.-The marriage of Tina Lerner, Russian plan- Ist, o Viadimir Shavitch of New York was announced here today. Miss Lerner vas granted a divorce Wednesday at Reno from Louls J. Bachner of Berlin. She and her new husband were music students together in Berlin, ten years ag0. The marriage took place hete yes terday before e justice of U e | Miss Lerner giving her age as % years. Brokman con- | | ming. Its coming Is heralded by a stack of health certificates whichvhave bedn recelved at the veterinarian's office and which relate that each of twenty bulla | shipped by 8. Peterson of Stanton, Neb., ! to Thomas Shaw of Wheatland, Wyo., Is tatooed on the ears. The use of tatooing | produces as many cattle a | state, any other IMPORTANT PROGRESS Te 1 | | | LONDON spondent at oles that a declarati { Germany by Italy fe i ! | RUSSIA AND PERSIA have settled | thetr aitferences and Ru | t | e clity, advices from Te | nd Petrograd sta | SITUATION WITH Serbian army is leas serious ti mont reports b i cated, according to | | recently mt the front, a London | mey dispateh from At -I |A DESPERATE BATTLE on the, 1g i 1 » Austria possession of driven out and attacked, is reported by Rome. 'COMPARATIVE QUIET prev, the western battle front s ind ecated by the Paris report today only artil position [l WIRELESS MESSA said to have tatooed live stock ever shipped into Wyo- | celved of the report that the Bul- :mrlnna have captured Monastir, in i southwestern Serbia, little hope is (felt In" England that the announce- ment is premature. Accepting it as true, the impression is growing that the entente allies arrived too late to glve any service to the Serbians. The only thing certaln in regard to the | plight of Serbla in that its military situa- | tion is going from bad to worse. In the notth the main Serblan armies are giv- ing, way slawly before the battering Austro-German , forces, which probably would move more rapldly if weather coriditions were better. It is established that the ‘Bulgarians are in Prilep and at least have made Monastir untenable, The Anglo-French armies, based on Salonikl, #eem to do no better than hold their positions. Optimistic feeling In regard to the diplomatio situation In Greece still pe siats In England. The reasons for this optimism, however, continue to be ob- scure, The weather seems to have intervened agaln in Russia.’ Little activity is ro- ported except 'Ith the retirement of the Russians to the east bank of the Styr, in Galicla. In Courland wet weather In the swampy district evidently has brought both sides to a stand still, On the other fronts there are fow changes. Desperate fighting continues between the Austrians and Itallans. In Mesopotamla, General Nixon #s reported to be In sight of Bagdad. Au. nee Caprare of Serbinns, BERLIN, Nov. 20.—(By Wireless to Say- ville)—Announcement was made by the war office today of the capture of 2,50 more Serblans. ! The occupation of Novavaros and Sfen- ifoa in western Serbia, near the Monte- negrin border, is reported, Toward the center of the Teutonic advance the town of Raska, about twelve miles northeast ot Novipaser, has been reached. Today's statement also reports a bom- bardment of Westende, Belgtum, by hos- tle monitors, which withdrew when rv- plied to by the German batteries on the coast. - - Freneh Officisl Report. PARIB, Nov. 20.—The French war offlca this afternoon gave out a report on the progress of hostilities reading as follows: ‘“There was reported last night nothing ‘more than some artillery fighting.and var fous engagements with hand grenades in the Artols district, at the barricades of ;'rn- Labyrinth,” in the Argonne at Courtes Chausseos and at Vauquols and in Lorraine, at.a point not jsar frem Relllon." Persia and Russia | Make Agreement; - Shah Will Remain TEHERAN, Persia, Nov. 19.~(Via Lon- don, Nov. 20)—A proclamation issued | by the government today confirmed the unofficlal announcement that the shah has decided not to leave Teheran, owing . to the adjustment of questions ralsed be- tween Russia and Persla, PETROGRAD, Nov. 20.—(Via London.) ~The forelgn office recélved from Teh- eran today a telegram saying the Per- slan government had adopted measures to put an end to ihe agitation Sald to have been carried on in Persia by German agents, and to disarm bands of irreg- wulars, In consequence of this action the Russian troops, which have been ad- vancing toward Teheran will refrain from entering the city, Mayom Will Ask that His Name Be Withdrawn CHICAGO. Nov, Special Telegram,) ~Mayor Thompson announced today, that he will ask Nebraska officials to with- draw his name as cendidate for presiden- tial nomination. % { ‘Week Beginning Nov. 39 Free Movie Coupon regular prif and lfi’ll‘lflm “THEATER BEAUTIFUL" 16th aad Binney. heen sent by the Man steamer Verona in the Mediterranean re- ' ported the steamer was be 1 pateh from MW ALIAN OFFIC twelve persons and the wounding ! of twenty-seven others. AN ATHENS DISPAT paich reported Movanstir had oo ed FPrelepe were uune | kmown. Loadon, hewever, ac. | eepin ine report of lonastir's faii l as probably authentie. The Mome of High Grade Good sny Monday nigbt when - accom- panied by Ome paid admisalon HIPP O DR OME 8614 Cuming St. | 334 wna Arbor. Alware e ont | Your Favorite tainable. fiood Mondays This coupon xood any | and Thursdays Monday night if ae- | with ome ticket. a -ompen- fed by a 10c paid ad- mission. ARBOR companied by & paid admission SUBURBAN RO it i First Counsider. ation, When sccompesisd wight

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