Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 2, 1916, Page 23

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OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: APRIL 2, 1916, 7B LATTER DAY SAINTS HOLD CONPERENGE nual World's Conference at Ine dependence, Mo, Will Be Pre sided Over by ¥, M. Smith, | ' OMAHA WOMAN TO BE S0LOIST week the 16 Mo m of of n| f reh ! ' t f the e wa Independance lor the ffieta), i dent, thin office also confe o right to a hand of the alntor The Tatter Da K0 by Joweph Hmi prosent fander tion, They and re Apenk an earth toda ehmen nnization which through 1ife and denth at ands o wwko inder the protects In tha confusior tragedy Brighnm ¥ouns lending of the ohupe the presidency of the entire and had himself orduined ton and in a short time elnimen | organization | to that post- | led the people | quorum out Into the valleys of the west In & #s-| rien of most remarkable journeys over | and, the rallways at that time not ex Ving farther wost than Counetl Bluffs wonderful axect and enterprising abilfty of Brighiam ing, were Iaid the foundutions of the hewutitul City of Balt Lake Retuses 1o Go The widow of Joseph Bmith firmly fused to follow Young Aue to the really | wost, or to re ) nize his usurped muthoiity, and stayed /In her home on the banks of the Missis with her four young wsons, and L\l them to be God-fearing and law Ing eitivons, W wepl, the old of thess sons, r n majority he made two mreat resolutions that he would lve in wuch a manner | that no one, from his notions, should he justified in Interring or saying that m.? father Liad been & bad man. The other | was that he would strive to make the roliglon for which his father lald down his lite honorable In the sight of ten. Thus 1t was that, in 180, at the age f 26, he mot with a handful of the faith One was ful, who, ke his mother, had retused ) to follow Young, and thers he reorgan Ired the church, and was ordained ity | president, which office he held until the of hix death in 1914, at Independonce. How well he wucoesded in carrying the resolutions of his young man hood, 1n best attosted by t that wherever he and the me the irch have 1ved, they h nized 10 be good citizens w e and command the resp men, They oecoupy positions of honor and trust all over the Umted States, and no bedy of peopls is mors sealous stamping out the of the Apostate church in the west, than are the members of the Reorganization, To day, they number 100,000, and have jocsl churchor all over the world, Four Aff forent timen, the suprems court of the United Btates has affirmed thelr tention that they are the true mucc original founded in that the church with headquar n Intquity wors to the chureh 140, ar ters at Halt Lake Otly, i npostat Josep) fmith himaelf took the hat the doctrine of pe bomination in the sight ¢ who originated 1, 1 i Heturne 1y e | i ' | terest wiil | of n new presiding bishop of the church, | ery claim made that his father e for thin evil but was un, trace | toachir ) o Raor ed oppe waRIng | r pul HEAD OF THE SAINTS CHURCH Dr Frederick M, Smith | n thing ndegunte Adupta for dmily use-not something 1o} sut and aired for & fow hours or « wook! Lo bollaves the keynots | of u wuccomsful Christian 1ifs 18 spellad | by the word 'servive and that that sorvice should be rendered to those who need It, regurdless of caste, station w!, | | | in lite (hoose New Bishop, fortune mference some in W the choosing At the approsching ¢ center aro Kollay, whose | resignation was mccopted at the last | conterence, 1t I thought to place aome | to take the place of I, L young man in thig position, whose experi- | anoe in business shall qualify m for | taking charge of the rapldly enlarging | | financinl affalrs of the chureh Thed “ treasury 16 maintained by the titles and | wo-will offering of the members, and out | f this fund, cf bullt, schools onrtut od 8 homes and ad, nw well as \nrlen AUpported it, almont 1iterally the families of the mius The misstonaries wo o b or merip hiaving but dependent. upon Wt pures no nllowance walury the kindneas and gonsrosity of the peaple labor and among whom they prench Those misslonaries have added 1o chureh, by baptiem this year, over B0 membars, and they gather to thess an- | the number of 600 or | the | nusl conferences t " to conunsel They form, together with other forma of priesthood od at the conferences and the number of Aslegates from Among large the lay mombers o by varlous local chy mont Aemooratic 3 doctrine can he foresd upon this orgen zation; no priest-ridden, lgnorant peopl accopting blindly what s offersd them | but everything is Adiwcussed openly, and | the humblest member has the right to Yo heard ,and has equal chance with avery other member of the conference for volte and vote This oonfersnce sees the return of sev oral Interesting u: Klder (!, § misslonaries from for d Miller, from a | LATTER DAY | e | southwest were the Mallst brothers and mission in Aust ; Bahop oderick May, from a five years' effort London, England, where he has tem his wife and family in that troubled aren; Fider Teen Jonkins wite Palostine ind | rom & most lrylnk mission in Lovers of Musle, The Latter Day Salnts are great lovers might religic of music, Tndesd music be n part of their @ olat ‘oultivate the gifta of Thus they have a Keners uret ter, whowe duty it In to firect the musteal notivities of the whole hurch, to stimulate and suggest nnd out e, and atove all ¢ ine thelr o fort for thess annual assemblies For dying nder his direction cot thi WAL chorua pre harmony and enth nAdition ng they Mrs. W Hobinson f Kanmas | 1y, Mr ik of Omaha and | fian Mthel amon of New York Ot | . » Mr ow York City s the na Hor rister, and My Rell of | 1 bath nt r e precad) att f and A Pers Eczema Wash Used in Hospitals f Meat Cause of Lame Back and Kidney Trouble Take a glass of Balts to flush Kidneys if your back ‘ is aching. Noted authority says Urle Acid from meat irritates the Bladder, Ment forme urlo aoid which exeites and overworks the kidneys in thelr efforis to filter it from the \ Slegular eat ore of ment mus o kidnays ooos sonally, Yo relisve your aolde, wasts and Aull misery In the When the First White M ()n (','ro.s-:-_(e(l N(’/)T(L.S'k(l/ m 1739 followsd thin river up stream, remaining on the left side of the stream until they found a place whers it forked, evidently nonr North Platte Thie sate ong the Missouri river 1o reach Banta W On the advice of soms of the Ne braska Indlans the Mallet brothers took a new routs, steiking diagonally moross first white men to oross the entire and & number of horses Iaden with packs wet out May 19, 118, for o, where they hoped t wondu, 1he Banta Ve, Mexi trade with the Mante ¥ Indians and also of Nebrasks from northesst 1o o you fesl a y region, sharp sx othor Freneh companions, & UArY of | with Mpaniards aiready settled in that | the grest unknown plaine of Nebraska On June 18 they crossed the river whers pains in the bask or slok headachs, Alez! wlght, who made this trip in 178 rexion sinde the expedition of Coronad I'he second day of June they reashed |t forked and struck southward (nto ness, your stomach sours, tongus 14 The meeompanyIng cut Is u pen draw oarn bnfore the banka of a wide and shallow river | what they termed the high plains, that| coated and when the -ulh‘u iu bad you Other tradors had (aken the cotirse | which they named the “Platte.” Tha¥| extended olear (o Hanta Fe. They report have rhaumatic (winges, The urine s w0t in datall historieally the channels to aet night acids and sloudy, full of sediment; often get irritated, obliging you wp two or thres times during t To neutralinze thess frritatf having traveled south from this arossing & full three days without finding & single | trace of wood of any kind On June 0 they reached the Arkansas |Clark, Notorious u This group, f the Afty to s Lhat ame to historieal | Law Abolishing s ) { Mnous wasts gel e rep ! ! ) rivar. In attempting to oross it they lost | flush off the hody's v & roge romns | Counterfeiter, is Coroner's OFFICO | v, e it saces i i abov fou suntes ot ud Bt from sy 1uring Ak-Bar-ten woek In the fal 2 pharmacy | take a tablespoontul in ' | they hoped to trade at thelr destination oy Ak Taken After Fight DOCIAred VALid | "o wiet recorte of hets careor show o waisr bafors vreaktast for a tow dare ing of Cor o Hpaniard, with his | ) ) i (hat thay renchad Manin ¥ July £ 17 | 864 your kidnays will then aot fina and thirty-aix o historical parads | aring vt & T 4 lor disordere dianppanr. This famons o roupective KToUps | 1 om ANGIL Tamen | TH laws passed by the last tegislature, | o ¥ o e o made from the maid of grapes o Mallet brothers are oredited with the first white men ““to brivg the and the mountains to oups of ae trap and faderal troops that hollahing the offlea of cownty ecoronsr and making constables appointive (nstesd and lemon Julos, combined with Hithin D, Qlark, believed by f and han baen used for wensrations 1o o 1 ouched tha woll now Known a8 |loe men here to ) ront of alective offices, are both upheld by M river oloan and stimulate suguish kidnays And o dincovery of Amarion | coin sountartatters in (e nir s Uimtriet Judge OGeorge A. Duy, befors | stop biadder \rritation, Jad falts ia inex whom two mandamus sults woers heard ted historioal (noMents and histors pensive; harmisss and makes & Aalight edition, pletured here- | 1N I8l here foday following his capt Dorranes, undertaker, who was | 1Al pointa of the old days are o he !ty effervesesnt lithis-watar Arink which of the soron of groups | /81 JAst night afier despernte ' the olsotion commissionar | shown In this parade by means of elabe | milllons of men and women taks now A 18 wiven hers merely as | 108 Arrest. Clar . od 1 A enbin | gy ored hin filing fes for the | floats, whils the prinoipal axpedis| and then, thus aveiding serious kidney ple of the kind of parade this 1e | In the nearby hills and w varpowsred |, brought the first sult, and and soouting trips over the state | and bladder dissases Advertissmen! to be by two mecret sorvice men aasisied by | Whi (o ba conalabls again, sarly days of from a century to e Mallat bhrothers ware Perre and | members of the polios forea Revolvers | hygught wooond | three centuries are to be represented Pawl. They plunked into Nebraska some- | And sawed-off shotkuns were found In making the ruling, the court de- | by historioal ips, of whiah the one the cabin, as wall as dien wnd alloys for the sounterteiting of wold ooine red both lwwe (o be perfectly plain, and | ropresenting the Mallet brothers 10 & | | snmpla, whare in the reglon of what s now Du. kota county, With sight men fu the party fl? Bite L. .l!ra'!hul‘ rensonable,_and tharefors valld | ; Byl The Most Fascinating and Enterraining Stories over published have been conceived by the celebrated dramatist, and novelized by the GEORGE BRONSON well-known author, HOWARD HUGH C. WEIR This remarkabie series, one of which will be published weekly and each one complete in itself, sets forth The Adventures of Two Remarkably Smart and Attractive Young Women who dela'-h themselves the champions of their sex and start out to work retribution upon unscrupulous and perfidious members of the male sex, especially those whose wealth and position seem to have rendered them almost impregnable of attack. The title og this clever series is TheSocial Pirates and it will set you gu-uin at times to determine which side of the game should be designated with this appellation. Should it be these two girls who, with all their shirewdness and attractiveness, Do Not Hesitate to Match Their Wits againat their male enemies; or, these same opponents whoso cunning, reputation and position make them all the more dangerous? Yet daringly and fearlossly MONA AND MARY FIGHT FIRE WITH FIRE secking the vulnerable spots in the armor of the enemy until they leave them “hors de combat' or crying for mercy. S0 much so that the result of most of the campaigns conducted by Mona and Mary Will Make Every Woman Smile With Delight and at the same time set many men of conceited habits and un- scrupulous natures wondering if they are really quite as smart as they thought they were Each story in this remarkable series keeps the reader en- thralled from start to finish and always wondering what will turn up next. Never was the Klruh- raft u’ the great play- wright, GEORGE BRONSON HOWARD, employed te batter advantage than in The Social Pirates and the vary name of HUGH C, WEIR, the well.known writer, (s of ltsell sufficient guarantes of the literary merits of the novelization, No more conceptive hrain and virile pen could have been seleated for this task than those of these two celobritios in thelr chosen prow foasion The Little Monte Carlo i» The Sunday B ee BESSIE THEATER s SOUTH SIDE Be Sure and Read the First Story Entitled | The super-sensational society masterpiece, “The | Social Pirates,” will be exhibited for the first time i in Greater Omaha, FRIDAY, APRIL 7, at the

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