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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1898)
irB OMAHA DAILY 11EI3 : SATURDAY , OCTOIVEIl 22 , 1898. New Cloaks , New Suits , New Furs , New The busiest and handsomest department in Omaha. New cloaks going out every hour. New ones coming in every hour. Many oi them are rare sample garments perhaps but one or two of a kind. Rich eflects , unique , original designs. J. L. Brandcis & Sons have the largest stock , more and better styles , offer them at lower prices , than any other house in Omaha , and are busy , busy irom morning until night. n ISth and DougEas Omaha. RRJIII Rft flH Ul L | Ulini'U IU vx J UIIU . . * ' im mmtm * vmi IWMHTCVWV RK'&Yrwevm wf KiiiWi r.ti mu MZ-N florfc-fcJA iM&TJ tf"'l' * T CtJfk - Saturday welll show for llio flrnt tliiii1 Inuulrciln of flue tailor suits and lOMumos , Indies 'nnd ehlldien's Jackets and CnpOH and Silk WalsH , Separate Dress"Skills and Mackintoshes and at prices Unit will 1111 the liniucn-'e depart inent , covering the entire second floor , full to overilowlng with en er and wise customers. No. 1. All wool Cheviot Serge Suits , jacket lined with change able silk , Saturday No. 2. Imported Serge suits that are worth more , for only , No. 3. Konncl Cornered Suits , mate rial good Jill wool twilled cheviot gorge , a bargain , for only No. 4. Fine imported Venetian Cloth Suits , none bettor in the for $22.00 , only No. 5. Good Camel's hair suits , silk lined throughout with fine silk , Avorth § J30 , for only And hundreds of nobby suits , all shades , all styles , positively the iinest assortment of suits ever shown in this city , $25 , $28 , $35 $ and UptO $65 , Llko cut , made of line nil wool kersey cloth and boticle , stylish bo\ fronts , well tailor ed and lined In batln , would bo great valtif at $7 50 special Saturday , $498. Made of stylish tun covert cloth , also boucle , Inlaid velvet collar , full satin lined , only have 110 of them , regular price $9 00- Saturday , ? 6 73. Made of flno ker sey cloth , splen didly tailored , new est effects , lined In flno satin , good value nt SHOO , special Satin day $9.98. Laiics' jackets 0 Llko cut , In very fine tan , blue and black kersey , finely tailored , handsomely 1 i n o d throughout with fancy silk and satin tegular price. . $10 GO , Saturday , Sl..GO. In finest kersey , In tan , black and colors ; also line whipcords nnd meltons , man tailored throughout , handsome fancy linings , regular price $1S 73 , Saturday , $15 00 Thi Yon should lay in a supply of winter bedding as never again may you have such an opportunity. We offer Saturday the most splendid values In IJeddlng. Comforters. Horse Blankets and Lap Robes- that ever tcok pluco In the west. Full size soft and lleecy Blankets at , pair Extra large and heavy 11-4 wkito , grey and tan Bed Blankets , worth § 1.00 CQp each , goat , pair Juli 1'h'e1 lai-Rest nhd he.iVlest Hllver prey , Mood lirovvn nnd chinchilla Hhinkets , worth up to $1.7.1 each , KI > nt 98c anil $1,25 ; * . Nearly all wool silver grey Michigan Blankets , very largo Blze , go nt , pair . Extra heavy white , tan and chinchilla Klondike Blankets there Is no heller or heavier blanket made arc woUh $12.50 a imlr all over Omaha a lim ited quantity onlj.nt , a pair CHALLENGES 1NFALUBIL11Y , i i Rev. John FavHle Says Neither Ohurch Nor Bible Has That Attribute. CHRIST HIMSELF IS THE AUTHORITY i i lllllltli IlM > llttlllll DlMCOIirMPH Oil I.tll- rnillNiii 1'npcf on mill .soc-liil rroliU-iiiH liy . ) . AV. A very analytical paper on authority in religion eamo from Hev. John Favllle of Appleton , Wis , nt jcsterdav's session of the Liberal Congress. Not only did he j I challenge the claims of the church to infalll- i blltty , but IIP brushed asldo the bible as an Infallible guide. Not that ho did not ac cord to the blblo the respect due It , but he was Iconoclastic to the extent of dethronIng - i Ing it as the great Protestant idol. I Among his many references , both nfflrma- j , live and negative , he quoted from Prof. | Ilrlggs of the higher criticism , Kant , Car dinal Newman , Martlncait. Falrburn , Lyman Abbott and Phillips Brooks. To summar ize his conclusions Theto is n strong current of opinion In favor of Christ as the Una ! authority I- religion. He Is the master of both thi church and the bible. No article of the church has bad the three essentials ot universality , antiquity nnd agreement. Uniformity bos been brought about by penaltv and expulsion Instead of campailson and compromise It Is Impossible to mlUo the church Infallible MB a guide us lom ; as Its claims conflict Fail burn sa > s an ah elute lute and infallible church means n limited God that Oed then belongs to the church rather than thai the church belongs to God. MartlnMu questioned the new testa ment n an infallible authorlly. The claim- of an Infallible blblo has bfen made to sus tain the claim of un Infallible church. Tuo reformation under Luther was an insur rectlon of the human mind against the onlrltual order of the day Luther had doubts of the cnuonlcliy of the Epistle tote to Hebrews Hut the reformation , though It wanted freedom from the authorlly of the church , begin to deny freedom from the nuthorltv of the scriptures Freedom to the spirit became bondage to the letter An infallible church was met by an Infallible book. Prof. ItrlgRS1 poslllon Ihai the holj pplrlt is an infallible guide and a final court ot appeal working with the rational Eoul is not In harmony with the ultrn- protcstautlsm. Newman sajs the In ward conscience demands an outward reve lation. for olberwlse Ihe HOU ! has no real- Ing place. Martlntau's ultra position of "con fidence with God" IB permeated with alleged revelations about Him and concludes that the only authority Is an Illuminated soul. Kant's supposed Infallible guide torapels us to rlcht conduct , but doe not determine If i - ' -"s It iwogether o our Infallible Judgment. lift elation IN I'roKrriNli f. lu limit Christ to any ono channel la to transfer tliu authority to thai channel. In our nvxrch for the iruo aulhorliy , what wo ran natural religion reveals to us lhal God Is but bv revelation , vvo may know what (1o4 Is Hcv elation U progreeilve and lu- $4.50 U. S. Government Blankets go at $2 50 Wo still have left 1,000 U. 3. Government IlKliiKcts. Wo purchased 1,000 and 3,000 have already been sold. These Svere man ufactured for the U. S. Government , but were rejucted by Uncle Sam on account of being overweight Wo bought the entire lot so offer tomorrow Uncle Sam Government Blankets $2,50 $ for , each , Sttletly all vvool urey , wood brown and white , lnrji' size Illnnkets mm ftp i California make , at , a pair Extra heavy all vvool Marysvlllo Illank- C H , white only the ivgu lur $7. . " > 0 Blanket , at , u no pair . . . . iUU rludcs all methods by which God manifests I Himself to man. The doctrine o the correU lion of force In physics needs a companion In the doctrine of the correlation of rovela- Uon In thcolocv Our progess Is In the struggle nnd growth , not In the definitions and limitations of faith. God Is constantly revealing Himself. The leading thought In Christianity Is that of the ptrtonallty of God that the soul U a fcoark of the Infinite mind In kinship with a personal God. nut white the authority begins In the person It does not end there. Negatvcly our reason is our standard of truth and our conscience our standard of right , but positively neither is an infallible culde. Experience gives us a n btom of ooaauo facts , not a transparent rcvelat on. Christ Is the objective to our subjective. Ho U the best conception of God we have. He supplies the ethical Ideal and teaches a monotheism of a universal GoJ whoso nuthorltv rests In His ethical nature and who grants freedom to man. He makes the seat of all authority , personality , not a rollglon with Its sacrifices nor a literature coming to us miraculously , but a personjf belief In n personal manifestation of a per sonal God. We may go to the bible for the quality of the metal , though not the stamp of the coin , accepting It mcrily as a medium for com c > Ing to us our conception of Christ , and then we will give to It Its proper place nnd will not confound an infallible church with an Inherent book. A church that rnveals to us Instead of limiting the Almighty , that follows Instead of dictating tr > Christ , that docs not usurp the place of God , In the true , holy , apostolic. Catholic church Pastor Herring of the First Congrega- .tonal church was given time for a few ob- | I i icrvatlons. He said that God will always I bo In the company of the truth-seekers. I Habbl Isidore Low Initial of Nashville , Tenn. , the doors of whose church were opened to the congress when it met In that city against na adverse religious sentiment , followed with a survey of , the liberalizing results of the gathering there last year. Though It had met there at the Invitation of the Tennessee Centennial exposition , the governor of the state and numerous Protest ant ministers , only four or live of the min isters participated and the antagonism in the pulpit was so positive that ono preacher thought It imperative to have a day of fastIng - Ing and prayer to atone for the sins of the congiess. yet , said Dr Leu Initial , the day of fasting and prayer didn't materialize and the morals of the city have not suffered In consequence of the congress. Ho philoso phized in Ihe following strain : llroiul niioiiRli for All. ' Liberalism does uot seek lo destroy and tear down. Its platform is broad enough for Jew nnij Gentile orthrdox and hetero dox. U wages no war against science , but halls every science as a revelation from God. God.Why Why should we always harp on disagree- I mcntr Are there not many things from which we can produce swcel chords of bar- I inony ? Do we not all believe In the uplifting - , ing of humanity ? Thai there are vices i which WB must all attack In common ? That ( Virtues ore more than docmas ? Churches tire undergoing great changes. I They are breaking away from creeds In- I tcllectual freedom Is Ihe hlchest purpose of I the present In the past the Injunction was , "Uelleve believe In the Itlble. " bul human nature cannot bo suppressed. It lias clam ored for Irtcllectua ! liberty and the Lib eral Congress supplies this need Liberalism Is leading us along Ihe lines of intellectual progression to a higher hu- Immense spec'ial bargains in We arc offering the best values In horse Blankets that ever occurred In the -nest. We do not carry horse blankets , but we were offered these very cheap , and could not resist the temptation to buy them. Ac this price they will not last long. Plush Lap Uobes are out of our line but for spot cash we bought a lot very cheap and wo offer them Saturday at These lap loTics would be cheap from $3 to $5. If } ou ever expect to want a lap robe you should not fall to examine these. inanity , to universal peace , to lhat day when no nation shall lift up sword against nation , when the swords shall be beaten Into plowshares and every man shall be ut. pcaco with his neighbor under his own vine j and his own flc tree. Pccplo who are intellectually free do not bcllevo In ml-nclcs. sacraments and holy relics , holiness to them IB truth , virtue , honesty. Justice and purity. They believe In humanity , work for humanity , net for humanily Every land where trutli , right eousness and justice reign Is holy nnd consecrated crated ground to them. The last paper was by llev. J. W Frizzell of Eau Claire , Wls. , on "Our Great Theo logical and Social Problem. " In subsUuce It was : The theological factor of the problem is ono thought ; the Social , ono of conduct. Thought influences character and charac ter determines destinv. Literally , theology Is the science o'f God , scientifically , It tells us of His nature and attributes , eccleblast- lenlly. It is what men have thought about God , sin , salvation , inspiration , the devil , heaven and hell : practically , we must have u rational and Inspirational theology. The man who IUIH n cruel and tyiannlc.il God will bo blgrted and nariow. Countless ages Imvo passed since man first appeared upon the earth. In his early stages be groped after God In polvthel'in and Idolatrv At first he apotheoslred ihc foices of nature and then he clothed his gods ) lth Ibo altrlbutes of his own charac ter. The Hebrews gave to the human lace its conception of a monotheistic God The- form which our theology will take Is largely determined by our stage of develop- ment. There Is n great difference between the cruel and despotic God of the old testa ment who had to bo appeased with blood and the God of love as revealed by Christ in tl.e new testament Tht current condition of Christendom is a chaos of creeds , but the great theological pml social problem Is one It Is embraced In the command. "Thou salt love" The hy- fnlth answer that Christ died to satisfy the justice nf God and pav the debt of sin j ! docs not sulllce Chri"l himself says that < by conduct and character shall the social I problem be solved. He said nothing about Inspiration , eternal punishment , the plan nf salvation , joining the ehurch , but Ho did I , sa > , "Love your neighbor" The theology that teaches that God could I ' damn any one for His own glory la Itself coudemnablc. Wo can never emerge from the chaos of creeds by trjlng to get all to agree to ono theorrj , nor by wasting time on a , belated theology The social problem was never more im-1 ( j.ortant lhan now Conccnlration of capita ! and specialization of Industry have made sociely verey complex. Our Ideals bnvo developed wonderfully At one time slavery was ihought to bo humane. It was better to make n man work than to cook and eat him' The clashing of Interests Is unsocial conduct Christ would synthesize egoism and altruism In the hiehcr doctrine of ElewardshlD. He would nurmonze wealth , and commonwealth All our social , poll'lcal I and religious problems , all the problems of this country the war of the revolution , the . Declaration of Independence pnd conctltu- I Urn thecivil , war and the abolition of slav- ! cry , the war wl'h Srnln for the freclmr I of fill' * have twen problems of Brotherhood Wealth and Industry are being demo cratized and God Is the greatest democrat 111 the itnlveise- The great to.lal problem Is to take boeiety as It is nnd tran'-firm It Into a kingdom of Gad nnd brotherhood of man The gatherings such as the world's parliament nf religions and tbn Interna tloual peace cougreag , the liberal congress OUR BED COMFORT BARGAINS ARE THE BIGGEST IN TOWN , Wo aic spiling hotter comforts for ono- half the money that j > on can buy them elsewhere. One immense lot of soft , downy ilkolino eqm- f > rts , hiuul knotted. worth $2ouch , goat. One big , high stack of silko- line nnd tnitino , hand knotted and scroll s-titehed Ci mf-ifta ut $1 .JO most of this lot worth ; r2. ; > 0 each All the best grade of fine soft , Uownv cotton nnd satino comfirts. it w uld be imposciblo to nmko a bettor comforter , have been t ? 1 bo.lluir for * d.50 and rfj I * * $4.0U , > o at if- These prices and these comforters nrc doing the com foil fousluess of Omaha. nnd llko assemblages , Indicate th.it society is moving toward the Christ ideal. Eomo resoluflons covering the financial problems of the congress were adopted. The afternoon was spent at the exposition. Aiiicrli-ii'M IIxHliui Iii Knriipc. As anticipated , imperialism had an inning lost evening. The church was as well filled as on the evening previous , when David Starr Jordan of California learnedly argued against expansion , and while considerable applause punctuated the one address of the evening. It did not seem so hearty as that which hat ! rewarded Prof , Jordan. The speaker was Dr. John Henry Harrows of Chicago cage , a traveler who has been around the globe and has made orientalism and Asiatic , conditions and characteristics a particular I study. He is an enthusiast who would llko I to sco the planet w rapped In the starry folds of the American flag. His subject was "Thp Greater America and Her Mission In Asia " I Naturally he prefaced his remarks with I some conclusions he had reached In his tour I of India , China , Japan and other Asiatic * countries and his personal observations of ' Turkey and Egypt. The English viceroy of I the land of the Pharaohs haJ told him that the most effective educational work done in I Nile-watered Zoan was that of the American missionary schools , whilst In Turkey good Mussulmans are becoming apprehensive that the pc-aceful Invasion of the Yankee cccleal- i astlcal schoolmaster is threatening the very strongholds of Islam. Hrlclly surveying re cent history ho had some vvcrds of prals ? for Gladstone's work for Italy , Greece , Ireland , Roumanla and Armenia , though ho was not very flattering to the "concert of Europe" In Its methods of dealing with the "Eastern question. " In united Germany he found an Instance of the "resurrection of nations along parliamentary lines , " and Hawaii In the mid-Pacific had demonstrated a political wonder accomplished by American mlsslon- ories. America he regarded as being the chief factor In the progress of the world to day and he stated that England and Uttssla have resigned themselves to a recognition o. this country as the coming controlling na- tlon of the world. God U the origin of the state and God Is pieparlng America for an ampler Influence. The evening previous ho had witnessed In his city the conferring of a university degree upon Pres'dent ' McK nley and had heard the one who performed that function declare that "righteousness la the strength of a nation. " Ifintor ) mill Illllillllllty. This righteousness ho would liave America spread around the world. Ho said : There is a God In history and He Is writIng - Ing His messages to mankind in letters of flro on the man of the world Our national dcbtlny Is interwoven with the cause of humanity throughout the earth. In my travels I have found that Americans are being more and more appreciated In their world-wldo work. It Is useless for us to talk about whether America shall be expanded - _ panded America Is already expanded ; our ' flan floats In Cuba. I'orto nice and the ! Philippines and were a preposition made to have our arms leave the Philippines some dark night , leaving the Inhabitants there to anarchy and civil war , it would certainly b i rejected by congress as an act of national cowardlcn and the American people would never allow the llac to be torn down , The destlnv to which Oed has called us we roust bravely fare. Wo are told that to attempt L Like cut , extremely stylish , ' made of flno black kersey : loth , richly embroidered , very full sweep , regular price fS.GO , special tomorrow , $3.18. In flno lierscy cloth , double or single cape , splendid ! } tailored only have a limited quani'ltv , tegular price | G 18 , special nt $1 US. TT f\ I i The big sale of B ' 9 is Saturday in the basement. - heavy Oilcloth , 25c , 29c and 39c square yard , worth 35e and 59c. Extra heavy Linoliums 49c and 59c per square yard , regular price G5c and 75e Great Special Bar gains in Oil Cloth Rugs 4-4 rugs , 39c ; 5-4 , 59c ; 6-4 , 75c ; 8-4 rugs , § 1.39 ; all new patterns and extra heavy oil cloth. to Christianize the Philippines wo must neglect our own countrv , but wo will h.ivo a better America for our greater te. ponsl- billty. America is no longer a foundling , bul she Is equipped for a must valiant serv ice to humankind.ve ate ic-jolclng touny In a peace which means FO much for a broader Americanlbin. Gloiluis results are ours from this last great struggle between the middle ages and I the declu.ution of independence , between the Inquisition and the common school , be- ' twecn the spirit of the uuKo of Alva and that of GeoigeashliiKtou , Philip II and Abraham Lincoln , bettveen the cruelties 01 Wcyler and the humanities of President Me- Klnlcy. Spain discovered America twice , once in 14&2. nnd then she made the tmddci discovery which will lesult , however , la hei ovsn good , In this jcar of wonders , 1698. The ono word which describes our posi tion nt the nrcscnt tlmo as a people Is the word , "discovery. " Wo have galne new acquisitions of knowledge and oppor tunity. "What Wur HUM Done. No vision foresaw what has happened , not even the president's , boino ot UH lumembc. how Ciod educated this natlou In the Idcub of liberty during tbo agonizing civil war anu It happens that unuer the red torch ol battle dull minds and hearts sometimes dls- cover what was hidden betore. In thest dajs of approaching Ihanksgmng we realize lhat wo ha\o lived more rapidly in the last six months than in any previous six year : . Piobably not even Geiuiany carne to realize herself more suudenly and hopefully after the I'ranco-Prussian war than America has como to discover both her greatness and her oiijortumty , and ulso her duly , during the Spanish-American struggle. Viar is not to be picised. At its best It is a dire neces sity. Its essence Is the spirit of destruc tion. Hut God's uiovidcnce has usal u time and again lor glerlous results and one result In which we rejoice tonight is a now sense of our nationality and of our mission I am not praising the martial spirit , I am not glorlfving war which has In U elements of cavagery , bul Ihe victories of human rights have largely been victories of the baltleflcld. Maiathon made hurope Greek and not Asiatic , 'louis made Europe Chris tian and not Moslem. Nascby and Dunbar made English-speaking nations flee and not slaves. Quebec made America Saxon ana modern and not autocratic and mediaeval , barntoca and Yorktown made America American and nol Drltlsb , nnd Gcllysburfi piovcd Hint "a nallon ccncelved In llbcrly" and dedicated to the sublime proposition that "all men are eaual" can long endure. I believe that Manila and Santiago are names that will rank In history with almost any of tha greater bailies of the past. Our military victory has opened the eyes of the world. Our good fighters have done moro to help us than our good scholars In the eyes of Europe Dcwcy's victory at Manila , the heroism at Santiago , the splendid shoot ing and seamanship which destroyed the licet of Ccrvera have wrought more for \mcrlcan prestige than our wealth , our schools , our liberties and our prosperity have accomplished. The universality and continuance of English good will in Ihe last six months are crorf that It Is genuine , England Is proud of us , for her people recog- nlzo In us what Is best In themstlves. ' IiviDili It. " Nine thousand miles away a shot was fired and America was Ins'antly expanded. Her arm was lengthened and the hopes with which Columbus tailed forth , four centurlun I ago , to find the East Indies were strangely I realized by those dwelling In the land which Columbus broiiKht to the attention of man- kind America become an Asiatic power. Attractive , MILLINERY * > The inquisitive millinery crowds increase daily. "Correct 'Brandeis1 anillinery at correct prices" brings its own results , for pleased cus tomers spread the news awide. Wordy argu ments do not sullice a visit of inspection is ab solutely necessary. Saturday wo show a new shipment of foreign and New York models just received and never before displayed , and otter the following sharp bargains in moderate priced millinery. Stylishly Trimmed Hats at $4.75 $ Specially designed for this sale , velvet or felt shapes , 'tastily trimmed with ostrich tips , velvet dress shapes and Napoleons , all colors and black , placed on sale Saturday at SPECIAL TT I I " f"ft in PRICES our * " < | J jpf Dept. We can save you 25 per cent and over on Furs. We can and positively do on everything from a < . ) Se neck scarf to a $ lf > ( ) seal skin Special Sale of i 13 | Extra heavy Union i Ingrain Carpet | a yard i Scrictly all wool , cotton chain , In grain Carpet I worth 50c i Best grade , extra super , 'allvool ' Ingrain Cart - and t pet , at 50c and f > io ) 1 per yard Gre.it special sale of Moquette Axminster and extra velve Carpet nt 8 o u yard. Kuai ly all theec are worth moru than il.STi , all new pat cms. Most all of hem have bjrdors to match Thn echoes of the artillery In the harbor of Manila brought the great continent seven thousand miles nearer to our shoies. God had spoken In Ills nroIdunce There has been no parallel to this midden expansion of national obligation and opportunity In all the at.nalH of iron kind and a half century hence It will be seen that the greatest mo ment in American hlttorv since Lincoln's proclamation was that moment when , on n May morning , Admiral Dewey on the flag- 8hli | Olympln , quietly raid , "When you are ready jou may file , Gridley. " j I N1th the solemn sense of our new re- Bponsillllty 1 thnnlt Oed that America has nldencd westward ncioss the Pacific , which In to be the chief highway of the world s future commerce. I am Kind that In Ha waii and the I.adroncn and the Philippines wo ha\o stepping stones for American ideas clear over to the Greatest and moat popu lous side of tlio world. My own observa tions in the Orient have Cfepencd the coni i \ictlon that the cleat event of the twentieth century ( s to bo the uplifting of Asia and , thus , the unlttzliiK of the globe. Woo bo to our western world , as Captain Mahan has Indicated , if the Oreat Asiatic nations become equipped with our arms * and en riched with our inventions and are not in harmonv with our Ideals. The road Is still onen between Peking and Vienna for new Asiatic ho'dea to press Into Europe ami If an array of millions of Asiatics follow the path of Ghcnghis Khan and Tamerlane , armed with Maxim Kuns and modern rifles , who knows If Christian civilization would be able to push back the red wave of dc- I , structlon' Wo have neen the rch.ibllltatlon i of Japan , a great military and naval power , I but thanks to Christian forces Japan Is not altogether out of harmony with western ideals. The creat conflict of the future ought to bo between civilization represented I by pure homes , free scho Is , free churches , ' ropular enlightenment and political liberty , nnd the barbarism or seml-c.lvlllzatlou of Asia , where wompnhood Is degraded , human rights dented opportunities limited , deceit and Impurity are universal and where the popular irlrd has not expanded and been lifted heavcnwnid bv a Christianity which teaches the fatherhood of Cod arrt the brotherhood of man Let us hold the Philippines - I ' pines , to use a phrase of Benjamin Kid , "as a trust for civilization " Today will conclude the work of the con gress , but tomorrow many of Its members will occupy loal pulnlts In the morning ( David Starr Jordan will speak at All Saints' | Episcopal church , Dr. John I'avlMo of Appleton - ton , WU . at the First ConKiegatlonal church , President II. W. Thomas of he con- grc s at the Plrst Methodist Kplsconal church , llev II. H. Peabody of Rome , N. Y , at the First Presbyterian and nev. Jcnkln Lloyd Jones at Unity church. Rabbi E. O. Hlrsch of Chicago will preach at Temple Israel this evening and Is also to deliver an address at the First Congregational church tomorrow afternoon. Dr Hull's Cowch Syrup for throat Irrita tions Is Invaluable In the home. 25c. HoliU I lie Il < > > . Thirteen-year-old Charlie Tate was bound over to the dl'lrlct court by Judge Cordon yesterday In lx > nds of $300. He stole J25 from A W Clark , superintendent of thn Child Saving Institute Charllo ran away from home , b" "E at traded by the strange sights on the MUway. and spent the great part of the summer on the grounds. He made the co-rich farm his abiding place , being allowed to remain there and to neslle down at night among the big Grand Special Sale Wo have the only complete yarn depart mcnt in Omaha. Evcty eolot and even quality , all of the Fllsher make nnd them Is none better. Best imported Spanish Yarn , a skein Fleischer's Germantown Yarn , a skein Best imported Saxony Yarn , a skein Fleischers best Domestic Saxony , a skein test imported Angora Yarn , a ball Best imported Ice "Wool Yirn , u bo\ . . . Fleischer's German Knit Inpyirn'iskeln Zephyr yarn , all colors , , n Impoiti'd grade , Up ungainly birds thnt had learned to kmw him The only one who has befttended the bo\ since he ran aw.iy was A W ClorU , tl i man l-o robbed Mr. Clark took htm fron" . the ostrich farm and tcok him to his Instl n tlon. Within two days the desire to b- back again among the ostilches ovcrcan.15 the bov nnd ho stole $2. ) from Mr Clark H desk nnd went back to the Midway and the ostriches , wl'cro ho was nrre't d IIo \ to I'rrtcnt Crouii. Mr. J. M. Nlckle , n well known merchant of NlcKlevllle , Pa. , has two children who are subject to attacks of rroup. In speaking of It he says"Whenever an attack Is coming on , my wife gives them Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and it alwa > s prevents the attack. U Is a hoiuehold necusHty in tills county nnd no matter what else we run out of , It would no do to bo without Chamberlain's Cough Ilpmedy , More of It Is sold hero than of nil other cough medicines combined. \Vlio K11011 n IVIIIInni Knock. Identatlon Is wanted by the coroner of Tacomn. Wash. , of the body of an unknown man , supposed to lin from Oniuhn , who died In that city October IS , of typhoid fovc- , The man wan taken from a hotel at Sheldon Wash . to Ihe Frank Paddock hospital at Tacoma on the irth. At this hotel lie had registered as "William Knock , Omaha , Neb " Ho is supposed to bo a lumberman Nothing was found on the body that would nerve to reveal his Identity. From the man's clothing , the Tacoma authorities be lievo ho was n man of so-no means. For broken surfaces , sorcis Insect bites , burns , skin diseases , nnd especially pllifl , there Is one reliable remedy , DeWitt's Witch Ilnzel Solve. When you call for DeWitt'n don't accept counterfeit or frauds. You will not bo disappointed with DcWltl'i Witch Hazel Salve One IIlHinUxuil , Out * Held. At the hearing of Fannie Wright and Wll Ham Crltchlleld , arrested for the theft of IRQ and a dlamcnd pin valued at $200 , from the person of William Sheldon of Daren- port , la. , yesterday afternrou , Crltchfleld was discharged , as II was shown that ho had no hand ! n the robbery. Decision as to the woman was reserved until this morning. The stolen stuff , found under a matlrcss In the woman's room the morning .iftor the1 robbery , was placed ns fcllent evidence against the woman Rev. Paul H. Arlington , Tccumsch. Neb , wiles' "I dcslro to cx- pre J to ynu my sincere thanks for the In terest you have malnfested In me and for 1 the help you Iiivo given me. Since taking ! votir Dr. Kaj's HenovntT , I have been frea from iipuralrla and rheumrtlrm , vvhlrh had not been the raso for ee/eral years befor' I wish alfo to saj I consider your Di Kay's Lung Ualm the best cough , lung and throat remedy I ever saw Since I htvo used It. It has never failed to euro both cough and throat trouble. Laboring In the mlnlbtry , I arn almost dally exposed and frequently take cold , nnd therefoream in constant need of Dr. Kay'u Lung Halm. I cannot find It in i the drug fatorcs hero , so I cncltsa stumpa to ' pay for u box , which pleueo vend mo by ro- i turn mull " I Thousand ) ! of tl < o mcttt prominent people in America know that thn above urc facts and no remedies have atfectrd i > 9 large u per cent of cures Send for our Illustrated book. It has grcut value , but will bo sent free- , | Dr I ) J Kay Medical Co. , Omaha , Neb.