THi: OMAHA DAILY DEE: WEDNESDAY. XOVEMREU 2., 100.T COD'S LAW, MAX'S NATURE lather Dowling Adds Bis Last Word to the Bto Siio d Debt'. OBLIGATION COMES WITH MARRIAGE (om mints Raised y Ana Taaonls tlc's C'nraanonlcatlon Aainrrrd by the Rrvrrrad (ientleman from a Priest's , Btaadpoloat 301 CD A Ar A Jif.T"lsELL..j. '.a.-i- i-.M-i mgyfmMmm.mvm iw -. 'nU.'S,'.,!.: I""J ' mmr a-lmHrWfH- Ml I UisW H "" ""' Ari P7 Q fi n r a ui IS U u L 1 J 1 Mostly cloaks and furs that are constantly coming In will be quoted at special prices tomorrow some of the jauntiest and most fashionable apparel for women at bargain prices. Hundreds of our very highest grade over coats and suits will be placed on special sale tomorrow Great bargains for well dressed men, OMAHA, Koy. 23 J a the Editor of The Bee: I see by the communication of Ann Tagonlstio In last Sunday'! Bee that I am ruled out of all participation In the d s cusslon of race suicide; that on account ot being a priest I am utterly and Irre deemably disqualified. What right has a celibate to Impose obligation on those who have entered the married ttateT What does ho know about It? Well, It Is not tieceneary to become an artor In a play In order to understand fully the plot of a drama. Because a priest has not assumed the obligations of matrimony, It does not follow that he has no right to point out their providential duty to those who have. It Is his duty to speak out upon vexed questions dealing with the moral law, tha gospel and the commandments; that Is what he was ordained for. Inasmuch as he ha bound himself by vow not to marry, In order that he may with greater single ness of purpose devote himself to hla min istry, the problem does not come up to him for personal solution. Ills own tastes and relations do not affect In the least hla right and duty to act as teacher and guide In his own proper sphere. In which he may be all the more reliable because he is a disinterested observer, without family ties. I might feel bad about being excluded from this discussion, If it were not that by reading the entire conynunloatlon I find that I am not the only one shut out; all mere men are under the same condemna tion. Ann Tagonlstlo wants "nothing from us but silence, and very little of that." Women alone are eligible for the discus sion. Moreover, none are Qualified to speak but those who have passed through the perils of childbirth, and even they must be o free from bias as to be prepared to sub stitute convenience for the requirements of the moral law. NVorst of all, only a wife who has been three times a mother acquires a classlo right to dictate terms; he alone is entitled to speak the last word In the matter of limitation. All these con ditions place ms in very extensive and re ( spectable company. This noble environ ment of all tha men and perhaps three fourths of womankind emboldens me to raise my voice just a little bit,, ever so hesitatingly, in gentle remonstrance against the unfeeling denial ot all ray right and title to a hearing. one Reasons for Coming; In. It would be strange. Indeed, If a person had to be a graduate of law before being qualified to pass judgment on the question able conduct of a lawyer, If he had to be a doctor In order to take cognizance of a violation of medical and ChrlsUan ethics. The condition might soon be pushed so far that he would have to be a thief or gam bler In order to express his disapproval of stealing and cheating; he might have to become an actor before being a play wright, a finished performer before acting In the capacity of a musical critic. I opine that all this comes very near to constitut ing unmistakably what the logicians call a reduotlo ad absurdum. If Ann Tagonls tlo had her way, the entries for this dis cussion would be exceedingly limited. Btlll ' the number she admits is purely arbitrary. Anyone els has the same right she has to establish qualifications; and I respectfully suggest that all disputed points ought to be left to parents .who have reared ten chil dren Instead of three. Humanity may be divided Into two principal classes, married people 'and single people. The former are subdivided Into those who have children and those who have not. The last men tioned consist of persona who defeat the end of marriage and those who do not. Those who have children comprise parents who restrict the growth of their families and those who do not. It seems to me that all the various classes and subclasses ought to be ruled out except the last, for the same reason that all men and child less women are excluded. Only the heads of large families know by experience what a full compliance with the divine dispensa tion entails, and experience seems to be an essential. sentiment A gat mat Reaaoa. Sentiment is good In Its way, but reason Is better. Very seldom is a case based on pure sentiment presented fairly. False sentiment Is easily aroused, and It is not difficult to distract attention from the main Issue, which in this case Is to find out what God wills. I find all the necessary Ingredients for a misunderstanding In the letter of Ann Tagonlstle. Here Is the re cipe: Borrows of childbirth brood of neg lected children paupers issuing from the slums waifs thrown upon the cold and un feeling world Inheritance of poverty, dis ease and degeneracy workhouses, reform atories looming up In the background of want high types of manhood and woman- Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Cure Costs Nothing if It Fails. Any honest person who suffers from Rheu- stlsm is welcome tQ this offer. For years 1 searched everywhere to find a specific for Rheumatism. For nearly 10 years I worked to this end. At las.; In Germany, my search waa rewarded. ' I found a costly chemical that did not disappoint me as other Rheu tnatlo prescriptions had disappointed phys icians everywhere. I do not mean that Dr. Shojp's Rheu matic Cure can turn bony Joints Into flth again.. That la Impossible. But It will drive from the blood the poison that caunea pain and swelling;, and then that Is the end of RheumatUm. 1 know this so well that I will furnish for a full month tay Rheu matic cure on trial. I cannot cure all cases wlln In a month. It would be unreasonable to expect that. But mot caves will yltW within 10 days. This trial treatment will convince you that Ir. Shoop's Kheumatlo Cure is a power agalnut Rheumatism a potent force agaltiMt disease that Is Irreslst-able.- My offer Is made to convince you of my faith. My faith la but the outcome of fi perieuce of actual kuwwled. I know what It ran do And I know this so wail that 1 will furnish my remedy on tr.eJ. Himply write me a puaial for my book un Rheumatism. I will then arrange with a drusaial in your vicinity ao that you can secure six butllaa of Ir. Choop'a Kheu matlo Cure to make the teal. You may take It a full noulh on trial. If It suo reeda the coat to you la le.h. If It fails the loas la mine an4 mine alone. It will be lelt entirely to uu. 1 mean that exactly. It you say the trial la not satisfactory I don't expect a penny from you. 1 have no aainplea. Any mere sample that can affect chronic RheunuUlnm uiuat be oruiswii to the verge of danger. I uae ao aurh drugs for It Is dangerous to take them. You must get the diaeaae out of the blood. My remedy does that even In the most ctlf fluult, obstinate caaea. It has curej the old est cases that I ever met, and In all of my experience, in all of my Z,0u0 tests, I never found another remedy that would eui one ulionlo oaae In ten. VNnte Die and 1 will send you the book. Try ur remedy for a month, for It cu't haxna you auyway. f It faila the loaa la mine. Address Dr. Bhoop, Box V (Ruolne) Wis. Wild reave nut chronic are olien rule I ty vue er lw twltlca. At all tin,. It.. - Special Sales SPECIAL FOR TOMORROW NEW LONG COATS AT $8.98 Here are stunning long 42-incli coats made of handsome Kerseys with the new storm collars and half fitted backs, lined throughout with heavy satin. These are very smart nnd attrac - 1 I SALE OF HANDSOME FUR SCARFS A handsome assortment of the swellest and most serviceable fur the squirrel lined American etc., some m extreme long . Bwtut.-tn iur pieces iui . vwiiifj.- hood quality against quantity good clt lienshlpi clean living, wholesome birth right intelllgeht, respectable and patriotic limitation difficulty of providing for nu merous offspring. All abnormal and unus ual conditions, bunched together In one typical case that never happened, are made to do duty In the attempt to correct the work of God and heal the Ills of society, with a subconscious understanding that they all point the way to the prudent re striction of population as an absolute ne cessity of our times. . , Lars; 'Families Not a Menace. I cannot quite persuade myself that the children of large families are Inferior In mental and moral endowments to the spoiled and petted darling of the contracted domestic circle, and they lack the higher qualities supposed to be developed In what are commonly regarded as the more favored homes. As one of the family of ten chil dren, I think I am qualified to speak of the conditions and Ideas prevalent In such households. All large families. do not neces sarily Issue from the slums, all are not poorly provided for, all are not 111 bred, all do not swell the dangerous classes, all are not a menace to the security of the com monwealth. Often it Is the pampered child of Indulgence and selfishness, with no fel low in the family circle to keep him com pany, that sears the hearts ot parents and makes them wish he had never been born. The outcast from the school of adversity often outstrips the favored of fortune and the rejected child of today often makes the honored cltlxen of tomorrow; none can read hla horoscope or predict his future, till by the free exercise of virtue or vice he has ennobled or marred the makings of a man. It is passing strange that the prudential check so frequently invoked in behalf of the poor unable to provide for children, la Invariably applied In practice by the wealthy, who are amply able to rear nu merous sturdy sons and daughters fit to be the bulwark of the nation. The outcry does nqt come from those who have large fami lies. Such parents do not consider them selves hardly used, or subjects for pity; rather they are generally happy In the pos session of these household blessings. It Is a spirit of rebellion against the providential conditions of a state which they were free to enter or not If they so willed, which makes most of the trouble for the wedded. Let us be honent and put the contention on Its true and proper basis. Married people who deny tha boon of existence to offspring who naturally come to them pleading for a chance to live, are not so much moved by the desire to furnish a better dowered child to the family or a superior rltlxcu to the state. Their motives are often leas disin terested, and Instead of taking their stand on the high plane of suppoEed moral and Intellectual excellence, greater wisdom and more Intense devotion to the common good, they might more truly admit that they shirk obligations which savor of a plebeian caste, because It Is Inconvenient to bear burdens which entail the sacrifice of many pleasures, because each addition to the family requires some chapters to travel, drees and social triumphs to be cut out, some rearrangements and subdivisions of the good things of life to be made. What May U Don. . Everybody admits the Inconveniences and even dangers of maternity. Rut these In evitable penalties formed part of the de sign of God when he decreed the propaga tion of our race, for ha eays, "in torruw shall the tear children." I'nlees be changes his decrees, these penaltUs stand; and woman must bear the burdens peculiar to her sex. Just as man must bear other re sponsibilities and dangers Incidental to hia nature and polt on In the world's economy, some of which are pathetically ret forth In the vereea quoted by Ann Tagonlstlc. Men and woman have a right to get ruirried or not. provided they can get some one to take them: they have a right to avail them selves then of all of the marital privileges sauctiuned by Ahu.!.niy Cod; but thajr aiu of Ladies' Coats tive cloaks for winter wear, sold elsewhere at $12.50 and Wednesday at STUNNING LONG COATS AT $14.85 Ultra fashionable long coats with the military capes ana button new velvet collar and cuffs, easily worth $22.50 and $25, very stunning wraps at JAUNTY BOX COATS AT $5.98 Smart and fetching idea in box coats, with the new cape effects, lined throughout, flat stitched collars and the new sleeve, QQ in every correct at . SAMPLE FUR JACKETS AT $p5 An assortment of jackets in the most fashionable furs including Persian lamb, krimmer, near seal blouses with beaver and marten reveres, 24-inch near seal worth up to $50 i. ..." m i i . : ,. mulct; VI tills at marten, skunk, opossum, Isabella jengius wun cora ana xau inmmings. v ery h cusiuiucs, a I Special Selling Event, Trimmed Hats $1 Handsome Trimmed Hats for Thanksgiving Wear These hats are regular $1, $5 and $6 creations which we offer at a tremendous reduction. They are large velvet and plush dress hats, velvet turbans, misses' and children and tastily trimmed in seasonal! e flowers feathers.eto. See our splendid window aUplay. On sale on second floor and basement. Your choice Wednesday at Fur hats. The smartest effects in trimmed, values as high as $12.50 each, Wednesday at Choice of all.$3, $4 and $5 street hats, to clear them away, at when by a positive act they thwart the primary end of marriage. If they do not eee their way to accepting the conditions placed on them by God himself, they can follow the counsel of Bt. Paul, who says that he would prefer to have all even as he 1b, vowed to virginity, which he does not regard as Impossible, though he admits that many are not called to this Btate. In the discussion of race suicide, too many lose sight altogether of the moral law, of the will of God, of divine providence as a prime factor in the affairs of men. They do not think It worth their while to con sider at all what God may want; they take Into account merely convenience and ex pediency. It may be Just', as Inconvenient to observe the commandment which says "thou shalt not steal," but that doea not absolve us from doing our duty. If a divine law exists and U does It must be obeyed, no matter what the consequences. And this finishes my little story. It also ends my participation In this controversy, for which I have neither the time nor the inclination, and from which I can see no good likely to accrue; the more so as the writer of the communication referred to exercises an undoubted right In using a pen name Instead of a real one. It would be disappointing to find out after awhile that a whole lot of courtesy was being wasted on a "horrid man" and that tha controversy was with a Man Tagonlstlo instead bf Ann Tagonlstlc. Yours respect fully. M. P. DOWLING. TO MAKE OMAHA TERMINUS American "rVlegraphi and Telephone Company Will Move from Council Bines. The terminal and offices of the American Telegraph and Telephone company will be removed from Council Bluffs to Omaha as soon as the new telephone exchange butUllng la completed. The change Is made principally because the greater part of the long diatance business of this terminal originates In Omaha and the change to thla aide does away with one set of con nections which will have a tendency to improve the service. The matter of economy in office rent, etc., has something to do with the move. The new building of the Nebraska com pany will not be finished before February and then the changes will be made. II. W. G. Church Is manager of the company. The lines whleh carry telegrams and tele phone messages at the same time connect from this terminus with Boston, Cudahy's In South Omaha using this connection every morning for a long talk. The first line was j ut In from New York to Chicago and was the cause of considerable comment. Work on the new exchange has not progressed as rapidly as had been antici pated and owing to cold weather will not be far enough advanced for the Installa tion of the new switchboard until some time In February. This new board has been stored for some time In waiting. A month will be required by the Western Kl?otrlcal company In doing the work of Installation. The old board has been too small for some time and has space for only 3.600 wires, while the new board has a capacity of 6, COO. Tlint A w fail f-sltf. And its terrible cough can soon be cured by Dr. King's New Discovery for Conaump- tion. ivy it. no cure, no pay. toe, $1.00 For sale by Kuhn & Co. Movements ol Oman teasels, Kor, 313. At New York Arrived : Furnesala. from GlHKgow; Minnehaha, from IOndon; Zea land, inun Auvwifrp. i At Ulusgow Sailed: Siberian, for New ' York. Arrived: Columbia, from New Tork; Mongolian, from New ork. i At i'lyinoulh-Arrived: Kaiser Wllhelm I j I. irom .-sew iurh. At London Ai rived: Mlnnetonka. from New York. At Sues Arrived : lndi'udeo. from Yoko hama for Near Voile and Furs I g.98 inmmings, run satin nnea, LI 1 1 OtlllU 14.85 fall shade, coats, etc. These coats are and $65 each, jour C i , a : .1 , r 35 epicjium iiSMiu uucui AT $6.98 scarfs for winter. These are and sable foxes, Qfi dress bats, elaborately QL and foliage, ribbons, fancy aJJ 1 lllv all desirable furs. Beautifully $5 49c AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA City Council Prepares to Ball BigIasm of Befnnding Bonds, FIVE PROPER BIDS OPENED AT MEETING Wide Variance In Offers Owing to Misunderstanding; ot Terms, and Finance Commute Will Act la Making; Sale. While an Immense amount of routine bus iness was transacted by the city council at Its meeting last night, the feature was the opening of bids for the sale of $21,000 refunding bonds. This Issue runs for twenty years, and draws S per cent Interest, Six bids were opened. Five had the certi fied check for $1,000 enclosed, while one bid from an eastern city was sent in with out the check. There was a great variance In the amount of premium offered. This was accounted for by some ot the bankers present as a misunderstanding regarding the five-year option clause. After discuss ing the five bids for half an hour or more, the council referred all the bids to the finance committee with power to act. An ordinance waa read for the first time amending the present fire limit ordinance and enlarging the district. The new dis trict comprises the territory from J street on the north to O street on the south from the Union Pacific tracks on the west to the alley between Twenty-third and Twenty fourth streets on the east. This ordinance was sent to the Judiciary committee for consideration. Chairman Welith, of the judiciary com mittee, reported favorably on the water works amended franchise ordinance and the report was adopted. City Attorney Murdock was instructed to Gold Medal At Pan-American Exposition. Unlike Any Others! Tbe full flavor, tha delleioua qual ity, the absolute Purity, of Low ney's Breakfast Cocoa dIstlnfTlUa It from all others. No "treatment" with alkalies; no adulteration with flour, starch or ground cocoa sheila; nothing but tha nutritive and digestible product of the choloaat Cocoa Bean a Salt Your Dealer for It i' aiSSI -W-AJ VIVu FASHIONABLE THANKSGIVING SPECIAL-MEN'S SWELL OVERC0A1 Every man wishes to appear at his best in Thanksgiving attire. We have arranged for a special sale of the most stunning over coats in our stock, which presents an opportunity such as has never before been given at-this lime. We have gathered the swellest, newest and most up-to-date hand-tailored overcoats, some that have sold as high as $16.50, $18.00 and $20.00, and grouped them for one great day's selling at $10.00 each. These coats are made in the belted backs, new tourist shapes, skirted effects, etc., that are so highly fashionable this season. The most remarkable Thanksgiving offering ever made by any house in the west. Thousands of overcoats to choose from, tomorrow morning at 8 o'clock your choice for , , MerTs High Grade Suits at $10. A splendid lot of high grade winter suits, made in the latest coats and fabrics tomorrow at Handsome Overcoats and Suits at $12.50 Elegant overcoats and suits, made in every late idea the new novelty cloths, h'.nd fitted collars, etc, -fl fe h a stunning overcoat for Thanksgiving P S J 1 wear at Brandeis Spjcial Here are overcoats and suits made under our own special supervision every one of the selected materials and made by skilled tailoring experts L ! - .l ilt m -a J.UU unci- Bciw kucii nne cioining cuereu at , The Finest Clothing in America. Rogers, Peet & Co;s Overcoats and Suits. fltlUttilJ reauy-io-pux uiaiea paaies. ine Jtogers-reet Essentially a clothing for the BOYS' AND CHILDREN S CLOTHING FOR f Boys' Overccats and Suits, of all wool materials, nloely nttlng1, your choice, third floor, at Boya' Fretty Overcoats and Suits. in the very latest ideas, your choice, at commence suit against the Rock Island railroad for $400, being the amount due the city for maintaining electric street lights at grade crossings used by the Rock Is land. George Nicholson gave notice .that he would start suit against the city for $5,000 damages! He alleges that on the evening of October 31 he fell on a defective sidewalk at Thirteenth and M streets and broke his right leg, besides suffering other Injuries. The claim was referred to the city at torney. A large number of complaints about the assessment of taxes for grading and sewers were read and referred. In most of the complaints the tender was made to pay the principal of the tax providing the Interest was deducted John P. Breen sent In a bill for services as special counsel In the case of the city against C. Bevin Old Held In the bond deal of a year ago. Final estimates for the grading of C street from Twenty-sixth to Twenty-seventh streets, amounting to $281. and the final estimate for grading Twenty-first street from 8 to W streets, amounting to $213, were allowed. A. request for an electric street light at Forty-second and 8 streets was referred to the lighting committee. Some of the residents In the northern part of the city remonstrated against the grad ing of C street from Twenty-third to Twenty-fourth stree in the manner contem plated. The remonstrators want the street graded its full width of eighty feet and not sixty feet as planned. No action was taken on the remonstrance. Adjourned for one week. Board Lets Contract. Last night the Board of Education met and let the contract for the construction of the new high school building. T. C. McDonald secured the contract, his bid be ing $74,475. Mr. McDonald agreed to erect the building according to the specifications of John Latenser, the architect, and to have It completed by October 1, 1904. Three other bids were received they were: Hughes &. Son, Council Bluffs, $S3, 900; Carter & Alcox, South Omaha. $79,143; Rocheford & Gould, Omaha. $79,948. The architect's estimate was $75,000. It was decided to give teachers and pupils a vacation Thuisday and Friday of this week on account of Thanksgiving. . It was the original Intention to hold school on Friday, but so many of the teachers desired to spend Thanksgiving out of the city that a change In the original order was made. The Christmas holiday vacation will com mence on Wednesday, December 23. Schools will reopen on Monday, January 1. Bud Clark Arrested. Yesterday the police arrested "Bud Clark and locked him up on a charge of bigamy. It Is asserted by Chief Brlggs that Clark has a wife In South Omaha and another In Council Bluffs. For some time past Clark has been living with one wife here at Twenty-sixth and M streets. Through an acci dent it was discovered that he had a wife and another home In the Bluffs. The arrest of Clark is particularly grati fying to the police here, as the prisoner has been wanted for some months. Along In the early part of the summer Clark stole a calf out of a pasture near Thirteenth street and Missouri avenue. A warrant was sworn out for his arrest and the document given to Officer William McCrallh to serve. Mc Cralth found Clark eating dinner and did not like to disturb him. When tha meal waa finished Clark said that he would go Into the bed room and get his coat and then go right along. Instead of returning to the kitchen where the officer was waiting Clark Jumped out of a window and took to tbe timber along the river bank. A thor ough search wss made but Clark could not j be found. Officer McCralth waa suspended ' from duty and tried by the Fire and Police Hoard. A plain statement was muds by McCralth and he waa restored to duty after NEW OVERCOATS AND SUITS MEN'S SWELL OVERCOATS AT $10 0 $10 Overcoats and Suits on-ciotning tnat is nindw in clothing has a stvle all nf t well dressed man. $17. f) in tl ine New Russian nilitary Effects -fc f r lc boy s handsome overcoats. KJ J bright colors, at " S S The H chest Qrade Little (ivercoats ind suits n s. k, all the new oolors, in military -and Jtussian . CTr C? overcoats, the smart little fcuu, every one the rft ! latest novelty style, at $3.09 up to... -' 1.98 2.49 being cautioned to be more careful In the future. Merely an Incident. In speaking; of the trip of the live stock delegation to , Fort Worth Secretary Guild tells of an Incident which occurred in Kan sas on tho way south. "During the night the rear sleeper of our train broke away and remained standing on the track while the engineer went ahead with the train, not discovering his loss. The porter on the car In which we were In tried to put on the air and thus s,top the train. He found the pipes frozen and consequently the engineer kept on pulling ahead. The porter on the lone car way behind knew that an excursion train was not far behind and getting out a red lantern he ran back quite a distance and flagged the excursion train. While the porter -was flagging the excursion train one of the trainmen bad crawled over the tender and notified the engineer. The train backed down and picked up the lone sleeper. The passengers In the last sleeper did not know anything of the accident until they were told about It In tha morning. But that was Just one of the Incidents." Testing Milk Aaln. Inspector Jones gathered In sixteen sam ples of milk from wagons on the street yesterday and made the customary test. Complaint had been made to the inspector that persons In certain parts of the city were being served with poor milk. It was for the purpose of finding out the par tic. ular dealer that was adulterating his milk that the test was made. Of tha samples examined fifteen showed over three per cent butter fat, only one not standing the test. A soon as the Inspector found out the name of the dealer whose milk fell be low standard he started out to find him An arrest under the milk ordinance will most likely be made. Turkeys for Rale. Last evening we received a car con taining SO0 turkeys. Those wanting turkeys for Thanksgiving can secure prices by cal ling South Omaha telephone No. 390. Harry Guthrie, Twenty-fourth and K street.''. Car Rails Spread. Street car rails at tbe west end of the Q street viaduct spread yesterday while a loaded car was passing over them. The heavy planking on the bridge was torn up for a distance of nearly 100 feet. Street car traffic across the viaduct has been sus pended while repairs are being made. One car will run on Q street from Twenty seventh street to the end of the line. This track was laid only a short time ago and street car officials do not understand why the rails spread. Maale City Gossip. Attorney P. A. Wells leaves today for Of unequalled value as a household beverage. r. Mmti mi : $15 Overcoats and Suits at $5.00 Basement Special A special In good quality durable overcoats and sultA, on sale In the . basement at , $5 IIANKSG1VING Chicago to cpend wife. Thanksgiving Tilth Ms The banks and city office will be closed an uay mursaay. A daughter has been born to Mr. Mrs. Martin Tisrhe. 2iW9 T street. and J. A. Vail left yesterday for Phoenix, Arizona, where he will spend the winter. Mrs. Denna A liber y will Irave .oday for St. Louis, Mo., where she will Join ner hus band. Joseph Koutsky returned last night from a few days" stay at his farm In Nuchons county. contractor Welae expects to have public library building under roof by the the Engineer Beal had the city trading mu. chine at work yesterday as the frost is practically out of the ground. A meeting of the Fire and Police board Is to be held this evening. It is expected that several patrolmen who have been sua. pended will be tried for violating the rules of the bard. TlianksKrivina services will h.i.i cnurcn. lciftAont I. ..... Madison streets, Thursday evening: at 7 'io o'clock. Rev. W. 11. tn.mh.n.1, .in ' duct the services. " ' vu" The Ladies' Aid society of the Flwt Pres byteriau church expect to clear about $160 hy .,n8,.,un"'y "lo,e and flr held last week. This money will go towards buylna a pipe organ for the church. " ' There will be u special meeting of South ' Omaha Odd Fellows at tha halt, Twenty fourth and M streets, at 7 o'clock this sffifc vt'th'ad Allows &ra:0U'"U THINK HUBBARD PARTY LOST Latest Report from Labrador lays Xothlna; Hesardin Expedition from Aevr York. ST. JOHNS. N. F.. Nov. 2L-The last mall steamer to return from the coast of Labrador brings no report of the party headed by Leonldas Hubbard, Jr., of New York, which started from Rlgolet, Lebra dor, August luat to explore the Interior of Labrador. The coast la blocked with Ice floes and the snowstorms have covered the country with snow to a depth of fifteen feet. I It is the general opinion that the members of the Hubbard party have perished. DANIEL FR0HMAN IS MARRIED Weds Msrasret Illlnton, Who Wilt Continue nllh Japanese Mahtlngale Company. NEW YORK. Nov. 21-tjinouncement was made today that Daniel Frohman and Margaret Illlngtuu, who la playing the leading part In "A Japanese Nightingale" at Daly's theater, were quietly married yestcrduy by Judge Henry Bischoff of tha supreme court. Mlas Ullngton will con tinue In the 'Jtpanese Nightingale" until the conclusion of her contract with Klaw & Erlang?r, when she will retire from the stage.