JNIK BKK: OMAHA, hATl'KDAV, MtVKMIthU Jl. l!U. PASTOR STUDIES CENTURIES'! History Relation to Religion Theme of Rabbi Cohni Sermon. BEGINS WITH THE FIFTEENTH tsurrta !! Discovery -t Sew Wart AIM Marked Beln of Xew TMnaa Morally, latel-lec-tnally and Socially. .IOUN A. SWANSON, President. ta WM. L HOLZMAN, Trrn-iiror. "The Soul of the Centuries." a new sertea of dissertations dealing with his tory's relation to religion, is the subject which Rabbi Frederick Cohn has selected for a year's study. In the first of these lectures entitled The Fifteenth Century; the New World." delivered last night, Rabbi Cohn sal3" "I puiposo to exomlne each century with a view to ascertaining Its essential yplrit or soul.' In our study of the centuries we shall begin with the fifteenth century, for all the centurlos that went before were in h manner but the preparation for this wonderful century; this century, itself the beginning of a great era of human history. It Is the transition century that marks the definite division ot the new Irom the old. the distinct separation of past views of life from the dominant con ceptions of the world in which we live." Rabbi Cohn said that aa the discovery of America, marked the discovery of a new world, so that same year and cen tury marked the beginning of a new world, morally, religiously, intellectually, politically and socially. with ' the fifteenth century the medieval era comes definitely to an end I and humanity enters positively and confidently upon the moaorn period, the ( period in which we live, which is so alive ! and thrilling and so lnatinct with hope J and promise for the days that are to be. New Methods Adopted. "What was the soul ot th fifteenth century? It was the soul of the break up of the old and the dawning of the new: It wai the eoul of invention and discovery; of mankind entering upon j new paths and making trial of new j methods. For one thing it was the awak- I tnlng of tha soul after the long, ten centurted aloep of the mldJla ages. The human Intellect and the whole mental life of man wcro reborn. "Tha fifteenth century was the century of the renaissance which, taking Its rise in beautiful, cultured, artistic and fascinating Italy, spread thence to all Europe and ultimately to all tha world. The fifteenth century witnessed the so called 'revival of learning;' the resur rection of art and culture, the resur rection of reason, the general stimulation and kindling of all the Intellectual facul ties, due to renewed acquaintance with the ancient and classical literatures ot Greece and Rome, made possible by the discovery of ancient manuscript, and Im mensely furthered by tha newly-dts- . . - I II i . . . lici AlMnjlt coverea rv 01 jinming. uum wv, .ai'ai. the very year when Constantinople fell (1453) sending forth hosts ot ' Greek scholars to occupy professional chairs in the newly-rising universities and to ex plain the old masters In the' new spirit and In accordance with the newljr -acquired knowledge. "Scholasticism . gave way to . modern eclentifio- knowledge. With the rebirth ot reason '.vas ajready planted the seeds that were to arouse and quicken the " conscience; and Renaselance was Instinct with Reformation that was to characterize the succeeding century and with revolu tion In England and in France that was to be the dominant fact in the subsequent seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. New Idea Still Retained. ' 'In, that springtime of the human ep!rit the life was germinating that was to come to blossom in the succeeding centuries and that fills with beauty and fragrance and expanding power the , activities and forces of the day in which we live. The nineteenth and the twen- i tleth centuries are no less unoer the j bpell and spirit ot the Renaissance than were their predecessors; and th? new age inarches on to the music awakened out of the marvellous melodies of the past, . and particularly out ot the matchless achievements ot that century that Is rightly regarded aa leading the van in humanity's all-conquering progress toward tho goal of civilisation and ot life. "For the lesson of the centuries ia tho lesson of progress. As a great Binger has expressed It: "Yet I doubt not thro' the ages one increasing purpose runs and the thoughts ot men are widened In the pro ven of the suns.' I "And of hope; for I believe we shall not j conclude these lectures without feeling, with Senator Hoar, that today Is better than yesterday, and tomorrow will be belter than today.' " i . my f i , , wywf "V ,m iM4 wewww J ih I IvT (Eraei CUniax Gate Week JOHN A SWANSON . PR ES Free Anniversary Souvenir Saturday will be the last day of bur Soooud Anniversary celebration and free distribution of Souvenirs. With every cash purchase of $2o or more throughout the store, we will give absolutely free a $12.50 Gold Piece as n token of our appreciation for the notable success you have helped us to achieve in our new and greater store. Accept this gift with our compliments. Remember, Saturday it the last day of anniversary week and $2.50 gold pieces free. l.SSMllM n,t j Kraft: in a . a T HI I i - a r 7 u - V u c u w www- yy HO Free Anniversary Souvenir Ovcrwlicluiiug surprise is being manifested by the hundreds of peo ple attending our Second Anniver- sarv muo - a great iiouuie aiiraciion greets everybody. Thousnnds of do lars' worth of higli grade clothing bought at a big redaction from over stocked manufacturers and s.dd as bought the greatest values ever offered in Omaha and besides we offer A $2.50 Gold Piece with each indi vidual cash purchase of $25.00 or more throughout the store. 2L LZMAN SATURDAY Thousands of Men's and Young Men's $15.00 to $35.00 Suits, Overcoats and Balmacaans Four mammoth groups that will make clothing history Saturday: $ Gray, Heather and Brown Balmacaans -..$10 Black and Oxford Chester field Overcoats $10 Warm Shawl Collar Chin: chilla Overcoats $10 Convertible Collar Taney Cheviot Overcoats. $10 Tartan Plaid and Pencil ' Stripe Suits $10 Fancy Worsted and True Blue Serge Suits $10 Two and 3-button Suits, all sizes up to 46-inch chest .....$10 $15 Values, Saturday at $10 $ Tartan and Velvet Collar Balmacaans $15 Blue, Brown and Gray Chinchilla 0 'coats.. $15 Silk lined Oxford Vicuna Chesterfields $15. Shawl collar and convert ible fancy overcoats . $15 Ulsters, ' Ulsterettes, Guard Coats, Motor Coats $15 Overplaid, pencil stripe and Heather mixture Suits. . .$15 Two and 3-button single and double breasted Suits .... $15 $20 Silk lined, oxford Vicu na Chesterfields. .$20 Scotch Heather Plalrt and Chinchilla Bal macaans $20 Shawl Collar Chinchilla and fancy 0 'coats $20 Black Kersey, Velvet collar Chesterfields $20 Glen Urquhart, Fancy Worsted and Cheviot Suits $20 Gold Fiond True Blue Serge Suits, all sizes $20 Two and 3-button single and double breasted Suits - . .$20 $30 Values, Saturday at $20 Skinner Satin lined Vicu na & Melton 0 'coats $25 Genuine Worumbo Chin chilla Balmacaans and Overcoats $25 Scotch Tweed Ulsters, Ul sterettes & Motor Cts $25 Pencil and Hair line Dou ble Breasted Suits. . .$25 Foreign Worsted and Che viot Suits $25 Tartans, Overplaid and pin stripe Suits ....$25 Full silk lined Full Dress Suits . $25 $3S Values, Saturday at $25 $20422.50 Values. Saturday, $15 $2.50 GOLD PIECE FREE WITH CASH PURCHASES OF $25X0 OR MORE THROUGHOUT THE STORE SATURDAY. " Men's Finest Chesterfield Overcoats Men's Smart Furnishings Galore Largest showing of America fs best known lines Tho special pride of this new and greater store is our wonderfully complete stock of fashionable furnishing goods. Every well known maker has bom drawn upon until each and every dept. in this establishment is practically a store in itself. Vassar, Superior, Duofold and Ritesize Union Suits, $1 to $5. Manhattan, Arrow, Yorke & Bates Street Shirts, $1 to $3.50. Pennsylvania Sweaters in all sizes and colors, $3.50 to $7.50. $1.00 Union Suits. Saturday, at.... 60c ft. OO Flannelette Night Robes, at.. OOc 91.00 Hearr Ilibbed Union Suits, at Sl.OO $1.00 Negligee Shirts, Saturday, at.. 70c Men's Mackinaw Coats (Jenuinc ob to 38-oz. fab rics. Beautiful new plaids and plain tones. All tho new color combinations. All sizes. Largest showing in the city. $7.50 to $15.00 values $5, $752, $10, $12! A notable sale of highest grade garments A backward season caught some of America 'h finest wholesale tailors" with too many goods, Overcoats were a dniff on the market for weeks. We bought right and left at our own prices and now we pass the benefit on to you in these . t ' ' Luxurious Skinner Satin Lined Chesterfields made of Montegnac, St. George Kersey, Carr XXX- Melton, English Vicuna and German unfinished worsteds. $H0.00 llieNterfirldft, at. $10.00 Chentcrfieldn, at .$10.00 $50.00 C'licfcterrieMN, .$.10.00 f.'I.VOO Chedler fields, at at ANY$2.00$ifiC Hat at 1 ANY $2.50 $ QC Hat at 12E ANY $3.00 $oiC Hat at Lll JOtiH A SWANSORmi. vn L noiZMAN.v -1 M M I I CORRECT APPAREL FOR MEN AND WOMEN AH Members of the Crooker Expedition Well Late in August NEW TORK. Nov. 20. All the mem beri of tha Crocker land expedition, headed by Dr. Donald B. MacMtllan, were well on Aug-uit 29, according to a letter written on that date by Elmer Ekblaw, geolovlst ot the party. Part of Ek- blaw'a letter waa made public today by Kdmund Otla Hovey, chairman ot the committee in charge of the expedition. The letter waa written aboard K. Rae musaen's motorboat in a i aging eca Juat aouth of Cape Alexander. In it Mr. Ek blaw aaya: "By a (trance freak of luck aa Jot Small and I were fleeing before a atorm ! TURKEY TWENTY-FIYE CENTS Feitive Birds on the Market at Two Bits Per Found. APPLES AT REASONABLE PRICES Price, Accord I a to the Variety, la (rota Tweatjr-f ivc Ceati Per Peck I'pwarda -Pork Makea AdTiae. ' No. 1 turkeya can be had for a quarter a pound next week for the Thankaglvlnf dinners, according to the promise of some of the dealers. It ia stated, however. that they will be none too plentiful at that. They are being shipped to Omaha from Kansaa City, where they have been gathered from the tanna and ranches of Kansas and Texas. The dry-picked turkeys will sell at a 1 .,- ht IS renin a puond, while lraf lard ia 12H cents wholesale. -v. Cabbage is abundant and cheap. While last year it was ISi cents and 3 cents a pound, and pood aolld quality at that Aiies are still reasonably cheap. Choice wlnesapa In special cratea can be had at 11.40 a bushel. Oood gano apples can be had at 25 cents a peck. Sugar has made a welcome drop until it can be bought much as It was before the European, war scared .the consumer and gave the magnate their opportunity. It can bo bought now at nineteen pounds for a dollar. BACK FROM THE SUFF MEET Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Sumney Have Important Parts in Convention. TRIBUTE TO J. L. KENNEDY fcaffraflats Spead More Money la Nebraska Campaign Tha a In Any Other State Darts the Repeat Election. quarter, while the acaided will be about in our little motorboat we met Knud , 3 centa cheaper. Scalded fowel la always Rasmussen'a boat on lta way to Etah , cheaper because it doea not keep aa well with our mall and supplies. Both n.otor-1 1 tock. The theory Is that when acaided boats attempted to get by Cape Alexan-; the pores of the skin remain open and der. but, unable to do so, we have turned I the flavor ot the bird is not aa well pre- back to our camp. Since hla motorboat aerved as in the dry-picked. must start back at once there will be no chance for our lettera, cable messages and mall to get back to you." "Evidently." Mr. Hovey explained, "the atorm which was raging when Mr. iik blaw'a letter was written, and the fact that he was going back to Etah, kept Mr. flasmussen from continuing his Jour ney to the Crocker land party's head quarters. Mr. Rasmus en apparently felt obliged to put back to North (star bay for fear of getting caught in the ice at Etah." DR. SEDGWICK MINOT. ANATOMIST IS DEAD BOSTON. Mass.. Nov. 30.-Dr. Sadg wirk Mlnot. a noted anatomist, died last night. He was professor of histology and embryology at Harvard Medical school and directory of the anatomical labor atory at (hat institution. Jn 1912 and lt13 Pr. Mi not was Harvard exchange professor at the univeraltica of Berlin and Jena. He was 61 year old. Ducks are promised at 20 centa a pound for the week. Geese are quoted at IS centa Cranberries of good quality are celling at TV centa a pound, and celery can be had two bunches for a nickel. That completes the principal features of a Thanksgiving dinner within a reasonable price. Beef is holding quite steady. There Is an Inclination on the part of the buyers to keep away from the beef market on account of the foot and mouth disease scare, in spite of the fact that repeated Inspections have shown the stock la Omaha to be In excellent shape. This tendency has thrown a greater demand upon pork. Pork loins are 18 centa a pound and pork chops 20 cents. Lambs are li a hundred higher whole sale than they were a few weeks ago. They sell from l! W to $17 a hundred wholesale. Lamb chops are retailing at a quarter a pound, while a few weeks ago they could he had for 20 cents. Lard ia up. Rendered lard is retailing TWO MEN WHO STEAL WARM DUDS FROM CAR ARRESTED Cold weather is alleged to have caused Jack Prince an.l John Clem, transients from Butte, Mont., to break into a Union Pacific box car and steal warm coats and glovea from freight shipments, and then to have remained tn the car, In order to get warmed up. They wera ar reated in the car at Grand Island by special agents 01 tne rauroaa and are now In jail under a government charge, aa the goo la alleged to have been atolcn were part of an Interstate ahlpment. THREE NEW DEPUTIES FOR LOCAL REVENUE SERVICE . Three new deputiea have been added to the Internal revenue service for Nebraska under the emergency revenue act paaaed by congress on account ot the war. Their appointment were necessary because of the Immense amount ot extra work oc casioned by the new war taxes. Tha appointees are Hubert J. Tanner, son of ex-fiute Beniitor J. M. Tanner of South Omaha; John Borgnoff of Omaha and Thomaa Carroll of Fremont TOWNSEND MAY PROSECUTE COLD STORAGE HOUSES City Engineer Watson Townsend Is threatening police court prosecution If cold storage houses persist In throwing feathers Into the sewers. The lower Famam street aewer has been clogged up several times recently by an accumu lation of feathers Mrs. Draper Smith and Mrs. Herbert C Sumney returned Thursday from the National Woman Suffrage association convention held lait week at Nashville, Tcnn. Mrs. James fllchaidson and Mrs. E. M. Berkley of Llnroln. the remaining members of the Nebraska delegation, stopped In St. Loirta to spend a few days, the Nebraska women took active part in the meeting's procedure. Mrs. Bark- ley served on the election committee and Mrs. Sumney on the resolutions commit tee. Mrs. Smith waa o-., the program with a report of the Nebraska campaign. Mrs. Sumney was also appointed to serve on the national membership committee. The Nebraska delegation attended th breakfast tendered the national board by the campaign states' delegations Sunday morning. Opposition tn Pr. Khaw. Mrs. Sumney staled that tha effort to oust Dr, Anna Howard thaw from the presidency was not a concerted move ment, but was only backed principally by the Congi-esau hal union. "The Massa chusetts women were the only ones who talked it up, one ot them having ap proached me, but even they were di vided. They offered Dr. fhaw the posi tion of president enr rltus, which she de clined berauxe, ahe said, the conatitu Hon did not provide for such an office, and she was even willing to suffer de feat if need he, but she would be a can dldate." Mia. Bumney told of Dr. Shaw's public tribute to John L. Kennedy for li Is work in the cause. UI.e said also that in her opinion Nebraska had not done Its duty. by the national association. "Other slstes, especially the eastern ones, donate large sums to the national organisation, while we In Nebraska always look for aid from the natlonnl and n ver contribute any thing to It." She said that the national had spent more money in Nebraska dur ing the last campaign than in any o.-er campaign state excepting Ohio. BOYS EN TO BE CANDIDATE FOR THE CITY COMMISSION P. J. lloyeen, well known Omaha busi ness man, is to be a candidate for nomt -nation for city commissioner, according to announcement authorised by him. He la one of the first camMdutes to come for ward, with the exception or those com missioners seeking re-tlectlon, although dlsousslon of the proepects of many ap plicants la current. A Piping Hot Dish 3r N. For Wintry Nights Jr There's sothinf finer than a teaming' hot dish of Fangt Spaf bettl a a cold eight. It warms you up satisfies your hunger. It 'a strengthening, and makea rich, savory meal. You can make a meal for n whole family from a 10c package of Tauat Spaghetti. Cook with tomatoes, serve with grated cheese. Watch the folka smack their lips. rcmrfVti W . J f . nn.Ly,,. fifu t4lH lTl ! - ' MAUIX BROTHERS, St tub. Me. m !aiMMa i 1 , f.;l.YOO .925.00 Anniversary Souvenir Offer of a $2.50 Gold Piece Free applies to all departments Women's as well as Men's Wearing Apparel Great Sale of Men's Fall Hats ofLridLri n:t Men's $3.50 to $7.50 Trousers tJiyVIVyjimViVMgMUyU, Thousands of mn Specially SoCA .rA .tf.nn Priootl Saturday at 621, . ', . AMt'BEMEflTg... BRAflDEIS Joday MAT, 130 ITS. 1,11 LAST TWO T fee KB ,5ssae Walters Dramatisation of tb TBAii. or rum loxssoki . with UabeUe Lost m Jua" AT MAT., 8 Be a i T., tS. t. fl.go. laaday Matinee aaa -Brealng, Her. 12, SARAH PAB8EN "ZrXZiX , "OMAHA-a rvar czwtsb r i buy th.. .m. ...in, oi ... 1 1 AST TIMES TODAY terlal. the) best, fur uaa lu my .at. LHU I I IlilLU I UUH I g;J5 ing plat-.a aa I use tn my home. VOU OLD rt AT uni So matter what you pay elaewbor. PRUNO. rM I WW ft I I U. you ara not getting bettar. and ,nd THE BI3 JUBILEE KJSaoUR seldom a. gooU food .. yo will iadius)' zm MAT, Hun, Wk.: Andy Lewie & "Dreamland" The Pure Food Siffn. JlfX; ' Qaickserv Cafetens EVA LANG GHAS. MILLER And tiwIH, Hlarar In llaaeuient City Wat! Itenk Bldg, "THE TYPHOON " J?T sS! ph..-. . SIB oUlh lotli hU week of Vorimbn 83, "Viae eathars." I40Q isuuglaa 8L i APERICAII i47c" ' - Tonight aad gat. Mat. aaa Wight. AHI'IEMBXTI. Tha Woodward Stock Co rreseattag . dee. Ade'a root Sail Comely, frVvVl r.K . . "TM COLLEGE WIDOW" WaXu5VVtCCv b0D,4Q4 "Th lmm VVW)t Poug. a7T First Apyeaieaoe of Mr. Sdward fcyaaa. Advanced VaudOVlllo makaii fam)iTxmr CVBTAXjr TOVIOKT . 8:10 AUDITORIUM rrtcea: O.ll.ry. 0c; B..I Beats, ,.,0.7se RQLLER SKATING HIPPii,!,""!,,, Season Open. Saturday Mght. X.ast Time Todaj, Chaa Kiohmaa U November Slat. TM mam rM moau." GOOD KKATES and FINE FLOOR ryrtB& n,U? Admlsslo, 10c; Skate. aOc Tarpin's Dancing Academy 28th and Farnan Zh New class for beginner, nest Monday and Thursday, t . m. Advaneag elaas Tuesdays, t p. tn. Uy-to-dale danuaa are alandardlsed and eaey to leara, rrlvat. tUs.oaa ally. Aaaeasnly Heat Satarday areata. KABsTBT Uti I