Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 07, 1915, EXTRA, Page 2, Image 2
THE BEE: OMAHA. "WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER G, 1915. v. n ft ) E Dr. Jchyll and Mr. as Subject of "Billy" Sunday apta lt nlahl on the . topic. ''Vv. Jrkyll and Mr. Hyde. He, Mid: fltevrnson alwaya had a liking for al legory, but hla pow rachl the hlh ot einrraalon In hla horfV "Dr. Jckyll and Mr. Hyde." This will always be rejtardpd aa a maatfrplrce. The ned-thought of thla appalllns; fable la familiar to all. It'a the old, old atory of the vitally prwnt ar In ovr rnembera. In which the hlh t and lowrt. the p:rat and v.loal rnllmt for a war to the hilt, that man la .not one. but two, and In the field of i-ntm lounneM the two naturea fight. Thla pmblrm of the duality of two radlrally different naturea houeed In the oarne body haa held the attention and ferlnted the thought of earneat men of all area. It la not a problem for the clolatered theologian It la an In tnaely practical problem In many hac, which we me-t at avery turn of the road In our dally life. The atory had t-en written In many wmjKh before Kttve4i tranalated It In the language of hla terrible work. Stey nson and all othera, however, owe the rtet debt to tha New Testament. It waa &t. Paul who really wrote the plot of thla atory In the aeventh and eighth chaptcra of Roman, which Btev-i-nion Infn translated Into the languaiit of our day a Dr. Jckyll and Mr. Hyde. Name thla problem what you will. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the war In our members, . conflict of flesh and aplrlt and original In any one of a hundred names tha labola are not Important, but you are compelled to face thla prob lem every day. Every day In life you have aeen a man with a loving heart tear hla hair over aome hateful, mean thing ha haa aald or done to on ha loved. If I had known In the morning How wtaii.v all the day. The worde unkind would trouble my mind. I miu when you went away. 1 would have been more careful, darling. Nor given you neell-ea pain. Hut we vex our own,, with look and tone, . VTemlglit never take back again. Tou have aeen a generoua man adding away In "elflxh greed; you have aeen a truthful man smarting under tho acourge of hla own 11c; you have aeen a vlrtuoua man taahed by tha conaclous neaa of vice, you have aeen a aober man ihoatilng In repentance for having been drunk. Tou have had a quiet hour of ' prayer and meditation Invaded by elime tnd atalned by tha wickedest, of thought, which, unbidden, troop. Into . your mind Ilka a brood of vulture. We aee It In aclence. Home mlaguided aclentlala have recently auccceded In producing a diabolical fooL By graft lng the portion of ona Inaect onto tha body of another they have made new organlama, In 'which are Joined belnga of directly oppoalta naturea, mlaerabla creature with a ctaah of Irreconcilable Writhe aa Two NiOrn atrasale. Imagine, If you can, a spider-butter fly. On with paaaion for the sunshine, one with love of darkneaa. Ona with a longing for rosea, the other with a thlrat for blood. Tha epldr nature de vouring the butterfly.. Imagine a wolf lamb. Thii terrlb'a fact haa , It representa tion In literature. Hawthorn picture Hodertck tlflaton cut r.. lng In hla boiorn an enormou green anake, Icy cold the entire' length of it bady, carrying tha deadlleat polon in ita atlng. It at Into and abaorhad hla . very being; It atung him when h thought of hi brother good qualities; It gava him pleaiure when calamity and rhlifortun overtook a friend; It gava him aupernat ural insight Into tha deepeat faults of 'others, and took supreme delight la polng these. , It turned hla fact Into a alckly green, ml tie,! In- with 'a natural deadly white; It put potion Into tha breath; It aaver laughed, only at inlafortuna; It turned apeech Into a revolting hi, until ha waa a crawling and shuddering, wretch. That mi bad enough, but what made atnrdlng at the window, as he- brushes It worse, he became Wadded to thla re- away a tear, while hi ringers clench and .l.ulslv-M't lav. He had a longing to "ncjunch convulsively, and h orlea: : kind, but the vile overruled. One might "Would to Ood that I had a home like i.M content to be' Juat -snake, but to be1lht'" . . i aerpept and dove, vile and pure, is to Bravest Klaat la'Asjalast Appetite, struggle and writhe. In the bell of cen- j Ood Is In love with the beautiful. He "t. ntlon. paints the Illy, He distils the dewdrop, E.1r Allan roe,, with far more Insight, 'He mould the pearl, He arches the rain rt present this antagonism In William bow, He atuda the starry night. Ha gem Ulllson, who was constantly meeting a"1 ocean depth. He flecks the flowery kind, gemle being of the same name, with , 'fc'ld. He robes the mountains In snow. manner and voice wondrously Ilk hlluH In love with the beautiful. own. .-. This double dogged his footsteps. N thwarted evil purpo sea, dashed the cup fiom his lips. Intruded upon every tempt a- j tlon with uplifted finger of warning and Pleading vole. Finally, tormented and . r n Biraciro cy me impertinent intrusion n drew a rapier and thrust his gentle double J through, when the dying better Mlf ut- tered lhrS terrible word: r ' "Henceforth art thou also' dead dead ..to' the world. "dead" to heaven, 'dead te hope, dead to purity, dead to Ood. In me thou did exist, thou hast murdered ' thyelf.M - Paal'a Ptetare. All of this is la full accord with Paul's powerful picture of the moral degenera tion of a oul divided agalnat lUelf. But after all haa been read and laid aside, we inuat turn to Stevenson as the on who haa given ua the most dramatic, the moat powerful and the most terrible commentary on the seventh and eighth chapters of Romans, t la Ids strange atory of Dr.V Jekyll and llr. Hyde; he p itires Dr. Jekyll as a man. pure In hla life, of high Ideal, loving and kind, with generoua sympathies and aid charltlta. who In hi scientific Investiga tion In hi laboratory on day discovered a drug, which, when taken, dissolved hi Utter a If and released the vile, mean, lower nature. When be drank the drug Pr. Jekyll, the noble, pure, kind person, faded Ilk the breath on the mirror. The brute In him took the rein of Uf and drove like Jehu. The angel In him retired, the devil took the stage, bis body shrank and shriveled to fit the shrunken soul. When la the person of this brutish dwarf he Indulged with slaful glee and dtllght in outrageous things which h would not for his right arm do when be pr. Jekyll. . . He would outrage virtue and the de cencies of socle (y, and when the polio were on hi trail would dash Into his laboratory, drink the drug, and In the twinkling of aa eye change Into the re fined, gentle. Mod and virtueu Dr. Jekyll. He gave this vll Joner self a name Mr. Hyde. He slanted his handwriting backward, gav Mr. Hyde a handwriting of hi on. He opened a bank account for Mr. Hyde, mad hlia a real person, as real as Dr. Jekyll. For a long time be 41vda doufcl bfe, switching from Jekyll Hyde Taken . Sermon by Sunday 1 i to Hyde anil Hyde to Jrkyll. The druslh h.l no ri ilmlnntln aoMnn, would f, chanre Hyde to Jekyll an easily as Jekyll to Hyde. It waa the person taking tha drug who determined which It Would be. j One thing I note: Every time Dr. Jekyll. used the drug to release Hyde, Mr. Hyde grew stronger, until a lny came whan Hyde became stronger than Jckyll, and! ha found himself turning Into Hyde auto- matlcally,' without unlng the drug. L4f ' became unbearable, and the hcart-alck- cning story and in in victory ot neii as Mr. Hyde die. Ifrl-rfcU and Depth of llamaa 1.1 fe. With these stories I want to lay down a few facta: First, there la a Dr. every man, Tha possibilities 1 Jekyll In of heaven and hell lie concealed In every man, " Jesus-Judas. These two names Indl- p.t. ttlka hM il.nth. Iha ill I'lnl I i and tha depravity. Tha sraenlah of hu-l'"' u'von, h rteAMi..lt,vin wrouh man meanncs. I. found on tha tear- 'y " "I ' 1 L ' "V??" ... . ,, . ,..o tha faces of the dead staring stained page of history. For cruelty u who can equal Nero, who fiddled whll ... . . ' . , , ... I I have seen something more terrible Home burned; or Attlla. king of the .t. . . . " . . , t the fle, bleached, white face living . "'lone nw.tn.nt In .n .l.r,-r- t Ood;" or for bigotry, Queen Isabella of rpain, w no ain. i nave acpopuiaieu happy villages, rlih towns and fertile fields In tha holy name of religion;" for heartless cruelty, who ever equalled Caesar Uorgla, who would Invite hla enemies to banquet with him, and then deposit drota of poison In the wlnaT For pitiable . circumstance read ths auto blogiaphy of Pot, who said: "In Infancy I was fed on a mild concoction of liquor ' to keep ma quid." and who died ot de lirium tremens In the city of iialUmors, October 7, 1MB. Call II I a her Life. OIHieit, the . grav dlicger of Monte Carlo., where there ar more auloldes than any , spot on enrth, said that "IJfe Is a game vt chance." Life Is not a game of chance. We make our own fortuno, and then name It oliance or fate. Every man 1 the ar chitect of hla own fate. Chartee Htuart Parntll, the great orator, be lieved In luck and chance, and would not paa another on the stairway, would not sleep In room number thirteen, would not, sit in a room with three candles burring, would not begin a Journey on Friday, would not begin a new project In October, and yet ha fell, and the wurld gasped. Thsre la throbbing in (he breast of every man and every woman, of , the hurrying, pushing, rushing, surging crowd In the street, a 'force that woes them, pleads with them, call them to tha highest In life, as the sun kisses moisture Into the skies. I believe at heart nine-tenths want to be better than they are. I make no ex ceptions. Tou may brand one aa hard, cruel, reckless; I all!! plead hla cause. Ybu aak: "Does the drunkard and har lot want to be bettor T' Beyond any doubt, Iet me paint you a picture. Reeling down a street In some, city tonight' is someone who, for whisky's sake, has thrown away his aclf-rrapect, hla aelf controt, hi home, hi place among men. liook at him! Dirty, unshaven, un kempt! It would tag your faith In man kind to believe there la any leaning to ward the highest In him. ' , i A block farther down the atraet a glim mer of light attracts him. He stumbles toward the window to look In maybe for the, purpo of thrift. ' As he looks In he. soef the fragment of heaven transplanted on earth. On one side, of an open fire place, up the chimney of whloh sparkg are dancing with the poetry of disorder, there sits a young man, the picture of health. Tou can tell that honor Is his guiding star, and purity Is his law. Sprawling over Mm. with chubby arms aroand Ms neck and fingers tangled la hla hair, la a little boy, the worthy off spring of a noble father. On the other aids of the fireplace Is a young wife, holding In her arms a beau t' f nl girl, with tender Intimacy of mother hood. ' All the emotions and .memorise that the word home recalls to mind sweep through tha mind of the place of human driftwood It gripe one's heart to see poor Henry Jkyll's eye wet' with tear from his bondage to Mr. Hyde, and aee hi heart hUn out against hla breast, long, m to ,r Tho bravest fight a man ever made Is a A WELCOME RELIEF .3 i jVr.Jl7iiisVa7. .-v I S' SSw, iM ' - - . -.; -1 Sow ' that our PrivaU Stamp orr the nock f Bot t U unbroken. fluht agalnat phyrlcal appetite. Ona of the grvateat heroea In tha world Is the man who la struggling aralnat tha de mand of an Inflamed and dleordered phyclcal frama, w-hen ovary nerva cries out for drink. O what a battle! O how he flghta, hrw he Rtrugglea, how h cnnjure up fond so of the mother and child, that for their aakea ha may win! When the body master the soul, you hav a sinner: when the soul masters the body, you have a aalnt. They found soma time ago In Egypt a massive tomb of a princely yving man. buried alive I,Mn year ago. Within the dark chamber he had frantically fought fr life. There waa evidence of fearful stniggl. Hla body waa doubled, hi fln- gera clenched and the walla were atalned with blood. He had frantically battered the granite doors until tho flesh had fallen from hla bones I have seen men In a deeper dungeon. ,n drk"' ttUnnm. In a lighter grlo-tha Iitu-ti grip m an evil nauii. luincoin walked over the battlefield at Gettya- Iburg. after It had been baptised with tha I blind of that terrible conflict, and as he neaa and purity and tha next moment 1 have them crushed to the ground, gono forever. Tou will never know what a ! reputation la until you have Inst It. The soul la a gift from Ood. Tha soul can think with Ood, can talk with Ood, ! can act with Ood. The soul without Ood I la loneaome and and. What the ahell is to ths nut,' what tha skin Is to tha or ange, what the shoe la to the foot, what the caaket to tha Jewels, tha body la to the soul. The grandest moment In life la when we become conscious of a soul. Archaeologist hsve digged mnanlflcent cities from under the sand of centuries, have uncovered what they call "burled magnificence." There la In the hearts of men with whom we rub elbowa every day a "burled magnificence," but only Ood can uncover it. Jekyll and Hyde Alive Today. There Is a Mr. Hyde In every man who neutrallies and paralyses the aspir ations of Dr. Jekyll. Htevenaon was not in falrland when he wrote Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Mr. Hyde la alive today. There Is In the hearts of men a force which chains them and drags them In the dust. Society is organised around the Idea that men have a natural ten dency to sin This Idea Is back of every social and every criminal law on the statute books. Tou may not like the doctrine of original sin, but unless you are a moral idiot you cannot deny the fact that there Is an Inborn tendency to sin. Paul said, "What I hate, that I do. It Is no more I that do It, but sin that dwelleth In me. For the good I would, I do not; the evil I would not, that I do. I find a law when I would do good, evel Is present I aee another law. In my members, warring against the law of my. mind, bringing me Into the cap tivity of sin.'' Tho re are thousands who can sub scribe to tho statement Paul makes, who appreciate the sorry plight of Dr. Jekyll, whin they have reached the point where Mr. Hyde haa dominated. Listen I The story has a ray of light. Tour will Is still supreme; It Is still the pivot, of your destiny. Tou may say Tbq will take the throne of life. . T re Pie tares. In front of you tonight stands tha mlld-manered Jskyll, with pure and clean thoughts. On the other side crouches dwarfed, mean,, vile, low, mis shapen Hyde. He asks control. Neither can take control without your consent The drug In Stevenson's story had no discriminat ing action; It waa the will of the man taking the drug which decided what the result would be. Men try to avoid thla truth, lay blame on other thlnga, but you are at fault 1 Tou remember when Moses waa on the mount Aaron, whesa chief lack was backbone, who was like many people in our day, always a reprint of the one who had his ear last permitted and helped the wavering children of Israel to make out or ths earrings and trinkets the golden calf which they worshiped. Aaron even fashioned the calf with a graving tool; but when Mosea returned. Indignant at Aaron for following . the children of Israel, Instead of leaving them, Aaron, Ilka a whimpering oMld caught In a Jar of Jam, said, la ub atance: "Well. Mosea, Tm not to blame for the golden calf tha people brought ear ring, trinkets and Jewelry, and cast them into the fire, aa you might throw old latter Into the waste basket and out came this calf whloh you see." Tou see, Aaron tried to shift the re sponsibility for the Idolatry of the gol den calf onto the furnace, tried to make Moses believe that be threw gold Into the fire to get rid of It and upon Its own from that awful distress after eat ing, can bev ob tained by careful diet and the as sistance of . QOSimtsD'S STGLIACH D ITT ERS Ittones,8trength ens and assists the digestive system in every way. It is for Poor Ap petite, B e 1 c h i n tf. Blotting, Nausea and IncUgcation.-Try it. set of Ms own Initiative out walked a calf, perfect from It head to the end of It tall. tieorae K lot In "Adam Rede" tell of a Mr. Poyser, who s nt Molly, a mod- ' est, awkward girl. f r a mug of beer. ' When she returned Mrs. Pnyser began one of her famous tongue Inshlng. In humiliation and earltement Molly dropped the mug, which broke into a , thousand pieces on the rag-tone. Mrs. Poysi r cut loose like a broadside from one of our big battleships and In her agitation dropjied a beautiful piece of crockery which she waa holding. Im mediately ahe ennnjed her tune, put on a oft pedal and aald: "There do be tlmea when It aeema crockery Is bewitched and files out of one s hands like a bird," and ended with one of our comforting I'resbytprlan doctrines, "What la to be troka will be broke." Society Mast Share Itlame for Crime. Tou laugh at Aaron and Mrs. Poyser, but we have exactly the same tendency today to shift responsibility to some one elae. One man blames cusnedness on environment, and aays: "I waa born In the slum district, where twelve peo ple lived In one room; my father died when I was young, snd my mother was compelled to throw her unripe strength Into the care of the family, I was left home during the day, and roamed the street as the only piay-ground. natur ally I took on easy low morals of the street low, atandarda of my tenement surroundings. I am what I am, because of my early environment." Now I wlif not say one word to lessen tha enthusiasm for Improvement of the physical and moral environment of man kind. I firmly believe environment ha great effect upon character. I bellev If society permit any considerable pro portion to live in foul, unllghted rooms, where from eight to ten people live, cook, eat and sleep, working year In and year out from fourteen to fifteen hours every day; I believe If society allows deserving men to stagger along with leaa than a living wage; If society permits shoulders of widowed mother hood to be forced down under indus trial burden and throws the unripe trength of children Into the hopper of corporate greed, to be ground up Into dividends, that society must share tha reaounsiblllty of these people become criminal. If light causes a plant to lift Ita head and the flowers to swing in glad aban don, while darkneaa causes them to droop and wilt and die, It la reasonable that wholeaome living condltlone will make the battle for righteousness eas ier. 1 believe all thla, and I also believe that the church must throw her Influence more upon the aide of Justice and square dealing for the under dog, and in doing that it will be translating Into modern life the teaching of JesUs. . Nat a Playwhlas;.1 All thla is truth, but nt all of the truth. A man la not a mechanical play thing, In the hands of an arbitrary Ood. Tou have It In your power to aay "Tea" to right and "No" to wrong. . . Environment la only a part of the story of life. I can take a poisonous aeed and plant It In the beat and mrt wholesome soil, amidst the best surroundings, but it wit produce a poisonous plant Just the MAKE SURE that jour estate will be carefully managed and that your wishes will be carried out as stated iu your will and testament, by appointing the ' PETERS TRUST COMPANY to act as your Executor. ' The cost is no more than that allowed to an indi- ; vidua! acting in this ca pacity. . Write xis or call and see us for further particu lars. lltANAM)JMUr& I. HOTEL. S. HOTELTURPK "is fas ajusf tsa cm IT POWCLL ST. AT MARKCT SAN FRANCISCO Cvtar convchicncc n Coat'oar tunOPCAN PLAN, St. AND USSASt raj C C Au Bos Meet Trains sa i Iwinw IMllKMRItTI. BOYD 4M1M1S Will JV ' stats. Today aae ta ardiy. WesU's lrret aaa ast stasia Vewpaaa of las taaleaja; riereaee Mcor en aff la. Sail. Mkta, & te 1-61. fciskta, a 9aJjO. Wees Cm. 10 TB1XJT 1ST riOTVUl rltPX mm Sims. With a vile heart you will live -lie. for "tha heart is deceitful and des perately .wicked." etc. Poms shift the responsibility on their assoclatea. A miser who interprets all of lire In terms of dollars will unblush I'tgly tell you not to Name tnlaerll he; when he started In business the general policies of the business world forced him to adopt th principle "every man for himself, the devil take the bind meet" Home people will lay responsibility for their condition on the devil; but remem ber the devil can only tempt you. It's not fashionable, I know, to talk about the devil or about hell, but If the devil is gone he hs certainly left a llveiy office force. Tour will Is supreme. The seat of rellg Ion la not In lachrymal glands, not In handkerchief, but In your will. Ever let this one ray of hope be tetingutshed apd life becomes a blackened page. One of th law of nature 1 that the abuse or prosecution of any force or fac ulty must be paid for by the death of paralysis of that force or faculty. Dr. Jekyll at first would change Into Mr. Hyde only when he choae to change. Rvery time he released Hyde, Hyde be came stronger and more powerful, and harder to control. Dr. Jekyll died as Mr. Hyde, locked In. his laboratory, chained by the shackles of his lower self, with HiiOMPSON BELDEN & (p. n Millinery New Tork Ceachmen'a Mat Very Popular Already-4n the last weak or so the coachman's hat has beeom sud denly extremely popular with the bet tar das of trade. On can see hun dred of them worn by amartly dressed women on th atreets and in th hotel and eafe. Th material la mostly satin, hatter plush, occasionally even patient leather, and they always oom In black or other yery dark color. As to the shape, two distinct types are In vogue. The one whloh is seen In largs numbers haa a high sym metrical crown, converging more or less toward the flat top. The brim Is quits Barrow, often being Insigni ficant and always flat. The trimming consists of hat bands, sometimes using more then one on th same hat. and placed at varioue heights. A cockade, fancy or buckle la the (rent Is also often found. Ths other type la considerably low er and Is a replica of the men' high ilk hat, the low crown having the Idea curved. The brim attains often a width quite considerable In proportion to the height of the crown , and la shaped and curled. The trim ming usually consist of a faille hat band or a buckle la front. From Women Wer The Fashion Center of the Middle West Distinctive Suits for Women Desiring the Best '.:';;:V7''.:','.$.25V $35, $45, , $55; Av complete offering of choice Tailored Suits, em bodying all of the most attractive style sugges tions for the . Autumn of 1915. Coats Furs $5 and $6 SOROSIS SHOES Thursday $3.95 We were fortunate in securing another, large shipment of Sorosis Shoes in both lace and button patterns. $5 and $6 Values, Thursday, $3.95 , 1 AMIIEMENTI. MI'SF-MNT. Aiiukiiv T . Where the Omiha Bee Universal Animated Weekly May Be Seen FARXAM THEATRH CAMKRATHOICB OEM LOTAL PABTIMS LI RIO HA CUC HANSCOM ARBOR IVT rALACB DIAMOND BURT AUIO OMAHA, BKSSOM JTLORXXCX ' , L raeae TW Oatr HISS ballj alatliwa, Oaai TaaSmil Otkr Act this rk aulraaa. Uw GlllMt. Urltl Wd, Sllaa btMktft a O., ftryaa rh.rvkait, UrsoMai Tranl Wakiy. Irta Mat., Oallary, Uc; B Kla (.lo.pl st. s4 Su. L SM. Mtthta, Ita. Ua, aw a4 Ita. 8$ EDWAKSS on kCTOl shrieks of dlspalr, answered only b the echo of his sgony. as he fell baci. dead. Paul chained and shackled his lower self until It shrieked; "O wretched man that I am. who shall deliver tn?'' but before hla cry dird on the air Jesus was at his side and kissed the fever of sin from hla heart, and be went Into the pres ence of Ood with the laughter of redemp tion on his Hps. "Who shall separate ua from the love of Christ T Shall tribulation, distress, per secution, famln. nakedness, peril, sword ? I am persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor heights, nor depths, nor an other creature shall be able to sepsrnte i:a from the love of Ood In Jesus Christ our Lord." (Copyright William A. -Sunday) RAWITZER HEIRS ASSERT ' INSURANCE MUST BE PAID Heirs of the late Albert Rawltser, tent and awning manufacturer, at'ege that the Travelera" Prolectlve association, which they are suing for $2,500, I estopped from pleading aulcide aa a defense. In a reply fl!ed In district court. The reply a'lerea that the association haa never been authorised to do business A Special The High Twenty Shapes, $4-95, $6.93 $7.50, $8.75 Hatter's Flush Velvet and Satin, Black and Bark Col ors. Special Note: The above Hats are not a Paris idea; they are made up for Ameri cans only. Broadcloth, Dnvetyne, Velvet, Velour, Gabardine, Serge and Whipcord are the fabrics shown. The colors most popular are navy bine, in deep shades, brown, green and black. Dresses Wa'sts Patent or dull leath ers, with black cloth or kid tops, also a few styles with colored tops. Don't miss this sale. The most thrilling Melo drama ever presented in Omaha QEGEUERATIOil Not Island of Regeneration, bat stirring story of the New York east side based on Owen Ktldare's My Mamie Rose. FRIDAY: DESTINY, OR SOUL OP A WOMAN "OltJjtAy TVM CBaTTZB" tX&n J If J I L Cartels aVsee After tJ--fT ParaHre ras Tin -v. rpely Booked for A.k-Br-B Week jr.Vr . Bostoniaas TM rinlnl'i Cadtapatat IHiaia Th oar abow vtoiior UMNI4 mm, aataias Ilk it Wck hoata. Umput) aavir M la TkfM Ontum lurft.ft bpctcl. ofcgUni Beauty char a. OIARO MATIsTSi U Mil u Wk. 1 S..U a In Nebraska, acco'-d'og to the Ineuraflco law of the state, and that for that rea son It Is barred from claiming benefits of Its constitutional provisions. A "For Fale" ad will turn eecond-hen mrniture Into cash. Heard at the Tab Plllv" Scnav has ch.ine. his mln'l shout not speaking In Council Fluff nest Mom'av. He will speak In the I'ouni I! Hli'f's Auditoi i tm and Ms subject will be "litvnae, or tJtt in the Ws!er Wagon. A delegation of TO people from Shenan doah, la., arrived In the city yesterday mornlrg and occupied a re-erved sec tion In the Tabernmie at the afternoon rnd evening meetirms. lesvnj for their homes agal i late la-t night. Not one mm besides "Hilly" Sunday h'rrself will be Insliio the Tabernacle at the afternoon and evening meetings to rtn'. They f strlctlv for women only. Mrs. Aaher will lead the singing and sho will provbln a womsn pianist. A number of women and girls have been secured to art as ushers. IWeVtie c Urge was out In full force at the tabernacle last nlshl with , fly ing banners, sunns snd veils, dispel rervicea for the la it three days have been plven over to rehearsing sonss aid yell' under the leadership of Prof. Kdwln Leon 1 Is. The foot boll team entered a' tha bead cf the procession garb-.d In their blankets, and the remainder o. the school 'ollowed with pennants and Tying rib bons. Showing Crown Hat $18 The tailoring and work manship is in every way worthy of the name Thompson, Bel&n & Co. Reliable Since 1886 Skirts MEW TAFFETA -SILKS The Height of Fashion Unlike the Taffeta Silks of old, when rustle and stiff ness were the criterion" by which quality was judged, these new Taffetas are au in the new soft chiffon finish, falling naturally into grace ful folds. Every fashion able shade. New AH-Wool Challis For Waists an! House Dresses Wonderful selections of pretty patterns in pin stripes, dainty dots and fig ures, also in the new Dres den figures in dainty even ing shades. A COJTTIiruOUa Performance ef High Clae Vaudtnl. and Tint a route riar The Only Plac3 to Go in ths Horning 9 A. M. TILL 11 P. M. ICo AOmSBIOkT ICo Brr4 Saata 10 latra RflAriDEISl, THVATZB I TODAY is And ill this Week Edward Lynch Owa Dl. Orateat ay. WHAT H.il'I'KXh.l TO MART" Car ata Bis Teal-ht after ara4e Mats I Teuay. Thnraday aa Sataraay 4 Bays Oct. 13. 14. is, It Ita -raa "X KUL iffast Hit la as Tears. 1 i atarda sraa. M eeata to fwi i i . . SS cants te il.SO A For PalM ad will tura seoood-baad furniture Into cash. V )