Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 26, 1921, Page 14, Image 14

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    14
THE BEE: OMAHA. WEDNESDAY, ULTOHKK tiU. 1U2I.
Church Officials
Arc Lax Declares
Evangelist Smith
Slioulil Know' Evff)Lody in
Their Parishes, lie Trill
Them, and Go Out to
Hffoue the IVrMiing.
MBSSSSffa
"There's no ue singing 'Rfcue
Ihc Prrikliinu while lining on
cushioned (!; you've gut to go
where they are perishing if you want
to do any mating," Gipy Smith
to!i about 3,000 church official
liradi of department and cluirr
organization! and their families at
special meeting fur them Moiid?
night at the auditorium
"If you want the strangrr within
your gate to come to your church
you've got to make him feel thai he
M welcome and that you are glad he
lis come.
The whole of the evangelist's lis
course Monday night wat directed at
- the church omcial. who, he declare'',
were lax in their duties to the church,
For hia text the sneaker took
part of the Book of the Acts, from
which he read the description of the
first church.
Citei Firat Church at Model.
"This first church wai an ideal
church," he laid. "It wat a praying
church, the memhera spoke the word
of God with boldness and had all
things in common. There were no
strifes in the coneresation and when
there was need of money those who
owned property sold it and laid the
proceeds at the leet ot the apostle
' The officials were chosen, not be
cause they were wealthy or had high
social position, but because they were
good men. I hey were praying men,
and when they prayed in that church
something happened. Is that why
vou were chosen as officials?
"What happens when you pray?"
he asked, "and what's the use of
praying unless something happens.'
What's the good of mumbling a few
petitions like a parrot? Something
happens in any church when its
members lay everything aside and
talk to God face to face. All other
things called prayer are mockeries,
Sensation Better Than Stagnation.
"Some of you would be afraid if
something would happen but I'd
rather have a sensation in the church
than stagnation."
The sneaker ureed that the church
officials should be an example of
goodness wherever they went.
"Are you living so your families
believe in your religion?" he asked.
"You have no right in office unless
you are. It is a terrible thing to
handle holy things with Ainclean
hands," he continued. "What a dif
ference there is'in the church when
all the officeholders are loyal to God.
, Should Know Everybody.
. "It is different when the officers
go to church twice each Sunday in
stead of once and when they , arc
praying and looking out after the
Jost. Church officials should know
"everybody in the church and parish
in which they live. They should
know them by name so when a
stranger came to church or to the
parish he could be singled out and
welcomed. f They should know the
unfortunates in the church that they
would be better enabled to help
them. A church1 official's duties arc
no perfunctory performances but
they are real and calling for sin
cerity. , . ' . . . -'
"When you are after a man's vote
you take pains to know hirn. You
visit him in his house, kiss his baby,
pet his dog and when election- day
comes around you do all you can to
get him to the polls to vote as you
would have him. When you want
him to come to church you pull a
rope that rings a' bell. Every poor
lost man or woman in The city should
know that there is a welcome await
ing them at your church. -"It
isn't that way now. If repent
ant sinners woke up in the middle of
the night with a decision? in their
hearts to live a better life they would
'.. not knock on your church t door.
They would go 'to the Salvation
Army where there is a welcome for
them." ' ' ' . -
Here there was a great applause. .
Urges Atmosphere of Welcome.
"You shouldn't applaud that. You
, were here long before the Salvation
Army and it is a reproach upon your
church.
"To make the strangers' and un
fortunate .know they arc welcome
you have to create that atmosphere
of welcome in . the church.. You
must live the right life. Do you
know how to do it J" he asked. Then
leaning over the bannister of the
platform, the evangelist spoke very
confidentially to the officials, "You
men will have to cut out Sunday golf
and you ' women will., have "to quit
Sunday bridge.
"There was more applause and
somebody in the ministers' section
cried out. "How about Sunday mov
ies?" . ;., .
. "No good man will do anything on
the Lord's day that is inconsistent
with His teachings. Does that an
swer your question?" the evangelist
asked. ' - - . .. ...
"Yes," was the reply.
"Well, the answer Will go farther
than you will," was the evangelist's
retort ' - .
; "And then," he continued to the
officials, "you'll have to quit pulling
down the curtains and playing 'jazz'
and dancing on.Sefhday.
"You must all come back to the
first principles. Yours is great
work and you must create the at
mosphere in the church that will
help your ministers do better, work.
The officials must - stand for the
things that are God's. Put away the
things of which God can't aoprove
and yield intelligently to God," he
urged.
Two-Minute Sermons
Written Especially for The Be by Gipsy Smith
Modern mail it very clever, snd no
doubt some of hit achievement
would teem supernatural to the
primitive people of the pat.
There is danger, of course, that in
their pride over
brilliant inventions
or remarkable dis
coveries, some peo.
tile today should
forget the one be
hind thee selen
itic wonders
It would be pos.
siUle for an un
educated race t'
confute an aviator
with an -angel.
Some educated
people, in much
the same way, may
consider that they
have conquered di
vine law and
freed themselves
from dependence on any power ex
cept that within themselves.
Can't Stay up.
Ilut the foundations were not laid
by man.
lite possibilities lor inventions
were all there before man suddenly
if
stumbled upon something illumined
by liod. t
Who put the coal, the iron, the
copper and all the minerals beneath
the earth for man to mine? It was
God, making wise provisions for
man need.
The ainilane can't stay up, but
mut come down. There sre limits
to all the powers of man. Once in
a while in my country one comes
upon a road across a private estate
which is opcu to the public except
on one day each year.
On Jist one day the owner bars
the way in order that, his ownership
will not be torgotten.
Puts Chains Across.
Once in a while God puts the
chain across.
Man can harness the forces of na
ture; he can hardly be said to mas
ter them, but only to work with
them. ' He can invent machinery, but
he did not invent the materials.
With all his cleverness, he can't
yet invent anything to heal a broken
neart, kiss a tear into a jewel, mend
a broken life or take the burden of
misery from a guilty sout.
I know something that will do
that, for all who come unto God
thtough Him and His name is Jesus.
"Our Religion Is
Too Superficial,"
Says Evangelist
Rain Fails to Keep Crowd
From Noonday Theater
Meeting Presbyterian
Pastor Preaches.
"We are too superficial in our re
ligion and are afraid to pay the price"
declared Gipsy Smith in his noon
day sermon at the Brandcis theater
at noon yesterday.
t,Tl . 1 .' H t. ' . 1 1 C - !.
i ne ihc in vnriM cans lur mum
suffering as we' go along, but after
all it is the only life worth while.
Until you know the sufferings and
have compassion for those in sin and
want, you will know nothing of the
sufferings of Jesus while he was on
earth," the speaker said.
"What have you given to Him or
the world? Have you suffered with
anybody, or have you eased any
body's pain? What has your so-
called Christian life cost you?"
Rev. W. H. Jackson, pastor ot the
First United Presbyterian church,
delivered the first 10-minute sermon.
"Like Paul." he said, "every man
bears on his body or his sout the
marks of his master. Every man has
a master and may you throw off all
earthly masters and make Christ
your redeemer."
The evangelist s sermon was inter
spersed with stories of human in
terest to illustrate his theme. The
attendance was good considering the
heavy rain that fell just at noon, pre
venting many from attending. The
singing was excellent.
Women Frame Rules
For Handsomest Man
Paris. Oct. 25. Having elected
what they considered was the hand
somest man in trance, j-rench
women are now busy framing rules
which such a man should observe in
married life, as follows:
Never dare to give orders to a
wife, even for her own good.
Never commit the crime of being
bore.
Never resemble a preacher or
schoolmaster.
Avoid assassinating the wife with
good advice or wise examples taken
from his own family.
Offer everything before she has
asked for the slightest thing.
Above all, learn to forgive th1;
wife when the husband is mistaken
and to approve of her when the hus
band is right.
Union of Central America
With Mexico Is Proposed
Mexico Citv. Oct. 25. Wide inter
est was stirred here by the reported
agitation for the union of the five
republics in. the new Central Amer
ican federation with Mexico. Mex
ican officials were unwilling to dis
cuss the matter, but their demeanor
left no doubt that they were pleased
ith the report.
At the national palace it said that
President Obregon read the report
with interest. But -it was denied
that the idea had taken serious form.
The report reachtd here m a dis
,tch from Havana, which stated that
Rafael Cardenas Jiminez, the new
Costa Rican consul in Mexico City,
had strongly advocated the union, of
Central America and Mexico and had
announced his determination to agi-
ate for such a union. .
Early Briton Ate Human ;
Flesh, Writer Declares
London, Oct. 25. Small solace for
the British is to be found in the lat
est book on evolution, by an English
man, Dr. Albert Churchward.
The prehistoric Briton, he declares,
had no objection to eating human
flesh, "as proved by the discovery
at Braitttree of human skulls split
open, to extract the brains, and bones
split from end to end to extract the
marrow. . ;
Item two. by the gloomy scientist,
the prediction that one of these
days "the huge city of London will
be ground to atoms by the weight of
ice. Nothing living will then endure:
only the remains of ancient skeletons
of men and animals will be left for
our descendants to discover."
Chicagoans Deny
Miami Suicide Is
Warren Spurgin
Discrepancies in Descriptions
Cast Considerable -Doubt
On Identification Made
By Friend of Banker.
Chicago, Oct. 25. Proci that is
considered positive, came from Mi
ami, r la., yesterday that the un
known man who committed suicidi
in a hotel there Friday was not War
ren u bpurgtn, the emblezzling
banker, who drecked the Michigan
Avenue Trust concern here.
The Chamber of Commerce of
Miami sent a telegram casting doubt
upon the identification made by W.
C Bennett, who claims to have been
a former friend and associate of
Spurgin.
The dead man is 5 feet 10!l inches
in height, while Spurgin is more than
6 feet tall. Spurgin weighed 260
pounds, while the Miami suicide
weighs only 160. Spurgin had raven
black hair, while -that of the suicide
is auburn.
Chicagoans now in Miami and
who knew Spurgin, have viewed the
body and all are positive it is not
that of Spurgin . Mrs. Spurgin and
her daughter, Vivian, did not believe
the first reports that spurgin had
committed suicide.
Harding Writes
To His Namesake
Parents of Babe Receive Let
ter Congratulating Child
On Name. :
Norristown, Pa., Oct. 24. Warren
Harding is a good name, wrote the
president to a baby named for him.
The letter made public today by the
child's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
J. Hannaway, follows:
"My Dear Warren Harding: A
friend of yours has just written
to let me know you have arrived in
I this world within a few days past and
have demonstrated an early and
appealing discretion by inducing
your -parents to give you a good
name. I know it is a good name be
cause my father and mother gave it
to me, and they were the beet peo
ple I have known. I hope you will
try as hard as I have to do nothing
to discredit the name, for I know
your father and mother, like my own,
would grieve if that should happen;
You have arrived here in a mighty
interesting time for the world and
will have a chance to be a useful citi
zen. "Please do your best to live up to
all your possibilities in that direc
tion.
"I wish I could hope to remain as
Ions as you may, for this world is
going to be an extremely interesting
place during the time you are en
titled to stay in it. Please give my
kindest regards to your mother and
father and thank thenj for me for
the compliment they have paid me in
selecting the name for you. . From
your friend,
'WARREN G. HARDING"
Girl Marries Man Serving
10 -Years for Auto Theft
- Poplar Bluff, Mo., Oct.' 25. Love
absolutely laughs at locksmiths,
pretty Winnie Mann will tell the
world. Paul Gardner ' of Tupelo,
Ark., the man she loved, wa sen
tenced to i 10 years' imprisonment
for automobile theft Sheriff J. R.
Hogg granted the plea of Miss Mann
and Gardner" was taken nndeY guard
before Judge Deem, where he said,
"I do." Gardner will reside in Jef
ferson City at the "state house,"
while his wife will go to his home
at Tupelo.
House Expunges Blanton's
Remarks From the Record
Washington, Oct. 25. Congress
man Blanton of Texas "got in hot
water' in the house yesterday over
an "extension of remarks" in the
Congressional Record.
An "extension of remarks" is a
speech not delivered but printed iti
the record ' without being heard.
Blanton's "extension," which con
cerned a row in the government
printing office, was expunged by the
house, 313 to 1. . Blanton opposed
expunging it.
The context of the "extension"
concerned a nonunion printer, who
contended conditions in the printing
office were made such he could not
remain without a union card.
Clean white zephyr' articles by
rubbing in flour and magnesia, chang
ing frequently. ;v Shake and sun. -
President Ebert
Cannot Form New
German Cabinet
ttsasssttsssssssfmsf
Reason Is That No Politician
Will Promise Entente That
Reparation Agreement
Will Be Fulfilled.
. By GEORGE SELDES.
Berlin, Oct. 2S.-rreident Kbcrf
cannot form a new government.
The chief fact, militating against
the 'reconstruction qf the cabinet is
that no German politician is fool
enough to promise either the entente
or Germany that the reparation
will be fulfilled. Chancellor Wirtn
kept promising fulfillment despite the
almost universal belief that the thing
was impossible, but the loss of upper
Silesia upset even Dr. Wirth's hopes.
Therefore Germany today is in the
position of a man whose head has
been chopped xff who yet must keep
cne eye on upper sucsia. wuerc
something may happen, and the
other eye peeled on Bavaria, where
the monarchist movement is gaining
dailv. Fortunately the Wirtli cabi
net, despite its resignation,, has of
fered to remain on the job to take
care of the emergencies.
Faces Complex Crisis.
Germany now is facing what is
probably its most complex crisis since
the establishment ot the republic.
Germany's leading troubles, each of
which is called unsolvable by one
party or the other, may be thus:
One. reparations, the stumbling
block which caused Dr. Wirth's fall
and which lies under the foot of
every candidate for the chancellor
ship. Two. Upper Silesia, Here the left
parties favor acceptance the extremre
right demands absolute rejection of
the Geneva decision come what may
and the central parties are unde
cided. May Form Coalition.
Stockholders Are Bane of
U. S. Railroads Says Ford
Vhiigton, Oct. 25. Henry
Ford, writing in the official publica
tion of the Chamber of Commerce of
the United States, tells how he would
run a big railroad.
Mr. Ford's operation of his own
road, the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton,
has been the subject of much dis-cutkion.
these slocks for the financial protec
tion of their families, their children,
I'rotection front wlutf From the
nrceity of earning their living.
Their children would be better if
if they had to finance themselves.
Proper financing would, of course,
be easier on new roads. On the
old ones, however, it should he pos
sible to retire the parasite, the non-
contributing stockholder and get the
First of all, he says, he would get ownership into the proper hands,
rid of the individual stockholder
whom lie considers a parasite: then
he. would turn to lighter . rolling
stock and finally "tire useless em
ploye. especially the lawyers,"
1 Finance as it applies to railroads,
he says, is a failure; and. the roads
spend money uselessly in red tape,
particularly in accounting.
"Real purposes ot a railroad," he
writes, "are to serve the public
There is no reason why it should be
diverted from that service and set to
putting money into the pockets of
stockholders who make no contribu
tion to the road's actual operation,
The public pays these dividends,
They are a tax on the people.
Make Roads Work.
"There is -a possible and practic
able system of financing railroads
by which those contributing the
money will be in positions to add di
rectly to the success of the under
taking. If the brakeman on a rail
road owns stock in it, he has an ad
ditional inducement to ' competent
service. If the railroad is successful
it is due to him and his fellow work
men, and they are entitled to the
profit.
Railroads should not have to go to
the banks for money. They can be
otherwise financed. The first thing is
to make a railroad work. Make it
possible for people to use it as much
as they want to. Then there will be
no tcouble about finances. The
trouble is that we start with finance
and expect finance to make the road
go.' Finance can't do that. Finance
is a failure.
"If such a course were attempted,
7-hSei' The - ta.,xa uOIY PJogran we could expect a great outcry for
the protection of invested capital;-ft
would be said that people had bought
which has remained the bugbear of
the Wirth administration and cost
Mathias Erzberger, the leader of the
Catholics, his life at the hands of an
assassin. -
Four. The credits plans which
fell by the wayside when Upper
Silesia was lost. Both the foreign
credits and the 2,000,000,000 marks
gold internal credits, which German
industry pledged, are doubtful now
that Upper Silesia has been lost.
It is most likely that three parties
will form a coalition, either the pres
ent three, which includes the ma
jority socialists, or the democrats,
Catholics and peoples which would
give Germany a bourgeois govern
ment without a single socialist cle
ment for the first time.
Northclif fe On
Way to Hongkong
British Publisher Reiterates
Britain Would Aid U. S.
In Jap War.
.
Manila, P. I., Oct. 25. That war
in the. Pacific which would involve
the United States, would bring to the
side of America not only Great Brit
ain itself,) but "the whole family of
British nations, was the personal
opinion expressed yesterday by Vis
count Northcliffe in answer to a di
rect Question put by a staff corre
spondent of the Mainichi Shimbun
of Osaka, Japan, who had been sent
here to interview the British pub
lisher on far eastern questions.
He declared that Great Britain
would stand by the United States in
Pacific troubles, just as the United
States had stood by Great Britain
in the world war. He added: "It
seems inconceivable that any contin
gency might arise to menace seri
ously the invisible, but impregnable
bonds "binding the English-speaking
peoples." . v
Viscount Northcliffe, who arrived
here for a two days' stay from Aus
tralia, left' last night for Hongkong.
' On Earth, Englishman Says
London, Oct. 25. "Once the Eng
lish race were the best washed race
oh earth, but now that honor belongs
to the Japanese, said Mr James
Crichton-Brown, in an address at
Bath to the Sanitary , Inspectors'
association. ' . ..
Would Llffhltn Slock.
"After removing this dividend
drain, the second step would be to
remove the grr.1t physical burden of
the facts about it Slid settling it on
the basis of justice. It would keep
aii mis (iriau on me books.
Cut Out Absurdities.
"We don't claim to have 4hi any
thing new in railroading yet. We have
only taken the old syirm of opera
tion and cut off its obvious absurdi
ties, liven the old system, brought
up to efficiency, would be an mi
nimis change. We havs simply cut
out the loafing of men, engines and
cars. There i no mystery or magic
about it. Any one ran do it. If the
introduction of plain, everyday good
management will create such a
change what may we not expect from
really new ideas,
"I don't like to appear as criticis
ing any railroad management for I
have never done so. With their
stockholders on their backs and their
banker bosses who don't know any
thing shout railroading what can
the railroads-needless wcight of it. they do? They must be liberated
rolling stock. A freight train is sev
eral times the weight of the load it
carries, and a passenger train is 20
times a heavy. The cost of pulling
empty trains is needlessly large.
"On the Detroit, Toledo and Iron
ton, the old styles of engine and
car will be displaced by better types.
Our patents will euarantce free use
of ideas. We will never proceed
against anybody (or infringement
of our patents.
I he third step would be that of
expediting the journey of the freight
carrier. By speeding un our f rein lit
over the preliminary part of its
journey on the 1). T. and I. we have
shortened the time of its delivery
by from seven to 14 days. This
means our product gets to the peo
ple from seven to 14 days quicker
than it used to. It means wc carry
on our hooks $30,000,000 less unde
livered product than otherwise.
.Most railroads have enouuh
lawyers working for them to operate
them if they were engaged in use
ful work. One -of the first things
is to dispense with the legal staff. A
well-managed road needs less of that
sort of service. The lawyers are
mostly in the claims department, one
of the most wasteful branches of
railroad operation.
Any small claim acainst a rail
road is likely to knock about the
claims department for weeks or
months, to cost many times as much
as it would to pay it. Proper or
ganization would lead at the time
it is first presented, to establishing
from the present svtein. And vou
cant da that by giving them $500..
000,000 to perpetuate the present bad
system, either."
Richest Man in Germany Is
rrenl of Cheating Charge
Derlin, Oct. 25. Hugo Stinnes
yesterday was found not giulty of
(heating the government out of mil
lions of marks by not paying the en
tente prisoners employed in his coal
mines. Instrad the jury said that
Herr Stinnes' concern was a bene
factor, it having sulfered a 900,000
marks' lcs on account of employing
the prisoners. The trial, which lasted
two weeks, was hard in the Essen
criminal court. Radical papers call
the decision a joke.
"Walking Tourist" Is
Cause of Scare at the
U. S. Embassy in Paris
Tsris. Oct, 25. Sime the hand
grenade wa sent to Amhassailur,
llrrriik and as a rult of the com
imuiitt outbreaks the nerves of the
attaches of the American chancellory
have been on edije. Yoterday a
man wearing a cap the symbol of
the Paris apaches or "tough guys''
and a fhriiig red nctktie swagger
rd into the chancellory rarr)ing a
big box wrapped in rnnvai.
"It i another bomb," thrirkrd
Mrs. Murray, who receives callers
and lakes cards, and she dahed up
stairs to warn the ambassador. A
young newspaper rnxirter fled down
the stairs and summoned the French
policemen and detectives, who were
sunning themselves on the sidewalk
while protecting the chancellory.
Investigation proved that the mvs
I tenons man was only John Nico.
Ick, a naturalized Pole, who is walk
ing around the world. The package
contained a big book which he gets
people to iK everywhere he goes
and lie merely called to ask for Mr.
Ili-rrick's signature.
1K
NOW
LAST TIMES FRIDA."
WANDA
HAWLE
in
"HER FACE
VALUE"
Comedy
MONTE BANKS
"His Dizzy Day"
First Showing in Omaha
TONY SARG'S
"THE FIRST CIRCUS"
Biggest and Newest Novelty in Picture
Remember
, A small bottle of
MENTHO-LAXENE
wiUs. homemade sucar svrurj
mas a run pint of the very
oest ana quickest acting
Cough Syrup
J
CVlCVUX 1 TMt BIST IN VAUDCVIUC
M.I. Dally, 2il3 Evwy Nlfhl, SilS
JOSIPM f. HOWARD a CO.! 10. MNIS A
CO: OIBSON 4 CONNiLlli NAT NAUAHNO
4 C0.I Sow Bra.; funk Firm: CUR It.
Itn 4 Otrllni Slltiri: A.Mt'l FltlM
TwIm lb Oay: Paist Moi. Hilt., ita to
SOi: w 7Sf SI.M. Sal. 4 m.
NirMt. ist ! . M; turn l. Sit. 4 In.
Tonights
HEATfl
nd Tomorrow
latin Thurs.
Direct fifim f 1. !.... Ti t. . .
Theater, where thla attraction close
laat Sunday.
SaraH.
Harria
Present
Grant Mitchell
In
"THE CIIAMPIfM"
The comedy that ticklad New York's
funnybone ail lat aeaaon.
Night. SOc to S2.50.
Mat, Bet Seat, S1-S0.
Saturday and Sunday, October 29 and 30
Daily Matinee.
Ilf...' J. If With
inin Hens H.ien
Nlcht, SOc to $1.50
Mat, SOc, 75c, $1.00.
The Big-
Laufh
Festival
Sax
Sooth and Heal Itching,
Disfiguring Skin and Scalp
with
FOR SKIN IRRITATIONS
EMPRESS RUSTIC GARDEN
" Carl Lamp's Ten-Piece Orchestra
EVERY EVENING AND SUNDAY MATINEE
WEDNESDAY M. W. A., CAMP 120
FRIDA Y N I G H T
The Rustic Garden Anniversary
One Year Old Friday
HUNDREDS OF CUT FLOWERS GIVEN AWAY
NOW PLAYING
mi
mm
mi mm
WITH
HOUSE PETERS
.Written tjr
KATHARINE
NEWLIN BURT
and greater than
"The Branding Iron"
.voTEFimS
KOHSTAKCE h2fi
TAUIAD6E Zffi
ONLY 4 ivlOME I0)AY
D. W. GRIFFITH'S Masterpiece
mm
Shows Start Promptly at
11,1,3,5,7,9.
ONLY 4 MOKE (DAYS
Special Musical Presentation
Augmented Orchestra '
Harry Brader, Dir.
Julius K. Johnson
at the Organ
Now Playing
A'-f '
V - y
MIS .
JESSE
la as icy
WALLACE
113 EE. ID)
the'hell
DIGGERS'
A story of the gold dredg
ers and a ' he-man' who
fought for the love a girl
A 2-reeI Comedy Scream
Louise Fazenda
Chester Conklin
in ..
"The Love Egg"
National Geographic Society
Presents - '
Crater of III Kairaai
SILVERMAN'S ORCHESTRA
. Playing
"Prelude in C Sharp Minor"
By Sergi Rachmaninoff
GEORGE E. HAUPT
Playing
"SOUVENIR" - -
Drolo
. 'OMAHA'S FUN CENTER" ,
fl M FJ Mat. and Nite Today
pjbOjf54f Good ResVd Seat SOe
' Dave Marion's Own Co.
Emil (Jazz) Casper SJES
"The Land ot impossible"
Tin Flmoui Day Mario Buuty Chorui
Ladle' Ttckals, 15c-30c Every Week Day
Sit. Mat & Week: Sliding Billy Wition.
EMPRESS
LAST
TIMES
TODAY
CAMEO REVUE. Prenflns Muilo, Son ntf
Duet: FOUR CAMERONS, In FlHier.
Like So , BILLY ALOHA t GIRLIE. Pre
WfltlRl "Stmt Hwlltn Melotfltl;" INFIELD
4 N08LET. I "The Sons Booth." Photoplay
Attraction "BEYOND PRICE," Featartef
Purl WhlH.
Milton Sills
in The Little Fool"
When in Omaha
Hotel Rome
CHOCOLATES I
X. INNER- CIRCLE
CANDJESr
I
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