Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 11, 1921, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE BEE: OMAHA. KK1UAY. NUVKMBKK 11. lirjl.
Gipsy Describes
Life in Trenches
At Auditorium
Building Crowded to Ca
paclty and Many Stand to
Hear Evangelist Tell of
War Experiences.
The firs( portion of Gipsy Smith'
lecture. "Three nd a Half Year
With Our Boys in the Trenches,"
vi$, delivered Wednesday mgiu at
the Auditorium to a crowd estinu
ted at more than K.OOO.
The first part of the lecture dealt
mainly with the men as the evangelist
tame in contact wmi mem !:
a worker at a Y. M. C. A. hut in
France. He paid glowing tributes
to the American soldiers- ana tne
American Y. M. G. A. .
Not Prepared for War.
"When war broke out England
as not prepared," he said. "Eng
land hadn t :0 tons m INI and we
munition. But when war was de
clared we began shipping mfore am
munition to Germany by a ditler
tnt route.
"There were only 260,000 in the
regular army, but those men were
on the fighting lines in 10 days. In
less than a year there was a volun
teer army of more than 5,000.000,
and before the war ended every third
male in England was in the service.
"The Britibh navy was ready, for
which every American should thank
God, for it Kept Germany from
sweeping the seas.
Service Men Stand.
At this juncture the evangelist
asl.ed all former service men to
stand. He said: "Gentlemen, we are
proud of you. We can never repay
our debt to you. You have saved
the Tace. We love you and don't
want to forget you and the brave
men you represent. You gave up
mothers, wives and homes to fight.
God forgive us if we ever forget
vou. You came to our rescue when
the world was in danger. You shall
always hold our everlasting love.
Vou did a great thing - when you
showed you were ready' to die for
your country. You can do better
nov.'' by living for it, and you can
do that only by living as God would
have you live." '
The evangelist's words were re
ceived with cheers.
"I saw the boys, the, cream of the
world, going out to fight. I decided
.. . , .1--
Midi was wic iui i,iv. w ,, "iv
. cream. I tried to enlist as a soldier.
I was told I was too old. I could
have got a job as chaplain, but I
wasn't a regular parson, thank God.
"Out there, you know, they didn't
care to what denomination you be
longed. They were too big for that.
All they wanted was Jesus and they
got Him from me.
"1 finally got a job' as a Y. M. C.
A. representative.
''There isn't a British soldier that
won't say,- 'Thank God for the Y. M.'
C A.' You would too if you were
honest about it." The last remark
was addressed toward the ex-service
men'.
"They wcne a great lot of boys,"
he. said. "I never found any skep- i
ticism in all my experience.
A ksiuvu mat sviuiv,4 ,aiw oik.,,,,
rant wishv-washv ihintrs. Thev
like the straignttorward way ot do
injar things." )
. Hundreds aiiswered his call to live
better lives. The special thank of
fering taken up for the evangelist
one. according to J. R. Cain, jr.j
financial chairman. The story was
to be continued Thorsday night,
Burglars Loot Grocery,
; ; Cafe and Clothing Store
The grocery store of G. A. Mul
iinger, 2501 South Twenty-fourth
street, was robbed of $300 worth of
goods' Wednesday night by thieves
who broke through the front door.
They took summer sausage, cream
dircse, catsup, rice, eggs, butterine,
boiled ham, tobacco, cigars and a
dozen hair nets.
A burglar, opened the door of
Elias Mena's store, 420 North Six-
night and stole $5. and four dozen
pairs of .women's stocking? of assort
ed colors,.
: Ralph Barich's cafe. 1306 Dodge
street, was entered Wednesday night
by a thief who carried off two gran
tic cooking .'utensils andvone ' Of
al iminum. .
U. S. Attorney Unable -to .'
. Get Quintet Out of Jail
James C. Kinsler, ' United States
district attorney, wields a lot of au
thority around the federal building.
But he can't get people out of the
rnnntv i a it. '
Wednesday night he telephoned to
Sheriff Mike Clark to release five
men arrested in a raid yesterday
afternoon in two shacks near East
Omaha. ' ' '
"They gave, bond in county court,
he explained.
"Nothing doing" was Mikes re
ply.' "They've got on their slippers.
And in they stayed.
They were released jesterday
morning when a regular release form
pral
Wv4 ..... . -
building.
Nine Children Found by .
Dead Mother's Bedside
Dcs Moines. Ia.. Nov. 10. (Spe
cial' Telegram) Neighbors who
went to the home of Charles Earnest
here found nine little children, cold
and hungry, whimpering about the
dead body of their mother, which
lav half clothed en a small cot.
The father was out in search of
work. He has been practically with
out work all summer. The mother
had given b'rth to another baby a
few days before and after its death
ihe was too weak and undernourish
ed to meet the demands of privation,
doctors said. .
man woo licaieu vriri
Apologizes Before Court
Katherine Kellkenny, 17, Drake
Court, who caused the arrest of J.
S. Monganero. 616 Pacific street, at
the Moon theater ueanesoay. re
ceived a public apology from Mon
ganero in Central police court yes
terday. Miss Kellkenny accused Mon
ranero of tickling her.
Two-Minute Sermons
Written Especially for The Bo by Gipsy Smith
Taul said. "All things are lawful,
but all things arc not expedient."
He was a big enough Christian and
big enough man to be willing to
sacrifice even those things he liked,
not only tor the
sake of Christ,
hut for the sake
of his fellow men.
Hence he de
clared, "The things
that were dear to
me, I counted as
dung and dross
that I might know
II i m, and the
power of His res
urrection, and the
fellowship of His
suffering."
There we have
self-denial for the
sake of personal
fellowship , w i t h
God. Now hear
Him in His wiljingtiess to sacrifice
Hi. tutM and 'Artirr for the sake
of the weak men and women around
Him. And you hear these woras,
If eating meat will -cause my Broth-
Program on Opening
Of Arms Meet Planned
Washington.' Nov. 10. (By The
Associated Press.) Active exchange
of views are taking place between
the delegations to the armament con
ference in order to agree on the pro
gram for the inaugural meeting Sat
urday. Up to the present, it seems
that President Harding's opening
address will be followed by the pro
posal from the English delegation to
appoint Secretary Hughes as presi
dent of the conference which it is
expected will be approved unani
mously. 'Secretary Hughes will address a
few words of welcome to the for
eign delegates.
Immediately afterward a commit-
er to stumble, I will cat no more at
long as I live."
That's the big spirit of Christian
ity. I verily believe that I could do
many things without sinning against
God, or against my conscience.
Some things I'm thinking of now I
would enjoy doink. But what about
the man who looks up to me, who
hasn't my light and my point of
view, and doesn't see as I see?
Ought I to ignore him?
Should I not rather consider his
weakness? If I am stronger than
he, should I not be willing to carry
his burden him; too, if necessary
in order that he may behaved?
I have no right as a Christian or
as a man, cither in public or private,
to take my pleasures at the expense
of another's ru!.i. This applies to
all the walks of life, in business, in
the hom and everywhere.
We must apply the spirit of Jesus
in all these, matters, remembering
that the apostle said of Him that
even Christ pleased not Himself.
Then he turns right around to me
and says: "Let this mind that was
in Christ be also in you."
r
tee will be formed or the delegation
presidents of the five great powers
which is already called the "big
five" for the drafting of the agenda.
Another committee composed of the
representatives of the delegations of
the four smaller countries, Holland,
Portugal, Belgium and China will be
added for the agenda concerning
Far Eastern problems.. The confer
ence will then adjourn to Tuesday
when the reports of these two com
mittees will be presented.
Widow Wins $13,500 Verdict
From Missouri Pacific
Mrs. Eva Hand won a verdict of
$13,500 in federal court yesterday
against the : Missouri Pacific Rail
road company. She sued for $74,000
for the death of her husband, Fay
D. Hand, a switchman, killed in February,-1920.
Education Will
Not Save World,
Asseris Gipsy
Sin Began in a Garden, Re
calls Evangelist "Ye'
Must Be Born
Again."
"The world is not to be saved
through education," declared Gipsy
Smith at the noonday religious serv
ices at the Brandeis theater yester
day, "but through regeneration."
"The church keeps saying contin
ually, 'educate,' while the Holy Ghost
still preaches that old, old gospel,
'regenerate.'
"Vou are born in the kingdom of
sin and you must be reborn before
you can enter the kingdom of God.
You can give a child the best edu
cational advantages possible until he
has finished all the higher institu
tions of learning, hut you have only
a, natural man. To get God in his
heart, he must he remade.
"Vnit ran't .nialep nrw rrralnrM fiv
- - -. - - j
making new surroundings. Some of
the worst sinners I know live in big
houses, ride in automobiles and
wjar ftilk anrt hroaclrlnf h. whit nm
of the holiest people I have known
have lived in hovels, but they had
the snirit of God with them.
"Sin didn't begin in a hovel, but in
a garden. You must hear the voice
of God and be regenerated if you
want salvation," he urged.
Six Seriously Injured
. In Oklahoma Train Crash
Mulhall, Ok!.,- Nov. 10. Six per
sons were seriously injured and a
number of others were bruised and
cut when three Pullmans and two
day coaches of southbound, Atchison,
Topeka & Salita Fe passenger train
No. 11 were derailed and went over
an embankment a mile south of here
early today, according to Dr. A; B.
Childress.
Let Fatima smokers
tell you
MA
FAXI
CIGARETTES
WENTYfor
...;
but taste the difference
Liggett U Myers Tobacco Co.
Do your feet get cold?
can tell you cause and cure
Cold weather, ill-fitting shoes, cold feet. Woolen hose, '
hot radiators, and still their feet stay cold. Tuesday a
case of cold feet brought his troubles to the Foot Fitters.
The remedy was: Shoes that permitted the blood to
circulate freely, removing all undue pressure. The free
blood circulation quickly cured the cold feet. As a
result, today six of this person's friends, are also
wearing the
Grant Flexated Arch Shoe
Will 5. Stryker's
DOUGLAS SHOE STORE
One Seventeen North Sixteenth
Prices of Clothing
Drop, Says Omahan
John A. Swaiuoii, president of the
Ncbra.-ka Clothing company, who
returned yesterday from a buying
trip in the eastern markets prepara
tory to the store's 36th anniversary
sale, declared that prices of clothing
?re substantially lower.
"The wise merchant today will
adopt the policy which the Nebraska
Clothing company believes in,
namely that of cutting prices to a
basis of replacement cost," he said.
"It may be necessary for the cloth
ing merchant to take losses because
of falling prices. But, if he is wise,
lie will lo that and keep his goods
moving and give his customers the
benefit of the falling wholcerlc
prices.
Foot of Snow Blankets N. Y.
Malone, N. Y., Nov. 10. A blan
ket of snow, one foot thick, covered
northern New York today. Traffic
on railways and highways were se
riously hampered. The snowfall was
the heaviest that had been seen in
early November for many years.
Miners to Strike
If Wages Arc Cut
Colorado Workers Decide to
Strike If Attempt to Kc
i duce Kates Is Made.
. Trinidad, Colo., Nov. 10. A re
duction of wages at any mine owned
by the Colorado Fuel & Iron com
pany will be met 'by a supension
of work in till that company' mines.
Tlut was the plan of action defi
nitely decided upon here last night
by oDicials of the United Mine
Workers of America, meeting here
to discuts a threatened wage reduc
tion, according to union oflicials.
John P. McLenna, president of
District No. IS of the union, issued
a statement in which he said;
"We are all aware that a reduc
tion in wage in the Colorado fuel
and iron mines would simply be
preliminary to a redurtion in all
other mines and it is the policy of
our organization that if a cut is put
into effect in arty of the Colorado
furl and iron mines, the miners work
ing at all mines v ill YuspenJ wmk.
"We have, the full Wral and fi
nancial support of the iiiloiiutuMi.il
union reUtmf ny reduction in'
v ages and upholding the award of the
United States government commis
sion. We hold that a coal operator
has no more right to folate a
agreement than has a coal miner."
Emergency Tariff Kxtendod,
Washington, Nov. ll). The Iiounc
concurred today In senate amend
ments to the bill extending the life
of the emergency tariff until it 1
supplanted by a 'permanent law. The
measure now goes to the president
J
This Bag is
Priced to Merit
Your Attention
and the value is so extraordi
nary that it would pay you to
buy one for future use.
An 18-inch-smooth cow--.
- hide bag ,in black or
brown, full leather lined,
with inside pockets, '
hand-sewed frame, rein
forced sewed corners and
.lift catches.
Priced
low at
$13.75
To determine the true worth,
of this bag we urge you
to see it.
Freling&Steinle
1803 Farnam Street
.-' .' Here 5 Year
FREE LECTURE
: Christian Science
1 at' - ' ' . V "
First Church of Christ, i '":.
Scientist':' . , ,;-'''
St.'Miy' Ave, and 2 lib St.' , '
..' Thuri. and Friday Ere., '
November 10 and 11,
at Eight O'Cloek
By John J. Flinn, C. S., of
Evanston, 111. Mr. Flinn is s
member ot the Board of J.ecturc--
ship of " The First Church of
Christ, Scientist, in Boston.
Mass.
All Are Cordially
' X' Invited to Attend
$7.50 Worth of Advo
Groceries FREE With
A 'Hoosier' Saturday
Union Outfitting Co.
$1,00 Down Club Plan Sale
Hoosier Kitchen Cabinets
Gpens Saturday.
Just think of it! Every woman
who joins theHoosier "Thanks
giving $1.00 Down Club Plan
Sale" Saturday at the Union Out
fitting Co. will Teceive a basket
of ADVO Groceries FREE.
"Advo" products were select
ed because of their high quality,
fine flavor and full measure. On
the Club Plan a big, time and
labor-saving Hoosier is delivered
for $1.00 Down and $1.00 a
week. See the big, new Hoosier
Kitchen Cabinet at $42.00.
Advertisement
"THE STORE OF THE TOWN.
The Greatest Values
Offered in Years
Friday's Special Opportunities
Our new management policy demands wo clear
, out our present stock, so that when the new sea
son, Jan. 1, opens, avc will have only new stocks
to offer. , ' '
Overcoats at Clearance
Prices
Hundreds of the finest Overcoats
enough to please every man, and
tailored into every one.' i
Up to $30.00 value
OVERCOATS
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made. Variety
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Men's and Young Men's Suits
Up to $30.00 value
SUITS
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suits
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.tip 75
$46.75
Gabardine Ctjats
Swtll Belted Models
(1)1) ff $25.00-$27.50
pDJ Values
fcQQ Cf $37.50440.00
tpOOaOU Values
J7 gf $45.00-$50.00
ij0 tUU Values J-
Men's. Extra Trousers
... Tone up the old auit with a nw
pair. Special Friday
$3.45, $4.35, $5.45, $6.95
r
Men's Shirts
.. 1 Only the Good Kind Represented
$2.00 value OQ 3 for
SHIRTS aploOJ $4.00
$3.00 value q- ft E 3 for
SHIRTS .................. VltlO $5-65
$5.00valu d0 1C3for
SHIRTS X$9.25
$1.00 Silk 4-in-Hand
Ties
$1.50 Flannel Night ; ,
Gown
$1.00 Men's Onyx Silk
Hose
$2.00 Ladies' Fancy Silk
Hose
55c
:95c
.49c
$1.35
r
Boys Knickerbocker Suits
A great variety of patterns and qualities, in
long wear materials for hard service.
$15.00 value Boy a DQ QC :
suits . . . ... ; pOVD
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Boys' Corduroy Suit3
Full of style and quality to give 7 ft J?
Men's Underwear
Pr.par for Cold Winter Now.
$4.50 value cotton and wool mixed d Q ft C
Union suits pD
$3.50 value wool mixed
UNION SUITS .......
$2.00 value cotton ribbed :
UNION SUITS
$3.00 Wool
DRAWERS
$1.95
. 95c
9Sc
E. & W. all linen Collars, fc 1 fift.
$20c each, 3 for...... w.'... 1.UU
r
$15.00 value
OVERCOATS ..
long wear, specially priced at..
(Sizes 6 to 17.)
BROWNING,
15th and Douglas Sts. .
Boys' Overcoats
Every one our own high-grade make. '
$9.45
$18.00 value 1 O ft E?
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$25.00 vglue 1 i2 A E
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(All Sizes.) ,
r
jsoys juong rante suits
New smglo and double models at very ape
Dial prices.
$14.75 $19.75 $27.75
(Sizes 15 to 21.)
1
V- . J
KING & CO.
HARRY H. ABBOTT, Mgr.
Start the Day the Breakfast Brownies Way
You'll feel better. Breakfast Brownies is mildly stimulating, nourish
ing, sustaining. Made of nutritious grains mostly wheat with just
enough chocolate to give it a pleasing tang. You'll like it. Costs only
a penny a plate. Sold at quality grocery stores. ' '
Breakfait )rownies Company, Minneapolis, Minn., and Helena, Montana
Mi
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