Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 109, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 September 1924 — Page 7

SATUKDAY, SEPT. 13, 1924.

LUTHERAN CHURCH ,MEETS AT CHICAGO LATE IN OCTOBER Important Problems to Be Considered by Delegates. SO put into action the plans formulated last year at the first world convention of Lutherans at Eisenach, Germany, is one of the most interesting and important tasks to be undertaken at the fourth biennial convention of the United Lutheran Church in America, to be held at Chicago from October 21 to 30. Several prominent American Lutheran general bodies participated at the world convention, where delegates from forty nations recommended a closer cooperation of Lutherans throughout the world. The executive board of the United Lutheran Church in America has indorsed this plan of cooperative effort and the approval of the Chicago convention is now necessary to make the movement effective within the United Lutheran Church. The world convention drew up a doctrinal statement accepting the Holy Scriptures as the only source of church teaching and practice and recognizing the Lutheran confession las the pure exposition of God's Word. Asa first tentative step toward world-wide cooperation, the Lutheran world convention organized an executive committee of six members, including two representatives of the American church. Rev. Dr. J. A. Morehead of New York, executive director of the National Lutheran Council, and the Rev. Dr. L. W. Boe, president of St. Olaf College. Northfield. Minn. The high esteem in which the American Lutherans are held by their foreign brethren is further evidenced by the fact that Dr. Morehead was made president of this executive committee. The aim of this committee is the ambitious task of harmonizing all Lutheran activities in works of love, in care of emigrants and In foreign mission work. As indicating one of the objects attained, an American delegate to the world convention asserts that “henceforth the Lutheran church of the world will be able to speak as a unit.” The committee is charged with the task of preparing for another Lutheran world convention. It will present suggestions made to the convention by Dr. Morehead for an exchange of visitors between Lutheran church organizations—notably between those of Europe and America —exchange of news and of literature. The Chicago convention of the U. L. C. A. will he asked to approve these first steps in Lutheran worldwide movements and to elect four of the eight American members of the larger standing committee of the world convention, which will aid the executive committee. Those nominated for such election are Prof. J. A. Clutz of Gettysburg. Pa.: the Rev. E. C. J. Kraeling of Brooklyn. N. Y.; Hon. E. Clarence Miller of ■Philadelphia. Pa., and Prof. Dr. A. G. Voigt of Columbia. S. C. * * * THE REV. G. W. PEARCE of fg>uth Bend will preach at Sr. Paul's Reformed Church, 709 X Belmont Ave.. Sunday morning at 10:30 o’clock. During the ahsera® of th® pastor, the Rev. J. H. Bosch, there will be no night service. There will be no niarht services during this month. Sunday school meets every Sunday at 9:30 a. m. with Eugene Lentz in charge.

"THE SPIRIT OF MAN” will he the morning theme of Dr. Edwin Cunningham at the Central Universalist Church. * • THE REV. PACT. IT. EDDINGFIELD will preach Sunday morning at the Broad Ripple Christian Church on “The Temptation of Distance” and at night, "Life as a School.” • * * AT GRACE M. E. CHURCH. Dr. M. B. Hyde, pastor, announces that the Rev. J. A. Sumwalt of Sullivan will preach in the morning and the Rev. J M. Lanicore at night. • * * AT HALL PLACE M. E. CHURCH the Rev. Horace A. Sprague will speak In the morning on “The Turn at the Top” and at night the Rev. Clarence Shake will speak on “Life's Greatest Enterprise.” • • * AT THE NORTH WOOD CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Forty-Sixth St. and Central Ave., Dr. Charles H. Winders will preach at both the morning and night services. * * * DR- FRANK S. C. WICKS announces the following order of service at 11 a. m. Sunday at All Souls Unitarian Church: Andante in C—'Silas.’’ Melody—J. A. West. Hymn 336. Second Service. Covenant. Anthem. Word 9 of Aspiration Responsive Reading: 14th Selection. Scripture. Hymn 4. Notice* and Offerinsv. CTadle Sonr—“Brahms.” Address —"Religion and Morals.” Hymn 454. Benediction. Portlude. , Chorus Magnus—“Dubois " • * AT SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH the pastor, the Rev. H. R. Waldo, will speak in the morning on “Ivet's Go.” and in the evening on “God Almighty’s White.” • • * “THE BLAZED TRAIL” will be the subject of the evening sermon of Homer Dale at Hillside Christian Church Sunday. His morning theme will be “No One Liveth Unto Himself.” • • * AT EMERSON AVE. BAPTIST CHURCH the pastor, Paul Judson Morris, will speak Sunday morning on “Listening to God.” The Sunday evening topic will be, “Twice Born.” • • • REV. L. C. FACKLER will preach Sunday morning at St. Matthew Evangelical Lutheran Church on "The Trouble That the Gospel Causes.” No night service. Wil- ; Ung Workers will meet on Tuesday

LETTING LOVE RATHER THAN PREJUDICE RULE ALL ACTIONS

The International Uniform Sunday School *,es?on for Sept. 14. Jesus Driven from Nazareth. Luke 4:10-00. By WM. E. GILROY, D. D. Editor-in-Chief of the Congregation- ‘ alist. Not long after Jesus began his ministry he went back to his own home town, Nazareth. This lesson tells the story of what happened to him there. Nazareth was a no-account place away up in the hills about fifty miles from Jerusalem. It was so unimportant that it had never been mentioned in the Old Testament, nor is it mentioned by Josephus, the great historian of the Jews, nor in the Talmud, next to the Old Testament the most important Jewish literature. The world has never heard of Nazareth before Jesus went there to live, and the world would probably never have heard of the place at all had not Jesus made it famous. Though He was bora in Bethlehem, He is known to the world as JesUs of Nazareth. The little place has a fame that it hardly deserved, for it spumed and rejected this very Savior who has given it a place in history. Yet Jesus would rejoice in its fame, for He must have loved Nazareth. He was taken there when a baby and all his boyhood and youth

night at the parsonage and on Wednesday night the teachers will meet. * * * DR. EDWARD HAINES KIST LER preaches in the Fairview Presbyterian Church Sunday at 11 on “The Day of the Flag." Thursday at 8 he will speak on “The Most Unmeant Petition in the Lord s Prayer.” The Westminster GuiM meets with Mrs. Paul W. Kistler, 530 W. Bernard Ave., Monday at 6. Anderson Hotel Purchased William F. Roepke, Indianapolis florist, and Ford Watson, Cumberland farmer, have purchased the Meridian hotel at Anderson. Otto Huff, owner, announced the purchase price was 975.000 and that a farm near Warren, Ohio, was taken in for la consideration of $45,000.

MY OWN STORY —— SHADOWS OF MONEYED BAND LURK BEHIND CURRENCY BILL By ROBERT M. LA FOLLETTE

“MY OWN STORY" is an exclusive newspaper version of one of the great autobiographies of modern times: La Follette e own story of adventure* in politics as written by himself in 11*12. together with an authorized narrative of his experiences in the years then. SYNOPSIS OF FKKVIOtS INSTALLMENTS After years spent in fighting the political boss's in the House of Representatives and later as Governor of Wisc-onsin. La Follette is eleet-si to the Senate ill 1905. At Washington, ns in Wisconsin, he discovers the machine politicians combating progressive legislation. Some of his earliest battles in the s<aate are fought a? dust the railroad interests La Follette is at first the Senates lone progressive, but gradually the new movement grows. The fight on the Payne. Aldrich tariff bill brings the progressives more closely tog'-ther. The little group stands steadfastly against the measure Partisan power shows its head in the struggle w Inch ensues over the bill. The insurgent members of the House, for example, were made apprehensive about their patronage. A great many of their postoffice appointments were delayedand a little later the appointments growing out of the taking of the new census became a critical matter. One night nearly all of the Wisconsin delegation came up to my residence. They were very much wrought up. They had discovered that the Administration was discriminating against the progressive members in Wisconsin and in favor of Senator Siephenson, who was voting regularly with Aldrich. Senator Stephenson had said to them that the President was going to allow E. A. Edmonds to name the supervisors of census in all the districts of Wisconsin. Edmonds was chairman of the State central committee of Wisconsin and the men who had managed Stephenson s campaign when he spent §197,000 in the primary election. They said they came to me because I was chairman of the Committee or Census of the Senate, and they thought I might ascertain if Taft was going to turn over all the patronage of the State to the “standpatters.” Directly Contrary I told them that such an action as this was directly contrary to what he had stpd to me when discussing the civil service features of the census bill: that I had seen him about strengthening those section of the bill and he had then assured me that the census bureau was not to be made a political machine. I told the delegation that if it would be any satisfaction to them I would bring the matter to the President's attention. So I saw the President and told him just what had been reported. He looked out of the Window and said: “It’s a lie; not a word of truth in it.” “Well,” I said, “may I say to them, Mr. President, that they can file their recommendations with the expectation that they will be treated as other Republican Congressmen are treated?” “Well,” he said, “I can't take this matter up until after the tariff bill Is passed.” Then I knew that this patronage matter was being held as a club over the Progressives. When the tariff bill was passed, Mr. Lenroot, Mr. Nelson and Mr. Cary, Wisconsin Republican mem bers, all voted against it. "When they filed their recommendations be fore leaving Washington for supervisors in their respective districts they were promptly turned down and stand-patters recommended by Stephenson and Edmonds appointed in their places. There wag one Democratic district in Wisconsin where no recommendation had been made. Dr. Durand said he would be glad to have me make a recommendation for that district. The man I suggested was 515.000 00 in Cash Prizes to be Distributed EVERT WEEK Between Now and Christmas. Read the Announcement In Next Sunday's Chicago Herald and Examiner. Order It Today from De Wolf News Cos., 15 So. Senate Are, Indianapolis.—Advertisement.

were spent in that little hill town. But more than this it was a very beautiful place—or at least a place from which one looked out on things to quicken the imagination and stir the soul. Our lesson says that it was built on a hill. It was to the brow of this hill that the fellow-citizens of Jesus took Him, and from whifh they would have thrown Him down to His death, had He not miraculously escaped from them. But this description gives little idea of what Nazareth must have been in the mind and imagination of Jesus. The little town was really like an eagle's nest, in a secluded cleft a mile and a half back from the face of the mountain range and a hundred and forty feet below the sum mit. No highroad passed through it, but from the top of the hill just above it one could look over the Mediterranean Sea. the Plain of Esdraelon, the deep Jordan Valley and the hills of Gilead, while off to the North were the snows of Ilermon and Lebanon. How the youthful Jesus must have loved that view! And what emotions must have swayed Him as he looked out over that world that He was to conquer with the Truth! Nazareth was not a no-account town to Him. No town, no matter

Where Visiting Pastors Preach Bishop Joseph F. Barry of Philadelphia will deliver his conference sermon at the East Tenth M. E. Church at 10:45 a. m. Sunday. Visiting Methodist pastors to the Methodist conference will preach Sunday as follows: Arlington, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. W. R. Thom; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. H. P Bodwell. Barth Place. 19:45 am., the Rev. C. R. Stout; 7:45 p. m, the Rev. W. T. Jones. Beech Grove, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. E. E. Jones. Rellaire, 10:4r> a. m.. the Rev. Os-

, / jf'l “THERE'S NOT A WORD OF • ' TRUTH IN IT." promptly turned down, and she man appointed by the President was recommended by Edmonds and Senator Stephenson, Now these appointments were made during the recess, and their nominations all had to come through the Senate Committee on Census, of which I was chairman. When the committee met I stated exactly what the President had done with respect to supervisors of census in Wisconsin. Haje, Carter and a number of members of the committee said: “You report against the confirmation of these Wisconsin supervisors and every member of this committee and the whole Senate will stand with you. Not one of them will be confirmed.” But I saw plainly enough that I was going to have some differences with the administration upon important legislative matters and so I resolved to report these nominations for confirmation, determined that my differences with the administration, if any, should be upon matters of principle and not be obscured by squabbles over patronage. I wish to refer here in passing to another experience I had, as chairman of the Census Committee, with the President. On one of my visits to the White House while the census bill was pending, I called the President’s attention to a section of the bill that provided for taking the valuation of the manufacturing plants of the country. I said, “Mr. President, I have been a member of the Senate for three or four years. I have been trying to secure consideration of an amendment to the interstate commerce act authorizing the commission to make a valuation of the railroads of the country. ‘But as the committees are organized in the Senate and in the House we can’t get a bill out of the committee. Opportunity “Now, there is an opportunity here to put a provision into the census bill employing engineers of the Army and other experts under the direction of the Department of Commerce and Labor to make a physical valuation of the railroads, and I am very strongly tempted to use all the power and influence I have as chairman of that committee to get some action upon this important subject.” “Senator La Fojlette,” he said. “I am afraid that will delay consideration of the hill. If you will not do that, I will recommend val uation strongly in my message next fall: I will put the whole influence of the administration behind your proposition.” I said, “Vfcry well, Mr. President.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

.WEEKLY SUNDAY. SCHOOL LESSON

how remote or insignificant, is a noaccount towrn to Jesus. He loved Nazareth, His home. It

car Jean: 7:45 p. m., the Rev. Horace H. Sprague. Blaine Avenue, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. G. W. Holmes; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. E. Stambush. Brightwood, the Rev. T. W. J. Collings; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. W. E. Watkins. Broad Ripple, 10:45 a. m , the Rev. J. H. Carnes; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. O. E. Haley. Broadway, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. J. X. G> eerie; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. C. S. Black. Capitol Aveiuo, 10:45 am., the Rev. J. E. Murr; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. G. A. Smith. Central Avenue, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. W. S. Bovard. East Park, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. J. G. Moore; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. H. H. Sheldon. East Twenty-Ninth Street, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. Lee Andrews. Edwin Ray, 10:45 a. m . the Rev.

I will act on your suggestion, and with the support of the administration next f ill we will have a good show of gettitng some action.” He did not recommend the legislation in his message. Instead, he put in a statement that no legislation of the sort was necessary; thal the Interstate Commerce Commission should proceed under the law just as it was. And that was the end of the valuation of railroad prop ertj under the Taft administration. It was acts such as these. together with his attitude upon the tariff question, his failure to sup port the plain pledges of the party, his interference in behalf of Cannon, his use of patronage to discipline members, his alignment with Aldrich and the stand patters of the party, and his whole course in the Ballinger affair. which absolutely alienated the Progressive group. One of the most important measures which has come before the Senate since I became a member is th® Aldrich emergency currency bill, afterward known as the Aldrich -Vreeland currency bill. In some ways no bill over introduced in Congress was more significant of the control of legislation by great financial interests. This bill proposed an issue of $500,000,00 of additional notes to national banking associations, such issue to be based upon State bonds, municipal bonds, and as reported by the committee and advocated by Senator Aldrich, railroad bonds as well. Panic of 1907 The country had just gone through the panic of 1907 and banks and business had been made to feel the pinch. There was a plausible reason to urge, and, indeed, considering the character of our currency system and the Imperfection of our banking lawsw, a sound reason, for making provision against, a sudden withdrawal of the money necessary for the daily exchanges of business, whether such contradiction was due to the fear resulting from a panic inauguration for speculative purposes or otherwise. For even a managed panic may become unmanageable. There were reasons back of the emergency features of the AldriehVreeland currency bill more important vastly to the interests than those prominently urged. It was inevitable that the years of stock-watering and promotion, the inflation of railway securities, industrial securities, miring, traction, gas and electricity, should bring :ts harvest of financial distress and reaction. It was inevitable that the crime of over-capitalization should meet its punishment. There was urgent demand that these securities should be restored to public confidence. The emergency currency measure offered the opportunity, and for the first time in history it was proposed that railroad bonds should be wrought into our monetary system as a basis for currency issue. When I entered the Senate in 1806, as before stated, I had proposed as an amendment to the Hepburn rate bill a provision authorizing and directing the Interstate Commerce Commission to make such valuation as a basis for establishing reasonable rates. The Senate had voted down my proposed amendment. For two years I had awaited an opportunity to offer my amendment providing for valuation to any measure pending before the Senate to which it would be germane. Apparently it had never occurred to the committee reporting the currency bill that my valuation measure, which had bee nbottled up in the committee on interstate commerce, would be germane as an amendment to the railroad bond provision in the currency bill. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) (Continued in Our Next Issue)

hud been His custom to go to church, or to the synagogue, which was the church of that day. So when he

Frank Lenig; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. C. D. Wilson. # Edgewood, 10:45 a. m.. the Rev. Ralph Cross; 7:45 p. m* the Rev. H. A. Broadwell. Fletcher Place, 10:43 a. m.. the Rev. W. M. Whitsitt; 7:45 p.< m., the Rev. S. J. Cross. Fountain Street, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. Amos Bastian; 7:45 p. m , the Rev. C. O. Morin. Garfield Avenue, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. W. C. Patrie; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. E. 11. Boldrey. Grace, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. J. A. Sum wait; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. J. M. Larimore. Hall Place, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. Horace Sprague; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. <l. A. Shake. Heath Memorial. 10:45 a. m.. the Rev. L. C. Jeffrey; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. S. L. Martin. Irvington. 10:45 a. m., the Rev. W. B. Farmer; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. E. it. Zaming. Meridian Street. 10:45 a. m., the Rev. J. W. McFall. Merritt Place, 10:45 a. m.. the Rev. K. L. Hutcheson; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. C. It. Ulrey. Morris Street, 10:45 a. m.. the Rev. IV. S. Rader; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. R. E. Badger. ' North. 10:45 a. m., the Rev. J. T. Scull. Jr. New Jersey Street, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. C. G. Fritsche. Roberts Park. 10:45 a. m., the Rev. Alfred F. Hughes. Shelby Street, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. O. C. Hass; 7:45 p. rri., the Rev. E. N. Rosier. Trinity, 10:45 a. m.. the Rev. A. L. Bennett; 7:45 p. m.. the Rev. C. W. Whitman. St. Paul, 10:45 a. m., th eßov. W. 11. Wylie; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. A. H. Pitkin. West Miehigan-King Avenue, 10:45 a. m.. the Rev. R. o. Penson; 7:45 p. m.. the Rev. T. J. Hart. West Michigan-Wesley Chapel, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. W. E. Brown; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. L. C. Murr. West Washington, 10:45 a. rn., the Rev. W. G. Morgan; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. J. A. Breeden. Woodslde, 10:45 a. m., the Rev. E. F. Shake; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. George Dairy tuple. Riverside. 10:45 a. m., the Rev. .T, B. Meyer; 7:45 p. m.. the Rev. J. g. Golwin. Simpson Chapel. 10:45 a, m., the Rev. A. H. Couchman; 7:45 p. m., the Rev. E. A. Daughery. Today's Best Radio Features Copriyht Iti/ t nitt'd Prats WEAK. New York (492 Ml. 9 P. M., EST —Vincent Lopez and his orchestra. KDKA, Pittsburgh (326 Ml. 8 P. M., EST—Westlnghouse Band. KGO, Oakland (312 M), 8 P. M.. POST—Comic opera, “The Serenade,” by KGO Light Opera Company. , KYW, Chicago (530 Ml, 7 P. M.. CST—Pershing Male Quartette WSI. Cincinnati (390 M). 1:30 P. M„ CST—Freda Sankers’ RagaJnuffens. SUNDAY WEAK, New York (492 Ml WCAP, Washington (469 M) and WJAR. Providence 360 M) 6:20 p. m. EST—Musical program from the Capitol Theater. WCED, Zion (375 M) 7 p. m. CST —Sacred concert program. WMAF, South Dartmouth (363 Ml 6:15 p. m. EST —Musical program from the New York Strand Theater. WOAW, Omaha (526 M) 9 p. m. CST —Musical chapel service. WIP, Philadelphia (509 M) 2:35 p. m. EST—Matinee concert by Comfort's philharmonic orcrestra. HE FACES DOUBLE GRIEF By United Prats EVANSVILLE, Ini. Sept 13. Granville Phillips, 30, was held on a double charge of forgery and bigamy today as a result of his marriage to Jessie Baker of Mt Vernon. He paid the squire who married them by check and the squire found it was worthless. Baker, arrested on the forgery charge, admitted he had never been divorced from his first wife. MOTION PICTU RES ISIS First Half Next Week WILLIAM DESMOND A " Seats “BIG JIMRF.R” A||theTirne HAL ROACH COMEDY “OUTDOOR PAJAMAS”

[ came back home. He went to the j synagogue. And there, as He read | from the Book of Isajah, He told His fellow-townsmen of His mission, te preach the gospel to the poor, to heal the broken-hearted, to do all ; that Isajah had proclaimed. They wondered at His gracious words. But to them He was only ; Jesus the carpenter. They resented 1 the fact that He should presume to teach, and when He told them plain they took Him out to kill Him. i I Was Nazareth different from other towns? Hits not every community had people too bad for it and people too good fox it? And how often have the real prophets in the community been made to suffer more cruelly than the evil-doers and ne’er-do-welbs! , Boston honors William Lloyd Garrison today, but once the mob dragged him through its streets. How necessary it is that we should strive to understand truth and carefully consider it no matter who may utter It. Truth is as much truth when spoken by a carpenter as when spoken by a clergyman. How tolerant we should be toward those of our own town, and toward all men, even though we may not understand them. We can not err in letting love rather than prejudice rule our actions. God g.vt us grace to recognize and honor our prophets!

PICTURES LIMITED ENGAGEMENT STARTS TOMORROW AT OUR REGULAR PRICES—THE MOST MASSIVE SEA SPECTACLE OF THIS OR ANY OTHER SEASON First National Presents j A 1 FRANK LLOYD PRODUCTION With MILTON SILLS I MMKk. ENID DENNETT Hgl WALLACE BEERY W AND 3000 OTHERS j RAFAEL SABATINI’S bTj\ Greatest romantic drama of the dashing pirate chief of the Spanish wfJL •* “ will Main, woven into the most colossal MM] dramatic production ever screened. %$m If you long for the open road or yearn for the deep sea trail, where untold 1 adventure and romance unfold before j you—with the love of combat and the ✓ glory of conquest—you will live it all j with the Hawk of the Sea, the most j daring gentleman pirate that ever walked a wave-washed deck. Atmospheric Introduction and Spe- I cial Musical Settings arranged by C. Bakaleinikoff TO BEST ENJOY “THE SEA HAWK ” WE SUGGEST YOU PLAN TO ARRIVE FOR THE BEGINNING OF SHOW | SUNDAY 1:05—3:10—5:15—7:20—9:30 I DAILY 12:10—2:30—4:45—7:00—9:15 |

RIKHOFF STARTS PROBE OF RAID ON ALLEGED DEN Will Quizz Officers About . Men Who Were Not Slated, Pqlice Chief Herman Rlkhoff today began an investigation of alleged irregularities in the conduct of a raid at 37 S. Capitol Ave. last Saturday. He said before he was through two lieutenants, several patrolmen, patrol wagonmen and turnkeys probably would be questioned. Rikhoff said his investigation was started because of a rumor that three men who were in the rooms at 37 S. Capitol Ave. during the raid were not slated. One of t>ese men who is said to have possessed liquor was freed and the liquor confiscated, it is said. Another man was allowed to leave the place. A third escaped after the wagon reached headquarters, according to reports. Lieutenant Cox charged Lasky and Nate Farb, 1236 E. Ohio St., with

being the keepers of a game. Both allege they told Cox they were not connected with the place and Nate Farb states he was in front of the place on the sidewalk when the raid occurred. Lasky, Farb said, formerly owned a place at 25 S. Capitol Ave., but sold it several months ago. CHAIRMAN IS NAMED John H. Kingsbury Heads La Follette Campaign in County. John H. Kinsbury. attorney in the Peoples Bank Bldg., has been named Seventd district chairman for the La Follette campaign. Progressive State headquarters announced today. Kingsbury conferred with ward chairmerf Friday evening, laying plans for activities in Marion County. There are eighteen cities in the world with populations of more than a million. AMUSEMENTS CAPITOL THEATRE Columbia Burlesque Last Times Today. Ladies, Every lay, 23c. BILLY ARLINGTON GOLDEN CROOKS Mothers, Bring the Children to Our Playground.

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