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Lincoln Journal Star from Lincoln, Nebraska • Page 2

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Lincoln, Nebraska
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2
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LARGEST Home Delivery; City Circulation; Tctal Circulation, AND EASY TO READ TYPE. (AM) LINCOLN DAILY NEWS) mtnta A 24-hour Newspaper And the only one in Lincoln open and printing all day long. Noon--Afternoon--Evening--Night--Mornlitfl. THIRTY-FOURTH YEAR. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1923.

TWO CENTS, PPERS SOLICIT WHISKY a a 3 HARDING IN FOR LICKING Middle West on the War Path, Bill White Says. EMOTIONAL CAMPAIGN AHEAD Hard to Tell Where the Voters Will Kick Over. ACCUSED DENTIST CLAIMS BELL EXTRAVAGANT STATE COMMISSION COMPARES COSTS OF LINCOLN COMPANY. On Rates That Bell Says Are Con- fiscatory Lincoln Corporation Pays Dividends and Gives Good Service. NEW YORK--A kiss In a dentlsts's office on Fifth avenue in New York proved the Transportation Fanners' Real Trouble But They'll Vote on Something Else and Good Man May Lose.

EMPORIA, July Harding is in "real danger of getting an awful licking," in the 1924 elections, William Allen White warned in an editorial in his Bmporia Gazette. Prohibition is the only thing which will hold the middle west in republican ranks, he said. The editorial, an answer to thosq in the east who disturbed by the trouble out west as evidenced by the Minnesota senatorial election, declared the "middle west is on a rampage again." Continuing he said, "The basic trouble out the trouble we have had for forty years--transportation. ''it is a curious thing that when fairly treated in the matter of transportation, he forgets more or less the farmer gets mad because he is un- about tjie transportation question and does something else. This part of the world is for national prohibition.

It pioneered -woman suffrage gave Impetus for direct election of United States senators and brought about passage of the income tax amendment, the adoption of the direct primary and a lot of of that sort." I White said the election of Magnus i Johnson, taken with that of Ship-' stead, Frazier, Ladd and Brookhart, proves very definitely the middlewest is going on the war path. "It if hard to say who will get the HswteHMwt "It will tsot'-be" the-democrat's: Ford might get Itr'or a third-party even wiHi Ford. There is not a remote chance to get republican delegations from these states if "we merely abuse men who make rash promises. La Follette on the republican ticket could carry those states. By all rules of the game Harding- should have a renomi-1 nation.

If voting were a matter 8f in-! telligence And not of emotion, he would win. But we seem headed for an emotional campaign and there is real danger that an honest, decent, courageous, efficient man is going to get an awlul licking." 6IYIHG THEIRBABIES AWAY Toothful Chicago Parents Say Poverty Denies Them the Right to Keep Children. CHICAGO, July and Mrs. Joseph, liaverne, the former scarcely ont ot Lis teens and the latter twenty- one, today decided to give away their three small children because "their poverty denies them the right to keep Norms, one year old, has already been placed in a wealthier home. Jean, lour and Robert two, are to hare their future "parents" picked from a number of applicants.

"I'd t-ather die than give the kiddies away," said Mrs. Laverne, an exceptionally pretty woman. "Dying ff Oia 17 states. This highway is wouldn't help them or be fair to them rou ted thru a fertile section of conn- and it would only cost money. no deserts to cross or mountains "We want them to grow up so they to cUml) can have enough to eat- We've been It is the first highway of conse- married six years and tried to get east the Pacific coast and ahead but we cannot Robert lost his traffic KA y.

turn" on going north job and as soon as he gets another. and soutn it connects with the Cus- the furniture company garnishees his ter ha tt i fi highway at Mitchell, wages. We failed, but we ack an i llow trail at Woolsey, the Twin City and Black Kills cut off at Redfield, the famous Yellowstone trail at Aberdeen, the National highway at Jamestown, the North Star trail at Carriagton, After a day's rest from the Northwestern Bell Telephone company hearing at Omaha, Chairman Taylor of the state railway commission and Attorney Lamaster returned to Omaha Saturday to again take up the presentation of testimony on behalf of the state. Expert Accountant Johnson of the commission was on the stand for several days presenting his analysis of the company. He submitted a comparison of the expenses incurred in giving service by the Lincoln company, the next largest telephone organization in the state, seeding to prove thereby that on rates materially lower, exchange for exchange, outside of Lincoln and Omaha, than those which the Bell says are con- flcatorf With respect to it, the Lincoln company is able to pay dividends that have placed the common stock slightly above par.

The Bell objected to this comparison on the ground that it had had no BEATS QUOTA LAW NEW Vera VelnhanJ. trlumjfh over the quota, law for admission Into the United States paved the way to a bridal altar. She had been held three weeks on Ellis Island because, tho ot German parentage, "was born In a Turkish port and the Turkish Quota had been exhausted when she arrived In New York on the steamer Oscar II. She will be' married" In Washington, D. C.

to Elmer Mortensen, a young student of architecture. opportunity to examine the men in the employ of the Lincoln company that had made the entries. The railway commission admitted this was sound argument, and offered to produce witnesses to support the figures. While the master who is taking the testimony was debating as to whether XelnfM would adjourn the hearing to Lin- Browning, millionaire realty operator, to coin for that purpose, the Bell Wlth- rtt rt a 1 I a rt c'o tm OC ar Good drew its objections, the state growing Ground, L. i.

for a gay- round of pleasure more urgent in support of a desire to aloriR the boulevards of Paris. The man kiss had such magnetic quality is said by Edward Browning, her husband. to have been Dr. Charles H. Wilen (in first exclusive photol), a dentist who maintained an office in the Bronx.

Xew York t-lty, until'he sailed for Europe on the OImpic, June" 29th. Mrs. Browning it. according to "husband, occupied a i rendered the Northwestern by the "wfi tt Parent Bell company and for which ot a jt nfij gj -hug it pay 4-1-2 per-CBnt of its gross revenues. AmOng other things he c6m- hatted the statement that the Bell i engineers had invented a combina- i tion truck that not only hauls poles but handles them in the setting cess.

Mr. Cram produced a circular PASSING OF THE OLD WEST. TOMBSTONE, July to put a stop to the activities of the demon speeders on the paved highway between Douglas and Bisbee, the county supervisors of Cochine county have authorized the sheriff to buy an automobile. They specified that he get one of the "high powered kind" used by sawed-off shotgun squads in the big cities. It must be able to go seventy miles an hour, they said.

Until a few years ago the sheriff did all of his pursuing on horseback. TO INCREASE WHEAT PRICE LINCOLN BUSINESS MEN TAKE ACTION SATURDAY NOON. Pass Resolution Asking Railroads With Consent of Interstate Commerce Commission, to Cut Rates 25 Per Cent. BANK ASSETS AT AUCTION TRAIL IS WELL HARKED ti J.AJ. 1 Am call witnesses as the other side grew iPIBST SALE TJHDER NEW LAW AT Crum, Chicago HADAR NEXT MONDAY.

hired by the commission, gave i mony as to the value of the services State Banking Department Can Buy Jy ffiving Beceipt tod Turn TKein Commission. K. C. Knudson, head of the state banking department, was absent from his office Saturday. JHe left word at DIVORCED IN TWO MINUTES; WILL WED AGAIN SOON At a meeting of representative business men of Lincoln held at chamber of commerce Saturday noon for the purpose of helping Nebraska farmers to get a higher price for their wheat, a resolution was unanamously passed endorsing the emergency relief masure passed by the" Omaha chamber of commerce and the Omaha grain exchange.

The Lincoln resolution is addressed to Hale Holden president of the association of railway executives and to the interstate commerce commission. It applies to a cut of 25 per cent in the rates on wheat and flour shipped to the sea ports for export trade only. The meeting was called by the Lincoln chamber of commerce. The grain, banking and commercial interests were represented and President August Eiche and Secretary W. S.

Whitten appeared for- the chamber of commerce. Besides the latter members of the conference were J. E. Miller, W. T.

Barstow, E. Leet, H. S. Freeman, H. E.

Gooth, W. W. Hackney, jr. C. C.

Carlson, J. D. Bushnell and J. Cass Cornell. President Eiche acted as chairman.

A suggestion originating in Chicago that the people be urged to buy wheat or a barrel of flour was frowned upon as impracticable and visionary. J. E. Miller said that the farmers are now being charged 100 per cent more for the commodities they require than before the world war. It was stated that the are 50 to 100 per cent for hauling commodities than before the war.

With a cut of .25 per cent in export freight ratea it was figured out that thte would mean a -cat of 6 uifeta per bushel. Barstow suggested th'at' as' a relief measure for farmers might store their wheat at home instead of in the public elevators. Mounting costs of storage in the elevators would further reduce the price. that farmers would get for their products. The resolution of the 'iq wh'ich a private firm advertises the governor's office that he had not this trurik for sale.

He alse pointed ma de public his recent letter to bank Oin aha association follows: out ot the window to where precisely receivers notifying them to turn over ResolveA that the a oal5 the same truck was being used by assets and affairs to the department thru the association of railway executives EOAD TO THE NORTH GETS HEAVY TRAFFIC. the street car company. i of trade and commerce of which fie is A The object of this testimony is to secretary- His statement also said i not ce wit fi the consent support the commission contention none of the members of his depart- thaf, the Bell- is not economically man-1 mem had done so. aged, but is so liberal a spender that A copy of the notice to receivers he grain on it runs costs of giving service above I stated had been sent to eight receiv-; commission the interstate emergency shipped all rail points in the mitea states including an in elevators at storage reasonable limits. TulV 25 It is said it Will be sent rates now' in effect, these emergency rates .11 ThP notice States to expire January 30.

1924. that the grain KLAN WINS THEFIRST ROUND Arguments on. Temporary Injunction Against Organizing in New York Postponed. ALBANY. N.

July state to all receivers. The notice states hlp that it is based on authority conferred i allowed Extension of the Sunshine Highway to the South Is the Plan Being Worked by Its Promoters. A new auto road from north at Brandon, fanitoba, to the Gulf coast and Mexico, is the plan now being worked out by the officers of the Sunshine Highway. J. R.

Dalton, of Woonsocket, South -TMTM Dakota, secretary of the Sunshine. today lost its first skirmish with the part of the receiver to turn assets of Highway who was in Lincoln Satur-, ku klun klan, when Supreme Court the bank to the department of trade ji j.2 I m-nn nar a day says'. "Our highway is now 700 Justice Staley granted a motion of and commerce for the reason that to Atlantic, gulf and Pacific ports of 75 per cent of the by section 30, chapter 191 session laws of 1923. Assets in failed banks have been unofficially estimated at over 000,000. Accompanying the notice is a copy I of a motion to be filed by in district court asking leave on the on these only one emergency rates intermediate stop be at transit or proportional rate breaking points except that one add.tional stop may be made for milling purposes and that storage at transit milling or rate breaking point and also at elevator at seaport be limited to thirty days.

This resolution has been forwarded to Hale Holden of the association of railway executives, also the the presidents of all the Imps. By this rate resell onr export -wheat at successfully compete -with other wheat exporting countries. It is our firm opinion that the reduced rate as proposed will benefit the American farmer very The Omaha Grain exchange NEW YOR1C--Lorraine Brox, noted atcress. obtained a dHorce from "SV. L.

Ginter In two minutes, record time, has al- readv anounced who she 'will wed next. The lucky man is "Winfield Scott of Texas, and she will marry him just as soon as the law allows. BATTAN CAME fflHWHDE TY STATE SHEBUT 1 OF OMAHA SHOOTING. BRITISH SMUGGLING SCHEMEJJNCOVERED Baronet Solicited Funds For Liquor For Unnamed Destination. TO BE TBANSFERBED AT SEAo Promised Investors Twenty Cent in Sixty Days.

Per PARLIAMENT IS INVESTIGATING Wholesale Whisky Shop on the High Seas Planned by Former Consul Says Trade Is Safe and legal. THE WEATHER. For Lincoln and virlnlty. Fair tonleht and probably Sunday: warmer tonight. Tor Nebraska: Partly cloudy tonight and Sundav, probably scattered thunder showers, warmer tonight southcentral portion; cooler Sundav afternoon.

LONDON, July report of a committee appointed to investigate liquor smuggling into the United States was laid before the British cabinet today and a statement on the subject will he made in commons, probably next week. Simultaneously with this announcement the Daily Express today exposed an attempt by Lieut. Col. Sir Broderick Hartwell Bart, former consul at Naples, to raise funds for a whisky selling expedition on the high seas. A circular was issued inviting subscription of $12.50 or more to send ten thousand cases of liquor to foreign ports on a private ship under sealed orders within a.

month. The baronet stated he already had arranged for five thousand cases and guarantees to return the invested money, plus 20 per cent interest, within sixty days. DEPUTY STATE SHERIFF TELLS The circular states that Hartwell received a guarantee of that the goods would be accepted and paid for twenty -miles off shore of the unnamed destination It declares that plans made to send "aboard" at least ten thousand cases monthly. "This fortunes you -wttBonf rfsf circular" TneTWSiness perfectly legal safe," Hartwell is quoted asking the Daily Express "It amounts "to the fact that I am setting up a wholesale whisky shop on the high seas The profits to investors would amount to 20 per cent in sixty days." The government has indicated that the parliamentary commission which now is investigating the situation has Two of Three Bullets, According to His Story, Would Have Killed But for on Windshield. Eugene Battan of Lincoln, prohibition enforcement officer, and his companion, Bill Sudenberg, came near the big divide late Wednesday night, according to Deputy State Sheriff Broady who assisted in the roundup and arrest of suspects.

The first bullet from the bandit car according to Broady, struck the top WHAT'S DOING TONIGHT. Dinner and dancing; at the Country club. Mr. and Mrs. Francis M.

W. Trice. Io4o Washington informal reception from 7 to 10 o'clock In celebration of the sixtieth an- of their marriage. Marriage of Ml-w Martha Sell to Harry Krleger at 7.30 at the home of tha bride a parents. Mr.

and Casper Sell. and York posts of Travelers' Protective association in Joint picnic at Beward Pa Sport carnival. Antelope park at 6.30 p. m. He narrowly missed being killed, in the opinion of the doctor.

The steel bit of the drill entered the abdomen of the patient but the intestine was not punctured and there is chance of his recovery. He was drilling into a vertical piece of wood. When Mr. Follmer attempted to withdraw the tool it stuck. He jerked ana the drill suddenly yielded.

It caught his clothes, tore them half off, and pierced the abdomen. The drill was revolving at the rate of twelve hundred times a minute. H. B. Gertson, 536 North Fourteenth, who was with Mr.

Follmer at the time, jerked the electric cord and broke the circuit. The injured man was rushed to the hospital in Henry Brown's ambulance. LEMEN PLEA IS INNOCENCE STATE CHECKER CHAMP IS BOUBlf of the hood and had practically spent found a permitting the its force when it caught Battan on the United States searching rights within knee. A bruise resulted. Two subse- a twelve mile zone.

The cabinet is quent bullets, however, plowed for- expected to adopt it- ward in direct line with the two offi- cers. They struck metal instead of glass and altho the windshield was shattered, both bullets dropped harmlessly in the car. The metal had taken the sting. Battan received cuts from the glass but was not seriously injured. His companion was not injured.

This is takea to indicate that Batten was the game the gunmen were after. The shooting happened at Seventh and Hickory streets within one and one-half blocks of the heart of the Italian quarter. Deputy Broady assisted in rounding up two Italians. One of them was found in a private garage back of what the deputy re- We failed, but we failed to love each other and the Bat the children can't live children, on love. "A lot of people say we no right with our poverty to hate children.

Maybe we have no right to happiness of any sort." she concluded bitterly. Mrs. Laverne will soon become a mother for a fourth time. Satisfactory Progress Beported Toward Eliminating It From Steel Industry. NEW YORK.

July 25 "Sansfac- ASKS FRANCE TO SPEED DP BBnAHf EAGEB fOB BEPLT TO BEPABATIONS KOTE. ,13 i i-i A 1--1 carefully thru towns and cities as sion from the privileges of member-! 27 and it requires this taking mer well as thru the country. An immense ship corporations in the state. The within four months thereafter, traffic passes ovef it. A few days ago temporary injunction was continued Mr.

Knudson's statement left with in a 72 mile drive we met motor cars by the court. the governor says the bank examiners and gnaarnty fund commission are out in the state taking possession of property and affairs of receiverships, that they have been out four days and will continue this work next week. Mr. Knndson. announces that he has arranged with the receiver of the Farmers Merchants bank of Hadar.

Pierce county, to sell its assets ajt i public auction next Monday. B. X. Saunders is receiver. The bank i closed February 28.

192L Mr. Knud' son will attend this sale. The assets of the failed bank at' Page, Holt and the Theodore Roosevelt highway i county, will be sold later. Assets are at Devil's 1-ake. At Brandon it con- Premier Baldwin Has Promised the! being turned in to the department of House of Commons a Statement Before Adjournment on August 2.

necls a transcontinental high- whicll ext ends from the eastern to Vancouver. B. C. "We trade and commerce and will later be i turned over to the guaranty fund com! mission. Section 00 of the new law provides whea the department of trade aiid commerce takes over receiver- PAR1S.

July 28--Great Britain to- ships and assets the guaranty fund port this move. COAL PARLEY BREAKDOWN AHTHBACITE OPEKATOBS WOFT BECOGIZE UNION. Ironies" he adds. "The first is thru Nebraska. Kansas.

Oklahoma and i Texas into Mexico other from 'Sioux City to Deaaison. thence to Des to th- Bruish to Louis and toward the A wa-s an accountsas: -o the Also Balk at Paying Union Dues Before Wages--Official Intervention Expected Before September. ATLANTIC CITY. N. July 28--Anthracite operators and miners leaders left for Uieir homes todar while Rogers, government observer.

to Washington a rt-port that day askej Franc" to speed up re- commission shall appoint a receiver. ne tj a t3ons over atsd union rc- Receiver? relieved 01 duty roust fi co bad definitely broken down. southeast. I am of the first making a survey Marquis Carson, 11 foreign court, aad if h-o has not accounted for 5 route! and have secretary, asking this goverr.inent to 'property the depart shall proceed of Garv. as a meeting of president of subsidiaries.

companies Slates corporation next ThuTsda The presidents and the iron and institute will nyivo 4 azain ork si OommeTitinc on which were in this Gary irotn 01 clu'h ior a jne-eUne to ard has 5-n town nrnh irom the rtty a Th- and 5 -une or.e o' towns. The is arrant- Monday and south of i OT WV, IS to tl! trict court for to sell assets of the hav a for mombers fore adjournment Aucsst 2 i a bar.k undT is a "opy yf BelrJati 'asF are not sufficient to sending his own to Ixindon i i cnaranty fund for paid out to depositors. I a of at art- Vjt if! CHILI) BADLY SCAIDED FIE MILLION FOR A POUND: Agile German Mark Getting Uo Bet- Fast as Trading Opens Saturday 1 an i- rbaaces ot recover! are BEEfi GABDEN BAIDED. OMAHA. July complete beer vending establishment yet discovered Omaha.

cf both a bowery and beer garden, with secluded booths for customers, was raided last by deputy sheriffs at Sixth a-d Pocp'eton Fifteen cars were parked in front of fie clace a-d fcrty oeoo'e -were enjoy- i a when the -aid was r-ads One hundred 3f beer i- the T.akmg were destroyed and 2,000 quarts of beer confiscated. At th" pal" th" Tnay bid on and if his is r.5ch«-st bil the "urn'-l him pivin? a for th" assets. His if in full Th" of ar" paid from or a draf' -cpon th" cuararn Th" of tra'i" and rom- m'rr" is- 10 Official is expected by both as otherwise a strike would probably becin on August 31. the existing wage agreement expires. An informal conference called by tie United tSates coal commission in (another attempt to brine operators and men September is anticipated John Mine Workers, for a of with district CRVC CAW CURED UfllU UUN UUltUU Mrs.

Knox Declares Novena to St. Anne Transformed Deformed Child Into Active Boy. OMAHA, July Knor, 4, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Knox, 535 South Twenty-fourth avenue, whose birthday was Thursday, the day of the feast of St Anne made a novena to St.

Anne in 1922 and within a year he was transformed from a deformed child into aft active boy, his mother states in a letter to the M. A. Stagno, pastor of fers to as one of the most notorious Anne's church, Twenty-fourth street places in He says that a recent raid netted fifty gallons of whisky. Evidence was gathered via the purchase route. First it was a quart but-by the time the official party had completed the deal, thirty gallons had been produced.

The place was so well stocked that the officers couldn't buy it out They contracted for the thirty gallons. A search revealed twenty additional gallons. Another Italian picked up in the neighborhood was in a Studebaker car which, according to Broady, was street and Peppleton avenue. A Novena is defined as nine days devotion to a religious object The testimony was sent to the Rev. Father Stagno in a letter during the solemn novena to St Anne at Father Stagno's church, which ended Thursday with a solmen benediction.

"Andrew could hardly walk a block and from Infancy never had use of his "legs." Mrs. Knoz declared, "I took him to three specialists and they recommended braces or an operation when he was older. In 192 he started identified by Battan and his com-j a novena and within two weeks panion as the car occupied by the gun- noticed a change." men. The Italian taken with the Mrs. Knox says that her son is as Is said to have made tnreats to shoot; active as any child now.

The trans- few prohibition agents. i formation was complete before the was while assisting In this round- sec ond novena could be started. The up that word reached Deputy Broady I boy's legs, formerly bowed, are now of the so-called roundup of bandits straight and strong, she declares. that so far as nothing was wrong in his comxnunuy. Officers then began to suspect that it Their suspicions later or." Italian in the GOKDlTIflH SAHE Victim of Electric Drill Accident Is Holding Own at St Eliza' beth's Hospital.

KC1 blacksmith who was seriously injured Fri- Chauncey lemen, Serving Burglary Sentence, Is Arraigned on Charge of Breaking Out of Reformatory. Chauncey Lemen, confessed burglar and former state checker champion, was bound over-to district court by Justice of Peace Stevens Saturday forenoon. Lemen pleaded innocewce to a charge of breaking custody. He escaped from the state reformatory on the morning of July 2 under cover of a dense fog and was recaptured an hourlater a mile from the institution, according to the testimony of Assistant Superintendent H. P.

Shidler, who testified against the defendant in a preliminary hearing. Lemen is serving a sentence of from two to fifteen years for highway robbery. Lemen would talk little while in the court room. In the hearing he declined to tell his side of the story until his trial at district court He was sent up last winter. He confessed at that time to Captain of Detectives Anderson that he staged several burglaries and that he shot Norman Walt, 1420 South Twenty-first, in the leg while attempting to rob the Walt home.

He also admitted holding Up a street car motorman near Thirty- third and Sumner streets. Chauncey was taken to the state penitentiary following after the recent escape. was all a fake. justified. The private parage was attended by con-) afternoon in the siderable excitement, according to the abdomen by an electric drill which deputy.

The man screamed like a al his shop at 1021 child men aad holdioE his own. No score nf Italian of the noticed in his condition at Pt- in They jjijjabe'h's he is confined. Friday nicht. aceorditu: to fiatly off of operator? Qf the 13 i on and off" or wl hit hisiile and Mr Rroa1 bar from the hands o' While fici'e- mnning hirt. Omaha police an iron of th" -a ho hai" pot boilins for ''-i' IT.K rested Pr.

T. McCarthy, -who is aif-idJnr Ibe victim Mr 3'ollmer i. treated to prevent dagger of or ly outla-arj i place -ttie i payir.c 'TTX -hal" I was drawn th rc" an-1 rt i -he proportion its i' Omah lh- t' a KritJav nieh' from Lltcb'Vld r. Moll5' Citj. Sari'ie-, 21 Hendricts.

21. both Bluffs, la. sera Cilj. 1 rc. a $10,000 FIBE AT SARGENT.

A ISLAND. July cornbustion caused a loss of $10,000 early Saturday the elevator at Sargent. Neb. Only recently, the Harry elevator that vhlage was supplied with tew machinery arid be'tmg. but contained on'y 300 bushels of corn the fire broke out.

The auildmg was owned by David Welch. The amount of insaratce not be learned here. his capture He was captured by Adolph Trager, a guard at the reformatory, when he was noticed passing house. "I took the direction," said Chauncey when questioned Saturday. "There were plenty of good hiding places around there and maybe 1 should have hidden." He made his escape from the Institution at about 6 a.

m. after waiting his chance and slipping between the guards under cover of the fog. BIBLE TO JAPANESE PRINCE Beautifully Embossed Volume Will Be Wedding Present to the Future Emperor. TOKIO. July A beautifully embossed Bible will presented to Crown Tegent Hirohlto.

future emperor of Japan, and his bride the Princes? Xapako Kuni, whta they are married xt fall. This wedding gift will be given to future emperor and Empress of this country by several hundred thousand Christians in Japan-- both for- and natives small rapila, but substantial in total. noir raised by Japa- Christian workers thruout the Biblo nrjii be printed 5n the The and -rorlcTnanship Ihf rAn buy. bin 1t not a cna-Jy thine, not built only for rlar It will of a handy, ron- binlt for uf trho ar" i 31 tba 4 win bo r-arj "Tb" rro-R-n a in a 4 i hTia al r- in-e. Th8t handy this it a SPA PERI A I.

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About Lincoln Journal Star Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1881-2024