»mmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrnWANTS MONEY BACK.Donation* Made Under Religious ZealLook Different Now.The recital in a complaint filed in court by Sarah E. Cripe indicates that it is better to stand by the old time religion than to take up with the new-fangled notions.The defendant is David W. Myland, who, the plaintiff alleges, is the pastor of a peculiar form of religious worship known as the Apostolic Faith and commonly known as the Gliggy Bluks.She alleges that she was induced to become a follower of the faith and a member of defendant's congregation, and that he represented that he was so in Divine favor that he had visions in which the Lord, would appear and communicate with him; that he told her the Lord had appeared and said that an- elderly woman was to furnish $2,000 to purchase a home for a Bible school. Plaintiff admits she believed' such representations and that she was the woman the Lord had selected to give the money. She alleges that the representations were false and intended to deceive but that she believed in them and in April 1911, she paid the defendant $2,000.The defendant then purchased of David W. Davis a tract of some 27 acres of land, paying $7,000 for the land and taking title in the name of David W. Myland, trustee. On the land he paid the $2,000 plaintiff gave him, a note for $2,000 secured by mortgage on certain Indianapolis real estate and a note for $3,000 secured by mortgage on the land purchased.She alleges that in April 1912, the defendant borrowed of John B. Seymour, of Kenton, Ohio, the sum of $3,000, executing his note and a mortgage on the land bought of Davis for security. With the $3,000 he paid off the $2,000 mortgage on the Indianapolis property and applying $1,000 on the original Davis mortgageShe alleges the land bought of Davis is worth $9,000 and the encumbrances on it are the $2,0001 owing to Davis and the $3,000 owing to Seymour.In January 1912, she alleges that she advanced $150 to Myland to pay interest on the Davis note. She thus had $2,150 invested in the proposition]She now asks that the money invested by her be made a charge on the real estate subject to the rights of Davis and Seymour and she* wants judgment for $2,150 with interest and that the real estate be sold to pay the Hens.