light * - *«. Barnsdaie,dnr(1 j certain deals.anotner millionaire, inconrust.Mr.thetheDIDN'T FEEDbusinejThat t aboutdayouldlardJ€ S-As-BEER TO BABYtor-iller.mi-hadtos a ogg:;rn-was;onellerion.;ghtlext3D.ley-emetvritt ot■Bed inst S aIthehasbilenown a on riv-; to that reetoc-ibilean-uldhiefthoElijah Groomes, 58 years old, charged with feeding beer to a baby, causing the infant to become drunk, denied Monday in criminal court, that he put beer in a nursing bottle, and denied that he gave the liquor to a child. He said he bought the beer, but that he did no more than carry it in a bucket from the saloon to the house where he, with members of a religious sect, the “Alphas,” had theirlodgings.Judge Pritchard overruled a motion to quash the Groomes affidavit. Counsel foi Mr. Groomes argued that the indictment ought to have been on the charge of giving liquor to a minor, and urged that the conduct of a 1-years-old baby boy could not be vicious or immoral or render the infant subject to prosecution.Officers Shine and Merrill told of finding the baby drunk. The nursing bottle, partly filled with stale beer, was shown in court and identified. One of the officers testified that Groomes admitted having given the baby the liquor.In explaining the presence of four infants in the group of religious workers known as the “Alphas,” Groomes said the children were from the office of the matron of police at Columbus, O. The band of religious workers, he declared, had been caring for infants from that source for the last two years. He said that U babies, or about that number, had been taken, in charge. He was asked by the state what had become of the seven or eight infants other than the four httle ones with the colony when the officers raided • their place on Sixteenth street in October. Groomes* attorney objected to this line of questioning and was sustained.The state desired to show how the people living with Groomes had cared for the orphans and nameless children given to their hands, it having been shown in the trial of another of the “Alphas,” Mrs. Nora Davis, that eight of the babies had died at Springfield, O., last summer, while being cared for by the society. The court confined the cross-examination to matters connected with the four living babies.users tbetterIndej Indian their lt;tern ai for se good i they slt; The local lt;do as erty, I with t ♦he cc Centra indepe; tion.A not has be compa profithas beport hJ have t stockhito as* compai The upon t of Tc jr., prlt; phone long dir.g in a suit two Ir mond Richmlt; compai It is the po changethere i some compai or divi nate cc Bel! cotion ntiust h Indiana compai It is been h charge-issued petitive plantsdividen