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VOLUME 16. NO. 58 1913 OVERLAND $985 Model 69-T —Completely Equipped WHAT THIS VALUE MEANS Self Starter Center Control 30 Horsepower Remy Magneto 5 Passenger Touring Warner Car Speedometer 1 10-in. Wheel Base Mohair Top & Boot Timken Bearings Clear Vision Auto- Prestolite Tank matic Wind-Shield THIS car, at this price, smashes all previous the ability of this most powerful and efficient au records. It even totally eclipses 19J2 Over- tomobiie factory. land values, which a year ago baffled the „ , . ~ ....... f 6 Here we can but call your attention to the world. 40,000 Overlands will be made in 1913. bare facts. This is the car—a big, powerful, teau- This enormous jump in production makes possible tiful, spacious, comfortable, self-starting, thirtj this new car at this new price. As the production horsepower, live-passenger touring car—fully goes up, prices come down, as has been shown each equipped—all ready for night or day, rain oi preceding year. In this age of rapid progress it is same, service. Made of the best materials on the sometimes difficult to grasp the full significance of market, by the most skilled men known to the an important, progressive manufacturing step, tiade, and iu the most efficient automobile shop- Such as this car exemplifies. But when you sum in America. And the price is but up the extraordinary, cold dollar-for-do lar value which this car offers, as compared to auy and all This is the automobile industry’s record value, competing motor car values, the giant economical Come iu and see this car of extraordinary value— manufactuling strength of the huge Overlaud take a ride iu it aud be convinced. We can show plants is realized aud recognized. It only proves it to you today. Other Specifications MOTOR Four-cylinder, cast — Model L, RFAR AXLE—Three-quarter FRONT AXLE -Drop forged’ separately; bore, 4ld jstroke, Schebler. floating; bearings, Hyatt; clearance, 101-2 lu. 4 1-2 In.; horsepower, 3u. axlesuaii,Carpenter i-aiuson pevTh'P rriWTRAT steei; propeller shaft, cold XIUK> —32x3 1-2 Q. 1). IGNiri SI-Battery and mag- I.OfIIKOL. rolled steel; main ar 1 v 1n g _ neto—two sources of current. „ DD , Mnu shaft, C • luiuet steel. FINISH —All bright parts ....... TwSSS nssswsrwws as* •“ in. All springs have six leav- 9 1.4 i,i • uuibl.ip niametrr of and boot. Warner speedo- OlLlNG—Splash system for es, steel bushiug eyes. brake drum, 13 3-8 In.; width meter. Win i shield. Free crank and cam shaft bear- brake band, 2 1-4 lu. tollte tank. He l starter. Mve tugs. Cylinder and timing TRANSMISSION Selective: black and nb kel lamps. Tn pears oiled with Kinwood three speeds forward ana re- F ONT WHEEL BKARINGS irons, robe i aii, foot rest, tool forcefeed oiler. a verse; auoutar bearings. —Timken roller bearings. kit and jack. HUBERT H. WRIGHT, Agent, Cambridge, Mel. Bjooceeosoooooooeooooocesooc^ IgS Rugs I ibridge has there been ex- k leusive a stock of Kugs as | { g. j J uliy selected, and you 'will i Velvet, Wilton | d Brussells i IAND LB THE } MODS ? l Wilton Rugs | into Oriental designs. { & Harper | IT NEAR MUIR | CAMBRIDGE. MD. DOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOt loooooooooooeoecoocoooooocc I Dean Bros. ij THE PLACE TO | BUY FRUITS. | We buy very carefully 11 —only the best Fruits— | call us up for prices, or, 1 c better still, call and in- j spect these Fruits. j THEY WILL PLEASE |! YOU Telephone 325 |j HENRY LLOYD, JR. ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR AT LAW Collections, Trial Practice, Real Estate. Representative Of The Illinois Surety Company. 5 Spring Street Cambridge, Md. Advertise in The Banner. COAL AND WOOD BEST QUALITY FULL WEIGHT The Cambridge Manufacturing Co. having decided to fur nish coal and wood from now on will be glad to receive orders for coal and wood delivered direct from vessels or cars; also all along as you may need it. We guarantee our prices to be right and full weight and the best coal. CAMBRIDGE MANUFACTURING COMPANY Phone 43 Ice Cream For All Occasions! All flavors, packed in bulk or in bricks; hotel or family use. wed dings, banquets or picnic outings J3f”Quftlity guaranteed the best. lmiuediate.attention to all orders. Write telephone or telegraph. MIDDLETOWN FARMS PURE DAIRY PRODUCTS Middletown, Del. | Public Notice! I fITK ARB selling all second-hand | VV goods, such as Furniture ; and other Articles, on commission. J. C. WHITE & CO. So. 17 Gay St. Cambridge, Md Store open at all hours. Paone 72. WILL CALL FOR GOODS. DR. Wm. L. LOWE DENTIST Office Hours—9 to 12 a. m. and 1 to 4p. m Phone 409-D New Brown Bldg. Cambridge, Md The Daily Banner. [ FOR SALE 11 1 i L'UK SA' K—Alort interesting than a novel. I; t Wooitrow w l son wrote tne most Inter -1 estlng story of the Ameraan people over I written, it Is ihe story of our country’s life I from eatllest times to the point where his -1 tory and the present meet. W lie Harper I & nrotners, Franklin isquare. Few Y rk, foi I lull particulars. 8-iT-tf FOR SALK—Good cord wood,oak and pine; 8 yokes good steers; i oM steei; 8 timber I carts, I large. 2 medium; 1 p ilr mules. Goi -1 dy 11. fSmiili, Cambridge, Aid. 8-17-tl FOR SACK —Cheap Good slab w- od, cu' in stove lengths,at a u. Phillips’ mill on | Dixon’s tract, opposite H. T Derby’s roan [jgate apply to Cambridge Mfg Co. 8-17-tl. 1 , COR a v I.K First class cm#, --milt \ npiisa ! r ... Fr*i Doan | LOR SALK- Building jt„ on park Lam | 1 and K.lgewood avenue , Fuse te-ms 1 Small pur base paymeutfirti* tnm.i'fsly de- I posits will buy one. Apply to Edw.rrt a I Pnlll.pj. U-13-tf. { COR HvLE—i heap to quick buyer, house { P and lot on Pine street, near At utr; dwell } ing in good repair. Apply to A. S. Marine. { 10-22-61. * For Rent. | COH RENT—l.lvery stables in rear ol t 1 Straughu property, formerly occnpleu | by All„n Tyler. Apply to W. Lake Kobln t son or Edward S. Phillips. 5 81-tf. t POR RENT-Eleven room house, 106 Chop in i tank avenue, formerly occupied by 1.. 1 1 B. Phillips. All modern conveniences. Pos- C session given at once. Apply to L. H. Phil K Ups, Cambridge, Md. 10-30-cf. | DOR KENT - Flat of 4 rooms and bath on t r Ga> street. Ready about December 15 t Apply to Kdgar B. Simmons. li-22-tf. s rt)R RKNT-Store nouse oc' Race street, t " formerly occupied by Stevens -‘tultli & Co. Very desirable stand. Jas. VV. Wad • dell. 11-23-tl. FOR RENT—3 upstairs rooms. Appiv 207 Muir street. 1.-26-41. DOR RENT-Dwelling on G'ssgow street. 6 P room, sewer connection. In good condi tion. 810.00 per month N'.w occupied by D. H. Marvel Possession December Ist. M. Warren Hooper. 11-26 21. Let Us Fill Your Prescriptions 1 Fourteen years of straight forward, honest dealing with the public is the rep utation we stand on in ask ing you to Jet us till your prescription. In all those years we have i made a g ood in any su tisfied, steady customers who trade with us exclusively and 1 have a feeling of perfect confidence in everything we do for them. There is a great deal of comfort in be ing able to trust y our drug gist in such away, and we I should like to have you ex j perieuce it. POSTOFFICE PHARMACY i . I i “There could be no better medi cine than Chamberlain’s Cough Re medy. My children were all sick with whooping cough. One of them was lit bed, had a high fever and was coughing up blood. Our doe tor gave them Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy and the first dose eased them, and three bottles cured them,” says Mis. R. A. Donaldson, of Lexington, Miss. For sale by all dealers, j (Advertisement) CAMBRIDGE, MARYLAND, WEDNESDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER 27, 1912. !SERVIA PREPARES TO FI3HT AUSTRIA Reported to be Mounting Big Guns at Belgrade. VIENNA EXPECTS CONFLICT Relations Are So Strained That PollU cal Circles Have Abandoned Hop* For Peace. London, Nov. 26. —It is reported at Vienna that the Belgrade forts aie be ing hastily armed with heavy guns by tne Servian war office. Inlormation has also been received that all the Servian troops who can be spared from Prisrend and Monas , lir have been recalled to the Servian capital. Relations between Austria-Hungary and Servia are now so strained tnal political circles in Vienna have aban doned hope of the preservation ol • peace, according to the Neue Gessll • schaltliche Correspondenz, of Berl.n, which says it has its information from a diplomatic source. Despite official Austrian denials ol the reported mobilization of the Aus tro-Hungarian army, the Correspon denz declares that five army corps have been already mobilized and tne reserves continue to be called up in large numbers. The Austro-Hungarian government, ’ it continues, is resolved not to await the return of the Servian troops op crating against the Turks, and an ulti ; matum to Servia may be expected in a few days. The situation has become merre acute through the changed attitude , of Russia, Sergius Sazonoff, the Rus sian foreign minister, after having de dared suitable as a basis for further negotiations the Austrian proposal guaranteeing Servia a free port on the Adriatic sea and a. Servian railway through Albania, but without ter.i torial rights, has now abandoned this standpoint. Austria is now disposed to push the question to a decision because if war is inevitable she wants to take ad vantage of her mobilization being more advanced than that of the Rus sian army. Servia notified Austria that she can not definitely define her attitude in regard to obtaining a port on the’ Adriatic sea until the end of the Bal kan war. This action followed a coun cil, at which King Peter presided. J. \ While Turkey and the Balkan ’ i iu efforts to arrang^Oo { • v-~sr ; *x-ptiravavv’tc a definite peace, pr| arations elsewhere for 1 ble on ?. larger scale show no signs of abatement. While the Intentions of the great European powers undoubtedly remain peaceful, Austro-Hungarian procedure seems to foreshadow separate action which will make difficult the realiza tion of the plan of Premier Asquith, of Great Britain, for the settlement of near eastern questions as a whole when the war is over. The withdrawal of the Austrian warship Admiral Spaun and of the Austrian contingent of bluejackets from Constantinople, and the sudden and unexplained departure for an un announced destination of the Austrian squadron which has been lying at Smyrna, are factors which are disturb ing diplomats, who see In a close un ion of all the great powers the only hope of a peaceable solution. The information that the Servian war office has recalled all the Servian troops that can be spared from the columns operating in the neighbor hood of Prisrend and Monastir, and that the fortifications of the Servian capital are being hastily supplied with heavy artillery, leads the Austrians to I infer that Servia is not disposed to yield, and a pacific settlement of the Austro-Servian dispute seems to them difficult of realization if Servia’s de mands are maintained as an Irreduci ble minimum. Unconfirmed messages from Vienna stated that 11,000 Austrian troops have arrived at Gravosa, on the Guli of Cattaro, in Dalmatia. Within the next twenty-four hours there will be nearly 20,000 Austrian soldiers at Gra vosa, which is an Important strategic position on the Adriatic sea. Messages from Cattaro say that 16,000 addi tional troops are being disembarked at Gravosa from transports to help • strengthen the garrison. Three Drown In Hell Gate. New York, Nov. 26. —Three men. whose names have not been learned, were drowned in Hell Gate when the power boat In which they were sailing was run down by a New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad car lighter. The fourth man, owner of the boat, a policeman, Otto Schmuck, was discov ered shortly after the collision dining to the rocks off Hell Gate. Baby Scalded to Death. South Bethlehem, Pa., Nov. 26. While playing around the kitchen ol her home here, two-year-old Madelina Angelina fell head long into a pail of boiling water. The child was so badly scalded that she died in a few hours. Pups and Pigs Mothered by Dog. Elizabethtown, Pa., Nov. 26. A hunting dog on the farm of James Li brandt, which recently gave birth to a i litter of pups, is also mothering four | little nigs, whose mother died. Fresh Oysters, | Fresh shucked and scalded oys i tors for sale. Oysters shucked in their own liquor.—Mace Fraizer, 124 Race St., Phone 284-A. —Adv. 11-14-tf. —— * Don’t waste your money buying ! strengthening plasters. Chamber lain’s Liniment is cheaper and bet | ter. Dampen a piece of flannel with It and bind It over the affect -1 cd parts and it will relieve the pain and soreness. For sale by all dealers. (Advertisement) SAMUEL GOMPERS. i j President of A. F. of L. is 111 In I ( Rochester, N. Y. M li Efim * '} v * '%,■ : ■ r : ■■ * • J g ■■ ■ = * SAMUEL GOMPERS ILL Pneumonia Threatens President of American Federation of Labor. I Rochester, N. Y., Nov. 26. —Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, is seriously ill at a hotel here. He Is threatened with pneumonia, according to his physi cians. Mr. Gompers was to have welcomed the delegates to the anual convention of the Building Trades department of the Federation of Labor, but Vice President McDonald announced the face of his illness from the platform. The physicians In attendance upon Mr. Gompers have issued strict orders for quiet EIGHTEEN MINERS HURT IN CAVE-IN Fall of Roof Traps Men and Sevsial May Ole; ‘ fe" ■ Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Nq(%, 2flv-EWffiteeE( [. SSk- M ’w-wa-t =ertmislr • the BarnuJn >T. MS, *£ I Pennsylvania ’ Udttl company at D.ir j yea. The cave-ln came without warning ! and the Injured men were partly cov ered by the slate and coal. Rescuers promptly went to work and the en tombed men were taken to the surface before gas could accumulate. Thirty other men, who were In the mine at the time, escaped by a second opening. t The most seriously Injured are: A. E. Jetter, superintendent of the col Uery, injured internally; John J. Me Nulty, miner and treasurer of th; school district of Pittston; Frank Flannery, miner; Martin Reap, miner, and James Langan, miner. All the other victims are foreigners. Several of the Injured are likely to die. Nearly all the physicians In the vl clnity were summoned to the shaft t<> attend to the injured. Most of the vie tlms were removed to the Pittstflh hos pltaL An Investigation shows that the ac cldent was caused by a depression in the surface, which caused the roof tc fall and entombed the men in the place they were working. FATALLY POISONED AT MEAL Delaware Detective Investigating Col ored Lumber Dealer’s Death. Wilmington, Del., Nov. 26. State Detective Walls began an invesiiga tlon of the poisoning of Chailas Showell, a colored lumber dealer, near Selbyville, Del. After drinking coffee at his evening meal several days ago Showell died. His wife and son, Jo seph, were critically ill. Two other members of the family, who did not partake of the coffee, were not affect ed. It Is believed an attempt was made to poison the entire family. The "Votive is not known. Showell was worth S6OOO. The state chemist at Delaware college. Newark, is analyz ing the contents of Showell’s stomach. Wife Murderer Dies of Wounds. Mount Vernon, 0., Nov. 26. —W il 11am B. Magill, who several days age shot and killed his wife, wounded hi.- nurse and then turned the weapon or himself, died without ever realizing that he killed his wife. Magill was de mented. Child Falls 500 Feet. Colorado Springs, Colo., Nov. 2(i- Mlldred Sheehan, twelve years old who with a party of school children was enjoying an outing in the morn tains, fell 500 feet down the Devil’s Slide into Cheyenne Canyon near here and was instantly killed. Prison Convicts Extinguish Fire. Salem, Ore., Nov. 26.—Convicts in the state penitentiary extinguished a fire which damaged the prison audi torium to the amount of SIOOO. The fire was caused by defective wiring. Fresh Oysters For Sale Families desiring carefully shuck- | ed, fresh oysters, will be pleased j with those which we have on sale. | Mrs. Wm. Price, Phone 286, Water street. —Adv. " 9-16-e.o.d.tf. —Messrs. Geo. O. Dashlell & Bro. have Just received a complete line of cigars and tobacco of all kinds, which they have for sal© at their stationery store, corner Pop lar and Race street*. 10-8-tf. , WOMAN LEAPS 20 STORIESTO DEATH Thought While Slavers Threat ened Her. BODY IS BADLY CRUSHED Che Had Crimson Linen on Her Breast and aeon and Tea In Her Handbag. Chicago, Nov. 26. Possessed with the idea that she was pursued for dis honorable purposes, Miss Maude Van Deusen, twenty-five years old, leaped from the twentieth story of the Mc- Cormick building and was crushed to death on the stone paving of an alley at the street level. She jumped from a fire escape near ly 250 feet above the ground. Her body struck another fire escape at the first floor and bounded into the alleyway. Nearly all the bones in her body were broken. Miss Van Deusen, according to pa pers on her person, was a school teacher at Humboldt, Neb. It appeared that she had been seeking a position in Chicago and had been obsessed with the idea that she had been in danger from white slavers. She wrote that she had been driven to appeal for protection to Chief of Police Mc- Weeny, to the federal department oi justice and to social settlement work era She had prepared for death by pin ning across her bosom a strip of wh.te linen, which had been stained crimson at either end, and on which she had printed in large letters: ‘‘Death before dishonor.” She had tied around her neck a copy of the New Testament, in which she had marked passages in St. Joan. She held her handbag in her hand and It was picked up near her body. In it was another marked Bible and a typewritten statement of several thou sand words, entitled “Part of my li.e e history.” “I will die clean, if I have to kill myself,” was written at the head of one of the sheets, A strip of bacon, a small paper of pepper, an ounce of tea and $3.19 la currency were found in the handbag. “I am trying to write this witho.it the least emotion,” her typewritten statement began, “and though the 10l lowing statement may seem dramatic your reason will assure you that they contain only commousense. “I have very little money and am not allowed to hold a position. I wIJ - Accept no money but what I -v> / 3U “If I do not get help it wui be * \ ‘ certainty that I cannot /tf&l;-.-# 5 Into the hards of the spiritualist white l slave irtih and that will ferca me tc self-destruction.” The police aie mystlfieu over wnai Miss Van Deusen meant by “spiritual Ist white slave trade.” GETS SIO,OOO HEART BALM U. S. Court Upholds Verdict Agains’. Rich Constable. Scranton, Pa,, Nov. 26. —Jacob £u ravitz, of Olyphant, a one-armed con stable, worth from $75,000 to SIOO,OOO. must pay SIO,OOO of his fortune tc Miss Katie Prlstacz, his former house keeper, for breach of promise to marry her. In an opinion Just received from the United States circuit court of appeals the judgment of $9700 allowed by the jury has been sustained. Miss Prlstacz came to America twe years ago and entered Suravitz - ? home as his housekeeper. He is a widower. A year ago the girl s arted suit, charging Suravitz with deceiving with promises of marirage and wit. n throwing her out of the house when she insisted that he keep his word. At the trial of the case Suravitz ap peared in court literally in rags, ap parently to disabuse the minds of the Jurors of the truth of the allegation that he was rich. The verdict Is said to he the larg est judgment ever given in Pennsyl vanla in a breach of promise suit. Bandits Get S6OOO In Whirlwind Raid Chicago, 111., Nov. 26. Detective? are searching for three automobile bandits who made a whirlwind ra d through the South Side and took val uables estimated at S6OOO. Eigh‘ homes were plundered and person were held up on the street. Severn saloons also were robbed. Shenaddoah, Pa., Nov. 26. Mrs John Schnne, forty-two years old, o Lavelle, died at the state hospital at Fountain Springs, following an oper atlon In which 596 gall stones were removed from her. The woman suffer ed excruciating pain for the last si> months. Dreams of Fire, Falls Seven Stories New York, Nov. 26. —Dreanrng tha there was a fire In her apartments Mrs. Ida Radt, wife of a New Yor’ banker, walked in her sleep to a win dow In an uptown hotel and plunged j down to a skylight, seven stories be low. She was seriously if not fatal.y hurt SIOO Reward, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn tharf; there is at least one dreaded disease that sci ence has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Ca tarrh Cure Is taken Internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system,there by destroying the foundation of the ; disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the consti tution aud assisting nature In doing Its work. The proprietors have eo much faith In Is curative powers that, they offer One Hundred Dol lars for any case that it fails to cure Send for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO.. To ‘ -edo, O Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for con stipation. (Advertisement) Makes W _ Home Baking J/j EasyanH Prajitaffle Baking Powder : M Adds Healthful Oualitiestofheftiotl 1111 y\ Hie onlyßakingPowder made j : \\ from Royal Grape 11/l oJTartan/^f BETWEEN 3 AND 12 KILLED IN EXPLOSION 27 Olliers Injured When Starch House Blows Up. Waukegan, 111., Nov. 26. —An explo sion which wrecked the dry starch house of the Corn Products company’s plant killed between three and twelve workmen, injured twenty-seven others, several of whom will die, and caused about SIOO,OOO property damage. Uncertainty *as to the o* ' *** *MiWd by l IrfabWW , ihe , - iJ, : txX .i.d’ Conrad was^fidinrYity i for ti‘ state rent that twelve men I least • 're trapped. Cha.lt s Ebert, superintendent of the plant, said that only three men had been killed and twenty-seven injured. Nearly all of the workmen killed or injured were Polish, Lithuanian or Austrian, and they were on the com pany’s payrool by numbers, which fur ther increased the difficulty of arriv ing, at ..a correct death list. ; Well-Known Ladies’ and Gent’s Tailors FORMERLY 112 GAY ST., IRE ROW LOCATED AT 22 Poplar Street, Johnson Building Grand Display of Styles and Designs for Fall and Winter We now carry the | )§ largest stock uf im put ted woolens. Every material that is fashionable -every style that's new. Latest novelties in | designs wr fall and V^T winter, 1912-13, now pjmto' x I ready for your inspec * S f/on. Superior qual- || |^ /fy. correct style, ar- \% |] r/sf/c workmanship & P per fee t fit guar an teed. PHONE 3901* COME GIVE US A TRIAL I I Your Grandfather Walked Upstairs— i and in his pocket was a big I 1 heavy watch. Maybe you are h j j wearing that watch today for senti- j | i mental reasons. The same sentiment S|C£v 11 doesn’t lead you to choose a flight of i i j stanis in preference to an elevator, ' | b Don’t take the chanct of losing a val- J|r K ued lieirlootn. Put it where it belongs— (ji in a safe place. The repair cha'ges you — ] | V will pav on :t in the neat few years will ( ( S buy you a tine modern watch now. ;;y t ll We Offer a Splendid Watch at S3O for Men. 11 I Handsome filled gold case, distinct, easilv read dial, adjusted to tem- I perature and position changes. It is an Elgin “G. M. Wheeler" watch. , | J. G. EVANS, Jeweler | i PHONE 390A. Sboceoooooooooooooooccccocoooousooocoooocoooooeoooooi PRICE, $2.00 PER YEAR The body of one man killed was blown across the Chicago & North i western railroad right of way onto the i hillside in Oakwoods cemetery. All of the injured were coated with starch. Two Employes of Sulphur Works Blown Into Street Will Die. | New York, Nov. 26. Twenty-five men were injured, two mortally, by the explosion of a vat of sulphur in [ the Union Sulphur Mills in the Wll ; liamsburg section of Brooklyn. Fire followed the explosion, and | buildings which occupied a whole block were destroyed. The men who will die are Charles Wandell and ! John Concello. They were blown into the street by the force of the explo- I sion. twenty-three others injured ....... A rtftWeH t^WMjMtalsP'Jacks ot . rf J ., Wf* *'■; aoi, '••v.fdnat iWi-e etd j ftct a|eirM*r*s &f-ertH A Of al : : rendered difficult the work of con trolling the fire. The loss may reach ' SCOO,OOO. * The explosion occurred in what is * known as a grinder. Forty men were ' at work in the sulphur mills at the time, and the flames spread with such rapidity to every part of the yards ’ that they had difficulty in escaping. A number were overcome by the sulphur fumes and were dragged into the street by their companions.