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An I v T<> lai'v ‘i VOLUME 11. N \ 317 m " * _ We are established in our new factory at Eddystone, Pennsylvania, where we are making nothing but “GLOBE” Marine ENGINES Our factory is new, our engine is improved and we have Greatly Reduced Our Prices We build and carry in stock engines from 3 h. p. to 100 h. p. U you arc interested in a reliable engine for your boat, write for a sew catalogue and price list. PENNSYLVANIA IRON WORKS COMPANY EddystoDe, Pa. BALTIMORE OFFICE: 17 E. LorooariSt. ——i— *■ i 4M. 4* - ■ Standard af Musical Excelle I B I T sei| in more than 171 Colleges nmi Cm- * B lies. America* leading Inst,hi ' I | tiu. AA for look let “HEJPI THRO -S" I sfiEFPTPLAYER • FIAT '6 ■ ■ A perfect self playing piano at c ; ; I „ !■ price. ■ ■ “Hrom Popuk.- Song toCniud - .'-,. |f ■ Wiite tor |airU- * rs Mention t)ej*{ .>. |K I s *" *-*■ lll ! PIANO TUNING Ail Work Guaranteed. Not Here One Day and Gone The Next. PIANO & ORGAN BIBGIHS . EDWIN HOLT, Expert Piaoo Tuner WITH UCBMPTE ft HARPER. CAMBRIDGE, MD. Fora Sprained Ankle Aspialned ankle may be cured in about one-ibird the time usually requir ed, by applying Chamberlain’s Pain Balm finely, and giving it absolute rest. For sale by Bradshaw’s Pharmacy. Windsor Hotel 1217-29 Filbert St.. Philadelphia, Pa. “A square from everywhere ” Special automobile service for our guests Sight-seeiug and touring cars. Rooms $1 00 pci day and up The only moderate priced hotel of repu tation and consequence in Philadelphia. Had Teller For Thirty Years. 1 have suffered with tetter for thirty years and have tried almost countless remedies with little, if any, relief. Three boxes of Chamberlain s Salve cured me. It was a torture. It breaks out a little sometimes, but nothing to wbat it used to do.—l). H. Beach, Mid. land Cit , Ala. Chamberlain’s Salve is for sale by Bradshaw’s Phaimacy. TotirT KIDNEY CURE WILL CURE YOU of any case of Kidney or Bladder disease that is not beyond the reach of medi- Take it at once. Do not Bright’s Dis- There is gained by delay, and $l.OO Bottle*. ■■FUSS SUBSTITUTES. MCALISTER’S I’ll \KMACY i FORSALE |4 BUILDING LOTS. undersigned offer at private sale 24 lots in the town of Cambridge, ® and located as follows: Four on the ißLldeof Choptank avenue, between CSand Water streets; Tw.nty on the of West End avenue, 3 lying be Vater street and li- {H School and Water streets, be , ; and Travers streets, and J i S6hm >i-ravers and Church streets. All j AtifeM feus have a frontage of 30 feet or / • lipotii of fot*t Aud terms, call ou I bangs* Md. St t THOMAS E. TRAVERS, WAdflß-K B TRAVERS^ THE, DAILY BANNER. MB DtDiCATED n oiisa-itis Alte.ul Ceremonies at LiLiiiiey Mausoleum. t;:e rr IoiDENT v.a3 there A-ter r< •; : r -. e ? .vjrr:r Mr. Boose ve!t ar.d PaiL, VisitcJ Intorior of T . |- p •.< L> I .-it J Guests ar.d tlw r : j. he M Kinlry j I ,ii .Mid .ill of .1 i. t - ,,: ir. '.I;; i‘i i'm- martyreij •: nt Wil’ian. M< Kinley was . ~; h ; presence ot hundreds ■ ,■ !:i. h ,| nn-i from all parts of i e i r ?:•:!(• in the presence of • ~;i • .)• leri-ign countries, a- jn ih: 11 eot a i-rowd of up . ir o- ‘ („■!, gathered from all , parts cf t!v country \ feaiurr of ill - dedication was the presence of the president of the ; ( Theodore Roosevelt; Vi-.e Pre-id m Fairbanks, members of | the president’s cabinet. Cnited States j senators find governors of seyera] ! states. Addresses were delivered by Presi dent Koosevejt. Justice William R. Day. McKinley’s secretary of state and Governor Andrew L. Harris, ot Ohio. ■The president of the day was Gov ernor Harris, who was introduced by Justice Day. The introduction of the president of the day was followed b.' an invocation by Rev. Dr. Frank M. Bristol, pastor of the Metropolitan Methodist Episcopal Church, of Wash ington. D. C. The opening address was then given by justice Day. This was followed by the singing of the ‘'Stay Spangled Ban ner’’ by the grand army band, qf patu ton. the Canton Singers’ club, and the entire assemblage, Governor Harris then delivered an address, which was followed by the unveiling of the bronze statue of Wil liam McKinley, by Miss Helen Mc- Kinley. of Cleveland, the only sister of the late president. James Whitcomb Riley read a poem composed for the oceasion. This was followed by the address of President Roosevelt The program was closed by th e singing of “America” and benediction by Right Rev. Ignatius F. Horstman. bishop of Cleveland. Immediately upon the close of the program. President Roosevelt and party visited the interior of the tomb. This was followed by a visit by the invited guest., and then the general | public was admitted. Thousands pass ■ ed through the tomb. This tomb, built at a cost of over jano.uoo. is the donation of over 1,000,- 000 Americans. It is intended as a memorial to William McKinley, a war president and soldier and first citi zen who gave up his life in the exe cution of his duty. The mausoleum contains the bodies of President McKinley. Mrs. McKin ley and their only children. Ida and Mary, whoe died in Infamy. The President and Mrs. McKinley’s bodies are in bronze caskets in the sarcophagi, while the bodies of the children are In caskets placed |P niches in the wall of the tomb. The tomb is a work of simple art designed by H. Van Boren Magonigle. of New York, and it is situated on Monument Hill, a spot high and picturesque and oloae to his old home in this city. Student Dies After Rush, Ithaca. N. Y„ Oct. I.—H. Douglass Fowler, a Cornell freshman, who par ticipated in the unorganized rush last Wednesday night, died in the Cornell Infirmary. Although the attending physician is positive In hts statement that Fowler’s death was not caused by Injuries due to the rush, as no contu sions of ajiy kind were found on his body, other authorities here refuse to accept that view and are waiting for the autopsy. Posse After Negro. Mobile. Ala.. Oct. I.—Sheriff Casalas and a’ posse have gone to Whistler to begin pursuit of an unknown negro who seized Mrs. Johnson at her front gate. She screamed and the negro fled. A neighbor shot at him several times as he ran. The negro Is said to have purchased a ticket and boarded a northbound train. The sheriff took bloodhounds with him. Dream Saves Husband. Waterloo, la.. Oct. 1. —Mrs. David. 1 wife of a farmer, dreamed she saw her husband, who was ill when she left. him. burning to death. She ar rived home in time to see smoke Is suing from ail the windows. She had just time to rush In and drag her un conscious husband to safety before the roof fell in. Hands Tied: Drowns. Chicago, Oct, 1. —With hands tied behind him and clothes weighted with stones, the body of a man was found in the Chicago river, near Us mouth. The police believe the man was a vic tim of murder. A piece of marble tombstone a foot square was found ; buttoned in the bosom of his shirt. Train Fills Creek. Osceola. Neb.. Oct. I—A freight j train on the Union Pacific railroad went through the bridge over Davis creek Just outside of this city, and filled the entire creek up with wreck age. The railroad Is tied up. and it will require two days to rebuild the bridge and clear the track. CAMBRIDGE, MARYLAND. TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER I, 1907 JUMPS HIS BAIL i 3'iysician Charged With Burglary ; Identified As Ex-Convict. I New Rochelle. X. V.. Oct. 1. —The excitement mulei which Now Rochelle : labored when riamuel Bolin, who posed as a wealthy physician, was arrested on a charge of burglary, was aug m-mted when developments came thickly. In the first place. Bolin failed to appear in court when his case was called, and the |3uou bail which friends had put up for him was forfeited. The next shock came when Mrs. Bolin told ; the police that while she believed her husband owned an interest in a drug store in Harlem, his regular occupa don was that of bartender in a saloon in the Bronx, Tlimi came the assertion that Bolin had served a prison rein, in New Jersey, and had been arrested for burglary and other crimes in NMt 1 York. 1 This was followed by the report that , Mrs. Bolin had attempted suicide. She threw herself in front of a slowly mov ing trolley car on Main street, but the j car wea stopped before she was in Jttred. Later the police stated that' i she had disappeared from town, ami they did not know where she hjpl go,,* i A general alarm and request to arrest ; Bolin has been sent out broadcast. CHARGED WITH MURDER Brother and Sister Accused of Slaying Wealthy Uncle. Newcastle. Pa., Oct. I,—Mre. Alice Reeble and her brother, Charles Well endorf, were arrested at Edenburg. near here, charged with the murder of their uncle. Ernest Bauman, who was found near his home shot through (be head. The arrests caused surprise. The week following Bauman’s death Mrs. Reeble and Wellendorf were taken into custody, charged with con spiracy to minder but were release! under $5OOO bail each. Bauman was worth about $15,000. and Mrs. Reeble was his sole fiejr, I _ 2-CENT RATE IN EFFECT New Fare Schedule For Pennsylvania Announced. 1 Philadelphia. Oct. I.—The two-cent fare rate in the state of Pennsylvania i is effective. The Reading railway has already announced an adjustment of i rates to meet the new' conditions. Un til a final decision of the supreme i court is handed down there will be some doubt as to the constitutionality -of the new law. Took Poison to Sleep. Paterson. X. J.. Oct. I.—Loud ' screaming in the home of John Rusted 1 arouse ! the neighbors, and a moment ' later Mrs. Ku-sted ran into the street, crying that her husband had taken poison. Ip answer to a telephone mes sage an ambulance soon arrived, and the surgeon found KiesteJ lying in a 1 stupor in b Alter Kiestcd had with difficulty been aroused he refused to go to the hospital. Kiested told th surgeon that for several nights he bad been unable to sleep and had been * compelled to resort to the use of lauda mini. An empty bottle that had con tained lasidanum caused the man’s wife to assume that he was dying from J the effects of Thu opiate, i I George E.Cccper Killed In Auto Crash . Pittsburg. Pa,. Oil. L George E. I Cooper, of Harrisburg, assistant resl • dent clerk of the state house of repre t sentatives. was instantly killed in an I auto accident, in which John Chilly and Frank Blessing, also of Harris burg. and .lames A. Clark, county com missioner of Allegheny, were seriously Injured. Tim hi ( Idem occurred on the _ Great boulevard, near Jones avenue, , by the breaking of one of the wheels I of the auto, which was going at a high j speed. All the occupants were caught beneath the machine. t Second Coming of Christ Near. ; Fort Wayne. Ind.. Oct. 1. —Bishop , Walter Sellew. of Jamestown. N. Y, p who had beep presiding at the Free Methodist conference for northern In diana. greatly excited the members oi the Free Methodist church here by : sermon predicting the end of the world i within a few months. The bishop said ’ that lie djd not mean that the plane' would he destroyed, but that all the 1 works of man were to be swept away j and Christ was to come a second time to rebuild it and make it a fit place ! for the dwelling of the Holy Spirit. 1 More Resignations of Fair Officials. Roanoke. Va., Oct. 1. —Authentic re ports disclosed the fact that a numboi Of heads of departments will resign with Director General Barr, of the ’’ Jamestown Exposition. John A. \\ ak 3 field, chief of concessions, and A. V Sherwood, chief of admissions, an nounce their resignations. It is report ‘ ed that \V, M. Dixon, assistant direcloj ' general, and S. W. Bowles, director of i publicity, have resigned. NUGGETS OF NEWS t The office of the Western Union Tele -1 graph company at Lancaster, Pa., were destroyed by fire. Dr. H. W. Kitchen, one of the best j known bankers in Ohio, died of paraly 1 sis. In Cleveland, aged 64 years. Twelve horses and 58 cows we;e burned to death in a fire which rb - | A Strong Tonic * - Without Alcohol A Y 1 f A Body Builder • Without Alcohol iS' A Blood Purifier - - Without Alcohol A XILv/fIL/* A Great Alterative • Without Alcohol . Ask your doctor if a family medicine A Doctor’s Medicine - Without Alcohol like Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, is not easily Ayer s Sat sapanlla • Without Alcohol ? belter without alcohol than with it. jZ&SSU'. Contains All The Local News Tested And Proven There Is A Heap Of Solace In Being Able To De- I end Upon A Well Earned Repu tation. For months Cambridge readers have i seen the constant expression oi praise for i Doan’s Kidney Pilis, and read about the good work they have done in this locality. Not another remedy ever produced such convincing proof of merit. Mrs. Martha A. Meekins, Choptank ave nue and Locust street, Cambridge, Md , says; ‘‘Kidney complaint came on me about nine years ago, and first started j with dull, deep, gnawing and an a vfql weakness, -old misery across my loins and kidneys. I had sharp, ‘hooting pains through my back and limbs and all I through me. In thdO I was bedfast, for ; some mouths undei the doctor’s tieatmciu with what he called hemorrhages of the 1 kidneys. The pains through my kidneys at these times would be acute and pierc i ing and at times 1 could hardly turn ray i self iu bed. Medical treatment seemed to have lost its effect and nothing I could do had the slightest effect or, it. i was very i much discouraged for my future knowing : what 1 had suffered in the past. I saw Doan’s Kidney Pills advertised and high ily recommended by prominent people nght uere in Cambridge so 1 sent to Brad I sliaw’s Pharmacy, got a box and began I using them accordiqg to directions. 1 Good results followed almost from the first dose, and by the time two boxes were used, they had effected a positive mid lasting cure.” (Prom a statement given in 1903;, A PERMANENT CURE. On May 18. 1907, Mrs. Meekius con firmed the above statement as follows: “Doan’s Riduey Pills cared me of a severe case of kidney complaint four years ago, and there has been no sign of a return since. I gave a statement recommending them at that time, and I am only too glad to confirm samp ” WROU6HT IRON RANGE CO., ST. LOUIS, MO. We have one of yohr new Horae Com fort Ranges No. 1907. that is giving fine i satisfaction, this new range takes the place of one bought frotu your company 21 years ago, and your salesman, Mr. Wood put the Old Range in first class order, and if we did not have the new Range we ’ would not take $25 00 for the old oue as 1 am sure it would now outlast two cast iron stoves, I cannot find a crack or warp iu the old Range today It gives us great pleasure iu recommeading the Home Com fort Ranges to our neighbors and friends. I>a>vsox & Ta yi. OH. McDaniel, July 2ft, J 907. learl itje pMR 1 DmamM A few doses of this remedy will in variably cure an ordinary attack of diarrhoea- It can always be depended upon, even in the more severe attacks of cramp colic and cholera morbus. It is equally successful for summer diarrhoea and cholera infantum in children, and is the means of saving the lives of many children each year. When reduced with water and sweetened it is pleasant to take. Every man of a family should keep this remedy in his home. Buy it now. Price , 250. Laro? Size , doc. I LAZY LIVER **l find Casoarets aa good that I would not bfc Without them. 1 was troubled a great deal with torpid liver and headache. Now since taking Cascarets Csndy Cathartic I feel very much better \ shall certainly recommend them to my friends *s the best medicine 1 have ever seen.’* Anna Bazinet. Osborn Mill No. V, Fall River, Maas. The Bowels fawcwigto CANDY CATHARTIC Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. D#Oood, Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c. Hsc. 50c. Never sold in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped CC C. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. Stirling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 6u* SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES i Notice To Ovr Customers. We arc pleased to announce that Foley’s Honey and Tar for coughs, colds, and lung troubles is not affected by the Natio nal Pure Food and Drug law as it contains | no opiates or other harmful drugs, and we . recommend it as a safe remedy for chil -1 dren and adults. For sale at McAllister’s drug store. strove-! two large Darns at Pittsfield. Mass. Dr. Francis A. ‘ Ramsey, the aged , (I mist, who was found unconscious i*i 1 : s home at Norristown, Pa., died at i . ' hospital, as d 26 years. While cam-ei ig in Perkiomen creek, at Spring Morn!, Pa., Edwin ft. ilani. , 22 yoai. : Id, ot Philadelphia, was swept eve a d n and drowned. ItfTUO.V SuiiELY AFFLICTED Ltsssand Kinged For Murder and Grandmother Dead of Grief. > Mie.-iola. X. I . Oct, 1. — The sympa ’i' <>’■ tin w ole town is extended to '■l- .!<<-. till Labriola. widow of the ■an v o was hanged at May’s Land ; i on September 20. for the murder ..i let brother, John Huglio. With om brother murdered, she is worrying about another brother, Jo - * • t. who is thought to be dying from r typhoid f. ver. Her grandmother died recently from j grief over the murder. \ sister-in-law is in jail under a 10- year sememe. , A b' He r in law is awaiting trial * for allege.! complicity in the murder 1 pt hei Pro'lu r, 1 She has <lire p little children to sup port . one or whom Is in bed with a [ broken leg. All Foodstuff* to Go Up. ! Chicago, uct. 1. — Now that the beef > trust lias set the pace the whole array of food stuffs will rise in price. People will find their grocer’s and butcher’s ’ billi mi reused 30 per cent, over year's prices, according to estimates . of dealers who base their figures on • present butieations. The greatest shock .(cult tl'e family provider will oome s wlicii the pureha c e of canned goods tnl Iried fruit* is mad*. These have 1 d .mi ■ '■•adl’y for three years, and this vear an increase of 20 per cent, has ’ been made. - - Hits Escort to Get Him Jailed. York. Pa.. Oct. 1. —When Policeman Sclu oeder refused to arrest John Lewis, who was walking with Mrs. Charles O Brian, without a warrant, the husband replied; “Well, you just ' wait a minute, and I will give yon cause to arrest the bunch of us.” 1 O’Brian confronted his wife and her 1 companion, and with a hard blow with his rieht cancht Lewis squarely. The man dropped to the pavement. All , gave bail for a hearing. Engineer Foully Murdered. Sharon. Pa., Oct. 1. —Frederick Dah ringer. engineer at the Sharon plant of the American Steel Foundry com pany. was murdered by being shot in ■ the head with a rifle. The shot was fired through an open window while Dahringer was sitting in a chair. Two 1 foreigners. George Shinno and John Bola. have been arrested and will be held pending an Investigation. Saved After 36 Hours In Water. Boston. Oct. 1. —The disappearance • of Henry S. Horan, the Boston long distance swimmer, who went bathing last April and never came back, lias been explained by a letter from Harry | Howard, of Seattle, who says Horan was picked up by a ship after having been in the wafer 3fi hours and taken to Buenos Ayres. PRODUCE QUOTATIONS The Latest Closing Prices In the Principal Markets. PHIi.Aln: .I’ll: \ - FLOUR steady; i winter extras, new. $3.40@3.60; Penn sylvania vouer. clear, $3.90®4.10; city mills, fain y. 55.70® 5.90. RYE FLOUR Arm. ar $4.65 per barrel. WHEAT firm; No. 2 Pennsylvania, red, $1.024<| ® 1.():!. CORN steady; No. 2 yellow, 730.® 74c. OATS firm; No. 2 white, clipp' d. riT'a'u 58c.: lower grades, 55VsC. HAY steady; timothy, $18.50. PORK firm; family, pei barrel. $20.50. BEEF steady; family, per barrel, s26® 27. POULTRY: Live steady; hens. *s® la 1 -.-.; old roosters. 11c. Dressed firm; choice fowls. 14c.; old roosters, BUTT Lit steady; extra creamery, 33c. EGGS firm; selected. 27®29c.; nearby. 25c.; southern. 20® 22c. POTATOES steady; per bushel. 58®60c.; North Carolina sweet potatoes, per barrel, $1.50 0 2.50. BALTIMORE—WHEAT quiet; No. 2 spot, $1.04 !.u5; steamer No. 2 -pot. sl.oo 1.,1.00 q ; southern. $1.04. CORN steady; mixed spot, 6914 ® 69-'Uc.; steamer mixed. G5 l / £®tfs%c. OATS steady ; white. No. 2, 57V4@58c.; No. 51</55c.; No, 4, 50f^®;51c.; No. - 2 mixed. 53® 54c.; No. 3. 52@52Vfcc.; I No. 4. 51®51 Va*‘. BUTTER steady; ! creamery separator extras. 29 $4 ®l 30c.; I held, 23®24c.; prints, 30@31c.; Mary- I land and Pennsylvania dairy prints, 19® 20c. EGGS firm; fancy Maryland, s Pennsylvania and Virginia. 24c.; West Virginia. 2;;<-.: southern, 21®.22c. : NEW YORK • BUTTER steady; , creamery specials, 29c.; creamery ex tras. 28L,c.; state dairy, common to . finest, 21® 28c.; western factory, com mon to first, 19®23c. CHEESE firm; stale full cream, small colored and white, fine. 14Vc.; skims, 2@l2c. EGOS firm; state, Pennsylvania and nearby fancy selected white. 30®)32c.; good to i choice, 26®28c.; brown and mixed I fancy. 26®28c.; first to extra first, 23 ®25i.. western first, 224 i® 1 23 1 f POULTRY Live firm; spring chick ens. 14c.: fowls, 15c.;- turkeys. 13c. Dressed ouiot, western broilers, 11® 17c ; turkeys. 10® 16c.; fowls. 12® 14c. POTA TOES firm; Maine. Cobbler, per . sack. $1.25® 2; Long Island, per barrel. r s2® 2.25; Jersey. $2®2.15. Sweet Pota toes firm: Jersey, per barrel. $1@2.25; i southern. $1.25® 2. CABBAGE steady; > flat Dutch, per 100 head. s4®6; red and 1 Savoy. $3.50® 4-50 per 100 head. Live Stock Markets. s PITTSBURG (Union Stock Yards)-- 1 CATTLE steady; choice. $5.75®0.50; prime. $6®6.30. SHEEP steady; prime 3 wethers, $5 50® 5.60; culls and om p men, s2®3; iambs. $5®5.60; veal calves. sB® 8.25. HOGS lower; prime ' heavies. $6.05® 6.85; mediums and 3 heavy Yorkers, $7.10; light Yorkers, s7® 7.05; pigs, $6.40® 6.60; roughs. - $5®5.55. 1 1907 OCTOBER 1907 Su. Mo. Tu. We. Th. Fr. Sa. P~TTTTT - _6 _7__B__9 JO Jl]2 n_[4is J6i7_lB 19 KJ 21 22 23 24 25 2G 127 28 29130131 ~l Largest Circulation in Cambridge of Any Newspaper H Bracing food for steady ft fl nerves — I Nutritive food for heal- H M thy appetites— I Strengthening food for | B| sturdy muscles — I m The most nourishing |k Hi wheat food M I Uneeda Biscuit | ID f ln moisture and 111 Or dust proof packages. M %. XJ NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY JH For Kodaks, Cameras and all Photographic Supplies call on A. C. Brown, jeweler, optician ui errrher. Then you will get the beat goods and the lowest prices. XII Goods Guaranteed. i That Spare Time ot Yours How Are You Spending It? We have students who are spending their time profitably by taking the Shorthand or Bookkeeping course. Be wise ; improve your time by writing immediately for full information relative to one or both courses. BOTH DAY AND NIGHT SESSIONS. Graduates Assisted to Positions. For Information, Address Eastern Shore College, Cambridge, Maryland. i^—— PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. PERSONALLY-CONDUCTED EXCURSION TO Niagara Falls OCTOBER 8, 1907. R ~ R,P $lO FROM CAMBRIDGE. Tickets good going on train leaving 2.53 p. m., and SPECIAL TRAIN on Pull man Parlor Cars and Day Coaches, leaving Philadelphia at 8.07 a. m., following day, October 9, running through the PICTURESQUE DELAWARE VALLEY AND OVER THE POCONO MOUNTAINS. Tickets good returning on regular trains within TEN DAYS. Stop-off within limit allowed at Buffalo returning. LAST OF THE SEASON. Illustrated booklet ami full information may be obtained from Ticket Agents. J. R. WOOD, Passenger Traffic Manager, GEO W. BOYD, General Passenger Agent. | LECOMPTE & HARPER. |. f IF YOU WANT t \ GOOD FURNITURE CHEAP | t CALL ON US. | t LeGon|pte tfqypep | PRICE $2.00 YEAR