Ligonier Banner., Volume 41, Number 2, Ligonier, Noble County, 9 April 1914 — Page 2
The Ligonier Banner . CHAS. W. COOK, Pub. - LIGOXIER & & : L houw 12 FEDERAL REokhV: ' ?'hfe_(; Surprises to Bankers in ‘Selestion of Cities. 'CHICAGO SEVENTH ‘ON LIST ‘Efaiiaz%.. Tex., \N:i;:;:f;r New Or"leavm *— -and Cleveland Over Cincino ‘nati-——Satisfaction 1s “General. :
. Washington April B—The following | .32 pities have hef,aseiecxedas federa | gesprve citieg: 8 = i’ | Moston. ] Chicago. ‘ 2. New Yorik =8 8 louis ' | . X Philadelphia. .+ 9. Minneapolis. | 4. Cleveland. =lB Kansas City. ; L Bonichmand ?llDallab . "6 Atanta @lB Ban Francisco. I . Ansteict No. 7 {the Chicagoe district) | s deseribod in full as fellows: - | . Dristriet b ¥ The sfate of lowa, | ‘sl that uie SR “fitc{:usm located | vosith of the terthern poundary of the * . Colmmbia, - Dodee MWashington and | tiankee: afl @ i‘.,:xf Wuthm‘n . pengn- | sadn of Michigas. wik | That part cast! | of Lake \(hgxx‘*a’;ihax part of 1| neis -located dorth of & line forming § | the southerd bgiiudaey of the follow. | | Aug o counties: | HGNEOCE, S(‘ah\’i}";ui"'} Tlfnes. Saungaman Chmddian, Shelby. | Cumberiand and Clark, and all that i . Far: of ludigim sarth el a line foom | . ing ibe soutaeen boundary of the f()igi pwig cetntles Nige, Clay. Owen, | “Slonree. Browms, Lastheolomew. Jen | {ones, Ripler and Dhio, with the fod: | oL WERE TeRGEpe i;JX;is Jocated in the-eity § s Chicaee BEL | © Yiujs disivicl pentains 984 natidnall banky which Bave Accepted. the ’rr(}ig sisioas of the federal reserve act. The | Laapnael wlock Of the federal reserve | . immk ot Chiegse, o 8 e basis of five | e cout of fhe fotal eapital stock | unit - sorgfus @8 @ gssenting na- | Alonal feh’;»ai’*(mnm o sicons. | B el 1511&}9\"&,1}9 added ~\: yer conts of :?:étsfifl capital’ stock | e z';immflm%u&te banks and f trust ggummwmch ‘have applicd 4 fur wedmbersain g to April 1. 1914 e tatal \~~?‘tfi§“fi“‘m{“"“b” z];~‘.’~'§ r ' Sefections Cause Surprise. o TR - splectiofie contain some sur- I I gwises It adag mot thopsht that both . Toston and Philadelphia would be: naudd. The eholee gives thrée re sorve. banke te & tomparatively lim - tted aréq, in #déition to the national s hoarfi?fiw”zwhington Cloye= luuds - conguest oven Cincinnati was lot expected though the former ity fow leads the latier in poeint'of popuCififion . Cifelmnatl is the older town, hus -imofe’ wedlth, apd has enjoved Eigerlor Gmpadial bedtipe - * Tinlined (L’mt»‘&-t wll New Orleans ; “whv not taken semously by bankers; but the eltims of the Texas city have sovvailed SaEh ERO freasury officials, =to have seen advaitlages over New Oirleans UDRIOWH (0 fhe genera) finan“rini confimuniis. In other respocts the - centions chosen @re eansidereq satis Tyl haweger, did not dcem he - pieximum SHEUE | 18 mecessany, Ther hHelisyed cight regional banks wonid eniies }iefia,{am Washing: e thflfi’e\{n?}"rtfl&d ‘the general © sentiment of £he hanking clement, . e B WMES. SWIFT WINS DECREE I Farmer Society Belle Who Eloped . With Broker Mamed Chicage 3 k’!oman?aflamplamt s New York, April 2 Florenée Fow- . Hle Swilt, former Seeiety belle in Bzl | timore and Waehineton was granted " sndecree gt (fiw)!%:efi'emflarh Wilson. o Cirs Smfli‘*&m%fiawomnn vhHo s | Yeil knbwn in Ckicags society circles, ¢ The testimony showed that Swilt' ac- . ympinied this woinan, whose name’ . was net mentioned at the trial to ho . tels in this €ty S®ift-is a stock -bro- - iker e vafi&fl@fiuwt‘estfd in the . Difbam Maidén” pew on a western. tour. Swift did net interpose a de- © fenge to the divorde sult. It is said he agreed o paw Mps Swift a generous, Zamuatallowdies 0 = FormerfireféerEndsLnfe o Coburg, Oat. Apsil 3W, B. Spader, | fovmeriy a partubr in the dissolved T brekerage firm of Marshall Spader & ~ New York 'aed Toronto, commite o tr}démhi&resmence shere by shontne. 8 e - Jefferson City. Mo., April 3. The Polar Wave lee vampany, 6f St. Louis, . was tdeclaredyto be a combination in s Testraint of trade by the Missouri sp- - préme court and fmed $50,000, -
' . Lind Coming Home. . Washington April 2.—John Lind, former governor of Alinnesota and for ihe last eight montlts the personal rep resentative in Mexico of the president o the United States, will sail from Wera CUruz for Washington abroad: the pregidential vacht Mavfower. . Arrested for Throwing . Handbills. New York, April 3—The police arrested Miss Louise Berger for distributing, without a license, hand bills among & large ¢rowd gathered near the city hall. . ‘ | " Sixtyfour Perished. | .8t Johns, N. F., April 3.—Sixty-four members of the crew of the steamer “New England are known to have per ighed and thirty-seven were rescued, according to a statement authorized by Colonal Secretary. Bennett, acting premier, late last night. e
: iR E2ER ! WINS N HOUSE SR ‘ . £ * e & 2 Y ¥ Wilson's Measure to End Exemp- ~ tionfor U, S. Passed. | | : ol i ! : 2 5 { QSRR B e S S SPEAKER CLARK HITS BILL o . Defends Economic Policy of - Free . Transit tc American Coastwise .. - Ships and Cites Court Decision e '\\’@.Shiui;tofl, April 2.--By a majority of 86 voies the louse of representa tives pasged the Sims bill Tuesday to repeal the provision in the Panama canal act exempting American coastwisé vessels from the payment of toll for passage throtigh the canal. i In enacting this measure the Demo“¢rats of the house followed the -suggestion of President Wilson. even though the messure was opposed by Speaken Clark. Representative Under‘wood, majority leader, and other Democratic leaders and in addition involved the repudiation ef the plank in the. Democratic platform adoped at ‘the EPaltimore -convention approving the ‘tol] exemption provision. - * Speakers Clark, for nearly t}‘#‘n‘c}* two \‘ll‘ “a nember (?&‘ the Thouse mwade the speeph of his liie to pfevent 4\§ix;ltf}‘,<f ternied the “li:}<}ll@s'-imi,L}-.-'zo degradation’ of the pation In this he failed and the bill wae sent to. ile sehatd by a vote-ef 247 veas to 161 Have | o : . Defending the econonie policy of free tolls ana citing’ court decisions of its Jesality “Chenip Clark speaker of the eIOUST 6f ;x‘b;n'e‘s{»ntmvi\'as‘ challenged Al policy of President Wilson in advocating the ::‘?»;,z,::_}i)o;' the Pansma vanal aot whicl permits American coast Wise vessels to pass fres throuch the ranal ' , P v Tl ~;i.«fa_ix; geblaed . vhat this Lpolicy Srag @ fc—‘,su‘ii.zz,".g::,- Sot s:(flr::‘.'x,, piatfors ohligations and derbanded, that] (e Tlemoerats hold true to the ; ".’.:‘i';izl proclainied by their v.m‘,i(;r:;z’n‘(:():s--v ention e - 2 | b deciared that heis not/a «'m::‘:i: ’ flate far the De mecratic presidential Lsemintion iy opS%e far 4 Progident P Wilson's agnunistratian amonnts to a tailire. “the nomination \1 not he L worthohaving D and he denied that he 3 has éver entertained the ‘FQEg;thtest illir,\xi{q taward the pressdent ?leg%(::*.u:‘:a of i'his|ewn failurg te seeure thid nomina‘?;l{:‘.3:;}' at’ the® \Daltimere <‘<_>¥nm":'.‘iou \hu\ Qlark was particularly em-Z-pl’::fi(i(‘ it his: deciaration zi‘xzx}t neither '; hm]z;(:r the president dcsirr'd{;‘s, breach i'ZTu {the Demacratie party, and in ‘hig [ eriticiem of the ‘iackal’ press, some Lot | which gepresent that we are seekfi ing to disrupt the Democratic party.” ;’ IThe Panama tolls repeal means the | ifi“i:f:-.ti(fizfi.'l abandonment of the Monroe i doctrine,” he said, ““which we forced | into the internatienal tode and which 3 ;hf .-\.nz_‘e;;-ibcszx‘r,\eoi:hg Will x_;j';z:xi:ztz}i:zirut !fl‘ hazards: That 15 ihn auly propo- ! sfiion the Ameriean ypeople . ever i agreed upon, and the reason they | agreed upon that was that because it | was a- genuing American prongunce- ! ment. 1t was the deefrine of self- | defense. = . e b ;“FE,DERAL JUDGCE FES'J?\S i i e [ | Justice O'Day Says He Wili Practise ‘ - ‘»4', i . Eaw. o L = Wackiugion, Aprl 3 The resionaYfli of Willam B Dayv; as -United 3";*%‘?;,‘?.;;5" judge tor the northern distiict tof Ohio, «was rTeceived by Attorney | General Mcßeyiioids. He is a son of ¢ Justice William R Day of the Supreme Frourt and was apgpinted in May, 1911, | Cleveland, OF Aprll 2 Judse WilHam 1., Day, wlie will leave the bench P Aoy i‘;;-r;zah}: Tram vesienine Simply ! Decauce ofthe dnadequacy of the sal Eary of United Sfates gudee. [ am a L Young man, have a iahiih and bolieve o 2F : i) (ol have o fitdre Lvais: look afier it 1 becqme a niember of the Tegal firm ! of Squgire, Sanflers & Dempz=ev upon, Heaving the beneh. e Pl “;;‘”7"";*{‘“ e : i RUBE WADDELL IS DEAD: | Former Creat Southpaw Diss of Tu i . herculesis in Texas. j san mfism_m;: el Anril 5. Rube | Waddell, In s time qne of the great+est southpaws in the history of base {‘*2 zl_?eeiz: h‘gj:’(a_ of tnbez'(:u"xiwis.- He i thad been ill for several nmonths and - had come here from St Paul, where |he last wWorked as a pitcher for the | Amgricand associatien.. - His niothe: iwas al hik bedside : : B oo N e e g I ; ~ » " Ty F'oiice;r‘g'sen dviust Learn to Swim.” | New York April 2-2 All New York | policemen hereafter must know how F;to swim and to reseue drowuing f><:,r. | song. P;,oliée Commissioner McKay | received ipermission to use-the publc | baths for swimming schools. © -
| Emile Vedrines Falls to Death. . Rheims, France, April - Emile Vedrines, a ‘brother of .the famous: French ayiator, Pierre Jules Vedrines, was killdd here when his aeroplane felll. Avjator Plerre Teatalat and a. passenger also, were killed. o . R : Hoidi st 5 | ~ Fixes Women's Wage at $lO. : { Seattie, Wash. - April 3.—Thé state Lindustrial | welfare commission at E;O}ympi}a, the capital, fixed the minjTG (Mf.nb to be p’aid tfhe working: woren of the state of Washington .ak t\s_m qur weeks o [ L e e ' 'Ten Trains Taken Off. - ‘ Pitesbureh. . Pa. Anpil 2. _ . Re. trenchment on the Peunsylvania lines | west was extended when ten padsen § ger tr'a_i:}&i' were taken off the Pitts- | burgh, Fort Wayne & Chicago railroad. } Shop forces are also being reduced. ~ Monon Express in Ditch, Bloomington, Ind., April 2.-—THe Monon's fast Louisville express, which left Chicago late at night, jumped the track .gix ‘miles south of here. The mail ear was partfally demolished; no i tomess T ¢
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SIEGEL'S WIFE SAYS SHE = + ° WARNED HiM OF ACTS A.earred »f Criminal Conduct as Bank_er and YWhen S'he."Toid- Him » He ‘Abused Her.. - New York, April 2—Following publ:cation of herl jutended divorce action against Henry Siegel, now ‘under indictment in connection with the failure 8t the Niegel mereantiles enterprises, Mrs. Sivgel cave ont o perscial sStateniont flii‘tcri}" arraigning Slegel’s husiness methiods and marilal couguct. It follows i 3 pote: £ 0 o My married Lfi &?‘ Al Siegel was fuli of trisls Gng dribWaticns. Sulice it"to say that 1 endeavoresiin every wav te guard and proteet him from his own weaknesgses and his lack of consideratinn for the feejitgs and rights of others. } o '~'- S v ' “Several vears ggg b toarneyd dnei: e 'w‘ the deatings »f Mr. Eiveel with the nionevs of ‘}'rt}})\'}.sfl,a"trrs. 1y hids bank; and [ imuisdiately remonstzated ‘and warned hinr.as I ihought that it was niv duty %o do thif 88 was icing jain’ He ragzed ke o madnion ':.l treated mie shamefullys worse, if passible) than ever. This eontinued for several weeks when he changed his attitude toward me, gud-at a dinner pargy, at w hich Frani Vnged vad pres. ent, he niade light of ‘my vredietions and endeavored to convince jne that | had been misled and misinformed, and that 1 was unjustiv suspeciing nioy, whereas Le was a noble and honcst citizen, seeking only Ilhe weifare and sGvantage of those with wiiom he was ‘connected s - “The pretense by Mg Siegel that e lost a lot of money in the mines has no 'r-.ii.g»'»"un(:y ; the present proceedings. and 'such loss, if it iecurred was at leastbn years ago. [ believe that it willgltimately be i‘z_\,umif‘)thz‘st Mp e has 'very Jarge stoek intestmichts in carporations other than the mercantile companies directly coptroiled by him." GOETHALS TAKES NEW OFFICE. Canal Bullder Takee Up Guties as : Governior of Zone. = ; Panama. April 3-Col Georpe VY. ilJ;:;«wr‘:u:h; begame govermer of the ccanal zone. .In c'dnfiorm.fly_fl"it‘h his own wishes 1o ceremany marked the ceeasion., Celonel | Goethals istued his ldast cireulzr as chairman of the - isthmian+ canal commnission and his first circulars as geyernar, promulgatillg A peripanent torin of gavernment in the zone. One of the circuiars informed. all employes of the canal that they had been taken over under the new organizatien and that their wages would not be él‘;:xnge(lg In the others Colonel Goethals outlined the new departiments with the duties they are to perform. -il - TO PROLONG COPPER STRIKE. Tents Offered tc: Miners. Who Are ot e B - %‘z«:hma‘}t, Mich., April 3.—Phe West. - omi- Federation of Miners at a district meeting here, decided teo continue the copper sirike indefinitely. and 16 sup- ] ply tents to any faimifies evicted Five ' hundred tents have been offered by the United Mine Workers of America in a message received Ly the union leaders. | . o ] l ] ~._.,..._.._;_._.L.,..;___.‘__ < 2 ! g italian Flyer Is Killed. (- Turin, Haly,” April 2.-An- italian }a{m’y aviator, Lieutenant Griffa, was | killed while attempting a somersault f w_'ith‘a’n; aaroplane,r |
" Murdered Girl Is Buried. Sonnett, -N. ¥, April 2 sls The gray dawn funeral Servi'('es were Leld here ' for Miss Lyda Beecher, the young &chool teacher whe was mnuurdered near Poland last Friday nigh{ by seventeen-year-old Jean y(ii“amni. i Congressman Richardson Is Dead. Atlantic (_‘ity,« N. J,, April 2—Representative ‘William Richardson of Alahama died at Galen hall on Tuesday, after a long illness. He came to this resort some time ago (0 regain bis health. . = 7 0 L ‘Convict Saved From -Hanging. . Jefferson Cite Mo - Apyil 1 - Coy. ernor Major refused to pardon James Schruin, now serving a 99-vear prison u:'rrfix_ for the murder of Mont Hall and thus made it impossible for the sheriff to to hang Schrym for another murder. oA el e Orders Suit to Oust Oil Trust, _Columbus, 0., April 1--Judge il lon granted. an alternative writ ardor‘ing: Attorney Genera} Hogan to inati tute: proceedings to ousttie Standargd oil company and its gubsldiaries from doing-businegs in Ohio. - L
- . F g i r ¥ 'V AEIGN OF TERRDR - N MEXIGD BHY‘ i / it - , ! Ten Students Who Cried “Death | ~to Hueria” Are Slain. - § : o tedae | TORREON- BATTLE STILL ON! el | Gen. Villa Reports Heavy Fight irég Canyon—Huerta '/m Message | Says He Ils Ready for. ! % : Sacrifice. : e : ‘s e e { Vera Cruz, April 3.—A virtual reign ;! of terror prevails - in. the City of Mex- | f¢o in conseguence of the dcspératé‘ position --of {h(:".!'.erierai army in 'l‘9l‘-i reaty and)local:curbursts 3g’aifin§t‘the,‘, gevarnment of P'resident: Huerta. ! Pér shouting . “Death to Huerta."_int the streets of the capital ten students have been Killed: Two wgre shot by§ ‘{he poilce and_eight Werefit to (_Peath; under niilitary law by a firing ssunad. | At gredt number of students formed a ifight procession’ on .hearing that | -Villa wae zbout to capture Torxreolu, ex- ‘ pressing antigovernpient: views as| iiey marched about the capital. The | pokice charged the miob and fired on tha/students when they refised to dis- | Lelses . { After the nalice volley kilied two ! students ‘many ymn'*:;-,.. ‘Wera arrested. | Ehe hring squad executed eight of th9§ -hrisppers later:. |[ o o : Juerez, Mex.. April S.—Heavy fight- | ir;g%is i’ progress at Toireen, sayvs al 1,60 P-word report received by General | Carkanza from General ¥ila Wednesui» The heaviest fghting was pro- | cévéii;g im-a canvon named Huaraches Téndreon's southern railroad exit. i - %’i‘horc was a-report early %n the d.ab"{ that Torreon ¥ad fallen. A gehel (%i- | cipl in Juarez sent General Villa (’m;-f _gratulations. . Afterward he received | the following: . e “Gomez Pajacio, Aprid & 1(‘24:_(7()1.,; Fidel Avila, jefe do las armas, Juarez: | In reply to your message 1 wish to | state that while I have I’s3!«‘-13 part ::;t': thie Qity of Torreon. the struggle is not'| vet completed. o e 2L expect to obtain a complete triumph. of which 1 will advise you. “CGIENERAL FRANCISCO VILLA | City of Mexico, April B&e— T must en ; grave upon yeur hearts that it is my | i]:nz*g‘»‘.,s:v to achieve the peace. of the country: if te do so your sacrifice and | | mines shall be indispensable, you and | | oWI Miow how g sacrifice our- | solves” . L %I With that statement President Huer§ta ended | his lessage 1o congress, | ' witich cgnvencd. : | | Viva Huertal Viva Faenta!” was | shouted througheut the house as the ; president r:g.‘.zéed s;uf:ik?ng. the first ap- | plause. that the mesgsage evoked. - | boiin Bis niessagoe President : Huerta | | commented with bitterness on the diffi%'('t‘:’xiies hi¢ government ‘ha(’.\ encoun—f { tered in obtaining money :,)wir.;l;* to “_‘the | influence exercised by the-strange at- ’ titude of a certain power toward Mexi- | rO,” referring to the United States. . | Douglas, Ariz., April 2 Xaqui In- % dian raiders killed Otto Mueller, a Ger- | man citizen. at-Ihe Bruss ranch, in the. ;Yaqz;i z'iv_er‘\'ufie.\' of SGHOTE‘..{"-‘?IT‘LYEJ‘J» | pews dispateh. .
CAWHNETT! WON'T RESIGN. | i g [ Lo Savs He ls Needed More -as immigra- | o tion Cemmissicner. - i 1! ; Washingzion, April i:}_.~-fl(‘m‘mmrzéiun-{ $r Caminetti-of the immigration bureau announted that he would übt regign his office to run for governor of Califérnia on the Democratic ticket. | “T fdel,” he wrote a friend;:[that, owing to the Hindu and other Hills vital: ly affecting Califérnia now under way | in ‘Washington and general immigration legislation .pénding, it ds .my duty to devote my time and labor to those measures rather ‘than go 'to .California and ‘enter a primary contest for a nomination for office, ‘which, after all ig said, would, at least in" the incep*on, be a personal rather {than a public service. ‘ : f - = “FPg absent myself at this time from my post would be an injustice not enly to the president and secretary of labor, but also to the people of California’ . = ; T HINES WINS IN MISSISSIPPI, Supreme * Court Upholds $15,000,600 " - Land Right of Company. < Jackson, Miss, Aprilii-—Edward Rines, Chicago lumberman, has won his famous fight{with the state of Mississippi, jrovolving timber hofildings in the- southern jcounties, valued -at gbout fifteen lillion dollars.. The gsupreme court; held that -a foreign corporatidn is not amenable to the statute prohibiting timber holddngs by any c_orgporatibn in excess o{ '52,000,000 in value.’ The decision up: holds ' the conbtitutionality of the statute, but rules that it can be made applicable to domestic corporations only. :dl - ‘ ! = = : { ! . One Dead, Two Hurt in Cave-in. . I.os Angeles, Clal.. April 3.—One man was killed, two ifjured and 35 laborers employed in ex¢avating narrowly . escaped being butied bemeath tons of earth when a bulkhead collapsed and earth from both sides.caved in.
- - Sentenced Under the Mann Act. San Francisco, April 3-—Nicholas Landi, a salesman, was sentenced by . Federal Judge Dooling to serve eight | months in jail, on a charge of violating | the wliile slave law. Mrs. Rosa Hax;ris was the complaining witness. ‘ Hundreds Lost in Battle. o Athens, April I.—News was received liere on Monday of a fierce battle between Albanians and rebels near Premeti. The Albanians lost sev‘eral hundred mén, being decisively defedated. i e : . 880,600,000 Loan Is Invalid. ' . Philadelphia, April I.—The supreme court of Pennsylvania declared illegal the $80,600,000 loan voted on by the ! people. The decision blocks afl’ the plans for greater Philadelphia improvements. o j L
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ASQsJiTH WILL ASSUME . DUTIES IN WAR OFFICE ; A : : . Announcemeht of Solution of Crisis - Comes as a Surprise—French - : . and Ewart Are Out. ' Dt i - Londen, April I—Fojlowing all the niany. solutions of the covernment: crisis wihich 1‘}::(1' been proposed and discussed; Preinier Asquith announced a fdecision toithe house of comimons whichh none of the propfets had exDected orjeven suggested. . o ; j‘he prime minister. bimself will assume the burden of the war-office, in addition to His other and ainiost crushing duties. 'He will resign from the house at this. critical stage, when the gccond-reading of the home rule bill is aboit to be taken up, and will appeal to. his constituents in- East Fife, Scotldnd, witlein a.féw days for re-election, ' Field Marshal Sir John'Prc—ncfl{, chief of the imperi”‘l general staff, and Gen. Sir' John ‘}Q\Viq?"(,- adfut:mt genef'al, declined, to withidraw their resignations, ih spite of thé army order, which Viscount ‘Haldane cleverly framed as a platform on \t"‘u}'("h the generals might stand with consistency and honer.: "It thus became impossible for Col. J. E. B. Sedly, who wids co-signer with tlem of the assurance to -Brigadier General Gough that the atmy would not be used to suppress the Ulster op‘position to home rule, to retain the secretaryship for war. His resigriation, therefore, was accepted after e had been for some days under fire from the névgsp;u:ers of his own party, which idsisted that he :y%,ust 0. . : ! : ©C MINES N OHIO SHUT DOWN. | Lo Fifty Thousand Men Are Thrown Out f e Motk ]‘ Cleveland, O.,'Apri}' J—With'few e\ I(,:'eptio'ns every coal mine .in Ohio was lclosed down for an indefinite period at fthe close of work. I.ocal coal opera-‘-[tors estimate that 50,000 miners are thrown out of employment. » ' At the last session of the Ohio legislature & law was passed providing for the payment of miners on a run-of-the-mine pasis instead of the screen payment ‘plan. This law is the cause of -the shut-down. . “ Although it does not take effect until May 15, operators refuse to renew contracts with the miners, wWhich ‘expire, today, until conditions resulting from ‘the law become miore settled. ‘
" WILL SUCCEED GEN. WOOD. Wotherspoon Chosen to Be Chief of sy Staff of Apmy.. | Washington, April | 3—Brig. Gen. William W. Wotherspoon will become chief of staff of the army on April 22, when "the term of Maj.:Gen. Leonard Wood, the present chief of staff, expires. Secretary of ‘War Garrison made this announcement. -Maj. Gen. Hugh L. Scott will be assistant chief of staff and it is expected that he will succeed Wotherspoon: when the latter retires on aecount of age in November. Major General Wood will take charge of the department of the east after April 22. General Wotherspoon has served as assistant to the chief of staff for some years. Brigadier General Scott is one of the youngest of the brigadier generals, o
7 Entire Family ls Siain. Knoxville, Tenn., April 3—Mystery surrounds the murder of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Seivers and their son, Millar. The bodies of the parents were found in their home pear Clinton, Tenn. The body af Millar Seivers was found later.
‘Asks Increase for Chicago Post Office. Washington, April 3.—Representa: tive McAndrews proposed to increase the Chicago federal building, that will be erected near the Union station, cost from $1,750,000 to $3,750,000 in a bill he introduced. :
Held on $20,000 Theft Charge. Harrisburg, Pa., April 2.—Accused of having ‘stolen $20,000 from the United States mails, William R. Baum, a Harrisburg pest office clerk, was arrested here by Deputy United States Marshal James W. Snyder. : ‘ Cyclone Destroys Church. ‘Dallas, Tex, April 2,—The First Methodist church and five other buildings in the town of Wilmer, near here, are in ruins as the result of a cyclone which swept that section of the county, One negrowas killed. s
0t G RUSSIAN GHUREE Inieresting Ruins Found at Forl E !~ " Ross, Californial. ; - | ;- | Structure Was Built by Members. of | . Russian-American Fur Cempany | Expedition in 1813 and Usec 5 " for Place of Worship. 3 { San Francisco.—At Fort Ross, Cali- | ‘fornia, somie fifty miles torth of San | Francisco, there are the very interest- | ing remains of what,was once a church i of the Holy Orthodox religion—as the | members -of the Eastera or Greek church call their faith. It was in 1809 that an expedition of the RussianAmerican Fur company ‘' came south | ,fro_m Sitka, and made a seftlement at : Bodega bay, which they called Port i Rumiantsof. Two years iater they | _chose 2 position for their main post | dbout twenty miles farther north, a } little beyond the Russian river, which | they called the Slavianka. At thia} point, which they named Ros; or Rus, | ithey built a fort with watchtowers and i mounted 40 camnon. : i ~ The settlement wag ostensibly only | a peaceful trading pest and a center ; for sealing operations. There was no &ason, however, in thel character of l {he Indian inhabitants of the region, | /for a post of such strength, and it | _seems probable that the company in- | tended to hold the territory as a Rus- | sian ¢olony 'and by gradual settlement | farther south, to offer ‘an effective | chalienge to the claims of Spaii to the | ¢oast region north of San Francisco. | The fort. was built jof heavy red-'g . wood. timbers. It was about cne hun- ! dred yards square. and contained the ! quarters of the officers and men, work- | shops, warehouses. grafnarie-& a wind- ! mill; and, of course, bathhouses. The | populayion varied between two hun- : ~dred ‘and four hundred, inclusive of | some Aleuts who were employed in -the sealing and sea-otter industry. The | fur business grew to be large and _ very profitible.. Sir Georgé Simpson, the governor of the liudson Bay company. who visited Fort Ross in 1841, \ , reported that up to that time no less | | than eighty thousand sea-otter skins | alone had been taken and marketed by @ the Russiap-American compafly. In | ;’1513 the Rusdians built a church, and " there the gorgeous ritual of the Greek | Clatholic church was| conducted untii i the close of the Russian occupation. . That came in*lB42 There was con- | stant fricticn between the Russians % and the Spanish and| Mexican govern: i mernts. In 1824 -the Russian governi ment beound itseif, by the treaty of E ondon, not to - acquire torritory on | the Pacific ceast south of 54 degrees | 40-minutes latitude. So there was noth- | ing for the fur éonx’pzzn}' to do but to | seek 4 purchaser for the settlement. ; After. the Hudson Bay company had i refused to buy the property, it was sold | in 1840 to “Captain’ Sutter, who lives | in California history as the owner of i Sutter’s mill. where gold was fitst dis-
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TRIALS OF YE OLDEN DRINKER No Inebriate of Today Would Stand & . for the Rule as Here i Outlined. - TLondon.~~Here is an extract from the Diocesan Registry at Gloucester which would make a modern drinker sit up, ; » “Drunks” were orderad, the record statés, to stand up on the coming Sunday after the homily and eay: “We. are sorie for our. intemperance in .oyer moche drynke, intending to amende ourselves for hensforthe and to lyve sobrelye, and the learne the creed, the lord's prayer and the ten commandments, bye the feasts of all saints next.” This was in August, 1551. : ' BUGS PAINTED ON CHEEKS Birds and Beetles ‘in Natural Colors . Adorn the Faces of Paris ‘Beauties. »/ Paris. — Designs painted on the cheeks are the latest barbarous eccentricity indulged in by Parisiennes, which is ousting the colored wigs. - The fad now is to have a miniature work of art in the form of a bird, bug; lizard or what not painted in natural colors on the cheek. ™~ ~_ Safeblowers Obliged. 'Stockton, Cal.—" Don’t blow the safe. Here's the combingtion.” - ' A note bearing these words was found by cracksmen when they entered the plumbing establishment of Pahl & Henry, in the business district.. They followed directioris and made away with $8.50. : “There's no sense in having'a $3OO gafe wrecked when there is only $8.50 ‘n it,” a member of the firm explained subsequently. : i
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HBRE is a strabge - satizfaction. ¢ in having any great experience. of life reserved for -one until : maturity of thought and“a ‘development of the apprecistive faculties ~ insure . gi- -understanding point of wiew upon its - ko d As Theodore - reisér. - haB - salds apropes of his recant firstvisit fo, Lont don; “We can only do ope thing:significantly once. . The first time of My important ihing sticke. and lasts; g comes back at times; and hdunts Fou~ with its.beauty and itz ssdness.” i “We can do anvthingbul-once for’ the first time,” was the tlidught 1 had persistently in mind as T.Féached forward in’ prospééi to 1y first’ glimpse of the Grand Carfiyon. of “the:Yellowstorie, writes. Necta. Marguis-:in: “the Los Angeles Times. 1t wds hot oply to.be my first vision ‘of this cauyon but of any @irand (Cahyen in the world, and I ached with the sense of What'it was ‘golng to ‘mean to me: . "All the way 1 had abstained fromguide books with. almost réligious earnestness, lest other “travelers' impressions taken .bafotehampd . might blur my own when tlie time came: for their forming. All the freshness’ of first wonderment must .be reserved for my owneyes.. . - n e I . Stream Teemed With Fish. [~ . It had rained during the night, but that had only quickened the mountxin air and laid the dust on tire*long gray, roads. Starting from the A_n.\t_:uxj'e;p-b'}ué. lake, our journey followed first along the Yellowston¢ river a:cleas cold green stream teeming with iish, whieh leaped and frolicked in ’,iz's*')'.irané‘;x;ir-f ent tide, = - . o PN Pine forests Fomed Tark beside the road, and the sigy above was thick-and soft with bropditig raih ‘cloads .. - The forests-receded ds weradyvanced, and before iong the. way opened .out into' the famcus Hayden: valley, Jush with grass and richin eolors of gold: en green, reddish bßrown, mauve anpd tan and pink. - ‘The ‘green.river flowed through the middle:ofi+t, taking fan tastic shapes at {ities -around ‘the ouaint’ - little ,grassy “islands- which trwke the continuity 6f its flow:.:" o -, We halted to -maké a defour on’ foot to gaze upon the Mud Geyzer.: It wag & weird, almdst a sickening ‘sight=—a hole under- a mouitain sideforever and forever belching forth' @ -thick. black liduid permeated with the odor of gulphur, - - TR S 0 There was ‘somewhat primordial in the ugliness of if. It repelled Wwhile it fas¢inated me. It depressed me to think - that, year in and ;year ~ouf, through all the blue and green beauty of June and the siowy loveliness: of December, there is no ‘cessdtion to.the ‘motion or to -the ‘siop, slop sound of the glimy mud in its heavy splashing. It was the mouster Caliban in a realm of enchantmént—tHe -one .unlovely thing we saw in'the park: . - [ ~. A few feet away from this-Caliban ‘was the Miranda of the Isle, .a small end beautiful -tlear “water ~géyser sperkling forth from “under a little gheltering gableroof ¢f golden afd green formation. “-And the- black
_Many-Times-Told Tales. . = Of goursé -many of the- children in. all the cities are extreniely, well fed | at home in respect to stories, but yol don’t find them staying away from the libraries just because of that!l Tf you had heard “The Three Golden Apples” 50 times, couldn't you listen to it for the fifty-first?- I’l wager you coufi! - And- there’s no such thing as ever tiring of. “The Shooting Match af Nottingham Town” ‘or :“The King Who Was: a- Gentleman.” "To hear a trained story-teler give one of -yourfavorites is like hearing -music you know ard love sung by a_delightful voice. You know story-telling was one’ of the first arts developed in the world. Storiss were told, passed from -mouth to mcuth, before men learned to write them down and make.books. - And now that this clistom is afising so strongly agatisome cone has called it “the oldest and the newest of the arts.”"—St. Ly e e . - Théddegllet, -~ o o ~ The idexliet sces.ihe things of earth s they are, but also as they omght to
. stream’ and the clear-one cgould not i buf. meet: as they flowed ddwn 0 a 8 | compion level. .. . ; . | "1t wags good to be ¢riving for miles : | through ‘the sweet, placid, rain-wet | -}'ifll( v after we left this-point. e : .We approached from: the rear the_ , falle .whick ' mark- the head of .the t tsrand Cdnyon, and we had no intima- | tiore of their nearness in%he steady, Cdeep, unrippled flow of the cleargreen river. .0 L% T 1 v(-‘a;:, f}oo}; b{;ck “now, !‘;()l?s3“.‘9':'" and | se¢ that the’ river gained in depth® L and. serenity—in pbise;ls(w {o spedk—‘as it -neared z,lxiéi great .crisis of iis course. “whieh - ifivolYed « Tocks and. .chasms”to shelter|its evenness and to | tear. | its, gmooth {green ~eolor intt a, ' millierr rainbows. e oo Our, first view Bf the canyon itself | wa¢ marred as an'impression, because | it was taken in company with a coach;lioaé of Tellow travelers. Inspiration 5 - Point “was the high .far - aerie from ' whickr we took that first comprehen}_s‘i:\:c. gaze up canyon and down, from . i the "man-made platform everhanging - | its -bewildering. dazzle and deptt ; I - “Inspiration Point!” chattered ome iL inioonsegu: ent girl, as she 'lean»ed« over | } the railing to mieasure the spaces with, j ber eye. “How leng does it take to v get inspired?” . S : ‘ ~;Zfirxt.;i‘;gbié_sues no guarantees for in ispiration, for the mere asking, how: P ever. “At ‘her: booth -inspirativns are ' seld’ and the most vital inspiration i gues ‘te himy who has -bid highest in ‘decr gquieiness of mind and reversnt . simplieity of spirit— ) o {"--But pothing ¢dyld mar the caryon as. |8 fact. Apg it Was in our, unhurried | separate studies of it that its magni;ficence made its lasving imprint, hot Ate- he ouidone fer splendor by ofisntal “visiens of seas of jasper and walls of . ‘garnet and sardonyx. , i 1 < Golden Sea of Air. A L péch(ing up the gorge-from Inspira “fion ‘Point. beétween. the walls of rept | sulphur cliffs, we could see the foam{ing déscent of the great. falls—npearly 400 feet- of frothy white, viewed I"through & dazzle rof prismatic®iizhis. . {+ Down the gorge there were green . peaks covered with pices, and bivond . them ome tall mountain wrapped .in ’;lie'e’p viglet mist. - Belew the wall np [ 'on .the Tim of which we were frailly- . perehed, “tall needle: of rock fhrust - | up their points, colored like the gar i'ments of Clecpatra, and upon ong or T two' of the pinnacles the ospreys had - [ found them nests where ther wmight Llay their vourg- E%en now the soar;mg birds floated near the nests;},-‘;bla'ck,,‘ ‘;-’spe{cks. in a golden sea of air ‘far be | meath’ us. B S { it was from Artist Point, on the op- | posite side; that we were best abie to ! s-‘ti_}dy the bewildering ‘c_anym,' color ! «At[\{arfed hou.x}'sS of' the day. the. ef i-fects were, strengthened or softened:” - But. the bewilderment of the beauty did not: alter. Here the walls were i nearly 2,000 feet high, and etery foot of the way dabbed with lengthwise. | streaks of coler—rose, terracotta, sull'phur,; chrome, orange, burnt orange. {brown, green; -gray-green, lavénder.
be. He dreams, and longs to see his dreams realized. In our early years we are all idealists. Youth is not flaun;ed by even the most impossibie task. It is ready to pay the price. "We smile at the enthusiasm of youth, but the tragedy of age is possible only when that enthusiasm is; gone.— Youth’s Compamnion. [ - b S Wonderful Word., ‘ | Confidence! What a wonderful word it is! How much it does to make a de ‘spocndent man or woman feel beiter. ‘How often it has lifted a business. ‘man out of the deepest despondency ‘and given kim another chance. Say = “helpful word whenever -you can. - whether'it be to a *child with “teardimmed face or fo a workman who -has Tost his job or to a business man l' who faces serious embarrassments. ilt will pay—Leslie's, e Sey . el Saving Stamp Money. e . - Patience—She says her husband is trying to economize now. TR | Patrice—How, 1 wonder? . | -“By for’ggmng to mail ber letters"”
