Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 44, 1 January 1913 — Page 8

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AERONr . accidents h.

-plane -tract much attention; 'Nearly 250 pilots and passengers have fallen to ' their death this year, and the aver- '. ge is rapidly approaching one a - jnnteworthy aerial disaster osion of the big dirigk at Atlantic City, July animan was preparing for an effort to cross , rtUantic ' when the disaster ociMiitm. arirt he. with four comrades. lost their lives. COLLAPSE OF BUILINGS. 'Jan. 5. Many children and teachers perished in wreck of schoolhouse, Seville, Spain. 'Aug. 2. Collapse of building in Nuerembtrg, Germany, causing death of 15 persone. ( ' DROWNINGS. Feb. 20. Launch capsized, Rangoon, India; SO drowned. June 23. Pier collapsed. Grand Island, ! Niagara river; 35 drowned. fjuly 28. Pier collapsed, Binz, Gerj many; 21 drowned. Sept. 15. Launch from U. S. Naval Station, Chicago, capsized in Lake Michigan; 10 boy recruits drowned. EARTHQUAKES. JJuly 20. Guadalagara, Mexico, parj tially destroyed. !Aug. 9. Dardanelles, Turkey; 1000 i chin rnimprl nersrinst nertshed jOct. 10. Bayonne, N. J. Explosion of j ship caused loss of $3,000,000 worth of oil. Oct. 17. Warehouse, Tampico, Mexico; 45 killed. JNov. 25. Waukegan, 111. Corn Pro- ! ducts Company plant; 12 killed. ci d re Jan. 9. Kqitable Life Assurance So ciety Building, New York; 7 per-

""i ished. , '. ;Jan. 16. Osake, Japan; 3,000 buildings

, " destroyed; 30,000 rendered home- ! 1 lees. jFeb. 21. Houston, Texas, fire in suffered heavy loss Dy Dy business ( district. fApril 28. Damascus, Syria, bazaar; $10,000,000 property loss, j June 30. Constantinople, Turkey; l 2,000 houses. une 23. Business section of Canning,

r . j Nova Ccotia. rJune 24. Chicontimi, Quebec Province ,'' t Canada; $2,500,000 loss. ,'Oct. 19. Arsenal, Benicia, California; j t ' $3,000,000 loss. !.J MINE DISASTERS.

100 are ,:IVb. 212. Lehigh, Okla.; fire; j 1'iuiiea.

flrch 20. McCurtain, Okla. ' , rjton; 63 killed.

ExplosriAEP0AD NOTES dawns on apace and Jtjjames McCrea will Resident of the Pennsyl-'trABiaiVlce-President Samuel Rea suc.ceding to the office by selection of 'the board of directors. Since numerous executive and administrative changes

(invariably ensue upon the succession ;of a new chief executive, much anxilty is felt at the moment everywhere " ("throughout the system because of the 1 belief that a general housecleaning is

c Imminent. Between the promotions due ;

tW change in chief executives, !

pi-which reach down the line, many oth-j

I 'jpra -will be announced in course. dueU-v oi (ioKi

j v ' i ' - v wi . vr uuu j uiiauic 1 1 j jto deaths and transfers during thejgine will be put into service today to ' 'jyear, ranging in position from vice- j move the freight which has accumu-

I ipreBiaenrs aown to roaa roremen or i

ngines. But, so ingrained is the polIcy of secretiveness that has been Tsued by the Pennsylvania during 11 the years of its existence that even ow, on the very eve of the changes . fhat are known to be impending and otwithstanding the fact that the ap-; Aointees for the scores of important , positions to be filled have been decid- j jed upon long since, in most instances jnot a hint has been vouchsafed as et Us to whom the favors are to go. In well inforced circles here, it may be mentioned in passing, however, the belief obtains that General Superintendent R. L. OTJonnell. of the Western Pennsylvania grand division, is slated for a substantial and well-merited promotion, particularly should General Manager S. C. Long be advanced to a ice-presidency in accordance with the Pennsylvania's long-established policy. General Manager Long himself was (Everybody Who Used Great Kidney Remedy Obtained Fine Results. ! At the time I commnrffl nsfnc Jyour Swamp-Root I was so bad that I j iuu iu ui) ui ure imnis in mjf j i ack would be like some sharp instrujnent piercing my kidneys and I could wdly get owt of a chair without help. -""v roivd to gi ve JOUr swamp-

" the reaults were so j firms, representing shippers of 44 States. The list of the victims infM recommended it to j states, who have signed, at the sug-! eludes Henry B. Cleares and Frederiteems to produce the j gestion of the association, a declara-! Ick Robie of Maine; William A. Richresults with everybody : tion favoring a policy which will per-jards and John W. Hoyt of Wyoming: MPm very thankful to youjmit the railways "adequate revenue to! James D. Porter of Tennessee; us,for your .great remedy, Swamp-Root, meet existing obligations and to at- tin L. Crothers of Maryland: William

as I know that it will do all you claim ! for It. CHAS. J. SHELDON. McGraw, N . Y. v . Personally appeared before me, this :23rd of September, 1903, Chas. J. .Sheldon, who subscribed the above statement and made oath that the same is true in substance and in fact. R. C. Gleason. Justice of thr Peace. T My commission expires May, 1912.

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4v March 2- Jed, W. Va- Explosion and to fire; 82 killed. July 9. Cadeby. Colliery, England; 83 killed. NAVAL ACCIDENTS. Feb. 2. British Submarine A-3 sank. 14 killed. June 8. French submarine Vendeniaire sank; 23 perished. Oct. 4. British Submarine -B sank; 15 perished. PANIC. Xov. 24. Moving-picture theater, in Spain: 35 killed in stampede. RAILWAY WRECKS. Jan. 2. Rock Island Railway, Kinmundy, Illinois; private car wrecked; J. T. Harahan and several other well known railway officials killed. May 18. Near Paris, France; 10 killed. July 4. Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railway, Corning, New York; 39 killed. July 5. Legoiner Valley Railway, Wilpen, Penn. ; 26 killed. July 14. C, B. and Q. Railway, near Chicago; 13 killed. Nov. 11. Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railway, near New Orleans; 14 killed. Nov. 13. C. H. and D. Railway, near Indianapolis; 15 killed. RIOTS. ETC. Feb. 29. Prison rebellion, Monterey, Mexico; 36 killed. APri1. 18Mine riots, Siberia; J00 slain by Russian soldiers. April 24. Strike riots, Portugal; many killed. SHIPWRECKS. Jan. 11. Russian steamer Russ, in Black Sea; 172 drowned. Feb. 18. Steamer Erne, enroute Boston to Buenos Ayres; 10 lost. April 15. White Star Liner Titanic sunk by collision with iceberg. (See Chronology Aril 15.) Nov. 28. Schooner Rouse Simmons in Lake Michigan; 11 drowned. STORMS. Jan. 18. British Coast storm-swept. 100 perished. April 20-21. Storms in Illinois, Indiana and Alabama; 100 killed. June 16. Storms in Ohio, Indiana and Western Pennsylvania; 35 perished. June 30. Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada, partially destroyed. 50 killed; property loss several millions. July 24. Cloudburst, Pennsylvania and West Virginia; 60 killed1. Sept. 2. Storms in Pennsylvania and Ohio; 40 perished. Oct. 16. Typhoon, Philippines; 1,000 perished. Nov. 21. Tidal lives lost. Wave, Jamaica; 100 translated to his present position from the one held now by General Superintendent O'Dcnnell and only two years since, the latter having been brought here from Buffalo, where he had been general superintendent of the Northern, better known locally as the Allegheny Valley division. MOVING FREIGHT. A special effort to move through freight, which has been held on sidings during the past several days is being made on the western division of the Pennsylvania company in an effort to prevent a threatening congestion of freieht on the division The freight movement has been unusuallv heavy on the division during the past I lated at various points along the line. C. & O. INCLUDED COLUMBUS, O., Jan. 1. The United States circuit court has handed down a decision in the case of the iroviernment against the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern, the Chesapeake & Ohio, Hocking Valley, Toledo & Ohio, Central and other roads tried in federal court here laBt June, declaring the roads guilty of restraint of trade in violation of the Sherman law.

Local railroad men are much inter- Clnt Lfx von Aehrenthal premier ested in reports from St. Louis, thatlf Austria-Hungary; Jose Canalejaa B. F. Bush is to become the head of ! Mendes- Prime minister of Spain; Dr. the most powerful railroad system on S M- G" Milovanovich, prime minister of

the American rrT t i)1fnt im Kro rt- cr transcontinental. gulf and Appalach- i ian trunk lines with 1SS44 1! miw r,f )

rails. The next largest system is that t'ormerly Speaker of the House of Coraof the New York Central lines, which mons: Henri Brisson, former president has 12,817 miles of road. of the French Chamber of Deputies; Mr. Bush, it is reported, is to be Gflorge Coulen. vice president of the made president of the Gould lines : French Cpuneil of State; Gen. ShiarJanuary 1, as forecast several months : oku Ishmloto, the Japanese minister of ago. The elevation of Mr. Bush williwar: Henry Labouchere. the British establish Flnley J. Shepherd, fiance of statesman and journalist: Auguste Miss Helen Gould, and assistant to ! Marie Francois Beernaert, the Belgian

President Bush, as the active represen- i tative of the Gould family in this vast ranwav svstem WANT SANE POLICY. The Railway Business Association has made public ft list of 4000 hTiinooe i tract capital for necessary improv ments and extensions." Told Him In Few Words. A man ouce wrote to the Rev. C. H. Spurgeon. the famous preacher, saying that he had heard he smoked and could not believe it to be true. Would Mr. Spnrgeon write and to1! him if it really was so? The reply was: Y "Dear Sir I cultivate my flower ft burn my weeds. Yours truly, C. II. VKeoa." , Y Purxling. -ulons--Do yon think you will

VJIearn to like your titled son-in-law? ' . 'Billions I don't know. I can't tell

where to place him in my expense ac- i count. He is neither a recreation nor en investment. A Child Wonder. .' , 'fWhat a wonderful memory your "1,for names and faces!"v Huse ; prouq rjw-.

DEATH'S HARVEY

During the year just ended desaix has levied unusually heavy toll, sparing neither crowned heads nor men and women distinguished by their rank, position or ability in every branch of human activity. Army and Navy, diplomacy, statesmanship and politics, commerce, industry and finance, literature and the arts, science, education, the church, and many other realms have been invaded by the pitiless reaper and robbed of many distinguished men and women the losa of whom will be severely felt. Nutsuhito, Emperor of Japan, under whose Jong reign Japan advanced from the obscure position of a semi-barbarous nation in the far East to that of a world power, commanding universal respect; Luitpold, prince regent of Bavaria and Frederick VIII., King of Denmark were the most prominent among the rulers of nations, who were removed by death during the year. Others were William Alexander, grand duke of Luxemburg, Mataafa, former King of Samoa, Duke Francis Joseph of Bavaria, Infanta Maria Teresa, sister of the King of Spain, Prince Louis Murat, grandson of the King of Naples and the Duke of Fife, brother-in-law of King George V. Among the noted soldiers who capitulated to death during 1912 were Wilhelm von Fahnke, field marshal of the German Army; Gen. Count Mare-suke Nogi, the noted Japanese commander; Homer Lea, general in the Chinese army and an authority on Chinese military affairs; Field Marshal Sir George Stuart White, the defender of Ladysmith; Maj. Gen. Sir John F. Maurice, one of the ablest British military writers; Gen. Edward S. Bragg, commander of the "Iron Brigade" during the Civil War, statesman and diplomatist; Lieut. Gen. Arthur Mac Arthur, noted for his services in the Philippines; Maj. Gen. Frederick Dent Grant, eldest son of the late Ulysses S. Grant and Lieut. Col. Frank Bridgman, the oldest retired army officer in the United states. The Navy deplores the loss of many distinguished men, among them Sir Frederick William Richards and Sir Newell Salmon, admirals of the British fleet; Rear-Admiral Aubrey, commander of the Italian fleet in the war with Tripoli; Vice Admiral Jules Marie de Cavelier de Cuverville, of the French navy; Rear-Admiral Robley D. Evans, the idol of the American navy

Rear-Admiral George W. Melville, the of Europe; Chas. C. Grafton, Episco Arctic explorer; Rear Admirals John pal bishop of P'on du Lac: Bishop H. F. Hanscom, Benjamin P. Lamberton, F. Hoffman, of the Reformed EpiscoLucien Young and John M. Bowyer; j pal church; Dr. Robert Collyer, the iioCapt. Lucien F. Prudhomme, formerly j ted Unitarian preacher, and Dr. Grifprofessor of mathematics at the Naval fith John, the first Christian mission-

Academy and James Rufus Tyron, formerly medical director of the American navy. The diplomatic service deplores the loss of Baron Alof Marshall Von Bieberstein, the noted German diplomat; Joseph N. von Radowitz, formerly German ambassador to Turkey and Spain; Count Nicholaus D. von der Osten-Sacken, Russian ambassador to Germany; Whitelaw Reid. American ambassador to Great Britain; Hamilton Ming, American minister to Siam; Col. A. Louden Snowden, formerly

American minister to Spain, Greece j great authority on Anglo-Saxon literaand the Balkan States; Alex. Watkins ' ture; Prof. Abbott L. Rotch, the me-

1 eTreU- formerly American mimsiter Terrell, formerly American Turkey: ym- Lindsay Scruggs, for- j ieny Aiueui-au minister to toiomoia and Venezuela ; Wm. B. Sorby, formerly minister to Bolivia; Dr. Yung Wing, the Chinese Diplomat and reformer; Thos. C. Dawson, an authority on Latin-American relations and Chester Hol-

combe, for many years secretary ofi.,-

the American legation at Peking. iue usr or noiea ieaaers in tne ; realm of politics who died during the j past year includes James b. bnerman. j Vice President of the United States Gen. Cincinnatus Leconte, President of Hayti Alejandro Lopez de Roraana, ex-President of Peru; Ramon Corral, formerly Vice-president of Mexico; Lieut. Gen. Sir Frederick W. Kitcheni t flntrswn - Dnrmniln A 1mt T ;onua, uuiil noisiein-LieureDorg, former Prlme minl8ter of Denmark; Arthur Wellesley Peel, Viscount Peel, statesman ; iscount Ouro Preto and Dr. J. M. da S. Paranhos, Baron de Rio Branco, two noted Brazilian statesmen and Gen. John Willock Noble, secretary of the Interior under Harrison. Unusually great was the mortality nmnnfir former eovcrnnra nf AmoHan Larrabee of Iowa, John Freemont Hill of -Vermont. Royal Chapin Taft of ttnoae jsiana, wn. t-Tancis t. -Nicnolls of Louisiana, and Charles B. Aycock 'of Xorth Carolina. The' United States senate lost four ' members by death during the year, i Senators Isidor Rayner of Maryland. j Robert Love Taylor of Tennessee, ; George Stuart Nixon of Nevada and jWeldon B. Heyburn of Idaho; also the j following former members: Anthony jHigginSvOT Delaware, William D. Washburn. "of Minnesota. Fernando De i Soto Money of Mississippi. John J. j Patterson of -South. Carolina. "William A. Peffer. of :T-t?ader of the PoduI" '"" ' " crt Jones ot-,r 0f Miasl" Wasoteof Pet cr' .Tef " Cod, of Rhode If of New YorT Leonidas T X George T nd marii j men g jGeorf"

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. Ann en of affairs, capitalists, heads of great corporations and rep - resentatives of commerce and industry mortality was unusually great dura tko hiH nf the list are Col. John Jacob Astor and Sir Julius Charles Wernher, the head of the De Beers Diamond Syndicate. Others are Frank Stuart Bond, former president of the Philadelphia & Reading R. R.; Edwin Hawley, Charles Finney Cox, James T. Harahan. former president of the Illinois Central railroad; Lord Christopher Furness. the British shipbuilder; Samuel H. Cramp, former head of the Cramp Shipbuilding concern; Emil L. Boas, American resident director of the-f Hamburg-American Steamship Co.: Gustav H. Schwab, the noted steam-

to, v t,. f rhi,.!caPe tn ravages of death and was

l . , go, Ernst Thalmann and Donald Mackay of New York, bankers; William C Clark, thread manufacturer, Newark, N. J. ; Amory A. Lawrence, cotton manufacturer; Henry S. Dickinson, paper manufacturer; Matthew Chaloner, Durfee Borden, cotton goods manufacturer; Samuel M. Bixby, manufacturer of shoe polishes; three noted merchants. Isidor Straus and John Arbuckle of New York and Simon Mandel of Chi cago, and many others. Three noted philanthropists died miring tne past year, Dr. Samuel cuppies, the educational philanthropist of St. Louis and Capt. John C. Martin. The Church suffered through dead during the past year and the list of the noted dignitaries and representatives who died since 1911 includes the following: Cardinal Hubert A. Fischer, archbishop of Cologne; Cardinal Peter Coullie, archbishop of Lyons; John Clancy, bishop of Alphin, Ireland; Archbishop Stoner, Canon of St. John Lateran ; Patrick A. Ludden. j bishop of Syracuse; Abbe Charles Loy son (Pere Hyacinthe) the f.smous French preacher; Rev. Alex. P. Doyle, the noted Paulist father; Rev. Matthew Russell, the distinguished Irish Jesuit; Mother Mary Sebastian. Provincial of the Eastern Province of the Sisters of Notre Dame; Yoichi Honda, bishop of the Methodist Church of Japan; Henry W. Warren, Bishop of the M. K. church; John Sheepshanks, formerly bishop of Norwich. Eng. ; Chas. Wm. Stubbs, bishop of Kruro. England; Thos. Augustus Jaggar, bishop of the American Episcopal Church ary in Central China. The harvest of death among educators was unusually bountiful and space forbids to enumerate more than the following few: Rev. Chas. L. Ixos. many years president of Transylvania University, Kentucky; David B. Perry, president Doane College, Nebraska; Alfred Tyler Perry, president Marietta College, Ohio; Prof. Max Mandelstamm, the Russian expert on international law: Prof. Theo. Gompers, the noted Austrian philologist; Rev. Dr. Walter W. Skeat, of Cambridge, the teorologlst and Charles R. Sanger, professor of Chemistry, both of Harv ard; J hos. H. .Montgomery, jr., pro.fessor of zoology and Dr. Henry W. Spengler. head of the department of mechanical engineering, both of the University of Pennsylvania, and Rev. Dr. Thomas Hume, the noted Southern Political economy and sociology suffered great losg by the death durinfr ' the past year of Prof. Nicholas Paine1 oilman, Gustave de Molinari and Frederic Passy, the noted French peace advocate. Every branch of literature had to pay toll to the inexorable reaper. The list of noted dead of the year includes the poets Will Carleton, Emil Bohusch Frida, Mario Rapisardi and Robert Pamernn Rnr- th hlstnrfane Poi'v s. uann, Justin Mcuartny, Mrs. Koger A. Pryor and WTIliam B. Weeden; the novelists Auguste Strindberg, Alexander Glowacki, Dora Greenwell McChesney, Robert Barr and Caroline White; the dramatists Alexander ques Futrelle and Dr. Horace Howard ! Furness, the noted Shakespearean j scholar; Henri Jean Baptiste Anatole Leroy-Beaulieu, director of the Institute of France and noted author; Dr. Edward Wilmot Blyden, the negro author and lecturer; Wm. S. B. Mathews, the author and music critic, and two writers of juveniles, Karl May and Sophie Miriam Swett. The world of art suffered the loss of many noted representatives among them the following painters: Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, Francis David Millet, Charles Schreyvogel, Aureliano Beruete, Robt. W. B. Browning, Robert Shaw, Jules Joseph Lefebvre, Al bert Hertel, Walter L. Dean, Chas. Gifford Dyer and Thos. P. Anschutz; the illustrators Arthur Lumley and HaiTy George Burgess, and tlie sculptors Louis Potter and Theodore Rivere. The world of music also suffered great loss. Among the victims were the composers Julien Emile Frederic Massanet, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Edgar Tinel, Jan Block. Frances Allitsen and Dr. Gerrit Smith, and the musicians Howard Malcolm Dow, William Kuhe, Edmund Singer and Sieg fried Behrens. Among the distinguished members of the stage who died during the year were the following: George Grossmith, Richard Temple, Edward O'Connor, Terry and Wm. s. Penley, English actors; Felix Schweighofer, the Austrian comedian: Nathaniel D. Jones, the old time Boston actor; Mme. Judith, the ""ted French sctress; Mrs. Annie "ans, the veteran of the Ameritage; Edith ; Crane, Beryl Fa ber, aerita Saxtop. ,the former intert of Shakesperean role and HerTyinkelmaniu the ndLed, German M tenor s- L. --Bis of Journallsta were thin!

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' ) and Washington, John Henry Holmes,j formerly editor and publisher of the Boston HvralJ, Capt. Henry R. Jones,; proprietor and editor of the New Trib-, une: Col. Joseph E. Caven. WilliamThos. Stead, the English journalist. William Blackwood, editor of Blackwoods .Magazine; Alexis Suvorin. the Russian editor; Dr. Isaac M. Funk, William Penn Nixon, editor of the Chicago luter-Oo an; Col. Isaac F. Mack, for forty years editor of the Sandusky Tlegi?ter; Col. L. D. Burch. Mrs. Mar-j garet Elizabeth Sangster, Bradford j Torrey and the noted correspondents Capt. Frank Brinckley, Isaac Nelson; Ford, Maj. John M. Carson. Col. W. C. ! Connelly, jr.. Gen. Duncan S. Walker ' and Janus Henry Havnie. , The realm of science did not es-; depnv deprived of the following distinguish ed representatives: Lord Lister, the discoverer of the antiseptic treatment in surgery; Sir William Henry All-! chin. physician extraordinary of King George V; Sir William J. Sinclair, the noted English surgeon; the, following noted American practition- '. ers: Drs. Norton Royce Hotchkiss. t Arthur Kendrick MacDonald. John H. Musser. Maurice li. Richardson. Frederu k Larle Beal, James E. Newcomb. j Arthur Tracy Cabot and George M. j ; Tuttle. The list also includes Prof, i Hermann F. Wiebe. the distinguished German scientist: Dr. Morris Loeb. Dr. Waldemar Koch and Charles Gilbert Wheeler, chemists; Jules Henri Poincare. the French mathematician; Dr. William Sprenger, the X-ray expert; Dr. Auguste Renouard. the authority on embalming; Prof. Lewis Boss, director of the Dudley Observatory. Albany; Dr. W. J. McGee, the anthropologist and geologist; Dr. Charles Delano Cook, the leader of the dental profession; Ignat Oestreicher, the expert in photographic chemistry, and Captain Theodore F. Townsend, the meteorologist. Among the noted inventors who . died during, the year were Wilbur j Wright, the inventor of the aeroplane; j Major -Eli H. Janney, inventor of car ! coupler; William Stockney Lamson. ! pioneer inventor of cash carriers; Edward L. Kilbourn, inventor of hos- j iery machines; John Hope, inventor of the pantograph machine for en-' graving; Edward A. Calahan. inventor J of stock tickers; Valdemar F. Lassoe, j who was associated with Erisson in designing the Monitor, and Johann Martin Schleyer, the inventor of Volapuk. Dance, I. O. O. F. Hall, New Years night. Orchestra. T. Fryar. si -2t Serious For Him. 'The doctor looked very serious." 'Ye; I'd.in't think he could find an excuse to oierate " Detroit Free Press.

're-lnventory Shoe Sale

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and get our pricesJbeforfe you buy

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arable Daies ofi 1912

Monarchy calftwo an ena in China

February 12.' v Alleged dynamiteXonsPirators arrested February H. House of Representatives ordered Money Trust Probe Februarv 4 1

Theodore Kooseveit ouerea 10 accept third terra. February 25. . English coal strike, involving 2,00 ,000 mixurs. began February ruled April 6. . Hillsville (Va.) Courthouse assassination, March 14. Titanic disaster April 15. President Taft renominated June 23. Woodrow Wilson nominated July 2. United States Senate ousted William Lorim.tr. July 13. Judge R. W. Archbald. of Commerce Court, impeached. July 13. Rosenthal murder. New York. July 16. Roosevelt nominated by Progressives. August 7. President Taft signed Panama Canal bill, precipitating controversy witk Great Britain. August 24. Mikado of Japan died August 23. Ohio citizens voted sweeping amendments to State Constitution. Sept. i. Montenegro declared war on Turkey, thus precipitating the Balkan War. October 8. Theodore Roosevelt shot by insane crank. Milwaukee. October 14. Italy -Turkey War over Tripoli ended October IS. Vice President James S. Sherman died October 30. Woodrow V ilson elected President of the Fnited States November 5. Balkan, Turkish and Greek delegates met in London to negotiate pear in Near East December 16. Ohio Supreme Court denied last appeal of legislators convicted of bribetaking December 16. Thirty-eight of forty defendants in the dynamite conspiracy, tried in the federal court at Indianapolis, found guilty, December 2S.

- - - 1 - 1 BROTHER WILL SEE . . THAT HE IS GOOD (Palladium Special) SHELBY VILLE. Ind., Jan. 1. Samuel Wiley. 39. of Marion, Ind.. was fined $200 and costs in circuit court and given a jail sentence of six months by Judge Blair on a plea of guilty to a chaige of petit larceny, but it was ordered that he be released at the end of 30 days if the fine and costs have been settled by that time. His brother, William II. Wiley, of Marion, agreed to take charge of him after he has been released from Jail and to report once each month to the court hia whereabouts and amployment.

ED. A. FELTMAN

v v isiica iuua i.jicipijj' aiiuriu3-i

perous Year lor Nineteen Hundred and Thirteen.

ED. A. FELTMAM Dealer in Tobaccos and Smoking Articles 609 Main Street r

Remember, we will cut the price on every pair; of shoes in the house to reduce our large stock before Inventory. Note Prices Below

Ladies $3 and $3.50 shoes in all leathers and styles. Sale Price $2.69 a Pair. Ladies' $3.00 shoes in all leathers and all styles. Best quality ever offered at S3.00. Sale Price $2.19 a pair. Ladies' $2.50 and Z shoes. Broken lots, but in all sizes and all leathers. Sale Price $1.98 a Pair.

I Barry's 13.50 and $4 glen's shoes, all styles, in Gunmetals, Patent olts and Tan. Sale jprice $2.98. Men's Shoes Small lots, newest styles and best quality ever offered at $3.00. Sale Price $2.39. Men's $2.50 shoes in Blucher or Button, all I styles. $1.98 a Pair.

One Each Day

THURSDAY ONLY. Children's high cut shoes, all sizes from 3, to 8. $1.25 values. Sv(C

FRIDAY ONLY. Ladles' Velvet shoes, all sizes; $2.50 and $3 vatues. Factory shipment. Per Pair $1.69.

83c a Pair. yon the saJme quality.

OS3lIEIR';'SIFjIfi

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by the abdication of the EarWHAT IS MEANT BY OTHER "SET-UPS?! All the Wayne county officials whi were elected at the last election if November have been sworn in anl their bonds accepted by the author! ties. General good will and fr!ent j saip exist between the outgoing an the incoming officials who assunr their new duties today. Cigars, ' pies, candy and tpassed out todif - i-m. i E "Experience . . quoted the wise pxrj. i "Yes. but ber char'jres are migKv high." added the simple mng. rhll. delphia Record. V-.. - i - iHBHilHHMa . SATURDAY ONLY. Men's Taa Waterproof shces, Button or Lace; medium weight; just the thing for a irork shoe; two full soles, $3.00 Talue $1.98. your rubbers. We

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