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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 4

Publication:
The Baltimore Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
4
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THE SUN, BALTIMORE, SUjVDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 21, 1909. STEAMSHIP LINES FOR SALE- THE SOT to show bis fiuaneial ability by taking charge of the family fortune for a single day? We trow not. ALBACK. On November 20, ISM. ELIZABETH, aged 82 years, beloved wife of the late Christian Alback.

Washington and Annapolis papers please copy. Funeral from her late residence. No. 743 Maldies street, on Tuesday afternoon, at 2 o'clock. BLAXIIRE.

Suddenly, on November 19, 1909. at Trappe, Talbot county, MARY E. BLA-MIKE (nee Hicks), wife of the late Charles Bla-mire, of Baltimore. 1 Due notice of the funeral -will be given; BOIDY. On November- 19, 1909, KOXllN beloved husband ef Charlotte Boidy (nee 8oloman), and son of Frank and Caroline Boidy (nee Mc-Intyre).

Funeral from his parents'" home. No. 1436 Allen street, on Monday afternoon at. 2 o'clock. Interment in Loudon Park Cemetery.

BOYD. On November 19, 1909, JOSEPH- aged 69 years, beloved husband of Mary E. Boyd. Hagerstown (Md,) papers please copy. CHA3TGE THE POOTB AH RULES.

Two distressing accidents have, been added to the list of football casualties. A young student at the Westminster Theological Seminary in this State and a young man at East Orange, N. were the victims. The list of disasters during the present season furnishes sufficient argument why the committee, on rules of the game, which "Is shortly to meet should make a radical revision. Football Is an exceedingly popular game in this country; It is estimated that 40,000 people assembled yesterday to witness the contest between Yale and Harvard.

The game requires of the players just such qualities as- the American people admirecourage, alertness, which men and women cannot begin to understand In many instances in all its bearings. They are confounded by the suggestion that God should consign His children so largely to the tender mercies of impersonal law and Interpose so seldom to insure. their well-being, failing to see with the poet that "all's law, jet all's love." But 'of you who is wise that does not do the same? "The first Almighty Cause acts not by partial but by general laws." And every father of a family or head of an Institution does the same; he has to, for the greatest good of the greatest number. James Mill himself, we venture' to say, did not conduct his household of nine Exactly as he would have managed it had John Stuart been his only child, though that precocious individual EDUCATIONAL. in.

unaries st. Fail Term beams sept, za. iw MRS. LETITIA P. WILSON.

Principal. je4-6m GERMAN LADY, high school teacher, gives lessons ana aiasses in uckma), KKtAUM axmj SPANISH. MRS. 11. DESSAUER.

310 West Hoffman street. n30-2t MUSICAL- EXPERT PIANO TUNING AND MOVING. PIANO MOVED 82.50 PIANO TUNED 81.50 SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. J. P.

CAULFIELD 102 N. CHARLES STREET. MANDOLIN, Guitar, Banjo. Violin. Instructions C.

J. LEVIN, national reputation; concise and thorough method. 419 N. HOWARD ST. Classes at Y.M.C.A.

and Y.W.C.A. Booklet free, tf OILS AND GREASE PATAPSCO OIL GREASE CO. 109 CHEAPSIDE. BALTIMORE, XID. Manufacturers of all Kinds of Lubricating Oils and Greases, Boiler Compound and Belt Dressing.

Dealers in Linseed and Cottonseed Oil, Piue Tar. etc. Standard Exhaust Heads and American Oil Filters always on hand. Write for prices, circulars and booklets, tf JOHN RYAN. President.

STEAMBOAT LINES. CHESAPEAKE STEAMSHIP COMPANY. g. CHESAPEAKE LINE. FOB NORFOLK, OLD POINT COMFORT AND THE SOUTH Dally, except Sunday, at 6.30 P.

M. FOR YORK RIVER LANblNGS, WEST POINT AND -Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, at 5 P. TICKET OFFICES. 119, 127 AND 217 E. BALTIXlORE STREET AND 30 N.

CHARLES STREET. General Offices. Light and Lee Baltimore. 1840. 1909.

OLD BAY LINE THE BALTIMORE STEAM PACKET COMPANY. FOB OLD POINT COMFORT, NORFOLK AND PORTSMOUTH. BEST ROUTE SOUTH AND WEST. THROUGH TICKETS TO ALL POINTS. FINEST 6TEAXIERS SOUTH OF NEW YORK, EQUIPPED WITH UNITED WIRELESS 1 TELEGRAPHY.

-FREIGHT RECEIVED AVID FORWARDED EVERY WEEK-DAY, AND THROUGH BILLS OF LADING ISSUED TO ALL POINTS SOUTH AND WEST, AND FOR RICHMOND, NORFOLK. PORTSMOUTH. OLD POINT COMFORT AND MATHEWS AND GLOUCESTER LANDINGS. THE SPLENDID STEAMERS FLORIDA, VIRGINIA OR ALABAMA, CARRYING THE U. S.

XIAIL, Leave Company's Pier, Light street, foot of Barre street, at 6.30 P. M. dally, except Sunday, connecting at Old Point Comfort with the Old Dominion Steamship Company steamer for Xlathews and Gloucester landings. Fare 83.35 With the C. and U.

Ry. for Richmond and the steamer leaving Baltimore on Xlonday, Wednesday am1 Friday, connecting with the Virginia Navigation Company's steamer for Richmond leaving Old Point Comfort at 7.30 A. arriving at Richmond at 6.30 P. M. This day trip up the historic James is an ever changing panorama of view of famous places a most interesting trip.

Fare, Baltimore to Richmond, either route, 83.50 At Norfolk and PortsmoufH connection made with all rail lines for all pointe South and West. Tickets to New York, via Norfolk und the Old Do. minion Steamship Company's steamer, including stateroom berth and meals on Old Dominion steamer, 88. 75. Round trip tickets.

815. A delightful sea trip, reaching New York in the. afternoon, affording a magnificent view or urn harbor of the great city. Fare between Baltimore. Old Point Comfort, Norfolk and Portsmouth SirxJ! Round trip, good for 30 days 55-x Second-class fare, one way 82.

OO Special rates to parties of 10 or more. Tickets to all points and staUrooms reserved at Ticket Office, 107 E. Baltimore S. A. L.

Ry. Ticket Office, Continental Building, Baltimore and Salvert streets; 109 N. Charles and at tht eneral Office, SOO Light street. Baggage checked from residence to destination. For further information address JAMES E.

BYRD, Gen. Pass. Agent, JOHN R. SHERWOOD. 500 Light st.

President and General Manager. il'25-tl MARYLAND, DELAWARE AND VIRGINIA RAILWAY COMPANY. Steamers Iv. Light St. Wharf, weather permitting! PIER 73.30 P.

XI. daily, except Saturday and Sunday. Saturday 2.45 P. for Iewes and intermediate points; Mondays. 6.30 A.

XL, for same points. PIER 8 1LO0 A. Thurs. and for Rock Hall and points on Chester river; 6 P. Xlon.

and for points on Chester river. PIER 312 noon. for Bav Laudings and points to Benedict; 2 P. for Bay Landings and points on Patuxent river to Benedict: 2 P- XL, for same points and trip extends to Lyons creek. PIER 212 noon, 4.30 P.

Tues. and for Fredericksburg; 4.30 P. Wed. and for Tappahannock. PIER 3-rXIonday, Wednesday and Saturday.

5 P. for D. and intermediate points. Tickets at P. R.

R. Office, Baltimore ana Calvert streets. WILLAKD THUJUOUiN, x. MUttUULn, General XIanager. Gen.

Pass. Agt. BALTIXlORE, CHESAPEAKE AND ATLANTIC KAllAVA (JUMfAM. Steamers lv. Light St.

Wharf, weather permitting; (PIER 4) 4.10 P. XI. daily, except Sat. and Sim Sat. 3 P.

for Claiborne and noints to Ocean City; 6 P. XI. daily except for Easton, Oxford. Cambridge and landings to Windy Hill; Fri. and Sat.

trips extending to Denton. PIER 516 P. XL. Wed. and for Trappe and Tuckahce river to Waymans.

PIER 7)-S P. XL, Sun. and for Great Wicomico and' Piankatank rivers. (PIER 1. PRATT ST.) 5 P.M., Thurs.

and Sat. for Hooper's Wingate's Deal's Isl. and landings to Salisbury; 5 P.XL, Wed. and Fri-, for Deal's Isl. and landings to Seaford, 5 P.

Tues. and for Crisfield, Onan-cock, Pocomoke river to Snow Hill; 4 XL, Sun. and 5 P. for Crisfleld, Pungoteague, Nandua and Oecohannock; 5 P. for Crisfleld, Onanoock and Pungoteague; 5 P.

for Crlsfield, Onancock and Pocomoke City. TICKETS at P.R.R. Office, Balto; and Calvertsta. VV XilU-VISUJN, X. MUKUOCH, tf General XIanager.

Gen, Pass. Agt. TOLCHESTER COMPANY, (Weather permitting). ANNAPOLIS AND WEST RIVER LINTC. MVn.

days, Wednesdays, Fridays, 7.15 A. M. Saturdays, 9 LITTLE CHOPTANK RIVER LINE. Tuesdav. and Thursdnys at 6.30 A.

XI. SASSAFRAS RIVER LINE, Tuesdavs, Thurs. day and Saturdays at 2.45 P. for Tolchester, Betterton and Sassafras river landings. (Does nnt stop at Buck Neck Saturdays.) rUKi unii-UBrr liin hi tor oicnester.

Better-ton. Havre de Grace and Port Denosit. Xlondava Wednesdays and Fridays at 2.45 P. XI. Freight recelvea at Pier 15.

Light street. tr STEAMSHIP LINES- frjORTH QERMAN JLOYD rast ana Luxurious xww-screw Express and Passenger Steamships, Equipped with Wireless and Submarine Signals, PLYMOUTH-CHERBOURG BREMEN. Express Sailings Tuesdavs at 10 A. XL Kaiser Win. 23 Cecilie Dae.

14 Pr.Fried.Wilh....Nov. 30 Kais.Wm.II Jan. 4 BKJli.MtW U1KKCT. Twin-Screw Sailings Thursdays at 10 A. XL Rhein Dec.

9 Princess Irene Dec. 30 Neckar Dec. 16 Chemnitz Jan. 6 GIBRALTAR NAPLES GENOA ALGIERS. K.

Dec. 1 Jan." I Berlin (new) Dec 11 'Berlin (new) Jan. 29 omits Algiers. INDEPENDENT AROUND THE WORLD. TOURS.

Travelers' Checks good all over the world.) Apply OELRICH General Agents, 5 Broadway. New York, or ARTHUR RORSON 1 27 E. Baltimore st. A. SCHUMACHER 7 South Gay Agents for Baltimore.

CUNARD LINE From Piers 51-52-56 North River. N.Y., 10 A.M. QUEENSTOWN-FISHGUARD-1 LIVERPOOL-LONDON-PAKIS. QUICKEST ROUTE TO LONDON AND CONTINENT. Via Fishguard.

Wireless Telegraph Submarine Signals. Dec 1 Carmania Dec. 11 Carpathia Dec. 4 Dec. 15 Luntania 8 XIauretania Dec.

22 XIAURETANIA LUSITANIA. Largest and Fastest Steamship Afloat SAIL WEDNESDAYS. S. S. Caronia Nov.

27. S. S. Saxonia Dec. 4, Feb.

5, March 19. 1 SPECIAL CRUISES. Xlagniftcent New 20.000 Ton Steamship CARMANIA, CARONIA, SAXONIA (14.3O0 TONS)i ITALY AND EGYPT, VIA AZORES MADEIRA GIBRALTAR. Caronia. 27, Jan.

8. Feb. 19 Saxonia Dec. 4, Feb, 5, Xlarch 19 Carmania Jan. 22.

Xlarch 6 HUNGARIAN-AXf ERICA SERVICE TO FIUX1E, VIA GIBRALTAR, GENOA, NAPLES, TRIESTE. Nov. 27, noon Caronia Jan. 8 4, noon Carmania Jan 22 Travelers' checks issued good everywhere. THE CUNARD STEAMSHIP LI XI IT ED.

2124 State street. New York, opposite Battery. 120 State street Bo-ton, XIsm. ARTHUR W. ROBSON.

127 E. Baltimore st. J. HOWARD EAGER. 306 N.

Charles sU A LI REGULAR FAST SAILINGS FROXf NEW YORK FOR NAPLES DIRECT, GENOA, VILLE- FRAVrWF. PART HP VtCf Diviru'ii XI A RS El LLE S. RO UO 6 I i 8 TO ALL rm.Mn iy xnc AND THE ORIENT. ALL STATEROOMS OUTSIDE ON PROMENADE DECK. ALL STEAMERS BUILT SINCE 1902.

FRENCH CUISINE WINES GRATIS. STATEROOMS 870 UPWARD. BOOKLETS ON REQUEST. J. TERKUILE.

G.P.A.. 33 B'way ARTHUR W. ROBSON. 127 Baltimore st J. HOWARD EAGER, 300 N.

Charles FRENCH LINE Campagriie Generale-Transatlantique. Direct Line to Havre-Paris (France). Sailings every Thursday at 10 A. XI. from PIER 42.

North Riverft. Morton st N. 25 La Lorraine bee. 16 La TouraJne Dee. 2 La Provence Dec 23 La 9 La Touraine Dec." 30 Twin-Screw Steamers.

SPECIAL DEPARTURE. 3. S. CHICAGO 1L second and third class only. GENERAL AGENCY.

19 State New York. ARTHUR VV. ROBSON, 127 E. Baltimore st. J.

HOWARD EAGER. 3QO N. Charle st. THE ROYAL XIAIL Tf T3 STEAM PACKET CO. iVi JAMAICA-COLON (for North South Pacific) West Indies and Central America, Southampton, Brazil and Argentine.

BERMUDA KonSSs. 8 "Orotava," commencing December 15. SANDERSON SON, G. P. and F.

A. 22 State New York. A. W. ROBSON, 127 East Baltimore st.

J. HOWARD EAGER, 306 N. Charles at. Theo. H.

Diener 217 E. Baltimore st. AUSTRO-AMERICAN LINE XIEDITERRANEAN. ADRIATIC. FROXI NEW YORK WEDNESDAYS.

1 P. XI. To and from Italy, Greece and Austria with scheduled calls at GIBRALTAR (East and West), ALGIERS (West) and AZORES tEasj) TWIN-SCREW S. S. XIARTHA WASHINGTON, ALICE.

LAURA, ARGENTINA, OCEANIA. Further information and 1910 sailings furnished by PHELPS BROS. GeneraV Agents, 17 BatfcMi or to any local agent. J. TO Italy MEDITERRANEAN I A MEDITERRANEAN SERV-, ICE THE YMIllJKG-AMERICAN LINE.

An excellent route to the Winter Resorts of Southern Europe, via Naples and Genoa, with occasioual calls at the Azores and Madeira Island. "The splendid large stenmers CINCINNATI. HAMDIIHU AND MOLTKE sail Dec. 9, Jan. 6, 29, etc.

Stop-over allowed. Jan. 6. 29, etc. Stop-over allowed.

Excellent connections from Italy for the Hamburg Anglo-American Nile Service in Egypt. I Li HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINE For Local Afcents see other advertisement. CRUISES DE LUXE TO THE -WEST INDIES By New Twin Screw AVON 11,500 Tons Two Cruises (31 days each) $150 Up Erora-New York January 13 ana. Easter Cruise (18 days) $35 up. "from:" New York March 25.

February 19. Also Yachting Tours by Jew Twin-Screw "BERBICE" Through the West Indies. NEW WEEKLY SERVICE "OROTAVA'' December 13 and every Wednesday. Comfortable voyage to this delightful Island by Ocean Liner. High-Class Cuisine.

Orchestra, Electric Fans in all Rooms, CHRI8TXIA8 VACATION-Special rates, Including Hotel and Excursion. Sailings of December 15. 22 and 29 to Bermuda. Sailing of December 24 to Jamaica. Panama Canal, Barbados, Bermudu, etc Complete Illustrated BookleU on Request THE ROYAL XIAIL RTEAX1 PACKET SANDERSON SON.

22 State New York. A. W. ROBSON, J27 E. Baltimore st.

3. HOWARD EAGER. 300 N. Charle St. THEO.

H. DIENER 217 E. Baltimore at. AMERICAN LINE PLYXIOUTH CHERBOURG SOUTHAMPTON. 27 NEW YORK Deo.

11 ST. PAUL Dec. 4 ST. LOUIS Dec 17 PHILADELFHI A. QUEEN HTOWNrf LIVERPOOL SAILING SATURDAYS.

RED STAR LINE NEW YORK DOVER ANTWERP. ZEELAND Not. 24 1 LAPLAND Dec. 1 WHITE STAR LINE NEW YORK-QUEENSTOWN-LIVERPOOL. BALTIC 4 CELTIC Doc.

i.l ARABIC Dec. 11 CEDR1C Dec. 21 PLYMOUTH CHERBOURG SOUTH AXIPTON. OCEANIC Nov. 24 ADRIATIC Dec.

8 TEUTONIC. 1 XIAJESTIC Pee. 15 ITALY EGYPT VIA AZORES. XIADEIRA AND GIBRALTAR. SPECIAL FALL SAILING.

NOV. 25, S. S. CEDRIC 8i5 Largest -Steamer to the XI editem'nean. CEDRIC (21,035 Nov.

25, Jsn. 8. Feb. 18 Romanic Dec. 1, Jan.

la, Feb. 26, Apr. Cretic 29, Mar. 12, Ap. IS, Xlay 21 CELTIC (20,904 TONS) Feb.

2, Mar. 18 Canoplc Feb. 12, XIar. 24. Xlay 4, June 11 ARTHUR W.

ROBSON. 127 E. Baltimore st. HAMBURG-AMERICAN ALL MODERN SAFETY DEVICES (WIRELESS. ETC).

London-Paris-Hamburcr 27 'President Grant.Dec. 2JI SWaldersee Dec 4 tKaiserin A. fi tAmerika Dec 11 SPennsylvania Jan. 8 Deo. 18 jG.

15 tRitz-Carlton a la Carte Restaurant. Hamburg direct. New. AND THE TTAT CONVENIENTLY NTT J- 1 n-L' 1 REACHED BY OUR XIEDITERRANEAN SERVICE. The splendid, large steamship CINCINNATI.

MOLTKE AND HAXIBURG Sail Dec. 9, Jan. 6, 29, for Gibraltar. Naples and Genoa (with occasional calls at the Azores and Xlsdeira Islands). Excellent connection with, steamers of Hamburg Anglo-American Nile services up the Nile through EGYPT.

Travelers' Checks Issued. Tourist Dept. for Trips Everywhere. Company Offices. 45 Broadway.

N. Y. ARTHUR W. ROBSON. 12T B.

Baltimore st. CLARK'S TWELFTH -ri jP ANNUAL CRUISE 10 THE ORIENl Februarv 5. 73 days. $100 up, including ftkor excur- MERCHANTS XIINERS' TRANS. CO.

STEAMSHIP LINES. FREIGHT AND PASSENGER. FOR BOSTON AND THE EAST. Every Tues. and Fri.

at 6 P. M. FOR PROVIDENCE AND THE EAST, Every Sun, UVed. and Fri. st 6 P.

M. FOR NEWPORT NEWS. JWed. and Fri. at 6 P.

M. Freight Received Daily Until 5 P. XL. for Stctimef Sailing That. Day.

tFreight only. FOR SAVANNAH AND JACKSONVILLE, Every Wed. and Fri. at 6 P. XI.

D. R. XtcNEILL. Pier foot Gay street. GEN'L OFFICE.

GERMAN AND LIGHT STS. BALTIMORE AND CAROLINA S. 8.. CO. For Charleston nd Georgetown.

8. connecting with steamer for Columbia. Conway and Georgetown and Weston R. Southern Railway. Friday, at 3 P.

M. MASON L. WEEMS WILLIAXIS, General XIanager. Union Tnu't Building. Steamers sail from Pir 2.

Prntt street. tf RAILROAD IilNES- SEABOARD AIR LINE. Leaves Baltimore from Union Station (P. R. for Raleigh.

Camden, Columbia, Wilmington, Savannah, Jacksonville. Tampa, St. Augustine, Palm Beach, Miami. Key West and all Florida. Cuba.

Nassau, Atlanta. Birmingham, Xletnphis, Xlontsromery. New Orleans and the Southweit. T.38 A. XI.

Daily "Florida Fast Xlail." 3.00 P. XI. Daily "The Flamingo." H.OS P. XL Round Limited." tm. riffM rnvTivirvT i tpt'ut vjr.nn C.

B. RYAN. G. P. R.

L. Ticket Agt 'Portsmouth. Va. O. XI, CHILTON C.

P. A. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. N. B.

Following schedules published onlya in formation. Trains lv. Baltimore via P. R. R.

2 40 A. XL, for Memphis, Nashville, 7.38 A.M., 9.45 A. 9.20 P. XL, for Asheville, Atlanta, Birmingham. New Orleans.

3 OO P. XL. for Atlanta, Birmingham, Columbia, Augusta. Savannah, Jacksonville, Tourist Car fol California Thurs. and Fri.

8.20 P. XL Krtoxville, Chattanooga, Birmlng ham, Bhrevenort, New Orleans. Texas, H. BURGESS. T.

P. llO E. Balto. st. ANNAPOLIS SHORT Cars leave Camden Station, also Annapolis, on the hour and thirty minutes after the bour fron 6.00 A.

XI. to 6.00 P. then at 7.00. 8.00. 9.00.

10.00 and 11.86 P. M. mhl-tf RAILROAD Daily. tDaily except Sunday. ISunday only.

'Westward. Lv.Xlt.Royal. Lv.Camderi. CHICAGO (via Daily 12.16 P.M. 12.30 P.M.

CHIC AGO (via Newark). Daily 4.16 P.XL 4.30 P.M. 7.45 A. XI. A.

XI. CINTI. ST. LOUIS. 2.43 P.XL 3.00 P.M.

CINTI. Daily 10.50 P.M. 11.0S P.XI. PITTSBURG Daily 7.45 A.M. 8.00 A.M.

PITTSBURG. 12.16 P.XL 12.30 P.Xi. PITTS. CLEVE Daily 8.00 P.Xi! PITTSBURG. Daily 11.23 P.XI.

11.32 P.M. COLS. WHLG Daily 4.16 P.XI. 4.30 P.M, Express trains "EVERY HOUR ON THE HOUR from Camden Station to WASHINGTON week. days.

7.00 A. XI. to 8.00 P. M. Earlier departure.

from Xlotmt Royal Station. CONNECTIONS IN NEW UNION STATION. WASHINGTON. WITH ALL LINES SOUTH. WASHINGTON.

Lt. Xlt. Royal 6.05, 6.43. t7.10. 7.45.

8.55. 9.50. T10.50. T11.53. jil.55 k.

L. n2.16. tl2.53, tl.55 2.43, 13.50. 4.18, t4.55, t5.55. t.00.

6.55. 8.09 (Limited). 10.50, 411.23. P.M. Lv.

Camderi S.00. 6.15. 16.20, 7.00. t7.20, 8.00. 8.20.

9.00. 1L0O A.M.. tl2.02. "12.30. 11.00.

fl.CS. 120 "8'w' "-w. FREDERICK, Camden Station. 19.15 A.M.. 1125.

13.50 and 5.20 P.XI. HAG ERS TOWN, Xlt. Royal 17.45 A.M., t3.5) P.M. Camden Station. J7.35, tR.OO A.M..

t3.50. 14.00 P.XI. ROYAL BLUE LINE TO PHILADELPHIA AND NEW YORK. New Terminal at Twenty-third street. New York, convenient to Hotels and Theatres.

Eastward. Lv.Camden. Lv.Xlt.Royal, Sleeper Daily 3.46 A.XI. 3.51 A. XI.

Parlor and Diner Daily 7.55 A.XI. 8.00 A.M. Parlor. Diner Ex.Sun. 8.50 A.XI.

8.54 A.XI. Parlor. Diner. Bun. oniy v.a a.m.

.57 a.m. Sun. 11.50 A.XI. 11.54 A.M. Daily 1.55 P.M.

1.59 P.M. Daily 3.48 P.M. 3.52 P.XI. Ex. Sun.

5.00 P.XI. 5.05 P.XI. Dally 6.00 P.XI. 6.05 P.Xi! Daily 9.00 XI. 9 0S Parlor, Diner Parlor, Diner "ROYAL Coaches, Parlor.

Coaches. Sleeper 1.15 A.XI. 1.25 A.Xf. lyocai raieepCT ior ni iotk rrnay I or occupancy in Mt. Royal Station at 10.00 P.XI.

Reservation of sleeping or parlor car space, rate of fare, will be quickly furnished by TKLE. PHONE at all of the following Ticket Offlcfsi Cbarle and Baltimore C. St. Paul 1524 or Courtland 1501: Xlt. Royal Station, C.

Xlt Vernon 3123: Camden Station, Information Bureau. St. Paid 846. or Courtland 2726. and 32G South Broadway.

WESTERN MARYLAND R. R. Commencing September leave Hillen Station. 4.10 A.M. Fast Mail, Hagerstown.

N. and Waynesboro. Chambersburg and ex. Sunday. Hani cock and Cumberland.

6.67 A.XI. Western Express, Westminster. Union Bridge, Brucevill (Frederick and Emmittsbura ex. Sunday), Waynesboro, Chambersburg, Hancock, Cumberland, Elkin (Buffet observation Car). On Sunday th run of thia traia terminates at Hagerstown.

2.15 Accommodation for Union 4.15 P.M.-Fast Express, XIain Line. Hagerstown, Hancock, Shippensburg and ex. Sunday, Frederick and Emmitsburg (Parlor Car). DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY. 7.50 A.XI.

Accotn. for Thurmont. 2.45 P.XL Express for Budbrook, Glyndon. York. Hanover.

Gettysburg and and H. Dlv. 6.30 P. Accommodation for Hanover. 6.15 P.XL Accomrr.odKtion for Union Brldn.

SATURDAYS ONLY. 11.30 P.M. Accommodation for Union Bridge. 6UNDAY8 ONLY. A.M.-Aecom.

for Union Bridge and Hanovtr. Station. A. F. M.

HOWELL. Vic-Pre, ft Gsn. Mao. Qm. Pasa.

aV MARYLAND AND PENNSYLVANIA R. R. CO. 7.45 A.XI. For York, except Sundsy.

9.05 A.M. For Delta. Sunday cnlv. 8.30 A.XI. For except Sn.Vday.

12i.3? ttW, aUd 8uDd1'' 4.05P.M.-For Delta, Sunday only. 5.P0 P.Xf. For Belair. except 6i00 v. ucua, VA.T",v (ZM1IJ11HV- 11.00 P.M.-For Delta.

Sunday only 11.40 P.M.-For Belair, except Sunday. FRANK C. CLARK. Times New York. ARTHUR W.

ROBSON. 127 E. Balto. SOO-UPRIGHT PIANO. Beautiful Mahogany Case, in perfect condition.

We bought this Piano cheap and will sell it at a bargain. Terms to suit. GEORGE WILLIO 218 and 220 West Franklin St. Near Howard St. (Over a Hundred Years in Business.) UNCLAIMED SHIPMENT OF FOUR PIANOS has been ordered sold through ua by New York manufacturer.

Beautiful Mahogany cases, full size and in perfect condition; brand new. Will be sold at sacrifice, single or in lot. Must go awonce. KUNKfcL, N. Liberty st.

$145 MAHOGANY CASE $300 UPRIGHT Leslie Bros. Co. Piano Bargain with Stool and Cover. STIEFF- 9 N. Liberty St.

1 3 5 LARGE MAHOGANY UPRIGHT PIANO fine condition; cost new 9275; will sell now for only S135. on easy monthly payments. An unusual opportunity. K. LERTZ SON.

19 East Baltimore street. FOR SALE 400-light DYNAMO AND ENGINE, direct connected: suitable for steamboat or private lighting: also full set LAUNDRY MACHINERY. HOTEL ALTAMONT. Eutaw Place. EDISON MOVING PICTURE MACHINE, GAS OUTFIT AND 18.000 FEET CHOICE FILM cheap.

BOX Baltimore Washington. D. C. n21-3t MAGNIFICENT RUSSIAN BLACK LYNX FUR SET; large Pillow Muff and Shawl, with beautiful head and tails; latest style, $12; worth $80. Address 912, Sun office.

n21-3t FURNITURE OF 8-ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE ALSO KITCHEN UTENSILS; must be sold at house also for rent. Apply Otw vv SARATOGA STREET. nZl-2t RANGE New Imrftoved Baltimore (No. 824) near-ly new; fine heater and baker; suitable tor boiler attachment. Apply 1829 HOPE ST.

n21-2t ONLY $15 FOR FINE SQUARE PIANO; lately done up at the factory and in perfect order. 511 N. EUTAW ST. n21-4t 850 BUYS AN UPRIGHT PIANO. Another Rorrtsin Clrt 11(1 TM AUCTION SALE By order of the Trustee in Bankruptcy, of 5 POOL CUES, 7 seta BOWLING BALLS AND PINS and other chattels; will be held on Hickory avenue north of Third avenue, on SATCRDAi, November 27, at 10 A.

M. Particulars may be bad in advance by addressing SCHWAB BROS. Auctioneers, 601 Fidelity Building," Baltimore. Md. n20-7t FOR SALE DIAMONDS, WATCHES AND JEWELRY on easy payment plan; strictly confidential; lowest of prices; will call in person.

Address A 990. Sun office. n20-3t FOR SALE Old Colonial DINING-ROOM FUR-. NITURE; also. BEDROOM AND LIBRARY PIECES.

Mahogany good condition. Address 5T8. Stu office. nlO-lm NEW AND SECONDHAND Traction and Portable Enirines. Sawmills.

Shingle Mill. Hay Press bargains: easy terms. Both phones. BALTI- MORE EN( GINE 1 327 N. Calvert st, KINDLING WOOD FOR SALE.

F. A. BROAD-BENT MANTEL Canton avenue and President street. O. P.

Phone. St. Paul 5730. Md. Phone.

Windsor 42. nS-lm FOR SALE 50,000 Hard Brick and 2,000 Pom-peiian. Engine. Boiler, Shafting. Belts, Ovens.

Apply at 2U3-211 GREENE 9T. FOR SALE One large DIAMOND, value $800; wil' sell cheap; over 8 carats; to close Quick. Address lOOO. Sun office. n20-3t $150 buys my Elegant Mahogany Piano, costing $350 August hurry removing.

5Q9 W. Mulberry. inn GOLD CHECK STAMPS 1 Or Discount With Each Ton S5.25....LARGE SIZE SMALL gTOO 1 87.25. NOS. 2, 3 AND .87.25 S7.50.....NOS.

2 AND 3 SUNBURY 87.50 Mfc. Vernon 4571. Both Pnones. Courtland 81. $125 CHICKERING PIANO plain Rosewood Case like new Stool and Cover.

STIEFF 9 Liberty St, $98 BRADBURY UPRIGHT PIANO; like' new; cost $350: reason for sacrificing; young business needs cash to buy Xmas stock; opportunity of lifetime. 11Q5 NORTH GILMOR ST; SHOWCASE AND STORE FIXTURES. F. X. GANTER, JALESROOMS-13 VEST PRATT FACTORY-SHARP AND STOCKHOLM STS.

"BEATS EM ALL" PHONOGRAPH OFFER 25c. weekly pays for Victor Talking Machine, tt 810; for EDISON Phonograph. 12 50. HAMMANN LEVIN CO.7 419 N. Howard st.

FISCHER UPRIGHT PIANO; mahogany y-jtv case. guaranteed 5 years: original cost, $590; Stool and Scarf. SANDERS TAYMAN S. E. cor.

Charles and Fayette sts. nl8-tf UNCALLED-FOR GARMENTS, MISFITS, SAMPLES, SWELL CLOTHING FOR ONE-THIRD. HIRSCHMANN'S, o-lm 113 Eden st. orr HOWARD PIANO mahogany case; used pj.ULf 0Diy months: fully guaranteed; Stool ana Cover SANDERS STAYMAN 8. E.

cor. Charles and Favette sts. THE ONLY PLANT OF ITS KIND IN BALTIMORE where it is impossible to get dirty or slaty coal as it is automatically screened, sized and slated and kept under COVER. WITH EACH CASH TON. S5.25-THE LARGEST SMALL NUT IN THE CITY.

R7.00 No. 1 Hard. No. 4 Nut 87.25 R7.25 No. 2 Hard.

No. 2 Sunbury 87.50 No. 3 Hard. No. 3 Sunbury 87.50 Bsw.iiTniarrfwnTintHrii.i SAWED AND DELIVERED FREE.

G. ERNEST KRAFT. COAL POCKETS. BOLTON DEPOT. OFFICE 1302-1304-130 N.

CHARLES ST. O. P. Phone Mount Vernon 4738. 1441-W.

$450 BABY GRAND ART KNABE PIANO cost (new) $1,000 beautiful Hand-Carved Case more than a Bargain. STIEFF 9 Liberty BUY YOUR COAL FROM THE OLD RELIABLE FIRM OF A. P. SHUTT SON, which assures you getting the best grade of Coal-clean, free of slate, full weight, prompt and neat delivery. We give a MONEY REBATE FOR CASH to offset competitors' inducements.

117 NORTH EUTAW STREET. 1510 MARYLAND AVENUE. Established 1865. Both Phones. fe1 ft'1 WILL buy a beautiful Upright Piano; Ms-pxuu hogany case; 7w-oetave; cannot be told from new; Stool and Scarf.

SANDERS STAYMAN S. E. corner Charles and Fayette gt9. o30-tf ONE lOO LIGHT DYNAMO AND SWITCHBOARD; ONE MOTOR; ONE MOTOR motcva bought, sold and exchanged. McCAY.

-9 E. Lexington street. n4-lm 85.25 LARGE SIZE SMALL NUT 5.25 87.OO.....N0. 1 SIZE HARD COAL 87.O0 87.25. 2.

3, 4 NUT HARD 87.BO...NOS. 2. 3. 4 Nut Sunbury .87.50 Cord Pine Kindling or 84.00 CONSUMERS' COAL BOTH PHONES. 218 WEST FAYETTE ST.

$40 ROSEWOOD CASE SQUARE PIANO good tone will do elegant service Stool included. STIEFF 9 N. Libertv St. 100 H. GREEN TRADING STAMPS WITH EACH TON.

85. 25..... LARGE SIZE-SMALL NUT 85 25 87.00 NO. ftARD 8700 87.25. NOS.

2, 3 AND ..87.25 87.50 NOS. 2 AND 3 SUNBURY 87.50 McCULLOUGH COAL CO. Park avenue and Fayette street. Both Phones. Railroad Yard, 926 East Monument street, tf $200 CARVED CASE MAHOG- ANY STERLING UPRIGHT PIANO with Stool.

STIEFF 9 St. iCOAL SIZE SMALL NO. 1 NOS, 2, 3 AND 2 AND 3 100 S. H. GREEN TRADING STAMPS WITH EACH TON OF COAL.

1518 Maryland Avenue. C. P. Xlt. Vernon 1070.

Court, 138L BRANCH OFFICE, 521 N. HOWARD. KNABE UPRIGHT PIANO: large size: fine tone; first-class condition; left with us for quick aaie; price only 9225; a tremendous bargain. R. LERTZ SON.

19 East Baltimore street. 100 s. GREEN STAMPS WITH EACH TON. S.V25 LARGEST SMALL NUT 85.25 K7.UO HARD NO. 1 87.00 RT.25 HAKU JiUS.

JS. 3 AJMJ SSVl 87.25 B7.60-..-SDNBrRY NOS. 2 AND 3... .87.00 CASH yOAL COMPANY, 521 N. HtfWARD ST.

(Beethoven Hall). Mt. V. 871. Courtland 488.

$75 -LYRAPHONEv with 25 roll of Music and Bench -big bargain. SANDERS STAYMAN 8. E. corner Charles and Fayette streets. MISCELLANEOUS.

DR. R. SAPPINGTON'S LIVER PILLS. The JUDICIOUS use of the LIVER PIXXS will restore a htaitny action or tne- iivku. btum- TJrttXJTTT a xA ITTrwVVC.

will k. following symptoms: Indigestion, Constipation, Lou of Appetite, Pain in Shoulders. Limbs. Side or Back, Oppression In the Chest, Depression of Spirits. Chilliness and Sudden Blushes of Heat, etc.

Price 25c GAY AND LEXINGTON and sold by druggists for the past 6a year. nl5-lm DR. R. SAPPINGTON'S FEVER and AGUE ANTIDOTE For FEVER and AGUE. DUMB AGUE.

etc. One bottle will cure, and will not have the second chill. Also produce good, neaitn. vay ana iexing ton. Bold by druggists.

Price jl. nl5-lm No. 2700. Dr. F.

XiETZGER'S RHEUXIATIO REMEDY ran RHEUMATISM in all its forms IN FLAMMATORY. MUSCULAR. ARTICULAR or CHRONIC. Prepared by DR. R.

SAPPINGTON. 112 North Gay street, cor. Lexington. Pnce $1. wuo sold cor arugguis past iua-iai 85.25 87.00 87.00 87.25 S7.50 The ladies might run the Government better than the men do, but unfortunately they cannot be given the opportunity until we change our constitutions) charters and politics so that instead of running one lone man for a position the tickets will read like For Mr.

and Mrs. William II. For Vice-President: -Mb. and Mrs. James S.

Sherman. For Speaker of the House: The Lady of the. House. (She is going to be that anyway.) THE WIDOWS OF THE Around the mouth of the Illinois mine they stand, the women waiting for their husbands, the children crying for their fathers. Scarcely less distressing than the loss of life in such a disaster is the grief and trouble of those who have lost their loved ones and their means of support.

The miners receive such meager pay that they are able to save very little money at the best of times. Many of them have large families, for somehow a family seems to Increase In size in inverse ratio to the ability of the father to support it. These scores of wives and their many children are left destitute, to face the as best they may. Their support is too heavy a burden for the other miners to assume. They have all they can do to support their own families.

The company is never willing to undertake such a financial burden as is involved In caring for them. So that these penniless women and orphaned children must face the world alone. It Is hard enough to bear poverty at best, but when the family circle is broken, when to the terror of want is added the burden of grief, it makes the task doubly difficult. These widows of the mine are the most pathetic figures in the whole district. If they do succeed In supporting their little flocks and rearing their children into sturdy men ana honest women, they are to be counted among the heroines of the earth among them who after great tribulation have come into their own.

The tragic death of the scores of strong men struck down so suddenly at their work in the great darkness, with no hand to aid and no voice to hear their cry, is distressing enough; but there will be many a tear of sympathy for those wives and mothers who sit in the ashes of grief and wait in vain for the men who were their comfort and support. AX ARGUMEXTTM AD HOMIXEM. Which one of you doth not? Luke, James Mill, famous father of more fa mous son. was wont, after the manner or free-thinking philosophers free-thiuking is usually loose-thinking to rail at the iniquity of Almighty God in creating souls to bo damned. On this familiar subject he drew out many problems and theories.

Of course. Mill realized that his indictment against the Moral Governor of the Universe was rather loosely drawn after the manner of freo-thiuking charges, inas much as he knew that God does not create souls to be damned, but only allows souls to be created who may be damned, de spite His efforts to save them. But this. in Mill's mind, was a distinction without difference, since he would say that God's omniscience renders Him without excuse in the matter. Now, how many children do you sup pose James Mill, philosopher, was father of? No less than nine.

As a clear-headed man he must have known, of course, that some of that numerous company were lia ble to be damned. Yet with the possibility of damnation overhanging all human be ings, and the certainty of it suspended over a large proportion of them, James Mill, philosopher, and poor, and a con sumptive, did bring nine souls into the world. Was there ever a philosopher so weakly inconsistent or so willfully insincere? For if Mill did not believe in damnation for his own, he ought not to have used it as an argument against God in the case of others. And so when lesser men than James Mill today rail at the iniquity of God iu creat ing souls to be damned or to be miserable, the preacher always feels like, inquiring of these critical minds, "And how many children, candidates for damnation or lesser misery, are you responsible for You know, of course, that God does not send souls into the world as He sends the rain and the sunshine upon the earth. You know that God is only indirectly re sponsible for children, men and women being the immediate authors of their existence.

And if men deem existence an insupportable evil or a risk too great to be borne, they need not marry and beget chil dren to be damned. For surely God cannot damn souls that men and women do not beget. So in many instances it will be seen that the defamer of God and God's ways is condemned by his own conduct. In judging God he condemns himself, for "thou that judgest doest the same things." That was the only reply Christ vouch safed the captious Pharisees when they charged Him with breaking the Sabbath by healing a man upon the Sabbath day. He brought against them the argttmentum ad Jiominem "Doth not each one of you?" Out of thine own mouth, therefore, will condemn thee." Now, it does not follow, of course, that our actions justify God's actions or establish their propriety.

Only in modesty and consistency a man may not criticise another when without conscious fault or offense he himself is accustomed to act precisely as the other man does. If in following out our highest impulses we find ourselves imitating God's ways, we may be sure that God's ways are not properly the subject of our reprobation, but that they are holy and just and good. That Is the argument imputed to God in the Book of Job, which is not really an argument at all and which does not really prove anything logically. The argument attributed there to God is merely an argumentum ad hominem, a suggestion to Job that as God's steadfastness and power in nature so greatly exceed Job's own ordinary abilities not his comprehension, but his actions therefore it is reasonable to conclude that the part of His Provi dence which Job cannot understand is worthy of his trustful acceptance. Many conditions and institutions in life become Intelligible to us when we thus ap-pioach them from the human standpoint and view them sympathetically instead of abstractly.

A father, for instance, permits his son to think and act for himself to a considerable extent and to bear the consequences of his independence, for weal or for woe and so does" God deal with us as with sons. A father sends his son to boarding school, and then to college, to be educated, knowing full well the perils that will beset him there within and without. The father does not wait until he discovers a perfect boarding school, one that will insure perfect results and eliminate all danger, for he knows there Is none such, and cannot be; he sends his boy to the best school that happens to be available. And the boy once enrolled as a pupil the father surrenders him very largely to the care of the Institution that he has chosen for him, and "he is under tutors and governors until the time appointed of the father." So God educates and develops human ity. In a world that is not an ideal world by any means or the best conceivable, only the best possible under the circumstances, or at least one practically suited to its pur pose.

Ana once in tne woria which God has prepared for our training and development God leaves man very largely to the world, its laws and its forces of good and evil, an action on God's part which sounds like abandonment in the abstract, and when formulated into a doctrine becomes I the half truth of deism a way of God PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING By The A. S. ABELL COMPANY, SDN SQCABE, Baltimore and Charles Streets. Telephone Ncmbeks Editorial JC. St.

Paul 1700 iiOOMS Maryland 487 Business 5 C- OFFICE Maryland Courtland 233 The Daily Scn Is wired by Carriers to subscribers in the City and Districts and in surrounding Cities, Villages and Towns for 6 cents a week, payable (weekly) only to the Carriers by whom served. The Sunday Sra Is serred br Carriers for 3 cents a copy. Persons wishing to be serred can leave their names and addresses at The SCN office. Prices fob Mailing Daily Sun: One 6 cents Two .50 Two weeks 13 cents Three months 75 One .....23 cents Six .1.3) One year $3.00 Prices for Mailing Sunday Sun: Single copy 5 cents One year $1.50 Daily Sex to Foreign Countries, Including Postage: Single copy-. 3 cents Six months $4.62 Per month 77 cents One year 9.24 Sunday Sun to Foreign Countries, Including.

Postage: Single cciflr 7 cent Six months $1-80 Fer month 35 cents One year 3.60 Carrier delivery in Washington and Georgetown tame rates as abor. Leave orders at or phone THE SCN Bureau, and 1308 street northwest. Washington. 1306 BALTIMORE. SUNDAY.

NOVEMBER 21. 1909. Y-F OUR PAGES. THE Oil. TRUST AXD THE SUGAR TRUST IN THE P1LLOBY.

The United States Circuit Court at St. Paul, in a decision yesterday in which, all the judges concurred, held that the Standard Oil Company has been engaged in transactions which constitute "a combina tion and conspiracy in restraint of and to monopolize commerce among the States and with foreign nations." These transactions, it is declared by the court, are in violation of the Sherman Antitrust act of July 2, 1890. The court, therefore, enjoins the individual defendants in the suit, including Mr. John D. Rockefeller, the Standard Oil Company and its seventy subsidiary corporations from continuing an unlawful combination.

The decree will take effect in thirty days from the time it is filed ira-- less suspended by au appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States. It is stated in a New York dispatch that the Standard Oil Company will appeal from the decision of the Circuit Court. So, until the highest court in the land has acted, the question whether the Standard Oil Company is an illegal combination in restraint of commerce will remain unsettled. Under the decree of the Circuit Court the Standard Oil Company Is forbidden to engage or continue in interstate commerce until the unlawful combination is discontinued. The decision of the Circuit Court is one of far-reaching The specific transaction which, in the judgment of the court, constitutes a flagrant violation of the Sherman Antitrust act.

was the transfer, in 1809, by the individual defendants and their associates of the majority of the stock of nineteen corporations to the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey in exchange for its stock. For ten years, prior to 1S79, the defendants had been engaged in suppressing competition. They had acquired control of many corporations, refineries and partnerships and had placed the majority of the stock of these corporations and the interests in property and who held and operated them for the stockholders of the Standard Oil Company of Ohio. From 18TD to 1802 they prevented these corporations from competing for commerce. From 1S02 to 1S99 "they accomplished the same results by a similar stockholding device and by the joint equitable ownership of the majority of the stocks of the corporation." In 1S99 the transfer was made to the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey.

From the day this transaction was consummated down to the present time the Standard Oil Company has been maintaining an unlawful monopoly. The Oil Trust and the Sugar Trust have been the most arrogant, the most powerful, the most strongly intrenched of the great combinations which have attempted to maintain monopolies of necessaries of life. The Circuit Court of the United States has now placed the oil combination under the ban of the law-. The Government, it is understood, Is preparing to prosecute the Sugar Trust under the pro visions of the Sherman act for unlawful conspiracy to monopolize trade. This trust was caught recently defrauding the Government of revenue and forced to make restitution.

Its demoralizing Influence pervaded the Custom House in New York, and many Government employes there have been dismissed from the service for dis honest and corrupt practices. The Government is wisely setting its own house in order before cleaning out the premises of the Sugar Trust. When it does settle down to this vitally important work a thorough, job should be made of it. The highest officials of the trust should, if their guilt is established, be made to pay the full penalty of the law. Not only should the trust be dissolved, but the men at the head of it guilty of destroying com petition, maintaining a monopoly and fla grantly violating the laws of the United States should receive punishment commen surate with their crimes.

II-' WIVES SHOULD TAKE THE PLACES OP THEIR HUSBANDS. hy, if Mayor Mahool went out of town, could not Mrs. Mahool act in his stead?" Inquires Mrs. William M. Ellicott, president of the Equal Suffrage League.

"Under the conditions of former ages she would have naturally looked after municl pal affairs." When Mr. Taft leaves Washington, why shouldn't Mrs. Taft put on her apron, go down to. the executive offices, and act as the Presldentess? Why shouldn't Mrs Sherman preside over the Senate when the Vice-President wants to take a rest? Why shouldn't Miss Cannon take her father's place in the Speaker's chair? (But perhaps this last suggestion is a little out of place, as no lady could wear Uncle Joe's whiskers or smoke his cigars.) Any of our suffrage friends can easily convince you that a woman can do any thing better than a man, and cook dinner at the same time. Why shouldn't she take charge of her husband's affairs? When Charles Dana Gibson doesn't feel very ar- -tistlc, why couldn't Mrs.

Gibson draw a dozen or so pictures? If Glacomo Puccini is called away on business, why couldn't Mrs. Puccini put away her embroidery a few days and write a couple of operas like "Tosca" "Madam Butterfly," only bet ter, of course? When Rudyard Kipling "goes on a trip Mrs. Kipling might keep things going by turning out a story or two and a couple of poems each day. Think of the talent that has been wasted in this country of ours by not allowing the wives to run things half the time. There's Mrs.

Harriman, who was never given the opportunity to build a single rail road, Mrs. Rockefeller hasn't even one lit tie trust of her own, Mrs. Hughes has never acted as Governoress of New York for one single day. The loss of these talents that the wives of great men have never been given the opportunity to exercise is excelled In pathos only by the condition of the husbands of urominent women. Has Mr.

Ella Wheeler Wilcox ever written a poem? How many people know even by sight Mr. Leslie Car ter, who has never been given the chance to play Do we ever see the novels of Mr. Edith Wharton among the "six best What chance has Mr. Carrie Chapman Catt or Mr. Carrie Nation Then tlfere is the case of Mr.

Hetty Green, JVas lie eTer given, an opportunity xne relatives ana inena iu-uuij respectfully invited to attend --the funeral services, at his late residence. No. 1852 MeHenry street, on Monday, at 1.30 P. M. Interment private.

CONRADES. On November 20, 1909. at his residence. No. 739 Cumberland street, GUSTAV CONRADES.

beloved husband of Minnie Conrades (nee Senf). Washington, Richmond, Philadelphia and St. Louis papers please copy. Funeral notice later. DON LAN.

On November 18, 1909, at his residence, No. 1304 South Charles street. JAME8 beloved son of John and Mary Donlan. (Philadelphia (Pa.) papers please copy. Relatives and friends are respectfully invited to attend the funeral, from the above residence, on Monday at 8.30 o'clock, thence to St.

Mary, Star of the Sea, Church, where a Requiem High Mass will be offered for the repose of his ELLIOTT. Suddenly, on November 20, 1309, at his residence, No. 'SllO East Baltimore street, CAPT. JOHN B. ELLIOTT, aged 67 years, beloved husband of Adelaide A.

Elliott. Due notice of the fueral will be given. ENGELKE. On November 20, 1909, ESTELLE, beloved wife of William Engelke. Funeral from her late residence.

No. 1807 North Durham street, on Monday morning, at 10.80 o'clock. i FETCH. On November 19, 1S09. at her residence, No.

1322 North Dallas street. GRACE FETCH (nee Pruett), aged 23 years, beloved wife of Louis Fetch. The funeral will take place from the above residence this Sunday, November 21, at 2 P. M. Interment in Baltimore Cemetery.

November 17. 1909, EDWARD GEORGE, aged 8 years 4 months and 16 days, beloved son of Alfred M. and Frances C. Flayhart Relatives and friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend the funeral services, at his parents' residence, No. 1706 Rutland avenue, this (Sunday) afternoon, at 2 o'clock.

FREY. On November 19, 1909, Mrs. ANNIE E. FREY, in her 76th year, widow of the late John Frey, Funeral from the residence of her son, George G. Frey, No.

1302 North Fremont avenue, this (Sunday) afternoon, November 21, at 2 o'clock. Interment (private) in Mouut Olivet Cemetery. GAITBER. On November 19, 1909, BE ALE aged 68 years, beloved husband of Alberta Gaither. The relatives and friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend the funeral, from his late residence.

No. 722 Potter avenue, on Monday, at 2.30 P. M. GALLAGHER. On November 20, 1909.

JAMES eldest son of James and Emma J. Rest in peace. Funeral from his late' residence. No. 906 East Biddle street, -of which due notice will be given.

GILBERT. On November 20, 1909, ROBERT aged 67 years, beloved husband of Laura L. Gilbert. uneral from his late residence, no. zuzi est Baltimore street, on Monday morning, at 10.30 o'clock.

Interment (private) in Greenmount Cemetery. HEISS. On November 19, 1909, FREDERICK in the 35th year of bis age, son of the late Jacob and Louisa Heiss. Funeral from the residence of his sister. No.

1736 North Fifth street, Walbrook, on Tuesday, at 10.30 A. XI. HILLl On November 18. 1909 GEORGE D. HILL, aged 72 years.

Washington (D. and Louisville (Ky.) papers please copy. The relatives and friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend the funeral, from1 his late residence. No. 312 Norffii 'Eutaw street, this Sunday, at 2.30 P.

M. JEFFERSON. On November 19, 1909, FRANCIS, aged 59 years 9 months and 11 days, the be-love husband of Laura Jefferson. The funeral will take place from his late residence. No.

1502 Patapsco street, this Sunday, November 21, at 2 P. M. Interment in Loudon Park. KOPPELMAN. On November 20, 1909, ELIZABETH, aged 67 years, widow of the late J.

George Konpelman. Funeral from the residence of her daughter, Mrs. H. F. Klinefelter, No, 5 Harvest road, Eoland Park, on Monday afternoon, at 3 o'clock.

Interment private. Please omit flowers. KRAFT. On November 20, 1909, CAROLINE L. KRAFT, in her 80th year, widow of Charles -L.

Kraft, The funerc! will take place from her late residence. No. 913 Edmondson avenue, on Monday, November 22, at 2.30 P. M. Interment private.

L'ALLEMAND. On November 20, 1909, Mrs. MARIE L'ALLEMAND. Funeral from No. 830 North Carey street, of which dne notice will be given.

LAMBERT. On November 18, 1909. RUTH EVELYN, aged 3 years and 6 months, beloved daughter of John and Delia Lambert. The funeral will take place from the residence of her parents, No. 4007 Belleview avenue.

West Arlington, this (Sunday) afternoon, at 2.30 o'clock. LEYSHON. On November 19, 1909. REESE, aged 46 years 4 months and 9 days, beloved husband of Mary Leyshon. Funeral from his late residence, No.

1553 South Clinton street, this (Sunday) afternoon, at 3 o'clock. Interment in Mount Carmel Cemetery. MACK: On November 20, 1909, after a short illness, at her father's residence. No. 1101 Battery avenue, SARAH L.

MACK, in her 24th year, beloved wife of John E. Mack. A light from our household's gone, A voice we loved is stilled A place is vacant in our home That never can be filled. We cannot tell who next may fall Beneath Thy chastening rod. 1 One must be first, but let us all Prepare to meet our God.

BY HER HUSBAND AND FATHER. The funeral will take place from her late residence on Tuesday, November 23, at I P. M. Friends and relatives are invited. McMAHON.

On November 1909. ANNA, beloved wife of Terrence McMahon. Relatives and friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend the funeral, from her late residence; No. 1126 Homewocd avenue, on Monday morning. November 22, at 8 o'clock, thence to St.

John's Church, where a High Mass of Requiem will be said for the repose of her soul at 9 o'clock. Kindly omit flowers. MEGEE. On the morning of November 17. 1909, ELLA V.

MEGEE (nee Thompson), beloved wife of Charles R. Megee. Relatives and friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend the funeral services, at her late residence. No. 17 North Patterson Park avenue, this (Sunday) afternoon.

November 21, at 2 o'clock. Interment (private) in Greenmount Cemetery. PRICE. On November 16. 1909, at her residence, at Livingston.

Staten Island, ELIZABETH WYNNE PRICE. Funeral services took place at Livingston on November 18. Burial in Greenmount Cemetery, Baltimore. RAYMOND. On November 19, 1909, at 7.30 o'clock, Mrs.

FLORENCE aged 53 years, beloved wife of S. D. Raymond. The funeral will take place from her late residence, No. 624 Elm avenue, this Sunday, at 3 P.

M. REITZ. On November 19. 1909. MARY 8., beloved wife of the late William H.

L. Reitz. The relatives and friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend the funeral services, at her late residence. No. 417 Hanover street, on Monday, at 10, A.

M. Interment private. RING. On November 19. 1909.

at her residence, Rolling road, Catonsville, MARY widow of the late John J. Ring. The funeral will take place from the above residence on Monday morning at 11 o'clock. Interment private. Please omit flowers.

SCHOTT. Suddenly, on November 19, 1909, at his residence. No. 1710 North Patterson Park avenue. HERMAN, beloved husband of Marie Schott (nee Arends).

and only son of Dietrick and the late Sophia Schott. The funeral will take place from the above residence on Monday, November 22, at 3 P. M. Interment in Baltimore Cemetery. SCHULZE.

On November 18, 1909, CAROLINE, aged 83 years, the widow of the late Wilhelm Schulze. Please omit flowers. i The funeral will take place from the residence of her son. Henry Rau, No. 425 South Bentalou street, this Sunday, at 2 P.

M. Interment (private) in Loudon Park. SHANNON. Oa November 19, 1909, at her residence. No.

212 South Fremont avenue, MARY aged 65 years, the beloved wifo of the late P. F. Shannon. Relatives and friends are respectfully invited to attend the funeral, from the above residence, on Tuesday, November 23, at 8 A. thence to St.

Peter'g Church, where a Requiem High Mass will be offered for the repose of her soul at 9 A. M. TAYLOR. On November 19, 1909, at his residence No. 823 North Gilmor street, JOSEPH E.

TAYLOR. Relatives and friends are invited to attend' the funeral services, at the above residence, on Monday afternoon, at 2.30 o'clock. VOLLAND. On November 20, 1909, FERDINAND, in his 70th year, beloved husband of the late Margaret Volland. Funeral from his late residence.

No. 414 West Henrietta street, on Monday. Nowmber 22, at 2 P. M. Interment in Loudon Park Cemetery WEISBECKER.

On November 19, 1909, at 2.50 A. MICHAEL WEISBECKER, aged 44 years, beloved husband of Mary Weisbecker. Funeral from his late residence. No. 2249 McEl-derry street, this (Sunday) afternoon, at 2.30 o'clock.

Interment in Trinity Cemetery. WERNER. On Thursday morning. November 18, 1909, after a lingering illness, st his residence, at Ellicott City. JACOB JOHN WERNER, in his 42d year, beloved son of Catherine and the late Charles J.

Werner. Funeral services at his late residence this Sunday at 2 P. M. Interment in St, John's Cemetery, Ellicott City. FIjOIHSTS J.

J. CUMMINGS, 1131 W. Baltimore St. Fune- ral designs a specialty: right prices Both phones. RELIGIOUS NOTICES.

jglP EUTAW PLACE BAPTIST CHURCH, Eutaw Place and Dolphin St. THE MINISTER, Rev. Charles Hastings Dodd, D.D. WILL PREACH SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1 ADAM AND1 ANDRE THE UNMANLY AND THE MANLY." T.50 P. GOSPEL SONG SERVICE.

8.10 P. "THE PEARL," Sixth in series on "The Parables of Jesus in the Light of Today." It SPECIAL NOTICES. onMArnvmArrov mr rn. RINTH1AN LODGE. NO.

93, A. F. AND A. XL. MONDAY, Nov.

22. at NEW MASONIC TEMPLE, 1 P. XL, to attend the funeral of late BROTHER JOSEPH E. TAYLOR, iiy order. CHAS.

XL McKEWIN, lb Worshipful Sfaster. BOATS' FOR SALE SHARP 8AIL BUGEYE: 24 tons register; good condition. Apply ROHDE SHIPYARD, Foot Patuxent street. JBl6-t MISCELLANEOUS. CURLY AND KINKY HAIR MADE STRAIGHT.

Send 50 cents for one box of ointment. ED ALIA HAIRDRESSING It Box 123. Bedalla. Xfo. DR.

A. REED CUSHION SHOES FOR MEN the easiest shoes on earth. Relieve and cure corns, bunions and callous growths on the feet. WILLIAMS SHOE 103 W. Baltimore st.

WHY PAY FANCY PRICES FOR ASTHXIA CURES when you can purchase Huthwelker's German Asthma Compound for 15 cents a box. with the assurance of relieving Hay Fever, Asthma and other nasal afflictions by inhalation. All Druggists or mailed for 17 cents 'in stamps, from HUTHWELKER'S PHARMACY, 218 North Greene street, Baltimore. ALL 9 I watchfulness, strengthendurance, activity, and, resourcefulness. For this reason the United States Government had encouraged the annual contests between the army, and navy.

Nevertheless, all those qualities could be developed just as well in a modified game which can. be played without risk of life, and Colonel Scott, the superintendent at West Point, was eminently justilled in prohibiting the game that was to be played between West Point and Annapolis this year. The tragic death ofrone of the most prominent members, ef the corps of cadets, a player on the football team, was ample reason for Interdicting this year's contest. By next season the rules of the game should be so modified that fatalities will no longer be unavoidable. It is, of course, useless to make rules if they are not to be obeyed, and provision should be made for referees who will see that the law of the game is not transgressed.

Unless the rules are enforced so that the game of football can be played without serious risk to life, it is possible the game will be outlawed al together. Several of the colleges have al ready proscribed It, and there Is talk in one or two States of prohibitory legislation. Any action of this kind might be forestalled by a revision of the rules which will take from the game its inherent danger to life and limb. WHY HOMELY WOMEX BIARRY SO WELL. A correspondent of the New l'ork Times, writing from Oxford, Ohio, wants to know why it is that beautiful women do not marry so well or so often as their plainer sisters.

"A woman," she says plaintively, "may be as homely as a hedgehog and yet marry." The Times prints the inquiry without answer, being inexpert in matrimonial psychology, and so we feel It our duty to come to the rescue. Our answer is brief, but extremely accurate Homely women snare good husbands because they devote the whole of their time and energy to the art. It is theonly thing in life that really interests them, the ono thing that inflames their imaginations incessantly. Looking into the glass early In their teens, they arrive at an uneasy sense of something wanting, and it becomes tti first aim and object of their lives to conceal and obfuscate that lack. Cosmetics and chicanery are their tools; They proceed with courage, resourcefulness, desperation.

No weak or vacillating man escapes. The rush up the Aisle of Sighs is so precipitous that the bravest swoons. The beautiful girl has less sense. Flat tered by masculine homage, she mistakes attention for intention. Because a man plainly admires her style of architecture, she concludes inanely that he is eager to insure his life in her favor and eat the indi gestible products of her amateurish cook ing.

So she is coy, arctic, austere, egotistic, remote, unyielding, cruel. One day, while her young man stands shivering in her frigid aura, a homely sister rushes him from the rear, and before he can yell for the police or apologize to his friends the connubial yoke encircles his neck. Homely girls, in a word, get husbands because they go about the enterprise in a determined and business-like way, while beautiful girls miss them because they waste too much time Jidmlrlrig their own beauty. This is our honest verdict, reached after 42 years of observation and meditation. If we are wrong.

we ask forgiveness. THE MILLENNIUM IS AT HAND. After all, there may be some flavor of truth in Col. Henry Watterson's dolorous prophecy that the end. of the world Is at hand.

Signs and portents" fill the heavens, the walls are black with enigmatic hieroglyphics, and the earth witnesses multitudes of prodigies and marvels. A Western Senator, recently elected, confesses without shame that he knows no infallible remedy for all economic Ills. Kind words for the Lee Statue come from Faneuil Hall and the bilious stone heaps of Connecticut. Halley's comet is on its way, "Uncle Joe" Cannon seeks a martyr's crown and a general European war impends. Worst of a candidate fo office In the military oligarchy of Kentucky, defeated by but one vote, meekly accepts the returns as authentic and announces that he will make no contest, impugn no motives and shed no blood.

No wonder the melancholy Colonel sees the future all black before him. No wonder the thoughts of millions turn to cosmic cataclysms and the vanity of all things human. In Kentucky, at least, the old ideals and customs are crumbling and tumbling. Man emerges from his ancient shambles with tears of pity in his eyes and the spirit of brotherhood in his heart. An election down there is now an end, instead of a mere beginning, as it used to be.

There is no saturnalia of charge and counter; charge, mandamus and habeas corpus, ambush and assassination to follow. Judges are no longer slain upon the bench the Legislature no longer adjourns once a week to bury the dead Kentucky grows mild, humane, tolerant, genial, gentle, al most civilized. No wonder Colonel Watter-son, his heart going pitter-pat, hears in the unwonted silence the footfall of the archangels. SUNBEAMS. Some one suggests Mrs.

Mayor. Maybe she is Mahool for "Norfolk's arms wide open to receive Taft." Of course, necessarily so. Now watch Baltimore pitch right In and win the beauty prize. The New York Custom House employes are on the firing line. Decided change in the program for a white Thanksgiving.

Chicago is undertaking to make pemmi-can a popular dish, like scrapple. Mighty tough proposition. So far, Secretary Ballinger hasn't felt resigned to his situation. Of course, the Sugar Trust thinks it's a case of sour grapes. PROVERBS AND PHRASES.

Faction is the bane of society. French. Folly is never long pleased with itself. Italian. Fools must be taught by experience.

Liry. Force without judgment falls by Its own weight. Horace. What Mearis This Annuity? It means set free from rl6k and It means a certain payment on certain days each year of life. It means large rates of interest and no reinvestment.

It means encouragement for old people to live and income to live on. 59th vear. doing business in 42 States. National Life Ins. Co.

of Vermont. (Mutual.) M. H. Goodrich, General 8-10 South Third Floor. DIED.

ABURN Fell asleep, on November 17, 1909. ANNIE beloved daughter of the late Charles Henry and Mary 8. Aburn. Washington papers please copy.) Funeral from her late residence. No.

1710 East Oliver street, this Sunday, at 2 P. M. Interment private. AHRENS. On November 20, 1909.

at 31inneapo lis, after a short illness, ADOLF HALL AHREXS. of Baltimore. Due notice of the funeral will be given. seems to have absorbed a disproportionate amount of his father's time and attention. When are numbers to be considered there must needs be general rules and regulations, and the management of affairs must needs be a system, an order, a dispensation, and not a succession of in dividual visitations.

And that is the-kind of world we live in, though most persons do not know It, and many do not like to think it. Most persons of a religious temperament try to persuade themselves that 'because it Is metaphysically possible for God to love them as much as if they were the only objects of Ilia love, therefore it is practically possible for God in all His dealings with them to treat them as if they were the sole objects of His care. That Is nit practicable, with reverence be it said, even for God. Many possible advantages we miss iu life from time to time not because God interposes and prevents our enjoyment of them, for our own greater good, as people piously suppose but we may miss such good things naturally, just as members of a household we ordinarily profit, but sometimes lose by the presence of our associates with the restraints implied in numbers. Run through all the Divine methods.

beginning with the creation of moral agents, through election, predestination, vicarious redemption; to damnation itself which is only the rejection, the sorrowful rejection, of the hopelessly, unfit--and when properly understood you will find them one and all paralleled by man at his highest and best. The very things we reproach God for are the things which, like the Pharisees, we ourselves are accustomed to do and count ourselves most worthy in the doing of them. In a deeper sense even than Pope meant it, his advice to his fellows is sound and wise: Know, then, thyself presume not God to scan; The proper study of mankind is man. Belair, Md. John I.

Yellott. THE LATE FATHER TABB; In the judgment of literary critics of high culture men whose opinions carry weight on both sides of the Atlantic Rev. John B. Tabb, whose death was announced in The Sun yesterday, was a poet in the most exalted sense of the word. He wrote comparatively little, but his verses are of exquisite quality and compelled the.

admiration of judges who are not easily moved to praise. His poems are philosophical, spiritual, ethereal and wholesome. Personally Father Tabb was one of the most delightful of men witty, gracious and learned, without pedantry and without ostentation. He had a kindly, mellow sense of humor, which he retained even after the hand of affliction had been laid heavily upon him. It is a pity that he did not make greater demands upon his noble gift of poetry; but the verses he gave to the world have a permanent value and entitle him to a place of distinction among the poets of true inspiration.

THE ADMIRABLE BIDDLE, In an age of specialization the all-around man fewer and fewer. Once upon a time every nobleman in Europe was, ipso facto, a master of many talents and a dabbler In many arts. He could fight, he could put down his six bottles of Canary, he could sing a song, he could kill a wolf, he could pull teeth, and if the need arose, he could make a fair showing as a high jumper or a theologian. Such men are now practically extinct. In all the world there is but one reigning monarch who is also an excellent water-colorist, an accomplished veterinarian and an eminent divine.

In all creation there is but one man who excels alike at lion-slaying, tennis, exegetics, diplomacy, word-painting and the science of morals. Such versatile and protean artists, we repeat, are growing fewer and fewer, and therefore it behooves all of us to be happy when a new one appears upon the horizon. The new one in the present case is the Hon. A. J.

Drexel Biddle, of Philadelphia. Born to opulence and fashion, with blue blood in his veins and a whole chest of silver spoons in his mouth, Mr. Biddle might well have surrendered his life to Society, becoming a mere dawdler at tea tables, a mere transmitter of vapid witticisms and whispered scandals, a mere virtuoso of etiquette and connoisseur of fancy vests. But for that voluptuous life, fortunately for the world, he conceived a violent aversion in his early 'teens. The bland cackle of society men disgusted him the talcumed complexions of society wom en aroused his ire and horror.

He turned for relief to the company of honest pugilists and untainted sports admirers of sport for sport's sake, of the straight wal lop and the fair wager, of the true, the good and the beautiful. Amid such scenes Mr. Biddle arose at once to fame, becoming a hard hitter and a good boxer, with a deadly left swing to the wisdom teeth and a deft command of footwork. He was bold, challenging ac knowledged masters of the manly art and surviving Corbett's cosmic pummeling for nearly half a round. The profession and the public generally looked-p to him.

He was cited on all sides as an example of what even a society man might come to In this world. But eminence In this one de partment did nof satisfy him. He yearned to startle the public variously. Once mas tered, the science of pugilism was as unsatisfying to him as the suffrage would be to a suffragette. So he cleared his throat, struck middle A.

on the piano and began to sing. In short, he became a famous baritone, a golden-voiced warbler, a Scottl with a pedigree, exquisite table manners and hard fists. And yet the canker of ambition gnawed his vitals. Fighter, musician and diner out, he would now tackle the mysteries of metaphysics. The elementary problems such as.

What is the human soul? and Why was man created? first engaged him, but he quickly mastered them, and so passed on to the more difficult matters of practical evangelization. A moribund Philadel phia Sunday-school lay In his path. He grabbed it by the neck, gave it a shake and it was soon gaining members as fast as some new fraternal order. Another Sunday-school appealed to him for uelp. He galvanized it into dizzy activity.

A third cried out. He slid down, the pole like a fireman and went galloping to the rescue Today his hands are full. Four days a week are given over to homiletics, four days to athletics, four days to fashionable dalliance and four days to harmony. He gets sixteen days of -strenuous endeavor into every week and sorrows because it hasn't a hundred days. Here indeed is a man of the magnificent, old-fashioned sort a man who would have risen to the purple in any ancient kingdom; a two-handed man with hot blood in his arteries; a man with imagination, ambition, endurance, a passion for human service and a hard punch.

Let Tartarin of Nairobi look to his laurels; let Wilhelm von Hohenzollern beware! A greater than either comes sizzling up the firmament. He has youth, ideals and a thick neck, lie belongs to the old race of giants. Before he dies he may be Speaker of the House, professor of Greek at Harvard, the best of all Searpias. and heavyweight cham-piou of the world..

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