‘Many Buried in Lava and Ashes Whole Island In Southern Japan It Under Volcanic Dust of Varying Depths. Official reports of the disaster ir southern Japan have brought out the following general features: The small island of Sakura is cov ered with a layer of lava and ashes. in places several feet deep. Beneath it lie many bodies, whose number will probably never be known. Any esti mate of the dead must include a large number of refugees who were drowned while trying to swim from Sakura tc the city of Kagoshima. Kagoshima, last week a prosperous town of 60,000 inhabitants, is in ruins. Even stone buildings collapsed under the weight of the hot ashes. Simultaneuosly with the eruption of : the volcano of Sakura-Tima, there oc curred an eruption of Yarigatake which threw a cloud of ashes over Mat: sumoto, but did no serious damage. The eruption of Sakura-Jima is gradually subsiding. A heavy rainfall is clearing the atmosphere and there. by assisting the work of relief. The entire island of Kiushiu, an: area of 3000 square miles, is covered | with volcanic ash in varying depth. | At Kumamoto, north of Kagoshima, over 1000 refugees have arrived and the authorities are faced with the dif ficulty of housing and feeding the suf- ferers from the disaster, the full ex: tent of which has not yet been told. Kagoshima, the nearest large city to! Sakura, while it suffered great dam | age from the earthquakes, does not ap pear to have sustained a severe loss of life. H. Ijuin, former Japanese min ister to China, who lives in Kago- shima, sent a dispatch to the foreign office, in which he said ten persons have been killed and thirty injured. Sakura-Jima, - at the height of its eruption, is pictured in reports as a terrifying mountain of fire. The air for miles around is thick with ashes and smoke. The police and soldiers of Kagoshima, soon after the disturbance began, made many rescues from the island of Sakura. The people at first did not seem tc realize their danger and were slow in trying to escape. It is feared that many were killed before reaching the seashore. Thousands, pursued by a rain of fiery stones, knelt on the beach, half submerged in water and gesticulated wildly to the steamers and fishing boats for aid. One small steamer saved 300 persons, while the other boats also did noble rescue work. The cruiser Tone reported that Sakura had been entirely evacuated. A party of refugees from the island of Sakura arrived at Miyazaki. They reported that the inhabitants of 300 houses, composing the village of Seto, on the island, lost their way in trying to reach the seashore and probably all perished together. The refugees declare that hundreds were drowned in trying to swim across the Gulf of Kagoshima. They add that the volcana of Sakura-Jima has completely chang: ed its form, several new craters hav- ing opened. The hail of ashes ceasec at Miyazaki after lasting thirty-six hours. The whole volcanic range of Kius: hiu burst into dangerous activity with startling suddenness after having been quiescent for more than a century. ‘Hundreds of earthquake shocks were | felt all through the islands. Railroads, telegraph lines and telephone lines were destroved, and nothing like an: adequate account of the disaster has yet been received in Tokio. i According to dispatches from Mito: yoshi the main loss of life was appar- ently on the island of Sakura. After | having been dormant for 130 years the volcano, without warning, burst into activity and poured destruction on the | villages on its slopes and base. | The eruption began in the forenoon of last Sunday, according to one of the survivors, who managed to escape from Kageshima and arrived at Naga-! saki. Many of the islanders hastened | to the mainland, a couple of miles dis-! tant, abandoning their homes in ter-| ror, but by far the greater number had no time to escape. The whole mountain seemed to split. New craters opened up in a score of places and lava and blazing ashes came down the slopes, igniting everything in their path, until the en- tire island was a mass of flames. Mine Cage Drops; Three Killed. Three miners were killed when a cable broke and a cage carrying six men in mine No. 7 of the Spencer Newels Coal company, at Mulberry, Kan., fell 100 feet. The others were | seriously injured. Firemen Find Battered Corpse. During the progress of a fire in Rast Federal street, in Youngstown, Ohio, the firemen forced open a door and found the body of Peter Szenyk | lying on a bed with the skull battered in. An axe was lying nearby. The sum of $1.55 was found on the body. Preferred Jail to Music. Declaring that he preferred jail te music, Charles P. Phillips, of Chappa . qua, broke a banjo over his son’s head Thirty days. Boy Skater Drowns. Horace Lewis, nine years old, was drowned in Newton lake, at Collings- wood, N. J., and his body was found by Isaac Collings and the boy’s uncle, Isaac Dolby. The boy left home to go skating, ;and when he did not return a search- ing party went to the lake and, pro- curing a boat, they broke the ice and grapled for the body near a large hole. The body was found in five feet of water. Wreckage From Vessel In Distress Drifts Ashore—Ships Rush to Her Aid. The Royal Mail packet Cobequid, still clinging to the Trinity Ledges, with the waves breaking over her, was sighted by a lone fisherman just as the fog lifted on Wednesday morn ing. All hands are safe. Nearly all of those on board have been landed at] Yarmouth, N. S. The steamer West: | port brought ashore seventy-one and the others came on the steamer John L.-Canm, +: The decks of the Cobequid are awash. If the present weather continues the Cobequid will hold together. She is heading off shore. The Cobequid went ashore at 6.15 a. m. Tuesday. The Trinity Ledge, where she struck, is gix miles off the mainland of Nova Scotia and fourteen miles from the port of Yarmouth. The Cobequid’s masts and funnels | are standing, though terrific seas are. sweeping over the ship. The ship's | cargo, including many barrels of mo | lasses, is coming ashore. | The wreckage includes an extension ladder, a hatch combing, companion way fixtures and a sign board bearing | the inscription “Keep clear of twin | screws.” As.the Cobequid is a twin | screw boat it is thought the sign! Aldrich and signed by all the mem, | pers of the commission. In its open- | came from her stern. Radiograms had been sent out from ! St. John ordering all ships that could be reached to hasten to the Cobe quid’s assistance. The steamship John | L. Cann was sent out from Westport and a tug was sent out from Westport and a tug was dispatched from Yar- mouth. The Trinity Ledges, on which the Cobequid stranded, are a collection of jagged rocks just out of water on the eastern side of the entrance to the Bay of Fundy, and fourteen miles north of Yarmouth. They are more than five miles off 2p ' the regular course into the bay from the southward and eastward, and the Cobequid was carried on to them by the westerly gale. The faint purr of an “S. O. 8.” call from the missing Cobequid was picked up ai several points in the Bay of Fundy early on Wednesday morning. The Canada Northern liner, Royal George, caught the cry of distress three times and heard the steamship Lady Laurier replying, asking for the location of the Ccbequid. TO HOLD REFUGEES 3000 Mexican Feerals to Be Detainec In United States. All of the Mexican Federal soldiers | now in the custody of the United! States borden patrol forces at Presi ! dio, Texas, will be transferred to Fort | Bliss and interned there indefinitely. Secretary of War Garrison ordered the transfer, witb permission for the refugee women and children to accom- pany the soldiers if they desire. There are about 3000 of the Mexi- can officers and men who fled across the Rio Grande when the victorious Constitutionalists entered Ojinaga, and with them, besides many women and children, are some 1500 civilian refugees. The latter are not prisoners and will be allowed by the military au- thorities to do as they please, though those desiring to remain in American territory will have to satisfy the immi- gration authorities. $13.000 PACKAGE STOLEN Disappears In Conellsville After Being Received From Pittsburgh. It has become known in Pittsburgh Pa., that a package containing $13.- 000 was stolen from the office of the United States Express Coonellsville on Monday night. The Pittsburgh bank to the Second Na: tional bank, of Connellsville. Express company detectives and the police are looking for Ralph Wyant, night clerk in the express company’s office at Con- nellsville. It is said he has not been ! seen since Monday night, when he re- ported for duty. FIRST POSTAL BANK SWINDLE Arrest In Omaha Brings to Light Suc- cessful Forgery. What is believed to have been the first case of successful swindling of the postal savings bank through for- gery came to light in Omaha, Neb. with the announcement of the arrest there of Philip Nugent, alias Jack D. Lynch, of Phoenix, Ariz. Nugent is accused of forging the | name of Coval Morris and obtaining $30 deposited by him in the Omaha postal bank. Scranton Coal Dealer Slain. The frozen body of Robert Fidiam, fifty-six years of age, prominent in coal mining circles in Scranton, Pa., was found in the Green Ridge section. The head was battered in and the cir- | cumstances pointed to murder. Search- | ing parties were sent out after Mr. Fidiam when he failed to return home after having been absent since Mon- day morning. First Steamer Through Canal. through the Panama canal. It was the Alexander Lavalley, a crane boat, and it carried no passengers. It had been operating on the Atlantic side and gradually made its way through dur- ing the course of its dredging opera- tions. Goes Blind at Meal, Regains Sight. While he was eating his dinner, Charles E. Gilbert, a constable, of Mount Holly, N. J., was stricken with blindness. After being confined in a dark room his sight was restored. It is thought he was stricken with para- lysis of the eye, caused by the strain of wearing a pair of cracked glasses. company at | money had been sent by a; The first steam vessel has passed. WILL BE FREED ON BAL Members Unanimous That Silayer’s Relcase Would In No Way Menace Public Peace and Safety. The commission appointed by Judge Aldrich, of the United States court, to reach a finding as to whether it would be a public menace to liberate Harry K. Thaw on bail, pending a final de- cision of his case in the federal court, has reached a conclusion and filed the same in writing with the clerk of the United States court in Concord, N. H. The report of the commission was made public and its conclusion is couched in these words: “In our opinion it is reasonably probable that Harry Kendall Thaw's liberty under bail would not be dan- gerous or a menace to the public peace and safety.” The commission further states by its written report that its members have formed a unanimous and positive opinion as to the state of Thaw’s mind at the time of the homicide, but re- frains from expressing that opinion, . "The heavy stow fail last" Sunday ‘a webk ‘ago bed, havi because the scope of its inquiry does not permit of a finding or an opinion on this point. The report is addressed to Judge ing pages of the somewhat exhaustive report the commission says that they went carefully over the case book of the Matteawan hospital covering the period from Feb. 1, 1908, to Aug. 11, 1913, when Thaw escaped. | It also examined transcripts of all | other legal proceedings, including the ' various close and direct examinations of Thaw and all evidence submitted at the two trials of Thaw for homicide. The commission refers to the public, hearing which it gave on Jan. 7, at which only witnesses in favor of Thaw appeared, and then concluded its re port as follows: “To determine the immediate ques, tion before us, our inguisition was , necessarily directed to four points: “First—Careful physical examina- tion to determine the presence or ab sence of structural or functional dis , turbance of the nervous system. “Second--The conduct of Harry K.' Thaw since his committal to the Mat. teawan State hospital on Feb. 1, 1908. up to the present time. “Third--Whether he is now suffer- ing from such a disease of the mind | ' or whether his present condition of | mind, whatever it may be, is of such ! character as to predispose to acts of ; violence, independently of the nar rower question whether such acts act- ually have been committed since his | confinement or not. . “Fourth-—-The circumstances and conditions which outwardly and in: wardly led to the homicide on June , 25, 1906, and the probable condition of mind of Harry K. Thaw at that time. ; ] “In its studies and deliberations the commission has in the main confined its attention to facts, preferring to at tach little importance, for its purpose, to the conflicting opinions of expert. and other witnesses. “In our opinion it is reasonably probable that Harry K. Thaw's liberty under bail would not be dangerous or a menace to the public peace and safety.” Would Bar Cheap Labor. Any alien laborer, who, within the year previous to his admission tc the United States had not earned 30 per ! cent of the wages paid in this country | for the same work, would be excluded { from the United States, by a bill in- | troduced by Representative Gillette, of Massachusetts. It is designed tc | bar cheap foreign labor. Rob Theater of $1800. Cracksmen broke into the Academy theater, in the heart of Buifalo, N. Y., and bound and gagged the watch- man, blew open the safe and escaped with $1800 in currency. The robbers left a satchel of safe-blowing imple- ments behind them. With the hurches of the County. : Notes of Interest to Church People of all Denominations in all Parts of the County. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY. Service Sunday 10:45 a. m. Wednes- day 8 p. m., 9% E. High street. ’ LEMONT. The sledding has been all that can be desired. Chas. Thompson and wife spent afew days among friends here. + Monday was a bitter cold day, with a strong ! west wind and drifting snow. A sledding party .came up from Centre Hall to spend the day at William Ralston’s one day last week. ; Wayne Thompson. is at present employed in Philadelphia and has leased the Center Furnace farm to_State College. The United Brethren congregation is holding a protracted meeting at present, and itis hoped that there will beimuch good done. .. The venerable George Baker, who camein from the west to attend his sister Mary's funeral, had the great misfortune to fall last week, but it is hoped that his injuries are not serious. wrecked John Osman'’s barn, Thos. Houtz’s wag- on house, and corn cribs, some buildings for Daniel Keller besides the ones reported last week. Elopers to Fight White Slave Law. Shocked as Mobile, Ala., society was to learn that the “Mr. and Mrs. Fos- i ter” it had entertained lavishly were ' a girl stenographer and her married employer, it was even more agitated ' to learn the more startling details oi the romance. | With Joel M. Foster, forty-two years ' old and wealthy, held for an alleged violation of the Mann white slave act, and Miss Delilah Bradley, seventeen years old and pretty, under guard in her fashionable hotel as a material ' witness, many a fashionable hostess in Mobile fears she may have to ap- | pear when Foster is brought to trial. With the arrest of Foster for a technical violation of the white slave law, the story of their elopement from Pemberton, N. J., came out. | After his arrest both Foster and the girl admitted that they were not married. but intended to be as soon as the man could be divorced. Both have so far maintained a defiiant atti- tude. | It is said he will test the power of | government agents to arrest any man under the Mann law, unless they can | prove the suspect is actually a “white slaver.” Foster and Miss Bradley eloped from Pemberton early in December, where the girl was Foster's stenogra- pher. He was the general manager of one of the largest chicken farms in the world there, and his father is the head of the Scranton, Pa., correspond- ence schools. Paid Man to Kill Him. . That William Lechtenfeld, whose body was found riddled with bullets in Briar Creek township, near Ber- wick, Pa., Dec. 19, had paid $30 for his own murder, is the conclusion an- nounced by officers who have been working for weeks on the case. Lechtenfeld furnished the revolver, that he borrowed from another. He bought the cartridges that were to penetrate his own bedy. He then hired the assassin to commit the deed and stood in the bushes while the fel- low aimed and fired, is the theory of the police. : ~ To prove this the state constabulary officers have much evidence. ‘The mo- tive o! the crime was lacking from the first. There was every indication of suicide, with the impossibility of it. He had threatened suicide by poison- Ing and shooting, but feared to do so. In a saloon he offered money to a man to kill him, and it has been establish- ed that he left the saloon with a strange foreigner, although nothing was thought of it at the time. : The fact that he paid for his own murder is indicated by the fact that he had money above the amount he offered for the killing when he left home, and there was little money on his person when the body was found. 3 Automobiles. A Car for Every Purpose In considering the prices of Studebaker Cars please remember it is | by reason of their excellence in design, immense volume and | trically Started aud Lighted FOUR Touring Car, 5 Passenger, Delivery, with choice of bodies, and Lighted BEEZER’S GEORGE A. BEEZER, Propr. SIX Touring Car, 6 Passenger, fully equipped, Elec- trically Started and Lighted....... method of manufacture, and the resources and buying power of the Studebaker Corporation that we are able to offer you these values. fully equipped, Elec- sesessstesivsntari nesses nrenn conse. Elgctrical ly Started Bess sasasanerreasveentt atari GARAGE, 59-3-tf Bellefonte, Pa. EE. a. ——————— , Mutineers Get Three and a Half Years | Sentences of three and a half years’ . imprisonment and $100 fines were im- posed upon the seven convicted muti- , meers of the bark Manga Reva .y Judge Bradford in the United States district court in Wilmington, Del. Smoked a Cigarette as Anaesthetic. Smoking a cigarette, Lawrence Uy- saz, a Pole, lay on the operating ta- ble at the Alexian Brothers’ hospital i in Elizabeth, N. J.," watching his own | operation. He was too weak for ether ti be used. Overturning of Stove Burns Village. The village of Castel Guglielmi, near i Venice, Italy, was destroyed by fire, i caused by the overturning of a stove. ; Its 3000 inhabitants escaped without | injury. . ’ New Advertisements, ANTED.—Able and willing good girl t general Plead Ming wages. In ‘quire 143 East Linn street. { XECUTOR’S NOTICE—Letters testamenta: | upon the estate of Hannah Ianthe Py { ston, late of Bellefonte borough, deceas- E Deen granted to the undersigned. all . persons knowing themselves indebted to same | are requested to make prompt payment, and | those haying claims against said estate to present | them duly authenticated for settlement. ! FANNY A. SHUGERT, E: i W. HARRISON WALKER, ry a. Attorney. * '59-2-6t d New Advertisements. ANTED.~To rent, a small house or two rooms, furnished. Inquire at this of- fice. 58-50-tf AND UP.—Earned weekly selling our High Quality Lakeshore Grown Nursery Stock. Best grown in the U.S. Permanent position. Pay weekly. Outfit free. Write today. Pennsylvania Nursery Co., Girard, Pa. 59-2-8t OTICE.—The annual meeting of the stock- » holders of the Whiterock Quarries will be held at the offices of the company in Bellefonte. Pa., on Monday, January 26th, 1914, at 10 o’clock a. m., for the election of directors for the ensuing year and to transact such other business as may properly come before such The New Grocery. ..Bellefonte’s Best Grocery.. mestiog L. A. SCHAEFFE i Li A. FER, Bellefonte, Pa., Secretary. Jan. 8th, 1914. 59-2-3t For Sale.’ = Automobile For Sale. 1910 Model Cadillac Touring Car for sale cheap. In splendid condi- tion, new Nobby Tread Tires this season, prestolite air tank for filling tires, inner tubes and full set tools. Guaranteed to be in A I condition. Call on or address * GEO. R. MEEK, 58-46. Bellefonte, Pa. But a few big bargains in 58-49-1y. ROBERT MORRIS, We claim best, because our goods are Strictly Fresh, Pure and of Unexcelled Quality. Don’t worry about the weather. Telephone us your order and we will see that you get it. kitchen means solid satisfaction during the winter time. A well stocked Dry Goods and Shoes left. You had better avail yourself of this exceptional op- portunity before it is too late. This store will be closed at six o’clock each evening, excepting Wednesdays and Saturdays, beginning next Monday. Double Stamps Saturday. BELLEFONTE, PA. mmm The First National Bank. | Calendar Maps 59-1-1y We have a few more Calendar Maps for distribution among our friends. We do not send by mail but shall be glad to reserve one if you.cannot call now, and will write. The First National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. The Centre County Banking Company. it confers. positor. It is the policy Small Accounts Encouraged uth One need not have a large account with this Bank in order to enjoy the privileges Believing that banking co-operation tends to develop the resources of the small de- preciative attention to all who bring their business here regardless of the size of their transactions. You are invited to open an account at this bank, no matter how small. The Centre County Banking Co. of this Bank to give ap- BELLEFONTE PA.