EER wi PRICE ONE CENT GREAT MEN DO HONOR Obsequies of President Spen- cer at Washington. —— SOUTHERN HALTS ITS WHOLE SYSTEN While Soft Notes of Funeral March Seunded Through Church Every Wheel Ceased te Turn, Every Workman Pald Respect. WASHINGTON. Dec. 3 All that is mortal of Samuel Spencer, late presi dent of the Southern railway, whose tragic death on his own Tailroad on the morning of Thanksgiving day shocked the people of two hemispheres, was laid to rest yesterday afternoon in Oak Hill cemetery A notable tribute was pald to the memory of the distinguished railroad maguate by his associates, by states men and by men eminent in all the walks of public life. The funeral ob- { sequies, held in historic St. John's Protestaut Episcopal church, were at. tended by railroad officials, financiers and public men from all parts of the country, Mauy of them were lifelong associates. Hundreds of friends came from the south Among the distinguished people who attended the church services were Vice President Fairbanks, Justice White of the supreme court of the United States, Senator and Mrs. Foraker of Obhlo, Senator Bacon of Georgia, Governor Swanson and Senator Martin of Vir ginia, Senator Kean of New Jersey, Secretary of the luterior Hitcheock, Senator Wetmore of Rhode Island and former Senator llenry G. Davis of West Virginia. Just as the soft strains of Chopin's beautiful funeral march pealed through the church from the organ at 2 p. m. throughout the whole system of rail roads lately presided over by Mr Spencer every tral came to a dead stop, every wheel ceased to turn, ev- ery employee put aside his work. - For five minutes over the thousands of miles of railway every employee paid silent respect to the dead president. To the strains of the funeral march the surpliced cholr of forty male voices silently entered the church and ranged itself on each side of the altar The eholr was followed by the Right Rev. Henry Y. Satterlee, bishop of Washington; Rev, Dr. Roland Cotton Smith, rector of St. John's, and the as- sistant rector of the church. Immediately afterward J. Pierpont Morgan of New York, a lifelong friend and business associate of President Spencer; Charles Sterling of New York, First Vice President Andrews and Second Vice President Finley of the Southern mallway entered the church and were followed by the funeral par- ty, the great concourse of people pres- ent rising and remaining standing as the casket bearing the remains was placed in front of the altar and the members of the family ere ushered to their seats. It was pecullarly ap- propriate that the body bearers should have been selected from among the colored porters of the Southern rall- way. All of them bave Leen In the service of the company for many sears, several of them nearly a life time, and all of them were known per- soually to President Spencer. Following the body came the hon- orary pallbearers, all of them personal official friends of Mr. Spencer. They were principally presidents or high of- ficials of the railroads of America, and it was voted that, either personally or by proxy, they represented quite one- third of the vast wealth of the United States. E. H. Harriman, a lifetime friend, was one of the last to arrive at the church. The funeral service was strictly in accordance with the ritual of the Prot. estant Episcopal church, It was con- ducted by Bishop Satterlee, assisted by Rev. Dr. Smith, A special musical pro- gramme was rendered, Mrs. Spencer having selected her favorite hymns. These were: “Lead, Kindly Light,” “For All the Saints Who From Their Labors Rest.” “Abide With Me” and “Fast Falls the Eventide.” The burial anthem and gloria were chanted by the choir to Felton's C minor setting. When Bishop Satterlee had pronounced the committal service, the committal being given In the church because the body was to be de- posited only temporarily, the choir sang “I Heard a Volce From Heaven.” At the conclusion of the ritualistic service the remains were borne from the church during the sluging of “Abide With Me.” No such wonderful profusion of ex- quisite floral offerings has been seen in Washington since the obsequles of the inate President McKinley ns filled the Massachusetts avenue residence of President Spencer and the chancel at St. John's church. These tributes came from all parts of the country. There were carloads of beautiful emblems wrought from the rarest of cut flowers. Only a few wagon loads of the floral offerings were displayed at the church, President and Mrs. Roosevelt sent a wreath of orchids and white roses tied with white satin ribbons; Vice Presi dent and Mrs. Fairbanks, a huge bunch of chrysanthemums; officers of the Southern raliway, a standing wreath of orchids, lilies of the valley and vio lets; J. PP. Morgan, a mass of rare cut flowers, and E. H, Harriman, a cluster {of Ameriean Beauty roses, palms, vio- FACTORY GOES UP IN SMOKE, — Drastic Measures of Kentucky Mob Against Tobacco Trost. PRINCETON, Ky, Dee. 3-—-The to bacco stemumeries of John Steger and Jolin G. Orr here, the Intter controlled by the Imperial Tobacco company of New York, were destroyed by a fire which was kindled against them by a mob of masked men. Several cottages In the vicinity were badly damaged, timated at about £170,000. The mob, which numbered about 300 men, entered Princeton between 1 and = 8. m., seized the town marshal and disarmed him, took charge of the po- Hee station and the waterworks and set fire to the buildings. Even had the fire company responded they would have been unable to obtain water. Masked men stood on guand, permit- ting nobly to come near until the buildings were completely enveloped in flames, A squad took charge of the telephone office, and wo wonl of the affair was permitted to go out When the members of the mob saw that the fire was beyond control they left the town, going in the direction of Hopkinsville, discharging revolvers and rides. The fire department then came out, but could only prevent the fire from destroying nearby buildings The work of the mob is Lelleved to be only a furtherance of the agitation by the tobacco ralsers agalust the so called tobacco trust. A Destroyer to Do Away With War. NEWARK, N. J, Dec. 3-John P Holland, the inventor of submarine boats, spoke in a general way of a statement In a lecture before the La Salle society In reganl to a submarine craft on which he is at work and which Is desigued to disable instead of de stroy warships. If It proves success ful be believes disarmament and pot annihilation will be the object in war: fare. “This boat om which 1 am at work,” he sald, “will be the real new thing fu submarines. It will be the chief instrument in doing away with wars. It will not go forth to destroy, but to cripple or disable the warships of the enemy.” William O'Brien For Conciliation. LONDON, Dec. 3.—~William O'Brien, member of parliament for Cork, ad- dressing a Nationalist meeting at Cas tle Island, County Kerry, declared that there was no split or scandal between himself and his friends. By the silent force of public opinion, the speaker said, he bad caused the Irish party to return to a policy of conciliation. If he knew that the present government could carry the full Gladstonian home rule programme with the present par Hlament and that it was cheating them with a contemptible makeshift he would be the first to denounce jt. Murderer Made Desperate Fight. EL PASO, Tex., Dec. 3—-After a desperate fight with officers, during which he was shot several times and severnl of his pursuers were wounded, A. B. Sibley, a sheep buyer, charged with murdering and robbing B. MM. Cawthorue and J. W. Ealstou and an- other rancher on three successive days in Val Verde county, was captured during the night in the mountains near Sanderson and Is now In jall, probably mortally wounded, Seven Negroes Shot, Seven Arrested. JACKSONVILLE, Fla, Dec. 8 — Seven negroes shot, three of whom will die, Is the result of a general row and shooting affray, growing out of an old feud, at Marietta, seven tiles from here. Seveu negroes charged with doing the shooting have been ar- rested and are In jall bere. The jaw bone of one of the negroes was shat. tered and his tongue shot off Operator Mattox Located. LYNCHBURG, Va, Dec. 8. — Tele- graph Operator C. D, Mattox, who was in charge of the block telegraph office at Rangoon, on the Southern caflway, and who Is charged by officials of the railroad with being responsible for the accident in widch President Spencer and seven others lost their Hves, has been loented at Rangoon, He deales responsibility for the disaster. Joachim Plays at Sandringham. LONDON, Dec. 3.--Dr. Joachim and bis famous Berlin string quartet, which is now giving a series of con- certs in london, was summoned to Sandringham and gave a concert Sat- urday night in honor of the birthday of Queen Alexandra. There were pros- ent King Edward and the queen, the Prince and Princess of Wales and the king and queen of Norway. Statue to Andrassy Unvelled. BUDAPEST, Dec. 3.~In the pres ence of Francis Joseph, emperor-king of Austria-Hungary, a number of other members of the royal family, a gather Ing of ministers, diplomats and mem- bers of the Hungarian parliament and before a large assemblage of the peo ple the magnificent monument erected to the wemory of Count Julius An- drassy was unveiled here Patt! Stags “Nome, Sweet Home.” LONDON, Dec. 8. — After having achieved repeated trinmphs with more classic numbers Mme. Adelina Patt) chiose for her farewell to London awdi- ences the two songs with which she won the bearts of the people of many conntries—"Home, Sweet Home,” and “Coming Thro’ the Rye.” May Have Saved a Lynching. ~ HUNTSVILLE, Ala, Dec. 3~Caleb CONGRESS CONVENES Many Important. Measures Slated For This Session, President Rpesevelt Will Sead In Fifty-ninth Anncal Message To- merrow—#roceedings Were Merely Formal. WASHINGTON, Dec. 3 Roth houses of congress conveusd here today, but no business was fransacted on the opening day other than routine The proceedings in both houses in opening the Fifty-ninth session of con- gress were of the wost formal charac ter, The attention of the licuse was officially directed to the fact that four prominent members of that body Messrs. Hitt, Hoar, Ketcham and Ad- ams—have died -zince the close of the Inst session, and a motion for an ad- Journment ont of respect to them Im- mediately followed The president's message will be re celved tomorrow, and both houses will probably adjourn for the day as soon 1% It is read. It Is expected that the nomination of Attorney General Msody to succeed Justice Brown on the su- preme court bench will be nmong the first nominations to Le sent in by the president. The senate has on its calendar two important house bills, the immigration bill and the Philippine tariff bill, but there are spags in the pathway of both. Not a few members of both houses are anxious to meet the demands of the bankers and others for a more clastic currency, and It Is quite cer tain that there will be efforts to supply this want. The recommendations of the president In the interest of a na- tional Inheritance tax is awaited with eager interest by many. Among the questions slated for a liberal share of discussion, the tariff stands at the head of the list. The president himself, it Is sald, desires some changes. The Japanese question, the discharge of the negro soldiers, the desirability of an income tax law, the result of the late elections and the trusts are also slated for discussion, President Would Stop All Hasty Ace tion Against Japan. WASHINGTON, Dec. 3.—President Roosevelt took n very emphatic pos! tion in rebuking a member of congress who had Intended to introduce fu con: Eress a joint resolution which would have added fuel to the flame of agita tion of the differences between this country and Japan over the question at San Francisco The representative In guestion Is E A. Hayes of the Fifth California dis trict. Mr. Hayes is very strougly aunti- Japanese. He already has pending in cougress a Japauese exclusion bill which would exclude the Japanese al most as rigidly as the Chinese are ex cluded under the existing act of con- gress, Mr, Hayes has In Lis possession a Jolut resolution requesting the presi dent to enter iuto n pew treaty with Japan in which Japan would Le re quired to recognize the right of the United States to deal with the ques tion of Immigration of the Jupanese into this country as it deems fit When Mr Hayes called at the White House to consult with the presideat regarding the relations of the adminis tration with the Japanese school ques- tion at San Francisco something al wost dramatic hnppened to him The president told him with great earnestness that his resolution was ill timed and that It wight make dificult the work the government was seeking to do In bringlog about an amicable adjustment of the entire question, He very strongly urged the California rep- resentative not to Introduce any meas- =e Livol tend to inflame the Californian mind or excite any further antipathy on the part of the Japanese. It {3 understood of to the Mr. Hayes, resolution out deference “I do not think that we will have trouble with the Japanese over this school question at this time,” he said, “but we will have war with that coun try in the future. The Japanese have got it Inte thelr heads that they will control the Paciic and we bave got it into our heads that we will control It A clash will eventually come “1 do not belleve that Japau Is ready for a struggle with this country over the question of her people mixing In the public schools with ours. But 1 can say without the least desire to inflame the controversy that the peo- ple of the Pacific coast, especially of California, are united on this question, It is not a party question at all. Re- publicans, Democrats, labor people, all, have not learned to hold the Japa nese lu ns high esteem as might be possible.” Fight White Plague In Every State. ATLANTA, Ga, Dec. 8 <The Amer: lean Antituberculosls league, under the presidency of George Brown of At. lanta, Is planning a campaigu for the introduction In the legislature of every state in the Union bills to secure unl- form legislation for the care of Indi- gent consumptives and to prevent the spread of the disease, Ameer of Belhara Vielts Cuar, -8T. PETERSBURG, Dec. 8.-Sayid NAVY PLUCK WINS. — Football Hattle Wha West Polaters. PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 3 — Nav y courage, dash and daring scored Its first athletic triumph over the army since 1800 on Franklin fleld and before a throng of uearly 30,000 as bLrilllant in its way as the game itself. The navy's victory, by the score of 10 to 0, will go down Into the history of Annapolis sport as one of the most remarkable football triumphs ever set down to the credit of the plu ky young =allors From Northeroft, who kicked the splendid field goal from the forty three yard line that set the seal on the ar- wmy's doom, and from Ingram, the tall navy fullback, who caught the for. ward pass and scored the touchdown that broke the soldiers’ hearts, straight through the team to Norton, the little admiral to be, who handled the keen navy eleven with crystal judgment and nerves of steel, every man of the sallor host carned Lis ample share of the laurels, Moments there were ju the trying first balf, with the blue and gold fight. ing superbly agaiust the desperate sol- diers, with the wind at thelr backs. when the“ Annapolis line faltered and reeled from the shock, when the An- napolis backs forgot their cunning, but always little Norton rallied Lis men, and as surely they answered with a defense that hurled back the gray and black line that thundered against it again and again with a fury that had tested Harvard, Yale and Princeton to the uttermost, : If ever a battle was well planned and unfalteringly carried through to vie- tory it was the navy's splendid game against the West Pointers. Everything was foreseen. No turn or twist of the army backs, no surge or shift of the line, but the sailors met it and mas- tered it. And when the skillful de- fense of the first half had served its purpose it was cast aside, and the navy went lunging into the battle in the second period equipped with every de- vice of modern football so well exe- ented and with such clear headed cor tainty that the hive and gold tide was uot to be stemmed All that this knew of the “new footbmll” bad been taught the navy by the New football advisers, who went ta the ald of the sallors this week did the navy pupils prove that in the Desperate Yale cocoa hes Year's the keenest strategy of the game Not that the tall, lithe Annapolis backs or the sturdy Annapolis for wands had no individual stars among their number, On the contrary, there was n cluster of four behind the line — Norton, Douglass, played as he had never played before Dague, at end; Piersol, at tackle: these were the brilliants that gemmed the navy line, dier back broke away and ran nearly eighty yards for what seeined to be a but from the moment when Northeroft kicked as clean a goal as ever was seen on an eastern field the navy bat. talion knew that the victory was theirs Happlest Day of lils Life. ANNAPOLIS, Md, Dec. 8 The midshipmen celebrated the return of the victorfons Naval academy football teas to Annapolis last ulght in a manper excesding all previous siml- lar demonstrations. The horses were taken from the velilcles which were to carry the players to the academy and midshipmen willingly substituted themselves. At the academy Captain Spencer was presented with a cake bearing twenty candles In bonor of his twentieth birthday. He told the mid shipwen in a specch that it was the happlest day of his life, and he begged them to “lick West Point next year too.” To Settle Gold Cap Dispute, NEW YORK, Dec. 3~Major P. P. Johnston, president of the National Trotting association, and several mewm- bers of the board of review, who are to sit In judgment on the Memphis gold cup race, In which, it Is charged, that Lou Dillon was drugged, at the weeting which opens here tomorrow, have arrived fu New York. The gold cup case has been pending pearly a year S———————————— Is It the Tomb of Clcero? NAPLES, Dec. 3-What would ap pear to be a most important archaeo logical wade at Forwlae, near which place Cicero was Assassinated nearly twenty ago. This discovery mains which arc thought Le the tomb of the great orator. They stand on a hill dominating both the Appian and Herculaneum ways discovery has been centuries Coilsists of re Conslstory May De Postponed. ROME, Dec 3 —1t is probable that the consistory, which was schednled for Dee. 6, will be postponed on ace count of the illness of Mgr. Joseph Samassa, archbishop of Rigonla, Hun gary, who was to receive the red hat of candinal Rev, A, A, Bloomberg Diea Abroad. EASTON, Pa, Dee, 3 Au- gustus A. Bloomberg, professor of modern languages at Lafayette col lege, 1s dead in Germouy, Last Juue he was given a year's leave of absence and went abroad, ley Rig Brewery at Passaic Ablaze. PASSAIC, N, J, Dec. 3.~Fire here Drawing company to the sstimated an LINCOLN AND HAY. Great Predecessor. JEWISH PEOPLE UNVEIL MEMORIAL the late Secretary Hay nas a Kindred Spirit to Mar- tyr President. PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 2 as a diplomat who tempered statecraft with the Golden Rule, the late Jolin Hay was honored by the Jewish peo NOVELTIES Holidays are rot far off and le- fore the week closes this stors will be croxded with Lolidsy gifts. state was unvelled at Kenesetl; Israel temple Attended by Secretary of State Elibn Root, Oscar Straus, Our lice of these useful articles complete. All kinds and all eol- gun metal 18 the Hay family, the exercises were among the most striking ever held in a Jewish syuagogue Among the members of the family present were Mrs. Payne Whitney and Mrs. James Wadsworth of New York daughters of the late sec retary, and Clarence Hay, a son Mr. Root, who wade the chief ad dress, sald “During John Hay's among the familiar White House scenes of hix youth, some incident would evoke a memory of his earlier days, and he would give it to his friends, clad in the felicitous and charming expressions of which he was A master “1 remember that once as we stood by the door of the old cabinet room he spoke of the dark and dreadful time when Lincoln was beariug the burden and the sorrow of the civil war and feeling his way among innumerable ob stacles to his great conclusion of the emancipation of the He told how the great president often In the dead of night gained relief from sleep- lessness and restlessness by rising and seeking the chamber of his young as- sistant private secretary, Mr. Hay, and, sitting on the edge of the boy's reading to him aloud some fa. vorite Look. As the story was told by Hay we could see the tall, gaant form in white walking down the cor ridor In which he sto] and the mg ged, careworn face secking sympathy later years, slave son! above the turmoil of the davs of “Doubtless the cold words on the printed page lack power to beat back the lavading throng of troubling thoughts, and life was given them by the finely sensitive appreciation in the noble and ingenious youth “The instinct of Lincolu's genlus di vined a Kindred spirit in his young se companion ship was wolded aud inspired the char “He has lived a noble life, he has fought the good fight as Lincoln would have wished, and through the long se ries of the passing years the spirit of the great emancipator, the strongest, the just, the compassionate, has wrought mightily In the work of his great disciple for justice and mercy, for freedom and peace, for the op pressed aod forsaken of the earth. So ‘who hath made all wen lo Lis lmage,” we unvell a meworlal set up In honor of one who also gave his life for his country and humanity” Dr. Lappont Serfoualy 11 ROME, Dec. 3 - The condition of Dr Lapponi, physician the pope, Is growing more serious. He now has a fever, apparcutly caused hy the begin ning of blood Dr. Lap. poni enjoyed an vacation of two months last summer, returning to Rome the latter part of September He wns then announced to be serlously Ill of cancer of the stomach to paisoning French Senator Killed at Sedan. SEDAN, I'rance, Dee. 3 —Charles Ce lestin Goutant, a member of the Freoch senate from Andennes, met a tragic death here while on his way to attend the funernl of a friend. M Goutant tried to fump from a moving train, but fell under the wheels aud was crushed to death. Iis body was frightfully mangled Jap Cooly Transport Missing. CITY OF MEXICO, Dec. 3 — The steamer Toyvowla, which left Kobe, Ja pan, on Sept. 18 for the port of Man zanillo, Mexico, is thirteen days over due. The agents of the Trausoceanl Immigration company were to bring to Mexico 1,300 Japanese laborers on board the overdue ship Frank BE, Hyde Dead at Parle, PARIS, Dec, 3 Frank E. Hyde, for merly of Hartford, Coun. died here vesterday. Mr Hyde was one of the most prominent American lawyers (on Paris. He was a member of the fir of Hyde & Harper and principal coun sel In the Fair, Evans aud Jill cases Mrs. De Carle Dies of Wounds. PUTNAM, Conn, Dec. 3 Mrs. Marie De Carlo who was shot on Tuanksgiv Ing day at Willinmsville after a quar rel with Alexander Tdeschie, who had been living at her house, (s dead as @ result of her wounds. ‘Tdeschie is un der arrest, Prominent MHorticultarist Dead. FREDONIA, N. Y,, Dec, 3. ~George RB. Moore, prominent as a grape grow ar and horticulturiet, is dead here as Injuries he recelyed » Jour ago. He Jo wr TA Many Holiday Handkerchiefs Are here, fresh and sweet from the manufacturers, many styles are already here and more on the way from 5¢ to 50¢ each. Silk Waistings In plaids and plains, everywh popular but rary bard to a alds are es cities now a as = for spring. Gceod showi to- day and more on he oving (Coatings Rainproofs, coverts and fancies are here for your inspection and all at Globe Warehouse prices. Gloves Kid gloves in two button, twelve button and sixteen button We sell the best $1.00 kid glove to be found anywhere, Our constant ly iScreasing glove trade speaks for 1tself. Golfs and Mittens For ladies and children, all colors and prices. Dress Goods Oar prices begin at 25¢ for all wool. We have the new reds and other staple shades raising by stages up to $1.75 Mss J sic Children’s School Hose Extra heavy hosiery for hard ser- vice, usual prices 18, 20 and 28c, Special all sizes 15¢. Underwear Sale Men's 50c fleece lined, 33c. Ladies’ 50c fleece lined, 39¢. Ladies’ 50¢ union suits, 30a. Ladies’ $1.00 union suits, 60¢. Ladies’ $1.00 wool garments, T0c. Blanket Opportunities We are anxious to show you our aces It will benefit you and our- selves. Globe Warehouse. Talmadge Block, Elmer Ave. VALLEY 'PHONR. W. T. GAREY, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE OFFICE ROOM 8B, M. P. A, BUILDING, Telephone 246y. FRENCH FERALE MADAME DEANS BLL 8 A Rere Canvaon Naum Me Servutsse NM oreraren. ! Sure 1 Baile EE A a. oe Tit hoo iat fT whew mn have thew vend Tver rders 06 the. “ YRITED BTDICAL CO. sot 74, Lansasven, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers