Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, January 14, 1910, Image 1

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    XIV. NO 34.
, IRST NATIONAL BANK,
VI r. XjXG. i : % -A.-
CAIMTAI, r K
$50,000 w c. FRONTZ President.
%
Surplus and A. REEDER, Cashkr
Not Profits,
75.0W0. DIRECTORS:
Transacts a General Wm. Front-/, John <:. Uinl, W.
, « i» • , '\V 0 Frontz, Frank A \'. 1« . !'• r.
Mitulani; Business.
Lynuni Myers. \\. I Ue< >y, J'etoi r.0r.1/, ]
Accountsoiludivid- i j \ $ Bull J»!m Bull.:
r.ils and Firms
solicited.
Safo Dppositp 80x63 for Rent, One I'olUvr per Vrr r.
3 per cant. INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS.
!
No Place LJke this Place
Foi* Reliable
STOVES and RANGES,!
COAL OH, WOO D
HE ATERS;
ONE OF WINTER'S GREAT DELIGHTS.
Mouse Furnishing Goods, Tools cf Lvery
Description, Guns and Ammunition
Bargains that bring the buyoi back.
Come and lest the truth of our talk.
A lot of second hand stoves and ranges 112 . . c aK.- civ t ;
We can sell you in stove? anything from a fine Jewel Ease I
Burner to a low priced but satis".'.i 'jto;*v cook t' ••-•••••
Hot Air, Steam and Hot Water Heating rW:
Genera! Repairing, Roofing a:*! \g.
j ,—,»
uul n. vb--v/\a.a-a/W
HARDWARE!
112
Wanii Winter Underwear
SOME SPLENDID VAL JE3
Mni'd lu*av\ col oif ill ilwvrd L'.dies' W- |>r:v.\vrs heavy
brown mixed Shirts ami Drawers; ,i ,j-c ! I'.iii tlcei\d. !!"».• ."iiii*
also ribbed gnrnici)(-i tor •">!.- ,
, . , Ladies white ami natural i mrf'd
Men's natural colored shirts and
Drawers in part wool and the finer Vesta and Drawer*, in part wool md
all wool grades; from 7at* to $1.75 tine all wo >1 gi rmeiitsr 7oe to ifcj 00
Blankets and Comforts at Ex.cpon al Prices
WOOL BLANKKTS—It is blanker tim • n<»-v and w- ant idler! u* somio
exet ptional values in blankets raimine in price Ironi ••••»* s|(l
WOOD COMFOBTrt -Facb if-.rt is filled with clean white cotton; j
lif -a silkoline aad sateeu e<<v i in j ! tin ■ 1 t!or dil tdu'-t =•'! • ><' ■ 0-1.
Ot "Pi N'< > I'L VN* N F.L WK\ 1J -Ladies' outing flannel ;.->w ns >0 • i > *l.
Ladies outing flannel sii-• rt «ki - to
OUTING FLANNEL—Splendid assortment of the latest fancy stripes
and check", ,ju-d the tpialitio you will he w-,inline for the cool oi-ills Wi
nn'showing some exceptional vthi, s for <c, he and i>e
Ladies Winter Hosiery
Ladies' Black Fleeit Lined ITosel Ladies' Fast Black Cotton li
•it l->', 25c, !!5c and | extra rpisilities fur U?.le to.">■ •■.
Ladies' Black Wool and Fine ('as-j Ladies' F. st lilacl si k Lisle 110-c
si mere Hose; tine lot from 25c to sl. j iwpeelally good values at 25c to 75c.
SHOPIELL DRY GOODS CO.,
313 PINE BTREET,
WILLIAMSPORT - FENN'A,
PRINTING
TO PLEASE
I *L£ C - IMcws Itcin vi-vuee.
LAPCRTE, SULLIVAN COUNTY PA. FRIDAY JANUARY 14,1910.
k' ftoppfisnumn.
iJ ril i nUfiblllliU
I j
Seven Killed in Colorado, and
Siorin is Imaging Over Upper
Mississippi Valley
ICY REPORTS FROM EVERYWHERE
Points in Northern New York State
Report the Collect Weather of the
Winter—Serious Interference with
Traffic—New England is Frozen Up. j
Albany, N. V., Jan. 11. —Severe cold
! 13 reported from Central ami Northern j
1 New York. At Waterunvn the nier- j
: cu.'v dropped 35 degrees in twelve ;
. ho 1 - to li> below zero. Blizzard eon- ;
iltti'Hid prevailed at Interlaken, a tern- i
pi r.uure of 4 beln.v being aceompan- j
ied by Heavy snow and high wind, j
i Vuca had a temperature of IL' below, j
i Tlie mercury dropped degrees at .
Saranae Lake, marking 25 below.
An ineli oT seow fell at Rochester.
I thermometer showed KO below
throughout, the Mohawk Valley. Platts
■ biug, Oswego, Buffalo and all other
i points report the coldest weather of
the winter and serious interference
; with t'afflc.
S<:ow and sleet, accompanied by a
cold north wind, fell in the central
wit, the storm exteiating from Okla
! lioma north w; d. In lowa a blizzard
• itueicfe.ed with railway and street
car traffic. In Nebraska s :hools are
' clo ed on account of snow blockades.
Tiie snowfall in Noitiiern Nebras
ka and Sunt hern South Dakota is re
ported as half a loot. The tempera-
I tares around 12 below zero. In
(" aland Western Kansas the fall
of . r.ow was the Heaviest in ten years.
11 extended to the Colorado line. In
v f-st• -a Kansas the snow is a foot
».i« p. The temperature in Missouri,
i Km--. n and North Oklahoma averaged
about 10 degrees above zero.
New Kngland is frozen up. Port
i land h'.id a temperature of 1 below,
' e in (lie Rang, Icy Lake region it
! was 30 below. The Andover-Kum.
(.Me. I stage was overturned by
the. high wind. No one was Hurt.
Chicago, ,lan. 11. Over the Upper
Mi: -issippi Valley a bis blizzard is
racing after a day of wind, snow, sleet
and shifting drifts that impeded trains
sad made life a 1 widen for those
whose tasks called them outdoors. In
Ch so sleet as luv.l as bird shot is
| cu•: irig obliquely thioitKh the air.
Cen-'er. Col., Jan. 11. Big snow
!• s ,;.re running in the western and
southwestern sec tions of Colorado as
a r- iult of blizzards. The reports
tii far received indicate that seven
iat ti are dead. Over the private tele
phone wire of the San Juan Power
: Company the report reached Durango
that four men had lost their lives
there. One man lost his life In an
avalanche that swept by the lowa
mine, near SiiveCon. The victim was
Charles limn. The slide did $5,000
• damage.
I New York, N. Y., Jan. 11. The suf
fering among the poorer people as a
result of the sudden change in the
wo'UHer was intense, and all the lodg
■ In-' Houses and free shelters for the
destitute were crowded to their full
est capacity.
The sr-.at battleships in the North
Ki . • r looked like pictures of an Arc
tic exploration ve -'el trapped in the
Ice. The brief interval of sunshine
made them glisten like immense
mountains of ice, and the sight proved
so unusual it attracted a shivery
crowd to the river's edge.
Niagara Fails, N Y.. Jan. 11.- The
ice bridge has formed here, and the
scenery about the park and fails is
very beautiful.
HOSPiTM. SWALLOWED UP i
Seven Die When Cave-in of Disused
Mine Occurs.
Vienna, Jan. 11.—An extraordinary
accident occurred at Itaibl in Carin
tii. The sudden subsidence of the site
of a disused min completely engulfed
a small hospital building-. Not a ves
tf, ' r the hospital remained, and only
ii !:, ; ,e cavity in the ground was to
| be seal.
Seven inmates of the hospital, in
.i iding Surgeon Wesseley and his
family, perished.
Flaxseed ?2.10 a Bushel.
I <;V mo. Jan. ti. Flaxseed touched 1
ttu' hatiie.-st point in its history, No. I
iii .western selling at £2.10 a bushel
eti the Chicago market. This is an
re vance of six cents over yesterday's ;
il.i No. 1 southwestern closed to.
day at There were no receipts
i of eed at this city to-day.
Morgan Trinity's Donor.
Hartford. Conn., Jan. 5 The m.vs
1 te ■ concerning the New Yorker who
ci ,tribal d SIOO,OOO to the Trinity en-
I i. j.vment fund of |500,000 was cleared
up u>ilay by the announcement that
1. I'iernunL Al organ la the donor.
HUGHES if! HSSM
cms FOB REFORMS ■
Stands by Demand for Direct Nomina- ;
tions—Wou'd End Bookn~aking |
and White Slave Traffic.
Albany, N. Y., Jan. It. —In two of
the moat important documents sent ,
out from the Executive Chamber Gov- I
ernor Hughes called upon the State
Legislature to defeat tho proposed in- ,
come tax amendment to the federal |
constitution, again urged a law pro- \
riding for direct primaries and an- |
nounced the gift of 10,000 acres of j
; land and $1.000,000 from Mrs. Mary
W. Harriiuan for a great public park I
on the Hudson River.
One of the documents was the Cov- j
I ernor's annual message to the Legis- )
lature. The attack on tho proposed i
Income tux amendment was made the
j subject of a special message. The !
| Governor analyzes tho amendment I
| from a constitutional standpoint,
: quoting eminent judical opinions to j
justify his determined opposition, and !
1 recommending that the proposed con- j
; stltutional amendment piovidiug for j
an income tax be not ratified by the
i Legislature of this state.
The Governor in the general mes
sage urged amendments of the Penal
Code to prevent oral betting, or book
making without the recording of bets,
and the so-called "white slave" traf
fic. A renewal of his recomtnenda- j
tion for the inclusion of all telephone
and telegraph companies under the
jurisdiction of the Public Service com
missions was distinctly brief, even
curt. Extension of the state's agricul
tural work, the state development of
water powers and the adoption of a
more liberal forest preservation pol- j
icy were other features of themes- ;
sage which were expected by the leg
islators.
Entirely new was the acknowledg
ment of a,gift by Mrs. E. >l. Harriinan
of a tract of land of 10.000 acres near
her estate and $1 000,000 in cash to
acquire other land for a great state
park in the highlands of the Hudson.
In the body of the message and in au
appendix giving in detail correspond
ence between the Governor, George
W. Perkins, president of the Palisades I
Park Commission, and others there ]
was Ret forth a comprehensive plan
for the acquisition of the splendid
pari:, to include most of the beautiful
territory of the Palisades region, with
a river.frontage and a great roadway
along the base of the Palisades. Gifts
by John 1). and William Rockefeller,
J. Pierpont Morgan, Mrs. Sage. Miss
Helen Miller Gould. George \V. Per
kins anil others amounting to $1,625,-
000 were announced, with the 'declara
tion that $2,500,100 more had been
raised. To meet this New York State
is to appropriate $2.500,000 to acquire
land and build roads and to remove
the new state prison fiom Rockland
County to some place where it will
not interfere with this park work.
Charter revision for New York
City, the passage of measures to as
sure more economical condemnation
proceedings, comprehensive automo
bile legislation, with a license tax;
proper legislation to provide better
compensation for injury of employees
along the lines of the report of the
Comission on employers' liability, the
lessening of special legislation for
municipalities and a definite system
of budget making by the state were
uiged by Governor Hughes.
Other recommendations are:
That the Governor appoint a cabi
net of Stat administrative head-.- ac
countable to him, in place of the pres
ent elective State officers. This would
requi; e constitutional amendment.
That the New York ballot be sim
plliied.
Publicity of all campaign expendi
tures.
Direct nominations.
That it be made a eriive, with se
vere penalty, for a motorist to seek to
escape after an accident to which his
act lias contributed.
AN OYSTER TRU3T~CHARBEO
Mississippi Proceeds to Break Alleged
Combination.
Gult'port, Miss., .Tan. 11. —Alleging
violation of the state anti-trust laws,
proteedings have been brought here
ugaiuct the Lopez, Dunbar ft. Dukate
Company, which is charged with con
trolling the oyster industry of Missis
til pi and restricting competition.
Penalties aggregating ?2,225,000 are
asked, or at the rate of $5,000 a day
since September 4, 1008. On that date
It is alleged that the defendants se
cured the conveyance of all independ
ent oyster packing plants into one as
sociation. The suit is brought for the
state by Wirt Adams, state revenue
agent.
Two Auburn Convicts Dead.
■\uburu, N. Y., Jan. 5. — Clarence
Baitv.'i and Miles Halligan, convicts in
i Auburn urison, are dead, and the
prison authorities decline to give de
' tails. The .'ion, according to one
story, dn nk ovt.-doses of wood alco
hol, but rumors from reliable sources
indicate that the men ; iad as the re
sult of wholesale holldi-.j" indulgence
; In drutf.;.
PUT $200,003,800
IN IRGAti'S GRIP
i
Money Powers Hand Over Seep t-.
J re of Finance to the Wall
Street Banlier
PASSING OF RYAN m MODTOH
j J. Pierpont Mcrgan Buys the Morton
and Fifth Avenue to Consolidate
j with His Guaranty Trust—Total Oi
j posits $171,000,000.
| New York, N. Y„ Jan. 11.— J. Pier
j uoiu Moragn, head o.' the Money
j Triut, has accomplished another of his
| tremendous coups, merging three
I trust companies into one of the great
i est banking institution iu the coun
j try- a $200,000,000 as:>.'.s concern to
| be known as the Guaran.y Trust Coai
' panv.
The companies consolidated are the
Morton Trust Company, the Kifth
Avenue Trust Company and the Guar
amy Trust Company.
As the power of Mr. Morgan ex
pands to unlimited bounds the finan
cial activities of another king of High
finance, Thomas F. Ryt u, are stead
ily diminished by his own voliiion.
Very swiftly Mr. Ryan is divesting
himself of properties and their burden
of cares in order to seek complete re
tirement. The consolidation will
make the Guaranty Trust Company
die second largest trust company in
! the United States, with -.ggregate do
j posits of $140,000,000 and assets if
S 170,000,000. The merger will end
Ryan's sway of the Morton Trust
Company, which controlled the Fifth
Avenue. It will give the Morgan and
iHied interests control or influence
over life Insurance companies, banks 1
trust companies with aggregate re
sources of $2,302,860,"82, and of rail
way and industrial corporations with
an aggregate capitalization of !>7.u,".';,-
961,606, a total of almost $10,000,000,-
000.
Coming ?o soon after J. P. Morgan's
I purchase of Ryan's majority holding
| of the stock of the ISqui-able Life As
| snranco Society, the nn ger of trust
companies is especially utgniflcant.
About two years ago Ryan an
j nounced that he intended to give up
i practically all his big interests, and
he withdrew from most of the firms
in which he had big Holdings. The
Equitable Life and the Morton Trust
Company were two of the corporations
from which he did not retire. Mor
gan bought his Holdings of stock in
the insurance company, thereby
eliminating him from that. Now in- ;
teiests closed to Morgan have wiped i
out the Ryan control of the Morton |
Trust Company by consolidating it !
with the Guaranty Trust Jompany.
$240,000,000 1 HMOS j
Great Disbursement by Banks to Hold
ers of Securities.
New York, N. Y.. Jan. 10. —The New
! York banks have begun the disburse
| nient of more than $240,000,000 in divi
] dends and interest payr ents. This is
j the largest sum ever paid oat in Jan u
-1 ary in the History of Wa'l Street. Dur
! ing the last quarter of lf'o'J many rail
j road and industrial companies in-
I creased their dividend rates while
i others resumed or made initial pay
! nients.
! At nearly all the national banks
j there were long lines of men and worn
j en waiting to collect coupons on Gov
ernment bonds and railroad and in
• dustrial mortgages.
; NO ONTms"§6o,ooo
j Left by Apparently Pocr Ragman in |
St. Louis.
St. Louis, Jan. 11. —A fortune of
?60,000 in good securities awaits the
Heirs of Jeremiah Moyn'han, an aged
ragmari, who died on Friday. Appar
ently in destitute circut istances, Moy
nihan was to have been hurled in Pot
ter's Field to-day, but ti e public ad
ministrator found a ke - to a safety i
I deposit vault In his effects. The i
I safety box contained bonds worth I
j $60,000.
j Moynihan was eighty years old. He
« was a miser and lived alone, and. as
far as is known, He had no relatives
in this country.
The Flea.
! Oh, there's nothing quite so uiaa
! dening as a pesky, crawling Ilea, when
j the little cuss is biting in a spot you
I cannot see! Nothing which drives
! man or woman ' the point where they
! will swear, like this Hopping, frisky
: critter, when he's out upon a tear!
Los Angeles Express.
Men's Measurements.
For the athletic type of man the
! average che.it n e t.-aituaeat is IS
'inches, with the waist 31: while the
| motoring uian. though shorter, de
mands a 28-inih waUi ilostou Giobo.
75C FLR YL 112 P
! "' T; '' T i
WOULD O'k- r
THE WKE tl.
• Covotmg f.Tinor Htiptic.vags Fia:rt .'!
| AH Over lira Glob 3
DO ML STIC.
In a statement 1.-aaied at CU"r ! y,
111., by the Rod C'r.. ami 1 i'ne v- fle
ers it, was 're. oamjc cried thai <*. a- n
utd relief bo in the form ;.f pi . 1
to widow.? of iho St. Paul • a
tims.
U was annoimood ft To a,
that Now York ami i!u .*;«;> .*r;>H
behind a proj' otto b.iikl tin <k
largest dam in u>e v.*<>rid acre a. a.i.
Miissisaipd a!, thi-.t le-'nt.
Jacob S. Co:-.ey ■".'• '•"l the :a
crease in the cast <1 livkig Pic'fl
remedied only by the Onvn-Mi r»t
ing control oP* the _ 01 v l-oai ;
banks and baair.g taisiae-a; ... , ;v*e.a<l
cash.
Oscar 0. Murray's vi ■' ■■■ e ' a
tho premie •:•."•} of I'.tWmi, 1 j." l > o
Ralli oa.l as ace: :> ,- '' '-1
Willi*;vd va:: rbo. en M h>.."
Senator A lids is' selevt. d nt 1 * y
caucus iu surreal the- l:>• e S *:-;.r
Rnines r - R ?nidi!ie:>n hauler. '
C.cori;o V. i'-r.er d r»tl<e" » re
of big 1 -'ilroadr. held 1 ■'. . • 0
over tin- <lfeu;'!!n!s of the r i
arranged to heir'the adjustment e&n
mit?ee a
C. W. Morse, as eon- let Mo. ; !,
began his I.' ii'ii-i <ar i»v.: o* <i *<
oninent iu tie; ; enUi-ntiajy at \t" ■ .•<>,
Oa.
John D. Un i:oller, jr., vr:i.e :
foreman of the Oram! JufS Mo .v t'ork,
which is ell a* i-.'d v.-'Mh an in r.-l:/ o
the iille-'i ' v s.lr,■ 1 - ; da.
Senator Jouaihn a Hon ; 0 *-
gon, announce:. >; 112 he •• ' : f>-i •
to the voters <•! 1 '• at: ;e that il y
vote directly for ! . *;«»i .
V-'ASM I NCTGN.
President Twill a.a -ike' l.'a
t retrenchment 1 - to i:i 1: .-• u
the two bait! i-.avr.i 1
Reports of il-.f. Bin» et of '
Depr rtinent of (,nu. c e and i r,
sli -'v that the i.rl.-ea .of i; -: t-• » a."o
rapidly inert-
Represent;; . -. :ai 1 .1 a
fight over the r- '1 la - ft.
gress by presenting a ttlil before re*
col; t of the Prt . ...
sa.ao.'
Pro adent T i't de; Ir.red • " ' ■
Insurgents in Congress who
his policies, cutting off the.; pa roa
ago.
The heads of six great
tried in v.- a to •. ar a ■
Taft against recommending farther
railroad lr;J• i •:> n.
Secret ary K: ■' is to < . ■ r
tho Bi'lii ; . . a 'or
Foreign Mint ter on matters 1 eg
The I);re( tor of the Ce a . jrta
The compensation is S6O for two
weeks' to l'o - a. s' v.-.-...a
. . .
The Aero Uah .-.1 1 r- ace <h •• e u
I to issue a f>" .
balloon and aeroplane caps, both in
u 'uafioiial a:ai Vio.'a ! db o
tie It of A ii 'a
The Paris newspapers -say the
the.l >; •r!<-*;in 1. .
prehabiy ia- a i- : a t
of '.it ii o: -. 1 ;'
French ! ii. ' •• H- •
tion of M > \"
ban Will i*.' •<-. >;.•
ha; the ini.-n- '■ ' - ; in
the i' d ii ■ 1 - -a
,A eeoi a n g | ) a li
fro ;i 1.. ..don - a- .
being conducted with conr:der.a;)tj
lit : . C I! !l
men who a ' ''
way ta a i
diers, who have con:
Despatches fro u B1 11 ■. T
I gun his !-:o\ .. 1 a
i It is stated, that Dr. Co< s . - ,i
I polai data va- e ■
formerly rector of the Unis 1 at
niore than a w< «t,o.
PLAMS Si V; ;
, "Kills Crin-.e Germs," Ss
Assistant «" ■ a .
1 Chicago, daa li. 1
; have a n w ei y Jni 1
: model for all j; . •
now in the I:an-' ie I - a.
Sehue tier, . i-.tan;. c a,. ; ... , .
j Instead of 1., in*: iu . -
; unsanitary • ;a !!
i wili oe on the tcp iiaor <•
Then inrter.d . the a.
root Chief S 'a. .• ** e.
■ a I*.*M\y :
' will b a , -'m -. ,
1 malUnK tl*.e ei ■a; -In.
inr:erl of b • lir.a pi ' . :*o.
"Sun 'an-- kills eii , > ■
; cl*i:ed Mr. ' J 'h . ar.
SrreaJ of C;rn o I - .;u ■ •
Io Cl'.iii thero re • ; . ■
there are so ma a..' 0» - ! i.at lh<
nstive servants Icaru thoir language.