HABBWBTJR Vf K HbUO ifcen. i Semi- Weekly Founded I Wayne County Organ I 1908 Of the WceklyFounded, 1844 REPUBLICAN PARTY 66th YEAR. HONBSDALE, WAYNE CO., PA., FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1909. NO. 1 PLEA FUrt iUUSE Mass Meeting In Oath dares Him Innocent MAYOR ONE OF HIS CHAMPIONS EcRtence of Fifteen Years Declared to Be Disproportionate to the Offense With Which He Is Charged. Bath, Me.. Dec. 30. Friends of Charles W. Morse, steamship promoter and banker, who was sentenced last month to serve fifteen years In prison on the charge of misapplying the funds of the National Bank of North America of New fork, hare .held a mass meeting here, at which the may or presided, and unanimously passed the following resolutions: Whereas, Charles W. Morse, a most loyal son of Bath, has been sentenced to serve a term of fifteen years at Atlanta (or an alleged misdemeanor and Is non Incarcerated at the Tombs prison pend ing; a hearing; before the board of appeals and. Whereas. To a man of Mr. Morse's age a sentence of fifteen years is practically a life sentence and as It seems to us dis proportionate to the offense with which he was charged; now. therefore, be It Resolved, That it Is the sense of this meeting that all honorable means shall be employed In his behalf to obtain a new trial and secure reasonable ball to which he Is entitled under the constitution. Be It further resolved. That we extend to him our hearty sympathy In this hour of trial, believing him Innocent of any criminal act or Intent. Realizing fully that the honorable court of appeals is in duty bound to decide this CHARLES W. MORSE. case in accordance with the law and evi dence as presented to them and having the utmost confidence in the wisdom and Integrity of the sitting Judges, we trust the respondent will have the benefit of every reasonable doubt. Among the speakers were Mayor Hughes, former Mayor Edward W. Hyde, who said he also spoke for his brother, John P. Hyde, president of the Bath Iron works; President Ho ratio A. Duncan of the Marine Sav ings bank. City Treasurer Oscar C. Rogers, who Is also president of the People's Savings bank, and William Rogers, a retired shipbuilder. JjTEVEHS DEFEKDS TEE DAM. former cmef Engineer Say Critics Are Nioaraguan Advocates. New York, Dec. 29. John P. Stevens, formerly chief engineer of the Panama canal, in a letter to be published In this week's issue of Engineering News defends the Gatun dam, declaring there Is no Justification for the sensational reports attacking its design which re cently have been circulated. He states that the dam Is being built actually much wider and higher than safety requires, but merely as a con cession to prejudice, and that If the ca nal were being built by private Inter ests a much less massive structure would be considered entirely secure. Mr. Stevens suggests that the pub lished attacks on the canal plans and methods of work are In the Interest of the Nlcaraguan route, and he declares iua.1, lu uia ujuuiuu, iuc rauaiui vuuai has been wisely located and properly pUnB As a hint to Mr. Bryan for March 4 the Brooklyn Eacle recalls the fact that Stephen A. Douglas held Lin coln's bat at Old Abe's first Inaugural. But at the national polls In I860 Doug las bad proved to be an ally rather than an opMent of Lincoln. He spilt the Democratic popular vote, but gain ed only twelve electoral votes. Doug las Democratic rival, John C. Breck- is iiii lira i rnni7r ninnninir inn tJtrw. o&d highest, although his popular vote was fewer by 500,000 than that cast for the "Little Giant." FACTS IN FEW LINES' A hand (horse measure) Is four inch- The average age of the people ol hew lortc city is twenty-Bevcn years. The total number of sailing vessels In the world Is double that of steam ers. Bosnia has not been au independent state since 1389, when the Turks con quered it Distress In India Is still decreasing. The number now In receipt of state re lief is only 405,000. Of the 105 counties of Kansas 100 have some of their boys and girls at tending Kansas university. Following a practical demonstration of Its value In that field, the govern ment will use concrete buildings In which to store explosives In the canal zone. A New York law has gone Into ef fect forbidding boys and girls under fourteen years of age to sell newspa pers on the streets between 10 p. m. and 0 a. m. As a proof of the lasting qualities of cypress a coffin recently was exca vated at New Orleans which bad been buried since 1S03. yet the wood was as found as when new. 1-ava from the volcano of Savaii, In the Samoan Islands, which has lieen in constant eruption for over three years, has formed a river eight miles wide Sowing into the ocean. According to the federal fish com mission, which has been making tests, the meat of the small shark, common ly known as dogfish, is palatable and morn nutritious than beef. In a recent race in a Canadian town third place was won by a jockey 103 years old. Since he began his racing career nt the age of eighteen he has ridden in more than C.000 races. The equipment of the big buildings of New York city with telephones makes a great demand for wire. In five buildings alone the telephone wires total a length of 2,300 miles. Nearly 4.000,000 pouuds of hog bris tles were exported from Shanghai last year. They were valued at $1,858,600. It takes a hundred coolies to sort and bundle about fifty pounds of bristles a day. That there will be no more Spanish women toreadors is said to be due to the influence of Queen Victoria, who dislikes bullfights very much, but King Alfonso must go very slow In combat ing the pride of the Spaniards In their rational game. Schenectady Is the only city of New York state In which grade crossings have been entirely abolished. Since the public rervlcc commission wns or ganized only 250 have been done away with, and there still remain 8,733 on stoani roads alone. It is known that Alaska has yielded great wealth to the fur Industry, but the extent cannot be stated with any certainty, ns It has been the policy of the fur trader to conceal his operations, and the conditions of the trade are such that he Is able to do so. At a cost of nearly $5,000,000 the British admiralty will construct a line of huge concrete blocks at Splthead to force vessels to use a defined chan nel. Naval maneuvers have shown that It Is possible for small craft to creep up to the shore at night. According to the last census, there arc 233,508,005 chickens of laying age lu the United States. These aro val ued at $70,000,000, and the eggs they lay would if divided allow 203 eggs annually to every person man, women and child In the United States. The newest thing In freak photogra phy In Egypt Is posing for photo graphs In cardboard sphinx molds and mummy coses. A bole Is left where the face of the sphinx should be, and English and American faces peer out from this vantage upon the photogra pher. Albert Card of Searsport, Me., has a novel watch charm. It looks like an ordinary silver locket of rectangular shape, but opens to disclose a tiny English dictionary. One inch long, tbrc-quartcrs of an inch wide and one-quarter of an Inch thick, the little book contains about 1500 words with their definitions. A forgotten picture by Frans nals, the famous Dutch master, has been discovered In a country house near Dublin and sold to the British national gallery for 23,000. Hardly half a cen tury has elapsed since the very best examples of Hals' work were thought dear enough at 2.000, and the poorer ones would not fetch more than a tithe I of the snm. The automobile club responds to the accident Indictment with "You're an other." It admits that there ore reck less drivers, but says that the chief fault lies with pedestrians. Accord ing to that. If reckless drivers are abol ished pedestrians will Insist on break ing their own legs and cracking their own akulls- That sending of Invitations to bridge parties through the malls can be stop ped without the parties chiefly Inter ested discovering that anything bat harnentd- Seeingthe (jp lIlgNgW YEAR iNpig iebsvwisKT. SYUwpcnwoo aoxogmwooo More Vacant Chairs. Among the scores of Americans dis tinguished for their public activities who passed away in 1008 it may be said without bias that none will be more often missed the next few years than Grover Cleveland. With the sin gle exception of Grant, whose distinc tion anyway was gained In the field Instead of the White House, no ex president of the republic since the days of the founders having a per sonality as marked as that of Cleve land remained so long on the stage to enact the role of foremost citizen and elder statesman. The world of litera ture lost in Edmund Clarence Sted man a writer with his task completed, yet bearing worthily among his fel lows and In the eyes of the cultured public the title "dean of American letters." Closer yet to the popular heart than Stedman, with a pen still active, Joel Chandler Harris had made for himself a place not to be easily filled. From among the elder statesmen were also taken Senator William Boyd Allison and Senator Redfield Proctor. Journalism 'lost a past master In Mu rat Halstead. The chairs of Dr. Charles Eliot Norton and Dr. Moses Colt Gil man will remain long draped out of respect to scholars who have placed our national culture In their lasting debt. Harriet Hosmer, the sculptor; Louise Chandler Moulton, the author; Bronson Howard, the pioneer native dramatist; Joseph Wheelock, the ac tor, and Donald G. Mitchell (Ik Mar vel) revered ns a sage by the literary guild all of the old school, yielded honors rather than powers at the sum mons of the great leveler. The annual Nobel prize award Is an Ideal method for letting the whole world know what has been going on among scientific tollers of late. But for the patient Investigation of evi dence by competent authorities few outside of technical circles would ever learn who has been doing the greatest work for humanity during the year or what branch of activity has achieved the most valuable result. A chorus of "let us alone" extending from congress all around to Cuba was the echo to the annual message, not withstanding that some critics Insist that the document was only another ermon. Even Japan's geisha girls and our chorus girls are asking whether that Washington-Tokyo "mutual Interest" confab counts them out or counts them In or counts them not at all. Speaker Cannon Is doubtless sincere In declaring for honest tariff revision, but the nicest honesty can be differ ential when it comes to placing bene fits. Test a boy's brightness by asking him to point out the good skating oi tell where bis dad keeps the "hickory or when the next school holiday Is due. jfEACE WITH THE YAQUIS. Treaty Is Signed by Indian Chiefs and Governor of Sonora. Nogales, Ariz., Dec. 30. The long war with Yaqui Indians In Mexico, In which scores have been killed, Includ ing many Americans, has been termi nated. A treaty of peace has been signed by three Indian chiefs and 166 of their followers and the governor of Sonon, Mexico. The scene enacted at the treaty agreement was a remarkable one, con cluding with the Mexican soldiers em bracing the Yaquls and participating In a Joint celebration. Fitzsimmons Challenges Johnson. Sydney, N. S. W., Dec. 30. Bob Fitz simmons, former heavyweight cham pion of the world, has Issued a chal lenge to Jack Johnson, the conqueror of Tommy Burns, for a fight for the heavyweight title. Chile to Borrow $1500,000. London, Dec. 30. A Chilean loan of 515,000,000 will be Issued next week under the auspices of the Rothschilds. Earthquake Shock In Russia. St. Petersburg, Dec. 30. An earth quake shock was felt near Ekaterin burg, In the Ural mountains. SPBECKEIS LEFT $50,000,000. Widow, Two Sons and Daughter Get Sugar King's Estate. San Francisco, Dec. 30. Under the will of Claua Spreckels the widow re ceives a life interest in the estate, which after her death is to be divided among three children Claus A. Sprec kels, Rudolph Spreckels and Mrs. John Ferrlss of Klngswood, England, for merly Miss Emma Spreckels. The testament recites that the two other sons, John D. and Adolph, were liberally provided for during the life of the testator. The value of the es tate is $50,000,000. Mrs. Anna Spreckels, the widow, Is now seventy-eight years old. In the event that Claus A. or Rudolph Sprec kels die before her the share of the one dying Is to be divided among the surviving children. Saving Corn. The annual slump In hogs has come earlier than usual this year because corn matured early and the hogs are being finished up with as little of It as possible. The light average weight of the hogs marketed indicates this, and so does their quality, which Is Inferior. Everywhere there seems to be a dispo sition to save corn. This Is all right as far as it relates to the economical use of It, but there may be false econ omy In corn as In everything else. The man who rushes his pigs to market to save corn Is In all probability prac ticing false economy. He Is likely to find that be could have marketed both pigs and corn In one car later on to better advantage. This early slump may Induce those who have not mar keted their bogs to keep tbem back, make them good and In the end do bet ter with them than if they shipped now. Unless something checks this false economy of corn that grain Is going to come to market In too liberal quanti ties for the good of prices. RUINS LOOTED BY VANDALS Troops Shoot Scores In Italian Cities. DEATH LIST 90,000 Pope Gives $200,000, King $400,000, to Relief. AMERICAN CONSUL IS KILLED. Scores of Thousands In Towns of Cala bria and Southern Italy Are Home less, and Numberless Others Are In jured or Buried Alive In Masses of Debris From Fallen Houses and Pub lic Buildings Refugees From Mes sina Tell of Terrible Scenes and Widespread Suffering Geography of the Straits Changed and Navigation Made Impossible. Rome, Dec. 30. To the horrors of earthquake and Inundation are added today tie horrors of vandalism and starvation. In Messina. Regglo, Palmi, Catania. Boplara and other stricken cities bands of armed vandals have gone about robbing the dead and injured and looting ruined buildings, stabbing nnd shooting any survivors who op posed them. Large bodies of troops suit to estab lish martial law In these cities have shot and killed scores of marauders, but the looting has not been stopped. Latest reports today place the esti mated number of killed at 90,000, of which 55,000 were in Messina, 17,000 In Roggio, 1.200 in Palml, 1,000 in Bognara and '2,400 in Catimia. One serious result of the earthquake s that the straits of Messina have MAP SHOWING REGION DEVAS TATED. been geographically upheaved, and navigation is Impossible. The famous whirlpool of Charybdls has shifted Its position. King Victor Emmanuel and the queen, who left for the scene of the calamity, reached Regglo today. One of the deputies at the station observed to the king, "The presence of your majesty will suffice to console the stricken population." The king turned sharply upon the speaker and said abruptly, "Don't talk nonsense." The hands of all the nations have been extended to Italy in her affliction. From rulers have come messages of condolence and from the peoples spon taneous promise of that aid which brings the world closer together In times of great calamity. Great Britain, France and Russia have sent their warships to lend as sistance to the stricken cities. Relief funds have already been started, nnd a hundred ships and trains are on their way carrying supplies and re-enforcements to the south. Rome, Milan, Florence, Naples nnd other cities are sending physicians, police and fire men. The pope has telegraphed the nrch blshops of Palermo and Catania and the bishops of Mlleto nnd Catanzaro expressing his deepest affliction In the appalling calamity nnd ordering the saying of prayers. The pope gave $200,000 and King Victor Emmanuel $100,000 to the re lief fund which the International Cath olic relief committee Is raising for the earthquake victims. In the Calabrlan district, which was only beginning to recover from the ef fects of the earthquake of 1005, Reg glo, which bad 17,000 population, was the center of the earth's upheaval. The city Is a vast sepulcher, having been utterly destroyed. The seaport of Reg glo Is reported as no longer existing, and the city proper Is In ruins. Reports from Messina today say that at least 55,000 men, women and chil dren were killed In that city and that 60,000 arc rendered homeless. The fires started by the expioslon of the gas works at Messina are still rag ing. The bodies of dead and Injured alike are being burned In the ruins. The city is deserted save for some half naked survivors who wander through the ruins and for the soldiers y aad sailors who are engaged in the work of rescue. The soldiers have bent every effort to stop the sweep of the flames. They are also kept busy with the convicts who escaped from the prison after it had been demolished. Several of these who were caught looting have been shot The tidal wave caused more destruc tion In Messina and more loss of life than the earthquake. The great mass of water that fell upon the city after tho shock was about fifty feet high. This great -wall of water fell upon the town and In . .iilnutes bad Inundated It to It limits. Before it everything seemed to bo swept away. The big Trinacria hotel, one of the largest In Sicily, disappeared entirely. In this hotel were hundreds of for eigners from all parts of the world. Some of the visitors were Americans, and It was thought that these may be among the dead. Buildings that are completely de stroyed include the municipal offices, the bourse, buildings of the post tele graph companies, the cathedral and nearly all the churches. Arthur S. Cheney, American consul at Messina, and his wife lost their lives in the earthquake. The straits of Messina have takes an entirely new shape since the earth quake. Navigators describe them as "twisted." Many villages and forts along the straits have been destroyed. Lighthouses have been swallowed up by the sea, and navigation is impossi ble. Starving, bleeding from Injuries and almost Insane from their terrifying ex periences, Messina's survivors are flee ing in all directions. The spectacle presented by the ruined seaport is de scribed as terrifying. Tumbling build ings both killed and mutilated, while hundreds of the injured Imprisoned in the wreckage were abandoned to their fate by the fleeing populace. A wounded soldier from Messina said: "The spectacle was terrifying be yond words. Dante's 'Inferno' gives you but a faint idea as to what hap pened at Messina. The first shock came before the sun had risen. It shook the city to its very foundations. Immediately the houses began to crum ble. Those of us who were not killed at once made our way over undulating , floors to the. street Beams were crash ing down through the rooms.' The stairs were equally unsafe. "I found the streets blocked by fall en houses. Balconies, chimneys, bell towers, entire walls, bad been thrown down. From every side of me arose the screams and moanlngs of the wounded. The people were half mad with excitement and fear. Most of them had rushed out in their night clothes. In a little while we were all shivering under a torrential downpour of rain. Everywhere there were dead bodies nude, disfigured and mutilated. In the ruins I could see arms and legs moving helplessly. From every quar ter came piteous appeals for aid. "The city hall, the cathedral and the barracks crumbled, and churches, oth er public buildings and dwellings with out number were literally razed to the ground. There were 200 customs agents at the barracks. Only forty one of them were saved. At the rail road station only eight out of 280 em ployees have been accounted for. "Many of those who succeeded in escaping with their lives said the first thing they knew they were thrown out of bed and amid crashing ceilings and falling furniture managed to make their way to the street Then In the blackness of night and amid a pour ing rain that added to their horror and distress they rushed blindly away amid the crash of tumbling buildings and the shrieks and groans of those buried In the ruins. Many were struck down while trying to escape by falling balconies and masonry. "Looters and robbers by the dozen were shot dead by the rifles of the sol diers." San Giovanni, Scllla, Cannltello and all the other communes and villages bordering on the straits are in ruins. Great numbers of dead are believed to be still under the wreckage. The British steamer Ebro came in here from Messina with sixteen wound ed. Including Alfred J. Ogston, the British vice consul at Messina. Mrs. Ogston lost her life. At Rlposto the tidal wave was ter rible. At first the sea receded for a great distance and then swept forward with tremendous violence. The water advanced in a huge wave and swept before it every house and building for a thousand feet from the shore line. The waters rushed through the streets of Rlposto to a depth of from ten to twenty feet Auto Kills Boyi Fathsr a Suicide. Philadelphia, Dec. 80. The death of Hobert Becker, aged six years, who as run down and killed by an auto mobile, caused F. J. Becker, the boy's father, to commit suicide. France slruek by Blizzard. Paris, Dec. 30. France has been struck by a most severe blixzard, ac companied by a heavy fall of snow. Traffic in Paris Is paralyzed.