t 4 i . 5 . M fi mm Semi-Weekly Founded! Wayne County Organ . of the REPUBLICAN PARTY T I 1908 fccklyFounded, 1844 HONESDALE, WAYNE CO., PA., "WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1909. 66th YEAR. NO. 2 VOLCANOES IN ERUPTION Ffna Q-f-rAmknli anI LlliU? Oil UIIIUUII UIIU Vesuvius Active. TERROR IN CITIES. Survivors Glamor to Be Taken to North. ABOUT 80.000 BODIES DUG OUT Work of Burial I. Not Y.t Half Com plated, Thousand of Bodies Lis In Ruins Which Are Inacc.tiibte to Re lief and Rescue Parti. Many Hun dred of Living Person. Also Said to Be In the Wrecked Buildings In Mes sina Praise For the Work of Rus sian 8ailors Many of the Wounded Taken Care of at the Vatican. Rome, Jan. 5. The worst fears are aroused by the outbreak of the volca noes Etna, Stromboll nnd Vesuvius In fresh eruption. Terror has seized upon thousands of survivors In stricken cities and towns, nnd tbey clamor for transport to the north. Renewed shocks of earthquake oc curred today In Messina and the sur rounding district. The motion frpm them seemed to bo vertical. " People at Messina nre in terror now of a new shock, which they fear will come and complete the work of that of a week ago. The shocks that have continued at brief intervals since the' first, and most destructive are now increasing again in violence. A severe quake, central In southwestern Sicily, drove the Inhab itants out from their shelters. Prime Minister Glolette has Issued a statement that about 80,000 bodies have been burled by relief parties In Messina and Heggio, but the work of burial is not half completed. Thou sands caught In the ruins arc still in accessible. There are still hundreds of living people under the ruins of Messina. A few were taken out today, but they cannot survive. The crews of the Russian squadron have labored with ' out rest, and not a few of the sailors have been killed or Injured In the per formance of heroic services. The brunt of the work of rescue has fallen upon the sailors, foreigners as well as Italian, and all have done their duty nobly. Praises of the Russians nre on every Hp. They hesitate be fore no danger, digging under totter ing wnlls or entering the unsafest shells when asked to do so by some frantic woman who had not lost all hope that husband or child was still alive. The streets of the wrecked city are piled twenty or thirty feet high with debris. It is a wilderness of ruin a mile wide and two miles long. Beau tiful churches, splendid villas In the foothills, hospitals, barracks and the university all shared the common lot. Two-thirds of the magnificent Norman cathedrals, the pride of Messina, Is in ruins, and little or nothing remains of the relics of Phoenician, Greek, Roman and Saracln architecture. Here and there salvage parties are nt work digging at the instance of some distracted wife or mother who imagined she heard a voice, but usual ly there is no echo to the pathetic 'calling. One party vtvtu trying to dig out a girl whose crying could be heard plainly, but there was a sudden cave In and thereafter silence. In many places bloated and decom posing arms and legs protrude from heaps of masonry and plaster. Curious freaks of the earthquake arc everywhere to bo observed. Stand ing walls have fallen out, exposing one tier of rooms above another, In which nothing seems to have been dis turbed. Pictures hang straight on the walls, lamps were on tables and vases and flowers on mantelpieces. The buildings that best resisted the shock were the old royal palace, now the prefecture, and the archbishop's palace, where ten of the Inmates lost their lives. Although the air in Messina Is heavy with the stench of putrlfying bodies, several groups of Sicilians have camped out in the cleared spaces of the city and obstinately refuse the Invitation of tbo authorities to move oway. The universal brotherhood spoken of by Archbishop Ireland of St. Paul was further emphasized in Rome today when upon tbo arrival of 1,600 wound ed from Messina and Regglo Mayor Nathan telephoned the Vatican, ask ing whether these unfortunates could be taken in there. The Vatican replied In the affirmative, nnd the wounded were received with open arms. To realize fully what this incident . signifies It must be explained that Slrnor Nathan is not n Catholic and i that he was at one time grand master of the Free Masons, an organization that has carried on a persistent strug gle against the Vatican. The first 120 of the wounded sent to the Vatican were received at the rail road station by Mgr. Mlflatelly, sent especially by the pope. S'mie of them were taken to the Vat li nn in public conveyances, but the more grievously Injured were carried on stretchers by the Red Cross. They were received In the Vatican precincts by the nurs ing slaters. The pope could not restrain his de sire to bring them consolation and sought thorn out. He passed through the basilica of St. Peter's over the arch connecting the basilica with the hos pital. Although he did not actually set foot on Italian territory, he in re ality went outside that area which un der the law Is guaranteed and enjoys the right of ectraterrltorlallty. The hospital, although belonging to the pope, stands on Italian ground. The pope's entrance Into the hospital was the sign for an outburst of emo tion not only on the part of the pa tients, hut even from the pope him self and the members of his suit. Many of those who were not gravely wounded Insisted In Jumping out of bed to kneel and kiss the pontiff's hand. The pope spoke consolingly to each unfortunate. He said that since the earthquake lie had lived only to think of them and study the best means of helping them. All his prayers to the Almighty had lmrtored mercy, clemency and power to undergo the terrible strain, rising up again through the comfort of religion. QUAKE RELIEF BILL SIGNED. President Puts His Signature to Bill Appropriating $800,000. Washington, Jan. 5. President Roose velt tqday signed the bill passed by congress appropriating $800,000 to the relief of the earthquake sufferers In Italy and approving his action In send ing provisions and stores to Messina on the supply ships Cel Ic and Culgoa. The law follows the text of that passed after the Mont Pelee disaster in 1002. JOHN D., JR., ACCUSED. Young Rockefeller In Danger of Ar rest For Alleged Perjury. New York, Jan. 5. John D. Rocke feller, Jr., is charged by S. S. Carval ho, president of the Star Publishing company, with perjury and may be arrested. Mr. Rockefeller, Jr., hid Carvalho arrested on a charge of criminal libel for an article that appeared In the American In connection with peonage cases. He denied every Hue of the story. Mr. Shearn asked young Mr. Rocke feller if he knew to his own personal knowledge that the three defendants, Carvalho, Merrill and Clarke, were connected with the American, as he swore in the complaint. Mr. Rockofeller, Jr., said that he did not know this to be a fact from his own personal knowledge. Mr. Shearn then, on behalf of Mr. Carvalho, asked for a warrant charg ing Mr. Rockefeller, Jr., with perjury. Magistrate Moss, while the lawyers were arguing the question, took the papers nnd said that he would consid er the matter next week. BASEBALL FIGHT ON TODAY. Question of American Association and Eastern League Debated. Cincinnati, Jan. 5. The question Whether the American association and the Eastern league will be put Into a special classification among the base ball clubs of the country came up again today before the National base ball commission. The commission transacted other business before it took up the caso of the alleged "bolters." The most prom inent case that was decided was the reinstatement of Player William Se brlng. Ho Is fined $200 outright, nnd the club that purchases him must pay $000 to the Cincinnati baseball club. The application of Joseph Ward of the Trlstate league was granted, and Ward was fined $200. Players Freeman, Johnson, Jesse Tannehill nnd Keeley, all of the Wash ington club of the American league, were reinstated. NIGHT RIDERS MANGLE MAN. Despite His Many Wounds, He May Recover, but Won't Talk. Thomasvllle, Ga., Jan. 5. B. F. Akrldge, a planter, was seized by Night Riders, bound to a tree, shame fully maltreated and bis throat cut. Akrldge was found apparently dead, but was revived and despite the cuts may recover. Akrldgo says' he knows his assailants, but Will not tell their ames. is. mwii She Baffles All Attempts to Break Her Story. SWEARS THAT SHE IS INNOCENT "I Did Hot Kill Captain Erb," She Exclaims, "but He Threat ened My Life as Well as My Sitter's." Media, Pa., Jan. 5. Mrs. M. Flor ence Erb's cross examination was con cluded in court here, and every one agreed that she acquitted herself most cleverly. District Attorney McDade's attempt to break her story that Captain J. Clayton Erb was killed in self de fense by Mrs. Catherine Belsel, her sister, were futile. Mrs. Erb stood the ordeal with sur prising fortitude and at the end walk ed with a smile from the witness stand and took her seat beside her sister. Every resort of Mr. McDade to trap the young widow into a con tradiction or retraction failed. "I did not kill Captain Erb," she said, "but he threatened my life as well as my sister's." By a ruling of the court Mrs. Erb was saved from being compelled to bare that part of her life prior to her acquaintance with Captain Erb. Centering his attack upon the young woman's account of the events of the night of the tragedy, the district, at torney did his "best to discredit her declaration that she and her sister did not plot Erb's death. The most achieved, however, was the bringing out of a few discrepancies In minor details. "I was excited and overwrought," was Mrs. Erb's reply to the question why she had told the deputy coroner that Erb had first appeared at his bathroom door with a revolver and had testified Saturday that it was his' bedroom door. "I hardly know what I did or said that awful night" "Mrs. Erb, you are charged here with the murder of your husband," said Mr. McDade solemnly. "Do you fully realize that?" "I fully realize It," she replied, re peating his words. "Will you tell this jury that you participated in no way In that crime?" "I participated in no way In the crime." "Will you say that you In no way aided your sister In shooting down your husband?" "I aided her in no way." "Will you say that in no wny did you have a hand in that murder?" "I had no hand in it." "How could those bruises on his head, the bruises on his forearm, the bruises on his body, how did they get there?" "I don't know." "Can you tell us, Mrs. Erb, why you permitted your sister to battle single handed with your husband and why you fled to the bathroom?" "I was a coward from abuse. My nerves were all gone." "You lost your nerve, you, a skilled horsewoman and fox hunter, you lost your nerve for once?" Mr. McDade's tone was withering in its sarcasm, but Mrs. Erb looked him straight in the eye and calmly re plied, "I did." 60'000 FINE SUSTAINED. Government Wins Rebate Case Against the Chicago and Alton. Washington, Jan. 5. The rebate case of the government against the Chicago and Alton Railroad company In the United States circuit court for the northern district of Illinois the com pany nnd its officers were fined $00,000 on the charge of making a refund to Kansas City packers as terminal charges has been decided by the su preme court of the United States. The decision is against the company nnd siistiilns the $00,000 fine. MINING MAN IS MISSING. Wife Fears Foul Play While on Long Railroad Journey. Tucson, Ariz., Jan, 5. T. A. Cot, a prominent mining man of Santa Cruz county, has been missing since Dec. 20, when he left San Francisco for Pitts burg. No evidence of bis having arrived has been found, and his wife, who lives here, fears foul play. GROWS TH0RNLESS CACTUS. Experiment Prove 8ucces For It Us. a Cattle Food. Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 5. Reports on the first summer's field cultivation of the Burbank thornless cactus de clare the results successful. The use of the plant bb a fodder for cattle seems to have been established. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. , Closing Stock Quotation. New York, Jan. A. Money on call was 2V4 per cent; time ' money and mercantile paper unchanged In rates. Closing: prices: Amal. Copper.... 82 Norf. & West... 85H Atchison... 100 Northwestern ..181 B. &O 11QK Fenn. R. R. 133 Brooklyn R. T... 6SH Reading 141 Ches. & Ohio S6H Rock Island 21 C. CC&St.L.. 70 St. Paul 14914' D. .L. &W 050 Southern Pac.llSH D. & 11,.', 480 Southern Ry.... 7t Erie Sift South. Ry. pt... 62 den. Electric... 164 Sugar 1S1 Ill.Central 147(4 Texas Pacific... 34 Int.-M.t. 17 Union Pacific.. .181 Louis. & Nash...KStt U. S. Steel 62 , Manhattan 153 II. 8. Steel pf...ll2 I Missouri Pao.... 70 West. Union.... 6SH I N. Y. Central.... 123 Market Reports. WHEAT Quiet, but steady; contract , grade, January, S1.04al.04M. CORN Steady, but quiet; January, 64a 64 4c. ' OATS Unchanged. i BUTT ER Steady to firm; receipts, 5,080 packages; creamery, specials, S3V4c (offi cial Sic.); extras, MHaSJc; thirds to firsts, 54ailc: held, common to special, 23a30c.; state dairy, common to special, supply about over for season, quotation nominal; process, common to special, ItalSc. CHEESE Firm; receipts, 823 boxes; state, full cream, specials, 14HaUc; September, colored or white, fancy, 14c; October, best, 13ic; late mad., best, 13c; common ta prime, 10Hal2c; skims, full to specials, 2allc. EGOS Easier; receipts. 6,916 cases; state, Pennsylvania and nearby, fancy, selected, white, 39a40c; fair to choice, 36a JSc; brown and mixed, fancy, 34a35c; fair to choice, Sla33c. POTATOES Quiet: steady: domestic. per bbl. or bag, $2.10al7; European, per I bag, Sl.50aZ.10; Bermuda, new, per bbl., I4a5: sweet, per bbl, J1.60a2.60. LIVE POULTRY Firm ; better trade; no prices established. DRESSED POULTRY Turkeys weak er; fowls firmer: western, fancy, 22a23c; poor to Rood, 16aZlc.; spring chickens, broilers, nearby, 18a25c.; western, 16a20c. : I roasting, nearby, 17a22c. ; western, 12Va inc.; lowis, ooxes, i;iai4',tc. ; oarreis, lift a 14c; old roosters, 10V4C ; ducks, western, llalCc. ; geese, nearby, 13al5c. ; western, Sal2c; squabs, white, per dozen, J1.50a 4.50. HAY AND STRAW Quiet; timothy, per hundred, 70aS5c; shopping, U0a65c; clover, mixed, U0a75c; clover, B5aG5c; rye straw, 9a$l; small bales, 2a5c. less. WIRELESS PLANT FOR NAVY. Bids In Today For Equipment of Ves ' sets and Shore Stations, jvashiugton, Jan. . Today marks expiration of the time set by the navy department for the receipt of bids for the equipment of the vessels and shore stations of the United States navy with new wireless teleg raphy apparatus. When the contract for the construc tion of the apparatus is satisfactorily fulfilled the wireless equipment of our navy will have no peer on earth and sea. The department will be able to communicate quickly with any ship of the navy, no matter where it may be stationed. i The contract calls for the building and equipment of a high powered wire loss telegraph station, the first of n number of .similar stations, one of which is to be at San Francisco, with a radius of 11,000 miles; the installa tion aboard each ship of two sets of instruments capable of sending mes sages a distance of 1,000 miles and re ceiving messages from a distance of 3,000 miles, with a wireless telephone having a radius of 100 miles. The contractor will be allowed to use any system of wireless telegraphy he wishes. TWO STATES SHAKEN. Pennsylvania and New Jersey Feel Ef fect of Dynamite Explosion, i Philadelphia, Jan., C Residents of Pennsylvania and New Jersey felt two well defined enrth tremors caused by an explosion of fifty cases of dyna mite In the magazine of the Keystone Quarry company, near Norristown. Nearly 10,000 pounds of the explosive went up at once, tearing n great hole In the ground and slinking the earth ! for miles around. I Windows in buildings live nnd ten i miles away were shattered by the ex j plosion, chimneys were shaken down, ' and in the immediate vicinity walls of buildings were cracked. I Reports from points In New Jersey, including Uordcntown and Moores town, indicate that the explosion caus ed shakings of the earth. RIVAL FOR THE BEEF TRUST. Stockyards on Hackensack Meadow to Compete For World' Trade. New York, Jan. 15. Immense stock yards, with modern slaughter houses, designed to do business with the whole world, nre projected on the Hncken sack meadows. The plant will have connection with leading railroads and steamships to foreign ports. The capital is said to be $10,000,000. Chance For Invention. The wind It shakes the treetops, It shakes the shutters new, I .wish that I could make it Shake my furnace too. Bohemian Magazine. Beyond Recall. SheDo you recall the night you pro posed to rue1 He I wish to gracious I could I Yonkers Statesman. MOST REFUND, $9,828,770. I New York Qity Gas Companies Hard' Hit by Court Decision. New York, Jan. 5. As a result of the United Slates supreme court's ac tion upholding the constitutionality of the eighty .cent gas law the gas com panies of New York city must refund to consumers $9,828,770, or one-fifth of the total amount of all bills for gas supplied since May 1, 1000. The legal price of gas In this city since May 1, 1900, has been 80 cents per thousand feet, but the companies have been charging $1. Tbo Consolidated and other gas com panies must refund the 20 per cent ex-' cess they have been collecting and I must render their bills hereafter at the eighty cent rate. But the Consolidated company is granted the right to go into court-and prove If such proof be possible of production that 80 cents per thousand feet Is a confiscatory rate for gas in this city. In other words, the burden of proof is shifted from the people to the gas monopoly. The Consolidated and its associates must prove by actual testa that 80 cents per thousand feet Is not a rate to allow n fair return upon the investment. BOYS' MURDER TRIAL. Three Youth Accused of Killing Aged Man For Money. Brldgeton. N. J., Jan. 5. The trial of Walter Zeller, one of the three Vine land (N. .T.) youths accused of the mur der of William A. R. Read, Zeller's grandfather, on the night of Nov. 13 last, was begun here. The trials of Cllne Wheeler and Herbert Grlgg, Zel ler's alleged accessories, will begin when the present case Is concluded. All three boys are eighteen years of age. The charge against the trio Is that Read, who was over seventy years old, was killed by the youths for Ids mon ey. Zeller and Wheeler confessed. Grlgg maintains that he was with the other boys earlier on the night Read was killed, but that he did not enter the house with them. The commonwealth asks verdicts of murderjn the first degree in all three cases. NO BIG OIL TRUST FINE. $29,000,000 Sentence Quashed by the United States Supreme Court. Washington, Jan. 5. The supreme court of the United States has denied the petition of the government for a review of the $29,240,000 fine Imposed upon the Standard Oil company, which was set aside by the United States cir cuit court of appeals. In declining to review the case the justices of the supreme court upheld practically every point raised by the circuit court of appeals. The final rul ing means that the Standard Oil com pany will not have to pay the fine as Imposed In the present case. A new trial is ordered. In the new hearing the case will be begun all over again, and the $29,400, 000 fine will plaj' no part In It. PRIZE OF $2,500 UNCLAIMED. No One Can Prevent Pulp Mill Pollu tion of Streams. Washington, Jan. 5. In spite of the fact that In 1894 a prize of $2,r00 was offered In Germany for the best meth od of preventing pollution of streams by sulphite liquor from paper pulp mills, no one has come forward with a solution. The money still awaits a rightful claimant. BATTLE WITH VIGILANTES. Two Mexicans, an Indian and a White Man Shot Dead. San Diego, Cal., Jan. 5. Advices from Mesa Grande, forty miles from here, tell of a pitched battle thirty miles from there between n gang of cattle rustlers and members of a vig ilance committee. Two Mexicans, an Indian and a white man, all members of the band, were shot nnd killed and one vigilante was seriouslv wounded. KELSEY'S PLACE FILLED. Governor Hughes Makes George W. Schurman Insurance Commissioner. Albany, N, Y., Jan. 5. Governor Hughes has tendered the state Insur ance supcrlntendency to George W. Schurman of New York city, a brother of Jacob Gould Schurman, president of Cornell university, who has ac cepted. The appointment takes effect on the resignation of Superintendent Otto Kelsey. Mr. Schurman Is the junior member of the law firm of Hughes, Founds Ic Schurman and was an assistant dis trict attorney under District Attorney Jerome. Weather Probabilities. , Bnow; colder; fresh south wlnda, HIS HI FIRE Captains Brother Under goes Severe Ordeal Today. HURT BY GROSS EXAMINATION He Falters In Explaining How Ho Cams to Interfere With These Who Would Here . Saved Annii. Flashing, N. Y., Jan. 5. Thornton Jenkins Halns lost bis confident smile today when District Attorney D&rrln began to cross exnmlno him as to bis story of the killing of William E. An nls by Captain Peter O. Halns at the Bayslde Yacht club. The prosecutor's questioning was very severe, and Halns seemed upset nnd dazed when asked to explain why ho' thrust his pistol in the faces of members of the Bayslde Yacht club who sought to save Annls after the first shot. He told the jury first that all the shots had been fired by Captain Halns before be rushed to the float to pro tect his brother from John Tonnlng, the boatman, and the club members, who, he said, he thought would harm the captain. Later he contradicted himself in this. He denied that he pointed a re volver at Mrs. Annls. He stated that he had no Idea how many shots Cap tain Halns had fired, and when Charles Roberts, a club member, picked the re volver up and the muzzle of the weap on pointed at him he drew his own gun and told Roberts not to shoot. Before he went on the stand today Hnlns said: "Within the next few days my case will be In the hands of the jury, and what their verdict will be I have not the slightest doubt. There is no ques tion In my mind that the scales will weigh heavily in my favor. That I should neverhavc been arrested I al wnys have been convinced. 'The court and jury, hearing from my own Hps the story of the many weary, sleepless hours that I spent watching Peter, from the day shortly after his arrival from the Philippines until that eventful Saturday in August when the wrecker of his home met his doom, must nt least give me the bene fit of any doubt that may lurk In their ! minds." HARRIMAN CASE REOPENED. i Government Continues Dissolution Suit Against Union Pacific Today. New York, Jan. S. Hearings of the government's dissolution suit against the Union Pacific railroad were re j opened in this city today before Ex aminer Sylvester G. Williams, t One of the points which the govern , ment Is using In the suit against the railroad Is the arrangement whereby the Southern Pacific became a half I owner of the San Pedro, Los Angeles i nnd Santa 1V and a traffic agreement was made whereby each side agreed 1 not to change Its rates without the consent of the other for ninety-nine years. The issuance of stock and bonds In 1001 to finance the purchases wf North ern Pacific stock, the subsequent nego tiations and the Chicago and Alton deal also figure In the suit. BRIBE FUND $380,000. Seven Pittsburg Councilmen Indicted For Alleged Conspiracy. Pittsburg, Jan. r. Seven councilmen accused of accepting bribes nnd con spiring to secure bribes and two for mer bankers accused of giving bribes were Indicted by the grand Jury after witnesses had testified that the brib ery fund aggregated $380,000. Those Indicted are: T. O. Atkinson, select councilman; William Brand, president of common council; John F. Klein, Joseph C. Wes son, Jacob Soffel, W. II. Melaney and Hugh Ferguson, common councilmen; W, W. Runisey, former president, nnd A. A. Vllsack, former cnphler of the German National bank. AMAZON ARMY IS DRILLING. Montenegrin Women Ready to Battle With Austria. Chicago, Jan. 5. An army of ama zons trained to wage war on the Aus trian empire Is the newest body to take up the profession of arms, ac cording to Dr. Splro Sargentlch, com missioner of health of Tacoma, Wash., en route from Montenegro. Ho says: "In our little country, where the de signs of Austria become more galling, our women are preparing for a fray. Dally tbey drill and practice with their rifles and revolvers to fight side by side with the 70,000 men in our fighting force."