ttttett Semi-Weekly Founded! Wayne County Organ of the 1308 u r t.i.. r? i i tOAA REPUBLICAN PARTY 66th TEAR. HONESDALE, WAYNE CO., PA., FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1909. NO. 23 r WORK BEGUN ONTARiFF. House Committee In Session Today. SENATE BUSY TOO, Measure to Be Reported Without Delay. DEBATE BEGINS NEXT MONDAY. New Bill Cuts Steel and Lumber Du ties SO Per Cent Tea. Is Taxed, but Coffee Is Placed on Free List, Also Hides and Wood Pulp Works of Art Exempt if Twenty Years Old In heritance Tax Graded Tariff on Boots and Shoes Reduced 40 Per Cent Internal Revenue Tax on Cig arettes Increased Beer and Whisky Undisturbed. Washington, March 18. The full membership of the house committee on ways and means, Including Democrats as well as Republicans, met today for the formal consideration of the Payne tariff bill. The senate committee on finance at the same time began formal considera tion of the measure. It was said that the probabilities were that the house committee would have only one sitting on the bill, that tho measure would be reported to the house without delay and that formal reading In committee of the whole would soon -.begin., General debate will be postponed until Monday, and after that the measure probably will be before the house from ten days to two weeks. The bill Includes the inheritance tax recommended by President Taft. It provides for a tax of 1 per cent on amounts from $10,000 to $100,000, 2 per cent on amounts from $100,000 to $200,000 and 3 per cent on amounts over $500,000. Strangers and collateral heirs pay 5 per cent on amounts over $500. It provides for the Issue of Panama canal bonds to reimburse the treasury for the $40,000,000 for the original pur chase of the canal. There is also re-enacted a provision for the issue of certificates to run one year to replenish the treasury, raising the amount from $100,000,000 to $250, 000,000, an amount sufficient to provide at any time against two or three years ' of depressed business conditions. The steel and lumber schedules are cut 50 per cent. The tariff on boots and shoes Is reduced 40 per cent and other leather manufuctures in propor tion. The tariff on wool of the first and second class used for clothing Is not disturbed, but is reduced on the cheaper grades. Recommendations for placing wood pulp on the free list and reducing the duties on print paper, with certain restrictions, as made by the Mann committee of the house, are incorporated In the bill. A cut of one-twentieth of a cent a pound was made on refined sugar. On dextrin a reduction of half a cent a pound was made. While there is no duty imposed on coffee, a most Important provision pro vides that if any country shall Impose an export duty or charge of any kind, directly or indirectly, upon coffee ex ported to the United States a duty equal to such export duty shall be levied by this country. This will com pel Brazil and various other countries in nil likelihood to abolish tho export tax. Tea, however, is taxed 8 cents when Imported from the country where it ia produced and 0 cents when from other than the producing coun tries. The tax on beer and whisky is undis turbed. One of the most Important matters In the bill Is the provision whereby a countervailing duty is imposed on pe troleum. Oil producers bare been lob bying to get this provision kept in the bill. A material Increase is made on the internal revenue tax on cigarettes. The duties on plato glass of the smaller sizes ore advanced, while tho duties on the larger sizes are reduced. Most of the articles on which duties have been increased are thoso classed as luxuries. Among them are the fol lowing: , Perfumes and toilet articles, from 60 to GO per cent ad valorem. Fancy soap, from 15 to 20 cents per pound. Chicory root, raw, not dried, from 1 cent to 2'A cents per pound; roasted, from 2 cents to 5 cents por pound. Cocoa, crude, transferred from tho free list to the dutiable nt 4 cents per pound. Cocoa butter, from 3Vi cents to 5 cents per pound. Dandelion root and other articles used as a substitute for coffee, 2 cents to 4 cents per pound. Spices, which are now largely on tho free list, nre assessed an average duty of 30 per cent ad valorem. Feathers are increased from 15 per cent to 20 per cent ad valorem. Furs dressed on the skin nre assess td 27 per cent nd valorem. Among articles on which duties have been Increased by the ways and means committee, which found there was not sufficient protection In the Dlngley bill, nre ppllt peas, from 40 cents to 45 cents per bushel; figs, from 2 cents to 2 cents per pound; lemons, from 1 cent to 1 cents per pound; pineap ples, from $7 to $8 per thousand. The estimated revenues under the tariff duties prescribed in the bill amount to ubout $300,000,000. A sec tion Is inserted preserving the Cuban reciprocity system of the'present law. Provision is made to terminate the various commercial agreements with foreign countries according to the terms of said agreements by notice and In the meantime keeping faith In those agreements. The maximum rates do not go into effect until sixty days after the pas sage of the act, but it is provided that the bill iff general shall go into effect the dny following itB enactment. A section Is added to the bill apply ing the same rules to patents obtained in the United States by aliens that are adopted by the country of which these aliens are citizens in respect to patents issued there to citizens of the United States. This will either compel foreigners obtaining patents In the United States to build factories and manufacture here for our trade or eventually for feit the right to their patents. Champ Clark, the Democratic leader in the house, said he would make every effort In the committee, as he would on the floor of the house, to have the bill amended and for that reason wonld ask for time to consider it. He added, however, that he would not press for more time for the prepa. ration of a minority report, as that could, be formulatediAd .well, after the bill had been reported as before. Mr. Clark said he did not consider general debate of nearly so much im portance as the descussion of the bill paragraph by paragraph, with tho op portunity to suggest changes in the various schedules. It is therefore prob able that If Mr. Payne and his fellow Republican members of the committee concede this privilege the Democrats will accept It In lieu of a similar privi lege In committee and make no' serious protest against the Immediate report ing of the bill. No announcement as to the length of time that will be given for debate has been made. The Dlngley bill was un der discussion in the house for only ten days, and of that time four days were devoted to general debate. Senator Aldrlch, chairman of the senate committee on finance, which will deal with the bill in the senate, called a meeting of the Republican members of the committee for today with the idea of immediately begin ning consideration of the house meas ure. The finance committee suffered seriously from the defeats of the re cent elections, and as a consequence the Republican membership numbers only four senators. They are Messrs. Aldrlch of Rhode Island, Burrows of Michigan, Penrose of Pennsylvania and Hale of Maine. Senator Hale, chairman of the Re publican caucus, Is among those who find the bill objectionable. "It abso lutely murders the wood pulp and pa per industry of Maine," he said. "This Is the most important Industry in our state, and we shall resist the change with the utmost possible vigor." Mr. Hale predicted that the bill would be before congress for the next three months or more. The committee on finance will not grant any hearings, but will consider any written or printed statements which may be presented to it. The probabilities are that when the house begins the debate of the bill the hours of the sessions will !) extended. The sittings will probably begin at 10 o'clock in the morning and con tinue until 10 or 11 o'clock at night. ATTELL TO DEFEND TITLE. Featherweight Champion Will Fight Patsy Kline In New York Tonight. New York, March 18. Two of the country's best featherweights Abe At tell, champion of tho world, and Patsy Kline, hailed as "champion of tho east" will get together tonight In a ten round bout that Is expected to be one of tho best scrana over ninn horn It is reported that Attell expects one oi mo uaracsc ugms oi bis career. Kllno. who la rnnnldnrnil n "rnmnrl l , ' vw w ... t Judges of tho fighting garoo, Is forcing ms way to mo top in ins class ana has never been defeated. Ho makes no se cret of tho fact that ho Is after tho championship of the world and will make his clever Callfornlan opponent oxttind blnioQlf tonlcht KING SEES WEIGHT FLY. Edward of England Enthusiastic Over Aeroplane's Work. Pau. March 18. King Edwnrd wit nessed two flights by Wilbur Wright and showed enthusiasm over the re markable accomplishments of tht American acroplanlst. Tho weather conditions were highly favorable. The sky was unclouded, ami there wns very little breeze. Wilbur and Orvllle Wright and their sister Miss Wright, were presented to bin majesty. Wilbur Wright then conducted the king to the neroplane shed, when' the latter minutely examined the mech anism of the machine, which wns dec orated with American, British nnd French flags. Ills majesty watched the preparations for tho ascent with the greatest Interest, taking a position with n group for a photograph. Mr. Wright made the first ascent alone. He remained in the nlr foi seven minutes, performing marvelous evolutions with the utmost precision around the king and bis party and coming to the ground without diffi culty. On the second flight Miss Wright, wns n passenger. They soared to a great height and then" skimmed along the ground and disappeared In the di rection of Pau. They reappeared after an Interval of six minutes, descending amid applause from the king and other visitors. His majesty warmly congrat ulated Mr. Wright on his success. MBS. POTTER GOES FOR GOOD. Actress Never Expects to See This Country Again. New York, March 18. Among the passengers on the Mauretanla for Eng land was Mrs. James Brown Potter, the well known actress. Mrs. Potter expects never to see the United States again. "My American managers didn't give me a fair chance," said Mrs. Potter, "I had a straight contract for eight weeks, and I played only three. They complained of my work. They didn't like the two poems I recited 'L'lttle Boy Blue,' by Eugene Field, nnd 'Memories,' by Mr. White, both of which have been very popular iniEng land. They .insisted on my 'reciting Ostler Joe.' ,. Think .of it 'Ostler Joe,' which is passe! Why, every schoolgirl can recite it. Just think of coming 3,000 miles to recite 'Ostler Joel' If they had allowed me to do my work properly it would have been as popular as in England. I don't think I ever shall see this country again." ROOSEVELT OUTFIT SENT. Smithsonian Institution Dispatches Tons of Apparatus. Washington, March 18. The last of the outfit for the scientific end of the Roosevelt African hunting trip was sent from the Smithsonian Institution to New York. Major Edgar Mearns, the chief rep resentative of the Smithsonian, has gone to Sagamore Hill for a final con ference with the ex-presldent before the party sails next Tuesday. The scientific outfit weighs several tons and is packed in big cases for ocean shipment FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL Closing Stock Quotations. New York, March 17. Money on call was IK per cent; time money and mercantile paper unchanged In rates. Closing prices of stocks were: Amal. Copper... 68H Norf. tc West... 8Stt Atchison 103 Northwestern ..177M B. & O lOTtt Penn. R. It 130 Brooklyn It. T... 72 Reading 12914 Ches. & Ohio.... 68V4 Rock Island 23 C. CC.&St.L.. TBVi St. Paul 144 D. & II 174t4 Southern Pac.118 Erie 2i Southern Ry.... 24ft Gen. Electric... 154V4 South. Ry. pf... Gift III. Central 142 Sugar 130 Int.-Met IE Texas Pacific... 32 Louis. & Nash.. 130 Union Pacific... 178 Manhattan 142 U. S. Steel 45ft Missouri Pae.... 69 U. S. Steel pf...lll N. T. Central. ...125 West. Union.... 60 Market Reports. WHEAT Steady, but quiet; contract grade. March, Jl.Wal.25. OATS Unchanged. BUTTER Firmer ; receipts, 4,128 pack ages; creamery, specials, 30c. (official 29c); extras, 29a2Sc; thirds, to firsts, Baffle.; held, common to special, 20a27c; process, common to special, 17a23c; western factory, 16al3c. ; western Imita tion creamery. 20o21c. CHEESE Firm; receipts, 1,960 boxes; state, full cream, special, 15ol6c; small, fancy, 15c. ; Jarge, fancy, 15c; good to fine, lSc; winter made, best, 14c; common to prime, Ual4c; skims, full to specials, 2al2c. Eaas Receipts, 21,495 cases; state, Pennsylvania and nearby, fancy, select ed, white, 23a4o.; fair to choice, 21a22c; brown and mixed, fancy, 20a2tc; fair to choice, llaltHa; western, firsts, 19c; sec onds, 18a. POTATOES Easier; domestic, old, In bulk, per 180 lbs., fZCOoS; pur bbl. or bng, S2.25aZ.7S; European, per 1G8 lb. bag, S2a 120; Bermuda, per bbl., ts.50a7; sweet, per basket, 1.26al.M. DRESSED POULTRY Firm; turkeys, young, selected, per lb 23c; poor to good, 16a22c; fowls, boxes, 16alGo.; barrels, 14alSc; old roosters, 12c; squabs, white, per dor., ll.2ia4.2S; frozen turkeys, No, 1, per lb., BaSc; broilers, milk fed, fancy, 26a2Sc; corn fed, fancy, 22a24c; roasting chickens, milk fed, 20a26c; corn fed, 17a20c; fowls, No. 1, 14aUc; old roosters, 12c; ducks, No. 1, 17al8c; geese, No. 1, 12al4c; capons, 24s27c. HAY ANu STRAW-Steady; timothy, per hundred, 6Sa85c; shipping, 60c; clover, mixed, 66&7&C.; rye straw, tlal.120.; small balos, 2aSc less. F Ml mm Telegraph Strike Extends to the Provinces. GOVERNMENT REFUSES TERMS. Premier Clemenceau Says Cabinet Can Do Nothing While Em ployees Remain Away From Posts. Paris, March 18. France haB been practically completely cut off from tel egraphic and telephonic communica tion with the remainder of the world by the strike of 25,000 government telegraphers. After much delay, however, tele phone communication between this city and London and Berlin was re stored by means of volunteers from other branches of the public service. About 150 military telegraphers are now at work In the central station, and naval telegraphers are on their way here from Brest. Premier Clemenceau flatly refused to offer terms to the strikers. He told the justices of Paris who called to see him relative to what the government pro posed to do to end the serious situa tion and who suggested a bill creating a superior council of the administra tion which could consider the employ ees' grievances that the government would promise nothing while the em ployees remained away from their posts. The premier declared that the strike was senseless, entailing the gravest consequences not only to the business of France, but to the country Itself from an International point of view. He pointed out that the government now was without the highly Important diplomatic communications and con cluded by saying: "The employees want to fight. We accept, but we will not cede, nnd I am confident that the government.wlll win" The Gtrlke extended rapidly, and the operators at the bourse station, who remained at their posts long after the central station was paralyzed, march ed out, severing' the last strands, which Included the French Cable company's New York-Brest communication. Si multaneously the failure of the tele phone operators to make their appear ance put the final means of quick com munication out of commission. The situation In the provinces Is worse than in Paris, the public service employees In most of the larger cities having followed the lead of their Paris comrades. The international and inter urban malls are at a standstill, entail ing heavy business losses. Some of the larger commercial and financial firms have sent agents to London, Brussels, Antwerp, Strasburg and other places, where they are receiving messages and conducting operations. The bourses here, at Lyons, Mar seilles and other centers are at a standstill owing to the lack of quota tions from foreign exchanges. The foreign office, in the midst of the Balkan crisis, Is unable to commu nicate with Its representatives abroad, and, while the government continues to Insist that it cannot surrender to its rebellious servants, It is only too ap parent that the measures thus far taken to suppress the strike movement have been Ineffective. Threats of suspension and dismissal have only served to bring the employ ees of the various branches Into closer union. Reserve operators who were summoned from the country districts to Paris refuse to perform service, and the military telegraphers who were called upon this afternoon and through whom it was expected to re-establish wlro communications were almost help less before the damaged switchboards and instruments which the strikers left behind. Besides, it is now realized that it is practically impossible to re place 25,000 trained men in a moment. It is intimated that the government will find a way out of the difficulty by putting forward M. Barthou, minister of public works, posts and telegraphs, behind whom M. Slmyan, the under secretary, can for the present efface himself. With any one except Slmyan' to deal with, it is believed the strikers, the vast majority of whom realize tho seriousness of the offense they are committing against the public, would soon come to terms. The sympathy of the public Is against the strikers, o& it is considered that their grievances are trifling compared with the interests that are suffering. MORTGAGE TAX LAW KILLED. New York Supreme Court Justice De clares It Unconstitutional. Ballaton, N. Y., March 18. In the lult'by tho state of New York against tho Union Bag and Paper company to recover taxes due on a mortgage given to the Trust Company of America, Justice Spencer banded down a deci sion declaring tho mortgage tax law unconstitutional. CLEVELAND HONORED TODAY. President Taft at Memorial Mass Meeting In New York. New York, March 18. In the me tropolis of the nation America Is doing honor today to the only man who was ever elected to the presidency, then defeated for that office and again elected. Todny would have been the soventy-second blrthdny of Grover Cleveland If he had not died last June. For tho purpose of paying proper trib ute to his memory the president of tho United Stntes, the chief Justice of the United States and the governor of Now York state enmc here to Join with tho mayor of New York and other no tabilities In two great mass meetings. The first of the two meetings took place In Carnegie hall today, and the other will be held this evening in the great hall of the College of tho City of New York. Mayor McClellan of New York presided at the first meet ing. Addresses lauding the place held by Mr. Cleveland In tho nation's mem ory nnd history were delivered by President Tnft, Chief Justice Fuller, Governor Hughes nnd others. A let ter from former President Roosevelt expressing regret at his inability to Join In the meeting was read. Richard Watson Gilder, the famous editor and poet, who was a close personal friend of Mr. Cleveland, read an original poem. Among the purposes of the meetings is the planning of a permanent memo rial to the memory of President Cleve land. Mr. Taft will remain in this section of the country two days. Tomorrow morning ho will go to New Haven to attend a meeting pf the Yale corpora tion, of which he la a member. He will return here in time to attend the dinner of the Yale alumni of New York. MORE STEEL WAGES CUT. Cambria Company Reduces Pay of 18,000 Men 10 Per Cent. Johnstown, Pn March 18. The Cam bria Steel company, which employs 18,000 men, announces' a 10 per cent reduction in wages to take effect April 1. The following notice wns posted In all departments of the plant: "On nccount of the recent sharp de cline in' the market prices of the com pany's products following the long continn&I business depression it be comes necessary to announce a reduc tion In salaries and wages averaging 10 per cent to take effect on and after April 1, 1000. "The reduction ylll affect all em ployees from the highest to the low est. There Is a general expectation that this reduction will enable the concern to take business It could not accept with a profit under the old rates and that Increased activity will be the result." ROOSEVELT PLAN ADOPTED. Senate Creates Committee to Investi gate Nation's Resources. Washington, March 18. A commit tee on the conservation of natural re sources has been created by the sen ate, in line with the recommendations made by former President Roosevelt and President Taft. ' This Is regarded as the most ad vanced step thus far taken in the na tional campaign Inaugurated by Presi dent Roosevelt. The committee will consist of thirteen members, eight Re publicans and five Democrats. The committee will make a thorough investigation into all matters affecting the nntlon's resources. OPPOSE SUNDAY BASEBALL. Bishop Colton and Clergymen Object to Passage of Bill. Albany, N. Y., March 18. Clergymen from all over the state bitterly op posed the McGrath bill to permit Sun day baseball between 3:30 and 0:30 p. m. nt a hearing before the assembly codes committee. "We don't oppose this bill," said the Rev. Dr. Henry Ward, "on religious grounds, but In the name of good cltl zenshlp. I believe that such legislation is a part of the immigrant influence to break down American citizenship. Sun day baseball contributes to Sunday saloons and draws boys away from Sunday schools." Mr. Ward read letters protesting against the hill as a desecration of the Babbath from clergymen, including Bishop Col ton, head of the Roman Catholic diocese of Buffalo, Weather Probabilities. Rain; warmer; variable winds. KILLED BY FILIPINOS. Four American 8alore Shot In En counter Vyith Natives. Newark, N. J., March 18. Mrs. Wll Ham Cook of this city, whoso husband, an enlisted man for the past twenty' three years Jn tho navy, went to tho Philippines last July, hears that her husband has been killed by natives, Mrs. Cook has received adyices from tho navy department that Cook and three others were shot In an encounter with hostile uatlves. CUBANS! ARMS. The Revolutionary Outbreak Proves Serious. PRESIDENT SUPPRESSES NEWS Captain of the Rural Guard Shot and Killed by Troops Sent by Gomez to Santa Clara. Havana, March 18. The revolutlea In Santa Clara province Is spreading. and it is reported that more than 2,008 insurgents nre now under arms. Tho movement is aimed at the over throw of President Gomez, and the malcontents seem to be well supplied with rifles and ammunition. The first fatality reported is the kill ing of Captain Lavnsttda of the rural guard, formerly a friend of Gomes; who had Joined the Insurgents. He was shot down by a detachment of the guard sent from here to suppress the Insurrection. He made a determined resistance. Lavastlda was reported officially as having been arrested at Placetas on si charge of complicity in the insurrec tionary movement. The government has information of the spread of the insurrectionary movement, but it refused to divulge the contents of its communications. It is rumored that the uprising is more serious than the authorities are willing to admit. Secretary of Government Alberdi and General Machado went to the palace to confer with President Gomez, lat er a cabinet meeting was called. The cabinet remained in session four hours. when the announcement was made that the government was wltbont fur ther advices, except that the fugitives were surrounded by 1,000 rural guards and would undoubtedly be captured soon. President Gomez is in receipt of many telegrams from officials, veteran organizations and private cltlzcna pledging loyalty and active support to the maintenance of the republic. Reports from various parts of the island show an extraordinary concen tration of the rural guard in the di rection of Vueltas, Camaguay and Placetas, apparently far in excess of the requirements to pursue and enp- ture the revolutionists. The government has sent a tele graphic circular to all mayors through out the republic declaring the upris ing to be without Justification and con veying the thanks of President Gomes for the assurances of loyalty and sup port. TRAIN WRECKS STATION. Four Killed and Thirty Injured tn Strange Accident. Montreal, March 18. Four persows were killed and thirty others serlouslr injured ns the result of the blowing out of a pipe on a locomotive hauling the Boston express into the Windsor- street station of the Canadian Pacific railway. Scalding steam filled the cab, and th engineer and fireman were forced ts Jump. The train, without a guiding nana nt tlie throttle, dashed Into the statlon, through the granite wall lnt the women's waiting room and the Into the rotunda, where the locomotive after demolishing one massive granite pillar wns brought to a standstill bjr another. ' The four persons killed were Blttiw: in the women's waiting room. Why before Jumping the engineer failed to bring his train to a standsUS may never be known, for he Is uncon scious and Is not expected to live. FIGHT IN THE PHILIPPINES. Moros Attack Constables and Los Eight of Their Number. Manila, March 18. A dispatch front Lake Lanno reports that a band cf hostile Moros attacked Lieutenant Far long's detachment of constabulary at Bordong on March 8, and after a sharp fight eight Moros and two members of the constabulary were left dead on the field, while two soldiers and one civil ian were wounded. A company of the Twenty-fifth U fantry and a detachment of scouts have gone to the aid of Furlong's) forces. TONSLLITIS CLOSES COLLEGE. Faculty Deoldes Not to Run Risk ef Epidemlo Among Girls. Ithaca, N. Y., March 18. Wells col lege for girls at Aurora has bee a. closed on account of tonsllltls in the school. Four of tho young ladles are In th Infirmary, and many more havo b como afflicted. Rather than run tte risk of an epidemic tho faculty -elded to dismiss tho students.