11110 WKATIIKR Wcdncfltlny fair wenthcr and ncnrly stationary tcin pcraturen will prevail. " x j sc te ;5" K" K r Wayne County Organ Scml-Wcekly Founded 1908 3 V; ? fc Weekly Founded, 1844 J of, the t REPUBLIC . . j .tf 67th YEAR. HONESDALE, WAYNE CO., PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1910. AELPARTY If NO. g F Sec'y Wilson Testifies Be fore Congress Committee. SAYS FARMER GETS LITTLE. Calves Sell at a Cent a Found Cheaper Than Formerly, Yet Frice of Veal Has Risen 20 to 30 Fer Cent. Washington, Jan. 25. Secretary of Agriculture ,1 allien Wilson tostlfletl be fore the Moore special committee of the house of representatives, which on n basis of a measure to prohibit the storage of perishable foodstuffs for a longer period than six months In the District of Columbia has inau gurated an Investigation of wide scope and purpose. It is Intended to call experts from the agricultural department, farmers, commission men, wholesalers and re tailers from Washington and else where. It is intended through the va rious District of Columbia agencies to go into the whole question of the ad vance In prices from the farm to the city residences that not only the health of the community with regard to storage, but also in prices as be tween the producer and consumer, would be considered. Secretary Wilson made the state ment that the farmers, although they wore admittedly getting good prices for their products at this time, re ceived very little if any of the great increases in the prices of food prod ucts. "We found," lie said, "during the' courfes of our inquiry that the two-year-old steer ou the farm can be bought today just as cheaply ns twelve years ago." Bepresentntlvo Wiley of New Jersey hero broUe In on the secretary to say that a friend of his who has a big farm In New Jersey where food cattle are fattened for market told him that he has to sell calves at a cent a pound cheaper now man iormeriy "Hut," said Mr. Wiley, I under-1 stand that the retail price of veal in the District of Columbia has advanced from 20 to ao per cent." "That Is true," said Mr. Wilson. "I nm fully convinced that the food prod ucts of the American farm are being sold in foreign countries cheaper than in the United States. This Is not due, as some have said, to the excess of production over consumption and the necessity for getting rid of the surplus abroad. It is due to the trusts Just to the trusts. I cannot And out all I want to on this subject, for I cannot compel people to testify. But I will get the data to prove this statement I have Just made." Ou the subject or cold storage and the length of time that meats and other perishable food products could be kept without spoiling the secretary said he would have some interesting and valuable Information to lay before the committee In a short while. CREAMERY BUTTER DROPS. Cincinnati Board Decides Not to Wait For Elgin Quotations. Cincinnati, Jan. 25. Creamery extra butter dropped 3 cents to 35 cents ou the Produce Exchnnge here as the result of a change in exchange meth ods that had been iu operation for 'twenty-live years. All that time the Cincinnati board has depended ou the Elgin board for the quotation. Now the price Is changed without waiting for the Klgln quotation. Dealers on change declare that this action means failure of the staudlng prediction that butter would go to 50 cents this winter. Housewives may buy butter iu a few days for 35 cents. Ten Cent Drop In Price at St. Louis. St. Louis, Jan. 25. Butter dropped 10 cents a pound hero when prices at the Elgin creamery market fell 0 cents to 32& cents u pound. St. Louis but ter dealers attribute tho break direct ly to the consumers' sympathetic strike against unreasonably high prices ot provisions, in general. They admit that many thousands of families hero have ceased to uso butter for cooking pur poses, treating It as a table luxury. Consequently the creameries were caught with an overproduction.' .; MEAT BOYCOTT SPREADS. Thousands of People In Indiana 8lgn the "No Meat" Pledge. Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 25. The boy cott against high meat prices is spread ing all over this state, nud in some cities grocers are abandoning tho meat trade entirely because people will not pay tho high prices. At Tcrre Haute hundreds of heads of families have signed agreements hue not to Buy -meat of nnj" Rind for sixty days. A lodge of United Mine Workers, 2,000 strong, has also signed pledges. A number of grocers who have meat markets In connection with their groceries Iihve censed selling meat. Itegular meat market men say the boycott Is a good thing; that the Chicago packers havo such control of the trade In Terro Ilnute that the meat market men get no profit. At South Bend, Fort Wayne, Bush vllle, New Albany and many other cities people are signing agreements to abstain from meat entirely, and "no ment" clubs hare been formed In many cities and towns. The feeling nmong the people Is intense against the meat packers. Cheaper Beef In England. London, Jan. 25. London's beef, apart from what Is home grown, comes from America, Cannda, Argentina and New Zealand and in small quantities from Australia and Denmark. The price of loins starts with Argen tine frozen beef at 10 cents. Argentine chilled beef comes next at 15 cents. Bibs cost from 10 to IS cents n pound. Chuck ranges from 12 to 10 cents nud round from It) to 20 cents. West end prices are: For Australian ribs, 12 cents; loius, 14; chuck, 10, nnd round steak, 12 cents. Kast end prices are: Bibs, S cents; loins, 8; chuck, 10; round, 9. Colorado Workers Join Big Fast. Denver, Jan. 25. Forty thousand un ion men in Colorado have joined in the meat boycott. Olllclals of the Colo rado Federation of Labor, to which these 40,00(1 union men belong, say that the trust will be forced to reduce prices of meat. Without organization of any kind thousands of Denver peo ple have cut out meat. Miners to Give Up Meat. Wilkesbarre, Pa., Jan. 25. Leaders of the mine workers say that thou sands of the anthracite workers have joined the beef boycott and will ab stain from meat until the cost of It Is decreased. Most of them are foreign ers, who buy largo quantities of the cheaper meats and will keep the boy cott strictly. Drop In Price of Milk. New York, Jan. 25. Owing to the public clamor against the high price of milk one of the largest dealers has reduced the price from 9 to 8 cents per quart. It is said that all the firms m tIl ml,k tntst wH1 r0lluee their price to s cents wituin iorty-eigut hours. Coffin Makers Boycott Meat. Syracuse, N. Y., Jan. 25. Slxty-flve employees of the John Marsellus Man ufacturing company, casket manufac turers, hnve taken a pledge to abstain from meat for thirty duys. KATHERINE GOULD'S DRESSES. Sued by Milliners, She Says Her For mer Husband Is Responsible. New York, Jan. 25. Mrs. Kntherlue Clcmmons Gould nppeardd In the su premo court for the Ilrst time since she got her separation from Howard Gould to defend a suit brought by Malcolm llutlcr as assignee of a millinery firm to recover ?2,GS0 from her for wearing apparel. The plaintiff called witnesses to sup port Its contention that Mrs. Gould bought all her wearing apparel in her own name and paid for It with her personal checks, some signed Knther lue Gould and some Mrs. Howard Gould. Mrs. Gould testified that on Dec. 4, 1900, sho was notified that her hus band had refused to settle a bill there, and sho went down to see the head milliner. lie admitted, she said, that he had no claim on her nnd said he was going to sue Mr. Gould. As Mrs. Gould was leaving court she was served with papers in n suit brought against her by "His" Hawley, Tho suit is said to be over money lent to Mrs. Gould by Hawley. U. S. GIVES UF SLAYER. Sailor Taken to Rochester to Stand Trial For Murder of Girl. Portsmouth, N. II., Jan.' 25. James Hall, tho self confessed murderer of Anua O. Schumacher of Bochester, N. Y on the evening of Aug. 7, 1009, was turned over to Sheriff Willis K, Gillette of Munroe county, N. Y., to day. The navy department honored tho requisition papers" presented by the New York oillcers nud signed by Gov ernor Hughes nnd gave telegraphic or ders to Captain Frank A. Wllner, U. B. N., the cojninnudnnt of tho navy yaru, to turn mo prisoner over. Sheriff Gillette confirmed tho con fession of Hall nnd said that there was no question In his mind that Hall was the right man. Antltreating Bill In New Jersey. Trenton, N, J., Jan. 25. Assembly man Heritage of Gloucester ha Intro duced a bill prohibiting treating in sa loons or taverns. He holds that much drinking would he averted if every mau were compelled to pay for his own liquor. Women Take $28,000 from Warner M. Van Norden. OUTSIDE WALDORF-ASTORIA. Financier Had Been Dining and - Was Beguiled Into Conversa tion While They Went Through Wallet. New York, Jnn. 25. Wnruer M. Van Norden, president of the Van Norden Trust company at 780 Fifth avenue nnd n deacon in tho Fifth Avenue Presbyterlnn church, wns robbed of ?2S,000 in bills outside of the Waldorf Astoria hotel here, and ho accuses two women of being the thieves. Though one of the women has made, a partial admission of the crime charged against her, neither of them lias produced the twenty-six $1,000 bills nnd twenty $100 bills which Van Norden says disappeared from n wal let in the iuuer pocket of his evening coat after an encounter ho had with the women. "I had been to the theater with friends," said Mr. Van Norden in de tailing his experience. "We stopped at the Waldorf and had supper, after which 1 started to go home. As I left the hotel I noticed two women Just ahead of me, an old one and a young er one, both rather flashily dressed. "One of them turned and looked at me, and the young one dropped her reticule. I Immediately stooped to pick it up. They spoke to me for a minute, and the younger one threw herself upon my breast apparently in excess of gratitude, winding her arms about my neck. '"Don't mind her, said the other woman. 'She's drunk.' "Hut the young woman tried again to throw herself upon me and made desperate elTorts to pillow a large pic ture hat upon my shoulder. 1 pushed the woman away and walked home. "When 1 got home 1 remembered my wallet and tool; It out. From one side S.000 was gone. On the other side $900 was safe. The stolen money con sisted of twenty-six $1,000 bills and twenty $100 bills. I then called up po lice headquarters and told my story." Mr. Van Norden said he could not understand how It had been possible for the young woman, who had lunged at him, to find the wallet, abstract so many bills and return the wallet to his Inside coat pocket without detec tion. One of the women arrested by tho police is known as May Williams. She gave her age as twenty-four. The other, nn older nnd henvler woman, said she was Bessie Boberts, forty years old. She is also known ns Kitty Dowdell of Chicago, an expert nt purse grabbing. Both women have a police record, and their pictures are in the gallery here. May Williams was arrested once iu 1900 and once in 1907 on grand lar ceny charges, but she was discharged in both instances. Bessie Boberts had her picture taken In New York head quarters on Oct. 13, 1905, when she was arrested for picking pockets. Mr. Von Norden went to headquar ters and recognized the women ns the two who had robbed him. BALLINGER HEARING. Commissioner Dennett of Land Office Denies Hitchcock's Charges. Washington, Jau. 25. Commissioner Dennett of the land office of tho inte rior department continued his testi mony before the house committee ou expenditures iu the interior depart ment, which is investigating the ehnrges of extravagance and misap plication of funds mnde by Beprescnt- utlve Hitchcock of Nebraska. Mr. Dennett denied practically nil of tho Hitchcock charges, although he admitted that in some instances clerks were transferred from tho statutory rolls to what is known as the Schwartz roll at increased salaries. Ho also ad mitted that his office was two or three months behind In Its correspondence. The work of examining entries is so far behind that July nnd August en tries of 1909 are now being examined. TURKS WON'T GIVE UF CRETE But Grand Vizier Says Autonomy Will Be Granted to the People, Constantinople, Jan. 25. Tho grand vizier, Hnkki Bey, uunounced In the chamber of deputies that tho Turkish government wuh prepared to extend to tho Cretans the largest measure ot autonomy, but was determined at all hazards to uphold tho rights of the sultan as suzerain pf tho Island. To do tjils every means within the power of the government would b used. FI00D HAVOC III FRANCE. Thousands of Homeless Flock to Paris For Shelter. . Paris, Jan. 25. The Hood situation Is fast becoming desperate. The river Seine is still rising, and the cold Is causing Intense suffering among those who have been rendered homelCHS. Two thousand hnve nlrcudy come to Paris for shelter. The Bed Cross society Is organizing aid for the sufferers. Subscriptions hnve been opened, and the theaters are tirranglng benefits. It Is estimated that one-qunrtcr of France Is under water, and both snow and rain are swelling the Hoods. An enormous number of aulmnls hnve been drowned In the departments of Mnrue, Aube, Alsne nnd Mouse. The police are making a house to house canvass, notifying people to boll all water used for drinking purposes In order to avoid n typhoid epidemic. The water supply In seven nrron- dlssemcnts has beeif" crippled, as tho pumping engines have stopped work. Tfiere Is no water for manufacturing purposes, and the Industries are prac tlcally suspended. Paris is threatened with an Immedi ate, complete tie-up. Most of the lines of the subway nre closed down be cause of JkcIs of electric current. The stopping of transportation has raised the prices of food, which is becoming scarce. The east, central and southeastern districts of Franco nre terribly allllct ed. Valleys and plains are Inundated, and cities and towns are In darkness. At Tours-sur-Marne eight houses and nt Juvlgny fifteen houses collapsed. A hundred houses at Chalons threaten to fall. TAFT TO WAR ON TRUSTS. Start Made by President In a Crusade j of Great Extent. i Washington, Jan. 25. With the beef 1 trust already under lire and the Stand-1 ard Oil and American Tobacco compa ny cases in the hands of the supreme court, the administration Is planning u crusade against tho trusts such as this country has never seen since the passage of the Sherman antitrust law1 uvftout twenty years ago.1- "'" , President Taft Is waiting only for, the decision of the supreme court In the Standard Oil and tobacco cases be fore ho begins his campaign against the trusts. He is firmly convinced that tho highest judicial tribunal will ( decide against the oil trust nud the to-1 bacco trust, and after that he Intends to begin the prosecution of every il legal combination. Already the department of justice has started Investigations of many cor porations which nre operating In re stralnt of trade by combining to eon- trol prices, by unjust discrimination and by Illegally maintaining n monopo. ly of any product. MINERS DEMAND ADVANCE. Resolution Calls For Continuance ot Work Till Wages Are Settled. Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 25. The Unit ed Mine Workers of America adopted a resolution In the national convention here demanding an increase of wages in all districts. The resolution was presented by President Lewis. It sets forth that "we demand an Increase In wages in each nnd every mining district in the country, that nil districts arc author ized and instructed to negotiate wngc agreements, but no district shall sign a contract until nil wage contracts ure negotiated, and that all mines shall continue working after the 1st of April and continue working until wago con tracts are finally negotiated, provided the present rates continue until final action Is taken." UNDER THE SEA TO THE F0LE. German Doctor Is Building Submarine to Rival Captain Nemo. Berlin, Jan. 25. The old Idea ot reaching the north pole by submarine, us was so graphically set forth in Jules Verne'H story of "Twenty Thou sand Leagues Under the Sea," has been revived by Dr. Anschuctz Kemp, tho well known Inventor. Ho will build n submarluo of his own design capable, It Is asserted, of remaining under water at n great depth for a long period. Dr. Kemp has also Invented and pat ented in all civilized countries tho dif ferent apparatus by means of which ho hopes to tuku his soundings fluid bearings when deeply submerged. ENGLAND HONORS , PEARY, 8peolal Gold Medal Awarded to Dis coverer of the North Pole. London, Jnn. 25. Tho Boynl Geo graphical society has awarded a spe cial gold niedal to Commander nobert 10. Peary for haying been the first man to lend n party of. explorers to. the north polo and for having undertaken such scientific Investigations as bis apparatus permitted. It wns decided to glvo a silver re plica of tho medal to Captain Dnrtlctt of tho qtenmer Boosevelt, Teary'a CANAL LIBEL SOIL Government Prosecution of New York World Begun. JURY BOX IS SOON FILLED. President Taft, His Brother Charles and Former President Roosevelt Named as Complainants In Federal Court. New York, Jan. 25. The criminal li bel suit of- the government against the Press Publishing company (the New York World) went on today In the United States circuit court before Judge Charles M. Hough. The com plainants, whom the World Is alleged to. have libeled In a series of slxnrti cles published in October, 1908, nre Theodore Boosevelt, President Wil liam Howard Taft, Charles P. Taft, the president's half brother; Douglas Boblnsou, brother-in-law of Colonel Boosevelt, and William Nelson Crom well. The Indictment, on which suit is based, contains fourteen counts, which charge that seven specific offenses were committed simultaneously on ter- rjtory belonging to the United States, the military reservation at W est Point oint aud the federal building Iu this city In substance the Indictment charges that the World accused certain peiwons (Americans), some of whom appear in connection with this prosecution as complainants, of receiving some part of the $40,000,000 paid by tho govern ment to the French Panama Canal company and that the United States government and certain Individuals In tho government conspired to bring about the revolution In the republic ot Colombia by which the present cunnl zone was detached from the republic. Various arguments arose between De Laneey Nlcoll, counsel for the Press Publishing comimny, nnd Unit ed States District Attorney Wise foi the government nud tho complainant as to the Jurisdiction of the court. In examining the first batch of tales men Mr. Nlcoll asked if they under stood that iu libel actions in this state tho Jury are the judges of the law as well as of the facts. Mr. Wise promptly objected,ind Judge Hough sustained the objection. Mr. Nlcoll, arguing against tho rul ing, contended that Inasmuch ns crimi nal libel Is un offense covered by the penal code of this state the United States court In considering the ense must take over tho body of the state law relating to libel ns well and the constitution of the state. He maintained Iu that connection that while tho law of the stato mak ing tho Jury the Judge of both the law ami the facts hi criminal libel cases does not take from tho court the duty of explaining tho lnw to tho jury the Jury la not obligated to abide by the explanation. Judujj Hough held that tho consti tution and law of this state nro not applicable to tho case on trial. The act of congress of 1898, under which the proceeding has been brought, cre ates a situation, be said, exactly the samo as if congress had specifically enacted certuln sections of the penal codo of the state of New York with out any reference to tho constitution of tho state. The Jury chosen consists of three merchants, two real eatuto brokors, ono stockbroker, a building contractor, an accountant, n theatrical manager, tho secretary of n gas company and J two manufacturers, . Mr. Nlcoll, as counsel for the de fense, strqvo' to impress ou tho minds of the talesmen the unprecedented na ture of the suit the first of any sort of proceeding of that nature In eighty- pll fe- IIJL poircTrcr?ocriypoo,y.t'7i DB LANCEY NICOLL. fivc years, he salihaBtt the necessary latitude that ncwKSIur hnve had in criticising public District AttonuKtWlsc nuked the talesmen to be very careful in distin guishing between the license nnd liber ty when they considered the matter of the freedom of the press. Mr. Nlcoll summarized the points to be emphasized by the defense two In number, justification and cxcusr-.Me li bel. "I want to show," he said, "the facta and circumstances which will create tho belief that when wo printed, theso things we thought they were true." MAGICIAN HELD AS SUSPECT. New York Police Say They Have Slay er of Two Six-year-old Boys. New York, Jan. 25. Herbert Jerome Dcunisou, a magician, has been arrest ed here and held without bail as the man who killed little Bobert Lomas and Arthur Shlbley by shooting them on Jan, 12 in Ulghbrldge park. Tracing his history, the detectives nay that Dennison wns nt one time with Herrmann, the magician, nnd that In nu net on the stage he fired a thirty-two caliber revolver. This wos of a Hopkins-Allen make, and the po lice say that a bullet taken from the Lomas boy after his death was fired from just such a weapon. Tho police say that Dennison is very erratic. They allege that he was in un Institution for the insane in Con necticut and left there Jun 1. Another point upon which the police base their Idea that Dennison Is the man wanted Is that a revolver of the Hopkins-Allen make was found near the place where the double shooting: occurred. The police also say that Dennison shaved ,off his beard aud left town tho night'jjf the murder. The prisoner "was searched, and on. him were found tattoj) marks that In dicate that he s Irrational. On bis- breasV is a huge Spanish flag and a cross with the words, "I hate all Anic'ricnnsJ' . . On his right arm ire two more flags and uuder thes6 thy words, "Scientist, Alchemist, Priest, Atheist." He was asked wfiatjthey meant. They mean I nm a magician," was his reply, "I am greater Jthan. Herr mann. I am the greatest man In the world." AGAINST THIRTEEN RAILROADS Accused of Raising Rates on a Com petitor of the Steel Trust. Washington. Jan. 25. The High lands Iron and Steel company of Terre Haute, I nil., iu a complaint made to the Interstate commerce commission, charges that a recent raise in freight rates by the Vandalla railroad, the Illi nois Central railroad and eleven other carriers was "for the purpose of ar bitrarily favoring the United States Steel corporation and other large com petitors by excludlug the complainants from the market." The complainant says that the ac cused carriers made a Joint traffic agreement which raised the rate from 0V6 cents to 12 cents a pound on their products from Indianapolis to Louis ville, but left undisturbed the present rate arrangements with connecting lines thut reached points where com petitors of the Indiana firm were lo cated. The Indiana company claims that It will be put out of business un less tho commission orders a re-estab-llshmeut of the old rates. FEASTING TAE BRYANS. Brilliant Entertainments In Lima At tended by American Visitors. Lima, Peru, Jau. 25. William Jen nings Bryan and his wife and daugh ter have been guests here at n num ber of brilliant social functions. They were present at the Municipal theater at a benefit performance for the So ciety For tho Protection of the Poor. President Legula and his wlfo were present at the entertainment. The members of tho American legation, tho ministers of stato and diplomatic representatives nlso attended. A tea In honor of the Bryan family was attended by many American fam ilies and tho British minister to Pern. CLEMENTINE'S BRIDAL. King Victor Will Be a Witness at Nup tials of Leopold's Daughter. Brussels, Jan. 25. It la announced that when prince Victor Napoleon Is married to tho Princess Clomentino of Belgium, tho youngest daughter of the late King Leopold, .King Victor Em manuel of Italy will bo n witness for tho former nnd will bo represented at tho csroiaony by an Italian prince. German Chancellor Breaks Down. Berlin, Jan. 25. It is rumored Iu of ficial circles thut tho health of Dr. von Bethmaun-IIollweg, the Imperial chan cellor, has broken down nnd he Is anxious to resign. Harry Payne Whitney Drawn on Jury. Mlueolu, N". Y., Jan. 25. Harry Payne Whitney Is among tho trial Jurors drawn for the Bupreme court term before Judge Maddox, sitting here this spring.