THE WEATHER-Wcdnesdny fnlr and warmer wcntlicr will prevail, with llftlit and warmer wcntlicr will prevnll. ." tc ' 8 Jf K" 0 & i Seml-Wcckly Founded 'A V. Wayne County QjHn 1908 or the Weekly Founded, 1844 J W J .5 . .M J J .X Jit J J . ! S ' REPUBLICAN ,S 4 v't . vJ vtf . , J J , 67th YEAR. HONESDALB, WAYNE CO., PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1910. NO. 45 WON'T El SUKE I Pennsylvania Miners Refuse to Return to Work. r- . - PRIESTS WORK FOR PEACE. ! Representatives of Nonunion Men Ask Italian Consul to Act Hs Brings About Conference, but No Final Deolslon Is Reached. i possessor 01 u.ui uuuy iu inline ihs way in the world. Now, alcohol, tak Wilkesbarre, Pa., June ".A largo i en In what Is considered moderation, majority of the 12,000 striking mine lessens the power of the body to work ,,.. , .,..i..i n'd to maintain its heat supply, workers of the Pennsylvania Goal Th,s concluslon ,B based uon ex. have voted against ending the strike i nerlments conducted upon largo num untll the compauy has settled their hers of men during long periods of grievances I time. The results in regard to the Their committees reported to theui f" weobtained fromTnveU thnt the officials of the company have j gat0ns In the large armies of the promised to take up their grievances world during active campaigns. In within forty-eight hours of the time the British army in Africa, for in- tho strike ends and if it is Impossible ?ta"ce' he exPcriment tr'e1 . , M ' . 1 tcrtln-j how far the soldiers could to reach n satisfactory settlement i lnareh when taking dally what were with the mine workers to submit the considered moderate amounts of rum, grievances to the conciliation board. ! and then how far they could march Officials of the mine workers also ad- ; vhen taking no liquor, and compar . ... , ,, ., .. ing the records. So also In the Army dressed the men and told them the of Ule Potomac ln the American strike was In direct violation of tho , civil war, the same experiment was aword of the strike commission, from tried with whisky. When the rec whlch they had benefited, but the men ords were compared it was found that were obdurate and said they would 1 soldiers can endure longer marches not return to work without their grlev- 1 when taking no liquor than when nl ances being adjusted. lowed their dally portion. Freder Priests in tho mine district are ac- lck Treves, the King's physician, said: tlvely endeavoring to end the trouble, i "J was with the relief column that moved on to Ladysmlth. It was an Italian Consul Acts. Scranton, Pa., June 7. Representing the 12,000 nonunion miners employed by the Pennsylvania Coal company, who are on strike, thirty Italians called on Consul Fnrtunnto Tlscar and asked him to use his good offices in securing an adjustment of their grievances. 1 The men are still insistent, they said, . that work will not he resumed until the company remedies the evils of ox- , ceslvo Cocking nnd short weight com- 1 plained 6f. A vote taken during the . past few days has revealed this. Consul Tlscar informed General Manager V. A. May of tho request, , and the result was u conference be- tween the company officials and a committee of priests and business men representing the strikers. No final de- j cislon woa reached, but It Is under- ! stood that the prospects for a settle- mcnt are bright. Up to this time the mii i 4 ... , ., . mittee of tfce strikers' representatives. Mine Laborers Scarce. WHkesbarro, June ".Owing to tho scarcity of mine laborers lu this part of the region the Delaware and Hud son Coal company imported from New York and other eastern points heveral hundred foivlgn laborers, chiefly Slavs and Itallaiw, and they will be distrib uted among tho mines of tho compa nies In this tiectlon. The officials say the demand for coal far exceeds the capacity of the company nnd that It Is necessary to import laborers ln order to load the cirs. BASEBALL SCORES. Results of Games Played In National and American Leagues. NATIOXAI, LEAGUE. At New York New York, 5 jSt. Lou Is, 1. Hutterles Mathewson and Mey ers; Sallee and Phelps. At Urooklyn Cincinnati, 1; IJrook lyu, 0. batteries Itowau nnd Mc Lean: Hell, llergen nnd Erwln. At Philadelphia Philadelphia, 12; Chicago, 2. Batteries Moore, Pfeffer, Moran and Needhnm; Rlchlo and Archer. At Boston Hoston-Plttsburg game jM.stponed on nccouut of ruin. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. W. L. P.O. Chicago 25 14 .041 New York 20 15 .031 Cincinnati 20 18 J523 Pittsburg 18 18 .000 St Louia 20 22 .476 Brooklyn 10 23 .452 Philadelphia 15 22 .405 Boston 10 20 .800 AMERICAN LEAGUE. At St Louis-New York, 2; St. Lou Is, 1. Batteries-Qulun and Mitchell; Towel!, Bailey and Kllllfer. At Chlcugo Chicago, 1; Boston, 0. Batteries Walsh nnd niock; Hall and Cnrrigan. At Detroit Detroit, 4; Washington. 1. Batteries Mullln and Stauuge; Gray, Hardy and Street At Cleveluud-Cleveland-Phlladolphla game postponed on account of rain. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. W. L. P.O. New York 20 11 .703 Philadelphia 20 12 .084 Detroit 27 10 .628 Boston 21 18 .038 Cleveland 15 10 .441 Washington 17 24 .418 Chicago 13 22 .871 St Louis 6 31 .205 "ALCOHOL AND fnnrv i innnrnnifl,t' of tne thousand boys who tire I Hr I A KUk hit I there, undor the age of eighteen I IILf LMUUUliH vonro rnmn from Irmilrnril'a linmoa. The White Rlbboners offered a prize to the member of the Physiology class In the Honcsdalc High school who would write the best essay on "Alcohol and the Laborer." There were fifty ossnys submitted. The prize was awarded to Alice Sluman, aged " years. The essay we print in full: Alcohol Is the laborer's enemy. The end and aim of all the body pro- cesses is to work. To accomplish this end the body must keep warm. The ( more perfect the body can accomplish these conditions, the more able is the i a i ... ' - i i . exceedingly trying time apart from the heat of the weather. In that column of some thirty thousand men, the first who dropped were not the tall men, or the short men, or the big men, or the little men, but the drinkers, and they dropped out as wUh a bJg ,etter' on thep backs ., These and other experiments of the same nature thus demonstrate that alcohol has the effect of diminishing the capacity of a man for muscular work, oven when the alcohol is taken what aro generally considered as moderate amounts. From these re- ftfXe? even ln S0.caUed moderation, is a Da(i practice for anyone who wishes to do hard work or endure sustained exertion. In skill and accuracy, nnd in the direction and expenditure of energy the man who has taken no alcohol has a great advantage over ",c mau wuu uua- ,a '" u,u" la any emergency, and can Judge bet- Her how to make his strength most effective. Science has proved that the drinking man cannot work long or as hard as can the abstainer, that his work is not so accurate, and that he Is more likely to make mis takes. Liquor does not fortify against cold. Doctor Hayes, the Arctic ex plorer, says: "In Arctic countries, al cohol is, ln almost any shape, not only completely useless, but positively in Jurlous. I have known strong, able bodied men to become utterly incap able of resisting cold in consequence of the long-continued use of alcoholic drink." Experience shows that al cohol weakens tho power of under going severe bodily exertion. Doctor McRae. ln sncakinc of Arctic exnlor atfon, at the meeting of the American Association for the advancement of science, held at Montreal in 1856, said: ' The moment that a man hnd swallowed a drink of spirits, It was certain that his day's work was near ly at an end. It was absolutely necessary that the rule of total ab stlnance be rigidly enforced, If we would accomplish our day s task. The uso of liquor as a beverage when we had work on hand, In thnt terri fic cold, was out of the question." We have the evidence of statistics In regard to the health and mortality of people who use alcohol, and of those who do not. These have been collected in England by the life In surance companies. They indicate that the life of the abstainer Is, on the average, longer than that of the drinker. Also, It has been found that the hospitals get their inmates to n much greater extent from the drinkers than from the abstainers. The drinker is less able to resist infection, and the physicians ln these hospitals all ac knowledge that, once Infected with a serious disease, tho chances of the alcohol drinker nre much less than thoso of tho abstainer. Mr. Huber, who saw ln one town ln Russia two thousand one hundred nnd sixty per sons perish with the cholera in twen ty days, said: "It Is a most remark able circumstance thnt persons given to drink have been swept nway Hko Hies, in Tillls, with twenty thousand Inhabitants, every drunkard has fall en, nil are dead, not one remaining." Alcohol often lures men to crime by which they forfeit life or liberty. How much ovll Is done to men by al cohol can bo learned by examining tho records of criminal courts, where between three-fourths or nine-tenths of all the crimes listed are directly duo to the use of Intoxicants; nnd by turning tho thought to the untold miseries in countless homes, never made public, which are caused by the same evil. In Illinois, in the two penitentiaries, one at Jollet and one at unestor, tnere are tnreo tnousanu Inmates, two thousand seven hundred of whom aro there because of strong drink. In Pontine, Illinois, at the state reformatory, six hundred and It Is estimated that in England from sixty thousand to one hundred thous and vlctlmB of strong drink die every year. The late Honorable Cnauncey M. Depew, president of the New York Central Railroad Company, in a talk to railroad men, said: "Twenty-five years ago, I knew every man, woman, and child in Peekskill, nnd it has been n study with me to mark boys who started In every grnde of life with myself, to see what had become of them. "I was up last fall and began to count them over, nnd It was an in structive exhibit. "Some of them became clerks, mer chants, manufacturers, lawyers, and doctors. It Is remarkable that every one of those that drank Is dead, not one living of my age. Barring a few, who were taken off by sickness, every one that proved a wreck or wrecked his family, did It from rum and no other cause. "Of those who are church-going people, who are steady, industrious, and hard-working men, who were frugal and thrifty, every single one of them, without an exception, owns the house in which he lives, and has something laid by, the Interest on which, with liis house, would carry him through many a rainy day." When a man becomes debased with drink, he doesn't care, and all his liner feelings are crowded out. President William H. Taft, in nn interview in The Defender, New York, (Vugust, 190C, declared himself an ab stainer and told young men It was the best plan; and in 1908 he turn ed his wine glass down and said it was going to stay down forever. In his Yale lectures he declared for lo cal option. The United States government de mands total abstinance of all rural mail carriers, railway mail agents, and all working men in navy yards. A recent rule of the Civil Service Commissioner requires an investiga tion of the drinking habits of all ap plicants for government positions under civil service rules. This rule Is required by one of the largest ship building concerns In the world, by the largest capital bank note company ln the world, and by the large employ ment agencies and business houses. Recently In a large manufactory tn the western part of the- State, six thousand worklngmen signed the pledge "No drinkers wanted." Aside from all considerations of physical, mental and moral Injury wrought by the use of alcoholic drinks, every young man may well take Into account the damaging ef fect of such a dangerous habit upon his business prospects. Careful busi ness men are becoming more and more unwilling to take into their employ any person addicted to liquor drinking. Within the past few years the officers of several railroads, hav ing found that a considerable portion of their losses could be directly traced to the drinking habits of some one or more of their employes, have ordered the dismissal of all persons in their service who were known to use Intoxicants, with the additional provision that persons thus discharg ed should never be reinstated. All mercantile agencies now report the habits of business men In this re spect, and some life insurance com panies refuse to Insure habitual drinkers, regarding such risks as "extra-hazardous." Modern life has left no place for the drunkard and Is fast ousting even the moderate drlnkgr. The saloon breaks up every right relation, honesty, Industry, kindli ness, alike In the home and on the street, ln business, politics and pleas ure. The only safe way is, "touch not, taste not, handle not." NOW IN OPERATION. The Wuynu Cut Glass Company Has Thirty-live People Employed. The Towanda Reporter-Journal says: Towanda's now Industry, the Wayne Cut Glass Company, Incor porated, an establishment which has been doing business at Honesdale for the past seven years, and which was recently taken over by a number of Towanda capitalists, began opera Hons in their new home, the Tracy building, on Monday morning of last week. Tho Tracy shoo factory building which was frequently vacated by tho Seneca Silk company, has been leas ed for n torm of years with nn op tion to buy. Fred P. Leo, superln tendent of the plant, has been busy for the past three weeks preparing the building and installing the ma chinery which was moved from Honesdale. Everything has been put in readiness, tho machinery install ed, nnd electric motors placed In position for driving the machinery, Tho entiro building is occupied by the company nnd nil the floor space Is used to tho best advantage possl hie. About 3D men were put at work in tho various departments of tho big fnctory on Monday morning. Tho force will bo Increased from time to tlmo as the occasion requires. It is not an easy matter to teach the In experienced hands the art of cutting glass, and for this reason only a few are put to work at one tlmo, and as soon as these men become proficient ln their work more help will be tak SLIPS IN MB IT Mnrh VAantnJ Hnffctnt Vic lYlUlll YTdllluU IIUMOlUl TlO" its Pittsburg. 1 41, convened with Sterling Grange, , No. 861, the first Grange organized NARROWLY FSGAPFS ARREST in the county. It also has the larg NrtlUUmLI LOUrtTLO rtllLOI. egt membersnlp at the pregent Ume ! The morning opened tip fine and gave Alleged Millionaire Briber, Fighting Extradition From New York, Slips Back Into Pennsylvania De tectives Cry "Stopl" would be a light attendance, but we 1 were agreeably surprised. The at Plttsburg, Juno ".A dash Into Pitts- , tendance far exceeded our expecta burg nnd out again in his private car , tons. A good dlnner was provided was made Saturday morning by F. N. n the bMt Dinner over, Grange Hoffstot, president of the Pressed wa8 caled to order at 1:45 p. m. Steel Car company, but his daring net Pomona Master M. G. Noble occupied almost resulted ln his capture by do tectlvcs, who nre armed with war rants charging him with bribing ritts burg councllmen. Hoffstot, who Is fighting cxtrndltlou from New York, has been needed at tho steel works for some time. His business affairs became so urgent that no ueciueu to sperm an nour in i-uis- jn tue largest number of new mem burg at all hazards. bers for the quarter Just ended, and At C a. m. Saturday his car was Ua3 captured Wayne County Honor shunted in the works at Schoenvllle. banner. The followinc conimlttPPs Ills arrival was noted by n man who Is well acquainted with tho millionaire manufacturer, and word was sent to the county detectives nnd District At torney William A. Blakcly. While Hoffstot was conferring with his subordinates detectives were has- Resolutions F. M. Shaffer, C. C. tening to the car works. Guards were Gray, M. A. Gilpin, stationed about tho place to warn The following were appointed to Hoffstot. The private car, with a deride where the fourth quarterly swift locomotive attached, stood In p0mona meeting shall be held E. readiness. A number of papers were E. Kinsman, E. W. Gammell, J. F. signed and approved by the steel man Taylor. nnd important plans were discussed, i The Worthy Lecturer E. E. Kins Just at 7 o'clock he left tho offices man now occupied the chair. A song and hurried to his car. As ho boarded by members of Hope Grange, a very a group of detectives were whirled ieasing address of welcome was glv around the corner of the building in en by w B Webster. W. W. Baker, an automobile nnd started for tho car. of Honesdale, ably responded in his The engineer prilled the throttle wide uauai happy way. openand the train started down the ' ; The question, whether a person "Stop! Stop!" cried the detectives, ,f tim nndnoer ....Id no heed to the but the engineer paid no heed to the command. Jumping out of their automobile they ran to a yard engine and ordered tho engineer to start after the special. Before It got fairly started tho special was out of the yards and Hying tow ard the Ohio line. After running a short distnnce the pursuit was aban doned. Hoffstot not only outwitted detec tive here, but also outmaneuvered special detectives who have been report oi me comnmiee on canui wntcuing him In Now York. Ho left ' dates gave eleven names for lnitla that city Friday night. The private tlon in the fifth degree, and they were car was brought over tho Pittsburg duly obligated into the mysteries of nnd Lake Erie rond from Youngstown, I this degree. Pomona Grange has O., and was backed down the Alio-1 grown very much in the last two gheny river tracks to what is known ' years and it is somewhat burden as the "River gate." some now for the entertaining Grange SIXTEEN FALLS BRING 85,000. Railroad Has Mrs. Sturla Arrested on Charge of Larceny. New York, June 7. A woman who has fallen down sixteen times iu tho last four years and hits received ln all about $5,000 from transportation com panies on whose premises she fell is locked up In tho Tombs. Sho Is Mrs. Anna A. Sturla, sometimes Strula, late ly of Hazlet, N. J. She was arrested iu New York on a warrant charging her with the larceny of $500 from the New York Central railroad on Nov. 17, 1000. This money wits paid to Mrs. Sturla by the railroad to settlo her claim for personal injurlos In a fall occasioned by tt banana skin. Killed by Building's Fall. Buffalo, June 7.-By the collapse of a two story building at Ml Sycamore street, on which wreckers were work- lg. one man was killed and three were injured, one seriously, tuo ueau man Is Wllbert L. Shualc, n laborer. B0LDIEES DASH FOB LIBERTY. Eighty Artillerymen Make Sensational Attempt to Get Away. San Francisco, June 7. A sensation al dash for shore liberty In which, It Is said, eighty men of Battery O, Sec ond field artillery, outward bound from Fort I). A. Russell, Wyo., to Maulla on the transport Logan partici pated la being given a rigid investiga tion by Captain Francis W. Griffin, commanding the battery. Thirteen of the men, two having been taken from tho city prison, bare been placed ln tho transport's brig. According to an official report, almost half of tho battery, Just at dusk Sat urday night, slipped from tho ship without orders, carrying arms and wearing cartridge belts, scaled a high fence at tho dock and scattered along tho harbor front. Some who were un able to elude tho dock guard dropped overboard and swam nshore. It was not until 3 o'clock ln tho morning that the last of the deserters was rounded I POMONA GRANGE ..PT CTrm MET AT STERLING 'v ljarK Attendance Notwithstanding I the Stormy Weather. The second quarterly meeting of Wayne County Pomona Grange, No. promise of a fair day, but about 10 a. m. the dark clouds began to gath er and In a short time showers fol lowed each other In quick succes sion and we concluded that there the chair, and nearly all the other of flecers in their respective places. Reports were received from sixteen out of seventeen Granges. Reading of the minutes of the last meeting, also reading of the reports. The reports show that Hope Grange of South Canaan township has taken were appointed: Soliciting Committee T. E. Steph ens, Mrs. A. F. Jones, Joseph Quln tin. Time and Place F. L. Hartford, f!eorEG Korr. H. R. S.imnson "ul f "B' '" was e'Elule to membership in the Grange or not, was freely discussed, in which some of the ladies took part. A recess was declared, when some specimens of San Jose Scale, leaf blister mite, green aphis, etc., were exhibited and much interest was shown in the matter, after which the Grange came to order, to ad journ for the evening session. At 7:30 p. m. the Grange opened In full form In the fifth degree. The ; to furnisn provision rreo wnicn was i frequently done, it was therefore de- elded at this time to hereafter mako a charge of ten cents for each person for each meal had while attending Pomona. This Is practiced In .other counties nnd meets with general ap proval. On motion Salem and Sterl- l lnf? Rrnneps were each awarded $5 ns a special prize for holding Wayne County Pomona Grange honor ban ner for two successive qunrters each. At 8:30 p. m. Grange opened In the fourth degree. Song by the Grange. A valuable paper on the renova tion of the old orchnrd, which brought forth several questions nnd answers, was read by W. II. Bullock. Several specimens of black knot on plum branches were exhibited by I uur,t l "l """"" , "s experience n combating with this seuse, 'ci u .. uu air In the form of spores and attacks , the sour cherry as readl y ns the j fruit growing and from li s pocket n fine specimen (for this time of the year) of the Northern Spy. The writer had ono, too, but It was In his grip or It would have been dlsplnyed ln competition with Mr. Gilpin. Song by members of Hopo Grange. Recltntlon by Master L. H. Cross. Select reading by Mrs. Asa Jones. Recltntlon by H. R. Sampson. Recitation by Miss Kato Cross. There was a valuable paper on tho "Silo and SUngo" by P. L. Hartford. This is a very Important subject, nnd If the lessons Imparted hero were more strictly heeded to It would add much to the profits and pleasure In farming. Recitation by Brock Lesher. Song, Miss Maud Foster. Theo. Klein wns nppolnted a com mittee to present Wayno County Honor Banner to Hopo Grange. Tho committee on resolutions of fered the following which wore ap proved and adopted as read: Resolved, That tho next Pomona Grange meeting bo hold with Cherry Ridge Grange, between tho first and fifteenth of August, subject to tho approval of Cherry Ridge Orange; F. L. Hartford, II. R. Sampson, committee. Resolved. Thnt we heartily com- i!"e"d. "..Su.rface'?t.atoZo.- I !U(jlOl, 1UI I1IH iUUUUIU USSIHIUUUU in producing higher state of orchard culture by demonstration and Inspec tlon In Wayne county; also for his his appointment of our highly esteemed nnd prominent Granger, W. II. Bul lock, of Dybcrry, as orchard Inspector. Several Granges were largely rep resented, especially Hope and Union Grnnges. Several visiting members were also present from Lackawanna county and a very enjoyable time was spent. W. H. BULLOCK, Secretary. COLES FOR JUNE. Storms and Signs for the month of June says: June brings an interesting dis turbance of the solar system. This Is solstice month the turning point where we turn westward In our orbit, and where the north pole reaches Its greatest inclination to the sun. This fact throws the ecliptic on the day side of the earth 23 degrees farther north than tho celestial equator and as far soutn on the night side. This Is why the sun and moon are far north, and the summer constellations along the ecliptic and the full moon are far south at this time. Old Mother Earth Is sailing through the "House of Enemies" this month and Is opposed by the "House of Sickness;" the Indica tions are that earth will receive great affliction from the other planets. At the time of new moon Uranus is in strong aspect to the sun and Neptune. There will be seventeen "high flood" days and thirteen "low, ebb" days, and the month will be a very changeable one. Sudden and unlooked-for events will take place In many localities. Speculators must be on their guard nil through the month, for when one planet favors satisfactory deals, another opposes, nnd the chances for and against are about equal. On the whole, the month will be an excit ing one in some lines. Consider able sickness will prevail in the form of nervous diseases and stomach trouble. Vesus disturbance blends with the earth's solstice from the first part of the month to the end. The crisis of the June solstice period usually falls from the 10th to the 25th, and during nil storm periods within and about those limits except pheno menal rains, much hall with thun der and lightning, and dangerous gales and tornadoes in mnny locali ties. Extreme warmth will precede storms, with a sudden drop lu tem perature, followed by a cold wave. Avoid all surgical operations dur ing the "low ebb" dnys. Monday, the 27th, and Tuesday, the 2Sth, will be the strongest and best dnys. Sow tomato seed or transplant tomato plants Wednesday, the 1st; Wednesday, tho 8th; Friday, the 17th, afternoon, and Monday, the 27th, p. m. If the plants are train ed on supporting frames or trellises they will give much more satisfact ory results and nre more easily car ed for. ERIE Cl'T MAY OPEN ,JlTXE 15. Last Stretch of Rock Belli); Blasted Out of Bergen Hill. Final work towards getting ready the four track open cut of the Erie Is now under way and a large forco Is at work on the Incline leading from tho foot of Ninth street, Jersey City, to Palisade avenue. Here the men are blasting out rock and open ing up a clear passageway between the cut and tho fottr-trnck iron structure which leads from the Erie depot to the Bergen Hill. This stretch Is nil that has stood in the way of the completion of the new cut. This work will be hurried, as it is tho hope of the Erie officials to have the cut ready for use of at least some of their trains by June 15th. Plans are now being made for the opening of tho cut. It Is the idea of the Erie officials to make the day a memorable one In tho history of the railroad. The first train to run through will have President Under wood and the Erie officials and di rectors and the engineers who had the work of constructing the tunnel ln charge. After that another train will ho run with some prominent Jersey City officials and railroad men. Edward Salley, who Is Inspector of engines on the Erie and nn experi enced engineer, will bo tho first en gineer to run over tho new four track cut. After tho cut Is opened, the New York, Susquehanna and Western railroad trains will enter the Erie depot. They nro now entering the Pennsylvania station. Tho Susquo hnnna's arrangemont, so It Is re ported, expired June 1 with the Pennsylvania railroad. LET US PRINT YOUR BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, STATE MENTS, NOTE HEADS. ENVEL OPES, CIRCULARS, ETC., ETC. eu on.