THE WEATHER On Friday partly cloudy weather and slowly rl'lnj? t nicrnturcs will iroTnll. ( K" " C jC tC so jc jo jo jo jf tc T? Scml-VVcckly Founded k 1908 k - Weekly Founded. 1844 J Jfi Jl & J & J Jt Jt S w J J J ! vt s" " m' rf j." jo r :p j.- to jo k ounly Organ f the " ICAN PARTI o 4t 5 67th YEAR. HONE SD ALE, WAYNE CO., PA., FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1910. NO. 46 i tgi& Sift MM) START Col. Roosevelt Sails From Europe Tomorrow. HE IS BUSY PACKING TODAY. Tour of Foreign Capitals Ended No More Kings to Hobnob With Prep, arations Completed For Great Reception In New York, London, June 0. Tomorrow Colonel Tbeodouo Roosevelt will nay farewell to Europe mid sail back to America. Today will end his remarkable pe riod of speeehmnklng and hobnobbing with kings. As the tioC of departure Is 80 near, Colonel and Mrs. Roosevelt were chief ly engaged today In the packing of their belongings for the voyage across the Atlantic. Colonel Roosevelt declares that he has not nsked for nor will be accept uny favors from the New York custom house upon his return to America on June 18. In reply to questions concerning the report from America that In view of the fact that he had represented tho United States as n special ambassador at the funeral of the late King Ed ward his baggage would bo allowed the exemption from customs lnspcc-' tlon that attaches to ambassadorial agents the colonel snld: "I have not asked any courtesies of , tho New York port or any special con- j sideration for my own baggage or that j of my family. I expect to pass I COLONEL ROOSEVELT, through the customs the same as any private citizen returning from a trip abroad. I expect to pay full duty ou every article not exempted to the gen eral traveling public." j The former president yesterday re-, covered from the effects of Ids strenu- j ous day at Oxford. His throat, which had failed him when delivering his j lecture, was better, and he was feeling j "bully." Yesterday afteruoqn a recep-1 tlon In their honor was given by Am-1 bassador and Mrs. Wbltelaw Reld at i Dorchester House. I Will Greet Roosevelt. Washington, June 0. When Colonel Roosevelt comes sailing home again George von L. Meyer, who was post master general and secretary of the navy In his cabinet, and who continues in the latter position under Mr. Taft, and Secretury of Agriculture Wllsun, who has been In that ofilce for many, many years, will be waiting to greet him for the Taft administration. It was made known at the White House that the president had asked Mr. Mey. er nnd Mr. Wilson to go over to New York to greet their former chief. Names Senate Committee. Syracuse, N. Y Juue 0. Lieutenant Governor Horace White has announc ed his appointment of the committee to represent the senate In greeting ex President Roosevelt on his return to this country. The committee constats of Senator Cobb of Jefferson, Senator nolden of Onondaga, Senator Meade of Monroe, Senator Hamilton of Chau tauqua, Senator Coates of Franklin, Senator Grady of New York and Sena tor Hardin of Kings. Many Excursionists Drowned. Lisbon, Juno 0. An olllcial dispatch from Lorenzo Marques, Portuguese East Africa, says that an oxcurslon boat crowded with working people apslzed, thirty-two being drowned. HENRY M. BOUTELL. Congressman Attacks Prohibi tion In Brewers' Convention. Washington. June 0. An attack on prohibition by Congressman Henry .Sherman Boutell of Illinois and n pre diction by President Carl J. Hoster ol the United States Brewers' assocla tlon that the time would come when the brewer would bo found working with the "real and practical reform ers" In the Interest of temperance, were the salient features of tho fiftieth annual convention of the brewers at the opening session. Representative Routell advocated temperance In all things, characteriz ing It as "closely allied and almost akin to strength." President Hoster In his annual nddress to tho 500 delegates as sembled from all parts of the country declared that he had no apology to make for being a brewer and that he recognized every brewer as a promoter of "true temperance." INSURGENTS MAKE GAINS. Republican Primaries Show Increased Following of Discontented Leaders. Des Moines, In., June 0. The vigor of the national fight between insur gency nnd stand pattism is exemplified In the results of primary elections throughout Iowa, the home of Insur gent Senators Cummins and Dolllver. With only live counties missing Gov ernor Ii. F. Carroll, Republican, is nominated for re-election by a major ity of TOO votes over Warren C. Garst, Progressive Republican. The missing counties nre known as Carroll strong holds and probably will bring ids ma jority up to 1,74)0 or li.OOO. Two years ngo Carroll was nominat ed over Garst by 2:1,000 votes. Insurgents captured eight out of eleven concessional nominations. South Dakota In Doubt. Pierre, S. D., June 9. Indications are that it will take an olllcial count to settle the contest for the Republic an nomination for governor. Both stalwart members of congress Martin and Hurke were nominated for re-election. The stalwarts made legislative gains also. The gubernatorial candidates are George W. Egau, Independent Repub lican; Governor Vessey, Progressive, and S. II. Elrod, stalwart. Progressives assert they have nomi nated a good working majority In the legislature. Denounce Insurgents. Milwaukee, Wis., June I). Denuncia tion of tho Insurgents and commenda tion of the Republican administration was the trend of a number of speeches at the first session of the Republican convention in this Senator La Fol lette's state. Every mention of Presi dent Tnft's name by the various speak ers was followed by n demonstration. Vice President Sherman addressed the convention, denouncing Insurgency. Black Still Fights. I'ltUburg, June 0. Robert J. niack, claiming that an hottest and correct count of the ballots at Saturday's Re publican primaries will show him to have received a majority of 1,100 votes over Congressman Dalzell, filed a petition with tho county commis sioners asking that the ballot boxes from sixty-live precincts be brought In and opened nnd the votes recounted. Friends of Dalzell immediately ask ed for u hearing. This will bo granted, but It is not likely to check the pro opodinir. New York Preparations. New York, Juno 0. All arrange ments hnvo been completed for tho brilliant reception which Is to bo given Colonel Roosevelt on his returu from Europe. Numerous persons from all parts of the country aro already assembling here to see tho greeting, which will assume the proportions of a aoHotacIe. HmTA dBsflsSEth. T REVOLT Yucatan Disturbances More Than Indian Uprising. LED BY EXILED OFFICERS. New Aspect Given to Trouble In Mex ico Deepens Border Interest Colo nel Victor Montenegro One of Rebels' Leaders. El Paso, Tex., Juno 0. Information received here forces out the startling revelation that the trouble in Yucatan is not merely an "Indian uprising," aa described by Mexican officials, but an organized revolution against the rule of Diaz. This fact has caused Americans here to accept with distrust much of the previous Information sent out concern ing massacres by savage bands. Developments are being watched with deepened Interest. It is tho fact that Colonel Victoi Montenegro is one of the rebel leaders that has given the new aspect to the revolt. He Is an army otllcer who was banished from a choice berth In Mex ico to Yacutan for exhibiting a prefer ence for General Bernardo Reyes for vice president against the wish ol President Diaz, and It Is said that a number of other olllcers banished with him have taken up arms with the in surgents. Maximlllnno R. Bonllin. another reb el leader, has been American refugee In Yucatan for many years, nnd there is now a price set upon his head. Further reports are received of the sacking of towns throughout the In terior of Yucatan. As yet only small places have been attacked, and tho rebels have contented themselves with killing officials and taking what arms, ammunition and money they could find unless they were resisted. They have also waged war against planta-,-, ownepi known to have been un usually loynl to Diaz. A Mexican gunboat with two Jiattal lons of Infantry has reached Progresso, the principal seaport of Yucatan, from Vera Cruz. The troops have been dis patched Inland. The troops have been on duty In the state of Vera Cruz, which is itself something of n tropical region, and t he Mexican government has confidence that they will be able to deal with twice their number of Insurgents. They were taken inland through Morida, the capital, where they were loudly cheered, shgwing that the people of the capital nre loyal. They cannot reach the section of dis satisfaction without a hard march, and this may be delayed from the fact that Colonel Victor Montenegro, leader of tlie rebels, has seized the army transportation nnd also torn up the railroad tracks. WILL CONSULT HUGHES. J. Pierpont Morgan to Seek Governor's Advice In Equitable Affairs. New York, Juue !. The trust agree ment made by Thomas F. Ryan live years ago by which stock control of the Equitable Life Assurance society with Us assets of $ 175,000,000, nre vested in Morgan J. O'Brien and George Westlughouse as trustees ex pires next Wednesday. i Mr. O'Brien and Mr. Westlughouse i under the deed of trust have the pow er to continue it for another five years, i but they have taken no action lu the matter. i The 7j02 shares of stock of the Equi table which Mr. Ryan bought from James Hazen Hyde are owned by J, Pierpont Morgan, who acquired them last winter. After Mr. Ryan got stock control of tlie Equitable ho sold some of the shares subject to the deed of trust to the into E. II. Harrlman, and when Mr. Morgan made his purchase he bought from Mr. Ryan and Mrs. Harrlman. What Mr. Morgau's plans are for the future protection of tho 000,000 policy holders have not been explained, but it was ascertained that he has advised his partners that his plans must first bo submitted to Governor Hughes and the state Insurance department and their approval obtained before nuy thing definite Is done. BURNS BESTS COULON. New Jersey Boy Outpoints "Champion" From Chicago. New Y'ork, June 0. Frankle Burns, the New Jersey bantam boxer, out pointed Johnny Coulon, who styles himself tho 115 pound .champion, from Chicago. From the start the Jersey boy waa there and managed to cleverly aide step some of Coulon's wild rushes. It waa a fast bout from start to finish, with action lu every second of each round. f JOHN M'GRAW. 5 j ( Giants' Manager Blames Moran J j S Because Team Wasn't First. ) New York, Juno 0. McGraw's expla nation of the failure of the Giants to be In first place yesterday morning Is the fact, as he calmly Insists, that Angle Mornn is using a Turkish towel for a spine Instead of the regulation backbone prescribed In the official rules. In tlie ninth inning of the duel be tween New York and St. Louis the Giants had a chance to win, when Wilson led off with a single that tore two or three Inches of bark from the off shin of Shortstop Hnuser. Devore, the lleetest footed young wnrrlor In the business, wns immediately substi tuted for Wilson for base running purposes, nnd the fun started. McGraw is at all times willing to gamble on chances In baseball, nnd, In the parlance of the esteemed crap game, he decided to "shoot It nil." When St. Louis was least expecting such a maneuver Devore got the of fice to steal second with none out. He started like ti streak, and to the grand stand it appeared as If he had dived under the ball at second and was safe by a yard. Umpire Morau already had his hand uplifted, as If to bring about a disaster, and he couldn't stop. Hnv lng gone that far Angle evidently de cided to go through with It, and ho called Josh out. To get a fair Idea of just what hap pened you should drop n lighted cigar Into n keg of blasting powder and await developments. That decision on Devore killed off the chances of a victory, for later two more runners got on the bags. With the -death rattle In' their throats, the Giants had one hope left in Murray, but he couldn't deliver. BASEBALL SCORES. Results of Games Played In National and American Leagues. NATIONAL LEAGUE. At New York New York, 7; St. Lou Is, 0. Batteries Ames and Meyers; Corridon, Bnchman and Phelps. At Brooklyn Cincinnati, 13; Brook lyn, 2. Batteries Burns and McLean; Rucker, Sehnelberg, Dessau and Er win. At Philadelphia-Chicago, 7; Phila delphia, :i. Batteries Cole and Arch er; Sparks, Maroney and Dooin. At Boston Boston, 4; Pittsburg, 0. Batteries Curtis and Graham; Cam nltz and Simon. Second Game (eleven Innings) Pittsburg, .'!; Boston, L Batterles Mattern, Rarldou nnd Graham; Ad ams, White. Leever and Gibson. STANDING OK THE CLUBS. W. L. P.O. Chicago 12(1 15 .1X14 New York 27 1(! .023 Cincinnati 21 19 .525 Pittsburg 20 19 .513 St. Louis 21 23 .477 Brooklyn 20 24 .455 Philadelphia 1(1 23 .410 Boston 1(5 2S .304 AMERICAN LEAGUE. At St. Louis New York, 4; St. Lou Is, 4. Batterles-Wurhop and Mitchell; Bailey and Kllllfer. Game called at end of seventh lulling on account of rain. At Cleveland Philadelphia. 13; Cleveland, 1. Batteries Bender and Lapp; Berger und Beuiis. At Chicago (twelve Innings) Chica go, 5; Boston, 4. Batteries Smith and Payne; Smith, Wood and Carrlgan. At Detroit Detroit, 5 Washington, 1. Bntterles Summers nnd Schmidt; Groome nud Street. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. W. L. P.O. New York 27 11 .711 Philadelphia 27 13 .075 Detroit 29 10 .Oil Boston 22 10 .537 Clovcland 10 20 .444 Washington 17 20 .305 Chicago 14 23 .378 St. Louis 8 32 .200 NIAGARA MERGER. Hydraulic Power Companies Announce Combine. Albany, N. Y., Juno 0. Tho nydrau He Power company of Niagara Falls certified to the secretary of state that It has merged tho Niagara Falls Hy draulic Power and Manufacturing corn' pany. The former company owned all of tho capital stock of the latter. Tho ccrtlllcato Is signed by Gcorgo B. Mathews, president and Paul A Schoelkopf, secretary. TRIAL M CLOSE Sugar Frauds Case Reaches Jury This Afternoon. WEARING CLOSING ADDRESSES Interested Crowd Gathers at Final Day of Celebrated Trial Last Words Being Said For and Against the Three Defendants. New Y'ork, June 9. Before the Unlt sd States circuit court adjourns this evening the sugar frauds case will bo In the hands of tho Jury. Some time tonight or tomorrow tlie three defendants will know their fates. These are Charles R. Heike, aged former secretary of tlie sugar trust; Ernest W. Gerbracht, former superin tendent of tho Brooklyn refluory, and Inmes F. Bendornagel, former superin tendent of the refinery. In the beginning there were six de fendants, but three of the accused men In the middle of the trial decided to plead guilty, following the testimony of Oscar Spitzer, former dock superin tendent, who was pardoned from At lanta prison and made a full confes sion of the sugar weighing frauds. The closing scenes at the trial at tracted an Interested crowd in which prominent sugar men were conspicuous. When counsel for the government and for the defendants In tlie sugar trlnl began their summing up addresses In tlie United States circuit court there were five to talk. Wlnfred T. Denl son opened for the government and Henry L. Stlmson will close. Henry F. Cochrane summed up for Bender nagel and Clarence W. Lexow for Ger bracht. Johu B. Stanchfleld summed up for Heike this morning. "We do not claim," suld Mr. Denlson, "that these defendants knew of the frauds ou the specific cargoes men tioned in tho Indictment. It is not nec essary' to prove that, but It is incon ceivable that the defendants hero should not have known of the frauds In general, as the very atmosphere of fraud permeated the whole trust. Ben dornagel was located at the distribut ing point. Figures went from him to Wall street. We do not claim lie was tlie originator or operator, but it Is as plain as day that he must have known the government was being defrauded. it is a pitiable situation for liim to lie lu. lie Is a man of honorable dis position, and he must have suffered cruelly during all those years to find himself the center of a system so dis honest. Tliis Is a consideration, how ever, only for the court when it comes time to impose sentence." Mr. Denisou denounced Gerbracht, the ?20,000 a year superintendent, so fiercely that his lawyers objected. He derided Gerbracht's defense of being merely an instrument of "Old Man" Havenieyer and maintained that Ger bracht sanctioned the thefts and re warded Its perpetrators. Of Heike, Mr. Denisou argued that to assume Hnvemeyer's "Man Friday" did not know of the weights was be yond all human possibility. As chief of the bookkeeping department, a man whose hobby for twenty-nine years was In weight statistics, Mr. Denisou assorted that Heike was the one man in tlie sugar trust offices at 117 Wall street who knew of the discrepancies. "It wns Heike," he declared, "who conceived and conducted the remarka ble bookkeeping system which has made It so difficult to place blame on him." Mr. Cochrane for Bendernagel said there was no evidence to show that hla client had had any physical participa tion In the frauds or was even ac quainted with those who had. Mr. Lexow for Gerbracht said that frauds on the docks are conceded, but not to tho extent alleged by tho gov ernment. He followed this up by nn attack on the tabulations of Harry Waters, tho customs liquidator. "Tho whole dock," he said, "wus tainted with tho pestilential taint of Oliver Spltzel." When tho sugar trust paid more than ?2,000,000 to the gov ernment it paid out money not only for tho short weights, but also paid tho penalty for having such a man as Spitzer lu Its employ. TORNADO HITS PRISON. Three Buildings at Missouri Peniten tiary Wrecked. Jefferson City, Mo., June 0. A. tor nado struck Jefferson City and partly wrecked three buildings at the state penitentiary, but killed no one. It swept lu from tho river, unroofed E hall, one of the cell buildings, In which ttsto were 800 convicts and eight guards. Farther on It twisted the roofs and fire walls from two other large building I DROPPED II FEET Ten Spilled From Mine Ore Gar; Five Killed. HASTE CAUSE OF DISASTER. Workmen Crowded Into Narrow 8pae Are Upset Near Surfaco Four Save Themselves by Clutching Shaft Timbers as They Fall. Dover, N. J., June 0. Five men wero killed, one inortnlly hurt nnd four oth ers had narrow escapes from death in the seven hundred foot fall of a shaft lift lu tlie Richard mine. Tho accident was due to tho eager ness of the ten men involved to leave the mine. They Jammed themsolvea In and on top of nn ore lifting car only large enough to hold four Inside. In piling on tlie car they disobeyed tho rules of the mine. The ore lifter ascended the shaft slowly and with many hitches. Final ly, 700 feet from the bottom of tho mine, the car suddenly turned turtle and spilled its human burden down Into the black well. Those who were clinging to the ropes and practically standing on the heads of those inside the car jumped as tho lift tilted over and grasped at the tim bers that walled the sides of the shaft. Some of the four men who were saved fell sixty feet before they could se cure a firm hold on the timbers. Tho five men who wero killed had been pitched headlong down tho shaft and had no opportunity to grasp at any thing but air. Five of the six that reached the bot tom of the shaft were mangled past recognition. The sixth man fell upon the others, nnd though his legs wero broken lie was alive when found. He had snatched nt the timber of tha shaft, ripping out tho tlesli of his hands nnd arms, but somewhat break lug the Impetus of his fall. Coroner Edward F. Totten, after in vestigating the uccldcnt, exonerated" the company from blame. The coronet declared the men were entirely at fault, ns they had wilfully violated tha company's rules. One of the dead men, George Dor man, leaves a widowed mother. TALIAFERRO BEATEN. Broward Will Be the New Senator From Florida. Washington, June 9. Telegrams re ceived In Washington by members oi (lie Florida delegation say there is no doubt of the defeat of Senator Talia ferro by former Governor Broward In the senatorial primary. The new senator started life as a deckhand on a steamboat plying tha St. John's river. His mission in life lias been the reclamation of tlie Ever glades of Florida. Tills was the issue that carried him Into the governor's otllce, nnd it lias been his hobby evet since. His success in converting th Everglades Into productive farms belli ed liim in his senatorial primary by :i decisive majority. The newly elected senator has been at tlie head of a real ty company since lie left the govern or's otllce. He is not a lawyer. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL.- Closing Stock Quotations. Money on call today ws; 3 per centt time money nnd mercantile paper un changed In rates. Closing stock quota- tlons on tho New York exchange June were : i Amnl. Copper... KH Norf. & West.. .100 Atchison NM'u Northwestorn ..Hi H. & 0 112H Penn. It. H. lM'i Brooklyn It. T... 7Ssi Reading 152T1 Ches. & bhto.... 82 Rock Island tl C. CC.&St.L.. 80 St. Paul 13 D. & II l&t Southern Pac.m Erie .Si's Southern Ry....SS4 Gen. KlectrIc....H5 South. Ry. pf... 68U III. Central 132 Sugar 117 Int. -Met 15 Texas Pacific. ISM Louis. & Nash.., H2H Union Pacific... 171 i Manhnttan 130 U. S. Steel 7Si Missouri Pac... C7i U. S. Steel pf...H6 i N. Y. Central... 115V4 West. Union C4 Market Reports. BUTTER Unsettled; receipts, 11.41 packages; creamery, specials, per lb.. Sc; extras, 2SUc; thirds to firsts, Ka Sc.; state dairy, finest, 28c; common to prime. 23V4a27c.; process, specials. 26c.: Beconda to extras, 23a2SHc; factory, sec onds to firsts, 23a23Uc; imitation cream ery, 2ta2Sc CHEESE Quiet; reeelpts, 8,097 boxes state, full cream, new, specials, HHatfc; fancy, white, 14c. j colored, 14c; average, prlmo, 13Vial3io.i fair to good. l!Kal3ttc; common. 10allc: skims, specials. Uc.; fine, lOWnKttic; fair to good, 7tfa8a; common, 4?iaCc; full skims, 2HaSHc EQaS-Steadler; receipt, 27.CM cases: state, Pennsylvania and nearby, hennry, white, 24a2Sc.; gathered, white, 23a2Sc; hennery, brown, 22Ha23c; gathered, brown. 21r!2c.; freBh gathered, storage packed se lections, 30V4a21Vic.; regular packed, extra flrstB. 20M21c.; tlrsts, 19Ha20c. POTATOES Firm; new, No. 1, per bbt., Jl.Mu'.aS; No. 2, llal.25; culls, TSc.aO; old. tn bulk, per ISO lbs., IUJal.40; per sack. (lal.S; sweets, old, per basket, COc.afl.