OCR Text |
Show ' 1 fnUCKEf?llESSllJA5 M PLACE GREATEST - THAT HAS TRAGEDY SINCE. BEGINNING. OF HISTORY BEFALLEN CHRISTIAN F GREAT NATURAL BEAUTY e WORLD ixedentedtJre - r 3 n vr-w- .1 : - ':: - -- 1 XALAdKIAI HAa CDttfi; otUUKutll No PiurTof the Said.to Have een Founded in the Eighth Century B. C ; Magnitude ibf GiLtmil inCal&bri HaslSetSi TenfljTViclinvbf the YidsjMeti Jegipir Completely asiroyed- i jls f lourumng i own m J ''' I Ti.Y--'v f'm'X: ". Middle Ace. V" - tine Altered.. i MMMMMMM CALAMITIES 1061 tnT con quered. by the Nbrfians.TThe rtowa beWWCH-XAYcame flourishing eat of trade ta fhp laiddjeajgsa d recei ved r tm porta n t privileges trim Charles" L "oT "Spain, c.- -' t which edde greatly to Its prosperity:' ;;b. 493 Captured by fugitive from During the struggle between the arisSame and Miletus. : c tocratic faction, or Merit, and the ' 472 Surrendered la Athenian. factionror Mavlszi, the senate; Z 396 Entirely destroyed by Carta-In, 1674, appealed for aid to the French, , giniana. whp occupied the city, but soon aban' by Hann(bal , doned It, after having defeated tie " A. D. . . combined fleeteSpaln.andJloland. - Left in the fianda of the Spaniards, by Richard fiotur the city was deprived of Us political !, 1282 Besieged by - Chan, duke liberties and. soon lost its commercial " ; , of Anjou. The plague of 1743 and Importance. ' 1672-T7aJ tftfr Sc8nTotayrca rtvolu--j : Von between Democrat and adconsiderable part of its population. In ttlnrA WAV ru"iMii,1ait hv lu ri. 1678 Abandoned by the, French. baldl and In 1861 il became Si part of ; Population reduced from 120,000 W united lialj. " A. tvn HI 41 .Catania Third City Jn SIciTy. H.W, t740Vitited by fearful .plague; CaUnls is the capital prov 40.000 oeoole died. luce of Catania, and the. third largest earth1783 Almoet wiped-oby city In Sicily, "being outranked - in auake population by Palermo and .Messina. It 1854 Cholera carried away 16,000 In front of has 145,000 Inhabitants. X 2 the inhabitants. cathedral Is a fountain with an an z 1908 Earthquake again felt; great T cient statue of an .elephant, made of J aamage. lava, bearing an Kgyptian granite obe 1; - dem-scrati- 1 . . 270-Selx- J -- 1189-Attac- y ' g ', i f. J J J J -- earthquk-i73Kled.-OfI- ri&&Q.-ih- .' r . f ut f The earthquake which has devastat of the stfait, must havefbeea more violed the Italian departuieuf of .CalabHa ent,-for scarcely one stone remain has wrought the greatest on another in that flourishing city of aJ, Sicilywhich ever ha befallen the only two iay ago .. tragedy tz . ehthitlan wofM." ' WJ3aAijlayiLQjjtopJthe homes and .works of men and busy Nothing previously known In "Eueo-pea- streets :" and earth.-- - : ; history can be compared with It rocks ' region has been deatrbyed. J"he city, had vanished as TOmpjete That cornerpf Italy oa which nature ly as Aladdin's palace under the ma seemed to smile, Messina and Reggio, giclan's 'spelL .Jare heai) of fains undet which lie . country of Many Language. d .mil burled thousands of corpses. Jjalabrla has one and inhabitants "TAIT tlffoTjntrralong-rh- e Stratts- of iionljnMy ?ajntaTle Messiita ha suffered.- Lowr down the sueak Slretfaa or Albanian dialect'- bt coast the sea rushed with terrific vio- an' antique Italian. Visit Stricken Subject. lence' Into Glarre, RipostflJtargotL1 and ;J A King Humbert-wothe admlr' Giovanni, sweeping away - houses, nUili Inval pnr1 hi, Ma gMtt t shitis.dtshing boats am All the fishing boat.at sea have the hospitals of Naples during tbt " cholera epidemic- ha. Victor Em y At Palma and Bagnara the dead fire manuel. throufih his emulation of hit Iu 1905 Vic counted by hundreds sad the Injured father' act of bravery. tSrthquoceT Mid ydcanic Eruption -- Contr&it t'li Between Ancient And Modern Time in ; of Disaster, j FKHi--whlev-efc- . T--- - J lisk, n 't - wgrdSi ' saTl i.'llan coast In -J . , AT MESSINA. crtl , - I . 4, " -- 3V ... Aim-rli- ! ft jn 1 :-- .,'f7 ; r- ' if 111 JpV Its giand baroque church contains' a. famous organ bjrBouato with five keyboards, 72 stops, and 2,916 - e, l distressing b ; n 1 refugees sv& . - " y Into Palml are : attraction" la Mount Etna which may be seen to good advantage from the tower of Sap Nicola and front " ' .. the!Villa Iiellini. The monastery if San Nioola, formerly one of the most beau tiful in Europe, was" destreyvd by an earthquake In 1693 and rebuilt by 1735 In The institution, was "suppressed . ! and-4veg- Th-w- -- .... - 1866 'j tin-ne- l,..! - The chief Ihe victim of '"TTnfortuiiatftrJtlessina, :he recent frlghtjnl catastrophe, is .'.hus described by a Travelers Messina, Sicily.! population 150,000, '8, next" to "Palermo, the .jnost Important city In Sicily. It Is situated In :heu northwest corner of the island on ' '.he Strait Among, tbe leading buildings are the MuninlpaL-palacthe convent of San regorio, which contains a museum of valuable -- relics, buildings .of the uni- - .. e i- . f - f v. . one-thir- - CATHEDRAL ; Moute Tone.-Th- e 'experiences-a band of refugee from Messina on who made their - I - - -- 1 , . - " ' boats. "Xfief: IriKhtful experience. In crot.sl n g tne and Indicates wlthaorne approach it Btait ibey landed, on the CalabrUa" scientific accuracy how the maftHes met by hag- Here they-wertations of seismic " activity are Sr4 refugees from Reggio and tba tributed over the eanh's surface. The various groups of unfortunates Joined table goes bark as far as authentic fcrces. patnfui y .Together- - they j. records are obtainable, but the prepon t'imbed the hills, cAt a certain point darauce ol Uaijexprds refers to shocks Caf,jMpop4latIatt.Jf0l to give a last l".lc they nil t ruins.-:- ' which have occurred witfiin on af l!IeiBsiUesTheystc)od Cosenza, population 21,000; nearly 50 years, of fiere is the summary the mountain side, iij"3. (lunged all dead. MaJ. de ilaloif's BtHll.stlcs: A priest who bad efcap;d spalr. "mall de-- J Seminara, village, Area. ICariliuutikH. ,y from Reggio advanced toward the atreyediti4H diHv4 ,1 I, ynnm T,fllrf pgmfynB all,' art! rroii)!, . Scllla, population 7,800; In ruin. 6 British ltli W , Fiovntt : 7,1 I,less4 them. Then, turning in tn In Paterno, population 24,000; t,69k ilirechon Spain and PurtiieTTT , of Reggio, b solemnly uln. . BwlHirliimi , "vft down the blessing ot Ood- - tipoi Vittona, population 32.000; badly . .. Ital tt,. the deso1atedClty, ilolliind inn) North Ofrnmny wrecked. ! ." s ; SUHj 'Peoe to the dying" he Naro, population 12,800; half de . . . til IHPIV I ' Peace to the dead." : i , stroyed. . . lluiisla a Meu, women and children Icnelt on 5 Rlpoto, . . Asia Minor , i 411 population !JK)0iJnrull!s:. . ... . . the and a " their hand! Yam k ground a raising lmlla mi i i raw ana wanroreai, mi, muieo, n.m . .. "ST VH 10 heaven pravnd for. the. deliverance Sicilian town; all badly dam- - j Julian .. . 1" Of the multitude: . Afilut aged, with heavy loss of life. . . . 1 im Alluull. MiiiiIm I then took up lis broken .. . 4.7 end tiresome march to.Calmi, where I'nltHi St itf I'u.ille t'oHSl Palmi; Bagners, San Giovanni and . . AtlnniU dmat Calabrlan Cannttello, the refugees arrived ten hours later villages; . . . SM Mtxlm all in ruin, : . . lTSt in a torrent of rain. " Two thousand' tVntrl Aiiii'ii.a I,a4 set out In thB beginning, but onlyf . t'St lixti, trtit , Bmitli tH WO ragged and emaciated wanderers: . 2.1 u .. destination. The othreached The portion of Italy affected by the Jna S3 AimfrHlln anil Taxiuunm ers had succumbed on the awful recent earthqualte Is in the most Nfw SHlnnil , Jlw jt'iirney and fallen powerloss by the, TBRtmr of -- the-- glob& : Sicily,-f-or It will be noTIcea-Th- at WttVSl!, Themain area of disturbance r whh In whiib More sppAllIng than the destruc-- j the records go bark 3,000 iears. on the Island has boen bliaken verv little Calabria, thouKh cities compared lion of the towns and villages them-.- " shaken and a tidal wave with of Sicily-wefctlves, i the terror of the survivors. its neighbor Italy. : -- - C . a.-- i: Mewlna, 100,000; population wrecked by hoek njt wept bv. r tidal wave, de50,000; Reggio, population troyed. ,s in 140.0C0--; CaUnte, population , .. ruin.. : . : , life-m- -l t Mountains te Place of S.'r',' Only 500 Surviving Fearful ., . .. Experience. The calamlty'in .Calabria gives fresh Interest to the elaborate catalogue ol earthquakes to which Mj. de Mon teSgus de Balore has devoted years ot labor, ana which he completed:, few j nieirtE tiQfcwjir.iha 130,000 distinct hocksTof which trust heaviest were as follow: fheresothlna1! n IT tjsTevlarlSaf f CTrfor Severelyirtmtf-- r v;iroiJlSl,dBefUaee--6tr- ITALIAN CITIES WHERE LOSS Off. LIFE WAS HEAyilST, -- ff TPI t -, the Jiaracens, and in ID VICTIMS Of nm i -- !-PIbbo, re Bg midated !'' ' JliJ!!!!!!L " TS v M j,VVW ' -- : v fl. leland--s Ihe refu-fce- es ragged ' were the victims. It would be useless to revert to the fetoir of the div mmctlon bf the towns; they are exceeded by the horror of the present. CHURCH OF ST. CREGERIO, MESSINA. 4 wounded, bleeding, Seismic Copvulsfont. Notwithstanding the fact that since are human skeletons who stas-c- er the beginning of history the ground I 'The mobt shaken Countries ot lha ihere and there, dragging "Iholr1 Caltibrla lias bea knowaao-bave tlie world ure (Italy, Japan, Greece, South bruised feet with effort and staring directions. habit of opening as If to swallow up America (the Pacltic coast, Ja,vg. rteantly-In-a- ll , s Those tell contnidiC'j its inhabitants, the region has .always Sicily and Asia Minor. The land most been well populated- ;- Nearly a million free from..cltinilcconvulgions are Af- - lory stories; they remember only the RUIN IN A CA LABRIAN CITY. .... that 74 who is charged with Or-- CaaAellino, the 4Ietinn of relief from R"pe;!o, t'eclacea that the question of survivors Is more harrassing than - the question of the dead. The government army and lnarlne, mighty as are their efforts, -- remain impotent before the immensity oF this misery. Money The .1ndispensnbi. id without, value". tePd Is food, clothing and tents for" h Biter. These must come TTach day's delay increases i - cf the dead. 7 , qiilcMy., the list T1 MAY GET HIS DESERTS, it il Wit 1 " Hessltia waw a 51tj-t ISMXd luhabi. hlet is one of the show- places, of the itants, and Is said to have been founded citv,iao( Gothic ir chltecturer-wlth-- e KXH B. C. somewhat heavy evterlor, but supported under the name of Zancle in It Is an important seaport of Sicily and within by vaat..plllHrn-n- t granite supposed capital of the privlm.. Among the pub-- ' : ty have belonewl to a tntnple of Neptune, lie ediflcee are about 60 churches, many The Corso Is the most taalihinabte ef tha ot them of treat beauty. The cathedral, drlvewaya. "K Man Arrested In Texas forCeward! Murder Committed In Nebraska. Las Animas,--- Colo. John Harry Dale 8mlth;for whbm"ths police r.f the country have been searching fur -pnontht, was ar'fesred. In a saloon bere early Friday morning. Smliii wanted on the charge of bniiaiiv muiKlerlng Volly Mann, whose body .was found partially buried in a ravine In western Nebraska The nrsr'lnkllnglhe " authbrltTe j bad of the crime was when a woman 1 - tor Emmanuel, despite the protests of his ministry, hastened to Calabria personally to tronsole tbe survivors of the earthquake. As boob as ihe mag- - by "thousands. Throughout the province of Calabria the ravages were frightful. Destroyed Messina and Reggio are in ruins -- Ths towna nftude brflie prfffenTinBaTrter-becarne- mmmr -f 11?; - Udftroue Results "of er Prior Earthquake In Italy-WhAlmost Tot! Destruction and Many of lOrinhabitantB.upheaval. en Ferruisaoo Buttered 4011d 4y the - Were pipes; the museum contains antiqui ties in pottery,-bronze and marble, :: medieval armor and natural history and environs are affording magnificent views specimens; the library contains 20,000 " of the sea, as well as' of Mount Etna. volumes and 300 MS3.; and the ob Jn the west rises the former fort of servatory is associated with that on " i fastellacclo, ajid not far away to the Mount Etna, JEnimdaHnji Aplbed to Greek. pot. The new Campo Santo la beauti' The classic Catania was founded by ful, with Its graceful Greek colonnades Greek from Chalcis about B. C 729, iand wonderful iews. The XeleBrar soon became prosperous. Here, In ! the summit of a pass near Messina and the sixth century, B. C, died Stesicho-rus- , is much visited for Its scenery. Here who created the chorus of" the was supposed to be Charybdls of the I familiar legend, opposite Sellla, on the Greek- drama, and the situation of whose tomb is said to have given-namQalabrlan coast. to the Piaxza Stesioorea. Founded 600" ffrrnlo, rrons the strait nf waping Messina Is a town of great antiquity. from the city of Messina, is the capfoundation being ascribed to pi ital of "Calabria. The city suffered se ates from Cumae in the eighth cen verely In the earthquake' of three years iury B. C, wheq It was known as Zan ago, and appears to get the full force isle (a sickle), in allusion to the shape of every tremor that shakes the rer . ' ht Its harbor. w gion of Calabria, At the end of the fifth century B.--C by fugitives j the town was. occupied !rom Samos and Miletus, and it soon 1 AMERICAN EARTHQUAKES OI ifter passed to Anaxilas, the tyrant-o- f LAST FIFTY YEARS. X I Rheglum, who introduced there Mes1 A L r' k nusccmcer, ,AM by jenlans' frota '.the Peloponnesus, j . .joy low , , uuierriia, rhom tbe name - of - the city was o . building nd 14 churches de changed to Messana . .. ,troyeoV After the death of Anaxllas MeBsana NcvvO, 1870 Quebec; slight dam-- ' 'became a republic and maintained that b",. ttatus until ltg destruction by thA Car- March 0 ; ' -. , wars with ;hftglTiian ',. live, lost during their ;. ' - Olonyslus of Syracuse at the beglnAug. tremor, B. C. It ofthe.;fpurth century ling TTasniriyion 10 new totk. ' soon?ell rebuilt but by Dionysius, (fas Novfijiber,J893-M6nWeair"llnigain into the hands of the Carthagin-ans- , , aamage. who were finally expelled by Tim-- " j; March 7. 1893 New York city; yerslty, whlcn la attended by 600 and a municipal hospital. -- stu-deh- s . - - - - 1 I HE A . t - "- - - 26-2- ; J " I ht .. i Dleon In B. C. 343. 1 , ' ' , Once Belonged to Rome. i distinct tremor. ''Sept. Messana' Bided with the Carthaginians. The first Punic war left Messana in the poseiwion of Rome, and the town subsequently attained considerable cora- mercidl Importance. , 7 In A. io town was taken by j earthquake !ofSyracuaean(LCarthaReJ ' . and Yakutat, Alaska. aamage. I April 18, 1902 Guatemala; eight town destroyed; 900 lives lost Feb. 5, 1903 Slight shock,, Wett , r -been destroyed, as has the town of scene "of the calamity; Queen Helena refused to allow her GazarJ, In Calabria, Cantillo has been I wiped off the map. Nearly every husband, the king, to po alone to the town alone the coast .6f Sicily for scene ef the disaster. el.i said she miles south of Messina was' engulfed ..v by the sea "The- -" carthquakemanle-r-ailgh- t transformed the face of Sicily; rivers were dried up ottheirpursechanged; bills dlsappearedj vast crevices are yawning Ih the earth; tbe country is desolated. The destruction- of property cannot be as great a at San Francisco, for Messina and Reggio, the two principal cities destroyed, were not rich or mag' nlficent from tbe metropolitan point 6f view. Asa great cataclysm of na t l;ure, however,, this disaster is on a far vaster scale than the California '. plenomenon. - Face of Country Altered.--r- v The whole face Of, the country and the, coast line have been altereqVEven Scylla and' Charybdls havr changed the positions they have occupied since Aeneas' leeeBflafg ToyagB.' where the The three province greatest .damage was done were Mes, slna and Catania," In "Sicily, and Reg gio dl Calabria, on the mainland. They comprise about 4,400 square miles. The rock of Charybdls now blocks the entrance itra!tMeslflfc& Several hundred persons ' perished J and much aamage was done outside of Uibbb piuviucee,1 them the devastation was so -- comjilete- that scarcely a human habitation remains. All account-no- w agree - that tbe time " ocAjpied-byaatur- e's gigantic spasms was but 32 twmi.'''t.:.:.-i;r:Some minutes later a great wave in the completed - r- rT coast towns. i Shock "1 ' Fearful One. IhetMfinj5eolJUie- - ahock.seeinifl have been unprecedented 'excep by volcanic eruptions 'within a limited A. -- i - - ."- .. " V': i Withor-witho- ut 0Js; most "spoken culaneum in 79 A. of beeauaei)f (h relics of antiquity. whlchi.it sq strangely 'preserved, but within the last eight centuries Ihere T ;v. The buildings of Messina were not shaken down their fo:nda- merely, I 4Ufl5a JU ter aH jr. jyere yanked-jroneatn tnem to one side or j6 X&6 her, .until they toppietj from the "peT"- f otpendlculaf ,and fell In ruing along-ildI tlifiir brlKinal sites. '" ;V . Tli&t was the experience of Messina:-"Tha- t of Jteggio; onhe opposite side e " rupUon the. region ha felt these volcanoes disastrous earthquakes in almost every centuryLaince history, began to be written. The eruption which overwhelmed. Pompeii and Her- - the-hav- -- frgvrbeen iwaByar4hquahes . Elnf Victor Emmanuel Succoring-of Calabrlan Earthquake of tim ' thered about which caused great loss of life and property. : For Instance; Catania, which Is again visited, is said to have lost 15,000 people by earthquake In 1137 and to have Vic1905. ileTnfEe'trf' More- - Human- - Nature " - " " wen. who wonnrr "Each kid got one vote." rrJudge, ' ' The Welland Can'af. : "The WellansrcBnaf, which connects Uke Erie and Lake .Ontario.' I '.27 mfles lont?. It was begun in 1S24 and cotiM.lt ted In 1833.-ptoriginal tllmnn-Bfti,Irffv gmttly enlarged; and there I now a depth of 14 feet.'' s bn 9 f : nm air m'p Bun Down by Bloodhounds. :8eattle, Wash. Joseph.. Nicliohi.?. accused of killing the smi cf Joseph Santos, and alleged assailbrother of tho ant of thedead boy and of George. A. Brown, toth of whom he is said to have s!so?, the latter dying of his wound Thin was traced t Port Orchard by bloodhounds put oh "IS e""lf all " Tli rr s day, and captured on Friday. ITe i row in Jail at Seattle. .Cleo, "the - son of Santos,-who- , was s! pre-cario- President Receive 6,000 Vlsitol i the Whit House; President Roorrv "Washington and 6,000. persons, representing ever hJld and every state and territory the Union, ; on Friday cxcham-- i happy. New. Tear greetings at t: White House. For three and a !u hour: the president stood reci. croBB-countr- y X-rM- . an ? To-da- fiforSo Wiitt Needed, f:-,- ; MulcaL.Telegraph.Jiyj.rer - moirt mmlster-IamHle- s, tliey- TelTriicbedefen Teltyfraph ires:may from tbsh tnualeal .. standpoint: The wera not extensively blessed with Hits sound they make, is often curious end world's goods. She, however;- - wa the beautiful, as everybody knows who youngest of ten children until fcer fa'a "n? nf H" cr"l ther explained to her of the baby statost by. the highway when the wind ler who TiaJ cotnera "the ftlghT.tt'ell.' "t 'spose 'is twanging through half a lundred She said, after it's all rlhtv papa, but there's many wires overheadj Satnrday geview. a thing we needed worse." DVllne" Still Using Hand llaborT""""" In China there are match factories t Beware cf Him. l which only hand labor I emplo.vd. w.H thatter Who c'!iaiU'tsto-yo- u One of them, at Hsleh Chang," has 600 about Vou. t.erhmn provetb. workers, 400 of whom are women. from various ' sia'te-Too- . e'd. k papts at "The" 'jastTS 'tt' could equee76 in'o sembly chamber saw th sturi' tive sworn InMor .another two riany as "jFear lo Send Fleet V f The Washington. ' .. ' through .the nerk, is still In a condition. ; The bullet pas'i through the child's 'peck on the rid i side and caused, paralysis of the rur! t side of the body. rny:aaj)I due-thou- ' t T1:tBfneBtBr-- ffhm - tbe reco p.S science, who happened to be in com was ended last year's record1 of ii mand oflbe naval station near Naples. He got out a vessel and; went as near tendance had been broken by tn" than 709. President Roosevelt.' a!: flow-t- o af.he eoalbrto-thrla-ya observe K the Wtttta House, to'.k it so .near that he was sufocated" by, receiving horseback fWe. long the 'fumes. Incidentally be picked up home fugitives from the water and Hughes Begins Second Term. along the beach. Hls nephew records K ld Albany, booming "n ihal-as-evidence of his humanity.. crash-o- f nume-oi- is the vott, But he does not appear to have i.nnds.lnir guarded;y .2,000-.t;--- . thought of eJerreoiHWefefrictar Charles E. Hughes oaTaniiai-- 1 powers for relji-f- , of suffering.. He tered upon his second ,term as went to his death not to aid distress ornor. The military display wm? but to add to his owil knowledge.. roost Imposing, witnessed here y any public offlqlar who did the Inangurallon of Levi P. ? n r "j CnW-- - afterwards., am "Then." 17 mothers in the village mothers' club - agreed,tp decide by ballot which bad the handsomest told . PVt-- A Perhaps the mosf striking difference between the antique and the modern "worlds appears In their differences of social and governmental attitude to ward such disasters. We really know more, thank to the Younger Pliny's account of his uncle's death, about the destruction of PompeiJ and Hercula-neum and 1 what was done about It than we know of any similar disaster lor f.OOO, years r wouiar nbT gfve "up T'rriifiiirrf"! JniL.ofJ j.njjp;cd..t!'"nT'lf'':rt th4 utmost to.re-sfiaflng Ber"hUSbraddangerrThe4W40Q4lve Septenfber, 1693.- RyTlievedlstfessbula queen explained to. a membtssr of her this earthquake 64- - Sicilian cities and graceu.TharTB""rtic difference between enourage that she considered It her towns and 800 '.villages were reported a Chrstian civilization, with all 'loss 'of 100,009 its 'fault, and one which, with all. her. power to conlfort wracked, with a duyt to do and belp her airted .ubject, Uvea. .,, ;..,. it merit..: w.aa, aot Christian. Ju , Wife -- wk-all4. -- 'W;. V cWming tdTe Smith's . tb. ber husband had shot a strange man at their camn ln,an Ih lated portion of Nebraska, robbed him of his team and other possessions and hastily 'buried the body. Investigation disclosed the body at th?' place described by the woman, p immediate search for Smith wua t basin. t 4 in Denver than this part.ot the Mediterranean From the beginnings of record- edJiistory Stroniboll has seldom been quiet. Vesuvius has been frequently In eruption, and Etna Is' always growling and periodically. Is in violent action, toe area.;. I ' S c , '- 4 'ill America In August, 1906. anion Always In Turmoil. Probably no part of the earth of equal fertility, population and historic note has suffered more severely from ' earthquakes and volcanic eruptions W77 c . 'm " -- ,?r' dd and a half of cheerful, reckless people rlca, Australia, Russia,. Siberia, Scana rule, where lived there. The Appenine mountains dinavia and Canada. run through the region for a distance earthquakes are most-- frequent they of 160 miles, considerably reducing are most severe But ta this general the area amenable to tillage, but the statement' there are exceptions, Invalleys and plains are among the most dian shocks, though less numerous, be'fertile anywhere in the world, yielding ing often -- very disastrous. Lns of in abundance a variety of crops. The life In many cases depends, however, on the intensity of (he earth movement. neighboring fisheries are Important tn respent, of thfl prQljejityjiamajNumericalfr France har regls- io flirted .and the number of lives ei tered more" seismic Tremors' than Spain tlngulsbed, as well as in respect e the and Portugal, but France In historic extent of the disturbance,- - the earth times has experienced no earthquake the havoc quake far eclipses the great disasters disaster approaching oMts type -- such as that which de wroughtby tb one calapilty at Lisstroyed Lisbon In 1755 and that which bon. ....... .. k visited the Western 'coast of South Ancient and Modern Times. - . Money Getting. Criminals Not All front Slums, Pertinent Qgery. i' ThjereJia not npHgh money In the Law breakers In New'York city are Effie, the little daughter of a clergyman, branced into her father's study not. most- numerous In the slums, .for world to satisfy the greed of tbe there there are more to bff found west of money getter; and those, who pursue nun was preparing a lengthy sermon BroadwaydnsTf-Strvrm- t .. between. Herald al enjoyment will never fully attain for the following Sunday square and Forty-setheir ambitW.Iiut la the hand of extent than ond the Jn same, manustreet, She' looked curiously at the proper uses script for a moment nd, then turned of territory lnwhat are known as tbe those whq devote it to itafield for money affords a limitless to her father. poor Bectlonof the city,.; , Journal. r. City she "does b(!jian,- seriously, ''Papa," f.iod tell i'uiiwhut tntwrji??'- , - -- Be Natural stid Happy.. Not a Lover ef th Sea. be heppy I lo i ; deauu.'J '"Certainly. The easiest way-treplied the Samuel Johnson: Being 111 a ship Is o be yourself, without . cltrevman. 'to natural "Then why d yon scratch so much my airs of assumption or pieleusiens being In a Jail with the'ehawee of be' ' of It out?" asked KXo. 4 o tLaf which yau are not. ing drowpeiL. ' .. kit . appsrent the klng and quqen made have arrahgemenUjo go at once to the uf ..;.. 4 q'' hether to send the. .10., um1" Messina earthquake region Iarrass!na; one to the ' ; r.'!tiVr-!- tOiUf.d. v in in fetal" nv ecrHary--f ' 1 (it:, thp navy. vlearlv shownl!i (It'll e. it Will ; Kc-fretinn 'f' Oent- St Kit:, if " tn unwi f ! ' |