II. T0Z. XXIX EARTHQUAKE IS DISASTEROUS TO SOUTHERN ITALY DETAILC ONLY ADD TO HORROR OF AWFUL Tidal Wave t-iat Followed Tremors Swept Along the Straits of Messina Drowning People in Helplessness and Panic Flames Broke out Immediately After ward and Countless Maimed and Wounded Victims . Meet Awful Death by Fire . Rome, Dec29. -One hundred thousand dead; Messina, in Sic ily, and Reggio and a score of other towns in Southern Italy overwhelmed; the entire Cala brain region laid wa?te this is the earthquake's record so far a3 is at present known from the re ports that are coming slowly into Rome on account of the almost complete destruction of lines of communication to the stricken places. . The death list in Messina rang es from 12,000 to 50.000; that of Reggio, with which its adjacent , villages numbered 45,000 people, including almost the entire ppm k ? DISASTER is believed that navigation has become exceedingly 'dangerous, in which case the fortifications on which the government in recent years spent large sums will be useless. The famous whirlpool of Charybdis, it is said, has shift ed Its position. Desperate calls have been made from Rome to Messina, but these remain unanswered and fears are entertained that Fort Spuria, near Messina, has been destroy ed a3 the wireless station install ed there i3 one of the most pow erful in Italy and is evidently not working. The catastrophe has excited the superstitions of the entire populace who are running about the country calling upon Lj...at1''W It I It ill - 11 1l MOUNT AIRY, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1909 ter of yesterday's terrestial mael strom, was shaken to ruins, Flames burst forth to complete th city's destruction and to burn alive numbers of hopelessly pin ioned beneath fallen walls and broken timbers. The Strait of Messina was shaken and twisted by the earth's trembling, for mariners report the channel altered beyond, re cognition. The ports and vil lagos on both the continental and Sicilian sideo were wrecked or inundated, and all lighthouses along the coasts were swallowed up. Navigation now is danger ous and in some places impossi ble. In the Calabrian district, which was only beginning to recover from the effect of the earthquake of 1905, Reggio was the center of the earth's upheaval. The sea port of Reggio is reported as no longer existing and the city prop er is in ruins. The less of life on both sidc3 of the strait and in Eastern Sicily was enormous. One of the re fugees from Reggio. who was the first to bring the news of the city's destruction, tried to make his wav to Sicily in a sail boat, but was compelled to return and finally found safety at a peninsu la port. In describing his experience he said: "The, sea was strangely, pys teriously agitated and the neav cn3 were ablaze. Nearing Sicily the clearing smoke revealed the mystery; Messina was in flames. " AW 'I their warships quick as the flash of the telegraph could carry the orders to lend assistance to the stricken cities. Relief funds have already been started, and a hun dred ships and trains are on their way carrying supplies and rein forcement to the south. Rome, Milan, Florence, Naples and oth er cities are sending physicians, police and firemen. Today all the ambassadors and 'ministers expressed sympathy with M. Tit toni, minister of foreign affairs, whose emotion wa3 profound. The bourses and theaters have been closed throughout Italy, and dispatches of sympathy continue to pour in from all quarters of the plobe. At the time of the earthquake the torpedo boat Sappho was ly ing in the harbor at Messina and one of thefficers told of the oc currences as follows: "At half past five in the morn ing, the sea suddenly became terribly agitated, seeming literal ly to pick up our boat and shake it. Other crafts near-by were similarly treated and the ships looked like bits of cork bobbing about in a tempest. Almost im mediately a tidal wave of huge proportions swept across the strait, mounting the coasts and carrying everything before it. Scores of ships were damaged and the Hungarian mail boat An drassy parted her anchors and went crashing into other vessels. Messina Bay was wiped out and the sea was soon covered with r.iasses of wreckage, which was pour into the town. It seemed that this must mean the end of everything. The oncoming wat ers rolled in a huge wave, ac companied by a terrifying roar. "The sky was aglow with the reflection of burning palaces and other buildings, and as if this was not enough, there suddenly shot up into the sky a huge burst of flame, followed by a crash , that seemed to shake the whole town. This probably was the gas works blowing up. "Eventually we reached the principal square of Messina. Here we found two or three thousand utterly terrified people assembled. None of us knew what to do. We waited in an agory of fear. Men and women prayed, groaned . and shrieked. I saw one of the big buildings fronting on the square collapse. It seems to me, that scores of persons were buried beneath the ruins. Then I lost consciosness and I remember no more." Refugees are pouring intoCat ania by trains, steamers and au tomobiles. They are half naked and stupefied with terror and suffering. Some of them appear almost insane from the horrors through which they have gone. In the beginning they could only babble "Messina has been anni hilated. rLittle by little some idea of the tedescribable horrors at Messina was obtained from these unfortunates. They de clare that thousands of demented survivors are still wandering a- j bout fiw tV t . NO. 2o ployes have been accounted for. same story Told By All. "Many of those who suceeded in escaping with their Imps are incapable of relating their ex&jflj iences coherently. I questions. ' " all who were in a condition to talk. Most of them told the same story. They said the first thing they knew they were thrown out of bed, and amid crashing ceil ings and falling furniture man aged to make their way to the street. Then in the blackness of night and amid a pouring rain . that added to their horror and distress, they rushed ' blindly a way amid the crash of rumbling buildings and the shri' , and groans of those buri i the ruins. Many whilo trj J , io es cape were struck down by fall ing balconies and masonary, and still many others lost their reas on and are wandering aimlessly in the open fields outside the city or up and down the ruined streets they knew so well. "The looters and the robbers were shot dead by the soldiers." Messina and Catania, in Sicily, are the two largest cities that have suffered in tins earthquake. Messina has a population of a- bout 100.000, while Catania has about 140,000 people. Messina is on the west side of the Strait of Messina, near the narrowest part. Catania is south of Mes- srv4 . on the east coast of the is. lanQi Reggio is the capital of the province of Reekie dLDhhrK