Taft to Evade | Mexican Mix-up. | Juntas Have Been Organized In Sev eral States—Madero Administration Charged With Financial Irreguiari-| ties. Washington, Feb 27.—Recognition | of the Huerta government in Mexico probably will be left to President elect Wilson, it was learned at the state department. i Officials of the Taft administration are of the opinion that inasmuch as Mr. Wilson will enter upon the presi-! dency with a delicate and critical | Mexican situation upon his hands, the | question of recognition should be left undecided between now and March 4. | Though Ambassador Wilson is in| favor of immediate recognition of the Huerta government, his views are not fully shared by the present adminis | tration of the state department. It is believed by the present administration | that broader questions than those in- volved in the present situation in Mex-| jco City make it advisable for the United States government to withhold recognition for the present. i Absolute quiet in Mexico City and more or less disturbance in the north | of Mexico—that is the situation im the southern republic, according to re-| ports reecived at the state department | from the American embassy and Unit. ed States consuls. There is practically’ no change in the situation in Mexico | or in the relations of the United] States with the new government. ! It is reported that Governor Car-| ranza, of Coahuila, has taken the field | with troops to oppose the Huerta gov- ernment in Mexico City. Federal troops are approaching the governor's forces from the direction of Monterey. Rebels are likewise reported active in Sonora and San Luis Potosi. At No- gales and Hermosillo considerable bad | feeling as a result of the killing of Madero and Suarez is reported. At Juarez events are moving more favorably for the Huerta government. Four hundred soldiers known as Ma dero volunteers laid down their arms to officers of the garrison. They were offered their choice of enlisting in the federal forces of the new government or of returning to their homes. Most of them are said to have declined to join the regular army. It is reported at Juarez that Inez Salazar, one of Orozco's co-leaders, will join the garrison at Juarez in a few days. The majority of the city civil officers have abandoned their posis and fled across the river to El Paso, Texas, leaving the military in control of the city. The city is quiet’ and trains and telegraph service with Chihuahua has been resumed. MANY REBELS IN FIELD Mexican Government Admits Upris- ings In Several Provinces. Mexico City, Mex., Feb. 27.—No offi- clal confirmation was received of the reported death of Emilio Maderc, a brother of the late ex-president, who was said to have been shot dead near Monterey, The representatives of the foreign powers generally have formally ac- cepted the official version of the death of Francisco I. Madero and Jose Pino Suarez. Zapatistas took advantage of the withdrawal of federal troops two! weeks ago to occupy several towns in! the state of Morelos. The most im-! portant of these is Yautepec, forty miles southeast of the federal capital, Many depredations have been commit- | ted and additional troops were dis- | patched against them. Eufemio, a' brother of Emiliano Zapata, has pro- | slaimed himself governor of Morelos. The state of Aguas Zalientes admit. | tedly is in revoit, the rebels being led ! Yy the governor. Padilla is reported at Cumpas lead- | ing 500 revolting troops, who planned to start for Frontera, where the new rebel forces will mobilize. Rebel juntas have been organized in| many parts of Northern Sonora and! are said to be working with Governor | Maytorena, who has refused to accept the Huerta government. i The departure from Mexico of Er nesto Madero, former minister of | finance, was followed immediately by | a hurried counting of the cash in the’ government treasury, The result show. | ed a baiance of $92,000. There are also various deposits in both local and for- eign banks. The new government has discovered that Madero’s administration was guilty of gigantic financial irregulari- ties. President Huerta's investigators announce that vast sums were receiv- ed by the former government for con- cessions, although the money did not benefit the public treasury. New discoveries are being made | constantly which indicate that Fran- | eisco Madero and his friends cast out in every direction to obtain funds for maintaining their regime. Among other matters unearthed by Huerta's financial experts are docu- ments indicating that the Madero gov- ernment paid enormous sums as bo- nuses to railroads which have never been built. Many of these projected roads probably never will be come structed. Second G. W. Ties Up Town. “I can't tell you a lie, papa. I did it, and with this little Boy Scout hatch- et.” This was the explanation given by Timothy Butler, eleven years of age, of Plantville, near New Britain, Conn., when he was asked by his father to explain the felling of a tree that put every electric light, telephone and trolley car in town out of commis- sion. The lad was emulating George Washington, and when he felled a ma- ple tree service wires were carried to the ground with it, | } | The riezc of Expedition Alive. With! covered in the breach.by Six of His Companions, Are Re turning. Somewhere within the frozen Ant arctic, not {ar from the magnetic pole, two more lives have been sacrificed to the cause of South Polar exploration. A brief wireless message from the little relief ship Aurora, of the Maw: son expedition, from the neighborhood of Adelie Land, received in Sydney, announces the deaths of two promi: nent members of Professor Mawson's party, Lieutenant R. E. S. Ninnis, of the British army, and Dr. Herz, the Swiss ski champion. How the two men met death the dispatch does not say. The Aurora, which is a sailing ship, had gone to bring out Dr. Mawson and several of his men who had left the mein party temporarily. Some unfor- tunate circumstances, believed to have been the sudden closing in of the ice, prevented the explorers from regain ing the ship, the message states, and Dr. Mawson and the six men with him will winter on Adelie Land. They are well, according to the report, and have accomplished some important explora tions along the shores of Wilkes Land by means of sledging expeditions. The Aur: =a, with Dr. Mawson on board, was known to have been on its way to pick up Dr. Wilde, a former member of both the Scott and Shack- leton axpeditions, who with several; companions had been left at the fcot of Termination Glacier in 1912. It is believed in Sydney that Dr. Mawson, with a half dozen men, landed and ventured on a side excursion, from which they did not return in time to regain the vessel. The wireless message received in | Sydney was addressed to Dr. T. W. BE. David, professor of geology in the University of Sydney, and himself the Antarctic explorer who led the party which reached the South Magnetic Pole in January, 1909. This is the dis- patch from Adelie, which was relayed at McQuarie Island: “Dr. Douglas Mawson and several of his men missed the Aurora, which had gene to fetch them, under the command of Captain J. K. Davis. This happened owing to unfortunate cir cumstances. Lieutenant B. E. S. Nin nis, of the city of London regiment ol Royal Fusileers, and Dr. Herz, whc was ski champion of Switzerland in 1908, members of the expedition, are both dead. The others are well. “Dr. Douglas Mawson and six othe: members of his party probably wil winter in Adelie Land. Some very suc cessful sledging expeditions ware made during the sojourn of Dr. Maw son and his companions in the Ani ; aretic.” Wrong Baby Buried In Mix-Up. The confusion of two tiny paste board charts at the Philadelphia Hos . pital for Contagious Diseases, at Sec ond and Luzerne streets, Philadelphia, has developed astounding results in | the burial of one child under the name of another, who, to her parents’ over- | whelming joy, has been restored to them as one raised from the dead. The living child is three-year-old Mollie Engelman, daughter of David and Mary Engelman, 629 West Mont gomery avenue, where all day long friends have collected in dazed sur prise to express congratulations which | are all too weak to meet the remark. able situation. In another home, that of Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Kaufman, 2044 Westmont street, there is naught but desolating | sorrow, for there has pierced to their hearts the terrible conviction that their daughter, Beatrice, whom they thought soon to have back in their household, lies under the earth in Mt Carmel cemetery. The remarkable revelation which carried such overpowering joy to one home, such harrowing grief to anoth- er, came when the Kaufmans refused to accept the child offered them as their daughter. Immediately there be- an investigation which showed that the little girl really was Mollie Engelman. Offered $20,000 to Release Thaw. Testifying before Governor Sulzer's committee of inquiry in Albany, N. Y,, Dr. John W. Russell, the superintend- ent of the Matteawan hospital, said he was offered $20,000 by a lawyer a few weeks ago if he would agree tc release Harry K. Thaw. Dr. Russell said he refused. He could not recall the lawyer's name, but said the offer was made in a New York hotel. Dr. Russell also testified that Wil- liam F. Clark, secretary of the Sulzer inquiry committee, has told him that “Governor Sulzer would be pleased to have Thaw released.” Dr. James V. May, a member of the state hospital commission, testified that he had been approached in the same way. Governor Sulzer declared that the use of his name was unauthorized. “If Mr. Clark or any other man made the statement that Thaw's release would be pleasing to me, it is absolutely un- true,” said Governor Sulzer. On Feb. 15, Dr. Russell said, Dr. May called him on the telephone from Albany, saying he had seen the gov- ~enoT, and that Mr. Sulzer woukd issue po order and “the case would have to take its regular course.” “I told Dr. May,” continued the witness, “that it the governor wanted this thing done he would have to give a written or der.” Brutal Wife Murder. At “Turkey Run,” on the outskirts of Shenandoah, Pa., Mrs. John Semone owicz, thirty years old and mother of three children, was beaten and then choked to death, it is alleged, by her | an overbearing, brutal husband, but searching contains twenty-three of those deliyhtfully inter- | esting legends that Mr. Shoemaker has the facul- al Wilting io che Waory of i and tion, placed ihe dead woman's hug. SPTEES and caves ot mountains section band, John Semonowicz, under arrest, vb the tute, 10 hide 20 Well us bi Bevigus vol- and he is in the lockup, charged with | So tt our great osuliy 0. ae Wicd the murder. | posed to have heard from the Indians, or the first The only witnesses of the crime settlers who lived among them. He has woven were the three sons of Semonowics, | these, along with traditions that still cling to aged respectively seven, four and {WO many localities hereabouts, into pleasing roman. | ces of the early settlers, and the red man who Neighbors say that Semonowicz was | possessed this country long before any of us were | born. In the author's “argument” he states his purpose to give “one legend for each mountain in that Sie ite was thrifty and made an the Bald Eagle chain.” This latest excel pmate. | closely to that purpose, making it particuiarly en- Guisily Arrest Alleged: Rokivers; | ieuiting to veaders in Wiis sestion wiv kaow While Mr. and Mrs. Levi Smith, ns often won- | dered why the legends and romances that have residents of Whipps Cove, Pz., four given many of these names, and about which teen miles north of Hagerstown, Md., | there still exists traditions that border on the were away attending services at the mysterious and supernatural, have never been Church of God, burglars entered their | written into books. It is a work that will well en- home and stole $1477 from an old can. | tertain any one who knows the localities to which vass bag hidden for years in a bureau | 't refers, and most of us know them all. in their bedroom. | TE LARGEST MAGAZINE IN THE WORLD. —To- They had thought their money safer | ’ . tuere than in a bank. The bureau 29's Mugutine ja the juts snd best edited dra~ rr was pried open with a grub-| cons pericopy at all newsdealers. Every lady bin; hoe, which the thieves left be, who appreciates a good magazine should send for hind, with the canvas sack. | afree sample copy and premium catalog. Ad- Constable Frank Heller lodged in dress, TODAY'S MAGAZINE, Canton. Ohio. the Hagerstown jail James Seville and | 58.7-4t Chester Hoiles, of Morgan county, W.| conmn— crs Va. and Alfred Decker, of Fulton : county, Pa., charged with the wb. NeW Advertisements, bery. — The police, after a hasty investiga | They were arrested in the barroom R SALE OR RENT.—The Orbison house, of the Monterey hotel, at Hancock, in| : gn Pring etre. A Ben MES ORE. the safe of which Decker had deposit-| ed $1100, including many $5 gold pieces and $20 bills, tied together and identified as part of the loot. Mother and Three Children Burned. The wife of Howard Fisher, a car penter, and three of her children were burned to death in their home in South Huntingdon, near Huntingdon, Pa. Mrs. Fisher had gone to a store, leaving the children, two girls and a boy, ranging in age from six months to five years, unattended. On her re- , in Exchange building. Fo ean: heated in house. Three offices, steam heated, Storage rooms. 68.9.4 F. W. CRIDER. Attention Farmers. Spraying Time almost here! Are you going to spray ? turn she saw the house in flames and! Sharir Sng You Good Returns. We have tried to enter the front door, but was Material. driven back by the fire and smoke. — have in mind a M Then, frantically, she ran to a rear Possibly ou, ve Jin a Manure window and, although seized by two men, succeeded in throwing herself into the flaming interior in the first floor. In this manner she me: her death with her little ones whom she was unable to save. The husband was absent from home and an eight-year-old daughter, who is deaf and dumb, was the only one saved from the flames. NEW IDEA SPREADER. You can try one and know it is the best before you settle for it. WIARD PLOWS, We sell all kinds of them. Both Walking and Reversible Sulkey Plows. £30,000 Fire at Beaverdale, Pa. Fire in the business section of Beaverdale, twelve miles from Johns. town, Pa., destroyed seven buildings and stores and the Kensinger hotel The loss is $30,000, METAL TROUGHS for Cattle and Chickens. Poultry Gri , Meal, Hop ind Seeds. BROOKVILLE WAGONS, GASOLINE EN- SE GINES, FERTILIZERS AND SAND PLASTER. BOOKS, MAGAZINES, Etc. In fact everything the agriculturist needs, We HAVE Barcains For You 1 You ARE LookiNG FOr THEM. JOHN G. DUBBS, | BELLEFONTE, PA. PENNSYLVANIA MOUNTAIN STORIES. —Another of those entertaining volumes, under the title of “Pennsylvania Mountain Stories” has, through the courtesy and kindness of the author, Mr. Henry W. Shoemaker, just reached the WATCH. MAN office. This volume, like the several that have preceded it is printed from new type, on "ge antique paper, substantially bound and —Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. New Advertisements. Fe — OSEPH x RHO. BORLA N. RHO. 1913.—And now, Feb appearing to the Court that there be trial for Sither the first As.this order is made for economical hese as to the sanitary of this 3 lly reassuring character. There seems to be no reason why the citizens | should not freely come to the of business or of the count county seat for the transaction other purposes. Now therefore the prothonotary is directed to tf | potify all jurors commanded summoned NOT and also to notify the time, and also to noti cree. By the rt, ELLIS , J A . L. ORVIS, P. J D. R. FOREMAN, Prothonotary, 5882t Bellefonte, Pa. ECREE OF CO CONTI G PCE SRR STUNG, THE ruary, 15th, 1913, it reasons reasons to be mis- find them greatly improving and of a gen- 0 APPEAR as constables to make no returns to this term of court at this all attorneys of this de- phones. GARBRICK BROS., Bellefente i NGINE—International, four-horse, water E cooled, used 10 davs, for sale cheap. Both 5854 DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. — administration Letters of on the estate of Inauguration REDUCED FARES WASHINGTON MARCH 1, 2 AND 3, 1913 Tickets sold from stations beyond 250 miles from Washington on above dates, good returning until March 8, inclusive. CONSULT TICKET AGENT Pennsylyania R.R TO ees The First National Bank. HAVE YOU A Bank Account? Let Us Open Every man and woman that handles money ought to have an account with a good bank. It means safety for your money and the cultivation of good, economical business habits. an Account With You. The First National Bank, Bellefonte, Pa. Aggregate Statement of the Tri-ennial Assessment of Centre Co., Pa., as made by the Assessors for 1913. sm : . Houses and || Seated Lands.| Unseated | Horses and Cows. Occupa- |For State Tax| Dogs. Lots. Lands Mules. | tions. | | sri) 5 [208 |Z 037 52% 38(§[30%4 (3 58 fee == || 58 3 3 g 2 2 zg I 8 3 il 3 zl 2c |hwgl § 8 n or | a os 2 2 i i “ g = 2 ° z DISTRICTS. 3% LH 3 5 3 Z 2 2 [*3] § |3 g 3 3 I 2” FE $ -~ - - 2 2 - . sal B2| EQ] 202] ilo [BR] 5 (83 32 lal 2 ioe? ig 2 E iz E s |g 2 El & 1g] § Es: Eire lz 1E]3 EE |Bl2v EEF |°1 3 :B%: (: es a = oe 2 . Zz ® «8 » . ~~ : : § B ? : : : : : is ro REPD 51: | : H ot gl: : Bellefonte Boro, N. W... 556 432] 836,436; 2 a 1319 3 3 1022407 250 % 2 Bellefonte Boro, 5, W;-- 1d 3 os| 24/l 12.100] 72|| 210.658) soof| 20 Bellefonte Boro, W. W.. Ji EE aa 160 s10| 31) 11900] 72|| 127.957 28] 3 Centre Hall Boro. ........ ag1f| 196] 138,970 ol si al need) iy dnesr) 118 Howard Boro........coees 270 199] 184,025 5 303. 24 Lee . Sie Lh ¢ Milesburg BOro........ tl zasl| 187] 78,655 sil a0) af eso Sh) fab ob 3 Millheim BOO. .......::+ "| 2esl| 203] 176,580 8) 300 29) 12480) 18) SRI Sah 2% 2 Philipsburg Boro, 1st W...| 33) Zi 0400 bl 81| 12|| 25.860] 75| 81,469 34 1 Philipsburg Boro, Ind W.| #23) 308 130000 14] 200] 15 19.760] 67|| 19.000 19 Philipsburg Boro, 3rd W..| 422) 206| 118425 1 gu 150 19760) 61): 10.309 mo Snow Shoe Boro.......... 230 132] 82,675 5 S75 1 11.530 3 $5111 State College Boro. ...... 592|| 452] 650,425 1) 210) 24) 40055) 98) 10.208 28 2 South Philipsburg Boro...| 217|| 153] 37, Si 180 30 ass az) 100 Unionville Boro..... enn 250 98] 66,760 wl iw 0G Lol 1H Benner TWPe«.+ssrsecseses 373 13,074 565,878) 941] 1,365 1041 9,720. 24 6. 336) 1, ol 8 BOBES TWP. +s +ssvsirsiee 508 165.427 249,170|| 15,107] 17,100 3 4.213) 18] 9,645] 40) 26,707 wil 1 Burnside TWP... + eres], 120 7.381) 34,537|| 38,178] 41,126 Jol. Goo 16 2,355 3 Sa 200 63 2 GOHEER TWDre r+ vs rescens 339 10,314 457.853] 3 1000 281; 10,023 27! 6,645 9 89 2 Curtin TWP...eeneneees nl 2a 5,284| 103,347(| 17,376] 23,8 121] 3.026] 25/1 6,720] 58 EL ¢ool| 96] 16 Ferguson TWP.......eseeed 560 26.560] 585.938| 4,712] 8,874 537] 13,400 25]| 13,550) B6l| 79.772} 2,700 137 11 Gregg TWD...... ay. BET 22922 575.137] 2,210 2,144 6161 15,530 25/| 16,635! 58] 116,500) 2.5001 165 10 HAINES TWD... roe rsrrrrsss 478 17.114] 488.607] 4,993 5,324 517] 14.444] 28] 14,410] 60|| 111,710] 2,650( 169 4 Half Moon TWD... .eseess 176 8.969 193.155|| 3.668 10,101 1761 3.54 21)| 8.655] 51|l 22,494] 250 51 HAEFIS TWPsevs sesvssss ors 300 10,010{ 308,050{ 3,385] 3, asl 805] 20i| 9.200] 57/| 69,692! 1200{ 63] 2 HOWBFE TWhuessossreersrs 157 9.007) 146,780] 3,455) 4,414 160i 2.795! 17) 3.965] 40 ,r10 s00!| 64] 12 HIRStON TWh «gor riss 223 10,958] 95.232( 4,042] 7,388 16s] 2.615) 15|| 5.450] 48 24,208). 64 1 Liberty TWp..... | 288 10,787] 193,952 5,502] 5,468 169 4170) 20/1 9,555] 45(| 12608 675 113 4 Marion TWD... 177 9.920, 252.258|| 2,498] 5,578 235 6.3900 26l| 3,190] 46fl 12931] | 57 9 Miles Twp... 460 22.207 446.418] 11,947 19,917 1701 11.865 27!| 12,615] 62] 101,753 109 2 289 10.709] 260,714 3,495| 8,136 212 5.25) 24l| 7.760] 43} 31,142) 9Goll o4| 22 243 12,085] 333,945| 1,121] 1,034 204| 7.565) 22i| 9.208| 56|| 57.866 750ll 85] 5 556 25.177] 636,880 2.797 2,782 7o4| 20.447] 28|| 10,805] 48|| 43.304] 2,700) 175 9 1,104] 550 7.711 471,485|| 69,879(244,202 50l| 380] 7.728] 20| 33.920] 43|| 22,218 228] 10 654 3.491] 183,989! 61,465) 74,212 a5e| 4.175] 16|| 24,210] 45(| 5.687 257] 81 o21l| 376 12192] 722,929! 1,902] 3,189 esll 117! 10416] 25|| 25.695] 54|| 128.267 228] 3 195! 13,559 83,275 1,692] 1,953 sll 118) 1.844] 16]| 1.870] 411] 1.408 68 240 7.750] 131.890| 12,097] 14,383 soll 1771 3.sso| 22! 2.760] 40|i 21,215] 2,100 88! 407 14.909] 440,314/| 11,931 13,73 esll 377] 11,110 9,175] 45 uel 2 256 9.195] 117.802] 3.620] 10,632 soll 138! 3.488] 26] 6,865] 57' 25999 1 1 13.858] 4,312]3,666,265([317,112]5,079,530]/288,387(531,421(3,880,213][6,822[467,967| 66([7,879/190,625] 23 188,645) 58]3,308,008|21,320/[3,440] 203 In accordance with the Act of Gen-| NOTICE OF TRIENNIAL ASSESS- Monday, April 14. Thursday, May 1, and Friday, May 2. eral Assembly, regulating the Trien- MENT APPEALS FOR 1913. Worth, Taylor, Patton and A General Appeal will be held in the nial Assessments and constituting a Noti 15 hotéby FIV that the Moon Townships at the Hotel at Port Commissioners ! Office, Perfo ns wish- Board of Revision, the County Com- |. otice ere 2 en Matilda. oe io Te heard at this peal io missioners of Centre County publish ers 0 entre County, uesday, April 15. ve Assessor presen - the above statements made by the ‘As. | Pennsylvania, will meet the taxpayers | Unionville Borough, Union Township | range with him as to his compensa~ sessor for the several districts of Cen- yf the various Hatriots of the squaly and Huston Township, at the Election | tion. _ ’ tre County for the year 1913 upon all | {08 the Duipong 2 saving appeals, at | House in Union Township. a UNSEATED LANDS. property le by e following times and places: Wednesday, April 16. ap will be held as follows, at And Monday, April 7. State College Borough, College, Har- pr od Difical February 28th, and Bellefonte Borough, at the Come [ris and Ferguson Townships, at the ’ 2 1st, Iont,: have been fixed upon which | missioners’ Office. hotel at State College. Harris, pn the valuations of the Assessors Tuesday, April 8. onibe Thureday, April A ana | Walker T . : been made Beaner snd Townships, at Townships, at the Hotel at Cen 3 May ing, however, the Comm Ps, at the Ho " {io Liborty. Cortih, ward, Boggs, Un- duties of Wednesday, April 9. Friday, April 18. jon, Patton, ait Moun and De same. and Town- | Millheim Borough, Haines, Penn and Friday, May 9. a ea Miles Townships at the Hotel at Mill- as provided 1909, P. L. The ral fixed at 7 mills, a gh ding