President Reads His Message. Mr. Wilson Pleads For Early Action on Currency and Says Anti-Trust Law Should Stand, Suppemented by More Explicit Legislation. President Wilson read his first an nual message to congress on Tues day at a joint session of both branch- es in the house chamber. The message, among the briefest of documents of its kind from any presi dent, and some 3000 words long, re quired less than thirty minutes for reading, though it treated upon a va riety of subjects. This was the third time the presi: dent had personally addressed con gress, the two previous occasions be ing the expression of his views on the tariff and the Mexican situation. This was the first opportunity he had of commupnicating his views and recom: mendations regarding the state of the union. The Mexican situation, President Wilson dismissed with brief comment, reiterating the sentiments he express ed in a special address to congress upon the same subject some time ago, and expressed the belief that the Huerta government slowly was crum- bling and that the United States prob ably would not be obliged to alter its policy of waiting. The following are the other salient | features in the message: Currency.—The president pleads for ' early final action on the currency bill, and makes special point of the need of a rural credit system, Anti-Trust Laws. —*“l think it will be easily agreed that we should let altered, as it is, with its debatable ground about it, but that we should’ as much as possible reduce the area of that debatable ground by further and more explicit legislation.” president promises a special message on this subject later. President Primaries.—“l urge the prompt enactment of legislation that will provide for primary elections throughout the country at which the voters of the several parties may choose their nominees for the presi dency without the intervention of nom: inating conventions.” Philippines.—"“We must hold stead ily in view their ultimate independ ence, and we must move toward the time of that independence as steadily as the way can be cleared and the foundations thoughtfully and perma nently laid.” Alaska.—"Alaska as a storehouse should be unlocked. One key to it is a system of railways. * * * These the government should itself build and administer, and the ports and termi nals it should itself control in the in terest of a!l who wish to use them for the service and development of the | country and its people.” Employers’ Liability.—“We owe {! in mere justice to the railway em: ployes of the country, to provide for them a fair and effective employers Mability act. * * comes first. * * * We ought tc address ourselves among other things to the prompt alleviation of the very unsafe, unjust and burdensome condi tions which now surround the employ men: of sailors.” Goes Coolly to His Doom. Displaying more bravery than any other murderer who was ever hang ed in Sunbury, Pa., and even after his mother and sister, Mrs. Katherine Ma loney, of Philadelphia, and his sister in-law, Mrs. Albert Nye, of Pittsburgh, had fainted in his cell, Fred Nye paid the- death penalty for the killing of Harry E. Miller, of Sunbury, by hang ing in the Northumberland county jai} The boy cheered his mother and rel atives after they were revived and told Sheriff Glass that he would not cause any trouble. He went to his death in a talkative mood. denied com: mitting the crime and blamed it on his companion, David Everitt. never flinched until the drop was made. Soon after he was pronounced dead. Nye was twenty years old. He was convicted of murdering Miller on Feb, 12, 1912, in Miller's poolroom in Sun | bury. The motive was robbery. Nye and Everitt got $8, some chewing gum and the contents of a slot machine. Nye was soon captured, and his companion was arrested at Hazleton. On a train from Hazleton to Mount | Carmel Everitt is said to have con fessed, clearing himself of the actual murder. A jury believed his tale and be was sentenced to twelve years for manslaughter. “Voodoo” Doctors Practice In Cuba. A sensation was caused in Havana, Cuba, by the discovery of an alleged extensive organization among the ne groes of Cuba for the practice of witchcraft or ‘“voodooism.” It is said that the negro wizards constitute a powerful trust. The revelation was made as a se quel to the recent murder of a white girl, six years old, in connection with a mysterious method of healing an: ill negro woman, to whom the child's Bloor was said to have been admins “rn . It is generally reported that the “yoodooists” have relations with poli- ticians who control their votes and protect them. Several crimes of a similar nature to the one which led to the discovery of the “voodoos” have been committed recently. The newspapers now call on congress to find a remedy. Man Kills Buck and Doe at One Shot. Because of the freak action of a bullet on the last day of the deer hunt- Ing season, R. C. Yocum, of Mapleton, pear Carlisle, Pa., voluntarily laid in- r— Se of $100 for shooting » doe ne naa | WILL FIGKT TO THE END sot aimed at. Yocum had stationed himself at one : of the deer crossings on the mountain Nea: bis home, wien 3 lame buck | Belief Prevails In Mexico City Pres passed. He fired and hit the animal, dent Wilson Will Keeg Hands Off The bullet mortally wounded the buck, | but passed through its Dedy op. for| AS LSt Muerta'ss'¥is Enemies. more than 100 yards and kiled the The enunciation of Washington's doe. | policy appears to alarm President Old hunters say that such an incl. | Huerta, especially since he long ago dent has not hitherto occurred in the ' abandoned hope of anything but oppo shooting annals of Pennsylvania. | sition from the United States. He said Theer have been seven convictions in Mexico City: for the shooting of does in the Cum-, “I have no intention of yielding. berland valley in the season just clos- | Should this fighting in Mexico con- ed. Many dead does, nowever, have tinue for years I shall continue to do been foumd in the woods, abandoned ; my part in it, if [ am still alive.” by careless hunters. | An outline of the message delivered —— | by President Wilson to congress at Shot as She ns Door. ! Washington was prominently display- Mrs. Dora Sho Opens the wife of © by all the Spanish newspapers. Ernest Balderston, of Newtown, Pa. | Only vague impressions of the actual shot as she stepped to the back door | contents of the message were con- of her home, lies in the Mercer hospl- | veyed by the brief extracts published. tal in a critical condition. | The general conclusion was that Pres- The woman left the breakfast table ident Wilson intends to keep his to do an errand. As she opened the ' hands off and to leave Provisional back door there was a loud, though | President Huerta to the mercy of his the Sherman anti-trust law stand, un | fied eyes as he took four tablets of The | { his job, and since then has been um- rible suffering from blood poifoning ! On Oct. 29 she stooped over to pick ! The needle’s eye contained a small * Social justice He ' distant, report, and she screamed. Her | husband and children rushed to her side. A bullet had entered her body. | The surgeon located the bullet by ! the aid of an X-ray. It les direct; | over the heart. The authorities are looking for the man who fired the shot. Invalid Tries to Stop Suicide. After struggling desperately with her stalwart son in an attempt to prevent him from taking poison, Mrs. | Elizabeth Kvet, an aged invalid. of Baltimore, Md, was flung from him and compelled to look on with horri. | poison. The woman's cries brought neigh- bors to the house, and a policeman sent the man to St. Joseph's hospital He is sinking rapidly. The son is Albert Kvet, twenty-four years old. Several weeks ago he lost able to get employment. Dye in Needle’s Eye Kills, Mrs. F. W. Keiferle is dead in Lew- istown, Pa., after three weeks of ter- from the prick of a needle. a needle from the floor and, los'ng | her balance, fell so that the eyelct end of the needle penetrated the palm of her right hand, causing a wound a quarter of an inch long, which imme- | diately became infected, portion of red silk, which is said to be responsible for the infection. $33,818,870 In Postal Savings. | Postmaster General Burleson re- ported to congress on Tuesday that! ; during the year ended on Jume 30 : postal savings deposits increased from + $20,237,084 to $33,818,870, and the number of depositors from 243,801 to 331,006. The average deposit increased to $102. From the establishment of the system to the same date postal savings deposits amounting to $3,506, 000 were converted into bonds. Body of Missing Lawyer Found. | The body of Attorney Henry J. Kotz, seventy years old, of Stroudsburg, | Pa., who was the oldest member of the Monroe county bar, was found in - Ackerman’s mill dam, about a quarter mile from Stroudsburg’'s main street, ; by Irwin Bachman, a car shop fore man. Kotz has been missing for more | than a month and a systematic search had been made for him since. Doctor Dies Seeing Patient. Dr. Robert Alvin Walker, fifty-eight years old, of Monterey, near Clarion, | Pa., died suddenly in the home of Ja. : cob Rosenhover, where he had gone to , attend Mrs. Rosenhover, { Drowns In Six inches of Water. { Edward Griffith, church sexton ot Groveville, near Trenton, N. J., was found dead in a swamp. In crossing a marsh he had become mired and , drowned in six inches of water. 11.Year-Old Victim Left Unconscious Bound and Gagged. For the second time within a week a small girl has been attacked nea: Easton, Pa. The latest victim is Sarah Gehret eleven years old, daughter of Wilsor Gehret, of isiand Park. The person who attacked her seize her while she was on her way tc | school, dragged her into a quarry hole , bound and gagged her, and after mal i ‘her, cut her hair from he Then he pulled a lunch from his pocket and ate it, teasing his victin by pretending to offer it to her. She was found unconscious two hours later, gagged and bound. A description of the man agrees with that of a supposed tramp abou! | twenty-three years old, who has beer soem about the place for the last few White House Bride and Groom Leave on Wedding Tour. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Bowes Sayre the White House bride and groom sailed from New York on Saturday for Europe on the George Washington. It is said that they will first visi London, going later to Paris and Ber lin. The length of their stay abroad has not been announced. They were accompanied to the pier by Presiden! Wilson and Miss Eleanor Wilson. Kill Cashier and Take $5000. An arm~d posse of deputy sheriff: and civilians searched the jungle: along the Colorado river, near Blythe Colo, for the two robbers who flec with $5000 in cash after killing A. W Bowles, cashier of the Palo Verde Val ley bank. = enemies, The news that General Mercado, commander of the Federal forces in northern Mexico, had sent a military peace commission from Chihuahua to Juarez to treat with the rebels, while vigorously denied in official circles, | is regarded as the most serious blow | yet struck at Federal prestige. In view of Provisional President Huerta's statements that he never would treat with the rebels, it is con: sidered impossible that the peace com- mission has been sanctioned by him. At the same time, however, it is point. ed out that the appointmem of the commission is in line with the recent suggestion made by Dr. Aureliano Ur rutia, when at the head of the minis try of the interior. that overtures might be made to the rebels without governmental sanction, Miner Killed by Cecal Fail. While he was workinz in the Gin'e: mine at Shamokin, Pa., Peter Wores was covered by a fall of coal. A res cuing party dug their way to him an hour later and found him in a dying condition, his back having been brok. en by the fall. Eye Specialist. ssn Em — Louis Dammers Philadelphia Eyesight Specialist ONE DAY ONLY Brockerhoff Hotel Parlors Thursday, Dec. 11, 1913 SPECIAL OFFICE HOURS 9.30 a.m. to 4.30 a. m. MY SPECIAL OFFER $1.00 Glasess This Visit Only. I will make you a fine pair of glasses, including Dammers' eye examination, clear lenses, a 12-karat solid gold filled frame and an elegant leather case—All for $1.00 Thirty days’ trial of glasses allowed. ers charge as high as £3 to $6 for these same hing EYE EXAMINATION I will examine your eyes by Dam- mers’ scientific method, without , without asking questions, without tests or charts. Absolutely Free of Charge. Don’t fail to take advantage of this remarkable offer. Special Notice. Monthly visits to Bellefonte. Office—238 Mutual Life Building, 1011 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, BOOKS MAGAZINES, Etc. Thue Yourns Companion CALENDAR For 1914. ~The publishers of the Youths Companion will, as always at this season, present to every sub- scriber whose subscription is paid for 1914, a cal | firm endar for the new year. [It is a gem of calendar. —The best Job Work done here. New Advertisements, ANTED—Able and willing Sued Sitio do quire 143 East Linn street. front office in the Ex- change reasonable. Also. A Lamb For Sale. Automobile For Sale. «THE... INDEX Our line of goods For Christmas is now on display. We want to help you to do your Christmas shopping early. OUR Christmas Cards, Christmas Booklets, Christmas Books, Fancy Goods, Novelties, Calendars, and Toys are unusual. We shall be pleased to meet YOU among the early shoppers. The Index, © §7-48-3t BELLEFONTE, PA. man , fresh stock at all holiday season. Bush House 58-48-3¢. ITS A HOBBY OF OURS Our Candy Department. rrr We handle the choicest products of the best es. over the elegant supply we have for the BOXES 50c to $10.00. Hamilton Coupons Given with Every Purchase. Watch the Window. insure a It’s a treat to look Cigar Store. XMAS GIFTS. Precious Stones in Gold and Platinum, Rings and Lava- liers. DIAMONDS Watches and Jewelry of all kinds. F. P. BLAIR & SON. 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