’ ‘ NEW RECTOR FOR EPISCOPAL CHURCH. —Rev. W. C. Charlton, of Shamokin, has accepted a call to become rector of St. John’s Episcopal church in this place to succeed Rev. John Hewitt, resigned. He will move his family, consisting of his wife and four children, here this week and will officiate at all the services on Sunday. Rev. Charlton was in Bellefonte several weeks ago and preached for the congregation, and at the time created a very favorable impression. Women Glued to Seats In Theater. The intenes heat caused an awk ward situation at a theater in Potts ville, Pa., where a thousand women most of them in white dresses, at tended an operatic performance. When the play ended 200 of then were glued to their seats, the intenst heat having melted the varnish on the chairs. Many were able to get awa) only after ruining their dresses. Some of the women and girls at they walked home were made the ob ject of much amusement. Some of th¢ victims regarded the matter as a joke while others were very indignant. Among those who suffered was the wife of the manager of the theater After tryinz various ways to remove the varnish she finally succeeded witt plain soap and water. This methoc has been communicated among the victims, and many of them graspec the suggestion and triel the sam method. The intense heat proved fatal tc former School Director Krieg. Krieg received a sunstroke on Monday, but feeling better, got up and was imme diately prostrated again, dying soor afterward. Student Is Stabbed. In a class fight between the junior: and seniors of the Nanticoke, Pa. high school, Edward Kitlowski, wh was captured by the juniors and tiec to a flag pole, was accidentally stab bed by Mrs. Josephine Parney, whe rushed to his assistance with the hop¢ of cutting the ropes that bound him. Kitlowski was among the seniors who tried to raise their colors on the pole. He was tied to the pole, and later, when Mrs. Parney went to res- cue him the juniors reappeared, and while she tried to cut the ropes they rushed on her and Kitlowski was seri- ously stabbed in the right arm and breast. The police were called out to quiet the students and most of them fled. McCarrick Boy's Body In River. The long search for Warren McCar- rick, seven years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. James McCarrick, of Philadel phia, who disappeared from his home on March 12, was ended on Tuesday. Edward McCarrick, a police ser- geant, identified the body of a boy taken from the Delaware river as that of his nephew. The body had been in the river so long that identification could not be established from the features. The only things by which the police could make a positive identification were the underwear, stockings and a gar- ter. Sergeant McCarrick, who assisted for two months in the search for his nephew, examined the clothing in the morgue for a half hour before he could be certain. Warren’s father was not permitted to see the body. Recovery of the body so far from the McCarrick home has given the detectives a mystery to solve. They do not know whether the boy was drowned accidentally, perhaps by fall- ing down an open sewer, or was thrown into the water. U. S. Judge Impeached. Impeachment proceedings against | Judge Alston G. Dayton, of the north- ern district of West Virginia, charging “high crimes and misdemeanors,” | were started in the house by Repre-| sentative M. M. Ncely, of West Vir- ginia. Neely’s charges were referred to the judiciary committee. | | { It is alleged that Judge Dayton has shown marked favoritism to certain | corporations having litigation in his court; that he conspired to bring! about the removal of Judge John G. Jackson that he, Dayton, might suc- ceed him; that he has put on grand and petit juries persons favorable to corporations having litigation in his court, and that he assisted his son, Ar-, thur Dayton, an attorney, in preparing cases tried before him. Thomas Dolan Dies In 80th Year. Thomas Dolan, for many years the president of the United Gas Improve-| ment company prior to 1912, and one of the wealthiest men in Philadelphia, | died at his home in Torresdale, a su-| burb of Philadelphia. Mr. Dolan was approaching his’ eightieth birthday. His fortune has! been estimated at between $20,000,000 and $35,000,000. | With the financier at the time were Mrs. Dolan, his widow, and his three | sons, Thomas, Jr., Yale, and Clarence, | with the wives of the two former, sons. Want Wilson to Stump. The possibility of President Wilson taking the stump for Democratic nom- ifnees in the fall congressional and senatorial elections was discussed with him by Representative Connolly, of lowa, the Democratic nominee for the senate. . The president told Mr. Connolly he had not decided whether to make any speeches. Representative A. Mitchell Palmer, Democratic nominee for sen- ator in Pennsylvania, also has made efforts to have the president speak in his state. ———They are all good enough, but the WATCHMAN is always the best. Gen. Villa Seizes Control in North. Denies Break With Chief, But It Is Said He Resigned and Is Preparing to Turn Army Against Leader. Acting in the name of Generai Francisco Villa, Constitutionalist army detachments seized the custom house, telegraph office, treasury department and information bureau in Juarez, just acros sthe Rio Grande from El Paso, Tex. The Carranza appointees who had charge of these offices were arrested. Similar action, it is reported, was tak- en at Chihuahua and Torrein, and probably other important points in the porthern military zone. It was reported with circumstantial detail that gained credence that Villa had resigned as commander-in-chief of the north and that the sudden action was a coup d'etat sprung by Villa to signalize the long-expected break be- tween him and Carranza. A new revo- lution, headed by Villa, is expected to be declared. Despite these dramatic and menac- ing happenings, General Villa, through his agents, issued a general denial of reports that there had been a split between him and General Venustiano Carranza, “first chief” of the Constitu- tionalists. He said the arrest of the Carranza officials at Juarez had been the result of a misunderstandng of orders on the part of Colonel Ornelas, in charge of the Juarez garrison. It was learned, however, that from twenty to thirty employes of the Juarez offices were sent on a special train to Chihuahua City, the state capital, thence to be transported .o Torreon, where Villa remained. These men, Carranza adherents, were arrest ed by Colonel Ornelas in his raids. Partisans of Carranza and Villa at El Paso discussed hotly the future of the Constitutionalist movement. The question of the Niagara Falls confer: ence played an important par’ in the argument, especially as regards the naming of provisional president. Some of the Villa supporters even declared that General Felipe Angeles, secretary of war in Carranza’s cabi- net, had been selected by Villa for provisional president in place of Car ranza, as some partisan publications had suggested. Angeles, a former Federal general, has been commanding Villa's artillery since the battle of Torreon, and Tues: day departed for the front above Za- catecas, according to official notice. It was asserted without qualification that General Villa had resigned as commander of the northern military zone and that it was final. To Villa's message offering his resignation, Car- ranza replied asking who ‘would suc: ceed him. Following this, Villa’s various mili- tary chiefs held a conference and sent a “round robin” to Carranza, declar- ing they would accept none other than Villa as a leadér. The action in seizing the civil offices and arresting the Car- ranza adherents, it is said, came as a result. sp — MAY CHANGE U. S. POLICY Expected to Result From Unsatisfac tory Meeting With Carranga Men. On word from the Washington gov ernment depends the next move in the mediation proceedings at Niagara Falls, Ont. Justice Lamar and Frederick W. Lehmann telegraphed a 2000-word re port of their conference at Buffalo with Rafael Zubaran and Luis Caba rera, authorized representatives of General Carranza. The feeling is general that the Unit: ed States may make a distinct change of policy as a resutl of the uncompro mising attitude of Zubaran and Cab rera, dispatches telling of friction be tween General Carranza and Villa, re: ports of a rupture in Sonoro between Governor Maytorena and General Obregon and news of Constitutionalist ' reverses both on land and sea. Emilio Rabasa, head of the Huerta delegation, said that he and his asso ciates would do everything in their | power to prevent a break in negotia tions. His suggestion was that a neu tral be proposed for the provisional presidency and that the United States accord recognition to him. Rabasa de clared that a person of capacity and honesty would be chosen and that as soon as the United States accorded the new president recognition, funds | and arms could be obtained so that ft would be conceded that there were two factions that must be considered. Although generally termed unsatis factory, it is learned that the Ameri can delegates in their conference with the Constitutionalists received the ‘suggestion of one name which they have some hope may prove acceptable | to the Huerta delegates. The Constitutionalists explained tc the Americans in detail and with em phasis that there could be no com: promise in any shape or form with General Huerta or any of his party; that a prominent Constitutionalisi alone would be accepted by them for the presidency, and that the military trinmph of the revolution was inevit able. Dressed For Gallows; Gets Respite. Dressed and waiting to be taken to the gallows on which he was to be hanged for the murder of his wife, Silas Jones was notified by the war den of the Moundsville penitentiary, near Wheeling, W. Va. that Gover nor Hatfield had telephoned a respite of thirty days. ‘Leading citizens of Huntington, W. Va., where Jones re. sided, interceded in his behalf, declar- ing that new evidence had been dis covered. Dynamite Diet Fatal to Cow. Eating several sticks of dynamite; did not agree with a cow on the farm of George Kilpatrick, at Kerr's Creek. near Middletown, N. Y., and the ani | mal is dead. Several other cows which tasted of | the explosive were only slightly af fected. The dynamite had been distrib : uted in the pasture for use in blowing | out holes for telephone poles. The yielded to its effects, gradually suffer ing until death. While the owner of the cow thinks | the company which placed the dyna: | mite in the pasture should pay for the j cow, the company contends that the animal's death was not due directly! to the dynamite. Eugenics Bar Marriage. Register of Wills Newman, of Read ing, Pa. has refused a marriage li cense to Herbert Good and Miss Leona Helman, both .of that city, on the ground that the would-be bridegroom did not measure up to the require ments of the new eugenic marriage law in some respects. Miss Helman then had Good arrest: ed on a misdemeanor charge. He was taken to jail, though willing to marry the prosecutrix. The problem was finally submitted to Judge Bushong, who directed that the license be re: fused on the ground that the young man is not mentally strong. First Drink In Eight Years; Dies. For eight vears a great horned owl, | which was the pet of Mrs. Frank W.| Flood, of Vineland, N. J., never had a’ drink. It was given water Saturday night, as its mistress felt sorry for it in the extreme hot weather. The ow! immediately went into a violent con: vulsion and sank its long talons intc the hand of Mrs. Flood. In this man ner death came to the bird, and its death clutch was so strong that Dr. George Cunningham found {it neces sary to cut the sharp talon out of the wound. It had passed entirely througk the hand. Sun Digs For Dynamite. A section of gutter and street or Second avenue in Bethlehem, Pa., was blown up as the result of an explosion of peculiar origin. : A year ago, when the street was be inb permanently improved, workmen nsed dynamite to blast away rocks and a stick is supposed to have been carel-ssly left behind when the dress ing of amiesite was put on. The hot rays of the sun penetrating the paving are believed to have caused the dynamite to explode. Wilson ¢o Open Panama Canal. President Wilson will leave Wash ington on March 5, 1915, for Panams to attend the formal opening ceremon ies of the Panama canal at a date tc be determined later; will pass through the canal with the cabinet on the old battleship Oregon and then proceed on to San Francisco. ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN New Advertisements i cows ate the dynamite with considerable relish, but it was SOmE | time before the unfortunate animal oria 3H a | | GOLD COIN FLOUR. Boys and Girls, Attention ! This Beautiful Juvenile Auto will be Given Absolutely Free to Some Boy or Girl. In order to introduce our. Gold Coin Flour quickly we will give to the boy or girl selling the most of it during the next thirty days a Premo Juvenile Auto {, Auto gear, steel tion. 59-25-3t OR SALE,—Six cylinder Mathewson car. Inquire of H. N. CRIDER. OUND.—Bunch of keys. Inquire at this of- fice. - 59 25.2t housework can find employment in a small household by applying to Mrs. Geo. R. Meek, Spring St., Bellefonte, Pa. G™ WANTED.—A girl who can do general DMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE.— Letters of administration on the estate of Wm. H. __. Graham, deceased, late of the borough of Philipsburg, having been granted to the under- signed_he requests all persons knowing them- selves indebted to said estate to make immediate payment and those having claims against the same to present them duly authenticated for settlement. GEO. T. GRAHAM, 59-20-6t State College, Pa. RIVATE SALE OF REAL ESTATE.—In pursuance of an order of the Orphan's Court made the 25th day of May, A. D. 1914, the undersigned will sell at private sale on or about the . 20th DAY OF JUNE, 1914, the following described real estate, to-wit: Tract No. 1, being all that certain messuage, lot or parcel of ground situate in the borough of Bellefonte, bounded on the north by Bishop street, on the east by public school lot, on the south by Logan street, and on the west by lot of the late John McDermott and wife, fronting on Bishop street 75 feet and extending back the same width to Logan street 200 feet. Tract No. 2, being a tract of mountain land sit- uate in the township of Miles, County of Centre, CONTAINING 55 ACRES AND 79 PERCHES, bounded by the brush of Nittany Valley turnpike, lands of B.F. Sheffer, Zacheriah Williams, Adam Shaffer and others. Tract No. 3, being a tract of land surveyed in the name of Jeremiah Parker, situate in the town- ship of Snow Shoe, CONTAINING 216 ACRES MORE OR LESS. If the said premises are not sold at private sale on or before the 20th DAY OF JUNE, 1914, the same will be sold on the said day at the Court House in Bellefonte at one o'clock p. m. at public outcry. TERMS OF SALE: —Cash on delivery of deed. J. M. HEINLE, BETTY WOODS HEINLE, 59.33-3t Adms. of the estate of W.C.Heinle, Decd. Excursion. Niagara Falls] Personally-Conducted Excursions July 3, 17, 31, August 14, 28, September 11, 25, October 9, 1914 Round $7.30 Trip FROM BELLEFONTE SPECIAL TRAIN of Pullman Parlor Cars Dining Car, and Coaches through the Picturesque Susquehanna Valley. Tickets good going an Special Train and con- necting trains, and returning on regular trains within FIFTEEN DAYS. Stop off at Buffalo within limit on return trip. Illustrated Booklet and full information be obtained from Ticket Agents. may Pennsylvania R.R. 59-25-16t. 59-21-tf 'X TANTED.—Painters and paper hangers. : Must be sober and industrious. Ap- ply to JOHN MCcSULEY, 59-14-tf : Lower Petrikin Hall. OR SALE.—Good Ranger bicycle for sale. Inquire of JOHN H Ente mon Pleas of Centre county, Pennsylva- nia, January term, 1892, No. 204. In the matter of the assigned estate of James A. Beaver. : : : The undersigned, Auditor appointed by the said Court to distribute the funds in the hands of the Commonwealth Trust company of Harris- burg, Pa., assignee and _trustee of the said James A. Beaver, for the benefit of creditors, as shown by its Fourth and partial account filed in this pro- ceeding, and confirmed by said Court, to and among those legally entitled thereto, will meet the parties interested, for the purposes of his ap- pointment, on Friday, June 26th, 1914, at 10 o'clock a. m., at his offices in Temple Court, Bellefonte, Pa., when and where all parties inter- ested are required to make and prove their claims, or be forever debarred from coming in upon said fund. HARRY KELLER, Auditor. June 4th, 1914. 59.23-3t ATS NOTICE.—In the Court of Com- Cattle Pasture. Cattle Pasture The Lehigh Valley Coal Company will open their 5000 acre range on Beech Creek May 1st, 1914, under the management of Mr. Geo. Lorrah. Season May Ist to Oc- tober 15th. Terms $1.50 per head per sea- son, payable in advance, Cattle received only on Wednesdays and Saturdays. Ad- dress for any further information, LEHIGH VALLEY COAL CO., Snow Shoe, Pa. 59.15-2m Hardware. Quality First. Asphalt Roofing Galvanized Roofing Atlas Portland Cement Wall Plasters Wall Coatings Leather Beltings Canvas Beltings Extension Ladders Step Ladders Ropes and Twines Bar Iron and Steel. Our Specialty -.Dockash Ranges.'. OUR STOCK IS COMPLETE. Owings Hardware Sor 59-10-tf BELLEFONTE, PA. a — New Advertisements. like the cut below. " DESCRIPTION.—Width of steel tonneau 15% in., fender to fender 24 in., 4 ft. long, real fore doors and locks, fin- ished in black and red, artistically striped in gold, adjustable wind shield, perforated nickeled radiator, uphol- stered seat, emergency wheel on rear, nickel plated trimmings on radiator and hood, four nickel plated oil burner torpedo lamps, nickeled artillery hub caps, wood rim steering wheel, mahogany finish, American knuckle joint fenders black enameled, 143 in. artillery wood wheels, front and rear rubber tired wheels, auto red finish, auto starting crank. Packed one in crate, weight 95 pounds. Call upon G. R. Danenhower & Son, Inc., and he will give you an order book. Then call upon the people in your neighborhood and ask them to buy a sack of GoLp CoIN FLOUR. Make the order out in duplicate and ask the buyer to sign the order, turn that order in to G. R. Danenhower & Son, Inc., and when the flour is delivered you will receive proper credit. On Saturday, July 25th, the Final Count Will be Made and the Auto will be given to the boy or girl who has sold the most GOLD COIN FLOUR. This Auto is on exhibition in SPIGELMYER’S STORE WINDOW. but well built and well worth the effort to win it. Get an Order Book and go to work. GOLD COIN FLOUR is high grade and easy to sell, It is not a flimsy toy, Look at the cut above and read the descrip- GET BUSY. JEWELRY AND WATCHES. OUR GUARANTEE means positive assurance that any ar- ticle whatever, sold by us, will positively be replaced if it does not wear and give entire satisfaction. We can supply your needs, no matter what you may want. Old gold and silver taken in exchange. F. P. BLAIR & SON, Jewelers and Opticians, Penna. Bellefonte, 59-4-tf. The New Grocery. ES The Picnic Season is Here And we can supply‘you with the best Cold Ham, Minced Ham or Dried Beef in the country. Our hams have a recognized and acknowledged high standard. Just the thing for picnics or a cold luncheon. This Store Will be Closed All Day Saturday, July 4th Our patrons are respectfully requested to note this fact and prepare beforehand for this Saturday holiday. All deliveries will be made on Friday, July 3rd. ROBERT MORRIS, BELLEFONTE, PA. 59-22.