items of Interest. — —————— Churches Rairing Funds for Many Worthy Objects—Items of Busi- ness nd Pleasure that Interest. Students of Catawissa High School will give “As You Like It.” was severely hurt. lets to get rid of a sick headac he, R. W. Stine, of Berwick, almost Anewalt with arson. Dogs broke into the hennery ou 40 of his prize-winning bantams. hip. on full time. R. E. Neumevyer, of Bethlehem, been elected borough engineer Freemansburg, Albert Weiss has been Bethlehem police force Josiah Welss. resigned. elected to the to Martin Barsch, aged 62, was found dead in his room at the Butztown Hotel, near Easton. of its The Fame Fire Company, No. 3, West Chester, cleared $2,500 recent fair supper. at and and Blooms- Mrs. M. B Dunkleberger Year-old Sarah Garrison, burg, await trial at Court, selling cigarettes and cigarette paper 10 boys. ¢ of 50 her vil To celebrate dence in the Htt) saLuie Years of resi- lage of Stockton, many friends on her eighty-ninth birthday annive rsary. Miss mokin, has received word of her ap- pointment by the Reformed Church Foreign Missionary Society to go China. A probation officer for the Juvenile Court at Bloomsburg will be favored eventually by the rec ently-organized Children's Aid Society of Columbia county. State Highway Department, has re. turned from a vacation spent in Eur. ope, He incidentally looked over many of the fine roads abroad. The Rev. Father Keegan, of Crown, h been appointed rector Las of ceed Rev. Father Downey, who has been transferred to Franklin. The effort to keep secret the for St. Paul's Reformed Church, at Northampton, has failed. He S. Miller, and the bell costs $600, The Chamber of Commerce of Al housing survey of the city. be done to interest people Lew building and to that are on the fo erect verge of decay, John B. Hanlon, of Freeland, been appointed by County has Coroner land and vicinity J. Devers, who resigned ing in Philadelphia. Irvin Chapin, of Huntington Vallay, who owns a peach farm which Year yielded 10.000 bushels, asserts that he does not bushel this year because of which killed the buds. the frost, Extra sessions of farmers’ inst}. tutes have been ordered for Bucks, Bradford, Montour and other counties where the recent heavy storms pre. vented the holding of the usual ges sions, Because they snowballed him, Jo eeph Bartelle attacked & group of American boys at Berwick; the ¥nife in his hands was turned from the body of Frank Bergolt by a collap- sible tineup in his pocket, There are 30 fourth-class post offices in Clearfield county to be filled this Year, Falllng from a freight car in the Reading yards at Tamaqua, Brakeman Rosco Harvey, of Schuykin Haven, cut off a foot. Crows ars not only kilMng part. ridges and rabbits, but OpoOssUmMS fre flso their Pray, as a half-dozen or more bounced down on one in a fleld in Reod township near Duncannon, 8nd picked it to death, Bi 0 UNITE SECTS IN TRUGE OF Gop Thirty-Seven Branches of Chris- tianity in Move, se ——— FOR A GREAT CONFERENCE. European Natlone Are Asked To Join In the First General Council Of Church Since the Reformation. New York.—The greatest effort In the history of Christianity to unite all the sects of the world which held the Christian faith was proclaimed by = committee representing 37 branches of in the United States. This committee has no authority to resents the attempt of the majority of combine in a “Truce of God.” In 1910 the House of Bisbops of the Church, convened in Cin. gin the movement for universal reli peace This commission re late J, P. Morgan, and at once ap with an invitation to Join In prepara- of Christian churches During the last four Years repre they God con com of have the one people the world, and in Apart Since Reformation. Christen period the A general council of all dom has not been held since the known as the Reformation, Sixteenth Century, because since that various branches of Chris done little except in tianity have cal differences by reason of which they had become estranged The coming general conference, or #8 such a gath of Christianity, will meet not to talk of these differences, but to agree on As a solid col definitely establish the unity of just U. 8. EXPRESS TO LIQUIDATE, Driven From Business By Parcel Post and Rate Cut. New York.—Directors of the United States Express Company voted un The resolution under w hich this “Resolved, That. pursuant to the power and authority conferred tipon the board of directors of the United Express Company by ite arti of association, the board un y declares that it is for the best Interests of the company that the company be dissolved as soon fs may be, without awaiting the expiration of Its term of existence. and that its busi affairs be settled finally adjusted as promptly as may be done. The president is directed to inform the shareholders of the com pany of said action of the board.” eles CUTS OUT THE AUTOMOBILES. District Officials. Washington, D. C.—In passing the &ppropriation bill for the District of Columbia, the Sen. ate Incorporated an amendment to pro- If the House concurs. government. Senator John Sharp Williams proposed the restric. tion, insisting that distriet officials their own machines. ALASKAN RAILROAD BILL SIGNED Wilson Expresses Gratification At Completion Of Measure. Washington. — President Wilson signed the bill authorizing the ex. penditure of $35,000,000 for the con- struetion of a Government-owned rail. road in Alaska. Secretary Lane. of the Interior Department, and mem. bers of the Senate and House and others from the Pacific Coast region witnessed the ceremony. FIND A CURE FOR PARES!S. London Surgeons Draw Patient's Blood and Inject Serum Into Skull, London. —8alvarsan {sa being sue. cessfully used here in the treatment of insane paresis sulferers, It was stated. Two cases are under treat. ment in a hospital. The method Ia to Inject salvarsan in a vein An hour later the surmeon draws six ounces of the patient's blood and a blood serum is Injected into the brain Cavity through a hole in the skull, . {TT jw \ Copyright.) NEW DIPLOMAT IN HOT WATER | Ambassador Page Must Explain His London Speech. HIS OLD ENEMY AFTER HIM i Ambassador's Reported Definition Of Monroe Doctrine and Re. Stir i i | i marks On Canal Congress, Washington.— Walter Hines Page | American Ambassador to lain, was meade the target of . {in a resolution adopted by the Sen {ate calling upon Secretary | State to Investigate alleged public as | sertions by the Ambassador relative {to the Monroe Doctrine lama Canal | Senator Chamberlain, aroused over {reports of a speech by { Page in London before the Assoc iated | Chambers of Commerce, introduced | the resolution of inquiry and his re | Quest for immediate consideration re sulted in its adoption without debate The resolution requests the Secre tary of State to procure & copy Great the f | | Page's address, and to call upon the | Ambassador for evidence upon which {ne based the alleged statement that { “it added greatly to the pleasure of | the Panama Canal to know that the the of i= made in report Particular : resolution for request & verbatim | defined the Monroe Doctrine as mean {ing merely that “the { would prefer that no European Gov {ernments would gain more land in the New World” Not Reported Verbatim. After the resolution had been adopted Senators heard of dispatches from London saying the Ambassador's speech was delivered extemporane | ported verbatim, and | Page as explaining that his reference to British use of the Panama Canal {Was in a lght vein. It was taken for granted at the Capitol, however, that in response to the State Department's request the Ambassador would furnish his recollection of Just what he had said, with the desired explanation No attempt to oppose the resolution was made when Senator Chamberlain offered it, the usual custom being to pass such measures as a matter of courtesy Later In the day a similar resolu tion was introduced in the House by a Democrat, but it did not get before the body for discussion or action, FIRST HUSBAND IN PRISON. Thought It Gave Wife tHe Right Te Take Second Spouse. Clarksburg, W, Va. Resulting from her conviction that her first husband's sentence to the penitentiary auto matically divorced her, Mrs. Theo- doria Fisher, of Center Point, Dodd- ridge county, Is on trial in the Crim. inal Court here under a bigamy charge. Several months ago she was married in this county to Stewart W. Cobb, while her first husband. Harry H. Fisher, of Salem, wes gorving a sentence in the State prisgn at Moundsville for the murder of her brother, Frank Asher, a few years ago at Salem. Jersey Man Asks Divorce After Fif. teen Years. Jersey City John E. Orchard, of Plainfield, testified in his action. for divorce that his wife never kissed him in the fifteen years they lived together, He said he had given his wife his salary every month and she doled out $2 or 33 for his carfare and newaspa: pers. He declared he found a revol ver with which she had threatened to El him, They separated in 1903. ANOTHER WHITE HOUSE ROMANCE Secretary McAdoo to Marry Miss Eleanor Wilson, The Financier Of the Administration is Fifty, While the Youngest Daughter Of the President is Half His Age. D. C It Miss Eleanor | son, youngest daughter o i i Washington e engagement of 1 i " ident Vilson, and and Mrs | liam Gibbs McAdoo, which nied ®t the White House ] Creder of both that j announcement is looked for any day | as set all social Washington ¢ i Mr. McAdoo |ury, when upon #aid be {him to make any comment | McAdoo has been a frequent | the White House this past jhe knew the family of the President { well before coming to the capital {take up his duties as head of i Secretary of the T: approached the : for Secretary ject, it would not proper visitor at Year io the { Treasury Department | They have been seen together mune b ithe last few months and they are fre quent partners at dances {who wish to please them usually seat {them next each other at dinner parties calling that it was Miss Eleanor Wil | son who caught the bridal bouquet of jer sister, Miss Jessie Wilson. now Mra. Frances B when the lat {ter tossed it into the crowd of friends | and relatives who stood about to wish Sayre, | House for her honeymoon. | Miss Eleanor Wilson iz the youngest {daughter of the President and frankly admits being fond of society, so. of | Course, society is fond of her. and she {has had what 2 girl calle “a good time” since she came to live at the | White House just a year ago. She dances gracefully. rides well, loves to i motor, to play tennis and golf and. in ifact, is a perfectly healthy. normal and a wholesome enjoyment of all the social amusements She i= just twenty-four. while Secre tary MeAdoo is fifty. She was edy cated in private schools at Princeton and bas studied art in Philadelphia The Becretary is the econceiver of the Hudson River tunnel system. He organized the company which built it and was its president till 1812 He is a lawyer of New York and a widower with six children—three sons and {three daughters, two of whom are married. He is a grandfather. a son having been born recently to his eldest daughter, Mr Frances Mec. Adoo married Miss McCormick, daugh- ter of Mrs. Isasc Emerson, last sum- mer, the President and his family motoring over for the occasion. See retary McAdoo is a native of Georgia and son of Judge William G. MeAdoo. He was a student of the University of Tennessee ’ While the rumor of the engagement would not be confirmed or denied by the White House, some persons £0 as far as to say that the White House is putting up a joke on the public and Ithat the real fiance of the President's daughter is not the Secretary, but his son, Willlam, Jr, who is a student at Princeton. THE BETROTHAL ANNOUNCED. A ————— President Confirms Report Of Sec. ond White Mouse Romance. Washington, D. C.— “The President and Mrs. Wilson announce the en. Eagement of their youngest daughter. Eleanor Randolph, to Hon. William Gibbs McAdoo.” This announcement was issued at the White Houke by Secretary Tumulty after a day of speculation in capital ofMecial and so ciety circles over the prospects of an. other White House wedding In June # SIEGEL INDICTED FOR BANK GAASH His Partner, Vogel, Also Accus- | ed of Grand Larceny, BOTH ARE RELEASED ON BAIL i { Biegel, On Stand When Bad News | Comes, Pales and Stammers Re. plies To Questions In Presence of Near-Rioting Depositors. New York While Henry Siegel {the head of large department in New York, Chicago and Boston. | Was testifying in a riotous bank | ruptey hearing in the Federal Build jing the grand Jury that has been in- 5 i Bloreg | | vestigating the fallure of the Siegel | jBlores In New York and the savings | | bank condueted in connection with | {them returned three Joint indictments against him and his partner io the {banking enterprise, Frank F. Vogel | Slegel and Vogel were {the indictments while {in the Federal Bullding. Both were taken to the Criminal Courts Build { Ing, where they were arraigned on the charges and later rele red $25,000 ‘ball each Three hundred Angry had been forcibly [the bankrupts ¥ hearing, hunted ithe Federal Building for Siegel {AL the they him to ask him some que bis banking partnes Judge Seas # GIy notified of they were still on depositors, Iw ho from around in vain looking for sions he and elected time were were standing be- if ' > 3 4 i - i "” | fore Rosalsky pleading not One of indictments charges the Siegel and Vogel with grand larceny n that they made false & ate to of Com ments the Bank tallege that deposits merce in The other the waer 1o bor { j row y B06 it lictmenis when they knew the Henry Riegel £& Co 10 be Insoly PLNNSY TO BURY WIRES Railroad To Have Conduits From Gotham To Philadelphia, hia Steps toward plac ’ or vu : ele: Pires in tween telephone = this city and New York conduit { derground were taken i by Pennsylvania i pany The board of dir {printed $300,000 to | brick conduits 2f by the begin immediately {way and Trenton More j of wiring was torn down between here New York the of thousands of the Railroad © eclors appro replace in vitrified miles of recent Wires torn {down | will slorm, and work Rab 10 miles between than and and it {work f Uraffic required 0 men to restore [THE NEW TEXAS IN COMMISSION. {Largest Warship Afloat Turned Over To U. 8. Goverhment With on the dreadnought warship in the turned over to Government at 1 ‘8B held the Norfolk cinborate cere snow .covered Texas the world, was the United the Norfolk With her sailors and offi lined up on the deck, W. Grant, hes commander, one of the shortest ad. record. He sald “1 de- | Eire to say that every man is expected | 110 give to the Texas that spirit of de. { Votion to duty which is necessary to | make this ship a success” | Ion jes {decks { largest formally | States i Navy Yard i cers Capt. A { dolly ered | dresses Guarter on OBJECTS TO EIGHT-HOUR Law, To Supreme Court Te it Aside. Woman Appeals Set Washington --A lone Woman appeal | ed {0 the Supreme Court to set aside | the California Eight-Hour Woman La. | bor Law as unconstitutional. She is Miss Ethel E. Nelson. graduate phar | macist in the Samuel Merritt, Hospital | in Alamead county, Cal, and contends that if the law is enforced a man will | take her place. The hospital also has attacked the law, because it applies to student nurses, but not to graduate nurses or women working in the fruit industries, MEMORIAL FROM ROCKEFELLER. | Oil King To Leave $50,000,000 For Cleveland Foundation. Cleveland. O. — That John D, Rockefeller is the guiding genius be- bind the Cleveland Foundation, recent. ly launched by F. R. Goff, president of the Cleveland Trust Company, and that the oil king plang to leave not less than $50,000,000 to the trust fund. the income of which would be used for bettering Cleveland, was the sub. stance of a report in circulation among bankers here. Mr. Goff was out of the city and could not be seen on the question. GEORGE WESTINGHOUSE DEAD, —————— Stood In World's Forefront in En gineering and Invention. New York. George Westinghouse, & foremost figure in the world of on. gineering and inventor of the airbrake that bears his name, died at his resi. dence in this gity. Heart disease manifested iteell abou! iF months ago and the end came a few hours after it became publicly known hat Mr, Westinghouse was seriously ill. He was in his 68th year. A AAS sii FROM MINE TOMB Escapes Death Miracie ALIVE AFTER 100-FOOT FALL Others Miss Doyle Sank From Cave In—Miners Pulled Her to the Surface. Bhamokin.—After Mary Dovle, a 17- Yearold schoolgirl, had fallen 100 feet down i Lear the Rich. » Bhe found herself in total and almost frightened to She was also with She had walking mountain path, talking ee€veral girl friends. when the path caved in. She was in the lead, and 48 she sank from sight her companions barely escaped. Close behind the girls was John Back a miner, on his way home from work Hearing Miss Doyle's friends call for help, he ran to the scene, called to the missing girl and was overjoyed to hear her faintly answer, told him she had fallen ance, but did not think any had been broken. Bach remain as quiet as pos. he ran to a house clothesline, Again he lowered one to Miss Doyle, who was weak miners t Bach {ent until CONG ga hon 20001 brea h ards darkness death, bruises, along a colliery covered been 10 She a long dist of Hm bs her i told her 10 sible and reaching end of faintly whereupon procured a the cave in, she too to- tie it about hes Several appeared, and he Hncons« iOUs, her and ha rope abou ’ . wowered m fully 10 ’ sev A «5 3 § ound th who had be A tha rhe , ie Fp i her up, after AWD to the sur resuscitated found of $700.7 exe 86, or per ess of 10 per cent. red stock outstanding, of an tax, sett marine 1912 of $287.000. These profits came from tolal tonnage produced and handled, including coke, of 24 704,204 net tons, an Ind an icreage per injury over iicCregse in ements and personal losses a over of cent. The re Neervalive expecial uits for 1914 is Warranted, although there has come a more general feeling 1912 644.822. or 268 port Ha¥s A C1 won of re of encouragement w ith some ment in demand improve Kills Three on Tracks Pottstown alien emploves the Reading Railway were killed when a light locomotive Btruck them. They lived in bunk cars near the oold storage plant, and returning from Royersford were struck The engineer three men walking not until it late engine. Al @ mien were married and have families n italy. Their names are Glovann} Desimone, Vincenzo d’Alfonso and Mariano Dipardo, and the latter had service of the any the day His two fri had gone with him to Royersford to pur chase a cot and bedding and were turning home when they were kil of while saw the tracks, but to stop his % 3 On the was 3 : , #4 Oo 4 ihe comp before nds Sw" Memorial Tablet Unveiled. con A § the bor cham Presi Marletta gession of ber was used for the first time tan The done by George and the artistic painting lettering by J. RB Henry, of Columbia. It is inscribed at the top, and tablet erected during past few months was unveiled. town clerk, councilmen and present officials. The first chief bar ess was David Cook, and the bur Bess In 1912 was John Kugle. For Simpler Student Garb. West Chester.—At a meeting of the School Directors of this town a resolu tion was adopted requesting boys not to wear dress suits, and girls to ob serve ‘simplicity in thelr dress at the class day and commencement exer clges in June next, as wel, as at other social events in the High School, Silver-Gray Fox Shot. Sunbury Northumberland county commissioners were surprised when they were called upon to pay $4 bounty for a scalp of a sllvergray fox, a species that is rare in this vicinity. It was shot In Lower Mabanoy township by William Lehr. He said’ he refused $50 for the skin, Lebr also lad two weasel scalps, which are worth $4 each in bounties, making his day's work, $12 for the bounties and the $50 offered for the hide of the fox, make a total of . >