THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURO. PA. TISH SUBJECT F YLVANIA MAKES NO DIFFERENCE IS SHOT TO DEATH BUT PROSPER Another Serious Crisis in the Mexican Situation. Secretaries McAdoo and Hous ton Return From Tour. Happenings of the Week in the Capitol Building and Th oughout the State Reported for Our Readers in Fu.'ton County ant Elsewhere. WASHINGTON IS STIRRED. THE CURRENCY BILL PASSED ALL CROSSINGS I ROAD WORKERS 0 01 REVIEWOF PENNS SNAPSHOTS AT STATE NEWS All Pennsylvania Gleaned for Items of Interest British Ambassador Sees Him About the Former Bandit Rebel Leader's Act and President Wilson and ' . Cabinet Discuss It Cabinet Officers Issue Statement , Federal Reserve Bank Organize ' tlon Committee Telling Of Their Trip Around Country. MUSTBE SAFE Public Service Commission Directs Conductors Duties GRAFT COSTLY ORDERS SAFETY DEVICES Steam Railroads and Street Railways Included In Regulation! for Protec tionElectric Cart Forbidden to Croti Tracks Till Signalled. (Spi'ciul Harrisburg Correspondence.) Hurrlsburg. A general order has been issued by the Public Service ('ominlslson in the matter of regula tion governing the protection ot grade crossings und baa been Bent to the various Bteam railroads und. street rail ways throughout the State. It pro vides that boforo an electric railway nr Bhall cross the tracks of a Bteam rul!ro:id the conductor shall go In ad vance and ascertain whether are any approaching trains, lie shall not sig nal the motoriuan to proceed until he Is assured that there Is no danger. At crossings where conditions are espec ially dangerous safety devices must he provided which must bo submitted to and approved by the Investigator ot accidents for the commission. One ot the regulations provides that a light shall he displayed on the dead end of railroad trains when it Is necessary to shift cars by night over a public crossing, notwithstanding the fact that the crossing constitutes part of a yard. Must Tax Penalties. Acting under authority of State tax ation laws, the Auditor General's De partment will pn March 1 begin esti mating the State taxes of corporations which have failed to file their reports of capital stock and loans, according to a statement at the Department. The estimates will be bused upon Information secured by the depart ment's officers and carry with them a penalty of 10 per cent. All corpor ations are required to file by Decem ber 31 statements; of their business for the year ended November 30. When this Is not done the department has the right to estimate the value of the stock for taxation purposes. Several hundred corporations are said to be delinquent A demurrer to the man damus proceedings to test the anthra cite tax suit Is to be tiled within a few days by the Attorney General's Department, and the case will bo ar gued In the Dauphin County Court. Meanwhile steps to compute this tax will be taken by the State's fiscal au thorities. Mine Blast Kills Two. Two men were killed and two In jured by an explosion of gas In one of the shafts of the Wllllaiustown col liery, the largest one In the Lykens Valley anthracite district. The dead men, Charles Roudenbush and John Crozier, were working side by side, nd were killed instantly, while George Seaster and John Fagen, who were a short distance away, were only slight ly burned. Crozier leuves u widow and family. Demands Auto Fees. State Highway Commissioner E. M. Blgelow has presented another requisi tion to Auditor General Powell for payment from the automobile license fund of 1913 and 191 4. The amount Is for several thousand dollars and has been held under advisement for sev eral dayB. Mr. Powell conferred with State Treasurer Young and when a de cision can be reached Mr. Powell will write to Mr. tllgelow, setting forth his position. Veteran Engineer Dies. John E. Miller, 811 years old, a Penn sylvania Railroad engineer, whose train carried Lincoln's body from Phil adelphia to Harrisburg In 1805, died nt his home here. He wai born at lloneybrook, Chester County, In 1831, md worked for the Pennsylvania. Rail road for more than 50 years, retiring In 1901. Eyes on Rural Insurers. The rates charged by mutual com panies and their methods will bo par ticularly dealt with by the State Legis lative Commission investigating the Are insurance business at its sittings In York. They flourish mainly in such agricultural districts as York county. State Sells Waste Paper. The State sold its waste paper for the first time, bids being opened for tons of paper that have accumulated In the Capitol since the legislative session and from "departmental busi ness. Named as Asylum Trustees. Frank L. Smith, of Norristown, and Thomas W. Marshall, of West Chester, have been appointed trustees of the State Hospital at Norristown. Manage Water Works. The State Board of Health authori ties have taken full charge of the plant of the West Reading Water Com pany In order to rectify errors end give the residents of the borough a supply of pure water. In the moan time a committee of the Borough Coun ell Is seeking available water supply tor the purpose of establishing the borough's own water system. The West Reading Water Company was furnishing the citizens with Schuylkill water which was responsible for the typhoid fever epidemic In the borough. Chester Farmer Tells County Supervisors About Skimpers SHOULD TOIL FULL HOURS Quite as Mean to Begin Late and Quit Early as to Shave on Contracts Two Kinds of Road Hogs Are Specifically Described. Norristown. "Too much money is spent on highway Improvement in rennsyivaniu, declared Thomas Mc Donnell, a farmer and a road super visor of Chester County, in addressing township road supervisors of Mont gomery County In annual conventlou in the Court House here. Mr. Mc Donnell was not opposed to good road or their lmprovecent, but his point wns that there Is too much "graft," which takes the form of lack of conscientious service on the part of those who are employed In the work of road-building and roud repulrs. He said that that man was a grafter who came to work at 7.30 In the morning instead of 7 o'clock, as he was supposed to do, and quit at C.30 instead of G o'clock, tak ing advantage of the friendship of the man In charge. The payment of that man for un hour which he did not work Is graft pure and simple. ThU Is only one Instance of what Is going on all over the State. That Is why the speaker said that too much money was being spent for highway Improvement. He said a well-drained dirt roud was a good road, and, with the use of a "drag," one which can be kept In good con dition at little expense. He said that in his township of Chester County there were no stone roads, only dirt. In answer to a question of a super visor he declared that the ..automobil es are not the only "road hogs" In existence. He said he has seen horse-driven vehicles occupied by just as big "road hogs" as those In motor driven vehicles. This quizzing super visor seemed to have It "In" for auto mobiles, and McDonnell turned on him with the assertion that "farmers or3 now using autos to a great extent and why not? Nothing Is too good for the farmer. I would rather sell the piano and the parlor furniture and close up the parlor than do without an automobile. It makes the country not such a bad place In which to live " The Suburbun Planting Commission was given a Jolt In the moeting, and the supervisors enjoyed it In his op ening address Samuel II. High, attor ney, of Jenkintown, stuted that it looked like a scheme to Improve suburbs for the benefit of Philauei phla. Identified by Stolen Fox. Coatesville. Two foxes oddly dis appeared from his kennels near Down Ingtown and W. Warrar Journeyed to Parkershurg In search of them. Go ing to a stable, accompanied by Con stable Umsted, of Coatesville, he de clared he would not bring Buit against the men who took the foxes If the female member of the Reynard family should fall to recognize him. As he entered the stall where the foxes were the pet female fox barked and ran to her owner, who took her in bis arms and fondled her, while others who had tried to get near her were unabH. Three members of the Wagontown hunt have thus found themselves In serious trouble. Two arrests have been made Iloraco Carson and John Worth. Blames Crew for Death. Conshohocken. A Coroner's Jury, In investigating the killing of Margaret McShune on the Ford street crossing of tho Reading Railway in West Con shohocken on February 5, found that the crew ot the train, which blocked tho crossing, and which caused Miss McShnne to walk below the crossing, "as she was told by a supposed rail road employe," were negligent in their duty and censurable. Nabbed as Bogus Healers. Phoenlxvllle. Representing them selves as physicians, two men, claim ing to be from New York city, were arrested by the local police as they were doing a large business among tho foreign residents of this town. Their medicine chests were seized, which contained "cures' for almost all known diseases. They were selling them to the foreigners for from $1 to $3 a bottle. Two in Election Plot. Scrar.ton. Wallace G. Moser and Robert Walker, accused of having con spired to alter the returns of tho prim ary election last fall, were acquitted by the Jury. Casper Wagner, who confessed the alteration, and John owens, were found guilty. The latter Is 80 years of age and will apply for a new trial. Fatal Powder Accident. Blalrsvlll. With a roar that was heard 25 miles away the mixing house of the West Penn Powder Company, located at Tunnolton, six miles from hero, was blown to pler.es by an ex plosion. ' Robert Caugherty was killed and another workman mortally Injur ed. A telephone message from near the plant soon after the explosion said tho plant had taken fire and waa burning. The company usually make.? two shipments of powder each week, sr.d the quantity to have been removed I had not been sent out. REPORTS ABOUT CROPS GOOD Farmers Busy In Every Locality Churches Rairing Funds for Many Worthy Objects Items of Bull , ness nd Pleasure that Interest. .' An effort Is being made in Morris vlllo to secure free mall delivery. Scranton's segregated "red light" district Is to have white lights. Evangelist Stough wound up at Sun bury with 3,1(J5 converts und $3,400. Readlnp Railway oar shop men at St. Clair fatirl Palo Alto are on short time. 1 Illoomstmrg dealers have raised the price of nillk from seven to eight cents a quart. A strike Is promised on the Laurel Klectrlo Rallwuy, between Wilkes Iiarre and Scrunton. Martin Andrews, of Lancaster, was struck by a train while walking the, Pennsylvania Railroad. Russell Wanner was knocked down and robbed by two men caught trying his doorlock at Hazleton. A complete printing outfit is to be added to the manual training depart ment of the Easton public schools. Assessors report that Schuylkill has a vast army of 32,131 able-bodied men ready for war. Tamaqna will organize a choir of 500 voices for the union revival serv Ices to commence on March 22. An open-air school Is to be establish ed by the Easton School Board for tu bercular pupils. In an attempt to thaw the water pipe In his home at Berwick, Ben. F. Sponenberg set quite a Ore to his house. Blinded by the blizzard Mrs. Emma Dell, a widow aged GO, was struck by a Pennsylvania Railroad train at Ma- pleton and Instantly killed. In the wedding dress which she wore at her marriage, three months ago, the body of Mrs. John Kulttle was laid to rest ut Bloomsburg. Street Commmissloner Daniel Eck- erd's force of men cleaned 40 Berwick, sidewalks, from which owners had ne glected to shovel snow. Tamaqna fire companies have ap pointed committees to boom the hold ing of the Six County Firemen's Cou ventlon in that town in 1915. In view of Hazieton's trolley strike, Hazleton Township School Board has hired auto 'busses to haul pupils to and from schools. Charged with embezzlement of $42. James S. A. Bentzel, a collector for Troup Brothers, York piuno dealers, was arrested and entered bail for a hearing. When Dr. R. A. Meek, of Nanticoke, asked Frank Funnan, janitor of the building, to turn on more heat, the janitor assaulted him with a hammer, and the doctor waa seriously Injured. George Deerolf and Charles Grouse, both of Philadelphia, were sentenced to six months In Doylestown jail for stealing brass from the Reading Rail way. A new 10,000 concrete bridge will be erected across the Lehigh Canal at Morrisvllle, ond the N. J. & P. Trac tion Company will double-truck its rond. The Commissioners of Bucks county have approved of a new reinforced concrete bridge over Swamp Creek, Tinicum township, on the road from Erwinnu to Revere. Pasquale D'Andego, a member of the night force at Simon's silk mills, Easton was stricken with heart dis ease and died as he was about to eat his midnight lunch. Falling down a flight of steps while visiting at her brother's home, Miss Helen Henrlcks, of PottBtown, tore her lower Hp from the Jawbone and sustained severe lacerations in her nose and face. W. S. Eyster has accepted the cash lershlp ot the jiew national bank re cently orgnnlzed at Ford City, and has tendered his resignation to the Jeffer Bon County National Bank. Major James M. Laird, of Greens burg, and Miss Margaret Engbert, for merly of Greensburg, more recently ot Somerset County, were married at Al toona. Major Laird gavo his ogo as 77; tho bride's 29. They will make their home In Greensburg. Tho bride groom is well known through his con nectlon'wlth The Greensburg Argus. . Washington. A slumbering Mexican situation was brought quickly to a point of intense International Interest by the flash of a message stating that William L. Benton, a British subject, had been killed in Juarez by order of Gen. Francisco Villa, tho constitu tionalist commander. Sir Cecil Spring Rice, the British ambassador, conferred with Secretary Bryan about it, President Wilson and bis Cabinet discussed It briefly, and a thorough Investigation was ordered by the State Department from consular reports on the border. In this case, for the first time since the present revolution began, a year ago, ' the general warning from tho United States government to Mexican factions to protect all foreigners went unheeded, though there is every evi dence to show that both tho British Ambassador and the State Department were advised too late of Benton's Im pending fate to Intercedo specifically for him. The news shocked officials generally, who had come to believe that Goncral Villa fully realized tho position of the American government in regard to tho protection of foreign ers in Mexico, particularly In the north of that country. "I haven't sufficient facts on which to baso an opinion," said Secretary Bryan. "Until I have the department will express no opinion." This was the official vlow of the situation with messages passing back and forth between the State Depart ment and Consul Edwards, and his temporary assistant, G. C. Carrothers, consular representative at Torreon. Only a few details were announced by the State Department that Benton bad been executed after a military trial. A copy of the sentence of the court, setting forth the evidence In the case, was promised the American consular representatives. Mr. Bryan said a full report of the affair was on its way fcy mall from Consul Edwards, to whom General Villa had personally explained the incident The killing of a British subject un der circumstances such as dispatches from the border portrayed caused a stir In diplomatic circles. Those familiar with the aggressive attitude Great Britain assumes in pressing for reparation when her subjects have have been wronged were inclined to foresee interesting developments im pending. W. VA. FACES DEFICIT. State Will Not Be Represented At Panama Exposition. Charleston, W. Vo. Covernor Henry 0. Hatfield, in a statement, declared that the reason the $75,000 appro priated for a West Virginia building at the Panama-Pacific Exposition, at San Francisco, Is not available is be cause of the deficit facing the State treasury. Should all appropriations be paid, West Virginia's treasury will have a deficit of more than $1,200. 000 .in 1915; The Governor says the Paint Creek strike cost $500,000, and that prohibition will result In a de crease in State revenues of more thun $612,000 annually. AROUSED BY FIRE; SHOT. Farmer Mysteriously Killed and Rela tives Wounded. Barbosrsvllle, Ky. Aroused by hoarlng the crackling of a fire that was destroying his barn, Henry A. Fultz, a farmer, living near here, rushed out of his home accompanied by his famlly,only to be met with a volley of bullets that killed Fultz Instantly and injured several of the others. The members of the dead man's family are mystified and unable to understand the reason for the kill ing or the fire. ROOSTER AS ALARM CLOCK. 'Bird, Kept In Bedroom, Better Than Machine. Bridgeport, Con. The board of health ordered Hyman Slavan, of this city, to dispose of a rooster and three chickens which were found domiciled in the family bedroom. Slavan's ex cuse to the authorities was that his alarm clock was out of order, and tha he found the crowing of the rooster more dependable to awake his wife at an early hour so the breakfast for three schoolchildren might be pre pared. BOBSLED INJURES TWENTY. Plunges Off Curve and Dashes Into Big Crowd. Atlantlo Highlands, N'. J. At the annual winter carnival held here a bobBled racing with a toboggan ran off a dangerous curve and dashed Into a crowd of 300 spectators. Twenty persons were injured. Joseph Phillips, a boy of 12, may die. "PEN" WARDEN FOR SENATE. Three Others After Election In Kansas. . Lansing, Kan. Jeremiah D. Botkin, warden ot the Kansas State Peniten tiary here, announced his candidacy for the United States Senate on the Democratic ticket There are four candidates for the position held by Senator Joseph L. Brlstow. The Son ator seeks re-eloctlon, and Charle CurtlB, former senator, is contesting with him for the Republican nomlna tlon at the primaries next August ,iii... m t II...... m v x i i -a (Copyright.) EUROPE BEHIND T Holds Toll Exemption Violates Treaty, Says President. OTHER REASONS FOR REPEAL Of Such Grave Effect Upon Inter national Relations They Can not Be Divulged, Is Intimation. Washington. President Wilson took the newspaper correspondents a little further into his confidence con cerning the international aspects of the free tolls controversy when he de clared it to be his belief that all Eu rope stood with Great Britain In re gard to the exemption clause ot the Panama Canal act as a violation of the Hay-Pauncefote treaty. The ..President was careful to ex plain, however, that he did not base his opinion on any official protests which these other nations have lodged against the clause, for, he declared, Great Britain was the only country to file a protest. At the same time, he said, Information had come to him showing cloarly how the other govern ments regarded the matter. It also leaked out that the President has given his callers within the last few days' a reason of greater import ance than any heretofore disclosed by visitors willing to talk why repeal should be enacted. It appears that this reason has to do with American foreign relations, but the exact nature ot the matter Is being kept a profound secret The fflrther fact beenme known that the President's friends look to Repre sentative Claude Kitchen, of North Carolina,' the heir apparent to the ma jority leadership, to head the fight for repeal. They want to make a test of his strength. Representative Under wood will probably sit through this fight and content himself with a nega tive vote. . Thinks Repeal Will Pass. President Wilson Is firmly of the opinion, following additional confer ences which he had during the day with leaders in Congress, that he can get tho repeal measure through at the present session of Congress. He told correspondents that at the proper tlmo the Repeal bill would be pushed to the front and passed. By proper time, he explained, ho meant that it would be taken up as soon as the lead ers in both houses could shape the legislative program so as to admit of consideration of repenl. Although efforts have been made by some of the House and Senate leaders to postpone action until the short ses sion, beginning next December, in order that a break with the President might not occur before the Congres sional and Senatorial elections next fall, the President took the position that a settlement of the question be fore that time was nocessary from the fact that ships will be passing through the waterway before the short sessions begins. YOUTHFUL BRIDE BURGLAR. Mrs. Anschott, 17, In Boy's Clothes, Aided Husband, 19. Pittsburgh, Pa. According to the police, Mrs. Elmer Anschott, 17, con fessed to them that she had taken part In many burglaries for which hor hus band, who is 19 years old, was arrested and held for court. Dressed as a boy, her hair cut short, she stood guard outside the houses he robbed, with a revolver hidden under her coat, they say. NINETEEN HURT IN CRASH. Street Car Runs Into B. & O. Engine Near Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh, Pa. Nineteen pas sengers were injured when a street railway car ran into the side of a light engine ot the Baltimore and Ohio at Second avenue, Hazel wood, Mrs. Jessie Peipler, of Munhall, Pa., was Internally hurt; the others but slightly. LEAPS FROM 75-FOOT BRIDGE. Clarksburg Woman Jumps Into Creek To Avoid Electrlo Car. Clarksbure. W. Va. Mrs. Carrie Thorn, 26 years old, jumped from the Mononcahela Valley Company bridge 75 feet into waters of Elk creek to escape being run down by an Inter nrhnn car. A man nearby saw her Jump and waded in Just in time to save her from drowning. Both ankles hmken and internal injuries were received, but physicians have hopes of her recovery. BRITAIN lllllilllilliiilili'"' MJ U.S. JET CASTILLO Mexican Bandit Captured on the American Side. SIX OF HIS MEN SURRENDER Should the American Officers Do So, He Will Certainly Be Executed For Setting Fire To the - Cumbre Tunnel. Alpasa, Texas. Maximo Castillo, the Mexican bandit, charged with re sponsibility for the Cumbre tunnel dis aster, in which ten Americans and 41 others lost their lives, was captured 38 miles south of Hachlta, N. M., by American troops. The Information was conveyed to Gen. Hugh L. Scott, commandant at Fort Bliss, in an official telegram from Captain White, Ninth United States Cavalry. With the' bandit were six of his fol lowers. According to Captain White's brief dispatch, they surrendered with out a fight They will be brought here. ' Castillo, to avoid a range of moun tains on the Mexican side, made a de tour which brought him into Ameri can territory. Captain White was on the watch, having received informa tion from Waiter McCormlck, Ameri can manager of Las Palomas ranch, 6n the Mexican side, that the much-wanted man was in the vicinity. Captain White telegraphed by Army wireless to General Scott tor instruc tions, and was ordered to arrest the bandit should be put foot on American soil. Whether the prisoner shall be sur rendered to tho rebels is a legal 'ques tion which remains to be settled. If this is done there Is no doubt that he will be executed for the Cumbre dis aster. He is not charged with any crime on this side. Castillo set fire to a freight train in the Cumbre Tunnel two weeks ago. The cars were burning when a pas senger train crashed Into it and every life aboard was lost The tunnel Is still burning. , A speciul to the Times from Hachita, N. M., says that the capture was made by Lieutenant Rothwell, of Troop A, and remarks that It was particularly gratifying as coming on the heels of the theft ot 18 horses belonging to the regiment by Mexicans on Sunday. The special continues: "Captain White will ask that Castillo and Capt. Emlllo Garcia, a member of the band previously cap tured, be transported Immediately to El Paso, as the number of soldiers on duty here is limited." Previous reports of Castillo's cap ture, made to General Villa, proved un true. The latter expressed his gratifi cation at the capture. General Scott was no less Jubilant. GLOVES FOR COOKS. Prof. Chantemousse's Idea Of Way To Get Clean Food. Paris. That cooks should wear kid gloves when preparing food Is the recommendation of Professor Chante- mousse in a report to the Academy of Medicine on the poisoning of a wed ding party at Cholet by a mysterious bacillus which the Professor discover ed in cream cake. In order to avoid such tragedies, which are frequent, the doctor says, cooks should use abso lutely clean dishes when boiling milk and before donning the gloves for cook ing they should scrub their hands. RAILROAD FINED $402,000. The L. A N. Also Enjoined From Doing Business In Mississippi. Gulfport, Miss. The Louisville and Nashville Railroad was fined $402,000, and enjoined from doing lntra-state business in Mississippi, by a decision in chancery court here, based on the charge that the railroad company had failed to obey an order of the Missis sippi Railroad Commission to the effect that Louisville and Nashville trains should stop at Bay St Louis, MRS. Z. SEQUIN-WALLACE DEAD. Created Title Role Of Carmen In America. Indianapolis, Ind. Mrs. Zelda SegMln-Wallace, at one time "a well known opora and concert singer, died at her home here. She was 65 years old. Mrs. Seguin-Wallace created the title rolo In "Carmen" in America and acquired fame as the Gypsy Queen in "The Bohemian Girl." She was the widow of David Wallace, who was a brother of Gen. Lew Wallace, of Indiana. TROOPS Washington. The federal resen, bank organization committee, ba. k t Washington after a five weeks' tn, . tnrough the country, in a statemet announced that its selection of feilert reserve cities and definition of resets districts would not be madeuntil cart ful consideration bad been given th. information accumulated on the trif The statement said the commute. Secretaries McAdoo and Houstoi found the country prosperous as: learned that bankers and business ui: are greatly interested In the new ban! . lng system and confident of Its so cess. In a supplemental statement Mr. V Adoo declared that he hoped the mi system would be established In tin-..' to take care of crop moving coij: tlngenclcs next year, but that if iy were not, the Treasury Departmei:j would stand ready to place Its l'lino again at the disposal of business urn:'' The committee's statement: "We have spent practically from tl-', 4th of January to the present time k hearing the-views of business men an; bankers on the problem of dividing tl country Into not less than eight, no: more than 12, districts and of Una'; lng in each district the main ollin of a federal reserve- hank. Of th' two questions, the division of the country into districts Is the more Irr. portant and difficult. The committed asked those who appeared before It il direct their attention to these twif problems and to furnish all possibli information. Go To Great Trouble. "A great many able and impartial, business men and bankers have sub mitted their best Information an-!' opinions and always in a spirit of great! fairness. In preparing their informa l tlon many of them had gone to th; extent of presenting maps showinjj not only the districts they were inter ) ested in, but also the districts for al j the nation. The committee has he-Id t hearings in 18 cities and has heard; from every community of consequence in the sections ot the country thnt it ; has visited. It has secured a vast?. deal of information on the movement? of trade, as well as on the currents of banking. "In every section of the country the , committee hns found a practically un animous conviction among banker ' and business men that the currency; bill will bring about most beneficial changes in the business of the rmin- try; in fact, the committee heard no one speak who did not sny that the measure was a great step in advance The committee was presented every where with overwhelming evidence o! the enormous economic strength of the country, and of the rapid progress of every section. The fact that the nation's banking resources, as a whole, make enormous advances every twelve or fifteen years, approximately doubling In each such period, was made evident; while this is true of the country, as a whole, It was shown that certain sections are advancing with more rapid strides thin others, and that the country is fundamentally exceptionally sound and stronit economically. The facts and figures submitted to the committee in every' part of the country show amazin? growth and strength and disclose condition of financial, industrial, com mercial and agricultural soundness and prosperity that leaves no doubt as to the future." K. OF P. GOLDEN JUBILEE. President Wilson and Secretary Bryan Address Convention. Washington. Welcomed by Presi dent Wilson and praised by Secretary Bryan as "one ot the greatest In fluences operating in the world to hasten tho coming of the universal brotherhood," the Supreme Council, Knights ot Pythias, began Its annual convention here, with delegates at tending from every state and province of the North American continent. Celebration -of the order's golnVn jubilee marked the opening sessions, and in the convention hall here and In nearly 8,000 lodgerooms, scattered throughout the United States and Canada, commemorative service were held. NOT SQUANDERING MONEY. American Farmer Borrows For a Use ful Purpose. Washington. The American farmer Is not squandering his money on frills and furbelows, Dr. John T. Coulter told the joint Congressional Rural Credits Committee. "The fanners of this country need a rural credit sys tem," said Dr. Coulter. "They will not run to extravagance if money 1 9 made cheaper for them. The Ameri can farmers borrow money, according to my investigations, for good and use ful purposes." HAS NO USE FOR BACHELORS. Daniels Detaches Lieut. Knauss So He Can Marry. Washington. "Bachelors encumber the earth," remarked Secretary Dan iels when he ordered Lieut Harrison E. Knauss detached from the Presi dential yacht Mayflower so he could be married. The Mayflower is golns to Mexican waters. "I am In favor of matrimony fr all naval officers," said the Secretary, "and I shall do all In my power to help such a good causi along."