. IF. t. - THE WEATHER. 16 Pages Today fair Sunday and probably Monday, not much change in temperature. 4 ONE SECTION YOL. XCVH-SCO. 134 WILMESTGTON, 3SV O, SUNDAY MORKLN'G, FEBRTJAR Y 6, 1916 WHOIE NUMBER 39,465 r I : . , Ions may now BE QN THE MARCH Indications Are That Long Looked For Offensive is Either on, or is Near. FIGHTING NEAR DOIRAN French Artillery Continues Its Activity Along the Franco Belgian Front. The. long-looked for offensive of the Teutonic allies against Saloniki may now be on, or near at hand. An agency dispatch from Saloniki reports that an artillery duel has been in progress for two days near Doiran, where strong forces of the Central Powers for some time have been facing the positions of the Entente Allies. Such a bombardment might well be the prelude to an . advance movement ty the Teutons and their allies, which, according to recent reports from the Balkans, was set for about the middle of the present month, but which may even now be in progress. According to the message through Entente sources reporting the opening of the bombardment, the British heavy guns were dominating those of tne Germans and Bulgarians opposed to them. Elsewhere along the many fighting lines of the widespread war field, few operations of importance have been recorded. On Franco-Belgian Front. On the Franco-Belgian front the French artillery continues its activity the bombardment being intense in the Champagne and the Argonne. Berlin reports cases of sporadic activity , by infantry, one instance being south of LaBassee canal, where the British are declared to have been repulsed when one of their detachments attempted an advance, while south' of the Somme, where the Germans made gains only recently, the French were beaten off In a hand grenade attack., - In the Vos ges the German guns have .been bom barding French positions. ; -', - $ ;..- : -i Few reports of pronounced activity come from Russia or Gallcia, a German airship attack on Dvinsk being the only incident in this 'war theatre men tioned in the German communication. Along the lines where the Austrians and Italians are engaged, the deadlock shows no signs of being broken. Ger man reports declare the Italians are worn out and discouraged by their fail ure to advance and have recognized the impossibility of breaking the Austrian lines. No indications of lagging Ital ian activity, however, are reflected in the official reports. British Driven Back. From Mesopotamia the Turks report driving back the British to their for mer positions by a counter attack when General Aylmer's relief force attempt ed a nearer approach to Kut El Amara, where another British force is belea guered. It is announced in Vienna that peace negotiations with the Montenegrin cab inet ministers remaining in their coun try have not been begun by the Aus trians and will not be started until the ministers are furnished with unim peachable credentials empowering them to conclude a peace that shall be bind - ins. . AUSTRIANS CHANGE MINDS? Regarding Peace Negotiation With Ee- Vienna, (via London), Feb. 5. The Austrian authorities nave evja.eui.ijr changed their minds regarding the possibility of negotiating peace with the members of the cabinet of Monte- nee-rr. loft 5 viiti t-r-w. Tt is nOW announced that the negotiations have .. a i ill . T. a. Jftfawa ui yet oegun ana ww; ua until the ministers are furnished with tia.ia to make a bind It is asserted in arm ycircles that the Montenegrin people are manifest ing a strikingly friendly attitude to- war atne Austrian troops. BEGIN THEIR OFFENSIVE Germans and Bulgars Start Movement on Saloniki, Is Report. Paris, Feb. 5. The inauguration of an offensive movement by the German and T!tiim.i.i -Fm.roc nrtiiih i o vft been o iau jlvi wv. j ...v. stationed along the Greek frontier Is reported In a Saloniki dispatch to the Balkan agency. It is said an artillery duel has been in progress for two days in t-v. . ; i t, j TAtran: fLTld vnr: licigliuuiuwu VJ- v - 'hat the British heavy guns are dom inating those oi tneir aaversanes. BERLIN PRESS INDIGNANT, Denounces Attitude of British Crew Toward Wrecked Zeppelin. London, Feb. 5. According to Berlin le'egrams transmitted by Reuters' cor respondent at Amsterdam, the attitude t the crew of the trawler King Ste Phen toward the crew of the wrecked Zeppelin L-19 has raised a storm of mciignation in the Berlin press which escribes the case as a worthy coun tcrpart of the Baraloner incident. "This fresh infamous action," says the Lokal Anzelger, "discloses the bru ,a''ty of the British character which e 'barbarians' did not know." 470 KILLED IN AIR RAID. rcnch Aeroplanes Attack Bulgarian Camps 50O Wounded. . Paris, Feb. 5. An official Bulgar ,an report as forwarded from Athens the Temps says that 470 men were uiea and more than 500 wounded aur '"g the recent attack by French aero Planes on Bulgarian camDS. The at ta'k is said to have been made by 17 TOWARDS SOU SECRETARY GARTER WIRES THIRD TIME Continues Attacks on Keating Child Labor Bill. NO FURTHER ANSWER Secretary Lovejoy, of Child Labor Com mittee, Declare Continuance of the Controversy Would Re cruit in No Good. Asheville, N. C. Feb. 5. Declaring that no good purpose could be served by, and that very little information could result from, a continuance of the telegraphic controversy between the National Child Labor Committee .and the Southern Textile Association, through its secretary, A. B. Carter. Charlotte, N. C., Secretary Owen R. Lovejoy, of the Labor committee, stat ed that no reply would be sent to a third ! telegram which was received from Charlotte at this morning's ses sion of the National Child Labor Con ference. The telegram from Secretary Carter follows: Tne Third Telegram. "Charlotte. N. G. Feb. 5. 191. "Owen R. Lovejoy, Secretary, National nua iiaoor Committed, Asheville. N. C "Do not dodge the issue. Livinsr rooms of a tenement cannot be classed as workshops and it was admitted up on the floor of the House that Keating bill did not prohibit tenement house work. If you are sincere in your con tention consult . any Asheville lawyer. Mr. Keating and Chairman Lewis, of Maryland, voted against making the Keating - bill apply to little children who work long hours, in the oyster and nsning Industries of Maryland. You refused to put in the bill anything to prohibit the working of young news boys or messenger-boys. The suffering and immorality caused by. the law you rorcea on Pennsylvania is no false alarm and it does not lay in your mouth to speak of false alarms. "The" fact that 20 states have moth ers' pension laws does not relieve the suffering of those in other states who would be refused- honest employment under the arbitrary standard which yon in your. wisdom would fix J!or us. a. You even go so . far aa , to arbitrarily say that the mill operatives cannot distrib ute the-total hours per week so as to have vacation oh Saturday, afternoon but we doubt if any of your organiza tion labor on Saturday afternoon. We do not believe in child labor but are better qualified than you to define child labor. "A. B.' CARTER, "Secretary, Southern Textile Assn." Opposes Keating-Owen Bill. In the general discussion which fea tured this morning's session Hudson Millar, of Charlotte, N. C, secretary- treasurer of the Cotton Manufacturers' Association of North Carolina, sound ed the first note of opposition to the Keating-Owen bill yet voiced from the (Continued on Page Two.) ALEXANDER HAM LION'S REST Following Simple and Impress' ive Funeral Service. Chairman Walters and Other Promi nent Coast Iilne Officials in At tendanceDeceased Eulogiz ed by Petersburg Bar. (Special Star Telegram.) Petersburg, Va. Feb. 5. Following simple but impressive funeral services at St. Paul's Protestant Episcopal church, with which he was long con nected, all that was mortal of Alex ander Hamilton, native of North Caro lina, banker and lawyer- of this city and general counsel of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, was laid to. rest this afternoon in old Blandford cemetery. The -services were conducted bv Rev. tr T nonflriiltre St. Paul's rftr.tor.l as sisted by Rev. C. Braxton Bryan, rector nt a-rant rhurr-h and uncle of Thomas P. Bryan, of Richmond, who married Mr. Hamilton's eldest daughter. Mr. nnnririirA wan n iso assisted dv Jrtev. Charles R. Strlbbling. of Tabb Street Presbyterian cnurcn, in wnicn jurs. rfomiunn. formerly Miss Helen Leslie McGill, was reared.' Those serving as noii-hoarnrH were: Bernard Mann. Sam uel Woods, R. Boiling Willcox, Carter Hall, Carl H- Davis, Jtsernara J. Byrne A number of prominent railroad or ficials attended the services, among them being Henry waiters, cnairman a n T. 'hon.rd of directors. All immuiiiit members of the family were present except Mr. iamiitons . . TT9 -J-fl A second daughter, Mrs. tester xu. wani, of Chile, wife of the son of a former MmAr nt rtnTorado. who is in busi ness in that far off country. Among those observed at the, cnurcn ana grave was Mr. Hamilton's half-brother, Urol., a lotnn "Hamilton. U. S. A., con- lMLOfJ.W ' - nected'Wlth the coast artillery at Fort Hamilton. , Resolutions eulogizing Mr. Hamil ton's life and character were adopted today by the Petersburg bar; the paper being drawn by the following commit tee : Richard B. Davis. Bernard Mann, Richard H. Mann, George -Mason, Da vid A. Lyon. Jr., Robert Gilliam, Sr., j ca Sonatnr William is. Mcllwaine, who was Mr. Hamilton s REMAINS LAID TO MRS I RC RED OF 1 FH VMM Negroes, Brow aSpellman, DecKy Guilty. - ON TRIAL FOUR WEEKS The Three Now harsed With Assault on Miss Sfejtr With Intent to Kill on Nl&nt Dr. Mohr Was Shot Review of Case. Providence, R. I Feb. 5. Mrs. Eliz abeth F. Mohr was acquitted by a jury tonight of a charge of having Instigat ed the murder of her husband, Dr. C. Franklin Mohr. C. Victor Brown and Henry H. Spellman, negroes, who were accused of the actual killing, were found guilty. The jury reported at 6:07 o'clock, after having been out since 10:50 o'clock this morning. Mrs. Mohr swooned while the lore- man was announcing the verdict. Her head dropped forward and she was slipping from her chair when her at torneys grasped and supported her, while a court officer rushed for a glass of water. "Is there any other charge against these defendants?" inquired Justice Stearns. "There is. Your Honor," replied At torney General Rice, "but Mrs. Mohr is on bail on the other charge." Now Gharsred with Assault. "The defendants, Brown and Spell- man, are committed without ball," said the court, "and Mrs. Mohr Is discharg ed from custody on this complaint." The other charge against Mrs. Mohr and the two negroes is that they com mitted an assault on Miss Emily Bur ger with Intent to kilL Miss Berger was shot while riding with Dr. Mohr on the night he was attacked. Brown and Spellman are accused of actually firing the shots at Miss Berger, while Mrs. Mohr is charged . with being an accessory before the fact. The jurymen looked tired and worn as they passed into the court room. After each man had taken his place in the jury box, the clerk asked the foreman: "Do you find the defendant, Cecil Victor Brown, guilty or nt g.uU- tyr .vv... . .... , . As; the foreman replied "Guilty," Mrs. Mohr collapsed. The clerk continued: "Do you find, the defendant, -Henry Spellman, guilty or not guilty?" "Guilty." "Do you find the defendant, Eliza beth F. Mohr, guilty or not guilty V "Not guilty." Mrs. Mohr apparently was in a stu por when the foreman pronounced the words "not guilty." She recovered quickly, however. "The fight has only begun," was the comment of William H. Lewis, counsel for Brown, who said that he might carry the case to the supreme court. Attorney General Rice declined to comment on the verdict. He would not (Continued on Page Seven.) YAFTER A OF INSPECTION Nucleus of World's Greatest Fighting Machine Mr. Sprague Points Out the Weak Points More Men, More Officers and More Efficient Target Practice Needed New York, Feb. 5. The United States has in its navy the nucleus of the greatest fighting machine in the world, according to Frank J. Sprague, chair man o fthe. committee on electricity, and ship building of the Naval Con sulting Board, who returned here today after spending a month aboard the bat tleship New York and witnessing the maneuvers of the Atlantic fleet in Southern waters. Mr. Sprague declared the two most vital requirements of ' the navy at present are more officers an dmen and greater efficiency in " target practice. He said the government could not spend too much money in this regard. "No man who has the love of Amer ica at heart," asserted Mr. Sprague, "need feel ashamed of the navy. There is room for improvement, bu tunder or dinary circumstances the American navy would give a very creditable ac count of itself." Mr. Sprague is preparing a detailed report of his trip, which he will for ward to Secretary Daniels at Wash ington. He said he would make certain recommendations for improvement of electrical devices now in use aboard American warships. A graduate of Annapolis and the first engineer to recommend the in troduction of electricity into the serv ice of the navy, Mr. Sprague said his observations while aboard the New York had convinced him that Ameri ca must be prepared to fight her future battles at least 1,500 miles out at sea. - Five years, according to Mr. Sprague, would be required to place - the navy on an equal Tooting with tnat of Great Britain, provided Congress saw fit to make the necessary appropriations. He said it would be necessary to en large Annapolis and to provide train ing ships-in sufficient-numbers to in sure a full and efficient complement of officers and men. - Bigger guns, faster ships and more efficient target practice will solve the whole nxflfclem. said Mr. Snr&eua. PRASES WAV MONTH Residents of Larger Part of Three Counties Face Peri lous Situation TOWNS ARE INUNDATED ' Mississippi River at Places is Highest Ever Known and Still Rising Little Rock, Ark Feb. 5. Residents of the territory in the southeastern corner of Arkansas tonight faced a perilous situation. Two-thirds of Lin coln, Desha and Chicot counties are covered with water which is flowing southward through a half dozen breaks in Arkansas river v levees. Arkansas City, McGhee and Lake Village and dozens of smaller towns are flooded and the high ' stage of the Mississippi river added a new danger. At Ar kansas City the level of the Mississippi river is 15 feet above the town. So far alt Mississippi river levees are reported holding, but the flood waters inside the levees are certain to weak en them. At Arkansas Ciy the stage of the Mississippi late today was 55 1-2 feet, the highest ever known. Water from the Arkansas river flood is six to eight feet deep In the main streets of the town and expected to go at least three feet higher. About 1,000 resi dents have left the city which is cut off from communication with the out side world except by boat.. .There are 500 homeless and hungry persons in the town. A dispatch early tonight said that the Chicot levee is In such a weakened condition that, should it break Arkan sas City would be wiped " off the map. The dispatch ,sald immediate aid is needed. A serious ""condition also e-ists-j&t xaarii:where :theWhrte "riv-" er rose four feet today; . , Railroad officials and Murray Auer bach, of Little Rock, representative of the American Red Cross, left late today for the flooded district along the lower course of the Arkansas. The train car ried a great supply of food and provi sions and a big motor launch with which to deliver the food. It was fear ed that falling waters will reveal that many lives have ,been lost in addition to those already reported. HARD TO OBTAIN AID Labor Needed to Help Strengthen Levees in Missisippl Valley. Washington, Feb. 5. Official War Department reports today on the Mis sissippi Valley flood situation indicate that serious trouble may result in the region south of the Arkansas river un less the residents there assist in strengthening the levees. One of the most serious difficulties, it was said, was the scarcity of labor and there were intimations that the Federal offi cers would be authorized to provide ra tions only for those who showed a disposition to assist , them. A report from the chief engineer's office at Vicksburg, Miss., said the levees were being put to a severe test, but that there was an excellent pros pect that they would hold if the white population put up a proper fight. LEVEE COLLAPSES Town of Clarendon, Ark., Inundated Within a Few Hours. Clarendon, Ark., Feb. 5. Levee which protected Clarendon from the White river flood collapsed at 10 o'clock to night. Virtually the. entire town was inundated within' a few hours. In an ticipation that the embankment would give way women and children had been removed to places of safety and no loss of life was reported. BODY FOUND IN RIVER. Young Woman, Student in Nurses's School, Commits Suicide. Pittsburg, Feb. 5. The body of Miss Hazel Schoenfeldt, age 20, of Altoona, was found floating in the Allegheny river here today. Miss Schoenfeldt, who was a student in the school for nurses at the Allegheny General Hos pital, was dismissed yesterday for giv ing a certain medicine to the wrong patient.. She at once put on a heavy coat, and hurrying to the river, three blocks away, walked into the water un til it covered her head. THE DAY IN CONGRESS SENATE ; Not ' in session; meets Monday. Judiciary sub-committee decided to hold open hearings on Supreme Court nomination of Louis D. -Brandeis. Public lands committee heard West ern men on 640 acre grazing homestead bill. HOUSE Met at noon. Resumed debate on Indian Appropri ations bill. Brigadier General Goethals continu ed 'his testimony on Panama-) canal needs . before Appropriations committee.- Ways and Means committee Demo crats formally chose; Representative Humphreys, of Mississippi, as chairman of the new House committee on flood control and selected the committee per sonnel. ' .Adjourned at 5 p. m. until noon 'Mon day. . "CYCLONE" WEARING HIS FIRST COLLAR. fi 9 I T'$&AnW ll AWM I .I m nm fniTinii in nMrrriTni.iirr,ii.iiiiiii.iiiiiimiui.imLii? j fc iniiinmimir.nr.iwm , ... w.,. rTr':5emit0lil'llMtfil1' Congressman "Cyclone" Davis. : This is the first photograph taken of "Cyclone" Davis, representative in Congress from Texas, wearing his first collar. For more than twenty years of public life he refused to wear one. In Texas, at least in that part of Tex as most frequented by the Davises, Mrs. Davis could stand that. But when the Questicm- May Remam'-O Until the War Ends. IS A COMPLEXED CASE Ruling as. to Whether Prussian Treaty or Hague Convention Should Gov ern Case' Might Not Settle Title to the Steamship.' Washington, Feb. ...5.. The question of ownership of the British steamship Appam, brought into Hampton Roads by the German prize. crew, may remain an open issue until the end of the war, with the ship meantime held in the cus tody of American officials at Newport News. Conflicting claims on behalf of Ger many and England are being consider ed by . the State Department and the neutrality board, but there has-been no indication of a decision. Officials, generally are inclined to the view,' how ever, that the case must be governed by the Prussian treaty of 1828, which grants Prussian prizes free entry to American ports and declares that they "may freely be carried out again at any time by. their captors, to the places ex pressed . in their commissions." A litr eral construction ' of " that provision, which- some officials favor,- would-'per-mit the Appam to remain indefinitely at Newport News. r That the treaty - has not been ,con strued. literally in initial-consideration of the ,- Appam case,- however; is. evi denced it' is vpointed out: by .the facts that the ship was searched and that some form of legal process, was served by the customs collector to : procure discharge of the : prisoners. Both of these : things , are expressly prohibited in Article 19 of the treaty.. Officials are inclined ' to : believe that a formal , ruling, by the department; as to whether the Prussian ' treaty " or the Hague . convention' of 1907 should 'gov ern the case; would not alter or con firm title ' to the Appam, but simply would determine the length -of her stay in port- The practical -effect of a de cision would; be to determine the ques tion of whether Great Britain would be put to 'the trouble of -maintaining in definitely a warship patrol off the Ches apeake capes to prevent the escape of the ' vessel Eventually a German . prize court must pass Tipon the title, and even after that the ultimate disposition of the Appam, if she remains in port, doubtless will depend upon the result of the war. WILL FORWARD MAIL. First-Class Matter Removed From Ap pam Berg Anxicras for Decision. Newport News, Va., Feb. 5. One hundred and fifty-three bags of first class mail from the steamship Appam, brought here . by a German, prize crew, this afternoon were forwarded to Washington for shipment to England and France. The maJKis all from the cities of the West Coast of Africa. The parcels post carried by the Appam Is still aboard the steamer, and, according to customs : authorities,' -will remain there until the status of the steamer is determined by the State Department. Lieutenant Berg chafes while await ing the . decision' although he- says he realizes the question' is - one that . can- (Continued on Page Seven) .. .-tvx r . . , couple reached Washington where lov ing constituents had. sent .him, she found things different. "She just cried so milch I had to put on a collar," said the "Cyclone." The reporters swho talked to him in sisted he also wear a "biled" shirt, but he did not commit himself. PyZZLEDBTllJ . To Be Uncertain HEADED FOR BORDER? Campaign ; Against the ' Zapatistas States, of Morelos and Oaxaca to Begin Within the Next Few Days, It is Announced. in El Paso, Texas, Feb. 5. The where abouts of Francisco Villa is proving a puzzle to Carranza authorities in north ern Mexico. While several detachments of troops were scouring the country for 50 miles east of Juarez where' Villa was reported to be 'advancing toward the international border, advices from Ma dera, Chihuahua,--today Reported Villa in. the; Santa Clara district, west of the Central Mexican railway. Carranza .troops from Madera, Buena Ventura and Ojo Calientes were dis patched to the Santa Clara 'region on the strength of the Madera advices, while Carranza detachments from Oji naga and other points continue to; scour the Bosque Bonito country east' of Juarez. . . General Gabriel Gavira," at Juarez, tonight explained that most of the troops pursuing Vilja were infantry. Villa is supposed to have good cavalry mounts. A dispatch from the information' bu reau at Mexico City to the Mexican consul here today under date of today stated: "' . "General Pablo Gonzales announced today that the, long delayed campaign against the, Zapatistas will begin with in the. next, ten days and . not be aban doned until -the "states of Morelos" and Oaxaca , are in complete control ' of con stitutionalist forces. . Forty thousand men'-are being prepared for the cam paign." . . - . Private advices to American mining company representatives here indicated to fay that aTbandof bandits had at tacked the mining camp or iarrei Te low Chihuahua City yesterday, but that all was well there now. Carranza offi cials denied there had been such an at tack. - ' - ' . STRENGTHEN PATROL. Troops of Eighth United States Cavalry . Leave for Bosque Bonito. .. Sierra- Blanca," Texas, Feb. 5. Unit ed States-troops of the Eighth cavalry left here tonight for an all-night ride overland to, Bosque-Bonito, on the In ternational ; . border, for which place General Francisco Villa is reported to be heading. ; Carranza troops on the Mexican side are also reported march ing for the same' point to intercept Villa. x . BACK FROM EUROPEAN TOUR. R. W. Flournoy Investigated Treatment and Welfare jf Americans. Washington, -Feb. 6. '"Richard W. Flournoy, chief of the State Depart ment's citizenship bureau, who has just returned from a trip through England, France, Italy; Germany and ? Switzer land, for investigation of the treatment and welfare -of . American citizens, re ported today that nowhere did he 'find any general complaints,-, although In a few Individual cases dissatisfaction ex isted because of . the stringent regula tions enforced against foreign travelers. EARLY ADJUSTMENT E T Germany's New Proposal Ap proaches Nearer American Desires Than Any Yet. BERNSTORFF OPTIMISTIC Wilson Now Considering Note. Announcement May be ; Made in Few Days. Washington, Feb. 5. For the wont "illegal," wb'.ch Germany was unwlfl lng to incorporate in the tentative draft of the Lusitania agreement, taa Berlin foreign office has substituted'; phrase which certain high authorities in a position to be familier with the status of the negotiations consider1 c-vere. all the principles involved n the question of a submarine warfare. The language substituted for the ob jectionable word "illegal" in a tentative communication now being considered by President Wilson avers that tho killing of Americans in the Lusitania disaster was without intent, because the destruction ' of the Cunard liner was an act of reprisal and the German government agrees that reprisals should not be applied to neutrals. From various diplomatic and official quarters tonight came the information that the outlook Is promising for an early settlement. It was indicated that the tentative form of settlement which, should it prove acceptable to the United States, will be embodied in a formal communication from Germany, ap proaches nearer the desires of the United States than any yet submitted with, authority of Berlin officials. . Secretary Lansing' and Count Berns-. torff. the German ambassador, met quite informally in the Metropolitan Club here today, and talked for a short time. Although .it was not disclosed just, what , was said, the ambassador seemed extraordinarily, . optimistic at the 'Conclusion of" "the : "talk-. - , v The cardinal points of the tentative form of settlement were obtained to night. The agreement is. prefaced with the statement that submarine war fare in the North Sea was Inaugurated by Germany In retaliation for what she regarded as the "illegal" British blockade under the orders in council. Jt then states that the""1 method of conducting submarine warfare, in tHe North Sea, has been modified on ac count . of the friendship Germany has for the United States and because of the fact that; American lives have been lost, r Germany, says that the killing of Americans was not intended, and in addition to expressing regret for the loss of American lives, assumes liability and offers reparation in the form of indemnity. 5 . The last portion of the document ex presses the readiness of Germany to co-operate with the United States in any effort .looking; toward the freedom of the seas. , Secretary Lansing sent the draft to President. Wilson last night. He prob ably will confer with the President Monday. . . Count von Bernstorff expects to bo caned to the State Department soma time Monday or Tuesday. Secretary Lansing allowed it to become known today that he might have some an nouncement on the Lusitania case to make within the next few days. FEAR NO FURTHER TROUBLE IN FLOYD COUNTY, KENTUCKY Threats Between Miller and Osborne- -Meadows Factions Subsided. Prestonburg, Ky., Feb. 5. Excite ment in Floyd , county over last week's battle between members of the Miller and Osborne-Meadows factions. In which Ance Miller was killed and Louis Harrison and Alfred Miller wera wounded, apparently has subsided and no further trouble Is feared, according to county authorities. Among the first cases that will be taken up by th Floyd county circuit court Monday, will be those of John Meadows and Walter Osborne, who have been In cus tody since the shooting. The trouble is said to have arisen over possession of a small piece of property along Rough and Tough Creek, near here, where a battle oc curred. '- FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD ASKS GREGORY'S OPINION Whether It Has Power to Change Lo ' cation or Reduce Capital. Washington, Feb. 5. Attorney Gen- erfal Gregory has been asked by the Federal Reserve Board for an opinion as to whether it has power to change the location of a Federal Reserve bank and whether there is authority in the Reserve law for a reduction in thie capital stock of a Federal Reserve bank. 5 The first question was asked because the board has before it an appeal from banks in Pittsburgh asking for jthe Reserve bank now located in ClevelantL and one from Baltimore banks ask ing for the bank 'now in Richmond. Washington, Feb. 5. Department of Justice agents are keeping close on the trail of General Felix Diaz because of reports of a' proposed expedition froni Southern Mexico into Guatemala. As sistant Attorney General Warren said today that Diaz is now in New Or leans and under close surveillance.7 Norfolk, Va., Feb. 5. The United States cruiser Washington, arrived in Hampton Roads today with 152 men in cluding a company of marines, which had been on duty at Port Au Prince, Haiti. The Washington will proceed, to Portsmouth, N. H., tomorrow. 1 GAS OW i if 8 it !1 ;.! if 11 w if if : i 4 11 ! -si' 1 Y ;" I i. - y ! ! V Hi I-. .( t-f ... i t H ; f f i f 1 I i 11 3 f 11 "; i t !! i i r if:' ! '('Si i, ' Mi- 1 4s- -1 -9 - . -! 4 ' '-'roplanes. " law uanoer iur .. If ! 4 it i , if r..-.kiJ-? - '0- x r it- f