GAPE FEAR NEW THE CAPE FEAR NEWS LEADS OTHERS FOLLOW WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy and colder today. Monday fair. CAPE TEAR NEWS Baa Full Telegraphic New. Leading Advertising Medina VOL.1. NO. 58. FAYETTEVIIXE. N. C SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY 23, 1916. PRICE, J4.C0 PER YEAR RED LIGHTS GR NG BRIGHTER 9 msmm--mmsam IMessrs Hall and McCas- Wll Would Brin Suit Ajrainst Marshall Cut It Terminates In the Fact - That Marshall Is Not Itespoiwble Ikcaus No Bond. It will be remembered that the News carried an account a few day ago of the arrest and detention at police headquarter! of two young men, Messrs. liall anal HcCaskill, who were alleged to have been engaged in the business of smuggling wbiakey into Jl'ayetteville. Following the arrest, when the : police were unable to prove their charges and were forced to allow the young men to go, they at one began preparations to institute auit against Policeman Marshall, who it waa al leged had falsely arrested them. Yesterday Lawyer D. M. Stringfield addressed the following letter to the mayor, which i self-explanatory: "ilr. Jno. C. Cibbs, Mayor, t "Fayetteville, N. C. "My Dear Sir: I have been csulted 1 y a number of "people within the last few week bo desired for roe to ait for them in bringing a suit against PtMireman Marshall for fulse arrest, abuse of process, assault and various other actionable wrongs alleged to . have been committed ly him in the supposed discharge of his duty as a police ollicer of the pity. And today jut as I was preparing to i;ti!ute auit fur damagea in behalf of Uie par ties, Messrs. Met a.-kill and Hall, whia i!iir.ihill arrested the other night at the river bridge, I waa as tonished (though upon second thought I need not have been) to learn that tve had never been required to execute the bond as such officer, which the laws of North Carolina and the city of Fayetteville demand before he could even enter upon the discharge of duty. Would it seem possible that those whose- duty it is to first have safely filed in the city's valuable docu ments a bond with good and sufficient eurety before a police office ever goes tjpon duty, could so far have neglected this exceedingly important duty as to allow this man to go on and on to this late date restrained only by his own bent and inclination and responsible for not limit and to nobody? It is like wise passing strange that Mr. Mar shall seems to have been made the ex ception, aa I am informed that the other members of the force are under bond, such as is required by law. "It has come to a pretty pass here where we live under a constitution and laws when, while citizens of the State in their orderly and lawful travel from place to place, are to be halted at pistol point, arrested thus without a warrant or other process, snatched to polite headquarters and detained for night, totally without authority in law or otherwise and that without rem edy. Very truly vours, D. M. STRfNGFIELD. TRINCIPAL OK SCHOOL, SHOT FROM AMBUSH Wilmington, N. .C, Jan. 22. W. F. Livingstone, principal of the Gad.lys viile public hchool. in Kobeson county, brother of J. A. Livingston, city edi tor of the Wilmington Morning Star, was shot and seriously founded in wodos back of the school, apparently by some one who had' been lying in wait tor him, accordmjr to news re ceived hre. Truf. Livingstone thinks some one hired a negro to shoot him because of trouble growing out of the recent ex pulsion of several pupils. Mrs. Liv ingstone is her husband's assistant in the school. LYON'S, HI ANCE NOW MONTENEGRIN CAPITAL Kome, Jan. 22. The Montenegrin Covenmient has been removed to Lyons, France, it was officially an nounced yesterday at the Montenegrin legation. There are now three seats of gov ernment in France, the French, Bel gian and Montenegrin. AN ACCIDENT Owing to an accident to the News press, the paper is unable to appear in eight pages today. For the last three days the News has been issued from the presses of the Judge Print ing Co., through the cour tesy of the manager, Mr. Judge. firaFJLLEGISi A M. BY A. C. L. He Was Killed Mumford Street Crosgiiu? at Caught the Train at I lay Street and Was Pragged to Mum ford Street Where He Fell Beneath the Cars. unknown negro attempted to eaten train No. 85, at Hay street exosa ir.g, but in some way he slipped and was dragged to Mumford street cross ing where he fell from the cars. lie waa so mutilated that no one could recognize him. -The negro waa completely torn to pieces, and at different places along the track was a knee cap and different parts of the negro's limbs. He had on a new pair of shoes and $7 in money in bis pockets. ARIZONA CITY IS UNDER THE WATER Yuma, Arix., Jan. 22. Yuma is un der from two to six feet of water to night as a result of the breaking of the levee of the Colorado river and the overflow of the Gila river cast of this city today. A number of oil buildings that hav been standing since frontier duys have crumbled. 3V0 UNDERTAKERS SING -WHEN I EE AVE WORLD" New York, Jan. 22.-A chorus of ?00 undertakers sang "When I Iave the W orld Behind"- at a house-warming in the new plan of a cottin com pany at Astoria last night. 300.000 GEKM4NS ijjst in CHAMPAGNE Jaris. Jan. 22. The Journal, quot ing Swiss military evperts, states that the Germans lost 300.001 me in the battle of Champagne last September. PEACE TERMS NOW UNDERWAY WITH AUSTRIA Berlin, Jan. 22. Peace negotiations between Austria and Montenegro, ac cording to a statement received from headquarters of the Austrian govern ment at Viennt have not jet begun and will not begin until the arrival of the Austrian dele gate, Herr Otco. The statement says: "Negotiations regarding the places at whii h the Montenegrins are to lay down their arms will be closed with n a few hours. An agreement will le reported as soon as it has been concluded." It is further stated that King Nicholas in his manifesto to his peo ple urges (hat the people of ( ettinje receive Emperor Francis Josef's army with popular rejoi. ing since this is the kings wish. Hocunient dealing with the capitulation of the Montenegrins was signed ty all the ministers. PRESIDENT IS INVITED HERE The Chamber of Commerce yester day took the initiative and prepared an invitation to President Wilson, ask ing him that he take Fayetteville into consideration before finally deciding upon a place in which to speak when ne visus norm e.arouna. The invitation was sitrned bv a num ber of the leading representative citi zens ot uie town and I'V the heads of a number of business hrms. It will be sent to Congressman Godwin to night, who wilL in turn, present it to the Iresident. The invitation points out the advan tages which Fayetteville has to offer, and cites the surrounding territory from which a huge gathering could be drawn. DID NOT ENOW THE WAR WAS ON IN' EUROPE New Y'ork, Jan. 22. The police have discovered a man who hadn't heard of the war in Europe.' He is Andrew Kirsky, miner, of Morgan ton, I'a. Mr. Albert Slocumb, Jr., left last night for New Y'ork. Mr. Slocumb may remain in New York for some in definite period. Biggest BIG ROBBERY HERE MUTED WST WEEK What is regarded as mi ef boldest robberies ever pulled off to the South occurred here last Saturday morning when two women. auriru-,al ;U be inmate of the red light district, axe aijesed to hac taken from 'a aoutr.bouni tram three suit rases contain. ng valuables and eecuntiea amounting to over JlO.tiOO. At a late hour last night nothing definite could be learned of the affair. however, it was ttatei to a reporter I fur tho News that a U irns detective had arrived here and that he would probe the case. It was said that a millionaire, com ing from the North for a visit to the South, was sleeping in his berth when the two women got his suit cases by telling the porter that they owned them. It was stated that the officers had reason to believe that the Women left the train at Fayetteville. i CHICKEN" THIEF WAS FORCE!) TO I LEE This morning Mr. Williams, police man, heard a chicken Hopping' Its wings iier the Uuy Bee cafe. Upon investigation he saw a negro, who, when be saw the officer;,, threw the chicken down and made his escape, iefpite the efforts of the officer to cairn r.im. HUSBAND JAILED AS OIKL-WILE'S ASSASSIN ; Satibury, N. C, Jan. 22 Mrs. An-' nie Overcai-h, 17, girl-wife of Houston Ovenruh. a vouii frm!. ? 1 'V rntintv. ttkn uu, ,.Kr,r Ihrmmh Bi'n duw at the home of her parents Sun day night, died yesterday. The hus band in being held in jail without bail accused of her assassination. The couple had been married iss tnan a year and had been separated several months. TOMMY CHIRON S MAY EIGHT Gl'S CHKIi TIE Milwaukee, Jan. 22. Len Rowlands, local welterweight, yesterday accept ed terms to meet Mike O'Dowd at St. Paul February 4, ten rounds. Gus Christie, local middleweight, practically agreed to meet Tommv Gibbons, of St. Paul, at Winniueg, February 14, in a 12-round match. FIRE AT EATONTON" DESTROYS SCHOOLS Eat.tnton, Ca., Jan. 22. Eatonton is without a school building, following a tire which occurred early Thursdav morning. The main school building and two annexes were burned. The origin of the (ire is unknown. it v officials are considering a bond issue for the erection of new buildings of bri.-k. The old buildings were in sured for i.i.l',!Nt. The ninin l..i!.l,.. bad uni si; n-iirnr f;,r 21 ve.-irs. ROOK STORE HERE OPEN PRETTY SOON It became known vesteiday good authority, that the store , up..: buiL; ing next to . K. Kin.iley Company is being equipped and ma.ie rea.lv for a book store which will le owned by Messrs. Fry & Clayton. It is under stood that Miss Jessie Simpson will 1 in charge of 'the book store, ar.d that it will be opened up in the near future. .nn rt-Dt, , ........ ....... '? r "s v.-. i ..v,. Mit, i m IL WAR , 1 OrK. .Inn V Vnol.n.. the German University U.-.cii rrf A. II, Faust, of Cornell, said thl i; per cent of the nation is German born or t.erman ancestry, against 30 per cent English and Scotch and 18 c mere were olio l.erman bm officers on the Union side in the Civil War. he continued, an. I 'Mo 0,1,1 enlisted men, although the (erman population in the country then was only 1,270.000. BOYC CLUB ASSOCIATION- HAVE ADOPTED MOTTO Y.lr T.. 00 i.xr-.: . . 1 1 t.. n ruing lo uie Boys Club Association, which is try ing to raise S500.000. Thmxiora R, velt said: "You could have no better motto for the association than 'Never be neutral between right and wrong.' " The boya have adopted the motto as their slogan. MenaceIChe EIGHT AttE8IGAHS;D0ES POLICE ABE KILLED Ifi IWo-c!. A r-i , Jan 22 tonnrtm reaching lure late today told of the aanging of eight Americana near Eieutla br Mexicana. (In-of the sources of this report an Andrew I rum no. an engineer, una arrived here today. Trumbo, with his wile, was riding pat the place and aaw the bodies swinging from trees, he ssid. -- They srere so badly mutilated that identification waa imiMW.Kit.le. lie said that the Mexicans told him of the hanging and said that the dead were Americana. The hanging hap pened about three month ago. Trent, bo reported that the train on which he was riding was fired upon, but no Americans were injured. A pasxenger train which preceded the train on which he was riding, was dynamited near i'urlblo and twenty -three Mexi cans killed. . Washington. Jan. 22. Secretary of Slate Lansing flatly denied today that he had received any confidential r-p'.-rts concerning- the, hanginir. of American miners near Ejcutla, ilex. FIVE PERSONS ARE , KILLED IN WRECK Seattle, Wash., Jan. 22. Five per sona were killed and a number injured l.-d-iv uhen th, Wftliotiiid Casciede "ifcmTted train of the Great Northern struck a snow slide at Corea station. An avalanche of thousands of tons of snow and ice almost completely wrecked the train, threw two- of the , ,, "A ground belaw, a fail of seventy-five over an 1 feet. The avalanche struck the train at He dep-1 aid h jr'ed it from the rails O.jrea u -wVmt ffreen miles east of Seattle. T:.' accident occurred on a rjrve, the i. fated train beim? on the uppr awe. The avalanche struck the train at mid-center, tearing the bner and baggage coach from their -ouphrtgs ar.d hurling them ovtr the bank sevenry-fiv feet be'ew. It was at this point that a similar ae-cident caused, the loss of life among many persons about six years ago a number of the dead in that accident having been cause'! by beinp sorTocnt ed by the weight of snow and ice that followed them down the bank. GERMANY MAY BE AFTER PEACE WITH RELGilUM Washington. Jan. 2. Information has been received in diplomatic cir cles that fiermany is considering mak ing Belgium a proposal for separate peace. An evacuation of all llelgtan territory would follow. It is uiuK r slood that the proposition whirh 'Aill l-e made to in.-lu-ie mm offer to iay for all damages. 0:i;eia!s in cl.e touch with the (ierriiin e!i.l'-i-y c 1 ressed the . pillion to-lav that the of- for probably would be accepted, j IVlgium is ro t one of the signa tories to the di.cumer.t whi.-h Sir ji-'dwnr.l (Jrey obtai:.c! the MC".i!:-n-I of the French an. I K.s.iun and t;it-r j the Italian government' ami hi, h hinds those nations hot to eonelu.le a separate peace. The restoration of i Helgium would leave the allies no , room for protest in the opion oT otli jeials, inasmuch n it has been this one j point on which the aliies have been ; insistent as a condition of peace. It jean be stated that question of foreign I jtvranny withdrawing from ail of the j j occupied positions of Belgium, on the j j conditions that Helgium will first con- j nt to conclude jthe Central powers, is now heing care separate fieuce w un fully consulered in official cirel Merlin. STEAMER IS HIT RY UNKNOWN CRAFT New Y'ork, Jan. 22. The steamer Brazos en route to San Juan collided with an unknown steamer off Barne jat this evening. A big hole was stove in the side of the vessel, and she was turned back to port. RESTAURANT M AN SERIOUSLY BURNED Chester. S. C Jan. 22. Wallace Mclliley. a restaurant man of New j the New Y ork police department ihan trict. You'll only mak enemies for York City, while on a visit to his 'ever before. In the last vear there',-.,,.. i a- . M mother, Mrs. Sallie Bailey, received was a saving of 5.050 days of sick)7 " ' K' away from t severe burns on his body while stand- 'leave as compared with li14, which is I .V1w ' bat it does not appear ing before a fire clad only in his bath- robe. lie ia in serious condition, la ITS PART FOR RIGHT ! The News begins publication today of a series of articles which'" wiU sho that th? red light, or segregated districts, of Fayette vilie is the bigtst menace, or stumbling block, in the pathway of the town'j progress. These articles have been written and care fully veriCcd before publication. The News is not directing them to that element of citizenship which patronizes the "hell holes of eorrcptioc," as a prominent North Carolina judge once termed the red L'ht houses of another city not so far removed from rayetteviUe. A statement which some will probably doubt, but which is never theless true is this: There are more bad women in Layetteville, compared with its population, than there are in New York City,, compared with its population. A recent investigation by a repre sentative of the ews revealed the fact that there were sixteen bad women in what is known as the segregated district. This does not probably include all that are in Fayetteville. Three houses that were visited had the following numbers: First, four, women and a landlady; second, five women; third, three women. In other houses four more women were found. Whiskey or beer can be bought at will in these houses, it is stated, from persons... who have visited them. The greatest factor is that pertaining to the police of the city. The force does not seem to be able to cope with the ditiiculty aris ing? from this segregated district.. Raids are some time made, but it is tsaid that they are always made between the hours of seven and nine at night.. The women have been warned and when the . police appear on the scene to make an inspection they probably find a quart of whiskey and one or two dozen bottle of beer. VERIDCT IX FAVOR UNITED FRUIT CO. Philadelphia,. Jan. 22. A verdict in favor of the tWluodant was returned iaie todav by th jury in the -suit of the liiuefield Steamship Company against the United Fruit CompiOiy. The jury was out fifty hours. The uit was known us the "Banana Trust" case. Three weeks were re quired to try the case. COL. HOUSE IN PARIS YESTERDAY Paris, Jan. 22 Col. E. M. House, President Wilson's representative of a special missior., arrived here today conferred with Amuussnuur rp. fused to discuss his mission. He said "I did not see any French ministers in London or in Paris. I have not seen anyone in Paris except Ambassa dor Sharp." Col. House flatly refused to discuss the contemplated Hritish blockade. He was also silent when asked if Chair man Holmes would continue as the head of the National Democratic com mittee. WAR TELEGRAMS Berlin, Jan. 22. The official state ment issued today states: "The enemy fheiied our positions between Mulleste And Iosees us well as the villages be hind our front without success, tin the eastern front, there were inter mittent artillery due's." don, Jan. J. An Athens hs- j i ati I Kmc to the r.vemiig Nc-w Con stantine in an Hi says that 1 lew o' -upproii.-h-iiiu-er n;no red that if his n.m.stw hi ni with a proposition : ;ia! law that he w o.;!.i ppi-civc it. ncli war ')i;i ii-ir or. tin icrne anu a as calm Paris, Jan. ;'i, e -taienu 22. The nt todav artillery go.im. t I th. It OUI enemy m le the oss-eiTes. mp: the nigr the fronts. !-" noys ( I t II ASSOCI TlOS OF NEW YORK CITY York. Jan. 22. The child wel tird has just granted the first fare 1 w idows' pt-nsion here. To Hl w-omen carine for more than ;u0 children will go checks by mail direet from the city auditor's office, with no pro fessional charity worker to interfere and perhaps humiliate the poor moth er. it h each check goes, too. a kindly letter notifying the mother that she receives the money fro her ser vices to the. State. LESS SICKNESS THAN EVER BEFORE IN N. Y. PtLICE DEiT. V...1 1 -, : . . i 1 1 erenseJ sanitation in" stations " edv-.-a- '' , n,embt r l,f the was re tion along health lines and raore cently overheard te'ling another one (rvmnasiums. there is less sickn.s. in equivalent to more than thirteen men day for active police duty. $3 3 City -Knows FORCE PLA11 A COLLECTING POINT. Fayetteville appears to l.c a Collect ing point between Columbia in the South and Richmond in the North. Women, driven from the towns of -5uut.il Carolina Come to FsyetteviUaa the same thing applies to the North. They seldom stay in ore place for more tbun two or three weeks when they move on to some other point. Recently when a campaign was waged in the city of Wilson, it is au thoritatively stated that a large per centage of them came straight to Fayetteville. DISEASE PREVALENT It is known that disease is usually prevalent in these bwdy houses. Un like the bad women of Europe, they are not license! an'j governed under medical inspection. In Germany7 France, England, Russia, Sweden, Norway ond Denmark, and, in fact, all European countries, the segregated districts are inspected by a govern ment health officer at least once a week. Certificates of cleanliness are then given to the women with the re sult that the percentage of disease is much smaller. There is not any medical inspection in this State with the result that those who contract any disease whatsoever go right on spreading it until they be come insane or other diseased to such a point tl at the State has to take care of them. w.srir.n hfki: Tiie lei hght district !'rir:i;s many people to Faye! teviiU- from the small -irr, ir i:no Thus it r:ot only piay- t-.j oc wi'h the r,i y;;ng men an! l.o. but Fayei'cviiio. is -then put to i..i yr.r sec! ion-, the bla.-k -s thu, iiroi .1 tca.vns It g.-.. eye ant! ct res;. its te i oisu i - the a bad from t; t. .haulier s;., 1 egreg ALL CONTROXTF.ll Fvery town of importance u m. i.;o.! with just si, h cohditn -t here. Some of them are i'V their tight against it e.f. l-..rh;m. for intanct, rtvenily ns as ntuk ttive. tart sired 'Cia- e.l a campaiiri! which had the d esl'eet In Durham the civic as tions i f the :!y hea.te ! by the best women of the t,.n( brought so much pressure to hear on the authorities that the red light district was cleared up. 1: i - argued' by those opposed to the red 1 ,' ' district that what Dur ham t n do "or its own benefit' and fut r. v . ;:'.. re, Fayetteville can d. Pt LICE INTERFERENCE il --s the police, want to interfere wit:: .he segregated district of Fay- ; . ill th is the question being put One i"not to bother aSout the re,) li,.ht ,ti- (Continued on page 2)