Kin PR STON EE 11 PUBLISHED TWICE A WEE W E D N ESDAYS AND SATURDAYS VOL XV1U No. 17 KINSTON, N. C., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 291916 PftrCE tlVE CENTS EVERY SfflER TO RALEIGH PREPARES BRITAIN DECLINES FOUR INJURED, TWO CRAZED IN HELD A GHEECMBOUT IJ1SE W1AN1A : DEFEND MAKE FIGHT AT THE SEE AMBASSADOR OF JAILED AS RESUL AT BAY FOURTH CABINET IN TO PLAY 1111 HUE, from villvs m WSS& AS'MBLY HERE SAFELY OF CUTTING AFFRAY AFTER SHOOTING 1 THAT MANY MONTHS IS GETTING WED chose CROWD r i Carranza Strips Border Plaices of ((jfarrlsons; Sft uation (Mtical RELIEF IS PAYS AWAY Big De Facto Force Hurry- 1 inff to Raiise Siege May Arrive Too Late Assault Goes on Without Cessa tion (By the United Press) El Paso, Texas, Nov. 27. The at tack on Chihuahua by four thousand Vlllistas under the personal command M Villa is still in progress, United States agents here today declared They based their statements upon the action of the CariAna authorities In ending every available soldier in Northern Mexico to the besieged city. From Santa Buenf Ventura the garrison of 150 Carrarizistas is be In withdrawn, together with the garrisons, at Namiquipa, Cases Grah dee said 'Guzman, numbering about ioO each. These are being rushed to Chihuahua over the Mexican North west iRailway to Juareii Where they ill toe transferred , to the Mexican Central. t General Gonzales today announc ed that General Mayeotte, with 3,500 de facto trifmis la makrag a forced jtarcti 'northward from Santa Rosa lla. It will ' take several days for hint to arrive because every bridge south of Chihuahua baa been burned. MRS. INEZ MILHOLLAND BCSSEVAIN PASSES OUT Los Angeles, Cal., Nov, 26. Mrs. Iner MllhoH'and Bolesevain, widely known suffragist and Welfare Worker, died In a hospital here shortly be fore midnight last night after an ill ness of ten weeks. She was thirty years old. Mrs. Boissevain was stricken sud denly while addressing an audience In this city during the recent political campaign and fainted on the platform at the meeting. She Was removod to a 'hospital and her husband and par ents rushed from iNeW York to Join her here. 'Mirs. iBoissevain's illnss was diag nosed as aplastic anemia and blood transfusion was resorted to in at tempts to improve her condition. BLACK VICTIM JOKE MABAtljOSE SHAVE 2ebulon, Nov. 27 There . came near being an electrocution here when James Smith, colored, was made the victim of some practical jokers. He Was given In either hand an end of a piece of wire. The middle point of the wire was Inserted into a socket for which the lamp globe bad been removed and the current twitched on. When the resultant commotion was over Smith Was found lying under an Ail tank and it took the services of a doctor to revive him. - BORNCTMjEFFSOIl ' WAS CtnEt EXfeCDttVE 7 Waxahaftie, Texas, Nov. 27. Mrs. Narais Barns, born when" Thomas iefferaon was president of the Unit ed States, wilL celebrate herllOth tilth anniversary (tomorrow. Her ttree daughters, the eldest of whom 89, and many xff;her 110 grand nd a-wet-grand children will be at tie celebration. Mr, Burn died to ago. ' ; vr,;r'-ii -'v,.. ; Born in Madison county, Tenn, No vember ,26, 1808, the now Hrs. Boras, whose maiden name was Yar borough, Texas with her father's at the age of ten. ' ' Capital Cltir Wants to Be the PcrlHaneiii Meeting Place4 Three Others Want 1917 Convention of Tarheel Pedagogues (Special to The. Free Press) Raleigh, Nov. 27. (Raleigh's ho tela are daily making reservations for teachers who will attend the 23rd session Of the North Carolina Teach era' Assembly here (November to December 1, and one week in advance of the first business meeting the guarantee of an unprecedented at tendance Was complete. At this session the city means to make its bid for the assembly's per manent favor, but invitations from three of the State's larger cities to make the 1917 sitting Of the teachers in another town, 'revives the fight of Raleigh against the State and hold ing the teachers yet another year will be the persuasive job to be undertak en by the business organizations. The compliment is to the bearers of light Who eohipHse the most popular convention of the score or more who visit Raleigh annually. The 1916 assembly promises the most variedly interesting program. New organizations that bring into the larger federation another section of teachers or school-Workers, will bo here for the first time. In the as sembly proper are the associations of grammar grade teachers and princi pals, of county superintendents, of city superintendents, of music teach ers, of high school teachers nl prin cipals, city high school teachers and principals, of school boards, and of the department of higher education LIFE AGAIN SWEET FOR SUPER-FASHIONABLES New York, Nov. 27.No lunger need tenants of William Waldorf Astor's super-fashionable Apthorpe lpartments hold hands to their eyes as they roll up to their home in im ported limousines. The, so they (thought, hopelessly jross, materialistic sign, advertising tho commercial matrimonial agency in the property at 385 West End ave- l.uc. is today removed. The sign which has just come down was put in place years aso bv the ate Fritz "Cupid" PodzSUs. The war took it down. 'Johann Rlnglau. who was Podzjsus' partner, has boon cooking in tho Kaiser's army for the last two years and when recently he .'ailed to meet payments, foreclosure, now successfully concluded, was started. PREPARE FOR SAILING OF CHRISTMAS SHIP (By the United Press) New York, Nov. 27. iBoxes, bales ind bundles of supplies to form the :argo of the American "Red Cross Christmas Relief ship for the bene fit of Syrians were arriving at Red Cross Bush terminal in Brooklyn to day the last day of their availabili ty. The relief ship is to sail for Beirut, Syria, about December 1. The shipment Will be Chiefly cloth- .Persons who intended ' to make gifts but delayed too long still have opportunity. On account of the fight ing on the Somme immense stores of hospital 'supplies are needed. Mon ey donations made the Red Cross for these supplies will be applied , quite promply. , : . V1 ., iU v SATURDAY PDOreALL At New; Haven, Yale 6, Harvard 3. At New' York, Army 15, Navy 7. At Chapel Hill, Virginia Fresh men 19, larouna r resnmen 7. . . (By the United Press) London, Nov. 27. It is officially announced that the British Government has re fused a safe conduct for Count Tarnowski, recently appointed Austrian-Hungarian ambassador to the United States. The action is unexplain ed. BLACK GAMBLERS PUT UP FIGHT TO ESCAPE ARREST BY DEPUTIES pitched battle between officers I negro gamblers at "The Adkin" Sunday resulted in the taking of h:eo prisoners and the wasting of nbut 15 shot3, with the injuring of no one. Col. II . E. Shaw, Solicitor tho local judicial district, looking dewn from his home on Liberty Hill, aw a rams in pnoirress in a hollow n the bank of "The Adkin," the ream which mark;": (lie extreme st;rn boundary of the city. He tel honed the Sheriff's office. Depu s H. V. Allen and N. B. Evans went to the place and surprised 10 ,to men and a woman, the men all ;un!ed with a game. The blacks irtod a retreat, one or two firing as iey ran. Mr. Jim Flowers, Col. haw's law partner, joined the offi- in the chase. The white men aimost had the darkies corralled at on5 point, but all except three man- aired sto make their get-away. Part of tb.3 negroes went Into a briar a'most impenetrable, and one, clalm to be fhot. is believed to have re ceived his injuries from briars. He went to a" doctor. The officers re ceived information which may lead to the arrest of five others from the captured nion, who are John Leo Ilat-lc;-, Will Porter and John Ward. A : e elver was taken from Ward. The wu.ipen had not been fired, and Ward :. believed to have had no hand in th- shooting. 'tIMKK THAN A. THOUSAND TELEPHONES IN KINSTON There are now a thousand and thir-:?--..;(. ven telephones operated from he local exchange. The, thousand i ,rk was passed recently. Nine hun- .'?L-d and twenty-six of the phones r:s wUbin tho corporate limits. Man- aor tJmisau oi tne evenango says g-distanco talking also is breaking si; rccoMls. The number of tickets r out-of-town calls since the sum mer has been astonishing. The cham- ion long-distance talker of the city ur.;il recently was a colored junk Act, who called Harrisburg. Pa., ami other Aortnarn places aimort as icqueniiy as some peoplo do the rrocer down the street. HERZOG WILL BE CHIEF SPUR TO GIANT OUTFIT By HAMILTON, (fulled Press Staff Correspondent) New York, Nov. 27. When John M:G;tjw put over the deal that sent Oristy Mathfwson to Cincinnati as n :.i:;gei- of the Reds, and brought Cha:!ey Hnrzog to New York to pl.ty second base for the Giants he accempHshed one of the brightest mines of his somewhat brilliant ca reer. R.gardlesa of McGraw's manager ial ability, and regardless of how the Giants stand up next year, there is cne thlnu that will be just as evident as it was when the New' Yorkers hang up their " historical winning streak last fall. Charley Herzog will be there in fighting and driving his team mates to greater effort. More than one close student of baseball gives Herzog more than half tht credit for , reviving the Giants last fall. His Irresistible enthusiasm, his fighting mood on rail occasions, and best of all, his ability to make those playing with him spurt at the name speed simply catapulated the Giants into that winning streak. " Eight Pitt and Lenoir Coun ty Men in Near-Riot In South Kinston ONE MAN SERIOUSLY HUR1 Lem. Taylor In Hospital With Throat Gashed Clear Across No Bai for Assailants of Loca Party (Daily Free Press 27th) One man is in the hospital with his throat cut. three others are car rying injuries mare or less painful two are in jail and the authorities believe they are on the track of two others wanted, a3 the result of a cut ting affray which assumed the pro portions of a small-sized riot in South Kinston late Sunday night Following the fiRht Lem. Taylor and Paul Wooten went to Memorial hospital, tho farm;r in a serious con dition from a knife wound clear across his neck, and Wooten with a slight knife wound on his face, and an apparently serious abrasion on his head, supposed to have been made with a plpce of scantling. Frank Hay and Amos Dawson were the others injured. Dawson has a knife wound 14 inches long on his back. Hay was stabbed in one side, the wound being about half an inch deep and three inches long, has a gash six or seven inches long on his breast and his chin is split open. Wooten was knocked senseless,- But it was found at the hospital that his injur ies were not serious en'ough to hold him there. In jail av2 Thad. Braxton and Har ry Jones, both of Pitt county. .The Shorlff'3 office says Joe and Holier Braxton, brothers of Thad. Braxton, are likely t be arrested in Pitt dur ing the dav. The men will be held bailess pending a change in Taylor's condition. W. A. Harris, a brother-in-law of one of the Braxtons, accompanied the Pitt county men to this city in an automobile. When the trouble start id be ran uptown for tne police. He later told the Sheriff that the party had had more than two gallons of wine, and that his companions seem ed to be about intoxicated- Harris himself had his coat ripped almost in two. Sheriff Taylor, policemen and physicians hurried to the place on South street, where the affray occur red. Taylor, Wooten and Hay are Kinstion men, while Dawson Is a res ident of Lon.iir county. The story they told the Sheriff was that they saw the Pitt men on the street, and 'hat as they passed them "one word" was passed by someone on one side or tho wth:r. Tho cutting, they said, started in "the twinkling of an eye," and was over almost as quickly. The Braxtons and Jones fled after the cutting. Two were arrested in South Kinston, while Jones and Thad Brax ton are believed to have walked to Ayden. near which place they live. None of the men cut is believed to havn been armed. Harris told the Sheriff that the Braxtons and Jones had been quarreling among them selves in a house in the neigh'or hood before the attack on the local men. Jones and Joe Braxton are believed to have been responsible for the injuries of Taylor and Wooten. . Around 75 bales of cotton had been sold here by 3 o'clock Monday, buy ers , estimated. The high price was 20 tents.' New York futures quoattions were - Open Close January ... . . .t, ..... .20.99 March .. 21.14 May .. .....21.30 20,81 20.95 2114 July ;. 21.45 21.18 (By the United, Press) Philadelphia, Nov. 22 The po lice urp trying to Identify a man who, crazed by a stab wound In his back, nhoi four persons last mum. and held a crowd or a thousand people at bay and es caped several hundred shot fired at him before he was captured. VERMONT DEMOCRATS DID THEIR LITTLE PART FOR PRESIDENT New York, Nov. 25. Wilbur W. Marsh, treasurer of the Democratic National .Committee, made public lore tonight the official statement of caimpaiarn contributions and dis bursements which will bo filed In Al bany tomorrow In compliance with h? law of New York State. Mr Marsh announced that there is still deficit of more than $300,000. The statement, largely a duplicate of the one filed in Washington, gives ho total amount contributed to the IVmbcratic fund as $1,581,548, of i'ch $4f,558 was received in imounts or less man siuu. in me number of contributors, Texas led with $14,622, with an average of $4 person. Every town In Vermont with over 500 population sent a con- ibution, the total from that Stat: ing approximately $14,000. Re- erring to Vermont s snowing, mr. Marsh said: "If the same rate had r-nn maintained throughout the mntry a campaign fund of more han $14,000,000 could have been iilsed by subscrpidion." BONT PINCH, TICKLE AND COAX 'EM, A NEW DICTUM OF THE POLICE "Superfluous arrests" don't look oid to J. Felix Skinner, chief of ice. He is discouraging "pinch- n:r. To an unintormed person tnifl ms unpoliceman-like, but Chief kinncr's idea is exactly in line with tho policy adopted long ago by many th:; department heads in the big ies. "Tell 'em not to do these hings; give them a chance," is hts plan. The number of arrests made i:i a month in this little city looks big. It would indicate that the po lice aro on their jobs; but it does nr.t necessarily indicate that they are on their jobs in the right way all the time. In recent years the local' po les force has improved rapidly. It ij now a splendid outfit for A place like Kinston. The men are invari ably iptelligent, willing, neatly uni formed and courteous. Skinner be lieves the 'respectable outfit" should become "educators." Desk Sergeant Fescue, who used to be a newspaper ma n would go him one further and have a course on municipal govern menit taught In the public schools, have the cops, make friends with the kids on tho streets and teach them what little they can about the busi ness of aviation in preparation for tho Great Ultimate. "Some rural visitors regard the pfclice as friends especially employed to collar and cuff and lock them up," is one officer's be liE.f. "We are goine: to get that idea cut of their heads." , Every publica tion of consequence dealing with mo dern police methods comes to the lo cal station, and many good things from them aro being stored up to be put into practice. SEVEN LOST LIVES : IN BURNING HOME Cape May. Nov. 26. Lewis .Wil son, his wife, mother-in-law. .'and four children were burned to death In a fire that destroyed tho Wilson home in West Cae May early today. . The family was asleep wnen the 5 Are broke out, and neighbors found it Im possible to save any of them. It b believed the fire originated in 4 defec- tive flue. (Continued from Page Two) Rome. Nov. 27. Athons dispatches declare the resignation of the Greek cabinet is imminent. Greek dispatches have several times indicated imnendlnir dlftnnlntinh or the Lambros cabinet, formed Oc tober 10. A Teport was had on Sat urday that the Minister of Justice had resigned. This is the fourth ministry formed in Greece in fourl months. CARRANZISTAS HIT VILLI'S AUTOMOBILE Chihuahua City, Nov. 25. Via Conrierfo Marfa ,Nov. 2ft. Francisco Villa's automobile, which was being used by him to direct his campaign against the Carranza troops, was struck by shell fire today and was abandoned near Fresno, southwest of the city. The shell holes and bullet marks Wre plainly sebn on the sides of the big automobile when it was found on the battlefield after Villa abandoned it and rode away on horseback. BIG LUMBER PLANT DESTROYED BY FIRE ! Wilmington, Nov. 26. Fire of un determined origin destroyed the plant of the Waccamaw Lumber Company, at Bolton, twenty miles south of Wil mington, entailing an estimated loss of $200,000, insured, early this mdrn- ng. (By the Unked Press) TRAGIC bEATH THEATRICAL MAN. New York, Joseph Brooks tho noted theatrical man, either jumped or fell from the eighth story of an apartment here to day and was Instantly killed. U. C. V. INVITE PRESIDENT. Washington, Nov. 22. Presi dent Wilson was today invited .'n attend the annual encampment of the United Confederate Veter ans in Washington in May. It will be the first time the encamp ment has been held north of the Mason and Dixon line. GERMANS TAKE A TOWN. Berlin, Nov. 22. Alexander has been captured from the Roimianl. sns In Wnilnchla, says an bffirtal German statement. The German advance down both sides of the Atl rlvr-r valley threw the enemy behind the Popologue sector. SOLDIERS' HEALTH GOOD. It having been reported that a Kinston soldier on the border, a member of tho headquarters compa ny of the Second North Cainollna in fantry, was seriously 111 and had been transferred from El Paso to Hot Springs, Ark., The Free Press Wrote Us soldier correspondent at Ft. Bliss for a statement as to the man's con dition. It follows: " , is about to dle from ovetreating. His hot springs will come later, when he Will be kept constantly on the spring from the heat, I Imagine. Whoever aid he was sick, though, went o the last degree of prevarication. If this lad croaks it's going to be from indi gestion or lost of breath because there won't be any room In him fot breath at all. We are all well. We hope to be home Christmas 1917, t PAVING Will ALL BE r ITO&fflED If EW DAYS ,,The paving ton which the city has expended betwten $400,000 and $450, 0QO -will be oompleted during the next week . oi ten days, probably. There will hale been finished abont ISO blocks, ' or" between ' 10 ,and 11 miles of asphalted roadway, and somethlntp 'more than a ' scftre ' . of ciilps of. pare! aicieWallts, . j ; BULLETINS Voti FAlkerfiayft'S Aviators ' rf tfefiigees LONDON IMttOPlFUL That Wailachian Armies May Esfcipe fYdm '' h$ German Commander "flas Laid for Them Ntit ; a Big Capture Repartecl (By the United Frets) London. Nov. 27. News Jlrom Ger man sources tfitttad renBWsl f Vbpe here today that Roumanla may axtrl- :ato herself from the precarious posi tion in which her Wwlachlnn forces have been placed by General Von Falkenhayn's exceedingly 'brilliant strategical campaign. Hie prime oa 3!b for such nope Is the utter lack in all of the German dtfrdiaf fdpor'ta of 4ny claims of large eaptaftea 1ftf fcHj ohers rr material, ftthe ftoumani- vn army is that actually trappwd by the encircling movement arfetmd Xr- lova, it is regarded as certain that German reports . would have chron- clod the big cajpturea by now. Von Falkenhaya Modest. By CARL W. ACKERMAN, ,- (United Press Staff Correspondent) Headquarters "of General Von Fal- kenhayn, Tranylvania Alps, .Nov. 27. "Our task is to destroy the Rou manian army, and tiia we are doing is best we can." So spoke Genaraf Von Falke1inado5 HW fcrdwa Were wrinkled but hit tyea sfpirklmf as he submitted to d.uJtlms Ycon- ;crniig m vlctortotia . Wotrresf aftaJMt Roumania. 1 5 : . . jX "Our flyers," he eonUnnefl "report Roumanian roads blocked with peo ple and wagons, fleeing from Utthi Wallachia toward the Alt'. ; river. This is the terrible part of the .war.; That soldiers should puffer ia war, but jthat women aid little children shout' be ut td sucn miseiy. 'lhat is terrible. But it was fcttflmtataV holce. Tvoumfinia played with '.' fir :oo long. ftTow Ae ht etHfift butned." Bflchares't Aflftifta Retire Aeht,. " Bucharest, Nov. . 27. Retlrtoent 'rnm the Alt, and also from Topoloa lightly eastward, of the iRownanlaa irmies is oflksially reported. ;'-. Nature Aids Defense. , , Petrograd, Nov. .--ythe retiring '.voumanian army in western wai achia is taking advantage of all oat iral obstacles td resist Voit Fttlken- hayn, it is said officially. Havin "rossed the Danube bee SraAniUa. he Teutons haVte placed bbstrvatloa osts on the river Vede, ocWpytng pe- utions between Valent and - RUie- wade. ot Much Fighting In Wast. Berlin, Nov. 27. -A French at tomDt to force an entrance in th4 southern part of the St. Pierre-Vaast iWood, without artillery preparauon, ,vas repulsed by UCfrmah machine vun fire, it Is said offldafly. Minor Ighting only it in progress afotfg the Somme. East Of Gt WlShJlf, a French raid fcgamat a 3rtflan '- post ", failed. ,: ,v v - n&iro nnur UlL0 Ur.lAU Ull (By the United Preat) Washington, Uar .2TvThe cov. ernment and railroad attorneys today marshaled mtertbl for what Ati-" tmed to e -tite f eatest " ir5dtt.rial contest in Mceni yw, the test of fhe'Adimlon'eight-hOar At torney TJenfefal GM'gof f'h Li Son il 'charge for Vfie teVei'U.t n' britnerhc6otfici.U f...'i V i V'e fines "will keep ceedicjs. , i... Jr nr. ifit