THE WEATHER For N. C Ftirtonirhl anil Wd , wdair, Ml much Chang in mBrMuraJihl variable wind YOIIH HOHE PAPER PUBLISHED BiriERY; KFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDKV, VOL. XVI.-No. 262 KINSTON, N. C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1911 PRICE TWO CENTS SWITZERLAND WOULD PLAY PART PEACE MAKER AND ENLIST HELP OF NEUTRAL POWERS TO RESTORE ORDER IN EUROPE SOCIALISTIC MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT DEMAND THAT SUCH ACTION BE TAKEN AND BODY SO AGREES. IS THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRESIDING OFFICER. great britain Meases one of the italian ships DOOM LOITERED IN I PATH OF THE GREAT OLYMPIC ANOTHER PEACE SLOW VOTING IN CONFERENCE TO EARLY PART OF DAY : SIT IN MEXICOi MAY CUT MAJORITY. i4 I.? RUSSIA TURNS DEAF . EAR TO TURKEY'S APOLOGY . "' , V. ' '' Demand of Allies That AH German Officers In Turkish Army and Nary Be Summarily Expelled Was Not Agreed to and Therefore, Apology Was Not Taken Seriously Martial Law Proclaimed Throughout Egypt Ambassadors Leave. (By the United Press.) Berne, Nov. 4. Resulting from de mands for action on the part of So. cialist members of Parliament, the president, Doctor Arthur Hoffman, announced that he will undertake to reach an agreement with neutral pow. ers for a joint action in the interest of peace. TURKISH EMBASSY MOVED FROM PETROGRAD Petrograd, Nov. 4. Charge d Af faires Fareddin Bey and the entire staff of the Turkish embassy today left for Finland, which action was the result of the rejection of Turkish ap61ogies. There is no confirmation of reports of a Turkish and Russian fight in Caucasia, which reports de. clare that the Russians are continu ing the fighting on the offensive. The Turks were unable to make a stand, lacking artillery. LOCK JAW THREATENS WOUNDED SOLDIERS. Paris. Nov. 4. The Germans con. tinued a night assault in the Arras suburbs and westward of Idle andl along the Belgian frontier without material gains. Activity is reported on the extreme left of the German center in the region of Verdun. A heavy fall of snow has stopped prog, ress of the fighting in Alsace. Lor raine and the Vosges. Many wound ed as a result of shrapnel wounds, are in a serious condition with a growing percentage of tetanus. The medical department is lacking antitetanus serum. German troops in northern France have been effective with the bayonet and hundreds of soldiers are suffering from Bayonet wounds. ALLIES ON OFFENSIVE FOR TWO WEEKS. London, Nov. 4. The press bureau stated that the Allies have been on the offensive in France since October 20. The Germans who confront the British line are declared to be only partly trained, and are suffering from lack of food. EGYPT UNDER MARTIAL LAW. Cairo, Nov. 4. Martial law has been proclaimed throughout Egypt. Many Turks have been arrested. The natives everywhere are quiet. ALL TURKS FROM RUSSIAN TERRITORY IN WEEK Petrograd, Nov. 4. An imperial decree was issued today ordering ex. pulsion of all T.urks from Russian ter ritory within ft'week.' The imperial manifesto, in part, says: "Russia re. ceives fresh aggression from the an cient prosecutor of Christian peoples, TIia Claifa MAAf fViA tooiiA AnnflrlantlrM1 is announcea mat ine viceroy oijthemis C0Vered with sterile oil to Caucasia has already been ordered by prevent air from getting at the germs the Czar to cross the frontier aAt- nd permitted to stand for three kit The Turks' troops are reported : Hnrino- which neriml th to be massed on the frontier. RUSSIANS AND TURKS fIcTHY. Rome, Nov. 4. It is reported that Russian and Turkish troops'haye en gaged oh the frontier near Trebizond, following instructions from the Czar, and special dispatches from Constan tinople state that . , the Servian 'and Montenegrin ministers have 'been re. called from' the Turkish capital. The Turkish apology was rejected by Rus sian Foreign Minister Sazonoff in as much as Turkey refused to expel Ger- man officers4 from hetf'territdry. The apology was without force. SIX THOUSAND MEN . - TOLL OF ONE BATTLE. London, Nov.-4. Six thousand men died in one battle .on October 21. A battalion of the 104th German regi. ment was nearly annihilated Jn ..the - ugnung norm or Lya. four hundred of the battalion were killed and many ' captured. A tribute to Saxon human, ity was the treatment accorded Brit, ish prisoners who were placed in a cellar for protection from British shells. At the offset the above stated party of Germans advanced. "Don't shoot, we're Cold Stream Guards," they shouted. The British responded with machine guns, killing and wound, ing seven hundred. It is claimed that German officers are untrained and use faulty leadership, "which the su perhuman bravery of the soldiers could not counterbalance," was res. ponsible for the severe losses. The British cruiser Minerva has destroy ed the Turkish town of Okaba in Arabia- .uldSf FLOODING OF DYKES DROVE GERMANS OUT. Paris, Nov. 4. The Germans have abandoned their position along the left bank of the Yser as a result of the flooding of dykes. The positions, especially at Dixmude, are now held mainly by the Allies. German as saults since were repulsed. HORSES GIVING BLOOD TO SAVE WAR VICTIMS (By the United Press.) j Detroit, Mich., Nov. 3. Quartered on some of the finest pasture land in Michigan, at Rochester, near Detroit, ! and maintained in a life of luxury and ease a drove of magnificent horses are daily giving their blood-to save the ' lives of soldiers fighting on the bat. j tlefields of Europe. These animals . i have no other purpose in life they , merely give, their blood that the sol- diers may livp. The horses are the property of Parke, Davis and Com. pany of Detroit, the largest drug manufacturing concern in the world. They are used to produce anti-tese-tanic serum, which is administered to prevent and cure the dread disease, tetanus. The entire output of the an. ti-tesetanic serum manufactured by the Parke Davis company from the blood of their horses, is now shipped to Europe for injection into the sol diers suffering or threatened with tetanus. The method of manufacturing the serum is complicated, and the pro cess takes more than nine months from start to finish. Briefly, the method is this: Tetanus germs, which pagated on a large scale in the Parke j Davis laboratories. These germs are forty feet square, which is filled with 1 beef soup, or bouillon, manufactured from beef and glucose. This mixture anus germs multiply into the mil lions. These germs excrete poison. This mixture of poisonous soup is then injected into the horses at Ro. j Chester. At the same time, anti-tox- j in is injected to neutralize the effects 1 of the poison. These double injections j are repeated, at periods of about one week, for hree months, when the horse ' is immunized. . The bleeding process begins. Each animal is bled from the jugular vein about once every month, an average of two galJ Ions of blood beingtaken each time. Whenever possible, this serum is injected into each wounded soldier, to eliminate all possibility of lockjaw. Any shortage of serum in the medical departments of the European armies, medical authorities assert, would re sult in a rapid increase in the death rate and would increase the suffering of the wounded soldiers . a hundred fold. WAS LADEN WITH AMERICAN COPPER AND WAS HELD UP SOME DAYS AGO. KROONLAND NOT SEIZED Merely Detained, Says Official Ad. vice from British Government to the State Department Today No Complications. (By the United Press.) Washington, Nov. 4. One Italian steamship loaded with American cop per detained, at Gibraltar, has been allowed to proceed to Italy, according to official advices from the British government to the State Department The British government stated that the American steamer Kroor.'.and was not seized, but is merely detained. BULLETINS (By the United Press.) PRESIDENT JOURNEYED TO PRINCETON TO VOTE TODAY. ' Washington, Nov. . 4. The President today went to Prince ton to vote. ' He will return this afternoon. Philadelphia, Nov. 4 President Wilson was so anxious to hurry to vote at Princeton that instead of stopping here for fitting new eyeglasses, he received the ocu list aboard his train. ARMOUR COMPANY HAS SERIOUS FIRE TODAY. Chicago, Nov. 4. Armour & Co.'s five-story fertilizer building was today destroyed by fire with a loss of $150,000. BRITISH STEAMER SCUTTLED. London, Nov. 4. A report offi cially confirmed is that the Brit ish steamer Friederik was burned and scuttled when Novorossisk wss bombarded. ' JAP CRUISERS WAIT 1 FOR GERMAN SHIP. . Washington, Nov. 2. It is believed here that repairs on the German cru iser Geier at Honolulu have progress ed to such a point that the warship's commander must elect to run the gauntlet of the Japanese cruisers out side the harbor or apply to the port authorities to have the ship interned until the end of the war. AUTOISTS RESCUED CHILDREN FROM BURNING HOUSE. i Tarboro, Nov. 4. Misses Ethel Skinner, Rubelle Forbes, Leuisa Grant and J. B. Kittrell and H. M. PhllhP8 o Greenville, a motoring party, rescued three small colored children from a burning house which Pa9sed n e road neaf eB T 8j' The house was totally i destroyed. The pickaninnies were un. able to get out of the building by their own efforts. WINSTON SPEAKS FOR NEW AMENDMENTS AT COLERAIN NOW. ... T-iiK&rrNofii The campaign in Bertie county closed with a speech at Colerain, by Hon. Francis D. Win 8ton. Sixteen years ago at that piaCe Judge Winston made the first public announcement of his purpose to introduce, an amendment disfran chising the negro voter. His address today was devoted partly to advocacy of the pending amendments. V AN ACTIVE LIVER MEANS HEALTH. ' If you want good health, a clear complexion and freedom from Dizzi ness, Constipation, Biliousness, Head, aches and Indigestion, take Dr. King's New Life Pills. They drive 'out fer menting and undigested i foods, clear the Blood and cure Constipation. On ly 25c at your druggist (adv.) LINER'S SIDE GRAZED BY A FLOATING MINE NEAR IRISH COAST. THING FAILED TO GO OFF Costly Big Ship With Precious Car. go Probably Was Saved by Neg ligence .of Constructors of the Torpedo. (By the United Press.) London, Nov. 4. After escaping destruction by a floating mine through sheer luck, the White Star linar Olym pic today landed passengers and mails at Belfast. It is reported that the Olympic struck the mine, which failed to explode. The Olympic, one of the largest steamships in the world, carried considerable number of passengers besides her big crew. When the great hull scraped the floating bomb there was imminent danger that all would be sent to the bottom of the sea as quickly as did the more than 1,600 Titanic victims. All owe their escape to an imper. fection in the construction of the mine rather than to defective explo sives contained in it, is the opinion of the ship's officers. HOT CAMPAIGN MARKS WEST VIRGINIA FIGHT Charleston, W. Va., Nov. 3. West Virginia balloted today for six repre sentatives in the national House of Representatives-r-one from each of its five districts and one at large and I i . l c .. i The Democrats were claiming that they would carry the State, but Pro. gressives and Republicans were ex. pected to make a gopd showing. Lead ers of the former were particularly optimistic and looked for much Re. publican support. The campaign was a hot one. In Logan county the coun ty court was forced by writ of man damus to sit in extra session and reg ister Republicans who charged that they ware not permitted to list them selves during the regular registra tion. Politics were blamed for the "shooting up" of the homes of a num ber of negroes, in an alleged effort to frighten them away from the polls. TARIFF THE ISSUE IN PENNSYLVANIA. Harrisburg, Pa., Nov. 3. Boise i Penrose, Republican; A. Mitchell Pal mer, Democrat; Gifford Pinchot, these are the nominees for which a million voters in Pennsylvania were casting ballots today in the first di rect election of a United States Sen Etor in this Stats. And the tariff was the issue. In the senatorial fight Penrose and Mrumbaugh were admittedly strong in the cities of the State. Palmer and McCormick looked to the smaller towns and the. agricultural districts for support. Pinchot expected the support of Progressives and inde pendent Republicans. SKIPPER AND EIGHT MEN RESCUED AT SEA. Newport News, Va., Nov. 2 Bring ing Capt. A. E. Burt and eight men of the crew of the Americarr schooner Charles W. Church, which foundered about 450 miles southeast of Cape Henry Saturday, the Norwegian steamer Belridge arrived here this morning. The rescue, which was made during a forty-five mile.an-hour Sale, was accomplished with much tfiflkulty, as the Belridge was m bal ls sti' : VIRGINIA LEGISLATOR KILLED BY TRAIN. ' Richmond, Va., Nov. 2-R. Bt Hartley, president of the Bank of Stony Creek and representative of Sussex and Greenville counties in the House of Delegates, was run down and, killed by a train on the Atlantic Coast Line Railrad today near his home in Sussex county. Mr. Hartley was' running after a colt and (did not hear the train approaching. ' Be was C3 years old. ;. ! ', .-; EXPECTED TO RATIFY NOMINA TION OF EULALIO GUTIERREZ FOR THE PRESIDENCY. A PROMISE OF HARMONY All Factions Will Send Delegates, Canada Advises Jap Ambassa dor Hears His Countrymen Celebrate Birthday. (By the United Press.) Washington, Jjov. 4. Consul Can ada today reported that the second peace convention in Mexico will bo held within twenty days to ratify the selection of Eulalio Gutierrez by the Aguas Calientes convention as provi. sional. president. All factions will be represented in the new convention. Reports, confirmed, that Tsing Tan, capital' of Kiao Chow, was afire Octo ber 31, were received at the Japaneso embassy today. Special attacks against Kiao Chow, October 3, were made to celebrate the emperor's birth, day. PRESS BUILDING AT FAIR IS COMPLETED. San Francisco, Nov. 3. The Press building of the Panama-Pacific In ternational Exposition was completed today, and is to be occupied by the exposition division of exploitation. It is situated in the South Gardens and conforms in architecture with the French Renaissance style of the Pal ace of Horticulture and Festival Hall. It is a two-story structure. LOVE MESSAGE ON CUP. St. Paul, Minn., Nov. 3. A cam paign throughout Minnesota to use sanitary drinking cups, today gave promise of bringing results not a lessening of germs, but an increase of the love bug. A patient of the State sanitarium for tubercular resi dents, at Walker, read a note on a sanitary drinking cup. It was signed Evelyn Ellison, East Walpole, Mass. He wrote. His comrades are still looking for the answer. WOMAN SHOT BY YOUTH MAY RECOVER. New Bern, Nov. 4. Clara Kimball, the woman shot in a house at Pem broke last week by young O. W. Thompson, a Washington, N. C, tel egraph opeitor, is now expected to recover. Thompson is held without bail pending the result of the wound. Disclosures by the X.ray show that the bullet is lodged between the shoulder blade and a rib, having pierced both lungs. WANT BELGIANS TO SETTLE HERE. Raleigh, Nov. 2. North Carolina may have one or more colonies of Bel gian refugees as the result of corres pondence between Director B. W. Kil gore of the experiment station, and Malcolm McDowell, director of south ern settlement and permanent organ ization, Baltimore. There is a chance now to make set. tlements of these stricken people from Holland, France and England. Those in the war zone wish to come. MATHEWSON MAKES POLITICAL SPEECH New York, Nov. 2. Christopher Mathewson tonight made what he de. scribed as the "first political speech in his baseball career." The National League pitcher took the stump in Elizabeth, N. J., in behalf of a friend, Frank H. Smith, Republican candi date for Union county register of deeds. "Matty" confined his "politi cal" speech mostly to baseball remin iscences. CANAL CLOSED BY ANOTHER LANDSLIDE. .Washington, Nov. J. The Panama canal has been closed to navigation by another landslide. Colonel Goe thala hopes to have it open again By Wednesday, v'., y .... f , , ;. PRECINCT No. 1 HAD NOT POLL ED MORE THAN FIFTY AT 10 O'CLOCK. AMENDMENTS IN FAVOR Full Returns By Private Wire in Lof tin's Opera House Tonight Kit. chin's Majority May Exceed 8,000 Though It Is Off. Year. This is election day. As early as 5:45 o'clock the Courthouse bell pro claimed it The polls were officially opened at 6:39 a. m., and will close at 5:16. Democratic County Chairman G. V. Cowper this morning declared that there was a possibility that the par ty's majority in the county would not come up to 1,200, which he regards as the normal majority. A spirit of disinterestedness prevailed in nearly all precincts. Party leaders look for a majority of 900 to a thousand at least, however. Voting was slow dur. ing the earlier hours of the day, and at precinct No. 1 in the city at 10:25 a. m. only a half hundred had ct ballots. In the Second Congressional dis trict, this being an off year, Repre sentative Claude Kitchin will not get more than an 8,000 majority, Chair man Cowper thinks. This majority W. O. Dixon, Republican, has for days past conceded his opponent. Chief interest in the State centers about the proposed constitutional amendments, ten in number. Demo, cratic headquarters at Raleigh is sat.' isfied that all ten will carry. Many Republicans and Progressives have declared their favor for the amend ments, although in Lenoir county the Moosers declined to endorse the tenth. There are warm contests in one or two western congressional districts. Full returns, county, State and na. tional, will be had in Loftin's opera house this evening. AMENDMENTS AROUSE INTEREST IN TEXAS Dallas, Texas, Nov. 3. A victory for the Democratic State candidate, for the two Democratic candidates for congressman at large and in the six teen Congressional districts was the only expected result in today's elec tion. The certainty of an overwhelm ing Democratic majority, which al ways brings out a light vote in State elections, was slightly offset today by balloting on three proposed amend ments to the State constitution, in eluding one providing for the initia tive and referendum. This amendment, ordinarily likely to pass, seemed doomed to defeat to day, owing to the opposition of the staunchest friends of the initiative and referendum. The proposal, ori ginally introduced in the form of the perfect Wisconsin plan, was changed in the last hours of the 1913 legisla ture's session. The two other amendments voted on today were likely to pass, author izing counties bordering on the Gulf of Mexico to build seawalls and in creasing the compensation of the leg islature and extending the length of the regular session. FETCHING YOUTH ACCUSED OF FLASHING CHECKS Durham, Nov. 2. W. R. Smith, a young man of pleasant personality, was arrested today by Sergeant Ca gle and Officer Clark on a charge; of passing worthless checks to the amount of $40 in Chapel Hill. Smith is being detained in the city lockup in lieu of 500 bond until an officer from "The Hill comes for him. : DAUGHTERS OF REVOLUTION' GATHER IN DURHAM. Durham, Nov. 2. A great many distinguished women have arrived to attend the annual State convention of' the Daughters' of the American Revo lution. , ' .. :- .. . .i4 . ...ij I "I t i "'J . . . - "t 'U .. . , .