J v- '- " ; - ... , : YOUR : HOME PAPEB K jP 1 -. -j II V IP THE WEATHER cloudy and aaUat Jin n PUBLISHED EVERY . RFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDRY, VOL: XVI. No. 282 SECOND EDITION KINSTON, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6,1915 FOUR PAGES TODAY 28 COLUMNS PRICE TWO CENTS HUNDREDS OVERCOME DY SMOKE IN N.Y. SUBWAY FOLLOWING STALLING OF TRAINS BY BLOWOUT FROM DEFECTIVE CABLES NEGRO BOYS DANCED OVATION TO WOOTEN HIGH SCHOOL NOW TURKISH FORCES IN SHAMEFUL RETREAT FROM THE CAUCASUS WITH WHITE GIRLS WHEN PRESENTED TO TO CONSIDER FOUR IMPORTANT TOPICS IN CHICAGO SCHOOL HOUSE AS SPEAKER ' - i " REE PRESS IDA 842,000 Traffic In Tube Tied Up for Dead and Others Reported to Have Suc cumbed to Injuries EVERY FIREMAN AND AMBULANCE IN CITY CALLED Official Investigation of Worst Disaster in Tube Travel's History to Be Held Hospital Holds 150 Victims- Heat Unbearable in Stalled Cars and Windows Could Not Be Raised for Smoke Firemen Worked in Short Relays and Many Were Rendered Unconscious (By the United Press) New York, Jan. G. The entire New York subway system was tied up for hours today as the result of a blow out in the tube at Fifty-ninth street, which slatted a fire that filled the entire system with smoke. The trains were filled with passengers and a wild panic ensued. All the am bulances in New York were called to treat passengers overcome by the smoke. In answer to three alarms all the firemen in the city were called on to aid in getting the people out of the tube filled with smoke for more than a mile. All police reserves were called out. Great danger threaten ed the cars stalled in darkness and filled with passengers. A hundred were overcome by smoke and are in a serious condition. It was impossi ble to open the windows of the cars and the heat became unbearable. Wo men collapsed. All the lights on the trains were out. Victims were stretched on the sidewalks and given first aid. Many firemen, overcome by smoke, were carried out in an un conscious condition. Thirteen persons are in a very se rious condition. Seven hundred are suffering from shock and smoke as phyxiation. It was the worst disaster in the subway's history. Three hundred were overcome by the smoke and 150 were taken to the Polyclinic Hospit al. Many were burned. The firemen worked in five-minute relays. It is reported but not confirmed that some were smothered to death in the tubes. Doctors giving first-aid reported th two showed no signs of life. An un iilentiied woman victim of the sub way accident is this afternoon dead in the Polyclinic Hospital. The dis aster will result in a complete inves tigation of subway methods, accord ing to District Attorney Perkins. The fire was out at 11:30. Officials of the Interborough insist ed that none of their trains were burn ed. The fire was due to faulty in sulation of cables. Fire Commission er Adamson said as trains were stall ed they were searched as rapidly as possible for dead bodies. According to E. J. Lewis, a passenger on one of the trapped trains, the guards lock ed the doors and deserted the impris oned passengers. Men and women j fainted. Those standing in the aisles began dropping like ninepins after the cars had been stalled a few min utes. Windows were ' broken with fists and heels. STAND GUARD ALL NIGHT TO FIGHT OFF OFFICERS Joseph Boyer and Brother-in-Law Barricaded Themselves On the Island in Icy Stream With Guns Turned on Pursuers. (By the United Press) Chicago, Jan. 6. Determined to fight to the death to evade arrest on a charge of robbery, Joseph Boyer and his brother-in-law, Harry Sheft er, all night stood with rifles in hand to prevent a sheriffs posse from ap proaching an lice-locked island in Roche river,' where they had barri caded themselves. - DEAN SUMMER BECOMES . ' THE BISHOP OF OREGON Chicago, Jan. 6. Dean .Walter Taylor Summer, long prominent in social welfare work in Chicago and chairman of the vice commission whose work attracted national atten tion a few years ago, was today con secrated bishop of Oregon with im pressive ceremonies, at the Catholic! oi fcaint Peter and Saint PanLV Hours At Least Three Are N. Y. LEGISLATURE CONVENES AT ALBANY (By the United Press) Albany, Jan. In accordance with state law the legislature will convene here today, the first Wednesday in January. With its meeting, the wheels of the new state government, begun today, will be started on their revo lutions. The make up of the Senate will be: Republicans 33, Democrats 17 and Republican-Progressive 1. The assembly will be composed of 99 Re publicans, 49 Democrats and 2 Pro gressives. The presiding officer of the senate will be the lieutenant gov ernor, luiwaru benoeneck. lne re election of Thaddeus C. Sweet, Phoenix as speaker of the assembly is prac tically assured. SIX-YEAR-OLD CHILDREN IN NORTH CAROLINA MILLS Washington, Jan. 5. Lewis W. Hine, staff photographer for the Na tional Child Labor Commission, made the statement to the commission to day at its eleventh annual conference that while child labor conditions in the South had improved he had found two little girls six years of age work ing in North Carolina cotton mills. The statement caused a sensation among the delegates. "There has been a marked improve ment in the general situation during the last five years, but very young children are working today in North Carolina mills," said Mr. Hine. MANY CLUBS WANT THE NATIONAL OPEN GOLF TOURNAMENT By Hal Sheridan (Written for the United Tress) New York, Jan. 6. Unusual com petition b yclubs to secure the nation al open golf tournament has been dis played this year. The Fox Hills Club has for sometime been keeping this fixture in view and tomorrow at the annual meeting of the United States Golf Association the decision of the officials will be made known. The Baltusrol club has also been a keen competitor for the tournament and contends that it is entitled to it. The Garden City Golf Club has look in and the Wilmington Country Club is anxious to secure either the open or any other championships Many Western men have expressed a desire to see the open held again over the Long Island course. It is regarded in the West as certain that the open will be held near New York. If the large delegation from Chicago vote solid they will probably hold the key to the situation. Body checking in hockey has been practically disbarred by the Amateur Hockey League. No player who is not actually handling the puck may now be checked. Tht interpretation of this rule depends considerably on the referee for the rule is taken to mean that the player is playing the puck so long as he can reach it with his stick. A nlaver coming down the ice and cafroming the pock against the boards must be given the right of way and not checked against the boards. The hard checking which in the past has been a feature of many games here will thus be abolished to a great ex tent A faster game is possible under the new rule. - In sDite of the fact that he had declared that he would retire, Robert n. Wrenn has consented to accept the office of president of the United; . . . v . rf..!M A ran. ' fat Vntlnnal Lawn Tennis Asso-' ciation, if he is re-elected at the an-! of nnal meeting next month, ' Principal, Protested to, Put Stop to Mixing of Races at Play Action Upheld Ry the City Superintend- cut of Schools (By the United Press.) Chicago, Jan. (5. Chicago's super inlcndent of public schools today up hold Principal Fanny Smith's divi sion of the white and negro children n her school's social affairs. Mis Smith divided the whites and negroes when the parents of whites protested igainst negro boys dancing with the white urirls. CITY AUTHORITIES WILI HEAR OTHER BIDDlRS Jf Leach & Co. Defer Consummation of Their Purchase Much Longer. Note to That Effect Has Cone Forth to New Yorkers. If Leach & Co., of New York dilly dally much longer about closing the deal for the $100,000 worth of city bond.-; they some time ago obligated to take from the Kinston City Coun cil, the council will call the thing on j and sell the issue to somebody else. A telegram to the Leach company on Tuesday conveyed that information, comhed, of course, in polite language. A reply came immediately stating that the delay in the consummation of the negotiations rested with their attorneys, and that they would hurry their consideration to an immediate conclusion. A Toledo, O., firm of brokers has asked the city authorities if the bonds are still on the market and available for an immediate transfer, and it seems that there are plenty of other would-be purchasers of the issue, which is the one voted last summer for street, sewerage and lighting im provements. The market for municipal bonds, it is said by authoritative brokers, has improved a great deal recently, and it will not be difficult for the Kinston city fathers to get above par for the issue, which they wish to dispose of immediately so that work may be commenced on the proposed exten sions. IMMIGRATION COMMISSIONER COMING TO THIS STATE. Reidsville, Jan. 5. Anthony Cam- inett, commissioner of immigration in the Department of Labor in Wash ington, will visit Spray and Went worth during the next few days. He was invited by Col. Frank Mobane of Spray, owner of an tmmense Here ford cattle farm and for many years a prominent cotton manufacturer. The natural advantages of Rock ingham county and surrounding ter ritory have for some time appealed to Mr. Caminetti in connection with his studies of the adjustment of farm labor atnd rural credits. NEW BERN NEGRO BANK CLOSED BY THE SHERIFF. New Bern, Jan. !. Acting upon legal instruction, Sheriff Richards j B. Lane this afternoon closed the doors of the Mutual Aid Banking Co. of this city, and telegraphed the Cor poration Commission to send an ex aminer to look into the affairs of the institution, which is operated ;.y ne groes. During the past few months sever al judgments have been secured against this bank by different con cerns scattered over the country. Ex ecution of a judgment for one hun dred and fifty-eight dollars by the D.. I Arey Distilling Company of Baltimore. Md., was the direct cause of the closing of the bank. WHEDBEE SAYS JUDGES : WASTE MUCH BREATH. 1 Wilmington, Jan. 6, In charging the grand jury at the opening of Su perior Court here yesterday Judge H. . W. Whedbee of Greenville, remarked that he had come to the conclusion ; W. Bailey of Raleigh, who will pre after his four and a half years expe- sent their case to the General As- rience on the bench that 95 per cent, what a judge says in his charge is' useless consumption of time. Unanimous Choice of Cau- cus"" When Opponents Read "Handwriting' LEGISLATURE ORGANIZES Governor's Message Thurs day Kinstonian Says Business Will Be Con ducted With Dispatch In the Lower House (By W. J. Martin.) Raleigh, Jan. (!. Emmett R. Woot- en was iriven an ovation when nre- sented to the House as Speaker to- day. In acceptance of the office, Mr. Wooten announced his determination to see to it that the work of the ses- sion both in committees and on the floor of the House, will be dispatched in such a way as to make sure to avoid congestion in the last days and weeks of the session, and that the work will be completed within sixty days, the constitutional limit. Both branches of the Legislature were duly organized today by the election of officers chosen by the Dem- ocratic caucuses. Governor Craig's message goes to the Assembly tomorrow. Elected Speaker by Acclamation. Mr. Wooten is being showered with congratulations today upon his success in the House caucus last eve- ning, when his three opponents with- drew to leave him the only candidate for the speakership before the cau- cus. It was conceded by all three several hours before the caucus met that Mr. Wooten had an ensy major ity, and the other aspirants, T. C. Bowie of Ashe, L. II. Allred of Johnston and A. A. F. Seawell of Lee, very gracefully served as the committee which escorted the Kin ston man to the floor after he had been unanimously selected by the !)3 members present. MARY GARDEN few ite :"' "'Wtf Mary (.anlen, the American prima donna, came to America for the holi days, but intends to return at once to France, where she converted her home Into a hospital and has been devoting herself to nursing wounded French soldiers. She intimates that she may never return to the opera stage. . , Raleigh, Jan. 6. The short lines of North Carolina railways today eom- nutted their interests to uouector J. sembly. They ask the repeal of sec- tion 9 of the Justice act the long and short haul clause. Zi3r$r S3.1' h s'",Jn iCitrvttn -a' "-Si Grammar School Grades Will Also Use Building 6o0 Children Will Be Ben elitcd by Completion of the Structure The handsome new East Lenoir street schoolhousc was occupied this morning at 9 o'clock by the high school and eight grammar grades am: Superintendent of Schools Barron Caldwell, who will have his office in the building. Eighteen rooms are be ing used by the (150 children entered there, Ihe new schoolhousc was to have heen put into commission on Monday, but the failure of the architect to arrive to formally accept the build i"K interfered with the authorities' plans and kept the children out of it for two days. Architect t rank II. Thomson has not yet arrived from Charlotte to accept the work, but the officials were allowed to go ahead with the use of the building since no doubt exists as to the safety and nde- quacy of the heating and ventilating facilities of the house. The finishing touches to the oxteri or are being put on today. The work does not interfere with the stucy of the classes, however, and the children were at work soon after their ndmis- sion, and as much at ease as in their old quarters. The interior of the East Lenoir street building is airy, light and altogether inviting. The appolni- ments in every particular are of the most modern. The structure cost equipped, around $42,000, and is one of the finest public school buildings in iwtn Carolina. KEITH GORE, SHOT BY GIRL'S BROTHER, DEAD Warsaw, Jan. 5. Keith Gore, who was shot at Bowden over a girl, is dead. Gore was shot at the home of Louis Anderson last week because, it is al leged, he had threatened to kill An derson's sister if she went with a man named Coleman. There is an other story, however, to the effect that Gore and the Andersons had been hunting during the afternoon and re turning a misunderstanding arose be tween them; that Louis Anderson and Gore were scuffling over a gun when Gore was shot. CITIES PROTEST TODAY ON RESERVE BANK LOCATIONS (By the United Press) Washington, Jan. f. Rival claims of Richmond, Va., and Baltimore, Md., for financial and commercial suprem acy were uired here today. Hearings were begun by the federal reserve board upon the protest of Baltimore against the location of the regional reserve bank at Richmond instead of Baltimore. Failing to win out in a fight with Richmond to have the reg ional bank located at Baltimore, in terests of the latter city, request, as one alternative, that Baltimore Iks in cluded in the Philadelphia instead of the Richmond banking district. Other protests of geographical di visions of the new banking system were heard by the board later. The regional banks were assigned by the "organization committee" before the board was appointed. The board has authority to re-district and change banking districts at any time. As secretary of the Treasury McAdoo and Comptroller of currency John Skelton Williams were members of the orga nization committee making the origi nal selections and are now members of the board, it is thought that im portant changes in the present geo- graphical make-up of the new system , are doubtful. Prominent hankers and business jay sentenced to two years in prison men of both Baltimore and Richmond anj a fine 0f $0,000 by Federal Judge appeared today. They, filed reams of Pollock. Chambers was the promoter documents pro and con. The oral 0f the Chambers Land Company, or arguments today, however, were the Kanired to sell land in the Florida first held by the new board. BIRMINGHAM'S GREAT I NEW RAILROAD YARD, j Birmingham, Ala Jan. oV Finley yard, the new gravity classification yard and engine terminal of Southern Railway, just north or Birmingham, - containing 30 miles of track" with a capacity of 2,000 cars, has just been placed in serv ice. Fair, Better Roads, City Manager and Enlarging State School COMMITTEE TO BE HEARD Men Who Have Keen Con sidering Five - County Fair to Make Report Ex pected to Be Favorable for the Project Four important matters will be discussed by the Chamber of Com merce at its regular meeting Thurs day night, President J. II. Canady nnnounced today. The meeting is ex pected to have a full attendance, hav ng been postponed from Tuesday night for tho accommodation of mem bers who were out of the city and will eturn during the next twenty-fou hours. The proposed five-county fair will be discussed and the committee ap pointed to investigate its feasibility will make its report. The commit tee is comprised by Messrs, J. F. Taylor, P. S. B. Harper, Dr. J. M. Parrott, N. J. Rouse and F. C Dunn. They are expected to make a favorable report, and it is not at all unlikely that the Chamber will take definite steps to promulgate the plans advised by them. Good roads will be a matter of discussion hardly secondary in im portance to the fair. County com missioners and others interested in better highways will be welcomed in the meeting and given a voice in the consideration of the subject. A city manager for Kinston will bo another subject the merits and defi ciencies of which will be threshed out at the meeting. Since the city authorities have taken the initiative in bringing it up, numerous leading citizens have suCcrosted that it be given a place in the Chamber's pro gram for Thursday night, Mr. Can ady says. Members of City Council re invited to join the Chamber in its discussion. The proposed enlargement of tho North Carolina School for the Fee- ble-Minded near the city, being matter of more than ordinary local interest, will be considered by the lusiness men. The Chamber will de termine Upon what course it should pursue in aiding those behind the movement for an appropriation by the Legislature for the purpose of erect- ng new buildings and increasing th piipment at the institution. ABOR DEPARTMENT INTERFERES IN STRIKE Washington, Jan. 5. Federal in tervention in the eastern Ohio coal miners strike was ordered today by Secretary of Labor Wilson. Daniel J. Keefc, labor expert and former commissioner general of immigra tion nnd Ilywel Davies, former medi ator in the Colorado strike, were des ignatcd to undertake an amicable ad justment. It was announced that the two con ciliatories would proceed as soon a1 possible to the eastern Ohio coa fields for consultation with the op posing faction. EVERGLADES PROMOTER TO JAIL FOR TWO YEARS Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 6. Dr. E C. Chambers, who yesterday was re- fuse,i a new trial on the charge of fraudulent use of the mails, was to Everglades. RALEIGH YOUTH LOST ON BARK WHICH FOUNDERED Norfolk; Va'Jan. 6. From reports received here Earl Lloyd, twenty-one years eld, of - Raleigh, was the only member, lost of the crew of the Am- erkan .. bark . .Pilgrim, formerly the British bark Gale, which foundered in mid-Atlantic December 15, ' r . J Leave Behind Guns, Equip ment and Standards of ' Their Regiments MANY PRISONERS TAKEN Russians Capture Corps Commander and Fifty Thousand Men English men Dying From Rheu matism and Pneumonia (By the United Press) Petrograd, Jan. 6. The entire Tur kish campaign in the Caucasus has failed. The Turkish army is in dis graceful retreat, abandoning .their equipment, guns, ammunition, and in a number of instances their regimen tal colors. The Russians have al ready captured fifty thousand pris oners. Iskhana Pasha, the command er, and entire ninth corps are pris oners. The Russian advance in Hun gary is practically unopposed. In Poland and western Galicia there is practically no change in th situa tion. French Attack St Mihiel. Paris, Jan. 6. The French on the east front are endeavoring to retake St. Mihiel, the only point where the Germans have crossed the Meuse. Hundreds are dying of pneumonia ; and rheumatism, mostly English. The French advance is steady in Alsace. Germans Claim Advance. Berlin, Jan. 6. It is officially an nounced that the Germans are gain-' ing .ground in Alsace. The Germans wiJ reinforce the Austrians in front of Cracow. Reports from Constanti nople say the Allied fleet has again been driven from positions in front of tho Dardanelles forts. A torpedo badly damaged one vessel and the en tire fleet was forced to withdraw be yond gun range. Germans Attack in Hard Rain Paris, Jan. 6. The Germans, des pite torrential rains, essayed two at tacks today to attempt to re-take St. George's. They were driven back with heavy losses. The Germans in the region of the Aisne and around Rheims were forced back 100 yards northwest of Rheims and near Courte- chausse, the French dynamited and demolished 800 yards of the Germans' trenches, capturing half of the trenches. Germans Advance Beyond Vistula. Berlin, Jan. 0. The French heavy guns are bringing destruction to vil lages behind the German lines. Near. Houain, in the Argonne region, the Germans have captured Beveral trenches, two officers and 200 other prisoners. On the eastern front the Germans have penetrated past the Vistula as far as the Sucho branch, capturing several Russian positions, 1,400 prisoners and nine machine guns. DUPONT POWDER MILL BLOWN UP (By the United Press) Wilmington, Del., Jan. 6. The large mill of the DuPont Powder Co., at Rockland Yards, exploded today. The mill contained many tons of black powder. A watchman was in jured. A whole district in Pennsyl vania was rocked as if by an earth quake. COAST STEAMER TRANSFERS TO TRANSATLANTIC SERVICE Wilmington, Jan. 6. Significant of the attractiveness of the trans-Atlantic freight rates and the scarcity, of , neutral vessels to transport Ameri can goods to Europe, is the sailing from here yesterday of the American passenger steamer, City of Savannah, with a cargo of 9,529 bales of cot ton for Rotterdam. The City of Sa vannah usually plies between New York and Savannah, Ga., which run the vessel left to enter the trans-At lantic freight business.