i ..inn TUTTT -Mm Fttf wd colJwnlaht trtnf to- vol.; jcyn.Npf 19? SECOND EDITION EINSTON, N. G, FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 1916 FOUR PAGES TODAY , PRICE TWO CENTS FIYE CENTS ON TRAINS ll ' IKE .fiu...t .ritB ' n -'-I'- ii " "" "' EED-HOT RAGE IN EL WAY TO RIOTING; Pershing Declarfis Martial Law Thousands ; Mexicans Sent (M of CityOrganJzed Mob Threatens to Cross Border and Avenge Butchery If Washington and Car ranza Do Hot rAcj AoiH- Congress Excited- Adsiinis trationaxPpTe Able to Hold In Check Ware of Anger Spreading Through CapitoMAmericans In the Nortt HrllciJco'Jlee to Safety of Texas Yilla May Order alsacrejThrt States Official la Three States (By the United Press) EL PASQ, Jan. 14.Martial law was declared here today by General John Pershing, commanding- United States troops jn the Department of Texas, following sev eral hours'-street "fighting between Mexicans and infuri ated Americans ; Regulars dispersed the crowds, searched Mexicans for arms anid patrolled the international bridge. The hpspitalstare filled with wounded Mexicans. Rage over the massacrejwas expected here, but it overran all bounds. 'Mexican Ire being deported by the wholesale to avoid mobs.'4' The Mexican quarter is guarded by sol ' diers with loaded rifles. Americans are reported to be organizing a regiment of volunfeers to invade" Mexico if Washington and Car ranza do hot take immediate steps to avenge the slaugh ter. A molo pf a thousand armed men heard that Mexi cans were Catherine in another part of the city, and made a rush. The '.Eighth Regiment, from Fort Bliss, arrayed just in time-Co halt them.1 ; ' : , ' Rodriguez and Almeida Dead. ; Report of Jfurtherpiassacres con? Vtdnue to filter !n. David Kramer, . father of "Bert Kramer, previously reported killed, fis reported to have been executed. - . The death o ' general Rodriguez, the Vjllista chief,, is confirmed, by Carranza authorities, i With 40 aids, . B&riguexattempted.;to 4ura the Pearson mining plant ; a MJadero. They were . surrounded by- Mexican an -AmerioanaV -and "RodrigueJ! and Almeida "vera executed.. Their fol lowers are ' expected ito meet the same 'fate. . ,- , CONGRESS WROUGHT UP. Washington, C., Jan. 14. Offi Waahinirtnn la seethine 'Over the , Mexican affair. "The reported parti- cipation , by ' American employes on the nJteo, ,t A1-, mejda OI ipry men, u is learro, win deliberately pWeke ! 4e Villistas' geaeral to. attack the Americans. General Fuaaton Is under orders : ' to Wit all border raids and depreda tions. " indignant over the massacre of the eigjiteen mining men, Congress is at ' white heat. An avalanche of reso lutions and speeches are In prospect The administration js said to be pre pared to head off hot-headed action.. 'A The administration a considering the withdrawing of all American officials front , Chihuahua.) Durango and So nora. It is 'reported that most of the : few hundred Americana still in the North of Mexico are fleeing for the border. Administration leaders are seriously concerned over the political effects, of an attack on the adminis tration's policy. It it reported that Carranza is to send an army to wipe., out the. ban- Plana for Occupation. Washington, .Jan. ; 14-It would take $70,0.00 .men to clean up Mexi- , co as 'Cuba was cleaned op, according to the war college plans. The force "would be, .comprised of 50,000 regu Jars, i00,000 volunteers and 20,000 marines. The regulars v Would bear the bnint of the work and the volun teer would ba the army of occupa One expedition would start for &e south from Texas, the, other in lnd from Vera Cruz. . .if- J 211 Expedition, . Wilson determined No . armed troops will be sent yross the border at present, how fcJr, the President indicated today, following a conference with Senator Stone. State Department dispatches y all Americana in Madera are vafe, disposing "of a rumor that 12 more had been killed. ' British Embassy Asks What U. S. ViUDo, Washington.' Jaa. 14-The British embassy is preparing a request to the State Department fcr information regarding the United States' intend-J ed action in Mexico, it is learned, British Representative Holder a' Mexico City .has reported that one British subject has teen killed and property damaged. Hp to .Congneaa. Says Works. Washington, Jan. 14. Sen. Works today introduced a - resolution -declar ing that the responsibility' for the United States action in Mexico rest ed with Congress And not the Chief Executive. It declared for interven tion. It was the signal for hot' de bate by Lodge, Gallinger and Stone. Carranza After Bandits. Carranza, in a message to Ambas sador Arrenondo, today declared that the bandits who massacred the Amer icans are being pursued, ahdwill meet with condign punishment. COTTON SALES ON ,u 1 OCAt EXCHANGE About 75 bales of cotton had been sold here today by 3 o'clock, accord ing to weighej-a. Buyers stated prices to have been 10 1-2 to 11 3-4. ; ' (New York futures quotationa were: , January March . May . . July . . October Open j 12.25 12.45 .12.64 ........12.78 ........ 12.59' Close 12.30 12.58 12.74 12.85 12.68 BRYAN WONT OPPOSE ; WILSON ON ONE GROUND One-Term Plank Will Not Be Rea son U Commoner Fights .Presi dent's Renomination. Declares Bai ley, Who Is Intimate Friend of the Nebraskan, in Washington State ment v . (By the United Press.) Washington, Jan. 14. Bryan has no intention of lighting Wilson's re nomination because of the one-term plank, Representative Bailey, a close friend of the Commoner, today de clared, j . . " ; '.; NERASKANS SELL OOD Lincoln,' Neb. Jan.: 14. Munition makers in the cast are not the only ones to whom the European war is bringing increased incomes. t Nebras ka landowners who have walnut trees about their homes or walnut timber along the creeks n their land are reaping a harvest. , . PASO GIVES MARTIAL LAW OLD KING WEEPS AS HE SIGNS TRUCE FOR NATION Montenegro Virtually Out of War; May Become Austrian Territory HE WOULD RATHER FIGHT Advisors Persuade Ruler to Save His Country From Horrors That Befell Ser bia Teuton Gunners Had Range On Cettinje (By the United Press) "Rome, Jan. 14. With Austrian ar tillery trained upon Cettinje, and the gunners ready to lay the Monteneg rin capital in ruins, King Nicholas has signed an armistice which virtu ally eliminates the little country from the war. The aged ruler wept as he agreed upon the' truce, which prob ably means Montenegro's entire sur render, and that the country is going under Austrian suzerainty. The King wanted to take to the mountains and fight His advisors said that action would make the lit tle country a second Serbia. ESCAPED GERM AN (TV'1 ft Quartet Who Escaped From Intern d Ships at Newport News Ar rested Near DuPont Works in Del 3 aware, Says lie port From Wilming ' ' ton Were Working . As Laborers In the Vicinity By 'the United Press) Wilmington, Del., Jan. 14. iFour German sailors who escaped from in terned vessels at Newport News have been arrested working near the DuPont works. YOUNG WOMAN TAKES OWNlffE WmDRUG IN DUPULV county Daisy Wilson, white, su icided at the home of a family named William- eon in Duplin county late Thursday, says a report which .gave few of the details. It is 'said quicksilver was taken by the girl, who was about 24 or 25 years of ago, and that she died after physicians, who were helpless in the case, had arrived. She was a native! of Wayne county, and was staying .with the Williamsons as a maid or cook, it is said. Persons In Pink Hill, the nearest town to the scene of the supposed suicide, knew very little about it to day. ' They stated that the William son family resided six miles from Pink Hill. The causes for Misa Wil son's act has not been ascribed so far as is known. BULLETINS (By the United Press) TWO BRITISH SHIPS ' : AGROUND. ' A . ; ' .NorfolW Jan. 14. Thre : tuga are endeavoring to pull the Brit- ish steamer Oilfield off a bar in Hampton Roads, where she is , aground. The British steamer Priestfield . is also ashore, near Cape Henry. , ' THREATEN STRIKE IF "; - . CONSCRIPTION PASSES. 'London, Jan. U The Nation- al Railway Men's Union, one of the strongest labor organira tions, today defied the govern ment to enact the conscription : bill when it passed a drastic res olution, threatening a strike. NO SENSATION WILL . ..... vi FOLLOW INQUEST AT ; STATED i ft Coroner Terms Reports of Lynching of Richards NO ARRESTS EXPECTED No one But Members of the Mob Know Who Strung ' Negro Up Northern Press Overdid Account of Affair (Special to The Free Press) Goldsboro, Jan. 14. Coroner Stan ley today expressed regret over what he terms "rot" printed in State pa pers to the effect that ho would ex pose a number of the lynchers of John Richards, confessed murderer of Anderson T. Gurley. The official told the editor of the Daily Argus here that it was impossible for him to name anyone connected with the lynching on Wednesday morning. There is not the slightest thing to base an accusation even of suspects upon. The stringing up of the ne gro occurred at an hour when the streets were clear of all persons ex cept a few policemen and the lynch ers. No one, the coroner is quoted as saying, other than members of the mob, knows who comprised the party, The coroner's jury is to meet to day to conclude the inquest. The jury had not assembled at noon. The verdict, there is every reason to be lieve, will be that Richards came to his death at the hands of parties un known. , : The story sent out that ateel-Jack et bullets had been dug out of the tree upon which Richards was hanged, indicating, that militia rifles has been used in shooting at the victim, is de clared to be the farthest thing from the truth. No government-owned ri fle has been taken from either of the local armories, officers, 'who are in dignant over the report, say. There are other makes of ammunition, they point out, that is steel-jacketed. Reports of the lynching printed in Northern papers are creating amuse ment here. How 500 men, masked and armed to the teeth, overpowered the Sheriff and his deputies, (took Richards, to a point near town and lynched him while he screamed, for the murder of a wealthy planter, is told by one report printed in many papersi "There was wild excitement," according to the story. Gurley was not wealthy, there was not more than a hundred and fifty men in the party, the lynching was so quiet that not a person 'living around the jail or the place where the man was banged knew it was going on, and nO one has been heard to testify , : that the . negro screamed. . There was certainly lit tle excifcment. The xone officer the mob encountered gave them little trouble. .' . . .: : ' - Richards, it is now about conclud ed, was shot to death before the rope got in its work, although the man was banging before he was fired at. Have Been Few Lynching in This' Section. ' ' . . ILenoir county officials today recall ed that there have been very few lyndhfngs in" this immediate part of North Carolina during the past half century. ' Beaufort and Craven coun ties have had their share; Following an awful crime in Greene county dur ing Reconstruction times a mob took a party of seven or eight blacks and a white man who were accused of as saulting two white .women, 'mother and daughter, to the bridge over Moc caaion river at Snow Hill and broke the skulls of all with a hatchet The bodies, were thrown into ihe stream. One of the - victim Irecovered con sciousness and made his way to the shore. , It was bitter cold, and the man cried for help. ' It was not help that he received. The mob finished its work." At a bridge over Neuse ri ver about where the "Iron bridge now is, during the same year, it is said, although those who remember the occasion are not certain of the date nor the number of victims, four MAN CHARGED WITH POISONING WIFE T$ JAILED IN CRAVEN W. R. Hopewell Alleged to Have (liven Woman Poi son last Summer BURIED IN THIS COUNTY .1 (! Prisoner Won't Talk Mar ried in Few Months' Time Rumor That New Wife Put First Husband Out of Way Being Investigated (Special to The Free Press) New Bern, Jan. 14. Drs. Josoph F. Patterson and Raymond Pollock, appcuioted by Superior Court to ex hume the body of Mrs. W. R. Hope well, alleged to have been the victim of poison administered by her hus band, are expected to go to a point six m'iles fom Kinaton. where it is buried, on -Saturday. Hopewell refuses to say a word about the affair except to declare that there is "absolutely nothing to the charge." His present wife, who has been suspected of the murder of her former husband, M. F. Pugh, by poisoning, has not been arrested. No evidence to confirm the reports about her has been secured. Details of Alleged Crime. New Bern, Jan. 14. W. R. Hope well is in the Craven county jail here charged with poisoning his wife last summer. The crime is alleged to have occurred in June, but Hopewell, a Bridgetoh man, was not arrested until Wednesday night. The grand "jury had epent a considerable time investigating Mrs. Hopewell's death and returned a true bill against the husband. There had been gossip concerning Hopewell and the wom an's death for some time. Mrs. Hopewell was before her marriage in 1HU1 Miss Kachel Far sons of Lenoir county. She was ill four or five days before death. Her life was insured. The insuring com panies -are understood to have hesi tated over payment of the policies. In .October Hopewell and Mrs. Han nah Pugh, a widow, were married. The first Mrs. Hopewell was buried in Lenoir county. It is intimated that Mrs. Pugh also poisoned her husband. Mai. F. Pugh. The grand jury is investigating. Hopewell declines to talk about the case, which has called to mind the famous Casey case of a few years ago, in which Leona Casey was sen tenced to State's prison for the poi soning of her , first husband, Joseph Whitty, in order that she might mar ry Burrill Csey. Casey also was convicted and sent to the peniten tiary. ' itopewell, it is charged, gave hVs wife arsenic. It is understood that the body will be exhumed for an ex amination. ' A . commission has been appointed to do this. ' Counsel for the accused has expressed willingness for it, in order, it is stated, that the client' case may be strengthened. CAPT. AHRENS DEAD. Charlotte, Jan. 13. Capt F. W. Ahrena, mayor of Charlotte from 1867 to 1869, v and prominent here, died at his homo this morning at S o'clock. or five men were lynched. ; They were the members of an outlaw gang, most or all of them negroes. The whole sale lynching terminated a career of crime which Would shock the Nation in th period of history. They, too, were "brained" hy hatchets in the hands of a mob. Once, about 80 years ago, a party came here from a rural township in this county to lynch a rapist A big dance was in progress, however an all night af fair with hundreds present The mer rymakers saw from the windows of the second story of the Courthouse, where the dance was being held, that the would-be lynchers had gathered in front of the jail. The officials were notified, and nipped the attempt in the bud, "', . . . JJLANKINBUBG AND M ITCHEl MAY 0END ANNUAL CONVENTION DFlIAYOIliS OFSllE nnni ink lit nr niimiiif;1 rniiiiMj cdmpji US1HULI lnuiiuiLuumiiu uuiiiuiu ui mini Definite Announcement of Selection of Kinston for the Meeting Place of Carolina Municipal Association Nearly Hundred Chief Burgesses, Councilmen and Commissioners Expected to Be Here-Chamber of Commerce to Entertain Kinston to Make Big Show, Especially of Remarkable Paving- Program One of the Most Influential Organizations of Local Officials In the Nation ? ' DEATH CLAIMS GRIM IP HUERTA, BALKS AMERICAN JUSTICE Passed Out On Night of Day Set for Trial On Conspiracy Charge EVENTFUL CAREER ENDS ing," He Said When Sol diers Took. , Him Lieft Great Fortune Grave for Enemies (By the United Press) El PasO, Jan. 14 Victoriano Huer ta, former dictator of Mexico, died here last night A recent operation and old age combined caused his death. He was under Virtual arrest for his part in an alleged conspiracy to start a revolution from American soil, and his trial, which his condi tion would not permit to be called, was to have been started yesterday. With elaborate irony Huerta had remarked when arrested by Federal officers and soldiers at Newman, Texas, "Ah, American soldiers to greet me. That is very nice. Effi cient watchful waiting!" With the passing of the grizzled soldier, the meteoric career of Mexico's last dic tator who sought to rule with a mail ed fist becomes history. Huerta be lieved the best place for an enemy was the grave. He loved whisky.' Pain held no terror for him. Once' a cataract over one eye blinded him. No anesthetic was applied at the op eration. "Cut it off!" he command ed. Huerta, after the trouble with the United States at Vera Cruz, relin quished the dictatorship in June, 1914, going to Paris. He is said to have left $60,000,000 vin Paris. Huerta was born in 1857 of well-to-do parents of Spanish and Indian ancestry. He was educated at Cha pultepec military academy. He be came a general between 1892 and 1902, which yeara he spent in sur veying in Mexico. He declared him self provisional president February 18, 1913. Madero and Suarez were slain during his incumbency. GOING ON IN NEARBY TOWNS AND COUNTIES Craven county has no coroner. Dr. Walter Watson, who held the posi tion, resigned some weeks ago. His successor .will be chosen next month, probably. A new steamer line is to be estab lished between Washington and Swan Quarter by the New Holland Boat Line, Inc. , Clayton Lancaster of Vancebore, who was charged with store-breaking at that town, has been cleared in Superior Court at New Bern. , Lan caster k white. ' Big meat packing concerns are writing farm demonstrators in this section to request them to encourage the raising of hogs for Northern and Western markets, especially in the Winter months. . . ' ,. .. Greenville and Washington are to have new city directories. .... . if Mayor John Purroy Mitcbd of New ' s York or Mayor Blankotffiurg" of Phili' adelphia, or possibly bulk. them, will attend the jUiaT convention f the Carolina Municipal Association to be held here in the coming spring, it is expected. The first, Intimation that the big meeting would be held ' ; hare was given to the public today, when Mayor Fred. Sutton,, who is treasurer of the Association, stated: to The Free Press . that.' it had been definitely decided to honor Kin ston with the presence, of nearly 100 officials of North and South Caroli na cities for 'a (wo or three days' . gathering. Both Mayors Blankenhurg ' and Mitchell will be invited,, as well as other persons of national note. Officials of the Association have every reason to believe, 1 saya r Mayor Sutton,' that both the Now . York and Philadelphia chief burges- ' ses will accept. Mayor Mitchell la called -"the boy mayor," and i prin- . cipally known for his courage and ' cleanness as a politician. - Mayor Blankenbung's municipality has tak en many steps forward since his ten- ; ure of office'. The police force, under,, three separate. , commissions police,'. ' public service and parks is accepU ed to be the most perfect ' in thit country. " Health education meeting's , are held in all parts of the city, the traffc regulations are a standard for the nation, and safety xones on (the streets are the Mayor's especial hob by, it is said, as well as municipal' " concerts and other things in which he takes an interest. . . , The executive committee of the as sociation will meet n a few days to perfect the program ". and set the dates. ' Kin'ston's Chamber' of Com merce will take the matter of enter- v tainment in hand. ' There-will be' au tomobile trips over the good roads of , the county, shad and' b'runswick , stews, oyster roasts and barbecues for the mayors and others. The ses sion, will be held fln a public place. , At the last annual convention, held in Charlotte, there were about . 60 mayors present, This year it is in tended to urge the attendance of mayors pro torn, and councilmen, commissioners, etc., so that1 every city and town of any importance in the 'two Carolina can be represent- ; ed. It is the first time that the As sociation has condescended to meet in a city of this size, but then, Kin- , ' ston has been in the public eye for 1 the past year or two. And the -city, says Mayor Sutton, will do itself proud. It will act for the occasion ss did Singletary, the U. of N. C. football star, who before a famous game with U. of Pa. declared that though he weighed .only 175 or 180 pounds, he would, make every man he tackled think he weighed 250. Sin- : gletary broke five ribs'. Kinston will , burst clear out of harness if neces sary to look large in the eyes of the , hosts. " , ' , ' The Carolina Municipal ' "Associa tion is one of the most influential or- ' ganizatione of its kind in the coun-. try. A large number of former may- ors are among its members.' Mayor T. J. Murphy of 'Greensboro presi dent For the " first ' time, ' Eastern, Carolina officials are" expected to be . in attendance in some number upon a meeting. H" Kinston has some' things that will '. interest them to show the men who will be its guests, too. ' They will see under construction the rqt extens ive paving program' undertaken by a town of this size solely on its" own re sources Jn the world during the past decade. : - " . l"'' " . Subacribe to. The Free Press,