pIesI FREE THE .WBATHEH Fur taahrki d to- ... , tOL. XVII Na 203 SECOND EDITION KINSTON, N. G WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1916 FOUR PAGES TODAY , rmfcSS ontoains " r- - "1 T" ' I REVOLT IN GREECE IIFICISTS.WILL THE DISAFFECTION ION IS EPISCOPAL COUNCIL DEATH CLAIMS CHAS. H. TOY AFTER LONG FIGHT FOR HEALTH FIRST SESSION OF j,IAY BE RESULT THE lIOlifJRESIfiENT IN FIGHT TO MEET THIS CITY MAY TWENTY-FIRST mi TOfiEHELllTiHiIfr i ON SPEAKING TOUR ISSUE ADJHNISTRAT MISSflN EflNFII KGE PilESENT SITUATION ON MEXICAN England Denies Allies Have Sent "Athens Two-Day , Ultimatum - - ill CLASH WW. COME SOON Between Allies and Ten tons on Greek Soil Con stance Withdraws His Troops From Bulgarian Frontier - (By the United Press) London, Jan. 19. Peace nego tiations ' between Austria and Montenegro , have been broken off) says an unconfirmed Rome report It is accepted with re serve Here. London,: Jan.' 9. The Allied war council is meeting. The foreign of fice denies that a two-day ultima turn to Greece, ha been issued. Dispatch es froth Rotterdam and Germany de clare a Greek revolution is feared. Constantino's government is in dan ger. The Allies' troops are still landing and the Teutons' attack on Salonika is' momentarily expected. Shipload'Serbs to Aid Allies. Athens, Jan. 19. A transportload of Serbians Have been landed at Sa lonika to co-operate with the Allies, sajr dispatches. ' They were carried from Albania on a British steamer. Engtand to Furnish Coal for Greek Railroads, . tbndon, Jan. 19. All Greek troops 'eUtept one 'battalion will be with ' drawn Iron the Bulgarian frontier, V it is announced.,- England has agreed to export 6,000 tons of coal to help , the Greek Railroads. " ' .' GermansJEiave Loat Two Million ; and .Half Men. , .-..A . London Jan. 19. -German casus, ties during the war have oeeu 2,525, . 769, Under War .Secretary Termant todayfiihriounced to" the House ,of Commons.: Six "hundred and thir teen thousand were kiHed and 1,566, 649 wounded. , ' South Africans Reach Egypt ; Frefaria. South Africa, Jan. 16. 'The first, of the South African bri- fades to be sent to Egypt has ar rived at its destination, it ia announc- 1 ' Premiers Attend War Council Meeting. - London, Jan. 19. The French pre mier an 'femier, Asquith and mili tary; representatives are attending1 the war council, which went into ses sion ft noon. Mesopotamia Relief Movement, i Stopped. , London, Jan. 19. The British ad vancing to the relief of the besieged garrison at Kutelamara have been unable to make progress beck use of the weather, India Secretary Cham berlain '. today announced to the Boose Of Commons. . 1 JWi CONFESS. GERMAN SPY MADE ESCAPE ; New York, Jan. 18. Ignatius. T. Treblch Lincoln, a former member of ifhe British Parliament and self , confessed German spy, and who was being held here pending extradition to England, escaped from a United States deputy marshal last Satur day, it , was learned today, -and has not been seen since. The United States marshal We has notified the , secret service and a ; nation-wide search Siastbeen ordered. fODAY'S SALES ON THE LOCAL COTTON MARKET , -Seventeen bales of cotton had been sold her today by 3 o'clock, at prices ranging from 10 7-8 to 11 3-4c. Open 12.30 .......12.45 .......12.69 .......12.82 12.73 2:40 12.27 12.41 12.64 12.77 12.72 January March ... May .. ..... ..July;-.. October '.. Bryan, Jordan, Villard. Rabbi Wise and Hillquisi Expected to Go On Anti Preparedness Campaign. Bryan Makes Statement (By the United Press) Miami. Fla Jan. 19 W. J. Bry an approves President Wilson's pro posal to speak on preparedness t in several States. He says. Mr. Wilson will find the real sentiment of the people against hie plans. People to Hear Both Sides. Washington, Jan. 19. -Peace ad vocates plan to follow the President on his; speaking tour, Representative Bailey of Pmwsylvani today said, including Mr. Bryan, Dr. Davis Stan- Jordan, Oswalg V. Villard, Rabbi Wise and Socialist representative London Morris Hillauist. .' PROTECT GAME BIRDS, THEY'LL RECIPROCATE Destructive Insects Ruin Hundreds of Millions of Dollars' Worth of Growinsr Stuff for Farmers of the United States Annually, Says Au dubon Society of North Carolina- Put Up Bird Houses. . . -v "Safety first. Protect the birds and they will protect your crops , by destroying injurious insects," is ad vice from the Audubon Society of North Carolina. I-enoir county people evince deep interest in the work of the society, it is said here, and this county has unusually strict laws for the protect tion of imect-destroyinj birds. Tim open season is ono of the shortest jn the State. Destructive .insects, says the A'.r d;ibon Society, cost the com growers of the United States $100,000,000 an nually, the fruit growers $30,000,. 000, tobacco growers $10,000,000, po tato growers, $17,000,000, etc. Nine ty-eight per cent, of the food of wrens is composed of insects, 76 pef cent of meadowlarkfi, 64 per cent., of brown threshers, 90 per cent, of kingbirds or bee , martins. "Put up some bird houses. Do it now. Put some water in the front yard for a bird bath. Furnish some food for the birds when it is scarce. Encour age respeef for jgam laws." NEWS OF? A DAY IN OTHER LCAROLJN TOWNS AND COUNTIES The S. II. Adams Cooperage Com pany, with $oo,w of iwvjwv paia hi, is to start business at New Bern. New York and Indiana men are in terested". Staves, barrel headings, etc, will be manufactured. Bad weather is slowing down the work: at the Cape Lookout Harbor of Refuge. :-,'V,t;,:. Commissioner T. P. Spencer of Florence, S. C, has been at New Bern making a study of that city's streets.. -::!'- A' family reunion occurred at the country place of Dr. Earl S. Sloan, the 'millionaire liniment man, near New1 Bern " a day or two ago. Rel atives- from Colorado, Ohio, Indiana and Brrtfsh CoTumMa were present. C. S. Carr, for many years cash ier of a Greenville bank, has gone to Norfolk to be employed by the Royster Guano 'Company. ' When grip becomes prevalent t frequently attacks as much as forty per cent, of the population, says D. M. T. Edgerton, Jr., whole-tame health officer in Pitt county. The disease usually manifest itself with the symptoms of an ordinary cold with fever and bronchitis. :v TURKS HALT RUSSIANS. London, Jan. 19.-The Russian of fensive in the Caucasus was halted by the' arrival of Turkish reinforce ments. It announced , tnat xne that the enemy is suffering from the weather and other hardships. v IN CHINA SPREADS, PLOTS DISCOVERED ' - v Many Arrests Followed the Finding of Explosives In Palace of Yuan Shi Kai. Thirty Thousand Revolu tionists in Yunnan (By the United Press) Peking, Jan. 19. (Numerous ar rests were made following discovery of a plot to dynamite .Yuan Shi Kai, the new emperor. Explosives were discovered today in the palace. Sev eral plots have been found, and the revolution in Yunnan province is continuing despite' the presence there of large bodies of troops. There are 80,000 of the revolutionists. Tokio dispatches say the dissatisfaction is spreading. HALF MILLION DOLLAR FIRE AT PASSAIC, N. J. (By the United Press) , Paisaic, N. J., Jan. 19. Half a million dollars' damage was done by a tire which had its beginning in a dime store. The blaze left 50 fami lies homeless ' and destroyed 1 the - 1yle business blocks. MANUFACTURES IN WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Washington, Jan. 19. A special census bulletin gives the number of manufacturing establishments in Winston-Salem as 73, employing 10, 964 persons, using primary horse, power of 8,253 with capital of $25,: 703,000, and value of products $37,- 288,000. The estimated population on.uly 1, 1914, was 29,000. VIEWS ON GREAT ALLIANCE Some Want More Compre hensive Plan. Others More Time, Etc. Daniels Announces An Increase of Waffes at Navy Yards (By the United Press) Washington, Jan. 19. Pan-Amer ican replies to suggestions for an al tisnce are reaching, the State De partment Some are enthusiastic; others want time. Some suggest a ntore comprehensive plan for the Al liance of the 21 western republics. Navy Yard Employes Get Increase. Master mechanics in all navy yards will receive a five per cent, increase in wages, Secretary Daniels announc ed today. '" "' BULLETINS i (By the United Press) FISHING CRAFT SUBMARINED. ' ' London, Jan. 19. The Lowe stoft fishing smacks Foamcrest and Sunshine have been subma rined but their! crews rescued probably, in the North Sea. TWO ZEPPELINS DAMAGED. Amsterdam, Jan, " 19, Two Zeppelins, damaged by French, fell behind the Germans' lines at Rhehns, say dispatches. They were taken to Germany and re paired. . THREE MEMBERS SHUTS ' CREW KILLED. London,. Jan. 19. The liner Ryhdam, damaged at sea, ar rived today earryingihe bodies of three stokers killed and four injured persons. AMERICAN HOLD VAR'YO President's Forces Today Prevented Discussion of Question in Senate BANDITS ARE FRIGHTENED Exhibition of Bodies of Ex ecuted Villistas Scares Their Fellows Into Moun tains State Department Report ' Today, Probably (By the United Press) Washington, Jan. 19. The Mexi can report of the State Department is expected to be had today at a meeting of the Senate foreign rela tions committee. The situation to day engrosses Congress, the Presi dent and the State Department Parade Bodies of Villa Bandits. El, Paso, Jan. 19 Carranea's death order terrifies the Villa bandits. 'A public parade of the corpses of the men recently executed sent many of them scurrying to the mountains. A third bandit U due for execution. President's Forces Victorious in Congress. Washington, Jan. 19. The Senate administration forces today sucoeed ed in the hottest session yet of the foreign relations committee, keeping from the Senate floor discussion of Mexico. The majority was against reporting the intervention bills. Bo rah, the opposition leader, said the fight was poponsd to gain strength s .. : rr !- AMERICANS BELIEVE REAL BiOCKADE IAY I British Fleet On That Du ty Would Not Have to Be Increased Would Be Conditions Similar to Those of War of W65 (By the United Press) Washington, Jan. T9 That a de claration of Britain's actual block ade is imminent, officials believe pos sible. Three rear admirals have said that it would require no more ships than the admiralty is using now in the "paper blockade." There would be a similar blockads to that the North employed against the Confederates. ,. 50,000 More Men for British Navy. Lodon, Jan. 19. Provisions for the addition of 60,000 men to the na vy is believed to be a preliminary step to tiie actual German blockade. The addition indicates an increase of blockading ships during the wst. The number of men asked for is sur prising. With this addition the na vy will have 260,000 officers and men. FINGER PRINTS ARE , M0HR CASE QUESTION Those On Dead Man's Clothing Could Have Been Made by Hos pital Orderly, But State Tries to Prove Otherwise Witness for the State Heard Accused Woman Threaten Her Husband, Testifies VL (By the United Press.) t v Providence, Jan. 19. Mrs. Eliza beth Mohr was bright when she en tered court today with her attorney, James Logan, an orderly ' at the Rhode Island Hospital, was the first witness. He told ' how his finger prints might have gotten on Dr. Mohr's clothes. The State is trying to show that they might have been the murderer's prints instead of Lo- NSTITUTED - .nil 'iV ' ' ' '' Bishop to Make Ilis Official Visitation to St. Mary's Parish Then Annual Session Diocese of East Carolina-Dr. Hall 111 The Rt Rev. Thos. C. Darst, D. D4 Bishop ot East Carolina, has an nounced that he expects to pay bis official visitation to the following Episcopal churches in this section of the diocese: St Barnabas,' Snow Hill, Sunday, February 27, at 11 a. m.; St Augustus', church, colored, Kin ston, same day at 8 p? m.j Holy In nocents', Lenoir county, Monday, February 28, at 3 p. m.; St. James', Ayden, Tuesday, 29th. at 8 p. m. Bishop' Dant also appoints Sunday, May 21, that being the time when the Council of the Diocese will be in session in St Mary's church here, as the date for his visitation to the lo cal parish. The Rev. J. Jefferson Davis Hill, of the Galilee mission, Philadelphia, who is well-known in this city, is critically ill at the mission, having suffered a serious breakdown owing to continuous attention to the rescue work connected with the mission. He has been a worker in that field of la bor for years, and has an interna tional reputation. Before that he was engaged In Christian work among prisoners in Alabama. He will be compelled to take a long peJ riod of rest before he can enter up on his' labors again. Galilee Mis sion, in the business section of Phil adelphia, is known to nearly 'every person in the city, as la Dr. Hall, its head. '.-.' "-'"'::K-p : HONOR MEMORY LEE AND JACKSON THIS EVENING IN CHURCH The Edifice of the Gordon Street Christians to Be Used for Services to Be Participated in by Three Full Congregations and the Public The congregation of Atkinson Me morial Presbyterian, the First Bap tist and Gordon Street Christian churches will unite in regilioua ser vices to be held in the edifice of the Christians this evening in commem oration of the natal anniversaries of RobertrEdiwatd Lee and Thomas J. (Stonewall) Jackson, and the gener al public is cordially invited to at tend. The services will be under the auspices of A. M. Waddell Chapter, United Daughters of the Confeder acy. They will start at 7:30 o'clock. The speaker of the evening will be Mr. B. P. Smith, pastor of Gordon Street church. There will be special music Nearly every ex-Confederate sol dier in the city will, of course, at tend these services. Hundreds of persons should be attracted . through a sense of patriotism, and many will be present just to do homage to the surviving characters . of the two great Southerners', whose biograph ers refer to them as "Christian gen tlemen" and "soldiers of God and a lesser Cause." The customary midweek prayer services in the three churches nam ed will be dispensed with, of course, and their pastors will attend the ex ercises in Gordon Street church with the congregations. . ' . gan s. -' - i George Rooks, brother-in-law of Emily Burger, was a Stats witness. He identified a card alleged to have been sent by Mrs. Mohr threatening Emily's life. " He said ha. heard the defendant threaten et husland. Well-Known Kinston Man Passes Away In Jones County Funeral Here Tomorrow Was of Ex cellent Character Many months and thousands of dol lars spent in pursuit of health avail ed Charles H. FOy naught, , Mr, Foy, 59 years of age and one of this city's well known men. died at a country home in Jones ! county some miles from here Tuesday evening between 8 and 9 o'clock. Tuberculosis was the immediate cause, of his demise. He is survived by hia wife, two daughters, Misses Elisabeth and Ruby Foy of Kinston, and one son, Mr. Henry Foy. of Norfolk, and several, brothers-and sisters. The remains weri to , be brought here this afternoon. The funeral will be held from the city residence, . on McLewean street at 10:30 a. m. Thursday. ; Mr. Foy had been in declining health for several years. He had travelled extensively In the West and had spent some weeks at Michigan sanatorium in : 'the hope of re gaining his wasting vitality. Spe cialists said chronic stomach dis order was troubling him. ' Probably that complaint ' aided the disease which ycaused his death Through all the months of his indisposition he maintained excellent spirit and un til he left the city for the country was frequently on the streets to chat with his Mends. The rural life, he believed, would benefit him more than all other treatment if there was any improvement in store for him. Mr. Foy was born in Jones county and has lived practically all of his life in this section. He was a member of the Methodist church. He was a large landowner and of independent means. He was a Mason. His char acter was exemplary. i Interment of the remains will be in Maplewood cemetery. The funer al is expected to be largely attended, bince the majority of people in. the county were acquainted with the, de ceased. He was prominently con nected, - -r- FERRIS BILL IS PASSED BY THE LOWER HOUSE Washington, Jan. 18.--The Ferris bill to create a system of 640 acre stock-raising homesteads on arid, semi-arid, and mountainous lands in seventeen States was passed late to day by the Hsoue. All three of the administration conservation meas ures, providing for water power de velopment, mineral leasing and larg er stock-raising homesteads, now await the action of the Senate. KEATING TO ATTEND " ASHEVILLE MEETING Asheville, Jan. 18. Congressman Keating, .who introduced the Keating-Owen child labor bill in Congress and Congressman Britt will both be present at the child labor conference which is to be held in this city Feb ruary 3 to February C. MAY TRY WILMINGTON OFFICIALS THIS WEEK, i Wilmington, Jan. 18. II is ex pected that cases against several city officials charged with violations of election laws which have been on Superior Court docket since Septem ber will be tried at this term of court INCREASE IN CATTLE AND HOGS REPORTED iWashington, Jan. 18. -The De partment of Agriculture's annual es tkftafe of farm cattle in the country January 1, issued today, shows 21, 988,000 milk cows, an increase of 3.4 per cent over 1915; 39,453,000 other cattle, an Increase of 8.4 per cent; 49,162,000 sheep, a decrease of 1.6 per cent, and 68,047,000 swine, - an Scores of Methodist Wom en of East Carolina to Gather in Kinston AN IMPORTANT MEETING Not Much Formal Tonight . Rev. II. A. Humble to Open Convention .- Ad dress of Welcome by Mrs. . Ret tie Lee The majority of thfl officers and ilrlcffst to the annual missionary (oFifcrenee of the Methodist women -f 'ths jffc'enf half; cf the Stats Will ' r.Hye on this afternoon's and even iujf's trains, probbly p haif dosstn Jiad arrived this morning: Homese : tt'cre'awdgned for cbout 13i visitors on Tuesday. . Mr.?. R. B. John, the ., J'rt'sicVnt, will arrive this afternoon from -Smithlleld. Members of the lo cal society, of which Mrs. N. B. Moore is the president, will meet the dele gates at the depots and conduct, thein to the hemes in which, they will be entertained during the remainder of , tlhe week. Practically all of the visl- v tors are expected to remain through . Sunday. Thejr will be from as far -, East as .Wilmington, Washington and Elisabeth City and as far West as Rockingham," Raleigh and Durham. The first session of ths conference will be held tonight at 7:30- o'clock in Queen Street Methodist church, in whkh edifies all the sessions of the week will be conducted. The choir of the church will render an, anthem, after which' there will be scripture reading by Paster H. A.( Humfcle' of Queen Street church, another musical number and a prayer by Mr. Humble. Mrs. Bet tie Lee of the local society will make a' brief address of welcome. There Is no responses scheduled. With Mrs., Lee's . speech .. the formal pro gram of the evening will be conclud ed, after whkh there will be a get acqualnted period in which the isi- ; ting women will be introduced to one another -and their more than half a hundred hostesses. Not more than 200 will be in at tendance upon the conference, it is believed, but officers of the local cicty will not be surprised If tl number is attained. The conference will get down to actual business on. Thursday, with reports and plans for future work. Sessions will be featured during the remainder of the week by addresses by noted mission workms and ret tiumcd missionaries, etc. The (Conference Society is one of the most influential organizations of ilis kind in the Sovth. It raised be tween $35,000 and $40,000 for mis si on work last year. FIRST REPORT SAYS GAS. EXPLODED IN SUBMARINE Washington, Jan. 18. Gas gener ated by the new Edison storage bat tery and ignited by a spark of un known origin is held responsible for the explosion on the submarine E-2, at the New York navy yard Satur day in s report to Secretary Daniels today by ithe board of injury to de termine the cause of the disaster in which five men lost their lives and nine were seriously injured. . As only one of the survivors was in a condition to testify, the report is regarded by the secretary as in conclusive. ; ' . ., : - BABY DIED, FATHER COULDN'T BE FOUND. (By fne Eastern Press) Washington, N. C Jan. 19. Tele grams told relatives here of the death yesterday in Denver, Colo of the infant son of Thos. Clark and wife. Mr. Clark was a prominent business man here until ill health drove him west ' Many attempts had been made to locate him, but be bad not been found when the baby died, said the teram. ' Ha was trsvel ir; ci C.9 re.:"; c--- . ; -