'Ov;'.: ;jt"'.:;l. 1LY P Northeast Wind VOL. - XVIII. No. 51 SECOND JSfrflffON "I KlNSTONj N, Ct. SATURDAY,, JUIVF 29, 1916 PRICK TWO CXNTS ' FIVE CENTS ON TRAINS SIX PAGES TODAY IONST0N MINISTERS ,ASKfD TO. BRIl'G TO1 NO lEllEf ft THpSl. IN PIlS0NST0CKS MATTER HAS FEDERAL COURT H.. i i (I m MIDDLE WEST, .SAYS APPROVED . PUTTING BEEN ARRANGED) IS HAVE i j. ill. k :. 1 MB SIN TO DEATH NEWS FROM KEPT HER TERS HELD 01 ORD ERS XPPAM RESTOR'D A itIVllUN wlm n m TO BRITISH 1 0WNER8; SHOULD 1RTI lAROtlNA'S GllrrtlvtKo YrAIHtl oURtAU tAPT DM OUT OF NEUTRAL 1VA after being marooned in weeks, and he brings a firsthand account of the terrible cuuuiuuiia wjau prevail. ;. w tin; epicjiiuiu i eapuiicse tureauy given to wie can lor am, ne emphasizes the need for etill further assistance, and urges the people of the" State to continue to respond to the call. Momr TliAiitso1a a-P 1rT 1 n va wswa even tne nrst aid can De given, t The contnbutions through the local committees show? ed a decided drop today. Only $9.25 has been turned in to trio onm-miHoa ainno voctofita wmvSVr "Tha lrtnl Prtmmit. tee has issued a statement1 expressing appreciation for the moneyalready 'given, and emphasizing the need for morev The?pastors of the various churches are asked to call the attention of the congregations tomorrow to the need atld "ask that contributions be made. :, The statement of Messrs. Rouse and Douglass of the local committee follows: . ' ' We desire now to give expression of sincere appreciation for the liberal donations participated In by so many people of the city and community for the relief of those who suffered ffr'om the storms that visited Western North Carolina. At the same time we feel under the necessity of emphasizing the fact Hlnat'lhe Governor of the State, upon his return to Raleigh, calls 'aiterilion to the vastness of the storm's destruction and of the necessity of continuing and supplementing the relief already jprovided.' We tfieref ore ask permission through your paper to "direct the attention of the public to the call for relief that still' Continues, and to request that the ministers of the vari !olia 'churches, of the city bring to the attention of their res f 'peetlve congregations the conditions prevailing in the west tfix 'tfart of the' State and that they emphasize the necessity ofHteting the voice that appeals to the 'generosity of those "Vho'have escaped misfortune., Surrounded by our c-wn good fof ttfnc, let us tot forget those who are surrounded by adver- ' ty. j ' We also desire gratefully to acknowledge the cordial and Wattle aid that the papers of the city have rendered, W. B. DOUGLASS, Mayor Pro Tern, of Kington ' i r i r N. J. ROUSE, ' . - ' ..,....,... ; M.Mif Stat Relief Comtnitteei f : - The cohtributiona to date are: Previously reported . . . 0sh .. ..i, i Cain Casih1.. Mrs.'c. W.lanchard Rev. C. W. Blanchard . D. T.TSdwards ..... TfCSl.13 .. .50 . . 1.00 ..1.00 ..'1.00 1.00 .. 1.00 . . 1.50 Lon"'i.,t Moore, . . ,' J, T. I.H.H.. ' Mil f,W ': .( rf-t i '" .'! PMTO1ATIDN GoMerhmentv Decision Irre- vfcable: 'MfelsadoT m taidWili feetam With $50,000 for Irish Relief On Monday ' (By halted Wwi) ' ; Washington, July ; 29-England's decision not. to allow ThomasH. Kel 3y and wife artd Joseph Smith, carry ing $50,000 for the Irish relief fund, to remain in England, Is irrevocablei Ambassador Page . today cabled the State Tiepartment. Kelly and the others will aoil for America Monday' on (the liner Philadelphia, from ? Liv erpool gereian mfflmmimx'M C0'TIES;li (By the United Ptm) , - LohSba, 'uTy German air raid bver LMolnshire ad Sat folk today ouwed So mterial damag,', "it ia i tedally said. "Three airships it i-J this Morning dropped, 32 bombs over "Lincolnshire aad Norfolk without "material damage. There wen no euaalUea," U tu aaiL We flood district for a several nue expressing appreciation 02 ' Turned in by Colored Committee: John Shepherd . . 25 .25 .50' J. D. Slado Roscoo Wiggins Clark Miller '. Pride of Kinston Lodge ........ 1.00 . '.. ; Grand total to date. .. .'.$G40.38 J It I J is Ority the Firtrts1 A&ifig Vs Agents dTrXJetmant ' or; Sending Wohey ioVltiati Country to Be Boycotted Is Assurance Given (BY the United fcress) Washington, July 29. The British ambassador today 'delivered to ithe State Department formal guarantee regarding the scope of thepplication of the British blacklist as StppliesJ to .Amencan nrma. The guarantee says H applies only "to firms actually, named, and ttat tho only, firms .sub-w ject to the blacklist are those proved k w De agenw or tne uerman govern- , : - i - - . .' a ment Or aendjng mdnef 40 Germany, l y, By KOBT. 3. BtXDEfi, 5 ';' (United Press SUIT Correspondent) Washington, July 29. Tho Admin- J Hill I nilii(4t rUVi Litil .m r - nil iiiiHiii ill LSI TH t S. campaign, Main istration's Mexican" policy will be the " lfia eseapades' brought ruin to ,na, football of the campaign. Hughes will and broke my mothor's heart that's make the kick-oit Monday in his ac- why I'm in the ranks, hating (.- my ceptance speech. Senator James, the father's peopie,", said Jones. , , Democratic leader, will foHow when "Jones ia a willing worker. HeU he notifies President Wilson of his, make a good soldier," said Captain nomination. : ' 4 , 'Edward 5ollins. KefeI0n May IIave to Swel ter a Week Yet, is Bad News From Chicago MrtBE THAW I'M) nFATrft Hundreds Prostrated All l. Wo . Anv. tne lr0m Aliegneny Mountains tO KOCKieS the Country Sizzles Under High Temperature (By the "United Press) . Chicago, July 29.-awn found Chicago, and the section between the Rockies and Alleghenles still swelter ing. There was no reduction In the temperature and it was predicted that the hot spell would last until Monday at least, possibly all of next week. The total of dead is 106, with sev eral hundred prostrated. No Hope for IJarly Change. Washington, July 29. No relief is in sight from the hot wave, the wea ther bureau today (reported. BULLETINS (By the United Press)" SENATE REQUESTS CLEMENCY JOR IRISH. Washington, July 9. The Sen ' ate today voted to ask Great Brit ain to exercise clemency in deal S jyithjjrish political prisoners. AEROPLANES KILL ITALIANS. Rome, July 29. Enemy aero planes today bombarded x i the towns of Ba'ri, Molfeta and Ot ranto on the southern peninsula, killing several and wounding over a score of persons, it Is of- daily said. " 1 . ' ' Li' ' j; AGAIN M .lEuPlTE, IN THE NICK OF TIME Man Corrvictesd of Murder Believed by Prison i Offi cials to Be innocfent -New Evidence Had At Midnight (By the United Press) Ossining, N. Y., July 20. For the third time Charles Stielow was snatched from death when his execu tion, set for 6 o'clock this morning, was" postponed until 11 p. m.. by . th Supreme Court. The court to go over new evidence at midnight. gtieiow WM convicted of murdering . fpa. Priaoner and officials t nenitentiarv belifeve he is inno- )N OEUESGAN Cnllr, j (By Ae United Press). Camn Willis. Columbus, O. 29 The ton of . a Mexican tandit chief is in the ranks of the Ohio Na tional Guardsmen hflre today. Ifo is Oscar Jonea, private, Co. I,. Second regiment, of Kenton. Oscar's .father vas chief of one c.f the lawless tands that ravam northern Mexico and the border. 1 CTin mir England In Rage Over Exe cution 'of Fryatt, Merch ant S&ipper, Who Tried to Ram -Submarine Likely to Retaliate; Said (By the Unltd Preu) iLondon, July 29. Th? Kaiser him. self confirmed the death sentence of Cant. Fryatt for attcmnttnir to nam a submarine, it is reported. The re- Rort has . inflamed British feeling, Newspapers ! say the "murder" sur passes the fjavel case in cruelty. Tried to Send U-Boat.to Bottom. Eterikv.July 28.--Capt. Chas. Fry. att of the Great Eastern Railway steamship Brussels, convicted yester day by a Gernan courtmartial at Bruges, Brussels, of attempting on March 28, 1915, to ram a German submarine near the Maas lightship, when he did not belong to an armed force, has been executed by shooting. The Brussels was captured by Ger man destroyers last month and brought into Zee Brugge. Capt. Fryatt and the first officer and the first eingineer of the Brus sels received from the British ad miralty gold watches for 'brave con duct," and were mentioned in the House of Commons. England May Retaliate. Washington, July 28. Germany's execution of Capt. Charles Fryatt, master of the British steamship Brussels, for an alleged attempt to ram a submarine, is regarded in Al lied quarters hero as a brutal viola tion of international law likely to result in prompt retaliatory meas ures by Great : Britain. ' " is back mwm ALONG WIDE FRONT - Slavs Follow Up Capture of Brody With Resumption of Advance ACTIVITY m WEST -14-, German Counter-Attacks. In fletvutel-Wcf6d "Repulsed the Britrsn-Haitd-tw- Hafld iffhtang Northeast of iozieres " " (By United PVess) ipetrograd, July 29. General iBros- iloff has resumed his Offensive and thrown hack the German line on the whole Kovel front froh, the Roviech 4RaWay Jo Brpdf Th'ea'pturc cf Brody is ofRcially announced. Brftbih Hold tfvtMe AgaKis't f ... TGeVman Attacks. ' - Lon3on, July .59. Two jdesperate Gerinan counter attacks An the Del virle Woods wee Repulsed today; Iwffewd teavHy,' it 4s.?id,fin hand-, to-hand struggles, wmch north and J'northeasl of Poziertet -are ontiaumg. BeVffn Admits Reverses. .Berlin, July 29. The "enemy sne: ceeded in penetrating our lines in the region of Trysten, causing us to gve up advanced position beyond rtie river, Stoched,'.' it iiisaidL By, the war oflice. It is omciartly said that Brit ish attacks in the region of Posieres hkve 6een repulsed. . Germana 'Can't Dent JUlg Lines.' ' . , London, July.29. The British front js : withstanding Germany's most powerful attacks. Artillery is ham mering at the British ana1 the Teu tons, are making massed attacks, hut have failed to dent the lines gained in the recent offensive. Ten Thousand Dollar Bond Was Ordered Forfeited, It Is Reported SOME MIX-UP, BELIEVED Allecred Lyncher Had Not Skipped But Left for Ke nansville Today Settle ment Made, Reported By a Lawyer , A telegram from Kenansville via another point today stated that the "Stocks matter has been arranged.. Court has adjourned." The message came from H. D. Williams, a lawyer, to a Stocks bondsman. An attempt to query Kenans- s ville from here by telegraph this afternoon was not successful. ' Telephone lines from there to other places are out of commis sion as the result of a storm. Stocks, it Is learned from i re liable source, left Snow Hill this morning at 2 a. m. 1 He prob ably has not arrived at Kenans ville yet. Lawyer Williams said he would give details in a letter, which Is not expected to reach here before Monday. Heports received here and at Snow Hill Friday night from Kenansvillo said Samuel Stocks, the alleged lyncher who was..A,..ordBodL,JJi8lil.Jii $10,000 bail at the conclusion of an investigation into the shooting to death of Joe Black held, here several weeks ago. had failed to show up when called fcr trial in Duplin coun ty superior court and forfeited the heavy bond" signed by more than 40 Kinston and Lenoir county men. li was impossible to. git into communi cation with KeiransvilleJ which place has very limited communication fa-; cilities. Snow Hill lawyers tele-, phoned here and . wanted to know something about the matter, but the only intelligence that had been had here was a telegram, similar to one received in fhe Greene county seat, saying that vjhen Stocks was called he was absent and that the bond had been declared forfeited. The tele grams had been despatched from a station some miles from Kenansville; that town has no office. Lawyers here today thought there must be some mistake, or at least that if Stocks could show any good Treason for not being present the bond money would not be confiscated. There have been two stories about the Greene county man being sent home by Solicitor Shaw on Monday: one account said he was told to stay at home "until sent for," another, and perhaps the most reliable, that he had been told to report back on Thurs day. Tt was thought this morning that the man irripht have started back to Kenansville and been delayed somewhere; means of .travel in the section south of here are as uncertain now as the telephone service into Kenansvilfo. In the lai.er event, ltgal. men think, . the state would not be apt to seize the bail. 'Stocks is the tenant of a reliable Greene1, rounty planter, and the latter would make every effort to get him to trial, per sons Intimate with the matter say; the landlord's actions in the jiast would indicate that much. , So far as Kinston Is 'concerned, Kenansville migit as well be in an other country instead of in an .ad joining county., Ones during the week on. , Tuesday Solicitor's Shaw's voice has been heard here from the1 Kenansvillo end of a telephone line, as long as from hero to the moun tains, -nearly, the connection being built up via Wilmington and other points in ' the southeast. Not .ten words of what the solicitor said could fco understood. . , Wliat , was heard was to the effect that no case would be called until after Wednes-; day in Duplin court. - 1 (By the United Press) " " Norfolk, Va., July 29.Federal Judcre Waddill today decided that the captured i estored to its British owners. The decision was against the German prize crew that captured the Appam and ' brought the vessel here. The Court held that Germany lost her claim to the ship when Lieut. Berg, the vessel into neutral waters. BRANDEIS EXPECTED BE UNITED STATES' MEMBER COMMISSION Carranza Probably Will Ac- weppt American Suggestion i'".fnr T?rWf1pi Tnvostip-nfinn into International Ditier- ences a-vt (By the United Press) Washington, July 29. Convinced that Carranza plans to accept the American suggestion to broaden the Mexican negotiations by a joint com mission, so as to get to the bottom of the whole question, the Administra tlon today began the selection of the American member of the commission. Justice Louis Brandeis, it is believed, will be tho United States commission er. Acceptance Mexican Proposal. " ,- Washington, ; July 28. General' Carranza was informed tonight in a note handed to his ambassador here that the Washington Government is ! prepared to submit to a Joint interna-: tional commission the task of seeking solution of border problems. The proposal of the de facto government for a commission is accepted, how ever, with the suggestion that the powers of the commissioners be en- larged beyond the limits proposed in i the Mexican note, of July 12. REV. B. W, MELTON TO LEAVE RICHMOND Prominent Minister Called to Balti more One of Old Dominion's Best Known Clergymen Fashionable Congregation Wants Him Son-in-' Law Lenoir Official 1 Rev. B. W. Melton, a minister of the Christian church, and one of the best known pastors of Richmond, Va.. has been called to the Twenty-flfth Street Christian church in Baltimore, friends here of Dr. Melton and rela tives of his wife, who is a daughter of County Supt. of Schools Kinsey, have been informed. It is reliably re porte that he will probably accept. "Richmond papers Friday devoted columns' to the possibility that Dr. Melton would leave the city. The call was one of the most important local happening of the day there. -Dr. Melton is connected with the Rich mond juvenile' court, and one of .Vir ginia's leading mission workers, be sides being the pastor, of a promin- ont church. The Twenty-fifth Street church, Baltimore, is located in the' wealthiest and most fashionable part of (the, Oriole City. The odifice is a magnificent one. ,. . . Dr. .Melton went from Wilson & Richmond. ., He is well known in North Carolina. He personally sup ports two missionaries fn foreign i! LEAVES CANADIAN ARMY V TO REJOIN U.S. COLORS 1 (By the United Press) Camp Willie Columbus, O, July 29. Three weeks ago, Private Harry E. Smith was drilling around Camp Bor den in Canada to the martial air Of British liner Appam should be " prize commander, brought the ' ' ' v POPE HOPES AWFUL FOR ;atlord 6f Mercies" Vm Be Moved on This Anni versary to End Speedily Terrible Conflict" In Eu rope (By the United Press) ' "New York. July 29. The Unite4 Press toduy received ' the following- from the Pope through Cardinal Gas- ' parri: . , "l have presented a telogram from t you to the iloljr Father, His 'Holiness is grateful fir your arespect and cort fidence: !n the Holy See. . Sle prays that the Lord of (Mercies, moved fcy, the prayers of innocent children, lm- . ploring peace on ithik second anni versary of the terrible conflict, shall : deign to end speedily this awful car nage." i " "..,. OF -:"f -. BY BOMBS (By the United Preu)' Aurora, :IlC July , 29. Tfc presses of the Menace,, the antl Catholic newspaper, were wreck ed 4 by ( the explosion of three Bombs placed under the floor last night. A watchman was the on ly person ' in the building, lie : was uninjured. ORGANIZED SNEEZERS ! ARE PREPARING FOR ANNUAL CONVENTICn (By the Ualted Ttfess) ; Bethlehem, N. H., July 29-JNobocly ; i nose how many members of the Na tional Hay Fever Association ' will v attend the annual convention up here in tha White Mountains August SI. But there are 200,000 sneezers, snee zeresses and sneezerettes enrolled and a good many thousand of them will ' be here, from nil over the country. - 'According to the teport of Presi dent John R., Pinover, these; sneeze ridden eneesers sneeze eome venty three eneeaes da-y, for an, average of forty-one sneeze days year. Thia gives us 6 "biHion, 3 tnfliion, 200 thou sand sneezes to look forward to this year. ;v ' "God Bave -the King." -Today, he U tramping around Camp WillU to tha same k, but the words of Ihe song have different meaning. Now he Is Lieut Harry fe. Smfth of Col J, Sec ond .Regiment of fcenton. Tired of the monotony of an annual camping trip and -listless practices at hk local i armory during winter evenings, Smith resigned his commission in his regi ment at Kenton on February 29. He wanted action. . , . Ha started i or K the next morning by leaving for DetroiC Front there ha proceeded to Toronto, Canada, where he enlisted in the 124th Battalion of the. Canadian expeditionary forcesl He has been ewt back end forth, to va rious Canadian training camps eve$ MAYCEASE SAIINNOC'NTS mss. 11ENACE iDER THE BUILD ING