r-J- 51 A fiU The Home Paper - i TU7' New Today" Y .-TM'Weauer.w Rain and Warmer ;" VOL. XVIII-No. 150 Oermany first to Answer President Note; Suggestjmmediate Conference Deiegates tSBIgere'nts Neutral Place GERMANY SAID TO HAVE HANDED SEWED PACKET WITH PEACE TERMS TO NEUTRAL REPRESENTATIVES; CONDITIONAL RELEASE Official Comment Not Obta'nable, But Rome Report Says Neutrals Given Liberty to Answer Allies If They Specifically Call for Germany's Peace Terms Pope Given Copy and Permitted Read Secret Gerard and Swiss Minister at Berlin Called In Special Audience With Kaiser British Ire Assauges Berlin, Dec. 26 Germany has handed Am haador Gerard for transmission to Washinrr twitti5 answer to President Wilsons' peace note. The 1 American representatives at the capitals 6fSofia, Vienna and Constantinople were hand ed Ithe same reply. It proposes an immediate meeting of delegates from the belligerent coun tries at a neutral place, but says the "great Work- of preventing future wars is possible only after the end of the present war. The note declares that "when this moment shall have come" Germany will be "ready with pleasure to collaborate entirely with the United States in this exalted task." The answer holds that the tosPppropriate road to reach the desired re sult ig the meeting of delegates of belligerents at a neutral place," The note is short and says "The high-minded suggestion made by the Presi dent of the United States in order to create a basis for the establishment of a lasting peace, has been received and considered by the Imper ial government in the friendly spirit, which w?s expressed by the President in his communica ion. The President points to that which has a heart but leaves open the choice of the road." (By John II. Hearley) Rome, Dec. 26. Germany has handed to the no nations, whose services she asked in forwarding thv suggestion to her enemies, a sealed packet containi - ; ;pecmc terms upon which she - C vamW' ,4 rp 1 J 1 T"ncu. ine report saw tne pacKet was per.1. v;tn instructions only to be read and forwarded to the A'liios if the latter actually asked for her terms. The sanv re port said that in the note sent to the Pope, he was permit ted to read the secret list of terms. No official comment was obtainable. Ambassador Gerard Granted Special Audience. Amsterdam, Dec. 26. American Ambassador Gerard , is scheduled for a special audience with the Kaiser today, according' to Berlin dispatches. It is stated that the Em peror has also asked the Swiss Minister to come to the piii ace for an audience. Presumably the conferences are in re gard to peace. Another British Interpretation. " (By EDWARD Y. KEEN) London, Dec. 26. The British hostility to President Wilson appeared modified. The change is attributable to the latest interpretation of the motives which impelled the American note. It is now regarded that the note has been sent with the purpose of forcing Germany to state her peace terms, and that it car ries the implication that unless the terms are satisfactory tt America she may enter the war on the side of the Allies. South American Countries Back President. Buenos Aires, -Dec. 26. That certain South American chancellories are tentatively communicating in regard to a note to be sent to the Belligerents backing up President Wil son's peace plea is reported. FllRTHrlMFOR 1 iSAtltlTARY olVICEBESUBMIT'D (By the United Press) Washington, Dec. 26. Plan for universal military, service, designed to offset objections to the existing Plan, will be robmitted to the Sen MiliUry Committee by CoL Webb ye of Ohio. The plans design- y Him and Colonel Foote, who is thertillery school at otress Monroe, involve the calling each youH of 17 for training dur- Ve OTmmr "ontb f fonr 4r- Congressional district would x taitj. SECOND tral ,...f the is willing to make m-v ll ' 1 , COTTON revenue cutter, the Gresham, has been dispatched to help the steam The farmers were still celebratin? ;;,jp Maryland. the Christmas holidays Tuesday, and ' there wece no receipts on the local PQP DECLARES THAT cotton market' The local market would have offered from 16 to 16 1-?. In New York January closed pcints higher than the opening fig ure. New York quotations: Open Close January March May .. July . . Oetober spa . ..16.50 16.79 ..16.86 17.10 ..17.26 17.3a ..17.45 - 17.47. ..15.75' 15.80 . - 16.90 .. . . ' : Subscribe to The Fre. Press. EDITION PRESIDENTS IS BEING B ll BY OTHER NEUTRALS Encouraging Messages Ar rive From Holland, Nor way and Sweden Switz erland Has Likewise For warded Note (ily the Unite.) Press) Washington, Deo. 26. A flood of telegrams from or ganizations and individuals in Holland, Norway and Sweden, reached the White House today. There is in dication of strong move ments on foot in these coun tries to follow the lead of Switzerland in bricking up President Wilson's peace overtures. All messages report a tremendous growing sentiment com mending the President's move. . .: '43 PEACE BEFORE ANOTHER CHRISTMAS. The war on earth with nil its bn terness will turn to peace and good will before another Christmas comes, tne government heads believe. Their hope and belief in such an outcome within the year is strengthened by Switzerland's note, to the belliger ent';, approving. President. Wilson's peine move, ar:d offtrir.c; the little mountain republic's bit toward halt in ir the great world struggle,, and seeing pence made permanent. On top "f (his very encouraging news came word that other neutrals may vi-riv ji that all. are, privately, at In';... :; similar course,, while it is K-a.'. hi hind the American position. The s'a:inistratiott has reason to b? lieve the warriors themselves will take 1-indlv to a peace proposition be fore wry long, and hence tne Amcr cause for rejoicing, despite the fact ican officials believe there is real that the big guns still do awful laughter abroad. BULLETINS ! iT!SRrnr;ii i?EPr hi. ican CONTEST'S FOR SEAT. Pittsburgh. Dec. 2R. Uepre stntntiNe William II. Coleman. Kepu! jican. has served notice in court that he will contest the elec tion of M. Clyde Kelly to succeed him from the Thirtieth district, on account of alleged fraud. lilJEAI) FAMINE THREATENED. Buenos Aires. Dec. 20. The fear of a bread famine has in creased by additions to the bak ers' strike. More Assistance Sent. Washinsrton. Dec. 26. A fourth PEACE IS UPPERMOST IN MND AND DESIRE (By the United Press) Rome, Dec. 25. The Pope's reply to the congratulatory address of the Cojiege of Cardinals expressed a fer- vent hope that the belligerents "would finally listen to the voice of the Church invoking the restoration of eace." : The Pope declared that "peace was uppermost" in his mind. He referred' to neither the German note, not . the President proffer. KINSTON, N. C, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1916 I .SANTA ABfJILSFn THF Uillllil jilkUls'ULjLJ ilMtJ milt no at rAiHiLi AT THE CBACK IT HAY President's Grandniece Had Household Up Much Be fore Usual Time On Christmas Morn Mr. Wilson Manifested Keen Interest (By the United Press) Washington, Dec. 25. The golden rays of a gcrgeou-3 sunrise bursting in rhe east windows of the White " .:.(' east light uponthe magnifi tei.t Christmas tree, laden with spa;:gle.? an wondrous gifts at the sarr.e time, Josepmne Oothran, grand niece of the President, stirred rest lessly, open her baby eyes, saw the .sunlight, and crawled out from un der the covers. She couldn't wait. Throughout the night her sleep had been disturbed by strange dreams of Santa 'Claus, and strange noises in the lil.-ary which led her to believfe that he was at vork. That is just why the executive family was dis turbed at the unusual hour, and fore stem cn:m ud ff little Joswphine to appear at the tie soon after dawn The I're-i lent enjoyed the occasion so mi:--i tr.as he let Mrs. Wilson at te:id churL-h alone. KiVn -McAiioo, his little grand -:!.i'ig-lite'-. had her own tree, hut join ed the White House celebrants. This afternoon i-he White House automo- I forth to disl : ibute f: if ' to children. the The IVe- e-:!ent, umnoutea cuts to chil dren along the favwite roads to VV::Si)i',!rion and the country club. Tonight the President and -.datives will have an cld-f-ishionod celebra tion at the White House. wwm mm mi AT KENTUCKY TRSOPS !?v WERB MILLER, (I'niteJ l'rcs Staff Correspondent) Fl Pi.so. Dee. 25. Over :!( shot.' were fired across the Rio C:;-.r-. le l ist nijrht !.y Me? ican snipers at the rutposts f the Third Kentucky riuvrd, j'.i.t above Juarez. A ma chine g;:r. c-m-pany rus-hed to the scene, swept the hi'.l.i and the snip ing censed. Officers believe the fir ing was started by drunken Mexicans. imm CELEBRATION NATURALLY TINGED A LITTLE WITH SORROW (By the United Press) London, Dec. 25. Not even the Cb' ijtmas cheer Stopped war's maim incr. Rep'v-l j from every f-ont dis closed a 'i'-'it. !et-up in the business of killing. London Uaoir celebrated !.ut with a cheer tinged with sorrow for its lo it and recansec ration for the future. London's main manifestation cf the holiday spirit was furnished in its elaborate arrangements to crivc the furldughed Tommies a real taste of the cheer of home comforts. Thou sands of khakk-lad warriors from France spent the holiday at home. Snow made real Christmas surround ings at nearly every front, traced a covering over the trenches in the Yosges. and interposed a natural ob stacle to unlimited fighting in tn east. High up in the Carpathians the Germans and Russians are lock ed, and south of the Alps the Ital ians and Austrians, fought in trenches at dizzy heights above the valley, and in Macedonia both sides were snowed in. LITTLE OUT OF USUAL MAKKED DAY'S BATTLES Berlin, Dec. 25. A temporarily strong artillery duel in the Wyshsete sector is the only instance 'ahove or dinary Tighting on the western front An officfal report tella of the re pube of the Russian attacks Sa the Carpathians, forcing tack the Czar's troops to Dobrudja.' BOATS ROUT ENEMY IN A VERY SPIRITED FIGHT British Patrols Repulsed Increased Artillery Fight ing On All Fronts Ger mans and Austrians De fend Village Berlin, Dee. 26. Four Aust rian destr overs suc- ce?sfu!ly raided the straits of Otr:'.nto. sank two pat rols, rov.ted six enemy des troyers of sunerior type and speed. The Vienna official report says: "In a heavy duel one of the hostile destroyers was set afire :md three others were hit at short range. Our losses are one dead." Artillery Activities Increase. Uepeated repute of British patio!-; reporU(; officially. Artillery battles have actively increased in me sectors. On the Ypres front to Oermans and ustrians beiiig stuin--d at bayonet point, tenaeio is' ,1 -fended the village of Filipesti i Waachm.' Pa-is. Pec. 26. There was active 'liPe:-;,' action Christmas niivh! on the S.)!rrr.e front, in the region rf ! s:.ys the official report Tuea- i'l-s-ian'? Advance In Valley. Berlin, Dec. 2G. Russian raiding attachments : have advanced in the " -r a Valley, it is said officially. There has been a temporary enliven -i r.', cf artillery fighting in the.Karst 1'hueau, on the Italian front, says the officii? I Austrian report. Sir a umvi h UJi,: mwm mm IE OFF COAST 'x vnuQ Cutters Rushing to Assistance Boiler Room Said to Be Flooded San dy Hook Picked Up Wire less Distress Call (Hy the Unitl Press) Xcw York, Dec. 2d. Tlie steam ship Maryland is reported sinking a hundred and fifty miles off the San dy Hook wi:eless station. The reve nue cutters Acushenet and Mohawk" from Savannah, have gone to her as sistance. The messages said the en gine rooms -of the Maryland steam er were being flooded. TUESDAY LAST DAY GIVEN GARRANZA TO SIGN UP OR REJECT Protocol Relative to With drawal Troops From Mexico Friendly Ter mination Mexican Trou bles In Balance Reply Expected In Washington (Dy the United Press) Washington, Dec. 26. A settlement of the difficulties between Mexico and the U. S. by peaceful means de pends oil; what answer Car ranza gives today. This is the last day set by the Peace Commissiori'for him to sign the troop withdrawal pro tocol Administration offi cials expect to hear today whether he agrees to ; ,the protocol. If he does not si invthe "peace negotiations will be at an end, and the troops will proHHy be kept AUSTRIAN FOUR PAGES TODAY pbice two cents ruuiv X -florid XVUAJ FIVE CENTS ON, TRAINS - JEWISH PEOPLE ARE LIBERAL IN GIVING TO WAR SUFFERERS Splendid Meeting Held On Sunday Night Netted $izo nans Laia ior a Jewish Sunday School for Kinston List of Donors The Jewish people of Kin ston subscribed one hun dred and twenty-five dol lars to the fund for the re lief of Jewish peoples in wai -stricken Europe at a most interesting and spirit ed meeting held Sunday nicht. Dr. J. B. Gordon nnd Mr. Philip Olarsch of New York arranged the meeting and made the prin cipal addresses. Plans were also laid for Hie organization of a Jew- h Sunday school under the 'eadership of Dr. J. L. May berry of Goldsboro. The ollowing account of the meeting wais kindly contri buted to The Free Press: The Jewish pecple of Kinston did themselves proud Sunday night, at s meeting arranged Jiy Dr. J. B. Gor don and Philip Olarsch of New York, under the auspices of the Daughters of Zion, a society of the Jewish wo- :ncn of Kinston. The occasion will long he remembered hy those pres ent as the most thrilling ana sxir- Mii- event of their lives. Mr. Philip Olarsch was the chai.-- : 1 .na. m.".n c1 Vne evening, u jpcuiri)? prayer hy Dr. Mayberg, a very warm ana cf. uni extended to all present !y tne popu- !n- and well-liked president of the DauK-hters of Zion, Mrs. Eli Nach- im. -on. An address by Dr. Mayberg, the well-known rabbi of Goldsboro, who n:me to Kinston especially for this audience interested to such a deg-ee that when he offered to do the same for them that he had done for Dur ham and other places, namely, found ed a Jewish Sunday school, the sup port and co-operation of all wa? engerly given. But it remained for the last speak er. Dr. J. B. Gordon, who together with Phi'ip Olarsch, the chairman, -epresent the interests of the Ameri can Jewish Chronicle, to really stir the assemblage, lie swayed his au dience first to tears, then to laugh te: then back to tears, playing with their emotions as though they were hut pawns in a chess game . He des cribed the conditions of the war-ridden district? of Europe so vividly that there was not a dry eye in the as semblage and solm were audibel throughout the room. Then follow ed a description of the hunger an:! destitution and an appeal for help so fervent, so stirring and so touch ing, that no sooner had he ended than money began pouring in. Eli Nach- am&on started the ball rolling with a donation of $25.00. Everyone gave, men, women, chil dren, large sums, small amounts, as much as each was able to give; but give they did. The money came r;. checks, bills and silver, so fast that Mr. Olarsch, who received the mon ey, had his hands more than full. And the result in ten minutes was $125.00, which was turned over to Mr. Eli Nachamson, to be sent by him to the General Rc.ief Committee in New York. Following are the con tributors: Eli Nachamson $25.00 H. Stadiem 10.00 M. Pearson M. Goldstein Wolf Ader "Shocket of Kinston" 6.25 6.00 S.00 1.00 6.00 6.00 3.00 1.00 2.00 B. Naiman ilr. Cohen Mr. Aaron Adler . Mr. SUverstein-. L. Foxman . , ......... t IS DEAD, it WOUNDED IN FIGHT rt- Three-Cornered Embroil- ment Saturday Night' In Tenderloin All That Mar red Kinstons' Mogt Or derly Christmas Sue Huggins is dead; Od- enia Tartt is lying critically wounded in the hospital ward of the county jail, and Ada McNeill is held on the charge of assault with - a deadly weapon. All are ne ?roes, residing in Kinston11 enderloin, and their , thresf ?ornered fight Saturday light was the sole serious disorder reported in the ounty in the observance tf the Christmas season. From accounts gathered y h police, it seems that the Huggins and Tartt women became vinvoWed ra' Iifficulty, which resulted in tbe Huggins woman receiving mortAl wound3 from a knife in the hands of he Turtt weman. She died Sunday Tiormng. Arta took tne part ox ue v-4 r.A used a gun on Odenia. The r- ults were as above stated. The, W- uen are an oi questionaoie cnarp- er and bad reputation. The iis woman was a native of Kinston, hile Odenia Tarrt is said to be a Georgia negro, and Ada McNeill iails from Wilmington. . Most Orderly Obserrance. i . .Quiet. .Yes, the quietest ChristHU Xinston has ever celebrated, say the dd timers, nnd those whose duty is o ketfp' up with the orderliness ef 'he section. There was no serious 'iporder except the murder of a Me arro woman, as already related. Few drunks were to be seen, and nose were incapacitated to the extent ef efjuiring the attention of the police. Sheriff Taylor, (Chief of Police Ikinner and other officers all ate 'oud in their praises of the good Sf-io- or the people hereabouts. Yes, ihe folKs'-tore getting more sense, de clared one of them. The good 'preachments" which the newspapers .nd other educational agencies We making in regard to safe and Mas observances of the Christmas season is having its good effect. Mrs. Aaron A-Iler t.W Mr. J. Diamond t.6t Mrs. A. Diamond l.to . Diamond l.0 rs. Philip Adlor 1.0 1. W. Gyiss SJ0 Wra. J. Plisko 2JB9 M. Emanuel l.W Jae::b Xeuman . . . 1.6 M. Bloom Z.0 Sam Lipman, New Bern t.0 L. Kivi. 4.9 Jack Lipman l. V. Perez 1M ll. Tearjon I.N L. Pearson . . . . ! Mrs. Goldstein I.N Mrs. A. T. Gross 1.N Dave Bronstein 1.09 Albert Helfont J. Hishfield tit Miss M. Passman 2.00 A. Snuckl US Mrs. Anselowitz C.N Sam Pearson Ul Miss Esther Lipman M Miss Gertrude Guyiss M Barnett Neiman ?S Isidore Paris .16- Cash .. .60 Jack Lipman .. ............. JtO Ben;. Anselowitx (3 1-2 yrs. oH) Jfl ' Benj. Lipman (6 yrs. old)... Ji Becky Bloom (5 yrs. old) 'It Victor Kazz .. ............. J9 Miss Paris .. Grand total ,.$125.09 The officers of the Daughters t Zoin sre: Mrs. E5 Nacham'on, frti dent; Mrs. A. Gro:', vi. e : Miss Dora I ' ', s Mrs. J'" ' ' ONE NEGRO WOMAN P u I m "ft r: y. r i