Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / May 15, 1914, edition 1 / Page 1
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, ' - '.V'.,;- ',...-'.". -k. :...y - ; -. .- . .-j. . . ", r r :... ic5 NEW : BERN,5 II: C. FRIDAY iMORNINgISay 15?19l4l if- ft nVE CEBITS PER COPY '; 'rt -Ill Jt FDII it . . .... D ill TO CLuiiOL -m- '..iLt 1L5; PICO OIL iVELLS ' Ne?r9 I onb County jcarranz'a- Wee, To- Permit; Such I Strikers' Tent Clt;Ludlow6l And View After Fire &yjtt It -JHE WAT. .WENT TO PAMLIPO COUNT Y (MEDIATORS -ON l - ; V . J-. y "er Wrl"en. FederaU' Slaughter. Women ' And : , , .Children Near; Par. v ' -" - ' ' - V"-- ' -" r 1 Z" - Twelve year, ago Abram Davles, a ' (Special to the" Journal)' ' ". wv mu. miicu , WAHlNUTpNMay. 14;-A state- -another negro near Maclesfidd in Ed- met; IWed from the .White. House i,.iy anu succeeaea in tonight , was to the effect that Carranza waking h,s escape at that time although had agreed to permit' civil .represent :the athorrt1es of that county made tadves of the Unfted State, to assume . .y l. mjw ana piace mm charge of the Americarf oil properties " uu tuuiny uuiciaiB in ,ryery ; county m the State were fur- 1 turn and for several years the authori- tey were in danger ?ies kept, a strict ! watch for him-fbut 1' p?lng on y bu rating shells. nnauy came to the conclusion that he I ,rc"uu'i constitution. itnerhad been killed or had jjone to r"BlB ' us- 0,1 rePfese"tea when the uiuc iiunuern state ana tnis'watchl " mwiiuay l iia " wai n1stH f - . I Kara Falls in a settlement of tho Moviror 1 'J' Yesterday M. W. Hayes) 'a special situatioh t0 be effected through t--.ii .j,;--:. tr- , uupuxy- irom agecomDe county 'went V ,, , , to Bayboro and" placed under arrest ,. a negro who has been known as Samuel -.y ji, ;. Hincs and when confronted with -Xa "l .s" criminating eyidence "Hines" acknow - iledged that he was-Abram Davies and - v " i that he had committed mtirtfor J . , .I. ,-yi According to the story told by the for Key, West, Augustine Rodriguez w "n,an,''he and-his wife went to Pamlico estimated that the delegates Jiad been - tuunty , aiter ne naa committeo; the empowered to consider the eliminatwn . , ', u.vivj.tMiiTO iuc iiainciui nuerta anq au other questions-in-- of Hines and began farming.; For jyolved in' the Mexican situatioh with ' I , ral vear8 thev neer relaxed their j the "exception of the constitutionalists . , vigilance, always oeing on tne-lookout I status.- r .; -. . ' - a- "for the officers and in readiness to niafe I w-,;?- . ' ' y M ' t -' n - 7. ' I - Um ita.. Piti. J - j v . 1 "t el Thls announcement has relievod ih& I tears of the American Oil well owners gara Falls in a settlement of the Mexican I situation and" to he pffW-tpH general election Under the supervision ot the commission appointed, by the mediators. v, , . Meninfnra at En tv. : 4 J; ., -ijutciai 10 ine "lourna ) - - i HAVANA. . May 14.-The Mvirah I j mediation - delegates ' today embarked i 10 ra WILL J BE A PASSENGER Registers For Plight In The Aero t - i . - plane. . TAKE : PHOTOGRAPHS TO t Will Carry , Along Camera During e , ,Her Trip In The ' , ; Clouda . ." n , mm. BUT SEEK PEACE Not A Weapon Turned In To Wait ing Regulars. mi i iii - -: .. ... -. v w.tawN(te . ,. . i-, -ii1" iSpi:i -1 1.1 Finally, they thought that the. affair - u - 't " - t-j i a t. - . I VERA ! CRUZ.. Mav 14. It'w'r. i , .u. i-.j - . t-j. I ported ere that the Federals todav ' - ba'rountv anH i wa. i o J WW the wife and three small children 1 ' ,the authorities there discovered their f Go"ra'e? Atlas ,-aa ardent suppor- - -wheeahont. arrf ,r -Jtor .of the Maderd ' faction and that -xnce to arrest the fugitive' 1 : they iUed Maria Hcrntz, daugh- Special " Deputy Haynes ; will ass " ??ahh Mean, . - . .; through New Pern this morning; with v i' "J Battle Impending ' ;. - .- , -. vhis- - prisoner, ca'rrying - him'! back: to r " (Special to the Journal) " u .1 Maclesfield wliere he will be placed on PARDEON, COAHULILA, May 14 - -.Var at -the next term : of Superior j--Av ibg b.attleis impending at Saltillo. Court.!-' i tlrr ' i j The constitutionalists have advanced 0 v"." -': . . v . . - n i . Photoa copyrteht, 1914, by American Pre Association. lB of the worst labor disturbances to the history of-tha country has sett w m e luiuiuu. p( xnmaaq ana, otnen points cod- per miner rose against the operator! because nonanlon'men wiere idveV work, and manv lives hnv hwm ina?. tti4.Ij v.i-i -pir . - . . iuc umieu Dixies troops were ordered on rh iwiw hw Prumm wn- : v .... . : T. settlement, and it la rlnimwi thn tha n.iu . -. x y i-.. , , ., , duuuu me names. Ton IRustratlon shows the tent city at Ludlow destroyed. by the' blaze1 arid a view or the desolated section after t.h pnnflnft-ratinn arAnn . .t . . Dm owcu. umiv women ana children were suffocated In the Are. - v4i - .- : - " ' '.'f , I., t Mrs. Bayard Woot'en, of the-Wootten Moulton Studio, has name with the mannwmpnt ' rS Home-Coming Celebration to .take a flight in the Wright casseneer aprn. plane, during the Home-Coming Cele bration, i , Mrs. Wojten will carry with her a camera and., take pictures of thP umn. . I dfiful view'tp. Jeseen only from an aero- ' M.r-WopJten is . well k Mown thrnncrh 'out this secjtipn fjif ('tie Stati;.., She made,-a. oajipaal. reputation, as a'..hiirh Icjass photographer.., Stais pathe board o the Federation" oi )tfopn Photo- ",ieniMuuiL mat . i na- tional in scope. In the May issue of Wilson's Magazine, the official ortran of the above F-deration, she has coji tributed, five i photographs and two ar ticles. This magazine is considered the most techinical photoeraohic mag azine published in America. The following have registered their names with the managmi nt of th? Home-Conune Celebration: R. ('. I Minnich, Mrs. Bayard Wooten arid Roy Taylor. Who will be next? The Home-Comina af New Bern has not onlv attracted SOLIDERS PACE TRIAL State-wide . interest, but letters coming in fron all over tha country for information. -Attention is again called t.i the fact tfiat allcleading merchants are eivine away absolutely fr.a admission tickets tc) the fair grounds. Don't fail to ask for your tickets. TFT A I I ! r " ; I 1 1 f n rying - the-Federal oupo.ti. ill" III III : I I Villa toni8ht bhipped artillery ML MLUL t LiUd front.. Twenty-two; thousand r ST YET a uard of ten thousand" and are har tieneral to the men are massed Jiere 'and,- will,i begin forward march tomorrow! ' The. : garrison ' at Saltillo is estimated at twelve thousand men and thtse are etrondv entrean- ched. - Jluerfas End Is Mow Almost A Gcrtpinly TTiev "Greaser ' '; General '.Whose fActfens i idve..yausea oo iviucn iTouble IriNow, LOADED REVOLVER LEFT IT HOME BaBY 01 OLDER CHLD SECURED WEAPON , AND ACCIDENTALLY KILLED THE OTHER. v Aldermen Again . Defer : Action In L - . . The Matter, 1 ; -.IS CONSIDERABLE OPPOSITION 0;j. CUSS. R. TRIMS : SPEJIXS HEBE TOIHT : breakwater May - Be Built - The Shore Of East ... , Front Street - Along Facing The Final Act Of His Career ' (Special' to the WrnatV VERA CRUZ, May 14 Three Mex ican gunboats, crowded with federal soldiers who escaped from Tampico yesteraay wnen the constitutionalists took the last stronghold of Huerta on the eastern seaboard o(. Mexico, rode anchor today under the protection of Rear AdmiraWMvo' American warships off Tampico. - It is probable that the Mexican warships is the comman WILL ADDRESS THE DEMOCRA- TIV VOTERS AT THE COURT HOUSE IN THIS CITY, V I tln . r-u-! D . "M. . . - :i. .. f I . -'j . . i.. nun. iiiuiiiitB, vanoiuate i-"v "icxican warsnip9 is tne comman- rThe proprietors of the drusr stores I for Conel-ess from this'distriw innlrc tn der. whose KfiiQl Vr inmni...:.i. u r and cafes, in this- citv ill tint h rnrh. I tha vnom vf Prirlintnn n h .1... i ' ' " '' . . .. t , . pcHi d to cut out the sale of soft drinks last night and. madeWmostfavorable cigars, and all articles except food and impression upon ihen-' - V - drugs next Sunday as had been expec- Mr. " Thomas -s'oke.of the . present ted. It was thought" that the Board political situation, handling r i in Can of Aldermen' in, their Vrecess meeting impartial add interesting way and those la&t night Id pass, the ordinance who heard his address greatly enjoyed relative to these "blue laws" bufafter it. - , 's. f ; . t that body had been called to order. - Tonicht at- ft . n'rWt' ho will .'--..'t. Alilrrman Ellis stated that as lone as Ian address at -the Court House in this ONE YOUNfi 1. Anv'pRtVPMTirn News reached this city ywterday of an accident which occurred ci thi .previous day near Ayden and which cost the life of a three-year old child of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Cox who reside near that' place. from the information receivad, it seertis, that two of the Cox children were left alone at home while their parents went for a visit totown. Du ces toward the south litsr'from coasttofTg the time that they were absent coast and embrace WnW' th.n hu the older of the two children secured miral Mayo's demand for fc-sdluttf 'othe siars ana stripes precipttsted the Am erican occupation of VerW. Ceru'a With the fall of Tampico 1 the line oi advance of, the constitutional for- coast and embraces more", than half Of the republic. Observelrs here be lieve, the latest constitutionalist vic tory forms one of the 'closing tscenes of the -. Huerta dictatorship. ' V They believe his downfall is aV&uestion of only weeks and perhaps. "toply .-of 5 days!; tell,thrilii;;g stories OF EDILEfl EXPLOSION all of t!." Ministers of the City were not city and eVe Democrat voter, is ex- present a' 1 as the discussion of tho proposed action Mould consume con- sidcralile tune, he thought it best that the matter be !; ' I on mc other night and that, tne r.iiier le thoroughly dihCM.. -I'd at that t "ie. This sticges tion i. i t with t' e apj-i.ival of the Board vas,made into a j union and pas- tended him. " ' a cordial invitation to hear TO TRYON COTTILLION CLUB " GIVE DANCE . y Tyron Cottillion Club 's Mav dance will be held this evening in the Naval A PANIC ON OLD' DOMINION LINER. I a loaded revolver which had been left around the house and, pointing it at the; younger of the two, pulled the trigger, liert wan a flash and the child fell to the floor with a bullet through its brain! ' ' Death Wis' probaWy instantaneous for the child wa dead when the parents FLOWER ' MART "ANjy. 'BASKET returned- and he youthful slayer tpld 'tSALEi-POSTPOrivjg' , the" that the accident had occurred ' ' , ; 'ffjin 4-.yyt'., .oaly'a fewmin'utes previously. - MISSIONARY SOCIETY TO MEET TODAY weather m-c va iloH jthni.ifUiuU.'. m. v.r-. "."I iV" was postponed. The oat& ,ott( which j-the iWoman s Missionary Society of this sale wjlf be held wU"bW MnnoilMed J Centenary thiirch will be held' at the I . i l M 1.. .1 r I k.in.' nf "Kit C tr ' CiJll T 1 . ' .i". If VifU f-t .i ."-..J-Ti. .home of ;,Mrs.: S.- H. ' SEoft on Friday aftefnoon': at" 5 o'clock,' s e l on a- tnd . ' 1 i to a - I! 1 i (Special to the Journal) i NEW YORK. May 14. Vivid, cir. cumstantial stories of the' explosion on Doard the Uli Uominion liner Jeffer son late Monday"" night, which killed nine men. wprn - folH h, ' " 1 - h..i.m...j .;.. ..th- ..l , T Militia Armory, complimentary to M.ssf when the cnopbcT ship' docked here BIG WATER-WAY NOWfcEASIj wuis.,w 6oiue;oi tnese, lixr-ss fu MARITSK TKAt-. i lilK-LLfS HlSlOKy Of THE. KIL- Barges PasV.TI ; Tte Pcflii3 Cal Fliccil Oh Stand h : 1 4i J Delphine Brown of Winston, who is J today: v; (jp.r p.s flary Nixon. Pantin 'narrat la. Is J iohij ily at nine o clock. II us -! y Imperial Orchestra. ' ' Will Have To Answer To The Charge Of Committing M order bENVER, May:14.-Str!ke leaders were earnest today in their declar ation that no nnthi-palfc u , . IU Uf feared between the min-rs nA .i. soldiers of UAcle Sam when it ram to the search by the regulars for fire arms which, it is regarded as cer tain, are concealed in' large numbers. The leaders do not pretend to say that anything like the number of weapons which the miners had have been surrendered to the Federal au thorities. ' ttiev declare thai' the man -n n . - . .... .in.il aii; all for peace, now that the mine guards have been thoroughly disarmed, the militia has gbne, the mines closed and attempts to run the strike breakers over the State border have ceased. The final proclamation calls f:r th.. surrender of all arms before 5 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. After that sear ching squads will thread the hilb and go through the camps after caches ot arms and ammunition. No Miner Gives Up Arms. Thee was little activity today at the stations for receiving arms. None of the miners appeared at any of these places and the only arms re ceived at Trinidad and some of the smalller places did not amount to much. Strkers were at work today at the old site of Camp I.udlow, where the worst tragedy took place in April They are preparing to re-establish their families, as it was lipfore an ar proceeding according to the de mand set down byt'ol. I.ockett that th? names of the union men in charge of the camp be submitted to him for consideration as to their fitness to maintain order. Everything is now as quiet in the northern min districts as in the southern. Two additional troops, ar rived today at Louisville, where th?ra has been constant fear of renewed trouble. The Mayor of Crested Butte, where the trouble has been anticipa ted, telegraphed yesterday to Col. Locett that Federal troops would not be needed, therr.as all signs of Jistur banc ihad subsided and affiairs alto gether 'hare; been resumed. Militiamen Face Trial The general court marshal of the militiamen concerned in the Ludlow and other tragedies of the mines will begin tomorrow, and anxiety and ex citement are keen among the national guardsmen, for they have learned that some of the men and officers are to be charged with murder, arson and looting. fl jt i Theres charges are said to be di rected against the officers and enlisted men of Troop A and Company B. The murder charges it is stated. will apply to the officers and men involved ' as principals, accesories be fore or after the factand all who can be considered as "particeps crim inis" in several alleged murders dur ing the Ludlow battle between the militia and strikers on April 20. These murder charges includ the incidents' of thp'killino' of ploton i-hA- rn:nn'1 rt ummn in" t-Ua l'J,V. in he southwestern Corner of the ' ' Ludlow tent colo'ny, 'and 'tha killing' of the three prisoners of war, Louis ! Ic leader ' nV '"fh" J rnlntA ' James , t" yler, ."inahcial ' Secretary of ' rilZA" ANN CASEY YESTEHDAY cir: narratives, First Officer Dange, with a mat mi spike, fought back .the ne ;ro passerijjers from the steerage' who ' ''1 to throw themselves iii" the sea fcer the exp e da ; ' " s save for the. dim light, the 'effect that barg . WASH I SC. TO V ilosion there.T,was com- port reaching' this FIC OP AN TTiKIND tit i (Special to the- J(t0irlial cM i-f THAL.S , Ma . 'it -i-ri &-1 1 .'if wXSMcki'to.;theniourna.).T: trf IfimVhlv I" . KE.W VORJT. : Maw li' ll1;t.'ftiik i J r' 7,t j f r J:..j 7 C, L.i: cy 'en s J 8t . 5 t . - - - . . . i .. . & - , . . . "y ? lanterns, the 'Panama Canar haa'alray tietta.d twtajt' t &'$w,m ir.-'ifvi'-V, 5-v;4 1 coHipariiiusiiw j ; uis , water-way is v-now- Areatfiywtt Hi o.rwgie:; vveoer was placed ipn the i curred,;; four permit1 marine" trafll'd'a" Ithqfe tee1tnhi 'mornWand, during the , 1,.,J ' - - ii ...... .-. .ljt.:.:.'I:i; ' rt. ' :l . burned. , a I essarv V.l.i Mable of mind un a!l the pas ;. E irne of to 1 e tlirown rs faint- ed. It was to Miss El liot'si efforts as much as to those of Officer i Bange, said the passergerst' that a panic was averted, . ' , .'.:cr.- ', da he was Pt7tliubajvereirrillintr, I JHilf WW' .QUllinofoian was i41)(,.mme,ifiat "he 1 first jthe, Minen' Unkind and a striker posied' to have been Frnk Rabfnb! llgiihsf fit cclsclcllcip ; I -- j. r , , ivi 'i f - it r W6THEk' 8 !mis ' HOT wr , J;THE TRAIL Of THE STANl f EW,YURK,VMay' 1 14."M6ther" 4 VradS strike1 leader', to-1 ' N MV Lancaster, of Vanceboro was a business yisitorxto the city yesterday, .and other outbreaks 'are expected." purpose , of orKanizinir a naribit'wMo agitationagainst' K.odieetellei'i ' "... 4.l.- .'i."L.s '1 -r ' - '7 'J ' loiiowers deal of trouble ifufing'tKe past feW weekgi n nf Afkn a.'.I l' L t -. - a . ....
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 15, 1914, edition 1
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