IS GAZRTTfc-NEWS HAS THE OST EXPENSIVE ASSOCIAT D PRESS SERVICE IN THS , ti CAROLTNA9 It n a LEATHER FOEECASTi PROBABLY RAIN. I jUME XIX. NO. 187. ASHEVILLE, N. 0., WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 16, 1914. PRICE FIVE CENTS 3A7 7 LE RAGES IN NOR1H FRANCE ! - ALONG FRON7 OF ' OVEFi lOO MILES ilTLE CIIGE OUT rrerid'er of Forces Led by iankel and Auffenberg Is Imminent, Says Rome Correspondent. SE 40 PER CENT IN ... JOINING THEIR FORCES W Hope Now Lies in Con I ,entrating Their Armies in the Triangle Dominated by Przemysl. IIIICE III IIS FORMS State Commissioners Are Now Hard at Work at Grove Park Inn Fine Program. DEBATE WAS FEATURE OF THE SET PROGRAM President Young and Other Of ficers Are all Well Pleased With Meeting Being Held in City. GERMANS WAGING A DEFENSIVE FIGHT So Far Results Have Been Undecisive Leaders of Germans Are Keeping Their Forces Intact. WEST FRONT STILL RETREATS, REPORT to London, Sept. lB.Telegrapning jn Rome, the correspondent of the ly Express, says: The surrender of the Austrian hy led by Generals DanUel and enbi-rg is Imminent, The neir to throne, Archduke Charles Francis th General Dankel's army, which ntirely cut oft from communlca- The third army corps marching Itie aid of the Austrlans has been kked at Grodok. by the third Rus k army. General Dankr) is caught the niarcht'8 north of the river . Further to the west a flanking nv nf Cossacks is awaiting It. Its illery has been lout and Its cnvalry In the bogs. The Austrian s omy Is to conoctvtrnte In the triangle, minuted by Przemysl. They enn ac jmlish this, if at all, only by tra mdntis lossvS. K dispatch to the Express from jino states the two Austrian armies mmanded by Generals I'ankel and jffc-nberg have joined forces at jrsow, 13 miles northeast of Jaro jii, and 23 miles due north of jii'mysl. In the course of this opera iii, the dispatch says, they lost 40 r cent of their numbers. lie IVtrograd correspondent nf Times quotes the military expert, haelowsky, as saying that Kusxlan esses In the past week over three istrian armies from the Vistula to je Carpathians leave the road f southwest completely open. Summary of Fighting. ,Tftrograd. Sept. This sum- hry of recent fighting In Gallcla is been made public through seml llelal channels: ( Russian troops are pursuing the strums with energy and the defeat !thc enemy continues. Certain Aus an army corps have been virtually Snlhllated. Russian forces have ssed the river San. The eastern Jiisslan advance guard Is approaeh tg Przemysl. The Tapidlty with iiich military operations are being Inducted has made It Impossible to ttermlne accurately the losses of the fiemy, but It may be said that they c becoming colossal. According to i'h information as come to hand Austrian have lost In the neigh- (rhood of 250,000 men In killed and founded, this In ndditlon to 100,000 p-lKoners, many pieces of ordnance Id standards. "In all directions the roads are nwded with artillery, transport wa ns and arms and ammunition ihleh have been abandoned In masses luring the precipitate retreat or me fnemy. in the river Vistula Russian Hops have taken possession of the ('cumulation of material for bnege Hiding and they destroyed several f'snurs, one of which was armored. "The desperate efforts of German fnpn to save Austrian from, utter '"Ut should be recorded. The active tartlrlpatlnn of Oerman army corps n the f ichtlng has been revealed at "veral different places along the Austrian front, as for Instance,- at i'ouroblne. The Ttuselana captured 86 '"leces of long range Oerman artillery i addition td some S.000 German nsoners. At many places on the ont several dosen large guns, many which had been prevented by lack tr time from being used In the fight ." Into their hands. I Hiecor sent by Germany did not "Ve the Austrian and tl.s hesvy de f,1at Inflicted on the Germans Is con ,rlluted to the brilliancy of the Aus- 'n victories." of full The Continued Disaster toAustrians Compels the Germans to Rely More on Themselves in Both Theaters of War. Continuation of the reading technical insurance papers und discussions of the same featured the morning session today of the forty Hfth annual meeting of the National Association of Insurance commission ers which is meeting this week at Grove Park Inn this morning. James It. Young, insurance com missioner of the state of North Car Paris, Sept. 16. -According tional association presided over the to Ollieiill announcement, mUUf morning session. , this morning, tho German ar- The feature of the set program, . , which commenced at to o'clock and ray is righting a defensive bat- continued for two hours was a debate ' aJono. its front from OVOn on the subject: "Should We Abamlon .n J the American Itestrh tions Upon the 10 tt point north 01 V erdlin. V'liisses of Insurance Written?" tho r,. aclrmative' aide being taken by Bur- ; " " ',' ' r ton Mansfield of onnecticut and the PvOVOn IS 00 miles northeast negative by ; Frank Hasbroiich of 'New ,)f p u.j8 n(l'14 mil(S from York. C. G. Itevelle of Missouri was ' Lompiegne. me battle line, as given in the foregoing dis. pntt'h, is in a straight line rnn nirig almost dlie east and west. JYorn Noyon to a point north of Verdun is about 110 miles. L OPENED T Mission Building Committee Asks Its Architect to Go Over Plans Again. TIRELESS STATION AT TUCKERT0WN CLOSED Tuckertown. N. J., Bept. II. The C wlrelem station here one of the two ; '"is in tn unltti mates In direct ,uch with Germany, was closed to 'lsy. 'Jentenant Felix X Olgax, tT. S. N., 'n charge, later said ons of the gen 'rators had burned out Us said there w no evidence of any tampering w,,h the machinery. Ths station Is of operaUon for an indsflnlts psr "4. Possibly a week or more. on the side with Commissioner Mans field while O. -K.-Stabelln of South Dakota supported tho negative. A full discussion of the subject followed and, much Interesting matter to In surance " oftli lals and agents was brought out The attendance this morning wan the largest yet at the convention which opened yesterday morning and will continue through Friday. Presi dent Young and the other of.lcers of tho national association express themselves as being well pleased with the Asheville meeting. Today's set program In full folUiws: Wednesday Morning.' "Should we Abandon the American Restrictions I'pon the Classes of In surance written (a) by a rompany doing direct writing? (b) by a company doing reinsur ance? Affirmative Burton Mansfield, of Connecticut. Negative Frank Hasbrouck, of New York. Afllrmative C. O. Revelle. of Mis souri. Negative O. K. Slabclln, of South Dakota. Discussion of papers. Executive session. (An executive session may be mov ed at any time by a member). Wednesday levelling, 8:80 O'clock. "Acquisition Cost of Fire Insur ance, Alvln IS. tieruen, 01 uouibwiiu. "Cost of Miscellaneous Insurance, S. Epsteen of Colorado. Participating and Non-Partlclpat- Ing Insurance jy Stock, hire ami Casualty Insurance companies. it. M. Small ofiOhlo, and . U Welcn or Oklahoma. Discussion of papers. Many Visitors are Here. In addition to the visitors who have been In Asheville for several a ays oast In anticipation of the big con ventlon. a number of others came In last night and this morning and are now at Grove Park Inn and the other hotels of the city. Last night the' "big" room and the dining rooms at the Inn presented brilliant scenes. Here and there groups or aistin irulshed visitors, their wives and daughters gathered and several little informal parties were held. Alexander Webh of Raleigh, the nresident of the chamber of com merce of that city Is one fo the visitors to the convention. North Carolina has a large representation on hand, prac tically all of the larger cltlles hav ing sent Insurance men hers to the meeting. Tey will remain throughout the week. Following the addresses of welcome and the responses yestersay the In surance commissioners got down to business In earnest and this will be the order of thing throughout the balance of the forty-fifth annual gathering, tast night several Import ant and Interesting, to Insurance world, addresses were made on the question of offering encouragement to ths formation of new companies by ths various states and on compulsory local Investments. State Commissioner of Insurance T. U. Henry, of Mississippi, who by ths (Continue oa pag XI). London, Sept. 16. The sec ond great battle in northern ance since the northern sweep of the allies is now in progress along the river Aisne. The opposing lines are layed from the Argouue liils to Por cien and near the practice camp of Soissons where the program of the French sum mer maneuvers contemplated cavalry training on a large scale for tliis'verv date. Whether the Germans pro pose to fight to a finish, or plan merely to cover their retreat on the river Meuse, is rot yet clear, but the German .com manders are showing the same skill in retreat and the same skill is keeping their forces in tact, as the allies showed a fortnight ago. Tho German rush into France and back thus far has brought no decisive results, and until a pitched battle is fought and won neither side is in a position to claim that it has secured more than the op ening a'dvantage in the war game. The allies, for the moment, have retrieved their perilous position and have turned tl.c tables on the invaders, but the next move is with the Germans whose armies are still in grcnt force on a ground more 01 lebs selected by themselves. The debacle for it seems nothing less in the Austrian armies shows that Germany will have more and more to rely mainly upon herself, hence there will be a greater inter dependence of events in the eastern and western field of operations. What new. forces Germany can put into the campaign in the western area must hence forth depend in a great meas ure upon how far she can ne gleet the Russian movement on Bresslau, 190 miles southeast of Berlin..' ; According to - re ports today Kmperor William himself has gont? to east Prus sia. Little credit, however, is attached to' the assertion that he proposes to take the active command out of the hands of a fighting general of the calibre of von Hindenburg. There is the usual diversity ef stories today regarding the Austro-Serviar. operations. The Austrians claim to have driven the Serbs out of Banat and from the eastern district of Slavona. The Serbs, however, heretofore have shown a mark ed capacity for remaining in the same or better positions af ter these defeats. They now claim they are bombarding the Hungarian town of Orsova. The war indemnities de manded by German troops in towns traversed in Belgium and France reach a total of $144,- 300,000. Only a very small part of this sum, however, has been paid. stKKItieitKKistKKkstK n S WAR NEWS SUMMARIZED. K . . I An official statement issued in IS st Paris at 8 o'clock this afternoon t st declared that the German army S t was fighting a defensive battle t t along its front from Noyon, tit- H t teen miles from Compiegne, to H t a point north of Verdun. The st t line is approximately 110 miles t H with the center 65 miles east of i n Paris. t t Official report's say the west s st front was still retreating. t st A Berlin report that the Ger- st t man emperor will go to the H st scene of operations In east Prus- H t sia is published in Paris. H t An official statement issued st In Vienna declares the Servian t st Invaders of Hungary have been t t defeated along the whole line. at st Demonstrators against Italy's st t attitude on neutrality were sup- H t pressed by the militia in Rome at t last night. . H t According to advices In Rome st ? from Austrian sources, two Aus- t st trian armies in Gallcla have ef- st t fected a Juncture at Rzeszow 32 t st miles north of Przemysl. ' H st It Is announced at Tokio that st K .Japanese scouts have occupied st t the railroad station five miles t t from the bay of Kiao Chow. t ? st ttttt;tetttttttstKtKt At a meeting held yesterday af ternoon by the men's advisory board and the committee of ladies from the board of directors of the Asheville Mission hospital, the bids that had been received by Architect W. H. Lord, for the erection of the large addition planned for the hospital, were opened, but as all the bids were far in excess of the amount of money the committee now has on hand for building the addition, none of them was accepted. I Mr. Lord was asked to reconstruct his plans for the building of the addi tion and to ask for other bids under the new plans. These bids will be submitted at a meeting to be held at an early date, at which time It is thought that some definite steps will be taken in regard to erecting the addition. Mayor J. E. Rankin acted as chairman of the meeting and among the men on the board who were pres ent were the following: Captain J. P. Sawyer, Harmon A. Miller, W. B. Northrup, S. Liplnsky and C. V. Brown. It seemed to be the sense of the meetine yesterday that as soon as the new plans are submitted by Mr, lord and bids received that the con tract for the actual erection of the addition will be let The meeting yesterday afternoon was held at the Battery Park bank. II OUT NEW REVENUE II House Committee Democrats Settle Details of Measure With' Tax on Freight Left Out. BANKS, BROKERS AND THEATERS TAXED HIGH Tax Also Is Proposed on To bacco Dealers, Checks and Various Kinds of Le gal Documents. London, Sept. 16. Tho cen ter of interest in the western theater of war has shifted from the right wing of the German army under General von Kluck to the left wing, where the re lief of 1 ryon by the French U regarded as leaving the army under Prince Frederick Will iam in a dangerous positior. The retaking of Rheims by the French is regarded as of great er morale to the troops than former achievements, as the town presents an ideal de fense. This rart pf the lino, judg ing from dispatches made pub lic here, appears not only to have withdrawn from the in vestment of Verdun, but hy permitting the relief of Tryon, 12 miles southeast of Verdun, to have left itself only one line of retreat. This is through the Stenay gap. ' , If tho allies aro able to rre vent the army of the crown prince from using Metz as a basis of operations, it is felt in London that the German left wing will be in as serious a situation as was its right last week. Expert military observers in Petrograd have declared that the Russian investment of Koe nigsburg and General Rennen kampf's foray into east Prus sia were planned with the de liberate intent of compelling Germany to detach some of her forces from France to the re lief of her east Prussian fron tier. Tn Petrograd military crit ics unite in characterizing this maneuver as brilliantly sue cessful, so mu so in fact that the salvation of the allied for ces in the west probably was due to Germany's having sent some of her best corps to east Prussia. With this work apparently accomplished, it is being pre dicted in England today that the Russian forces investing Koenigsburg together with General Rennenkampf's army will be withdrawn within the Russian border. If it is a fact that Germany's ally in Galicia has retired within the triangle dominated by Przemysl, as dispatches re ceived here indicate. The in ference is drawn that the Rus sian right is now free to ad vance from the southeast and Kb at an aggressive movement from this quarter may be look ed for. A Central News dispatch from Rome quotes a telegram from Basel, Switzerland, to the Messaggero, stating that the Germans have received or ders to retire as far as the right bank of the Rhine, com pletely evacuating France, Belgium and Luxemburg. A Rome dispatch to tho Ex- (Continued on pace 11) IGlSTRnTE HUT LftTEYESTERDAY Case Against Mr. Mclntyre Was Re-Opened Tues day Evening. The case of Magistrate James A. Mclntyre, who was sentenced. to serve ten davs in jail yesterday by Magis trate W. R. Gudger for contempt 01 court, was re-opened yesterday after noon and Mr. Mclntyre released irom Jail at 6:30 o'clock. The charges of contempt grew out of an altercation between Mr. Mc lntyre and Sheriff C. F. Williams, which occurred In the office of Mag istrate Gudger yesterday at noon. Sheriff Williams submitted to assault before Mr. Gudger and was fined 1 and the costs, but Mr. Mclntyre re fused to testify in the case after be ing brought into court on a capias and was sentenced by Mr. Gudger to serve ten days In Jail on charges of contempt of court. He was taken to Jail at 1 o'clock and remained there until 6:30 o'clock yesterday after noon, when he was released. Washington, Sept. 16. Democrats of the house wa'ys and means commit tee today worked out details of the new war revenue bill with the pro posed tax on freight transportation eliminated by direction of the party caucus and with , the approval of President Wilson. As reframed the bill provided for these special taxes: i Banks with capital and surplus not exceeding $25,000, $50 a year, and $2 for each additional $1,000; stock brokers $50; pawn brokers $20; com mercial brokers $20; custom house brokers $10; proprietors of theaters, . museums and concert halls $100; cir cuses. $100; public exhibitions $10; bowling alleys and billiard halls $5 per alley or-table. Dealer In- leaf -tobacco $o lo $24 according to amount of business; dealers in tobacco $12; manufacturers of tobacco and cigars $6 to $24. Bank checks, two cents (stamp tax) drafts or bills of exchange, Inland, two cents for each $100; certificates of deposit, two cents; promissory notes, two cents for each $100; money orders, two cents per $100; express receipt, one cent; freight receipts or domestic bills of lading one cent; tel ephone messages costing 15 cents more, one cent; bonds, 50 cents; cer tificates of deposit, two cents per $100; certificate of damage, 25 cents; certificates not otherwise speicfled, 10 cents; charters $3 to $10; brokers' contract 10 cents; conveyances BO cents for each $500; telegraph mes sages one cent; life Insurance policies eight cents on each $100; marine, in land, fire, casualty, fidelity and guar anty, half one per cent; leases, 25 cents to $1. mortgages or conveyance In trust, 25 cents fof reach $1,500; power of attorney to vote, 10 cents; power of attorney to sell, 25 cents; protests, 25 cents; warehouse receipts 25 cents. T ATLRNTIGJS EXPECTED Now Centered Off Florida East Coast Shipping Has Been Warned. President Thinks It Not Nee- essary for Them to Remain Any Longer. Washington, Sept. 16. A tropical storm now centered off the east Flor ida coast Is expected to spread rapidly northward making shipping hazardous along entire Atlantic seaboard, accord Ing to a warning Issued by the weather bureau today. The storm will undoubtedly Increase In Intensity as It moves northward. says the station, and be attended by shifting gales along the Atlantic coast northward to the Virginia capes dur ing the next 24 hours. Warnings of this dangerous conditions has been sent shipping along the coast, and storm warning has been displayed from Key West to Norfolk. EVEN BREAK ON BASEBALL SERIES Wlnston-Solem. Sept. It. Norfolk, the Virginia league champions Tues day afternoon defeated Wlnston-fia lem, North Carolina league champi on. 4 to 1, In the second game of the post-season series. Wlnston-Halem took the opening gams Monday. Score: R. It. E Norfolk t Wlnston-Balem 1 t Washington, Sept. It. Details for the withdrawal of the American forcei which have held Vera Crus were beins worked out today at the war deport ment, according to Secretary Daniels. Transports at Newport and New York will be ordered to the Mexican city to transport troops. The naval contingent also will be recalled, but the date for this movement has not been set The soldiers will be return ed to Texas City, while the naval con tingent will go back to the warshlpi and stations from which they wer withdrawn. The president and his advisers bt lleve further presence of American forces Is not necessary because of th removal of the causes which brought them there. JAP AIRMEN DROP BOMBS ON GERMANS Toldo. Sept. 10. It was formally announced that a Japanese aeroplani dropped bombs on the barracks al Tslng Tau and that the machine re turned safely to Its hcadnuarters. Th destroyer flotilla operating from Lao shan bay near Tslng Tau drove In thl enemy's patrols. The railway station of Klao Chow, five miles from the bay of that nami and opposite Tslng Tau, the Qermai port, was occupied September II b) German soouta according to an ofBclai atatemtnt U1ay.