1 - v , iMBMM COLLECTION A Home Newspaper Published in the Interest of the People and for. Honesty in Governmental Affairs; SALISBURY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6TH, 1915. VOL. XI, NO. 42 FOURTH SERIES Wm. H. STEWART, ED. iUHIEIOP t -' -,r s .. . ',s.,vi-f, " . . - j 3.... . .. rtT'"-., " . .. ... ' ' Tim e e i j! i j ma & i--v--- a iiiivr . i i - i T Gcriaii Were Filed ; Far Wnfr Hid Ctmsui Lintfl Dngoms and Were Com tortab1! Hou.ed. British Headquarters in France, Sunday, Oct. 3, via London Oct 4. The scene of the British attacks in the Lens region is a flat mining country slag heaps, mine pitti, ruined buildings, splint ered and felled trees and earth works churned by ex plosions, with slightly rising ground toward Loos and Lens. Kothing is visible except the", soft puffs of shrapnel bursting and volumes of black smoke from British and Ger man high explosive shells, marking positions where the British troops are oiganizing their gains and the Germans are preparing a new defensive line. It is with infinite satisfac tion to the British, who had lojttg looked at the eye-sore twiti towers of the mining workB at Loos, that they now halve in their possession this German position. The chnrch attLo.s, which had been used as an observation post, is a heap of stone as the result of the bombardment preceding the attack. The normal population at Loos is 10,000 miners and thefr families Three hun dred of these remained dur in& the battle, taking shelter in; the cellars of their wrecked mjeerable homes. 'As the skirmish line ap proached the town, it saw six women ard a child coming , toward it in the midst of the battle. Some of the British soldiers tried to rescue them, rut before they could get the -tromea to a shelter two or three were wounded. The elaborateness and per tnanency of the German trenches indicated the appar ent conviction of the Ger mans in the security of their line. Dugouts, often 30 feet deep, were cemented and con tained electric lights and arm chairs Some of them were impenetrable even to high ex plosive shells of big caliber The British bombardment cut the wire in front of the German trenches to bits and battered the firing trenches and traverses into irregular piles of earth . Under such a flailing of shells it was sui cidal for the Germans to at tempt to remaiu outside the dugouts or to try to man their machine guns, or use their rifles. When the artillery work was perfected the British in fantry sprang over the para pets at a given moment. Sprinting toward the German trench they arrived almost without opposition. Then the German trench was theirs with the Germans who ware alive htfddled in their caves. Some of the dugouts had their openings blown in by shell explosions, and their oc cupants were either buried or (Suffocated. Where a dugout had reeu unharmed the British sol diers, with bayonets fixei or bombs in hand, appeared at the entrance to find the Ger mans still inside or perhaps just starting out. All in the dugout might surrender, or on the other hand, if a Brit ish soldier started to enter or even showed himself he was received with a f usilade. In case of refusal to surrender -bombs wre thrown into the dugouts. The Germans sur viving the explosion usually gave in, though not always for some of them died to the last man. Some incidents had a hu ffiioroup as well as a tragic uiue. in rnese suaaen en counters at close quarters where the charging Briton Eiet'a German emerging from s is dugout the bayonet, J)omba and' even fists were Sometimes brought into play $n the ensuing melee. Vf Que4 difficulty was the gathtring and guarding of ,,$ri -oners in such a confined j apace as, the irregular wreck ed trenches. With rifles and 111 Hate. Yiriii'a Dry Both Sides Seem Ts Win! to UtkelTheLiw Effective. Washington Dispatch to Balti more Sam Temperance leaders of Virginia have proposed a novel plan to en force State-wide prohibition in that State when it becomes ef fective in 1916. The plan em1 braces the creation b?4he General Assembly of a superintendent of prohibition, whose day iV shall be to enforce the temperance laws, make investigation of its viola tion and assist the legal authori ties in prosecutions. The purpose of this plan ii to bring about the enforcement of the prohibition law in the Virgin ia cities and "wet" counties where public sentiment-is not strong for the abolition of he saloon. Un der Bush a plan, it is contended, the authorities will not dare to wink" at violations of the law, is is now done iu Southern cities where State-wide prohibition pre vails The police and the State's' attorney, it is declared, will knew that behind them is an official who intends to enforce the law at all costs The Virginia General Assembly next winter will be called upon to pass laws for the enforcement of State-wide prohibition. The pro hibitionists will control the L-)gls- ature. They favor drsstio laws because they wish to repudiate the many assertions that "prohibition does not prohibit." The "wet forces favor similar legislation because they want the State to have a genuine period of thirst, believing actual prohibition will go a long way toward making -nany Virginians change rhair minds on the subject. Oue of the issues in the prohi bition oampaign in Virginia last year was that the anti-liqaor laws in Georgia and other Southern "dry'' States were not enforced in the big cities. As a result of these charges the prohibition forces promised a draatio enforce ment of the law in county and city. Chronic Constipation. "About two years ago when I began nsmg Chamberlain' Tab lets I had ben goffering for some time with stomach, trouble and chronic coustipation. My condi tion improved rapidly through the use of these tablets. Since taking four or five bottles of them my health has been flue," writes Mrs. John Newton, Irving, N. Y. Ob tainable everywhere. bombs lying about the Ger man even -after capitulating were likely to seize them and rush to the cover of a traverse trench or into a shell crater and reuew the fight. . The British are keeping to the tactical plan undertaken by them to gain a certain amount of ground with each attack. The Germans fought des perately and the viciousness oi xneir counterstittacKs ap parently was due to rage over the loss of their comfortable dugouts, and the unpleasant prospect of a Winter in the mud, building new caves. The rear of the army dur A 1 A A -n ing tne action presented a wondrous varied scene, which was the more concentrated because of the narrow front of the operations. There were the slightly wounded walking back, the steady tramp of fresh regiments go ing forward, processions of swift motor ambulances whose burdens would be back in England in 24 hours, long- 1 er and seemingly endless pro cessions of motor-trucks load ed with shells to feed the ever-thundering unseen guns troops ot the reserves in the fields or beside the -orged roads waiting their call, while the French population stood in'theird oorways ' and asked for the latest news from of - hcers and men who knew nothing jxcejt concerning their own parts in the big scheme of things. Aiiolier Bbss furls People Stiti Bcird of Heal himplofs Piosecatof tod Will see that the People Obey. The Barman cf Vital Statistics of tire State Board of Health closed a coniraot today with J. A. Mcl ityre, cf Mount Olive, whare- iu the latter becomes prosecuting agent for the Vital Statistics Bu reau in North Carolina . Mr. Mclutyre is ex deputy sheriff f Wayne County, a former looal registrar, and a young man tally equipped for this partioalar work. He starts on his first trip Monday, October 4, to visit those counties where incomplete registration is suspected. His ltiueary will be arranged altogether by the Bu reau of Vital Statistics in accord ance with those counties report ing low' death rates, that is to say, those counties that rest under suspicion of incomplete registra tion. Mr. Mclutyre will travel by motor cycle, whioh will enable him not only, to hold down travel ing exper. b is, but to reaoh the re mote districts of the State. The State Board of Health is determined to enforce the State registration law," deo'ared the ecretarycf the board today. Mr. Mclntyre a oontinuanoe in cmoe will be basejl on his ability to find infringement of this law and to secure convictions. In addi tion to knowing where people are dying-aud th relative importance of the various causes of their deaths, the Board proposes to se cure good standing with the Un ited Slates Bureau of the Census and to be admitted as a 'registra tion state. To this end the Bu reau wi'l emply county and dis trict agents in addition to the State agent, to find a ad prosecute violators of the vital statistics law. State Hea'th Bulletin. This gives you an idea of wher and how- the rule of the people is gradually slipping through their fingers and how the government is being centralized and added to without the least show of a gen eral demand for such legislation. This, at one time called czarism, is uow termed Democraoy, k Coughs Tb it are Stopped 1 Careful people see that they are stopped. Dr. King's New Dis covery. is a remedy of tried merit. It has held its own on the market for 46 years. Youth and old age tetify to its sjothiugand healing qualities Pneumonia and long troubles are often caused by dlay of treatment. Dr. King's New Discovery stops those hacking coughs aud relieves 1 grippe ten dencies. Money back if it fails. 50a. aud $1.09. Wireless Telephony 4.600 Miles. The most important scientific discovery of an age was made when the officials of the American Telephone and Telegraph Com pany telephoned without wires the other day from Washington to Hawaii, a distance of 4,600 miles, and from New York to the Mare Island Navy Yard in San Fanoisco Bay, a distance of nearly 8,000 miles. Experiments i n telephoning across the Atlantic have been made, hut have not yet proved successful. The telephone offici als said only, conditions due to the war have made this use of the wirelesB 'phone impossible up to this time, for the difficulties of sending word across the Atlantic are not so great as telephoning without wires aoross the United States. Facts For Sufferers. Pain results from inj try or con jestion. Be it neuralgia, rheuma tism, lumbago, neuritis, tooth ache, sprain, bruise, sore stiff musoles or whatever pain you have yields to Slrans Liniment brings new fresh blood, dissolves the con gestion, relieves the injury, the circulation is free and your pain leaves m if by magic. The nature of its qualities penetrate immedi ately to the sore spot. Don't keep on suffering G"t a bottle of Sloan's Liniment. Use it. It means instant relief. Prioe 25o and.fjQo,:.. $1 00 bottle holds six time s-meo ha 4he 55a size, North Carolina Stale Fair T Don'l Seem to be Afraid to Ts 1 1 in Advance What Ilw Will Haie A communicatioii from the cab I icity c mmittee of she Staie Fair, to be held iu Raleigh, says: Ootober 18 S3 Mark the dates down in your memory as foar gala days of festivities, v'he week of the Great State Fair atRaleigh. Sdres upon scores of woudorfujishe openly break with the Central' events are awaitiug, you in the Capital City, marvelous attrac tions that have never been ffered at any previous fair. The agricul tural and industrial exhibitions are interesting and instructive, (he midway, one great line of un usual attractions, and the free at tractions the most marvelous ever shown at a tioath Atlantic fair. Headiug them all Is the thril ling aeroplane spectacle copied from the actual destruction of a German fort by a Freuoh aviator on the European battle front. Daring Captain Worden, in his monoplane, 2,000 feet in the air, drops bomb after bomb on a solid fort below, the fort returning the fire with sham ehatpnel shells, which burst around the aeroplane, high in the air, For f many min utes the battle rages until the fort is destroyed iu a cloud of dust and smoke by a bemb from the aeroplane. 4 .v Of the soores of othfer free at tractions there are the human loop the-loop, the skutiug bear, the ohair balancing a eft, Cotton's C;medy, donkey aud many others, Famous Miss Collier, from 100 foot ladder, will dive in a shallqw tank of water. ' For those who are interested in the agricultural welfare; of the State, ther re ihe AndstpoX. judging ooutests,he tomato clubs and competitively county exhibits, bys' corn clubs, pig clubs, boys' aud girls' poultry clubs, free nao tiou pictures of all diseases of poultry and cattle, perfect types of cattle and many other interest ing and instructive thiugs. This year will be another inno vatiou that b.du fair to eolipge any feature of the fair, and one that should interest every town in the Sa e. This new feature is a monster fl. ral aud industrial pa rade of the agricultural and in dustrial resources of the State. Th Be interested in a float in this p.rade shuuid wire or write M W. Tyree, Riieigh, N C, chairman f the Arrangement oommitt9e. This parade will include fl at from busiuess houses, mauufao turers, towiiB, schools, oollegts, etc- Iu addition to this there will oe tne msrenai9 paraae aud a grat.d review of the National Gutrd by General Young aud staff O.i to Raleigh. Begin to plan your trip now and stay all of the eek, October 18-13. All persons interested iu secur ing space, will cemmuuicate with Col. Jos E. Pogue, secretary, Rleigh, N. C. For Indigestion. Never take pepsin and prepara tions oontaiuiug pepsin or other digestive ferments for indigestion, as tne more yu cage cne mere you will have to take. What is needed is a tonic like Ohamber .'aiu's Tablets that will enable the stomach to perform its functions uaturally. Obtainable every. where. . Weather Fosecas for October. From 1st to 8tb, oool showers and some wind. From 8th to 15th, chaogeableto cool, with slight rains., n 4 w . l a. Lin . Jl m f rom lain to zzna, rair and oool, if wind is southwest slight showers, and, if wind is northeast at from 6 to 8 a, m., on the 15th, look for heavy irost, inside of these seven days. From 22ud to BUto, rain and wind, some stormy like aud cool m a" a l tll mis inontQ win buuw up some warm, cold and uncertain weather as this is the change month be tween summer and autumn and lotB of wind this month. Hksry Rbid. Route Ho. 8,vStaiibnj7t,lvarl Rossiai ffarsMj! off PprI ef Vana Events In Balkans Moving Swiftly With Probacy a New Battle Line. Oct. 4. Allied troops have landed at Saloniki, Greece, and two powerful Russian squadrons have appeared off the .Bulgarian portot Varna, on the Blaok Sea. Whether Bulgaria has complied with the Russian ultimatum that Powers and dismiss the German and Austrian officers with her army is not known, but her failure to do so is considered certain to result in the creation of yet an other zone in the world war. While unofficial reports in Lon don are that the Greek Govern ment has protested against viola tation of her teraitory, dispaohes emanating from Athens assert the Greek people received news of the landing calmly, realizing that if the worst should come the Allied troops would aid them in repelling Teutonic aggression. The. Greek Minister in London has. declined to either affi rm or deny that G raece has formerly protested. Bulgaria, it is reported, has an aounoed that she will immediate y reply to the last note of the Entente Powers concerning Ser bia's offer to bulgaria of compen sation fcr Bulgarian neutrality. An Anthens dispatch Sunday said the powers of the Eutente had withdrawn their offer of conces sions of Macedonian territory to Bulgaria. Heavy fighting continues in the Artois region of France and bom bardments are going on in the Ohampagoe regioo-andin the Vos ges mountains. The fighting . in Artcis has beeu trenoh warfare of xjttat,chaBte;ThG mans are on the offensive, but ac cording to Par if, the? have been everywhere repulsed exoept louth of Givenchy, where they re-took from the Frenoh the crossing cf hve roads, whioh the earlier French effnial communication had recorded as being occupied by tne French. A Brit'sh report from Field Marshal Sir John Frenoh says the Germans noithweit of Hnllneh nave recaptured the great portion o: the Hoheuzollern redoubt which was taken from them last week. Numerous other attacks made over the open against the British treuches between the quarries and Saimedes-Hulluch road were re pulsed with severe losses. According to the German com munioation on the progress of the oampaign in the east the Russians advanced to the attack in dense masses in central sector to the east of Velna, bus were repulsed with uuusuaily heavy losses. Pet- rograd admits the capture of trenches by the Germans in the regiou of Dviusk, but declares that iu a counter-attack the trenches were recaptured. The Auglo-French bond issue of $500,000,000 already has been over subscribed. The amount of the over subscription, it is esti mated will reaoh $50,000,000. When Baby Has the Craop. When a mother is awakened from sound sleep to find her child who has gone to bed apparently in the bist of health struggling for breath, she is naturally alarmed. Yet if she can keep her presence of miud aud give Chsml erlain's Cough Remedy every ten minutes until vomiting is prcdaoed, quick relief will follow and the child will drop to sleep to awaken in the morning as well as ever. This remedy has been in use for many years with uniform success, Ob tainable everywhere. Snow in Northwest. St. Paul, Minn , Oct. 4 The first snow of the season fell here today, the light flurry continuing only a few minutes. Dadwood. south Dakota, re ports a seowfall of from three to six inches throughout the Blaok Hills last night, the first general fall o? the season. Suras Old Sores, Other Remedies Won't Curs. rh worst cases, no mattetpf bow lone standing-. re Caxtxi vr Va ronJttol, pld -jsllaMe Dt, eUinar.;Oit.- ft tttteve Tie People Fair The Agricultural Exhibits Wen Eicellini, Fire Works and Free Acts Good. The People's Fair held here last week, though the weather was contrary and the financial loss considerable, was a success in many respects nevertheless. The attendance was small during the five days. Saturday havinir been added, and of course the receipts were limited, Friday and Satur day the gate fee being reduced to 25 cents. We have not vet heard any one speak of the exhibits, especially those of the f aimers, sxoept in terms of praise, and, this is wherein good ib done for this entire section; they were edifying, instinctive, educational and worth the efforts of the pro moters of the fair and the farmers ooucerned. The rain spoiled the track and stopped the races, whioh oy the way, were not indispensi- le, merely being a feature for the amusement of some and offering in opportunity for those so in clined to gamble. It would take considerabl) more spaoe and time than we have do spare to give a detailed de scription of the many splendid exhibits in the various depart ments. They were all good and no doubt the judges were often at a loss to determine which deserved I the first premium or the blue rib bon. The exhibition of stook was not arge but what, was lacking in quantity was made up iu quality. The fireworks and free acts be fore the grand stand were good and quite entertaining. We understand the receipts amounted to about 10 per cent iheicFiulB er Iobs than last year, but the management anhounoe thsir in tention to pay every bill in full, thus indioatiug a very fine spirit, one that will go far toward the snocess of any future fair that may materialize. Friday morning the directors decided to oall off the races, ow ing to the bad condition of the track and probably to save as much expense as possible and ex tended the time to include Satur day, which was a fine day. R. J. Holmes who had entered a horse, like the ethers, had gone to some expense to prepare for the races," thought the extension should in clude the race program also, but as this was not to be, he had some oirculars grinted with the follow ing wording: "No raoss Satur day. A fair without races is like an egg without salt." Of course this stirred the boys up a little and Saturday morning oirculars were issued stating that there would be races, etc Mr. Holmes then thoughtlessly offered to en ter his horse, but was refused . Canal Blocked for at Least a Month. Washington, Oct. 8 The War Department to-night announced that there was little prospect of reopening the Panama Canal be fore November 1 . Since the channel was blccked by a slide from the east bank north of Gold Hill September 20, the movement has continued steadily, pouring earth and rock into the waterway while the dredges worked away in a vain effort to keep it open. Hundreds of vessels will be held up by the closing of the canal for 40 days or more, causing the first very serious interruption of traf fio through the isthmus since it waS opened in August 1914. War Department officials said tonight they oould give no deh nite assurance that the canal oonld be onened November 1. It waB explained, iiowever, that brsing an estimate upon the man ner in which the earth . was mov ing and the amount of earth and rock already deposited, it was be lieved that another month should serve to dear the channel. The present slide began .when the canal bad been open just 10 davs after a slide which blocked ir' for a week. Read Th Watohtsux and Rxcord Sofia 6iien24' Hears Id W.irt to Stud 6enan8fflcertl!irsr." Oot. 8. The crisis in the Bal kan situation has been reaohed . Russia's ultimatum to Bulgaria has gone forth. King Ferdinand 's Government, it says, must openly break off. relations with the Cen tal Powers and dismiss thft Ger man and Austrian officers with its rmy, or the Russian Minuter and Consuls will be withdrawn from Bulgaria. The note lent by Russia to Bul garia sets forth that the presence f German and Austrian officers in Bnlgaria, the concentration of troops on the Serbian border and ihe acceptance of financial sup port by Bulgaria from the Teu tonic Allies, leave no doubt as to the object of Bulgaria's military preparations and dsolaret thai 3u8sia therefore cannot sanction y the presence of that country f her Minister "preparations for ratrioidal aggression against a 3 lav and Allied people.' While the Bulgarian Premier is e ported in a semi-official sfcate oeut as saying that Bulgaria is tot threatening any of her neigh ors and still hopes for a pacific 9ttlement whvwill taka iher iuterbsts into account," an Athens lispatch reports that the Qua druple Entente Powers have :witb drawn their proffered concessions of Macedonian territory to tBajt- aria add that an Anglo-French , expedition is about to be, landed v it Saloniki with the approval of ; Greece. . t-r" It is reported from MikMfiX-, the, chief :oftheataian, jUfthsoJte rn u.'uti aiiute&BfB Wi )nce to a possible Italian expedi tion to Balkana.1 sufficient troops for which are concentrated at Bdindisi. Ou the western front from the fioith Ssa to the Vosges Moun tains there have , been artillery oombardments, infantry attacks, fighting by means of bombs and grenades and aerial raids by both sides . The only claims ofja capture of territory is made by Paris, whioh asserts that in Artois the French have taken a German blockhouse and entrenchment to the south of the Givenohy wood. Berlin ac knowledges the loss of a few yards of trenches to the French near Neuville, but declares that a Brit ish atta;k' uorth of Los was re pulsed with heavy casualties and that the French offensives east of Souchez aud in Champagne were beaten back. Allied aeroplanes have bom barded the station, railroad bridge and military buildings at Luxem burg. Berlin says the Frenoh dirigible airship "Alsace" has been foroed to make a landing uear Retyel and that its crew was captured by the Germans . Along the Eastern the Germans and Austrians Soill claim that they are making progress against the Russians but no great engage ments have ooourred anywhere in this region. Switzerland has ordered the as sembling of several squadrons of cavalry which will be stationed along the German frontier. Morgan Retnrns the Will. J. P. Morgan of New York has sent without cost to justice James Keith, president of the Virginia Court of Appeals, to be disposed of by him at his own discretion, the will of Mrs. Martha Washing ton, taken from the records of Fairfax Court House by a Federal soldier during the Civil War, and bought, by the late Pierpont Mor gan for his library. Fairfax Harrison, president of the Southern Railway, was the mediator between Mr. Morgan and Governor Stuart of Virginia, and Justice Keith. Morgan had refused repeated reqaests to re turn the will and suit had been brought for its recovery. It is said that the will, by oonsept, will probably be placed in a fire proof vault at Mt. Vernon. M 5