,..?!WT... m ii u I , i n:..in .ium mum.h i.'i j mi , I 'i ' ', u m m ! ;) m n iimn. j -' umi.i iiwm ,'- - --.. - . -.'..- . . . : .. . . '. i j ' i. i J' r V A Home Newapaper Published ia the luterest: of the Pec pie and for Governmental Affairs ' THr aOWE8S.50LLECTlO ft VOL. XIV. NO. 28. FOUBTS SBEIES SALISBUSY, K. C. WDNPAY. JUNE 26TH, 1918. ESTABLISHED 1832 - 4- j 1 v-; .- . FAMILY PLEDGE fflUST BE TRUE STATEMENT 7 TT iv.rS!!V'i ITALIANS WIN GREAT VICTORY. AMERICAN AVIATORS AD HJSTTJ1T DEFEAT. r 11 Si -. THE WEEK'S PROGRAM What mast Be Done If North . Carolina f 1 IK:;. . , - 5 ' 1 V . ALDERMEN ELECT CITY OFFICIALS. Practically HII Old Officers Re-elected With : jUdermsn Norwood Mayor Pro Tempore. The board "of aldermen met in special session at the city hall Saturday night June I5th, for the purpose of electing officers for the fiscal year. All members were present and Mayor Wood son presided. The followiug officials were chosen without opposition and being re-elec tioi.s: i N'ayor protem-r J D Norwood ity Attorney T H Vander- ford,.Jr . City Clerk W T Rainey City ftrea? T W Sum morsetl Saperintendent of Cemeteries M A Sihink Soperiutendent of Streets S h McCanless Assistant Superintendejst ol Strueis John I Shaver. City Eugineer J W VVebh Chief of H'ire; Department A FJrown ' ': i'ity ll.:l Jauitor S C MiJer There were two applicants foi ci y tax coiitc'or, D W Jnliair -tho pre&oni incumbont and J S ; Corriher, i'v Julian was elected uuajuim. usly, receiving eight votes. . For chief of police- two m'e:. 8( ught tho place, J M SLcle auc A ' Rice. Chief of Police J PrnkuMiUer did not stand for re-eisction not having 'an appli cati.in in fur the .phice. The vo e was live for Steele and tl i en f o r Rice. Ch ief Ai i ler h ad requested that his successor be sv(,rn in iuimedi.Uely and the oath was administered to Mr Steele, by A ay or Woodson and . - ... I dmea me amies oT tho office. Policeman John W Kosler was elected captain of the force to succeed the late J, Arthur Har rson and he, too, was sworn in a', the meeting Safcur (lay night. Patrolem elected were as fol tows: - ' W Vf Julian, JC Williams, BW Hall a C Lentz, all old officers, and J A! Mahaley, who has been serving as extra for so:ne weeks and who was on the force some years ago; aud Frank Mesimer, These two new officers were necessary as there 'were two vacancies on the force, no one having been elected to take the place of iS J Shuping who some f weeks ago resigned: tos become station-master for the Southern at this point, aud the other due to the dea'th of Captain Harrison a week' ago Extra officers chosen, to be called on as substitutes or for extra duty, are Henry Beaver and Ney Kesier. At the request of A J Warren, health officer, the election of a sanitary officer was postponed until a later meeting and in the meantime Warren and the health committee of the board will oon--fer on the matter. .T ie retainer fee of the city at torney was raised fri m $50 to $100 a year. On recommendation of the fi nance committee the tax rate,for the year was 'fixed ,at $1 25, fifty cents of this for the sinking fun 1 and 75 cents for the gener al find. It was ordered that an audit ing company be em p loved to audi' the books and papers of all the c-itj departments. T.t 3 question of out-of-town firms hauling soft bottled drinks into Salisbury for distri butin and sale and uql hwhig paid icense.as brought uoand are.-, ration was passed impos ing a ux of $100 a year on each and c'jry such firm distributing soil thinks within the city limits. LUTHER LEAGUE TO STATESYILLE NEXT. Plans Are on Foot to Convert The District Leagus Into a State Body. The District Luther Leaguo closed a three day meeting Friday to meet in the fall with St John's League at Statesville. The date of the fa 1 meeting is to be fixed b the executive -committee i The meeting held here'is known as the midsummer meeting. There was a good attendance and it was said to be the most en thusiastic meeting yet held by the district league. One item that had tho atten tion of the leaguers was the pro--posed transforming of the dis triet league into a stale league aud it is hoped to Jiave this ac complished by the time the fall meeting comes on. This means there must be an increase in the number of local leagues and the delegates that were in attend ance here stand pledged to this end. The district league set apart an' amount for the perma nent loan fund of the extension board of the church. President J C Sigmon, in mak ing his address to the league, ave a history of the Luther League, tracing its tirst organi zation in St Peter's church New lrk city, m 1887, until now, when it is an organization of in ternational proportions. Proclamation By The President. To the Poople of the United States: I earnestly appeal t o every man, woman and child to pledge themselves on or before the 28 h nf .TlltlA t.ri KSlt'O cnnctontlTT ar-A l w v v.uuuiuui r ouu 111 f buy as regularly as possible tho securities of the Government and to -do ihis as far asr possible through membership i n War Savings Societies. The 28th of June ends this special period of enlistment in the great volun teer army of production and saving Here at home. May there bo no'ne unenlisted on that day. WOODROW WILSON, President of the United States Pursuant to the proclamation of the President of the United States, you are hereby notified to attend a meeting at the school house in your district on Friday, June 28th, at six o'clock in the afternoon - F. H. FRIES. ' North Carolina Director of War Savings, under authority of the United States Treasury. Whooping Coaeh. In this disease it is important that the cough be kept loose and expectoration easy, which can be done b? g-ivinsr Chamberlain's j Cough Remedy. Mrs P H Mar tin, Peru. Ind., writes, -'My two daughters had whooping cough. I gave them Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and it worked like a charm." Tho H. estate College of A. -and E. 1 he andvertisement of the Noi Ui Carolina Stale College of vgricultu. and Engineer ing appears in this paper. TecLuical education has. proved its worth not merely to those who posse-s it, but 'o coinmuuUies and to the public good. Jt is that form of education which while training the mind to tlnk' Un oh 93 t he hpnd to do. The c.llegn offers four year uour -um in agneu zare, agr i cult iai ceemistry, chemical ODgi!!e-.nng, civil eagioeer iuK, meeaauieal engineering, e!ejtrical engiueemg, and textile industry. Her Quota. - Jariti 23, North Carolina War'Saviugs Sunday-a War Savings message will be d livrd - ia every church anri Sunday school ia tile stain . : June 24, House to house Caivas- June 25, House tn houjee Caovas, Meeting at night reports. fior Juue 26, Hou?e to Canvas. hoqsa Jun 27, House .to house Canvas, Meeting at night for reports. June 28, National War Savings Day, -every adult is summoned under order of the Government to appear at ! is schoolhouse at six o'clock Fiiday afternoon. Juue 29, Meeting of TownV ship and Ward Chairmen to return records and pledge cards and tabulate results of Drive. Civilians Must Not Use What Government Needs. Frank B Anderson, the San Francisco banker, says:. tlWhen Congress approprw ated 120,000,000,000 for the first year of the war, it con sciously or unconsciously, ap oropriated the labor and ser vices oPall of the people bf 000,0a0000, but raw matertals and the lacor to turn that raw material into the finished product needed in the prose cution of the war. , 'The plans and activities of the Administrafion will fail or be delayed to the ex tent that the population fails to bring the surplus of pro duction over consumption to the basis demanded by Con gress, and neither Liberty Bond issues, War Savings Stamps, nor taxation can solve the problem, for the reason that money is of no avail if the population con sumes what the Government needs to carry on the war. We must teach the people that every act and every ex penditure of each indivdual has a good or bad effect on the winning of the. war, that to the exfent that each indN vidual fails to deliver as full a day's work as he is c tpable of he is working agaia?t the Army in the field and aiding idle Ka?ser, and to the extent that he fails to respond to the Government's demand for conservation of those things that are needed for the Army and allies lie is giving aid and comfort to the enrmy and is creating the conditions and causing the delays for which he is criticizing the Administration. 4 'The great purchasing power of the country is not in the hands of the compara tively few rich men; but in the hands of the great mass of .workers." Has a Good Opinion of Cfiambsrlain's tablets "Chambeilain's Tablets' are a wonder. I never sold any tiling to beat them," writes F B Tres sey, Richmond, Ky. When troubled with indigestion or con stipation, give them a trial. Family Heads Urced to Make Accurate Resorts . m mm . m a am m A oi family's bnpgort to war saYHtzs caase jW ins too -Salem, June 19 5 State 1 Leadquarffars for War Savings calls attention to the fact that the Family War Savings pledge that given by the head of the family for himself and the dependent members of bia family must be? a true statement as to the number of War Savings Stamps bought by members, and particularly as to number they will pled ere themselves to buy during the remainder of the year. The father, or .housekc lder, wi 11 be called on to. make this pledge during the week os June 23-28, and he is urged to canvas the menibersof his family before hat time to know how many stamps -they own aud how many they intend to purchase by December 3lst, He should know this t hat he may repre sent them fairly io the pledge he makes for them. As the pledge made by the head of the family will be come a reccd of history of this great war, State Head quarters emphasises the im portance of this pledge being an accural representation of the iamilyV support to the War pavings Campaign. I calls attention to the fact that it becomes a permanent record of the service the tam ilXXd ers ict lljijp.caJL of4be Government, and that after it is made nothing has the power to change it. It would warn against the ten dency of family heads to un- derestinatH the importance of this request of" the Grovm mental. d to pledge too little to the cause, an amount that would not be representative of the family's ability to save au(fc lepd to the Government, nor their williijgness to serve their (louutry at this imper ative hour. It advises that every family Take time before making the pledge to consid er, fir-t what it owes to the soldiers now in the heat of battle lighting and dying, and t-ecoud, what would their moktVy be worth to them if Ger many should win "the war. Chsleia Slorbiis. This is a very painful and dangerous disease. In almost every neighborhood .some one ha-v died from it before medicine could berobtained or a physician summoned. The right way. is to have a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy in the house so as to be prepared for it. JMrs Charles Enyeart. Hutnritr'ton, Ind., writes: ' Dur ing thesummer of 1911 two of my children were - taken sick with cholera morbus. I used Chamberlain's Colic and Diar rhoea Remedy and it gave them immediate relief :. . . Ten Per Cent. Increase in Express Rates. Washington, June 22 A ten per cent! increase ia express rates was approved today by the Interstate Commerce Com mis sion. A.t the same time the Com missiouv disallowed an applica tion for an increase to 15 per cent. Itie hew rates will, be come effective as soon as the express com pan es tile new tar I. iff s probably within 2 weekaC iCIM- Buy War Stamps. Baron Burian, flastra-Hungarian Foreip Min ister, Fears a Rewjon Hay Folw. Juri 25 AuBtnas armies are beyond the Piave . river and the line, once more bar the enemy from the Venetian plains The crushed Aus trian toices net only were pursued to the river but the ItaPans at points occupied several bridgeheads an Uie east banks of the stream. How thorough the victory has been 19 not yet clear, as every hour brings reports 61 increasing Austrian losses. Many ihcusand of tin- invaders were killed in topir attempt to regiiu the east bank of the river, and the latest . auuouncemen from General Diaz places tlu number of priemiers alou at 40,00. One report phu;e the Austrian casualties at 2Q 000 men. Iu additiou ih enemy lost large storrs ol munitions and suDDlies and uany guns. Apparently the sudden torrent in the liane, whtel played havoc with Austriai communication, fell as quick as it rose and the ri ver bed was dry when the Austrian retreat began. This enkMed he enemy to get many of his rooi s across, "otherwise hip osses would have been much greater. . Vienna blames the weather a ud i jgh WAter Jjaahe r4 ver for the retirement and gives no credit to the stout Italian resistance which held the en emy on the west bank of the river and gradually forced him back to the stream. It says the order to wrh- daw was given Thnrsdv aud leaves the impression that the retreat was carried out unobserved by the Ital- ans. It has been reported that Ba ron Buriati, the Austro-Hungar- iarn foreign minister, told the (ierman command that O " evenls, possibly a revolution. would follow in the dual' mon archy i f an Austrian attack which Germany insisted upon, was repulsed. There has been no reports that the disorders and unrest within the Hapsburg empire has ceased. . In fact. late. nPWt ilia. patches give scanty intelligence as to the state of affairs in Aus tria. If the Austrian offensive was expected by the German com mand to relieve the situation on the western front the. Teuton strategists have been badly dis appointed Austria probably will not be able to take ud a new forward movement on the Piave line for a few days at least. In fact, the Piave front appears to be stronger now than at the begin ning of the present battle. Operations on mountain front are still at a standstill and if Emperor Charles si ill, desires to push the offensive against Italy the. next enemy attacks may come from this front unless the Italians continue the advance eastward from the Piave of which, however, there are no indications at present. Along the front .from t h i North Sea to Switzerland the al lied armies are availing another blow from Germany Premier J-lOya-Lre0rge nas told the liru- ish lLuse of Common's that an- rklhr ui.rantiV fr . - otner gigantic enemy effort is Austrian Farce Ust WdL Italian Army Headdaarters Sunday night Jade 23. - - The great retreat by the AuetrN ans along the Piave front be gan under the cover of dark uess on Saturday nicrht w : t The retreating troops left their cannon behind them. xianan aeiacnmentff ; are pursuing the enemy east of 'he Piave. Austrian trop left to covi er the retreat used their ma chine guns to eet up a barrage fire. When it was observed that the Austriaus had began a retrograd e movement, the Italians began to; attack yir ually all along the Piave line rom Moutello on the north, ell toward the mouth of the ver. The attack wag quick- . ' pre?riYd. and becanie more 1 i s t e u t a cc J m p aui ed by vio. in arti1Ieryflre'.::,iTliS"Ddni "jr of gnus left behind by he Austrians as they re reated has not beMi com uted, but it is said to be rery great. The work of the American ivitors who appeared on front last week for the ;first . time, contributed notablyjbo, the disorganizitioh of the Aue trian forces, which had crossed the Pi ipydihg to the correspondent of. the Drafted lies In Asha Connty Ara biffin Authority. Kaleigh, June 24 The ;tfite reserve militia company at Winston-Salem has been ordered to hold itself in reserve for a week's campaign against forty drafty men who are defying the author ities in. Ashe county, Adjutant General Young announced today. He said reports to his office from the Ashe countv draft board were that one man, a civ - ilian, had been killed, in at tempting to arrest some of the resisters. The men refused to be inducted into service, and legally are deserter from the army. Call For 4,247 Nan From North Carolina. Raleigh, June 21. A call upon North Carolina for 4,247 men has been issued by the War Depart ment, Adjutant General Young .ihnounced today. One thous and men qualified for general military service will be sent be tween July 5 and 10 to Camp Green leaf , Oglethorpe, Ga, ; 247 of grammar school education having experience as black smiths, carpenters and mechan ics will be sent to Clemson Col lege, Clemson,- S C, July .15; l,7oo others will go later to Camp Meade, Md., and 1 3 00 negroes will go to Camp Dixf Md . coming in a few days, possible a few-hours. The allies are ready to combat it. Canadian Headquarters in France, by the Canadian Press, June 25. A. Canadian hospital on a site behind the British front and occupied for 18 months was bombed by the Germans last night and several persons, tn rluding doc iocs, officers, and pa tients were killed or seriously wounded Hie aLnfci8 That IIao Mat IffiM Secauseolits tonic and laxaUVrtfecCtAXA- I Quinine and does not canse nervousness nor I ringing in neaa. Kemexnter tfle tnU name nd look for the int el B. w. gbovq. ,