w The Nation's Business is to Win the War h h WEATHER FORECAST Probably snow tonight and Tues day; not so cold; variable winds. ONE EDITION 2 CENTS MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. IS. NO. 307. SALISBURY, NORTH CAROLINA MONDAY. UECICMHKK rtUCU TWO CENTS GERMANY STRIKES I I First Great Effort Since Herald ing of Great Offensive is Made But is Held in Check. BIG PEACE CELEBRATION SUNDAY IN PETROGRAD Bessarabia and Turkestan Report ed to Have Declared Independ ence Kaledines Re-elected. (By Associated Press.) Germany has struck her first strong blow on the western front since the heralding of the grout offensive in that field, but wa3 held in chock by the British. The attack was morked by heavy fighting on' the southern end of the salient before Cambrai. The Germans in some places gained a foot hold in the British front trenches, hue were driven out Dy counter at tacks. The German thrust was on a front of more than two miles between Marcoing and La Vacquarie and against the positions which the Brit ish held since their ratuen.er.i under the blows of GenerJf By rig. In the center cf the attacked Ir.ne the Ger mans were held without gains, but on the ends of the line thev entereJ the British first lines. British coun ter attacks however, drove them from the mosit of these positions and result ed in the taking of many prisoners by the forces of General Ilaig. Ber lin reports claim front line positions and a "few hundred iprosoners" taken. The Germans have also been active at other points along the front but their local attacks in the Ypres sec tor and their raids northeast of Ver dun brought no successes. Their ef forts followed a heavy German fire in these three sectors, Cambrai, Ypres and-Verdun, and may be the forerun ners of determined atticks. In the Italian theatre there has been only artillery activity along the north ern pront. German airplanes again raided Pa dua, much damage being lone to monuments and buildings by incen diary bombs. Three people-were kill ed and three wounded. Another advance along the Nadlus rixtu invxiui oi Jerusalem nas Deen made by the British forces in Pales tine. Against stubborn Turkish re sistence the British progressed three miles and captured Birch-Berroth and three other towns. Progress was also made between Nadlus road and the Medeterranean coast. In Petrograd Sunday the day wns given over to peacs celebrations, marked by parades. The headis of the German and Austrian peace delegates were spectators of the parades. The heads of the German and Aus trian delegates to Brest-Livotsk con ference, Dr. Von Kuehlmann and Count Czernin, are returning to their respective capitals. Delayed dispatches from Br?st Livtosk indicate that while the repre sentatives of Russia and the Central powers agree on most .of the peace terms there is difficulty in the pre liminary settlement of the question exsncrning German reirement from occupied Russian territory in order to give the inhaoitants opportunity and time to decide the future for themselves. One of the forts at Kronstadt, the naval base near Pttrograd, has been blown up by an explosion, according to a dispatch received in Iondon. Bessarabia and Turkestan are re ported to have declared their inde pendence, while fighting between the Bolshevik i and their opponents is re ported to be going on in Harbin and Irkutsk, Siberia. General Kalendines has been re elected Hetman of the Don Cossacks by an overwhelming majority. Counter Measures in Course of Pre paration. Vienns, via London, Dec. 31. Coun ' t measures against the French are in course of preparation in the Monte Tomba area, ths war off'ce aTnriiTes. British Regain ImporUn Ground. London, Dec. 31. The Bntisn in successful counter attackj on the Cambrai front rfcgained more impor tant territory on Welsh ridge taken by the German in yesterday's at tack, the war office reports. Enemy Positions Captured. 4 Rome, Dec. 31. In the Monte Tom ba region on the northern front the French have captured enemy posi tions between Osteria di Monserena and Maransine,' the war office an nounces. They also captured about 1,400 men and 60 machine guns and seven cannon. The lovs of power may be at romi nant in tht heart of a peasant os of a. prince. Hsadley. III I BLOW ON II FROM E S When the Peace Terms Are Pre sented the British Government Will Make Serious Reply. LLOYD-GEORGE GOES TO FRANCE TO CONFER ON IT The Peace Negotiations Outlined by the Austro-Germans Re ferred to by Paper. (By Associated Press.) London, Dec. HI. The Manchester Guardian says it is the intention of i the British government, when the : Auitro-German plans for peace are r resented to it orlicially. to return n serious nnd reasoned rcniy. Premier George has ai ranged to vi sit Franc2 and confer with Premier C!emanc?nu on th? subject. j The Austro-Gernian pcac.-1 term rc- ferred to are those presented by rep- resentatives of the Central poyers at i teh peace negotiations with"fl(fl8JLu. i sians at B:est-Litovsk. These nego i tiatioas were interrupted by the ten ; days adjournment to give the enten te allies an opportunity to state if they will join the negotiations with them. The principal points outlined in the terms submitted by the Russians have been accepted by the Central Powers these bring no indemnity and no annextation. $50,000 TO HELP BOYS. At Death of Sister of Robt. J. John son, Large Sum Will Go to Educate Roys at Pulaski Boys School. (By Associated Pres3.) Pulaski, Va., Dec. 31. Property valued at $50,000 is left at the death of a sister to be managed by the Southern Methodist church to assist boys to acquire an education at the Pulaski Boys school under the terms of the will of Robert L. Johnson, pro bated here, it was learned today. Practical Sermon Delivered at the Tabernacle Sunday Night From Fphesians Firth Chapter, 15-16 Verses Associated Charities Next Sunday Night. The second Sunday night union ser vice was held in the Tabernacle last night and - despite the severe cold weather a fairly good sized eongrega. tion was out The meeting proved to te a splendid and helpful one. The sermon delivered by Rev. Dr. M. M. Kinard, pastor of St. John's Lu theran Oburch. Dr. Kinard preached a most interesting and practical ser mon from the subject, "Conduct Con sistent With Profession," taking his text from Epheaians 5th chapter and the loth and 16th verses. These union services will be hold each Sunday night and are proving ex ceedingly convenient as well as help ful. Not only is it a means of con serving fuel but a spirit of church unity and deeper brotherly feeling is being created and manifested through these meetings. N?xt Sunday nifht the evening will be given over to the Associated Cbar it:iat which time several speakers will make brief talks. The women are clamoring for the Fcod Administration to order smoke less days. The msn in rebuttal doubt less demand talcumleas spells. Ex. SHOW BIG INCREASE The Year 1917 Was a Big Year for American Trade the Balance in Our Favor Being More Than Three Bil lion Dollars. (By Associated Press.) Washington, Dec. 3L American exports ere estimated today at the department of commerce to have pass ed the six billion dollar mark. Im ports were less than three billions ahd the trade bilanos m favor of the Uni ted States is more than three billion dollars. E UDHK ASEROUSAN THE SECOND UNION tm. 'taK- . - .i .u i i "Perhaps You Did The Flyer Was Making Tets Before British and Italian Pilots and in Bad Weather Fell, Died After Giv ing Observation to American Of ficers. (By Associated Press.; Paris, Dec. 31. An American avi ator was" killed yesterday while mak ing a tost flight at an aviation center before seme British and French avi ators. Though the wind was blowing violently he made the loop successful ly and as in the act of repeating it when he fell. Though in a dying con dition When picked up he insisted th.it he make report of his observations to the prop.'"" officials. FIRE SUNDAY DAMAGED CAMP GREENE HOSPITAL Charlotte, Dec. 30. The laboratory and operating room buildings at the base hospital, Camp Greene, near here, were totally destroyed by fire early today, the loss totaling at least $75, 000, represented principally by de stroyed ?aboratory apparatus. Maj. W. L. Sheep, medical corps, in charge of the hospital, declared a defective flue in the laboratory caused the fire, which "for some reason" escaped de tection by the soldier "detailed as watchman." The loss was said to be covered fully by insurance. Much of the operating lxwrn apparatus was saved. Firemen and fire fighting apparatus from Charlotte went to aid the camp volunteer firemen, but frozen water mains had to be thawed before pres sure could be obtained. During this interim, the frame structures were consumed and efforts of the city fire men were directed to averting the oossibility of the fre igniting other buildings, about 60 of which were closely grouped nearby. Major Sheep said the loss of the laboratory, which was "wonderfully equipped," and the various valuable cultures being grown there was not likely to "greaHy decrease the efficien cy of the hospital in treating the sol diers who are iatierts here." He be gan today efforts to replace the de stroyed cultures by purchase. Lab oratory equipmeSnt to replace that de stroyed is expected to be forwarded immediately. About 900 soldiers are patients in the wards of this hospital Munition makers in tbia country ray they can operate their plants success fully with 70 per cent of women as em ployes. RESOLUTION. Your Best, Sir, but 1 Shall Do Better.' .E L AW ENFORCEMENT Believes That the Enforcement of the Child Labor Laws Will Add to the Health Also. and to War Productions (By Associated Press.) Efforts of the National child labor c '.r. .nisrion to prevent the relaxation of te laws on the excuse that war time nt:E3itk!j justifies has been en dorsed fcy President Wilson. In a let ter to the commissioner made public today the President said the enforce ment of the laws will contribute to the preservation of life and have a tendency to more efficiency and econ omy in the production of war necessi ties. French Forces Take Offensive. Berlin, De:. 31. French forces oil the northern Italian front yesterday took the ofTensive. In th afternoon the French infantry penetrated a por tion of tine Austor-German position on Monte Tomba, the German ganeral staff announced today. HELP FOR GUATEMALA America Ready With Warships to Send Aid to the Earthquake Strick en City. (By Associated Press.) Ws Kington, Dec. 31. Still without detailed information of tbs earth quake which destroyed Guatemala city, costing mary lives and leaving 100,000 inhabitants bomsless, Ameri can officials today were prepared to sond aid to the stricken sister rcpub lc. Further reports are awaited from American Minister Leavell and Con sul Fee. iHod Cms 3 officers "have conferred with ns'fal officers as to upplie3 to be sent forward on American war ships. FIVE GERMAN MACHINES WERE DESTROYED (By Associated Press.) London, Dec 31. Five Ger man air planes were destroyed or put out of action yesterday. The British lost none of their machines. THIS STATE IS HEARD Food Commissioner Page is Not Over Patient and Will Enforce the Law This Will Mean Putting Men Out of Business. Some (Sjeoial to' The Post.) R!cigh, Dec. 31. Notwithstand ing its oft-repeated and proven as I'.rtb'rs that its attitude toward all dealers in foodstuffs is first of all ft it r ily, and that it is desirous of co openLing with; all handlers of food stuffs, rumblings of impatience at petty profiteering are beginning to be heard around the quarters of the Food Adnrnistraticn in this city. That Fc:d Administrator Henry A. Pagi haj at heart the interest of the produceis and handlers of foodstuffs has been demonstrated by hi3 action in straightening out the wheat situa tion in the State anj by his attitude toward all whiclealer and retailers in their r::pe?tiv.i crrifercncej here; but Mr. Page is r.ot famous either for his patience in the fj?e of injury, nor for hu forbearance when liws are being violated and people oppressed through the greed of grasping or unpatriotic dealerx Where wanton violations of the law zni policy of the Food Administration are found, it is anticipated that the offcrding dealers will be punished by the simple procedure of putting them out of business. Where profiteers are shrewd enough to stay barely ithin j btunsrs, they will be cuf. in a class of suspects and watched. In order to give the consumer bet ter protection and to secure from the consumer more effective co-operation, the Food Ad-ivinistration contemplates offering the pjpera throughout the State occasional price lists showing the average cast of staple food com modities to the dealers and the price at which dealers should be able to buy. The publication of these prices s'.'.ould be of inestimable value to the people of the State. CONFERENCE ON RAILROAD MATTERS Matter Of Raising Pay of Rank and File of Workmen and Cutting High I Salaries is Discussed. (By Associated Press.) Washington, Dec 31. Plans for raising the pay of the rank and file of railway workers and the reduction of some of the very high salaries paid to executives and officials was. discussed at a conference between Director McAdoo and the Federal board of conciliation, and mediation here today. YEAR SENTENCE Private PHIlin Vun lingers Tried bv Court Martial on Charge of Deser- tion am! Forgery and Gets Long 'IV rin (l!v Aii-'K'i.ited Friau.) l.uimil K, o. Vj., OI. "I I I- J v.ile iMiill'p Vun Engcrs alias I.ieu- i m nt Wil "i'. n Vincont H .wjrd Biant, j 21 years of age, of LaGrange, 111.,' ! h is been trijd by court martial ut' ' ( tiiD Wndiiworsh and onUnoed to' i no Un yeais in a military prison. Vun Kn;.( .i fuccl a charge of deser tion ml ici eiy anil ontered pica of guilty. i T!k- i't'ftmlunt snys his father was i Usvn in Nctliirlar.- and is now en - rairc-l in soivico in France for the' TIm inten: c-a'.J hM nvi bein equal UnilcJ Ktutcj. Van Enaeis ays he I in the tar:!try 'urjh of New wjs pi c y.l of a dcjbo ta secure in formation about irmy cJrrps, AUTO TKl'CK TRAIN FINISHES JOURNEY Baltimore, Do;, 29. Twentyn!ne three-ton motor trucks which will one :!'ay carry supplies to American col umns abrouli, rolled into Court House Plaaa just before noon today. They had completed a M0-mile trip from Detroit. The three ofnsers And eighty mem bers of Uncle Sam's fighting forces had brought the train through tem peratures as low as 8 degrees below ero and through snowdrifts which in one case forced them to shovel a path. Thry mude about fifty miiles a duy. They are the first of thosands of motor trucks which will be brought to Baltimore in like manner from Detroit and from other towns further west to ralkva tht railroads of the burden of carrying thsin. font r.' n n..i. t- ur.-v. irrgton to report on, the trip, He sall it was omjuaijntiu success. ''.; til. , , , iim .,..'. z E Chief Ordinance Officer Says Every Effort of His For iletter Equipment Was Turned Down by Secretary of War and Congress. (By Associated Press.) Washington, Doc. 31. Major Gen eral Croiier, army ordinance chief, to day gave to the smsi committee in vestigating the conduct of the war his side of the reason fc.- artillery shortage nnd of the celebrated con troversy oyer the Lewis mnchine gun. The responsibility for the artillery shortage, General Ciozicr said, lay with the whole country, and he show ed how hi every effort to get larger appropriations fcr artillery in time of peace was overruled by the sec retary of war and congress. Goroial Croxier submitted re;-ords of tests of ths Lewis gun, showing that other guns performed better, and disclaimed any personal prejudice, as claimed by Colonel Lewis, tho Inven tor, and showing that since the gun was perfected to the use of American ammunition the war department had bought a quantity of them. - MANY MINERS REPORTED KILLED (By Associated Press.) Scranton, Pa., Dec. 31. Many min ers are reported killed by a gas ex plosion in the Underwood Mine of the Pennsylvania Coal Company near Throop, about six miles from the city. CompRny officials are silent and In formation is vague. At noon 17 bod ies, some of them dead and some alive, were reported to have been taken from he mine. E California Man Says He Has Been Named to go to Washington as Di plomatic Representative of the Gov ernor. Pan Francisco, Dec. 31. Feilding J. Siiteon, a Los Arrgelc capitalist here today, aaid that he had been appointed diplomatic lepresentative at Washing ton of Governor Estanda Candtu, of Liwer California. "I believe,- he said, "that thU fore shadows the cession of Lower Califor nia from Mrxico. IER SAYS COUNTRY COLD MOW PASSING TO SEA Weather Bureau Promises Moder- 1 - it j m . t . 11.. uuuu in iBiuperaiiUie iwr mo j Country, Beginning; To-night. I 1 " 40 DEGRES BELOW ZERO AT NORTHFIELD, VT, : t.i.... n.1.1 c.mii tr,.. w i iutouDo vim" wyon nam nvi Equalled Since Deo. 3D, 1880,' Says the Weather Bureau (Py Associated PrMS.) Washington, Dec. 31. Some mod el Jtion to bercin tor.iu'ivt of tha colli wave wis tha forecast txby by the weatScr bureau tjr the country from e 0 h i .) valley eastward. The cold : wave is now p-jinr ta s.J. Ysrk, nbr.jr the owt and Inland, &:.ico Decsmter 80, 1880. Thsre ilrwy Kji been a modcra t oi In the temperature of the Ap: palstivon mcur.'Uir3 tj1 in th Cast Gil Stages, slt'.vaugh over the grsatcr pit of this region ii .t still .colder than the seasonable avjrige. CiTrton, N. Y., reported the hwort tsmi:r: tute at 8 o'clock t'-jis morrriajr of any pint in tho country. It ww 20 ckgree belo v tcro there. During the previous 24 hours the coldest wi 40 degrees below ier at North flsld, Vcrmcrt, ac:ord'lrg to wcathr bu reau reports. New York in Winter's Grip. New Yoik, Des. 31. A lengthening death roll, isfi'-dly dwindling Coal sup ply and weather bureau pre lie tion of the reccrd breaking cold spell t keep tho mercury hoveing about cero mark through the next 24 hours made win ters grip on New York aitl vicinity a grim actuality today, ' The cotton exchang voted to eolae ti noon. At 1 o'clock th mercury stood at on da- P"Mw ,an' North Carolina Farmers' and turn Women's Convention, 1918. " Wert Rslclau, Dec. 81. PJin are under way to msko tho 1918 Farmers' ar i Fawn Womcn'a Convention t tha Stilt College- of Agriculture ths larg est nr. m::S s'cejful aver hsld. Sever.)! susceiafal farmers and farm vuman of tha Ute, ho del by Mjr. F. P. LjtVim, pr,:;!dinii of the efiovsn-H-.o, ..iii7a dt'.ej.nht J -to make t'Js convent't a one of pri'Mical benefit to eery perron in the State. It is to bo plarnid anl ccm!u;t:d by farmsra and fivn AeTie-', who w!U be asiwtud. by the stiT of lbs ullage and Depart" mc;'''. cf Agrlcuvare. v Anvng :hc n. :ny spocU futures already planned are exhibits and dis cusslr'j ;f h;m;-mad fa m labor saving device, practical demonstra tions and Interesting exhibits by the CoPigc, Department of Agriculbare, ?id other State depar'.ineols. These w'll all be of prsctieal vhs i!a grow ers from ev.-ry section cf ths State. In r Hit 'on to these, the progrsm com cn:ti?c has premised a good spoiker of national reputation for the o?ca j'en. v r At a time when every industry of the :ci.'Ptry is co:perstin f t. sik- cccjful coniuct of our purpose In grtit wr, it ! particularly tmpor tint that ths food produeera of tha State meet once a year to learn how thoy can be.t sreve their country and them reives. WOMAN GOES TO CHURCH .ND IS SUED FOR TRESPASS Auaatic City, D?.'. ?. V .' " ' Mll lin:t Watson, p'omir.i'"t Chelsea vi :n-n. v.as touay made ,'lefjndant in a ruit for S4.000 m the District court for having attended 8v-c:e- ta Christ Meihcdis' Prote.-tint church m rha n.f 'iiiiiK and eveniu f of Dec 13 ami biinila; .services Dec. Th cimre i i I e'JflSH. i t - ' jit was instituted by Leo F. Wash ington, attorney f .tt ihe church, at th instance of the Ebiers, who had Mrs. Watson "read out" of the chdrch soma time ago, following a snaatinnt hear ing of charges of slander against on l of the dc irons. - "' - The con okint states "that the plain tiff was "in poosossion of the church' on the dttes named and that aha' unlawfully, willfully and intintionally entered upon said land" after being forbidden and in spite of the pon tiff's protest . 'v.; . . The church is demanding l,0OQ on each of the four counts m addnon ta the costs of tha suit. " . , . v . There may nothing in a nt, still we would not ear to be around when Filer Gush, of Lima, Ohio, is coiug tha talking. x. ' ' . y If God is leading tha Germans far--ward in Italy, who is leading trWa backward in Belgium? Wichita Bea con. ' - y .