Established 1899 ALLIED ARMY REPORTED TO BE IN RETREAT Germans Now Within 60 Miles of the French Capita! and are Continually Forcing the Defenders to Fall Back and Seek Stronger Positions. Bombs Dropped in Paris. While the whole world is awaitirg definite news from the battle line* the French War Office contents itself with i ,he simple statement that, as a result of the turning movement of tfce Ger many Army and in order not to ac cept battle under unfavorable condi tions, the French troops again 1 ave retired. From the British Capital no word is forthcoming regardi ng what are con sidered the ir.oit momentous operations of the «ar. While Berlin claims a German vic tor; over the Russians in East Frussia in the capture of 70,000 men, the Russians claim an important victory over the A'istrians on theGalician side with 30,000 prisoners. Another German aeroplane has been droppin? bombs into Paris and accord ing to the French official statement the American Ambassador has organized acomnaitte and has sent a protest against this method of warfare to the Washington Government. The Belgian special commission aa its way to tfce United States to protest against alleged German atrocities has been received b7 King George and has presente 1 him with an address set ting forth some of the happenings in Belgium during the present campaign and has warmly thanked Great - JBrilain for its intervention. "An American committee, organiz ed by the American Ambassador and including the most conspicuous mem bers of the American colony, asked the Minister o! War for proof that bombs were dropped on Paris from a German machine. The Minister of War pre sented proof, which decided the Am bassador to cable to his Government a report on war methods, which not onlv are contrary to humanity but in vio lation of the convention of The Hague signed by Germany itself, "The committee has deciied to ask the United States Government while remr.ain? neutral, to protest energ;- tically to tUe German Government, A squadron of armored aeroplanes las been organized to give chase to German aeroplanes which have been fljing over Paris. " Terrific fighting continues on the Rus3o- Austrian frontier. B)th armies c'aim an advantage. It was offhhliy announced GENERAL VON LOCHNOW th» ° mmantier °f the Third corps ol Slum erma " army ' now f 'B htin 3 ,n THE HICKORY DEMOCRAT KAISER AND VON MOLTKE Kaissr Wilhelm, on the left, looking over a war map with his commander. In-chief, General von Moltk*. that 30,000 Russian prisoners had been taken by the Germans. Pari?, the capital of France, is preparing for a siege. The Ger man army is nearing this city in spite of the furious resistance put up by the allied French and English. A German aviator flew oyer the city of Paris Sunday and dropped five bombs, but two, however, exploded and did little damage. "We are at the gates of Paris; prepare to surrender, was the substance of a note that was also dropped. It is reported that British war ships off Hong Kong are holding up vessels, including those under the American Flag, and remov ing Germans and Austrians bound to the scene of hostilities. William Pinkney Reinhardt. W. P. Reinhardt was a son of John Reinhardt and wife. John Reinhardt was a son of pioneer Christian Reinhardt ail wife. John Reinhardt married Annie, a daughter of Alexander Moore, who was a soldier of the Revolu tion. John Reinhardt and wife are buried at Salem church, six miles north of Lincolnto.i. W. P. Reinhardt married Mary For ney and died without issue. Aftor the war he and Dr. Ellis were candidates at the same t!m\ I believe Mr. Reinhardt was the successful candidate and repre sented Catawba county in the House at Raleigh. Mr. Rein hardt had a farm a few miles sou*h of Newton. After the war he scld this farm and moved to Hickory where he built a large boarding house where the Huff ry Hotel now stands. The writer became pastor of the Reformed church at Hickory in the sum mer of 1874 and was pastor of the chu ch for two years. He was the pastor of three country churches at the same time. While stopping in Hickory he boarded with Mr. W. P. Reinhardt. Mr. Reinhardt and wife were mem bers of the Reformed church. He and his wife were good peo ple. Mr. Reinhardt paid the writer S2O a >ear for preaching. A. A. Si; u ford paid the writer s2o a year for preaching. A. L. Shu ford paid sls a year. These were among the best supporters of the pastor. The writer preached at Hickory on one Sunday of each month. Charles and Make Bost were living with Mr. Reinhardt at the time, Mr. Reinhardt was their uncle. Tnc y rang the bell and made the fire while the writ er was pastor of the church. Mr. Make Boat lives in Burke county HICKORY, N. C.. THURSDi on the farm of Jacob Forney who was the father of Mary who [married W: P. Reinhardt. Mr. W. P. Reinhardt and wife died at Hickory where they are buried. The funeral of Mr. Reinhardt was preached by Rev. J. C. Clapp. lie was assisted by Rev. J. L. Murphy and Rev. J. H. Shuford. J. H. SHUFORD. IVEY MILL RUNNING FULL TIME Plenty of Help and Employees Well Satisfied. West Hickory, Sept. I.—All is quiet here at present. Tne mill i is running all right with plenty of help and the hands seem to be well satisfied. The portable sub station, which has been nere for several wetks' famishing power for the mill whi!e the transformer house being repaired, has teen re moved as the repairing is now completed. Mrs. T. C, Jarett and daugh ter of Cliffside, were here last week visiting Mrs. Jarett's son in-law, G. C. Freeman. Mrs. J. C. Pendleton, who has been \isiiing friends and rela tives near Cook's post office- for the past two weeks, returned home Sunday. The Lsdies' Aid S>?iety of the Methodist Church gave an ice cream supper in the mill park Siturday evening. A large crowd was present and music was fur nished by the West Hickory band. Eli Keller and family moyed to the Ivey Mill last week. Mrs. James Abee was taken to the hospital at Statesvi le last week for an operation and we gre glad to sav it is reported tnat the operation was success ful and that she is getting along fine, Q lite a number of people from West Hickory went to Ball's Creek campmeeting last Sunday. W. C. Helton was here Satur day visiting Charles Bolick. Miss Lottie Barger has been -sick for several days, but is 8 little better at present. L. E. Hildebran wa3 here last week visiting the family of J. Abee. Prof. M. L. Sherrill resigned his work at the Ivey Mill Satur day in order to rest up a week and be ready to take charge of the graded school in Longview, on the first Monday in Septem ber. Prof. Sherrill was the prin cipal of this school last winter and the trustees were so well pleased with his work that they employed him for another term. Drink Causes Itinerants. San Francisco, Aug. 31. Drink is the agent which most frequently beings the American laborer to the stage where he must accept casual employment, F. S. Edinger, a contractor who deals with large bodies of un skilled workers, testified today before Federal Industrial Rela tiens Commission. 4 We do not employ many na tive-born Americans when we can do other wisp," he said. "The reason is that an efficient Ameri can workman usually can get a steady position. The class ol Americans who have to take our work generally is the kind we do not want. The cause of this in efficiency most often is drink. The minimum amount required for actual living expense was a question thfct today caused much discussion by different witnesses. Edinger said his firm found it impossible to meet expenses in boarding employes at $5 25 a week. F. M. Andreani, a mem ber of the Italian Consulate, tes tified that good board and room could be obtained here for $4 a week. .A. A. Woolner of the North western Pacific Railway, said many seasonal worker wintered here on 40 cents a day, paying 10 cents for lodging and 30 cents for food. Kills Interloper .Who Interfered With Courting. Shelby, Aug. 31.—Because it is said. Luther Jimerson inter fered with him and his girl last night and drew a pistol on him, Walter Shannon waited on Jim erson this morning at the Grover depot and shot him in the neck with a shotgun from which wound he died immediately. Both Jimerson and Shannon have bad criminal records. Sheriff Wilirins went to the scene and 'phoned Sheriff Thom as of Cherokee Cojnty, South Carolina, who answered the call I with his bloodhounds but the dogs could strike no trail and ; Shannon made his escape to South Carolina. canon WAREHOUSE FOR an cornm Mass Meeting Called at Newton Saturday, Sept 5, at 10 A. M.—Everybody Urged to Attend This Meet ing. 7 . Last Friday evenin# the Cham ber of Commerce calle J into con ference representative farmers, merchants, manufacturers and bankers to talk over the cotton trade situation. Mr. A. C. Shu ford has been visiting among the farmers of Catawba County quite freely for the past; feto weeks, get;ing their opinion on the fea sibility of having a bonded cotton warehouse established here, so that the cotton grower w.euld not have to market his crop at a l"ss. Cotton properly protected is such a warehouse would become a good collateral asset upon which the owner of one or many bales so stored could secure funds from his banker. \ ; The matter was discussed quite freely from the various stand points, including the eost of storage, the number of bales likely to be stored here, location of warehouse, character of build ing and means by which the far mer could secure an advance of money on his cotton. Mr. Shuford said he was con vinced the greater number of our cotton growers would take ad vantage of such a warehouse, if t'. ey were given an opportunity, and many of them, he believed, would take stock in such a pro ject. A Committee consisting of A. C. Shuford (Chairman), J. D. Elliott, K. C. Menzies, W. B. Gaither and T. F. Conner, was appointed to visit Charlotte and see how Mecklenburg County handled the cotton warehouse there. This Committee is to make a report at the Brass meet ing to be held in Newton Satur day, September 5, In pursuance of this plan, the following call for a mass meet ing was submitted, and a full at tendance urged; "AH the farmers, business men and all classft- of citizens of Ca tawba County who are interested in the welfare of the county are requested and urged to attend a public meeting to be held in the courthouse at Newton on Satur day, the sth day of September, 1914, at 10 o'clock a. m., for the purpose of discussing means for protecting the farmers in mar keting cotton. We feel that on account of the demoralized con dition of the cotton markets of the world, brought about by the great European War, closing the markets which consume about two-thirds of the cotton crop of the South, thereby throwing more than eight million bales surplus on the home market, it becomes absolutely necessary for concerted action by the farmers and business men of the south to take all possible steps to protect the cotton interests, in order as far as}possible to avert the great calamity that now confronts us. This is a problem that will not work out itself, but will require the best effort and concerted action of all our people. We must begin the work ourselves, and by earnest concerted action we believe that those who are in authority and can render assist ance will come to our aid as far as possible, but nothing will be done unless the farmers demand relief and show an inclination to back up the efforts in their be half." Made a Sortie. An official statement issued by the French Embassy said: "Our troops took up the offen sive in the Vosges in the region between the Vosges mountains and Nancy, where fighting has been going on for a fortnight The German losses were consid erable. "Longwy, which was garrison ed by onlv one battalion, has sur rendered after holding out for 24 days." Philathea Class Methodist Sunday School Sept. 6, 1914. A Discussion on "What Makes a Gift Great." We cordially invite visitors and strangers. Last Sunday we had the great pleasure of having with us Miss Zung of Soochow, China. Will YOU honor us with a visit next Sunday? Invigorating to the Paw and Sickly The Old Standard general strengthening tonic, GROVK'B TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out VYV SEPTEMBER 3, 1914 V ' '>#» • England Wins Nttval Battle. Fleets of Great Biitain and Germany at last have come to grip 3, and, according to reports from London, victory lav with the British. In a battle with British war ships off the Island of Heligoland, in the North Saa, the Germans are reported to have lost two cruisers and many of their de stroyers were badly battered. The British claimed not to have suffered the 1 oss of a vessel and declared there were few fatalities on board the vessels of their fleet. The German casualties were not stated, The Island of Heligoland, which lies 45 miles off the mouths of the Rivers Elbe and Weser, al ways has been regarded a point of great strategic value for the protection of the Kaiser Wilhelm Canal and otherwise in the naval defence of Germany. Recent re- ADMIRAL CALLAGHAN Admiral Sir George Caliaghan, com mander-in-chief of the British home fleets in the North sea. porta had it that a large part of the flower of the German Navy lay in the waters adjacent to the moutha of and Weser and in the Kaiser WilheTm' Ca nal. The French War Office in a statement said laconically that the situation along its lines Fri day was the same as it was Thursday, adding that tne Ger mans "apparently have slacken ed their march." That was all. From England there came not even a word officially concerning the fighting on land. / One of the most important an nouncements was made bv Mar quis of Crewe in the House of Lords. It wa3 that Great Brit ain would draw on the native forces in British India to rein force her armies in Europe. The German forts atTsing-Tau fired on two Japanese cruisers reconnoitering off the fortress. One of the cruisers was said to have been damaged. Louvain, a Belgian town of 50,000 inhabitants and with many historic buildings, is reported to have been burned by the Ger mans as an act of reprisal for al leged firing on German soldiers by Belgian citizens. The Bel gians claim, however, that the people of Louvain did not commit the hostile act charged, but that it was the Germans themselves who fired on their fellow coun trymen. Because of the non-payment of a war levy of $40,000,000 the Germans, it i 3 said, threaten to seize the famous pictures and objects of art in the Brussels mu seums. Advices from Chinese coastal cities report the sinking of the German torpedo boat S-90 by the British torpedo boat destroyer Welland and the seiz- I ure by the Allies of various Ger man merchantmen as prizes. German reservists are said to be pouring into Tsing-Tau from va rious parts of China to aid in the defense of the German static n. Pressing for Money. An Ostend dispatch says that of the German war levy of $40,- 000,000 on the city of Brussels only $200,000 has been paid and the Germans declare that if the remainder is npt made good they will seize pictures and art works m the museums. Children's Seryices at St. Stephens. Special children's services will be held Sunday morning at St. Stephen's church at 10 o'clock. Preaching services in the afcer noon by the pastor, Rev. E. J. Sox. Everybody cordially in vited. Mrs. James B, Beard's School will open on Monday, the 31st day of August. Further infor mation given on request. 3t. Democrat and Press, Consolidated i£os COMING IN ALL ITS ENTIRETY. Sparks World's Famous Shows to Visit Hickory September 25th for One Day Only—Two Exhibitions. I Four hundred people employed and carrying over two hundreJ foreign and domestic animals, is the statement made by Mr. J. C. Tracy, agent for the Sparks Show?, who was in town last Tuesday making arrangements for the appearance of this big circus here on . M.day, Sept. 25. The strange colony of peop'e, handsome horses, rai e wild ani- 1 mals and the golden caravans are scheduled to arrive here dur ing the early hours of the morn ing of the above date in their own special trains from States ville, where they will exhibit the day before. Circus day will begin with a big street parade at 10:30 a. m„ and two performances will be given, the first starting at 2 o'clock and the other at 8 o'clock. The grounds known as the 9;h Avenue Circus Lot have been arranged for by the agent and a number of our merchants will receive contiacts to furnish im mense quantities of feed stuff for both man and beast. The Sparks World Famous Shows have been successfully established for the past 27 years and bear a reputation in the Eastern sections of the country second to none for the high class exhibitions presented and the honest manner they have of deal ing with the public—no gambling or grafting being tolerated or carried with these shows. Atlanta, Ga , Aug. 31.—T0 enable growers in Western North Carolina, East Tennessee, and Southwest Virginia to promptly forward.live stock to the Eastern and Southern Railway has ar ranged to operate a weekly fast special live stock service such as was operated last year. Begin ning on September 3, the service will continue until December 31. according to announcement made today by Live Stock Agent F. L. Word^ Each Thursday during this period, trains will be started at early morning hours from Oolte wah Junction, Harriman Junc tion. Bristol and Appalachia. These will be consolidated at Morristown, leaving the New. Line yard at 2:75 p. m. t arriving Asheville at 9:25 p. m. Trains will also be started from Murphy, N. C., and Rosman, N. C., on the Transylvania division, ar riving Asheville in the early eve ning. At Asheville the stock will be made into trains and run special to Spencer which will be reached before 10 a. m„ Friday. Here stock will be fed. watered and rested. Friday afternoon trains will leaye Spencer, giving arrival at Greensboro 7:10 p. m, and Dan ville 9:55 p.m. Friday; Raleigh 1:55 a. m., Goldsboro 11 a. m., Richmond 7 a. m„ Lynchburg 4:40 a. m., Charlottesville 10:50 a. m., Manassas 4:00 p. m. f Po tomac Yards 6:45 p. m. Saturday. Stops will be made at points be tween Orange and Manassas -to deliver feeders and a special train will leave Manassas at 4:30 p. m. to deliver feeders to points on the Manassas and Harrison burg branches. Information as to this service will bfc furnished by any agent or by by F. L. Word, Live Stock Agent, Atlanta, Ga. I KING GEORGE OF ENGLAND New photograph of King George of England. LOOK WITH DISFAVOR ON 11. S. BUYING SBIPS Declare Purchase of German Ships Would Enlarge Ger man Credit.—Would be Cause of Com plications Great Britain, France and Russia have advised the United States informally that they would look with disfavor on the purchase by this government of I German merchant steamers to re , lieve conditions growing out of the European war and also to build up an American merchant marine. While not conveyed in any diplomatic correspondence, their position nevertheless has been vigorously set forth to President Wilson and Secretary Bryan. France took the initiative, Am- Jusserand carrying bis objections to President Wilson in his recent interview at the white hou3P. George Bankmeteff, the Russian ambassador, conferred with the British and Fre'neh am bassadors today and later saw Secretary Bryan. All three diplomats held that there was no precedent in international law for the purchase by a neutral nation of any great quantity of shipi from a belligerent. Tn9 chief objection urged is that the I transaction would estiblifTr a large gold credit in the hands of Germany. The diplomats point out that ! the German steamship compan ies are closely affiliated with the German government and to buy their ships, now marooned in American ports, would be tanta mount to furnishing Germany with a large loan. Should the American government, however, distribute its purchase of ships equally among the belligerent nations, they do not believe there would be objection from any quarter. Considerable difficulty would arise, however, it is asserted, if, for instance, the crew of a Ger man vessel purchased by the United States were maintained on it as the English and French governments would not allow the nationals of any belligerent to land from neutral ships at their ports. Aside from the question of possible financial aid to Germany and complications over the crews of the vessels, the European!di olomats who are opposed to the plan believe difficulties, would arise with reference to the car goes of the American ships. Their effort in the present war has been to sweep German com merce from the seas and they look upon any means to supply food to Germany or Austria as an unneutral act. Administration here has de clared that the new ships would carry only articles whice were specifically defined as not con traband of war, but it is the be lief of the diplomats that their governments would object even to conditional contraband, thus restricting considerably any commerce with belligerents. The European diplomats have endeavored to point out that they desire in no way to inter fere with the upbuilding of an American merchant marine and wish it success in neutral coun tries, but they think the Ameri can government's ships could not be available far commerce with the belligerent countries of Europe. Raised $40,000. Newport, R. 1., Aug. 31,—As a result of the fete held last Fri day at the Summer home of Mrs- Cornelius Vanderbilt, $40,000 will be remitted at once to the International Red Cross Associa tion for impartial distribution in relief of those suffering in for eign lands by reason of the pres ent war. This sum, according to the report tonight of the au diting committee, will be follow ed by another contribution from the same sourse. German Universities Open. Washington, Aug. 31, —Am- bassador Gerard today notified the State Department that the German universities would be open to citizens of neutral coun tries, but that Nationalists of belligerents would be refused entrance according to a ruling of the German Government. A great number of students now in Germany expect to enroll when the universities open in Autumn, I Piles Cured la 6to 14 Days Y oar druggirt will refund money if PAZO. OINTMENT fail* to cure «ny ewe of Itching, Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Pile, in «to 14 Xltftftm KiTjn Em JtowjHv