t?rr ... The Trading Public Im The Graphic Advertising Columns For Results it I Liberally Patronize Merchanu Who Bid For Tbs Trad I I I ! I It ' Reaches The People Watch For The Bidders A VOL. XXIV; Vs N'ASIIYILLE, North Caroling August 15th, 1918. NO. 32. , Progressive Merchants 0 'r. v Back' or This bank's ' .Success ha always prevailed hard' and conscientious work on the part of tea Officers and Director wjl ingneas to aid and advise with Its depositors, .also he , necessary principle of - SAFETY each transaction. Vj? "f If without a banking .. ' f ' home, we'll welcome. 7 -"-, yonr accoupt .' y , , The- first National Bank s' ; Rocky Mount, N.C. ,'; : -.Safest For Savins- the; national bank OF ROCKY MOUNT ROCKYMOUNTt N. C. v Capital and Surplus $200.000,boS- Compounded Quarterly On " Savings. 'WV" Your Business Solicited; - Thos. H. Battle, President.' . R. H. Ricks, - . Vice President' S. L. Arrington, , -" Vice'-Preslde,nt Frank P. FWan. ' .' -;;'-Cashier W. G; Robbing, " Asst. Ja-hier Visitors-FromlNashville When in Roclfy Mount - Stop at the 4 , JAMESON HOTEL . AND CAFE For Ladies and Gentlemen, v" v- European Plan. , .. .: i ' HOMEICOOK1NG. '; , ;. GOOD. SERVICE. " , -'m SMain St. ' - ' ' .'i ' i .' 'i .:,. Central Location. Steam Heat and J Running Water in Every Room. Save Fertilizer Dilk, in. crease crop productive-: , nets, and make the best of Summer forage crops. ; WiU Impiwe land wonderfully,' eren after using- crop foe-forage or ' grazing purpoak. Can be grown to excellent advantage in your Corn cron. innvaain. wlaM of Cora and making a wonderful improvement m ne sou. .. .: . WrINt fnr nrtram anil KWrknTVtt CROP SPECIAL," giving inform, (ion about air Seasonable Seed a. Mailed free on request. T.17.700D&S0i;SI Seedsmen, Richisni Yl To The - . Cow Peas B 1 AND!; Velvet Beiaris It gives me great m- - V yrY 36,000 PRISONERS :.TAKEfl IN PICARDY IN ESTIMATES OF CAPTURED ARI f' 1.009 OFFICERS FROM GEN. ' ERAL TO CORPORAL, ever soo mm IN SPOIL Knamy- R4atnce 1 la ttlffanlng Against Advanoa f Alljpal Dae perata Stand Eypected. . The number of prisoners taken ao far la the allied offensive In Heard r la oow estimated at 38,000, Including more than 1,000 officers. More than 600 guns have been captured, accord ing to the lateat advices. The pivot of the German resistance at thia state of the battle, it now P-f Unrveraity 'ef Wlaeoniln, lc 4re Pfars, la the town of Noyon, about I h flr woman to. b applntd a midway between Montdidler and Sols-' mln1 under the federal trade com. -sons. " The' enemy la throwing in re- nileelen. She Is doing roaaareh work ! serves from this base in an effort to ' e9re'!alona Jlbrary, Inveatl prevehti regardless of cost, the allies ,et "bout the manufacture f j from gaining control of the Noyon Ham road, which is choked with ma terial, guns and troops. ';' . The ermans are expected to make a deaperat atand on the Jloye-Noyon to permit ' the. columns which are re treating lo the direction of Neele and Mam td reach .safely." . ' ' .v ' ' The resistance of the fJermani Is stiffening amat" the fourth British ariny nn4er General Rawllnaos?. They are reacting violently in the region of Llhons, which changed hands twice during the night "but which was firmly held -by the British.. .r ' v -; All the bridges aetoss'the Somme between jPeronne: ana" Ham,' a atretch of about 15 miles,' have been destroy ed by allied aviators. . The Germans have been attempting -to throw teas. porarv bridges across the stream and the allied airmen are now systematic-- ally bombing these Improvised atrao- tures. .' . : - . All IHRMln. MilAH. .lift W m carfn..wtt. enemy fe in" their , precipitate retreat, : -i Among the orlsonera Aken are ten. orals, colonels and officers of alt other grades, pieven diviulona of Generals von. Hutles and Von Marwlt have been identified bpriwneri "taken. , . t ; - - . - -. -. , ' - . ' . ! GERMANS DIGGING. IN . : ! . . ' ALONG THE.VESLij RIVER j " ' VV' - I With the Americait ArmK on the Vesle. Allied aviators have reported ' that the Germans r dleainc in onno. ' site the Franco-American line along i the Vesle. The observers also have re- ported that the enemy is stringing barbed wire along the hills northwest of Flames. Allied officers express the belief that the Germans will not give ground here unless they are deliber ately pushed off the plateaus, 'i The Americans 'earned from Ger man prisoners that the enemy was using an old rock quarry cave. in the region of LonguTfcl, large enough to conceal, two regiments. He employed 11 as a refuge tor troops to rest. The "Franco-American heavy artillery shell-l ed the cave all , day and the Germans wcie finally compelled .to abandon. It as a hiding, place.- i . , ' , "The guns of the Franco-Americans got the range of the; ehtranee,. to the cave and' kept up a'-continuous ,'Jre all 'lay. Observers reported that the cave had been considerably damaged, and was rendered very untenable. The Germans are digging trenches along the line west and east of Loncu- vsl and also In the valley r of ' the Perles.'i.V3W:s;:;'f'?;:.,-"', COAL SHORTAGE 18 -r :i. .V-: : - SOURCE OF DANGER " Washlngton.-7-Coal miners and oper ators were called upon in a proclama tion by President Wilson to give their maximum effort to the production ol coal to the end that the threatened shortage next winter may be averted. The- president asked miners partlcr larly to work full time and urgdB these who are essential to the industry t accep deferred classification - In the draft. Tobacco " THE P.OCilY pleasure to announce that 1 will operate botfi of my Warehouses and am in better position to take care" of my friends and patrons. Tobacco prices will ppen high and the outlook for high prices for this crop .. 1 : is the brightest in the history of the tobacco business. . . ' . Ready' ' and ' -Es On ; Qur Openinn: gcilo l MISS MARION DAVIES Mis Marion L. Davlaa,' a graduate variowa article. mm LOSS'S. ME HEM ALONQ , BATTLE .FROfltt CONDI TIONS UNCHANGED' BUT AN- ' t TICIFATION RUNS RIOT. . Thirty-Five- Tbouaand Prisoners " lir - Addition to Supplies and 700 Can non . Fair t Allies. Conditions on the battlefront' along the Voile river etwen' Soissons and RJielms remain unchanged, and, rela- tively. speaking, there have been no Mnnm ' ' antntndiria- imoort. - .. :. . ; . ance on me line running irum ids rw I" of Montdidler tow.rfl. the Eng. a channel. U botft regions, jjow- ever, there la a tenseness which Seems , to forecast tho"appwachlng dawa of j, ;,;. :,, V, ; Sf , :.-!LlJLSL!llLtll riliiiLL f 1tw; br ahalUng j heavily the American and French, sof- I diara who hava made their wav across iha northarn hank of t&e.Veale or dellveriag f . heavy counter-attacks agalnat- them, but everywhere-they have net with a atonewal'of resist; wee that Us" not permitted them' to counter-balance their losses ox ground. But tit Germans have not "'been) permitted by the allies to have monopoly of the , initiative. Where they have thrown shells against the Americans In the Hemes sector, Amer ican missiles have been returned with added Interest. This particular sec tor has boon a veritable Inferno, Gag against the .Americans, who, , with, their gas-masks adjusted, .; were -vir tually unharmed by. the noxious fumes. A kindly switch in the wind at one time even turned back the gas against the enemy, i Ttia. French also have an swered the1 Germans la kind: . "Thirty-five thousand prisoners 'and 700 cannon, have been captured," said the premier who added that Paris no lenger was in danger, that' Soissons and Chateau-Thierry have been recon quered and -that 209 villages had. been delivered through the formidable thrust of Fpch'i men through the Soissons-Rhelms allent. . FINE RECORD IS MADE - - BY AMERICAN SHIP BUILDERS Washington. With the launching of 13 vessels', totaling 631,844 dead. weight tons, and the delivery Of 41' others of 235,025 deadweight tons, new world' shipbuilding records Were es tablished In July by American ship yards" the ' shipping board'; announc ed. The July launchlngs alone were greater than those of any single year in the past. The launching Included . (7 . steel vessels of 43,24 deadweight- ' .tons; 63 wood ships of 187,70 deadweight tons, and three . composite' ship .of-., 11,000 tons. Farmers .i.."!.',rr TCLV.CCO VKSX VILL OPfcN august 20TH. II i iimn STILL SWEPT BACK ;1 TANKS, CARS, CAVALRY j -AND HNFANJTRY ALi COMBINE .TO OVERWHELM FOB, Alllea Capture 17,000 Frlsoners,Mere Thari Two Hundred Cannon and ' Other War Munitions. inltlons. f Over a curving front of mere than 10 mile the British and . French troops are continuing to sweep; back the Germans eastward. aerose the north of the Somme east of Iforlaa court to the eastern bank of the Avre nortlrwest of Montdidler. ' As on' the first day of the offensive, material progress was made over the eatlre" battle front. Many additional villages were - captured the bag of prisoners was largely Increased; nil merous guns and great quantities of war stores were taken, ana heavy casualties were Inflicted on the enemy by tanks, armored motor caff, the cavalrymen and the infantry. The losses sustained by the AngldPrench forces are declared: to be rfcatlvely ": T6 the ' allied forces the have fallen, 17,000 German prisonsls and between J0 and 300 guns, itany of '.if thanr of heavy caliber and finumer- able machine guns, trench Inortars end' kindred amaf weapons. " f Already having penetrated the Fieardy salient to a depth dt nearly W miles In (he center toward the vicinity of the- important' "railroad junction of Chanlnej. and ' Str other points along the' arc, pushed forward betwen five and seven miles, the northern and- southern flanks of the battle front where tin Germans ha 1-pcn resisting desperately, gave way before the pressure - respectively of the British and French. ;., - : . . . " " i ' , , A, CORRESPONDENT SAYS - GERMANY IS SCARED WHITE i; .,'..: .,.,;, t rri London, England. Germany li scar- .Whitf.--. ..-.- . J - Abe's scare;TMt -St"! 0wr tke turn of things on -the west front; over the thousands of Americans Yegularly Outfighting her; over the hundreds of thousands of Americans waiting to fct into Ilnef over the millions of o.her Americans "on the way."..-,. : This Information comes from an al lied source' whose buslaess It is to know conditions In the enemy cofin- trles. . ' x ;--v ; She's' frightened about Austria. She doesn't know , what moment Austria may blow up. Sh knows what is known and conceded In official allied sources that tlie .Austrian economic situation is worse now than 4 it has b.een since the opening of the war and the people are bolder. - lr f : She's frightened about Russia. AJ. lied warBhtpa and American ? troops uO north have, pulled out her -hone of getting her hands bn the hundreds of thousands? of 'tons of military stores at Archangel there since the revolution; she -can't take a step to ward Petrograd or the northern rail way leat these . allies forces swoop south; and for all she knoivs -they may be going to swoop south-without waiting for that menace : , she can't spare men from the west front. V ,f' - ,x-.'.-l, --7 GOVERNMENT, NOT DRAFEC, 1 " .WILL DO THE SELECTING Washington New draft regulations under - which the government 'Lwould do the selecting rather than' leaving it to the registrant, are Under consid eration by the war department The war secretary . made, It plain that he is' not sattfled with the pres ent system - under- which the regis trant must claim deferred classifica tion, as many men with - dependents hesitate for patriotic reasons to. make such. a claim. In this connection, Mr. Baker said, he was Inclined to the opinion . ; that the marriage rela- tion will In Itself constitute deferred classification. of Nash AI1L1IS ULII EREAT NUMBER OF PRISONERS ALONZO E. TAYLOR A new photograph of Dr. Alonro K. Taylor, a member of the war trade board and also of the House mis sion to Europe. He was In charge of the feeding of French and English In Germany before the United Statee entered the war. In private life he ranks as one of the loading food chain lets and- biologists In ths world. - IS PRAISED BY LLOYD BEORGE ALL POSITIONS. PREVIOUSLY GAINED STEADILY HELD? . w By'sTIFF FIGHTING. British Premier PraJaoe Part Taken In Preaent Offenalve by' the " American Troopa. The alljed. armies have obtained further successes over the Germans in fighting in ' the Soissons-Rhelms sector and to the north in the Monl dldler region and still further north in Flanders between the Lawe and Clarence .rivers.. 1 East of the town of Bralsne on the Vesle River, midway between . Sols- sons and Rhelms, American andi French 'troops after the stillest kind of fighting have crossed the river and held all -the positions gained. In ad dition all the positions previously gained, by the allied troops through- out the entitle. Rhelme-Solssons salient have been solidly held, notwithstand ing counter-etackS and the heavy ar tillery fire the enemy . has poured down from the heights north of the Vesle upon their antagonists. Near where the. Vesle enters ; the Aisne east of Soissons the French have over- come the resistance of the enemy aad taken the village of Ciry-Salsogae, . In the Montdidler sector the French south and southeast of the town have further advanced .their line on ' this important sector which represents the Junction point of the armies of the German crown prince and of Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria. : - It remained for the Britsh, how ever to deliver the hardest blow against the tlermans. Following up a previous advance In the famous Lys sector northwest-' of, VLaBasse, Field Marshal Halg'e men pushed forward their line over a front of nearly five miles to, a depth ot a thousand yards. '- David Lloyd-George, the Brltsih prime minister, addressing the house .of commons, spoke optimistically of the status of the war from the allied standpoint. He ' characterized the -present offensive on ihte AlBne-Marne front as the) most brilliant in the an nals of the war. and praised he part takea in it by the American troops. TO HURL ENTIRE STRENGTH V AMERICAN ARMY ON GERMANS Washlngon. Backd by a reservoir of 5,000,000 American troops, Field Marshal Foch, supreme comander of the American and ailed armies, Is pre paring to harl the entire united mili tary strength of France, Great Brit ain and the United States against the Germans on the' western front in time to bring the war to a victorious con clusion in the. shortest possible time. Next, spring will see the terrific con flict,1 already in progress en the Aisne-Marne line, in full swing i and Adjoining Counties? SURPRISE ATTACK dc in RETREAT Id FOCH'S NEW OFFENSIVE GIVES PROMI8E OF SERIOUS MEN. ACE TO GERMAN FRONT. CIK PORTS NOW SAFE Evident That Rupprecht Must Defer Campaign to Cut Off the Crose- , Channel Servlee. ' The historic battle ground between Amiens and Montdidler again is the scene of a mighty contest This time the British and French are the ag gressors and under their fierce on slaughts in the first day's battle they have penetrated deeply into the Ger man positions over a front of more than 20 miles, reaching from the re gion of Braches to the neighborhood of Morlan court. ' Following short but intensive artil lery preparation and aided by misty weather, the allied attack took the Germans completely by surprise and they fled almost everywhere pell mell before the tanks, motor machine gun batteries, cavalry and infantry sent against them. Al the objectives set for the Australians,, anadians, English men and Frenchmen were attained in remarkably quick time, and at last ao -counts the allied forces were still mak ing progress. Wherever the enemy turned to give battle he was decisive ly defeated. Thousands of Germans were made prisoner. Large numbers of guns were captured, great quantities of war materials were taken and a score or more of villages and hamlets were re- occupied. In addition, heavy casual ties were Inflicted on the enemy At Its deepest point the penetration of the German line was about seven Anil ft tinlf mtlAl MMtvnH from Vft. lers-Bretonneux to Framerville, while from two to five miles were gained all along the front from northwest of Montdidler to the region around Mor- lancourt. The fighting extended north of Morlancourt to the Albert sector, but no official details concerning It have been received. Well out on the plains and press- Jjpr forward, seemingly with great rap idity, the rW6TrriTeietv-r4lie; French and Britsh gives promise of seriously menacing the entire Ger man 'front from near the sea to Rheims. If the drive should proceed eastward to any great depth it cannot but affect the armies of the German crown prince now fighting betwen the Atsne and the Vesle and possibly make Impracticable a stand by them even north of the Alsne. - Under the pressure of the offen sive the menace to the channel ports also seems for the moment at least, to vanish. Already there have, been signs to the northward from the post lions' where Crown Prince Rpprecht had formf d his men for a drive toward the channel that a retrograde move ment by the Germans was not lmprob able.- It is apparent that Rupprecht will have to defer his campaign to cut off the cross-chanel serlvce. : GOVERNMENT TO TAKE. OVER ' COLD STORAGE PLANTS, ETC. Washington. Investigation of the packing Industry of the country by the federal trade commission culml nated in an announcement that . the commission ' had recommended . to President Wilson that the government commandeer and Operate for the pub lic : benefit stockyards, cold storage plants, warehouses and refrigerator and cattle cars. Monopolistic control of the essen tial food supply not only of the United States and Us army and navy, but also ot the entente countries was charged by the commission agalnat -the five great packing companies Swift, Ar mour, Morris, Cudahy and Wilson. The last named company, the committee's report said. Is controlled by three of the strongest1 banking groups in the United States Kuhn, Loeb ft Co., Guaranty Trust Co. and Chase Na tional bank. IIUIL, FIGHTING inEUROPE SELF PliESERVA HON as well n- pairi"tiHm uVmiiii'j-t 1 mil. our far men shall plentifully et. our fight ers. '. f When Germiny nrncitiimpd the apni closed to American nifrchant vessel and entered upon her projrratn of wholesale ocenn tnntuge destruc tion, she was aim it a blow directlv at the American Kin m ?r. :- . , . For lack or prnpt r marketinjr and shipping: facilities Australia todav, has three crops unsold and millinn'i. pf tons of grain spoiled or destroyed either by weather or rodents. Upon our success in this war de pends not only life nd liberty but livelihood. 1'! Bank Rocky Mount, N. C. Every Citizen of Nash County is Invited to Visit Nash county's' New nk Has recently installed its new fixtures and awaits with gleasure to show you its ofnplete Banking Equipment.- - , Farmers Merchants : I Bank. Rocky TT. Thorne, M. O. Blount, TV A. A VERA, W. W, A VERA, TVlount. President. - " , Vice-Pres. Vice-Pres, - Cashier. AFlKCB ; Wilson, - Lmox T. Vapohas Nasbvillc FINCH 4 VAUGHAN. .... . . . '. . . Prompt attention n'iven to all matters entrusted to our care. Office in , New La Buildinsr. DR. J. I. WEEKS, VETERINARY SURGEON Rocky Mount, N. C. " .' Office at Kentucky Horse & Mule Exchange. C Prompt attention given to all Calls. T. O. C0PPED6E Physician and Surgeon Office in Grand Jury Building PHONE U ' " Nashville, NC. . 3. F. Austin . : U L. Omwmn AUSTIN & DAVENPORT LAWYERS' Prompt attention given to ail matter Not associoted in any r Recorder's Court Practice, ; v T. T. ROSS, Dentist, Spring Hopw.KC. Office In New Finch Standing Thurfday. Friday and Saturday -.of each week. , Nashville Offlco at Residence Monday.Tuesdav and Wednesday ' of each week. f V' I j: i 3 o