ti3 a Year, In Advance. "FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." VOL. XXV. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1914. NO. 15. KIIIS VICTORY SALICIA IS SURE VON KLUCK'S ARMY, REINFORC ED, MAKES A BRAVE 8TAND. GERMANS LOSE 70,000 MEN Army of General Reunenkampff Cuts Between Two Opposing Forces and Gains Decisive Victory. London. General von Kluck, rein forced with troops from the German Central continues to make a determin ed stand against the attempt of the allies to outflank him. The French, who officially reported that all German attacks in this re gion have been repulsed and that the allies had resumed the offensive, an nounced that the battle to the north of the Oise which commenced seri ously about September 25 continues "with great violence with no decisive result and that at certain points the French troops have had to yield ground. The Germans, In their report, say the battle is proceeding successfully for them. Both in London and in Paris there Is the greatest confidence, although some surprise is displayed at the suc- cess of the Germans in preventing the outflanking movement. They feel however that the Germans cannot ex tend their line much farther north without weakening at some point. Along the rest of the line the French communication says there has "been no change. Therefore the prog ress in the region of Soissons and in Woevre either has satisfied them for the moment or they have been check d by the Germans. Of the fighting here, as on their right, the -German Teports say it is proceeding favorably for the German arms. Progress by either side must be extremely slow, for after every advance, no matter how slight, the troops making it must entrench themse'fes for protection against the shells from the enemy's guns, posted in strong postions, from one end of the line to the other. The defeat of the German army Trhich invaded Russia from East Prussia appears from Russian ac counts to have been even more de cisive than previously stated. Accord ing to the Russian . ambassador at Rome the Germans were routed com pletely with a loss of 70,000 men and have been forced to abandon every thing. - No news has been received from tthe Silesian and Galician battlefields and probably the main armies have not come together there. A big bat tle cannot be delayed much longer however as on the Silesian frontier both armies are moving forward and . will meet in Russian Poland. Before the Russian advance in Gali- cia the peasants are fleeing the coun try andit is reported that 20,000 of them have reached Bohemai. The sanitary department of Vienna reports that four cases of Asiatic cholera have occurred among the troops returning from Galicia but that all have been isolated. At Antwerp, the official report says, the situation in the fortified positions remains unchanged. While the Servians and Monte negrins are attacking the fortifications of Sarajevo, Belgrade, which has bee.i under fire so often has not been bom barded for several days probably as a result of reoccupation of Semlin by the Servians. Skirmishes which occurred on the Anglo-German frontier in East Africa was the result of German raids into British territory for the purpose of cutting the Uganda Railway. All these raids, according to the British official report, have been repulsed. , While the routine life in England is not seriously upset by the war the regulations in many respects are be coming more stringent. In order to keep the army provided with warm clothing the authorities have com mandeered large quantities of woolens in Leicester, a step which is likely to be followed elsewhere. Germans Say English Fear. Rome. German newspapers con tinue to print items of news sent them from England. One of the latest pa pers received here from the German capital contains the following: "It is difficult to say whether the Britishers tremble more in fear of an enemy below tho water or in the air, After the exploit of the German sub marine. As to danger from the air, Zeppelins are expected everywhere. London is kept at night in semi-darkness in the fear that the city may ba mad a target for the airships." NATION OBSERVES PEACE SUNDAY Prayers For Peace In Europe Are Offered Up In Churches Over the Entire Country. ALLIES ARE SLOWLY GAINING At Aisne Rulers Of Three Warring Nations With Their Troops At The Front While the voices of thousands of peo pie assembled in the churches through out the United States was lifted in prayer on Sunday for peace among the warring nations of Europe, the titanic struggle on the European continent continued with all its fury. It is re ported that the rulers of the three na tions at war have gone to the front Kaiser William of Germany is said to be with his troops attempting to stem the progress of the Russians in East Prussia; King Albert, the Belgian king, is leading his troops against the Ger man armies, and President Poincare of France has gone to join his soldiers in the north of France. Jsn It was announced from Paris that President Poincare's mission to ".his soldiers was not to direct the fighting or " to interfere with General Joff re's plans, but to deliver to the soldiers his personal appreciation for their he roic efforts in repulsing the German invaders from French soil. Kaiser William is much alarmed over the con tinued successes of the Russians in East Prussia, German Poland and Ga licia. Vienna fears that the Russians will endeavor to take the Austrian capital. The Germans up to the pres ent time hav been unable to check the progress of the czar's armies in German territory. Slowly but surely the allied armies of France and Great Britain have been pushing the Germans backward out of France into Belgium. The bat tie line Is now close to the Belgian bor der. The fortunes of war have been playing fickle with the contesting ar mies in the north of France. In some places the Germans gain an advan tage, while at other points along the 150-mile battle line the allies have the better of the argument. v Belgians Reinforced At Antwerp The little Belgian army is again bearing its share of the attack of the German armies. For the past week the kaiser's soldiers have been doing their utmost to crush the defenses at Antwerp and capture the city. Ant Werp is one of the strongest fortified cities in the world. The British are watching the attack on Antwerp with much anxiety, as the capture of this important city would render possible an opening to the North sea and a future campaign in England. The Brit ish have hurried their artillery to aid the Belgians in the defense of the city, Austria Agrees To Italy's Demands For a time it appeared that Austria and Italy would become entangled in a diplomatic struggle which might end in the declaration of war by Italy on Austria, but this was happily averted when Austria agreed to the demands of Italy to remove the floating mines in the Adriatic sea and to pay an in demnity to the families of Italian fish ermen who were killed by the destruc tion of a fishing boat by an Austrian mine. It is expected that shipping on the Adriatic sea will be resumed as soon as Austria gives notice that all of the mines have been removed. " German Victory For Africa In China the Japanese troops have been extremely active In their cam paign against the German colony in China, but they have done little fight ing so far. It is said that China com plained of the Japanese violating their neutrality, but the Japanese have paid little attention to these complaints and have moved their troops by the most direct routes. They were not molest ed by the Chinese soldiers. There has been somewhat of a lull in the fight ing between the British and Germans in South Africa with the exception 'of one small skirmish in which the Ger mans were the victors. In an earnest desire for a hasty cul mination of the war in Europe, Presi dent Wilson issued a proclamation set ting aside Sunday, October 4, as peace day and requested that prayers be offered up by the American people all over the United States for peace. Germans Routed By Russians Petrograd. The official statement from general staff headquarters Issued reads: "The battle of Augustowo ended Oc tober' 3, in a victory for the Russian arms. The German defeat is com plete. "The enemy is In a disordered re treat toward the east Prussian fron tier. The valiant Russian troops are in close pursuit, the Germans aban doning in their desperate march trains, cannon and munitions, not having even time to gather up their wounded." Washington. Prayer for peace In Europe arose from all parts of the United States Sunday. Clergymen of all denominations read President WH son's proclamation, Itself a fervent peace prayer, and congregations g&th- ered to sing peace hymns and take part in peace services. The president attended the Central Presbyterian church here and heard Rev. James H. Taylor pray that the United States might be instrumental in restoring peace to Europe and that Mr. Wilson might be given wisdom and strength in his mediation proposals, The church was packed. After the services a large crowd waited until the president' had taken communion, to watch him lide away in his auto mobile. May Bring Lasting Peace New York. Hope that the European war will be the last object lesson of the horrors of strife and that after it the efforts of man will be devoted to production rather than destruction. was expressed Sunday by Secretary of State Bryan and Oscar S. Straus: former secretary of commerce and la bor, at a special peace day service at Carnegie Hall. The meeting was one of many held in this city in accord ance with President Wilson's recent proclamation, designating Sunday as a day of prayer for peace. "Today, when a number of nations all our frien4s, have been drawn into the vortex of war," said Secretary Bry an, "our first duty is to use such in fluence as we may have to hasten the return of peace. There will be ample time afterward to discuss ways and means for preventing future appeals to arms. J "Our interests are so entwined with the interests of other lands that no nation can live or die unto itself alone If we had no higher reason for encour aging conditions conducive to peace we should find ample justification in the fact that the burdens of war no longer are borne entirely by its direct participants." Success For Allies At Aisne Paris. The official announcement issued by the French wa,r office re ports progress in the region of Sois sons, where several German trenches have been taken. The battle on the left wing is in full swing without decisive result. The text of the communication follows: "First On our left wing the strug gle is in full swing in the region of Arras, without decision having been reached. The action has been less vio lent between the upper valley of the Ancre and the Somme, and between the Somme and the Oise. We have made progress In the region of Sois sons, where some -of the enemy's trenches have been captured. "Second On almost all the remain der of the front, the lull already not ed, persists. In the Woevre region we have made some progress between Apremont and the Meuse and on the Rupt de Mad." Vienna Hospitals Are Crowded Venice. Vienna hospitals and all temporary asylums for sick and wound ed soldiers are fearfully crowded. The city council has decided to build addi tional wooden barrack hospitals, which will be furnished with ten thousand beds. 1 Buildings of the University of Vienna have been given over to the wounded soldiers. The army of destitute and unem ployed in the Austrian capital is in creasing daily. Thousands are threatened with star vation. The authorities estimate that it will be necessary to provide free meals for 100,000 persons daily. Owing to the rapid advance in the price of meat and the shortage of live stock, the city council has asked the government to permit the importation of 1,000 tons of Argentine beef. French President With Soldiers Bordeaux. President Poincare, ac companied by Premier Vivianl and Minister of War Alexandre Miileiand, left for the battle froDt. The presi dent goes to the battle line not to take part In the strategy, but to con gratulate the troops personally upon the bravery they have displayed in the long and stubborn lighting. German Victory In Prussia London. A dispatch from Amster dam says: "The German commander at Koenigsberg, East Prussia, has an nounced officially that the Russian ar mies in the battles of October 1 and lost 3,000i prisoners, eighteen big guns and many machine guns. German Women Give Gold Rome. The women of Germany, according to reports received here, are busily at work preparing woolen garments for the soldiers in the battle ine. The reports also state that a committee of women has been formed for the purpose of inducing the wom en of Germany to give up their gola ornaments wjth the ideaf of tranbform ing them into money with which , to buy arms. Each woman receives in exchange for her gold ornaments an iron ring inscribed with the words "I cave gold fofthi3." GENERAL VICTOR DANKL i V General Victor Dankl Is the Austrian commander whose army has been un successfully opposing the advance of the Russians In Galicia. Germans Claim Victories, Berlin. The following official an nouncement was made: "In the siege of Antwerp forts Wa- vre, St. Catherine and Dornweid have been taken and Fort Waelhem invest ed. Termonde, an important strate gical point, has been occupied. On our western wing a , new French attempt to encircle our forces has been repulsed. The French have been ejected from their positions south of Roye. "Sorties from Toul were ..repulsed with heavy losses." Mine Sinks Dutch Ship London. A dispatch from Amster dam says the Dutch steamer Nieuwl and, from Goole, England, to Rotter dam, struck a mine in the North sea and sank. Servians Repulse Austrians Paris. The Servians on the front from Zvornik, Bosnia, to Loznitsa, Servia, along the river Drina, have re pulsed violent attacks and inflicted heavy losses on the Austrians. Japs Disregard Chinese Pekin. Without further diplomatic controversy me Japanese are proceed Ing along the railway to Tsinan. Their troops at Wei-Hsien, who occupied the station there, have been reinforced. , Roumania Remains Neutral London. The Rome correspondent of the Exchange Telegraph has sent the following dispatch: 'A message from Bucharest, Ru mania, announces that the president of the council of the crown and the con servative and democratic leaders have decided to ask King Charles not to hold the council meeting fixed for this week, saying there is no need for Roumania to change her policy of neutrality." Gen Von Kluck's Army Outnumbered London. The Daily Mail's corre- pondent in France reports fighting in and around Douval, department of Nord, eighteen miles south of Lille, and considers that if the French have reached-Douval in force, the situation of the German general. Von Kluck, must be desperate. "General Von Kluck," the correspond ent adds, "has had all the reinforce ments which can be spared him and yet finds himself outnumbered at ev ery point. There are many Indications from German prisoners, from French officers and from members of the Brit is htransport service, the combined testimony of whom it is.difficult to dis believe, that the German army is be coming demoralized. The German prisoners are dirty and hungry and suffering from the effects of bad food, bad atmosphere and bad sanitation. Their trenches are too deep to make the lifting out of the dead an easy matter and in some cases no attempt has been made to remove bodies. Invaders Have Trying Time3 London. A picture of the sufferings of the German troop3, cramped in un derground trenches and galleries along the Aisne river, I3 given by the Paris correspondent of the Daily Mail. He says that the autumnal weather with s damp nights, and, bitterly cold dawns, is extremely trying, u tno men step from their trenches to the evel ground they do so at the risk of their lives. At uight every German oldier. must, be at his post in the narrow ditch, sleeping as best ha may, 1 ith hh rifle at his side. ST, LOUIS BANKERS RAISE COTTON FID START MOVEMENT FOR $150,000, 000 TO LEND ON SOUTHERN STAPLE. AT 6 PER CENT INTERES Niot to Buy Cotton But to Finance Growers With Money on Holdings, Liquidate Cotton. St. Louis, Mo. A plan for raising a cotton loan fund of fl50,000,000 pro posed by a conference of St. Louia bankers, was ratified here by a dele gation of bankers from the cotton growing states and now awaits only the approval of Secretary - of the Treasury McAdoo and the Federal Reserve Board before it is carried Into effect. The plan as approved "in gen eral essence" by nine southern bank ers who had been asked by Secretary McAdoo to attend the conference with St. Louis bankers, provides for the raising of the fund by subscript tions from national and state banks trust companies and mercantile and manufacturing companies throughout the country. "It must be distinctly understood,1 declared Fetus J. Wade, 1 chairman of the St. Louis Clearing House Asso ciation, and originator of the plan "that this is not a movement for the purchase of cotton. It is simply a movement to make available a fund of $150,000,000 to loan on cotton at not to exceed six cents per pound, middling basis. - The amount to be raised by each financial center will be apportioned by the committee at a meeting to be held later, providing the -general plan meets the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury and the Federal Re serve Board. Among southern bank ers who attended the conference were: E. W. Robertson, president Nation al Loan and Exchange Bank, Colum bia, S. C; and John'M. Miller, Jr., vice president First National Bank Richmond, Va. The plan then was submitted to Secretary McAdoo and to the Federal Reserve Board. The southern bankers were Invited to come to St. Louis to discuss it They sent the following telegram to Secretary McAdoo. "The plan as laid before you and the Federal Reserve Board to endeav or to raise a cotton loan fund of $150,000,000 was submitted to the un dersigned. After careful consider ation the following resolution was passed unanimously: " 'That the plan outlined by Mr Festus J. Wade, in general essence, be adopted and the details worked out later. It is believed the South will subscribe its proportion as suggested and outlined." ' CARRANZA MAKES STATEMENT. Says He Will Resign, But If Not Per mitted, He Will Fight Villa. Mexico City Charging that the re bellion in northern Mexico was insti gated by the so-called clentificos and "our conquered enemies," General Carranza in his statement to the con vention of Constitutionalist leaders here offered to resign as "first chief if a mojority of the military chiefs so decided, but declared he would never submit to "a group of chiefs who have forgotten he fulfillment of their duty and a group of civilians to whom the nation owes nothing." "If I had not tried to conquer the rebel force by force of arms, it has been on account of prudence which the circumstances demand but the nation must know that if we reach a stage where it is impossible to other wise suDDress their rebellion we have 100,000 men well armed, art illery and machine euns and also we have right and justice, whic'i aro invincible, on our side," declared the first chief. General Carranza said it was his dutv to "fix the responsibility of the prepared rebellion of General Villa which is nothing but a plot instigated bv the so-called clentificos and by all of our conquered, enemies who have not rrceived public office on account ircompetence and cowardice." Nation Prays For Peace. Washington. Prayers for peacfi in Europe arose from all parts of the United States. Clergymen of all de nominations read President Wilson's proclamation, itself a fervent peace prayer arid congregation gathered to s-nf peace hymns and take part in I -w.ee services. The president at tended the Central 'Presbyterian church here and heard Rev. James JL Taylor pray that the United States might be instrumental in restoring peace to Europe and that President Wilson might be given wisdom. AiHI. CELEBRATES 25TH ANNIVERSARY OCCASION BROUGHT LEADERS OF STATE AND THENATION TOGETHER. ABOUT 200 SPEECHES MADE Hon. T. J. Jarvis, Ex-Governor of State, Secretary Daniels, Secretary Vrooman, Principal Speakers. , Raleigh. The North Carolina Agri cultural and Mechanical College haa just celebrated its twenty-fifth anni versay. It was the climax of the three day celebration which . took form in festivities of congratulation dignified by the presence of many of the fore most men of thought and achieve ment In North Carolina and the na tion today. The speakers were not just men of a single achievement, but men who by continual determined per sistent efforts have placed themselves in the line of dominant progressive ness and have brought prosperity to their fellowmen. Governor Locke Craig presided and gave the pitch to the exercises when he said, "There is no place in God's world for a standpatter." Hon. Thos. J. Jarvis, ex-governor of North Caro lina, whose term of service saw North Carolina struggling through the terrible period of reconstruction, brought to the students of today the message to prepare for life and to solve the problem of the high cost of living by aiding the movement of "Back to .the Farm." on. Josephus Daniels, secretary of the navy, one of the first friends of the instiution, em phasized the value of the man as op posed to the machine. ' Hon. ' Carl Vrooman, assistant secretary of agri culture, stressed scientific agriculture and the blessings of it. Then followed a series of felicita tions from Hon. P. P. Claxton, of tho United States Department of Agricul ture by letter; from .state department of education, by Dr. J. Y. Joyner; from the state colleges, by President Edward K. Graham,, of the University of North Carolina; from the denomi national colleges, by President Wil-" liam Louis Poteat, of - Wake Forest College; from the United States de partment of agriculture, by Dr. A. F. True, director of the office of experi ment stations; from the state depart ment of agriculture, by Major W. A. Graham, commissioner of agricul ture, and a summary of the college growth, by President D. H. Hill. During these three days of the an niversary the alumni have given th9 lie direct to the theory that student of the agriculture or mechanics can not talk and will not talk; Prof. W. A. Withers, chairman of the commit tee on arrangements, said: Forty meetings have been held and every one within a few mlnut of the time set, without friction and without jar of any kind, and about two hundred speeches have been made." CELEBRATE FOUNDER'S DAY. Exercises at Normal College Com memorating 22nd Anniversary. Greensboro. October the 5th of each year is observed at the State Normal and Industrial College as Founder's Day. The college was open, ed on October the 5th, 1890, and hence this is the 22nd anniversary of the founding of the college.. A program of the exercises for" this year was: Sunday, October the 4th at 4:30 p. m., memorial service for Miss Sue May Klrkland. Address' by Dr. Melton Clark, Greensboro. Miss Kirkland was the first lady principal of the in stitution and served it for twenty-two years. She died on June 8th, during the summer vacation. Monday, October the 5th at 11 a. m., Founder's Day address, President Edward K. Graham, University of North Carolina. 8:30 p. m., decf ca tion of Woman's building. Address by Judge Walter Clark, Raleigh. Thin building was provided for by an act of the legislature of 1911. The act making the appropriation dedicated the building to the "Women of the Confederacy." Kinston Tobacco Market Good. Kinston. In September 4,236,791' pounds of tobacco was sold on the Kinston market, and to date the sales have totalled nearly 5,000,000 pounds. At th'i rate, well-posted tobacconist. 3 ay, between 12,000,000' and 14,000,0G, pounds will be handled here, duriti; he entire season. Prices during the past week were better than at any ime since tbe opening on September The' grades continue fair, and an row beginning to average up we!i with last season " offerins3.