v.. mm v.-: ,4 J . t' J. I , THE WEATHER FORECAST. worth and Sowth Carolina Prob iv local thunderstorms Sunday .. i,w not auite so warm. 1 8 f AG n(j Monu; " THREE SECTIONS. .a I; H f is FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE vQL XXIII. NO. 101. WILMINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 29, 1917. PRICE FIVE CENTS. - . ' r.- .... -' ' ; ;r... , ........ ,. . " . v ETnn"RTTT7 mssm is .Li u 444 4. 4 .. '. vi 4 4 ritish ... DC). HFQ, . 4, . d PA Historic Fight in Senate and House Ends In Victory for the President at Late Hour Last Night. DIFFERENCES TO BE SETTLED Measure as Desired ment Passed Both gress Shortly Before Midnight Dis agreement as to (By United Press.) Washington April 28. Departing from a traditional policy framed at its inception, the Republic will raise its army of 2,000,000 by selective conscrip tion. The draft army bill Dassed both House and Senate shortly before mid night; the House by 397 to 24 and the Senate by 81 to 8. The final vote came after an epochal session during which the volunteer system advocates fought fiercely against the overwhelming current for the draft and died still struggling. senators voting against the bill ere: Borah, George, Gronna, Hard- J-ick, Kirby, La Follette, Thomas and irammell. Joint conferences next week must spttle differences between the two Erasures. The Senafp hill will aiitVinTMao tho Koosevelf. division, which the House overwhelmingly rejected. me senate voted the armv and con- ff Su dry whicn was thrown out in iflp House on a point of order. lrlC benale wants to Hraft mon tio- Jeen 21 and 27; the House between "1 and 40. Other minnr j;frn.nnnnn nn.in,'n;lrn i UHLCiUIILCO pel UllUlSg io exernntifina i.-i, ,.,;n l ' aim iiivt; niu axou na;;e to be smoothed out. u IS believed thpro ic nnthirur in. nipatiblo, however, in the two -bills pi? aSreement is expected by the K'tc-hin. I)roo(.- T t Rank 111 and others who earlier in the j-n.orui.oi.ivc jcauuciic dav striking out the volunteer fea , - lined up solidly for the bill in Donfn i reCOrd vote- f the 24 Hnn s there were no national figures. thaS. ,e. Prhibitionists maintained inehv ,0 the bitter end attempt 13 M no rule and then other to force toncurr Just 'H'enrp in tV o i j j.; Tiic . Lllc ociiate ury auuuu. adopted voting, the Senate .Stn;. " iiuenament j T-i i e GmnhaaiTiMv l j. i-i j js. onlv t k """6 mai me araii was tnt" .a be employed during the pres sor k Another amendment, by Sen Ameritny0n' raiSed the Pay or the iDg the war Wier frm $15 t0 $3 dUr" mediately after the vote the Sen to rcfpes"ed fnr 30 minutes in order a committee HUSe espionage biU ot Theeallar.i, .... vr X- vr 0ut the i . crowaed tnrougn night's debate. But there was Only - ml shtly "utter when the his- iori The Jsseo-tk-aiiv tntflre Senate debate was prac- ception nf t Utsensation' with the ex close f La Foette's flare up at the up any "I1T rnl T -UJJ.ctlJ.lULH. ''I ohS.Uette shouted unanimous con- asked hen Senator Martin esionaer hni 8 cousent to bring the UnfmishS ? .so that u coull be the atr LaPnn ! 6 vote was take Sen 1,3(1 an a "! tlf' rose stating that he SubstitutaS, dment in the frm of a wtion for the administration Smash Enetn ARM SHORTLY By War Depart Branches of Con Age. bill. It was then ten minutes of twelve and Vice President Marshall held that under the unanimous agree ment rule there was insufficient time for LaFollette to discuss his amend ment. Flashing angrily LaFolletts then said in a loud voice: "Well I'll tell you right now that it will be a long time before there is an other unanimous consent rule in this Senate." Vice President Marshall replied merely that he was not responsible for the unanimous consent rule and the roll was called. Senator Vardaman, of Mississippi, who has opposed wjar asked that he be excused in the voting. In ,the House, 8 Republicans, 14 Democrats and London. New York Socialist, and Randall, California, Pro hibitionist, voted against the bill. , The others voting against were: Bacon, Michigan; Burnett, Alabama; Church, California; Clark, Florida; Claypool, Ohio; Dill, Washington; Dominick, South Carolina; Gordon, Ohio; Haynes, California; Hilliard, Colorado; Huddleston, Alabama; Keating,' Colorado; King, Illinois; La Follette, Washington; Lundeen, Min nesota; Mason, Illinois; Nolan, Califor nia; Powers, Kentucky; Sears. Flor ida; Sherwood, Ohio; Sisson, Missis sippi. " 1 Of the 24, four were Californians. The House army bill was reported and referred to the Senate military committee. Senator Chamberlain re ported the bill back immediately and moved to strike out all after the pre liminary enacting clause and insert the Senate bill. That puts the bill on the calendar and it will be up Mon day. It will then be sent to confer ence where it will be smoothed out and finally passed. The bill then will be ready for Presi dent Wilson's signature. At 12:34 the Senate adjourned until noon Monday. LODZ AND WARSAW RIOTS. v.! (By United Press.) Zurich, April 29 (Sunday). Serious strikes were reported at Warsaw and Lodz, In information received tonight from Germany. The German military autnoritles arrested a number of Socialists. The strikes affected the railway shops. i CARRANZA SOLDIERS KILLED IN WRECK. (By United Press.) El Paso, Texas, April 28. Two hun- rpnnrt- J A r.-nirr t-n tl WTOfV Of ft. 1 troop trdin which was dynamited near I Guzman, eight miles soutn or me Bor der, by Villistas, commanded by Sala sar. The reports of the number killed, however, are unconfirmed, -and government officials here believe the figures are exaggerated. i 1 First American 1 1 f B 1 A r, vlf -5- To the steamship Mongolia, of th first American ship of any kind to s steamship company after word had be British port. The Mongolia is one o WITH SUB-MEN BRITISH r IR DEPARTMENT PREPARED ISSUE Half Million Men Will Be Summoned to Colors About September 1st GOVERNMENT READY FOR PROMPT ACTION When Assured Selective Draft Bill Would Pass Steps Taken Many Amend ments Defeated. (By United Press.) Washington. April 28. While Con T FIRS I gress was tonight talking its way clo-' miles northeast of Arras. All of Ar ser to the inevitable the writing of leaux, a mile further north of Oppy, a selective conscription statute on the had been taken. books the War Department, finally assured that the House and Senate would authorize the President to raise the Nation's 2,000,000 army as he sees fit, announced officially that the first half million men would be called to the colors about September 1, next. Should the war last another year, two out of every five of America's able-bodied men will be called out. The Senate decided on age limits of 21 to 27, inclusive. The House voted for conscripting men between the ages of 21 to 40, inclusive. Agreement i to be reached in conference commit tee next week probably will set some average betwen the two. The war machine will begin formation- in embryo with voluntary regis tration of men eligible. Slackers will hp srone after later. Of the more than 7,000,000 who will register be-'J tween 600.000 and 800,000 will be drawn by the jury wheel system. After physical, industrial and other exemptions are allowed it is expect ed 500,000 will remain. These will be placed immediately in training. Equipment is expected to be ready for them at once. In connection with equipment, the department announced the second million men raised will be provided with the British Enfield rifles. Simul taneously it was announced the gov ernment is constructing two new for eign types of field piece, both far larger than the present big six-inch weapon. The congressional battle today was fiercely fought. Prohibition for the army, Congress, all executive depart ments of the government; the Roose velt division idea; 'eligibility; age (Continued on Page Two.) .. V. . ' . . - - -r , y Kaiser May Seek Peace Merchant Ship ' W - n MM WW e Atlantic Transport Line, belongs t ink a German submarine. Announce en received from England following f the largest American freighters a 'E A t First of the Famed Hinden i burgs Defense Lines Has Been Turned. ENTENTE TROOPS GET NEARER TO LENS In Massed Attacks Teutons, Sacrifice Enormous Num bers Desperation of Fight ing Equals Any of The War. i Artillery Thunders Forth ! Death and Destruction. ! (By United Press.) London, April 28.-In fighting that ior intensity and desperation equalled! any of the conflicts of two and a half' j cai o ui liiu .gi uat waij i iiu J-i i Lion forces tonight had apparently turned ! the first of Germany's great defense lines of the famous "Hindenburg front." Part of Oppy, the pivotal point of this defense sector, was in British hands. The town lies six Both cities are supposed to consti tute the northernmost points of the "Wotan line," running southward down through Hamblain, Eterpigny, L'Esperance to Pronyille. Both positions tonight are canters' for German counter-attacks that for sheer violence surpassed any recent fighting on the western front, even in- eluding the bloody engagements of; Vimy Ridge. The Britisn uirust is toward Douai, northern pivot point of the Hindenburg line. To stop it Field , Marshal Hindenburg is recklessly throwing thousands of his gray-clad troopers in massed attack. . EJvery word from, the front tonight empha sized the enormous total of the Ger man losses and this in the face of the continued counter-attacks. Haig's resumption of a grand of fen sive movement today , was almost un- expected by military experts here. It had been estimated he would drive steadily against the Germans at vari ous points. Keeping them busy all along the line, the French forces which achieved such brilliant gains last week would be freed from any violent German counter-attacks and have leisure in which to consolidate the newly-won ground. But today's "-'h offensive was on a tremendous scale. The blow was struck over a front of several miles width. Moreover, it was de clared to the accompaniment of con centrated artillery drum fire that dis patches indicated had spread death along almost, the entire British front of forty-odd miles. It was a titanic drive at the very spot where, no later than Friday, front dispatches had in dicated a seeming deadlock between j vast forces on both sides. J -III l To Sink A Sub. Jl iVi - V -1A he signal honor of having been the ment is made by the officials of the the Mongolia's arrival at an unnamed float. FURY MORE vrt "TV -ir Tf ' ir -rv -'-v 'Ti m B N ii t x& ii in i w- ii i THREE TAR HEELS VOTED AGAINST THE ARMY BILL . Bu Other Congressmen From Noh Carolina Stood By 1 he Selective Draft. CONFEDERATE CHIEF FOI IND TO RF FOR FT rVJKJlVU IKJ DC rKJEK 11 w- O 1 vt i iwFiCBCihoiivc l"lo vv At" The President Congress man Godwin Also Voted With Him. (By Georg H. Manning.) Washington, D. C, April 28. Con gressmen Weaver, Godwin, Small, Stedman, Webb and Robinson, of North Carolina, voted for the selec tive draft bill to raise the war army, when that measure was passed in the House by a large majority late to night, and Congressmen Pou, Hood and Dough ton voted against it. The vote against it was for the com mittee bill providing for raising 5,000,000 men by volunteers before conscription is resorted to, and this was the plan Hood, Pou and Doughton favored. In the Senate, Simmons and Over man voted for the selective draft. This is the plan so insistently and earnest ly urged by President Wilson and rec ommended by all the heads of the War Department and the military ex perts of all the countries at war. "I voted for the. selective draft plan because 1 believe it the most efficient way to win this war,'" said Congressman Zebulon Weaver, the new Congressman from the Asheville district. "The first few weeks of my service in Congress have brought me to the consideration of some of the gravest and most far-reaching questions that have confronted Congress in half a century. "Whether or not all agree with Congress in declaring war, it does ex ist, and we must prosecute it with an army greater than any this Nation has ever known. A system is neces sary not only to raise an efficient army, and raise it promptly, but to preserve and mobilize our industries and maintain our armies in-the field. "The selective draft merely recog nizes every man as a volunteer and calls on him to serve where he is most fitted. It is not conscription in tne odious (Continued on Page Three). 1 ssasswftflkt! UM BESET ON EVERY HAND WITH TROUBLE Unless Russia Yields Germany May Be Forced to Sue For Peace INTERN AL DISCORD GROWS STEADILY 1 'Submarine Campaign Not . r o f..i r Proving Successful Re verses in West Have De pressing Effect. (Bv United Press ) Copenhagen, April 28. Unless Ger- many succeeds in enticing Russia in to a separate peace in the immediate future, she will strenuously resume her efforts for a general peace. More over, this time she will seek to coax peace on her own terms but with a great show of concessions from her previous position. This information came tonight from an exceedingly well informed diplo matic source. From the same authority it was like wise learned that Germany and Au stria at the present moment are se cretly mapping out the exact form of the peace blandishments they will of fer. Austria, more sincere than Ger many in desiring peace, because of J neater unrest in the dual monarchy, jig urgmg abandonment of all occupied territory for the sake of immediate i -v- ;peace. Emperor Karl faces a near condition of anarchy in his kingdom. Success of the Russian revolutionists has affect ed his Slav subjects. ,Turkey, too, is said to be pressing for peace, her troops being thrown back in disaster after disaster in Mes opotomia and Palestine. Talaat Bey, grand vizier, is now in Berlin on some mission. In Germany itself there is vast dis quiet among the people. Word has reached there that the food situation has now reached a climax. The government in many cases has found it was impossible to place re liance on the army in punishing strik ers or putting down food demonstra tions. It was this sort of spirit in the Russian government that made the Russian revolution possible. The tremenfous losses which Ger many has suffered has undoubtedly af fected the morala of her troops. It was pointed out tonight that the re cent record-breaking captures of Ger man troops in the Franco-British drive are a plain indication that the soldiers are surrendering instead of fighting to the death as they formerly did. Although still professing complete confidence in the submarine warfare, diplomatic sources were authority for information that many German officials were privately expressing doubt of achieving England's starvation, now that America's vast resources will be turned to defeat the submarine block ade. , SON OF SEC. DANIELS HAS JOINED NAVY (By United Press.) Washington, April 28. Josephus Daniels, Jr., son of the Secretary of the Navy, today set an example for the youths of th country when he en listed as a private in the Marine Corps, passing up the opportunity of a com mission. He was accepted as, a pri vate, class four: and will report to the inuume uuu . " slight visional defect was waived. m Gigantic Undertaking Before International Conference Assembled at Capital. SYSTEMATIC PLANS BEING WORKED OUT1 This Nation The Leader in The Great Combination Against German Militarism Feed-' ing The Almost Famine Stricken People Her Great est Work. (By United Press.) Washington, April 28.-As a result of the first week's work of the great- l i est war conference in history, Arner j'Ica' tdnight had a firm grip on the ""J of toWiji tawtatbuit ' "uu6c " miu iu European war. The alMed parley modestly begarf last Monday as a mere interchange of courtesies. Then ideas as to how the JJnited -States could help in the crushing of Prussianism were ex- vuaugcu. luuifiui lilt) I tHiHUCitLIUUB fof developments so far recorded en compass the world and reach, from, the home of the Argentinian to the hut of the moujik in Russia. Liberty enlightening the world from her block of stone in New York harbor took on a new significance. The situation may be summed up by quoting an unnameable, though supreme, authority in world politics, who said: "If the time ever comes that the United States, shall enter the war of nations it will bring an entirely new alignment of world forces and resolve itself into a monumental struggle for '' the preservation of democracy and of the occidental race." The last seven days, in the opinion of experts in world polities, have marked the setting in of this trend. Already, by the appointment in Elihu Root as . head of the American committee to Russia and today's avowed intention of our European al lies to stand behind that committee to "prevent a separate peace with Germany and keep alight the spark of freedom flickering in the recent domain of the Czar," the United States has begun its world leadership. The second most important phase of the week's development which stands out tonight is the rapidity with which America at war is draw ing the bonds of mutual interest close about North and South America. What the Pan-American union has striven for years to do; what the com mercial, industrial and diplomatic forces of the Nation have sought to effect a genuine community of In terest between the Latins of the south and the Anglo-Saxons of the north is being accomplished by the war. Allied conferees here In world par ley, while, of course, saying nothing officially, tbday let It be known that they believe South America logically and naturally will strongly align it self with the United y States. Every war development in South America since the United States de clared itself against the Teutonics has tended to confirm this. Brazil has severed diplomatic rela- tions with Germany and is on the ' very brink of a declaration of war.' Today she made diplomatic soundings as to the possibility of financial help from America in case of war. The population of Argentine has been clamoring for a break with Ger many. ' Guatemala today severed diplo matic relations with Prussianism and offered all her resources to the United States to wage war against Germany. The feeling here in the war capital of the world tonight is that the en- tire trend of South American spirit j is toward pro-North Americanism de- mocracy. . - This trend, world authorities de-r clare, Inevitably involves , the . death (Continued on page seven.) , , -it I' I I til' :.: :'r t' . 1 I- 111:, ! - 'H i ' ' : W i C f ' i -1