It . 111 ' T 1 I v ' 1 JO m Ymr In Advance -FOR QOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." tlngl OoplM, Cent, VOL. XXVHI. PLYMOUTH, H. 0., FBIDAY, APRIL 5, 1918 HO. 35. . ' ' ' i. WILL H. HAYS 100.000 Ainu ' GENERAL FOCH GENERAL SUPREME YOUR LOW TO COUNTRY'S CAUSE FIXED AT 300.000 SOLDIERS TO FRONT FOCH AS GOIili OFFICIAL FRENCH STATEMENT SAYS GERMANS ARE SENDING WOUNDED TO BELGIUM. TO OECIEVE THEIR PEOPLE Kaiser Would Not Have His People Know Awful Slaughter of His Men at the Western Front. Washington. A French official esti mate of the German losses in the great battle on the western front puts their casualties at between 275,000 and 300,000 men. The Germans are send ing most of their wounded tT Belgium, it is declared, to conceal from the Ger man people their heavy losses. It has been possible to identify, the dispatch says, nearly 100 German di visions, more than 10 of which were twice engaged. Some of the divisions, it is declared, had to be relieved at the end of the 'first day after losing more than half their men. The dispatch follows: "After an 11 days' offensive, during which the Germans have recklessly pushed forward their attacking waves, one, may gather a fairly accurate es timate of their losses. "In the first place, it has been pos sible to identiy nearly 100 of their divisions since the beginning of the offensive, more than 10 of which were twice engaged. Some divisions had to be relieved at the end of the first day, having lost more than half of their men; such was the, case of the 45th and the 88th. The latter has been nearly entirely wipe out. Among those that have suffered the most are the 5th. 12th. 28th and 107th divisions, at well as the 2nd (Prussian guard), the 16th, the 21st and 26th divisions of reserves. "In the second place, an enormous number of corpses were found on the battleground, and the prisoners on be ing questioned acknowledge the extent of the losses of their respective units. "To conceal from the German peo ple the heavy sacrifices that their of fensive methods required, the Ger mans are sending most of their wound ed to Belgium. "It is not an exaggeration to esti mate the total of their losses at be tween 275,000 and 200,000. men." GERMAN ARMIES' ADVANCE ALMOST AT A STANDSTILL wmle the advance of the German armies in Picardy has come almost to a halt, there has been severe fighting on the extreme edge of the battle Bone. Encounters in which large forces have been engaged have , oc curred north of Moreuil, but there seems to be no decided advantage gained by the Teutonic invaders. They claim to have taken heights and to have carried a wood in advance of their line near Moreuil, but the Brit ish say that they have driven back the enemy from positions they have occupied elsewhere in this sector. The French lines further south have stood firm against savage assaults, es pecially in the region of Montdidier and eastward of that place along part of the line which was,-subjected to a terrific strain for two days late last week. In a number of sectors the French have surged forward and taken hard-earned ground from the Germans and have established their lines solidly along the Oise river. The f. expected allied counter-offensive ha3 not yet come, but the Germans, who are reported to be entrenching along the French front, evidently expect it there. The elements have been at work in delaying the German advance. Rains are reported along the French and British fronts. -Wet weather, if continued, would handicap further ad vance of the Germans and be of in finite value to the allies, who are mov ing their forces and supplies over gofid ground instead of ground which has been churned into a condition where every step is beset by difficul ties. EVERYTHING ON DUTCH SHIPS TO BE SEIZED Washington. Formal orders for the taking over of all tackle, apparel, fur niture and equipment, including bunk er coal and stores belonging to the Dutch ships in American ports which have been seized by the United States were issued by President Wil son. Some of the masters of the ves sels removed, or attempted to remove, navigating instruments, glasses and other equipment when they surrender ed possession of their ships. j ' Will H. Hays, the new chairman of the Republican National committee, though only thirty-eight years old, has developed the natural Indiana gift of politics from the precinct organiza tion through the state chairmanship and right into his present position without a hitch in his record for. suc cess as a political organizer. In the last general election as chairman of the Indiana organization he turned what looked like defeat into a big Re publican victory. He is a lawyer with a large practice. SUBSTITUTED INFERIOR METAL RESPONSIBLE FOR PART OF DE LAY IN PROGRAM SAYS NORTH CAROLINA SENATOR. Investigation Into Delay Started By Senate Military Committee in Sec ret. 90 Days Behind Schedule. Washington. Investigation into de lay in the airplane program was be gun by the senate military committee behind closed doors after several days of discussion in the senate which cul minated in the assertion by Senator Overman, of Ncrth Carolina, that part of the trouble was due to German spies in the Curtiss plant which as extensive government contracts. Members of the committee were pledged to secrecy and Chairman Chamberlain announced that no state ment would be issued until the inquiry had been completed. Maj. Gen. George O. Squires, chief signal officer, and Colonel Deeds, of the aviation branch, were the first witnesses called. They remained with the committee nearly four hours. The committee plans to hear Maj. Gen. J. Franklin Bell, who has just returned from a visit to the Ameri can front in France. Later Com mander Briigs, of the British flying corps; Colonel Waldon, of the Ameri can signal corps, and Howard Coffin, chairman of the aircraft board, will be called. Senator Overman furnished Chair man Chamberlain with the names of his informants, so that they can be called. His speech followed charges that instead of having by July 1. 12, 000 airplanes in France or ready for shipment as provided in the original program, that number would total only 37 and that the American air plane program was 90 days behind scehdule. Senator Overman said although he would make no charge against any one employe of the Curtiss concern, there were spies there and were he secretary of war he would comman deer the plant and put in new em ployes. A metallic brace used in the construction of airplane frames from which a piece of metal had been re moved and lead inserted so as to weaken it, was exhibited by the sena tor a3 a sample of spies' work. The first machine tested at the plant fell, he said, and on investiga tion showed that this tampering had been the cause. A delay of two months followed, while government inspectors went over every airplane part in order to replace parts which spies had weakened. DEATHS AMONG TROOPS IN AMERICA INCREASED. Washington. Although health con ditions in general among the troops trianing in thi3 country are describ ed in this week's imports of the divis ion of field wanitaiion as "very good," deaths among the soldiers increased from 1?() the week before to 22,1. F'neuroonla increased in the national ffvnr.y nnd regulars, but In the national man! all epMemic diseases are 4 mains. PERSHING'S ENTIRE FORCE HAS BEEN GIVEN INTO HANDS OF GENERAL FOCH. ON THIER WAY TO FRONT Germans Lose Great Numbers In Kill ed and Wounded French and British Make Gains. The American army in France ia to fight shoulder to shoulder with the British and French troops who now are engaged in the titanic struggle with the Germans in Picardy. Gen eral Pershing's entire force has been given into the hands of General Foch, the new generalissimo, who is to use the men where he desires. More than 100,00 Americans, inten sively trained and fully accoutered, are available or immediate use in aid ing to stem the tide of the German hordes, and large numbers of them, on railroad trains and in motor trucks, and even afoot, already are on their way to the battle front, eager to do their part in defeating the invaders. The miserable weather which has broken over the country is proving no deterrent to the Americans as they push forward from all directions to ward the battle zone. The acceptance by France of Gen eral Pershing's offer for all American men and material for the present emergency has in effect virtually re sulted in a unified army command, so far as the Frehteh' army and Ameri can forces are concerned. This is shown by the fact that the orders is sued to the American troops are of French origin. Great activity continued throughout the zone where the American troops are quartered, etc., as sent. Even mor activity was observed behind the German lines opposite the American front on the Toul sector. An entire battalion was seen on the march. Infantry at other points was being shifted about, while the cav alry also was seen again. Numerous automobiles of members of the Ger man staff made their appearance be hind the lines. Three American patrols penetrated the enemy's lines. One patrol went in until electrically charged barbed wire was encountered. This was cut. Enemy sniping posts took warning and opened fire' on fhe Americans, who were forced to retire No casualties were suffered. Another patrol inspected German front line trenches, but did not en counter a single German. The third patrol penetrated th enemy's wire field to a French airplane which fell there last week. The engine of the plane was found to have been re moved. The enemy gas-shelled the Ameri can batteries without effect. On Way to Front Lines. Washington. The announcement that American soldiers actually are on their way to the fighting lines to take places beside their hard-pressed Brit ish and French allies, sent a thrill throughout the national capital. It was the first positive statement that General Pershing's forces actually are on their way to the battle lines to help stem the tide of the German drive. The American soldiers previously referred to in the official , dispatches being in the fighting are believed to have been the engineers or other aux iliary troops, which probably were caught at their work, as they were a few months ago - at Cambrai when the Germans suddenly enveloped par ties of British forces behind their lines in a swift turning movement. The sending of General Pershing's fighting troops to places in the British French line has been expected by mil itary experts to follow the creation of a unified, command under the French chief of staff. General Foch. and Gen eral Pershing's formal offer of all the available American resources. KING GEORGE VISITS HEADQUARTERS IN FRANCE London. Reuter's correspondent at British headquarters in France, de scribing King George's visit to the fronC says: "In the course of an inspection the king visited an airdrome, where he in spected an American section, the mem bers of which he congratulated upon their tine and smart appearance, praise which was well justified, for a likelier looking set of lads never yet swore to drive Huns out of tie air. ml J General Foch, the great French strategist, has been placed in supreme command of all the entente allied armies. GERMAN CASUALTIES 400.000 THE BRITISH REGAIN GROUND ON BOTH SIDES OF THE SOMME RIVER. British Have Repulsed Heavy Attacks and Driven Germans Back Across the Ancre River. The stretch of the great German offensive in France apparently is fast diminishing. ' On the seventh day of the titanic battle there were strong indications that the enemy was feel ing materially the strain he had un dergone and that his power had been greatly impaired through hard usage. While the town of Albert has been captured from the British and we3t of Roye the French have been com pelled to give ground in the tp.ce of greatly superior numbers, the British have repulsed heavy attacks, both north and south of the Somme and also driven back across the Ancre river the Germans who forded the stream. The fighting still continues of a sanguinary character on all these sectors, but everywhere4 the British and French are holding the enemy. Especially severe has been the fight ing west of Albert, where the Ger mans, in an endeavor to debouch west ward were repulsed by Field Marshal Haig's men with the heaviest casual ties. AH along the 50-mIlw front, from the region of Arras to ' the south of the Oise, near Noyon, the effects of what was to have been the final stroke to end the war in a victory lor the Teutons are only too plainly evident in the redevastation of the country side and the wreck and ruin of the towns, villages and hamlets through which the armies have passed. About 25 miles represents the great est point of penetration made at any place by the enemy in his advance, and on the northern and southern ends of the big salient he has left his flanks dangerously open to counter attacks, which, if successful, possibly might result in a retreat greater than the 1916 retrograde movement of von Hindenburg and nullify in its entirety the drive that has been accomplished. It is not improbable that British and French reserves, and possibly Ameri can troops, known to be behind the battle front soon will be thrown against the weakened enemy. Notwithstanding the sterngth of th German drive, nowhere has the Brit ish or French front, along the latter of which American troops have given a good account of their ability as fight ers, been even dented. Ground has been given, it is true, but so skillfully nd with such precision of movement that from north to south a surveyor scarcely could have worked out a more even line. Still Intact in the hands of the allied forces are portions of the old line from which IP'nden burfr fell back if. os "strategic" re tirement in 19 .'. ALL FORCES OPPOSING GERMANY IN FRANCE ARE FIGHTING UN DER SINGLE COMANDER. EABLV5TRIKE BACK' EXPECTED Germany Claims 70,000 Prisoners and 1,100 Guns Captured Since Drive Began American Forces Offered Foch. The entente forces opposing Ger many in -France are, for the first time during the war, fighting under the con trol of a single commander. General Foch, the great French strategist, to whom has been accorded much of the credit for the victory of the Marne in September, 1914, is generalissimo of the entente allied armies in France. This report was received in the form of an unofficial dispatch from London, but in the evening it was officially con firmed by advices to Washington 'rom Paris. Early in the day, President Wilson sent a personal cable message of con gratulation to General .Foch and Gen eral Pershing placed at the disposal of the French commander the Ameri can forces now on French soil. Gen eral Foch is given supreme command over all the men on the battle lines, and, in addition, has a strategic re serve force, the size and location of which is not known, but which, judg ing from reports, is very large. After eight days, during which it has swept forward over the rolling hills of Picardy, at times like a tidal wave, the German offensive has slow ed down. Instead of a sweeping ad vance, its progress has been checked at all but one sector of the front, and there it has been merely creeping for the last two days this fact even ad mitted by the German war office, which usually concedes nothing. ' From Arleux, north of Arras, to Al bert, on the Somme, the British lines have been holding stubbornly- and have thrust back the Germans at a number of points. From Albert south to Montdidier, there has been a slow movement to the west, but the hills west of Montdidier are still being held by the French. No ground has been made against the French along the southern side of the salient driven into the allied lines, while it is as serted that the French counter at tack from Lassigny to Noyon is still going on. The extreme depth of the German wedge now is about 37 miles. Soon, if Effective. When this blow, if it comes, will fall, or where, is as yet Bealed in the minds of the men directing the prog ress of military affairs for the alles. but seemingly it must come soon, if It is to be effective. The German ad vance now is converging on Amiens, the railroad center of northern France, which is known to be the ganglion from which run the main communi cations of the British army in northern France. The railroads from sT'aris to Amiens was cut by the Germans at Montdidier, but this would not be vital if Amiens itself is held by the allies. The German thrust in front of Ar ras, while, according to Berlin, it netted thousands of prisoners, has ap parently come to a stop before Orange Hill, Telegraph Hill and the labyrinth, strongholds held by the British in this sector. Repeated mass attacks by the Germans on these points have re sulted in terrible losses to them, with out, however, breaking the line and causing more than a straightening of the front before Arras. MANY WIPE WHEAT OFF HOTEL MENUS Washington. Wheat and wheat products were wiped off the menus of several hundred of the country's lead ing hotels in response to a request of the food administration that "every independent, every, well-to-do person in the United States" should pledge complete abstinence from wheat until the next harvest. CLASS OF 1919 TO BE CALLED TO THE COLORS Paris, March 29. The soldiers ot the class of 1919 are to be called to the colors at an early date, which is to be fixed by the. ministry of war. This was decided on by a vote of the chamber of deputies this afternoon. It is known that the ministry of war has decreed that the recruits shall re port April 13. The chamber voted 43( to T on a law providing that the ditfe of the calling of the class be advanced. ARE YOU MAKING SACRIFICES EQUIVALENT TO THOSE OF OUR SOLDIERS? ALL CAN FIND WAY TO HELP Make No Ridiculous Reservations; Hold Back Nothing; Share Your Money, Your Food and Your Clo'th ing to Aid the Great War. (By VIRGINIA TERHUNE VAN DE WATER of the Vigilantes.) A good woman was discussing tha rules of the food administration. "I am doing a lot for my country." she said, "but there are certain trifles that I do not intend to give up. Such as white bread and bacon." "No," she said in response to my astonished look, "I mean to have white bread when I want It. Why should I eat corn bread and other substitutes! I like white bread just as much as the soldiers and sailors do. And, any way, what difference can it make If I use a little white flour and a few slices of bacon every day? I am only one person." Only one of millions ! Suppose they all took that nttlhidAf "I am no slacker," she added. "I work at the Red Cross four afternoons of each week, and I have made dozens of knitted things for the soldiers. But I draw the line at bacon and white bread and rolls." Is this patriotism? I remembered the text: "These things ought ye to have done, and not to have left the other undone." Another good woman was talking of the next Liberty Loan drive. "Well," she declared, "they need not come to me for help ! I am a business woman, and I have lost money on heatless Mondays, and since the gov ernment has made me do that I do not propose to help with their Liberty loan. I love my country, and I am a Red Cross worker, and all that but there Is a limit." Should Be No Limit. A limit! Is there any limit to what she would do if her nearest and dear est were fighting for his life? Would she stop to argue that she had given the suffered expensive woolen under wear, but that she drew the line at the renunciation of certain comforts so that he might have them? Would she be considered a good wife or mother or daughter if she held this attitude towards husband, child or parent? Let us stop all these ridiculous res ervations, these talks of what we will do and won't do. Let us hold back nothing. Do the women who are send ing their sons abroad hold back any thing? Do these sons grudge risking their beautiful youth, their lives, for their country? Yet some people hesi tate at white bread and bacon, and refuse to buy Liberty bonds ! The last-named hesitation is not only unpatriotic, but it is absurd. Later we will know the meaning of the ex pression, "What I give I have." The money we invest in Liberty bonds will be ours when other money that we now have is gone. All such talk as I have quoted is wickedly unpatriotic' Let us give as our sons give ungrudgingly, proudly, because we are counted worthy to make sacrifices for the greatest cru sade against evil that the world has ever known. Make It An Honorable Service. What would the Son of Rlghteou. ness say to our hesitation about trifling luxuries? He died for his cause. We women are not called upon to do that. (Some of us may wish that we were.) But we are called to sacrifice our selfishness for it. I am not making light of the wonder ful work done by those women who toil at Red Cross stations; I am not forgetting the noble and vast army of wives, mothers, sisters and sweet hearts who stop at nothing in their de sire to help end the war honorably. But I hope that such sentences as I have quoted go no further than the tip of the tongue. If they do, shame to the speakers. And shame to us who let such speech pass unreproved. "His very living such was Christ's giving." We women "have not yet resisted unto blood." But some of our men have, and God help us I many more may have to. Can we then endure the Ignominy of remembering that even In our inner hearts we have paused to consider whnt delicacies we may use? Shall we nft in the language of our iear fighting boys "cut out" fill doubtful articles? 'And let us mnke of the trillin? duty an honorable service. The cause ennobles all that It touches. True Respectability. Having the courage to .live within ne'i? T3 enns is respectn" S tab-4y