A. - The Weather. Showers Monday except fair in noMlieast, cooler in extreme west; Tu-'(-d.'iv probably fair and cooler. Complete Service of the Associated Press yOU CHI-NO. 55, GERM, I UDENDORFF RESIGNS AND R 0W GERMAN NOTE Wlf PRESIDENT PEOPLK HOW RULE AND ARE READY f M ARMISTICE jlies Will Not Make Terms Known Until President Has Received the Note. IXT)ENDORFF QUITS ARMY Crash Comes in Personnel Of German Command When War "Boss" Resigns. ALEPPO IN SYRIA TAKEN s Allied Armies Make Gains from France to Asia. (By The Associated Press.) The German government has prepared a rejoinder to Presi dent Wilson's last note in which after again referring to the far reaching changes which have been carried out and are being carried out in the German con stitutional structure to which the military powers have been made subject it declares that Germany is now awaiting the proposals for an armistice. A London dispatch, however, report ing tte fact that Premier Lloyd-George and Foreign Secretary Balfour had gone to France with naval and military adviser?, savs it is is understood au thoritatively that the allied govern ment will not reveal their armistice terms until Germany has replied to President Wilson's last note which it proba'p'y was expected would contain more than the mere fact that Germany was wait in sr forthe terms of the armis tice. A crash has come in the personnel ot the German hi?h command. General Ludendorff. reputed to be the brains of the German army the man who Promised the German people he would crrsh Great Britain and France before the United States could tret under way m a military sense has resigned his position as first quartermaster-general and Emneror William has accepted the resignation. simultaneously, while the German line continues to crumble under the I Silted attacks and thp flprma.n rinrrier :s s'.fuv:;.- ;,ut gradually being ep proac.i.eri ry Germany's foes, comes a report J- the rpinVotoer Ktt o lni- rr ma, ' ; pasel a bill placing the mil-.tary comma nd . under control of c:v;i -'overninent. t'n the western hattlp frnnt tho T?rit. sh. French and Americans have con- Untied to make further slight gains again st (he Germans; in the Italian tneatre both tv t2i-; ;.,t, -r i ; save spr, c tSi -- . . ... : ui-i csbea, wniie in abi tic Ttk.y the British have captured on kP0 !n ?ria ?nd eTe driving ahead 00th banks of the Tigris in Meso- ft . ' Wlth the Turks unable to "Kck them. The fall of Aleppo and Lae Continue'! a rli-a r, r tV Tir,.l, grooves of such strategic value that ...... -..invij! luimsu upera oy- position shorti-o- riii 1 .i. lift k t. 1 a 1 uvciumc, uu LU ; -v uintl ana in Mesopotamia. fnr-,. . iiiinea, ngnung on me iic "win. uetween tne vjise ana Ifpncr, ' 'i-i seeping up ineir or- llI ijermnns ana nave e aaditinnii , IYYo gams, laKing several fan k". and cmpelling the enemy to t tne region southeast of Valen- arrmnl T - i s- -;. ave delivered violent counter- fonr asfainst the British. ts 3 throw Their ef- Kai. vw DacK Field Marshal Ihnul men from the positions thev -1U W - rere nc , - . . Iaaltie, """'-essiui ana heavy cas aoh4 e inflicted on tS enemy by '-ihne trim mri Th r,, , - - ""u ime me. 1;le rnc.rW , ona mr;v: "alls nave Degun the sec l u month of tvo,- , . IreS;on nt t- u,c" operations in tne attacks I erdun by keeping up their Hea,e l tne Germans from the lira ttle wooded country north of 'etn mVri" me further progress has Ron- n- iwunstanding continued hcnr.r 0iPoiTTtion by German machine Ideation -ir behina the natural for d!sWct A"hlch abound through this rontinii.-Tw V . 11 airmen also are sixty of them being ni;)chin;s. s began their op- n !"hwest o: i jm.':. Vlllares havi of Verdun, more ave been liberated. tn:i, . lJ averase rienth nt nie.de and more 'so,, -ermans have been made er. Vh fr 'l0r:e- y- T., Oct. 27. A dU- me7 Dominion's telegraph r at thp K neau tonight ien nCS3 SOPHIA AlS-. ehinr3 th Dombing operations Effort in ,r. 'erman lines, their latest Gainst thl'S rospect having been made rrth of p L, rr)tory around Briquenay J!3"es, ,r.,5and Pre in which 140 air- ANY SA YS SHE NOW A 'ED ARMIES FROM Ludendorf f " Military Brain" Of the German Government Ludendorff,ss Action Taken to Mean Huns Will Agree on Terms London, Oct. 27. The resignation of General Ludendorff is interpret ed here as heralding Germany's ac ceptance of the allies' armistice terms. Whether this is correct the resignation of the first quarter master cannot fail to seriously af fect the morale of the German army. Unofficial advices"report the situation in Germany is daily growing worse. There are persistent reports of riots in various parts of the country, con flicts wth the police and loss of life and that lack of raw material is seriously interferring with the pro duction of munitions. The socialist, Georg Ledebour, is quoted by tne Cologne Volks-Zeit ung as saying in the reichstag: "The baneful effect of the kaiser must be removed," and advocating the abolition of the monarchical system. His speech was greeted by the socialistic shouts of "Abdicate!" V J SOU'S LATEST NOTE ASKS FOR THE TERMS Says President ,is Awareiof Tar Reaching: Changes' in Ger man Government. 'STEP TOWARD JUST PEACE' Germany Seems to Think She jJHaa Qualified for Concluding Peace With President, Asserting Peo ple Are In Power. Copenhagen, Oct. 27. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Germany's answer to President Wilson' latest communica tion says: - "The Germaji government has taken cognizance of the answer of the Presi dent of the United States. "The president is aware of the far reaching change which have been car ried out and are being carried out in the German constitutional structure and that peace negotiations are being conducted by a people's government in whose "hands rests both actually and constitutionaly, the power to make the deciding conclusions. "The military powers are also subject to it. The German government now awaits proposals for an armistice, which shall be the first step toward a just peace, as the president has described it in his proclamation. (Signed) "SOLP." UNDERSTOOD ALLIES WILL AWAIT RECEIPT OF NOTE London, Oct. 27. It is underst-ood in authoritative quarters that the allied governments will not reveal their arm istice terms until Germany has replied to President Wilson's last note. Premier Lloyd-George and Foreign Secretary Balfour, accompanied by na val and military officers have gone to France. AUSTRIAN REPLY IS READY AND IS MOfeT CONCILIATORY Basel, Switzerland, Oct. 27. Austria's rejoinder to President Wilson's note is ready according to "Vienna papers. It was submitted to authorized quarters today and will be sent this evening or tomorrow to Washington. It-is couch ed in the most "conciliatory terms. GERMAN REPLY MAY AND MAY NOT INDICATE ACCEPTANCE Washington, Oct. 27. The unofficial text of Germany's reply to President Wilson- was received tonight too late, to be seen,. by President Wilson and other officials. m The question pf an armistice trad peace already Is being considered by the allied governments and by the United States. CoL E. M. House and Admiral Ben son, ranking officer of the American navy, recently arrived in France, the former to represent the president in the discussions to be held at Versail les where the supreme war council sits. Admiral Benson will represent the navy in any matters relating to an armistice, insofar as American navar forces may be affected. Gen Tasker H. Bliss, former chief of staff is the American military representative art the council. . The iGermac repjy i expected to clear the way for a general discussion of the, individual vtews of : the entente Continued From ra Two), WILMINGTON, N. O, I ADVISE His Resignation Causes Sensa tion in Central Powers and in Europe Generally. IS A SIGN OF COLLAPSE? German People Reported As Wrathful Over Having Been Deceived so Long. WERE PROMISED TRIUMPH Ludendorff Handled All Their War News , Copenhagen, Oct. 27. General Lu dendorff, first quartermaster-general of the German army, has resigned, says a telegram from Berlin. In ac cepting his resignation the emperor has decreed that the lower Rhenish infantry regiment No. 39, of whch General Ludendorff long had been commander, shall bear his name. " In the resignation of General Lu dendorff, Germany losses -what often has been described as her -"military brain." Unknown before the war, General Ludendorff sprang into prominence in the fall of 1914 as chief of staff to Field Marshal Von Hindenburg, then a general, in - the' operations against the Russians, when Von Hindenburg was given the chief command in Au gust, 1916, Lhdendorff was appointed first quartermaster-general, but his position iii reality has been chi of staff and collaborator with Von Hin denburg. Soon after his appointment as first quartermaster-general, Ludendorff te gan to be looked upon as the real "boss" of Germany and was recognized as the representative of the -Pan-German at great headquarters. It was Ludendorff .who brought the retire ment of Chancellor Von Bethmann Hollweg and he was Reputed to have been responsible for he appointment to the chancellorship of Michaelis and Von Hertling, both of whom were de scribed as stop-gaps. The gentral's rule as first quartermaster has al most amounted to military liotator ship. General Ludendorff was reported to have been the originator of the plan of the German offensive of 1918. The plan called for offensive operations on the western front which would split the British and French armies and compel the allies to sue for peace be fore the strength of the American army could be available to any extent, It was planned that if the offensive failed, then Germany would resort to a diplomatic campaign in order to obtain peace. Since the death of the German of fensive and the successful -offensive of Marshal ocb, reports from Germany have beefi to the effect that Luden dorff and Von Hindenburg were losing (Continued on Page Two.) FALL OF ALEPPO IS A CROWNING EVENT Allenby Cuts Important Turk Railroad. British) Now Placed In Position to Ctrt Off Remaining Turks and to Send Aid to the Anti-Bolshevists In Russia. . London, Oct. 27. The Important railroad city of Aleppo was occupied by British cavalry and armored cars Saturday morning, says a British of ficial statement Issued today on op erations in Syria and Palestine. The statement reads: "Our advanced cav alry and armored cars occupied Alep po on the morning of October -26 after overcoming slight opposition. Tha fall of AlenDo to the -British is the crowning event 'of the victoriousSrou want a congress that will? Ger campaign of General Allenby in kwhich he captured Jerusalem and Damascus on his way northward through Pales tine and ' Syria. Aleppo is 18-5 miles north of Damascus and 70 miles east of the Mediterranean Sea. - At AJeppo the railway line from (Goattnuea a rag '-Two MONDAY MOBNING, PR A N HAYES BITTER IN REPLY TO WILSON'S APPEAL FOR VOTES Republican Chairman Speaks Words Seldom Used Against a Chief Magistrate. CHARGES OF MENDACITY Says President Wants to Rob the Allies of the Fruits of German Victory. New York, Oct. 27. Will H. Hayes, chairman of the republican national committee made public tonight a statement in which he replied on be half of his party to President Wilson's appeal to the nation to return a demo cratic congress. In his statement Mr. Hayes said: "President Wilson has questioned the motives and fidelity of xur, rep resentatives in congress. He has thereby impugned their Royalty and denied their patriotism. His challenge is to you who elected those represen tatives. You owe it to them, to the honor of your great party and to your own selfrespect to meet that chal lenge squarely, not. only as republi cans but as Americans. I, as your chairman, call upon 'you "to do it. "Mr. Wilson accords the republicans no credit whatever forhavfng sup ported the "war measures' proposed by his administration, although they have done so with greater unanimity than the members of his own party. Despite that fact, he accuses them -of having tried ta usurp his; proper func tions. - - 's.-A-r'-' ' - ' "At no tinier- hnrmvSi ay fcwve they tried to take control of the war out of his hands. The president knows that. The country knows it. You know it. A more ungracious, more unjust, more wanton, more menda cious accusation was never made by the most reckless stump orator, much less by a president of the United States . for-partisan purposes. It is an insult, not only to evry loyal repub lican in congress, but- to every loyal republican in the, land. "It fully merits the resentment which rightfully and surely will find expression at the polls. "Mr. Wilson grudgingly admits that the republicans have been 'pro-war.' Then why does he demand their de feat? Becajise they are still pro-war? Hardly that. No; it is because they are for peace through, not without, victory; because they do not believe lasting peace can be obtained through negotiation; because they consider U. S.' stands for unconditional surren der as well as for the United States and Urrcle Sam. The democratic con gress does not. Mr. Wilson does not. There is the issue clear as the noon day sun. The country will decide. "Mr. Wilson wants only rubber stamps, his rubber stamps, in con gress. He says so. Noone knows it better than democratic congressmen. He calls for the defeat of pro-war re publicans and the election of anti-war democrats. He, as the executive, is no longer satisfied to be one branch of the government as provided by the constitution Republican congressmen must be defeated and democratic con gressmen must, as they would, yield in everything. That is evidently his idea-the idea of an autocratic calling himself the servant but bidding for the mastery of this great free peo ple. "Republicans in congress have seem ed to him good enough when they assented, when they .did assent with highest patriotism, and sometimes against their best- judgment, to his proposals. Republicans at home have seemed to him good enough to send fully a million of their sons into bat tle, to furnish at least half of the army and far more than half of the money for winning of the war. But they are not considered good enough to have a voice in the settlement of the war. "But Mr. Wilson's real purpose has nothing to do with the conduct of the war. He has had that . from the beginning, has it now and nobody dreams of interfering with his con trol. He wants just two things. One is full power to settle the war pre cisely as -he and his sole, unelected, unappointed, unconfirmed personal ad viser may determine. The. other is full power as the 'unembarassed spokesman m affairs at home' as he actually demands in his statement to reconstruct, In peace times, the great industrial affairs of the nation in the same way in unimpeded conformity with whatever socialistic doctrines, whatever unlimited government own ership .notions, whatever hazy whim xnay happen - to possess him at the time but first and above all, with ab solute commitment to free trade with all the world, thus giving to Germany out of hand the fruits of a victory greater than she could win by fighting a hundred years. A republican con- irress will never assent to that, do manv does. "Mr. Wilson forces the republican party to lie down or fight. I say plght. Answer with .your" votes. "Mr. Wilson is for-uneonditional surrender- yes, . for,, , the - unconditional jtrrreade ts- Aiwaelf iff the republican Contmu on PagreyrTwo).- OCTOBER 28, 1918 TERMS WILSON CONFUTES REPUBLICANS WITH THEIR OWN LOGIC Appeal of McKinley, Roosevelt, Harrison, Lodge and Pen rose in 1898 is Cited. "STAND BY PRESIDENT' McAdoo Declares United Com mand at Home Essential as on Western Front. Washington, Oct. 27 Secretary Tum ulty tpnight made public a letter he has. written atPresident Wilson's di rection to the Cuyahoga county repub lican committee at Cleveland, O., in which he replies to protest against President Wilson's appeal to (he coun try to return a democratic congress by recalling quotations from utterances by Colonel Roosevelt, former President Harrison, Senators Lodge and Penrose and former Senator Foraker in the campaign of 1898 at the close of the Spanish war. The Cuyahoga county committee tele graphed the white house, taking issue with the president's statement. Secre tary Tumulty, writing at the presi dent's discretion, simply commended the statements he quoted and also vari ous editorials appearing at the time in leading republican newspapers to the president's consideration without com ment. - . The first quotation was from Colonel Roosevelt, Identified as republican can didate, for gOvernor- ia New York in 18984 " H "Remember that; whether you will it or ndi, your vote this year will be viewed by the nations of Europe from one standpoint only. They will draw no fine distinctions. A refusal to sus tain' the war and to sustain the efforts of your peace commission to secure the fruits of war. Such a refusal may not inconceivably bring about a rupture of the peace negotiations It will give heart to our defeated antagonists; it will make possible the interference of those doubtful neutral nations who in this struggle have wished us ill. i "You could not get the benefits of the victories of Grant and Sherman only by re-electing Lincoln and we will gain less than we ought from the war if the administration is npt sustained at these elections." From former President Harrison, pleading for the election of a republi can congress: "If the word goes forth that the peo ple of the United States are standing solidly behind the president, the task of the peace commissioners will be easy; but if there is a break in the ranks if the democrats score a telling victory, if - democratic senators, con gressmen and governors are elected Spain will see in it a gleam of hope; she will take a fresh hpe and a re newal of hostilities, more war may be necessary to secure to us what we have already won." From Senator Lodge: "But there is one question on which I wish to say a few words and that seems to me to override all others. It is whether we shall stand by the administration and the president at this juncture. If we give a victory to his political opponents we say not only to the United States but we say to the world, we say to the Spanish commissioners in Paris, that I the people of the United States repu diate its result and repudiate the man who has led victoriously the war and (Continued on Page Two.) BLOODY FIGHTING ON ITALIAN LINE Austrian " Counter-Attacks Re pulsed With Loss. Island Wrested From the Enemy by British in Two Attacks Counter Attack Reached Nearly to Al lied Line. London, Oct. -27. British troops fighting along the Piave river since the night of October 23-24 have occu pied the island of Grave di Papdopoli and taken more than 710 prisoners, according to an official statement is sued here today. Saturday violent Austrian counter-attacks were repuls ed. The statement says: "On the night of October 23-24 the 10th army undertook operations against the island of Grave di Papdo poli in the Piave. The seventh. British division, crossing the , river In small boats,, under circumstances of consid erable difficulty, surprised the garri son, which consisted of troops of the seventh Austrian division and - occu- wied the"? northern . half -: of ; the- - island. - 7 (Coatinuertroxn, Page Two.- EICHSTAG OF ARMISTICE; SEEKS CONTROL; WIN HERCULEAN TASK OF PERSHING'S MEN IS BEING A CCOMPLISHED Steam Shovel Used to Dig Graves for Many Victims of Influenza New York, Oct. 27. A steam shovel was used in one of New York's cemeteries today to dig a trench in which to inter tempo rarily the bodies ' of victims of Spanish influenza. This extraordi nary procedure was made necessary by a shortage of grave diggers coupled with Wie large number of deaths. At another cemetery there were 400 unburied bodies and city la borers have been drafted to pre pare graves. , New cases of influenza reported in Greater New York in the 24 hours ending at 10-a. m. today in creased 185 over yesterday's re port to , a total of 4,897, ealth Commissioner Copeland announced tonight. In the same period the . number of deaths was 418, an in crease over yesterday of 24. A decrease was reported, how ever, in the number of. new cases of pneumonia and in the number of deaths from that disease. FRENCH GAINS ON OISE-SERRE FRONT Advance of Five Miles Made and Numerous Villages, Cannon and Men Taken. 3l' BRITONS SMASH ATTACKS Haigs Army Repulses Very Heavy As saults by Germans South of Val ' euciemtM Allies Continue PreffiUK. Paris, Oct. 27. A marked advance by the French troops in the sector be tween the Oise and Serre rivers is re corded in the official communication issued by the war office tonight. Num erous villages have been captured and at certain points the advance amount ed to about five miles. The statement reads: , "The enemy, pressed hard by our advance guards, continues his retreat between the Oise and Serre on a front of more than 25 kilometres (about 15 1-2 miles. Our advance at certain points exceeded eight kilometres in the course of the day. "On our left we occupied Boheries, Proix and Macquigny and pushed our advanced elements as far as the out skirts of Guise. "Further south our troops are draw ing near to the road between Guise and Marie, having attained the gener al line of Bertaignfemont wood, Landi-fay-et-Bertaignmont, west of Faucos ey, Monceau-le-Nuf and Montigny-sur-Crecy. We took numerous prisoners and captured much material. , "Since October 24 the number of prisoners taken by the First army has reached 3,700. In the booty taken by this army in the same period, were 20 cannon and several hundred machine guns. "On the Serre front the Tenth army, in close liason with the First, has en ergetically pressed the enemy north ward. Our troops have occupied Cre-cy-sur-Serre and have gone consider ably beyond that point. "West of Chateau-Porcien, the fight ing in the last two days has likewise compelled the enemy to abandon part of his Hunding position which he had still held between Herpy and Recouv rance. Our units are keeping in close contact and are continuing their prog ress." , FRENCH MAINTAIN PRESSURE ON 40-MIIJS OISiS-SKIUiE UTXE Paris, Oct. 27. On the 40-mile front between the Oise and the Aisne, the French maintain their pressure and on the left have made important gains according (to the official statement to day from the. war office. - They have captured four villages be tween the Oise and the Serre, and along the Serre have penetrated the enemy-positions. Between Sissonne and Chateau Por cien, on October 25 and 26, the French took more than 2,450 prisoners. The statement reads "During the night the troops of the First army redoubled their efforts along the entire front between the Oise and the Serre. The Germans, dis organized in the fighting yesterday, were compelled to fall back along the entire line toward the north. , They abandoned the positions which they had occupied. The French conquered Mont D'Origny, Origny-Ste. Bendite, Courjumelles and Chevrlses-Monceau and also a number of fortified points between these villages. On the right French, units crossed the Perorf river and; progressed -toward the- northeast, capturing 1Hill,llZ and 1 Sucrerie, 1,500 Continued ;n Page 'Two).- . WHOIiE NUMBBB 30,578 SUCCESSES First Major Operation Nets 20, 000 Prisoners; 165 Miles , of Territory. MONTH OF BITTER WAR Wooded Heights, Swamps, Machine-Gun Infested Ravines Slowly Taken. USED 2,500,000 SHELLS V Have Downed 230 Enemy Planets and 23 Balloons. With the American Army, Northwest of Verdun, Saturday, Oct. 26. CBythe Associated Press). Irt its first major operation against the Germans, con sidering the clearing of the St. Mihiel salient as a local affair, the American army in a few days less than a month has liberated more than 45 vi lieges and advanced to a average depth of ten miles, freeing 165 square miles of territory. In the offensive the Ameri cans have captured more3than 20,000 prisoners. :f'- of 2Q miles . from the Argonne to the - Meuse, and the axtyance nas oeen maae in the face of almost Insurmountable . difficulties, due principally to the 'na ture of the, .ground which is covered with hills, deep ravines and woods. In addition, the Americans had front ing them four organized systems of trenches the Hindenburg line, the Hagen position, the Volker position and the Kriemhilde position. They have forced their way through all these lines. Ahead of them lies the Freys position which has been reach ed at one point in the region of the Bantheville wood. The advance has been particularly difficult because the Germans have stubbornly resisted every foot of the way and have used more than 33 dl- visions on the 20-mile front. The ene my continues to make a formidable effort to hold this front in order to protect his great lateral line of com munication running through Hlrson, Mezieres, Sedan, Montmedy and Lon guyon. This line is threatened and should the Germans lose it they wlll lose their main line of cbmmunicatlon from Germany Ufro occupied France. In addition t the prisoners. Gener al Pershing's Jnen have taken more than137 gun of large calibre, num--erous machine guns end anti-tank guns, a great score of ammunition and much war material including locomo tives and railway cars. "Since September 26 the Americans have fired more than 2,500,000 shells, trie number at times reaching as high as 150,000 daily. The guns used in cluded a great number of heavy ones and also some captured from the ene my. American avfators and anti-aircraft guns in the period since September 27 have brought down 230 enemy - ma chines and 23 enemy baloons, despite adverse flying conditions and bad weather at times. Bombing planes dropped more than 40,000 kilograms of explosives on railroad centres, troop concentrations and other points be--hind the enemy lines. From the view of the engineer, the most difficult task faced has been the repairing of roads and the movement of supplies, men, ammunition and food to' the front. More than 40,000 engin eer troops are employed day and yight in rebuilding shell shattered roads, using where possible crushed rock from villages destroyed by the German shells. In the Argonne, hundreds of yards of German barbed wire entanglements fastened from trees to various heights, had to be bridged, as it was impossible to cut them. In audition, many roads in the Argonne were of black loam which became a morass in rainy weather. The engineers were com pelled to virtually build bridges over many miles of these roads. The crosaing of Forges brook was accomplished in the first day of the advance under a heavy fire. The brook traverses marshy land and to bridge it the engineers had to lay bundles of faggots on -both sides of the stream. The crossing was made in record time and then began the battle of the Ar gonne which lasted for more than two weeks. Computations made by army officers show that of the more than 165 square miles taken from the enemy since Sep tember 26, almost one-half were heavi ly wooded and machine gun -infested. The Americans had to take by storm 159 hills and ' high crests, most of which were heavily wooded and de fended by strong machine gun de tachments. Of the hills, 141 were west of the Meuse and 18 east of the river. The Germans also had to be driven from 430 -ravines, all defended by ma chine guns and nearly-as hard to take as the hills. . 5 General Pershing's men have had tq CContlnued o& F&ff Six) . j . Wc-; . - iff 'y- - L - " f .is yi Ji .JO-