THE WEATHER: if Friday, probably local rains; Saturday fair. THE ASHEVILLE CITIZEN fra VOL. XXXIV, NO. 155. ASHEVILLE, N. C, FRIDAt MORNINO, MARCH 29, 1918. PRICE FIVE CENTS be BACK WITH FORCES REPULSE TE "J HEMf LOSSES TO EMEMY 1 1 "'. r . ; UTOH. GERMAN DRIVE IN PICARDY HAS COME ALMOST TO A HALT WITH BRITISH LINES STILL FIRM French Have Delivered Dashing Counter Attacks Over a Front of About Six Miles, Driving the Germans Back For a Distance of Several Miles British Also Repulse German Attacks. COUNTER OFFENSIVE IS AT HAND ALLIES THINK French Drive May be Forerunner of Great Movement American Troops Are Held n Reserve With French For the Great Drive to Come Allies Confident " Eventually Why Not Now?" Slowly assuming the shape of a giant plough share the German drive in Pieardy has come almost to a halt except at the very tip of the salient driven into the lines of the en tente allies. As the area covered by the Teutonic offensive stands now( it runs, on the south in an almost straight line from Landricourt, on the old "Hindenburg line," to Mont didier, well behind the allied positions as they stood in 1916. Savage Fighting. Savage fighting has taken place on the French part of the line. The German attempts to advance, on the extreme tip of the salient driven into the French positions have been fruitless and they have been driven back at the point of the bayonet. The British on the front north of the Scarpe also have repulsed the enemy, but south of this river they have been forced to retire. From Montdidier the line to the northeast runs with a sharp angle to Warvillers and there it turns northward and passes along the, Somme river to above Albert, where it again turns to the northeast until it joins the old lines held by the contending armies on the morning of March 21. Two New Features. , Out of the cofusion of the battle, and the contrary claims of the contesting armies, two new features stand out. The first is that the French, over a front of six miles, have driven into the German lines along the southern side of the salient established by the Teutonic drive. The other is that the Germans have begun a new operation to the east . a .: u u xi. : i: e : a it.. vi Auaa, wine jj. uia ue uie mcepuuii uj. tx wiucjuxuj uie Vwtn - f VwHtn r-k i -v In 1 7 n "t"l aita i;i uiiitiiL iu tut; uuituncuu May Be Big Move. At the present moment, the allied world is looking anxiously for news of the success of the French thrust into h the flank of the German forces. The fact that the drive Qgressed rapidly and cut a deep notch into the German held ground in the region of Noyon, may indicate that this movement is the counter-offensive which has been expect ed for the last three days. Progress by the French for a considerable distance into the German forces would cut off the Teutons fighting at the very tip of the "plough share" and compel them to retreat, or at least pause until the menace to their communication can be removed. Might Overturn Whole Plan. A further advance by the French might easilv over turn the whole plan of the Germans and bring about a new rthase of the battle in which the allies would strike hard all along the front and compel the Germans to relinquish their dearlv bought conquests. , The German activity near Arras may have for its pur pose either a new drive at the allies' line or a defensive op eration intended to stop an English blow from the north coincident with that began by the French; . ( , ' The British held firm north'of the Scarpe, but to the south of the river have been driven back. Their line now - is near that occupied in July, 1916, and runs straight from Arleux, north of Arras, to Boisleux, on the line held by the BATTLE OF PICARDY GROWS MORE LIKE SITUATION AT BATTLE OF MARNE DAILY, WITH GERMANS EXPOSING BO TH FLANKS Marked Improvement Shown on Largtr Part of the Allied Front, But the Crisis Is Not Yet Past- Time for the Allies to Strike With Great Counter Offensive Appears to Be at Hand, If Allies Have the Troops. xmxTurcED ox page ixe. (By FRANK H. SIMONDS.) NEW YORK, March . The eighth day of the great battle In Pieardy ahowe a marked improvement on the larger part of, the allied front between Arraa and Noyon, but despite the general betterment there has been two developments which do not en courage the feeling that the orials of the contest has, as yet, been safely passed. The first of these develop ments is the sudden and remarkable leap forward of the Germans north of Lassigny and west of Roye, which has resulted in the evacuation of Montdidier. The second develop' ment, of growing Intensity of artil lery preparation east of Arras, which should betoken the coming of a new thrust in this region. With respect of tb German advance in the center and capture of Montdidier, it must be recognized that this push has driven a wedge between the mass of the French and the British and has al ready cut one of the two Paris-Amiens railroads, which are the4 main routes Ol lateral communicauon oeiwcen me two allied armies. At Montdidier. the Germans are thirty-one miles ' from their starting place at St. Quentin and are hardly more than ten miles east of the latitude of Amiens, although nearly twenty miles south of that town. The capture of Amiens would bring with it an Instant dislocation of allied communications. Not only Would the British and French armies be separated, but the British would be cut off from Havre and Rouen, the main bases of their southern armies. Germans Exposed to Attack. . The latest German advance, then, carries a distinct menace to the allies; on the other hand, there are inherent weaknesses in the present posture of tha Germans. Their wedge which they have driven forward to Montdi dier is rapidly narrowing and they are now exposed to the obvious peril of attacks on either sids of this awk ward bulge, attacks which would threaten the safety of the troops In the point of the bulge. , a . In point of fact the German posi tion en the whole operatltve front is mora and more tending -to reproduce their situation before the battle of the Marne. North and south of their operative front, that is about Noyon on the Oi and around Arras on the Scarp, the allied lines are holding mmim. mm tfcs attiad Una held about Paris and Verdun In the Marne cam paign. As a result the Germans are thus thrusting themselves between two allied pivots and offering an in viting target for Just such an attack as Maunoy made from Paris on Sep tember 5, 1915, in the first phase of the Marne. Great Moment Near. If the allies have at last collected their army of manoeuvre and can now put it in, if the British and the French have reserve armies north and south of the German wedge, then it would seem that the moment is about arrived when the strategy of the Marne can be repeated and one or both of the German flanks assailed. Now as to the threat at Arras, once more the Marne parallel will serve to illustrate. In that battle the effort of the army of the crown prince was to isolate Verdun which was the hinge of the French armies on the east as Paris was on the west Now Arris is the northern hinge of the allied armies and so far the British troops have-swung backward on this hinge with fairly steady movement and the German drive has been steadily forced southward into an ever narrowing front. As a reeult there has come the very real danger to the Germane Incident to the awkward bulge or tneir nn toward Montdidier. In a word they have broken through between Arras and ths Oise on a very narrow front and the wedge is being steadily blunt ed. They have failed to break the southern hinge by an attack on the French and It would seem tnat tney are now about, to attack the. northern hinge in front of Arras. A successful drive about Arras, the capture of the town and the Vlmy rlda-e. north of it. would mean the de struction of the northern hinge of the Imperilled British and French front. To use another figure, what may now be compared to a leak would become an actual break in the dike and the Gorman flood would eweep through. The allied line would then collapse, for nearly fifty miles from Arras to Noyon and a supreme German success might result. This is the maximum of possibility, happily remote, but it must be faced. - i i Allied Advantages. On' the other hand, it to well to re member that on this Arras front, .the alliea have all the advantage of po sition since they hold the high ground won In recent . campaigns. The bno ( v Osrmsn success region would seem slight unless tne British trenches have been Jenuded to furnish reserves for the imperilled district further to ths south. There is less cause for panic now than at any moment since the Ger man drive began. The British situa tion has been pulled together from the Scarpe to the south bank of the Somme and the - French, taking over the flank of the British along the Olse, are steadily slowing the German pace. The parallel of the Marne is strik Ing, if only In the geographical clr cumstances, and ths tactical and even the strategical resemblances are not to be mistaken. The Germans have of fered the flank to the French from Noyon to Montdidier as Kluck offered his flank to ths army of Maunory east ot fans along ths Ouroq in Sep tember, Ills, The allied armies now fighting have escaped danger of a swift and complete disaster. They have re tarded an attack which was too pow erful for them to check at once. They have given their high commands a wsek in which to prepare a counter thrust and they are still "going strong." but the situation is develop ing rapidly out of which must come a decision and a solution of all ths problem. (Copyright by McClurs Syndicate.) BELIEVED HAIG'S REPORT PRESAGES COUNTER ATTACK Washington Officials Think Moment for Blow is at Hand. AMERICANS WILL BE IN BATTLE LINES AIRPLANE STEEL' RUINED BY SPIES OVERMAN STATES Displays Portion of. Steel Bracket Plugged With . Lead and Painted. News of Beating Back of Germans Cheers All of Washington. WASHINGTON, March 28.- nouncement by Field Marshal tonight that the German war chine along the whole British -An-Halg ma-front had been beaten off today with heavy losses gave 'new test tonight to specu lation here as to the allied counter- assault which officers feel certain will not long delayed. - Americana Ready. War department officials generally appeared to be satisfied that sub stantial. American force would enter tha hattle lines with the French when the signal for the cuonter blow is given. Major General March, act ing chief of starr, stated natiy, now v.r. that he was not advised as to the numbers or disposition of Ameri can units which may be employed with the French army of attack. The new outbreak of the German tnrusi at Arras, rsported early in tne oay, caused some apprehension here lest the allies might find it necessary to further delay their effort to seek vic tory after bitter daya of steady yield ing of rrnund. Definite word from General Halg that this new drive also had been checked aqaea to tne SPIES ARE AT WORK IN CURTIS FACTORY North Carolina Senator Springs Sensational Sur prise on Senate Floor. (continued on page nine.) (By 8. R. Winters.) WASHINGTON, March ; !. Dl playing a piece of steel that had been plugged with lead and then painted to disguise Its intent, as the . work of a spy, Senator lm 8. Overman, of North Carolina, In a series of oensa tlonal uerancee in thV senate today,, expressed the opiirtrthat-thef r" 400,000 German spies in the United Bute. The bracket exhibited, was evidence of the methods employed by a German workman in tampering with the steel used in manufacturing fight ing airplanes so a to retard the pro gram of the American air craft board. 'If I were secretary of war or presi dent of the United States. I would commandeer the Curtis plant and turn out every man In that plant and hire only loyal American and dispense with those under suspicion," declared the North Carolina ssnator. , , Have German Names. "I want to say in passing that some ot tha leading men in that plant have ' German names. I make no charges - (Continued on Page Two.) SUBSCRIPTION GOALS FOR EACH DISTRIGT ARE Each Federal Reserve Dis trict Assigned So Many Liberty Bonds. NEW YORK GETS BULK. WAST PRICES INCREASED. WASHINGTON. Mar. 28 Inc in price, to stimulate production and Improve the quality of coal, were of fered today toy the fuel administration to operators who use- special means for eliminating impurities from their product. Twenty cent a ton may be added to the government prices for coal, at the mine, where mechanical appliances and addition labor are em ployed to eliminate slate or carbon from th fuel. 4- FIERCE AIR FIGHTING. X - LONDON, Mar. Z8. The con- tlnuance of fierce air Aghtlng in the battle area la shown -by the report of aortal operations Issued tonight, which asys-that on Wed- iresday, twenty-four German ma- chines were brought down In air fighting and seven were driven down out cr control. Nineteen Brittoh machines are aliasing. a-.-'-- - WASHINGTON, March II. Sub scription goals which each federal reserve district will be expected to reach or pass during the third Lib erty loan campaign opening April 6 arranged today by the treasury, give the New Tork district thirty per cent of the $3,000,000,000 loan total or f (00,000,000 as Its shara, the eame as In tha second loan. The Chicago dis trict Is allotted 14 1-lt per cent or $428,000,000. It was found Boston had been given a disproportionate shars In the second loan, and ths dis trict's percentage baa been reduced from ten to 8 1-3 per cent. Cleveland, Minneapolis and flan Francisco were givn the same proportions a In the second loan and other districts were raised slightly. The gosls of each state, county and city will be determined by federal reserve district committee on the basis of population, wealth and busi ness conditions. Quotas by districts are as follows: Third Liberty Quota In Percent. 8 1-3 ' 3ft 81-r ' 10 4 1-i 14 ' 4 1-$ 1$9.. 3 1-2 10S tx-f 10.. 3 3-3 . $0 .7 J10.. Liberty loan cam .was assigned, four par cant ot ins total, or uu.uvu,vuu and raised $101,000,000. Atlanta as signed 8 3-4 per cent, $80,000,000, raised $0.00t,000. AMERICAN LABOR WILL SEND DELEGATION TO FRANCE10 ENGLAND Will Explain Position of Labor in United States Toward War. WILL SAIL SOON. Boston ' New York Philadelphia Cleveland Richmond Atlanta Chicago St. Louis Minneapolis .... Kansas City Dallas San Francisco... In the second aign, -Richmond Millions. ISO too JSO $00 130 Al - BRITISH CASCAIATES. r LONDON, Mar. 28 British casual, ties reported for th weefc ending to. day amounted to M13, divided u follow! NEW TORK. March 88. To maV known to British and French labor th .position of labor in the United States with regard to the war, a dele gation or nine American labor lead ers, with credentials of ths American Federation of Labor; will sail shortly for England and France. This was announced late today by the American Alliance for Labor and Democracy, of which 8amuel Gomp ers Is president. The American labor mission, ac cording to a spokesman for th allt ancet, will tell British and French la bor leaders that organised Htoor In the United States Is committed to the prosecution of the war to a successful conclusion and will not confer with any representatives of an enemy country- The mission officially known as the "American Federation of Labor Mis sion" in composed of the following: James Wilson, president. Pattern ?.7akers League of North America, chairman; John P. Frey. executive of ficer,' International iMolders Union of North American, secretary: William Short, president Washington State Federation of Labor; Miss tSIellnda Scott, president Straw Hat Trimmer and Operative union: Mis Acne Nestor, vice-president Glov Worker international union: Win. H. Johnson, president International Association ol. Machinists; George Lv Berry, presi dent. International Printing Press- msA's.aml Assistant tin Ion: Chester M. Wright, member International Typographical- anion; Martin F. Ryin. president Brotnorhood of Raili Car Men.. ' - The sending ot th mission is response, it was explained, to repeat- ed Invitations from British and French labor leaders to 8am uel Oomp' ' ers, president o( the federation, - visit them personally and confer ' them on the question of th post of labor In too associated nation" war with Germany. Mr. Oompsnr. .. anxious to go, but felt that hi f isQuirod him to remain her. 7 In