.1 St -- ,. .. . . .. .- --3-. : : r ; ; f, - . , . f V WEATHER: Mnrth ana obu. w. N.. rallv fair to- !ina." -a Wednesday, FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE J ' 'VOL. XXIV. No. 63 WILMINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA. TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1918. PRICE FIVE CENTS - i iilBiiM'oiilpSll mKSJ dL VOJJI JI - y TODAY ' - ' :- ', : . rs , OFFIGMMMOUlCESiBJTCIF SKiMBlMfl .... ':Z2-:.7 . . . - t : . ! . : - irV.i u ' " - 1 ? r i f : t. in erican PROVOST - - - MAKES STATEMENT 1 Make i it n.. 1 1 U f,I G2 " - tfi' First Unassisted Maid ABOUT XT BIAFT ach State's Quota to Be Bas- d on Number m Class One PROTECT INDUSTRY AND AGRICULTURE Probably 800,000 Men Will Be in the Draft, But They Will Be Called in Small In crements ly needed in the production of this year's crop.; "This is not,, however, the only ex pedient thatNis to be adopted to con gerve the supply of fehor appurtenant to agriculture-, and. & mobilize all means for increasing? the harvest for the agriculture seasdh of 1918. 'There is now , pending before Con luaEIi; T STILL IN ARGENTINA "b now .jienamg Deiore uon- r f . a gress-a bill authorizing the Secretary ! ormer Uerman Minister Ac cused of Not Wanting to go Home Washington, March rrovos jlirshal General Crowder today made lie first official announcement of the fine of the second draft. It will be ordered as soon as Congress amends tie law to compute the basis of ap jortionmpnt among the States on tae number of registrants . in class one, toiead of population. For purposes of computation, 800,000 men will be con jured also composing the secoM draft, although no such number will be called to the colors at any. pm Men in deferred classification, the froTost marshal general announced, ould be called in small numbers as rell as men in class one for the pur wse of utilizing special technical mlificauons or senaing mem v fcliboli. to acquire such qualifications. The firovost marshal general mases Indefinite statement, however, that there will be no sudden withdrawal of great numbers of men from industry tad agriculture during -the coming hummer, but that they will be drawn relatively small groups, spread fimghout the year. To give the ex- I act numbers, he says, would be to ftp the enemy military information. while General Crowder. sets no time in his statement, it has been stated previously that supplies and equipment for the men of the secona draft, vould become available fn April, and as action on the desired leg islation is expected before that time, the first calls are exptcted soon afXei- ards. "The next national quota -will be innounced and apportioned among the K?eral States as soon as pending leys-; Nation authorizing a change in taw' Of comnutatlnn is enacted bv Congress," says the Provost Marshal wneral's statement. The number 'hat will be assumed as a basis tor Mutation will be 800,000, which is ?H within the authorization of clause 5ur of section one ofthe Selective 'Nice Art nf a sopnnH 4nrTri ATlt of .000 men, increased by the recruit talnlns: units fmthnrizftd hv clauae of section on and hv thp SDMtai Jld technical tronns authorized bv section two of said Act. . It cannot J01rbe announced what the total nuxi.- "er to be called to the colors eacn jonth will be, but it may be stated Jh no more men will be called than a be properly accommodated ana ?Ptly assimilated. There are difficulties confrontmg "e nation in the supply of labor ap Jtenant to agriculture. Class on, which new levies arts to be with tv.11, contain many more men ""a aro at j. j It 'Wniltrl ha Q m. .mant ati rti.i' 'ancu inaiscnminateiy wim- . cUltUre. Th cr-afn-s t, H . j directed to fil ltheir quotas m u or 1.' 1 lli. a ui naDuity or men m cias3 8 aetermined by tne national us. except that wherft it rs n that a registrant i ?nmn1ptelv h I??!?U0U8ly engaged in the plant- "is pan u reaPmg oi a crop, tr 11 10 colors shall be deferred lon f the quota of his boaru feged as he continnes to be so eii- "hpriQt- . . . . M, .u.c-i any rfie-istrnTir wnnn "U fn tVi. i ' Haion . c?lors has been deferred by V , his engagement in agricui- 4s fB. snown to have been idle on ivP 1 ,a0n which he Is engaged or vo sas u wilu me aeierment. tnai Mil fn fD .accprded him, the boaras rce -f inauct nim into mllitaiy IHt-hcA . his order numoer has een a in tha rv, i.J mi.. J . this "wauume, me cueci 's expedient i to grant fur- H to th service prior to actual wjufB to ine men so greav of War to grant furloughs, with or without pay, to men. in the army to enable them to engage in industrial and agricultural cir-suits. These i'ur- IrnoTic, wtll K --in;.j . .2.1 :r..r.1 XT Buenos Aires, March 12.-Reports I individual case in which thov n ri i were current nere today tnat uount find when the. military- situation is j von Luxburg, former German minister such that they canlbe granted with- j to Argentine had fled. It was said he tub ui great aisrupuou ana aisorgaa iaiion of the arm or ol any parties lar disorganization or the army. ' As to further jn?r Brown Affidavi tide Still Refuses It Latest Ar- HasBeen Declined urn LINES PE had been missing for several day& from the house in the suburb of Lo- to protect as-; mas de Lamora where he was sup- Li culture, a new icfcu'ation has baen! posed to have been under, strict suv r iomulgated authcrUiing agricult j u.l veillance d that last night, he, the s'udents in their sentoi year in 'ianli. . pi&nt colleges to enlist in the enlisted iformer German naval attache and a ie&erve corps 61 tire quartermarc's arse group of other Germans passed department provided their class stai-j Puenta "Inca, ln the Andes, on the i"g is such as to Piace them in te InteraaUonal train for Chile After upper-third of tussr class. By x.cin ' . . - xl A. , iU . meonMt will be possible to defer ihul80 investigation of these reports the dait call of such young men in orJ r, foreign office sam tney were untm. t friable 'them a, agriculturalists prottel theffl in suc services ad under sntard The foreim office states !i,ay seem that thej should' perform; the reports were due to a mistake as t tMri.itil nf V. iinll , ... J. ... .. to xne laenuty or tne uermans Been on the International traia. The Brit ish government havinar declined to very comprehensive study in jri issue a safe conduct for a German phy tr discover hny mam$ .that may Le j sician to acC0mpany Count von Lux taken to protect and augment the la-; burg on his voyage home the foreign boi supply - appurtenant to mdu v.ry offIce , endeavoring to make arrange- ovtrl aoTioniriim txti n ni-M T"Af1nniTi2r ... ..... "uu v. mentK tn nave a neutral nnvsician eo in the best Interests of the nation. -'ILe whole industrial and agricul tural situation is being subjected to the prompt and orderly progress of our military plans. It is confidently believed that great progress can be made along this line and that more effective- measure than any yet de vised can be put into operation to attain the desired' end, "It must be emphasized that this is a war of mechanics.; The need of the several armpd f ol ces for men highly, skilled ffftechn:cal and me chanical pursuits is greater than In any former war. Yet this need for specially skilled men finds the nation under a necessity for increasing its production in. almost every line of in dustry. Withdrawals of men from in dustry must be made and these with drawals must take men who might otherwise he deferred on account of their special qualifications and skill. The necessary number of such skilled men will be , obtained In one of three ways. "First, men already in the military service who have such special sfciH will be taJten f rohT the Une regiments and assigned to the staff organiza tions and departments where their skill is needed. Second, men classi fied by the selection boards, even though they may have been placed in a deferred classiflficaUon, will be withdrawn with great cure and partic ularity from the industries of the na tion for special sevice of staff cor respondents. . Thirl, men of draft age with certain educational qualification will be inducted to the service and sent to" universities, colleges and technical and secondary schools, to be instructed in technical arts until they have acquired such proficiency as will justify their assiinmont to the spe cial units that.-are;' Demg orgamzea in considerable mUmbors. "In accordance with this plan, tV provost marshal general has already called upon thetates ior some 10,000 skilled artisansihd vvill shortly call upon the States" fo 10.000 young men, graduates of grammar schools, who will be sent before the first of April to various technical and other -schools throughout the United States for a two months, couisc of training. Regularly thereafter an increasing stream of selected men will be sent through educational End other train-. ing institutions for this purpose. "To sum 'up, it may be said th$.t there" will be no sudden, withdrawal of great numbers' of men from the! ranks of industry and agriculture dur-. ing the coming summer, but that! men will be drawn In relatively small groups throughout the year in such a way as to create the least possible interference with; jtagustry: and agri culture. Men In deferred classes as well as men v in class , one will be se lected, in smjill numbers either on ac-, count of their speeial technical quali fications or for the pui pose of sending them to scbfools-w4iere they will be givenoa- opportunity, to acquire smcb, QuaUficiiiori." - -r ' with him. According to Buenos Aires dis patches on Sunday, Count von Lux burg had been granted a safe con duct by the British, government to sail for Sweden and was expected to depart shortly on the steamer Valparaiso. Count von Luxburg was handed his passports by the Argentine govern ment last September .after the dis closure of his objectionable activi ties in connection with the subma rine warfare as it affected Argentine shipping notably his message sug gesting that Argentine steamers might be "sunk without trace." n October he was ptaced in a German detention camp on the island of Mar tin Garcia, but later was taken to the German hospital at Buenos Aires, whWe he has been under treatment because of his reported unbalanced mental condition. According to the accounts from Ar gentine, there nevi has been appar ent a strong desire on the part of the Cotfnt to leave South America, and he has been openly accuoCd in the Ar gentine capital of trying to avoid re turning to Berlin Ly causing his con dition to be represented as more se rious than it actually was. Can't Be Located. Santiago, Chile, March 12. Rumors are current here that County von Lux burg, the former German minister to Argentina, has arrived in this city.' None of the newspaper correspon dents: has been able to ascertain as yet whether the rumors have basis In fact. (EDITORIAL) Absolutely failing to pomply with our request that he fur nish us with an affidavit that Mr. J! Allan Taylor did not write, inspire or suggest, nor did any one other than himself write, inspire or suggest the two previous articles that he submitted to us for publication relative to the candidacy of Mr. W. B. Cooper for the State Senate, Mr. I. S. Brown, has todav Sftnt to us a third communication,' very much longer than either of j tne two previous ones, and contains nothing at all that is ma terial to the campaign. Besides, practically everything that he has brought out in this communication ("barrine some un called for and unjustified personalities) has already been cov-!n A ered. In this communication he makes the statement that he ! ?T y A will not furnish the affidavit asked of him. That alone should dispose of Mr. Brown so far as this paper is concerned. We prefer to deal direct. The Wilmington Dispatch is first of all a newspaper and it has been the constant aim and desire of the present manage ment to make of it a first-class newspaper in every respect. From the comments we have heard, both in Wilmington and outside, we believe we have succeeded in a very large degree. We have trebled the circulation and our advertising has been built up. The paper is read in most of homes in Eastern Caro lina and delivered to them the day it is published- But we are digressing. What we started out to say was that The - .Wilmington? Dispatch isr a newspaperT-andaiot- the organ of any maivor set of rnen We have our opinions and N D ETRATE 300 YARD STATE REPUBLICANS SELECT GREENSBORO " ccept the Plane Thrown Down for Non- partisian Campaign (Special to Tbe Dispatch.) Raleigh, N. C, Ma'cl- 12. Eastern North Carolina RepUDlican clubs and the State Republican Executive Com mittee, in a meeting here today, de plored the Demociatic State commit tee's failure to A Number of Enemy ' Kilfef and Wbunded, 11 Ameri cans Returned H it ( ' : ft MANY GERMANS HAD FLED FROM TRENCHES In Hand-to-Hanc! Eighting, trieKir h Raiders Made Short. WprfIf ; of Opposition rWent Be-t. yond Objective ill" pi .1 1 H ? -.. toft i?.va Si if ! IS convictions. The paper U conducted by -newspaper niehX They ax to - nect themseiv ? and that jt had been assured by the run it along lines. that:a neWfp3per C'JHt-tO ruOH.X AC -In sud services ad-U hinder euard The foreim office states r , ' - r rT . . J V ,.rw or men that we seeht to advocate. It one or them happens to be a member orlihe paper's official family all right and good. It certainly- is no'crime to be connected with a good paper like The Dispatchi rior is it a crime to run for office. It is the paper's prerogative -to support whom it pleases for any office; this has always been the policy of The Dispatch and will con tinue to be as long as it is in the hands of the present manage ment. Any person has a right to take issue with us and, like most all other papers, we will allow a reasonable amount of space free for a discussion of fundamentals. But to allow a dis interested person to use column after column of our good space in the interest of a candidate who is opposed to the man we ad vocate, free of charge; while this same person, or some of his close friends, use the advertising columns of another paper to get the "message over is, we think, asking too much. And right here, we would like to correct a popular fallacy. A newspaper does not nave to use all communications tender ed it whether signed or unsigned; nor does it have to use all the advertising that is tendered. If the matter is objectionable, either as reading matter or advertising, it can be rejected. There is a pretty general belief in Wilmington that a news paper has to accept an advertisement whether it wants to or not. . 95,000 MEN CALLED. Washington, March 12. A move ment of 95,000 drafted men, to be gin on March 29 and continue for ive tdays, was ordered today by Provost Marshal General Crowder. .-The order calls troops from every State in the Union with the excep tion of Iowa and Minnesota. It in .cludes men remaining " from the first draft and those liable to call in the second. Just how mar-." men of the sec ond draft are affected by the order "was not stated at General Crow der's office. It & understood that the movement will virtually com plete the first draft, an that it is part of the announced plan to call registrants in small groups as fast as they can be accommodated. The apportionment for Southern States follows: Arkansas 1,511, Alabama 2,634, Florida 2,506, Georgia 5,925, Ken tucky 1,651, Louisiana 3,573, Mis sissippi 2,220, North Carolina 5,174, South Carolina " 343, Tennessee 2,753, Texas 3,943, and Virginia 2,178. - - "v'-"': "American troopsafe'&in" have raided : endorse Governor successfully German- position. This- Bickett's non-partisan proposals, and time the raid was made on the sector gladly accepted the glove thus re- northwest of Toul where the Ameri- eT thi? d! - , , 1 cans hold a line- Also they made' .: The State committee selects! ; , - - . Greensboro for the convention city. ffort aIone and Penetrated the.; but late in the afternoon had been un-, German front lines for c00 yards tyithr;r able to fix certainly the ninth, te ith out help from ther Hench ..brothers or eieventn or May. iauonai comma-f jn ijfcg . . . . ' UVv"? teeman J.?MMorebe4d-declares UJeT ' i-,"TT5,fT' Bickett auggesUonrnieie' tamouna. '"r '?-2aT?i:?c::? -9 declaring It came from higher. up.,Tbe , 4f , mi&utes $:-'.bohindv ra ; barr; : . I material - an4";fnfdnuaiiot- " itc: : .U ill, in START Of AIRPLANE 1 1 the Germans," ' aduaiciUly i expectlnv- 3JCJV. y ls I CAJ j There were some Miand -to-hand : fight- ; ing, however .with Germans who. had Washington, March 12. The start! been left in the du&outs and a nuta: of the airplane mail service between her of these were killed and , wounded. New York, Philadelphia and Washing-: Tne Americans returned without the- ;' ton, will be delayed probably as latel I0SS or a man' nav-iig spent it mm- as May 15 because landing fields at!utes witnin tne enemy unes. Philadelphia and New York have not! Raid Was Highly Successful, b&en found. The service was to have been begun April 15. SUFFRAGISTS STORM With the Anifrican Army fir France, Monday, Maich "11. An' i American raiding party entered the (German trenches along the Toul . sec-; PAI MFTTn WN ATHDQ artillery bombardment of 45 mlti-y f" OEdiyAlKJI:D ntes and brought l3ck much material'. . j an(j. information but captured no prls- Washington, March 12. Senators oners. .-ir-w'aV 'the-"lM5t"aidly, -thev! Tillman and Smith.of South Carolina, Americans 'without the" aid of the, today were presented by Mrs. Helen t French. ; 'Vt Gardiner, vice president of the Na-! The raid , was highly successful s tional American Woman's Suffrage As ! the enemy withdrew many men from: sociation, with- a petition bearing the ! the front line when the bombardment" signatures of several hundred stu- indicated that a raid might follow dents and members of the Winthrop College faculty of that State, and urg ing their support of the Woman's Suf frage Federal amendment. EXPRESS COMPANIES TO BE TAKEN OVER BIG 'WESTERN DRIVE IS NOT FAR DISTANT German Raids Are Becoming ' More Numerous and Con siderably Stronger ENEMY EFFORTS HAVE MET WITH REPULSE French have checked-strong Germaja raiding attempts. Whether to ratify the German peace terms is the question before the All Russian Congress of Soviets which meets in Moscow today. Press dis patches from Peti'ograd in the past Washington, March 12. Govern ment control probab'y will be extend ed shortly to lead;ng express com panies, it was officially intimated, to day at the railroad administration. The companies that would be affected are the Adams, American, Wells-Far-go, Southern, Great. Northern, North an, Canadian and Western. COOLEEMEE MAN COMMITS SUICIDE The raiders reported . .that American. " gunfire had created djCStrficton In ;thr German positions and had torn gaps ; : in the enemy barbed wine entangle-; ments. The German batteries came ? into action, but accomplished nothing toward disturbing the progress' of thef ' raid. - - - : ., . The Americans entered the enemy ' trenches behind ono side of -a "box; barrage, which moved forward .In1 front of them. They found numerous .. . f t : (I I 4 I I.I In, tne nana to nana i.f,nung wmcn ioj-j r lowed a number of the enemy wer -j killed and wbundei and left in th trenches. . - ' Going far " beyond their objective,' the. raiders penetratea . the German line 300 yards. A fe ' fights derel Qped on the way, but .the Germans were driven off. ' " " . The Americans failed to find most of the Germans, wco.cad. been with- German Artillery Activity is Growing in IntensityRus sian Congress and German Reichstag Meet Today The American troops have partici pated in their first raid without French assistance, penetrating the j Some support is given recent rumors German lines a distance of 300 yarZs, that many of the Bolsheviki were northwest of Toul. Elsewhere On the Western front the German raids are becoming more nu merous and stronger. Heavy bom- CoUcVinrir "M r Afn -r 1 t xt I ilnwn linrrioHIir fr.im' ITia f rmf lln. 1 few Havs have t.fuc.hed but. liehtlvi, , r. . . : . 1 - ----- j ieorora, 4& years ot age, a prominent ' aimougn iney earcnea ior i-nera. ..v. on the probable decis on the Con-, merchant and buai Jess man of Coolee . - inthe hand-to-hand fighting th gress .will take. If k is still con-, mee committed suicioe near that 1 Americans used - their . automation pli- 1"!1L night by drowning himself tols and , rifles. -. D.uing the raid, the siesa vmua.u y, .ii &J o w in a mJn Lodord tied a weight ! American machine guns piacea. a around his neck and jumped into the I barrage in the enemy back areas 19 water. He left a note at his office terms President Wilson, in a message to the Russian people, to be i3fr teUliii where Ms body iiould be found ; American sympathy and American thig mornin also left let. j support in restorlfiK complete over-jters addresse4 to his wife and broth. cratic Russia. The Fresident doesf not attempt to sway me juagment 01 the Congress with regard to peace. bardments now precede attempts tojvik commander in chief, penetrat-e the Entente positions, but prepared to refuse the German terms by the resignations licm the Lenine government of Foreign Minister Trot- zky and Ensign Kiy'euko, the Bolshe- CUBA BORROWS TO M 1 ;l. ,1 . : 4 t order to prevent a counter attack. ; ; The Americans fought so fast- nfl '7 did their work go guU-kly that . the H medical men who accompanied -jthei4 had little to do. Every, Ajnerlcia who left the front llnb returned.,' - ,V On their way back the' America 'j' encountered a. German listening post, which fired at thom. In. less tixne than it flakes to tell it the. Germ av - PREPARE FOR WAR! e post were s'lenced. . t, I The Americans reached their owe , r . . . . j lines without a G et man shell harlnr, - Washington, March 12. Another o-p.,, ihim fnr ff ally oecaine a borrower irom tne ; go u German b& in Today also has ben set for the j extended a credit of $15,000 000 ; t mto action Th3 Americans weev Lrr nf r- r?,Dfo to the Cuban government to assist it ;4ni.Mo iha onpmv n.,oa nr ie min,,t-?: the enemy has not attacked in great! nt th nat-mar. Wfl?M,afo! fnma oitTtAiitrii stn An jrf&firimAnt nf hati! .. . . . j .. ..- un var nrenarations. At the force, although an engagement of bat tie proportions probablj is not far distant. In the Ypres sector, in Flanders and around Artuentteres between Ypres and Arras, the Germans have in Berlin to vote on the ratification of the treaty with Russia, same j time Great Britain was given another ; credit of $200,000,000. Both loans Sixty German airplanes descended j were made at the new interest rate on Paris Monday night and dropped of 5 per cent. boiirbr. One of the raiders wrasj carried out strong local efforts. At i brought down in iaies by the de all points the British repulsed the en emy with loss. German artillery also has been busy at various points along the front between Ypres and St. Quen tin. In Champagne, northwest " of Verdun, and north of St. Mihiel, the fenders and its crew capturoa. Tlx, raid lasted nearly Jhreo hours. A num ber of buildings were destroyed or set on fire. The population of the French capital su jtained , casualties, but final -reports, are lacking. Peterson's Case Next Monday. (Special to The Dispatch.) Raleigh, March 12. Solicitor Nor ris announced this afternoon that the trial of Major George Peterson, charg ed with embezzlement, will be set for Monday, March 18. BRITISH HEAVY GUNS BOMBARD CAMBRAI Berlin, March 12. (Via London); Cambrai haa been bombarded by 'Ion? range Biitish guns,, according to :fc day'js amy headquarters report:, Seyv eral. hsots from British artillery of the heaviest calibre fell in ' the town,) th statement reports, . : r -