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* the earlier period of the war. Adjt. Racul Lufbrey, an American GERMANS FALL BACK, =z e oW 5[ POINTS IN DISPUTE i IN WAR ARMY BI aviator, brought down his eighth German airplane. A"RIDICIN.IOH FELT IN REGARD | MARSHAL JOFFRE TELLS NEW! TO POSSIBLE DISTURBANCI A NORWEGIAN STEAMER IN PORT AT NEW YORK " PAPER CORRESPONDENTS SO |,,/° ir oxPlosion In a munition fac: and four injured. RESISTING STRONGLY British Drove Germans Out of Trenches on the Outskirts of Gavelle TIDE OF BATTLE FLOWS IN FAVOR OF BRITISH chiefly to agriculture this summer. Arbor and Bird Day was observed throughout Massachusetts Saturday Statement Has Been Made Public |by the planting of trees and shrubs. by the Stats Department. Socialist Leader Guarantees There |A Censored Translation of Jofire’ Will be No Rioting if the Workmen Are Not Provoked. The New York Senate passed an dct making it a misdemeanor to throw balls at the head of a negro. London, April 29, 1.36 p. m.—Great| Washington, April 29.—Marshal Jof- e in regard to passible|fre told the people of America today| The mother of the late Maj.-Gen. on May day exists inlthrough Washington newspaper cor- |Frederick Funston died at the home Govell Sweden, sass an Exchanse Telegraph | rospondents who calied om him that |of her daughter in Kansas. She was ‘erritory From Arleux despatch from Stockholm, The. con- | France cherishes the confiden: hope 4 The Three Mile Stretch of T F; e 5 sorvasive partics announced on Friday | chac the fiag of the United States soon £ riata that they had organized corps of stu- ! be fiying on her battle lines. The Austrian ambassador an i of Great Battles for Su- dents ana oth ist | Victories sure to be won by the sol- | Turkish charge d'affaires will return b oalle SR e Sl e e | S o e i S e e i i i) of labor disturba: 4 fight'ng shoulder to shouider for 1ib- |been secured. premacy—Germans Failed in Counter Attack Against Teft The soclalists quickly conmtersd by | erty, deciared the hero of the Marne,| oo the Canadians Holding Arleux and Gohelle—From the Organizing similar_protection corps to|Will “hasten the end of the war and| yp, Elk Grove National Farm Loa safe the workmen. sighten the links of affection and es- |, uociation of California made appli. The whole subject of these protec- |leem which have ever united France|cgiion'to the Farm Loan Board for & - . 2 and the United States. Bend in the Line Northeast of Soissons Well Into the tion, corpe wae taken up in pariament e marshal riecived the corres. |I08° of 48200, % e Dy Sud, ey WeIrer S tos | SORSEDES Juet belers Bo . dpd other] .. oL il of Botiar,Law, Champagne the Big Guns of the French and Germans E Flntian | (are would'be ua Hating if the Work- | Wembers of the Srench war mission| Lieut C.J. Law, sop of Bonar Law, Bwarts sald arcobiyoked Premier | & o ashington ai AMount Vernon |reported wounded and missing in Pal- - . e - Are Thundering Away — Northwest of Rheims the|As=ociation. who previous fo (oo lat D b e et | e e Tt bs: | bins Taet Wodneatr. the German prison camps in the West- | " Tater 1n the day 4l partios fagiad. | Colonel Jean Fabry, “the blue devil of —_— i onsiderable A of__the France,” his chief of staff and other| The Apache Indians at Roosevelt French Have Gained C: Ground. ing the e ihe petics e eeeis- | oficary of the- commisson. . After |Dam: in Arisoah mre (0 Bave & Ereat prisoners. He said there was no seri- | T - shaking hands with the newspaper | “devil dance” to take the form of a ous food shortage In Germany before | TUSH o7 ‘he eround that den 552 | men he took from a pocket two (ype- | preparcdness demonstration. far as he had heets of ana bezan t g b ol o e B i e g e Peard o reports of lapor trowbles. | the perils of war. e Pt Avabcicart o Frendht] The Fedecal. suthoritios o6 Traiston trom en Gohelle to Gavrelle e ®|"“Among others on the ship were a officers stood just bebind him at at-|arrested two men and are holding e Germans threw 2 heaty joounterat | number of German representatives of |A GENERAL STRIKE HAS tention. three others as witnesses In connec- is Still the soene of great battles for | on maminet them, | which _ roquired 1 hree large American manufacturing con- BE When the marshal concluded, a mil- | tion with the finding of & bomb. supremacy betwsen the British and |hard work to put down witn - their |3 Jarss, American manufacturing con- [N ORUERED- 0 WIRIIA | | T the merinal concliifed. & ml- ¢ the Germans. And in them the :fle 0 T m:;“"m.“ ac- | matic relations et ’:_evemd. ’n-;z On May 1st by the Social Democratic | Which h; ‘exnl‘!llned was hurriedly | Great Britai h-] lost, u_om aviators @ ‘whi: v declined to rmit names to made an imperfect. since the first of January. ere were e e i oa g tht | used. but one of them said that ad- Party—Work to Be Resumed May 2. | ™3 o 1agt word was read and the 646 from the army and 121 from the vices reaching him just previous to non-French speaking _correspondents |navy, and 72 just jearning to Ny, s orce e e e i most | Bertin has admitted the loss to the |Saillg inalcated “tbat the labor 6. zfi“"“:fiu- Tondon, APril 29,|realized the importance of the mar-| " taken over a front of & mile in most| Berlin mit Gohelle’ and |troubles were widespread. He added.|S:20, P- m—Reports that & May day|<hars remarks there was a Burst of| Mrs. L. F. Wanner was sworn in at sanguinary fighting. The new posi- |Canadians of Arleux en e And | . That 1o LA ey ook emea 3. 2Ke place in Austria are|applause, then loud cheers. Hempstead, L. 1. as a deputy sheriff. tion lies south of Oppy and runs al- |to other parts of Field Marshal g’s be settled without serfous embarass- confirmed by the Arbeiter Zeitung of a & She has won blue ribbons at the dog most to the outskirts of Gavrelle. | &Iy of OB A Dok one Smaracier. |ment to the country amd to the war|'ienns which announces that a gen- e Fanintion: shows with her German police dogs. The Britishers went into the fray |relle and Roeux. which are character- party. The food situation in Ger- | 72l Strike has been ordered by the| A translation of Marshal Joffre's for- ith their usual spirit of viotory. The |ized as "advanced positiona® The Ger- | Perty. The food siwetior ' Cor|Austrian social democratic party fo| mal siatement iescd o the riate 95| sbiti. ut 6o Beats: Wik it Tieis- Germans resisted serongly, but King |man wer ofice adds, however. thal o= |ent. but net coriouss due fo ‘the|May I On that day will Do held a | partment was expursated and did not |, A Sy st the State House in Tren. CeorE e oud o b el A o e ama that the Beition "suffercd | policy of conservation set on foot by | SCries of meetings intended as peace | contain vital passages relating to the |ton N J. saw a man creeping toward soon drove out the defenders of the |gained and that the British suffered |Pol at the beginning of the war. |Jcmonstrations ~Work will be re. |marshal's previously known desire for | the executive wing of the building and position and entered it. Counter at- lxsfi‘:ntdl&mly heavy mlo-:‘ e Ho adaca it wonld Be & hard matter to |*umed on May 2. the presence of an American force in 4 tacks the Germans were ce the recommen . _— France. The translation follows: » i e Sravadiie and of the closs of the Gay offensive ‘Suturday (he ~umber 'O |starve the country nto mbmission. ” | GeRmANS ARE THROWING e verscordial wilcome given mo |, Mite Bankin of Wontana, wes toia She Nuttih wiee I Full_ Pl Of jpcetiece e Ger- |mark reported that there. was no suf- IN FRESH by the city of Washington and the|pl jiqent tn his bill for conscription, their new gain and in an appreciably | terially increased, nearly 1,000 |fering from food shortage in those TROOPS | expressions of sympathy which reach- | President fn Rty il e e B P L | o e, 2" nghclng ot oap | Souivis. oy (et the Avuiable ‘805 | To Defend Poitins Which Are e | 0,80 in SEsien A chics throichont 41 72 — & v i being carefully watched s ‘ward toward Doual. to Sunday evunol;{.'u. ki i e A government CORTroL Attacked by the British Forces |deeply since they arc a homage Pald| g g noet Shackleton, the Antarc- nd‘:hu sm"‘"’u"“’“‘m.a’.'; Cnatians | the effeot that Hoeus Is the scent of & | | Captain. mates, engineers and other London, April 29, 7.40 p. m.—Bitter r‘:pmeman:";:?:e French army which I|yo exploror, is in New York, and mye - [titanic struggle, the official reports |officers sufficient to man 42 steam- | fghting continued throngheat E m and jiititei ot ane LIe YoNtser ) SIoR: 't the Sorerusines e ptred Sat- | make ne meation of the Dok ships. all from Norway, were amons i ana"today On the faont ot e | solaie at i, and pesolution of the |of aisaster and that he is for con- the passengers. These men sald they offensive. Reuter’: Tnit has | Seription. e - = bad boen: SOHL: heww: b ennt‘,e;: ent at the “British neadqusrters tele: S gD S evtinis v na i o ._:,..,,.m.. General RESULT OF UNRESTRICTED CONN. STATE CONFERENCE e I T i e Fave s busy the Germans apparently | preme effort defeated and thrown back | To a Reichstag committes Genern) Lave a good idea of the al s enemy, the French arm: SUBMARINE WARFARE CHARITIES AND CORRECTION polits against which the Brition sahor e maticiusly” Iaboteft o crokse ang |Dat Sela i e B G e i T Meride PLANNING TO SEND 1,000 is Jirected and which must be carried | perfect its efficiency. And mow in the |Showed a certain amoun More Than 1,600,000 Tons of Shipping | Opened Last Evening. in = SURGEONS TO EUROPE | 25f0T® It Will be possible for the Brit- | third year of the war it is attacking | couragement. Destroyed in Two Months. Over 100 Out of Town Visitors Present b a0, B ahead again. rne | the enemy with greater vigor and ma-| | 45y Goodheim, & gloye manufact- = Germans throwing. resh | terial force than ever before. - y z Meriden, Conn, April 29.—The Tty oA the Dositions as tap-| - “Side_by. st#e with it and animaten |urer of Gloversville, N. Y. was sen- seventh conference of the Connecticut e Sy I Poalile I butry. Sem: Dt T e e i ina® ihe |two vears and mot more than four State Conference of Charities and| Washington, April 29. — Plans for| The contour of the Scarpe valley is | aciorisment will mr romnt one Sa0 |years for perjury. ping to the amount of more than 1-|Correction opened this evening. About |sending 1000° American surseons to Rehmen: pr Styorable to the estab- |miration of the world. The Germans| o .= oo === = £90.000 tons was sunk by the Germans, 100 ont of town visitors were present, SAIORS 0 Service o the allied | lishment o« perlectness of mathing | have. reaitsed in. wondertol Srowth | Sarsh Bernhardt received a tele D e e e T oealy | while others are expected to arrive to- | General Modical Board of the Council | difficult to detect and thoy mirc oLy the Thcreasing menace of its strengen, |Of the British High Commission, con- morrow morning for the general ses-|of National Defense. hard to deal with by artillery fire but | The contempt thev pretended to feel |STatulating her for the heroic fight she committee yesterday. Asserting that|sions and round table discussions of| The men will be picked by thelthey ape gradually being subdued. for it in the early days of the war has |has made for life. the submarine campalgn was proving | Monday and Tuesday. Samuel Me- | smerican College of Surgeons and the| “Just as in the last pitched battle | gradually become a dread more openly + & to_be a great success, he continued. Siord Crothers, D. D (2 ambridge. | aim is to have them on the firing line | the hottest fighting centered. averng | ooy become Aristocracy got a black eye and “The frst month's results exceiled |Mass, delivered an address on “The | within three months. Monchy, now Breux is the scene of | ~Led by its Hlustrious president, the |chivalry was dragged in the dust at the best previous results by twenty-|Spiritual Values of Social Work™ An| The announcement was made after a | the severest fighting,” the correspond- | United States has entered into this|Hempstead, L. I, when Princess Pig- five percent, the second month’s by |address on “The Call of the American | conference of the medical board today | ent writes- war. By the side of Frances in the |natelli d’Aragon was fined $10 for B e O e By twe mbatie | oea \Cross. was given by Albert W.|with Colonel T. H. Goodwin, ranking| “The Germans appreciate the tactl- defense of the ideals of mankind, the |assaulting her cook. e given but in the first two months |Staub of New York city, director of [medical officer of the British forces i |cal value of Rocus wo'e comple- | place of America is marked. - sunk exceeded |the Atlantic division of the American | France. ent to Monchy and are sacrificing | “France, which has long recognized| Mr. Reid, an American clerk in Red Cross. e offer of Surgeons for the allied | troops in droves in the effort to keep | the valor of the American soldiers, | Peking, charged with having sland- E. T. Bradstreet, M. D. of the con- | tronts came from the regents of the|the British out, but the concentration | cherishes the confident hope that the |ered President Wilson, entered a plea O e an oy (s | Ssucs. Drasided 4t tenigts mecting|Collese of Sursecns and won the fm- lof Mg British guns s making th e | o o e e O it e | ot suilty and was reicased on & in Bngland is made difficult by he|and the address of welcome was given [ mediate approval of the medical|mans puy & heavs price (ot op- | unfurled on our fighting line. This is |bond of $8,000 in gold. fact that the British government since | by Governor Cooke. Rew. John Neale, [board. It was inspired by Colonel | position. what Germany dreads. the of unrestricted subma-|Ph. D, one of the vice presidents of | Goodwin's story of difficulties Great| wAll night long the battle crashed| “France and America will see with| Capt. Emery Rice of the American Jdecided on far-reach-|the conference, gave the invocation | Britain and France are having in keep- |and thundered atouns Hoo and the | pride ana joy the day when their sons |steamer Mongolia, and Lieut. Bruce ing statistical concealment. England |and Rev. Paul A. Kirch bestowed the |ing their medical ranks filled. Iigh sun this perfect Sabbath morn- |are once more fighting shoulder to|R. Ware, who commands the gun crew could.no longer afford the publicity of | benediction. - & Sftion to gffering surgeons for |ing must be looking down upon a ver- | shoulder In the defence of liberty The |were the guests of the American Lun- e e the allies, the College of Surgeons,|itable German holocaust between the victories which they will certainly win |cheon Club in London. “From our figures one may estimate | |NGARY I8 TO HAVE With the American Medical Associa-|Chemical works and Mount Pleasant | will hasten the end of the war and the total tonnage etill avallavle for | U R o Pt the medical board's dis-|Wood. To the northward we are well | will tighten the links of affection and| A committes of Boston ai B it a PUTUEERGT P MONL REFONINS Sl Tela S A eeninatos. | onatiied T ATiect T Toa| i Hetten the links of affection end| A commiites of Weston art Amsterdam, April 29, via London, 4:30 p. m.—In the first two months of unrestricted submarine warfare ship- 000. It is clear the British merchant Deans of forty-six medical colleges | along the line of advan 3 - ing work. Sketches ad drawing for flest cannot bear sinkings at the pres- | To Facilitate Acquisition of Land by | reported to the board that they had |from the southeast of Aok Wood S = me,:;:':fd :::: to Ask Ques- |Posters will be contributed to he va- ent rate. Adequate substitutions by All Classes of the Population. decided to make no changes In their |about 1,200 vards west of Achesiiie. s = rious recruiting agencies. new construction are possible, as the == gourses toward shortening systems of | “Our ‘posts were pushed forward up tions. British increase in ships In 1816, nof Aterdam, AP B2 London, | Instruction so 4DAl jita) ORUREUOUS | to the western slope of Greenland Hiji| When the cheering died away at the| Acceptance by the government of an Jihstanding every effort, Wasnotsuf-|2.38 p. m—Important political reforms | Stream of trained medical men May|and now commend the e il | coneon ot Th resdin of e aide’s |offer of three steel airplane hangars ficient even to replace the normal di-lare to be introduced into Hungary, ac- | be supplied to the army and navy If|northward of fts summit. Between | English translation, Emile Hovelaque.|from W. Earl Dodge, a New York mfi- minuition of peace time. cortiag to advices recelved here from mix:‘fzh::'. A S of.yehey. : educe | 022 and Gavrells the struggle general caunselior of the mission, in-|lionaire, was announced yesterday by udapest. e Hungarian government ceeding with a d Y vited the correspondents to ask ques- [the Ag club of America. ENTENTE ENVOYS VISIT ia Teported to have anmounced. its in. | thelr teaching staffs to fres men for | which rendoms Tt (ot o0 tion, L TOoMI :ORG| tention to introduce bills to “extend | military service. the situation. M. Hovelaque or one of the aldes|Bacil Norman of Fitchburg, a Na- . w“_E-V/ASMINGTON democratic political reforms” and “to Hospitals, too, will cut down thefr translated the questions and the mar- n::x"J Guardsman, accidentally shot Spokesmen of Three Great Democra- | facilitate acquisition of land by all | Staffs to give the military forces the OBITUARY shal replied In French. The replies|nimselr through the left hand while on 3 largest number of physicians possible. 1y it = i i i Homage o Soiser-state. | e, o S popbitlent 7 ==L Or. Matthow T, O'Connor | eI el T n T St RIS e et 1 v / B T WA I DEitont G| | ANGERED 8Y GEN. GROENER | sithert S Gonts, A oD | B et snctny s Sk el bt | st vt . = no o - . GROEN atthew C. O’Connor, or the ol e s American Institu rehi- lh?‘x Vernon, Va., m;!:‘;‘g:: net should resign. The emperor as- of the four last .urvxrnn:h?nc:‘r;ormf was under tflh!‘flfflfy"a:; members |tects recommends that the tracks in Great Britain, Fran gures the present government of his |Who In an Appea] Denounced theiors of the Knights of (ol b ana | of France’s war mission o Riverside Park be laid at the extreme ted States floated together over |Cinfdence and support < Folitioal Teaten for forty years'e practicing physician | (atives of the American sovernment |ouitiore boundary of the park. mak . Be- A Vienna d-pn:nh‘uy- that a reich- SR — [ i hospital - this e of tue “;{:;'Pl;’“"fg’-"kq:;"' ing the westerly wall an architecturai srath committes approved unani- atte; tions were prom; y the knowl- 4 mously the issuance ehorTily of the | 1047 bt iFhe appea lomied be e |Suffered last Satindas”onicii g 35K | edze that. the o ke L sixth loan. man munition workers by General|’Connor was found in an unconscious | JSnding of an American expeditionars| George De Van Aken, of Inwood, L. The fitth Austrian war loan was |riitions, n which he Schoniaca iy |lerter Carmier. o was triey 17 o |The last one agked. Marshal Joffre |L has beeh swarded u bronse Car fioated only a short time ag0. An oM | Milikers: va pontial teanene nos sthg [Hospital. where physicians k- Arst be” | bowed low and Jeft the room with his Frederick Chapin in Jamaica Bay. Jan. clal Spmouncement of the ‘total sub- |ihey would be suppressed with the|lleved he had been overcome by sas S et 1n the Gay the correspondents |- 1915 _Van Aken went throush the scribed, about $1,250,000,000, was made | full’ force. of The lers hag reraited g |1eaking from a gas heater 1o nis ol | L 4 “gents|ice to et Chapin Betore the tomd the eversreen trees|!™ Vienna on April 7. sharp criticlam in the reichstag main |Further examination disclosed that he | 30 Mormed thay 't was the, desire ” re i P : o & of the French mission that their con- : Line e iRl . ool sign o Ieos | CligRicAL COMPOSITION o Eiom oariaiiet S et e T e e s 1 Brsoliys ot bg peMnma iy they ad e e erov o oy ITION To : 5 2 not be pul S ey €eD . Bismarck: a turbine steamer of 20.- change since Washington was laid to appeal is not made in a tone in which Soon after being grad- E e e i B B ; rem so long ago was the fiags of the MAKE AIRPLANES FIREPROOF |free-thinking workmen should be from the College of Physicians :;,':m‘;;,flo,,“, S eniate department 279 100¢ tons and three other vessels of an thres allies over the arch tran 3 T — e ey f= Weing ::-;v;fi:fl;d by the Aero|strikes cannot be avoided.” Eiehte oo s connection with the | Rene Viviani, head of the French mis- RS Saev Wb iment” gathering, Including the mer- = R . a lUfelong member, he was one of the | 5o CINSE toniehl WICE Henry White, New York, April 29—A liquid |archial times. There can be no separa- |founders of the Knights of St. Patrick, | 7ong BON N RBIERNE = chemical composition _which tion of the economic S8 semncal 8- ;’m""flm_‘,mm‘ T et b Entertained by Gemera! Scott. GERMANY ARE TO BE TREATED congress claimed will make all inflammable |mands of workmen. ere is no po- . Joseph H., ster, . s up through the sloping grounds from |parts of an airplane Areproot. ihecee | itical movement which is net a9 Tue E e S Mt a0t % INot as Enemy Foreigners, But Merely the river bank unti] perhaps half aleliminating ore of the greatest dan- |Same time economic.” Rear Admiral S. L. P. Ayres, U. S. N.| &5, en . as Non-Neutrals members of the military section at hundred people stood with bared heads | gers ‘that war aviators ‘mow faes, Herr Baver said: “The orders from |~ Philadeiphia, Apri e ol i B action At semi-circle before the tomb. The military headquarters e . Fran 3 R T e e e Yol 0 §Thie to workimen. | The Roas o e -|ant secretary of the navy, entertained | Berlin. Saturday. April 23, Via Lon as the party approached om the which cannot possibly im- | disease Admiral Crocheprat and members of |don. April 29. 1:10 p. m.-—Although , suddenly cleared and sun- Dress them. The governmont ought to z the navai section, headed by ~Mr.|the police circular ordering Americans light through the trees, maintain contact with organized la- n L e | i vaniatn | 1oty ek 0 D, Without formality, Secretary Dan- bor, The result is that such appesis e e e s § % 1 s O okt Atger 15 metioned fo M Yivianl, ménister | snabling the substitution of wood for |8 ihia are instigated in political Guar- e T e | eaneiars to. be tronted Demoerortl &e i R stoel. .. 3 embers of the mission and the|enemy foreigners, officlals of the s Dahrans Saie: “The_ sbpesl 4 matabers attachod £o It have shaken |forelgn office say this Is true only in 28 RACE HORSES BURNED badly worded. Empioyers who profit hands with several thousand people (modified form. At the foreign office AT BELMONT PARK | workmen's iiberee. cngheto be- am e e e et N | e e Y s sot sesoy % French officers, after greeting | nized the American declarat the with sharply. The same applies to April 29 Jesse ::n:hl.n uniform, remarked: “Your ar- e:lne‘m of a state of war and that d t appear so small.” therefore Americans are not enemy T Colonel Fabry, at one of the recep- |{orcigners. but merely mom-neutrais. General Petain Promoted. tions, turned to an American navy They point out the fact that the po- New York, April 29—The stable of| Paris, April 29, 9.30 p. . officer and satd: “T have lost my le%. |lice rules with reference to Americans Schuyler L. Parsons and 8. K. Petain,” who commanded Now I dom’t know what is going to|are less strict than those appiied to horess quariered thurs| i e e el Who are not intored. " Fhey and the 26 race - s wi n are re- died in the flames. cavalry, field | quired to report twice daily to the po- The fire 1s believed to have been of coast artillery arms of |lice. Moreover, the police have been in. On 7 six the officers’ reserve corps have been |dirccted to waive the rules wherever cendiary original. “April incendiary fires were set at the park ordered into active service by Presi-|possible. In the meantime all Ameri- and 31,000,000 damage done. ? 3 dent Wilson. - cans are reauired STUDENTS AS POLICE|TO HASTEN END OF WAR| Th: foreery, doparimems of Marvacd | op oo oo Age Limits at 21 to 27, House Them From 21 to 40 OVERWHELMING VOTE FAVOR OF CONSCRIP Senate Passed the Bill by Vote of 81 to 8, House 397 to Congress Will Go to Work Today to Smooth Aws Differences in the Drafts in Army Bill is Passed- Chief Clashes Will Arise Over the Maxmum scription Age—Senator Lafollette Threatens to to Obstructive Tactics. Washington, April 29—By over- whelming majorities both the senate and house passed late last night the administration bill to raise a war army by selective draft. e final roll calls brought into line behind the 'bill ‘many senators representatives who volunteer army until routed by cisive defeat of volunteer amendments carlier in the day in both houses. The senate, which had voted down the vol- unteer plan, 69 to 13, passed the bill by a vote of 81 to 8. In the house the vote against the volunteer plan was 313 to 109 and that by which the bill ftself was passed was 397 to 24 As passed by the senate the measure provides for the draft of men between the ages of 21 and 27 years, which in the house measure, the ake limits are fixed at 21 ard 40. This and lesser dis- crepancies will bé threshed out in con- ference early this week so that the bill may be in the hands of the pres- ident ns quickly as possible. The war | department already has completed plans for carrying it into effect. Senators who voted ugainst the bill were: Democrats—Gore, Harwich, Kirby, Thomas and Trammell—five, Republicans—Borali, Gronna and La Follette—three. Total eight. Senator Vardaman of Mis«issippi, democrat, was excused from voting at his own request. FHe. did not give a reason The 24 representatives who voted in the negative were: Democrats—Rurnett, Church, Clark of Florida, Claypool, Crosser, Dill, Dominick, Gordon, Hilliard, Huddle- ston, Keating, Sears, Sherwood, Sisson —4! La Follette, Lundeen of Minnesota, Mason, Nolan, Powers—eight. Prohibition—Randall—one. Socialist—London—or:e. Total 24. CONGRESS TO SMOOTH AWAY DIFFERENCES Between the Drafts of the Army Bill s the Senate and House. Washington, April 29.—Congress will go to work tomorrow to smooth away differences between the drafts of the army bill as passed last night by the senate and house. With the administration’s plan of raising the country’s millions of fighting men by selective draft accepted in both houses by overwhelming majorities, it is re garded as certain that points in dis. put can be disposed of in conference 5q that the measure may go to the Republicans — Bacon, Hayes, King, | president for his signature bef end of the week. move to Iimitiess | debate After for that night or out by consent during mitfee, opening age, the training dlers. Parliamentary Tangle. The parliamentary ta from the almost simult by the two houses require be made on the sen The bill must me repassed 1 opportunity, unde; terpretation of the rules, and amendment. It 80 to conferenc h the task that of harmonizing houses on the maximum e ge, fixed by the senate at e house at 40 years. preliminary sine row, probably including on the resolutions regar: roads’ application for- in |rates, the senate w anew, with a motion b draft’ section as p: which came Technically the bilj » unrestricted discus. leaders hope it can ¥ out protracted deba Tuesday. Threat by Senator Lafc Senato others who considered the agreement to midnight, presented the nw tor regarding speeding the conference, Renar threatens to block futore s L t G voting agreement press his amendment for referendum on conseriptio tor Gronna has an amendmes htbit manufacture of grain the wa Senato lain, - chairman of *he milit expressed the hope however, sideration will be brief. e was confident that the amt tion advoeates would not = fight and that the senate we little patience for an ext that the senate’s furthe of general discussic Chief Clash Over Maximum In conference, the chief clasie arise over the maximum cons senate’s decisive approw: the house’s refection of the g designed to recruit a volunteer force f diate service abroad, and the clause prohibiting lguor sal to permit Colonel camps and to uniforme Sentiment in the overwhelming against _cons r thirty years Hous regarded as eq ed to accept nothing less thas year maximum. MYSTERIOUS SHIP SIGHTED OFF VIRGINIA COAST. Captain of a Standard Oil Tanker Be- New York, April a Standard Oil tan arrived here today s: that he had no doubt that a mysterious ship which he sighted on Thursday night and Fri- day morning off the Virginia coast was the German raider Seeadler. The stranger was a four-masted bark and had all sails set, but in a six knot breeze she was proceeding 10 or 11 knots, the oil ship's skipper reported, and ft was obvious she was equipped with motor power. The tanker was coming from Mex- ico. bringing ofi and towing a barge, also laden with oil. Shortly before § o'clock on Thursday night, according to the captain’s log, the bark was sighted 15 miles south of the Diamond Shoals lightship, off Cape Hatter: The bark steercd across the tanker's etern and disappeared. At 12.30 a. m. on Friday she return- ed. the captain said, and came along- side. Forty-five minutes after being sighted she had passed close across the tanker's bow and disappeared. Several vessels arriving at American ports recently have reported the pres- Jressed. As long as grievinces exist, [and Surseons of New York, he came|.ng answers would be given out later. |Svorage of 22000 tons ~oat Bremen jence of strange vesseis in the Atlan- tic. In marine circies here little credence has been placed in reports t Seeadler was operating off the American coast. UNOFFICIAL ACCOUNTS OF WAR TAG BILL AROUSED STORM Democrats Are Understood to Bo Di- vided on the Proposed Income Tax Washington, April 29 counts of the house - sub-committee framing bill have aroused a =torm democrats and republicans crats are understood to be divided o the proposed income taxes particular- ly the rate on incomes of more than trouble over the sub-committee’s plans for taxes on excess profits and in- comes. They also promise to make a fight for tariff legisiation to raise a part of the $1,500,000,000 or more to be Provided during the coming year. Even members of the full commit- tee are without authoritative inform- which is to be presented at a meeting Foreign will be weeks.” the fact Petrog 50 p, m—An n Boston, April 29 —Amer work for Armenians and Turkey will continue, notwi the severance of diplomatic with that country, according statement given out tomight James L. Barton, secretary American Board of Commissic the Turkish cabinet were not & of breaking with the United “The fact that even fs at war with Great bave permitted so many ish missionaries under { board to remain at their undisturbed at- their work gestion at least that we equally sympathetic tre oldiers, AMERICAN RELIEF WORK FO AMERICANS AND SYR Not to be Interrupted by Severance of. Diplomatic Relat Missions. Although fcation may be hindered for says the statement. “we f funds enough in carry on the relier work The American Committed) fo menian and Syrian relief hi Constantinople from the beg over $1,300,000. Of this $% gone sin. Germany, and early §700,006 i sent since the middle of Des “For the present,” saye Dr. “it is impossible to communi letter with the missionaries key, but we do not expect the condition will be long continue recent despatch to the state ment from Ambassador &I 00 the diplomatic bres that the great major ANTI-PACIFISTS PARADE STREETS OF PET |A Thousand of Maimed, Bands and Convalescent Soldier on n motor lam sembled this m >utss $100.000 whi'e republicans threaten |cathedral and paraded the strssty the starins of “The Marsstiies Scores military of one-legged men Ben decorations bravely hob along on their cruftches, whils & others were glad to accept the Nal arms of riurses. The banners &% in the procession bore inscriptions viting “Lenine and company” 6 ation as to full details of the draft|back to Willlam. (Nicoll Lelns radical vooescs soclalist separate peses