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assistant; homatsu, miral Xato. Military experts—Maj. Gen. Kuni shike Tanaka, imperial Japanes: army; Maj. Gen. Slwl]l Otake, 1. J A.; Maj. Gen. Ha.sutaro Haraguchi l} 3. A} Lieut. Col. Uuruji Tat kawa F. Ono, assistant, and T private secretary to Ad- SERVED AS HONORARY PALLBEARERS FOR UNKNOWN SOLDIER MANY FAMED MEN HERE FOR PARLEY World Leaders in Various Branches Gather to Cure k.ms Evil. REPRESENT NINE NATIONS Lieut. Col. Noboru Mo-ita Maj. Kanichiro Ta!hlro. I J. A ; Maj. Tsuncnarl Hara, I J. Maj Tanehide Furushiro, L J. A.; MII] Ka- nichi Nisalhara, L Capt. Ta a- masu Isekl, Dr. K. M ima, Genj.ro Watanabe, T. Kalzuka, assistant, and T Furusawa, assisiant. Legal experts—Seunosuke TYolkota, :sident of the bureau of legisl:t.on: iroku Hayashi. counselor of foreign ice; 8. Tachi, professor of the Im- crial University; T. Negishi, profes- r of th- Imper al Univ rsity. and 8 Matsumu 'l; counselor of the bureau of legislatio: Financial experts--Akira Den. finan- clal attache of embassy at Washing- ton; Tsunetaka Komuchi, secretary of department of finance; Yutaro To- mita, secretary of department of finance; Takeo Kawagoye, secretary of department of finance; Mr. Iriye. assistant; Hisano. assistant: Mr Ishikawa, istant; Eigo Fukal, di- rector of the Bank of Jagan, and Ma- surosuke Odagirl, director of the = Greatest Group of Noted Foreigners in History of Wash- ington. Never before has there gathered in HIGH ARMY AND NAVY OFFICERS IN Washington such an aggregation of distinguished foreigners, including ! statesmen, soldlers, naval officials and officers, masters of International Jurisprudence and technical experts in many lipes. The nine countries represented in the conference have sent of thelr best talent. f The full list of principal delegates, advisory Loards and technical staffs zollow: The United States _delegates— Charles Evans Hughes, Sccretary of tate; Eiihu Root, former 8 nator and cx-Secretary of State; Henry Labot J.odge, senator from Massachusetts; c Underwood, senator from | Advisory committee—George Suth- | rland of Utah, ex-senator, who is inted a justice of the s Su]‘romu Court when & < the (I:l-‘ganon unselor of embassy, secutary Ed- selor of embassy, sec- tary; Philip H. Patchin, Depariment secretary; Henry Suydam, opartment of State, secreiarys . L. Jlayer, first secretary of embassy, scretary; W. P. Cresson, secretary: Tithgow Osborng, secretary: Seth Low Pierrepont, secrStary; J. G. D. Paul, scretary; Warden McKee Wilson, cretary of embassy, assistint T. L. Daniels, third secre- lar)’ of mbassy assistant secretary. erson Patterson, third, secretar: ssistant secrefary; J. O. ecret.ry of embass: John M. Vo protocol, etc.— Robert third assis‘ant secretary Robbins. counse- of state; arles Lee Cooke, r of emb: partment 0! second secretary of embassy. Millard, third secretary of em: «alifornia, Secretary of Commerce.i en. John J. Pershing, chief of staff! Army; Rear Admiral W. L. of the Navy; Stephen G. vania, representa and chalrman of the! on foreign affairs; Gov. Jormer progressive, Menry P Fletcher of Pennsylvanial ndersecretary of state; Col. J. M. Wainwright of New York, assistant ccre.ary of Col. " Theodore Roosevelt of York, assistant | Mrs. Charles s JI ter Bird A therine Phillips Edson of California, e Erenor Eoniion Egan oI New York, a writer, who has resided in the far east; Mrs. Thomas G. Winter of | Minnesota. president general of the Federation of Women's Clubs; Wil- liam Boyce Thompson of New York. financier; Willard Saulsbury of Dela- ware, ex-senator: Samuel Gompers of ! the District of Columbia, president of | the American Federation of Labor; | John L_Lewis of Indiana, president of the United Mine Workers of Amer- ica; Walter George Smith of Penn vania. lawye and publi:ist: Carm Thompson of Ohio, former Treasurer | of the United States; Charles 8, Bar- rett of Georgia. president of the Natlonal Farm Bureau; Harold M Sewell of Maine, former min:ster to Hawaé n~d consul wam~ral in Lim'tation of armamont—For Department of State: Henry P. Fletch- er, undersecretary of state; J. Reub'n Clark, special counsel to the Depart- ment of State. H For the War Department: Maj. Gen. George O. Squier, radio and electrical gommunications _ gencrally; Maf. ~Gen. C. C. Willinms. chi o Brig. Gen. William mdwn aviation ; Brig Gen Amos A Fries, chemical ; Col. John A. McA Palmer, rganization and gencra! mt'itary Subjects: Col. B. FL Wells, organization and general mili‘ary subjects; Lieut. Col. Stuart Heintze'man. mi‘itary intel- ligence and o.ganization of - foreien armies; Dr. Louis Cohen. civillan radio ; enrince- Siew |- For the Navy Department: 'rh.-odore! Rooseve t. assis ant secretary of the navy: Admiral Robert E. Coonts, tech- nlcal expert-general; R-ar Admiral Wiliam A. Moffett, aeronautics; Capt. Willlam V. Pratt, technical exp ; Capt. Frank H. Schofleld, tech- nical expert-general; Capt Luke Mo~ Namee, tochnical exp-r - ne T Nimuet W Brvant communications; L. W._Austin, ra Ch mical warfare—Prof. Edgar F. Smith, University of Pennsylvania, and | Army and Navy officers. Pacific and far eastern questions— John Van A. MacMurray, chief, division of far eastern affairs, Deparmeni of D. C. Poole, chief, division of Russian affairs, Department of Stat E. T. Williams, formerly chief, division of Far ers m_~airs 1y ment of State: N. T. Johnson, Depart- E. L. Neville, Depart- Prof. G. H. B'akes ee, Ciark University ; Stanley K. Hornbeck, Department of State: J. S. Abbott. De- partm-nt of Comm rce: F P L~ kh Department of State; J. P. Jamieson, Depai n. .t ol Sae, Kobeil & woone ard, Department of Siate; F. L. Mayer, Department of State; J. O. Denby, De- pertm ot of State, and J. L. Donaldson, epartment of State. Other Activities. Legal ques'ions—F. K. Nielson, so- licitor of the Drpartment of State; Chandler P. Anderson, formerly coun- salor, Department of State, and Prof. ‘ George G. Wi son. ‘mic queutlons and merchant marine—Dr. W. S. Cu'berson, commis- | sioner, United Stales Tarlff Commission, ! und Daniel H. Cox, United States Ship- ping Board. Communications — Leland Harrison, oounselor of embasey: 8 W, Stration, Departnient of Commerce, J. H. Dil-: linger. Department of Commerce; Wal- | ter S. Rogers, Depar'ment of State, and ; Army and Navy officers. i For the press—Phillip H. Patchin and ' Henry Suydam. Archives—D. G. Disbursing omwr—wu!hm G. Mec- assistant. Téchnical Staf. Technical staff of the American | & gelegation: S Ucheral—John ¥an A. MacMurray,| ehief, division of far eastern affair: Department of State; D. C. Poole, ehief, division of Russian affairs, De- fiarunen( of State; Prof. E. T. Wil- ms, former chief, division of far eastern aff irs, Department of State; J. Butler Wr'ght, counselor of em- bassy: Leland Harrison. counselor of | embassy: Edwurd Bell, c.unselor of embassy; Prof. G. H. Blakeslee, Cllrkl University: W. S. Rogers, Department of State; Nelson T. Johnson, Depart- mant of State, E L. Neville, Depart- ment of State; S. W. Str tton, di- rector, bureau of standards, Depart- ment of Commerce; J. H. Dillinger, Department of Commerce; Prof. Ed- I gar F. Smith, University of Pennsyl- vania; Willlam S. Culbertson, United States Tariff Comm'ssion; Frederick K. Nielsen, solicitor, Department of State; Chandler P. Anderson, former counselor, Department of State; J. Reuben Clark, former solicitor, De-|, partment of State, Prof George G. ,"Wilson, Harvard University. For the Army—Maj. Gen. James G. Harbord, Maj. Gen. George O. Squ'er, Maj. Gen. C. C. Williams, Brig. Gen. Wlllll.m Ilne.vll. B\'lx Gen. Amos A. 'ries, Ct John Palmer, Col Nalr., - Editor—Gatllara Hunt; J. L. Dune-.n.‘chntneld K. C. M. ector of military lnlolll ; 1 - deputy dire i Ay | :Ou Hou. Kwang-Yi Ch i | mint; Tung-Fan Hsu. secretary in the | nando Bussett! for Representative Meda. Military advisers—H. E. Lieut. Gen. Gluseppe Vaccari, chief of staff of Italian army: Lieut. Col. Natale Pen- rimalll and Lieut. Col. Curio Bar- bassettl. Naval advisers—H. E. Vice Admiral Baron Ferdinando Acton, Commander Prince Fabrizio Ruspoli and Lieut. Giulio Ragadeo di Torrequadra. Aviation advisers — Col. Riccardo Meizo. military aviation, and Lieut., Col. Alexxandro Guidonl, naval avia- tion. ‘Technical advisers—Gr Uff. Fran- cesco Quattrone, commissioner gen- eral of Italy, honorary minister pleni- potentiary; Commander Giuseppe Gen- tile, honorary minister plenipoten- tiary; Commander Domenico Gidoni, iaccountant general of the Bank of Italy, delegate of the ministry of lheI treasury; Commander Francesco Glan- .nini, commercial attache to Italian embassy at London; Cav. G B. Cec- cato, commerclal attache to Itallan embassy at Washington; Commander Adolfo Vincl, counselor of emigration Italian embassy at Washington and Commander Vito Catastini, director of division to ministry of colonies. Attaches —Commander Alessandro Sapelli. Count David Constantini, Sigilfredo Antonini and Dr. Franco Bruno Averardi. Specfal attache—Signora Olivia Ros- &ARADMIRALCRAS‘PPWNKET‘I Mas. GEN WC szum. Harris -Ewing 7 rectorate of operations and Intelli- gence. and W E Ta'or Economlic_s-ction—Sir H. Llewellyn Smith. G. C. B.. economic adviser t0 . gett] Agrestl, H. M. government. and W. Carter,' Clerks — Mario Buonom private secretary to Sir H. Llewellyn | Matteo. Mr. Canepa. n.?'y ur:lexl-llcl,chlse('l'e Smith. | Odorico. Mr. Serino and Mr. Contl. Australian section—E. L. Plesse, ex- Admira) Kate B pert on Pacific questions, and D Reid, ; Fa) Nate: Hends' d8 private s -cretary to Senator l;[esr:a. ! Delegates—Admiral Baron Tomosa- Canad.an section—A. erriam, buro Kato, minister for the navy; principal clerk in the department of : ooy affoirs: Baron Kijuro Shidehara, ambassador at Washington; Prince Iyesato Toku- odisn slei:nocn—acol Lo . gawa. president of the house of peers. G. L. Corbett, 1. C. S. - Secretary general—Maninae Hant: Publicity section—Sir Arthur Wil- hara, vice minister for foreign affairs, lert, K. B. E, and Robert Wilber-: General sec etariat—Tsuneo Matsu< force, assistant. dllu chief of the bureau of Euro- Secretariat—Lieut. Col Sir #1 P. A. n’ and Ame-ican affairs, fo-eigr Hankey, G C. B. secretary to Britisk Sifice: Katsull Debuchi. cognseror of empire delegation: L. C. Christie, sec- | embassy: Sadao Saburl. cofinselor of retary for Canada; G. S. Knowles. sec- : cmbassy; Toru Takeo, consui gen ral; | retary for Australia; E. O. Mousley.lm -ichi 'Kimura, secretary; Yotaro| secretary for New Zealand, and G. Suzuki, first secrctary of embassy Bajpal. 8 cretary for India. | Yotoro Sugimura, secreta~y of foreigr Cabinet secretariat—C. Longhurst, joffice; Hachiro Arita, first secretarv C. B., assistant secretary; Capt L F. of embassy; Hiroshl Saito, consul urgis assstant secreiary: Com | Shulchi_Sako, “secretary of forelgn(Stol oZ D10 WY 97 T Solonies PRRRR T TR fedems mander H. R. Moore, D. 8. O., assist-'office; Ei}i Amau, secretary of foreign ant_secretary; Lieut F. S. Rawlins !office; Foshio Iwate, secretary of for- M B E, chief clerk. and F. W. Owen, | eign office: Shigeru Kurlyama. second M. B E secretary of embassy; Toshio Shira- tori, secretary of foreign office; Masa- haru Shibatsuji. third secretary of embassy; Renzo Sawada. third secre- tary of embassy; Ita-o Ishil. t-ird secretary of embassy; Shuh Tomil third secretary of embassy; Eiji Ki- sh'da. secretary of foreign office; Shoichi Nakayama. third secretary of embassy; Hirofumi Terashima, secre- tary of foreign office; Isago myo. secretary of foreign office: Kanszo Shiozaki. third secretary of embassy; Takarobu Mitani, third secretary of embassy; Tatsuo Kawal. third secre- tary of embassy; Chuichi Ohashi_third secretary of embassy; Renkel Tsuda, B. H. Wells, Lieut. Col. Stuart Hela‘lv zelman, Louls Cohen. For the Navy—Admiral Robert E. Coontz, Rear Admiral William A. Moffett, Capt. William V. Pratt, Capt. Frank H. Schofleld, Capt. Luke Mec- Namee, Capt. Samuel W. Bryant, L. W. Austin. British Delegation. Delegates: Great Britain—The Rt. Hon. David Lloyd George. O. M. prime minister and first lord of the treasu (as soon as circumstan e permit); the Rt. Hon. A. J. B-lfour, O. M. M. P.; the Rt Hon. Lord Lee of Fareham. G B. E_K C B. the Rt. Hon. Sir Auckland Geddes, K. B. (in the absence of the prime min- ister or any other delega‘es). Canada—The Rt Hon. Sir Robert Borden.-G. C. M. G, K. C. Australia—Senator the Hon. G. F. | Pearce, Australian minister of de- fense. New Zealand—Sir John Salmond,| K. C.. judge of the supreme court of New Z:@ nd. India—The Rt. Hon Sprinivasa Sastri, member of the vice regal council of the government of India. Forelgn office section—R A C. ling, C. M. G., counselor in iu:!l;gmu ic service, assistant sec. Delegates M. Arisiide Briand, retary in charge of the American de-|president of the council. minister of partment of the foreign office. L The toretien affalra; M. Rene Viviani, dep- Rt Hon B JoN & formerly H 1| Uty. former president of the councll; minister at Peking; M. W. Lampson,: M. Albert Sarraut, senator. minister M. V. O. counselor In H M diplowof colontes. and M. Jules Jusserand. m;’fp_;::",‘::m‘ e e Smra: | ambassador of France to the United States. 1kin. G.. assistant le. gllvzdv"i:er. F. "Ashton-Gwatgin, 2d,, Secretary general—Philippe R!r(he- Secretary in H M _diploma.i- servic | lot, secretary gemeral of min 3 H_ H Quarmby, O. B E. establish-!forelgn affairs. with rank of amb jment and accounts officer. ador of France, and Massigli, as- K. Wigram, D. S. D.. and Delegates From France. L ‘Admiralty section—Adimniral c' the | sistant “"eh!lr!' general third secretary of amh;m Tsunetaro Fleet Earl Beatty, O. M. G. C. B,| [Experts chosen: Yamamoto. translator of . foreign ‘or_militaty questions—Gen. Buat, S C. V. 0. D. 8 0., first sea Slora Col. Roure. Col Requin. Capitaine hima, attache of . 1, < Paymaster OB :‘ecr;r{gxgpl?;!rgifl Koets and Lieut. de Colbert. . For _naval questions—Admiral de eatty: Rear I A 5 O iBon. Capitaine de vaisseau Frochet M Dupuy, Capitaine de corvette Oden- dal and Lieut. de vaisseau d’Anselme. For legal questions—M Fromageol. For rolitical questions—M. Kam. embassy:; Yoshlakl Miura. secretary of foreign office; Akira Oml. attache of embassy; Yoshio Yonaivama, trans- lator of foreign office: Chuichiro .Ha- rada, translator of forelgn office. ‘Takeo Ishii, secretary of foreign :(m:f’{o;hh: Sugly: m: vln'c ‘consul; atsu; naha'a. attache of foreign fi"!;""':":‘::fi;g’:}“::,f;“'::r." 804 office: Totaro Takayanagi, translator | For financial and economic ques-!of “"'9""' offices L2 tions—M. Casenave, minister plenipo- |3t{ache o (:g{,:'l’g'i l!llllll Dk moto. a hief of mvnl staff; Capt BB Domville, C. M. G.: director ur pllnl mvmlon, C t F. C. Dreyer, s B. B dibcctor of gunnery dlv!nlon, Capt. 3. C. Llllle. C. B, di- reclor of trade division: Comm-nder . Bower, D. S. O., assistant direc- tnr “of plans division; Instructor- Commander G. V. Rayment. C. B. E. n.val intelligence division: t, C. B., principal staff assistant secre- : A. W. Street, private secretary lord. to‘?ral_l office sention—en. the Ear of Cavan, K. P, G. C. M. G, K. C. B, M V. O. G_O. C Alcr!hol eom mand; Lieut. E H. Gage. M. C., aide- de-camp-to Lord Cavan; Col W Bartholomew. C. B, tentlary, and M Chevsson. For colonial questions—M. Du- chesne, M. Touzet, M. Garnler and M. ; Geraud. +T. Iwagal chancellor: T. oo 'fh:lr’l::!“:r S, Tanska chancellar; ¥ 3—Capi- IC chancellor; ‘amasal chan- '.}:.:rnleehr:r:““ul Question o Jcellor; K Kato. chancellor; T. Saku- w72 cables and wireless telegraph— | ral. fkhlg‘l;;“",o: ‘:l";.;‘l'c-‘l:'-;srkmA Shencer A ea 3 T Cacalial: waFfareM. Monren, chancelors A Bobr i b Fc;a :%: prou—Ma %on.co.(‘ ‘liu canlllnmy- ch}::r::lorghv. 01‘1“' eluns ;:el- eron an T atin. ura, lancellor; 0~ Interpreters—M. Cameriynck and bayashl _chancellory M Nakatant M Denaint. chancelior: S. Tanabe. assistan Italian Delegates. Misushima. assistant. and 8. Mochl- Delegates—H. E. Carlo Schange juki. chancellor senator, president of the delegation: | NY&l experts—Vice Admiral Kan- H_E. Vittorio Polandi Ricel, Itahan ! |Capf E‘K‘:flfllm’;f'uY J."n.h.l.l ?,. ambassador; H. E. Senator Luigi Al- O amanaanty Crpt. Masabaru Kojima, L g‘?fi;%' M‘;:,d._ H Representative | gy pisaburo . Nomura, 1. J. General ucre!lmt—llnrquh Gio- | Nobumasa 3"’"""" LJ. " vanni Visconti Venosta, secretary T oMhE general of delegation: Count Enrico L J. Pagliano. counselor of deiegation. and Cav. Gluilano Cora. first secretary of delegation. vate seoretaries—Cav. Bosio for Senator Schanszer, Vittorio Falorsi for Am or Ri ¢l, Signor Leonardo Albertint -for ' Takel, I Senator Albertint and Gr. Uff. Ferdi- aelor to the uw daunmt. K Bhllu. 1 - Ker, C. M O mlllury intelligence dl- Lieut. Col..D. Forster, C. 8. 0. military npernlonu Lieut. Col. F. 8. G. gott, D. S. O, military auuha at Tokla. and Lieut. Col. M. F. staft duties A?lroctxl;ns.' = rnflnlsl section—Air Vice Mar- M rym gins, C. B.. D. 8. lecond in command, Lieut Commlnder Ahlrn Klu'-p J. N - Lieut. Commander H. i Firat Lieut. deputy director, Torso Kuwa- First Lieut. Yoshihike to Pummu DII d llonl and lntelllsence. Flight Lieut A. R. Arnold, D. 8. O, D. F. G, aide- de-camp to Air Vice Marshal Higgins. Flight Lieut. R. Gambier-Parry, membe: of the hous: Osagewa, secretary of the department of communication; Mr. Ean i Ma {the United States Yokahoma Specle Bank. Other experts—Baron Nalbu Kanda, of peers; Mr se~re- tary of the department of imnerial railways: Mr. Seko, secretary of the house of peers; Mr. Ich'hashi p-o- fessor in Leland Stanford University; Mr. Ota, Mr Sakai and Mr. Oka. Foreign ad.!sers—F Moore, H. Moore. B. McFall. D D. L. McGrew and D. 8. Richardson Amhassador Be'glam's Delegate. yleleente — Baron de Cartler hienne, Belgian ambassador de to Techni al ad‘sers — Felicicn Cat- tler, president of the Banque d'O-tre: mer and honorary professor of Brus sels University; Chevalier de Wouters d'Oplinter, vice president of the Banque Belge pour I'Etranger and ex-legal adviser to the Chinese gov ernment, and Jules Jadot, head man- ager of the Lung-Hal rallroad. Attache—Lemafre de Wa:zee d'He. malle, counselor of embassy, attached to Belgian delegation. Secretary general—Pol le Telller, first secretary of embassy. Assistant secretary general—Robert Silvercruys, secretary of embassy. Chinese Delegation. Delegates—Sao-Ke Alfred Sze. min- Ister at Washington; Vi -Kyuin Wel- lington Koo. minister at London: Dr Chung-Hui Wang, chief justice of the supreme court. and Chao-Chu Wu. Superior advisers—Yu Liang (M. T. Liang). ex-minister of foreign affairs, | and Tzu-Chi Chew, recently minister of finance. Advisers—Vice Admiral Ting-Kan| Tsai. associate director of the revenue | council; Lieut Gen. Fu Hwang ad- viser in the president’s office: Chia-Jui: Wang. secretary of the bureau of | |printing and engraving of the cab-| jinet; Wen-Kan Lo vice director of! law codification bureau. former chief of Peking procurator’s court, and Dr. Hawkling Yen Technical advisers — Yu-Chuen Cheng T. Y. Teng. Chin Tien Chow. Te-ching Y a Tu, Lun Chang, Tien-Chi Yaung and Kwal Yung. Counselors—Yen Lui, e: retary of Chung-Yu Wang. | brother of Wang Chung-Huif: Mun- Yew Chung, directorate of Shanghal iforeign office_and Shantung govern- ment's office; newspaper New Soclet Ta-Chan | Wang, t:anslator in the foreign office, and Shih-Chan Wen (honorars) Secretary general — Philip K. C, Tyau, recently sgenior couns-lor of foreign office, now minister to Cuba, and Yun-Siang Tsao, counsclor of forelgn office, assistant secrutary gen- ral. eral secretariat: Directo's — Pau-Yien Wu. Chao- Hslung Zee, Tzon-fah Hwang and Dr. Ung-Yu Yen, assistant dirertor. Secretaries—Shou-Mo Chang. Ziang- Ling Chang, Chi-Tai Hoo ' (Victo Hoo). Dr. Feng-Hua Huang T. L.| Huang. Dr Themss Kirg Gilford T.| Kuang, Yung-Kuan Kuo, Wel-Shiu Lao Sy-Tchaig Liou. Tsiun Lou. Tsu- | Lieh Sun. C M. Sung. T. Philip’ Sze,| Hslag Chang Szeping. Ching Y1 Tang: T Z. Tvau, Wen Pin Wel, Tsen | Reso Yang and Do Djuen_Yu. Compllers—F. Chang, Kuang-Chao Lee, Dr. Tien-Lu Li, Dr. Pao-Heng Lin, K. Lieu, Kwang Schu, Pao Shen Shen, I Hsuan Bi, Che-Tsien Tchou and Y. L Tong. Attaches—Hsing-Hai Chanz Hung Yeh Chao, Yen-Shu Che, Bvt. Brig. Gen. Ting-Chia Chen. Franklin Chiu, T. H. Chu, Chuan Chao, Pao-Tien | Hsleh. Mour Hsu, K. C, Jen, Wunsz King. Telly Howard Koo Tey-Peh Kung. Yuh L, Shih Sung Li. Yuhu C. Liu. Nim-Tsao Liu. Teh-Kwang Chen. Chao-Kwe! Sze. Nal-Wen Tao. Kwing |Lat Lou, M. D. Lu, Jones Lu, Dr. Ven- {Four Tchou Hong-Nien Tong, Yuan- Mow Wang. Ge Zay Wood. Yungshi Wel. Seu Mel Woo. Yung Ching Yang. Chao Ying T. C. Yen, Kih-Sung Yen ' Kimpson Yu., Chun-Chieh Yu. Dzu-: Kun, honorary attache: C H. Wu.| honorary attache, and Robert Yu, jr., honorary attache. T:anslators—Ying Kao, Che-Yee Li, C.Y. Lieu and Gin Ding Shen. Private secretaries—Comdr. T. Y. Chen and Y C. Kwong. Typist—Ch’un Fang Leo. Telegraph clerks—Tsong.Gee Tsung-Len Li, Chi-Seng Mong. Lean Shang and Shih-Yuan Yu Clerks—Hing Ching Chu. Shao- Ying Fan. Vun Kang Hang. Tsen- Tung_Lied. Ts0-Ying Tyau and Hsi- Chi Wang. Delegation From Netherlands. Delggates — Jonkheer H. A. van Karnebeek, minister of foreign af- fairs; Jonkheer F. Beelaerts van Blokland, chief of the polltical divi- sion of the ministry of foreign af- fairs; Dr. E. Moresco secretary gen- eral of the ministry for the colonies, Chu. | Yu-| BY SERGT. T. HOI\'AH TEMPLE- (Beret. Temptoth e o tn the t lines three P rars bxo'today.) At the eleventh hour on the eleventh day of the eleventh month just three years age hostilities came to an end from Switgerland. to the sea. Early that morning, from the ‘wireless station on the Eiffel tower In Paris, there had gone forth through the air to the wondering, half-incredulous line that the Americans held from Sedan to Moselle the order from Marshal Foch to cease firing on the stroke eleven. On ‘the stroke of eleven the cannon ceased, the rifies dropped from the shoulders, the machine guns grew stiil. There ‘followed then’ a.strange, unbe- levable, . silerice . as. though the wocld had died. Pt -lasted ‘but ‘a moment, -dloru:e-ucemtunmchu T e o eriing of ?i;‘r‘:'-.':n‘n'?m whistles, such an overture from h-nd.l and trains and urch bells, nu:th shouting of voices Shufe earth is not lkely to hear again Tnfl ration. 2 Whlfillht ell on the bnmafleld. the clsmor of the celebration rather than waned. Darkness? There was none. Rockets and a ceaseless fountain of star shells made the lines a streak of clnrlou- Jbrilliance across th- face of re?o g France, while, by the llthl of flares, the front and its danct: '5 boasting, singing peo- ples was as clearly- visible as though the sun sat high im the heavens. German 'h..— Most Joyous. The mun from Mars, coming to earth om the morning of November u. lnl. would have been hard put say which army had won. hr. l! saymu the greater celebra- -the more stantling outburst, eul mot. from ~ the Americun or REARADMIRAL CLARENCESWitLiAng MAY. GEN. ROBERT L BULLARD. FUNERAL PROCESSIiON TO ARLINGTON BRITISH“MOTHER' Pilgrim Fath—ers’ Association Investigated Letters From Hundreds. Mrs. Amelia Emma McCudden, Brit- ish “war mother" who laid a wreath on the tomb of America’s unknown dead at Arlington today, was selected from 600 bereaved mothers of the United Kingdom to pay this tribute. The Pilgrim F thers' Association, which made the selection, investigat- ed 600 le ters received from as many mothers offering to be the medium fo rend-ring homage to America's- dead Of these about 400 had lost ove ron. {200 had lost two so:s and eight had {lost three sons. Mgs. McCudden was found to have had twent:-five soms and near relatives in the war. .Of these ‘here were kil d. thre: -ons, one son-in-1 w and two n-phcws. On thi: {showing the association voted unan iimously that Mrs. McCudden had suf- {fered the most intense bereavemen: iand she, accordingly, was selected for the mission of honor which had its | fulfil.ment at A:lingtor oday. Son Brought Down 57 Germans. Of the gons 108 by M s, one Maj. James Byford ithe ar forces, who wvas kllled in July. 1918. had brought down fifty-seven Germa airplancs and becn awarded the Victor.a cross, the disiinguished service order, the milita y cross, tme ,military medal, the croix de guerre. the American Aero Club diploma and the Mons star. He aiso was mention- {ed personaily by Earl Haig in dis- {patches from the froat. A second son, Licut. Jchn A. Mc- Cuddern, also of the air forces, who was killed in March, 1918, brought tdown eleven enen A third igon, Flight Sergt. W 3 { Cudden, who was one of the first Brit- {18h military pilots, was killed in May. 1915, and received the Mons star. — e tion of his day dreams and his nlght- mares. He had reach-d the front. “It is 11 o'clock. The war is over, voiced. “And 1 just got he said. a short little taugh £ of relief and half of that was made h: disapp in'ment. Ty Amavionn sotdisrs 5 mmoned tato {line for the third and phas: of *he Argonne drive e mber 1t all the days of their li Bu: the memory that will lie always closest o their hearts anl will color mos: b-autifully the stories they will ‘el their childrea in the glorious years to come is not the memory of the pursui., wh v umphant, not h- sp haveting beyend all words, It i T the memory of he scores of communi- | tles reclaimed in the pach that led from ~| Grandpre_to Seéan, the little oid lost towns of F ance Win Back 130 Towns. ptgmber morning ican Army struck its first blow northwest of Verdun, 10 that misty and murky November morning when the order, “cease fir- ing.” sounded from Switz/rland to the sea. mo o thar 150 towwns and villages Were won back by force of arms. Some of these, the first recaptured, were so_nearly obliterated that those who had lived there all their days did rot find one familiar wall or door o greet their desolate return. But other Zmore than half of all—were little battered by the tn all of (those from Buz nor‘hward, a { half-incredulous, al:ozeiher jubilant { population stood waiting with out stretched hands, wailing with laugh- ter and tears d songs and coffee and kisses, the advent of their deliv- ere s. Sometimes they went out into the fields, the women and old men and the children, there o wave sheels as | white flags of friendliness and ap- peal. Som hey went fearfully frto their cela yed there un- til they heard the uproarious and un- mistakably Ameritin voices calling “The boches have parteed, the boches have part od!” - They we: e of one :pirit. these peo- ple, and it was the spirit of the liztla lold’ woman of Briculles-sur-Bar It glowed in her. aven as she stood amid the ruivs of her hore Germans Flee in Afternoon. At 3 o-lok on the afternoon of the day before the armistice was signed the Germans had fled from |the town. At 3:20 the last of them 1had set off the mines, which opened great gaps in the road lerdirg to the village. At 4 o'clock came the Amer- fcans. The explosion bad blown her arn to bits and wreck-d ner huse. Now while Yankee engineers wern MAJ.GEN TASKERABLISS. Frhotes By Korrus Fumng appointed vice president of the coun- cii of the Netherlands and East Indies. | Everwijn, Wasn:ngton; Jonkheer W. H. de Beau- fort, counselor of legation, Washing- ton, appointed minister to Six. chief of division of the ministry for the colonies: M. van Wettum, for- mer chlef of the opium monopolies service in the Dutch East Indi s. I president of the advisory committee to the council of the league of na- tions on the oplum problem: Kat affairs of the Dutch East Indin gov- ernment: capitaine de lregate. Royal Nether- lands na !ma de With Jonkheer borgh, secretary of legation: Jonk- heer C. \an Breugel Douglas, attache of lezarion. JOY UNSURPASSED FOLLOWS ADVENT OF LAST ZERO HOUR French. but from the German side. At least he could have said_—that man from Mars—to which side the suspen- sion of hostilities had come as the held by the Americans. the firing con- greater relief. the front shortly after the sun rose. There was more or less of an effort to send It forward only through mili- ! tary channels. to have the corps re- | port it calmly by wire to the divi-,At one sions, the divisions to the brig-des, |division, vlaitlns at the time with a and so on down squad, quite as though this were an morning battle to the east of the ordinary order and nothing to get'Meuse, a man statloned at one ba excited cbout. not_work very well. sped on the kind of wireless that' men knew many centuries befors like' a current of electricity along the shivery mess lines, hopping up and down #nd enifling and scuffling as they waited for the morning-cof- tee and maybe rice. the chains of road menders, along the creeping -columns of camions. Drivers c~lled it to driver and run- ners__tossed shoulders as they hurried by. "nd again a fleet of motor cycles fowr WoRld Mhits Mlong through ' the bewvy | divisions, with the 2d American A-my. at first. That was old night—that was why the envoys Rnifl socss sl months befores hi : u‘:e;w:hbuy s-“m to prefer 121 ~ “Armistice” had | gkies, the.rockets tearing down the remains of that house, to bring a new road into being with the stoncs she stood guard over her bits of rescued furniture, hud- dled in the mud. polishing them with vigor when she wrs not too busy patting the passing doughhoys on the back, or bending in love 2nd reverence to kiss the h'nd of every poilu who paused to speak to her. Down her 3 wrinkled cheeks the tears were rain- 1 Cgs ing steadily. but they were tears of i Alternate delegates—Dr. J. C. A, Netheriands minister in Greece. Technical advisers —Jonkheer O. appiness. _ Thers was no doubt at PP bout that. Even with her home ck? ® MMon dieu, a house can be rebuflt. 1t is not so with the life of a man.” Thus_spoke the little old woman of ulles-sur-Bar. Pl'{; ‘most of these towns, when dawn came on the morning after the eleventh. could be heard the jinzle of harness on the frosty morning air, the rumpus of the muies, the growing chorus of curses and iaughter, the imusic of an Americn reziment 'wak- ing from slumber. In some the bop- ored guests were leavine that day. In the half-frozen mud of one of these towns. a little irl of about ten, shivery in her gingham dress, was murmuritg somethi| ‘Gosh boy rumpling his hair. th~t.” It | ilfien and there iis pack was opened up; late M. de Angelino. adviser for Chinese Putnam Crame; MAL.GEN. Joun A.LEJEUNE. (uese minister at Washington; Capt. 1= oncellos dir ctor of dip- lnml.uc service in ministry of colo- nies nd secrctary general of Nation- al Geographic Soclety of Lisbon. Montalto Secret'\ries—donkheer M. van Haer: counselor of legatio A. Tjarda van Starken: For the press—Mr. Pelt Two Delegates From Portugal. Delegates—Viscount d'Alte, Portu- Secrerary-interpreter —J. de Jesus. about » bl nket. » said one very small dough- Bande burst Into long-suppressed Xall dosghs music and headlights twinkled all lon; ) e un en flm a nhof» was much soolding; but as a | It was ll:hter when he took to the nothing much more {2 half hour later. And if any qlnr— demoralizing to the enemy could well | termaster takes action in the matter— have been staged than this spectacle{may God have mercy on his—the quar- termaster’s soul! Bells Peal Forth. n m that same morning that the news came. Surely. bells rang- forth the tidings from Rome to San Francisco. but there are some of us who will always belleve that, in all matter of fact, of the 1st American Army celebrat- ing something he had not heard. ANl along the seventy-seven miles tinusd. literally unto the eleventh hour. At one minute before i1, when a million eyes wers glued to the slow: 1creeping minute hands of a milllon o wounded the. weeid watches, the roar of the guns was a | ‘he, Chime® whICh SoAnOCe er 11, thing to make the old earth tremble. | Sver NAL MOTEAS OF JOTC I oni POt Yas Where 2 Yankee| e liberated belfries of France. Though it was all France that eele- brated, in every villaze and town the day of deliverance, the day the arm'- stice was signed, yet it was in Parfs, the heart of all' Frange 'that the sx- u'tation re~ched its he . which had shown Itseit cahe The news began to spread actoss to the uttermost French corps, was having a brisk {tery stood with a handkarchief in hi There was the effort. But It did'uplifted “and his eyes fixed upon his The word was Watch. It was one minute before the fatal hour. To the lanyards of the four b'g guns ropes were tied, each, rope manned.by 200 soldle~s. cooks stragglers. gunners and everybody. At the stroke of eleven, the handker- chief fell. the men puiled. the guns cursed out the last shot of the bal tery. And 'so it went. at a hundred, at a thous~nd places along the line. Attack Before Vigneuiles. bombardments, found heart. in the face of a th ened offensive to celebrate the Ponk nd Fourteenth of July with bunting, p.rldes and cheers, which. for four and more had been darkened and nd by night. tight-lipped, but smili; y day, awoke on November I.bom the middle of the morning. Probably the hardest fighting beln, Tudt, 1t awoke with a long-drawn-out fonr, “was. nat whign chEagsd it | oe. resiisation that the. Armiscce 'P' our, was that which engaged the!the realization ps of the um 924, 8ist and Tth at last actually signed, it shook oft cloak of unbelief and gave way to.on- ‘who launt hm! a fire-eating attack be- feigned, delighted, rapt surprise. fore Vi lles just at dawn on the | vur grew as the news spread, 11th. It was no mild thing, the last'-he big bulldlnn Paris poured l |fiare of the battle, and the order to|walk, walk, walk = ceaselessly cease firing d'd not reach the men in 'down the crowd~d boulevards, In and (front line until the last moment, out of the great squares | when runners sped with It from shell- anywhere, everywhere, just to 'hole to shell-hole. see and be seen, to see the glow of ¥ip- % tory reflected from the hm of est of “all Paris.” It ask t_was_enough. The day had come. The day for which' the gayest of capitals hld wlll-r long and so nnlently under the buff of the enemy’ ns by day and under the t.h\lddln‘ blow- of his bombs by actually materialized. in ml.l dny as soon as it could its eyes and come to itself and be syre that " the hideous dream had 3 Paris came home to itself, and the coming. was glory. 2 rgoni come on earth. It spread It spread along . their Now 1 the word over Hard to Realizse at First. | befimul! You “could hear it called out. again d_again. "Whlt time? “Eleven o'clock.” They took it a little hm;duloul‘ly uff. They had heard it again and, n during the past fortnight ‘Why, the preceding Thursday ' U - tallboas o, ktflm m:he- mud‘o! Ar- e an lenn: ere gazed a boy Sho had been drafied in the heart of from ews that wno, with stop-offs for tedlmn trafning on the way, had slowly ed from been : his home to the Ardennes. lnmium spread like the Spanish fll'mn six months, it had put him through ""?‘é"‘mfl"“".n e the | e e O ad rosit. bi ‘That n it lares inflamq 0 ment system, but. it roug] HI te streaked the night. at last to his’destination—the destina- A B.: