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ERALD, SATURDAY, J i e TS SR AL o deny the possibility of such a con s e SEEBIG UL S. NAVY - OF WORLD'S PEACE! OF ALL RELIEF WORI ustomed ws - Feel It Would Aid in Maintaining President Wilson Delivers Ad- Appointed Director General ol World’s Peace dress (o Ialian Deputies International Organization i Mornit Roms, Jan. 1. In hi v speceh in the | editorial that Secre- | (‘hamber of Deputies proposal to build a more dent Wilson said shoulc ¢ entirely i ’ ! Your Majesty and Mr. Presiden - » 5 i liberated iforcing law | the Chamber: You are bestowing up- he destruc- | On me an unprecedented honor. wl nem ch [ on the staff 1 suppression of |1 accept because ! believe that it is | commissioner has been dis- | ©Xtended to me as the Tepresentative the British | of the great people fron e B during the last cak. And I am going to tak ual e survesed all seas - [irst opportunity to say how entire v limited 5 & < published charts = the heart of the American people has |, paono 2 0N some of the ind. in the i of all other : een with the great people of Italy | \merican nission in a statement whi S e : e of war the British navy : ent at times, to look from a great dis- © have seemed, no doubt. indiffer harge of the relief work soon 'mity with the request o as saved Furope not once nor twice, | funce, but our hearts have never heen \d has imprin formidable a far away. Al sorts of ties have long | ) : | : e cin LRIe Q I memory upon the hearts of restless lound the people of our America to | . -\ Predeminating p ir e Americaniza Nercis 3 A iutoéracies that time and again {he the people of Italy, and when the | S2nizatlon B¥enitne, Mavor Georee A e Gl LAl mere threat of naval action has kept People of the iecl | setes j“"'}f"'” ment follows the peace of the world Knowing this people have bon President \Wilson's arrival Pseribeq him as \ police cour (e e st] i 1 ) i \avor - : : nited 3 i i/ 1o be feared by civilization east or s, its heroic actions upon the hat : 1 =zov Ui i i " : officials inio 1 ccjaim.s 010 Glory has 1 Bt & i ew s without tor the time being. Any increase | tlefleld, and its heroic endurance at Bovernments At the Ut S S o o B Elthel Uhited Siatesllnavy ) o5 | but [ Home-ifs b Shadataat D enduranca Rl o [ P, - oc o) . »_“.‘_1 | sea and astuoyed IS MPved i «fter S Lo il s e e e i o reasantwhy Tnnother ban= v in hisq0Wn mind the ob W Qg . { J. and of the Allies to keep Germany (uick even than its heroic Fhich ' znt : b fi PACTS AND FANCIES " impotent to work evil for a genera- the battleficld--we v o tion or more by a new tie of profound admiration ) the wholc preme American navy being necessary il all, running like the golden thread vith regard Shot M SR B GLC TG if the peace conference fails to agree (hat wove it together, was our knowl- | ferences held between t on. De i i upon the limitation of armaments he vdge that the people of Ttaly had gone | Menis concerning the met 3 Dodgi is quite ht. We would go further into this war for the same cxalted | $anization for the relief of i Meditciranean | any say that if America will stand the | Principle of right and justice that ons to Mmoved our own people. And &o 1 The ies to save sinking warships in the | expense, she would be well advised welcome (his opportunity of conveying | are in agrecmer I Atlantic, a d lighting off vicious | keep a strong navy in any case to vou the heartfelt greetings of the | furnished and t U-boat attacks while carvying Amer For the United States navy. like ised, | 1he peovle of altly, and when the ! ¢ of this charact ican troops some of the achieve- ! the British navy. has never hee ments credit to the White Sta we are assured never will be used Spring- { this wi itk p ¥ S o e i e B purposes of aggression This | 0f this war without knowing there are | sinillar in character vodka t cannot stand m the shadow | 8¢ necessitates unit of the wartime. These we country would glad to see America | 'INgs which are in some senses more | Method successful in t i only incidents of her experience, be- | relieving Great Britain of a part of , @ifflcult than those we have under- | British command in the operatioas sall enough | + t o wipe L s “ | cause, weeount of her great pas-lthe heavy cost of insuring the safety e ¢ out exis . TEepton O e the | SCTEET capacity was steadily and | of sea communication ¥or the benefit | SheaK of Tight and Justice. it is some- | tvely. rio oppCrtunit ifen ancy-touchi gnunie & faithfully keeping to ihe task of ! of the world and. whether that relief = times difficult 1o work them out in The allied governments had advis ome om el onlioan ] f ¢ itter the amous old | . neporting men material the | js afforded by a general limitation of actice, and there will he required a [ ©d the president that the desired havy or our own t < s G LS Manchester | qmies in Burope. First it was Chi- | armaments or by the increased naval | PUTity of motives and disinterested- | fhat the 1 ness of object which the world has |1ead in the reorganization and admin. never witnessed before in the councils | iStration of relief. Under this a of nations. | rangement between the United States many thousands of Americans & e e orousinaTolor ineuritaa It is for that reason that it scems |and the allied countries there are be to me you will forgive me if I lay |iN& appoiated {wo representatives ofw taken. because, while it is easy fo |the Allies on land and sea. ros nited States should take the pes of German capital se cool for road building, then | power of the western republic is com- that would entail great ex- farmer boys from Canada to. replace | paratively immaterfal for maintenance and np ust S, A the losses of Vimy Ridge. aad ftinally R ol s periencetlor hthefcor he GermanfousitheSwestern Sbattl States navy during the war we feel ont that its increased strength would pro- bisay » t re the co some of the elements of the new situ- distinguishing fact of this war is that great empires have sone to picces. | PToblems connected with the relief. And the characteristics of those em- ‘The president has appointed He pires are that they held different | ert Hoover and Norman Davis as the peoples reluctantly together nnder the | tWO American representatives in the vide & most powerful guarantee | peace. The only substantial guaran- tee of peace in the future must in the nature of things—the world being | PIng resources in the solution of the made as it ix and not otherwise—con my ship: llowi UPo’ r g 3 ; sist in the degree of force fo he po- 0 A coercion of torce and the guidance of | COUNCil. and Mr. Hoaver will act as the water-fogsed dreadnoughr | ERHAIN triet s | director general of the undertaiing Lcious, was sufficient to put her in| ) The great difficulty among such | The French first rank of transports. but her A States as those Sl Sl S Gl an s S = IRiancnar LAl INVESTIGATING CLATMS iteg Rasitn of the Haikan L 0 s om cquent work in bringiig Can heen that they were alw ccessi- | { ne . Vilgrain, minister troops and Chinese labor “ ble to secret influence: that they were | {20€ Lo its epresentative Tt newcome g t < q on : Salvation Army Workers Co-ope 5 W Gl ner condon | ind then her wonderful care A < 2 Jways heing penetrated by intrigue | Dritish an Italian on " : since. Christmas, 1917, when she a With War Insurance Bureau. of some sort or another. that north of RN eland | ontally exercised by America i and governmeat has appoin epresentatiy have not as vet beear announced president has asked Mr. Hoover to call the first meeting of the council as quickly as the delegates are med niza ived ia New York for her first load| you vo fan. 4 Trained Salva- them lay disturbed populaiions which MUSTIERED OUT of American troops must put her in aj o074 oo vorkers are now ! Were held together not by svmpathy | of and friendship, 1 force of a military powr { Now the intrigue is checked. and CANADA’S LOSSES 220,182 drive him I . herscil as a “trooper by the coercive co-operating here with the Bureau i e o War Risk Insurance in a tiga- 2hadia i N is glo oud they o war s < : S e fion 1o determine the validity of o : ; ctaims by dependents of enlisted men X ) | i I O del U R s a ent ma . I musiere S [ it was announced today. The inves- N”hmf[m\ AR L vam | Of This Number 60.383 Were Killed < > € 25 > hold the peopl together. They | tigators found that in one and Are Prisoncrs have not been accustomed 1o heing in- Prisoner dependent. Thoy n now ho inde- Ottawa, Jan, 4.—A total of 220,18 rendent casualties, with 60,383 dead, were suf all seven in turn previous to their V7 2 1d, w ofte oF ragns while bonds are breken. and what we | i @ d with the statement that : - ot o e . : s ’ . : tired s woman had been receiving the allot 9 ments of seven soldiers, having in the vrkitess earl ands T T'o have forced aliens into ; X 4 ‘ morning she strafed’ one ried rture for service overseas am sure that vou recosnize the | fered by the Canadian overseas for e principle as L do —that it is not our | during t might { 1d he . T S “The Olvmpic had most s i e S : S v ; . Ry e 2 g orivilege to say what sort of a gov- | casualty list issued here last nigl ventures while she was 2 Am-| WANTS TO BUY GRAVESTONE Hermtn e B ] e e erican troops. Duriag Mar Aprill FOR 'THE SON WHOM HE KILLED | we are friends of those people. and it | list fol and May. 1918, the German subn vt e nielaw Stneka, | 1S our duty as their friends 1o see rine commanders made at le seven = = 5 killed © it that some kind of protection daring attacks on her. Not once did| WHo shot and killed his son John in : 5 : l = 5 thrown around them- something sit Torvington. New Year's Eve. in & S0k : plled which will hald them toget] quarrel, informed the police that he = e it Sl There is only one thine that holls i o ; nations together, if vou exclude force and that is friendship and good-will HONg « & The only thing that bind men to e p : S ‘ Clonelt o A s T RE Bl zether is friendship, and he the same ope and in J v Pl e Fon IninsEbRloR B Phe Lesser Heroes. token the only thing that hinds i J1ympic (Buffalo Express. tions tozether is friendship. 1'% A storekeeper Welland. Ont .. | our task at Paris to organiz 5 narks in his Christmas adveriisi friendship of the wo.ld s avimy to wiite a cheering tessag i sarrassment, but a the darkaess of early morning of May, | J\2TKs in his Christmas advertis N _ 3 ” ko £ cer yrmonipg o May,li el 00 e cially appea) foy Supjior hat ali the mor orces that ma once. Many of the soldier t should transpive 1918, near the entrance to the Bng ¢ e < < of those who went to the o of | for right and justice and ARER'S INVESTIGATION eived no mail since they landed 2 ehin g : ('-,:,w“v “‘,‘,,.‘, th ;\LIM e ,' ,“ 1 : our liberty and of thei nd ' united and ara giver onght hut w or 1z nsti clock wh ooko an pickes i e e e e . Hion totwhich o st in el e Biiiis - oy the privilege (o go and fight v world will vezaily ane 10 fanlt of his own. T.eft ai honie ™ other words < » o hospitals in | trans I so frequenily and some ; rnment the full measure | Was 1ving on the surface. Immediat X B3OM eft 1 H PEACE DELEGATTION H 1\ neglect on part 1w t en the main wany s finest U-boats. dep: - L pngst - L he war, according to a rev opinion wnother colun the enemy have time to launch a to t S today is printed a i L ¥ do. for i1 every case he was grect- by a 6-inch shel of the | wants Soldicrs lotter to ) —1 v h sh he v $ 2 stro; wias his I th | his son's grave and to pay the funeral deseribes the v 1 Suther- - gopth charges. Perl expenses wspaper me and is the ty ever o . ‘ v any longer or e most thrilling Xperience who has a frien ervance persor It would not ' which the Olympie had took place in i France Leeause of the poor post offi ? nvesiigation of n ' ¥ S fion wer we dre unakle toldo out oi the almost total darkness the jers were | facilities or because they have been 2 niore prosaic duties. he can s colossal than thi alter his warning shout onc of o , MO% 1 S CR ¢ ol sl ; : . ! e ent { forward guns blased | ouf. and i I et of hix small means, he interns . : o ; Likety o Consist of Clemencean, \tives. fouching i ussions : o s supported every fund and measure Tew real atmospher i am happy ¢ . + f T ship, with her helm hard over. spun Pichon, Riotz, Bourgeois. Tardie The ‘ : caiculated 1o assist our wen and their suy that, in my deal with f 2 Seol A Tardt dependents in muc did | dnguished gentiemen who Secretar wound like a great racing vacht and crashed into oty no ain fo hat gov- ;0 % = < as doing rar P ind England. 1 fe ! o 7 clean one, « would bave b oinoane L mpaired powers o xathering, (hat desire ! We . 0N survi t the submarin : & ) g ean ® ' Judging from the damage on (i e Heus Clebsd gLy Lo enter upon, 4wy of ihe ship wl dry dock (Boston Globe desire to mak e rest upor wetivity with | g o i t: and with this common purnc thifew days luter the blow cit o ery 2 old man was not aliow- = L fodinasd ; faan] complete of the submarinem S Prei s it e | Mo obstacles n e formidalile . n of the Olympic. him. One day they the com- e gun crews on The only use of an obstacle is vercome. All that an of with brave men is not to friahten hera. but to challenge thew. o | (e @ 6-inch shell squarc t 1 hearing avy badn coming | on this en interna- of the destrove - irned the n around so thut rned hat jt eueht 1 he our pride to over- co-operation cort dropped hehind, ane ‘ t would not see it. a might annot afl the part of of star shells picked o b O el v e e come evervthing h € in the way. We know those who aken the desirc : e e e e Ry N : 5 other balance of 1} tom man 1 L 5 heen tricd and found B best of all reasns thai proves the er « ' 3 e 1 i T " wit sOme wovel hie 0 New rk 'Tr 3 1 & roves th m ¢ me n to New York Tri (Louisville Courier-Jour waste (weight?) w ! - IRELAND HAS nmen: 2 the | obod ires government = ors, three of whom dic t ¥ heroaiby man turned weapon frequently blic officials, is not an; That mess ¥ onfess, when The Strafts Barvaoe. Knows One Thing. e . submarine campatgn be- [ sce Henry Ford is gzoing to t sether cannot consti vak AWAY FROM BRITALN 1 carnest Germaay w 1Hing | 4 pewspaper.” vodght in the aftairs « agh Does he know anyxthing Iherefore there m A sUnann o @ Must know a ho tice 1 cp. and I am hapn chester Guardian in dese ited until he gof $40.000 100 hefc where in the an greatest bluff of {he wa prean to vun one.” one the con - must he a thor wonderfu X e thea 1 Gl A Change e s, alarm signals. contact elactrical wir (New Yo <nicker— Jones 0 e R famentary tnmat er—Wouldn't Fein ele- aems Rt 1 e mankind o er that there was pean = . ) and a Dover strait 4 : Priendly Rivaley : 0 officiais tions. inadequ evenier < v Patrick should be lost in « € t ruth or falsity of these > { 8 i Eo p T L 2 5 na t AWN TENNIS ANNUAL. onclusions | fopm EEIo0 v . s T b = e K A ) The annual without color i \ \ the United State ond e friends in America 1 | v 1l Lawn Tennis ecn mistreat- peii i ¢ on Feb- lumbia o ¢ s : £ th eting were . | service. Some of 3 ua f the national inl this ity \ . o \s mder the Russial terned prisoners and others ' L voted and p ) ¢ Germs \ had | vation. the between a B profiteers. but neither s | sumption of the Davis Cup contest im in the “War kdition™ are 4 or he called neither the right king or mines nor |sheviki and g Zeois is about ss o1 920 will be recommiended by the exe may be meted out + of itcis refervir 0 nmental control . wa he new mechanism then ready lm\m«: : cutive committes,