Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 5, 1919, Page 1

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Bullottn Service Flag VOL. LXi—No. 77 POPULATION 29,919 NORWICH, CONN.. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1919 10 PAGES—74 COLUMNS TWO CENTS is causmg great havoc among ltalan | . | fection, and yet I have felt besides i cattle: ; g | Y its tragedy, its compulsion, its oo n Imsm 0 r% enera Ssem Three American steamers with car. | ~ pulsion upon every uviug man to ex_ i goes of grain for Switzerl G ave | groise svery influence that he has t5 | i B omaleyed warkmen and commun. | ) 4 : possible of that hops IS filissa.i)nl.}iemrl Decl: I Trial | . . < ists of Dresden deciued on a general| ; \ because if men cannot now, atter thig ares It Grew Out of Trial | Senate Judiciary Committee| i trike. agony of bloody it t ir | 1 y g The high license law which went in- asony of bloody eweat, oome to their| by Courtmartial of Major| to Favorably Report a Bill i ! . 3 ffect Saturday reduced the num-| . In Speech at New York the President Declared the League U the affalrs of the warld we wil A. W. Birdsall, Formerly| to Legalize Moving Picture;w o saloons in Pauatma from 680 ber of saloons in Panama from 680 to | sink back into a period of struggle Would Overcome Intriguc—Declares That No Party in i ¥ich.thers. Skl ‘oo mo-ons. o Correspondent N. Y. Even.| Shows On Sunday Even.| s westorn - | Result of Bitter Controversy Between President Wilson and Massachusetts army herefore i : reqruit headquarters in Springtield . B the Long Run Will Dare Oppose the League—Is to Tell 10 mercy, whers there ia o hogs, fog| 5 Telegram. ings. s reo o ordes of tha wir de the Senate Over the League of Nations—President Ad- reopened by order of the war de- why should vou spare another if| Washington, March 4—A cablegram Special t Bulle | is'Re o the People of Europe That an Overwhelming Majority | ¥ou yourselt ‘expect to perish. Wy | from General Pershing made Dublic| rartsers aa - oolcin) Dr. Charles L. Doolittle, 76, a wide- | heres to His Refusal to Call the New Congrzss Before ‘eop! pe eiming WAJOIILY | shouid you be pitiful if you can get|today at the war department charges| g oy ll®h d—Speaker Walshily own astronomer, died &l his| His Return From France—Failure to Make A . of the American People is in Favor of the League—The |2 Pity? Why should vou be pitiful | that a campaign of eriticism against | 7o/o8 *he house fo order at 1135, and| in Philadelphia’ from a com_ s ranc anure to € Appropria~ P! gu if you can get no pity? Why should | the handling of the embarkation camp | {*Y5r, W25 offered by Rev. Howard of diseases. 5 t tion of $750,000,000 for Rajl N 1 3 Presidential Ship is to Sail From Hoboken at 8:15 This |¥ou be just if, upon every hand,you |at Brest, France, grew out of the trial |y, &*"jeHIeh Who was chaplain of the| The Polish forces operating on the | ,U0U, or Railways Not Only Leaves the 4 = jare put upon by courtmartial’ of Major Alfred W.|FOuSe in 1917 and who has recently| polish frontier have had scvers | Railway Administration Without Fund: : . Mornin ays He Will Not Come Back “Till It's Over, | “There is another thing which I|Birdsall, formerly of the New York [feourned from V. M. C. A overseas brushes with the Bolsheviki east of y Administration Without Funds, But Also With g—Say ?{think the critics of thi* covenant|Evening Telegram. . Ggurtesy being extended by | Kovel, other messages state About $381,000,000 Back Over There.” bave not observed. They mnot only| The message said the “violent news- | “haplain Hildreh, Reference was| ' Attorney General Gregory, who re. ,000,000 Back Debts. ave not observed the temper of the|Paper attacks” upon the Brest camp e oieath of Adolph Parizek || tived: from office’ Tuesday, formalil . = > worid, but they have not even ob- |began about the time Major Birdsall|=> b o HlEcal kel annon t night that he ashington, March bitter New York. March 4—President Wil- | the peace of the world which is exempt| cerved the temper of those splendid|returned to the United States after| ' illington. He was born in New | would ace ny President Wilson “‘,{”‘“‘.’H*' between President Wilson | Colorado. democrats, to speal son told the American peo _an|irom inquiry and discusaten and Ilpoys ir. khaki that they sent across|having been reprimanded, reduced in tmands macried B There (wete | oy {Hik wetuFn: o) Brance [ tieisena the league of na- | New York, Boston and other adéress here tonight on the ve of his| think evervbody here present will|he seas. I have had the proud con- |&rade and fined for striking an enlisted Y oup meriers on the calendar and || “An American relistcommission (hasy [[ORS and 2 1l Y a tew re criticism of the league constitution, roturn to Pari was roing back |agree with me that Germuny would fgcioysness of the reflected glory of |man. It added that Major Birdsall y. were disposed of in order. arrived at Constantinople and is en_| ol senators secking [Eepublican Leader Lodge doe: to the peace conf attle with | never have gone to wa- if she had |gnose boys, because the constitution|threatencd before he lofi that he| Petition was received from citizens |gaged in prepari the tr mediate extra session inarked plan to engage in the sposchraking. renewed vigor for cre { & league | permitted the world to dizcuss the 4% | made me. ther Commander-in-chief | "%Ould get someone at Br of New London in and Reed of Missouri and Thomas of o v Lon opposition to the | portation of food and medical sup-)l@SSINE at noon today of the sixty-| Chief interest at the fin*h centered : and they have taught me some les-| General Pershing’s message follows: | proposed bill to restrict fishing plies and clothing into the Caucasus,| 't} OF great war congress. in the senate filibuster and the league. The first thing I am gomg to tell | we. sons. When we went into the war,| . Reference P 2155 (a cabled inquiry | Gardner's lake in the town of Salem.| Anatolia, Armenia, Cicilica and | , C2lled in April, to throw | of nations controversy. The filibuster the people on th sice of the| “The Britizh foreign office suggest- | vo went into it on the bagis of dec. |from the department), reference crit- | Petition favoring passage of ihe act |Syria. j America’s weight the conflict | continued from ten oclock yesterday water is that an ov ming ma-|ed, it pleaded that there nught be aljirations which it was my privilegs | iCiSIS against port of Brest, following | authorizing the fown of Waterford to| Nine transports cabrying approxi-|0v¢rseas, the congress held three mo- |morning until 1130 o'clock today, Jority of the Amer people is in|day or two delay so that the repre-{. “,iier hecause I believed them to|information received from intelligence | construct wharves and docks mately 600 officers and 14,000 men,|Mentous and historic sessions. Parti- nators Sherman of Tilinois; favor of the I said | sentatives of the nations of be an interpretation of the purpose|°fficer at port: The act providing for appropriations |many of them of the Twenty-sev- S30ship lay dormant during the war |La Follette of Wisconsin, and Fyanes the presider could get fogether and diseu: and thought of the people. of the|. . '(A) September, 1918, Major Alfred|for state highways was referrod to|enth (New York National Guard)|Ldt it broke forth in the last session |c 1 \s most of the Speaking resident | possibilities of a settlement. ‘Germany | {jniteq States. 3 W. Birsall, formerly of the New York | committ on appropriatior ‘.~,,,,,§‘,”N,=. have sailed from Fr for | '@ culminate in a final filibuster which | time ¢ E . It even pre- Taft bad cxpound n fea- | did not dare permit a day s GISCUSSION. | ~ wang those hove want over there|Evening Telegram and former provost ' e Sl rivers and|New York and dHampton Roads and | $UcCéssfully blocked half of the four- | vented exchanges of tures of the 1 of| Yon know what happened. So soon | wioh"the feeling that thoy were s . |Marshal of Brest, convicted by general bridges, o o b e e A teen regular appropriation bills, in-|courtesy at the finish. In the house, nations, 1} vast | the world realized that an outlaw w credly R Lcaization of | courtmartial of various offense: orable reports were made on| Harvey Helm, for six terms rep- | uding the 3$750,000,000 railroad ad-|however, the usual riotous scenes audience, w tropoli- | at large, the naticns begon cpe by one | 1 oc0” i that they were not' only| (B) December, 1918, Major Bird- | cundry nots r o OB ervtice O ALY Congres: from the | MiNistration revolving fun he, d the close of the session. The tan Opera ki r of op-|to draw together inst Fer. | going over there to beat Germany:|Sall ordered to Brest in connection|gsynday, with et t - rict ed at}'‘U8€ army, navy and merchant ma- | clock s stopped a few minutes for ponents of the e Ameri-| «we know for a certainty that if|they were not going over therc mere- | Vil investigation of ceratin supposedinioving’ pictures, bills rejected. It where he had a|Yine budget f icitations and for an hour af- - jermany hal thought fc 1 x(lml‘n(il\ “with resentment in their h-‘llrls”“ipg”]dr“ = 1 plained -’;" subject | Although unsucce: ul in their ment house \Y\L‘m:‘:fi ex- “No party has L 10 APPro- | that Great britain wouli g6 in with |against a particular outlaw nation; | . G} Jan. 4, 1919, Major Birdsall| wora considered in another bill .:| The peace conference committee on | !OTtS 10 record the senate in fa anged good-byes with music, songs priate this =~ varty will| prance gnd with Russii she never|but that they were crossing those | SaiS United States after having made |y, R e s haorcematen €24, {@mendment of the constitution of the |and impromptu speeches 4 3 B4 laug e r it". | would have undertaken the enterprise | three thousand miles of sea in order mieaty that he “would get someone in| tormation i ar close | 000,000,000 is the amount ich " the{ [t 110 O pations as now drawn, the = 5 ahitel D i it o thee tionsen: Fdds os T iy e el et bt b epublican senators left in the record Y s e e b I WL (D) Feb. 1, 1919 (about), violent oL i Al s L resolution approved by 39 of them | CROADS WITHOUT FUNDS, only Great Eritain, but the United|would go anywhere where the rights | "ouePaper attacks begin'® = = lwid Guek: m 2 at trol- tion by the fed opposing acceptance of the charter in| - WITH DEBTS OF $331,000 008 rtés and the rest of the world will| of mankind were threatened. s ment made Public atllex grade crossing commission of the milk i - eabe st form. Remublican Leader| Washington, Maxh {—Adjonrimaen . ! £0 in to stop enterprises of fhat sort| wThey would not sit lin’ Major Birds all's case. He awas| Favorable reports were received, | tieularls - vas motice to. the Brestont o bt | 750000000 tos itia e = N o o e thal e avasi | trenches b)l:n‘_» ;\::jx‘.«xn not, be e |charged with violation of the bth|aud resolu D nder susper J r 2 cace ot this . < an | strained the pruience 6 expdric ; H conference that the nece v i s acti et e Sl s, fatitare] ari- | article of war, the general article cov- | sion of tI s ng th - I S two-thirds majority in the new ot sasi o0t £ e e - Wt the ¥ il always maintain|enced continental commanders. They | ering conduct unbecoming an officer. | pointmer Hiseit alesmen 2 employes re-| ., " atificatior he present pl < d no funds with which to fi- don and e It has now vindl- | thought they had come over there to: There were three specifications ch 1 1 1 Werner, de er dien uid not S ol iCo.the eXtersive. progiamit 3 g A o by some of the most Dreciods!do a parucular tnng, and they were ing that in June, 1915, Major Bir i on 1 s red | ¢ ot e obtaliin s SDemocrifln] M extensive DrogammiSec i At T i N ki . ng 0 do it and do it at once. And struck Corporal Harry W. ] i ime 3 Alber - 2 & ' e IAbaGnado ton = 5 ¥ slack i Ghe gt daanss neop o At pirit as an infantry headquarters company 1 § X : 5 Brehooditda ro-Hungaritn empire and of 1l as rushof body came in con-'the face with his hand; cursed Clar- n eor it i bt A i ® 5 7 = quarters rkish empire call uot to us for t Vo of & o a g S| i spent te relinquishment of the g Il iiot to us for this} tact with the lines of the enemy, they!ens, who was then a_ prisoner in co v : > r ! : feriar ot ot ag. It has not arisen in the coun-|y.oqn 1o break, and they continued to- finement, and he ordered him placed O D of statesmen. Europ: is a bit sick|reqx untit Taey eontinued in irons in violation of army regula- and ( a5 & DoSRITH S sBRESomT b herrt this very moment, be- | DrGAE tnti iizens, not mere- : tions. st 4o 1 of Orat y £ the r would be done only if nally ap- C e it sees t statesmen have had| o l;pf‘“\w ” ¥orce’ 61 Mi8or Eirdsall was found gu F ; e sies e r g I < 1 peared not feasible for the railroads to the forc ¢ * | no vision, an that the only vision has |} 0% e el ish and game 1 th { borros the millions_needed, t ' 3 ose 1 ause ' all speciftcations and sentenced to be s: J ‘ en, they 7 heen the vision of the people.” Those ' ¥ . et fo the e infay A B Hes and ” rom F or to have the War Finance Corpora- the wor gl ol e (Spiritual forc Hotor walees of the, gnartecmae g : - T4 nin o et i “a group of men” for their|ticn extend large loans to the com- are goir rong is wrought know Low desira- | that {hat corps for the | o ear 2 5 5 r ) t Loui 4 result of the fili- 1 i their m the right and the r'ghteous B Y : et e rfor 1 yme. s hich held the senate in con.| Director Genoral Hines. after com= might nations that hav g 1 ! 2 S 'fg;fl 3 Under sus; ion of rules forf Fhe strike. whichs: agit session for 2§ hours, the pi erences tonight with Secretary Glass, are ove el ot then At Lt 2 e NE T e nt had little to do he 1 sene Mever, Jr., managing di- he world long cowered fore 5 ko sbi s f«'m"‘:[i T 3 E e (Continued on Page Eight—Col. Four) | {10 trres sign the $1,000,000,000 wheat jrector of the War Finance Corpora= worid must o vy R T iveved lodee herefore every foot oflchange of view is indescriba : r il and exchange leave- | made this statement Mr. W € able agomi ann o e T o Tl A ndiviguit Bl ' PRESID = % 5 S with members and ds. | “The railroad situation % so com- X . t have the |, OR 10T gtae OF maniing,, | you may aften i ay P e L B p © of the presilent’s decision |plicated by this recent development, Yon's Come t o 5 aft b And vou that having | confined to his al interest t| R : extra session, members who |and there are so many possibilities, There." o 2o 1 c g spiri hese | take the American in the mass a 1 N ien d outgoing ht feit|that I cannot say at this time what Text of President's Speech wor A - T § t e REsto G Tor . 108 | v 1 thi 2 - e - wssured that cong may be done with the raflroads. It ent Wilson s n o e i t : i le much be . Lead- | will take a 30od deal of consideration P wanization pitving 4 EVED M e e 1 rs. Fran Sayr i > predicted t rould re- |before a conclusion is reached.” e . Py . ropic men And women | ady to make the supreme - L f ) the| Several ury cficials in clode oy { wred out their treasure in or m ar suerifice for it, the supreme sacrifl o e 4 1 g {tcueh wwith financial conditiors ex- And yot I proy God. in » these suiferings: but 1 it 1t the opening ol throwing in our fortunes : ; 5 3 ess scores | pressed belief that tne railroads could peace and of the worlc s said to the matior . i € iscaniug than| fortunts of men everywhere. i ok 7 its o of the | obtain ns privately to tide them gy . Jle “You must stop; this thing DeRlnps DI e ht, 1 do mean|Taft was speaking of 1 s > e lation : 2 f nations | over the mext few ircaths, although “Tho first thing that rtolerak xnd we W o rm R : ;. 08 m demo- | perhaps at hign interest rates. sl Wi Feonta on th And the vi n with the p must 1 3 until | @ D SR t i pub 1 War Finance Corporation it the water ¥ he nations of he world assured nterpreta 3 v W o : ic failure ¢ | we nounced today, &lready has majority of ! A ¢ s T wish K eflec . pEpRIEY DR (0 . 2 ' I t € v : « S 209 to roads. Tt has favor of a sition. ' v 1 n this the | PESS aaL o ‘ r e 5 2 n to advance several hun- that {s tru . 3 r Z e on .dollars additional under {ntimati t . t getting int t b s powers, on adequate collaterai and countey and the v T he some g p iof {115 JONEEC ates at least one per cent. higher P . o t e fi 3 P th, Ve son Haw a0 L ; 2 : : e S [ pron 1 current rates for ninety day pa- to speak here r ass X es | fellow « X cod | © e cials questioned, however, cumstances n : t f lurope sare | 1, o terms of the act could be Py to associat ) expla C > head 3 el Iy enough to permit ise. He R ; ) this whole- R s bination with somebody else this whole an minutes, hough only by th> supposi ate R ! 1 who utter the criti e is a|cntangles a nation, hampers it, r felt the t puise | vel ; which you | il; EXCEDt to enter into a combi 5 ta ith sof oth he-world. i it is not an ideal With some ot i e Lk v other nations of t * 3 FAILURE TO VOTE $750,000,000 WILSON OBJECTED TO PRESENCE e T Bhoule b o | i Yettied upon an 1deat |Sreat disenta r liar i e com FOR RAILROADS SERIOUS| JUSTICE DANTEL F. COHALAN ters such a comprehensive I maver cames inifo nti| b DOW. t0l he dccomplinRed - ¥, : 5 e Lap st 2 *hiladelpk nuel Rea w Yorl 1 racident Wil- Gt tHe stits: orite viox ) ¢t with them before, but Gl Ly wa ¢ : 2 : ! Airg dentof enmsylvan i tha itlemen do not know wl £ L to/ be' thalt ey, they axe | Isstnat no Mationr shall enier iiosan = s . Comypy legati v 1 racs, the mind of men is just now. Bve gy oW, Pheyubave baan | Elation with another natio firm Comptro Willia X 2 on: ss the $730,000,000 ap tion i ladelphia to urge his body else does. I do not know where | Subdued, if that was thpgpeonsistent Awit the icovenants ot aation resulted fromt thelmilbuster 101 e propriation fc ilroad revolvine | suppor ish freedom umil Justies they have been closeted; I do not|temper, by awful significance of j!¢a8Ue ot nations | [{owing his nomination for'e new:term. 1 func 2 statement t 1 n of New Yoric 3 know by what influences they have |recent ev and the awful import-| “Nations promise to have no al-| _ v Mr. R i mentioncd in the te of umer [ been blinded, but I 8o know wnce of what is to ensue; and thers|liances. Nations promise not to make | RECEIVERS APPOINTED FOR ESAL of the $7 3 ondence, had_with- rather 1 v t 1 they have heen separated from s not one them with whom I|combinations against each other, v h THE RHODE ISLAND CO. £ UND# 2 Y smmended the Metro- R hen general currents of the thoughts of |have come in contact who does not|tions agree that there shall be but one rovidence. G T PLT Al t . im d deep which ths eq t 3 mankind. feel that he cannot in conscience re- | combination and that is the combina- R e s R T want to utter this solemn|turn to his people from Paris unless|tion of all against the wrongdoer. And eslin, a oF Jeite to e ‘or the | warning, not in the way of a threat; |he has done his utmost to do some- |s0 I wm going back to my task on tue byt tir . ay mean 1~ member of (e delezation, the pres! <A vaglh 4 tae | the forces of the world do mot|thing more than, attach his name t»|other side with renewed vigor. I had e I e P 1 t e na- | med ge of a la i Moran, who headed thoe of B t threaten, they operate. The great a treaty of peace. Eve in in that|not forgotten what the spirit of the | Gt excent those at Newport for's Al be r construction now service bodvguard, to_in- heodore 8 is S ¥ i o N B erior court toc | gt St g men | tides of the world do mot give n |conference knows that the of | American peopls is, but I have beer sexperience tice that they are going to rise and|peace in itself Will be inoperative, as|immensely refreshed by coming imexperient A D ey Tise ‘In their majesty and|Mr. Taft has said, without this con.|contact with it again. I did not kno ; . Overwhelming might, and those who | Stant support and’ energy of a great |how good home felt until I got her ederal trustees appointed 91 i : nz int £ o) S mapletig " o tand in the way are overwhelmed.|organization such as is supplied by| “The only place a man can feel al|der a court decree, and Zenas W g y AgtionEhe 8 ensraon ot - wes the o se or | Now the heart of the world is awake | the league of nations. Leme is where nothing has to be ex-|chairman of special com n i o e jconsieg on o yglenxin or St of ait ¢ . \land the heart of the world must be| “And men who, when T firet went plained to him. Nothing has to Delnamed by the eral assembly t f rurs pities ledl fo thesinios) fatlieo | to i sscnre yneod agreement and ! £ { satinfied | over there were skeptical of the pos_|explained to me in Amer; least of | vestigate the company’s affair ductior seves ills providing for| 1 on many compa agreement wit Do not let yourselves supposo for sibllity of forming a lcague of nation :Y‘H_‘hi pentinrit of e JAmerican peo-| The receivership ¢ ulted from thelits repea pem Talled. el l;’”:“r"!”“‘"‘“l"";“ WA E Svitiael Wworsd a moment that the uneasiness in the |admitted that if we cou ut form | ple. can about’ great lamental | company’s announced inability to meet | e uel, materiais and other s of th zed world B T P e mvs Semtiral” | it, It Wwould be an invaluable instry. | things like this. There are many dif- | jta hans ohiigacions and pay an awned | CLEMENCEAU CONGRATULATED |4 0 cconomic causes or economic m mentallty through which to secure | ferenc udgment as to policy P W i SCtiotH e \aucu deeper | the operation of the various parts of |and perfectly legitimate. Sometimes !io its ¢ he replacement val- | Paris, March 4.—Prer - S == of more tha: s he | underlies it all than that. the treaty; and when that ~treaty | profound differences of judgment but |uation of the has be timated | ceans. on his s STRIKE IN GREATER BERLIN« conviction th thing oug : b E comes back gentlemen on this side |those are not differences of sentiment, | by the fede P 32,000,000. | chamber of d i thi SPO { done, and there v 5 @i .}“,if mb,‘lor:“v h‘,h\m;) f";’:."\"fi”‘s will find the covenant not only zu’ilt,"»hl):“- are not differences of purpose, ! wx“m - \‘ empt on h B ,vTIE\Sy UP RN -PQPTAT{S'\ S = tion that not a man ther v \gainst intrigue OF aggression, anmd |Put S0 many threads of the treaty|those are mot differences of ideals.| ——— — "7 |rounded by deputies and co Teportation facilities of Greater | OPPOSED TO GOVERNMENT “Mr. Taft Fas set the 7 . ot prduence in ;m{ 1mfu].tr1§ cabl- | o e thout dentroying -the whala| that, you recognize & wrong explana. 5ot co 4 T vhu‘x’”j = e ara i ene i o'cloc ght Al {.—Opposition to ot what & fa of this D D o a t be oo OFe wheY|vital structure. The structure of | tion when you hear it i latty Swith & douchiz taipiety | okted o premier apy t i L itos Eova, ration of ST B e weaty L Dearing | atal cause for this' and the fum.|Peace will not be vital without the| “In a certain rather abandoned part|they presented me with a petition in | the health mobiles and in cabs joce | Dresmec D Tl e .:’M.o'rw o damental cause they are beginning to \‘f:;mg N;rfh_r::‘gm;; ‘“?‘IL?“{).\?:M;,:T“! mr{ frontier at onv‘ L:mr‘ it was said | favor of the leagu y e fortunate than the travel n el ping hoard a s 1 luncheon y of war has Ia R e e D : ck a ca h|they found a man who told the truth; | wounded limbs, their impa | lett railway because i el of the - \facturers’ Ex- sinister purpos ‘ral Er o’ eingly’ or in ¢t Jealous|BiD: | he was not found telling it, but he|were the only argument rinciy i yance: 1 TSS9 BER0 MOt o Jups against each other, fosterins| 1 Must say that I have been puz_|could teil it when he heard it. And|with them. It was a e N cup t O betiew Aftee a eourse tha y_me rejudice. inereasing the danger of 7led by some of the criticsms—not |l think I am in that situation with|that I lend at 1| e belie o be impracticable an quests to take. Where War rather than concerting mensureg | DY the criticisms themselves; 1 can | regard to some e criticisms 1 have | might happen to M ve to relieve future ( 2 e coes i enterst G s D Sl me of that map lle, o entral line | F e avent 1t; and it there s right sy | understand them perfectly, even when |heard. They do.not make any im-|sererations of sacrifices that they formances ignorant of mpending | ment owner s 10 shipe, 118 that we used to ca \ Breme the world, if there is justice in the|there was no foundation’ for them; | pression on me, hecause I know there |had heen obliged fo make i foahible. becanse the on T Attoriy rmposatbies o T Bagdad ST b i s il e el fact of the criticsm. 1|is no medium that will transmit them,| “That appeal has remained in my papers _did not say anvthing of an| Mr. Rosseter declared American Tney dy A e b ralled | tons should be divided in the support | C2nnot imagine how these gentlemen |that the sentiment of the country is'mind as I have ridden along the streets] impending strike, were forced to wall pping interests could huild and op- gins to which Mr. Taft has called | tons should be {can live and not live in the atmos-|proof against such narrowness and|in European capitals, and heard cries to their homes in some cases miles *o it oy competi- B e G crre. hthel| “They are therefore saying if you |Phere of the world, such selfishness as that. I commend |of the crowd, cries for the league of . % abu; A drizzliv déd to|tion with any other nation regardless throug! ite empire, th:o the | eally belicve that thero is & right it| "I cannot imagine how they live and | these gentlemen to communicn with |nations from lips of people who, 1] & 3 the discomfort of the ped of the zes paid to American B 2=l voh Teally believe that wara ausht; to| RSt in contact with the events of | their fellow citizens. e e as e Telephone service onpidiliea et i 3 employes: ik tegrity whi any was bound to | e Stopped, stop thinking about | the times, and I particularly cannot| “What are we tp say, then as to the | tion of how it was to be done wWho e R R e American ship- respect as her ally in path of that |0 BVl interests of nations, anq | imagine how they can be Americans|future? 1 think, my fellow citizens, | were not ready o propose a plan fol estanrants closed “fearine | ping co » {han balanced by Hne of conquest: the Turxich emp LAk it Theti and. Womeny g and set up a doctrine of careful sel-|that we can look forward to it With 'a Jeague of nations, but whose hearts ¥ » the orowds in the stre operatir ronl tal d. whose interests she professed to make | thime about mon and women and|gepness, thought out to the last de- |great confid 1 have heard che id that something by wa p el e i e T e her own lay 'n the direct path that she | children throughout the world. Sh Timebd mclui o | o e i samegiE DY Rey B S o : = T A sl A intended to tread. | j Nations are not made to afford|erosity in their criticlem. I hava|the water about the progress that 1s | ooriom ot Alpiacn Sverywhere must 3 175 NAMES IN TWO | bisorpEALY MEMBERS OF *And now what has happened? The | distinction to their rulers by way of | heard no _constructive sugestion. I |being made in Paris towards the dis- | “As we drove along country roads| IR 3 ARMYL CASUALTN L1sTs NATIONAL WONAN'S PARTH Austro-Hungarian empire has gone to | success in the manoeuvres of have heard nothing except ‘Will it not | cussion_and clarification of a great |weak old women would come out and - . Vas BECChiS = New Y Mar: 1—Frominent pleces and » Turkish emplre ~has|tics; nations are meant, if they are!pe dangerous to us to help the world? |many difficult matters; and I believe |hold flowers to us. Why should they ¥ ualties are reported the | s 1l Woman’s ismppearad, and the natiors that ef- | meant for anythine t make th It would be fatal to us not to help it.| that settlements will begin to be made | hold flowers up to strangers from| | gl | comma general of the American | p, . " charzes of fected that great resul-—for it was a|and women and children in them s | ““From being what I will venture to | rather rapidly from this time on at|across the Atlantic. Only hecause they | |B Expeditiona sorderly conduet - a tutile to= result of liberation—are now respon- | cure and happy aau piusperous, and o | call the most famous and the most fthose conferences. {believed that we wese the messenger: 5 S Shcliop One v %% | night wit hosiice in f e Met- sible as the trustees of thy assets of | nation has the right to set up its|rowerful nation in the world we would | “But what I belleve—what T know |of friendship and of hope, and fhes $ . wounded seve ropolitan Opera Hou they hat those great nations. Y¥ou not only | special interests against the interests|of a sudden have become the most|as well as believe, is this, that the | fiowe mmble offerings of Geore A 7 X d t monstration would have weak nations iying in and benefits of mankind, léast of all| contemptible. So, I did not need to he | men engaged in those conferences are | g atitude ends from so sreat Zhb wounded severely, was the only C« -ain 1 0 e path, but yon would have nations in|this great nation which we love. told, as I have been told, that the peo- | gathering heart as they go, not losing ' s distance should have brought them 5 B s | necticut man RS r 3 il which that old poisoned aced of in-| “It was set up for the benefit of [ .lo of the United Stales would sup- |it; that they are finding community of : 2 trigne could be planted with the cer- | mankind; it was set up to illustrate d tainty that the crop would be abun-|the highest ideals and to achieve the % 7 a W Paul and I ¥ so great a hop: 3 e A tion 1:“ port. 11.;\1(?m-cn.fi;z 1 :\rrlidan Ameri- | purpose }«‘nnd x»on;muniu- of ideal to an| “It is inconceivable that we should 5 cond: section—-Wonuded ' (degree | pyialiy A Thev can and knew ey would. extent at perhaps they not ex- | disappoint them, a we shall il & 3 Fai etermined) pRag SEEAL o i t eth dant: and one of the *hings that the | highest aspirations of men who want_ | “““What a sweet revense it is upon | pects and (ot amider uit she s, | disappoint them, and we shali —no : i 39: total 123 : . o Jeague of nations is intended to watch|ed to be free; and the world—the!{he world. They laughed at us once.|play of Influence, there is a forward |jea will look back with swelli ¥ Wounded (Degree Undetermined) T is the course of intrigud. Intrigue|world of today bhelleves that and|They thought so until April of 1917, | movement which is running towards|hearts and rising pride that thes - . I oo Sridge- | started their nstration. 2 o cannot stand publicity, and it the|counts on us, and would be thrown|It was hardly credible to them that | ihe right. Men have at Iast percerved | thouid mave heen privileged o mun: Comorals SAIbert O e T e e kb league of nations wero r:;xh;zslyuzmn lh':u‘k xénn tne blatkness of despair |we would do more than send a few |that the only permanent thing in the | the sacrifice which it was necessary |- | e i D e ronn? Do L great debaiing societ 4 we deserted 't men over and go through the forms of | world is the right, and that a, wron |to make in order to combine thei-{ B, ! St : £ AL SH Intrigue “T have tried once and again, 1 | nhelping, and when they saw multis | settlement o boand 1 be o te?"nnomry‘;x;;gn’? B il e e £ ) 3 s T St {ZREEIDENTIAL SHIBATC L2 "M s one of the agreements of this| fellow citizews, vv .cc circles | tudes hastening across the sea and |settiement—bound to be o temporary | cause of justice for men of every kind s 2% ; 3 AT 815 THIS MORNING cgvenant that it is the friendly right|of friends or to larger bodles, what |saw what those multitudes were eager |scttlement for the very best reason o |everswhere. 5 ; ‘ 3 ; e Marel dent Wil- of every noiion a member of the|seems to be the real hope of the peo_|to do when they got to the other side, |all, that it ought to be a temporary “God give us t rength and v Ieague (0 i attention that anything | ples of Burope, and I tell you frank- | they stood amazed and said “The thing | seitlement and the spirits of men will | sion to (o it S “hat it think: wiil disturb the peace of | ly I have not been able to do so be- privileze. Opera appeared meetin Justice ; ing the pplies. to|room rath interfere with the by the war la ard of back wages'| BY FRENCH DEPUTIES [larze extent t:pon W orde | | | | W iod give 1 : \ 1 | Wasi this " is real, this nation is the frfend of | rebel against it, and the spirits of men | privilege of ki t we did it - = = 3 Y «nd other the worid. no matter where that thing j:ause ‘when {hec:‘houhgm 1ri:s to crowd | mankind as it said it was' The en-|are now in the saddle, oo toouniige BERe Cost e 85_ILLUSTRATING SERVICE, M. Y./ members of his party. The ~*eamshi rTiag teelt into epeech, the profound em6- |thusiasm, tie hope, the trust. the con-| “When I was in Italy, a little limp- | cause we were true Americans. lovers more dollars yoa zet tozetherlis scheduied to sail for irance at 815 There in no subject thatsmay:toreh il of the thing s iog much: | Adence in the Tuture bred by that|ing group of woundsd ftalian sokdtess | o inerty o of doine men:. % Mow-Governor of Wyoming. loudes .

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