Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 11, 1919, Page 1

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' POPULATION ~_ NORWICH. CONN., FRID s 14 PAGES—98 COLUMNS PRICE TWO CENTS SOENT TELLS SEMATE S v o e ety s R34 1S AVERAGING WORE Thges T ; z 1o bncan Secretary” Lansing wiil leave Brest : 2 (U - NI ] i P res’m s ) wxx-:;mi:c K:?;}?:E‘Efi;mnuw the i Board | Senator Brandegee =Declared 5 To Become a Business Advic-| 7 St of 25 ships to trade routes during the e “It Was a Soap Bubble, B ini bosied Anpounced slloastion or to Small Manufacturers : , Declared It Was Demanded By All the Peoples of the World| With No Substance.” e B —Successor Appointed. At Times Speed Reached Between 75-80 Miles an Hour— —Asserted That For the United States to Reject It (Special to The Bulletin.) national holiday to celebrate - signing | Washington, July 10. — President Crew Should Be Able to Sight the British Shores Early i e . h * Washington, July 10.—Unless alf’ in- | OF the peace terms. Wilson today accepted the resigna- = % ! “Would Break the Heart of the World”—The Senate | dications See” ot tauie e cas 20l in-| “ During the month of Jume 342686 | tion of Edward N. Hurley as chairman Saturday—The Weather Bureau is Sending Reports to P e S odd 5 ¥ . | message today has ~weakened . the|men were returned to the United |Of the shipping board, effective Aug. 1. el B A o ——— . Received the President With Cheers and Listened to His|cause of the league of nations in the | States from France. s S Con SHRL M. Builey will the Blimp’s Crew Regularly During the Trip. - e ; Senate. Except the few democraiy| Bar silver was quoted at 53 3-16|be succeeded by John Barton Payne of Words in a Grave Silence. who inyariably stand by the adminis- | Pence an ounce in London. New York|Chicago, general counsel of the rail-| Washington, July 10—Aided by a storm center over Newfoundland was i i 3 tration, no matter what the racemice|auoted silver at $1.06. road administration, whose nomina-|westerly wind that sometimes reached | moving northeast and that another Washington, July 10.—The peace|you with regard to the work of the |concerned, it was difficult to find sen- | ltaly, it is reported, may purchase|tion as a member of the shipping|a velocity of nearly 40 miles an hour, |over Ontario was moving toward treaty with its league of nations Cove. | donference by which that treaty was|ators of either party who expressed | 100,000 tons of shipping from United [board wa ssent to the senate today. _|the British dirigible R-34 tonight was| Newfoundland. The report compiled nhnt WaS, N30 Betore 1he cemate by | formulatad. satisfaction with it. The. general opim. | States shipping board % Mr. Hurley after a three months’|well out over the Atlantic on the re- | by Korecaster E. H. Bowie concluded: President Wilson today 1n e .idress| The treaty constitutes nothing less|ion was that it was inconsequential| Voters aufiorized the $22,996,000 im- | vacation will become a business ad-|turn trip to Bast Fortune, Scotland. You will have strong westerly aceounting to the country fo: part|than a world settiement. It would |and gave no enlightenment on the|brovement program in Pittsburgh at . ewhaeery i fn- 3 B wasaEe Tomthe alsship, ve- | winds next 24 to. 58 hours with some gt siatintions at Versailles. Hot e Dosaible Tor: Trie, I S ot LBraht Guestion e bond issue election. al operators. ceived late today by the navy depart-|clouds and a falling barometer. My e L Sl ety Sir Thomas White, minister of fi-| E. Marvin Underwood of Atlanta|ment gave her position at that time advice ‘is to keep well south and take The league, declared the president,|marize or to construe its manifold | Senator Brandegee of Connecticus . : & | nance of Canada, will retire from polit- ) now solicitor for the railroad adminis- | as 630 miles due east of Bar Harbor, | adv intage of westerly winds attending ‘Wwas born of the conviction of practi- | provisions in an addrgss which must|When asked by The Bulletin corre- |I D f cal statesmen that an international |of necessity, be sométhing less than |spondent what he thought of the mes. |ical life in a few weeks. trationfi was looked upon today as the| Me., more than 1000 miles from |rapid eastward movement of disturb- concen had become a werld necescity |a treatise. My services and all the a. | sage, said: "It was a soap bubble 1t| The Crimea was cleared of the Bol- [most probable successor to Mr. Payne | Mineola, L. I, from which she started | ances north of latitude 45, Good luck o end the old order And ‘guarantee | formation 1 posses will me at yanr | was an airy nothing, with —mo. sub.|sheviki as (he result Gf the advance|as general counsel of the railroad ad-|last midnight. and a quick trip.” 3 civilization. He asserted that in such a|disposal and at the disposal of your|stance. Like most of the president’s|of General Denikine’s troops. = ministration. The dirigible, according to wireless e War Department announced enlisted reports received by the mavy depart. | MESSAGE OF THANKS concert the world looked confidently to | committee on foreign relations at any |addresses, it was well written, but it America® for leadership and added |time, either informally or in session.|dealt entirely with smooth platitudes, |men near the wheat fields will be re- ment throughout the day, averaged FROM DIRIGIBLE R-34 that while the treaty might not be ex-(as you may prefer; and I hope that|It gave no information, and it led no-|leased to help harvest the crops. fect a complete and systematic inter- | more than 60 miles an hour for the| new York, July 10.—A message of actly as the American _ delegation | you will not hesitate to make use of | Where. London Board of Trade announced | nationalization of waterways and rail- | first 15 hours of the return fiight and | O ¢ 0% 03T S07 04, ERREae 28 Apparently a great majority of sen-|evidence given secretly at inquiry in- | ways, which were necesary to the free fat times.the speed reached between 75 | 2018 [T @0 EIReD, BY LG ROV €O would have written it. no vital prin- them. I shall at this time prior to . - ciple had been sacriliced by the nec-|your own study of the document ,at- | ators entertain that opinion and the|to sinking of Lusitania will be pub- | economic life of more than one nation |and 80 miles an hour. If weather con- day by Major ‘G. H. Scott, her com- essary compromires. _|tempt only a general characterizatica |2Pathy of old time democrats was es- | lished. and to clear many of the normal chan- | ditions remain favorable, naval offi- | o ¥ 9% T fo. SeOt, Ber com- The senate, already divided in a bit-|of its scope and purpose. pecially noticeable. While they de-| A report from London says the Brit- | nels of commerce of unfair obstruc- |cers here believe Major G. H. Scott, | pon commander of the Third Naval ter fight over. the league .proposal, re- In one sense, no doubt, there is no | clined to criticize the message, they |ish government disposed of 12,000,000 | tions of law or of privilege, and the|commander, and members of the |y W CHENEl great :,‘,“,,,‘; g ceived the president with cheers and|need that I should report to you what | likewise declined to be quoted as find- [ yards of balloon cloth at a single|very welcome opportunity to secure |R-34's crew will see British shores [ StE¢H Welt FoC ERESL @irri'D Hes asun‘dw"ge;“’hew;g&! Jn a grave si-|was attempted and done at Paris. ing It satistactory. The very seneral S = ¢ | Zox, labor ahe. concerted protection of | early Saturday. PRl 5 ace. o] re | Fou have been dally cognizant of wi opinion here seems to be tha wi mployers of cotton operators at| definite international pledges of prin- a2 i o was another burst of cheering as he | was going on thereof the prsbiom | not influence a single vote in favor of | Manchester, Eng., will meet represent- | ciple and practice. e ] T D i went to his capitol office, where he|with which the peace conference had | the treaty, and if the treaty is ratified |atives of the workers to discuss the| These were not tasks which the | pore (Bl "40Y (1o R34 regularly | (he' valuable and. eficient assiatance talked for an hour with senators who|(o deal and the difficult: v it will be after reservations and much | strike situation £ i h i ; i r ena v of layin; 3 be ¥ . g conference = looked about it to find | g Fhpsiteip: £ o . of Tistied 19 ask about specific features | down straight lines of settiement ang. | discussion. The opnonents say frank-| During the first five months of 1919| and went out of its way t perform. | " € P 0t to the | e R e e e O o ihe Lreaty or of the negotiations. In|where on a. field on which the old |I¥ that if the president goes before the | the exports from London to the United | They were inseparable from the set- S et rioiy saoid inat- &l good DrogreEs ? 2 these conferences the president dis-|lines of international relationship, and | COUNtry with no better arguments or|States totaled $47,779,249, compared | tieracnts of peace. They wern thrust | B-34 from here tonight s : cussed freely such subjects as the dis- | (he new aioke . fofbwor hbicata | more information than he gave the|with $31071541 in 1915. upon it by circumstances which cou'd position of Shantung, the German in- i Sominirical® | enate today. public sentiment will| California State Mining Bureau an-|not be o had : & demnities and Irish freedom. e ere, for the most part. | Cuickly demand either refusal to rati- | nounced 307 ol wells wore Started i | oreated them: oo he Wur Bad|gpar ADMIRAL HUSE JUMPED [SUB-LIEUT. JEAN /NAVARRE, In his sddress. however, there was|Su' which dominatod ation amstance | 8 or that it he amended. first half of 1919, compared with 406| In all cuarters of the world ld-cs- OVERBOARD TO SAVE A “GOB.”"| FAMOUS FRENCH ACE, KILLED no direct reference to many of the S5 NRMGH SOMUALe] aotion where M| Woinoigr Mclean was tied close tollast vear and 577 vear before. tablished relationships had be:1 dis- Paris, July 10 (By the A. P.)—Sub- guestions around which senate debate| cierse them. The oross currents of |the banking and currency' committee,| ~James Hamilton Lewis, former| turbed or broken and affairs were at| New York, July 10—When Rear Ad- |, (00 S ;0 BENCERE b B m e has centered, the president deeclaring|politics and of interest must have | Of Which he is a member. He listened | United States senator ef Illinois, | loose ends, needing to be mended or |Miral Harry Mclaren Pinckney Huse, | 58 SRR, < BOR | 5 STETES B onen he Sould not construe details of thelheen evident to you. It would be|attentively to the address, but made|awarded a Belgian war cross announ- | Lnited as:in, but could not be made |COmmander of the train force of the | oy o B4, ine " TR 0 Who was Lleaty in a short address. He did not| presuming in me to atiempt to explain | N Statement regarding it. ced he had declined the award. whac they were before. They had to [Atlantic fleet, dived into the Hudson| i ipjrwn from the service becauss t e Monroe Doctrine, Congressman Merritt said» “T think| Committee of bankers will submit| be sct right by applying some unitorm | Fiver last week to save a plain "g0b"| ;i " cccontric escapades, fell while the questions which arose or the many diverse elements that entered into he did “just what any mnaval officer|q. .’ in the vicinity of Versallles this Shantung or the obligations assumed under Article 10 of the league cove- nant, nor did he allude to the propesal to write reservations into the ratifica- tion. I express the general sentiment of|io President Wilson plan developed | principle of justice or enligntened cx- 5 B 1 T o tempat jentered INto | members of &onsress of both parties|under leadership .of H. B. Davison for | bediency. — ° gnreacd € | would hve done,” the admiral declarg | ;3108 00, "0, died soon after in & arabtious than that the morg clear. |When I say we were keenly disap-|financing reconstruction of Europe And they could not be adjusted by |©d tonight when news of the rescuc|pjary hospital. ly susgested by my duty to report (o) Pointed that the president gave 10| |n order to stop profiteering and |merely prescribing in a treaty what Eeadhont 4 was William J. |, lieutenant Navarre was about to H information resarding the league oOriavoid troubles similar to Italy’s,|should be done. New states were to S aEhman fessucdiwan A . |1and at the airdrome at Villacoublay i I the congress the part it seemed nec- P : " 2 g D,\;gses:sr_\,-xfidan&ra1\\*:021195::511“%: heass Tor s cglengues o anee; | entighten congress in any way. .| France has lifted nearly all import|be set up Which could not hope to live [ Buckley of Chicago, b""t"sl"“a:“l Of | when, in trying to avoid a collision At e disposel aah ot e Slapaail 03| Play as-the representatives af the gove one Jnen I have taiked with | prohibitions imposed during the war.|through their first period of weak- | barge which was about to take the ad- | i1, other” machines, his airplane e ot e ol i e so stated, and I have talked with| Sub-Treasury reported withdrawal|ness without assured support by the|Miral and his wife ashore from the | iagpeq, IRy e either informelly or 1o"2.at| " The part was dictated by the role | Many congressmen of both political | of $3,65.000 in gold for shipment to|great nations that had consented to|fagship Columbia R v TN Bee | urnericn fhad iplased | e ns. and| PRrEes Spain and the Assay Office reported | their creation and won for them their Sub-Lieutenant Jean Navarre was R R e | e cxpeciabiohs thas ST hebr o $135,000 in gold bars was sent to Eng- | independence. : Ill-governed ' colonies | CONTROL OF OCEAN FREIGHT officialiy credited with bringing down Sous R e e 3 land. 5 could not be pyt in the hands of gov- RATES RELINQUISHED. |twelve enemy airplanes, although the ‘American isolation, the president as- | Whora we had associated ourselves in |them of calling myself their leader. With the arrest of five men alleged | ernments which were to act as trus-| o . E i tro1 | Paris newspapers during _the "latter O Dl B Bt A | et kreat Lt But I speak now of what they meant |.to be river pirates, the marine division | tees for their people and not as their ashington, July 10.—All control | o2\ ‘¢ his service in the French avia- whess HE TS SR BRI Dot the pe Why. Ws.Entored the War. to the men by whose sides they fought|of thesNew York police department | masters if there was to be no common [ Over ocean freight rates was reln-(tion corps credited him with the de- by oy 15 control: of . Cuba .and| The vk 3 and to the people with whom theyibelieve they have leaders in water|authority among the nations to which |quished today by the shipping board. |giruction of nineteen enemy machines. e pnmbérfiufiie‘m I e United States entered the war |mingled with cuch utter simplicity as{front thefts. they were to be responsible in the exe- | Abandonment of rate control hith-| After his retirement from the ser- But we Bave.not efploited them,”|UD°n 2 different footing from every |friends who asked only to be of ser-| It is reported Frank A. Vanderlip, |cution of their trust. Future interna- | rto exercised by the board through a|yjce he was arrested and placed in a -1 e e e other nation except our associates on | vice. They were for all the visible|in conjunction with several prominent |tional conventions with regard to the|System of charter will give perfect|mijjjtary pris: charged with having friends and have sought to serve|.0iS Side of the sea. We entered it, | embodiment of America. What they| Pittsburgh interests, is to become |control of waterways, with regard to | freedom to shipowners in the matter. |run down several policemen of Paris Them. = = & Phere cam be no ques. |1°t because our material interests{did made America and all that shelidentified with the American ruit |illicit trafic of many kinds, in arms or Pt Bistoblie, butiwas; relesson e were directly threatened or because |stood for a living reality in the|Growers Inc. in deadly drugs, or with resard to the ter, At the time it was reported tion of our ceasing to be 1d e 1 2 s A ord |any special treaty obligation to which | thoughts not only of the people of Department of Agriculture report|adjustment of ma; varying interna- [ was to be secured, the authority with-|hat he would be examined by mental power. The only question is whether > ; 4 W e Tl ,h,,q moral leadership | ¢, Were parties had been violated, | France but also of tens of millions of | places condition of corn on July 1 at|tional administrafive arrangements|out which, as they had come to see it,|exper but only becapse we saw the suj - |men and women throughout all the 4 = ; & that is offered us, et] 1] E. prem- | mi m 2 . | 86.7 per cen mpared with 87.1 per|could not be assured if the treaty were |it would be difficuit to give assured accept: on reject the N ndenos df the 2y, “d,”'g e valiaity or Hight] fotling nations of & Gstandm&:& 2 R et tu“&mvlde no perns-nént common in-|effect either to this- treaty or to any | READ PRESENTED GOLD b2 R evervwhere put in jeopardy gnd. free|erywhere in peril dom_and AR o ternational agericy; if-its execution in|other international understanding up- MEDAL BY AERO CLUB “The stage is set,.the destiny dis-|SOverfiment -likely-to-be everywhere {of the loss of everythifig F 1 to govern aerial nayiga- |SUcCh matters was to be left to the slow [on which they were to depend for the o closed. It has epme.about by no plan | 'mPeriled.by the intolerable aggression |in deadly fear that its ~bonds Were|tion already accepied by most of the|and uncertain processes of co-opera- | maintenance of peace. The fact that| New York, July 10.—Lieutenant of our concciving, but by the hand of |Of & Dower which respected neither |never to be loosed, its hopes forever|Ajijed natiohs were made public by |tion by ordinary methods of negotia- |the covenant of the league was the | Cocmmander A. C, Read, commander God Who has led us into this way. We | SyStem of government flouted the !to be mocked and disappointed. the aeronautical commission of- the | tion. . first substantive part of the treaty to|of the navy seaplane N. 4 in the rights of the citizens as against the Must Allay Europe’s Fears.. peace conference. If the peace conference itsclf was to|be worked out and agreed upon, while [pioneer passage of the Atlantic, was zannot turn back. We can only go % Y o 2 Y autocratic authority of his governors. President E. W. Beatty of the Cana- | be the end of co-operative authority |all else was in solution, helped m’p}v‘»l«mr\w\ s, !m:f i of the Aero clu America at a lun- forward, with lifted cyes and fresh- = e deipree o e e Gl o And in the settlements of the peace lA"‘idf"‘"V“’mD“:f’“ ‘;’; what "‘? dian Pacific Railway Co. refused to|and common counsel among the gov-|make the formulation of the rest £ Alluding to_the - skepticism with | We Have sought no special reparation o Amorica nt the pesce table D1t was|confirm reports that the war claims|ernments to which the world waseasier. The conference was, after all, | cheon given in honor of the command- x ' of the company were settled with the | looking to enforce justice and give|not to be ephemeral. ers of the th planes which took h;r ou}:-;e!ve; but only the restoration (9 America at the prace taple. . It Wa ] lanes which too of right and the assurance of liberty 4 : o |-British government. pledges of an enduring settlement, re- i 4 part in the historic flight. The club's everywhere that the effects of the |IOn we took part in contributed, $0|™"wpe arrival of the U. S. transport|gions like the Saar Basin could not be c",;‘:”' of N[“‘:"‘ x“ ‘“‘,’ c‘::‘*'f‘{‘;’_— aviation medals of merit ~were, con- settlement were to be felt. We entered 5 : v Sant_Oliva with 1,757 casuals from |Dut under a temporary administrative Srepnciri-atinationswas: to_con- | ferred. on Commangsr 4 R the war as the disinterested cham- |duiet the fears s;‘nd redal}x)z: the ihopes Bordeaux marked the closing of that|regime which did not involve a trans- | tinue, under a definite covenant which | ers, who commanded the flight, and pions ‘of right and we interested our- | Of the peoples who had beer lVing in| oor¢ for transport service. All re- |fer of political sovereignty and which fhad been aéreed upon u?‘(}b,\vn.cg]ztu Licutenant Lo.mmm;‘d‘cr\ P. N. L. Bel- 1 : turning troops will come by way of|contemplated a final determination of | Were convinced was workable. —They ger. Their fachines reliched 'the which the .plafi for a league of nations first was received, the president said th-* as the peace negotiations pro- celded it became apparent to all the delegates that cuch a concert was “‘a practical necessity,” demanded by “all e Sopgre ity e world” - For the|Selves in the terms of the peace in no : : Unieoa &.ief'm”rim‘l';'?. he asserted, | Other capacity. s e Ty o A N e e o5 ponitioal wommections by populer |could go forward with confidence to ! Azores, but were unable to complete om. It was our duty to do every Representatives of American oil | vote to be taken at a distant date; no|Make arrangements intended to = bethe voyage. P permanent. The most practical of the| The principal speaker was Baron “would break the heart of the world Nations Were Tottering thing thi v ? r? .4 ng at it was within our power to 3 e & i - in disregard of precedent, the senate! mhe % & H companies operating in Mexico are |free city like Danzig could be created n 2 preeecal of T 4 = e s a mph - f o . 2 o £ nations the|of the avie 2 ss 3 ard aft ordered that the treaty | very Jow ebb when our soldiers be- | assurance of which men might every- |State department to use airplanes in|tional guarantees, to accept exception superintendence of all interests which | French senate, who declared that “an transporting money to the oil fields|a] oblisations With regard to the use|Jid not admit of immediate determi- [aerial police force will be the only Dbe published in the Congressional - 5 R galleries were overflowing aRd crowds | copt in their stoutest Spisits. o someore Entanglements Faced. John W. Davies, American ambas- | With a state of which it was not to |Dation, of all administrative problems | complete and eflicacious defense o unable to gain admiscion waited in|foronoding of disaster.” The war crq.| Old entanglements of every kind|sador to Britain, is understood to have |form a part; properly safeguarded | Which were to reauire a continuingleague of nation T the rain to cheer the president When|ed in November, eight months ago bui |5t00d in the way—promises which | been selected as the American repre. | Plebiscites could not be provided for S e e e e S PR LR et HIE i g el he arrived and departed. you have only to recall what was |Eovernments had made to one another| sentative to the permanent court of |Where populations were at some fu- | oy, % 0uncel of necessity. The league | constantly ready an aerial army which There was no attempt &t oratory|feareq j in the days when might and right| international justice to be formed by |ture date to make choice what sove- i . - ar fr and no applative interrupted the ad: | (qared in midsummer last, four short | ! L DL T e T relgnty they would live under; no cer- |Of nations was the practical statcs- | would prevent the next war from orig- dress. Nearly every senator was in| 2008 ReTRre the armistice. to real | Ui 0. ‘was without restraint. Engage. femitand iniban imethodiof - arbitras | BISD S HAPE OF BRcceas IRy o Lhe | inating; in & SUCDXISe. O atine Gere his seat and all lisiened = attentively: | gcomnlished miike for Thein horals {ments which contemplated any dispo- tion could be secured for the sctile- R e Rt e Dy agnIe ROWes. opinNT Afterward his supporters were un- i IOBED of fereay e ey 3 ment of anticipated difficulties of final many. and their physical safety. That first SO s Sl ancient Poland had ever in any true | jocigion with regard to matters dealt Stinted in their praise for the pre: A & : S ~ | never-to-be-forgotten action at |Sovereignty that might seem to be to| cense become a part of Germany, or < - 3 thought of every member of the con- ARADE IN he had dealt only in unsatisfactory|Place. Our redoubtable soldiers and | POWEC,'G (OS50 (0OR A, BEG DOC| was alien in every thought and oDe | ,ration which Germany was to under- | Uch sreater every way, than a mere S 0 = Goverd- Sencraiitied marines had already closed the zap Eht of What|to the monarchy of which she had | STREIR FOICR TICTMANY. Was 10 WSO | instrument for carrying out the pro-| Adantic City, July —G In his talks afterward with league|tDe ememy had succeeded in opening | the Peoples concerned might Wish or{co long been an artificial part, and [ 278 ® PR entirely break dewn; |Visions of a particular tregty. It was|or Frank Lowden, of lllinois, in a vic- supporters. the president was said to|fOF their advance upon Paris—had | Profit by; and these could not always|the uneasy partnership between Aus- | grat'ol TSR CRUrely breafc —COWR: | niversally recognized that all the|tory and peace oration here today at have discussed at length the Shane,already turned the tide of .battle back | Pe honorably brushed aside. It was|{ris and Bungary had been one rather b s v peoples of the world demanded of the |the conclusion of the Elks parade, de- TR e n. A leugt fie oos|towards the frontiers of F: q |mot easy to .graft the new order oflof interest than of kinship or sym- | 2dMinistrative arrangements and re- |70 that it should create such|nounced Bolshevism and socialism. tung and Irish guestions. He was| s palibe, and gl T, and sOme . of . the o SO sy oy o lstrictions which the treaty prescribed | conference that it shou’c o g B sl tiee 4 S gl TN quoted as saying he was ot satisfed |BCSUR _the _rout. that was to save | [AS2S on th o Jor pathy. The Slavs whom Austria had [FUCRES, Wil fecognized, might not |2 continuing concert of free nations as| Declaring Bolshevism was “as de with the treaty provision giving| EUrope and the world. Thereafter | [Fuils of the sgra “gg e 1% ear,!mr chosen to force into her empire on | oo of o ™ ETe ZoCoRn B T e ntirely | would make wars of aggression and [structive of a government of law and Shantung to Japan, but as declaring | (he Germans were to be always forced |2 Line Le biiter = But with very few| the scuth were kept to- their obedi- | p1o¥$¢% 0 long enforcement would be | SPoliation such as this that has just|order as militarism,” he added: there was an informal understanding |back. back—were never to thrust suc- | ChccPAORSIRE men Who sat with us at| ence by nothing but fear. Their hearts 5 < onded forever impossible. A cry hed| “Our most dangerous enemy is not T 5 3 : the peace table desired as sincerely| - p & Tax impracticable. The promises govern- . ; ost d ; g g1 among the peace delegates that even- | ¢essfully forward again. s were with their kinsmen in the Bal- - Pl el > Srother | @One out from every home in every!in some foreign land. He 18 n 2 o v & as we did to get away from the bad|p, Thes all jiis [ Iexiswene mmlding fo-one another |8 . o dang #n thich sons and|within onr gates. He bears different tually Jauan must make an accepta- France Had Lost Heart. influences, the illegitimate purposes, e B wers arrangements | o hout the way in which labor was to |Stricken land from whicl ezt (o ey . byl Toausteial ble agreement with China in.th t- ralizi i i ;| of power, rot arrangements of natural ‘i v 1a , in | brothers and fathers had gone forth to ometimes it is the Industria e agreement wit, a in the_ma And . yet.there was no confide-t!the demoralizing ambitions, the intes | Trion or ascociation. Tt was the im- | D acalt With, by law not only but in |}t 000 B0 og e that such a sac rs of the World, sometimes the ter. B hope. Anxious men and Women, Ic ) - | national counsels and expedients, ouc e < i i fact as well, would remain a mere| 2 & rer age be exacted. It sometimes the ‘One Great Un- Discussing the faflure of the peace ing spifits of France, attended (..o |of which the sinister designs of Ger- | borgiive task of those who imeoula |humane thesis if there was to be com- |fice should mever again be exacied. e o8 socialia conference to receive the representa- | celebration of the Fomcth ot thl 1iot | eramy e e e o oavin, | make peace and make it intelligently | mon tribunal of opinion and judgment |had been exacted because one nefion nd _sometimes soclalism. tives of Irish-American organizations | year in Paris out of Senerows conries T e T s e Taur el Showin-| to establish a new order which would | 0% hich" Tiheral Statesmen couid. re- | desired dominion and other nati/s| The parade was held in a_downpour on behalf of Irish fréedom, Mr. Wil- | " with no heart for festivity. little ¢ Yate ; thi by 1est upon the free choice of peoples|gort for the influences which alonehad known no means of defence cs-|of rain, more than 5000 Flks from son was said to have- told - senators|for hope. But th€y came. amesr vitn ! centad oo B T Ay paere 2. |mather than upon the arbitrary au- |might secure their redemption. |cept armaments and alliances. many arts of the country taking part. that the representatives had so identi- | somethinz new at thelr hearts. Thes | ihoy had been aceented, not becauee | {Pority of Hapsburgs or Hohenzol- | ™% 'league of free nations had become| War had lain at the heart of every e § fied themselves with the revolution- | have—themselves told wus so. The| we had come in to hasten and as. | e5nS- - a “practical necessity. Examine the |arrangement of the IEurope—of every|paR|S TO EXPERIENCE A ary element in Ireland that it-became | mere sight of our men—of their vigor,| sure the victory and insisted upon | Mofe than that, ereat populations | ireaty of peace and you will find that | Artangement of the world “that pre; 24-HOUR GENERAL STRIKE, impossible to receive them. of the fa 5 o - k o0 | hound by sympathy and actual Kin |guerope DE8CS P00 MOR N anifold | ceded the war. Restive peoples had g confidence that showed itself| them, but because they were readily A % 4 14 ghout it - 1 . Satsiend e nich | Pari: July 10.—A general strike The decision not to bind Germany |in every movement of their stalwart| acceded to as the principles to which | (0, umania were also linked against| provisions its framers have felt|been told that flects and armics, which | Tafls, S 1ol begin at b o'c to a definite_indemnity, the president : = - their will to the conglomerate Austro- A = | they toiled to sustain, meant peace; |lasting 24 hours will begin ock Was reporisa o Dave Eaid: was|iog mmace o inr L g ", SWInE" | Ronorable and enlightened minds ev- | Hungarian monarchy. or {6 other alien | COuS he unt Tndispensable factiamen |4nd they now 'lnew that they had | inthe morning of Juy 21 and termin: v i = inli = o e SOV ignties, L i i i ; that eets and armies|ate at 5 a. m, July according e Ve hls Drotest 3%, 25 |hending eyes and easy discipline, in| They spoke the conscience of the | SOVSTSiEmtes and it was part of (he | tality for the maintenance of the new |poen UeQ tor, CRAT TS AUT CIMISH| O D ent issued from the labor ex- quoted as caying he consented to the|their indomitable air that added spirit| world s well as the conscience of | {isk of peace to make & new Ru- |order it has been their purpose to set indeterminate plan to help Premier|to everwthing they did—made every i : = m America, and I am happy to pay m: ek . Lioyd George over domestic obsta-|one who saw them that memorable | tribute of respect and mratitude te the | Clustering about Serbia. change this afternoon. tional ambitions and meant war. They of the movement ap- knew that no old policy means an The organizers thing else but - force, force—always|pear determined to carry it out in de- up in the world—the world of civilized men. ;'!;I:file I:va:::t s;‘gnu!::ed?““uon of d::eé—eg‘:zf that something had hap-|able, forward-looking men with whom | German Colonies Had to Be Dispos- | One of the First Agreements Accepted (¢, co. And they knew that it was in-|fiance of the government's warning In talking to the senators, the pres- | are incident in the Mehiing. somer | ey ay, Drivilege to co-operate for ed OF. That there should. be a league of | {olerable. Every true heart in the|and at the risk of partial failure, and ident was said to have taken a firm|thing very different from the sneo ne. | their unfailing epirit of co-operation,! ,.4 no natural frontiers could be |nations to steady the counsels and |world, and every enwightened judg-|also in the fact of criticism that stop- stand against any reservations in the | rival of freeh tronpn A LeriCle ar-| their constant effort to accommodate! so1,3 to these mew fields of adjust- |Maintain the peaceful understandinss|ment demarded that at whatever cost|page of the railroads will obstruct de senate’s ratification of the treaty. It|foree mad Sune Stooif intos et Juorall the intersts they reppesented to the| 0" 004 1C3cmption. It was neces. |Of the world, to make, not treaties |of independent action, every govern-|mobilization. which the —manifesta- ung itself into the strug- | principles we were all agreed upon. 16 look comstantly forward to|alone, but the accepted principles of ment that took thousht for its people | tion ostensiby was organized to hast- w: erted he would not be di : e e it Gven 1owatd ditbeoretive mostrs riton oine Dhysical force of those| The difficulties, which were many, lay | S85¥ 19, 100K CORSPARLY JOTRAT0. 12 | international law as well, the actual jor for justice or for ordered freedom | en. vations to make the senate’s POsition | than bodily. vigor. They corrsd tag|in the circumstances. Mot often in the| onice ‘Gore to be disposed of. They |Tule of conduct among the govern-|should lend itself to a new purpose _— clear. great ideals of a free people In thelr| Bon yaimost without exception thelp,q not been governed; they had been |Ments of the worid, had been one of fand utterly destroy the old order of|jjGH TENSION BETWEEN Regarding the proposed - reservation | hearts and with that vision were an. | Bc@ ¥ho led had caught the true and | y;i5iceq merely, without thought of | the agreements accepted from the first|international politics. Statesmen might | AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY. i under which the senate would declare | conquerable. = Their e rosence | [Ull vision of the problem of peace| ;;."interest or even the ordinary hu- | S the basis of peace with the centralsce difficulties, but the people coul i : 3 | the nation could not enter war under | brougnt. reassuiein, o Thcsonce|asan indivisible whole, a problem, mot | 1% PISTESE B SUCR RS SN0 NET powers. The statesmen of all the bel- |see none and could brook no denial. A| Parls, July 10.—High tension be- Article Ten without a wdr declaration | made victory certain. Shting| of mere adjustments of interest, but| "7} TRI S0 " ire moreover, had | ligerent countries were agreed that |war in which they had been bled white | tween the Austrian and Hungarian by congress, Mr. Wilson was report-| They were recognized % or Justice and right action. fallen apart as the Austro-Hungarian |SUCh a league must be created to sus-|to beat the terror that lay concealed | governments js cated in despatches gnized as crusaders,| The atmosphere in which the con- [ [210€T &PATL A8 TOC S e O | tain the settlements that were to be|in every balance. The monster that|reccived he from Vienna and g 2 | effected. But at first, I think, there|had resorted to arms must be put in|Budapest. The Austrian foreign mir ing that the constitutional inability of | mean salvation. i"g"{h was seen to|the ambitions of strong governments, Jess inhuman force. Its peoples cried | Was a feeling among some of them |chdins that could not be broken. The |ister, I Otto Bauer, demanded {the United States to make war With- | fo carry such a heme eud ooy’ paog | Put by the hopes and aspirations of | J92% "R 2l L (2770 I liceor rrom un- | tBat. While it must be attemnted, the |united power of free nations mu:t put 1 from Vienna of the Hunga- out a congressional declaration Wwas |the assurance it forecast '!';.fn: Sm"° small nations and of peoples hitherto | co o e “(qistress, for all that the |foTmation of such a league was per-(a stop to aggression, and the -world|rian minister. e T Men| ynder bondage to the power that vis- " haps a counsel of perfection which|must be given peace. If there was noti Bela Kun, head of the Hungarian one of the reasons why the league |neve; s 3 S ‘da BE = - 3 council was authorized anly to. "ad- | floess wers ‘wf‘;;:;‘g‘;(:;‘:‘ their of-| tory had shattered and destroyed. Two g:fi‘“g"‘;i‘(h{"f ll’;“g‘;w;‘fm},“i,p,“(fs I her | practical men, long experienced in the | the will or the intoiligence to accom- | soviet government, in return has de viee’ 1o _the steps to be taken. 3 F 2 3 great empires had been forced into | in utter darkness were to be 1d world of affairs, must asree to very |plish that now. there muse be anot! # | manded that the campaign against the In all, The president's visit to the _ Praise For U. S. Troops. political bankruptey and we were the | (0, " UG SO0 RN, AETE, g Civen | cautiously and with many misgiving: e ikl Wwar ! andlthe world reusl | Hungarian lagation at Vienns be atops rapiiol oceupied less thun two hours.| ThIS is not the occasion upon whichl receivers. Our task was not only to} 2t 2 helping hand. Undeveloped | It Was only the difficult work of ar-|he swept clean of every power that|ped ches report that sup- The address required 39 minutes. . to utter a eulogy of the armies Amer-| make peace with the Central Empires | 1o,oic. and peoples ready for recog- | FAnging an all but universal adjust-|could renew the terror. por “Ja Kun are entering Aus- After the president finished speak- |ica sent to France, but perhaps since|and remedy the wrongs their armies | Digon. but not vet read to assume |Ment of the world’s affairs advanced| The league of nations was not mere- | trian territory. ing the semate adjourned until Mon_ | am speaking of their mission I may|had done. The Central Empires had | fhe °fun responsibilities of statehood.| from day do day from onc state of{ly an instrument to adjust and rem- 2 ghaen omy day, when. the rntlfiu;in? debate will :v"y :::flo; r:hvevh?)fl:;wx sh;u;it w:t;x lived ift art‘en'violflfi:phflt;““y of ;:; were to be given adequate guarantees g?:‘ggnnt“f: l‘ge;fl‘:;hir“‘:g: :;e‘;f:flm* €dy" old wrongs un}glor a jew treaty | MAYOR HYLAN VETOES A 3 i, ‘elat it- or dealt witl very ri s for whicl Vi 13 v’ were | of eace. it was the o ope or tot iso ill ‘ratet- Monday: to ‘begi n fou fen pe of friendly protection, guidance and | oiiing would be little more than | mankind— Asain and aeain had (he| _STOCK REGULATION MEASURE tee also .wili meet Monday to ‘beg them there. They were the sort of|been fought, dominating alien peoples assistanee. E = something written upon paper., to be|demon of war been cast out of the| Ncw York, July 10.—A measure ARSIREration ~ of - the (oeale. - |men America would wish to be rep-|over whom ‘they had no natural right p‘._i‘_: promien e at:ueh resented by, the sort of men every| to rule; enfor!c};ng, not obedience, Ehut Great Opportunities Opened. interpreted and applied by suchmeth- {house of the peoples and the .houce |signed to check irregular stock trans . £ American would wish to claim as fel- | veritable bondage, exploiting those And out of the execution of these|ods as the chances of nolitics might | swept clean by a treaty of peace, only |actions by ‘requiring curb brokers to President Wilson, in presenting the |low countrymen and comrades in a| who were weak for the benefit of those | 8rcat enterprises of liberty sprang op- | make available, if they did not provide |to prepare a time when he would en- 1in licenses from the city. recently peace treaty and the League of N: great cause. They were terrible in|who were masters and overlords only | Portunities to attempt what statesmen |a means of common counsel which all {ter in again with spirits worse than |passed unanimously by the board of tions to the senate today, spoke’ buttle and gentle and helpful out of| by force of arms. There could be |had never found the way before to do; | were obliged to accept, a common au- | himself. aldermen, toed by Mayor follows: it. refembering. the mothers and the | no peace until the whole order of Cen- | an opportunity ‘to throw safeguards | thority whose decisions would be rec-| The house must now be given a ten- D amendment pro Gentlemen of the senate: The treaty | sisters, the' wives and'the little chil- | tral Europe was set right. about the rights of racial, national and | ognized as decisions which all must|ant who could hold it against all 2 unlice trading “in | of peace with Germany was signed at |dren at home. They were free men § - | religious minorities hy solemn inter- | respect. sueh. . Convenient, indeed indispensa- | ihe streets of New York” the mayor | Versailles on the tweniy-eighth.of |under arms, not forgetting their ideals New Nations Had to Be Created. national covenants; an opportunity to| And so the most practical. the most [ple, as statesmen found - the newly|irsisted the proposed crdinance would June. I avail myself of the ecarli-|of duty in the midst of tasks of vio-| That meant that new nations were |limit and regulate military establish- |skeptical among them turned more [planned league of nations to be for' prove non-eficctive, e reason that opportunity to lay the treaty be-|[lence. I am proud to have had the|to be created — Poland, Czecho-Slo-} ments where they were most.likely to | and more to the league as the author- brokers ‘could move to another # a5 “ ""flwflj@_‘g@_‘,‘!‘}fif%nm o b e associsted with vakio, Hungary itself. ' No part of - be mischievous; an Opportumity to ef- ity through which internationai arfion ~antinued on Page Thirteen) block.” B A -— R ) S, R . P R CRES B T R =

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