Page
SURE FOUNDATION
OF LEAGUE OF NATIONS. PREMIER'S PEACE POLICY
MOTTO.
A
་་
HUNGKONG DAILY PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER
37TH 1818.
tion.
repent, the horrors of war. Do you tion could fall to pieces after the war realise what this war means! We went would be a crime against civilisation. into it with an equipment which overy The Empire will not have survived all soldier regarded a perfectly adequate. its troubles, even after this, war is over. So it was to every conception of war The British Empire will be needed after that had been formed. What has happence to keep wrongs in check. Ita merg In accepting the Freedom of Man-pened? Discoveries have been made in word will count more next time than it chester on September 19th, the Prime the art of, destruction which, if we had did the last. (Chcers.) For they know dealt with The next is this. There deal, and this year we have progressed, may I say, past appeals. We are really
only time to perfect them, would simply now what they have got to deal with
BOLD RECONSTRUCTION."
Minister said, inter alia:-
VO
model dwellings and endless authorities, the res for our food. We have realised objectives we ought to get, and if we But you cannot plough the waste land during the war the perils of this post agree as to objectives, do not let na with forms; you cannot sweep away
We have been dependent upon quarrel about methods. Let us keep ane aluma with paper; and you cannot cops others, not because Great Britain cannot people until we get there. (Cheers.) And with the wants of the people with red produce food, but because never that is my appeal. We must approach realised the importance of home produs these problems with judgment, undeterred tape.
That is the first thing that has to be tion. Last year we accomplished a great by past préjudices and predilectious, and
ought to be a more intelligent organisa- and our production has been increased
not infallible, and when you
are in
On March 21st, when we suffered that destroy and crush 'civilisation from the But it must be there to give the word, tion of the forces which have special by hundreds of thousands of tons of earnest, and when you have the great reverse, we still had large reserves in face of the globe. (Hear, bear.) You and to ensura that it will be there, not'] charge of the health of the nation, grain. It is in the highest interests of experience of this war, when you see the
this country, and there is a very re- markable article from the Frankfurter Zeitung, & very able and on the whole a
very independent German paper which defeat to two One of them is the fact that The they underestimated our reserves. other. I will refer to later on.
attributed Germany's
rensons..
We, had then considerable reserves, The Germany did not know it-(cbeers)
and I have already expressed my grati. tude in the House of Commons to the
newspapers which eiticised the Govern- ment on the ground that we had no reserves, for so skilfully misleading the enemy. We owe them a very deep debt of thankfulues for that criticism, and
can see now what these weapons of war are. High explosives; powerful artillery that were never taken near a battlefield
before; cities bombarded at a distance of seventy or eighty miles-and there is no reason it should not be a hundred bombarding aeroplanes getting more and more powerful, and more and more de structive: submarines; poison in the air. That is the result of three or four
years of intense thought and human ingenuity. Give man that most terrible of all things, give him twenty or thirty years' of concentrated thought on these lines, and what is to happen to the next generations: This must be the last war--(great cheering)-the last, the last, look very good care not to contradictor, believe me--I have been studying all them. As a matter of fact, we have pour this chinery of war for months as
business, and for years as a part of my business-believe me, if this is not the last war, there are men here to-day who will see the last of civilisation.
ed in hundreds of thousands of very fine troops since March 21st, and the Germans never expected them in the Jeast. They know now that they are there.
(Cheers.) Then, an additional fact which depresses the Germans, is the advent of Americans.
only to develop, strengthen, and enrich, but, above all, to waite, must be the task of statesmen throughout the world, What has been accomplished in the way of achieving practical unity still has to done in order to make the Empire a more concentrated and a more solid fores than it is at the present moment.
เ
In
national, municipal, and medical. this respect I doubt if there is a "first rate country in the world where less has
little about it.
There is a good deal of land in this country which is not fit for the production
I
the community" that the land in this firmament illumined through the whole country should be qultivated to the full-earth, you must see things you never saw est capacity, and I doubt whether there before, otherwise it is time for you to go is a civilised country in the whole world to an oculist. If men decline to take the been done. We have enormous losses to make up the fallen, the crippled, and where agriculture has received less atten- best course because it is inconsistant with"
There something they said or thought before the mutilated Their ease must be partition at the hands of the State- cularly thought out; but we must also has been a good deal of talk of small they will never achieve anything but. con- think of the children who are to fill up holdings and allotments, and there Introversy. For heaven's sake, don't let us THE NATION'S HEALTH.
the gaps in the generations that are to
been a good deal of rapid scratching on plant new lands with barren fig trees. I
ask no man to scrap his principles; What is the next great lesson of the come, and the Stats must see they arS the surface, often by men who knew very only ask that new facts revealed by the war should be considered with an open, war? The next great lesson is that if built up into a fine, healthy, strong, Britain has to be thoroughly equipped vigorous people. There is no sure way
unprejudiced mind enriched by the un to meet any emergencies of either peace of strengthening this country than that
paralleled experience gained in this war. of food, but it is capable of producing vulsion has taught us nothing
It is idle to pretend that this vast con- (Hear. or war, the State must take a more co (Cheers.) What more have we to do to
for nothing-(laughter) and they cer- stant and a more intelligent interest in improve the life of the country. We see timber. In other lands the State saw that hear.) Men who learn nothing are fitted that wages during the war have been these wastes were planted. We have taken tainly ought not to be employed in settle- the bealth and fitness of the people. If the Empire is to be equal to its task the raised, and we must see in future that no steps of that kind as a community meats of after-war problems, because they hear) Don't the healthiest and best bccupations for turn your backs upon the future, nor men and women who make up the Em- labour is rewarded with wages that will Agriculture and afforestation constitute are dangerous men. Hear,
How does sustain life in full vigcuz the life of human beings. The cultivation of the dete on the present. You will forgive me
land
is the basis of national strength and when I say I see the kind of doing in a pire must be equal to it.
done great things in this war. We would Britain stand in that light
We have the worker and the life of his children; prosperity, and the cultivation of the hand and around the sheds where the various have accomplished greater if this coun
and it is the great part of the State to includes the minerals under the land. party machines have rusted. I can hear for set- try had been in condition, and a war,
bring them up to take their part. I am Here we have made an extravagant and sounds of elaborate prep-go-round like sickness, lays bare the weakness of
glad to see that in agricultural labour wasteful use of these rich deposits. By a ting up the old a constitution, and what has been our wages have gone up. Fourteen billings conversion of these resources to a large (cheers) which would give men the illu a week was a monstrous wage today. extent into electric power we could not sign that they are prancing at a terrific weakness? Let us talk quite frankly. We have had a Ministry of National (Hear, bear.) There must be healthier morely assist existing industries, but new speed (loud laughter) when they are Service and carefully compiled statistics conditions in the workshops. Many of industries could be established under really circling around the same old crank. as to the health of the people between them are admirable. Many of them are the ages of 18 and 49. Now that is the tolerable, and many not tolerable Bad there would be a saving of the cost of same men, Billed with spirit and experi production. Increased wages could be ence of the war, which has spread brother- age of fitness, the age of strength. You health for the nation is bad business for
much better born without increased cost hood among all ranks of the people, to the consumer or impairing our changes should do their best for everybody, bow- have three grades-A1, B2, and C3-and all. What is the next lesson of the war
That the
We must pay more attention to the all I can tell you is this:
competing with neutral markets. ever rich and however poor. results of these examinations are start schools, the most formidable institution Another of the lessons of the war is the we had to fight in Germany was not the
importance ing, and I do not mind using the word
of improvies.
transport arsenals of Krupp, or the yards in which facilities in this country. You are fairly appalling. I hardly dare tell you tha
they turned out submaripes, but the all right in Manchester. results. The number of Be and C3 men
You have a They were our good many magnificent railways branch throughout the country is prodigious school of Germany. So much so that we half suspected the most formidable competitors in business, ing out from your city, but there are doctors, but there were re-examinations
and our most terrible opponents in war, many towns, and certainly multitude of An educated man is a better worker and villages in this country that are not which did not make very much dinerenoa,
& more formidable warrior, and is acqually favoured. They are hardly fav and I apologise to the doctors here for the first time. Now, what does it mean? better citizen. That was only half com- oured at all. Hailways-light railways Let us look at it. It means this--that prebended here, in this country, before and the like-enter into every phase of country prodigally, foolishly, cruelly, I Mr. Fither's great bill. That is a great ing is a huge question. asked the Minister of Nations Service step forward towards redressing the Still, there is a how many more men could we have put blunders of the past. into the fighting ranks if the health of good, deal to be done. I have had con- the country had been properly looked versations with men of all ranks of life I have been deeply ita- after. I staggered at the reply. It was since the war. a considered reply. It was At least pressed with one sentiment amongst them
of
old tune.
That is why in all earnestness I want to say to those who have the same herrer of war as I have, who would like to see
healthier conditions all over the land, and ing machine, to the same They have been any national moans of bringing this madness to an end, do not let us be misled into the belief that the establish ment of a League of Nations without power will in itself accure the world against that catastrophe. A League of Nations with 4 Prussian military Power triumphant, why it would be a league of the fox and geese-one fox, many geese (chcers)many at first-laughter)-then diminishing in numbers. gradually
Read the Brest-Litovat (Laughter.)" Treaty. Poland was once greater nation than Prussia, and in its day as great as France. The Teuton has at Unless there is a victory the sorbed it
'pouring in stendily. There is po finer feat, in the history of British industry than the way in which our shipping was taken away from all sorts of urgent bust ness in order to concentrate on transport ing troops across,, and now we are carry, ing about 60 per cent. of the American troops across the Atlantic. There is an- other miscalculation for you." They wore under the impression that no more than two divisions could be brought across,
The
There were many people who thought Plans for the new world, on which wo we have used our human material in this the war. I am glad, since then, we have I national prosperity and wellbeing. Hous- laat, is that all classes mast be invited to
that, but a special effort was made, and you never know what you can do until you really try in any business. When the British saipping was mobilised witbout any loss of time for the purpose of carry ing the American troops, it was a mar-
hope to see the dawn barsting, these plans might as well be shelved. I will tell you the best time, the best thought, the best energy, the best resources of a nation will be devoted to averting con- fict or preparing for it unless you stamp out for all time the rule of brute force
of
vellous feat of which, we have a real which has challenged humanity in this one million." If we had only had that all-that these things that were tolerat (Choor speedily than our own farmers no class has suffered more than the class.
reason to be proud as a nation. (Cheers.) What is the difference between 1918 and 10187 Endoubtedly the main dif ference is the unity of command. This is in a passage from the Frankfurter Zeitung, which I think is worth quot ing:-
war.
GERMANY AND LEAGUE OF NATIONS.
15
in-
another important
The next thing is, we must face these problems with courage. When you come to the war, millions of people are full of courage, but when faced with the problems of peace, somehow or other it vanishes. You will never successfully tackle a job of which you are afraid. The next thing. is, the effort must be equal to the tas That is one of the lessons of the war. We must handle the problem of reconstrue- tion boldly, and the next thing, and the assist (cheers)--to cooperate, to devise and to work out problems. The fatal SHIELDING OF INDUSTRIES.”
vice
Bolshevism is that it left to ase class, to Agriculture is largely a question of
exclusion of all others, the..... management of the trade, commerce, and transportation Foreigners got their pro industry of the whole nation. What has duce to the English markets more cheaply been the result Bad management, and and more
That is folly (cheers) and it tha
that was supposed to be in supreme con- They are starving with their million this war would have been endeded before the war cannot be tolerated tears me of many other industries, trol
importance triumphantly. Here we are combing out any longer. (Hear, hear.) There has The war has shown the
The transportation, and has shown how it can Pockets bulging with paper money. There the essential industries. There are ques. been a community of sacrifice.
All who have any. I am for & League of Nations-in tions whether you should bring miners national conscience has been stirred in a ba speedily improved. (Cheers.) There are then with hundreds of roubles who-
iding cannot buy food." polat, the shielding knowledge, or experience, or capacity, to fact, the League of Nations has begun. back or keep them in the army a few way which is unparalleled in the history
of industries, which has been demonstrat contribute ought to be called upon. I The British Empire 19
teas of theasands whether you can pat of this country, and the nation, wheed by the war to be essential to the very cou (Cheers.)
this war is over, will expect wrongs,
bave been at the head of four departments (Cheers.) League of Nations
The a few thotsand more men into munition Marshal Foch took over the command Allied countries who are fighting the works, and yet you had a million man equalities, and stupidities from which I app nation. I remember well when of State since this war began, and I have
was appointed Minister of Munitions I of the whole Western front, and it cannot battle of international right are all a who, it the State had taken proper care millions have suffered, and the communi- found there were industries essential to the community. The workmen of this come into contact with every section of There are national defence which had been very country contributed by their industries be denied that his unification of the com- League of Nations, and say other coun of the fitress of the people, would have ty has suffered, put right.
times in the Eistory of the world when largely captured by our enemies There and skill to the winning of the war. The mand has borne fruit in the shifting and try wishing to join-(laughter)-in order been available for the war. using of reserve. "In the preparation and to assist in the establishment of interna And the vigour and strength of the nations take a great leap forward This does not seem to be, I am very glad to is such a time. There is a great river say, any difference of opinion amongst
business men of the community I found execution of every kind of defensive and tional right and justice in the world, is
workers of this country have been uns offensive operations there was a preci welcome to this league of nations, and satisfactory even in pursuits where all in Eastern Europe which, after mean say party in the State that these essential assisting me at the Exchequer ta ave the country from a financial panic, which sien and skill which put a new face op if, after the war Germany repudiates conditions are favourable to the develop-dering through hundreds of leagues, find key industries shall be preserved after would have destroyed, confidence, and the whole leadership. Let us have no ad condemns, her perfidy, or, rather, the ment of a fine physique. The results in ing & great barrier in its stretch the war, not because we anticipate another made it impossible to win the war. It illusion about this.””
perfidy of her rulers, then a Germany agriculture have been almost as dieng trates the whole of its strength, and
was the same at the War Office. Great That is German. It is not that there freed from military domination will be pointing us in any other industry. In a breaks through, rushes along, and when have another war if they know that we engineers, great contractors, managers, was discord between our generals. They welcome into the great League of thoroughly healthy occupation of that it has emerged from the rock it deploys are quite ready for any challenge on 'a and others engaged in transportation
These are their work has been invaluable: I do not worked well together, and with complete Nations. But the only sure foundation Find everywhere a virile race has been into a summer land, into more fertile just ground. (Hear, hear.)
That is the story of the some of the objectives of peace. conâdence in each other. Don't let any is a completa victory for the cause of wasted by neglect and want of fore-regions.
It would be a mistake-in fact it would know how we could have run the war had it not been for the assistance we have had one go away with this idea, that there justice and international freedom which thought, and it is a danger to the State national life in this country before, dur-
from men who have been running great was any distension. Every move had to the Allied nations are new carrying and to the Empire. I solemnly worn my ing, sad after the war. It has taken a be impossible to attempt a statement of be adjusted; you had to compromise be along the road of triumph. through barb fellow-countrymen that you cannot main great rush forward, and when it emerges detailed plans in this tour crowded with business in shipping, and food, and trans tween them, and compromise in war ised wire entanglements," deep emplace†tain an AI, Empire with a Ca popüla from the rocks through which its to is quite trae at any moment of the war, would have been quite impossible. They other and more important concerns. That port, and production of every kind. It fatal. It is not that one general is betterments, and the serried ranks of a re
(Cheers). Unless this lesson is renta are now struggling into than another, but that one general is doubtable foe. There have been other learned, wat is vain. Remember that and fairer land the men who have endur- but there are minds considering all these freely and gladly gave their services tu
points experts so that when the war is the health of the people is the secret of ed the discomfort, the terror, the torture over the nation shall not lose time in struct the national life of the counter- national efficiency and national recupera of this mighty struggle have not gone tion. With our machinery we take the through it all to reestablish more firmly setting its house in order. It is idle to which depends so much on its commerce, greatest care. It is material. We look in the land, for which they have fought, pretend that the best method of dealing its trade, and its business-without secur
with all these intricate, delicate, complex ing after it. If the steel is defective through the dominion of slums, of wages that problems, far-reaching and immense. is the co-operation of those different direction of those important or ill-constructed will not maintain, let alone cheer life, in the power of any Government. President badly-ventilated
and of disorganisation
brauches of national
would be activity, furnaces or insufficient fuel, if the of confusion
disastrous, in my judgment, to the machinery is inadequately oiled and which creates waste, inefficiency, misery,
national well-being (Hear, hear:) We looked after and overworked, and re- and squalor.
want neither reaction nor revolution, but a sane, well-advised steadiness of bold pairs are not done in time, and not done thoroughly, then your machinery is no
reconstruction. Man is the most delicately con use. structed of all machines, and it is bad business not to look after the man, the women; and, above all, the child.
tion.
sunnier
war, but because we are less likely to wa
the
And
better than two. (Laughter.) Neverthe terms which have been indicated. I have les. let me say at once, we have been stated them repeatedly on behalf of the supremely fortunate in securing the British nation They were so moderata services of Marshal Foch in the supreme x to command even the support of the command. (Cheers.) He commands the whole of the Trade Union Labour repre- confidence of all the Allied Armies, and sentatives of this country. nil the Allied generals trusted him and Wilson bas stated them from time to believed in him. He is specially fitted time, and we stand by them. (Cheers) for the exceptional conditions of this I will only make this further observa war, where battles are fought, not en ation about pead. It must be a pesca front of two or three miles, but of 300. that will lend itself to the common sense Marshal Foch possesses all those quali and conscience of the nation as a whole. tion of high imagination which enable a It must not be dictated by extreme men soldier to visualise and to prepare plans of either side. You cannot allow the for this vast held. He is one of three Bolsheviks to force upon us a peace to rare men who bas a telescope at the humiliating & to dishonour and to make (Chebra) Now, the most important tion, we must see that national resources minds. You must. reconstruct when the the attention of the nation from the great
prender of nothing in the whole of my public life than the troublous part I took in achieving unity of command (Cheers.) I am prouder of nothing in the struggle than the fact that was determined in February at Versailles, when an army for defensive and offensive was suggested
NATIONAL RESOURCES.
And to enable the nation to hear the gigantic burden of debt which the war will impose on you, and the still greater burden of recuperation and reconstruc. the that the
PATRIOTISM, SACRIFICE, AND FRATERNITY. The whole mind and energ of the Government is necessarily absorbed in the prosecution of this war to a victorious end; bat the moment thas struggle it over the work of reconstruction must begin. You must have reconstruction. When we
I have troubled you at this have the lessons of the war fresh intour these matters not because I w length wit
17
**TAKE HEND IN TIME"
inevitable, nor can we allow Chauvinists Voice: Hear, hear.") There is a lady. State renders all the assistance in it and before they become stiff with repose concentrate our strength, the winning of to impose terms that will leave a stain there, I can see, who at once accepts that power for the attainment of that object, and slumbers and you must reconstruct the war, but because, when peace comes upon the conscience of the Allied people, propositica. (Laughter.) And the quaComfort is the surest preventative of an. what you see you have behind you that I do not want the nation peace come and subject them to the inevitable lity of the steel in the national fabric archy; but comfort involves plenty. You eat spirit of patriotism and sacrifice unawares. There is a great deal of talks can insure plenty by insuring the best which has been raised from the depths of about preparing for war in time of peace; punishment that wrong doing brings in depends upon it. If it is unhealthy,
We must not arm Germany ill-supplied, ill-managed, the quality be conditions for production. If abund- } Auman nature in every house and every but it is equally important to prepare for with a real that I proposed that Marshal Foch should shall neither accept ourselves nor impota strain... Now, what are the influences Lit. That is an obvious truth which the when you have got behind you the momen- astrous. In a world so highly strung, a
(Cheers.),
CONDITIONS OF JUST PEACK.
ין
its train.
BOURING OF THE PEOPLE, A
to carry you
The end of all war is to impose a just up a new world in which those who have dwell. You cannot bring up healthy road to national poverty. The Bolshevik being is being examined carefully and inking, komeland they will return to
and desirable peace upon your enemies. What are the conditions of a just and
cordion should establish beyond doubt in my judgment, is that its power to enforce its decrees. (Cheers.)
even
That is why the whole field of national Years there is Phe men in the trenches
greater triumph.
in an appearance
of
national resource, and of material well- of the conflict are. I am sure, thinking enterprise, of national endeavour, of crastination.
face to face with the actuality
bard, thinking view to immediate
deeply about prospected with a
great spirit grows cold when this struggle is over, Let us see
diate the kind of action before that
that is worthy o of their symptoms all over which we at home would be wise note of and provide against. In
desirable peace? The first indispensable establish the new world. We must take urgent that awaits solution. We have that is quite immaterial." He says, in the frigid atmosphere of self-interest that it is an on gangs
Let us have it when the nation is rid Simbing AOF PHARE
· Are
Bolsheviks began with distribution and Now, when a peace of this character is
ended with distribution. Production secured we can then proceed with a clear
The first is the houses in which people did not concern them. That is the surest conscience and a steady nerve to build sacrificed so much may dwell in peace, people in unhealthy homes. The problem said, "Let there be peace." When ask security, and contentment do order to of housing in this country is the most ed. What manner of peace he says
welter of the old, b heed in time lest we fall back into the talked about it, we have played with it, Let there be plenty for everybody
for farty or fifty years, but it has never and when you say rehat does not concern down to the dusty road. That is the time Where does it come the chariot of a high purpose, ere it comes We must be ready as soon as the unseen been really taken in hand. It has only from?" he says, As long as there is doubt left in the mind hand casts the rainbow of peace on the been taken in hand in the way in which me. What is the result? You have had to reconstruct that is the time to build Be to the irresistible character of this ene word. We must profit by the lessons the cleaning work of her house just the (Hear, bear.) And you will not get it throughout the land, when there are no method of ascertaining when a storm in of either the offender or the defender aky. And to be ready is summarised in untidy or slovenly housewife takes up neither peace nor plenty notes the band spirit of fraternity my Welsh home we bare an infallible here if you have men of that type There longer rich and poor of one party or coming. There is a lighthouse beyond the power, once it challenged, this war of war. It has been the most costly part of the house which the visitor can will not have achieved its purpose. Victory schoolmaster any nation ever had. I am see and can just see it at a glance. There are far too many of them, and, unfor other, but one people, one spirit, one western hills. When the weather is fair is casential to sound pence. Unless, you not sure it has not been the best in many has been too much in only as of tunately, they are in a position toren. par post, one soul to lift our native land or settled you never see its light; but now
wretchedness
of a foreign and again it illumines the darkness, and have the image of victory stamped on ways. And the first lesson it has taught the bad bounewife kind. This is not the der mischief You should than their not merely above
the roa then know that the storm is coming. the surface, the coin will depreciate in is this the immense importance of main way to deal with a problem which affects teathings like an attack of poison gas. value as time goes on. The Prussian taining the solidarity of the British Eg the strength of nations. It is hopelessly It withers the vitality of nations. The squalor, the horror, the misery which no I have been scanning the horizon, a military power must not only be beaten, pire (Cheers) It has rendered a service in arreurs No Government, no party, State must help to promote and encour many of the men and women and children can see flashes in the sky which indicate the hearth-stones of this old to me that there are grave atmospheric military many itself must know it to humanity, the magnitude of which has had the courage to grapple with it age-production. It must remove hind who live on the hearth stones of th
disturbances in the social and economic (Cheers.) The German people must know will appear greater and greater as this No good business man who he some sort cances to production and ensure con-
world. In the natural world you cannot that if their rulers outrage the law of generation recedes into the past. It help of redundance which he discovered in his idence and serenity, which are essential
with thinking avert the storm. In the nations the Prussian military strength ed to stop the rash of barbarism that business which was wasting bir energies to production: There must be none of
I have been amongst the people, and I cannot protect them from, punishment. was sweeping over Europe. It has held would asy he would not trouble with it that shrinking from national organia know it, and I want to see this thing more artificial world of human society -you can you take things in time, avert (Cheers.) There is no right you can the intended high ways of the world free Hewall thoroughly search it out and tion, national production, and national righted after the war I deal not with the hurricane. I have one advice to give
Germany never made that celablish, national or international, for the armies of freedom to pass and thoroughly put it right. That is going assistance. the man who breaks the law will meet not have accomplished that object This whole of the public health question. We antional industries, agriculture Art Frames (Laughter and cheers. I deal do we shall enjoy settled weather for the unless you establish the fact first that repnas. The British Empire stone could to be done. It is equally true of the mistake. Take the most important; of not with programma and above all, to my countrymen, and I say it solemnly beed in time, and if you thevitable punishment. (Cheers.) And Empire has never been such a Power to have Act running into hundreds and culture in the past, has been overlooked with what is called in military langinge, great harvest which is coming, when the unless that is accomplished, the loss and good, and is it not the fret times ever hundreds of sections. We have had to in this country. It has been neglected, objectives-something which you, mean to fierce best of summer which is beating your artillery and with upon us in this great wat will be over suffering and the burdens of this war came into action in the international gulation which would fill a library. We with the result that we have been de get at with
all the weapons in your power. These and past. "(Load cheers) will have been in vain. We shall have to arena. To suggest that such an organise have had the most attractive, pictures of pendent very largely upon lands across
foe but ab
land have
NEW ORIPOTIVES,
am sick of pro to
d