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Show THE SALIVA SUNy SALINA, UTAH six months or even more, they still contained a large percentage of untrained men. As already pointed out, the general staff, when called upon to provide men for special services, had relied .upon taking them from combat divisions Instead of anticipating such require-- , irients and-- segregating these specialists frora tfie Btffrt and training them as suclf. 7hls ulis a most vlclops application lq tilnq of .waf of a very objectionable pracjlce .that had grpwn ut In our of peae. It appears tht army during the firepqration of ouc arfnies tralnlng for Qeneral Pershings Stqrq of the Ar E. F, (Copyright. I9M.U 11 eoMtrito by tbo North American Nwpipf Allunc. Wrld Eij . Qeherjjl rights reserved, including the Scandinavian Reproduction 1b whole or in part prohibited. . -- John J. Pesshinq WNU Service.. , in-tl- lleve the British of the necessity of depleting the strength of the forces kept at home for defensive purposes. This suggests to my mind a certain political phase of the British situation which may give us additional explanation as to why Mr. Lloyd George and British representatives are s urgent In their appeals for assistance from America. . Following this further may I suggest tl t you give the matter serious thought? There l so very mucii at slake for us that it seems to me very frank r(eresent)tion should be made to the Brjtish government as to the yrgency of their putting into the army bvery possible man that can be mustered to meet the Immediate j?mer- - Alaskas Rmli audio -- t!e vijar planwa Continued. Enough In. trying to coordinate t Pie opfollow(al-ari- d the rwactlce wais carried ewlhout erations of.the allied armies, . . Replying April 3 to the depart to 8ul) go extfiiF tfifit divisions with- mbnts cable.I emphasize J that It was success. Therg Ji,ua nq,er beep pen I sar. 2.r,(HK menv yhicfl should have gency. . . . not Intended that our units should re-- . unity of action. . heeh held Intact and" each one perfectIt aiay she that you would think It htteween two or Slide place the losses of British or French Fa ft), werq coft;, organifdd edlas.an to go to London, or .else to Advisable mhttbr no three arnnlps, is lmjmsslble organizations, add therefore our artilintimate to the President by cable staigly Jclled upon . td send large In chief may be. fol- -' be? In tes readiness commnnder the who held should lery the urgency of Great Brltaln?s putting grynips of thfiir trained soldies low when called for, although It was Fad) commander In chief Is Interested I duties. . .v .fnto the ranks every possible man to , In his odn army find cannofget the, 'possible, that the situation might beGeographic Harbor on Southern Coast of Alaska Peninsula. !. Inspects Available didsiops. withstand the present Germaa on-- . viewcome so. serious that some of our otlter- cdmmandersi jMntof, nor, slaught, even If they have topromise fhj view of their. possible earl.v. em (Prepared by the National D.Geographic Unalaska, a hundred miles farther Infantry units will be fbreed to sewe grasp tbe problem as a whole. I &m C.) Society, Washington, thein'in six to and f look months, to, withdraw is the second largest of the east, wqnted eiieciaUy fikoynynt In vflth British temporarily,. favor of a supreme comirfarldej .a ad of Colonel and Mrs. LindInto the general state ot efficiency of .of their doing so without wglting on On it is situated Dutch Aleutians. believe tfiaJ the. success of tfie ajljed and My Intentions wertf furtlrer.lndlcat-.f- l to fly to the Orient on us In the slightest PLANS or some us our available of call for vessels plying give p&rt fiisjsloiikand counting Harbor, it.. . Americans must nqt dans depends upon . by saying: first reported Intention to 111 lnstruclioiis about training. be few enough between Seattle and Nome. This har-- . degree. There peffinnn I thinly the action rtiould lose sight o$ the purpose to build up en necessarj .fly westward focuses attention men even withhe best we all can-dhas deep water at Its wharves and Going the Toundji, 1 met General Illr- divisions and corps of their own, ami be tqken by this council at once. the air, route to Alia along Alaska's bor ffT Britsv hauer, be Great time was .for who one off a protected anchorage that could acenough qblo Alasalso, wfe- must .avoid .the tendency to hm In favoy of conferring the supreifie the great ain tfi consider th defense of, Eng- southeast panhandle, Frenah gera-rfilcommodate the largest battle fleet firxj found, Jilin .very command ppon General Foch. Incorporate our Infantry into Ifrltlfih ka.peninsula ank the Aleutian islands, sfie land ifbout after the The shortest sea route between Seattle forth. whlh every put Seoond, (as VI visions where lt.111 be used up 'and Tam.. When I Ifad finished Mr. Yrfoyd eithHMle. ; all under American" jurisdiction and Yokohama (the great circle route) half been In lineait Sommedleu. under possible. energy on the continent never relieved. Union Georg- - ca me irfcc to where I saj, took . is fhe plaqp to beaf Germany,' chatka, a part of the Soviet hi command! confirmlag m.wpwn opln- Here lies practically through Dutch Harbor-an- d me by the hand and saJ.d: . My cabld recommended that the exenand the Kurile islands.northern ffud re- - band not on British, soil. -- In writing fsom observation loa it may some time become an Imformed. "sent . be two of divisions .by agree fully with. General Versing sion of Japan. . . . . . and provisioning point. Jtritlsh shipping qnd two by out owV. IHilgi Is well put.- The route is an Ideal fine asftir fis portant coaling Because of the dangers froqi fogs and no . but tlmt present" plans should j;o After some fUfTtter Infynipil discug Janding places are concerned . fcr rocks, however, ships now swing well . .further than thfsi "It was my purpose "slon, a' draft of tile resoliuhm wu for while Ubines fitted witji pontjions, south of the Aleutians. Only a few In which too Involved to become kot "submitted jleeply most o the ground IS "rough, there oqiitted referiutce Jo Dutch Iiar-bo- r. natives whites live and at &n agreement that wpuld mahfe. It lin-ihe American ar;ny! .WherCjipon .. I are Innumerable coves and hashers of " is the village Nearby, own fftfm our to called attention- to the oversight, say lrjde possible later among the islands amj in their a native community.. pendent force vwvler our own fleers. ing . . . dentQfi coastlineS. The route was first , . .. The Aleutians were born of volI. thlak thin rfsolhtam slrtutld Inshown to be frffn'cabehy tlifi group canic ,action, and the activity Is not clude the American army..The arnange-nfen- t CHAPTER X.XXIII . . of United Sfates army, flyers whoJfew I forot-: lw In as yet spent. Bogoslof Island, some 50 understaml to he I Around the world in 1921. , Secretary Bakerand I bad fitequepl-l- y , of ft, frptn now on, and tjie- - American discussed the Question ot "a fjupreiite The first leg the roffte, after riiq, miles from Dutch Harbor, is continu Uiited oStates proper is left, leads filly changing it form, rearing one allied" cojnmander, and we were bbth army Will soon he WaJy lo furtctihn'as Included ns'an suck, and shoifid-hover the traits along the west coast. smoking profuontory after another Veady to accept .'It :ln" wh'eq Jlie F.ritjsb mid Frefich "lik . proposed. of British Ooluntfua, then over the above the waves and withdrawing . . . r "aripres.1 In responie to a nettled from Island studded Inland Passage of others. Volcanoes are to je found in the There te ns AmeriGwi army yetas Clemenceau I went,' ApVfl 3, to southeast Alask.fi. Beyom tht north- iteauvals.to 'ipeet with the Supreme such,"' General retain Interjected, as. erfi end ofthe Inland Passage comes Ateiitians, In evpry stage of develop-mei- t: young anjl aged volcanoes, 'iTierfoijpn yvater of the Gujf of Alaska .war council. Arriving early Colonel Its units are.elther In training or.are the RritisJi iml anitilgnipatqd.-wltml hour at the odiak islan,di reached, south, jictivtf and dormant, not oly cones until Bpyd and had .whose symmetry rivals that of Fuji.'. . hotel de ville before Jl! Clenionceuu Freta of. tjip Alaska peninsifla. , .is. from ; . Slncluded." Has IJ.. fhat yama, but also the jagged stumi of end Lteyd Geerge eifnie Into tbs con-- . ,r00Pershfig the.1 thctip of ths peninsula mountains that have been blown Jo There rtmy not be aai American ( tlfe ferenee room. Marshal llaig, General isfand crescent of Alqntion injle .1 re bits force .now,"' . Iji try recent volcanic explosions. Sir functloning chain sweeps off toward Asia. Henty Wilson, Rites, , Foch, Potato; arnij pUqil, hut there sooir wllf he, a'rul 'The Aleutians are volcanic, a fact Volcanologists consider H one of the IVeygund and myself were tJi.e others want this resolution to apply to It marie plain by the first and'lprgest of best known fields fdr the study of tlfe participating. . Brigadier "General gplffrs. aclqd as whfn jt becomes a fact. Thf'Ameri fhe tHteppiny stqfies, Unimak. Alproblejns of vulcanism. "cah Is at fibre of MuuCol. easternmost Is represented the little Lieut. and Sir a Attu tl(,e government intoTpjeter, though it ba antyvfii only e W.lr, and 4hls coflPerpnce apd riife JhinUey, who usually aceorirpuniid 2,700 mites from the coast tlqin Rhode Island, so. many lagreq ML Lloyd Georg, aS recorder. The any action as-- to Jhe. supreme dour occiTr on linirtial; Island thafr of Washington state. Because the Incraters . The Red ross Was pn the Job. ... thereeis often a great (tymlmf conf-- . ternational Date Line lies just beyond meeting was finally called to" order by mund fhat liududes tjie British aruf . .. t French" armleS Should' also hiclpfle tie a?C to. the docation.of the various M. Clemenceiru, who stilted Its 'pm sion Attuan airman, rising from the island I ITe it this tfiat s.'UtJ .trtld hne . yun without lp ntiiffijiha port. doybt . .. Shishal-din- , Mount to continue his flight, plunges directly Ambricpn army, pose, suying In substance: . me Ejjg-laasues was then as eOicfest gs any of bit (uptions reported. in. rogaftliag available Thb foregoing liecounf df the cohfer.-enc- e 'JYenclt (kvisioils. The We have come together to jetlle often reported active, is the most Into another day without the lapse . . wffs fqrs First, a very simple question regarding the; may not .be .an" exirct recufd striking and beautiful of 4he eleven of finy tfme. Thus, if he starts from "thfr aiBancfid than any oflljie ofliers functions of General Foch'. I think the fanguflge'ufced, b.ut ft Is givfn as major ccatrfig of the iSldfld. "It, has tills westernmost American station pros-peq- f the at washigli . . CHAPTER ,XXXJ . .we are uirln agreemeht as to the co--. my aid took of .tire most neryly perfect cones Monday morning, he will be flying a one of going into tfie battle line. Os 'A'pril 12. 01918, Wqshingfoi re.' ressntlon. wa ben . few morqents later in the morning of hi; the world, seeming Jo ffufit sustpdlnutlon of allied action, bift therd Uiwegt developments hqd brought tje a 110,000 Increase In cargo ton-- , ported. rehd qml' adopted: . cloud-gir- f . ", Is some dltTerence In the undgrst.lnd' in above its the day. that to the. Eastern hcsnjs-fchepended alp Anuri-, the, question of the eihployment'of by the use of Dutch skips. General Fodi--- Is charged ' by the qanis .Tuesday, li!g of Qenrtul Foclifi ijowersas . : base.o hito lipmediate, qnsideia-tlon- . , n.nge, and machin-jajtroops pesonflel of . Unimak Uhike. upou him at Hie houllens con ; British, French and American governTfie President's qualified . Traveling ia Kamchatka? " lyiiat . four divisions were promised for that ferenee of March 2d. Qeneral Foch ments with the UtfimSk's siza and Itsqep- yietic. Do'jpiJ the reroinmpnflatlnn ofJh the main The Aleutian route month. ' .Hon-oith- e aided armies. on the- - westVlH esp'ain his dillleultles. from i the mainland of Alaska land of Asia at the coaststrikeg i5 embodied vya-iri. puatioif sup rente counclj, of Kamchatka. litst . ere .The at Is duid thbre to 'front ern thoroughly tlis tyfies. Foch Call cop f8r f Action.. . Jiy,.hnl.v a narrow 'strip of water. It is .Joint nele N,o..TS,,was seized jifion. by , 950, miles eastof Attu. This peninsula ; alive to th General Foch then set Toryi 'briefly necessity iff air ejtraoV-dinar- y of little imporfanep. TheBe are ue ftuyed on him aU Hie power necessary the allies anif cornet sued jig ,a ephee's-- . ,and-tli- e country north of it to theBerinp fo dTfort tonnage To realization. effective Its the provitk as fqr follows: foe hijs situation, good Jihrbors ;ir"mtjd Its shora find sthrit cofitaias a Sion for the, unlimited absorption of. large area of tundra months After tfnd Doul-lens trangporjing oqr treifs, 'The powers eppferred Ify Uie siune emi the BriQsh, EreVqla. rftnly one settlement, (Japp Alsit il- o,uy troops ih .their, armies. .-or Arctic plains; soft rirttety morasses of and realized Jiey. delay, disegssion conference weuf J I id i fed to the American government confijle hi ftep . .. lage, Is Jistedi . No.iloiibt my offer to Gemtral Foch the few .months of summer; q ,forcy eral Foch. the strategic Hirqction of lent, encouragement tfi ' fully that tlse superiority of action between.. Cod fishirfc qn the gyeat hanks .to'.' during view. . tlje wastes in vfinter. . frozen, must to avert defeat while ' necessary were conferred tlffi nfillitasy operations. ? the sonth of tlje island," whiqh"fesiyi They 0n the day V)f Secretary .Baker's under-,bruslaflff In impenetrable across come from the Atlaatic. In chief of the' "fuivlure General Tire oominander t '.actlori was on. The pgwer jo.co-ordlIlarHofihnse.of Newfdundlnnd, and the and General Whigham What .summer. in springs up . Agierica had become their sole re-- , mining of Isjuall quantitfes ofsuffihur nate has 'been cevifitrued to be limited British, Frenqli and AmcVtcau armies Hutchinson came overfrmn HieJifitfsh season this at is ' .possible little.;trave1 111 to the time the allies were action. wllf exercise te tfie fullest cxtqnt the .war pfiice'to dispuss arrangements Ttor , llaitee, not only for the forges ihces- jmdpumlce stoqe are the principal. inis done on the backs of sturdy ponies That was Murch 20 at Doullems.. fow tactical dlreftlon of their armies. Fart tchDsportatiwri of Americaif. tTeops- - In sary t save them from defeat but dustries. Tlie inhahitailts are mofHlY . must wade up the shallow streams who welf. tmve 'ceiHnmnder Ih chief will for unlimited financial aid ,as the eight accordancewlth we are at April 8. . the ifimnants of the original native ., the'yirovjsionfi of joint, or.. through the sticky swamps. plod II fn hW Now that, the tvtfo opposing armies Mr. to appeal to of" Rakers firsthand knojrlede tribes found here by the Itnssiana in In No.. lf. The cohveprartr'n Intli; k pole travel Is easy. Teams of winter hfiT the situation In Fraace enabled him' the Eighteenth century. . . . army Is placed In danger , cal.eif that the BriMsh understood we longer In aclion but have opinion dolrs and reindeer whisk laden sledges Gea. received Trem Instructions to effort fresh and art each the . Dike other, by.tbn Its sister Jslands, Uniuifik Is in impetus stopped facing were tq send tJtf.OOO rpenper mqsth.to Jo give of the streams there Is nothing to eral. iV.ch.' s.. . of the Was department.. With Gen. genenal desolatefand scraggy along its ovec the frozen surface, There tvaln tgith them, and that they, weje and across the snow of the tundra fit ot aS cMef Allied Corhmahder. is Ohief. e March should be authority to prepare for. acC. the staff, lower Slopes., ft rpeky, jrass-coverbriierlnn jjvof He saihe ,n uni hey. sink- - .Payton a rate, under favorable circumstances,, tion and dlcect It. So we are tight Tire Idea of aa allied cominpndec In." general staff and0 the supply depart-- . is treeless, Jand.Vxcept fof fts haavy a totAT fff 120,0K) per montj), belug oY 75 mites sr more a d;y been suggested and disments exert back where we were, and nothing can chief-Jinto Jiegan njpre energy. rainfall amf fns, hasa delightful pliginning with April. IChey helif that he In the summer the curse of the be done tfntll an action starts again." cussed many times unofllblally, but for JThe war industries board, reorganized, sfratsii ffummet's.ln Unimare cooler approvul .of note Nh. 18 .lind super; moist ? " other-regions of the north strikes the and B. M. of various the Pleads feasoas, under for political Unity. Baruch, than pjaces farthej north, white In Lloyd George leadership seded agrensnt previously .Wflle In-- , Knsnchqjk&n counjry ; swarms of mos-- . direcMr. Lloyd George then, entered the' wise, It bad ifever been dednltely taken control and definite .hiid Is the lhan winter Aveathor . miltjof "plarf.. cjudlng the quitoes and flies thicken the air and discussion, saying kiftistantlally f adopted by the supreme war councTl. tjoa o the natiiyis Indusjxfes with the that of f'ennessee or Kentucky, twenty Baker. Spqaks tlainly. .. , make life, miserable for all living We have had more than three years-o- f With the distrust that existed anvotg sole aim dT aiding us to win the war. degntes of latitude fartlier south. Tlie The British fonferees. entirely M & Jn the crisis, activity at warm,Japan current, which creeps np Jhings. The nomadic flee with thfiir face of this war and we have not had unity the allies, It was not feasy to bring the noffid thfi Specific condition UmA tht home hail at las? replaced the ffp-- fh coqyt .of. Asja and .around the herds of reindeer to the sea coast, of action during that time. During about the dodsioa In favor oF abu- .final arrangements ag to .trainlhg and; .paretit deliberation of our first year Aleutians, givfis It fc. January fivpr-- . vjhere the breezes give some relief. disposition of J1 opy units eretoJe. The K a m rji a t k a n p'Tun STfS proper rf the war. Our hope for an liuprovss- - lage of thirty degrees abetye fero. Ifift In my haqds. ; i'hfflr'error wfis Is a nsorg com- about 750 mites in length, and the In methods ment and e Grasses of all kinds, Ghent pointed ou1,and Mr. Iaker then said:, potent effort seemed on the lowlands all year round,, distance from its roots to Bering pf What pertinent to the present Kamabout to fie realized. but .tie srmatq IsT too 58amp .to strait is jin jeqjjal distance. discqssidn lsthat Anyrifan troops are In the same latitude as chatka lies, mature soil the grain. Although I Is, the British Isles, while the country , FirsDrvtofian Moves Up. oing to the British for training. fielng- - coraposCff a vegetable rltlsh public or army dont want th . At Petains request the t'irst .divT rich, north to the Arctic ocean is in the latimold .ftiixed, .yith votetfnic ash. the 'or the Frfnci public ter army to, get sion was withdrawn from the linenear land tude of Norway. The Kamchatkan reIs rugged and there arejio place! an exaggerated Idea that this scheme Toni and sent to Chaumont-en-YexiIs bathed by cold Arctic currents farms where be can of size any majle. gion provides or will provide a means by northwest of Paris to go Into an acof the warm Gulf stream, and instead which their losses will.be made up In tive sector. I- - visited She division Small though the Islahd is, tfie Uclimate is therefore much colder Its Exha lterior Morti nqver pene thoroughly the future.. , April 10 to witness the divisions final than that of Britain or Scandinavia. . .want . no feeling of disillilsioef-meir- t maneuver In open warfare before plored. From the southern tip of KamchatUnimak of Islands fhe .other when General P'ershlng calls for taking Its place en tlfe fron- t- Both the Kurile islands sweep southka e . chalif, believed to Offensive Ground German Aleutian by gained to them fortrainofficers and men were In splendid .the troops ' to the major islands of Japan, ward route which 1918 by. manficst migrated to. . April y 26. PK" condition, notwithstanding their long : fhis distant string of SQMIles the should be 2g 9 Westernhgujlsphere, Mr. BfikerlS' vjslt to our arinle.sjdur-inrail Journey, and all were ready for Islands Is the most westbetter known to thfe wtirld at large, storm-lashe- d tils critical- period was fortuitous, the test of actual battle. of the north Pacifics bridge for they are on th shortest route .be-- , erly group the last year. we have had two kinds preme commander, and It was mgde as the problems that on fronted us General Mieheler, who commanded the Aleutians, the Like Islands. of tween mr statesnorthwestern and of strategy, one by Haig' and another the French Fifth army, to which th possible only by the extreme. eiuer: could, then be seen lu their true perare a string of volcanic peaks, The Paof Kpriles the expanse' Japan. great an o had TTIrst had been nssiguedcsme along opportunity spective. Jle by Petaln, both different, and nothing gency of the situation. dead and alive, whose smoking heads the allied leaders, both civil and to witness the maneuvei, and spoke cific and the curvature of the earth The designation of General Foch" has been gained. The only thing that almost-duYokohama northprotrude above the cold and stormy places In con and with touch get wag accomplished was by General commander in chief of the allied military, highly of the troops and their effwest of If orfe Seattle. follows, . thp suiters of the North Pacific and stake armies In France was proposed by the ditions In the different countries. Nivelle, when he wss In supreme comiciency.' The Weather was clear, but .most direct ont the Sea of Okhotsk. Tims, they form path. he saw still Of French. April 15 1 received a letter mand. greater Importance, still rather sharp. "The countryside a haven for the Japanese fishermen The American world flyers General Foch Is now empowered to from M. Clemenceau advising me lhat with his own eyes the building of our was radiant its green meadows sea who swarm ever this Island-gir- t "Unimrtk of- - the ber one of a was He aSpart keen ohserv;. the action of the allied Mr. Lloyd George had approved. the organization. and early flowers, and one could not summer. Stretching between KamIn most their jn difficult, stages armies, but this does not go far suggestion, and asked If I agreed. I er, with clear understanding and a help thinking how different would be chatka and the Japanese island of trjp. Port Moller, the comlogical mind,- and obtained In a short those other fields oh which this unit enough, as he has no authority repbed In a personal note expressing Yezo, they have long been known to to which Martin made munity Major .time an accurate conception of our would soon be engaged. my agreement subject to the confirma except by conferring with the reRussians who exploited their valuthe on his foot after his plane way spective commanders in chief. He tlon of President Wilson, which came task and Its difficulties. Lack g? Regular Officers. furs. Not until recent years able Is 1.10 mites crashed. about farther r As wants authority to prepare for action. April-1-relations, he gave me from have the Is a comparatively simple matter It The Japanese become Interested east. district presented the same the start that strong and sympathetic I think the resolution made at Doul-Jen- s Once the question of supreme comnext door neighbors. in these to. absorb partly trained recruits ' in pitfalls for aviators as Unimak, conshould be modified so thut we mand was settled the support which, means so much to a veteran en The desolate Islands are a cradle organizations, but It Is an ical peaks and sharp ridges rising sudI may have a better understanding. ergies of the allied armies could be mllltnfy commander in the field, difficult task to create denly out of dreary and enormous of blizzards," hazards to the mariner tundras feared British Were Lagging. should like to bear what General Bliss directed with maximum effect toward of new mateand aviator alike. Storms and squalls and a marshes. where entirely organizations Ray, Portage common a and General Fershlng .have to say. end. While dark days were Before Mr. Baker sailed for home rial. There - a serious lack of regforced landing was made. Is on the spring np from nowhere, 1 had sent him the letter quoted bestill ahead, we were spared the chaPereMng Gives His Views. ular ollieers In our organization i mainland opposite Kodiak island, but is fogs hng the waters surface in spring I then gave my view, which was Eet grin of Inefficiency through lack of low, and, although we later discussed staff and line. The I corps similar to the few indentations of Unand summer, hiddeft rocks lie in wait .both forth In a brief memorandum prepared teamtvork. its contents briefly, it is given as showhad only 7 per cent of otlicers from imaks shoreline, with rocky cliffs and for the unwary navigator and swift In pencil after the discussion began, as ing the reaction of at least part of the the regular army. Iss thfin 1 per treacherous sand shoals. currents race through narrow straits. CHAPTER-XXXIfollows: British press at the time: cent of all captains of the line In the an The have However, the lost sailor may tell when Aleutians, however, Now that the supreme effort must The principle of unity of comApril 5, 1918. Dear Mr. Secretary: A. E. F. at that time had been In the he is close by the vast fields of brown In the willie-wanadded handicap mand is undoubtedly the correct one be mude on our part and when units I noticed the other day that one of the a year, and the thought of cyrtphii? winds peculiar to the region seaweed or kelp which floot on the service were sorely needed for immediate acBritish papers. In referring to the fact for, the allies to follow. I do not bewater. Old salts who can smell the and prohahly attributable to the meetpossible immediate activity with such lieve It Is possible to have unity of tive service It was found, much to my That plans had been made to send leaders was not reasbea.ch" when near land are not alone of cold .from the the north winds Inexperienced ing action without a supreme commander. American troops to the assistance of surprise, that, although the divisions in this useful ability when sailing warm hree-zeand the from the suring. Japan Vs have already had experience then coming to France had been under the allies, stated that this would re- ' (TO BB CONTINUED current these foggy waters. CHPTEh XXXI world in I er ... .- , o. th. .. -- .I -. " Ua-alas- , e en-ti- .'...- Ire-.mie- b ji-.- 1 - in-th- -- -- g re -- con--ferre- d n -- O i the-allie- " snow-covere- d lf the-hig- her O -- lr,no -- -- d growin-ajiund-auc- -- .. ,..I ..'V be-th- Infl-iiste- . - g -- - e globe-circling to-ou- 7. n low-lyin- " V |