WILSON AS PEACEMAKER
EXPECTED TO MAKE ANOTHER BID
AN ARMISTICE PENDING TREATIES
(Australian - New Zealand Gable Association.) (Received January 31, 8.20 a.m.) . NEW, YORK, 30th January. ' The New York World's correspondent at Washington says that envoys of the Entente expect President Wilson to make another move for peace. They consider In will follow two possible courses : First, he may formally invite an official discussion by the belligerents of. the principles of his peace speed); second, he may invite ihe belligerents to send representatives to confer with the United States, with a view to adopting general principles as a basis of an armistice pending actual peace treaties. 0 PEACE DEMONSTRATION IN VIENNA. (Received January 31, 8.20 a.m.) LONDON, 30th January. tAt Vienna there $as a great peace demonstration by women,.who resolved to appeal to the women of enemy countries to declare their desire for peace. GREEDY PAN-GERMANS. * (Received January 31, 9.30 a.m.) AMSTERDAM, 30th January. Herr Schiedemann, speaking in Berlin on Sunday, opposed annexation. He declared that the Imperialists caused the war. The Socialists granted the jwar credits in 1914 because the Chancellor had stated that the war was not a war of conquest., .They; must pow^ : .prgveftt ..thg gveedy.- paji-jGeniiftjia-from (changing ,the-i>oii^;. , _..-... . - - -
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19170131.2.49.5
Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume XCIII, Issue 27, 31 January 1917, Page 7
Word Count
202WILSON AS PEACEMAKER Evening Post, Volume XCIII, Issue 27, 31 January 1917, Page 7
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