IffEWORL ' yiilu Jif.W ml in'l Served Af est Day in the History of Victory and Absolute Tri ''zjjtf' of Peace for the Wd Mm turn j^jj^iiilliatic Germany Hu Mi ffiSvapuntry I hat HMn to H Ambition Was to Domwiat J^v^ftmtry?German Annies I|HfaMR ?f Armistice Kwnts Knees, Ha ^jta^)Mi<iiiioii3r tlic Btod been ooayercd in Cmua ^,?ut the smile of hopeful iil*! N0VEMBE1 D-WiDE" VAR IS OVER ' . ' I ter Four Years of Struggle?"Great* -Nations Has Dawned," the Day of uraph for the Allied Arms and the rW. * - powerTn complete oefejsi a I ?t the Fate That Must Come to Any ! ule the World and the Kaiser, Whose , ?Over All, Is an Exile in an Alien , and Navy Reduced to Impotency by j Which the Once Great Empire, , % Mifbt nvybi to m Hi* cotottrr. , \ ur oaw?rtl?t seeks to nrttf tho world. i mml/ to iilijcct. for j is once iiiait Cprt^Hui power, ?? **?t to dqjntoate.ovcr all. Is U> complete dto ) NAVIES IMPOTENT. ! fto pdlctrt command is c Into tftcir oW lionfiy (had from OH \n* , ycvnn uroira nwu iwi aiso us uajw?? iontes arc loot, anil the hand that Bought | territory I# wltiw^rod by ito ruling of the . ^ . - A fact, full compensation of ,-:l kinds. ta -to has followed iter armies and \ wall for- Gcrmanp Her , troops Juul nore than four years of warfare. Bui my an ItiviBMbic army wan beetettip feats i before Germany's allies deserted Her Uic ^me njJiurem. l'nprcpaTOl, they hail re] never recognize detest, Belglnm, FraftBe. lard days were experienced by the i ? of satisfaction In animate succcaa? s was drawn Into the war by Germany's I law nod of the preeepda ofxhnmanlty, the J twHleStan*3oa? t ''iothe ^loaelfef"river was only a matter of time when their n on the battle Held. Ihelr great forupled aaccesslvcly Undo the impetus of ere being harried everywhere from pUlar rtiflcatUma, it was foreseetp,Would prove torn Qf ber imperialistic and militaristic in/flto Ion#: ran of disarvantage. Already infryarO tending toward demoerafcattiau- ' p* <*f a country once controlled by trar , MM at #.o'clock Monday morning;, eastraiBBfeay the allied forces at tliat time fewnrttig the enemy. EjegSB?8 across the Belgian frontier Germans^from northern pMSBttonuon by envelopment. I^HHjj^Kr of the^HrrtMtx day of the ^^ B^Btatrymeo; te^wwe sportsman- j on their vrirji watches a* RfMMbfbcctOrS In the fear that OicyJ cessation for host 111 ties. Not EsBarc tins American artillery men g.tbo tlme^for^the calltog^ *!''jJi - r'.V * . ... Printed Weekly for the Y. ' yv? i$r' : mm matw Edition far CAMP G1 mmWm M. C. A. by Courtesy of fife (fKbsorfo* IEENE Charlotte, N. C. K 13, 1618 ?.. > . MAHYNEW SOilERS 1MB Recruit Camp Four to Be Refilled. Ten Thousand Stevedores - ? ' Expected. v- , ' r. " ?. This week marks " the arrival of many new troops. In Fourth Recruit camp, some 2,500 men will be received to 'take ..the place of those transferred overseas and to other camps; then a provisional depot brigade arrived .kyit week, consisting or 179 men and ojcttrs who are to. handle the incoming..drafted men. Captain Qlaason of RercuK Camp fpur will kave .charge of the white men and Captain Meiesner of. Recruit Camp Ave will have charge of the colored recruits. In the latter camp, something like 2,500 colored troops are expected this coming week. Tb?n orders have been received to prepare for.a stevedores' organization which will coitrist of 1.0,000 especially trained men. These-mew are expected my day how and they jrhfl be -in com " " T J ~ - Btvg iTO<>BSABp' I'-'- ' Tftoor.H cmOKG This month4* dtnft will Induct close to-ttoefl troop* .Into camp Greene, then halt belnr white troop* and halt oolored. v > ; Following that it l> believed that a division will Be pin red hfrq jest as soon as the authorities can brlns them Into the service and kooomiBOdatlons secured. A large, number of troops- have left the-camp for overseas jp the last month and their places will undoubtedly he filled and others are undoubtll#!y BOln* sooii. PRINCIPAL THING GERMANY IN TEH Ilcrc arc the principal things ( fore tbc victorious allied arxhlcs,- si* Immediate evriCrfitlon of Alsj Russia and Rumania without furl lie Then, occupation by American 1 on the west bank of the Rhine. ' (Vflllnn of a neutral zone ia i of the Rhine* Mcumvhile, as a guaranty of gti and allied troops of Mayenoe, Coble ings of tlie Rhine. On the eastern front all Germ: territory whiotr before the war bclo Tlicn, the German war mnehir American and allied prisoners out reciprocal action by the assocla gcd off into slavery from the ihvadi The provlslolHfor compensation wrought by tbc invaders Is containc for the dsm^s^doSOtv As astnSjorcstorlna; the mai which laid Russia prone, and of B must be abandoned. Money, sccarit ablcs looted from the invaded count allies until the conclusion or peace In the west, the railways-of M Iron and coal, stores of tluppllcs In must be handed over. In the east, the Black sea por - taken by Germany., from the Ross' Baltic, forts and defenses barred t live red, and there must be free new Tbe allied blockade Is to remain chant ships are to be delivered for r the starving; Germany Is to notify with thtf associated governments wl . In R word the Iron ring is tight world waits while Germany reforms ? ? . ARMY NEWS l V FOR ARMY MEN fjuSTg ' THEIR HOME FOLpj ^ wR|| SJPUU t JLL ORSFT CULLS ill GUNGE L L E D HH | Movement of 252,000 Men to Camps This Week Stopped. Action of War Department Affects More Than 330,000 Men Called to Co This Month K' Tjjjl Washington, Nov. 11.?Almost the art j|j9 first action of the war department to-- Lyfm day after the announcement of the ||ryVMje Igsinf of the'armistice with Germany vja was the cancellation of ail army draft rMilinB 'v'iS cai!s under which more than 390.000 mim men had been ordered to entrain for | camps before November 30. KM H I Urgent tetegrams^were sent to all ffjsM Mi local draft hoards directing taac me lj CTIIBB ' ' >> ? movement of 252.000 men under or- Btla ||n ders 4o entrain between today and Friday be stopped immediately., The , the morale of the camp. Every we)fare organisation comes under his vu pervislon as well as the army actlvi- 9l?.W9FW\ . ties ot the camp and his work is law uwlfll when it comes to public program* nN^f and other events which effect the WKMJkJTA morale of the soldier in any way. Tht.^ KanP*V department is considered one of the IjftW*/ I moat Important In the whole servicv of tho army in time of war or peace. II NEW CAMP SINGEO. (I AA J I Albert -BeUlqgbam, who ia tho new I camp singer and arrived last week + ITml ju Trio*m Vow York to renlaco Ira Ham 1 iltoB. who mi trmnrftrr^J. , 5 REQUIRED OF ] W 96 OF ARMISTICE f? | Jcrmany must do, or, powerless be- V* ul 9 wUI have them done for her: \ A L*; lOe-LiOrmlne, Belgium, huxumburg. v 1 ^ r destruction or harm to inhabitants. TT e and allied troops of all the countries X ' f * i strip of territory on tlic east bank | >o<l faith, the occnpnon by Americah 99' i :uz and Cologne, the principal cross- IS ' in troops are to be withdrawn from 9PL 13 nged to Russia," Rumania or Turkey, ic must disarm. . wcaliSp. arc to at once be repatriated, with- *. * rail,I S-ivtllnilfi llwl.w. xl territories arc to be retained. BSSr^BB the occupied tefiitariofl for the flavor mCSm^ma d in a stinpft aenteifoP^'i4jp?aMoa . > lines, the treaties of Rrc^fettovak. B*9|JEh| -''*PI uciiarest which plundered Rn?gpW tfti Jjffi 2 lk% precious metals and other ntfo- H. UMj ifll rlcfl must be returned hi (rqft the H? Ml W ^ y0laoM-.a|?M or llfil Be hp inn with aims ana -* ni} nf? -ml t"? most be evacuated, the vMVfclpft |]lj nnj ml * j fans must be surrendered: -m toe Mil ff|}[ iy| lie way at the Cateput mast be (]{[ |H| 11 J sa to the sea for the" allies. Bfj ||| Jlil ..-vy.j unchanged. Meanwhile Gonna* mer- . K|J JyLpgjw nl?sIons of mercy jn carrying food to . the neutrals they arc free to trade K ithout molestation. citcvl ami at her borders the civlttoed *'/ V ^T>. i herself from within. - *' ' 7 ' :jnmi \ I fC 7mT'.~T

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