There may have been three day’s worth of news to cover today, but it seems there wasn’t actually that much going on given the size of the paper and what was in it today, for example a large proportion of page 2 being given over to reviews of some London pantomimes for this season. It seems apposite that at a traditional time of peace and goodwill the American peace overtures are the major news item (see several articles on reactions on pages 5 and 6, including that of various churchmen), but there wasn’t that much goodwill evident at a Peace Society meeting in Trafalgar Square, as reported on page 3. King George V’s Christmas greeting to his servicemen and visit to a military hospital is given centre state on page, even relegating the inevitable articles about the distribution of the Telegraph’s Christmas Puddings to the end of the page and a continuation on page 6, although there are photographs of this on page 3 showing soldiers with their bounty. Slightly oddly, whilst the war news from Christmas Day is on page 5, the news from over the weekend is relegated to page 7, which seems a tad topsy-turvy, but then the Telegraph has been quite good at being that over the years!