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Show 1 TCHGOCK ;- LEADS FOR ; i iCE PACT ; : e Is War Without ' Concord With the - ;igue, Nebraskan De- ires to Press Club.! - I rjtion Too Vital for' :'itics, He Says; Ar- it X Is Monroe Doc-V Doc-V zi on Large Scale.! u'Or-Z. Sep:. Declaring :.i.t j ' :: hi? never been confronted , " " i r.:eii?-s an issue as the peace! ni Ir.u-'e of r.a'.icr.s. jr.aior j " : - :: NVcral-ci. t "r.o is leading the j :: niiii'tti.n in the senate, rr.aJe : : ::: tie treaty witi-.out amendment j before the Ba'.t'.n-.ore Fress - - ." Ti. yi; the issue r.?.s become in-"... in-"... . - :.i::cr.a politics in a parlisAn ?r- :'r H::ch'Xjk said. "It Is a t . . . liTge and too :tal to - :::y of -: world is a history - ni rry jea;e settlements. . ;ow is whether we can ;ri:e settlemer.t rern-.ane-t. T-- C2r. r-rorrr: ir.ternaf.or.al re-ioiiay re-ioiiay with wars whirr. hae .- - - ; -j zi'z ir. the past. t.'.e issue is plain. It is . - a i-i?u- of rations or a con-: con-: "r old progran: of war witr.- --; S FORESEEN iCT FAILS. -i effort to establish the " ' -uer.s fails the w-orld will re-' re-' Tis '"ilticr.s. Every nation will l5-t:ons for war. No intel- ":11 be willing to have the ' 'zi-r. -"prepared as long as war :-" a question of having this y ' ' " "e: or.e. It is a question "... ''-"--s league or none. If this ; -- -ouz-t forth as it has been i ." : - eilencies of war, with a!l ' an ier-ational council - trrns of peace, never in : -r?i we expect to see a serious p to create a league of na- yU- -"r.ent and dismay wiil settle Lawlessness and disorder - ,'5-:ssion m vast areas of the -- r ' cvPortiiiiiy wili be given to j - - -c jrearr.s of conquest that have : . . ' :-ln? been shattered. "E IS ONLY '.v.: FOR WAR. . "' -fc no possible doubt that I ; .: :s to get rd of war. The j :- ra;ize is that this league, - -.' ' . ' -'-'w oefore the United States, '-" : .;.a ,r'm-d' for war. but it is, - - tr-at is proposed. There ! " . Ils critics suggest no other i .'-:".f- ,-"-;1:-t r.o othr; it is this or i -' "nt to prevent war. I , . Y11 t0 defeat the league of 'r-' 1 ''e.oped along several very Z an. aPPea: to a distorted and -intsni. in this effort, the1 H ". "vae t-at the league does not ' '. - V roe dr-".-irlne, that it im-. im-. "-' -:x .-V'.r"-'n P'A'Ji"s of congress, 'j-T' .',;:s tr,e council of the league rt-nil var' and that it drags do-rW',,; do-rW',,; -'-jns lik immigration and rt-U '1 reaIjTl o:" international de- Rln ' v to its jurifcdi- tion. This is ---'J Misrepresentation of the ? " -Jt asserts The bold falsehood : -. . V-n of the league will involve :"- ' o Tn wars and niake it 'r,d boys to take part r ; - -S ANALYZED ' BRASKAN. S iar.' uf thlo misrepresenta- 1 W, assumption that there J"'1"1 wars. whereas the ' . 6 Grantees which the mem-. mem-. fJ' lvtt'." d-sPUtes by lawful I "-'.',iV "mmptlon a reckless r:- -V'fm' ""e league provisions t?'?"' ' ;- b-i 870',1t out of disputes " -"' '''in. Artl,-1 ten deals with '"'ji 1 '" which one nation . '-'il .? destroy the indepen-. l- ' L , territory of another. " .""Possible, provided all '". . 'n "'""gini? each other .- " o. , gainst the loss r,f ln-' ln-' 4lr"rn""-y. This pledge. In-ri In-ri ' war' is certain to pre- .-' " nation will attempt ' - v. t' ,st when It realizes that 1-:".nVBllt tne whole world. ' Wrir! tn'8 rwpeot la like the -' .' 'c.t .'" a large scale. It '' '"stead of producing It. -ft- ' 3r''' tl,e Monroe doctrine, '' . - -a penalty for an ag-, ag-, - -:(ti cn H1TGHCQCK HITS ' j Question Too Vital for Po-; litical Football, He Tells Press Club. (Continued From Page One.) pression, but the threat, instead of making mak-ing war, prev ents it . "W hen tho Monroe doct rino was promulgated pro-mulgated a nd our republic not it led the old world that wo would treat as an act of war on us any attack on any of the little nations of tho w est ern hemisphere, there were some who condemned it, just rs critics now condemn article ten. It har: never cost us a mun or h dollar. Instead In-stead of lead ing to wa r. it led to peace, just as art id o ten will. "Third, it brar.enly pretends that tho league would require tho United States to assist any members of the league to suppress a revolution, if called upon, ami, by way of illustration, the falsehood is p roc la imed that if tho Irish st art ed a revolution which threatened t lie territorial terri-torial int egrit y of the Brit ish empire, wo could bo called upon to help tho British Brit-ish government. Tho direct eontrarv is true nny part of tho British empire could resort to revolt t ion to secure It p independence, and neither tho United Stat es nor nny other league member could be called upon by the lengue or the Brit Ish government . "The guarantee which members giro en eh o1 her in art Iclo t en, of t orritorial integrity, is only against "external ng-gression.' ng-gression.' The use of these two words gives the lie to tho claim that the league has anything to do with revolutions or rebellion." |