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Show DESERET EiTNING NE1VS SATURDAY SEPTEMTIEll - , ' 1.BRANO C1ARK TAU( "DO IT NOW, TODAY" e . AS uNri(IR AND Oita Alt A t 0100101111011100100 Ina had hoped, do at You aro aot the only diseourago4.1 'rho havoc ot war lo with many et - - . ' - - 9 . ' ' 111 t - - ! , 0- - - D ., - , IP .., ' . W , , t. 0Mt 4..,.qo r IMMIIME1111110EMIM0101MMIND l Asa on..........., wto . .,.. , 'oar hos not rosereed your Strength and vigor as: tor It your vacation . ., 1919 R 1 0 . 0 ,,,,, UM- - tither. hairs given thole low.' tame a real until with lioc.d tiatuat borilta. Peptlros and Hood's Illis, ILLOGICAL creating au appetite. aiding digestion. porforting asolmitation. and stimulat !Ivor to a normal activity' .00 Wig th that Its blood anti th eystom revel", the nutrition that Iniprocea boalth Lodi' mmittee of Utah Branch makes strength. Ono package of each modloins will 1611 bo all you will Isod League to Enforce Peace prohahly and', ' This le a spociallsed troatmont., i lp i ii enenhinalloa In reasonably, sure to Issues Statement on Peace the roach your moo and bring tiormar 41 health it It la in the powor ot any 1 Achim' as. ttiodirine to do it. !login hair, today. Treaty ,i. . Advertisement. tEr"T STATEMENT issued fig the the council advises we Gs tO ware thla eoramittee on tofertnatiost end advios doeo not become binding upon :. .., ':111 publicity of the Utah branch. Ins American people until the . luta lowked into the mailer and League to Enforce Peace, press decided whether the proposed war . ; brands the recent addrosa et Ittejor I. hes is reetily righteous end necessary or , on the and Reuben,Clark peace treaty merely a whim or & prejudiced vote III ."'"........7: I . the league of nations as "pro.German. of the council. It is the American .. a . not the league oouncil. that . " f A III The, tom., Congresa illogical and - will decide whether or not this is a Mitt oonsiats of Dr. Geo. W. Middle. moral obligetionwhther or not we .,r 11 shall wage war; and if the Congrese ton, Dr-- E. A. Smith. Prot. 1 1 11 I I iekk411.411114C...111111141 X I III Fellows and Prof. J. II. Paul. The deciders that the war is Dot justifiable or neceeary, then the reoommendaII atentent follow,: tion does not place the nation under geateLelel1S, ' vrill V any obligation and our ootintry obit-Wiot 'Phi Deseret News: 'Editor more no to, not is There wet. go dill11114 4 "Th iinalysis of the peace treaty or nation any any person and of the league cotenant presented I) take upon action in the dark against his I . .I. Reuben Clark at the tabernacle the nation's own sense of right r . by . jotMoral 4N111 obligation implies; both knowon Tuesday nicht was ledge and approval. so that. when the illogical and 'n 'council recommends war, the only obI , CAN -4 ligation our nation to under Is to bees Part. take the matter up and re. ej) "The argument cot Mr. Clark opened Congress .b um opp its findings. with the statement that an unjust port that "Mr. entire Clerks argument peace forced upon a vanquished namoral obligation to go to war po Ma always owe the seeds of future the k be forced upon Amerka by' a war. That is true; but Mr. Clark then could libbt mere vote of the malarity of the intimated that the peace terms offered Council his collapses. But to Germany are unjust; which is the foundationtherefore (Iv here is false again. enoo German view. not shared, as far as we the vow war for by the Council must know by any Congressman or other be 600 unanimous; and if America alone 1 prominent American interviewed since opposed it there could be no such dethe termewere made public, tempt 6.1) this admitted Clark sir., , whop 41.1111PPMr. Clark'. patron. Senator Knox. icision. the decisions of the Count Oleo against whose te;íz the ,.. war little that by saying treaty so recently shocked the its and defeat block could alone gi;;; NZre public. It is simply the laction. Yet be argued that America SIP claim. Is unsupported by alone could not block war in the Coun, v 11 w facts. and amounts to disloyal gita, all essential matters a , tion in behalf of Germany. The jun- cil. since ofin the decade. could Council . tics. humanity and moderation of the' majority section dealing with war terms to Germany may be summed up, The special an , legi exception by requiring ,r In these words; no indemnities and makes this vote. lePP Mr. Clark repeat11:"!' Ctivx! only such reparation.for damage done a unanimous laedly contradicted himself. , as Germany can pay. minted that the big five nations PP "Mr. Clark then stated that ouch a formed -the backbone and strength of 1 Ai... peace es has been forced upon Ger the the and then large deplored league. the allied will as nations many by 114K. it. in of nationa small the voting power surely lead to future wars of revenge He 1111, was aggrieved that the enemy Zia- .on the part of the German people aa tionm have not been invited into the the great war itself was the outgrowth I. top of that bemoaned of the unlumt peace terms forced by league. and on 4 I smallness of the Anglo-Saxla Germany upon France in 1871. That the relative power therein, :Amp, of ' OP which , voting a such monetrous and mischievous I I reduoed course be further would still could.be uttered at a time like by admission of the enemy nations. 1 ! was one who as aft announced this, by t, the taws and history of na- His fervid denunciation of the alleged export-i- n of Russia by the Altions and who repeatedly proclaimed diamomberment Nino was lies ridiculous. particularly his patriotism and preparation for the address he made. would have been be- It was the Allied topeace terms that forced give up all the . Germany yond belief had not the speaker de- Russian territories stolen at the treaty liberately. at the very beginning of of k and to renounce the hie argument, anewith cool emphasis. German-financed declared this to be the bailie of what indemnities that the it j Lenin and 'Trotsky of 4 he had Pa Ray. fzernineett Lequ'' r to awarded Ger. ) "Mr. Clarke ,statement Implies that - the Allies are the great war came because of the many. The only thingsresume f , Its peo- -; . ' ! re-- I going to Russia le to desire .of French. the for people I J . from the tyranny of the present ' ' lenge on Germany, and is precisely pie ' -laid of all who the at . traitors head, what the Germans have always I ' . claimed. It is perhaps the one great Russia at the , feet of Germany and t lie to which the Germans have tens- - who have ever since waged war upon ,- the Mlles and upon their own people clously clung from tile .very outbreak who . opposed Germany. of hoetilities to the presignt time. It ix 1 I "Mr. Clark flouted the reoognition not false merely. but traitorous. s , It , 4' , to Monroe the because Doctrine. means that France, burning for re- given , , tempi. either made war on Germany it is described as a 'regional underI or forced 1 and " e tions and our own country then went ing,tru& since all nations had hated ' . into the war to help France take re- - and none bad acknowledged the Monroe Doctrine. Very true; but by this t venge for the unjust peace of 0171. . If there is any substantial truth in encougagemert and guarantee in the , is now for it the that Mr. Clarke claim. then the entire LotgoCovellant . , American Congress which cheered time acknowledged by the 12 nation" . ' Wilson's declaration of the reasons that will compose the league; hence it , ' r , why America would not tread the path Is. on Mr. Clarke ()Wm showing. Im, . of submission but would wage war mensely strengthened and rendered upon Germany in return for the war a world policy. if we enter the league, she had forced upon us. should .be whileSt we do not ratify the covenant shall be left as before to defend the indicted before the bar of civilization we 4 and turned over to Germany for trti.l. IMontoe Doctrine and all that it stands i ' .. . For the president declared that we ifor, against all other nations. , r r' t , went to war in our own self defense "His string of 'ifs,' as to what '. I g 4 . , and in the defense of the rights of might do or what might happen Japan if we , ' 1 t small nations and to put en end to have n representation in the labor , , J .. .,,,, --war; whereas, if Mr. Clark is right. we ,cbuncil; his sneers at the idea that . . l .7 went to war in order to help France !other nations desire the league, taken t l ,...., ' Y t newsrevenge. every get In Locally. connection with his i sumertions that . t paper in Utah. Ihe CommerciaLclubs.-- - foreign mationserill gain muck while s,t . practically all the churches, and esPe- - America will lose. by entering it; his o 14 ' 1 , ' , . daily the schools and colleges, should notion that France distrusts the league , -.. he indicted for the sante reason; for because the deeiree an alliance with . 7 they all declared that our nation went Britain and America for a, few years I Into the war to save civilization and while the league is still In procems of 4 . - to establish permanent-peace.-f- filmilar completionLittheseand - 4 I , ,statements are illogical or contradic. , - ' Blundering Logic. . , tory. , . ',lift. Clark next resorted to an ex- d 4. "In. A , Analyst& . . . ' . traordinary.device. He claimed that course the 'in the I address, ofta long eertain of the league advocates (whom . lie did not name) have maintained speaker found nothing to commend in . document of that the moral obligation of the cove- - the most l momentous history. He could discover nant (such as the obligation to go to modernfaults-an' ol btricof ' ,,, ' blemishes. Tat he d not necessarily binding, while i only are war) , ' !naI . tio!, legal obligations (such as boy- - claimed that his discussion was . ,, , . , , , Suppose a cott) are binding. This doctrine he !man,- - and , ! L purchase a fruit.. III n,k,!!!!'7.t , hotly denounced as 1 ti an expert to ex- -.. But what advocate efthe league huhtorchard, should , --- -The a such claim? . The president s,e I II the' wormy and holds the moral obligations. of the pert picks out x. . ,- , an find. and sh9s . fruit -ttreaty to be even more binding than shriveled ke , . -.tTer all & true theI. Sirt-La-o - iheidnd fruit of of - the orchard Q.: sample lit inholds advocate -,Dtherwise7-7. league 1 ., . - "Mr. Clark argued 'bears; "but he aluaadde that all the -, , of which there apgoot11king fruit), league Covenant IS'reall ' "'' T cod anY nation that breaks the peace, pearato be a ' . ,, , , tinfit This is precisely the league council of nine. by its re, Poisonous,and . ,.. , t. , taken by Mr. Clark In rela- ,. commendation , that. wa,,ao to ..war.. i -- '''''''"."--"''- '' ' '61:411111" altd 111' ' would put us under fo. moral obligation , , - - to obey and we should have to wage peace treaty. To him, they are rotten ' .y the good old world '. ''' advised, even wars iin to the core: while ' domoaaleseroemeoma as it Christian right , 18 , which we have no interest or of which ig about OUR DRUG .4 . !maim m.m... omegas y 11 we utterly disapprove. Let us see. If world. CO why try to improve it? NA- 4 SOUTH MAIN almw1awww"'"111' 4600,1Poonnemommis112-11r and are tions selfish ambitious: in) OMI, why m ,411 , , l ' ' Russia. Japan, And China, he says. .. , number. was of The Borodino an battla the The had' fought. slaughter Atop. equal t, 40 ' us and .tne - In- both armies, was terrific. ,, one 1 Of num- Alll rift! and overfowter under French '. , Bonaparte. army, . ' the War; other little .,. ' i barod about 110.000 and the.Ruestans Russian divigion.of 30,000 men only TOMORROW. '''t4 -- . so why bother about universal peace? , .. -- -- death or 'wounds. is It -- eircaped' eigtrt ' ,, , - Peace is entyw Idream, and the league ...- 1 . and Russians 30,000 estimated that I , , Iliblaynypreozrielenrt rNISI the lth of , 160.000 French were, killed. - e-- September 113S;Ells-- 1 i , , 1 audi. , Hici j of 1 ' on Ith September, the In ... 1316, , of of war; , abeth and Englind, daughter A Home Recipe for , ' t ? ' -- did not Lincoln warn us that tYrants .. finer. ateamboaton sod the the Frontensc, . . .., wasi Boleyn, . - -Henry vim and Anqe at ,. -, Great Wrinkled, Saggy , S itMI the Bright eyes, a clear akin and a body - (such as wilmon?) would arise and born. t, 1 ( on Ontario. ) take Canada, Ernistown., liberties? to The the abolishour stek : lieptember,' 1630, of 7th On the -ho ,of youth and health may be argument of Mr.- Clarkprejudiced, town I, ve ., The Frontenae was built at a cost of sr- r of Boston was settled by John -no point, while Winthrop and a colony of Puritans. yours it you will keep your system 4I pessimintle; Peevishat The famous satollte lotion recent. $75,000. She wow S. ggternwheeler of op, t sommossingsmonses For i fault with almost everything, The previous year the colonists had mended by - 10 I:I - -- in order by 'regularly taking ' - findingto shcrw for and service wrinkles rducindie-Moving lento Latent -and bother. how beet work in and Len; the fuel:beefing.. at dd lin New York and settled the tended pores. MB easily befor made a. and Niagara. e A more Ap- ''' :written or what kind of villages of Salem and Charleston. dependable. ateadier. . easolite between Kingston ' I should be - - the Ithot water bottle-ide'home. Ask your druggist In - 1917.On he He more had heat.' of 7th Septemi;sr, ijeague healthful a On ounce. the home, ply wod uphold. and one half of 7th on In powdered form, your 1760. . to, the In September, i 4 :". nothing poeitive to offer: he could only Montreal aurrendered 'to - the English pint et witch hazel, Dissolve. the pow.. set of Congress went Into effect that I Ciiet any estimatevi...14hey tell mom -, - I find fault with the worlds mightiest under the prohibited the manufacture beset and batha of whisky ' er Amherst. The tall of der In tbs. witchhan THE:1b(3t.-IbtastagI general k the oolution. and neck I effort for' peace; for. after all there Montreal completed theEnglish cal in the United States.- rho prohibition ifsblis . and ' oilik". ., tare , tthis was a food control messmre adopted Many arotie things than' warto quest of Canada and the subversion Ito." t: ar.The skTn tightens. sad months and the themillionaire profiteers previously legal o'c the French empire Inliorth Amer-- I natnurallily reduces the wrinkle& as well by Congress.eeven 4 , . experts' who help them make fortunes ica. as creas or folds about the sock. to conserve' grain for food- purposes , Of of war. world out and beneath the the The tissue kande. 1107. In tor the.tesgediee cheeks daring Wannich' On the ?th of September,' Wee& 217 Phone South. , Th. world,. standard temeil tot kidney. the mieeideeof hIS7 Second ; the people by exploiting tturrindered Dthe skin aloe becomes firmer ; and more Denmark, liver, bladder and' , a oi id. the blood of other men's eons who died tn the a long siege. -- otter exhilanemias of Ina I lo to since for L refreshed much gad fools Otte Of mankind- - , , 4 , the Ilhertiee 11,0GO bombardment ' work.office I 1696. All druggists, thres sizes. arated after eisit tit if truly wonderful five- or h Committee on Information und and wounded and preparation. Many women lookthis siiritiat work. legal wdrk, quick work. Our THE took h. gibe IMMO Cold M.J.J 4YEEKLYNEWS- Great CountrY NelyspaFtr 11" , F'u Welty of Or Utah Branch of 1".7 after tea only using younger destroyed. years Deseret Newe 1;6 Dept. ' ----.- -,IMF & short specialties. , - ire 10 , ' 7ashion's 'Atitultri- I :.1i$010,Y,:,':".1--- i The Season's Newest Creations Await Your Inspection at C M. L -- I fr one-sided.- r t r , O. ' et en I' Oieplkt ,.k. 00 1 Alt1 r;;L, Mit one-side- Pro-Germ- an Tbet , ) 41),- i n i L' ov I 1 pro-Germ- Bel-glu- 10Ai loP 0, 1 m tc..peat I Alf s 1111 , N. I i that on th , - 4 t Brest-Litvoa- 41 - . . Comment cing Monday Morfit ng 1. ,. i ,- V limmomme, New C oats , , t , N W urs - 1 - , 1 One-side- VI - -- , . $ - , $ t.,,, . . -- f f eminine 7 - . , fashions that are absoiutely,correct and: epresentative: 0 . , '7 , self-defen- 1, ' bV V 4 -- , - , r , '', . , . , n; - .... - - - ant-profusion.----T- .. grepit-attartit- a.w ; - , ..- itt . . - . '- -- . .,, . . ... ---- - . , & isa . . ---- - 7 Ma Ian, eage. 'GOLD MEDAL - - - . --- -- con-ifs-- - , , I :I . . and . - e plwribe s' I am ' ys - - !.. teh, 1 , . ece - - - . -- ounagt,,,3e.,f.,her... - - ' 1. , ' - -- 40' 7 omen ' , 0 - - - ,- I i -- he . -- t Fashion s latest predictions are, shown in eleg' ladies.of City and vicinity are cordially invitéd spect our delightful showing, raL . . h ea t.er -- - . I 1 - i ------ CS. ' o.-,- Superior - 1 1 I - , , - -- sun , - , . . . , - , - . ,1 - 4 - . , -' - - - . - . : , - . - ' -- . t. V - - , - ' - . - '- - - , , . . - . , , r .. |