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Show RESIDENT! GHEETEDI IStllSi! I o Gathering Warm-! : Applauds Wilson's! ruments for World; tenant of Nations.: :'jasts Paris and Vi-' : :1 Congresses; Rule: Royal Masters at :i. Executive Says.! - - :--;:f:ee a'. Vers.- '.'. 3 n-irh j '-; V Fr-,;-t VT- . iz aa r.I.'.rcss th.n: t:io j ; . ,: e::- Ul l-:.! Vc.-:.::,, j :-;:-- . ?.:s represcntjd th..'ro .-. 1: "ir.i? ci - ia st:'.! " ootc no i :aZiS. a'A the preside:, the r::'. iis.-'-y-.fS so tbr.t aa-:. aa-:. stiver tou'.J ecsisve t:.e : r-r-iso; o: !? VU.-.r.s :, Mr. V."i'.5ca asserted, "as " s:i i UiiotJ as rrou'd hold in :? ;r:? t:d? of d-rrr.oera'-'V. ;oi:ern or t.:e dclegstvs -vho rr;:i.V-s, h-? added, was to ao--: :i;eti- :r. opposite. : : z theatre here to a erod '' - .'j. :i.e rre?id-:3t frnuer.tiy ; : t::d by cpp!au?. By ::n -- i-Ti!,: i-:.3 rrords vrere car-' car-' ir otiv.-r ti.eatres holding 1LICAN PRESIDES SO GATHERING. wr. w-lcomed to Evixo ""j '-ioh cheered him at t"r? ; ;" "-t:ca rnd along the line of L" i"oob;Ie ride through the - :-Tvr:-:. ','iovornr.r Bo;Ie prc-nic prc-nic f.nd Mr. V.'ilson ': '' bv 0::.rlvs ChsndU-r, n - iiTve7f 7; ho snid h denied - of -;a f?'.v prominent senr.-; senr.-; ''--"it the Ti-'pubian party ;V r-"-on of the peroe treaty. The - c-rCiarrd, contained 'good uoctrines. ' ' "" roi- and e!.erod when :ho - r'-r -r.trr -iueed nnd there was , ,-. --"-ior. for Mrs. Wilson :tlso - '-'''-i'.-r mr-niionci her name. ... ' --rnf-e to the congress of prf-?idnt .r.id that the er'- ;" :' cade to stifle revolution ' 'y had been unsuccessful ' ;'-::on but Germany. :- '".voer.tion of the Monroe r. said, that broke the baek- -jOTacy's effort to over-, over-, ' -'-M America, and added that : ; '";3 th? eye!,., of liberty had , J'-'C'! by application of the f UTS, NOT THE OF PEOPLE. ' :"1 ienna congress, con--r ''residf-nt , the conference at .'r. hihfle up of men who .' "."CTe the servants and not ' r of the people. As the peo-:. peo-:. ..a's' h sai'l, they had car--!r promise of a permanent '''' "'as not written, essen-V essen-V in Paris," he said. "It , Chateau Thierry, in Bel- -.' -'. and in theArgonne. . . : -n did not fight with the pur-'ir.g pur-'ir.g back and having the -V ;??laI'r'"n again. They fought ' ' ;5!)r""C " ooinK e thing j .," 7,"c are going to sec it " tribute, to the frontier ;, ('e Kr'3', the president said , ' 'rf,r,'icr that was found ,Joking people. Too many tU: treaty, he asserted, y'U over their shouldcra. ''Vr ""i' "insubordinate rest-. rest-. 1,":' ailing in Europe nnd ; '.,', s'm nsserted (hat the hlJnred oaee, but must ""- oa pase .,, ColumaT)- PfiESII WILSON GREETED BY fiS (Continued From Page One.) have it. America onlv couM cu?rantcc such a peace. A?kin his hearers whether they had not heard of organizations organi-zations in America ''the purpose of whicli is nothins k-ss than to overthrow the eovrrnmeut itself.'' lie added that it was important to America also that unrest l-e quieted. Repeating his previous declarations in support of article X and other disputed dis-puted roints of the treaty, the president presi-dent said the jieopV? had been diligently dili-gently misinformed about the contents of the document. GREAT GUARANTEE FOR LIBERTY, JUSTICE. Hfl lauded thf ;ibnr ami mandatory features of th treaty, payine it constituted consti-tuted "a great guarantee or' justuv and liberty. ' Th president aU disu?sed the objection ob-jection that the Kritish empire would have, an unequal representation in the I Wgrn- nssemblv, saving that the fear expressed on that score was n '"bugaboo." '"buga-boo." He also explained-tlie Shantung provision of th treaty, and said the leazup i urn ished China her bev hope of regaining control of the province. It was at the in -'tan re of the United State", said Mr. Wilson, that Japan promised to return the Shantung rights to Uiina, and international law was so ' ' revolu' ionized bv article XI of the covenant that the great powers would be in a position to secure t'ul- j filltnont, of that promise. , Discussing the withdrawal tVature, ' Mr. Wilson said he didn't want to get into the league with a f'ir he might ; not be able to gpt out, hut wanted to : go in with the hope of slaving in and helping all he could. The crowd cheered wI.mi ho alded: '! want to get into anv kind of trouble that will help liberate mankind. T don't want to always bo thinking about tn v kin or my poeket book or in v friendship. He added that when tho-e opposing the league t.'l "the impulse of courage cour-age inst'-nd of the impulse of coward-ice." coward-ice." tliev would see it in the proper light. Text of Address. The president s:i trl. m part: "A man In the 'itst rerently said. e-pln e-pln Uli m," I he f i e t t hat we were iihlc to t rain 'he pre" t army so raphlly. i h:it U wan always r;i.ier to trnln nn .nn'ilean heciiuso yon li.id to train htm m c only one wav. and that Is unrl 1ms been true of Aim-rlra and the ni.tx.'ment ol' the populHlmn hits been one way, never any t u mine i hie. nl ays been an ndvaneintc t ld; :ind tlie fd juiriiik- tide has been the m"M orlu i na t i n spirit, .M.-u are rendv to o forward and take up any rrnnt to advame the Interest tlint people need nnd denlr... Therefore it is with n 1 spirit of enthusiasm that I find myself in this Mat.-. "And It is more delightful In this aspeet bo.-inun the mitijeet T have cmie tn speak about la the foi ward-lnt.kinc sub.h'et. 'Some of the erities of the league of ' nations have their eye over their shoulders, should-ers, thev are lnokitu baekward. I think that is 'he reason they ure stumhlinp nil the time. Thev are always stnUiuK tlieir feet iu;alnst ohstnele which others aoid. r am imlntr to tell you what kind nf ii treaty thi In: very few liae taken the pains tn do that. Goes Hack a Century. "Yerv few of them have piven the eoun-try eoun-try what eonvk'tmn tills doelrine contains or what its orh;hi if. ' want tn mi the ptaKO inr the peoide to let uii see what was meant xo be accomplished and what it was that was accomplished. Perhaps I can start with something over a hundred hun-dred years ago. The last preat so-called peace conference was held in Vienna, back In the year of 1815, if I remember correctlv. "The conference of Vienna was intended to check the revolutionary spirit of the time. That was intended to check the revolution not oniv in Europe, but throughout the world. The British representatives rep-resentatives at that conference were alarmed because they heard it whispered that European governments were proposing propos-ing to extend their power to the western hemisphere to the Americas; and the prime minister of Great .Britain suggested to Mr. Rush, the ambassador of the United Unit-ed States at the court of Great Britain, that he put it in the ear of .Mr. Monroe, who was then president, that this thing was atoot. that it might be profitable to cay something about it. The Monroe Doctrine. "Thereupon Mr. Monroe uttered his famous fa-mous Monroe doctrine, saying that any European power that sought either to colonize this western hemisphere, or to interfere with its political institutions, or to extend monarrhial institutions to it, would b? regarded as having done an unfriendly act to the United States. Since 'hen no power has dared interfere with tli a fie! f -determination of the Americas. That is the famous Monroe doctrine; we love it. because it was th first effective dam built up afe-ainst the tide of autocratic power. Promises Always Fulfilled. "We promised at our birth to be a help to France, and we have never made a promise that we have not delivered. The very heart of the treaty of peace is the covenant of the league of nations; that no autocratic powers may have any part in it: that no powr like Germany, such as Germany was. ehall ever take part in Its counts. Germany has changed her constitution, has made it a democratic constitution, and she has executed for the time being and has seen and has realized real-ized that, if phe means wha t she pro-fejses pro-fejses sne must put tn the hands of the people the rliht that has been proposed by t':ie constitution at Berlin. K hu can prove her change of heart and t lie permanency per-manency of her cha nge of const it ui ton, then she can come into respectable society; soci-ety; but if she cannot she is excluded therefrom, so that at last the cycle is com pier the free principle? which were recited at Vienna have come into thHr own. "When T hear gentlemen Hsk the pues-t pues-t :on. Ma t he Monroe doctrine suf ticiently si'eaiuirded in the co enant of the league of nation?' T can only say that I understand under-stand the English language. It says in the Englii'.i which 1 shnil quote that nothing in that covenant shall be interpreted inter-preted jis HfY.vting the vahllty of the Monroe doct rine. And can anything be p!a;ner t'utn t hat " And when you add to that that the Monroe doctrine is applied ap-plied to the whole world, then surely I am at liberty to say that the h-art of t lie covenant Is the Mo u oc doctrine Itself. It-self. Go Out by Themselves. "T ant under the impression that we have come to the place w here we have got into to stay, and that some gentlemen gentle-men nre uoirn: to tlnd that, no matter how anxious they are tn know that the door Is open and that they can get ovit any time they want to. l hey will he allowed al-lowed lo get out by themselves. We are goiim to stay in; we are going to see this tlung tin I shod, because, my fellow , cit irens. t ha t Is t he only possibility of pence, and the world not only electros peai o, hut. It must have i!. "Thev know that we have no imperialistic imperial-istic purposes. They know that wo do not desire to pi of it at the expense of other people. f nd thev know our power, thev l now our wealth, t hcv know our indomitable spirit, When we put our names lo the bond, then Europe will again he quiet. Put Them in Trust. "Po you find cvervbody about you content con-tent with our present industrial order? Po you hear no In i imat Ions of radical cha n i; " Po you Ira t n of no organtza-t organtza-t ions the ohlect of which is not hlng less than to over! urn t he government itself? We are a self -pnssessed nation; we know the value of order; we mean to maintain (Continued on Pago Ton.) |