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Show I ' .Tix. o':i'i;t to tmd.-rio rrf . r n . t:.- wor.-i t ; ;lVo b:.,; ; r- a " oV! --r "i r! v.'.l'-h To i ' 'a. t ' i h!:.t:i :: s-- ' rival. Tl'.e wfjriii . a.'.no- ! i',v a:, i opi.-r -.-jj it ha- a i p.-;i...' "A':.--' ..-! yj'i v.'i.l or .'.., o :r :" .;: :r;f-s t' '''I in u:,;i L v-.-.l of t - w.j::'!, of t:.-- rr.4L of I:..- v.., ivi ;,:.d L.- r--i jV th.-:i-. or 'j:i-'r:t'.i the. i:.f : of "'.Vint ;c-t- voi t, br-rr.vs, r::-ir;-::' aroilf.-l t:... circus t.-:.r. and p.-.-r::i- .m- r '-ar.va.7 M-n d-roiinit!- to pa a! i.'.i:-:or: .'ml s. : Mr. lt o:i tie root and lin-:i: i:i fin t;n: :';i:i.';? Or arc yo'i going to ii.av y-j:i -, ...i--" ! !ii-- ' a--r in" tie game, kr.'i" in t :.:u yon are trusted a.-i a b-ad.-r and u::.p::j but!:? SHOUTS AT AMERICA'S GREAT OPPORTUNITY. ''If y-'j ar; j'-ing to put In the world thin ''.-n-i, ,':a!i I rail it. of A mortey n at.-rjji is.; and Arn-ri an faith and Arn.-r-: .in t:.c:i yi'i m'i:-t be tbe prin cipal pa::.i.r-!-rf In the new partnership Wi.l-'h Lilt; 'Afir't.l is forming. I take ii-ive to sa, without intending the 1-rast dis-r.-si.f'-t, t l.ar. an;, bod y that consciously or t;nroris. iously opposes, that propo-.Hitiori propo-.Hitiori i-lTh'T has i:o iioaina tion or no knowledge or is a quii ter. A n: erica has put her rand to this great enterprise alr'-ad1.' in the men she sent overseas, and their part was the negative part tll'Tfly, very d rop of blood I have In me g--ts up arid s:oi.:ls vli"ii T think of the I'ppnrt unity that America has. I come of a certain sto-- t (.at raised Cain in the northern part of tin island of Great rri t-ain t-ain under the name of the covenanters. PROPOSES TO SEE TIIEJOIi FINISHED. . "They nu t in a churchyard and on the top of a flat tombstone they signed an inunorta 1 document cal led the solemn league and covenant, which meant that I !h-v were p. o I rig- to stand by their religions re-ligions principles in spite of t ho crown of Kn gland and the force of Kn gland and every other influence, whether of men or the rlevii, so long as any of them lived. "Now, J have seen men of all nations sit a round a table in Paris a nd sign a solemn league and covenant. They have become covenanters, and I remain a covenant cov-enant IT. "We are g'dng to see this Job through, no matter what influences of evil oppose op-pose it." DREGOHiS CHEER PLEA BY ILSDil Portland Citizens Give President Cordial Reception; Re-ception; Applaud Address Ad-dress in Suport of Pact. Thousands Unable to Gain Admission to Speaking Place; California Cali-fornia Is Next Stop. I'OirnXD, Ore., Sept. 15. "If America Amer-ica mays out of tlio league of nations It will do so at a reat co:;t to democracy and In violation of It.s material as well as lis moral iotcrceta," President Wilson U'-rlarcd in an address here today. lieldorltiK the KUKK' Stion he said was bciiiK made on all tiidrs that tho United States take advantage of tho world situation sit-uation without shouldering any of tho responsibility, Mr. Wilson declared such a policy would bo futile, becauso this country as much as any other was Interested Inter-ested in aruaraulocinfr a stable world order, iMirint; an all-day stop here, tho presi-eb presi-eb ut spoke first at an afternoon luncheon, "wluru his declarations were cheered re-peateeliy re-peateeliy by two hundred business and prnf.'ssional men of Portland. ONLY ONE SPEECH MADE IN OREGON. lie niado only a brief impromptu tall;, however, the only set speech on his day's schedule beinfr at an eveninjr mass .meeting .meet-ing at tho municipal auditorium. For this meeting seven thousand tickets had bciii distributed In a. lottery in which local officials said there were more than thirty thousand applications for admittance. admit-tance. From tho timo tho presidential train nrrived, tho president and Mrs. Wilson were followed by cheering: crowds. When he appeared on tho' rear platform of his private car at the station, a railroad man shouted, "Atta boy:" and a. crowd which bad sepieezed throusrh the police lines to the tracks started a roar of welcome, which continued all the way along- an automobile ride through Portland's principal prin-cipal streets. GOES FOR DRIVE OVER BIG HIGHWAY. - Later, tho presidential party was taken for a sixty-mile automobile ride over the Columbia highway, hundreds of private cars following in his rear and thousands more being parked along the way, that their occupants might join in waving a erecting to tho chief executive. At all of the small towns through which the party passed there were waiting crowds. Tho luncheon was given in Mr. Wilson's lienor by C. S. Jackson, publisher of the Oregon Journal, and Governor Olcott and -Mayor Baker were among the guests. In the evening the president and Mrs. Wil-on Wil-on dined privately at a hotel. leaving Portland hue tonight, the presidential !arly will spend all of tomorrow on their pei-ial tram, en route to San Francisco, iv here they are to arrive Wednesday morning. The text of President Wilson's lunch-son lunch-son u.lress, in part, follows: "I think we are all now convinced that iV0 imv,k .not reached (lie riirht and final irgamaztuin of our industrial society :hat Mere are many features of our social |