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Show Declares People Tow Ready to Destroy Governments Gov-ernments Incapable of Proper Administration. Minneapolis Throngs Hear President in Support Sup-port of Pact; Hearty Reception Is Given. 'MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 9. Declaring : that the peace treaty tvould end the j- regime of the balanco of power, President Presi-dent Wilson told a crowd in the Minneapolis Minne-apolis armory today the new world or-t or-t der act up would be to the advantage of all nations rather than a few stronger. The president's party motored over ; from St. Paul, where he had spoken earlier ear-lier today. He waa escorted through i, the Minneapolis streets between crowds ' that lined both sidewalks and kept up " a wave of cheering. In ten blocks of the downtown sec-' sec-' tion every square inch of sidewalk ' space was occupied and the windows ; wero thronged. Under the old balance of power, said the president, the people nowhere "dared speak out" against autocracy ; or against the burden of armament. But : now, he continued, the people were ' nwake and had determined that "if the governments can't get together they 'will destroy the governments." WORLD TIRED OF OTHER EXPERIMENTS. "The people of tho world," he said, "are tired of every other kind of experiment ex-periment except the kind we're going to try. The world has turned a corner .that it's not going to turn again.'" To destroy autocratic power, Mr. Wilson continued, was the object of the war. Yet in Russia, he said, an autocratic auto-cratic government as cruel as that of the czar had been set up and the Unit- , cd States must seo to it that there was no similar movement in the United States. "We will brook the control of no minority in the United States," he added. add-ed. "I would as leavo serve one kind of an autocracy as another." When Mr. Wilson said another great war would come if thero were no con-: con-: ceptcd movement to preserve peace un-: un-: der American leadership, someone in the gallery shouted "Amen." LEAGUE WILL END AUTOCRACY. The president said tho league of nations na-tions provided for destruction of autocratic auto-cratic power by admitting only self-governing self-governing nations to the league. "Had you ever been told that before?' be-fore?' asked the president, and there was a chorus of "No" and cheers. For another thing, continued the president, presi-dent, the treaty provided the substitu- tion of arbitration and discussion of force, and an "absolute boycott" against covenant breakers. The peace of the world, ' he said, would thus be placed under constant international supervision. "The peace of the world is everybody"3 business." said Mr. Wilson, "and this is the international document that has recognized rec-ognized that fact. "There should be agreement that no nation ever should again attempt annexation annex-ation was a further point in t lie treaty, he continued. There were more cheers when he said it was provided further that no secret treaty should be valid. Discusses Secret Treaties. Secret treaties, said the president, were a constant source of embarrassment at Versailles. Yet, he continued, the war had been fought on the principle of the sanctity of treaties and it was impossible im-possible to disregard the secret agreements. agree-ments. Finally, said Mr. Wilson, there was in the treaty a great bill of rights for labor, establishing an international labor organization or-ganization to keep labor standards. Of course, he said, the United States "was at liberty" to stay out of the league, but asked whether it would be better to "go in as trusted partners or stay out and act as suspected rivals." "We've got to be either- provincials or statesmen; we've got to be either ostriches or eagles," said the president, adding that he meant by ostriches those who "submerged their thinking apparatus In the sand." President Wilson concluded shortly before be-fore 4 o'clock and received an ovation as he h-ft the armory. Mr. Wilson covered in his address many of the same points previously discussed dis-cussed during his trip. World Revolution On. "Wo must realize in this country of ours," he said, "the fact that the world Is In revolution. I do not mean active revolution. revo-lution. I mean that it Is in a state of mind that may bring about tho dissolution dissolu-tion of government if we do not bring abmit a world settlement. "The great peoples have been asleep, but God knows tho other nations have not been asleep. There was no place in the world where they dared to speak out, and now the catastrophe has come. Blood has been npflled and nations have been destroyed and they made up their minds that rather than have this happen again if the governments cannot get together thf-y will destroy the governments. "Hut In trio meantime look at the things that are happening. Thro Isn't a day goes by that my heart isn't heavy to think of the things tho people in Kus-nla Kus-nla are doing. They are without form, ami without order, and the danger is to the world. We must ab.-iolutojy look to Jt in this country that that form of government of a minority of men shall not be net up h-re ;ind elsewhere. "We have either got to b provincials or fit jiterunen. We have either got to ostrich'-M or eagles. The ostrich In b'-Ing ov-rdonr. I see pen tinman bury their h'-adu and think that nobody sees said. "I believe that the most disastrous thing that can happen to the under roan, to the man who is suffering, to the man who has not had his rights, is to destroy public order, for that makes it certain he never can get his rights. I am far from intimating that, but I am intimating this, that the people of the world are tired of every other kind of experiment except the one we are going to try. I have called it an experiment; I frankly admit that it is, but it is a very promising experiment, because there is not a statesman In the 1 world who does not know that his people j demand it." that they have submerged their thinking apparatus. That is what I mean by being be-ing an ostrich. Now what I mean by being be-ing an eagle I needn't .describe it. I mean leaving the mists lying close to the ground, getting up on strong wings into those spaces where you can see all the affairs of mankind, all the affairs of America, seeing how the world appears. Covenant Effective. "This is an effective covenant. It is carried out by the attitude of the Irishman Irish-man who went into one of those antique institutions known as the saloon and saw two men fighting in the corner. He went to the bartender and said. 'Is this a private pri-vate fight, or can anybody get in?' "In tiie true Irish spirit we are abolishing abolish-ing private fighting and making a law that U is everybody's business and everybody every-body can get in, and consequently there wiil be no attempts at private fighting." Discussing secret treaties, the president "Tho treaty provides that every secret treaty shall be invalid. One of tho difficulties diffi-culties in framing this treaty was tiie fact that after we got over thero private secret treaties were springing uu on all sides like a noxious growth. You had to guard your breathing apparatus against the miasma that arose. "Hut they were treaties and the war had been fought on the principle of the sacreil-ness sacreil-ness of treaties. We could not propone that solemn obligations, however unwise-lv unwise-lv undertaken, should be disregarded, but wa could do the best possible in the presence pres-ence of these understandings and then make no more secret undertakings. World Thought Changes. "The representatives of every groat nation na-tion absented without demur, without the slightest difficulty. I do not think you realize what a change of mind has come over the world. As we used to say In the old days, 'Some men that never got it before have got religion.' In referring to the possibilities of revolution revo-lution over the world, the president made It clear he did not advocate that method of stabilizing conditions. "1 am not spiakinli revolution." ho |