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Show Ss LETTER Cannot Siibmil All Documents Docu-ments Used at Peace Conference, j ENORMOUS MASS I . I Some Private Papers Which Would Be Unwise Un-wise to Publish, i WASHINGTON, Aug. 11 President Wilson wrote Chairman Lodge of the senate foreign relations committee today that it will not be possible to j comply with the committee's request ! for the documents used by the American Ameri-can peace commissioners at Paris in , negotiating the peace treaty. "The various data appearing upo:t t or used in connection with the treaty of peace with Germany." said thrt president, "are so miscellaneous and enormous in mass that it -would be jm-posible jm-posible for me to supplv them without with-out bringing from Paris the whole file of papers of the commission it-.self, it-.self, and would include many memoranda memor-anda which, it was agreed upon (grounds of public policy, it would b j unwise to make use of outside the I conference." The president sent Chairman Lodge 1 ;he informal draft of the league of nations na-tions covenant presented by the j I American peace commissioners it Paris and also the formal report of Ihe commission on the league of nations. na-tions. "In reply to the request," the president presi-dent s rcte, "let me say that General RUflfl diil write a letter in which he ! I took er strong ground against the ! nroposed Shantung settlement and that :bis objections were concurred in b (the secretary of state and Mr Henry White. But the letter cannot properly I be described as a protest against tho tinal Shantung decision because it was 'written before that decision had been (arrived at. The final decision was very materially qualified to the return re-turn of the Shantung peninsula in full I so erelgnfy to China." Tho president declined to send a icopv of the letter to the senate because be-cause of references to other countries Contained in it which he believed might be embarrassing if published. League of Nations WASHINGTON, Aug. 11. The orig inal draft of the league of nations covenant sent to the foreign relation" ! committee today by President Wilson contains several provisions widely differing from the league covenant .us adopted at Paris The much-debated provisions of Article 10 of the present covenant for guaranteeing the territorial in-tegrity in-tegrity of the league members is al mof identic. il with a clause in the American draft The letter was as follows: "The contracting parties undertake to respect and to protect as against external aggre8iOD the political independence inde-pendence and tentorial Integrity of all stales members of 'he league." Many of the arbitration provisions are virtually the same - as the two drafts. The American draft also con-j talned the plan finally adopted for a council and a larger assembl and em bodied a disarmament program similar simi-lar to that in final covenant. It also provided for an economic boycott of covenant breakers. The covenant made no provision for withdrawal of members and made no mention of the Monroe doctrine. There also was a provision in the American plan, omitted from the tinal draft. which w ould de. la re it a "fundamental covenant" that no power should overstep international agree-, ments for rights on the high seas oo |