4 TEXT OF WILSON SPEECH IN SENATE [Continued from First Page.] attempt something lets ambitious than that and more clearly suggest ed by my duty to report to the con gress the part it seemed necessary for my colleagues and me to play as the representatives of the cto\- erirment of the United States. "That part was dictated by the role America had played in the war and by the expectations that had been created in the minds of the people with whom we had associated our selves in that great struggle. • The United States entered the war upon a different footing from every other nation except our associates on this side of the sea. t\ e entered it not because our material inter ests were directly threatened or be cause any special treaty obligations to which we were parties had been violated, but only because wo saw the supremacy, and even the validity of rigtat everywhere put in jeopardy and free government likely to be everywhere imperiled by the intol erable aggression of a power which respected neither right nor obliga tion and whose very system of gov ernment flouted the rights of the cit izen as against the autocratic au thority of his governors. And in the settlements of the peace we have sought no special reparation for our selves. but only the restoration of right and the assurance of liberty everywhere that the effects of the settlement were to be felt. We en tered the war as the disinterested champions of right and we interest ed ourselves in the terms of the peace in no other capacity. America Won War "The hopes of the nations allied against the central powers were at a very low ebb when our soldiers began to pour across the sea. There was everywhere among them, ex cept in their stoutest spirits, a som ber foreboding of disaster. The war One of Six Systems of Heating Opinions may vary as to which system is W& *■ adapted for your needs. Richardson &' W& Boynton Co. manufacture six distinct heat %ro ing systems and can advise you, as they iiP install, which is in proportion in cost of i S installing and fuel upkeep to the entire cost Ji MI iUetom&on & Hounfon dfo. :?V }\ Hflß Established 1837 & a have for over three-quarters of a century solved the heating and cooking problems of America. Steam; Hot Water; Gravity warm air; Warm 01 Air Circulating; Vapor vacuum pressure; or Pipe less furnace—together with the Richardson ranges for coal or gas, or combination; pr VfjT Richardson automatic garage heater, and ■§: l V\ the Richardson Galvoxide laundry Check mf\ A tank heater this is the wide range in square B ° f Richardson & Boynton Co. l am interested H gjKMM mm products. In □ Richardson ■,s rr mam , IJPA RICHARDSOW A nS ea - ng APPARATUS IHHM& ■ I Philadelphia, Pa. □ Laundry Tank Heaters J By ..j > NcwTwk Barton PUl.i.lkia r "" >6 "" Name ——!—. ~ HUunniniiiiitiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiißiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiviiiiißiiii^^^^^iiiiiiiii Down by the ■ I SEA ATLANTIC CITY and the New' Jersey Coast Resorts Cool ocean breezes and the Tangy Salt Fragrance of the SEA! The great natural and unpatented tonic for summer time! * ATLANTIC CITY and all of the forty beaches on the Jersey Coast have it supreme. Miles of hard, glistening, ocean sand, where great foamy salt sea waves roll in and break continually. World famous Boardwalks, along which stretch a living throng of interesting people—a panorama of amusements, shops and things. Across the walks, facing the sea, splendid hotels; and everywhere, color, life, sport. Cape May—Wildwood—Ocean City Asbury Park and Ocean Grove, Long Branch All the New Jersey Coast resorts have a country-wide fame.' They offer an embarrassmer.: of riches in sports—surf-bathing, boating, sailing, fishing, golf; amusements of all sorts - a fascinating, gay life. Each has individual attractions peculiar to itself. The United States Railroad Administration invites you to travel and offers Summer Excursion Fares. Ask yc. local ticket agent to help you plan your trip; or, apply to the nearest Consolidated Ticket Office for descriptiv booklet — "Tha New Jeremy Soaahore" —with lists of hotels; or write to the nearest Travel Bureau. • UNITED-STATES • RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION* Travel Bureau Travel Bureau Travel Bureau 143 Liberty Street 646 Transportation Building 603 Henley Building AtiKKSy New York City Chicago Atlanta lr THURSDAY EVENING, HXUMSBURO. TEEEGRXPH JULY 10, 1919. ended in November, eight months ago, but you have only to recall what was feared in midsummer last, lour short months before the armis tice. to realize what it was that our timely aid accomplished alike for their morale and their physical safety. That first, never-to-be-for gotten action at Chateau Thierry had already taken place. Our re doubtable soldiers and marines had already closed the gap the enemy had succeeded in opening for their advance upon Paris—had already turned the tide of battle back to wards the frontiers of France, and begun the rout that was to save Europe and the world. Thereafter the Germans were to be always forced back, back, were never to thrust successfully forward again. And yet there was no confident hope. Anxious men and women, leading spirits of France, attended the cele bration of the Fourth of July last year in Paris out of generous cour tesy—with no heart for festivity, little zest for hope. But they came away with something new at their hearts. They have themselves told us so. The mere sight of our men —of their vigor, of the confidence that showed itself in every move ment of their stalwart figures and every turn of their swinging march, in their steady comprehending eyes and easy discipline, in the indomi table air that added spirit to every thing they did—made everyone who saw them t.hat memorable day realize that something had happened that was much more than a mere incident in the fighting, something very dif ferent from the mere arrival of fresh troops. A great moral force had flung itself into the struggle. The fine physical force of those spirited men spoke of something more than bodily vigor. They carried the great ideals of a free people at their hearts, and with that vision were unconquerable. Their very presence brought reassurance, their fighting made victory certain. "They were recognized as crusad ers, and as their thousands swelled to millions .their strength was soon to mean salvation. And they wer ? fit men to carry such a hope and make good the assurance it fore cast. Finer men never went into battle; and their officers were worthy of them. This is not the oc casion upon which to utter a eulogy of the armies America sent to France, but perhaps since I am speaking of their mission, I may speak also of the pride I hared with every American who saw or dealt with them there. They were the sort of men America would wish to be represented by, the sort of men every American would wish to claim us fellow-countrymen and comrades in a great cause. They were terrible in battle and gentle and helpful out of it, remembering the mothers and the sisters, the wives and the little children at home. They were free men under arms, not forgetting their ideals of duty in the midst of tasks of violence. I am proud to have had the privi lege of being associated with them and of calling myself their leader. Embodiment of America "But I speak now of what they meant to the men by whose sides they fought and the people with whom they mingled with such ut ter simplicity, as friends who asked only to be of service. They were foi all the visible embodiment of America. What they did made America and all that she stood for a living reality in the thoughts not only of the people of France, but also of tens of millions of men and women throughout all the toiling nations of the world standing every where in peril of its freedom and of the loss of everything it held dear, in deadly fear that its were never to be loosed, its hopes for ever to be mocked and disappointed. "And the compulsion of what they stood for was upon us who repre sented America at the peace table. It was our duty to see to it that every decision we took part in con tributed. so far as we were able to influence it to quiet the fears and realize the hopes of the peoples who had been living in that shadow, the nations that had come by our as- BOWMAN PICNIC BIG EVENT DESPITE RAIN Whole Store Family Makes Merry Along the Gonodoguinet Creek Where There Is Dancing, Games and a Wonder ful Menu of Good Things to Eat The big Bowman and Company, annual picnic was moving right along this afternoon. From the time when the crowd left the store this morning around 8 o'clock, in ma chines, there was not a dull mo ment, and the only complaint reg istered was the old circus one, "too many things going on to watch." Immediately upon arrival at the grounds, a big group picture of the handsome crowd was taken. This will be interred among the archives of the store, although there have been some rumors that it may be exposed for a short time to the en vious public eye. At about 10 o'clock, the first baseball game be gan, that one scheduled between the "Jelly Toes" and the "Weak Ankles." The "Bundle Tossers" and the "Counter Jumpers" likewise put up a big league contest. Results of both games are very much in doubt, as the perpetual disputes and um pire slaughters rather concealed the outcomes. Good and Bad Jobs The best and worst job at the party, the cake judging, was pulled off later in the morning. Great secrecy surrounded the announce ment of the prizes, but it is hoped thjjt the lucky bakers may be pre sented to the public at a later date. Water sports occupied the rest of the morning and presented many fair swimmers with an opportunity to appea in bathing costumes which would have thrilled a California coast crowd. Total blindness is re ported throughout the floor walking staff as a result of this. Everything from the customary sistance to their freedom. It was our duty to do everything that it was within our power to do to make the triumph of freedom and of right a lasting triumph in the as surance of which men might every where live without fear. Entanglements in Way "Old entanglements of every kind stood in the way—promises which governments had made to one an other in the days when might and right were confused and the power of the victor was without restraint. Engagements which contemplated and dispositions of territory, any extensions of sovereignty that might seem to be to the interest of those who had the power to insist upon them, had been entered into with out thought of what the peoples concerned might wish or profit by; and these could not always be hon orably brushed aside. It was not easy to graft the new order of ideas on the old, and some of the fruits of the grafting may, I fear, for a time be bitter. But, with very few exceptions, the men who sat with us at the peace table desired as sin cerely as wo did, to get away from the bad influences, the illegitimate purposes, the demoralizing ambi tions, the international counsels and expedients out of which the sinister designs of Germany had sprung as a natural growth." "It had been our privilege to form ulate the principles which were ac cepted as the basis of the peace but they had been accepted, not be cause we had come in to hasten and assure the victory and insisted upon them, but because they were read ily acceded to as the principles to which honorable and enlightened minds everywhere had been bred. They spoke the conscience of the world as well as the conscience of America and I am happy to pay my tribute of respect and gratitude to the able, forward-looking men with whom it was my privilege to co operate for their unfailing spirit of co-operation, their constant effort to accommodate the interests they represented to the principles we were all agreed upon. The diffi culties which were many, lay in the circumstances, not often in the men. It was almost without exception the men who led had caught the true and full vision of the problem of peace as an indivisible whole, a problem not of mere adjustments of interest but of justice and right action. "The atmosphere in which the conference worked seemed created, not by the ambitions of strong gov ernments, but by the hopes and as pirations of small nations and of peoples hitherto under bondage to the power that victory had shat tered and destroyed. Two great em pires had been forced into political bankruptcy and we were the re ceivers. Our task was not only to make peace with the Central em pires and remedy the wrongs their armies had done. The Contral em pires had lived in open violation of many of the very rights for which the war had been fought, dominat ing alien peoples over whom they had no natural right to rule, en forcing, not obedience, but veritable bondage, exploiting those who were weak for the benefit of those who were masters and overlords only by force of arms. There could be no peace until the whole order of Cen arniics had done. The Central em "That meant that new nations were to be created—Poland, Czecho slovakia, Hungary itself. No part of ancient Poland had ever in any true sense become a part of Ger many, or of Austria, or of Russia. Bohemia was alien in every thought and hope to the monarchy of which she had so long been an at'iflclal part; and the uneasy partnt -ship between Austria and Hungarj had been one rather of interest than of kinship or sympathy. The Slavs whom Austria had chosen to force into her empire on the south were kept to their obedience by nothing but fear. Their hearts were with their kinsmen iW the Balkans. These were all arrangements of power, not arrangements of natural union or association. It was the imperative task of those who would make peace and make it Intelligently, to estab. llsh a new order which would rest upon the free choice of peoples rather than upon the arbitrary au thority of Hapsburgs or llohenzol ierns. "More thun that, great popula tions bound by sympathy and actual kin to Rumania were also linked against their will to the conglomer ate Austro. Hungarian monarchy or to other alien sovereignities and it was part of the task of peace to make a new Rumania, us well as a Slavic state clustering about Serbia. LEAGUE OF FREE NATIONS OUTLINED [Continued from First I'agc.] stroy the old order of International policies." Statesmen might nee difficultieM In accomplishing this purpose, the President continued, but the people could see none and could brook no denlr' dashes to egg races, potato races, and tugs-of-war occupied the crowd for a while. Late in the afternoon the reading of the store prophecies was on the list. Up to this time, a copy of this interesting document could not be secured. The Committees Those most active in planning the party were: Executive committee, J. Wlliam Bowman, chairman: A. L. Roberts, Emily Lockhart. ' . Eats, H. M. Himes, chairman, E. R. Seidel. Mr. Handshaw. Decorations, F. C. Felton, man; L. H. Hilgartner, Harry Perk- Sports—Miss Helen Etter, chair man; C. M. Hooker, F. Smyser, Paul Weaver. _ Transportation, C. R. Bowman, chairman; L. H. Hilgartner, E. R. Seidel. o ,_ Programs, Anton Benson, cnair man; R. H. Yarwood, F. C. Felton, Mildred Cron, Al. Douglas. First aid, Mrs. Hartman, chair man; Miss Elizabeth Kintner, Emily Lockhart, Mrs. Fred Thompson. Music, W. A. Sigler, chairman, Rae Shandler, Alberta Kinzer, Miss M. A. Roberts. Signs F. M. Newcomer, chair man! H. Weirick, William Cook. Prices, Miss Anna Krause, chair man; Makle Orr, H. B. Shatto. Photographs, H. J. Roberts, chai - man; T. P. McCubbin, H. H. Bow man, Miss Blanch Shaefer. Cakes, Miss Alice Musgrove, chairman; Minerva Starry, Ethel McLaughlin, Mary Perdue, Anna McCoy, Mrs. Ida Goodyear, Mary Eyler. The League of Nations he added, was "not merely an- instrument to adjust and remedy old wrongs under a new treaty of peace, it was the only hope for mankind.' It had not been easy the Presi dent said, "to graft the new order of ideas or.* the old, and some of the fruits of the grafting may, I fear for a time, be bitter.' "But, with very few exceptions," he added, "the men who sat with us at the peace table desired as sincerely as we did to get away from the bad influence, the illegiti mate purposes, the demoralizing am bitions, the international counsels ar.-d the expedients out of which the sinister designs of Germany had sprung as a natural grawth." The proposed supplementary treaty ur.-der which the United States would agree to go to the aid of France in case of an unprovoked assault on that country by Germany, will be presented separately at a later date. Mr. Wilson is preparing a separate address to the Senate ex- : plainir.-g this agreement. Mr. Wilson's purpose to present the Peace Treaty and the agreement with France separately, was dis closed to-day at a conference with press representatives. It was in dicated that his time thus far had been devoted entirely to preparing his address on the Treaty with Ger many and that oportunity had been lacking to complete a similar expla nation of the proposed pact with France. President Wilson- is understood to take the position that a two-thirds majority will be required to adopt any Senate reservations in ratifying the Peace Treaty. The impression of opposition leaders in the Senate has been that on-ly a simple ma jority would be required. After concluding nis address, the President formally presented the Treaty to the Sen-ate and the official copy was imediateiy referred to the Foreign Relations Committee and rushed to the printer in order that it might be in senators' hands In the shortest possible time. Fifty thou sand copies of the Treaty and the President's address were ordered prir.-ted by the Senate. ! Ispl P DESTROYS I Seborrhea kills the hair and causes dandruff. FAMO stops seborrhea by de stroying the sebcrrhean microbe. FAMO nourishes the hair roots and gives the hair health and beauty. It comes in two sizes—3s cents and an extra large bottle at $1 at all toilet goods counters. Mfd. by The r-—o Co., Detroit, Midi. Croll Keller, 403 Market Street. C. M. Forney, 31 N. Second Street. Special tamo Agenta- FJH4O SQUEEZED TO DEATH When the body begins to stiffen and movement becomes painful it is usually en indication that tho kidneys are out of order. Keep these organs healthy by taking COLD MEDAL Th world's ztendsrd remedy for kidney, liver, bladder end uric ecld troubles Famous tlnce 1696 Take regularly enc keep in good health. In three sites, el druggist*. Guaranteed as represented Uek ler U Cold M.d.l a* every end gee.pt M luiiuuee LOCUST DAMAGE PEACH TREES Carlisle, Pa., July 10. Locusts are causing some damage to peach crops in the opinion of growers who met here after attending the weekly murket. The 17-year pests are said to have created considerable havoc to trees and the crops in some sec tions will be cut a considerable per cent. I Store Opens at 9 A. M. Friday and Closes at 5.30 P. M. WMITM!/rMIJ\ KAU F M AN'S jjamagpaiEg- All Our Men's Suits I ARecord Smashing Clean Sweep Sale I Our entire stock is included in the Clean Sweep Sale [1 and the prices have been greatly reduced to make this jl the most extraordinary Clothing Sale in our history. The |j values prove this assertion. || Men's and Young Men's Q D> , SUITS y= §1 I |H Clean Sweep Sale Price, |!s „ . l°ts, ail sizes, S3 to 42. The materials are Cool Cloth, /\JT Vi\W / IJ M Palm Beach Cloth, Worsteds and Cheviots. || Men's and Young Men's M AT Mlm ll I SUITS |4= lY 1 ||] Clean Sweep Sale Price, /1 I |IIJ \ |j Nj Real Mohair Suits. Fine Cool Cloth Suits. Fine Worsted f 111 IllU \ jU Wj Suits. All liandsomcly tailored. -jJ |1 \ U|| 4~" |j j|] Men's and Young Men's fIC IJm 1 SUITS 19= U\\ I Hj Clean Sweep Sale Price, I ll I hi New conservative models. New waist Une models. New Eng- m IVI { [lll ILsh models. The materials are Worsteds, Cheviots, Serges, and 111 I K1 C'aaslmeres. We include In this lot every extra stout size to 46 IN 11 |U M Men's Palm Beach Suits $"7.95 JIL 1 || Clean Sweep Sale Price, 1 (Hk bjj Genuine Palm Beaches; new model coats, with belts and liy patch pockets; several shades in this lot v fil, lr : ; i| For Friday July 10.—A district Sun day School Convention, composed of the Sunday Schools of the churches of Blain borough. Jackson, township and Toboyne township, will be held July 27 In the Zlon Lutheran Church, with sessions at 2 and 7.30 p. m. Each school in the district Is ex pected to send a delegate.