Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, September 05, 1919, Image 18

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    "Pu£ Up or Shut Up"
Wilson Declares in
Indianapolis Speech
Indianapolis, Sept. 5. "Put up
or shut up," was the advice given
opponents of the League of Nations
by President Wilson here last night
in the second address of his ten
thousand-mile tour of the United
States. "If the critics of the League
have something better to suggest,"
said the President, "I hope they
will hold their convention and do it
now." He said the League oppon
ents could not hope to defeat the
program except by offering some
thing better.
Mr. Wilson said the Covenant "is
the only conceivable arrangement
which wiil prevent our sending our
men abroad again, very soon. And
if I may use a very common ex
pression. 1 would say if it is not to
be this arrangement, what arrange
ment do you suggest to secure the
peace of the norld? It is a case
of put up or shut up."
Great Plan Needed
"Opposition is not going to save
the world; negations are not going
to construct the policies of man
kind. A great plan is the only
tiling that can defeat a great plan.
The only triumphant ideas in this
>vorld are the ideas that are organ
ized for battle. The only thing that
equals an organized program is a
better program.
"If this is not the way to secure
peace, I beg that the way may be
pointed to you. If we must reject
this way, then I beg that before I
am sent to ask Germany to make a
new kind of peace with us, 1 should
be given specific instructions us to
what kind of peace it is to be.
"If the gentlemen who don't like
what was done in Paris, think they
can do something better I beg that
WOMAN SUFFERED
12 YEARS
Finally Made Well by Tak
ing Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
Emmitsburg, Md.— "l suffered for j
twelve or fifteen years, and was i
treated phy
•■- pound in 'my •
SCST™ If! newspaper, eo j
ill" i thought I would j
try it, and it did I
JJte:J j me more good
than a " tlie doc- .
tor's medicine. I 1
am a farmer's wife and do my house- |
work all the time, and I am better .
now than I have been for years. I j
am never without Lvdja E. Pinkham's I
Vegetable Compound in the house and |
have recommended it to several of j
my friends. You are perfectly wel
come to publish my letter for the
good it may do other women."—Mrs.
Ettie Wabben, Emmitsburg, Md.
Backache and nervousness are
symptoms or nature's warnings, which
indicate a functional disturbance or
an unhealthy condition which often
develops in'o a more serious ailment.
Women in this condition should
not continue to drag along without
help, but profit by Mrs. Warren's ex
perience, and try this famous root
.end herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's
•mtnKle Compound—and for special
write to Lydia E. Pinkham
uioine Co., Lynn, Mass.
Ilarkct fctrcet ' UteiM No. ti-303u0
Specials For Saturday, Sept. 6. 1919
Morning Specials Until 12 Noon
Picnic Hams, any size, lb 28c
Sliced Bacon, lb 38c
No. 5 lb. Pails Compound Used as lard
$1.35
Sirloin and Club Steaks, lb 25c
Veal Chops, lb, 25c
Land) Chops, lb 25c
Choice Chuck Roast, lb 18c
Top Rib and Fleshy Boik lb 16c
Small Fresh Hearts, 12^
Fresh Beef Kidneys, 15c
All Day Specials
Sliced Liver, 2 lbs for 15c, lb 8c
Butchers Bologna, Fresh and Smoked
Sausage and Garlic Links, lb 22c
B. B. Special Butterine, 2 lb. roll 60c, lb.
32c
Corned Beef, lb Lsc
Pure Lard, lb. 35e
Cleveland Bologna, lb 25c
65 Markets in Principal Cities of 15 States
Main Office, Chicago, 111.
Packing House, Peoria, 111.
All Meats U. S. Government Inspected
All goods purchased guaranteed or money refunded
FRIDAY EVENING.
! they will hold their convention soon
j and do it now. They cannot, in
I conscience or good faith, deprive us
! of this great work of peace, without
substituting some other that is bet
ter."
The President immediately re
turned to his train, which soon left
for St. Louis.
President Wilson's speech fol
; lows in substance:
"My fellow citizens: So great a
company as this tempts me to make
j a speech (laughter and applause)
j and yet I want to say to you in all
seriousness and soberness that I
have not come here to make a
1 speech, in the ordinary sense of that
i term.
Errand Sober One
"I have come upon a very sober
I errand, indeed. 1 have come to
report to you the work which the
representatives of the United States
attempted to do at the Conference
of Peace, on the other side of the
sea, because 1 realize, my fellow
| citizens, that my colleagues and I.
in the task we attempted over there
were your servants. We went there
with a distinct eriand, which it was
out duty to perform in the spirit
which you have displayed in the
prosecution of the war and in con
ceiving the purpose and objects of
that war.
i "I was in the city of Columbus
1 this afternoon, where I was endeav
, oring to explain to a body of our
, fellow citizens there just what it
was that the Treaty of Peace con
tained. for I must frankly admit
that in most of the speeches that I
have heard in debate upon the
Treaty of Peace, it would be im
possible to form a definite con
ception of what that instrument
means.
"I want to recall to you for the
purposes of this evening, the cir
cumstances of the war and the pur
poses for which our men spent their
lives on the other side of the sea.
Made Pretext For War
"You will remember that a
prince of the house of Austria was
slain in one of the cities of Serbia.
Serbia was one of the small king
doms of Europe. She had no
strength which any of the great
powers needed to fear. As we see
the war now. Germany and those
who conspired with her made a
pretext of that assassination in ord
er to make unconscionable demands
for the weak and helpless kingdom
of Serbia, not with a view of bring
ing about an acquiescence in those
demands, but with a view to bring
ing about a conflict in which their
purposes, quite separate from the
purposes connected with these de
mands. could be achieved.
"Just as soon as these demands
were made, other nations of Europe
sent telegraphic messages to their j
representatives at Vienna and Ber- ]
lin, urging them to ask the govern- ]
ments of Vienna and Berlin to enter
into discussion of these matters.
"I was recalling, my fellow citi
zens, the circumstances which be
gan the terrible conflict that has
just been concluded.
"So soon as the unconscionable
demands of Austria were made on
Serbia, the other governments of
Europe sent telegraphic messages
to Berlin and Vienna asking that the
matter be brought into a confer
ence. And the significant circum
stance of the beginning of this war
is that the Austrian and German
governments did not dare to dis
cuss the demands on Serbia or the
purpose which they had in view.
"It is universally admitted on the
other side of the water that if they
had gone into international confer
ence on the Austrian demands, tb
war never would have begun. There
was an insistent demand from Lon
don, for example, by the British
foreign minister that the cabinets
of Europe should he given time to
confer with the governments at
Vienna and Berlin. The govern-
' ments at Vienna and Berlin did not
dare to admit time for discussion.
I "I am recalling those clrcum
i stances, my fellow citizens, because
i I want to point out to you what ap
; parentiy has escaped the attention
: of some of the critics of the League
1 of Nations that the heart of the
League of Nations does not lie in
; any of the portions which have
1 been discussed in public debate.
; The great bulk of the provisions of
that covenant contained these en
. gagements and promises on the part
of the states which undertook to
' become members of it; that in no
I circumstances will they go to wtir
l without first having either submit
' ted the question to arbitration —in
which case they agree to abide by
j the result: or, having submitted the
: question to discussion by the Coun
cil of the League of Nations in
which case they will allow six
; months for the discussion and en
gage not to go to war until three
• months after the Council has an
i nounced its opinion upon the sub
-1 ject under dispute.
; "So that the heart of the Covc-
I nant of the League is that the na
! tions solemnly covenant not to go
; to war for nine months after a con
• troversy becomes acute.
"If there had been nine days of
discussion Germany would not have
gone to war. If there had been
nine days within which to bring to
bear the opinion of the world, the
i judgment of mankind upon the pur-
I pose of these governments they
| never would have dared to execute
• those purposes.
Agreed to End Wars
"So that what it is important for
i us to remember is that when we
| sent those boys in khaki across the
| sea, we promised them, we promis
ied the world that we would not
! conclude this conflict with a mere
Treaty of Peace. We entered into
■ solemn engagements with all the
| nations with whom we associated
ourselves, that we would bring
about such a kind of settlement
and such a consert of the purpose
of nations that wars like this could
not again occur.
"If this war has to be fought
over again then all our high ideals
and purposes have been disappoint
ed, for we did not go into this war
merely to beat Germany. We went
into this war to beat all purposes
such as Germany entertained.
"We are presently, my fellow
countrymen, to have a very great
pleasure of wlecomtng on this side
of the sea the queen and king of
the Belgians. (Aplause.) And, I,
for one, am perfectly sure that we
are going to make it clear to them
that we have not forgotten the vio
lation of Belgium; that we have not
forgotten the intolerable wrongs
which were put upon that suffering
people. I have seen their devastated
country. Where it was not actually
laid in ruins, every factory was
guttea of its contents; all the ma
chinery by which it would be pos
sible for men to go to work again
was taken away, and those parts of
the machinery that they could not
take away were destroyed by ex
perts who knew how to destroy
them. __
"Belgium was a very successful
competitor of Germany in some lines
of manufacture, and the German
armies were sent there to see to it
that that competition was put a
stop to. Their purpose was to crush
the independent action of that little
kingdom—not merely to use it as a
gateway through which to attack
France. And when they got into
France they not only fought the
armies of France, but they put the
coal mines of France out of com
mission, so that it will be a decade
or more, before France can supply
herself with coal from her accus
tomed sources.
"You have heard a great deal
about article ten of the Covenant of
the League of Nations. Article ten
speaks the conscience of the world.
Article ten is the article which goes
to the heart of this whole bad busi
ness, for that article says that the
members of this League—and that is
intended to be all the great nations
of the world—engage to resist and
to preserve against all external ag
gression the territorial integrity and
political independence of the nations
concerned. That promise is neces
sary in order to prevent this sort of
war recurring, and we are abso
lutely discredited if we fought this
war and then neglected the essential
safeguard against it.
league Council Advises
"We engage, in the first sentence
! Of article ten, to respect and pre
| serve from external aggression, the
j territorial integrity and the existing
I political independence, not only of
I the other member states but of all
i states, and if any member of the
' League of Nations disregards that
I promise, then what happens? The
I Council of the League advises what
; should be done to enforce the re
j spect t*r that Covenant, on the part
1 of the nation attempting to violate
I it. And there is no compulsion upon
| us to take that action—except the
I compulsion of our good conscience
| and judgment. So that it is per-
I fectly evident that if, in the judg
j ment of the people of the United
, States, the Council adjudged wrong,
I and that this was not an occasion
I for the use of force, there would
j be no necessity on the part of the
Congress of the United States to Vote
j the use of force. But there could
i be no advice of the Council on any
i such subject without unanimous
| vote, and the unanimous vote would
| include our own. And if we ac
j cepted the advice we shall be ac
cepting our own advice. For I need
I not tell you that the representa-
I fives of the Government of the
j United States would not vote with
! out instructions from their Govern
i ment at home, and that what we
j united in advising we could be cer
! tain that our people would desire
i to do.
"There is in that Covenant not
j one note of surrender of the inde
i pendent judgment of the Govern
ment of the United States, but an
expression of it, because that inde-
I pendent judgment would have to
j join with the judgment of the rest.
Usctl as Last Itcsort
j "But when is that judgment going
Ito be expresled, my fellow citi
-1 zens? Only after it is evident thai
j every other resource has failed.
And I want to call your attention to
! the central machinery of the League
!of Nations. If any member of that
i League, or any nation not a mem
! ber, refuses to submit the question
at issue, either to arbitration, or
I to discussion by the Council, there
! ensues automatically, by the en-
I gagement of this Covenant, an ab
| solute economic boycott. There will
i be no trade with that nation by any
| member of the League; there will be
I no interchange of communication by
| post or telegraph; there will be no
j travel to or from that nation; its
I borders will be closed; no citizen
1 of any other state will be allowed to
j enter it and no one of its citizens
I will be allowed to leave it.
"It will be hermetically sealed by
the united action of the most pow
erful nations In the world, and if
this economic boycott bears with un
equal weight, the members of the
League agree to support one an
other, and to relieve one another in
any exceptional disadvantages that
may arise out of it. And I want you
to realize that this war was won
not only by the armies of the world,
but it was won by economic means
as well. Without the economic
means the war would have been
much longer continued. What hap
pened was that Germany was shut
HXRTUSBTTRG TELEGRAPH
off front the economic resources ot
the rest of the globe and she could
[ not stand it; and a nation that is
; boycotted is a nation that is in
sight of surrender. Apply this
| c"nontic, peaceful, silent, deadly
! remedy, and there will be no need
I for force.
"It is a terrible remedy. It does
not cost a life outside the nation
: boycotted, but it brings a pressure |
i upon tha't nation, which, in my judg- [
] tnent, no modern nation could re- ,
sist.
"I dare say that some of those
i ideas are new to you, because, while '
■ it is true, as 1 said this forenoon, j
|in Columbus, that apparently no- j
| body has taken the pains to say what j
j is in the Covenant of the League of
i Nations. They have discussed three I
—ohiefly three—out of twenty-six !
! articles and the other urticles con- j
j tain this heart of the matter, that ;
I instead of war there shall be arbi- J
I tration; instead of war there shall I
jbe discussion; instead of war there I
shall be the closure of intercourse;'
| that instead of war there shall be j
I the irresistible pressure of the opin- I
i ion of all mankind, * * *
"I need not tell you that I speak j
j with knowledge in this matter — i
I knowledge of the purpose of the j
| men with whom the men represent- '
! ing America were associated at the ,
! peace table. Everyone I consulted j
! with came there with the same idea, j
' that wars had arisen in the past I
i because the strong had taken advan-|
; tuge of the weak, and that the only l
way stop war was to band our- |
! selves Together to protect the weak. '
"And so, when you read the Cov- ;
enant, read the Treaty with it.
Refers to Poland
| "I have no doubt that in this au
dience there are many merr who ,
fonie from that ancient stock of !
, Poland, for example—men In whose ;
! blood there is the warmth of old ;
j affections connected with that be
i trayed and ruined country; men
j whose memories run back to insui- j
| ferable wrongs endured by those |
1 living in that country; and I call
them to witness that Poland never |
I could have won unity and independ- !
I ence by herself. These gentlemen
I sitting at Paris presented Poland
with a unity she could not have won,
and an independence which she can
not defend, unless the world guar
antees it to her. * * •
"I am arguing this thing with :
you, my fellow citizens, as if X had
any doubt of what the verdict of'
the American people would be. I
haven't the slightest doubt. I just
wanted to have the pleasure of
pointing out to you how absolutely '
ignorant of the Treaty, and of the '
Covenant, some of the men are who
have been opposing them. If they j
do read the English language they
do not understand the English lan- |
guage as I understand' It. If they i
have really read this Treaty and this ;
Covenant they only amaze me by I
their inability to understand what ;
is plainly expressed. So that my
errand upon- this journey is not to
argue these matters, but to recall !
you to the real issues which are in- j
volved.
Wouhl Forget Party
"And one of the things' that I j
have most at heart is this report to
>ny follow ci' izens, is that they should
forget what party I belong to. and ;
what party they belong to. I am
making this journey us a Democrat, '
but I am spelling it with a little
"d," and I don't want anybody to ;
remember, so far as this errand is i
concerned, that it is ever spelled i
with a big "D."
"I am making this Journey as an
American, and as a champion of
the rights which America believes |
in, and I need not tell you that as
compared with the importance of
America, the importance of the
j Democratic party, and the import
ance of the Republican party and
the importance of every other
party, is absolutely negligible. Par- |
ties, my fellow citizens, are intended
to embody in action different poli
cies of government. They are not,
when properly used, intended to
traverse the principles which un
derly government, and the princi
ples which nnderly the Government
of the United States have been fam
iliar to us ever since we were chil
dren.
Speaks With Cnutlon
"I want you to notice another in- !
teresting point that has r.-ever been
dilated upon in connection with the
League of Nations. X' am now tread
ing upon delicate ground and I
must express myself with caution. ,
"There were a good many dele
gations that visited Paris wanting
to be heard by the Peace Confer
ence, who had real causes to pre- !
sent, and which ought to be pre
sented to the view of the world. But
we had to point out to them that
they did not happen, unfortunately
to come within the area of settle
; ment; that theib questions were not
j questions which were necessarily I
drawn into the things that we were j
deciding. • • •
"I, therefore, want to call your
attention, if you will turn it up when
you go home, to article eleven, fol
lowing article ten, of the Covenant
of the League of Nations.
"That article eleven, let me say,
is the favorite article in the Treaty. ■
so far as I am concerned. It says
that every matter which is likely
to affect the peace of the world is
everybody's business and that it
' shall be the friendly right of any
nation to call attention, in the
league to anything that is likely to j
affect the peace of the world, the
good understanding between na- I
tions upon which the peace of the
world depends, whether that matter |
immediately concerns the nation
drawing attention to it or not.
"In other words at present we \
have to mind our own business. Un
der the Covenant of the League of I
Nations, we can mind other peop'cs' ,
business and anything that affects
the peace of the world, whether we !
are. parties to it, or not, can by our
delegates, be brought to the atten- I
tion of mankind.
Henring For All
"There is not an oppressed pec- !
pie in the world which cannot,
henceforth, get a hearing at that |
forum. And you know, my fellow ■
citizens, what a hearing will mean, :
I if the cause of those people is just. ,
j The one thing which those who ;
have reason to dread, have most
j reason to dread, is publicity and
! discussion; because if you are chal- |
! lenged to give a reason why you are
j doing a wrong thing, it has to be ,
' an exceedingly good reason and if ,
i you give a bad reason you confess '
j bad judgment and me opinion of
mankind goes against you."
The President's speech here was
interrupted several times by noise
in the rear of the great ellipiteal
enclosure. Mr. Wilson's voice did
not carry against the direction and
many persons on the outskirts, un
able to hear, left the hall.
After the President had proceeded
for a few minutes he was forced to
suspend while the police closed the
doors.
It was the second extended ad
dress to be delivered by the Presi
dent during the first day of his
country-wide speaking trip in the
interests of the Treaty. Earlier in
the day at Columbus, Ohio, he had
outlined in a 50-minute speech the
purpose of the trip, which he said
was to report to the people and to
explain just what the Treaty con
tained.
The League of Nations he had
eulogized at Columbus as the only
agency that would prevent recur- I
rence of a world war, and as a J
guaruntee that American soldiers J
would not uguin have to cross the j
seas. The Treaty's provision for an <
international labor organization he j
also praised, saying it was the !
magna charta of the rights of labor j
throughout the world.
In a short talk at Richmond. Ind.,
Mr. Wilson ulso had declared the i
Treaty was made for the protection !
of the weak peoples of the earth !
and > t he was making his appeal 1
for i...illcution as an American and;
without partisan consideration. The j
President's next scheduled address !
is in St. Louis to-night.
10.0(10 People Hear Hint
The President spoke here in the
Coliseum at the State fair grounds. I
The fair was in session and the 1
building, said by residents to hold ,
more than 10,000 persons, was >
packed.
The Presidential train pulled into i
the station promptly at 7 o'clock and
escorted by a citizens' committee ■
President Wilson was driven live
miles to the Cciiseum.
Along the entire route the streets 1
were thronged with people who had
turned out to greet him.
When the fair grounds were
reached thousands cheered as the
President made his way into the hall. !
Many who had uttended the State
''air during the day remained over 1
to see the President.
Declares Critcism of
Japan on Shantung
Question Not Justified
I'y Associated 1 rcss.
Richmond, Ind., Sept. 5. (On
Hoard President Wilson's Special
Train),
Criticism of Japan because of that
country's attitude toward the Shan
tung question is not justified, Pres
ident Wilson told a small crowd that
gathered at the rear of the train
at Urbana. Ohio.
Japan cannot act in the matter
of Shantung, the President said,
until three months after peace
comes. "Then I am sure she will
do so. Criticism of Japan is not
justified," he added.
"I think you will beat them,"
some one in the crowd said, refer
ring to the critics.
"Their ease is so weak," the Pres
ident replied, "they are not hard
to beat."
Some one asked about the crowd
at Columbus, when the President
had casually mentioned that it was
raining there.
"The crowd was remarkable con
sidering they had to walk to get
there," the President said. "We
got a warm reception there and
were much pleased." This was the
only mention made by the Presi
dent of the street car strike at Co
lumbus.
After the President's train left
Urbana, Mr. Wilson went into the
club car and chatted for an hour
with the newspaper correspondents.
He discussed the details of the trip
and of the treaty, and told manv
stories of humorous incidents con
nected with previous speaking tours
PHnranwn
CAN YOU ANSWER
THESE QUESTIONS?
(1) What Is Labor's Duty to the Public ?
(2) Must We "Work Another Hour a Day" to Reduce Prices ?
(3) Should the Shantung Award to Japan Be Stricken From the
Treaty ?
(4) Does America Want a Department of Aviation ?
(5) What Is Industrial Democracy . . . ?
(6) What Are the Principal Provisions in the New German Consti
tution ...... ?
(7) Is Germany Doing Secret Propaganda Work in Spain . . ?
(8) Is England Drinking More Now Than Before the War
(9) Are Cattails Suitable For Food ?
(10) C&n the Earth's Surface Be Accurately Represented on a Flat
Map ?
(11) What Great New Harbors Has the War Developed r ., ?
(12) Is There More Democracy in the German Theater Than in Ours ?
(13) How Are France and England Honoring the Dead . ?
(14) Of What Does the American Merchant Marine Consist ?
(15) On What Dates Will Foreign Securities Held in the United
States Mature . ?
Where Two Million Americans Find Answers to Their Questions
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and with the Paris peace negotia- I
tions.
The President said he was well
pleased with his reception in Co
lumbus and made clear his inten
tion as the trip goes on to follow
out his plan of taking up details of
the treaty one after another and
laying them before the people. He
indicated that he believes the best
arguments for the treaty was to
explain in clear language just what
it contained.
WILSON REACHES
REAL BEGINNING
[Continued From First Page.]
Treaty ratifying body at Washing
ton the State is represented by Sena
tor Reed, the only Democratic
Senator who has taken a definite
stand for the Treaty's rejection, and
Senator Spencer, one of the Republi
can Senators who have declared
themselves generally friendly to It,
and have agreed on a set of reso
lutions as a basis for its acceptance.
In St. Louis Senator Reed recently
made an address bitterly assailing
Oe Treaty, and within the next few
weeks, Senator Johnson, of Cali
fornia, a Republican member of the
Foreign Relations Committee, and
others are expected to address op
posing meetings. In addition to his
address here to-night, the President
is to make one address in Kansas
City to-morrow morning.
To Explain Features
In his keynote address yesterday
the President made plain his mten
tion to explain various features of
the Treaty during the trip and to re
frain from engaging in a debate
about the issues raised in public dis
cussion of the Treaty heretofore.
To the League of Nations, the
labor section, the provision for self
determination for various territories
in Europe and the reparation system
established by the Treaty he attaches
particular importance.
The fighting temper of the Presi
dent's appeal to the country was
apparent in both his addresses yes
terday. Within three minutes after
he began the first of them at Co
lumbus, he had warmed to his task
and was putting his ideas into blunt
sentences, punctured by various
gestures. He was interrupted re
peatedly by applause and several
times by cheers.
At Indianapolis the President call
ed on the opponents of the Coven
ant to produce a plan to secure the
peace of the world, if not willing to
accept the League of Nations. "If
it is not to be this arrangement,"
he said, "what arrangement do you
suggest to secure the peace of the
world? It is a case of put up or
shut up. If the gentlemen who
don't like what was done in Paris
think they can do something better,
I beg that they will hold their con
vention and do it now."
Besides his two principal ad
dresses. Mr. Wilson talked briefly
to crowds that gathered around his
car, during short stops at several
small cities in Ohio and Indiana.
Mrs. Wilson, who sat on the plat
form at the two scheduled meetings,
also stood beside the President when
I he appeared at the shorter stops.
SEPTEMBER 5, 1919
pi m
1 N s?&**
NACO Keeps My Bed Linen
Snowy White
before you realize it, your best linen
gets dingy, stained or yellow.
Trade
Whitens Clothes
It will bring back the snowy-whiteness your linen
had when new. A little poured into your washing
water dissolves the grime and stain, and is as
4 harmless as pure soap itself and
just as easy to use.
For household linen and all wlpte linen and
cotton apparel. Will not harm the daintiest
or the sheerest garment. In faet, NACO
makes dainty waists wear much longer be
cause it eliminates hard rubbing.
NACO is used with soap and disinfects
the clothes as well as whitens them.
Get NACO for this week's wash and notice
the difference.
Sold by leading grocers.
NACO PRODUCTS CO.
General Offices: New York City
531