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6D
“We Desire That the American People Give Ad
hesion to Secheme Framed for All Mankind and
Can “zu'(”y Succeed Without Their Aid.”
BY VISCOUNT BR“YCE‘
Former British Ambassador to the United States,
The e f a league natior mean In their pplication te these
das now at last emerged from the
lumhinous mists of ilealism into a def.
inite plan wheh, although still not
quite perfect in various respects, is
sufficiently advanced to furnish at
Jeast a foundation for a permanent
edifice, and can now profitably res
ceive the criticism of wellwishers as
as well as of skeptics,
The scheme is in some points vague
Bnd in some it is obscure; and it is
pot always clear what the words
Complexion Rosy. é._
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HOW MUCH WE CAN SAVE YOU ON GOOD
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COME IN MONDAY IF YOU CAN. USE YOUR CREDIT.
Swing Special Monday
eIY 9 5
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t of these fu 1 oak 4-foot
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Sxle Price ......l. .$975 vw ‘ :’,‘;\‘
Otharstyles from $5 to $25 : it
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N -
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! 1." | B $27.50 Values, This Week, $22.50
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"N_ $50.00 Values, This Week, $42.50
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eet i e
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IR TIS C AMTARNRODS 7
| 7 SOUTH BROAD STREET
particular cases. Some of these ob
geurities are to be found in the most
delicate and Important parts of the
plan,
The general treaty to which the
name of “convenant” ig given, Is in
tended to cover the whole fieid In
which the combined action of the
powers can work for the peace of the
world, |
This convenant falls into two partu.‘
One relates primarily to the preuer-‘
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, MAY 25 1919,
‘Make-Up’
ake-Up’ for
British Shop
Gi i
irl Essential
l ONDON, May 24 ~That Brit.
ish “land girl” of the war,
who Is once more a town
girl, has returned to the use of
“make-up,”
Artful make-up, in. the opinion
of a London business woman who
champlons the practice, is essen
tial, To an interviewer she sald
“Phere I 8 no room for the
washed-out, tired-looking woman
in the business world Even if
ghe s delicate, she must not look
delicate, A little rouge, daintily ap
plied, wili glve her an appearance
of health and brightness which
goes a long way with an em
ployer
“] assure you that hundreds of
girls who are never suspected of
the fact by outsiders habitually
‘make up.' But they do it so per
fectly that they deceive the op
posite sex, and large numbers of
their own sex, too, Obvious make
up is vulgar and would be of great
disadvantage.”
vation of world-peace, whle the other
seeks to provide for spheres of ac
tion in which nations may co-operate
for various common ends. The con
stitution and scope of the league may
be considered under three heads:
First, the organs of the league; sec
and, the powers to be exercised by
those organs; third, the obligations
which the members of the league un
dertake.
Gegmany and Russia in Abeyance.
The organs are two. One, called the
executive council, is to consist of
“representatives of the five great pow
ers—the United States, the British
Empire, France, Italy and Japan, to
gether with the representativeg of
four other states, members of the
league, These four statés are to be
selected by the Body of Delegates,
hereinafter mentioned. |
The other organ is the body of del
egates, and is to consist ofy pt-rsmm‘
representing the members of the
league. Any state may be represented
by delegates not more than three in
number, but having only one collec
tive vote,
The executive government of each
epuntry will ahve the right to ap
point its delegates, but we may pres
sume that its exercise of the func
tions will be subject to the control of
the, Legislature.
The original members of the league
will consist of the states which have
gigned the convenant and of others
named in the protocol (to be annexed
thereto) as “states to be invited to
adhere to the convenant.”
Thereafter admission to the league
will require the assent of not less
than two-thirds of the states repre
sented in the body of delegates, “and
no state will be admitted unless it is
able to give effective guaranties of
fts sincere intention to observe its in
ternational obligations.”
The question of admitting, those
two great countries whose future gov=
ernment remain at this moment un-‘
deter‘nined——(‘mrmuny and Russia—is
meant' to stand over, and this is really ‘
the only way in which the matter can
be dealt with, |
No one can tell what sort of a state
will ultimately emerge either in Rus
gla or Germany, and whether such a
state could be trusted to enter a
league Bf peace.
It may, I thnk, be assured that if
such a state does ultimately emerge
it would be invited to enter, for to
leave a great nation outside without
adequate reasons would obvicusly be
much to the injury to the propects of
world peace.
Now, as to the po‘vers of the
league. They are to be exercised
majnly by the executive council, and
it is not easy to make out how much
is to be left to the body of delegates,
and what the relations of that body
to the executive council are meant
to be. Some points, at least, are clear.
It is the executive council that is
to “formulate plans for the establish
ment of a permanent Court of Inter
national Justice,” to which justici
able question are to be referred, and
it is also the council which will have
the supervision of armaments.
The council will deal with all dis
putes between members of the
league, and make recommendations
for their settlement, and if any party |
to a dispute refuses to comply with
the recommendations it is again the
Executive Council that shall “consider
and propose the measures necessary
to give effect to the recommenda
tions.” |
It is also to have authority to deal
with disputes arising between a mem.
ber of the league and a state not a
member, and between states which
are not members, |
If such a state (or states) accepts
an offer to inquire into the dispute,
the council shall proceed so to in
quire, and in case the invitation is re
fused the council shall, nevertheless,
take such action, and proceed to make
recommendations, to prevent hostili
ties.
The powers of the body of dele
gates are less clearly set forth, but in
any case they are much more re
stricted. They have the general right
of Ydealing with matters within the
sph&e of the league,” a vague pro
vision which may or may not include
international legislation,
They have also the power of deal
ing with disputes likely to lead to war
which may be referred to them by the
executive council, Nor is there ap
parently anything to prevent them
from debating any question that they
please, and making recommendations
to the executive council.
There is also to be a permanent in
ternational secretariat. It may turn
out to be one of the most important
parts of the scheme.
Centre of the Scheme.
The obligations undertaken by
members of the league are, first of
all, “in no way to conceal from each
other the conditions of such of their
industries as are capable of Dbeing
adapted to warlike pufposes, or the
scale of their armaments.” They also
undertake that, should disputes arise
between them, they will not resort to
war “without previously submitting
the matters involved either to arbi
tration or to inquiry by the executive
| council, nor until three months after
' the award or recommendation, and
I that they will not even then resort to
war as against any member which
lcomplles with the recommendation of
the executive council.”
This is the center of the whole
scheme.
The members also agree that they
will carry out any award which may
be rendered, and that if any member
disregards its undertaking to the oth
ers, each member will join in a com
plete boycott against the offending
party,
' It will also contribute to the mili
er‘v and naval forces whick each
! member of the league is to supbply
' for the protection of their respective
mutual obligations,
The articles which contain these
obligations, the kernel of the provis-
{ lons for preventng war, are the most
prolix in their wording, and are also
the most difficult to abbreviate in a
clear and precise form,
I ean not but think that the draft.
ing of these very important articles
might be remedied both more con
clse and more explicit, '
It will be seen from this short and
necessarily imperfect summary of
the leading provisions of the cove
nant that it includes the main points
upon which advocates of a league
of natlons have always dwelt as be
ing essential,
The covenant is a very long step,
longer than most of us thought the
powers assembled at Paris could be
induced to take,
It is an effort to create a world
wide machinery capable of preserv.
ing peace; and if it does not provide
a solution for every possible case
still there is every reason to believe
that the Immense majority of cases
in which wars would be likely to
arise can be-dwelt with under the
machinery provided.
We see even today how hard it Is
for governments to resist the ex
treme demands of powerful sections
at home, and how often governments
are tempted to win temporary sup
port by making promises which the.v‘
know to be imprudent and may well
doubt their ability to fulfill,
We have got to create not only the
machinery of a league, but that mov
ing and guiding power which dwells
in the opinion of enlightened and
liberty-loving men all the world over,
It is this power that is needed to
give the machinery the life and
strength that will make it work.
Mandatory Must Be Just.
It is most important that, if the
scheme is to be of any service in
protecting weak nations or backward
races, the league should feel that its
overseeing care is a reality, and that
the mandatory state must not be
permitted to exploit the regions in
charge of which it has been placed.
We know how real is the danger of
such exploitation.
No mandatory is likely ever to sink
\ \‘\&fizj RN ;
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TN R s RLT N o ,;’;ff_’
T e O . Tm‘t@_m_mfi
e S e e e e e i et 1A L Y S Bl e
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Y
7 ®
e New Hudson Super-Six
Improved in Quality—New in Price, it Surely Has
No Rival— Early Deliveries for Prompt Buyers
Distributed by
J. W. GOLDSMITH, JR—GRANT C 0.,, Inc.
229 Peachtree St. Atlanta, Ga.
to the infamies perpetuated in the
Congo State twently years ago, nor to
the cruelty which marked the admin.
igtration of the German African colo
nies, But short of such cases as
those many evils are possihle.
The action of the league will need
to be stimulated as well as watched
by an enlightened and humane publie
opinion,
Whatever form this covenant may
come to bear, when it has been fur-‘
ther amended by the assembled pow
ers which have now provisionally nc.‘
cepted it, it has, at any rate, the
promise of mnrklng’rn enormous ad
vance upon uflryvthl € hitherto done
by the Jjoint #iction of ‘#-eo peoples
for the common benafit the world,
Even if the breadth of some of its
provisions may have to be reduced
lin order to allay the apprehensions
felt in some quarters still even a
scheme less complete than this ecove
nant may be gladly accepted if it
holds out a real prospect of reducing
armaments and practically averting
the risks of war,
To leave things now where they
were before the war would be the
most deplorable confession of human
weakness, the most dismal surrender
of human hopes, that has ever yet
been seen. . ‘
We must earnestly desire that the
American people, who have now be
gun to realize that they can not stand
aloof from the dangers and trials of
the Old World, and who have in a
nobly disinterested spirit given their
invaluable help in saving that Old
World from ruin, will give their ad
hesion (perhaps subject to certain
amendments in details) to a scheme
which has been framed in the in
terest of all mankind, and which can
hardly succeed without the co-opera
tion of their own great, free and
powerful republie, '
TAKE SAFE AND CONTENTS, .
BT. LOUIS, May 24-—Exit the safe
blower. Enter the safe taker.
Robbers didn't take the time to *“crack”
a safe In the Kroger Grocery Company
office, but #instead carried a 400-pound
safe, containing $86.55 out of the store
and put it in & machine and drove away.
At the price at which you can now get a Hudson
Super-Six, surely there can be no close second
choice car.
As marked by its sales, Hudson has for four years
been the largest selling fine car.
Now with a better car at a new price people
who on account of its cost have had to accept less
desirable cars, will be content with no other.
This, therefore, is to warn you to prompt action.
You have no doubt followed Super-Six history.
You know how it has out-performed in endurance
and reliability, cars of every description. Its
record fills a large part of official automobile
m‘ m '.
Its feats on the speedway, and in every imagm
able automobile contest have been told so often
and are so much the part of everyone’s automobile
knowledge, we need only to suggest them.
The First to Grasp
Its Present Worth
Owners of earlier Super-Sixes were the first to
appreciate the new Hudsons. When we an
nounced the new car they came in great numbers
to see it. They knew what to expect. It was
they whom you have heard say the Super-Six was
potentially the fimest car built. Many own their
third and fourth Hudson. Some have had even
more. They bought new model Super-Sixes for
they know how each successive year has seen an
advancement over previous models. They can
appreciate the greater value of this new car.
Youa, Too, Will
Understand
The first Super-Six—brought out four years ago
—increased motor power 729, without increased
weight or cylinders. It gave the smoothness and
endurance others had sought through added
cylinders and complications,
English Paper Fails
To Give Wilson Credit|
For League of Nations
(By International News Service.) ‘
LONDON (by mail).Credit for '@
workable plan for the league of
nations is claimed for Lord Robert
Cecil, General Smuts and other
British statesmen by The Evening
Standard, which says President
Wilson was but the paternal ideal
ist who stuck to the main idea of
establishing such a league,
“Nearly all the practical work has
been British, both in regard to the l
league of nations and the interna
tional labor scheme,” says The
Standard,
“It is certain that Mr. Wilson's
tendency to look at practical things
from a remote and idealistic stand=
point has been in some cases rather
a handicap, and a good deal of the
hardest work of the peace congress
has lain in reconciling his attitude
with the actual situation.
“Prinkipo was an example of the
kind of difficulty the President's
faith in his methods tends to bring
about. The invitation to the Bol
sheviki was founded upon an en
tirely mistaken misapprehension of
the real state of affairs in Russia.
“The President’s misapprehension
of the disposition of ‘democratized’
Germany has also been responsible
for many - things which the public
has watched with astonishment.”
E. A. MORGAN’S
SEAMLESS
@ WEDDING
RINGS
ARE THE BEST
10 and 12 E, HUNTER ST,
First doer from Keely’s, Cor. Whitehall.
s e RS eSR RS
.
4 Y
Of Detective on B¢dl
(By International News Serviee,) i
" PHILADELRHIA, May 24.--Acting De
tective Joseph Miller's home on reenwich
street was ontered by thieves who ran
sacked the house and stole jewelry and
other valuables worth $260. After taking
everything they wanted the accommodats
ing thieves carefully laid out Miller's uni.
‘form and cap on his hed and left, Al
Mitler had to do when he returned home
was to don his uniform and go hunt his
valuables,
| ———————————
FOCH THANKS STUDENTS,
(By International News Service.)
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO, May 24.—8te
vens Bromley, editor of the Rayon High
School Record, sent to Marshal Foch a
copy of the school publication in which
the activity of the school in French re
lief was “covered” in a two-page article
Foch replied with his ewn engraved pers
sonal eard, thanking the school over his
orsonal signature.
WALL PAPER
. PAINTING
fiuggflflzwém&NlCatw:u&ravv;' request,
GRAY & HALEY
30 Luckie St. Ivy 736,
e NI
l
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DIAMONDS :=
73PEACHTREE STREET s
Then it proved its superiority by establishing
new limits in practically every worth while test.
It became the largest selling fine car. More than
60,000 are now in service.
Every test and every car produced added its
influence toward further development and improve
ment.
All the qualities in the Super-Six, many of them
exclusive to it—that you know are retained.
Some are enhanced, new ones added.
That is the characteristic of this new model. It
starts easier, rides easier and runs smoother.
It is just as enduring, just as rehiable. It is free
from many annoyances regarded as inevitable to all
cars.
What men have said of Hudson possibilities
has been attained. Old Hudson owners recognize
it and are buying new models.
You Can Have a
_ Hudson Now
But you must not delay in ordering. Mid
season has always seen an over demand for Hud
sons. There has never been a year when there
were enough Super-Sixes. We know our allotment
for the next several months. There is no possi
bility of their being increased. There might be an
interruption in production that would cut us short.
Deliveries are made in the same order that sales
are made. Your order now means an. earlier
Sivery, ‘
Compare Its Price
$1975 at Detroit
Go over the list of cars selling at near the Super-
Six price. Do you find any name so favorable?
Can you want any other car quite so much? But
if you delay you may have to accept some other car
for Hudsons are the first choice with thousands.
They will not delay.
Can you wisely postpone action?
’
When He Couldn’t Get
Liquor He Wanted It
(By International News Service.) !
CINCINNATI, May 24.-" T am fifty
four years of age and I never took a
drink of whisky until West Virginia went
dry."”
This statement was made to the court
by James W. Peters, real estate dealer of
that State, who was indicted for carrying
liquor into dry territory,
“When I couldn't get it T wanted it
Peters sald,
(37 g TN +
2 ?'Z;‘
il SWING ¢
i FRAMES
‘ of the most f
| Artistic Designs || ‘
| ' Other Frames |
i made to order, 4l‘
| SAMUEL G I !
4 WALKER fel
l ' Art Store. LM/
! 91 N. Pryor.
¢ I Al |
5_ s\ N 1\ 4
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