‘ n. ’ ' n * . n . n . - ! E; 1 a C; an :1 - : V L : -xii‘ 0 E’. i M J v ‘ ‘ . Y 7’ 1]‘ as .-i :4 J ‘ - an AA ' - r , l‘ ' L‘ Ti I; ' 4" ” - s . it 7‘ -- its first ‘H - iioxily” hy"a siusli iroi:p"'of well: ifrfily enga to'a'pply othfi neventnsily ddine ‘cc-rtnin'elect iudltes of the Perrnauehi . g p r ‘ «lllinouriho 1301 V ll9_ geafiouafigife has n.i;t__o‘nl_y'states like Panama and i’ersia,jin_ the name; pg pllce tuna powers and care: or relatively local Co‘urt. ; - pa’... ., 5 g Do ‘ th ‘i i Y 3-’: ‘wro_ t- ‘a group _ prooe-;which evidently ,attrihuted to Art-arises from nferoiice, from moralnsignificance ch may be devolved‘ in other words, the force ‘of ¢,_ 5 ,_ an 5, 3,3,‘ 3,,-_ ,,_n you fbpron e an n‘ '5 ——-- the beginnings ofwliat aiiglntucle K a protect: t it Judgment. from full publicity and upon r unnorns.,cumstanoes is gradually moving we as-saiaiuiy the ‘ ' _ .——— the nailed the constitutional last of; ' ' ' any on pgpe)-_ :fy-on) we power of punk 'o‘pin_ion..But the of business and fn - League into posntnbn upon an ‘ ‘ 0"" 0' lllflllflhtl Jlmbo IMO! 9'13‘ ill 3“b‘“"“97 15° | I shifted. Such states, in possible fear of ‘The Leader-slnip.af .the.l.ln.ited Ststesnaiice is already unified. The worlds foundntiolnsdso well laid by no ‘ ‘ ' world's ca L-rs lie-iwbcn 1899 up : ' I 01%" .6‘ 1.a“,,.f ......”.] . . . . . ..‘.‘.‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . .o V tacit’! the 3...}. "'-.....""".}',‘2',“"n."" "" fl . ""° ””’ At its birth the Covenant of more it tip Ofthe Wllhllltllitr pcasatpo-operation with the dd , bore, vaguely in Article X 01'”. I . '- I: _ ___f ’au“m d {fig A T938 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . o. ‘more m I 05353335300 ‘o’ u""' ml the of a general agree- ‘ _ of. nIVIl ’ suhu“u ab,“ '0'’. ‘ad nu ‘‘ . . . . . . . o . . .. Slfilf . . . . . . . . . . . . ment to enfofie ‘Dd coep-ce_ %3l_3 I 9 T the military a , of those articles suggest the- onnof, in ‘.501! "Ind “$01305 Vim G798‘. ‘°"°' '°""""“’ ""P“" Are you a voter? . . . . . . . . . . .. ;of a world state which never . W w W3 .3 X $3 ' - ‘ " ~ ' , ‘ ‘ ‘ L 8“ In”. Dwflu. . . ex: and does not »now e-nstaydats to 9|! P3633!-‘ 0°9!fl ‘V0791! 07‘ *5‘ 3, 5,9,“ 9,, {M u,,, 9,, U,,;,,_, 3.“ pmmpu, ,0 How far the present League is name. _ ,; State!’ willaastane Ia ’ actually removed from functioning later came the m=°mm¢ndI1I°n= we ‘I: A <1 Vet-m_--3 ‘mt: AMERICAN PEACE giwsmn as such a mate is sufficiently ex- ‘''°''‘ '‘ A ‘ n ' hihited in in dealing; with Lit that the United States should ad-. " ’ Court -of 1 ’ hereto. - fiuiationsllustice. -- Not-long after “Imt Harding that action Presi-i wrote to Bishop? ‘'1 do not believe any V man can} . . " A ,l L p . confront the responsibility of a United States have between them No different procedure would have _President d'th'e“Unibei!VStates andlpiedged more than $400,000 to sup- been followedif the United States the $pi- were in member of the Labor 0r- sped Jet adheretq the-idea that his? Ejpossible for our country to main-. flgtiht an attitude of . the world 1 , :1‘ the Permanent Court would bring? ;.this country into close contact at} fintime and point with the ‘ ',j'dl'-Nations, and since such acti viatrenuiiusly opposed for exactly that ffrssson.‘ it is pertinent to inquire- .hot only how much "with the Lpague and its organs has ~ . in proposed during the life of "the present administration, but also ffbow much, «Officially or_UnofficiaIly the United ':j; States is Repreaeutedon Many a .« League Cdllnissious. n W The United States Government. glass accredited its representatives to. ‘ «hit as members “in an unofficial and jzgsuiting capacity" upon four of in I most important social welfare feotmnissions of the League. vi .| "Edith. Opium, Tnffic in Women». !‘and_Children, and «Anthrax (Indus-i Chan Hygiene). ~ = "'7' Our government Bureau. an organ of the’ _..League. r government was re-l uqlesented by an “unof icial ..}‘orter an . ".:sent it at the meeting of the Opium, §{;0ouu_ui_ssion.last May ‘ gpiou an oaaental "_' serums. . . 3. Our government collaborates with ;:'the League R th ‘. the International Office of "Public Health at Paris. and with d has helped in work for the standardization 1‘ ':'.'.the Agriculture Committee of the H ‘n-League labor Organisation through the International Institute of Agri- ::f8enate approve our adhesion to the mPcrmanent Court under four’ conci- ;::tions or reservations, one of which ...m that tht United States should "officially participate in the election 2'0! udges Assembly d But since the proposed adhesion}n°" has been actually begun. !' i5 9 fl-‘n “‘""'i3h°w its wmmxm” ‘O mfimtatgjand the Assembly and Council of an Inmmtionfl H,.d,.o_;s_imilarly with the other humane op“. ‘ fir 0b_nthat government 'had already sent nfenenceid°l°3‘t°" , , , could as properly accept nntntntnons Brent to repre-D 9° the experi- co ization : (Put an inside the proper '08.) l ‘O “i i2 Madison Avenue. New -York’--City port either the work of demics Commission or the I e gs in women and children. - lncraaaed Co-operation Between the United; States a, the Organized World Be Secured mon social co-operation‘h"°_5°m9 b°‘"'l"Z “P0” “"3 l"‘°‘riisniing in February, 1923. These lilY(‘E Sl.lflK¢S1l0IlS ‘Of ill-lghe senate‘-i.] fggeg-v‘t_j°n . creasing co-operation with the fam-Jpn... gubjeft in 1920 was mocked ily of nations are in hannony 7 policies already adopted by ’ * servation of world peace, the ques- tion before us may take this form: can increasing co-operation between the United States and the organised world for the promotion of peace and security be assured, in forms acceptable to the people 0 the United States and hopefully practicable?% - The United tales Can Extend I. .go ,of l’reserit Co“-operation with League's Serial ' Activities ‘ Without any {change in its present: policy, already ‘described. the United-‘ Stat government could. first, line he “ elfare reconstructive agencies of t League. To four of these agencies with adiisory powers. It to accredit members with like wers to each one of the other wel- fare commissions. it has already received invitations from two of the 1, with cognnized that it may now be called.” tr: 0 al , _ ‘ ‘ ‘Du-y do not involve a question; Germany. are members of the in-E tcrnhtional Labor the League. live independent states in the world.) 1 "3'-“"3 f you wish to espnn-u an fuller opinion. aim. L. Provide for the continuing: di-vol - i ' .1 gr lgggngguogug by. please write to the American Peace Award - a fill nization of the League. No isolation and ‘- inquiry into conditions of the traffic A“ jmmgfiiate Step is Adherence to caunm 1,, "5. w wmmon umicx ." A an d e Permanent Co A third immediately practicahleqx, ohm KWP l8 '59 3€N|l°'5 flPPl'0Vll 0‘ We police force for the Vilna district. , _ proposal‘that the United States ad- lxxuef The U"“°d. S“"°3 5'5”? “"934? here to the Permanent Court of In- isvso far committed to united counsels amnion,‘ ;u,fi¢,_. Wm‘ 14°58‘-l'~' ‘X93393 107' the °°f'." and under the conditions stated by tsry Hughes -the League, but it has also ' plus’ inactivi ‘ lone ‘League and for-cshadow modifications in its vdisnt-. i-nanin and Poland over Vilua and their common Greece and Italy over rfu. E: has demonstrs hle difficulties in the way of ful- lnrge promise of Article X in re-, em 18 I i boundary. and with Co perience in the last three years d probably insuper- ing in all parts of the world the to either its letter or its spirit. one now expects the League- fleets. since it utterly failed in an international ties’ of thefunfriendly neighbors. must eti important whether the preservation of a form, cunsttution, tinefof words in ‘the Covenant is more [vital to theirpesce and security, and e peace and security in w than the presence of the Unitaii States at the'councii table the family of nations. A5 to Article XVI, the Council the Leagu Commission which-worked for two noiitic weapon" of ‘the League could be efficiently used and uniformly applied. The commission failed to - any obligatory procedure that-weaker powers would dare to "accept. it was finally agreed that etch stat}: must decide {or itself whether a breach of the Covenant hsrbaen committed. : The second Assembly‘ adopted a radically amended form of Article XVi‘from which was removed all toference to the poieilnilityof em- ploying military force and in'\‘:inicln the abandonment of oniiforrn obliga- tion was directly providai for. The British government has Iinco 'pro- in of e created a Blockade de terminc how the “eco- recognize r. reciscl y ,- - --. ,_ , _, _ 9 lag-Nueis the on League Council to intervene in any troversy. even though all states in the New World except] three are members of the League. The refusal becam Panama-Costa Rica’ _ and in the qunr-rel.bctwcen Chile, Peru and Bolivia, a quarrel which impelled the last two states to ab-A Th rent themselves from the third as- therefore evolved a Council widely scmhly, wherein n ' chosen to presi e. Obviously the League int ' leade ' United States in the New American can the 35 d. rship to turn the and access world only actual questions ' When the United .effort are our mgsny kind is in Chilean was different from by th decide, in the New ‘World Is Obviously of scientific knowledge and humane gained! by the League. ;' Another significant de"v'élopmc the constittntioltai-practice of z i creasingly imptisaiblc. be end world or-ganir.ation,_already cenn- . wn1;n,mg_., of u,e*tralized, ‘IS no _more likely in rc- to disconnected effort than the United States is likely to revert 40 Calhoun theory of states rights ion. 9 evident in the . in Actual Operation. if Not in Orig- ises the Principle and the Hopes of The Hague Conferences e operation of the League has ends t,, can employ no force but that of of the persuasion and moral influence. its powers are to _ the ,United States “"5 “d'i’e- l-° ‘T9339 "°’“"“'_";““’_’”‘- (.]a;m_._. in Thgs is nbtbing 1,3,5 than to exercise inquisitive, concnlnatnvc the observance of an unwritten lav: ‘md "ll"-"‘l f“"'~‘“°“9- mm W h'~'ll’. limiting the power and duties of the League Council, defined in Arti e X! of the Covenant. that seem to threaten the peace of the Old Worl States is wining ‘'0 bring the ‘W0 its-tailing in a field of opportunity for the trains! mind. Isolation ni 1907 iii the least begun to realize l'.u_lnc and purpose of League Conference. have come fice work of the organized ' nm iucd 3 at It sources to cnzitc but rejoiced to see confer NEW YORK l7.\'l\'BIISlT\' SCHOOI. OF RETAli.l.\‘(: A Graduate School great ‘ internatiow‘. ._r A8-° the lt‘orntlnuo-ni on page C) ' ‘ ; tilt- 4 1 5,‘:- The secretariat and the labor ofif ~:; ~<‘ continuation: comnnittees for the administration‘ W0l‘ld, 3335 as the Hague (Tonia-rence lzncked rg. would have /' . The Council, resolving ‘noose and ' 1. large tlneorics into ‘('l('a!l('lll modest practice, has l.en.-nn grnduan). l‘¢‘('nnn(‘liln${ the League, and -'1‘ an or. Titv Sfhllili Inf Ritnifo sed to weaken the form of -1- . . . . Each Asscmbl ' f th Le b zlolirement still further N M.“ 0:’ °f ‘hf’ “°.”d ‘°"th” hr in: trllm '0' "N-""""‘ I""“‘°""- “"°"""”“ "‘.“° """"""“'"’- "*"*‘?-'"="?» ‘Tm-~ . . 5 0 . .2“? as ' ‘ friendly ('°n5'd°r3“.°" of Cmnmon inc. Service. Fnnancr and Conntml. and 'l‘«:nchin:: arc allrzmtiu 1.-H . “ witnessed vigorous ci'forts'to nnter- Articles X and XVI, inn their dangers. duties and needs, it will he ‘ SF.lt\'lCl2 rn-:n.n.nw.~:nnnn'.~; ‘ ‘-34 plfi. modify Article 1. in the Oflgltlli forma, have h('l'El0fl)re been pogsible (0 spcupg. it is a Ciao. room and the store are clnu-«:-' lnnkwl iUI'0'tl;c»f. Assembly an attempt i0 practicnliy condemned by the prin. clngcr ¢o.0peg-1-_fion between the Students may enter second trrm i‘e‘.»rnn-.nn,' :, 3'.-"‘ ‘adopt an interpretation of that cipal organs of the League and ar('1L(-gggue or-gunizatjons and tin. pan. lllu-true-J booklet unvon nun-2'-«~=:ior.. .article in essential agreement with today reduced to something like inn- Annorican union ad‘. ,1 I,0ten_ For further information urnt.- nu. .x-..r.-n. A, lirmun, nn..-mz... x... Y”; \ DCCUOUS desuetudc. The only killtitiiul regional le‘gue. n is conceivq University, School of l€rl'An|.rn-,', {Mn \\:.»hun;-nu 5-1ln'.:l'-, .‘sI\\ \'urL q_:.:;, ‘I - of compulsion which nations can able that the family of nations may 4 vernment, and m the last Lawn‘ a policy so old and well re-’ ditn n membership in the League 3Natious as now constituted, but it? cannot be denied that they lead to; the threshold of that question. Any further step tows ' must confront the problem of directl _relations between the United States{ co-operation oi ty-four nations in the League. (Fifty-seven states, includingl Organization of; There are about sixty-, Actual Operation the League} ’ s No I-‘orce ‘ latter. It is, secondly. immediately prac- ma ed mendstidns for national legislation. , P The practical experience of the; o 4 F. P. Miller .1 Planing Mill South Eighth St. Does first class wood work; aid furniture repaired and re- finished. Try us. 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