PAGE EIGHT THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1919. ; w mm m ft HOUSE Buy One On Easy Terms A cute 5-ROOM BUNGALOW on Rural avenue. 2 lots 100x100. $600. Make your own terms. This is a snap'. SEVEN-ROOM FULLY MOD ERN HOUSE; six blocks from Nation al bank. A really good buy. $2500. $:100 cash; $20 monthly. 5-ROOM COTTAGE 3 blocks north of State street, 2 lots. $1000. $300 cash, $12.50 monthly. HOUSE AND FOUR LOTS in Highlands. Good fruit. $2250. $300 down. - . 7-ROOM HOUSE, 3 blocks north of State street. Large lot. Good fruit. $2000. $200 down, ' $18 monthly. SIX-ROOM BUNGALOW on S. 12th street. Bath, etc. Nice barn $800. $200 down. Balance monthly. SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE with mod em conveniences; city water in addi tion to fine well; double corner lot in Englewood. ; Splendid fruit. $1500 down. Balance to suit buyer. COMFORTABLE 6-ROOM HOME on Saginaw street." Large lot. Good fruit. Garage. $1750. 1-3 cash. Balance monthly. Fully modern 7-ROOM HOUSE opposite High school. Old but in good condition. Good fruit. $2250. $500 cash. BUT HERE IS A BEAUTY Eight rooms with all modern conveniences. Two bathrooms; wash-basins and toilets. Upper floor arranged for a double flat .with entrance from either front or rear; and separate from lower floor . Paved street. 3 blocks to car, 5 blocks to University; 10 blocks to postoffice. Upper floor can be easily rented at $30 .a month, yet owner for quick sale will take $G00 down and $25 a month. This is living rent free. Price $3500. If It Is a House You Want, See NIEMEYER The largest and best list in Salem bar none. Whether cash, terms or installments. I have a fine $8000 home (and a good buy at that) on Court street at a snap price of $6000. E W. ME1EY, "Just Real Estate and High Class Investments'' B7P y - 215-216 Masonic Building Telephones 1000 1014 Buy stock in Salem's dehydration plant I am not selling it. But it's good for Salem and it's good investment for you. TREATY OPPONENT'S VIEW PACT WITH (Continued from page one) tiicy will never go to war without first having done one or other of two things, either submitted the matter id contro versy to arbitration in whicbscase they agree to abide by the- verdict, or aub- is a pitiful arm stretched but to heaven; : and there is no pity in the world. When ( shall we wake to the moral rcsponsibil- ny oi mis gruub uccuaiuu, ,; - authority everywhere in the world. We wanted to see to it that there wtis no place in the world where a small group of men could use their fellow citizens as pawns in a game; that there was no ittimr' it t iim..,uinn in th . nnnooi nlaee in the world where a small srouo of the league' of nations and for that of i without consulting .their fellow purpose they .'consent to allow six citizens, eould send their fellow citizens months for the discussion and whether j to the battlefield and to deal iu accom they like the opinion expressed or not, plishin something dynastic, some polit uirte months' disc.nmions and I want to ,al plan that lad been conceived In remind you that is the central principle private, some oojeet that had ben pre of some thirty treaties entered into be-'Prl for by universal, world-wide intri-tw-en the United States of America tud ' fT"'- That ia what we wanted to . some thirty other sovereign nations, all ; complisk. of which are?, confirmed by the ten:, to I "The most startling that that de of the United 8tutes.( Applause.) iveloped itself at the opening of our par- rto bave such an agreement w:th France, we have such anagreemcnt with Croat Britain, we have such an agree ment with practically every great ua ticipation ia this war was not the niili tary preparation of Germany we wi familiar with that, though we had been dreaming that she would not use it but lion except Germany, which refused tojh" political preparation. To find that ent.;r into such an agreement beca-.so. my fellow citizens, Germany knows that I sl.c intended something that didn 't bear Uiiscussion and that if she had submit- ted the purpose which led to this war jtr ao much as one month's discussion, she nc or' would have dared go into the n:err,rjse against mankind, which the tinaily did go into and therefore, 1 say this principle of discussion is the princi ple r.lrcady adopted by America and what it the conipnsion to do thU The t in-ulsion ia this, that if any member state violates that promise to submit either to arbitration or dismission, It is tnercDy ipso facto deemed to have com m;tle(f an. act of war against all the rest. "Then, you will ask, do we at once take up arms and fight themt No. Wo 'do something very much more terrible than that. We absolutely boycott them (appluse). It is provided iu that In strument that there shall be n, com- munieation even between them and the rest of the world. They shall receive no goods; they shall ship no goods; they shall receive no telegraphic messages; they shall send none; they shall receive no mail; no mail will be received from them. The nationals, the citizens of the member state will never enter their ter ritory until the matter ia adjusted and their citizens cannot leave their terri tory. The most complete boycott crer co:aceived in a public document. And I want to say to you with confident ijicuiviiuu tiiai mure win oe no miH fighting after that. '.' Gentlemen talk to you as if the most probable .ouk-omo of this great combination of all the fighting people of tho. world, was going to be fighting, whereas, as a matter of fact, the essence of the document Is to the effect that the processes shall be peaceful, and peaceful processes are more deadly than the processes of war. Let any mer chant put up to himself, that he enters into a covenant find then breaks it and the people all around absolutely desert his establishment and will have noth ing to do with him, ask him after that if it will bo necessary to send tho po lice. The most terrible thing that can linppen to an ndividual and the most conclusive thing that can happen to a nation is to be read out of decent so ciety. (Applause.) "There wna another thing that we needed to accomplish that is accom plished in this document. We want dis armament and this document provides the only possible" Way for disarmament by common agreement. Observe, my fel low citizens, that just now every great fighting nation in the world is a mem ber of this partnership except Germany and inasmuch as Germany has accepted a limitation of her army to 100,000 men, I don't think for, the time being she may be regarded as a great fighting nation. ,; Here in the center of Europe, great nation of more than sixty mil lions, that has agreed not to maintain mi army of more than 100,000 men and all around her, the rest of the world in concert to see that no other nation at Jumes what she attempted and agree ing among themselves that they will not impose this limitation of armament up on Germany merely, but that they will impose it upon themselves. "And you know, my fellow citizens, that armaments mean great standing armies and great stores of war material. They do not mean burdensome taxation merely, they do not mea-a merely com pulsory military service, which saps the economic strength of the nation, but they mean the building up of a military class. Again and again,-my fellow citi zens, in the conference at Paris, we were face to face with this situation: that in dealing with a particular civil government we found that they would not dare to promise that their general staff was not willing that they should promise; and that they were dominated by the military mar hi no which they had J created nominally for their own defense, every community in the civilized world was penetrated by her i.itrigue. sThe German people did not know that, but it was known in Wilhelmstrasse, where the central office of the German govern ment were, and Wilhelmstrasse was the master of the German people; and this war, my fellow citizens, has emanci pated the German people as well as the rest of the world. . "We don't want to ace anything like that done again, because we know that democracy will only have to destroy that form of government; and if we don 't destrov it now, the job is still to be done, and by a combination of all the great fighting peples of the world to see to it that the aggressive purpose of such government cannot be realized, to make it no longer worth while for little groups of men to corjtrivc the down fall in civilization in private confer ence. "But I want to say something abont that. That has a different aspect, and perhaps you will regard it as a slight digression from the discussion which I am asking yon to be patier.t enough to follow. ' ' My fellow citizens, it docs not make c-ny difference what kind of a minority govern you, if it is a minority. Anil the thing we must see to is that no mi nority anywhere masters the. majority. That is at the heart, my fellow citizens, of the tragical things that arc happen ing in that great eountry which we long to help and can find no way thut is ef fect to help I mean the great realm of Russia. The men who are now meas ureably in contrcl of the affairs ot Kussia represent nobody, but themselves. They have again and ag.au been cnal leuged to call a constitutional conven tion. They have again and ajjain been challenged to prove that they nad some kind ot a mandate even froit a single class of their fellow citizens. And they dared not attempt it, they have no ma., date from anybody. There are only d4 of them, I ain told, and there were more 34 men who used to control tho desti nies of Europe from Wilhelmstrasse. ' There is a closer monopoly of power ia! fetrograd and Moscow than tuere ever was in Berlin, and the thing that is in tolerable is not that the Russian people are having their way, but that another group of men, more cruel than the czar himself, is controlling the destinies of that great people. And I want to say here and now that I urn against the con- trol of any minority anywhere. Search your own economic history and what you been uueusy about; Aow and again you have said there were small groups of capitalists who were controlling the in dustry and therefore the development of the United States. Seriously, my fellow citizens, if that is so (and sometimes I have feared that it was), we must break up that monop oly. I am not now saying that there Is any group of four fellow citizens -who are consciously doing anything of' the kmd, I ain saying that these alleg&t- j tions must be proved. But if it is proved that any class, any group, any where, is without the suffrages of their' fellow citizen in control of our affairs then I am with you to destroy the pow er of that group. We have got to be frank with ourselves, however. If we de not allow minority government in Germany, we must see to it that we do not have it in the United States. If you do not want little groups of selfish men to plot tat' future of Europe, nv must not allow little groups of selfish men to plot the future of America. Any man that speaks for a class must prove that he also speaks for all his fellow citizens and for mankind; and then we. will listen to him. "The most difficult thing in a- de mocracy, my fellow citizens, is to get classes, where they unfortunately exist, to understand one another and unite, and yet you have not got a great de mocracy until they, do understand one another and unite. So that if we are but really whether they willed it Or not, for seeing that there are no more czars j for the provocation of war. And so, as long as you have military elasa, it does not make any difference what your form of government is- If you are de termined to be armed to the teeth, you must obey the orders and directions of the only men who ean control the great machinery of war. Elections are of miuor importance because they deter-,1 and no more kaisers, then let us do a thorough job and see that nothing of that sert occurs anywhere. "Then there was another thing we wanted to do, my fellow citizens, that is done in this document. We wanted to see that helpless people were ' no where in .the world put at the mercy of unscrupulous enemies and masters. mine the political policy; and back of j There is one pitiful example which is in that policy is the standing pressure of the hearts of all of os. I .mean the the men trained to anna, enormous bod-, example of Armtnia. Thero arc Chrts- les of disciplined men behind th. ni, un-jtian people, helpless at the mercy of a limited supplied of military stores aud wondering if .thev are never going to be allowed to use their education and their ! skill and ravage some great people with the force of arms. ' That is the meaning of amis-ruents. Turkish government which thought it in service of God to destroy them and at this moment, my fellow citizen, It is an open question whether the Armenian people will not, while we ait here and debate, be absolutely destroyed. When I it is not merely tho cost of it.'althongnll think of words piled on words, of de that Is overwhelming, but it Is the spirit i bate following debate, when these nn jOf it mid America has never had, end spesknblc things that cannot be handled i nope in the providence of God never ! until the debate is over arc happening will have that spirit. (Great applause.) tin those pitiful parts of the world, I "And there is bo other way to dis-jwonder that men do not wake np to pense with great armaments except by j the moral responsibility of wht they the common agreement of the fightingjare doing. nations of the world. And here is the' "Great people are driven out upon a agreement. They promise disarmament.jdesert where there is no food and ean and promise to agree upon a plaa. Buibe none, and they are compelled to die, there was something else we wanted, that U accomplished by this treaty. "We wanted to destroy autocratic and then me, -wnraea and children thrown into a- common grave, so imper fectly covered up that tere and there "Aad so, my fellow citizens, there are other aspects to that matter. "Not all the populations that are hav ing something that is not a square deal lived in Armenia. There are others. And one of the glories of the great document,' which I brought back wiL me is this: that everywhere within to? iarea of settlement covered by tne po litical questions involved in that treaty, 'people of that Bort have been given I their f redom, and guaranted their free I dom. But the thing does not end there, I because the treaty includes the cove nant of the league of nations. And what does that sayt .That says that it is the privilege of any member state to call attention to anything anywhere that is likely to disturb the peace, of the world or the .good understanding between nations upon which the peace of the world depends, and every people in the world that have not got what they think they ought to have is there by given a 'world forum in which to bring the thing to the bar of mankind. An incomparable thing ,a thing that never was dreamed of before, a thing that was never conceived was possible before that it should not be regarded as ai unfriendly act on the part of the rep resentatives of one nation to call atten tion to something being done within the confines of another empire, which was disturbing the peace of the wo.M and the good understanding between na tion's. There never before has been pro vided a world forum in which the legi timate grievances of peoples entitled to consideration can be brought to the common judgment of mankind. And if I were the advocate of any suppressed ot oppressed people, I surely could not ask any better forum than to stand up before the world and challenge the other party to make good its excuse for not acting in that case. - That compulsion is the most tremendous moral compv--sion that could be devised by organized mankind. I think I can take it for granted, my fellow citizens, that you never realized before what a scope this great treaty has. You have been asked to look at so many little spots in it with a magnifying glass that you do not know how big it was, what a great enterprise of the human spirit it is, aud what a thoroughly American document it is from cover to cover. It is the first great international agreement in . history of mankind where the principle adopted has been not the power of the strong but the right of the weak. "To reject that treaty, to alter that treaty is to impair one of the first charters Qf mankind. And yet there are men who approach the question with passion, with private passion, and party passion, who think only of some imme diate advantage to themselves or to a group of their fellow countrymen, ana wh look af the thing with the jaundiced eyes of those who liave some private purpose of their own. "When at last, in the annals of man kind they "are gibbeted they will regret that the gibbet is so high. I would not have you think that I am trying to characterize -those who con scientiously object to anything in this great document. I take off my hat in the presence of any man's genuine con science; and there are men who are con scientiously opposed to it, though they wiu pardon me if I say ignorantly op posed I have no quarrel with them. "It has been a pleasure to confer with some of them ,and to tell them as frank ly as I would have told my most inti mate friend, the whole inside of mv mird, and every other mind that I know anything about that has been concerned m order that they might understand this thing and go with the rest of us in the confirmation of what is necessary for tn tne conduct of affairs at Paris in the peace of the world. " " 'I have no intolerant sprit in the matter; but I also assure you that from the bottenrof my feet to the top of my head, I have got a fighting spirit about it. And if anybody dares to defeat this great experiment then they must eathe? together the counsellors of the world and do something better. . If there is a better scheme, I, for one, will subscribe to it, but I want to say now, as I said the other night, it is a ca.se of put up or shut up. Negation will not save the world. Opposition constructs nothing. Opposition is the specialty of those who are boleshvistically inclined. "Again I assure you I am not com paring any of my respected colleague to boleshvists; but I am merely pointing out that the bolshevistic spirit lacks every element of constructive opposi tion. They have destroyed everything and they have proposed nothing. "And while there is a common ao- horrence for political Bolshevism, I hope mere win not De any such thing grow' up in our country as international bi shevism, the bolshevism that destroys the constructive work of men who have conscientiously striven to cement the good feeling of the great peoples of t world. And the majestic thing about the league of nations is that it is to include the great peoples of the world all except Germany. Germany is one of the great peoples of the world: I would bo ashamed not to- say that. These sixty million industrious, inven tive and accomplished . people are. one of the grent peoples of the world. They have been set upon, they have been mis led; their minds ha-ve been debased by a false philosophy. They have been taught, things that the human spirit ought to reject. But they wiil come out of that nightmare; they will come out of that fautasm and they will again be a great people; and when they are out of it, when they have got over that dream of eonquest and oppression, when they have shown that their new gov ernment relly is based upon new princi ples and upon democratic principles, we, there at Paris, all agreed that they should be admitted to the league of na tions. "In the meantime, her one-time part-1 ner, Austria, is to be admitted; Hub-1 gary, I dare say, will be admitted; and the only nations outside cf the league unless we chose to stay out and go in later with Germany the only great na tion left out is Germany; he only ac tions left out, of any consequence, are Germany and Turkey, and we are just now lookhiz for thej nieces of Tumey. She is so thoroughly disintegrated that the process of 'assembling the parts ia becoming increasingly difficult ana , chief controversy now is who shall at--tempt that very difficult aud perilous job. " " "Is it not a great vision, my fellow citizens, this of the thoughtful world; combined for peace and this of all the great peoples of the world assoeiated to ' see that justice is done, that the strong, ' who intend wrong, are restrained, aad that the weak, who cannot defend them- selves are made secure. We save sl problem ahead of us that ought to inter est us in this connection. We have promised the people of the Philippine islands that we will set them free.. It, has been one of our plerplexities how wo should make them safo after we set them free. Under this arrangement they, will be safe from the outset. They will . become members of the league of na tion, and every great nation iu tho world will be obliged to respect ana preserve, against external aggresmv.i from any quarter, the territorial integ rity and political independence of the Philippines. It simplified one ot the most perplexing problems that has faced, the American republic. "But it does not simplify our prob lems, merely, gentlemen. It illustrates) the triumph of .the American spirit.- I do not want-to attempt any flight of fancy, but I can fancy those men of the firmst generation of Washington, Ham-'v ilton, Jefferson and the Adamses 1 ean fancy their looking on with a sort of enraptured amazement that the Ameri- ' can spirit should have made conquest of the world. v ' I wish you could have seen the faees of some of the people that talked to us over there about the arrival e-f tho American troops. At first they did not know that we' were going to bo able . to send so many, but they caught some thing from the first groups that etainged the whole aspect of the war. One of the most influential ladies in Paris, the wifo of c member of the cabinet, told us that On the Fourth of July, last year. sh and others had attended the ceremonies with very sad hearts and merely out of courtesy to the United tntes, lecans they did not believe the aid of tho Uni ted. States was going to be effective. But she said, after we had been there and had seen the faces of those when in khaki- and seen the spirit of their swing and attitude and seen the vision that was ia their eyes, we caine away know ing that victory was in sight. "What Europe saw in our beys was n 't merely men under arms, indomitable men under arms, but men with c-n idca in their eyes. Men who had come a long way from home to defend other people's homes who had forgotten the conven ience of everything that personally af-. fected them, and that turned. them away from the longing love of the people who are dear to them, who came across the broad sen to rescue the nations of the world from an intolerable oppression, 4 - "I tell you, my fellow eitiwns, the war was won by the American spirit. Orders were found were picked up on the battlefields; German orders, direct ing the commanders not to let the Amer icans get hold of a particular position, because you never could get them out again, and you know that one of .our of. our American wits said that it took only half as long to train an American army as any other because you only had to- train themto go one way, and it rs true that they never though of going any other way. And, when they were restrained because they were told it was premature or dangerous, they were im patient. They say, 'We didn't come over here to wait; we came over here to fight.' And their very audacity, their very indifference to danger, changed) the morale of the battlefield. They wouldn't fight prudently. They were going to get there, and Ameriea, in this treaty, has realized, my fellow country men, what those gallant boys we are so proud of, fought for. The men who make this impossible Or-difficult will have a lifelong reckoning with the fight ing forces of the I nited tntes. I have consorted with those boys. I have been proud to call myself their commander In chief. I didn 't rua the business. They didn't need anybody to run it. All I had to do with to turn them loose. "And now for a final word, my fel low citizen. If anything that 1 hawt said has left the impression on your mind that I have the least doubt of the result, please dismiss the impression. And if you think I have come out on this errand to fight anybody, please dis miss that from your mind." I have ot cometo fight or antagonize any individ ual or body of individuals. I have, let me say without the slightest affectation the greatest respect for the senate of the United tates, but, my fellow eiizens I hs-ve, come out to fight for a cause. That cause is greater than the senate; it is greater than the government. It is as great as the cause of mankind, and I intend, in office r out, to fight that battle as long as I live, ily ancestors were troublesome cotchmea and among them were some of that famous group that wrc known as the Covenanters, i cry well, here is the covenant of the league of nations. I am a covenanter." SALEM PRODUCT (Continued i.rom page one) to be cut off and sent to the head office with nelosures of from 85 to 50 cents when ordering sample cartons of the different dehydrated products. It is re garded by the big advertising firm that tho national campaign of advertising at least 50,000 will take advantage of the coupon offer to test dehydrated fruits ' and vegetables. .vThBi.Umore hoM -Nw City, the Blackstone and La SSalle hotels of Chicago have already placed their orders 7ydra,ed eorn on th . total of 6500 cartons aad the information is given that if one wants genuine fresh roasting ears at any of the bit? hotels this winter, all that will be necessary . w be to call for the dehydrated prod- OPT. A little "Want" Ad SeBs It