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SCHAECHER. | Pacific coast and then on his eastward =. | Way back toward the capital was given WILSON'S WORDS CLEAR UP DOUBT CALIFORNIA THROWS OVER ITS LEADER, JOHNSON, AND RALLIES TO LEAGUE, WEST GIVES HIM OVATION All Doubtful Features of Pact Are Explained Away By President, and Former Doubters Hasten to Give Him Their Support. (By Independent News Bureau, form- erly Mt. Clemens News Bureau.) Aboard President Wilson's Special Train—A continuous ovation along the to President Wilson as he came toward the end of his month daylong speaking tour in behalf of the League of Nations. California, particularly the delightful city of Los Angeles, went wild in its enthusiasm for him and his advocacy of the League, and it was in that state, perhaps, that he did his most successful missionary work. Hiram Johnson, California's former governor, now her United States sena- tor, and considered by her as the most likely Republican candidate for the presidency in 1920, had before the ar- rival of President Wilson, convinced a great number of citizens that the League as at present formulated was not a good thing. He had told them that the United States, because of it, would be drawn into every petty European quarrel; he argued that we would lose our sovereignty by joining with the European nations, He had blamed the president for assenting to the possession by Japan of the Penin. sula of Shan Tung in China. BUREAU CHANGES NAME The Mount Clemens News Bureau, which has been furnishing reports on President Wilson's tour in behalf of the League of Nations to 5,500 papers, has adopted a new name and will hereafter be known as The Independent News Bureau. But Mr. Wilson, with clear logic and with compelling eloquence, answered to the entire satisfaction of Califor | nia’s people every objection which | Senator Johnson had made to the League. And thousands of the state’s citizens deserted the Johnson stand- ard immediately and rallied to the sup- port of the president. More than that, they came forward and said, “We were against you, Mr. President, but you have cleared everything up and now we are with you heart and soul.” Still more than that, they let Senator Johnson know that they were no longer with him and that they disap- proved of the speaking tour which he himself was making in opposition to the League and so powerful was the volume of public opinion which reach- | ed him, that the senator almost im- | mediately abandoned his tour. The | Shan Tung question, because of the anti-Japanese feeling which undoubted- ly exists along the Pacific coast was the most serious which the president had to answer, He explained to the people that he had been powerless to prevent the rich peninsula from being | given to Japan, England and France, through a secret treaty, had promised it to Japan for entering the war and remaining in it. That treaty had to be carried out, Anyway it was not China that was losing Shan Tung, but Germany, which had seized the terri- tory from China in 1898 and held it ever since. Japan had promised, the president explained, to return Shan Tung as soon as the peace treaty was ratified and it was only through the ratification of the treaty with the League of Nations inclusion, that China could ever expect to get her former property back. And she surely would get it back, he declared, through the ratification of the League. There- fore, through the same instrumentality no other nation could again prey upon the “Great, patient, diligent, but help- less kingdom.” As to our being drawn into any European conflict. The pres- ident pointed out that no direct action such as the sending of troops to any part of the world to maintain or re- store order could be taken by the Council of the League without a unant- mous vote of the council members, therefore our vote could at once nega- tive any such proposition as sending our soldiers where we did not want them sent. Besides, Mr. Wilson argued, “If you have tc quench a fire in Call- fornia you don’t send for the fire de- partment of Utah.” But, he argued, there probably never will be another war, if the League is established, for the members promise either to arbi- trate their difference and accept the ferences for discussion and publica tion before the Council of the League for a period of six months, and then, if possible, accept the council’s advice, That failing, they agree to refrain from war for a further period of three months and nine months of “cooling off,” the president contended, would prevent any arified conflict. These clear explanations sattsfied every reasonable hearer and destroyed the “Bugaboos” which Senator Johnson and others had raised against the League. Through rugged Nevada into Utah, the land of Mormons, the president swept to find that those fine people were heartily with him for the League and @ 7: mapency of peace. eed decision of the arbitrator, lay the dif- | Getting at the Seat of the Trouble THE TROUBLE WITH MOST LUMBER IS NOT IN THE QUALITY OF THE MATERIAL ITSELF—BUT IN THE WAY IT IS MANUFACT- URED. WE INSIST ON SUPERIOR MILL WORKIN ALL OUR STOCK. THAT’S WHY IT IS SO SUPREMELY SATISFYING, ABSOLUTELY UNIFORM GRADES, EVEN THICKNESS AND SOUND, DRY STOCK— HERE YOU HAVE THE REASON FOR OUR SUCCESS. SEE US BE- FORE BUYING. 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