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THE EVENING STAR, - WASHINGTON, . . O, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY .28, 1922, " AMERICA! ATTENTION 4 The Proposed Treaties Just Submttted to the Senate Are a Demal of Our Ideals and a Surrender of Our Interests; For Instance: - THE FOUR-POWER PACT - The Proposed Four-Power Pact means an ALLIANCE, or it means nothing. If it means nothing, why enter into it? If it is an ALLIANCE we must not enter it. BARON UCHIDA, Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs, says that “The Four-Power Treaty was not intended to abrogate the Anglo-Japanese ALLIANCE but rather to widen and extend it.” -Washington’s and Jefferson’s warnings against ALLIANCES are as sound today as ever. THE NAVAL LIMITATION TREATY The Naval Limitation Treaty does not pro- "vide for disarmament. IT MEANS NOT PEACE, BUT WAR. It gives England and Japan by dlplomacy what they could not win by force. The ships and machmery of naval war al- lowed to England and Japan, as compared with those allowed to our country, insure and guarantee to them for generations to come the supremacy of the seas and the economic con- trol of the world. NEVINSON says that the danger of war between England and America has NOW passed. - WHY? It is not England which has changed elther her practices or her demands. Where Here Is the Assurance of That Peace For Manklnd Which The World Seeks?* The naval quotas of capital ships allotted are: To the United States. . . 525,000 tons To the British Empire . . 525,000 tons To the Japanese Empire 315,000 tons The United States has apportioned one-half of its fleet to the Atlantic and the other half to the Pacific. That means:" To the Pacific........ 262,500 tons To the Atlantic .. .. ... 262,500 tons In the event of the violation of the Treaty we would thus be opposed on the one side by a navy 100 per cent larger than our own, and on the other by one 20 per cent larger. If Any Nation Is to Endanger 'lt_s Security, Why Should That Nation Be America? THE ALL AMERlCA National Officers JOHN J. SPLAIN Presndent JOHN A. McGARRY Treas (Connecti (llhnols) EMIL (I‘Tv m§0TEIGER, Vice Pres. " GEORGE A. SCHREINER Sec JOHN M. MURPHY, Vice Pres. e ey resma (1llinois) DANIEL F. COHALAN,' JULIU(%I 'MUlgNCH, Vice Pres. (New York) Clmrman of the A. A. N. Conference _ NATIONAL COUNCIL ' _ Committee on Publlcity JOHN P. GRACE JOHN D MOORE (South Carolina) ‘ . FRED](%HCK F. SCHRADER FERDINAND SCHEVILLE : ew York ; ROBERT E. O’MALLEY AL GAUTHIER ' (Missouri) (New Jersey) . (Minnesota)* .+ (New York)