The True Story Of Wood row Wilson By DAVID LAW HENCE (Copyri?M 1924 by the Geo rf H. Dor an Company in th? United State*. Canada. ">outh Awenca. World publication mhti reMrvtd by Current Ntwt Feature*. Inc.) As Party Leader Chapter VI. Nothing perhaps illustrates more forcibly the psychological effect of the parliamentary idea on the mind of Wood row Wilson than his de termination to attend the Paris peace conference as the head of the United States delegation. It was no sudden decision arrived at in the two weeks between the signing of the armistice and the day he set 5ail. Mr. Wilson had seriously con sidered going to Europe even in the months when the United States was neutral, if by personal and official mediation he could bring about world peaco. When Mr. Wilson did go to Paris to represent the United States in a conference of belliger ents. people on thlc aide of the At lantic failed to grasp the signifi cance of his relationship to the other negotiators. j It was not a conference of sover eigns ? no kings or emperors were; present* It was a conference, how-j ever, of the beads of parliamentary i governments ? prime ministers and; premiers. In point orf rank all were | on an equal footing except Mr. Wil-I son, who was not only prime min ister but the head of the state he! represented. By virtue of his dual 1 role, he was entitled to the consid-1 eration due both offices. To have stayed in America and sent a member of his Cabinet as head erf the delegation would have permitted the prime minister of Great Britain and the" premiers of the other countries to outrank the chairman of the American delega tion. This did not comport with Mr. Wilson's idea of of the dignity of the United States as an equal nor was It consistent with the influ ential part America had played In articulating the alms of -the War. ? The Secretary for Foreign Ttffsrorj In the British Cabinet, Arthur Bal-| four, and the Minister of Foreign I Affairs in the French Cabinet, Ste phen Piclion, were members of' Jhelr respective delegations but they did not preside. Prime Minister Lloyd George, the head of the' British government, and Georges Clemenceau, the French premier, as well as Signcrr Orlando, the Italian , premier, together with the Presi dent of tho.T'fiited States, made up the famous "big four" who conduct-, ed the Peace Conference. It was the first time in the his-j tory of the American republic that the Executive of the Presidential system and the head of the par _ liamentary system came face to face. Mr. Wilson found himself1 constantly explaining the differences' between the two. The British : Prime Minister and the other pre miers were able' to commit their governments to a specific line of action. President Wilson told his colleagues he could not do so. He J needed the concurrence of two thirds of the United States Senate j to approve his negotiations. The other negotiators were sure of their j parliaments ? if they had not been! they could not have remained at the' peace conference. A crisis hack'* home would overnight have forced'* a resignation or a general flection. " Mr. Wilson had lost a majority of i both houses of Congress but hoped ; to win non-partisan support for the , treaty because never In American * history had a treaty of ponce hern , rejected hy the United States Senate. I r Jn this same connection It Is per-1 tlnent to disclose what were Wood- ' > row Wllsdo's reasons for declining' to appoint to the American peace delegation any members of the United States Senate. He was bit terly criticised for his failure to do1 so, the argument being made that since treaties can be made only with the advice and consent of the Senate, the latter body should have representation on the mission which negotiates In treaties. Mr. Wilson never made public his viewpoint on] this. Hut he gave nevertheless careful consideration to It before he announced the personnel of the American pence delegation. He called for an opinion from the De partment of State. The opinion ren dered was in consonance with a be-j lief always held by Mr. Wilson that President McKlnley made a mistake; when he appointed two members of the Senate, a Democrat and a Re publican, to sit on the delegation , which concluded a treaty of peace with Spain after the war of 1898. The action of Mr. McKlnley was de bated at length In the Senate at the time, some of the best constitu tional lawyers of the day contending that it was improper to permit a member of the legislative branch of the government to hold any of fice with or without compensation in the executive branch of the govern- j ment. On this point the Constitu tion says: "No Senator or Representative shall, during the time for which he was elected, be appointed to any civ il office under the authority of the United States, which shall have been created, or the emoluments whereof shall have been Incroased during such time; and no person holding any office under the United States, shall be a member of either t House during his continuance in of I lice."* j Woodrow Wilson was a keen stu dent of the Constitution. That memorable document placed the ne gotiation of treaties entirely in the domain of the Executive. Mr. Wll I son felt that not his Secretary of ? State nor any special commissioner ! he might appoint but he himself, the i Chief Executive, would be held re ! sponsible for the negotiation of a treaty, especially one of such vast ' Importance as that ending the great I est war In history. So he took no members orf the Sen ' ate with him. believing that any one j who took part in the negotiation of ! the treaty would be in a sense dio | qualified from voting in an unpre I judiced way on it as a member of ? the Senate and that the farmers of jthe Constitution were wise in insist ! ing that members of Congress should j not hold office under the authority 'of the executive branch of the gov ernment as would have been the case if Senators became a part of the peace delegation subject to the in structions of the President and Sec-| retary of State. When President Harding appoint- 1 ed Senators Lodge and Underwood j special commissioners to act with the j Secretary of State in negotiating the) four power treaty with Great Britain, | France, and Japan, Mr. Wilson felt that the Constitution had been dis-j regarded again as in the Mckinley! case. The answer made by the other side was that since the Senators re ceived- nor compensation "they- wore] eligible but Mr. Wilson's objection was that they could not remain Sen ators and act under the authority or orders of the executive branch of the government at the same time. The ill-fated appeal of October 1918, when President Wilson asked the American people to elect a Dem ocratic Congress, was .really a nat ural development of li is theory of party responsibility. l,le asked for a Democratic Congress because Re publican leaders had expressed oppo sition to his declaration of peace aims, He feared embarrassment by his opponents in the making of peace. His fears were corn firmed. Even before the Executive could complete his negotiations with other governments, the Senate by informal round-robin expressed dissent. In January 192p after the \veary dead-! lock in the United States Senate ov-j er the ratification of the Versailles! treaty in which was incorporated the constitution at the League of Na tions. President Wilson, again con-! scious of party responsibility, ap- j pealed for a national "referendum" j tor decide whether the United States | should accept the Treaty and enter i the League of Nations. He made the suggestion for a "referendum" in a letter to a national gathering of Democrats at a Jackson Day banquet ? an occasion for party counsel. Six months later when the Democratic National Convention was in session in San Francisco, Wood-row Wilson felt that he should be nominated [again for the Presidency so that he ? might make the fight for the League. ? He held that his leadership was on : trial and that since He had made the I record he should enter the lists as . its defender. These were the days when Wood row Wilson had suffered a physical break-down. He had no serious ? thought, c course, of retaining the presidency for a third term if elect ed. But he hoped his health would return so that he mifht seek vin dication by a personal appeal to the i voters. His party associates at San Francisco, including Bainbridge Col by, Secretary of State, who was to have made the motion to suspend the rules and nominate Woodrow Wil j son for the presidency. Joined in a i telegram to the White House advis ? ing their chieftain that circumstan ces would prevent the passage oT I such a motion and that the plan had , better be abandoned. The telegram , was never published and Mr. Wilson never replied. Was the Election of 1320 the re ferendum Mr. Wilson sought? He I never thought so. Thirty-one Re publicans including such eminent statesmen as Elihu Rcrot, Charles Evans Hughes and Herbert Hoover signed a statement issued to the Re publican voters of the country de claring thut a vote for the Repub-i lican presidential candidate was a vote in favor of the League of Na tions with suitable reservations. When the Republican nominee took office he announced in his inaugural address that he would not favor en- 1 tering the League with or without1 reservations. The interpretation ofj Republican policy on which presum-: ably millions of voters had cast their I ballots was declared to have been er-' roneous. For that reason Woodrow i Wilson hoped for a clear-cut issue in the platforms of the presidential, contest but he died before the lines] of battle for 1924 could be drawn. So to the end Woodrow Wilson J carried his theory of personal re- i sponsibility to the party that had honored him with its leadership for eight years. (The next chapter will deal with the intimate side of Woodrow Wilson's life.) ?????? Wh?*n Time Is Precious j Give U? A Ring. The Apothecary Shop : Phone 400 ] Al.OXG THE WATERFRONT A four masted schooner, the Mar garet Thomas, is strandifd at Mos quito Lagi/on, Florida, according to reports received at the office of the superintendent of the Coast Guard in Elizabeth City Friday afternoon. The reports stated that the crew were all saved. The schooner Eugene H. Brown i arrived in port on Friday morning with a cargo of peas and miscellan ' eons from Little Alligator. She loaded outward at the foot of Bur gess street. Fresh i ? RAGRANT ; LOWERS i RYAN FLORAL CO., ; | Inc. DAY PHOXK 842 J i ! NIC1HT I'HO.VK 421 Yeofiel* in Tort. Tug Lamberts Point on ways. Schooner Eugene H. Brown, foot j of Burgess street. I Schooner Mark Stevens, foot of ' Main street. Steamer Texas, at Elizabeth City | Iron Works, waiting for charter. I Steam tug Viente y Tres. at Ellz 1 abeth City Iron Works, tied up. j Steamer Hertford at Elizabeth City Iron Works, waiting. North River Line. Steamer Annie L. Vansciver sailsi Tuesdays, Thursday and Saturdays | ?at 2:30 p. m. for Cowells wharf, Old; jTrap, Newberns Landing, Jarvisburg. . Barnetts Creek, Coinjock, Indian Isl-| I and. Long Point and Norfolk. Gas boat Eva sails Tuesdays and( I Fridays at 11 a. m. for Point Har ! bor. Halls Harbor, Hog Quarter, and j Kitty Hawk. Gas boat Jones sails Thursdays at' | 2 a. m. for East Lake. Gum Neck, i i Kilkenny and Fairfield. Elizabeth City Boat Line Steamers Harby and Virginia, | Dare ? daily at 3 p. m. for Jarvis-j I burg, Indian Island, Coinjock, Long! ' Point and Norfolk. Wanchese Line Motor vessel9 Hattie Creef and | Pompano sail Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays for Wanchese, Stum-| py Point, and Mann's Harbor. Matthews i.ine j Gas boat Ray sails Mondays,: Wednesday's and Fridays at 2 p. m. for South Mills. I WOOL prices good Portland, Oregan, March 1 (By The Consolidated Press) ? Wool' men in Idaho and Utah are begin-', ning at last to contract for the 1924 i clip of wool from their flocks. Prices! are rangif * from 38 to 40 cents a! pound in' te grease, for average Clip8. Stetsons The above cjt shows one of our early Spring Styles mad ? on The Marco Last Heelarch. nrown Calf Oxford. Invisable Eyelets. Heavy Sole, Square Heel with Rubber Tod Lift. 1WY V% A CALL TODAY Owens Shoe Co. ?| A NEW STORE Just Open, Opposite Quinn Furniture Co. BIG BARGAINS BOOTS, SHOES, CLOTHING Everything To Wear For The Family @| ?*? H* ? _ @ i @ f . i -w? ^ Wf have discontinued our nloro on Mnltliews St. and have opened a much ? tgc larger nlore in the old stand of A. Ellis oil I'oiudextcr Street, op|>ositc Quinn ? @ F urniliire Coinpuny. > ? W e want all our old customers to rail at this store and look at the big, new ? ? stock we arc showing. Everybody know h there are usually some very big bar- &* @ gains to be found when a store first open*, and we believe- you will not find a ? "** better plaee to do your spring shopping. 0 We are offering some especially good value* iu pieee good", riicIi as giug- ^ Inline, cottons, and other good*. Before you get ready to do your spring Dewing, ? eome here and eompare these prices. ? Thanking vim for your pant patronage and hoping for a continuance of the ? same. ? T. W. WILLIAMS & SON ' Tiro Store on Poindexter Street. One IS car Rnrge?? Street , The Other Opponite Quinn'* ? - >? ii ? ?? *KJl=Jl=Jl=i \ SPRING and NEW I H r= Clothes THEY'RE Inith here. Splen did are the new Suits, he cause ihe designers went the absolute limit in combining style, fabric and workman ship. Heady now for a vis it from you. SCHLOSS CLOTHES $30 to $45 SKILCRAFT $20 to $35 McCABE & GRICE THE BUSY STORE ? Gabriel Snubbers should be on your car. Endorsed by 71 automobile manufac turers who either standard equip or put holes in the car frames for them. Auto & Gas Engine Works ?g AB R I ELl NUBBEIf ?inTogi M It's a ?nubbar ?it's a ?OABRm" Kaap Ton an tba Saat MARINE RAILWAY DRY DOCK Elizabeth City Iron \Vorks & Supply Company MACHINISTS ANI> TOUJfDKHH Marino l.Alhvuy Dry Dork* ? lltillilcrs mul ftopAlrrrs of Boat*. .Mill ati