NO. 9, PROTOCOL OF ARBITRATION, SECURITY AND PART III. DISCUSSION BY JOHN H. CLARKE, FORMER JUSTICE U.S. SUPREME COURT; A. LAWRENCE LOWELL, PRESIDENT OF HAR- VARD UNIVERSITY; ELIHU ROOT, FORMER SECRETARY OF STATE. COVENANT OF THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS (AMENDED). PROTOCOL A POPULAR DISCUSSION OF THE PROTOCOL, BY JUSTICE JOHN H. CLARKE 509 TENTATIVE DRAFT OF A TREAty for a League of Nations, approved by the Executive Committee of the League to Enforce Peace, New York, NO. 10, THE AMERICAN TREATY OF LAUSANNE by EDGAR W. TURLINGTON, Assistant to the Solicitor, Depart- ment of State The corporation is constituted for the purpose of educating the people of all nations to a full knowledge of the waste and destructiveness of war, its evil effects on present social conditions and on the well-being of future generations, and to promote international justice and the brotherhood of man; and, generally, by every practical means to promote peace and good will among all mankind.-By-laws of the Corporation. It is to this patient and thorough work of education, through the school, the college, the church, the press, the pamphlet and the book, that the World Peace Foundation addresses itself.-Edwin Ginn. The idea of force can not at once be eradicated. It is useless to believe that the nations can be persuaded to disband their present armies and dismantle their present navies, trusting in each other or in the Hague Tribunal to settle any possible differences between them, unless, first, some substitute for the existing forces is provided and demonstrated by experience to be adequate to protect the rights, dignity and territory of the respective nations. My own belief is that the idea which underlies the movement for the Hague Court can be developed so that the nations can be persuaded each to contribute a small percentage of their military forces at sea and on land to form an International Guard or Police Force.Edwin Ginn. *Incorporated under the laws of Massachusetts, July 12, 1910, as the International School of Peace. Name changed to World Peace Foundation, December 22, 1910. LEAGUE OF NATIONS Published Bimonthly by WORLD PEACE FOUNDATION 40 MT. VERNON STREET, BOSTON, MASS. The subscription price is 25c. per year in advance. Prices in quantities on application. General Secretary, Edward Cummings. Corresponding Secretary, and Librarian, Denys P. Myers. 8-31-1921- CONTENTS PAGE LIST OF AMERICANS MENTIONED 4. International Labor Conference. 5. International Labor Office . 9. Brussels Financial Conference 10. Financial Reconstruction of Austria 11. Financial Reconstruction of Hungary 36. Expenses of the League and the International Court 37. Publications of the League, the International Court and the Inter- 25 |