Is there an image? Or data to rank?
I believe your answer is C.
For A, we were never in the League of Nations in the first place, so why would we want to enforce any policies related to it?
For B, this is was in no way to stimulate the economic growth of the US. That's is the obviously wrong answer.
For D, The Neutrality Acts wanted nothing to do with the war. It didn't care if they be any peacekeeping troops in Europe. It supported to keep the US out of the war, and that's all.
They did not typically fight in traditional means and employed guerrilla warfare against the British. Ambushing the British and catching them off-guard was the colonist's best tactic.
The statement that best expresses Theodore Roosevelt's attitude toward the muckrakers would be that "<span>A. The work of muckrakers is vital to the continued well-being of all Americans," since he was very much in favor of eliminating corruption in big business and government. </span>
In the years leading up to the Missouri Compromise of 1820, tensions began to rise between pro-slavery and anti-slavery factions within the U.S. Congress and across the country. They reached a boiling point after Missouri’s 1819 request for admission to the Union as a slave state, which threatened to upset the delicate balance between slave states and free states. To keep the peace, Congress orchestrated a two-part compromise, granting Missouri’s request but also admitting Maine as a free state. It also passed an amendment that drew an imaginary line across the former Louisiana Territory, establishing a boundary between free and slave regions that remained the law of the land until it was negated by the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854.