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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1920)
' TIW m iim"1"?1?!!!111100' TrE,pT- PW . . " HERE IT IS just What You Have Been Waiting For--A Real Old-Fashioned Shoe Sale-Your Chance to Save on Shoes, It won't take you long to realize the importance of this event. Tint f tua ..a j j . prepared to buy more than onepair There are no exaggerations or de. iis TmLZZ Sale starls Thursday mormng, June 10th, at 9 a. m. and will continue until further notice. reuuct.ons. Shoes Will Be Out on Tables and in Bins. Extra Sales People Will Be Here. '-And We Will Do All We Can To Serve You.-' Save On Shoes Extra Special. 24G pairs of ladies' shoes worth to : $2.95 Ladies' white canvas shoes, worth to $5, $2.95 Ladies Mack kid, cloth top shoes, worth to .iti.OO $4.45 Men's jrun metal blucher, all sizes $4.85 Men's gun metal button (English) $4.85 3 complete lines of ladies shoes, were $10,110 :. $7.85 Save On Slippers XTRA SPECIAL One big lot ladies' low shoes, worth to $3.00 v $1.95 Ladies' pumps and oxfords, worth to 7.00 $4.45 Ladies' patented one hole ties, were $12.50 $8.85 Ladies' kid oxfords, were $7.50. now $5.85 Ladies' black satin oxford, were 7.50 $3.95 Save On Sandals XTRA SPECIAL Uarefoot sandals, sizes 5 to 8 98c Sizes 8'2 to 11 $119 Sizes 12 to 2 $1.29 White tennis shoes and oxfords worth to $2.00 $1.39 Children's AVhite canvas oxfords 98c and Mary Janes $1.19 Save On Stockings XTRA SPECIAL Ladies' Wear-Well hose, black brown or white 33C Children's Iiuster lirown hose, blue, pink ' white 29c -Men's sox, were 85c, now 69c Men's sox, w ere 85c, now 69c Men's sox (white) 23c Ladies' fibre silk hose, were $1.00 79c Ladies $1.25 lisle hose, now 98c SHOE REPAIRING. BRING US YOUR WORK SEE THE DIFFERENCE. tarn ROSEBURG BOOTERIE IRVIN BRUNN Shoes that satisfy and fit your feet. Perkins Bldg., Cass St., Roseburg, Ore. SHOE REPAIRING. BRING US YOUR WORK SEE THE DIFFERENCE. pt and laid it before he senate. lie treat mass ul the American fk it said. "This covenant or the htm of nations will bring to the forld a laMing Peace." Fvprvnn. hni lasting peace and without 'iDf to consider or even to rend toti-nam, thousands unnn thnn. f ii of mod people united In the mo mat the senate ratify and ,tae leaaue at once and without Oration, lust as it stood Th. 1it!itan of the senate, perceiving HlllKera of the 1a,.t,, a.,,... M to resist Mr. Wilson's demand. "the cost of delaying the 3 of peace with Germany. They that the one thine nvn..... ..r me people "tr. that they might realize counsel of diplomats the working out or any salvation of the world from the things which It has suffered." And he said this In behalf of an al liance whose representatives will be tioned was pushed into an obscure 1 every day clearer to them that the corner. The people began to per- n .: . .. . Instead of being a guarantee for the (Continued from page two.) ceive with an intense clearness that this alliance, silent as to real peace agreements, contained clauses which threatened the very existence of the United States as an Independent power threatened its sovereignty, threatened Its peace, threatened Us life. The masses of the people be came articulate Public opinion steadily changed and today the num ber of Americans who would be will ing to accept the covenant of the league of nations just as the presi dent brought It back from Europe is neglible. The American people will never accept that alliance with foreign nations proposed by the president. The president meantime has remained inflexible. He is de termined to have that treaty as he brought it back or nothing and to that imperious demand the people will reply in tones which cannot be misunderstood. No man who thinks of America first needs for the ans swer. The Famous Article 10. Mr. Wilson said In a recent letter to Senator Hitchcock: "For my own part I am not willing to trust to the world's peace, was a breeder of war and an enemy of peace. As we studied It and a majority of sena tors desired to have some league if cupations of the people from the ments defeat Mr. Wilson's league as burden of war legislation and at the lie desires It. whether amended by same Uine have preserved to the him or in Its pristine simplicity. We United States under the terms of the must all light side by side lo keep resolution all benefits accruing to the safe and untouched the sovereignly United States under the provisions the Independence, the welfare of Ihe' possible which Bhould be a genuine .''.:.. " ."" -"" siutes. We hear the timid league of peace we found that It hr7 "". " , '. ? America will be isolated, dragged us not only Into every dls- ,h" , i . T5 aDd Ve""1 ,l Huvf ""- Th U'nlied Sta.e. can- pute and every war in Europe and in ,uh . " mMae w,,lch not be Isolated. The wo. Id needs us the rest of the world, but that our lUlthid ''"" . ?''''' fur loo much. We have never turned soldiers and sailors might be forced ,7. . . . . , ,. T ' cty "'" "u to give their lives In quarrels not Let us also In the battle we are to ' , Krk it exchange for the privilege of wage make no promises which can- J : :.n.llii.ir ,.,.if... Z ,h. P" . ' , , u wu eiuUMUB. " muni ana what It threat i SO he on. rt.h.i. i . n . ...... ut-piin ana " '"ted for more than a vear. uuinei mat portion of the the !e who Wished n (...-. I ,i j i K. . tanon.tis a "-' mi i aueous i an aipiomais ana politicians, i ney . ,wPanre of a cove-! will all act in behalf of the Interests hilk .. .. l . i... .linn nun never f; M possession kr(;( mnmrr tLVTwfl 'h,'r "'"'nods of T Public"y and "' were '"-len. The CT J.or u'iver a iT . hole country was with- ,, xh. or m.A ', .". Ku""sncir- rrl... ,K: ' "Preading tttlT. ..." , Pow'irful organs who ami of their respective countries and they will have nothing judicial about them. Strip the league of every j ciaure wnicn involves tne aciion or poimcai representatives in tne as sembly and the council and you leave but one article In which the diplo mats of the league as such will have no power. This Is the famous article 10. Host of the league covenant was prepared by General Smuts, of South Africa, but article 10 was the work of the president of the United States. It Is true this article is free from diplo mats, but it rests entirely upon naked foree. In that way peace Is to be preserved and the nations freed It . .""oca'lons but a. Tk. I.."1 '"'Tests Oflfrnm urn, h ml.llri- ,V ,.. ft. .. . ' "r UI'iJfO . . ' " J munililillBi us; 1 o them tk.. nie , tunltles for the use of force. Each r m Thev j ' 1 1 u n 1 1 1 es tor tne use or rorce. Eaen ened . ,k ,ne. Individual nation Is bound by article fir ,r"u-lx to go to war for the protection of a far more lm- th. ii ,. . ". thm I,.. r-'l and. ... rw. ther k, ' . " lar mre lm- fflre. '""r mf 1' nre" "Icnattire the territorial Integrity and the po- other their own at the bidding of foreign governments. It also appeared that our domestic questions, like Immigration, could be interferred with, that the interpreta tion of the Monroe doctrine was to be left to the decision of the league. that we were to be made participants In the outrageous disposition of Shantung which robbed a friendly nation and gave the proceeds of the robbery to her worst enemy, and that finally we were to have In the assent bly of the league only one vote to Great Britain's six. These provisions were all intolerable. Reservations were adopted which relieved us from every obligation under article X. which took all our domestic ques tions completely out of the Jurisdic tion of the league, which once and for all placed the Monroe doctrine beyond any interference by Europe or any foreign power, and which re fused our assent to Ihe cruel wrong of Shantung. We also made it im possible to subject the United States to the proposed inequality in voting power, for we profoundly believed that the United States must never take part in any council of the na tions where her vote was not equal to that of any other power represent ed, borne or us were deeply con vinced tnat tnere ought to be no league at all and that absolute safety could be obtained in no other way: others of us, more numerous, be lieved that the reservations I have described would protect the United states against the perils of the cove nant if we joined the league. We were all firmly united In our deter mination that the league as submit ted by Mr. Wilson must never pass. We were also agreed thai Mr. Wil son's league with what he called "in oe aamittea nan a pleasant touch of inanity, but whutever we do must be nuiiiui iu ua uiiusiun to me rreeaom uone in our own way, freely and of the seas. The house also passed without restraint from abroud. With a resolution repealing all war leglsla- no outKlde help since the Revolution tlon with three exceptions. The presl- we have come to what we are today dent vetoed It. His autocratic pow- We shall march on and not neglect ers must not be disturbed. Thui our duty to the world. When we me inrsiueni ueinniiHiraica again were culled to the defense of freo- inai unless ne coma nnve ills own noin and civilization In 1 H i 7 we did emcuy ami wnnout any moil l r l- - mil ian. we threw our great welehi cation he would not permit the coun try to be at pence, an exercise of ex ecutive power never contemplated by the constitution. There the story ends. We have stopped Mr. Wilson's treaty and the into the wavering scale and we were all the more effective, all the strong- uixaaie we went without alliance and of our own free will, as we should always go to help mankind. Let us stand fast bv the nrineitii... question goes to the people. In 1916 j nnu Policies of Washington and Mnn roe ana against utterly against, those of Mr. Wilson. We must be now and ever for Americanism and nationalism, nnd against Internation alism. There Is no safety for us, no hope that we can be of service to the world. If we do otherwise. l-'or the I uture of the Country. One word more before I close During all the tedious weeks an, I I months of the protracted struggle to ....... ..mr, iiwiii wiiui wn .nn. The l1" Nm nrt ,.. " . "'enainre: tnat is. ror tne proiec- be. ,,. . ' l,on states some of which are not wi f. .. V" r' "'"red as H.m..j.j ... : a " ..i Jl .-j law. nYhirT ?nt of ,,RT" n forth at the command of 1 de.."' TnHon, io nv ' aim mr terpretative reservations," or with the world at the time of " '"Tl."rL ,..'"m"p nurru, oo jubi an uau, juni an nit-u- acing. as the original. Twice we of fered the president and his most faithful supporters an opportunity to ratify Ihe treaty with reservations. Twice his followers, obedient to his orders, rejected the treaty with the reservations I have outlined. A Veto Without llnwon. The republicans of the senate then made another effort to nut an end to foreign countries unless we shattered the state of technical war with Ger all hone of world neace by breaking many and at Ihe same time rid the t i. yet neterfnlneit nr ABtahll.heri rnr ' t meant n. '. "n to protection of boundaries which !?" nd not Vi 1" no man can flne. We were o give it tv."", 'hat it dirt , ,or,m'n guarantee and any of the f,r Hams ,, ? Tfn- countries In the league In the event nicn of exterior aggression could have J"?15 loovin. I .' ""'"lona. riJT u 'o de.in, .? " solemn moral obligation. The re- country of those measures which k-a , "trnis. T)i. , 1 ""oilcans of the senate, no matter were adopted under tne war powers i . . n" re. i n . . . . ... . ... . . . rnmnti. wnat tneir futnr rate mignt oe. ot tne constitution ana wnicn are Ftam2i " "insure. - wr ""rmlned that the covenant clearly unconstitutional in time of States, all 4 lb. Mr. Wilson won on the cry that "he had keDt us out of war." He now demands the approval of the Ameri can people for his parly and his ad ministration on the ground that he has kept us out of peace. We of the senate believe tjat we have performed a high and patriotic duty and we ask you. representatives of the republican party, to approve our course and stand by what we have done. The next act will fill a larger stage and the people will de cide between us and the president. The league must be discussed in r-ve-rv district ami In every state and we desire to have the verdict so clearly given that no man who seeks to represent the people in the senate, in the house or In any place or any degree, can have the slightest doubt as to his duty. We make the issue; we ask approbation for what we have done. The people will now tell us what they think of Mr. Wilson's league and Its sacrifice of America. The shifting sewie in Europe, with Its wars and disputes. Its changing governments and fleeting boundaries which we are asked to guarantee, will instruct the people from day tn day and we confidently leave the fu ture and the protection of their sons and brothers and of the country's -ights in their hands. That future no man can predict but the country knows well In what spirit we repub licans will meet l. a spirit as differ- not be performed. Let us um Imi tate the democrats, who pliilmd themselves to reduce the cost of liv ing by lowering the turiff which they well knew, for even they must have known, that their pledtte wus impos sible of fulfillment, that the lilc'i cusi of living could not be aiT cteil in that way and every day sine "t In n bus proved the falsity of ihelr posi tion. Let us not pronii.se any mil Ioniums or pledge our rail Ii to the performance of impossibilities. Let us simply lay before the people n,ir principles and polit ies, policies uhirli are at once vigorous and practiealile and then pledge ourselves to do our utmost to carry, these policii-s into effect. This we can do mid we slionM bind ourselves no furlher. If th" righteousnsess of our cause will nol win. no false promises or di'lttsivv hopes will be of any avail. Let us be true to our highest truililiotiH be cause In them we shall llnd both an inspiration and a guide. Let past dissensions among ourselves be rele gated tot history and forgotten by us. Let all honest differences as to means and methods. If there are such, be set aside until November in order that the great and oveiTiillnir purpose In which wa all agre'1 ami which we long to achieve niav he nt- alned. Make onr declaration of principles so broad, so devoted to the one supreme ohji'Ct, that all may ac cept It and all work for the sa lominanl result. Thus Inspired, th-is united, we may feel nsssured that lax ATM AT O.NTAIllo. Charley Mallard, who formerly a cigar store on Sheridan meet in this city, and who has been 'i California for the past . few months, has purchased a bakery at Ontario, anil will make his borne there, according to word received hero this morning. Mr. Uullard's ion-ln-luw will be assuclutod with him in his new business. Ontario is a town of about BU00 population .hkI is located about sixty utiles from I.os Angeles. SCIIIilll' IIIXIMEK. trumpets blown we shut! march fortl' to a victory, not for onr pnrty alone but for principles nnd beliefs which nre absolutely vltnl If the Anier(ey! republic Is to continue on its trhnn phnnt course and the hopes of hu manlty. so bound up in the fortune f Ihe United States, nre to lie fulfilled. ceived to be Ihe dire perils lurking I when the banners nre lifted nnd tin in me covenant ot tne league of na tions, which Mr. Wilson presented to us, party was scarcely ever men tioned nor was the effect of our ac tion upon the parly considered. To this spirit I think our cuccess was largely due. We made up our hiinds as to what our duty and our general policy ought to lie and then' the only difference was as to the best way In which that duty could be per formed. I believe that the great party which we represent here today has made up its mind as to its alti tude upon Mr. Wilson's league and all that is carried wlih it of danger and of menace. In making our con test before the people let us think of what the public Interest, the future existence of ihe United States, de mand without any consideration of party enect aai.i-:. vai.i.i:v XOTEK. snf pioite union A lllinilier of people hen ferlng from bad colds this Quite a nuinhero four and others attended the Wilbur Saturday. Win. Levins and Henry Luke an shearing sheep this week. Jesse S'-ott Is husv shoiilini: piis When we put the word eons In order to save the prune cr The Twlllnlit league will resume ts si-Ik ilule this evening at 6:l'i, v illi a gamo between the Baptist and i M'sbvlei-ian clubs. The game last i-'rid.iy between the Christians and l'rfhj ivvinns was a win for the "ii-ilij lerians by a score of 1.1 to ". This made the first loss for lha t hristian team, and the first win for the Presbyterian!., The two '"'" Ihul play this afternoon have i:i h won a game, and are going in " piny this afternoon for all it " worth to put over another win. Ml t lie teams are strengthening, and nine L'ood games are being wltness d hv ihe baseball sports. The game v.ill bcKin about fi: I 5. !.:! I!I I,IMI I't.AT IMtKSHXTEO The city council Inst night re lived a plat of the Laiirelwood ad I'ttlon which has been thrown open 'v the Casey-Harding Ijind Co. This ; '' shows the streets and lota and e manner in which the land has 'en nii-ited. One change was mado 'uei-idlng for an extension of liar .nil avenue, Mr. Casey dedicating a ' I -foot street for this purpose. SCOUTS STAItT HIKE. lit i ! Ill Twenty two Hoy Srotits started In ii morning for their ennin at Rock gold" into our platform In 1806 we ook from the ordinary nolltlenl (loinl of view great risks but we went ent from that of the president as day : to the people confident In the justice from night. The people know our! of our cause and won. The way to nollcy: thew know Mr. Wilson's and i assure victory now Is to remember thev will choose between them. They always that Mr. Wilson and his party will tear aKd the veil of words i threaten not only In Ihe league but woven to blind and deceive and cornel In regard to the very foundations of down to the essential and vital point 'our government. Let us for our part Mr. Wilson's plnn on one side, the ' think of nothing except our cause Independence and safety of th" Unit- and with that great end clear before ed States on the other. To deter- us let us behold with indifference mine aright this question. Involving "the lenser rhances and inferior the fate and fortunes of the United ' hopes meantime go pouring hat Is one way to keep down the bih i-ost of livina Walter Gorsltne Is working R. K. Wells at present. I'AXSV. fo creek. They will hike as for 'A h'utlcr's houl today and will camp H ere tonikiit. Kai-h hoy carries suf li lent provisions for two davs and ; '-m I is blanket and extra clothing. e main part of the camping outfit '- been forwarded by truck, the Ma h ue having been donnted by H. Morten. The boys will remain In amp for two weeks. cami' f;i(!r:.i imimiox i:mi: is. il hi of republicans, all Amerl- only eonri I ,n ,nat unmodified peace. Tney would tnua nava re-1 cans, must join togeiner ana in ineir 1 mB- should never be ratified. It became lieved th business and th daily oc-lown way and with their own argu- So thinking, so past. believing, we must The council was nli'bt that a niiiuhe i enfs have been made at tin- auto tourist camp grounds. Aiiit ioi .il toilets have beep provided uml the r.ove topi will he Installed in a fi w davs. The council Is preparina to I! TTI,l:SAKE IS SHOT. I' no M.Mth hilled a four fe I Unrronrhs. a l.i-year-old residing at Green, Sunday rattle snake which measured I In length. The snake had eluhi rattbs and was by no means bahy. The boy heard the snake win because the fight we are making TJnt eoo'essjiiis to aotuo per on cr lling In the grass and Immediately la ror ine ngni. j uu win agree iu mite caurge oi m'.'j .snot It with a rifle.