Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, July 23, 1920, Page 9, Image 9

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    THE THOTIXING'- OREGOMAX, FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1920
CONFIDENCE IN LEADER CHOSEN
BY REPUBLICANS EXPRESSED
Speech of Henry Cabot Lodge at Marion, O., July 22, Notifying
Warren G. Harding of His Nomination for President.
S'
I EXATOR LOEK1K. in notifying: Sen
ator Harding of his nomination.
taid:
Senator Harding, we are assembled
here as a committee representing the
states, territories and possessions of
the United States to make to you for
mal announcement of your nomina
tion for the office of president of the
republic on June 12, last, al Chicago,
by the republican national conven
tion. This duty is to us as pleasing
as it is honorable, but we are also
deeply conscious of its far-reaching
Importance.
We fully appreciate that what you
eay to us'today will not only be read
and pondered by all the American
people within the confines of the
United States but also by all other
civilized nations. Here today you will
chart the course to be followed by
the' republican party in the great
electoral contest, which lies before us
and will declare your purposes and
those of the party you lead when the
authority of government is once more
committed to our keeping.
We await this declaration un
troubled by any doubts and with the
most entire confidence. All who are
familiar with your character and
career and most especially those who
have taken part with you in public
eervice known beyond a peradventure
that you are a patriotic American,
imbued with the spirit of the great
leaders of the past, of Washington,
Lincoln and Roosevelt, whose ser
vices to the American people have
become forever memorable in pur
history.
f'onntry'a Interests First.
Tou will always, and instinctively.
In meeting the difficult questions and
weighty responsibilities which con
front you, think with complete un
selfishness of your country and your
country's interests first, a high quali
fication for an exalted office not too
familiar to us of late and therefore
peculiarly necessary at this moment.
You will, we are certain, be ever
faithful to the finest traditions of the
republican party and at the same
time, we are equally cure that you
are wisely tolerant and open-minded.
In sympathy with the best movements
of the time, looking forward to the
future and its needs but never un
mindful of the great basic principles
upon which the builders of the re
public laid the foundation of our
government
Your public life has shown to us
and all your fellow citizens that you
believe in the system of government
designed by the framers of the con
etitutlon.
Lowavertnff Conviction Shown.
They established a representative
democracy and had no sympathy with
any scheme which would turn the
government of the United States Into
an autocracy based upon a plebiscite
and with all the intervening repre
tentative features disregarded or ef
faced. You have abundantly shown
your unwavering conviction that the
Eovernment of the United States
should be one of laws and not of men
and that the three branches of that
grovernment should all work together
In the exercise of the powers con
ferred upon them severally by the
constitution, fon the common purpose
of advancing the general welfare of
the people.
The makera of the constitution In
tended to co-ordinate the three great
elements of government and strove to
guard against either usurpation or
trespass by one branch at the ex
pense of the other two. In that
spirit, we all know well, you will
enter upon your great responsibility.
Confidence In Expressed.
Domestic and economic questions
of extreme complexity and difficulty
proposed protecting reservations
which he defeated together with the
treaty Itself. In that work, you, sir.
took a conspicuous part and we know
that you -were in full accord with the
belief of your republican colleagues
that the league of nations as pro
posed by Mr. Wilson and upon which
he and his party still insist ought
never to be accepted by the Ameri
can people. We have been and are
quite ready to join In agreement with
other nations, for the extension of
the Hague conventions: for the up
building and codification of interna
tional law and the establishment of
a world court of justice; for interna
tional conferences in regard to non
justiciable questions, and for ar
rangements to bring about a general
reduction of armaments.
Constructive Measures Recalled.
All these constructive measures are
in accord with the traditional policy
of the republican party which has
done so much in the past to forward
the cause of international arbitration.
But when we are called upon to be
come an integral part of a permanent
alliance of foreign powers, to put
ourselves in a position where the
youth of the country can be sum
moned by foreign nations to fight
and die in quarrels not their own, to
entangle ourselves in all the conflicts
and disputes of Europe where we
have no interest, to permit foreign
interference with our domestic ques
tions and with the Monroe doctrine.
and to sit in an assembly where our
vote Is not the equal of that of every
other country, we absolutely decline
the proposition.
We stand for the policies of Wash
ington and the doctrine of Monroe.
and against the internationalism and
the permanent alliance with foreign
nations proposed by the president. If
the world needs us as they needed us
in 1917 we shall not fall in our duty,
but we can help other nations far
better if we are free and untram
meled and do not permit our strength
and our resources to be wasted and
worn away and the lives of our young
men to be sacrificed in endless hos
tilities with which, we have no con
cern.
Grave Issues Involved.
Such has been the policy of the re
publican party as represented in the
senate and such its policy will re
main. We are certain that you who
helped so largely to frame this policy
will, when the executive authority
comes into your hands, carry it out
in such manner that we can fulfill
all our responsibilities to the world
without binding ourselves by any ob
ligations to a league which as sub
mitted by the president is but an
other name for the evil combination
which was attempted a hundred years
ago by the ill-omened Holy Alliance.
No national campaign for the presi
dency has ever involved graver issues
than this one, which now lies before
us. Upon you, sir, will rest the great
duty and heavy burden of executive
authority. We look to you in full con
fldence to lead us and the people of
our beloved country out from the
darkness and confusion which the
war has brought upon mankind into
the light which shines upon a na
tion where peace reigns and the love
of justice, of law and of order rules
in the hearts of the people. Then we
can again take up the work of ad
vanclng the United States along the
broad road that leads to success, the
road which . we have followed for
more than a century. Then indeed
we shall not only rise to still loftier
heights of achievement for ourselves
but be enabled to render the largest
and finest service to humanity.
WESTERN DISTRICT WINS
must be dealt with at once In such a KXICHTS COLUMBUS SCHOOLS
way as to meet the needs of the time.
SLAKE GOOD SHOWING.
Portland Institution, Being Over
bauled Preparatory to Open
Ing in September.
K -
ws."'imi'
3 n
FACTORY
AM
PLE
HOP
on; Morrison Street, Bet. Fourth and OQ?
OO Fifth Next to Corbett Building LiOJ
We shall not attempt to discuss these
questions in' any detail because we
know that you will declare your
policies in regard to them in accord
ance not only with the life-long
principles of the republican party but
also with the opinions recently de
clared by the republican convention
at Chicago.
It Is not for us to enumerate them rr.. witern district i-nmnri.in.
to you for it is to you that we look I ... .
. h ., . f 1 the Pacific coast section, made the
be Dursued by the republican party best showing of the entire country
both in the campaign and when at the recent national conference of
charged with the responsibility of ad- Knights of Columbus evening school
ministration and legislation. principals and registrars at Chicago.
v., "wo-- " ' according to J. P. OHara, principal
all republicans and all true Ameri- , . , . ' .
.cans who are thinking of the prob- ot tne local school at 290 Grand ave-
lems and perils of the present and nue north, who has returned from the
of the future is to give you such I Chicago session
generous and compile support that At the conference were representa
.. ...... 1 uves or an tne 75 rree evening
mI.t,i ni fmd . or, schools for service men established
senate in full sympathy with your throughout the country during the
purposes and ready to aid you in Past year by the 'Casey' committee
every way in carrying them to ful- on war activities, and from each sec-
fiii.viont tion ot tne country were brought
.... I exhibits showing the character of
. 1 . I work done at the different schools.
me Present snuaiion. nowever, An exhibit prepared by A. G. Bagley
. . 1 I of San Francisco, Pacific coast di
or foreign poucy-io a oegree rector, was declared the best at the
KnDn ...our previous niSlory - M conference, said Mr. OHara, and it
our own doors we have Mexico in a was cnosen to be taken to New ork
Mdit o! u,u a..u Ui...icBiailuu to be exhibited at the national con
io nuicn vui Kuvei mucin, lias un
happily, most liberally contributed
Here is a grave responsibility not to
be evaded or escaped. We rightly
insist upon the supremacy - in the
American hemisphere of the Monroe
BIG business men who work hard, yet
have little or no time for physical
exercise, need Schlitz.
A glass of Schlitz at mid-day will stimu
late, refresh and satisfy without contrib
uting to nervous indigestion, and without
burdening the system with waste.
Schlitz is food as well as drink it con
tains every element necessary to the hu
man body, for the building-up of tissue
broken down by nervous energy and for
the replacement of body fuel.
Schlitz is pure properly aged will not
ferment in the stomach and will not
cause biliousness.
The Brown bottle protects the purity of
Schlitz until it reaches your glass.
On sale wherever drinks are sold,
order a case for your home from
Phone Broadway 1920
Allen & Lewis
40-54 Front Street, North
Portland, Ore.
Don't Be Misled. Beware of Imitation Sample Shops and Sale Imitations. Look.
for the Big Sign with Hand Pointing to 28(3 Morrison St, Factory Sample Shop
All summer and spring apparel to go regardless of price. Most every
garment reduced way below cost. We must close out all summer garments.
Bottles
r4
TSte Drink That Blade Milwaukee Famous
D. J. Hille and P. J. Parker. Castle I according to word received yesterday I chief of police of Chehalis. Mr.
Rock, commissioner from third dis-i by Lloyd Dysart. commander of thi KniJek formerly lived in Doty, this
trict; J. A. Parker, commissioner first j Grant Hodge post. Centralia and Se-
district; W. G. Johnson, Kalama, for
coroner; C. C. Rulifson, Kelso, for
representative: G. G. Comer, justice of
the peace in South Kalama precinct,
filed for re-election. This office has
a bonanza in the way of marriages.
AU these filings are on the republican
ticket.
D-'Olier to Visit Centralia.
CENTRALIA, Wash., July 22. (Spe
cial.) Franklin D'Olier, national com
mander of the American Legion, will
visit Centralia shortly after August 7,
on his way from Portland to Seattle,
vention of Ui Knights of Columbus
there next week.
Mr. O'Hara, while in Chicago, had
the pleasure of a visit with his
brother, Frank O'Hara, former Port-
1 .J ...i.n, n,U i nick t V.
(iwiiiiic, v. 1 1 1 v ii v.aa vici 111 1 r u uj via 1 1 1 i - ,... r. v. 7 V. ; - . .
order to guard the safety of the "t w V. B ' "'w-
.-rl . j ,. ,K . . , I of the Washington, D. C. school, one
United Mates and save the new world 1 - . , . . . . , . ...
. . of the largest in the country with
. ........ . ....... 1 UVVV.
misfortunes of the old. We justly
. w. ' , c 1 O'Hara is professor of economics at
demand the abstention of r-urope I , , .fl . . t ,
ton.
from any interference with American
questions, but this doctrine of ours
brings with it not only its benefits
but its duties
The condition of Mexico, owing in
our government, could not well be its evening classes, is closed for the
wnrBP nri w mst mako r, o,,r summer, and Principal O'Hara and
The Portland school, located at 290
Grand avenue north, which during the
past spring registered over 800 for
mer soldiers, sailors and marines in
minds that we not only owe it to ou-
Frank
J. Whalen,
registrar, will
Condemnation Proceedings to Be
Filed by State.
nmioM tKe-o c Qn tv, spend the next few weeks in reno-
world. American rights and Interests vating the class rooms, and securing
so long neglected, but to reach out additional school equipment, prepara
a helninsr hand to the Mexican neonle torv to opening the school again in
to the end that law and order mav September, shortly after Labor day.
be estabilshcd in that "country which
cursed with continuous civil war. It RIGHT OF WAY IS SOUGHT
is of the highest importance to the
United .States that Mexico snould be
both prosperous and peaceful and we
must face the fact that -without our
aid the Mexican people cannot nron
erly or speedily bring about the im- THE DALLES, Or., July 22. (Spe
proved conditions and tfre reign of cial.) Condemnation proceedings to
law and peace, which, we are con- 1 secure rignt or way to Duua a road
vinced. they desire as much as we I connecting the present county road
do. and the west approach .of the new
Wllnon'n Acts Answered. highway bridge spanning the De
Tn defense of freedom and civiliza- schutes river will be initiated short-
tion and to vindicate our own invaded ly by the attorney-general's office
rights we entered upon the war with according to authentic information
Germany and although we were tardv I received nere loaay
tn taking part in that great conflict! The Wasco county court was noti
we came upon the field of action ia I tied about six months ago to take
time to turn the scale for right and I steps to secure the right or way
liberty. Not content with aiding ! needed to connect the county road
attle will be the only Washington
cities visited by D'Olier. It is planned
to hold a reception for the national
commander here, to which representa
tives of all posts in southwest Wash
ington will be invited.
Candidacy for Sheriff Declared.
CHEHALIS, Wash.. July 22. (Spe
cial.) Jos. G. Knizek has filed his
declaration of candidacy for the
nomination for sheriff of Lewis coun
ty, republican. Mr. Knizek had active
service in the late war and since his
discharge and return home has been
county.
Moore Estale Hearing Set.
WALLA WALLA. Wash.. July 22.
(Special.) Date for final hearing and
distribution of the estate of the late
ex-Governor Miles C. Moore has been
set for August 31. The net value of
the estate for distribution is $484,116.
on which an inheritance tax of
$9761.79 was paid. The heirs are
Whitman college. $50,000; Beulah V.
Moore, a daughter-in-law, $22,883;
Walter Moore, a grandson. $32,361;
Frank Moore, son. $171,286; Robert
1 Moore, son. $207.58.".
Genuine
o
o
ion
Bayer introduced Aspirin to physicians 19 years ago-Always say "Bayer"
The "Bayer Cross" is the thumb-print of
genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." It pro
tects you against imitations and positively iden
tifies the genuine, world-famous Aspirin pre
scribed by physicians for over nineteen years.
Insist on an unbroken package of genuine
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" which contains
proper directions.
Europe to bring to pass the peace
which all desired after victory was
won. Mr. Wjlson undertook to make
us members of an alliance with for
eign powers indefinite in extent and
containing provisions which threat
ened the independence, the sovereignty
and the safety of the United States.
This effort on the part of the presi
dent was arrested by the action of
and the new bridge, but has failed
thus far to institute the necessary
proceedings.
Cowlitz Candidates Continue Piling.
KELSO, Wash., July 22. (Special.)
Senator Frank G. Barnes filed- for
re-election as senator from Cowlitz
county this week. Others who have
the republicans of the senate who filed during the past few days are
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents Larger packages.
Aspirin Is the- trade mark 61 Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidetter of Sallcyllcacld
n " i :
260 Jersey Dresses
Mostly all sizes, values to $35, at
?10.9o, $9.95 and
Accordeon Pleated Dresses
With wide ribbon belts, values to $30,
must go at only
All new shades, values to
$35, must go at
i
i
!i KM mm
IB 0J jit'
'; s ? 1
241 Polo Coats
. $8.95
170 Women's Suits
Spring and summer models, JJ 1 Q QC
values to $55, must go at only. dlOiiJ
Genuine Sale!
85 Samples
Dresses, Coats and Suits. Advanced fall and
winter styles on exhibition.
Most beautiful garments and surely worthy
of your inspection.
Thousand Waists
Greatest bargains yet offered to the pub
lic. Silk, Georgettes, Crepes de Chine and
Tricolette Blouses, values to $22.00 to
close out at only $6.95,
$4.95 and
S2.95
211 Novelty Suits
in most beautiful designs to be the feature of
this genuine closing-out sale; values to $85.00,
to go at only $36.95 O Q QC
and , 410t0
SOS Sweaters
To close out ; values to $15.00 O Qtf
at only $4.95 and 3-.D
Money's Worth or Money Back
M
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