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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1920)
niz owO;; .daily .jou;:;;al, ; ohtlaud, . o-cou. - i Km SB. IN CONNECTICUT By Darld Lawrence . - (CoprrfcM, mo. by The Joereal) Hertford. Conn.. Oct. ll.Tb ; luu In Connecticut la neither Cox .' ' nor Hardlnr. but Brandegee, who la 1 desperately struggling for reelection to the Unlted Statea senate, where " he haa served, for 16 years. Woman suffrage, which Senator Brandegee consistently opposed, haa made the r race uncertain. It Isnf that Brandegee fought woism v" suffrage, but the way he fought It. Sis ' alleged contemptuous attitude toward 1 ' the suffrage forces,, has stirred Indlg , nation even among Republican women. . . Besides that he has arrayed against him . the people who want to see the Leaguo ? , of Nations established., either with or I without reservations. Senator Brande- gee has been from Ote outset a member ( of the "Irreconcilable" group- which has opposed any league of nation. v I CONFUSING STSTEM USED ' Senators Borah and McCormlck have nSade speeches here supporting his antl- league views, and Senator Johnson is T ' coming to help later on. Senator Lodge i. !' has appealed in person to the people of '' ' Ibis state to vote for Brandegee. There - 'is no doubt that the seat of Senator i Brandegee has been and Is in danger. The at, ' outcome depends largely on the else of the . Harding majority, ror the state will go Republican by a decisive vote. If it 1 should give a 50,000 majority to Hard ing, Brandegee will be swept into office with the tide. i It seems to be conceded that he will run far behind Harding and if he gets as far back as 30,000. then Congressman . Augustine Lonergan, the Democratic ' nominee, may squeeze In. Many of the friends of Lonergan fear that the women of the state will not make use of their opportunity to defeat Brandegee, as the voting machines are employW here and there seems to be an impres sion that feminine voters will become ' confused when they enter the polling booths and do what so many male voters have done In other states, namely, vote t a straight ticket because they cannot figure out how to cut or scratch" a can didate. ALL G. 0. P. FOB HIM ' On the other hand, the indignation of many women against Brandejree's reoord Is such that they would rather vote a : straight Democratic ticket and be sure they have punished Brandegee than to take a chance. Their feeling about the presidential contest itself is secondary ' to the senatorial race. The amusing thing about the fight being made to save Brandegee is the ' fact that he is receiving support from - the Borah-Johnson, or progressive wing, as well as the Lodge, or conservative, branch of the Republican party. The former supports the Connecticut sen ator on his anti-league views and nays . nothing about his record on domestic : . quctlons, while the other element In the Republican party really wants- Brande gee's vote to help the conservative Re- publicans from the East tell the radical ? Republicans from the West that they , tannot control the policies of the party J on such mattrs as taxation, the tariff V and kindred subjects ' BRCORD OF REACTION f The Hartford Times, which Is fighting Brandegee, puts the case against him in ' a nutshell when It says the Republicans i want to commit the state "to six years more of service by the man who voted against having any Investigation of Lor . ttner and who voted against direct elee- tlon of senators, against the income tax, against the Adamson eight-hour law, failed to vote on the child labor law, voted to retain the 16-hour day for rall- - road , men, voted against prohibition, voted against woman suffrage, helped Senator Lodge pack the foreign relatione i committee of the United States senate, 1 voted against the peace treaty at every opportunity, Insulted President WiUon v and ex-President Taft by his comments, made insulting allusion to women in his m comments on suffrage, though they ap- pear to have been edited out of his .. speech as It - apears in the Congressional Record." j - Now, the Hartford Courant, the Re-- publican organ here, is making a hard fight for Brandegee, and though the Courant has lota of fun the year around j finding Inconsistencies in the sayings of c public men, the tables are turned, for the Democrats are making excellent use Of this quotation from the Courant it ; self In January. 1309. during a contest for the senatorial nomination : .r. . WHO WANTS BBAXDEUEE! V "The reason for electing Frank B. ' Brandegee to the senate Is that he wants to sit there, and the reason for electing Ebeneser J. Hill is that the people Of the state want him to sit there." , . In 'another issue of that month the v Courant said : "We find Mr. Brandegee with a record of seven years' at Washington, three . years in the house and four in the sen . ate, and practically nothing at all to f show for all this except an alliance with the reactionary element with which the - people of Connecticut can have no sym . pathy at all." Still, newspapers, like newspaper men, , are Often forgiven their inconsistencies 4 -and the fight In this state turns more upon what the women voters really think of Brandegee on his legislative record i than what his newspaper supporters are saying about the necessity of letting by gones be bygones In order to give Sen t ator Harding, if he is elected, a sub ? atantlal mapority in the senate. Wilson Registers, to Vote at Princeton Princeton. N. J.. Oct 13. ill. P.) President and Mrs. Wilson have regis tered here by mall for the November election. Mayor Charles Brown said to day. They are expected to vote by mail aiso. -.. Mrs. wuson a aiiiaavit aid not state her age. - , .tof! -1 Villi HAVAtlfl , 134-2 fc? 25$ Japanese Delegates On Way to Geneva Seattle, Oct. U.(V. P.) Among the passengers on the liner Fushlml Maru, which arrived 4n port last night, wera two members of the Japanese delega tion to the League of Nations congress In Geneva November IS M. Matsuda and Viscount .MushakojU They were accompanied by the Viscountess Musha kojl and Mrs. E. Takeda, the latter the wife of a member of the Japanese lega tion at Washington. v BULGNS MOTHER FELT PREMONITION (Br Felted Newt) Chicago. Oct., 13. Mrs. E. J. Bul gin of Portland, Or., visiting her slater. Mrs. F. Peavey of thla city, had a premonition that some serious accident was about to happen to her 21 -year-old son, Arthur, a grand opera singer. "It's foolish to feet thfs way," Mrs.' Bulgin was .telling her sister, "but I Just can't help being worried." Aa she finished speaking a messenger boy came to the door. ' He had a tele gram from the Rev. E. J. Bulgin, an evangelist of Portland. It read: "Ar thur was killed today. His gun acci dentally exploded while he was hunting." BULGIN, BRINGING SON'S BODY, IS MET BY WIFE The Dalles, Oct 13. The Rev. E. J. Bulgin and son, William, accompanied by a party of ministers and friends, arrived here In a machine Tuesday afternoon from Sunnyside, Wash., where hUt son, Arthur waa killed in a hunting accident Saturday. The party had with them a fine pedi greed hunting dog. Gyp, belonging to Ralph Lyons, who, accidentally shot young Bulgin. Lyons, heartbroken over the affair, following his confession at the Bulgin revival meeting Sunday night. Insisted on giving the dog to Dr. Bulgin. Dr. Bulgin met his wife, the latter's two sisters, and her brother at The Dalles. They came from Chicago on hearing of the accident, and Dr. Bulgin and party, boarding the same train, left for Portland. The widow of Arthur Bulgin left New York with her mother Tuesday, according to a message re ceived here Tuesday afternoon. The funeral is to be held in Portland Sat urday morning. old dear He knows thi 1 J 7 Hina i Anybody can send a gift box of chocolates, but he marks himself as a man of taste and discernment who sends Sweet's. And another thing with Sweet's, you pay a compliment. By your choice of these chocolates of known superior' ity you say, in effect, that only the best jjood enough for the girt, lnat 8 one of the reasons Sweet s are douhly appreciated. Chocolates by Sweet are obtainable in a score of well-chosen varieties. For instance, try Sweet's Brazil Nuts in Creme, Rialto Assortment, All-Chew ing, Nuts and Fruits there's an assort' ment to suit every taste. o4t better JeaUrt heresold 'Jl. M I s J CHOCOLATES pj V : BIBl J ilSEJWlfeJ y AG1 ISHMNG STAND, SAYS COX By Harry Lu Rogers Peoria, III. Oct. .11. (L N. S.) Senator Harding, alarmed by the great wave of protest against his re pudiation of the League ot NatlJha, Is now "back orf bis front porch" declaring that, he has been misun derstood and that he Is for "an as sociation of nations," Governor James M. Cox said in his speech here today. Cox charged that Harding had vacil lated from one position to another and that at least 11 distinct changes in at titude wars recorded, by his league record. The front line of the reactionary forces of the senatorial oligarchy has already been penetrated, though it is only. October, and before November the line will have collapsed entirely. Gov ernor Cox declared. "They are backing away from the front trench," Cox continued. "They' will be at the second trench soon and I give you my word that when they reach the third trench they'll be going so fast they won't even see It" Cox again charged that there is a "conspiracy of silence" to keep the facts of this campaign from the people. "In St. Louis last night we had the greatest meeting in the history of that great city," the governor said, "yet the Chicago newspaper which I saw this morning said nothing about Its being an unusual meeting." Going into article X- of the league covenant in great detail. Cox said it was -simply the Biblical declaration, "Thou ehalt not steal." Mail Right Restored To Socialist Paper Washington, Oct 13. (U. P.) Post master General Eurleson today was or dered to restore to the New York Call, Socialist newspaper, the privileges of the mails. The order was Issued by Jus tice Hits of the District of Columbia supreme court. Hits denied a motion for rehearing. Counsel for Burleson then asked for a writ of supersedeas. staying the execution of the order. Ap plication for the writ will be passed on late today. likc recipient of the mm 111 I I II HIM ,1 AIM LIS MLMfT IM!M "L."T ..lav ill WmIML c?HsrS (tf) The New Fitted Candy in the Handy Tm Aalim'tsBwStXTfecUtyyewmtarelywaattetry: Lmcwui eieaas-auea, crisp-coatee' gloa caacs, kept fron ia hamesil eir-etht UM s 4esea sujity IUtoti Uul far table, hone, etorin( or any ether me. Ask your Dealer. Rdtarians'Request a .weeK to uonsiaer Salvage Project Before embarking In a "city-wide sal- age bureau plan for the renovation and distribution of second hand garments, members of the Portland Rotary club asked Tuesday for another week's con sideration of a plan presented by A. J. Bale and George C. Mason. The proposal was that tho members of the club organise a salvage corpor ation and, to finance preliminary opera tion, sell bonds of - low denomination. Garments, contributed and - renovated, would be sold to charities at cost, but at a moderate profit to persons pa tronising a proposed second-hand cloth ing store. All profits. It was said, would be distributed among the chari ties participating. The club unanimously 'adopted a res olution condemning the 5 per cent inter est bill on the November ballot. Water Proves to Be Gas; Home Is-Gone Rocky Ford. Colo., Oct 13. (U. P.) Clem Ryan, rancher. Is homeless. He thought he placed a pall of water on a hot stove. : The water waa gasoline. There was a flash and a few minutes later no house. No one waa Injured. Pas a Democrat, Grandpa's aRepublican. and Ma's Independent but when it comes to the Food Administration , we all vote For Post III, ,T 1 fc. COaS. NIECEwlLL TELL PEOPLE WHY TIM' SHOULD. WIN By James Lu Kllsajlen (United Frew Staff Conmooadtst)r Evanston. 81., Oct 13. If tnere Is any one thing that can be said positively about Evanston, It Is that It Is Republican. Its Inhabitants are of the old "gold bug", type, well to do and conservative. Its homes are adorned with neat lithographs of Senator Harding. Its little polltl- eal organizations are nearly all Re publican. Its dally paper staunchly supports Harding and Coolldge. It t no wonder that the Inhabitants have pricked up their ears at the an nouncement that Mrs. Delton T. How ard, Professor Howard's wife," of Sher man avenue will deliver an address at Foster school Friday night, at which time she will tell her neighbors why they should help elect her "uncle Jim president of the United Statea. Governor James M. Cox is Mrs. How a Kb BeiinMtCtoss 1; ard's real uncle and ah says she is "not going to stana Idly by and see Evanston go overwhelmingly for rhls opponent With : characteristic Coxlan aggressiveness she's going to put up a fight . , - "It wu be my first speech la Evanston and naturally Ira Just a wee bit nerv ous,' said Mrs, Howard In her coxy little corner apartment Tm going to appeal. Just aa Uncle. Jim la doing, to the pro gressive element In the Republican party. 'My uncle has always been connected with forward looking legislation. There is no comparison between his Ohio rec ord and Harding's. Look- at the work- on Do you know that millions of people who use Blue-jay keep entirely free from corns? .. v.' If a corn appears it Is ended by a touch. A Blue-jay plaster or a drop of liquid Blue-jayii applied. . ' ? The corn pain stops. Soon the whole corn loosens and cornea out. Themethod is scientific. It is gentle, easy, sure. Old-time harsh treatments are sup planted by it with everyone who knows it Iftgnaea's compensation act my .uncle put through. 1 It has bees indorsed by the American Federation of Labor as a mod el for ether states. See what "Uncle Jim did foe the rural schools and the budget system he inaugurated. .- . ; SUit long Hike e Chlcaro. Oct. IS. TL N. &)-Charles M. Snjrder and C IS. Simmons, local sign painters, left Chicago recently for Ban Francisco on foot ' They expect to pick up Jobs on the way to. furnish them ex penses on their lengthy hike. j Le-" ' m v it 1 Mazola the choice of lead' ing hotels, clubs, and railroad dining cars in America! WOMEN everywhere are rinding out that lard is one of the most unsatisfactory of all cooking fats. It is' absorbed into the food, making it heavy, soggy and indigestible at times. So much lard is taken up by the food during cooking that it becomes more expensive to use. Mazola is 100 pure vegetable oil. It never penetrates into the food, but sears fish or meat over, and preserves all the good flavors. At the same time, it makes the food more digestible. You too, should use Mazola for all cooking, baking, frying and sautcing purposes. Thousands of people everywhere use Mazola as a delicious salad dressing, in preference to olive oil or any other vegetable oil. t It costs about half what an acceptable grade of olive oil would cost Smiling epreenttfw ' JOHSON-UEBER COMPANY Portlaad tTRTTp Sixty-four page, beautifully IHustratedl Com rgXtO product, 6ook Book. Write today. Cora Prod ucts Refining Company, P. O. Bos 161 New York City. AiftBim- Never a corn niillions of feet nowadays Bluejay Plaster or Liquid The Scientific Corn Ender BAUER & BLACK CUcago New Teek Torosd Coast Artillerymen v ' Off for f Honolulu Tacoma, Wash, Oct lt(V. P.Ths Thirteenth regiment of coast artillery, a unit ef the Fourth division,- under cbm maad ot Colonel Wright Smith, which has been stationed at Camp Lewis for -two months, left here today by train for San Francisco, where it will embark on : the transport Great Northern for Honolulu It is made by a world-famed laboratory, which every physician respects. It ia now applied to some 20 million coms a year. You can see that com troubles are fast disappearing. Then why pare corns end keep them? Why use methods which are out-of-date Try this new-day method. See what it doea to one com. You will never forget its quick and gentle action. Your dru3 gist sells Blue-jay, j ' THE HART CIGAR CO. OCaoy Pine su Peruana Oreiee