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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 9, 1920)
DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY EVENING, SWTEMBER 9, 1920 TWELVE PAGES THE THOMAS h SHOP am indcpkndZnt nbWIpapm tnl-Weekly, at I ' otcwciuftiom titn ) .AST OHKMJON1AN r'l.'HLlSHlNO CO. Matee-ed at lb paeUffte mt Pedl . Oroa. e saewad-alaM -asall Mtta in At.m iw otbbr ciTirm tv e.gi UAiJ.MiN.NKKAHA. Sent. i-.w.n;tri Nation, eight vwir nhl noii" I Oaiiy. year, br mil .IIH r k. j. .ntion met with n fHnn HA Dally, alt can nth a. aaali tMicident. Friday morning; while bringing J Datl. thraa tnuoth toy a4l l.ll the horses In from pasture. After getting- the heroes In Mia oki rn.a r u ". Set iMWItr MM Dally, d mouth br mttlUw. DaMy. on r br carrtf-r ''. tiirnnl to run hiirk ... ih. :!,. -w Dally, months by oarrier..... 1.7 oaiiy. thra mntna '"y oarriar, . ally. on Bin. b carrier .tl," 'fu,1ru nn her front foot over I nis lett eye, and remlerSnu him uncoil-1 int-ve.t,y tn TMr, tey mall...... Vtl sclous fur wverul hours. tlr. Winn. I itm- wci atv nnsihi. oy aaa.II .7a SCO u or Mermlston was called and at' Wi.Mt report the child la convaJeBe. 1 milled to the on for republication or 8I-Wwil few saoatba. by asul sui aew. ai. patches credited to It or , n ot MhwwlM credited In thl paper! , ,, .-. , Um uia local sews sublisoed br- I j ' ', , b I Te!9b i , ,,, , the inir and will soon be around. I B. 1C. Gardiner left Tuesday on a I hunting trip to the mountains near Albee. He returned 8umlny being; ac companied by Mrs, Gardiner and the rAos rou j !SE INJURES SMALL I inmifii'imMiiiiimmiiiRiri ' ' " -' i 11 ull lUUIuUlll lll'.il I ' , i IjffliiMi i ii an iiiimniiiiiii mum ii J otr-wv e-r ":r . .. . H'i """""""""J ' """' " "' 11111 '"""!" esssm ,m im.'.m l I I - .r, . ,- ,.. .i cnuaren who have been In the moun tains the last two weeks vlsitimr with! ilrs. Gardiner's brother John Can field. Airs. Minnie Kinemnn and children, Harriet and Billy, of The Dulles aj-e (Py Frank U Stanton.) . Hi : i lxv If a lon4y way: '4 ; Hnnrtx flnan, nd then they prt . Hut retm niher that I loved you In lire's loe wa'9, Sweetheart! AM I did not foar Pate's chnllenee. Nor Death's unerring dart; I oniy knew 1 loed yon. Sweetheart Sweetheart! Park storms Ma dim your heaven. But 3.irt. the clouds wilf part, nememberine that I loved you Even uiito death. Sweetheart! Copyiipl ted for the Rast OreRonian Tub. Co. 1 ......,. PFfOVEN BY THEIR OWN EVIDENCE TfT VIDENCE from republican sources given before the sen- i ate investigating committee bears out the charges made by Governor Cox that the Harding campaign managers are raising a gigantic slush fund with which to influence the l.4tionai election. ... 5 Dudley Blossom, who helped raise the Harding fund in , Cleveland, testified yesterday that Governor Cox's charge of 4 $400,000 quota for his city was correct. His testimony contra dieted that of Treasurer Upham who had tried tomake the conv . iiiittee believe that the quota for the whole state was but $400, O00. .,..-,-..... $,iEvidently the testimony of Ifpham and Hays as to Ohio 'was jv Jiearer accuracy than their statements regarding the Oregon assessment. Mr. Upham listed Oregon as giving but $2500, whereas our own republican organization officials say that $20,- 000 was raised in this state. . H- - The city of Cleveland has 7000,000 people and there are five apiillion people in Ohio, according to the 1910 census. If the rest f;.Ohio is called upon to give in the same proportion as Cleve land then the Ohio contribution to the Harding fund would be Something like $2,800,000 for that one state. Should the entire ration be assessed by the Harding workers on the same basis as Cleveland, using thi Blossom evidence as to Cleveland s quota s correct, the total quota for the nation, would be 56 millions. It is not likely other states are being a3 strongly worked as Ohio Lilt the situation makes it easy to believe that the Cox charge of -11- 1 , 1 T T 1 ' . 1 " J 1 . -a ,10 minion aouar naming iuiiu i iuu iuw. I -J Not having access to all the Harding money raising records, the Cox forces may not be able to show the exact amount that is being raised but they have presented much specific evidence to ear out the charge made by Governor Cox and they have fur nished "leads" that when developed further corroborate the fharge that men who profiteered during the war are preparing to, get an 'Sinderhold on the government" if they can do so by he use of mony. - " '. .. The facts already proven in regard to the Harding campaign fund constitute a national scandal of the first magnitude be cause this money is to be used to influence the choice of the na tion's president. If successful it will place the brand of the dol lar ripfcn the white house. It involves a menace the people will not and cannot tolerate. Nor will they be deceived by either ponderous or flippant denials from those who have reasons for Irying.'to obscure the truth. -'.'.'' ' : U. 1 VINDICATE THE McNARY GROUP -; '. i 1 HE Oregonian asks how the treaty can be ratified if Cox is elected and the democrats fail to get a two-thirds majority;in the senate. " - . ' :: That is easy. "l A Very large number of republican senators are favorable to the treaty and made speeches in support of ratification. Sen ator McNary was prominent in thisroup and his speech in the senate a year ago answered every objection raised by the Harding-Lodge coterie. If the people elect Cox, the champion of Ihe treaty in this campaign, the position of these republican senators will be vindicated." They will be justly freed from the Lodge . influence and with the people's mandate to back" them up they will support the treaty with such clarifying reservations as may ie desired. The Cox campaign is in reality as much a fight for liberal republicanism as it is for the Wilson policies. Men like JVIcNary may be supporting Harding for the sake of party regu- ' Jarity but their convictions are more in line with the Cox pro gram and their own speeches show this to be true. 1 . Here is another point to be considered. Control of the sen ate is now held by the Lodge group through a single vote. That iof Newberry, and Newberry is under sentence to the peniten tiary. If Cox is elected he will doubtless have a friendly senate "and the committees will be organized on a basis of friendship for the League of Nations. Such a course would further add to certainty of the treaty's ratification. Committees are all jiower- ful in nnr iinnpr linnse. '" u -. - ' There is no occasion for honestly questioning the outcome of tie treaty fight jf Cox is elected. On the other hand the treaty , - . 1 . i 1 Y f 1 : ,-nrtni'p Uflrlintf had niton- lS aoomea in me event, ui naiumg o ly declared his' opposition to the entire plan, has advised that the treaty be scrapped and that reliance be placed on the Hague tribunal. He has placed himself on record for a separate peace with Germany. In fact he voted for separate peace when the subject was up in the senate and when this disgraceful step was .prevented only by the president's veto. , - , . ' The Oregonian has often professed faith, jn. the treaty and the League of Nations. Holding such views ft should be sup porting Cox instead of Harding. Its present cpurse can be die to no'other cause than a desire to be regular in a partisan way. "But do the voters of the Etate think partisan regularity more im portant than the success of a great principle; do they think partisanship a bigger thing than national honor or world peace ? We shall see. !'.'...' . ''" 1 ' " J Money to loan would become extinct in Oregon should the so-called four per cent interest law be enacted. Large corpora mn likp ih railroads are now Davinz sevea per cent on loans backed by gilt edge security. People with money would lend it to these corporations or to other outside borrowers, should .xne proposed law be passed, and the farmers and businessmen of Oregon would be threatened with bankruptcy. " visitmar wlth friends and relatives on Iutter creek. Mrs. Maude Canfield who' hna kun ma guest of her aunt, Mrs. W. H. Starr. mr sianrield Friday preparatory to taking up her duties of seventh and eipnta grade teacher ot that nla.ee. W. H. Hesser who has charge of the iniann empire Lumber yard at Stan field is moving- his family to thaf nixrn lor me winter. They will return to their frni In the spring: B. J. Nation purchased two dairy cows at the Quick sale on Thursday. jn Monday the Gardiners commenc ed cutting- their corn and sunflowers preparatory to filling- their silos. 'A smalt force of men are at work on the grade Tear the Sherldas Bridue at! tne mouthj- of Butter Creek. They are graveling- and grading- the hill aim expect to have this piece of road open to traffic in about three weeks. Frederick Thorn has entered the high school at Pendleton. He is resid ing with his sister, Mrs. Xellie Mc- Nurlln. Violet Shipley left Sunday afternoon for Nolin. where she will be a ffuest of her Sister Mrs. R. W. Bartley. Janet- Oox. of Arllnetnn. to tin has been visiting with relatives here, re-! 1 turned to her Irome on Friday. She was accompanied by her cousin Vir ginia Rodda.- Little jDonald Jackson, son of E. I Jackson, tinderwent an operation on Saturday for. the removal of tonsils and adnoids. ARSENAL EMPLOYES DIE BALTIMORE, Sept. 9. (A. P.) j Four civilian employes of Kdg-ewood j arsennr, near here, are dead and four I more desperately Ul as a result of ! drinking some form of poisonous al- j eohol. Military authorities said they did not know whether the men bought : their liquor In with them or drank i some of the alcohol stored at the post ; for military purposes. The latter, they ; admitted, had been rendered deadly to deter soldiers from stealing and drii- ing it. ' i ALL TRACE OF SLIDES REMOVED FROM CANAL 1- 'Ash SANDIKGa Sept-(A. P.) All traces of the re?eni jtlids in the Pa nama canal Jiav been i removed an a the channel of Culebra 'Cut is being widened and deepened, according to word brought here by the united States destroyer Morris. The Morris on arriving- here completed a cruise of 14,000 mite? whlch' took the cral't to practically every important port in the Adriatic. The new destroyer Par rott, built' at ;t he Cramp yards in Phil. adelphia, accompanied the Morris here from the 'Atlantic'" - ; FARMER-LABOR DELEGATE WARNED TO BE NEUTRAL SPOKANE, Wash- Sep 9. (A. P.) A warning to delegates to local and state conventions of the Farmer-Labor party not trr enter the republican or democratic primaries on Sept. 14, lest "the proceedings of the conventions be made illegal" has been received by J. H. Johnson, county chairman of the third party, he said today, from state headquarters in Seattle. "Any affiliation with the old parties in. the primary- election would hui;t our purpose," said Air. Johnson. 100 YEAR OLD WOMAN " HAD FIRST AUTO RIDE . ENR0UTE TO HOSPITAL Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured br local appncattoRfl as they cannot reach the diieaaed portion of the ear. There Is enly one wrmr to ura Catarrhal Deafness, and that by a constitutional remedy HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE acts through th4 Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the Syeteoi. Catarrhal Daafneas is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucous Imlnr of the Eustachlaa Tube. When this tuba la Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when U Is entirely dosed. Deafness is the result. Unless the Inflammation can be re duced and this tube restored to Its nor mat condition, hearing may ba destroyed forever. Many cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrh, which Is an Inflamed condition of the Mucous Surfaces. ONES HUNDRED DOLLARS for any ease of catarrhal Deafness that .cannot be cured by HALL'S CA3ARRH MEDICINI!. , J All Druggists We. CtrtuUre . T. f, Chsnar C. Toledo, . Harding tries to deny he advocated dollar wheat. But his sneech or that subject is in the senate record and likewise a bitter speech in opposition to passage of the farm loan ' act. Judge him by his record, not by campaign repentances. It is evident that the invitation to Irvin Cobb reached the jigi)t spot, : , t, - -r WTLMIXGTOX, Del., Sept. 9. (U. P.) Mrs Anne Gibson, aged . 100 years, had her first auto ride today when an ambulance took her to the hospital with a broken leg. She sajd the ride made her forget the pain. PIEADS Oi n.TY OF BLACKMAIL 8POKAXB, Wash., Sept. 9. (A. .P.) James Lavell pleaded guilty before United States District Judge Hodkln , here yesterday to a charge of attempt- j ed blackmail. Sentence was deferred. : Lavell Was charged with havihg-'wrlt-I ten A. ' L. Porter, secretary of the j Western Retail Lumbermen's Associ- j ation threatening danger to his son if a sum of mon'A' was not forthcoming. ; Season af ter . season ,urs liave been growiii": in '1 .popularity. IN o wardrobe is now complete with- J out a Fur Coat, Cape1 or Collar, ' ' i : , Tbroiigb,special arrangenient with WM. II. MIL- 1 LER & CO., of Detroit and New York, we will have MR. BYRON F. LEMAITRE; their special reprc- acuta live here " J - - , t v .,-,.-j hi '"-.v1 II T Ml" Friday and Saturday Tl! 1 f? f'lTT -A TTTX" 1 1 mTT -rrwr t ---n-sr L . i ( iiixi XU i II 2LV U 11 III W 1 1 it m v S f- v 1 9 CONSISTING OF Coats, Muffs Goatees, Gapes, Scarfs and EACH ARTICLE WILCRE OFFERED AT Less than f regular cprlees OF SPECIAL INTEREST We will gladly bold any article se lected on a reasonable deposit up till Christmas. IF v.f . yJ . if . : Guarantee We have no hesitancy in exit liiliiig the fullest guarantees as to tbe quality and value of ihe Furs offered. This provides against all iruj)erfeeli6ns in iliaterials or woikmaiiliip. : ,'( ! i . . E(very article will be sold under the true names of the pelts from which' they are made. I- V . I, III 1 r- 7 1 .T-fc -, ..... . C ' m