East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, October 12, 1920, DAILY EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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. ' DAILY EAST OnEGOIOAJI. PIIHDLETON, OREGON. TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 12, 1920. "1
TWELVE PAGES -) j
." -" jr
Publlshe4 Delly and Sml-Weekly, at, ,
Penal-Ion, orepon, by the I SUBSCRIPTION RATK8
Kntered at the pontoffice at Pendle-J (IN ADVANCE)
matter.
, ON 8AI..J5 IW OTHKR CITTKS.
ImptuiaJ Hotel News Stand, Portland.
ON PILE AT
Chicago Bureau, 809 Security Bulld-
Washington, D. C Bureau 101 Four-
tee-1 h Street. N. Yt.
Nnihrr mt fa AftMetsfed IVess
1 The Associated lreie la exclusively
entitled to the uae for republication of
all news dinpatches credited to ft or
not otherwise credited in this paper
and alao tha local aewa published ba rain.
GREAT CLOTHES BUNDLE
IS SENT FROM HERE
Dally, on yetr, by mall ' , !
Pally, fix months, by mall.
rily. three montha by maili.,
Iaily. one month by mall...
Daily, one year by carrier
Daily, mix montha r-v carrier
Daily, threa montha by carrier
Many, one month, by carrier.
Semi-Weekly, one year, by mail
Semi-Weekly, six montha, by mall
Semi-Weekly, four months, by mail
Telephone .
'
1
lAIVK AXU TK.K LIGHT OF MOHXIXCi
, (Ey Frank U Stanton.) ".
A shelter rude ami a crust of bread
But your hnnd In mine on the way f tread, ' i ,
And the red blooms owr the roses dead, v
I And Love, and the light of Morning! ,
A Sorrow, thrilling the lonely years, . -Hut
your smile like liEht in a rain of tears,
And your sweet firm faith, and your whispered prayers.
And Love, and the light of Morning!
And so we mingle, and so we meet.
And shall till the journey, at last complete.
We rest with the beautiful dreams and sweet -In
Love, and the light of Morning!
Copyrighted for the East Oree-nian TMih. Co.
One thousand seven hundred twantv
'pounds of clothing' for the relief it
Armenian Rtifferers this -.winter woro
shipped from VPerittleton to Head
quarters at Portland on Saturday, ac
cording: to repwt from Joseph X.
Scott, county -chairman. Yesterday
si-.mcient more to Uvtal 1900 pounds
was forwarded.
Good reports from all the tow.ts In
the county have been received and the
success of the appeal has been gratify,
ing to the officers In charge. Athena
sent 388 pounds of clothing and In tills
was a box of new garments valued at
$40 given by the J. C Penney store.
Cash collections ot $11.50 were also
received in that city. . :
The Peoples Warehouse dnnnten
buttons for all garments that had but-
ons missing. Penland Brothers navo
their services also in shipping the
bundles. Bundles were received nt the
Peoples Warehouse, Alexanders, Bondi
and the Chr'stlan Church here.
THREE ARE NAMED TO - -LEAD
R. C. ROLL GALL
MAN WHO ACCIDENTALLY
SHOT HUNTER JOINS
CONVERTS AT CHURCH
D
ALL REPUBLICAN SUGGESTIONS HEEDED
BEFORE the final draft of the Ijeaguie of Nations cove
nant was completed four amendments suggested by
.William Howard Taft were written into the covenant at
the request of President Wilson. '
Five out of seven amendments suggested by Charles Evans
Hughes were likewise adopted. -
I Five out of six amendments suggested by Elihu Root were
out into the covenant.
i These facts were brought out by Governor Cox in a statement
miblished Monday morning and last evening. The statement
phows that not one single suggestion received from a responsible
source went unheeded. On the contrary, most of the sugges
tions made were adopted almost verbatim. To prove his state
ment Governor Cox submitted copies of nine cablegrams that
passed between Taft and Wilson during the conference. They
cannot be disputed.
s These facts shatter the false claim that the league covenant
was drafted bv President Wilson single handed and that-he
ehunned the aid of other Americans." He had the assistance of i
the best. minds in the republican party. In the delegation with
the president at Versailles was the former repubican ambassa
dor to France. .-.'....
No suc-eestions for changes in the covenant were by any re-
nublican eriators. This despite the fact that the, final draft
was made after the president met vith the members of the sen
ate foreign relations committee at the white house and frankly
etked for counsel. The senators refused to help because a
group of majority members led by Lodge and Warren Harding
were in a conspiracy to fight the treaty for political motives.
The facts are plain and must be evident to any one who has fol
lowed the news without prejudice. ..
On November 2 it will be up to the American people to take
their choice between those who support a president who devoted
brilliant talent and all but gave up his life for the great cause
of peace and progress and a senatorial eabal that was false to a
sacred trust in a tragic hour and whose candidate for president
jiow seeks by misrepresentation and appeal to prejudice, to un
dermine the most magnificent move ever devised for mankind..
GOOD IDEALS ARE MOST PRACTICAL v
ISCUSSING the presidential campaign the Portland Ore-
gonian offers this glass diamond of wisdom: THE
NATION, LIKE THE MAN, WHICH ATTEMPTS TO
FOLLOW HIGH IDEALS WHILE OTHER NATIONS ARE
STRICTLY PRACTICAL SURELY WILL GO UNDER. The
East Oregonian rises to make denial. The most practical man
is the man who knows that high ideals are practical and that
low ideals are not. No'man wins by being a crook nor can a
nation win by taking the view that high ideals are unworthy,
s .The Portland Oregonian knows that the League. of Nations
i a good thing and that it should be upheld. It has often stated
o.. i But seemingly the Oregonian prefers to follow is own ex
pressed contempt for idealism by supporting for president a
raan who is making vicious hatred of the league the cornerstone
of his campaign. The Oregonian is throwing its own principles
to the winds at a time when the nation needs men and newspa
pers with courage to uphold the truth. There is a higher
course the Portland paper could take with more self respect and
self respect is never bad business. Any newspaper that will sac
rifice its honest beliefs for the fools gold of partisan regularity
has much to learn. , , ,
... From the Oregoiiian's low estimate of idealism let us turn
to these words by a poet who senses the true spirit of the day.
1 'Now in this morning of a nobler age,
, , Though night born eyes long taught to fear the sun
' . Would still delay the world's great heritage,.
. Make firm, Oh God, the peace our dead have won,
For folly shakes the tinsel on her head
1 i And points us back to darkness and to hell
, Cackling, "beware of visions," while our dead
? Still cry, "It was for visions that we fell."
Thankfully we may likewise note that; idealism is not dead
in the churches of the land, for a poll of the clergymen of the
nation shows a margin of 18 to 1 in favor of the league covenant
without reservations that would destroy its usefulness.
u ;: LINCOLN IN PRAGUE
ERAHAM LINCOLN" has been produced in the Cezch
laneuage in Prague, Czechoslovakia, where it was en
thusiastically received by press and public, says a Red
C-R3 bulletin. It appeared many times during the recent cele
lu ation of Czechoslovakia's independence and was witnessed on
one occasion by John Drinkwater, the English author, who made
a special trip from London to Prague to see the Czech production
of his work. ' . , .
The Czechs are warmtdmirers of everything American,
particularly America's self-made men, and it . was chieflc
through the discussion of the life of Abriham Lincoln that the
terra "self-made" came to be adopted by the Czech press and
later incorporated in the dictionaries. '
YAKIMA, Wash,., Oct. 3 2. (A. P.)
Ralph Lyons. Sunnyside, who 1 acci
dentally shot and killed Arthur BnlKin,
son of Hev. E. J. Bulgin, while hunt
ing Saturday morning, was among 100
converts who responded to the evan
gelist's Invitation at Sunday night's
tabernacle meeting In Sunnyside. Rev.
Mr. Bulgln called tor silence and pub
licly exonerated Mr. Lyons from blame
for the tragedy, which he declared
purely accidental. Many members of
the congregation Inirst -into sobs as the
evangelist welcomed Mr. Lyons into
the church. The body of Arthur Bul-
gin will be sent to Portland for burial.
it was stated today.
C, K. Oiuiston, secretary- of ' the
Pendleton Commercial' Association,
was yesterOay: chosen by I C. Scharpf,
county 'IJ.mI tos chairman, us county
head of the ;Hetl Cross membership
Koll Call, which opens November i I,
Armistice Pay and closes November
25, ThHitkfPitfng lay. Mr. Cranston
was chaRmHn' last year and his work
was notevvorthy.
Mrs. Sylvan O. Cohn was-chosen as
Pomlletop chairman and Mrs. Fre
Dohnert as hid of publicity through
out ihe county. Both are prominent
in civic work Jn the- city. Mr. Crans
ton will choose other leaders for tha
campaign in various parts of UmatlJia
county. U- v - -
Tho Umatilla county membership
Quota Is tf.04. The present member
ship is M'hioh, number enrolled
last year.' Because of adverse weather
conditions. the'camiMUsn last year fall
ed to bring in i 0,000 memberships, the
former frytal for Umatilla.
. Besides seeking -the $1 membership
fee. workers will ask for donations to
tho Red Cross. This la for the purpose
of building tip funds which were great
ly depleted during the influenza epi
demic Inst year.
- 1RK1S.
- V. W. Peem.-m to M. O. IiHue,
$2500. Lot 2, Block 14, ltlllcy's Add.
Pendleton. ; :
John BV P-ockwoiler to W. B. . Itnss
$1. ' SV 1-4 8li- 1-4. Site 29. TP. 7. K.
It. 3S, and SR 1-4 XH 1-4 Sec. 22, Tp.
1, T. R. J5. .','.,
C. F. Bowinnn to Geo. Stangier
$2000. Lots 6 and 7, block 224. Uos.
Add. Tendleton.
Kugene IT. Tratt to J. M. ' I,abndie
$250. Mote and bound tract in SB 1-4
FE 1-4, Se. 2, Tp. 6. N. R. 35.
' W. R. Taylor, sheriff to Marion
Jack, Bxr. $1402.83. Lots 5 and- .
Block 4, of Ki-ik's 2nd Add. Athena.
. Wm. W: ,Sirninons to Wilhelm Pom
merening I1S00., North S acres of
tract 22. Crandview Orchard Tracts. 5
J. A. Bradley to Wiihelm Pnmmer-
.ening $8400.. Tract 3 and south. 4
acres of tract 22 of Orandvlew Or-
XTTW TJQVOR IIFARIXO DKMKn.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 12. (U. P.)
The supreme court of the United
States denied a petition for rehearing
of the prohibition cases. These suits (chard tracts.
were decided last June, upholding the Win. Ewaldt to f. M. Lockwood
prohibition cases. These suits werej$10. Tarts of E 1-2 Sec. 7 nnd W 1-2
decided last June pholding the prohi-JSec 8,- and X-1-2 XH 1-4 Sec. 18, Tp.
nition and Volstead acts. 'X. n. 37. - '
Lives to See the Prescription
He Wrote in 1 892 the Worlds
Most Popular Laxative Remedy
. i Founder of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, the largest
selling liquid laxative in the World, long past
Biblical old age, but hales and heartyStill
' sees patient daily Wonderful achieve- J '
- ment of a "country doctor." t f
WHEN I started to practice medicine, back in 1875,
there were no pills or tablets or salt waters for
the relief of constipation, and no artificiaJ
remedies made from coal tar. . ...
The prescription for constipation that I used early in
my practice, and which I put in drug stores in 1892 un
, der the name of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, is a liquid
remedy, and I have never had reason to change it. I
intended it for women, children and elderly people, and
these need just such a mild, safe, gentle bowel stim
ulant as Syrup Pepsin.
. I am gratified to say that under successful management my
Erescription has proven iU worth and is now the largest selling;
quid laxative in the world. The fact that over eight million
bottlet were (old by druggists lust year proves that it has won
the confidence of mothers whose chief interest is the health
of their children.
v
mil
sAu-Ai- J "-irnummj-j
DR.W, B. CALDWELt, TODAY
,' Bom Sbelbyvllle. Mo.. Hmh aV. 18 '
9egmat-erauufcturof httsmoas .
. prescrijitiau in 18S2
It Is particularly pleasing to ma to know thnt
the biggest half of those eight million bottles were'
bought by mothers for themselves and the chil
. dren, though Syrup Pepsin is just as valuable for
grownups. The price of a bottle holding 50 aver
age treatments is sixty cents; such bottle will
last a family several months. '
I have never made a secret ot what is in Dr.
Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It is a compound of
Egyptian Senna and other simple laxative herbs
with pepsin and pleasant-tasting aromntics.
These ingredients are endorsed in the U. S.
Pharmacopoeia. I consider Syrup Pepsin today
in the serious 82nd year of my age, as I did in
1892, the best remedy a family can have in tha
house for the safe relief of constipation and its
accompanying ills, such as headaches, bilious
ness, flatulence, Indigestion, loss of appetite
and sleep, bad breath, dyspepsia, colds and
fevers.
Millions of families are now never without Dr.
Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, and I believe if you
Will once start using it you will also always have
a bottle handy for emergencies.
T R'Y "I X' $ni your name and atoms and 1 will send you a fret trial bottle of my Syrup Pepsin.
Fjy 7 C 1 Atkj me Dr. W. B. Caldwell, J13 WaiJifngton Street, Montlceilo, IHinoii. Everybody now
' IV JCi JtLi and then needs a laxative, and it is well to know the best. Write me today.
JOE CANNON SUFFERS -
FRACTURE OF WRIST
DAXVILLH. III.; Oct. 12.- (A. P.
J Oongressman Joseph G. Cannon, 84,
suffered considerable pain last nish:
from tho frnetura of one of the bones
of his left wrist at his home here Sun-
d.iy evening.
. The Injury
was received when ho
temped on a piece of coal, in the base
ment and fell cm hi arm. '
piilll!!l!!ill!ll! !l!!lllli!lll!!ll!lli!ll!i!li
HARRY CASFY IS MKATFN.
KAIT LAKE CITY, ft ah, Oct. It.
-,(. -p. Harry Casey. T a com a. Wn..
- Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
k Local. Al'rUOATlONS. a. they
cTnltr-ch tiw eat l th diseas-.
local uisease. Irreatly ln(l
, ed by coiintliuu.mal conditions. " r
lightweiKlit, lost a referee's decision
to Pat Uilbert of Salt Lake in six fast
rounds .here lt night. .GUljert went
down for the count of nine In the first
round.
-J,fm: lr, f th. beI tonic
r.t in insredients In HI.I. -Al
LVldCINlC IS lit proauces '
iwrful reult. In c-tsrrh.l cond.U.
Jrunl THtionita '-,
yesterday ;
two men were
k y j
a- r m j 1 jo xv. rtj. "-i- , . '
V- t Vrv- 1 ' -'-1
1 i!p - r' si 1 w
fee W"
- 1 Av 7
a -; .' mv .
' ' ' . ; v x. ;
(,: rv:-x
peciausts
n
n
lothes
or ivie
Tliis is the age of Concentration keeping everlast
injrlv'at one idb brines success. AH the time, skill
? and energy of this Store are devoted largely to one
thing; the production and 'distribution of the best
' Clot hes available at the price.' ' ' ' ' ' 4
i By the bes t clothes we refer to Hart Schaf f ner &
Marx clothes, which offer the greatest values for the
aniourit expended, lhere s variety enough to please
tfie mbs't particular man style, good taste and good
sl&&.tftst'
.'i Jji t. U -4
tailoring for all.
onrriAT PTTTP Ct?Trt? CTTfT'C
JL liilJVLi ULiUl. UiillUUj JU11 U ,
We have a wonderful stock of Blue Serge Suits, good, heavy
weights, beautifully tailored, values you'll not be able to find else
where. . : '
LOT ONE is an extra heavy,
fine serge, all sizes, regular
and stout, priced at. . $57.50
LOT TWO is a beautiful serge,
soft arid lustrous, absolutely
all-wool" strictly hand tail
ored and perfectly finished.
Made by Hart Schaf f ner &
Marx; - all sizes, regular,
stout,' long stout, medium,
stout, longs and stubs.
Priced at $65.00
LOT THREE Grey Serges
Suits that have no equal for
service and quality, conser
vative and good. Priced
at . : $50.00
LOT FOUR Oregon Cassi
mere Suits Guaranteed all
wool, none better for ser
vice, good lookers, new mod
els, very attractive and
surely good. Priced. .'$39.50
PfNDlHBNS GREATEST DF.PAItT.HENT STOnf
JjgTteoples Warehouse.
WHCPt IT PAYS' TO ' TnHD7!"11
MYSTratV Of I'LVfclts fsm.vfi,
GJS.VEVA. Oct. 12. ( A. t lTh, !
mystery .urroundins; the fate of a Fin-i
n army orficer and an Italian pilot
m a Bavoia bllane from Milan to'
Finland, who have been missing sine.
ueu uie oodles of the t
"" irozen near the summit of
TamII mnnnl.i. . .
BOYS' SUITS SPECIALLY
PRICED AT $D.S5 '
' Come and look them over.
New MANHATTAN SHIRTS
The best knownrknown as the
best.
:.-oet-,' (rii!l!!!!I!!!!!l!l!!!!!i!!lI!I!:i;!i!:!i:!:!!!!il: