PACE Mii DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, . TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 27, 1921 TWELVE PAGES BETTER THAN ALL MEDICINE. II wd Politician, True Schol ar Marks Lodge a , Striking an Amonir Striking Men. . tHAVtsa Vol) DCoP Irt 0 Jt lAftklES ME FEEL SETTeE Mr . A 6 Than fveB - BY J. HART CAMPBELL. nternational News Service Staff Correspondent. ? "ASHnxoTON. Sent. 27. Rapler- j . aHr.iltnABa la narhmm the chief ital characteristics of Senator Hen- Cabot Lodge the culturea scnoiar. j shrewd politician,, the dexterous 'liamenturlan. the Kindly aristocrat. U Jnt avnn Lodge's bitterest critics A stlon the wisdom of rresiaeni ...limr'B hnip 11 n American rep entatlve at the wasnmgum bin -nnpn rif fine HI) well eauloned to itch wits. knowledge and expert L is with old world statesmen and F lnmntn ' elatlons' committee Lodge has naa i . . . . 1 1 U n li ii i i-i iti a ( li r r UUIlUUIlfc Ull tuil.lj m u i iBhlv acaualnted with all the Chi lory, subterfuge and camouflage of fk. dlnlomacv. . No subterranean -.'Al.'n tViA IntArnntlonal game of i. i i v. I . nfo-na-ni'AH arm u lias unvapcu mo a " " " " - .iiv of foreign relations and foreign " I 7 .. . ..." . . - i ' rOtCCUOn 01 ine American jcvfic i entangling foreign alliances, tne guarding of their Interests from A.ninatlon toy the politics of the i')pean chancelleries, has become i .i TviHita n doctrine as sacred and violate as the Declaration of Inde- idenco and the Bill of Ilignts. ' llmimn Koiiotor 111 1H93. Philadelphia a -few ir tho overwhelming result of last ni'a vfArAnfliim on the League of itlons was made known, Lodge said: le American people are as earnest tdvanclng causes of peace as any i world, but they have shown by , votes their conviction that they beat serve this great cause by ra ting masters of their own fate and i ' mbmlttlng their future in any de- to the control of other nations." irtge is a slender, wiry, erect man ii whom advancing ngo ho was n at floston May 12, 1850 still r lightly, iris capacity for arduous al labor is amar.lng. His keenness ebate, his Inclslveness of utter 9, especially when aroused by an lonent, are familiar to his senatorial (leagues. He can be angry when he ii crossed, but usually a quiet sense of humor mingled with a playful cynl ym keeps his temper within control. ; fodgo combines the polish of the ard graduate and savant with natter-of-fact sharpness or tne ;loal politician and man of affairs. Knows his Washington and Ills 1 sachusett. He Is essentially a of tho world. Ho has long rub , shoulders with all sorts and con .im of men. We served In the 1achusetta legislature and In the leth. fifty-first, fifty-second and y-thlrd congresses before he was j rit elected to the senate on January Yi. 1SBS. A Lodge haa long J)en recognized M . . r I one of the leaders In the highest coun cils of the republican party. Ho has been a conspicuous figure at each suc ceeding republican national conven tion since ho was chosen permanent chairman of the one at Philadelphia In 1900, at which McKlnley and Roosevelt were nominated. His close association with Roosevelt developed questioned In ,tho senate by Senator Pat Harrison, tho fiery acmocraui. leader from Mississippi, as to where he stood on disarmament. "I shall not change my views about Hmituiinna nf armaments, be cause I have always favored it,1 stated then. "I voted for it In 1916. ( when what I thought was a very grea-. for a "general reduction" was into a warm personal attachment be-1 navy bill was reported from the senate tween the two men. and Lodge's doc trine Is the fighting Roosevelt one of "America first!" Some of Lodge's severest critics are leaders of his own party. They, like Senator Borah, of Idaho, who enter tains different views on disarmament In particular and International ques tions in general, express doubt as to the sincerity of his purposes In urging a limitation of armaments. They refer nKval aff.alrs committee. "I have always been in favor Of it, but it must be a general reduction of armaments, and I shall do everything in mv uower to fulfill those views in the great office for which the presi dent has done me the high honor to select me. I want the senate to be as sured that there will be no one at tho Washington conference who will labor harder for a general reduction ct sr- strued by them as reflecting his opin ion that only by an Ironclad agreement between the world's big powers for such a "general reduction" of their resnective armies and navies can a Lodge 'real limitation of armaments be at tained. Lodge expressed himself strongly in the senate on May 27, 1921, on what ho termed the "worthlessness or the provision about disarmament In the League of Nations covenant. Itock-Uke Steadfastness. to him as a ''Big Navy" man and cite Imaments than 1 but I want a gener- hls record, both as republican leader In the senate and as one of the rank ing republican members of the senate naval affairs committee, to support their contention that he has Invaria bly voted against any material reduc tions In naval appropriations and that he even held out at first against tlio Borah disarmament proposal. Asks ;'H(thI Itiiluction. Ab recently as August 17, 1921 the dav following the announcement of his seleotlon by the president as one of the American "Big Fqur" at the Washington conference Lodge was nl reduction. "My views are simply a reiteration of what I have said over and over again," Lodge added. "One controll ing reason for the reduction of arma ments is thnt.lt will mean a great economy. I hope It will also promote peace. A general reduction of arme nients will, of course, mean the great est possible economy and money sav ing for the people of the world. ' Lodge's friends believe that he could not ha'o stated his position more plainly than in those few words. The emphnBlst he 'placed upon his desire HH you know lat ky lar tne larger number of the common L IKE kO you know that by lar the larger number of the common ' ailments of women are not surgical ones : that is they are not caused by any serious displacement, tumor, growth, or other marked change ? kO yOu know that these common ailments produce symptoms ' that are very much like those caused Jv the more serious surgical conditions? , i DO you know that many women and young girls suffer need lessly from such ailments? More than that, they endanger their health by allowing their ailments to continue and develop into something serious. It treated early, that is, within a reasonable time after the first warning symptoms appear, serious conditions may often be averted. Therefore, at the first appearance of such symptoms as periodic pains, irregularities, irritability and nervousness, Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound should be taken. It is prepared with accuracy and cleanliness from medicinal plants. It con tains no narcotics nor poisonous drugs, and can be taken with perfect safety. The Vegetable Compound acts on the conditions which bring about these symptoms in a gentle and efficient manner. The persistent use of it shows itself in the disappearance, one after another, of the disagreeable symptoms. In a word, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound acts as a natural restora tive, relieving the present distress and preventing more serious trouble. Why not give a fair trial to this medicine Lydia E. Pinkham's Ifedetable Compound '' t LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN, MASS. A The Advantage of Using Revere Tubes TUBES do not always make the tire. But a poor tube will often help ruin a good tire. Revere Red Tubes are built of layer upon layer of tough, elastic, quality rubber. Already they have brought more motor ists to a true appreciation of the meaning of tire economy than any other tubes that were ever created. "The peoplo of the United States havo decided against the League of Nations." Lodge said on that occasion. "The president has declared that he would not enter it, and I, for one, eager as I am to have an internation al agreement for disarmament, glad as as I should be to see a conference lor the limitation of armaments, such as is proposed by Senator Borah, a con ference I hope will soon be called, I do not propose to Join in any way the League of Nations, discarded by tr.e j American people. I certainly am not going to enter it In any s.de way or through any back door." Lodge's utterance had reference to senate resolution then pending. which was to request the president to express to the council of the League of Nations the earnest desire of the government of the United States to co operate with the league commission charged with the formulation of plana looking to a general reduction of ar maments." The resolution a democratic ma neuver was lost after Lodge naa op posed It and Senator Oscar W. Under wood, of Alabama, democrat minority leader who will ait with Lodge at the Washington conference, had urged its adoption. It was Lodge who stood like the Wymouth Kock' of his native Massa chusetts against ratification of the Treaty of Versailles and the League of Nations covenant without reservations which would adequately protect and safeguard the American people from those of its provisions he so strongly condemned. It was Lodge's leader ship that .was a contributing factor in blocking former President Wilson's ef forts to force upon the senate the un conditional acceptance of the volum inous document he signed at Versailles and brought back to the United States. PENDLETON CYCLE CO. 228 E. Court Street BE (East Oregonian' Special.) HBRMISTON, Sept. 27. Approxi mately 100 men are employed here now by the reclamation service, which is lining the "A" line with concrete, the work has been in progress only a few days but will continue as long Into the winter as the weather will permit. The Hermiston Fruit Growers ex pect to ship at least 25,000 boxes of apples out of here this fall. They have a force at work now and are loading a car for the east about every other day. One order of 6,000 loxes will go to Norway, but most of the ap ples will go to the Atlantic coast. Father Butler Is In California on a vacation trip. He is expected back within the next 10 days. Father Ker wick is taking his'plaoe. A nine pound fcirl was born to Mr. and Mrs. Burt Mullln Thursday, Sep tember 2S. Mr. and Mrs. John Nation of Alli ance, Nebraska, are visiting their son Burt Nation here. They report times In the east as being much worse than they are here. C. M. Mathews of the Great Lakes naval training station who is visiting his parents Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Meth ews of . Spokano were visitors here Monday. Tho Mathews were formerly residents here and came down by auto for the Round-Up. The local hotels appear to have re ceived a fair proportion of the Round Up trade this year. Many people en gaged rooms here and motored to and from the city each day of tho show. The various currents In the North Sea are now being tracked by means of sealed bottles. A single orange tree of average sire will hear 20,000 oranges In tho course "N FT 1- n orses dim lviuies 3 Ann ublic Sale 43 HEAD OF MULES AND A NUMBER OF HORSES! ; I will sell at the Levi Eldridge feed lot, in Pilot Rock, Oregon, MM, The following described Mules and Horses, to-wit: 1 Five year old horse Mule, weight 1000 to 1200. 4 Four year old horse Mules, weight 1000 to 1200. 4 Four year old mare Mules, weight 1000 to 1200. 4 Three year old mare mules, weight 900 to 1100. 7 Three year old horse Mules, weight 900 to 1100. 7 Two year old mare Mules. 6 Two year old horse Mules. 3 Yearling mare Mules. 1 Yearling horse Mule. 1 Ten year old mare Mule, weight about 1050 lbs. 1 Ten year old Mare, with Mule Colt by her side. 1 Five year old Mare with Mule Colt 8 Two year old Mules and a number of Horses. TERMS OF SALE All sums under 8150 cash. On all sums over that amount a credit of twelve months will be given f rom October 1st, 1921; purchaser to give bankable note drawing 8 per cent interest. Two and one half per cent discount for cash. All Mules halter broke. Most of the Mules above 2 years old have been worked. SALE WILL COMMENCE AT 10:30 a. m. Positively no by-bidding will be permitted. Mrs. G, M. Johnson A. J. Gill, Owners COL. YOIINKA, Auctioneer. E. L SMITH, Clerk of Its life, . '! . t -