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Show THE PROVO POST, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1920. Army Officer Gives Soldiers View on League of Nations ' . -- s EDDIE RICKENBACKER CHAPTER TWO (Continued from Tuesdays Post) ! it United States has fine fighting men: none finer. Every soldier who was in France knows this. And when these men were they got into the war, But they pever felt enough."' warlike business with a was regular war that of Europe unthem. As the people not were military derstand it, they American And the professionals. - They people "are "not professionals.- PAY TO UST J m ---- ds i red-hand- ed ue ' Funeral' services for Mrs. Della Mrs. Agnes R. Lewis, widow of JosFrederick of Lewis, died at the home wife Huntington Stevenson, eph Stevenson of his city, were held of her daughter, Mr. Addle Ludlow, in the Provo First ward, meeting in the Manavu wqrd last night a prolonged illness. Mrs. house yesterday afternoon.. Bishop following Lewis was horn In Scotland 77 years and the Joseph A. Buttle presided ago. In 1854 she came to Utah and Elder settled In Big Cottonwood Canyon, offered was .by opening prayer , WiL-oiitwn- I- w DAUGHTER HERE MRS. STEVENSON n get-his-o- DIED AT HOME OF RESPECTS e. s best-knov- AGED WOMAN , Cox stands for Wlldarlsm and all it Imp.... The Democratic platform commits him to Wilsonism without reservations, and he, in his daily utterances, is underwriting and all lhat.it implies.. sealing this commitment la x ' What is Wilsonlstn? i A record made a "Washington these past eiiu years answers this question and illuminates it f.iiiy, Wilsonlsm stands for an orgy or governmental extiavagance unparalleled In history. - It speaks ofiucomiietence and tnc fTielercy Wflsonlsiu stands for waste u p reh "bit? waste that did not wa-tbut wanton waste stop with war, which inevitably Tn all directions and involving m.liions since the armistice.' It spells taxation heavier than was eier borne before, The State, it v Wilsonism stands for one-magovernment is V and an Individual rule Lltir. rto unknown to tli'i American . - Republic. ' , I exemplifies autocracy. VrUsonlsra stands for mounting prices, profiticr.ug and co- -. quant hardships in ail walks of life. 7 It is high coat of living system arlng' WUsotHSm stands Ior the profligate cost-pltoe war. that entailed governmental burdens that c.,unot bo wholly lifted for .generations to coam- It emphasises graft and scandal. Wilsonism stands for a League of Nations that would have nullified the Monroe Doctrine, plunged this nation into the mael-atroof European politics, and made for war not peace. It means involvement in foreign entanglements aud disrepresigard of the teachings and wamii.gs of all the - American -dents that have gone before; -WUaooUm-stanfor anudmunstraTlon unprepared for ZZ peace, as it was unprepared fci fcar, and an utter Incapacity to ' deal with problems ot the day sad hour. It reveals unfitness to gown in every sorry chapter written at Washington during the costly regime now drawing to a clo:a. stands (or ail the Candidate Cox, standing -i Jiowicn' Ba:la-aonisth!3gs'here enumerated tnd rM dev,?! pot-to Danielsism. Bakcricm. Tr.Imwlsra aud ail . names at once imply,' f it? , Does tha country wart f" " ' t fhi3 ia what Ce promises be-ua- . - may-l-nott- ed , BY SCOTT C. BONE Candidate e Yet we spent more than dollar Xor alfcratW The soldier of the air knows that. . We did not make our own gas, though we tried. We did not use our own grenades. We did not have our own liquid fire. We did not have any American tanks. The soldier of the line knows Jhat;and he knows the thousands of lives these failures cost us. We cannot afford to go into "another war thus unprepared. It would cost too many lives and too much money. If we contract for wars all over the world, we have got to prepare of suffer awful Tosses. A soldier who was ln iEurope during the war realizes what a burden a policy of militarism would put on the American people. He . understands how terrible would be .the losses, under Artjcle 10, Jf a pol icy of military preparation were'"' not " are fighting peoplewhen called out, adopted. The soldier is against bringing hut in peace they refuse to be mili""" militarism to America and European tary.. We went Into the war unprepared, he is against sacrificing American and were protected by our allies flesh and blood in conflicts for which while we made preparation. We we are not prepared. If re go into Were In the war nineteen months and the League of Nations he would have came out still unprepared. Yet we to choose preparation or punishment. He knows it. , That is why he spent f 20,000,000. We had only 108 airplanes at the does not want this country to go in front in France at Jhe end of the under Article 10. That is why he is war, and not one of them was a fight against the League of Nations. MANY GATHER TO - BY STRICKLAND G UHLAN A nervO'iOhd fretful world is marking time with what pawnee it can uit.l I announce my preference for the presidency, re it goes I am for Raiding! 1 say this with the full knowl-r.?of the falling offjhis nu j causq ia the Uarcing vote, among C'T'FSrdes of bitter enemies everywhere. But .oat's that. I voted twice ior Woodrow Wilson. This is no boast. J a confession, RepubMcan though I naturally was. having been Democrat, I, was so carried away with theLFghlntellect-lucf We Tiincetou w'ucer that I voted for him. We admire the qualities wo ourselves do not possess. Cripples e oodrow Wilson So I voted for Ivayt aiend prize-fighthe had brains. I am a stubborn cuss In the matter of Midships.' As an adherent and a camp follower I am tenacious n nd hard to lose. As a henchman I have the. glues cases sut-f-i commerce In and detached. distanced My tenacity jf nade and provided is equalled only by Mr. Wilson s effectiveness ;.s a solvent for every form of mucilage that attaches human ' eings to him. Despite my eftorta to remain eoupled, he pulled "i draw-ba- r and was gone! I believe 1 wall the last friend," outside f holders of postofflees, that President Wilson had. .IJWtt9 more anxious for the League of Nations to go through n its essentials than he was. He was more anxious to get his awn way and conquer the United States Senate with the be'p of the people, than he was for anything connected with the peace treaty he had gone to help enact. When he said it would fracture the mundane heart' to rejoct hla treaty, he meant . ha would -have a fit and gum up the Works, if he didn't way." Uls superlority to the United States Senate, which had been for , so tong an accepted fact with him, should b W-'r.ained at an; cost. His proneness to attach the tubular tinware io any of hU cabinet-membe- rs in the art of independent caught and individual cerebration had been getting on my nerves for quite a while. It was growing harder aud harder lor me of mine who had always detested against a brother-in-lathe Wilsonian personality. And when the skoin of state affairs. became so that Lansing let go and was urgently permitted to depart, there was a sound cf rending cordage and my goat, freed at last, bleated away into the distance. It seemed to me that whenever, the Wllsoa eye detected anybody in a state orwiihd to stand loyally and trustfully by him, he sent to the pharmacy tor some chlorine r?3 and charged the aisin his vicinity. His friends did not desen him. He deserted them. All a fellow had to do was to find out vftiat seemed to bo the desire of the president's heart and coma out tor it. Then the president, through the introduction of some wild and weird and arbitrary methqd of attaintng-tha- t heart's desire, wear and stood on a pinnacle where there was no foct room for a friend ' beside.. Sef finding myself alone where I thought the president was ou platfortd for the enactment speedily of an effective peace "treaty that should embody the essentials of the league while he wandered elsewhere. ami BQUghtan DundoUed and of a specific and dubious document I gave right up. I said to myself: "He is a wouderful man. 'He has amazing mental ability. Bnt land sakes, he isnt brighter than everybody else in the United States put together. And even if he were, himself is not the person from whom this idea .should be bulletined out. If he thinks so, he can't be! The world has never been such a - stickler for rhetoric as to insist on this literal acceptance ot something even the president himself had to have forced upon him in Europe. Goodby, Woody, I worshipped a long time at and go home shrine. I am going to take up my prayer-ru- g your And I shall vote for the man who is least in sympathy with you ' In the next presidential campaign. ing plane. Coxilsonism ' ME AND THE CAMPAIGN BY what it says, If Article 10 means war than the war-m- ore., it means Before. had If ever United 'States to . preserve ourselves we pledge - every -against external aggressionwe have the League, of member other break our word., got to fight or we must It we are going to' fight, means a That to fight. get ready a man who was in Only deal. great much. We can't the war knows how war by signing of lot contract for a prepare for then pot and Article 10, . WORTIIY OF CONSIDERATION YjO CJR Julius Anderson. The speakers, all Salt Lake ceunty,. three years later of whom paid glowing tribute to the she moved to Spanish Fork where she life and character of Mrs. Stevenson,! lived until about three years ago of1 when she moved to this city. Mrs Lewis 1 survive4-by-th- e Sprlngville,, W P. Whitehead, and Mrs. Priscilla The ward choir children: Bishop Buttle. music for the occasibn,' and a Swenson, Mrs.Agnes L. Crandall, duet was rendered by " Prof. J. R. Mrs.' MamrT. Markham and Mrs. Bcshard and Miss Elizabeth Evans. Addle Ludlow of Provo; Fred Lewis Solos were rendered by Mr. Murray of McCammon, Idaho; and Wm, O. Roberts and Mr si Sadie Ramsey, and Creer, whoso mother, a twin Bister I duet was sung by Mrs. Ramsey and of Mrs. Lewis died when he was a Ur. Walter Whitehead.- - The bened- baby and- - left him in the care of iction was pronounced by Elder Mrs. Lewis, whc reared him as one rthur Price. of her own children. She is also surHundreds of floral designs ex- vived by 59 grandchildren and four pressive of the love- and esteem held great grandchildren. ed ior the ""'Funeral services will be held ,in Mr. Spanish Fork' Sunday at 5 o'clock, front of the meeting house. Stevenson was the recipient of many where she lias a host of friends and messages of condolence from various neighbors. "who wtn yrish to pay their points "outside of Provo, where the last respects to one whom they so Before the body family had lived, and a special car highly, esteemed. as chartered from Salt Lake for the Is taken to Spanish Fork: It may be purpose of conveying Mr. Stevensons viewed by Provo friends at the home and friends from that of Mrs. Agnes Crandall, 469 North Bishop O. B. Huntington were fol-low- irg fur-sish- ed tFsrcsimlle of A leffeFsent to a number of prominent Democrats over the state by A, W. McCune, himself a stnuncdi Democrat, prominent In affairs ; 1'" of State for the last quarter of a cen retry, L ' -- - family-decorat- the-entir- e to attend the funeral First East from 9 to 12 oclock ' day forenoon. The burial was In the Provo city cemetery. The dedictory prayer was HE COULDN'T WORK offered by Judge A. B. Morgan. city who came Sun- ! services. DATES J .. ANNOUNCED AT FAYSOX y '! Mel-- T' Wilson RESTORES n HIM. se-T-th consider my first bottle of Tan-la- c has been worth all of nine hundred dollars to me, said Dan Mn carpenter of 385 cLean, Esplanade St.T Sydney; Nova Scotia. The flu left me In such bad shape I was unable to hit a lick of work for Mceight months, continued Mr'. that Lean. and I could find nothing I helped me until I got Tanlac. Birth of Son Announced without distance walk not any could 0 T a ? horn Satur- - .bkowjng likfiji stpv'un. engine. BuUtop.- and'MrT.'Adelbert Blglerlping"' to rest, I had perfectly awful Provo who are visiting at the headaches and my nerves were so e of Mrs. Biglers mother, Mrs. Shattered 1 could never get a good H. time Huish, Mother and babe are nights Bleep.' I Iostr 31ii0 in from work and spent JiffO on treatments and medicine that'dld me no good, so you can see what that spell of flu cost me., - j kept reading in the papers about l so lJought bottle.-- It may meeting of the c'ty 8 held here Wednesday the fol-- ! sound exaggerated but after taking jmg library board was appointed: the fourth- dose I could tell .that.lt I have JensenT George Powelson, O. was going to do the work. t and elin to serve bottle first Until July l,;ust finished my list.: LeRoy Dixon, Mrs. I. H. feel well enough to go back) eorESW.'Fitzroy, - to serve 'to work. I want to eat all the time Jly 1, 1922; M. W. Poulson.'and my digestion is perfect; the head-- j .Dixon and Mrs. and nervousness are entirely) Christen me Unt11 Ju,y 192S- - The gone and this Tanlac is Just making 'treasurer filed her new man out of me. I dont heslmonthly re-'- a lT medicine inj receipts for the month ,tate to say it is the best Htember in 4,1 t the amount ' of the world. The c(ty Tanlac is sold in Provo by Ptovo poundkeeper re--1 t 88Ting received 43 for the Drug Co., and by the leading drug-' ' September. In every city. gist stu-jitrl- j I 1 well-know- ah rWr. -- ccramis-tTanla- BROAD Mr. John 7. Howells , 1993 SoutU West Temple Salt lake City, Utah. 1 ' ' --o Sear John: -- left the to yonr inflation &a to party, let ms take Replying Bemooratio to express my I haYO so oompletely dlsgristel with the Dem- oI oratio administration in Washington that I fail tosee ain how any-sane-m- WANT DEER AND WINE; ; IF YOU ity opinions. r:! , could continue his support of such a an 80le'aim of the Demooratio party in Tederal gOTerament, in the 3tate, the oountry and oity seems to have been to increase taxation and burn up the money, without regard to the interests of the people. I am against Woodrow wilsons league of Wationa. - I fail to see how, any real Amerioan oould sanction tha adoption, of a polioy th$t un?uastionally leads to internationalism and the sacrifice of the constitutional rights of the American people. theSenator Harding's idea of a oouyt of arbitration for settlement of disagreements among nations meets. my approval. ' Were it not for the reserTStiona-to.lrtio- le by the Eepublican senators, I am '10'as"lhslsteartip6n men would be fighting in our young convinced that Poland today and our millions would be poured into the i venture. for I want to say emphatically that I amfriends Ky Reed Smoot for the United States Senate. and associates in tha east all say that he has more and a greater at-hifingertipsthan any other man affairs knowledge of governmental he is the hardest and furthermore, that in the senate, senate.. Worker in the c, The 1 Hung conspicuously in a saloon la Chicago the above slgaJD : considerable commeit. . YOP.K NEW THE TIMES, Mr Hiynn calif- - ho Cox enida f!o s.us fjf (taev a disgrace. -- 'M The fact That the Dc int!!. oi lo nd Kenof two tucky, hnv 'i iruclcd for Gov, ornnr Cox niaic it proper to consider his position on (ho liquor question. It Is bo nomine every tn.n dayvnore and moto T.mrf"tt v- Ilia" abqiil wh will 11)0 rot force, ard gafh'r. - C.ever'ior K'lv a .U ' .rdq Lu.k.ml in the J.act st.ih-- s rtell.lum Iremona 'ouM 1mo L ne enough to tnouof th.il nci.ini-tln- n. iris no U.mre U 1 d' not Senator Hilchco be ore the hove nnv rhanre-ete- n In me Ij. lei hr;, k. if nothing b' lo.. Gowuno! bo rtj- jr r, un ard ft:;.' sou r ho fh.it the w i' After dikgialng la, Inch to a posOfon In kt-,i rouhl rl; . ret r.Mujl vemrs tac men er.gej.Sd i u I i BRYAN ASSAILS.COX ' -- AMD H. & COEHIMGS Calls Cio!ce of Democratic Con Jventjon Cbaj.reianL.aJTr aged f-f-or the Party. . . .Hla Nomln.ltcn b tha WsuW B tlf.aoi Inr-tl- . Torse' , -- ft. AerW Ncbrn.itan -- it OX CANDIDACY A DISGRACE )'i -- e -fa- ots-end-figures .1 - -- T In Th LINCOLN'. N'J -- Jciinicp . Brt-a- V nV Tf- May IS lurnn,i-- .Ml-lir- hr hn'i!ie-- t lu'f teen IliC : ot liquoriiidh polilic;i4 baUvrKS tonlchl I of tt,.i aiiuntry. ,f a"jr( Homer S. Vumiolnzs rlmirm.in more lhan the ,rof.';-sfnuof, the Demooratlc- - Nallorai Con . aairhi-tvGotcrnor Cox Ohio mltloe. and tiovernor Cox their candidate. Ja a stalajent given out kvre h.p l "HIjl ueh.in. ion would mnki says: the Djihocritlc Dirty the t'loier "The selection of Chairman of the lisle-- , rlement o' the Cummings to sound the gotiitiio eountry nn-- l hti tf sir. h of the Democratic Natlontl turn ajhina-atr- o posiblr senlrt vontion la aorae the White House ov"t to those it Is a tragedy If It Is ho defy tUa goyei r.q,u.t anJ Ihe Democrats Choly beginning law m contempt. gave any Intention of making a bnid "There Ih no I:V.cliboo'd of h's Campaign thhi year. U the Demo- nomination and no chnnee of hU cratic Tarty Is to be wrapped in election If nominated, but whv a wet shroud, locked-- up In a should any Democrat he v tiling Wall Street -- safe end bnrlod ir a min who, nemina- Ci-jn-Is a. Cumnungs i arould rFU1 th5 tonicieme ,.o a ts selection his bill officiate, of the nation? For the triumph til lerlous handicap If the parly it a trtumptt cj, tha ' to appeal to the progressiva prohibition nation's conscience. tonUmonl of the country." 1 nt The ration will House and with me the wish ia Harding to the White .. father to; the thought. Tor thaaV reaBOni I am for tt. . to bottom, r.t omortla tlobst froo top me move. this in to Join "friends - . -- thn--tntMa- '- -i to Mas-.rea- dy Jen-lach- I why this-opportun- al-- 2 STREET NEW VORK CITY September - SPENT HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS SEEKING HEALTH TANLAC , Oct. 5. Principal announced that the Pay-- k high school and the sixth, and eighth grades would be iinnlssed Thursday, October 7,- - for beet vacation which will last un- October 25 in order that the far-- I r may have the help of the arresting their beets and I ttw farm products. He also stated under no consideration would time he extended over this date. BATSON, tm .85 - regime. FOR EIGHT MONTHS BEET VACATION A. W. MCCUNE pm-jfw- e , es The Roosevelt Republican J. P. McGUIRE, President (Paid Advertisement) of Provo CLINTON BEESLEY, Secy |