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. POISE OF SCHOLAR HID LODGE WARMTH Cold Exterior Never Seen by Close Friends—Was Always Fighter. Few men in public life have made @s many political enemies as the late Senator Henry Cabot Lodge. Yet he 1was powerful enough to thwart a great President in achieving his chief ambition—entrance of the United States into the League of Nations. This remarkable sketch of him was written by M. E. Hennessy. political correspondent of the Boston Globe, out of an acquaintance extending over a period of 30 year: M. E. HENNESSY. November 10.—“Politi- cian, calculator, time-server, stand aside! A hero statesman passes to his reward.” Application to Henry Cabot Lodge of these words, the closing sentences of Charles Sumner's oration in the Senate on the death of Thaddeus Stevens, will not meet with unive sal approval. Like all most positive men in politics, Senator Lodge had BY ROSTON, his share of enemies inside and outside | of his party. of friends they true e But to his wide circle will be accepted as a mate of the man Always n Fighter. Beginning which he directed suc against the re-clection of Gen jamin F. Butler as Governor of sachusetts, his championing of the “Force bill” as a member of Con- gress, his fight for the gold standard in the Republican national conven- tion that nominated McKinley, his advocacy of a high tarifi and the crowning effort of his long political cireer—his opposition to the League of Nations, chairman the Sen- &te committee on foreign relatic Lodge was a fizhter for what he believed was for the best interests of his countr. For more than 30 vears 1 knew Senator Lodge. In my yvounger days, in the Russell era of Mussachusetts politics, 1 shared with the follow- ers of that brilliant voung Demo- crat, William Eustis Russell, their supreme contempt for “the scholar in polities,’ Mr. Lodge was then known. But with the passing of Gov. Russell and the coming of new Jeadership to the Democracy with its strange and distracting isms, I came to know Mr. Lodge more intimately and to get a better understanding of the man Wax Warm-Hearted with the campaign esstully B Ma Man. Senator Lodge's proverbial cold- ness gradually disappeared and he was revealed to me a warm- hearted man. To be sure, he was n 1027 ANNUAL M ers of tlie D 1th and E sis”onow 317th, 1924, at T:30 oo of_directors a T wWor wee me sl v MANN. 811 I st sortment of diamands 1 WILL NOT delts FREDER st FING OF rpetinl B THE ling on Mo By o W SHARE [ T old Jewelsy T CHAST i 18 nw 11 ETC.. 100 COPIE! Didirfet Natio RT. 1912 14th st NOTICES OF MEETINGS #1. 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Be let us examine the 1121 Sta mw. to your | | dent, a dlap-on-the-back politiclan, but those whom he liked and trusted were always sure of a cordial greet- ing and a share of his confidence. Some claimed that Mr. Lodge was & vain man and that he liked adula- tion. That was true to some extent, particularly in his latter days, but unless it came from his real friends, flattery made little impression on him. Tt was not on the public plat- form or on the floor of the Senate that the real Lodge was seen. It was in his committee room or in his hospitable home that he revealed his true friendly nature. - A man who had the same butler for a quarter of a century and the same servants for even a longer period, must have been a kind- hearted employer. All of his private secretarfes regretted to leave him, and when they accepted better posi- tions he still retained their friend- ship. Happy With Friends. On his 70th birthday there appeared in the Boston Globe a briet story of his career. He wrote to the authors: “Growing old is not a pleasant proc- ess and as the number of one's birth- days increase, the only consolation Is !in such expressions of affection and kindnesses as are contained in your account. It means a great deal to me to know that I have friends like you who are glad that I am still here. The one ambition of Senator Lodge’s life was reached In 1918, in the second term of Woodrow Wilson, when the Republicans got back control of the Senate and he was made chairman of the committee on foreign relations. From that moment the stubborn fight against President Wilson and his League of Natlons started It was said that Mr. Lodge’s oppo sition to the league was due to his persol hatred of Woodrow Wilson. !.\Ir Lodge always denied this. When Mr. Wilson died, Senator Lodge was appointed a member of the Senate committee to attend the funeral, but he was missing and it was said that he was i1l with a cold. After the fu- neral, Charlie Groves, Washington correspondent of the Globe, and 1 called at the Senator's home to in- quire about his condition. As we |stood in front of the log fire Mr. Lodge's relations with the dead ex- President were broached Opposition Political. to Mr. Wilson aid to say was Mr. that | =My oppesition | . not persona E “but I am sorry he cordially disliked me and be- lieved that T disliked him. 1 op- posed his league without reserv tions because 1 believed that it was a bad thing for the United States. His attitude was ‘“Take it or leave it' gn on the dotted line’ A majori- ty of the Senate, exercising fts con- stitutional rights as to the treaty- making power, dictation and the country backed us in the election of 1920 by a seven- Ilion majority. Mr. Lodge then related what termed the “dog incident” to illus- | trate the feeling he believed Mr. Wil son had toward him. | “One morning as I started for the { Capitol 1 saw a dead dog lying In- side the hedge in front of my house,” id the Senator. dog indicated that Admiral Grayson, he it belonged to President Wilson's physician. T left instructions to the | butler to call up the admiral and i him that his dog was dead. admiral and Mrs, Grayson came and arranged for removal of re They said they felt very over the los: the dog, be- was a gift from' the Presi- and the chifdren were | attached to it i Wilxon @ dly cause ted Wrongly. “That afternoon a story appeared the papers in which Mr. Wilson tuoted as saying that he was H for the dog, adding that he | would not have a dok of his die in i the front yard of Senator Lodge.” Checking up on this story through Tumulty, the Presldent's secre- tary, I found that the President prob- ably never heard of the incident and that the offensive statefnent nated from of the in White House—proper that misunderstanding be avoided if the principals get together and talk over But Woodrow Wilson and | Cabot Lodge could no more get to- gether, than the North and South poles. They were of two schools of politics and thought. Wilson had a world mind—Lodge's was American. Selfish, many claim. |The kind that would help Armenia, but put America first in though, word and deed. ervation was the corner stone of Mr. Lodge's foreign and domestic policles. proof would matters refused to follow his| “The collar of the! jot greatly | { ) | own might often | g ohysetts Senator was eulogized and | | different | every | Self-pres- | {° (he making of history, so each had THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1924 HARRIS X EWING. ' LODG STIRRING CLASH OF PROUD MEN RECALLED BY PASSING OF LODGE Antagonism Between Senator and Woodrow Wilson Ended Only With Deaths of Both With Work Unfinished. Dy the Associated Press When time shall write its final es- timate of Henry Cabot Lodge it must turn for its most colorful passages to the story of that strange twist of circumstances which set his name over against the name of Woodrow Wilson in one of the stirring periods American history. Both outstanding men of called by some the two American examples of the scholar in politics, the venerable Senate nd the war-time DPresident found themselves in disagreement, deter- mined and irreconcilible, at the very time of their most virile public ser: fce. Kach in his proud and resolute W <ought at first to ignore the im able barrier that was rearing itself between them: but in the end each came to acknowledge it openly, though each sought to blame the other. Difference Over League. The most fundamental difference between them developed over the League of Nations. For his opposi- tion to unreserved acceptance of the Versailles covenant Senator Lodge was assailed by his enemies with a bitterness equaled only by the fury letters, i : ema- | witn which the enemies of the league the executive office instead | ;yacked Mr. Wilson; while by his friends and followers the Mas- revered as the savior of American liberties, who had fought courageous- Henry | 1y against a subtle invasion of the independence of his country and had preserved for posterity the cherished traditions of the fathers. It may be that history will never know the full story of that epochal struggle, which lifted both Lodge and Wilson to new heights of leadership. leader | Then, As each had been a dominating figure | hoped to become at last the historian of Wis time: but, worn by the rigor Perhaps that is not altruistic, but it ¢ partie, both have fallen into their malkes for the preservation of Amer- ican independence, can of him, Mr. gies for his course. | (Copyright, 1924.) 'MORE ADVERTISING BY CHURCHES URGED :‘Federal Council Body Says Many | Indifferent Folks Can Be Reached. last sleep without completing the and, as an Ameri- | york that circumstance and natural with several generations back |jnciination seemed to have patterned Lodge offered no apolo- | ror them. When Mr. Wilson died, he left only scraps and patches of the great human chronicle he had hoped to set down for future generations. | A few weeks ago Mr. Lodge confided | | i I to his friends that he was gathering material for a story of the league fight in the Senate and for other histories of the great days of his intimate association with men and affairs. The task never was finished. How They First Met. There was a touch of romanee in the first chance contact of these two | brilliant mental forces that were one day to meet in such furious combat. They brushed elbows, in a spiritual | sense, nearly a half century ago, and | Newspaper advertising by churches|although Mr. Lodge had forgotten it throughout the country ! part of the campaign to to the church” in a statement issued | today by the Commission on Evangel- {ism of the Federal Council of { Church Co-operation by business offices of = | newspapers to make the advertising | | effective | church has been organization. asked by the The advertis- DORE | ing will be placed by local churches | | or church organizations and will be in addition to church items printed in news columns. | Dr. Charles L. Goodell, secretary of “news columns cannot as a rule carry the stralght gospel message,” its “place is in the advertising columns.’ In this way, he said, the church can reach people who never enter the church. “They are the people, many of them friendly to the church, but Indifferent, that we want to reach in this cam- paign,” he added. never realized the wonderful oppor- tunity of the advertising columns. Too often it has been satisfled with using them for mere announcements of service, and though this has its place and is worth while, the church must realize its greater task of using advertising for the story of salva- tion. — o i 'RED CROSS AIDS VETERANS 87 Per Cent of 1924 Budget Goes to Service Men’s Relief. Disabled former service men and their dependents will receive more than 37 per cent of a $4,674,790 bud- get the American Red Cross has pro- vided for the fiscal year which will close June 30. This is exclusive of funds which will be used for a simi- lar purpose by individual chapters in nearly 3,000 communities, said a statement from the Red Cross yes- terday. While $300,000 tentatively is set aside for disaster relief, it was explained by John Barton Yayne, Red Cross executive head, that this figure may prove inadequate, as was the case last year, when 192 disas- ters made necessary the expenditure of $737,000 in Red Cross funds. T S e At 50 one can make friends, but at that age one develops few comrade. ships. It is a great price men pay on the way up, says the Baltimore Sun. ~ s urged as| all people | | the commission, explained that since ! “The church has| i | | until years afterward, Mr. Wilson al- ways remembered it. It came to light again soon after the inauguration of 1913, when the new Chief Executive and Senator from Massachusetts met at a dedicatory service in Washing- ton, were formally presented to one another, and shook hands. é “You may not recall, Mr. President, sald Senator Lodge, “but I met you for a moment some years ago, at a college commencement, When you were president of Princeton.’ Published First Article. “Oh, T remember you long before that,” replied Mr. Wilson. “A man never forgets the editor who publishes article. B e *Semator was puzzled until it was explained that as editor of the International Review in the late seventies he had accepted for publi- cation a treatise on government writ- ten by Woodrow Wilson, a student at Princeton. Mr. Lodge went home and made a search on his correspondence flles and found there a letter about the article written him by the future President. It {s characteristic of the bent of the historian that until his death that letter remained in the Sen- ator's collection of cherished docu- ents. T Puring the earller years of the first Wilson adnfinistration the relations between Mr. Wilson and Mr. Lodge were without feature. They met on occasion, but not often, and talked of public affairs as any President and any Senator of an opposing party might. They never were friends. It was not in the nature of either to impose cordiality where he thought it might not be welcomed or to over- ride by sheer will that indefinable teeling of restraint which now and again springs up unbidden between two strong individualities. But even as they eyed one another at a dis- tance, Lodge cast his lot with Elihu Root in_support of the Pariama Canal tolls repeal advocated by the Demo- cratic President, and Wilson thanked bim. Break Came in 1916. The actual breach in their relation- ship was reached late in 1916. Many stories of how it came about have been whispered about Washington, but here follows the actual sequence of events during that period of rapid and final transition. On the night of October 26, 1916, ip a campaign speech at Brockten, | support Mass., Senator Lodge decl ut qualification red with- that President Wil- son had added a “postseript” to the second Lusitania note to Germany, assuring the imperial government that some of the previous vigorous American pronouncements on the subject were “not to be taken teriously” The charge was denied v some of Mr. Wilson's friends, but greatest | it was repeated by Senator Lodge at omerville, Mass, on 28 on October 30. Mr. Wilson is- sued a formal ement saying th rtion of Senator Lodge was.“un- true.” October) Reply By Lodge. Leneath the terse phrases President’s denial there was ent to those who knew him tentious depth of feeling. Lodge replied in terms quite rect, saying he would not qu the word of the President of the United States and must accept the denial. but he recalled that the au- thority on which he made his orig- inal statement had appeared to h unimpeachable. To his dyving day the Senator believed he had been folled by a clever use of language and that some sort of supplement to the Lusitania note, if not precisely a “postscript,” had existed This incident left no pretense of personal cordiality between them. During the following month Mr. Wil- son was invited to attend an anni- versary ceremony at the historic Chutch of the Presidents” and Whit of the appar- a por- Senator as di- on e e House officials announced that he had | 400 1y accepted. Later it became known that Senator Lodge also had been in- vited. Wilson did not go and after he had refused the invitation Lodge accepted. Hontllity During War. The trying months of the war saw no change in their personal relations, although on many occasions they submerged personal considerations to measures and policies that both believed for the good of their country. It is a part of history how, later on, each set his face resolutely along different pathway in the League of Nations fight and how all the efforts of their best friends failed to discover any common ground on which both were willing to stand. They exchanged words for the last time on March 4, 1921, when Wilson went to the Capitol for the Harding | inauguration ceremonl Lodge, in his role as leader of the majority. entered the President's room to go unsmilingly through the formality of announcing that the old Congres was ready to adjourn unless the Chief Executive had some further communi- cation to make to it. At first ap- parently oblivious to the of the Senate leader, Mr. Wilson turned to him after a tense pause and said in a tone whose sharpness will never be forgotten by those who heard: “I have no further communication to make. I appreciate your courtesy. Good morning.” Two years later, when death laid its hand on Wilson, Lodge rose in his place in the Senate, according to the custom that goes with loadership there, and pronounced a brief eulogy on the intellectual attainments of the departed war President. Unknown to him or to members of the Wilson family, he was named on a committee to represent the Senate at the fu- neral, but a formal statement from his office announced that a slight illness would prevent his attendance. And thus was written the final chap- ter of the earthly relationship be- tween two proud and militant Amer- icans. Somebody ought to amend the penal law to provide that when a woman murders her husband the court ought at least to shake his finger at her, says Montague. Ask for Menthol Honey Menthol is distilled from pure Pep- permint Oil, in crystal form; wehereas black ocough drops are mostly mere candy colored with charcoal, to make M “'fiw Cough Drops ronce TRVELLER. INC. Yom.B.c. ESTABLISHED 1840 | NET WEIGHT 1302 presence | | | | | | | { potitics. LODGE’S SENATE ACHIEVEMENTS | BUT ONE FACTOR IN WIDE FAME| Made Great Impression on Cotemperaneous Events As Statesman, Publicist, Author, Lawyer and Historian. Henry Cabot Lodge, oldest Senator in point of continuous service in the United States Senate, had become an institution in Republican politics, and in national politics. His death not only makes necessary the election of another Senator from the Bay State, but also the selection of a new leader of the Republican forces In the Sen- ate. Senator Lodge had served continu- ously In the Senate since 1893, a period of 31 years. He served as Republican leader of that body since August, 1918, and for more than a generation had been one of the most prominent members of his party. Arouxed Antagonism. Because of his failure to support President Coolidge in his opposition to the soldlers’ bonus bill, on the Japanese exclusion clause of the im- migration law, and several other matters, Senator Lodge aroused much antagonism during the last session of Congress in Massachusetts. In consequence, at the Republican na- tional convention in Cleveland Sena- tor Lodge was accorded no special honors by the State dclegation of which he was a member. But Sena- tor Lodge took the situation in a manner which won him admiration. He joined in the parades about the hall * with the Massachusetts dele- gation as one of the rank and file, instead of occupying one of the “geats of the mighty”; he worked for the interests of his party in the selection of a vice presidential nominee. amed in Many Fields. Statesman, publicist, author, law- yer and historian, Mr. Lodge's mani- fold activities made a wlide impres- slon on cotemporaneous events. Chiel prominence, perhaps, came to him as leader of the Senate 0ppo- lition to the League of Nations and the treaty of Versailles during 1918, 1919 and 1920. As chairman of the enate foreign relations committee | and Republican floor leader, he led the contest with former President Wilson in the fight against ratifica- tion. He was the thor of the Lodge reservations” and was cred- ited with a large part in molding the poliey of the Harding administration against American entrance into the l“::‘n‘-{e(lf the most distinguished serv- ices performed by Senator Lodge was in connection with the Washington conference on limitation of ments_and questions reiating to the | Far East. Senator Lodge was ap- pointed one of the members of the American commission to the confer- ence by President Harding—an ap- pointment highly valued by Mr. Lodge. 1t was Senator Lodge who laid before a plenary session of the conference the four-power Paclfic treaty, under which the United States, Great ' Britain, Francg and Japan agreed to respect each’ other's terri- tortal rights in the Pacific and to resort to a conference should any differences arise over these rights. and who strongly urged its ratifica- Senator Lodge was confident that the successful negotiation of th! treaty was a great step in the in- terest of p He always main-| tained that the abolition of the so-| called Anglo - Japanese lance— which followed immediately upon the | ification of the four-power Pacific treaty—was of vital interest to peace in the Pacific. Always Worked Hard. . | Senator Lodge was born in leisure. | but always worked. A principle laid | down 1 him in early life was: “The | first thing for a man of leisure to do, if he really wishes to count in his day and generation, is to avoid beingan | amateur.” Although he apparently | had no intention of practicing law, he worked hard and won a degree in| that branch at Harvard. and then | worked on a thesis on Anglo-Saxon | land laws, which won him his Ph. D. | In the three years that followed he| was lecturer at Harvard on Amer- | ican history, and at the age of 30 was recognized as an authoritative | historian. Among the score of books | he wrote were biographles of Wash- | ington, Hamilton and Webster. | arma- 1t was his theory that every man “give of his leisure, more or less, to politics: for it is simply good citizenship for him to do s and | along with the historical researches | he became interested in cotemporary | His public career began with election to the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1579. Reaten in Houxe Race. He was unsuccessful in his first at- tampt to g0 to Washington as a na- | tional legislator. In 1882 he was a candidate for the Republican nomina- tion for Congressman, and the con- test was so close that 130 ballots were required to decided the nomina- tion of his opponent by the con- gressional convention. In 1886, how- | ever, he was nominated and elected to | the national House of Representa-| tives, where he scr\-‘:d gix vears be- | ore his election to the Senate. o ratory was distinguished by his practice of sketching in a his- torical background and his facility in quoting apt historical incidents. ~In an Interview in 1922 summing up his career he said: “1 have nothing to say about my opponents, for I have never made personal or abusive at- tacks on any one opposed to me. It No Change in Quality Since Price Decline. LEETH BROS. SimMPLY A FooL.--- She had everything a young wife could desire—a beauti- ful home, fine clothes, jewelry, everything happy—and yet she wanted more. She craved excitement, adventure, with fire.’ encouraged the attentions of Contents for December Domestic Relations * Court. Laughs From Life. Stranger Than Fiction. Love Is Everything. His Daughter's Honor. Mountain Blood. The Faith of Woman. Mirror of Beauty. Crossroads of Life. Where Poppies Bloom. If Youth But Knew (II). the MacDonald little did she real- ize what a dangerous game she was playing. has always seemed to me that a man in public life stood more strongly if he stood on his own merits rather than on some one else's defects. I think I may say that I have Gone a great deal of difficult and responsible public work. On that public work and on that record I am content to stand.” Mr. Lodge from the outset of his public career was an enthusiastic Re- publican and an intense partisan. He was honored often by his party. An ambition to be chairman of the Sen- ate foreign relations committee, on which he served for many years, was realized when the Republicans re- gained control of the Senate in 1919 He then also was chosen majority leader, having served the Republican minority previously as floor leader. Mentioned for Nomoination. Twice Senator Lodge was tempo- rary and permanent chairman of Re- publican national conventions — at Philadelphia in 1900 and at Chicago in 1920. Former President Roosevelt, a lifelong friend, urged Mr. Lodge's nomination for the Republican presi- dential candidacy in 1916, when Mr. Roosevelt declined the Progressive party’'s nomination. As chairman of the 1920 Republican convention Sen- ator Lodge was prominent in confer- | ences which led to President Hard- | ing's nomination In addition to conflicts with parti- san opponents Senator Lodge had several interparty contests He was severely criticized by inde- pendently inclined members of his own party in 1884, when, on his re- turn from the Republican national convention, at which he had joined with other members of the ) achu- setts delegation in strenuo y op- posing the nomination of James G. Blaine for President, he announced that he would give his support to Blaine in his compaign for election. As a member of the committee on resolutions at the Republican na- tional convention in 1896 he wrote the words which committed the party o international bimetallism. = Im- mediately after this convention Sen- ator William E. Chandler of New Hampshire announced that he would give $100 to whoever could prove that e was the author of this plank. It was not until 1902 that the proof was disclosed, when Senator = Foraker, (Continued on Fourth Page.) A Select School WASHINGTON SCHOOL FOR SECRETARIES Washington D.C DAY > EVENING JOHN P. AGNEW & CO. 728 14th St. NN\W. Main 3068 Southeast 23 23 Sold Sample Sold || House 921 6th St. S.E. Open for Inspection $300.00 Cash $40.00 Per Month (Including all Interest) Price, $3,950.00 Six large rooms. papered and painted. J. Dallas Grady 322 Maryland Bldg. | 1410 H St. N.W. i Main Newly Vacant. to make her wanted to play And so when she dashing young Walton OLD Db Prices are ’way down for Tuesday—W ednesday—T hursday BREAD, Loaf, 5¢ 16 Ounces of the Finest Bread in Washington BUTTER, Lb. , 39¢ PURE CREAMERY Porterhouse Steak, b 27c 25¢ 23¢ Sirloin Steak, Ib . Round Steak, Ib. Chuck Roast, Ib . 15c¢ Plate Beef, Ib.. v 9c Ground 121/2(_' Beef, 1b.. 5;;’:',15. A .206' All-Pork Sausa‘:‘e, Ib. .. 25C Pork 27(_‘ Chops, Ib. . . .. Igc Shoulder Cuts Links, Ib. . . . .. 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