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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1920)
TIIE MORNING OREG ONI AN, THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1920 BOlBOI FLOOD OF Demon Rum Does Ghost Walk Despite Bryan. OLD SCENES REPEATED Fair Sex Swajs Gathering;. Gal leries Indulge in. Fun l'east and Speakers Pull Old Gags. (Continued From First Pare) wlth- the big hat next to him and in front of me is giving satisfactory symptoms of asphyxiation. Welch of Indiana, one of the de voted and diminished band who takes his reportorial duties seriously. Just whispers that the resolutions commit tee "ain't never going to get through and that we'll be here all summer." Evidently Bryan has unlimbered for action. No danger of a drouth how ever, despite Bryan. Now the chairman says nominations for president are next. That suits everybody. They won't wait for the platform. What's a mere platform be tween democrats. They are calling the roll. Alabama Is passed and Ari zona yields to Oklahoma. That means Senator Owen, a cowboy scout, rises from somewhere and a little song frnm raucous throats to the effect that "Owen Is all right and he's been nil rio-ht for a hell of a while." rings through the auditorium. They believe it In Oklahoma, but nowhere else. An orator with a good voice extolls the vi-riii nt Owon and la heard respect fully. But wait awhile. The crowd. particularly those responsive citizens In the galleries who want to have ac tion and less words, will get impatient and will not listen to speeches that have no stuff in them. Arkansan Quotes Scripture. The eovernor of Arkansas, who ap nurentlv has an Arkansas bog in his throat. in seconding Owen, claims that Arkansas Is the only state men tioned in trie Bible, for Noah looked out of the ark and saw the rising waters, or whatever it was that he saw. I could find out if the demo crats had done their duty. and fur nished a Bible to every reporter. You'll get the point if you will pro nounce it the way they do in Arkan sas. It's a fine joke down there. A lady from Massachusetts seconds Owen in the approved modern polit ical form. No candidacy is complete nowadays without feminine oratory to help it along. A black-bearded democrat named U. S., G. Cherry is nominating somebody. What is any one with the initials of Ulysses Simpson Grant doing in a demo cratic convention, anyhow? Cherry Is no forensic peach. He says something about hanging a German spy from every American lamp post and then you know he is from South Dakota and is nominating Gerard, former am bassador to Germany and an all-right American citizen. They say now that McAdoo is not to be placed in nomi nation. All they are going to try to do is to nominate him. New way of springing a surprise. Cummins Is Sponsored. ronneptlcut nute forward a black- haired, black-coated, dark-visaged - gentleman named John S. Crosby to nominate Homer S. Cunimings. They like Cumminns and they cheer rap- tnrmislv. The speaker has a fine. tremolo. The crowd starts to sneer, but stays to listen. He has all the old phrases, but knows how to use them. He 'starts an ovation for Woodrow Wilson and delivers an apostrophe to the unsmiling portrait of the presl dent. But he gets back to Cummings and winds up with a real oratorical flourish. th crowd breaks into a roar of approval and the band plays the na tional anthem. Everybody gets com plainingly up and the demonstration tons. A well-dressed woman from California makes the ideal seconding uruiirh. It is exactly one-nair min uw in length. Now somebody who is verv short in stature but too long ' otherwise is telling the convention that tlie New York Times has come ' nn for Cummings. Sh! Ha'. Wall treet? Where's Bryan? The Incipient signs of a stampede for Cumminers have already started th. nvnical reporters into reminis cence. They Bay that the biggest fee h ver irot was from some chocolate Tnakins: concern which was taken over rlurlng the war by the alien property custodian. Hitchcock la Presented. Vow it is Nebraska's turn. That mn Senator Hitchcock. Ex-Gov ernor Sohallenbarger puts an anchor , .inHwird bv announcing that he -niii not take ud his entire 20 min utes. It will be in one aspect a good L.nrh. He save no democrat need be ashamed of the Wilson record. Th.r'i something wrong somewhere Th last heard heretofore abou thal'ipnhsreer was that he failed of re-flection to congress in a demo cratic district. They soon tired of Kh.iii-nharicer. for there was a loud ,.ii nf "time." and he quit. J Thn tin roee a tall, smooth-faced nn its rfl. chin delegate from Pennsyl in nominate Palmer. We're o-.ttincr along. Here it Is only a lit i. ofti- 1 o'clock and they have APPETITE AND HEALTH Loss of appetite Is a sure sign of Ill-health. Those who take Dr. Williams' Pin Pills far Pale People as a tonic In variably say that their improvemen besan with a noticeable increase i the appetite.- When you are sick an your vitality is low your appetit fails. Nothing tastes good. You tak no pleasure In your meals. TJnde such circumstances good digestion is impossible. Dr. Williams Pink Pills tone u the entire system, the blood Is en riched and good red blood is essen tial to normal digestion. The gland that secrete the digestive fluids are strengthened, not merely stimulated, and you once more enjoy a good ap petite. Looking forward pleasurably to meal-time is the. first sign of re turning health, strength and vitality. What to eat then becomes a prob lem and it ts solved by the diet book that the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y.. will tend you on request. It gives the relative digesti bility of different foods, gives the proper diet in various diseases and is a handy book to have. The price of Dr. - Williams' Pink Pills Is sixty cents . per box. Your own druggist sells thorn or they will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of price. Adv. iic-iiiui nncc ill UllLUUUL ORATORY already partly completed the roll of ; democratic immortals by naming Owen, Gerard, Qumming;a and Hitch cock. The spell-binder's name is Bigelow and he makes up in fervor what he lacks in size. Just now he Is roundly roasting the "insidious forces of an archy." Give 'em hell. - They have no friends here. Young: lady friends of some Influential democratic editor have Just crowded by to take the seats some friendly sergean t-at-arma has reserved for them. Just to the left is another handsome quartet of big-hatted, well-groomed lady visit ors with nothing to do but listen and look pleasant. Through the adjacent smoke screen It appears that the suffering female just one seat removed is gone. Good work. Pass the cigarettes. If those women would only smoke, they wouldn't talk. I hope the speaker gets leave to print. He's going dili gently through the motions but he is not putting it over. Here comes another squad or women. They've just been fired out of seats they had preempted, but which belong to someone else. More good work. The little man is still at it. Just now he is saying something unpleasant about the dastards who murdered the martyred Lincoln, the noDie Garfield and the sainted Mc Kinley or something like that. Yes thl3 is a democratic convention. The orator rambles on and, some body breaks in and wants to ask a question. The convention dissolves in confusion and the chairman takes a hand and suppresses the interrupter. It is not polite to heckle a nominator. The terminus Is at last reached and the convention gets the name of the "man who." being Palmer. Mrs. Funk, who is for McAdoo, a very smart and interesting woman, says to me. "Now watch. They've planted two thousand boosters for Palmer all over the hall and they are going to be heard from." Pennsylvania seizes its standard and starts a dem onstration. Florida, Georgia and some others follow. The band gives us "Glory, Glory. Hallelujah," and a big woman in white starts the chorus, "Palmer. Palmer, Pennsylvania." One Man la Envied. Some stalwart person is carrying around a pretty girl with a green hat ana an American flag. She s a bear Ive or six women take possession of the speakers' . stand and. with swinging' arms and shrieking voices keep things moving. The delegates stand, the galleries do the same and the reporters climb up on their desks so as to miss nothinar My next neighbor has Just skillfully placed a more or less shapely foot through a woman's hat with a flow- red periphery of about nlnetv Inches. More good work. Lots of pretty girls verywaere wavine Palmer streamers. The lucky atlas who Is the supporter mat lovely vision in ereen is still ternly resolved to do his duty, look ing as if he enjoved it. He must have een practicing up a lot. The band la mm harrf -ci nrv Glory," which to my hardened repub lican ears sounds much lika "John Brown's Body." I won't tell 'em. A ed-headed yell leader, with coat off. is mucn in evidence and continues to tart anew the uproar when it shows igns of subsiding. ine galleries are readv to settle own, but the regiment of federal em ployes hasn't yet earned its monev. They are out for a record. Their wind i good. It should be after seven ears at the public crib. The eralleries begin to boo and hiss. They know he real thing from the artificial Dr. Morrow is sending out an S. O, S. call. Pnrdy Insists on Chamberlain, Delegate Purdy insists that he will nominate Chamberlain for president against tne wishes of everybody else Then by half a vote Schuyleman still may De burning with zeal to put Wil son before the convention. Quarv: a nan a vote enough to name a whole candidate? . After 36 minutes the gale subsides and comparative peace again reigns. Congressman itainey throws a few verbal bouquet t ualifornla. That will dlsolease ainornia, not. A lady from Arkansas, seconding t-aimer. stirs such a lively controver sy in the press seats as to whether or not Arkansas is a suffraee state that nobody hears her. But it sounds as if it was a good speech. She la mentioning disagreeably the "prof iteeyahs," with accent on the "ee yahs." She gets quite a hand as she concludes. Georgia gets on its hind egs and sings a little sonar about Palmer. A reportorial authority from the sunny south, you can tell by his accent, says they're a bunch of Georgia crackers working under the aicononc inspiration of corn liquor, He said if, I didn't. Convention -Near Famine. Another woman up for Palmer. They are going through all the ortho dox forms. Two forty-five o'clock and everybody hungry and impatient. Two plethoric reporters produce a banquet from some mysterious source and eat It before the eyes of their envious and famished fellows. The roncall gets safely by Illinois and Indiana, the latter of which has Mar shall up Its sleeve, and reaches Iowa. They take Meredith quite seriously in lowa. A gaunt gent named Porter, candi date for United States senator, stirs tne crowd to wild applause bv his promise that he will detain them "but a few minutes." He didn't mean it. He is driving monotonously alone- iorgemng an about his early pledee alter some 15 minutes of old stuff about the achievements of the demo cratic party The name of the Porter candidate Is still a secret. "Name him!" some ex asperated person finally yells. Not yet. Now he Introduces an Iowa barn where the "man who" was born. He's on the home stretch, but the going is baa. A frantic shout goes up at some thing the speaker said, but the Lord only knows what it was. Probably another promise to quit. Yes, , it was. He quits at last. It's Ohio's turn, i Ovation for Cox. The gallant Arkansas chairman has turned over the gavel to Mrs. George uass ana sne introduces something or-other Johnson to nominate Cox. Ohia has a big claque in the north gallery with a band, a song leader and much noise-making machinery. They join again in the swelling refrain announcing their purpose to nomi nate Cox or "know the reason why." Orator Johnson looks like Hamlet in a $20 hand-me-down and speaks like a machine gun. Recess is herewith declared so that a bun and a bottle of Rainier, vintage of 1920, may be disposed of. Some Samaritan brought it in at 3:20 lust in time to prevent a famine. Rainier tastes beery, 'out the Cox demonstra tion, just begun, acts more so. Where do they get it? A red-headed youth in white climbs the chairman's table and leads the crowd In Ohio. He looks like the same dancing dervish that stirred things up for Palmer. Familiar business of marching about the floor, screaming women. S,nS oblowing The Cox band blows away for fair, and the frensy reaches a high pitch If it was only 2:75 per cent at the start, it is alo-g about 50 per cent now. Those Ohio people know how to sing "Ohio. They never get tired. Now they take a turn at "Maryland, My Maryland." and get away with it. They drag the red-headed man down from the chairman's table, but he gets back and they let him alone. Cox, Palmer CHeerers Vie. The Cox band leaves the gallery and marches about the hall. All mighty well staged. They have set out to beat the Palmer show. Three of the ladies aforementioned are walking over the necks or the reporters. They are for Cox and say so quite often. They are from his Ohio papers, and one of them Is Cox' daughter. She is certainly on good terms with her father, which Is quite all right. If any candidate's son and his mere male friends had invaded and dis rupted the press section as those handsome ladies are doing they would have been seized, tied hand and foot, and boiled in oil. The band has quit and the red headed youth has come down covered with glory and sweat. He Is a Stan- ford student and his name is Wendell Kinney of Ohio. A live wire for 45 minutes while the agony lasted. A- blackhaired lady, with a clear voice Is telling what Kentucky thinks of Cox. He certainly is popular where bonded warehouses mostly do congregate. The best yet, though, I don't know what she said. Makes no difference whatever to anybody. Senator Pat Harrison, who beat Vardaman. emereres in the limelight for Cox. He says Mississippi was the first state to adopt prohibition. Now what's coming. A restrained voice, a good presence helps him get the crowd's ear. San Francisco Papers Seared. The tired crowd pricks up its ears when the intrepid Mississipian at tacks the newspapers of San Fran cisco which had criticized the "match less leadership" of the democratic party, but which were trying to dic tate the party's nominee. "Certain newspaper." he said. "All of them." roars back in a loud voice. "Hearst." shouts another in a storm of hisses. Some of the San Francisco papers have got on the nerves of the demo crats. Now he compliments San Fran cisco for its hospitality and the band breaks in with "I Love You. Cali fornia," the national anthem for Cal ifomia. Evidently California regis tcrs no dissent from anything Pat Harrison says. If he Intended tosay anything about the wetness he for got it. They ve trotted out a lot of em but not all. Governor Al Smith of New York is to come. . A roar goes up as the old war horse Bourke- Cock- ran comes forward. They've been fed up on oratory, same good, some bad, but they have all heard of Cock ran. He hit on three cylinders most of the way through. But-they list ened, for there were occasional flashes of the old-time Cockran elo quence. The fires are burning low. A big ovation broke forth at the end, partly for Cockran, partly for Smith! The Willis of this convention has not appeared. He doesn't exist, per haps. Willis is the supreme stump speaker who nominated Harding. The big organ is giving us the "Eastside, Westside." Great melodv. Now it's "Sweet Rosy O'Grady," which so ex cites a big, good-looking policeman that he sings at the top of his voice and New York follows him. Then its the "Bowery." They'll never go there any more for a candidate. Five o'clock and the long ordeal Is nearly over. Lady Carrier at It Again. A very good-looking lady commit teeman clambers on a table Just above tne press gallery. She wears 'em both white. A friend frantically makes motions at her and she jumps nasiuy aown. The manly delegate who carried the beautiful Palmer ladv about on his shoulders Is busy again. e lines nis Job. Protracted disorder with usual business of carrvinsr the staie s standards around. If the dele gations vote as they march It's Smith on the first ballot. He is beautifully wet and all for Tammany, eh, what? But It was more nearly a spontaneous outburst than has yet occurred. The convention may be dry but oh. the wnite lights of old Broadway? wen. a democrat may at least yearn. Franklin D. Roosevelt. cousin of the only Roosevelt, creates surprise by seconding Smith. He was thought to be for McAdoo. He may be later. Tt looks Hke a deal. Just watch. A short and very earnest lady seconding smith says her candidate Drought no shouters, no boosters' here. The crowd yells with delight, evidently thinking she said booze. Great disorder. Loud yells for Smith. Reporters ask one another uneasily 11 bmlth has really got something sianea. Missouri Is called, with ap parently no response. The galleries break forth in excitement calling for Missouri. Rev. Burris Jenkins of that state had been scheduled to nomi nate McAdoo. Jenkins appears. He says he will make no nominating speecn. ine crowd breaks forth In uproarious protest. Jenkins says his candidate will accept and nominates McAdoo. Big responsive yells, with same old demonstration. What's the use telling about it? Same as before and just as much of it. perhaps more from the galleries. Ugly row breaks out in Missouri; anti-McAdoo men prevent McAdooites from carrying stanaara aoout the floor. . McAdoo Wins, if Noise Will. The tumult increases as the minutes pass, men some inventive soul con ceives the idea of bringing the Oregon standard to the platform. Manv others follow until 20 or 30 states are massed about. If noise will do it Is McAdoo bands down. After 40 or more minutes of din and confusion, tney try to stop it. ine ena cones at 6:20 and then came the great hour when New Jersey couio. nan ns wet colors to the mas py ottering Governor HflwH nn Charles O'Brien did and he did it well. " as a wei speecn. addressed to an auaience moved Dy mixed notions of dryness and wetness. They heard him inrouen wnn some impatience. The galleries are more than half emntv T nd Pla'8 a Jazz version of How Jry I Am." Several wet per sons second Edwards. At 7 o clock the convention wi.... Eight hours of talk and uproar is an earful. It sure was a fieirf h- t the "man who." ITALIAN HEADS CONGRESS I Chambers of Commerce Hear Re. port on War. Devastation. PARIS. June 29 Today's session of the International congress of cham bers of commerce was presided over by Senator Ricci of Italy. Resolutions were voted concerning the questions of distribution and production, raw materials and disloyal competition. The delegates also beard the report oi tjnaries Laurent, the newly ap pointed French ambassador to Ger many, on conditions in the war-de vastated ergions. On the board of permanent directors the United States will be represented by Edward A. Filene and John H. Fahey of Boston, and Willis H. Booth of New York. A. C. Bedford, president of the Standard Oil company of New Jersey, was selected as a member of the executive committee. HELPER ADMITS KILLING Veteran of World War Is Found Dead In Tent. BOISE, Idaho, June 30. (Special.) Caldwell, in this state, has Just developed a somewhat sensational murder case. Dewey Lee Harris, a veteran of the world war, was found dead In his tent on the Tom Bartlett ranch near that city. J. E. Jensen, a helper on the ranch, was arrested and . confessed that he killed Harris because the latter was trying to entice his wife away from him. BITMIMS Z What Mr. Wilson Wants Is Mostly Not Known. t ADVISORS GRIND AXES Nearly All Arc Presidential Aspi rants and Nearly All Arc at Democratic Convention. BY JAMES J. MONTAGUE. (Copyright, by the Bell Syndicate. Pub lished by Arrangement). SAN FRANCISCO, June 30 (Spe cial.) You'd think that with prac tically the entire cabinet in San Fran cisco, the convention would know Just i exactly what the administration wants in the line of candidates, platiorms, i etc. They're nearly all here. Begin- ; nlng with Bainbridge Colby of the j state department and ending with l Josephua Daniels, secretary of the ; navy, in between are Secretary Burle- j son, who used to be administration sportsman; Secretary Meredith, who ! has Just taken hold of the interior department, and A. Mitchell Palmer. ; the attorney-general. They're all candidates, too. every one of them. and all with about the same chance for nomination, which is no chance at alL But what they don't know about Mr. Wilson's wants is positively amazing. Precedent Cnrbs Colby. Of course Mr. Colby, as ranking member, could call a cabinet meeting right here in San Francisco and give the convention the orders that it is so eagerly waiting for. But the last secretary of state who called a cabinet meeting landed very- soon thereafter on his neck and ears the exact middle of Pennsylvania avenue, wnicn is a way ot s,yin that he stopped being secretary of state right off the reel, so Mr. Colby, ' who has never held a great oince before, is going to be extremely con servative about calling any cabinet meetings or about making any def- nite statement about what tne presi dent wants the convention to do. Of course these cabinet members could. if they wanted to. all get together on one man and put him over. The reason they tto not oo mis two-fold. First Each one of them is a can didate himself and if he supported one of his colleagues and said colleague ' would get the nomination, where would he be? I Second If the five, as cabinet mem- , bers, happened to name a man tne , president didn't want, and they prob- i ably would, in about three days some stranger would drop into the office of each and tell them coldly that he was the new boss of the department. All Are Evasive. The position of these cabinet of ficers has therefore been extremely embarrassing. When they are ap proached on the hypotheses that as the presidents advisors tney Know what he wants, they have to admit that they do so know. But when they are asked what It is that the president wants they have got to be evasive and stall and pre tend that they are too deeply in his confidence to be allowed to tell. In all conventions that have gone before this the gathering of such a great number of cabinet members would have settled the, works right from the jump. Obedience Not Possible. In Baltimore, of course, there weren't any cabinet officers, for the democrats at that time were unhap pily on the outside looking in. But in St. Louis they appeared In a body and -told the convention to re nominate Wilson and sure enough the convention did exactly what they said. They could tell the convention to renominate Wilson today, also, ..and the only reason they don't is that the convention would not do it. WILL MAY BE FORGED Lumberman's Estate Furnishes Cause for Contest. CHICAGO, June 30. James B. For gan, chairman of the board of direc tors of the First National bank of Chicago, testified today In circuit court that the signature of Byron L. Smith, late president of the Northern Trust company, on the alleged second will of James C. King, millionaire lumberman, was not genuine. II r. Forgan appeared as a witness for the Northern Trust company, trustee of the King estate under the first will, which provided for the maintenance of a home for aged men. Gaston B. Means and Mrs. Mary C. Melvin, sister of King's deceased sec ond wife, seek to have the second will probated. Priest Celebrates Anniversary.' CHEHALIS. Wash., June 30. (Spe cial.) The celebration of the 25th an niversary of the elevation ot Rev. Father F. A. Meens of Chehalis to .the Catholic priesthood attracted a large number of prominent divines of that church to this city yesterday. Among them, were Bishop O'Dea of Seattle and the priests of most of the prlnci pal northwest cities. He v. Father Couvrette of South Bend delivered the address. 'After the church services there was a banquet at St. Helen's hospital. - . . . Seattle Plane Firm to Open. Victor Vernon, general manager of the Oregon-Washington & Idaho Air plane company, left for Seattle last night on a two-day trip. He will su perintend tne opening ot the new agency and inspect the new site of the city field, also the possibilities for starting regular lines to Seattle Tacoma and Olympia, while there. Pigeons Make Record Trip. BEND, Or.. June 30. (Special.) Four Deschutes National forest car rier pigeons, sent to Portland and re leased there from the district forest Sure Relief 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief ,E LL-ANS FOR INDIOESTION GIWRICE Al (Out Samson Oriental er s office at 10:30 o clock, this morn- inc. made Bend at 1:60 o'clock this afternoon, making; the entire flight 3 hours and 20 minutes, messages V That the great lecturers such as Taft. Cobb. Tarbell. Bryan, Stefansson and others come West under our management exclusively. ELLCSON-WHITS M0S1C LYCEUM" CHAQTAOQ8AS on ocr TMRee fcags-o two hcmisphcrcs PORTLAND CALGARY frUCKLACIO, NEW ZEALAND GEA-RHA Fred Ober's Grocery open for business. Full line of groceries, fruits, veg etables, meat and ice at reasonable prices. We solicit your patronage. Strict attention paid to all orders. El in HHBaMaaBBBBB ai MUM Mil NewMctor Records for Jt&ly A program of great musfc such as only the Victor can present. 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