TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, JUNE 7, 1920 FIGHT OVER TREATY TO GO TO CHICAGO Work Started on Trouble some Planks. ONE TO BE ON MEXICO Attitude on Industrial ' Relations Will Be Put in Platform.' First Work Harmonious. BILLY SUNDAY'S SON AMONG SCINTILLANTS AT CHICAGO Rush on for Place in Dark Horse Class Jonathan Bourne on Job. Washington Delegation Arrives Depew Is There. CHICAGO. June 6. Republican platform builders went seriously to work tonleht on the more trouble some of the pianks remaining to be fashioned. One of these was the declaration on the treaty of Versailles and the league cf nations, a subject of long? standing nd bitter controversy. Another dealt with industrial relations, brinftinK into contrast widely divergent schools of ccrnomic thought. A third related to Mexico. On all of these entire harmony was predicted by all the party leaders, although most of them conceded that eome interesting scrimmages, possibly reaching: the convention floor, would have to be fought out. Reaction Complicate Task. Complicating the task temporarily, was a reaction against the platform programme worked out by some lead ers in Washington. The movement against the programme, apparently, nevertheless was based on an objec tion that republican senators had taken too free a hand in pre-conven-rtion platform construction. With the belated arrival here of several senators, representing ex tremes of republican opinion on the treaty, the long senate fight over the league of rations virtually was trans lerred here. They will make a re newed effort for a programme on which all republicans- can stand. Hard Treaty Hattle I.oom. The lrreconcilabtes and the mild reserva tionists of the senate are pre pared for a hard battle on the treaty plank. Senator Borah of Idaho, a leader of the irreconcilables, arrived late in the day with a plank which will have the backing of the John eon forces. The mild reservationlsts held nu merous conferences and prepared to draft a plank for stbmission to Ogden Mills, chairman of the executive com mittee of policies nd platform. "We will submit our plank to the resolutions committee," said Senator Borah, "and if we don't see it in the platform we will offer it in the con vention." roller Declared Wanted. The men of our 'group think we re entitled to a straight-out. affirm ative declaration for the maintenance of the foreign policies handed down by George Washington and James Monroe and as advocated and re effirmed many times in republican platforms since 1S60. Senator Borah was not ready to make the Johnson-Borah plank pub lic, but said it would be presented to the resolutions committee. It was learned that the mild reser va tionists' plank would demand a constructive policy for ratification of the Versailles treaty with protective reservations and an indorsement of the stand of senators who voted for the Lodge reservations. Senator Lodge, who arrived today, predicted that an agreement between the vari ous groups would be reached. Kalla Plank Opposed. There was a general feeling that little trouble would be encountered In bringing an agreement on the Mex ican plank. The declaration prepared at Washington by Senator Fall of New Mexico, however, providing for American intervention unless Mexico mended its ways ran into some opposi tion, and it was suggested that it might be modified to omit altogether the reference to possible military n terference by this government. In that case, the plank would de clare mat recognition or tne new regime in Mexico City should be with held until certain guarantees had been made. There also would be an attack on President Wilson's Mexican policy and a general statement of the nece ity of protecting American rights. - Two American tx-ambassadors to Mexico. Henry P. F!etcher of Pennsyl vania and Henry Lttr.e Wilson of In diana, are in consultation here with other leaders. Shaping the industrial relations plank revived many old animosities and brought into fjcus several issues raised by recent strikes and unrest. On this plank the supporters of Sen a tor Johnson are generally expected to have a programme of their own a.nd various other elements of the Party are counted on to bring in pro jAsals that will run counter to the views of some detegates. None of these elements has yet disclosed its Stand. Although only the less controversy 5latform declarations have heretofore teen taken up In the conference here. ihe leaders declared that so far they jiad been able to reach . complete agreement. "There has been apparent unanl mity on everything: taken up," said Will H. Hays, the national chairman, "The treaty has not been taken up because the proprieties required that there be no real movement in that matter until more of the advocates on the different lines of thought ar rivea. Organzied agricultural interests to day planned their campaign to urge adoption of platform planks dealing with agricultural enterprises. Presi Jent C. S. Barrett and other officers of the national board of farm organi zations, composed, of many agricul tural associations, met and appointed committees to present their cause to tho resolutions committee. . Gifford I'inchot was among those at the con ference. The platform committee is expected to. adopt virtually unchanged the rec ommendations respecting agriculture made by the national committee's body on -platforms and policies and pre sented by Senator Capper of Kansas. Senator Borah was chosen to rep resent Idaho on the resolutions com mittee at a caucus tonight of the state delegation. CHICAGO, June . (Special.) George M. Sunday, son of the Rev. Billy Sunday, who calls Hood River, Or., his home, is a chip off the old block. As director of publicity at the Leonard Wood headquarters, young Mr. Sunday has demonstrated the value of his experience in organizing his father's great revivals. He dis plays the faculty of being able to keep his work going and seeing flocks of callers at the same time. It was marvelous to watch him today as, one after another, he received visitors who came in to publicity headquarters to remark, "And you are Billy Sun day's boy." To most sons of great fathers who are trying to get along on their own account such a query would be dis concerting, if not offensive. Not so with Billy Sunday's son. He had a line of conversation that soon im- ressed his visitors that he was not eamng on his famous sire. And he made them all feel good by saying. xou don t need to be in a hurry." It ascertained that Sunday. Jr.. proved his ability as an organizer as a cap- ain in the American expeditionary forces, in which he performed impor tant business service. There wag a rush for first position i the "dark horse" class Saturday fternooa when one of Senator Hard- s managers suddenly began tell- ng friends that "we want it under- tood that Senator Harding is a dark orse and the leading one. A little ater it was discovered that Senator Poindexter also had voluntarily trans ferred himself to the "dark horse" ables, showing that this is once hen keeping slightly under cover appeals to wise heads as good politics. Senator Poindexter, in a very happy mood, declared with a loud laugh, that e wished to have it understood that he always had been a "dark horse." Watch Jonathan Bourne." was the ord quietly passed out from the headquarters of one of the candidates Saturday. As manager of the Poin- exter campaign, it was declared by political manager or another candi- ate that ex-Senator Bourne was aking surprising headway in lining up some second choice votes for his an in several delegations. One dele gation in wheh it was asserted he was making headway was the Harding utfit from Ohio. The Washington delegation irot in during Saturday all of the delegates rnving except State Senator Johnson Colville, who was detained by a serious operation. J. H. Sexsmith of Metaline Falls, ai alternate, came in Senator Johnson's place. Thaddeus S. Lane of Spokane is chairman of the elegation, but Mark Reed of Shelton. loor leader of the lower house of the ate legislature, is head of the steer- ng committee. All members of the delegation insisted they were for Senator Poindexter to' the last ditch. ut during the afternoon the majority mem got together and called at the headquarters of General Wood where they were introduced to the soldier candidate. It is just as well not to comment upon whether this call had any significance. Ex-Senator Chauncey M. Depew, 86 years young, arrived Saturday as a elegate from New York, remarking that this was his 14th republican na- ional convention. His first one was as delegate, to the convention in 1864. which renominated Abraham Lincoln. Mr. Depew said he expected to attend everal more conventions. Manv urious admirers flockedJ about him o compliment him on his success in olding his youth. There is nothing to it," he said. except to continue to do the things ou aid wnen you were young. I would advise every man to have hob bies and plenty of them and not to work too long at one job. When von ire of one thing, try something else. na you will nevr get old. There is ot any set way of keeping young, Jfew Industries Located. VANCOUVER, B. C. During th first four months of 1920 there were 564 new industries established in British Columbia, according to a re port Just made public by the Work mens' Compensation board. This ere ates a provincial recorod. Many the new concerns are returned soldier propositions. Domestics Get Labor Bureau. HONOLULU. T. H. The newly-or ganized Honolulu Housewives' leagu recently decided to open an employ merit bureau lor domestics. B A It greet. Holman Fuol Co, imm tor cart. Main 353, 60-J DELEGATES BLEAT OUTPLEA FOR GUIDE but there are many modes of living that will accomplish that purpose. Simply think young. When you were young, you admfred pretty girls. Con tinue to admire them when you get old." Then the celebrated dinner ora tor and humorist, as illustrating that there is no regularly prescribed method' of living to old age, told this story: "When I was in Paris some years ago I was invited to a dinner in cele bration of the 100th birthday anni versary of a noted French chemist. After the chemist told me how he held onto life by simply having kept himself satisfied I leaned over and inquired, 'But, honest, what do you drink?' He replied, 'Nothing but water from ,the Seine." I learned, however, the next day that there was still living in Paris one of Napoleon's old guard who was 103 years old and he had gone to bed drunk every night since the battle of Waterloo." Writing publicity in the office of Candidate Hiram Johnson today was A. D. Fairbairn, who, umong other occupations, contributes to Labor, the official publication of the Plumb Plan league. Oregon will be well represented at the convention outside of the regu larly chosen delegates and alternates. Every train from the west brings in one or two new Oregonians. Clark Leiter is here helping out at Hoover headquarters and has come to be known around this convention town as one of the most effective workers for the former food administrator. Roy Ritner of Pendleton is here try ing to get some "inside" dope on the identity of the nominee so that he can wire advance information back to his friends in Oregon. Frank W. Camp of Portland is here and National Com mitteemen Ralph Williams received a telegram this afternoon from William Hanley of Burns which read: "Please reserve a ringside seat for me. Will be in tomorrow." Joe Singer of Portland) was elected special sergeant-at-arms for the Ore gon delegates on the motion of Wal ter L. Tooze Jr. The Tooze motion, which was carried with a whoop and hurrah, was followed by loud ap plause which Joe acknowledged with a broad smile of appreciation. mm Delegate Tooze evoked the big laugh of the Oregon conference this afternoon when Chairman Rand de clared nominations to be in order for the Oregon member of the committee on notification of the presidential nominee. "Well, now, that depends on who's nominated," said Captain Tooze. "If it's Johnson, I favor Judge Mc Caraant." Arthur W. Dunn, veteran Washing ton newspaperman, tells an amusing story to illustrate the mistake of scoffing at some of the most harmless looking candidates. "I was on the newspaper special carrying the Wash ington correspondents to the repub lican convention at Chicago in 1888 when some stranger came through the train taking a straw ballot," said Mr. Dunn, "when a slip of paper was handed to Perry Heath, correspondent of the Indianapolis Journal. Mr. Heath rather apologetically wrote the name of Benjamin Harrison, just as a matter of loyalty, because Mr. Heath's paper was the lone promoter of the Harrison boom. Harrison had 29 of the 30 delegates from Indiana, but his candidacy was more or less a joke among the wl-je ones. When the straw ballots were counted Harrison received only one vote, that of Perry Heath, but was nominated just the same in a convention which hung in a deadlock over Sunday. It was said here today that Senator Borah had come to Chicago for the convention confidently expecting to be the nominee. The low down is that Senator Borah expects the Johnson delegates to Jump to him if their can didates fail and that theirs will fall on him as a compromise. Wood, Johnson and Lowden Exhort and Defy. KNOX BOOM FALLS FLAT Fevered Tangle Promises Spectacle and Even "Dog Fight" Before domination. BT JAMES J. MONTAGUE. (Copyright. 1920, by the Bell Syndicate. Published by Arrangement.) CHICAGO. June 6. (Special.) There may be unrest scattered abroad through the country, but it is the quintessence of quietude compared to They have been saying that no dele the unrest that rages in Chicago on I gate can be found to nominate Hoover. tight, but deadlock of some fashion it will be. That is what the several promoters of the assorted dark horses have been hoping, praying and plan-1 nlng for. "They want to eliminate first one and then another of the leaders and then bring forward from the field the fortunate unknown. And unknown he is, not only to them, but I to everybody else. He may be Allen of Kansas, or Sproul of Pennsylvania, or uoolldge of Massachusetts, or I Hoover of California. or even Poin dexter of Washington, or none of I them. Therein lies great trouble, with the I dark horse programme, the Initial process of eliminating besides may I prove too hard. Despite various set backs. General Wood is well in the van of all of the others. It is a po litical axiom that you can't beat some body with nobody and the nobody who is to defeat Wood is as yet undis covered and nameless, unless it be Lowden or Johnson. Call Most Have Backinc When the call to leave Wood comes. it must have behind it the authority of a workable plan. What plan? Certainly none has yet been designed and it will not be until the scattered groups behind the lesser candidates or the unknowns are more nearly of one mind. It is probably true in view of such a situation that Wood is stronger than the tacticians have as sumed him to be.. You don't hear a great deal about Hoover. Tou will later, perhaps. this Sabbath day. The reason of the unrest i3 simple. Nearly a thousand delegates are here to nominate a republican candidate for the presidency. They don't know ho to nominate, and they can t find ut who there is the slightest chance nominating. In the old days they used to go to he bosses and the bosses would tell hem. If there were disagreements between bosses they were thrashed ut in conference. Even In the wilu and disorderly times of 1912 the dele gates knew that they would nominate either Roosevelt or Tatt. Boaaea Are Oione, But here in Chicago now, there are no bosses. Penrose could-not be here because he was ill. Reed Smoot has eased to be a caller, William Barnes oes not control even his New York elegation. and A. T. Hert of Ken ucky, who has in a measure taken he places of the old-timers, is so ew to the political game that ne will take no chances in giving orders To say the result is confusion is to ut it mildly. It is chaos. Delegates re swarming through the corridors f the Congress, the Blackstone and uditorium. literally bleating for omebody to tell them what to do General Wood. Senator Johnson ana Governor Lowden, the three heaviest delegate holders, are issuing state ments and defiances almost hourly. he old-style republicans would like o hey haven't the slightest idea how to go about it- The arrival or the New York, Pennsylvania and Con necticut delegates instead or sim plifying matters, only added to the general mixup. Kmi Boon Pstile. There has been some attempt on the part of the non-partisan leaders f these two delegations to throw heir support to Knx. thereby start- 3. Knox boom. But the sugges- ion has thus iar lanen on auw, cuia ars. As soon as It gets out into the open, ir it ever toes. lte jonnson, Wood and Lowden people will fall 'on t like a thousand of brick. Clearly Johnson is tonight the trongest single contender. Whether he wrill be for long remains to be seen. The aggresr.ive tactics have made aggressive enemies and if he gets the nomination it will not be without a bigger battle than the one n which Roosevelt was beaten in 1912. It is plain tonight that when the delegates take tha'.r seats Tuesday morning they will know little more than they do tonight. It is also plain hat something very closely approx- HOOVER SPEECH GIVEN IIP NOMINATING ADDRESS AT CON VENTION TO BE OMITTED. into the Coliseum this week will pro duce one. Strategy Declared to Be to Depend ( on Failure or AH Others for Nomination. CHICAGO, June 6. Hoover head quarters last night authorized the an nouncement that, according to present plans, a nominating speech for Her bert Hoover would be dispensed with. but that if it were decided to have one made, it would be delivered by Nathan L. Miller of Syracuse, one of the New York delegates. , The strategy of the Hoover mana gers, it was said, was to depend on the convention failing to cast a ma jority vote for any candidate and to place Mr. Hoover in nomination, prob ably without a formal speech, at what they consider to be the proper moment. The name of Governor Calvin Cool- idge of Massachusetts will be placed before the convention by Speaker. F. H. Gillett of the house of representatives. Reports earlier in the evening cred iting the Hoover headquarters with announcing that a nominating speech would be made by Judge Miller brought a disclosure of the plan and the following statement by Miller: I hav not authorized anyone to say that I shall make a nominating speech for Mr. Hoover. I am for Mr. Hoover and shall vote for him la the convention, but whether any nominat ing speech will be made for Mr. Hoover will be decided later." Charles S. "Whitman, ex-governor of New York; William Wilcox and Bertram Snell, chairman of the ex ecutive committee of the New .York republican committee, were callers at DEADLOCK SEEMS CEfiTAJil (Continued From First Page.) LOWDEN FUND TRACED Missouri Candidate for Governor Admits Receiving $1000. ST. LOUIS. June 6. E. E. McJlmsey. of Springfield, candidate for the re publican nomination for governor, in a statement last night declared he had received J1000 from Jacob L. Babler, republican national commit teeman. Babler has stated he handled $17,000 of Governor Lowden's presi dential campaign funds in Missouri A. M. Hyde, of Trenton, who is op posing McJlmsey for the nomination declared he had been offered $1000 by Babler as a campaign contribution but had refused it. McJimsey assert ed the money was given him early in January in the form of two personal checks from Babler and that he un derstood they were intended as i contribution to his gubernatorial campaign expenses. McJimsey is pub Usher of the Springfield, Mo., Repub llcan. framing a platform acceptable to the convention will also be able to pro vide a candidate equally acceptable. At this time four years ago Charles Evans Hughes was as good as nomi nated, although the ballots were not cast until four days later. Tonight he is being mentioned here and there among the dark horses. Mention o ex-President Taft also is heard in the same way. The Hughes talk, which could not be denominated a boom and yet bears th stamp of a good deal of support, was brought in by New York business men and financiers, who con tended he was a man upon whom all the elements could unite. Governo Sproul of Pennsylvania and Senato Harding of Ohio also figure in the speculation. . With the opening of the convention 36 hours away, last-minute arrange ments are promptly moving into place. They include everything but a win ning candidate, but the practical poli ticians are confident that the elimi nation races they are planning to run DERANGED PATIENT SAVED Nnrse Grapples With Woman About to Leap From Window. NEW YORK. June 6. (Special.) Mrs. Mary Florence, an Inmate of the Norwegian hospital, Brooklyn, fight lng with all tne strength of a de mented woman in an effort to fling herself from the third floor window of the hospital yesterday, struggled for 15 minutes on the window ledge with Miss May Foren, a nurse, whil more than a score of other inmates shrieked for help. Dr. Rienstren ar rived just in time to prevent the two women falling out of the window. Mrs. Florence has suffered for more than a year with a nervous disorder. Several of the ward patients today saw Mrs. Florence creep from her bed while trie nurse was out of the ward and run toward the window. Two of the patients shouted for help, which bretught Miss Foren back to the ward jus in time to see Mrs. Florence raise the window. but now it is said that the service will be performed by Deleate-at- Large Miller, of New York. Here and there you may see a Hoover but ton, and the walls are decorated with occasional and rather modest Hoover placards, but there are no crowds shouting that they want Hoover, no brass bands, no processions, no meet ings, no anything but the silent and I watchful presence of a few admirers of the great food conservator. This is not to say that Hoover is out of the question, for he may after all prove the solution of the nomina tion tangle. The Hoover managers are sitting tight and playing a wait ing game. Some gambler would say that they may have an ace in the hole. Perhaps they have. LABOR'S RIGHT DEFENDED MR. GOMTERS REPLIES TO THE QUESTION OF GOV. ALLEN. Toiler's Claim on, Life and Free dom From Oppression Held Prior to Public. WASHINGTON. June 6. (By the put all three out of business, but I Associated Press.) "The public has I Gonservativo- eind Progrossive The First custodian money. National Bank is a of other people's The .management of this Bank is conservative in carefully safe guarding the funds of its depositors. But the First National Bank has assumed a further re sponsibility which has helped it maintain first place in its community. It has been progressive. " It has pursued a broad policy of progressive activity it has adopted Inew methods of best serving its cus tomers. It owes its position of being the first bank in the Pacific Northwest to its creative enterprise as well as its sound and safe policies. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PORTLAND OREGON NATIONAL BANK WEST ROCKY FOUNTAINS THE FIRST OF THE MEMBER AMERICAN BANKERS ASSOCIATION no rights which are superior to the toiler's right to live and to his right to defend himself agatnst oppression. Samuel Gompers declared in his de ferred replies to three questions asked him by Oovernor Allen of Kansas in their debate at New York May 28. Mr. Gompers' replies were made in pub lic tonight. Governor Allen asked whether the public had any rights in a strike "af fecting the production or distrmution of the necessaries or lire, thus threat ening the public peace and Impairing the public health, and if so how would Mr. Gompers protect those rights. He also asked who controlled the "divine right" of employes to quit work. Strikes in which the public peace has been threatened, Mr. Gompers said, "usually have been strikes in which the employer or public officials infuenced by employers have created the breach of peace by the use of thugs, armed guards and detectives.' "Labor, he continued, "has no de sire to cause inconvenience to tne public, of which it is a part. "The right to strike must be and will be maintained, not only as measure of self-defense and self-ad- RAIN DRENCHES ORCHARDS VALLEY EXPERIENCES FIRST DOWNPOUR IN WEEKS. place before anybody can be nom- nated. And until the matter is set to get together on anything resem bling a platform. Platforms are sup posed to be acceptable to candidates, and the Wood platform would please fits it has brought." Johnson as little as a Johnson plat- I As to Governor Allen s question re form would please wood. Tangle Promlaea Thrills. Farmers Extend Hearty Welcome to Precipitation Scheduled to Continue Throughout Day. Thirsty orchards and gardens of the Willamette valley were drenched yes terday by gentle downpours of rain, the first the valley hao experienced for several weeks. Parties of would be picnickers, who had expected to spend the few remaining drops of their gasoline supply upon trips to near-by beauty spots, had their plans badly upset, but farmers throughout the entire .belt through which the rain extended welcomed the precipi tation heartily. Up to 5 o'clock last night .15 of an Inch of rain had fallen. It rained has won its right to a post of honor I considerably after that hour and the prospect was for a continuance of the downpour. In fact, eome of the heaviest rain of the day fell follow ing the close of the weather bureau's official day at 5 o'clock. That the rain is general through cial.) The annual memorial services of the Centralia lodges of Modern Woodmen ami Koyal Neighbors were held today at the Methodist Kpiscopal church. Rev. G. W. Frame delivered the memorial sermon. The two or ganizations assembled at their hall and marched to the church in bodies. Dead Man Native of Ireland. ABERDEEN. Wash., June 6. (Spe cial.) John Stattord, pioneer Aber deen resident who died in Seattle a fow -days asro. was horn in County Wexford. Ireland. He came to Grays Harbor county in 1886. Kor about ten years previously he was in the dairy business in California. He is sur vived by his widow and five sons. Stork Visits Raker Family. SAN KRANC1RCO, Cal., June 6. (Special.) A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Ray L. flaker today. Mr. Baker, who is director of the United States mint, left tonight with William Gibbs McAdoo, cx-federal di rector of railways, for the east. mating a dog-fight is going to take I vancement, but as a measure neces sary to public progress. The strike tied it will, of course, be Impossible among the institutions of free civili zation and the temporary inconven ience it has caused is but a small price to pay for the permanent bene- garding who controlled the "divine I the entire western portions of Oregon right" to order employes to strike, land Washington was indicated in the V (In ..t nor a naiA t T i U" t wrA But although the situation tangles dered by the majority vote of union the brain of the distracted delegates almost past unscrambling, it promises something doing when they get on the floor, and from the spectators and public's point of view it will be perhaps the most interesting ehow of the kind ever staged. Just how interesting may be In ferred from a conversation I over heard between two southern delegates of very . dark complexion in Wabash avenue this morning. "Does you all think youse gwine have a voice in these heah delitera tions?" asked one of them. "Ah don't knaw as ah will have voice in them." was the reply, "but fum the way the indications points now ah would not be surprised if ah had a razah in it before it's ovah. memberships; they are not ordered by officials at will. LOWDEN FORCES SPLIT (Continued From First Pagre.) weather reports: Seattle reported rain, as did also Marshfield, Or. Up to last night the precipitation had not extended across the Cascades to any extent, but prospects were for rain in eastern Oregon, where it Is much de sired by the farmers. Walla Walla reported cloudy weather and prob able rain, while at Pendleton and La Grande there was cloudy weather with probable rain, according to the report received by the Oregon-Washington railroad here from those points. The rain was general as far eastward as The Dalles. Similiarly. renorts from noints up 20,000,000 Women Said to Have 1 the Willamette valley showed the rain Rights That Arc Refused quite west of the moun- The forecast for today, as issued last night by the weather bureau, was the same for Portland and for Oregon and Washington, generally, namely, showers and southerly winds. WOMEN PLAN PICKETING REPUBLICANS HELD FACTORS IN BLOCKING SUFFRAGE. by Two Key States. CHICAGO, June 6. Representatives of 20 states have promised to assist the national women's party in its plans to picket the republican con vention next week as a protest against what the women term the "dilatory and obstructive tactics of the republican party and its officials, It was announced tonight at the women's party headquarters. A statement issued by Miss Alice Paul, chairman of the party, blames lobby -whisperings that Thompson has by no means run the gamut of his re sources in making trouble for his op ponents. He has a surprise or two in store for the convention, it is said. It mav be guessed that Johnson not only intends to present in person his I the republicans for the defeat of the special views on the league of nations I rederai suit rage amendment in ueia so as to have a platform which will ware and declared they are blocking suit him and nobody else, but that he it in Vermont .and Connecticut. will demand a show-down in the con- I "The rights of 20,000.000 women rest vention on the surging question of with the republicans," the statement lush funds, for anv money sDent for said. another candidate in the glowing Mrs. J. W. McGraw, legislative Johnson lexicon is a slush fund. It chairman of the Illinois Equal Suf- Memorial Services Held. CENTRALTA, Wash., June fi. (Spe- FRUIT OFFICE CREATED John A. 3ead of Pittsburg Named Vice-President at Seattle. SEATTLE,- Wash., June 6. (Spe cial.) Creation of the office of v'ce president and election to that post of John' A. Mead of Pittsburg, who has arrived in Seattle, was announced to day by Reginald H. Parsons, presi dent of the Northwestern Fruit ex change. Mr. Mead' has spent 24 "years with service companies and resigned a high executive post with the Pittsburg railways company to accept the of fer in Seattle. Mr. Parsons said he was rated as an expert in economics, corporate, tax and financial matters, and as such would fit in well with certain Intricate problems confronting the fruit industry. may be doubted, however, if he has the boldness to do it, unless he intends thus by a dramatic exit to bid fare well to his own candidacy. Who la Not Wanted la Knows. It is easy to see that the delegates as a wnoie would Ditteriy resent tne washing of the republican soiled linen in the official presence of the con vention. It may be justifiable strat egy to use the senate forum and the columns of the newspapers to make exposures of other candidates' meth ods, but it will hardly ba excused in Johnson if he precipitates a wrangle on that sensitive subject at the coli seum. It will be a poor way to start a Johnson stampede. If there is a good way, Johnson will be glad to adopt it, of course, but nobody" knows what it is. Here in the 1920 conven tion are delegates who are seasoned to political sensation and they may not be readily swept off their feet in any sudden rush of emotion pro duced by Johnsonian or uorahvlan eloquence on any subject.' They may not know whom they want, but they certainly know whom they do not want. There may be no outstanding leaders, but there is a pretty well disciplined lot of followers, some of whom went through the bitter Roose veltian ordeal of 1912 .and the lesser ordeal of 1916, without the twitch of an" eyelash. All this is another way of saying that Johnson has a difficult task. The Johnson bludgeon is more likely to hurt than-to help. Deadlock Appears Certain. The convention is progressing pret ty surely to a deadlock. It may be a, very tight deadlock, or on not ao frage association, today issued statement condemning the proposed picketing and declaring that picket ing in Washington had retarded prog ress of the suffrage amendment. Former Premier Dies. VICTORIA. B. C, June 6. James Dunsmulr, former premier of British Columbia, died this morning at Co wlchan lake, where he had gone to recuperate. Read The Ore-gonlan classified ads. ALOHZO0. BLISS PORTRAIT AND (ISNATUSE ON tVEAT PACKAGE ' Or TABLETS MO POWBM. HERBS PILES DYSPEPSIA RHEUMATISM CONSTIPATION KO CALOMEL OH HABIT FORIfQtC DRUG MASK FHOM ROOTS. HERBS A BAJtKS ONLY MOKET-BA-CK. CTJAJLUtTEK Ut EACH BOX ALONZO O. BLISS MEDICAL CO. EUU33. 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