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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1920)
THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JUi,Y 25, 1920 '4. J VI ..... ..." SEEN BY CAMERA wmzi . .... . , I NEfmsr 1 WKMJuJ BY MEANS of the radio telephone. Secretary Daniels recently, ad dressed a crowd in Times square, New York, from on board the flagship of the- Atlantic fleet, the Pennsyl vania, several miles out at sea. Ad miral "Wilson, commander of the At lantic fleet, was. with him. At Camden, O-, are two citizens who are sure to cast their votes for Gov ernor Cox for president. They are Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Cox.- father and stepmother of the democratic ioml nee. American athletes who will com pete against the best athletes of the rest of the world at the forthcoming Olympic games will be trained by y i- - . X t.k ft'' C- Xt M. 10 : j C' ""- 1 a , y?i- It v '. H fi ' - - .a,i '1 n Coach Jack Moakley. who has built up a wonderful reputation at Cornell. Coach Moakley is shown with his wife (right) and daughter Mildred (left). Canadian society circles are await ing with interest the arrival from England of the wife and children of Lord Athlone, governor-general-elect of Canada. Lord Athlone's wife, is Princess Alice, countess of Athlone, and the only daughter of the late Duke of Albany (youngest brother of Edward VII). She is thus a British royal princess and granddaughter of Queen Victoria. The children are Lady May Cambridge, 14, and Vis count Trematon, 13. m m m Revolutionary troops are again on the march in Mexico. The photograph . portrays a scene recently enacted revolutionary troops occupying Juar ez, just across the line from the' United States. These troops were formerly Carranza men, but they have joined the revolutionary forces. Eugene V. Debs, socialist candidate for president of the United States, recently received official notification of his nomination at Atlanta prison. Atlanta. Ga., where Debs is serving a ten-year sentence. The photograph shows members of the socialist noti fication committee with Debs at the prison. They are, left to right: Joe Rhoden, Atlanta socialist; Dr. Madge Stephens, Terre Haute: Samuel Uasl leta. Atlanta; Editor Fiegenbaum of a socialist paper; Eugene V. Debs; Otto Bransetter, national secretary; Seymour Stedman of Chicago, nomi nee for vice-president on the socialist ticket; Julia Gerber of New York; James O'Neil, editor of the New York Call. Selected as the most beautiful wild west type to boost 'the Cheyenne Round-Up, "Miss Wyoming" (Miss Helen Bonham) Is on a tour of the east and recently called upon Senator Warren G. Harding at Washington. "You'd better come out, senator. We have a pair of chaps and a pony waiting for you." she republican nominee. .,V I'X II tar-, I? - .v !?1iiOJ hllcM :il W V?t L liiA - ;r; . f"-. - 'lV - J 44rv- - - v-; r Vnw ' -"P4! II P 0" V :1 I 1 ' - ITS' - f ' - t-J4 -'-V" o."' - , 'r iirt,- 1l T e-w-t . - m i m ; irt "4 v I" 4 I N w - c v J X- -x- H - - - assured the - W Wit 41? V U'L .MA 1f mitt iL r'