THERE HE STANDS! GRAND old "Bull"' Durham. He belongs In this country's Hall of Fame. Can you think of a more familiar figure? For over half century Bull has been part of the landscape; the tobacco he represents has made millions and millions of friends. You can roll fifty-thrifty cigarettes from one bag. GENUINE .99 By Mi n TOBACCO LfU M tl!te$$jffiii H WR$lw$SRm Wi1' ppr rou GOV. COX IS NAMED BY THE DIMOCRATS Franklin I). Roosevelt is Given Second Dace On Ticket. Hn rranclM'O. Jbiiic:i M. Cos, gov ernor or Ohio, wan noinlii:il4 for pres ident of the t'ullxit Hlul. In the dem ocratic national convention at 1:4' o'clock Tuesday morning. The con tention then adjourned until hood Tuesday, to tanvsas llio question of second place to eotnplote the ticket. When the convention convened again t noon Tuesday It wa derided to Rive second place on (he tlckot to Hie Kat. Franklin l. Kooseveil of Now York, assistant aecretury of the navy. The nomination of Cox came at the conclusion of a 44 ballot slnnt'.le in which lie bad steadily braiou down the forces o( William O. McAdoo, ex. socrelary of the treasury, and I'rcal dent Wilson's aonlu law. When the balloting ou the 44lh rote had reached a point where Cox hud 72 voles and waa rillly approaching the oeceaaary two thirds of 729, Ham CITATION In ilu Comity Court of the stalo of (itvguii for I nintlllu Comity. In the Matter of the Katute of John L. llmwn. doccaard. To Frank Brown nod Kiln lirown, hia if of lloliliimn, oreiion, Ilnrvey A. Itrown, William I.. Urtvn nnd Clitra Brown hia wife of Ilrllx. (irciicni, JittiK o, Itrown und tlolda Itrown of Kphratn, Washington. Arthur U Itrown of Totirhct, Washington, Kvil Thorite of IIiililntMii, Oregon, Klmcr It. Corpoion of Weston, Oregon, Floyd t'orporon of Baker. Oregon, Karl Lundwell (or Lund wall) n non-res-Idem residing at a place unknown, Uene Lundwell (or Lmidwiill) a non naUleiU residing nl ft pliteu unknown, Klpli Lundwell (or Uimlwull ) a, non resident residing at n place unknown, and nil persona Interested In the es ti.le of John I Itrown, deceased, uHICOTlNim: IN TUB NAM 13 OF Till HTATK OK ORBliON: You und each of you arc hereby cited and required to appear on or tiefore Wednesday the 2 tut day of July, JB30, at ten, o'clock A. M. In the County Courtroom of the above entitled court In the City ot-Tondlcton, Oregon, to enow caimo If tiny there be why an order of snlo nnd license to sell the following described real prop city ehould not Unue to Harvey A. Brown, adiulnlatrator of the above en titled eatato uuthorUtuK, dlroctiuti:. mine fr the brat Intereata of the c- nnd Report in the adminiatrntion of tate and all concerned therein and the estate; that Monday, the 10th ehell order and direct. day of July. 1920, at the hour of ten Thl citation la wrved upon you pur- o'clock in the forenoon haa been ap- stiam to und In compliance with an pointed as the time and the county ord.-r to how cauao made nnd entered courthouse at Pendleton as the place bv lion. Charlea II. Alarah. Judito of wncre an oojecuons ana exctpiiune the aove entitled court and hearlmc diitn tb 3rd day of June, 102", direct -t it if peraonnl aervlca upon auch of yot. u lire wilhtil the State of Oregon and that the real of you and all others In tereated In the anld catalo be arrved by pulillcatlon of aald citation once u week for four conaocutlve wceka In the Weaton Lender, a weekly newa paper, bmlnnliiB with the liuuo x of June 1 1 1 It. 1920 to and Including the laniie of July nth. 1920. IN WITNKHH WIIKIIKOF, I, It. T. Itrown. Clerk of the above entitled court, have hereunto act my hand and eal of the aald court thla 7th day of g0Mg wnom it may concern that A. W. to it will be heard and a settlement of the estate made. Dated this June 18th. 1U20. CHRISTINA B. BEELER. Administratrix. Tetcrson, Bishop & Clark, Attor neys for Administratrix. Notice to Creditors In tha County Court of the State of Oregon for Umatilla County. In the Matter of the Estate of Ninna N. Lundell, deceased. JAMES M. COX Who Received the Democratic Nom ination for President B. Amldon of Kansas, inanaerr of the McAd;o forces and vtc chairman of tho democratic national committee, took the platform and moved that the nomination of Governor Ccx bo made unanimous. Nomination Made Unanimous. Immediately there was a roar from the tired and worn delegates which laatvd for a full fcur minutes before Chairman Robinson could put the question on Amldon's motion to sus pend the rules and nominate Cox by acclamation. At 1:43 o'clock Tuesday morning the motion was formally voted over with a rolling chmiia of ayes und a crash ing of tho brass bauds. State standards which had surged back and forth In tho desperate bat tles of the deadlock raced to tho front of the hall and to a place before the platform. The Cox band wagon movement really started lute Monday afternoon before the recess for dinner. During the interval both sides of the fight made desperate appeals to Tammany. Throughout the night New York's vote stood the samo, 0 for McAdoo and 70 for Cox. On the third ballot of the evening session tho slide to Ccx start ed and before the leaders of the op position could realiio It the votes we're flopping over in twos and threes and June, A. D. 1920. It. T. DROWN, I'nuitilla County, County Clerk of Hlnto of Oregon. (Seal) I'eteraon, Ulshop & Clark, At torneya for Admlnlatrator Pendle Administrators' Notice C. Price, deceased. Nntiea la Imrehv 17 i von that we have empowering and licensing him tp aell een appointed administrators of the tho following described real property, Hbove named estate by order of tho tn-wlt: abovo entitled court, and have duly Commencing lit n point on tha Went qualified. All persons who have claims line, Thirty-six (3) rods tsouin or too against said estate are lioreoy iluiilieu Northwest corner or tno noumcam his attorneys, Peterson, Bishop & Clark, in the Smith-Crawford building at Pendleton, Oregon, within six In tho County Court of the State of moI)ths of the date of the first publics Oregon for Umatilla County. tion of this notice, which is Friday, the In the Matter of the Estate of Zorolda 25th day of June, 1920. A W. L.UNDSL4,, Administrator. Peterson, Bishop & clakk, Notice is Hereby Given to all per- fours ,n a fnUm wntch gent nlm over nfl wnom l mnv uu con iiini. n. t. ... ... I...,lell has been appointed adminis- " majority mark and put mm at a trutor of theestatoof Niiina N. Lun- new level. dell, deceased, and has qualified as Georgia Goes to Cox. such. All persons having claims " against hor estate are required to pre- Atter that the going was easy, sent them with proper vouchers to the Georgia went into the Cox column said administrator at the law office of .llh h.r th. -.h(,r...ai of Attor. Attorneys for Administrator. Notice to Creditojs nunrtcr of Paction Two (2) In Town ship Five (8). North limine Thirty flvo (35) E. W. M, and running thence Bast Thirteen and one-third roda. thence North Twelve (12) rods, thenco Went Thirteen and one-third rodn, thenee Pouth Twelve (12) rods to tho place of beginning, containing One ( 1 ) Acre moro or Icmh. Alao. Lot numbered Thirty-three (38) In Block Seven (7) in North Mtl- to present thorn to us, with proper In the County Court of the State of vouchors, at mo oiuce oi warier Oregon lor umaiiua v.ouniy. Smythe, attorneys, in the American j tho Matter of the Estate of George National Bank building, Pendleton, Or- w Mitchell, deceased. i . ...i.-.i.. . t u. " VgOll, Wllltlll B1A I1IVI11.I1 aiviii iiib date. Dated June 25, 1920. James H. Price, Frank Price, Administrators, etc. ney-General Palmer had released not only the Pennsylvania delegation, but other delegates who wanted to slide to 'the Cox column. The accessions of twos, threes and fours soon grew Into blocks, and when the 44th ballot was well on its way (he votes were tumbling Into the Cox column so fast that his nomination seemed an as sured fact. ' After 22 fruitless ballots, tho con vention gave up hopes of selecting a presidential nominee within the firs( week of its session and adjourned on Notice of Final Account Notice is hereby given that we have been appointed administrators of the Saturday night until 10 o'clock Mon- catate of Goorge W. Mitchell, de- dy morning. SKSi JflJSZZ hSlT "'hen the convention stepped Co, to present them to us at the office of aa leading with 430. McAdoo came J. B. Berry, our attorney, in Pendle- next with 372V4. Palmer was down ton, Oregon, with proier vouchers at- t0 lsVi Tho flnaI ballots of the lacnvU. WIU1III a! iiivmvuq hvih vuv nomination were Senator Owen of Ok lahoma, AtUrny Caorl Talmar, 8a alor Hitchcock of Nebraska, llomar f.'ummlng, rhalrmaa of the democratic national committee; William G. Mc Adoo, Governor Hmltli of New York, Governor Kdwaria of Now Jersey, Hecretary Meredith, (Ji.vernor Cox of Ohio, James W. tienrd. ex ainhnasa dor to Germany; Henator Hliumous of North Carolina, John V. Davis, am bassador to (ileal Britain; Henator Carter Glass of Vlrt-lnla, and Kranrl Burton Harrison, Kovurnor g'nicrul nl the Philippines. No Spatch for McAdco. Dr. Hurrla Jenkins of Kansas City, who placed the ex ui-crelary of the treasury In nomination, main one of the shortest ape chea on record when he merely announced that he placed Mr. McAdoo In nomination, fully as sured that If "(1-ofied for the herrlre of the nation" he would not refute tho nomination. I'erbapa the nvt exciting scenes of tho convention occurred when Henator Glass, chairman of the resolutions committee, presented the platf jrm and tho battle of the wets an1 drys got un der way. After the platform had beu read without maClng mention of a prohibition plank, W. J. Bryan was recognized to offer a bone dry plank, as a minority report. W. Bourke Cochran cf New York offered a plank permitting for home consumption tho manufacture of elder, light wlnc-s and bt-L-r. K. L. Doheny of California presented a minority report on the Irish question, proposing a plank providing for the recognition cf the Irish republic. Bryan Lambaste Liquor. Bryan, showing the oldtlme fire of bis oratory, lambasted the liquor in terests in his regular fashion. Beginning with an argument In sup port ef the eighteenth amendment, Mr. Bryan soon got the convention to cheering. Every democratic state, be said, had ratified the amendment and every one recognized that the "liquor traffic Is dead, never to be resurrected." As he worked into bis speech the Nehraskan mixed many Biblical refer ences with his rounded rhetorical per iods. His full voice filled the ball, nnd he got the galleries and s'me of tho delegates going into longer and 1 rm -r bursts of applause as be went on. Minnesota Woman Speaks. Mrs. Peter Olesen of Minnesota a called by Mr. Bryan in support of his program. She said, she spoke in the name of the motherhcod cf America In supporting the dry declaration. In a dramatic emotional appeal which got the convention to lis feet, Mrs. Olesen asked that God should help her in the fight sho was making for it was for the sake of her child that she was fighting. "Let it never be said," she criel, "that the Democratic party tliir.M more of its appetites than cf tha chil dren cf the land. God speed the rih'." PLATFORM ADOPTED BY THE DEMOCRATS League of Nations Indorsed and Republican Senate is Condemned. Alao, iiu numbered Thlrty.f,r In tho County Court of the State of J; the first publication of this no- ' McAdoo movement. (34) and Thirty-five (sr.) In ihock vnguu iur um.wna Uce nin.ib.red Helen (7) In North Milton In tho Mutter of the Estate of John Dated this 25th day of 'June, 1920. (Now known bh Wrlght'o Addition to Miltnnl. all within Cmatllta count), J. Betder. Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to .11 u ..,Kn.m It- man nnnoarrt at private sale to the highest and beat that Christina B. Beeler. administra l.ldder for nisi, or In such manner aa trix of the estate of John J. Beeler, tho court nt said hearing shall deter- deceased, has filed her Final Account Nellie St. Dennis and Edward L. Mitchell, Administrators of the Estate of George W. Mitchell, deceased. First publication June 25, 1920. Last publication July 23, 1920. but It failed to make much headway. The convention perfected Its organ ization by accepting Senator Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas aa Its perma nent chairman , ' The fourteen candidates placed In FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT Who Received the Democratic Nom ination for Vice-President. Mr. Ccckran, arising to reply, said it is a peculiar thing in history that most of what Is bad has been con ceived" by people who were good, by ill-digested efforts to coerce people in their daily lives. "I am opposed to tho word prohibi tion. 1 abhor it. It is the word you will find chalked up in all the peniten tiaries. If it Is necessary to have pro hibition and to force tho people to do what they do not want to do, then I say they are not fit for self govern ment and are ready for submission to a monarchy." All Amendments Fall. Secretary Colby and Senator Glass defended the platform as framed by the resolutions committee. In quick and successive votes the convention voted down by heavy ma jorities all attempts to amend tho re port of tho platform committee and threw out all substitute proposals, in cluding the bone dry pjnnk by William J. Bryan and the wet plank offered by AV. Bourke Cockran. ' The administration's league of na tions plank as reported by the com mittee was sustained against all at tacks. The administration supporters were In control by heavy majorities all along the line. The platform Is silent on prohibi tion enforcement. Foremost among the planks is an Indorsement of I he baiue of nations and condemnation of the republican senate for having In terposed "partisan envy and persona,! hatred" In tbe way of world peace. The Important planks sunimaried are as follows: Kemls arreting to tha prftArat, an4 tittllD wlih patriotic prld th great aihlevrmmi for our rountry and lh noilil rm.hl by democratic ailinln titration uietT hi Iraderthlp, and ! clarc II t'llirrenr lo th fundamenUil pi htiIv prinelplM of aortal. ronomte aoU lii'luslrUl Juatlr. favor th leag'i f ni lli.ni aa lh urK, If not th only liraetiol If mean of maintaining the per manent pear of th wurM. Kndor the ptenlflent' lew of our International. ol.li:.l. na and hia firm stand as-ttnat rcaervattoit dealgned to rut to pln-r th vlul prunlalon of the Versailles treaty and commend th democrat In coosrea fur votirs aKHlnst resolution for separ ate pence hlh would dim rare lh na tion. Advocate th Immediate ratifica tion of th treaty without reservation which would Impulr It essentia! Integ rity; but doe not uppoa th acceulanc of any rraervatlon making clearer or lour specific th obligation of lii Called Mute to th Ieue associate. l'iale rhe admlistratlon's conduct of th war, commend th patriotic effort of American rltlsen to aid th govern ment anil praise the military and naval tone with mention of General I'erahing by name Extol the federal reserve system and the financing of the war. Denies republican claim ef cooomy, declaring that no money wa aaved ei cept at the expense of th efficiency of government bureau. Irmanl prompt action by the nest congress lor a complete survey of exist ing Ui and their modification and aim pllficuticn. Hlnme diminished production for High pri e and declare the republicans ar ic.-p.it.aiHe In that thy delayed peace und failed to provide the president with necc.iAui) li-siMUttlon. I-ita. the party to a policy of airict e, onoiny In sovernment expenditures and to the enactment and enforcecraent of auch legislation a may be required te bring profiteer before the bar of crim inal Justice. Heuffirms the liaUTTlonal policy of the demiK-ratlc party in favor of a tariff tor revenue only and confirms the policy of basing tariff revision upon the tntelllgeiut research of a non-partisan commission. I'eOnds President Wilson's veto of tbe builst bill, and advocates a budget ss tern that will function In accord with the p, Iniiplrs of the constitution. I'miss th dcm.jcratlc record In estab 'ibliir.g farm loan banks and other farm legislation, and favors such legislation as will confirm to the primary producers of . the nation the right of collective bargain ing and the right of co-operattv handling ?.nd marketing. Ieclare resort to strikes and lockouts tthkh rnitanger the henlth or Uvea of the people an unsatisfactory device for de termining disputes, and pledges the party 10 contrive. If possible, and put Into ef fective operation a fair and comprehend sive method of composing differences of thi3 nature. Congratulates legislatures that have ratified the suffrage amendment, and urges democratic governors and legisla tures of Tennessee, North Carolina anil Florida to complete ratification In time for women to vote this fall. IH-clares against child labor. Favors legislation for child welfare and mater nity care. Advocates Increases In teach ers' saluries. Advocates vocational education, better conditions for working women, and In dorses separate cltienship for married women. Advocates generosity to disabled sol dier, and pledges the party to the en actment of soldiers' settlement and home aid legislation. Commends federal administration of tnlli-ojids during the war, declaring It was efficient and economical, despite inade quate and worn equipment. Criticises the recently enacted transportation act and says congress temporised until so late a date thut the president was forced to sign the bill or else throw the railroad situation Into chaos. Favors continuance of federal aid In road building. IMedges the party to a policy which will promote the growth of our merchant ma rine under proiier legislation. Indorses the creation and work of tho federal trade commission. Favors the enactment of legislation for the supervision of live stock markets by the national government. Deplores the misfortunes of the Mexi can i-oile and upholds President Wilson's Mcxtcnn'policy, declaring that as a con sequence order Is reappearing In Mexico. Advocates recognition of new Mexican government when it has proved its ability to maintain order. Within the limitations of international comity and usage, repeats the several previous expressions of the sympathy of the democratic party of the Cnited States In tho aspirations of Ireland for self government. Commends the administration for Alas kan railroad construction and coal and 011 development, and advocates modifica tion of the coal law to facilitate develop, ment, and also extension of the farm loan act to Alaska. Favors the granting of Independence without unnecessary delay to the Phil ippine Islands. Deplores the pre-conventlon expendi tures of republican presidential candi dates, and advocates regulation of such expenditures by federal law. Reaffirms respect for the great princi ples of free speech and a free press but asserts aa an Indisputable proposition that they afford no toleration of enemy propaganda or the advocacy of the over throw of the government of the stats or nation by fore or violence.