PRINTING CQ L • -, ___ / 1 ■ * 1 By W illiam s WAY /H Ç L O l4 E U N E A w erft ’, ÏM 3j$S M1MOA PLAMitj'vjffU <© ECO UP W I U ^ ~ MA-UH- mai * H im « rtö p p rf ! M M A v A M S i B K sr WS« T w a LORD:— Blag unto the Lord with the harp harp, and the voice of a psalm. With trumpets and soun make n Joyffll poise before the Lord, the King. Psalm W A S H J N O T O lW lu » ,,,» « « ■ rflnt ran to^ $ * A Governor A1 Bmlfti WiH net seek the Demo­ cratic presidential nomination probably are inspired by hope-' Tb® truth seems to be that with William G. McAdoo pushpd pretty well oat of the picture, many Democrat»—especially In the south— (eel that their breth-* ren who hare supported Smith should also eliminate the gov­ ernor in the Interest of p d r t y harmony. What happened was that the southern Democrats, realising that no good would come out of a repetition of Madison Square Garden -mess of 1*24, decided that the party nfust start with a clean slate, so that chances ef a successful campaign would nbt be ruined by bitter warfare over prohibition or religion. They practically disowned Mc­ Adoo as the candidate of "the “dry, Protestant south," no doubt much to McAdoo’s disgust, but it does not appear that they ob­ tained any promise from the Smith folks to do ad much on th s fr a lfls .o f G e fence. SmfG H«p Largest Followta« The trouble was that t h e e ra- sfltoblanea jtottreeipjber Magdalen. His expression softened ik of ado- upturned by force o t clreWtoto has since built up nc political following. Thflt’s where Dewi and Hughes come In. , H u ghes S trong fn New York the people as do Hoover and Atuthto would -have* the back- Dawes, He W0UI4 be^vulnerable Iflfl R powerful lnter«eto—b en l- because o t his recent law cennec- Idg and all, for Instance, ut be rides not hold the imagination of (Continued On Page Five)