' K - ' , .... .;. 'Hi J h ' ' i i iU I. f ' Ff t v K loinm Swept by Hiram Johnson . .,,. i tbMlnort frmn rase Oil Wepubllcnns tuny be counted upon to JtHy the name trick when there is n !kwio'raco between the Democratic enn- atyates, or thf bowct tlcMrc to put over somu Rpecial mau or kill off n'n ether. . Oo wirprlslng feature of the day won int failure of women voters to give v.tlloovoc the support expected of them. .Claims hnvc bien made throughout the . country that Hoover was miro of vlr- ' ,i...H iL . if a inmu me kuihi voir 01 women Dccausc , j . ....... in hit-- ....... ui.- Ulll III! (.IT ' ; ,Kdiction fell off smlly In California. ,' There l 110 bnxln for n rumor thnt (.AS- "Hoover's .candidacy yas In pome ni.VH , j ttrlous way a cover for some scheme of V."' the, Wilson administration, but It had " '. an effect upon the vote at the primaries. . . .Ilu...!.. ...I. ..I..II 1L.I. .l.t At A..- L i V -v,l,, wmi luiiim inrir uumiruiiou jor sw .. TlnnpAn nml t.lc. twmnpL'nfitn fif.iA.-ti A... LK ? office by reason of hi superior fi i tvnuwiiuRi: oi wuriu iiuairN. jiouu mil ' i hfhftl'i ti llrtrcitl tilt. Afnrrlnnn linrmln In t return n partisan f'onRrQSH that would Minnort President Wilson. Tohnson won by the urcutest majority ver Riven a enndldate at it primary election In the West. When the returns are compared with Ma victory over Willis llootli In the tirimarlca of four years ago. when he -.1 l. II.. I- .t.H IT. iiliA it.. Ltt irii uv n nut iiMir iiiuu in imw, uiv ru Ijf Butt In a remarkable triumph.. Aianrcfia county rcrorieu .jonpson tar nhei' a'moxt th'rn to one inc'tulinc ph lierKcicy. me supposct i mover sironc- hold, liven ncrKciey nau Jounson in the. lead. Sacramento kept piling up n Johnson lead beyond the Johnson expectations. San Joaquin was In the samo way of increasing the Johnson estimates. Santa Clara, Hoover's home couuty. dkl bet ter by blm than most of the other parts of the stnte, but the early totals showed Johnson carrying tlnj county decisively. n Fresno's first figures showed a more equal struggle, but it look very much as If Johnson had swept the stato cleau Tfith the possible exception of ItivcrsWu and Fresno. WOOD CONTINUES TO GAIN IN INDIANA Indianapolis. May .". (By A. PJ Major General Tieonard Wowl continueil to make slight gains over Senator John son, of California, his nearest opponent for thp Indiana presidential preference vote In yesterday's stnte-wldo primary, as returns Continued to be tabulated to day. With 1.2J0 precincts out of TWS7 In tho state reported. Wood wns leading by n plurality of tlolO. The vote ".vast AVood. IJl).4ioJ Johnson, .M).i4 : Hov efnor Lowdoii, of Illinois, L'rt.M.I, Sen ator Harding, of Ohio, 14,0,)i). Warren T. McCrny, of Kentland, continued to pile up his early majority in the Hepublican contests for the nomi nation of governor, and when tabulation of inn.', precincts hnd been made he had Tl.niitl to J'-'iOUO for James W. Kcsler, of Indianapolis, and 1.0,778 for K. C. Toner, of Atidcrson. As no presidential candidate has re ceived a majority of the votes the state delegates will bo unlustructed unless in structed by the state convention. With fewer precincts l-'OO heard front Dr. Carlton 11. McCqllocli, of In dianapolis, was running nwny from the Held in the Democratic gubernatorial contest and politicians predicted that he would win by a good-sized majority if he continued his present gnlns. Mason J. Xlblack. of Vluceunes. wns ninnhic I second, with John Iseubarger, of North , Manchester, n close third, utid J. K. Klsk. of I.nfuyette, fourth. The vote was McCulIoch. lD.OOl : Nlblaek. 7001); Isenbarger, 77-.", and ltlsk, oS34, In llarrisou county, election day was marred by the sudden deuth of J. Ij. O'ltannon, n candidate for the Demo cratic nomination for Congress in the Third district. Ilnces for congressional nominations served to enliven the primary election contests in a number of Indinna dis-. trlets. In the main tho Hepublican In cumbents were nominated without oppo sition, but the Democrat staged some strenuous competitions, particularly in southern Indiana. Helurns Indlcnto that there will be no change, in tho list of Hepublican. candi dates, with the Seventh district doubt ful, nnd Hcprcscntntlvc, Bcnham having i ut'iuiicu inn iirnuuinuu upi'qucui. lli uii' om.v otucr tt. j. i. rinirj "t;iu. In the Fourth district. Hepresentatlves Luhrlng, of the First district i Bland, of the Second ; Dunbar, of the Third: Sanders, of the Fourth; Elliott, of the Sixth; Vestal, of the Eighth ; l'arnell. of the Ninth : Wood, of the Tcuth ; Krnus, of the Eleventh ; Fairfield, of tho Twelfth, nnd Hicliey, of the Thirteenth, were renominated without the necessity of contesting with fellow Republicans. In the First district the Democrats seem to have chosen Wilson over Hunt singer; in the Second district former Congressman William Cullop appears to have defeated two younger oppo nents, Fullerton and, Wakefield ; In the Third district Ewing appears to hnvc won over llusklrk, O'ltannon, llrowu nnd Minto; the Fourth district Demo cratic noniluec appears to be. Canfield, who has a small but apparently safe mnrgln over Craig. Hickctts. Custer and Conway; in tho -Ninth district Solfrcs hns defented Howard, and In the Thir teenth district Hcpler appears to have a lead over Smith, which, If maintained, will make him the no.nincr. Yarling wns unopposed for the Dem ocratic nomination in the Sixth dis trict, as. was Henry Spanii la tho Seventh and Charles A. Paddock In the Eighth. The returns from tho Fifth district-were incomplete, atid the' stand ing of th6 Democratic candidates there, Craven, Mcrrtjt and BaUundeclded. FORDNEY CRITICIZES WILSON IN MICHIGAN Panama Hats nirnchfJ. Rlotkcit nnd Trimmed In biit i tyle. We nse no j Ht-ld. lo Injur yonr hat. d5 IEFFERSON HAT CO.. 135 S. 10th Automatic Operators and Set-Up Men For Cleveland automat!'' sti-w ma chine: stedy emplomnt and pl.'snnt worklnsr conditions; sood opportunity for rUht men. Apply. ihon or writ.' THOS. H. DALLETT CO. llroxd nnd 1'rdernl t 1 OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT Desirable space in two modern, well-lighted office buildings; 2500 sq. ft. near oth and 'Chestnut; 825 sq. it' near 4th and Walnut. Box A 731, Ledger Office Kalamazoo, Mich., May B. (By A. P) Responsibility for tho loss of many lives and billion's of dollars in' tho world war as the result of policies It adopted, extravagance in post-war expenditures and "toleration In public office .of high officials who give aid and comfort to enemies of our cbuutryi," wns. charged to tho Democratic administration by Congressman. Joseph V. Fordncyin an address today before the-Michigan Re publican state 'convention. Mr. Fordncy condemned the' League of Nations as .a pact requiring the' surren der "by this country of its indepihdei.ee utid one thot woiild invoHc'tho United States in frequent Europeani contro versies -".entirely foreign" to our-lntcr-ests." Tho speaker 'declnrcdtherc was Imperative need for revision of the tariff laws In order to encourage 'industry. "The Underwood tariff law," he said, "Is1 u menace to our prosperity. Customs recetbts hav dwindled from 50 per cent of, our total revenue collections to 3 per cent. An adequate protec tive tariff would provide $700,000,000 revenue." Slnco July 1, 1010, Mr. Kordney de clared, government expenditures had exceeded receipts by $214,000,000. Mn Kordney then attacked tho Department of La"W, asserting "it has made the deportation, or even the arrest or de tention, of the most despcrato anarchist, virtually impossible." , Chief interest in the convention cen ters in n lively contest over tho tone of thn Indorsement' to bo eiven Senator Johnson as Michigan's primary cholcoJ for I'rcsldent. EVERY MAN who has ordered one of these $65 to $75 suitings, built to his individual meas ure, is delighted with his purchase, primarily because he gets his suit for only ' $50 secondarily, because he gets a fine, worsted, flannel, serge, woolen 4 or tweed effect with selection ranging up to 100 different kinds of patterns, built .either in plain sack business style or Norfolk style, as he prefers, without extra charge. Order yours early. WILLIAM H. WANAMAKER Tailoring Shop 1217-19 CHESTNUT STREET "W 14 because it fits Millions men, women and childrenin sist on Munsingwcar to give them the ut most in summer underwear satisfaction. Sheer, cool, light in weight Munsingwcar summer garments weigh only a few ounces. DonVsay Underwear say Munsingwcar offered in every required style and size for men, women and children. -the satisfaction lasts jm . f, 1 u 23 J I Jrm' " " " f" ! !! ! Ml fflil 1 ' &IHBHH(Hfll ii'3"iB Jtome of the 1 "World's Jiwst? (Uld ywhns r For over fifty years the'houso of Lyon & Hcaly has dealt in fine violins. At all times our collec tion is a treasury of famed in struments from the hands of the great masters. AntoniuStrad ivarius, Joseph Guarnerius del Gcsu, Carlo Bcreonzi, Domin icus Montagnani all are rep resented. And every instrument ' vc sell is accompanied by a LYON fNHEALY CO to 75 Jackson Blvd. Lyon & Healy certificate of genuineness. x The most scrupulous care li given the regulation and adjustment of all violins sold by us. Every fine quality is fully developed. Prices f 150 to $20,000 Write ui for list of old instruments In our preitntcollection also catalog of violins of highest grade modem manufacture. Violins accepted in exchange. Easy payments arranged. CHICAGO gamSpW To thine own self be true, And it must follow as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false to any man." Pif2mB5SK&&Mjfk )QuissS9wniasBBHBHHHHCwBBHH&?n fi. i F'..i 1 1' ;' If VZ- (iv v h PI" K. ) s ' UR procedure here ac the Peerless factory has been inspired - for more than eighteen years by the ambition to build a car that would meet every demand of speed, every requirement of hill nd level, of open road and crowded city street, every need of comfort, convenience and appearance. Our designers, our engineers and our workmen have been constant and loyal companions in the search for this ideal. All of us together have felt that the results of our efforts muse first satisfy ourselves, that a car which should bear the Peerless name must have passed repeatedly the most difficult tests. When the first Peerless Two-power-range Eight was produced five years ago, we believed success had crowned our efforts. While perfection in human affairs may be impossible, this car gave us a feeling of confidence. We experimented with it,- tested it. Time and again it surprised us by its power-flexibility its wonderful contrasts in performance, its stanchness, its economy, its endurance. We find now that, after five years of use by thousands of owners who have no reason to be prejudiced in its favor except as use has demonstrated its qualities, this car is not less but even greater than we had at first supposed. Someone has said that cold matter cannot transmit the things of the spirit, but we cannot.help believing that the Peerless Two-power-range Eight is a living expression of a fine pride of work manship, of a sense of devotion to-personal and business ideals and of a deep respect for strong, enduring efficiency. Girard Automobile Company 2314 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pa. PEERLESS TWO POWER. T7 T C UT" RANGE JulvjrJrl 1 v :l j t 9 . . V ; ,' vr. the "makes' of a good cigarette may start with, say, Tuxedo or "BulP Durham Tobacco .... but they don't end there by a long shot ... the finest of paper is required. To get the full aroma of the tobacco, try rolling them with . fmmMMmmm a m , mm aIWF l TO&Mf CIGARETTE PAPERS (Made in France pronounced "Ree La Crpy") TOAFINtf " Jnni f utt i L'"spo i I I t 1 I I Touring Car ft ,230 Roadster ft,aoo Coupe ft,92o Sedan 4,140 Sedan-Limousine 4400 Priett tfftctivi Juhi I, X020 F.O.B.OBVELAND .r:. -. you smoke tobacco. This paper bifrnswith little ash and no odor, simply because no foreign ele ments or ingredients enter into its manufacture from pure vegetable fibre so painstakingly processed that four hundred gallons of clear Pyrenees Mountain water are used in making a single pound of RIZ LA CROIX. Made in France CA OayoBtocdVr JhsJfmrtea5 i - $eSg L S?at if y0U don,t 1Uco JUZ LA CROIX cigarette paper you can got your money back from She dealer. 1 1 'i V ., BBBP RTINjG S, H RANOI RANGE? fS.. r x?v ... 3h
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers