M ', ', V Sin GV M i- vV. . V n Fvt-. r',' M ,4 rfilS ii ' r ' w EVENING iPUBLltf LEDGEErPHlLABlLPillA.THUltSbAy, JU'ftE 10, '1920 OMOS 4T CHICAGO GIVING WA Y TO ORDER; CONFLICTING PLATFORM VIEWS BEING HARMONIZElj l . . ; - jm CARDINAL GIBBONS PRAYS TAFT ADVISES FIRM - .STAND ON TREATY Evasion of Issue Likely to En , danger Success at Polls, Ho Says "LET THE RADICALS BOLT" s Thc following article ?; former President H'iffieirn Votcnril Tnft t re printed from today's Public I.ednci Copyrighted, 1020, by the Public Ledger Company, Norton, Kan.. June 10. The (lis patches from CliionRo report the meet ing of the resolutions committer of the conventlou and the choice of Sen ator Watson, of Indinna, ns its chair man. Without further information thli tniirht indicate tin- puniciM- of the committee to report t)ic unsatisfactory and non-committal declaration of the Indiana convention on the subject of the tongue, hut tin dispatches say that Senators Watson. Lodge', Lcnroot, KcIIork, Hale and MeOiimbcr and members of the advisory platform committee favor a plank tlhlch, after indorsing the mN of the senators, pre venting the ratification of the peace treaty 1cs submitted, lilrdcet the party U the ratlllcation of a treaty of peace and an n-oeiiitliiii of nation" with nn I Internntionat tribunal for the deter ( between the nations and with uch safe ftinrdt as will secure the protection of every American interest. It was further reported that the Johnson -Hornh faction arc pressing the declaration of uncompromising opposi tion of the party to nuy such plan of in ternational government as is contem plated in the League of Nations em bodied in the treaty of peace with Ger many by President Wilson, nud nf flrmfng its determination to preserve lor this government its foreign policy of Washington and Monroe. Of courso, the members of the Republican party and they arc in the majority, who np- ?rovc the League of Nntions with the .odge resolutions if they can get nothing better must be content with uch a vague declaration as that now proposed by the senators who voted for the treaty with the Lodge reservations, and assume that what tlu senators mean Is to approve their own course. It would seem asth better, however, to adopt such a resolution ns that of the New York state oomentiou, which was much more explicit. League Ismio Unavoidable The circumstances are surh that when the 4th of next March conies the issue rill and ennnqt be other ise than the approval of the league, with the Senate reservations or something similar to them, or its defeat. There is no other league: there is no opportunity to nmke any other league or constitute auv other association. It is this league, modified by the recruit inn's whirli Mr Lodge aid in his speech protected oyorv Amer ican interest. Why not for ouce gratify the desire of the votiug public and ninko clear w;hat it is that the resolution mea.ni. so thj't it ini lie applied hv the voter to the situation nnd he may Tote according to his judgment? Heal i-sues enimot he avoided bv ambiguous words in a partv declaration, and it Me. Johnfcnn and Mr. llnrnh insist on a straight-out declaration against the league, with or without reservations, their insistence will miiUe this vague resolution mean wlmf It onght to declare explicitly coniiuenda tion of the thirty-five senator who voted for the league with the Lodge reservations and a pledge of the party td abide hv their attitude ns its future policy They, having o toted, should hate nothing to apologise for Neither should the pam in their behalf. The ItcpublicuiiH who would have preferred to nave the treaty without i enervation -were not in the tnaioritt of the party and have accepted the course of the thirty-fie Republican -enator-. Why now attempt to bet loud the position whirh these icnator should be willing clcarlj to take, when they will bo driven to sustain it in the campaign by the opposition of Mr. Jolin-on and Mr. Borah? Rumblings from Mr. Itorali indicating a bolt are not to lie taken so seriouslv as explicit statements by Mr. Johnson In respect to the platform. Mr. Horn has been threatening to holt on this nubjeet for a jour. I'nfortunately for him, ho has thundered in the index so much on other uhjeets, uotnhlv in his opposition to Senator Penrose, that many are inclined to take what he siiy as only for present use and in a Pick wickian sense. One may conjecture thnt Mr. Itorali would be much em barrassed if Senntor Johnson were to CHICAGO CONVENTION HALL DURING THE "KEYNOTE" SPEECH OF SENATOR LODGE m AWH tMSt" i?lJiTif iy-if fflmPir IWirrii wTHtlCTMIELjHm fmfflHIWfft'Lf it i' iurCLJ wmKmm 9lCltSHwi'lWKRt.7iyZrSi J s . -.l ,' r-r-imrirr-- ' umimmmmiu' .. .Ju i auto (w wwwn """ . , - . M.M K. tfTy - t ryr WikaPPrVr BrSVinBr"!! tS r &. mLji tiiuL jj i j uuw u im M I wn WWM majiuncLiiLiEil lttHMMtfSriHKHMilHHKI '- DBlMHH.HiMrsSMr4MmH fmaMrMimW:1k3NuWmMWkmmS BUKnUWiwe 4j$BJMUUW uKtMKuUMWE I ?)3SSiMKMMBHHH3aS9HK&MfSSBr MaWBBi3Mftiiwtt.wAwwwwfljBCM Bir'yBtoHWPK.iiK.MBSg wM wa WmM&MwBM$BMawW&m! I plrA,iTl1iwwIB tHrmWTWmmmn BHRtp MfklMMmMufcW-mBiL muuuuumWmWW J, -M.jF'MnMmwMMMMmK2Utt FOR UPRIGHT PRESIDEM Appeals for Downright Honesty Toward Foreign iVoifoi Justice, Mercy aild Respect for Religion Before lWpUUUCail nauuiut yuuuvimvii. " Ity tlio Associated Prtxw Chlcaco, June 10. In opening the. third day's session's of the Itcpublican Convention today, Cnrdinnl Gibbons mndn the - following prayer: We prny"rheo? 0 f?od of might, wisdom aud justice, through whom authority is rightly administered, lnws urc enacted and judgment de creed, vouchsafe to inspiro Thy serv nuts, the citizens of America, to elect n Chief Mnglstrnte, whose admini stration will bo conducted lu right eousness nnd be eminently useful to Thy people over whom ho shnll pre side, by encouraging duo resnect for virtue and religion, by faithful exe cution of the lnwfj in justice nnd mercy, nnd by restraining vice and lii'-'orn'itv. May Thy people always realize the Inspired truth that "righteousness cxnltcth a nation, but that sin maketh a peoplo miserable" Mny they be intimately persuaded, that If our na tion Is to bo perpetuated our gov ernment must rest, not on formidable standing armies, not on dreadnoughts, for the "race Is not to the swift, nor the buttle to the strong." Stay they bo persuaded that our government must rest upon tiie eter nal piinclples of truth, justice nnd righteousness; on downright honesty lu our dealings with foreign nations, nnd on the devout recognition of an ( overruling providence, who U. all things by his' wWom a'nd8 eternal vigilance wntches over tl. w' fairs of nations nnd of u,ei ."i 'without whom not even n l.i.i D'; fall to tho ground. "Unless tl, V'.il build tho house: they labor in J that build It. Unless the Un, 'M kcepetVit." " nKUCUX ta'tfi5 Grant O Lord, that the n,lmi i''l trotion of tlie new Chief Vft'- I"K,r"lt0. '' snIritl and''' I t-.m. u.iaiu ui mo commonweal J 1 to tho suppression of sedition .. L aonrcjiy : nmi to the strength . !3utioL.o our ehu an" pifil I have been. O Lord. n mT a J many tremendous upheavals wh u thrcntencd to rend tho nation as2r from the inauguration of ThvnS loraimm liincoin, even unto thlt,i. Rnf Thnn hnof on,..l .. ' "f? V.1" . by. Thy almighty power ami V i tl noid ng coniKencc that Thou vi ill t, prnclonslv with no In L ." M ..ergency. " '" ""' m Grant that proceeding, of this fon. vcntlon may be mnrkedbyn wlZ.. ... -,.. ....... v..,.,,u. imiinony ami Bin tunl forbearance, wort hv of an A lightened nnd nntriotle i.iJVPjH lean citizens. " ' "mtr' T-fdKer Tholo Pflce. Ail KuMiiti; Public Iedgcr yliotograplirr tool, the photograph during tho Krpubllrmi p.irly "ltenote" speech, detiercd by Temporary Chairman Serfator Ilcnrj- Cabot Lodge, at the Coliseum hi Chicago on Tuesday afternoon. Senator Lodgo ran he seen on tho platform with a stenographer standing behind lilni REPRISAL THREATS MAD E BY ONI Senator Lines Up Delegates Pledged for Him in Solemn Warning Taft to Vhit Chicago, but A ot Convention Chicago. June 10 illy A. P.) Tormer President Tnft will nrrlve he.rp tomorrow morning from the West and w ill stop over a feAv hours before leaving for Now York. It wns said today he probably would not Kit the convention or attempt to take part in platform conferences. ffl STEAD DRY AT ARE EDWARD i I Presidential Aspirant Sees Man- ace to Whole Industrial Fabric of U. S. WILL TAKE CASE TO PEOPLE Chicago, June 10 Senator Johnson gac iiotn e yesteulay he would take measures of reprisal against any delegate- pledged to his support b results nf primnn lectiv who did not "stick." Speaking to newspaper coriespondents. he declared his opponents wire Vising meuns of every kind to shake the alle giance of some of his supporters, men tioned "gold" and added that if any delegate broke uwa, "I'll take his easo to his people." . ICoiteratiug his opposition to the League of Natious. Senator Johnson said unless the platform committee took a corresponding stand he would "nsls the conentioii and the people of the United States to reject" its proposals. "The contention i" tightening up moro and more, ' said Senator Johnson. "It will got to balloting day after to morrow, and .i- tlie time approaches my contidenee lnen.tses "I think tin re 11 be ipiite a number of ballots I shall not endeavor to stnrt with it ttemendous number, but ns the ballots are tal en 1 think jou n ousvuu later that m II nunc along. Platform to Deride Nevt Step "I niesiime the platform decision will h ! be mnde tonight m the committee .My o . . . . ... ...it!.... ..l,nln the ItUIIire course s nem i , Vi I iconvuton will 1" di'teriiiined cntircl i bv tho dicisi.ins on the platform. 'To l en talking to delegates today I about who i an best do the job beioro I us which i- i tut r of eliminating the present ndiniiiisirntion from power. I'd like to submit the question to you. .or to anvboih. as to who can get the 'most votes t'oneeding all candidates be- r n... .,,m.niimi have reoiusite nuall- bolt this issue, and he were called upon f,fa,ons for the presidency, (here can to follow It is doubtful what he will ( D n reason for rofusiug a nomination do. In respect to Senator Johnson, a ( tn.lt individual except on the olf defeat on the subject of the resolutions ,1Porv of striving tor immeiuaie eu.- biipporter and it wns said that there "as littl" If any support for cither Governor Sprout or Herbert Hoover in Delaware. If Genera) du Pout's mum is placed before the inmcntlon he will draw support on the tirst ballot from the A. T. llort people of Kentucky, who have li votes ami who are under CALLS FOR LIBERALIZATION stood to bo seriuuslj back of tlie nioNcnicnt. Lowdcu VICE PRESIDENTIAL BOOM FOR EDGE (hir.ico. June 10. A boom for Senn tor Hdge, of New .Icrsoj, for Vice I'resiileiit was started here esterdnv ami gained considerable impetus, altho Trenfon, June 10. Portraying pro hibition ns one of the greatest evils which could befall the American people, Governor I'dwaids isbiicd a statement jesterdav appealing to tlie citizens of the country to exert their sovereignty to denounce the national prohibition act and demand its liboialmition. Governor IMwards describes the manifold evils which tie l(eliocd will flow from the decision of the Supremo Court of the United States upholding the eighteenth amendment nnd the Vol prominent men from New Jersey were !.,,, , ,.,i -r-i , ,i, slinntinn n : f. I .. .!. lf. .! . .. . . , u" ' l ""' .' ' o .- w .. - I'oniiiiciu in me preoiiiion iseiiaior l.llgo would certainly presage n defeat of his nomination in the convention, which Indeed lias never been at all probable. It is quite possible that strategienllv he would prefer to bolt the platform rather than await bis personal defeat as a candidate. Sir. Hearst has been a most formid able supporter of Mr Johnson Mr. Brisbane s article of jesterdav fore shadows Mr. Hearst's ragcrncs that Mr. Johnson run as nn independent candidate. That Mr Johnson would secure a very large number of votes that he would unite Hie Sinn tuners the pro-Germans, th .u, i,n ,iirimnrr victory ross rum in" ........ -- - - Kcpnrts thnt the convention planned to nominate a caudidnto before adopting a platform were mentioned. "I think the iisitnl method will be mirsiifd " Senator Johnson replied. e d not think It likely, he adder . the convention would attempt to 1 Unit de base on the League of Nations if debate became nooessnr) . Will Take Case to People n man who neiruvs mi iruiur or betray n volb' in man wn "V, , , ,'i ' i rays me." hf said, in breaking of! ,.y of questions, und referring to ..!.... ,ln opntOfl. WIICIII'T mi fc'OU more radical i l,r""" ;:"., Til mite his case wotihl not consider such a iirononl. New Jorse 's delegation to the Re publican Niitionnl tV)iieution is di vided bctwun Johnson and Wood. The division is HI for Wood und Jl for Johnson witu tho Johnson men pledged to stiik to tho C.iliforninn until ho re leases tlnm so far there appears to bo no Spronl or Hoover sentiment In tho New Jere camps, and no one will venture n prediction as to wiirre the votes will go sliuuld General Wood and Sciiutoi Juiin-oii hu thrown out of the race. Tor sonr reason which Sprout 'men sa thev cannot explniu ill-fecliug seems to nile the Johnson camp respecting incomer proul s candidacy and for that reason it is jvpoctcd Senator John sou will releasi- hi men if necessary to almost nnv other enndidnte, preferring Senntor Knox if his name is presented. Senator Krelinghuysen heads the Wood group from New Jersey nnd the senator's friends, saj ho and his col leagues will stay with the general until tho tinal showdown. Senator and Mrs. rreliughuysen were tho i lib f injures nt a New Jersey rally last u ght mi the gold room of the Con gtess Ho til Visitors from New Jersey ns wfll .is ili legates nnd their friids nt U'ndid .Mrs. Krelinghuysen acted ha hostess to the wives ind duughters of New Jersey delegates. WOMEN PICKET CONVENTION Suffragists March With Banners Urging Vote Boycott ( hiraco. Jut 10. (Ry A. P.) Vir- i 'in IK devoid of hope that Itcpubllciin Absent Leadors Influence Convention by Wire Chicago, June 10. Two of the most potent inllueiices in the Re publican National Convention arc being exercised over tlie wires. The plank dealing with the League yf Nations, which has boon accepted by both the irrooonoila blis and the consenntives, was drafted by Llihu Hoot before he left New York for Lurope, and was presented to the platform commit tee toduy'nt the conclusion of tin exchange of cable messages between its author and former Senntor W. Murrin Crane, of Massachusetts. While these messages were be ing flashed through ."000 miles of blur wafci, Senator Penrose, seated in the Hluary of his Spruce street home in Philadelphia, his hand con stantly on a telephone, wns utilis ing the (oiieiitlon lenders and bringing order out of the welter of conflicting lews entertained by the nearly 1000 delegates to the con-xcution. InVinr men niu !l the wn Iforons co I or llll "it"' ' . ,, ... , ,i, ,t, . r .tnVnLt , ,(,, sniir'n. i to his people, nnu i a iib i ''" uhihw here xvl urge tnc governors nt ?J r?lM- l orsi ' A,?!,! !, ", h,; l Pkiln I don't believe here will be I V( rm0Dt d Conncctcut to call special and Mr. Hearst would enter upon i the P ajn bPlryal. I look for full I ,.g,slative sessions to pass on the sf- campaign as a "bor "f Invo Rut Ir I n,"" to the people's mandates. fr amendment, members of the Nn Johnson would W'" '""i wou1'1 l hough efforts of every kind and everv fnnn, Women's party prepared today to elect the Republiean caudidnto. M,"".Pl ,lml I say that advisedly with nt,.nslfv their nieltBtini: attack on the Explicit Derloration I'rgcd Inferences from Senator Iodge's speech that he favors a platform decla ration, which, to use Senator Johnson's expresaion, pussy -footed as betw.ecn the thirty-five senators and tho fourteen, do him nn injustice if. ns now leported. be is in fnor of firinh standing up to the course of the thirt-flve It mav be that in a key note speech he felt it not appropriate fur him lis f lunrmnii to he n special adocato of his own i ours, , It xvould seem now to be the wisest courso of tho party to chouse the giound or the battle bv an explicit decima tion of a vote of confidence jn the action of the Republican Sennte majority. Then let Mr. Johnson nnd Mr. Horah yield to the party majorities, both in the Senate and comeutiou. or with draw. It is n question of principle, and tho parti khould meet it To mnke n declaration so vague that Mr. Johnson and Mr Itorali nun gixe It n strained i oust ruction to suit- their .. -,i ..... i .... . . ... n ,, mentis, nre neirig usru m iuvv mnvention. 1'ickets were sent out wmi i,r.m I think those efforts will be lmnuers calling upon voters to ballot '"After remnrking thnt he had lieen having a "delightful time with No braska. Oklahoma nnd Michigan dele gates who called upon him or upon whom he called, the senator revolted to tho League of Nations To boon telling you verv finnr.lv nnd ver fully oorv-dny inv opinions on the League of Nations," the senator said "What do jou hear from nn opponents about it. what do they tell jou. where do they stnnd.' He waited a moment. "Echo answers where?" he ob served. "That's all." HASTINGS POSSIBLE I NAMER OF DU PONT Cliirago. Juno 10.- against the Republican party until it took more decisive notion on equal sul fr.igo. "The situation looks darker today than it oor has since wo came to Chi cngo " Mrs Abblo Scott linker de clared. "We shall sharpen our attack from now on unless something is done Our nilimis mny lead to arrests, but we are rendv for any emorgency , for wo are tired of waiting." LOCUST CLUB ORGANIZED New by plainly hostile view and moid recourse I . '"S Vllinlngton' Pel . altern to a bolt w .11 not help matters and w ill ; rYrrn T Coleman d merely carry the fight into , the ci.m; hrr selected to place Gen Daniel O Hast mate nt ii Pont, .... !... . niAftiriii iii nini-o . fi n rtrn i fin paign with all the confusion incident 107,t" name before tho R epubliean Na tional Convention as n caudidate for the nomination of President If General du Pont permits his name to be proposed On Tuesday leaders of the Delaware delegation made the dennite nnnounce- m e a national scandal. The governor leaves no qtiostinn thnt in a enndidnte for the presidential nomination he is prepared to make prohibition the main, if not the only, i"uo of the day. His state ment, piepared after mature delibera tion, follows: "The Supreme Couit Im3 declared the eighteenth aim iidnieut to be n part of the constitution .mil the Volstead uct to be its slut hi oi v interpretation. That act is opin to sin h amendments ns the duly elected n pieseutativcs ot the peo ple may cunct. Appeals to the Nation "I therefoie appeal to the people ot tlie 1'iiited States, lawfully and by the constitutional method proscribed, to pass judgment upon the, Volstead net. I deiioume it and demand its liberali zation. "It attempts to legulate the habits, of millions ot icir litr.eiis; in mv judg ment of the iist majority of them. "It plaies in the class of rriraiunls nnd lawbieakiis millions of women ail oyer the country who make light wine from lioine-giowii fruits for their own domestic u-e, as did their mothers be fore them It places in tlie criminnl class millions of funnels who mnko nnd mature i idi r fiom their own orchards. "It places a han upem those millions of our populaiiou to whom for untold geuerntlons light wiues and beor have been as much a pint of their daily food as the bund upon their tables. "It has already stimulated, by this prohibition of simple and hnrmless beverages tho Illicit distillation of lmrinfiil Honors tn twentv-fold their fonni i production The cry agents of enforcement, both state and federal, have become either blackmailers of the lr .bienkoi, ot their partners in enmr National scandal and disgrace am upon us. A force ol l.oou.ooti men, ami cue i.niiunl expenditure of $,000,000,000 roulel not secure tlie adequate cniorcu ment of ibis unwise and vlcidus legis latino. Aliens Dislike Prohibition "It uienaees our xvholc Industrial fabiic. and millions of workers tiro Hllcd vith resentment n( this invasion of their p'-rsonal liberties. ' It is the main impelling cause. as show n l the investigation of the Fed eral Department of Lnbor, why 12,000, OUO men of 'otoign birth plan to return to tli, ir native lands The Depart ment of State is niubing their appli cations for passports, while tho De partment of Justice Is ninklng mass arrests and tliieatening deportation among the very samn classes, whoso mental coiulition thereby borders upon panic, nnc romlers them the prey of own ' Red" agitator. It falls betweeu the two stools of fedcrnl authority, ixo law for concurrent jurlselletlou of fe dei nl ami state administration can FRIENDS TO SAIL 10 HELP EUROPE Henry J. Cadbury and F. R, Bacon Go on Rotterdam to Germany and Poland WILL REBUILD VILLAGES Social Body Supported Prominent Merchanta Prominent merchants nnd profes sional men nre subscribers to n newiv formed social organization, known oa Miiti aud feelcral authority. the Locust (Jlub, which applied for a proinlui charter in Court of Common Pleas, I s, . - . I-. mm.- ..i..i- .1. i s ic eessMi nn eniorceei. i ouiue;i.ui tiu- o. , yosiereiuy. iiie i-nin, organ en , : .- , n,.. .., I.. for social enjoyment and the promo- j '"'" J Jealousy und failure uro In to uncertainty of leadership and with tho possible party late ot laiuug iw twecn two stools. s.t.u.a clh In "Back Yard" Itrldcrtou. N. J.. June Iff Morton ment that General chi Ponfs nn It IieecH cnuglit t 450 pouuils "from I tic-o river from which hn pulled tho nothing except that he would be guided i.ludge John M Patterson, Kills A Gim' cmi.lidittes ili.h, Tho rou of thu hsb veilied ser nv noundl. ' '- J -- u- ' " x. N tlj' JJ ."!. t S I. J- .F"-, 1 , ,. .IlltIV l. ........nt - , -,- i I . tIl-tlt, n, ,i,i.i, , ill,,, ,, , n sturgeon weighing would bo presented U'Stefdav it was tl.,,aMlrer. nnd Sidney A Ah IiIh own back yard." said Mr du I'm might not pe,,it s, i JmI1 ,, ,, , Sxwm 1 down to the Mini taction. General du Pout would sni eteeii diiectoi aie finbii tion of friendship and good citizenship" will occupy a Historical tamuy House in tlie neighborhood of Thirteenth und Locust streets Officers chosen for the tlrst year are t'ninois Shllllk I'loWII Illl'Sllle nt Wiiiminl 1 1 .it lu n npiiuulmi t lkiiliirA Stem, secretary , Alfred W, I'leisTier. ,n the power of the peoplo expressed nt treasurer, and Sidney A Aloe, chair- I the polls There also Is sovereignty. L' t he sex lni eiiiicieiitc for I eiliciom. CM-ry iii Ilium, -lut ami OMliihle "It blocks the wny for the consider ation of vitally important post-war constructive legislation by tho clemorull nation which thli,unwiso nnd too dr.isiic law has forced upon us. No power exists which is parumounc tnkably on the sane nnd rensonnble in terpretation of the constitutional amendment in fnvnr of the permissive use of light wines and beeis, every stntc to determine its leguiutions under the liberal limitation s of a general federal statute. , "Now I appeal to tlie great and final referendum of the American people." WETS RENEW CAMPAIGN Constitutional League's Committee Undaunted by Supreme Court Practically coincident with thr de c'slon of (he Supreme Cunt, iloclnring us constitutional the eighteenth amend ment and tlie Volstead enforcement act, tlie I oustitutional I.e.igue, a recently formeel organir.nl loo jipposing prohibi tion, lias renew eel its effoits to light qgninst a dry nation Tlie committee which oignuizcd tlie league in this oi!. Cluiles T. Crcsswell, James Potter. William V. Noiris and J. Warner Rhlii", met jostcrdm nfternoon iiwthe Rellevue-Stiatfoid. 'Mr. Rhine was appointed secretin. Tlie establish ing of a headquarters, the perfecting and enlarging of tlie organization, and campaign pluns were discussed. All ef fort will bo maele to foim u stnte-wielc league, with a committee m owry city. Interest nmong liquor elenleis is cen tering in the outcome of n meeting to be held todnv, of the executive boiiid of the Philadelphia Liquor Dealers' As sociation. What ni'tion will he taken by liquor men. relating to going out of business or fighting ugaiiist tho eight eenth afnendmintt will be discussed nt uus meeting aim oiners wnicli will fol low within n shore time. SOUTH WANTS RECOGNITION Vice Presidential Candidates Boosted at Meeting fliiragu, June 10. (Ity A P l A mass-meet ing of southern delegates htuged in a hotel lobby, with seme '100 attending, vus held last night in the In tel est of demanding recognition of the South on the national Republican ticket. Virginia ami .North Carolina both have vice presidential candidates in tlie field nnd speakers from other southern states advised that thev unite on one man or the other, and that the southern elele gntions then all join support of the mnn so named A committee lepresenlliig all southern delegations was appointed to cnuxiiKS the situation and report to a second mass meeting tonight. Among tlie speakers were Colonel Henry W. Anderson anil Representative) Slemp, of Virginia, und former Senator Hutler, of North Carolina. INDIANA STRENGTH DIVIDED Conference Fruitless Wood May Get 22 Votes fend Johnson 8 Chicago, June 10. The Indiana del egation met last night to dUcuss its line-up on the first ballot, but, accord ing to Senator New, "got nowhere." While tho indications were Wood would receive 212 and Johnson 8 votiw on tho first ballot, none of the members nt tempted to say how It would go iherc- aner Some members had expressed the hope nil- 'iiieo veilllll uevcioil a iliuinnili Two workers for the American Friends' scnleo committee will salt today from New Yoik on the Rotter dam. One is Henry J. Cudbury, formerly professor of Illbiienl lileia ture ut Haverford College, now a member of tho fnctulfv nt Har vard Fniycrsity. He will join the staff of the unit at Rerlin uow engaged in child relict throughout Germany. The other is Francis It. ltucon. of Huel douliold. N. J., member of thu faculty of the Fniiersity of Pcnnsyhatiiu in G, O. P. to Survive Clash on League enr clintov w, cn,nERT) Continued from rune One vention get through by Saturday? Up stairs were so many words to split and the whole resources of the unabridged dictionary were nvoilnblc. Tbc nomina tion would not be made until next week. Woodrow Wilson wns the enemy of mankind. Why did be ever bring his League of Nations back from Taris? Other men than the young senator who dashed his cane upon the ground and askt if anything but the ghost of' the Republican party would walk ,tbc purlieus of Michigan nvetiue after mldnlgnt snm tuere wouiu no a com promise. William Allen White, wres tling with lnbor and other issues and peeled down to his shirtsleeves in the Auditorium, for from those upper realms of thought at tbc Blackstonc yvhere the question of tho league wns being set tled or unsettled, declared thnt thcro would be n compromise on the Icuguc. Ilcforo each turradldJIn KncottCil of Knclallt-s. ItoliUfter PTSenn twld'lU Trcmenduiirly bits llstH. Some Robustcr Persons Bill While is n "robustcr person." Ho nccr dashes his enne upon the floor and asks whether there will be a Ite publicau party after midnight. Bill White's faith is that there should be no compromise, but thcro always is a compromise. Bill Borah, too, is n robustcr person. He tossed bis name us he came from the inner plnce- where the dictionary is be lug offered up us a sacrifice to the gods, but he did not dash his cane on the floor nor express doubts ns to tho Re publican party after midnight. He suid lie would light, light, fight on the floor of the convention. He would bring the poor words out bofoie the delegntes, point to tlie gaping wounds nud show what a rent tho knife of the envious Murray Crane had torn. For it is Mur ray Crane who brought the League of Nations to Chicago. No one lias seen Murray Crane. lie is as mysterious as the League of Nntions itself, which oe of man hath not seen, though car of Mur ray Crane has retired from polities. It was officially announced from Massa chusetts ninny days ago. But persous say Unit Murray Crane is here, near tlie boss, and that he has brought the League of Nations with him. Jim Watson arrived from Wnsliingtou n few days ago and at that time tlie League of Nations had been left at President Wilson's doorstep. Jim Wut son cnino here, in the full conscious ness that the League of Nations would never get here. But now Murrnv Ciaiie is here and the lengiie is with hiln, and young senators gnash their tooth unci fine ladies ruefully e-clunt the number of gowns they have left in their trunks, which tlie Blackstonc has not yet seen. Thetnindiddlesof the League of Nations took six months to dispose of at Paris, eleven months to dispose of at Washing- tlie a nil i toot u re department. Mr. Un coil goes direct to Warsaw to lie the '"an hath heard much about it. head of the Polish relief unit. Head- I quarters lins recently been established nt Warsaw and a iciitinl warehouse is located there. The Polish relief tinil is being rapidly enlarged and soon will number over 100. Two phases of the work nre now established. One is n mobile, delousiiig, nnti-typhus unit centeres! nt Viidunriia hi Gnlicin cm the Kunlnninn bonier, equipped also to gho general medical lellef. This village is two-thirds de stroyed. Refugees who had been driven from their homes by the German ad vances through Poland aie now return ing in largo numbers fiom oast Russia. Mr. Bacon, with his nic hitoctiiriii training, will supei intend the rebuild ing of the houses and Milages and in troduce modern American methods of agriculture. Farming implements and supplies, including horses nnd cons, have already been sent to Lublin province. REMOVE BLAINE BODIES Former G. O. P. Leader and Wife to Rest In Maine Park Washington, June 10 c lt A, P.) The bodies of James (J. Itlaine, Repub lican nominee for the picsjdenc in 1S84 and twice secretary of state, aiid of his wife, llniriot S. Blaine, aie to find a permanent resting plm e in a memorial pnrls near tlie state house at Augusta, Me, where Mrs. Blaine was horn und where Mr. Blaine moyeil from !',.nn. Nylvauia when n young iiuiu llie Homes were disinterred today from the family plot in Rock Creek Cemetery here und will he sent tomor row to Augustu, where they will lie iiuriou rMiuuuy. ton and the end there is not yd. ,, n Chlcago-but thi, Piece is a,t ij ing written by tbc prophet. Tho nucstfon in the Hlackstone ,j day and all night yesterday was. Shafl we mention the league or not? Acd we mention It. shall we mention tk Lodgo reservations to the league cm. nunt? On this question the UtrnM cans arc divided, ns in Washington lit, the milds and the wilds. The mild'sf that- the league must be mentioned Th wilds say that it must not, and romi senators dash' their e-nnes upon ti ground nnd say the Itcpublican put? will disappear. v One thing Is clear: Washington ti not Chicago. In Washington the Inru wns totally, finally and forever dV posed of. It wns bitter-ended andm crvntfoucd to death. But In Chictn it is very much alive. The delegates have their mvn viewrf the lenguc. and It is not the Bonl. Johnson view. One of them illustrate! it graphically. Ho drew a line at cut side of a piece of paper. He said "Mr Wiln is hec." lie drew n line at thi other side nnd said "aud the RcpsV Ilcan senators propose tn stand im They would surrender nil that Inter vening territory for occupation by Mr Wilson. I don't believe in it. It tvouk be as if Marshal JotTre, when the Gtr mans violated France, had elected t meet them clear nt the western side v this country along the coast of the At lnntic occnu. We can't give the vrM league nnd every kind of a league to Mt, Wilson." ( Tho truth is that Johnson got bold ot the wrong tall. In Washington ho had the United States Senate by tbe tail nnd thought he hod the ltenuLliran party by the tall. Now that be h In Chicago he is discovering his mistake. i FINGERPRINT LAW ASKED Police Chief Would Have Every Per son In United States Registered Detroit Juno 10. (By A. P.)-J federal law requiring tho regislratke by fingerprint of every person in ti country, establishment of nmniclpi yyircless stations for use of police tV pnrtmciits in cities of 50,010 pop tion or more auel uniformity ct liicular laws wcro recommended i spenkcrs beforo tho convention ofti International Police Chiefs' Assoclitiv here yesterday. , The universal fingerprint rcglstri tion was "necessary to the wrll-lxii. of our government in these troublcou tUues," Lugenc vim Buskirk. head tlie Bureau of Criminal Identification! Washington, declared. The plan, 1 said, would identify nil immigrants up their arrival and render it cxtrcm'l difficult for criminals to evade eletct tion by ro-ciitcring the couutry tindi assumed names. To uid in tho recovery of stolen u tomobiles a committee from the cos yention today visited uiitoniohile r''! to urge tbut Ineradicable inaiks of id' tiflcution be placed upou all ruacbhr Mr. Bhiine died in Washington oil imary lis, lS!):i. Jn To Stage Costume Concert Mrs. Phillips Jenkins will giP n viiiu onel costume concert at the Bellevuo-Stratford this evening, the staging nnd dancing being under the di rection of Mile. Louise Lo Gni. The proceeds of the concert will go to the national fund for the war orphans of Italy uud St. Anna's Homo for Aged Women. Among the aihniiccd pupils who will appear are- the Misses Horn thy Tox, Hilda Reitcr and Marguerite i nil Mil i. ijiiini i iii i i Kiiiiiinii in iiii iiir ui toiui iivj in-'i "i i -n ' .--...,..- uiii,i-i. iiiia i by circumstances. bel, Jules H. Mustbaum and Morton 15. will be called upon this coming Novcm- posed such n urogram, declaring he General du Pont b a 'strong Wood Bnclleuburs , bcr to declare their position uptnia; wouWjrcfutie to be bound by it. f. legislative ntliclnl, and tlieigrpiiml when, all eoiild meet and stand for the presidency Itself, together. Senntor Now, however, op- tobel fteUi! Wood Probably First, in Nominating Speeches Chicago, June in. General Wood probably will got the coveted "pole" or first place in the nominating speeches, with Governor Low den second. Alabama, the first state on the roll, has decided not to yield for Gover nor Lowdcn's nomination, National Committeeman Street announced yesterday. Arizona, the second state, is friendly to Genernl Wood and is expected to yield for tho nominating address of Governor Allen, 0f Kan- 1118. The third state, Arkansas, Is scheduled to yield for the Lowdcn nomination by Representative Rod enherg, of Illinois, Less than a Gent a Mile! 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