? '-, re?,. . u'.A "t'" r: -t.? ''W' !"! .VU S 'V 7 f-r 'Afto vf ." x -f . V"r-,V,P ' ' ' "Y THE.WEATHER Rfintrnm Into tills afternoon anil to. :. v a uetttit0 nlriit followed by fair Saturday; not FINAL . ft ?& . niuCll,CIllMiBn I" ivnimii.i TEMI'KKAIUHK AT 1WIUII IlUUrt 113.181 ,fr ' i t. VOL. VI. NO. 250 PRICE two cents; -, Entered i fiocond-CUM Mutter nt tho Pottofflc, at Philadelphia. Ta. PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1920 Published Dully Exeunt Bun1y. Subvrlptlon Prloj $0 a Tear by Mall. IfoonUhl. 1820. bjr rubllo Iediter Company. unuer ino cv oi Aiarcn 1S7B. rX WETS AND DRYS BATTLE IN DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION Bryan and Cockran Present Opposing Prohibition Planks After Draft of Platform Is Read '$ "i. feftger Bubfic fYORlMP SUNDAY BASEBALL IF FOR RECREATION Executive Refuses to Heed Min isters' Plea to Halt Sabbath Sports WARNS AGAINST ROWDYISM AND 'COMMERCIAL' GAMES Tells Delegation Working Man Must Have Some Diversion. Points to Autos Mavor Moore will not forbid Sun dnv baseball games or other sports when they nre Indulged In merely ns recrea tion, he Informed a delegation of minis ters today. The Mayor Impreoscd upon Ms visi tors, however, that he would not toler ate rowdyism or commercialism at Sun day hnll game"). This was his reply to a demand that he enforce the law of 1703 ncatnst Sun day sports and have the police prevent all Sunday ball games. The demand was made by n commit tee of five clergymen, representing the Ministerial Union, headed by the Rev. J. M. R. tyenbers The committee was inhered Into the Mayor's private office (shortly after 11 o'clock and were there for more than an hour. Doctor Jscnbcrg, ns chief spokesman, itinde a vigorous plea for enforcement of the nlrt Snhbath laws. "Sunday bnscball Is organized and commercialized more this vertr than ever before." lie asorted. "Tbls city should obey the laws of the state Mr. Moore Interjected : "Some of the Methodist preachers are ball nlajcrs. aren't Htey? T see tbclr nietiires in the npwsnnners. " Doctor Ibcnberg replied the ministers were not nnnnscil tn hnr.ehnll eirent MifjifnJt.wos played- on. Sunday. wnon do you want tne people to play?" asked Mr. Moore. The ministerial spokesman rejoined that tho people could play In the cvo ning after they had returned from work. Question Noise "The great question with mc," as rertcd the Mayor, "Is whether these people should be housed in alleys under unpleasant conditions whero they can't sleep with the noise nt night. I am speaking from a humanitarian standpoint. "I wish thn churches were more potential," continued tho Mayor. "Some of them nro struggling for existence. The whole world 1h changing. You would have a difficult time if you at tempted to stop women from dancing, for example. "Only this morning Director Fur bush, of the Health Department, said that baseball is one of the most neces sary health measures. I nm prepared for newspaper criticism, which is be ginning, but I am not going to check tho people in their ordinary rights if I can hcln it." Tho Mayor pointed out that when the diddbui inws were passed automobiles, Continual on Tain Two, Column Three BLAST KILLS JRAIN FIREMAN P. R. R. Employe Meets Death When i Locomotive Boiler Bursts A bursting boiler enveloped n loco otlve rnb with live steam, causing tho ath of Luther It. Ilarrlb, the fircmnh, lOrtly nftCr Picllt. nVlnelf Hits ninrnlm I ills a Pcnnsvlrnntfl Tlnlli-nn.l nrnrna from Capo Mny wns speeding through Hie unner end of Atlm.tL. ..mmtv Harris either wns blown from his post m back of the enb or leaped from tho Bleeding express to escape tho searing "f "team. Ills body, with tho Mull fractured, was found beside tho ...r..u( tracus near Ulchland. hi irrls ,lTC1' nt un " Twenty- ---, -.". v minim, Aim IJIIIJV Pm i i? t0 Hnn"nontown by Coroner Rt?i M,pies b01"111 fnr TCroad Street hntioi,. left Cnpe May ot 10:118 o'clock h. unrDhl?' V'lth William S. Laurie nt the ocomotive's throttle. i if(tr1-" wa" Posing near Richland Ri liity-hve mlcs nn honp when n "own-hoU on the boiler gnvo way. S1 Wnrtof steam back Howard Acer's ponstU,C b,,'C OpiKwlt0 th cn thor'hflLlBll,l.t.10,r ,.hp Pnwpr nntl "PPliPd more n,nM B,,h.?uich tne train had gone & " m l',b,fGf il topped. The urcrnnu wns missing. findlnUnCf!7i,f tl!0,tr?(,' resulted in the rns nml the heuil resting on a tie. WOMAN ENDS UF INRIVER J"mps Off Glrard Avenue Bridge. Body Recovered, Unidentified 'W&1 ,U"n.n" rt""'Htcd sul S,l,v i mv "'ns '-I. the east side of the briilpV at in.i'r . , w, (:l,-nr'1 V(,I""J Thobo.lv vn, " oV,0,,k tlllH nmrnlng. "'I ternoo, t U:25 o'clock M'Itt tn Z T: ' T won,nn " the o the bank Tl sI,lI n.ml ny down mt. She ti "'0V "K ,,,T ""it as she ffiovere, 1 ii,, i ' )n V1" .iP, boat Uphvw tP. Thi n,y '"""ywi fi'ct of 'loth K t , nld" ''"i8 '".'l'' wo' . N w " 1.'". ;,'r identificn. eolit 1....1 1" ' .P"ii'iH, 'iud iMiK ilv fJ freaked with ernv mi br,,w" ,,ul ",ft bat. blaek kmU 2,,n, YVr, n ''I"" !lt. Ucr bo.lv ' L,n."d. ''l''k .laced ru suoriibous. v" l0 "oort Text of Wet Plank Offered to Convention by Cochran Auditorium, San Francisco, July 2. (By A. P.) The text of tbo substitute! plank offered by W. Bourko Cockran Is an follows: "The validity of the eighteenth amendment to tlio constitution ban been sustained by the Supreme Court and nny law enacted under Its au thority must bo enforced. In tho In terest of personal liberty to conscrvo the rights of the states we favor fed em! legislation under the eighteenth nmendment, allowing the manufac ture and salo for home consumption only of elder, light wines and beer, preserving to the various states power to fix any alcoholic content other than ns fixed by Congress as may bo demanded by the opin ion or wishes of each locality." YANKS GET BIG LEAD ON MISCUE Walker Muffs Fly Ball, Permit ting Three Aliens to Score. Harris Hurls for A's N. Y. LEADS, 7-2, IN SEVENTH By ROBERT V. MAXWELL It took Babe Ruth and the other members of the Tanks exactly two In nings to grab the lead in-todny's ball game with our A's. Tho Babe rapped a lusty single to start that aforementioned second frame, stole a base and .registered .on Pratt's long single to left. While this was going on Cbnnle's Athletics played in their old-tlmc form. A muffed fly bnll by Tilly Walker in the sixth permitted three aliens to count, giving the Yanks a commanding lend of (1 to 2. ' Jeff Jones, the Harvard first base man, reported today and practiced with his future playmates in tho morning. 1'addy Byrne, the former Villanova athlete, and Tate, of tha -St. Joo, .no., cnip, niso put in an appearance. Taddy is a third baseman and doesn't caro who known it.- The A's did somo work in their por tion of the second inning. After Dugan was retired. Strunk singled and scored on Perkins's double, which bounced ngninst the wnll in left center. Welsh wus tossed out by Peckin paugb, but Perkins went to third, l'eckiupnugh, who hud strained n ten don, was taken out of the game. Bobby Meusel took his place at third. Wnrd Continued on Tore riftern. Column Una TILDEN MAY DEFAULT MATCH TO PATTERSON Hardy Wires Injured Knee May Keep Bill Out of World's Tennis Title Tilt New York, July 2. A private cable dispatch received hero late toduv from London indicates that William T. Tll den. 2d, of Philadelphia, may default to (iernld Patterson, Australia, in the challenge round nt Wimbledon, Kng., tomorrow, for the world's lawn tennis championship. Tho cable received at the office- of the Notional Lawn Tennis Association was bigned by Samuel Hardy, of Chi cago, captain and matiager of the Amer ican Davis cup tenuis tenm, and read : "Tilden knee wrenched: mny defnult Saturday; playing surely Davis cup." Members of the association' execu tive committee stnted that they did not know how serious Tlldcn's injury might be and the question of his playing rested entirely with Hnrdy. As the American team was sent to Kngluud primarily to play In tho Davis cup matches, which open July S, it is considered preferable hero for Tilden to default tomorrow rntlicr than take any chance of further injuring his kilee. The executive committee therefore de cided to notify botli Hnrdy nml Tilden not to play tomorrow if in their opinion such coin;ietlti(j would endanger the loss of Tllden's services in the Davis Cup mutches. EENY, MEENY, MINEY, MO! a . Being the Weatherman's Forecast for Holiday Weather "Ecuv. meeny. miney. mo, cntchn " The forecaster thus gravely cast about for n means of determining the weather for July Fourth, which fulls this year on July Fifth. "If he hollers, let him go," resumed the weatherman, "eeny. meeny, mlney mo! You're out!" Then ho paused in reflection. "As near ns I can tell, ho ex plained, "I can't tell just what the weather's golug to bo like Monday. The best I can promise is n fifty-fifty break." Tho forecaster proceeded to obscrvo that conditions for a fair Monday were not precisely as he would like them. Tho weather 1h unsettled in tho West, par ticularly iu tho vicinity of San Fran cisco. "Thero's no extenstvo area of high pressure that is to say, u.o wide spread area of fair weather," the ex pert went on. "And that's not just the condition I caro for, In connection with holidays. But let's hope!" Showers oru expected tonight. To morrow and probably Sunday uro to bo fair. Tho lilghest temperature, wns reached at noon 811 degrees. Tills dropped to 70 late this afternoon. The humidity is high. 78 per ce,nt. i '' ' ' Whtn yonUMnW ol wrIOM. W iWHWWllW 1 DELEGATES CAST LONGING LOOKS AT no CHARIOT Forces Opposed to Former Sec retary Lack "Nerve" to Block Him FIFTY PENNSYLVANIANS READY TO QUIT PALMER John W. Davis Shows Strength as "Dark Horse" Can didate By CLINTON W. GILBERT Copvriohb IS to. 01 PuoHJrfffcr Co. San Francisco, July 2. All the ad--antngo of the day of waiting while the resolutions committee fought out the liquor plank wns with McAdoo. His opponents made no progress, and to make no progress against a man who has n clear majority of the convention in sight and for whom nil the psycho logical factors arc working is to lose ground For a day the delegates looked nt the McAdoo band wagon. Looking nt a band wagon has n demoralizing effect upon delegates who arc not on board it. It has had a bad effect upon the Pennsylvania delegates, fifty of whom would like to break away from At torney Gcnernl Palmer after one or two ballots and vote for McAdoo. It is having a bad effect upon Thomas T. Tnggart, of Indiana, who loves a winner ns tho girls in tho San Fran cisco cabaret restaurants love to shimmy. "Wo have the votes to beat Mc Adoo," said one of tho opposition lead ers, "but we haven't the innards," only he used a shorter; nud uglier word to describe tho elements they lacked. it nU-cdmeB"dcfwn-to that. The on position lacks, let us put it politely, rclcntlcssncss. On paper it can beat McAdoo. On paper it has more, than one-third of tho convention that it can marshal against hira. It hates Mc Adoo, but it probably does not hato him enough. If it were in tho mood of the men who beat Roosevelt at St. Louis in 1012 or iu the mood of the men who beat Graut iu the convention of 1SS0, it could and would beat Mc Adoo. Old Row Over Patronago But McAdoo raises no Midi sharp issue as was presented in tho Itepub- li.. ..ii.. r toon -ntn .. icon convention of 18S0 or 1012. There j is nn old row between McAdoo and i Tammany over patronage. There Is a nlmllnr ru l,f,..n !,!. -.l - ... .., vt,,w. u.m uuu duiuu ui mc umur aiuic icuacrs over tne same !.. ,1 .!. 1. . I issue. But there is not the bitter nn- tagonism to McAdoo which would rather wreck tho party than 6ee him its can didate. The bosses hoped to make McAdoo .on, mj .i.... I..-.. ..i .i. . , i rri. i , , . , ' nomination. They do not like to have . a candidate nominated who has not como to see them. It is against the ' Combined on 1'nio Sixteen, Column One WALK AIDS ROBINS IMARSTON 3 DOWN DOWN PHILS. 2 TO ION TWELFTH GREEN Causey's Only Pass, in the Ninth, Helps Pfeffer Win Box Duel PHILLIES AB. It. II.PO.A. E. Rawlins, Sh I 0 0 U II Williams, cf 4 0 13 I 0 0 Stengel, rf 4 0 t 0 0 1 Meusel, If 4 0 0 a 0 0 Fletcher, ss 4 0 1 a 7 0 Paillette, lb .1 1 t 12 0 0 It. Miller, 31 4 0 0 2 2 1 Mi. Wheat, c a 0 t 2 0 0 Ciiusey, p 4 0 1 1 t 0 Totals .11 1 724 1.1 2 BROOKLYN Alt. R. II.PO.A. E. Olson, s-s 4 0 1 2 1 0 Johnston. lib 4 11 12 1 Kllduff, 2b t 0 1 2 1 Z. Wheat, If 4 0 1 2 0 (I Myers, if 0 0 0 0 0 Konetchy. lb 4 0 2 8 1 I Griffith, rf 0-0 1 0 0 Elliott, c o a 5 1 o Pfeffer, p 2 0 1 o :t o tNcis 0 0 o 0 o o Hruegcr, c 0 0 0 1 o 0 Totals !U)2"H27 10 3 No one out when winning run scored. titan for Elliot In eighth. Two-base lilt Fletcher. Struck out By Causey, 2 s by Pfeffer, 0. First baso on bulls Off Causey, 2; off Pfef fer, 1. Double play Fletcher to Raw lins to Paulette. Sacrifice lilts Pfef fer, Pauletto. Umpires Hart and Har rison. Ebbetts Field, Brooklyn, N. Y., July o, After Kllduff 'fl muff of a short throw from Elliott in the seventh inutng had w in VnnWto with tha tvine run to day, Causey's only baiion tails l8t CMitlnuKl on Vise TourUvn, Column You 'tlS&JJiH&uftk MISS VIOLA KRAUS Divorced wife of Victor Von Settle gell, who has been named by Dis trict Attorney Swann as tho "Miss .Wilson" of tho Elwclt caso .1 OF ELWELL CASE Victor von Schlegell's Divorced Wife Is Mystery Woman of Murder Hunt SHE IS QUIZZED ONCE MORE Bftclal Dl.ipatch tn Evtnina TiibUr l.tAotr New York. July 2. Miss Violn Kraus, dlvo'rced wife of Victor von Schlegell, was named today by District Aftnrnev Kilivnnl Swnnn ns the mys terious "Miss Wilson," who has figured prominently in the hunt for the mur derer of Joseph Bowno Ellwcll. Testimony that she had heard "Miss Wilson'.' threaten to kill Elwell If he attempted to desert her again, contained In n cnbled newsnnner Interview from Ireland with Anna Kane. Elwcll's former housekeeper, caused Mr.vSwunn to break his accustomed reticence. Tiio young woman, who Is spending tRPWihrrt'or with' her sister and brother. In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lewisohn. come here voluntarily last night and was questioned by members of the dis trict attorney's staff for three hours. Denied Threatening Turfman She denied ever having threatened Elwell. In his statement, Mr. Swann snld : "In nn endeavor to unravel the Elwell murder, the district attorney has centered his attention upon the main question of who committed the murder. if It wns n murder, and the motive for the crime. He has consistently elim Inatod from his answers to the public press nil matter tending to pander to the morbid tnstes of scandal mongers. IIYY- 1 .1 11 1 x- -11 .L- "c niiH urriwru iu nui'w un- iiuiirn to print copies of the pictures of a woman found among th murdered man's effects and ho has declined to glVO 111C IinmCS OI young WOllien Willi .. ,,, l,l ,.. " ti.'lll lliu iiiuiuuui milt i un ill.- whom tho quainted. Why Name Waa Withheld "Among these young women wns one known to the scrvnnts ns 'Sliss Wilson.' As uo charge heretofore had been made against this young woman, the district nttorney. following the invariable cus torn, declined to give her name to the public press. "The district attorney got into im- mediate communication with Miss Violn Cmtlnurd on 1'urc Two. Column Sem Dave Herron Loads Merion Star in Match for State Golf Title Oahmont, Pa., July 2. Max Mnr ston. tho Merion stnr, was three down on tho twelfth green to Dave Herron, the nntionnl chnnipion, in the final for tho Pennsylvania state amateur title here this afternoon. Mnrston went out In 42 nnd nerron In .'!!). Tho Philadelphia plnyer was H down nt the turn and tho tenth nud eleventh were halved. The match was played in a driving rainstorm. Mnrston gnined nn early advantage, copping the first hole with n birdie . Herron was iu trouble from the tee. going Into the rough with his drive mid following with ati iron shot into n pit before the green. Both were on the green in three, but nerron failed to ne gotiate his putt, whilo Marston went down. Golnrf to tho second. Herron sliced bndly from the tee and wns In the rough. Mnrston shot straight down the fairway and wns holo high on tho green with his Iron. Herron was short and took three to get on, laying ten lect from tho pin. Marston ran his putt dead and sank It for a four. Her ron missed his and took a fi. Thus challenged, Herron showed the fighting spirit" which won him the nn tjonnl title. He drovo straight down the fairway .100 yards and lnld his iron shot on tho edge of the green. Marston won with enso from J. B. Rose, Allegheny Country Club, in tho semifinals 8 and 7. Herron bent John Graham. Htontnn Heights, 2 up in the other semifinal. Marston's second pujlcd into the deep rougn, nnu no was uventy-nve reel trom intj, pin on. inira. iierron was ncai CoUid oa ttt Two, CoJujb On ND IVIIOO YVILOUri PLATFORM DRAFT SILENT ON LIQUOR; NDORSES LEAGUE Committee's Declarations as Presented to Delegates Strike at 'Republicans SYMPATHY WITH IRISH ASPIRATIONS EXPRESSED Sharp Indictment of G. 0. P. and Condemnation of Lavish Campaign Funds Tho full text of tho Democratic plat form as submitted to the convention today by the resolutions committee is published on pogo 17. By the Associated Press San Francisco, July 2. Framed after days and nights of struggle with clashing interests nnd opinions, the resolutions committee draft of tho plot form was lnld before tho Democratic National Convention today for adop tion. .The committee platform wns silent on prohibition enforcement. It was n long document, efforts to produce a brief, emphatic statement of principles having been balked from the outset. All proposed planks onfhc liquor question were eliminated. A wide range of subjects were trcnted. Including ngriculturc, labor, soldier relief, and a si!brc moro domes tic questions. The preamble was brief. It was confined to a tribute to the lead ership of President Wilson.- League of Nations Indorsed Foremost among the planks came in dorsement of the League of Na.ti.on8 and condemnation -of tho Republican Senate for having interposed "partisan envy and personal hatred," in the way of world peace. The President's stand against "reservations designed to cut to pieces the vitnl provisions of the Versailles Treaty" wns applauded, but coupled with this declaration went tho statement, written in after a prolonged committee struggle, that the Democratic party did not oppose "reservations making clearer or more specific the ob ligations of tho United States to the league associates." Accompanying this was an assertion that tho President had repeatedly de clared and the convention now reaf firmed that American obligatious as a league member "must be fulfilled in strict conformity with the constitution of the United States, embodied in which is the fundamental requirement of de claratory action by the Cougress be fore this nation may become a partici pant in any war." Sympathy for Irish The Irish plank, center of hours of committee dispute, was brief. The spc ciHc reference foRowed a gcnernl as sertion reaffirming the principle of na tional self-determination as a war aim which "victory established." It merely renewed 'within tho limitations of in ternational comity and usage" previous Con tin ii wl on paca Elutrrn. Column Two FISHING LEADS TO DIVORCE Camden Woman Wins Freedom From Huoband, Follower of Walton It may be ground for n divorce in Cnmden to bo too fond of fishing, ns Walter Howit Icnrnotl today when the courts gave his wife, Mrs. Alice Hewitt, of 20L'." Federal street, Camden, her legal freedom. Samuel K. Robin, advisory master In ohnmery. recommended a divorce de cree to Mrs. Hewitt today because, as he said in his opinion, "it is plain to me that the husband is fouder of fishing tnim or pcriorming ins duty toward Ills wife and children." The decree was granted on the ground of desertion, Mrs. Hewitt, in her bill of complaint, stnted that her husband had left her in August of 1017, and hud thereafter ro iniiiiied away from his home and failed to support his family. Mrs. Hewitt averred that her spouse wns excessively fond of the noble pastime of Izaak Walton, which also got Isaak into difficulties with his wife nt times. Hewitt is living nt Anglesea, N. J., where, by all accouuts, the fishing is uhwis good. f JIM DAISY FIRST Wins Opening Race for Two-Year-Olds at Aqueduct Aqueduct, New York, Julv 2. Jim Daix was first under the wire Iu the opening race for two-year-olds at the Aqueduct track here this afternoon from n field of classy entries. Ho paid 8 to 5. 7 to 10, nnd 1 to 3, and wns ridden by Jockey Ensor. Fair (lain showed her heels In tho tcrnud ruce. She paid 7 to 2, 7 to 10 and I to 4. The summaries : '""ifr.J",01?' ,two.year.oW, puriifl 11100, 5 furlong. 1. Jim Unity. no, Ensor... S-s 2. wlk Up, 10H, Kumnur. ... 0-a 3. Him ot tha North. US. clalmlnr, T.jo 8. B If ire o.s ft. r 4 Time, 1 -.01 4-8. EpUode, Mry Brb. Wli Continued on l'a.o riftron. Column Fl . " L 1 HARVARD dXADS OF 1S60 Bunrtvtna; rotmMn olecrta cltu'i ali. lt..i "Wt" tlath unntvnary In Boaton Pictured In naxt I mnaay'a t-icionai mcuoa BOII. AMI. v. uia -oaut TODAY'S BASEBALL SCORES NEW YORK,. 0 1200400 0-770 ATHLETICS.. 0 100100 0 2 4 30 2 Tliormnhlen nnd Hannah; Harris and Perkins. BIneen and Fricl. 1'HILLIES...,0 00000100172 BROOKLYN.. 0 0000100 1283 Causey and Wheat; Pfeffer A'S L0SE0URTH STRAIGHT TO HUGMEN ,'r'TFriCS r h o a c Witt. 2b .. 13 15 0 n'' 'r.T, 3b..... . 0 13 4 0 Yi'alker. If....'... 0 0 2-0 2 Duan. ss 0 0 2 3 1 f-'trunk, cf. ...... 12 10 0 r-Mns, c..'. 0 2 6 3 0 Y.'c.:,Ii, rf 0 13 0 0 isiin, lb l 0 9 2 0 Ii:rrit,,p 0 0 0 10 Hasty, p 110 10 I - III IM Totals 410 27 19 3 AMERICAN CLEVELAND 0 0 6 0 DETROIT 0 1 0 0 Coveleskie and O'Neill; Dauss WASHINGTON 103 1 0 BOSTON 2000 0 Erickson and Qharrity; Jones and Walters. ST. LOUIS 0 10 3 0 0 CHICAGO 0 0 0 Q 3 0 Shocker and Seveveid; 'Williams and Schalk. 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE BOSTON '. 03 10 0 01 0 2 0, " NEW YORK (First).. 1000100 2 3 0 0 Oeschger and Oowdy; Nehf, Benton and Smith. W-TOX 1 J. 0 0 1 0 Ni:W YORK (2ND).. C 1 0 2 0 4 Scott and O'Neill; Douglas and Smith. CHICAGO 0 0 03 0 0 0 0 0 0 CINCINNATI 0201001000- Carter and Daly; Ring and Wingo. PITTSBURGH 0 0 0 0 ST. LOUIS 0 0 2 0 Hamilton and Schmidt; Doak and Dilhocfer. JAPANESE DIET CONVENES IN SPECIAL SESSION HONOLULU, T. H., July 2 The Japanese diet convened in bpecial session at Tokio yesterday, accoiding to Tokio cables to Nippu Jlji. rrnGTTY SEEKS INTERNATIONAL 0v ' "OrTTVITlEO. Uruguay, July 2. President 3 mm '.: t :e opinion cT the national administrative council concviiin," r veution with the United States, in accordance with the con.lusiini 01 the pan-American financial congress, for the establishment of an international gold fund. ' If the reply Is favorable, It is stated, hs will sign the treaty. STRIKE OF SUGAR WORKERS IN HAWAII ENDS HONOLULU, T. H. July 2. The strike of sugar plantation workers of thee Hawaiian Islands, which began on January 10 last, was officially declared ended yesterday by the Hawaiian labor as sociation, formerly tho Japanese federation of labor. About 5,000 Japanese and Filipino laborers are effected by the decision. Em ployers announced they had granted the returning men no concessions. NEW CAMPAIGN AGAINST VILLA PT.ANNVT) MEXICO CITY, July 2. General Eugenlo Martinez has r-r named chief of military operations In the states of Coahulla, Du lango and Nuevo Leon. General Guadalupe Sanchez, who Joined the Obregon f'orceB after tho flight of President Carrrtnze from Mexico City, has beon ordered to move northward from tho state of .Vera Cruz to participate in the campaign against Francisco Villa, rebel leader, whose forces are operating In western Chihuahua, and. Elliott. Hart and Harrison. NEW YORK Wckinpaufjh. ss. Ward, 3b. ss Pipp.lb Ruth,rf Meusel, If., 3b... r h a c 0 0 0 2 P 2 1 3 1 1 12 12 0 0. 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Bodic.cf 0 0 2 Pratt, 2b 0 2 2 Hannah, c 0 0 G Thormahlen, p.. . 1 0 0 Gleich.lf 2 0 1 2 0 1 0 : 0 0 0 Totals. 7 7 27 12 0 LEAGUE 2 0 f! 0 0 3 0 nnd Stanage. 4 0 0 0 4 111 0-30 1 0 0 18 1 1-10 12 1 0 15 0 7 11 0 MINORITY REPORT ARE FOLLOWED BY BITTERGLASHES Commoner Wagos War Against Liquor on Floor of Audi torium NEW YORKER URGES WINE AND BEER PROVISIONS Plea Is Made for Ireland Big , 'M uemonstration tor Suffrage .... . ' ' . -a .. . d.w.ivi.imi limit J(l Auditorium, San Francisco, Jui7:2. JW FY. 41... A..A.I.I.J - 1' A . . .M tup battle of the "wet" and ."dryu;''' Kit under way In the Democratic Na-t tional Convention this afternoon when.-, after the platform had been read" with-; out making mention of n prohibition plank. William" J. Tlryan was recpgnfied' to offer a bone "dry" plank, aa a minority report. 3Ir. Bryan presented five planks of his own and a prohibition plank, by former ConRrchsmon Dobson. and then W. Rourke Cockran. of New York, took' the platform to present another minority report. Mr. Cockran presented a substitute for BryanN prohibition plank, 'which'. while declaring for the validity Of the prohibition amendment, also declared for the "manufacture for homo -consumption only of cider, light wines. and bccr." ' Shout for Beer Plank The convention greeted the reading, of that phrase with a mighty shout .oncjr,,,11 prolonged cheers. It reserved to Uir ' states the right to fix alcoholic contenti'.''' E. L. Doheny, of California, pre" eehtcd 'a minority, report on the 'Irish, question, proposing n ptank"p1-yldlnp-foi the recognition of the Irish Repufi-' lie. Chairman Glass concluded the rcatfT- iug of the platform at 12:47 p,' ra. (3:47 p. m. Philadelphia time), two hours and seven minutes aftertlt began. At tho concluding words the band started up aud the delegates stood and cut loose with a crash of applause. Then there were cries for "Bryan" and ,-i'j clamoring for the fight over adoption to begin. ; Bryan Bounces From Chair Senator Glass moved that the plat form be adopted as read and Bryan bounced out of his chair on the platform to begin his fight for hit. minority planks. He was greeted with a minute of chccrinc in which very few dcler-ates took prominent part. Opening his speech diplomatic. with praise for the platform, he a .ln.,.,1 u nun if the Ktroncest evfc'. , ii,i, " -- - -- ,.--.- --, - 1 adopted by a political party. Hfr added that whatever difference of opinion there had been in the platform committee had been over the means and not the end to be accomplished, but it was ouc of the prerogatives of a Democrat to speak his own views. "I am glad to come to you an"! say that I am ready to indorse alinos all that is written there." he continued, and an uproar of approval and disap proval interrupted him. "Make it all. make it all," "yelled several of the delegates. Commoner Presents Planks LTndcr the rules Bijau was required to read all of his proposed planks be fore the discussion of nny of them could begin. The bone-dry proposition he presented first iml then followed the declarations he had drafted for publi cation of a government bulletin for dealing with profiteers, aud to put the party on record as opposing compulsory military training in times of peace. When he came to the last of his five planks, which dealt with the League of Nations, Mr. Bryan prefaced Its reading by baying that nothing contained in it was mteiided to conlllct with the ma joritv platform's words of pralke for the President. The peace treaty, h added, was "better than any one had a right to expect," considering the cir cumstances with which the President had to deal. Some "noes" interrupted the readlnr of the llrjun league piuuK, our us pro isions nlo got some applause. It demanded nn nmendment to the constitution for ratification of treaties bj 11 majority vote of the Henate, When Mr. Brvan finished reading his p'anks he nut down and Mr. Cockran, unotner veteran ot many ueraocrauc I'linvent 011s. wns men rccoguizra 10 ?a present his minority report. He said ' ,3 Sir. lii'.viui had been inadequate in ins , description of the efforts of "the plat ' form committee to write a grciu piai; form. Cochran's I'lanli Wet Mr. Cockrnn's minority report was a wet plunk. He told the convention that had Mr. Bryan consented to let Ik" committee's report Maud ho doubted whether the weta would havo rained thn (nii'stlon. "But Bryan and evasion urn trreeonclluble within the same hall." 1... M.l.l.k.1 'iinil .wiitr tliAt tl,A. lau.itt jl had been raised,' thank God tho dotiVMfe tlon can no longer dodge ft," ; 110 ....... u, ...... " ."!' ". A roar of cheering nrwtcd the' ring groeiru ik which Ac -VI. 1 .i'" luajo' of tbo plank whici) dclaMi M SI .n t 'I 1 I lft, , 1 . ' c v jr. . ' COMUUM HH WVtMUf-KU, AT- Wj.1 j'... WMLXlMJhsst ViMs. & -nfe V i., itM ...a, t V. ,.fjjjJiikArtV. "-vOiii "Vfl it . ", M1 Iv lAf. mmmmm '