Evening Star Newspaper, July 2, 1924, Page 3

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ROOFING—by Koons Slag Roofing, Tinning. Repairs and Roof Painting. _Solid, durabie work always as- gured. ~ We'll ' gladly estimate. Call Maia 833. KOONS 3358 H2riitl 36 to 334 | | general OTHER GROUPS AID COMMONER SEGHT Many Western and Southern Delegates Oppose “Wall Street Man.” | BACKERS ARE HOPEFUL See Prospect of Getting Most Smith's Votes When Dead- lock Is Broken. | | BY FREDERIC WILL NEW YORK, July 2—Bryan versus Wall street, a controversy of the vintage AM Wi | prosiaentiag of 1896, is the up-to-date situation into which the Democratic national conven- | tion of 1924 has drifted. The commoner | has put himeelf at the head of a cru- | sade which is determined flercely to frus- | trate the nomination of John W. Davis. | Bryan is assailing Davis in practically the same terms that he fought William McKinley. He calls Davis the “tool of | the interests.” “Morgan's lawyer.” “Wail street's candidate and the certain be- trayer of the cause of “the plain pee-pul in case he should, by unhuppy | set of circumstances, be elevated to the presidency Bryan is apparently bent on crushing Davi n New York, just as he eventually | succeeded in destroying Champ Clark at Baltimore. The Nebraskan-Fioridan's | plans, which at no time have en | secret, did not publicly manifest | celves until the dramatic rise in Davis trength on Tuesda Immediately the any | [ | | | | votes Missouri | and Mississippi were transferred to | { Davis and pointed to him as the in- | evitable dark horse, Bryan unmasked all his batteries, The e now blaz- ing away at the West Virginian's trenches. By every artifice at his| command, the commorner is Carrying on his vendetta. He has the enthusi- astic aid of the Hearst press. He touring delegations on the of conven- anti-Davis article in the | rst papers. He invades the press | section. He whispers, gossips and talks to leade deiegates, reporters— | everybody in whose system an anti- | | Davis seed may usefully be planted. | | iverywhere Bryan is speaking the! | language that gave him fame in 1896. | | Between concessions to Davis' per- | onal integrity and tributes to his iegal skill. Bryan charged that “the Morgan lawyer” could not carry a state west of the Allegheny mount- | ains or north of Mason and Dixon’s | line. He asserted that John W. Davis would be as badly beaten for the presidency, if nominated. as the “las New Yorker” to be a Democratic standard bearer., Judge Alton B Parker. of hix He Crusade Not Futile. e idle to contend crusade against Davis the convention reas- | morning there that Davis has progress is ar- that | is It the futile. would Bryan When this impression | been stopped. H rested—if it really has been arrest- ed—at the moment his prospects | Seemed the most brilliant. It would ‘be equally diflicult to describe th eclectrical _thrill that shot through Madison Square Garden all Tuesda afternoon and evening every time the ballots revealed a Davis gain, even if | lonly two or three votes. Only the | | enthusiasm evoked by a Smith spurt | equaled the joy expressed when the | Davis star seemed to be in the cendant. Every external sign showed that the convention was ready to claim the West Virginian as the nom- ince. Then the deadly work of Wil- liam Jennings Bryan began to show its effects. We are in the midst | a “situation where the psychology of | things is of tremendous importance. The merest suggestion that the Davis should be checked. and is on of collapse. suffices to punc- fatally. was a | sembled boom the eve ture it, almost Bryan Not Alone, Bryan does not stand alone in his | opposition to the West Virginian. Even in western delegations, where | Bryan influence counts for little, anti- | Davis sentiment is strong. In the| south, too, Davis' unavailability is| emphasized because of his Wall street associations. The westerners and the southerners, who join with Bryan in decrying the Davis cause, insist that such hopes of victory as are left to the Democratic party de- pend upon the nomination in New | York of an out-and-out progressive. If the standard bearer to be “simply a Democratic Coolidge”"—one of the anti-Davis slogans that now | has currency In Madison Square Gar- den—Democrats as geographically re- mote from each other as Josephus Daniels of North Carolina and Edwin T. Meredith of Towa bluntly say the jig is up. They argue that such a candidacy would hand the November election to the Republicans on a Eolden platter. Meredith is reported to feel so strongly on the Davis prop- osition that he declines to consider a Davis and Meredith ticket, which has been suggested. Hopes for Davis. The Davis people have by no means thrown up the sponge. They ac- knowledge the formidable mature of the Bryan barrage, supported, as they believe it to be, by a “senatorial oligarchy” determined to wrest the nomination for some United States! senator. The Davisites seem to be counting on Smith support eventually to win the day for them. The big business interests that would be gratified by a conservative nomina- tion of the Davis type are clos: linked with Tammany interests in New York City and state. If there seemed to be a Bryan-McAdoo combi- nation to_thwart John W. Davis, a so-called Wall street Tammany-Smith counteralliance to support him is an imminent probability. Brennan of Illinois is favorable to Davis. Tae Cox strength in Ohio, on account of Davis' league of nations views, may eventually be thrown to him. Events are moving so rapidly, dis- gust with convention conditions is becoming so universal, that the spec- ulation of the wisest politicians may be wrecked before this report of them can reach the printed page. Tom Taggart, sage old Democratic owl, said this morning to a downcast conventionite who returned to Wash- ington, disgruntled and disillusioned, that “we are running around in the same circles In which we were run- ning ten days ago.” No one can chal- lenge the accuracy of Taggart's epitome of the situation. The In- diana boss could have gone further without offending the truth. He could have said that nearly every Democrat in New York -who is honest with himself is chagrined be- yond expression at the hopelessness and helplessness into which the con- vention has fallen. Leaders confess they recall \no convention which opened amid such promsie and is wind- ing up amid such desolation. The New York Times, pleadirg editorially today for “a rescuer,” laments: “Has Made Sad Mess. “It is only uttering the general be- lief to sdy that the Democratic con- vention, to date, has made a pretty sad mess of it. It met under roseate auspices. ‘The common boast THE {TELEGRAM FROM HOME” FAILS TO WIN DELEGATES Ancient Trick Unavailing When Senders Forget to Prepay Charges. BY the Associated Press. SW YORK, July 2—Many candidate managers were working the “telegram {rom home” game o ihe delegates today. The disappoint ing feature of the outcome was tha a lot of telegrams came collect The dictates of the finest tradition of the | of @ hundred years of Democratic his tory, in the view of O. Max Gardner chairman of the North Carolina dele gotion, are that high-strung hom: toiks ‘who send telesrams Lo tine: representa in the national con vention should pay the charges. _Of some 300 telegrams from all sec tions of the state reaching the Nortl Carolina chairman this morning mar., came collect “Without the expressing approval o telegraphic referendum on th nomination.” Gardnc d, *4ct us go on record as unal- terably in favor of the principle o prepayment. BRYAN SAYS DAVIS STATUS IS FATAL Declares Employment and Environment Would Lose States in West. By a Staff Correspondent. EW YORK. July nings Bryan, who has thrown all his nfluence against the candidacy of John W. Davis of West Virginia for the Democratic nomination for Pres- ident, said last night: “I have no personal objection to Mr. Davis. He man of the highest character “So is Coolidge. ence between them in “Mr. Daviy' environment ployment would fatal is a There is no differ- that respect. and em- be handicaps tion floor. He is circulating reprints iy him in the states west of Pennsyl- | I don’t believe he'd carry any And no Democrat carry eastern states vania. of them likely to against Coolidge, it would leave him | which has not enough sident only the south, clectoral votes to elect a P n answer to some statements that ave criticized his employment as a lawyer. 1 believe he had a perfect right to do this. But when a man decision, he takes all the ac- that go with it. and the is not an accessory that such a decision. 1t'is the e in the gift of the people, makes pr 3 zoes with highest offi and ought to & who has. by his words | shown himself not only with the people in_opinion, but willing to champion their cause. 1f a man has the ability to be President, he ought to give it to the ¢ the people. not to private bus if e the people to be sted in We do not choose snts by service | system, Dbut because they champion the cause of the people Deniex Threatening to Talk. Mr. Bryan denicd he had threat- ned to take the stand in the conven- tion hall and deliver a speech Davis should the West ceive upward of 200 votes. What he would do. bowever, he did not say and deeds, use ness, int him. Pre sic civil Hix attention was called to the fact | for the in a case in counsel 1y an increase 1 went into a other day,” said that Mr. Davis was telephone company rec which brought about telephone charge lothing store the Col. Bryan, “and the merchant asked me what I thought of Mr. Dav 1 said that I thought him an able man. The merchant became excited and told me that Mr. Davis had made him pay more for his telephone. Col. Bryan declined to say whom he supported as a second choice, in e could not be nominated. 3 he said, “of the I reached Paris on my way round the werld and I saw an Amer- n paper for the first time in nonths, I got a copy of the Paris ald and read every word in it about America. One little item said that Senator Allison of lowa was de- manding that the Senate make an appropriation to_clean the snow off the strects of Washington, and that Senator Spooner of Wisconsin had suggested that perhaps there might be another fall of snow. Whercupon Senator Allison threw up his hands and replied: “1 neve make predictions.” ATTORNEYS MINUS PAY.. Shortage of Funds Cuts Out Prose- cutors’ Salaries. Attorneys David Hart, handling the prosecutions the 'violation of the handbook laws, and Thomas E. Lodge, looking after the prosecution of all cases in violation of the national prohibition law in the Police Court, will have to o without their salaries this month by reason of the shortage of the fund at the Department of Justice from which they are paid. FLYER PRESSES ON. By the Associated Press. FOOCHOW, China, July 2.-—Stuart MaecLaren, the British aviator, ar- rived at the Payoda anchorage here today on his flight around the world. Assistant District AL in the party leaders was that the Lord had delivered the Republican philis- tines into their hands this véar, and that_any Democrat could be elected President. But now the fear is that no Democrat can be elected, so swift- Iy has_the outlook been changed since June 24. That the party has been greatly dispirited by the events of the past few days is not disputed by even its hardest optimists. It is in crying need of a bracing tonic, such as can be given to it only by a man able not only to rescue it, but to rouse and revive it.” Meantime the air at Madison Square Garden is cluttered up with talk of compromise combinations. Davis and Walsh, Davis and Meredith, Ralston and Copeland, Glass and Walsh, Un- derwood and Ralston, Smith and Ralston and a number of others, all more " or 1les are being bandied about. In the tangled state of things there are serious men who say thai a McAdoo and Smith ticket is ‘the only solution, and predict that no other method of breaking the ex- isting deadlock is conceivable. Smith people snort at the notion of their hero playing second fiddle to New York’s best-hated candidate. Long ago a wise Democrat, who sits in Madison Square Garden, said that when that situation arose in this convention which now is baffing it, it would turn in desperation to some man utterly and unqualifiedly re- moved from its rivalries and bicker- ings. He said it would be a man ‘who had not hitherto figured.in Dem- ocratic speculations. He said it would be a westerner, a progressive, a Protestant and a dry. He said it would be a candidate around whom everybody could raMy because he had made no enemies anywhere. Perhaps before the nightfall of this eighth suc- cessive day of the convention the identity of this Moses will be given to the world, —William Jen- | as a reward to one | expects | against | Virginian re- | NATURE OF PARTY INVITES DEADLOCKS Democracy Has Three Ele- ments—Aristocratic South, Irish Northeast and West. TWO-THIRDS RULE WISE Prevents One Faction From Dom- inating Other Two in Choice of Candidate. BY WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE. NEW YORK, July 2—In the eighth lay session of the national Demo- cratic convention tame the deadlock, iways to be expected in the life his- tory of these gatherings. The two ading candidates, Smith and M Adoo, have beew grinding each other’s vitals in a death grip. Four years 1go, in San Francisco, the same hing was happening between Me- Adoo and Mitchell Palmer as is hap- pening today. Eight yvears ago, in St Louis, Wilson w a ndidate for renomination, but twelve years ago Speaker Champ Clark was at grips with Underwood and Harmon, while Wilson was one of the minor candi- dates. Bryan's entrance into the na- tional Democratic convention of 1896 was less conspicuous than that of either Glass or Newton Baker or | Franklin Roosevelt today. The two- thirds rule makes it almost impossi- ble for any one to win in the Demo- cratic convention who is not virtu- ally the unanimous choice of his |party. When two leaders get in op- | position in a Democratic convention |each with a third, the second-choic |man must win. It is written in the <tars Is | Only National Party, The philosophy upon which the | two-thirds rule stands in Democratic | conventions has its roots in the fact | that the Democratic party is a na- J[nnn..x party—the only national party |in the country. The Republicans poll |no notes in the south, but the Democrats have strength in the eastern Atlantic seaboard, in the south and in the west. The Republican convention always made up of leading and highly respectable citizens, always of one kind and one mind, and chiefly of one class, all over the east and west, with a few s and | hangers-on, more or less declasse at | | the very best, coming out of the south. Of its own motion the Re- publican party has clipped the wing: of these southern outcasts, so that they are holding less and léss power | in ‘the Republican convention.” But | it a Democratic convention the three | estates. cach from a different part of the country, east, sonth and west nake three separate kinds of people in the convention. From the,south come the ruling classes, who ‘corre- spond to the Republicans. From the west comes a nondescript group, :gricultural, small-town or big-town Irish. mine owners, ranchmen—a bold, | gay “crowd. unterrified and a bit irrcsponsible, not at all like the proud and dignified southerners, and very little Jike the delegates from the st and north. Th seaboard states send their governing but not their ruling classes—their politicians, not their bankers and trust mag. nates, their city bosses and not their industrial captains. These seaboard delegates are under Irish domination and generally con- tain Irish majorities. They also are unterrified and frec. Incidentally they are clannish. And now abide in every Democratic convention these threo estates—the rulers from the south, the governors from the north- eastern seaboard and the unclassi- fied, unwashed and untamed west- ernérs. It is almost impossible - to combine cither two of these thirds into a two-thirds majority. Could Get Majorities. But it would be easily possible for either third, having a strong candi- date, to make terms with minorities of either or in both of the other thirds, and nominate under a mere majority rule, a purely sectional can- didate, who would be unsatisfactory to two-thirds of the convention, and a_vast majority of the Democrats of the country. The convention today is expediting the inevitable spectacle that must | come in_certain Democratic conven- tions. Two sectional leaders, Mc- Adoo and Smith, the one from the west, and the other from the east, grinding each other to death in a deadlock so that some second choice candidate may unite all of the ele- ments of the party in a nomination. 1t has been absolutely impossible B is efo Some are completed and ready for immediate occu- pancy; others will be fin- ished within a short time. many other features. e, EXHIBIT HOUSE 3319 Cleveland Ave. Open and Lighted il 9 P.M. for a purely’ sectional candidate like Smith, who represents views so high- ly antagnostic to the west and south, to be nominated, and it is equally impossible and has been from the beginning, for a man like Mec- Adoo, who represents views so thor- oughly opposed to the convictions of the east, to win. Even if he won he would fail in the election because le was the sectional candidate of the national party. Smith or McAdoo would meet Bryan's fate, and this leath struggle’ here in Madison 3quare. Garden, so many times repeat- <d in "Democratic national conven- <ons, so typically a part of the life astory of the Democratic organism, inust go ahead with its full monoto- nous, deadly process until the two sec- tonal candidates are eliminated by | some third cangidate upon whom ail three sections’will agree. Because the wesat and the south are dry and Protestant, the coming candidate must be neither wet nor Catholic. Clash of Interexts. It is hard for Democratic New York | ind New England to realize this; to calize that as America is now con- stituted no man who does not believe n the prohibitory law and no man who i3 not a Protestant and of more or less strongly marked New England ancestry can be nominated and elect- ed by the Democratic party. Twelve years ago Woodrow Wilson, who was an Irish-Presbyterian, with a Scotch mother, and who had the spirftual inheritance of the Puritans, if not their actual blood, took the nomination from Underwood and Clark. So it will be in this conven- tion: and that slow-grinding struggle n Madison Square Garden these days of human forces working s great, inevitable drama that | vomes with the clash of the three great interests in the Democratic party. However, one must not generalize too exactly. Facts have a way of Kicking holes in hypotheses. We must not forget that Saturday night in the tragic combat between a Nordic, white Protestant civilization and the crumbling influences of an inferior culture—if we may drop into the ver- nacular of the Ku Klux Klan—the Nordics were served to a tottering country by the votes of two Filipinos, two Porto Ricans and two hidalgos from the Canal Zone. So that all of these generalization hereinbefore et down, must be accepted, if at all, as somewhat speculative and always | amenable to intervening and un- comfortable facts which put their| thumbs at their noses and hoot at all hypotheses. (Copyright, 1924, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) ADMiNISTRATION WINS | IN PRINTER ELECTION | By 18 Associated Pross INDIANAPOLIS. July Practi- cally the entire list of administration candidates. were elected over their | progressive opponents to the more | important offices of the International | Typographical Union, according to the official tabulation of votes cast in | the recent election, given out here | 1ast might by the union's canvassing James Lynch of Syracuse, heading the administration ticke was_elected over Charles P. Howard | of Detroit, incumbent, by a plurality of nearly 3,000 votes. Other admin- istration candidates for major offices | were clected by from 3,000 to 4,000 | votes. They are: Seth Brown, Los Angeles, first vice president; Austin | Hewson, New York, second vice pres- | ident: J. W. Hays.' Minneapolis, sec retary-treasurer. George W, Barker, ||| 4 progressive candidate, was elected delegate to the trades and labor con- ||| Eress of Canada and Fred S. Barker ||| of the administration forces was | | N..¥. named a member of the bo; of auditors. Walter Ames Malcomb A Knock. A. D. Ballantine and George A ols were elected trusteees. Delegates to the American Federation | of Labor elected are Max S. Hays, T. | W. McCullough, Frank ~ Morrison, | John C. Harding and William Young. | Joe M. Johnson named agent of | the Union Printers’ Home. rd EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1924. Bryan Is Fighting John W. Davis SureRelief ESTION @® "> 6 BeLLans = | Hot water Sure Relief LL-ANS 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Evervwhers “Kodak” | While You KODAK Outfit for the “Fourth” 1A Autograhpic Kodak, Jr. Rapid Rectilinear Lens Photographic Album 3 Rolls of Films (18 exposures) Developing 3 Rolls 18 Prints Complete for 518 $1 Down—$1 a Week Only store in Washington that sells KODAKS on terms art3 Chas & Son Schw 708 7 St.NW. 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