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a eed er wm Ln eR ene - vane mee _—s ANU CHOICE IN § BALLOTS: | HARDING TAKES 3D PLACE eee On the IL ssue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise Weather Tonight and Sunday, fair! moderate winds, mostly westerly. Temperature L M Hours Maximum, 59. Mini . 48. = unum ae Kntere 1 Clans Mattor May 3, 1899, woffion at Seattio, Wash, under the Act of Congress March VOLUME 23. JOHNSON DROPS as Michigan Bolts From Californian Sen- ator on Sixth Ballot; Long Fight in Prospect ATTLE, WASH, “SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 1920. 1 i — even Time father of can make un done the accomplishment; yet, with happy fortune, forgetfulness may come Forgetful n quickly, to us today as to the an cient heroic Greeks. And what Pindar wrote, as quoted, some stin true the world was praying for pea Unit spir ft, facing a forbidding future ready to lay our last dollar and our last ryan on the altar, the free na- tions of the earth were holding q high their courage, en tho the Power of the Hun was seemingly 4 Overwhelming : Do you remember the spirit of America, two years ago today? Any sqcrifice, any dev @iscomfort, any sorrow borne for the ultimate good of posterity, and for the immediate salvation of nations half across the s does ce COLISEUM, Chicago, June 12.—After taking four more ballots, making eight in all, the eee national conven- tion recessed at.1:37 p. m. until 4 p. The recess came after a amie spurt by Senator Warren G. Harding of Ohio, which apparently disconcerted his opponents. The Ohioan’s floor managers were.called into conference on the platform after a recess had been moved Harding became, apparently, the dominating figure of the convention. A leap*of 281% votes for him on the eighth ballot, while © the strength of ‘Wood and Lowdest slightly, decreased, was BARS Oe believed by observers to indicate a trend in the vote. | Wood and Lowden were running a close race at the end} / ‘of the eighth ballot, with Lowden slightly in the lead. B OT NO 8 Part of the Michigan dele- i gation bolted from Johnson If you want to know how readily We have forgotten, read the yelps, barks, whines, wails and snappings that are coming forth from Chi- Pi gee. where, presumably, the des. iny of this people for the next four years is “ issue. HE ouck ending tommy | 'T | was one of the most mo- eMentous in history. In this seven days the probable fate of this na- ae ie asta ae prom pects ' on the sixth ballot and from t * “ de Ve 7 > a! of the horde of a modern Attila Alabama — Lowden 6 Wood 4, that time on the senator’ wre checked. And, make no mis- Harding 4 stock decreased. Johnson lost take; had the Huns borne thru and Arisopa—Wood 6 231 votes on the sixth ballot.| Warren G. Harding is 5S years {number of large business entero seized Paris two years ago, it Arkansas—-Lowden § 11'% Wood aE , = _~ Id aw was born in Blooming /and a member of the board of 4 Ghd have’ besh. 0 ten Sauer 1% Harding’s stock increased|*e om te. ‘con of a countty tore of seve! ef tices. Tea It might have been the death of California—Johneon 26 from the sixth ballot on, and) goctor and the eldest of eight} ° . ™m. b ee den ee Colorado—Lowden 3, Harding 3,/0n the seventh he jumped] chidren. Harding lived the life! “irector, and a trustee of the @and years. The world has, before Wood 6 into third ce, crowding out) of a farmer ng his boyhood | Baptist church, of which te is a this, been kicked back into centur. Comune tiswien 11, Weed Job and attended rural schools, | ular stent, ies of savagery because of one bat . : wOnnedp. ; his way thru Ohio Central . Ge. Coolidge 1, Johnson 1 eS Ee ay i 4 A week ago today, in 1917, Lord sited ' hail had it tres to Harding, ‘ela 4 Kitchener was drowned—strange, . rela reed one sum. ee story of his still living per ee aan 4 view h Heaney With Local Men B: Two years ago the American ma Harding 1, Wood 4 wedge, re cating rteach-| CHICAGO, June 12.—The Wash- - fines went into Chateau Thierry, Hindle ——— if ma ‘ ng of iat | nston ¢ iamebiont this morning voted — rs and the Hung left. Indeed, it was ‘aeieas C al Wood, Who tinted ye n nt shop that} to stay with Poindexter, the first time in months that they ot * t ‘i v th tt most. He’ sho they be released, Harding” left in as big a hurry as they lowa—Lowden 2 ies en ele ‘% ¥ from | will receive a majority 6£ their votes, showed Foea home gig lel , aka Path ballot, Gktweed: Mask took |The drift. before the itth ballot ‘0 years ago the Ge 1 bere to sxegond today, f J: a seems to be toward eae uleping = dried in whieh the wes i ih EO ihe eight t ‘ 9. . who | Coolidge for view president! 7h Bas army of the crown prince took 55 . On the fifth t Wood also ove. Nahe a 4 000 prisoners, 2,000 machine guns ie “ieee an hidered 4 £80 tiga nee Mabilit ‘ and vast quantities of munitions aine ‘ood 13. pee Prager finisheg |than It . t was Fy * ° S and stores, Page the crown prince Miss Elsie Evans, who sells baked goods for the Chauncey Wright Restaurants company, a ar sovoadi ate ae bi ye igt ing” for se 1 years Harding Again in in Easy. and & small, tires waneerer lis one of the Seattle salesgiris in the eontest for the Zie afeld- May flow er stage and photo-| 7 eying ah te ont Harding was all things in the pense Senatorial Race 4 these Re Dtgtere pl Bt \play prize. Miss Evans is 20 years old and lives at 4324 Rainier ave. Contestants must enter| wichigan—Johnson 10, Wood 13, 9d f vote th a: ORE ee ene e COLUMBUS,Ohio, June 13<—-Sam third-rate Duteh town official tor |their photographs by next Friday, June 18. Today's ballot is on Page 7. This photo by| Lowden 7 oe Harding married, in 1981, Miss |®tor Harding is a candidate for re | Y O0K 16, owden cES . 5 re ’ 88 | olectio: c o1 of I. ; Jeave to step outside his back yard. |; | jie wend aeny LOWDEN TAKES Florence Kling, daughter of Amos, “lection. pov are Ta aga to - ‘Pwo years ago the new German | : ‘ i > na v 2 Lowden | LEAD IN FIFTH ‘alnosa tran of Marion, |¢cy was filed at the secretary @rive started on a 20-mile fro Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. ner will become a stage star. pwiden concluding state's office at 11:58 last night and half a dozen ages were > Seattle, June 11, 1920. If Ziegfeld think New York will pay Wood 2%,|* with 289, leay in 1899. RESER yCRR ah taken in the first day's offensive { & ’ , v ail co - on aut sale 4 " the ‘Two years ago German subme Editor Seattle Star: It seems to me you | Money to see the most beautiful salesgirl, li Johnson & Wood 14, Johnson 2 rines sank #chooners And oli tank " iil : ‘ why not give attle a chance to see her ers off the New Jersey coasts are overlooking a golden opportunity to | first, and use the money thus obtained for) % ah Spe glk Two years ago today United raise a lot of money for your fund for the | the Scott fund, a more worthy cause than|,,° syne ohnson vod 1%, ee ee oe ea there | Widow and children of: Deputy Sheriff | Ziegfeld’s? | New Ham te from that ma lyear ws ecame lieu g started from a} A he obtained the nomination e fourth ballot, He| easily, Harding was defeated in a _ fifth, 89 on the|race for governor on the republican i shire-—Wood 8 Hun advance had ceased. Robert C. Seott. | Why not, in fact, arrange to give a bene-| New qorety—EarGing enth and 123 on © Ohio voters sent ‘Two years ago the long-distance For several days you have been display- | fit show for Mr: ott in Seattle, right | "re tg mised develop United States senate in re: yp Bald taxi Adan ‘ling hap \ing prominently in your paper the pictures | away, and let our most beautiful salesgirls,) New York—Poindexter 1, Lenroot | ent of strengtl tant, Bist ake . majority of more than Algo Several Hundred More ? 1, Hoover 4, Butler | of Seattle’s most beautiful salesgirls. The | all of them, be the players Coolidge 4 —almost every night. naylvania's loyal dele-|aame year Olio passed to the temo} Deaths Reported Two years ago it looked black; it |most beautiful, as I understand it, is to be I'll buy a ticket or so to start the thing|"™ ~ % bd ga z~) ore tt with their governor | cratic column a looked as tho We would be lucky it | judged by Ziegfeld and others in competi- off. Are you with me? ie cake ts before recess. Int te Harding was an ac eo r we held the Hun machine from i ; ij its rt ay, i 126, Searding 6 | an undercurrent of be-| tive worker for the preparedness pro-| LONDON, June 12.—Explosion of |tion with the beauties of other cities who | Yours sincerely, North Dakota—Wood 3, Johnson : he EGS ’ Paris; from surging over the chan- d th hall d h H. TWISS. 31 len 4 lef thruout the Coliseum that the gram. He was a member of the/a dynamite store a mine tower nel, until this nation could put have _acceptes the cha mange, a u ie win- | . SS. yg nnd ag Sia Pennsylvania dele would swing |foreign relations commit of the|in Hungary resulted in several hun+ 5,000,000 men in the field [or reamed a _ pt are Se DAF aM to Harding whenever the senator ap- | s¢ dred deaths, according to dispatches { rar | Oklahoma Lowden 8, Wood 2. 4.[Proached close enough to the nec While a great deal of Harding's! here from Vienna today. One hums ne cians 1 HOW THE BALLOTS STOOD: _ Qrocondotnan 8, Wont ty Haga | Nome lve enh vile erent deat ot trding's| here from Waane ota Soa might be a good idea to | __ sitet swim wast Migiibennin-tines 1, @aceal t Hiram Johnson's strength ‘slipped /of the Star, he is identified with a ered recall these dark, these saae - Firet Second ‘Third Fourth Fifth Sixth Seventh Highth | *Rhode Islan ond ma total of 140% on heroic days—these days CARDIDATE. Fallot Ballot Hallot Ballot Pailot Ballot Ballot Ballot iste mann Wi aa He last ballot to 87 on hth today 6 9 © © South Dakota Wooc Bie “unncifistmess, broad aympe Wood 2871/428914/808 31414299 299 Routh Dakota Wood 10; aah 1,| unexpected primary victory, bemn|| MAY SOUR Limes Be ore "3 | thies and zeal for service | Lowden 211151259 5,289 303 307 a ing 4 drop uway from him on the G O P Tak Yo 2591/4 4\288 2 if ‘ood 10 1 , en Uver ce) st of what Is the ma | ais, a4 7 * 5 ixth ballot today, and on the ¢ E Mtr aia tae aimote coven. | Johnson ; 133144146 148 14014 13314110 | 9914) 87 Texas—Johnaon 1, Wood 5, Low: | Wong went intr he raga en Piachebatis ; pea with us there ix one simple cure— | Coolid 34/71 83 o7 | 251 09° | 28 | 2 ps idan Ae Suacninigy 0% | ! Only four times before the present year have there been more than charity; a charity that suffereth AOHAZE «+++ : 34 | 82 | 27 | 25 oe “ 28 29 Utah — Harding 2, Lowden 2,| 22" quot Many of the leaders | tiree ballots taken to nominate a republican candidate for presi¢ant, ong 90d ie kind: that unteth not | Pritchard «...... 21 10 Oe PORTS Se ripen, Carte ye wood 4. % a as Vani ghopeat: % lately | 1. 1976, Hayes was nominated on the seventh ballot. In 1880, Garfield tne ometimes it ix called love > 91, 2 ‘ . bea pee woes was nated o1 allo 1884, Blaine was nomina ities Ste called patriouen, | Butler 404 69%) 41 2 Vermont—Wood 8 A auassity etn wie eeaied ast nominated on. the 26th ballot, tn 1884, Blaine was pominated a Euever you call tt, we, asa peo. | ¢ “Hoover ..... oh ois wales 5A) 5% 5 | Virginta—Harding 2, Wood 3, Low-| the Coliseum, with the deloantes, the fourth ballot, and in 1888 Harrison was . ne eighth c 6, a eo- | 2 ballot mes em | x 54, 59 331 |den 10. | Chairman Lodge called the conven. pipad it two years ago, and we Harding Pere t ee 6514) 59 13314 : | on math " 4 7 | " * | pe | Washington— Pol ter 14 on to order at 10:27 a od The following is the record of ballot from 1860, when Lincoln was WeMrutticient for our very wriey- | Sproul 84 | 7814 7914| 7914 7515 Were aie Word sokeimine t. | ae ce Shale Ant eel dartektaat oe ous rdens. on e a th: ‘ 9 fm ° = AN The order of busines provided for spirit ~ eayge ayy oy ro yi | Poindexter 20 15 | 15 | 15 16 | _ Wisconsin—Hoover 1, Wood 1, La | taxing ie ih rth ballet a Reals Chicago, 1860, Abraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin, three. trifling annoyances are turning us | Sutherland .. F 16 15 ea Follette 24 : : nation of president. Baltimore, 1864, Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson, one, into a peevish, fretful, hateful lot | Du Pont .... 7 } b big rerio J Raitt When Lodge guveled for silence Chicago, 1868, Ulysses 8 nt and Schuyler Colfax, one. of silly, old, scolding chuckle-wits Borah r 2 Bs bat Beco pass ih ote rhea "€P | the space reserved for the New York Philade Iphia, 1872, Uly Grant and Henry Wilson, one. And, after all, it doesn't really | Warren (Michigan) 1 erie gdar's Nace ah god le tion was vacant, the members neinnati, 1876, Ruth dB. Hayes and W. A. Wheeler, seven, make such an awful lot of differ. arren ( % Ea eOALY He Pe ee Alaska—Coolidge 1, Wood 1. Stil Batik tn cate Chicago, 1880, James A. Garfield and C. A, Arthur, thirty-six, ence to any of ux what happens, | La Follette 24 1 District of Columbla—Wood as * aeamaeainde (a oe 1884, James G. Blaine and John A, Logan, four, IF EACH DAY WE bO THE Knox a 1 Bewail-fapwaen 3, ie tieaen * Siay areca: porches 1888, Benjamin Harrison ard, Levi P, Morton, eight. BEST WE KNOW HOW | Watson Philippined>—Wood 2 ait ceaeh asian Wattle tiie tclamaees polis, 1892, Benjamin Harrison and Whitelaw Reid, one, Listen to old Mr. Pindar again Ward DAA tee lak ae I Alan OF eg | af bt A ot cares n 1, Wood 1 | ead T cstitien ax thea St. Louis, 1896, William MeKinley and G, A, Hobart, one, One race there is of men, and ar tee cee Inoffic otals 2 0 attention to the < . leiphia, 1890, William McKinley and Theod R e of gods, but from one mother | Kellogg a Wood, 299; Lowden, Johnson, Lodg finally called Bi seraee nt oi ‘ eodore Roosevelt, ac- ea et iw the etre | ; Harding, 133%; Coolidge. atarms and instructed him to take a 904, The se 7 he ae * eee nee ne sirgtiath. | Lenroot “9 : Hoo e Po can squad of deputies to the floor to 1 See a ee nee oeavelt end C."W.. Paisbanks, acclaim of us diverse altogether; for the | Nok “otkne ver, indexter. aaa “ot Rat j] Chicago, W. H. Taft and J. 8. Sherman, one yace of Tan i as nought, but the ) voting r g Py Pe eae! ‘> Uhh eo Oman ea ee Sproul, 16%; Knox, 1; La Follette, | pnt ag aces i let eet Chicag W. H. Taft and J. 8. Sherman, one. if re. Peaven pideth, a habite Necessary to choice, 493 . “at fn ads nee 1; fa ay jt “ ; a Ps ne Chicago, 1916, Charles 8, Hughes and C. W. Fairbanks, three. tion steadfast unto everlasting.” PCess 2, 495, rst Seven Ballots on Page A) (Turn to Page's, Column 4)