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THE oo - FIFTY IS SOTA VOTE, DPartican Candidates Win and Lose ‘AUL, Minn., June 23.—Jacod ily defeated Dr, Hen- national nonpartiean date, for the republican for governor, virtually the state's ed today » mayor of St. Paul democratic nomination for over a field of tative Anthony J. of the prohibition en- act, was defeated for the! Nomination for congress | ©, J. Kvale, national non- Teague candidate, today's Indicate, Kvale was leading Votes early today. ‘8 defeat was credited to ; tations from him that he jon to light wines and gained on returns Feported | » ‘only 878 small precincts ow {N the state missing, the vote | 121,573; Shipstead, 105,074 jus’ majority, 16,499. entire ticket indorsed by the) state convention for nom Won out, it was indicated | _ was little change in the f of candidates for the demo 4 ination fér governor to teading the field with y ~ league apparently 1 in = nominating | eL. _ St. Paul, for asso- | eupreme o court. MER SORRY » HE SAYS 4 Apology to Mil- aire Soap Maker ATI, Ohio, June 23. Wil. for the republican presidential Qu received a telegram of yesterday from Dr. Nicholas iy Butler, president of Columbia ty. New York, for Butler’ of Wood's campaign met! Butler had issued a public in which he credited failure at the national con- to the fact that “big money’ a indefinitely! rette revelation. Administration Will Control Democratic Meet, Says Observer 5 2, KEY SAN 18CO, June 22. There sepms to be little, if any, doubt that the majority control of the dem ccratic convention will lie with the administration, ‘This means that Mr Wilson's friends will have their way | as to the organimtion of the conven tion ‘machinery and the writing of the platform, For, while it takes two-thirds of the delegates to a dem cratic convention to nominate the presidential and vice presidentia! | candidates, all other convention | business in by majority vote. Secretary of State Colby is the ad: | ministration candidate for permanent | chairman. and, unless he in with: | drawn in the interest of harmony, he will wield the gavel, Senator Walsh, of Montana, has been suggested for | the permanent chairmanship in case | the administration forces decide to| placate the minority, which at the| noment does not seem likely, Senator Carter Glass wil! represent Mr. Wilson as chairman of the com-| | mittee on resolutions and the League of Nations plank will be exactly as Mr, Wilson wants it. ‘There is a lot of loose talk about trying to repudiate the League of} | Nations in the committee and failing there to carry the fight to the floor of the convention. The effort will probably be made in the committee. It may be made in the convention. But it is certain to fail. LIQUOR NO ISSUB AT CONVENTION Two other ,, ictions about the | platform may ‘be made with maar but not quite the same cert&inty ny will be silent as to liquer and it will nd&t contain a plank recognfing the Irish republic, Bryan will go the limit in the tom. mittee certainly, and possibly on the | floor, for a bone dry plank commit. ting the party to the most rigid en- forcement of the Volstead act. But every infcation points to his failure Just as all the indications «point to the failure of the group which will fight to commit the party to light wines, The administration forces knew perfectly well that the mention of| Uquor in the platform, either favor. ably or unfavorably, would make that the paramount issue of the cam paign. Mr. Witson is determined that the League of Nations ts to be the paramount issue. Bryan will have to-be mtisfied with silence as to liquor and wil! be allowed to claim a victory for keep we the party from going wet. With the adoption of the adminis- tration platform by a majority of the delegates controlled by Mr, Wilson, the convention will pass from the majority to the two-thirds state. It is extremely doubtful whether the administration control extends te two-thirds of the delegates. My own judgment is that it doesn’t mating him ts te convince Bryan that if Palmer isn't nominated Cox will be. The administration and Bryan to gether, assuming that Bryan can .{contrel 156 delegates, might be able to nominate Palmer, But it i by Re means certain that Palmer is the administration candidate. If the administration decided to go or e AMELS win your favor quickly — and they hold your good opinion That’s because they have the quality! Camels never tire your taste, no matter how liberally you smoke them. Besides they leave no unpleasant cigaretty aftertaste nor unpleasant cigaretty odor! Camels expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos has proved a ciga- It has won thousands of men who never smoked cigarettes before! Camels blend has proved to smokers that it is far more delightful and far more refreshing than either kind of tobacco smoked straight! All we say to you is to compare Camels with any cigarette in the world at any price! |the delegates pledged to Cox, To ‘Buffalo’ . | of Virginia. {DEADLOCK MAY TIE DEMOCRATS “Dark Horse” T; alk Increas- ing at San Francisco Jbehind Cox as the most available ny BAILLIE candidate and the one moat likely to A : 4 defeat Harding, Bryan could not pre-| , SAN FRANCISCO, June 23.—The democratic convention vent his nomination. aah a oddone clared that | forces would control more than 400 | votes each, woth ling and that a compromine between them would be out of the question With McAdoo in it, leaders, instead of two, a compro. mise would more easily have been arranged, it was argued, A® a result of this situation, “dark horve” talk is increasing, Vide Prest dent Marshall, Ambassador John The administration delegates plus Leaders today de plus the New York, Ilinola and Indiana delegates, who at heart are for Cox, would insure the" Ohio governor's nomination with a lot of votes to spare. Cox has one great advantage over all of the other candidates. It is that practically all the party leaders excepting those tied hard and fast to other candidates that he is the strongest man could be nominated, If Cox # nominated in spite of Rryan, the likeliest man for second place ts Meredith, of Iowa, secre tary of agriculture. Bryan recently spoke quite kindly of Meredith, bo ing the most prominently mentioned The expected deadlock, however, | ‘wing to other candidates, leaders are apparently | the Palmer and Cox} McAdoo not figur-| making three | Davis and Senator Robert Owen be- | probably will not carry the conven-| — STAR. FAILS TO HURT Bourbon Leaders Say Attack on Wilson Fruitless BY ED 1, KEEN l BAN FRANCISCO, June 23. iw an administration convention so far, Not only hay early arrivals been tration supporters, convention mach greater part of the preconvention activities have been directed by them. Such antiadministration rum Ding» as have served to disturb the serenity of the Wilsonian camp at the Palace hotel have come from outside. And they have hed little more ef- fect than yesterday's earthquake at | Lon Angeles—even including the antl Wilson attack made by William MeCombs, Wilson's former man- ager, at Chicago, making reservations to leave San Franciseo Saturtay, July & Altho MecAdoo's repeated declara- tions that he does not want his name to go before the convention has| caused many McAdoo supporters to awing to other candidate, leaders are not counting him entirely out. Different’ constructions continue | to be put on his message, Some re who in 100 per cent dry and is naid to have a big following among the farmers of the Middle West Golden Gate News Writers SAN FRANCISCO, June 22.—"Tin said you can't buffalo newspaper men, but in San Francisco its going to be done, They're going to be buffaloed tnto | dyspepsia, It's going to be a recu lar Royal Gorge--s0 says Vic At) | Hertaler, world-famed chet of the! Hotel St. Francia, who will preside has not yet flatly sald he will not Fun even if nominated. Western I Delegates to) Meet on Saturday SAN FRANCISCO, June 33.— Delegations from the elght Western states and Mawall and Alaska will meet Saturday night to formulate a program for the democratic national jeonvention. The meeting was called over the groaning board at the moat| DY Calvin MoNab, who denied to- unique feast to which a horde of |d@ay that any attempt had been hungry Journalists were ever led. | Planned to swing these states for Two .young buffaloes will be the | Governor Cox sacrificial offerings of the West to| “These states merely wish to con- the quid nunes of the democratic | fer On matters of peculiar interest | convention, The buff are now |t our section,” said McNab. Hoe t#| national comrmitteeman for Califor- fattening tn Golden G park, Vie- tor will start with b tall soup | h® and work up thru buf roast and| The elght states are thore west steak and what not to the neck. of and including Wyoming. The names of the two young bulla to be devoured aren't given out yet, but there are plenty of folks here who'd like to believe they're named Harding and Coolidge. ‘The feast room will be done up int old Spanish style with live models all around, The waiters will wear cowboy “chaps.” Vice-president Marshall will be BY MABEL ABBOTT there, and will be presented with; SAN FRANCISCO, June 22—Ite the two mounted buffalo heads aa|hard to get a quorum on any kind trophies of the feed. of preconvention committee just —_ now, Everybody t# tied up with im- Platform Conferences mens, The nature of these engee. Are Ready to Begin} ments is usually not specified, and| it ls not convention etiquet to in- SAN FRANCISCO, Jie 12.~Piat-| quire into them too closely, I know form conferences are to begin heraj what they are, however, and I don't among democratic leaders immediate. |mind telling, The democrats are ly after the arrival of Senator Glass out sightseeing. ‘They are wandering up and down Senator Glass, who ts stated tothe streets, that somehow don't look head the resolutions committee, is re-|like the atreeta of any other city. ported bringing with him the draft of |\They are motoring thru the brown & platform bearing the approval of President Wison. Glass conferred with Wilson before leaving Washing- are riding on the bay and prowling thru Chinatown and climbing Te ton. malpais and trying out all the ree Giasw arrival etimutates interest in|taurants that might possibly stilt the three platform planks concerning |have “some,” and in general having which there may be disputes before | the time of their lives: the resolutions committee and per. | I climbed into a rubberneck wagos: “agg before the convention. These are | yesterday. It was loaded to the the League of Nations, prohibition |gunwales. They all are. On one and the Irish planks. side of me was Mra. E. B. Tow! of Right off Camels win you through their quality and flavor and mellow - mildness! paper. strongly recom- mend this carton for the home er offes eupply or when you travel. R. J. REYNOLDS yosacco co. #ard it expecially significant that he | bile in the sun and wind They) Most of the leaders on the a Agree, or at least pretend to agree, entirely with Homer Cummings’ characterization of the McCombs ut- terances an “a negligible factor.” In other words, the president is gener- jally regarded by the advance repre | sentatives of the party now in Ban Francisco as their leader and Cum |mings as hia mouthptece, Among the administration leadery | |here there is cordial support of Postmaster General Burleson's deo- Maration at San Antonio yesterday in favor of an “open” honest stand on jall the great issues now confronting the country, | Among delegates generally, re wardiess of their individual views about the Leagie of Nations, pro- hibition, labor, government own ership, eto, sentiment is appreciably crystallizing in their direction of such clear pronouncement of party [principles as will obviate any poesi- bie charge of “straddling.” ANACORTES.Felix, S-yearold | son of Carl Anderson, drowned when | he slips from hen boom. MEXICO CITY.—Yellow fever re, ported to have broken out in Vera| | Crus. Democrats Busy on Sightseeing Journeys j Omaha, ® Bryan worker. On mal other was Mra. Charles 0. Williama, jof Memphis, a delegate from Ten- | nesses. |MORNING FOG 18 |SOOTHING TO GUESTS The morning fog touched our cheeks like @ cool, soft hand. The ‘Dreese ameiied of eucalyptus and salt jsir_and the flower stands on the corners, We knew we wouldn't get |back until 1 o'clock, and we didn’t care. No other national convention, Probably, has had so Beautiful @ set Ung as this one. Ban Franciscans like to sigh ovemthe irrevocable at- old city before the earthqu--~. Excuse me, I mean [before the fira, But the new city has atmosphere tow The women beside me had trav- |eled. ‘They talked of Mexico and of Rome and of Alaska. But as the bus waddied slowly thru the lovely canyons of the downtown section and the megaphone bawled the in- formation that all thie had been re- built since 1906, they fell silent. Mrs. Towl spoke first. “It's « good thing the fire happened before the war and the labor troubles,” said she. “It couldn't have been done since Typical of the city ts the civic center, with its great gray white stone bulldings around @ square of |trees and grams and The meghphor therm. nh this building, jed the lecturer, “the democrats are |soon to elect the next ptesident of |the United States.” ‘The applause | made It perfectly clear that he had & convention crowd on board. THINKS DEMOCRATS WISE IN CHOICE | Across the fire line we trundied! fru streets of old frame buildings | —all that remains of the San Fran- cisco of the sixties—along the wind-| ing roads of Golden Gate park, till the Pacific opened before ua, Conventions must be principally politics, of course, but the democrats shave been wise enough to recognize | that politics can be played just as| well in @ pleasant place, and in a| few days, when the struggle begins, there will be many a democrat who| will forget politics for an instant to remember a vision of wet rocks with seals writhing on them, and gray guile wheeling above a blue ocean, and brown, windy hills, and & beautiful and joyous city. Colby Is Silent on Third Term Talk CHICAGO, June 23.—Secretary of hot discussed a third dent Wilson, he de- clared on his arrival today from Washington Colby, delegate to the national democratic convention from the Dis trict of Columbia, is credited with be- ing President Wilson's personal rep: resentative at the San Franc! con- vention. Colby mid today, Gompers to Stay Only Two Hours Sam Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, will reach Seattle at 9:15 p,m, Thuraday, He is accompanied by other labor of- ficlals, Gompers is en route to San! will be presented to the democratic convention. { William Short, president of the the state federation, and local labor | leaders will entertain the A. F. of L. head at « luncheon until 11:50 p. m,, when the party leaves for Cali-| fornia, Knights of Columbus Will Hear Foch Ferdinand Foch, generalissimo of the allied forces, will address the Be- attle representatives of the mcalaete of Columbus on their tour of the Eu-| ropean battlefields, according to an||njury, The halr-roota come. out be= Announcement made The local delegation, not yet made up, will leave the city late in July. “I haven't discussed « third term|% with President Wilson or aay one,” make; Meco Athletic Union Suits, make; Knit Union Suits, “Globe” and white; sizes 84 to sy In black, white, cordovan, navy and gray; sizes 914 to 11. Not all sizes in all colors. Slight imperfec- tions in the weaves. —_— SECOND AVENUE AT PIKE Our Semi-Annual Clearance of MEN’S ATHLETIC AND KNIT UNION SUITS $1.35--3 for $4.00 $1.65 $1.95 “Vassar” long and short sleeves; cream white; sizes 34 to 46. ‘Madras Shirts $2.85 Lisle Sox 30c 4 for $1.00 variety of attractive designs. 14 to 1%. 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Sizes 64% to 6%. —MacDeougell-Southwick, Third Fleer, Mother Gray’s AROMATIC-LEAF The Medicinal Tea, regulates the ean and gives Veakness and Lame Lodge last night. Let's eat at Boldt's: the whole family, BA iy for ‘ena “aired” “ianguid condition r the daily your drug- ddress Any, woman —one or two tablete—eat like ceuaty, re] Instantly relavestleartburn Boe Gassy Feeling. Tien ladiens Indigestion, food souring, ‘ting, headach: the many caused by Acid-Stomach at frequent ke ever BUTTE, Mont.—A negro, believed to have been demented, killed by deputy sheriff at Deer i cozy boxes for hot and