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SAN FRANCISCO, June 28.—Here are the horses, both light and @ark, who lined up at the post here today for the democratic derby Their jockey-nominators are given, also WILLIAM G. McADOO, former secretary of the treasury; nominator Dr. Burris Jenkins, editor Kansas City Post MES M. ©OX, of Ohio; nominator, johnson, of Columbus, Ohio. A, MITCHELL PALMER, attorney-ceneral; nominator, John TL Big of Pennsylvania, EDWARD I. EDWARDS, of New Jersey; nominator, Charles F. X. O'Brien, of Jersey City SENATOR ROBERT 1, OWEN, of Oklahoma; Hayden-Linebaugh, of Muskogee, Okla, JAMES W. GERARD, former ambassador to Germany; nominator. S. G. Cherry, of Sioux Falls, South Dakota. SENATOR GILBERT M. HITCHCOCK, of Nebraska; nominator, former Gov. A. C. Shallenberger, of Alma, Neb. BK. T. MEREDITH, secretary of agriculture; nominator, Claude Por ter, of Towa. SENATOR GEORGE FE. CHAMBERLAIN, Will H. Purdy, of Portland, Ore. HOMER S CUMMINGS, of Connecticut, chairman of democratic national committee; nominator, John F, Crosby, of Connecticut, special assistant United States attorney general GOVERNOR ALFRED E. SMITH, of New ran. of New York DAVIS, of West Virginia, ambassador to Great Rritain nominator, Governor John J. Cornwell, of West Virginia. Some consider CARTER ASS, of Virginia, a dark horse. F. M. SIMMONS, of North Carolina, i also mentioned cAdoo Boom Gains Strong Leadership BY HAROLD D. JACOBS BAN FRANCISCO, June 29.—The Fejuvenated McAdoo boom had/of McAdoo, Feached the stage today where it had/ From an authoritative source ft Passed out of the direction of volun-| has been learned that the Cox and} teer workers and had assumed com-| Palmer men want most of all some! pact form under a small group of! sort of statement from the White) Entrants in Demo Derby | | Supreme Court Judge nominator, PD. H Uv nominator of Oregon; York; nominator, Wy nd Cox groups are driving toward | the identical objective--elimination THE SEA 48’s CHAIRMAN HOPES TO UNITE OPPONENTS | OF TWO OLD PARTIES NEW YORK, June 29.—"T have no/on international relations, and be doubt that we shall be able to unite|lHevea that a general statement of upon a platform and candidates,” to-| principles without particular ref: day declared J. A. H. Hopkins, chalr-/erence to the league of nations, Rus man of the Committee of 48, which | ala, Ireland, etc adopt meots in convention in Chicago, July )ed. But it is 10, at the same time that the labor] plication of auch @ principle woul party, the World War Veterans and|be against the league in its f the single taxers gather there, to| form. form a third party Not the least of the worries of the It is posalble that a plan similar]organizers of the new party ts the to that of the British labor part necessity for getting the ticket on tt be worked out, whereby the v ballot In every state. The p: composing groups unite on la being taken up systematically dates but remain autonomous, The working plan between the COMMITTEE OF 48 FULL various groups to meet in Chicago OF WICKED KICKS does not officially melude the The Committees of 48 te altve,|Parmers’ Nonpartisan league, The * | league is empectally designed for state The ton foot of it that doesn't cv hy ob bl wlohe . enate more |°2™palgns. But there is no doubt optinitic momenta, the membérs of | that ed _ Be very friendly to the the “Forty-Fighters” picture thoee | Oued the yd ravegand sae teak, (DS kicks being delivered upon the pros) 1i4. he People's, the American, the Mee ein ete tine republigan’ and |/8dependent or the Lincoln party temocratic parties. LIST OF DEMOS to the two old parties, “Since the republican convention, BY H. N. RICKEY SAN FRANCISCO, June 29 continued Hopkins, “we have been swamped with offers of aasistante Everybody agrees that it ls McAdoo against the field. not only from members but also from persons active in the old or Few, outside of the Cox head quarters, believe that Cox can sur. ganizations “We don’t expect any different re Vive the attacks of the drys, beaded by Bryan sult from San Francisco than from The officers of the Anti-Saloon cand Chicago, Neither old party has @ensed the situation nor has in mind the necessity of meeting it “SAME INTERESTS CONTROL OLD PARTIES" seasoned politicians. The hastily-formed organization, Which had become too huge and un Wieldy to function without experi enced leadership, will be retained, but will be advised and directed by the small group. A McAdoo sup- porter likened this group to a board of directors chosen by stockholders, | Floor leaders have been chosen, ac- cording to authoritative information, So far as can be learned, no definite decision has been reached as to whether McAdoo's name shall form ally be placed in nomination. ‘The growth of McAdoo sentiment apparently bas caused the convention | to resolve itself into “The field against McAdoo.” COX AND PALMER TO FIGHT TILL END ‘The situation is much the same as Mt was before McAdoo formally with- @rew from the race. The organim- tions of James M. Cox and Attorney ped A. Mitchell Palmer are now awake to the danger that con- fronts them and may be expected to up a bitter fight. Aligned against doo, will be the faction con-| trolled Charies F. Murphy, Tam-| many leader, who may now be “off” | ‘Cox, but may be definitely regarded ‘@5 certainly not “on McAdoo. Without in any way working di- Teetly together, as yet, the Palmer read. Keep the forests House on McAdoo's candidacy. No| “The Chicago convention conclu matter what President Wilson might | sively demonstrated that the repub be maneyvored into saying, it would | lican party is controlled by a small militate against the chances of his|group of financiers who lected son-in-law, they believe. Should he, | Harding as their candidate and dic even by indirection, give the impres-| tated the platform. The same tn sion he indorsed MgAdoo, immedi-|terests dominate the democratic ately “the crown prinée” ghost would | party. rise up to haunt the McAdoo sup /| “The Committee of 48 plans to put porters. [into the field a new party and nom McAdoo's nomination can be said inate presidential and vice preaiden to be far from assured despite the tal candidates in order that the men fact he is generally conceded to be | and women of America may have « the strongest candidate in the field | chance to function politically.” at present. Cox has a strong ma-| LaFollette to date is the candidate chine that has weathered several| most favored, but others mentioned hard collisions in the last few days for the head of the tickets are Gov- and Palmer will have a lead in the |ernor Lynn J. Frasier, of North Da initial balloting that will be extreme | kota, Frank P. ly difficult to cut down. Walter Clarke, of North Carolina, = ee ee Frederic C. Howe, Amos Pinchot, Wilson Pleased by r Convention News WASHINGTON, June 29.—-Prea- dent Wilson today was described as) “highly pleased” over the result of the first day of the democratic na- tional convention. One official at the White House said the convention news was the best tonic the president has bad since his iliness. latter is not @ member of the com | mittee, Hiram Johneon ts no longer talked of as @ pomible candidate PLATFORM CONTAINS 150 WORDS ‘The platform of the new party will followed. At present the committee | has a platform of 150 words, contain. ing three planks, one on public own lership, one on taxes to force the use Jof idle lands and one on civil rights Jand labor, Hopkins favors a fourth emoke te the weeds, ser he FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET DOWNSTAIRS STORE 1,200 Pairs of Barefoot Sandals For Misses, Children and Infants In an Extraordinary Offering — ECURED at a concession and priced with corresponding advantage to Downstairs Store customers, these Bare- foot Sandals make a very important offering for Wednesday. They are of Smoked Horsehide and Brown Willow Calf in the style pictured, with solid oak soles and staunch straps with metal buckles. Sizes 5 to 8 { Featured Wednesday —at— *1.65 The Pair, Sizes 8} to 11 Sizes 11} to 2 : Exceptionally low-priced at $1.65 pair. —rux vowxstams strona Walsh, Chief Justice Jane Addams and Henry Ford. The) be short, if the ideas of Hopkins are) {but its place has been taken by the league are here in force. Wayne | Wheeler says that they are here to get Cox's goat, and that they are | Meing to get it It looks as if they may Certainly Cox's chances do |not seem anywhere near as good as they did 48 hours ago. If McAdoo is nominated @ great effort will be made by his Western friends to nominate for vice preal dent Victor Murdock, a progressive | republican leader, now chairman of | the federal trade commision. I am | Adeo expressed @ preference for Murdock. SAN FRANCISCO, June 29—Up to date their haan’t been much jand if the girls do thetr work well | the boases will let ‘eum wash and dry | the dishes. eee You hear a great deal more talk about “third term” than “third party.” eee It hardly seems right to speak of Champ Clark’s candidacy as the Clark “boom.” It's more Uke a @op —or @ crack, eee Strange an ft may seem, there are scores of delegutes and patriota who my they were in favor of a prohi | bition law. But they explain that | they supposed it would be like the anti-trust and anti-profiteering laws —-never enforced. eee The buffalo, for which the West | was once so famous, may be extinct You can’t blame any delegate who doesn't believe Wilson and McAdoo. If you had ever attended a demo. cratic convention you wouldn't be eve anybody. ‘Harding Will Reply | to Cummings Speech) | WASHINGTON, June 29.—Senator | Warren G. Harding intends to reply to the keynote speech of Homer 8. Cummings to the democratic conven- jtion im his acceptance speech next | month. Harding read the democratic | broadside carefully today but de- | clined to comment. { | | Your Eyes Eramined and Glasses Fitted, Broken Lenses Duplicated Eyes Made Young —again through the magic of rightly fitted glasses. Eyes ere nature's crown- ing work and cannot be valued too highly and cared for too well. Moderate Prices YERSOL OPTICAL CO. |told that several months ago Mo | TTLE STAR 43rd Semi-A SALE of July FURNITURE . Will Begin THURSDAY First The Semi-Annual Clearance, at Decisive Reductions; of Odd Suites and Pieces, and Discontinued Samples, from our Regular Stocks of High-Grade Furniture. @ The Sale Begins at 9 o’clock Thursday Morning. @ Deliveries of Sale Furniture Bought in This Sale Must Be Accepted by Customers Within Three Weeks at FREDERICK & NELSON’S Convenience. (FOURTH Wilson Followers Praise His Record| Ne\GHBORHOOD SAN FRANCISCO, June 29.—Gov. Krederick Gardiner, Missouri, pre Sented a resolution extending the convention's greetings to President Wilson yesterday afternoon, The res olution is as follows: “The democratic party assembled in national convention extends to the president of the United States its ad miring and respectful greetings. “For seven of the most fatefat years in the history of our country Woodrow Wilson has occupied and, | by his character, learning and power | has adorned the highest office in the gift of his countrymen. “He has initiated and secured the adoption of great progressive mea sures of immeasurable value and ben- efit to the people of the United States. “As the commander-in-chief of the | army and navy of the United States he has led the patriotic forces of his country thru the most momentous | struggle in history and without) check, reverse or retardation to an honorable part tn the immortal vic: | tory for liberty and democracy won by the free nations of the world, “We hail these achievements, sir, and are proud that they have been accomplished under your administra- tion “We rejoice in the recovery of your health and strength after months of suffering and aMiction which you have borne with courage and without complaint. “We deeply resent the malignant onset which you have most unde. servedly been called upon to sustain from partisan foes, whose judgment | is warped and whose perceptions are | obscured by @ party malice, which constitutes a lamentable and dis graceful page in our history. “At this moment, when the dele gat to this convention from every state In the Union gre about to en- ter upon their formal proceedings, we pause to send you an expreasion of cheer, of admiration and of congrat ulation.” Following adoption of the resolu tion Homer Cummings sent the pres ident the following telegram: “The president, Woodrow Wilson, Washington, D. C.: In recognition of the fact that the mantle of Jefferson and Jackson has fallen upon your shoulders as the unquestioned leader of our party, the hosts of democracy, in national convention assembled, have directed me to send you the fol lowing resolution of appreciation and greeting.” Pring home some of Boldt's French Pastry and Hard Rolls.—Ad vertixement, A SERVICE Our method of running our dental office is a service to you as well as to ourselves. You profit by our combination of specialists as owners. We profit by the class of work you receive—you come back and bring some one with you, }out a dozen more bluecoats. To consult an organization as to your dental equipment is the easiest thing in the world. We're not mysterious about it for we make absolutely no charge for an examination. Open Evenings Lady Attendant Elliott 4357 FLOOR), SHOTS WAKE UP Thoroughness} orery_transactt Patrolman Fires to ‘Stop Auto Thieves Residents in the vicinity of 16th ave. and E. Fir st. were awakened | last night by a volley of revolver | shots fired by Patrolman J. H.| — : Davis to halt two men he had sur-/ prised dismantling an automobile || Peoples Savings Bank belonging to J. A. Adams, 303 14th SECOND AVE AND PIKE SE ft ave. 8. The shots brought Jack Irby, | @ colored cook, to a stop, but the other man, said to have been a friend of Irby’s named Dille Jack- son, also colored, escaped by elud- ing both, Davis and Sergt. L. J Forbes, who had joined in the chase. Irby is held on an open charge. H. Mossbach, 1304 FE. Alder st..| oys and girls are learning hearing the shots, turned in anjfacts about Seattle from ‘ to heada vhicl | series of articles running larm to headquarters which brought | series, of articles Funai Mos- | Book.” bach said he distinctly heard shots. Davis says he twice, In the Hawaiian about 7,000 acres planted with pine apples. Greater Production You can help lower the H. C, L. and do your bit toward making prosperity permanent by speeding up your own work, and also by saving some of your income regularly and depositing it sys- tematically in a savings account at the First National Bank. Economy ought to be our watchword and a savings account for everybody our aim, Are you doing your share? = Tixst National Bank C/STABLIZAED 1662. Bist Ave.t James St.