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| } -{tucky, an avowed Champ Clark man. ‘facainst Mr. Parker Ateaders. The Murphy. _ selection of Parker as Temporary Chairman, was openly claiming that | {moment to come out flatly for the New Jersey candidate. ir a a nm: "SEVEN SPECIAL TRAINS FILLED.WITH TAMMANY MEN OFF FOR BALTIMORE missionary work among the delegates and leaders not al There is discord in the Harmon camp. The sinews of war are miss- ing in the Harmon headquarters and his lieutenants are rebellious. Nor . is the Ohio delegation a unit ior Harmon, although bound by the unit} tule adopted by the State Convention. Mayor Baker of Cleveland, a dis went before the National Committee this afterno * ia asked that body | to break the unit rule in the Ohio delegation . Baker said if the} committee refused his request he would take the uit before the con-| vention. | The Kentucky dele nat a meeting to-day announced their inten- tion of supporting the choice of the National Committee tor Temporary Chairman despite the faci that Senator Ollie James of that State had heen \ suggested as a candidate by the Bryan forces against Parker. After the! , delegation in caucus had adopted a resolution pledging support to the ; National Committee, James announced that he would not be a candidate «tor the place. f Several delegates from Alabama called on Mr. Bryan this afternoon i and told him that while they were bound by the unit rule to vote for! Oscar Underwood for President, they would be against Judge Parker for Temporary Chairman. Mr. Bryan replied that he hoped the National Committee would settle the matter without a fight. | “I am for harmony,” added Mr. Bryan. “I am the greatest har- monizer here.” Regarding a report that he had been visited by William R. Hearst, Mr. Bryan said he would not give out_a list of his callers. H The Pennsylvania delegation this afternoon in caucus voted 59 to ol Ito appose Judge Parker for Temporary Chairman. ‘The Texas’delegation sent a written protest to Col. R. M. Johnson, the Texas National Commiiteeman and member of the sub-committee, on his vote for Parker for Temporary Chairman. | Chairman Cone Jonnson of the State delegation signed the letter {for the delegation, asking Committeeman Johnson to change his vote} pand oppose Parker. { ° The session of the National Committee was short. After Judge! ' Parker had been placed in nomination before the committee several speeches were made for and against his selection. No other nominations had been made when the recess was ordered shortly before 2 o'clock. ; Committeeman Kremer announced that the Bryan Democrats would defy | the committee if Mr. Parker’s name Is ratified, and declared that Mr. Bryan would himself lead the fight as a candidate for the Chairmanship. } Following efforts at the recess the Chairman announced the agrce- ment to send a committee to the opposing leaders in the fight, to see Mr. Bryan and Judge Parker. WILSON LINES UP WITH BRYAN. The Wilson boomers have lined up with Bryan, Supporters of the yNew Jersey Governor instructed Robert S. Hudspeth, national commit- {teemen from New Jersey, to vote for Senator-elect Ollie James of Ken- trict delegate and Wilson man, ati ' { = a JAMES KYNCH GAYNOR BOOM AREAD OF TA ON TRIP Boosters for Mayor Off “We cast our support with Ollie James,” said Mr. Hudspeth to- even though he is a Clark man. We do this that the cause of the mae and progressive Democracy shall not fail, or, if it fail, the responsibility Wil be upon others and not upon us.” j In a statement Mr. Hudspeth urged all progressives to join in fight ing Judge Parker's election. Mr. Bryan said al noon after Mr. Sullivan had left: “There will be a progressive candidate for Temporary Chairman it the progessives cannot agree upon a candidate for Temporary Chairman | will be a candidate myself.” ‘That an open break: between the forces of Champ Clark and Bryan’ lis impending was the general opinion of the majority of the Democratic! The Tammany and otherwise Demo-} -S i cratic hosts of Manhattan and the vari-} ggart-Sullivan combination, who are behind the | ous boroughs of New ‘York set uff for| Baltimore to-day to proclaim and bovst| whatever booms may appeal to balled chieftain of the Hall, Charles . Murphy. ‘The privately cond: ‘ed Gaynor boom, Parented and fostered by the Dom | cratic Association, of which Jacob Ca tor is the head, got away with a flying start about an hour before the four | Manhattan and one Brooklyn Tammany n pulling out of the ma trainshed of the Pennsy ia Railroad, ‘There were betweeh 300 and 400 in the organized boom outfit, 200 of them Iti }Bryan was for Wilson and that he was waiting for the psychological! The conservative combination in figuring at first on its vote on the qpemporery Chairmanship, insisted that Parker would receive between! 4600 and 700 votes. Ohio's forty-eight votes In the Democratic Convention will be cast for Alton B. Parker for Temporary Chairman if the Harnfon men in the delega- {tion can put through the unit rule by which they plan to bind the nineteen }Onfo Wilson delegates to the Harmon interests. In any event Parker will; get twenty-nine from Ohio, according to Edmond Moore, the Harmon man- "ager, who in to be the new National committeeman from Ohio. ‘The Wilson men in the delegation will have two fights on thelr hands—| {tne Under, the Lrbagd vader one against Parker, the other to free themselves from the unit rule which were the thes them to Harmon though they were elected to vote for Wilson. Both) Business Men's League, led by Street toatties are to cecur on the convention floor GRRINE SARIS eae SE9e) Be When the secretary calls for Ohio's vote on the temporary chatrman-| yyivania trainshed a* quictly and de-| ship, the chairman of the Ohio delegation, who will be a Harmon man, wilt| corously as a funeral procession, bear- ‘announce that Ohio casis forty-eight votes for Its candidate for enrians, | oe _ pies hag banbers Wah Sane {Mayor Newton Baker of Cleveland, a Wilson delegate and leader of the untl.| 2 sort of noint and ging vent to no, {Harmon forces, is then expected to challenge the announcement and ask erving thelr energies for Baltimore, | {for a roll call. 1 Mr Cantor, aun Sees ee i ' a { the Ohlo delegation will protest that under hed been secretly nds: Sn doltentee et Galen ea al patiara oe me wie bs of support trom givotal States for the ‘Harmon, and the fight will be on, Gaynor boom. ‘The Gaynor apocial left the trainshed ; MACK WILL HAVE TO DECIDE. at 9.30. It was made up of seven cars— | It will be up to Norman EB, Mack, Chairman of t four Pullmans, two diners and an ob- clan members of the East Side ‘ational Committee, who | will be ch an until @ temporary chairman is elected, to decide whether t Pere aapeane u ‘a neduled to arrive nine Wiisop men can be voted en bv! for the Harmon intereste, y in Baltimore at 3 ocioc ae tarmn. Mack 19) “Horough President Connolly of Queens has declared him: |Gaynor boom and | Baltimore, but of course he if in favor of the With the necesnity confronting them of lining up 129 delegates to mominate, the managers of the Various Vresidentia} booms showed an activity in Juggling Agur that would have done credit to the cashler of @ ten-cent circus, Bach of the ing candidates was shown by figures tesued from the respe: be in the lead. But the figures when analyzed all showed beyond the que: a doubt tha: there was no chance of any candidate securing the two-thirds vote needed to nominate, unles# there wee a etampede. And the danger of @ etampede was believed to io be remote. The Champ Clark manovers insisted that thetr man would poll 612 votes on the first b: » ney divided these as follows. Instructed, 423, pledged, 89, They sai on had only 122 instructed and 68 pledged, The Clark mi agers inssted powitively that they would put thelr man over on the second ballot. But the politicians who are supposed to have a good line on the situation were quietly insisting that Clark would show his total etrength on the first ballot, and | that if he had not enough to nominate then he would have shot his bolt and would dwindle on each succeeding ballot. will be the Gaynor boom |» dropped he will rally himeelf and his following to any her boom that is spread on the carpet. He sald before leaving to-day that the New York delegation would make its choice to-night were ihany Gaynor men tn the five Tammany specials that fo wed the |Gaynor special, notwithstanding the re port that Mr, Murphy Iw leaning toward | Gov, Harmon. ‘There were about fou' men, representing twent | diatricta The Wilson managers claim that they will have 222 instructed delegates on in the Tammany detegation the first ballot and that there are 187 who are ledged ttat will fall into tine. | that bearded the four Tammany specials ‘They also claim that they will recelve strong accessions from the unlnstructed They were all on their Way before th delegations, Brooklyn host of #0 arrived via the ‘There is little doubt that the Wilson men are forcing consideration of thelr claima by insisting that if their man js turned down they will line up behind | which pulled out at 10.3%, Wiliam Jennings Bryan and force him over, ‘This was best shown by tle attl mmany regulars were just tude of a number of the Pennsylvania delegates who openly told the New York |undencnstrative as the “ delegates. ther you help us pur over Wilson or we will jam Bryan down Gaynor boomers. The various distil your throats. leaders in charge marshalled their fo ‘The Wilson men have an enthusiastic supporter for thelr cause in Senator jn aolld phalan Jed them to thes James A. O'Gorman of New York, One of the “Big Four’ from the Emplira | respective trains, t m cheer was State, the New York Senator ts a friend of the New Jersey Governor. He be- uttered and the Gaynor boom was men- Moves Wilson would be the strongest candidate who could be nominated and ims been doing much missionary work among the New York delegates to Lave him made the choice, toned only tn whiepers, In the first train, which drew out at | 10.20, were the delokates of the faithful The New York delegates were scheduled to get together this afternoan to|from the Kifth, Ninetecnt 1, Thirteenth, © Ways and means and to adopt a general programme for ention. Fightcenth and Seventh Assumbly Dis as expected that candidates would be talked of, but 1t was not belleved any man would be decided on to receive the New York support. They wil! hold themselves open for the time being. $ ( tricts, Two minutes later the m Tammany apecial was on it way, ca: ing the hosts from the Fifteenth, Klev- son bound by the unit rule, he says, and if | Long Island Railroad and boarded their | THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE 4, Toia. 5” STATE _.COMPTROLTER , ‘SOHMER GETS AWAY MMANY HOST TO BALTIMORE an Hour Before Four- teenth Streeters, but Very Quiet— “Big Tim” and “ Boys”’ Depart. enth, Ninth, Twentieth and Twenty -sec- ond Assembly Districts, The = third Special left at 10.25 with representatives ‘om the Twenty-sixth, Twenty-fourth, enty-seventh, Twenty-elghth, Thirty- first and Twenty-ninth Assembly Dis- tricts, The last of the Tammany specials, leaving at 10.27, carried those chosen from the Thirtieth, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-third, ‘Thirty-fourth and Thirty- nl Assembly Districts, SECRETARY SAYS MURPHY’S STRONGER THAN EVER. Secretary “Tom” Smith, who boarded} the last spectal, sald before leaving that any report from Baltimore that Leader Murphy would be erseded in author- rman or any other rat was absurd, suid Secretary Smith, js stronger than ever, “The solld New York delegation will through everything. Bridge Commissioner O'Keefe, who ac- ompanted the Brooklyn delegation, with Herman Metz and @ acore of other notable Democrats from over the river, sald that he was confident that Mayor vr would be the second cholce of the convention, “The Mayor is not a candidate of hi own volition,” sald Mr, O'Kee whatever happens we will not be disap- pointed, With the usual brass bands and other forms of enthusiasm, Tammany dele- Bates to the jonal Democratic Con- Vention left for Balti the Cen- tral Rallroad of ey special at 1 o'clock: to-day. es Were cheered 4s they arrived, but when the “Big Fel+ low" strode through the crowd the Tam- many cohorts gave him an ovation, es went on this vclal Do one seemed to know. The In started 400 men,most of them wide shouldere buy juggling su and waiting for orders, Som Were fifteen del rty out « rded the tra there and some said hundred that four The othi the boys" ‘8, they sald, ‘Were Just going along to see “that Ing was all right” first division of “thg boys" prom: 4 nice auto ride from the Tenth Assembly Distri rcond avenue ade the mi wet wide adimi wrong with th f Simon Steingut, the Li na j thre | some ACTIVE SECURITIES, Steel, 318.400 shares: Re » Bacific, 10.400 sare: € a 1,8d0 ——— - -|World Wants Work Wonders. stich by "him; 1 avenue, and no mas Ss Breeted “the boys,” ‘ 44 Was shown by the ies und “the boys" from part of Manhattan "below Pourt . solime 4 Harbury: and 1 himself, they outdid hes «| Just a Small Bunch of Tammanyites Ready for the Start for Baltimore; A Few of the Shining Lights Who Hope They'll Figure at the Convention (Photographed To-day Specially for THE EVENING Cagh by a Staff Photographer.) BRYAN SAYS HE MAY NAME Will Fight Parker Floor Unless Committee Chooses a Progressive Who Suits Him. BY WILLIAM J. BRYAN. Copyright, 1012, by Virgil V. MeNitt BALTIMORE, June %4.—The most, prominent arrival this morning was Gov, Burke of North Dakota, He has} the support of his State for the Presi- dency and at once aligned himself with the progressive fight against Judge Par- | ker for Temporary Chairman. He brought his answer to my telegram and) delivered it in person, Gov. Burke has been elected for a third time in his State and his popular- ity 4s due to his strength as an Execu- tive and to the satisfaction which his administrations have given. He is one | of the strongest men in our party, and is not only considered for thi ffice all President but will doubtless have a@ still larger support for the Vice-Presidency {f geographical conditions do not weigh against tt. PROGRESSIVES STILL LOOKING FOR A CANDIDATE. | The National Committee is In having under cc of T sives are still engaged in an endeavo> to get together on some candidaie, with some prospect of success, The Wall street Influence is on hand stiffening the backs of Judge Parker's supporte but the tide seems to be turning mors strongly against Parker as the delogates ; arrive. 1 do not Ike to discuss my part in the convention and yet I am compelled to do so or deny this information to HIMSELF AS CHAIRMAN |@ progressive without su From Convention those who read these reports. I will! therefore say that I am not attending| {the meeting of the full committee, preferring to leave them to agree upon estion from me, if they can do so. If they fall to do so, and Mr. Parker 1s recommended by tie full committee, I) shall, from the floor of the convent oppose his selection, and propose tie name of some proxressive ay a substitute for his. 1 do not know Who that pro- wressive will be and I shall not decide moment, my sole desire be- about harmonious co-~ Is of th puie ing to brin, tlon betwe sive candidates, pr upon Ww y hearty s Any y may agree will have If they cannot agree, 1 will th ity of finding a pro-) gressive to present 4s a candidate, the best one whose consent is obtainable. — | MAY SEEK TEMPORARY CHAIR-| MANSHIP, my effort to find s can- myself be @ candidate those who are attending whose speech ‘will indorse the party of | progressive record and urge an advance ive lines. andidates is ded. ime being t what kind of | be a in the Pr ably decline, f difference who carries the sta: convention in the party which enters into competition with the Taft party for the support of the predatory interests, GUARDS SHOOT AT STRIKERS; 8 MEN, 1 WOMAN HIT (Continued from First Page.) on Warburton avenue, ck away with an infant at her b » received one bullet through her left shoulder, It ranged upward and cut through her | neck, severing one of the minor ar- terles, Dr, Col who removed } to the Hastings pital, waid the wo man might die. The baby was unin. Dominick Smith wes shot luring the second battle, ken to the hospital; he wounds tn his body Six others, Including a wi treated by physicians, who were sur 4 to the spot by telephone fro Hice Headquarters of Hasting ween to carry sey nded into the agaln and wa had five boy, The eval of thelr ross the Adam Ye dinner ta two blod woo. acks ewits was sitting at t ein his eon High strec om the scene of the shoe ng. when OWo bullets. passed, almo simultaneously, between his head that of tits wile and buried tl | made Orange, N° J., started from his home last Mond for Wellington, N. J., to investigate an accident and vanished. He did not reach Wellington, Detectives for the Travellers’ Insur- nce Company, which employed the | missing man, have done their best to get on his trail, but have not succeeded. ‘hey have found nothing to point to a porsible reason fu: hls voluntartiy ab: | senting himseif, His accounts with the | company are absolutely correct, they | te. So far as can be learned he was fond of the home his mother and sister for him, | Papers in his pockets would identity | him had he met with an accident and | been taken to a hospital. A Epicures Would Buy | | it even if it didn’t go twice far, but strength is thrown in. WhiteRose CEYLON TEA Yes, It’s Imitated! ARTEL EE White Rose Coffee, Only 35c.a Pound in the wall ios ses HUNT AGENT WHO VANISHED John J, Warner, an Insurance clatn agent of No. @& New street, East \e LUST, FOU » AND REWARDS. "Sunday of Steeplechase Parks, Ares f Specially Retained by THE WORLD ward, Ka, hee CF PENAG' RY Your Opportunity to Purchase a $30, $35 or $40 Suit $9 2: Madeto Your Measure _— The values are absolute. Such sales as are announced by this house are the legitimate outcome of business conditions. They require no introduction—no unusual comment. There is enough cloth to make 650 suits They will sell rapidly at $22.50. It is the fixed Boley of our house when we have but a suit length left of any style to close them out irrespective of their former price. ‘That is the only reason for this sale, and to those men who come in time—we will make to your measure at #22.50 a suit that actually has sold at $30, $35 and $40. These suits will be made for you—fitted to your form by a | tailoring organization that gives you per- sonal service. The members of this firm supervi: absolutely every fitting, they see to it themselves that every customer receives the attention and care he should and when you leave our establishment it ie with the knowledge that you have found your tailor—where you can in future go with the fullest measure of confidence. Early selection advised. PH. 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