The evening world. Newspaper, July 6, 1920, Page 2

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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1920. REAT LOVE FEAST FOR GOV. COX AS THE FINAL BALLOT EN ENDS : a trianeuter deadlock between Cox, | challenge for a poll nent a dozen men oe Se ee ee WILSON SENDS COX |FEBESTOF THETWO 44TH BALLOT THAT WON FOR COX DC 0 01 at that time had no predio- argument and abjurntion he could SONS OF GOV. COX, | oO Ins, Col fo make; although they then |not resist. Finally, after « NOW 17 YEARS OLD Cox. MsAdon Davis. Palmer, Owen, Glass, Colby. Oox with a lead of some 60 | eve Fe eM dcmeereie otter. ae HIS BEST WISHES: Te 5 5 ie ur in aloe ( 4 over McAdoo and more than 200| ave oir defeat nna. been roared ’ Pe } 234 , : twenty-second roll ' down, Bi last ballot, the ‘ache 13 1a i f f fourth, began, FAY Sto trv ona ae MAY TAKE STUMP a firat vote. fares swung solid to} H 3 ; Cox. State b; 10, dolegatios ‘ SSS aut Sut far “Moadon, wite| 2 ci divided delegations, followed sult! (Continued From First Page.) | 28 * m) The njide had wet in and there was) estlahiceaticle! 8 . no stopping it. The convention had | “a “1B i to its mind wet to nominate on that! confident that Cox could beat, Hard- oh ie ballot, Up and up mounted tos ing in their pivotal home State. 28 ie paneet bog mate wile “Of course, Cox is going to be elect- m 20 . 34 iJ | “I ed," Josoph P. Tumulty said. “It was ‘ . i necessary two-thirds just ahead, the’ = : : tumult increased minute by minute Earned First Money as School! GOVERNOR COX’S a stratesic ang wise nomination 7 "git Until the last votes were heard only ( fa Harding haan't one chance in ten to 134% a6 “ . Wasuely on the platforan poate Janiter and Church Bell DAUGHTER, MRS. | ou:y oni 35 i 4 , et jorndo . Chairman Teapod to ie char to chan er H. C. MAHONEY /tAsor strona For cox. savs april the vote of hia State to Cox. Halt a ‘ed MORRISON. 6 | i dozen other chairmen woro waving Gov. Cox will meet with favor 2 | : for recognition to make similar au-| WAS PRINTER'S DEVIL. amos onekntesd labor, Boncitiry iB.) ie | es oeindat Wa Frank Morrison of the A. F. of L. ; 3 ar ‘ SFABCO FORCES MOVE TO MAKE) , i indicated to-day, Labor commands resceel @ : IT UNANIMOUS. Forced Passage of Workmen’s| tore than 1,000,000 votes, its leaders |New Hampshire... | 2 6 ( Chairman Robinson hurried to his i claim, New Jersey | 28 desk with Gam B. Amidon of Kansus, Compensation and Other “Cox stands highly with organized New Mexico | 6 & MoAdoo chief, “Through « sontina- Progressive Laws. labor in Ohio,” said Morrison. New York | 7 | 2 ous racket Amidon movi at the " Samuel Gompers, immediately on : rules be suspended and the nomina- é | 4 } ; . tion be made unanimous, All over tho | Jamo Middleton Cox was porn on a his return here from San Francisco Fe t hall men climbed upon chairs! farm wt Jacksonburg, ©., fifty yoars is expected to call a meeting of his | 20 : then Wesed “polesa tke. college yall ago. His grandfather moved into the; executive council to pass on Lertnie : 10 > leaders to signal the answer to tho | Wertern Reserve from New Jersey on issues as drawn ‘in the Democra c 4 2 i question, A prairie schoonor with all his family. and Republican cect ti carats 8 | Banging hie gavel in a final thump, | yw: demned the Republican platform 5 | : ‘je | Chairman Bobluson put the queation | When he was fifteen years old Jimmie and characterized Harding aa “choven | South Dakota. §.) 38 ' and the answer roared buck at him| COX ran away from home, not to be} pam eeete sail JAMES M, COX JR. Tennessee : | 24 with all the volumo of a thouxand|4 sallor or a miner, put to be @ acliovl to fit the platform. = Texas, ii aon 40 i : to join. you in shouting the tremendous | teacher, and when he was neventeon Gov. Cox will be usked immediately Utaccesties i | 7 | reached 4 & division of 20 Fe cent made Gov. Cox the Dom- | was the teacher most sought by schoo! to exert ‘his influence to bring about Vermong...... 8 1 Meal pee Gee. os wales it “SThe déth ballot never was com-| boards tn his part of the state, rititieation of the suffrage he Yesinle ae 2% | eal 1% had voted 73 ‘of | Pleted. In the chorus of affirmation| Cox has beon meeting ‘and going ment by the Tennessee Logisiature, | We a ron... ‘| {t was swept away as unnecessary. was announced to-day by the Ni- est Virginia i | | | | Mi through barriers similar to those Wiscons! 2 3 b Rawe bese tate bad the’ ete een which youth and luck off educational tional Woman's Party. Wyong. H 3 | § ey carried through wore never recorded, | Opportunity put in the way of his DAVIS SENDS CONGRATULA- | Alaska 6 Mine 5 Hl | vag | Cox on She thee. ge tee paliot Gov.| being a teacher when he determined TIONS FROM LONDON. P | Distrir of Columbia H | } | ‘ox received officially voton, NDON, July 6—American Am- await... | | | | but they were never totalled, for he| 12 De one He bought bankrupt penton John W, Davis to-day cabled Philippines. lo4 x | | | waa nominated by the unanimous|®°W8papers and kept them «oing Gov. Cox upon the j t | } | congratulations to Gov. © Pp | Porto Rico., 5 1 | | owe voles of the convention. without money of his own until they s pornination. eee | : | became prosperous and the basis of | MRO.HELEN COX MAHONEY You can and will lead the Demo- | ey el - forecast only ono bon 5 his present $2,000,000 fortune. He was} —— Sarit tnaneir sadn les eratie Party to victory,” Davis said § 3 Be release of the Palmer F pa mg ‘a in the cablegram, | * ‘, ss C1 ” Pt elected to Congress for the first time ‘Michigan wus passed and when recalled the 30 votes were cast for Cox, = GOV. COX RECEVED dead Politica; field general, Sorg was sd] Considerable surprise was expressed f | ai Bvauninieteds but lbetare\ the: aunuuitaamentiteiae & break up in the long in a rockribbed Republican district.| Impressed that he put into the hands | py officials at the foreign office upon! Party to evelons ei we 1 After the rol cal was eam but before the announcement w _ PALMER'S -aripesnerpt ne Pi y . J i made M. Amidon of Kanna, a manny 5 Ado! ed to suspend He was elected Governor of Ohio in|! Cox many of his own business | receipt of news that Gov. Cox had a i Me iea een fake th SRARGnI Nausicaa, WHE GuGonucnathn ae DRAWS NAME a strongly Republican year because of| “airs and in 1898 became Cox's|becn nominated, Most officials de-| Numbers 150—Cost to U.S. | the rules and make the nomination tnan imo: mae aentsusiaie ‘Carlin briefly ssid that Attorney: the tathiaisniar rer use Of) Anancial backer in the purchase of | clured they had never heard of Cox cally adopted Ma nred was pot smiling Fusion of the Bull Mooseinaur-|the various properties which were | DAYTON, O. July 6.—Hundreds of $7 a Day Per Person, He caiiont . cscs caeen eee mene to goiay a rh omina rection In the campaign. In Nis first; mergod into the Dayton News. Sorg | telegrams of ongratulation were re- ‘ Anthony Of Kansan Dakota and se zed the ana uneous term he mado enemion becaune of his, Peiieved in a distribution of owner- [ceived for Gov. Cox to-day. a age ’ , vearibed Hoe dale cit une ee release “Or is delegates. A radical independence of party leadern|*™P-_ Cox belleved in a “one-man” | President Wilson's telegram of con-| SAN FRANCISCO, July 6—New] Ropresentative Browne uf Wiscon- | Kopreseniative John Small 0 went up Ce el to be suey and Ohio political paper. He tok on obligations which | gritulations was among the frst.) ovr wit) be woll represented amon | it and family, three persons, | North Carolina, with wife and daugh- while Chal: pol traditions, Do-|cuused the little sheet to livé a hand| ‘There were dozens from San Fran- Representative Guy Campbeli of | '¢t a twenty- eeminute Deion epee for re-election, he ran again! to mouth existence, Frank McCor- cisco, including one from Joseph T./the Congrestonal junketeers who are Porinaylvania, wife and two children, | 7 Mra. Everett & andere Dis ot might be po! lor . and was elected for the mick, his business office manager, has Convention Chairma one}. a 5 Se ee Oe on, e>resentative San of Indiana. the change in| (Continued From First Page) and then for the thirds ent U™*| contensed it was often high neon, ve. | kooud ehe Georgia Delegation.” an- [today on the Army Transport Great | Ropresentative L. C. Dyer of Mls-| Representative William. €. Vare uf , ‘The steel manufacturing area ot! fore he knew whether he could bor-| other from Governor 8. V. > hae Northern at it spler ut Fort Mason | souri, wife and two daughters. jPennsst a, with four members row enough money to Insure the ap- ntana, pledging hearty suppor . . ; ae yowell of | bis family, in| waiting all night for the convention! Pennsylvania wae never more arbi-|pearance of the publication for that |“‘oue trom W. J. Cochran, director |Nere waiting for the signal to start | Representative Casstua Dowell of | Wh iT i Henry C. Woode jown | rewults, trarily policed and administered in| **™e afternoon, ot publicity for the Democratic Na-|0f on the voyage to Hawall, the | lows = {ward of Wost Virginian, with wife and Mra. Cox aeized her humband, and] tne interests of big business than}, 129 Dayton News was a rough and | tional Committee, read: “The mag-| Philippines, Japan, China and other | ume C. Veyru, delegate from the | gon the tears streamed from her eyes 48| was Ohio 1912, tumble sheet, Cox culled names in nj nificent way in which your nomination! noints ‘The transport ts -catng ip | Pbilippines, with wife and two mem-) John Burke, treasurer of the United she kinsed him. Gov. Cox relaxed ‘aed Cox, aguinat all/way he how since characterized av| was won in good tempered cont bide Of hin tuinily: States, with wife, son and daughter, advice and precedent, forced the|unfair and excusable only on thet. great victory in November.” | $9,000 worth of fnel each day while | . 5 sted Dr. Reinseb, former Ambassador to Workers |from the strain of the campaign and | passage of a Workmen's Compenan, {80nd of his desperately. enthual. | "rene N trom the State Democratic| waiting for the Journey to begin. Famund F. Erk, wife and daurhter. ying! with wite and daughter, maximum effort to take hin eyes filled with tears, His volceliion law. In 1912 there were 50,000 aatic vont He Wan then twenty- | Central Committee of wos There are six Now York represen. {secretary of the party and also secre- Represcntative Rufus Hardy, with break. The floor * . el le made enemies right and Re “enthusiastic support” and a % re 2 .|t Representative Porter of Penn-|wife and two daughters. Gulia Hike the Mice | eee, Com Senatios, wren he suits of employees againet employers |jefi und also friends. He. took |e eeea gy neatitornja for Cox in| {tv's AN told there are 26 Sena- | tary Representa . Arthur J. Mays, son of Representa- 2 panicky day, Great| tempted to speak, Mra E. A. Déeds| in the state, and few of them availed |chances which were. regurded ax | Wvember: tors and Representatives in the | $y'vanla. tive Maye of Utah { ot Cox and McAdoo workers |®nd Miss Elinor Parker, both of ona the plaintiffa anything. Last year,|Feckless by country editors, such as = party. Originally 150 plonned the | Representative James A. Frear of| Representative’ Frank Murphy of 16 Palmer groups,|ton, with Mrs. John Root and Mies taking the Associated Pri service i trip. But the searchlight of public- | Wisconsin, with wife, Ohio, with ntion and to enlist West, bot! loago, who| Lite because of the enforcement of jana throwing “boller plate” or space | BROKE POLICEMAN’S si ess 4 i es Representative John M, Morin of Ly wg rivers Elinor West, ih of Chicago, the Cox 1 by the 8 ity drove off the others. tath Warren Gurd of fag See atceaticn 2nd to Ole ” tox law by the State, but fifty/fillers furnished with literature and | JAW WITH CLUB : Representative rre TANREMERBiag Whih two. Ghamtitelen had been with Mrs. Cox through thé] such suite were started. advertising by outsiders bodily out he trip will’ cost’ each: Congress again under tho urge of the gavel, the dele- night, captured the Governor, They ail kissed him and they all crted, It entirely consistent with the of the window, with another inch of it should ‘ders that not Man $1.75 a dayroom, Ohio; with two members of family. L. 8. Goodall Representative H. Z% Osborne of California, board and alr] Representative oft 5 be set tr} >atrol Attacked When He Tries|inciudea. 1 an AWE Migs Alice Page, daughter of Gam man’s history that the nomination at |), ‘atrolman included. Tho trip will cost the Gov- | Main: A * is columns, He Mil ‘ y : ?, — % ctor Pare ’o} ion Ra eee a ree] At this time Cox's paper got out) san Pranciaco whould have come to|with local items, tog) Mak Lacs to Stop Disorder—Woman —_|ernment $7 a day per person qn board. |” ptepresentative W. W. Hastines of |" "Representative Stephen G, Porter te bis ied ‘ie nel ‘ble at | & extra and the first copy Wa8/ him, though ho was not seriously re-| Persons aggrieved by the pugna- Bites Cc The journey is to last ninety ¢ tt Lake City, with four members of | of Pennsylvania, with daughter. Shende wae handed to the Governor. The news-| garded aas a contender outside of his | °!us and outspoken gditorials and ares tthe rings |THE Purpose is to find a way to familie |" Representative Michael F, Phelan paper plant was filled with men who! own State two months ago. It ia en- | NWS erticles tha News went to] policeman James Shanley of the Fifth! a0. ving costs, ‘The junketeers el tients: with gon and. two and they cheered the nominee and) after veteran observers of conven-|to the number of four or five of fist | (o-dny. went to the Wn ft Den) ite oF the world cpposite the ian | Connceticut, with wife every leader of bis delegation at tho) tions had declared late Saturday Grete tic, 3h Gh be vestnted “such aoaede: e owd at 43d Street. ana|2ctual scene of the problems, Dia- a ' Seep Sona RIES cA convention, night that Cox'# Jast chance was| chased the protesting subseriine far | Third Avenue, Somobody hit Shaniey|tance Jenda a better perspective. F corre: ee ine neRuaenS BEET) GIy: STRIKERS SENTENCED. @OX'S FORCES NOW SURE OF AJ Gov. Cox excused nitisslt from te | gone ae eeaerner rar yn the face with m club wud fractired| ‘The ix New Yorkers slated to make |tanical Gardens at Washington, yp” | ing (Continued on Fourth Pi h t . + |suinably going to inspect tropica VICTORY. crowd and went to the compos! TO RETIRE TO FARM WHERE HE ‘on' 0 uge,) his jaw. he journey are: Representatives C. v ATES RRBURY, Conn., July 6—Sen- ee x, 3 . jants. a | he Cox forces scented victory right|Toom to shake hands with all his WAS BORN. Thomas Gitsbons, No. 303 Bust Sixty- |p, sullivan and four members of ins | P!4 ranging from thirty days to Be Gox, band trooped into tne employess, It was dawn snd noting Adout a year ago Cox, who tas a| CITY TO SUE IN GAS WAR. 4 aintn street, arrested by Strang, was| cam ty; Luther W. Mott, Henry M. Representative 1 D. Robinson of ain jal worn fenponed Im the and hur! je rains of the time, jv. Cox cal ree Of! ine home he calla Trallsend, near -_—_—_ held in $5,000 bail by Magistrate| Goidfogle, Danicl J. Riordan, wich | “orth Carol an i court here to-day on six strik- fst team or “Ohio, Ohio!” down| nig closest friends and they went 12| Hayton, bought the farm on which he| Hylan Snyn Harrett Order Conflicts in Yorkvilin. Court, on 2] wife and daughter; Jamen V. Ganley| Representative Charles H. Handall |r irralaned on the charge of esahule fuired to get quist enough to sturt| an automobile to the home of Cox's) haa been born, at Jacksonburg. He with jon. of felonious aasiult, and wife, and Thomas F, Smith with |Of California, with two members of iontly changed to breach of tho cull, Ufelong friend and adviser, John Me-| has torn down every building: and| Mayor ‘Hylan to-day directed Cor-| poticeman Arthur Lavery of Inspector] wite, two daughters apd son, hilo family: (thought to ‘be uncles and an Stuvelin, Salvatore Castil- Mahon, eighty-seven years old. porch bullt since he went away te be} Portion Counsll O'Brien to take legal) Cahalane’s Staff was aiding Sergeant) phe others are: aunts). \u Rosat Aiderrios wer vy . . arrett | Eph Street. a Avenue w Whe, : ri vennsylvania and wife. vent to iil was bound over under ey (aged waa disclosed and} *" Hr had the place put tn condition 98] riying $1.40 per thousand cuble feet 1 a him ‘on the i ay. | sentative Summers of Washington pou looked a little dii ‘Timmy! was all that be could "89 nearly aa possible as he remembers It.|the rate for te Brooklyn Borough Gas | Moyers ot Na 606 Lenoe Avence,|{ _ Representative William J. Harrisuf| Adele Steele, daughter of Represen- | bonds of $5,000 to Me NX Hie drift to the-Obio stand-| as he took the Governor in hia arma) 11") 0) born his plan to retire to the | Company, bpp itl adi “| Georgia, wife and daughter, tative Henry J. Stevle of Pennaylvu- | storia responsible. for the ioe Pe 60, sa8 even the more than! and kissed him. farm when his! active business and| nore tee sat hist Mayer, anys, the | WAR MEFOMAC Dan Anthony jr, and Miss Anthony, | ala, wh rred here recently and in Palmer men who joined) “I want to be tho first to bring you arrett order “la directly in conflict : ie ape s soore the Pennsylvania forces could McAdoo back into the lead. it to adjourn for the night was McAdoo supporters against of “No, no\” all over the floor, ‘motion went down on a vote that ‘no doubt of the convention's detor- to fight it out then and The forty-first ballot was McAdoo and Cox gained ground McAdoo supporters dug them- ives in, grimly determined on a lant oh Aight. ‘The forty-second roll call started. It showed new drifts to Cox as the votes were shouted back oi the platform from the unsuppre: a Able urmur among the delegates, roe regardless of the fatigue of the longed fight, although the great galieries above them were by then almost vacant. Many had gone home the expectation that there would no nomination. On the forty-fourth roll call Cox ined two in Alabama and then ne three more when the Ar- tion went solid for him. Bicked up another one in two more in Colorado. Hout Par, Cox another and ire chipped in one, Three more the Cox column from Florida, ing the delegation solid. Tilinols added four more to the column. Indinna wen’ nolid for giving him thirty, Kentucky went solid Cox with her twenty- A JOINS IN THE RUSH TO cox, Bh Goorin wes | reached the del- to his chair Georgii Cox ‘ine the shout that followed poemed to rock the bulldin, An McAdoo followers were stil) holdin, ly, Again the Texas block o > went in for him. ree which led the way in Grives stuck porte and even the vote SReeorded Sy i rity ir any shake them loose. the news in remembrance of ali you have done for me,” the Governor said. Gov, Cox had worn in hia button- hole during the balloting an American Beeaty pg that was given him as Spee te charm by McMahon's jaughter, Miss Louise McMahon. Cox will preserve this flower between the leaves of the Bible, he told her. After the Governor had gone to his home this morning for a brief rest, he went alone to Woodlawn Cemetery and there at the grave of his mother he prayed for half an hour, The Gov. ernor’s mother was at & New Year’ reception given by President Grover Cleveland at the White House, Jan, 1, 1896. At that time ghe sald to “I have 4 gon at home bere where you now are, ‘The Goveroor related this story for the first time to-day, During the morning meetings were held by officials of the Dayton Cham- ber of Commerce, who are planning a huge jollification mecting late to- day or to-night at which the city pal extend congratulations to Gov, ‘OX, ‘When the Governor arrived at his bis rest he was presented with resolutions of congratulations the union printers working on the paper. The resolutions pledged united support continued: @ recognize the fact that you have -come from the ranks of the workers, and therefore, are in every} way able to understand the needs and requirements of the man who tots.” a ¢| DEPORT SHAKESPEARE SCION Othello Lotharto Says Stater's Name In Desdemon Othello Lothario Ingham, who claims to be a direct descendant from William Shakespeare, to-day was given his de- portation passports back to England, {Ingham had been living in Malone, N. \% How he got into this country is a mystery the Atimiaration ee Wor not ‘hough toned him ae ‘isha ‘he reason hel ie Sete nd publ shar that he might become a m Bokaier Tarts ‘tr c,h0t,2 if name, he says, is Des- politioal life ls Anished. Cox earned his first money at fourteen when he added to his farm chores the duties of janitor for the district choo! house and sexton and bell ringer of the Church of the United Brethren, of which he is still & member. When he went to Mid- dietown to the home of his brother- in-law, John Baker, editor and owner of the Middletown Signal, Cox looked on school teaching a# a means to be- coming. a storekeeper. Middletown wan the biggest community he knew,| and the storekeepers were its most influential and respected citizens. Baker was himself a teacher and gave the youngster constant aid, tak- ing in return the boy's services as printer’s devil, typesetter, Pressman, hewsboy and reporter, An excursion train carrying em- ployees of the National Cash Register Company of Dayton was wrecked near Middletown. Baker, who was correspondent of the Cincinnat) En- | quirer, sent Cox out to “cover” the atory for the Enquirer. He not only got the news first and wrote it clearly and fast, but he tled up the tele- | graph wires with a dummy message (as was possible,in those days) so that no other correspondent could get & despatch out of Middletown that day. The Enquirer lavestigated and sent for Cox, “I was scared,” he says to-day. “I felt there was something wrong and 1 bad got John Baker into trouble.” reporter just long enough to qualify him for important staff and exeou- tive work. He was much at Colum- {bus, reporti the Legislature and " paahing the, Enquirer’s plans at the “apitol Paul Sorg, a wealthy man, without muoh political experience, was elected to Congress in 1804. He took Cox to aebianton st secrotary. et 1896 ‘ox ran ‘* Cay ‘or election and proved ability ‘The Raquirer put him to work as a! pany of Albany, inerense gas rates bi specified In the statute.” eee ‘Three-Yeur-01d Tamblen Frank Krirkler, No. 414 Eat T1st Street, fire escape at the ence to the basement ak Our Two CRYSTALLIZED frattes penvertes, Rise ey oral igus which MIDGET sTICKs— feot tittle These are reproductions: to the box, PACKAGE with the ruling of the Court of Apt in the case of the Municipal Gas C which held that public Service Commissioner may not éi three years old, of the” limit worth of Jewelry from a guest of the Hotel Savoy ‘was to-day held on a & Stortes|urceny charge in $1,000 bail for the ‘ Grand Jury by Magistrate Schwab in fell from the) vorkvilie Court. ‘The charge against fith floor of ha to Flower Hospital Fitnete |mtaaed when Stanley said that he alone PENNY A_POUND PROFIT ow For Tuesday, July 6th FRUIT GUMS—In these sweets we have cay- tured the Juices of the most luscious Held for Hotel Savoy Jewel Theft. Michael Stanley who was arrested June 28 for the alleged theft of $1,140 the as Demell, his companion, dis- focday, tig |Thomas Demell, hi pa waa dia was responsible for the theft THAee- MARK Big Daily Specials’ Our Big Daily Special for Wednesday, July 7th CHOCOLATE. COVERED CREOLE PEUPERMINT PATTIES these nce te delicious || Hetions mags of richly aniced ervars m in thee ind flavored with the finest Ol) of he 1c || ke 34c LLY teh met lowatl tdispwone ‘directory, "* tainer, son a wile j daughter of Representative Senator Thomas Sterling of South »1 JULY SALES of Coats reduced from 75.00, 85.00, 90.00 to 35.00 Suits reduced from 95,00, 125.00, 130.00 to 50.00 Cotton Frocks reduced from 28.00, 35.00, 45.00 to 18.50 Sweaters reduced from 15.00, 18.00, 22.00 to 10.00 Silk Skirts reduced from 45.00, 50.00, 55,00 to 22.50 622 Fifth Avenue at 50x, Sirgelc

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