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THE SUN ANtt NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH ,0, ,1930 4 S WOOD FIRST IK- CONVENTION OF ARIZONMi Delegates Not Instructed, but Will Vote for Gen eral in Chicago, SECOND PLACE TO LOWDEN Dryan Strong, but Wilson Of ficeholders Hold, the Party Power. AMZpNA. Arizona. Republicans have declared of ficially that their first choice for Presi dent Is Major-Gen. Leonard Wood. When his candidacy was Indorsed by the State convention In Tucson on Sat urday It confirmed the evidence-obtained by the poll of Tub Sun aKd New York Herald. The poll shows Gov. Frank 0. owden of Illinois as second choice, with Senator Hiram M. Johnson a close third. It was decided that the six delegates from Arizona should, go to the Chicago ronventlon without Instructions, but at the same time resolutions Indorsing the Wood candidacy were passed. Arizona has no direct primary law and the Presidential delegates are selected by the State convention, composed of delegates chosen by county committees. The delegates selected on Saturday are all known personally to favor the candi dacy of Gen. Wood. Two of the largest counties In the State Maricopa and Co chlie formally Indorsed the Wood can didacy prior to the State convention. Steps taken to test the popular senti ment In Arizona have developed that Wood leads with Gov. Prank O. Lowden of Illinois and United States Sena tor Hiram W. Johnson following. There seems to be some scattering sentiment for Herbert Hoover, but It Is largely confined to the rurual districts. nitchcoolc for General. Frank H. Hitchcock, one time chair man of &be National Committee and well known promoter of Presidential booms, lias been revealed as a supporter of Gen. Wood through his activities for the Gen eral In Arizona. With large business interests there Mr. Hitchcock, it Is understood, has officially changed his residence to that State. There are reports that he is thinking of standing for the nomination for United States Senator this fall to succeed Sena tor Marcus A. Smith, Democrat. He Is half owner of the Tucson Citizen. At first It was reported that Mr. Hitchcock was working for Lowden. He has made no formal announcement of his Presi dential affiliations, and the fact that he la out for Wood will be a surprise to many politicians In the East. Allan B. Jaynes, Republican national committeeman from Arizona, Is on en- Pioneers in Hand-Tailorins V 1 I. THE an achievement which commands respect and the flattery of indiscriminate imitation. And we are glad that it is so. For. the innovation which is ignored is already condemned. But to be copied in one's labors, and to seeone's ideas pirated by " the mob of gentlemen who write with ease" is, after all, the crowning achievement of originality. WE have blazed the way for others who are now' begin ning where we began. As origina tors of the hand-tailored principle, applied to ready-for-service clothes, we are obviously more dependable than those who are in the experi mental stage. Any comparison you make will prove it. To Professional Men Yen cannot safely Invest In Emulative w curl ties fwhtn you have not tfce facilities for shrewd selection nor the time for vigilance. That ceRtnrlses a profession In Itself. Sacrifice of either your profession or your Invest mutts weaM become Inevi table. Enjoy the good Income and that sense of absolute security given by Guaranteed First Mortgages which re quire none of your time. So loss in 27 years fo any Investor. We guarantee thare never shall be. Stmt tor twain F-tO. LAWYERS MORTGAGE CO. R1CHARB M. HUftB, President Capital and lurplus $9,0:0,000 69 Liberty 8t N. X. 131 Montague St.,Bkn. thuslactlc Wood supporter, and has been able to arouse genuine sentiment for the General: This was the easier be cause of the fact that Gen. Wood lived In Arizona In tho early eighties, when he was stationed at Forts McDowell. Huachuca' and Rjsbee as an army sur geon. , Also" many of the Rough Riders, the Wood regiment In the Spanish American War. were recruited In Arizona.' Some of them still -live there and are active campaigners for him. Progressive Wood Men. Wood Is the flrs choice of former iTosressive iraaers in Arizona. Johnson Is their second choice. R. I Carnahan. manager of the San Franclsccpjohnson headquarters, has been organizing for the Senator In Arizona recently. FrIU Homqulst of Phcenlx, Is head of me iowaen League. "America first," law and order and economy In governmental administration are the Issues of the coming campaign that are attracting most attention In Arizona, according to the replies re ceived from the county chairmen by Tub Sun and New York Herald. One of them answering the question, "Who seems to be the leading Demo cratic candidate for the Presidency in your county?" wrote " 'Ain't no such an imal.' Bryan has a big following, as formerly, but Wilson, through office holders, will control the delegation from Arizona," Another chairman expressed the opin ion that McAdoo was the choice of the Federal otice holders. Copyright, 1K0, b Tub Sen axd Niw Youk Herald. MAY EECAII SUFFRAGE VOTE. Charleston, W. ., March 2. Pos sibility of the Federal Suffrage Amend ment being ratified In the West Virginia Legislature lay in .the hope to-night that the Senate to-morrow would recall Its vote of Monday, when the ratification resolution was lost by one vote. The Senate adjourned to-day without at tempting to reconsider previous disposi tion of the resolution. The House of Delegates, which made the resolution a special order n busi ness for this afternoon, postponed action following the Senate's adjournment and made It a special order for to-morrow afternoon. F7tJNKIN SMOC MENS SHOPS 2 to 8 WE 38th STREET STREET LEVEL P r e AUTHENTIC FOR CURRENT WEAR IVE years ago we introduced Men's hand-tailored refady-for-service clothes for the first time. Then, it was an experiment that invited ridicule. Today, it is Meanwhile, we are still Pioneers in Hand-Tailoring FIFTH MOSES CLAIMS 300 ARE HOW FOR WOOD Senator Jlefuscs to Divulge Names, but Predicts Nom ination in- Early Vote. COL'. PROCTER CONFIDENT Dr. Butler Hears General's Iowa Boom Wanes, With Lowden in tho lead. ' His managers are claiming that laJor-Gcn. Leonard Wood will have at east three hundred delegates on the Irst ballot in Chicago and' that his omtnatlon will bo Won on tho second or third ballot. This Is the way. in which these dele ntcs are allocated hy Senator Gdortfe II. Moses, who refuses to particularise: "New England, New York, New Jer ty and Delaware, 100; Middle West, nd Northwest States, 100: South At antic States, to; interior South and Southwestern States. CO." Election of delegates without instruc t ons has no significance, It Is confl .cntly asserted, beeuuso assurances ave been received that the delcgater te really for Wood. Only South Caro lina, Florida and Louisiana have corn icle delcsatlons nt present Within hree weeks New Hampshire, Minnesota .nd South Dakota, with a total of orty-two votes,, will have chosen. 'Nothing short of a political cataclysm an prevent Wood from carrying them jmpletely," according to tho optimistic adorations of Wood managers. -Wo certainly will carry tho Illinois preferential primaries against Gov. Frank O. Lowden In Illinois," declared Col. William Cooper Procter, generalis simo of the Wood campaign, aa he emerged from ti conference with Repre sentative Norman J. Gould, tho Eastern manager, at the Hotel Imperial last night The Colonel, who reached the city In the morning from Chicago, went on to Pittsburg. Edward D. Robeson of Newark, who has just returned from n trip In West Virginia, 3llchlran, Minnesota, Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa and other States, writing to Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler yester day, said he had been told that the Wood boom in Iowa nad almost entirely subsided. The indications favored Lowden, with Butler as second choice. Leading Republicans In Michigan and Minnesota were declaring that Butler was the strongest candidate who had been named and there would be a few delegates for the Columbia president frbm each State. The Wood sentiment in Missouri was disappearing and Low den, Harding and Butler were nlvidlng the honors. For Colds, Grip, or Influenza nl Prvnllv, uk LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tableti. Look for K. W. GROVE'S signature on the box. 30c Adv. s e n t MEN'S CLOTHES MEANWHILE, we are ready, and invite you to examine our custom conceptions in Men's top coats and suits for Spring to see the delicate mechanism of work manship that is never, mechanical, the free-hand beauty of lines that are never labored, the charm of style that is never strained! AVENUE Wo You Know a THAT 4 of all babies born In tho United States aw born deadi but that leu than .1 ,i of tho babies born uhder the into of tho Maternity Center Association were - 'born, dead? Maternity Center Association 18 West 34th Street Miss Mary L. Davison Chairman Executlvo Commltteo r.. n. p. WOMEN BALK AT LONE DELEGATE Point Oat That Democrats Have Done Better. Republican women In New York county wcro Inclined to do a bit of grumbling yesterday when they heard that probably only.one woman would be eent as a district delegate out of twenty to be selected. This one will be Miss Helen Varlck Boswell, head of the Wo man's Division of the County Committee. Miss Mary Garrett Hay, who has brought upon herself tho Indignation of the men becauso ofher unalterable op position to United States Senator James J. Wadsworth, Jr., will not go to Chicago as a delegate. She may go as an alter nate, unless a change In the plans is made, but it Is not believed she would care to accept such a place. Her friends hold she should have been selected as a delegate at large. Miss Hay lives In the Nineteenth Con gress district where Dr. Nicholas Mur ray Butler and Charles D. Hllles, former chairman of the National Committee, have been chosen as organization choices for delegates. Miss Boswell also lives In this district but she Is to go to the con vention as a representative of the Thir teenth district Tho women wished Mrs. Olive Stott Gabriel to go as a delegate from the Fourteenth district, but Borough Presi dent La Guardla and S. S. Kocnlg are to represent It Miss Boswell explained that the Democrats could afford to give more places to women because they did not have as many prominent men to take care of. The women will be liberally treated In 'the matter of alternates. Among them will be Mrs. John II. Isclln and Mrs. William Wilson. The following slate of delegates In three Congress districts in Kings was announced by the Democrats yesterday: Fourth District Representative Thomas II. Cullcn and William J, Met formin. Eighth Thomas F. Wogan and Mrs. Minnie Wlshman. . Ninth David J. O'Connell and Ru dolph Reimer. The alternates In these districts have not been chosen, V .1 . V -. J.,' . i I SAY PALMER IN RACE MEANS WILSON OUT Administration Politicians Think President Approves. Bpttfcl to Tub Boy and New Toik Iltiup. Wasiiinoton, Murch J. White House oiricluls declined to comment to-night on the announcement of A. Mitchell Palmer, Attorney-Oeneral, that he Is a candidate for President. Nor' would they Intimate that tho action means, as has been Interpreted In some quarters, that 'President Wilson has let down the bars for those who seek to succeed him In office, thereby eliminating himself aa a possibility for a third term. In spite of the White House silence Administration politicians seemed to take It for granted that Mr. Wilson actually had given approval of the ac tion. They had known for a consider able time that Mr. Palmer had been a candidate, but had hesitated about an nouncing the. fact because of the desire to wait on Mr, Wilson. Serving In the Cabinet, they knew, gave Mr. Palmer the feeling that courtesy to his chief left no ether course. Bptclal te The Bon and New Your RutLc Hamhsduro, Pa., March 2 Vance McCormlck, chairman of the Democratic National Committee In 1916, publishes to-night In his newspaper, Tho Patriot, an editorial, saying In part: "Attorney Gencrul Palmer's formal consent to the filing of his candidacy for President In Georgia Is the welcome sign progressive Democrats in Pennsylvania and elsewhere havo been awaiting with lively anticipation. Mr. Palmer's action directly presents to the people of this country his claims for consideration and gives to all forward looking Democrats the agency for promoting their cause." TO FIGHT OPPOSITION TO MISS MARBURY Committee of One Thousand Called for Protest Meeting. The voice of the committee of one thousand, which at present numbers a total membership of something under Men's Shoe S 1 t , McCreery's 1 V '1' t tri;. t: " that figure, Is preparing to make Itself heard in opposition to those Democratic women ivho or,o, tryjng to havo Miss Elisabeth Marbury" selection as deto gato at large to the Democratic National Convention recalled, according to Mrs. John fherwln Crosby. For the purpoca f gathering a big force to defeat the efforts of Mrs. Clarice Barlght and Miss Margaret Vale to dis credit Miss Marbury on tho grounds of her being a non-resident, Mrs. Crosby has called a tipeclal .protest meeting of the committee of one- thousand, which she organized, to be held In her home, 37 West Klghty-second street, this week. She has Issued the call as associate chairman of the Democratic State Com mittee, as well as chairman of the com mittee of one 'thousand. Three Republican women were nelectod yesterday as alternates to represent the Rpubllcan Nw Tork county commltteo at the national convention. They are Mrs. John H. Iselln of tho Fifteenth Assembly district, Mrs. Katherlne T. Hammer of the Ninth Assembly district and Mrs. W'lllam Wilson of tho Fifth Assembly district. JiObSktffuli Vtnttr Offtl &l tiO.OO. NEW YORKERS ad mit, that it is simple to get an acceptable gift at Ovington'8, but it is a common complaint that such a splendid variety 'makes it hard to decide uponanyparticularthing. OVINGTON'S "Tho OIK Shop afPUth Annuo" 314 Fifth Ave nr.32dSt. MSCREER&-ANMML SPMNG SALES Embracing Every Department ABSOLUTELY! The Biggest In Ye jars All New Spring Styles Low and High Models ALL LEATHER $in At Jk v Regularly 15.50 -ENTIRELY COMPLETE RANGE OF SIZES 4 16 DIFFERENT STYLES No man walking can do better than to follow the foot steps of others right into our shoe shop. This 10.75 sale is the biggest shoe event we know of because there are over six thousand pairs that are all leather and all Value. Here you have the styles plain Oxfords, Blucher Qxfords, Wing Tip Oxfords, High Bafc, High Bluchers, Button and Lace, plain tops and Button and Lace Suede Tops, in Tan and Black Russia Calf, Norwegian Grain, Vici Kid and Patent Leather. - James McCreery & Co. (Second Floor) Use 5th Avenue Arcade 5th Avenue T DREICER&C ' (Dnenial &barl& of keenest lustra and Quah FIFTH AVENUE ot FOKTY-SHTU 1 AND 3 WEST 37TH ST. ONE DOOR FROM FIFTH AVENUE KNOWLEDGE To know an exe'usive store to call upon when your home equiremcnts need attention is to know that the McGibbon store is stocked with dignified mer chandise for an exclusive clentelc. HOUSEHOLD LINENS SMART UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE LAMPS AND LAMPSHADES MAHOGANY FURNITURE-FLOOR COVERINGS BEDS AND BEDDING DRAPERIES-INTERIOR DECORATIONS ' UPHOLSTERY Shoes " ; .75 Tax 8c 35th Street ale 4 1 ; ' ".1 11