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"q {i @aate. 1 shall not seek the nom- faation, nor would 1 accept it if it to as the result of an But I wili not tie my hands by & statethent which would make it met or tmpossible for me to gerve the public by undertakin, © great task if the people as @ Whole seem definitely to come _fo the conclusion that I ought to @ that 1 If ‘If a@hould consult my own and interest, I should Most emphatically and immoedi- @tely announce that I would under Ro Cire run, I have had @l) tHe honor that any man can have from holding the office of President. From every personal @tandpoint there is nothing for me to gain, either tn running for the oMice or in holding the office @nce more, and there is very much to lose. PEOPLE MAN FOR THE JOB. Under such circumstances, if 1 @neult only my own interest, the @bvious thing to do would be to an- Mounce that 1 would not obey any popular mandate—that 1 would not Yun if nominated. 1 do not follow ets “goueme decause I am sincerely endeavoring to lo@k at the matter only, from the standpoint of the pub- Ue thterest. ‘Tt is not only necéssary for the people to have the right in- or the right tool, with which to im any given emergency, but » is not in the Jeast holding the but doing a job that ts actu- worth doing; this ts the position to the best of my Dellef I have s n end always whall take. she peuple should feel that I am Anstgument to be wed at this I should accopt, even although that I should be broken ond ide im the using. Bed eft ta I f Hy i ‘ Motte for any mise ts “Spend ang be vpent;” and if one should 0°@ $60 worth acing from the otandpeint, he must pay Ris own life, actual life on ‘ie Gold Of battle, or political uife fm divie affairs, and must aot be- Gvetge the payment. Bem net concerned with the ‘welfare ef any one man in this i Hy 8 3 5 it: with enly with the welfare of of tho United States. BR OUTCOME COULD BI EXPECTED. wered to those who have Lincoln 1 wan not re- Quired to cross that bridge until I @ame to it. The reason ix that in making any statement it is not Necessary to consider what the man actually means and, uctually says and will be understood, as saying by people who intelligently accept hale statement at its face value, but also to consider what the statement ‘Will be held to mean by the great ple who are ob! their information more or less at second hand, and largely through inatrumentalities like most of the New York dailies, whose one Purpose, as far as 1 am concerned, ig to invent ‘Faisenooa and distort th. ether outcome con! ¢ me Mlustrate what I mean by we you to the language in » after the on of 4, 1 @Bnounced that I would not ry candidate for ren on, At the time good friends of mine suggested that I Bhould use some euch formula id not be @ of the cus- tom that had grown up not to elect @ Map 26 Presfdent for a third con- term; but on thinking It 1 became convinced that if I So language it would inevi- ‘taken as an announcement I would be @ candidate i ff LL HE'S THE ONE bb 0 RESERVATION ON ssn sta) ins 0 curred in front of Mra, time in office, whethe: he had oF had not boon President before. People cuch as the editors of the newspapers above referred to are not honest, they do not show the truth, and to pay any heed to their demands would be worse than folly. As to what you say as to the de sirability, no matter what the result of my being “frank” and telling the whole public what I feel, without any regard whether or not ft can be misrepresented, let me refer you to Lincotn, Surely there wae never @ more Mratghtforward nor @ more sincere man than Lincoln, nor @ man Who more unhesitatingly, when- ever the occasion arose, took the public entirely into his confidence, but he consistently declined to make statements which though true would give opportunities for a misrepre- sentation, An Interesting contribution to the was made by Mr. White, Hite version of how the Colonel was drafted to save the cause of the Progressives bears out the Colonel's statement that he never meant that he would not be a candi- date, if there arose a public ery for his retura. HAD TO BACK HIM WITH LA FOLLETTE OUT OF IT. oosevelt told me he was not a can- @idate and did not want to be a candi. if he w Folletto and not for Roosevelt until the Senator's candidacy became impos- sible and, of course, we had to turn to We told him that two-fifths of the dele- alderations which compelled him to again shoulder arms. These are: “Firat, the fact that Taft has a Con- gress on tis hands and each time h Picturesque Iterature of the campaign RECEIVER TAKES CHARGE Head of Rosett Concern Gone, and Girl Cashier Opens Depositors to the number of 2,000 date, but he also said he would accept | have $220,000 tied up in the failure of) drafted,” declared Mr, White, | the private bank at No, “We folke of Kansas were for La&| street of Morits and Mex Rosett, father 4nd eon, who were thrown Into THE BVENING WUKLD, 200 PONS |<" SWARM AT DOR OF CLOSED BANK Crowds Storm Failed East Side Private Financiers, De- manding Cash. tary bankruptcy sesavelt crowds of depositors besléged the bank “There 1s and never was any mystery | ‘0-day, fling thelr claime with a repre- as to why the Coiunel consented to rin, | sentative of the receiver. The bank safes were opened at noon fates would be naturally friondly~4o)/by Anna Fass, the cashier, and the him and added three important con-| yooks were turned over to expert ace faire of the concern are sald to be in tangled shape. In addition to their banks the Ros- has a Congress he has allenated a @tt# conducted an extensive countants, ing of the bank day, evening wa latge enese Of the people, ticket businens. While the deponttora IA no ane bank yesterday evenne oe “Second, the fact that the Southern | were storming the doors of the bank(tigings spread rapidly, and @ great delegates are going to commit hart-k they know they can save them and “Third, that there fe @ large group of of the InefMlolent Administration who men may not support Roo had enlisted in the 1912 Rough Riders. He morely paying a nelghborly call mt Colonel. Cockran's it political , | thi because they are not men who are in| We favor of walking the plank for a prin-| tickets for Rotterdam on the Holland- ciple, but because they want their jobs| American liner Noordam, sailing to- Preserved and with Taft the candidate | day, a we who had purchased nd missed the boat, reached the jn express wagons with all their @. They were after their money reactionary Senators tp States which | or tickets on some other line, but were have become doubtful territory because | unable to obtain either, Morits Rosett left his home early in are going up againat a buss-saw, These/the morning eaying he was going to velt, but] Perth Amboy, they never will support Taft.” bank owned by him and hie son was Mr. White added that the end {9 not | closed yesterday. The Rosetts also con- yet, and that, maybe, after all, some | ducted banks at Warren and Montgom- Hughes or Cumming or some other sort | ery of sentimept may develop. Pa., and Wilkes-Barre, Pa, W. Bourke Cockran dened that he|gANKERS WENT INTO AUTOMO- BILE VENTURES. Aa the Rosette did an ints N. J, ‘where another itreets, Jersey City, Youngstown, afternoon fifty Hungarians from| crowd besieged the bank until mid- night. Another crowd started to gather at daylight to-day and Capt. MoDermott went the reserv: from the Union Mar- ket station to the bank. - 600 LETTERS CONTAINING MONEY ARRIVE IN MAIL, A notice posted on the door directed | Gepositors to go for information to the | offices of Black, Olcott, Gruber & Bonynge, No. 170 Broadway. Several hundred of deposiors walked down to the address given but were not allowed by ¢ levator men tS ascend to the law offices on the eleventh floor, From there many of the depositors went to the general offices and headquarters of the Hosetts, at No. 114 Liberty street, which were closed and guarded by ‘ate bank-| police from the Vid Blip station, somersault was to the Stimaon cause, |ing business, the United States courte! Albert M. Ernst, a brother of Irving for which he made specches two years | were appealed to by thelr creditors yes-| L. Ernst, counsel tu the receiver, opened ago. ROOSEVKLT’S WILL BE A SURPRISE. County Chairman Duell, commanding the local Roosevelt, forces, has no pa- Uenee with President Taft's national manager, Congressman William B, Me- Kinley, when It comos to making pre- dictions, The veteran campaigner and ed-Judme to-day denounced Mr, MeKin- ley aw a prognosticator, “If Chairman McKinley is predicting 4s he did in 1910 he is practiaing decep- tion,” sald ex-Judge Du with him on the National Conar Coumnittes whan he predicted that a Repudlican Congress woul’ be elected. He awed his calculations, he eald Agures in his office, Democratic landslide than occurre "Would you hagard a guess on the chances at the Chicago con- was asked, | ‘er, no, it's too far avay, | You see, and this Is an extraordinary campaign,’ he answered. i Being pressed for some estimate, Chajnman Duell consented to go on re-'! cord with the fotlowir “LT predict that no no a mighty the 1,06 24 from the South. States which The povple are tired of having thelr Presidential nominees selected by FORT WORTH, Tex,, Maroh 5,—By a Texae State Republican Executive Commktee, Supporters of Taft there- wpon decided to carry their fight in his behalf before the voters by some method ygt to be worked out vec. - Ae VICTIM OF STABBING , NOW HELD FOR ASSAULT. Boy Who Used Knife Swears ‘That Brooks Knocked Down and Kicked His Mother, Raymond Stewart, nineteen years old, of No, 31 Sumpter street, Brookly: at Avenue Poilve Court to-day, inant, Brooks, who was re- The ¢ cently discharged from the hospital, be- came the defendant immediately stew- art had been discharged and was held in $00 ball on a charge of having as- suulted Mrs. Alice Howell, young Stew. mother, wee her husband, She had met him on the streot and told him that she didn’ want her husband to have anything to| do with him, Thereupon Lrooks apat |4n her face, struck her and knocked her down, Ho was Kieking her as she lay }on the pavement when young Stewa: | came along, he boy ran into the hous and got a knife, Me a ed Brook and 4} him until it was thought he was mortally injure Not only did the complainant have the tables turned on him 11 matter of the assault charge but an additional <parge was made against him of having | 4h ble Qosscesion « drug called heroin, terday for an order of involuntary bank-| the —_—> ruptey. PROPHET DUKLL SAYS, \City was Joseph M. Conklin of Jersey | ch: street .tles whete Hung predominate, aud so long ‘as he rem banker he prospered, recent yea: and his son became 1 tomobile and auto supply companies, Gistiiery and real estate ventures andj stants in this country. Their average these drained the banks until failure in- | SMount sent abroad was $7,000 a day. tervened. ‘There had been a run on the Perth Amboy bank all i RB} noon, She ne@! ing business of the Hosotts is wound = ROOSEVE to postmasters and other 4 similar form of nt out through the ated, tut ite exact erma have not as yet come to light. “The letters received by the Federal vote of 27 to 1 the candidacy of Col. | employees in the Northwest Roosevelt was tndorsed to-day by the | delicately worded—such letters as only the pen of the diplomatic Mr, McKin- ley could well turn out, and abound wd plastic praise. id with velled thre Boundless enthusiasm ts it ts declared without hesitation that nt in favor of the nomina- re then thrown out that a all good ofMflce-holders 19 McKinley evidently for- getting the optimism expressed in the preceding paragraph. “Already several hundred ters have been sent out, it 1 more, sald to contain a more personal tone, are in course of preparation for Who haye div to jod-holders piayed reluctance to rally to th of the Adminisuration, castody by ™ opiaties, it | tody by Mugistrate Hylan in Jones ft ie eaten or F 1 to faithfully sei of Prosident Taft are made more plain.” the Roosevelt headquarters wave out @ copy of one of the Taft circular letters, addressed in After expressing optimiem as Taft and the arrested on Feb, 16 last for stabbing | *er¥ing to the outlook for opening of the National Taft Bureau, the letter concludes: “Tt will be the conduct a dignified and energetic palgn in keeping with the P high conception of Amer puld therefore thank you to AB you can, con- and would up- preciate an early reply giving me such information as in your judgment will m of this bureau to anton Street Bank and took at 10 o'clock this morning. He inted receiver by Judge| found the safes lockod and not one of TRENGTH Holt, and he is now tn charge of all the| the clerks on hand. banks and of several business concerns | FIRM THANSMITTED $700 A DAY in which the Rosett The elder Rosett founded the Stanton thirty-three years ago. Gradually hp extended his bai! este to comm: POR IMMIGRANTS, Ethel Gastner, tnanager of the money forwarding department, which employed @ dogen wks, appeared shoruly before ppeared to think the bank- up for all time. The Rosetts, actord- ‘erested In au-|ing to her statement, did the’ diggest money forwarding business for imm!- More than 600 letters, contatning sume ef money to be forwarded to relative: of immigrants abroad reached the gen- t week, but news of | gral post-office to-day, addressed to the it did not reach this clty, and the cloe Rosett bank in Stanton street. LT MEN STIMSON FOR TAFT, STRIKE AT TAFT | SAYS NOMINATION INSTATEMENT] SHOULD G0 TO HIM WASHINGTON, March tional Rgosevelt headquarters to-day 1 vote for a| Save out & statement, which said: ‘ther evidence of the manner in witch the ere ysl ee ke re , 4 : Slee. | M2NAgers are conducting the it for toral College. A. enndidate ‘must “be| ¢eleaaten haw come. to Hight in the chosen whose delegates represent voting | form of @ circular letter which is be- Republican States,” ing Federal TEXAS TAFT MEN FIGHT | Northwest VOTE FOR ROOSEVELT | vouniey'nas vs country haw been Secretary of War Admires Roosevelt, but Declares President Best Man Now. CHICAGO, March 6.—Secretary of War Henry L. ®timson when he arrtved here to-day was asked whether Theodore Roosevelt had told him that he would not be @ candidate for the Presidency this year, Mr. Stimson laughed when the ques- tion was put to him and repile “I am not going to discuss politics now. “Did you hear Col. Roosevelt declare that he would not run again?” Mr. Stim. was asked, “No, indeed, I never heard him say that,” replied the Secretary of War, Mr. Stimson continued: ‘It an eMfcient, straightforward and sincere administration of public affairs in this country for more ‘than three years @ wade a man deserving a second nomination for the Prestdency, President Taft ts that man, I am a personal friend of Col, Roosevett, and 1 admire him, but 1 think in this case President Taft 1x the man the Ameri- can people would be wiser tn selecting.” peaeeeerstiiien—cseee TAFT PREPARING SPEECHES IN ANSWER TO ROOSEVELT’S TALK. WASHINGTON, March__6,--President Taft called off the regwiny meoting of the Cabinet to-day, canceled his calling Hat and aspen the Walt evoting muc ntion to correspond: at e and! preparing drafis of some of the apeechos | he will deliver on his trip o Toledo at Chicago the last of the week, President ta ex. In thewe speeches fusilitate (ho work of the bureau. velt, —-. HY. Director””| ACTIVE SECURITIES, yam 2%, ¢ 50,48 0 ebridig Cites United Staten Sigel, 200,105 shared: Readt ; 15,050 .00U sveres 1 ator Vacit A 5 Ha EMS siti 14.040 anaraen “ead ‘ TU EBDAY, MARUM 6, 1922 ous Depositors Mobbing Closed Door ii canes moprenentantre fet, “Tt r Sawa : £* A la woollen mill?” asked Representative 7 ela @ ! thieves and criminats were locked were im the In Run on Failed Private East Side Bank) *i%'sonee. sas: 0: xew vore @ trained nu who was instrumental In ‘ing ol ‘en from Lawrence to New York, also was a witness. Mian Sanger said the condition of }many of the children was horrible. “Out of 119 children only four of them had any underwear on,” said Miss! Sanger “And these people were workini in Stanley. “Yeu,” “Was thelt outer clothing wool?” asked Representative Foster. ‘No; | Most of the clothing was rags.” Miss Sanger sald the Goctors exam- ined the children in New York and that most of-them were sick and emaciated. “You ought to have seen the children eat when we“got them to New York,” aid Miss Sanger, ‘They grabbed the meat and ate it with thelr Hands, they were #o hungry.” po BELL HOP STOLE DIAMOND. Vgren Pass Key Is Found Ring Recovered. Robert Kelly of No. #1 Third avenue, a bell hop at the Hotel Breslin, ‘as iaken before Magistrate Hervert in Yorkville Court to-day charged with stealing a diamond ring fiom the room lof Stewart MoCienaghan, County: Cierk at Ottawa, Canada. | The boy confessed when Detective | Trojan and House Detective Cost'gan | found a pase key for one of the ttoors Jof the hotel sewed to his undershirt | He was held in $2,600 bail for thé Grand | Jury. The ring was recovered from Kelly's brother, who sald he thought | Robert had picked it up in the street. ee Drops De art, J. Louls Singstack, @ retired candy | manufacturef, dropped dead in the Su-! |preme Court, Brooklyn, to-day whi | waiting for the call of the calendar be- Conte: NS. TAFT GASP AT HORROR TALES OF MUL STRKE (Continued from First Page.) whole wagon load of Injured. young woman, not a striker, clubbed by & pollcoman. She was struck sever: times in the back. tion house hours with women and chil- dren in cells, come from Philadelphia, hasn't got such a good record for po- Moe. But the Pennsylvania constabu- lary nevor dared or contemplated such brutality on women and have the police of Lawrence tn this “The Interstate Commerce law was violated when I, who had bought a rall- Tuad‘ticket, was prevented from taking THROWN DOWNSTAIRS TO DARK Under examination by Representative Mardwick, Knebel said he saw things “too horrible to mention.” if wick wanted to know what and the witness in a low voice said: “In the police station that day a man didn't speak much and children were also locked up. Knew from what he heard that his wife fore Justice Kelly. There was a rush Stanley, “I thought they violated th@ gop pnyaicians and the business of the Interstate Commerce law to keep these Qoiet sugpended for an hour until children with thelr parents. Surely you, Ty gy could he taken to the Adams must be mistaken in saying they tried | Me Dod Ul" .' gingstack had « thee dla baer ao what] ait for an accounting against his “What‘on earth did they want to lock Drothes-In-lw the children up for?” demanded Repre- | == —=—= = sentative Pou, “I don't know; ask} them,” sald Knebel. “Is this the same jail where they lock up thieves and cutthroats?” “Same Jail, Same barred ac yoe| “Were these child Congressman i’ou. The mothers were fined. “This is the most have developed so far,” sald Repreven- | tative Pou, nd I wis) you would have} put on the stand every one who knows anything abgut the, way these, children | were locked lip in that place." | CHILDREN IN CELLS WERE LEFr! WITHOUT FOOD. | In the police station where be was locked up Knebel said that all day the children were not anything to ent, Afteen or eighteen of them. | of them were idven at the| he continuct, “Some of the! husbands whose wives were locked up brought children to thelr moters to be uursed. When the case cune some of the ci Learn to Make Your Own Frock We Teach Practical Dress- cutting, Dressmaking, De- signing and Millinery. nis bring their own, materials make fashionable frocks and tried?” asked » they were. | rious thing we! 103 Avwilic dren were forcibly ar taken from their mothers, to be taken Beautiful to a poor farm to be cared for.” = werere the obildren actually locke -ampletida “and yet for wet the fact up in the IF YOUR BABY =~ an HAS A COUGH § Sree Don’t Neglect It . KEELER'S cclla where was a few cells awa; call her in his own language, turnkey told him to stop. yelling, man did not do it, door, the turnkey dragged him out and threw him down the stairs to dark ceils nd he started to children at the locked up in the cells, woman locked up who had a baby two A Mra. Brown, a widow, was locked up there with her children, The women and what the Jail people called coftee—it | waan't coffee—and they didn’t give them After the trial, Uttle children—were dra; weeks before. 4 from their “To be taken to the poor- interrupted _ Representative FOR BABY'S| ARST BATH CUTICURA SOAP Tt is beyond all comparison | the purest and sweetest soap, | while containing delicate emol- | i cough, cold, or sore throat of any k —especially in a child—is a danger i ii rh cases leads t al diseases, It i important for mothers to know tha: Father John’s icine, by means « its soothing, jing ingredients pre ly relieves the throat irritation an: cures the cough or cold in the natura! way. 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