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: “ot Support for Root that came from Iilinois similar assurances had come from other States where the delegates were pledged by their preferential vote for Roosevelt's ngmination. They do not have to vote with the Roosevelt men on any other proposition, and the Taft men hoped to-day that this support would be large. And if the Roosevelt men try to hold a second convention in the hall, the Taft men say the Roosevelt men oa THE EVENING WORLD would be relieved of the instructions and could vote for Taft on the first: ballot. ~ CLAIMS 42 MAJORITY FORT. R S Virginia's delegates will line up, twenty-two to two for Taft, accord. ing to a canvass completed this afternoon by the Taft supporters, The delegation in session voted unanimously against the selection ,, Of Root for temporary chaiiman, Protest against permitting delegates if seated by the National Committee in contested cases to vote on their own | <® cases on the convention floor was also voiced in a resolution unanimously | * carried. f But the Roosevelt men are not conceding anything to Taft. é “We have a clean majority of 42 votes for Roosevelt and will con- = trol the convention,” said Senator Dixon, “Senator Borah will be C chosen Temporary Chairman over Senator Root by an even larger ma- = jority. 1 make this claim after eliminating a lot of votes that look © favorable. We are going to make the fight from the jump.” The Senator declared that many Southern delegates who are in- structed for Taft would vote with the Roosevelt forces on organization | and had so assured him. He also said that four more Georgia delegates had followed the five who yesterday signed the open letter to Roosevelt, pledging him their support. OTHERS ARE COMING, SAYS SENATOR. “There will be others from Georgia before the day is over,” the Senator continued, “and I aiso expect to make public later in the day a letter to Roosevelt signed by several South Carolina delegates pledging him their support. There ts not a Southern State that has not broken. 2. “I can frankly tell you that 1 know nothing about the situation in New York, but I make this claim, that we control the convention. We will fight from the start against this attempt to murder the Republican party; we will save tt and nominate Roosevelt by 42 majority. Put that » im your notebook and see if this, my first definite claim, does not prove | to be about right when it's all over!” | ~ HADLEY CLAIMS IT FOR T. R. | : Gov. Hadley of Missouri, the Roosevelt floor leader, was equally | ge emphatic in claiming a majority for Roosevelt. He asserted that 10 con- lested delegate endorsed by the National Committee should be seated in i New Jersey, Gov. and Gov. Johnson of California, labored ROOSEVELT AND AIDES (Sketched In Chicago by MAURICE KETTE | MONDAY, JUNE 17, 1912.” BID FOR VOTE REPOR mc HARG CHAIRMAN ROOSEVELT Committee of the Colonel's staff, covering every Posstble contingency. A oard of strat- ergy, including George L. Record of Hadley of Missouri with the programme to-day, Because ny angles to the fight determined to lay out @ battle f * the convention, : “We are not unmasking our batteries now,” he said, “but a delegate | , with stolen credentials shall not have a vote in this convention if we can help it. By to-morrow we will have out plans completed. We shall do Gothing that is not regulat and American; nothing that will not be ap- proved by the American people.” & pied by those duly elected or chosen,” Taft managers to-day planned.to demand an investigation by the National Committee of thelr charges af bribery of delegates, dozen affidavits are said ta be in nossession of the Taft forces, and the President's supporters are charging that in several instances as much as $5,000 was offered to delegates for transfer of their allegiance, Roosevelt managers characterized as “too ridiculous to deny” an alleged affidavit from F,H. Cook, a negro preacher and Taft dele; ate | ? ~~ Vidalia, La., charging attempted bribery by a “Mr. Thompson rise { eirahe ards horton a + Colorado.” Cook swears he was offered $1,000 to come over to the} Roosevelt camp. Roosevelt’s action in coming to Chicago and taking The Roosevelt leaders asserted that the convention would not be Morganized “with frauduient delegates in the places that should be occu of his campaign has worked to his advantage. COLONEL GIVES ALL ORDERS. His presence has crystallized, in a sense, the force of his boom. It Is all Roosevelt now. Senator Dixon and the reform boss, Mr. Flinn of Half a }#P4 Tatt prognostications ever since the Personal charge plan which would embrace any devel- opment. The Colonel's loaders will be drilled in this programme so that they Will be able to understand just what to do when the fleld marshal of the forces, Gov, Hadley, enters the fr For the Ume in the history of the Party It seemed probable to-day that there might be a minority report trom the National Committee on the seating of contested delegates, But there enters into calculations in thie campaign the element of bluff t distinguinned th the Roosevelt | selection of delegates was inaugurated in the various States. DELEGAT TIED TO T. R. BY SELF INTEREST. It 1s hard to believe what the Coionel says, and it is equally hard to believe what President Taft’s boosters say. who, hile they do not credit all the claims jof the Colonel, admit he has the strate- | ste advantage in that his delegates are Senerally bound to him by closer ties of self interest than are the Taft dele- RIVAL FORECASTS: “CONVENTION FAIR,” “WARE TORNADOES.” CHICAGO, Ju! W.—The United States Weather Bureau rose to the occasion to-day and issued this sup- plement to its regular forecas ' Spectal forecast for convention week: With the development of a cool, high area in the Northwest the ble for gen- fair and comparatively cool er in Chicago for three or four days. Political prophets issued a forecas; of thelr own in the following bul- letin: “Forecast—Area of great excite- ment forming in Michigan avenue, {Sates bound to the President. It 1s | Undisputed that many of the delega Who are under {natructtons to vote for ‘Taft are firmly convinced he cannot be! elected should he lead his party in the | coming campaign. On the other hand, ’ Pittsburgh, and Gov. Hadley of Missouri, and Gov. Stubbs of Kansas, and jit, malority of the Roosevelt adherents Gov. Johnson of California and others who have been mouthpieces for belleve the Colonel can be elected and they are willing to take the Colonel are now as dumb as professional politicians cam well be, S18 with him to success. When the Colonel tells them to go, they go, and when he says come, | « they come. And the Taft forces are flustered, So heartened are the Roosev yy the accumulation of di on, chargeable perhaps to the Colonel's visit, that they have announced their intention | of forcing a show of strength at the centring to-night at the Audito- rium and extending to-morrow to the Coliseum, wita low barometric Pressure and indications of viol storm. Air waves general the week over heated substrata, Look out for tornadoes.” brother is not oniy an object of sollct- tude to the politicians who are man- aging the opposition nooms, but he has been adopted, so to speak, by the Chi- cago colored man and phrother, THEY'RE ALL GOOD fo THE COL. With the eight delegates at large from Massachusetts now boldly but | trom Mississippi and nine from Georgia and one from New York—the | » ngthened by approximately twenty-four votes, ‘The meeting of the Ta® dolom Niedtinghaun of Missourt, from Texas to-day marked tho passage! North Cavollna, P; of Col, Cecil Lyon, for twelve years) and Edwards of W the Nationa! Committceman from the] teemen Whiting o: , Lene Mar State. Lyon's successor us| of California and 5 National Committceman is H. F. Mac+|and State Chairmen Wa: of Penn- + Gregor. He chosen at ting] syivania, Brown of Onlo and Knox of " of the twentyaalx Taft delegates trom] Michigan, | ‘Texas at their meeting to-day, Eugene} “We denounce the fraud by which) Marshall declared that the fight in| the created majority of the Republi. | Texas had been between Lyou and ational Committee has made up | MacGregor, and that Lyon had fa rary roll of th ale » back on Rootevelt in the hope that he) Vention,” the statement deel and would ald him in retaining his cons | we dony the right of the committee trol. Marshall su; od that the/to make a roll which might result in Moosevelé men in the delegation be mination that 1s effected by dis. asked to unite with the Taft men, He Y and trickery. We desire to © said that a number of them were! serve notice on the committee and on 1 4 anxious to do so, ) the convention that the rank and file AN organized attempt was also bexun| of our party never has permitted dis- to get the solid Texas delegation for| lionesty in the party machinery to be Prowdent Taft. The men vehind the! @ teat of party regularity.” | movement insisted that they would suc-| Aw proof that the Moosevelt forces ceed and that Taft will get the entire) have an organized plan to boit, Congress. | @ delegation before the vote is|man McKinley this afternoon referred reached in the convention. This was|to the ection of the Oklahoma cavfous to- Planned by the Taft manage their|@ay, Tho State delegation, he sald, by a ‘answer to the attempts the Roosovelt| Vole of 18 to 2 refused to agree toe | men were making to get the negro vote| Port the convention nomine nis waa! of the South for the Colonel's candidacy, | the best proof possible, McKinley de. The T. KR. men tn the Onto detema- clared, of what all the Roosevelt men ine tion, thirty-four strong, put through the | tended to ao. e| gomplete slale of committee assisn-|NEBRASKA REPUDIATES CHAIR. | “ments, Senator Burton announced that MAN ROSEWATER, he recognized that the Roosevelt mon] Nepudiation of thelr Natl had both the right and the authority! mitteeman, Victor L, © to name tho ticket and that he would|man of the Natio therefore voice no opposition, caure “he did not 5 rry Daugherty, Taft deiemate-at-| or views of the large, followed Burton with the states] Nebraska in the sdellberations ment that he did not want the country | Nattonal Comyn: to think that the vote of the Roosevelt | Nebraska mm Was unanimous as the Taft Aelge | A resolution deman wai throt H call In silence, | water “elther change refusing (wo vot j#lan' was amended pr NEW BROADSIDE AGAINOT THE |!" offorin of J. 1 COMMITTEE, J substitute unanimously Another broadside against the Na- tional Committee was fired by Senator Dixon this afternoon in tha shape of a etatement signed by National Commit- ‘seemen White of Kansas, Thorson of ‘ Minnesota, Virginia; Commit: Li viahes Party in tn "voted by the ng that Rose attitude o pally hrough Dua Water raps for | order to-morrow the Roosevelt Meuten- | ants will have already prepared a cdm- | plete battle plan--a programme map) out in advance and theoretically at lea laration on the part of Col, Roosevelt very beginning of the Convention, “not officially claimed for Roosevelt, although the Colonel presented them | pi ,o%4 bi to President Taft right after the primaries in that State, and six delegates | Bo Senator toot, the # nal Committee. same being Mr. Woodruff of Brooklyn—the Roosevelt forces were Senator Borah wit! not ‘accept the bur- | den unless he can be shown that he te morally certain of prevatiing over the Pearson of | Senator from New York in tho vote. rlesdy of Oklahoma |Ig he decides to run for 4# been about decided that the ‘elt forces shall nominate Senator h as temporary chairman to oppose tion of the Na- ‘Temporary Chairman, and jays his pians accord- ingly, the announcement will be a sad blow to the Taft aspirations, for it will amount to a dec- that he has enough delegates to contro) the Temporary Chairman, WOULD MEAN SCRAMBLE FOR BAND WAGON, Of course, if Senator Moral made Ter ensue @ ac ta get on the Roosevelt band wamon, It would mean the Roosevelt forces would organise the permanent convention, put in a credentials committee that would undo the work of the National Com- mittee and seat ali the contesting Roose- Veit delegates, and make certain the Aomination of the Colonel on the frst ballot, ‘Tals is one of the Roosevelt dreams. may prove as ephemeral as the average drei But if it works out there will be no necessity for presenting the name of William Howard Taft to the Repudlican Convention of 1912, un- © Roosevelt management, out of party feeling and compunetion, should allow a vote to be passed thal kindly for having House for four Roosovel There a should be and keeping Col, m. ous signs that of the Roosevelt b: wird far and wide, Natlonal Coma feeman Victor Rosewater of Nebras expires with the present and whose Ceposition was the Ccionel @ couple of encountered coming out rooms in the Congress t night, Mr. Rosewaier hm allegiance tw Par was ep, but that he deemed it the awa, is | Pellcy to keep in touch with the situa. tion in the widest sene “i ‘The colored man and brother wearing & delegates’ badge, -\ator Root would be the ORED DELEGATES. The report has gone out tn the dis- trict of Chicago known as Dahomey that the negro delegures trom south of the Mason and Dixon {ne are ether plenteously upholstered at the present time ur are to be up. holstered after that fa hours. In consequ a darky in Chicago tan": paying for any- thing. The cottonfleld delegates reached Con- gress Hote! with a bocyguard of fasuily attired fellows from the South Stare sereet station, and the bodyguard ad- heres to him even while he {5 in the inner sanctums of the statesmen, About every halt hour there moves down Pea- cock alley, the long show corridor of the Cong: @ dark out decorated ay. wregation that reminds one of the pa- rade of a negro minstrel show. An Eastern negro, who is for ‘Taft because he holds a Government job, was feen in earnest conversation with cus of his race who wore # badge proclaim- ing him to be a delegate. When they had separated the Eastern man sald: “I am distrustful of that gentleman. He looks to me like he was ge ready to flop. He 1s certainly peeved, Senator Elihu’ Root passed him about half an hour ago and didn't speak to him, Whenever you see a colored man Betting peeved Mike that you ean cal- culate he is getting ready to do some- thing to the man he fs peeved a Speaking of Senator Root, lie has brought with him to Chicago a hind jand genial disposition, which he boy rowed from somebody en route, Ord narily the Senator ts about as effurt as the stone liona in front of the public Ubrary, In the absence of Senator Henry Ca bot Lodge it was anticipated that Sen human ice f tory at cits conyen | Far from such is the case. Senator arrived yeste volunteered to newspaper phot day in iis perei alot caused a by buiring: into |zene, patting th linjecting bimeelf | conversation, |The Senator's quarters are open to | owl Ax a matter of fact, When the pose ray) tn. sue) ons about estion o of ordinary citl. the bucks end with currency | all tor 1 | 6 |Dixon's latest claim, issued at § to another and put through a» drill twhes lay. To Gov. Hadley of Mis- scribed the credit for framing up this plan of rehearsing the Roosevelt delegates. Said Gov. Hadley to-day: “We thought it would be a good plan to accustom them to act together and think together.” another innovation in conren- been customary to tes at Intervals, but the of assembling the Reose- twice a day and putting @ course of schooling | Velt adherent Ithem through military ideas of organisation. j Im the matter of platform both sides are more or less up in the alr. The Taft people are torn between the desire tu honored methods of government expedient of appealing to the cl, which Col. Roosevelt has drawn strength. form was brought to Chicago from Washington by Senator Root. It is ex- pected this draft will be considerably shot to pieces in the deliberations over | rallying call to the people. As for the Roosevelt plattorm build they are even more harassed, The ex- | treme radicals, such Gov, Stubds of Kans: nd Gov. Johnson of Callforn! are for a red headed, red faced peraplring platform calling for th itlative, referendum and recall and far reforms. These violet progressive are not at ail satisfied that Col. Roos velt will stand for their theories in the platform, for did not he say two weeks ago at Oyster Bay that he could afford to be conservative? ‘LIKELY TO BE BITTER FIGHT | ON RADICAL PLANKS, \ Here will be the struggle In fashion- ig the Roosevelt platform: On t one id the militant Stubbs type, wanting wet everything in; and on the other ind the Filnn type, wanting to keep some things out. ‘There is likely to be @ bitter fight over the radical plauks, but the Col- onel’s supporters are confident his diplomacy will surmount such ob- stacles as may arixe, “If the Colonel can show hi in grab the nomination,” marked one of his managers, “He'll have that Stubbs out- fit eating out of his hand on the plat- form," Furthermore there is to be figured in the preparation of that platform the desires of Senator La Follette, and the La Follette delegation in the convention. This delegation consists of thirty-six men, each of, whom exudes eloquence like a collapsible tube, Vour years axo @ handful of Wiscon- sin delegates, under the able leadership Of Representative Cooper, stood the con- vention on its figurative head for al- most a whole afternoon, trying to force into the platform some of the very {deas which Col, Roosevelt subsequent- ly adopted and called his own, This year the La Follette outfit, coming to thirty-six strong and holding, from present appearances, a whole handful of trumps, bide falr to create some- lthing of whirlwind both in the com- | e on resolutions and convention id the from his managers that a La Follette platform 1s to be presented to the committee, There 1s every chance that the more radical provisions of this platform Will be more or less gently eliminated, In this event a minority report will be presented and the argument will be carried to the Convention Hall, There }is also the chance the La Follette man. Jagers, by trading on the strategic im- portance of there thirty-six delegates, Jin the preliminary convention pro- ceedings be able to get things {into the platform whieh they could not otherwise ge: in with a chisel, | WHAT IS WHEN THEY ARE NOT FIGHTING IN CHICAGO CHICAGO, June Col, Roosevelt will the ouese of | find a formidable array of hoodoo teens around his Stare" IN ACTION Evening World Caricaturiet.) shows that the Colonel has not lost hie) , adhere to the Constitution and tne time- | A tentative draft of the piat- | oe Giw PERKINS labelled Dixon's room, which is on the hee floor, to make it “Room 1313." & good luck sign, Ah, he has arrivod—the original Roose- velt ‘third term man, stances all other criginal velt men by at least a month. “On Jan. 28," he said, “I called a mect- ing of all Roosevelt sympathizers in Oklahoma and thus started the Roose- velt nation-wide boom.” A throat epidemic spread through the camps to-day, driving the boomers t the dru; ‘es voice, usually audible above the din and roar of the Roosevelt camp, dropped into @ hoarse, rusty rut. in the who has absolved cs. Four years ago The most talked of missing man Chie Fr M. Hit it fro Uitchcock was “Former Senator Beveridge will accept second pli on the Roosevelt ticket, although he will not meek it," said Del ry Horace C. Stillwell of Anderson, “Thay Iked with the believe that he will be the of Col. Rocseveit.” Tod., to-da: Senator an running mi — J. Henry Smythe jr. of Philadelphia, known as the grand old party mega: phoue man, arrived to-day at the Ham- jfton Club. With megaphone and flag Smythe led the 190 convention in its ene | thusiastic “Roosevelt” ovation. Sinythe, who 1 Braduate of the University of Pennsylvania, $s aMilated with the | National Republican ewe League, He hopes to “come back" at the pres- Jent convention. | Nicholas Rooreveit, nephow of Col, | Roosevelt is around boosting Vacle Ted, | Young Roosevelt was coxswain of the freshmen four at Harvard last year, Senator La Follette's ohildren are in chicago, prepared to stay through the convention, Robert jr., Philip, Mary and Fola, with Fola's husband, George Middleton, motored from Washington. it is expected the Senator wil! Join them here. _—_—__ GAYNOR “DARK HORSE” BOOM HAS APPEARED IN CONVENTION CITY. BALTIMORE, June 17.—Headquar- ters of the Democratic National Com- mittee were moved to-day to rooms in the convention hall, where National Chairman Mack and his associaty com- mitteemen will conclude the remaining details for opening the convention, a week from to-morrow, || Two “dark horse” booms for the Presidential nomination were discussed here to-day by national committeemen, ‘The booms were for Mayor Gaynor of New York and Gov. Eugene Foss of Massachusetts, If the movement in be- half of Mayor Gaynor ix being encour- aged by Charles I", Murphy it could not be learned here, but those directing the candidacy of Goy. Wilson sald they had been informed that Leader Murphy be- Meved New York should make no choice for President until after the Chicago convention, The movement for Gov. Foss was launcjed by Frank Hendrick of New York, who said the Governor's name might not be taken up until the second ballot. National Committee- man Sullivan of Ilinols said he had not heard that the Illinois del were trying to secure the Vice. dency for their State. Regarding repeated reports that the New York, Indiana and Illinois delega- tions would uhite to make the nomina- tion, Mr. Sullivan said: “Iiinois delegates will vote as a unit and continue to vote throughout the convention. We are for Clark." | “Will you vote for Clark after the first ballot?” "I may be dead then, and I'm not go- ling to tell what we will do,” answered Mr, Sullivan, Headquarters for Speaker Champ ; Clark and Gov, Wilson were opened to- day, The name of Mayor John F. Fitager- d of Boston was put in the sts for Temporary Chairman to-day, Fitzgerald s the Chairman of the Massachusetts delegation, which has been instructed for Champ Clark, but which mayi break after the first ballot or two and sup- port Its favorite son, Gov. Eugene N. iy he would not refuse it. Senator Culber. rived with the dvclar: Dixon sald that the number was! (ROOSEVELT RUSH ILIKE CYCLONE AS "HIS LAN GATHERS | Wild and Woolly Western | | Delegation Tramples All Over | Itself to Reach Him, | | SLAP HIM ON THE BACK. Stampede in Elizabethan Room Like Bunch of Texas Steers Let Loose. | BY LINDSAY DENISON. | (Sa Correspondent of The Bveuing K tos) the corridors around the Rous velt headquarters on tie second floor of the Congress Motel were as jammed &: Broadway on election night. The crowds aurged into the Hlorentine | Room, the overflow and gene ude- ville department of the headquarters, | | and then back into the hall again am | again, milling Hke the angry bewildered | Western steers and Texas longhorns #0 many of them were, From mouth to mouth passed Senator o'clock to-day but dated at 2 o'clock in the morning, In which the Senator said that Roosevelt would have a clear majority of forty-two on the temporary organl- zation proceedings and would do even | Detter in the fight for the permanent | organization. | The declaration of the Cummins peo- ple and of the Virginia and other Taft | delegations that they will, without obeying their nomination tnstructions, stand with the Roosevelt men for fair play in organizing the convention has cleared the air mightly. It {@ @ peculiar feature of this con- vention that matters which are dis- cussed in hissed whispers in the inn most sanctums of legations are blurted out openly in the intoxicating whirl and surge of the crowds in the lobbies. Thus the following incident shows the temper of the moment in T. R.'s camp. Two of his most.intimate lieutenants were in conferenge in the middle of the lobby. “But suppose they say they will not accept him as a compromise?” said one. "Then to H— with them,” sa'd the| other man, even closer to ol. Roosevelt | than the other. “If they wont save ap- pearances for themselves by taking him ~~by G-—- they'll take Borah whether | they want him or not.” MR. PERKINS’S SMILE FLASHED BUSILY HERE AND THERE. George W. Perkins flashed his smile in and out of the Roosevelt parioi t nearly regular half hour intervals al! | morning. | Frank Henry, the official hunter of the Taft organizers’ goats, went in and stayed. But most of the Colonel's morning wes used in shaking hands with the delegations from Oklahoma, who are now ail here and snorting for @ stampede, Illinois, Massachusetts and New Jersey. Ay official announcer appeared at eleven and roared through the lobby that “All alternates and delegates were in the ‘Elig-a-beeth-e-an-Room,’ Immediately thereafter ensued sight which on cooler days with less} urgent affaira prevailing would have! been as amuring as a circus, a wild! west show and a zoo combined, | COLONEL CATAPULTS THROUGH | THRONGS TO GOLD ROOM. | Surrounded by a@ little knot of his| al retainers headed by United! Marshal Tyre of West Virginia and the ever faithful nephows, dore Douglas Robinson and Geo: len Roosevelt, the Colonel flushed o: face, his smile gleaming, perepiratior dripping from his nose and the lobes | of his ears catapulted through a densely packed crowd toward the Gold Room, al eo fe Em- | For the June Bride. 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