Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
See 10 PUT UP ‘Will Not Leave Bolt Signal Comes but Hold Sepa- rate Convention, According to | Present Pr BY LINDSA ROOSEVELT HEADQUARTERS, satisfaction that ft is a dishonest Se ros ‘be anything you choose to call it.” Whether Theodore Roorovelt himsat fall jead the march-out, in case of a Fetueal to debar contested dele from voting on their own cases, @uestion. A fullback, who is not carry- dag the dail, to use @ familiar footba! Ghustration, is not expected to run for- fumarad and buck the Ine, unlens he ne- eves that by so doing he can add the fast ounce of strength which will make the pay successful. A fullback, in other (words, will not prance about and make faimselt conspicuous on the field for the @ake of attracting attention to his own Personality, ROOSEVELT MAY QO TO THE COLISEUM. If at any moment before this con- Wwention—or the possible two conventions , SOeare activity, Col, Roosevelt believes fee can save the unity of the party or give lasting strength to the so-called “guperseding party” by going into the fea) and aiding in gatning strength out ©f confusion, all the police of Chieaxo an't keep Theodore Roosevelt out of j@e Coliseum, short of knocking hit ‘qmconecious. But at present there is mo immediate expectation by his friends that he will feel it necessary to go. California and Pennsylvanta (etrange- acceptable for a “Post Names of persons from whom Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., pur-| chased Post Toasties Jingles in May will be mailed on receipt of stamped and addressed envelope. We Paid $20.00 for this original May Jingle (Givem as cxampie o: Father is a busy man and has a hungry look, Mother is a suffragette and has Baby's hat isin the ring, he wants a little lunch, So Brother shouts around the house ‘Toasties for the Bunch.” Purchased from R. 6123 Musgrove St. ' Sign here—Name Street Jingle Dept. 568, POSTUM CEREAL CO., LTD., BATTLE CREEK, MICH. Use of above We will buy 50 Post Toasties Jing)cs, eccept- @ble for ueein a Jingle Book, received during June, * 1912, at $20.00 each. Only the Jingles we pay for no Jingles, whether purchased o: turned. Thenames and addresses of » 50 Jingles purchased in June, 191 ‘and mailed to cach enquirer who sends us a Ic stamped and addressed envelope for return. The Jingles will be judged honestly upon merit, so if you are a sensitive person and not a good sportsman don’t try, for we have no time to oe alii | | (Bta® Correspondent of The Evening World). | | which the situation is now put by the Roosevelt campaigners: “We shall leave the convention as soon ns it is established to our Gartly lenve the hall. Ours will be the regular convention, yours may Germantown, nin of ta Follette in the tion to this notion. TAFT MEN TRIED TO KIDNAP n Hoosevelt an porary organiza. | THEIR rae Herbert | Senator Mu have been among what might the outer fringe of the lately. They have n pecans ian who will carry with him a [siderable number of the lukewarm Bultseuls WE N Howrevert men and neainst whom the Taft men will not ret sons exploring v. Hadley and at him, was told they would Idok fine as @ can- ce-President on the ticket crept up t ee ae sald Mr. Hadley, “should young man commit sul- for the Vice-Presidency Y DENISON. Chicago, June 20. CONGRESS HOTEL This is the way convention, but we shall not neces- ly assorted companions) were eager for @ secession and a reading of the Taft organization in the convention out of the party when the first motion to dis- card the Nation Committee temporary roll was voted down Tuesday. ‘The Maine and Massachusetts Roose- velt delegates were anxious to have the break deferred until the final vote on the nominee for President was com- Ploted. They were told frankly that ac- cording to all past behavior of people who deferred rebellion, a protest de- ferred #0 long would only send tho rebels home to sulk in their tents and If you cut your finger, or get any other kind grumble, and would resut altogether | Of Wound, put in harm @nd not at all in good to the party. the Powerful If the information of the Roosevelt Disinfectant organization people is correct, a shivery aervousness has pervaded the aystema| OM it. GN will stop the bleed. of the wise persons of the Taft camp re- cently. They know, for instance, that emis: saries of the Taft organization went to Robert La Follette a few weeks ago and told him he looked fine for a candidate for Vice-President with Mr. Taft. They know that La Follette, who feels iil used and none too well recovered from his_recent nervous breakdown, con- ing and will kill germs that might cause infection. Always have a bottle of CN ready in case of accident. “The Yellow Pachage with the Gable Top" 10c, 28¢. 50c. $1.00 At Drug and Dept. Stores, WEST DISINFECTING CO. 2 East 42nd St, Riise $1000.00 for 50 : Jingles in June. (We paid $1000.00 for 50 Jingles in May), $1000.00 will be paid in June, 1912, for Post Toasties Jingles— $20.00 to each of 50 Persons who send in crisp, snappy Jingles—most Toasties’ ” Jingle Book. FINISH THIS JINGLE Daddy's on the engine that pulls the fast oxpress, Runea mile a minute or faster'n that I guess, When he's home to supper he says" well, let me seo” aly) 1 time to cook, T. FRAM __Date. State Alaress anil mail your Jingles to form of answer is suggested, but not required, “pet up” those whose Jingles are not accepted. Fill in the missing line of the incomplete | Jingle printed above, making the last line include | the name “Post Toasties” or ‘“Toasties,” with correct rhyme and metre. Or, write an original Post Toasties Jingle of not less than 4 lines, any one line of which must contain ‘Post Toasties”’ or ‘‘Toasties.”” will be used, but r not, will be re- the writers of the 2, will be printed As many Jingles may be submitted as desired. No Jingle submitted in May, 1912, will be considered in this June, 1912, offer, One can make this a pleasant form of entertainment, may make some extra money, and in addition become acquainted with Post Toasties —the delicious, ready-to-serve, crisp bits of toasted Indian Corn, 2 ‘Tey-a dish with some milk or cream and a sprinkle of sugar. ® welf that this wae a sien that! | THE EVENING WO! e living,” there are | telephone rang. old employee an- not regarding the Viee-|thoveands, af clean, active, ambitious {swered It, "No," he said, "tam not| KERMIT ROOSEVELT Presidency. If the Taft people will con-| young Republicans who want to see the | Mr. A., Iam Mr. B., the first assistant GRADUATED AT HARVARD. ent to purge the r ft the names of | parly gu ahead, manager.” A few minutes later the thowe wie are now & velt organization to it {8 possible that t tive opposition to Mr, Hadley's nomina- tion, the sounding of the tocsin for the great | seeking One 4 Boys’ Box CaiiBluchers POCFL90O06 000 OOOO OOOOH OOSOOODOOOOCOSSSOOO OOD ware y went elsewhere and hunted| willing, like Samson, to pull the temple |down about them to truetion, when heir own party meth- se eer enacts, | SEEKING A CHANCE TO COM. re will be no post- PROMISE. ‘There are hundreds of delegates com- mitted to Mr. Taft who are eagerly “am chance to get off without moment of| breaking their heads. “They want the a” Creden. | train slowed.” But, as one Roosevelt pat this ia 6 enters yainet, one of the ereatent of them ty and selfish all, says, “The Taft people are afrala For the very reason for fixing interest, and not to aid the cause or | to slacken up to make @ transfer from | the personality of any one man. | Roosevelt to Taft for @ compromise who listens to the talk of the|candidate for fear they lose more to finds them «i wevelt than they gain from Roose- | © like Willam velt for the compromise candidate. roxe may be There was once a new man brought AVE.atT 20T'ST. IN NEW YORK S SHOPPING CENTITE AMMEYER » BASEMENT VALUES ARE ABSOLUTELY HONEST TAKE HEED Mor Basements are veritable junk shops for every department in the store in which they are situated. Th hey always have been considered a dumping ground for damaged goods, merchandise that has outlived its usefulness, and all kinds of trash upon which a low price has been put to make up for a total lack of quality. The Cammeyer moderate priced shoe store in our Basement is run on the same high standard of merchandising as the rest of our business. We tell you just what a shoe is worth, putting no fictitious value on it. When a shoe is marked down we tell you really what its former price was. In short, you can come into our Basement with a feeling of confidence that your money will purchase more real shoe goodness than anywhere else in New York City. These are mighty plain facts, but they just about hit the nail on the head. Men’s Shoes Women’s Shoes $9.50 $9.50 — The best in the World at the price. in AN Leathers White Buck Colonials with Nickel Buckle. eee Canvas 1¢-Butten ' *tun Calf, Patent Leather The styles are new and exclusivejand Gun Metal Oxfords, with us. Pumps and Colonials. Special Sale Women’s About 1000 Pairs Low Shoes Men’s Shoes [Fx ormerly Sold for $3.00 and $3. ~~ Good year Weited Soles Embracing the following styles: in in Patent Colt and Gun ‘Metal, Russia Calf Pumps, Black Suede Button and Blucher. Pumps and ‘T'wo Eyelet Ties. Women’s Pumps and Oxiords, § 2-90 In All Leathers. Girls’ Pumps in Patent Leather, Tan Calf and Some more of those stocky, | in om 3 ]Gun Metal Calf. Knockabout shoes for rough wear at play. Sizes 1 to 514, oth ut 35 | Slee $4.6 to 104, 1 es 91.50 | s,. 2 E, E. LURLINGTON, Vice-President. B way at 13th Street 3 _ Women’s Department 3 General Clearance Sale | : Greatest Ever Held : Entire Stock of Fashionable Spring ?' and Summer Apparel 2 I b ’2 Former Price : This sale will go down in the history of Clearance Sales. % Nothing reserved. ‘ An opportunity to secure a ‘Hackett Carhart’ de- + pendable garment at a fraction of its value. : : wa We Carry Nothing Over : Suits Gowns | Coats Dresses : | Wraps Shirts . | Coatees Waists + No €.0.D.’s None to Dealers No Exchanges RLD, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1913. cues SSWE’LL LEAVE THE CONVENTION, NOT NECESSARILY THE HALL’? ROOSEVELT MEN NOW PLAN <= spirit of the} »| a Condensed HikaNGaran.G = rayne ner | fnto a certain office who understood | has been stolen from him he Is lucky if that he had been hired as firet assistant|he drives three-fifths of tt back to the; BE ga: to the boss, There was already an home corral. | sistant there. The hoss was away. T a new man went to the telephone. “No,” | CAMBRIDGE, Mass, June 20.—Ker- he said, “Mr. A. ig not here, but I am) mit Roosevelt, second son of Col, Roose- M the 0 1% assistant manager of the) veit, receives his degree of bachelor of house.” By the “stperseding conven-|arts to-day at Harvard's annual tion” plan Mr, Roosevelt plans to be | commencement, Young Roosevelt will the "0%" candidate of the Repub-| craduate trom Harvard after but two Hoans. years and a half of college work, where- Ills friends believe that 60 per cent.| as the ordinary course calls for four of the Repwblicand east of the Pall-| vears’ study. He has announced that sades of the Hudson will follow Roose-| he will take wp chemistry as a protes- velt. He may be defeated, “but like] sion, Oille Roosevelt, his cousin, also the man who stampedes the herd which! graduates. He Is to become a physician, Peterman’s Moth Food (Oder less), kills moths, Always First in the Lead for Low Prices At All the 200 James Butler Inc. Stores Best Creamery From the new June grass; é best of ‘aa’ whole year; HBP CUE TO i eistiteis cus | Ch e e Ss e, Best New York State; 1 SMa | CHOICE GROCERIES ~~ CANS FRI Ai All James Butler Licensed Stores i Thursday—F riday—Saturday “i made from milk WITH Belle Mi Ik, EVAPORATED; thick- 6°|| ] GAT GUE W608 6 esisva cers pe Milk, 3 | ] Coltmbi 3 ans 9 f, tee ee 31 Choicest California ie Essie Peaches i177] In the Bean, or a ge at 5 01 0 "= 1 Ib. Best Tea, 50°) FREE With fll I lcs: Bete. BF New Store at 1938 Fulton St., near Ralph Ay, burdens of the housekeepers there, who want the best for the least money. Surety or JA Stamps FREE with All Purchases ALL THE CREAM; Ib. er than cream; tall 10c. Brook c cans 25°| Lemon Clings; Coffee! ean sun, 2S] Stamp: 8 Back this morning to our old Brooklyn stand at the above address, to dighten the gods treigh' sat cnd The Hot Summer 8 Favorite WINES.BREWS, £ LIQUORS 69° 69" | Sandeman &Co.’s Port, Celebrated for its exceptional richness, bot. ‘Port and Sherry, Choice California scleeted vintage, bottle, pale Curtains. DINING ROOM— Oak Sideboard, mirror, Dry Gin, For refreshing rickeys, fizaes, cock- ils; bottle....... Uur Liberal Credit Terms ald $50 Worth $3 Down} z3¢ 1 Princeion $75 Worth $5 Down) ~— Wee! Cock ails, $100 Worth $10.00 Dowr.§ ous Martini, ‘85° 500 $50. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE MAILED FREE 1417-1423 THIRD ‘AVE S*AVE..r80°STh I pays to pay cash Harlem ‘ Furniture 20° Special Reserve a AM A blend of fine oid private-stock rye 4 to hiskics ; forthe home and your friends; j of rare quality and excellence; regular $1.25 bottle, cut to ; Kingussie Scotch, 79°] qd Sple ondid for hot-weather high-balls; bottle, i Power’s Irish Whiskey, rey 41 The famous Three-Swaliow; J. B. bottle, cut to Stamps FREE with Case of 94 $ LAGER BEER tor A Liebmann’s or Ruppert’s, the Leading Home Brews. ’ ‘