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{ } { i } ~ FROM A ‘ROOSEVELT F Followers of New Party at Bitter \ Odds With Personal Well Wish- ers—Colonel Would Spurn Democratic Nomination. | (Stat Correspondent of The ng Wort.) | CHICAGO, June 24. -- Theodore Roosevelt remained quietly in his Iiv- fog rooms in the Congress Hotel most of the morning, before taking the Twentieth Century Limited for Wew York, He had a short confer- ence with the Illinois Roosevelt dele- gation. It developed that enmitics have arisen between his personal friends and the hottest advocates of the “Roosevelt Revolution.” The ‘words are William Allen White's. The nomination of a proonunced pro- gressive by the Democratic convention will make no change in the plans of Col. Roosevelt to head the new party A positive statement came from Roose- volt after some discusison arcund the headquariers of the possibility that a known “progress Democratic presidential nomination In answer to the question “Will your position be influenced t Baltimore convention?” said | “Ht will not ba. t shall not depart) from what I said on Saturday night. 1) Shall accept the progressive nomination on a progressive platform and shall Aight the battle through to the end. This town is still tingling to-day with that Roosevelt meeting of Saturday night. It makes no difference how aynical one may have come to be regarding the Roosevelt tradition of myth, whichever one pleases to call it, that meoting was an event. No one who was dn Orchestra Hail when Theodore Roorevelt walked out! on the pliftform will ever forget the! surging feelings which stirred up in his heart from the time when the audience first rose and screamed until) Roosevelt finished the speech, which! wax not 40 much an expression of his @wn convictions, bitter as they were, as it was a reflection of the wrathful fighting spirit ombodied in the men apd women before him. Men who have jeered at Theodore 1 might receive they Col, Roosevelt | Roose’ up and waved thelr arms and cheered until their volcos Were hoarse whispers. They walked eut into the street after it was over and argued with one another, each in- @isting that the other had not fully understood how big were the feelings Joose in the hall. no public notice that the Orchestra Hall meeting was to be held. Word was passed from mouth to mouth two ‘hours before it was held. Mich- {gan avenue was blocked from Adams to Monroe street an hour before the! Proceedings started, ‘The thing was im the alr. There was to bea fight. The message Was flashed all over the city wherever | Republican convention people happened | to be that the battle cry was to be | sounded at Orchestra Hall. It has been custom to call political meetings | “rallies For once the term made} iteelf true In that Orchestra Hall Meeting was’ the wild how! of coyotes i through the wage brush, the Gull grow! of New York's east aide, the hiss of the waste places of the north and the plutter-plutter of the fountains among the palm trees, HE MERELY VOICED FIERCE ANGER OF CROWD. ‘Yes, laugh if you will; you were not You did pot see conventional men of the staidest sort lean forward ‘on thelr arms and sob as though their hearts were breaking. You did not seo; the other kind of woman (who thinks she is conventional) stand up on her ewat and scream and scream like a girl ina reformatery “ shing out.” Theodore Roosevelt the individual did angry heart of a crowd aulked and sulked until it was ferment- img to the bursting point, But after Johnson of California had fed fire to them and Prendergast had played on the feelings unt!! everybody was trembly, Theodore Roosevelt, the embodiment of all that 3 fo: te ed out on that platform and played on the meeting as though it had been a players: . The man was eside himself. He had fa typewritten speech im his hands. From it, now and ayaln, he read words of Pinchot, of Van Valkenburg, of Munsey, of any and all the more or less fanatl- ca} self-constituted tribunes of the peo- who have attached themseives to m. But in the main he #ruck out anew. He said the things which were in the minds of the mad hundred filled the reats before him lle now half the time what he was sa big fighting tune played 1 Rooseveit as the justrument. SWEPT THEM OFF THEIR FEET WITH “FIGHT.” « who 1 not « with A lot of people with sodden automatte minds sat around and sald to each other “We are seeing the funeral of the Re- Publican party. We are seeing history in the making. America {x being made over.” In the seat next to The Evening World | as a Wonder of the u one of those elected by Ife to see 's heads sliced oft China, to gallop unscathed across South American plazas in the r to crawl out of sleep.ng reporter dst of revor FROM ADVOCATES OF HS CONVENTION “REVOLUTION” et) bags in | « ote, to greet the discoverer of a | RIENDS SPLIT n hie Rood A an legs and turned his mouth to the ceiling and howled like | A Wolf of the plains, He was making an ase of himseit and he knew It. 1 don't care, voy, he said in his coherent momenta, "I don't care. It is] 000." The Jate 1. C. Bunner wrote a story. of an insane camp meeting which was reaching the point of battle, murder and sudden death, He told how a@ saintly old bishop rose up and simply and} uttered the doxology and storm © Was no saintly bishop there 8 night. People went out and clawed the alr until ex- hauation overcame — th and they dragged themselves to nd to sleep. AND T. R. 18 HAPPY WITH JOY OF BATTLE. One more example, or two, men both, The first solemn young individual as might be found any day stopping and starting traMe at Mroadway and Canal street. | re velt was half through young man was waving one hand and his brown in the other and shouting deep, The other policeman smiling-eyed person with helme guttural noises, was a fat, DIM. BESIDE .GAYNO! PIC TORE. AMAPRESS ASSOWATION strawberry marks on his features, the midst of the riot he Walked over to an utter Hed him a perfectly good $17.50 po- Model revolver and said, “For n's sake take this or I'll begin to shoot.” The three or four thousand people who were privileged to see this hys- terla are most of them going about Chicago to-day trying to cool their fevered brows by taxtcabbed breexes. They are dipping thelr handkerchiefs In the sses and mopping their fore wl heads, Hut not Theodore Roosevelt, His first, last and middie name to-day Is Joy, the tle, He hates Peace. He says this isn't so, but the people of these United States know better, Ho has started the biggest trouble of his life. He goes into the battle laughing thing worries him, Perkins and the F nehots and Munsey | lot of other people who stand ney are willl with him, despite Predictions that they would | him overboard when the real }test of thelr loyalty came, His hat |ts in the ring. And to his own aston. ishment, it Ie fair to guess, Stubbs and Johnwon and Dixon and Perkins and a lot ding ready to | pune) aud all who Jattempt to Mrt ft —_—.] WEARY DELEGATE: BACK FROM CHIC. . | WON’T SAY A WORD, RET LOLITA TROIS PTT IIT Committee, THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1912. ‘ARS MINGLE WITH CHEERS AS THE COLONEL THE DAY OF REST IN BALTIMORE Sketched in Baltimore by MAURICE KETTEN, Evening World Caricaturist. Sy a ROOSEVELT MAN ISOUSTED FROM NEW COMMIT F, B. Stanley Replaces White, Who Wouldn’t Pledge His Support of Taft. CHICAGO, June —Powell Clayton, Republican” National mmitteeman from Arkansas, the oldest member of the committee and whose membership, with an dnterval of four yeara, extends from 1872, was made temporary chalr- man of the new Republican National which convened in execu- tive session to-day in tha Coliseum. Alvah H. Martin of Virginia, was named temporary secretary. One of the surprises was the absence of Wiillam Allen White of Kansas and the presence of F. B. Stanley of Kansas Commttteeman White had told the Kansas delegation that he was undecided whether he could support the candidate of the convention, Prealdent Taft, and Mr. Stanley w: accordingly chosen as State committe man, F. B, Stanley, through the pr convention campaign, was an ardent Roosevelt man, To-day he deciared that he Was willing to act with the tlonal Committee, Walter F. Brown of Ohio also took his seat with the committee, Before en- tered the room he sald no plan of action had n decided on by the Roosevelt and that he would sit with the commit- Ppointment of the committee of nine to confer with President Taft and ascertain his wishes regarding the naming of a chairman and the conduct | wi of the campaign. It is expected that the Tatt ell Clayton, Arkansas: Roy O, West, Munots; John J. Adams, Iowa; Charles B. Warren, Michigan; Thomas K dringhaus, Missourl; a w Hampshire; Newell Sanders, 'T |B hessee; Alvah H, Martin, Virginia; 8.| A. Perkins, Washington | As soon as the committes has cons ferred with President Taft it ls expected another meeting will ‘be called and the organization the committee will be completed with the election of perma- nent officers, Victor Rosewater, acting chairman of the old National Committee, attended the meeting, holding the proxy of L, B, ley of Mississinp!, ise of the clause in the resolu- adopted Saturday night, which tion gives the committee ftself power to fill} all yacancles “created by death or others | wise,’ the ousting of tl Roosevelt mon Omega Delegates and alternates of the New York County delegation to the Chicago Convention returned at noon to-day tn 1 train on the New York Ce t Mirman & as ent }from the Grand Central stat his unsme at Bra Reach to get A vest and asked to be excused from any comment on the r¢ t Bome of the te legates Were on the sw it at 4 and other Special Fears ¢ delegates from le Talat it and Massa. wusetts Were also detached from the special at Albany to go over the other Dole, And what did he do? He rose up reeds : Toothache Earache & Soak a piece of cotton with this wonderful Oil, Place it in the cavity | of the tooth or in the ear, Then ‘rub some more Oil around the af- fected parts. It gives quick relief. Trial bottle 19<. jlarge bottles agc., 509 SENATOR O'GORMAN| of th National Committee, | was looked for if they refused to sign the pledge. | The ten Roi ting Was brief and adjourned | the Calltorn! LA. ¢ Whiting, Ohio; tiitam Howell, North ( homa, President will name bis secretary Charles D, Hilles. . The mittee to walt on Presses | The commit nposed of the following: Pow. | NeXt Monday! In the National Commit mittee to make the N dGnslishg Sauce At once the most savory and most economical sauce obtainable. |CARPET J 8 J, W, WILLIAMS | [CLEANING 353 West 54th St | OUTSIDE | ROOM’ GO3476 Commi other BY tion in United of Ame! cause 1 rupt. Roosev as the manent sevelt supporters still in committee were: It Avery, Frederick Hale, Maine; Minnesota; Borden D. ’. F. Brown, W. '. Priestly, Okla~ | of nine decided to meet | ew Willard Hotel | onfer with Pres!-| White House, The zed the com- Washington and t Taft at th publica onal € Once You Try It, | Yow ll Always Buy It— | DDYS 10° Per bottle... At Your Grocer's be named. | Roosevelt whether they intend to withdraw from the committee. ROOSEVELT PRAISED LONDON, June 4—The Pall Gazette to-day praised Roosevel “There ts every reason to belleve that the future will justify the Koosevelt and his friends. and Democratic parties ts cynical, perfunctory and largely cor- “Regardless THE WIGWAM PACIFIER: |. 0% na sunnson. en FIND DESERTED SHIP HERE. Jersey, North Carolina, South Dakota SER TREN WHEN MURPHY BUNGLES. |.00, attest g, olyanttte. | Weanaenen Lames senen {sts in Massachusetts and a National tteeman from that State ds yet to The representatives of the States who were missing were men. It was not stated Although they had abandoned the schooner, Fred Roessner, bound from Wilmington, N. to New York with lumber, on June 13, Capt. A. B. Chase and five members of the crew, who ar- rived to-day on the Cuneo Frult Com- pany's steamer Medelrense, met the abandoned ship lying peacefully at anchor off Staten Island. When several days out from Wilming- ton, a heavy gale struck the lumber schooner. She rolled the masts out and for two days the crew tried to rig up a -| mast to keep her before the w! new party in the| found it hopeless. Five days later they tes, saying: were sighted by the United Fruit Com- pany’s ste: to Kingston, Jamaica. ed New York the schooner was aband: ed and the derelict destroyer Seneca set out to blow up the wreck. Instead, whe: it found the schooner, its condition wai s0 good she was towed to port. The crew and capain shipped from Ji on the next steamer and arrived to-day. The abandoned achooner had been in port for a week. Capt, Chase took command of her again. ———— W. WALDORF ASTOR’S PAPER IN LONDON. launching 8 action of ‘The division rican politics into the Republican doomed be- it has developed a system which of immediate results, elt's revolt will figure in history inauguration of a great and per- change.” GIVES NEW WAR CR RIVAL BOOMERS HAVE NOVEL WAYS OF SEEKING VOTES Sashes, Electric ‘Houn’ Dawgs’ and Lithographs Figure in Good Natured War. *. BALTIMORE, June %4.—Ingpnulty of the campaign managers of the Demo- cratic Presidential aspirants is being put to the test to find some novel way to advertise thelr particular hero of the hour. Almost from tha start, the Wilson hatbands became popular. They bore the alliterative motto, Win With Wi- son." ‘The Clark men profited by the example and got out hatbands with the words ‘Champ Clark” in big red letters, But the Missourt advertisers went further, They got out a spectalty for women. Thesa were in reality “Champ Clark” hatbands with several inches length added so as to mgke them suttable for sasles. ‘The Wilson forces procured a spacious banquet hall, extending the entire width of the hotel in which to enter- tain the visiting de! They re- tained an octette to chirp forth Wilson songs. The latest addition to the decor- ations of the room {s a hand-written copy of the “Y right” telegram of Gov. Wilson Ham Jennings Bryan last week. The pandwriting was after the style of the Governor and was spread over a sheet of paper ten feet long. ELECTRIC “HOUN’ DAWG" IN CLARK “REST ROOM. The Clark forces have hired a ‘ room" for similar accommodation 0 their friends, This hall is across Bal-! timore street, and visitors are at- tracted to it principally by a big el tric “houn’ dawg,” that blinks eyes and wags its tail at fri ave another “houn | This one its | The Marshall boomers, with keen! souls for hot weather, rented a ho! roof gurden for udmirers of the In diana man. The Harmon leaders had a| Feception room just opposite the Wil’ | son room, | ‘A lithograph contest, consisting of| ttempts to plaster the hotel cell of with Presidential tures, is also going on. Th men placed in the hotel lobl likeness of the Speaker and the frame the ing thing about it was that the shee was tacked on with a Wilson button. Every Sign of Satisfaction Points to INSTANT POSTUM —the newest food-drink No boiling | required, Made instantly, Tastes better than most coffee, —and costs about half as much. This new beverage is made instantly by stirring a teaspoonful of Instant Postum in a and adding sugar and cream to taste. A 100-cup tin of Instant Postum costs 50 cts. at grocers—I1-2 ct. per cup. (Smaller tin at 30 cts.), Regular Postum, large pkg., (must 15 minutes) 25 cts. Coffee averages about double that cost. “There’s a Reason” POSTUM CEREAL CO., LTD., BATTLE C' cup of hot water be boiled REEK, MICH. 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