Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ee ee equal to her tasks. tons, was 450 feet long, 68% feet beam, and drew 25% feet “This flag means more than association and reward—it is the symbol of our national unity. endeavor, our national aspira' in. From a Speech Delivered Yesterday at the National Cathedral in Washington. our national It tells you of the struggle for independence, of union preserved, of liberty and union one and inseparable, of the sacrifices of brave men and women to whom the ideals and honor of this Nation have been dearer than life. “It means America first; it means an undivided allegiance; it means America united, strong and efficient, It means that you cannot be saved by valor and devotion. of your ancestor each generation comes its patriotic duty and that upon your willingness to si you have sacrificed and endured rests the national hope. that to and endure as,those before srific “It speaks of equal rights; of the inspiration of free institutions exeniplified and vindicated; of liberty under law intelligently conceived and impartially administered. There is not a thread in it but scorns self-in- dulgence, weakness and rapacity. It is eloquent of our common interests—outweighing all divergences of opinion—and of our com “Given as a prize to those who have the highest standing, it happily enforces the lesson that intelligence and zeal must go together; that discipline must accompany emotions and that we must ultimately rely upon enlightened opinion. renee, mon destiny. She was armed with four 7.-inch, six 6-inch, two 12-pound and twenty 3-pound guns and two torpedo tubes. She cost $4,260,000. The Hampshire bas been in use as @ scout boat and for carrying oM- oh pose. started she was in the Far East and wi fight with the Germans in the South © json various missions, having ample accommodations for the latter pur She was too old to take @ place on the fighting line. When the wat ‘as reported to have been worsted Ina hina Sea. She was one of the British squadron which was sent to this country for the Jamestown Exposition in 1907. “ARE FOR ROOSEVELT, NO SECOND CHOICE SAY GED. W PERKINS (Continued from First Page.) stand for militant aggreasive Amert- canism and extreme preparedness, But when the Buli Moone herd got wind that Root was under considera’ tion, they went wild and declared that the mere mention of the name wags sufficient to drive them into im- mediate bolt. How head off Hue! is the! first common purpose of the Perkina- Old Guard negotiations. They differ only on which is the man to accom- piish It. PERKINS TELLS BULL MOOSE: “ROOSEVELT OR NOTHING.” | In his statement to the Progressive, delegates Perkins made the broad as-} eertion that the Bull Moose party ts for Roosevelt and has no other choice for the Presidential nomination. “We have no second choice now or aid Mr. Perkins. “Go to “Let me remind you,” sald Perkins in his statement, “that we are not here for the avowed purpose of being against anybody. We are for some-| body and that somebody 1s Theodore Roorevelt. 1 urge you to bear this in! mind in all your conversations with | whomeoever you talk while in Chicago. “The process of tearing down men and things in thi« country and in the} world should stop. It is time to be for somebody, for something and to| Wuild up. i “We haven't ‘got it in’ for any- body or anything. We are out for a matchless man and an in- comparable cause. You know that no one else has such a man and that he is the cau: There- fore, we have no second choice, Go to it. jer. VMefore issuing his statement to the oxressive delegates, Mr. Porkins| It Is Significant | as to the esteem in which shrewd and successful advertisers hold The World that in the month of May its advertising showed a Gain of This is 32714 columns more than its nearest competitor in the tising space, and 842!4 columns more than its second nearest. Its third nearest made one to the geveral public. In it he sald tol. Roosevelt has neither eaid he was for nor against any man. When he does speak, it will be over his own signature, 1 am od that per- bons are taking advantage of Juation Hughes's speech before a girl's college to get dent, It was not a statement Just & Ittle address Jusice to him-it Is unbelievable that he should do this for such a purpose, Who ever tries to use this statement for the purpose of getting him the nomination places him tn an insincere position and does him w gross in- justice.” John MeGrath, Colonel Roosevelt's Seoretary, reiterated that the Colonel had no present idea of coming to Chi- It was Caucuses of Progressive State dele gations will be held this evening, so that every delegate may be advised Just what the leaders are considering. Chairman Murdock expressed belic that action upon nominations by th Progressives might be withheld until) Friday but no longer. — COURT HOLDS SCULPTRESS FOR BIRTH CONTROL PLEA Ida Rauh Pleads Guilty and Pic- tures Herself as Martyr in Defending Course. The Yorkville Police Court, in which Magistrate Breen presided this afternoon, was packed with birth control advocates. The occasion was the arraignment of Ida Rawh, seulp- tress, of No, 5 West Sixteenth Street, charged with dispensing literature in Union Square on May 20 dealing with birth control. | Miss Rauh pleaded gutity, walved| examination and was held in $500 bond for General Sessions. The ball was furnished by her husband, “Max Kastor , Socialist orator and writ-| Miss Rauh, as she prefers to be known, in a long speech plotured herself as a martyr, During the hearing Policem Wagner brought into court Stephen Kerr of No, 1416 Stobbens Avenue, the Bronx, charged with selling books dealing with birth control tn Union| Square to-day, Kerr and Bolton Hall, author and lawyer, charged with’ dealing in birth control litera. ture, were also arraigned, 540% Cols. matter of gain in adver- competitor LOST 244 | columns as compared with May of last year. The Character, Volume and Purchasing Power of The World’s Circulation |\\ afford an unequalled opportunity to every merchant and manufacturer who has any- thing to sell to the Vast Population of New York and Its Environs which constitutes ONE-TENTH of the population of the United States. him @ nomination for Prest-| It is a Kross tn-| | est on available points. He has an T. RIS BARRED IF PARTIES GET TOGETHER SAYS BRYAN O90 Commoner Thinks ! | May Be Abandoned. By William Jennings Bryan. (Special Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) CHICAGO, June 6. delegates are in uw vod to heed the advice. They all recognize that 1916 4 to sce a titanic struggle between the two great parties All recognize that the restoration of the Republi not an easy task. It Js going to require concessions on both sides and large exercise of charity and toleration. |been employed by Progressives against standpatters and by stand- | batters against Progressives, and @ great deal of feeling has been atirred | up—the standpattera did their part of | the stirring at the last convention, | and the Progressives afterward, Thoy are working overtime trying to for- get. They are trying to get together, and it looks Uke they would succeed In patching up a peace between those who were at war in the last cum- paign. The rash are being brought under contro! and the cautious are extending their sway. As long as the chief purpose of the delegates 18 to get together, both Col, Roosevelt and ex-Secretary Root are outside the breastworks. ‘They repre- sent the extremes and neither one lected to go out and flood the expense of the assemblage. of the gathering. tion. of efficiency experts. Th are seven of the alli: whe, according to the informa tion in the Hugh ind Roose- will be chosen if the party acty in| velt camps, are banded together the get-together spirit. There is a| in an agreement which incor political advantage, however, in hav-| fates the necessity of six of them ing both of these candidates urged by thetr friends and there may be, some method in the madness of those who are urging them on. They fur- | nish an excuse for compromise, The} supporters of Mr. Roosevelt can claim , a victory in the elimination of Mr. Root and the friends of Mr, Root can | claim a victory in the elimination of | Mr. Roosevelt, At this writing Justice Hughes seems to be the man who scores high- stepping le in the event that, Hughes and Roosevelt being elim- inated, one of the seven shows elements of strength that might lesd te nomination. LING “FAVORITE SONS,” jcatalogued every delegate to the con- leach is on file. | the boom of the favorite sons ts confi- official record which 18 reasonably! dent that the convention is non-stam- satisfactory to the Republican lead-| pedable because of this line-up of the ers. He would not be their first | occupations of the delegates: choice, but he would be much more! pawyers number 484: acceptable to them than: Col. Roose- velt and probably more acceptable than any one else whom the Progres- sives would be likely to accept. The Progressives emphasize the service} which he rendered in standing for a| primary law; this probably would furnish them a better talking point than could be found in the record of any other candidate proposed as a} compromise, These two facts, first that the Republican leaders have no serious objection to him, and second, | that he furnishes to the Progressives | a plausible reason for accepting him, make him what Is called the “logical candidate.” ; there are 94 me ers or cattle raisers, 257 ex-Federal office holders, and now holding public offices and earnestly anxious to continue in the same capacity. The total is larger than the number of delegates, for many of the lawyers and 4 few of the bankers are counted in twice because they have held or now hold Federal or State offices by virtue of re-election or election cause they were Republicang, It is claimed that the efficiency experts employed by the manage- | ment of the campaign of the | allied candida have discovered just how each of the delega’ has money made just where the delegates owe money if they are in debt. It is further claimed that a convention numbering in its membership 484 ts, 68 farn- And yet it is too early to make any forecast with uny feeling of certainty, | because in a convention the logic of | the situation is always subject to| change. If the Republican leaders | find that they can get some one who | guits them better than Hughes, thoy | lawyers and 125 bankers or finan- will not hesitate to abandon Hughes; | giers is not likely to b and they aro open to change in the! by an app opposite direction if they find the/ ay an offset to the cluim of the Roosevelt following is insistent 0B] oosevelt forces that big business something else. interests of the country, the packing > HUGHES BOOM interests in particular, the [city Bank and [und banking interesis in Chicago, are Nattonal behind (he Roosevelt candidacy, the| Progressives here this time only in| Michigan; Socialist party—Allan Ben- eMciency experts employed by the| opi, pan se ee go busy son, New York. t writing his John 3 a | mana ment of the allied favorite! at Beverly Farms that he can't com WA . }sons have dug instances proving that | = - ; | these same interests have sometimes| Ohio backers of Theodore Burton A lady who is sweet, slow, re- | del p . do not take kindly to mention of their| ceptive, jolly and husbandiess [deliberately bucked a candidate for} favorite son aw “The Bachelor Candi . , public office solely for the purpose of] hate." ‘They carefully refrained trom| might write to Mayor Raymond jaatesainating his candidacy, putting out any campaign buttons for| of Newark, He has an applica How far the open advocacy of! Burton, lest some seoffer should des-| gion — | Roosevelt on the part of big business} ignate them Bachelor Buttons. ‘iv going to help him ts # question _ ene r (Continued from Wirst Page. subinitted by the opposition for con- sideration The idea of card cataloguing dele. »s on the big ina the cam. | ites is not new. Frank hvock A picture of Abrahain Lincoln, All| Bat Anti-Sufframtats Lead tn Ke-/ Hughes on the big tnsue of the cam: | Hite 8 not now. | Byae four | ot Oite asked to study the ‘pore | arna So Far Received. years ago, But if the informacion off trait well and then compare it with! ppg MOINES, Ia. June 6.—Returns » Hughes meeting at the Hotel | the Hughes and Roosevelt campaign | the Hkeness of Ulinois's favorite son, |io.qay from. yesterday's vote on the Sherman yesterday afternoon was an | boosters t* correct, {he favorite eyed at amendment to the ‘ re | movement, backed by an unlimite elt is perl ere jeye opener to the Old Guard and the |Movemints Backed the position agonted Presidential Aspirant renre institution indicated that th | Roosevelt forces, Started as an in| of being able to tell, by a glance at] sented on Candidates’ Row. In ad. | sult would be close, Out of 2 pre- forma) effort on the part of the ten |a card, not only the political history | qition to glaring at you from 75,000 |cinets In the Stute, only 617 had reported. | delegates from Oregon who were se- | of every delegate, but his financial! coat lapels, he is the most badged ; These show 67,157 for the amendment lected on a Hughes ticket in a pris |@%d 18 many instances his domestic} And embiemed Roman of then all. jand 70,779 against Fi ‘s ” , j standing, Moving pictures were flashed on| Woman suffrage leaders, however mary. it proved to be the starter of) py “ shects nailed to the sides of Notels | qaim that the returns from the 1 @ tangible Hughes movement, backed | Pemrose WIN Lead Delegations (yore and there throughout the city jeounty precincts now in show that 60 by delegate xpi them-| CHICAGO, June 6.—Pennsylvania |jast night, Options were closed to- | hop cont, of the farmers voted for ‘votes selves as willing to up their own | delegates favor to the candidacy of| day on all the Michigan Avenue bill. 7. women and that it will carry. The} ; Gov Brumbaugh in conference last | boards in both directions from the rome tpt monay to help the cause sang night decided to support Senator Pen-| Coliseum and in the early hours of bulk of the returns in are from th ‘ When one of the conferees called ate | rose , hip of the del-|to-day @ big force of pasters were ;4nd it will probably be twenty-four hours tention to the fact that there has not | esat This action forecasts the| busy blazoning posters of the Saga: | beforg the entire vote ts tabulated been a Hughes badge or banner seen YMhitous selection of the Pennsylva-| more Sage thereon, together with ex: | odentiy won the Republican nomination Co nio Senator §t to-day’s caucus. Gov. | tracts from geome of his more violent eS overnor The Democratic candi jip Chicago tince the crowds began to frumbaugh conceded Penrose’s elec- | diatribes, lke “Note writing ts not an | dates w Hxed by a State conterencr assemble for the convention, a com- tion | antidote for murder,” and Md not enter into the primary fight Justice Hughes | Will Be More Acceptable to Peace- | makers Than Roosevelt, but He —"Don't rock the buat,” 16 the advice which the pell- ticlans ure now spreading among the delegates as they come in, and the in Party to power ts A great deal of bitter laneuage has ——————$$—$$$$$—$—_______ mittee was at once unanimously se- 6 town with Hughes badges and bannere at | There was no mistaking the sptrit Jt brought out sev- eral gpd two-handed talkers who will be heard on the floor of the conven- | Tt ts not generally kuown that the campaign of the ullies, or the favorite 801.8 who are hopeful that Hughes and Roosevelt will kill each other off, by the violence of their exertions has | been prepared and is now in the hands EFFICIENCY EXPERTS HAND- The efficiency organization back of the favorite sons combination has card bankers or} persons Interested in financial affairs, | cla) affairs! but when he whispers at one.end of be. | Immense dry goods 'NO BABY KISSING, FEW HANDSHAKES, Pledged to Help Chang i Electioneering Style. WOMA Liltle Stories Which What Is Going on Among | | | | Delegates. | CHICAGO, June 6 out as the first non-h anti-baby kissing, back-slappingle: convention in American history. Minneapolis, conclave, imore logical easier to control. if it pri Uncle Joe Cannon didn't this morning, cock Alley, | Odors range from the delicately in- sinuating to the simply staggering. Murray L. Crane of Massachusetts, spoke above a murmur in his life, | Michigan Avenue he is heard dis- | tinet!y by politicians for miles around. | The Burton Republican Glee Ciub of Columbus ‘s for Ohio's favorite jfon in hoth the basa and treble clots, | As they sing it, “He May Not Be a | Hero, but He Is a Zero.” The preparedness and safety first |!dea has captured convention hotel | managers, They've stripped the lob- | bles of smashable furniture and hurl- able cuspidors anent the advent of the mobs. Elmer J. Burkett of Nebraska ts dragging his own Viee Presidential boom around Candidates’ Row by the heels, Burkett ought to go down in history as the only man that ever wanted the Vice Presidency and ad- malted ft, Five of Senator Weeks's delegates walked into Room 1818 about 3.13 this morning looking for bad luck. ‘They | found it waiting for them in the bed, in which all five of them had to sleep. Albert Beveridge On the theory that seeing is be lieving, Sherma: yelled in their h ATHECONVENTO , | iSenators Weeks and Penrose TO KEEP ORDER. Show! By the solemn | vows of various aspiring Bentlemess, | this political gathering to-day stands ndshaking, | Senator Weeks and Senator Penrose have promised to keep their hands | in thelr pockets and have Instructed all their retinues to do the same. Not | ‘The first woman sergeant-at-arme ever appointed for a political con- |, 1916 vention Is Mrs. Sarah E. Lyons of who arrived here to- day all ready to quell any disturb- ances that may arise among the 33 women delegates to the Progressive | “But I'd rather handle the women and systematic and I don't anticipate ‘any trouble at all, but I'll handle it have enough cigars to finish an interview | he started with himself about 1 o'clock Phew; for tho perfume of Pea-| It's a worse combination | vention and a history of the life of than a village cut-up leaving a coun- The management of | try barber shop of Saturday night, the prize pussyfooter of politics, never is with the boosters have un- quarters a herote | PLANK READY FOR THEREPUBLCANS Suttrage Resolutions Asking Indorsement to Be Carried in | Parade to Convention. | \SPEAKS FOR’ MILLIONS. Americanism Demands That | Women Assume Full Citi- zenship, Is Claim Made. | | National CHICAGO, June 6.—The Woman Suffrage Assembly, held une | der the auspices of the National Woman Suffrage Avsociation, té-day } adopted @ statement which is to be} sented to the Resolutions Com- mittee of the Republican National Convention at the conclusion of the paride of suffragists to-morrow, The | statement, embossed on vellum, will a baby will be Kissed. Nary ali. carried in the parade by women | mother will be chucked under the] o..7, oxtreme boundarivs of the coun- | chin, Even tho folks at home won't | or te gotiows in par’ | ked after. “We, women from every Ftate. | , gathered tn National Assembly, June come to you in the name of Jus! Liberty and Equality ask you to incorporate in your plat- form a declaration favaring the ex- | tension of suffrage to the only re- | maining class of unenfranchised citl- | zen's—the women of our nation | “We make this request in behalf to | |than the men,” she sald. “Women| of millions of women, wha not only | are a whole lot more level headed in| earnestly desire the vote but who be- | a meeting than men are, They're! l!eve that the perpetuity of our na- | tional ideals, our patriotism and our Americanism positively demand that women assume the responsibility of full citizenship. No class of tnen- franchised citizens in our own or any other country have asked the vote In such large numbers; none so patiently, yet so persistently the women of America.” The resolutions then cite the fet that women have the vote in twelve and that the fight for Equal ; as have! Suffrage will he nued until ted throughout the Union, It concludes with the statement that “Wo believe that party to be far- seeing which befriends our cause.” A similar plank, except that it will specifically seek to pledge the conven- tions to support of the Susan B. An- thony amendment, will be presentend by the National Woman's Party, which was formed at a meeting of the Congressional Union for Woman's Suffrage last night. The two bodies of suffragists are meeting separately but both parade, The Women's Party Convention re sumed its meetings to-day with thre: sessions on the programme. The first session consisted uf a conference of committees appointed yesterday. At the afternoon session the programme called for reports of committees, re- ports from Suffrage States, speeches, the adoption of the platform of the Woman's Party and the election of a campaign committee of the purty. The night session will be occupied with @ continuance of the reports of committees and speeches by repre- sentatives of all national political parties, The men who are to address the meeting on the claim of their re- spective Parties to the support of the women voters are: Democratic party Dudley Field Malone, New York; gressive party—-Gifford Pinchot, Pennsylvania; Prohibition Bugene N, Foss, Mass: publican party Obese will march in to-morrow’'s WOMEN CLAIM IOWA VICTORY JUSTICE. HUGHES PAYS ELOQUENT TRIBUTE TO OLD GLORY ASDECLARNG HED TE GEN, WOOD Visitors to Oyster Bay Assert That Roosevelt Calls the General a True American, * OYSTER BAY, N.Y, June 6.— The nomination of Gen. Leonard Wood for the Presidency would be “fveaptable” to Col. Theodore Roose- velt as a solution of the situation at ey ufo, according to two visitors Who called Upon the former President o-day Just before he lott for New York to visit his publishers. They asserted that Col. Roosevelt told them that while he was “neither for nor against any candidate,” Gen, Wood “would be the most acceptable to him,” and that he would “throw his hat in the ring and go out and work for him asa candidate” who was “thoroughly United States” and whose election would “mean the return of the true spirit of Americanism.” os BEATTY PRAYS HIS FLEET MAY MEET FOE AGAIN “We'll Be Ready Next Time; Please God It Will Come Soon,” Admiral Writes. LONDON, June 6.—Rear Admiral Hedworth Meux, who was elected he seat in the House of Commons si to left vacant by Admiral Lord Charles Berestord when the latter wa has created Baron and who become spokesman tor the y. read ata public meeting to-day the following letter from Vico Admiral Sir David who commanded the batue cruiser squadron in the North Sea We drew the enemy into the jaws et. 1 have no regrets, ex- cept for the gallant lives lost, for the pila that have gone and who died gloviously, It would have warmed your heart to have seen how the gal ut Hood brought his squadron int tion, Would to God he had been successful in the «weneral re- will be ready for them next ne. Please God tt will come soon, The battle cruiser fleet is alive and has a very kK in her.” BRYAN GLAD HE ISN'T IN REPUBLICAN LINE-UP View of the Chances Party Will) Have For Election,” He Says. CHICAGO, William Jen- nings Bryan went the rounds of Can- “In the June 6, didates’ Row. to-d me of his friends said he ought to be in the line-up. “In view of the chances the part, will have for el think ['d rather Three K DENVER, Col., June 6.—Three persons killed and two injured when Den- ver and Rio Grande train No. 15, wi bound, was derailed near Colton, Utah, carly ‘to-day, The dead are Engineer A. M. Campbell and two unidentified men. The train 1s for express busin and carries no passengers. Wreck. t- pe Ll Orpet Jurors Still Scarce, WAUKEGAN, Ill, June 6.—The trial William = Orpet, college student ed with the murd f Marian uumbert, entered {ta nineteenth day with eight permanent and two tentative Jurors. There is no ehance lo comp! the Jury until both sides have exhaus! their peremptory challenges, MID r ver them, There ure distinetive ch | Special for To-morrow, | Wednesday, June 7th D FE. STREET B4 BARCLAY 0 p.m. Clones ht : Bsr, iL 20"conrr Closes W be fARy RO’ ay 4 OME, acer m, Tones 11 'VOTES FOR WOMEN’ COLONEL QUOTED {57 DEAD, 250 HURT. IN STORM'S SWEEP OVER TWO STATES Many Towns in Arkansas and Mississippi Wrecked by Fury of Gale. COMMUNICATION IS.CUT, (Fear Death Total Will Be In- creased With Later Reports— Property Loss Heavy. LITTLE ROCK, Ark, June 6—At |least fifty-seven persons are dead and 250 injured to-day as the reault of a series of tornadoes that swept through Arkansas and Misstsstpp! early to-day, All means of communtention were jbadly crippled, and to-day detatis |were far from complete. It was feared the Nst of dead and injured would be groatly increased with later reports, Advices recetved up to a late hour this afternoon indicate casualtion @s follows: Jackson, Miss.--Two white, six ne- groea killed; fifty injured. : Heber Springs, Ark.—Twenty-fivo reported dead Cabot, Ark.—Three dead, a doi injured. Germantown, Ark.--One negro killed Judsonia, Ark.— Fight negroes dead and fifty whites and negroes Injured. Greenland, Ark.—One dead, six in- Jured. Fordyce, Ark.—Five whites killed. Hot Springs, Ark.—Four killed, eight injured (reported last night) Morrijton, Ark.—Two negroes killed, several injured. JACKSON, Miss, June 6.—Fight dead and fifty injured, many ser is the result of a tornade swath from fifty to one hundred yards wide through Jack- json at 1A. M. to-day, Nearly two hundred and fifty homes were dam aged, many of them completely wrecked, “LIKE WILD BEAST” ON THEIR HONEYMOON” Thus Mrs, J. E. Roosevelt De- scribes Her Husband’s Acts in Separation Suit Je store like a wild beast than a white man," was Mrs, John Ellts vosevelt’s characterization of her husband's conduct during thelr hon eymoon in her testimony to-day be- fore Supreme Court Justice Clarke in her suit for separation She described Roosevelt's attack upon her in bed in @ hotel in Naples, the bruises he left upon her neck, hie profanity toward her. Also she recounted instances of hie angry out bursts in London and in thelr home at Sayville, L. I. The only spectators in court room were relatives of the couple, includ- ing Mrs. Robert B. Roosevelt, wife of Mr. Roosevelt's brother, and the Misses Pansy and Jean Roosevelt daughters of Mr. Roosevelt by a fer- mer marriage. During the examination of Mea. Roosevelt her husband's attorney an- nounced that the counter claim for an annulment of marriage filed by his client would not be prossed. Offering for To-Day, Tuesday, June 6th ET STICKHe—The delight of Candy lov honk 50 dainty ented in ten delicious Fruit and Spice The Kiddies fairly weetn We Ave Now Offering: : bay oar ‘bi h ‘ Y 4 EON a jomey. completed . quel et of our Toconparal 9 ic srant Chocolate, pov SH ( ' |