The evening world. Newspaper, June 7, 1916, Page 2

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THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1916. G. 0. P. LEADERS WORK HARD FOR HARM cee SE ROTI RTO ITS TNE RBA 0 ONY , * eS. tae . tes _ acnstinaseannicantien stv canoes east sania while he woke them up, more by | to Senator Harding's criticism of Ad- | World power of his eloquence and person- | ministration measures, many of wo ng has tpelodious ality than by a spirit of enthusiasm | which had Mr. Brya ardent supp | ve and « good aelivery, | he was for the principles he advanced when he was in office As Senator| up against about most clamiike One of his best arousers was the! Harding denounced the attempt of the | audience thot ever sifted into a hall. H —" declaration that “We do not need the | Wilson Administration to let go of Senator Harding's friends over in) biggest navy in the world, but we] the Philippine Islands Mr, Bryan|Ohio were inspired with the hope | | ought to have @ navy that fears not] clutched at the front of Mx collar, At when he was chosen Temporary the world. A Ravy that can say at] times he was plainly itching to get {Chairman that he might so arouse ] any time amd anywhere ‘these are] op and dispute the statements of the |the delexates that they would rise | Amer! rights and must be re-| speaker, but when + Harding /Tight up and nominate him out of " i vot iv to Republi. | hand by aceiamation. The Senator | | ie aids put over wit dorabte | can p oe Mr. Bryan was bored |!8 @ scholarly orator and emitted nu a | . alah bad, i Nam ihe tae merous epirrams and patriotic els | “tat | eclat the declaration that thin nation | and frequentiy consulted the face vf) Mite Ctisthile all pat e aco.| Lemporary Chairman of the oud to fight his wa " pawn’ iam $4 t ‘ “any; | Wie wwtslinen went better in the| gf ) nding rain of the | fore he wasn’ tatking to a fervid Republican National Conven- | r, | 1 dia ediv prinkling rowed . . | galleries than on the floor, for they morning hid a aoe ae init an| _ We said the country ts calling for’ ton Pleads for Harmony, | bulk of the delegates to this Conven- | effect on the atten lance, and half an fasabie fen - tion are for peace at almost any pric jour after the time set for calling tha Republican leadership and the pa sega ee | and out here in the Middie West tha) Convention to order the t gallery the . front of him sitting under \W AN PREPAREDNESS. people say that if New York is at-| at the far end of the hall was only | the My pails sat quiet and bs " : labor , ” J out on, Moved. He made an eloquent plea y Dre ‘ow the mill about one-quarter filled, aw | — ° - irae ough to fight f hee cuit | the flooded xidewalke frantic specu. | for party harmony to aozldy the mis- | Attacks Wilson’s Mexican Pol- . id ‘aan ra were offeri jokets at from. take of four years ago and the dele- Lage ‘ | HAD A HARD TIME WINNING |! wer a iar ite Gore HAlWe: took but a Tanmuld interest} icy and Demands Restora- | ANY APPLAUSE. | 4 ; | hee 4 pen : Dp Tora Mhaat | Ha ee ng last week at from $100 to $250. There was a good, strong outburst tion of Protective Tariff. get audience to rime te ‘. - é when he said there wasn't a reac- passionate pieas for a high protective | hs ms rte t ile: pe acl Bet ok |tionary Republican bearing creden-| CHICAGO, June 7.—Senator War- tariff ahd @ full dinner pail, becnuse | Pressud th teket market, but nl tials to the convention the audience {Te G. Harding of Ohlo in hin keynote everybody within range of his v« (ABA hd eta ? A registered surprise, Hurrying along [*P¢ech as Temporary Chairman of the 4 he {Roig to be a flivver, Never did Drie ying 7 ; has felt in one way or another the | ROR 1) OO Ong of a politieat{the Senator brought in the name of {Republican National Convention to- ffec' “1 that shane 4 i spoke part a 4: et Ses Os the wie Meee ‘Benue | party open more qutetly | Abraham Lincoln and half woke them | 44y spoke in part as follows | realizing that it is hard to make peo- ple long for a full dinner pail when they already are carrying full dinner pails in their hands, took pains to de clare that the prevalent prosperity is fictitivus and will be succeeded by de- pression unless, of course, the Re- publican party is restored to power Senator Harding sounded the key- note of this Convention—American- ism moderate, reasonable pre; 1- nesa, and much else the Democrats may declare for next week in St. Lous. But the big note sounded by Sen- ator Harding echoed high protective tariff, which is again the slogan of the G. 0. P. HOW BRYAN TOOK ATTACKS ON WILSON’S POLICIES. r It was interesting to watch ex-Sec © retary of State Bryan as he lister , PIMPLES Eczema, Rashes, Re€ness should not be permitted to aunoy. They may be driven away quickly, thanks te the incomparable remedy FOR AILING SKIN (At All Druggists) medicated with Poal Poslam Soap mics ri Ski . Superior for daily use; Poilet, Bath, Shampooing. BELL-ANS ‘Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package While the delegates and alternates were gathering almost an air of de- entire assemblage of the “star Spangled Banner” immediately after the Convention was called to order at 11,80 o'clock failed to raise ripple of excitement or enthustasm, The platform in the Coliseum is #0 placed that about one-third of th audience on the platform and in thy [galleries are back of the speakers. In previous years the proceedings to most of those In the was largely a pantomime. This year with the idea of throwing the voices of the speakers in all directions there hang suspended af immense papier-mache pyramid, the point hanging just over the which marks the place where speaker stands. If the contrivance doesn't work any better in the future than it did in the open- ing of the proceedings, they might well have hung # bass drum over the platform. NO APPLAUSE AS THE CONVEN- TION CELEBRITIES APPEARED. There hadn't been more than a per- functory cheer when Sergeant-at- Arms Stone opened the proceedings. No celebrities had been greeted with wild ac Most of them were not &reeted with acclaim of any deserip- tion, The assemblage was silent during the prayer, but chatted ami- ably while Si ry James B, Reyn- olds read the call for the convention. Many of the delegates actually wore their « vats, ‘Phe party who cir- culated those “Put on your overcoats and hustle for Hux! signs last Sunday gets better every day Announcement that Senator War- ren KE. Harding of Ohio would pre- side as Temporary Chairman aroused applause lasting fifteen sec- onds. The names of Senator Murray Crane of Massachusetts, Senator | Borah of Idaho and Congressman | McKinley of Mlinois—the committee (appointed to escort Senator Harding |to the chair-aroused a show of tn- | terest a rear spot the as latm. Senator Harding 19 a big, manding man with a big fine head, |silvering huir and one of those ath Middle West adamantine statesinen countenances, made popu- lar by the politically late William Jennings Bryan who, by the way, was right up there on the press stand, {wearing his little old red press badge land working a8 a reporter for The com- | ‘ | | provesit. 25cat all druggists. OFFICE OF THE | READ MACHINERY COMPANY | IN THE PULITZER BUILDING OFFICE CLUB, Furnished comple Phe dc dade &K of Out-of-town Business quiring a New York address. with stenographer, with switchboard, conference room. The Club jnow has 14 members. tisement for their names and picture. It will pay you to investigate. E, A. PRATT, Superintendent, Room 420, Pulitzer (World) Building, Firms re- telephones Watch this adver- pression and even the singing by the) jup. He almost started something in! |@ sarcastic and sometimes scathing pid for harmony the last time we met. he | forget attack on the Wilson Administration. tor Harding proved that West. |ward the course of “culchaw" takes | ¢ its way. He pronounces it “rawther” | fundamental “We did not do very well in mak- | untry and We has regretted, make amends did not divide over principles, we did not let us| to our country NATOR FROM OHIO WHO MAKE. KEYNOTE PEECH AT CONVENTION 5 UARR S.ARDING 1 | different, the atmosphere different, | the emotions different, the principles | different. Only one thing remained Ithe same. “We want Teddy!" the mob cried, marching through the storm awept streets, carrying Imply | wet banners and bedraggled flay “The man and the American flag have supplanted the wild outery of four years ago for social justice, for initi- ative and referendum, for recall of Judiciat decisions. Teddy and Teddy alone!" | Slowly, and at first quietly, t oozed out of the wet into the Aud rium, where four years ago they burst with frenzied excitement through the {doors, proclaiming, their wrongs jthe whole world and pledgigg their political fortunes and lives to the revolt. | NO SINGING NOW OF “ONWARD, CHRISTIAN SOLDIERS.” And now, ob, so different! A brass band in an upper gallery played har- Monious notes, Instead of that won- derful outburst of devotional singing “Onward, Christian Soldier” commercialized music publisher hh placed on each seat a slang new song, “When Teddy Comes Marching Home, and tried to drum up trade. A ban- ner with an atrocious picture of T. R was carried in by the Michigan dele Bation, who started singing their own song, dh, Yor ‘eddy, We're Going to Put You There!" But it was pitt- fully weak and watered “We want Teddy, ey to some And falls into the broad ‘a’ in other | “agree over a national polley. We | directions, | SPIt Over methods of party procedure |WHITE AND GOLD DOMINATE|@"d preferred personaliti Let’ us | DECORATIVE COLORS. |forget the differences, and find new In the decoration of the convention ({PsPiration and new compensation in} hall the managers departed from the)" United endeavor to restore the long established practice of practi. | country. | jcally relying on flags and bunting to} “Much of the discussion of the hour Jobtain the desired artistic effect. This |!* hinged upon a world at war. We year the scheme of interior ornamen- !Meed not wonder thereat, because the, tation is more elaborate and artistic |{ormity of the conflict and the in- than ever before, according to ex- | fluences of its horrors have set man perts. The plan was designed by C. R, | kind in upheaval. The traditions of Hall, superintendent of the Coliseum, ¢lVilization have been broken and in- and Julius Floto, an architect. White | ternational laws have been {gnored jand gold dominate the color scheme, | Hverything is abnormal except the | while American flags, shields and|depleted condition of the federal bunting are used to complete the|treasury, which is characteristic of working out of the decorative plan Democratic control, and the facility | Hight thousand yeards of white /of the administration for writing | cloth, 4,000 yards of gold cloth, 3,000 | varied notes without cffective notice. | yards of red, white and blue bunting | “There are manifest differences about and 360 Am n flags and shields | our developments for military defense were used in the interior ornamenta- | The President made a trip from the} tion of the convention hall, The bare | Coast to the valley of the Missourt to | brick walls and stee! girders which | tell the American ysople the need of | support the roof are concealed by| Preparedness, It might have been | twenty-six pxnels of white cloth,| more seemly to tell the story to Con-| each twenty-five by fifty-five feet. | gress, for that body was in session and | Fach panel is decorated with a deep |€mpowered to act, and seemingly ever | flounce of gold cloth, Hanging from | ready to testify obedience. However, the room in the centre under the | Congress undertook to provide an army large gl ventilators are large bars| for defense and the majority wobbled of gold cloth which add to the artis- | between pacification and preparedness | tc effect without obstructing light| Until the Republican minority in the | and air, The balconies are tasteful | Senate put something real in the pend- ly festooned with red, white and blue | img measure. We Republicans made bunting caught every ten feet with | rational response to the call of the | bunches of small American flags and | land, but Democratic insufficiency and shields, inefficiency are recorded in the con- ‘Temporary Chairman — Senator | ference-amended act, and a federal | Warren G. Harding, Ohio. Nitrate plant to supply powder to the ‘The officers of the convention are; | Patriots and pap to the paternalists and | ‘Temporary Secretary—Lafayette B, | federal fertilizer to the farmers in com- | Gleason, New York. petition with private enterprise is the | Sergeant - at Arms — William | great constructive offering of a Demo- | Stone, Maryland. {cratic majority. | Official Stenographer—George 1.| “It i# not for me to put the stamp Hart, Virginia, of relative importance on pending is- Chief Doorkeeper—John J. Hanson, | sues—the intelligent voters will de- MarylenG, \termine that for themselves, But | } ¥. Chief Usher—William Nelson Pe- louse, Illinois, m Nelson Pe- | cnow what they are thinking, and ———— they believe that the protective policy | | which made us industrially and com- MYSTERY IN ATTACK = inercintty“Simtnent In necessary to ON BANKER AND WIFE preserve that eminence. I know they want it restored and maintained. pk aia “No one disputes a temporary pros: | WILLS POINT, Tex., June 7.—Mrs. |perity in our land to-day. But it is sectional in its factory aspect, ab- H, F. Goodnight, seventy years old, | normal in its fevered rush, fictitious was killed; her husband, who is Presi- | in its essentials, and perverting in its | dent of the Vandzandt National Bank here, was fatally injured, and tendency. Worse, it is the gold | sluiced from the river of blood, poured their daughter, Mrs, R. J. Morau, was beaten into insensibility in their out by the horrifying sacrifice of home early to-da motive is | millions of our fellow men. “No honest business in this country , is too big to be Kood and useful, or | i in. |t00 little to be protected and encour. | Known for the orime, which has mys- | aged, and both big und little deserve terious features. ‘There was no signs |the American shield against destruc, of attempted robbery tion by foreign competition, and pro- KR. J. Morau, son-in-law, saya he |tection from ‘the raiders, political oF prot aa | otherwise, at home. was awakened about 3 30, A. M. bY| “The President has said ours is al the screams of his wife tn an ad- provincial party, evidently forgetting | joining room, He found her uncon- hed iisarer ge Sones of our na- Neoualin hen iedt ine tlonality and Republican expansion to | i Mr. Goodnight was | crester’ national glory” ‘The Borne’ | ‘na dying condition In his bedroom | Cratic Party. not only fails to ercop on the second floor. Mrs. Goodnight jour immensity and importance, it te was discovered in the cellar dead, Sectional on the mainland and un- having been carried from her bed. | Becding of our island possessions, Whatever the ultimate solution room on the second floor, Her head may be, history will write Mexico us the title to the humiliating recital of | an the greatest fiasco in our foreign re- | the lations, Uncertainty, instability, Me: ican contempt and’ waning self-re spect will be recorded in every chap- was crushed, in the same manner as the other victims. It is believed axe or a hammer was used by assailant, but no trace of a weapon could be found e tere ang the pittasle story of sacri- lee merican lives and the dest - BELMONT RESULTS. tion of lawfully-held. American nonce erty will emphasize the mistaken pol icy of watchful walting and wobbling warfare, © political party ean draw a vari- | * chart for our ship of state amid | wo varring ambitions, lust for bower or battles for seif-preservation, FIRST RACE.—For maiden two-year olds; selling; purse $500; five furlongs; straight--Running Shot, 112 (Keogh), $ to 2. 6 to 5 and 4 to 6, frat; Mirga, 11 | (McDermott), 6 to 1, § to 2 and 6 to } Seconds Old Drury, 112 (Davia), # to | demonstration weakened contro! over But still there was fire underneath the damp coats of the delegates Free, independent, unbossed even by | Perkins and hise crowd of dickerers they proclaimed. Rumors of new ne- | Rotiations with Old Guard leaders, BULL MOOSE IN The delegates poured into the Audito- rium in a steady stream, singing not (Continued From First Page.) ——— the ory Hallelujah” nor the “Dox- | of the party's nativity, but Tag-time, topical songs, college cries end of twenty minutes he and Mur. | 4nd jingles, with Indian whoops and dock began sending the banner bear-} Wild yells of “Teddy, ‘Teddy, yov ers down from the stage and back to | Yow," bursting out from pit and gal- their seats, Their places were taken | lery: by fresh delegations, climbing up on| Down the aisle paraded the Texans the platform, Perkins standing on/with a big banner, “Texas Is for the desk greeted them as they prom-| Teddy!" “Whoop-e-e!" shrieked the enaded past, shaking their hands and | crowd. More rag-time, more topical mouthing words greeting that | Songs, more choruses lost in jumbled could not be heard in the roaring din! confusion, but rising alwa of human voices, Jend with the battle cry At every slight let-up there broke | Teddy.” n the same old stamping re- Up from the border came Arizona We want| with the banner, “If Teddy Had Been Here Where Would Teddy Le?" Kansas met them with a jingle cry became possessed of simultaneous | like college boys on a football tield desire to climb on the platform and | shouting out the last line, shake the hand of Perkins—that good | Will Give Teddy the Who! right hand that writes such generous | State.” checks and guides the wardering Bull) | Alongside Arizona was a ¢ : | lon banner trom the bord Moose herd. They wrung the arm | Duy New Mogi tiy gots of sat “We Wang Teddy. Every man and woman in the hall pun- ddy,” tho | totum. | unite upon a man who will get things don They have been reading ches on preparedness and notes n American rights for dreary months —only to learn at last that we have no rights except those we are able to enforce and that we are not now prepared to enforce even the right of an American citizen to live within aiding distance of the Mextoan der. We learn that more Amer- icans have been killed in keeping peace with Mexico than were killed n fighting a war with Spain, Ii ix no time for one party to offer to the other a partisan chotce, It is time listen to choose ROBINS TELLS "MOOSE NATION CALLSFORT.R a Temporary Chairman of Pro- gressive Convention Says He Is Man of Hour ir NO TIME FOR FACTIONS. Principal customers of Albert G. Fack« ner of No. 232 Ainsley Street, Brooklyn, according to internal revenue inspect- ors who arrested him last night on the of having oleomargarine in \Principles Greater Than Party, {and if Need Be Moose Will P sion without «a Government | Go Alone. kner was held in $1,000 ee | to-day by United 8! s Commis= Harick for ther exam! CHICAGO, June 7.-"The keynote ad- | nation little more than two ‘dress of the Progressive P. . | monthe, inspectors say, Fackner reas of the Progressive Party Na-| fii ald 5,000 pounds of his produet t6 {tional Convention here to-day, deliv- ona who supposed they were buy- ered by Raymond Robins of Chicago] ing butter, Ie charged 3 cents @ ft sound for i /as Tempor Chairman, agserted in| LAM forous terms 1. That the Progressives will stand j by the announcement made by the > tional Committee last January that the party will join the Republicans if the latter nominates for President a man true to Progressive principl 2. That the principle is greater than the party and if necd be the Progres- | sives will go on alone; 3. That preparedne mount issue of the cam 4. That Theodore man of the hour. “What this country needs now Is a MAN," announced Mr. Robins, In the course of his speech he said ow as we are met again in national conven HETHER two-base hits, or triples, or home tuns, prove the deciding fac- tor in to-day’s game, it has 4 been proven many times that there is only a single way to go to the Polo Grounds. That’s by the is the para- uign, and Roosevelt 1s the tion there comes to us once more a common knowledge that in 1912. we ‘sounded forth a trumpet that shall never call retreat.’ And we know tha we are here to write a revord that shall | witness alike to the faint rted and | t the tical, and to the great army |still faithful to the cause, that our vision i# yet undimmed and that our rds have not been furled, - our part we feel that in this no motive of p al} jinterest or party advantage be} | tolerated to ‘thwart the conscience and intelligence of th | American people. “The feanism and preparedness. stand for an Americanism not qualified by differences in blood | They stand | we body and of the) and al as well] with universal service for} solemn hour will awakened | Progressives stand for Amer- ‘They which is} “And We Damned lor birth or for! | pre, as military, nearly off, squeezed his fingers so he| Then came Perkins, smiling, debon- |e defense of the Natio couldn't hold a pen. They slapped! air, to the platforr “Yow, vow!"| Wc Soil ay disinterested patriot Aimion the back. Good old: Perky, | Wey yelled and save him a rollicking | hove Nine healtate lonesto nang you're all right,” they cried to him. | matter with Porkine?” cyee sy the der best fitted to serve thi After hulf an hour of this frenzied! from the gallery. His name on the "3 of | pandemonium the demonstration grew | “He's all right, Perkins is, but we (ene Neuen Hi ane Line perring Siena) ; - frazzled in human endurance. Then|~ Congressman Victor Murdock of | & tity for many years. He Consult our Re stered S cialists about they got second wind, Kansas called the convention to tof our Nation for seven | o en nd the exuberant Bull Moose |¥ears. There is no man in Am von S. ROOSEVELT HEARS CHEER IN, °°" restrained tneiselve: HOME AT OYSTER BAY. | let Bishop MeDowel long enough ¢ offer a pi Then to turn on the taps of ent Victor Murdock connected up the! siasm asain Murdock called on ait to {every nation in the world 4 ded convention hall with the Oyster Bay/ rise and sing “America” fervid| “There are millions of patriottc || Optometrists & Opticians telephone wire to let the Colonel hear | chorus, the first touch of the old de-|ien and women. straining eyes to- || Madison Av., Cor. 100th St. 114 Fulten St, how they were cheering him vouonal epint ' Dreary routine procedure followed “Let them cheer,” said William; the customary flashlight photograph Hamlin Childs, former assistant to! reading of the perfunctory call, ¢ Perkins. ‘The harmony committee, “uring it all the delegates sat in com- nt mlence, » call provided for 628 delega but to provide places for all the thusiastic faithful many delegati doubled, even tripled, their quota, proposition is all arranged with the! piace Republicans, They are to ask us to, appoint a committee to confer with them, We are ready to meet them ened eee teres’ to ouch when they ask us. The idea orlg- |” jraymond pbins of Chicago was inated with them.” | well greeted as Temporary Chairman, Meantime the frantic demonstration | Ut the cheers were more for his for Teddy continued. Gifford Pinchot | (wort Johnson Of Calltornia and danced in lock-step time with 4] relatively unknown social settlement crowd of Pennsylvanians on the plat-| worker. form, Oscar Straus and James R.|_ Introducing ~~ Robbl: Garfield stood on chairs and howled | Strted off the old like college boys, Kh % devotional battle hymn |. “Ladie and gentlemen of the Pro- Half a dozen men stripped off their! gressive party and Christian” sol- coats as interfering with muscular dlers.” be began, and that was as action, Othera tied handkerchiefs] {7,45 fe fot wonward, Chria- and flags around their heads and/tjan Soldiers,” and a chorus of the performed Indian war dances. Per-| ong followed. But the fervor was kins, Johnson, Straus, Murdock, Rob- | fone. the spirit was weaker, One bins and Childs conferred repeatedly | Y°PS® sufficed. oe what should be done, but gave tt uD| gig payment for Mihel Lorraine because nothing could control the are concerned, Mrs stampeding Bull Moose, John MeGrath, the Colonel's Secre-| wife of Reymond Belmont, will have tary, ran back and forth from plat- | no 7 form to soundproof telephone booth ; COU Juatios Sieeemich settlement in five figures for rele N claim to any part of her husband's state, August Belmont, father of he husband, was a party to the arrange: ment, since his son's property is under to give reports and receive Oyster Bay orders, Every added minute of sing the convention and endangered tho | ment. sine carefully nurtured compromise home of Perkins ‘Better let them shout themselves The Right Sort of out without trying to do any more Preparedness business," suggested Gov. Johnson. »," said Perkins, “IL think we will get buck to order pretty soon, and Robbins can finish his speech, We through La | & to 5 and 4 10S, third. Ty 1.02, | Justic s the way through the ae jBendlet Moonlighter and Chris. safe ¢ of neutrality, There aro abel wlyo ran dangers, seeming or real, looming on | SE IND KRACK Por three-year- every side, but we should feel oure Jolde and upward: selling; purse $500; | aiong the course marked by int six furlongs: main course —Arma- | tional law and our own ene ment, 110 (Ball), 12 to 1. @ to 1b an ne wane our 0 conscientious 13 to 6, first, Bmden, 105 (Garner), 9 to ,So8victions of Amertoan rights. 5,3 to 2 and out, nd; Those V STRAIGHT AHEAD" shall be the {95 (Lyke), 9 to'2, 7 to '® and 1 command, and when peace comes the | third. Time—1.15° Monmouth, Harry )soner judgment of the work! will sx | UHorOF and Rafe Home sleo ran alt us ever higher and higher ay a or two-year-olds, five furlongs; straight with HG) adina people strong in heart and noble in Ballad, 10 (MoDermott), 7 to 2, even {Ue espousal of justice and justice's and out, first; Arnold, 110 (Keogh), 9 | humanity |to.5. 1 to 2 and out, second: Startinch,| "My countrymen, Americanism by | 118 (Allon), 11 te 6, 3 to 6 and out, third) gins at home and radiates abroad v 101) Pasatn ney also ran The republican conception gives the — = first thought of a free people and a BLUE BONNETS RESULTS, = {nies neonle, and espeaks condi * tions at home for the highest hu FIRST RAC 00 ‘tanment, We have justified two-year- id maidens, forled in Canada, four and #n fortified hope. We need on a halt firlankereaciain (Ware preserve and defend, and go un rington), firet; Brit Am- | ingly on. Power is the guar, | brose) ‘ond fet- peace and conscience the buckler of 7 ndy everlasting right rily, it fs good te and Nels to bean American. And we re ran, dice to be Republicans,” must go the regular pro-| gramme for the day.” The cheering ended at 2.37, having lasted an hour and thirty-five min. , utes | Dampened outside by drenching [downpour of vain, but exuberant in spirit and fanatiea! de | Col. Roosevelt, the Progressive | tional Convention m noon to lin the Auditorium Theatre, Here \this same beflagged hall the sprang into organized existence four a N party years ago as @ passionate protest against the Old Guard and the Re olIeoc. publican steam-roller that crushed yagTINGS—On Tuesiay a oyoie out the Colonel's ambitions and the! at 287 Basi E8bth Street MARY, be fica] principles of his insurgent Tee ia A Ne at following espe ancasnC RTO kG nkares Bui bere to-day the weniiment waa = at. Joseuue Cometerr. the | Murdock | Best Quality Crystal 50 Up. Mm.Singer |to-day who holds as he does alike |the confidence of the American peo. |ple and the ungrudging respect of | ward Chiengo and praying that the jtwo great parties in convention may | | 981 Prospect Av., Bronx. 604 W. 18let St. in in a Jac sof various port dainty, CANDIFS—You fone Count to the such @ «plendl we | American F ly | SSA Sab 1 LOD. DOME STREF | met mat 1B. en, Ey Tr FURNISHES 3 Beautiful FURNISHES 4 Beautiful $@ WEEKLY FURNISHES ALL 3 MAGNIFICENT ROOMS Why not have a home of your own when you can furnish a beautiful opartment on such easy terms of payment, No worry attached to purchases made on our “ROYAL” Peyment Plan. Wonderful seleetion Exceptional Inducements to Newly Weds WO HIG STORE a if \ | a when wise leaders will voices of the Nation to nominee, And those M voices now repeat one name, If there Was ever a call of the people it te sounding now t Judg clergymen, policemen and ven living in Brooklyn were the

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