The Sun. (New York, NY) 1912-05-24 [p...

1
my frlend.s, t nm here lo warn you that In this prcllinlnnrv ntcst before the ' Chicago uuivi nllm tliiTP Is h crisis In your country's history Hint ought to nerve mi t. activity to prevent thu daogei tlinl threaten us as n constitu- tional Ami' It Is been use of the unfounded n ciisatlnns against my administration nnil unfounded nmilutit nil' which have been UFtd to iiiIhIuiiI the people n to the real Issue Hint lit now Hint I have felt It rercs.-ti-r- tn come out nnl meet these HU'iiM.itltinM anil repel those as- persions ami explain what Hie leal Issue In lieforc tin' people nf this rnuntry at this tlmi The I'nstilent Hii'll t""l lli the aclilen tiicnii- - of his Administration, one hv i1M- fiiitl If II II It'll l ii- - tin' HttntHirt nf ,NVw .IctM'W voters nn Hint "Tli.it." -- .ild tin' President, "Is a list of iiemiiipll diluents In tin- - Interest nf the 'ii.!o t extensive than bus been ttitiiMInd I'' three Jean, of any admlnlstr.itli-- since tin- - I'lvll war." HppiiMli'. f tin1 initiartlal conduct of thi'Ailininlxtiatltin In enforcing the Hherr-i.i- nnll-tuii- l law the I'rcslduU Ktld! "Tin ro t" onlj ono nrs Hint I know nf for the President of Hip I'nllPil tntc.--i to pursue when In- - raises hl rlwlit ha.'il ami Mvenrs that ho will support tin- - 'niistltulliui of the I'nltpil States iml that he wli; see that (In- law.- .ip- - talthfullv executed. Hi- - must enforce llu- - law or vlolati' his oath," "I claim." tin- President added ,i little later, "that this has been n business atlmtnlstr.itlMi that lnm gone r,nng en- forcing ho laws ami doing tin- - best It could ami keeping tho balance on the right of Hip lulci r What I would like to know- - Is In what respect wo hap fnll.-- If w-- i have fnltoil, I am willing to Fitlmtit tf our eniiili-mnatlon- . If we haven't, why tl n nr.- - wo not en- titled to tho approval of tin- - people?'" ThP President told his New Jprjcv audiences that ho Is opposed to Then- - dorp Knnsexelt for thiee reason", .xi Trpnton hi- - said "1 am opposed to Mr Itoosevelt, first because of tin- - character of tin- - cam- paign that Iip haw boon carrying on, which has lironcht about this unprece- dented nrcpsslt and spectacle of the President of tho t'nlted States being called out to rpfntp unfounrti-- charges against thp Administration." Thp Presldi-n- t aroused tho pnthuslasm of his big TrPiitnn audience liy showing, as he has In otln-- Stales, how Itoose- velt selected ono sentence of his Tolpilo speech and distorted It Into meaning that Tnft Is In favor of the government by the f w. Thp also dissected ltooso-velt'- s cliiirup that In- - Is In fnor of bosses, "Mr. Honspvplt lilmsplf." said tho Prosldont, "was I'rpsldi-n- t for spvpii and one-ha- lf yrars and 1 ask you to rccol-lp- If you ran toll mo what bo.ss ho In theso sorn and f years, I don't say It was his duty to end anybody's hut as a inattor of fait' tin- bosses thrlvod In hi day just as thi-- hnvp always when the ppoplo permit them to. and It Is not for tin- - 1'resldi-n- t to unseat or do any- thing about It and therefore whpn he makps the Issue that If In- - comes In there ale Kolns to be no bosses and If I come In they are colm; to flourish, he makes nn lsu- - that does not elst and u promts.- - I hat ho cannot perform." The I 'resident ilcclaleil that loose-vo- lt oiltsht to bi lejoiteil on account of h'.s xl-- ws In resanl to the Judiciary alone. UN proposition to recall Fed- eral drelslons the t characteri- zed as a "wild dep.irtuto from the constltutli n'll piinclples" ar.d as a blow at the foundation of our nl lllifrtt-s- . The l'r li!i-n- t ot a ureat cheer when he conc'ml-- il .ds Trenton speech with these words. "nii, ilnally. I am opposed to him bemuse his nomination will be a de- parture troni r. tnolt'.lon that ha. been reiopnlzeri y Washington, by .leffer-sn- Imkson. b.v Lincoln. li and was pieserved In the e.,..e of (iraut bv the people acalnst the will of 'Jrant's friends: mii has been -' b Theodore Itoi It was approved b hlm in 1SU4. and it was reenfoi i i d by him In IJ'Oi "I app"-- l from Theoilore !loo-.pp- t now to Theodore Iu om-v- i It then. I appeal In the same way to those remarks with which In- - commended me to tin- - Ameri- can so euliTlMlc. so that I lannot reol them now with nut hliishhiiT and I sax that both with I if h!s oiilninii ol n;e nnd with re.ipiet to the constitutional question or r.-- '11 in- tr.idll.onal ipn stlnn of two ie-- ;;, that li s Ji,di;in-- nt then wai e.-- y . it.'- - r i' an It Is now an.) that If . fi.im Hint tradllio-- i and cl.. h.i.j j, third term, there Is not tn- - lluh;i st reason at an win mio should not him. him a fourth term, nnd If a foiirib then th- - barriers are il' brol n ..- - a, iln- tr.idltion which limits ip. o in. i If si.ne, nnd un- man conn- ."t in l to the "My friends i,!s will be a .s.id dav In the hlst..r .f th.- republb when o:J- - teni - Is , ss. ntlal to our coun- try Hen m I. in oln's day. :)nd Lincoln tiled at the of h'- - usefulness and the height ' his puwer j, remember vh.it ;ar!iel-- l s'liil nn the ,,f th,. in Ne. V.-r- 'find relgnr. and the 'm rnni-- ni at Wash- ington still 'i s' !)d ?(, It Is i:inr,.i. 'm di pendent upon mie man, am! th, mla-.u- it - suci-.-ste- that tt is. end tl,..t s,, -- ,.sl ;,, f,,. lowed, ami the ,m ): dependent on one ninii. tb. ::!..rv of t(u- republli will riep..r! li.i. us i - institutional fea- ture will be aii'l we shall no lonuei fi el tni ,n Me that now throb- - In every A'neri- ins heait Hint foi l.Ti yraii' v e i"tiion-- rated and Indicated the wisdom arid the pimaneiiie of pnp-- i ulur gni i mm nt ' T. R. IN MELLOW MOOD. Drop Illtteriu'" anil Ik lionil ,h-tnr- am His V mltencea. Col. Hoosevelt h New Jersey camifTiKll opened with a boom at I'atersou at, noon yesterday, when a throne of mill workers and laboring men roared for him in the armory. At night a lollicUinj:. merry-makin- happy crowd of Hoosnvelt fans packed themselves standing into the Efisex Troop Umory at Newark, and fairly lt? with life and red hot enthu-rJoat- n for the Colonel All he had to do waa to mention Ohio and his crowds wouldn't atop cheering. "What's, the matter with Ohio'" a deep lunged rooter shouted at Jilm in Newark. "Tho imptiNive' judgment of the people of Ohio was all right " shouted back the Colonel in his most humorous and happy bfpjeak. "Kvorybndv s all right, " ho shot out. "Everybody's rloin' it now." tho gallery gods yelled back, and the big throng went into an uproar The Colonel was as happy hh a hov "I thought I'd had a middling lively lime in the West, but 'poti my word, New .Ii rsey boats 'om all. " he called out lo the Newark armory crowd alter lie had been ulil" to make himself he.nd "They've kept me going ii hard " "nu'og(it the othfr follows going, though. " came back from the cmwd, "and don't you worry about New Jersey " 1 rleniis, and tho l olonel lossed back his head, thiow out his chest and raised up his arms, "I'm not worrying about anythinn My eneinii'-- i can't get me going." He grinned and the audience set up a mar nf laughter It a i different lini-- e. xeli to-l- ay Ii om the aiupaiKiier in t)iiln arid otliei statci. i amp,iign tl.rt. Iillll .'lltiriill- - .1 tllfT.tiuikt r.l.nrc.l.,,. iUid flavor. Tin; Colonel wun In mellow 'moed ll wiimh charltntilp, kindly spirit that i)Vnl in him nil day llnrdlv i flash of th" bitterness and Imtninorlnc ptiRtincity of the Massachn-sett- s nnil "hlo cumiiaisuM wa seen, lln barely mentioned I'tesldent Tnft during the day lie hardly nientlniuil tho tlRht ho was makitiR In lis hard and crsnal lentiirPH. What Col lloosi-vel- l centred on y was broad idenU and principles thp fundamentals ho called them -- ot tho iur-his- i- he declared In- - has net himself to. of sei'iinm: eritinl opnortunltv and social M and industrial Justice for Hie masses. Tn hl-- j tilK crowil of laiioritiK inpn at I'atersoil lie llptD'Ulod by talking of real impiilar rule for ttii'tn in Rovernmpnt. tin- - luealdnn of the bchses nnd political machines, and in social conditions, tho nt of their life liy ou-nlti- tin creatpr opimrtunity, secured throtinh regulation, not iiestritrtinn, ot dir nusiness, ana ny ntnendtiient of Hie tariff to secure the "lienetltH of protection coins Into the pay enveloxi, not stoppinR In the office. " i nen to tne wen on wno in his audiences in l'nssnle, Unckptisnrk and thp pleasant cp'pn .Iprsey suburbs he Hew through in his auto, he preachpd tho Kolden rule, altruism, -- helpini; thp other follow not so wi-l- l off specifically by the elimination of such conditions tn tnn hand- ling of big business as are responsible, Im decl.ip-d- , for tho RrowlnR feeling of unrest, discontent, rancor and Has hatred that he told these crowds they would hand down as a eurso upon their children if thev did not remove them now. "I would like to preach it with the fervor of n rrusader. the Colonel said at llackeiisack in the midst of this talk for social Justice, "Hie improvement of tene- ment nouse conditions, workmen's com pensation acts, national and Stale laws forbidding overwork of women and all work of children. " Hp spoke with great ititetiseness and earnestness, Ho vias the preacher rather than the fighter most of the day As the remedy for these conditions of social and political oppression and in- justice, th" Colonel in th evening at Newark stoutly defended his "rpfprendum on judicial decisions" his new name for the recall of judicial decision-"M- y opponents attack me most on this, in- - said, but tr thpre is any ono point of which I am siir of upholding the cause of the plain tieoplo I am sure nn this one. I d allow every Iwir as Hociation in the country to hummer me for twenty years and I d not change my utimi one nil. Hie t olonel pushed his doctrine one step further He has applied it in tne past oniv to Mtnte court. "This does not mean that it shall never be applied to the courts," he said. "At some time whenever it shall become necessary so to apply it I shall favor it. If the Federal courts made a practice of such decisions as in tho New ork Imkeshop case I d proceed against the federal courts just as soon as any otlier Tim C.lnnul l.r.,1 tb wnwiL U'itli ht, wherever ... he went. ... He . .r played and - inked with them and had n Jolly time. All the Colonel's best campaign humor was in evidence, .Not a mother who lifted up her Iwiby to see him missed a wave of the big black hat. "You citizens carrying small citizens you know what 1 think about Jer-vy- ' flint crop the baby crop, " and the Colonel would chuckle and keep waving the hat and the crowd would feel awfully tickled At Passaic an intense and approving crowd cheered him in the high school auditorium His Hackonsack audience wa- - an afternoon crowd with many women in the hall and another larger crowd out door- - A littl" crowd had gathered in the road nt Hasbroiick Height, mostly women and Hoy Scouts "1 hope you'll vote a you shout on Tuesday. " laughed the Colonel And a distinctly feminine ripple of cheers and laughter' answered A woman's club luncheon party came out and flutterpd handkerchiefs for the Colonel near llack- eiisack And once lie stoppi-- 1 his caravan to get out along the road and snake hands with an old lady who was celebrating her eighty-fourt- h birthday , The Colonel is a wise campaigner He never missed a tncu y with tne women, and they seemed all to be for hi.u I'retcv suburban house along the (laden-sac- k height were flying Hags and bunting for People stood out on their lawns to smile and wave at him along tho road '1 here were big crowds gathensl at Hutherford. where the Hough llider told the Hoy .Scouts that m unselfishness and eflort to drive out foulness they wi r fundamentally part nf the progress e inovi-iiu-ui- . and at lllonmtlold. at botn places in the public -- quale .Moiitclatr turned out a tug crowd on ol tu- - high school I hey clieered in heartily I Col lliioseiel! ciosisl Ih- - llackeis.irk uieailow- - ma special Mc.io nib- - tram to Jerey City after Ins appearance in Newark lb- - was taken I nun in- - Siiinnii' avenue -- latum m an automobile 'o tin-hig- school building and loiind oa peop'e on tin- - grounds ho ha. I I n un- able to get Into the building lie talked to them fur fifteen minutes and nt in 20 lireei-- into the school auditorium, which was jarnm-- d to the limit He wa- - greeted by an audience of :t,in. of whom were women "I thoroughly enjoyed the trip through New Jepy he sjud "I've had some middling hiely times in the West, but New Jersey put nno (Her the West y 1 i passed about as M ioniums a ten hour- - as I eier had in my life. I'u been pleased with th" way l'hao been riv,-iod- , I undi-r-taiii- l il - not for mo, Inn tin- rai.s- - I represent " 'I ho ('oloti"l was very husky but it was apparent In- - wanted folk- - to know In- - was happy He -- aid h- - didn't want to be 1'iesident unless he had the heait-li- y behind linn, claiming that th- - only i ason why he wanted tn Is- - I're-ide- wa tor the sakoof putting into execution (oi'ain piiuciple which h- - said lie Is-l- ie' ed m with all Ins heart "I don't want ih- - office," ho declared, "unless th" people want to see the principles for which I stand pievail " The Colonel opened his address by sax lug In- - would tell a little anecdote Hint he has not told before. "At the time when my Western frl'nds were urging me to become n candidate I told them lhat I did not want to run," he said "They replied that they had stood by me In 1 90-- when I wanted the Presidency nnd that now I ought to stand by them when th-- v wanted the Presidency or me. Then om- - of them remarked " No, It Isn't the time foi It He doesn't want to run ' " Whi'ieiipon a very great filend of mlii". Mr Marl; .ullhan. said. "'The time to set n setting hen Is vhoii the hen wants to set,' and he continued to Ihe effect that If the people wanted me to run then now was the tlmi to run. Vnu see I had to run" The Colonel paid his icspectH to the bosses, some of whom he enumerated, and glei fully exclnlmcd "Wo have the scalp of most of these gentlemen hanging nt our belt I no- tice that a boss In my own State, Mr Harries, shows symptom- - of rending me out of the Hepubllcan partx. He'll have to lead a large order when he doe It. It has been said by Mr. Taft himself that I've been disloyal to the party, I'm disloyal onlv to the bosses. If jnu In New ,i rsev vote for real Hon Jim will xute to uphold tho hands of every bnsa In the country.'' Aftu luncheon In the llnmlllou Club at I'aleison the Colonel shot away In Ids iitiln, with twelve machines of news- paper men and locm committeemen in the wnl, o. Ilooseveltlan dust Is black and hcavv and the Colonel's entourage looked Ilk- - e line of clamdlggeis when th-.- v pulled Into the Kssox County Cnun- - i try ('lull at night for dinner as Hie gnosis with the Colonel of Senator liverill I nlliy children, 1,100 of idem, mnatlv I '.!nlli,,1!'' ?' Ameiicnn. .nnd Italian tlavs, made nn Italian holiday for ihe i'iiIoih I along th- - streets In l.odl Tim Colonel got In some good work there milling at the hahles and the mothers. iieverai mg nveing lactones closed up nnu ineii employee made UP H lively I crowd fm nn- - i oionei .i orniorj , ...,. .ii, ,..,. ... n... I......... .. ... i Country Club he made his speech In the . I .vwutK Armory nnu to u UIb crowd In i Military Park. He then went to Jeriiey THE SUN,. FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1912. City and sppnt the night at Hie Hotel Astor In New York. With him on the trip were I'o't of Porto lllco, Harold Howland of the Outlook, who Is managlnir the trip; Kverett Colby, l'sax progressive Ipatler who Is waiting for n Fnltpd Btnte. to hit him: Franklin Fort, Stokes, George L. ltecord. this Jersey City progressive lender who abandoned 1m Follette not long ago for the Colonel! Senator Polndcxter of Washington nnd Itcpresentatlve Victor unlock- - of Kansas. (if the political situation George L. Record snld y Hint Itoonevelt would get twenty of the twenty-eigh- t New Jersey del'-gntet- The Colonel went through "seven Congrewlonnl districts representing altogether half the delegate strength of New Jersey. Mr. Ilecord declared Iloosevelt would win the four delegates at large. He said Hie Tnft forces vvert conceding llu.lson to Hooevelt. The unbiassed snld that the Taft ma- chine under John W. Grlggn In Pas-sa- ls was strong and thit noosevelt would have to fight for Ksscx. They declared that Itoosevelt'a only Weak ter- ritory was In Morris, Union and At- lantic county, containing Atlantic City. Thoe unblnssed observers give the Col- onel :he State. One remerk of the Colonel's Hint cho.ved hlm In no fear of thp nntlonnl committee arose from a loco- motive puffing outside h!- - Newark meeting. "It'. the -- tenm roller," n man yelled. "Yes. the steam roller," echoed the Colonel, grinning. We'll stop their steam rnllr. They won't try any slrntn roller on us. We may hove our faints, bile we're not weaklings." OHIO'S BIO SIX SLIPPING. Honsrxelt l.lkelr In Control Con- vention Taft Han Onl- - H Mnrr. Columbus, Ohio. May ?3 -- Control of the Ilppubliean State convention to be held June r is still in doubt but the trend is toward Itoosevelt, despite vigorous claims to the contrary by Taft supKrters. The convention will be made up largely by county conventions to be held, prior to the State meeting The indications are that these county conven- tions will display band wagon tendencies and thus send to the State convention delegation which will stand for Coi. Iloosevelt This means that Hoofevelt men will wrest control of the Stntp con- vention from the Taft people If the President fnil to land Ohios big six he will have only eight do legal is from Ohio Heports In- -t night gave him ten district delegate, but txvo of there xvere rpmoved when completed COllllt in th Thirtpenth nnd Fifteenth district showed that no Tuft men had been electeil Th" district carried liv Taft were the First nnd Seccnd, where ho hail no optiosition to sna' of. nnd the Third. He has onp delpgate from the Sith nnd another from the Seventh (lov Wilon of Nexv Jersey is likplv to havn fiftpen out of forty-tw- o Dpmocfatic di-tr- delegate in Ohio. Gov. Harmon will hnx-- e the others and nUo th" fix dele- gates at large T. R. OWNS THEIR VOTES ONLY. lllliiol- - llrlrHUIr lleruar In lie lie lltrreil XVrniipril nnil Tied I p. Cllirnr.o, .May .'3 That part of the Illinoi delegation to the Ilepuhliccn national convention which rr.el in secret session at the Hotel I --a Salle las night to delix-er- - itsplf wrapped and tied to Theodore l'ooevell, although declaring sin-e- re allegiance to the Colo- nel's cc.use. Fewer than half ol the delegates were present, and conspicuous among the absentees were Gov Deneeii and Ijw-renc- e V Sherman, nominee lor the t'niled States SenatorFhip Chauncey Dewey. niihisnl pinnier in the eaue nf Hnosexelt in this State and one of the delegate- - a' - pre- cipitated the discussion lie g-sti l that 'inasmuch ns there Im l Ij. n gossip as to Hie lovn! y of ninnv delegates to Hooseveli a mil c.i'l be arid til" delegate- - Im In ,'e' Lire thcnielve Then Dewey offered a resolution projKi-ni- g that on all nuestions connecied with he national convention the Illinois delega- tion take the advice of Mr Hno-exe- lt The resolution was intended to Itoosevelt to siy who should go on tho committee on resolutions, the credentials committee and. in short, direct tin- - entire deliberations of the Illinoi- - delegation .several delegates tool; issue wit h Dewev. ehiirged him with iiiestioning the Kood faith of his fellow members and ass-m- in substance that tho delegates would obey to the Inst letter their Instructions without further reolut ion. roll call uledi?" or affidavit faft delegates ulso met last llL'ht io tin, l.aS-ill- All were present Their session was harmonious. The Tail delegates are William J Cooke nod ( hurles Hiippel of the Fifth district STANDING OF CANDIDATES. Cliiliiied for ThII. r.HOi llnnsrxrll. n.-it- cisru, unit xaiuiiii, i:u. W siii.voton. May S3 -- The standing of the candidntes according to Hie latest information at the resiectiv head )uat1ers, is ii-- i follow. IIKPt'ni.lCANH In ciinvf nilon.. 1.111 tu choice :,iu rialmca far Tuft . . !Mt Intrnrtfit fnr Ta!t .M0 Clalmcl for Homcvclt ... . MR Intruclcil for Hoofvell. , I.H Initrurtt-i- t for lv Folic ttr M Ini'nirtM for runimln 10 IHIUOCHAT.S tic lcsatc In convention I.P94 Nccrmary to choirs.. , i: tntructeit fnr Clarlc . , :ai Inttrurted for U'llton .. 14 Intrurtrrt for t'ndcrwood , , tntructfiJ for Harmon ,. .1 Instruciril for Mamhall , .. .10 Initriirinl for llalilwln ,. H Inmriirti J for llnrke . 10 TAFT MEN RUN THE ROLLER. Ilnl- line llnnsevell Man Allnirrd lo MhoiT In Ohio Cnnnlr r'nnvenllon. SrniN-ai'iF.Li- Ohio, May :a Taft men controlled the Hepubllcan county con- vention thin afternoon from tho start, The only clash camo with tho project of naming committees of five to nominate delegates to the State, circuit, judicial, common pleaH judicial and Senatorial conventions. Thp Taft men won by a! ... . , n ,.t fm 1 ,,1 ,,i .tu iu dl, The steam roller was used Affectively on the Hoofcevolt men. Harry r'rey jot the honor of lieing an alternate to tho common pleas Judicial convention to Im held ot Troy Juno 12. He was the only Moose veil man recognired, TO RUN WITH ROOSEVELT. Ilciiri-seiitnltt- Conprr of Wtaronala Mrnllnned for Vlpe-I'rrsldr- W xsiiim.to.v. May ?.v The name of Itepresentiillvn Henry Allen Cooper of Wisconsin was hrouuht forwanl y by ii number of l(onm-vel- t men in t nngress for on the Hooevcll tlckst, ro men in course irisi llnnsevell, real zn lie extraordinary claim of his manager, Senator Dixon, and pt the Republican iii'iniiiiiiiiiii .in iur nrni Hanoi Mr Cooperhas had many year of service hi Ihe House, I erne nf Col, Honaevelt' I'lnneMl f riemlh nnrl t- - n i,inn.a, r,.,n.i ., - He led the flsrhl In the Ifouae airalnst Speaker ; ihihwi, iit.-ui- imuse insurgpiii i a ktonii sneiiki-- anil I etod h,. ih V" , ll r.rK. f.'W T threatened bv the aittimU ..r i i Vn-..- ". U. S. RUSHES 600 Covlinutd from Ftritt Pagt. None of the beof wo have pnvlously sent to the uhlpi down there was roiected and there wrw no reon for this lo lx" Another member of tho firm said: "They have g ven us a raw deal The beef may have been under weight because of the rtnh In filling tho older, but it was perfectly good. It wai A No. I beef." Notwithstanding this claim of the con tractors, a lo.rge part, of the beef was re jected and ient out of the yaw shortly before & o'clock. A telephone order for lS.ooo pounds was at once placed with a large packing house, to bo delivered so the Prairie could take it aboard and be ready to sail. The packing house manager agreed to begin making delivery within din next three or four hours. Three companies of marines, 210 men In all, under command of Major Henry C. Davis left the Brooklyn navy yard at 0:30 A. M. yesterday for Philadelphia. They did not know whet they wero to do then, for the orders from Washington gave no intimation of their destination except the significant phrase "to prepare for tropical service." Also, there wr.s some hustling on the part of those under I, lent. -- Col John A. I.ejpuno to get Hip men off. i An orderly from Commandant Iieute's office panted up the front steps of Col. Ijeune's house at 11 o'clock on Wednesday night with orders from Wash- ington to get three companies ready to leave for Philadelphia. Col. I.eJeune'B men are always technically ready to go anywhere at any time, so no word was sent to the men Some of the officers, however, were in Manhattan and there wa some lively telephoning for them. The reveille, sounding at dawn, got the men out of their barradis. wondering what wa up. Few of tVm had he.i"d about the troubles in Cuba, and il xvas the common impression th.v Panama wa their destination for they had been expect ing orders to go to t he cenr.l or Me.x -- ico nil winter. The marines were told to g"t thd' knapsacks, haversacks, canteen-- , belts r.nd rifles ready for heavy ma'ching orders. There wa chance for a bite so en", nnd then cnm the of Held kil. the stowing pw.v of sheet, blanket nnd for the depa-tme- n'. , fly 0.30 o'clock the men were pilingnboa-- d a n.vy tug to go to Jersey Cite, there to ( take a special fain fo- - Philadelphia, i K.iglitv men. most or them short timers, up . ,v, i., ........ i,,:,i,.i, u. ,w , I r.t c . t'nU'-- r Major Davi, in command of the three compaiie. a-- e Cr.pi. AIesander S Williams, Pirsl I.ieur H. X Manner, I Ki'M Lieut. Cla-l;- e H Well and Secmd I I Lieut. Alfred McC. Hobbin ' i CUBAN NE0R0 REVOLT GROWS. . Will Wrlrnmr nterlean Troi, ' llopr In ttnld litter ellllon. rierni ' allr hnfiltU 'o Till- - Si Havaxa May the tlovern-men- t declare the negro rebellion is dving out. other reports fav it is grow- ing to an alarming eitent in Snn'ingo ' In Santiago city various public utilities hi've alied the Oovernor lor the pro i tection of troop. They have been told i lli.it soldiers e.'e not available, but th?.' they can arm themselves, The town of j San Luis, Palma and Soriano are in ilr.nger of capture by the rebel. Sefior Chibe. n prominent engineer of Santiago, who ha just r.Tived in Hnx-pna- . savs th negroes number more thr.n .'.nno. Many of ihein believe the spirit of (Sen. Jon Miiceo, the negro hero of the tn yea's wa- -, i reinci'.rnnti-- in Lstinoy, hoi-- e followers include Haytictis and Jmnaicans. who regivd him sa Messiah. Ihi dangerous element i preaching the; doctrine of negro domination i Secretary of Government Laredo Ilru declarea the negro movement is collapsing i but at the same time he says the authori ' ties ari enlisting all the volunteers who are offering t heir services in large numbers j in response to the call of the President 'I he warship Patria sailed this afternoon carrying troops, and other are going by train tn Santiago Arthur M Heaupre. the American Minlsler to Cuba, ha informed the (iov-ernme- of the coming of American transports with marine m ! ' ...... xiuxi-lliuie- .in imu r gratitude at the action of the United States in protecting the whites nnd Cuban independence. Secretary Ilru says, however, that he hopes the inter- vention will not be necessary Cart Parker, the cavalry of the Cuban army, is sounding the waters of Mariel Bay, presumably in anticipation of the possible landing of marines theic In fact the sending of such small ships as the Nashville and Padticah suggests that it is considered necessary to enter certain ports Heax-- y firing was heard this afternoon about 5 o'clock near Tiguabos, forty miles from Bam iago. It is believed that a big fight is going on there between the rurales and the negroes under A negro was arrested hero He had tI0 and it was proved that he was a member of the first hand which has started from Mariano, a suburb of Havana. The money the man had proves some one i furnishing funds for an uprising. papers publish a story that Mr. Hteinhart and Jose San Miguel aro the instigators of the uprising. The Government ridicules the statement. H About ono hundred negroes in tho regu lar army hnx-- e been arrested on suspicion of having robel sympathies. The cartmen have postponed their . ....ii.- - ... .u- - ; . . proposed mrmn in mo uiki-ii- i requesi of President Qomer.. With all tho polico engaged in patrolling tne outskirts or the city to prevent any nogroes from leaving. it would be impossible to guard the wharves and maintain r in cao ol a strike, GUNBOATS ALSO TO GO, (internment Orders I'ndncah and aahvlllr to Unantananio. WasiilNQTON, May 23. Alarmed by the growing seriousness of the negro revolt in Cul Hie United Htates Hovemment is sending 700 marinen to the naval base at fluantanamo. Orders for the cxedltion were sent out from the Navy Department early to-da- The expedition Is in command of Col. l.lnln h'.rm.nv. Vh .nil,, r j should be landed it (.uantanamo Bay not later Uian Monday. . Besides to. marine, on th. lranport Prairie, Ihe gunboats Padue.ih and Nash- ville were also ordered to Guantanamo. Tho Pnducali Is surveying off the eastern coast of Cuba and tho Nashville in at Santo Domingo city. Both vessels wero directed to proceed at once to Guantanamo and nwnlt there the arrival of the Prairie. Suite DeKirtinenl officials declared the expedition was not to lip rcgardpd as nn intervention or oven nn occupation tn Cuba. Tho force. It wa said, wns being sent to provide further assurance, that American life and property would bo pro- tected during tho dlslurlianoes. According to the ordr undor which Col. Karmany.'s force Is leaving, he will not move his men lieyond tho limits of tho United StateH naval station at Guan- tanamo without authorization from Washington, It I said the marines will lio kept at Guantanamo for use only In case of emergency It Is not proposed to place, them at thu disposal of Minister Henuprp to lie disposed of as ho socs fit for protecting American life nnd proierty. The lotest reports received In Washing- ton were slightly morn encouraging Uian previous which brought oboii. t he decision to solid a force toGuunt anumo. Iloth thu War and State departments am being kept in close touch witJi tho situation throughout tiie island by their representatives in Culm. ihis afternoon's despatches indicated that the Cuban Government, caught and hampered at first by failure to realize the significance of th revolt, was bestirring itself and seemed likely lo restore order shortly, 'though pro- fessing absolute conllderice in their ability to suppress the negro uprising promptly, the Government oitlclils ct the highest rank privately expressed apprehension now that th" extent of the negroes' or- - guniziitioti i revealed. though th" action or tn United rttntes wns taken primarily in ihe interest of American life and property in Cuba, a desire to prevent th" downfall of the es- tablished Government prompted the de- cision tosend th" marines, llisttie State Department's hope that the Gome. Government may be preserved, al least, until th- - have been h-- ld nnd a new President chosen, A serious revolt in the mid- -t of the Presidential campaigns and election would be regarded a u ealamitv possibly requiring another American intervention. It is believed th" t two o- - thre-- t days will show wh"ther the Ciilinn Government is going to be able to maintain itself and protect American property in the island. Th" source of the financial backing of the negroes i -- till puzzling State official, 'I heir organization nnd their plentiful supply of money and arm- - i regarded n proof that powerful and rich in'luence are supporting the reeolotioniirv In Cuba it i beex-e- that the revolt - lieiiir by persons who d"sire tn iirim on another American interven- tion T'noTicinl depntche name a thi Hacker of t he ni?roes one of thp wpalthiest Xmerlcpti- - in Cnlvx. who wa prominent I "Jrl1?"!":!!? i.r''. A'rJ J..Jl1.f 'Tl iV:.rt 'jrjl'i to 1)rln(: otl ,llir(l intervention and is con"ii!entlv supplying the negroc with money n"d arms Aceordini to th per-o- ti responsible fnr ebnrr.e. the negroe are being pncniniT'd to go lo extremes In ctpprp elation ittion American property in Cuba j n'nl Iti ttireatenuip tin- - lives ot .Aniericnn there On th" other hand, friend of this American insist nothing could be further t .1... iniii II" llll 111 Ministpr ,..lunr,v rallied the State Pep,irtmnt y thi mot seriou disturbances were occurring especially in the provinces of Ouantannmo and iSr.ntingo American citizens and their iiroeerte nrt lieinir menaced tv nepro bnnd thne district There' ia great' fear arr"ni i iiha'i. or n race wn" Ihe t'tihan Cuba has left Havana nm soldiers bound for Ouan-trtnnn- m Other force have been sent to nrien'e iroxince bv train A party of t'onpr-'-- Havana for th.eir heme et ln' night 1 hey xxill try, it is said, to com ilinte the negroes. 'I ho Oov- - eminent i said to be receiving offers of nitatipe in tln uprising from orgnnbntion and citizen through- - ut the republic NO DANGER. SAYS STEINHART. 1'uitrr In 4'iilui r n reil for I'. . Interxrnftiiii. I'ranl; Stcin'tii-t- , who i regarded a Ihe mot powerful American in titmnciul nnd political w.ivs in Cuba, mid last eve- ning ut the Hotel Imperial that he did not think the negro uprising in Cuba would be nf much consequence, and from what he knew of the situation he wa quite certain there would be no need for Intervention by the American Mr. Stcinhart. who urrived h-- re on Wednesday evening, wa a (iovernmenf clerk in Washington at the close of tho Spanish-America- n War and wa sent to ( uba. In a short time lie wa made the American Consul-deiier- by Presi- dent Hoosevelt . Since then he has plaved an important part in Cuban alairs and he wa called "the m.m behind Mr.goon" when (ien. Mugooti xv.is n ler of thcilaud. tl.. ,1... ,,C II... If,,.',,,,,. L'lunl llailwav. an American concern, nnd the -- ,., r. .,1 Sn,.v..r ltr,,u ', , , ... ... 1 lllivi inn nun ii it, ri.j, ..iiuiii i Jie Cuban situation." Mr Stcinhart Fcid "1 do not thinli the negro revolt is very serious, (ien. Come,- -. Itnetv on Saturday that it was threatened and he wa pre- pared for it Of course nt the start the reports from those who are scared are alarming "For instance. I have seen reports that caneflelds were burning anil grpat dam-ag- o was being clone. As a rr.t.tter of fael tho grinding is over and very little cane i standing, Therefore, while there ha been some burning of cane, it has not amounted to a great deal and tho loss will not be heavy. "I know how tilings are exaggerated. In the uprising in IWW, when I was Con- sul, (iuerra, one of the leaders of tho revo- lutionists, sta-te- d out with fourteen men A Cuban paper said (iuerra led 1,100 men, In a few days the grew to l.tmn, Aliout the same thing is going on down there now. An uprising of this kind must have organisation, lenders and financial backing." "It is wild in Washington," Mr. Stein-ha- rt was told, "Hint the uegroea have plenty of financial Iwlilng." "Thev have not." he said. "Where would ft come from? I do not believe it." ",h you view the situation now do vou think it will 1st necessary for ths United States (lovernment to net?" Mr. Hteinhart wa n!ed. " I do not ," he s.nd, "Hen, Oomez knows what is going on mid ho is capable of quelling the uprising. There is a strong ., i l,PV ,,j wij! ,,Mi hpip " uo not pelleve j jir. steinlmrt said his trip here had m,t,ing to do with tho uprising. He is here to attend the unnunl meeting of the Havana Kleotrio ailway Company, He wild ho would return t'-- i Cub.i on June is. rienor (larcia. the Cuban Minister to England, and a number of other Cubans are stopping at the Imperial ('niiBri-ssiiiii- Tatnnsenil a I'andldnte unln, MoNTOt.AlR, N'. ,1,, May 13, Following a lonferonce of l.iemocrutu- l uilrrs at n luncheon at the Hotel Monti-lnli- last nll'.lit I'mmrt simian ICdwaid W. Tmvn-ren- d ann-iuiiif- lunisilf as u can- didate for rctionilnatliiii liy the Ueinneiats of the Tenth Coiikipss district, lty a ehnn- t- in ir. iin. nt the dbtiict-- ; within t ll.C . IMSt far hlllll hr 1111(1 i onureshin.in xxauei i .xiivni in ,ie nlru-e- In the , Tenth district. Mr McCov has gone to luiuuier uimih-i- , mi umi nis ,M,,niiiuiii I Sow "Uf 'fit. Townnd."01 ",U'rfcr W"" W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES s3sgg3t2&s4s22 Boym wmmr W.L.Douml $AOMt 3260 Shoe: mt Tn thm Worof W. L. Doiiflas makes and tells more $3.00, $3.50and$4.00ihoe. than any other manufacturer in the world. WHY? BECAUSE he protects the wearer against high prices and interior shoes, by stamping his name price on the bottom and guaran- teeing their value. BECAUSE for style, fit and wear thev are sunerior to ordinary makes of shoes. Don't take a stitute for W. L. Douglas shoes. If vnur deilfr cannot supply W, fT. Douglas shiMI. vnic' U'. 1,. DotiiUi, BrocHon, Miii., tnr catalog, hoes sent tvervnhere tlehverv charvti nrrnaiil. - Call at W. L. Douglas Store in New York: OS NMn l.i 13(9 Hrolwf.rnr..iaih Ntrcetl 1408 Hrosdw.T (Time Smire)i HI Thlril Kxt.i MM Third Je.t 3n Third Ae rnr. IJOth L til Third Aw bfi, nrt 147IU Hl. i 34n Klghtti Atrnutl Ml Klghlh Ave.t 8f W. l8lh 4a I Pulton st.,ror. Pearl Nt.t ft. 1 1WIT flroiidwa? t 1387 Urnndwav.rur. natpa At. 478 Tlflh Ae.,eor. llth Hl.t 17711 Pltltla Anns. NKMrAHK-8- 11 llroad Slreel. JKBSET CITT-- 18 Newark Aveou. LA FOLLETTE LAYS IT ON T. R. Mi on a Unit Ihe Colonel Permitted Tnlrmfnl C'omhlnallons" lo Grow. Atlantic City, N. J.. May 23. Sena- tor La Kollette arrived here this eve- ning from Trenton and spoke before 4.000 listeners on the steel pier. In the course of his speech he snld: "There nrc millions of people In this country who are feeling resentment In their hearts against the unlawful com- binations which nre preventing them from getting Justice. They will rise up shortly nnd demand an end of it nil. "Ibis u man like Itoosevelt the right to return where he wields absolute power over conditions when he per- mitted unluwful combinations to grow from H! In number with three billions of capital to 10,020 with thirty-on- e bill- ions behind them In capitalization, 70 per cent, of which Is fraud? This when nil the time In- - had the Sherman anti- trust law. the grandest Institution ever made a law, to enforce discontinuance. With all these new Inventions, the strides made In science nnd the higher understanding of things In general, things should be cheaper. Instead, they are higher, principally Because of these combinations or trusts. You know xvho Is to be blamed, nnd there ure others beside Morgan nnd the Standard fill." Thentox. N. J,, May 23. Senator Ilobert M. Ln Follette arrived here lato this afternoon on his tour of New Jer- sey. He got a warm xvelcome. more than 3,000 persons following Ills auto- mobile from the Pennsylvania Railroad station to the Y, M. C A. hall, where he spoke. As he entered the hall he was heartily cheered. Labor men pre- dominated ln the audience. DINNER TO K0EN1G. Tnll Lenders In Ihe County Knler- - lain Hlm. The Taft supporters arncng the execu-tix-- p committee of the Republican county commlttee-whi- ch means thirty-fou- r of the thirty-si- x committeemen- - turned up lit-- t night at tho Iiepublican Club in West Fortieth street for a dinner of felicitation to Samuel Koenig, president of the county committee. The two absentees were William Hatpin, leader of tho Sex-ent- Assembly district, and Louis Friedel, leader of the Eighth ThesJ two districts were the only districts to back up Col. lioosovelt at the primaries, Ogden L Mills, treasurer of the county and executive committees, pit sided, with Mr. Koenig seated at his right. John Hovle, Jr., secretary of the county com- mittee, and Mr Mill were the guests of the executive committee "It's strictly a Taft bunch here," Mr. Itoyle said. "The dinner is quite informal There ate no formal speeches on Ihe pro- gramme, but alter the coflee prol-ahl- will Is- - some brief cxtemxrancous talks." TAFT. SEES GOAT QUICKLY RID. I'rrslilenl lines) of I'hllndelpliln - sons nnd NnxlBHllun I'mitirrra, Pun Aiu:t I'll a May II (n - be- ginning his campaign New ,lerey President Taft orinally opened ihe Inter- national Congress of N'avigal on in this ci y. The President also stopped nng enough to a lend n luncheon .it he Hotel Bellevue-Stratf- o d us ihn guest of Will nm L (lorgas, St.ite (ii.-.u- d Mp.ter o the Maons, nnd to th ceremony ut the MuMiniu Temple of lie mak ng o n Mr. on "at sight " The President himself not ong ago was made a membet of the 0 der by this method in Cincinnati In opening tho Into, national Coiigre. of Navigation the President declared that gave him grer.t pleusure to greet any organization thr.t standaforth" promotion of the peaceful arts among the nations of i lie world. Th IV Hident added that here in America we have lieen trying to do something to bring about universal peace "We have been halted temporarily." saiii IS" Card anaj alWA sub i "What! Fading? "Why I can't believe my own eyes. "Bought it no, by George, I didn't buy it at Rogers ; Peet's, and well it serves me right. "But you can bet it's me for R. P. and their fast colors alter this." No matter how delicate the shade of gray or brown No matter how blue the blue the color must stay fast or "your money back." Spring and Summer suits. $18 to $48. Variety for any man of any size ! K.Ntra preparations this ear lor Iixtra Big Men and Extra Slim Men youths. For men who want to take exercise and pleasure to- gether Our "Explorer" bicycle. .2;l with coaster brake. In the Sporting Goods Dept. all three stores. Roc.fks I'eet Company, Itaret Brody Stare at it il Wirren St. 13ttl St. 34th Si. , he, "but I try to you, repre-entetiv- of other nations, tha the heart of the American people beat high for peace and j hev ae any other method of I settling disputes save hx arb nation and judicial decision " Ilio President declared that the United States has many things to learn Irnm t'.i Ktiroppun countries in the nn-.tt- of hrndling freight and in regard lo the methods of transportation. "We have ono inland water route, the grc.t lalie.s," said he, "that dos tli- - big- gest business of its kind in tho world b,.i we want to leiiru to use our other lakes and streams Wa wnnt to make sure tun that when we send u cenal boat ourl.d with freight from one point to another a turn cargo will be waiting for it at its destination " The President told the engineer and i others r.ttc-rdln- the conference that the Panama Canal wil be completed within I eighteen months Ledger Promptness In emergency your entire office force can work on the Card Ledger without interfering with each other. Each account being an inde- pendent unit, the ledger can be distributed among any number of assistants. Balances and statements can thereby be prepared promptly without rush or night work. Booklet and samples furnished on request. Library Bureau Manufacturing alUtributort of Card ui filiar ? 0i, litViry ud bulk eqsipsest UlH wi ui filial ciUmIi ia wood aid steal 310 Broadxvay rhono Worth 1400

Transcript of The Sun. (New York, NY) 1912-05-24 [p...

my frlend.s, t nm here lo warn you thatIn this prcllinlnnrv ntcst before the

'Chicago uuivi nllm tliiTP Is h crisis Inyour country's history Hint ought tonerve mi t. activity to prevent thudaogei tlinl threaten us as n constitu-tional Ami' It Is been useof the unfounded n ciisatlnns againstmy administration nnil unfounded

nmilutit nil' which have beenUFtd to iiiIhIuiiI the people n to the realIssue Hint lit now Hint I havefelt It rercs.-ti-r- tn come out nnl meetthese HU'iiM.itltinM anil repel those as-

persions ami explain what Hie leal IssueIn lieforc tin' people nf this rnuntry atthis tlmi

The I'nstilent Hii'll t""l lli theaclilen tiicnii- - of his Administration, onehv i1M- fiiitl If II II It'll l ii- - tin' HttntHirtnf ,NVw .IctM'W voters nn Hint

"Tli.it." -- .ild tin' President, "Is a listof iiemiiipll diluents In tin- - Interest nfthe 'ii.!o t extensive than busbeen ttitiiMInd I'' three Jean, of anyadmlnlstr.itli-- since tin- - I'lvll war."

HppiiMli'. f tin1 initiartlal conductof thi'Ailininlxtiatltin In enforcing theHherr-i.i- nnll-tuii- l law the I'rcslduUKtld!

"Tin ro t" onlj ono nrs Hint I

know nf for the President of Hip I'nllPiltntc.--i to pursue when In- - raises hl

rlwlit ha.'il ami Mvenrs that ho willsupport tin- - 'niistltulliui of the I'nltpilStates iml that he wli; see that (In-law.- .ip- - talthfullv executed. Hi- - mustenforce llu- - law or vlolati' his oath,"

"I claim." tin- President added ,i littlelater, "that this has been n businessatlmtnlstr.itlMi that lnm gone r,nng en-forcing ho laws ami doing tin- - bestIt could ami keeping tho balance on theright of Hip lulci r What I wouldlike to know- - Is In what respect wohap fnll.-- If w-- i have fnltoil, I amwilling to Fitlmtit tf our eniiili-mnatlon- .

If we haven't, why tl n nr.- - wo not en-titled to tho approval of tin- - people?'"

ThP President told his New Jprjcvaudiences that ho Is opposed to Then- -dorp Knnsexelt for thiee reason", .xiTrpnton hi- - said

"1 am opposed to Mr Itoosevelt, firstbecause of tin- - character of tin- - cam-paign that Iip haw boon carrying on,which has lironcht about this unprece-dented nrcpsslt and spectacle of thePresident of tho t'nlted States beingcalled out to rpfntp unfounrti-- chargesagainst thp Administration."

Thp Presldi-n- t aroused tho pnthuslasmof his big TrPiitnn audience liy showing,as he has In otln-- Stales, how Itoose-velt selected ono sentence of his Tolpilospeech and distorted It Into meaningthat Tnft Is In favor of the governmentby the f w.

Thp also dissected ltooso-velt'- s

cliiirup that In- - Is In fnor ofbosses,

"Mr. Honspvplt lilmsplf." said thoProsldont, "was I'rpsldi-n- t for spvpii andone-ha- lf yrars and 1 ask you to rccol-lp-

If you ran toll mo what bo.ss hoIn theso sorn and f

years, I don't say It was his duty toend anybody's hut as a inattorof fait' tin- bosses thrlvod Inhi day just as thi-- hnvp always whenthe ppoplo permit them to. and It Is notfor tin- - 1'resldi-n- t to unseat or do any-thing about It and therefore whpn hemakps the Issue that If In- - comes Inthere ale Kolns to be no bosses and If I

come In they are colm; to flourish, hemakes nn lsu- - that does not elst andu promts.- - I hat ho cannot perform."

The I 'resident ilcclaleil that loose-vo- lt

oiltsht to bi lejoiteil on account ofh'.s xl-- ws In resanl to the Judiciaryalone. UN proposition to recall Fed-

eral drelslons the t characteri-zed as a "wild dep.irtuto from theconstltutli n'll piinclples" ar.d as a blowat the foundation of our nl

lllifrtt-s- .

The l'r li!i-n- t ot a ureat cheer whenhe conc'ml-- il .ds Trenton speech withthese words.

"nii, ilnally. I am opposed to himbemuse his nomination will be a de-parture troni r. tnolt'.lon that ha. beenreiopnlzeri y Washington, by .leffer-sn-

Imkson. b.v Lincoln. liand was pieserved In the e.,..e

of (iraut bv the people acalnst the willof 'Jrant's friends: mii has been -'

b Theodore Itoi It wasapproved b hlm in 1SU4. and it wasreenfoi i i d by him In IJ'Oi

"I app"-- l from Theoilore !loo-.pp- t

now to Theodore Iu om-v- i It then. I appealIn the same way to those remarks withwhich In- - commended me to tin- - Ameri-can so euliTlMlc. sothat I lannot reol them now withnut hliishhiiT and I sax that both with I

if h!s oiilninii ol n;e nnd withre.ipiet to the constitutional questionor r.-- '11 in- tr.idll.onal ipn stlnn oftwo ie-- ;;, that li s Ji,di;in-- nt then wai

e.--y . it.'- - r i' an It Is now an.)that If . fi.im Hint tradllio-- i

and cl.. h.i.j j, third term, there Isnot tn- - lluh;i st reason at an win mioshould not him. him a fourth term,nnd If a foiirib then th- - barriersare il' brol n ..- - a, iln- tr.idltion whichlimits ip. o in. i If si.ne, nnd un-man conn- ."t in l to the

"My friends i,!s will be a .s.id dav Inthe hlst..r .f th.- republb when

o:J- - teni - Is , ss. ntlal to our coun-try Hen m I. in oln's day. :)nd Lincolntiled at the of h'- - usefulness andthe height ' his puwer j, remembervh.it ;ar!iel-- l s'liil nn the ,,f th,.

in Ne. V.-r- 'findrelgnr. and the 'm rnni-- ni at Wash-ington still 'i s' !)d ?(, It Is

i:inr,.i. 'm di pendent upon mieman, am! th, mla-.u- it - suci-.-ste-

that tt is. end tl,..t s,, -- ,.sl ;,, f,,.lowed, ami the ,m ): dependenton one ninii. tb. ::!..rv of t(u- republliwill riep..r! li.i. us i - institutional fea-ture will be aii'l we shall nolonuei fi el tni ,n Me that now throb- - Inevery A'neri- ins heait Hint foi l.Tiyraii' v e i"tiion-- rated and Indicatedthe wisdom arid the pimaneiiie of pnp-- iulur gni i mm nt '

T. R. IN MELLOW MOOD.

Drop Illtteriu'" anil Ik lionil ,h-tnr-

am His V mltencea.Col. Hoosevelt h New Jersey camifTiKll

opened with a boom at I'atersou at, noonyesterday, when a throne of mill workersand laboring men roared for him in thearmory. At night a lollicUinj:. merry-makin-

happy crowd of Hoosnvelt fanspacked themselves standing into theEfisex Troop Umory at Newark, andfairly lt? with life and red hot enthu-rJoat- n

for the Colonel All he had to dowaa to mention Ohio and his crowdswouldn't atop cheering.

"What's, the matter with Ohio'" a deeplunged rooter shouted at Jilm in Newark.

"Tho imptiNive' judgment of the peopleof Ohio was all right " shouted back theColonel in his most humorous and happybfpjeak. "Kvorybndv s all right, " ho shotout.

"Everybody's rloin' it now." tho gallerygods yelled back, and the big throng wentinto an uproar The Colonel was ashappy hh a hov

"I thought I'd had a middling livelylime in the West, but 'poti my word, New.Ii rsey boats 'om all. " he called out lo theNewark armory crowd alter lie had beenulil" to make himself he.nd "They'vekept me going ii hard "

"nu'og(it the othfr follows going,though. " came back from the cmwd, "anddon't you worry about New Jersey "

1 rleniis, and tho l olonel lossed backhis head, thiow out his chest and raisedup his arms, "I'm not worrying aboutanythinn My eneinii'-- i can't get megoing."

He grinned and the audience set up amar nf laughter It a i different lini-- e.

xeli to-l- ay Ii om the aiupaiKiier in t)iilnarid otliei statci. i amp,iigntl.rt. Iillll .'lltiriill- - .1 tllfT.tiuikt r.l.nrc.l.,,.iUid flavor. Tin; Colonel wun In mellow

'moed ll wiimh charltntilp, kindly spiritthat i)Vnl in him nil day

llnrdlv i flash of th" bitterness andImtninorlnc ptiRtincity of the Massachn-sett- s

nnil "hlo cumiiaisuM wa seen, llnbarely mentioned I'tesldent Tnft duringthe day lie hardly nientlniuil tho tlRhtho was makitiR In lis hard and crsnallentiirPH.

What Col lloosi-vel- l centred on y

was broad idenU and principles thpfundamentals ho called them -- ot tho iur-his- i-

he declared In- - has net himself to. ofsei'iinm: eritinl opnortunltv and social Mand industrial Justice for Hie masses.

Tn hl-- j tilK crowil of laiioritiK inpn atI'atersoil lie llptD'Ulod by talking of realimpiilar rule for ttii'tn in Rovernmpnt.tin- - luealdnn of the bchses nnd politicalmachines, and in social conditions, tho nt

of their life liy ou-nlti- tin creatpropimrtunity, secured throtinh regulation,not iiestritrtinn, ot dir nusiness, ana nyntnendtiient of Hie tariff to secure the"lienetltH of protection coins Into the payenveloxi, not stoppinR In the office. "

i nen to tne wen on wnoin his audiences in l'nssnle, Unckptisnrkand thp pleasant cp'pn .Iprsey suburbshe Hew through in his auto, he preachpd thoKolden rule, altruism, -- helpini; thp otherfollow not so wi-l- l off specifically by theelimination of such conditions tn tnn hand-ling of big business as are responsible,Im decl.ip-d- , for tho RrowlnR feeling ofunrest, discontent, rancor and Has hatredthat he told these crowds they would handdown as a eurso upon their children ifthev did not remove them now.

"I would like to preach it with thefervor of n rrusader. the Colonel said atllackeiisack in the midst of this talk forsocial Justice, "Hie improvement of tene-ment nouse conditions, workmen's compensation acts, national and Stale lawsforbidding overwork of women and allwork of children. " Hp spoke with greatititetiseness and earnestness, Ho vias thepreacher rather than the fighter mostof the day

As the remedy for these conditions ofsocial and political oppression and in-justice, th" Colonel in th evening atNewark stoutly defended his "rpfprendumon judicial decisions" his new name forthe recall of judicial decision-"M- y

opponents attack me most onthis, in- - said, but tr thpre is any onopoint of which I am siir of upholdingthe cause of the plain tieoplo I am surenn this one. I d allow every Iwir asHociation in the country to hummer mefor twenty years and I d not change myutimi one nil.

Hie t olonel pushed his doctrine onestep further He has appliedit in tne past oniv to Mtnte court.

"This does not mean that it shall neverbe applied to the courts," hesaid. "At some time whenever it shallbecome necessary so to apply it I shallfavor it. If the Federal courts made apractice of such decisions as in tho New

ork Imkeshop case I d proceed againstthe federal courts just as soon as anyotlier

Tim C.lnnul l.r.,1 tb wnwiL U'itli ht,wherever... he went.... He

. .rplayed and -inkedwith them and had n Jolly time.

All the Colonel's best campaign humorwas in evidence, .Not a mother wholifted up her Iwiby to see him missed awave of the big black hat.

"You citizens carrying small citizensyou know what 1 think about Jer-vy- 'flint crop the baby crop, " and the Colonelwould chuckle and keep waving the hatand the crowd would feel awfully tickled

At Passaic an intense and approvingcrowd cheered him in the high schoolauditorium His Hackonsack audiencewa- - an afternoon crowd with many womenin the hall and another larger crowd outdoor- -

A littl" crowd had gathered in the roadnt Hasbroiick Height, mostly women andHoy Scouts

"1 hope you'll vote a you shout onTuesday. " laughed the Colonel And adistinctly feminine ripple of cheers andlaughter' answered A woman's clubluncheon party came out and flutterpdhandkerchiefs for the Colonel near llack-eiisack And once lie stoppi-- 1 his caravanto get out along the road and snake handswith an old lady who was celebrating hereighty-fourt- h birthday ,

The Colonel is a wise campaigner Henever missed a tncu y with tnewomen, and they seemed all to be for hi.uI'retcv suburban house along the (laden-sac- k

height were flying Hags and buntingfor People stood out on theirlawns to smile and wave at him along thoroad '1 here were big crowds gathenslat Hutherford. where the Hough llidertold the Hoy .Scouts that m unselfishnessand eflort to drive out foulness they wi rfundamentally part nf the progress einovi-iiu-ui- . and at lllonmtlold. at botnplaces in the public --quale

.Moiitclatr turned out a tug crowd onol tu-- high school I hey clieered

in heartily ICol lliioseiel! ciosisl Ih- - llackeis.irk

uieailow- - m a special Mc.io nib- - tramto Jerey City after Ins appearance inNewark lb- - was taken I nun in- - Siiinnii'avenue -- latum m an automobile 'o tin-hig-

school building and loiind oa

peop'e on tin- - grounds ho ha. I I n un-able to get Into the building lie talkedto them fur fifteen minutes and nt in 20lireei-- into the school auditorium, whichwas jarnm-- d to the limit He wa- -

greeted by an audience of:t,in. of whom were women

"I thoroughly enjoyed the trip throughNew Jepy he sjud "I've hadsome middling hiely times in the West,but New Jersey put nno (Her the West

y 1 i passed about as M ioniumsa ten hour- - as I eier had in my life. I'ubeen pleased with th" way l'hao beenriv,-iod- , I undi-r-taiii- l il - not for mo,Inn tin- rai.s- - I represent "

'I ho ('oloti"l was very husky but it wasapparent In- - wanted folk- - to know In- - washappy He -- aid h- - didn't want to be1'iesident unless he had the heait-li- y

behind linn, claiming that th- - onlyi ason why he wanted tn Is- - I're-ide-

wa tor the sakoof putting into execution(oi'ain piiuciple which h-- said lie Is-l- ie'

ed m with all Ins heart "I don'twant ih- - office," ho declared, "unless th"people want to see the principles for whichI stand pievail "

The Colonel opened his address bysax lug In- - would tell a little anecdoteHint he has not told before.

"At the time when my Westernfrl'nds were urging me to become ncandidate I told them lhat I did notwant to run," he said "They repliedthat they had stood by me In 1 90--

when I wanted the Presidency nndthat now I ought to stand by themwhen th-- v wanted the Presidency orme. Then om- - of them remarked

" No, It Isn't the time foi It Hedoesn't want to run '

" Whi'ieiipon a very great filend ofmlii". Mr Marl; .ullhan. said.

"'The time to set n setting hen Isvhoii the hen wants to set,' and he

continued to Ihe effect that If the peoplewanted me to run then now was thetlmi to run. Vnu see I had to run"

The Colonel paid his icspectH to thebosses, some of whom he enumerated,and glei fully exclnlmcd

"Wo have the scalp of most of thesegentlemen hanging nt our belt I no-tice that a boss In my own State, MrHarries, shows symptom- - of rending meout of the Hepubllcan partx. He'll haveto lead a large order when he doe It.It has been said by Mr. Taft himselfthat I've been disloyal to the party, I'mdisloyal onlv to the bosses. If jnu InNew ,i rsev vote for real Hon Jim willxute to uphold tho hands of every bnsaIn the country.''

Aftu luncheon In the llnmlllou Clubat I'aleison the Colonel shot away InIds iitiln, with twelve machines of news-paper men and locm committeemen inthe wnl, o. Ilooseveltlan dust Is blackand hcavv and the Colonel's entouragelooked Ilk- - e line of clamdlggeis whenth-.- v pulled Into the Kssox County Cnun- -

i try ('lull at night for dinner as Hiegnosis with the Colonel ofSenator liverill I nlliy

children, 1,100 of idem, mnatlvI '.!nlli,,1!'' ?' Ameiicnn. .nnd Italiantlavs, made nn Italian holiday for ihei'iiIoih I along th- - streets In l.odl TimColonel got In some good work theremilling at the hahles and the mothers.iieverai mg nveing lactones closed upnnu ineii employee made UP H lively I

crowd fm nn- - i oionei .i orniorj ,

...,. .ii, ,..,. ... n... I......... .. ... i

Country Club he made his speech In the .I .vwutK Armory nnu to u UIb crowd In i

Military Park. He then went to Jeriiey

THE SUN,. FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1912.

City and sppnt the night at Hie HotelAstor In New York.

With him on the trip wereI'o't of Porto lllco, Harold Howland ofthe Outlook, who Is managlnir the trip;Kverett Colby, l'sax progressive Ipatlerwho Is waiting for n Fnltpd Btnte.

to hit him: FranklinFort, Stokes, George L. ltecord.this Jersey City progressive lender whoabandoned 1m Follette not long ago forthe Colonel! Senator Polndcxter ofWashington nnd Itcpresentatlve Victor

unlock- - of Kansas.(if the political situation George L.

Record snld y Hint Itoonevelt wouldget twenty of the twenty-eigh- t NewJersey del'-gntet- The Colonel wentthrough "seven Congrewlonnl districts

representing altogether halfthe delegate strength of New Jersey.Mr. Ilecord declared Iloosevelt wouldwin the four delegates at large. Hesaid Hie Tnft forces vvert concedingllu.lson to Hooevelt.

The unbiassed snld that the Taft ma-chine under John W. Grlggn In Pas-sa- ls

was strong and thit nooseveltwould have to fight for Ksscx. Theydeclared that Itoosevelt'a only Weak ter-ritory was In Morris, Union and At-

lantic county, containing Atlantic City.Thoe unblnssed observers give the Col-onel :he State.

One remerk of the Colonel'sHint cho.ved hlm In no fear of thpnntlonnl committee arose from a loco-motive puffing outside h!- - Newarkmeeting.

"It'. the -- tenm roller," n man yelled."Yes. the steam roller," echoed the

Colonel, grinning. We'll stop theirsteam rnllr. They won't try any slrntnroller on us. We may hove our faints,bile we're not weaklings."

OHIO'S BIO SIX SLIPPING.

Honsrxelt l.lkelr In Control Con-vention Taft Han Onl- - H Mnrr.

Columbus, Ohio. May ?3 -- Control ofthe Ilppubliean State convention to beheld June r is still in doubt butthe trend is toward Itoosevelt, despitevigorous claims to the contrary by TaftsupKrters. The convention will be madeup largely by county conventions to beheld, prior to the State meeting Theindications are that these county conven-tions will display band wagon tendenciesand thus send to the State conventiondelegation which will stand for Coi.Iloosevelt This means that Hoofeveltmen will wrest control of the Stntp con-vention from the Taft people

If the President fnil to land Ohiosbig six he will have only eight do legal isfrom Ohio Heports In- -t night gave himten district delegate, but txvo of therexvere rpmoved when completedCOllllt in th Thirtpenth nnd Fifteenthdistrict showed that no Tuft men hadbeen electeil Th" district carried livTaft were the First nnd Seccnd, where hohail no optiosition to sna' of. nnd theThird. He has onp delpgate from the Sithnnd another from the Seventh

(lov Wilon of Nexv Jersey is likplv tohavn fiftpen out of forty-tw- o Dpmocfaticdi-tr- delegate in Ohio. Gov. Harmonwill hnx--e the others and nUo th" fix dele-gates at large

T. R. OWNS THEIR VOTES ONLY.

lllliiol- - llrlrHUIr lleruar In lie lielltrreil XVrniipril nnil Tied I p.

Cllirnr.o, .May .'3 That part of theIllinoi delegation to the Ilepuhliccnnational convention which rr.el in secretsession at the Hotel I --a Salle las night

to delix-er- - itsplf wrapped andtied to Theodore l'ooevell, althoughdeclaring sin-e- re allegiance to the Colo-nel's cc.use.

Fewer than half ol the delegates werepresent, and conspicuous among theabsentees were Gov Deneeii and Ijw-renc- e

V Sherman, nominee lor the t'niledStates SenatorFhip

Chauncey Dewey. niihisnl pinnierin the eaue nf Hnosexelt in this Stateand one of the delegate- - a' - pre-cipitated the discussion lie g-sti l

that 'inasmuch ns there Im l Ij. ngossip as to Hie lovn! y of ninnv

delegates to Hooseveli a mil c.i'l bearid til" delegate- - Im In ,'e' Lirethcnielve

Then Dewey offered a resolution projKi-ni- g

that on all nuestions connecied withhe national convention the Illinois delega-

tion take the advice of Mr Hno-exe- lt

The resolution was intended toItoosevelt to siy who should go on thocommittee on resolutions, the credentialscommittee and. in short, direct tin- - entiredeliberations of the Illinoi- - delegation

.several delegates tool; issue wit h Dewev.ehiirged him with iiiestioning the Koodfaith of his fellow members and ass-m-

in substance that tho delegates wouldobey to the Inst letter their Instructionswithout further reolut ion. roll call uledi?"or affidavit

faft delegates ulso met last llL'ht io tin,l.aS-ill- All were present Their sessionwas harmonious. The Tail delegates areWilliam J Cooke nod ( hurles Hiippel ofthe Fifth district

STANDING OF CANDIDATES.

Cliiliiied for ThII. r.HOi llnnsrxrll.n.-it- cisru, unit xaiuiiii, i:u.

W siii.voton. May S3 -- The standingof the candidntesaccording to Hie latest information

at the resiectiv head )uat1ers, isii-- i follow.

IIKPt'ni.lCANHIn ciinvf nilon.. 1.111tu choice :,iu

rialmca far Tuft . . !MtIntrnrtfit fnr Ta!t .M0Clalmcl for Homcvclt ... . MRIntruclcil for Hoofvell. , I.HInitrurtt-i- t for lv Folic ttr MIni'nirtM for runimln 10

IHIUOCHAT.Stic lcsatc In convention I.P94Nccrmary to choirs.. , i:tntructeit fnr Clarlc . , :aiInttrurted for U'llton .. 14Intrurtrrt for t'ndcrwood , ,

tntructfiJ for Harmon ,. .1

Instruciril for Mamhall , .. .10Initriirinl for llalilwln ,. HInmriirti J for llnrke . 10

TAFT MEN RUN THE ROLLER.

Ilnl- line llnnsevell Man Allnirrd loMhoiT In Ohio Cnnnlr r'nnvenllon.

SrniN-ai'iF.Li- Ohio, May :a Taft mencontrolled the Hepubllcan county con-vention thin afternoon from tho start,The only clash camo with tho projectof naming committees of five to nominatedelegates to the State, circuit, judicial,common pleaH judicial and Senatorialconventions. Thp Taft men won by a!... ., n ,.t fm 1,,1 ,,i .tu iu dl,

The steam roller was used Affectivelyon the Hoofcevolt men. Harry r'rey jotthe honor of lieing an alternate to thocommon pleas Judicial convention to Imheld ot Troy Juno 12. He was the onlyMoose veil man recognired,

TO RUN WITH ROOSEVELT.

Ilciiri-seiitnltt- Conprr of WtaronalaMrnllnned for Vlpe-I'rrsldr-

W xsiiim.to.v. May ?.v The name ofItepresentiillvn Henry Allen Cooper ofWisconsin was hrouuht forwanl y byii number of l(onm-vel- t men in t nngressfor on the Hooevcll tlckst,

ro men in course irisi llnnsevell, real znlie extraordinary claim of his manager,

Senator Dixon, and pt the Republicaniii'iniiiiiiiiiii .in iur nrni Hanoi

Mr Cooperhas had many year of servicehi Ihe House, I erne nf Col, Honaevelt'I'lnneMl f riemlh nnrl t-- n i,inn.a, r,.,n.i ., -He led the flsrhl In the Ifouae airalnst Speaker; ihihwi, iit.-ui- imuse insurgpiiii a ktonii sneiiki-- anil I etod h,. ihV" , ll r.rK. f.'W T

threatened bv the aittimU ..r i i Vn-..- ".

U. S. RUSHES 600

Covlinutd from Ftritt Pagt.

None of the beof wo have pnvlously sentto the uhlpi down there was roiectedand there wrw no reon for this lo lx"

Another member of tho firm said:"They have g ven us a raw deal The

beef may have been under weight becauseof the rtnh In filling tho older, but it wasperfectly good. It wai A No. I beef."

Notwithstanding this claim of the contractors, a lo.rge part, of the beef was rejected and ient out of the yaw shortlybefore & o'clock.

A telephone order for lS.ooo pounds wasat once placed with a large packing house,to bo delivered so the Prairiecould take it aboard and be ready to sail.The packing house manager agreed tobegin making delivery within din nextthree or four hours.

Three companies of marines, 210 menIn all, under command of Major HenryC. Davis left the Brooklyn navy yardat 0:30 A. M. yesterday for Philadelphia.They did not know whet they wero to dothen, for the orders from Washingtongave no intimation of their destinationexcept the significant phrase "to preparefor tropical service." Also, there wr.ssome hustling on the part of those underI, lent. -- Col John A. I.ejpuno to get Hip

men off.i

An orderly from Commandant Iieute'soffice panted up the front steps of Col.Ijeune's house at 11 o'clock onWednesday night with orders from Wash-ington to get three companies ready toleave for Philadelphia. Col. I.eJeune'Bmen are always technically ready to goanywhere at any time, so no word wassent to the men Some of the officers,however, were in Manhattan and therewa some lively telephoning for them.

The reveille, sounding at dawn, gotthe men out of their barradis. wonderingwhat wa up. Few of tVm had he.i"dabout the troubles in Cuba, and il xvasthe common impression th.v Panamawa their destination for they had beenexpect ing orders to go to t he cenr.l or Me.x --

ico nil winter.The marines were told to g"t thd'

knapsacks, haversacks, canteen-- , beltsr.nd rifles ready for heavy ma'chingorders. There wa chance for a bite soen", nnd then cnm the of Held

kil. the stowing pw.v of sheet, blanketnndfor the depa-tme- n'. ,

fly 0.30 o'clock the men were pilingnboa--d

a n.vy tug to go to Jersey Cite, there to(

take a special fain fo- - Philadelphia, i

K.iglitv men. most or them short timers,up . ,v, i.,........ i,,:,i,.i,u. ,w ,

I r.t c .

t'nU'-- r Major Davi, in command ofthe three compaiie. a-- e Cr.pi. AIesanderS Williams, Pirsl I.ieur H. X Manner, I

Ki'M Lieut. Cla-l;- e H Well and Secmd II

Lieut. Alfred McC. Hobbin '

i

CUBAN NE0R0 REVOLT GROWS..Will Wrlrnmr nterlean Troi, '

llopr In ttnld litter ellllon.rierni ' allr hnfiltU 'o Till-- Si

Havaxa May the tlovern-men- t

declare the negro rebellionis dving out. other reports fav it is grow-ing to an alarming eitent in Snn'ingo

'

In Santiago city various public utilitieshi've alied the Oovernor lor the pro i

tection of troop. They have been told i

lli.it soldiers e.'e not available, but th?.'they can arm themselves, The town of j

San Luis, Palma and Soriano are in ilr.ngerof capture by the rebel.

Sefior Chibe. n prominent engineer ofSantiago, who ha just r.Tived in Hnx-pna- .

savs th negroes number more thr.n.'.nno. Many of ihein believe the spiritof (Sen. Jon Miiceo, the negro hero of thetn yea's wa- -, i reinci'.rnnti-- in Lstinoy,

hoi-- e followers include Haytictis andJmnaicans. who regivd him sa Messiah.Ihi dangerous element i preaching the;doctrine of negro domination i

Secretary of Government Laredo Ilrudeclarea the negro movement is collapsing i

but at the same time he says the authori '

ties ari enlisting all the volunteers whoare offering t heir services in large numbers j

in response to the call of the President'I he warship Patria sailed this afternoon

carrying troops, and other are going bytrain tn Santiago

Arthur M Heaupre. the AmericanMinlsler to Cuba, ha informed the (iov-ernme-

of the coming of Americantransports with marine m

! '......xiuxi-lliuie- .in imu r

gratitude at the action of the UnitedStates in protecting the whites nndCuban independence. Secretary Ilrusays, however, that he hopes the inter-vention will not be necessary

Cart Parker, the cavalry ofthe Cuban army, is sounding the watersof Mariel Bay, presumably in anticipationof the possible landing of marines theicIn fact the sending of such small shipsas the Nashville and Padticah suggeststhat it is considered necessary to entercertain ports

Heax--y firing was heard this afternoonabout 5 o'clock near Tiguabos, fortymiles from Bam iago. It is believed thata big fight is going on there betweenthe rurales and the negroes under

A negro was arrested heroHe had tI0 and it was proved that hewas a member of the first hand whichhas started from Mariano, a suburb ofHavana. The money the man had provessome one i furnishing funds for anuprising.

papers publish a story thatMr. Hteinhart and Jose San Miguel arothe instigators of the uprising. TheGovernment ridicules the statement.H About ono hundred negroes in tho regular army hnx-- e been arrested on suspicionof having robel sympathies.

The cartmen have postponed their. ....ii.- - ... .u- - ; . .

proposed mrmn in mo uiki-ii-i requesiof President Qomer.. With all tho policoengaged in patrolling tne outskirts or thecity to prevent any nogroes from leaving.it would be impossible to guard thewharves and maintain r in cao ol astrike,

GUNBOATS ALSO TO GO,

(internment Orders I'ndncah andaahvlllr to Unantananio.

WasiilNQTON, May 23. Alarmed by thegrowing seriousness of the negro revolt inCul Hie United Htates Hovemment issending 700 marinen to the naval base atfluantanamo. Orders for the cxedltionwere sent out from the Navy Departmentearly to-da-

The expedition Is in command of Col.l.lnln h'.rm.nv. Vh .nil,, rjshould be landed it (.uantanamo Bay notlater Uian Monday. .

Besides to. marine, on th. lranport

Prairie, Ihe gunboats Padue.ih and Nash-ville were also ordered to Guantanamo.Tho Pnducali Is surveying off the easterncoast of Cuba and tho Nashville in atSanto Domingo city. Both vessels werodirected to proceed at once to Guantanamoand nwnlt there the arrival of the Prairie.

Suite DeKirtinenl officials declared theexpedition was not to lip rcgardpd as nnintervention or oven nn occupation tnCuba. Tho force. It wa said, wns beingsent to provide further assurance, thatAmerican life and property would bo pro-tected during tho dlslurlianoes.

According to the ordr undor whichCol. Karmany.'s force Is leaving, he willnot move his men lieyond tho limits oftho United StateH naval station at Guan-tanamo without authorization fromWashington, It I said the marines willlio kept at Guantanamo for use only Incase of emergency It Is not proposed toplace, them at thu disposal of MinisterHenuprp to lie disposed of as ho socs fitfor protecting American life nnd proierty.

The lotest reports received In Washing-ton were slightly morn encouraging Uianprevious which brought oboii.t he decision to solid a force toGuunt anumo.Iloth thu War and State departmentsam being kept in close touch witJi thosituation throughout tiie island by theirrepresentatives in Culm.

ihis afternoon's despatches indicatedthat the Cuban Government, caught

and hampered at first by failureto realize the significance of th revolt,was bestirring itself and seemed likelylo restore order shortly, 'though pro-fessing absolute conllderice in their abilityto suppress the negro uprising promptly,the Government oitlclils ct the highestrank privately expressed apprehensionnow that th" extent of the negroes' or- -guniziitioti i revealed.

though th" action or tn United rttnteswns taken primarily in ihe interest ofAmerican life and property in Cuba, adesire to prevent th" downfall of the es-tablished Government prompted the de-cision tosend th" marines, llisttie StateDepartment's hope that the Gome.Government may be preserved, al least,until th- - have been h-- ld nnd anew President chosen, A serious revoltin the mid- -t of the Presidential campaignsand election would be regarded a uealamitv possibly requiring anotherAmerican intervention. It is believedth" t two o- - thre-- t days will showwh"ther the Ciilinn Government is goingto be able to maintain itself and protectAmerican property in the island.

Th" source of the financial backing ofthe negroes i -- till puzzling State

official, 'I heir organizationnnd their plentiful supply of money andarm- - i regarded n proof that powerfuland rich in'luence are supporting thereeolotioniirv

In Cuba it i beex-e- that the revolt- lieiiir by persons who d"sire

tn iirim on another American interven-tion T'noTicinl depntche name a thiHacker of t he ni?roes one of thp wpalthiestXmerlcpti- - in Cnlvx. who wa prominent

I "Jrl1?"!":!!? i.r''. A'rJ J..Jl1.f'Tl iV:.rt 'jrjl'ito 1)rln(: otl ,llir(l intervention and iscon"ii!entlv supplying the negroc withmoney n"d arms

Aceordini to th per-o- ti responsiblefnr ebnrr.e. the negroe are beingpncniniT'd to go lo extremes In ctpprpelation ittion American property in Cuba j

n'nl Iti ttireatenuip tin- - lives ot .Aniericnnthere On th" other hand, friend of thisAmerican insist nothing could be furthert .1...iniii II" llll 111

Ministpr ,..lunr,v rallied the StatePep,irtmnt y thi mot serioudisturbances were occurring especiallyin the provinces of Ouantannmo and

iSr.ntingo American citizens and theiriiroeerte nrt lieinir menaced tv neprobnnd thne district There' ia great'fear arr"ni i iiha'i. or n race wn"

Ihe t'tihan Cuba has leftHavana nm soldiers bound for Ouan-trtnnn- m

Other force have been sentto nrien'e iroxince bv train A partyof t'onpr-'-- Havana for th.eir heme

et ln' night 1 hey xxill try, it issaid, to com ilinte the negroes. 'I ho Oov- -eminent i said to be receiving offers ofnitatipe in tln uprisingfrom orgnnbntion and citizen through- -

ut the republic

NO DANGER. SAYS STEINHART.

1'uitrr In 4'iilui r n reil for I'.. Interxrnftiiii.

I'ranl; Stcin'tii-t- , who i regarded aIhe mot powerful American in titmnciulnnd political w.ivs in Cuba, mid last eve-

ning ut the Hotel Imperial that he didnot think the negro uprising in Cubawould be nf much consequence, andfrom what he knew of the situation hewa quite certain there would be no needfor Intervention by the American

Mr. Stcinhart. who urrived h-- re onWednesday evening, wa a (iovernmenfclerk in Washington at the close of thoSpanish-America- n War and wa sent to( uba. In a short time lie wa madethe American Consul-deiier- by Presi-dent Hoosevelt . Since then he has plavedan important part in Cuban alairs andhe wa called "the m.m behind Mr.goon"when (ien. Mugooti xv.is n ler of thcilaud.tl.. ,1... ,,C II... If,,.',,,,,. L'lunlllailwav. an American concern, nnd the

--,., r. .,1 Sn,.v..r ltr,,u', , , ... ...1 lllivi inn nun ii it, ri.j, ..iiuiii i Jie

Cuban situation." Mr Stcinhart Fcid"1 do not thinli the negro revolt is veryserious, (ien. Come,- -. Itnetv on Saturdaythat it was threatened and he wa pre-pared for it Of course nt the start thereports from those who are scared arealarming

"For instance. I have seen reports thatcaneflelds were burning anil grpat dam-ag- o

was being clone. As a rr.t.tter of faeltho grinding is over and verylittle cane i standing, Therefore, whilethere ha been some burning of cane,it has not amounted to a great deal andtho loss will not be heavy.

"I know how tilings are exaggerated.In the uprising in IWW, when I was Con-sul, (iuerra, one of the leaders of tho revo-lutionists, sta-te- d out with fourteen menA Cuban paper said (iuerra led 1,100 men,In a few days the grew to l.tmn,Aliout the same thing is going on downthere now. An uprising of this kindmust have organisation, lenders andfinancial backing."

"It is wild in Washington," Mr. Stein-ha- rt

was told, "Hint the uegroea haveplenty of financial Iwlilng."

"Thev have not." he said. "Wherewould ft come from? I do not believe it."

",h you view the situation now do vouthink it will 1st necessary for ths UnitedStates (lovernment to net?" Mr. Hteinhartwa n!ed.

" I do not ," he s.nd, "Hen, Oomez knowswhat is going on mid ho is capable ofquelling the uprising. There is a strong., il,PV,,jwij! ,,Mi hpip "

uo not pellevej jir. steinlmrt said his trip here hadm,t,ing to do with tho uprising. He ishere to attend the unnunl meeting ofthe Havana Kleotrio ailway Company,He wild ho would return t'--i Cub.i onJune is.

rienor (larcia. the Cuban Minister toEngland, and a number of other Cubansare stopping at the Imperial

('niiBri-ssiiiii- Tatnnsenil a I'andldnteunln,

MoNTOt.AlR, N'. ,1,, May 13, Followinga lonferonce of l.iemocrutu- l uilrrs atn luncheon at the Hotel Monti-lnli- lastnll'.lit I'mmrt simian ICdwaid W. Tmvn-ren- d

ann-iuiiif- lunisilf as u can-didate for rctionilnatliiii liy the Ueinneiatsof the Tenth Coiikipss district, lty aehnn- t- in ir. iin. nt the dbtiict-- ; withint ll.C . IMSt far hlllll hr 1111(1 i onureshin.inxxauei i .xiivni in ,ie nlru-e- In the

, Tenth district. Mr McCov has gone toluiuuier uimih-i- , mi umi nis ,M,,niiiuiii

I Sow "Uf 'fit. Townnd."01 ",U'rfcr W""

W. L. DOUGLASSHOES

s3sgg3t2&s4s22Boym wmmr W.L.Douml $AOMt3260 Shoe: mt Tn thm WorofW. L. Doiiflas makes and tells more

$3.00, $3.50and$4.00ihoe. thanany other manufacturer in theworld. WHY?

BECAUSE he protects the weareragainst high prices and interiorshoes, by stamping his nameprice on the bottom and guaran-teeing their value.

BECAUSE for style, fit and wearthev are sunerior to ordinarymakes of shoes. Don't take astitute for W. L. Douglas shoes.

If vnur deilfr cannot supply W, fT. Douglas shiMI.vnic' U'. 1,. DotiiUi, BrocHon, Miii., tnr catalog,

hoes sent tvervnhere tlehverv charvti nrrnaiil.

- Call at W. L. Douglas Store in New York:OS NMn l.i13(9 Hrolwf.rnr..iaih Ntrcetl 1408 Hrosdw.T (Time Smire)i HI Thlril Kxt.iMM Third Je.t 3n Third Ae rnr. IJOth L til Third Aw bfi, nrt147IU Hl. i 34n Klghtti Atrnutl Ml Klghlh Ave.t 8f W. l8lh4a I Pulton st.,ror. Pearl Nt.t ft. 1 1WIT flroiidwa? t1387 Urnndwav.rur. natpa At. 478 Tlflh Ae.,eor. llth Hl.t 17711 Pltltla Anns.

NKMrAHK-8- 11 llroad Slreel. JKBSET CITT-- 18 Newark Aveou.

LA FOLLETTE LAYS IT ON T. R.

Mi on a Unit Ihe Colonel PermittedTnlrmfnl C'omhlnallons" lo Grow.

Atlantic City, N. J.. May 23. Sena-tor La Kollette arrived here this eve-ning from Trenton and spoke before4.000 listeners on the steel pier. In thecourse of his speech he snld:

"There nrc millions of people In thiscountry who are feeling resentment Intheir hearts against the unlawful com-

binations which nre preventing themfrom getting Justice. They will rise upshortly nnd demand an end of it nil.

"Ibis u man like Itoosevelt the rightto return where he wields absolutepower over conditions when he per-mitted unluwful combinations to growfrom H! In number with three billionsof capital to 10,020 with thirty-on- e bill-

ions behind them In capitalization, 70per cent, of which Is fraud? This when

nil the time In- - had the Sherman anti-trust law. the grandest Institution evermade a law, to enforce discontinuance.With all these new Inventions, thestrides made In science nnd the higherunderstanding of things In general,things should be cheaper. Instead, theyare higher, principally Because of thesecombinations or trusts. You know xvhoIs to be blamed, nnd there ure othersbeside Morgan nnd the Standard fill."

Thentox. N. J,, May 23. SenatorIlobert M. Ln Follette arrived here latothis afternoon on his tour of New Jer-sey. He got a warm xvelcome. morethan 3,000 persons following Ills auto-mobile from the Pennsylvania Railroadstation to the Y, M. C A. hall, wherehe spoke. As he entered the hall hewas heartily cheered. Labor men pre-dominated ln the audience.

DINNER TO K0EN1G.

Tnll Lenders In Ihe County Knler- -

lain Hlm.

The Taft supporters arncng the execu-tix-- p

committee of the Republican countycommlttee-whi- ch means thirty-fou- r ofthe thirty-si- x committeemen- - turned uplit-- t night at tho Iiepublican Club in WestFortieth street for a dinner of felicitationto Samuel Koenig, president of the countycommittee. The two absentees wereWilliam Hatpin, leader of tho Sex-ent-

Assembly district, and Louis Friedel,leader of the Eighth ThesJ two districtswere the only districts to back up Col.lioosovelt at the primaries,

Ogden L Mills, treasurer of the countyand executive committees, pit sided, withMr. Koenig seated at his right. JohnHovle, Jr., secretary of the county com-mittee, and Mr Mill were the guests ofthe executive committee

"It's strictly a Taft bunch here," Mr.Itoyle said. "The dinner is quite informalThere ate no formal speeches on Ihe pro-gramme, but alter the coflee prol-ahl-

will Is- - some brief cxtemxrancous talks."

TAFT. SEES GOAT QUICKLY RID.

I'rrslilenl lines) of I'hllndelpliln -

sons nnd NnxlBHllun I'mitirrra,

Pun Aiu:t I'll a May II (n - be-

ginning his campaign New ,lereyPresident Taft orinally opened ihe Inter-national Congress of N'avigal on in thisci y. The President also stopped nngenough to a lend n luncheon .it he HotelBellevue-Stratf- o d us ihn guest of Will nmL (lorgas, St.ite (ii.-.u-d Mp.ter o theMaons, nnd to th ceremony utthe MuMiniu Temple of lie mak ng o nMr. on "at sight " The President himselfnot ong ago was made a membet of the0 der by this method in Cincinnati

In opening tho Into, national Coiigre.of Navigation the President declared that

gave him grer.t pleusure to greet anyorganization thr.t standaforth" promotionof the peaceful arts among the nations ofi lie world. Th IV Hident added thathere in America we have lieen trying todo something to bring about universalpeace

"We have been halted temporarily." saiii

IS" Card

anaj

alWAsub i

"What! Fading?"Why I can't believe my

own eyes."Bought it no, by George,

I didn't buy it at Rogers; Peet's, and well it serves meright.

"But you can bet it's me forR. P. and their fast colorsalter this."

No matter how delicate theshade of gray or brown

No matter how blue theblue the color must stay fastor "your money back."

Spring and Summer suits.$18 to $48.

Variety for any man of anysize !

K.Ntra preparations this earlor Iixtra Big Men and ExtraSlim Men youths.

For men who want to takeexercise and pleasure to-

getherOur "Explorer" bicycle..2;l with coaster brake.In the Sporting Goods

Dept. all three stores.

Roc.fks I'eet Company,

Itaret Brody Stare

at it ilWirren St. 13ttl St. 34th Si.

, he, "but I try to you, repre-entetiv- ofother nations, tha the heart of theAmerican people beat high for peace and

j hev a e any other method ofI settling disputes save hx arb nation andjudicial decision "

Ilio President declared that the UnitedStates has many things to learn Irnm t'.iKtiroppun countries in the nn-.tt- ofhrndling freight and in regard lo themethods of transportation.

"We have ono inland water route, thegrc.t lalie.s," said he, "that dos tli- - big-

gest business of its kind in tho world b,.iwe want to leiiru to use our other lakesand streams Wa wnnt to make sure tunthat when we send u cenal boat ourl.dwith freight from one point to another a

turn cargo will be waiting for it at itsdestination "

The President told the engineer andi others r.ttc-rdln- the conference that the

Panama Canal wil be completed withinI eighteen months

LedgerPromptness

In emergency your entire officeforce can work on the CardLedger without interfering witheach other.

Each account being an inde-pendent unit, the ledger can bedistributed among any numberof assistants.

Balances and statements canthereby be prepared promptlywithout rush or night work.

Booklet and samples furnishedon request.

Library BureauManufacturing alUtributort of

Card ui filiar ? 0i, litViry ud bulk eqsipsestUlH wi ui filial ciUmIi ia wood aid steal

310 Broadxvay rhono Worth 1400