Newspaper Page Text
2
auehigantem
HOT FAVORITES
IN OLYMPIC
Odds of Five to One Offered
That Yankees Will Win the
Chaampionship.
Continued F r or® Page One
Denmark. <m-i. tn E Altiirvtni. "f
Italy finished sou" ■ Time. 47 min
utes 14 1-2 -e,'. -nd-
The same magnlfi'e>n xx®ath®i that
prevailed on ih® pie veiling days pt®,
vailed today when ih< groat -indium
filled for the third d.t' - exhibition of
international a.th’<'ii< |..0»,s-
Today’s Entries.
The following A met nans wire enisl
ed in the mor® important events o!
today:
886-Meiers Final- Melvin W. Sh«-|>-
pard. .1 E Meredith. Davis S t’aldwell.
<’ S. Edmundson, Ira Davenport and
H. N Putnam.
Running High Jump-J <’. John
stone of the Boston A A.; George Ho
rine. of Leland-Stanford university:
Egan R. Erickson, <>f the Mott Haven
Athletic club: A. W. Robards. of Brig
ham Young university James Thorp,
of Carlisle Indian school, and H .1
Grumpell. of the N-c York Athh-tii
club
Iti.Ohn Meters Run Pinal—.Louis- Tena
wina of Carlisle Indiay school; Louis
Scott. South Paterson N .1.. athletic
club. I'. F Mctlui'i North Attleboro,
M ass
Standing Broad Jump Platt Adams.
New York Athletic club: Ben Adgms,
New Yolk Athletic club. F. V Belote.
of Chicago. R L. Beatty. Columbia
university. .1. A. Billet of the Brook
lyn Central Y M <’ A . F Fletcher.
Noir® Dame. Ind Leo Goehring. Mo
hawk Athletic dub: A L. Gutterson,
Universltj of Vermont: E. c lions,
Chicago A A.. E. R Palmer. Chicago
Athletic club.
10.imh-Meter Walk Kelset. New York
Athletic club: T H. Edmund Renz. Mo
hawk Athletic club. Samuel Schwartz
< unattached >. Alfred Voellemke. Pas
time Athletic club.
400-Metei Relax Race F V. Belote. j
Chicago: <<’. Cook. Cleveland Ath-|
Ifitic club. J. i' Courtney. Seattle Ath-|
letic club: Rupert. Thomas. Princeton. |
Emilio Lungbi. the holder of the
w orld's record for the half-mile run. i
was disqualified and was not allowed;
Io start in the SOO meters.
Summary of Finals,
Following is the summary of finals
run y esterday
ion-Meter Final- R. <* Craig I' S.,
first: A T. Myer. C. S. second. D F.
Lippincott. I'. S.. third. G. H. Patchin.
South Africa, fourth: F V. Relate. I'.
S fifth. Time. 1114-7- seconds.
Pentathlon James Thorpe I'. S..
first. 6 points; R. Ble. Norway, second,
I. points Av- ry Brundage. I S.. and
Frank Lukeman. Quebec, tied w ith 24 i
points. Brundage being placed third; |
Jam®- .1. Donogiim I' S . 26 points. ’
J. A. Me.naul. I' S. 28 points.
The big surprise of the games thus j
far is the poor showing made by the I
athletes of England The score by na-l
tion' when th-- contests began today i
was:
America, a. Sw-d-m 2; Finland, 1
Norw ay. 2 Hungat y . 1
BAILROAD LAW AGENTS
TO HOLD A CONVENTION
MACON. GA July 8 Lawyers rep- '
resenting railroads in this state will
m®et tn first annual convention In Ma
con mt Thursday. August I. for the
purpose of organizing Ihe Georgia Law
Agents association A local organiza
tion with about fifteen members was
recently formed here and the organ
izers plant to -tan an association of
scope.
Carlev Evans.
The funeral « t Carley Evans. 9-\ear-old 1
son <»f Mr and Mrs W E <<vqns. who 1
died earlx \esterda.v. was held at the res
idence. Courtland street, toda.v. In
terment was in Westview
Telegraph!
Don’t write
and wait
It is an unusual business letter that
cannot be compiled in fifty words.
It is an unusual business affair, in
these days, that cannot be made
more profitable by clipping hours and
days off the transmission of details.
Western Union Day Letters and
Night Letters afford complete corre
spondence service at telegraph speed.
Full Information by Telephone
THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY
• Today's Olympic •
• Games Program •
• fin'll metris •
• fir i »'”> nt’-ter© »•••!;»> And 1 ©
• fuefric walk. •
• Field. •
• R nr. ns h;c . up fin.C and •
• i ng broad jumi •
• S> . I'-.in ng rr> lers f’ •-»- style. •
rl • • -in ter-- f.-c- -tyle ami water •
• polo •
• Fencing. •
• Saber team- •
• Wrestling. •
• F-ath ’w -ght i hamnionship. •
••••••••••••••••••••••••as
- WOMEN CONTROL
TEACHERS’MEET
f i
. | Progressives and Conservatives |
Battle for Supremacy at Na
tional Educational Session.
j!
■j i ’HP 'AGO. July 8. -More than 10.06(1
■’'teachers of the public and private
I school:, are In Chicago today to attend
> the fiftieth annual convention of the
' National Educational association. which
■ I will open its first regular session at
- 2 . ;:«> this aft- cnoon.
The battle for control of the conven-
; tion began early in the day at the
initial meeting of the 7R men and worn- I
en comprising the board of directors,
l! was a tlglit lietyveen Ihe progressives
ami the conservatives. The voting rights
of Hua new members of the association
binged on the action taken by the
board.
Members of the old line were said Io
lie alarmed ov(n the Increasing activity
<>f women, who predominate in num
ber
Discuss Alleged Sex Contest.
The subject of alleged sex contest
j for supremacy was discussed by tnem
! bers before the meeting of tit® board.
Secretary Irvin Shepard, of Winona,
! Minn., said that there was eonsider
i able dispute over the construction of
I th, by-laws in regard to the right of
j new active members tn vote, and that
: the committee may exercise the power
| some believe it to have to settle this
I question in the face of the ambiguity
I said to exist In the by-law s.
Two years ago at the Boston con
, venlion, a measure was proposed to re
| strict new active members from voting
i if their membership dated back less
I than three months from a convention,
i It was necessary to defer voting on this
proposed amendment one year and it
wa.s tabled last year at the San Fran-i
cisco convention.
According to Mr. Shepard, it was the
296 new members admitted at this con
vention who determined the tabling of I
the motion. Aside from these therel
was an active membership present of;
h.'lu Only present members are allow - I
cil r<- vote, proxies being forbidden by
I the constitution.
Two Candidates For Presidency.
f‘iogressive members of the organfza
; tion denied that It was a, “woman's
I fight.“ Members of the Illinois delega
, tion also denied that there was any
, attempt on the part of the women to
j obtain control. William H. <’ampbell.
’ principal of the Wentworth school,
i said;
' This is a fight for principle, nothing
else. There are some men who think
; the women ate trying to get control.
' but this isn't true."
Miss Grace t'. Strachan, of New York
I city, a progressive ami a clever and
| militant leader is an avowed candidate
for the presidency, and the New York
delegation, which lias Its headquarters
at the Auditorium hotel, is pulling wires
for het election.
Fifty New Yorkers arrived early in
lite day on a special train to support
her candidacy The New York head
quarters are filled with women poli
; ticians and stacks of literature and
j badges.
At a night caucus of tne progressives
E, 'l'. Fairchild, of Kansas, was nom
inated as tile progi essiy.- candidate for
the pn-sidencv
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. JULY 8. 1912.
Georgia s First Lady Clings to Old-Fashioned Ideals
TELLS HOW TO KEEP THE HOME COOL
K\ Wlimr
% wit/' ’IPt -• ■
'□H//I4 ,7 ,i j 1 r IwA
Bh/Ota'
Hl Jih4 U. \ He vJIImS
Hr '>■:
1 /
V 7 F/
■ < -* / //
\ ’ ri J /met
lhe “first la<i of Georgia’
terview upholds old-fashioned i
WRTIALLAWIN
i LOUISIANA PARISH
I
I Six Dead. Twenty Wounded in
I Riots at Lumber Camps.
Troops on Guard.
GRABOW, LA., July B.—All of Cal
den parish was put under martial law
today as the result of 24 hours of riot
ing between union and non-union lum
ber workers in which six were killed
and more than twenty wounded.
Fighting took place at Derldder. Oak
dale, Carson. Grabow and other lumber
manufacturing points in the parish
Three companies of militia are on hand
and others are being held ready for
service. Keeling runs high and further
fighting is threatened.
Trouble has been brewing for a long
lime and the clash was precipitated by
the arrival of James Creel, editor of
the socialist paper. "Rip Saw," which
is published in St Louis.
Creel was fired upon and driven from
Oakdale.
YOUTH, INJURED LIKE
GRACE,IS RECOVERING
I AFTER AN OPERATION
I WALI’ROSS, GA . July 8. Tim Mer
cer. who was shot by his father a few
| weeks ago near Hoboken, is gradually
| recovering and may in time recover the
1 use of his lower limbs entirely. An
operation has just been performed on
him. w hereto the bone fragments that
have been pressing the spinal column
were removed. His wound is almost
identical with that of Eugene Grace, of
Xtlanta The bullet, which struck him
in the back, was removed some dass
ago. Mercer's fathet killed his wife
and himself at the same tim>. the
younget Mercer was shot.
WAYCROSS MAYOR WANTS
COMMISSION GOVERNMENT
\\ AYt’ROSS. GA., July S. The pres
ent session of the Georgia legislature
may be asked to give Waycross a new
charter under the commission form of
government Mayor Harry D Reed
proposed this in a met ting of the Way
cross board of trade and his motion was
seconded by a city aiderman. James
Sinclair
The commission government commit
tee <>f the board of trade, beaded by
John W Bennett, will prepare a char
ter immediately and submit it to a
met i ing of citizens.
Mrs. Mary McCardle.
Mrs Mary Mei'ardie. «5 years old. «f
j"n East Harris street, died <' a -amta
| fturr earh today ’Sbe i- s-jrvhect b- onr
S'.«te r The bod' was taken tn Bioom
1 field f.- B irker' s chapel and will t.-ver be
• grrtad '» n» s t t'hesf erftGd, N. 1.. for
and her daughter, Miss Cora,
leals, and tells how to keep a hnw
Mrs. Joseph M. Brown Not En
thusiastic Over Bungalows
or Cottages of Today.
It will take more than a squatty bun
galow. a rose-bowered cottage or even a
pretentious country house to convince
Mrs. Joseph M. Brown that any habita
tion is cooler In midsummer than the old
fashioned Southern mansion.
To the first lady of Georgia the old
Southern home with its high hall cut
through the center, its vaulted ceilings,
its lofty windows that can be thrown
wide to spacious porches when the sun
is down and drawn against the noonday
glare spells the last word in summer
comfort.
Mrs. Brown is nothing If not old fash
ioned. She thinks of sleeping porches in
terms of neuralgia and connects summer
diets with dyspepsia She much prefers
the tall coot rooms of the executive man
sion and sugar-cured hams from the gov
ernor's Cherokee county farm
"Why. 1 couldn't give you any spe
cific recipe for keeping a house cool in
the summer time," said Mrs. Brown, when
the question that will engross Atlantans
sot the next few months was ventured.
"Modern" Homes Hot.
"The governor's mansion is an old
fashioned house and it is so easy to keep
cool that I have hardly given the question
a thought. Then our home in Marietta
is built on old-fashioned lines with thick
walls and high ceilings, and it is very
little trouble to keep it cool.”
As Mrs Brown spoke she stood in the
reception room of the executive mansion
at Peachtree and Cain streets. The
shades were drawn against the rays of
the afternoon sun, but the room, which
should have been the hottest in the
house, was easilt 8 degrees cooler than
the street.
"The problem of keeping a house cool
in the summer is a modern one.” con
tinued the governors wife. "Nowadays
people put up a house with thin walls,
low rooms and little w indows. Os course,
such a house will be hot
"I eould ne'er believe a bungalow is
cool unless the wind Is blowing, because
it is so tow."
Mrs. Brown is not an enthusiast over
(lie sleeping porch fad. To her the out
of-doors chamber presents visions of neu
ralgia and other little ills which abound
in damp weather The governor, too. she
said, preferred a roof over his head and
four walis around him for real sleep.
Sleeping Porch for Children.
"I imagine a sleeping porch would be
fine for children. In fact, the governor
has built one on the farm for ours" Rut
one does not need a sleeping porch to be
cool in Atlanta if the nouse is built for
comfort.
But Mrs. Brown has no list of rules
for keeping her dwelling at a comforta
ble temperature She keeps her house
n order and cool because it is easy and
natural sot her to do so. Her domesticity
is an instinct and npt an art
She admits that she Is old-fashioned
and la's claim to simplicity as her most
visible virtue.
"There isn't any rule about these
tilings. " she concluded. "Every woman
should know how to keep her house cool.
It is merely a matter of common sense
'Vitli a properly constructed house, it is
no trouble at all "
FIVE CANDIDATES IN TROUP.
LAGRANGE GA . Juh S Millard E
McLendon, a member of th« Troup count}
bar. has announced his candidacy for the
>egf-!.iture ind will be an opponent m
E T Moot'. J H Vrn'strong. Professor
Th-ekle and Representative Hines for
representative from this county.
Mrs. Brown in an interesting in
e cool in summer.
GUARD AT ASTOR
GRAVE DOUBLED
Friends of Titanic Victim’s
Family Concerned in Recent
Increase in Precautions.
NEW YORK, July B.—Friends of the
late John Jacob Astor are greatly con
cerned over the fact that guards at his
tomb in Trinity cemetery have been
doubled. The body of Colonel Astor was
brought to this city on May 4 after the
funeral services in the Church of the
Messiah at Rhinebeck. The sepulture
took place In Trinity cemetery. Broadway
and One Hundred and Fifty-seventh
street. The casket was placed in a niche
in the family vault, beside the casket of
his mother and above that of his father.
Two men have guarded it night and
day. the same size of guard that had
watched the tomb since it was built.
Within a few days four men have been
detailed to protect the place from intru
sion and no explanation has been vouch
safed as to the reason for the increased
precautions.
The custom of guarding the graves of
the Astor dead was inaugurated by John
Jacob Astor, great-grandfather of the
present head of the house of Astor, who
had been deeply and painfully impressed
by,the incidents surrounding the stealing
of the body of A. T. Stewart.
PORTUGAL MOVING
TROOPS TO CRUSH
NEW REVOLUTION
LISBON. PORTUGAL. j u |y B.—A
fresh revolution is brewing in northe n
Portugal and this time the insurrec
tion seems to be of dangerous propor
tions Land and sea forces are being
moved against the rebels, and Presi
dent Manuel de Arriago declares the.
uprising will be stamped out soon.
Monarchi-t -•vmpnthizers crossed tilt
northern Spanish frontier and recruit
ed an a 1 my in the mountains of north
ern Portugal. Strikers at Oporto and
other northern cities joined forces w ith
tile royalists.
The authorities here are watching
< onsfiit atoi s who ate believed to be
plotting the assassination of promi
nent republican leaders.
GIRL RAISES POLECATS:
SHE HAS_ FIFTEEN NOW
UANVILLE. INP., Jul.' 8. -Miss Hal
lie Carter. living near Plainfield, is the
owner of fifteen polecats, which she
recently captured neat her home, and
she is caring for the little creatures as
carefully as possible Miss Carter found
the n> st of youngsters while the old
ones were absent and ft was an easy
matter to place them in a basket and
take 'hem to tier home. She t'xpc-t» to
rv <= the inio'-iit. and -cit them for!
•heir fur,
3 SLAYERS GO TO
CHAIR IN TERROR
Italian, in Hysteria. Exonerates
Five Others Condemned for
Same Crime.
OSSINING, N. Y.. July B.—Three
murderers were electrocuted in rapid
succession in Sing Sing prison early
today. The three men were the most
hysterical ever executed here, and each
went moaning or praying to his death.
The men electrocuted were:
Santo Zanzara. Italian, implicated in
the murder of Mrs. Mary Hall at Cro
ton Lak®, Novembers, 1911.
Giuseppe Cerelli. Italian, who. killed
a fellow' workman at the Millville res
ervoir in Yonkers.
George Williams, negro, who killed
Charles Conklin, station agent at Cro
ton Lake, in April, 1911.
The same voltage was used for each,
but three contacts were required to kill
Zanzara and Williams, Only two were
necessary for Cerelli.
Zanzara showed greater terror of the
electric chair than any man previously
executed at Sing Sing. He moaned and
sobbed in hysteria, but before he was
strapped in the chair he knelt in prayer.
Before his execution, Zanzara wrote
a statement to" Warden Kennedy, in
which he declared he alone was guilty
of the murder of Mrs. Hall. There are
five other men awaiting execution for
this crime—Vincenzo Zena, Angelo
Giusti. Rilcho DeMarco, Lorenzo Cali
and Salvator DeMarco. The statement
made by Zanzara, that all the others
were innocent, was the fifth that he
had made. No two were alike, and the
other Italians probably will be unable
to obtain a new trial.
Zanzara was in the electric chair
nine minutes and fourteen seconds be
fore the 1,900 voitg killed him.
Cerelli prayed In a loud voice before
he was strapped in. He was in the
chair for five minutes. Williams was
in the chair eight minutes.
GAMORRATHIAL
IN JURY’S HANDS
• •
Exhausting Case, Lasting One
Year and a Half, Comes to
End at Last.
VITERBO. ITALY. July B.—After a
long-drawn-cut procedure of a year
and a half, the famous Camorrlst trial
drew into its final stage today. On
the verge of collapse from his seem
ingly endless task. Presiding Judge
Cavallere Bianchi, of the assize court,
finished his instructions to the jury
and the jury retired at 10 o’clock.
The presiding judge, as well as the
others figuring in the great trial, have
been worn out alike by the fatigue at
tending the case, as well as the intense
heat which has been prevailing here
for several weeks. Signor Bianchi said
that he had not been able to obtain
any rest for three .nights because of his
mental activity and the necessary con
centration of mind in his summing up.
The Judge has had to review millions
of words of evidence and speeches. It
was not considered likely that the Jury
would report before night and perhaps
later, although this was problematical.
The jurors were instructed to make 114
separate findings, based upon the mul
titude of counts in the indictments
againsf the prisoners.
Head of Crime Syndicate at Bar.
It was regarded as possible that the
notorious syndicate of crime in Naples
known as the Camorra might be wiped
out. because Enrico Alfano, alias "Er
ricone.” the accused head of the band,
was one of the prisoners before the
bar.
Another was Giovani Rapi, alias
Professor Rapi. treasurer of the band.
But the chief figure of the entire case
was Gennaro Abatemaggio, the be
trayer.
The scene in the court here, today as
the curtain began to descend was a
dramatic one. The prisoners sat in
their iron cages wan from long con
finement. but with unabating hostility
against their prosecutors. Alfano had
promised the judge that he would not
interrupt the proceedings, but he had
to bite his lips until they bled before
he could control his impulse to speak.
Carabineres and detectives were ar
ranged about the walls, guarding every
entrance and exit against sudden at
tack. There were few spectators. A
detachment of troops was held under
arms in the barracks for any emer
gency.
Wife of Prisoner Fall* in Faint.
There was a flurry of excitement as
the jury was filing into its chamber
when a woman spectator-—a wife if
one of the prisoners—began to scream
and suddenly toppled over in a faint.
rhe specific crime charged against
the prisoners was. the murder of Signor
Gennaro Cuoecola and his wife in Na
ples in 1906. They were believed to
have betrayed some of the society’s
secrets. Six of the prisoners were
• ■barged with actual participation be
fore or after the fact. Originally there
were 41 prisoners, but since the trial
began some have been liberated and
others died in prison. Among the pris
oners is a priest. Father Vittozzi, who
was accused of using his offices to help
the band.
PACIFIC MAIL STEAMER ADRIFT.
SAN FRANCISCO. Ju!' 8 The Pacific
mail steamship Panama is drifting help
less 250 miles sou'll of '.his nor' and a'd
is being rushed from San Pedro. The
sea is calm.
ALL PROGHESSIW
MEN INCLUDED
INT.R.’SCALL
New Party Convention to Meet
in Chicago August 5 to Nom
inate for President,
OYSTER BAY, July B.—August ”
the date set for the national conver
tion of Colonel Roosevelt’s new Pm.
gressive party in a call Issued here by
Senator Dixon, campaign manager foj
Colone Roosevelt. Chicago 1 S tbg
place. The call Is signed by metnbe-g
of the committee chosen at a meeting
held in Chicago and also includes the
signatures of Roosevelt followers in
states.
Among the signers are Julian Har
ris, Democrat, tor Georgia; Judge Bee
B. Lindsay. Democrat, for Colorado,
and John M. Parker, Democrat, for
Louisiana. Other signers are Medi’i
McCormick. LaVerne W. Noyes. Illi
nois; Henry W. Allen. Kansas; Les.;-
Coombs. Kentucky: Charles J Bona
parte. Maryland; W. R. Nelson, Mis
souri; Joseph M. Dixon. Montana, ex-
Governor J. Franklin Fort, New Jer
sey; W. A. Budergast. Oscar S. Straus
Woods Hutchinson. Timothy L. Wood-’
ruff. Chauncey L. Stoddard. New Yo-k-
J. R. Garfield, Ohio; E. A. VanValken
burg, Willia m Flynn, Gifford Pinchot,
William Draper Lewis, Pennsylvania
Governor R. T. Vessey, South Dakota;
Cecil A. Lyon, Texas; Governor jO
- Carey. Wyoming.
The first named of the signers is the
editor of Uncle Remus’s Magazine of
Atlanta, and a life-long Democrat. He
is the eldest son of the late Joel Chan
dler Harris.
"Territories have no place in a na
tional convention and will not he con
sidered." declared Senator Dixon.
"As for the missing eight states, the
most of them probably will send dele
gates, although they have not taken
part in the call.
"Maine, for instance, postponed anv
definite action because there 1s now a
strong fight on in the primaries with
the sympathy running in favor of the
progressive movement. Delaware.
North Carolina, Arkansas and Nevada
probably will taJte part. Mississippi
and South Carolina may possibly be
unrepresented.
No Rules For Choosing Delegate,.
“The call lays down no rules to
the methods of choosing delegates,
since each state will be expected to se
lect its delegates by its own parapher
nalia. The representation will be cut
down to just one-half that of the pre
vious conventions. This was consid
ered advisable since this convention is
to be notably a deliberative body and
will certainly be composed of a class of
men altogether different from those
who usually attend conventions
"In all probability the convention
will adopt the name ‘National Pro
gressive’ for the new party, but I can
not say definitely what will be done.
Thus far no issues have been authori
tatively stated, and, of course, the plat
form itself will have to be decided
upon by the delegates.”
The call says:
“To the people of the United States
without regard to past political differ
ences. who. through repeated betrayals
realize that today the power of ths
crooked political bosses and of ths
privileged classes behind them is sc
strong in the two old party o-ganiza
tfons that no helpful movement in th‘
real interests of our country can coms
out of either:
"Who believe that the time has come
for a national progressive movement *
a nation-wide movement —on non-se ■
tional lines, so that the people mar be
served in sincerity and truth by an or
ganization unfettered by obligation tc
conflicting interests;
“Who believe in the right and capac
ity of the people to rule themselv®.'
and effectively to control all the
agencies of their government and whe
hold that only through social and in
dustrial justice thus secured can hon-
est property And permanent protec
tion ;
"Who believe that government by the
few tends to become and has. in fa< t.
become government by the sordid in
fluences that control the few.
‘‘For All Kinds of Men.”
"Who believe that only through th*
movement proposed can we obtain in
the nation and the several states the
legislation demanded by the modern
industrial evolution, legislation which
shall favor honest business and v ‘ >t
control the great agencies of modern
business so as to insure their being
used in the interest of the whole peo
ple. legislation which shall promote
prosperity and at the same time secu'>‘
the better and more equitable diffuse ’’
of prosperity, legislation which c n ,
promote the economic well-being
the honest farmer, wage worker l 1 ’’ •
fessional man and business man a'l
but which shall at the same time .-tr'-e
in efficient fashion—and not me P
pretend to strike—at the roots of p’"' '
liege in the world of industry no ' "
than in the world of politics;
"Who believe that only this tyn e ’
wise Industrial evolution will a'-
Industrial revolution;
"Who believe that wholesome po
government can come only if thei*'
wholesome party management •>'
spirit of service to the whole come
and who hold that the comtnandmeu
delivered at Sinai, ‘thou shall not t--
applies to politics as well as to bus
ness.
“To all in accord with these vice -
vail is hereby issued by the proviso ’
committee, under the resolution of
mass meeting held in Chicago on Ju
-22 last to send from each state a nt>
ber of delegates whose votes in
convention shall count for as tn < "
votes as the state shall have sen
and representatives in congress
meet in convention at Chicago on
Sth day of August. 1912. for th-- r
pose of nominating candidate?
supported for the positions of pres'
and vice president of the Vn*
States."