WWWWW" EVENING LEDGEK PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1916. IT. hrding's Keynote Speech Sounds a Virile Call for Republican Restoration and America SEWS Cantlnned from raze One .miiDlle, let tin bury parly prefixes with tlie ministration which our difference put In wr. I lo hot believe there Is a really ro Srilonary Republican bearing credentials to convention. If there Is, he will depart, if r our deliberations, solely and proudly J Republican, with heart aglow with the Baity spirit of 1916. And the welcome dele Sale who emphasizes his progresslvlem, Is iinectetl to do his part In mailing our party I reflex of the best thought and best Intent f sincere committal to the uplift and pros ;m of the American people, thereby Iir.nirtlienlng larty purpose Instead of Sfyfng ind ivldual belief, and he, too, 2nf nnd new rejoicing In being a. Republl can. No party can enduro which Is not pro. sslve. 1 know the Itepubllcan party Is ' . ... .,tfA no well nn effentlvo. fl'na It would not rivet tho expectations of the American people today on the most lm nortant convention held since the party 1 formulated a new political decalogue and gave to unlon nna nntlonallty ths Immortal Abraham Lincoln. REPRESENTATIVE GOVERNMENT. In building the surpassing temple of the republic, which wo havo been doing to tho astonishment, sometimes the envy, some, times the admiration, of the world, and oft times Inspiring others by our example, there ever will bo modifications nnd nddl tlons to meet tho public need nnd conform to popular Ideals. Wo do not fear to Imi tate or fall to originate, but there can be no discord about underlying foundations or essential walls or proven arches or stntely columns. Mine Is a deep conviction that the founding fathers were djvlncly Inspired, and tho wisdom of representative popular government Is proven In tho surpassing achievement. .... u It Is not alone the miracle of accomplish ment which deepens our reverence; It Is not alone the, .-lotion that wo have bulldcd the first, seemingly dependable, popular government on the caith and exalted all Its citizenship, which adds to our faith; but we are tho oldest of existing civilized na tlonB, with one passing exception, continued under one form of government, nnd under that form wo havo developed the highest standard of living In all tho world. Sut,t;ly y,e must be right. Recalling that the mightier forward strides have been taken under a halt cen tury of Itepubllcan control, nfter we led In fixing the Indissoluble tics of union, the retrospection, tho contemplation and tho anticipation combine to nil tho Itepubllcan breast with pride and hope, and trust nnd faith, and magnify our obligations In this crucial year of our national life. Much of tho discussion of the hour Is hlnirpd unon a world at war. Wo need not wonder thereat, because the enormity of the conflict and tho Influences of Its horrors havo set mankind In upheaval. Tho traditions of civilization havo been broken and International laws havo been Ignored. There Is a tidal wave of distress and dis aster, there are vlolont emotions nnd mag nified fears. Thero are tho extremes of incalculable sacrifices and measureless new ' fortunes not nil Amorican. Thero are new wonders and nevf hindrances In com merce, changed balances of trade, new marvels In finance nnd utterly changed eco nomic conditions. These have attended em barrassments In our foreign relations as dlfllcult as those which tho Individual cltl ron experiences whose every nolghbor la Involved In deadly quarrel. Everything Is abnormnl except tho depleted condition of the Keilernl Treasury, which In character istic of Democratic control, nnd the facility of file Admlnlstrntlon for writing varied notes without effective notice. UNARMED AMERICA. Amid theso conditions has stood this un armed giant, typifying tho American re public, neutral nnd sane, to whom the neutral nations have turned for leadership. Our national unselfishness had been proven, our devotion to humanity had been estab lished, our committal to international Justice had long been proclaimed. Tho world had previously heard tho voice of American fearlessness, and all tho 'condi tions single us out for leadership Bmong the neutral powers, but the Administration tit Washington spoke with more rhetoric thnn resolution, and we came to reallzo what the wstrlng pauers soon came to know, that the ofllclal American voice lnckcd the Volume of determined expression that once demanded International heed, nnd we lacked the strength of confidence In our own de fenses. It is too early to estimate the debit and credit ajjunt of tho European war with civilization. Out of measureless cost and Inestimable heroism must come a rebirth of Individual, spirituality, reawakened .na tional hopes, new liberties and new bap tisms In patriotism which must prove some compensation. But we have seen ct-: 'za-. tlon stripped of the pretonses which cli th d man's savagery, nnd we have neon ele mental man, developed In genius nnd more formidable because of that, intoxicated with power or impassioned In the greed of con- quest, orrendlng or defending, contradicting every evidence of mankind's humane ad. vancement. In tho envy or Jealousy or rivalry or hatred, refined by boasted clvili ration, are the barbarities of primitive man, and the seal of obsolescence is not yet stamped upon the warrior's sword. FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE. Perhaps It Is a reminder more than a dis covery, but there has como to us a con viction that this great nation, rich In re sources and strong In patriotic manhood, has been negligent concerning Its own de tense. We have dwelt In fancied rather than real security. Pride mingles with re gret In this, because.lt sugy,4ts tho mind of a nation so free from Intended offense that there was no cultivated thought pt needed defense. Our righteousness of pur pose Is portrayed In our trust In unarmed safety, But there Is a warning In bleeding Europe, and there Is call today for prudent, patriotic and 'ample national defense. There Is no mistaking the sentiment. Wo are not thinking of tho hysterical, we need not be moved by a preparedness which Is partisan In conception. We need not believe In a defense propaganda Inspired by those who aim to wax fat In the production of arms and munitions, because there Is none, I deplore the teaching that an anxiety about our national defense Is Inspired by creed. We rejoice in free speech and free press and untrammoled opinion, but pa triotism Is Illy promoted by the Imputa tion of false motives, whether aimed at those who believe In defense or those who doubt Its wisdom. Such a teaching rends the concord of citizenship, which may develop a worse pe'rll from within than from any enemy without. Though we do not pretend to bo ex clusive In our devotion, we Republicans believe, Bincerely and soberly, In, ade Quata national defense. We have always believed n an amply navy, as invincible In modern might as John Paul Jones bullded In our freedom's earliest fight. We have In mind a protected comnferca on the waters, and a seacoast secure In" strong naval defense. We were building to high rank among naval powers when the Democratic party Interrupted, and we subscribe to a stronger committal now, because of a new realiza tion of the envy which our wealth and our commerce Invite, and a new appreciation of our commanding placp In the affairs of the, wprld. I shall not say that It is oih-s to have the greatest navy In the world, out noting the elimination of distance and the passing of our one-time isolation, we ought to have a navy t,hat fears none in the, world, and can say any time and any where, these are American rights and wtt be rejected. ' . ECONOMY IN SECURITY. It Is not for me to specify the provisions for naval defense. Since modern warfare In large part a conflict pf brains, bo must naval defense be devised In highest Intelligence, Let us strengthen every arm aerial, submarine, fleet cruiser and great .dnoughU, Let nlm who Is anxlou bout ths coat remember that Republican policies afford the ample means without wnselous. burdens upon the people. Every forehanded, American citizen, whatever his etlyity, know4 that the. cost of insurance WMsasi accident, theft. flr, flood or thunder Vit, MsaesMd a, Jbincj cfcrgf upon M Wat la wertta t cost,, la p ot inlmi, HIGH LIGHTS IN CHAIRMAN HARDING'S PLEA FOR REPUBLICAN RESTORATION ' Let us forget the differences, nnd find new inspiration nnd new compensa tion In a united endeavor to restore the country. " " Everything is abnormal except the depleted condition of tho Federal Treasury, which is characteristic of Dcmocrntlc control. The Administration nt Washington spoko with more rhetoric thnn We need not believe in n defense propaganda Inspired by those who nim to wax fat in the production of arms nnd munitions, because there 13 none. fie President made a trip from the const to the valley of the Missouri to tell the American pcoplo the need of preparedness. It might have been more seemly to tell tho story to Congress. Democratic insufficiency and inefficiency aro recorded in the Confercncc nmended net, and n federal nitrate plant to supply powder to the patriots ami pay to tho pntcrnalists and federal fertilizer to the farmers in competition with private enterprise is a great constructive offering of n Democratic majority. Let no ope apprehend tho curso of militarism in this fair land. We de clare unalterably against it. Our nrmed defense must ever be linked with our industrial self-reliance, nnd the nation worth dying for must first be worth living for. I choose the economic policy which sends the American worklngmen to the savings banks rather than tho soup houses. Tho failure of revenues under existing Democratic policy, the necessary resort to tho imposition of direct and offcnslvo taxation war taxes on n pcoplo at pence to meet deficiencies which ever attend Democratic control, the depression nnd disnstcr which followed Democratic revision, which wcro relieved rather than caused by the European war all these argue the Re publican restoration. It (the Democratic party) proclaimed tho sacrcdncss of its pledges and then profaned them. It professed economy and Is staggered by its own extra vagance. Tho Democratic Admlnstration ha3 proposed to set adrift nn island empire, in violation of our obligations to the world, to tho Philippine people nnd ourselves to renounce its guardianship of a race of people and leave them to walk alono when they had not bccnfully tnught to creep. The Democratic Administration first coddled Villa as a patriot, then chased him ns a bnmlit." Americanism begins at home nnd rndintcs nbroad. Wo believe in American markets for American products, American wages for American workmen. American opportunity for American genius and industry, and American defense for American soil. though loss nover nttends. Moreover, under any system security la economy Itself. Thero arc manifest differences about our developments for mltltary defense. The President mndo n trip from tho coast to tho valley of the Missouri to tell the Ameri can pcoplo the need of preparedness. It might hao been moro seemly to tell tho story to Congress, for that body wns In session nnd empowered to net, nnd seem ingly over ready to testify obedience. How ever, Congress undertook to provldo an army for defonso and tne majority wnooiea between pacification and preparedness until the Republican minority in tho Sennte put something real In tho ponding mensure. Wo Republicans made a rational responso to the call of the land, but Democratic In Runiclcncy nnd lncfllclency ore recorded In the Conference-nmended net, nnd n federal nitrate plnnt to supply powder to the pa triots and pay to the paternalist!, nnd fed trnl fertilizer to tho farmers In competi tion with prlvnle enterprise Is n grcnt con structho offering of Ilomocrntto majority. Until the civilised world Is pledged and rcpledged to peace, and until civilization commits nations to the nobler practices of tho Individuals who constitute them. In which I would have America lead, this Re public will havo need for a basic army and a ready provision for military defense. We have territory to defend, wo havo Independ ence to preserve, we have lives to safeguard, we hnvo property to protect, we havo rights to assert, we have mlsstonu of humanity to perform. We proclaim Justice and we lovo peace, and we mean to have them and wo nre not too proud to fight for them. NO CURSE OF MILITARISM. T.et no one upprchend tho curse of mili tarism In this fair land. Wo declare un alterably ngnlnst It. Our free citizenship, walking confidently, absorbed In the tri umphs of peace, would tolerato no such blight on American Institutions. There Is to be no surrender of cherished Ideals. With that yearning for peace which hns marked our continued development, with that same committal to Justice which has given us front rank In the onward march of civilization, with that raro unselfishness which led us to unsheath the sword for hu manity's sake and put all territorial ng grnndlzement aside, with that belief In the square deal, Individual, national and Inter national, which is tho" foundation of Ameri can faith, we mean to go qn, an exemplar of peaco to all the nations, an arbiter of Justice to all the world, a promoter of righteousness to all the people of the earth. THE PROTECTIVE POLICY. At the bame time wo have moro to do than to chart a national course through tho waters surging with tho turbulence of war; our Inspiring course Is on tho highway of peace. Our armed defense must eer be linked with our Industrial self-reliance, and the nation worth dying for must first be worth IMng for. Out of nature's prodigality wo have incalculable resources and limitless noHslbllltles. nrul-there is need only for the unhindered application of man's genius and Industry to make us as Independent Indus trially as wo are free politically. Ample defense rests on Industrial freedom and self-reliance an' well us patriotic sacrifice, and Industrial' preparedness gives that as surance of material good fortune In peace on which must be founded all oar higher aspirations. Subsistence Is the first requisite of exist ence, and we have the higher American standard of living because of the Republi can protective policy which makes of Americans the best paid workmen In all the world. Out of the abundance of em ployment and higher compensation, to gether with tho beckoning opporunlty which offers every reward, we Americans have attracted tho laborers of the earth, and set pew standards here. It Is not for me to put the stamp of rela tive Importance, on pending Issues the In telligent voters will determine that for themselves. But I know what they are thinking, and they believe that the protec tive policy which made us Industrially and commercially eminent Is necessary to pro serve that eminence. I know they want It restored and maintained. For myself I prefer a protective and productive tariff which prospers America first. I choose the economlo pollry which sends the American worklngmen to the savings banks rather than the soup houses. I commend the plan under which the healthful glow pt pros pering business Is reflected In every face from the great captain of Industry to the schooling child pf the dally wage-earner, Moreover, I like the abiding consistency of our unchanging position upon this policy. The Republican Convention of 1860, which gave to the nation and all history the nomination of Lincoln, made this simple and ample utterance: That, while providing revenue for the support of the General Government by duties upon Imports, sound policy re quires such an adjustment of these Im ports as to encourage the development of the Industrial Interests of the whole country; and we commend that policy of national exchanges which secures to the working men liberal wages, to agriculture remunerating prices, to me chanics and manufacturers an adequate reward for their skill, labor and enter prise, and to the nation commercial prosperity and Independence. We might fittingly reiterate that utter ance today. The failure of revenue under existing Democratic pollen the necessary resort to the Imposition of direct and offen sive taxation war taxes on a pcoplo at peace to, meet ileOeUncle which ever t. tend Democratic- control, ths depression and disaster which followed UcniacraUa re vision, which wen rslWyeU rather than caused by the KuryDeon wr nil these argue the Itepubllcan. restoration. TEMPORARY PROSPERITY. No one, disputes a temporary prosperity In our in,4 today. But It la sectional In Its factory aspect, abnormal In Us fevered riwh, fietftloua to It essential and par-i-ertuur in Its tendency Worse, It la the. gold, luis4 from tt rivr of Mood, poured 1 out by tho horrifying sacrifice of millions of our fellow men. God forbid that we should boast n prosperity wrought In such waste of human life. Wo had rather re joice In the prosperity of peace. Wo had rather boast our good fortune won from the world as It stands erect. In a fair content, where mon openly contend for'fho laurels of Industry and tho garlands of trade. I do not mean that wo must "sharpen our wits In competition with the world," for wo tried that, and Involuntarily turned the blade to cutting our production nnd severing thousands from American payrolls. There was no cut In the cost of living but a visible hack at tho capacity to llvo. The Democratic party Is always con cerned about tho American consumer. Our Republican achievement Is tho making of a nation of prospering producers, nnd by pro ducers I mean every human being who ap plies muscle or skill or brain or nil to tho conversion of nnture's abundance Into tho necessities and luxuries of llfo or partic ipates In tho ways nnd means of their transportation and exchange. Far better a high cost of living and ability to buy than a lowering of cost attended by destruction of purchasing capacity. THE COST OF LIVING. It Is worth whllo to recall tho magnified Importance given to the high cost of living four years ago ; first, to emphasize Dem ocracy's failure to reduce It, though It risked and almost accomplished the ruin of our good fortune In attempting It; second, to declare there Is no such thing. What was thought to bo the high cost were only tho higher demands nnd the larger capacity to buy, which wero the hatural reflexes of! the higher standard nt living reared under Republican protection. The one notable advance In cost has prof lied the American farmer, for whoso be fitting share In good fortune we have stood unfailingly nnd sincerely. Ills reward Is n Republican achievement, and we prefer to cling to tho conditions which brought to agriculture Its delayed but deserved re ward and hold It secure In Republican maintenance of a homo market unmatched In all tho world, More, wo want our baslo prosperity to be home-created nnd home sustained, nnd not dependent on conditions nbroad. Let Us ngrec nay, let us boast that American Industry can compete with nny In nil. tho world, under like conditions. But wo also boast n condition, created through Isolation nnd maintained by protection, wherein tho rate of American wages Is twice or thrice to ten times that of Old World competition. Reduce our wages nnd we shall hnvo conditions more nearly equal, but no Republican will consent to thnt. We nro wilting to standardize tho wagen of tho world. Wo aro ns fit to lead In doing that no wo wero tc fix the newer guaranties of liberty nnd Independence; but wo Republi cans do not mean to lower our scales to ef fect tho leveling. Wo want the world meas urements raised to our heights. Until It Is dono we shall cling to American wngex for Amerlcnn workmen, Amerlcnn markets for American products, nnd hold the Itepubllcan Ctinranty of our mnterlnl good fortune. t'ho nations nbroad nnd tho Dcmocrntlo party nt homo aro hearing witness to Re publican wisdom. German Industrial solf rellnnco Is the sequenco to her adoption of a Republican protective tariff, and England's manifest conversion to this fostering plan will mngnlfy tho prophetic wisdom of Re publican protectionists. Even tho Democratic party Is penitent now and makes confession In action If not In words. Tho proposed destruction of American sugar has been repealed, and simulated grief about tho American breakfast table has been put nsldo. With that facility for changing position which hns been mnde mnntfest from Ilaltlmore to Vera Cruz, the party In power proposes to restore tlto tariff commission which it tincl hastened to destroy. This change of attitude Is not because of Its great and manifest lovo of commissions alone, but because failure 1b written across every paragraph of Democratic revision nnd fear is haunting tho Whlto House slumbers. Tho Wilson Administration hns sensed tho country's anxiety nbout indus trial conditions when tho revelry In muni tions nnd tho Immunity granted by war, aro ended. It has made a reflective esti mate of the perils of 1914, onco called psychological, and means to apply a stolen remedy, with moro concern nbout the ef fects than tho ethics Involved. Wo do not oppose a tariff commission. We favor It. It Is a Republican creation. Wo do not want one, however, conceived In Demo cratic hostility to American Industry or managed In Democratic opposition to busi ness success. We would hasten the pro tective defense aralnst foreign lnvnslon, to Kuaranten our Industrial security, nnd then let n tnrlff commlslon deliberately nnd scientifically work out the nerds of Ameri can preference. No honest business In this country Is too big to be good and useful, or too little to be SOUNDER OF THE KEYNOTE HP dxKk -M fateiKiiiiiii.' SHlslsSlsm?ml4nRjHssssBa3sssK .'" ilrHrVK HsLHulwlSKiislssBilLsH v? WmSffimf sBsLgEMiaijiigSSMaMMsBsiaM ffifiw mr$X-m. wlmvSwlKSSsBKHslsHsV ' hvMNwbKBBt $ 3$&aMHI "jlSlwPff3gffi &tswy:i'9SF $ HBFk . i 1 JHBI ISaIS-IssssssHk jiJisrV HHHftaAaftaftaftai li$isssHBssK$Ve. JrTHiSkli mslssssssssssDsflssslssssssssssH Senator warren u. tlnruing, the Republican National Convention at Chicago today. protected and encouraged, and both big nnd little deservo tho American shield ngalnst destruction by foreign competition, nnd protection from tho raiders political or otherwise, at homo. Business nnd Its agencies ot transportation nre so Insepara ble from each other and from the common weal that the political party which doet not pledge them a squaro deal, no more nnd no less, doos not deservo tho confidence of the reoplo. Tho atrongth of tho business heart shows In every countenance In all tho land, nnd tho weakness of that heart holds n nation Jll. We must strengthen tho heart of American business In government co operation rather than ofllclal opposition. It is not Inspiring to recite Democratic failures. I shall not dwell on that pnrty's insincerity or incapacity. The country In dicts nnd tho record convicts. It pro claimed the nacredness of Its pledges nnd then profnned them. It professed economy and Is staggered by Its own extravagance. It has turned adequacy of revenue under In direct and unfelt taxes to insulllclency and direct taxation. It has espoused the free dom of tho seas and wrought only the free- ROOSEVELT IN MERRY MOOD; JOKES, SMILES AS CONVENTION OPENS Sagamore Hill Linked Up With Chicago by Telegraph and Phone Silent on Over night Rumors MAY HEAD THIRD TICKET OYSTER BAY, June 7. Convention day found Colonel Roosevelt In one of his mer riest moods. His face was wreathed In smiles nnd ho Joked with those nbout him. Neither the uncertainty of developments In Chicago nor the heavy rnlnstorm that drenched Sagamore Hill and filled tho fringes of tho bay with, thick fog, could lessen his good spirits. Special telegraph and telephone com munications had been linked up between Sagamore Hill and Chicago and tho Colonel was early In his llbrnry to receive reports from tho scene of political action. It was reported that several long mes sages had been received from George W. Perkins, the national chairman of the Pro gressive party, during the night, but. wnetner inese naa anything to do witn Colonel Roosevelt's Joviality was not apparent. Asked about overnight rurpors, the Colonel dismissed them with the words: "They are Just reports. That's all I can say for them." The Colonel persistently refuses to be In terviewed on political topics, but from other success It was learned that he may be persuaded to head a third ticket If .!"' tlce Hughes Is nominated by the Republi cans. Colonel Roosevl''" o '" Hughes te very deep-seated, as has been made evli nt. It Is uncertain whether or not Colonel Roosevelt will go to Chicago. But he Is primed for the trip and If he feels that his presence Is needed there he will make the jump. If a deadlock should develop In the Republican convention and the followers of Roosevelt display strength of dominating character In the convention hall, activities In Chicago will be made even livelier by the presence of the Colonel In the arena. SPECTATORS, COLD AND BEDRAGGLED, AWAIT CONVENTION WARMING-UP Arrival of Fairbanks' Delegates Does Little to Relieve Chill of Coliseum Crowd Women Brave Eain to Witness Proceedings ARRANGE ST. LOUIS TRIP Old Guard and Reorganization Demo crats Unlikely to Go Together Old guard delegates and alternates to the Democratic National Convention met last night in the headquarters of the Democratlo City Committee, 10th and Walnut streets, to make plans for the trip to St. Louis. At the conclusion of the meeting, It was announced definite arrangements had been postponed until tomorrow. A. Mitchell Palmer's reorganization dele gates and alternates will leave this city for St. Louis Sunday In a special train, It Is considered probable that the old guard fol lowers will not Join the reorganlxers, but that, like the Republican Organization dele gates, the Democrats will split and go In two sectlops. Big Suffrage Ball Given in Chicago CHICAGO, Jupe 7: .The assembling here of persona prominent in society in New York and other cltlea produced the most notable social event that Chicago has seen alnce the World's Fair. Mrs. Harold p. Mc. Cormlck'a equal suffrage garden party and ball last night More than 1600 guests were entertained by Mr. and Mrs. McCormlck at their home, 1000 Lake- Shore Drive. m 1 i ii, Florida Governor Beat Senator TAMPA., F!a .June T Returns Indi cate that Senator Nathan P. Bryan was defeatd for renomlnstton n yesterdays Democratlo primary by Governor Park Tramroell. Sidney J. Catt apparently baa a slight lead In the race for Governor over both Ion R. Furrls and W V. Knott Rep rsntatty S M, Sparknvin appears to have bn defeated &JT W- J- ratio Ul Ms Jtrst dlW?t, CHICAOO, June 7. With the convention hall opened for the first session of tho Republican National Convention and the first wet and bedraggled spectators ensconced In the galleries out of the drab drizzle of rain that covered Chicago like .a clammy, gray mantle, there was a big uniformed Chicago policeman, on guard In every section. With a policeman to every 30 seat and a small at my of doorkeepers and deputy scrgeants-at-arms on duty, tho convention officials believed .they would keep the Inevitable disorder In the big hall within reasonable bounds. As the first spectators filed In, the decora-tors were Just putting tho finishing touches on the ndornments In the hall. High up over the broad platform with seats -for the ofllcers and speakers n great full- length painting of Abraham Lincoln looked down on the scene. It was surmounted by a replica of the presidential flag and was surrounded by a score of draped stars and, stripes. From tho Lincoln portrait the great arched roof of the Coliseum swept away In waves of whlto to the tiny gallery perched upon the roof at the rear of the hall, where a red-coated band waited to add to tho convention din. The band at a signal from sergeant-at-arms Stone opened Its concert Just before 10 o'clock, A medley of national airs was the first selection, but it aroused little enthusiasm among the few cold, damp spec tators in tho galleries. None of the dele gates had then arrived. The spectators leaned over the flag decked galleries and watched anxiously for the first delegation. The seating ar rangements for the delegates put New York and Ohio delegations directly before the aisle. Qn the right aisle IlllnoKi and speaker's stand on either side of the centre Massachusetts had the front seats, and Indiana and Iowa on the left aisle. Charles D. Utiles, chairman of the Na tional Committee, was the first qfflclal to appear on the platform. He consulted with Sergeant-at-arms Stone, reviewing the ar rangements and discussed the program of the day. Shortly after 10 o'clock, a few ofltho seats In the alternate section, Just benlnd the delegates' section, began to All up. The gallery crowd began to arrive and the front rowB of the spectators' seats showed a rim of women, some of them In rainy day attire, but mnny of them In finery which had suffered from the driving rain. A squad of ushera added to the general hubbub and the efforts of the band by hawking "ofllclal programs" In roucous tones. A group of photographers over-ran the hall taking plcutres from all accessible and Inaccessible points of vantage. A few of the Indiana delegates, brave In an assortment of Fairbanks badges, took scattered seats In their section. They were the first delegates to appear and brought with them a dampening effect of the weather. They took their places without enthusiasm and talked Indifferently together, EMERGENCY HOSPITAL'S FIRST CASE. The temporary hospital equipped behind the big platform was early In demand. The first emergency caBa was that of Policeman Sweeney, who Injured his arm on one of the grand stand supports. Pr. Arthur B. Rankin and Dr. Thomas Grlfi flths bandaged the bruise and sent the policeman about his duties once more. Ab Indicating the lack of unanimity among the delegates, very few of the Staj,e delegations came In a body. They strag gled In by twos and threes, wet. angry and ready for anything. At 0:1i there were more than 300 delegates In their seats, but there was not a single State delegation com plete at that hour. The leaders also were slow coming In. The wet weather prevented the usual mass-play entrance of various delegations. Few delegates had the temerity to march to the Coliseum under the streaming skies. Ten minutes before It o'clock the dele gates' wptlon of the convention hall was a seething raa of delegates, and not a single delegation had aroused any enthusi asm of, bad, been given & aeraonstratlon o It Arrival rns delegate gathered la UtUe -roups and dissuMtd the, latest cur rent political reports. Tho statement that Colonel Roosevelt would run on a Progres sive third ticket if tho Republicans nom inate Hughes was the chief topic. Tho damp weather seemed to have dampened the convention .enthusiasm, but about 11 o'clock tho sun struggled through the clouds, a shaft of sunlight penetrated a window and fell ncross the speakers' stand, and the crowd woke enough to cheer a little ns the band played "Dixie." COLLEAGUES CHEER PENROSE Boles Penrose, tho Pennsylvania Old Guard lender, was given n round of cheers by his followers In tho Pennsylvania dele gation when he took his sent under 'the Pennsylvania banner In the seat of honor. Although scheduled to meet at 11 o'clock, there was no sign of getting down to busi ness at 11:15, The members of the Na tional committee wero in their seats on the platform nnd most of the delegates were In their seats. Tho leaders did not seem In a hurry to start things. There was no enthusiasm among tho delegates or the spectators. A tumult of low-toned conversation and tho blares of the bands were the only sources of noise In tho big hall. The conversation of the delegates was earnest and the whole big hall -seemed filled with a sense of the tenseness of the political situation confronting the gather ing. The New York delegation sat In Its seats In the front row and stolidly regarded tho big, crowded platform In silence. Only Chauncey M, Depew seemed to want to talk. From his seat on the aisle he beamed at his friends In the other State delega tions. Governor Whitman did not sit down with his friends, but devoted the time to a series of conferences with the Hughes boomers. The Maine crowd tried to stir up a little enthusiasm by waving a standard with the State Insignia upon It. The effort failed utterly. Temporary Chairman Warren G Hard ing, of Ohio, put In an appearance at 11:25 and cheers greeted his appearance, and the band played a few bars of the Star-Spangled Banner, which brought out a round ot hand-clapping. The three ' taps of the gavel were fol lowed by a round of cheers as Colonel Stone, sergeant-at-arms, walked to the front and announced: "The aisles will be cleared, the delegates will be seated. The police will enforce this order." CHAIRMAN HILLES THANKED BV NATIONAL C03IMITTEE Chairman Praised for Wisdom Self-sacrifice" and CHICAGO, June 7, National Republican Chairman, Charles D. Hllles, received high tribute today at the last sitting of the Republican National Committee just preced ing the opening of the convention. Resolutions thanking him for his "wis dom, self-sacrifice and absolute fairness" were adopted. Others praising the service of secretary James B. Reynolds, sergeant-at-arms: William F. Stone, and treasurer George 11. Sheldon were adopted. The final business transacted by the committee was the formal acceptance of the 'tardy West Virginia delegation report and the placing of the members on the temporary roll. Acting Chairman Charles M. Burke, of South Dakota, then rapped his gavel sharply on the table and the meeting closed. Votes Needed to Nominate G. O, P., 495; Democrat, 846 HKl'LUUCAN. Total BtuatM el dUt. . ga Number ceiiary to oataate 433 l)K110CU,T10 Total nomb.tr f dhMto, , - ljff jiBiaber nerery to a t'.ioUe . . f is dom of tho Panama Canal. It rcafllrmcd Its devotion to Jeffersonlan principles and simplicity of government nnd Is voting millions of tho public treasury to the es tablishment of Federal factories to destroy prlvato Industry. It declared for enlarged uhlpplng facilities without added burdens upon tho public treasury, nnd now proposes that 50 to 500 millions of public funds shall go to shipping, federally owned and private ly managed, with every menace that Federal ownership Involves. Wo bellevo In a great merchant marine, federally encouraged and privately erectod, wrought In tho committal to tho achievement of private enterprise and measured to tho requirements of our com merco In peaco. THE NATIONAL EXPANSION. Tho President has said ours Is a pro vincial party, evidently forgetting tho' Fed eralist founding of our nationality and Re publican expansion to greater national glory. Tho Democratic party not only falls to grasp our immensity nnd Importance; It Is sectional on the mainland nnd unheed ing of our island possessions. Its vision does not catch tho splendor of Old Glory In the sunlight of the world, lllglit now when tho devouring tinmen of wnr nre burning moat fiercely, when our national view must bo world-wide to be compre hensive, the Democratlo Admlnlntratlon hna proposed to net mlrlft nn lulnnd empire, In violation of our obllRntlons to the world, to the Philippine people nnd nuraelvea. Amid proclumntlons of our ministrations In behalf of mankind It undertook to re nounce Its guardianship of n race of people nnd leave them to walk ulone when they had not been fully taught to creep. A few rebellious Democrats Joined the Republican minority In sparing us this national dis grace, but the design Is written among the vacillations of the present Administration. Tho Democratlo party once hauled down tho flag which had been unfurled In honor in the Pacific nnd met rebuke nt tho first popular expression nt tho polls. No ad ministration which hauls down the flag nnd none which proposes to hnut It down ever can succeed Itself In directing the affairs of tho American people OUR WIDENED RELATIONSHIP. One century of marvelous development nan icu us into anotner century of Inter national sponsorship. This mighty people. Idealizing popular government and com mitted to human progress, can no longer live within and for ourselves alone. Ob llberated distance makes it Impossible to stand nloof from mankind and escape widened responsibility. If we are to be come the agency of a progressive civiliza tion and God's great Intent and to believe otherwise Is to deny the proofs of American development we must assume the responsi bilities of influenco and example, and accept tho burdens of enlarged participation. Tho cloistered life Isiot posslbla to tho potential man or the nptentlal nation. Moreover, tho Monroe Doctrine, stronger for n century's maintenance, flxea an obligation of New World sponsorship nnd Old World relation ship. Our part must not bo dictatorial; It must bo trusted leadership In a fraternity of American republics, OUR STRENGTH AT HOME To meet the obligations wo must first make sure of maintained mental, moral and physical health at home, It Is good to recall that ours Is the only major politi cal party ever formed In this country on a great moral Issue, Our first proclama tion was human liberty, to be glorified by tho spiritual and material development of a free people. Wo opened the way to higher human attainments and emphasized human rights under the guaranties of civil liberty. We need only to go on, Imbued with the spirit which has thus far pointed our way. The light of a moral people Is the halo of liberty itself. Let ua be hon est, not only In proclamation, but In prac tice ; not alone in campaigns but In incum bency of otflce; pot only before altars of worship but In our dally affairs and In every human relationship, If popular gov ernment is to be held dependable and com mand the confidence as well as the loyalty of its citizenship, political parties and their platform and their spokesmen must be honest and sincere. A PEOPLE'S WELFARE. If we are to urge the world's attention to International Justice we must hold secure our civil Justice at home and make social justice and attending welfare typical of our national life. We have advanced wonder fully, The reward of merit Is eternal, but we can promote the development of merit. I have spoken so emphatically for the American producer that I want to add here a committal to improved conditions of pro duction. It Is good to gaze afar toward markets we hope to attain in peaceful com mercial conquest, but production 1 Itself tbe maker of markets at home. To the safety and Inviting environment of the la borer we must add his growing merits of compensation. Thfre can be no permanent material good fortune that la not righteously shared, there can be no real moral achieve ment that does not lift the great rank and file to an ever higher plane. Maintained Re publican policies provide conditions for tbe ideal advancement and continued uplift, and it Is not too much to hope that we shall acclaim the day when choice Instead of ne cessity fixes the status of the American wage-earner. My countrymen, for two generations, with short interruptions, the Republican party, li) conscience, courage and capacity, has been translating tbe dependable popular sentiment of the Republic Into governmental policy- W? have not yielded to the ex pediency of adopting every ephemeral whim, because devotion to- country and its I ultimate gooq omimea atmann opposition to a momentary popwianty. Tb final ap peal to sober tuU!henco hna juttfled uup coursa in inUiUc.il ?gbteousnw. jut v.-e have been bo engrossed ln America that we have not stoppi? our own hearts for the soul of In tho travail of Life, LlbertyHjj Pursuit of Happiness tho Amerlck" was born. Set aglow nl Bunker was reflected In the faces of the pV-hn of a fearless Republic, where men dedkij. themselves to the solemn and momcL, tnsk which wns traced by an Infinite h'a" They were not nil Americans by birth, iL they were dedicated Americans In the ba tlsmal rites of a new republic and a net Patriotism. Thev could not nil Alert tho Dew duration of Independence, but they cpmt mlttcd all Americans to It for all succeed ing time. They could not all Join In mak lng the Constitution, but they pledged the succeeding millions of Americana to Its everlasting defense. There wero stalwart Americans then, Americans from Great Britain with British Idenls nnd their devotion to orderly gov ernment. There were Americans from tho land of Napoleon nnd Lafayette, to glvo of the enthusiasm nnd heroism of France In establishing new freedom. Thero went Americans from Germany to fight the bat tles of the Republic and blend their sturdl ncss and thoroughness In tho progress of a new people, not a new rnce. Thero were Americans from the green fields ot Ireland, with a passion for liberty, Americans from southern Europo to battle fpr opportunity. There wero Americans who enmo from op prcsston nnd stood erect In the freedom of tho Republic. They nil made common cause, There wns lack of homogcrnelty of race, but there was kinship of bouI, and that soul was Amctlcnn. The gates to our ports have swung Inward over since, thero has been a welcome to the foreign-born, whom wo asked to drink freely of tho waters of our political llfo nnd find their places In tho sun of American opportunity. They aro nn Inseparable nnd important nnd valued part of American sltlzcnshlp, nnd tho fw zealots of any origin who violate our neu trality do not and can not Impugn the loyalty or tho Amerlcnn patriotism of that grcnt body which adds to tho swelling chorus of "My country, 'tis of thee. Sweet Land of Ltborty." NATIONAL SYMPATHIES. It Is not surprising that In their hearts thero Is sympathy or partiality for the land of their nativity when It Is Involved In a life and death struggle like that which saturates Europe with the blood of their kinsmen. Search your hearts deeply, my countrymen. Ono must bo human to bo an American, ho must havo human sym pathies and human loves, nnd I should pity tho forclgn-born and the sons of foreign born whose very souls are not wrung by the cataclysmnl sorrow of the Old World, But sorrow Is tho test of bouI nnd the very altar of reconsecration. Thin Is the mo mentous hour for tho blazing soul of, Amorican allegiance. The spirit of tha fathers Is calling, and tho safety of un born Americans Is demanding nnd the se curity of tho republlo Is requiring that now nnd hero nnd everywhere, under tho Htars and Stripes, we proclaim n plain, simple, glad and unalterable Americanism. It must bo tho offering of loyalty and de votion and lovo nnd trust, and life. If need bo, to theso United States, now and ever lastingly. The Americanism which Indexes these United States must tfc more than the con secration of the InO? ual. In the great fulfilment wo must i't.ve a citizenship les3 concerned about what the Government can do for It and mort anxious about wha.t It can do for the nation. There must be tho submersion of Ucal and sectional views and the standards of nationality reared In their stead. Holding to tho Ideals of Just American rights, the Government must protect those rights, at home, on our bor ders, on the seas, In every land and under every sky. OUR FOREIGN RELATIONS. Seeking to practice tho very Amerlca'nlsm I preach as Republican gospel, I am re luctant to speak of a division of American sentiment relating to our foreign affairs. Ono must bo nn American first nnd a pnrtlsan afterward, though we bellevo Re publicanism Is the culture of highest Amer icanism. But It must be said, for the truth's sake and clearer understanding, we have hungered In vain for that unflinching Americanism nt Washington which is needed to exalt the American soul. There 1h no geogrnphlo modification of American rights. They nre the same In Mexico that they are on the high seas, they are the) ui In Europe that they are In Asia, and .re sucrrd everywhere, and the American spirit demands their fullest protection. Whatever tho ultimate solution may be, history will write Mexico as the title to the humiliating recital of the greatest fiasco In our foreign relations. Uncertainty, In stability. Mexican contempt and waning self-respect will be recorded in every chap ter, nnd the pitiable story of sacrificed American lives and tho destruction of law fully held American property will emplia hIzo the mistaken policy ot watchful wait ing nnd wobbling warfare. Under the pretext of noninterference the -Democratic Administration miserably med dled. In the name of peace that same Ad ministration encouraged revolution, and tho cost of American sacrifices was charged to needloss war on Huerta, where the real American expenditure required only the voice of authority demanding protection to American rights. The unbiased critic will recite that the Democratic Administration first coddled Villa as a patriot, then chased him as a bandit. Our civilization has evolved the rules of right conduct, arid written them into forms of government by law. They .were conceived in Justice and developed In right eousness. They have become Instinctive in our American life, and are cherished as a part of our people's inheritance. Our people do not understand any suspension, they are impelled to march on, confident and un afraid. When the spirit ot American ac complishment, or the mercies of American ministration, or the Inclinations of Ameri can teaching, or the adventures of Ameri can development take our .people abroad, under the compacts of civilization, they have a right to believe that every guaranty of American citizenship goes with them. When It does not we have forfeited 'the American Inher'tance. OUR COURSE WITH EUROPE. No political party can draw a variable chart for our ship ot state amid Europe's warring ambitions, lust for power or bat tles for self-preservation. Justice points the way through the safe channel of neutrality. There are dangers, seeming or real, loom ing on every side, hut we should feel se cure along the course marked by Interna tional law and our own conscientious con victions of American rights. "STRAIGHT AHEAD" shall be the command, and when peace comes the sober Judgment of the world will exalt us ever higher and higher as a people strong In heart and noble In the espousal of justice and justice's hu manity. In that world-wide respect and confidence which needs only to be pre served, we sjiall have a. lofty place lu the, great reconstruction, and wa reasonably" may hope to see thla mighty republic again ministering to the re-establishment of peace and all Its precious blessings. My countrymen, Americanism begtas at home and radiate abroad, The republican conception gives the first thought to a free people and a fearless people, and be speaks conditions at home for the highest human attainment We believe in Ameri can market for American product, Amer ican wage for American workmen, Amer ican opportunity for American genius uud Industry, and American dfeme for Aratrl cuu soli. American citizenship is the reflex ot American conditions, and we believe our policies make fog a fortunate people for whom moral, material and educational advancement la the open way foe glory of our progress confirms. The anawerrt aspirations of a new world civilization,, s claim. We have taken the. (deal form "if popular government and applied tks polMtat which bad led continent ! tjs (Bin f liberty and glorified the Rpjblj W fcawt justified prlda and fortllWd top, W Mari only to preserve and 4efnd, awl 41 na fuluringly on. Fwr 1 th fwmtoi wf mac and ctmiclsnso in feuekta t mwe- ttttlvx ht Yxntr. It i$ sjort -American. And w mxf rJe b J