OCR Text |
Show 1 BARNES OF NEW YORK I MffAHETIK Story Going- the Rounds That 11 1 Hie President Will Make a mm Few Remarks. II BAD STATE OF AFFAIRS kH Albany Man Has Been Talk-Si! Talk-Si! . ing and Protests Are Long', l . " Loud and Deep. jPj BY ROBERT LEE CARTER. RK By leased Wire to Tlio Tribune. mMi NEW YORK. Dec. 0. Chairman IUH William Bnniep. Jr., of the Republican Mwu state committee, tan sympathize today Hu with, the too talkative parrot of the 93 story. Xot only is he hearing from RK Republican leaders rom Buffalo to mmm Montana, demauding that he either pot AM in lino with tlio party or quit the chair- In manship. but he in liable to .hear some Hfl interesting talk when President 1'' H makes an address at a dinner of the B Youuc Meu's Kepublican dub of New M Vork. It is expected that, the president. SH in a perfectly calm, judicial way, will jlH take thp opportunity to come, back at UBI Mr. Barnes for the remarks he, has EMb been making of late, which indicate VH J hut all is not hannony between the administration and the Republican chairman of tho Empire state. BV Ttuo nifffirnnt Oluhfi. I The Youutr Men's Republican club is n n?w organization, and is not to be confused with the Tonne Mob 'b Republican Re-publican club of Brooklyn, which is to be addressed bv President Tft Tuesday Tues-day ovonincr. t)ns is a !Ncw "York club, and has been organized expressly to offset the work Chairman Barnes is suspected of being engaged in to induce in-duce Theodore. RooF'clt to listen to tho call of anybody else but the presi-Othor presi-Othor speakers at the dinner will be Souator Borah of Idaho and Chancellor Brown of New York university, tho latter making his first appearance in political circles. Chairman Barnes will not be there. Me is going to Albany over Wednesday and avoid meeting tho president, but Samuel Kooning, chairman chair-man of the Republican committee, will attend the dinner. ' Regarded as Significant. Its organization aud its dinner are rC; yarded as most significant, iu view of the present mixed state of affairs. It is announced that President Taft is going to speak Ills mind of several stib-ir-cta on this occasion, and Barnes will nut be the moat neglected one of the Mr. Bnrues is said to have told leaders lead-ers who have been nflqr him about his recent interview, that he was not opposed op-posed to the rcnomi nation of M.r. Taft. but that: if the president is. to run the second lime he must renounce his tnirit-busting'-" policies anil stand sqnarelv on Republican ideas. He said that if Mr Taft was to stand .on a. platform so strongly Democratic ;tu poliev an to be hardly different from '"that of the Democratic candidate, there would be no pnrtv issues drawn and nothing about which good Republicans : Mr, Roosevelt is nut commenting publicly pub-licly on the situation. He was seou at the Outlook office. His only answer 'to a query as to how he stood with the Vild guard', was "ot a word on that." |