Show E ESSIES 07 LOUISIANA M PARKER PLACE ON GIVEN SECOND THIRD PARTY TICKET clonel roosevelt Roo evelt ha s tc tj accept nomination at T thi his time a and nd progressives relve may have to choose another cand candidate bdate june 10 in cie closing chicago hours of 0 a tour four day session theodore tor for I 1 roosevelt looe it was nominated convention national dent lent by the progressive chosen colonel being vent ven tion lon the without opposition john M parker ot of IAL Loi slana waa was the unanimous choice ot of the conven tion tor for vice president that certain but it la to by no mean means colonel roosevelt will make the rac the PrOgress progressive lyt or r t the presidency on fo lt ticket lc k e three minutes b before the conven un until t an another 0 t ber time ith alon chairman on aar a adjourned uda journea raymond lago robins re read a d to them a a 6 brief ins message s 3 f from r 0 m 0 oyster bay day in which mr roo roosevelt declined this time nomination at to accept the in the vast few ot of the thousands auditorium some ot whom bad seen the colonel named in an even wilder burst ot of enthusiasm four years ago realized when robins rapped his gavel at 4 58 and declared the con coa mention adjourned sine sino die that in a few ew hours or a few weeks they might be a part without the one leader to whom they had come to chicago to give the pledge of 0 loyalty and falta the cance of colonel roose belts mes message tago with its announcement hit it the progressive national cora corn cittee found the subsequent elate ments of charles ephna hughes this tb republican standard bearer to its ilk 4 ok F R t X theodore roosevelt Rooi evIL ing ng his non acceptance ot 0 the progressive gres sive nomination should stand as his last word was wac lost la in that tired throng worn out by its own entha by ions long delays over peace parleys with the republicans and by the discussion bf cf a platform on which ic it must go into the field it at all against both the forces ot of democracy and republicanism none ot of the feeling that some of ot them later betrayed anen they h had ad opportunity to digest the colonels statement had bad time to flare out when the gavel fell they trooped out into streets for hone home while the band played faintly and the flags that had flaunted so proudly through all the stormy sessions were folded and the banners put away before they left the ball the delegates remembered one ot of the essential essentials of a cam alan in response to the spur ol 01 the leaders they promised more than to carry on the fight it was pledged in enthus enthusiasm tas M and the contributions tumbled in almost as fast A as they could be corded the only protest of the day came a few minutes before the leaders read the announcement fram colonel roosevelt when william flinn of 0 bure proposed the adoption ot of a rule which permits the national committee to fill all Ta candee on the ticket kel there wae wits a chorus ot of noes from over the ball hall tut but it was lost in the explanations of those who a stood tood upon the platform that thia this was but a perfunctory thing done at all national conventions conTent lons to provide tor for death or other casualties it was wag adopted then immediately the communication from oyster bay knorn knor n to all leaders for or at least an ra hour before it waa wu presented ted waa was read to the convention in a moment of tense dramatic silence the gavel 1 tell fell with a lait last bane bang alu ost cot as it was finished |