Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 150, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 June 1914 — ALL'S WELL; T. B. HAS SOLVED PROBLEMS [ARTICLE]
ALL'S WELL; T. B. HAS SOLVED PROBLEMS
Roosevelt and Associates Declare for Straight Ticket—Teddy Wavers on N. T. Governorship. Oyslter Bay, N. Y., June 25.—Theodore Roosevelt and his leading associates Anally settled questions which, it is felt, (Will decide the fate of the progressive party in New York state thiis fall. After Lt was all over Colonel Roosevelt made a Statement setting forth their decisions. Here are the main points: There will be no fusion in Now York state. A straight progressive ticket will be put in the held. District Attorney Charles S. Whitman, oif New York, who has been talked of ais a possible nominee of both the republican and progressive parties was repudiated by 001. Roosevelt. Col. Roosevelt’is nomination for the governorship is being urged upon him by virtually all the progressive leaders to srpite of his repeated statement that he would not run. The leaders said they still had hopes. Today the eolonel declined to deny again that he would run. Almost alii of Col. Roosevelt's A rat day at home after his trip to Europe was given over to politics, and he expects to have little time for anything else for the next four months. Not only did he talk today with the New York state leadera but he want into the political situation in three other states. William Draper Lewis, progressive candidate for governor of Pennsylvania, spent an hour at Sagamore Hill and outlined conditions in his State. ' Prom Ohio came Walter Brown, state chairman. Louisiana was represented in the person of John M. Parker, state chairman.
