Evening Republican, Volume 20, Number 258, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 October 1916 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
D THE Q I RINCESU TONIGHT Red Feather PhotoPlays presents Flora Parker . DeHaven with Richard Sterling in a five act dramatization of George Gibb’s famous novel ‘The Madcap’ Direction of Wm. Dowlar ■■■— 5 and 10c THOUSANDS CHEER T. R. IN CHICAGO
Teddy Attacks Wilson in Chicago, While Thousands of Chicagoans Cheer Ex-President. Theodore Roosevelt, speaking in 'behalf of Candidate Hughes in Chicago Thursday, was greeted with the greatest political demonstration that" has yet been held in Chicago this campaign. Roosevelt aroused the enthusiasm of the voters as in the days of old. He preached the doctrine of genuine manhood and womanhood with all the old time fervor. He asked men and women of the United States to vote for Charles Evans Hughes. At night in the presence of one of the greatest audiences ever assembled in the vicinity of the stockyards, Col. Roosevelt denounced President Wilson's handling -of the railroad situation as a surrender of “terrorism” and an appeal for votes. “For the first time in the history of this county a president took an industrial controversy from the economical field and placed it in the political fields for personal advantage in the campaign.” The Chicago Journal of last evening told 1 how Col. Roosevelt had denounced Candidate Hughes and how he would quit the republican nominee if he did n6t like the speeches he tfas making on his tour, to aid him in being elected. The Journal charged that the Colonel stated that the ‘,‘Old Guard” was attempting to muzzle him, but that it couldn’t be done. “As everyone well knows, the Chicago Journal is one of the most radical democratic newspapers in the United States and the charge against Roosevelt is only a tramped up one, in an effort to split the republican party again—a last .desperate shot in an attempt to create dissension in the ranks of the republican party, and an attempt to “wet blanket” the Roosevelt meeting in Chicago. Scared by the reception that Roosevelt’s speech in favor of Hughes received in Chicago, the Journal resorted to the above last desperate effort to stem the tide of the drift toward Hughes in the/ Illinois city. Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Long are spending today in Chicago.
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