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“Salvation Is Free, But It Doesn’t Appeal to Him”
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Most delegates to the Progressive Party National Convention at Chicago’s Orchestra Hall on August 5-7 were not professional politicians. They were social workers, suffragists, urban planners, and other reformers, who “seem to be inspired with something of the spirit of the crusaders,” reported the Chicago Tribune. The convention’s religious fervor was also conveyed through presidential nominee Theodore Roosevelt’s dramatic acceptance speech, tellingly entitled “Confession of Faith,” which he ended by declaring, “We stand at Armageddon, and we battle for the Lord.” |
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