Bewooralit ata, Bellefonte, Pa., November 2, 1928 THE UNHAPPY STORY OF MARY TODD, THE WOMAN LINCOLN LOVED. (Continued from page 2, Col. 6.) Sumner was well informed as to what Edmunds was doing. He knew that Edmunds had sent into the inner «circles and the byways of Washing- ‘ton and was calling hs his com- ‘mittee a multitude of the scandal- mongers who had made Mary Lin- coln’s life wretched while she was in ‘the White House. Sumner did not believe that Edmunds would dare to embody the gossip in his report and he hoped rather against hope that the very venom of the gossipers would prove their absurdity to the eight other men who formed the committee. Each day until the 13th of June .Sumner asked for the report without result, asked for it so regularly that there developed a sort of rite—Sum- ner rising and putting his request in his courtly way; a hiss from the gal- lery; Edmunds slowly getting to his feet and deliberately making an ex- «cuse that deceived no one; a patter .of handclapping from the gallery; and ‘the gavel brought down by the Vice- President. But on the 13th, Edmunds gave his report. The Committee recommended that the pension to Mary Lincoln be refus- ed. Their reasons were concise. Lin- coln was a civil and not a military of- ficer and his death occurred in the civil walks of life. Only the families of soldiers should be allowed pen- sions. Moreover, there was nothing to distinguish this case from that of other civil officers who had lost their lives in the performance of their pub- lic duties. The Committee had found that Mrs. Lincoln was not destitute. The Committee had “good reason to nso — think that after Mr. Lincoln’s death | she received no inconsiderable amount .of clothing, plate, household goods, ete., which should be considered” in relation to the case. The report wound up with the statement that the Committee was in possession of other facts regarding Mrs. Lincoln which clinched their resolve not to recom- mend the pension. The report was accepted without debate and Sumner’s first bout was lost. He now had measured the depth of Edmund’s opposition and was deter- mined that his next bill should not get into the hands of the clever Ver- monter. Three weeks later he intro- duced a new bill, this time for $3,000, and then set all his skill in motion to prevent its being referred to Ed- mund’s committee. Cameron backed him in this and so did Morton of In- diana and Howard of Michigan, but Sumner was father, mother and nurse to the bill. He gave the Senate no rest. But Edmunds was as famous an obstructionist as Sumner was an ag- .gressor. People from all over the country wrote to the Senator from Massachusetts protesting against his attempt to waste the public moneys on Mrs. Lincoln. Even some of his distin- ‘guished friends, one of them, Lydia Maria Child, a member of that group .of noble women of whom he had spoken to Mary years before, called him to account for his action. Sum- ner was courteous but unmoved. And the fight went on in the Senate. “I wish to call the honorable mem- bers’ attention to the fact that a bill granting a pension to Mrs. Mary Lin- coln is before us. It has been too long before us.” This from Sumner. Senator Tipton of Nebraska. “I ob- ject.” Senator Sumner: “Will not my friend allow me to plead with him that a vote be taken?” Senator Tipton: “I will not. shall not vote in Senator Edmunds’s absence.” Senator Morrill: “I am bitterly op- posed to paying three thousand dol- lars. 1 propose to strike out three thousand dollars and insert five dol- lars per day. We should not pay her enough to educate a brilliant boy abroad. In my judgment he had bet- ter be educated over here than abroad where he will not be brought up un- der the principles of his father.” Sumner: “I would remind the gen- tleman that he is speaking of the wife of Abraham Lincoln.” Senator Cameron: “Tut! Tut! Tut!” Thus day succeeded day and month followed month. As the winter of 1869-70 came on, the bill assumed a .deep significance in Sumner’s mind. He was getting on in years, though he still looked to be in his prime. He was fifty-eight. He had lived life deeply though splendidly, and he had learned some important things. One of these was that one must gage the possibility of success of any big en- terprise by measuring the characters of its protagonists. If Americans in bulk were grasping and gullible, then the fighting he had done for twenty years was wasted. This struggle became very import- ant to him. And—an added incentive —he was very lonely. It comforted him to be fighting for a woman. On the morning of July 9, 1870, he wiped the sweat from his face, tossed the great mane of grizzled hair back from his forehead and rose in his place in the Senate. One fine hand, the same hand that had brought Mary Lincoln the teacup at Fort Wayne, rested on his hip in a famil- iar gesture of defiance. But he spoke gently and as if bringing up a new matter. “A bill for the pension for Mrs. Lincoln was introduced at the last Congress. It failed. During the first week of the present Congress, now more than a year ago, 1 introduced another bili. I plead with the honor- able members to act upon it. Senator McCreery of Kentucky rose. “Three of our Presidents have died during their term of service. In each instance I believe Congress vot- ed one year’s salary to their wives. Their wives, it is true, were domes- tic ladies and did not choose to travel in Europe. If Mrs. Lincoln chooses to do so I am the last man who would criticize her taste. But I am the last man to tax the people for its indul- You |: Carolina has a circulation of less than one dollar to the inhabitant. Is she to be called upon for part of that, that Mrs. Lincoln may give more freely to the beggars of Europe?” “I find this discussion indelicate,” i cried Senator Fenton of New York. “Mrs. Lincoln may have been indis- creet, she may have forfeited a meas- ure of the respect due one in her position. Grant it. But still she is the widow of Lincoln.” That this damning with faint praise might not go unnoted, Senator Sauls- bury of Delaware added his mite. “I was no friend personal or political of Lincoln. I believed his adminis- tration disastrous. I believe it unfor- tunate that any such man ever lived as President. And yet if Lincoln’s widow is in want I am willing to con- tribute with other Senators from my private purse for her relief.” Yates of Illinois uttered so loud a groan that he immediately obtained the floor. “Sir, there are recollec- tions and memories, sad, silent and deep, which induce me to vote against this bill. Amid all the perils of life, amid good and evil report, a woman should be true to her husband. Mr. President, this occasion does not re- quire and I shall not go into details. But there are reasons why I cannot vote for this bill.” Saulsbury rose. Sumner tried to interrupt him, but the Southerner would nat be denied his chance to give a covert insult to Lincoln’s wife. He made this priceless effort: “I know nothing of Mrs. Lincoln’s character . . . In my eye she stands today just as lovely, as amiable and pure as though she were the widow of a Democratic President, around whom my hopes clustered and my warmest affections turned. While I am opposed to any act of her hus- band » At this point, Sumner whispered to Cameron. The Senator from Penn- sylvania took the floor quickly. He had listened te the efforts of Yates and Saulsbury with undisguised dis- i gust. | “A great deal of opposition to thi | bill arises from prejudices, politica { prejudice and social prejudice, got up {in this city. When Mr. Lincoln and { his family came here, the society of Washington was very adverse to him or to any other Republican family who might come here, and they were in a great measure ostracized. The ladies and even the gentlemen, the gossips of the town did all they could to try to make a bad reputation for Mrs. Lincoln and tried to do so for the President. His career was so extraordinary, he was such an extra- ordinary man that they could not destroy him but they will carry their venom so far as to destroy the social position of his wife. I do not want to talk, and I say, let us vote!” “Aye, let us vote, Mr. President!” said Sumner, quickly and a little wearily. It was noon now, a July noon in Washington with heat that dragged like leaden weights on every motion. “Aye, let us vote.” He paused and lifted his head; his glor-! lous voice swept the great room like an organ. “Surely the honorable members of the Senate must be weary of casting mud on the garments of the wife of Lincoln: those same gar-' ments on” whi¢h = one terrible night, five years ago, gushed out the blood and brains of Abraham Lincoln. She sat beside him in the theater and she | received that pitiful, that holy deluge , on her hands and skirts because she! was chosen companion of his heart. She loved him. I speak of that which | I know. He had all her love and Lin- | coln loved—as only his mighty heart | could love—Mary Lincoln. Let us vote.” There was utter silence for a full minute on the floor and in the gal- | lery. No one hissed. The gavel did | not fall. Then -the honorable mem- | bers, in a hush, as if the coffin of Lin- | coln lay in their midst, voted. | The result stood, yeas 28, nays 20, absent 24. Sumner had won the fight. Mary, in Frankfort, received from one of those curious-minded friends ' who always keep one informed of evil reports, a full account of the Senate ! fight. She wrote Sumner several let- . ters of deepest gratitude. But the viciousness of the Senate debate rob- bed the pension of any aura of na- tional graciousness. Mary, by this time, had lost the power of feeling surprise at any show of bad taste in the public attitude toward her. Still, as she made her preparations for returning to Amer- ica, she was conscious of a sense of wonder that the men of the Senate, though without bowels of compassion for Lincoln’s wife, showed not some shadow of decent feeling for his two sons. Robert was suffering torment from the Senate reports. Tad, while in Europe, was partially sheltered from knowledge. But what little he learned made the boy almost frantic. She delayed her return for many weeks. Finally it was the thought that she was as much the widow of a soldier as Mrs. U. S. Grant ever could be, that enabled her to make the start. She reached here at last, not with chin up as Abraham Lin- coln’s wife had every right to come home, but shrinking, wondering when the next blow would fall. She went back to Chicago, glad to be among her own. Tad at eighteen was now the center of her existence, for Bob was married and living his own successful life. Tad’s health was a ceaseless source of anxiety to her. He never had been strong. Early in July he went to bed with typhoid fev-, er. On the morning of the 15th, in violent agony, he passed away. “Baby Eddie, Willie, Tad, Abr’am! There is a curse on me,” Mary told her sister Elizabeth, who sought to comfort her. “You ought to pray that I be taken now to my husband and children.” But life had not yet finished with little Mary Todd. Bit by bit there re- vived in her her old love of things of the mind. She turned back to books and study. She was fifty-three now, but clothes, even mourning clothes, mattered much to her and she took an interest in them. She lived in shrinking seclusion, sensitive to every misinterpretation, vet gossip sought her out even when ' Baby Eddie usea to draw what he - that would have meant the very bread them twenty years before. | came President, she sustained her new she went abroad to spend a winter in Paris or London. ing a picture in her little salon in Paris, she slipped and fell, injuring her spine. She suffered a great deal from the inflammation that followed, but she managed to keep about, and to get back to Springfield, still show- ing her interest in fashion, for she had displaced the crinoline with the wonders of the bustle! Robert was making progress in pol- itics—a son of whom to be proud, and Mary was proud of him, but to her sensitive eyes a career in politics was a course to be viewed with acute anx- iety. Those ghastly years in the White House had broken her nerve. She worried about Bob and about her old age. If she was to be an invalid, she would be a burden to her rela- tives and she hated the thought. Elizabeth laughed at her. “You don’t picture yourself properly, Mary. You don’t realize that in spite of all you've been through, you're still the best company in the world. I think if a locomotive ran over you, you'd | still be a spitfire, still have some-'! thing funny to say.” They were driving to the station : in Springfield when Mrs. Edwards | said this. Mary was going to get | treatments for her back. She was looking delicate, but her eyes were still lovely and her skin soft as a child’s. She shook her head. “Abr’am and Willie were the humorists of our fam- ily. Willie used to tell jokes when he was only fiv:. For that matter, called funny pictures and chuckle with : rapture over them. He was the im- age of his father when he lay in his little casket.” She looked up, caught her sister's long face and smiled. “I’m making you out a liar, poor Eliz- abeth. Wait till I get back from New York! I really can’t be funny now. My back feels like—oh, do you re- member old black Zeb, our gardener in Lexington, when he had the ‘mis- ery?’ He and I are twin souls now.” And as Elizabeth helped her from the phaeton, Mary doubled over, screwed her face up in one of her, marvelous impersonations and as the image of the old darky she left her | sister on the station platform, help- less with laughter. ' The New York doctor couldn’t cure ! her poor back, and after a few weeks Mary returned to Springfield and went to bed. i She was sick now, helpless at last’ and at last giving way to her fears. | She thought, that poverty finally had claimed her for its own and she be- lieved that Bob, now Secretary of War, was about to be assassinated. | " All her old gaiety and all her sense of humor could not “help her now. | But this state did not last long. Fate at last finished with tormenting her. | On the morning of July 16, 1882, | came a blessed stroke of paralysis | and at eight o'clock that night she | died. They laid her in the room ! where, forty years before, Lincoln | had made her his wife. On the morning of the 17th, news- | papers all over the country announced her death. Many of them made oc- casion for raking up old stories about her. But the New York Times and the New York Tribune paid tributes of Heaven to Mary had they made Too late! Yet because one would do them | justice, it is fair to tell here some of the things they said. The Tribune spoke of her loyalty and her kindness of heart. adding, “After Lincoln be- position with intelligence and dignity. She never received the credit due her. There probably never was an occupant of the White House so persistently slandered and maligned . . .” The Times added its tardy truth. “In a war atmosphere like that which enveloped the White House, nothing but the strongest conjugal affection could have maintained even a shadow of domestic happiness. But it is a matter of record that Lincoln in his homely phrase constantly referred to his home and his family, his wife and boys, and to his daily domestic con- cerns with real enjoyment and with the unaffected simplicity of a villag-!' er who never had dreamed of power or greatness. give those slanderous tongues which maligned the wife of the President, who idolized and worshiped her hus- band. These fantastic inventions, gence. The good old State of North! In the winter of 1879, while hang- 2 ie mnie It is not easy to for-! 71-16-tf LUMBER? Oh, Yes! W.R. Shope Lumber Co. Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing Call Bellefonte 432 Don’t Eat Raw Pork. A warning has been issued by Dr. J. Moore Campbell, chief of the bu- reau of communicable diseases, State Health Department, regarding the hazardous practice of eating uncook- ed pork and pork products. “At this season of the year hogs are butchered at home for family con- sumption.” “Those preparing the meat and its products, especially dur- ing the mixing of sausage, frequent- ly consume some of this material while still in the raw state. Others ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW are likely to use smoked sausage as FE sas food without first subjecting it to the Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices is re. : all courts. Office, room 18 Crider’s “These practices,” he asserted, | Exchange. 61-1y “carry the possibility of infection KENNEDY JOHNSTON. —Attorney-at- whie The from the trichinois parasite, sometimes is found in hogs. Department’s records of last year showed a score of serious cases, di- rectly traceable to this source, one of which resulted in death. With the use of ordinary precaution, not one of these infections need have occurred.” Jon L. born of a time prolific of chimeras | and phantasms are now laid to rest | with the unhappy lady whose last | years have been filled with so much to make life a burden. away saying ‘Surely no sorrow is like unto my sorrow!’ ”—Hearst’s Inter- national Cosmopolitan. A Chance to Go to Annapolis. J. Mitchell Chase, a member of Congress from this district, announ- ces that arrangements have been made with the U. 8S. Civil Service Commission to hold a preliminary competitive examination on Novem- ber 17, 1928, for the selection of one midshipman for the Naval Academy in 1929. Owing to the large number | of applicants, Congressman Chase has decided that this will be the fair- est plan, as it will give every candi- date an equal chance. Candidates must be of good moral character, residents of the 23rd Penn- sylvania Congressional District, phys- ically sound, and between the ages of 16 and 20. Those receiving the highest grades, as certified to Congressman Chase by the Civil Service Commission, will be nominated as principal and alternates to take the regular examination for entrance next spring. The examination may be taken on the above date, either at the post of- fice at Clearfield or Bradford, Pa., at 9a m. As the Civil Service Commission must be notified not later than No- vember 5th of prospective candidates, it is requested that all candidates notify Congressman Chase of their intention before that date, when they will be furnished with complete in- formation how to proceed. Please be sure to state whether you expect to take the test at Clearfield or Brad- ford, also give the exact date of your birth. Address all communications to J. Mitchell Chase, House of Representa- tives, Washington, D She went, Republican Nominee FOR House of Representatives THE If re-elected my future aim shall be, as it has been in the past, to discharge all the duties of my office without fear or favor. I shall not forget that it will be my duty to under it at all times. stand by the Constitution and the laws framed In no other way can the interests of the County be better conserved or advanced. Political Advertisement P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market NO MEAL COMPLETE without something from our shop. Hams, of course, fresh or cured; steaks that just melt in your mouth, tender and juicy. So many kinds and cuts of meats, but all you need is to know it came from us, and you are sure of success. Telephone 667 Market on the Diamond Bellefonte, Penna. 2] Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at- tention given all legal business em- trusteed to hiis care. Offices—No. 5, East High street. 57-44 M. KEICHLINE. — Attorney-at-Law and Justice of the Peace. All pro- fessional business will receive | prompt attention. Offices on second floor of Temple Court. 49-5-1y G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law, Con- sultation in English and German. Office in Crider’s Exchange, Belle- fonte, Pa. 58-8 PHYSICIANS R. R. L. CAPERS. OSTEOPATH. Bellefonte State College Crider’'s Ex. 66-11 Holmes Bldg. S. GLENN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his residences. D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regls- tered and licensed by the State. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. Frames replaced and leases matched. Casebeer Bldg., High St., Bellefonte, Pa. 71-2 VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed by the State Board. State College, every day except Saturday, Bellefonte, in the Garbrick building op- posite the Court House, Wednesday after- noons from 2 to 8 p. m. and Saturdays ia. m. to 430 p. m. Bell Phone 68-40 | FEEDS! 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Let us sell you your Cotton Seed Meal, Oil Meal, Gluten and Bran to | go with your own feed. We will mix | same for five cents per H. We will deliver all feeds for $2.00 per ton extra. If You Want Good Bread or Pastry TRY “OUR BEST” OR «GOLD COIN” FLOUR C.Y. Wagner & Co. i BELLEFONTE, PA. 66-11-1yr. Caldwell & Son Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces ARUP ESS SISA Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully and Promptly Furnished 68-15-t£.