1WSK3rK8HwKr8W'suRfiwiS5r w- , pyp '''y&ftwrwffiff'rfrfflB! fcfflrtf'RlSHRSSt-. ' C5" E ij. V r4 Tti-'F m--T ""'"vv - T. .x ' ' - LS 16 UESDATf Sr WKRCm - j2 F HARRISON'S CABINET. THE PEESIDENTAE I s -iil ,5, jajww ' -1 " -."-" -r '- " i" 'J a i n ii' ii i w in ' i in ' 'i him i mm m i i mm i isswii ' i ri 11 iwiim i imbiiii ' hi ii ii i i i wi inwwu 'iwu " i n i u -vnaB it . i - w th--"t fc fi r ."' -- r m jii-iar K' .j. -. r j;-. ir- - - a airsB -" r"i -" an oubh'uiiii miibwlwc "- ' . iffi ish ii mm ! jfFi smBFDaBBwrui3-Cf? - fflfliwM i t .1 ji' ..rurwiiguaiaB KssssssssinnAa a j at -' ' jltsi-sjo j - j' - 'ium7(nn -'".. -u ..-. --.i-y,i.in-t iriuj.. wi) . .. v.-..-....., -,T ; ;j .,.-; t- -v t . - - apasavt i - j- 1 TJEW SOCIAL LEADERS Gossip About the Ladies Wlio Are to Preside in the White House. HOW HARRISON WON HIS BRIDE. Bussell Harrison's Wife and Secretary Balford's Interesting Family. HES. 210RT0N AND HER DAUGHTERS The shift ins: scenes in the national drama of executive session brings to the front new characters in the administration of public affairs and in the social regime of the place of supreme rank. In American politico Eocial as in politico-administrative con cerns it is the aphorism of the effete institu tions of divine-right doctrines repeated -with a feminine application, ''The Queen is dead, long live the Queen. In the drawing rooms of the Executive Mansion, while words of regret and farewell have been said to the retiring first lady, in the psrlors of the President-elect salutations and welcome have greeted the new first lady of the Ee pnblic The career of the former has been phenomenal in the rewards ot public ap plause. She had youthful beauty, amia bility of spirit, and an unusual aptitude for the duties and exigencies of social leader ship. The latter will have that splendor of matured loveliness of person, character and works which is the culmination of matronly influence and worth. Mrs. Cleveland exemplified the marvelous range of capability of the American girl. Mrs. Harrison will illustrate the wonderful force and development of the American woman. Mrs. Cleveland entered the Ex ecutive Mansion as a bride, fresh from the gayetiesof her girlhood and maiden life. The pleasurable experiences of college days, entre into society and European travel were still new. Prom the walks of a young lady in ordinary society, she entered the highest sphere of social preferment, and played her part with brilliant success. Mrs. Harrison takes her place in the Executive Man- 51 v, W jSnV-; h WSS5? Carrie Scott Harrison. 'sjon after a life of domestic experience.early cares, and subsequent sucoesses. The story of the life of Frances Folsom Cleveland, as first lady of the land, has been written in her career imperishably in the social history of administrations. Mrs. Harrison follows in the line of social leadership and pre eminence with her career before her. THE FIRST LADY. About S3 years ago the household of Rev. John Witherspoon Scott, a Presbyterian divine, President of Oxford, O., Female College, was made happy by the birth of a daughter. At that time Andrew Jackson Bwaved the destinies of the country, and Emily Donelson, wife of his private secre tary, and Sarah Yorke Jackson, wife of nis' foster-son divided the honors of the social administration of the Executive Man sion. The infant daughter of the reverend pro fessor received the name Carrie. Da Scott belonged to an old Pennsylvania family, his birth occurring in Bucks county, that State, in the first year of the century. When he was a youth in Philadelphia he met a young lady named Mary Xeal. The young people became much attached to each other, but circumstance intervened to sepirate them. The yountt lady's father was a bank cashier in Philadelphia. About the time she was entering the most interesting age of maiden life he removed to "Washington, Pa., taking his family with him, to ionnd and manage a bank in the interests of Eastern capitalists. Mrs. RvsseU Harrison. About the same time Mr. Scott, having completed his educational and theological studies, came to Washington, Pa., as an in structor in the old Washington College be fore it was united with its rival, Jefferson. The old acquaintances were renewed, and roon after Mary Keal, the bans cashier's daughter, became the wife of John "W. Scott, the professor. Some 40 miles in a northwesterly direction from Cincinnati, O., is the rural town of Oxford. As early as 1836 it was made the seat .of Miami Uni versity, founded under the patronage ot the State. These important educational inter ests subsequently led to the establishment of the Oxford Female College and the Western Female Seminary. Of the former Eev. John W. Scott had become President. lUUmiSON AS A LOVEK. There was a student at Oxford at this time bv the name of Benjamin Harrison. He had parsed from Farmer's College into the Miami University, and graduated at the age of 18 years, a tribute in itself to his industry and mental capabilities. The young stndent, in the midst of his pnrsuit of learning, found himself overtaken by love. The daughter of the worthy man of God and erudition was the object of his af fection. John Scott Harrison, the father of the student, was too warm-hearted and lib eral to lay by much of earth's stores or even to take a selish care of what he received by inheritance. The patrimonial estate had diminished in acres and the family exchequer in cash nnder his management, which left Benjamin to make his own way, with a good education as his capital and the 'world as his field tor investment. It was a trying situation into which to be driven by implacable' fate, to sever the tender ties -which held him at Oxford for the unemo tional experiences of a stndent at law in the firm of Bellamy Stover and Abram Gwynn, of Cincinnati. The very name has a mnsti rtess about it which savored of much law and learning. He finished his toilsome journey up the rugged highway of jurispru dence, and the first thing thereafter, like a aensible young man, wended his way back to Oxford. On October 20, 1853, he there made Miss Carrie Scott his bride. The prospects in life'forthe young couple were not bright, as the world goes, but the young people were .fall of hope. Their unitecLfortunes in love 'made them contented, and with happy I lEir' j? t3 a3K"Sb .AX PRESIDENT hearts and willing hands they crossed the threshold of life's duties together. EARLY WEDDED LIFE. The cash capital at the command of Ben jamin Harrison when he began married life and the practice of his profession was SS00, an advance on a lot in Cincinnati inherited through his aunt, who married'JamcsFin lav, a soldier in the War of 1S12. Mr. and Mrs. Harrison began their domestic re sponsibilities in rooms in an Indianapolis boarding house. In thesummerof 1854 Mrs. Harrison paid a visit to her parents at the old home at Oxford, and there, on August 12, Bussell Harrison, their eldest child, was born. After this event in the family circle, the young mother having returned in the autumn to Indianapolis, the proud husband rented a small house, and began life in earnest, his faithful and industrious wife doing her own housework, in a cottage of three rooms. The steady gains in lame, practice, and pecuniary rewards in two years found Mrs. Harrison presiding over a a larger and more pretentious house. Here their second and last child, Mary Scott Harrison, was born. In 1S81 General Harrison entered the Sen ate of the United States, and Mrs. Harrison became a member ot that distinguished cir- Jlfary Scott Harrison McKee. cle, the wives of the Senators. In her Washington residence of six years Mrs. Harrison extended her sphere of usefulness. Her name was associated with noble chari ties and church work. The' Garfield Hos pital owes its present success in a large de gree to her active interest as one of its first directors. In appearance Mrs. Harrison is a type of matronly beauty. In figure she shows the generosity of nature in a well-rounded form and in mind nature's equal beneficence, ex panded by training in the acquirements of a liberal education, drawn from the broad est opportunities. A lavish growth of hair, silvered with the threads of little over a half century of life, aud floating in curlyx waves over a weii-snapea neaa ana ending in a graceful coil, her regular features and dark, expressive eyes form a picture of ripened womanhood. She has a voice soft ened by the instincts ot a gentle nature, and a gift'of conversation which, while ani mated, is still thoughtful. ... The tastes of Mrs. Harrison lie in the di rection of art. Her works in water colors are the evidences of her gilts and applica tion to her favorite recreation. American womanhood may feel honored that it will have at the head of the domestic and social environments ot the new execu tive household one so fair and gifted as Mrs. Harrison. During a portion of the Senatorial term of Benjamin Harrison, Alvin Saunders oc cupied a seat in the same body as a Senator from -Nebraska. Each Senator had a daugh ter, both were named Mary, both were great favorites in Washington society, and were particularly fond of each other. This sis- Mrs. Mary Frances Halford. terly affection was brought within the periph ery of the family circle by the marriage of Bussell Harrison to the daughter of Al vin Saunders. - MRS. BUSSELL HARRISON. Her father, a descendant of a Virginia family of Kentucky pioneers, where he was born, went to Iowa in 1836, was a member of the Constitutional Convention upon the admission of that State into the Union in 1815; was President Lincoln's Governor of Nebraska from 1861 until it joined the sis terhood of States in 1867, and was a Senator of the United States 1S87-83. Her mother was Marthena, daughter of Theodore Bar low, of Green county, Indiana originally from Virginia and prominent in the early development of the Western Territory. The marriage of Mary Saunders to Bus sell Harrison took place in Washington in January, 1885. The young couple Temoved to Helena, Mont., where Bussell Harrison and Charles L. Saunders, his brother-in-law, engaged in bnsiness. Mr. Harrison, who is largely identified with journalism and the stock raising and agricultural in terests of Montana, is very popular among the people of that embryo State, and it is said that there is a great probability of his appearance in the affairs of the new Com monwealth. His wif, with her year-old in fant, Marthena, will spend some time at the Executive Mansion. It was also during the residence of Gen eral and Mrs. Harrison at Washington that their daughter Mary became the wife of James Bnbert McKee, a young merchant of Indianapolis. Miss Mamie Harrison was well known in Washington in p. select circle of young ladies, and her return will form a pleasant opportunity for the younger wives and daughters to enjoy the social entertain ments of the Executive Mansion. Her two iftn., 4? ..:,' HARRISON". young children,Benjamin Harrison, 2 years old, and Mary Harrison McKee, a few months old, will add to the domestic pleasures of the home of the President. THE SECRETARY'S FAMILY. The official household of the President, represented by his private secretary, Elijah W. Halford, will also have an interest in the social lite at the Executive Mansion. Mrs. Halford, although somewhat of an in valid on account of tendency to bronchitis, isalady of pleasant manners and striking appearance. She was Mary Frances Arm strong, daughter of George W. Armstrong, a merchant of Winthrop, Me., ten miles west of Augusta, where she was born. Her girlhood was pissed at that picturesque post hamlet on the shore of Cobbosseecoute waters, with its chain of lakelets and riv ers, tributary of the Kennebec river. Miss Armstrong was educated at Keorts Hill College, Maine. After her graduation and brief experience in society she was married at Indianapolis, May 1, 1866, to Elijah W. Haltord, a young and rising journalist. Their only child, Jannette Halford, is not yet in society,, but being well advanced to ward the end of her teens, she will made her debut during the first social season of the new administration. Mrs. Halford, on account of her health, passed the winter in Florida with her daughter. " It may be said as an historic fact that for the first time in the history of the Govern ment the social surroundings of the Vice President of jthe United States, the consti tutional heir presumptive to the presidency, will be of a character commensurate with the dignity of the chief place in the legisla tive arm of the Government and the second post of national election. Hiss Jannette Halford. Mrs. Anna Livingston Morton, on her mother's side, comes by descent from a fam ily of colonial and Bevolutionary distinc tion. In the affairs of those historic times her ancestors were conspicuous in public concerns. One of her branch of that family was Chancellor Livingston, who adminis tered the oath of office to George Washing ton, first President of the United States, just 100 years ago on the coming 30th of April. MRS. LEVI P. MORTON. The first 'wife of Vice President Morton was Lucy Kimball.daughter of Elijah Kim ball, a prominent citizen ot Flatlands, L. L They were married in 1854, the year of the Fremont campaign. She died in 1871, leav ing no children. The present Mrs. Morton, married in 1873, is a daughter of the late Wm. T. Street, of Poughkeepsie, 2J. Y., well known during a long life for his public snint. She is a sister of Wm. A. Street, a prominent law yer of ISew York City, and niece of Alfred B. Street,'the Albany- poet Miss Street in her maiden days was one of the most beautiful women in her native city and was greatly admired for her grace and accomplishments. In her matured woman hood, and the mother of five beautiful chil dren, she still holds the charms of her younger days in features, form and man ners. She grew up under the most favorable influences of family and surroundings, and as the wite of Levi P. Morton has shown her skiH as a social leader in the polite hospitalities of her rifth avenue home in Uew York, her seaside cottage, "Fair Lawn," at Newport; and her mountain re treat at Ellerslie, in the historic vicinity of Bhinecliff and Kingston, where the State of New York had its political birth. She has been a leader in the Congressional circles at Washington and in the sphere of diplo matic hospitalities near the court of the French Bepublic In her domestic surroundings Mrs. Morton is not only happiest, but her own little casket ot household gems gives her the greatest pride aud satisfaction. Edith, her eldest daughter, is a tall, willowy blonde of ex pressive beauty, just entering her fifteenth year. Lena, who has just entered her teens, bears a strong resemblance to Tier mother. Helen, who is 12, is a striking type of childhood attractions. Alice, who is also a blonde, is 9, and Mary, the youngest of the family, who is another competitor for the honor of family charms, is 7. The only son, Lewis Parsons, who would have been 11 years of age had he lived, died while his parents were in London. Mrs. Morton is a very striking blonde with blue eyes of deep expression. 'She is the type of queenllness of figure, and in her movements exhibits all the grace of a dis tinguished lineage and cultivation incident to careful training. - .. litr S Sketches of the Men Presumably Chosen to Assist the President in Steering the Ship of State. Although President Harrison has not yet officially announced the -names of the gentlemen whom' he has invited to take Cabinet positions it is well understood that the offices are to be distributed as iouows: Secretary ot State, James G. Blaine, of Maine. Secretary of the Treasury, William Wlndom, of Minnesota. Secretary of War.Bedfleld Proctor, of Ver mont. Secretary of the Navy, Benjamin F. Tracy, of New York. ' Postmaster General, John Wanamaker, of Pennsylvania. Secretary of the Interior, John W. Noble, of Missouri Attorney General, W. H. H. Miller, of Indi ana. Department of Agriculture, Jeremiah M. Rusk, of Wisconsin. Portraits and biographical sketches of the members of the new Cabinet follow: PEEMIER BLAINE. The Blncnetic Malne.aian Who ! to be Sec retary of Stnto. James G. Blaine was born in West Brownsville, Pa , January 31,- 1830. The Blaine family distinguished itself in the Bevolution, and Colonel EpKraim Blaine, the grandfather of the subject of this sketch, was an officer of the Pennsylvania line, as well as Commissary General of the Northern department. The family had been well to do, but at the time of James' birth was neither rich nor poor. The boy attended Washington College, entering it in 1843, and although not a sedulous student, ranked well in his James O. Blaine. studies, but most of all he was the idol of his school-fellows, jnst as he is of his parti sans to-day. A few months after gradua tion he went to Kentucky and taught school at the Western Military Institute at Bene Lick Springs. While in Kentuoky he wooed and won his present wife, then Miss Harriet Stanwood, a native of Maine, who was being educated at Millersburg, Ky. Beturning with his young wife to Pennsyl vania, he studied law, but was forced by necessity to take a position as tutor in the Pennsylvania Institute for the Instruction of the Blind. Here he remained from 1852 to 1854, when he went to Maine to assume editorial charge of the Kennebec Journal. The moribund condition of the old Whig party and the rapid growth of the Bepubli can organization gave him an opportunity that he made the most of. He was elected to the State Legislature in 1858, and in 1860 gave up his position as journalist. He served for fonr years in the Legislature, and during his last term was Speaker. In 1862 he was sent to Congress as Bepresentative. He soon became a pro ficient parliamentarian. He was re-elected to each succeeding Congress until 1876, when he was made Senator to succeed Lot M. Morrill. In 1869 he was made Speaker of the House, and held the position for six years, when the mutations of politics placed his party in the minority. As- Speaker he enjoyed almost unbounded popularity. When the Maine Legislature met it made him Senator for the term ending in 1883. He, however, did not serve his full term, for in 1880 he accented the position of Sec retary of State under Garfield. After the latter's death he sent in his resignation to President Arthur. Ever since 1876 Mr. Blaine has been a prominent candidate for the Presidency. He was placed in nomina tion at the Cincinnati convention and also at the Chicago convention of 1880, and both times was among the leading candidates. In 1884 Judge West, the blind orator, nominated Mr. Blaine amidst the scene of the,wildest enthusiasm. The fourth ballot resulted in 541 votes for the Maine man; on motion, of Congressman Burleigh the nomi nation was made unanimous. The inci dents of the campaign of 1884. are still too recent to need recapitulation. The meager majority by which Blaine lost New York and the election, the enormous majorities in Pennsylvania, Colorado and other States, attested ,the popularity of the candidate, and urge his supporters in demanding that he again become a candidate for nomination. SECRETARY WIND01T. The Statesman Called to Take Charge of i the Treasury Portfolio. William Wlndom, who will be the next Secretary of the Treasury, was born in Bel mont county, Ohio, on May 10, 1827, of Quaker parents. When he had completed his education, he studied law and was ad mitted to the bar in Mount Vernon, in 1853. Two years later he emigrated to Winona, Minn., where he practiced law until 1859, when he was elected to Congress, being re- ITiKiOTn Wtndom. elected for four succeeding terms. In 1871 he was elected to the United States Senate and re-elected in 1877." He left this body to enter President Garfield's administration as Secretary of the Treasury, butreslgned after General Arthur's accession. He made an excellent Secretary, having both wisdom and courage in his successful efforts to re fund the high interest-bearing bonds at a much lower rate. He was conspicuous for the reliable conservatism, which is the soundest principle in the world for a finan cial.head of any Government. In the memorable year 1883 Mr. Windora was again a candidate for the Senate, and was apparently the choicest the Republi cans of the State, but he' was bitterly and energeticallv opposed byM. H." Dunnell, member of Congress from the first Minne sota district In caucus Mr. Windom re ceived 83 votes out of 84 necessary to a choice. Dunnell fought him openly and secretlv, and the deadlock continued for some time. Finally a break was made and Dwight M. Sabin was elected. After his defeat for the Senate, Mr. Windom spent most ol his time in New York with, his family, but alwayB put in an appearance in Minnesota before each general election. Mr. Windom has been interested in some railway schemes and is believed to be a wealthy man. His former administration of the Treasury was infinitely creditable and most nseful to the country. THE SECRETARY OP 17AB. Ex-GoTernor Proctor, of Vermont, One of the. Original Harrison Olen. Bedfield Proctor,,whojias been tendered the portfolio of the War Department, is a native of Vermont: and was at one time Hedfleld Proctor. Governor of the State. Among the reasons given for the recognition by the new Presi dent of the Green Monntain State in Cabi net councils are, first, the eminence of ex Governor Proctor in his party, it being stated that he virtually controls the party in his own State, and, second, the fact that he, as the Chairman of the Vermont delega tion to the Chicago Convention, last year, was head of the only delegation in the whole body which voted solidly for Harrison, first, last and all the time. Ex-Govemor Proctor has all his life been engaged in "trade," being in every sense a self-made man, who has managed to get to gether a respectable fortune in a State that is not noted tor being burdened with wealth. He lives at Proctor,a town founded by him, and which is situated a few miles from But land. He is in practical control of the whole output of the Vermont marble quar ries, and is one of the largest dealers in that commodity in the United States. At his home at Proctor he is a farmer on a large scale, where he owns one of the finest flocks of Winkley merino rams and ewes in the world. Throughout the State of Vermont Mr. Proctor is highly respected, and has the reputation of being a "square man." NEW YORK'S REPRESENTATIVE. General Tracy, of Kins County, Who Is to HaTe the Navy Portfolio. General Benjamin F. Tracy, who will be the new Secretary of the Navy, is about 59 years old. He was born in Owego, N. Y., and seenred his education in the common school of his native town. After leaving the Owego Academy he entered the law office of Nathaniel W. Davis, where he re mained engaged in the study of law until 1851, when he was admitted to the bar and Benjamin F. Tracy. soon made a mark in his profession. In 1853 he became the Bepubliean candidate for District Attorney of Tioga county, and though it was a Democratic stronghold he was elected. Two years later he was again elected to the same office. He was elected to the Assembly in 1861 and a year later he recruited the-One Hun dred and Ninth and One Hundred and Thirth-seventh Begiments, and received his commission as Colonel of the former regi ment from Governor Morgan. In the battle of the Wilderness, May 6, Colonel Tracy led in the thick of the fight. He was carried from the field exhausted, bnt refused to go to a hospital, but led his command through the three days' fight at Spotsylvania, when, being completely broken down, he was forced to turn over his command to his junior officer. He subsequently was ten dered and accepted the command of the One Hnndred and Twenty-seventh United States colored troops. After the war General Tracy settled in New York and resumed his practice of the law as one of the firm of Benedict, Tracy & Benedict. He was one of the counsel for the defense in the celebrated Beecher trial. In 1866 General Tracy was made United States District Attorney for the Eastern dis trict of New York, which position he held untiK1873, when he was forced to resign be cause of the growth of his private practice. In 1881 he was appointed Judge of the Court of Appeals and served one year. General Tracy is a well known breeder, of trotters and with his son owns the Marsh land stud, at Apalachin, Tioga county, N. Y., where he has as stallions Mambrino Dudley, by Woodford Mambrino, record, 2.19: Cheltenham, by Oxmore, record, 2 28, and Bravado, by Kentuckv Wilkes. General Tracy also owns Kentucky Wilkes, by George Wilkes, record 2.21 JOHN WANAJIAKER.P. M. G. Pennsylvania's Representative In President Harrison's Cabinet. John Wanamaker's career as a merchant has been remarkably successful, and his present leadership among Philadelphia's business men is the resultof cast-iron nerve, heroic energy and triumphant ability. Con centration of purpose, springing from a na ture inherently stable, and sustained by a spirit worthily ambitions, has, achieved for John Wanamaker the victory of renown and the advantage of vast wealth. Mr. Wanamaker is a self-made man, aud repre sents the best type of American character. He is to-day, in the drygoods trade, incom parably the most influential merchant and manufacturer of the City of Brotherly Love. His fortune is variously reckoned, but all the estimates make him many times a mill ionaire. -His life reflects his religious convictions, his conduct is governed by a profound sense of morhl obligation, and, his character is sgiiLaSgSifcBKBSiS 3 "i VICE PRESIDENT MORTON. above reproach. In spite of the "vast busi ness interests which cl ;m so much of his time and attention, Mr. Wanamaker never becomes so absorbed in such matters as to be indifferent to the privileges and delights of his home life. He is a thoroughly do 'rnestic man, and in the compinionship of his family he finds his com pie test satisfac tion and most restful delight. The portrait at the head of this sketch gives an excellent representation of its subject, whose features indicate great mental strength, executive John Wanamaker. ability and force, and a straightforward dis position. Mr. Wanamaker is noted for his courtly manners, which are those of a pol ished gentleman of the old school. As a politician he is moderate in his viewy though he is a stanch Bepubliean. Mr. Wanamaker is a native of Philadelphia and takes an active interest in all matters per taining to the trade and commerce of his native city. ANOTHER OHIO MAN.. General John W. Noble, Who Becomes Secretary of the Interior. John Willock Noble was born in Lan caster City, O., October 26, 1831, and was the yonngest bnt one of nine children. His early days were spent in Columbus and Cin cinnati, where he received agood education; he afterward attended Miami University and Yale College, graduating from this in stitution in 1851. He then studied law in the office of Henry Stanberry, who later on was Attorney General for the United States under President Johnson. Mr. Noble com menced to practice in St. Louis in 1855, but removed in the following year to Keokuk, where he soon won a good name at the bar. At thebreaking out of the war he enlisted as a private in the Third Iowa Cavalry Begiment. This regiment was engaged during the whole war, participating John W. iVoftle. in many battles where it always distin guished Itself. Mr. Noble was at the battle at Pea Bidge, was present at the surrender at Vicksburg, and took part in the cavalry raid into Georgia and Alabama. When the war closed he had gained the rank of Briga dier General. General Noble married in 1864 Miss Halstead, daughter of Dr. Hal stead, of Northampton, Mass., with whom he has had two children, both of whom are dead. Since 1876 he has made St. Louis his home, where he always has taken great interest in public affairs. General Noble is a thorough gentleman and a very good pub speaker. ATTORNEY GENERAL MLLrfR. An Able and Wealthy Iatwyer Who Was Formerly Harrison's Partner. "William Henry Harrison Miller, former law partner of General Harrison, and wlio is to be Attorney General, was born in Au- gnsta, Oneida county, N. Y.,, nearly 48 years ago. His father was a Whig and an $. " " ' -' "';; f ,: yy'y TV. jH. Miller. ardent admirer of General Harrison. Mil ler entered Hamilton College at 16 years ot age and was graduated at 20. When he left college he taught school and studied law at the same time for two years. He pur sued reading nnder the instruction of Judge Waite of Toledo, O., afterward Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court. Completing his studies he returned to Oneida county and was married. Soon after he took his bride to Fort Wayne.Ind., where he begran practice. He remained at Fort Wayne eight years, and three children were born to him there. The eldest is now 28 years of age; the next, a son, is a junior at Hamilton College, and the third is a daughter about 17 years of age. Miller rose rapidly in his profession and soon stood at the head of the Fort Wavne bar. In 1874 he received an ofTer of partnership with General Harrison in Indianapolis. The ofTer was at once accepted, and he and his family removed to Indianapolis and became intimate friends and confidantes of the Har risons, the most intimate, it is stated, that the President-elect ever had. In everything that pertains to his busi ness Mr. Miller is a model of precision, and General Harrison has come to regard him as absolutely necessary to him, whether in or ont of office. The admiration is mutual, and the President-elect has no more disin terested admirer in the State than his former law partner. Mr; Miller has grown rich in the practice of the law, and his house in Indianapolis Is an elegant one. PARMER RUSK. Wisconsin's Ex-Governor, Who Will Manage the Agricultural Department. Jeremiah M. Busk, ex-Governor of Wis consin, was born in Morgan county, Ohio, June 17, 1830, and received a good educa tion. When 23 years old he moved to Wis consin, where he soon went into politics. After having held several county offices he was elected to the State Legislature in 1862. When the war broke ont he was commis sioned Major of the Wisconsin Volunteers. He fought with great bravery during Jeremiah M. Bush the whole Rebellion and served with Gen eral Sherman from 'the siege ofVitksbnrg until mustered out at the close of hostili ties, when he held the brevet rank of Brig adier General,, gained for services at the battle of Salkehatcbie. He was a member of the Forty-second, Forty-third and Fortv fourth Congresses, and was Chairman of the Committee on Invalid Pensions. Later on he became Governor of Wisconsin, holding the office for two terms. It was during his last term that the labor riots occurred in Milwaukee, and it was only, thanks to his determined opposition in Ordering out the militia, and concentrating the .whole force in Milwaukee, that the Anarchists were held back. TERY PLEASANTLY DiSCHAEGED. The Centennial Committee of the Chamber of Commerce Relieved. At the regular meeting of the Chamber of Commerce yesterday the report of Chairman Foster, of the Committee on Centennial Cel ebration, was read by thai gentleman. The entirework of the general committee and the various sub-committees was reported on and their reports recommended for ap proval, which was done, Mr. Kelly offering a motion to the effect that all the commit tees be congratulated on the success of the celebration, and that 1,000 copies of the re port be printed for the use of the Chamber. The motion was carried, and Captain Dravo then offered a resolution of thanks to Chair man Foster as well as the committees. The Centennial Committee was formally dis charged. Mr. Scott, of the committee which went to Harrisburg in the interest of the bill giv ing corporations the right of. eminent do main, reported action before the Legis lature. The Hon. Judge Mellon was elect ed a member. The Street Bill. City Controller Morrow insists that the street improvement bill is as good as could be had. He says printed copies of it will be given to all persons who desire to read it between now and Tuesdav next, when the Legislature will act upon it again. No money for City Employes. City employes were disappointed yester day when they expected to receive their salaries, for it turned out that the Mayor had gone to Washington without signing the appropriation bill. Some people still think he will veto it. Prohibitionists Discoanting; Prospects. The Executive Committee of the Prohibi tion.party met yesterday. W. D. Dunn presided and made a speech of some length on the bright prospects the party had of winning. B. &B. Two special numbers; portieres at $6 00 and 7 50 a pair; all shades old gold,, new gold, old red, old blue, terra cotta, etc., and you can't match them in any other store at these prices. See them. , . . .booqs s utjhii, Aiiegneny. If MM if SS?w'&3rTS Use of the First Person Singular in Inaujinral Addresses. HARRISON IS C0BTBHT WITH 17, But i3 Only Exceeded by His QrandXitlier, Old Tippecanoe, in THE EAEGE flUMBER OP WORDS HE USES The quadrennial utterances of the Presi dents not only outlined their administrative policies, but have been more or less charao teristie of the distinguished individual themselves. There have been 20 Presi dents who hive favored their coun trymen with ' a verbal chart of their plans of administration in advance," and there have been four Vice Presidents who , have taten up the severed link of authority where it was dropped twice by natural s wjses and twice by the bullet of an assassin, k The longest inaugural address and tha , , shortest administration were those of the grandfather of the President. The next longest address is that delivered yesterday by his grandson. The most sparing in the exhibition ot pronominal, importance were Abraham Lincoln while standings an the threshold of his second term, and Chester 1 A. Arthur when he took up the wreck of the Garfield government. The most effusive in the presentation of his official dignity in - the first person, singular number, pronoun I was Abraham Lincoln, when he 'entered' the place of supreme authority. WAsnnjGTOX's addeess. When George Washington took the oath of office at New York as first President of the United States o America, under their new model of Constitutional government by the divine right of the people, 100 years ago, he mapped ont his purposes of admin istration during that formative period of national existence in an inaugural address of 1,000 words, in which he appeared as 1 20 times. He entered upon his second term in the inaugural brevity of 154 words with six I's. The second President, John Adams, formnlated the incipient is3ues of liberal and strict construction of the Constitution and antagonisms of political parties in a,n opening address ot ',Jll words, in wnicn ne presented himself 13 time3 in the use of J. Thomas Jefferson, the father of American partisan Democratic government upon the loose system of State rights, gave his admir ing followers a view of his plans in advance in 1,526 words and 19 I's. The growth of anti-federalismand federalism as the diver gent doctrines of political faith were enunci ated after his second election in 2,123 words, in which he appeared as 1 16 times. ONE FOR EVERY HTTNDRED. James Madison told his countrymen all abont his plans otmeeting French intrignes and British maritime arrogance m an in augural of 1,170 words sustained by 11 I's, and four years later discussed the events of the War of 1812 and its successful results in an address of 1,142 words and 11 I's. James Monroe, on March 4, 1817, dis cussed the Indian question and Spanish boundary troubles, issues of politics and ad ministration, in an inaugural of 3,322 words with 19 I's, and made his second appearance with a grand flourish of pardonable pride is 4,466 words and 26 I's. John Qaincy Adams ventilated his in augural partisan notions of public ques tions in 2,944 words, parading- himself in the form of 14 pronouns, first, singular. The hero of New Orleans, after the bitter est ot political campaigns, founded his-vigorous administration on 1,116 words and 11 I's, and renewed it on the basis of the most effective political methods ever known in 1,167 words and six I's. Martin Van Buren, the "Magician of Kinderhook," the Presidental protege of Jackson, gave his preliminary views of pertinent public questions in 3,884 words and 38 I's. " THE PRESIDENT'S GHAITDFATHER. William Henry Harrison, the hero of Tippecanoe and the Indian border struggles of the third decade of the century, mapped out an administration of efficient service to the peace and prosperity ot the much dis turbed Union in 8,578 words and 38 I's. The constitntional residuary legatee of the political administrative affairs ot the ninth administration, John Tyler, showed his bad taste nnder the circumstances of bis succession in an inaugural of 1,643 words and 15 I's. James K. Polk discussed the paramount issues of peace with the Seminoles, sup pression of the "Dorr Bhode Island Be bellion," the annexation of Texas, and dis turbances on the Mexican frontier, with enlarged ideas of administration, in 4,904 words interspersed with 18 I's. Zacnary laylor, tne hero ot the opening battles ot the Mexican War, enunciated Whig doctrines of government to control affairs in 1,096 words aud 18 "Bough and . Beady" I's. I Millard Fillmore took np the reins of government by simply taking the oath of office. James Buchanan, the sage of Wheatland, discussed slavery conflicts, border troubles, Kansas agitations and sectional antagon isms in an inaugural address of 2,773 words, in wnich the last of the Democratic Presidents for a quarter of a century marked his prominent individuality by 13 I's. IJSCOLK'3 addresses. Abraham Lincoln, the first of the Bepub liean Presidents, outlined the administra tive policy of the new regime in political control and discussed the movements of se cession.the authority and perpetuation of the Union, the possibility of war, the raising of revenues and strengthening of Government in 3,588 words. The martyr President stood forth in theheroic attitude of 1 43 times, which overtopped the numerically pronominal prominence of all his predecessors, and yet he was always known as the least obtrusive of public men. He made his second inau gural salutation in the brevity of 288 words and a single I. Andrew Johnson, over-the slain body of Abraham Lincoln, told the country of his plans of succession in 362 words and 15 I's. Ulysses S. Grant, the great Captain in the war for the preservation of the Union, gave his soldier notions of civic duty and administration in l,13hwords, and for free dom in the use of I ranked next to Lincoln's 43 by scoring up 39 uses of the individual izing integer in the pronoun family. Upon his second appearance under similar cir cumstances, in disposing of questions of reconstruction and international differences growing out of the war, he gave expression to his views in an address of 1,332 words, supported by 24 X's COMtSO DOTV7T TO DATE. Bntherford B. Hayes gave his views of national administration in 2,472 words and -16 I's. James A. Garfield backed and filed on the salient points of pnblic policy and party expediency in 2,949 words and 10 I's. Chester A. Arthur, the Apollo Belvedere of Presidents, took np the blood-stained,r mantel of Garfield and formulated a ndu aggressive policv of administration and. a ,, reign ot Chesterfieldian social indulgences in the succinct numbers of 431 words and. II. iThe Democratic Presidents again came to" the front in executive control in Grover Cleveland, who told about Jefiersoniaa sim plicity, civil-service, one term, financial ' whirlpools, silver breakers, and econoaie reform in 1,688 words in which he modestly stood himself np in the form of the praaouaf' 1 I but five times. m T- President Benjamin Harrison outlines'the1 course of his administration in an address containing over 5,000 words. In the use of the personal pronoun he strikes a fair and mod erate average, contenting himself with 1 17 I's. Pleurisy pains, asthmatic, aadjrall throat-affections, are soon relieved bylthat certairtremedy for coughs andv oolii?!Ir ' .Tnrni "P.TTWfnrfln 'VT-a. TiJt