THE SCBANTON TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 22, 1896. 11 GREAT nEN D0.TT WANT IT . " r The Vice-Presidency No Longer Re garded an Honor. BUT IT WAS NOT ALWAYS THI S la OIJob Times the Man Who Coulda't Get the Very Ulghcst Of Nee Was died to Take the Nest Uigbest One. C. M. Harvey. In the Globe-Democrat The dlfllculty in these days of Renins men of what may be called presidential alse, or who think themselves of presi dential Else, to accept a vice presiden tial nomination shows that the "sec ond ofllce" under the government larks the attraction for great statesman which it possessed In earlier days. Four ;ir tive men are In the Republican race for the higher candidacy in IstHI. or Im- tiglnc they are In, but it is doubtful if any one of these would take the lower one if offered, though Hendricks, Demo, t-rat, and Logan, Republican, who were presidential figures, and who said they wanted the first otlice or nothing, ac ceoted the candidacy to the second, Yet the vice presidency was held by many eminent men, Adams, jetterson, Calhoun and Van Buren among them, Adams, Jefferson and Van Buren were subsequently elected presidents. Jef ferson, when chosen vice presiueni, Which was in 17!6, was. Ot course, run ulna? for the nresldencv. Onward un til the election of 1804 electors voted for two men without Indicating which was desired for president, and the ona who received the highest number or votes, If a majority of the whole number, was made president and the next to the highest became vice president. This was chansed after the tie vote between Jefferson and Burr In the Klectoral college In 1H00, when the twelfth amendment to the constitution was adonted. direct ng electors to des tgnate which of the two men voted for wns Intended for the higher office and which for the lower. Adams, however, knew that he himself was running for the vlee-nresidency in the two years in which he was elected to that office, for Washington was a candidate, and re reived one of the voteg of all the elect' ors, and everybody supposed he would. In Adams' time In the office, however, the vice presidency appeared to be a more exalted station than It subse quently was known to be. At the out set he was in very grave doubt as to the precise scope of his own functions and prerogatives, as well as of those of the president. He was In the dark as to the exact place where Washington's powers ended and his own began. "Are we," he asked the senate, "the two kings of Sparta, the two consuls of Dnnii or the two suffetes of Carth age?" (J. C. Hamilton's "History of the Republic," vol. ill., p. obuj. mis was called out by a report wnicn n-aint-u the senate that Wnshlngton. who took nine later than Adams In 1789. should be received In the senate chamber Just before he qualified for the presidency and should then go to the house of rep resentatives to be sworn in. ADAMS' DISTRESS. A writer who was a member of the senate at that time, and who kept a diary, which was published six years ago, gives a graphic account of Adams distress at this Juncture. "Gentle men." said Adams to the senate, "I feel great difficulty how to act. I am pos sessed of two separate powers, the one in esse and the other In posse. I am vloe-nresldent. In this I am nothing, but I may be everything. But I am president also of the senate. When the president (of the United StateB) comes Into the senate what snail i oe: i can not be president then. No, gentlemen, I can .not, I can not. i wisn, genue- men. to tninK wnat i snail ue. twin- lam Maclay'B Journal, p. 3.) Maclay, who was an ardent enemy or Adams party, the Federalist, and who was a prominent Jeftersonlan in pontics oe fore Jefferson, adds: "Here, as if op pressed with the sense of his distressed situation, he threw himself back In his chair. A solemn silence ensued. God forgive me, for It was invountary. but the profane muscles of my face were In tune ror laugnter in spue ot my inais position." In some positive respects the vice presidency was an office of greater power in the early days or tne govern ment than It has since been. The con stltutlon (article 1. section 3, clause 4) sets forth that "the vice-president of the United States shall be president of the senate," but stipulates that he "shall have no vote unless they be equally divided." In this particular, . as In some others, the vice-president Is ordinarily a less powerful official than the speaker, who, being a member of the body he presides over, is entitled to a vote the same as other members. Ties, however, came often in that lit tle body of twenty-six members over which Adams presided in the first two of his eight years In the vice-presi dency, and which had only thirty-two members In the latter part of his ser vice. The casting vote of the vice-president avails nothing, of -course, except when given for the measure, for the question loses unless It receives a ma jority. Most of the Important meas ures before congress during the dozen years following the establishment of the government under the constitution In 1789 were Federalist measures. The Federalist party, to which Adams, as well as Washington, Hamilton, Madi son (until 1791) and the Pinckneys be longed, had many faults, but It was Stronger In constructive atategmnnshlp than any other party which ever fig' ured in American politics. The party which ranks next to It In this respect was the Republican party from 1861 to 1879, from the beginning of the war to the close of reconstruction and the re establlshment of the nation's currency on the gold basis. During those dozen years the Federalist party held the presidency (through the eight years of Washington's service and the four years of Adams'). The party was In a minority in one or other branch of con gress during part of this time, but by Its courage, energy, skill and organiza tion, and the advantage which a posi tive policy and aggressive leadership gave it, placed most of its measures on the statute book. Equal divisions In the senate were frequent in the early years of Federalist sway, and a vice president In thorough harmony with the purposes of that party was In a position to impress himself powerfully on legislation. Such a man was John Adams. Indeed, during the four or live years In which the framework of the government was being perfected and the parts of the great legislative and administrative machine put In smooth working order the vice-president was a much more potent personality than the president. In the First congress, that of 1789-91, about twenty Important measures were made law by the cast ing vote of John Adams. Several times, too, though only for short periods, the vice president was permitted to appoint the senate com mittees, thUB giving him an authority which the speaker of the house has had during almost the whole of the life of the government under the constitution. For a short time the committees were chosen by the president pro tempore, but throughout the greater part of the time they have, as at present, been elected or appointed by resolution. A ttce president having this power would be something more than a fifth wheel to the governmental coach. -i--. ;---v X 8TEPPWO &TONE. " . In the beginning the vice presidency appeared to be the natural stepping tone to the presidency. The first and econd men, Adams and Jefferson, who held the second office, went to the high ' r on on the retirement of the incum bent ot tlit Utter. The third vice pres ident. Aaron Burr, was retired from the vice presidency after one term and his whole political future blighted by the suspicion that he coquetted with the Federalists for election to the high' er office when the tie between hlra and Jefferson In the Electoral college sent the contest to the house of rep resentatives, and by killing Hamilton In the duel In 1S04. The fourth vice president, George Clinton, who retained his standing In his party to the end of his life, thought the Adams and Jefferson precedent would put him in the presidency when Jefferson stepped down at the end of his second term, but Jefferson's friendship for Madison the secretary of state, the value of Madison s own services to the country, which was much greater than that of Clinton a together with the Virginia In fluence, then very powerful In the Jef ferson Republican party, secured the nomination In 1MJ8 for Madison in the congressional caucus, which put up candidates tor president and vice ores Ident In those days. Indeed, there was another Virginia presidential aspirant in the Held In 1808. James Monroe, who did notreach the presidency, however, until eight years later. Clinton was renominated for the second office In 1SK8, and died in ofllce Just before the nominations or were made. When Madison was preferred to Clin ton in 1S08 a new "line of kui-cpksIiui' to the presidency, connecting with the post of secretary of state, was started. This bond remained Intact for a fifth of a century, ror Madison, Monroe and the second Adams stepped from the office ot secretary of state into the nreslden cy. This chain was broken In 1832. when Clay, who had been secretary of state under Adams In 1825-9, was beat en by Jackson. No man Dassed dlreetlv from the office of secretary of state to that of president after Adams, in 1825. and nobody who held the former office nt any time afterward ever reached the latter except Martin Van Buren.and James Buchanan.- Both these men were In other offices between the time thev held the lower and the higher of these two. isobouy since Jefferson, except Van nuren, ever passed directly from the vice presidency Into the presidency. Van Buren was the last of the vice presidents to reach the higher office by election, although four of them. Tyler, Fillmore, Johnson and Arthur, did this through the death of the Incumbent of the latter. Though by electing fortune's supreme favor came to but one vice president after Jefferson, several of them ardent ly strove for it, and seriously hoped to gain It. Calhoun, who was chosen vice president twice, the last time being In 1828, when Jackson was first elected president, believed he would be the lat ter's political heir, but the old Demo cratic dictator broke with him, and he was supplanted by Van Buren In that magnates regard. Richard M. John son, who had the second place on the ticket with Van Buren In 1836, who did not receive the solid support of his par ty and lacked a majority In the Elect oral college, but who was chosen by the senate, was an ardent and powerful aspirant for the presidency In 1844. With Van Buren, Cass and Buchanan, John son created the deadlock In the DemO' cratlc convention of 1844 which sent the delegates to Polk, the earliest of the presidential dark horses. The election of Johnson to the vice presidency In 1837 was the only instance In American history In which the senate chose the Incumbent of that office. A later vice president than Richard M. Johnson eagerly sought the presi dency, and he was Hie only vice presi dent since Van Buren who secured the nomination for it. This was Jonn U. Breckenrldge. When Breckenrldge got the candidacy, however, which was In 1860. his party was split. He was the standard bearer of only one section of it, and, of course, was aware mat no would be beaten at the polls.' Since 1860 no man who ever held the second office was ever seriously mentioned for the first office until the present penoa, when Levi P. Morton figures as a presidential aspirant. Thomas A. Hendrlck's name, though, was often coupled conspicuously witn tne presi dentlal candidacy before he was elect' ed vice president, In 1884. NOT IN DEMAND. The unwillingness sometimes manl fataA tiv men of what is called pre' sldentlal stature to accept a vice prest dentlal nomination Is embarrassing to parties, and may prove a soupce of peril to the country through the death of the president and the promotion of an Incompetent or perverse man. The vice presidency has come to oe a son of consolation prize, tnrown to tne eie. mpnt beaten In the contest for the preS' ldentlal nomination, and the candidate Is often selected without any thought of his fitness for the higher office to which he becomes helr-contlngent. A very serious blunder of this sort was made by the Whigs In the convention of 1839, which put up a ticket ror 1840. After Clay, the idol of the Whig masses, had been cheated out of the presidential candidacy by an elaborate scheme of chicanery never resorted to before or since, and W. H. Harrison was nomin ated Instead, thus giving availability the first victory over capability which It ever gained In a national convention, the chief culprits in the convention were alarmed at the thought of a pos sible defection of the Clay element, nnd offered to give the vice presidency to any Clay man that faction would name. They offered the nomination to Benjamin Watklns Leigh, of Virginia, to Tallmadge, of New York, and to Southard, of New Jersey, all Clay men. all of whom refused it under the cir cumstances. Then John Tyler, who had, It was said, shed tears at Clay's- defeat, was nominated. Tyler's friends,- however, after the fight between him and the party which elected him began, denied this crvlng story. When "Tlppecanoe'I Harrison died a month after taking of llce and "Tyler, too," became president. the Whigs soon discovered their blun der, for Tyler antagonized their party on the Issue which Clay forced to the front, the re-establishment of the United States bank, and in the feud, beginning In 1844. However, the blame for the feud did not altogether be long to Tyler. Neither the bank nor any other political question was be fore the convention which put up Tyler. The Whigs framed no platform and made no declaration of principles what ever at that time. In their twenty years of existence as a national organiza tion tney maae a platform only twice In 1S44 and 18.12. Everybody who knew anything about Tyler's record knew he was committed against a bank like that which Clay Pi-oDOsed after Tyler became president ANOTHER MARPLOT. Another Vlce-nresldent. Andrew Johnson, whom the death of the president-sent to the . higher office, made trouble for the party which elected him and for himself by his hostility to it on the leading Issue of its policy. How ever, Johnson was nominated as a war Democrat, and not as a Republican. He never claimed to be a Republican, and nobody who voted for him did so on the assumption that he was one or that he pretended to be one. The as semblage of 1864 which nominated Lin coln and Johnson was called a Union convention, and the call under which It met was addressed to those who "de sire unconditional maintenance of the union, the supremacy of the constitu tion, and the complete 'suppression of the existing rebellion, with the cause thereof, by vigorous war and all act and efficient means." The platform which the convention adopted made no mention of the - Republican party by name, though probably , three-fourths of the delegates to the. Convention and three-fourths ot those who voted for the ticket were Republicans. The con tingency of the. death of the first man on the ticket was never thought of Cv tho convention when, the second man" was put. on. , . . v. t Fillmore and Arthur, tne other vice- presidents., whom death ' 'promoted. were, of course, members in good standing In the, party which nominat ed them, but the elevation or Fillmore made a change in the executive policy. In the contest over the compromise measures of 1U4 Taylor, the Southern man and livt.knUu uka mimA ,- k. fore those measures were passed, was on uiuniDw 10 tne purposes and pre tensions ot the slavery section than the Northern man. Fillmore, who succeeded blm on his death, turned out to be. Still Fillmore was in harmony with a large section of the Whig party, and made a fairly creditable president un der the rwculiav r,rt,imn- k Arthur was the only one of the four vice-presidents whom death made iimmeni wno gave entire satisfaction to his party, and yet he would not have, been nominated if Garfield's death could have been foreseen. Op portunity and responsibility revealed In Arthur a poise and an ability ot which even his friends had not dream ed. The death of a president Is a pos sibility which the people seldom and which conventions never take Into ac count. W. H. Harrison s death, which occurred a month after his term began, was as startling to the country as if a part of the physical machinery of the unlverso had suddenly come to a halt. The fact that four of the nineteen men who have been elected president died in office should make the vice-presidency more attractive to men of presi dential size than it is. and should make nominating conventions exercise great er care in choosing candidates for it than they sometimes show. SHE IIOOIiKIt Til KM BOTll. A Pretty Book Agent Who Gathered lathe Too Sympathetic. Law Partners. There Is on F street a firm ot promi nent in the realms of law, so august as a whole, with members so dignified that wrongdoers tremble at the sight of their door-plate. Last Thursday a little woman, with nestling golden curls and cheeks too pink from exposure to cold, sought re fuge In this office from a biting wind, and extended numbed Angers to a rud dy glow. As the senior partner entered from his den in the rear, the girl looked up brightly, and then, overcome by sudden seemingly overpowering ex haustion, fell prostrate on the couch on which she was seated. Judge gazed at her in astonish ment, as helpless and limp for the mo ment as the girl before him, then rushed away for Ice water, wine, bran dy, a second pillow, everything, any thing to relieve the tension of tho situ ation. He returned in an Impossibly short time with his arms full, looked at the girl, and then dropped everything on the floor and became again limp, for she onened her blue eyes and gated at him with the expression of a hunted animal. She then closed them again. The judge stood llrst on one foot and then on the other, stuck one hand In his pocket, and then another, raised his eyebrows, puckered his lips, and gave vent to a long, low whistle. This whistle lifted the white lids, and they did not close again. The red lips also opened and sighed, "Oh, I am so tired, and something seems to be the matter with my head." Tho Judge at once began to ply the Ice, the wine, the brandy, etc. The fair one smiled listlessly at his activity, but drained the glass gracefully and sighed again. "Perhaps, sir, while you are so kind to me you are thinking of your own daughter." This little speech made the judge's eyes misty. He had no daughter, but there are always possi bilities. "What can I do for you?" he asked. "Nothing, nothing, sir. I will rise In Just one little moment." And rise she did, in spite of the Judge's remon strances. She reached the door rather unsteadi ly, but returned hastily, as If somewhat dazed. "Oh, yes," she cried; "my book." She returned and pulled from beneath the pillow a bulky volume in a flashy uimiing. The judge at once suggested ringing up a boy to carry it for her, but she shook her head. "No, sir," she insisted: "I coutd not afford that luxury. I don't sell one a week." The judge's eyes gleamed. "The very thing I want," he ex claimed, and began to extract bills from his pocket-book, rather flabby from the ravages which ChrlBtmas and New Years had made upon It. He crushed them Into the girl's hand, saying: "I must Insist upon paying not what you ask, but what this valuable work is worth." The girl left, seemingly much strengthened. Yesterday the Judge entered his office to 11 nd staring him In the face the book he thought he had taken home on the day of Its purchase. His astonishment knew no bounds when the junior partner picked it up hastily and tried to force it into a pocket which was too small to receive It. It was too late. The judge had seen Its title and recognised its all too glar ing binding. Slowly the truth forced Itself upon him. "Old man." he asked, "did she have curls, and was she 'so tired,' and did something get the matter with her head and make her faint, and did she forget the book and have to come back for It 7" "Just so, Just so, judge." "She played a pair of knaves in this office and won. Let's see what a bot tle of champagne can do for our stupid wits." An Optical Illusion. She dressed up In her brother's clothes. A promenade she took, And everyone who knew her said: "How girlish you do look!" -Life. 8. R. CROCKETT, THE NOVELIST. ' ' -From the Chicago Timet Hsiald. By the Courtesy of Q. U. Kohlsaaf AS EDITOR AND OSATDR Henry Wnttersot and His Uiitae Pa sitioi ia Kentucky. HIS SUCCESS AS A JOURNALIST Ills Boyhood sad Early Newspaper Work la Washington-His Kindles of Lis ola Other Interesting Points About aa Interest tag Man, The other day Henry Watterson, who last winter so charmed the people ot Scranton with his magnificent lecture on Lincoln, did the same to the people of Washington, whereat the Star grew reminiscent. We quote from It as fol lows: The age of man like Mr. Watter son Is really not to any point. He has always had a long head, and he will al ways keep a young heart, and that settles everything. But to be accurate nd conventional, it may be stated that he Is fifty-five. He was born In the little house No. 235 Pennsylvania avenue, be tween 2d and :'-d streets northwest. In the spring of 1841. His father, the late Henry V. Watterson. was at that time a member of the national house from Tennessee, and Washington was but little advanced beyond the condi tions ot a straggling village. The so cial life of the little town was in the quarter where the Wattersons were so journing, and there the family re mained for several years. The return home of the elder Wat terson severed the coming youngster's connection with the capital for a sea son, but the year 1860, when he was only nineteen, found Henry Watterson back In Washington, eager for life's race, admirably equipped for It both In temperament and alertness, and with his choice ot work already made. He had resolved to ease the scriptural sen tence as it applied to himself as much as possible, and to earn his bread In the sweat of his lead pencil. His first offering was to the Star. A little boy had been drowned In the Potomac, and young Watterson wrote the account ot it. The article showed both accuracy and the power of sympathetic expres sion, and it served to open the columns of the paper to him for other perform ances. He worked hard and he pros pered. He soon established corres pondence wlthout-of-town newspapers, and was an aspiring youngster, with some reputation, when Mr. Lincoln came on to be Inaugurated. The young man met the president-elect, stood near at hand on the platform the day ot the inauguration, and wrote the story for the next morning c papers. DURING THE WAR. Then came the war, when young Watterson abandoned his flattering professional prospects and went south to cast his lot with the confederacy. He was assigned to staff duty, and saw some service In the Held. His talents as a writer, however, were demanded in newspaper work, and he became eat tor of the Rebel, a Journal, as its name would Indicate, devoted to the cause of the confederacy. He made that hum. But double leads proved to be as power less as bullets to stay the force ot the Union arms, and the Rebel and Its slashing young editor were among the assets turned over by the confederacy to Uncle Sam at the close of hosltllltles. After the war young Watterson set' tied in Nashville as a writer for the press, and then moved to Cincinnati, where he had relatives, and where he wrote dramatic and musical criticisms for the local newspapers. In i7 he went to Louisville as managing editor of the Journal, Gsorje D. Prentice s old organ, then In decay, and the next year witnessed the consolidation of the Jour nal with the Courier, the opposition paper, and the establishment, with Mr. Watterson as editor-ln-chlef, ot what afterward became, ana still re mains, the most famous of southern newspapers. Since that time the Courier-Journal has been Henry Watterson, and Henry Watterson has been the Courier-Journal. They have been twin visitors In thousands of southern households, and have played a notable part in the molding of southern sentiment. Often In advance of local opinions and those who held them, and called upon to fight hard for supremacy, the resourceful and courageous man with his popular newspaper never quitted any Held worth the winning until It was won, and his own standards of Democracy had been accepted as the faith of the party. THE MAN FOR THE TIME. Although it is by no means his only claim to distinction, Mr. Watterson Is best known, and will longest be remem bered, as an editor. He was born to the Journalistic purple, and he has worn It exceedingly well. The Kentucky field afforded htm the fullest opportunity. Everything was In the transition stage. In business, in politics, in journalism, the old was giving place to the new. The war had left everything depressed, the alder men all dscouraged. The call, the oc casion, was for the young men, and, as they always do, they came forward. Mr. Watterson, although but Just ar rived In the state, led the procession in his line. The old Louisville Journal, for long so great a power, was now almost moribund. Mr. Prentice had lost his favorite son in battle, his wife was dead, his means were low, and he him self was. a sadly broken old man. A younger hand was necessary to guide the paper and renew Us strength, aad Mr. Watterson was chosen. He came, and soon-gave the town such a taste ot his quality that attention was attract ed to him. Walter N. Haldeman was the editor of the opposition paper, and. being a shrewd man ot business, saw that a new move on his part would be necessary. This move took th3 form of negotiations for consolidation of the two enterprises, and thus the Courier-Journal the most euphonious name of all the hyphenated ventures was agreed upon as the name for the new paper. Mr. Watterson's task was difficult even for him. He had not only to make a name for himself, but in the very shadow of Mr. Prentice's name. But he did It, Their gifts, however, were not alike. Mr. Prentice was the father, and remained the master, of the para graph. He was capable of sustained effort, but he was not at his best In that style of deliverance. Mr. Watterson, on the other hand, cultivated the lead er, and made It racy with the collo quialisms of the soil. He studied his constituency, and finding how best to appeal to It, did so with conquering ef fect As the turfmen say, he "struck nis gait, and he has been keeping It. and with it keeping the lead at home ever since. HIS INFLUENCE IN POLITICS. The new paper dealt very largely with national politics, and Mr. Watter son, while a sturdy Democrat, took a broad and progressive view of mat ters, and did not hesitate to put the complete reunion of the sections above every other consideration. He advo cated fair treatment of the new citizen, the black man, both In the courts and in politics. Ho swung the paper to the support of Horace Greeley In 1872, and brought the Democracy of the state, ns of the greater pnrt of the south, to his Bide. He was one of the men who helped make Samuel J. Tilden the Dem ocratic nominee for tho presidency in 1878, and In every national campaign since then he has borne an equally con spicuous part. Ills pen and voles have both been at his party's service, and both have been recognized as among Its most potent Influences. It is difficult to convey to those not familiar with Kentucky life and the Kentucky people Just the. power Mr. Watterson exerts at home, and how he does it. It is not the power simply ot a writer, although he Is a charming writer. It is not the power simply of a man who controls the newspaper with a wide news service placed first in the hands of the people In the morning. It Is a combination power, of brilliant writer, of controlling editor, of genial and companionable man, of alert po litical observer, all rolled Into one. He Is an autocrat. Indeed, with a writing pad placed under his fist His people believe In him, follow him, look out for him, want to hear from him. William Dean Howclls, in some delightful recol lections of early Ohio Journalism has treated of Horace Greeley's wide Influ ence at that time; how people, even at that distance, were Impatient to hear what "Horace" thought about things and devoured the Tribune upon Its ar rival. This picture fits Mr. Watterson and the Courier-Journal in Kentucky. The people In all the little towns In the small stores, at the cross-road?, in the country court houses all want to near from "Watterson," and hall his double-leads as charts for guidance. And far beyond the borders of Ken tuckyas far down as the gulf states his name carries a very great weight HIS HOME AND WORK. And for this work which he has been doing so long, and still does so well, Mr. Watterson has drawn Inspiration from a happy fireside, and a devoted wife and children. He Uvea modestly, but with every comfort, on Fourth avenue, in Louisville, and does the greater part of his writing at home. Morning Is his time for work and he yields to working spells. When a spell comes on he al most monopolizes his editorial page, and when it posses he gives the "boys" a chance. He keeps up his "lick" with surprising freshness and effect. He has been In the every day harness now for thirty years without a break, and yet leaders, magazine articles, lectures and speeches show that his resources are un exhausted. It Is not likely. Indeed, that thirty-five or forty years from, now when It will not be dangerous to refer to him as an old man, it may still be truthfully said that "age cannot wither him, nor custom stale his infinite variety." Mr. Watterson. at the very outset of his career, renounced the thought of office for himself. He resolved to keep himself clear of all such entanglements, and to hold to the true Independence of a writer for the dally press. He has, in the largest measure, kept his faith. But once has he ever turned out of it. and on that occasion he yielded to a pressure wnicn was simply irresistible. He has, of course, always participated in political conventions of his party, state and national. He could not avoid that service, for it grew out of his lead ership In the discussion of political questions. He presided over the nation al convention which nominated Mr. Tilden, and he was chairman of the committee on resolutions In the conven tion of J888 which renominated Mr. Cleveland. At Chicago, In 1892, he led In the debate In the convention which re sulted In the rejection of the comprom ise tariff plank reported by the platform committee and the adoption of the free trade deliverance on which the party went to the country. In this way, and In many other ways, Mr. Watterson has long been prominently Identified 4Mth-ihe-makiflg-of current political h tory. FORCED INTO CONGRESS. He was drafted for his one term in office, and in circumstances testifying to the very strong hold he had, and has, on the admiration and affections of his neighbors. It was In 1876. The mem ber of the house from the Louisville district had died and the vacancy was to be filled, . A great contest over the result of the presidential election was coming on In congress, and the Demo crats, It was seen, would stand in need of all the clear heads and stout hearts they could command. Mr. Tilden, to whom Mr.Watteraon had already ren dered great service, and who trusted him Implicitly, wanted him elected to the house, and so did the Louisville Democracy, to a man. The tender of the place was made In this tone of semi-command, and Mr. Watterson yielded, and, of course, was easily elected. At that famous session of congrens. when the electoral commission was or dered. Mr. Watterson was much In use ful evidence. He championed Mr. Tll den'8 cause with great earnestness, In nlsted that he had been elected, and that he should be seated. He exerted himself to the utmost to bring about Mr. Tllden's inauguration. But when the decree went against him, he ac cepted the situation without further protest, and gave his Influence toward the peaceable carrying out of the com mission's decision. The peace of the country, he said, was to be put above all partisan disappointment. - Nesting else engaged his attention while In office. So Indifferent was he, Indeed, to minor matters connected with his place that one of the most amusing experiences grew out of It. He got a letter one day from an old ludy .ving in Tennessee, wno had known him when he was a lad, asking him to send her some garden seeds. The let ter was a puzzle to Mr. Wattorson, and ho handed It to General Garfield, who was a near neighbor In the house, for an explanation. "Why, certainly." said General Gar field. . . "You've got garden Becda to your credit at the agricultural depart ment, nena a note over there and they'll attend to It." t So Mr. Watterson. wroto a note, di recting that his quota of garden seeds be sent to the old lady In" Tennessee, nnose name ana address he Inclosed, and It was done. Presently nth a--.,,.-- - hi ture began pouring In on him from his va cuiiBiiiuenis, ana these he referred io uen. uarneid. "Do as In that other case." explained LEARNED WHEN TOO LATR. "But I ordered my share sent to that Uttl latl , Not all of your share," replied Gen eral narrirlil "Why. how much am I entitled tor Inquired Mr. Watterson, in a surprised tone. General Garfield threw back his head and laughed long and loud. "Why. man, that cli ladv has got seeds enuugh to plant a county! If she were vnsiuit-, Blle cuuin come to congress on i-imiEm aione or your benefac tlon!" In a few days Mr. Watterson got an other letter from the old lady thank In r- him , Mn,AMi.-A-.A. . Inff him. that ha hn i - . - . h v. i , , IWUIIII1UI she had been able to divide with a large number of people in the county. But that didn't help fill the yawning gulf In the Louisville district, and Mr. Wat terson was forced to hustle around and i.ui row irom nis colleagues to save him self at home. An event Of tnllr.lt kannlnu. Ik- -" ua)yiiicoa .u iu W atterson household occurred at this wmc. mrs. watterson had accompan ied her husband to the capital, and in the snrine- nt 1ST? n.v. ; i. .... . - " i tv. .... 1 1 , j m t r. 1 1 v - ea him with a eon. Mr. Watterson him- t-ii imvins oeen Dorn in Washington While hl. fflthpr wnn .ifiHni. I -. HU v- () 111 VUII" gress, the advent of the young man of iuc mi fceneruuon in similar circum stances was a coincidence fraught with much Inv tr, all th., -,!! irht j j -" ' "I'll J . A 1119 BUIl, who was named for his father. Is now iTumising young man or nineteen, and will be one of the party to accom pany Mr. Watterson to Europe, and under his father's eye take a first view ui mi- menu or tne oia world. Nature in Story . and Anecdote. CON'CBRNINO FORAKER. Major Stofer, a well-known Virginia gen tleman hailing from fulpeper Court House, and an expert In the science of i""51! me mew york Sun cor- i ,pm '8' wa" dl"buUng samples of """""' "m imurmtuion around tils capital the other Uuy when somebody mentioned MoKlnley and Foraker. "They seem to be all right, now," said the Major, "and they are thicker than three In a bed. but wait till the convention at St. Louis has develonml all that ,k conventions usually develop, and then we Mian bud wnai we snail see, as the ancient Greeks were wont to remark.' Foraker's part In It remind mo nf a while not applying In all particulars, does fw " ' jMumi i am maxing, it is the story of Casey and Murphy. Casey and Murphy were not friendly, though Casey had married Murphy's sister and Mrs. Casey had used her best offices In patching up a peace. She succeeded In preventing any open outbreak, but peaee other thsn on a war footing seemed to bo impossible to the good woman. However, Providence tlnally took a hand by. sending iu me iiuuie oi inn vuseys a son to uh'i u iir;uew lo jiurpny. "Twins?" SUBO-esteil a Con era a mm The Major refused to recognize the member. "As I was saying," he continued, "a child was born to the Cnseys, and Mrs. Casey was glad, for she felt that nnw tho two men must be friends. A christening was, of course, a necessity, and Mrs. Casey was talking to her brother about It, and of the beauty of peace. She was no far successful with Murphy that he agreed to go to the store and bring home a cradlo for his nephew's use. Then Mrs. Casey sought her husband and told him that when Murphy came back with the cradle he must shako hands with him and be friends. Casey shook his head doubtfully, but agreed to see about It. Not long after Murphy walked In with the cradle, anj Mrs. Casey spoke to the two men. They glowered at each other for a moment and Murphy put down tho cradle. " 'Be gorry,' said Murphy, sticking out his hand, 'Oi'U be friends with yes, Casey.' " 'Shake hands wld him, Casey,' urged dirfl. vnsey. "Casey put out his hand after the as gresslvely submissive manner of an Irish' man. " 'Ol'll shake hands now,' he said to his wlfo, then In an undertone, 'but OI'U kill um at -the christening.' "In my humble opinion," concluded the Major, as he made a heroic effort to con ceal his humility, "this Is about the way It will show up between Foraker and Mo Klnley when the debris of the convention has been cleared away and we get at the true conamon ot mines. II II II HE KNEW THE COLOR. A delightful story from Johannesburg, which Is peculiarly timely amid the pres ent Insane worship of Dr. Jameson and nil freebooters, has just reached London, says the correspondent of tho New York Sun. It describes a dispute among a group of Boers over the color of the English fla-ii. There was great lgnoranco and much dif ference of opinion on the subject until an old patriarch, clad In a blue shirt and soiled yellow moleskin trousers, arose. mis ruie was siung over nis right arm, nis beard was long and white, his face was yellow with 70 years' exposure to the sun. ana nis eyes, once Keen, were dull. Ha knew nothing about the English, was Ig norant of their language, their ways, and their grievances: but he was solid on the color of the flag that the sun always shines on. When he stood up there was a murmur or "Uora fief and a respectrul pause. "The English flag," he said with an air of placid certainty, "Is white." There was a general cry of expostula tion, which had no sort of effect on the old warrior. "Don't I know?" he asked gently. "I have seen it, seen It three times; once at Majuba, onco at Bronkerspruit, ana once at Doornkop. Each time It was hoisted and each time' It was white." And that settled It. II II II - LI WAS SKEPTICAL. General John W. FoBter. in a recent lecture, related a story told him by in American captain who formerly com manded one of Li Hung Chang's steam ers. It appears that while the Viceroy was making a voyage to Hharighal the captain explained to him the variations of the urometer and a few months, afterward received a summons to the yumen at Tien Tsln. Expecting that he was to be given a .reward for faithful service or some other mark of the Viceroy's favor he put on his best uniform and taking a sedan chair passed through the old city and announced himself at the door of thopul nce. The Karl received him joyously, con ducted him to the reception room with, great ceremony, summoned his attendants and retainers, and gave directions to the servants, who brought In a handsome box containing an expensive barometer that hud just arrived from London. Tho captain examined It, expressed his admiration for the tine quality of the In strument and declnred that It was the handsomest he had ever seen. The Vi ceroy -then asked him to explain to him self and the attendants how he used the barometer to foretell eventa and to ascer tain lucky days. The captain, who, as Is usual with the members of his profes sion, had more candor than tact, pro ceeded to disabuse the Viceroy's mind of the Idea which possessed It. He told him that the movements of the needlo Indi cated dry or damp weather, e:ilm or wind, and that persons of experience who wero familiar with tho climatic conditions of a certain locality miitht be able by ob serving It o antlclpato the weather for twenty-four, and, perhaps, for forty-eight hours. He said that navigators at sea always consulted a barometer at certain hours of the dny and noted the Indica tions In their logbook, but It was entirely useless In foretelling events, and showed an unfortunate degree of amusement at such a suggestion. Uy this time the Vlcorpy had worked himself up Into a furious passion. He denounced the captnin as an Ignoramus and impostor, and declared -that he had deceived him nnd should be severely pun ished. He drove him out of the yamen, forbade him to enter his presence again, nnd even ordered his dismissal from tho service of the company, II II II HK WANTED PROTECTION. The nntto Intnr-Mountaln tells a gooi gold-dust story ot (U-orge Wilson, who owned the famous Paris mine In Park county, Mont. Wilson was visted by somo E'lKlbihrncn one day, among whom was an expert of tne Ktixllsh pattern one who knew nil about mines ami a grout deal about everything else, in his own opinion. Thoy wanted to see sume ot Wilson's gold, and he panned out soma very Cue colors BACKACHE. -'v: A Vary "rlflrs- InJIsstl at Orgaala The back, u the mainspring' ot wo man's organism, "auicklT calls atten tion to trouble VyXaching. It talla witn other symptomsyAuca as i oesa, hecd- acho, psina ia loins, and weight in low cr part of body.Uues and "all goao"feel ing, that nature requires assist ance, nd at once. Lvdia E. Pink nam s vere - . table Compound for twenty yean hasf -i , . T. uccu mi one ana oniy eaecuvs remedy in such eases. It speedily removes tha causa and effectually restores tha organs to a healthy and normal condi tion. Mrs. Pinkham cheerfully answers all letters from ailing women who require advice, without charge. Thou sundsof cases like this are recorded. " I have taken one-half docen bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, and it has relieved me from all pain. I cannot tell you tho S(jony I undured for years ; pains in my back (Oh, the backache was dreadful I) and bearing-down pains in the abdomen extending down into my limbs ;, head ache and nausea, and very painful monstruatlons, I had grown very thin, a mere sliadow of my former self. Now I am without a single pain and am gaining in flesh rapidly." Matto Glenn, 15U1 Dudley 8k, Cincinnati, v III 11 v for their edification. "But that isn't . gold," pronounced the youthful expert, after a critical examination. "Me dean fellah, I am a graduate of the English ' School of Mines, and I know gold when I see It, you know. That is Iron." Wilson didn't say much. He just leaned over and took the alleged expert confidingly by the shoulder. Mebbe It Isn't," he said, "but den't go and give It away to those fellows down at the Denver mint, for I have been selling the stuff to them for gold all , along." II II II A SHORT SUPPLY OF INK. At a banquet In Cleveland last week Billy Kounts told the following story la his quick characteristic way. He said: "Arriving In Pittsburg the other night on 1 a late train I dropped Into Newell's for a bite to eat. While waiting for my order . I hoard two waiters conversing In barely audible undertones. The first speaker said, 'Sandow came In last night after the ' theater and had some blue points and a bottle of Bass. On getting his check he laid a hundred dollar bill on the table, took out a Btylographlo pea and wrote . Sandow across the face of the note. I asked, 'Why did you do that, Mr. San dow? 'Oh,' replied the strong man, 'I always write my name on every hundred " dollar bill I break.' Then up spoke the other waiter, who hadn't said a word yet, 'Do you know, I used to do that, too; but I ran out of ink.' " II II II HIS LAMENTED MAGNITUDE. IMall pours In on Speaker Reed these days, and It Is of the most varied charao ter. Very unique things some of his let -tera contain. For Instance, says the Washington Times, tho other day he received a letter containing a check for $1, "to pay," as the writer put It, "for his time and trouble In reading the communication." Of the dis position of the check It Is needless to say-' anything. Another admirer wrote to him the other -day In this strain: "Ton are the greatest man In the United States, and will bo the next President. You have a big brain, and you are a mar of lamented magnitude." No ono enjoyed this more than Mr, Reed himself. II II II OUGHT TO BE KNOWN. An old colored man who wheels rubbiih' out of alleys In a Southslde residence dls trict, according to the Chicago News, con siders himself pretty well known among tho people away from whose -toack doors he pushes ashes. Yesterday morning one of tha gentlemen who employs the Africsn wanted out in nis eacx yara ana spoxe familiarly to the ash wheeler. "What Is your name?" he asked, In ad dressing the colored man. , -ueorge wasnington," was tne repiy. , "Washington Washington." repeated the gentleman. "It seems to me I have heard that name before." 'Guess you have." rejoined the African. . "I have been wheeling ashes out of these alleys for "bout 10 years." II II II BUT ONE OP THAT CLASS. German Dollcemen aimreclata this lese " majesty business about as thoroughly as anvbodv. One of them arrested an Eng- '. jlshman the other day for publicly declar- ... Ing the emperor was several kinds of a blank blanked fool. "That's all right," . protested John Bull: "It wasn't your Em peror, but the emneror of China, I was talking about!" "That won't go," replied the policeman: "there's only one emperor who Is what you said!" And he had the Britisher tinsel 1.25 for describing the em- ' peror In a way that a fool, though a way - raring man, mignt unaerstana. . II II II THE NEAREST STEPS. When the use of the automatlo vacuum brake was first made compulsory on our railroads, savs London Answers, great .. pal nt- wers 'talcen-by the foremen ef-en- gine sneus to see mat tne arivers war fully alive to the proper working ot it. In one of our northern towns a fore- ' man was examining a driver on this sub ject and, after questioning him for soma time, put the following query o him: "If you were In charge of an engine and ,, the brake failed and you saw a collision wns unavoidable what steps would you take?" The answer. If totally unexpected, was " not devoid of genuine wit. The driver looked his questioner up and down, and then, with a look of contempt, blurted out: The tender steps, sir: ana pretty Ban dy, too!" II II II SOLACE FOR A SCOLDINO, We are told that nothing atros us so fast as sneer. Once an actress got In a rage with Perrln, the Paris manager, and . gave him a fifteen minutes tongue-Mum ing. "My dear j'orrin, saia reovre, wnen, told of It, "what did you do?" ' ; "Nothlnsr." renlied Perrln. "I said noth- . . Ing and watched her grow old." When you think of the Nickel Plata Road It brings to mind that delicious meal you had in the Dining Car, and the fine service and Low Rates, and ' you wonder why people will travel via any other line. The St. Denis Broadway and Eleventh St., New York. ; Opp. Uracs Church. -Europtes tlsa. , Rooms li.oo a. Day and Upwards. "' i, nu nnooirnsiva way laereare few bettor conducUd hotels la the metrepells thsn tlufcit, Denis. .. T ; The great popularity it has equlreieaa , readily be traced to its nnique loaatlon, its ' Bnmellk stmosnhera the pecallsr astollsnoe ut ltM etiifiliia tnd utvIiu Bnrl - hU. nuwl.a - ,IIW. ( J WILLIAM TAYLOR AND SON. I