TH SCBANTOX . TRIBUNE -WEDNESDAY MOBNINO, .. JTTNE 3,' 1896. 6 WHO WILL NAME THE :j NEXT PRESIDENT Tfct Ptmaad of the Ekveita Natlaaal RiatjMlcM CmtmUm. THE FAMOUS MEN WHO'LL BE THESE Mit Haa4r Scrikc f U Vie tarivas Baa af McKialeyltes, raises U Review Sosae fUe Note Warwickt Who Are Eiaecte at 81. Leaii. From tha Times-Herald. little lees than one thousand men constitute the eleventh Republican na tional convention which will aaeemble at fit. Louie on the lth of June to nom inate the next president and vlce-prel-dent of the United States, It will be a remarkably representative gathering, qurte the peer in personnel of any na tional convention held In late years, and the Interest In its proceedings will not be materially Impaired by the circum stance that, so far as the first place on the ticket Is concerned, it will simply ratify the choice of William McKlnley. In fact, this ought to enhance Its sig nificance, for the nomination of Major McKlnley will be the most notable In stance on record of the people's triumph over the machinations of the bosses who have attempted to defy their wishes. The roll of a national convention is always made up and called alphabetic ally. I begin with Arkansas, the dele rates from Alabama having yet to win their spurs. Powell Clayton, the leader of the Arkansas delegation, has been a Republican through good and through evil report. An adopted cltlsen of Ar kansas, he Is a northern man, but aa loyal an Arkansan aa any native. There have been times when he has had to take his life In his hand In defense of Republican principles. His brother went to death because of them. Powell Clayton has been a conspicuous figure In former national conventions and was the chairman of the one which nominated lllalne for president. From California come the son and namesake of General Grant, John V. P;reckels, son of the sugar king and a rising man in Callfornlan politics, and 8. V. Bhortrldire, editor of the Call. Connecticut sends Sam Fesendcn. one of the best politicians In New England, end liovernor Huckley. who Is b-lleved ly his friends to be a vics-prestdtntial Visibility. Colonel A. K. Puck. Is the jrtmost man -w.iontc tl Georjluji; he has been one of the wheel horses of the McKlnley movement In' the south. Vledger, one of his cullsagues. Is a mem ber of a group of colored mtn who have labored in vain to keep the cegroes of the south away fiom McKlnley. ILLINOIS MAGNATES.' The Illinois dekgatlon Is headed by nlmoat the last of the war tovernors, the venerable and gallant Dick Ogles- by. than whom there will be no more i picturesque Ilgure on me noor or ino convention. Apsociated wlih him as delegates-at-large ore Private Joe FIfer, Altgeld's predecessor In the gov ernorship, and William Penn Nixon and K. V. Patterson. Nixon and Patterson come to McKin lrv Htriiinst thnlr will and under Instuo. tlon, but are now with him in eo.jd i faith. Ueorise Schneider, unothcr Chi- j eucoan. Is probably the only member ot ( the St. Louis convention who wn also a mt'iribpr of the convention which nom inated Abraham Lincoln. He was. In fact, one of the founders of the Re publican party .and was ore of Lin coln's trusted counselors before and af ter his nomination. Sam Raymond, of Chicago, Is another Interesting charac ter. 3e Is a great wit and a stalwart Republican. .If he ever takes the floor he will win the hearts of all who hear him. The only other notable man In the Illinois delegation Is Asa Matthews, who was once well known In Wash ington, and I think- had the ofllce of comptroller of the treasury. Old Dick Thompson, who was secre tary of the navy under Hayes, was a deskmate of Lincoln In the house of representatives, and has been on speak ing terms with almost every President of the United States In this century, and General Lew Wallace, who has world-wide celebrity as the author of "Ben Hur," come from Indiana. One of their associates Is young Harry New, who is almost as good a politician as his. father, dear old John C, who is ex Presldent Harrison's best friend and who had the best plum of patronage under the last Republican administra tion. Iowa Is well led by Senator Gear, General D. B. Henderson, and J. S. Clarkson. It is a pity that Dolliver Is not a delegate-at-large to make the quartet complete. Kentucky presents Mr. Hunter, who came so near, and yet so far from being a United States sena tor, and, strangely enough, the only other notable man In the Kentucky delegation Is notable because, although a Republican, he Is a namesake of Clement L. Vallandlgham. THE NORTHWEST. Ex-Governor Kellogg, who has been a member of every national Republican convention in my time, comes again from Loulsana. His has been a stormy life, but he approaches old age in affluence, upon which ha has willingly drawn to oblige his old friends, Quay and Piatt, without, however. Im peding the McKlnley tidal wave. Maine's most notable delegate Is Har old M. Sewell, who has only recently renounced the Democracy, which was his inheritance. He was the consul general at Samoa whom Bayard ap pointed and whom Blaine retained and vindicated. ' From Maryland come Senator-elect Wellington and the gallant and bullet-riddled General Felix Agnus, editor of the Baltimore American. How many people remember that Wellington made' his national debut in the Har rison convention of 1888, when he got the floor to move a resolution of sym pathy with the German people In view of the deaths In one year of William the First and Frederick the Noble. Massachusetts has been more ably represented than now in national Re publican conventions, but Henry Cabot Lodge is big enough and brainy enough to redeem it from the charge of mediocrity. He Is the very man to move to make the nomination of Mc Klnley unanimous, for he has been Reed's safest adviser and yet never re sorted to unworthy tactics to carry his point. Michigan's star delegate is Gen eral Russell A. Alger, who received 143 votes for the presidential nomination eight, years ago. His most prominent colleague is Congressman Brewer. Minnesota Is brilliantly represented, In part, by George Thompson, the able editor of the St. Paul Dispatch, and ex Governor Mevrlam. Mississippi sends two able men of strongly contrasted types John R. Lynch, the only colored man who ever presided over a national convention, and General J. R, Chalmers, an ex-confedrrate, who when he was a Democrat was charged by Republicans with participation In the Fnrt Pillow mnPFarre. Uth are sound Republicans wbo have suffered for the. faith that Is In them. Chaunrey I. FIHey. tinder vrhoto leadership Missouri has been rencued from Democratic clutches, and Thurs ton, the mcenetlc orator, from Nebras ka, lead their respective delegations and will play prominent parts In all - that goes on at St. Louis. EMPIRE AND KEYSTONE STATES, New York's delegation ranks with the best that the empire state ever sent to a national convention; and it will be strange Indeed if It shall play ths puppet's part which has been as signed to ic by its self-constituted boss; tas piraueai rian. . Nothing caa keep Piatt from being a roan of mark in this convention, al though it may be his last Everybody is curious to see the man who has maintained his hold upon a great party in the greatest of states by such un scrupulous methods, and to know ex actly how far he will carry his rule or ruin policy. Depew la a perennial Joy at national conventions, and whether he ever gets a chance to nomi nate Morton or not he Is bound to make a hit In some way or other. Other New Yorkers whose faces will be familiar and welcome are Warner Miller. Frank Htscock. Cornelius N. Bliss, Serens E. Payne. W. H. Robert son. W. A. Sutherland and George E. Matthews, and you may be sure that we will be busy pointing out Lauter bach. Howard Carroll. General Collins. Lewis F. Pain. John Raines and Lemu el E. Qulgg. Who Is the New Yorker who will thrill the convention and make himself the hero of the occasion by a declara tion of independence from Piatt, Piatt Ism arid boss domination, and voice New York's participation In the de mand of the nation for McKlnley as the advance agent of prosperity? Pennsylvania, too, presents a dele gation crowded with noteworthy men. some with a past, all with a present and some with a future. Governor Hastings, who first won national laur els by his speech nominating Sherman In 1888, Is at the head, and among his colleagues -at-large are Mr. Elverson, sr., of the Philadelphia Inquirer, and Dr. Flood, editor of the Chautauquan. Among the district delegates are Quay, his sworn foes Chris Magee, David Martin and William Flinn, and his able lieutenant. Representative Stone, be sides ex-Mayor Stuart, of Philadelphia, and half a dosen other Republicans whose mettle has been tested In many frays. New Jersey is strongly offi cered by Senator Sewell, long a fami liar figure In national conventions; Garrett A. Hobart, who Is a strong vice-presldentlal possibility; . John Kean and George Hlnes. FAMOUS BUCKEYES. Ohio, with a full sense of her respon sibility, on this occasion has a delega tion splendidly endowed with brains, Judgment, dash, diplomacy and good looks on the whole the best all-around delegation In the convention. The big four of the present year ore Senator-elect Foroker, Governor Bush nell. General Grosvenor, and last, but not least, the Warwick of the campaign of 1S96, Lig, brainy, astute, lovable Mark Hnnna. Alor.g with them will be raiiged C. L. Kurtz, M. T. Herrlck and I Sylvester Everett to say nothing of a I dozen more eood men and trus, worthy , retresentatlvcs of a ereat state and of an Idual candidate. Watt otul see j the gallant Foiaker btlle the Infamous j iiisrsestions of a traitorous purpose. I which the tnemit'3 of McKlnley and of ! Foraker alike have sowed like tares In the public prets ever since the cam paign begun. Watch Gi-oHvenor shaka his Hhairgy heart and Jump at the chance to hit somebody with h's fcrondgword In debate. Feast on BuGhnell's benign countenance and Hanna's benedictory smile as they sie the states come tunnb- l ling In one after another and the devil take the hindmost to swell the McKln ley column to the proportions of un animity. Oh, you may be sure the Ohio di lega tion ulone will be worth the price of admission. After this It Is rather a drop to view the del'vatlnns frctn the lvmalnlmr states lu their alpha helical order. But ou may be rewarded none the lfss wlti a slfrht of some men of nte. Vermont. for instance, will be right In fr.mt In the person of Senator Redf.eM Proctor, who leads the McKlnley contingent from New EnRland In his own guileless way. Eolith Dakota present Senator Pettlgrew, chastised and chastened by his state convention. No South Caro lina delegation woufd be complete without coal-black Small, of Texna, without Cuney, both representative Southern Republicans. Tennessee's Henry Clay Evans is a man of mark anywhere and may be reserved for higher things. Virginia has a brace of notable men In General James A. Wal ker, who Succeeded Stonewall Jackson In the command of Jackson's Immortul foot cavalry, and Colonel William Lamb, upon whose shoulders has feW len a rather loose tit the mantle of William llahone. Virginia has never sent a stronger delegation to a Republi can national convention, but many will miss Mahone and wise. Strong, too. is Wisconsin's McKlnley legion, with Hoard and Sawyer in the van. OUT WEST Utah has the distinction of being the only state trusting both of her senators with a commission to St. Louis. But the senate as a whole will be represent ed. Teller not only comes from Colora do, but has the whole delegation but toned up In his pocket, with carte blanche to do what he pleases with it. Montana Bends Carter and Mantle, Massachusetts Lodge, New Jersey Sewell, Maryland Wellington (senator elect), Vermont Proctor; South Dakota the spanked Pettlgrew, Iowa uear, Idaho Dubois, Pennsylvania Quay, Ohio Foraker (senator-elect), and Nebraska Thurston. The house of representatives has been less fortunate. As a rule, the people are shy about intrusting the nomination of president to members of congress. They are too liable to be saturated with the over-breathed political atmosphere of Washington, or to enter Into combina tions against the people's will. The platform of a national conven tion Is often more studded with celebri ties than the floor. There are arrayed party leaders who for one reason or another have not been chosen as dele gates, but who are Interested spectators. and in many cases nave as mucn to ao in shaping the work as If they carried whole state delegations under their hats. Some of these Influential spectators who have been prominent platform figures at other national Republican conventions will be missing at St. Louis. Notably Tom Reed, who was the cynosure of all eyes at Minneapolis, will not be there. Joe Manley, how ever, will, and he will have Reed's final word on the vice presidency. Edward McPherson, the political statistician and chair-prompter, who never missed such a gathering, died last year. Wil liam Mahone, too, has Joined the ma jority. Ben Butterworth Is practically out of politics. So Is General George R. Davis. A dozen more frequenters of national conventions who are now missing for one reason or another might be recalled. But ot old timers there will be no lack. Look out for the imposing pres ence of Colonel A. K. McClure, of the Philadelphia Times, who always tries to run both of the great national con ventlons every four years. His col league and rival. Charles Emory Smith. of the Philadelphia Press, ex-minister to Russia, will be on hand, and will probably perform his old act of plat- torm writing. Murat Haistead, too, will cast a fatherly retrospective and prophetic eye over the convention. Hw would not miss a. national convention for the world. And the stage will be so tlocKed with Republican congress men that Mr. Reed will hardly b able to count a quorum In Washington. Altogether it will be a great show, If not an an-siar comuination. QUASI-PEXITEJfT; I want a little casket, - - - With hasp and lock and key. To hide a little treasure Thai's very dear to me. My sweetest sin's the Idol ' I seek to put away, ' But I will nut resign It Forever and tor aye., S , I want it kept securely . , ' I'm quast-penltent, ' And I'll be vsry likely To claim Itafter Lent. , -Suilt M. Bait In 'Judge. MAJOR M'KINLEVS OFFICIAL SCORER Sketch ef Qeaeral Charles H. QrorreMr, the iKoaparaMe Tabulator. HE WD HIS WORK REMARKABLY WELL The Flctaretejae Persaaality af the ' Impertaraaale rigarer Waa Lit e rally Pencilled His Maa lato the Presidential Race-Hew He Coa dacted His Mathematical Caaa- Probably the happiest man in Wash ington, writes Walter Wellman to the Chicago Times-Herald. Is General Charles H. Grosvenor. of Athena, Ohio. General Grosvenor, as all the world knows, Is the mathematlclan-ln-chlef of the McKlnley boom, and his work Is done. There never was a greater mathematician than Grosvenor. He has a method all his own. Coming from Ohio, the state which gave rise and fame to the late John G. Thomp son, whose greatest service to human ity was aa originator of the theory that when you have claiming to do It Is better to claim everything In sight and put the burden of proof on the other fellow, it was not surprising that Gros venor exhibited tendencies to large and eloquent and comprehensive figures. In his room in the Cochrane hotel in this city General Grosvenor has kept for several months a staff of clerks and stenographers and accountants. These able and alert young men and women have had nothing to do but to count up McKlnley delegates, and In this task they have had the assistance of type writing machines, adding machines. automatic tabulators and various other devices. General Grosvenor has kept an eye upon the work every minute. and has seen to it that everyone was pushing things for all he or she was worth. But the strangest part of the whole business Is the fact that count as hard as they could, count they early and late, count they with enthusiasm and greediness which disgusted the friends of all other candidates, these counters of General Grosvenor have never been able to get ahead of the actual facts. The country has run a race with them in the matter of elect ing McKlnley delegates, and up to dote the country seems to be a lap or two ahead. Oenernl Grosvenor has of tan con fessed his discouragement. Tnere were times when things did not go rlRht. He thought He was counting induptrlously and -alertly, he knew he had issued the strictest orders that nothing should he allowed to get away, he used the malls and wires lavishly, he sat up late nights with his hand on the lever of the automatic adding machine, and yet, with all this energy and precaution, al most every morning General Grosvenor awoke and read the papers and found that the Republicans of the country had got a little ahead of him had elected McKlnley delegates whose names and existence had evaded his eagle eye. So it was, too. with the regular weekly bulletin. Grosvenor thought he had everybody In. He was quite sure no wandering McKlnley delegate had been 'Overlooked. Yet after each bulletin It waa found neceswry. to apologize to some man who had been omitted and to Include him in the next bulletin, only lo have some other chap rise up and claim his rights In the same fashion. Under the circumstances It Is easy to see that General Grosvenor Is glad to get through with his Job. The Repub licans of the country have been muklng things pretty lively for him for several months, but he has caught up with mem ai lujr una ine ueeu is done. LAUGHS LAST. General Grosvenor has known all the time that if he was making any error it was In not catching the McKlnley delegates fast enough. They came In at sucn a rapid pace, with such a hot delivery, with so many curves and un-. dershoots, that Grosvenor was afraid all the time some of them were getting away from him. On this account It was particularly hard to be accused by the odious and envious opposition of too much extravagance. It was sad to see the look of pain upon General Gros venor's face when some one accused him of stuffing the returns. For weeks and weeks it was the fashion in Wash ington to sneer at General Grosvenor, to crack Jokes about his mathemalcs, to say smart things concerning his rapidly expanding McKlnley column. He has been called almost everything anyone could think of, and has been forced to stand pat against more poor Jokes and weakly attempts at wit than any other man in the history of American politics. But now that It is all over, now that he has caught up with the enthusiastic REV. DR. EARL CRANSTON, The Soldler-Prlest Wl nieg Bishop From ths Chicago Timot-Ttenld, Rev. Dr. Earl Cranston, the soldier priest who has been elevated to the dig nity of bishop of the Methodist church by, the Clevelund conference, has lived a life of intense religious work and has traveled widely as a dispenser of the gos pels. He Is CO years' old and In the very prime of his Intellectual vigor and ma turity. It was at the tender uge of 12 that he felt Impelled toward Methodism, and from the moment of his conversion he st to work to tit himself for the purpose to which his life has been undivldedly devoted. In 1801 he had Just come out of the Ohio University with his first degree when President Lincoln's call to arms made him a volunteer In the army of his country. From private he rose by gallant and meritorious work on the field of bat tle to the rank of captain. In 1864 he re turned to the university to have conferred upon him the degree ot master ot arts, and we ytars later hs was preaching to Republicans who were electing McKln ley delegates so fast that Grosvenor couldn' count 'em. it Is easy to realise the truth of the old adage concerning the stage of the game at which a certain party enjoys himself with the best and loudest laugh. Having run his type writers and his adding machines till he produced a majority of 200 for McKlnley over all other candidates, Grotrvenor spreads a smile on his benign face and closes up the shop. People who think Mark Hanna doesn't know how to run a political campaign should step behind the scenes a few moments and see the wheels go round. Mr. Hanna believes In having one man to do one kind of work, and no one else to get In his way. Therefore the Mc Klnley campaign has had but one offi cial enouncer and tabulator, and Gros venor was the man. The official talkers were designated and duly appointed Just as the official tabulator was, and General Grosvenor was one of these. Mr. Hanna. who is a simple business man, does no believe In too much talk ing. He does not like to see talkers falling over one another. One of the happiest strokes of his very successful management was the idea of having one official mathematician and one or two official spokesmen, with everyone else invited to keep quiet. As an of ficial talker General Grosvenor has been aa successful as he was a tabulator. He has known what to say and how to say It. There were times when it seemed to some of McKlnley's friends that Grosvenor was talking too much, but now they take all that back. They see how ablr he has kent up his end against the combined opposition and If there were any occasion for It, If it were at all desirable, which It Is not. for Grosvenor to come out and metaphoric ally and rhetorically to wipe up the earth with Piatt and Clarkson, he could do wthout raising his temperature a thousandth of a degree. Now that he has figured the other fellows to a stand still, perhaps It would be a good Idea tor him to start in and talk tnem into silence, too. LIKE SANTA CLAUS. No better selection than that of Gros venor for chief spokesman for the Mc, Klnleycampalgnatthenational captltal i could have been made, uenerai wros- venor is a veteran polltican and legls lator. He has few or no enemies in Washington, and is looked upon by al most everyone as a man of truth and candor and fairness. HU Santa Claus beard and full, white hair, Ms clear, steady eye, hla general air of sincer ity and well develc:ed character, do not belle the men. He has In ten years of congressional service won high repu tation bs a debater. Though a partisan of partisans, a radical cf radicals, he Is known as a man who gives ana tuKes, us one who does not believe all the facts and all the argument ore o.n one side, as one who Iovcb truth and is willing to concede something In order to bring It out. On the floor General Grosvenor has all the year been a free ( talker. He is more often interrupted, ; perhaps, than any other man, because ' it Is known of all men that he takes Interruptions calmly and good nutured-, ly, because he has a fund of humor, : because It is next to Impossible to j anger or rattle him, and because a : colloquy with him Is Bure to bring out ; not only wit and sharp rally, but some ; graceful compliment or concession to , his opponent. A man with a character ; and a reputation like theje is eminently ' fitted to be In charge of the Interests : at Washington of a campaign which had nothing to conceal, which sought , only thut the truth should be known, . which had no war to make upon other ! Republicans and asked oi:Iy fair ptay and an open field. General Grosvenor Is 63, though you wouldn't think it to look at him, de spite his white hair and Santa Claus beard. His eyes are so bright, his com plexion ho ruddy, Jils mental alertness and love of humor so boyish that those who do not know the truth put htm down at about 55. He Is a native of Connecticut, and comes .of a family which long distinguished Itself In de fense of the country. It i& said all the Grosveiiors in America can be traced back to one progenitor, so that If any Grosvenor reads this article he may with propriety address the meat mathe matician as a relation. The father of all the Grosvenors came from Chester, England, when the New England col onies were young and struggling. He established a settlement at Windham, Conn., but died before he could return thither from Massachusetts, and now lies under an old fiat grave stone at Roxbury, in Boston. The present Gen eral Grosvenor's grandfather was grad uated at Yale and went all through the revolution, and was afterward a dis tinguished Judge. With other officers of the revolution he acquired lund in Ohio, near Marietta, and his son. Gener al Grosvenor's father, moved out there in 1838. The mathematician was then a mere child of 4 or 5. His father took him right back into the wilderness. They lived in a log house and spent their energies clearing the land of the virgin forest. There was no other house within two miles. There was no schoolhouse within five miles. Gros- By ths Courtesy of H. H. RohlsaatJ a Methoillst charge at Mlddleport, Ohio. Lntll 1870 Dr. Crnnston served the uMo conference, preaching to many congrega tions. In that year he waj transferred to Winona, Minn., and thru he built a church, which was lft behind him as k monument to his energy when, at his own requnst, he was transferred to Jacksonville. In that city his wife died. Dr. Cranston stayed his full term there, and Jacksonville has Grace church as a result of his labors. Evansvllle, lnd had him a short time, and then his dut'et called him to Cincinnati and lator to Den. yr, Colo., For four years he was preld lng elder of the southern Colorado confer ence, and his energetic Work in that dis trict won for him the admiration of all who saw it. In 1884 he was sent to Cin cinnati as ' the representative of the Western Book Concern, a position he heli when hs went to the conference at Cleve land that widened ths scope ot bis work by making him a bishop, . venor lived In a log house till he was a man, and after he had been to school in a log schoolhouse five or six years, a 1? h began to teach school hlmaelt also In a log house. IN YOUTH WAS POOR. General Grosvenor la not as yet a candidate for the presidency, but if he ever concludes to run he has a log bouse record which will stand him In good stead. While teaching school young Grosvenor studied law. carry ing his law books to the school house with him. He was admitted to prac tice in 1857. While yet a boy he .took an Interest In politics, and even at that early day it was said ot him that he could count up the election returns and get them nearer right than anyone else in the -county. He made his first speech for Fremont in 1856. and of course was a member of the Republi can party from the start. In 1857 he moved out of the country districts Into the smart town of Athens and hung out his shingle aa a lawyer. Clients were not numerous, and when President Lincoln appointed Aleck Sands United States marshal at Cincinnati and Sands Invited young Grosvenor to become one of his deputies the invitation waa glad ly accepted. "In 1861 a warrant was Issued by United States Commissioner Long tor the arrest of a fugitive slave from Ken tucky who had escaped into Ohio. The warrant was placed In Grosvenor's hands to serve. "It was the hottest piece of paper I ever touched," says General Grosvenor. "It burned me. I didn't want to serve it worth a cent. Flainen Ball was the district attorney, and he said there was no way out of It Stanley Matthews, who had been the district attorney, said the same thing. Governor Chase was appealed to, and he replied that we had to serve the warrant even if It did come hard. The Kentucklana who owned the slave were at the Burnett house waiting for their property. Just then came the news of Bull Run. The streets ot Cincinnati were full of men and women howling with Indignation. The war feeling was at fierce heat. I happened to think of my warrant. So I went down to the Burnett house and hunted up my Ken tucklana. 'I am going up to Clermont county tomorrow,' I said, 'to serve that warrant, and I want you to come along to Identify the man.' 'No, we don't.' replied the Kentucklans. 'NT we get out of this d d state alive that is all we ask. Let 'em "keep our niggeit' That was the last fugitive slave war rant Issued in the United States," con cluded General Grosvenor. Young Grosvenor at once enlisted as a private soldier and wont to the front. He was promoted through various ranks and finally commanded a brigade In the battle of Nashville In December, 1S64. His war record Is a brilliant one, but It is one thing General Grosvenor does not like to talk ahout. Though a friend of the soldier he does not eternal ly harp on that subject for political effect. After the war aeneral Gros venor served In the state legislature, where he was speaker of the house for one term, and held other offices. Twelve years asro he came to congress, and it was here he first knew Major McKln ley. A warm friendship at once sprang up between tha two men. In congress General Grosvenor hus won a high place. He is a keen debater, a splen did parliamentarian, and would make a good speaker. But whether the fu ture brings him cood things or poor things, probably he will never in all his Hie perform a task that will bring him more honor and fum than he has won in the role of chief tabulator and of ficial interviewer for the McKlnley bourn. DAVIS, OF MINNESOTA. A Peu Picture of the Senator from the Northwest. Senator Cushman K. Davis, of Min nesota, Is in his fifty-eighth year. Of medium height and stocky In build, though not stout, he Is strong and ic tlve and capable of an Immense amount of work. His face Is shaven, except for a mouutache.and he is slight ly bald. The resemblance between him and Senator Quay, of Pennsyl vania, Is a rather striking one. Seen together from the senate gallery they might almost bo taken for twins, al though the resemblanue Is not so ap parent when one sees them near at hand.' Still, even then. It is sufficiently strong to confuse many of those who know but one of them very well. This leads to some amusing epsodes, In which Senator Davis is the more fre quent actor, as of course more Penn sylvanlans come to Washington than do citizens ot Minnesota. Scarcely a day passes that some Pennsylvania pilgrim does not hall the Minnesota senator on the street or In the corridors ot the capltol and proceed to Impart to him matters Intended for the Junior senator from Pennsylvania. One case was quite amusing to those who heard of It, although not so fun ny to the actors in it themselves. Sena tor Davis was going along the corridor one day when a man stopped him, greeted him familiarly, shook his hand and then proceeded to make a request regarding some matter In wheh he was very much Interested. The senator, to use a common phrase, "didn't know him from a side of sole leather," but from the familiar manner In wheh the man greeted him supposed that he was from Minnesota and a political sup porter, and was just politician enough not to let on that he didn't know him. The man stated his request and Sen ator Davis said: "Why, certainly, I'll do what I can for you. I'll attend to that matter right away. Now you come back to me In two or three days and I'll tell you how things stand." Back the man came and this time sent In his card to Senator Quay, who came out to see him. "Well, Senator." said the visitor, "how about that matter of mine?" "What matter?" demanded Senator Quay. "Why, what I came to see you about the other day, and you said you would attend to it for, me." "You are certainly mistaken," said Senator Quay; "I never promised to at tend to any matter for you." The man was speechless for a moment, and then exclaimed, with rising Ire: "Do you mean to say that I didn't meet you right here the other day and told you what I wanted and you said you would do what you could for me, and told me to come back here and see you today?" "Hold on," said the senator: "I'll bet you saw Senator Davis," and then he charged back Into the Bennte chamber and told the Mlnensota man what trou ble he had got him into. The two sena tors went out together, explanations followed and the visitor's wrath was appeased. A PLAIN MAN. The Minnesota senator Is a plain every-day man. He Is not a society man. Nine o'clock In the morning finds him In his committee room at the capl tol. where he works on public matters until the meeting of the senate: JIls evenlnsrs are spent In reading and stidy His office in his Washington home Is a little third-story back room away from the noises of the street. It Is plainly furnished and uncarpeted. The walls not covered with book cases are bare, except for the picture of Naoo'.eon at Fontnlnleau n.nd n beautiful enTv Ing of the cathedral at Milan. Every shelf of the book cases Is crowded with volumes, congressional, statistical, his torical and classical, except one corner of tho lower sh'if, where the senator, remembering his early days, In his nnrthwoRtern homo, keeps a little rile of faggots of wood to be used In the cheery fire that burns upon the open hearth. On his desk the other evening lay open Whewell'B edition of Grotlus's "De Juris Belli et Vacls," In Latin. Near by were Cooper's Vlrgll. Shakespeare. Shelley and the senator's old school copy of Tacitus, newly rebound. On the shelves are a score of volumes of International law, among them Cnlvos's "Le Droit In ternational, " In French, a German edi tion of Tacitus, Dante's "Divine Come dy" and two large volumes of Malte Brun's old geography. In this last the HATS TRIHHED FREE. MILLINERY, 421 Lackawanna Avenue Bigger and Better Every Day This etore le getting. The more you get aciualnted with It the better you Ilk It That's the Terdlct of the crowds who throng our stores daily. Our great half price sale of Trimmed Hats, Untrimmed Hats and Millinery Trimmings Is wonderfully successful. Take a took at the goods and prices before you buy elsewhere. IT WILL PAY YOU. A Oreat Sale of Trimmed Hats At $1.50 and $2.00 Trimmed in height of fashion and best materials. Reduced from SAW and .0U. Trimmed Leghorn Hats at 98c, $i.a3, $1.48 and $1.73 This is less than most stores can buy tha goods for. Finest Trimmea Hat a: la 08, $3.08, $4.98 Reduced from $, 110 and 112. Trimmed We have the largest stock and best assortment of Trimmed Sailor Hals ever shown In the city. Fine Bennett Braid Sailors We sell Knox shape, Leather Sweat. mem at 48 Cents Each. Worth 75e. Fine nilan Sailors, Knox shape, Satin lined, Leather sweat, at 01c, 73c. and 98c. Worth double the money. A Shirt Waist Sale That's creating lots of talk and lots of "fetanley" aint in cheots. stripes ana piitid pen-Mo, with double yo -e ana fullebt sleeves. The prices were t'80 ana tl.2o. You can take your plot at 4Sc. and 58c. We'd like you 10 see tha ewelleal ever shown lu town. GERSON'S MILLINERY, THIRD NATIONAL BANK OF SCRANTON. Capital, - - $200,000 Surplus, - - 300,000 Undivided Profits, 64,000 Special attention given to Business and Personal Accounts. 3 Interest Paid on Interest Deposits. senator pointed out an old map which shows the line of demarcation between Venezuela and the British possessions Is as claimed by the South American republic. Chinch's "Life of Oliver Cromwell" Is there also. "That Is an able and a valuable work," said the senator, "It Is an honor to Pittsburg that Its writer is one ot her sons." HIS FAMILY. The senator has no family except his wife, a beautiful and accomplished wo man, and one prominent in Washington society. His father and mother are still living, one at the age of 84 and the other 02. They make their home with their son, keeping his house at St. Paul dur ing his necessary absence at Washing ton In attendance upon his official du ties. Senator Davis hns learned the neces sity of dealing with men and affairs as they are, and not as they ought to be. To quote his own words, and the words of the great thinker he himself quotes, will give an idea of the man: "The geometry of general principles In statesmanship always becomes er roneous in its application beyond a cer tain point. But there is a calculus of probabilities In administering human concerns wherein true statesmanship finds Its most certain guide. We should be taught by the wisdom ot Edmund Burke: " 'The pretended rights of these theo rists are all extremes, and In propor tion as they are metaphysically true they are morally and politically false. The rights of men are In a sort of a middle, incapable of definition, but not Impossible to be discerned. The rights of men in governments are their ad vantages; and these are often in bal ances between dierences In good, in compromises sometimes between good and evil, and sometimes between evil and evil. Political reason is a comput ing principle; adding, subtracting, mul tiplying, and dividing morally, and not metaphysically or mathematically, true moral denominations.' " HOMELIER THAN LINCOLN. George NebccUer's Greeting from the President at a Reception. From the Chicago Times-Herald. Rensselaer, Ind., March 14. Judge Bundy, ot New Castle, was holding court last week at M uncle, and at the dinner table at the Klrby House related the following reminiscence of Abraham Lincoln: Judge Bundy was a page in the Indi ana house of representatives In the win ter and spring of l8ti. President Lin coln was on his way to Washington to deliver his Inaugural address, and stopped at the Bates House. Indianapo lis, to erect the citizens of this state. The page, Bundy, was well acquainted with all the members of the legislature, and was stationed a short distance from the President to give their names to the reception committee, so that they could be properly Introduced. Oeorge Ncbeker, an uncle to E. H. Kebekcr, ex-United States treasurer, was a state representative, and much resembled Mr. Lincoln in appearance, except that he was probably homelier. As soon as Mr. Nebekcr's towering form appeared in the doorway the page said In a stage whisper to the reception com mittee: "This Is Mr. NcbE-ker. of Foun tain and Warren." Mr. Lincoln heard this, and before Mr. Ncbeker could reach him, and without an introduction, the President reached over the heads of the Intervening persons and, grasping Neho!cr's hand, said: "How do you do, Mr. Ncbeker? I am especially glad to see you. Over In Snnenmon county they say that I nm about the uelle3t man In the United States. While I am proud of this hon or, I believe If you would go there the people would unanimously crown you with thi title." Mr. Nebeker took the matter In good humor. The Incident hud .been- forgot ten until recalled by Judge Buudy, . ' I "P.e mine," he Implored. i "No." she answered. "1 won't take no for an answer," he shrieked. "Nit, then," she responded. And he took his hat and sadly went. Boston Courier. EATS TRIH9ED FREE. MILLINERY, 421 Lackawanna Avenue Half Price and Less For Untrimmed Hats All the neVest shapes and latest styles In Finest Braids and Straws marked down to SO Cents Each, Reduced from 11.23. tl.W and $2.00, Fine Bernina and Jsp Straw Turbans Fancy Braid Children's and Misses' Hats marked down to 1 as Cents Each Reduced from 73c. and 11. Sailor Hats. Finest Satia Straw and English Milan Straw (alien. ' Newest shapes, finest trimmings f i.sj snd S1.4S Worth $2 and S2.23. Trimmed Panama Sailors Newest styles, best quality, $1.43, Si-73 andli.el Cost elsewhere .50 and J3. ploasure. The celebrated ''Troy" and lotne uew Linen Waists just lu. lliey'n 421 Lackaulanna flu? Jewelers and Silversmiths, 130 Wyoming Are. DIAMONDS MD DIAMOND JEWELRY, CLOCKS IND BRONZES, RICH CUT GL1SJ STERLING IND SILVER PLITED WARE. LEATHER BELTS, SILVER NOVELTIES, FINE GOLD IND SILVER WATCHES. Jewelers and Silversmiths, 30 WYOMINQ AVE. THE ROOMS I IND 2, COM'LTHB'L'D'6, SCRANTON, PA. MINING AND BLASTING POWDER MADE AT MOOSIC AND RUSH DALE WORKS. LAPLIN RAND POWDER CO'S ORANGE QUN POWDER Electrio Bstteriss, Electric Einloders, for ex ploding blasts, Safety Fuss, and Repauno Chemical Co. 's explosives. Hotel Walton Broad and Locust Streets, Philadelphia. . On of the most raatto'flcsnt hotels lotus world. Palatial In every detail. Absolutely Fireproof. European Plan $ i 5 o Upwardst American Plan $4 Upward!. Ritunted nnur all tUo leading theatres and railrjad nations. STAFFORD, WHITAKER & KEECH I. D. CRAWFORD, Manager. mCEREluCOILU. MERCEREAU ft GONNELu moose POWDER The St. Denis Broadway and Eleventh St., New York. Opp. Grace Church. - European Plaa. . Rooms $1.00 a Day aud Upward. In a modest and nnobtnulve way tbere are f w letter cuuducted hotel la the metropolis thiu tho St. Denle. The k.riRt ppu orl'.T it hu eciiutred can readily be tracej to its unique location. It huUdliitH Ktinoapli'iro, the puculUr ex ellenoa of ue cuisine and service, and lis very muder ute prices. WILLIAM TAYLOR AND SON. f