-Xs 6 The Commoner. y VOLUME 4, NUMBER 42 ! Vsaj - r T aBasjgjm A DISPATCH under date of Baltimore, October 25, printed in the Kansas City Star, says: "Mrs. "William P. Tonry, the only daughter of Mrs. Mary E. Surratt, who was put to death for being involved in the Lincoln conspiracy, died here early today after several years' illness, resulting from her efforts to save her mother. She was 68 years old." COMMENTING upon this dispatch, a writer In the Star says: "Juno 21. 1869r William P. Tonry, employed in Washington, lost his position under peculiar circumstances, and, it is said, with tho approval of President Grant. He had served in the United States army during the civil war, and he had been detailed as assistant chemist in the laboratory of the surgeon general's office, which position ho had filled with entiro satisfac tion. Tho trouble was said to ho that ho had just married. He had married, at that, a woman whom any loyal citizen of the United States ought not to marry, according to the views of tho sup posedly loyal citizen of the United States, at that particular time. His brido was Anna E. Surratt. Tho girl's mother had been hanged a short time before for complicity in the assassination of Pres ident Lincoln." t. v.- AT CHICKAMAUGUAina898, according -to the Star writer, when thoFifth Maryland volun teers were encamped there, they were under com mand of General Frederick Grant. In that regi ment wore Reginald I. Tonry, sergeant in Com pany C, commanded by Captain Thompson, and Albert S. Tonry, corporal in Oampany L, com manded by Captain Boyden. They were the sons of tho man who had lost his position because he had married Mrs. Surratt's daughter, and they were grandsons of Mrs. Surratt. Many remember Mrs. Surratt's trial and conviction after John Wilkes Booth had killed tho president. They re member her hanging, too, but very few remember that her son-la-law, a loyal union soldiers, was discharged because he married her daughter. And very, very few know that Mrs. Surratt's two grand sons were serving under tho Stars and Stripes in tho volunteer army. Mrs: Tonry had just loft school when her mother was hanged. .She was probably about 18 years old and was an only daughter." IT IS estimated that nearly 52,000,000 worth of licorice is consumed in this country every year -from tho lands bordering on, tho Mediterranean.' The Kansas dlty Journal says: "Most people think that licorice is made from the wooden twigs and branches of a tree, But in reality tho licorice wood is the root of a ver.y pretty, dainty plant, which has beautifully shaped leaves that are col ored bright green- on one side and pale silver green on the other. The licorice plant is a perennial and in England, where they are trying to make an industry of raising it, the experimenters plant it in rows between cabbages and potatoes, in tho Mediterranean and Oriental countries great plan tations are given up to it altogether. The licorice plant throws out immensely fleshy roots, full of Juice When they are fresh. They spread arid "bur row far into the earth and a good, big Oiofe has to be dug to get them out. The licorice wood as we see it here, represents only about half 'the original weight and size of the root for fullv 50 per cent of the juice Is lost in drying it. There fore the licorice .dealers are getting to-be more Mid, more in- favor of squeezing the juice oiit of StnS n thG Si)0t and tuen shipping this v. ONE of tho prerogatives of 'a United States sen ator Is that when ho stops into an elevator in the senate wing of the capitol, he Is carried im mediately tojiis destination, no mattery in which direction tho elevator may bo bound or who may be aboard. Three rings on the bell indicate that a senator wants to ride and the conductor loses no time in responding to the catl. The Washing ton Post tells the following interesting story: "One day last week Mr. Barnes, the assistant secretary to the president, stepped aboard a senate" elevator from the ground flootf lna portfolio under his arm ho carried a message ' from the president- or the United States to tho congress. 'Senate floor,' said Mr. Barnes, a tho conductor shut the door. Just then thero were three rings of the bell and the indicator showed that a senator wanted to be lifted out of tho terrace. The elevator went down instead of up and Mr. Barnes went along. Tho senator in tho terrace only wanted to go to the ground floor. As ho stopped off, however, there was another senatorial ring from tho ter race. This senator wanted to go to tho gallery floor and tlio elevator went there without stopping. As the car started down there were three rings from tho ground floor, and again the car failed to stop at the destination .of tho president's secretary. Fortunately- for Mr. Barnes, this senator wanted to get off at the senate floor, and the congress, after long delay' received the message from' the president." REPUBLICAN leaders argue that tho army. Is smaller In proportion to population than it was In the days of Washington. A writer In the New York World says that these leaders ignore that most Important fact in the use and handling of an army; the means of communication and transportation. This writer adds: "It took Mr. Thomson seven days to travel from New York to Mount Vernon to notify General Washington of his election as president. Washington, wh6se journey was delayed four days by the public honors showered on him, reached New York eleven days after starting from Mount Vernon. An army could not have traveled so fast. Thero were no rail roads, there were no steamships in those days. There was no telegraph by which an army could be ordered from place to place. New York is now less than six hours from Mount Vernon, so that Mr. Thomson could have traveled twenty-six times as fast as he did. The population has increased twenty-fold, the army only slightly less, though the Indian peril and tho English menace of Wash ington's day have disappeared. The larger the army, in time of peace as well as war, the greater the immediate cost, the greater the pension list. If the size of the army is to be dependent upon the number of inhabitants it is fair to ask if tho population more than doubled between the ad ministrations of Cleveland and McKinley. The standing army did." x THE -"Recollections and Letters of General Robert E. Lee." edited by his son, Robert L. Lee, Jr., has recently been issued. Newspaper correspondents say that in this publication will be found final proof of the story long published and long denied, that General Lee was offered com mand of the United -States army at the beginning of the civil ivar. A New York correspondent for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, in a review of this book, says: "In 1868 General Lee yrote to Senator Reverdy Johnson in- regard to a debate in the senate in which Senator Simon Cameron had made certain statements. In this letter - General Lee said: 'I neyer -intimated to any one that I de sired the command of the United States army; nor did I ever,bave a cdnyersatlon with but one gen tleman, Mr. Francis Preston. Blair, on this subject which was at his. invitation and as I understood' at- the instance of President Lincoln. After lis tening to his remarks, I declined the offer he made me, to take command of the army that Tvas to bo brought into the field, stating as courteously as I could that, though opposed to secession and denre cating war, I could tako no part in an invasion of the southern states.' " " or IT IS pointed out by this same reviewer that "General Lee adds that ho went dlrectlv tn General Scott, told him of the proposition that had been made to him. and two days later con cluding that he ougnt no longer retain his' com mission, resigned from the army. Two days latZ on invitation of the governor of Virginia, he went to Rlchmonu, found that the convention had parsed the secession ordinance, and he accepted the posi tion of commander-in-chief of the state forces In this book the author does not attemnf tn f the field of. the historian as far as to wa & s concerned. As the title of the work implies it is largely composed of his father's letters S of them--W inViinmediate'family, and he niXs no addition of value to the military history of thn late war. The chief Interest ox tho book ilea in its personal phase, as Relating to the daily Mo the, mental attitude t ad characteristics of General THIS correspondence, most of it of the most intimate character, according t.o the Post correspondent, in measure reflects General Lee's views on tho great question with which his career .'is so closely connected. This correspondent says "Writing With all the freedom of a husband and father to wife and children, or to intimate friends . letters which, ho probably never dreamed would see print, tho man himself stands revealed. Throughout his correspondence is a devuitly re ligious tone. Lardly. a letter is given but which evidences the deep faith of the man. Writing from camp and from battlefield, he seldom failed to acknowledge or Invoke divine help for his cause, his family and himself. Thero is a notable absence, of military information in those letters. Wherever it Js brought in it is incidental and those who anticipate lignt on the military problems of the great struggle will be disappointed. Tho author condenses into one chapter the period prior to his father's resignation from the United States army, and confines himself to General Lee's own utterances in letters to his family and friends as to -the , motive's which actuated him in his de cision. Writing to his sister, Mrs. Ann Marshall, on tho day he tendered his resignation, General Lee said: 'Now we are in a state of war, which will yield to nothing. The whole south is in a state of revolution, into which Virginia, after a long struggle, has been drawn; and though i recognize no necessity for this state of things, and would have forborne and pleaded to the end for redress of grievances, real or supposed, yet in my own person I had to meet the question whether I should take part against my native state. With all my devotion to the union and the feeling of loyalty and duty of an American citizen, I have not been abie to make up my mind to raise my hand against my relatives, my children, my home. Thave therefore resigned my commission in tho army, and, save in the defense of my native state, with the sincere hope that my poor services may never bo needed, I nope I may never be called on to draw my sword.' On the same day he wrote in similar strain to his brother, Captain Sydney Smith Lee of tthe United States navy." THERE follows in the Lee publication many letters written by General Lee to his wife in the spring and summer of 1861, counselling her on family matters. The Post-Dispatch corre spondent, continuing his review, says: "On May 25 he was transferred with his command to the confederate states army. In a letter he said: 'I do not know what my position will be. I should like to retire to private life if I could be with you and the children, but if I can be. of any service to the state or her cause. -I must . continue.' Soon after the first battle of Manassas General Lee was sent into Wesjt Virginia, and In the numerous let ters to his lamily ne interestingly describes the country, his raw soldiers, and the difficulties he faced. These letters were continued with great regularity alter he was sent to South Carolina in the winter of 1861. Many of these are deeply religious, Writing his wife on Christmas day ho said: 'If we can orly become sensible of our trans gressions, so as to be tully penitent and forgiven, that ,this heavy judgment under which we labor may with just ce- be. removed from us and the whole natio-, what a" gracious consummation of all that we have endured it will be.' In the same let ter he volqes his forebodings for his old home and says if- it ?is destroyed he would like to purchase Stratford (on the lowei; Potomac). 'It is a poor place,' he adds, "but we? could make enough corn bread' and bacon for our support, and the girls could weave us clothe ."' The Sioux City Journal of October 17 says ed itorially: "It may be that Mr. Bryan's Common er will reach Mr. Watson's letter of acceptance, but it may not bo able to get to it until after election.1' Readers of the Commoner do not need to have their attention called to this in order to convince them that the esteemed Journal is as badly off, in Its predictions as it is in its politics, So ! ts '.' J ,J V n'jji un Ufaaefjto.. ., - - .--i-tfyi - "