'rtVfci' DECEMBER 13, 1912 The Commoner. eNT Topics IRfCu rr fSS -aMHNaM' i "ST MBBiMBirffc. THE general discussion concerning tho pension ing of ex-presidents leads a writer in tho Washington (D.C.) Post to say that prior to the administration of Mr. Taft 25 persons have held the offlce of president of the United States. Of these William Henry Harrison and Zachary Taylor died in offlce. Lincoln, Garfield, and McKinley were assassinated. Of the remaining twenty men who held the Offlce, not counting Mr. Roosevelt, of course, nine lived less than ten years after their retirement, seven lived between ten and twenty years, and only three survived longer than twenty. In 1826 there were four former presidents alive. Only two men who had served in the offlce of the chief executive re turned to public life in some other capacity. John Quincy Adams was one of the presidents chosen by the house of representatives when no candidate received a'majority of the electoral college. He retired from the White House March 4, 1829, and was elected to congress from Massachusetts, taking his seat when tho Twenty-second congress convened, in Decem ber, 1831, being successively re-elected, and was serving when, in the Thirtieth congress, Febru ary 23, 1848, he fell on the floor of the house, stricken with apoplexy, and was carried to the speaker's room, where he died. Andrew John son, after serving as president following the assassination of Lincoln, returned to Tennessee and engaged actively in politics. He was de feated for the senate before the legislature in 1870; again he was defeated as an independent candidate at large for the Forty-third congress. In 1875 he waB elected a United States senator, but died July 31 that same year. Of all these men, honored by their countrymen with tho presidency, the only one for whom the gov ernment did anything in a pecuniary way was Grant. That, however, came to him because of his military career. He was placed on the re tired list of army officers as a general, and received pay as such to tho day of his death. tV l2rl &r$ THE average length of life of nineteen former presidents, not including Col. Roosevelt, after they retired from offlce, was according to the same writer, twelve years. The list of presi dents and the length of time they lived after retiring from offlce follows: George Washing ton served two terms; retired from offlce March 4, 179'7; died December 14, 1799 two years and three months. John Adams, retired March 4, 1801; died 'July 4, 1826 twenty-five years and three months. Thomas Jefferson served two terms; retire'd March 4, 1809; died July 4, 1826 seventeen years and three months. James Madison served two terms; retired March r4, 1817; died June 28, 1836 nineteen years and three months. James Monroe, two terms; retired March 4, ,1,825; died July 4, 1831 six years and four months. John Quincy Adams re tired March 4, 1829; died February 23, 1848 nineteen years. Andrew Jackson, two terms; retired March 4, 1837; died June 8, 1845 eight years and three months. Martin Van Buren, retired March 4, 1841; died July 24, 1862 twenty-one years -and four months. William Henry Harrison, inaugurated March 4, 1841; died April , 1841. John Tyler, retired March 4, 1845;''died January 17, 1862 seven teen years. James K. Polk; retired March 4, 1849; died June 15, 1849 three months. Zachary Taylor, inaugurated March 4, 1849; died July 9, ,1850. Millard Fillmore, retired March 4, 1853; died March 8, 1874 21 years. Franklin Pierce, -retired March' 4, 1857; died October 8, 186a twelve years and seven months. James "Buchanan, Tetired -March 4, 1861; died June 1, 1868 seven years and three months. Abraham Lincoln, two terms; assassi nated April 14, 1865. Andrew Johnson, retired March 4, 1869 ; died July 31, 1875 six years and four months.'1 Ulysses S. Grant, two terms, retired March '4,. 1877; died July 23, 1885 eight years and four months. Rutherford B. Hayes, retired March 4, 1881; died January 17, 1893 eleven' years and eleven months. James 'A. Garfield, inaugurated March 4r, 1881; assas sinated July 2, 1881,' and died September 19 following. Chester A. Arthur, retired March 4, 1885; died November 18, 1886 one year and eight months. Grover Cleveland, retired March 1889, first term; retired March 4, 1897, second term; died June 24, 1908-oleven years and four months. Benjamin Harrison, retired March 4, 1S93; diul March 13, 1901 eight years William McKinley, two terms; assassi nated September (I, and died September 14, in 21" Tlie(,doro Koosovelt, retired March 4, 1909; still living. 3 tS O INCLUDED in the offerings of an auction salo 1 ot some of the effects of Arthur P. Helnso were many of the treasures of tho lato Robert G. Ingersoll. Tho house where these treasures were sold was once occupied by Ingersoll. Tho New York Herald in an advanco notice of this sale, said: "Among these treasures are tho furnishings of Mr. Ingersoll's Moorish den. It was in this small room on tho second floor, sit ting before the specially designed mahogany fireplace and mantle, that tho great free thought exponent did most of his writing and thinking. Old friends of Mr. Ingersoll will have an oppor tunity to bid for mementoes when the auctioneer sells 150 camp chairs which were used in tho aisles and on the stage when the audiences at Mr. Ingersoll's lectures were so largo they could not bo accommodated in the regular seats. The little theatre in still equipped with the two sots of scenery, one a garden scene and the other an exterior, that Mr. Ingersoll provided and which were used by members of the Ingersoll family in giving private theatricals. Tho stage is 15 feet wido by 22 feet deep. Among the art objects that belonged in tho Ingersoll house are two pieces of statuary occupying niches In the main reception hall. One is a life size marble called 'Undine,' with veiled face and beautiful inline and drapery. It Is signed 'J. Mozier, Rome, 1862.' Another is a marble and bronze bust of Augustus Caesar by Lulgi Belli. Other objects that servo as reminders of Mr. Ingersoll are two Benares brass vases out of reach on either sldo of tho great fireplace in tho entrance hall. The nock of one Is askew, either broken or naturally so, and such was Mr. Heinze's reverenco for what Mr. Ingersoll had possessed that he never would allow anyone to ascend and find out. Among tho paintings in the Heinze collection is Sir Anthony Van Dyck's 'Portrait of Anna Carr, Countess of Bedford,' which Mr. Heinze acquired from tho Rothschild collection. There is a 'Landscape with CatMe,' by Gainsborough, dated 1760, bought five years ago by Mr. Heinze from a niece of Lady Wald grave, in London, and there are canvases by George luness, Mr. Henry W. Ranger, Mr. Ridg way Knight, Mr. J. Francis Murphy, Ralph A. BlakPlock and by Vibert, Troyon, Plot, Dupro, Grolleron and Detti." l (v c THE latest and best woman suffrage story Is given by tho Kansas City Star in this way: A Kansas grocer who had wasted his presiden tial vote for twenty years was so overjoyed at tho result of the election that ho attempted to paint a mammoth rooster on his show-window. But art being entirely out of his line of busi ness the chanticleer did not have tho trium phant pose deBired by the painter. "That's no rooster," sneered a small boy; "that's a bloomin hen'" A shout of derisive laughter from a group of citizens greeted this sally, but the amateur artist came right back at them: "Well, didn't woman suffrage carry in this state? What's the matter with you all?" & MVYOR GAYNOR of New York created some- thing of a sensation recently when he used the word "spissitude." Referring to this word Now York World says: This is the very latest Gaynorlsm. The man who rehabilitated Fnfctetus as a popular character shot these Shfnnt syllables of dispraise at the newspapers, choosing : the banquet of the Fifth Avenue c n TfL at the Waldorf-Astoria as the spot fScnHnf spissitude. Afterward there was a ,t0 8Sfn can for dictionaries, with this result: Sard d c Uonary definition-Spissltude- ?, r Jt. viRco-ity. Ninety-five per cent of Thickness visco icy. turn to the vocabulan gulti Viscosity-Stlcki-viscostty, wI,lnu ' solitude got laughter and SiuIeTo'm tho fottners.'Un a .ot of thorn didn't understand It. But, then, ns an English guest remarked, "Tlioy ' now it waa Hometh.ng nasty, and that's enough." Mr. Gay nor put splssltudo into tho bright lexicon of New York when ho was dealing with tho sub way tanglo last your. Ho told how honestly and conscientiously and splendidly ho and tho department wrostlod with the problem, and how mistaken the newspapers woro In thinking that the wisdom of Solomon and -ho roctltudo of tho Chevalier Hayard were not at nil times evident. "Wo were fumbling around reading the World and other newspapers for guidance," said tho mayor, with sarcastic inflection. "And perhaps wo wore also wondering at the mental and moral spissitude with which somo persons who run tho newspapers are aflllcted." That brought a howl. "Spissitude! SpiBsltudo!" ran from Up to lip. After describing how unkind the news papers had been to him and Borough President McAneny and others over tho subways, Mr. Gny nor declared that "For myself I don't caro, as I have boon pictured as a bad man so long that I don't care any more." & Jt jt TfIE death rate among the. members of tho United States senate during tho last twelve years has been very largo. The Washington cor respondent for tho Baltimore Sun says: Tho passing away of Senator Rayner runB tho deah list up to thirty-four In that period, which shows' that more than one-third of tho total member ship of the upper branch of congress has passed away. These figures do not include tho mem bers who died after retiring from tho senate, but only tho men who succumbed while in har ness. The present membership of tho senate Is ninety-six. Tho death roll Includos some of tho strongest characters and most prominent statosmen of the present generation. Sena tor Raynor's death Is tho fifth, counting Vice President Sherman, among tho members of tho upper chamber in tho last eight months and during the present session of congress. Sena tor Robert L. Taylor of Tennessee died last spring after a term of four years; Senator George S. Nixon of Nevada, who was elected In 1905, was stricken down last summer, and only a month ago Senator William B. Hoyburn of Idaho, who had served slnco 1903, passed away after a few months of Illness. Tho fatality among Maryland members has also been strlk ing. Senator Rayner Is tho third Marylandoi to die In harness during tho last five years. Senator Arthur Pue Gorman and Senator Wil liam Pinckney White, both of whom had served in the upper chamber with him, yielded to the fearful strain and arduouslabors which are now a part of the life of a senator. IN tho last dozen years such powerful figures as Marcus A. Hanna of Ohio, John W. Daniel of Virginia, Redfleld Proctor of Vermont, Stephen B. Elkins of West Virginia, William P. Frye of Maine, John T. Morgan and Edmund W. PettUB of Alabama, George F. Hoar of Massachusetts, Cushman K. Davis of Minnesota, Matthew Stanley Quay of Pennsylvania, and J. P. Dolliver of Iowa, havo disappeared. The senators who died In the last twelve years are as follows in the chronological order of their deaths: John H. Gear, of Iowa; Cushman K. Davis, of Minnesota; J. H. Pyle, of South Da kota; William J. Sewell, of New Jersey; Jamea McMillan, of Michigan; Marcus A. Hanna, of Ohio; Matthew Stanley Quay, of Pennsylvania; George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts; William B. Bate, of Tennessee; Orville H. Piatt of Connecti cut; John H. Mitchell, of Oregon; Arthur Pue Gorman, of Maryland; Russell A. Alger, of Michigan; John T. Morgan, of Alabama; Ed mund W. Pettus, of Alabama; S. R. Mallory, of Florida; A. C. Latimer, of South Carolina; Red field Proctor, of Vermont; William James Bryan, of Florida; William B. Allison, of Iowa; Martin N. Johnson, of North Dakota; A. J. McLaurln, of Mississippi; S. D. McEmery of Louisiana; John W. Daniel of Virginia; Jonathan P. Dol liver, of Iowa'; A. S. Clay, of Georgia; Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia; C. J. Hughes, jr., of Colorado; William P. Frye, of Maine; Robert L. Taylor, of Tennessee; George S. Nixon, of Nevada; William B. Heyburn, of Idaho; Isidor Rayner, of Maryland. I M ! 4