f The sentiment which resulted In the nomination of McKInley for governor of Ohio was en- As Governor and President gendered Immedi ately upon the an nouncement of the result of the elec tion of 1800 when after fourteen years continuous service In congress the Ohio statesman was defeated for re election During his gubernatorial campaign In 1893 McKInley visited eighty six of the eighty eight counties of Ohio and made 1110 speeches He was elected by a plurality of 80905 up to that time the record In Ohio The policy which Governor McKIn ley pursued during his four years of occupancy of the gubernatorial chair VS AM 1 SHBKt 9 HlifflBIBliSM bs MKINIiETS HOME CANTON was outlined when In his inaugural address he said It Is iny desire to co operate with you in every endeavor to secure a wise economical and honora ble administration and so far as can be done the improvement and eleva tion of the public service From the day of his Inauguration Governor McKInley took the greatest interest In the management of the pub lic benevolent institutions of the state and he made a study of means for their betterment During his first term the state board of arbitration was created and he made the workings of the board a matter of personal supervision during the entire four years of his administra tion No account of McKinleys connection with labor problems would be complete without some mention of the tireless energy which he displayed in securing relief for the 2000 miners in the Hock ing valley mining district who early in 1S93 were reported out of work and destitute The news first came to the governor one night at midnight but be fore 3 oclock in the morning he had upon his own responsibility dispatched to the nlllicled district a car containing 1000 worth of provisions Later he made appeals for assistance and finally distributed among the 2732 families in the district clothing and provisions to the amount of 3279095 McKinleys nomination and election to the presidency in 1S9G the stirring events of 1S97 culminating in 1S9S in j the war with Spain and the acquisi tion for the first time in this countrys history of foreign territory by conquest as well as his re election with Theo dore Roosevelt as his running mate in 1900 are events of too recent occur rence to require more than passing mention With the circumstances sur rounding his death resulting from the bullet of an assassin fired while Mr McKinley was receiving at the Tan American exposition and his gallant but unsuccessful fight for life the pub lic is but too painfully familiar General Coar Quelled a Mutiny General Cox was a good disciplina rian but he never blustered and was never severe On one occasion several officers called at his headquarters and stated to him that they would not promise to march their men up the nar row river valley He sent them to their quarters and said nothing of tbeir im pertinence until after the war While in camp at Gauley bridge his quartermaster general shot a private In the Second Kentucky The men of the regiment escaped the control of the officers and made a rush to kill the quartermaster who had been taken to Coxs headquarters Cox saw the men coming but instead of ordering the guards to fire on them he ran toward them alone bareheaded and unarmed He reached a gap in a stone wall ahead of the 500 or GOO furious armed men and stopped them He explained that they might kill him but they could not pass Straightening to his full height he said Your general unarmed as you see orders you to remember that you are soldiers and obey Much to the surprise of the score of anxious officers watching the parley the men returned to their camp Cox sent for a company from another regiment which guarded the prisoner to the lower camp No charge of mutiny ever appeared against that regiment which afterward under Nelson and Palmer made a splendid reputation for drill discipline and hard fighting Chicago Inter Ocean Cnttlnjr Watch Glasses In the production of common watch glasses the glass is blown into a sphere about a meter in diameter sufficient material being taken to give the desir ed thickness as the case may be Disks are then cut out from this sphere with the aid of a pair of compasses having a diamond at the extremity of one leg There is a knack in detaching the disk after it has been cut A good work man will it is said cut G000 glasses In a day Wlmt It Looked Lilce Beg pardon said the rude young man gathering his features together again I simply couldnt suppress that yawn Dont mention it replied the bright girl By the way that reminds me I visted the Mammoth cave last sum mer Exchange ROOSEVELT Interesting Career and Home Life of the New President of the United States Theodore Koosevelt the new presi dent of the United States is one of the most remarkable men in this coun try His career which from the outset has been a most strenuous one may be divided into nine phases or stages leading up to the tenth as president upon the duties of which he is just en tering In nine different roles he has given evidence of the attributes that mako him today perhaps the most talked of man of forty three in the world Of aristocratic birth a member of a family distinguished for valor patri otism and culture for many genera tions young Roosevelt first sued for public favor when he appeared as can didate for assemblyman in his native city New York He was then just out of college 1879 and was twenty one years of age Even his opponents admit that he was a zealous servant of his own par tyan unwavering Republican He was then as now athletic and remark able for his boundless energy his in terest in people and things and his un failing enthusiasm The second stage of Mr Roosevelts public career was that in which he an nounced himself as candidate for may or of New York It was very characteristic that he should with his belief in himself con sider the office of mayor one which lie was equipped to fill but unquestiona bly if Mr Roosevelt were consulted to day he would agree with his friends that his defeat in this race was bene ficial to him Defeated as candidate for mayor Mr Roosevelt next appears as a national civil service commission er and here again his party found him studious untiring capable and effi cient This appointment was made in 1SS9 by President Harrison when Roose velt was a trifle over thirty Two years later in 1S91 the fourth stage of Mr Roosevelts remarkable life he ap pears as a hunter of big game When Theodore Roosevelt concluded to hunt grizzly bears he naturally de- ROOSEVELT AS GOVERNOR cided to do so in what he considered proper costume and it is most inter esting to see the dramatic instinct again dominating The pictures of Mr Roosevelt taken In his costume as a hunter show him holding his rifle loaded with many bullets The leather breeches with their picturesque adorn ment of fringe the hunting shirt of leather embroidered supposedly by In dians the scarlet silk handkerchief ivory handled revolver the knife thrust through the cartridge belt are all the fitting paraphernalia of the cowboys hero ROOSEVELT AS A HUNTER i When Roosevelt dressed in his gau dy and personally selected hunting cos tume made his appearance among the untrammeled citizens around Little Missouri river he was looked upon as a tenderfoot of a very elementary brand The toughs who proposed to show him a thing or two arranged among themselves in their own ex pressive language to take some of the frills out of the New York tenderfoot A well known character approached Roosevelt and asked him what he in tended to do and what kind of game he was after The New Yorker said he was after grizzlies and it was soon noised about the camp that the four eyed tenderfoot was looking for big game The hardest man in the vicinity sent word to Roosevelt that he couldnt shoot any grizzlies in that territory and that if he attempted to the bad man in question would be informed and proposed to shoot Roosevelt at sight When this message was conveyed to the blue eyed tenderfoot he seemed greatly pleased and looking eagerly through his glasses he Inquired of his informant where the bad man lived Immediately upon receiving the desired information Roosevelt rode over to see the man who proposed to shoot him When he reached the camp of the in dividual in question the bad man had forgotten why he Intended to shoot and was very much disposed to be 7t 4ZlT5ci3 amlatle wth the tenderfoot from the east Mr Roosevelt not only wore a cos tume which he considered appropriate for killing grizzlies but he actually killed more bears than the best of the bad men and his unquestioned brav ery and fearlessness won him as it al ways does with the Bret Ilarte type of man unbounded respect and loe What the men of the west thought of the tenderfoot was shown when Theodore Roosevelt called for volun teers for the rough riders among whom wure some of those who tried to take the frills off the New York dude when he first appeared among them and who today lovingly and loyally re fer to him as a leader whom they would follow to the death - - POLICE COMMISSIONER NEW YORK Z lfei 5kMa wwMm Wmmm - OF MISS ALICE ROOSEVELT Presidents eldest daughter what had become of the first appro priation he replied Every cent of it Avas spent for powder and shot and every bit of powder and shot has been fired When he was asked what he was going to do with the 300000 he replied Use every ounce of that too within the next thirty days in practk e shootinc When the Mahe vi- blown up Mr Roosevelt had ud doubi that The fifth stage of Mr Roosevelts career was embodied In his service as police commissioner of New York city Other commissioners have come and jlllr MRS ROOSEVELT gone and their records are more or less prosaic but the history of Theodore Roosevelt stands out again picturesque dramatic and alive with the intensity of the mans nature an intensity which differentiates him at every step of his career from his predecessors or succes sors As police commissioner Mr Roose velt made New York seethe with ex citement Disguised he visited at night the various precincts seeing for him self and testing the probity and capa bility of his corps By day he fought the other police commissioners he up set old time rules and enforced old time blue laws because as he explained they were in the statute books and must be obeyed until they were re pealed The sixth phase of Mr Roosevelts career was brief but most satisfactory and was embraced in the short time of his service as assistant secretary of the navy Colonel Roosevelt was nominat ed by President McKinley on April G 1S97 On April 17 he tendered his resig nation as police commissioner to Mayor Strong of New York city From the very first Roosevelt fore saw the possibility of a conflict with Spain and he set about preparing his department for it He pushed repairs on the ships he worked with might and main for the navy personnel bill and visited the various naval reserves throughout the country He left noth ing undone In fact that would secure the highest efficiency in the service when the time for action came It is an open secret that he it was who first realized the tremendous opportunity that the war would open in the east and who had Dewey in whom he rec ognized the right man for the place appointed to command the eastern squadron And naval officers agree that the remarkable skill in marks manship displayed by the American gunners was due to his foresight Tie saw the necessity of practice and he thought it the best kind of economy to burn up ammunition In acquiring skill A characteristic story of the truth of which there is no doubt is told re garding Roosevelts insistence on prac tice in the navy Shortly after his ap pointment he asked for an appropria tion of S00000 for ammunition pow der and shot for the navy The ap propriation was made and a few months later lie asked for another ap propriation this time of 300000 When asked by the proper authorities v - ROOSEVELTS ROUGH RIDERS - -S Naturally enough Roosevelt would not be content to sit behind a desk while there was fighting going on He submitted his resignation to the presi dent on April 10 and tried to get an ap pointment upon General Lees staff Then came the rough rider idea the seventh phase of Roosevelts career hardly thought of before it was realized Roosevelts rough riders something in the alliteration of the name struck the popular fancy and the regiment became famous before it was organ ized Roosevelt had had some military experience as a captain in the Eighth regiment but not enough in his esti mation to fit him to command a regi ment in time of war and he modestly took the second place and was content to learn from his friend Dr Wood It is hardly necessary to recount the history of the rough riders from the time they were organized In San An tonio Tex until they were mustered out at Camp WikofT to recall the jun gle fight of Las Guaslmas and the bloody charge at San Juan Hill The tale is still on every ones lips But it Is worth while to recall the remarkable influence Roosevelts personality had over his men an influence that welded a thousand or more independent cow punchers ranchers and athletes into a fighting machine Youve got to per form without flinching whatever duty is assigned you regardless of the diffi culty or danger attending it No mat ter what comes you mustnt squeal These words of Roosevelts became al most a religion with his men To do anything without flinching and not to squeal was their aim and to hear the colonel say Bully was reward enough S- GOVERNOR VICE PRESIDENT PRESIDENT Colonel Roosevelt returned to the United States to find that he was al ready talked of as the next governor of New York But his regiment which he had breathed and eaten with for three months was still on his hands and he had no time for anything but it hi- s QUEXTIN ROOSEVELT Presidents youngest son Not until he became a plain citizen on Sept 13 would he talk of politics and then he found the tide of events bear ing him along inevitably and irresisti bly The eighth stage of Roosevelts ca reer began with his assumption of the office of governor of New York state and the ninth with his inauguration as vice president of the United States March 4 1901 A tenth phase is just opening for him as the chief executive of the greatest nation in the world President Roosevelts ancestry and his rearing and education coupled with an excessively aggressive nature mani fested unmistakably even in his very early boyhood seemed to presage for him a more than ordinary career ROOSEVELTS ANCESTRY - Theodore Roosevelt was born Oct 27 1S3S in his fathers house 2S East Twentietli street in New York city In that quiet region around Gramercy park the home of many families bear ing names held in high honor and es teem there was none bearing a name more highly honored and esteemed than the family into which Theodore Roosevelt was born For six genera tions his forbears had been prominent as citizens of New York and distin guished in the councils of the city nis father James J Roosevelt was alder man in 1S2S 1S29 and 1S30 assembly man from 1S33 to 1S40 congressman from 1S41 to 1S43 and supreme court justice from 1S34 to 1SG0 his grandfa ther James Roosevelt who was a mer chant was assemblyman in 179G 97 and alderman in 1S09 his great-grandfather Cornelius C Roosevelt likewise a merchant was alderman from 17S3 to 1S01 his great-great-grandfather Cor nelius Roosevelt was alderman from 1739 to 17G4 his John Roosevelt also a merchant was alderman from 1748 to 17G7 and his Nicholas Roosevelt was alderman of New York city in 1700 01 Sueli was the life of the sturdy Dutch ancestors from whom Theodore Roose velt inherited his name But although his name is Holland Dutch Scotch Irish and French Huguenot blood min gle in his veins in equal measure with that of his Dutch ancestors and ac counts to no small extent for the per sonal qualities of the man his energy nimanrm war would follow and that shortly and end perseverance his Impulsive not to ins energies were bent with redoubled force to getting the navy ready When war did finally break out Mr Roose velt was for rushing matters for tak ing navana at once and dictating terms from there say fiery temperament and his viva cious mode of expression With the impetus of family and the favorable material conditions In which he found himself as well as by the force of his own personality Roosevelt might have advanced rapidly in any path he chose whether it led toward brilliant social success or the making of a large for tune That he chose a career oL public service Is characteristic of the man the more so in that he saw in the course ho had marked out for himself small chance of pecuniary remunera tion and a struggle for principle that might jeopardize those rewards that are the politicians Once decided he never swerved from his course For more than twenty years he has been before the public eye as an aggressive political force THE ROOSEVELT HOMESTEAD THE -3 Vice President Roosevelts homestead near Oyster Bay N Y Is an ideal country seat and the Roosevelt fami ly is a very old one In the neighbor hood The house is large homelike and countrified quite unpretentious It crowns the very topmost peak of Saga more hill The approach to the house through forest and meadow Is beautiful and refreshing in the extreme But it is not until after one reaches the top of Sagamore hill that the full beauty of the magnificent panorama Is revealed The view of the bay the headlands with the Long Island sound and the Connecticut coast stretching for miles and resting against the deep blue of the sea is so restful so altogether lovely that it cannot soon fade from the memory The library which Is a splendid room directly off the main hall con tains about 5000 books The Interior is one of enchantment to the genuine book lover A big open fireplace stretches across one end of the room Above it is a magnificent display of the heads of deer rams antelopes mountain sheep and other trophies of Colonel Roosevelts skill as a hunter The floors are covered with rugs made of the skins of lions bears buf faloes and panthers all victims of the vice presidents gun In fact the whole house is adorned with trophies of the chase Here it is that most of his books and articles of which he has written many were brought into being Mrs Theodore Roosevelt Is the most enthusiastic admirer and ardent helper of her husband in his political career She Is absorbed heart and soul in her husbands success as she has been from the time they first knew each oth er as children Mrs Roosevelt who before her marriage was Miss Edith Carow possesses great intelligence a remarkably fine education and a won derful power of effacing herself and at the same time exerting a great influ ence She is very pretty slight of medium height and has dark brown eyes and hair She has not gone much into society since her marriage as she has been more or less an invalid and she has devoted herself entirely to her children and her home She has live children of her own and there is also a daughter by Mr Roosevelts first wife a girl of seventeen to whom Mrs Roosevelt is the most devoted of moth ers 8 MRS ROOSEVELT AND CHILDREN v - Mrs Roosevelt was a playmate of Mr Roosevelts sisters and of Mr Roosevelt himself when they were chil dren went to the same dancing class were identified with the same set in society and there were a great many people who predicted that as these children grew up they would marry However as is well known Mr Roosevelts first wife was Miss Lee of Boston and at the time of that marriage Miss Carow was abroad where she remained for some time Mr Roosevelt met her in Europe after his wifes death and their engage ment was not announced for some months When it was announced the congratulations were most sincere from assKvtcy ROOSEVELT LEADING HIS ROUGH RIDERS every one who knew them and realized how well suited they were to cne an other Like her husband Mrs Roosevelt is an enthusiastic novel reader but also keeps well up on all the topics of the day She is a good French scholar and also speaks German During the years spent in Europe she traveled every where and always kept up her studies The Roosevelts heretofore have seldom entertained formally preferring to keep open house When they first went to Washington it was quite a break to leave all their New York friends but It was not long before Mrs Roosevelt as well as her husband had formed a circle of new acquaintances and their house in Washington was the center of much that was delightful and Interesting When Mr Roosevelt decided to come back to New York again Mrs Roose velt felt badly at breaking up iier life in Washington but as usual said nothing and allowed herself to be car ried away by her husbands enthusi asm over his new field of work and came back to New York and took up her life where site had left it befre As is well known the life here was short and back again they went to Washington But during all these chances and changes the quiet routine of Mrs Roosevelts life If it could be a routine one went on and with the exception that the place Itself was altered there was no difference made Every sum mer has been spent at Oyster Bay where the life led is entirely an out door one Mrs Roosevelt there as elsewhere superintends the education of her children She does not Instruct them herself but she makes a Liolnt of T MR ROOSEVELTS OYSTER RAY HOME going into their lessons always ence a week If they are at school she goes to the school and stays through the day in order to know just what the children are studying The Roosevelt children are Alice seventeen years old Theodore Jr fourteen Kermit twelve Ethel ten Archibald seven and Quentin four They are all bright and interesting and as the boys are as full of pranks as possible and have none of the ex clusivcncss so common to children reared in aflluence it is likely that the grounds of the White House will be much more lively than they have been for a generation The romping outdoor life which these children have hitherto enjoyed at Oys ter Bay during nearly eight months of each year has had the effect of making athletes of them all Teddy junior is said to be an excellent boxer a good runner and jumper a first class swim mer and a magnificent horseman In deed all the children ride well for their father has always held that horse back riding is the most healthful exer cise in the world The children have taken to it mj naturally that a visitor who saw them some time ago on their favorite mounts laughingly remarked to the colonel that if he should ever conclude to raise another regiment of rough riders he will be able to get sev eral recruits without leaving his own premises Teddy junior is so striking a counterpart in miniature of his fa ther that his identity is clear to per sons meeting him for the first time at places where they would naturally not expect to see him His mental habits and his impulsive manner are also those of his father who y the waj is regarded by the youngster as the greatest man in the world Ills sole expressed ambition is that he may live to be as good a man as his paternal ancestor Secrets of Coffee Making Experiment has disclosed the fact that one fourth of a teaspoonful of me dium strength vanilla added the last thing before serving to enough coffee for four persons improves it 30 per cent The secret of perfection is to use enough vanilla to cover the strong cof fee flavor yet not enough to be de tected A pinch of salt In coffee has long been my secret for a certain delicate flavor that every one likes but I did not know until recently that I had in some mysterious way stumbled upon the modus operandi which has made the coffee of Norway superb In that country the coffee Is roasted fresh every morning in a covered shovel kept in constant motion over the fire A bit of salted butter added after the roast ing process is begun gives It an Inde scribable flavor as delightful as it is subtle The French too have made their reputation for excellent coffee by using butter while roasting it A piece of butter the size of a walnut with a des sertspoonful of powdered sugar to three pounds of green coffee Is the proportion used This Is said to bring out both flavor and aroma and more over gives the slight caramel taste which tourists remember to have en joyed nowhere but in France What to Eat Women ni Doctors To go back as far as the end of the thirteenth century a woman named j Protula was professor of the art of neanng at the University of Palermo and an old certificate in the archives of Paris shows that it was a woman who was called upon to prescribe for Louis IX on hL return from the crusade In the seventeenth cen tury Oliva del Sabucco a Snanish wo man was considered an excellent doc tor and a hundred years later Anna Manzolini an Italien was professor in a medical college in Milan Two other well known woman doctors were Bar bara Weintranhein a German woman and a Swedish woman named Christine Erxbelen In these days the United States boasts of more women doctors than any other country England fol lows next - f -