1 H i A i JM i 1 t up IssZ LHSafiSSSHBiMdMH te PERSONAL SIDE OF THE REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES For tho next few weeks the unities of two men will bo often coupled in enthusiastic phrases by Republicans all over tho country They will wnvo on banners They will be spoken by lolltlcal orators before audiences which will take this lis n cue for lot ting loose the rapid Ore butteries of applause These names ure McKlnley and Roosevelt Both names were familiar to tho people before the Republican na tional convention The public acts and the careers of both men from their Ing In Homo way affoctcil by It Mr McKInloy seems to have Rained dig nlty of carriage mental poise and gen tlenoss of mannor All throo he had In some degree before but now as has been said they are distinctive traits They nlwnys bespeak the ripened char acter lcrhups his gentleness Is due to his kindly domestic relations As Is well known he has for many years been tho devoted and tenderly solicitous hus band of a partially Invalided wife Ills devotion to his aged mother us wit- Hdfto3tigartEa Cciijriiiht ItWO by diaries A Gray WILLIAM MKINLEY boyhood on have been subject to ex haustive publicity Wo know when and where they were born what were the conditions surrounding them in youth and every step of their progress up the ladder of national fame But we may know all this and still be unacquainted with the real men bo hind tho names Character is abstract You cannot define it by dates and rec ords We have words to describe sa lient features of It but at the host they picture only vague generalities It is only tho great masters of Action who are able to make us know a man wo have never seen and who probably never existed There is still another manner of getting acquainted with men with whom we have not tho op portunity of intimacy This is by In ference It Is un indirect mode and Its accuracy depends upon our own judg ment The traits of character which are most apparent In William McKInloy the Republican standard bearer are manliness dignity and gentleness Yon will admit tuat they are good traits They command your respect But these traits by no means muko up the sum of his character They arc simply the ones which are most prominent They are the ones which show on tho sur face For the rost you must go much deeper than the limits of mere printers Ink will allow The cnndldato for re election to tho highest office In tho gift of tho people is today a man who might well be tak en as a typical American He is rather stout but none too much f for his height and age Ills Is not the com manding figure of Lincolns nor Is It ilacklng In Inches ns was Grants Men who knew Stephen A Douglas say that Mr McKlnley resembles him very much Mr McKInloy looks practically no older now than ho did when he was nominated for the first time Four years of presidential responsibility linay have thinned somewhat the hair on his forehead and touched it with iwhlto on tho temples but tho lines about tho mouth and eyes seem no deeper In spite of an eventful admin istration It is probable that the gain of self confidence and mental poise has inoro than made up for the strain of Jiard work and the anxiety about ex ternal things I Men who finally roach a successful period In their lives seem to ago very elowly It appears to be this way with Mr McKlnley Some of his friends even Insist that he has grown younger during Ids four years In tho White Ilouao At any rate he does not look all of his 57 years Yet tho McKlnley who Is now presi dent and presidential candidate Is by no means the same McKlnley who inado tho campaign In 1800 No man can occupy for four years a position at the head of a great nation without be- nessed during the last years of her life was no less tender An instance of this is the fact that every 24 hours during those closing years the president sou communicated in some way with his mother While he lived In Canton his daily call on her was a part of tho routine of his life After he became president ho did not nllow the days to become so crowded with affairs that there was no time left for his message to mother So every day there was sent to tho dear old lady in Canton a White House en velope containing some word from My William at Washington as she always spoke of him He is too as good a husband ns w THE NORFOLK NBW8 THURSDAY XTOHKK H 1100 BYOBB CYRUS Q SYLVEST ER In tho White House for a few momonttt with her He has been known to do this a dozen times In a day For Mrs MoKlnleys sake White House etiquette has been radically altered In other administrations It has been customary for the president to sit nt one end of the table at Htato dinners and the lady of the executive mansion at the other Hut Mrs Mc KInloy has always been given tho seat of honor nt the right of her husband where he could hear her slightest wish When great affairs of the nation were at stake he has always given her the most cheerful and optimistic view pos sible When they travel together she Is shielded In many ways by his con stant care Tills gentleness Is even extended to others There arc many who can testi fy to it Ills custom of giving flowers to casual callers Is an Instance of this The pink carnation Is President Mo Klnloys favorite flower lie Is seldom seen without one In his buttonhole and when he is In tho White House there Is always a big bunch of them put In a vase on his desk Sometimes the vase Is replenished several times during the day lie gives them away not reck lessly but with discretion He pectus to know Just where they will lie appre ciated A case in point is an incident which occurred early in his administration when representatives of several labor organizations called upon him to ask a favor The request was one which he could not grant but after he had ox pressed his regret he took the carna tion from ills buttonhole and pinned It upon the lapel of one of the leaders Then lie distributed the contents of tho vase among the rest with the remark Ilcase give these to your wives or sweethearts with my compliments Many a disappointed office seeker has gone away from tho White House with a carnation in Ills buttonhole which he prized almost as much as he would have valued the appointment he - THE MKINLEY HOME IV CANTON failed to get This may bo only tact or it may bo genuine kindliness of heart Tact he certainly has No better ex ample could be found than his reply to Captain Slgsbec when the president at tended n reception given in honor of the hero of the Maine ilr Presidit said the gallant cap- MRS MKINLEY was a son Busy as he is he seems never to forget the sweet faced wife who suffers much yet hides It all with a never falling choorfulaess It is not unusual for him to Interrupt the most Important conferences to run up stairs tain I wish to thank you for this houor Not at all captain replied Mr Mc Klnley It Is an honor to bo here But with all his gentleness Mr Mc Klnley knowe how to deal out stern Justice when occasion requires Tho business ami otllcla Wt n They woik leelopnieiits of the llauuin postal scandal not long ago revealed to some who had known him this other phase or the tiiau When he full story of the scandal llrst became known In Washington there was a gathering In the cabinet room at the White House which will not soon be forgotten by those present The look on the presi dents set face and the short sharp sentences which came lioiii tils lips will live In memory ltcfuo the tem per of that council all questions of rol ntlve responsibility all Inclination to express Incredulity all feeling of per sonal friendship for the suspected any thing which might tend to minimize the Importance of the discovery was dissipated The heads of departments went out from that conference wltli the knowledge that the full power of togclhci On a railroad train ton will 1 1 till n conductor unit nu engineer In a couit you will Hud a Judge and a prosecuting attorney In an ocean steamer ou will llnd a captain and an engineer None of these similes tits the caso oviotl but they must serve Iortu nately for the people who cannot have n personal knowledge or him Mr Roosevelt has written his own descrip tion I believe In the strenuous life he has said You have but to relied on his record to believe that he has told the w hole storj Before he hit on this apt term Mr Roosevelt used to say Woik for nil that Is my doctrine lie has not only preached It but he has conscientiously lived up to It As lawyer leglslatoi reformer hunter author soldier and N Vilr - - - v wf 7 WqViMjo occoCxpckj Uly Coiiilil 1WKJ liy Hotkuoui N Y THEODORE ROOSEVELT tho government would bo Involved to the complete exposure of the crimes nnil the merciless punishment of till di rectly or Indirectly concerned This firmness is one of his dormant traits Its presence is frequently un suspected until it comes to the suifaco Much has been said and written of the president as an orator He is sure ly notable In this regard Ills short speeches are models of rhetoric and de livered In n pleasing style but his tal ents as an auditor ire equally remark able and surrounded by Ids cabinet he Is frequently called upon to show them When he listens to a speech he sits tranquilly in the large chair gen erally placed for his convenience gaz ing intently at the speaker and usually holding ills silk hat in his hand No nervousness marks his manner except now and then ho will tap quietly upon the arm of his chair with his gloved hand or close and unclose It He does not miss a single point tho speaker makes looks grave or smiles as the caso may be and often as though car ried away by the enthusiasm of the moment leads tho applause He Is truly a sympathetic listener and as one of the younger orators put It un Inspiration to the speaker While Mr McKlnley Is no such mak er of epigrams as Tom Reed his wit Is by no means sluggish Ills Impromptu remarks are often humoroiu enough to do credit to a Chain y Depew but he never goes out of his way to drag in a Joke Occasionally however ho turns off what a story teller would call a good thing Hero is one of them On tho occasion of tho presidents trip to Alabama Governor Johnson In tho course of a public address said Tho south has no apologies to make and nothing to take back Tho president was amply equal to tho occasion He replied Wo had something to take back we took you back Wo wore glad to take you back and you were glad to have us take you hack In his private life Mr McKInloy practices the virtue of democratic sim plicity He likes to live comfortably but his Ideas of comfort uro on a lino with those of tho ordinary well to do citizen His home In Canton Is an ex ample of this It Is a modest dwelllug which does not oven suggest u man sion Although it was tho house In which tho president and Mrs McKIn loy first began housekeeping Mr Mc Klnley did not become tho owner of It until about a year ago when he pur chased It for 14500 It Is tho samo one occupied by him during tho cam paign of 1890 Mr McKInloy has led such a busy Ilfo that ho has never had time to ac quire a tasto for any but simple recrea tions Ills fondness for driving a good horso Is perhaps tho only predilection of this sort worthy of note During tho early part of his administration ho was occasionally soon on horseback about Washington but for the last two years ho contented himself with driv ing If William McKInloy stands for a well recognized aud highly respected typo of American Theodore Roosevelt is a living example of another Ameri can typo of which the nation Is Justly proud -You will find theso two types of Americans In every department of governor he has been forever doing the things which seemed right to hint anil doing them with all his might Energy fearlessness and honesty are his chief characteristics lie Is super lative In all Ills energy Is of the steam engine variety His fearless ness is tho kind of stuff that led men to martyrdom In other ages His hon esty is such that even ills most bitter political enemies have never doubled it a tribute none too common It Is a significant fact that Mr Roosevelt Is still listed by the popular mind among tho very young men Yel ho will bo 42 next October an age at widely disliked for doing Ihe work he Was set to do II was the HMtue story when he wan Hindu n police commissioner in Now York lie found there a police forco which neglected lis duly not as an occasional lapse but as a steady thing The taws against Immorality nnd tlm excise law were not enfoiccd at all 1ollcctnen spent Ihe night In Imronmn or slept In hallways Crime was com moti Itoosevell held the singular Idea that tlu duty of patrolmen was to patrol Single handed and unsupported by his colleagues lie assumed the task of uinliliiK hem do It On his little Mia Mourl Hindi when a cowboy did not ImiiimI to suit him he showed him how he wanted It done In New York ho bcnni patrolling on his own account IucsmiiI phi inly Hometlmes with a sin gle companion and sometimes alone ho walked the NlredH nt all hours of tho night When ho could not llnd a patrolman upon a certain beat the fel lows olllclal head fell Into tho banket with n plunk A spirit of unrest pervaded tho Now York police force Tho officers com plained Their friends the reporters wrote protests for them Tho eotnmlH sloncr was unmercifully caricatured But he kept at tils work At last tho policemen decided to do their duty New Yorkers finally conceded that tho man they had been so busily ridiculing had done them a most valuable serv ice He took his linblti of work Into the navy department before the outbreak of hostilities with Spain He was at his desk promptly nl l oclock In tho morning nnd lie left It at I In the aft ernoon In the hours between he dis patched an enormous auioiiul of busi ness Ills clerks liked him but ho made tliem work lie asked no one to do any more than he did himself but he Insisted that all should do their best Ills courage his aggiesslveness his honesty his energy his executive ability worked wonders In the depart ment and the results weie seen later when the lesl cillne Ills wonderful popularity with the rough riders was a slnccie surprise to his custom acquaintances But they hud not seen the side of the man which hud boon shown to the cowboys of the Bad I n nils The latter had iccogiilzed in 111 in the kind of a man they liked aud they went to Culm with him whooping with delight In the same manner that he rushed up San 1 un it hill he Jumped Into the campaign in New York when lie was nominated for governor In two weeks he was whirled through 40 counties made Kill speeches and traveled over 2i0 miles To tell the story of Theodore Roose velts origin would take too long Per haps It Is enough to say that In 1700 two cent in les ago there was an Alder man Nicholas Roosevelt In New Am sterdam 1 le was Theodore Roosevelts great grea t grea I l grand fa t her Of his home life Mr Roosevelt Is Jealous He dislikes very much to see II exploited In print He lias become however a national character and this reticence he must eventually modify to some extent He has a delightful homo near Oyster Bay on Long Island There he lives when possible with Ida wife and six children Mrs Roosevelt Is of n retiring MRS ROOSEVELT which we usually credit men with hav ing attained both discretion aud the wisdom of experience There Is no such tiling as separating Theodore Roosevelts private Ufo from his public career Almost from tho day he left college ho has been more or loss in tho public eye He began by getting elected to tho New York stato legislature In his first term he was so actlvo that he attracted tho attention of tho party leadors He was put on the civil Bervlce commission whero other men had found obscurity and be made a mighty stir getting himself sltlon ner tastes arc thoroughly do mestic Her maiden name was Edith Kermlt Carow She Is a sweet moth erly looking young matron with light hair blue eyes and a fair complexion She Is of medium height aud of rather slight figure She is primarily a home ma kor ner tastes are simple and alio Is much averse to extravagance and display She believes that her mission In life Is to mako home a cheerful place for her husband and to keep her six children healthy lu body and mind It Is an old fashioned Ideal this but one which still has many supporters 4