* J 'g THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE. ESTABLISHED JUNE 19 , 1871. OMAIIA , SUNDAY MOILING. SEPTEMBER G , 1S9G TWENTY PAGES. SINGI.1D COW PfVE CENTS. \ (1 ( CAMPAIGN ORATORS AT WORK Characteristics and Methods of Noted Men on the Stump. SOME OF THE PARTY SPELLBINDERS KltilrVt llrjnn , Heed , Ilepoiv , CoeUrati , Srlmrx , VllnH , Daniel mill Oilifrx llrllllnitt Men ( lit UlC HllNltllKH. . ( Copyilght , HOC. Political maiiaR'-'rs sometimes declare tlmt the daf of Iho campaign orntor lias passed inayi ami no ono will deny that tlio multl- plication , of tlio telegraph and the printing press has struck a fatal blow to his prestige ns a. creator and moulder of public opinion J * Tlmo was , but Is no longer , when men waited for the famous orators of their Marty to define and announce the Issues of a polit ical contest. However , mass meetings arc still a very popular feature In political cam paigns , and play an Important part In deter mining results. The- orator who addresses them performs an Indispensable- service In arousing- political Interest , and thus Im pelling the people to discharge the duty of citizenship on the day of election. Ills spoken word has a power peculiar to It- considered one of ( ho most eloquent political speakers In the northwest , never writes out his speeches In advance , but this docs not prevent them from being direct , logical and convincing. His vernacular Is the purest Anglo-Saxon , nnd ho never talks over the heads -of hla hearers. This latter quality often mnkcn him more effective before a mixed audience than his former colleague In the senate- , John J Ingalls of Kansas , who Is also an elociucnt stump speaker. Mr. In galls , who , It ho writes his speeches , must dip his pen In vitriol , Is a masltr of jibes nnd sneers , and never gives nor asks for quar ter In a war of word's. Other men always sure of a worm welcome by a western audience ence- are Senator William H. Allison of Ion a and Senator Edward O. "U'olcott of Colorado. Tlio former Is a plniu , maltcr-ot-fact speaker , whoso carefully considered utter ances always carry weight with tlio people of his own state. Senator Wolcott Is with out a peer as an orator In the body In which he Is n member. He possesses a musical and powerful voice ; his diction Is almost perfect nnd his utterances are marked by a manly , seemingly unstudied candor that Is Itself most winning. \ new generation has grown up since tlio days when General Stewart L. Woodford was a recognized power on.the stump , but tlio speeches he Is making In tliu present contest show that ho has lost none of his power as a robust and vlrllu speaker , es pecially effective In rough and ready cam paigning. Another republican veteran prom inent In the present campaign Is Roswull 0. Herr of Michigan. Mr. Herr looks like an up-to-dato edition of Uncle Sam , and his democratic ways , his quaint speech nnd hla homely wit make him extremely popular with the masses. He can be depended upon to make republican Speeches almost dally during a republican campaign , and the same democratic campaign orators would Include Rlihard I' . Bland , David H. Hill , Charles F. Crisp , Stephen At. White , General Adonlram J. Warner , Hogcr Q. Mills , George G. Vest , Joseph S. C. Illackburn , John W. Daniel , Den It. Tlllman and John M. Allen. Mr. Illand has been a power on the stump In ihe west and south for a dozen years or more. Sound common sense and wisdom of the homely sort , which appeals to tlio under standing of the masses , mark all his speeches. Ho Is a fighter who Is at his best when the odds are against him , and the same Is , In n measure , true of Senator Hill. The latter Is alwajs adroit In the selection of his points of attack and defense , and his audacity Is equal to every emergency. Hut Senator Hilt's chief source of Influence on the stump Is his unfailing good humor. HP controls his temper under all provocation , and thereby often achieves success where the general conditions are against him. Senator White , who Is one of the ablest of tlio new leaders of tlio democracy , has long been the foremost orator of his party on the Pacific const. On the stump ho Is nothing If not earnest , and his candor and frankness seldom fall to move and Impress even an hostile audience. General Warner has been nil enthusiast for n third of a llfc- tlmo on the silver question and generally succeeds In Imparting much of his en thusiasm to an audience. Rx-Spcaker Crisp always comes to tlio platform thoroughly prepared. His speeches lack eloquence , but are always logical , lucid and convincing. In no mo ways they resemble those of Hogcr Q. Mills , who Is one of the most capable of the democratic orators of the south. Sen ator Vest always gives one the Impression of being very much In earnest , and as n speaker he has few equals In the senate. Ucforo a larger body he Is handicapped by self , and as he addresses the people on sub jects In which both they and he are deeply Interested , he has no difficulty In obtaining an audience. Ho docs not have to drum up the people. They come of their own ac cord. The questions about which he talks are foremost In their thoughts and furnish the staple of the dally conversation. They cannot hear too much about them or read too many discussions of them. Perhaps never In our history has tliero been before the public n larger number of brilliant and ef fective campaign speakers than there Is at the present time. At the head of the list of republican campaign orators stands by common consent the name of the party's candidate. Major McKlnley. All will remember that In the campaign of 1S92 he was the most popular of the republican stump speakers. Men flocked to hear him , not alone because the doctrine of protection , with which his name was identified , was on trial , but also for Un reason that his speeches were of the kind that peculiarly suited the masses. Their simplicity and lucidity appealed to the mul titude. The speaker's methods were those of a man talking to his neighbors with re gard to the crops and the markets , the taxes and the store bills ; and they were pleased and Impressed because ho seemed In sym pathy with them , and Invested their affairs with dlstlnco Importance. The oratory of Thomas H. Ilced occupies In the present campaign much the same posi tion BB that held by Major McKlnley four years ago. Heed Is not an orator In the popularly accepted sense of the term ; far from It. His voice Is shrill , his gestures ungainly , his language never florid nor ornate. Hut he Is a logical , persuasive , and when occasion demands It , n singularly effective speaker. The baiting of opposition never disturbs him. On the contrary. It al ways serves to flro his latent mental ener gies. At such times ho Is at the same moment humorous and serious , deprecatory and defiant , while his sallies and repartees are always pungent , sharp and telling , and sting like blows from a rawhide. Mr. Heed's speeches are carefully thought out In ad vance , but never written down and com mitted to memory. He fixes clearly In mind tlio principal Joints of a proposed ad dress , and then relics upon his own abilities and the enthusiasm of his audience to do the rest. . Chaunccy M. Dnpew , who has figured as nn orator In every national campaign slnco that of 1SGO. has the nlmblo wit , but not the acidity of Mr. Heed. Still , many people prefer his oratory to that of the man from Maine. Mr. Dcpew believes that the orator Is born , not mode. As a rule , he never makes notes , savn mental ones , and trusts to the occasion for Inspiration. His popu larity as an orator Is duo In the main to Ills ability to adapt himself to the most wtilnlv vnrvlncr circumstances , to his power to meet with readiness and case any demand mndo upon him , and the gift which ho en joys In rare degree of combining the serious with the humorous In the same speech. It Is probably for the latter reason that people ple never tire of listening to him , be the oc casion what It may. Colonel Robert G. Iiigcrsoll Is expected to spcftk inoro frequently In the present campaign thrn has been his custom In re cent years. Ago Is telling upon him a bit , but he is still ono of the most brilliant speakers of ( he English language lu any land on HIP globe. Ingorsoll , like Depew , was born an orntor , and , llko htm , ho has made the most of tmtuio'n gifts , Some ono once asked him how long It took him to write thu speech which ho niado nt Cincin nati putting Mr. lllalno In nomination for the presidency , nnd also lion' long hn wns engaged in the composition of his famous Decoration day speech. The colonel replied that It took him about .1 half hour to write each ot tlio /speeches , and about fifteen years to prepare thorn , meaning tlmt he had turned ( ivr and over again lu hla mind the Ideas "which , when the lime came to use them , weie easily put on paper. Thus , ho said , all great composition is performed , and , ho added , that a purely extemporaneous fcpeerh is generally a sorry affair. In their way , thn speeches ot Carl Schurz , who came to the front as a campaign orator about tint sumo tlmo ns Ingerr.oll , have never been excelled on a polltlr.il platform. Ills command nf Knglish in marvelous , when It Is remembered that ho could not speak n word nf the language until after ho was 21 years old. The defense of some great prin ciple arouses every energy nnd ovcry ncrvo fibre of his BOU ) . and at such ( lutes this red- beardedl nnd grlrzled Teuton possesses the vocabulary of Shakespeare nnd the eloquence of Kossuth , However. Mr. Schurz Is not an Impromptu speaker. Ho often devotes weeks to a single speech rewriting and pollxhliiK with tireless raic. Ho hax a splendid verbal memory , and the single reading of a speech in manuscript fixes It Indelibly In his mem ory , Tlilu year , It Is said , Mr Schurz will takn ( ho Mump. In the west III support of Major MeKlnley and the gold platform , No campaign orator U more popular with western republicans than Senator Joseph I ) . Koraker of Ohio. Ho Is nt all times n stout and unyielding p.irtl > an , and as n Btumo speaker Is fprvl-1 nnd Impr.saloncd. His style of oratory rctombleg In many re- epecU that of Senator JuMus Caesar Ilur- ro\\E nt Michigan , with this < ! I ( Terence : that wlillo Senator Fnrskrr'a speeches nro , n a rule , largely Impromptu ihr p ol Senator Furrow ere prcpirIn * advance and wllh Iho utmost cue. Rci'o jiorirnn regard the { latter as ono of the mo-t pii'Ming of Jiving ; orators. Added 11 careful preparation , ho I lias a jungiiltVetit voiro eiul his delivery IK I I'esy mid graceful. I.lko Mr Schurz , ho It 1 able to commit n cpcor-h to memory by read- IIIK It over a couple of t < m s On the othpr hand , nx-Si-nator John C. M'KINLEY THE ORATOR. Is true of General George A. Sheridan , for merly of Louisiana nnd now of New York. Sheridan , aside from signal gifts of elo quence , IB n natural wit , and of his eam imlgnlng toius many amusing stories are told. During the campaign of 1STG ho wa > . . billed to speak ouo night In n town In western Ohio , Ho was In the midst of hla ' speech , a financial ono , when a long haired man stood up In the audience nnd said : "General Sheridan. I inay bo wrong , but I would like to ask you a question. " "There are nine chances out of ten that you arc wrong , " was the general's reply , "but I will answer you.1. " ' " "What I want to ask , " continued the long-lialrod man , "Is this : Do you mean to say that If the government of the United States takes A plero of paper nnd prints on ono side of it the worda , 'This ' Is ono dollar , ' nnd under it that it I-- legal tender for nil debts , cutomn and public' ' dues , and on the bark ot It prints the I words , 'This is n dollar' do you menu I to say tlmt it docH not male It a good dollar , and as good for UKO r.s any gold or silver coin In the United BUtoa ? " Quick r.s a Hash canto the response : "My friend , I will answer your question by a-sklng you another : Suppose the gov ernment of the United St.itos should take you and stamp on your forehead the words 'Daniel Webster , ' Suppose they should pick you up nnd run' you through one of the great government printing offices nnd stump on your back In letters n foot lung , 'Daniel Webster. ' Now. would that make you a United States senator ! " I Tlio audlonco icared and laughed , end the long-haired man eat down. | As In the rr.EO of Major McKiiiley nnd the republicans , Candidate Ui'ynu stands by common concent at tl-.t- heat ! of the list of democratic campaign ur.-.tors. Mr , Ilryan wnu born an ointor , anil his great fcpccrhcii before tha Chicago convention tint in M diKon Squaio Garden prove the lofty flights of whirl : ho is capable when fully oinuNOd. Physically , ho Is n splen did gpc.clir.eii ot manhood , lurKC-cycd , brond-chontrd and full-jawed. Ills voter Is melodious nnd powerful , his nesturrs nat- j ural and gracefu' , and bin diction direct , and chAKte. Zealous and luipetuoue , lie , leaves behind him' the Impression of IID- . , Moving In what he says , hut a great ncca- , clan IK needed to rail frrth the full c-xfr- else of hla powc'n. He believes that n man , In order to make a gicat rpecwh sliorlil be antagonized , sjunp. nvU wero. to effort "Ordinary spccrhinakliwr. " he euro raid ( o me. "Is vapid ( .nd Icadtua nothing M any rate , It bores me Ufeen a miull'ior of thine * whcro two fartuaa are -liMus for n prli'tipal a thron j > r 'i M fi \v" " ntevtr It U , nud ttirrr U when * oratory sbus like n star Hut la tulk fir the eiikt * t-f tAlling Jujt lu inikn invre i-Irnsnuii-in and plu'l- tVtlrj , that U not oratory " in n thin , shrill voice' . Ills speeches are bet ter read than heard. Vest Is most effective when filling the role of critic , and the same can bo said of Senator ntackburn , who Is ono of the most brilliant Impromptu orators living , dreaded j by bin rivals In the senate or on the stump , Senator Daniel's oratory Is of the old-faBh loned flowery kind , but it Is always vigor oils and forceful , and has made him the most popular stump speaker In the south Senator Tlllman Is at his best when aroused and addressing a mlddla-class southern an dlenee. Ucforo northern auditors he seems uneasy and out of place , but on bis native heath ho piles the tomahawk nnd bowic knife with vigor and dispatch , and his or atorical search for scalps Is always a suc cessful one. The southern 6rator most pop- ujar with northern offices Is John M. Allen He is a wit , whoso humor Is of the mosl ill oil and fetching kind , and he Is an Idea ! ttory-leller. After Allen has been talking a quarter of nn hour his audience is with him , and ho fills on the stump the place formerly occupied by Tom Corwln and Sun- Bet Cox. Three of the most conspicuous advocates of democracy In former campaigns Imvo this year taKcn the stump In support of Major JU'Klnley. They arc : W. nourko Cockran , John R. Fellows and William F. Vilas. Mr. Cockran has a splendid delivery , but his ex cellence lie * more In his manner than his matter , and hU speeches sound better than they rend. Colonel Fellows is In some re- sjiectf , an abler man than Cockran , and nar rowly escapes real greatness as an orator. He Is , pciliajis , tlio nearest to a purely ex temporaneous speaker of any eastern stump BpeaKcr , His witty utterances and effective sarcasms are not the Inspiration of the mo ment. He has thought of them before and put them away in his memory , but In the ordinary sense there U no preparation. Thh Is also true of Mr , Cockran , Senator Vilas , nn the other hand , U , In a , certain sense , a nliiKlt * speech-maker , The speech with which ho begins a canvass Is practically the same with which he ends It. Different pen'/u-a may vary In arrangement and II- tnitratlon , but tbo argument and the main line of thought are tbo same. This , however , doia not detract from the charm and force of his oratory ; ou the contrary , It helps to mnku him ono of the most brilliant nnd effective campaign orators In the west , GOSSIP AIIOUT MTii > I'KOI'M * . A romantic story Is told of the wife of Thomcs E. Walton , populist poinfuve for vice president After one of tbo batthe of our civil war a rl'hly dressed baby Was found onions the dead and wounded No parents tnne to claim the child They say that / the'ami mother had perished in the strife U U not known whether they were on the northern or the southern side. Hut u touth- gJ \vlteLippkjhejclina.at their own. The years passed and the little girl grew to bo a handsome ! and cultivated woman. Then young Tom Watson , farmer , lawyer , married her , and they have- lived happily ever since. * ' Upon a certain occasion ! during his senatorial career Daniel Webster had been getting the best of a southern senator In a discussion , when his 'opponent , rising , went to the window , ami obklng out re marked , "I say , Webster } , come here n moment. A number ot yowr constituents arc passing. " Mr. Webster obeyed the sum mons , and saw a droveof mules headed In a southerly direction. "Ah7 ye , " ho replied , promptly ; "I understand1) ) ' * They are going south to tench school. " | She read the sign , "Do liot- speak to the motorman , " nnd she snldi .1 wonder why not. " Then In winsome voice1 she Inquired of that functionary , "Wh/'mustn't ono talk to the motorman ? " Ho'told her It was against the rules , "nut wh > ' Is U against the rules ? " "Because It,1 W. " "Then yon don't like to be talked tor1 "Oh , yes , but thunder ! I came within an 'nee of running down that old gent. " "Hut'I should think It would be nice to have soniebody to speak to Instead of talking to nobody nil day long. " "Lady , you arc going to stop talking , or' ' tliero Is going to be n smash-up on this line , and a big one see"The hateful thing ! And I did so want \o \ be coclnble like. Ho's married , I'll bet ; he's Just like Henry when ho's got the paper under his nose. " The Into William Henry Smith , to whom wcro left the letters and papers of Ruther ford I ) . Hayes , had completed about two- thirds of his proposed biography before death overtook him , and had left the material for the remainder so collated and arranged that his son , Mr. Delevan Smith , and his son-in-law , Mr. Charlts R. Williams , will bo able to take It up nnd complete It In accordance with his original plan. The completed part Is left In manuscript , ready for the printers. The scope of the worlc had been so widened as to make It a much larger contribution to the history of the country than a mcro life of General Hayes , nnd Mr. Smith's previous , publications ot this kind give assurance of capable and con scientious . wor- r " . ? Dr. Pajot , the great French accoucheur , who has just passed away , was about as famous for his wit as his professional skill. Indeed , bU talent for epigram rather hindered his social success and certainly caused his exclusion from thd academy. Tn1rtf tt.ntil.l linrrllv linvn .lipnn n T.Vnnpll- man had he not Indulged la'sarcasm against la belle mere. "As soon as a child Is born , " ho used to tell his class , "lay.It on a table , and not on a chair. If you neglect this hint your patient's heavy mother Is safe to come in and" sit upon It. " Ilesldcs the swarm of fellow creatures whom he ushered Into the world Pajot prevented sixteen des perate mortals from Voluntarily quitting It. A keen angler , he vns woit ) to spend his nights In a bent under Pont Marie , where would-be suicides often Interrupted his sport. For his life-saving exploits he was nick named by Tardleu "The Newfoundland dog ot the faculty. " When the late Sir John Mlllals was In the Scottish mountains , making studies for Ills "Chill October , " a braw Scotsman came up to him , and , watching him. as lie" painted , asked : "Man , did ye never try photog raphy ? " "No. never , " answered Mlllals. "It's a deal quicker , " continued the braw Scotsman. "Yes , I suppose'so , " admitted Mlllals. "And , " wound up the braxr Scots man , " 'tis a deal llker the place. " Ono day Thomas Carlyle --went .With Mlllals to look at the latter's house , and , after gazing with wonder at all Its spleridprs , Its marble pavementsi Its -white imiVble'columns , Us stately staircase and beautiful' ' daiTost 'Re" turned to Mlllala and asked , In his brusque manner : "Has paint doVe all this , Mr. Mlllals ? " The painter laiiglied and replied : "It has. " "Then , " rejoined the dweller In the modest house at Cholsl > 'ac"all I ha-io to say Is there are more fo"ols > in the world than I thought there were- ! The retirement from th\ - army of Major George E. Robinson brings : to mind the Incident which led to his advancement. He had enlisted as a private-'during the war and wns soon afterward tran-ifcrred to the hospital corps stationed' it' Washington. Secretary Stanton had been thiov.-n from his carriage , nnd , needing the , services of a professional nurse , Robinon * wcs assigned to look after him. On thd u.ifue night that Booth assassinated Lincoln.Payne madb an attempt to take Stanton's Ili'e. .Robinson was In the roam and seized ; tie assassin ns he was attacking the secre'tarj. Had It not been for Robinson's prompt services Mr. Stanton might have been kilted. Congress gave him n gold medal , and , when Hayes became president he was made a major and paymaster In the United States army. SOMI2 ( ) I.I-'I'IJIiHS. Field Marshal Count von Blumenthal. at 80. has started on a long tour of Sweden and Norway. Candidate Ilryan has n great-grandmother , a well-preserved old lady In her 35th year , who lives In Now London , Ind. Robert Spp ! , the violin teacher of Richard Wagner , who Is now 90 yiars of age , was present at this summer's performances at Mrs. Longcrman of North Adams , Mass. , S3 years old , on a visit to Whltlnghnm. Vt. , recognized A horse which she had sold as a colt twenty-five years before. Amerlcus Symmes , 83 years old , has Just died at Louisville , Ky , lie was a son of John Clevo Synunes , who wan an Arctic explorer and maintained tlfat the world was hollow and tho'entranco to the Interior could be found at the poles. George W. Dunn , an octo'penarlan natural ist oj California , who hag been there slnco 1849 , Is making a collection of the butter flies of the Pacific slope forl3aron ! do Roths child , to bo added to the baron's entomologi cal museum at Trig , Englkpd. Mme. Slniounet , whose nkfl of 103 years and 5 months is well authenticated. Is the oldest poison In Paris. She was born In 1793 In Paris , and has always' ifved there. Her memory is very good , and .she likes to talk of Napoleon , Josephine , Louis XVIII and the other great people she saw when she was a girl. Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Columbus Shaw of Mllford , N. H. celebrated their golden wedding recently. Mr , Shaw is the presi dent of the New Hampshire Horticultural society and of the Veteran Spiritualists' association of America. Ho is a Mason of high degree , and a prominent member of the New Hampshire Grange , Patrons of Hus bandry , A , H. Jones of Newmsn'county , Georgia , Is 72 years old , hns a wife to support nnd only has ono arm with which to work. Ho owns a little homo of twenty-seven acres , all Uplands , nnd yet on this ho is making a good living. Ho raises no" cotton , but has an abundance of corn' , meat nnd the usual farm supplies. Ho Is independent and out of debt. - I Martin fiarra , theoldest voter In Cali fornia , Is 104 years old ; find lives In a country homo In the beautiful valley of Santa Clara. For the irnst sixteen years ho has lived In this gardeb spot of the golden state In a small' ' f tfUi surrounded by a grove of oak trees. lid earns his llv Ini : by chopping wood , and In this occu pation ho Is assisted by U'O partners , the junior nf whom Is more than 70 years aid. Uarra 1s a native of Qulib Cblll. . Ai\ful sirVia. Indianapolis Journal : . T-ho-fcur champion prlzo lighters of the world came out on tho- utage , bowed toIho audlhfce as they wcro Introduced , took their s ktv , and the great battle was oa. Tliu silence was awful. At the end of one minute ono champion had fallen to rise no more. Then dropped another and another , and at the expiration of six minutes more but one remained There was u light of triumph in tils eyes , bat the sweat was pouring down bU fuco and every limb was trembling. Hut ho had won Ho bad remained silent ( or sown lulnutt- MACHINERY OF A CAMPAIGN Process of Manufacturing Sentiment and Stirring Up Enthusiasm. NEW YORK REPUBLICAN HEADQUARTERS The Chief HiiKliiecrn nn Tlicy .Vpiienr t Their null- Work .lii ItiK SUOIICM ami I'lulur- v i-nitiiu YlxitorN. ( CoiiyrlRht , 1S9C , by S. S. AfcClurc Company. ) NEW YORK. Sep. 3. There Is probably no ptcco of mechanism that requires such careful poise , such nicety in handling , and such close attention as the central national organization of a great political party. It is welded together from a thousand diverse parts ; it consists of wheels within wheels , and the task of keeping all these parts work * Ing in harmony , of making the wheels re volve at once and In the same direction , requires not only a master mind to direct them , but able lieutenants to carry out his orders. Thuro must be no friction , and , above all , there must be no mistakes , for in a political campaign a mistake once made Is often Impossible to remedy. To one who pictures the political ma chine from the result It produces the first sight Is apt to bo disappointing. The re publican national campaign committee oc cupies eighteen rooms In the big white build ing of the Metropolitan Life association , which stands in Madison square , close to the eddying whirl of the center of tliu great city's life. The rooms resemble tbo olllces fused ; he considers the suggestion of this politician or that for the conduct of the campaign In some particular state or sec tion ; and ho Is In constant communica tion with the absent members of the committee. Ilcsldcs his desk Is a long distance tance- telephone giving direct connection with the Chicago headquarters and reports are exchanged between the two places once or more every day. Tlih Is enough to keep any ono busy , but It Is only a part of Gen eral Osborno's work. Ho receives hundreds of callers , listens patiently to their sugges tions and tries to send them all away nails- fled. Ho succeeds pretty well , too , and the man who wants to be placed in charge of the campaign In his section or to have the com mittee take up some pretty scheme that liu lias devised goes away smiling happily over the memory of the secretary's cordial hand clasp nnd the secretary's cheerful words , forgetting , until he Is well outside the buildIng - Ing at least , that so far as the advancement of his cause Is concerned he Is exactly whcro ho was before , so far as can bo ascertained. The chairman of the committee divides his time between the Now York and Chicago headquarters , and In his absence- most of his duties devolve upon the secretary. TUB TIDE OF VISITORS. While the secretary has been looking over the morning's mall his associates have come In and the crowd of visitors has begun to arrive , This ceaseless tide of callers tlmt Hews up and down tliu long halls all day long Is made up of alt sorts and renditions. It reaches the Hood early In the afternoon and does not ebb away till the end of the day. There are politicians from everywhere and nowhere , here a congressman from Oro- { on , and there a heeler from the Eighth ward ; there are men with largo schemes to make republican success certain If they 'all hero they will go over to the democratic Headquarters ; there are lean and hungry Individuals and fat persons wreathed In smiles and bathed In pcrspliatlon ; tliero are orators , male and female , white , colored and nondescript ; there- are fakirs great and small , agents , peddlers and bunco men ; there are women whose husbands or fathers belonged to the party ; there are newspaper men. messengers and scrub women ; the sombrero of the Texan brushes against the shiny nllk hat of the eastern senator ; ( he vagrant breeze that wanders In at the win dow sighs through the almost populstU | > whiskers of the man from Kansas and tans the smooth-shaven cheek of his fellow re publican from Maine , the picturesque dress . of the southerner Is side by sldo with the conventional garb of the New York financier It Is an Ill-assorted crowd alike In thla thing only , that nine out of every ten have sonic scheme to extract money from the sup posedly exuaustless store of the campaign committee. THE CALM OK STORMS. The tide breaks about Colonel Storms , the sergeant-at-ariiiH of the national committee. Tall , erect , handsome , suave anil graceful lu iiiatiner , he keep * bis post ail day , re ceives everybody , talks with everybody passes that one along to the proper person for him to see. dismisses this ono with ft pleasant "Good-day" and a courtly wa\o of the hand His task Is a most trying one , but his temper 1ms been tried by every form of an noyance In successive campaigns and noth ing can move him now. A man came Into the office today with dandruff on his coal collar and dust on his eye-glasses ; there was excitement In his eye , and ho came to the point at once. "I'm from Turple , Ind. , " ho said , "and 1 want the national committee to let me havt $100.000 to start a newspaper there. It wll bo a great thing for the cause. Like tin , stone of David , the truth phAll smite the Goliath of " / , ' , " 1 am very sorry , " said-ho ( colonel , his voice full of regret , "but Just at present Ihe financial condition of the committee doesn't warrant such a largo expenditure. I trust however , that you will continue to labsr zealously for the cause. " And the man from Turplo , Hid. , found himself moving to ward the door before ho realized what hai happened. A woman was waiting for the colonel when he returned , "I Imvo here a letter for Mr. Hanna ; m > husband was n republican ; ho used to be postmaster at Speonk ; I wish that you wouli give my daughter a place as typewriter can't you ? " The colonel's voice was full of tears as ho assured the woman that at present no addition to the clerical force would be made. A llttlo later there was an Invasion o men with Ideas for campaign devices. One man bore a papier macho elephant with thi. word "Gold" lettered on his side , "Very latest thing , " ho began ; "the com mittee should order 10,000 of them at once. ' "Excellent thing , " said the colonel , "but you see wo are not purchasing campalgi emblems now ; wo lenVo that to the clubs. ' A MUSEUM. The room occupied by Colonel Storms Is COR.irJLIUS N. BLISS. GENERAL CLAYTON. MARK HANNA. SECRETARY OSBORNE. of a big corporation more than anything else. There Is nothing of the atmosphere of Intense excitement that characterizes the nominating convention1'or the high strung enthusiasm of the political meeting. There Is less noise and more business. Only when the work of the day is well under way , when the managers are at their desks , and the long procession of visitors begins to arrive , is added the clement of picturesque that makes the scene full of Interest. BEGINNING OPERATIONS. The day begins early at the political head quarters. Hy eight o'clock the rooms are cpcn , the attendants are on post , and the clerks and assistants have begun to arrive. Half an hour later the heads of the vari ous departments begin to come in. The first arrival Is a solidly built man who wears a blue suit and n somewhat battered straw hat. His gray beard Is closely trimmed and his blue eyes have a pleasant look In them as he speaks to his assistants. He Is deliberate , oven slow , of. motion , but when ho situ down at his desk this air of deliberation disappears and he goes rapidly through the work before him. For half an hour the two assistants have been sorting over a hugh pile of mall that covers a table at one end of the room and now they place a big stack of letters before the gray-bearded man , who sits down at the desk and pitches Into the work without stopping to take off his hat. lie Is General Osborne , the secre tary of the national committee and the man who , after the chairman. Is dik-fly responsi ble for the conduct of its affairs. From 500 to 800 letters are received and answered every day at the headquarters and the ma jority of these come directly to the atten tion of General Osborne. He decides whether the appeal of the county or state committee In OHhkoah shall ho submitted to the executive committee or politely re- the museum of the headquarters. It is filled with specimens of n | | kinds of campaign devices left there by th'eso .visitors. The elephant referred to above Is the latest addi tion to the collection. He stands proudly on the top of a desk with a tuft of rod , white and biuo feathers sticking from his trunk and looking like an animated feather duster. On the walls are hung a great number of pictures of .McKlnley and Hobart , In which they are represented as belonging to every nationality from Scandinavian to Hottentot. The most Interesting of these alleged portraits traits are a couple In which the noble fea tures of the republican candidates arc stamped upon American tin. Against the wall stands a huge oil painting of Major McKInley - loy which Is a wonder In its way. The candi date Is pictured standing In the attitude affected by cigar store Indians and others of that Ilk. Ills right arm outstretched sup ports the American standard , the folds of which float gracefully behind him. On the other sldo of Mr. McKlnley Is a curious looking bird , which strongly resembles the molting crow , but which Is in reality In tended to represent the great American eagle. These arc but a few of the exhibits which Include campaign buttons , badges and emblems In the greatest variety. A few doors down the hall Is the room whcro the campaign orators congregate ; this Is the headquarters of General Powell Clayton of Arkansas , who has charge of UK , bureau of tlio speakers. General Clayton comes from a hot state , but tliero Is noth ing sluggish about his methods of doing business , and ho puts in longer hours than anybody clbe about the headquarters. He orrpules a very trying position , for the natural eagerness of each state committee to secure tlio most brilliant orators makes the assignment of speakers a ill III cult task , and he Is overrun with applicants who want to expound republican doctrines at the expense penseof the committee. Of late tliero has been a great influx of boy orators. The lat- ' st applicant was an 11-year-old , whoso parents had brought him from a small vil lage up the Hudson to display his poworn. "This Is " said the father. " my son , . "He A TALKING WONDER. can glvo Ilryan cards and spades and heal him on the stump. " "He's n regular wonder , " broke in the mother. "You should hoar him speak 'Kos- czlosko. ' Henry , speak 'Koscilosko' tor the gentleman. " Henry began in a shrill , piping voice that would Jiavo been us effective as a puiuy whistle in addressing apolitical meet ing. The general controlled his emotion ns wall as ho could , and explained that It wouldn't bo giving the opposition candidate a fair show to pit such oratorical ability as Henry's nenlnst him. Next door to General Claytnn Is the room of National Commlttconian ficott of West Virginia , who represents the committee in its relations with the state and other sub committees. Politicians of inorti or lesa note from every part of the union are to hn found here , talking over tlio progress of the campalftn In thnlr own sections , and the room Is Iho HceVd of almost rnnslnnt consultation. It Is In fact the anti-room to the quarters of the chairman. This Is thy corner room , the largest and pleusantcst of all , and suggests Itself as the keystone- the series. It Is occupied only by Mr. Ilannn and Mr. Hobart , the candidate for viceprcbMimt , who takes an active part In the wanaijnmcnt of the campaign and is In almost dally attendance at the headquarters. Thin room Is the goal of almost every caller at the headquarters. They all want to sen Mr. Hanna , but very few of them really get to bee him. They are carefully sifted as they pass along the line nnd a colored man stands at the door of the corner room to guard against Intrusion. Even with this careIho occupant of the joom is kept busy receiving single callers or visiting delegations. delegations.WHEN WHEN HANNA COMES. When Mr. Hanna IH in New York ho us ually spends his mornings In receiving cal lers at the Hotel Waldorf and arrives at the headquarters about noon. There arc always several men awaiting him and his anlval causes n i > niall buzz of excitement. There uro whispers of "That's him , " "See , that's ' Hanna , " as the great man maid's his way through Iho walling throng , pausing only to speak to those ulth whom ho la ac quainted.- goes at once to his own room .qji.d as soon as liu Is settled behind the heavy oak ilei.lt In the heavy opk Jialr which ho easily fills , ho Is toady ( Of business Mr. Manna's manner In dc-allng\Ylth the quts- tloiib that como before Iilt/i / for dt-ciidou Is sharp nnd dpclslve , but always pleasant Ho kccpfi lilmtclt In a cheerful frame of mind , and though not * . hujnornus man , ho can appreciate- good joke nnd frwjuently gets oil a wlltlrlim of bit * own. It Is thv politician' biibtneus to smile , but Mr. Datum's smile * seem to coma from Inherent good nature. What chiefly Impresses onu about the man who controls the political sit uation today so far as the republican party Is concerned , Is the fact that he Is at alt times master of the situation. The some what heavy Jnw and Iho firm lines of tho. mouth tell of the love of power and the nbll- Ity to wield It. This Is Indeed the key note of Mr. Hanna's character ! ho Is master , ful. He tr a unique figure In contemporary politics and would be Impossibleoutside of America. With the arrival of the chairman the busi ness of the day Is lu full swing. In n sulto of three rooms , not far from Mr. Hnnna's , the national treasurer , Mr. Cornelius N. Ullss. Is onconced. The management of- the financial end of the national campaign Is far from being Us least Important part. To the minds of many politicians It over shadows nil others. Hut the work of tho- treasurer Is done very quietly. His consulta tions arc usually held with men who talk \ery little , but very much to the point , or with the chairman himself. The manage ment of the- campaign finances lies almost entirely with these two men , and llttlo Is known about them to anybody else. As the afternoon wears on the executive- committee Is called Into session In a small room adjoining that of the chairman , There the whole political situation Is discussed AS It develops from day to day. nnd the commit tee's plan of action Is outlined. They form an Impiesslve group , thiso men , ns they gather about the table tn discuss the meas ures that may mean so much to their party and to the country , but In appearance they me business men rather than typical poli ticians. They might bo the directors of a great railway with Ilobart , sitting one side , saying little , but listening with keen Inter est to everything that goes on , for their counsel. CLOSING OF A DAY. With the conclusion of the meeting of tlio executive committee the work of the day begins to draw toward Its close. Letters are sent out , decisions on points that wcro In abeyance are announced and the various departments prepare for the close of busi ness. Hut there Is ono department in which Iho activity never lags from the be ginning to the close of the day. That Is the publication bureau. H Is In chnrgo ot Guthrldge , a former Washington correspond ent , and Is a branch of the main publication bureau which Is located In Chicago , and la In charge of Colonel Heiith. From thcso publication bureaus campaign literature Is sent out by the ton , wlillo fresh pamphlets. Intended to convince the voter , are all the tlmo In preparation. From here the "cam paign of education" Is carried nn , and It Is nn unusually Important department this year. "It ! s almost Incredible'said , Mr. Guth- itdgc , "the demand for campaign literature. We hnvc been utterly unable to meet It thus far. Already forty different pamphlets , most ot them dealing with the money question , have been prepared and 30.000,000 copies ot thum are to bo printed. From present Indi cations that won't be a bit too much. " There Is no regular closing hour at the republican headquarters. With the coming of G o'clock most of the visitors depart ; ono by ono the hands of the various departments and their numerous assistants follow. Finally two colored men come down bearing between them a largo sack filled v. llh the mall which has accumulated during the day. The loiters ters go forth all over the lend bearing the Cold orders of the commanders to the great army that Is at work In every part of the country for the success of their parties' ? r.usc. The two colored men are the lost to leave ) j the building except one. The elevator man * ' who runs the special lift retained for the service of the republican managers waits In Impatience and finally locks the elevator shaft ' and goes home. Still the man upstairs In 'tho corner room sits alone In his heavy oak chair behind the heavy oak desk , think ing , possibly , of tjio splendid structure ho has built tip , looking perhaps Into the fu- tuie. perhaps Into the past , but btlll sitting there while Iho twinkling lights como out along the streets nnd the great city under goes Its nightly transformation from a work shop to a play ground. At last ho rises , puts on his hnt nnd walks slowly down the stairs the last to leave the building. _ _ _ _ B. W. MAYO. sir A.M ) .mi. k TV. T. Lnrncil In New York Sun. Me nn1 Jim Jen' kinder ngrco ; I stick by him nn' he sticks by me. Never wns much thet I csuld do. Hut Homehow 'r other be sex me through. . Never did talk mlieli , nfore or sencc , , / 'Hout It , but there's u coincidence , Somehow 'r other cnn't Jc-j' mnko out- Tlmt brlngH him 'roun' ' when there's trouble about. SLots / Lots o1 others thet like nm , too , Hard to say what they wouldn't do ; Hnrd to say whnt they wouldn't shnrt When there WUH plenty uncl some to Hpnre. But , somehow 'r other , when you're barfy Seems' they don't happen to hear of It. ' An' there wns n woman once , nn' she Kinder believed that she kcercd for me ; 'Lowed thet she loved me b coz we'd ben Coin1 together uo loim ; Lut when PlanH worn n'mnkln' to KO through life Settled nn' cany as man u.V wllu , Suddenly foiin' thet sbo'd rather go 'Long with another she didn't Know. So , It set mo to Htmlyln' : Love is mennt Kor thum us don't meet with no accident ) Or mebbo thorn n ken rlcV : nn' choose In the crowd whcro thcj'vo t'ot no frlenuj to lose. While the feelln' n rnnn linn for n man Don't fool Itself with u bettor plan , Or come to grief through n Ihlnkln * spell * Thet we're too much aillco to mateh right well. 4/ An1 thet's the ronson thet I purpose To tic to Jim to tbo very clone. Fact o' the rnnttcr , wo're fond o' him , 'Coz you know you can always count ov Jlrn. ' There nro at present thirteen Unltarlam churches in Iowa , as against seven four years ago , The African Methodist Episcopal church requires every preacher In the annual con- Terence to subscribe and pay for a cliurcJ * [ mprr befon his character can be passed , On a recent Sunday In a church In Dublin Ihe choir was startled during the singing of : lie psalm by the appearance of the organ blower's ficad. who shouted out ; "Sing lllto ja/cs | ; the bellows Is butted ! " liev. Mr. Adarhl , a Japanese student la VandoiblR university , preached In Memphis , renn. , last Sunday. Ills command of English s gnod and hn held the eloko attention of a argo congregation In ono of the leading Methodist churches. The Missionary HaptUt Church association , of southern and western Kentucky at Dan ville lost v.'cclt passed resolutions coiiileinna- ory of Dr. Whltectt of Louisville , declaring hat ho "was guilty of heresy In stating and icllovlng that for some years Immersion , vas a lost art In Knt'lnnd. " All the land on which ancient Babylon once stood , where the Jews wcro held In exile , whcro Daniel was cast Into the lions' Icn nd the "Hebrew children" > were- cast ute ( ho fiery furnace , has lately como by mrcbaso Into the hands of two Hebrews , vhlch leads the Presbyterian Review to com ment upon the wonderful pemlstrnco of tlio lewlEU race , which has outlived Us con querors nnd oppretsura of theuges past. A clergyman named Robertson of Qlas- ; ow , Scotland , is mippblng the pulpit ot 'remont temple , liottou , during l > r , Lorl- mer's absence , A Dontnii paper quotes him as expressing some nil her extraordinary leuu , Unitarians , ho Is represented a ylue , are outside the pain of Christianity ml would not be tolerated In Scotland , Ha opposed to the Institutional church and egards U as evldcn"e that Christianity la tip Tutted States has KOIIO to seed. Ha hlnkn that the time U rot far distant when ho star * nnd strlpa will bo greeted wltU bUsc * and dcrjsloa lit the strtcuU ot Boston.