SS3 ' JV& &?g&zias ?$mmmw' u THE COURIER PEGGY BATON'S ORDEAL. Continued. Washington has alwads been noted for tho scandals set afloat by gossiping tongues. The leaders of its upper society were by no means exempt from this weakness. Reports affecting the character of Mrs. Eaton were started. As is usual, they gathered in their progress many fresh additions. Indiscretions of which little was thought at the time, were magnified into criminal acts. Timberlake, it was well known, was an intemperate man when he married her. It was also known that he had, after his marriage, lost large sums of money at play while under the influence of liquor. But notwithstanding these things it was reported that her extrava gance had forced Timberlake to becomo a large defaulter to the government, and that her gross improprieties as a wife had driven him to drink and finally to suicide. These reports spread with amazing rapidity, and among all ranks of society. The men laughed and ridiculed them. The women generally believed them. She could not go out on the street without meeting the stare of impudent curiosity. If she went to church women would draw away from her as though contamination would follow the touch of her garments. The wives of other cabinet officers knew little or nothing of Mrs. Eaton nntil after they came to Washington. The stories told them by the society leaders had their effect. They assumed a , hostile attitude toward Mrs. Eaton, ceased to recognize her, and if 'they could avoid it would not sit next to her at presidential dinners or other parties. The wives of foreign ministers were in like manner approached, and they too were persuaded to re gard her with abhorrence. One of them created great disturb ance at a dinner party by refusing to Bit next to her at the table. 'These ladies of gentle blood had done all that they could to hu miliate and make miserable the life of Mrs. Eaton. They had blasted her reputation as a woman; they had turned the great body of her sex against her and made her the object of aversion and contempt, but their triumph would not be complete unless they could have the doors of the president's house shut in her face. Mrs. Donelson was the mistress of the White house. She was the wife of Major A. J. Donelsou, a nephew of Mrs. Jackson, had been raised by Jackson, and who was his private secre tary. She could not doubt the truth of the stories constantly rung in her ears by ladies of first standing in Washington. She believed Mrs. Eaton to be bad in nearly every sense. She told Jackson she would receive Mrs. Eaton when she came to the pres ident's house, but that she would not otherwise recognize her nor return her calls. To all the remonstrances of Jackson, whose faith in the innocence of Mrs. Eaton was immovable, she turned a deaf ear. JacKson, in the presence of ladies, was one of the most courteous of men. When he believed a woman to be wronged he was one of the most chivalrous. He could not tolerate indignity to Mrs. Eaton from the female head of his own household. Finding that he could not overcome the in- ' fluences that had been brought to bear on Mrs. Donelson or shake her resolution, he said to her in the gentlest manner: 'My dear, then you had better return to Tennessee." She and her husband went back to their old home, but re turned and resumed their former places a few months later, when the disturbance was over. Jackson had a pew in the Presbyterian church at Washing ton, and was on friendly terms with the Rev. Mr. Campbell, its pastor. To him these ladies came with their charges against "Mrs. 2aton. They urged him to see and talk with the presi dent on the matter, but the pastor shrunk from the task. The Rev. Dr. Ely, a Presbyterian "clergyman, was in Phila delphia. It was known that he and Jackson had been warm friends for many years. In his desire to oblige the ladies, Mr. Campdell wrote to Dr. Ely, recounting all the stories he had heard about Mrs. Eaton and vouching for the high standing of the ladies from whom these stories had come, and begged him to write to Jackson on the subject. The good old doctor, who knew nothing of Mrs. Eaton except what he had heard through the letter of Campbell, was shocked at liis statements; and at once wrote to the president. The fiagarant acts of immorality of which Mrs. Eaton was guilty, he for some time smoothed over, to the woman, cabinet ladies, said, were notorious in Washington, and that tho ladies of Wash ington would not and could not recognize a woman of her disso lute character. In concluding ho implored Jackson, in the memory of his dead wife and for tho honor of his administra tion, to withhold all countenance from Mrs. Eaton in the fu ture. Jackson had known the O'Neale family for many years, and on coming o Washington had always made his home, at O'Neale hotel. Mrs. Jackson in her lifetime had usually camo with him on these trips, and had shown great fondness for Mrs. Timber lake and her children. Jackson at once answered Dr. Ely. Hi j vindication of Mrs. Eaton was complete. He showed the utter improbability of the stories against her, referred to his long acquaintance with the O'Neale family, and to the interest Mrs. Jackson had taken in Mrs. Timberlake and her little family, and said he had no doubt that these stories were the inven tions of political enemies. Troubles had been brewing in tho cabinet from other causes, but they might have been The war upon Mrs. Eaton, originally confined made itself felt in the cabinet councils. The through the influence of the local society leaders, were resolute in their determination not to recognize Mrs. Eaton, and their husbands dutifully submitted. The etiquette of the White house is different from "that of a pri vate house. The president is expected to ,jive state dinners and public receptions, to which the cabinet officers and their wives are at times invited, and their attendance expected. Jackson would not quietly sit down and see a woman whom he believed to be the victim of unjust prosecution exposed to insult by guests whom h e had invited. He could not degrade the wife of one of his own cabinet by excluding hei from the White house and thus give the color of truth to tho charges he believed to be false and malicious. The obduracy of the cabinet ladies and its effect upon their husbands brought matters to a climax. The harmony of the cabinet was destroyed, and necessity for its re organization was apparent. They all resigned within short intervals of each other, except Ingham, who was secretary of the treasury, who seemed disposed to stay. Mrs. Ingham had been particularly outspoken against Mrs. Eaton, and had treated her more oppressively than any of the others. After waiting a proper length of time Jackson sent for Ingham and asked why he had not resigned as the others had done. Ingham stammered out that he did not think that he ought to resign because of a quarrel among women. His resignation came the next day. The resignation of the entire cabinet within so short a period after its appointment was something new, and public curiosity was naturally aroused as to what caused it. The Peggy Eaton imbroglio with all its circumstances was published in tho news papers all over the country, varied of course to suit tho political complexion of the paper publishing it. It became the subject of editorial comment, of stump oratory and personal gossip. The name of Mrs. Eaton became known in every honsehold, and she found herself suddenly lifted into fame. Other causes were as signed to the retiring ministers for their resignation but the people very generally believed that the real cause lay in the Eaton trou bles. Jackson, on Eaton's resignation immediately appointed him gov ernor of the then territory of Florida, and soon after sent him as minister to Spain. Here he remained until after the close of VanBuren's administration, when he and Mrs. Eaton came back and for some time made their home in Washington. This of course recalled the gossip of former years. But Mrs. Eaton had given no room for talk when abroad nor any after her return. In the mean time public sentiment had among her own sex re acted in her favor. The current of opinion was that her sudden elevation in the placo where she grew up from an humble posi tion to a superior social rank as the wife of a cabinet minister, had aroused wrath, and was the real cause for the savage onslaught made on her by the female aristocracy of Washington. Mrs. Eaton did not bear meekly the scorn that was heaped upon her. She returned it with interest, and said many bitter and cut ting things against the ladies arrayed- against her. These things were duly -reported, with the usual exaggerations, and made mat ters worse. They had, it is true, destroyed all pleasure to her in her new position, but she was full of fight to the last. She would not allow her husband to resign while his wife was under fire. ;S X y V VJ .?