THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND. MAY 5, 1907. Wlfi Tiff IF Hi;' 11 HiiUy ORE THAN TWO SCORE ARE LIVING AND ALL ARE DO ING VERY WELL! THANK YOU JOHA?Z. -LOVGj JWVNLZyj SECRETARY Or TfiEWAVy THERE are nearly 40 mm now living, but not at present In the Cabinet, , who have been official adiisers of the Chief Executive, and every one of them Is doing well. There are three "cx-Secretar!es"' of State, four of the Treasury, five of War, Jeven of the Interior, eight of the Navy, one of Agriculture, two of Commerce and Labor, eight ex-Postmaster-Generals. These figures added make 46. but some of 'he "exes" have served In more than one Cabinet place, while four. Root, Cortel Vou, Metcalf and Bonaparte are still Cabinet members. The oldest of them all, Norman i. Col man, first man to serve as Secretary of Abriculture. is SO. The youngest, Paul Morton, second of Roosevelt's five naval heads to date, is ."0. George B. Cortel you, now Secretary of the Treasury, is five years younger than Morton. The repartment of Agriculture was es tablished Just before the end of Cleve land's first term. Colman had been Commissioner of Agriculture and was made Secretary, but, of course, was dis placed after Harrison's Inauguration. A York State boy was educated in' the "little red schoolhouse." At 20 he started West, reaching St. Louis five years later, having tarried In Kentucky, where he taught school 'and was admitted to the bar, and In Indiana, where he practiced law and served as District Attorney at New Albany. At St. Louis he went into agricultural Journalism, through which he became an agricultural leader in the West. When the Civil War came he was made a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Enrolled State Militia. He has filled many high Places, Including the Lieutenant-Governor's chair, and possesses a French decs ration because of his services to agri culture. Mr. Colman is still In active life in St. Louis. Paul Morton as chairman of the Equitablo's board of trustees, Thomas F. Ryan's right-hand man in insurance never was in public life before he be came a Secretary and has not been since. He was born in Detroit, and his father was Secretary of Agriculture during Cleveland's second term. Paul's career from the bottom to the top In railroading 'tis said he began as clerk at 36 a month, and wound up at JBfi.OOO a year was one of the romances of success we read about. It was Morton who posted Roosevelt on the details of railroading ii nd so made It possible to get the rate bill through Congress. Picturesque Naval Secretaries. The majority of the eight surviving Naval Secretaries have been picturesque entities. The latest, to leave the Depart ment, Charles Joseph Bonaparte. Attorney-General at 56. descended from a King, but American born and Intensely loyal to the land of his birth, yields to few 1n that respect. William Eaton Chandler. Arthur's Naval head, approaches the limit for audacity and courage. He is a Harvard law school graduate and now is prac ticing law In Washington and Concord, his birthplace and present home. As chief counsel In the suit to have the prop erty of Mary Baker Eddy. Christian Sci ence head, placed in a receiver's hands, he Is specially prominent Just now. He was a big factor in the rows accompany ing the rate bill's passage. Being a friend of both Senator Tillman and the Presi dent he was right In it and he uttered his full share of the language generated during that episode. Chandler is 70. He was in the United States Senate from 1SS7 to 1901. Since then he has been president of the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission at Washington. The Ufa of, Benjamin Franklin Tracy, who served under Harrison, has been full of contrast. At .77 he Is an active New York lawyer. He followed Whitney in the department and was a tremendous force in the Navy's rejuvenation. He was schooled in the village academy at Owego, N. Y., where he was born. He helped to organize the Republican party In the state: he raised two regiments when the war broke out. and was made Colonel of the One Hundred and Ninth New York Volunteers. He won the medal of honor for gallantry and was bre vetted a Brigadier-General. Then he set tled in Brooklyn, where he became "Uni ted States District Attorney and later Judge of the New York Court of Appeals, highest state tribnnal. and for years was state Republican leader. His services in formulating the internal revenue laws so that a maximum amount is collected ' at a minimum expense were of great value. At one time his farm near Owego was famous for its fine horses, cattle, poultry and pigs. He is still proud of a tribute to his agricultural standing reported by .a New York friend. This friend told an Owego farmer that General Tracy was one of the country's greatest men. "Ya-as," drawled the agriculturist, "I guess Tracy's the biggest hog man in the huM coboodler One of the most convincing of mod ern advocates. General Tracy has not often been really eloquent, but his op ening address as chief counsel for the defense in the famous Beecher-Tilton trial was a gem of eloquence. It was Issued in book form after delivery and 50,000 copies were sold. The great est grief in Tracy's life came when his Washington home burned down and his wife and daughter perished In the fire. Since leaving the Cabinet, he has stufck Dtctly dnse to . Ms cxoXession. though he served as president of the commission which drafted the charter of the "Greater" New York in 1898, and he ran for Mayor of New York, but was badly defeated by Van Wyck, Tam many candidate, in .a three-cornered contest. ' Seth Low, the Citizens' Union champion, being third contestant When Secretary of the Treasury Windom died at a New York Board of Trade dinner, in 1891, he fell into Tracy's arms. William Henry Moody, 64, a native of Massachusetts, like Roosevelt, a Har vard man, and now a member of the United States Supreme Court, is one of comparatively few wno has served in two Cabinet positions. Roosevelt ap pointed him both to the Attorney-Generalship and the Navy Department. Moody's predecessor under McKinley, John Davis Long, also of Massachus etts man, had Roosevelt for his assis tant Just before the Spanish War, and there was more or less friction between them until Roosevelt's . resignation to Join the Rough Riders. Long is be tween 68 and 68. He held several State offices, including the Governorship, be for going to Washington as a Repre sentative In 1883. He was born in ( Maine, got his degree at Harvard and lives at Hingham, near Boston. The bulk of his very heavy lawN practice has always been in the Bay State capi tal. Hillary Abner Herbert, who held the post during Cleveland's second term. I South Carolinian by birth, but Alabama bred, and a Confederate officer m the the Civil War, is practicing law In Washington at 73. At 64 Nathan Goff. Naval Secretary under Hayes, is a United States Circuit Judge, living at Clarksburg, W. Va.r the place of his birth. Richard Olney, at 71. one of the fore- t.J l - - I I f f?- I I :FS7 ' " feJ 7"4 t. . r.. . ... ,lWll,-Mt. ,.r1 - ii i mi' ' i i mi i i 'nil' f liiiinii Mill I II Mi ' I .;'; , V i I I"-- v' $ .I k' ; f V 't - ( j " r ,r i ' GA7ZrELLT5 SCy or SAR, V j J ' '' x ' N ' J I 5cz77ijzy or ttzra&r frcicocK most legal lights in Boston, where he , was on the down-hill road, Day fully him, and was hade head of the depart ment when Sherman resigned. Day re signed at the close of the war, but served as chairman for the United lives on Commonwealth avenue. Is one of the best-known surviving Secre taries of State. He served in Cleve land's second term, and made the greater part of his reputation by the audacity with which he upheld the Monroe Doctrine In the mid-nineties, when England was preparing to force certain claims against Venezuela. At least, it always has been supposed by the public that he wrote the Presi dent's famous message to 'Congress an nouncing that this Republic would not allow the landing of an armed Euro pean force on any part of the Western continent without making every pos sible effort to prevent it. William Rufus Day, who succeeeded John Sherman, is now a Justice of the Supreme Court. He is 58, slight, also retiring and silent unless he is wit nessing a baseball game. Called to Washington by McKinley in the midst of the perplexing Incident to the be ginning of the Spanish War to be Sherman's assistant, when tha 1 alter States on the Paris Commission which fixed the terms of the treaty of peace with' Spain. McKinley made Day a Cir cuit Judge. In 1903 Roosevelt put him in his present place. The third surviving Secretary of State. John Watson Foster, is possi bly the most famous American inter national lawyer. He was appointed to the state portfolio by Harrison, in 1892. soon after the Republican National Con vention. In which Harrison had defeat ed Blaine for the Presidential nomina tion. A Pike County Hoosier by birth and a graduate of the State University, Foster had served in the Civil War as a Colonel, had been an editor in Evansville, and United States Minister to Mexico, Russia and Spain; he had also been counsel for various foreign governments, and. had.uesolialfidjfidnxocltv treaties &Trr,rtEV3. TZJA with Brazil, Spain. Germany, the Brit ish West Indies, -etc. His income from his international law practice was big, and he used to wonder whether he could get it back or not. Harrison was not re-elected, but Foster's fears proved groundless, since he was sent to Paris in 1893 to represent this country in the Behring Sea arbitration. He represented China in her peace nego tiations with Japan and since then has been intrusted with several important special missions for this Government and has got his International practice back again. He is now 71; his famous side whiskers are as luxuriant as ever, though whiter, and his voice and manner have all their old-time suavity. James Donald Cameron." Secretary of War in-Hrant's l""t venr rich In Cual and iron mines, manufacturing establishments and the like, is retired at 74 and has been for years. His home is at Harrisburg, capital of the state over which he and his father, Simon Cameron, were political bosses before the Quay days dawned, but he is much in New York. He was in the Senate from Pennsylvania for 20 years after leaving the Cabinet, but re signed ten years ago. Two years older than Cameron. Red field Proctor, appointed to the war office bv Harrison, has been in the Senate ever since 1891. He is so big a man six feet three, and broad "according" that his ordinary frock coat would be amply large to serve almost any one of his colleagues as an overcoat. He had been prominent in Vermont state politics and had served as Governor, but never was in National politiCK before entering the Cabinet. He is famous for his dry New England humor. Once a fellow Senator, speaking along lines that Proctor opposed, an nounced that he desired to drop into verse. "I wish to interpolate this little bit of poetry." said the Senator, "which has been set to music by an eminent com poser." v "Has it?" queried Proctor. "Then sing it!" His great wealth is in marble. His son is now Governor of Vermont. Stephen Benton Elkins, who followed Praetor as War Secretary mder Harri son, now United States Senator from West Virginia, is about as big a man; perhaps not so tall, but much stouter. He is ten years younger and as rich, or richer, his wealth being in coal and iron. Born in Ohio, he went to Missouri as a child, stayed there till he got his degree at the University of Missouri, studied law went to New Mexico to grow up with the country, was sent to Washington as Territorial Delegate, got acquainted with the daughter of Henry Gassoway Davis, Senator from -West Virginia, married her and settled In West Virginia to be near his father-in-law. After leaving the Cabinet in 1893 he went back to his West Virginia mines and railroads and was made Senator in 1895. At 63 Robert Todd Lincoln, appointed Secretary of War by Garfield 16 years after Abraham Lincoln was assassinated, is living in Chicago. He never has been much in politics, but as the son of his father he has been mentioned several times for the Presidency with more or less sincerity. Upon leaving the Cabinet in 1R95 he returned to Chicago, where he had gathered a big law practice, after graduating from Harvard College and Law School, and - built up his practice anew, his specialty being real esfate. He became counsel for the Pullman Com pany early In Its history and on the death of Pullman was made its president. He is a rich man in the modern sense of the term. He was Minister to England under Harrison. Elihii Root, who preceded Taft in the War Department, can hardly be termed an "ex-Secretary" till after he finally leaves the Cabinet. The Nation's Financial -Men. Leslie Morton Shaw, Just out of the Treasury Department; at 58. and now at the head of a New York trust company, is the youngest of the Treasury ex-Secretaries. Charles Stebblns Falrchild. who had the portfolio during a part of Cleve land's first term, is next youngest, being 65. He was an Albany lawyer and had been Attorney-General of his state be fore he entered the Cabinet, but after leaving It made New York his headquar ters, where for years he was president of a big trust company, though now ire tired. He is a native qf New York State and a Harvard man. I Lyman Judson Gage, who held the port folio under McKinley. and was succeeded under Roosevelt by Shaw, also became president of a big New York trust com pany after leaving the Cabinet in 1902. He is a native of New York State, self educated, and was a Chicago bank presi dent before becoming a Cabinet Minister. ROBERT of WXYSVZ:, POSTMASTER G&VZRAZ SUCCEEDING- FAyAZ7 He also was president of the Chicago' World's Fair. At 71 he is retired and lives in California much of the time. Cleveland's Treasury had during hlffj second term John Griffin Carlisle, now 71, who has been practicing law success-: fully in New York ever since he retired from the Cabinet ten years ago. He has; been little in the public eye since leaving! Washington. He is not a college man. I He entered Congress in 1877 and served! in both houses, being Speaker of' the I lower one for six years. It was of hinv, that McKinley once said: "That man)' never had a cloudy thought." Tlie Interior Portfolio. Cornelius Newton Bliss and Ethan Allen' Hitchcock, both chosen by McKinley to -hold the portfolio of the Interior, Hitch-j cock's service. Just concluded, reaching imu nuybrveii a AQiminisirauon, are both rich men. Bliss is 74. Hitchcock 71. Neither is college bred. Both are mer chants of the old school. Called into public life without expecting, it hy Mc- Klnlev. Hitchcock served first as Mini ister and then as Ambassador to Russia, j becoming Secretary of the Interior when; Bliss stepped out. No one can yet have; forgotten the reforms of Hitchcock's regime. , Born in New England,- Bliss went to' New Orleans as a boy, got back north i and went to work fn Boston in 1866. but! finally gravitated to New York, where; he has been a noteworthy factor in the: business world for .more than 30 years. He was treasurer of the Republican Na- tlonal committee in the last four cam-J paigns and president of the American! Protective Tariff League from its forma-i tion, in 1888, until two or three years ago. j Bliss was never so bored in his life a when in the Cabinet. John Willock Noble, who had the Inte rior portfolio under Harrison, and David Rowland Francis, who had it during the latter part of Cleveland's second adminis tration, are both residents of St. Louis. Noble is now 75; he was a lawyer in the metropolis of the mid-Mississippi Valley when called to the Cabinet, and he has- been practicing there ever since he lef(7! it. He is an Ohioan by birth, was llv- ing at Keokuk, Iowa, when the Civil', War broke out went to the front, and" rose to the rank of brevet brigadier gen-; eral. - Francis was born a Kcntuckian. Hei, studied at the Washington University, established himself as ft commissions merchant, and served as Mayor of St.- Louis and Governor of Missouri before1 entering the Cabinet. His entire career has been remarkably successful, but he I is best known because he was president of the Louisiana Purchase Exhibition irt' 1904. This enterprise, in fact, made himf-J more or less famous In every civilized land. He is 56, rich, and has been talked! of a good deal in the past as a Democrat ic Presidential possibility. .riose mitu. wuu iiciu me ntcn., - retarvshlD three of the four years of Cleveland's second term, returned to At-, lanta on leaving the Cabinet and resumed his law practice. It and the newspaper which he took on a debt some years agol have brought him a substantial fortune.) and he will not need his salary as Gov-, ernor of Georgia, to which office he was"; chosen at the last state election. Hej gets his odd Christian name from hi?l mother's family. He is 51, and la noC(: a college man. J. William Freeman Vilas, Secretary, off the Interior during the latter half ofr Cleveland's first term, who had previous-j ly served as J?OBtmaster General, is 11 v-' Ing at Madison, Wis., where he practiced?; law- before his incurs Into Cablnetland-1 He is still practicing. He is 67, a native)! of Vermont, and a graduate of Wiscon- sin University. He served in the Civil; War. rose to be lieutenant colonel, and" was United States Senator from 1891 tor 1897. He Is rich. ! Henry M. Teller, Arthur's Secretary pf tho Interior 25 years ago, is 77. He was: a New York state boy, educated at A1-; fred University, (aught school, practiced ' law. and. in 1861, reached Colorado via ' Illinois, where, he made a three years' ; stop on the road. He got into the Unit-.' ed States Senate in 1876, remained there till put Into the Cabinet in 1882: In ISSi, ; when he left the Cabinet, went into the Senate, and has been a Senator ever since, part of the time as a Silver Re-f publican. One of his most remarkable speeches was made in 1903. Its delivery : took four days, and it took him a full ! tConcluded on I'aKe 11.) 4