4 Bra WIS PROMINENT MEN OF BOTH PARTIES WHO BIT THB DUST OF DISAPPOINTMENT, AND JOKE . WHO ARE -SWILL HOPIN& VV sJ - I OF FZSSZZZA N,. - At rW fcvi - .vr ;',j.-f-v:1 1 I JT L U ?; r :Kii L5- ft! ; i i ! j fv sh, ' , 1,71 PRESIDJ3NTIAU lishtnlnp rls never wore struck are stored In attics of quite a few men of preaent who loom large in the public from time to time.' A complete list of the ambitious who once had such rods up and all ready for business would assume rather formidable proportions. It would Include the names of such well-known figures as Senator Shelby M. Cullom, for several Republican National Convention the "favorite son" of Illinois; Adlal R Stevenson, of the same state, once Vice-President of the United States, and eight years later' an unsuccessful candidate for the same po sition; former Secretary of State Richard OIney, who ran up his lightning attractor while he held that portfolio, and who polled 39 votes at the last , Democratic National Convention; the present Secre tary of State, who beean tempting the lightning while he was President Roose velt's Secretary of War; Senator Henry M. Teller, of Colorado, who longed for a nomination from two parties; John G. Carlisle and Ieslle M. Shaw, both former heads of the National Treasury: the venerable William B. Allison, of Iowa; Horace Boies, the only Democratic Gov ernor of that state since the Republican party was otanUed. and various other former State Executives, among them David Bennett Hill. Governors AYlio Have Tempted the Lightning. DAVID BENNBTT HlIiT. became Gov ernor of New York when Mr. Cleve land was Inaugurated President for the first time. He had. not been very long In the executive chair of the Umpire State before he ran up his own Presidential lightning rod. Officially, It was not taken down -until in Aucust of last Presidential year, when Its owner, to put a quietus on the campaign tale that Farker. if elected, would name Hill as his Secretary of State, announced his purpose to retire from poll tics until January 1 following. Well-posted Democratic politicians have said that Mr. Hill, as late as 1902. still had hopes of beiwt nominated by his party, and In the Democratic Guberna torial conventions and campaign of that yrar. which he directed; laid his lines ac cordingly. But between that date and some time before the assembling of the 1904 convention In St. Louis, Mr. Hill be came convinced that he would never be called on to head a f residvnual ticket, and so gave his support to Parker, whom he had placed on the bench of the state's highest court. Former United States Senator Edward Murphy. Jr., of New York, one of Hill's closest friends for many years, said short ly altar the sx-Govsrnor mads announce rl M M- V I f3 kl M II Ef HH fci X ;;ih ; vj i " I puny 26. It was around Pattison that I i m - i as ment of his Impending political retire ment: "Mr. Hill is a greatly changed man. Some people have told me that Mr. Hill at 61 could not change the mentality of a lifetime. I disagree with them entirely. Mr. Hill has changed from the moment that he became convinced that he could never be nominated for President by hi party." Hill's hopes of being his party's stand ard-bearer were strongest, perhaps, when the party was getting ready to select such a one in S92. It had been charged against him time and again by his party enemies that at that time, by his "snap" state convention, he tried to force his candi dacy on the party. The New York dele gation went to Chicago pledged to him; Tammany was there shouting for him un der the personal direction of Richard CYoker; Governor Flower, of New York, Mr. Hill's successor as head of the state, was among the cohort of supporters, Until Just a few days before the balloting began the Hill movement gave the Cleve land boomers much concern. Then the drift to Cleveland set in, and Hill. In stead of receiving the 320 votes accredited to him by his boomers, mustered only 114 on the only ballot taken. At that time he received the second largest number of votes. Governor Horace Boies, of Iowa. coming third with 103. Cleveland got j 617 1-3 votes. The great cry of the mil boomers at this convention was that Cleveland could not carry his own state. How falsely they prophesied the ballots cast In November showed. It was at this convention that the name , of Horace Boies, who got only one vote less than Hill, first came before a Demo cratic National Convention for considera tion. Two years before he had been elected Governor In the rock-ribbed Republican state of Iowa the only Democrat who has held this pest since the Republican party was ori&nized. Naturally, this remarkable victory gave Boles national prominence. Democratic papers and po liticians began to mention him as probable Presidential timber, and it was not long after that before the Governor ran up his own Presidential rod. William J. Bryan, then Congressman from Nebraska, both before and at the convention, was an ardent supporter of the Iowan, whose strength surprised many of the political wiseacres. Boies did not give up hope of being his party's candidate until after Bryan was nominated for the first time. At that dramatic convention Boles at one time stood second in the balloting. He was In his 69th year when he was an avowed candidate for the last time; and he took -down his rod shortly after, not because he had been weaned of his am bition to be President, but because he realized that his age was against him. The Presidential aspirations of the late THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, Robert E.- Pattison, twice Democratic Governor of another Republican strong hold Pennsylvania also reached their climax at his party's convention of 1896. On the first ballot Pattison, the favorite son of the Keystone delegation, stood next to Bland and Bryan. On the fifth and deciding ballot Pattison still had his 95 votes, while Boies' 86 had shrunk to a puny 26. It was around Pattison that the stanch "gold" delegates rallied. When Pattison was elected governor of Pennslyvania in 1S82, by a plurality of 0.000, he became the first Democrat to hold that office in 30 years. At the time he was only 32, an age which kept him from running up a Presidential rod just then, with the assistance of his friends. But after his second guberna torial victory, which came in 191, Pat tison's Presidential lightning attractor was put up and only lowered when his death occurred four years ago. David R. Francis, of St. Louis, who started his career toward millionairedom l clerk in . a commission house, of which he afterwards became part owner. Is another Democratic ex-governor who has owned a Presidential rod, but in his case, as In that of Judge George Gray, of Delaware, it was presented to and erected for him by his friends. His career as mayor of St. Louis and governor of Mis souri has made the name of David R. Francls fairly well known throughout the country when Its owner was called to President Cleveland's cabinet as successor to Hoke Smith in the Department of Interior. His next nationally important job was that of bossing the building of the record-breaking Lousisana Purchase Exposition, and it was while he was up to his ears in the details of this stupendous task in 1903 that a big Eastern paper an nounced his candidacy for the Presidency the following year. Before -Mr. Francis put a damper on the enthusiasm of po litical friends by declaring that he felt he had pledged his time and energy to the exposition, his availability had been pretty widely discussed by politicians of both great parties. Joseph Benton Foraker, senior Senator from Ohio, has numbered a Presidential lightning rod among his possessions since the middle of the 80 s, when he was serv ing his second term as Republican ex ecutive of the Buckeye state. -His Ohio enemies have never grown weary of charging that he secretly nourished high hopes that the convention of 1SS8 would swing to him from John Sherman, as the convention held eight years before, has sensationally stampeded from Sherman, Grant and Blaine to Garfield. However that may be. Governor Foraker. after the fifth ballot had been taken and the con vention had adjourned, with Sherman still in the lead, announced that Sherman was "no longer a Presidential possibility so far as this convention is concerned. From that day to this Foraker has been credited with being a Presidential i pirant. ;Fol!owdng his re-election m 1900 as governor of Iowa, Leslie M. Shaw frankly let his friends know that he would be & Presidential candidate four years hence. But early In 1902 he be came Secretary of the Treasury President Roosevelt's Cabinet, and Mr. Rosevelt was an open candidate for the office. Mr. Shaw gracefully re tired for the time being. He was In the field again, however in November of 1904. immediately fol lowing President Roosevelt's state ment that he would not be a Preslden tlal candidate again; and In the field he remained until a few months ago. Then Mr. Shaw, who has always been credited with sight sufficiently keen to see a stone wait dead ahead of him self, once more retired. Today he Is simply a passive candidate. As an active candidate he was re freshingly frank regarding his ambi tion." Last year, when he resigned the Treasury portfolio in order to head a New York trust company, he told the HG RODS mxr I- H newspaper men that as candidate he would be as easy to locate In the me tropolis as in the National Capital. "Neither Lincoln, Grant, Hayes, Gar field. Blaine. Roosevelt nor Bryan was nominated because of the state he rep resented." said Mr.- Shaw, when asked what effect his going to the city of "the money power" would have on his candidacy, "and some of them have se cured the prize notwithstanding- loca tion." Next November 'Mr. Shaw will be 60 years old, not too old. according to nu merous precedents, to be an active can didate for President four or eight years hence. Whether he has put away his lightning rod for good, remains to be seen, though some of his Iowa friends are of the opinion that he will never again be an avowed candidate for the great honor. As Presidential candidates go, Mr. Shaw's career In politics has been ex ceedingly brief. He did not make a campaign speech or take an active In terest In politics until the third Cleve land campaign, when he was moved to answer the next day a Democratic ar gument he had listened to the day be fore. His advocacy of sound money in the first Mc.Klnley campaign brought him wide prominence in his state, and resulted in his nomination for Gover nor in 1 Senatorial Possessors of Iiight-ning-Rods. "HROUGH most of the '80s, and even 35V4- votes in the Republican conven tion of that year, another Iowa man, the now venerable Senator William B. Allison, was a . receptive Presidential candidate. Only when age put him out of the running did he cease to have his name mentioned both before and at his party's conventions, . Allison's candidacy reached its apogee at the Chicago convention of 1888, when he stood fifth in the balloting up t the eighth and deciding ballot. His friends say that the keenest disap pointment of his life has been the re fusal of his party to make him standard-bearer, which he thought he had excellent chances of becoming in 1888. But unlike David B. Hill, the distin guished Iowan has not changed notice ably to his Intimates because of this disappointment, and he has been heard to refer jokingly to the years when he prayed fervently that the Presidential lightning would strike him. Senator Allison's vigorous young col league from Wisconsin, Robert M. La Follette, of course, has a good-sized Presidential rod up; Presidential ambi tions have been known to be his since hie second election as Governor of Wis consin, in 1903. Senator Shelby M. Cullom was for years Illinois' "favor ite son." Senator Henry M. Teller, of Colorado, after he walked out of the 1896 Republican convention, when that body declared - in favor of the gold standard, expected to secure the Silver Republican Presidential nomination, and it was a bitter disappointment to him when Bryan got the coveted honor. Though he was still a Republican of the silver variety when the Democratic National Convention of 1896 met in July,. Mr. Teller, on the first ballot taken by It, received eight votes, a cu rious sort of political distinction, due to his advocacy- of the cause of silver, which, as every American knows, was enthusiStically championed by the Democratic convention. Years before the silver question be came paramount. Mr. Teller, when he was President Arthur's Secretary of Interior, ran up a Presidential rod for the first time. Until he walked out of the Republican convention In 1896 he did not cease to hope that some day that party would call him as leader. Among members of the upper branch of Congress who now have or nave had presidential rods up. Senator John TV. Daniel, of Virginia, is rather a recent comer. Thomas F. Kyan, of New York and Virginia, has been charged with In stigating the Daniel talk with the ulterior motive of succeeding to Mr. Daniel's seat In the Senate. However that may be, the Senator doubtless would not duck should he spy the lightning descending his way. He is recognized by both parties in the Senate as one of the most astute southern statemen In harness today. He has been one of Virginia's Senators since 1S87: three years before he was sent to Congress for the first time as a Repre sentative. With the features and locks of an old-time tragedian, a cigar always held In his mouth, and a slight limp, due to the loss of a leg at the Battle of the Wilderness, bis is a familiar figure about Washington. At home, when he is cam pahming. he adds to his plcturesqueness by moving about with the assistance of crutches, a strong reminder to his con stituents that he was one of the stalwart defenders of the Confederacy. He will be 66 next September, but his appearance MAY 24, I90S. iRo e LJw.Ai A.. IPSE: iwbn J a :. t .. -.-sir. 5 : 1 t' suggests a mucn younger age to the ordi nary onlooker. Though his life has been a busy one. what with looking after his legal and political Interests, the Senator has found time to write two standard law text books. "Daniel on Attachments" and "Daniel on Negotiable Instruments." The latter work resulted from a query put to him by a client as to whether sight drafts carried three days of grace. The Senator had to go to a bank and find out. Some years later the Senator told this Incident to a law class before which he' was lecturing. -When he had fin ished, one of the students, ' who had observed that the Senator was absent-minded, said: - "Senator, do sight drafts carry three days of grace?" The Senator looked the embarrass ment he felt as he replied: "Upon my soul, young man, I believe I have for gotten." When John G. Carlisle went to the ' Senate from Kentucky in 1890 he took with him his presidential rod, which he had acquired when he became Speaker of the lower branch of the National Legislature. His colleague, while he wore a toga, was "Joe" Blackburn. One day the two of them got to talking about the former's desire to become President. "John," said his senior warningly. "you live 300 yards too far south of the Ohio River ever to be President of the United States." This was sage advice for that day and generation (as it possibly is for this, also), and If Carlisle had taken It he probably would have saved him self many nights made sleepless by his ambition. But as a Senator ho loomed larger as a Democratic possi bility than he had while Speaker, and immediately preceding the convention of 1892 his name was on the Hps of Democracy as one of Its best possibili ties. Still, on the only ballot of the convention he got only 14 votes, while at the 1884 convention, held while he was Speaker, his votes numbered 27. In March of 1893 Carlisle became President Cleveland's Secretary of the Treasury. He remained at the head of this department till his chiefs re tirement four years later; and all the time he nourished his Presidential am bitions. Not until Just before he moved to New York and established himself there as a lawyer did he part company with the dream that had kept him company for nearly a. decade and a half. ' . . Presidential Possibilities Other Days. of CARLISLE'S successor in the Speak er's chair, the late Thomas B. Reed, put up his Presidential rod a short time after he had made himself fa mous as a parliamentarian and presid ing: officer, and the knowledge that It never was struck embittered the clos ing years of his life. .As most- followers of. National con vention history, will remember, . Reed was one of the leading Republican can didates in 18&6. He. In fact, was second In the convention balloting, receiving 844 votes to AlcKinley's 6614.. but before the . only ballot of the convention was taken it . was evident to all that Reed would not secure the coveted prize, which some of his old friends who survive believe - he could have carried, away: at the Minneapolis convention four years before had he then risen to the op portunity presented to -him in a - most unexpected manner. When the Harrison cohorts and the Blaine partisans were ail but at each others' throats on the floor of -the con vention. Reed, whose struggles with the Democrats In 'Congress had given him world-wide fame, slipped on to the, plat form, at the back to view the conven tion. The hundreds of excited delegates and thousands of equally - excited spec tators caught sight xt him. The Blaine men lost all thought of . the Harrison men. the latter left off shaking their fists, in the faces of the former, and evory mother's eon of them began an ovation to the big Maine man that dJd not die away until many minutes had passed an ovation that would brook no checking by chairman or band. Reed was so overcome by the spon taneity of the reception that he hardly could control himself when he was ail but pushed forward toy the chairman to give the convention the address It de manded. And perhaps it was . because his highly sensitive soul had been so deeply touched, say these old friends, that he signally failed to seize hold of the psychological moment and, by catch ing the fancy of the crowd with his speech, secure for himself the plum over which the Harrison and Blaine men were wrangling. Garfield secured his nomi nation by his manner of nominating John Sherman. That speech clearly rlvlted the attention caught the fancy of the delegates; and when they got tired of voting for Sherman and Grant and Blaine, they turned with, a whoop to the man who had impressed them by his ?1 ft speech and bestowed upon him the high est honor in their power to give. Among other great Presidential possi bilities of other but recent days, Blaine was the only one whose name was bal-. loted on at five National conventions in succession. In 1876 he ran only 33 vqtes behind Hayes on the deciding ballot. Until the last ballot of the 1880 conven tion, when the stampede set in for Garfield,- Blaine was second only to Grant. The convention of 1884 nominated him and he went down to defeat. -When that of 1888 met he withdrew his name In favor of Harrison, but four years later, when Harrison was seeking re nomlnatlon. it was around Blaine's name that the President's opponents rallied. I n point of years, John Sherman had his Presidential rod up as long as Blaine had his, but Sherman's name was seriously presented to only three conventions those of 1880. 1884 and 1888. He felt reasonably sure, before the convention of 1888 met. that at last he had the' long-desired nomination In his Trasp. Indeed, on the first ballot his strength was 229, while Harrison's was only 80. Until the sixth ballot Sherman led; on the seventh he fell 47 behind Harrison, who won out on the following ballot.' Thereafter, Sherman was a passive candidate. This he re mained almost to the day that he en Reviving Individuality Continued ness of Arts and Crafts in the "West But the time Is ripe for the advent of workers of the true William Morris type. , The ' Eugene association has made much progress, largely through the- In defatigable efforts of Its president, Allan Eaton. Mr. Eaton is a man of great versatility. He owns one of the most beautiful art stores in the country,: is interested in politics, being the author of the University appropriation bill, and yet finds time personally to oversee the practical details of Eugene handicrafts. First a word about this art store. It has been called by eminent men the "most beautiful art room in the West." Mr. Eaton designed and executed the Interior, being finished entirely in Lane County woods. All the lights are in closed in copper lanterns and shades made and designed by Mr. Eaton. The "store" Is like a beautiful room, har monious, individualized. The commercial element has been suc cessfully subordinated. By displaying examples of the best art in America Mr. Eaton has sought to stimulate the local Arts and Crafts workers. It has been hitherto impossible to get such inspira tion outside of , New Tork or Chicago. Mr. Eaton has a rare collection of pot teries, Rookwood, Van Briggle, Gruebyj Newcome,- Teco, Poillon and the Pew able " He . has also the Jarnie lanterns and candlesticks . of . Chicago, which are thought to be the finest in America. The -store contains samples of the best book bindings of England and America, also displays of hand-tooled leather, metal work, and Craftsman jewelry. One of ' the chief things of interest to art lovers is the work of Ikka Magai, who received the highest award at the Lewis and ..Clark .Fair for Japanese water . colors. He Is an artist of Na tional repute in his own country, and discriminating people have pronounced his work In the highest degree, talented. After the close of the Fair Mr. Eaton invited Magal to his store, where he spent several weeks, making wonderful landscapes, flowers, cromos and color effects. Some of these may be seen at Miss McKnlght's shop In Portland. - In speaking of the art store I cannot fail to mention a novel idea of Mr. Baton's known as the children's room. Here Is a corner devoted especially to the Interest of children; note the tiny tables and chairs and book racks. To this cor ner children at all times have free and delightful access. The art store has, indeed, been an in spiration to Arts and Crafts workers, as is shown by the number of practical re sults . gained. Chief among these is Mr. Eaton's book bindery, where good work ie being turned out. Here Miss Ruth Parkhurst, of Boston, served as an ap prentice, mastering the craft In its prac tical aspects.- Miss Parkhurst Intends to enter artistic book binding as a profes sion In which there is a large Western field almost untouched. Her work will undoubtedly be successful. In addition to the bindery, a decided urns tered President McKjnley's Cabinet as Secretary of State. His failure to secure Presidential nomination has been called the saddest In the history of either party In recent times. Certain it Is that John Sherman longed for a nomination above all po litical honors of this earth, and his failure to secure It clouded the whole of his latter life. Russell A. Alger, who died only a year or two ago; Arthur Pue Gorman, for years Senator from Maryland, Walter Q Gresham, of Indiana, who was one of the prominent Republican candidates in 1888, andi later on Demo cratic Secretary of State under Cleve land; Thomas F. Bayard, first Ambassa dor to England, who was a close second to Hancock, the nominee, on the first ballot of the Democratic conven tion of 1880, and also second at the convention four years later: Richard P. ("Silver Dollar") Bland, of Missouri, who led Bryan by 16 votes on the first ballot In 1896 these, also, were some of the great possibilities of other but recent days who prayed more or less earnestly and long for the Presiden tial lightning to strike them. And practically all of them went to their graves grievously disappointed that it did not. (Copyright, 1908. by the Associated Lit erary Press.) Among Handworkers From Pag 2. success has been made of leather work, basketry, rug weaving, cablnetmaklng, metal and wood work, and to a certain extent the weaving of fabrics. There are strong Indications that the seeds of an Industrial colony are being sown. Some' fine work has been done In water-colors and . miniatures by Mrs. Eaton, who In many respect is fully as clever a crafts man as her husband. In summing up Ithe Arts and Crafts movement, what rank shall we give It? Is it merely a reversion to a past state of culture, by sentimentalists who are ever ready to bemoan the past, or does it possess some vital modern spark that gives it a right to be called progress? Those who have studied the movement carefully and with sympathy, are of the opinion that it represents a much-needed reform in industrial condi'tions; that if carefully and with sympathy are of the I whole man, and lead him to the true spirit of work and happiness. Eugene, Or., May 20. Food in Tamarind Seeds. Nature Talk. Tamarind seed are to be reckoned among the fairly nutritious plant prod ucts that have been reported to provide food during periods of famine in India. The pulp of the fruit is an esteemed Ingredient of certain condiments. The kernels of the seeds when freed from the skin and roasted furnish a not unwhole some flour suitable for mixing with cer eals to make small cakes. Iearnlng the Alphabet. New York Sun. One -of your correspondents the other day Inquired for this alphabet. It was con tained in a primer which I owned when I was a very little cJiild and I knew ft by heart before I was 4 yearn old, helped, of course, by the illustrations. on for each Wtr. T remember that although I had a reasonably correct Idea of the meaning off most of the wnrdft I had no notion as t what a icamester or a vintner, or a usurer might be; they were each about an inch high and they looked very much alike. It wa of coume difficult to distinguish pro fessions within such very narrow limits. H. S. I A was an Archer N was a Nobleman Who shot at a frog. jGallant and bold. B was a Butcher, fo was an Oyatermsn Who had a great dog. Who went about town, s C. wan a Captain ' IP was a Parson All covered with lace.' And wore a black gown p was a Prunkard And had a red face. E was an Esquire With insolent brow. F was a Farmer And followed a plow. O was a Gamester And he had ill luck. H was a Hunter And hunted a buck. .Q was a Queen Of highest degree. R was a Robber And hung as you see. S was a Sailor Who jipent all he got. T was a Tinker And mended a pot. U was a Usurer IA miserly elf. I was an Innkeeper ;V wan a Vintner Who loved a bouse. JWho drank all himself J was a Joiner wa" a Watchman And built up a house. Who guarded a door. K was a King And he w as but a man. X was expensive And so became poor. Ij was a Lady And flirted a fan. T was a Youth Whodidn't love school. M wa a Miser And hoarded up gold. 7. was a Zany And looked like a fool.