THE SUXDAT OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, JANUARY 29, 1911. in ! i arr M. 'ffMRAk. Vr3. f r1?. JT- i BT E- J. IDWAKDS. IT la sometime a decision seemingly of small consequence at the time It la made, or aome fortuitous dream stance, that determines the course of a brilliant and successful career. There are probably many men who. though they have risen to prominence and power through sheer abllltr. can say. nevertheless, after taking a retrospect. It waa a matter of chance that I de cided thus or so at such a time, or I thoufht It of only Immediate concern when I did such a thins;. Tet If t had decided or acted differently, then my whole career would have been chanced. Instances of this aort are furnished by the careers of a number of men who nave risen to eminence within com paratively recent yeara In 175. when the present senior Sen ator from Iowa waa admitted to the Illinois bar at the ate of 28. he settled down to the practice of his profession In Chtcao. where he bad studied In a private law office. But Chicago was a very big city. The youns lawyer waa completely lost there, and he waa willing; to accept any decent employment which would eke out his Income. At last, with no clients appearing- before him. there dawned upon him the conviction that If he were golnr to make a career In the law. It would be the better part for him to ko to some small town where he could speedily make acquaintances and fain friendships. There were a half dosen thrlvtns llttle communities west of the Missis sippi In each or which the youns law yer thought of establishing himself. Hut before be had definitely derided upon any one of them he happened to read a newspaper report of some ex citing political events that were tak ing place In Iowa It waa In the year It; and It occurred to him that there might be a good opportunity for an ambitious youns; lawyer In the center or the political hubbub, the state capi tal. Des Moines. Now. the youns lawyer had no thought of a political career. lie simply wanted to make enough money to support himself and his little fam ily: he had married while still a law student. Pes Moines appealed to him: he was certain it would rrow In popu lation and In Influence, and that con siderable railroad business would ren ter there he had abandoned railroad ing. In which he had become an as Mutant chief engineer, for the law. Resides, he was told that the Des Moines people were as hospitable as any to be found west of the Mississippi. Therefore, he parked his few be longings and went to the Iwa capital rlty. not k no wins- a soul there when he set foot In the town, lie secured a little office and hung out his shingle; and when clients were slow In putting In an appearance he worked at the carpenter's trade. In which he had be come adept aa a lad in the extreme southwestern corner of Pennsylvania, so that he could make both ends meet. But little by little he began to sain a law business, end finally he at tracted the attention of Judge Oeorge O. Wright. United States Senator and hesd of the biggest law firm In Pes Moines. Judge Wright took the youns man Into partnership, and when In the early eighties Mr. Cummins became one of the associate counsel for the Chi cago. Rock Island and Paclflo Railroad. It was recognized In Iowa that the comparative newcomer to the state had sained prominent success In the legal profession. Ten yeara after removing to Des Moines he found himself In the state House of Representatives, later Coventor of the atate, and today he la of commanding Influence In the United States Senate ail because of that chance account of political events la Iowa be read back In 7$. when he was looking; about for a new location- Case That Parallels Cnmmlns. Curiously parallel to the early career or senator Cummins waa that of an other man who is now very much In tuie public eye. As In Senator Cum mlns case, a decision made as the re suit of current political excitement p Lay el aa Important part In determin ing the lines of the career of the new ly-appointed Solicitor-General of the United States. Frederick W. Lehmann. Frederick W. Lehmann was a ranch man and farmer's helper In southwest ern Iowa not far from the large farm now owned by President W. C. Brown. of the New Tork Central, to which Mr. Brown plans to retire some day when he Is ready to step out of harness aa an active railroad man. Lehmann had had little echo line, but he was esger to learn. Near by waa Tabor College. This afforded him opportunity, and he worsen bis way through the pre scribed course at that institution. Across the Missouri River in Nebraska City waa the home of Justice Mason. ' me Buprerae court of Nebraska. Judge Mason became interested m youns Lehmann. and save hlu a chance to siuuy law in his office. Nebraska City was a small place, well supplied with lawyers, and three yeara after hanging out bis shlnKle there. Mr. Lehmann came to the conclusion that he could do better somewhere else. Ills first Impulse was to so farther West, and he had Denver In mind, but Just at that time his Interest was aroused In certain political developments in Iowa and that derided him to go to Des Moines, the state capital. -He simply dropped into the town and stayed there." was the) wry one of bis friends put It. A year or two after Mr. Lehmann be gan the practice of law at Des Moines, and while he waa occasionally occupied with some newspaper writing. Jay O-juld began the work extending his Wabash Railroad system Into the State of Iowa The (Jould Interests In Iowa were under the direction of Colonel Alfred Howe, whose headquarters were at Des Moines. Between Mr. Lehmann and Colonel Hows a strons personal Intimacy was estab lished. Whether or not that led to any professional relation of Mr. Lehmann wt:h the Gould Interests, la a matter of doubt. But It did lead Colonel Howe to have a very high estimate of the youns lawyers) ability. 80 It happened that In 1 when Mr. Gould was looking for a man. of especial qualification to serve aa aa assistant general solicitor of the Gould system at St- Louis, be asked Colonel Howe: "Do you know Just the kind of lawyer I want T To the ques tion Colonel Howe Instantly replied: I certainly do: his name la Frederick W. Lehmann. and I have known blm Inti mately for 10 years. Upon the strength of that statement Mr. Gould offered Mr. Lehmann the post of assistant general solicitor to the Could system of railroads, with bead quarters at St. Louis. The offer was ac cepted and Mr. Lehmann removed to St. I-ouLs In ISO. He served the Gould sys tem about Ave yeara and then began tronerai practice. In which he soon at tained a leading position. He became president of the American Bar Associa tion three years ago. and Is now Solicitor-General of the I'nlted States. Doubtless. If that chance Interest In Iowa politics had not caused Mr. Leh mann to settle in Des Moines, his career would have taken a quite different course from that which has made It -so con spicuously brilliant, and brought him to f II - Large Opportunities for Big Americans That f c if l 1 -Ml 'Hinged on Quick- Making Up of V1 I the Mind to Change Vocation and Location IIl.J fc-S--v ;. .-V J tit), lit .-J' - It - r.7 1 ' JJK&zr the eminent position he occupies today. An Interesting story or a decision that had a marked effect upon the careers of two men of Natmnal prominence Is told by George F. Parker, the biographer of Grover Cleveland. In hla first Administration. Mr. Cleve land appointed WUllam F. Vilaa. of Wis consin. Postmaster-Genoral. Mr. Cleve land waa anxious to have the position of First Assistant Postmaster-Gencrai. the principal executive ofiice In the de partment, filled by a very strong man. lie and Vilas differed as to the appoint ment that should be made, however. One dsy about this time, Alton B Pa riser, then a practicing lawyer of Kingston. N. T-. received a telegram calling him to Washington to see the President. Mr. Cleveland and he had become well acquainted while the for mer waa Governor of New Tork. I want to appoint you Assistant Postmaster-General." said the President when Mr. Parker railed. "Mr. President. replied Judge Tarker. I appreciate the high compliment im plied bv this offer, and I regret exceed ingly that I am not able to accept It. ii- ft 1 . ..,4 ..-p.4 Kim to take time to consider It. and suggested that Mr. Parker, as a gooa I'ptnw 1 1. vuk -. iIh- w - a&rrlnre for the KMT WllilllH " - benefit of the public service and the party. ,1.. t.a forro of what you say. Mr. President." Judge Parker said, "but I have a family to provide for. and In view of that fact. I should not feel Justi fied in accepting the appointment." At this point In the conversation. Post-master-General Vilas entered the room. "Parker says he can't take It. Mr. Cleveland explained, turning to Vilas. Mr. Vilas received the announcement .... 1 nn !, Memd to indl- wnu an , - . . cate that It was not unwelcome to him. "Then. Mr. President. ne sa-u. 1 h. rtlare should not is no w, . - be offered to the man whom I want. Adlal K. Stevenson." , - 1 . . 1. - a 7 1 v. steven- son. of Illinois, was appointed Assistant Postmaster-General. In which position he achieved things as tho political heads man that made him well known through out the country, and led to his nomina tion for Vice-President by the Demo crats In 1S0C after Governor Boles, or Iowa had rerused the nomination, or had had it refused for him by his political Intimates. ,, . The same year in which he declined sppolntmrnt as Assistant Postmaster General. Alton R. Parker became a Jus tice or the Supreme Court or New Tors: State, and entered on the Judicial career that resulted In hla nomination ror the Presidency by the Democracy In 1904. Periston That Influenced Two. "How would you like to bo to chi eagoT" Lyman J. Gage, then a youns man or barely 10 yeara. holding- the position or Junior clerk In the Oneida Central Bank or Rome N. Y. pondered over this question for awhile, and then decided that he would like to go. That decision fixed the direction of his whole career a career that made him one of the lead Ins figures In the banking world and ultimately a member of McKlnley's Cabinet. Mr. Gage was a native of the little town of De Ruyter, N. Y. The town ship waa named after an old Dutch family, descendants of which were ln riuenilal there durlns Mr. Gage's boy hood. Some or the Delluyters removed to Chicago about the middle or the lest century, while Mr. Gage's family set tled In Rome. With boyish enthusi asm youns Lyman Gage had looked for ward to a mercantile career, but find ins a place In the Oneida Bank, he ac cepted with the Idea of promotion there as the hope for his future. Two years later one of the De Ruy tera from Chicago, meeting him casu ally, put to htm the question quoted above. The place' offered young -Gage was thst or clerk In a planing mill. After filling this place for some time. Mr. Gage got a Job as bookkeeper In a loan and trust company. Promotion In he banking business came regularly after that, until Anally he became presi dent of the First National Bank of Chlcaa-o. His prominence in the bank Ins world and his authority on ques tions of finance by this time Indicated his peculiar fitness for the position or Secretary or the Treasury, and to that position he was appointed by President McKlniey In 18)7. H Mr. Case had Riven a different an swer to that question with reference to Chicago, he would doubtless have been a successful up-state banker, but the ehancea that he would never have sat In a President'a Cabinet. . That decision not only determined Mr. Gage's own career, but also made possible the career of another man who has since risen to the highest promi nence In the banking and financial world: lor U Mr. Gage had not gone to Chicago. Frank A- Vanderllp, it Is pret ty safe to assume, would not now be president of the National City Bank, the greatest and most powerful bank Ins Institution in New Tork City and In the country at large. Aa a bank president In Chicago. Mr. Oage received frequent calls from a young newspaper man. a writer on financial subjects, who sought hla views on the Important financial news and questions of the day. Mr. Gage took a strons liking to the youns man. and Ending that he wrote with understand ing, ability and discretion, placed the greatest confidence In him. Mr. Gage discovered also that this youns man had not only Ideas, but executive abil ity aa well. Soon after he had accept ed, appointment aa Secretary of the V- Treasury, Mr. Gage said to the youns newspaper writer: "Vanderllp. I want you to so to Washington with me." "In what capacity?" Mr. Vanderllp asked. ' "A private secretary to the Secret tary or the Treasury," Mr. Gase re plied. Mr. Vanderllp accepted. His new po sition befran March . 17, and ended June 1 of the same year, when he became Assistant Secretary of the Treasury. Acting in that capacity, he consummated the negotiations for the floating of the great Spanish War loan. In connection with which he became Turning Point in Great Careers ABRAHAM LINCOLN The Great Cooper Union Speech That Made tho East Acquainted With Him. IPT MADISON C PETERS. HAKT3SPEARE who sounded the I hw ii or human shllosophy. ""-'says: Thers's a tlds In the sffalrs of msn. Which. If taken at the flood, Lsads on to fortune. Thra ta a turnlnsr noint In every I career which rhapes the future of the Individual. Somethlns turns up to put a wholly different aspect upon life. To heredity Lincoln owed little of hi .i.finitifti-.inv ti-slts of character. If we ; except what he Inherited from a good. simple-hearted, mother, who tnougn al most Illiterate, was a woman or sincerity and piety beyond most In her station or life. His father was a weak, irresolute, roving kind or man, who flitted here snd there and gave little thought to tho future. When Abraham was eight yeans old, he floated down the Ohio River on a raft with his father and family, with all their possessions until they came to the shores of Indiana. There he helped to make a clearing In the forest and young as he wsa did much to enable the family to settle down In Spencer County. He grew up here In a log cabin in the primeval silence of those solitudes, edu cates himself In the intervals of labor from a few old books which by chance came into his hands. At night he poured over them by the light or the pine log His education was altogether American, the Declaration of Independence was his compendium of political wisdom, the lire or Washington hla constant study, and something or Jefferson and Madison reached him through Henry Clay whom he honored from boyhood. At nineteen, feeling the impulses of ambition to set slons In the world, ha engaged himself to so down the Miss issippi In a flatboat, receiving wo a month for his wages. Afterwards be made a second trip. This New Orleans expedition was his first outing Into the great world, and the broad river with Its numerous steamers filled with pas sengers snd the village snd cities along the shores gave him many hints of a broader life. It was on this trip too, that he first came Into contact with slavery in Its revolting and inhuman as pect. There was an auction on the quay at New Orleans snd he eaw the auc tioneer trotting out young colored girls and racing them up and down to test their wind snd endurlns powers ror would-be purchaser Lincoln was aroused at the eight. Turning to his hair-brother, he- said: "By Heavenl ir ever I set a chance to hit at that (the slave business) 111 hit hard." This was the turning point that made him an abolitionist. ' When Lincoln was twenty-one his family moved to Illinois. Here, he fenced In the new homestead in the wilds . ...1 .ntit rails for a living, and subse quently, he was for tome time In charge of a store at New fcJeJcm. At twenty-three, he was a Captain of Volunteers In the Black Hawk war. He afterwards kept a store In whlcb. he railed. He was appointed postmaster at New Salem snd began the study of law by borrowing books from a nelshborlng lawyer. At the same time, he turned amateur land surveyor. At twenty-five he was a member or the Illinois Leg'slatcre, At twenty-ioven, he " I personally known to the great bank ers and financiers of New York City, who were not slow to recognize his ability.. When, therefore, his term as Assistant Secretary came to an end, they were eager to enlist his services In positions of the highest trust and authority In the financial world. So began Mr. Vanderlip'a extraordinarily successful career as a banker In. New York City. Action Probably Made a President. But ror a quick decision mads on the spur of the moment In the early Summer or 1898, Theodore Roosevelt might never have been President or the was licensed to practice law. At 23, he chose his home In Springfield. In 1817, at 38, he was a member of the National Congress. In 18S8 the most remarkable political canvass ever witnessed in the country took place between Lincoln and Ste phen A. Douglas, both being candidates of their respective parties for the United States Senate. Seven Joint de bates between the two took place In several parts of the State. Douglas, was elected. These debates made Lin coln a national character. The man who was fit to stand up before Judge Douglas and overcome him. too. In logic and argumentative skill, was cer tainly one to be reckoned with. After the great debates, the idea of presenting Lincoln as a presidential candidate was suggested. Lincoln smiled at what he considered an ab surdity. "What Is the user he asked, "of talking about me when we have such men as Seward and Sumner and others equally as able 7" ' From time to time before the Doug las debates, the doings and sayings of the Illinois statesman and lawyer had been reported In New York, but the people regarded them as the ec centricities of a backwoodsman and un worthy of serious attention. Lincoln's travels had never brought him farther eastward than the border line which separates Ohio from the state of Pennsylvania and Virginia. Tha neoDla of the East looked upon him ss unique, uncouth, awkward and uneducated. That he was a lawyer and bad sat In Congress for a term counted little. He might pass for a genius and statesman among farmers and storekeepers on the banks of the Sangamon, but the East could not tol erate bis oddities, his want of polish. But when the news reached them that be had vanquished the silver tongued orator, the learned Jurist, the forensic debater,' the most polished wit of his time, a man whose name drew thousands to his meetings when ever announced, the people of the East ern seaboard thought after all there roust be something in the backwoods man and curiosity -wanted to see him and measure blm with the standard of the East. So the lanky, uncouth law yer of Springfield received an invita tion to come to New York. That by any possibility he could be come a candidate for President had never occurred to the people, so they assembled for - the purpose of being amused and seeing a curiosity. The address was delivered in Cooper Union on the evening of February 26, 1860, with the famous poet William Cullen Bryant In the chair, and Horace Gree ley and many other distinguished men In the audience. Never was an audi ence more surprised. The address was scholarly and refined, with nothing whatever to give offense to the most fastidious or call forth hostile criti cism. The uncouthness, the ungalnll ness of the orator was forgotten in the diction and style of the address and the simple earnestness with which It was delivered. A great part of his talk was his torical, tracing the origin and growth of slavery. He held the vast meeting spellbound, and as one by one of bis 2r7Z3-2 United States. That decision, as It ap pears now. supplied a link In the chain or circumstances that made possible hla entire subsequent political career. It was in Tampa, where the regi ments were encamped waiting the order to take ship ror Cuba. The Rough Riders, the regiment organized by Col onel Leonard Wood and Lieutenant Colonel Roosevelt, were among them. On June 7 the order went out that the regiments would start at daybreak the next day ror Port Tampa, nine miles distant. There was a good deal or con fusion In the arrangements for trans porting the troops from the camp to the port, and It was only by taking pos session or an empty coal train attached oddly expressed, but trenchant and convincing arguments confirmed the soundness of his political conclusions, the house broke out In prolonged and enthusiastic applause. The speech was founded on a sen tence from one of Douglas Ohio ad dresses: "Our fathers when they framed the Government under, which we live understood this question just as well, and even better, than we do now." "Let us," said Lincoln, "who believe that our fathers who framed the Gov ernment under which we live under stood this question Just as well, and even better than we do now, speak as they spoke, and act as they acted upon It. This Is all Republicans ask all Republicans desire In relation to slavery. As those fathers marked it. so let It be again marked, as an evil not to be extended, but to be tolerated and protected only because of and so far as Its actual presence among us makes that toleration and protection a necessity. Let all tho guarantees those fathers gave It be not grudgingly, but fullv and rairly maintained. For this 1 Republicans contend, and with this, so tar as I know or believe, they will be content." Lincoln's Cooper Union address revo lutionized the Republican sentiment of the East. He had stepped upon that platform with the people prejudiced against him and looking upon him as a freak from the West; he left it with every one in his favor and all regard ing rfim as an astute statesman and 1 . . .. .- t nniichnd orator. He was i now ranked in ability and culture with i Seward, Sumner and Chase. The New York address proved to be the real turning point in his political career. He was recognized by those ... V. n Mba nmhauaodnra and PnsMPIlta and his right to statesmanship of the highest rank was conceded. s Before his New York appearance he had little, or no pretension, to political preferment, immediately after it he was regarded as the most formidable candidate for the Presidency. The ad dress did for him what his debates had not, it showed him the calm, thought ful man of all encircling grasp. In per fect command of the political situa tion, uninfluenced by any partisansnip of a heated hard-contested campaign. The platform he enunciated was so simple that not only could all K publlcans accept It, but It represented the political belief of many Northern Democrats. It was the flood-tide which bore him on to political fortune. Not only his political doctrines, but the force of his magnetic personality at close range commended him to the peo ple at large and caused them to select him as the most available candidate for the highest office they had In their power to confer. Great as had been Lincoln's local fame in the West, It is probable that he would never have reached the White House bad he not come to Cooper Union EDISON'S MOLDED HOUSE Inventor Completes Plans for $1200 (Room, Ponred Structured Hartford (Conn.) Times. Mr. Edison announces that he has perfected his plan for molding a con crete house complete, "all In one solid piece. Including the cellar, partitions, floors, roof, veranda; in fact, every thing except the windows and doors, to a live engine that Colonel Roosevelt got his men to the quay. On arriving there he round that ap parently no arrangements had been made for his men. Nobody seemed to Lnow what ship they were assigned to, and Lieutenant-Colonel Jtoosevelt and Colonel Wood saw that they would have to do something pretty quick If they were to get any transport at all. They hunted up the - depot quarter master, and after making a protest or appeal, succeeded in getting a trans port the Yucatan allotted to them. The Yucatan was lying out in mid stream. Colonel Wood, taking a stray launch, went out Immediately and boarded her. He had hardly gone when Lieutenant-Colonel Roosevelt learned by accident that the Yucatan had al ready been allotted to two other regi ments, the Second Regulars and the Seventy-first New York. There were more men In the Seventy-first alone than could be put aboard tho trans port. Lieutenant-Colonel Roosevelt made up his mind on the instant what he would do. Leaving the baggage In charge or a strong guard, he ran as fast as his legs would carry him back to the train where his regiment was waiting, and marched his men double quick to the quay. They arrived there Just as the Yucatan came in, and they boarded her Just a few minutes be fore the regulars and the Seventy-first came up. There was a lot of expostu which are of wood and the only parts of the house which are combustible." Cement men say that the practical dif ficulties are Insuperable, but Mr. Edi son has a way of overcoming Insuper able difficulties by "finding a way around" them. The typical house would contain six rooms and a bath and would cost only $1200, and would give a man for $10 a month a better home than he now. rents for $25. The ad vantages would be exemption from fire risk and sanitary qualities, since, should a case of contagious or in fectious disease take place the walls would afford no harbor for ge'rms and could readily be disinfected. Tho dis advantages are that the house, which can be completed in four days, must be built In large numbers and on adja cent areas, since the castiron molds are very heavy and must be handled by a derrick. The moving of the molds and derrick to any one locality would be a matter or considerable expense,' which. If divided among 15 to 20 houses, would amount to little. Be sides, after taking down the molds an interval of four days must elapse be fore the walls set, during which time the workmen must erect others. For these reasons the house cannot be cheaply constructed on a single vacant lot. Mr. Edlson'a figures for building 144 houses a year are for each house: lAbor and superintendence $ Interest and depreciation on construc tion plant 150 540 810 1--5 lr.D o5 1 cement, s-u Darnsin, hi ,i.iv I Kteel re-enforcement rods. ......... . Bath and heatlns Windoks, ddors and finishing Average per house $1,200 These Items are ample except that for the bath, and the others are high enough to make the total a safe esti mate. The house will be prettier and more comfortable than the wooden or brick house at twice the cost. Aside from cheapness and durability the great point Is the' elimination of the fire risk. Such a house would be good for BOO years. Double the size of the bouse and the cost is not doubled, and the man earning $100 a month can easily own or rent, a commodioija home. Mr. Edison's estimates, how ever, are for Long Island and New Jer sey, for he expects to use the sand re moved in excavating the cellar to make his riuld concrete. Further, he must be near an ample supply of water. , NEW YORK'S TEA SHOPS Attractive Little Rest Havens Tucked Away in Inconspicuous Corners. New York Evening Post. 1 Afternoon tea drinking is now as much of an institution in New York as abroad. Tearooms are springing up like mushrooms. That they are very much appreciated, these little rest havens, tucked away, as they usually are, in some Inconspicuous corner. Is evident to anyone who will take the time to make the rounds of them. Each is distinctive and has something especially alluring to offer. For in stance, there Is one that Is pervaded by a true New England atmosphere. The room is spfck and span In Its whiteness, the tableware such as might have been used by Priscilla and her John, and tha edibles are delicacies such as mother used to make. The reasonable prices, too, are an Interesting feature. Farther up the street a sign with thistle and a tartan plaid lure one up the elevator into a cheerful room lined with snow-covered tables. Here one is served with breakfast, luncheon or aft ernoon tea from a tempting menu. In ordering, Scotch Bcones should not be neg lected. Then there Is that very rashlonable tea room that Is partitioned into small seml inclosures, stalls, to be exact; here, once upon a time, the highbred horses belong ing to one of New York's oldest families were accustomed to feed. Each stall Is named for a famous steed, the china is decorated with pretty hunting scenes, and the loft above Is a Jolly good place for a barn dance. Needless to say. It Is Ire-J lation and protest from the two regU ments, but the Rough Riders had pos session of the transport, and they kept It. Speaking of this Incident, a friend of Colonel Roosevelt, who afterwards received an important civil appoint ment at his hands, said: "I have often thought how different the subsequent course of politics might have been if Roosevelt had not made that quick decision to ' get his mew aboard the Yucatan. If they had ar rived a few minutes later, they would not have got aboard and the chances, would have been that they would not have reached the front In time for th fighting. It was Roosevelt's war .rec ord that made- him the Republican candidate for Governor of New York In 1898, and, therefore, made possible his succession to the Presidency.' Mission That "Made" Dan Lamont. If the late Daniel S. Lamont had not decided rather reluctantly in 1882, when a legislative reporter for the Albany (N. Y.) Argus that he would go on a mission through the western and central part of New York State with the object of sounding political sentiment there, he might never have been Secretary of War. The late Daniel Manning, owner of the Albany Argus and president of a leading Albany Bank, was the great power In the Democratic party in New York State north of New York City at that time. Several months before the Democratic state convention of 1SS2. Manning became much disturbed by the Intense and bitter struggle that was developing between the friends of Roswell T. Flower and those of Gen eral Henry D. Slocum for the capture of the nomination for Governor for their respective candidates. Manning feared the contest would endanger tho chances of the party at the polls and he began to look around for some one who would be available as a compro mise candidate. While Manning was making this survey, a very capable politician, the late E. K. Apgar. one of the shrewdest of the younger Demo crats of that day, said to him: "There's a Mayor out in Buffalo who has been writing some extraordinary veto messages." "What's his name?" said Manning. "Cleveland," was the reply. Manning sent Apgar to Investigate further and then called In Lamont. ' "Dan," he said, "how would you like to take a run out to Buffalo and through the middle of the state and, sound the Democrats with respect to this man Cleveland?" For some reason or other Lamont was not eager to make tho trip, and was inclined to beg off, but as Manning seemed anxious about the matter, ha undertook the mission. The report that he made was so clear and convincing, and it so com-pletelj- confirmed other Investigations, that Manning was greatly Impressed with Lamont's ability and political in sight. So, when, six months or so later. Mr. Cleveland, then about to begin his administration as Governor, said to him, "Manning, do you know anyone you could recommend to be my secre tary?" the Democratic leader replied on the instant: "Yes, Dan Lamont. Ho Is Just the man for the place.". That was the beginning of Lamont's political career, which ended only with, his term as Secretary of War In the second Cleveland administration. quently patronized for this purpose. The chief treat here is a certain spice cake made from an old Southern recipe, and by a real mammy cook, presiding genius for the versatile young woman who origi nated - and has made such a success of the place. LOVE GIVES BLIND SIGHT Girl Bride Says There Comes Mys terious Light Into One's Soul. Chicago Inter Ocean. Jennie . Boehler, a beautiful young girl, whose voice has thrilled thous ands of Chlcagoans during the past several weeks, never saw her husband before she married him, and yet she was his sweetheart for several years. Nor has she ever seen him since their marriage. She is blind. And her husband, a pianist, who plays his wife's accompaniments, has never seen his pretty wife. He, too, 13 sightless. But love to these two Is wonderful, even in their darkness. "Love isnt blind." declared the sightless bride In their apartments at the Hollenden Hotel. "Somehow when one loves there comes into one's soul a mysterious but radiant light and one may see with one's soul. "Often during the Summer my hus band and I sit on the lake front and we see the yachts out on the lake. We see the sunbeams kissing the -white-capped waves as they splash rhyth mically on the beach. "And wo see each other, too," she continued. "I am sure I can picture my dear husband's face as well as you can, and you have your two good eyes. His image is mirrored In my soul and mine in his." Richard Boehler, who is but 24 years of ago, has been totally blind for 19 years. The two were married Thanks giving day, but have been able to keep their happiness there in the dark a secret until yesterday. It was while attending school at the Institution for tho Blind at Jackson ville, I1L, eight years ago that Boehler first met Jennie Martin. That was her name before Thanksgiving day. Onn day Boehler was playing a piano and the girl stole through the shadows to his side. She saw him with her soul, she says. She began to sing. The mel ody wound its way in tiny tendrils through the dark around their two hearts. They were In love's web ther In the darkness. And love's light flooded their souls. And finally there came a day when the little blind girl, now nearly 20 years old, plighted her troth with her sightless sweetheart at Hymen's altar. Now they sing love songs for a livelli hood and live a love song, "seeing with, their souls." "Ah, indeed," rapturously sighed the girl as the interview ended, "marriage Is beautiful even in our darkness." Blowing Up of a Mine. - -t Joseph Husband, in the Atlantic. It was about half an hour later when I reached my room, for I had stopped on the way to chat with the gateman. I was sitting on the edge of the bed, loosening the heel of one of my rub ber boots with the toe of the otherv when suddenly through the stillness of the sleeping town, from the power house half a mile away came a low and rising note, the great siren whistle In the power-house. Almost fascinated, I listened as the great note rose higher and more shrill and died away again., One blast meant a fire in the town; two blasts, fire in the buildings at the mine; and three blasts, the most ter rible of all, a disaster or trouble In the mine. Once more, after an inter minable pause, the sound came again; and once more, rose and died away. I did not move, but there was a sudden coldness that came over me as once more, for the third time, the deep note broke out on the quiet air. Almost instantaneously the loud Jingle of my telephone brought me to my feet. I took aown the receiver: "The mine's blown up," said a woban'B voice,