Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1894 — Page 16

16

WOMEN IN POLITICS

COMPLICATIONS ARISING FROM TIIH SUFFRAGE LVW IS COLORADO,

Some Evcltlnff Experiences In One Tonn When Lllectlrm Time Came Around Women at a Primary. Salhla (Col.) Correspondence New York livening Sun. There have been some high old times around about here recently. One-half the to'xrx doesn't ereak to the other half; Innumerable engagements hive been declared erf. And It is all because of the women and the new law which gives them a right to vote. Until that law went Into effect thia little community went harmoniously to the polls on election day. lint the time of peace has fled. It la war to the teeth. The house is divided ag-alnt itself, and all that I required to start the divorce mill rolling is a good New York lawyer. There are scores of housed where man and wife do not speak to each, other, and there are six young men who are no longer engaged to the dearest, sweetest creatures on earth. All social festivities have been declared off, and It's nothing lout politics, politics, politics, day In and day out The trouble was all started by a young man who was sent here by the Republican central committee to organize the Republicans of the district. He was such a nice young man. He hoc a cute mustache and his bangs were very neat. He had a fetching way of rolling his eyes and he left behind him but one regret, and that at present troubles every citizen of the community. There is not a man who would not give his best rooster to help swell the feather pile If the young man should appear in this town again. It was the young man who said: "And, ladies of Colorado, I beseech you to organize. You know your strength. I need not tell you that a woman has twice as much pense as a man, and that a man who trie3 to compete with a woman is little more than an Idiot. We need your refining influences in politics. Erigrhten, decorate and usefulize our halls of legislation." That 6tarted it, and the chances are that on Nov. 6 every town, county and State office will be wanted by the women. The first real difficulty, the cloud no larger than a man's hand, was encountered at the first meeting of the nevr Republican Club. The meeting wai called to order by Fred Foraker. It was held at a rrivate house. There were twenty-four persons present, twelve men and twelve women. The women eat all together. Their husbands sat together at the other end of the room. The old horse doctor proposed the selection of Foraker as permanent chairman and president of the new club. The retired cowpuncher seconded the motion. As yet not a word had "been heard from the women. Say, Sandy," said the horse doctor to the retired cow-puncher. "I don't like the looks of things. I think there's a felon in that left fore foot over yonder. Never like the looks of things when my wife Is not talking. They've put up some Job." FORAKER S RULINGS. So they had. WheA, Foraker said, "All those in favor," there was a dead silence from the women and a hearty "Aye!" from all the men. "All those ogposed," said Foraker. and a solid "No!" came from the women. "The ayes have it," said Foraker, who had once attended Congre ss when Thomas Brackett Reed was Speaker of the House. The storm burst then. All the women in the room were on their feet, crying "Division." "Let's get back to the corral," said the retired cow-puncher, "there's a lot of buffalo on the rampage and a Kansas cyclone kiting along." When the first storm had ceased there were still twelve women present, but their face3 were red, their bonnets disarranged and their tempers at white h-at. "13 a division desired?" asked the chairman. "Yes," screamed a dozen voices. "No," at the same time thundered a dozen more. "I demand a division on hat question first." said a stoutlsh lady In the rear of the room, "and then a division on the original question." There was a division on the question as to whether or not there should be a division on the original question. Twelve women voted In a body for it. Eleven men and the chairman voted against It. "You have no rlsrht to vote," cried half a dozen women at Foraker. "I be? your pardon." replied the chairman, "but. according to the rules of this ciub. which are soon to be formulated, the Chair has a right to vote on every question. The vote is a tie. therefore the question must be laid on the table. There will bo no division, and the ruling of the Chair goes, and the ayes have it. .Next business." The r.ien were Jubilant, the women furious. That they had been cheated they knew, but Just how or when they could not make out. Then the men held a conference and the women held a conference. "Do we want the secretary V asked Foraker of his fellow-men. "No; let them have that. There's nothing but work in it anyhow," said one of the men. They'll want it?" asked Foraker. In Sgnf ?Ur lif?" They11 want everything "All right." said the chairman. "We will make a dicker with them for it. We'll give ra the secretary of the executive committee, the executive committee to name tne delegates to the convention to be voted upon at the primaries." In the meantime the women had decided that have the secretaryship they would. When ordor was called the horse doctor proposed the retired cow puncher for secfur; ,e of tne wnien proposed one .the,ir ranK anJ flIe- was a tie vote. It looks to me," sai: ;he chairman after vote had been ann vtneed, "as if there would be a deadlock. No. I think It would be a good idea if. to save time and trouble, you ladies would agree to our naming the executive committee, and then we on our side will agree fo Mrs. Fitzbrown's having the secretaryship." MEAN LITTLE TRICK. v The women, intent upon but one thing at a time, did not see the trick, but, seizing at their first victory and thinking the accession on the part of the men meant weakening in their ranks, accepted the proposition willingly. The chairman then appointed an executive committee to consist of the retired cow punchftr, Dob Powell and himself. The by-liws were then produced. "Is there any sene n taking up the time of the meeting by reading all this?" asked the chairman. "The by-laws are Just like all others which you ladies are. of course," with a bow. "thoroughly familiar." "No," said the women, after noticing a disposition on :he part of their husbands to call for a reading of the by-laws, a little trick suggested by Foraker, "there wasn't any sense in reading the by-laws." The by-laws Imposed upon the executive committee the duty of naming the delegates to the State convention. The meeting then adjourned. "Geel" said the retired cow pnncher later In the evening, "we've got them whipsawed." "Don't vou believe It." said the horse doctor. "I didn't like that look in my wife's eye. She didn't say a word to me all the way home or when I left her at the door, and that is not a pood sign. There is going to be some tall electioneering done around here before the next meeting, you mark my word." At the next meeting each woman was accompanied by her servant girl, and as every servant voted with her mistress the women outnumbered the men two to one. The next morning the husbands give notice to the servants. The wives increased the servants wages, and so at least the girls profited by it. To offset this majority the men sent out and employed a band of cow punchers, and ence more tie votes were the order of the day. At this meeting the women surprised the men with an original bit of politics. They d'epo'ed the old chairman, or, rather, thy tried to do so, but failed because cf the by-laws, which suddenly developed a clause to the effect that the chairman could r.ot be deposed. Then they elected a Woman chairwoman to act with the chairman. After that there were two In the chair. There were. It Is needless to say; some lively tights, and nil th language used was not strictly parlia' mentary. It could end but one way. and that was In the dissolution of the club and the organiratlon of two separate clubs, one for the men. the other for the women. The men named their delegates and the women taxied theirs. There were two tickets in

the field when the day of the primaries came around. One ticket named men for delegates, the other named women for delegates. EXCITING TIMES. The week preceding the primaries was exciting. The women held meetings every night, and Mrs. Foraker, who attended them, told us all about them. The retired cow puncher met the horse doctor one evening quite late. The horse doctor was not looking well. "I'm if I'm going home to-night." "What's the matter?" "It's all up. Next thing there will be a divorce. She says if I speak to you again and don't vote her way she will get a divorce on the ground of what-do-you-call-It of temper." "Come around to the meeting at Dob Powell's and report. Will see what's to be done," said the cow-puncher. They went. All the men looked sad. They had grievances to report. "I think we will succeed," said Foraker. "I've won over my wife. She wanted a new dress. It's bribery, I know, but this is a desperate case." The men agreed on a plan of action. The next day at breakfast a score of wives learned that new dresses and new bonnets would not be forthcoming unless the delegates named by the men were elected. The women met In the afternoon, and no suppers were cookM that ni?ht. No suppers would be cooked, they said, unless the men withdrew their ticket. The men met that night, and the next morning the grocers and butchers were told that no more bills made by the wives would be honored. The men ate their meals at the restaurant. So the restaurant keeper also profited by the fight. This man was engaged to a very pretty young woman. Jler mother ordered the girl to declare the engagement off unless the man refused to feed the men. The girl's father patted the young chjp on the back and told him that It would be all right in the end. The young man went ahead with his work "and the engagement was declared off. By and by both, sides began to weaken. Some of the men sickened of the fight, and a great many of the women compromised on new dresses, so that on the day before election neither side knew Just where it stood. If anything, it looked as if the men hnd a majority of some two or three. Daybreak saw every buggy and carriage in the district hitched up and in the street carrying voters to the polls. The inspectors were men, but all the mothers-in-law in town and all political women in town were at the polU ready to challenge every vote. All the pretty girls, too. were out, and their electioneering reminded one very much of the tactics of the flower sellers at church fairs. HOW THEY VOTED. Early In the day the horse doctor went to vote. Ills wife was at the polls, challenging every voter. When she saw him approaching she went up to him. She handed him a ticket. She looked at him. "John," she said, "that ticket, remember, or South Dakota." "Divorce?" my dear." said the little man. "Or that ticket. John." "All right, my dear," said the horse doctor. He entered the booth, voted a ticket he had folded in his hand, and came out chewing something. When he saw that his wife was not watching him he ejected from his mouth a wad of tine white paper. Then he went over and had a drink and told Foraker what he had done. Warning was therefore Issued to all the rest of the men who might meet with such treatment at the hands of their wives. There was a great deal of paper eaten that day, and the reason the women didn't win was because half of their tickets were chewed up. Two of the men were watched so close'y that they had to swallow the paper or face the consequences. At 11:30 o'clock Mrs. Foraker lost eighteen personal friends on the spot, and nobody knows just how many she has lost since then. At that hour she approached the booth to east her vote. One of the women handed her a ticket. "I've feot one already," she said. "Is it the right one?" "Yes." "Let' me see It." Mrs. Foraker showed her ticket. It was the men's ticket. "Why, you've got the wrong one," said the lady. "It's the one I'm going to vote," declared Mrs. Foraker. "Oh, you traitor, you you you " Then, in the midst of a lot of language, Mrs. Foraker voted for her new dress. When the vote was counted it was discovered that the men had been victorious by eighteen votes. "Well.at least,"sald one woman voter, triumphantly, when the result was announced, everything has gone Republican, If we were defeated. It's a clean sweep." It had been a Republican primary. That night at supper, after a long pause, Mrs. Foraker said: "Well, you were elected, my dear, and so when may I have the new dress?" "You may have it now, on one condition," replied her husband. "And thatisV" "That you leave politics strictly alone forever and a day." "I think I shall," she said. "I've got the baby to attend to, and there's two weeks' work on my hands, and I haven't a woman friend in the country now, since I voted against them." A IIOOSIER HERO.

Tribute to a Ynrdmnstcr Whose Prompt Action Suved Tdany Lives. Lafayette Courier. Harry J. Brighty, night yardmaster of the Dig Four railroad, has well earned a place In the galaxy of heroes. To him is due credit, honor and praise for saving the lives of a score and perhaps a hundred passengers last night. At the same place and under similar circumstances an accident occurred a little more than a year ago that- resulted in the death of several persons. In that instance, as in this, a runaway train was the cause of the horror. Destructive as was the frightful wreck in May, IS!!, it is apparent to every one familiar with the circumstances that It would have been rendered insignificant in comparison with that of last nltrht but for the thoughtfulness and promptness of one man. The stillness of the night was suddenly disturbed by a roar that may be likened to the approach of a raging cyclone. From the southeast it approached with almost lightning-like rapidity, the ominous rumble fdling the sleeping valley with tumult and awakening thunderous reverberations on the frowning bluffs beyond. The grim men with lanterns flitting about the yard were not slow at divining the cause. The human n'ght owls hackmen, policemen and hotel runners were quick to grasp the omlnou3 significance of the roar that was awakening the echoes and increasing In fury as It came nearer and nearer, like a mighty monster mad and bent on destruction. They appreciated the fact that the horrible rumble was the warning of a runaway train. Most of them hail passed through one experience of the kind, and they were quick to recall the fate of companions whose lives had been crushed out on the self-same spot where they then stood. A monster locomotive stood Just outside the station building, the glare of its headlight penetrating the gloom to the south from whence came the thundering noise. Dehind the panting and Impatient engine was a long train of coaches in which two hundred or more passengers were peacefully sleep!ng, unconscious that they were even then almost in the very Jaws of death. The night owls, keenly sensitive of their danger, fled In wild confusion, all but one escaping. The situation at that moment was awful to contemplate. Rut one man stood between the hundreds of sleeping passengers and eternity. They were In a veritable death trap. Rut a few paces to the rear was the yawning river. In front and dangerously near was the runaway train, rushing on with the velocity of a whirlwind and gathering momentum at every rail length as it sped down from the hilltops. No human agency was powerful enough to check the velocity of the swiftly turning wheels. The men about the station who appreciated the situation were almost palsied with fear. The passenger train seemed to bo inevitably doomed to destruction Rut there was one man there with a cool head and with nerves cf steel. That man was Harry lirighty. There was not a moment to be lost. Thoroughly familiar with the intricate system of tracks In the yards, he rushed to a switch. Defore a watch could have ticked a dozen times the runaway train would be upon the sleeping passengers. That would have meant death to all of them. In his anxiety to reach the switch. Harry Brichty fell. The accident was almost fatal. But. rolling over, bruised and almost frenzied, he threw the switch Just in the nick of time. A second later the runaway train passed with a mighty roar. A high embankment of earth at the end of the switch offered but little resistonce. The heavily laden cars sped on. cutting through the stone and brick walls of the station building, passing through and through and across the street, leaving a passage way through the masonry from roof to foundation, cut as with a knife. A most disastrous wreck It was, but It is almost providential thr.t It was not worse. But for Harry Blighty's thoughtfulness and promptness the dath trap would have been converted Into a veritable slaughter house. A11 honor to the brave and models t man who saved so many lives, and all honor to even brave knight of the lamp and the rail who keeps his head clear and Ms heartr etrungr in tha performance of duty.

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Shakspeare's wa an original mind, the most original that has ever clothed its conceptions in English lorms of speech, according to the majority opinion, et the scholars who have explored Shakspeare will tell you from wnom ne piagianzeu ms plots, his dialogues and his songs. "Conscience does make cowards of us all. Grand line, is it not? But here is Pilpay, the Brahmin, who lived at least 2,000 B. S. (Before Shakppeare). saying: "Guilty consciences always make people cowards. And Pilpay, we. may be sure, was not the originator of that saying. Cain, after he had killed Abel, probably first coined that Shakspearean remark. "As good luck would have it," is Shakspeare. "As ill luck would have it," is Cervantes. They we're contemporaries. Who wa3 the originator? Neither, probably. "What the dickens" is another of 'F-hakspeare's originalities perhaps. Thomas Haywood also uses the expression m his play of "Edward IV." written, it may be, before "The Merry Wives of Windsor." Nick Bottom, describing his dream, says that "the eye of man hath not seen, the ear of man hath not heard," etc. But we find that from the pen of St Paul, from whom It is undoubtedly plagiarized. (See I Corinthians, ii, 9.) Again, we read in "Hamlet" that "diseases desperate grown by desperate appliance are relieved, or not at all," and feel the force of Shakspeare's great creative mind. Yet he has merely plagiarized an aphorism of Hippocrates, who said: "Extreme remedies are very appropriate for extreme diseases." Goethe was frank to confess himself a plagiarist. He says: "What would remain of me if this ant of appropriation were derogatory to genius? Every one of my writings has been furnished to me by a thousand different persons. A thousand things, wise and foolish, have brought me, without suspecting it, the offering of their thoughts, faculties and experience. My work is an aggregation of beings taken from the whole of nature; It bears the name of Goethe." Voltaire, commonly credited with being a hls'hly original writer, is a self-acknowledged plagiarist, and he defends it boldly. "Of all the forms of theft." he says, "plagiarism is the least dangerous to society," Moliere took his plot3 and dialogues bodily from old Italian comedies. He candidly repudiated any respect for the prigs who cry "plagiarist" at every man who digs a good thing out of the mines of literature and gives it a new dress to mankind as his own. "I conquer my own wherever I find It," he cries. Disraeli (latterly called Lord Ueaconsfleld) was regarded as a unique and entirely original character in the English public life of his time. No more persistent plagiarist ever, lived. His famous funeral oration over the Duke of Wellington wrr. taken almost word for word from a panegyrio written by the great Frenchman, Thiers, en Marshal Saint-Cyr. The London Examiner turned out this neat quatrain to commemorate the plagiarism: In sounding gTeat Wellington's praise, Dizzy's grief and his truth both appear; For a flood of Thiers he lets fall, Which were certainly meant fcr Saint-Cyr. Plagiarism was a pet pastime of Disraeli, who, nevertheless, added new brightness to all that he stoU and enriched literature with not a few coinages that, so far as yet discovered, were brand new. His oft-enest-quoted epigram, "The critics are the men who have failed in literature and art." is, however, a most flagrant plagiarism. We find it in Landar, Balzac, Dumas, Pope, Shenstone and Dryden. Who of all these was the author, and which were the plagiarists, has never been determined. Dryden was very likely the father of It when he wrote: "111 writers are usually the sharpest censors." Shelley put it in the most acid form: "As a bankrupt thief turns thief-taker in despair, so an unsuccessful author turns critic." The accumulated literary riches of all the ages certainly Include better, brighter, larger, nobler thoughts than any one man now living, be he preacher, poet, author, playwright, editor or any other variety of brain and pen worker, can think out for himself. "What Curiosity Leads to in Doston. Miss Frances Albert Doughty, in the Forum. The grandest attribute of the Boston public is its profound regard for the sacrednes of selfhood, for individuality as a formative power, and, as a consequence, character concentrates to a focus. As might be expected where scientific curiosity is a factor so potent. It often plants its standard on unscientific territory, and Interest in theories proven beyond proof becomes a craze. Exotics are especially welcome. The Grand Lama of Tibet, turning off yard upon yard of mysticism on a brass prayer wheel if only he would be careful to observe the decencies of New .England life through the week would draw & large and attentive audience at Music Hall on Sunday, and make an earnest band of converts to the wonder-story of his reincarna-

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Something new and handsome. tlonA He would leave his most cordial blessing behind him, and take away a good subscription, for the mysterious lamaseries in his native land. There 13 only one exception to the statement that prophets of all races, climes and proclivities are welcome to bring their teachings to Boston so long as their conduct 13 according to Boston standards. Thte Is the Pope of Borne. No matter how angelically he might behave while promulgating his doctrines, he would inspire a red-hot antagonism too deeply burnt In to have been caused only by the recent feud about publio schools. This is another inheritance from those old Pilgrims who crossed the sea for freedom to worship and freedom to persecute. Throughout New England persons who are liberally disposed in every other direction enjoy a Alng at priests and nuns as bugaboos. TUB GENTLE SAVAGE. Admirers of "Ilnmnnn" Will Be Pained to Read This. San Francisco Chronicle. The story told of the murder of Mrs. Piatt, a teacher In the Indian school on the Pichango reservation, in Riverside county, is almost too horrible to relate. It seems that because Mrs. Piatt declined to comply with the demands of Metteo Pa, the chief of the Pichangos, for money to pay his railroad fare to Perris and return, she was stunned or killed, placed on the floor of the school building, oak wood piled around her and her body cremated. We can only hope, in mercy, that she was killed before the wood and the building were fired. Pichango reservation contains the remnants of the tribe of Temecula Indians, apotheosized by the late Helen Hunt Jackson in "Ramona." As a rule the natives are harmless and peaceable, but none the less are they Indians, and possessed of the hereditary traits which were glossed over with so much skill by Mrs. JacKSon, and which make them as dangerous as a sleeping rattlesnake. Down in Arizona, where the Indians, like the poor, are always with them, the people do not take much stock in the civilization and Christianization of ' the Indians. Not only do they protest vigorously against the withdrawal of the United States troops from the Territory, but they object seriously to the return of Geronimo to Arizona, even though that doughty warrior is said to have become a Sunday school teacher, a justice of the peace and a deacon in the church, and we shrewdly suspect that the people of Arizona know quite as much about the Apache as he really is as does the Indians Friends Society. There Is one kind of good Indian, says the frontier proverb, and that 13 the dead Indian. Possibly this may be stating the case extremely, but it Is no exaggeration to say that all the education that can be bestowed upon the American Indian, as a class, will not breed out of him his innate cruelty, lust and savagery, and that sooner or later his hereditary traits will assert themselves at the expense of those who have labored for years to make him somethins better than he is capable of becoming. Beefsteak and Oysters. Table Talk. The best of porterhouse steaks is. Just good enough for thii dish, and fine large count oysters. Broil the beeksteak In your best manner over a clear, hot fire, until it Is about two-thirds done. Meantime carefully run each oyster between the thumb and forefinger to remove every particle of shell, and lay them on a clean,, dry towel. See that the oven is hot. When the beefsteak Is ready lay it -on a hot platter containing salt, pepper and butter. 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