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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1895 SENATOR ALLISON OF IOWA He Is Coming Strongly to the Front as a Presidential . Candidate. A SATISFACTORY PARTY RECORD J. W. Kay's Short and Pithy Bio. graphical Sketch of the Old Statesman. | serve in the war for the Union. delegate from Ashland to the convention which nominated Salmon P. Chase for Governor in 1855, and he gave energetic support to Fremont in 1856. This interest in public affairs and the mighty issues of the day he continued to maihtain in Towa. He was a delegate to the State convention which nominated Samuel J. Kirkwood for Governor in 1859, and was a delegate from Iowa to the Chicago conveation which nominated Abraham Lincoln in 1860. He took a fervent share in the campaign which resulted in Lincoln’s election, and which pealed forth throughout the world the gnell of the slave oligarchy at Wash- ington. Mr. Allison, as & member of the staff of Governor Kirkwood, was intrusted with the important task of raising trocps to Mr. Alli- son raised two regiments in Northern Towa when the rebellion began in 1861, and in the following year two more regi- While Harrison, Morton, Reed and | McKinley are being urged with more or less energy and sincerity for the Repub- lican Presidential nomination, the name of William Boyd Allison of Towa is assum- | ing a prominence that no intelligent ob- server can to recognize, says J. W. ! Kay in the New York Monthly Illustrator. Clean in character, with a recoM satisfac- tory alike to Last and West, a steadfast but not immoderate protectionist, and thoroughly imbued with American ideas, traditions and principles, Senator Allison | tibly pushed to the front as a | is irresi National leader without any effort on his own part, without any fanfaronade or dis- play, or circus-poster advertising in the public press. Representing a State which has long since ceased to be| on the frontier, but which retains | much of the noble spirit of the oneers, combined with the culture older communities, Senator Allison is | ments were organized under his supervis- ion and direction, also in Northern Iowa. This work had hardly been accomplished when the people of Iowa concluded that Mr. Allison ought to represent them in Washington, and he was elected a mem- | ber of Congress from the Third District of that State. Mr. Allison entered the House of Repre- | sentatives of the Thirty-eighth Congress 1863 — the same Congress in which General Garfield and the Hon. James G. | Blaine first appeared. No Congress ever | bad more important work to do. The | war was at its height, and the issue, in the opinion of many, still in doubt, when Mr. Allison was summoned with his loyal feliow-members to sustain the arms of | Abrabam Lincoln in that terrific conflict. | And President Lincoln had no more faith- ful supporter. Mr. Allison was mnever | absent from his seat when any measure of consequence came up for discussion or action, and his voice and vote were always unfalteringly given in favor of every meas- ure deemed necessary for the preservation of the Union and the restoration of peace on that condition alone. While some SENATOR WILLIAM BOYD ALLISON AS HE APPEARED SOME YEARS AGO. e SENATOR WILLIAM BOYD ALLISON. [Reproduced by the Monthly Illustrator from his latest photograph.] Committee, although the committee con- | sented to their being made a part of the bill, and t"e measure was therefore in- trusted to Mr. Allisor when reported in the Senate. The amendment was adopted | by the Senate and concurred in by the | ouse, and the bill was passed over the veto of President Hayes. He also had charge in the Senate of the act of 1882, authorizing the extension of the charters of the National banks, and prepared and submitted the twelfth section of that act, | authorizing the issue of gold certificates on | the deposits of gold in the treasury. Mr. Allison was appointed chairman in 1886 of & sub-committee of the Finance | | Committee to examine the administration | | of the custom laws. | Mr. Allison was chairman of the sub- | committee of the Finance Committee which prepared the substitute for the Miils bill in 1888, and he had charge of the bill in | the Senate up to the time of its passage in that body, early in 1889. Mr. Allison was | also a member of the sub-committee which | prepared the Senate amendments to the McKinley bill. ile steadfastly adhering to tbe prin- ciples of the party of which he has been a life-long member, Senator Allison has | never treated Democrats as deprived of | neithef” & cowboy nor a dude, but an Amer- ican statesman of the broadest as well as the highest type. Sprung from the people and always one of the people, he com- | mands the respect of all classes—if the | word ‘“‘classes’” can be correctly applied to | Americans. He has never attempted to | draw a line between himself and his hum- blest constituent, and every hornest citizen of Towa has felt that in Allison he had not merely a representative but also a friend. Mr. Allison is of Pennsylvania lineage. His ancestors on both sides emigrated from that State in 1783, and the paternal name, besides the fact that the Allisons are of the Presbyterian faith, indicate Scottish descent. His ancestors settled upon the farm where Mr. Allison was born, in Perry Township, Wayne County, Ohio, March 2, 1829. It is worthy of note that the earliest public buildings in the new settlement were a church and a school, and Mr. Allison received his early educa- tion in the Ohio free school founded al- most in the wilderness. When 16 years of age he was sent to an academy at Wooster, Ohio, known as “Professor Par- rott’s school.” There he remained for about twelye months, and then for one winter Le made his living as a school- teacher. He afterward studied at Alle- gheny College, Pennsylvania, and the Western Reserve College. He was a con- scientious student, and his college educa- tion meant more for him than it does for many who go to superior institutions of learning. Mr. Allison went back to Wooster from the Western Reserve Col- lege and began the study of law in the | offices of Messrs. Hemphill & Turner. He | was admitted to the bar in 1852. In the winter of 1856-57 Mr. Allison re- | solved to seek a mew field. He visited | Iilinois and Iowa with that object, and concluded to settle in Iowa. He chose Dubuque as the location for his future home, and removed to that place in April, 1857. He has resided in the same house in Dubuque over thirty-eight years, the modest home of his earlier manhood being dearer than ever to him in the days of comparative prosperity and fame. Mr. Allison became a partner in a well-known Jaw firm at Dubuque, and soon acquired a reputation as one of the leaders of the bar in Iowa. Dubuque was then the chief city between St. Paul and St. Louis on the Mississippi River, and having been for some years the terminus of the Illinois Central Railway, at_that time the only road reaching the Mississippi north of Rock Island, it enjoyed an extensive trade, the entire traffic north of St. Paul, when the river was navigable, being car- ried on in lines of steamers running from Dubnque to that city. The depression of 1857, bringing many failures in its train, also brought many clients to the firm of which Mr. Allison was a member. He then acquired a reputation for kindness and consideration in his treatment of un- fortunates which is too often foreign to the legal profession. No person \‘who en- gaged Mr. Allison to advocate bxs' cause had to complain either of extortion or sharp practice, and while he vxgprons]y and successfully maintained the rights of his clients he never treated an opponent unfairly. B Mr. Allison did not neglect political du- ties. In those years preceding the war, when the Nation felt asif a volcano was underneath, when the Lilliputian threads of compromise were being broken, and it became more and more apparent that the question whether this Republic would be hond or free would have to be decided by force, no patriotic citizen could stand an idle spectator. Before departing from SENATOR ALLISON WITH SHAVEN lfPPER LIP. the rights of citizenship because they were | Democrats. He has been ever ready to recognize the hts of allin the broadest | sense, and as a National legislator he has | legislated for the benefit of all. Senator Allison, in the great tariff strug- | gle of 1894, upheld the claims of Louisiana to the sugar bounty just as strenuously as | he advocated the claims of Ohio wool and of New England manufactures, and he did not suffer any schemng for petty partisan advantage to silence the voice of reason, demanding justice for the South as well as the North. Mr. Allison is one of the working mem- bers of the Senate and as active in its counsels as when he first entered the cham- ber of that body of legislators. He con- siders public office in tne highest sense a public trust, and he never wearies in ful- filling that trust. He has been an active participator in all important legisiation since he took eat in the Senate and his influence has been more than oncedecisive in preventing the enactment of measures which would have affected the National integrity and diminished the National credit. Mr. Allison’s position on the free coin- age question as stated, no doubt with authority, by Colonel Dorus M. Fox, of Des Moines, and as indicated by the Sen- | ator’s career in Washington, is, that both gold and silver should always constitute the metallic money of the world, with full legal tender power, and that the United States should use both metals so far as they can be used, maintaining their parity in value by means of limited coin- age of s.lver on Government account, but that an international agreement, or con- current legislative action of the leading commercial nations for a common ratio, with free mintage at such ratio, is a necessary prerequisite to the opening of the mints of the United States to the free coin- age of silver. That is, Senator Allison is a friend of silver, but believes in sound money—in money that will command re- spect all over the world. Mr. Allison has twice declined the im- portant office of Secretary of the Treasury —once when offered to him by President Garfield in 1881, and later, when the same ofier was made by President Harrison in 1889. He preferred to remain in the place to which he had been chosen by his adopted State, and has held no political office, except as Representative and Sena- tor in Congress. In 1892 Mr. Allison was appointed by President Herrison chairman of the American delegation to the inter- national monetary conference in Brussels. The unsuccessful issue of the conference was a foregone conclusion, as the British delegates were determined to make no concession to silver, and in fact had no authority to concede anything, and in this position they were supported by a majority of the Continental delegates. Senator Allison and his associates upheld the interests of the United States with dig- uity and ability, although success in arriv- ing at an international arrangement was, under the circumstances, impossible. Mr. Allison has been married twice. His first wife, whom he married in Ash- land, Ohio, in 1854, was the daughter of Daniel Carter, of that place. She died in 1859. In 1872 Senator Allison mar- ried Mary N. Nealley, the adopted daugh- ter of Senator Grimes of Iowa, who died in 1883. When in Washington Mr. Allison resides in a rented house, which he has occupied since 1873, and his home in Du- buque, as already stated, is the same in which he took up his quarters nearly forty others despaired, for Mr. Allison the star of hope was always in the ascendant, and even in the darkest hour he never lost con- fidence in the success of the National cause. The bravery of Iowa's troops in the field and the loyaity of Towa’s people at home were well reflected in the legislative career of Congressman Allison while the Nation was struggling for its existence. Mr. Allison was re-elected to the Thirty- ninth, Fortieth and Forty-first Congresses, serving continuously in the House from March, 1863, to March, 1871, throughout the period of reconstruction. The Iowa Legislature elected Mr. Alli- son to the Senate 1n 1872, and he took his seat on the 4th of March, 1873. He has been re-elected three times, and his pres- ent term will expire on the 3d of March, 1897. In the Senate asin the House, Mr. Allison’s abilities were promptly recog- nized, and he was appointed a member of the Committee on Appropriations. Mr. Allison became chairman of this commit- tee in 1881, and continued chairman until the Democrats obtained control of the Scn- ate in 1893, when Senator Cockrell was ap- pointed to that place. He continues to_be on the committee, at the head of the Re- publican members. Mr. Allison has also been a member of the Finance Committee for over eighteen_years, having taken the place of General Logan, when that gallant soldier and able statesman retired from the Senate in 1877. From the first Mr. Allison took a firm stand in behalf of sound money. In 1878 he offered in the Finance Committee two amendments to the Bland free-coinage act, which had passed the House. These amendments, which became the operative sections of the act, provided for limited coinage of silver on Government account, and declared it to be the public policy of tbe United States to use both gold and silver as money metals through an in- ternational agreement to establish a common ratio, with free coinage by the leading commercial nations at such ratio. Ohio Mr. Allison had taken an earnest part in the political contest. He was a The amendments did not have the real approval of a majority of the Finance SENATOR ALLISON; ONE OF HIS FAVORITE PICTURES, years ago. The Senator is handsome and well preserved, of pleasant manner and a bearing free from hauteur or egotism. He is all the firmer in his grasp upon popular esteem for the reason that he does not push himself upon popular attention. He allows his actions to do the speaking so far as his own fortunes are concerned. LIFERS” ASK CLEMENCY, Governor Petitioned to Pardon One Life-Timer Every Christmas. Warden Aull and Prison Commissioners Believe It an Advanced Step in Prison Reform. Governor Budd is considering a petition from the priscners at San Quentin serving life terms, in which his Excellency is re- quested to inaugurate the custom of ex- tending executive clemency to one among their number every year, either by pardon or commutation of sentence. The petition represents that among the life prisoners are many who have been faithful servants of the State for periods ranging from fif- teen to twenty-four years, who have long since atoned their misdeeds; that their lives are hopeless, but that the hope that he might be the one selected would give them all something to live for and serve as an incentive to good behayior, repent- ance and greater industry for them all. The Governor s asked to fix Christmas of each year as a day upon which one of their number should be selected in accord- ance with his prison record and period of confinement and given either his libery by pardon or a shortening of his sentence. Governor Budd, upon receipt of the pe- tition, forwarded it to Warden Charles Aull of Folsom Prison requesting his opinion_ugou the subject. Warden Aull has replied to Governor Budd ‘expressing his hearty approval of the idea. Hisviews are expressed in the following extracts from his letter: 1 have been engaged in handling the crimi- nal element of this State for twenty-four con- secutive years—sixteen as an official of the State Prison at San Quentin and Folsom. It is my conviction, derived from Iy experience, that the element of hope conduces more largely than all other factors to the good conduct and reformation of criminals. Hope, however dim and distant, prompts obedience and good order and spurs on the convicts to sustained and in- dustrious effort. Promptitude, attention to de- tails and habits of self-control are thus incul- cated and become in time the natural order of life, exerting in the end a vast mental, moral and physical benefit on the prisoner. To this may be added skill and pmflnlenc{ in the use of tools and industry as a fixed habit. Eliminate hope from the mind and heart of the couvict, and you have nothing left that is amenable to reformatory agencies. There is no incentive to obedience and work. When bereft of this pleasing and sustaining enticipation the convict becomes sodden in his degrada- tion and imbued with an implacable and vengeful hostility against society. Regenera- tion is the fruit of repentance and atonement. Denied the hope of forgiveness, there is nothing to lift the life-term convict above the level of the chained brute. The unceasing enemy of authority within the prison, he is the embittered foe of society and all law with- out. Evil passions obtain full control of his soul, and his mind closes against righteous precepts and wholesome reflections. Pl o e e Seventy men are serving life sentences in this prison: they have no incentive to good behavier save the hope of executive clemency or punishment by physical deprivation. Take all encouragement from them and you crush out everything human and leave only the animal. i terital S e ine el Tkt iy My view is dictated by & business study of criminalogy &s much as it is by humanitarian consideration. Whatever lifts the convict from a_life of sloth and wickedness and elevates him morally is a distinct gain to society, whether considered from 2 moral or economic standpoint. A pardon held out as an annual prize for the most deserving among the life- termers would be an act of merey which could not be abused and would greatly aid in pro- moting discipline, industry and correct be- havior. The recipient of this clemency must have shown himself worthy of it by a long period of hard work and strict obedience. PO e e SR Itmust be borne inmind that alarge pro- portion of life-termers are convicted of homi- cide. Such usually have more character than men who commii crimes against property. The fact that they are not hanged generaliy pointsto some extenuating circumpstance in the commission of the crime, or # lingering doubt of gnilt. Many of these men will not lie orsteal. Not a few of them were excellent fathers and husbands, who had led fairly use- ful and respectable lives prior to Vi lating the law. Shall there be no expiation for these? Itseems to me that society may, with- out injury to itself or insult to {umce. hola out the hope of pardon in recognition of con- tritton_and good works. Otherwise society might beter save itself expense and the hoj less brutalization of its offenders by executing them at once. In taking this view I have not lost sight of the deterrent influence of punish- nt, e * s+ s = » a3 @ An actual act of mercy in this form would, I am_convinced, enw“"ie those habits of thdught and energy which constitute the very founsuiou stone of all reformation, and inau- gurate a species of emulation that would exert a most healthful moral influence inside the prison, an influence which would be felt by all classes of convicts, and be of material assist- ance to the management. It would generate & public opinion of the right sort among the convicts themselves, which is something greatly to be desired in prisons where conviets are worked together in large bodies. One of the greatest difficulties we have to encounter in reforming and disciplining a convict is the evil tendency of his companionship. The only guh]lc opinion he isin touch with is that of is fellows. He becomes impregnated with the degraded sentiment surrounding him, and too often aligns himself with the habitual mxfninala who recognize themselves as out- o e li e Y e e At the last meeting of the Prison Com- mission Warden Aull’s letter and the peti- tion were read and considered, after which @ resolution was adopted approving the plan and urging Governor Budd to inaugu- rate the custom, which it is believed he will do on Christmas day. Following are the names of the life pris- gners at San Quentin who signed the peti- ion. Augustus Castro, Alfred Lichecomb, Charles ‘Wilson, Ah Lee,Thomas Campbell, Ah Dunn, J. C. Henley, Pascal Castorena, Ah Chung, Jere- miah McCarthy, Jose M. Alviso, Fsco Alviso. Frank Calmel, Juan Jose Alvarez, On Gue, Louis Ramirez, W. A. Ellis, Francisco Ortego, Chunh Ah Fook, Wonb Ah Tie, George Messer- smith, Frank J. Kessler, Romuldo Oliver, Frank Gilkey, Gobias Richards, Indian Pike. Jose Melendrez, George W. Demott, Ah Fook Yan, Vicente Garcia, Alatti Rossi, Charles Se- astra, John Murbach, Henry Paff, Abraham Turcott, Burr Beebe, Philip” Williams, H. J. Kelsey, Peter de Martini, lson Pierce, Clemente Garcia, J. J. Bush, William Edwards, H. A. Williams, Frank Gleicharf, Jung Quong Sing, George Gardner, William Dolan, Fre- diano Di _ Dinorci, Juan Trado, Pat O’Keilly, Fook Soone, F. L. Wood, Buck Gin, Michael Brady, Jose A. Rodriguez, William Williams, Jo Jung Chung, Wong Sick, Jung Wing, R. L. Sykes, Pedro Yamis, John Perrill, Harry Bird, John J. Murphy, Thomas Wilson, Thomas Bowman, Chin Heoug, Lou Kit, Ah Keoug, W. M. Loughlin, Dominico Bacigalupo, Henry Mullinger, August King. TALK OF CRIMINAL SUITS The Safe Deposit and Trust Com- pany Will Stop Aspersions on It. Its Secretary Replies to T. C. Spell- ing’s Statements in Indignant Mood. The officers of the California Safe Deposit and Trust Company were very indignant vesterday over the statements of T. C. Spelting reflecting upon that company’s actions in regard to its position as trustee of depositors of the People’s Home Sav- ings Bank. This indignation brought out several direct denials, and in one instance, the reply to a statement of Spelling’s was, “It is a lie.” Beyond all this the trust company’s representatives stated their views that the attack on their institution transcended legal limits, and they declared that criminal proceedings would be insti- tuted againstanybody who uttered state- ments tending to place the trust company in a false light, and thereby to injure its standing as a financial institution. “Those people better beware,” said the secretary and treasurer, J. Dalzell Brown. “If they go too far we shall put a stop to this kind of thing very effectively. *Spelling is a ‘shyster’ attorney without particular standing, who got into the Peo- ple’s Bank affair, and received money for services rendered and to be rendered. He has statea that the trust company is not a bank under the laws of this State. Thatis alie. The trust company is incorporated under the laws of the State of California to transact a banking business and has been and is operating under its articles of incorporation and under license of the Bank Commissioners. “Spelling has stated that we listed pass- books of the People’s Bank as assets at par value in our report for 1895 to the Bank Commissioners. He has uttered a false- hood in this, too. We bave done no such thing as listed the passbooks of the Peo- le’s Bank assigned to us in trust for col- ection. Our printed statement is public y.royen_v. But nobody can find in it what Spelling. claims—that the passbooks of People’s Bank depositors are given as as- sets of our bank. In our trust depart- ment we have taken the full amount of these deposits, $724,878 34, which we hold in trust for the depositors for collection, and given that amount as one item of re- sources—not our resources, but simply what we hold in trust. This has no con- nection whatever with our banking de- partment, and is only a statement of what 1s held in trust. “As Mr. Bartnett explained yesterday the reason for dismissal of the Winterburn suit to compel stockholders to pay the bal- ance of unpaid capital of the People’s Bank, I can only say that that matter was taken up by the People’s Bank directors. They brought suit to compel payment of the unpaia capital stock, thus taking the whole matter out of our hands. “The truth of this whole contemptible attack is this: These people are mad- dened because we fought for the deposit- ors, and since we took hold of the sorry muddle we have shown up the nefarious business transacted by that set of blood- suckers and bankwreckers. Their source of revenue has been cut off, and now that they find they can’t suck the lemon dry they are piqued, and try all sorts of mean tricks to vent their spleen. But let them keep it up and they shall find us meeting them more than half way.” —————— No Honey in Roses. Roses do not secrete honey in their flow- ers. Insects are simply attracted by the perfume and rich colors, and by the abun- dant supply of pollen, which serves as foo Los Angeles Express. NEW TO-DAY. 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