Something of Men I Have Known

Adlai E. Stevenson
Something of Men I Have Known,
by Adlai E.

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Adlai E. Stevenson
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Title: Something of Men I Have Known With Some Papers of a
General Nature, Political, Historical, and Retrospective
Author: Adlai E. Stevenson

Release Date: November 9, 2006 [eBook #19745]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK
SOMETHING OF MEN I HAVE KNOWN***
E-text prepared by an anonymous volunteer

Transcriber's notes:
The diaeresis is transcribed by a following hyphen.
The contraction "n't" appears both as a separate word and as a suffix in
the text. Since this seems to be the choice of the Linotype operator, not
the author, it has been changed to modern usage. Differing spellings of
"Lafayette" and "judgment" have also been standardized. The author's
spelling of "Pittsburg" and "Alleghanies" has been retained.
Hyphenations at the end of lines have been eliminated wherever
possible. Those remaining are words that are hyphenated elsewhere in
the text, or in general usage.
A few corrections of punctuation and of single letters have been made.
This transcription was typed into MS-DOS Editor under Windows XP,
spell-checked in Word Perfect, and examined with Gutcheck.

SOMETHING OF MEN I HAVE KNOWN
With Some Papers of a General Nature, Political, Historical, and
Retrospective
by
ADLAI E. STEVENSON
Fully Illustrated
Second Edition

[Frontispiece]
[Publisher's logo]

Chicago A. C. McClurg & Co. 1909
Copyright A. C. McClurg & Co. 1909 Published October, 1909 Second
Edition, December 17, 1909 The Lakeside Press R. R. Donnelley &
Sons Company Chicago

TO MY WIFE Letitia Green Stevenson THE PATIENT LISTENER
TO THESE "TWICE-TOLD TALES"

FOREWORD
To write in the spirit of candor of men he has known, and of great
events in which he has himself borne no inconspicuous part, has been
thought not an unworthy task for the closing years of more than one of
the most eminent of our public men. It may be that the labor thus
imposed has oftentimes enabled the once active participant in great
affairs submissively "to entertain the lag end of his life with quiet
hours."
Following the example of such at a great distance and along a humbler
path, I have attempted to write something of events of which I have
been a witness, and of some of the principal actors therein during the
last third of a century.
My book in the main is something of men I have personally known; the
occasional mention of statesmen of the past seems justified by matters
at the time under discussion.
With the hope that it may not be wholly without interest to some into
whose hands it may fall, I now submit this slight contribution to the
political literature of these passing days.
A. E. S. BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS, August 1, 1909.

CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.
ON THE CIRCUIT II. IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES III.
AGAIN IN CONGRESS IV. THE VICE-PRESIDENT V. THE
SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES VI. A TRIBUTE TO LINCOLN
VII. STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS VIII. THE FIRST POLITICAL
TELEGRAM IX. ALONG THE BYPATHS OF HISTORY X. THE
CODE OF HONOR XI. A PRINCELY GIFT XII. THE OLD
RANGER XIII. THE MORMON EXODUS FROM ILLINOIS XIV. A
KENTUCKY COLONEL XV. FORGOTTEN EVENTS OF THE
LONG AGO XVI. ROBERT G. INGERSOLL XVII. A
CAMP-MEETING ORATOR XVIII. CLEVELAND AS I KNEW HIM
XIX. THE UNANIMOUS CHOICE FOR SPEAKER XX. A
LAWYER OF THE OLD SCHOOL XXI. HIGH DEBATE IN THE
MOUNTAINS XXII. THE SAGE OF THE BAR XXIII. "THE
GENTLEMAN FROM MISSISSIPPI" XXIV. AN OLD-TIME
COUNTRY DOCTOR XXV. A QUESTION OF AVAILABILITY
XXVI. A STATESMAN OF A PAST ERA XXVII. NOT GUILTY OF
PREACHING THE GOSPEL XXVIII. AMONG THE ACTORS XXIX.
THE LOST ART OF ORATORY XXX. THE COLONELS XXXI.
REMINISCENCES XXXII. A TRIBUTE TO IRELAND XXXIII.
THE BLIND CHAPLAIN XXXIV. A MEMORABLE CENTENNIAL
XXXV. COLUMBUS MONUMENT IN CENTRAL PARK XXXVI.
A PLATFORM NOT DANGEROUS TO STAND UPON XXXVII.
ANECDOTES OF GOVERNOR OGLESBY XXXVIII. THE ONE
ENEMY XXXIX. CONTRASTS OF TIMES XL. ENDORSING THE
ADMINISTRATION XLI. ANECDOTES ABOUT LINCOLN XLII.
FIRST LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY IN AMERICA XLIII. A NEW
DAY ADDED TO THE CALENDAR XLIV. A MOUNTAIN
COLLEGE XLV. DEDICATION OF A NATIONAL PARK XLVI. A
BAR MEETING STILL IN SESSION XLVII. THE
HAYNE-WEBSTER DEBATE RECALLED XLVIII. IN THE
HIGHLANDS XLIX. ANECDOTES OF LAWYERS L. OUR NOBLE
CALLING LI. THE "HOME-COMING" AT BLOOMINGTON

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
[facing] PAGE ADLAI E. STEVENSON Frontispiece ADLAI E.
STEVENSON AT 30 8 JAMES S. EWING 9 GEORGE F. HOAR 12
SAMUEL J. TILDEN
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