. Review of reviews and world's work. is on many lines,and his sense of humor is well developed. A few years ago he was the favorite orator intlie great Christian Endeavor conventions ; buttlie attempt of the officers to keep him ch^ar ofparty politics on such occasions caused a rupturethat has never been healed. He must, as hesays, follow his vision, and lie has followed are strange words coming from a Presi-dential candidate seeking votes : For nearlythirteen years my single theme has been tliat theProhibition party wanted notliing but I?R()1IIBI-TION votes, and wanted them only upo
. Review of reviews and world's work. is on many lines,and his sense of humor is well developed. A few years ago he was the favorite orator intlie great Christian Endeavor conventions ; buttlie attempt of the officers to keep him ch^ar ofparty politics on such occasions caused a rupturethat has never been healed. He must, as hesays, follow his vision, and lie has followed are strange words coming from a Presi-dential candidate seeking votes : For nearlythirteen years my single theme has been tliat theProhibition party wanted notliing but I?R()1IIBI-TION votes, and wanted them only upon the stiff est, hardest, highest, RELIGIOUS basis.(The capitals are Mr. Woolleys.) His domestic life, so much of it as h^ findstime for, is a happy one. His home is in HydePark, Cliicago, and whenever he has occasion tospeak of his wife and her devotion to him duringthe dark days, or of his three boys and their suc-cesses in college, his face glows and his voicegrows unconsciously tender. Mr. Woolleys colleague on the Prohibition. HON. HENRY B. METCALF, OF RHODE ISLAND. (Prohibitionist nominee for Vice-President.) ticket, Henry B. Metcalf, of Pawtucket, R. I.,is a man of widely different traits. He is de-liberate and conservative, with the instincts of aresponsible business man rather than the intensityand passion of the orator. Mr. Metcalf has passed the Psalmists limit ofthreescore years and ten, and liis care and toilhave not been witliout a tangible harvest. Pie isa manufacturer of some means, the president ofa savings-bank in Pawtucket, a trustee of TuftsCollege, and for years has been (and perliaps isyet) the president of the national organization ofthe Universalists. He lias been a (Republican)State Senator in I^hode IsLind, and not manyyears ago was an active member of the AmericanProtective League—the Tariff, not the anti-Cath-olic, organization. His principal prominence inpolitics hitherto has come from iiis attempt toorganize the anti-saloon Republicans, and, late
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