<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ELEVEN. The Candidacy of Mr. Smith </h2>
<p>"Boys," said Mr. Smith to the two hostlers, stepping out on to the
sidewalk in front of the hotel,—"hoist that there British Jack over
the place and hoist her up good."</p>
<p>Then he stood and watched the flag fluttering in the wind.</p>
<p>"Billy," he said to the desk clerk, "get a couple more and put them up on
the roof of the caff behind the hotel. Wire down to the city and get a
quotation on a hundred of them. Take them signs 'American Drinks' out of
the bar. Put up noo ones with 'British Beer at all Hours'; clear out the
rye whiskey and order in Scotch and Irish, and then go up to the printing
office and get me them placards."</p>
<p>Then another thought struck Mr. Smith.</p>
<p>"Say, Billy," he said, "wire to the city for fifty pictures of King
George. Get 'em good, and get 'em coloured. It don't matter what they
cost."</p>
<p>"All right, sir," said Billy.</p>
<p>"And Billy," called Mr. Smith, as still another thought struck him
(indeed, the moment Mr. Smith went into politics you could see these
thoughts strike him like waves), "get fifty pictures of his father, old
King Albert."</p>
<p>"All right, sir."</p>
<p>"And say, I tell you, while you're at it, get some of the old queen,
Victorina, if you can. Get 'em in mourning, with a harp and one of them
lions and a three-pointed prong."</p>
<p>It was on the morning after the Conservative Convention. Josh Smith had
been chosen the candidate. And now the whole town was covered with flags
and placards and there were bands in the streets every evening, and noise
and music and excitement that went on from morning till night.</p>
<p>Election times are exciting enough even in the city. But there the
excitement dies down in business hours. In Mariposa there aren't any
business hours and the excitement goes on <i>all</i> the time.</p>
<p>Mr. Smith had carried the Convention before him. There had been a feeble
attempt to put up Nivens. But everybody knew that he was a lawyer and a
college man and wouldn't have a chance by a man with a broader outlook
like Josh Smith.</p>
<p>So the result was that Smith was the candidate and there were placards out
all over the town with SMITH AND BRITISH ALLEGIANCE in big letters, and
people were wearing badges with Mr. Smith's face on one side and King
George's on the other, and the fruit store next to the hotel had been
cleaned out and turned into committee rooms with a gang of workers smoking
cigars in it all day and half the night.</p>
<p>There were other placards, too, with BAGSHAW AND LIBERTY, BAGSHAW AND
PROSPERITY, VOTE FOR THE OLD MISSINABA STANDARD BEARER, and up town beside
the Mariposa House there were the Bagshaw committee rooms with a huge
white streamer across the street, and with a gang of Bagshaw workers
smoking their heads off.</p>
<p>But Mr. Smith had an estimate made which showed that nearly two cigars to
one were smoked in his committee rooms as compared with the Liberals. It
was the first time in five elections that the Conservative had been able
to make such a showing as that.</p>
<p>One might mention, too, that there were Drone placards out,—five or
six of them,—little things about the size of a pocket handkerchief,
with a statement that "Mr. Edward Drone solicits the votes of the electors
of Missinaba County." But you would never notice them. And when Drone
tried to put up a streamer across the Main Street with DRONE AND HONESTY
the wind carried it away into the lake.</p>
<p>The fight was really between Smith and Bagshaw, and everybody knew it from
the start.</p>
<p>I wish that I were able to narrate all the phases and the turns of the
great contest from the opening of the campaign till the final polling day.
But it would take volumes.</p>
<p>First of all, of course, the trade question was hotly discussed in the two
newspapers of Mariposa, and the Newspacket and the Times-Herald literally
bristled with statistics. Then came interviews with the candidates and the
expression of their convictions in regard to tariff questions.</p>
<p>"Mr. Smith," said the reporter of the Mariposa Newspacket, "we'd like to
get your views of the effect of the proposed reduction of the differential
duties."</p>
<p>"By gosh, Pete," said Mr. Smith, "you can search me. Have a cigar."</p>
<p>"What do you think, Mr. Smith, would be the result of lowering the <i>ad
valorem</i> British preference and admitting American goods at a
reciprocal rate?"</p>
<p>"It's a corker, ain't it?" answered Mr. Smith. "What'll you take, lager or
domestic?"</p>
<p>And in that short dialogue Mr. Smith showed that he had instantaneously
grasped the whole method of dealing with the press. The interview in the
paper next day said that Mr. Smith, while unwilling to state positively
that the principle of tariff discrimination was at variance with sound
fiscal science, was firmly of opinion that any reciprocal interchange of
tariff preferences with the United States must inevitably lead to a
serious per capita reduction of the national industry.</p>
<p>"Mr. Smith," said the chairman of a delegation of the manufacturers of
Mariposa, "what do you propose to do in regard to the tariff if you're
elected?"</p>
<p>"Boys," answered Mr. Smith, "I'll put her up so darned high they won't
never get her down again."</p>
<p>"Mr. Smith," said the chairman of another delegation, "I'm an old free
trader—"</p>
<p>"Put it there," said Mr. Smith, "so'm I. There ain't nothing like it."</p>
<p>"What do you think about imperial defence?" asked another questioner.</p>
<p>"Which?" said Mr. Smith.</p>
<p>"Imperial defence."</p>
<p>"Of what?"</p>
<p>"Of everything."</p>
<p>"Who says it?" said Mr. Smith.</p>
<p>"Everybody is talking of it."</p>
<p>"What do the Conservative boys at Ottaway think about it?" answered Mr.
Smith.</p>
<p>"They're all for it."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm fer it too," said Mr. Smith.</p>
<p>These little conversations represented only the first stage, the
argumentative stage of the great contest. It was during this period, for
example, that the Mariposa Newspacket absolutely proved that the price of
hogs in Mariposa was decimal six higher than the price of oranges in
Southern California and that the average decennial import of eggs into
Missinaba County had increased four decimal six eight two in the last
fifteen years more than the import of lemons in New Orleans.</p>
<p>Figures of this kind made the people think. Most certainly.</p>
<p>After all this came the organizing stage and after that the big public
meetings and the rallies. Perhaps you have never seen a county being
"organized." It is a wonderful sight.</p>
<p>First of all the Bagshaw men drove through crosswise in top buggies and
then drove through it again lengthwise. Whenever they met a farmer they
went in and ate a meal with him, and after the meal they took him out to
the buggy and gave him a drink. After that the man's vote was absolutely
solid until it was tampered with by feeding a Conservative.</p>
<p>In fact, the only way to show a farmer that you are in earnest is to go in
and eat a meal with him. If you won't eat it, he won't vote for you. That
is the recognized political test.</p>
<p>But, of course, just as soon as the Bagshaw men had begun to get the
farming vote solidified, the Smith buggies came driving through in the
other direction, eating meals and distributing cigars and turning all the
farmers back into Conservatives.</p>
<p>Here and there you might see Edward Drone, the Independent candidate,
wandering round from farm to farm in the dust of the political buggies. To
each of the farmers he explained that he pledged himself to give no
bribes, to spend no money and to offer no jobs, and each one of them
gripped him warmly by the hand and showed him the way to the next farm.</p>
<p>After the organization of the county there came the period of the public
meetings and the rallies and the joint debates between the candidates and
their supporters.</p>
<p>I suppose there was no place in the whole Dominion where the trade
question—the Reciprocity question—was threshed out quite so
thoroughly and in quite such a national patriotic spirit as in Mariposa.
For a month, at least, people talked of nothing else. A man would stop
another in the street and tell him that he had read last night that the
average price of an egg in New York was decimal ought one more than the
price of an egg in Mariposa, and the other man would stop the first one
later in the day and tell him that the average price of a hog in Idaho was
point six of a cent per pound less (or more,—he couldn't remember
which for the moment) than the average price of beef in Mariposa.</p>
<p>People lived on figures of this sort, and the man who could remember most
of them stood out as a born leader.</p>
<p>But of course it was at the public meetings that these things were most
fully discussed. It would take volumes to do full justice to all the
meetings that they held in Missinaba County. But here and there single
speeches stood out as masterpieces of convincing oratory. Take, for
example, the speech of John Henry Bagshaw at the Tecumseh Corners School
House. The Mariposa Times-Herald said next day that that speech would go
down in history, and so it will,—ever so far down.</p>
<p>Anyone who has heard Bagshaw knows what an impressive speaker he is, and
on this night when he spoke with the quiet dignity of a man old in years
and anxious only to serve his country, he almost surpassed himself. Near
the end of his speech somebody dropped a pin, and the noise it made in
falling fairly rattled the windows.</p>
<p>"I am an old man now, gentlemen," Bagshaw said, "and the time must soon
come when I must not only leave politics, but must take my way towards
that goal from which no traveller returns."</p>
<p>There was a deep hush when Bagshaw said this. It was understood to imply
that he thought of going to the United States.</p>
<p>"Yes, gentlemen, I am an old man, and I wish, when my time comes to go, to
depart leaving as little animosity behind me as possible. But before I <i>do</i>
go, I want it pretty clearly understood that there are more darn
scoundrels in the Conservative party than ought to be tolerated in any
decent community. I bear," he continued, "malice towards none and I wish
to speak with gentleness to all, but what I will say is that how any set
of rational responsible men could nominate such a skunk as the
Conservative candidate passes the bounds of my comprehension. Gentlemen,
in the present campaign there is no room for vindictive abuse. Let us rise
to a higher level than that. They tell me that my opponent, Smith, is a
common saloon keeper. Let it pass. They tell me that he has stood
convicted of horse stealing, that he is a notable perjurer, that he is
known as the blackest-hearted liar in Missinaba County. Let us not speak
of it. Let no whisper of it pass our lips.</p>
<p>"No, gentlemen," continued Bagshaw, pausing to take a drink of water, "let
us rather consider this question on the high plane of national welfare.
Let us not think of our own particular interests but let us consider the
good of the country at large. And to do this, let me present to you some
facts in regard to the price of barley in Tecumseh Township."</p>
<p>Then, amid a deep stillness, Bagshaw read off the list of prices of
sixteen kinds of grain in sixteen different places during sixteen years.</p>
<p>"But let me turn," Bagshaw went on to another phase of the national
subject, "and view for a moment the price of marsh hay in Missinaba County—"</p>
<p>When Bagshaw sat down that night it was felt that a Liberal vote in
Tecumseh Township was a foregone conclusion.</p>
<p>But here they hadn't reckoned on the political genius of Mr. Smith. When
he heard next day of the meeting, he summoned some of his leading speakers
to him and he said:</p>
<p>"Boys, they're beating us on them statissicks. Ourn ain't good enough."</p>
<p>Then he turned to Nivens and he said:</p>
<p>"What was them figures you had here the other night?"</p>
<p>Nivens took out a paper and began reading.</p>
<p>"Stop," said Mr. Smith, "what was that figure for bacon?"</p>
<p>"Fourteen million dollars," said Nivens.</p>
<p>"Not enough," said Mr. Smith, "make it twenty. They'll stand for it, them
farmers."</p>
<p>Nivens changed it.</p>
<p>"And what was that for hay?"</p>
<p>"Two dollars a ton."</p>
<p>"Shove it up to four," said Mr. Smith: "And I tell you," he added, "if any
of them farmers says the figures ain't correct, tell them to go to
Washington and see for themselves; say that if any man wants the proof of
your figures let him go over to England and ask,—tell him to go
straight to London and see it all for himself in the books."</p>
<p>After this, there was no more trouble over statistics. I must say though
that it is a wonderfully convincing thing to hear trade figures of this
kind properly handled. Perhaps the best man on this sort of thing in the
campaign was Mullins, the banker. A man of his profession simply has to
have figures of trade and population and money at his fingers' ends and
the effect of it in public speaking is wonderful.</p>
<p>No doubt you have listened to speakers of this kind, but I question
whether you have ever heard anything more typical of the sort of effect
that I allude to than Mullins's speech at the big rally at the Fourth
Concession.</p>
<p>Mullins himself, of course, knows the figures so well that he never
bothers to write them into notes and the effect is very striking.</p>
<p>"Now, gentlemen," he said very earnestly, "how many of you know just to
what extent the exports of this country have increased in the last ten
years? How many could tell what per cent. of increase there has been in
one decade of our national importation?"—then Mullins paused and
looked round. Not a man knew it.</p>
<p>"I don't recall," he said, "exactly the precise amount myself,—not
at this moment,—but it must be simply tremendous. Or take the
question of population," Mullins went on, warming up again as a born
statistician always does at the proximity of figures, "how many of you
know, how many of you can state, what has been the decennial percentage
increase in our leading cities—?"</p>
<p>There he paused, and would you believe it, not a man could state it.</p>
<p>"I don't recall the exact figures," said Mullins, "but I have them at home
and they are positively colossal."</p>
<p>But just in one phase of the public speaking, the candidacy of Mr. Smith
received a serious set-back.</p>
<p>It had been arranged that Mr. Smith should run on a platform of total
prohibition. But they soon found that it was a mistake. They had imported
a special speaker from the city, a grave man with a white tie, who put his
whole heart into the work and would take nothing for it except his
expenses and a sum of money for each speech. But beyond the money, I say,
he would take nothing.</p>
<p>He spoke one night at the Tecumseh Corners social hall at the same time
when the Liberal meeting was going on at the Tecumseh Corners school
house.</p>
<p>"Gentlemen," he said, as he paused half way in his speech,—"while we
are gathered here in earnest discussion, do you know what is happening
over at the meeting place of our opponents? Do you know that seventeen
bottles of rye whiskey were sent out from the town this afternoon to that
innocent and unsuspecting school house? Seventeen bottles of whiskey
hidden in between the blackboard and the wall, and every single man that
attends that meeting,—mark my words, every single man,—will
drink his fill of the abominable stuff at the expense of the Liberal
candidate!"</p>
<p>Just as soon as the speaker said this, you could see the Smith men at the
meeting look at one another in injured surprise, and before the speech was
half over the hall was practically emptied.</p>
<p>After that the total prohibition plank was changed and the committee
substituted a declaration in favour of such a form of restrictive license
as should promote temperance while encouraging the manufacture of
spirituous liquors, and by a severe regulation of the liquor traffic
should place intoxicants only in the hands of those fitted to use them.</p>
<p>Finally there came the great day itself, the Election Day that brought, as
everybody knows, the crowning triumph of Mr. Smith's career. There is no
need to speak of it at any length, because it has become a matter of
history.</p>
<p>In any case, everybody who has ever seen Mariposa knows just what election
day is like. The shops, of course, are, as a matter of custom, all closed,
and the bar rooms are all closed by law so that you have to go in by the
back way. All the people are in their best clothes and at first they walk
up and down the street in a solemn way just as they do on the twelfth of
July and on St. Patrick's Day, before the fun begins. Everybody keeps
looking in at the different polling places to see if anybody else has
voted yet, because, of course, nobody cares to vote first for fear of
being fooled after all and voting on the wrong side.</p>
<p>Most of all did the supporters of Mr. Smith, acting under his
instructions, hang back from the poll in the early hours. To Mr. Smith's
mind, voting was to be conducted on the same plan as bear-shooting.</p>
<p>"Hold back your votes, boys," he said, "and don't be too eager. Wait till
she begins to warm up and then let 'em have it good and hard."</p>
<p>In each of the polling places in Mariposa there is a returning officer and
with him are two scrutineers, and the electors, I say, peep in and out
like mice looking into a trap. But if once the scrutineers get a man well
into the polling booth, they push him in behind a little curtain and make
him vote. The voting, of course, is by secret ballot, so that no one
except the scrutineers and the returning officer and the two or three
people who may be round the poll can possibly tell how a man has voted.</p>
<p>That's how it comes about that the first results are often so
contradictory and conflicting. Sometimes the poll is badly arranged and
the scrutineers are unable to see properly just how the ballots are being
marked and they count up the Liberals and Conservatives in different ways.
Often, too, a voter makes his mark so hurriedly and carelessly that they
have to pick it out of the ballot box and look at it to see what it is.</p>
<p>I suppose that may have been why it was that in Mariposa the results came
out at first in such a conflicting way. Perhaps that was how it was that
the first reports showed that Edward Drone the Independent candidate was
certain to win. You should have seen how the excitement grew upon the
streets when the news was circulated. In the big rallies and meetings of
the Liberals and Conservatives, everybody had pretty well forgotten all
about Drone, and when the news got round at about four o'clock that the
Drone vote was carrying the poll, the people were simply astounded. Not
that they were not pleased. On the contrary. They were delighted.
Everybody came up to Drone and shook hands and congratulated him and told
him that they had known all along that what the country wanted was a
straight, honest, non-partisan representation. The Conservatives said
openly that they were sick of party, utterly done with it, and the
Liberals said that they hated it. Already three or four of them had taken
Drone aside and explained that what was needed in the town was a straight,
clean, non-partisan post-office, built on a piece of ground of a strictly
non-partisan character, and constructed under contracts that were not
tainted and smirched with party affiliation. Two or three men were willing
to show to Drone just where a piece of ground of this character could be
bought. They told him too that in the matter of the postmastership itself
they had nothing against Trelawney, the present postmaster, in any
personal sense, and would say nothing against him except merely that he
was utterly and hopelessly unfit for his job and that if Drone believed,
as he had said he did, in a purified civil service, he ought to begin by
purifying Trelawney.</p>
<p>Already Edward Drone was beginning to feel something of what it meant to
hold office and there was creeping into his manner the quiet
self-importance which is the first sign of conscious power.</p>
<p>In fact, in that brief half-hour of office, Drone had a chance to see
something of what it meant. Henry McGinnis came to him and asked straight
out for a job as federal census-taker on the ground that he was hard up
and had been crippled with rheumatism all winter. Nelson Williamson asked
for the post of wharf master on the plea that he had been laid up with
sciatica all winter and was absolutely fit for nothing. Erasmus Archer
asked him if he could get his boy Pete into one of the departments at
Ottawa, and made a strong case of it by explaining that he had tried his
cussedest to get Pete a job anywhere else and it was simply impossible.
Not that Pete wasn't a willing boy, but he was slow,—even his father
admitted it,—slow as the devil, blast him, and with no head for
figures and unfortunately he'd never had the schooling to bring him on.
But if Drone could get him in at Ottawa, his father truly believed it
would be the very place for him. Surely in the Indian Department or in the
Astronomical Branch or in the New Canadian Navy there must be any amount
of opening for a boy like this? And to all of these requests Drone found
himself explaining that he would take the matter under his very earnest
consideration and that they must remember that he had to consult his
colleagues and not merely follow the dictates of his own wishes. In fact,
if he had ever in his life had any envy of Cabinet Ministers, he lost it
in this hour.</p>
<p>But Drone's hour was short. Even before the poll had closed in Mariposa,
the news came sweeping in, true or false, that Bagshaw was carrying the
county. The second concession had gone for Bagshaw in a regular landslide,
six votes to only two for Smith,—and all down the township line road
(where the hay farms are) Bagshaw was said to be carrying all before him.</p>
<p>Just as soon as that news went round the town, they launched the Mariposa
band of the Knights of Pythias (every man in it is a Liberal) down the
Main Street with big red banners in front of it with the motto BAGSHAW
FOREVER in letters a foot high. Such rejoicing and enthusiasm began to set
in as you never saw. Everybody crowded round Bagshaw on the steps of the
Mariposa House and shook his hand and said they were proud to see the day
and that the Liberal party was the glory of the Dominion and that as for
this idea of non-partisan politics the very thought of it made them sick.
Right away in the committee rooms they began to organize the demonstration
for the evening with lantern slides and speeches and they arranged for a
huge bouquet to be presented to Bagshaw on the platform by four little
girls (all Liberals) all dressed in white.</p>
<p>And it was just at this juncture, with one hour of voting left, that Mr.
Smith emerged from his committee rooms and turned his voters on the town,
much as the Duke of Wellington sent the whole line to the charge at
Waterloo. From every committee room and sub-committee room they poured out
in flocks with blue badges fluttering on their coats.</p>
<p>"Get at it, boys," said Mr. Smith, "vote and keep on voting till they make
you quit."</p>
<p>Then he turned to his campaign assistant. "Billy," he said, "wire down to
the city that I'm elected by an overwhelming majority and tell them to
wire it right back. Send word by telephone to all the polling places in
the county that the hull town has gone solid Conservative and tell them to
send the same news back here. Get carpenters and tell them to run up a
platform in front of the hotel; tell them to take the bar door clean off
its hinges and be all ready the minute the poll quits."</p>
<p>It was that last hour that did it. Just as soon as the big posters went up
in the windows of the Mariposa Newspacket with the telegraphic despatch
that Josh Smith was reported in the city to be elected, and was followed
by the messages from all over the county, the voters hesitated no longer.
They had waited, most of them, all through the day, not wanting to make
any error in their vote, but when they saw the Smith men crowding into the
polls and heard the news from the outside, they went solid in one great
stampede, and by the time the poll was declared closed at five o'clock
there was no shadow of doubt that the county was saved and that Josh Smith
was elected for Missinaba.</p>
<p>I wish you could have witnessed the scene in Mariposa that evening. It
would have done your heart good,—such joy, such public rejoicing as
you never saw. It turned out that there wasn't really a Liberal in the
whole town and that there never had been. They were all Conservatives and
had been for years and years. Men who had voted, with pain and sorrow in
their hearts, for the Liberal party for twenty years, came out that
evening and owned up straight that they were Conservatives. They said they
could stand the strain no longer and simply had to confess. Whatever the
sacrifice might mean, they were prepared to make it.</p>
<p>Even Mr. Golgotha Gingham, the undertaker, came out and admitted that in
working for John Henry Bagshaw he'd been going straight against his
conscience. He said that right from the first he had had his misgivings.
He said it had haunted him. Often at night when he would be working away
quietly, one of these sudden misgivings would overcome him so that he
could hardly go on with his embalming. Why, it appeared that on the very
first day when reciprocity was proposed, he had come home and said to Mrs.
Gingham that he thought it simply meant selling out the country. And the
strange thing was that ever so many others had just the same misgivings.
Trelawney admitted that he had said to Mrs. Trelawney that it was madness,
and Jeff Thorpe, the barber, had, he admitted, gone home to his dinner,
the first day reciprocity was talked of, and said to Mrs. Thorpe that it
would simply kill business in the country and introduce a cheap, shoddy,
American form of haircut that would render true loyalty impossible. To
think that Mrs. Gingham and Mrs. Trelawney and Mrs. Thorpe had known all
this for six months and kept quiet about it! Yet I think there were a good
many Mrs. Ginghams in the country. It is merely another proof that no
woman is fit for politics.</p>
<p>The demonstration that night in Mariposa will never be forgotten. The
excitement in the streets, the torchlights, the music of the band of the
Knights of Pythias (an organization which is conservative in all but
name), and above all the speeches and the patriotism.</p>
<p>They had put up a big platform in front of the hotel, and on it were Mr.
Smith and his chief workers, and behind them was a perfect forest of
flags. They presented a huge bouquet of flowers to Mr. Smith, handed to
him by four little girls in white,—the same four that I spoke of
above, for it turned out that they were all Conservatives.</p>
<p>Then there were the speeches. Judge Pepperleigh spoke and said that there
was no need to dwell on the victory that they had achieved, because it was
history; there was no occasion to speak of what part he himself had
played, within the limits of his official position, because what he had
done was henceforth a matter of history; and Nivens, the lawyer, said that
he would only say just a few words, because anything that he might have
done was now history; later generations, he said, might read it but it was
not for him to speak of it, because it belonged now to the history of the
country. And, after them, others spoke in the same strain and all refused
absolutely to dwell on the subject (for more than half an hour) on the
ground that anything that they might have done was better left for future
generations to investigate. And no doubt this was very true, as to some
things, anyway.</p>
<p>Mr. Smith, of course, said nothing. He didn't have to,—not for four
years,—and he knew it.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />