Show the senate Is apparently becoming more like the house in personnel by PROP GEORGE E HAYES in atlantic magazine there are men of grent great wealth in the senate but none whose presence there rinds its sole explanation in the fact that lie he is a croesus laist masters in the arts efTer tye in manipulating state legislatures M me like e german arid and platt like quay and penrose Pc nrose do not find their exact counterparts in ill the senate chamber today the candidate who is ia obviously backed by a railway or trust stands little chance of election but during a six year term unsuspected fe fealty alev to such masters may develop the senate is apparently becoming more like the house both in type or personnel and in the rate of rotation in offrice ice men afen are now coming ia the senate with less of lawmaking 11 experience than their predecessor a had had in state legislatures or in the national house of representatives there them seems to be a distinct tendency to turn from men wisp wise in in coll council neil to men with more dramatic ai and A e executive qualities the spellbinder the eloquent prosecuting attorney catches the applause and the votes an aptitude for getting things done or promising to get things done often makes a stronger appeal to the voter than does docs a capacity for deliberate often jer perhaps haps too deliberate study of what is alt to do 1 |