CHAPTER VII
The Pike's Peak Gold Fever. 1858-9
THE real aim of my journalistic efforts was a regular
connection with the Anglo-American press. I
regarded my work for the Staats-Zeitung as only a temporary
makeshift, and kept my ulterior object steadily in view. I
had given up the idea of securing a position on one of the
principal New York papers, and my desires bore upon the
Western press. During my sojourn in Ohio, I had daily
read the Cincinnati Daily Commercial and noticed the
ability and enterprise displayed in its columns. At a
venture I went to Cincinnati and offered my services to the
publisher of the Commercial, M. D. Potter. He referred
me to the news-editor, Murat Halstead, afterwards the
principal proprietor and editor-in-chief of the paper.
After a few talks with him, we agreed that I should report
the important proceedings at the impending sessions of the
Illinois and Indiana Legislatures for the Commercial. In
the former, I was to look after the reëlection of Douglas.
In Indiana, I was to watch the legislative complications
that were expected to arise in connection with the claim
of each of the two political parties to the rightful control
of the majority of the Legislature, which resulted eventually
in the election of two sets of United States Senators,
by the Republicans and the Democrats respectively.
I spent only a few days early in January, 1859, at Springfield, Illinois, and then went to Indianapolis, where I expected to remain till spring. But my stay was cut short in an unexpected way. In my reports to the Commercial I had occasion to criticise rather sharply one of