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ARE YOU F% UP F TO DATE B ' —i —— If yoti are not the NEWS AN' OBERVER is. Subscribe lor it at once and it will keep yon abreast ot the times. . Full Associated Pitas dispatch ei *Hthe news —foreign, do mestic, national, state and local all the time. Daily New* and Observer $7 per year, 3.60 for 6 mos. Weekly North Carolinian $1 per year, 50c for 6 mos. NEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO., % • RALEIGH, N. C. p• > . ■ %' The -North Carolinian and THB ALAMANCE GLEANER will be sent for one year for Two Dollars. . Cash in advance. Apply at THB GLEAKBR office. Graham, N. C. English Spavin Liniment re ;j . moves all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavins, curbs, splints, sweeney, ringbone, stifles, sprains - all swollen throats, coughs, etc. Save S6O by the ass of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful blemish cure known, Sold by Graham Drue Co. DO THIS ,! | Len than the cost of a two i cent stamp will pat a copy of ! L | "The Alamance Gleaner" in I your hone each week. Scad $1 for a year, 50c for 6 mofc, or 25c for 3 mos. DO IT NOW, and you will wonder why yon I # had aot done It before. e Ta Cars a Cold la OieDay, 5- Take Laxative Br«mo Qninlne Tablet*. All druggist* refund the money if It fails to enre. E. W. (irovn's eignature is on each WOODROW WILSON The Story of His Life - From the Cradle to the White House By WILLIAM BAYARD BALE Copyright, Ull, IMI, by Doubledsy. Past * Co. CHAPTER VIM. Democracy or AriltlMNyf ma. WILSON bad served five years as president of Prince ton university before he reached the point of irrepres sible conflict So long as he confined himself to the strictly educational workings of the school be had been allowed to have his way without much opposition. But now, when his con structive miud reached over to the student's social life and undertook to organize that and bring It. Into proper relationship with the other elements of university life, he found that be had put hie hand upon what the guard lans of the aristocratic Institution were really Interested In and what they were not disposed to see changed. _ In brief, bis Idea was the organiza tion of the university in • number of "colleges" or "quadrangles"—practical ly dormitories—each of whlcb shonld harbor a certain number of men from every class, with a few of the younger professors. President Wilson secured the ap pointment of a committee consisting of seven of the trustees to investigate the merits of the "quad" proposal, and at the June (1907) meeting the com mlttee rep ted on "the social co-or dination of the university," Indorsing Mr. Wilson's plan. The report of this committee was accepted and its recom mendation adopted with only one dis senting vote, twenty-five of the twen ty-seven trustees being present, at the June meeting. Wbat Was atnlss with .the "quad" proposal? This—that It cut into the aristocratic loclal structure which the dominating element in Princeton had erected for it ■lelf. If, visiting Princeton, you will pro ceed to the top of a street known as Prospect avenue and pass down it you will aee aomethlng wblcb probably la not paralleled at any seat of learning In the world. Prospect avenne la lined with clubhouses; twelve of them with handsome buildings, beautlfni lawns and tennis courts and. In tbe caae of tbe more favored clubs on tbe south side t of the street a delightful view across the valley to the eastward. Some of tbe clubhouses are sumptuottf, . comparing very favorably with the best city clubs. Tbelr aggregate value must be much more than $1,000,000. The clubs bouse on an average thirty members each—fifteen Juniors and fif teen seniors, about 850 in all. Juniors and seniors alone being eligible. Three hundred otber member* of those class es can get into no club. Prom this Idea' has grown up this dominating feature of Princeton life, estranged from tbe university and yet having more to do with the real forming of its students' than tyiy other feature of -the college life. No one can reflect for a moment upon this club system without understand Ing its essentially vicious character. The trouble la tbat tbe club* neces sartly constitute an aristocracy in tbe midst of a community wblcb sboald. above all thinga. be abaolutely demo cratic. It may be all vary well for the 800 youtha who enjoy tbe delighta of the Ivy. tbe Cap and Gown, tbe Colonial. Tl*er Inn and tbe rest (though such luxury is of questionable value to a boy who bas yet to malca bis way In tbe world), but wbat of the BQO young men wbo have not baen able to "make" one of tbem? They feel themselves ostracized and humiliated, and the seeds of social bittern*** *r* sown in tbelr souls There Is no pro vision for tbem outside of common boarding bonne*. Not a few leave the university. Worse yet rivalry for admiaaion to tbe cluba Is so great that it lnjnraa tbe work of tbe freshmen and sopbo mores The first term of the *opho more year especially la conaldered to be entirely wrecked by the absorption of tbe etudenta in candldatlng tor tbe club election* held tbat sprlafr So highly Is membership Ip a swagger .club regarded that parents of proepec tlve students bave been known to be gin visits to Princeton a year or two before their aon entered college wttb tbe purpose of organizing a aoclal cam paitfn to land biio In the dob to wblcb ba aspired. It may eaaUy be seen how tbe exist ewe of tbeae *eleCt coterie* ministers to snobbery, how they foster toady tng. bow they Introduce a worldly, material and unnatural element into what la naturally one of tbe finest thinga in the world—a daatoeraay of boy a: how tbey set op at tbe ootaet of a student's career a mlacaken Meak an unworthy aim. and how they divide students along unnatural Uses. Over and over again Princeton *eaa a gvaop of congenial fellow* ot the Incoming frcehman eta a* gravitate toward each other In tbe first, tow weeka of tbe term and then, to otMienc* to *ome sudden, mysterloo* Influence from Prospect avenue, dlasoir*. The eplrtt of the place does not allow men to form friendly and natural aaaadatloaa in accordance with their taatea and dispositions They must alwaya strive untiringly to become friend* of those particular elas*mates wbo have tbe beat chance ef "making" tbe best clubs, and aa "the bunch" paaaea "down tbe line" tooas Prospect avenne tbe proepecta of one and another student wag and wane, and tbe of r.» GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27,1913 terles ffi f htc.T JUT fliTd* hlP.'aelf goe« I op and down. The aoclal life of the > two lower classes presents such it pic , ture aa would • layer of Iron ni(nin> over whlcb a mngnet In passed. form Ing groups now here, now there, ami keeping all ID constant confusion. In the worda of Wilson, the sideshow bad swallowed up the circus Nothing conld he more un-American nothing conld be mora opposed to the true prlnclplea of eduratlon. ——" j We approach now one of the mo* dramatic, aa it la one of the moat in I volved, chapters In the life of any American institution of learulag—ln deed, a chapter. If It could be rightly told, not'often excelled in Interest In any story of American life. A circular setting forth In outline President Wilson's "quad" proposal was sent to the various clubs and waa generally read there on the Friday night before commencement 1007. Princeton alumni, particularly those (fom the eastern cities, come buck In large numbers to their alma mater and usually put up at the clubhouses, where the Friday nlgbt preceding commence ment is given over to a jolly dinner. The "quad" proposal, it Was instantly seen, contemplated the dolhg away of the dabs. It was even said that President Wll- aon proposed to confiscate tbem. Tbe wrath of tbe alumni Jollifying that nlgbt In Prospect avenue whs instant ly aroused, and tbe shout of battle was raised. No decent consideration was ever given the new Idea. The grieved graduates went home to spread stories of tbe attack on Princeton's favorite Institutions and rally the old boys to tbelr defense. Old Princetonlans got busy and wrote distressed letters to* the Aiumul Week ly, expressing tbelr grief and aston ishment tbat a Princeton' president Should so far forget himself ns to try to "make a gentleman chum with a mucker." ' , The trustees, who bad voted the plan through with but a single dissent ing voice, now frightened by the alum ni bowl, were persuaded to reconsider. On Oct 11 the board requested Presi dent Wilson to withdraw the proposal. The Inalienable right of tDe Ameri can college youth to choose his own hatband (and compel other youths to wear untrlmmed headgear) wns thus triumphantly vindicated. But tbe saviors of tbe club system were not generous In victory. They continued to hurl Insults upon President Wilson It waa now discovered that be was a domineering, brutal, bigoted, Inconsld erate and untruthful demagogue. The preceptorial system, whlcb bad been In operation for two yean, with every body'a approval, was now also • at- I tacked. President Wilson was even charged with having inaugurated .it over the beads of the faculty. Various classes among the alumni withdrew their sub scriptions for tbe support of preceptors. It took only a few months of this sort of thing for the board of trustees, the faculty and the alumni to find them selves divided beyond compromise Lifelong friendships were broken. Tbe chasm deepened, and passions so vio lent that It would not have been deem ed poaalble for a collegiate to possess them were aroused. It la a little difficult to aee why tbe question should bave -provoked tbe as tonishingly bitter fight whlcb now broke out at Princeton. To find the real cauae of it all one must go deeper than tbe lasue presented on the sur face, much deeper than tbe mere pcr sonallty of the president. As to the latter. It is quite possible that Dr. Wil son's positive character, tbe certainly of bis convictions nnd his aggressive ness In expressing tbem may hare been distasteful to men long accustom ed to other methods It Is even possl ble tbat the president was not as gen tle ID his manner, perhaps not always as tactfnl. aa be might bave been, as ba haa since become. Undoubtedly a man of exceeding charm of personality, he had hia grim side—no man descend ed from a line of Scottlab Presbyterl 7 > Photo 9 by American Press AseoctaUoa Mr. and Mr*. Wilson. IDI baa not—snd. once aroused In • flgbt ba waa a ruthless opponent It Html to be th* cose that tbe presl dent's reform program grew primarily out of bia convictions ae a teacher of young men. He did not for Instance, deliberately aet about to' attack the Princeton clube, bat wbeo tbrf boat fathered for tbe defense of an arlsto natkf institution beoanse It was aria tocratic. wbeo they denounced hltn to a coaflacator. a leveler and a Socialist Ik* Innate democracy of the man flamed up. and tbe flgbt ceased to be a flebata over educational idea la. bavins become aa irreconcilable conflict be twees democracy and privileged wealth. Preaident Wilson contlnned to «t pound Ida tdeaa on tbe subject of tbe •octal organisation of tbe university when Invited to do ao at gatherings of the alumni la vartooa dtl«. but be made DO ag»l***lv campaign. Tbe preceptorial system, la spite of the (rowing prejudice against it, con tin a*d la vogue, tbe neceaaary funds lie tag voted by tbe trustee*. CHAPTER IX. 1 fli* Qraduata Collage Contaat. HUE slory uow becomes com- . plicated throujtb the Injec- 1 tion of another Issue that, namely, of tbe graduate col lege Souie time lie fore the election of Professor Wilson to the presidency | Professor Andrew K West, a brilliant and persuasive member of tbe faculty, with ambitious, had been given the title ot dean of the graduate school, together with an appropriation' of l*J,- 500 to lie used lu studying graduate systems of instruction lu vnrious uni versities. Dean West went to Europe for a year, returned and published • sumptuous little volume coutulning an eluborute and highly illmtrlited scheme for a graduate college. It wtyi never seen by the fuculty. The book was sent hy Dean West t* likely contrib utors ainohg the alumni. In December of 100(1 Mrs. J. A. Thompson ttwann. dying, left-$250,000 for the beginning of a graduate college. Amoug the conditions of the gift was the provlslou that the new college should t>e located upou grounds ot tbe university. In the spring of 1000, through tbe in fluence of Dean West, Mr. William O. Proctor of Cincinnati offered $500,000 for the graduate college on condition tbat another half million dollars be raised. Mr. Proctor's letter seemed to Imply that tbe money must be used In carrying out the scheme formulated by Dean West It also condemned tbe site chosen for the graduate college?"t)y the trustees In his second letter address ed to President Wllßon Mr. Proctor named two locations which alone would -be acceptable to him. Bo long as Dean West's scheme for a graduate school w»» a paper plan only. It bad received no special nation. But when these two bequests made its realization possible the plan was given scrutiuy. It wus apparent to many of the trustees and faculty ' that Dean West's elaborate plan was not one to which they were prepured to commit themselves definitely. A special committee of live, appointed by ' the president of the board of trustees, reported against tbe Unconditional ac ceptance of Mr. Proctor's gift Mr. Proctor's answer was s with drawal of Ilia offer The withdrawal naturally caused l sensation and brought down upon tbe bend of President Wilson all the vlalt of wruth tlint hnd uot been already emptied upon him. It was inconceiv able to some in the board of trustees, to u large number of tbe alumni and to a portion of the fuculty tluil n gift of $500,000 (carrying wllli it Indeed tin prospect of uuother $500,000, for thil hnd already liei-n nearly aubacribedi could be rejected on any consideration whatsoever But In view of the per fectly clear position taken by Presl ] dent WIIKPU. backed at that time by the majority of the trustees, the pas slonate outcry against them shown by some I'riucetonians of general repute for Intelligence and conscience doe* seem inexplicable. It was a perfectly clear case. President Wilson and the trustees were no doubt Infinitely oblig ed to Mr. Proctor; they were enger to accept his gift, but they simply could not abrognte the duties of their office —they simply conld not surrender to any donor the / right to determine the university's policy In so grave a matter as that of its graduate school. It wai they who were charged with tbe duty of administering the university, not Mr. Proctor Kurt(iermore. the particular plan which unconditional acceptance of Mr Proctor's, glfl would have forced on Princeton wns one utterly opposed to the principles In devotion to which the university under its president's guidance was now so happily advanc ing ' To President Wilson It* details were altogether obnoxious. Since tbe sub ject of graduate study bad been taken up the' deiiu and tbe president had moved in opiKislte directions, one to ward segregation and excluslvenesa. the oliier toward an organic whole, co operative, shut through with a com mon motive and spirit and atlmuinted by a common life of give and take President Wilson hnd his own -plan for a graduate school-a plan tbat spring naturally out of tbe new system of studies and the preceptorial organize tion-but It was a plan that content plated a -or|» of highly competent graduate Instructors, proper latiorato lies, an adequate library and tbe prac tical essentials of study rather tban tbe embroidery of fine buildings and seclusion "A university does not coo slst of buildings or of apparatus," he said "A nnlvershy consists of stu dent* and teachers " The fact of the matter la be didn't want a hundred nice young gentlemen to come to Princeton and live apart pursuing the higher culture. Tb* no tion violated the Ideal of democracy, deliberately set aliout to crente a schol arly aristocracy, Introduced a further •lenient of disintegration - when what Princeton needed was Integration. His own thought was aflame with the pic ture of a great democratic society of atudents in which undergraduates and postgraduates should meet and win gle This wit* of tbe essence of tbe whole program which President Wilson liad been permitted (o initiate and to brlngi to far toward success And now tbe intverellr wns asked to abandon It for I mlllion dollars: This .onr t>e as giwid a point a* any at which to make If clear thst the antl Wftaon sentiifent was far from gen ernl among the alumni It was prac Meally confined to the cities of tbe east. In the hoard of trustees four teen out of the thirty took their ataod against him The deciding few waver ed Tbe fine body of faculty member* engaged In graduate work wer* prac tfcally unanimous in tbelr anpport of the prraldent'a mnil.it. arholarty and prurtlc«t plan* ami entirely unaympv tlx-lit; with Ule oruule dreuiua of tti« drnii. Aa for, tl>* aludctita. uerer for • uMMiHfUt did be have miaou lo doubt tliflr maentlal WMiiidnena. They were caught In (lie totla of • vtcloua aya t»m, but they furntabed the beat of Mttrlal for the derelojinjeut of • true American unlveralty along democratic tinea. Throughout the graduate acbool eontrorerajr they were ardent Wltaon men. though, of courae, powerteaa to Influence the reault. Mr. Wt'aon never permitted hlmaelf to approach or, aur«w«t mnonalltlea llioiyiTVP -.'-.ought by'graduates -:. i distant cities to "tell them all the tnith"i. The opposition betook Itself to sln-er slander and abuse. Much may lie forgiven enrnest men, but it 1s simply inexplicable that college trus tees, professors and alumni could have indulged In the vituperative bitterness that found Its way Into privately cir culated iianiphlets and round robins and into public print The fact Is that the discussion of the "qWMT system nnd of the rights of a douor to dictate bow his money shonld be used had revealed the existence of a liottoniless chasm In the ways of thinking. In the attitude'of spirit that characterized two sets of Princeton lien. It was tbe rbaatu that ditldea •'emocrncy and aristocracy, respect for Photo ® by American Prsss Association. Whan the Going Is Rspid Wilson Isn't the Msn to Bother About s Shook Absorber. the lights of manhood and submission to tbe rights of property, it was an ineradicable Instinct In President Wil son and tbe men who supported him that the life of students must be msde democratic. Those who were enthualnstlc for a university In whlcb social lines should be obliterated and a group of co-ordi nate democracies set up were divided from those who were content to main tain and even accentuate distinctions by a cleavage ,a« deep as any that ex ists lu the world today. No wonder that the partisans of the opposition, In tbe board and out, looked on Wilson as a dangerous man; no wonder that be, slowly aroused by tbelr vilifica tion. began occasionally to.nnsllp the leasb of hjs tongue, denounce colleges and churches for yielding to "the ac cursed domination of money" and make Impassioned apiieals for a dec laration of college independence. When tbe going is rapid Wilson isn't tbe man to bother about a shock absorber. At Pittsburgh, addressing alumni, be poured out all his soul; The great voice of America doe* not come from seals of learning. It comes in a murmur front the hills snd woods and the farms and factories and the mills, rolling on and gaining valume until It comes to us from ths homes of common men. Do these murmurs echo in the cor ridors of universities? I have not heard them. The universities would make men for get thslr common origins, forget their uni versal sympathies, and join n das*, and no class ever can serve America. 1 have dedicated every power that there Is within me to bring the colleges that 1 have anything to-do with to an abaolutely democratic regeneration In aplrlt. 1 know that the collegca of thia country mUst .be reconstructed from top to bot tom, and I know that America ta going to demand It While Princeton men pause and think I hope that they will think on theae things- Ihnt tliey will forget tradi tion In the determination to see to It that the free air of AmerlCn shall permeate every cranny of their college. Will America tolerate the seclusion of gradusts siiidentu? Wlliylmsrlca tolersts ths Idea of having gradQsts atudents set spsrt? America will tolerate nothing ex cept unpatronlied endeavor. Seclude,,*, man. separsle him from the rough and tumble of college life, from all the con tacts of eve: y sort snd condition of men, and you have done a thing which Ameri ca will brand «lth its contemptuous die approval. To an utterance like that there could bq no reply, lu an l*sue thus clearly defined la-fore the whole world (for til* Plttabnrgh apeech got Into the paper*, and all America applauded) no living hoard of college trustee* would have Hired separate Itaelf from the bold ipeuker. No reply? No living men to take la sue? Ileladd bow the prcaldent of U>* Immortals Jests with u*; In the t urn of Salem, Mass., lived an old man named Isaac C. Wyman. "Isaac had been graduated at tb« col- S'ge of New Jersey one June day In IH4M. Durk'g the «ilty-two years since that day be had never returned to Princeton. President Wilson's Pittsburgh speech was made on April 17 (this waa In 1010). A month and a day later. Ma; 18, by fin* decease of Isaac t". Wyman. tbe graduate college of Princeton nnl verslty liecame the legatee of an tslale raflmated at more tban 93.00Q.fM lie qnentbed In tbe trusteeship of .'i-hB M. Raymond of Snlem and Andrew F, West of Princeton. There Is no quarreling with tbe dead. At the June trustee meeting the Proc tor offer was renewed and accepted. Tbe president made a polite announce ment of his acquiescence in tbe alfna llon created by tb* miraculous wind fall. The gigantic new fond altered everything. Commencement waa a *ea*on of care ful oliacrvancv of all outward %meni ties. Tho president made tbe speech presenting M. Taylor Pyne. Esq., tbe leader of tbe opposition among tb* trustees, with a gold cup, celebrating tbe attainment of hla twenty-flfth year aa a trustee. He attended a dinner given by Dean West In honor of Mr. Proctor. All that a man forced to con fess himself defeated by events could gracefully do be did. Wbat It coat hi* aoul no man could gueaa. A moral de feat be bad not suffered. Tbe principle for wblcb he bad atood had not been dlxproved, discredited or annulled. Tbe god* had overwhelmed It; that waa •1L Of course be waa laughed at, aneer edat even, by certain alumni, called on to resign. If they had dared the tri umpnnui party would nave atainlsnctl him. They did not dare. Wood row Wil son was too strong before Hie country. There was this' Hy in tbe ointment of their rejoicing—an alumni trustee was 1 being elected this year, ns uanal, nnd It waa the turn of the west to name him. liut eastern antl-Wllsonites hnd put up n candidate and made n frenzied campaign for him. At commencement the result was uiufie known—the auti- Wllson, Mr. Jollne. hud been over whelmingly beaten. Hut the president himself felt that bis werk at Princeton was dono. He wns to retire, but not to obscu-1 rlty. even temporary. The country had ' not missed altogether what was going on at Print-etna, Tbe state bad been | watching him. And now there came, rolling up from the iieople—the people; outside of the colleges, the Citizens for whom colleges exist—n great shout that this man was the sort of man that ought to be leading tbe light for their cause out lu the world of real affairs. Politicians heard that call and shrewd ly Jolued it. state convention—tllat of the Demo cratic party—lu session at Trenton, nominated Wood row Wilson for the governorship. A week later Princeton university opened for a new term, with the resig nation of Its president In the hands of the. trustees, who lu due time voted him all mumier of complimentary reso lutions. made him slill another kind of doctor, Inexpressibly regretted his resig nation nnd uecopted it on the part of a small majority with- thanks unspoken, but infinite in their sincerity. CHAPTER X. Out of Prinoston Into Politlos. HUE state of New Jersey at the ' beginning of the year 1010 was lu the case of many an other i oiumouwealth In this Union of States. It wan in the grip of the politicians and the corporations, and the good people resident within its borders hud aliout ns much voice In the management of their public affairs as they hud lu deciding the weather or de termining the phases of the moon. Kor years the state government had been run by agents of "tbe interests." Latterly It was the Republican or ganization that had been In power at Trenton, hut the system was really a bipartisan one. The Republican boss es hud eotbe to be known as tbe "board of guardians," In whlcb the public serv ice, railroad. Insurance and other cor poration interests were duly represent ed. The Democratic organization was the private properly of James Smith. Jr., a politician.who Jiad made his way Into the United States senate and who had retired from that body under crit icisms connected with certain scandals Incidental to tbe framing of the Wil son tariff. Ex-Senator Smith is a pol ished man of affulrs whose business in terests lire Identical with those of Ills friends on the Republican "liouTd of guardians." ills clilef lieutenant was James It. Nugent, a typical representa tive of tbe old style strong arm meth ods in politics. However, tbe great moral movement which during the last five years has been abroad In the land had not left New Jersey unnwnre of Its gathering power. Tile lenders of both |mrt!cs were forced to heed It. In the Repub lican party Everett Colby, (leorge I. Record and others stirred up a dan gerous enthusiasm among "new idea Republicans." Somehow, somewhere, by some one, there wns suggested to Mr. Smith's organization a plan of getting aboard Hie reform wagon and riding on It Into power. The flfht against privilege nud the champion ship j|f democracy In college life cup tallied by the president of Princeton university had attracted Hie attention of the state and now suggested hint aa a man who could lead a party to vic tory tinder the banner of political re form. President Wilson was u student of public affairs of authority through out the country. He' was an accom plished and iwrsinislve s|>enker, a man tof lofty character and winning person allty. Indeed, from outside (he state from the |iress of many cities, hnd come the suggesliuu thnt tlie nation would be fortunate If It could place such a man as Wilson In the presidential elittlr. It la easy enough to see bow the Idea of running Wilson for govytior needed only present Itself ty the Imagination of a shrewd boss to Is-ewtie Immediate I J congenial. The Democratic leader no doubt naturally Imagined that a learn ad collegian would lie ss putty In the hands of an experienced politician especially If his eyes were rose sjiee tacled by lite promise of a nomlnatloi for president. During tbe early rammer of 1010 . Provident Wilton not (old by • num ber of bis friend* that be could proba bly bare the I)emocratlc nomlnutlon for governor If be desired It. These Intimation* became ao nunieroua and •o pointed and were accompanied by ao many assurances of tbe benefit i in party and the state would derive from his acceptance that llr. Wllaon was conatralned to lend them a favorable ear. And Jret the protective nominee was profoundly puzzled. While sentiment among the beat class of voters through oat the state was strong, the practical overtures came from the organization beaded by Hmlth. Mr. Wllaon waa per fectly aware of M-Rnulor Hmltb's po lltlcal character and lißtory. lie knew wbat the organization was. How could such a gang »Up|*>rt blm? Were they deceiving themselves as to their man? Did they fancy that his lifelong de tastatlon of corrupt politics was almply pose? Did Huilth regard tbe school master as a simple soul who would band out corporation favors without knowing? Did be expect to get • Unit ed (Mates senatorshlp through tbe Dem ocratic legislature which Wilson's pop ularity was likely to elect? On that point Mr. Wilson made ape dflc Inquiry of the gentlemen wbo came to him on their puzzling errand. He required tbelr assurance that Mr. •mlth would not seek tbe senatorshlp. ►Were be to do so while 1 waa gov ernor," be told them, "I should have to oppose blm. He represents everything repugnant to my convictions." Tliey told blm categorically that Smith bad no Idea of going back to tbe senate; that he was a man thought to be sick with a dangerous constitutional ail ment and borne down by domestic be reavement and that be was deflbltely • 4 - h. jJL.gj ouVof'poiiucsr' - On Tuesday. July J2. 1010, a number of gentlemen gathered in a private room of the Lawyers' club, 120 Broad way, New York, to Inquire of Mr. Wil son whether be would allow his nami to tie presented to the New J erne j Democratic state convention. On July 10 Mr. Wilson Issued a pub lie statement In which be said that H It were the wish "of a decided major) ty of the thoughtful Democrats of tin state" that lie sl>oi>ll be their cnndl date'for governor be would accept the nomination. The announcement caused a sensn tion. It wus received with entlnislasn by many men of Jgiih parties. Ye; there were not lacking those who were so suspicions of Smith and Ills associate liosses that they could not believe the nomination was to be giv en Mr. Wilson without pledges frnn, lilra. Afiin. some of the liest am most intelligent men of the Democrat ic party, while tliey did not doubt the integrity of the proposed nominee, did fear that his Inexperience in practical politics would make him an easy in strument of the gang. Sir Wilson had lioen assured that' only his consent was necessary for bis unchallenged nomination, but in fact opposition to it at once arose and continued until the convent! >n balloted. Three other Democrats Frail!; S. Knlzenbnch. George 8. Wiser nud 11. Otto Wlttpen —lmmediately-entered Ibe ring. After issuing Ills statement Mr. Wil son went trii the little town of I.yrne. Conn., where he has been In the habit of spending Ills summers, and spent his summer. He'moved not oiiiTof his ten fingers In ls>half of the nomina tion. Certain other tieople, however, were moving everything movable to that end: - The fact that the Smith crowd was advocating lilni puzzled mnny who otherwise would have been his foremost supisirters. It was only (as Mr.' Wilson afterward learned to his amiizeinenti by sharp dragooning that a majority sufficient to make him the choice Was.seated lu the Trenton convention on Hep*. 15. Tho spoec.h made in thnt body ly Clarence Cole, formally putting Prince ton's president In nomination, was in terrupfed by Jeers, catcalls and sarcas tic questions. A few remnrks made by Mr v Smith were, however, closely listened to. The big boss said that bo had no personal acquaintance with Sir. Wilson. Mr. Wilson and he did not move lu tbe same world. He bad never conversed with him. Had con ditions been different he should hove preferred a randtdata identified with the organization. But It was neces sary to flinl a mini who could tie elected. . These were sagacious sentences nnd had the Incidental merit of telling the trutb. On the first ballot, 700 votes being uecessary to a choice. Woodrow Wil son received 71'J and wus declared the nomlneo for governor. Hastily sum moned from Prluceton, eleven miles away, be nptHiured on the platform and made a speech of acceptance so ring ing In Its assertion of Independence and so trumpet toned In Its utterance of the principles of progressive de mocracy that the convention was fair ly carried off its feet. Few of the dele gates had ever scon or htflird Mr. Wil son. Hnd ho made that si leech before the bullot there would have been no ballot. Having made It, he liecame the caudlduto of a united aud enthusiastic party. Now, this story of Mr. Wilson's nomi nation Is worth telling In some detail because, in the first place. It Is a fun ny story. In the light of its sequel, and because, in tho second place, It lias to do with the charge of "ingratitude" —the gravest brought against New Jersey's governor. ' After a few Speeches in which It was apparent that the nominee hnd n little difficulty In bringing himself ta ask anybody to vote for lilra Mr. Wilson developed utiusiinl power as a cam paigner. This candidate hnd things to sny on which his convictions were so strong aud Ills sense of their Impor tance so grenl that, he soon learned 0 by Edmonnlon. Mrs. Wilson at the Time of Her Marriage. language tbat caught tbe ear and won the warm attentlou of the great body of the plain voters of New Jersey. Ha talked to tliem of the need of drag ging pnbllc limine** out of privato rooms, where secret Intereata and pro feaaioßal political Jobbera conaplre, into tbe oi>en air where all might aee wbat ta being done; of tbe need of new po litical machinery that the people might resume the control of their own affaire; he talked of tbe vaat social and induatrlal change* of the paat twenty year*, making necessary tho renova tion of all our old aodal and indua trlal Ideoa; of the need of new rela tions between worklngmen and their employers, now that tbeae are daya of great- corpora tion*; of tbe need of reg ulating strictly those corporations; talked (imply, straightforwardly, of all manner of specific public thinga In a way that brought them home to the individual voter with a new sense of his own peraonal concern lo tbem and awakened In bim a new realization of hie duty, bis power and hla opportu nity. 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