- ' ' ' l. - i. ' - . 5 THE . OREGON : DAILY, ; JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1916. WB1&W-W1W&N1AS:SEEN BY MEMBER OF FAMILY CIRC'LE e Devotion Features Home Life of President ; : Professor Stockton Axson, Brother of the First Mrs, Wil . 'son, Writes intimate Sketch of Executive's Happy Domestic Environment. . CHARACTERISTIC INCIDENTS OF EARLIER CAREER By Stockton Axson. The following intimate tersonal ketch of Wood row Wilson, the man, written by Professor Stockton Axsn, whose sister. Ellen Louise Axson. wna the president'? first wife, waa secured for publication In the New York Times. Professor Axson not only had close per sonal relations with the president for US years, but he served under him whn Mr. Wilson was president of Princeton university. He was assistant professor of English literature at Princeton from 1899 to 1904. and professor from 1904 to 1918, when he Joined the faculty of Klce Institute, Houston, Texas, as pro fessor of English. Professor Axson conducted classes in the University of Oregon summer school In 1914. THERE are many who can analyze and assess Wilson the statesman, "known to all the world, but the ranks are thinning among those who have known the man intimately since his young manhood. Woodrow Wilson belongs to the world; is It then In bad taste for one who has had the great privilege of seeing him at close range for 35 years to talk about him fa miliarly to the world? Ky keenest embarrassment arises front my wonder about what Mr. Wil son himself will say If he should ever read thla article, for it has never pleased him to have his personal af fairs intimately talked about, and yet tne only reason why I should write at all Is that I am In a position to talk about him personally and that the country has a right to know what manner of man Is president. I do not suppose that I myself know when I first heard Woodrow Wilson's name mentioned: probably In my earliest childhood, for between, his family and mine there has always been an Intimacy. His mother's sister was Mrs. James Bones, and the Boneses were our next door neighbors In Rome, Qa. Jessie and Marian Bones were my childhood companions, Helen being much younger; and the names of Woodrow Wilson's father and mother. Uncle Joe and Aunt Jessie, were as familiar to me as the names of my own uncles and aunts. A tetter of Advice. But I very distinctly remember the first time that anybody talked to me in detail about Woodrow WHson; it was my father, in a letter written to me when I was away at school. Like Dr. Joseph Wilson, my father was a Presbyterian minister, and, also like Dr. Wilson, he practiced more than he preached. I think my father went on the theory that his example would do more for mj upbringing than wordy precepts, and so the first homily he ev-er delivered to. me was in the form of a long letter written Just after Woodrow Wilson had ended a visit to his relatives in Rome. My father made this voung man. ten years oiaer man myse'lf. his text, described him.' and held him up to me as a pattern or young manhood. I recall one phrase, vlriually verbatim: "I can think of nothing that would make me so hap py as to have a son like that." That letter was written 34 years ago; butxI remember it vividly, both because it was practically the only prlvatn sermon my father ever preached to me, and because the wish expressed was fulfilled, not In the way he was hoping, by my transformation, but by,. Woodrow Wilson himself be coming my father's son by marriage. M father lived to Know of the en gagement, though he died before the marriage. It was in 1883 that Woodrow Wilson and Ellen Axson became engaged. She was visiting friends in the North Carolina mountains when my father fell seriously 111. He had me summon her home by telegram my mother had died two yeara before, and my sis ter was the responsible member of the family. She. went to Ashevllle to catch a train, but as she had to wait several hours for it she went to a hotel and whlled away the time reading by a window. Aa fate would have it. Wood row Wilson, who was driving In the mountains, passed the hotel, chanced to look up, and saw her profile at the window. The two had been together in Rome the previous summer, and It needed Just the unexpected encounter In the North Carolina mountains to show them what life meant for each and tor both of them. Aa Unforgettable Conversation. Unforgettable fort'me the conver sation which my slater and I had on the night of her arrival home. In th earlier part of the evening she had been anxious about "my father, but Woodrow Wilson Cares More for Human Beings Than for Things as Acts Show Variety of Reasons Cited Why High Moral Integrity of the Presi dent Translated in His Achievements Commands Support. By William T. Foster. President Bead College. I AM FOR Wilson because I care more for human beinga than for things. In every conflict between persons and property, toe has thought first of human Interests. No administration ever did so much to Increase the well being of the miUona In greatest need; no administration ever opposed so i courageously the demands of those in least need. His Mexican policy, seen ' as a whole is a deliberate subordina tion of property interests to those of -humanity humanity inside and out- . mAm nnr hflrdorn i "watcnrui wait ing ' waa tne wiaaom or a statesman tv wljtInm That EurflM lacaea I am for Wilson because I am for . equal rlghtas to all. I cannot look with favor on the party that has stood bard . and .fast for special privileges to cer tain industries, under a policy eco . nomlcally indefensible which lnevtt- afilv takes monev from the nor.kntK nt all the neonla to fill th. nnk't nf part of the people. I know history too well to trust tha. .tariff wlH Ifo'nlrf , friends. Just what the evasive candi date means by patriotism, prepared v nesa and Americanism, he does not r, say j , but apparently includes the - traditional tariff of 'special previlege. Wilson's Integrity Appeals. " Im for Wilson because I am for . woman suffrage; and I prefer - the man who, though he. too. has the . un n uwn, Kuinj w P'ay politics with so great an Issue by" making" when he had at last been made com fortable and had fallen asleep, she joined me in the little sitting room, her dear face flushed, her eyes bright. "Can you keep a secret?" she asked, and upon my Intimation that I couM she told me that she was engaged to be married, the manner of the meet ing, and her joy. "He Is the greatest man in the world," she said, "and the best." In that faith she never fal tered in all the years that followed. Of the many mental pictures whicn I have of my sister three at this mo ment stand out with peculiar vivid ness: the way she looked that night when she told me of her engagement, the way she looked when she held their first born in her arms waiting for him to come from a distant place for the first sight of his child, and the way she looked In the little cot tage in Princeton the night that he was elected president of the United States. It was two years before they were married (he was studying at Johns Hopkins university In Balti more) In the manse of the Independ ent Presbyterian church in Savannah, Ga., his father and her grandfather officiating. I remember how he and 1 chatted about the books in my grand father's bookcases while we waited for the bride to come downstairs. I also remember a less idyllic circum stance, how bliss was jarred and the scent of orange blossoms temporarily annulled while two small boys, the bridegroom's nephew, Wilson Howe, and the bride's brother, Edward Ax son, "mixed it up" in a gorgeous fight over some difference in boyish opin ions. The bride was much shocked; but I caught a twinkle In the bride groom's eye, which seemed to say, "Let's separate them; but don't let's be in too desperate haste about It" First Home In Bryn Km. Their first home was at Bryn Mawr, Penn., where he was a member of the newly founded college for women; their second was in Middletown, Conn., where he waa professor In Wesleyan university; their third home was in Princeton, N. J., where he was profes sor for 12 years and president for eight; then came the wider life as gov ernor of New- Jersey and president of the United States. As soon as they had a home in Bryn Mawr they sent for our little orphan brother Edward, and he was a member of their household until he married. LProbably the sharpest blow my sister ever surrered was wnen bawara, nis young wife, and their baby were all drowned . together. Her naturally strong constitution broke temporarily, for he was as her son rather than her brother. I myself oecame a member of their family for a year In Middle- ton. and ever since have been practi cally a member of it, for during the long years in Princeton, though I had my own apartments, I used their house as If it were my own home. And our young sister, Margaret (now Mrs. El liott) had the same privileges. All of which would indicate that when Wood- row Wilson married he married a fani ily as well as a wife, and that is nod very far from the truth. If he ever knew any difference between her rela tives and his own he never Indicated it. And his blood became aa her blood. I have never known a case where each adopted the other's family so completely. He even used to refer to her dead father and mother by the childhood names by which she- always called them. I think he would prob ably say now that one of his favorite uncles was her Uncle Tom Dr. Thomas Hoyt of Philadelphia. Once wiren Uncle Tom was visiting "us" in Middletown, Mr. Wilson broke Into a soft chuckle while he and I were sit ting alone. The "trade Tom" Episode. "What are you laughing at?" I asked. He replied: "To think how I blacked Uncle Tom's boots this morning. Pass ing his bedroom door, 1 sav that he had put his bodts outside, naturally assuming that all self-respecting peo ple keep a man. I knew Bridget wouldn't black them, and Annie couldn't, so there was nothing to do but tackle the job myself." It occurs to me, as I write down this true episode, that he might very well have sent me to do it, seeing that I was only a college student, while he wai a professor, and. besides. It was my Uncle Tom. anyway. But Wood row Wilson would not do that simply I promises, for the sake of votes, which It- Is not within the power of any presi- ueni 10 Keep. I am for Wilson because I am for integrity of character in public offi cers, ana. as I know Mr. Wilson per sonally, and know many of Ms most intimate neighbors and lifelong friends, my faith in him will never be budged by campaign-inspired gossip for which no man or woman has yet been found wno aares take personal responsibility. Stands for Peace. I am for Wilson because I am for peace. Those who cry for "deeds, not words cry for war. whether they know.. or not- Under. present world conditions, our nation has Uttle chance of war with honor, or peace without honor The patience, poise and world mlndednea of a statesman have kept the nation safe through every crisis, while impetuous and petty-minded politicians have barked at hla heels. - I am for Wilson because I am op posed to large armaments; and since a period of national hysteria is im posing the burdens and dangers of militarism upon our country, it la more Imperative than ever before, that these agencies of aggressive warfare should ba kept out of the hands of thosa who demand deeds, not words Words are the only rational means of settling International controversies rn the present crista, , I shall continue to be satisfied with words, provided thev lira .Wllson'a words. , 1 because he was too considerate the most considerate man I ever knew -as well as the most generous and the tenderest. So there is a presidential picture to go along with Lincoln split ting rails, and Garfield on a canal boat, and Grant driving a dray Wil son blacking Uncle Tom's boots Uncle Tom by marriage. A Household of Karoo?. I have seen Mr. Wilson humorously assume the 'role of a browbeaten and henpecked person, unallowed to hol.l an opinion, when his wife would say in her impetuous way, "Woodrow, you know you don't think that!" and he would smile and say, "Madam, I was venturing to think that I thought that until I was corrected." At one time, when the girls were growing up, he used to laugh and quote Chief Justice Fuller, who remarked that his "Juris diction extended over all the United States except the Fuller family." I have sometimes wondered how a fam ily composed of varying and very pos itive elements ever contrived to live in such absolute and undisturbed har mony as did the Wilson family, and I have come to the conclusion that such a result can be attained only In one way, not by any prescription, or plan or domestic "scheme" of action, but only by enthroning love supreme that where love is always master, every day and every hour, there must be harmony. In the Wilson household love is always law. In Playful Mood. It has always been love mingled with deftghtful humor and good hiftnor. Of all the fictions that popular fal lacy would weave around a conspicu ous man, surely those who know Mr, Wilson must find it the strangest that he is supposed by some to be a cold and mirthless man. A dozen years ago I think any intimate acquaintance of Mr. Wilson could hare said tuat one of his most obvious Qualities was an in corrigible playfulness. Graver people thought he was too much that way, for he would Joke In the midst of the most serious discussions and con troversies. His una of anecdote (in one way he is the most provoking of men, for it Is next to impossible to tell him a new story he has heard them 'all and Invented some), his glee ful delight in nonsense rhymes, his atrocities in pun-making, an Inherit ance from his father, from whom he has derived so many and more com mendable traits, all these things are pronounced in Woodrow Wilson, to gether with that finest -of all humor, character humor, the knack of word portrayal of people in incongruous settings. . If you want to laugh until your breath forsakes you, get Wood row yilson to tell you the story of how a certain "educator" startled President Harrison- with a sudden eruption of oratory. 25 years ago. Not the least delightful part of It is that, while he Is relating it. he apparently forgets that the wheel has come full circle and he himself is now in the ex alted seat occupied by President Har rison when that entrancing bit of comedy unrolled. BesponsibUlties Bring Seriousness. These humorous characteristics are still In President Wilson, but it is hardly strange If they are less habitu ally on the surface than they used to be before the burdens of a whole world in turmoil were laid upon his shoul ders. Even before the weight pressed upon him, his inherent Scotch stern ness had begun to assert Itself. He went through some rough experiences at Princeton, and, I have heard him say, both in public and private, that he felt a stiffening of the fibre within him, found it less easy to relax at will Into playfulness. It merely means that, as years and responsibilities in creased, he became more purposeful. There Is a fact which he himself is probably unaware of, but which, I am sure is historically correct. A change came over him at Just about the time that Breat and sweeping changes were inning puc in our conceptions or na tionality In those important years that He between 1896 and 1900. Absurd as It may appear, previous to that I used to feel that he and I were men tally somewhat alike. There was ten years' difference in our ages, and an other difference of some moment, the difference between genius and the lack of it. But, with all that, there was some remote resemblance in the work ings of our minds even my percep tive sister used to see it. He and I would talk together for hours on end, conversations largely speculative. Change Takes Place. But gradually I felt that a change was taking place. For one thing, he had been through an illness, from I which he emerged more vigorous than before. He had always been a purpose ful man, but now he was a man of fixed and resolute purpose. He was .as affectionate and companionable as ever, but he did not have time now for such prolonged and "drifting" conver sations. The task was calling him. And I must believe that besides the merely personal 'change his own na ture was unconsciously reflecting the big and basic changes which were tak ing place in the nation and in national conceptions, changes that were leading America out of isolation into world relationships. Perhaps he was. all un consciously, enduring his vigils, pre paratory to the great conflict that lay ahead of him in the dim mists of fu turity. He grew more and more im patient of merely theoretical discus sions; he must handle facts in all their difficult reality. I often heard him exclaim, "I am so tired of a merely talking profession! I want to do something." This was before he became president of Princeton. In short, he was growing into what he has now become, a man with the surest and the flrmeat hold on the facts of things. This is why he seems inconsistent to some shallow people. They think In terms of an abstract theory, are logical and futile. He deals with facts, and. In crowded times like these, facts change chemically even while you are looking at them: because he deals with realities, not theories, he sometimes seems self-eon tradlctory and is always effective. By Way of Illustration. There is another and kindred thing about him which perplexes some peo ple; though the tenderest of men, he is the least sentimental. Once, since he has been president of the United States, I "was much exercised over the case of a man who had come under the national laws in a way that see.med to me merely technical; he was tech nically guilty, but virtually innocent; and so I did what I have seldom con sented to do; I wrote a long letter to Mr. Tumulty, to be laid before the president at his convenience. A friend of mine, personally more concerned with the case than I. read me a lone letter which he had framed. In which, among other things, he appealed to the president to relieve the bitlful anxiety of tha accused man's wife and parents. I advised him to cut that out. and said: "The president cannot and will not act on those grounds. He must do what seems to him Justice, however much his sympathies may excite him to mercy. Show him the essential Jus tice of what we are asking for. and atop there." ". ..v.,v.-";' The case was examined by the de parynent of justice, which decided thathe man's technical guilt waa. too DECLARATIONS r. PARTY LINES THE reelection of President Wilson Is urged, irrespective of party af filiation, by some of America's greatest men and women, leader In their fields, whose names are house hold bywords. Here is what they say: "I'm for Wilson because he is 'onto' the Interests' the unseen hands that 8ek to control government and Is holding them off. I am for Wilson because I believe he can do more to enhance the prosperity and assure peace for this nation than any other candidate." Henry Ford, automobile manufacturer. "A a Progressive, I am supporting "Wilson because he is the foremost Progressive in the country today. His record is one of devotion to Progress ive principles and of extraordinary persistence and success in translating them into law." Bainbridge Colby, the man who twice nominated Theo dore Roosevelt for president in Pro gressive conventions. "The Democratic party has achieved the seemingly impossible and is wor thy of a future trial."F. D. Under wood, president of the Erie railroad. "Mr. Wilson has now had four years of experience, and I think that he has earned raith and trust. I do not think It a logical or sensible thing to change to an Inexperienced and untried 'man just for the sake of a change." Thorn- A- Edsn. the electrical wizard, a Republican. President's Course During Hard Period Keeps Peace Hughes' and Roosevelt's Utterances Warrant Conclusion That With Either of Them in White House . War Would Have Ensued, By Claude m HE president's detractors deny Ithat he has kept U3 out of war. Colonel Roosevelt and Judge Hughes both say there was no' war we could get into. It is easy to prove if these gentlemen mean half of what they say that this country would have been plunged into war with either of them as president dur ing the last four years. Roosevelt says he believes In deeds instead of words. He is thus strik ing at the president's disposition to exhaust every reasonable diplomatic resource before committing the coun try to a war policy. Mr. Roosevelt said in Maine that It was our na tional duty to have protested against the Invasion of Belgium and he de nounced President Wilson bitterly for not doing this. Does anyone think that Germany would have turned back her gray horde from Liege and Namur because of the protest of the United States, even though it was made, by the mighty lion hunter? What then? Our Teddy Bays he believes in deeds not words. With what deeds could he have backed up his futilei Belgium protest, except with deeds' of war? Xoosevelt and the Xttudtasla, But, pass over Teddy's Belgium coup. Suppose Bwana Tuumbo to have been able, merely by the exhibition of his "terrible swift sword" to have thwart ed Germany's hopes of a speedy ad vance into France, and come on down to the time when the Lusltanla was sunk. "More than 100 babies were mur dered by the Germans bn the Lusi tania," Roosevelt shrieks, and hi would have seized at once, he says, every German vessel interned In the United States and asked the kaiser not, what would he give, but what did he want back? For less than that Germany de clared war on Portugal. Seizure of the shipping of a peacefuj nation is casus belli. Would the seizure of the kaiser's shipping have brought back the lives of the hundred babies? Now Mexico. Here Teddy Bhlnes. In a war with Mexico there would be work for cavalry and room for more San Juan hill stuff. "I would have used the Mexican railroad and gone into any Mexican city with ' Pershing's army which it fancv as commander In cUjief of the American army to enter manifest to warrant the department's interference with the due course of law. Then the president stepped In and pardoned the man outright, not because he had a family whose hearts would break, but because in the higher justice the man was innocent. This is the "austerity" of Woodrow Wilson, the austerity of a man whose conscience will not permit him to gov ern his public acts by private senti ments, who cannot use public offices to advance the fortunes of those for whom he feels a personal affection, who must keep his Judgment cool, evert when his heart is yearning, the austerity of a man whose heart can break, but can never be permitted to get beyond his own control. - Onlv a few of us know what Wood- row Wilson was really undergoing in the summer and autumn of 1914, when the world was catching fire from war, and the foundations of his own life were crumbling under him. Just as the war opened my sister died. "I cannot help thinking." he said, "hat perhaps she was taken so that, fftp might be spared the spectacle ofsome awful calamity." . It is hard for me to speak in moder ate terms of the beauty of the Wil son's married life that married life which I saw so Intimately for more than 25 years. They say "the bravest are the tenderest." and this strongest man in all the world today has always been so gentle In his home life that he has appeared to some too domestic in the days of the unfortunate col legiate quarrels in Princeton, one charge that used to be mad against him was that he was so shut up In his home life that he did not know man and the ways of men. Lover of Horns Xlf e. Of course, a man of Woodrow Wil son's genius for rapid perception learns mora about men in the flash of an eye than slower men learn of each other In whole long afternoons or clubroom gossip over their highballs. But in the charge there Is this much truth, that Mr. Wilson's own fireside has always been dearer to him than the thronged marts of casual contacts. If I were asked to name the leading and governing characteristic of, this man, I should Teply ; "That Is not e&jrft for he is a man of commanding genius, and genius Is necessarily com FOR WILSON DISREGARDED ''Does an American today see big ger or more dispassionately or more clearly than President Wilson? I be lieve that Progressives will see this; if they don't it is a reflection on their intelligence." Ida M. Tarbell. author and publicist. "His (Wilson's) character as a man, his sympathetic understanding of the problems of the day, his record In office, his unusual ability, preeminent ly displayed in meeting and dealing with the three great emergencies of his administration, and the importance of maintaining an uninterrupted policy at this Juncture in world affairs lead me to believe that the best interests of our country will be served In keeping tire present administration and its party in office. H. A. Garfield, presi dent of Williams' college, son of Presi dent Garfield, a Republican. "My firm conviction Is that Wilson has more great achievements to his credit than most presidents who pre ceded him." Judge Robert H. Lovett, head of the Union Pacific railroad system. "I am going to vote for Wilsspn." Jane Addams, the well known social worker. "I am going to east my first presi dential vote for Mr. Wilson, not be cause I am a Democrat, but bedause I am an Independent, and this is a time to forget parties." Mary McDow ell of University Settlement, Chicago. McColloch. and so notified Carranza." Substan them on tlally this, Theodore tells the border. Fine business. We might expect the dove of peace thereupon to hover gently over ths border. Can you imagine your own senti ments if you were so unfortunate as to be the member of a proud though stricken nation, when an alien race served notice on you of such inten tions with regard to your sacred soil? Wood's Estimate of tha TMt General Leonard Wood, who T. R says knows everything about military affairs, has stated that it would take six years and an army of 500,000 Americans to overrun Mexico. Can the American people doubt from th utterances of Roosevelt that If he had been in power the last four years he would have attempted that very ex ploit? But, it may be said, Hughes is the candidate, not Roosevelt. Very well. Hughes telegraphed his approval of Roosevelt's Maine speech and said it was a mighty declaration of Americanism. So Hughes, like Roosevelt, would have intervened in the European war on behalf of Bel glum, because he, like Roosevelt, is a man of deeds not words. We have his own statement for that. Furthermore, Hughes and Roosevelt are two souls with but a single thought about the Lusitanta. Under forced pressure, Hughes said at Louis ille that he would have severed dlplo- Utoiatlc relations with Germany upon u;e nappening of that event. Sever ance of relations means war, in times like these. Hughes Stands for War. And Mexico. Time, time, and again in criticisms of the president's pa tient policy toward those hapless peo ple, Hughes has said he would have used greater force and firmness. What other or greater force and firmness could have been used toward Mexico at any time In the last four years other than armed force and military firmness? Do you believe it's been easy to keep this country at peace these last four years? Don't you think the president has had a mighty hard time of it and that he has done abgut as well under the circumstances as any human be ing could? And that he has kept the peace with honor? And that he de serves a vote of trust and confidence on November 7? plex; but certainly one of his leading traits is deep affection. Sometimes in his public dealings he i forced to harden his heart deliberately in order that he may do Justice, but so soon as he can follow his own. instinct there emerges, above all his intellectuality and all his iron firmness of will hi affection." ' ms In the family clrple he can give this affection free reign, and hence he probably never feels so completely himself as when he gathers with wife and daughters and a f.. k tfriends around the fireside, and al- uwo ma oyim 10 move him whither it llsteth. He simply cannot live with out affection, for this our American great man. Is no superman, but human to the core of him. A Close Comradeship. In the long years of his and my sis ter's life together, they were more completely one than any two people .1 T m have Deen thrown into intimate contact. They took color from each other, as water and sky reflect each other's moods. Their tastes in books, pictures, statues and architecture coalesced. He taught her to love his prose favoritea. Burke and Bagehot and Birrell (the first Birrell book I ever saw was an inscribed gift book from him to her); she taught him to love her poetic favorites es pecially Wordsworth and Browning; he had a deep and true instinct for architecture, which he Imparted to her and she lijj turn quickened his discrim-I ln&Uon for color in landscape palntlntr and In nature for she had a skill in color that would have made her a At. iniBi naa sne net her painting secondary to her greater i - - o wile uu moiaer. It Interests me to observe how the three girls have shared their parents' tastes and talents: Margaret has her father's Passion for music; Eleanor. M.j. McAdoo. her mother's gift for painting; in young childhood, Jessie Mrs? Sayre, had something of her fther'a tasts for literary expression, and of her mother's taste for art; but as she waa developed these were over shadowed by that -which both her parents had in common, a strong hu manitarian instinct, which sought sat isfaction In settlement work until she was married. - 1 . - v We often faeau said of a married pair so often that it has become a sort of "bromide" "A cross word never passed between that couple. have been honestly trying to think it I ever heard anything approaching an altercation between Mr. and Mra. Wil son, and I cannot recall even a shadow of such. And yet these were no weak lings; but two spirited people, 'each with a power of conviction possible only to very strong characters. They would sometimes differ in their opin ions, but their relationship was so rooted in mutual love and loyalty that their differences were casual and su perficial, never fundamental. Xionellest Man 1a the World. I was at the White House a great deal that autumn and I know that tt is no exaggerated use of worda to say that he was the loneliest man in all the world. I remember in particular a few bitter days when there were only th.ee of us in the family circle. With characteristic solicitude for others and Spartan fortitude he had deliberately and peremptorily thinned the house hold for the welfare of others. He had compelled Margaret and Jessie and Frank Sayre to go to the summer home In New Hampshire for a change of air. He had forced even Dr. Gray son to take a few days of rest, for he saw that the doctor himself was In danger of illness after the strain of Mrs. Wilson's illness and death. Mr. and Mrs. McAdoo remained In Wash ington, and were much at the White House; but they also had their own home and obligations. I can see the lonely figure of the president now. alktng down the lona hallway, the hair so much whitened In the few months. His Intimate friends often expressed to me the wish that the president could marry again, aa he was utterly desolate. We who love him feel that God Him self must have directed the circum stances which brought Mrs. Gait into the White House circle? But for her we can only surmise what might have happened, for not even the strongest man in the world could bear up in definitely under that dumb grief. Sun light and grace radiate from Mrs. Gait. Her nature is big and generous and health-giving, and in that pres ence the president found new life, found that love without which he can not live. Their love for each other is perfect, and we all love her, both for what she has done for him and for herself, for to know her is to love her. She has entered this great career as simply, as unaffectedly, as unselfish ly as Bllen Axson entered into the ob scure career of the young lawyer who was abandoning law for a new and untried life of scholarship and teach ing. To neither woman has condition, high or low. meant anything; to both Woodrow Wilson has meant all. v I have lifted the veil from some pretty sacred things, and I wonder if I should have done so. My sustaining thought is that some day these things would have to be set forth for men like Woodrow Wilson belong to the world at large, and ultimately the Be crets of their lives must be made known to the world. The future biog rapher will relate in detail what I have summarized, when death shall have made Woodrow Wilson Imper sonal. But in greatly conspicuous of fice there is already something of the impersonality of death, and so I have, though not without misgiving, set down some things which it would be sacrilege to publish If Woodrow Wil son were still safe In the obscurity of a college professorship. Because he Is what he is in public. It is perhaps true that the public has some right to know what he is in private, and so I have written these things, every word of which is literal truth. CONSTRUCTIVE PROGRAM OF ADMINISTRATION IS NOT BEING ATTACKED (Continued From Preceding Tare.) the south that the man of humanity and calm was at the helm, not the Colonel who seised the Panama canal zone, and thereby lost for us the re spect and confidence of these very people to the south and who now says from Dead Dog Gulch that he would have gone Into Mexico "up to the hilt" and that "Bueky" would I have cleand UP the R1 Grande f ron tier in six months or weeks, I for get which. Really the colonel never should be president again. It if too quiet a life. He ought to be a buccaneer a dough ty discoverer with never a hesitation or a doubt unless it be a river on a map. His words mean war, always war. They fairly spurt red from between his- teeth. I wonder if he remembers when Kn gland and France threatened to intervene and nettle our affairs for us during the Civil war and Mr. Sew ard wrote to our minister In London if the subject was mentioned again to close his office and demand his pass ports. That is what Abraham Lin coln thou, ht of "Intervention." And ought we to be hasty to go to war with Mexico, to slay our son to serve the "Interests" because there have been bandit forays? There were bandit forays In Mis souri after the war and Missouri could not check them for a long time. If she had been a poor neighbor coun try ought we to have eaten her up? It Is for us to protect our citizens on the frontiers our innocent citizens. Sometimes they are not innocent, but It is not for us to wipe up desperate and struggling Mexico because of her border bandits. Xlacola's Hzpsrlsacs. When Mr. Lincoln came up for re election members of his own cabinet disapproved his conduct of the war (Chase left the cabinet). The Repub lican party split on the subject of his conduct of the war, and Fremont head ed the split. Lincoln's conduct in regard to Ma son and Slidell was declared "weak" and "pusillanimous" by the colonels of the day. Mason and Slidell, Confeder ate commlsloners to England, were taken from a British steamer by Cap tain Wilkes commanding one of our war vessels. He was voted the thanks of congress and a sword. He was a hero. But Great Britain demanded the release of the prisoners, and Lincoln ordered them to he released, saying it is International law of our own mak ing In the war of 1812. we must abide by it. Besides he added with Lincoln humor to his sour cabinet "one war . .. ...i. . . t a iime. out. infl nuKiiesM ana tn. cuionels of that day were not pleased. So unpopular was Lincoln with the politicians and aa they thought, with the people, that i they suggested that he retire from the candidacy for re election in favor of Grant. He made a noble reply: "If Grant can end the war better in my place I will step out." But the plain silent American citizen swept the sad faced patient man back, to hla unfinished task by a tidal wave of votes. And alas, they swept him into martyrdom. What would history now say had the great emancipator been repudiated and re tired. - ' . What wui the Future Bayf What will tha future say if, his task Act Brings Together Farmer Rural Credits Law Provides Machinery for Long, Tfme Loans at Reasonable Rates for Farmer and Safe In vestment for Purchaser; What Act Provides. , . LAND BANKS AND FARM LOAN ASSOCIATIONS FORM; By Henry United States Senator Piosa ew Hampshire. MODERN farming requires capital in large amounts. The American farmer has the best security in the world productive land. ' The rural credits bill enables the "farmer to ob tain capital for productive purposes at low rates and for long terma on the security of his farm. The successful farmer becomes more of a business man each year. He must use more machinery, buy more fertil izer, and sow better seed. He must erect better buildings, raise belter stock, and grow better crops. He must store his produce In order to sell in a high market. He must pay cash in order to buy cheap. If he wishes to keep his children on the farm he must make his home attractive. All of this costs money. He must have ready cash. .... Commercial banks are not suuea u. the requirements of the farmer. Their deposits are mainly on demand or on hort time, so that they cannot safely tie their funds u in long time loans. Tnose who loan to the farmer on mort gage muat have access to funds that are seeking long term Investment. Of money seeking long term invest ment at low rates there is an abund ant supply. It Includes the ordinary savings of the school teacher, clerk, minister and wage earner; the pro ceeds of life Insurance in the hands of widows and other beneficiaries, funds belonging to estates, minors and wards In chancery, in the hands of execu tors, guardians and trustees; funds of liisurance companies, benevolent or ders and societies of various kinds; en dowments of colleges. hospitals, museums and other Institutions; and assets to be Invested by receivers, courts and governments. The aggre gate of these is enormous. They re quire an investment that is absolutely safe and reasonably liquid in the sense that It may be converted into cash upon moderate notice; In other words, that it may find a ready market. A safe Investment of this character need not carry a high rato of Interest, investor and .Tanner Brought Together. We may picture the owners of this vast wealth grouped on one side of a river, the farmers dosinng loana Grouped ,pn the other side. It is evi dent that each has what the other wants. We are asked to furnish the bridge which shall bring them in touch, or, rather, to grant a franchise to those who will build the bridge If we will construct the approaches. Such we conceive to be a proper function of the government. It is evident that the school teacher in Vermont with $600 to Invest cannot be sure that the Nebraska farm mort gage offered her is a aound Invest ment. The title of the mortgagor may be defective; the farmer may be im provident; the land may not be pro ductive. She has no way to ascertain these primary facts. But If she is able to buy a long term bond, with semi-annual coupons sure to be prompt ly paid, secured In common with thou sands of like bonds on millions of t'ollars' worth of farm lands, guar anteed by 12 banks with an aggregate capital, of not less than 19,000,000, with selected borrows of known char acter, with titles examined and all details attended to by trained men, and with government examination and supervision, she may Invest with con fidence on a moderate income basis. ProrlsloKB of the Bill. Ths rural credits act provides for a farm loan board, which shall have gen eral control over the system; 12 or more land banks which make loans on mortgage to the farmer, and many farm loan associations which repre sent the farmers in their dealings with the land banks. The farm loan board is non-partisan, consisting of four members, in addi tion to the secretary of the treasury. Each land bank must have a capital of at least $750,000. If the public does not subscribe the entire amount, the government will take the balance. The farm loan associations are pure ly cooperative, made up entirely of borrowing farmers. Ton or more farm ers may apply to tha land bank of the district for a charter. Every farmer v.-ho wishes to borrow must become a member of the loan association, tak ing stock to the amount of five per cent of the face of hla loan. The loan association takes out an equal amount of stock in the land bank, forwarding the money at once to the land bank. The land bank sends an official ap praiser to examine the land, and, if the loan is made, forwards the funds to the farmer through ths loan associa tion. When the land bank has mortgages on hand to the amount of $60,000, it may issue a like amount of farm loan bonds on the security of ths mortgages r.g collateral. The land bank ia lim ited in its issue of bonds to 20 times Its capital and surplus, but as each lorrower puts up flv per cent of his loan In cash for capital stock, the is suing powefof the land bank increases automatically. The loan associations are purely co operative. All mortgages taken by the land bank from the members of a loan association are indorsed by it. Farm loan bonds Issued by sny land bank are guaranteed by all the other land banks, so that they have a broad insurance. Security of Bonds. Every farm loan bond is secured as follows: 1. By the capital, reserves and earn- all unfinished, the world still aflame, the American people repudiate ths great constructive statesman Wood row Wilson? I know in my soul they will not prefer the evasive Hughes, the fire breathing colonel, each In his way condemning all the calm sanity of our president. Each, if he Is to be believed, leading on to war. When I see life long Republicans like Edison. Burbank, Burroughs, Ford, railroad presidents like the heads of the Union Pacific, the Erie, the Wabash; Independent Journalists Ilka Victor Murdock. Marion Reedy, Os wald Vlllard; Progressives like Bain bridge Colby. Stephen Wise. Amos Pin chot. Judge Nortonl, Jans Addams, and hosts of such people uniting with ths miners, railroad men and labor every where lor. inn neiwiioD oi WOOdrow Wilson I know we shall not b humlll ated Jn- history. and Investot F. Hollis. lugs of the land bank which issues it. 2. By the capital, reserves and earn ings of the 11 other land banks. . 8. By the collective security of ail the mortgages in th land bank, ths mortgages pledged being at least equal In amount to the outstanding bonds. Every mortgage pledged as collateral is secured as follows: . 1. By the personal undertaking of , the borrower. - 7 2. By the security of the mortgaged land at . least double In value to ths amount of the loan. . r .. ' S. By the capital, reserves and earn- . ings of the local association indorsing the loan, , 4 By the individual liability of ths members of the Indorsing association. It is believed that these bonds will be marketed at par on a four psresot basis. The maximum charge for sx pnses and profits of the system Is ' one per cent on the face of .. out aianding mortgages, so that tha farmer should get his money at five per cent. . All the profits go to the loan associa tions In dividends, and thus to ths borrowers who are the shareholders In ' the local associations. - long Term fcoans. ' Loans to farmers are on long term, and may be aa long as 40 years. . They , are on the amortization plan, SO that vlth each interest payment the bor rower will pay In a rmall amount on his principal. If he pays in one per cent of the principal yearly, he will c icy out In 38 years. ' ' v,V.'- Loans must be or first mortgage and may not exceed 60 per cent of the ap praised value of the land plus SO per cent of the insured value of ths build. -Ings. The loan committee and the board directors first pass on ths value of the land and the character of. ths farmer. Before the land bank makes the loan Its board of .directors passes . upon It and has the land appraised, by a land bank appraiser, who las govern ment official. In this way absolute safety Is secured for each loan., r , M The Interest of the members of the local association is secured by their ownership of stock, -and by their in dividual liability, as the case may be. Moat of the local work of investiga tion, collecting payments, and forward lng funds Is done by them without expense. Their expenses will be Vry light. . The mortgages and farm loan bonds will be exempt from taxatloM and ths bonds will be a legal investment for. trust funds. 'VVL It Is believed that the system of land banks outlined affords a ssfs and at tractive farm loan bond for the invest !ng public; low interest rates, long term mortgages, and easy payments for the farmers; low cost of adminis tration; simplicity of organisation and operation; adaptability to ths needs of every section; and stimulation to the spirit of generous cooperation among farmers. Hughes Candidacy; ; Is Disappointing Hew Tork Xvsslng rost and Wichita Zagle Abandon Bepablleas , OasdL. data as Campaign Draws to Clots . Two great newspapers, one an In fluential Progressive organ and 'ths other Independent in politics and ones favoring Hughes, have recently de clared his candidacy a disappointment. The Wichita Eagle, edited by .Vio tor Murdock and ths official Bull Moose paper in Kansas, in declaring the Hughes candidacy a disappoint" men t, urges all Independent and pro-.' gre.slve citizens' to vote for the re election of President Wilson. ' ,' . i The New Tork Evening Post with its influence and its prestige has defi nitely abandoned the Hughes cause. "It is not necessary to say what hopes we pinned on Mr. Hughes," said the Post In a recent editorial. "If others are cast down by ths rssutt, ws are more so." " ' The Wichita Eagle until Its recent snnouncement had not committed Itself as to its preference for-iths presidency. But with ths election only a few days away, with ths Issues of ' the campaign before the voters, it said: "It is time for ths independent voter to get off the fsncs; he must . be making his choice. "The logic of events, ths issues as they are now Joined, the facts as they . exist, lead to the selection of Wood row Wilson as ths presidential choice by those citizens who would mors cer tainly further progressive principles so vital in a republic and to civilisa tion Itself." v.'i '".. The Evening Post has abandoned Hughes through sheer disappointment, confessing as it does so that It waotsd ' to see in him a candidate it could support. - "Ths Hughes failure Is, indeed, something like a calamity. TV'i dtl Intellectually poorer. It Is as If ths props had been knocked from under us," reads tho Post's recent statement, "He has left the country cold. Thou- ' sands who were ready to be drawn to him are left halting between two opin ions. Most of the votes cast for- him will be without seal or anticipation." Ex-Governor Takes! Stump for Wilson Cheyenne,' Wyo., Oct. 15. Joseph M. Carey, former Republican governor of WyomHig, has taken ths stump tor Woodrow Wilson. His speeches are being received with enthusiastic dem onstrations. ,: j -;.', i "I was member of what 'waa the Progressiva party." ths former gorer- : nor said In his first address. fci wes a member of the resolutions commit tee of tbs convention which nominated . Theodora Roosevelt in 111, and I thank God that 1 had a parti in the proceedings of that convention. "Two-thirds of th platform that was there adopted has been enacted Into law by Woodrow Wilson. -Now I am left without a party,, but with my conscience clear, I propose to vote and work for th continuation , In office of that man who has had th stamina to work for the enactment cf these principles Into law,'' ,