wgNWfPwfJyyiiw11" f 6 VOLUME 11, 1JUMBBR SS, 1Z&FTT' ''"" frr' it k' -ft 'ft , i EH Ii m tKH a I: I I, ! )' The Commoner. t Governor Woodrow Wilson in Lincoln . Governor Woodrow Wilson, of New Jersey, visited Lincoln, Neb., on his way oast. Tho Lincoln, (Nob.) Journal gives tho following re port of tho governor's reception: Dr. Woodrow Wilson, tho scholar-governor of Now Jersey and potential candidate for tho presidency of tho United Statos, received an especially enthusiastic welcome from tho pooplo of Lincoln. Ho como rb tho guest of a non-political organization, tho Lincoln Com mercial club. Ho rocolvod marked attention from all classes of citizens regardless of politics. Ho visited tho university and was greeted by a groat crowd of students as ono who speaks tho language of their tribe. In tho afternoon a public reception was hold in his honor at tho Lincoln hotel and in tho evening ho addressed tho largest gathering over assembled for tho annual banquot of tho Commercial club. From tho time ho arrived from tho north at 3:15 in tho afternoon until ho loft for tho cast at 11 o'clock in tho ovening, ho was tho recipient of ovory possiblo attention without tho least politi cal bias. At tho samo timo everybody looked upon him as a presidential possibility, and that fact crept -out Continually in tho conversation of those who greeted him and In tho speeches of introduction at tho formal dinner in tho evening. Bocouso of tho delay east of Omaha which prevented tho distinguished guest from making connections with tho train that arrives in Lin coln before noon, Governor Wilson was unable to reach the city until 3:15 in tho afternoon. A committee of tho Commercial club, consisting of W. A. Selleck, C. W. Bryan, and President George J. Woods met him at Ashland and . oBcorted him to tho city. At tho Burlington depot tho party was met by the recoption com mittee of tho club with several automobiles and taken directly to tho Lincoln hotel. Among those who acted on this informal re ception committee wore: J. E. Miller, P. L. Hall, Judge Lincoln Frost, R. M, Joyce, John Dorgan, Chancellor Samuel Avery and F. M. Hall. iGovornor Wilson wont at oncd to his room but soon reappeared and hold an informal re ception in the lobby of the hotel. Perhaps a hundred men were there to shako hands with him. The reception committee saw to it that he was kept busy responding to introductions. W; Hi Thompson, democratic candidate for the United States senate at the same time that it is rumored Governor Wilson will bo the demo cratic candidate for prosidont and A. E. Cady, formerly republican candidate for governor in tliiB state, were in the city on other business. Both chatted with the executive of New Jersey. The talk was kept pretty well away from tho discussion now going on concerning democratic presidential timber. "I have been in tho West many times," said tho governor while shaking, hands right and loft, "but have never boen in Lincoln before. Nice city this. I have boen in Omaha several times, and do not count the west at all a stranger to me. Tomorrow I go direct to North Carolina to fill a long-standing engagement for a commencement address." . Governor Wilson smilingly refused to discuss the political situation as regarding tho presi dential possiblitles. To members of the recep tion committee who mot him part way to Oma ha he talked freely of political conditions. Ho declared himself surprised and delighted with the manifstations everywhere of the progres sive sentiment in the west, and presaged that it means much in' the future policy of the nation. Governor Wllpon on this extensive trip is accompanied by only two friends, neither of thorn in any off Jial capacity. Frank Parker Stockbridge of Now York, a journalistic friend of the governor, is accompanying him as a volun teer and looking after his wants as a sort of private secretary. At the same time Mr. Stock bridge is securing material for magazine stories, he doing that class of work almost entirely at this timo. Tho governor's other companion is McKeo Barclay, cartoonist on tho Baltimore Sun, who is not only doing cartoon work on subjects ho secures from the trip but is writing special articles for his newspaper. Shortly after 4 o'clock Governor Wilson was again taken in tow by Commercial club mem bers and taken first to tho university campus where he viewed the annual competitive drill exercises then in progress. From there after a a very short stop he was whirled to the state house. Governor Aldrich was not in tho city, -he having gone away to makeff commencement address, but several state officers had lingered in tho governor's reception room in hope of seeing tho distinguished guest. A call was made on ex-Chancellor E. Benjamin Andrews, now ill in a local hospital. Tho chancellor and tho governor were old friends, both being college professors at tho same time, tho ono as presi dent of Brown university, tho othor as profes sor of history at Princeton from which position ho stopped to tho presidency of the institution and from that to tho governorship of his state. Mr. Andrews telephoned to C. W. Bryan that ho would bo delighted to meet his friend but considered It something of a hardship on the latter. Governor Wilson considered this tho most important stop on his brief trip around the city. Fairview and tho aviation grounds at tho state fair grounds, were also on the trip. W. J. Bryan was not in tho city. At tho state university Governor Wilson's automobile was driven into tho center of a hollow square, tho various cadet companies and 500 spectators ranging themselves on the four sides. Tho crowd then surged in about the automobile, the students cheering lustily for tho former Princeton president. As Governor Wil son rose after an introduction by Chancellor Avery, tho familiar college yell, "What's the matter with Woodrow Wilson? he's all right," delayed his opening remarks. "You aro very kind," remarked the recipient of the attention. "But you are taking a great deal for granted when you say that I am all right. In viewing you it occurs to me that I am not accustomed to seeing my students in uni form. I know, however, that you are a uniform lot and I know something of what is beneath tho uniforms at any rate. "I realize that you are interested in me be cause of my position in politics. Tho college man who has the temerity to break into politics is naturally a curiosity. However, I did not go into politics; I waB pulled in. For twenty years I had been preaching the doctrine that every man owed it to his country to -take part to his full ability, in affairs of government. Con sequently, when they camo to me I had to take my medicine. It waB a case of put up or shut up Being naturally a talkative individual, I shut up. "I know that you are not here to hear a speech, but rather merely to see a human curiosity. Therefore, I thank you." Tho third annual banquet of the Commercial club waB held at half past six o'clock at the Lincoln hotel. An effort to make it a formal affair was defeated by the extreme heat which caused more than ono half of the members to appear in the coolest neglige costumes they could find. Three hundred and twenty-five men gathered in the foyer of the hotel, and after a brief period of presentation to the guest of honor filed into tho banquet hall and took pos session of five tables stretched along the length of the room. To facilitate serving so great a crowd the food was placed on the tables as far as possible and the waiters had nothing to do but replenish dishes and serve two or three courses. During the dinner the orchestra added to the jollity by furnishing special music and singing a song in which Governor Wilson figured in a way not at all to his disadvantage. The boosters who had gathered some songs on their recent trade trip also rose now and then to help matters along, and were encored until their repertory gave out. Georgo Woods, president of the club, who, with Governor Wilson, Chancellor Avery, Mayor Armstrong, Victor Rosewater and members of tho local reception committee, occupied the table of honor on tho stage, began tho formal pro ceedings by welcoming Governor Wilson and re ferring to him as ono of the half dozen men from whom tho people of tho United States will choose their next president. Three of these men, ho said, were either visiting in Lincoln, or lived here permanently. Governor Wilson was one of these and Mr. Bryan was the other two. After a short story, a few more brief remarks and a telegram from W. J. Bryan, Mr. Woods in troduced Mayor Armstrong, who was received with a round of rousing and prolonged cheors. Mayor Armstrong's voice was not strong enough to fill the largo banquet chamber easily. Ho complimented the guest of honor as a pro gressive politician come out of the so-called con servative east to talk to the progressive west. The Commercial club, said ho, had been de lighted ever since it became lenown that the scholary believer in progressive thought had agreed to . speak at the annual meeting. The mayor gave way to Chancellor Avery, introduc ing him to tho audience. The chancellor remarked that as he had fol lowed the tall figure of the mayor into tho banqueting hall he had wondered if he should address him as "your highness." Whether or not he should be called "your serene highness" would depend on the outcome of the next few days in the city of Lincoln. This jocular re mark brought instant response from tho audience. Chancellor Avery paid a tribute to the speaker. In eastern college circles in which the Nebraska' educator had moved the president of Princeton had been considered the greatest of them all, and since he had become the gover nor of New Jersey he had been known as ono of the greatest governors of them all. WOODROW WILSON'S ADDRESS Governor Wilson, introduced by 'Chancellor Avery in lieu of both the ex-chancellor friend of the speaker and the absent governor of Ner braska, was received with rounds of applause, the audience rising to its feet to cheer. After some pleasant introductory remarks and a tribute to "the great Nebraskan, W. J. Bryan," in which the speaker stated the "sage of Fair view" stands in a peculiar relation to democ racy in that ho had been a leader of thought in the days now past and gone when it took the utmost courage in any man to keep the atten tion of the people directed at the things that required a remedy. He had played a dis tinguished and valuable part, and now at last tho nation had passed the period of-awakening and was now awake. Governor Wilson dwelt on the value of states' rights as a method by which the reforms now well under way can be carried through without wido national disturbance. He pointed out that each state represents within itself a peculiar condition and a peculiar problem set to be solved. Each state is grappling with its own paramount issue, and when taken together as a whole, the reform spreading gradually from state to state and intermingling, the whole na tion is leavened. The governor declared him Belf a defender and a believer In states' rights, but not the kind that had disrupted the nation before the civil war. The states' rights he advocated was a doctrine -without passion and without prejudice. ; :' PEACEMAKERS FOR THE NATION As an illustration of what he meant by the necessity of the states taking up reform each by itself, he cited Nebraska anj. Kansas "that brace of states in the middle west, the pace-makers for the nation," who had led in reform experiments that have now become settled policies in many parts of the nation. In the east people had shuddered at the mention of the "referendum" and "recall." They declared that the doctrine struck at tho fundamental theories on which our government is constructed, that it changed representative government into direct govern ment, and no precedent of a long life for such doctrines could be pointed to. The governor himself, in his eastern college, was won to the doctrines slowly. He used to prove to his classes that the referendum and the initiative would not work. The mischief of it was, said he, that he could still prove it. But the prin ciple does work. It has been tried. Theory had been overthrown by practice. In Nebraska tho reforms had begun by com missions to correct the evils of corporate con trol of power which the people had recklessly given away years ago in order to tempt capital away from the east and into western develop ment. That was why, said he, that the central west became a pioneer in reform. Its early policy had made the evils to bo corrected more glaring than those existing in the east. In California' the people had grappled with the Southern Pacific and taken back the control unto themselves. In Massachusetts the mistakes of ' easy political life had been gradually corrected until on' the statute books of that state are now many of tho best laws to be found. A machine still exists there clothed with the odor of re spectability, but the people are awakening and the delicate process of retirement is being prac ticed. In Now Hampshire the people have taken back the control which years ago they filtered away. In New Jersey the troubles were too many to bo told, but the people have awakened. This is the state by state system of reform which tho governor advocated, and through which he expects to seo the nation soon on a different basis, and the system which he now calls "states lights." PEOPLE THEMSELVES TO BLAME .Governor Wilson discussed leglslativereform. "Don't -blamo your legislators for what they (Continued on Page 10.) ih M-j t -ujtffkStffelifei -iM..tjiuMiiiu'nii " it,ttMtiuVmjuk&i)k