K1;' The Commoner." JULY 11. 1M3'' .- - k7 in 1826. He says he expects to live to the cen tury mark. "I'm only eighty-seven years old," he says, "but somehow I can't hear like I once could. For that reason I resigned as justice of the peace." In 1805 Long camo to Cincinnati, and from-there to Omaha, where he has resided ever since. But long before ho left Massachu stts he held office in the Masonic fraternity. In Massachusetts he rode -on the first train that ever ran over a completed railroad in this coun try. That was the old Boston and Lowell. In Cincinnati he held office in various lodges and fraternal societies, but it was not until he came to Omaha early in the 'GO's that he was elected to public 'office. Omaha was only a collection of mud huts and Indian tepees when Judge Long was elected city auditor. When ho came up for re-election he was defeated by Charles Goodrich, the only defeat he ever .suffered. Afterward he was elected to .the school board, on which he served seventeen years, two terms as chairman of the board. In 1891 he was elected a justice of tho peace, which oflico ho hold until ho re signed. O c& l A NOVEL defense by a prisoner' is described in a Macon, Mo., dispatch to the St. Louis Re public, as follows: Christopher C. Carter, who is serving a six month's term in the Macon jail, in a signed statement to the local papers refutes the charge that he was to be one of the benefi ciaries of the liquor which some boys tried to smuggle into the jail. The statement that the li quor was seized by a deputy and a Shelby county man was arrested for sending it, was printed in a Macon paper. In a signed reply, Carter says that instead of thinking of liquor and such things, he' had been busily engaged in reading, as follows: Thirty-two magazines. Two daily newspapers. The Congressional Record of the month. One volume of sacred history. Latest decisions from southwestern reports, comprising fifteen cases from Arkansas, twenty-seven from Kentucky, thirty-five from Missouri, sixty from Texas." "Since readying, them," Carter writes, "the Missouri cases have been committed to memory for future use. I have ts'o started two manuscripts during the month, one of them be ing upon the Dred Scott Case,' and the other on 'The Foljiep ,o'f Our Criminal Procedure,' to be read before a national association of lawyers. WJth such matter to occupy my time I am con fident that a fair-minded public will never be lieve that I sought anything to drink which would cloud my intellect. I am not guilty." CONCERNING America's vast business a writer in the New York Press says: We talk of tho economic growth of the United States as the most amazingly rapid that has ever taken place anywhere in the world. And now and then it is helpful to have some figures to bear us out. The Nation's Business, published by the chamber of commerce of the United Sta'tes, furnishes them. Fifty years ago exports were $5.83 per capita, compared with $22.41 now; imports were $5.79, compared with $16.94 now. But the most surprising thing is that the total commerce of the United Sates a half century ago, according to this publication, was less than one fourth that of the single port of New York in 1912. The exports and imports at New York are given as $1,793,000,000 for last year, $2, 000,000 more than London and $120,000,000 more than Hamburg, which leads Liverpool by a small margin. Assuming that the figures for 18G2 do not include the then blockaded ports of the confederacy, they cover New York, Phila delphia, Baltimore, Boston and the entire Pacific coast. They show as strikingly as anything could show what a rich inheritance- America pos sesses not only in natural wealth, but in the in dustry and enterprise of its people, and what a great obligation rests upon the nation to use this wealth aright. V m & A TRIBUTE to tho American city is paid by CX the Philadelphia Public Ledger in this way: Forty years ago the American city was regarded as hopeless. Crowded tenements, dirty alleys, haunts of vice and cesspools of disease were accepted as inevitable results of dense popula tions. Epidemics were expected and when they came and killed their thousands they were looked upon as necessary evils. But science found the microbes and tho civic conscience found the joy of public service. Thus in a third of a century a miracle was wrought, and today the city shows up better in the health and in sanity and defective statistics than the country. The pressing problems of better living are found in the rural sections. There is much to do in tho way of sanitation and ventilation, of purer water and more sunshine. There its a noble gain to bo made in giving more variety and interest to country life. The lonosomeness can bo changed and the change moans a wonderful uplift In tho average of tho now generation. Of course, the cities tire far from perfection but they are also far from their conditions of forty years ago, and city people have Been and learned. Soon they will be scattered throughout tho rural re gions. Why not take with them a purpose to use their knowledge wisely? In helping tho peoplo in the country to bettor living and healthier ways they will be helping themselves, for we know only too woll that tho energy of tho city is fed by tho new blood from the country, and the better and purer this blood is the better for the city. w t? fc A PROTEST against war talk by men of authority is registered by the Cltvoland Leader. Tho Loader says: Major General Leonard Wood says: "We know that a war Is coming. It is arrant nonsense to say that the day of war is over. Wars are not made by in dividuals, but by the pressure of public events. If thero were war tomorrow the United States would need 16,000 trained officers to command 600,000 men. We have 4000 men prepared to command." Senator Elihu Root says: "It is no longer governments, but people who do most to bring on wars. We in America must learn that wo can not continue a policy of peace with insult. We must learn civility Wo must learn that when an American sovereign speaks of the affairs of a foreign nation he must observe those rules of courtesy by which alone the peace of the world can be maintained." Let us contrast the words of these two eminent men tho one a professional soldier of high rank, and the other a statesman of broad vision. Major General Wood is doing his best to promote a larger army, and a more efficient army, and ho has the sympathy of a majority of Americans iii his efforts. It Is agreed that under present in ternational conditions it is the part of wisdom reasonably to increase our military resources. But it is true, as Senator Root says, that flory talk fans the flame of war. It is just such out bursts as the foregoing by Major General Wood in his commencement address at tho Carnegie Institute of Technology that Senator Root warns against. Senator Root Is right. Suppose the German kaiser were to speak as Major General Wood has done, or suppose the czar or the Mi kado or King George were to do so? How soon would follow such Intemperate language the roar of big guns of dreadnoughts? t5 i5 w TTE first White House wedding Is announced In a dispatch, carried by tho Associated Press as follows: Tho President and Mrs. Wilson announced tho engagement of their second daughter, Miss Jessie Woodrow Wilson, to Francis Bowes Sayro of Lancaster, Pa. Tho wedding is expected to take place next Novem ber at tho White House. Mr. Sayro is at present at attorney in the office of District Attorney Whitman of Now York. While close friends of both families havo known of the engagement for somo time, announcement was withhold. White House officials accompanied tho brief announcement with a biography of Mr. Sayro. Ho is twenty-eight years old and after prepar ing at the Hill school at Pottstown, Pa., and Lawrenceville, N. J., graduated from Williams college in 1909. Ho was manager of tho foot ball team there, valedictorian of his class and interested in Y. M. C. A. work. Ho spent two summers with Dr. Wilfred T. Grenfell in his missionary work on the coast of Labrador, and studied law at Harvard law school, where he graduated last year "cum laude." He has traveled extensively during his vacations, spend ing last summer in Alaska and northern Siberia. Mr. Sayre comes from a collegiate family. His father was the late Robert Heyshaw Sayre, for a long time president of tho board of trustees of Lehigh university, and builder of the Lehigh Valley railroad. His mother was Martha Finloy Novln, daughted of John Williamson Nevin, theologian and president of Franklin and Marshall college at Lancaster, Pa. She is descended from Hugh Williamson of North Caro lina, one of tho framers of tho constitution. She is a sister of Robert J. Nevin, head of the American church of Rome, Italy, and a first cousin of Ethelbert Nevin, tho composer. Miss Wilson Is twonty-four years old and was edu cated at Goucher college, Baltimore, where she specialized in. political Kclonco. Sho has don-iW much settlement work In Philadelphia ntyTU'fftt. '9q neon actively identified with tho Y, yf. O. ,A,1 having rocoii'lly inado many Bpoqchos in Its Jkj- . half. Whilo Mr, Sayro la not known toWusblnj? tonians, ho has in ado sovoral quiet Httlo vlsltn to tho Whlto House In rccont months and was a fre quent visitor at tho Wilson home at Prlncoton, , N. J. Tho announcement wan received with ' koon Intorost In social circle of tho national capital, us the wedding starts tho winter season with an Important social function. Not fllnrof Miss Alice Koosovolt and Former Representative Longworth of Ohio wcro married has there been a wedding at tho Whlto House, and many yoarH prior to that tho wedding of Cleveland took place. . w 0 w T'llii women of Illinois are rejoicing thono days.- A writer in the Lincoln (Nob.) Journal says: By tho time Governor Dunne had signed the Illinois woman suffrage bill tho scope of that measure had become known. It was not oasy to bellovo that the Illinois legislature had suddenly and without public discussion admitted woniQn to a voto In tho vital mattors of govern ment. Women havo had municipal suffrage in Kansas for .thirty years, and no conspicuous re sults have been shown. If this was all that had been done in Illinois, it was Important but not revolutionary. As tho now law Is analyzed It is found to mean much more than that. Besides a vote lor president, which tho Kansas woman had never had, tho Illinois lav grants woman suffrage on some county offices. But tho most interesting test of women's votes comes by tho way of tho very municipal suffrage that Kansas women have. The women may now govern tho nation's second largest city on equal tonus with men. What will tho womon do with Chicago? Will they keep Hlnky Dink and Bathhouse John in tho council? Will the town contlnuo tho easy going policy toward capitalized vice? Illinois Is a local option stato in liquor mattors. Tho suffrago extension appoars to give women a voice In local liquor roforendums. Where wero tho browors whon this bill was passing? In the western states where womon voto they do not appear to havo landed on the saloons with any mora force than the man had been doing, yet tho liquor capitalists are in a stato of anguish over tho spread of women's votes. Illinois will confirm or allay that fear. Friends of votes for women will say that specific results aro no fair test of tho expediency of woman suffrage, that womon aro ontltlod to a voice in public affairs regard less of tho tono of voice. Nevertheless, tho re sult will havo weight with many of tho men whose votes will he needed to extend women's votes In other states. The specific results of women's votes In Illinois will havo an Important influence upon other suffrage campaigns. DR. LEONARD P. AYRES, speaking In Phila delphia, said that not long ago ho and his staff had been asked to examine tho school cur riculum of a certain large Now England town. He discovered that most of the children dropped out of that school at tho seventh grade. Prob ing further, he found that tho courso in arith metic in that grade dealt almost wholly wlth the various tables of measurement. Ho took ten representative problems from this courso and submitted them to ten business and professional executives In New York city, men whose salaries range from $3,000 to $15,000 a year. Tho story continues: "The highest mark was scored by the secretary of a well-known propagandist society In social work. His grade was 25, There were several zeroes. Tw.o of tho problems were concerned with buying and selling paper in bulk. One of the men who took the examina tion was tho editor of a magazine and another was tho head of a book-publishing house, Both failed on these two problems. They declared that tho terms employed in the problem had not been in current use for fifty years. Each of tho ten men explained his low grade by saying: "I learned that stuff once, but I haven't had any uso for it since." A FAIR CHANCE It Is an injustlco to Mr. Bryan to say ho is at last eating salt out of the hand of tho goldbugs. He Is simply standing back of his chief. Mr. Bryan is determined, so far as ho Is concerned, that Mr, Wilson shall have a fair chance. And, by the way, apparently that la all the president asks. Sioux City Iowa) Journal (rep.) :M a u A i i i 5 M 4! a rvi ,n i 1 i al&&&iai d&&&M.-. f