1 91 33 Other Men of Mark 



Indiana, of which a former student of mine, Dr. 

 WiUiam A. MilUs, is president, granted Marchant the 

 well-deserved honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. In 

 19 19 Jane Addams, G. Stanley Hall, and I were 

 elected foreign vice-presidents of the National Wel- 

 fare Association. 



During my stay in London I again took luncheon 

 with the staff of The Nation. Massingham, its editor, 

 represents the far-sighted liberal minority in British 

 politics. Nevinson's appreciation of Thoreau's stand 

 for liberty touched my heart. With Hobson too I 

 renewed my former acquaintance.^ 



T. Fisher Unwin, publisher, anti-militarist, and Unwin 

 free trader, son-in-law of Richard Cobden, whose ^"'^,. 



'-,,,, , . , , Gardiner 



acqnamtance I had also made m 1910, showed me 

 varied courtesies. In his home I now met for the first 

 time Alfred G. Gardiner, editorial writer for the Daily 

 News and Leader, a young man of energy and spirit, 

 alert to the meaning of events and possessed of a 

 power of character-analysis quite unique among 

 journalists. His illuminating, vigorous, and original 

 editorials rank with the best of their kind anywhere. 

 His sketches of leading men — " Pillars of Society," 

 "Prophets, Priests, and Kings," and "The War 

 Lords" — give such vivid pictures of prominent 

 personalities that the reader cannot help feeling he 

 actually knows the individuals in question. 



At Unwin's also I became acquainted with Lord Weiby 

 Welby, then past seventy but wielding still the sane 

 influence which had made him a power in the Liberal 

 party. If men of the type of Henry Campbell-Banner- 

 man, Lord Courtney, of whom I shall soon speak at 



1 See Chapter xxxvii, page 327-328. 



c 475 :i 



