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22 # FaE ~ GABINET PLAGE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND PUBLIC WELFARE . IS PLANNED BY HARDING. WOMAN WILL GET POSITION i { Activities Planned for Dr. Sawyer Have ‘ Close Connection With Plan for New | ment Is Cause of Gossip, H e ! By EDWARD B. CLARK, { Washington.—Members of the next congress seem convinced that Presi- i dent Harding will submit a plea for legislation to create a new branch of the government service to be known s the department of education and {public welfare with a woman at its {head who is to have a place in the ! cubinet. There is some opposition developing it will be voiced on the floors of the two houses of congress if the plan for jthe new department is submitteds "l'here seems to be a feeling in both | political parties, however, that, if the { President makes a specific recome mendation which of course amounts to a request for the legislation, the ‘i party majority in congress will hecd his words and pass the legislation nece essary to make the new place in the cabinet. “It has been known for a long time | that some of the elements in the pops ulation were opposed to the creation of this new branch of governments Some of the churches have feared that under the new dispensation education in church schools might. be Interfered with and that, in effect, teaching might be wholly secularized. Recently, however, some of the leads ing churchmen have said that their churches cannot be put in a position of opposition -to anything which looks like the educational welfare of the | country, and so it is possible that a part of the opposition has passed from the field. All Will Be Heard. ! Representatives and senators have sald that everybody is to be given a sonnnce to be heard by the committees when the hearings on the measure creating the department are held. It is promised that the legislation will inot be passed hurriedly. If the Presi- Qent shall ask that the «lepartment be created, the measure for its creation iwhen first formulated for committes { consideration will be open to sugges~ tions for amendment, and it is probe ‘t\h]e that a good many ameiximents will be brought forward, The recent’ appointment of Dr. C. Be Sawyer of Marion, O, as a brigadier |general in thg reserve corps of the United States army has a close con- nection with the plan for a departe {ment of education and public welfare, I @eneral Sawyer is to inake a eurvey of the field of things related to the fpublic health and the public welfare, tand under the direction of the Presi- !dent Is to make u report thereon. This yreport, in part at any rate, is likely !to be used as a basis for the new leg- |istation. It also will contain many rec- jommendations based on Dr. Sawyer's jstudy, concerning the activities which should be undertaken by the various bureaus which will be brought within ithe new department. Service for the maintenance of the health of the pub- le is closely connected with much of the work which the government is now idoing in rather a scattered form. ! It the mew department is created, !the woman's bureau arml the children’s bureau of the Department of Labor; {the bureau of education and the De- !pnrtment of the Interlor, and the war risk insurance bureau and the public ihealth services of the Treasury de- partment, will be transferred to the ! Jurisdiction of the new cabinet officer. i" is also expected that the federal iboard for vocational education and all |other governmental agencies dealing with soldier relief will be concentrated in one bureau of the newly created de- | partment. { Gossip About Sawyer, There has been a good deal of gos~ slp in Washington over the commis- sloning of Dr. Charles E. Sawyer of ’llurhm, 0., as a brigadier general {in the reserve corps of the United | States army. .It should be said that Dr. Sawyer's appointment will not in lany way interfere with the promotion {of other officers in the medical corps of the regular army. | One bit of gossip about the matter {has its “medical connection.” Genera} | Sawyer is a homeopathist and most of the medical officers of the army are {of the school of allopathy. In fact, it jmight be said that the basis of prac- tice in the regular army is allopathic. {1t is not to be supposed that there {will be any trouble, but everybody jknows that there is a feeling between the two schools and that it never hag been entirely kept under cover. Near Scott - Circle in Washington there is n statue of Christian Friedrich Saw=:1 Hahneman, the founder of !homeopathy. Back of the figure of the | doctor is a multi-colored, stone which 18eems to throw a nimbus of light about {the ‘head. The curious have asked, (“Why the halo?” The answer of the !falthful has been, “Time will tell.” y So in a way it may, be said that _ {time has told and homeopathy seem- ingly bas gained a high place.in the izpa@ical corps cf the United States. Sabscribe Department—Doctor’s Army Appoint- | . Ito the plan and the chances are that} | Tor The Da'ly Ploneer. Subscribe “tof The Daiiy Ploneer. D qddy_g RIS ry lale THE CIRCUS PARADE. “\Ve are to lead the parade,” said the members of the band, “and we will play fine mu- sic to make ev- eryone feel happy. “They will be so glad that they are at the circus and will say, ““There is noth- ing like the circus after all.’” | “And then we will come along,” | said the snake charmer and the fat lady, “and ev- eryone will say how queer we are. | We like that.” “And they will wonder how I can swallow the | sword,” said the lady sword swallower. “Then we will come,” said the cam- els, “and we will have fine looking shawls upon our backs and humps. We are the Bactrian camels if any oneé should want to know and there are probably many who want to know this.” 1 “Then we will come,” sald the ele- phants, “and beautifully dressed ladies will ride upon us.” “They will ride upon us too,” said the camels. 1 “And we will march in the parade,” said the clowns, “and as we go about the ring we will make funny jokes. ‘We amuse the people and make them laugh, Last year we had some visi- tors with us. There was a great tall man who had made pictures and a very short man who made pictures too. “That Is, they drew funny pictures, and they knew that visiting us would lelp them to make still funnier pic- tures for we are so funny.” “Ah, but we will bark and shout, “‘Bow-wow,’” the dogs said. “And we will wear fine ribbons on our col- lars and look very much dressed-up.” “We will march too,” said the horses, “and after that we will run races and a man with a big rope will see if he can capture us all at one fling. “WVe pretend to be very wild. That is to make the circus exciting, but we aren’t really wild at all. We're gentle and kindly and friendly, but it is our part to act wild so we do.” “We will fly about and come back to the lady’s arm who trains us,” sald the pigeons. *“It Is true, she has two arms, and some of us will fly to one arm and the rest to the other arm. But we who are telling you about what we will do will fly to her right arm and so we only spoke of the lady's arm.” * “In the olden days,” said one of the clephants, “the circus used to travel by road. They didn’t come by trains | and my great grandfather told how | he and his friends used to swim the | small rivers when the rest of the| circus was travelling over the bridges they came to, for if they had gone over the bridges, the bridges might have gone through with their great weight. “That an interesting bit of fam- ily history.” “When the circus is over the peoplie will come and look at all of us,” sald another elephant. ,” said one of the other cam- . “they will all come and admire us. “They will see me,” said the Nublan Lion, “with my handsome big mane and my huge body.” “And they will see me,” sald the Sable Niger Autelope from Africa. | “They will he told | that I do ot make & nice pet put am rather cross. Still I am worth looking at, even if I'm not much on being a et “They wlll speak of my beau- ty,” said a beauti- ful Dbig spotted Bengal Tiger, “They will come to see us” said the Russian Brown Bear, “and I will stand up on my hind “On My legs and look at them out of the | bars of my cage. Of course I will look at them with my eyes but I will! look through the bars of my cage all | the same.” “And they will feed us peanuts,” sald the elephants, “and they will laugh as they see us wave our heads. The peanut man will tell them that| the elephants can be fed at this time, | and then he will make money selling | his peanuts and we will be fed.” ! But it was time for the parade to| start, so they followed the band, and all the people who saw them clapped their hands. Hind | Legs." | Added Excitement. Jimmie—Maw, will you have paw buy us a houseboat to live in, just like the Jonses? | Mamma—Why, what's the idea?| We own this home don't we? | Jimmie—But think, Willie Jones can | fish oft his back porch and go swim- | ming whenever he wants to, and still | be around home. Ancestry of, Moonfish, One of the strangest of all fishes that swim the seas is the greaf®moon- fish or Opah, writes a correspondent, almost as deep as long, with flattened sides, toothless mouth, and short tail. It lives in the open seas, reaching a ‘welght of 400 pounds. Its flesh is rich, tender and toothsome, but no person is likely to taste. it more than once, as the fish seldom. appears twice in| the same place. The one living species of Lampris is not related to any other existing fish, constituting an order by The ‘extinct moontish of the Miocene diatom beds may therefore stand as Lampris zatima. men is one of great interest as shows ing the antiquity of one, of the most singular of all living bony fishes. Cooking Eggs called in California Tt is a broad, flat fish,| ¢k practiced small, derstand how retu The speci- r_-__—_—_—_————-—_—_—_—' ° ’ ° I Prices Slashed! The Best Magazines at Bargain Prices Y SPECIAL arrangement with ber of the leading magazines, able to offer for 30 days only an exceptional opportunity to our readers to procure annual subscripticns for about onc-half the regular prices, in club with THE DAILY. PIONEER - {0 Save Money ,The Seven ‘Magazines " Pictorial Review "America’s Greatest Magazine for Women t bas_th ? PICTORIAL REVIEW b::n"l;! {:!:I:‘::‘;{\m ’7: published.” Tt has gained this seputation becatse the TWO MILLION women who read it main- tain that it gets better and better every year. gives you the best short PICTORIAL REVIEW £05% 20, fact. short- story critics have bestowed eignal honors on Pictorial Review fiction. > gives you 8] PICTORIAL REVIEW {7, 200f women who have made real worth-while achlevements in the world of affairs. [CTO! 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Anj jn his book, “Hnspltublé England in esg, after being placed in a sling made| (ne Seventies,” Mr. Dana shows many |but it- gives a right of pre-audience from these simple articles, is whisked| ¢harming and amusing pictures of the in all the courts. The king’s counsels’ high above the head and kept whirl period. ing at a great speed. No one can un-! gay he saw Queen Victoria make a cook the egg is reckoned, for no clock| yards, I or watch is nsed. During the perform- | ance, the fakir talks to-his admiring| was possible for her to shoot so well, | cial effect, so that “taking silk”, as it andience, and’ eannot. therefore be ac- cused of counting the time, customer wish a hard-boiled egg to he red to its.soft state, he.need only speak. A little more skilful’'maneuver: ing and the ‘ex; : haa just been laid! With 3 Bit of String, Mid-Victorian Markswoman, land T find that it -doesn’t, strain my 'AXE SILK. Years ago, Richard H. 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