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Zeal and Talent for Public Service Strong Coolidge Trait Political Philosopher as Youth, Presi- dent Studied Needs of Greatest Num-- ber as He Sees Them. BY EDWARD PRI | (Tuis is the second of th Mr. Bell giving the views of pros Cidates. Hix interview with appeared in The Star last Tu View with Senmtor La Follutte lished ‘8 few days hence.) It was toward the end of the noon of October 3 that, after passing through a square entrance hall and traversing spacious, silent corridor, 1 was ushered into the Chief Execu- tive's office at the White House President Coolidge sat alone at the presidential desk is back was. to the windows that look out over the year grounds of the Executive Mansion in the direction of the Totomac. Neat, Guiet, dignified, 1uedium-sized the figure; serious, even sad, the clear-cut, clean- gup PRESIDENT. shaven, intellec- lual face, witn its blue-gray eyes. its prominent forchead and its fat-lying frame of straight, flaxen hair, tinged viith red President Coolidge was dressed in a | el fitting, blue sack suit. His welcome | was restrained but kindly, a faint smile lightinz his renned features | as rose to shake hands. It was| understood that the President was | 2ot 1o be interviewed: he declined to | Transgress the White House tradition | ©f 1o direct quotation of the Chief Dugistrate. Oune is struck instantly Ly Mr. Coolidge's self-possession. He makes no gestures, not fidget, ivoks steadily into one’s eyes, is al- most disconcertingly intent Markx of an Orderly Mind. One had heard much of the Pr dent’s analytical mind, of his indus- | iry and thoroughness, of his buslness- like methods. 1 looked at his de: It was covered with papers. There were many different kinds and sizes. But there was no disorder. All ap- peared to be perfectly classified and | arranged, and one easily could imagine that singular] calm man and that singularly clear mind, deal- | ing with them swiftly. And then| there was the striking fact of the Prestdent’s coolness and freshness| ufter the tumult of the White House day—after the countless conferences and close labor of many White House days—coupled with the further fact that w sat alone, talking undis- turbed, as if the anxleties and strains of the pre-idency were as far away from Mr. Coolidge as they were when he was In his mountain home, As I sat watching the President 1| more and more impressed by his| sical slightness and its meaning. | Many public men, in the probiem of | achieving success, have the advan- | tage of big bodies. Some have the | advantage of ahundant whiskers. | will be after- | SPECIAL NOTICES. i YIC GATZZA, SPORTING GOODS, NOW Lo- | cated I the Hutchinn Bldg., 929 D t. 1w, Room No. 58 _Phone Frankiin 2600, " i3 | CARPE JOBRING, ALTERATIONS, good work; reasonable prices. Phone | North 648-W. Gl ) ETMAKER —REPAIRING _AND _ RE: | production antique furniture: all’ kinds of | Tancy Snlabing. JOHN MELL) wow. Work called for and ITWAY A | 1 any color desired. | hers from Grand Kaplds, Mich. n.w. Phone West | ANY | | ot rel | Amherst. |have no dependence, | nurtured, Some can roar as lions. Some have powerful and dangerous fists. Steam- roller superiorities these. Often they succeed wholly unaided by either brains or morals. Mr. Coolidge has not a big body. He has no whiskers at all. ~ There is nothing leonine about his vocal equipment. His fists are neither powerful nor dangerous. Yet, In a State of strong men. rich in political gifts and powers, he ros: above all his fellows, placed them al behind him, and took and held the center of the stage. Is this not proof character? Zeal talent for public service are conspicuous in the whole of Cal- Coolidge’s adult life. He was a po- litical philosopher as a boy, and a political philosopher deeply religious and keenly ethical. Almost 30 years £0, When a senfor at Amherst Col- cge, he won distinction in the aca demic world, and won a $130 gold medal by writing, in a contest open to seniors of all American colleges and universities, what adjudged the best essay on the causes of the American Revolution Results of Religion and Lenrning. Supremely throughout his life Cal- vin Colidge has believed in things—religion and education. In al: his thought and work he has de- pended in the past and depends now upon Divine guidance. He thinks there is 1o promise, no security without it. “Our nation was founded by men who came over for the sake ion,” he has said. “Religion 1s essential. Without the church the community goes to pieces. I have seen this again and again in New England. Our Nation cannot live without moral- ity, and morality cannot live religion.” Light on Mr. Coolidge’s spiritual na- ture is found in his abiding love for Its whole inspiration and practice delighted him and he places it first among the influences that have molded his life. And what sort of an institution is Amherst? In the lan- guage of its founder, It has and will not deviate from, its “original ob- ject of civilizing and evangelizing the world by the classical education of indigent young men of piety and tal- ent.”” To teach men spiritual values is the basic aim of Amherst. “And,” re- marks Mr. Coolidge, “the progress of this effort measures the progress of civilization: there is no other prin- ciple that men of the present day ail ver the world need to keep so con- stantly in mind.” Defender of Individualism. Individualism Is at the base of all Mr. Coolidge’s political, social, nomic and cultural thinking. he, the individual. New charters cannot save us. They may appear to help, but the chances are that the beneficial results obtained are due to interest aroused by discussing changes. Laws do not make reforms; reforms make laws. We cannot look to government. We must look to ourselves. We must stand, not in tiie expectation of a re- ward, but with a desire to serve. Pol- itics is the proce: affairs. and nothing more. of intellect and is Destiny is in you Government, to be sure, in Mr. Cool- | idge’s outlook, has a wide fleld of vital service. It must care for the educa- tion of the people, for their health, for their housing and working condi- tions, for the mentally and physically defective, for the weak in their strug- gle with the strong. All legislation, he remarks, should “recognize the right of man to be 1 born, well well educated, well em- ployed, and well paid.” But govern- two ! without | of action in public | It is personal, it is individual, | Sclences honored him with medal. Mr. Coolidge _esteems the United States Senate, "like the Supreme Court, a_liberty-conserving institu- tion, and, therefore, a bulwark of law and order in this country. He holds that the Senate protects. “not merely the rights of the majority— they little need protection—but the rights of the minority, from what- ever source they may be assailed.” His reading of the history of the Senate is that of a story of wisdom and discretion in action for the exe- cution of the public will. He suys it functions “without passion and without fear, unmoved by clamor, but most sensitive to the right, the stronghold of government, according to law, that the vision of past gen- erations may be more and more the reality of generations yet to come.” Coolidge is a nationalist. He re- veres our nationalists from Washing- ton to Roosevelt. He sees in jealous and vigorous nationalism nothing prejudicial to intelligentand beneficent internationalism. He admires the nationalistic principle that “lay at the foundation of all Washington's tatesmanship.” He declares that “where r and Napoleon failed where even Cromwell faltered, Wash ington alone prevailed. He wish the people of his country to be great but great in their own right. Hc resisted the proposal that he shoulld up to rule them. He adoptec proposal that they should wized to rule themselves. He ¢ these principles through to He adhered not to the ance, nor to the cause of E land, but to that of America; with' patience and greatness sublime bore the resulting abuse of his coun try for his country’s good.’ Americanism, in Coolidge’s inter- pretation, is humanism in govern- ment. It is all for the idea that the mass is served best by serving the unit. If the unit prospers. it the individual feels he has protection aud the open door, the mass Prospers ana there ix national tranquillity. Of gov- rnment activity affecting individual initiative and opportunity. Coolidge is instinctively suspicious and critical that is to he is the poles apart from socialism. He thinks socialism approaches human problems—the problems of society-—from diametri- cally the wrong direction. rly Advocate of Woman Suffrage. Liberalism of sentiment on the part of Coolidge is evidenced by his early approval of votes for women. In this matter—and it was an excellent test of the spirit of statesmen—he was in advance of many of his co- temporaries on both sides of the Atlantic. For example, Coolidge fa- vored the franchise for women long before Herbert Asquith, outstanding ( Liberal leader in England, threw his| welght into the scales for this epoch- | making reform Demagoguery, far as one discover from either the speech or the acts of President Coolidge, is alien to his ideas of party expedi- ency and to his temperament. Dem goguery implies insincerity, and no ‘quainted with the President suspects him of insincerity. His blood, his deeply religious home life, the mountains among which he grew up, the great instructors who mini, tered to his mental and moral de- velopment at Amherst, all combin- to make him too serious and too wise a man to set any store by dema- goguery or trickery of any Kind So, when Calvin’ Coolidge, for in- stance, declares his sympathy with | those who work—work with their hands or with their brains—one | safely may take him at his word. He himself is a worker. He always bas been poor, and he never has tried to get rich. His fees as a lawyer were | <0 low as to provoke remark all over Massachugetts. Unbounded p are part a -gold be set the ehd of F say, so can de apd faith in Ame: and parcel of Calvin character. He sees her “steadily marching on.” To him her history, her ser es to freedom, are | “glorious.” “There is he remarks, ‘her prosperity. There is the wonder- | ful organization of her Government, | perfected in its ultimate decisions to reflect the will of the people. There ! {15 her system of education, developed | {in accordance with the public schools | established in Massachusetts in 1647. | made icess after failure, and other barbarian tribes—if we do not ourselves go out to fight—we shall perish, as Rome perished. “Man's ‘salvation comes out of man. Govern- ment can aid, it cannot save, man. Civi- lzation is always on trial, testing out, not the power of material re. sources, but whether there bein the heart of the people that virtue and character which come from charity sufficient to maintain progress. When that charity fails, civilization, though it ‘speak with the tongues of men and of angels, Is ‘become as sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal.’ Its glory Its spirit has gone. Its life is don Revolutionism, in the Coolidge argu- ment. is a social menace that can be fought successfully with only mental and moral munitions. Overt revolution- wry acts—incitements to assassination ind violence and actual resort to crime—can be and must be punished They must be crushed under the hee of authority. But beliefs cannot be treated k0. Every citizen has a right guaranteed by the Constitution, tc make up his own mind and to express it, 80 long and so far as it does not signify violence toward those whe hold different opinions. “M you ar« zoing o resist beliefs,” says the President, “you must meet them, ex- e thelr fallucy, present the facts which prove them wrong.” Mr ‘oolidge thinks our extreme mal ontents are “in the pay of the volutlonary authorities of Russi ind he does not dismiss too lghtly the peril involved, but he does uot gard it as “genuinely se Devout New Englander, Calvin Coolidge is no sectionalist.” He has friends in all parts of the country, and not least in the South, where his Yankee twang was in strange contrast to the southern irawl He has spoken In many places and wherever he has spoken he has picked up local knowledge; it has surprised not a few of his deputations Baxis for Popular Liberties. Hear him speak of Virginia ld - Dominion of Virginie—and you eel his enthusinsm, as you feel it| when he speaks of New Hampshire - of Massachusetts “No other of our States” he re- flects, “is so rich in history and tra- dition. The story of the early at- tempts at the settlement of Virginia, of its lost colony, and of the final suc- is all more fasci- nating than fiction. It has ever been | the home of a proud and valiant race of pioneers and their descendants, of the early seventeenth century. strengthened and dignified by a dom- inant addition of cavaliers and Hug- uenots, a sturdy and high-minded people, forever jealous of their rights and intent upon guarding and main- talning their liberties. Virginta, in 1619, assembled the first parliament ever convencd in America. Its House | of Burgesses met at Jamestown, and, ever since continual, is the oldest of our legislative bodies.” While pointing out formal’ Mayflower compact of No-| vember, 1620, “holds a high place among the charters of free govern- | ment,” Mr. Coolidge states that “the | first formal and authoritative char- | ter which established free govern-| ment on this continent was that granted to Virginia in July, 1621 Dwelling upon the breadth of the Massachusetts mind, Mr. Coolidge re- calls the words of one of the great- est sons of that state, Benjamin Franklin: “Above all, Washington has a_sense of the oneness of Amer- fea. Massachusetts and G as dear to him as Virgini President adds: “It is becaus mouth Rock, Bunker Hil Adams and Daniel Webster represent the Nation that they glorify their | tate. In that faith Massachusetts | still lives.” | Sympathetic toward all nations, and | in favor of what he deems prudent ~the that the “in- {and effectual co-operation with other | peoples for the common welfare of | the world, Calvin Coolidge is vigilant | and scrupulous to guard the national sovereignty of the United States from the incident of any form of extra- American authority. His thesis is that we must be masters in our own housc. He Is of opinion that that way lies an increase of our strength and therefore an added abllity on our part to serve the general in- terests of civilization. i tration, our quarter of a membership of The Hague our long-cherished desire court of justice he recalls with gratifi- cation. To the Permanent Court of In- ternational Justice he is committed in his first annual message to the Con- gress. He supports warmly the ar- rangements looking to peace in the Pa- cific. Rejecting membership in_the League of Nations, he has found many Ways o co-operate with it for the benefit of all peoples—notably, in re- spect of narcotics, white slavery and public health meusures—and he used us influence to further the Dawes lan, including the indispensable finan- il transactions contingent upon that plan, century's tribunal and for a world ist, The Program of a Candidate. Again and again President Coolidge s acknowledged his eense of Amel ~a's International interests and obliga ions. His first message to the Con- ress was laden with this eentiment, ind it inheres in his view of the father- ©0d of God and the brotherhood of an. He has spoken of the wide vision the Massachusetts mind: it was ide enough to accommodate within its derstanding and sympathy all the states of the American Union. May not hope that the Massachusetts ind, or the Appalachian mind, of Cal- n Coolidge—if and when it miay pportunity—will bring within its con- pectus of the whole world, not as an sbject merely of generous sentiments, Jut a8 an object of concrete measures -f helpful fellowship., We have examined the spiritual and ntellectual background—the broad, sus- aining emotions and convictions—of e Republican candidate for the presi- on dency. by a few words: tionalist, an a tax reducer, immigration restrictor, man, an arms limiter, an enemy of ag- gressive war, a world co-operator with and permanent connectior machinery, a intense understancs Amerl out official with international agricuiturist, patriot, patriotism. as Shaffer's —Advertis, DOUBT OFFICERS’ RIGHT | TO SERVE AS ELECTORS Army Gives Unofficial Opinion o | Doubt by The opinion didates states, Advoce view an he ment. arrangements, 9 Politics. to the legal competency | of Army reserve officers to serve presidential | pressed electors the Arm has ‘s legal staff as a result of an informal inquiry I | individual reserve officer. who hold General's ha sno in t nce office His actual program: or plat- form in the campaign can be Indicated He is a constitu- individualist, an econom- a protectionist, a world court American 00 Reserves’ Part in been binding force reserve commis- sions and at the same time are can- for elector: however, min he the takes that it has nothing to do with the election laws and therefore is not in a position to pass judgment on the —uwill give years of service because it is quality built. 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Ib., 27c Pork Loin Roast . . [b., 24c . 0b., 17c . 1b., 22c Frying Chickens . . lb., 39c Pork Pudding . . . Ib., 15¢ Pork Links . . . . lb., 29¢c | ment, as this observer sees it, should interfere * with individual liberty— should subtract from the privilege: he is a stead- | 0B- = Our_record on_arbi- There is her transportation, superior | Far from a “pacifls [to that of any other country. There |fast peace of the individual—only to the extent [is her banking organization, richer |of ‘Dfeventing (mpingement upon the |than wny other on <art. SRSTS, '8 |Fihts of other individuals. Its func. |her commerde, which flows to the <lon is thadior sareiarding ama! pro- | world maricets - ihere s el S A0S | moting the social welfare, while main. | trial plant, superior to that of 2ny |taining " conditions of justice and|Other place or time. i aines |treedom for the individual citizen, |25Ticulture, vast beyond the Imag strong_or weak, rich or poor. tontojcomprentnd Sigrificant of Mr. Coolldge's feeling| Civilization's Need of Support. |about American politics und American | “with all the light that comcs from national interests is his admiration of | jcarning and religion,” says Coolidge, | Theodore Roosevelt. What Roosevelt |wwith all the deterrent power of or- ganized soclety, there is an appalling oved Coolidge loves. Hear him. ‘His (Roosevelt's) work Boes {amount of vice and crime. Some say His qonttle line strengthens. | civilization has failed. Ii has not fail- principles have more defenders, Cdisa any o7 Cknisad wiko/100ks at actions more admirers. His fol- |hiStcry. It must be supported and | lowers are bullding a shrine at his|continued. It cannot be preserved birthplace to increase the influence |without effort. and it is not yet done. |of his life. The people whom he The work must go on. As soclety ING, | loved and trusted and served are the | grows more complicated, as civilza- 31 G r’I’l"“”':Kv contributors. Here men may come |tion advances, the burden of [ts sup- RESIDENCE, | 204 remember that he re-established | port is not less; it is more. It was o a Jepresentative government of all{never so great before as it is now.” the people, reopened the closing doors | Mr. Coolidge affirms that, if he fill our leglons with Gauls and Numidans Scrapple . . . . .. lb., 15¢ Pork Roll . . . . . Ib., 40c Butter . . . . . . [b., 40c Tokay Grapes . 3 lbs., 29c Concord Grapes 2 szt 25¢ 10-Qt. Basket, 95¢ Sweet Potatoes . 6 lbs., 19¢ Cabbage . . . . . . b, 2c Spinach . . . . 3 lbs., 25¢ Yellow Onions . 5 Ibs., 19¢ Celery . . . . 3Stalks, 25¢ Potatoes . . . 15 lbs., 25¢ Three New Products You Will Like Ballards Buckwheat, - 14c Self-rising—but with that REAL buckwheat flavor so often missing in other brands. Ballards Pancake, pkg., 14c More than “worth the difference.” Ballards Flour . . pkg., 14c Self-rising—sure to please. Marcella Peas . 2 cans, 35¢ SUGAR =i | MUTH [0 s, 75° TO ALL WHOM IT fake notice that on and after t tober 23. 1024, 1 will not be responsible any debfs confracted by any other than my. LEO. W. SOLBACH, 3224 13th st. n.w. I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts except those contracted personally. J RHARRIS, 4013 5rd at. now. i EMPTY CIDER BARRELS, NEW, ONLY en_nsod once ai & v G &G | TLING COMPANY, 200 11th st. n.w. 25 DELICIOUS HOME-MADE GREEN TOMATO $2 a gallon. HAMMERLY, Gl . Md. > RE_APPLE CIDER—FIV LLON KEGS vered 10 Your door, threefifty. Kend check. “oeh or money order. SUNSET ORCHARDS. Fiorkelay Sprines. W. Va. WANTED — TO BRING A VANTOAD OF surnitore or part. New York, Hoston. Pitts- turgh, Norfolk, Va.. from or to Washingtan. Hpecial rates. National Delivery Ase’n. M. 538, THE JEFFERSON Lururious—Beautiful Hotel Apartments Sixteenth «nd M Streets LIMITED number of handsomely furnish- e d housekeeping apartments. Three Rooms and Bath Maid service; excellent restaurant near- by. dSome, on annual lease, perfectly sit- uated. Low as $125.00 Per Mo. By the month at slightly higher rate. Apply on premises or to ‘H-WE/'T Go Wm. L. F. King, Pre: E. G. Perry, Vice Pres. R. B. Cummings, Secy-Treas. Main 9900 REAL KESTATE 916 15th st. pairing, guttering, ROLLINS, 4 HOUSEKEEPERS—AT _YOUR s and restor of opportunity, reawakened the soul | of his country and re-enforced the moral fiber of America.” Hix Defense of Law and Order. Close student of government, both in theory and in practice, from early manhood—he went almost immediate- ly from law to politics—Calvin Cool- idge has had a lifelong and uncom- monly vivid appreciation of the i WASHINGTON SCHOOL Dortance of law and order. without FOR SECRETARIES which there is no government and no | 211_Transportation Bldg., 17th_and H_Sts. civilization. It was this sense—this appreciation—which decided his posi- | FLAI I lRE MAIN 500 | tion and gave him natlonal renown in 5 [ LEETH BROTHERS i connection with the Boston police Service Charge Never Over $1.00 S AND hy U ir process look 160. HEDGES, NORWAY £ ALL K1Y of “evergreen and ghrubbery furnished Lawns put in first-chss orde il end manure. F. A. HERK I0th st n.e. Line 6640 NTEDTHE USE OF A PRIVATE ACTO- ile for an hour or so a day. The driving, wi driveways throughout city. Phone M WANTED TO CARRY A vavload of furniture from Washinzton, D. €. to Philadelphia. New York and Hoston. SMITH'S TRANSFE STOR. TEFORE SELLING YOUR OLD SILVER GET our prices. We pay considerably more than You can get elsewhere. We also buy df monds, gold and platinum. We carry a large Yine of solid silvar teasets. antique Enelish Americon. FIELD ~PLATI iike new. “The oA A Vst nw. 1t SHORTHAND, TYPING, SECRETARIAL AND T Civil Service preparatory, day. late Or evening: rates, $10 to 821 monthly ce payment. Small class groups and ind Yiumt nstruction. Classes now forming. Refs Teauired from all studeats. Admission by wr | ten application only strike. It has been suggested that he was less strong in that crisis, or |at a certain stage of that crisis, than he ought to have been, but those most familiar with the facts believe his conduct left nothing to be desired and the National Institute of Social Rich Guernsey Milk for the Growing Child Every growing child is better nourished if given our GRADE A Milk, as a drink or in the cooked food making up the daily diet. 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