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6 . THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 19%. 'l‘}{E E"],:NIA\‘(; STJ\I{L“ the lower part of the Northern|To own an “Albany cutter” was as With Sty Edition. | Neck of Virginta. It does the work in | distinguished as owning o Brewster F[‘I_IIS AND TI.IAT THE LIBRARY TABLE ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS - = = —-—————|a few hours. The steamboat often|brougham or a Caffery “whalebone” WASHINGTON, D. C. needed two or thres days to do it.|buggy. To that Albany cutter was B. 2 y the Booklover. BY FREDERIC o There was transshipment from wag- | hitched a horse that could trot a C 1. HASKIN. BATORDAY o February 6 1026| ons to the boat and at the whart of | mile In three or four minutes—could BY CHARLES 5. TRACEWELL. ! destination transshipment from the |do it !n 2:40 if Eis owner was tu be A recent biogrephy, unusually = = : Q. Does an auto race driver ever|ministers proval. THEODORE W. NOYES. ... Editor | hoat to wagons and a land haul. beleved. There was o row of bright| & Doetry lover recently wrote as | struseles of existence, and curvies the | SSh0rI2 15 purmose und meihod b | el nilsiraon" S RinaS"Girins % | T Mumber of portlollos varios, thero = 2 e L i " ; ollows: “I am enjoying your articles [poor by pleasant paths whicl a 2 ek Tar. |Face?—P. L. H. - heing 14 in ige present minisgry. e Beeritsg b as NewspascComptny The river still carrles a good deal of | bells on each shaft of the slelgh, & |on Keats moro than I can tell you.|know not, and into places where they v:fi‘;r‘:f‘}:‘;‘;‘l‘;f ’;“ 'L;"";,‘"t'*‘(‘,nglo"‘;,: A. Automobllo race drivers often get | Each minister is responsible to the commerce, much of it borne {n barges | string of bells at the collar and|His poems have always given me a |shall not otherwise go. blisters on their hands from gripping | chambers for his acts and the minis- 1 s i tanta, Ave | drawn by tugs. The principal items | another string ncross the saddle and |great deal of pleasure; T do not know ok ok T noBTarhlcs, it , ICrease | the wheel during a race. De Paolo, at | try as 4 wholo is responsiblo for the Neg Vol Gl T RIR A in the orer of thetr tonnage are sand. around the girth. The driver was |JUst Why that is. T am unable (0 €X-| “Dontry fs now, na it always has boen | Sync'op et ok SXAE £ BPWAE | the Indlanapolis” Speedway, Indinapo- | generad policy of the government. , Ind., last year, was rolieved for about a 60-mile stretch because of blis-| Q. Please define ‘“plot,” climax, t St., Lon Toropean OM e 34 1o plain their appeal. the expression of the struggling =oul | the word popular was really under- “Perhaps it s that he ‘pipes not t0|o¢ man, We may not know exactly ws-making oil, general mer-lwrapped in a buffalo robe lined with —T coal, forest products and|a red blanket, or perhaps he kept the rensual ear Tut these lines axe | what the word “soul” means, but it Tt dn tho Muksachiussts colony iD|tersion hisihands: varame.” “ineltng force,” “proteg- . with the Sunday mom- {brick. The Norfolk boats are Impor- | warm undar an “afghan.”” y way of leading up to & Tequest|must mean gomething, after all these | qook gives & very STTAIS . = onist” and “antagonist.” fivard by o n hat you gly g " o ry fair analysls of the | Q. Who was Red Cloud?—W. D. G. ” vord “plot” has been defined 3 oot Ganomy. | tant to Washington and the Baltimore | There were double sleighs drawn by | that you give us Shelley after Keats. | thougands of vears of use. focicisivesia very s analvaisofitlie A Tho werk oot et Since the names of the two are al- A. Red Cloud was a principal chief |as 4 struggle and its result.” It is cents per month: Sund inues necessary to a large | two horses. The Avenue was the|ways assoclated:in the minds of thelr | couie, ey Dot be able to define | yecond of the threo famous Mathers—|of the Oglala Teton Sloux of Pine|the —trameweck sround wbich - the per month. Orders mar b boat e ; . exactly, to another's satisfaction, what . e ; : o o Terbene sl S0 number of persons in the lower part | Great White Wayand it was a merry | admirers, I am sure @ few 8vmDiL- | o moan by ihe word. bat each one B {f,:?.”,;,.';’”,,,‘.’:,'{,;:‘f.“‘:,,’;‘,',f",';f’",:i:,::‘ Sory s pullt” The. woed dreme o of Marylund and lower counties of | way. Sleigh bells tinkled all day and | Pathetic columns on Shelley would be | can, in a measure, satisty himself with % 7 ’ L means “the deed.” “Climax’" is derived g some of the charges often brought |and famous chief in the history of the fr vl - - e Rate by M. Virginia between the Potomac and the | as far into the night as respectable | V&TY Much appreciated. S ioorC mhich st & ladfier bis own definition. * against him by other historfans—the |tribe. IHe was born at the forks of the | The clim: p o = " = 3 ax of drema—that is, tho Maryland and Virginia. Rappahannock. Fxeursion business in | people would stay out. 17 the slelgh- | son. cxp e i o e o e duas | 1ty Al do 1o good to sneer &t the | Ciliias ‘of bigotry, relfseeking and |Platte Tiver, Nebr, In 1822, and died | igor o, of & drema that ls. the Datly and Sunday. ...1 sr. 80001 mo. & = s poople poria stay out. 1 ho slelwh- feon other than (AL Dy neme dosé | word “spirtt,> in the face of that sub-| Guliiicy.” THe outstanding events ot|at Pinie Ridge, B. Dal, Dadetibte 10| orcsa "An “inciting force” 18, for Daliy 4nd Sundas. ...15r. $8.00:1mo Summer {5 still of good proportions, | ing was particularly good there was|not matter. I am merely o Poetry | limo poetry, “Blessed are the poor in | (rlcILY. The outstanding events of|ar b 3 . {ntevints) An “lhaiting iforoe’ its; E 1$3.00: 1 mo.l and there are towns on the Potomac, | sufe to be a “carnival” The word |lover.” 8pirit, for they shall sea God D of o er, or almost lifelong pastorate of the S 5 10ta “olor s 1l | caentes . i That s the fact of the matter. The | “Thesa Intangible qualities (quanti- : Q. Who s the champlon rifl shot | fomS ovent which moves the action of .. All Other States and Canada, notably Colonial Beach, which will]carnival had an extraordinary 8ig-|namey of the postry lovers, Who are | ties e, it B Al A ::é:u‘?h;finl;.‘z{n"g:;:;:il:‘x'l“:‘;m}'fig‘u.:; o spaTchemy the drama toward crists o the cil fa e s ) Imo. 3100 | Krow and which need river connection | niticance. It is now put to base uses, | legion, do not_matter; it 15 the poet | meaning to right-thinking peopie, ba- College, hin mission to London, whero | A. Hartmann of Switzerland holds | Mantagonist are appiied. reshectively. Sunday cnly .. Simo. dse| With Washington. The Navy Yard, | but our fathers used it as meaning a |that counts, So we took up Shelley. | cause they have the sanction of hun- he remained four years, and by nego- | the champlonship. to the actor wWho played the chief “To have great poets, there must fdreds of years of use by other right- Y ngo! I 4 s " yad tlatlons with Willlam TII succeede i : plants on the Potomac call for the |1t has fallen into overuse something | vy, Frcat readers, too” sald Walt|thinkers. e in gaining a new charter for Massa-| @ When was tho British flag T : Whitman. (A sentlment which he| They find their highest expression | U EAMNE & new Charter (0 SIOvm0 |y aoniady t, B, Qe e i _ Potomaz chasnel o be maintained at | iike the word “banquet.” "A banque: probably” appropriated from Emer-|in the postry of the Worid, The poetia | Gusetts sfter the overthrow of Gov 8PP 1L prieain | & WAL corp t q e e e e e o N Perhaps/it would e, neareritoithe | iote Eoltly en fons M:-‘l:n;'nf:d craft proceedings and hix many theo- |18 composed of three crosses, repre-| “A. The Burean of Standards says Indian Head and other Government | public festival of an unusual kind. part of a drame, and his cpporent. Member of the Associated Pres: Tha Associated Pres xclusive 10 the Use for repubiication of il 1!atehes oredited o it or not othars tad in this vaper and also the I nablished hecein Al rights of nublication | to be bette lighted at night. apt vas-back 2 = senting Englan, otland and Trela; oo ' ity o 1 disoatehes hereln are aleo reserved. | 7 0 T R M hington wa. | o epi. canvasback duck, partridge |ty say that. glven the great |lines, but finds its irue home in any | 1o8ical writing The Cross of St. Georgo for England | i Sor ies e et o o oo, = : e oy n.:n & he hington and liquids not to be named now |poets, there will be plenty of great | writing where the heart has been giv- o s ks 1s a broad, uprighf Latin cross. red | (rical process. i ter front shou ess. armonious with | §leighing parties were numerous. Bus | readers. en free expression. Mr. Murdock, in his chapter “Dole-|on u white ground; the Cross of St. The Battles of the War Lords. tion of this is afforded by the innova- | that poetry is a form used iu childhood | {8tence, with many posers as “he-men’ only, and so has its everlasting up- | KIVILg 1t the merry “ha h ‘of battle. dnga Plutarch &nd ¥ , in leved in witcheraft, as did all the {flags of England and Scotland were | al revenue from Im- | washingten, connecting Water street educated men of his age, both in Eng-| unit the fuil plan for Capital improvement. | those were other days. . The intercst {n poetry is perennial | The filp exigencies of much modern | g1 Wirjtcherafc ” gives more space to | Andrew for Scotland fs a saltire or| . What {s the orlein of the expres- | Two wars are waged in China, one [ Tho Water street side of the Wash- e e ey hont bo petised be the e | OF stern of the. erriue of defidnce, | the witcheratt delusion in SAlmitnen |2 ananed Hlislon @ blue Evdiina) the sion “dogs ‘of war TR W URAGE tHa st Tacs botw el and | roaron obis = tho very first to be by the hu. 10tions, resu tified by its importance in the | Cross of ‘St. Fatrick for Ireland is A. Tt is prob bused on the ac- ;S ,:‘, iy “l“,:“"\:} e 1‘1,?: | ington channel should be mado sightly | German Flying De Luxe. man race and so it always uppealn |Partly of AngloSuxon traditions and | Hirela Inovesse Mathor, for the reason | red saltire on o whits ground. When Bl O ot i premacy As 20 thejand Water sireet made a handwome| G riany hes o far recovered from |t those whise hearts are open as W_;‘_:“?!h century sophlstication. that o much criticism of him in this | the union of the two crowns of Eng-|dogs in warfare. Both the Gresks drive connecting South Washington |, " 0 B8 B 0 TR men’s hearts were in the childhood erefore, it has come wbout that| . inaction has been nninst beczuse |land and Scotland took place upon the | an: them for of China, and|with Potomas e effects of the Worl ar as o|of the race poetry bas been forced, in many in-| 10t ased on an examination of facts. | accession of James VI of Scotland to | £ poses and for oA o o e e < “Soutn | Decome temperamental. A manifesta-| Pessimistic persons might declare | Slances, to Jead a sneaking sort of €x. | Fog truch 15 that Increase Mather be- | e English (hrone s JTames T the aining sation on b Al hes ast-wes across S = 2 R : tion 31 rort duti st announced from Berlin in d. The Unfon flag as It i3 now | ostia Park east of the peal In the childhood of every genera- | Tho superficial “aspects of 80me | Jund and in the New World, but “ho with the Ana <l the field of motton-pleture entertatn. | P Phases of our educational methods | irteq” nioderation find futtice, not Singtdppessunti 18] i) ment. The first showing of a cele-| So much nav be granted. But ered this spirit, so that itene are the wghts of foreign e brated American film—evidently no |®8aInst tho connotation of Breer Y Is commonly read in secret i . he Jaw and sut e which the statemenc The Coal Inquiry Hes 1 Vig- 1l seldom hear two “men in th b vas punishabl Mather was orous protest must be registered. ! quoting or discussing poems, | o5 P! 1 opposed to the prejudico against American made By virtue of two resolutions each of Srloras ety movies §s felt there —occurred In an e ::‘l:’tmlrltgtm somo cheap spectmen of | [Croong on “spectral ov | teader of a hand of- 2ittle e airplane while in flight over Berlin.| ot ; B Fasttiong of atle ‘ i ox ILle « district « 5 : e poctically inc s B : y 2 e ? he cenaries, agaremuting 1 all Chi g To ada to the illusion, it s stated, the poetically incl clared that evil spirits appear laws th imply one who belleves in the in-| A Doem's a poem, for all that! them In the likeness of thi or that|sels for the purpose of reshipping 4o Sae " tegrity of the human heart. There are at least 50,000 amateur | parson. He gave it 2s his opinion in | forefgn, In fact, this is the natursl . in order to ascertain the | ng clouds, making the cabin as dark| The emotions, to such a one, oc-|Poels in Washington, and the Lord his pamphlet “Cases of Conscience”|and inh: tng to prices paid and|ge a movie house. And to accentuato cup);, at least as paramount a place é‘:fi:: :.(uvl\' many throughout the | that two proots should be required for [which even the immigration 14w recog s arged by dealers, to “send for per- o g as the brain. 5 it . conviction of witcheraft: First, “a|nizes and respects. The deserting s chass in Chi UPEr-Warlords | sons,” books and papers” And to Al | st i e cter o ':,“’"' the] Onme s likely to ind, sn modern | Each one fondly believes ho (or she) | frae and voluntary confession of the | man. method of Eaining ieral en must merge in subordination to civil musio for the picture was furnished |ctyilization, any number of cock-|C4R Write poetry crime made by the person suspected |has been practiced to some extent ever minister oaths. Under this authority |, : e . iy | Thetr readt + A o 1ot Tt P S N ( Y|by a Berlin broadcasting station.|sure young kentlemen who fondly Teading of truc poetry has|and accused.” and. second, the sworn [since Immigration laws began to inter. government or must kill one Another | he committen, perhaps through a sub- | Thys while the plane buzzed along |belleve ml; the mind Is the chief ::r?kd l]helr :mhuslum, 80 that | gtatement of “two credible persons |fera with the unresiricted coming of committee, can get all the facts rela- . |ornament of ctvilizatio: one longs to go out and do like- [ s o * that they h seen the ® ® ®lgljens, $ive to the fiel trafc in the Disteict] o0, T°i Was spun through the Pro) “gysine - they fondly think, can|wise. accused speaking words, or do- — The keynote of e T e Mfl‘ Jector and from the cther came theldo evervthing, can wh everything,| FEvery newspaper office is deluged | ing things which none but such as| Q. How s the French cabinet|service. In supplyi #lderab) © coal situation in Wash-|riane flew through heavy, low-hang- rilled soldie 1f peace und order to succeed illion of armed and and ust dis- to work, a fraction he times 1o eficient g its readers with rotiined as a loval mational AEmy sna strains of the appropriate harmonles. can overcome anvthing. Usually such | With the works of The would-be poets, | huve familiarity with the devil ever | gormed? . O a free information bureau in Wash . e T duo profiteering in supplying fuel to |ty as some on this side of the At-|Youns gentlemen have not had very |and it is a heartening thing to KNOW | 4id or can do.’ M. araock con The ministry of France is se-|ington T emnother fraction colonized in sparsely- |y o people of the Capl ) = 1a 1 n e. But|Much experience in life, as vet, and |the kindly way in which most such { cludes that in connection with witch. by the President, general to its pr ¢ veopled thwestern Ch inelud: | Thig 1s not a new question. it & anti would sy, is going some. ere as ignorant as they wre confident. | offerings are returncd to thefr hope- | eraft Increase Mather “was not i rad two chambers of the Asserm-| mit you ing Mongolla bein often. o auestion. It has)ye g5 not all. Plans are being made to| There are many situations in life | ful writers. Ical on the side of what We NOW see g0 outstde the mem- | perts o wvestigated. The fuelloquip passenger-route planes with |Whero ones mind will do very little, | The point of the matter i3, not that | aa the teath. but an. orthodox ed dealers of Washington have been “'put | oy g ertainment [If 2Ny, good. Such poor consolation |amafeur poets write such wocful | cated mam, sharing the most lberal of | dent sumem oni.the | éarpst!t By joongressional el le machines for the entertainment | o " biioe0nhy. “divine though it be, | verse. but that they do try. the ‘then: orthiodox. doctiing He fty mittees virtaudly evers time there Ly | °f, PAssengers, especially those Whol|may bring to those in sorrow, con.| They are tryink theit best to|lfkens him to conscientious. educated his policies mittees virtually every time there has | iayq night tripe. And the reflection |stitutes the limit of h#lp from the | speak the language of the heart | citizens today who deplore ‘“crime , und b wen a fuel shortage. Nothing hasiiomes that there is at this time not i intelligence in #uch cases Thev are attempting to do what Percy | waves” and believe in upholding our joome of these investigations for| ne rezular aerial passenger route in BA CKGR OUND OF F‘;E‘Tg AUANG L Y 1 - There are situations in which the | Bysshe Shelley and John Keats and | Juws which provide for life fmprison- usually by the time they are concluded | 1o Urnited States s Super-warlord ¢l resenting J in convenie 10 Presi- | disposal. Inc can obtain | for return postage mbers in sup- | ning Star Information president of the 3 . o-lin, rep- 1s Manchuria, L proxtmity to Korea and Japan., S arlord Feng Yu- hslang, representing Red Russia, con trols the mountain passes northwest ©of Peking, throuzh which Soviet Rus- | sia will pour its forces, including Russian-trained Chinese mercenarles, when the trumpet s for advance sounds. Super-warlord Wu Pei-fu, claimingz t5 stand for China alone, is in retirem Yanstze River, after disastrous defeat n 1924, He fs collecting and extort- ing money to fill his war chest, and rengthening his military power and | ghitening thie bonds between him and his allies, the Yangtse River provinces, in preparation for a drive against “hang and Feng to regain, 1f he can, his lost mastery of China. The characteristics of the super-war- Jords, thelr relations to one another ard the kaleidoscople shiftings in be picture of the recent battles in Yina, are touched upon in editorial cagrespondence printed elsewhere in thYs ssue of The Star. e mind is &s i broken reed, utterly un- | Byron did with complete success. { ment or capital punishment for mur- : able to help. A kind smile, a touch | Out of the 50000 poetry writers in | der. Pernaps fn the year 2000, he the emergency which created the con- — - of the hand, can do more than all the | Washington, perhaps one shail aris (a\. all hn»-"all‘-d crime may be proved ditions under which they have been| an ants. i ordered has passed garette eclentist points | brifht words ever said. wflmltha lrua‘ fire. If g0, the writings | 1o be the result of disease and be ac = So poetry has its great appeal as|of all the others will not have been corded hospital treatment: our enitght- SUIL it 1s destrable to hold this in | Co% that @il youthtul criminals smoke | ¢po 1y nguage of the heart. Those who | in vain. g : S i clgarettes. During the war the gen-|care for it, in every age, are stmply | In addition to these thousands, | be looked upon as bigoted persecutors, n quiry in order to secure u definite|oral prejudice against tobacco sub- |those who have kept the eves of their |there are many more thousands who | ich as many now eontlder Incrense | Congress is Erowing rest answer to the question that has been | giged and its use became very general. |heart open, the ears of their inner |never attempt to write “poems.” but | and Cotton Mather. Fach man should rll-»r l:ans-—:s:{nstwld‘wa"“m\ e % s : the sl c 0al because of so pointedly and frequently raised|whatever may be its physical dan. |SPIrit alert o who possess the genuine poetic heart, | be judged as a part of his time he shortag e e & X : 5 d - | and who love to re rolonged strike. Opponents of | sinoe the strike began last September, | gers, 1t cannot be fairly considered o | b To st A3 liable to find a red: | And who love to read the real master * % % % prolon : blooded fellow who has 50 dogs in his | picce. . administration are m whether thers is profiteering in Wash- | yngication of criminal tendency. It |kennels a reader of poetry as yonder| Such is the writer of the letter car.| Another opportunity is offered the|declarins that somet Ington In supplying fuel to the people. signific gentle miss who sizhs ko elegantly |ried at the beginning of this column. | thousands of voung collere graduates |done . ) Under its present powers the Smate |\ oo caually significant to assert |20, 4o tntest works of Robert Frost, | Such are the many others who have |who feel within their inner depths| “One Senator demands that s that all vouthful criminals like eEES | "4s poetry knows no sex, so It knows [ expressed intercst in the articles on | that they are “calied” to be great |President tejephone to both parties to United committes can or should get to the}sor pregkfast and put cream in their | no statlon. High and low, rich and|Shelley, Keats, Poe. Bryant. Grane | writers—perhaps authors of the great | the strike that they should get to-| nited Stat bottom of the situation. It can get the | oo poor, are open 1o its appeal. It brings | Whitman, Dunbar, Pope, etc. All | American novel or the great American | gether, in the name of patriotism; :e!‘m Tonth books of the coal merchants, wholesale RO a touch of the common humanity to |these constitute the everlasting aud. | drama. The opportunity is alw open |deciares t(hat the prestige of the the tenth ¢ and retall; it can take testimony under those removed from the economic|ence of the true poets. to those older persons who have all|President's initiative fs all that is tutlen of | s e 5 Having insisted at some sacrifice on thelr lives hud a secrot conviction that | necded to break the deadlock —An.|intended thus to tran |cath; it can conduct its Inauiry WIth| o 0 gi0n to speak, it now rematns o s thev might have been writers f merit |other Semator calis for authority of jple of the sescrd Mates all the authority of a court, and if it C if 1t had not been for the pressure of | the Senate to audit the books of I« o Eie af Rie it it o maccstain) (o Takts it il be L LOF. 2ok Mitohiellito ascerte'n whether C 1mion O r. 00 immediate duties, lnziness or some|dealers, but a colleague gsks. naively. | dvlezated Ly the peoy ; nd a deceptk pje cantiold ihieten HonRer asanis, other reason and who sometimes re. |what will be done with the audit after | States to the Fec duo to undotected deception or ®% | what fickle audience. The public gives tained deflanco of its authority bY |,y a¢tention whole-heartedly to a man witnesses subpoenaed by it. on trial, but that fact does not mply There has been much confusion of | ;" o\ ginees to follow him in all his 1ot prohibited eft with the 5): **Certainly to the Consti- Tnited States was n er to the peo U d l] N member Willium de Morzan and wor- (it is made. A trlo CE i s dedito e der if it IS too late even now. Dodd. | Representatives calling at the White |47 fion: o Lhe powers not dels nchanged by New Argument 5o 5 s sorie i | Rttt e b S5 Lo e s £ £ the 1s. | g3 her o the First National Pictures, Inc., have | views were refused audience to dis- wwfw‘ e jointly offered & prize of $16,500, plus {cuss that subject. i e e % o ] S at | several in case T e e i | expressions of opinion. Capt. Amundsen gave the country | that as for Cook, “whatever eins he|TO¥Aliles. for the best novel by wn| Does Prosident Coolidge foel that |ty the United { few remarks implying skepticism | a5 goubtless everywhere else in the = something of a shock by his recent re- | {ubes, that man certainly believes in| o41\”"}i2d ‘a novel published in book | stitution, Whereby the Fodera) Gov.|States, ‘themsel o peoplciertie in certain religlous matters brought |country during the strike—arising “Wet” and “dry" differences of |marks concerning Arctic explorers on * % & % form. Manuscripts must be submitted fernment might end the crisls in de- |10 - not th the opinion now threaten to make a battle- maivid e the the occasion of his visit to Dr. Cook at before October 1, 1926. The winning |fense of the people? Not all legal manuseript will be annouficed by Da- [ authorities agree with that attitude, S the ot o the {cember 1, 1926: will be serialized in|from a constitutional standpoint. | of the extont of th the Pictorial Review in the Spring of | When the question was propounded m[i:!m;h‘_em“ . 1927: will be published in book form jone of the highest law authorities in | ACEacys in the Fall of 1927 and will be fllmed | the Capital, a specialist in constiti immediately after. tional law, as to what are the co & stitutional limitations applying to this emergency, he asked, “Which Con- Lazher Burbank an immediate offer|erom the different grad : grades of coal used $120,000 for a lecture tour. He |, q the different sources from which |8Tound of religion as well as politics. wi¥, however, expected to air his|y 5 obtained. Never befors has A thirst for righteousness and knowl- views on religion. It is a pecullar edge is compelled to forego its claim fat that a chance remark will bring to attention in deference to a thirst an eminent and able man more gen- for alcoholic percentages. The declaration of -Gen. A. W Greely that “neither Cook nor Pea had ever ‘given proof that he had reached the goal, " {n the opinion of the Reno Gazette, “will reopen the en- tire controversy, but it {s improbable that the distrust created with respect to Peary's reported accomplishments e will have the effect of giving eny the Leavenworth Penientiary. The captain later explained that he was not correctly quoted, and that his ref- erences to Peary were misunderstood, but in the meantime other explorers and scientists had come forward with such a wide range of domestic fuel been used. The people, adopting sub- stitutes as on no other occasion, have ~ral notortety than he could gain by a : SRS e 4 S ¥ @ | been burning otl, coke and many kinds | o 2TV RN T D0 e lawyers K the people are the final judges hat power they retain, not having r Secrs - Vi P, - jon—1 V) r the guted it to either the Federal or @ work of usefulness. i That there has been statements, and the argument of 17|70 NaVe, tE SXSCL Of BIVINE Y| Former Secretary David F. ilous.|stitution—the written one, or t deleguted it to el he' Tederal o = - ‘:fmb;‘“"r“‘):‘l’::ang & platn, That an|Plcted as a lady with corkscrew curls. | vears ago was on again. Newspaper |son also ia brought into the discusaion fone [Disht Ieus With Wrsonl il Henicuer mda et fies e peonlo. e hoe it is confidently expected that no | ¢ P One of these days the old girl is going | comment indicates that the public gen- |by the Wichita Beacon, which quotes v the United States—reserve published in book form. The first ilment in the February number gives an interesting account of Col. dealers have been so engaged in ex- the explorer as saying that the evi- dence In support of Peary's claim “is gely circumstantial, but no less i . e convincy P e e eomet bullder, 81| tion and put Into effect in 1789 as the | EAted pow The Norfolk Ledger Dispatch re-|Ygilliam Jennings Bryan, especially in |foundation of the Republic of the | i vornm marks that “those who have examined | contrast with President Wilson. Wil-|United States of America. Tt is the | e ong are re obliga the scientific data, the dlarles and|gon, he says, “is a student; Bryan is|Doblest work ever struck Off," OF|yo;4"of the Executive, adjustable to memoranda of both are convinced |not Wilson searches for facts, mas.|WOTds to that effect, said Mr. Glad- | oot any emergency, and superior in that Peary reached the Pole and that|terg them, and interprets them. He |Stone. o sacredness to all legalistic interpreta- { Cook did not,” while the Charleston |knows history, and has its teachings| England has no written constitu-lyon Dafly Mall recalls “investigations|at his command Brvan has never|tion and most citizens have assumed Aty that were accepted &s proof that Dr.|been a student. He has natural ability, | that the United States has no unwrit-| Cook, while in the North, suffered |but is untrained. Wilson has a keen |ten one. But we are told that there| from hallucinations.” The Norfolk |sense of direction: Bryan an uncanny |i8 a recognized “unwritten Constitu Daily , News belleves that while the|sense for the wrong direction.” Ad-|tion,” even superlor in force to the Amundsen statement “may reopen the | vance sheets from f forthcoming in.|Written document, which is displayed controversy and keep it going for a!gtallment of Secretary Houston's|%0 sacredly in the Congressional briet period, the American people are |diary reports this sto: President | Library and quoted so freely by ora through with Cook.” The Omaha [{Vilson “reminded us of the fact that |tCrs, statesmen and lawyers as the World Herald also points out that|after his serious illness Senator Fulllonly guide and authorit: Federal ““Cook’s records were announced by |had called at the White House, as the | legisiation and executive action. sclentists as being an incoherent jum- | president expressed it, ‘as a member| President Lincoln acted under the ble from which nothing satisfactory | of a smelling commiitee,” to find out | power of the “unwritten Constitution” could be gleane whether he was all there or not, and |Wwhen on April 25, 1861, he authorized Everybody fs supposed to be fa- milfar with the Constitution adopted in 1787 by the Constitutional Conven- | 1§ (R3" W& to modernize, bob her halr and forget | erally, at least. is not disposed to the past. alter its very definite opinion of Dr. public is not to be belleved. It may s R O PR Cook’s claim, formed long before the ibe impossible for the inquiry by the Publicity of income tax payments is discredited explorer was sent to prison e as an ofl stock swindler. Y Senate committee to cover the whole | 55 i eation tn the public | 2o oK A Aemundsen should isely “who is who" have revived the old controversy is &mall boys have been stealing motor | 1¢'d to find out prec! mind at the moment. Idle, curiosity | have 1 oy is ©'Fs at a rate that promises the in. |0 the fuel market in this respect. Butly 4 ye0n quite thoroughly satisfied. | felt by tho New York Times. i bed enough for him to seek to re- faht prodigy as a feature of the crime | i1 §eneral it should be easlly possible habilitate Dr. Cook,” saye the Times, v hve, to ascertain the trend of the trade. "but it was woree and almost unfor- Dealers who have dealt fairly in this SHOOTING STARS. givable for him in the same breath to situation should welcome the oppor- == CHos try to discredit Peary. The latter's Water Front Improvement. (:S:;ffo:; e e el even BY RRICANDHAR JORNEON claim to have attained the North Pole A plan for improving the Washing- | the expense of a. public disclosure of ton water front is being drawn by | their books. Others, if there be others, Army enginees iangus of Nations conference will cvir venture to keep its public as long in suspepse as the coal conference hae done. stitution,” superior deals with dele- opinion, there- , has a real place in as a repubiic. Public torting undue profits from the helpless was upon such a view of his s and duty that President Roose. velt acted in planning to seize the coal mines and by military force iznore all injunctions of Pennsyfvania - courts—not in disregard of law, but under what he esteemed the supreme law, which requires a President to Taeet any emergency in defense of the th and lives of “the was subjected to the same searching Of the Herd. ordeal as Dr. Cook’s, with the differ- “I'd hate to be too awful smart,” ence that Peary came out e;fim’k;zr;: and will be submitted | will not relish the uncovering of price | gajq Hezekiah Bings, tflu:x%::;lfigtflimfl‘ I1s pr ton to the chief of Lngincors of the | lists. There may be some, wwho have [« Ajthough I long to learn by heart | irmy. This project will be the prin- |been scrupulously fair in their dealings| A 1ot of useful things. ipal topic before the Commt: Fine Arts i i The Pittsburgh Gazette Times de- sion of | with customers, who will deny the|apnq vet an intellect so grand olarie that ~Deary may:be Mr‘kdl"d. at its next mecting. Do-|need of a broadcasting of thelr busl| myg¢ made folks all agree but to restore confidence in Cook, un- ails of the Army engineers’ plan have | ness relations. But the committee has der tho circumstances, is a hopeless an_ anti-trust act pro- ontract or combination in 5 : o ¢ |G & "the Maryland | = t t to understand o g Still the Evansville Courier finds!added: ‘T was lying in bed flat on my |Gen. Scott to e Ylan or otherwise, in re 10t been given to the public, but it is | the power and they have no recourss | apoows oy o beose o effort.”. Calllng Amundsen's statement | inat “many Americans are convinced |back. After the committee had dis: | Logislature and to suspend the habeas | (° {070 OF (0N 0¥ BURRELEE: T B0 s i 3 = . ‘Would be no treat to me. ‘a. feeble revival of the conl ;o | that it Cook never really attained the |cussed certain matters with me and |corpus if the Legislature undertoak to |tha several States o with forelgs ! sald that they provide more for im-!save tochallenge that authority, which the Duluth Herald observes: “And the | goa), he thought he did." The ques. |had, 1 think. discovered (hat T was |arr againmt the Repubilc Thers is| L0G SeVs & i proving the water front in an esthetic | is likely to be a losing expedient. Far|"“I'd rather journey with the throng|main purpose it has served is to ""& tion eventually may be settled, accord- | very much all there, the committee [no authority in the written Constdtu- | "G00 argument that coal mining is ) way than in providing for great com- | better will it be to show a frank dis-| That seeks for wisdom's light the &“m“;’:;fin&m‘wm&“ o edy | 108 to the Ann Arbor Times News, for | turned to leave. Senator Fall paused |tion, says our legal adviser, which | ;o 0 WiEument that, coal minine &« ! “if Amundsen should fly to the Pole|a moment and said: “Mr. President, I|gives a President power to suspend |oni. TUORVOE “THVETCS, PIg, o and find a landing convenlent he|want you to know that T am praying |the habeas corpus except in case of |y ‘qenied by lawyers today, where nerclal expansion. The engineers | position to spread the records on the | Than take a stride so wondrous 10ng|4i4'it. And, considering the real devo- hold the opinion that Washington's | committee table, although there isj I'd soon be out of sight, tlon and ambition and endurance and would undoubtedly come across evi-|for you.” ' The President remarked: ‘If (war or invasion. Lincoln's suspen-| pa eneral community has be t prospect of becoming a “seaport” does | small chance that any conclusions|Compelled all lonely and apart T‘;:l:: mc“&rfl'g&;":gf‘fi!{:’“m‘i d-m‘:te of Peary’s or Cook’s visit.” But|1 could have got out of bed, I would |slon cannot be justified because it was| come ot e e t B not warrunt extensive expansion of its | which the committee may reach will| To take what fortune brings— 1d who | 88 s, the Saginaw News Courler |have hit the man. Why did he want | exerc n war, for there was thel merce, and the courts have held ‘aetlitl ~dr hippin Le in season to yield results in this|I’d hate to be wiul smagt o "me"memu; 'fia'" t‘:,?n:v;.‘;at rep- 838, Amundsen “has but injured him-{to put me in bad with the Almighty? no war. Congress alone hLas consti- | (Rt o car Piracy may operate beyond ac cs for shipping. {be In seasc ¥ 'd hate to be too a rt, stood at P.m&!“ Ty, self in the esteem of the American|He must have known that God would |tutional power to suspend the writ of a State boundary without the physical Scophm Decn oo SkreeiMlone incerentiomersency Rt Herehing Tioes: resents the North Dol fisagree, where | People, who always have had for him |take the opposite view from him on|habeas corpus, unless it by AnCt au- | presence of the conapiators whese tha in the past that with & wide harbor, | e r—————————— i“ “:Eh;f:lh"’: ek for the truth?” |a very sincero regard.” any subject.’ thorizes the President to do so. 1"?"“"‘ act fs ¢ In such cases, long docks and a channel to Chesa-| 1y agddition to preventing street col- A Fraok Avowal. asks the St. Paul Dispatch. “The po- * ox ¥ % L’:&d ot L:&;:?;llrd- vet Lincol n | prosecution may be mado where the veake Bay deep enough to serve large | jisions, traffic experts are expected to| “Can you speak with authority on|jar regions are a closed book to all but ot g overt act t rather than seagoing ships, Washington could be- | find o means of averting clashes be-|the subject you have brought up?” _|a handful of men. el h":“f:l ome a port for large forefgn com- |yween D. C. officials. “Not exactly,” answered Senator | Thelf TR O0S OF LY the & 5 Stephen Graham, traveler in Russia| Later President Lincoln recalled | gpare it was & s Good Banking Lesson. before the revolution and student for |that after the Battle of New Orleans | rno it STl conceved and vears of Ruasian life, history, lan-|Gen. Jackson suspended the habeas|penncylvania between the miners or From the San Bernardino Sun. guage and literature, apparently knew | corpus, and when a judge undertook !ipe operators, or both, if it results fn The most recent financial juggling|too much about Russia to suit Soviet |to serve it Jackson took it away from | constraining the coal supply of “the in Los Angeles, by which a_ specu-|authoritles, for he was refused a vise |him and ignored its order. people” of the United States, is sub- lator succeeded in getting ahead of the|for Moscow. So, having determined S nerce. ‘The engineers in making up Sorghum. “In the halls of legislation | glaims to discoveries in the wastes thelr Washington port plan do not ighi very few of us speak with authority. |about either pole. All the public sees hold that view. A 100-mile river chan- Sleighing. 2 in the controversy is a dispute among eak i 5 " i t t "OS 1t i ve State, and el o the bay, much of the channel| When snow fell in New York the [ ¥ SPeak by permission explorers. game, or behind it, to the total of a|to study Russia some more and to . |1t ‘may Do & “continung ovil® from 3 3 other day sleigh bells tinkled on the DR million dollars, finds the banks hold- | write something about Soviet Russia, | There is no necessity to suspend the | g, 050 g0 “anibling the plaintift to naturally difficuit of navigation, and Y. R The Early Robin. Praising Amundsen’s loyalty te an|ing the sack instead of a multitude of | he camped in the border stote and |habeas corpus in the present coal| BV 10 A¥: CHUNRE (o€ PRITDE 0 a forty-mile detour to round Mary- | Streets. For the first time in many | mpe eqrly robin sings a song old friend, the Loulsville Herald-Post | defrauded individuals, as 1 usually |from there observed much about Rus- |Strike. saya the constitutional lawyer, | Prosecutes resurdless of the eize of iand Point, put Washington at a dis- | Years there was a turnout of sleighs. Upon an empty gizzard thinks he will find it difficult to 8lter [ the case in wildly speculative and|sia and her relations with the rest of |but history is thus cited to indicate . ' . “The Peary- advantage with Baltimore and Nor-| They were old slelghs. The Asso-| Ang every time he comes along (l:r;zlspci::&r&(‘;te::; ::;lg“n D etlod or- folk. Foreign imports under condl-|Ciated Press said: “Old-time cabbles ‘We get another blizzard. fost beyond . reopening.” the Louis- tons as they are could not be dis- |took advantage of the partial paraly- ville paper adds, “and Dr. Cookmhlx;\- tributed from Washington te interior | s of motor traffic to haul forth| Jud Tunkins says some people |self has been chiefly instrumental I% ue_in favor of voints as cheaply as they are from |anclent hflffl-fll‘m" :::“hs and cut- | blame the war for everything that | isposing of the tech ‘Dayton Daily Baltimore, Norfolk and Newport News. | ters and patrol © streets for|nes gone wrong, and then have 50|News also suggests that “doubtless, . > rth Pol Export cargoes have been going |fares. Some charged $15 an hour |jjttle sense as to hint at another war [after the storm blows over, No: through the two great ports of the |and they reported plenty of fares|to make 'em better. history will remain unchanged until some other intrepid explorer is able to el e elaborate on lhc%h.sfl’ltlunl made by Sleighing used to be a Winter sport Character Reading, Admiral Peary, heretofore investigat- in Washington. There was not so( “The Prince of Wales has a lovely |ed and approved by leading scientlsts much of it as in cities north of us, |and forgiving disposition,” remarked 35.;2; wt;rsld. Jxvhm at the r;:m:thr;:: but tharé-was €sioligh fo warrnt & | Mru: Cayenna. Cook’s work in the same category as man keeping a sleigh in his stable| “In spite of the number of times|the tales of Baron Munchausen.” river and bay trade should be sym- metrical, strong and clean. There fto meet the delightful emergency of ne has been thrown, he is still on|, Noting “({h;ttut:‘\iel _;:mrerwm i may be some doubt as to the extent | snow. Sleighing was not a luxury | eriendly terms with the horse.” Seattle Daily Times adds: ‘“Public of Washington's river shipping. There | for the rich only. Families that were —— sentiment has long since ized are fewer steamboats at the city | “just folks” kept sleighs. It might Blacked Up. on that great achievement. en- s 5 thorita- wharves than were there fifty years|be a “box"nlolsh, thl-t__wu home- | The world’s a stage as has been said; a;:;:elo“pedm'ork me‘rhy' ‘l'a"n'-fu‘.'.': ot ago, and In competition with the auto- | made, or & “basket, sleigh,” which was| The soft coal, now aglow, tion that Peary reached 90 moblle, bus and truck few Potomac degrees a wicker body on runners. A string | Is scattering soot—let’s go ahead north latitude April 6, 1909. Nolglng boats survive and their business is not | of sleigh bells hung on a harness peg| And give a minstrel show. that Capt. Amundsen or Dr. Cool a8 active as it was. The truck, with | in the stable. The family nag, some- could say at this time would change « 5 .| that historical fact.” 'In fact, the the ald of a good road, carries its|times a buggy horse and often a| “Posterity,” said Uncle Eben, "is|Roanoke Times thinks the American cart or wagon horse, drew the sleigh | what comes after us. And if sum of | public will gecline to take any interest through the white streets of Wash- | dis growing generation ain't gmore |in efforts to reopen the question. The fraudulent operations. Europe today. His book, “The DI-|that even in our constitutional Re- et R R There seems to be a valuable lesson | viding Line of Europe,” is the result. B '"‘-uem"g'&‘;““ arise beyond the) “yjnge. the Sherman law as in n the incident, not alone for the|The dividing line is composed of the ”‘n‘;:cg“""m w;"‘""“lc"“"“““”"v torpreted, it becomes the duty of banks, but for those who do business| Baltic countries, Poland and Bessa- |for e bae it S "“"""“;“'- 18| avery district attorney, acting under with them. Los Angeles is a city of rabia. In these border states Mr.|the ‘unalienable rlght’ and authority}ine airection of the Attorney General, very great banking capital and busi-| Graham' found & very general hatred |of, the peoplo whic Foghery s e on- [ to prosecuite the conspirators in every ness. Much of this is used in exten-|of everything Russian. Though not ool e Rl b'-! -:_\‘Athmz State and district where the conspir- sive promotion operations. Large prof-| yenturing to prophesy the overthrow HE I KRt acy or strike causes a restraint of coal lts are alluring to bankers s well as ot the Soviet regime in the near fu-)ito Wh g ;porn equal” | qupply. The constitutional lawyer on to people not presumed to have their |ture, Mr. Graham believes that it has|that 13 higher ,F"“"n‘u”;‘{ e OT | Whose advice this outline i3 based knowl of finance. Competition | prought no good to Russia or the fi;lmm& St A “gd adds in writing: among them for large accounts must|world. “The new Russia,” he says, o hen. & Prodmant o S beyond | “Although the Federal commerce be somewhat keen. Only on the the-| g no more like the old than Yiddish mw':'rme t:thc un;"‘mf"@ vond | | cer does not reach productions or oy :_!nutu tel;e“ m‘h::lgm t;;h::g is ke anhn; the new culture is| the WTitten to f iy o 523,‘_;‘1 manufactures as such, and said prod | a n culture superimposed on the o e considered apart from the a considerable balance can we account | gl cutture. The eln e bomiins | Welfare” of all the peopls In & vital | 1o ar co hetwe flow of commerce between the States for their retaining this particular ac: | manifold great gifts to the common |STSIE®ACY affecting the country gen- | sy Coronado vs. United Mine Work- Srunsactions” thae woud have 1ed | LATi,the, DS on® brings only death 71" *xox ok et o e . o prompt canceling of the acoount of a|* 0 o6 All power is derived originally from | s ToSUIRL 00 LRSe, WAOS, efeccts small depositor. * “the people’—not from the States, | he Nation can generally be reached Adventures on cold, windy seas,|nor from “the people thereof.” but under the Sherman law, although they 9 near dangerous reefs off the Nova(from the ‘“people of the United |are primarily combinations in produc- Luther’s Best Line. Scotla coast, make Ralph Connor's|States”—the Wwhole people. No ma- |tion' of manufacture. (Ses United rmus}:;ch"'l“;a;d{nog the wmepresg; Jority ol" vso::ra in u.nyd ez‘|de State or | States ys. Reading Co., 253 U. 8., 26, one wi young person Wwou | tes can decide against v 3 - Prom the Sarinew News-Courler. fike. ‘Tony Mackinroy lives with his | the intdrests and safety of the great |, Tiost uny bis cuse under the Sher As a theologlan, Luther Burbank is | father, foster-sister and aunt at Pirate | public of the United States. “In general, where conspiracies are admittedly the world's greatest hort!- | Bay House. He is expert in the ways| The written Constitution was not|gormed in one State and carried out culturist. of sailors and Indians, but not so ex-{adopted by the several States. As by overt acts in another, all the con- ren in the :\'n);:: Dri lo"}e‘rs_ However. | stated in its preamble, “We, the peo-! .. s may be punished in the State 4 = ove comes to him in the shape of a|ple.of the United States of America, | where the acts occurred, although A-Cure for Idleness. pampered soclety girl and most read-|in order to form a more perfect |mome of them mever set foot thorei a century, and much outgoing cargo originates in and near Baltimore, Nor- folk and Newport News. Washington's docks for the use of cargo from the door of the wholesaler in Washington, Baltimore, Alexandria Bingham Pret inclined to think | From the Baltimore Evening Jgin. rs will feel that the love st is not ion,” et # 3 H & ) 225 U | or Fredericksburg to the door of the | inston. bebavious, whut's gineter. That smoge neople hava. an unisited| The umpwynutg on usually {as well done a8 the spisodes of adven: | . The Federal Government, under the | Siyde Ve United States, U s R SN A At e o AR, ik d a4