Evening Star Newspaper, October 20, 1926, Page 14

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{ Senator Atlee Pomerene. 14 CAPAGN N OHO 57525 = INOLN FRANED * TOBEVERYELOSE Pomerene Has Gained in Few Years, But President’s Influence Is Felt. BY DAVID LAWRENCE. Special Dispatch to The Star. COLUMBUS, Ohio, October 20.— President Coolidge’s influence is hav- { ing its effect in the Ohio senatorial mpaign. Were it not for this forme: Democra would be elected with the ald of Ri publican votes. For he has the sup- port of large groups of business men and he has a much g r backing from local labor unions and less an- tagonism from the raflroad brother- § lioods than he had four vears ago. But the cry of “Stand by the Presi- dent” has heen r: and has led o 8 _counter attack on Senator Frank B. Willis, Republican nomined. Mr. . for instance, ® . Mr. Pomerene was inclined to vote independent won the respect of his colleague that course, The Democratic leaders in the wve beginning to whether & rsement of T ient Coolidge and whether the latter would approve of the various votes of the Ohio Senator to exonerate New- berry or to support that side of thi Teapot Dome resolutions which w by the Democrats a Has Dry Backing. Senator Willis has the unqualified support of the Anti-Saloon League, 1aving been one of its original cham: plons. He is particularly strong in the varal distri The registration this vear s very light in the cities, which ¥ ‘wet.” Mr. Pomerene o4 ed x a “‘wet” and will draw i 8 materially from the anti-prohibition | t it will be re when Mr. Pomerene was . voted hy mearly 200,000 proposal to legalize wines forces. ¥ lled that Ohio in 1 candidate is not as pap- ular in this State as he might be in ene is making a_much nore skillful campaign than he did four vears ago. Opposed to him then was Senator Iess, who had splendid support throughout Ohio because of cord in the House of Repre Mr. Willis has been under fire, and, urse, in his two campaigns for suffered the usual disad- vantages of local political fights. He ed to be mot so strong as who defeated Mr. Pom- 000 votes. This was four vears ago when no presidential can- \idates were running. so the statls- tirs of the last race cun be used to tudy the present campaign. Aided by Oil Cases. The Harding administration was atill strong in Ohlo in 1922, and Sen- ator Pomerene was figh a tide that had overwhelmed Ohio's own Democratic presidential candidate in 1920 Since those days, Mr. Pomerene has been employed as counsel by the I'ederal Government to prosecute the Teapot Dome cases, and he has ad- mittedly the respect and support of If he is defeated, therefore, it will not be by anything like 55,000. It will be a closer result than that. Generally speaking, the chances of Willis winning at the moment are very good. The Pomerene campaign may gather momentum in the next several days, but the undercurrent of influence among the regular Republic ans—the very men who might be expected to support Mr. Pomerene be. | cause of his record—is rising to the aid of the incumbent, Frank Willis, on |the ground that the control of the | Senate by the Republican party is in_danger. Mr. "Willis has the active support | of the Republican organizations and | has gathered to his side many other | workers. He has realized from the | start that he had a real fight ahead. | He is confidently expected to win, but not by a substantial mgjority, and | if this is to be a year of surprises, which the writer doubts, then Atlee | Pomerene will be one of those to , and perhaps he- too great emphasis which some | 8 his colleagues have put on the | #wet” side Pomerene would have cap- tured the State easily. H (Copyright. 1926.) 1 e | DOUGHERTY ASKS CITY TO GET BUSY FOR 1932, i Tells Petworth Citizens of Coming: 200th Birthday of ‘Washington. | The 200th anniversary of the birth | of George Washington will be cele- | brated in Washington in 1932, Com- issloner Dougherty told the Pet-| vorth Citizens' Assoclation last night. “We should start at once to make our plans for this event,” he said. | _Mr. Dougherty also urged that | Washington citizens be more careful {about littering the streets. The Dis- trict cannot afford, he said, to keep a sufficient force of street cleaners to maintain the highest standards of cleanliness if the citizens do not co- ! | operate. ! “Charles 1. Stengel, former repre- | sentative from New York, spoke on the voteless condition of Washington citizens but praised the action of | President Coolldge in appointing Mr. | Dougherty, who had been elected by | the people a member of the Citizens' | Councll, as Commissioner. | | | WILL DISCUSS PENSIONS. “inal plans for conducting the cam- paign here in behalf of the new serv- pension plan of the Presbyterian Church will be discussed at a lunch- eon tomorrow at 12:30 o'clock at the | Franklin Square Hotel by members of the Waushington City Presbytery laymen’s committee and chairmen of | ymen's committees in the 39 Pres- | byterian churches in this vicinity. | The quota assigned to the presbytery | out of the $15,000,000 needed to| launch the pension plan s $135.000. | This money will be raised by the lay- | men’s committees in the varlous churches, each committee working | | among the members of its owr con { gregation. The whole campalgn in Washington City Presbytery will be | under the direction of a committes headed by John B. Larner. | Rev. Dr. John H. Gross, treasurer {of the Prosbyterian Board of Minis- | terfal Relief and Sustentation, will spegk at the luncheon. His subject will be “The Service Pension Plan: What Is Is and What It Will Do for the Whole Church.” | ice | | Lincoln | thoughts, as he walked. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, and five times, until they became fin- ished gems of rhetoric. A scene is reconstructed. It shows Lincoln stopping in his walk to reach in his coat pocket for note paper. He finds none, but finds a number of let- ters. He takes the envelope from one, tears it open at each end and turns it inside out. There he writes his idea. His walk continues. Perhaps a sec- ond envelope would be used, a second idea rioted. Back at his desk, he would take a plece of foolscap paper, trim the en- velope down to the size of his nota- tion on it, and paste that clipping at the top of the foolscap. Beneath that clipping the idea is developed. The sheet is marked No. 1. Under it, a second sheet whereupon the original idea is developed, and then a third sheet and perhaps a fourth and fifth, bearing revisions. Some sheets have two revisions interlined. Changed Inaugural Speech. Hundreds of foolscap notes with such pleces of envelope for headlings are in Lincoln's papers. Indicating his thoroughness, for example, the last two drafts of the final paragraph of his second inaugural address are cited. They show forcefully the working of his mind, the careful development of an idea into a thing of beauty. “I am loathe to close,” the last draft SPEECHES WALKING Solitude on Hikes Gave Ideas for Famed Addresses, Eman- cipator’s-Papers Show. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 20.—Boxes upon boxes of his papers, now safely stored away, bear evidence that Abraham sought solitude for his To visualize Lincoln scribbling thoughts on envelopes on his daily walks {n Washington was the privi- lege of one of the few men who viewed his letters and papers before the death of Robert T. Lincoln removed them from further perusal for 20 years. They show Lincoln’s method, the de- velopment of his ideas, the fact that his most famous addresses were re- SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” - Gpmuine When you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin prescribed by physi- cians and proved safe by millions over 25 years for Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago Pain Neuralgia Toothache ~ Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART VAcceEt only “Bayer” package W " Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. which contains proven directions. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicact phrased and rewritten sometimes four | read. ““We are not enemies but friends. D. C. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 20, 192 LESE MAJESTE CHARGED. Tokio Society Members, Accused of Plot, May Be Executed. TOKIO, October 20 (P).—Several persons alleged to be agents of a political soclety will be tried for lese majeste in having plotted to present p ‘We must not be enemies. Though pas- [ sion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearth- stone all over the broad land will yet swell the chorus of the Union when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.” As It Read First. That evidently met with Lincoln's ideas. It was the last revision, one that has a place in the various vol- umes of the world’s best prose. Before this revision he had written it as fol- lows: “I close. We are not, we must not be, aliens or enemies, but fellow coun- |Famous for It Servics and Cuisine for trym;n.dAln'muflgh t;;ass:on ;asd.sitrai:ed {ll" Banquets. Receptions and Dances. our bonds of affection too hardly, they ||| must not, I am sure they will 'not be | | Beautiful Ballroom W:ll Accommodate broken. The mystic chords which, 160 Oouples. |Rates, ® to 12, $60.00: 9 to 1. $60.00. | Including Checking Facilittes. Refreshments Served 1t Desired. Under the management of | Maddux, Marshall, Moss & Mallory, Ine.| n Colonial Hotel Fifteenth Street at M W. P. Hutchinson, Manager Telephone Main 5730 7 b proceeding from so many battlefields ' and so many patriot graves pass through all the hearts and all the hearths in this broad continent of ours will yet again harmonize in thelr an- clent music when breathed upon by the guardian angel of the Nation.” | Yho doesni [tk Chocolate \ THE BEST RESULTS ARE OBTAINED BY USING Baker’s Chocolate (Blue Wrapper—Yellow Label) In making Cakes, Pies, Puddings, Frosting Ice Cream, Sauces, Fudges, Hot and Cold Drinks For more than 145 years this chocolate has been the standard for purity, delicacy of flavor and uniform quality The trade mark, *La Belle Chocolatiere,” on every genuine package WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. Established 1780 DORCHESTER, MASS. Canadian Mills at Montreal Booklet of Choice Recipes sent frec ‘will be imprisoned for life or executed. against the laws, regulations and dig- ublicly a petition to the prince re-|past years attempts to present sucl ent. If convioted, it is sald, they | petitions were punished by cruet fixion. Those to be tried are sal! to have planned to intercept ti prince’s automobile in the street and hand him the petition A public petition to the throme is ity of the imperial household. In The finest breakfast in the world—Pillsbury pancakes, withtheirrareflavor,(wheat or buckwheat), tender, golden- brown, light as a feather, nourishing and easy to digest! You can make them in six minutes — simply add Pillsbury's ‘Pancake Flour Madeby the millers of Pillsbury’s Best Flour - His Danderous Quest A thrilling tale of adventure - in the Canadian wilderness e THE best promise of an exciting yarn is the fact 2= that Frank Lillie Pollock wrote it. But in his latest book-length novel,“Honey of Danger,"which "--JB appears complete in the October 20th issue of < opular Magazine, Mr. Pollock has surpassed all his previous efforts at writing red-blooded tales that he-men like to read. “Honey of Dangeris a story of sinister purpose and desperate conlict in the Canadian wilderness; of an innocent man who, hounded by the agents of mistaken justice,escaped capture only to plunge into a region of desperate peril where he gattled single-handed not only for his own life, but to save humanity itself from a terrible menace, the very existence of which no one dreamed. Youcan e:;fi)ect to lose sleep when you start this * astounding tale—for once started, you'll never lay it aside until you have finished it. Other Big Features in This Issue Are: “Lightnin’ Calvert”—by W.B.M. Ferguson. He rode like a cen- taur; he could shoot like a demon—a gun-toting,hell-raising, Bible-reading terror who challenged Fate in the days before law and order went West. One of the most exciting, nerve- gripping yarns that this popular author ever wrote. Don’t miss it. “Duello”—by Holman Day—which reveals a primitive code of ven- geance unknown in modern courts of law. “The Flying Gun”—by Fred Mclsaac —A rookie telegrapher takes a desert job that all others shunned. He found cut why. “A Cathcart or a Riggs”—by Roy Norton—an exciting “Circumlocn- tory” Smith yarn. “The Long Shot”— by W. R. Hoefer — Horse-racing provides some thrills that this hero had not counted on. Also Unusual Stories and Poems by Henry Herbert Krubles, Robert McBlair and other leading writers. 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