Wednesday 25th " - .. r . -:r " Celebration o f Birtfiday of Robert Burns Comes on PUBLISHER DEDICATES FORTUNE TO MAKE YOUTH BETTER CITIZENS E CITY SIGHTS AMAZE ESKIMO TOTS WHO HADN'T SEEN BEAR POET OF HUMANITY SI TO BE ELUSIVE T fjlis Birthday, On Wednesday Next, Calls for a Study of His Works Neither Use Nor Tolerance of Liquor Has Any Place With These Cobb Declares He Does Not Know What War Did ! to ! Literature ROBERT BURNS THE nmiRp.H Mtwm i UMI TH UIIUIIUII 1111.111 U LI I U AND PROHIBITION! ! 1 1 (The following editorial article, by .the western editor of the Con gregatlonalist, Boston and Chica go, fs -printed In the current Issue of that Journal, Jan. 19th:) H. L. Mencken thinks that pro hibition will not last long if we can have an exposure of all the hypocrites who are supporting it. Apparently he thinks the whole crowd behind the dry movement is made up of hypocrites. That seems to us a slight exaggeration but undoubtedly, there is some truth in the remark. Pastors of large churches sometimes imply that perhaps some of the church members are publicly dry. but per sonally wet. A pastor of a large church, speaking on prohibition at a young people's conference a year or two ago, indicated that there were people in bis church who pat ronized bootleggers, who served broke the law In other ways. Dr. Albert W. Palmer of First church. Oak Park, struck at this in his New Year's sermon, "Ideals for the New Year." He said: "Trader Horn, in one of his quaint observations on life, sug gests that the most valuable thing about education is that it gives one independence and the courage to part with things. 'You can stand on your own spear,' he says, 'when you come to the place where you can say "good-by" and say it clear! "One of the things to which I hope an ever-increasing number of people will say 'good-by' this year is the use or tolerance of alcoholic liquors. There seems to be no question that prohibition has been vastly beneficial to the laboring classes. Professor Feldman of Dartmouth College, in his recent study of the economic and indus trial effects of prohibition, indi cates htat, even with our present incomplete enforcement, industrial life has greatly benefited work ing men's families are better cared for and the pay-check which used to leave a large percentage in the saloon keeper's till, now goes into clothing, shoes, radio, automobiles and better-furnished homes. ' "All this is reinforced and cor roborated by a conversation which I .recently held with the industrial relations manager of one of Chi cago's largest and most enlight ened packing plants. In spite of home-brew, bootleg, and half hearted enforcement, the working man and his home are profiting by prohibition. -: "The group which is least is the prosperous, well-to-do, especially youth, when supplied much money which profiting successful gilded,' with too it never earned. I do not know how many people in this congregation serve cocktails or other liquors or drink boose in any form, or joke and laugh at the prohibition law, but I make this appeal to you this morning: For the sake of the working man and his family and for the sake of our own youth, I urge you this New Year's Day to or. nniioni.iirv gnH ntl .Kliuuuvo social indulgence in that which science and experience have abun dantly demonstrated to be a racial and individual poison. If we can produce a genuinely non-alcohol ized nation, we can lead civiliza . . t . I HTa 4 n a WVU BMW - ' " " good time both by practice and example to say 'good-by' to alco hol 'and say it clear!" Would it not be helpful for the enforcement of prohibition for all of our congregations to hear now and again courageous speaking of the kind given above? Good War On Corn-Borer 1 Possible With Wormwood PARIS (AP) The corn-borer which threatens disaster to the . corn belt of the middle west, can be fought successfully, think French scientists, by introducing wormwood into the United States. : This was given definitely as a fairly certain solution by Dr. E. Roubaud, of the Pasteur Institute. In a paper read before the Acad emy of Sciences by Dr. Bouvler. Dr. Roubaud Is chief of the Pas teur Institute's entomological la boratory. i The devastating corn-corer tailed here "pyrale." is prevalent fa France and is said to have been taken to America by way of Ca nada. Here, however, it prefers life in the weed-like plant worm wood, says Dr. Roubaud and therefore is -not a menace to agri culture or horticulture. ; Wormwood, fairly rare in the ' United States, is prcWic her. where it was used in the manufac lure of absinthe, the liquor now prohibited. t Dr. Roubaud proceeded on the J,beory that since the corn-borer never bothered corn In France ,)Jiat it found something else more " to Its taste. Since "armoise" or wormwood seems to he its usual preeaing ana ieeaing grouna, ne ' came to the conclusion that the wide cultivation of this week In "Iho corn region : of tho United States wonld solve the probhem. I A. small town may be defined as ne that hasn't at least one traffic BcM, whether needed or not t-'S TT m rzait;. ?:f 4trt'r k::- sr -r As cap. .. o.. .i an educational scheme to make good citizens, an academy or arts at tJioomiie.a, Mich., is planned by the Cranbrook Foundation created by George G. Booth (inset), Detroit news paper publisher. A model of the projected academy is shown, as well as the main building of the Cranbrook preparatory school for boys (upper rig it), one of the units of the scheme. 1 1 EXCHANGES Buoyant Condition of Mar ket May Be Credited To Interest Rates . By Walter Margate (Attociated Pre Financial Writer) NEW YORK, Jan. 21 (AP) American capital in unprecedent ed volume poured into new do mestic and foreign financing in 1927. While final estimates are not yet available, it appears cer tain that 18,500,000,000, more than a billion and a half more 'nan the total for 1926, was ex changed for bonds of national state and municipal governments. nuu juuusiriai enterprises throughout the world. It does not follow that the. amount of American money Invested in bonds has increased eight and one-half billions, since much of the total was accounted for by ex tensive refunding operations. Although bond offerings reach ed record figures in October, the weekly average was largest in the first four months. The Influx of new bonds from January to May was so rapid that a period of acute congestion developed, and at one time It was estimated that $1,000,000,000 in new bonds re mained unsold. Three months passed, during which the flowof offerings shrank to a trickle, be fore the surplus was digested. The result was a steady lowering of quotations on listed bonds. Recovering from Its spell of In digestion, the market again head ed upward. Prices advanced, with a few minor interruptions, until the average in the last two months reached the highest level in all time. Prices Rise in Waves The rise of bond prices was in three distinct waves. Active bid ding wh'ch started in late 1926 did not subside until the end of January. A reaction which fol lowed was checked in March. when Government financing at low rates brought renewed stimu lation. Until the end of April quotations steadily rose. In the stagnant period of heavy surplus of new issues, prices entered a long slump which continued until the middle of August. In neither of the two reactions, however, did quotations return to the level at which they began the year. Despite the unprecendented ad vance in prices, demand for listed bonds showed no signs of dimin ishing. The volume of sales was close to $3,300,000,000. approxi mately $300,000,000 morn than in 1926, though failing to rome up to 1925. when $3,500,000,000 in bonds changed bands on the Stock Exchange. The buoyant condition of the bond market was indebted almost entirely to easy money rates pre vailing throughout the year. A general slowing up of business left enormous sums available for in vestment purposes, and led, in August to a reduction of the re discount rate of the Federal Re- serve Bank to 3 from 4 percent, at which level it had been held since August 1926. -Because of low credit rates, the U. S. Treasury was able to obtain huge loans as low as 3H to 3 percent, most of which were un dertaken to refund more than $3,- 000,000,000 of the Second Lib erty Loan. Up to the date of call. November 15, the amount of Sec ond Liberty bonds outstanding had been reduced to $732,000. 000. The final "mopping up' subsequently brought in for re tirement all but $185,000,000 of the Issue. Foreign Financing The amount of foreign financ ing In this market exceeded a bil lion -dollar for the fourth consec utive year. The International fea ture of such loans, and the State (CnlkiW ea yag It) DETROIT (AP) George G. Booth, newspaper publisher, has dedicated the millions he has ac cumulated through the years to the task of making "good citi zens." Through creation of the Cran brook Foundation with a trust fund of $6,500,000, Booth has con verted virtually his entire person al fortune to complete development of a 112,000,000 religious, educa tional and cultural center on his picturesque country estate 1 n Bloomfleld Hills,, a Detroit sub urb. The project was begun several years ago by Booth and his wife, Ellen Scripps Booth, daughter of the late James E. Scripps, foun der of the Detroit News, who con ceived the idea as a means of dedi cating their wealth to public ser vice. They already hare spent more than $5,000,000 in development. This includes building the Christ Church-Cranbrook, considered one f tQe largest Eplacopa, churches in America, erection and endow ment of a school for children of Cranbrook and in establishing the Cranbrook school for boys. To that, Booth has added his per sonal wealth for building a school for girls, an academy of arts and a school of arts and crafts. The purpose of the donors tb make good citizens will be achi eved, Booth believes, by giving students thorough training, mor ally, religiously and intellectually. in the midst of beauty. The build ings are to be the best available products of architecture, enhans ed art work and craftsmanship drawn from all over the world. Reserving only their home at Cranbrook, the Booths have given property consisting of 225 acres of rolling hills and dales, watered by small lakes and branches of the Rouge River. They expect even their home eventually to be work ed into the educational scheme. The foundation sets up a boardcomment. U. S. Makes Shepherds Of Warlike Apaches HFI-' $X3 -i A - A - - , rniii ij PTj) JvL Jt A i i 1" ' -" " ' ' n 'v vjfcv-w.vs -vx , vN J4s f iL .l?xt1 If I XrlwVt 5- MESCALERO. N. M. -(AP) The Apache Indians, most warlike of southwestern tribes, are settl ing Into the quiet life of herdsmen on their reservation here. Under the leadership of Chief Oeronimo, the Apaches once spread terror among the border settlements. They would strike. scalp and plunder and then escape across the border Into Mexico. Troops of many times their num ber were mobilised In both the United States and. Mexico before Geronimo was captured, disguised as a squaw, and his tribesmen! were taken back to the reserva tion. ! Today they are gradually adopt. Ing an agricultural life. 'Experi- (Ooatiaaed oa page It) of trustees to control the property. The one unalterable feature from educational and cultural purposes Booth is president of the De troit News nd chairman of the board of the Booth Publishing company, a separate corporation which publishes eight dally news papers in Michigan. Every Little Bit Added Makes A Little Bit More BERLIN (AP) The record prison sentence here 211 years is held by Herr Buchmann. 37, and a vaudeville artist before he became a first-story man. Recent ly he was released from his cell to appear again before the local court on another robbery charge. The theft in question was in 19Z1. Tne prisoner could n t re member it for he had committed some 500 robberies up to that time for which he had received senten ces totaling 208 years. Under the law, the judge might have given- Buchmann 15 years for the robbery. But he decided three years was enough to add on to the 208. Buchmann took the1 three years as a Joke. Cowboy Boots Correct At Ranch Town Dances SAN ANGELO. Tex. (AP). Cowboy boots still are a source of pride to the men of the range, and in the ranch towns they still are "proper" . at dances in even the most fashionable hotels. w early every ranenman has a pair of gaily decorated. 'boots for such occasions, but frequently an ordinary pair of boots is seen on a dance floor. Nearly all dancers wear shoes or pumps, but the ptes-i ence of boots does not cause any I 5 fx - Apache descendants of the right), who were feared as the f L-'; muni 1 i iwiiii . '' "r...--:.:.?7c-:T.: w"'-...:...'..'; iM SSS' ii'i tit1-'.' coming herdsmen near Mesealero, N M. Squaws are shown pre paring an evening meal. The sheep are part of the herds of the herds of 21,000 animals on NEW YORK (AP) Irvin S. Cobb finds the trend in letters so elusive that; he can not place his finger on it, He is not even con vinced that there is one. "No. I don't know the trend, if any, in literature," said the writer. "Maybe we won't know for a long time. i "This generation, in my opinion, is not the best judge of tne work being done now. gThe only safe critic is posterity. I have an idea that' when Shakespeare was writ ing his plays there were a lot of critics hanging round with their tongues in their cheeks, saying. 'Why, you can't write: Spencer, is our ibest writer.' Or some may have said Beaumont and others MarlowB. "We were told that the war would play a big part in our lit erature. There were two schools of thought on this, some viewing with alarm and some expecting great things as after-war developments. What has happened? What has the war done to literature? I don't know, and I don't think any one else does. "In my opinion we will have to wait a while to find how good we are! today, j Neither the current writers nor readers are competent critics. They are too close to the stage or the ring side. "It has always been so. I can Imagine Dickens writing his Pick wick Papers which he had to have ready and set up before press time saying: 'This stuff isn't much, but it will do until I can write an im mortal novel. Wait until I do Lit tle Dorrit. There will be a book fori you.' How did it work out? Pickwick Papers will propably poll a bigger vote today than Little Dor rit. "I can't find myself In sympathy with the critics who turn on the spotlight and arm themselves with a microscope when they go to a play or read a book. I have heard people say after seeing a play or reading a book, when they were moved to violent laughter and per haps shed a tear or two, in effect that they found it easy to laugh and had their emotions stirred, but after all it was not art or liter ature. What if it isn't? When we go to the theater or take up a book for an evening's reading it is like joining a club. The price of the book or the theater ticket is the initiation tee and the evening is the dues. If we are bored' we have suffered a double loss, but if we enjoy it we reap two dividends on our investment, "I am no Isaiah or Eziklel, sif ting up in the rarlf led atmosphere and looking down at the plodding folk below, to say. "This will live. I can say, however, that I like this book or this short story. I can only look at it with the equipment given me to enjoy or dislike it. "The book I liked best in the (Continued on p IS) K -V warriors of i Chief Geronimo (upper scourge of the southwest, are be the reservation. MM I CWU !feft HIM ESKIMO) 5' io.n iar ud in me Aictic. from Seattle, Wash.. Eva and Johnny Carbondale had an exciting time trying to count the stories In a Seattle skyscraper when they visited the city, where they also saw a polar bear for the first time. SEATTLE. Wash. (AP) Eva and Johnny Carbondale can return to the Far North happy now. They have seen a live polar bear. Although born far up in the arc tic, at East Cape, Siberia, the youngsters had not seen a real, live polar bear until they came here on a visit and saw one in a park zoo. Back home. In the na tural habitat of the polar bears, all they saw was the furs and carcasses of. the animals brought GOAL OF 1IBEDS Many Remedies Being Sug gested; Commercial Prop ositions Put Forth NEW YORK (AP) Twenty three hundred grandmothers, housewives, amateur scientists and novices, scattered through 27 countries, are certain they have a cure or a preventive for cancer. They have submitted their rem edles, ranging from axle grease to walnut meats, to the American So ciety for the control of cancer in competition for the $100,000 prize money offered by William Lawrence Saunders, of New York, for asolutlon of the world's deep est medical mystery. It is a case of laymen rushing in where professionals fear to tread, for very few of the "cures" offered to date have come from physicians in good standing or from competent research workers. Most of the letters declare that such homely household doses as salt, goose-grease, sulphur, iodine, yolk of egg, raw onions or castor oil will "positively" cure or pre vent cancer. Herb and Roots Suggested Other correspondents depend pa herbs and roots to win. them the awards, extolling the merits of vio let leaves, mustard seed and dry ginger, red clover tea, sorrel "cooked in a brass kettle and ap plied as a paste with a black rib bon," or fresh cranberry poul tices. Still other applicants for the prize have advocated sea water from North Wales, hypodermic in jections of pure oxygen, nicotene, candle grease from a brass holder, coal oil and hot water, roasted walnuts, epsom salts, the sting of insects, the bite of a serpent, or contact with a toad, mole or crab. Dr. George A. Soper, managing director of the society, reads each letter carefully, files it away in a scrapbook and sends a?n abstract to the Board of Reference, com posed of world cancer specialists. wmcn win decide whether a real cure or prevent! tive has been found. Mr. Saunders' offer expires next February. "Most of the, offerings," says Dr. Soper, "are from persons st! dently attracted by the mistaken belief that Mr. Saunders has can cer, wants to be cured and is will ing to pay well for the service, Some even want to go Into busi ness with him. Others are so com mercial that although they them selves haven't a cure to offer they know of someone who has and are willing to part with the nam and address tor a tidy consideration. Type of Letters Chance "At nrst most of our letters were penciled scrawls, written In one of a dot en languages. Recent (Oratlait em peg IS) if ai iuat K.a.w. oiDeria, z.7oo miles in by the hunters. Next to the polar bear the most wonderful thing Eva and Johnny saw here was a 42-story building They rode to the top in an ele vator to see it any dog teams or igloos were in sight. Automobiles and street cars first frightened, then fascinated them. Their parents are taking them to Canada, having left Siberia be cause of Soviet rule. First and Most Sacred Obli gation of School To Really Train Youth By Mrs. Snsan M. Dorsey (Superintendent of School, Lea AngIe, LOS ANGELES (AP) The first and most sacred obligation of the mblic school is to make the youth jf the land more "capable of wise, Just, useful and noble living." To this end, the various contracts and experiences of modern school life are adjusted. wnne the work is planned to develop self-help and selfdlrectlon the group activities in classroom projects, in dramatics, chorus, or chestra, in student government and in sports, are designed to be a constant training In cooperation within the group. The result is that these experiences give a type of social education that Induces habits and attitudes that make for successful homes. Aside 'from those subjects that educate for social living in a gen eral way, tlie public school trains directly for home making in a great variety of courses. In recent years, especial care is being taken to adapt those courses to the diversified needs of the modern home, so that the so-called domestic arts and sci ence courses have come to Include more than the compounding of recipes, the making of patterns. and practice in the mechanics of cooking and sewing. They go fari afield and give instruction in the choice and combination of foods for healthful living. In the art of heryingto contribute to the en joyment of the home meal. In marketing and shopping. In bud geting the personal and family funds, in simple home decoration. as well as personal adornment, in home nursing, and even in the art of hospitality. The varying home needs of communities, differing widely in their social standards and finan cial resources, are not ignored, since instruction is carefully adap ted to meet the actual necessities of those being taught. The most recent venture of the public schools In the realm of home making Is the establishing of courses In parenthood for the maturer students and for adults. Here and there throughout the country, classes are being opened in which' the older students of the schools and the adult graduates are studying seriously the duties, responsibilities, and bight prac tices of parenthood, using day nurseries as laboratories for the actual demonstrations of wise procedure In the rearing of chil dren. Seven nationalities were repre sented on a New Tork boxing card. And some people still Be lieve u world paacat " S HI STUDENTS M I OF HOME (John Moore, writer of the fol lowing article, is a native of Great Britain, but he is pastor of the Main Street Congregational church of Amesbury, Mass., and a man whose writings are sought for by the great magazine editors of the country. The contribution below is taken from the current issue of The Congregationalist, Boston and Chicago, and is espe cially appropriate on account of the fact that the birthday of Robert Burns will be celebrated on Wednesday next in Salem and most places throughout the Eng lish speaking world:) Robert Burns possesses a popu larity that is unique In the f eld of literature. He has fashioned and polished a pedestal of his own. His Parnassus is in scot- land; but from ft he holds sway In the hearts of the nations of the world. If one should seek a vital mnd fruitful example of national ism and universalism combined, one might run and hold speech with men of every tongue and race and clime, and then find no finer embodiment of that synthe sis than the great Scottish bard. He I3 "Scotland expressed in per sonality," yet from Ayr to Syd ney, from Chicago to Calcutta, his birthday, January 25, will be re membered, and his songs will go echoing round the woVld. This uniq-ue place that the poet occupies, and this supreme power hat he wields over the hearts of mankind, are exceedingly difficult o account for. What Is the se cret of that power by which he lives in the hearts of his fellow men, and unites mankind Into a ?reat league? What Is the secret of his enduring fame? With the object of endeavoring to discover that, I have lived for weeks with '.he poetry of Burns at my elbow, ind have reread most of his col 'ected poems. I have been struck ifresh with the poet's quick sense of wonder, the strange and solemn beauty of the world that flashed Into his consciousness and filled him with awe; his passion for Mberty that welled in his heart Mke a scorching fire; bis grand ifflrmatlojis. of his kind, that spiritual penetration to the innatn nobility and royalty of man ai man; his awakened and height ened sense of the dignity of hu man toll; his authentic and poetic 'ove of the simple pieties of JUr people all these qualities have 'mpressed me anew in the reread 'ng of his wonderful lyrics and Iramatic descriptions. His secret, -o far as this experience of mino can discover it, resides in certain qualities that I will try to point out as clearly and distinctly as possible. Th Magic That Creates First of all. Burns had to a wonderful degree THE MAGIC THAT CREATES. Not out o: nothing, of course, for every poet must have materials to batter into shape and mold after his' own heart's desire. Burns devoured books and assimilated them; he lived with a book of songs, carry ing it around with him until It was all tattered and until its trea sures had passed into the deposi tory of his mind, to be exhaled anew like the drop of dew that, trembling on the flower, la caught up and refined In the alembic of heaven and falls In the thunder showers of summer. Burns creates poetry spontaneously, intuitively. For me. an aim I never fash I rhyme for fun. There you have his pure creatlvo and instinctive quality! It makes ttself felt in. those lyric outbursts of his that sound like the song of i bird in an April dawn, or like the lark at heaven's gate, ne seems to have had little leisure to cultivate his art, and it wonli be true to say that his best li brary was the open sky and field, but what he lacked In leisure be made u for In frqphness. spon taneity, originality. He moved in no conventional groove, but sans with such perfect naturalness a to make his lyrics imperishable. They Issued hot from his heart, when wrapt In poetic mood, when he could steal a few hours fron the night or his daily toil. Effort less naturalness reveals that "touch o nature's fire" which he craved above all learning. Sav Stopford Brooke: "He bubbled no Into poetry like a springing we'l into an arid plain, and the plaH grew fertile as the well mat'" itself into a stream and watera.1 the desert." His poetry did wate' the desert of his own days. Ther lies his magic. No poet catcher the world as it flies past !n all ft . mutable moods more magically than Burns. Na man can tether time or tide yet he seems to tether both In hi lyric outbursts and his descrip tions the one being the mood ar moment, transcripts of an ex perience, the other being kaleido scople snapshots of the natural world, Aft hae I rovd by bonnte Daon. To see the toso and woodbine twin: 4nd nic fctrd sang o' Its lure. And fondly sae did I o' mint. (prattaMd ea. page T) f I 1