flPPWflWPW eCTBBSSBBSBWiKwSS3 -rvy yi"WN 7f'""'TJw M'SW'' The Commoner. VOLUME 9, NUMBER 1 s nfc K ' 'lV.il CURB8NT a'Hiftn''iCMw -r T V-pT b riftWk .rK- .-- r fjMjEnjs w'' topics SEVERAL DAYS ago ProBldont Roosevelt caused to be sent to Son.ator Ilalo, of Maine, u otntemont of tlio activities of the secret service. TJiIs was in response to ft request made by tlio sonftto. Soon after the president's communica tion was roceivod by Mr. Halo it was rumored that that communication contained a reflection on a senator of a southorn stato. On January 7 a Washington correspondent for the Associated Press gavo It out that the president's communi cation to Mr. Halo showed that Mr. Rcosovelt had ordorod secret service men to "shadow" Senator Tillman on tho theory that he possibly was interested in an "Oregon land grab." It is clalmod that tho president's "tracking" of Senator Tillman followed an attack made by the senator nearly a year ago on an Oregon land company which had usod Mr. Tillman's name aB ono of tho persons interested in the concern. In tlio samo dispatch tho Associated Press quoted Senator Tillman as faying that there can bo no development which ho would desire to have with hold from tho public. o ON JANUARY 8 President Roosevelt's letter to Senator Halo was mado public. In that lottor tho president names Senator Tillman of South Carolina as one member whom, in tho prosldont's opinion, it was necessary to "shadow." In this lottor the president charges that Senator Tillman sought to secure nino quar ters of cortain Oregon land, seven of theso quarters being intended for members of tho senator's family, one for his private secretary and ono for his agent, William E. Lee. Tho prosldont presents copies of letters which ho says woro written by Senator Tillman and others by tho senator's agent, Leo. The in ference in tho president's letter to Senator Halo is that Sonator Tillman worked for tho destruc tion of a grant hold by railroads on this Oregon land in order that ho might secure nino quar ter soctions of that land for members of his family. This would mean that Senator Tillman would jeopardize his good namo for 1,440 acres ?.f m?n Inndt Tho President also charges that Mr. Tillman used frank envelopes in which to carry on this correspondence with the land agents. SOON AFTER tho delivery of the president's message relating to tho Tennessee Coal and Iron company In which tho president admitted that ho consented to the absorption of that company by tho stool trust, Senator Culberson, of Toxas, Introduced a resolution instructing tho judiciary commltteo to report to tho senate whothor, in its opinion, tho president was au thorized to permit that absorption. Senator Cul borson said: "Tho president's position in de nying that congress had authority to direct a hoad of a department by a resolution of inquiry is characteristic of tho distinguished occupant of the "White .Houso, and it is a corollary of the main dogma that ho is absolved from any lecal restraint whatever." Mr. Culberson cited legal authorities to prove that congress is empowered to place restrictions on heads of executive de partments to direct their acts. He read a stato- nnf??v J? Wl!lch lh nttornoy goneral was quotod after tho absorption of tho Tennessee Coal and iJ?CimF,anyb? th0 Unitod States Steel corpor S S ? n y ?lQ stntemcmt tllftt ho would proceed in the courts against the steel corpora! on if tho steel corporation should violate tho law in ssraf isas of tnui- Th !e- TN THE HOUSE on January 8, tho special .1-committee reported with tho recomZ,! tlon that tho president bo rebiLu bTSin so much of his message as reflected on membG1I of congress in connection with his recomSda tlon regarding tho secret service detect? f and also declaring it to be tho senso nf 5,1 5 and that it yould decline to consider0 any ?omnn? delivered speeches in which they denounced tho president's attack upon the integrity of the house. The resolution to table the presidents messago was adopted with 212 yeas to 35 nays. ADVERTISING church services has been tried, spasmodically, to be sure, but for some cause or other there seems to be a sentiment against it. Just why this should be so is not apparent. If advertising will attract crowds to the theatres and to the stores, why not use tho samo means to attract people to tho church? In these days of business competition and stress the business man who fails to advertise is not usually a business man for long. And certainly tho church should be conducted on business lines. Wherever the experiment of church ad vertising has been tried it has proved success ful. One of tho latest examples is from Barre, Vermont, where Rev. Francis A. Poole is pastor of the First Congregational church. Rev. Mr. Poole is a firm believer in newspaper advertis ing and used it to good effect. When he took charge of the church three years ago, It was a' moribund organization. Mr. Poole started with advertisements in tho Sunday morning papers big ones, a page, when ho had the money, and three or four columns at other times. Ho took big, black type and told the people what was going on in the church, what the sermon would bo about and who would be there. "As a result, says Mr. Poole, "the congregation has quadrupled in three years and at a meeting of trustees we de cided to enlarge the church building to twice its present size." Some pastors and elders who are wondering why more men do not attend church might have their wonder set at rest by a judi cious investment in printer's ink. PROFESSOR William Hallock, the dean of the faculty of pure science, Columbia Univer sity, has written for the New York Times an article seeking to show the meaning from tho scientific point of view of tho great earthquakes of recent years. Professor Hallock says: "While tho disaster in the south of Italy, from a human standpoint, is appalling, probably the most awful catastrophe in man's history of man, it can not bo regarded as so important an indication of the earth's scientific vagaries as the quake in San Francisco. The disturbance on the Pacific coast extended for an area of over 200 miles, while tho actual place of disturbance in Italy was very much smaller. Of course, to the minds of the superstitious and the scientifically disin terested, there is in an earthquake an extra ordinary element of unknown horror, of an im pending disaster that lies under our feet over which we have no control, no forecast, and no means of protection. It qoines suddenly and in n; few seconds, perhaps, destroys hundreds of thousands of human beings. The actual mystery of the earthquake is only partly explained In scientific research, that by deductive theories only manages to pacify our awe of the un known. There are things we know about the interior of the earth, and many things we don't know but would like to. We are ourselves merely on the crust of the e'arth, which scientists have variously estimated to be from ten mles to fifty miles below us. From the inner edge of this crust to the center there are, presumably gaseous matter substances of excessive heat' The temperature of the center of the earth which has been sensationally declared to bo inconceivable by Flammarion and others is probably not so at all. Calculating a conception of these inner temperatures of tho earth by the increasing heat that miners find as they descend deeper and deeper into it it mnv i , that the probate temper eT tne earths about equal to that of an arc light or an electr furnace, which is about 5 000 tniinnif Jiectrlq. Fahrenheit The i&Tfh&'if'f terial in the center of the earth resemhip? vast volume of air, in a toy balloon for in stance is not scientifically accepted The ent ?o" earth is pressure rigid. It is subject to a?il? ences of load caused by the shiftinc o ? fw load. It is the incessant readjustment of bS ances in the integral rigiditv of the S, J1"" that causes eartuakes8. lialintuTtonsn tons that are carried from the mountains to tho sea by the rivers! The Mississippi river alone probably bears continuously millions of tons from the mountains to the ocean. Neces--sarily a pressure taken from one place and in creased in another too suddenly causes a cave-in or releases a pressure from below, which makes the upheavals wo call earthquakes. It is an accepted .theory in the scientific examination of the earth's substance that it is as nearly pressure solid as it can be, but not wholly so, a conclusion that leads us to believe that the adjustment of pressures is becoming steadier as the years progress. The displacements shown by the cracks in the San Francisco earthquake were only a few feet. Geological observation of prehistoric earthquakes shows that the earth, made fissures and slides of 20,000 feet. Take the evldenco in geological survey of Mount Shasta, in . California, and the probable South : American catastrophes of prehistoric time." ADMITTING THAT there is no actual scien tific assurance of the breadth and immen sity of these gigantic upheavals and that on the matter of earthquakes we are still "in a state of theoretical conclusion," Professor Hal lock adds: "Actually our knowledge is com paratively limited; there is no possible forecast of earthquakes. The seismograph merely regis ters a. disturbance when it is occurring. Of course, the human comprehension of earthquake Phenomena is as primitive and terrifying -as thunder and lightning was once a fearful dem onstration to primitive races. People , con tinue to live on the sides of volcanoes, in the valleys of eruptive zones, with naive indifference to the danger about them. They learn no les son in these disasters. The region in which this recent earthquake disaster occurred, although well known to be in the earthquake stone, had apparently quieted down. I do not believe there nSiiJSLTelfiIoils?lp btween sun spots and earth quakes; the elements and celestial influences' pnrf? muncerned h tlle inner activities of the 2J2S' ??? temPerature of heat in the center SSSaua?!! niretly lnVOlVed In tho earthquake in Sicily was not higher thnn that of the temperature of an arc light, wnich is by' no means inconceivable. The surrounding nre o?r??Rlmra?dia5ely contrS the heated fiquids or eM w!ir kte,p, that liquid substance m XL ha.rd whIch constitutes our belief that the earth is pressure rigid. There Is no do hJ that earthquakes are diminishing? This is easUy fnT1 by comPai'inS the history of the woHd's earthquakes as we know them according tn tut rapidity of geological changes. We associate earthquakes with eruptive neighborhood i l? the recent upheavals of the earth Tn L, f aft a: as-jSSS Stl Vn'I'0"868 were fram building of tidaT waVe n,' Causo 0l destruction waithe heaVT'the bot oanCf0S.Pal'atlVeIy sma" " huge and destruoti t?L ocean to ma,t a patch printed in the World sa- f01? .dis" Secretary Revnolds nf i V ys: Assistant is worklngReaynforcSo o 1 frazzlo because he asked thn! n J8 0fSce to a how much he ahouW pay esw ayS ag, for his services during the flrK Roosevelt run the chance of havl ?pS7.65 and state and other department, n itor, for thQ . r:L.MMlimuLM.-:.;