WILDERNESS IS WINNING BACK Traditional New Englander Dying Out, According to Author New York, (UP*—1The traditional New Englander, typified by Calvin Coolidge, is dying out according to Ben Ames Williams, author and interpreter of Maine life. Unlike the old western frontiers men who have disappeared with the advance of modern civilization, the men of the far northeast are being pushed by nature herself from the land gained there, and the wilder ness is repairing the damage done by man-made tools. One may drive mile after mile, said Williams, in an interview with the United Press, to see only deserted farms lapsing back into the forest stage, and stocked with moose and deer in stead of the cattle that in former years grazed these pastures. Perhaps no other writer in the country is able to speak so authori tatively on the subject as Ben Ames Williams. For years he has lived among New England people, in Massachusetts during the winter and in Maine in the summer. He has come to know the old fash ioned Yankees with all the vices and virtues of his section. He ex plained the decline in the popula tion chiefly by the fast that the isolation by the district has led to inWeeding with its consequent phys ical deterioration. The ordinary marriage takes place after the cou ple have reached middle age and very few children are produced, he said. Taking as an example a town In central Maine which in the latter part of the last century had a pop ulation of about 2.000, he said that today not more than 250 persons live there, of which 15 are chil dren. This los3 has not been caused toy emigration but by death and the fact that there are practically no births. The last influx of new blood into this town occurred in 1812. •when two British seamen deserted their ship and settled there. Their descendants still are considered newcomers. Although best known to the read ing public for his stories of Maine, Williams cannot be classed as an easterner. Born in Mississippi, reared in Ohio, and educated at Dartmouth, his newspaper career took him to various parts of the country and gave him a breadth of view that makes sectionalism im possible for him. He dislikes the word “type" to be applied to any of his story characters. Every man is to him a human b'ung, ut terly different from all others. Henry Beeker, whose life is the subject of Williams’ latest and fin est novel, “Splendor," has been called by enthusiastic reviewers the “typical American.” The author ob jects to this definition, however, raying that the Henry Beekers are as old as history and are confined to no country or class. Athens as well as Boston produced hundreds of kindly, plodding men who lived each day in the best way they knew, and attained neither success nor failure in a worldly sense. Williams sees two forces at work in the life of the American business man—business interests and fam ily or personal concerns. Or.e must rank above the other in importance to the individual. Men recognized as eminent successes must subordi nate their private affairs to the press or professional demands, he thinks. Henry Beeker chose his family as the most engrossing fact of his life and to him the news paper for which he worked served merely as a background. By such a decision ne closed tnc door to pro fessional success and his compensa tion was in the form of homely hap piness. In this connection Williams finds fault with the modern educational system. He sees that whatever a man chooses as his main pursuit In life cannot be sufficient in itself. Outside diversions do not fill the need. Interest must come from within and the author thinks that here the college fails in their func tion which primarily is to prepare a man for life with himself. - - -• ■ 0-0 The Betrayal of the Rim*. A white rose had a sorrow— And a strange sorrow! For he sisters they had none, As they all sat around her Bath on her feudal throne. A strange sorrow For one with no tomorrow, yesterday, to call her oven. But only today. A white rose had a sorrow— And a sweet sorrow! She had locked tt in her breast Save that one outer petal. Lets guarded than the rest (Oh. fond sorrow!* From the red rose did borrow Blushes. and the truth roniessed In the red rose’s way! —Edith Matilda Thomas. Q Does the government cost more in the United Starts than in otner countries? N. E. L A According to a comparison published in 1922 the coat of gov c. nment per capita In the Unfed S!a:es was only $1$. as tompared *»ih *95 In Englana The coat in )"ence was Mi In Japan II], and m Italy $11. And Tarn To. From Tld-BIta. First sailor How do you like lit* »n the navv? Quite a few turn* Second tailor: • should say ao. for a fellow to get used to? t night vou turn in. and jriat as you are ibuu* to turn over eo.ua bndv turns and and ahouta "Urrn out. * — • • Q Is it trie that sptdT web* ars used < oimnercUliy? g. a ft. A. Strands of the web of ep'drra are u*d (or cross lines in .ntrroe •rope*. range Under* and other te ar' ng nutriment* The w»t» is • oaUd on a cstd like thread. Growth of Executive Power Held Chief Feature of Gradual Centralization Under Federal Government ^ ^ By Rodney Dutcher, Washington NE ' Service. There always has bpen some conflicts, small or great, between the executive, legislative and judi cial branches of government, and argument has continued in recent years as to whether one or an other should have more power or less so that the system might function more efficiently. The one thing generally agreed is that governmental power has become more and more concentrated in Wa*li ington. In this presidential year it may be worth point ing out* that mast of this added power has accrued to the executive branch—that is, to the president and his cabinet and other appointees. Congress always ha3 had the power to do nearly anything for which two thirds majorities could be mustered and the judiciary has lately been attacked for abus ing some of its prerogatives In isolated Instances, but the executive power has grown consistenlly. When the federal system first started there were four cabinet posts—State, War, Treasury and Justice. Those since added are Navy. Postorfice, Labor, Agriculture. Commerce and Interior. All these are operated by the president's appointees and responsible to him. Thus, their policies are his policies. There is no control of the executive branch except as may be exerted by a congress suf ficiently hostile. Sometimes congress has been able to render the executive almost Impotent, but not often. Sometimes he has ruled congress. The present congress lias failed to follow President Coolidge's legislative desires, but has not been an tagonistic toward him. It makes no real attempt to limit the executive power. The State department may control private loans abroad, upset weak foreign governments in this hemisphere, refuse entry to foreigners whose views it doesn’t like and cause intervention in Caribbean republics. The Navy department can send marines to shoot and bomb Nicaraguans, Haitians, Chinese and others without consent of congress and can establish censorship as it did in Nicaragua. The treasury department handles hundreds of milltons in tax refunds with secrecy, delves into our private affairs by demanding income tax returns, regulates public morals through its prohibition and customs services and partially supervises health through the public health service. The Justice department maintains an espion age system which, has in past times led to abuses and has other drastic powers used in recent years. The postoffice department can censor con tents of mail ar.d labels on envelopes, which it does. The commerce department took over control of radio and aviation. The other departments have important and far-reaching regulatory and scmi-rrgulr ory pow ers. It's not that any of the departments have nec essarily usurped authority, but executive power and its patronage system have grown with the nation, which constantly presented new opportunities or demands for its use. The presidetially appointed and controlled commisions such as the Federal Trade, Tariff and Interstate Commerce commissions, along with the Federal Reserve board, must also be included In the citation. So should the fact that the supreme court’s members are also president la Ily appointed. In time of war this government becomes a vir tual dictatorship. As John Quincy Adams told the House in 1836, there are in the authority or con gress and the executive, “two classes of power, al together different in their nature and often in compatible with each other—the war power and the peace power.The war power Is limited only by the laws and usages of nations. This power is tremendous; it is strictly constitutional, but it breaks down every barrier so anxiously erected for the protection of liberty, property and life." The executive war power becomes transcendent; con gress realizes that it can't make quick and secret decisions. Lincoln, seizing the war power, had to Tight the supreme court and later, congress. His most far-reaching exercise of power was his Proclama tion of Emancipation, admittedly a war measure. When he attempted to reorganize the states of the confederacy, he had to fight congress, which accused him of usurpation. He might have won had he lived, but congress took it out on Johnson, who nearly lost his job. Just as big men like Borah. Reed. Lodge and Johnson blocked Wilson's attempt to enter us in the League of Nations, so big men of the 60s like Senator Thaddeus Stephens and W. P. Fessenden fought Lincoln and licked Johnson. _ . _ _ _ "TUNE MARLOWE it the only Hollywood starlet in the movies. M She's lived in the Film City since she Was a baby, the family moo ing there from St. Cloud, Nevada. She went from high school to the "locations." She worked hard foi three years, and then came her big chance as one of the lovely ladies with whom John Dairymore made life so interesting in "Don Juan. June Was quickly featured after that, then was chosen as e Wamp as baby star, and steadily progressed in leading roles. Stardom in her own right it just around the corner for her. Our heroine is five feet five, has very darl( blue eyes and brown hair with a touch at reddish gold. It's not bobbed. She weighs 113 pounO*. (In:•national lllaatrat*4 Maws) Cannot Be Passed Along. From Commrce and Finance. Who pays the corporation income .ax? It is an old and important question. The National Industrial Conference board recently set out to answer it and the answer is now .eady. The federal corporation income tax cannot be shifted to the con sumer; the burden in the case of all orporations exposed to fully effec tive competition li»s on the investor or shareholder, wiio pays the tax directly or indirectly in that the tax reduces profits and therefore tends to radUOt dividend. .1 These are among the conclusions of the board, after an exhaustive re search investigation undet taken at he request ol the Joint eongre-. •tonal committee on internal rev mue taxation, a preliminary sum fiction farm Setting, From Wallace's Farmer. fleyiewers on New York papers ue telling ns that Fsnnie Hunt's lew book, A President Is Born’* Hsrprrsi Is a fine study of corn Mil farm life. We would call it an imaxing study. Its heroin* is sup .tosed 10 be a wonderful farm man tgsr The book describes her broad sotaa, her wlos, barns and outbuild ings as being many and entirely ip-io-date. 8he has enough h-lp *0 ’hat It lake* *ome time to make out he weekly (why arekly?i payroll. Jut the sine of the farm, it appears, t only i) seres, and a mystery eon mum to hane over what lit* farm mary of which is being submitted to the committee this week. The forthcoming report of the board, entiled “The Possibility oi Shifting the Federal Corporation Income Tax," is based on a study of the sales, profits and capital in vestment of large and success ful corporations ior the period 1918 19-5. It involved the questioning of 180,000 executives and probably constitutes the most comprehensive I statistical analysis of profits ever made. Competition and the resulting pressure to make profits on laig" turnover at a low margin of profit per sale, th.* bouid finds. Is a con stant and moat important force in the market, to such an extent as to maky it extremely difficult to ob tain piiccs which would absorb the tax. The statistical analysis dis closes that "profits are ordinarily tought and ordinarily realised by produces, Thera are vague ref at - cnees to fat cattle, to buiter. to eggs and to hogs, but no detinue state ments as to what prod nets were turn*d out. And hoe she ms nag*' things! .-th* Is always a-tiding around, giving orders to people, go ing down to the “open cattle marts ' whatever they are, #orr> ng about th* nacesdty of sending a “pto* sit*,.1 blade' back to the factory for tefMUts Ah* lectures her young brother on the aria of agrtcultui<*. and among other thing* trill him >i inheritance of black-stripe In ctu ua-Pob** Her brother *p*nd* long lummru herding sheep in his fa.It er t paiture, though thU ia »pp»'* INCLINATION, By Johnson For general Improvement, a man should read whatever his Immediate inclination prompts him to; though, to be surl. If a man has a science to learn, he nui3t regularly and resolutely advance. What we read with in clination, makes a stronger im pression. If we read without in clination, half the mind is em ployed in fixing the attention, so there is but half to be em ployed on what we read. If a rnan begins to read in the middle of a book an dfeels an inclina tion to go on, let him not quit it | to go to the beginning. He may, perhaps, not feel again the in clination. increasing volume of production per unit cf capital although in this manner the margin of profit on sales is decreased. It is evident from the fact regarding the sales, profits and capital in industry and in trade that sales at a price close to the cost of production, and tlius free of a profit tax, are the dom inant element in determining prices in a competitive market. The likeliehood of an indirect , shifing of the corporation income tax through eventually higher pric es resulting from reduced production caused by diversion of capital from industries where profits have been highly variable or uncertain, is un supported by evidense. The study of capital investment in various in dustries disclose3 no diminution of reinvestment of earnings or decline in the flow of new capital into in dustries where the rate of return on capital was slightly less or the vari ability of profits greater than the average. --♦ ♦ Nicaraguan Costs. From the Baltimore ^•n. Many time during the course of our present Intervention in Nicara gua. we have been officially as sured that the expanse of military operations there Is negligible. It costs no more, the argument has run. to keep the marines on for eign soil than it does to maintain them in barracks at home. On this point, Washington has been insis tent, apparently feeling that Amer icans will not both much about the nf rviir vlitUHnn rvf MiciratriM sovereignty so long as it is clear that state department bungling is not hurting our pocketbooks. With mobilisation of another 1000 troops, the pretense that Mr. Kellogg's private war is inexpensive lias had to be dropped. Secretary Wilbu^r admits that the reserve fund of his department has been drained by costs already incurred and savs that “undoubtedly'' an emergent".' appropriation will have to be asked from congress, on the amount needed as on the amount already spent, he is silent. On** of tin* most shameful aspects of th*a sordid chapter in Am n history is the consciously false prop aganda in which our government appear* to have indulged in order to keep the truth about the Nicara guan situation concealed from pub lic knowledge It is ndnilt ed that the official statements of casual *les inflicted upon Bundino'a fol lowers have b»cn grossly exaggerat ed. And now that the heavy ex pense of occupation can no longer be concealed it It rrveiled that the navv bureau of Information ha* misinformed the country In intimat ing that normal appropriation* would cover costs. ii iv not more than )u acre* and presumably well fenced. Tills hap pens In a small farming dh'rlet In Northern I'l’nois and sf a time ainee the WorM War. Illinois readers ought ln i| Miss Hurst how long it s ii1, has h*id at »h*ep in th»* • « itoo. • • «*• I i real siaff. from Punch Theater Manager flood Invite • l it Thrre'a nothing like teal Cii atuff (o *et d up boa o fie* rrrdtHs Witsi have w# taken to* p-gh* ? Caeliter Can't say, Hamtoni'i Ml ro«n* in and lifted Its* »•(<*, The Cream Xjj of the W Tobacco I Crop * A;'. VINCENT RICHARDS Champion Tennis Player • ) writes: “Immediately before ~ and after my important tennis matches I obtain the great est possible comfort and sat isfaction from Lucky Strikes. A tennis player must guard his throat carefully, and that is why I smoke only Luckies—they are mild and mellow, and cannot possibly irritate your throat, and my wind is always in splendid shape/* “It's toasted** No Throat Irritation-No Cough. ©1928, The American Tobacco Co., Inc._| Would Try Later Jack—Now, I'll show you how to shift gears. Mae—Maybe it would he best for me to loaye them where they are until 1 ran drive better. Willing to Aid Lawyer—Do I understand that you want to divorce yonr wife? Client—No, that Isn't It at all; I Just want to help my father-in-law divorce hia. GOOD SHOES... add to your appearance, and appearance counts for so much these days. Millions of men and women wear W. L. Douglas shoes, year after year, in preference toall other makes because they are good shoes, styled right and priced below most other good shoes. New Sprint »t\!e» for Men. Women and Bor« are now being displayed In UO Douglas atorea in the principal citiea and by reliable ahoe dealer* everywhere. REMEMBER: We bought the feather* for them Spring ily!** hejore price* of hide■ and leather! advanced. 7'hrre'su laving for you of nearly 11 on every pair of W. L. Douglas ahora. A fair and square retail price stamped on the idles of Douglas shoes at the factory, guarani ees honest value. Idea’s $S ro |8-Women’* $S to |8—Boy*’ $« to |l Catalog of New Spring Style* mailed on request. fcv 1 W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO. 17i Speik Street, Brockton, Me**. TO MERCHANTSI If Douglat ahoea ere not sold ^ In your town, write today ior catalog and agency. Kind Husband Wife—Thai* Ihe kind of husband lo have! Did you hear Mr, Dike tell Id* wife to go and look at some twen ty-dollnr hats? Spouse—My dear, have I ever de prived you of the privilege of looking at twenty-dollur hats? Plain talk should never be plain to the point of coarseness. Lois of nov elists don’t know this. New Uae for riatol Delta Twelve hundred pistol belts wblcb| ordinarily carry death-dealing 4fia have been turned over to the Interior department by the quartermaster corps for allocation to Indian reserva tions. The firelighters likewise will, use the belts to carry compasses autfcj other articles of equipment. A man who Is popular with hlmae^, Is at least fairly happy. makes Biscuits 1 taste Better I I % in ^^B ■ j # ■ ^B | THE GREAT AMERICAN SYRUP I