» 2 By ELMO SCLTT WATSON —11AKE a look at the top two pictures shown above and answer the question, “Which is Lindy?" Now check your answer with this: The famous aviator Is shown in picture No. 1. The young man in picture No. 2 who so closely re- sembles the “Lone Eagle” is Diedrick Ramke, twenty-three years old, who was graduated from Louisi- ana State university last year. Not only is he “Lindy’'s” double in appear- ance but also in courage, for despite the fact that he is stone blind it could not hinder him from his determina- tion to get an education and as a re- sult he ranked third in a class of 221 and was elected valedictorian by his fellow-senlors. Now take a look at the lower two pictures shown above and answer the question, “Which is Buffalo Bill?" Whether you answer “No. 3” or “No. 4," you will be wrong for neither is & picture of the famous scout, Indian fighter and Wild West showman, de spite the fact that both resemble Colo- nle Cody so strongly as to be able to pass for him among most people. No. 3 Is Col. C, L. Alexander of Hastings, Neb., an old-time stage-coach driver and contemporary of Cody's. Now 4 is James Beitel, Civil war veteran who 1s spending his last days in the State Soldiers’ and Sa home at Sandusky, years jeitel attracted considerable by his claim that he was a friend of Cody's and that he often substituted for Buffalo Bill in the arena Cody's Wild West show Interesting as are the above cases there's nothing especially remarkable about them for scientists tell us that every one of us has a double—some- where. The only reason why that fact is not more commonly known is that our path, or the path of our friends who are likely to notice the striking resemblance, doesn't always happen to cross the path of our double so we don't know of his existence. To account for such doubles, Doctor van Bemmelen, a professor at the University of Groningen, Holland, has advanced the theory that they are blood relations, though the family connection is often remote. In many Instances of striking resemblance Doctor van Bemmelen established a common ancestry. He calculates that, going back eight generations, a man has 256 ancestors, and in 30 genera- tions 1,000,000! Hence, there would not be enough forebears to “go around” unless many of us have the same ancestors in common, But perhaps the most Interesting case of a double in which Lindbergh is concerned is the striking resem- blance between him and another trans- atlantic flyer, almost as famous as he. Only here it's a case of a man and woman being doubles, for this example of some one who “looks like Lindy” is Miss Amelia Earhart, some- times referred to as “Lady Lindy.” Following Lindbergh's rise to fame and her own interest in aviation, Miss Earhart's friends often commented on her resemblance to the international hero of the air, and this may have acted ns a stimulus to folow his flight. If there is some connection between ambition to be like some one else and a physical resemblance between those two, then It may account for the un- usual likeness that has been found to exist between Jack Dempsey, former heavyweight champion, and Max Bchmelling, the Germany heavyweight. But how can this be applied to ac- count for the resemblance between Senator Royal 8. Copeland of New York and Senator Hiram Johnson of California. Did Mr. Copeland have an ambition to be like Mr. Johnson or vice-versa? Or does the fact that they are in the same calling, 1 e. being a United States senator, have some thing to do with it? Almost every famous man, It would seem, has a double, and some of them have more than one. Sir Charles I. Madden, former commander of the British fleet, 1s declared to be a “per- fect double” for King Georve V of England, as Is Sir Henry Whitehead, British textile manufacturer, who re- sembles the English monarch so closely that, arriving In New York some months ago, he had difficulty ilors Ohio. Several ago attention during career, convincing shipnews reporters that he wasn't the king Incognite. A halt block away from the roar of the Grand Central terminal in New York city, a man who is a “dead ring- er” for Thomas A. Edison wears a porter's badge and pushes a baggage truck. A double of mou ik Czar Nicholas of Russia, and a petty rr of Count Leo Tols elist, A delicatessen dealer, a dentist and even humble the the was late swindle . oy, the grea nosy taken Goer. a chimneysweep have been m for former Kaiser Wilhelm of many, Lincoln had a double in Colonel El mer Loomis of Girard, Kan. the streets children had the flesh, whose to send declaring that Abraham Lincoln in presence on used achool home they seen Civil war and al- the He served In the appeared on high silk hat and long similar to that worn by the President. His friends had often commented upon his likeness to Lincoln. “Out In Girard, where I lived for more than forty yearas™ said Colonel Loomis once, “they called me ‘Honest Abe’! They sent me for three terms to the Kansas legisiature and I am proud of my resemblance to Lincoln. I try to live as Lincoln did.” An actor who took the part of Lin- coln in a play of some years back was a double of the Great Emanecipator. Impressed by his own Impersonation, he began to delude himself with the idea that he actualiy was Lincoln. He grew a full beard, he assumed the Lincolnian mannerism of dress, gait, speech and personal habits and in time he seemed to believe that his appearance ought to have been greet. ed with the respect due so important a personage. So painstakingly did he imitate Lincoln that a cynical friend finally remarked: “That actor will never be satisfled until some one as- te sassinates him! The uncertainty about the death of John Wilkes Booth, assassin of Lin- coln, made many people believe he was still allve when one of his doubles appeared. Booth, after his flight from Washington, was trapped by soldiers in a barm at Bowling Green. The barn was set afire and several shots were fired into it. The charred body of a man, presumed to be Booth, was afterward found, but it was beyond identification. One of the poose who fired Into that barn was Lieut. William Allen, and he may have been Booth's executioner, Some years later Lieutenant Allen was passing the stage door of a Lon- don theater In a cab just as Edwin Jooth, brother of the slain assassin, emerged. The actor caught sight of the face peering from the cab window, “Wilkes!” he shouted. “Wilkes!” Lieutenant Allen was a double for John Wilkes Booth! But he passed on and never declared himself. For years Edwin Booth believed his broth. er to be still alive, There were several known doubles of President Roosevelt, I. M. Garfield, & manufacturer of Xenia, Ohio, used to be mistaken for Teddy and eamben often refused his fare, saying they were repaid by the honor of driving him about, while tan Chicago, when T. R. was scheduled to be In the city, newspaper men besieged Garfield In the hotel, Insisting he was the Presi dent, In Florence, Italy, Pietro Cassini, a ways streets in a cant, woodcutter, used to put on spectacles of the kind worn by Colonel and delight American his Imitation of Teddy's grin. not word of F colonel’'s most « uous double was F. G. Huddleston, general manager of af mining company at Angeles, His tern toosevelt tourists with He did The speak a glish, angnie Los ravels in the we he color mas Merton, of Canton and Pittshurgh ed McKinley's “frontp paign in 1806, was cam oiten | and many of the carried ographed as the candidate, lally and pshots of M really and figure . sent of McKinley, who once remarked that they were “just often better-locking article.” weekly magazines Kinley which were Merton's reproductions of face taken with the tacit cor ns life! and than the real Five hundred persons, all of whom knew Merton personally, saw his first posing of this sort. A fa mous publication which had prided itself upon the accuracy of its pictures sent a corps of men to Can- ton in the early days of the campaign to get up a big pictorial issue. They arrived on only to learn that candidate feeling well, While bewalling this de lay, the leader of the pieture corps saw Merton passing and captured him by main force. Saturday the afternoon, was not “lI want you te get up on the porch and pose as Mr. McKinley,” he shouted. The newspaper men thought the fel- low was crazy when he began to take off his Prince Albert coat. In a few minutes, Merton, dressed In the silk hat and coat, mounted the steps of the McKinley and, while the future President was slumbering in side, he posed for pictures which aft. erward became famous. Mr. MeKin ley, when told of the Incident the next day, laughed heartily and later declared that they were among the best he had ever had taken. President Wilson enjoyed the lux ury of several facial counterparts. A tremendous commotion was caused in New York city In the spring of 1016, when one of them, Deputy Fire Com missioner W. Holden Weeks of New York. dropped dead in the street. Grief-stricken erowds with bared heads blocked the thoroughfare. So pronounced was the resemblance to President Wilson that police had dif. fieulty in convincing the people of their error. Another Wilson double was a New York man named Fleming who, It is said, was refused a life Insurance policy during the World war because his strong resemblance to the Presi dent made him a possible target for an assassin’s bullet and therefore a poor “risk.” The familiar features of Calvin Coolidge have a replica In those of Charles Hitz, a Philadelphia waiter whose resemblance to the for- mer Chief Executive was so marked as to give him a chance to play the part of the President In a motion ple. ture, and friends of George McKelvey, an attorney In Ohio, declare that he is the “very Image” of the present head of the nation, Herbert Hoover. (@® by Westerns Newspaper Union.) ame RADIO sound as a bond. to-date as the A.C. set, 4700 Wissahickon Ave. $99. 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