TWENTY YEARS AFTER v By FANNIE HURST (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) {WNU Service) OU talk about your dramatic panoramas of life! What is more stirringly that, than a glimpse backward, say along the twenty years that follow the college graduation of any given group. The college reunion is a singularly po- tent event, It is a stock taking. It is the moment of resume backward. Men und women who have not paused in the race of life long enough even to contemplate it as a spectacle, are here forced to face the evidence. Twenty years after graduation, Have 1 failed In the race or reached the goal? Two men who had not met for those twenty years were about to come to- gether for the first time; two men who had been inseparables through four years of high school and four subse quent years at their state university. The Heavenly Twins, they had been facetiously called during those years of their intimacy, It had been a nice friendship, ceasing, it is true, tion to have any active cance, or, for that matter, anythi ® passive quality, because the of the two boys diverged instantly. Rex Tyson went to Boston to learn the shipbuilding business In the yards ’ of an uncle. Claude Nipher returned to his home town to take up his fathe of taxidermy. Yarie d interests if ever there were. Tyson ahead in the enormously profital business of ship- r's business +} king up where | ind then bre i jtaries ti diverge and SL once mo which was northerly of the floated steamers of enor- rawing power, wis in connection with an enter prise to launch some gigantic boats on the bosom of this be dy of water that Tyson was returning to his home town. In the twenty uation from the state university, he had not set foot In it, Rumors of his fine success had come back, it is true. Some of the deco rative monthly magazines had carried photographs of the Tyson country es itate just outside Boston. The salling Aists of the big steamships bound for ‘Europe frequently carried the name of Rex Tyson and Mrs, Rex Tyson, and the year his son was graduated from Yale university the papers were quit agog with the story of the ship mag- nate's son shipping for South America aboard a fruit steamer. From-the-bot- tom-up-sort-of-thing which the Ameri public loves to observe, and ad- t years since his grad- ires in the sons of its millionaires. Nipher had followed Tyson's career Living as he did in the ler environment of his home town, closely is lal boratory built right on the quiet old frame house he continued to occupy after the death of his parents, Nipher had the scrutiny the various aspects of the world which interested him leisure to watch with close ontside most, Tyson's career captured his curios ity not only because it happened to whirl around the person of an old and valued friend, but because it illus trated a sociological and economic as- pect of his country. It was Interesting to study the success of a man like Tyson and to ponder over just what conditions made his kind of position possible, Nipher married a few years later than Tyson. Where Tyson had chos en an eastern girl of some social proml- nence, Nipher made what was consid- ered, even in his town, & peculiar al lance. He married a girl named Msadalaine de Fond, daughter of a French Canadian who had drifted across the line from Quebec and earned a more or less precarious ex- istence us a veterinarian. Madalaine was not only a rather plain, quiet girl, but she had quite a marked affliction. From birth she had been deaf, hear. dng only slightly with the left ear. Nipher beheld her one evening at the graduation exercises of the Central high school, where in spite of her handicap, she was graduated with honors. One year later they were married. There were two children, normal youngsters with acute hearing. One of Nipher's favorite occupations when he was not working in his lab oratory and doing important mount. ing of animals for some of the fore most museums in the country, was per fecting an ear disk for Madalalne by which she might be enabled to hear more clearly. Long years after his death, the Nipher ear drum was to earn great fortunes for his grandchildren. But when Tyson returned to his home city, the Niphers were living the qilet and uneventful lives of small town people of limited Income. Madalaine had no servant and took igole care of her two children, Nipher ‘himself spent the long hours of the day at work In his laboratory with only one assistant, and although he had come to be regarded as the prime authority in his field, museum experts keep pace with his achievement, Besides, preeminence in taxidermy to bring a man any great local emi nence. Indeed it is doubtful if his was truly supreme in his work. Nipher was just rather an old fogey like his father before him. he had hud time to give any great years intervening, might have affec tionately fallen in with that general estimate of him. And yet, It was with a glowing face back home on the shipping mis sion in question, Good old Claude! write Claude a good fat check if for any reason he might be in need of funds. Chances were that he was. Taxider- mist In a onehorse town. Read Claude had married. A deaf girl, too Just like old Claude. Undesigning sort of fellow. Fall for nearly any thing. Should have kept better in touch with old Claude. No friend ships like the old ones. Good old Claude! Jove, won't ever again get out of touch with him. So it was a genial, rather remorse a train one day in the little city he had once called home. A fellow with prosperity written all over him. In the cut of his clothes, his manner of lavishly tipping porters and chauffeurs The look of his luggage. The general aroma of expensive well-bel him, 1 ne friends clasped hands. Big, long, silent clasps, Nipher met two or three of them, and then, bag and lugguge, great big Tyson crammed into N pher's little old Ford roadster ind off they red. vas pretty much as Ty oreseen it would be, Stufly, weone shame vho was Tyson's age to the —_— looked it least five years older than his friend, Life had pussed Nipher by Had it? Tyson had occasion to ask himself after his first snap judgments had worn away and after he left the house at the end of five weeks where originally he had only planned to re main five days. Had it, or had li assed Tyson by in a that he : beginning to realize the extent t } had been at the materia i Why Nipher, with ymplete gnself CODSCIOUSNONS, *hanted Gregarion fashion that terrified him, now verse np Tyson 1 Madalaine read poelry aiou iri the long, qt 1iet evenings, feeling its music along her ot lips as she transmitted it to her hus hildren as they grouped 1hout sr in the lamplight The Niphers went on hikes in the springtime and actually and without he plant life of thelr region and brought home Spe imeng for slides and mounted their findings in their “Springtime Books" ns they « Madalaine Nipher played the harp and in the evenings she took on a dell cate kind of heauty, sweeping her fin gers slong the strings of the instru sel feonsciousness studied t called them shabby study, most romantic kind of taxidermy Mounting wild animais with such fidel. ity that several of the museums of Fu- Nipher wild animal display in a Chi- cago museum was said to be the finest in the world. Nipher thought nothing of spending a six-month studying from dog, the tiger, the llama. Frequently he went off on visits to ing him. own little living room, playing and acters themselves, Niphers wrote poetry to one another Claude and his elder son Merle at the transformed her into beauty Close, happy, almost naive family. Greedy for the beauties of life. Ignor- ant of its materialisms. Indefatigable in their quest for the happiness of harmony. No wonder that Nipher's face, while lined with the thoughtful years, was a face of peace, No wonder that Mad- alaine at her harp had a strange, quiet beauty all her own, What more nat ural than that the children of this union should share in its beauty? here was nothing that Tyson could do for Nipher, He realized that after his second day in the home of his friend. There was so much that Nipher could do for Tyson, the second dag of the visit of his friend. Samuel Johnston [John Hanson Washington.) By ELMO SCOTT WATSON Fourth 3 g of the Declara- tion of Independence!” you reply. “But why celebrate that?" you are asked, “Because It | h y of our nation,” you answe And in both cases, you're only partly right, As a8 matter of fact, the Declara- Independence was formally pted on July 4, 1776, by the Con- tinental co! 54, but so many mem bers were al it on that day that no effort was made thelr signatures to the immortal document, That was not done until nearly a month later. On August 2, 1776, the final copy of the Declaration was ready and the members en present {all whose names appear on it, except two Thomas McKean and William Thornton, 0 signed later) affixed thelr signatures, thus giving the document an authority which It lacked u hat time. So it depends upon a matter of interpreta- tion whether July 4, when the Declaration was formally adopted, or August 2, when it was signed, shall be considered as the “birthday of a new nation.” ut now that this “new nation” has come into existence, obviously it must have a head or an executive officer if it is to be a “going concern.” Granted? All right! Of course, we all know that the executive officer of this new nation of ours which came into existence 158 years ago Is known as the President. So there logically follows the question “Who was our first President? “Why, George Washington, of course!” you answer, But are you sure of that?! For again it's & matter of Interpretation. To be absolute- ly sure that you're right, you should say “George Washington was the first President of the Unit. ed States.” Be sure to put in “of the United States.” For there was no such pation as the United States and no such office in It until it was created by the Constitution, framed in 1787 and adopted In 1788 and George Washington was the first man to hold the office of Presi- dent under the Constitution, In recent years attempts have been made to prove that several men who held the title of “President” and presided over the Continental congress were Presidents before Washington. But those attempts have met what seems to be a final and decisive answer, from Dr. Edmund C. Burnett of the division of historical research at the Carnegie Institute of Washington, who has spent 25 years In exhaustive research of the work of the Continental congress during the entire period of its existence from 1774 to 1781. In a statement by Doctor Burnett, issued by the Carnegie Institution recently, he says In regard to the “President before Washington" theory : “In this year of exceptional grace, the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and thir ty-two and of the Independence of the United States the one hundred and fifty-sixth, when we are celebrating the two-hundredth anniversary of the birth of George Washington, many old controversies revolving about the character and career of the Father of his Country have been revived-—controversies which seemed to have been permanently relegated to the realm of tales that were told—and several new ones have pushed their way to the front to make their bids for a hearing. “Among the themes which are not precisely new nor yet hoary with old age is one which declares that the first President of the United States was not George Washington, but that this distinction belongs to John Hanson, presi dent of the Continental congress from Novem. ber 5, 1781, to November 4, 1782, “Similar claims, although on other grounds, have been put forth in behalf of other Presi. dents of congress, but only that lg behalf of 4 Hanson has been pushed with great vehemence or has attained any great vogue. In good time the legend John Hanson, first President of the United States, will also be assigned ts appro- priate niche in the Hall of Myths “The plain truth of the matte that not he p € resident f the ontinental cong yton Randol to Cyrus Griffin ‘nited States, either in urtesy, or otherwise, The first the first to bear that title, was Geor on: and all those who seek to bestow the title of first President of the Unit- ed States upon any president whomsoever of the ‘Old Congress’ are but chasing shadows, pursu- ing will-o"-the wisps. “The Hanson thesis, which has bad its own variations in the course of its career, has now assumed substantially this form: John Hanson wis the first President of the United States, because he was the first President of congress under the articles of confederation, the first con- stitution of the United States, argument of the Hanson proponents, to this argument that we shall devote our examination, This is the basic “Was John Hanson actually the first Presi dent of congress under the ar ticles of confed. eration? Those articles, it should be recalled, were adopted by congress on November 35, 1777. and two days later were sent forth to the sev. eral states with =» plea for their speedy adop- tion. Some of the states readily assented, others ratified with certain provisos, while still others, led by Maryland, held back until their views with regard to the disposition of the western ands should be agreed to. “By July, 1778, all the states except Mary- fand, New Jersey, and Delaware had ratified the articles as they stood and a few months later New Jersey and Delaware also came for- ward with their ratifications; but Maryland stood stoutly by her demand respecting the west. ern lands (and a most praiseworthy demand [t was), and not until her demands had been es sentially complied with did that state agree to ratify. The final step was taken on the first of March, 1781, when the delegates of Maryland in congress, John Hanson and Daniel Carroll, ap- pended their signatures to the articles of con- federation, “At the time of Maryland's ratification of the confederation Samuel Huntington of Connecticut was presidefit of congress and had been since September 28, 1779. There was no new election of a president of the body at that time, but on July 6, 1781, President Huntington gave notice to congress that the state of his health would not permit him to continue longer In the exer- cise of the duties of the Presidency, and on July 9 congress chose as his successor Samuel Johnston of North Carolina, “On the following day, however, Johnston pre sented his declination, offering ‘such reasons as were satisfactory,’ whereupon Thomas McKean of Delaware was elected President (July 10). McKean served as President of congress until the election of John Hanson, on Monday. No- vember 5. “It is to be observed, then, that two Presi. dents, Huntington and McKean, had served be. tween March 1 and November 5, 1781, and an- other had been chosen but had declined the of- fice. A chief question therefore is, whether the Presidents between March 1 and November 5, 1781, served under the articles of confederation, or whether John Hanson was the first to serve under and by virtue of that Instrument. The question hinges on whether the articled of con- federation were actually in force during that interval” Doctor Burnett declares that they were actu ally in force. He continues: “To contend, as do the protagonists In behalf of John Hanson as the first President of the United States, that the articles of confederation did not come into force until the first Monday in November, 1781, is to contradict official record and official Interpretation. “As an Instance of the lengths tg whicn tis L Msscsmsmmnismms cin. nnn ‘ a msec Samuel| | untim gion “The articles of confede main essentials of the | instru did little more than put form the principles on whi of the United States had t ducted. “At all events, it is not to be gainsaid sven at the time when John Hanson was elected resident of congress, these United Sta les were jating their national existence from the of July, 1776. They have continued to and that assertion respecting the nation's birth has held good both in law™ After discussing the conditions under which Hanson was elected President, Doctor Burnett says: “In any event, John Hansdn does have the distinction, If It be a distinction, of being the first president to be chosen for the definite term of one year, beginning on the first Monday of November. But this is very far from making him President of the United States. “The evidence, It must be repeated, is con- clusive that no president of the continental con gress, by whatever name It may be designated, whether ‘the congress’ as it first called itself, or ‘the United States in congress assembled.’ as it came later to be called, was ever President of the United States. And this is true for this best of reasons, among others: because no such office as President of the United States existed until it was created by the federal constitu. tion, framed In 1787 and adopted In 1788 “The office of President of the United States which that Constitution created is an office wholly different In character from that of Presi. dent of the old congress, whether before or after the adoption of the articles of confedera- tion: so different, in fact, that almost the sole thing in common is the word ‘President’ In their respective titles, “The president of congress was merely a presiding officer, and he was a member of the body over which he presided: he neither pos- gessed nor exercised any executive authority. The President of the United States Is almost solely an executive officer; he is not a member of the national legislature: and his contacts with the national legislative body, the congress of the United States, are of a definitely limited character. “There Is therefore only one rational conclus- fon that ean be reached, and that is, that George Washington was the first President of the Unit. ed States” (@ by Western Newspaper Union.)