- By ELMO SCOTT WATSON T ALL started when Lewis Gannett, literary critic of the New York Herald Tribune, in reviewing a re- cent book, “The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes, sald: “When Lendon gets around to honoring Sherlock, Hannibal, Mo., the home town of Huck Finn and his statue, will lose its proud claim to being the home of the only statue ever erected to a character of fiction in the world.” Whereupon Carolyn Marx, literary eritic of the New York World-Telegram, reprinted Mr. Gan- nett’s statement and added: “How about Framp- ton’s Peter Pan statue in Kensington Gardens? And the statue of Lewis Carroll's White Rabbit unveiled only last month in Wales?” But that was only a starter, for, as Mr. Gan- nett confessed in his column & day or two later: “Let Hannibal, Mo. boast: a flood of corre- spondents deny its claim to the only statue of a fictional character. Most of them recall only Peter Pan In London's Kensington Gardens: B. 1 K. of the department of romance languages at Columbia says there is a statue of D'Artagnan In Auch, France: Carolyn Marx In the World. Telegram mentions the Wonderland White Rab- bit recently unveiled in Wales; and Christopher Morley thinks he recalls a Little Nell in Phila- delphia and Sir Walter Scott's Rob Roy son where else. But, Chris, they don't count If they are in private homes: they must be public monu- ments to match Hannibal's Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer, Are there more?” There were more, indeed! ” 16h Several days later the Herald Tribune reviewer printed this: * Late additions to the lists of literary statues: Hans Christian Anderson's Little Mermaid, near the Royal Yacht club In Copenhagen. Paul and Virginia In the Jardin des Plantes, Paris. Longfellow's Evangeline In Grand Pre, Nova Scotia, Mistral's Provence, Puss in Boots In the Tuileries, Paris The Roaring Camp group on the Bret Harte statue In San Francisco, Velleda, voluptuous Breton druidess from Cha- teaubriand’s “Les Martyrs” near Boules ard Saint-Michel Gate of the Luxembourg Gardens, Paris. Which, with: Peter Pan and Rima in London The White Rabbit in Wales Little Nell and Tam o' Shanter In Philadelphia Leatherstocking in Cooperstown The Circuit Rider In Salem, Ore. The Barefoot Boy In Ashburnham make more than a dozen rivals to Hannibal, Mo's Huck and Tom. “the only monument in the world to a fictional character.” Mireille In Les Saintes Marlies in And even that list might be extended. Over in Madrid, Spain, four years ago there was unveiled in the Plaza de Espana near the royal palace a huge memorial consisting of two monuments, One of these monuments, standing 60 feet high, was a life-size bronze group of Don Quixote on a horse and his man, Sancho Panza. on a donkey, Crowning the main column was the figure of Cer. vantes, the man who gave to literature the famous fighter of windmills, and at the base of he monuinent was an allegorical representation, the “Fount of the Castillian Tongue.” Although the memorial was primarily to honor the genius of Cervantes, at the same time It preserves imperisfiably those two famous fictitious charac. ters, Don Quixote and Sancho Panza. But to return to America—a little Investigation will reveal the fact that the list of statues and memorials to fictitious characters is not limited to the compilation of the New York columnist. Be it remembered that the genius of Daniel Chester French, the dean of American sculptors, not only produced, among others of his great pieces of work, a bust of Washington Irving, but he also made a full figure statue of the famous character which [Irving created—Rip Van Winkle. And Phillippe Hebert's statue of Evangeline at Grand Pre Is not the only one which recalls Longfellow's immortal heroine. Hebert's statue was erected more than a decade ago, but it was only about three years ago that there was un. veiled at St. Martinville, La., another statue of the Maid of Grand Pre. This was done in the presence of several thousand Louisiana Acadians and of two hundred Acadians from Moncton, Montreal and Crand Pre, who made a pligrimage to the Bayou state for the ceremonies connected with the dedication of the statue which stands over the grave of Emmeline Labiche, who was the original of Evangeline, Go out to Denver, Colo, and visit Washington park, There In the center of a pool is a fountain where you ean see immortalized in stone Eugene Field's “Wynken, Biynken and Ned,” Or go to Lincoln park In Chicago and look upon them as they are portrayed on the Fleld memorial there, As for the monument to Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer which gives Hannibal, Mo. the right to make its “proud claim,” it was made by rederick C. Hibbard, a Chleago sculptor, and 1. The Lewis Carroll memorial at Liandudno, Wales, which features the White Rabbit of “Alice in Wonderland.” Beside it stands David Lloyd George, former British premier, who un veiled the statue, 2. Statue of Evangeline, which stands in St. Martinville, La., over the grave of Emmeline Labiche, the original of Longfellow's heroine. 3. The Captain's Well in Amesbury, Mass, made famous by the ballad by John Greenleaf Whittier, 4. Memorial to Eve, erected in Fountain Inn, 8. C.,, by Robert Quillen, noted newspaper para- grapher and editor (who stands beside it). 5. Statue of Muckieberry Finn and Tom Saw. yer which stands in Hannibal, Mo., Mark Twain's boyhood home town, ¢ 3 presented to the city of Hannibal by Mr. and Mrs, George A. Mahan, It stands at the foot of Cardiff hill where foregathered Tom and Huck and Tom's immortal gang. Closely akin to the practice of Immortalizing in stone characters In fiction has been man's practice of doing the same for mythical and legendary figures, Some of the greatest sculp- tors of ancient Greece and Rome found their inspiration In the gods and goddesses whom the Greeks and Homans honored. Similarly, in mod. ern days, names In the Bible have been trans. lated into stone, Two of the finest pleces of work by the great French sculptor, Rodin, are his figures of Adam and Eve, and in America we have such statues as William Henry Rine hart's Rebecca, with her pitcher at the well Down In Fountain Inn, 8. C. is an unusual memorial--not a statue, bat a slinple white shaft erected to the memory of Eve beeause Robert Quillen, editor of the Fountain Inn Tribune, and a famous paragrapher, thought that “insufficient honor has been paid to the mother of the human race.” Wo you remember that ballad by John Green- leaf Whittier which tells of the shipwreeked New England sallor who was cast away on the East Arabian coast and as he tolled across the hot desert sands, hungry and thirsty, cursed the day of his birth and then, suddenly overcome by a finer emotion, “prayed as he never before had prayed”? Pity me, God! For I die of thirst: Take me out of this land accurst: And if ever I reach my home again Where earth has springs and the sky has rain, I will dig a well for the passers-by And none shall suffer from thirst as IL Then, do you remember, how the shipwrecked mariner came back safely at last to his home land and, When morning came he called for his spade. “I must pay my debt to the Lord,” he sald Bo he tolled day after day out in the yard behind his house until at last “the blessed water, the wine of God.” gushed forth, Perhaps you thought that story was Just a creation of the New Engiand poet's. But it was something more than that. Although Whittier's PORTER, CENTRE HALL, PA, jer + jegend of na ar to a very Go to Ame “The Captain's ail Americans, it st hats mry, Mass, Well” there as H. Walker of Amesbury and presented Town Improvement society, You ean drink its pure and as you reminded not or Is of the hero of Whi lad but of all th dventurous New En waters, do so you men who once carried the corners For the tain’s Well” is a memorial to them. The hero of the ballad was Valentine Bagley, a native of wury, who, at eon, in Eighteenth and the ste tures can be found In an old book, Salem in 1704 Sufferings Board the gon, Commander, of the restored globe Ame went down to the sea century of Daniel Saunders, a Mariner on Which was Cast Away 1702." Bagley was a carpenter's mate on the Com. merce when that ship sailed from the Isle of France on January 27. 1792, bound for Madras, There she exchanged her Boston master, John Leach, for a Rhode Islander. Samuel Johnson, and on April 28 set sail for Bombay, However, the new captain, “being unacquainted with the coast,” steered too far to the west and the ship foundered off Cape Morebet July 10. The crew, “thirty-four souls in number, twenty whites, thirteen Lascar sailors and one African black,” took to the boats and for three days made their way along the shore. Then they were driven ashore by a storm which drowned three of them. Starting up the coast, the 17 white men, tor tured with thirst, hunted everywhere for water, Becoming separated, they wandered about in small parties and one by one they laid thelr weakened companions under bushes and left them there to die. -~ On and on they plodded across the burning sands and Bagley, thinking no doubt of the damp, fog-swept town of his nativity, forced his parched throat to utter the promise to his God that if ever he got back to that town he would dig a well where all who passed might drink, At last the castaways fell in with a party of Arab traders, traveling on eamels toward Muscat, who took them along. On August 12, six of the seventeen arrived at Muscat where most of them took ship for home, But Valentine Bag. ley evidently was In no such hurry. Still seeking adventure, he shipped on an Arablan vessel and followed the sea for three more years before going back to Massachusetts, Two years later Bagley kept his vow by dig- ging the well and for years from its cool depths bubbled the precious water which he had craved #0 much on the hot sands of Arabian. But after his death the well fell Into disrepair and its waters were drained away by excavations for a deep pipe line in 1012. But the restoration four years ago of the well and the erection of the memorial designed by Leonard Cracke, an Eng lish sculptor living In Boston, has guaranteed perpetuation of the story of Valentine Bagley, & real character in a ballad of a famous Amer lean poet, © by Western Newspaper Union, i f POINTS OF VIEW CALL FOR CODE OF GOLDEN RULE “It occurs to me,” sald George B. Cautious, at the weekly meeting of the Rowanis club, “that we need some sort of a national code or agree. ment fixing more definite regulations for individual points of view. There is an old expression that eircum- stances alter cases. It might have been broadened to include the obser. vation that circumstances alter points of view, and that what a man thinks and feels one moment may be wholly foreign to hig mental reactions the next. “Take, for example, the man who drives his ear downtown, All the way down, and while he Is motor minded, pedestrians to get out of the than he expected, But and he He is changes, his becomes point of view pedestrian ed, severely critical of what he did a few Now there ough exactly minute before that ground and that means nll more toler they somewher are driving, broader minded when ing. “1 know rious when h finds that a I: sprinkler Is throwing has But his own home he is to start the sprind pe fo nas a citizen who becomes fu to pass, when he ler going, and the Epray into the know permit bery to cover most of the sidewal and of be torn out by we they do not war proper for them, it seems, to take up CHURN street men who thelr shrub who declare that the * roots, SCC men an women do things enough room In a street car for two persons. If they see somebody else i FS " do it they declare that something should be done about it. Maybe the Golden Hule enough for all of us, but we seem to be off the golden standard, and | have men- tioned the matter here today In the hope that some of you gentlemen might suggest a way out of our diffi culties,”"--Indianapolis News, ————————————— Dr. Pierce’s Pellets ave bert for liver, bowels and stomach, One little Pellet for 8 lazative-—~three for a cathartic Ady. would be code Room at the Top Child (pointing to bald-headed man)-—Mummy, is he a nudist? Mother—Yes, dear; but only a be- ginner, Why Hospitals Use a Liquid Laxative Hospitals and doctors have slways used lig laxatives. And the public is fast returning to laxatives in liquid form. Do you know the reasons? { aliquid laxative can be be cone you need abi i a day or ater. Nor will a mild liquid laxative irritate the kidneys. ‘double do The right perfect movement, and there is no discomfort at the time, or after. The w you const ig cathartic may keep ated as long as'you keep And the habitual use of , or of powerful drugs y concentrated form of i A weak h a properly prepared tive like Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin will | you a lot. A few week nd your bowels can be “ y Dr. Cald approved | druggists kes p re: an ideal family ls all ages, and may es effective for be given the ASDar ins * your throat. X thoroughly w= Modern medical science now throws an enlirely new light on sore throat. A way that eases the pain, rawness and irritation in as litte as {wo or three minules! It requires medicine—like BAYER ASPIRIN- to do these things! That is why throat special- ists throughout America are pre- scribing this BAYER gargle in place of old-time ways. Be careful, however. that you get real BAYER Aspirin for this pur- pose. For they dissolve completely enough to gargle without leaving urilaling particles, At All Draggists “1 know of nothing bet. ter for expectant mothers than Dr, Pierce's Favorite Desigtion,” sid Mm J. G. Dawson George St, Hagerstown, Md “1 have eight deatttd chil. dren, When 1 would need and sick to my stomach used Dr. Pierer's i Prsacitption and found at relief.” Sold ra New i tablets S0c; liquid tH 0, Large size, tabs or liquid, $1.55. “We De Our Pars. | JEANETTE! HOLLYWOOD'S OWN SONG { HIT. Inspired by the Queen of the Screen 5c mailed, orehestrations 6be (no stam - Wm, ie, 538 Clay St, San Francisco, CNTY ede LiRy 5