THE CENTRE By ELMO SCOTT WATSON N NOVEMBER 2, 1734, there was born to a Quaker weaver and blacksmith In Exeter township, near the present city of Reading, Pa, a son to whom was given the name of Daniel. And now, 200 years later, that boy's name still has the power to stir the imagina- tion of his fellow-Americans, For he was Daniel Boone, Last month the magic of his name drew to a little town In Kentucky all the high officials of that commonwealth, representatives of the gov- ernors of eight states and a great crowd of people from every part of the country. They had gathered there to participate in the opening cer- emonies of the Boone bicentennial which is be- ing observed this year and which will come to a climax late this month, Although the celebration at Boonesboro on September 83 was primarily a Kentucky affair, since Kentucky regards Dan’) Boone as essen- tially her own, a dozen other states have some claim upon him. Among them are Pennsylvania, where he was born; Virginia, North Carolina - w—. — pe tr A” 7 5 and Tenaessee, where his youth was spent and where he started upon his career as a hunter and frootlersman; West Virginia (then a part of the Old Dominion) where he made his home after the loss of his lands in Kentucky: Ohio, where he had some of his most thrilling adven- tures; and Missouri, where he spent his declin. ing years and where he was buried when death claimed him in 1820. Even Kansas, Nebraska, North and South Dakota, Wyoming and Mon- tana have more than a casual interest In him, For in his old age, still the keen hunter and trapper, he made long trips into the western wilderness and it is possible that he trod the soll of all those states, But In a larger sense Daniel Boone belongs to the whole nation. Symbolical of that fact was the authorization by the last congress of a spe- cial haif-dollar for the Boone bicentennial this year. Designed by one of America's most dis tinguished sculptors, Augustus Lukeman, the coin bears on the obverse side Boone's likeness and on the reverse the figures of a frontiersman and an Indian and the designation of 1934 as Pioneer Year. These coins will be sold at a premium and the proceeds will go to the Boone bicéntennial commission of Kentucky to be used in acquiring the sites of three ploneer forts Fort Boonesborough, Boone's Station and Bry an's Station, These three, together with the site of the Battle of Blue Licks, will comprise the Pioneer national monument with a memorial highway connecting the four shrines. Even without these material reminders of the fame of Dan'l Boone, his is a deathless name in the American consciousness. He is the eternal symbol of the ploneer, of a land where there were frontiers to be pushed ever westward and a wilderness to be won. In the America of today there are no more frontiers where venturesome souls may escape the humdrum of everyday af- fairs: there is no wilderness to be conquered; and pioneer life exists only in the fading memo- ries of a few aging men and women facing the sunset of their days, So this nation, still youthful but realizing how quickly it spent its youthful heritage of high adventure and brave enterprise, looks back somewhat longingly to those glamorous days and seeks some figure In which is embodied the spirit of its lusty youth. In Daniel Boone it finds such a figure. Americans of today, reading of him and associating themselves In their minds with him, can experience vicariously the adventures which befell kim In real life, Such is the magie of the name of Daniel Boone and to 99 out of a hundred Americans he is the pioneer par exceilence, His apotheosis began long ago, for just as George Washington had his Parson Weems to make him more of a myth than a8 man, so did Daniel Boone have his John Filson to make him a frontier demigod, The result has been many a misconception about Boone's part In the settlement of Kentucky and many a “popular belief” about his impor tance as a frontier leader which are partially, if not entirely, erroneous. : Modern historical scholarship paints a some what different pleture of him from the one which our schoothook histories have presented, Sclen- tific historians, devoted to seeking the truth and making the truth known, have gone back to the source material and out of thelr findings has Pw 5 emerged a new Danlel Boone who bears little resemblance to the Boone of the myth-makers, One of the first of these was the late Clarence Walworth Alvord of the University of Illinois and the University of Minnesota, whose reputa- tion, gained In his researches into the early his tory of the Mississippl valley, Is too secure for him to be regarded as an idle “debunker” of the great. Writing in the American Mercury pearly a decade ago, he declared: “The facts of the life of the man Boone, in- deed, have little In common with those of the superman so universuily exalted. He is idolized as the most heroic of western explor- rs, a8 the first to make known to settlers the fertility of the ‘dark and bloody country’ of Ken- tucky, and as the first to plant in the West a permanent settlement of Americans, “Bat it requires only the most superficial re- search to knock the story into a cocked hat. A study of the historical sources proves that thou. sands of men explored Kentucky before Boone, and the region was well known to multitudes who needed no superhuman herald either to tell them of the fertility of the soil or to summon them to action. Finally, in this whole complex movement across the mountains Boone played a subordinate part: he wns little more than an employee of an empire bullder, Richard Hen- derson, a North Carolina speculator and the founder of the Transylvania company. Daniel Boone was one of many pawns in the magnifi- cent game of chess being played on Kentucky territory. Of the superman there is no trace.” Another distinguished historian, who Is prob ably the leading authority today on the history of the Old Southwest (Kentucky and Tennessee) and who is now writing a definitive blography of Boone, in an article which appeared in the New York Times Magazine in 1927, corroborated Alvord’'s statements in regard to the priority of other men as “Kentucky ploneers” but dealt somewhat more kindly with the superman myth, He 8 Dr. Archibald Henderson who is, incl dentally, a greatgreat-grandson of Boone's em- ployer. Writing of Boone's activities as agent for the Transylvania company, he says: “While these are the revelations of modern historical investigation they do not detract from the distinctive qualities of Boone's real fame. Boone was probably the most skiliful hunter of big game who ever lived upon the American con- tinent. He was a peerless explorer, a supreme scout. Unsuccessful as a leader—even the lead. ership in the defense of Booneshorough seems to have falien not to Boone but to Richard Calla why—Boone was unsurpassed as an individual Indian fighter, who on countless occasions proved himself more than a match for the erafti- est and subtiest of his Indian opponents, “Seen through the glorifying halo of a century and three-quarters of time, Daniel Boone still rises before us as a romantic figure, poised and resolute, simple, benign—as naive and shy as some wild thing of the primeval forest—five feet eight Inches In height, with hroad chest and shoulders, dark locks, genial blue eyes arched with fair eyebrows, thin lips and wide mouth, nose of slightly Roman cast and fair ruddy coun tenance. In suit of buckskin, Indian moccasing and eoonskin enp, with rifle, knife and toma hawk, alternating with the axe and the survey. or's compass, he Is the true Leatherstocking of 8 Cooper romance” Here, perhaps, Is a clew to the reason why than it is to take into account individual differ. ences in arriving at an estimate of some one person. Ro, when Cooper symbolized the Amer. fcan pioneer In the romantic figure of totype of all frontiersmen. acter In real life came as close to fitting the name would be stamped indelibly on the Amer. ican consclousness, | of racial and national pride—and also personal vanity, We Americans like to consider ourselves superior to other peoples, especially those whose we are, perhaps, no different from the British, the French, the Germans or the citizens of any other country. inal owner, the red man, He was wily and dar ing; he was skilled In wooderaft: he was a first class fighting man. In order to survive, the plo. neers who invaded his hunting grounds had to outwit and outfight him. Those who didn't, soon lost their scalps. Those who did, were able to maintain their precarious hold on their new homes in the wilderness until the overwhelming numbers of the white man made certain the subjugation of the red man and the acquisition of his lands. Outstanding among the pioneers who were able fo survive was Daniel Boone who, as Hen- derson has said, was “unsurpassed as an ind vidual Indian fighter.” So when we read of one of his victories over the “wily redskins” It con- firms our feeling of racial superiority, just as reading of Washington's victories In the Revolu. tion and those of Scott and Taylor in the Mex. lean war confirmn our feelings of national superi- ority. Danlel Boone was an American; we are Amer feans; ergo, we, too, would have been able to have ontwitted those “wily redskinge” He was a erack shot with the long rifle of that period; he was “the most skillful hunter of big gue who ever lived upon the American continent”; he was “a peerless explorer, a supreme scout” Therefore, by the same process of reasoning, we are all of those things. In other words he was a champion in his field of endeavol. And how we Americans do love champions and love to be champions! The scientific historians may take away our popular belief that Daniel Boone was the first explorer of Kentucky and the outstanding plo neer leader in a romantic pioneering era. But #0 long as we can cherish our belief in him as the symbol of something which we consider es sentially American, his name will be a lving memory during the centuries to come as It has during the two centuries that have passed since he was born. & he Western Newspaper Union, FOR OLD TIMES’ SAK Teacher asked a seven-year-old | girl what a bridegroom was. | i “Please, teacher,” was the reply, | ~Portland Oregonian, Averting War “If women had the they would avert war,” sald the idealist, “Would they?’ innocently inquired Miss Cayenne, “Of course.” “Then why was the war not averted? All that have been necessary was for Helen to put | on an ugly make-up. power, Trolan would “ i Trouble My son might have been | the United States, Flatfoot- President of Yesman-— What vent it? Flatfoot-—He got wife wouldn't let him go int happened to pre and his 0 politics, | married Pleasure of Imagination “iN ha 3 for asl is your reason Migher prices?” “1 get a gwered F ing about certain enjoyment.™ an wer Corntossel, “in think » wealth I'd be had left me anyti An Expert Silas—My new that he kn than I do Hiram-—He mu One of them farmhand ows more abou NOT FOR HIM tot engaged or iooks as | or a breach-o No Friend of Lady Luck unks—80 you think yon ICKY A% a man can | paid for tr on my hou i¢ thirty years i out ever having a fi let the darn policy lapse would burn up two minutes af policy had expired, ire and decided the Plenty of Time A boy remarked at the dinner table | that his class at school was to have | “A clean-up contest!” exclaimed | his mother. “And you come to the | table with those hands?” i “1 know, mother, but the doesn’t start until next week."—Pa- | cific Methodist Advocate i contest | Reducing Two of the comrades were discuss ing their big fat buddr. “lI saw Ben the other day, and he is not as big a fool as he used to be” “What's the matter—lias he re formed 7 “No, he's dieting.” glon Monthly, Said one: "-~American Le Explained Little Mae—Mother, 1 know why little people langh up their sleeves, Mother—Why, dear? Little Mas—Because that's where their funnybone Is Toronto Globe. "Twas Ever Thus “You look worried. What's matter?’ “Ding it, my doctor just told me I've got to quit worrying or else.”— Macon Telegraph, the Usually the Reason “He has a path worn to his door: did he Invent a better mouse trap?” “No, he Is slow pay, and that path was worn by the bill collectors.” Cape Ensemble That Has Chic PATTERN 1827 wing Circle } West Seven. rk City. CALLING THE DOCTOR Miss Cay- not to nerves vole enne. “They always tell you worty. And Gothe your in order to avold anxiety.” FAIR WARNING Yolce Upstairs—Mary! “Yes, father.” “If you're thinking of keeping that young men there for breakfast, don’t do it. Ma says there isn’t an egg in the house” down ———— RAR Sunny Jim Minks—He always takes a cheers ful view of things Jinks— Yes, when our boat tipped over and be fell in the water, he laughed and sald it was O, K. by him,’ as he intended to take a bath when he got home anyway, Obstacle Race “Is your son still pursuing his studies at college? “Yes, but he doesn't seem able to catch up with them.” It Goes to Your Head “Yes, I know fish is brain food, bat I don't care so much for fish. Hain't there some other brain food?” “Well, there's noodle soup.”