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The Rambler Popular Version Os an Old Story By JACK JONAS How does a piece of writing with wide appeal lose its iden tity with an author? That question has plagued authors and anthologists for centuries, and has risen again to bother Carl Claudy, editor of “The Transmitter,” publi cation of the Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. The piece that is troubling him is titled “One Solitary Life,” and goes like this: “Here is a young man who was born in an obscure village, the child of a peasant woman. He grew up in another village. He worked in a carpenter shop until He was thirty, and then for three years He was an Itinerant preacher. He never wrote a book. He never held an office. He never owned a home. He never had a family. He never went to a college. “He never put His foot inside a big city. He never traveled 200 miles from the place where He was born. He never did one of the things that usually ac company greatness. He had no credentials but himself. "While He was still a young man, the tide of public opinion turned against Him. His friends ran away. "He was turned over to His enemies. He went through the mockery of a trial. He was nailed to a cross between two thieves. While he was dying, His executioners gambled for the only piece of property He had on earth, and that was His CQBt. “When He was dead, He was laid in a borrowed grave through the pity of a friend. “NINETEEN CENTURIES wide have come and gone, and today He is the central figure of the human race and the leader of the column of prog ress. I am far within the mark when I say that all the armies that ever marched, and all the navies that ever sailed, and all the parliaments that ever sat, and all the kings that ever reigned, put together, have not affected the life of a man upon this earth as has that one solitary life!” That message came to a tele phone company official on a Christmas card he received last year. It Impressed him, and he laid it aside. This year he dug It out again and turned it over to Mr. Claudy, who re printed it in the December issue of “The Transmitter,” 1 spread over the two center pages with a picture drawn by a Washington artist. Mr. Claudy says wiser men than he have tried to find the source of the bit of writing, so he didn’t even try. The ref erence to the nineteen cen turies seems to pinpoint it as the work of a 20th Century writer, who may still be alive to claim it as his own. THE COMPANY reprinted Mr. Claudy's two-page spread in fancier form, and sent it out as a Christmas card. Along with it went this note: “Editors, writers and minis ters have credited this anony mous tribute to many sources —Phillips Brooks, O. Henry, Mark Twain. Emerson Fosdick —to name a few. It has ap peared in many anthologies and has been the subject of many sermons. . . . "The editors consulted li braries and prominent minis ters to determine its origin to no avail. 'One Solitary Life’ is a piece of great distinction.” Mr. Claudy may not have searched, but he’s as curious as the ministers and other editors who did. and still would like to know the source of “One Solitary Life.” Street Scenes... Boy clutching a dime-store paint set and staring wist fully at a display of fancy brushes and paints in an art store on G street. . . . One bike rider towing an other, whose bike was dis abled by a broken pedal, on Georgetown road. . . . An auto of about 1938 vintage, headed south on Fourteenth street N.W., and bearing on its side the letter ing “Arlington or Bust.” . . . A man telling the woman with him, as they inspected a window display in a fancy Connecticut avenue dress shop: “I may not have shaved this morning, but I'm not Santa Claus." . . . Radio-TV —Comics Feature Page jtg Irwyv ' TmkUtw kJ* SANTA ON ERIE STREET—The home of Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Lyon, 3382 Erie street S.E., has taken on fc J J* 1 >! -j hJh » * ‘ llil' J ®ft v, asi jasb&g* raft W& iJrra»SrM Bt --jWf » v Jem sKI Ijbk H 9|« a! • . BIBLICAL MESSAGE—The letters on the house of Benjamin Kerby, 4357 Southern avenue S.E., spell Bold Cowboy Forswears Roping President Again The cowboy rope expert who lassoed President Eisenhower at the 1953 Inaugural Parade wants to be in the one next month, but he promised not to repeat his performance. To the consternation of the Secret Service, Monty Montana, at the last parade roped the President, who was reviewing the parade. Inaugural officials said they have the cowboy's request under advisement. Edward R. Carr, parade chair man, said: “He promised not to lasso the President if we let him ride again this year.” Mr. Montana, who is from Northridge. Calif., said if per mitted to parade, he will enter tain parents in hospitals here, during his stay. Drug Addict Sentenced In Assault and Larceny Eldridge Brown, 24-year-old ex-convict and narcotic addict who disarmed a special police man and then wounded a Christ mas shopper, today was sen tenced to 540 days in jail by Municipal Court Judge Andrew Howard on charges of assault and petty larceny. Lt. Nunzio Bonaccorsy, sth precinct detective, said the shooting occurred when Special Officer Stacy Prince. 51. of 752 Princeton place N.W., attempted to arrest Brown of the 700 block of Girard street N.W. for shop lifting. The special policeman said Brown wrestled with him in front of the Kopy Kat women's store, 713 H street N.E., took his gun and fired one shot which SPEED SPOTTING BY PLANE FACING TEST NEXT WEEK BEDFORD, Va. (A*).—Virginia's new air-to-ground dou ble play being employed by State police to catch speeders will come in for a court test next week. Two truckers who were convicted of speeding last month in Bedford County Court have appealed. The case is sched uled for January 3. Edgar M. Loftin. Jr.. 38. of Ellerson. and Henry Ashby Mason. 38, of Glen Alien, were arrested by State police after being spotted by the light plane the division uses in enforc ing traffic regulations The attorney for the men said the appeal would be based on the possibility of human error on the part of the police men in the airplane. After clocking vehicles through a measured half mile, the air patrol radios a State trooper on the ground, who tickets the suspected speeders. i Then there's another problem . the inauguration officials are i wrestling with. It's whether the . elephant, emblemati. of the Grand Old Party, would slow down the line of march. The President wants to keep the ■ parade within two hours. ; Dr. Theodore Reed, acting of the National Zoo logical Park, said the normal ’ marching speed of elephants is ' about four miles an hour. This compares with the usual march . ing rate of men of three miles i an hour, officials said, i Previously, Miss Burma, an elephant from the Mills Brothers i Circus, has participated in the parade. But Mr. Carr re • called she “showed considerable , temperament" and repeatedly dropped out of the line of march. I struck Percy C. Holmes, 78, of , 1110 Sixty-ninth place. High land Park, Md. The bullet grazed Mr. Holmes' forehead. He was treated at Casualty Hospital and released. Police said the street was crowded with Christmas shop ’ pers and passersby quickly called police when they saw the special officer struggling with the sus pect. Meanwhile, Prince's son, | Curtis. 16, went to his father's I ald - Brown was charged with two cases of assault and one of petty larceny. He said the suspect has serfed prison terms for shoplift ! ing. grand larceny and petty lar ceny. Police said Brown also is i a known narcotics addict. file Jfreraitg j&I WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1956 a new brilliance during the holidays with this gaily elaborate Yuletide display. out the Biblical message of St. John in varicolored lights, topped by the Star of Bethlehem. j I JW ICS* ; ELMER JOHN SWEENEY (Photo Taken in 1930) j Photo Holds Ex-Convict in ' Holdup Fizzle ' A former Alcatraz convict yes terday was charged with an at tempted holdup of the wife of i Washington gambler Roger W..i (Whitetop) Simkins. Police said they were told the attempt was reported by Mrs. ( Yvonne Simkins, 35, last Thurs- i ( day. They arrested Elmer John 'Bulldog) Sweeney, 50, at his j home in the 3300 block of C , street S.E., Sunday night, after!] his photograph had been identi-i fled by Mrs. Simkins as one «f , two men she said attempted to rob her. Sweeney not only denied the i chdrge. but offered an alibi. ] "I don't see how she could identify me when I wasn't even there," he said. Mrs. Simkins, whose husband ' is serving a 16-to-54-month sen tence for bribing policemen, said Sweeney was the man who came to the door of her home and gave her a box of chocolates he said was "from your husband." As a maid opened the door of : her $50,000 home in the 1700 block of Sheppherd street N.W., he forced his way in and de-| manded money, she said. When she ran from the house, the men fled, she said. Abandoned Infant Given Operation The baby abandoned on a doc tor's doorstep was reported in satisfactory condition at District General Hospital today after a hernia operation. The 2-monthtold male infant, warmly clad and well-dressed, was found lying in a dogfood box outside 925 Rhode Island avenue N.W. Sunday night. He was taken to me city hos pital where he was operated on yesterday for a hernia. If his .mother is not located b* will be turned over to the Welfare De partment. Mysterious Death of Pet Saddens Nuns' Christmas There's something missing this; Christmas Day for the 15 nuns at Our Lady of Lourdes Convent in Bethesda—a neighborhood dog, which used to pay them frequent visits. Jenny, a 7-year-old black cocker, was a familiar sight! around the convent off the 7500 block of Pearl street until she suddenly died from what was believed to be a case of dog poisoning. That was about 10 days ago, when a number of other Be thesda area pets also were re ported poisoned. The poisonings received considerable publicity, but so far there has been no final solution by Montgomery County police. Jenny was one of about 14 dogs and two cats which died mysteriously during a two-month period. It is believed the animals may have accidentally come across some poison put out at certain establishments in the Bethesda business district to kill rats. . ' Detective Lt. John P. Leahy, said the Investigation is still open. He noted, however, that there have been no new animal poisonings since Jenny’s death. A chemical analysis of Jenny’s body failed to disclose any signs of strychnine or other metallic poisons. For the Franciscan nuns at Our Lady of Lourdes Parish, lit is the first time in three years that Jenny has not been around to help them celebrate Christ mas. "We miss her.” one sister said yesterday between answering the door to receive Christmas pres-; ents for herself and the other; nuns from members of the parish and school children. "We used to put a bow around her neck, the biggest one jme could find.” Jenny actually was the pet of Mr. and Mrs. DeWitt L. Slay, Jr.,; whose apartment at 4518 Avon dale street is Just a few doors from the convent. She wasn’t ; quite the stay-at-home type, however, and was well known around the community. Early Federal Pay Boosts Sales in Washington Stores Many Washington merchants were spending a merry Christ mas today, fortified with the knowledge that early Federal Government pay checks aided materially In boosting sales yes terday. It was estimated that from 116 million to tit million was dis tributed by Government agen cles, which cave some 100.000 employes their psy early on Fri day. Normally, they would have been paid on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. as al' *" \ • 4 ', I * » tJ *. „' ' r -*~’'■*-*, 111 ’ I I SEASON’S GREETINGS—The decorations on the home of Herbert Sharper at 4407 Southern avenue S.E., conveys the season’s greetings to passersby. > Bill m iw |pPif m J f 17 r ’ £k .y. Jy. . i ’ iM - fat L 1 t , ’.r (F f t .* -.1 • . ; ?• '• ’ • A PRIZE WINNER—The home of Charles H. Deery, 4 East Hamilton avenue, Silver Spring, won first prize in a contest sponsored by the Sligo-Branview Com munity Association.—Star Staff Photos by Ranny Routt. ; At the convent, the sisters sometimes called her Blackie. So did a lot of other people.! Jenny—short for Jennifer—made many visits to the convent around meal time. “She always got a bone,” the sister said. “We used to let her come in. We heard about her death the next morning. Some one came and told us she was poisoned. Now the only thing missing "from Christmas is Jenny.” Meanwhile Mr. and Mrs. Slay and their young son Mike were due to get a replacement for Jenny today. An uncle was to give a new puppy to Mike as a Christmas present. i \ jApp*’' JffW HIS VISIT "DEPLORED”— William Worthy, special ; correspondent for the. Ba ltimore Afro-American, has been castigated by a State I Department spokesman for crossing the borders of Red China for a month’s f visit. The department was described as "deploring" ' Mr. Worthy’s action be ! cause “it is against the expressed policy of the J United States Govern ment.”—AP Photo. j The large shopping crowds de lighted the businessmen, and many reported bumper sales But no dollar value of Wash ington's Christmas shopping spree is officially available The only clue will be the Federal Reserve Board’s figures, which will be made public later. The unseasonably warm weather had held down sales earlier. But the buying public loosened Its purse strings ss the lYuletMe i;ghu grew brighter. Local News Suburban 'SANTA' TUMBLES OFF SILVER SPRING BUILDING LFDGF Five Silver Spring young sters missed out on their an nual visit from a neighbor hood Santa Claus last night when the toy-ladened car rier slipped from a ledge and fell one stofy to a concrete alleyway. J. Willard Plum, 41, is in undetermined •condition in Suburban Hospital with seri oue head injuries suffered in the fall from a ledge out side his apartment at 8207 Georgia avenue. Mr. Plum, a carpenter foreman, for several years has dressed as Santa and j passed out gifts to children of his friends, who gather j in his apartment. Communism Hit In Jewish Talks Russian force and brutality cannot erase man's desire for re ligion, Rabbi David Panitz of i Congregation Adas Israel told : 1,200 delegates to the sixth an nual meeting of the United Syn agogue Youth yesterday in the Willard Hotel. Rabbi Panitz said “man's basic impulse to morality and need of religion" can never be overcome by anti-religious domination. In another address, Arthur Pestcoe, 18. of Trenton, N. J., national president of the Jewish youth group, said that the up ris'n'’s of young peoole In Poland and Hungary against communism was "an inspiring demonstration for freedom.” An Eternal Light, a symbolic fixture in Jewish Temples, was presented to the Jewish chapel at Port Myer yesterday by a delegation of 50 teen-agers at tending the meeting Officers for next year will be elected at meetings today, and the con ference will end with a luncheon session tomorrow. About 600 teen-ager* from Washington, Maryland and Vir ginia are expected to attend the area convention of the B'nal B'rith Youth Organization which opens tomorrow The four-day meeting will in clude business meetings, •eml nars. contest* and social affairs Activities during the four-day meeting are scheduled at Hotel 2400. the Meridian Hill and Windsor Park hotel* and the Jewish Community Center Americans in Spain MADRID—In less than a de cade the flow of American i visitors to Spain has increased more than 5.500 per cent—from ! 3.500 in 1947 to more than 200- 000 in 1955. ★ ★ Alien Students learning U. S. Yule Customs A group of foreign students Is getting an exciting Insight into how America celebrates the Christmas season. Arriving in Washington yes terday from the University of Michigan, the contingent of 26 from 14 foreign countries first was driven to the home of Mr. and Mrs. William S. Kilborne, 3549 Springland lane N.W. Here they sampled a pancake and sausage breakfast before ! touring Mount Vernon. Supper was served them at the Inter national Student House. 1825 R street N.W., followed by a Christmas party with, of course, caroling and gift-exchange. The students will be dinner guests of various area families today. Tomorrow there will be tours of the White House. Capitol Hill and the National Gallery of Art. The group will lunch at the Supreme Court. The visit is sponsored by the newly organized Foreign Student Service Council of Greater Washington. 2124 Florida ave nue N.W. Helping with the hos pitality, are members of the Experiment in International Liv ing, Women's Group of the For eign Service, International Fed eration of Catholic Alumnae, National Council of Catholic Women, Northern Virginia Dean ery and United Church Women, Arlington Council. 3 Girls Linked To Robbery An Alexandria youth being held on a rape charge has ad mitted participating in a Fairfax County delicatessen robbery with several other Juveniles, including three girls, police said. Fairfax police said Enoch Roach. 19. of John Robert* Homes, told them about the Oc tober 30 break-ln at a Huntington delicatessen which netted about 1100 in cash and checks Roach is one of four youth* held in Fairfax County Jail on charges of beating and raping a 17-year old Alexandria girl November 29. Police said a 17-year-old girl from Huntington, a 14-ycar-old from Alexandria and a 17-year old from Virginia Hill* in Fairfax County were involved in the robbery The Hunting Urn girl ha* been released on 1250 bond pending a bearing December 28 in Juvenile Court No date ha* been net for hearing* on the other girl* who are In the custody of their parent*. A-19