Pool 3787 Poor from 20 Ibs. to 60 Ibs. in weight. The poodle is gifted with a, keen sense of smell, will take readily to the water, and is remarkably in- telligent and unsurpassed as a retriever. The head should be long, straight, and fine; Ih2 skull rather narrow and peaked ct back; eyes almond-shaped, very dark brown, full of fire and intelligence; back short, strong, and slightly curved; legs well set, straight from the shoulders; tail set on rather high, never curled or carried on the back; coat | profuse and of good hard texture—if corded, hanging in tight, even cords; if uncorded, i thick and strong, of even length, and free from knots or cords. Colors should be black, white, and red, but not mixed. Pool, a game somewhat similar to billiards but requiring less skill The game is played on a flat table similar to a billiard table, but with six pockets. There are 15 numbered balls and one white ball, the latter being the cue ball with which the player plays from within the string at any of the numbered balls at the beginning of the game, and afterwards as he finds it upon the table. There are more than a score of variations of the game, such as Chicago, Two-ball, Forty- one, High-low-jack-game, Color ball, Skittle, Kelly, and others. Poole, Ernest (1880- ), American au- thor, was born in Chicago, 111. He was grad- uated from Princeton University in 1902 and since then has lived in New York City. In 1915 he was magazine correspondent in France and Germany, and in 1917, in Russia. His published works include None So Blind, and A Man's Friend) both plays, and the novels The Harbor (1915); Danger (1923); The Avalanche (1924); The Hunter's Moon (1925); The Little Dark Man (1925); With Eastern Eyes (1926); Silent Storms (1927); Great Winds (1933); Giants Gone (1942). Poole, William Frederick (1821-94), American librarian, was born in Salem, Mass. From 1856 to 1869 he was librarian of the Boston Athenaeum; from 1869 to 1873 ne was librarian of the Cincinnati Public Library, and was later in charge of the new Chicago Public Library until 1887, when he was ap- pointed librarian of the Newberry Library in Chicago, which position he held until his death. He is best-known for his Index to Periodical Literature, which appeared in 1853. In 1882, with the assistance of many other librarians, a greatly enlarged edition was published, followed at intervals until 1900 by supplementary volumes edited by William I. Fletcher. Poona, town, and cantonment, India, cap- ital of Poona district, Deccan, Bombay; 120 m. e. of Bombay. It is the headquarters of the Bombay army, and during the rainy season the seat of the government of the presidency. It has two arts colleges and a college of science. Gold, silver, and brass ware, ivory-carving, paper-making and the modelling of small clay figures are its chief industries. Poona is the center of Brahman- ical influence in West India; p. 234,000. Poona Wood, the timber of Calophyllum inophyllum, an Indian tree belonging to the order Clusiacea*. It is highly valued for masts and spars, and also for building purposes. Poor, Charles Lane (1866- ), Ameri- can scientist, was graduated from the Col- lege of the City of New York in 1886, and from Johns Hopkins in 1892. He was tutor in mathematics in the College of the City of New York in 1886-88; instructor in mathe- matics in 1891-92; associate in astronomy in 1892-95, and associate professor of astron- omy in 1895-99, in Johns Hopkins. In 1903- 4 he was lecturer in astronomy, in 1904-10 professor of astronomy in Columbia Univer- sity, N. Y., and since 1910 professor of celes- tial mechanics. His published works include The Solar System (1908); Nautical Science (1910); Simplified Navigation (1918); Grav- itation versus Relativity (1922); Relativity and the Motion of Mercury (1925). Poor, Enoch (1736-80), American sol- dier, was born in Andover, Mass. When the Revolutionary War began, he was living in Exeter, N. HM and was given command of one of the regiments raised by the New Hamp- shire province. He participated in the siege of Boston and in the unsuccessful campaign against Canada. In February, 1777, he be- came a brigadier general, and played a large part in the defeat of Burgoyne's army at Still- water and Saratoga. He spent the winter of 1777-78 at Valley Forge, fought at Mon- mouth, and commanded a brigade in General Sullivan's expedition against the Indians. Poor, Henry Varnum (1812-1905), Am- erican journalist, was born in Andover, Me. He was graduated from Bowdoin College in 1835, was admitted to the Maine bar, and began to practice in his native town. In 1849 he became editor of The American Railroad Journal, the first periodical in the United States to be devoted to railroad news. He assisted his son, H. W. Poor, in the publication of Poor's Manual of Railroads, and was one of the promoters of the Union Pacific Railroad Company. He was a prom-