Bellefonte, Pa., July 16, 1920. m——— OUR HOME COMING CELEBRA- TION. By S. L. Harlacher. Our boys are coming home again Their pockets full of pay, We'll ask them all to come to town And call it welcome day. ‘We'll have some things to draw a crowd, Also a fine parade, ‘With airmen flying overhead, And welcome speeches made. The whiskey me must close their doors The first day of July, We'll ask the boys to take a drink Before the town goes dry. The whiskey men are generous, For what small coin you pay They'll make you walk like rolling ships And take your wits away. AGAINST TIME AND TIDE. That there smell wagon o’ yourn’il get you out of a job yet, young man. Herz you was, due to go on beach pa- trol at eight o’clock, and you come puffin’ along on that fool thing two hours late. You needn’t think, jest because this station’s short handed, you can take advantage o’ me. Once was too many twice is rubbin’ it in, three times—” Captain Jimmy Robbins, keeper of Cossett Reef Coast Guard Station, significantly left the sentence unfin- ished. There was no mistaking his meaning. Young Fuller led his mo- torcycle, a vehicle of ancient model, which he had acquired but a short time ago, around to the storehouse at the rear of the station house. He was certain of the futility of trying to explain his tardiness. What sympathy could the “old man” as they all called Captain Robbins, be expect- ed to have for an amateur motor cy- clist and his engine trouble? “Well what you lookin’ so black about?” the deep booming voice of Number Seven broke in on Ted’ dark thoughts. “Did the old man get aboard you for showin’ up late?” “Yes,” admitted Ted, “an’ I guess T’1l hand in my notice for the first o’ the month. I'm sick o’ this anyway.” “Oh, pshaw,” laughed Edwards. “You’ll feel all right in an hour or two. You're too young to let a little call like ‘that worry you. And, be- sides, you'll have to admit you had it comin’ to you.” “How could I help having two punctures and a sooty spark plug on the way out? You don’t think I'd get into all that trouble a-purpose, do you? And then to have the old man talk about rubbin’ it in and takin’ ad- vantage of him!” As Ted trudged along the north beach patrol the next morning in a blinding snowstorm from the north- west, that had raged all night, dissat- isfaction with his work and a sense of the lonesomeness of it all still ob- sessed him. He was more determined than ever to quit the first of the month. This north beach patrol in a storm like this one was no work for a human being, anyway, he told him- | self, bitterly. It was dreadfully cold. His hands were numb, despite his heavy woolen mittens and in the cold fury of the gale his face felt stiff and frozen. In the snow, waist deep in places where it had drifted, it was almost impossi- ble to keep to the path at the top of the bluffs, which the heavily shod feet of the surfmen had worn for two miles along the shore. Once he bare- ly escaped falling down onto the ice- covered boulders below. Finally reaching the last key house, he punch- ed in and started back, breasting the gale. The cold blackness all about him turned gradually to gray and then to white. It would be daylight in a few minutes; but the prospect failed to cheer him. The monotonous roar of the surf as it pounded the hard, white sand of the beach, got on his nerves. “I’ve had all I want,” he muttered. But he admitted that things might have seemed different if it had not been for Captain Jimmy’s attitude to- ward his motorcycling. He had found fault from the day nearly two months ago, when Ted had brought it to the station. “But I certainly couldn’t ’a’ stuck it out here nearly all winter if it hadn’t been for the old smell wagan,” Ted re- flected. His occasional tfips to the village, fifteen miles up the beach, to “civilization,” as the surfman called it, were all that made the monoton- ous life of the lonesome Cossett Reef Station endurable for young Ted Ful- ler. He was only a youngster; but, despite his youth, he had held out bet- ter than three older recruits who had come and gone during the winter. But even for the most hardened surfman it was a dreary, lonesome job during the winter; and even old Bill Edwards had been known to chafe under the “demnition grind,” as he was fond of calling it. Ted found himself counting the days to the first of the month. Yes, he would get through. They could call him quitter at the station and again back home, if they wanted to; but he had had enough. The sudden flare of a rocket was visible through the snow to windward, interrupting his thoughts. The short blast of a horn reached his ears faint- ly, above the sound of the gale and the seas. It came from the direction of the reef, two miles off shore. Had they heard it at the station, he won- dered? Had they been able to see the flare from the lookout in the tower? It was doubtful. And a craft wouldn’t stay afloat fifteen minutes on the reef in this storm! : Turning quickly about, Ted hurried back through the gale to the key house and telephoned to the station. It was Captain Jimmy, himself, who answered the ’phone. A half hour later Ted reached the station. The doors of the beach house were open wide and the house was empty. But only a short distance off shore Ted could make out the surf boat returning. It had been a quick trip. Another rescue to the credit of Cossett Reef. It meant nothing less; Captain Jimmy never failed to get what he went after. Ted could not | prevent the thrill of pride that went | over him at the thought. The surf boat hove in plainer view presently. Big Bill Edwards, Num- ber Seven, was at the helm. With the skill of long practice he ran the boat in onto the ways. But they were a glum lot of surfmen who shoved the boat in under cover. In the bottom of the craft were two half-frozen fisher- men, who had been taken off the doomed craft; and Captain Jimmy, himself, lying straight and still be- neath a pile of oilers and the sweat- ers of the surfmen. ; “It’s a case for a doctor and right away,” explained Edwards in answer to Ted’s question. “He fell in the heave of a big sea and got jammed between the surf boat and the side o’ the smack. One o’ those fishermen’s n a bad way, too.” “No use,” announced Edwards a moment later, emerging from the cap- tain’s office. “Wire's down. We'll | have to run up to the village in the i surf boat—that is, if we can get out past the reef.” Ted had disappeared. Presently the pop and roar of his motorcycle reached the ears of the surfmen in the locker room, where they were apply- ing first aid treatment to the injured men. Edwards ran to the door. “You can’t make it on that thing in all this snow,” he shouted. “There’s the beach,” declared Ted. “No snow there and the tide’s out.” “Go to it then, youngster and re- member, time counts!” Opening wide the throttle, Ted ad- vanced the spark and the “smell wag- on” leaped ahead over the hard pack- ed sand. The wash from the giant comber covered the tires as he drove ahead. At the rocks of Cormorant Point he was obliged to slow down, zig-zagging his way among the boul- ders. On the left rose the steep, clay face of the bluffs and on his right thunder- ed the surf. The tide had begun to rise; there was need for haste if he was to come back the way he was going. Occasional patches of big, round pebbles retarded his progress. He clutched the handle-bars with all the strength of his numb hands and managed to keep his seat. The cut- ting spray from the combers froze on the glass of his goggles and in the driving snow he could see but a few feet ahead. Time and again he bare- ly avoided collision with the occasion- al weed-grown boulders that protrud- ed their black backs through the sand. But at every opportunity he advanced the spark to the last notch. He real- ized grimly that time was, indeed, precious. He was racing against time and tide as well. There was not a sec- ond to spare. Eighteen minutes later he was pushing his motorcycle through the drifts to the front door of Dr. Robin- son’s on Ocean Avenue. No urging was necessary to enlist the young doctor’s services when it was Captain Jimmy Robbins who needed him. “It’s kind of cold,” apologized Ted. “But we’ll be there in less than twen- ty minutes by the beach. Get up be- hind, sir,” he directed. With a roar that drowned out even the noise of the surf, the “smell wagon” was un- der way again, the doctor clinging tightly"to Ted’s waist. There was no chance for further talk. The tide had risen perceptibly dur- ing the last twenty minutes, Ted no- ticed in alarm, and the wash of the advancing combers forced him back toward the softer sand. Progress was necessarily slower. : The tires cut at times deeply into the sand; the wheel wobbled furious- ly and Ted barely prevented a spill. The strain on his wrists and his half- frozen hands was terrible. They were drenched again and again in the icy spray from the combers and all the time they were forced nearer and nearer to the soft sand at the foot of the bluffs. Half way to the hubs of the wheels the wash of the breakers raced up the beach. If it reached his carbureter Following the back-wash down to the harder sand, Ted opened the throttle wide and shot ahead at ter- rific speed through the wild storm un- til another advancing breaker crowd- ed him back again toward the cliff. It required all his strength and all his skill at the handle-bars to prevent a spill that would mean a delay, if nothing worse. And a delay, he real- ized, tightening his grip, might prove fatal to the injured keeper back there at the station. It was snowing harder than ever. Ted could see scarcely ten yards ahead. A great boulder loomed up suddenly through the thickly falling flakes. He veered to seaward of it and struck the wash of another com- ber with a rush that enveloped them in a drenching cloud of icy spray. The strength of it threatened to pull the wheels out from under them. But they passed the boulder in safe- ty and Ted opened up once more to full speed. For the moment there was a bare stretch of hard, white sand ahead of them. Ted made the most of it, before the next breaker roared in to cover it with three feet and more of water. A moment later another rush of water forced them again to retreat up the beach into the looser sand, and Ted was obliged to slow down again. His clock told him that he had al- ready been gone over half an hour and there were still five mile to go. But the going was continually more diffi- cult, as the advancing combers on the rising tide crowded him closer still to the cliff. During the next minute and a half his speedometer registered another mile. The moments when the back-wsah of the combers allowed him a spell on the firmer sand were becoming continually rarer. And on ahead, a mile this side of the station, were the rocks of Cormor- ant point. He knew they were not far off now. The roar of the surf among the outer boulders was brought plain- ly to him by the gale. Presently the first of them was visible through the SNOW. He was obliged to pick a new way through the big patch of boulders; the rising tide had completely cover- ed his tracks of thirty minutes ago. Suddenly without warning, the sting- ing spray of a giant sea enveloped them. Blinded, Ted lost control of the machine. Next instant they had crashed into a boulder and were pitch- ed headlong over its rounded back. = Ted was covered next instant in a freezing deluge of foaming, roaring water and hurled with stunning force against another rock. He reached out with stiff fingers and clung on with all his remaining strength against the receding surge. He looked dazed about him. s Dr. Robinson was clinging to anoth- er boulder near by and the motor half buried in the rush of sand that ‘the breaker had carried in. In the water near it Ted noticed the doctor’s in- strument case. With a leap he seiz- ed it before it had been washed out of sight. The old “smell wagon” had fared poorly. One of the tires was ripped clean off. The front fork was twisted and the carbureter was choked with sand. “Look out!” warned Ted, as anoth- er sea raced, roaring in among the boulders. “We've got a mile to do yet,” he exclaimed a moment later. Dr. Robinson tried to walk but fell down with a groan. But they were not yet out of danger. Another sea, higher than any that had preceded it, flooded over the doctor, as he lay there, for the moment, helpless. Rush- ing in, Ted seized him and held him against the pull of the back-wash. “It’s my ankle,” exclaimed the doc- tor, disgustedly. “I'm afraid I won’t be able to walk on it for a while, he | added shiveringly. “I'll carry you then,” decided Ted. “You see, it’s my job to get you to the station.” “And the motorcycle?” queried Dr. Robinson. “It’s a goner now, I guess, Ted grimly. A half hour later Ted : taggered up the snow-covered planks to the station house, the doctor astride his back. Despite his injured ankle and his half- frozen condition, Dr. Robinson, insist- ed, first of all, in looking over his pa- tients. “You got me here just in time,” he said, turning to Ted. “And it's lucky you saved my instrument case out of the wreck.” Captain Jimmy's injuries consisted of three cracked ribs and a concus- sion of the brain; but he would pull through, Dr. Robinson declared. “So you’ve decided not to quit us, eh?” asked Captain Jimmy a few weeks later, when he had quite recov- ered from his injuries. “I was thinking I'd stay on a while longer, if it’s agreeable,” replied Ted awkwardly. “Well, you jest take a look out in the store-house,” continued Captain Jimmy. “There’s something out there that the boys brought from the vil- lage in the surfboat this morning while you were down the beach. The department got a full report, it seems,” he explained with eyes twink- ling, “of that beach ride o’ yourn the other day.” In the store-house Ted found, crat- ed with his name on it, a brand new motorcycle, a gift from the station, “to replace the old smell wagon.”— The Boys’ Magazine. renee eee. A Teacher Placement Service. ” replied Obtaining suitable teachers for the public schools of the Commanwealth is one of the most important functions of the public school officer, and the de- gree of wisdom exercised in making a choice of teachers frequently deter- mines the success of a school system. The assistance of some central agency is often necessary in order to secure any breadth of choice, and the var- ious private teachers’ agencies have, in consequence, performed a real serv- ice to the schools of the State. It has been felt, however, that this function should not be left entirely to private enterprise, but should be one of the services rendered by the State Department of Public Instruction. Notably in the States of Massachu- setts and Minnesota teachers’ employ- ment and registration bureaus have been established and have succeeded in materially assisting school author- ities in finding suitable persons as teachers in their schools. It is now the intention of this de- partment to inaugurate a similar service as one of the functions of the Teacher Bureau. No fee of any kind will be charged for this service. In order to function effectively, it will be necessary that the largest pos- sible number of actual and prospect- ive teachers register with the Teach- er Bureau upen the registration card which has been provided for this pur- pose, and which may be secured upon application; and for school districts in need of teachers to file with the Bureau a request for candidates, a form for which is also provided and may be secured upon request. Superintendents and school officers should give the widest possible pub- licity to this information, bringing it to the attention of boards of school directors, principals of schools, teach- ers, and all other persons interested in teaching in order that the shortage of teachers which we face at the pres- ent time may be met and the public schools of the Commonwealth com- petently served. Didn’t Interest Him. A gentleman here from Georgia says the labor situation in the South this year reminds him of this story: “A negro applied to a cotton plan- tation manager for work. : “All right,” said the manager. “Come around in the morning and I'll put you to work and pay what you are worth.” “No sur, I can’t do dat,” replied the negro. “Ise gittin’ mo’ dan dat now.” —Commerce and Finance. Practical Girl. “They say that stolen kisses are the sweetest,” he said, as they sat on the piazza, looking at the moon. “Indeed ?” she said. “Yes. What do you think about it?” “Oh, I have no opinion at all, but it seems to me if I were a young man I wouldnt be long in doubt whether they were or not.”—Boston Trans- cript. ee ——Men suffer most from lack of application in forming a clear idea of the subject on which they are em- ployed. , DANGER OF DEIFYING THE COM- | MONPLACE IN PROPOSED STATE HIGH SCHOOL COURSES. By Richard M. Gummere, Ph. D., Head- . master William Penn Charter School. | Reform means progress; but novel- ty sometimes means decline. The i best type of reform distinguishes be- {tween the elements which make for ‘improvement and the novelties which ‘lead the community astray. The ideal : servants of the government, whether | federal or state, must, therefore, not | permit the introduction of hobbies and | personal preferences. They must not talk exaggeratedly in order to talk ef- i fectively. The whole group of the | people needs a consistent program, | free from cross currents and sweeping lon in solid consistency. The little par- | adoxes which appear so delightful in { the drawing room must be forgotten | in the council chamber. | One who looks beneath the surface | of the present school situation in the | State of Pennsylvania will see in the {new plans of the educational depart- | ment at Harrisburg much to admire. | He will have nothing but respect for { the movement to pay teachers higher | salaries, and thus keep up the supply | of well-balanced men and women to | whom it is safe to intrust the mutual ‘training of his sons and daughters. | Remembering that “teachers’ insti- | tutes” are usually the height of inef- | fective talk and a waste of money, he | will applaud the new suggestion that "the financial supply devoted to these ! meetings should be turned into sum- | mer school training and definite per- 1iodic attendance at such classes as | those which are conducted at the Uni- | versity of Pennsylvania on weekday { afternoons and Saturday mornings. | He will hope that, instead of being | content with raising the salaries of i teachers, the state authorities will | carry out their plans for stricter and | more adequate certifications. And as | to building facilities—by all means, he would urge, keep your buildings open for rotation of educational ¢om- munity activities throughout the day and evening and see that children are housed without congestion and taught without confusion or neglect. But the subjects to be taught in the school course itself! Here the thought- ful observer sees reason for alarm. The educators at the head of the state system are being led astray by a hob- by and taken out of their proper course by a cross-current. They miss the point of an education which is to benefit the whole community. They are in danger of adopting a novelty which will mean decline rather than progress. They are overemphasizing the utility element in education—to the peril of those mental habits which a good education fosters and develops. Their plan is all very well for obser- vation and memory, but it leaves out imagination, reason and taste, not to speak of the moral eiement, which de- pends on wide knowledge of what the world in its long course has shown to be vital. Another kind of mistake is now be- ing made at Harrisburg (as it has al- so been made in other States). Dr. William D. Lewis, deputy superin- tendent of education, in sitting down to plan a new course for the High 1 school pupils of the Commonwealth has applied to the whole state system ideas which worked very well in a commercial High school. Doctor Lew- is can reflect with just satisfaction on his improvements in the domestic arts and business courses at the William Penn High school for Girls. ; He saw clearly that household eco- nomics make better citizens and that practical life is aided by a knowledge of practical things. But when he al- lows these essentially practical cours- es to be the fundamental groundwork of all teaching, he goes astray educa- tionally, just as Matthey Arnold fifty years ago went astray in biblical and political criticism. Doctor Lewis, in his proposal to make a housekeeper out of every girl and a business man out of every boy, gave us some wel- come thoughts. But they are not all of education. I say that these things are not the groundwork of all teach- ing; they are simply the shell—a use- ta Jat of the building, but still a shell. He proposes, now that he is in charge of the state High school cours- es, to, first, eliminate all foreign lan- guages (ancient or modern) as requir- ed subjects; second, reduce four years of mathematics—that splendid round of arithmetic, algebra, geometry which trains the thinking and reason- ing faculty as nothing else can—to a single year of hashed-up algebra and geometry combined, which will result in knowing neither of these subjects adequately; third, instead of a solid year of physics or chemistry—which college professors tell us is still inad- equate to a thorough knowledge of their principles—he would install two years of “general science;” fourth, four years of commercialized English with no Latin, French, German or Spanish to form a basis of compara- tive study; fifth, the establishment of a four-year course in combined histo- ry and civiecs—which for nearly ail the pupils would mean a bare parrot study of officials, districts, products, dates and interests, based upon text- books made wholesale and totally un- connected with the vital currents of ancient medieval or English history. In place of all these solid subjects training (which in past years he rightly emphasized as desirable for at least a part of the children’s cur- riculum) would dominate the whole four years of high school. A thin ve- neer of handmade English, second- hand history and smattering of sci- ence would shut out all visions of mental progress: which every pupil has a right to expect. The fourth year of the course would be no more ad- vanced than the first, and would de- scend to the level of the eighth grade of the grammar school. What becomes, then, of the boy who expects to work his way through col- lege after a public school course? It makes no difference whether 90 per cent. of Pennsylvania pupils do not enter college or whether a scant 10 per cent. have college ambitions. The point is that all should be given equal privi 2ges to enter college if they so desire. Such a system would be un- democratic and un-American because it denies the opportunity of leader- ship. And very few pupils will be thoughtful enough to elect those solid subjects of their own volition. People have lost sight of the fact that we are educating leaders and not followers. We are in danger of dei- fying the commonplace. The lack of mathematics and an exact science would handicap the future engineer; the lack of languages would handicap the business man who hopes to have foreign trade connections and the pro- fessional man who needs culture; the lowered English standard would pre- vent the understanding of masterpiec- es and cut off many a future writer : from adequate familiarity with the best written English. The business world is now com- | plaining of the lack of men who can take and hold responsible positions; what will become of the supply? How helpless “will our representatives abroad be in competition and contrast with a Frenchman who in the most elementary forms of his education | could surpass our college Freshmen! | The result will be that Dr. Lewis’s 10 | per cent. of college aspirants, who | take foreign languages and mathe- | matics as electives (the 90 per cent. | will avoid them like poison) and the ! private school graduates, will form an | educated caste, set over against those | who can work with their hands but ! not with their minds. | We should in this case be Prussian- | izing the people—creating two groups, one of which will be handi- | capped by lack of thought and knowl- ! edge and power of expression and the other of which will have a monopoly | of higher education. It will be hard- er and harder for Lincolns to make their way and easier and easier for bureaucrats to get control of affairs. Capital and labor, instead of under- standing each other, will be at oppo- site poles. Is this true democracy? I hope sincerely that every high- school graduate will have had at least three years of one foreign language. To do this is to set the mind free for advancement; to close the door by do- ing away with these essentials is to lock the door on progress, to cut down our supply of leaders and to make a man’s four years of mathematics and a solid year of either physics or chem- istry, or a woman’s leisure time a mere matter of “movies” or rocking- chair vacuity. { i i i | U. S. SPEAKS BETTER ENGLISH THAN ENGLAND, BRITON SAYS. London.—Dornford Yates, writing in the Sunday Observer, pays a trib- ute to the teaching of the English language in American public schools. “As a rule,” he writes, “the vocabula- ries of the Englishman who has been to a public school and of his sister are almost as poor as those of their American cousins are rich. If Eng- lish were taught in our schools as it is taught in the United States we should not lie under this reproach. It is a pity that so gooaiy a neritage as the English speech should not be without honor save in its own coun- try.” Conceding that the English of the “indigenous American laborer is not so good as that of his fellows in this country,” Mr. Yates sets out to prove his charges against the “king’s Eng- lish” as spoken in Britain, as follows: “The regular use by Americans of the word “fall” for autumn, and the uncertainty of some Englishmen re- garding its ownership, are illuminat- ing. No American having authority would think of claiming the word, but if he were to affirm that in certain American circles there is spoken to- day a fairer and purer English than that generally used in the correspond- ing or lighter circles of this country he could not be truthfully contradict- e For proof of this statement we need not dig very deep. “Among English words ‘get’ is a | thoroughbred. Pure Anglo-Saxon, it is a ‘strong’ verb and one of the old- est words in our language. It is left to America to preserve in everyday speech its perfect participle, ‘gotten,’ in its original form. “No educated American will mis- pronounce ‘towards,’ another pure An- glo-Saxon word, over which five out of six educated Englishmen and wom- en will come to grief. “We speak of a ‘job’ (Latin and Old French) and are hard put to it to find a synonym for a word which has parted with what little dignity it had. Americans speak of a ‘chore’ which is pure Anglo-Saxon (cierr-char-chore) end means ‘a turn of work.’ “An American will never refer to the vessel from which we are accus- tomed to drink water as a ‘tumbler,’ because he has been taught correctly that a ‘tumbler’ is a drinking-glass so called, because from its base ending in a point it could not be set down till completely empty of liquor. “In the United States a ‘jug’ be- comes a ‘pitcher.’ There can be no manner of doubt which is the prettier word, and while the etymology of the former is doubtful—in all probability it is a slang term—the pedigree of ‘pitcher’ is clear enough. The latter is of Greek, Low Latin and Old French descent. “ ‘Elevator’ is ugly, formal and ag- gressively up-to-date, but the con- trivance it names is modern, and new wine should be put into new bottles. Our slovenly use of the word ‘lift’ in this connection is a disgrace. “Much of the English spoken in the United States is highly artificial. For the American who speaks of ‘a clari- fied intellect,” when he means a ‘clear head,’ I have little regard. But it is not to his school that I am referring.” Marriage Licenses. Lloyd E. Guiser, Mingoville, and Mary E. Peters, Mill Hall. William Wyant and Clair Linga- | felt, Hollidaysburg. Lewis L. Crain, Sandy Ridge, and Sarah M. Cowfer, Port Matilda. John H. Kuhn and Emma K. Rowe, Boalsburg. Willis W. Stephens and Emily A. Neidigh, State College. Elmer L. Lingle and Velma E.| Weaver, Spring Mills. Ralph W. Mansfield, Morristown, | time. | the age of fourteen as a school teach- { The Woman Citizen was ! Mrs. Catt in 1917. and Helen I. Morton, State College. TT It’s all here and it’s all true. Read the “Watchman” and see. WOMAN’S NEW SPHERE. At sixty-one Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, of the United States, is the world’s undisputed leader in the cause of equal rights for women. After de- voting forty years to the cause of woman suffrage, Mrs. Catt was ready ' to retire and see a younger woman at the head of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance, but the Congress in ' Geneva insisted that she continue to ‘lead the organization. The assem- blage of delegates from all over the world re-elected her unanimously, and Mrs. Catt accepted the office, despite i her declaration that she felt compel- | led to retire. Mrs. Catt founded the Internation- al Woman Suffrage Alliance in 1902, and has been its president since that Mrs. Catt began her career at er in Iowa. Later she earned her way : through Iowa State College. Her first | conspicuous entry - into the political arena was in 1892, when she address- ed a United States Senate committee. In 1900 she was elected president of the National American Woman Suf- frage Association, and was described by Susan B. Anthony, who previously held that office, as “the ideal leader.” During Mrs. Catt’s career all the full suffrage States except Wyoming, the pioneer, were won. From 1904 to 1915 Dr. Anna Howard Shaw was president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. In 11915 Mrs. Catt was re-elected to that | office and continues to hold it today. founded by After the government accepted the services of the oragnization during the war and formed a woman's com- mittee in connection with the Council of National Defense, Mrs. Catt fore- saw full suffrage for the women of the United States as an immediate achievement. She outlined a plan for a national and international League of Women Voters, the former becom- ing an actuality in St. Louis in the spring of 1919. Since the organization of the Inter- national Woman Suffrage Alliance, which Mrs. Catt continues to head, much has been accomplished for the cause of suffrage in Tasmania, Queensland, Finland, Norway, Swe- den, Denmark, Belgium, Russia, Po- land, Great Britain, Victoria, Iceland, Germany, Holland, Canada, Hungary and other countries. Confidence that enfranchised wom- en will bring fresh and spiritual ideas to aid in the solution of pressing world problems was expressed by Mrs. Josephus Daniels speaking at the congress of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance in Geneva. In making that statement she an- nounced she was voicing the senti- ment of President Wilson. In outlin- Ing a woman suffrage creed Mrs. Dan- iels said in part: “What women did in the war has hastened the conferring of the ballot. In our country the day of agitation for enfranchisement has passed. The hour has come when we must prove by deeds that we accept our new du- ties with a sense of our obligation to measure up to our new and high mis- sion. “As we go into the political trench- es let us endeavor to be as intrepid, alm as straight and keep our nerve as steady as our brothers in their grim battles. As voters we must find a way i to carry help and comfort to those who live in want or peril.” Commissioned rank for women ar- my nurses is about to become a reali- ty. During the war the army nurses learned that rank was indispensable if they were to work with the great- est efficiency. They learned that there Is nothing which the enlisted man recognizes and respects more readily than shoulder insignia. Since the | signing of the armistice the nurses have fought for rank and they have won. The nature of their rank is such that the buck private will not be of- { fended to think that he has to obey the commands of a lady lieutenant. In the army reorganization legislation “assimilated rank” ranging from that of lieutenant to major is conferred on members of the army nurse corps. Assimilated rank entails limited au- thority. It does not really call for a commission nor carry the pay, allow- ances or emoluments of one. The in- cidents of rank conferred upon the nurses are: First. The dignity of the name of the rank. Second. The right to wear the in- signia thereof. Third. The eligibility to exercise { authority within the limits set forth in the law, which are as follows: “As regards medical and sanitary matters and all work in the line of their du- ties they shall have and be regarded as having authority in and about mil- itary hospitals next after the medical officers of the army.” Several Senators discussing that phase of the army reorganization plan confessed ignorance of what assimi- lated rank really meant, but were sat- isfied when Senator Wadsworth de- clared that, whatever it meant, it was what the nurses asked for. More Apples and Peaches. Complete estimates on the fruit crop of the State, covering every county and farm, as well as com- mercial and private orchards, are made by the Department of Agricul- ture for Pennsylvania, as follows: Apples, 10,543,000 bushels, compared with 7,614,000 bushels a year ago; peaches, 1,444,000 bushels compared with 914,000; pears 489,000 bushels. ——The Navy Department has an- ' nounced the successful completion of a gun that will shoot nearly 110 miles. Work on this gun was begun when word was first received that a German gun was shelling Paris 75 miles away. Details of the gun have not been made public and no projectile has been fired for the distance claimed, but the carrying power of the weapon has been estimated from careful tests. ——To most men experience is like the stern lights of a ship, which illu- minate only the track it has passed. ——The “Watchman” office is the place to get the best job work.