W! 4 n ...v IK BT u & 11 3 .3, R P- u ha, KtW fro IsT V? I X ri ft. m m. V 'i 1.1 t i? w SM mrm niarininr - - -' - - . . . . lt- -. ... . - - - "- - ...--.,. . . , .,,.. -,...- , ,, ,- . . ., ,. ..... .. - ... ... ,.-, ,-... . . . -. -.. ... .-..... . ........-.- . ..... ....... , , ..... , . ..... . ..., . - -.- w iismtc Aeoqec M- WHMVA .&,, 1 ' " ".. , iinci bfijiiuiu lfeLtfeuiwiri) f .? PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY v jv frnitn w. ir. ntmns. PiiiintT .. Charlti JIi Ludlntlon. Vice Preldnt! Jnhn C. , llfcrtln, Stcretary and Treaaureri Philip S.ColIIni, 1 rviin t. wmiama, lonn J, opurgeon, uireviui. EDITORIAL, BOARD! J?. Ctici IC. K. Ccstii. Chairman PATID K. SMILEY ) .Editor V,jV;OHN C. MARTIN.... Cleneral Dualneti Manaiar tr-' Published dally at Poetic Limbs nullHni, TUNTIO CUT .PrffAl'fntan Bulldlnr XOIE OIT... 20S Metropolitan Tower 403 Ford Bulldlni ,100 lrmlnrtim Ilulldim T. LOBIS. nicioo.. .ISO'S" rrifvna Bulldlne- NEWS BUREAUS: YCTAait,WATAf nnttlR. N. E. Cor. Pennsylvania Ave and 14th St. New Tome Bciiao... . . The Sun Bulldlni: XniNpoH BnmEiu London Timet SUBSCRIPTION TERMS The Etbnivo Pcblio Lkdoer la served to aub ccrtbera In Philadelphia and aurroundlnr towna I at tha rate of twelve (12) centa per week, pajable to tha carrier. . ,, . . , . , . By mall to point! outside of Philadelphia, In the United Statei, Canada, or United Btatee po. aeailona, potae tree, nfty (60) cents per month. 1 Blx (IB) dollar! per year, payable In advance. ( To all rorelgn countrlea one ($1) dollar per wnth. . .. .. . . ' ' Koticb Bubicrtberi wlihlnc addren chanted '.must (Ire old aa well aa new addreaa, BBLt. 000 WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIS 100 K7 Address oil communication! to Eicnino Putlla Zedoer, Indirendtnce Square, Philadelphia. Member of the Aisociated Pren I THE ASSOCIATED PRESS is cxclu tively entitled to the uie for republication of all ncics diipatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local news published therein. 1 All rights of republication of special dt patches herein are also reserved. rhltadrlpMi, Silo'dir, Mirth 21, 191 MR. BECK AND OTHERS IT IS being pretty clearly demonstrated I tr tVio nrnviM in Philadelphia that men and women who labor are over whelmingly in sympathy with the league nf nnMnna nlnn s In one manufacturing establishment in Kensington 1485 of the workers voted for the league of nations and 661 voted against it in the poll being conducted by this newspaper. People wno work for a living are not confused by a devotion to abstract the ories, nor are they swayed by a special interest in affairs far removed from the common life of the country Meanwhile James M. Beck and the other livelier opponents of the league-of-nations principle continue to quote George Washington. One of these days some one will make Mr. Beck uncomfortable by interrupting one of his speeches to remind him that the American army didn't fight with the methods applied during the Revolution ary War and that Washington, when the time came for great decisions, didn't hesitate and wonder what William Penn would have done under the circumstances. 1MAKE THE CAMPAIGN JOYOUS rpHE local campaign committee of the -Victory Loan has adopted an admir able slogan in "Smile and pay the bill." Its spirit should be heeded both by those who solicit contributions and those who make them. Neither parties are exempt from payment. The campaigners owe to the public a display of good humor and friendly exhortation from which diver gence was occasionally made In previous drives. When the perils of civilization were at the Beak and American lives wpi-p "making the sacrifice on the fields of" -Champagne and Picardy -it was some times difficult for the loan speakers to preserve all the temperamental graces. Patriotic earnestness had a tendency to become minatory. Inevitably the need for unloosening purse strings was em phasized by depressing pictures of the world's woes. The loan meetings were not entirely pleasant affairs, for the times in which we lived were tragic and bitter. But the cheer of victory should per vade the rostrum of the campaigners now, and the public, too, should be good humored while it pays, for it will not be asked to invest in a scheme for which success is merely hopefully forecast, but in an enterprise that has tangibly tri "umphed. Surely the motive for discharg ing a debt was never so stimulating as now. Even before we finish paying the piper he is playing his fclithe airs. The coming campaign should be rousing, ring ing and invigorating. This time we are underwriting not death, but life. THE LEAGUE'S PRESIDENT TT IS probable that several eminent statesmen will be mentioned in turn for the presidency of the league of na tions before that great office is filled for the first time. The suggestion of Mr. Asquith as a first president of the world league that is sure to be may represent nothing but an effort further to distinguish a favor ite son. And it may be a bit of subtle .propaganda intended to cool the enthu siasm of those Americans who likp tn ft travel J- .fancy an American as the moving spirit njfrr,in xne new oraer. pMr. Asquith is not likely to be "the A- nrst president of the eaeue of Hnn p? The former British Premier is a superb POlltlCian. but WaR Tint- nn,,.(l J , enough to control the enemies fn !,! fV . OTYlTl Wo ?a rinit V.i- .. !i. i-i' ""- - " uw uui, uui, ijimu grea bl cnougu, xiui, we mere mention of his IS? 'name suggests the raritv nf -min. .... IhT ennno'Ti tn nrpaMp nf tiia ttm..:t. - IZlSY """-" " "- -wutliB Oi a rworld, still divided. BH' wt,ULun in ainiiiii iAMl5 iffflWITH the authorization' by Councils, '. .1'' given yesterday, and with the ex. vy pectcd sanction of the Fairmount Park I I. l..f'nmmtisinTiprs PhiilnrlalnViin ..oann 1. tA, 1' , - .. " . ' navA a Northpast: Roiilvnr? nWJ tl.t PfeSJupDer reaches of Broad street, pays re K4apect3 to the memory of Theodore Roose- FWvelU The new name is well chosen and M j&Z-ii 1.; -i : -a a. . f" '.aaaxgetii.ivt) ui uu cxveiiaiun 01 tasie in ; nomenclature hitherto hut scantily Idered Here. hum's arboreal thoroughfares was a ,, '9mM "W ' ;, mm uniuK livaoiuiy 1,0 "DHMriy growtn 01 tne city m separate MWKtfipallties, the scheme was imper- ftttrtly' executed. Much of our street :$&& has been haphazard, and even the r aaaaMlMip n-f tiaw avenues in recent vmw ed but lftlelexerclse of the W ffrlfffvy naajr' accurately describe tne- purpose f liebroad-new thorough fare leading to Fairmount Park, but the title is flatly conventional and devoid of commemorative appeal. What Is now the Roosevelt Boulevard was not even offi cially labeled "Northeast." On the city plan it was simply "The Boulevard" about as feeble an essay in nomenclature as could be conceived. Tradition and associations naturally impart vplue to the names of old and well-known streets, originally without special distinction. It would be confus ing to change the designations now. The new municipal highways, however, should be colorfully and carefully christened. There is much virtue in a fitting name. The "Moonlfght Sonata" and the "Pa thetique Symphony" have undoubtedly both profited In popularity because they were familiarly known by such labels rather than merely ns "opus so-and-so." Roosevelt Boulevard has a flavor of pride and patriotism. It is a good beginning in a needed reform. EDUCATIONAL FADDISTS AND STANDPATTERS BARRED Governor Sproul Is Expected to Appoint a Broad-Minded, Ail-Around Man as Sii-iessor to Doctor Schaeffer THE cause of education in this state will be advanced or set back by action teken in Harrisburg this winter. The General Assembly has been asked to increase the appropriation for teach ers' salaries in order that a living wage may be paid. Some of its leaders are savintr that the schools cost too much already and they are asking the advo cates of better pay for the teachers where the money will come from. They ignore the fact that the most profitable investment of public money is in the public schools. They do not seem to care that the rate of pay for the teachers in this state is far below that in those states whose public schools are admittedly the best. And they are not impressed when they are told that unless we raise the pay we are likely to lose many of the good teachers we now have, for they cannot live on their salaries. It is impossible to get a two-thousand-dollar teacher for a thousand dollars, nor can you get a twelve-hundred-dollar teacher for eight hundred dollars. The children arc entitled to the best instruction that it is possible to buy for them. The wage question is critical. If it is not decided right the schools are likely to suffer. The selection of the right kind of a man to succeed the late Doctor Schaeffer as Superintendent of Public Instruction is as important as tle light settling of the wage question. Doctor Schaeffer was an efficient offi cial. He did much to improve the schools. His successor should be a man who will build on the foundations that he laid and increase the efficiency of the whole sys tem. The Governor has an opportunity to win the gratitude of every believer in popular education by selecting the right sort of a man for the post. There are two sorts of men usually considered in connection with a state superintendence' of public instruction. First are the good routine men, who are successful as administrators, but are con servative with regard to educational progress and are content to let things drift rather than incur the amount of hard labor and hostile criticism to carry out a successful policy. The second type is the faddist. The programs of educational conventions are largely taken up with the mouthings of the faddists, each of whom has some panacea for all the ills of the educational world. The very fact that these men offer panaceas should convince thought ful persons that they are of limited in telligence and have supeificial minds. Once in a while such a man is put in a position of authority over the schools of a state. He disorganizes the work of education until sensible persons can unite in sufficient force to secure his retire ment. The new Superintendent of Public In struction should be neither a faddist nor an educational standpatter, but a broad minded man in sympathy with the whole circle of educational methods and quali fied to decide how far each method should be carried in order that the young people of the state may be prepared for the duties of citizenship. For that is really the primary purpose of popular educa tion at public expense. If our school system does not turn out boys and girls able to understand the functions of a citizen In a democracy it breaks down completely. There aie four phases of the pioblem, the solution of which is up to the state Department of Education. The first is the education of the chil dren living in the cities and the larger towns. The second is the education of the children in the rural districts. The third is the Americanization of tha foreign born, those of foreign descent The fourth is the industrial training of those who must earn their daily bread. v There is little need for the Hssiotonpp of the state superintendent in the larger cities, but any man big enough to be state superintendent should and would co-operate through suggestions and ad vice with the city superintendents toward the improvement of their educational systems. The development of the rural schools has attracted much attention in Penn sylvania as well as in many other states. In some states the activities of the su perintendent are confined to the rural schools. It would be as great a mistake to name as superintendent here a man who thought of nothing but the rural schools as to appoint any other kind of a -faddist. This state has taken the lead in pro viding' education for the . foreign-born, for we have a large population of this kind. But this work has not yet resulted in the sort of education for which there is great need. The policy should be continued and expanded until all of the foreign-born children and children of foreign-born, parents are thoroughly equipped with the rudiments of an" Eng lish" education and arft Irnbued with appre' elation as well as knowledge of American ideals. The Industrial and vocational aspects of education are also receiving much at tention here; but In order to- save waste of money and the precious time of the young the state needs intelligent leader ship and guidance, tho sort of guidance that will not permit the sacrifice of tho ultimate interests of the boys and girls to the immediate advantage of be ing able to earn fair wages at a job for which the vocational schools have prepared them. The kind of a man whom all interested in the progress of education are hoping the Governor will appoint aB Superin tendent of Public Instruction is one big enough and broad enough to aid the whole state in all these four phnses of the problem and with sufficient construc tive ability to plan an educational ad ministration sufficiently equipped with ideals, with men and with money to influence every part of the common wealth so that the coming generation may be better equipped for living a rich, full and useful life than the preceding generation. Even though the General Assembly should refuse to provide the money for the increase in teachers' pay, it is within the power of the Governor to appoint as superintendent a man with imagination and inspiration enoughto convince the teachers that they are doing patriotic service and hold them to their jobs with a new spirit until such time as financial justice can be done to, them. TOLL THE BELLS FOR BAILEY rpHERE is no political party in the world suited to Uncle Joe Bailey, of Texas, who has fared forth into a spi ritual no man's land after publicly re nouncing the Democratic brethren who were accustomed to send him to the United States Senate. Everybody will admit that the Demo cratic party is a pretty good party to get out of. It shines only by the re flected glory of one man. Its ertors of judgment and administration in various parts of the country have been such that even Mr. Wilson's extraordinary appeal was inadequate to save it at the last elections. But Uncle Joe has not quit the Democracy because of its sins of omission. He has gone into exile as a man Vout a party chiefly because the Demot ats have been favoring suffrage and prohibition. In what place can Mr. Bailey find com fort and sympathy? Governments and peoples everywhere are now facing an accumulation of the errors piled up by wrong-thinking generations and by po litical parties that were stiff-necked and narrow-minded enough to seem ideal to Uncle Joe. The average statesman is trying hard to catch up with the times. But this distinguished Texas politi cian has other notions. Because he dis trusts new things he would have progress and progressive thinking cease. Occa sionally it seems that there are many like him among the Democrats. The Republican party has among its leaders some men equally backward-minded. But the Republican party manifests a healthy independence and an ability to transcend its leaders when they are in error. This is a trait unknown to the party that formerly sheltered Mr. Bailey, of Texas. INCREASING DIVORCE "riyORCE records in the United States, "- when studied in comparison with those of other countries, have always been startling. The most recent general estimates made by the federal Director of the Census indicate that for every nine marriages in the United States there is one divorce. No other nation presents such an astonishing record. In France, which is usually supposed to be easy-going in relation to the marriage obligation, there is only one divorce for every fifty marriages. There is a much smaller percentage of divorces in Eng land. The case appears a little less hopeless from our own point of view when it is remembered that a great many separations take place in Europe without the formality of a legal divorce. But it still appears that families break up of tener in this country than anywhere else in the world. The general elasticity of the divorce laws in the United States and the fash ionable craving for "independence" doubt less are to blame. Divorce in this coun try has been the cause of a great deal of worry in the past. And it seems de stined to cost moralists and judges and lawmakers some more sleep in the fu ture. ' "Andlamo" (let's go) Is such a familiar operatic cry that it may have inspired Italians at the Peace A. Misplaced Aria the muBk-IoWng Conference to forget where they were. Nevertheless the Qual d'Oraay is not La Scala, and Slgnor Orlando would do well to comprehend that the great show he is engaged in U not mummery, but real life. The advent of spring Will They yesterday and the Neer lA-arn? approach of the planting season re mind us that they are Bowing for great harvests at tho Paris Conference. And that makes it all the more regrettable to find some statesmen still deluded with the belief that a decent crop may be wrung from wild oats. If the new wireless Miraculous, and portable tele- Yet Disquieting phone becomes pop. ularized not only is the service llktily to be "busy," not to say Impertinent, but busybodles will be favored far beyond their most inquisitive dreams. Perhaps after all Inventor Macfarlane should be thanked with reservations. These are lively In Days to times. But the fu. Come ture will hold even wilder thrills. Fancy, for example, the Job of the man whose duty it will be to pursue and arrest Joy riders in airplanes. 1 Somebody is always A PoUer Peace bluffing at the Pcaco Conference, , And And somebody Is always beting called, I 1 " " - - - -i -1 - I - - 1 - "- - -- 1 I " '-.? UUMM.kMSIUalU CONGRESSMAN MOORE'S LETTER Charter Revisers Seeking Informa tion in Washington Women Can't Get Passports to Europe Washington, March 22. POWELL EVANS, of the committee on publicity of the Philadelphia, charter committee, Is searching Washington for methods to present the case of the com mittee to the people of Philadelphia. He is "some booster,"' aa the boosters would say. So is Brother Winston, chairman of the general committee. Ho Is fairly well known here through his publications. Richard L. Austin, the treasurer, has to do with the capital through tho Federal Re serve Board, and Thomas Raeburn White, chairman of tho subcommittee on charter, and Ernest L. Tustln, director of tho speak ers' bureau, occasionally "visit Washington to represent Philadelphia interests. Arthur H. Lea, chairman of tho committee on finance, has gone Into tho record several times In protest against certain govern mental ownership propositions, but In favor of the daylight-saving law, in which he had an abiding faith. TT IS not very complimentary to our dls- tlngulshed Postmaster General, but many of the discharged soldiers In the UnlttM States hesitate nbout forwarding their discharge papers to Washington to obtain the $60 bonus authorized by the revenue law. Some of the boys, after their experience abioad, fear to trust to tho mails tho original certificate which estab lishes their army record and from which some of them would not part for a hun dred times $60. One suggestion that might tend to relieve tho situation is the sotting up of distributing offices In the various states. Congress would probably have to deal with that question. rpHE wives of soldiers in ICuiopo are, - naturally anxious about their husbands, and the demands for passports have been enormous. Both the War and State De railments, however, have set their faces against women going to Europe at the present time. Ordinary applications from persons who merely desire to tour Europe or to see tho sights are turned down at once. In some Instances It has seemed de sirable that women be permitted to visit their husbands who were wounded or to visit the graves of those who are dead, but the War Department has been qbllged to decline permission even In such cases. It now develops that the government is not only following its own Inclinations in this matter, but that it has received expres sions from both the French and British Goernments of their desire that the pres ent policy bo pursued. QUR -s us old friend, Charles II. Sayre, tells that the Young Republicans of Phil adelphia have moved into new quarters and that the club will bo put on a more active basis than heretofore. One of the schemes now under consideration is to have public men discuss public questions tit the club. In view of the misleading in formation which propagandists are largely responsible for, the Sayre plan may prove a good thing. Hampton L. Carson, who was one of the earlier presidents of the club and who believes in the Constitution, would be a good speaker to start with. Or Governor Stuart, also a former president, could give a line on the operations of the Federal Reserve system, or Abraham M. Beltler could say something about govern ment ownership that would be worth hear ing. The old "Young" Republicans are not dependent upon Washington for talent. 0 C of the few things the Wilson ad ministration did during the war was to create a War Risk Insurance Bureau. There was a good deal of opposition to it for a while on the part of those who be lieved in the old pension system as it is still conducted under the auspices of the Department of the Interior. Both the De partment of Commerce and the Department of the Interior would like to have had charge of the new system, but Mr. McAdoo had more influence than the other Secre taries and held it for the Treasury Depart ment. It can readily be understood that the Democrats coming from states which maintain homes for Confederate veterans wero not any too anxious to continue the Pension Bureau, which provided only for eterans of the Union army. Moreover, the new system, which grew out of a bureau to provide marine insurance and ultimately to protect sailors and others on munition-carrying Bhlps against losses, presented compensation and life insurance features that were much more attractive than pensions. As it has operated up to date the War Risk Bureau has provoked unusual criticism from all parts of the country, but the administration is about to move all the subdivisions of the bureau into one building on the old Hotel Arling ton site, and is claiming that fewer com plaints will now be in order. WHILE times have changed since tlie Continantal Congress struggled to keep an army in trie field under General. Wash ington and are vastly different as to the treatment of soldiers now and during the Civil War,' there are unmistakable signs that the soldier spirit for after-the-war camaraderie is as prevalent now no it was succeeding any of our previous wars. Tho boys talk of organizing and turning their attention to politics. It Is sometimes charged that it is because the rank and file desire to get together in civil life that there is so much delay in the matter of discharges. The high-up officers under the present army system, as it seems to have started In Mexico when we had a small army, and as It was carried on in Europe, where we hod approximately 2.000,000 men, are not so popular as were the officers of the Civil War or those of preceding ,wars, who fought side by side with the men under their commands. The feeling is that when the boys come back they will begin to talk freely about the system which makes the soldier who enlisted for the period of the war subjeot, as some contend, to "the will of the officer" now that the war Is over. As one sees it ,from this viewpoint, there will bo plenty for old-line politicians to think, about when the, boys politicians to mini aoout wnen tne, boys I now "oyer there" are Jet loose 2zaBmjm3&ajt.atiljak. lllA SY '-... V-. -.'.-. '.h,. r Wf " .. . . . -; t . '"r. -. - ". . w" : I. c THE CHAFFING DISH Greetings, Edgarl TIDGAR GUEST, Detroit's most popular -'-' poet, is to be In town on Monday, so this seems to us an appropriate ime to comply with a request Miss Bessie Graham haa made several times, viz., tl-at we reprint our perversion of Ed's best-known poem. This may seem a discourteous gesture toward our honored Guest; but he will be consoled by the thought that only the very best poets are ever parodied. And by the tfay, it is only fair to say that when we wrote the parody, last December, we didn't know that Ed was the author of the origi nal poem. We were Inspired to the feat by the fact that some woman took the well known verses, altered a word or two, and sold them to Life as her own, Ed's poem begins thus: Somebody said that it couldn't be done. Dut he, with a chuckle, replied, That maybe It couldn't, but he would bo one Who wouldn't say so till he tried. So lie buckled right In with a trace of a grin On his face. If he worried ho hid it; He started to sing as he tackled the thing That couldn't bo done and he did it. And hero Is our own version: The Truth at Last QJOMEBODY said that it couldn't be done, But he with a chuckle replied That maybe it couldn't, but he would be one Who wouldn't say so till he tried" He tackled the job and endeavored his. best; Saving "Fame is for those who pursue it"; ThQ upshot, of course, is much better sup pressed: ' ' He failed the poor fish didn't do it! QOMEBODY scoffed, 'Oh, you'll nerer O do that, Or, at leaBt no one ever has done, It'; But he only laughed while his enemies chaffed, And the first thing they knew, he'd begun it!" He worked like a slavt, with unlimited grit, When discouragement came, he'd pooh pooh it; But, though It gives Orison Harden a fit. The fact is the Boob didn't do itl trpHOUSANDS will tell .you it cannot be done; Thousands of friends, too, will fall you; Thousands will argue, enjoying the fun, The dangers that wait to assail you" Maybe they're right, and this doctrine of pep It ounkum, you'd better eschew it; "When they say ifs impossible, ponder your step And do not endeavor tti do itl l Are college students afflicted with bol Bhevlam, too? We note that the under graduates of the University of South Caroi Una haye petitioned the trustees of that Institution to renjove the'ir president be cause they say "he Is thoroughly incom petent to' preside over chapel exercises. A stiff and stilted jnanner and the lack of poise make his efforts to maintain order, to say nothing of Impressing one with the dignity of the exercises, futile." If,the president of South Carolina Uni versity is even half as polseless as the sen tence just quoted, the situation down there must be grievously lacking in aplomb. Then we hear a dreadful rumor that the boys at a nearby Main Lino college protest against having to go to Friends' meeting, j Cn Thursday. Our own Idea is that collefce against having to go to Friends' meetlngv WssiiS iaM"Ms?Mira I , V I ... r ,.......-. ?JH5!5.fi5$rJflE31 J I. f c boyB are getting entirely too lippish. Let them do what they'ro told, dnd the dean take the hindermost! t The equinox always has a calmlilg and sedentary effect on numan nerves. ''Even the bitterest opponents of tho league of natjons are crawfishing, and It begins to look as though beer might como through the barrage safely. The best way to find out whether the Kaiser really Intends to stay in Ameron gen would be to learn whether he has had any stationery engraved with the Bentlnck address on it. Robert Shackleton, of Connecticut, lias written a book about Philadelphia in which he says "the average Is higher in the good looks of the women than in any other city that I know, whether In Europe or Amer ica." Rather clumsily expressed, Robert, but you have the right Idea. 1 The Birdman , I breast the wind! I brave the storm! I rise above the cloud! I shame the eagle in his flight! The uni verse is mine! I gaze upon the puny earth with haughty eyes and proud; I am a very Superman the rest of men are klne! The mountain-top! The snowy peak! They lie beneath my plane! The sun In molten glory bathes my craft In golden shade! The placid earth lies bleeping, and I scorn it in disdain; For I am of the chosen, as I pirouette and fade! The ecstacy of flying! How my pulses run and leap! I (nose-dlve In a bank of clouds, to re f appear and climb! The pure air of the altitudes! I count my pleasure cheap! Mere mortals never know the thrill of racing after Time! My engine! How It sweetly throbs! I know its purr by hear! Its power-thrust propels us on my fly ing craft and I! The birds, outstripped, look on askance; they lose before they start! Ah, blessed was the day when I first bade myself to fly! ROBERT L. BELLEM. 1 We are a good deal alarmed to hear that Herbert Fisher, now the BrltUh Minister of Education, may'be coming this way as the new ambassador from Great Britain. We studied under "Hal" Fisher for a while, and If he comes over here with plenipo tentiary powers we fear he might be able to extradite us for never having answered some of the questions he asked us in sev eral examinations. We are still waiting to hear some one protest against the Camden bridge on .the ground that it would Impair Philadelphia's' sovereignty. Shad rhubarb pie puttln." the baby to bed by daylight yes, 'tis spring. SOCRATES. Even Senator Borah should enjoy the "concert of Europe',' as Lieutenant Jint directs it. It should be distinctly understood that when Doctor Laird urges that the Camden bridge be suspended, he Is speaklt cluslvely in the architectural sense. bridge be suspended, he Is speaking; ex i,ii.".;iiin , p vM 'jTsh f, ,. ,.' fj l V $ THE WHITE PEACE TVAWN on the night's horizon day of --' the unmalled hand! Thrill of the unspoiled ages in the youth of the uptorn land! A call from the sacred silence, from smitten soul and soil; "Bow ye in consecration et ye your hands to toll." Seven times seventy ages have smitten the earth to pain: . Yea, and till seven times seventy tks earth, has buried her slain) And, scarred with death-filled trenches, aid choked with blood of men, Forgiving, has smiled her harvests, ant yielded her fruit again. Tramp df tlje living heroes, where tho warring heroes trod! A million low, white crosses, singing the ancient Word: "Go beat your swords into plowshares! Go forge your tools and live Till Love and Justice conquer till God and the dead forgive!" Seven times seventy ages the tale hat been the same: Olory of victor and vanquished,, honot and grief and shame. But never sudh grief, so costly, such scenes as souls abhor, And never such glory as ours, naming th Final Wart' Charles Pcole Cleaves, in the New York Times. The campaign for twe-and-three-quar-ter per cent beer will be spoiled entirely should Its supporters become intoxicated with their success. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. What President c the United States had fourteen children? 2. What is the meaning of this phrase, "The ship had pratique"? 3. What is a dolomite? 4. What is tho personal name for a fox? 6. What Is the second largest city in Brazil? 6. What is a proa? 7. When was Spain a republic? 8. How many drams make an ounce la avoirdupois? 9. Whftfis the Spanish pronunciation of the word Mexico? 10. Who was In command of the United States fleet in the Mediterranean dur ing the war? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. The government's railway in Alaska, now under construction, Is to be 471 miles long. 2. The baptismal name of the Pope is Glacomo della Chleea. 3. The President, according to the constitu tion, "shall have power to make treaties, provided two-thirds of the Senators concur." 4. Cornwall is the part of England known as the Duchy, 6, Thomas Ken wrote the doxology begin ning "Praise God From -All Blessings Flow I" 6, Two Vrehlatorio animals allied to the contemporary elephant were the mam j moth and tha mastodon. 7, W. J. Bryan was- Secretary of State from March .4, 1913, to June, 1916, 8, Shakespeare, in "Henry IV," described j Julius Caesar as the "hook-nosed fel low of Rome." , 9. The word Newfoundland Is pronounced by the Inhabitants of that Island as though Bpelled "Nu-fund-land," with tlip accent on the first syllable, but also with considerable stress on the last 19. The acanthus leaf la represented in the. I decoration of tho capitals of Cor In v-1 1 thian columns. iv it ,hi 1 m:hk ... jrr !r"ryt3 M "-& m a wisfjq ii tX. rm ' m ai m i I 351 TSBj 1 dPmwmM&SW t, :h JM?. . " .. 1 ' JUUK. I I j. ,. :n v. ..as s; 1 fe. ' W.K,t &'&! El- JiiirM- . f ' . ' 3 $- -L ' ;