,4k ,V ' V s lA 4 V Hr h. ms U- frn a. 10 Kki- pbEuentrig public Wefcger 7? TOE EVENINGTELEGRAPH PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CTHI'S II K cimns, PiumtHt Charl-a II l.udln-ton, Mco rraaldont John r Martin. Parralarj and Trfaaurfr. PhlllpH t'olllna John H Wllliama, John J Spurnron l)lrtora F.DiToimti hoaud Circs M K Chtis. Chairman ElAVID K. SMU.ET . Editor 30HU C MARTIN . Qanaral Uualneaa Mnnaicer Fubllahad dallr at Flallc I -now Hiilltlinr. lndirndnce Squara, Philadelphia Atiastio Cut . . . rrni Union lliilldlnr Mtw oit 20tl Metropolitan lowar I)itoit . -tin Konl llulldlnij Pr 1-i)i.iii , 1008 I-utlarton Hull lln fcnicico 110J Ttilune llulldln.- NEWS lltmEVUS TVbinotov ntinr N E. Cor Ppnnayhanli A and Hth St JsRlT VORK Hlreal 1 lia NMn ltulldlnc Loxros lltnri I ondon Timet si nscnirnov TFnvts Tha ETtsisn Ptanc I,Eii(ira la afrvad to auh aerlbara In Philadelphia ant attrrnundlnc towi a at tha rata ot twelva (IS) ranta ptr waak paiabla to th carrier liv mall to polnta nutalla of Philadelphia In tha United Statei Canada or I nlted statea pn aeaalona poataKe free flfty 110) tent per month Bl ($) dollara per vaar paahle in adianee To all foreltn countrlea one 111 dollar per month Notice Subaerlhera wlahlnr nddreaa rhanced muat the old aa neil aa new addreaa BrLI. 300D WAIMT MVTONr. MUX 3000 EST Address alt mini ninlrrthnm to M'ifwfl rtibllc ledger Independent? Square, Philadelphia Member of lite Associated Press THE M-SCIl t 1H Pins'! fa crrti shflu entitled to the tnc In) republication of nil iieti ? rlltpnti hr irrdlted to l ot rmf ofhernMr riedltrd In this pnpri and alio the local nctt t puhliihcd therein All rlvhti of lepubllrntlnn of special dli patches heietn arc alto rrtciifrf I lulenelplile Thur.U. M.rrh ." 11I1 CAW V Ms IO 'IIIIMI.F. K LTORTS of the supoib inception nvn bv New 01 lv to tin1 'Ivventv seventh Division inspiie mingled -nut' montf. tn .the hearts of Phil.iilflplii.tn"' Nntuiallv wo ate glad that tile notch hoi ingr motiopohs was enabled to chain the .up of ecstasv hui thnt fact onh whpt.s out desno to have .i simil.ir op pottunit.v This tit . too. would like to ho emotionally paliiolu. t .iptiit misly festal. The lion Division, ' Pinnsvlvania'-. Own," is hooked foi .in catlv lionie romtne. 'I ho ix hie trnnspotis that are to cany the Ileum rwonU-ciKhth tould ccitainlj ho atcommodati d in the mrr that lias lately hioii lap.uious onoucli for the Idaho, Riant of dicadnoiiRhts The pott facilities, otheiallv domed when the iclurn of the H.ncifoid was first broacliod, lime been found ontiioly convenient. The du-cmbatkation .in.ingc ments would, of course hac to be con ducted on a much atrr stale loi the lion Division, but theio is no sound ir.i son for holtoMiip; that the ( mei nency could not be met The Philadelphia Count. il of National Defense emphatically thinks so antl is cairyinp; to Washington the petition of hundiods of the soldiris' mothois, ure; inp; that the tlncct home louto be adopted. If the government hoais these plca, us it should, the jubilation will richly warrant the hanp;e Philadelphia desenot the thiobs and thrills, the paceantry anil the splemlor that the boys who foup;ht foi hot will inspire. Pennsvhania's uuadeis oui;ht "to cet then fust welcome on Amenum Boil from their native state Kveiv one of us wants to feel as pioud as New York has felt. WHO INS IN I.KUalli: DKI.V I IS rpHE Lodt;e-Lowell debato fuinishes a - happy pietotlcnt foi the oibal ion test scheduled to take plnce in this cit between Scnatoi Hitchcock and Geoitre Wharton Poppoi on April 10 When the two eminent Massachusetts speakers had finished talkinp; it was evident that no gap of fundamental convictions sepa rated them. Each ap;ieed that a league of nations was a fine thinjr Senator Lodfte contended that the oiiKinul diaft of the nait was bad and should be nmendod; Picsident Lowell that it was pood and should bo amended It is not easy to single out the winner of a debate m which so much basic hat -mony amonp; the contestants is lcvcaled Lincoln and Douglas leally took s pa late sides and clung to them. The leaguo of nations "opponents' have a way of conducting a thundcious geneial ixing warfaie which looks heaitoningly like armistice negotiations when the sub ject is specifically considered. Before Scnatoi Hitchcock putuies himself demolishing Mr Peppoi's aigu ments, tho Nebraskan might profitably considei how often objections to a league covenant fade away into meie iintation over details, some of tho most impoitant of vhich are now under consideration in Paris. "Who won?" askod tho Dodo of Alice !n Wondeiland at the conclusion of tho mystifying caucus lace. "Kveiybody has won," was tho verdict, "and evci.v body must have prizes." As matters arc now going and the time for calling Congress diavvs nearer, millions who loathe war and are poig nantly weary of it aie piobably willing to he equally as generous as tho Dodo In apportioning laurels in public discus sions on the topic of the hour. THE FIDDLERS AT PARIS THERE will be rabid nnti-Wilsonitcs who will say, Boonei or, later, that the smnsh in Hungary, with such confu sion as may follow it, is due to delay caused by the Pans debate nbout a Jeaguo of nations. Jlr. Gilbert, who tepresents this news paper ot the conference; Doctor Dillon, jv whose dispatches to the Public Ledger uiR i .1 i- i.s.i i l-.i jTCVeai u tnoruugu uiamu kmuwicuku ui the fotce.s opposed at the peace table, 'and every other journalist able to sco ci, ,. ., i , ,. , . Wi-i peneaill me suriuco mivu inaue it; piain " hot the diafts of thfe league covenant 1 IiV weio agreed upon long ago and that the I -?& procrastination and delay that irritatea r Viivisrva Itt fliin in Inn lnnniiifi nf riAla Utvj'v . y- w .. '""""'V' viw- I A vets vo rvcuutiiu uuiuuk iiiujimuivca tnu collar ambitions of their various mi- mv K-AWWi'ic in this Instance is no only M, fof the newer confusion in , Mixhvif to ffapb set an waBl- to follow our lend to some degrco nt least The wai cost us close to fifty billion dollais in money. Hut our irpiccnt atives nt Paris hnvo vet to put in a claim for such vast indemnities as many other ippiesentntives have been tletct mlnctl to impose in a program that .meant fifty jeais of virtual slaveiy foi tho defeated nations. Their- may bo jus tice in such claims. Ceitainlv the Ger mans should bo punished, and punished thoroughly. But if a few of the diplo matists at Pans had been willing to admit what every lational man knows, thnt thoy themselves were foimeily par ticipants in a soit of competition that solved to make war inevitable, they would no' have piovuiod tho eacl soit of incentive and oxiuso that the mala dioit leadots m tho (!ei manic states ro quirctl for the pcipotration of new dis oider on the lontinent ("II VKM If l!K IKHs (,Iil'" MMIJE'IIIW llll'A DII-riiR Itul Hcforin in not be Pm riiri)iish Prnprrly I nlc- Who Itclipvr In II Work I opi llicr 7 1' Ih to ho hoped that Sinaloi Evte, of (hostel was light when he said, uttoi tho ihaitei healing in Hairisbtug, that the piopononts of the different loinis of lpvitiou were closei together than the loaliod 11ns newspapei has been Hilling con tinual attention to tho points of agioo nient in th'1 belief that if the two bodies of opinion lould g( t tiigethei and unain tnoiislv suppoi t lertuin ilinnges on the nrio-sii foi whiih theio is no dispute it would bp r.iMoi foi them to adiust ihc it difTeienies on the othei m ittei Pi ogress srenis to lie making in the light direction Scnatoi V.no iinnounied in llai i islmig that ho would favoi anv budget s.tem that has tho indoi moment of (ontiollii Walton, and lie suggested that tho' menthoi , ot the citiens' iom mittee, togothci with Mr daffnoy, of totincils, ( it Solicitoi ( onnellv and Mi Walton inci t with niombi r of the Senate Committee on Municipal (T.tns and dtalt a moa-uin whiih would bung about lefoinis, m the fiscal sjstrm of tho lit v If this meeting can bo arianged and thoip si puis to bo no icason loi objeiting to it. the budget question should bo vn tuallv settled Intolligent and n.ison able in n will had a loiniiioit ground on which to stand Evcivbodv piofessos to dcsiio to take the police and hi omen out of politus Whole w cement is unanimous on the end sought it should not be difTiiult to find a wav to loach it '1 ho wav pio v idod in the bill of tho citizens' commit tee seems to be much moio effective than that ot foi th in the altoi native bill sup posed to have the indorsement of Sena tor Vnie. It is assumed, undoi the wai tnnt of bis woid, that the Senator is sin ioi o in his announced wish that it be made impossible foi an politician to use tho uniformed servants of the citv to futthoi his personal ends. It is known that the mombois of the citiens' com mittee .no not socking political advan tage foi anv one in thoir plan foi 'di voicing tho In omen antl tho policemen fiom all connection with political or ganizations and in preventing them fiom intotfeiing in anv wav with the political fioedom of the voters If lopicscntatives ot tho two plans i an git togethei and enmpale then bills section bv section, and agieo on that which will most effectively bring about what each desnos, tho polae and fite men pioblem will be solved as casih as the budget problem undei the confotenco method suggested. Xo tosponsiblo men have appealed to oppose a teform in Councils. The plan foi a body of twentj-ono salaned Coun cilmon elected fiom constituencies of uuifoim population is in accordance with the best thooiy and piactice at the pics- cnt time. Scnatoi Varo does not like It. He is said to maintain that the pioposed Coun cil is too small and that the anange mont of districts will not give a fair lopicsentation to the votcit. Ho wants a Inigcr Council, whoso members will bo in such eloo touch with tho people that when a citien wants a new lamppost set up in bis neighborhood ho can find a Councilman neai at hand familiar with tho locality to whom ho can piesent his icquest. As wc understand the purpose of tin men who have drafted tho proposed charter, it is to give the new Council much more important duties than order ing now lampposts and to abolish the system of government by favoi con ferred upon the people by their elected servants. A Council of fifteen was fust proposed, but concession was made to the desne for a lai Ter body, and as the diaft now stands tlw number is twenty-one instead of 145, as in the present Councils It may be that Senatoi Varo would like the system of ward leprosentation picscrved, with at least one man fiom each waid. As tho population of the smallest waul is estimated this jear at 7000 and the total population of the city at 1,800,000, this would lcquiic n Coun cil of 250 members if theio is to be equitable lepicsentation of the people of all sections. So large a local legislature Is unthinkable. We think tho Senator himself would agree to this. But he and the others stand on the common ground of advocating some kind of Council re form. A definite, sensible, modern plan has been proposed. It is up to those who object to it to suggest something equally as good or gracefully to accept the plan now before the Legislature in Harris burg. 'fhc two gioups of charter revisers di vido radically on the matter of street cleaning and garbage collecting by con- EVEX1XG PUBLIC LEDGER fhjcnce tho men who supcrviso the exe cution of tho contiacts nro appointed, and tiint consequently ho cannot nppic ciatc the need for any chnnge in the piesent system. Ibis is the Senator's misfortune. Tho scandal in private business an's ing out of similni conditions in England became so great a few ycnis ago that a law was passed making it n cume for the pinchnsing ngent of any corpoia tion or fiim to place himself undei finan cial or other obligations to the men from whom he bought supplies for his em ploveis. The sjstcm can be defended in neither puhlie nor private business. If the political loaders of this city are contutctois, it is impel ativo that as much as possible of tho public work be done bv the citv. itself instead of thiough the political leadcis. It is beside the question to iiigue that contiacts aie always avvaided to the low est biddoi. There have been ndministia tlons heio under which the successful biildeis would have been mined if they had been foi cod to live up to tho speci fications in thou contiacts. Eveiy ono familiar with the histoiy of tho city knows this. The freeing nf the hands of this lominunitv so that it maj do its woik ilsoli or bj contrail, as seems best, is demanded, not primarily in the in iirest of ccmiomj, but in the interest of decent government In he brought about bv a transfer ol (he allegiance of the ittv offni.ils from the politico. contractor inlluence to the ciKv itsilf. 'Ibis is a mnttei th it mteiosta the whole lommonwealth, as, m fait, the whole siilnrit of thai loi levision hole allots the people of tho state at huge., Miti hell Palmei. tho official head of tho Demount ic paitv in tho state, has pinmisod to do what he inn to fuithci helteimrnl liiuiuse he knows it is needed and aNo heiauo ho realizes that tho issue m not ono of paitisan politics, hut of good goviinmint. If the Republicans, in the Legislature fiom distints outside of this citv will combine with tho Philadelphia icpic sontativos who favoi ladical lovision of the chattel, not onlj those changes on whuh all gioups heio are agieed can be made, but those whuh tho standpattcis oppose cm aNo ho put thiough. h.V IhRhrVS I ROLLED ROW TN A time like this, when governments, cnipoialions and individuals alike aie heioming aiutilv aw. tie of tho impei ativo need foi lo-opciation and undei -standing in human relationships, the plight of the Public Seivicc Coipoiation in New Jersey is interesting and even slightlv humoious. Echoes of a state-wide upioai icvoi hciated at the hearing hold in Ncwaik to dctciminc the tights of tho coipoiation to institute a new 7one faio system on its tiollov lines. It is plain that the Now Joisey coipo ration has .vet to sco tho light. It has a monopoly of tho street-car lines evcry whcio m the stale. And its scheme for a five-cent initial fare antl a cent for cveiv mile aftei the fust one cannot but appeal to a lav mind as a pciveision of the ?onc rules winch piovail abioad, wheic street fares lange as low as two cents for short tups The leaction of such a faio s.vstem on leal estate in the subuiban communities in Now Jeispv could not bo othei wise than unfavoiable, and tho mavois and tapaois of the one bundled and forty one towns and cities which piotcsted aie thoroughly justified in insisting upon an inquny to tho limit. But tho lesson foi corporations which lay in jostoidav's healing at Newark docs not i elate solely to questions of stieot-car fates. The New Jetsey Public Service Coipoiation is only leaping what it has sown when it finds itself mot with opposition fiom oveiy quaiter. It too often failed to enlist public confidence or to intetpiet itself to the people whom it solved. It piefened to exist upon a highei piano, aloof like a deity The tiolley seivico in many paits of the state and particulaily in Camden was fre quently inefficient and casual. Long sufTcriiig has actually picjudiced the Jorsevmcn against his public seivicc oiganiration. Even when tho big coipo ration has a valid cause, even when it may be stnving to be honest and help ful, it will be distrusted. Yeais will be lequncd to live down the reputation built up in the past bv wiong-mindcd ad ministtatois, who felt that the profitable thing to do was to deal with the poli ticians and let tho people look after themselves. That rule of conduct belongs in tho dark ages of American affairs. Tlin V-,,,, I-, t- . .,.. . , , .... .,..,. uumej. uuiiiujuiion is late in learning, utner organizations of tho same soit perceived long ago a message that is wiitten on the skies for all those who believe that it is better to be clover than just in dealing with tho public: "You can't got away with it." Now that Collector Wo Knew It Ledcrer has an Woultl Come nounccd that the fed eral (jovornment pro poses to tike a rnther heav toll for war expenses fiom all tho new fangjod, ncir licer danio resoits, it ma) be cried from the housetops that the tttxluibitret is here at last It Is important to find Tho 1'oollsli Urst out whether or not tho advertised Apill red ifvoltH in Berlin and Vienna aie sched uled foi the iHt of next month No MpiIohii Ih so poor that he cannot True boast of a Villa In the The llch arc? not ptoud of it. countiv. It will be the "Irony" Sarcasm Division if t is In ought back to port in any other than Its native state. Gra situation in Egypt," weeps Winston Churchill, and many a mummy gives corroborative evidence. roltowtng: the league covenant's necleel of the(Monroe. Doctrine comes the smash- ..n fr?fillirnrv.r Ttilft LHnri nf 1nrl,? ...,.,. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 27, THE GOWNSMAN -j Educational Nostrums Tin; educational cpeit is much nmonR us, and no matter what the hubbub ho Is alwajs audible above the din He Is sometimes an eminent lawver, sometimes i banker or a toal baron, and no matter where ho statts he is opt to degenerate sooner or Intel Into a "ps chologlst." He is not so often a teacher himself, for teach ing Is llkelv to beget n certain modestv of opinion which I not nnionK the attributes of the professed educator. If he does con descend to teach, he seldom makes much of a fist at It because his 19 that higher tvpo of mind outt of which leaders are made, and knowing exactly t-ow twenty things must Inevltnblv be done why should ho bother to do anv one of them'' T1IH oldet tvpo of educational cxpett was n meat pialsei of things gone bv and nf the wn in uhlclt thev used to do things In tho schools nf his bov hood and the col leges of IiIr jouth Hut this tvpe Is ncarlv estlnet, except wlieie ills grappling hooks stilt hang mooted to Gteok Tho newer tvpo agiees with the eldet ns to tapldllv with which education is now going to the bad, but ho offers a dlffetent nostrum, or, nt least some old nosttum put up with new labels In i now bottle At present things nrn in a vetv bad wav Out children can neither spell nor cipher, and thej won't lead As i iiile. they Know less at eight een than at eight Tltcv nre not only not educated, oni schools de-educate 'them. '1 ho are drhen too hurd and thev have not enough to do Too much is expected of them and loo little Thev stud too mrmv stiblccts and thev do not study enough Thev hive too manj holldavs, vet hivo no time In which to think. In shoit oven thing should bo ns II is not. and whitovpt Is tint should be Till: (low nstn in listened the otl er eve ning with much pitieiuo to a tvplcal tluido of the kind mil to the exploitation of a somen lint nov ol nosti mn eloquently si i foi Hi b n icjihot in one of tho most noltiblo of mn enstci n fieshwatcr colleges fter tho usual hallowing plctuie of our educational ilecenciaov, based mostly on assumptions tint wo aro living under con ditions which the (lownsman had supposed wero obsoleto at least a generation ago eon in freshwater colleges, tho end came In tho simple prescription, 'Read Plalo" Heie was a pcisistent and tnnepentant Crook ' Xo not a bit of it What our tnoilcnn student needs poor follow Is a ' pittern, an example precept his teicher ein alw.ivs bn depended on to givo him in abund mco Therefore, let him givo up the studj of litciatiiip language nnd the arts and rend the 'Dialogues of Plato' ttans lited Into nn old 1 menage or new one and nil his educ ition tl defects will slough off like the shell of a seventeen-jcar locust us ho ciiwls out into the sun, glu tei ing, volreful and destructive TIMP.S lne changed and we In them- It used to bo thought that knowledge had become so complex that ho was a happy man who giilng ills attention solely to the musleiv of ono subject, succeeded in learning- somen hit about it before he pic sumed howeci modesth , to teach it Now It ippeits tli at It is better not to know too much about am one subject and gladly to sactlflco much to the inestimable ad vantage ot being taught technically how to teach it bv those who know least prac tically about It. Om friend of the other evening took up the new old slogan: 'Stop stiidving voitr books and studj tho child" Alas' liow the child has been studied' lach child, it would seem, is a new problem to knit our brows over, to experiment with, to shape, mold, eloate. mcasuie ves, above all things, to measute weigh, theo ilze about, chail ami vet the child sur vives, foi natine is sttong and delight fullj wnjwaid Hach child, it would seem, is to be me mined for his individual suit of odiic ition, from the cuttj satk of the A B t" to the guarded robe of post-grad into emditlon there shall be no moie cus tom mado garments, no iead-made arith metic, no standaidlzed geographv and not spelling enough to keep the schoolmarm warm Or, to vary the figure, each child is a vessel of differing- capacitv. shape and contoui. You cannot put as much into one ns into another, although jou can fill them all to overflowing1 if vou rain long and hard enough nut tho new education will have more than this There must be a chemical analjsls of tho fluid to be lained in the case of each Jug, for one was created to hold rosewater, another vinegar, a third wine of precious spice. Query: "Who is to concoct these precious educational liquids, this x'ariegated pabulum of an infinite variety, when the world of teachers is whollj emplojed in meafesurlng pint-pots.' TT 1 in T HAS been well observed that, consldei- ng bow long the human race has been on this planet, man has been submitted to the influence of education a remarkably short time, and it may be added that he remains remarkably impel vious to merely oducatloml Influences, which are super ficial as compared with traits of race, even witli those of nationality. For example, a perverted education in Ideas of German superiority and dreams of universal empire have just been defeated largely by a strongor laclal defect tho German Incapa bility of comprehending any psj etiology other than his own. Educational nos trums are not altogether harmful, they aro concocted mostlv of drugs long known and tried in the pharmacopeia, and the healthy human sjEtem is strong against them. There is no true teacher who does not con sider who It Is that he is teaching; hut ho who is nbsorbed in" tho processes of his teacher's art should bo called by some other name best a hard one. Out of the fullness of his knowledge alono dare the honest man speak. Happily there Is much In hu man nature that must remain Imponderable In the balance and Immeasurable with psy chologic tape It Is equally fortunate that there is an Insight nnd discernment In th.e true teacher which even the nostrum monger cannot destroy. I TO THE AMERICAN WDIAn My nUOTHEn, with the piercing eves, Tho swarthy cheek, the distant mien, In whoso Impassive port is seen The habit of fiee centuries, The dignity that scorns surprise Brave without hope, and proud, I ween, Only of something that has been, And In tho dead past burled lies I,ook up with happier courage face Thla modern strife; accept the plan Of a strange world no longer young. The future beckons to your race; You, the self-centered, silent man, Shall yet gain friends and fli.d a tongue. Elalno Goodale Eastman. la it possibly because "Steve" himself "took a chance" that the marching Bolsha lets are Inclined toward Brody? . ' Tho blue ot the now triumphant Sun day laws Is the Bort of "fast" color which promises quite me rvern oi Bpeeoy limes. fryi-r - ;. t, .Tii T" . S Im. "SO .''-'-v-V-,' -. ,".."- , 1 V ?'iy.'&?e- r---,. ' . . j"V - ,' v ' -' V -t-'Hlwrfi'' '' - "s-cr ti zg .fiif tAmaM tBlai-ffiraE-i s THE CHAFFING DISH Small Talk WYNNE hB been chuckling 'The Home Manual," published VTA.VC '! over NCY in 1889, and has been kind enough to lend It to us With some difficulty we got It awaj from the Intelligent gentleman who edits the Dally Quiz In the southeast cor ner of this page, as he found It a mine ot material. The following is from the chap tet on 'Society Small Talk": A billroom is especially the place for airy nothings ' This Is ourdance, I think," a gentleman might Bay; 'jou are not afraid that I am not able to pilot u through the crowd?' If the lady answers 'No, not at all," her partner would have to seek some other opening; but were she to respond: "Xo, I shall believe In jou till ou prove my confidence mis placed," the joung man could reply he 'considered himself put on trial, as It were," or that she "should have np occa sion to regret her trust." Ornaments worn In a ballroom often sug gest gay conversation to ready-witted per sons For Instance: "I envy that butterfly on jour hair, close to jour ear. What a chance to whisper secrets, lucky butterfly!" The answer might be: "Oh, no, the but terfly is not so happy as jou think; I shut It up in a velvet case when I go home, lest I should lose it. Nov, jou could not be shut up, and jou wouldn't like it if jou could." Or the lady might replj'. Jestingly: "Unlike jou, mj' butterfly has no feeling, so it doesn't appreciate its happiness, a trait, I believe, characteristic of butterflies. Vou ought to know something about it." This icfers, lie presume, to the cos tumes. "In the croitef, probably. We aspire to bo the kind of poet who writes about homely topics and makes them seem homelier still. We notice that some ono nas collected a, number of the worst poems that have been printed in this column and published them in a book called "The Hocking Horse." We warn all our readers against this book, which contains some of the poorest poetry we have ever seen. To the Eastern Shore There's a little houso tn the holly tiecs, Down on the Eastern Shore, Where the scent ot pine drifts down tho breeze, And It's there I'd be once more. The wild geese call from high and far, And spring is In the air; And southward, spray leaps bright on the bar, ' And the bay gleams blue and fair. There's peace where the seagulls Idly sail, And quiet on the dunes, And kindly hearts Uiat never fall, And a lilt to tho darky's tunes. There, far to the south, Cape Henry lies A-beckoning to me; South as the wise old gray goose flics, And It's there that I would be, DOUGLAS C. AVENDELU Euclid Euchred "His manner was not at all that of a man who for nearly four years waB Eng land's single official army interpreter! of events." Interview with General Maurice. And yet If he was that man, that must have been hts Manner, exactly, as It were. Put It this way: General Maurice had a manner. General Maurice was the man who for nearly four years was, etc. Therefore, his manner must have been that of the man who for nearly four years, etc. Q. B. D. . Thomas Harned. one of Walt Whitman's c ... . ... .i - i: --------- uutvaryvexwrnors, mum jnataiwinaHi 1919 HANDLE JME GENTLY, YET!" -;fn.,riy-(.i -. rsnJHIyi.ffi aaja&iirfWLSJiaaws-aaaMaajiniaiaiaictaw-c: - the house where Mis. Gilchrist lived when in Philadelphia. In ono place the book gives the address as J 99 Nottli 22, In an other as 1729 North 2 Perhaps Mr Harned or some one else will ho gracious enough to tell us which is the correct ad dtess.' Lieutenant Earl C'adbuiv Is back ftom fljlng over the German lines We tiled to interview him for The Chafllng Dish, but Eail is far more scared of newspaper men than he evei was of the bodies And then there's Lieutenant Henry Carvill Lewis, another flying man, hiding out In German town at 51 Cliveden avenue. Henrj . who spent some time in a German prison camp, is so afraid well put his name in the paper that he Just won't come to see us. We're going to keep on putting It in until he comos to call. That's what they call the power of the press Lieutenant Charles H. Welgandt. of the Signal Corps, A. 13. I, sends us the fol lowing, which he sas was written by an American soldiei abroad Don'lg for ex-Soldiers DON T hurry Into jour clothes In the morning and then run out Into the street. Thete'll be no reveille at HOME. DON'T ask the "old man" whether you can go out at night. He may be jour new C. O , but he's not so awfully strict and vou won't need a pass to get in after 10 o'clock. DON'T neglect to take a bath at least once a week. Tho old gag of being A. 13. F. won't hold good then. DON'T faint at the sight of a bulletin board Your days of detail areovcr. DON'T embarrass your fi lends by rushing around and picking up cigarette butts every time jou hear a traffic cop's whistle. DON'T "hike It" when you go to visit jour relatives. Remember the railroads ore still doing business, DON'T be afraid to call on a doctor when jou get sick, He will have forgotten all about "CC" pills by that time. DON'T try to "parley vous" when you enter a store. Tho clerk may have been stuck at Camp Meade. DON'T make any loud remarks in the movies. They don't do It In civilized life. DON'T shout "ALL TOGETHER," when a friend tells a story at a perfectly re spectable party. DON'T forget to put stamps on your en velopes. The old game of soldiers' mall won't work all the time. DON'T eat fast at meal times. Remember there are "beaucoup" seconds and nobody In line. 1 DON'T call jour homo a billet. Your father or father-in-law may feel insulted. BY A MEMBER OP THE A. E. !. Please Qualify Simple affirmatives and negatives close the avenues of talk, "Yes, I urn," "No, I nm not," "Yes, I Ho." "No, I do not," give little encouragement for further efforts, if such answers aro nocessarj, try to qualify them, instead or a Diunt "No, I am not," tt would ba better to s.u : "I. do not think I am very fond of It. Do ou care for It much?" The Home Manual. We hope Messrs. Pepper and Hitchcock will bear this in mind when they debate on the league ot nations. It would be a pity to close the avenues of talk rlrht at the start. We tried a new experiment the other evening took a pair of opera glasses with us to the movies. It was quite entertain Ing, as through the lenses all the Infinite number ot tiny cracks on the Aim are visible. It rather marred Blllte Burke's beauty as registered on the screen, but as a scientific stunt It Is quite infonriing. te;yqurqte J" Jh"4 v '? A Prayer in Time of Peace REMEMBERING how our torturtd heai ts Turned unto Thee In time of wai, Por help to bear its blistering smarts, its fears, Its teais,,rts shifting scoie, Dear Lord our God, let us not cease To pray to Theo in time of peace, Givo to tlie eyes that wept and wept A clearer vision foi their teais. Grant to the hearts all passion swept, A manlier courage for their fearr, Let feet that through the depths have trod. Learn to walk humbly with Thee. God. l Out of the foulness let us bring Clean hands that hold life's standard high, Souls that will brook no bargaining With greed or lust, deceit or He. Ears deafened by war's murderous din Make Thou to hear the Voice within. Let us forbear to strut and boast Because of triumphs we have won, Remembering the valiant host That died or ever we'd begun. O Lord, protect us from tho shame Of thinking we are free from blame. Let the great hour that now has struolc Wake a great echo In our breasts, Let us. each one, with Joyful pluck Turn to the task that with him rests. Lord, may it not have dawned In vain. This day of peace Thou didst ordain. Julia M. LIppman, In Good Houm- "S keeping. i Wliat Do You Knotv? -. QUIZ 1 What university Is to get the flag ot truce under which the first American. staff officers entered German territory. beyond the Rhine? 2. How is peat rormea.' $ 3. From what Italian city does Parmesan l cheese take Its name? 'II 4 What Is the heaviest of all fluids? 1 5 What Is the meaning of oom" in "uom Paul," the pseudonjm given to Paul jjl Kruger, when President or tne aouin African Republic? 6 Who said "We must eat to live, not live to eat"? ( 7. In whose reign are white potatoes said to have been Introduced into Ireland? 8 Where is the largest bell In the world? 9. What is a lamprey? , 10 Who wrote "Peter Pan"? ' Antwen to Yesterdsy's Quiz 1. The Magyars are a Mongoloid race, pre dominant In Hungarj-. ,' i More than four months elapsed between the signing of the protocol In the Span- i Ish War and the signing ot the treaty of peace In Paris In 1898. 3. Glasgow ts the largest city In Sootlancl. 4 Carl Schurz wis a celebrated German American statesman, reformer and Journalist. He served In the Civil War on the Union side; was Senator from tllbBAii-1 1BAQ.7K and ia an AHIfn of the New York Evening Post. I G. Sanskrit was the language spoken In 'India In ancient times. ' 6, The word lorgnette should be pronounced as though spelled "lornyett." with th last! syllable slightly stressed. i 7, A duodecimo book ts one in which each leaf is one-twelfth of the printing sheet, 8, Reading, Pa., Is the "Prstiel City," 9, The Jains are a religious sect hi India, subscribing to a inoaincauon ot uua- anism, oasea on me lancunojiion ol the Jalni, or sages, who have rtacbH omniscience .' av-il-r, .jt rfu-.(S-, r . ii , . 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