PX ?"",vV PB8SOTI' :' ft n" .. .i.;;o: tc i liITi I. ,. Jl WW . f ti " . T--,&",1 t EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA; THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1919 j-io t ffi It W Jfuemno lUubUc-STctJacc V ir-4 -" . . and ' l. Wfl? THE EVFWTNfi tpi pnnAPir S-VVjU'-. mtmtr irnmn ..,, . ,.. "V.v. UULlj 1jE.LJUL.IV l.tJ.MI'A.V .;V i fc'?i.'l??r," " "UHnton. Vlcn Pri-nldi-nt .lnhn r Wi i i.s',Tl,ri' "' Tremnirir, rhllln H Co'iiiik. . , ..... ,. tiiuainr, jonn j. mmntcun, uircLiurn. EDITORIAL, nOAHD: fcfti uibcs ii." k. l'cbtu. Chairman gj DAVID C. SMIt.KY Editor fog.JOHN C. MAItTIN. .. .General Business Manager 4$"- Published dally nt TcMto T.raxjEn TlulMlnr. Pt AtUNTIC CtTt LSI , KM Vfti . . . j -. , iiiucwnuence square. I'niiuueipnitt 'rri. Union rtulKUtie m" v..--: ro Metropolitan Towfi . ."oi Konl nullillnc Inns riillrrton lliillilliiK 1302 Ttibano Hulldlne a? A St. I.ni-i... J Chicago..., . news ncnuAus: JVIIIIINOTON llOBrAU, ., ? '' Cor. I'ennsyUanln Av. nml liih St. New Yok lluarju The &mi lluii'lliia- 1.0.SDON UKBEiU LoikIoii riiiirs scnscniPTiov Tnnxta Th EtBMvrl Puiiiic I.I'ihii.ii li Kiriml to suh kcrlbers In Philadelphia and surronn.llnp town nt the rata nf lvtlre (12) tents per itffk. patabla to the carrier. By mall to points oullde or Phllarleiplila In tb United Stnten. Canada, or l'nlte.1 S'ltr pns. alon. po'taco free, nftv .".n) enti per mnntli. clx (G) dollara per car, payihle In adxanre To all rorelcn countries one ll dollar per month, NoTlOn Subscriber wNlilnir nrlrtrr cbancerl must sl old aa ipll lis new Hlire TtrU.. 3000 WA1.NLT Kl sTOM MaIN 3000 7 Addreti all eotmmntieatiov to 7,'r'rit, o I'ubho j Jiritgrr, Independence Snuiire, J'hilaili Ip'tin Member of the Associated Press ttte ASSOcriTnn rnnxs ; r,rt. iivcli entitled to the use for lepuliluiilian of all fictCJ rfi'pi7c7irt emitted In il or not olhcrxcifC vreilited in this pnprr. and oho the local tiFtrt pitaliihed therein. All rights of repuHUotinn of nrvmf fii patchct herein are alio leierml. I'hiladrlplua, Ihurxlit. Ma. I. lull -. THE HOMECOMERS rpO CHEER for the men of the lion - Division who landed here yeateiday is not enough. Cheering is eay. It is as easy as talk. Who of those who lemamud at home to encounter the tests of the hour that Liimn as a consequence of the war and as part of the war's responsibilities can lie half us jbravc, half as patient, half as clean minded and ha'f as stiaij;htfotaid in the service of their country and their people as these s-oldieis, were? LUNATICS AT LARGE pEBS in his cell, Haywood and Noar ing happily at huge and all other propagandists of hatred and delusion were permitted to view the inevitable reactions of their doctrines yesterday when seventeen infernal machines, ad dressed to men whose prominence in affairs offended minds obviously de ranged, were found in the Xew Yoik Postofticc. To encourage the malevolence of a mad dog in isolated groups of men, to send cowards and sneaks out to do muuler, to make the illiterate and the bate a little more stupid and a little more detestable these are the methods of your up-to-date radicals, and it is these wandering preacheis of unrest who are the cause of bitterness and despair in all men who have tvc irferest of the country and all its people sincerely at heart. - -An opponent stopped in the course of an admirable argument against the pro posed sedition bill at Harrihburg to sug gest that bombs found in this city not long ago were placed by disgruntled de tectivos out of jobs. This is unsound reasoning. The bombs weie placed by idiots made dangerous with exaggerated notions of their wrongs. Governor Sproul, Mayor Mylan and all the other men for whom yesterday's tjotnbs were made cannot be charged in Ihc slightest degico with any offense that would warrant this sort of attack. It will not do to befoul legislation in America with ideas borrowed from Rus sia and Germany to deal with a handful of lunatics. But if a i w s ould be pro posed to blow up every bomb assassin in the country with his own machines theie t" would be no objection anywhere. JIMMY rpHEY used to say that Jimmy couldn't get avxny with it that the thing was too wonderful to believe. There were times when Jimmy himself must have fdt that he was lost in an effulgent dream. But he stands today a icality, with about $200,000 in fees safely in his pocket, a darlli.g of the fates, envied by $ al! the pop-eyed politicos within a radius of a thousand miles, facing a life of r limousines and cushioned ease, while the 'v bill that will limit every futuio Register m ol Wills to Ins ?5000 salary moves along Ivi na ffrpflRPrl wnvs nt. Hnrrlshnrre .limmv $$&.! Is not a bad sort as they go. If some fj,. "body had to grow suddenly and unbe- ii&r. .lievaoiy ncn at me expense oi tne com- JKTimunlty it might as well be he. SjvBut this child of fortune ought not to r spena.all tne money in easy living. He ' should spare enough to buy himself a medal, a gorgeous medal witji ribbons ot) It. Then some bright and sunny day there should be a gteat assemblage on Broad street south of City Hall. There v.ihould be bands and silk-hatted commit- JgTlecs" and loud speeching, and at the right sjyhMiiuuieni. oiiiuiiy suuuiu uuvuncc lnio me -focus of the moving-nicture cameras and !&-. proudly bestow this medal on himself. J"- Tho inscription should be simple and di- k7 rct, anu it mignt run thus: T "Presented to Jimmv Shpnbnn nollti. Esk..cn and philosopher, by himself, in pSiLycoEnition of his fortitude and gallantry fX'-1" "laiaiinji, u;uiusi me comuincu opin PKJgn of the world, that a good thing can 4i?rtMever be bad." rzi Eg! A MORAL FROM BOSTON jr-YCTljrE canny managers of n Boston stole, fc" ?. which had giown in a few years from UMlMung to tne, occupancy ot a building t-fvering half a block, established a mini- " jBm' wage for Its sales force ?2 a week higher than that paid by its competitors. . ,iWhat was the result?, xjft had the pick of the young women 'jttUkirig 'employment and secured a force Which for efficiency was unequalcd. 'This is what happens in commercial k' Ht.fIt.BlM happens in tho school sys- raiitne country. w Ygrkr has adopted a salary sched- . fwSthe' .teacher? in its schools which KHIVK ILfualuiirai u f-vwv jt. w tetAers in th-primary and ,xram- m W ;yerfXer put. department teachers in the high schools. There is n prospect that in the near na ture these maximums will he raised ?& Capable teachers from all ocr the coun try seek employment in Now Yoik. lne even leave colleges and take professor ships in the high school". The young people of the city aie tiaincd by capable, enthusiastic, high grade men and women. How long is Philadelphia to be willing to suffer from this sort of competition . We do suffer fiom it thiough our in nbilitv to command the bo-t teaching skill in the country. -ae whcie nm clnfs teachers piefei to leninm here foi family or social leasoiis that hac no con nection with their salancs. This city ought to lie :m wie as the nianiigoi.s of the Bixton store and estab lish a salary schedule for its teachers which would bo high enough to gie us the pick of the teaching profession when we wish to till a acalicv. They pay that the money is not at hand to pay better salaries But if we were convinced that the salaiics ought to be paid we cnuld find the mnc, because we should know that it was pool economy not to find it At picsent we aie sufTei ing fiom that pound folly which comes from eercisuiir nenin wi-ilom ANTI-LEAGUE REPUBLICANS j UNTRUE TO PARTY IDEALS Shipwreck Ahejd if Traditional Policy of Construction Is Abandoned Through Plotting of Insensate Politicians pARTISAN'SHII' that defends to mere i-colding has long been notoriously mini ofitahle m American no'itic-. Whit- in cned with the bones of failuie is the stenle path which the Demon atic paity for many ears puisiicd in -uppoit of that policy Aside fiom haimful possi bilities to the r.a'ion, sheei selfish politi cal inteiests aie sorrily served theiebj. The Demociatic donke.v was no hazy symbol. It very vividly typified a spmt of fatuous obstinacy, ,-n stupidly unrca soiling as to be absuid. 1'iom Lincoln's to the end of Aithur's adniinistiation Re publican cmistiuctive measures abetted ill the most efficient fashion the natuial growth of the united nation. If the opposition derived enjoyment from being "sore." that emotion maiked the limit of its satisfaction. Theie vvie no material lewaid.-, foi a common scold is not an ingiatiating figuie. The scene was le-cnacted when Re publican enterprise freed Cuba, .Tcued Porto Rico and the Philippines, invested the United States with vvoild power dis tinction, ably suppoited Aninican indus tries, espoused tho valid doctrine of reci procity and nobly championed the code of "open-door" justice m the I'ar ICa.st. Theie aie excellent reasons in vei idea tion of the statement that this country is "normally Republican." It can, however, only remain .so in case the party itself is normal, healthy in its indorsement of its tiaditional constructive creed. A depaiture from this policy, such as exemplified in opposition to the league of nations a subject altogether unsuitable for paitisan capitalisation is decidedly a sign of illness. Since the nation was formed it has never discussed a topic less fitted for factional bickering. Demociats, who may champion the idea solely fiom the party angle, interpret it as eironeouslj as those Republicans who oppose it because it happens to have the .support of the present administration. Intiinsically, the conception lies out side the ordinal y domain of partisan politics. It was to give it ultimate reality that the United States, despite distinc tions of party lines, went to war to end war. Peace and the ideal of maintaining it with justice and in co-opeiation with the rest of civilization was the aim of no paiticular party when, after repeated provocation, wo took up aims in 1917. It is the foundation of permanent peace which every decent American wishes to see laid today. Scrupulous ex amination of the gioundwork of the structure a piovided for in the league pact is the part of progressive patriotic idealism. But blindly derogatory argu ment, obviously advanced because at a time when the assembled nntions seek to establish the bonds of mutual security Woodrow Wilson happens to be President of the United States, contains elements of the gravest political error. It echoes of the futile donkey braying of yore. It is reminiscent of the diatribes of the Parker Democrats against the admirable administration of Theodore Roosevelt. Devoid of sound constructive measures to advance, those shallow pattisans stum bled into only one thing which was deep their grave. The triumph of con structive Republicanism in 1001 was one of the greatest on record. It is open to no dispute that the Repub lican sentiment nf the country has been under going a new development during the second administration of Mr. Wilson. The congressional elections were con clusive proof. But the power recently acquired will have to be wisely used if the most popu lar of American parties is to resume fully its honorable role of broad-minded beneficence. And this means that tho sharpest lines should bo drawn between issues which the Republicans ought to indorse in opposition to blundering Demo crats and the monumental issue into which the injection of political spleen is folly. Mincing matters will only make them worse. The senatorial "round-robin" not only displayed the most heartless disre gard of the lessons of the war, but it was as palpable a display of insincerity, in spired by political passions, as American history has ever revealed. Republicans, smarting because their' party has been out of power, may sub scribe in a spirit of resentment to the sentiments voiced by the Lodges, the Poindexters, the Borahs and the Sher mans. But thousands upon thousands of other members of a distinguished politi cal party must, if they think for an in stant, tingle with shame at all this igno ble maneuvering. This "strategy" is in sane politics, for with Americans in their ipreswit imuuu vuiitt-inuij; wai iiiq icukii" pact .MW?ituaily fail oi Tatlfica- on. And naturally the Democrats will jump at tho cha,nce to arrogate to them selves a victory which will really be a result of the combined common fcense or the nation. Certain Republican spokesmen aie, of course, sufficiently shrewd to foresee the dangers ahead. From several of tho original "round-robiners" adroit indorse ments of the amended pact are forthcom ing. "The changes," declares Selden V. bpencer, of Missouri, "aro vital and com mendable." This looks as though at least one eraser will be called for when those hasty signatures are again brought to light. The repentance is of various stripes. That of Senator Penrose docs riot openly come under that category, and et it is perfectly possible to interpret his comment as presaging a revision of his views when the critical hour strikes. He believes in "closely scrutinizing the covenant." A good sentiment, well pionounced. "I have always," he ex-pb-ns, "been in favor of any covenant or treaty that would, diminish the chance of war," adding that "apparently some of the objections originally advanced to the league as first presented, such as the piotcction of tho Monroe Doctrine, have hern covered in the revised document." The tone of these remarks hardly sug gests that of the angry outburst which giceted Mr. Wilson's first return from Europe. Meanwhile the irreconcilables continue beating their black wings. .Those of llcjiry Cabot Lodge flap ferociously and yet, all things considered, they do not at tempt much of a flight. Ardently Italian in his outspoken sympathy with Or lando's imperialistic ambitions, he never theless would sulkily pause when it comes to pi enouncing upon the new covenant. He and Senator Curtis have urged Re publicans to bottle up their thunders tempoiarily. If he can hold all his fellow "round-iobiners" in line, in imminent jeopardy of their political future, this move may foreshadow a terrific blast of venom. If it does, the most pciilous breach which 'ever rent his 'party will be visible, for Mr. Lodge does not represent the attitude of the majority of Republi cans upon this issue, which is so ob viously of nonpartisan essential quality. Republican Philadelphia, for instance," is overwhelmingly in favor of the society of nations, as the Evening Public Ledger's poll clearly proved. The tire lessly patriotic spokesmen for these con stituents is William H. Taft, who su peibly champions 'the covenant for the best two possible reasons. In the first place, it is the only untried cure for war which is at hand. The second argument may interest him only incidentally. It is admirable politics for the progressive Republican party to support a measure so directly in line with all the ideals for which it has ever stood. If Mr. Taft takes higher grounds he is well worthy of applause; but, on the other hand, there should be no shame at taching to party politics if sincerely and sanely conducted. The party system is the cornerstone of American government. When the Re publicans were doing so well for their country it used to be Philadelphia's con viction that it was their party which was pnmaiily responsible for the national advancement. In a measure this was true. It will be so again if the distinc tion once more be drawn between what aie legitimate partisan issues and what are not. Indorsement of the league pact is a national duty in the broadest sense. The obligation falls upon us all, Democrats or Republicans, upon any American citi zen who has the faintest inkling of what the war was ostensibly about. When the "round robins' " wings are clipped and the nation -has become an honorable partner in world peace there will be a legion of topics for the Repub lican party to discuss in healthy opposi tion to its rival. Upon the party which Mr. Lodge professes to represent devolve gigantic problems of reconstruction. The solution of them will accord with the finest Republican traditions. That way lies redemption. BANDS T)ANDS that make the windows rattle LJ with military" music are everywhere in the streets these days. Soldiers and sailors play with a quickened tempo, a ihaipened and truer rhythm. -No paci fist, though he be ever so earnest a phi losopher and humanitarian, enn remain quite himself as they go by arid fill the air with the music of glory and defiance. Twenty yelling trombones can drown the voice of reason with a wild call to nction and aggression. Even after war is outlawed and when the woild is at peace, a good brass band will always bring a curious urge and a troubling remembrance of flying ban ners and polished steel, of rumbling lor ries and victorious guns and the lines of men who through all the years have marched to the heights from which the songs of triumph have descended. Must we reform music, too, before war is done with? A friendly reader, Not Half Bail stung to action by the observation in this column that no existing word is adequate to sUKKcst the various and assorted horrors of modern war, has invented "murkllslaut" and' rushed it in for approval. The car penter of this term obviously was feelinj for a terrible combination to imply briskly mur der. Killing and slaughter a'U in one breath. Since t lie word sounds German, it will do till something better turns up. The expenses of the ,l,0 ' Nvr-n ,;a(i 0id Moscow So- . llimU of It et nave approxi- nfcvnnn. i. n niite'1 bout ?250'' 000,000 to date. The income of the glad old Moscow Soviet has Uta about $25,000,- 000. It Is easy to imagine what Benjamin Franklin would say of Bolshevimm "Be calm and se- Trearhlng and rtnefi criM Orlando Practice t the Romans. If tha Ti.Mnni Hail said something of that sort to (Orlando before be went to Paris and thch bolted madly from the Petce Conferfnce,leBrMy".B- j THE GOWNSMAN J Tho Academic Wage AT AN' important university in the East, it few months since, the petition of the wntrhmen and nssistnnt firemen in the light ing and beating plant for nn advancement in wages wag deferred because they were alrcad.v receiving so much more than Ihc initial "salaries" of instructors. To become nn instructor n young man must have nt the least tho bachelor's degree. Many institu tions nre demnndfns n higher degree of even their jouiigest teachers. The H. A. means n four-year course on top ot high school. A Ph. I)., three years of nddltlonnl special ized study. ON ON'i: thousand dollars n ear a .voting collegian may live, it he lives warily: if he buvs even n few books lie may live shabbily. But whnt of the attempt, the necessity sometimes, that two or even moic mouths be fed on siu-li n mini and n certain standard of gentility be maintained in the process? A young instructor in a western college where money goes somewhat further than in Philadelphia tonfessed the other day to nn Older friend that he had not been financially able to buy an egg or n snap of meat for his family for over four months. Sueh provender was bejond them. Nor will it do to say. "Why did the fool marryV It raiiiiot be good publie policy to depute the brainiest mid most Htudious of tins primitive right. "Why didn't lie go into business?'' is n more pertinent query. Willi four and the dollars a day for doing what any intelligent mini can learn how to do in n couple ot da.vs, obviously that is the only thing to do. And the education, the ambi tion, the career, nil these things go for naught. Tnti position of a teacher is supposed to demand n certnin scale of living. It taken money cten to be clean: n scholar cannot work' in n cold room: his brains do tint flint tion with iiisuliicient food. He bn duties to the subsistence, the cdinntion nf his fnmily as well as to his college itMho pervbes lie renders Hud in the investigations in which he is busied. Wherefoie the aver age American tear her, driven to ubnmlnti this lust by insufficient menus, strives to eke out his scanty income by outside lectures, hack work, summer schools, more teaching in an already overcrowded curriculum, with whnt result? A little moie money, a de creased efficiency, often impaired health and scholarship once and for nil definitely pbandoned. THE (lownsinan is perfectly well aware that by no mentis nre all college tcacheis in o deplorable a condition. Some teadieis have means of their own and it is a, cur rent pleasantry that scholars often marry money none too dignified a resort. It would be an unhappy tiling to convert the trust of the teacher, to the administration of which a man slinulrt be ns nssuridh called as to the ministry itself, into n post of gain, alluring to the mere money maker Hill no one. Knowing conditions, can deny that with salaries little advnnced in n gen eration and with prices realizing the fondest dreams of the most impudent profiteer, there is much genuine suffering among the teachers in American colleges. The hand of privation is verily upon them. The lesult is obvious. Our most ambitious joung men for the most part do not teach: the few whose altruism lends them into teaching nre driven out, the ablest going soonest. The colleges have long since given up tompeting in salaries with high schools and private schools for the best teachers. Our universities even run afford only the second best, and for the most part save for some honorable exceptions that is all they get. R X THE thirties of the last century a pro- ceived $'Ju00 or .foOOO per annum in our large centers. There was often a house thrown in besides. His position financially, and therefore sofially in commercial Amer ica, was on it lrcl with the doctor, the min ister, the lawjer, the judge. Tn fact, the salaries of the Inst about tallied those of the professor. At best in these eighty jears the college teni her's salary has doubled ; it has certainly not increased "0 per cent, taking the whole body of teachers. The judge's salary, in Philadelphia nt least, bus quadrupled, and there nre even judges who do not feel that they nre excessively overpaid todny. The administration of our law courts is n practical utility. Is the selection, the power, the responsibility of those who train our best youth for the struggle of life any the less so? THE trouble with the professor, outside of the piofessional schools, lies in the cir cumstance that lie lias but otic employer. The doctor, the chemist, the lawyer, the en gineer condescends as to wage if he teaches nt all; for each is a money getter potentially in the markets of the world. The college nnd the school is the teacher's only market. Moreover, n teacher is not functioning ns n teacher if his mind is on money nnd its returns for his work. Scholarship is not measurable in utilitarian terms; only its applications can ever be paid for. The actual compensation ot the teacher lies in recognition and in the following which he evokes. But sueh impalpabilities do not butter parsnips nor pay the lordly butcher his bill. THE Legislature of the state of Michigan lias just voted $700,000 to the University of Michigan in two annual installments of $350,000 each to be devoted wholly and solely to the permanent increase of the sal aries of teachers in thnt institution. Three years from now the charge thus created will be included in the state levy of taxes. And the adjustments nre to be made from below, where most imperntively needed. The lowest snlary for any instructor will be $1500, with hopes of further amelioration. An interest ing feature ot this step in the amendment of salaries at Michigan lies in the circumstance that it was not on the program of authority, but, once noted, appealed to the sense of justice of the legislators themselves. With all our perfections upon us we may per haps learn somewhat even of the Middle West. Or muBt wo go on in our seaboard universities expanding, monstrous bodies nt last without informing minds, and our teachers be driven to the devices of unionism or worse for tho maintenance of their place in an advancing world? They are beginning Anil Where Is That? now to worry about the future fate of the bar-fly not the human bar-fly of cruel slang, but the insect that departed from a healthy, outdoor existence and spent, its life, rum-maddened, wherever strong drink was spilt. What is to become of him? Will he reform? That is the anxious inquiry of curious ftornol0B's's '"r ourselves wo venture to suppose that he will ko to the place that shelters the fly that once liTcd on free lunch. . The league of na-One-Way Minds tions, says former Governor Stokes, ot jjew Jersey, will lead to war. Is Mr. Stokee willing to contepd that the interna tional scheme which the league is intended to replace leads away from war? Mr. Wll unn. observes a British diplomatist testily,. Is hindering the work of peace. Can any llvinS diplomatist in .Europe say,,tllat he faiiwvj.tui"" UlADT K6P' THE CHAFFING DISH In examinlnij a literary work we should always find out what the author's real thoughts must be, nnd not assume that they mo what he claims them to be. Albeit Mordell. in the unmentionable book. Kor instance: The Literary Work The Author's Real Rreak, break, brenk. Thoughts On thy cold gray o bov, this is titter- stones, O sea ! ine 'em some! I And 1 would that my tongue could litter The thoughts that nnse in me. Tennyson. Wir wollen nicht Ias sen von unsercm Haas, Wir habeh nllc uur einen Hass, Wir lieben vcreint, wir hassen vcr eint, Wir haben alle nur einen Feind : ENGLAND! Lissauer. Not marble, nor the gilded monu ments Of princes, shall out live this powcr ' fill rhyme; But you shall shine more bright in these contents Than unswept stone, besmeared with sluttish time. Shnkcspcnre. Or let my lamp, nt midnight hour. He seen in some high bet nil the nntholo gies will print this one. ' Gott. I hope the English don't read it. What rot. but it will please the kiddo. I must get to bed early tonight. Haven't been getting enough sleep lately. lonely tower, Where I mayoftout- wntch the Benr, With thrice-grent Hermes, or itn- sphere Thcspirit of Tlnto. Milton. The little toy dog is covered with dust. But sturdy and stanch he stands ; And the little toy sol dier is red with rust, And his musket moulds i n h i s I bet the boss'll hand me n raise when he reads this one. hands. Time was when the little toy dog was new, And the soldier was passing fair ; And that was the time when our Little Boy Blue Kissed them and put them there. Eugene Field. No more from that Thank goodness that's done!. If I get a quid for that I'll go up to town next week and get a little relaxation! cottage again will I roam; Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home. Home! Home! sweet, sweet Home ! There's no place like Home! There's no place like Home! Payne, V V Think how glad Senator Ehenuau must be tbat h wasn't appelated secretary general REAL SYMPATHY jIE3 ---"'' f"OT NrJrAV T vou-urn It wi3B& COC vMmm a " ' The Signs of the Times Come, pal, we'll go abroad today to nolo the signs ot spring; The budding leaflets in the trees, the birds upon the wiug; The pussywillows' overhead, the couples in the park ; (And oh, the smacking sounds you benr when strolling after dark!) We'll walk the glenming hillside nnd we'll Iriiuip upon the green ; And bask within the sunlight, till the jolly ' orb goes down ; There's just one sign we'll have to note it can't escape unseen A poster setting forth the date the circus comes to town ! Come, pnl, we'll go nbrond today, to note the signs of spring; The maids perambulating with policemen on the string; The peanut venders opened up with fresh display of wares ; And advertisements telling of the nearer county fairs. We'll gnze upon the baseball scores that filter from the South, And tread the grnssy woodland which the other day was brow n ; A sigu placed in n window brings saliva to the mouth ' A gont's head that's proclaiming when the bock beer cornea to town ! ENVOY We'll board a passing trolley enr with win dows opened wide; Conductor knocking down the fares that he forgets to ring ; "For Rent," "To Let," "For Sale," we'll see displayed on every side Come, pal, we'll go nbroad today to note the signs of spring! ROBERT LESLIE BELLEM. V V V Old Shoes and Old Friends I will not cast old shoes nway While they together hold;' For though they're worn nnd homely things, They've graces manifold. For oft I've ventured forth in pride And shoes nil chic nnd new ; But yearned to see my nin fireside And old shoes, haven't you.' Wemust have shoes ns on we wend ' That nre both new and whole ; But an old shoe, like an old friend, Gives comfort to the soul. New friends are fine when blithe and gay Out in tho world we roam ; But with old friends in trouble's day The heart feels most at home. I will not cast old friends nway ; v Wo'vp shared life's woe and weal ; I need them all, tho polished ones And those "down at the heel." MAUD FRAZER JACKSON. V V V Desk Mottoes It were not best that wo should all think nlike; it is difference of opinion that makes horse tuccs. MARK TWAIN. V V V Which reminds us thnt we were much pleased to notice that Hocking Horso won the first race nt Havre tie- Grace Tuesday afternoon. Never mind why. V V V They're going to brine the kaiser to th dock after all and he won't be allowed to leap oft it, cither. V V V The parents of young children have no realLr intimate acquaintance with sleep Thflfbardly.rirCognisuj'iUivhcii It corned , to 9 -ffv..c-x-c-r. THE HOMECOMING rpHEY come, they come in brave array, - With pomp nnd panoply of war ; These warriors who amid the fray The flag of Freedom proudly bore. Now mothers their young heroes meet And wives salute their soldier ma'tes, While kinsmen, reunited, greet Yet, pale nnd pensive, some one waits. A paean now the people sing, As tales of victory unfold. And plaudits to the welkin ring In honor of these spirits bold. The cup of joy filled to the brim. Is quaffed on this triumphant day, Yet from the vessel's golden rim Some one in sadness turns to- pray. Recedes the awful battle wrnth Before the glory and acclaim That mark each young crusader's path Along the corridors of fame ; Yet one who kept the torch ablaze. In poppy fields far distant sleeps; Now bome one walks the lonely ways And, broken-hearted, softly weeps. Yet through the heavy clouds of gloom Thnt grief assembles o'er a soul Whose joys seem buried in n tomb Enshrined on some embattled knoll. The light o hope shall burst and gleam Like sun-gold dropped from heaven's dome, For just beyond the Stygian stream That soldier-saint at last is Home! Louis M. Grice, in the Baltimore Ameri can. What Do You Knoiv? QUIZ 1. Against which article of tho league covenant' is much of the Republican criticism directed? 2. What brilliant naTal victory was won twenty-one years ago today? 3. Distinguish between the recognized military and civilian pronunciation of the word rations? 4. Name the uncompleted novels left, re spectively, by Dickens, Thackeray and Hawthorne. , 5. What nre the names of the two houses composing the Italian rnrliament? 0. What is the jaekstaff'of n ship? 7. What is the meaning and origin of the word mufti? 8. Who was Jack Cade? 0. To the people of what American state is the term "Tarheels" sometimes applied? 10. What was tho original significance of a barber's pole? , Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Sir Eric Drummond has been appointed secretary general of the league cf nations. 2. Schelllng In "Philosophy of Art," char acterized architecture as ''frozen music." 3. Cerberus was the three-headed dog which, according to Greek mythology, guarded the entrance to Hades. 4. Ashlar is square hewn stone or masonry constructed of this. C, King Arthur was the possessor of the enchanted Bword Excalibur. 0. The Straits Settlements are in the Malay peninsula at the southeast end of Asia. 7. The book of Genesis contains the story of Joseph. 8. The famous Church ot St. Sophia is in Constantlnocle. 0. General Petaln, now a marshal, wa commander, of tho French army at the. time when Foch was the Allied ? , eralisslmo, 'vMi .10. Tostwasier', General 'Burleson U .Jtom V &n 41 "s h ,-- -..,. v uve lew tteMBim&bi&Mfa&afa