, '!!' . ' T f I "' v PUBLIC MDaEli-PHljbAOELPHIA., BATUKDAY, MAY 10,sl0 w 1. EVENING A . -.- i. '.,-. - -' .'";-, .J 1i i $7 T $ l, K, J i i S w A i... IK I if u I -! u r KS1 Yi i feinting $Jublte?Ictigcr V TrtiE evening"telegraph (.,TUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY ' .V" CSVnttH It. K. ClinTIS. rrmrT rlwH. I.uiJIiiirton. Vice Presidents .Iclin (3. fUrertit-ry and Treasureri rhlllp H Collins. l vvunain. jonn .i. npurfft-on. uirecvor. KntTontAT. nnAiiin "if -. .. .. :;r A;:r.i sATID E. S.MILIJT ' . K.lllor fe C. MARTIN Ocneral llusliiese Slannit- iJubllhrd dalljr at, 1'cbiio l.lcoorn llulldlnf. Independenre Bquare, Philadelphia. ftr AtiaifTio Cm JtirYoiT... LSH1 Metlormlitan Tower .JTrsviiiWii LiuuaniK Drtooit. . . TO) Por.l rtutMInK Inns fullertoii Holldlne 1.102 7rbmir llulldlnc tx. knots. ClllCiCO.., frtf Ninrs nvRBAVS: rAsnlNCTfN Rcikii:. l. s. l;. uor. i'f miss ivonn Ave. and Klh M. Hie .Sii.i lllHldln . . Tiondon Tim", jNiw Yokk nrnrvtj lliXikDriH nnarir &M snnicniPTioN terms ZOv Tmj JJtbnivo Vriuio I.rrxira is srvej in sub 3JcrHtri In Philadelphia and surr-miidlnif lomi" F"i,l tn rale or tneie 1121 ,nls per week payable VJ "? n,'l lo Point" oulsije of Philadelphia. In ,i ,lh wnltI PtMes. Car dr. or t'nltril Stnte" no- tj1 "ln. hAlin fcaa flfl, f.nl rnl. Tier i.innH. KM She jnj rtollnrs per yr, payable In advance fct?s To all forplffn countries on f 1 dollar pel ..wt.h... Nonrn Subscriber nlshlni; Address .banged moit fflva old a well a" tie address OF.LL, SOOO TMMT KI-STONT. MUN 3000 C jtdifrejT all cowimi.tlcalioit It Kv tltu Ptibi JedOr I idfpfildrtice Square. 'Wntep,,,! Member of the Associated Press tub ashoci ri:n I'm: m p(- licely entitled tn tin- mr for rrpuW.intiuii cf all neics diipafvhei relitril to it or mil otherwise riedilrj in n't paper, nml nl the local iifiri pnlliiiliril therein. All rights of republii alion nf ipe inl rfiV pitches herein are aUo leierrtil. I'hlUdelplda ?.lur.l... Ma, 111. 101U ,. it JOBS ENOUGH TO CO AROUND O one who is familiar w ith the labor ' situation in this country will doubt ihat there are job enough for evei man who is discharged from the aimy. The secretarj of labor has picdicted that there will be a labor shortage within three, months. The figuies cited to prove that there is a vast number of unem ployed in the country are misleading be cause, as Secretary VHon points out. there is always a floating idle population of about 1,000.000. Every employei knows that thete ' not labor enough to go around in time? of moderate prosperity. This was true be 'fore the war, in spite of the fact that the population was increased by immigra tion neatly 1,000,000 a year. Hut immi gration virtually ceased after August. 1914. Since the armistice thousands of "foreign born have gone back to the home of their birth, taking their savings with them. Business is gradually lesuming it-! nor mal course. The demand for labor is in creasing. In a gieat majo.-ity of in stances the discharged soldiers have taken the jobs which the left when they Were drafted. In many instances they have secured better jobs. Unless all uigns fail employers will be bidding against one another in the near future for all the available labor in the market. '? EVERY INCH A SOLDIER TTIHE United States army loses a unique figure in Major General Hugh Leno. $ Scott, whose retirement from active serv iiice", takes place at Camp Dix today. A ;!$i&tJr of keen resourcefulness and splen ? lid' vigor, he was at the same time the Uf leapt truculent of soldiers. Clear, dis j' ' 'criminating vision and the sturdiest sense or lair play have been responsible lor the brightest chapters in his long and varied career. General Scott's skillful settlement of the Naco troubles on the border in 1U13 vas among the prime factors of our escape from war with Mexico. We know now how neatly our entry into such a (conflict would have accorded with the aims of German intrigue. Such an adven ture, by engaging the American army, might have prevented the triumph of civilization in the European fray. But the Naco crisis was only one cf many from which the common sense diplomacy of General Scott extricated ifc 3is country. In the Sulu archipelago, :0l where he was for a time governor, he fcl 1fl 1 1 1 ,.! I 4....1... r SluvMBllcu aiaei, JltaillCU LUUSf luiuu- $ Iftnfc Moslems nnrl won thn sohrinnt rtf the "great and good governor." SP . Age-limit regulations, which compelled Sr jhia retirement as chief of staff in 1917 feJHit now necessitate his exit from Camp ODljr, denied him active service in the .world war. but his abilities as an orsran- P-fixer and trainer of notential soldierv 3t" JTvere rjut to invaluable use. It is aDDro- & nriate that tomorrow will .nark the re- W turn to the Jersey cantonment of the first units Qf the Seventy-eighth Divi- s . sion, which he developed into superb &? flrli?Yio mntprml. h '""White Man-Who-Will-Not-Tcll-A-Lie" ,5a .what the Indians, whon: he so often fought and pacified, called him. "White gs "Man is more compact ana even more comprehensive. It bespeaks, the affection which the country feels toward him and hn nriHe it takes in his lonir. clean and ?1 t,t.mtnf fnpnrrl MOTHERS m,jfifCEi again the day has come aiound Kw fciV'-when we pay tribute to the mothers, ;.'nd tomorrow there will be services in Mfcthe churches in their honor. flot.. ., . , . , ,jjut tney were noi iorgouen in the SearsT before a day was set apart for fj j formal recognition by a public demon fc stration. rj-S, Pur Iiteratuie is full of admiration. ruqienuge says inai j momer is a mother still, the holiest thing alive." PuTkoMfornv wrrntp ttmf Mntlipi io iha Lnaine for God in the lips and hearts of frjlkle children." Holmea declares that th fades; love Uroops; the leaves of 3ship fall; a mothers secret hope llvea them all." n, wny muuipiy msiance.s .- in tne of every worthy man and woman is a special shrine set apart where tftriwper? burn before the holy image of ' wiinrilinn snirit who watched over Pfly .infant footsteps and followed his AtttaiV, stride in later years. ''flidfe'i to the mothers! God 'bless ibmi every one! t i ft' THE. FLIGHT TO EUROPE the preludes, to a transocean t.wialMykt, fHfffttr made by American naval men, MtAdiy tnovene lmaginai'on oi peo flfiryhref VA$ least four nations. iloetiiStrauitnxMBr, snv gtojy oi vie-. tory in n contest that is more than Greek in its implications of heroism. It is but fair to the British llieis who have been tuning up their machines and watching ominous skies nt Newfoundland to remember that the American airmen have great advantages on their side. They will fly nt night. Destroyers will await them at fifty-mile intervals to in dicate the course by seaichlightc. The Britishers, when they hop off, will go largely by compass and blind luck. Upon both sides there is great i isk and it need for endless valor and endurance. The attempt at a transatlantic flight is significant in other ways. Even the Germans are said to be feverishly til woik with it hope of being llrst across. Mankind is no rooticr out of the blood and dust and miseiy of an incomparable disaster, than it turns to lencw a mag nificent conflict for supremacy over the I elements. Automatical!, like a man who has stumbled, the tace has blushed the dirt out of its eyes and, still limping. turns an undaunted face to the ky. MEN WHO FOUGHT MILITARISM MAY BE ASKED TO SUPPORT IT Returning Soldiers Are Finding Proof That Most of the Politicians Remained at Home A MISITIOI'S politicians e ei where r' are manifesting an ominous interest m the new American Legion, which has jusi been organized by returned sot vice men. who hope solidl to oiganiyc all of lleeis and men as fast as they return to civil life. Tbeio is nothing to indicate a political motne among I he soldiers lliem-elves. Their movement was a natural and almoM involuntni , one at tlie beginning, llut no one will Mippoo that politintl inanageis did not at once discern the high potentialit of an organization which appeals dnectly to the sentiment of more than 1.000,000 0iing men and indirectly to many other millions of men and women voters. It was plain that a paiticular appeal would be made ready for the occasion. The form of that appeal is now be coming apparent. Somewheie in the high places there seems to bo a belief that the returned soldiers will tespond most readily to a doctrine of extensive military 'prepaieduess" preached a a new political gospel in 19120. A ort of diluted Germanism charac terizes a good many of the speeches that ate lieintr made in various parts of the countiy by those who keep one eye on the futuie and the other on the men who are just leaving the arm. It is questionable whether Ameiican politicians weie ever more obtuse than they show themselves to be in this in stance. It is rebuttable thai professional jioli ticos weie so few in Fiance. Had the men who inspire patty platforms ever lived in a dugout or endured a barrage or a gas wave; had they ever been permitted to see the aftermath of a high explosive bombardment or a trench fight they would be better fitted now to make a decent and reasonable appeal to the mind of returned soldiers It , fashionable to look with a oi i of awe upon the homecoming service man and to regard him as a mystery of sorts. He i a new factor in American politics. But he is not a mystery. He is an aver age man made a little wiser and a little more critical by hard and astonishing ex periences. In some ways he is dift'eient from the men who welcome him and won der about his secret mind. It has always been obsetvable, foi ex ample, that such forbearance and calm and charity as there was in the war was to bo found for the most part among the men who fought hardest and suffered most. Soldiers at the front rarely par ticipated in the fashionable hatreds of the last few years. Their own experi ences helped them to a better under standing of the general catastrophe. The best haters were at home in the leather chairs. So it was and so it is with the jingoes. Who remembers ever having met a re turned American soldier who consciously assumed the heroic pose? The romantic glamour that still colors a stay-at-home politician's conceptions of war and war makers does not delude any man who saw modern fighting. "We don't want to parade. We want to go home!" That is the answer of a majority in almost every returning unit when the prospect of a public review is suggested by the officers. But the men parade usually in a spirit of tolerant kindness, to do the home folks a good turn and give them a thrill, even though they themselves feel a bit bored and a bit tired by the performance. The fact of the matter is that under the O. D.'s of the service the free spirit of these free men was voluntarily sub ordinated but never quite submerged. We hear a great deal of the illiteracy found in the new army after its organization, and often we fail to remember that, de spite all, the American expeditionary force was the most intelligent, the keen est minded, the fastest thinking and the cleanest army ever organized. It had superb self-control because it was not a driven mass that disintegrated and de scended to disorder and lawlessness at the moment when authority was relaxed or withdrawn. Each of its individual units was animated by a competent in telligence. Within each soldier remained the man who submitted his spirit to rig-m-oiK discipline and gave up hia inherited freedom of action yet remained always the conscious observer and the intelli gent critic of all that he saw and felt and heard. He saw things that will remain with htm as long as his memory la'sts. What he may bring back in the way of hopes or determination or conviction to his own country it is hard to say as yet. The homeward soldier is too glad to be critical now. The worst we have in the way of speeches of welcome, the most dismal of political prospects, the dullest witted politicians, seem so much better than the things he has left that he feels for the moment as if ho had achieved paradise. It is after he gets into civilian clothes and back to normal life with timo to think land make assessments of tho .. a ...- .. ""v-IA . conditions about him that his influence, mny bo felt In novel ways. What does he bring? Not a lovo of militarism, sutely! There is something fantastic in the gestures of the cam paign planners who are even now aiming subtle arguments at the returned soldier to urge an interval of rampant militarism in the United States. For the average man available for membership in the American Legion mili tary service meant the loss of his inde pendence, a flattening out of his' ego to a common level with millions iron re strictions everywhere, deadly risk, hard ship and unthinkable sacrifice and abso lute obedience to other men's whims and commands. He was a man taught to be free and independent and intelligent enough to appreciate freedom and inde pendence. And it -is to him that the patrioteeis now propose to appeal with a demand that ho perpetuate conditions thai irked and hindered him in order that his childicn may fate as haiti or even harder than he did! At this distance it would appear that political policies inspired by what lead ers talk of as "the military spirit" of the reluming soldiers will fail utterly to ap peal to the American Legion or to in sure its support. Our men finished their job and they are eager to thirl of plcas anter thing?. Pennsylvania will have leceived hack more than "0,000 of her men when all of the Twenty-eighth Division are home. As nearly as it is possible to express leverence and welcome in flags and deco rations we are doing so in Philadelphia. Hut the soldieis themselves will not deem that sort of thing adequate in itself if we aie unable to show understanding of the things they fought for and a ic specl for the system of government which they helped to maintain. Men like those lcturning with the Twenty-eighth will level a shr.rper scru tinj nt the leaders in politic. That is almost certain. And all the welcome and the color, the processions and the com mittees and the speeches will be but a mockery if we insist on affronting the intelligence of returning soldiers with an invitation to vole for the perpetuation of a cm so which they had to share before it could be lifted fiom the world. GREATER POLAND rpiir. habit of regarding as compHta--'- tively small the nations born or ic born of the war needs correction in one sit iking instance. In point of popula tion, Poland emerges fiom the conflict the sixth country in Europe. Her thirty million people, ten million mine than Spain'.- and only six million less than Italy's with the old frontiers, must un questionably become a factoi of vital consequence in the development of the continent. As she wa.-, in the past, l'oland is now a leal power. With the international ized Danzig and her own "corridor," opportunity for the legitimate commer cial progress of a historic, a i roud and a long-outraged nation is assured. At last the criminal partition in the eighteenth century is exculpated. Once agaii the nation which saved Christendom when John Sobieski beat back the Turkish hordes from the gates of Vienna is en abled to play her rightful role in the vvoild. The genius which, denied so man other outlets, -ought an exit in the art of Chopin, of the De Ueszkes, of Paderewski, of Modjeska and Sinkiewic., now has a chance to flower in fields of statesman ship, industr and all the broad avenues of civilization. The matchless pianist who is her premier has made an inspir ing beginning. It is an index to futuie accomplishments of an unextinguishnble nation. OUR FESTIVE TROLLEY POLES THE squatty typewriter and the rigid trolley polo have alike been held unfitted to artistic treatment. The lattci charge, however, is triumphantly dis proved in Chestnut street's green and gold colonnade which will frame the Iron Division pageant. Clearly there is much virtue in a coat of paint, enough, indeed, to inspire doubt that some of the ugliness of our thoroughfares is irremediable. The disfigurement caused by trolley poles seemed final when in the dim dis tant past and in the face of much rhetori cal indignation the transit company de clared the wiie-slot system, which has since worked so admirably in New York and Washington, to be "impracticable." Once the overhead wiles were author ized, no effort whatever was made to modify the offensiveness of the proces sion of iron supports. The very mildly ornamental top-caps are still lacking on many of the poles as on the day when the latter were first erected. Unsightly rust is another index of artistic indiffer ence. Gilt is expensive. The gleaming pole summits along Chestnut street will fade, and it is hardly to be expected that the adornment displayed for a special occa sion can be made practically permanent. But let costly paint, attractively applied, could decidedly brighten up the perpen dicular excrescences from our pavements. The festal guard exhibited for the parade furnishes a suggestive tip. "l'oland," said John The Nw V. Shulski, represcn- Vertfon tntive of that nation in the United States, is reborn!" The suggestion of a new ihikibood for Poland will remind the world at large ot a new version of a familiar musim thut now appears to guide other smaller nationb similarly fortunate. They seem to believe, often enough, that children thoul'l be heard, not seen. Would not current headlines have a bright new siguifi merely that a break Yes! Yet.'. ' cuuee it thej said threatens China? "Tho document," They Grow No Hetter cried 1'rofessor Schueklng, a II un savant, when ht. read the. peace terms, "is simply awful," Ger man professors are awful Id a complicated way The Allied nations Uuery are now reported to favor the Kolchak regime in ltussla. Now 'will Borne one tell us who Is favored by (lie Kolchak regime? CONGRESSMAN MOORE'S ' LETTER Howard B, French's Work for the Medical Department of the Navy. Stewart and Dennett and the ! 1 Kensington School of i Oratory Washington. .May 10. fTHHJ dlstresing effects of gas inatilfcst -- themselves in various wa.vs. Home of the bojs who were nt the front know only loo well how deadly tint, wretched method of warfare was. William L Bernard. Jr.. who was in action nf Chateau-Thierry and the Argomie with the 109th Machine Gun Battery of the Tvvent -eighth Division, is one of the victims who now understand that ens. once it takes hold of the human nnimttl, is not readily shaken off. Bernard was wounded he lind n piece of shrapnel tnken out of his leg but that prohnbl) wits tint so serious as the discovery that bemuse of the gas remaining in hi pj stein indoor work was virtually impossible. Physician who believe the gas will work mil in time have advised the open life, and in onse iiuenee of that advice the omig soldier will probably be found during the sum mer in the life guard service at Wildwood. Bernard is a nephew of Captain Walter .1 Bernard, who has recently been highly com mended for efficiency as mnrine superintend ent of the army transport pieis at Hohoken. OLD-TIME newspaper men will if If. Itrady, who "did Third street ecall V. street" when Third and Chestnut wus the (enter of finnn- i inl operations, but who is now at the Na tional Military Home. Dayton, t). Brady was a sergeant major in the Kltith Pennsyl vania Volunteers in the famous Philadelphia brigade. Years ago he detei mined to take up with the southern branch of the National Home foi Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, which occupies a beautiful situation at Hampton Boad1-. When the Km-opcaii war broke oiil the old bojs were moved to the home at Da.v ton. O.. where there are now prob.ihl.v ."00 of them, so that the War Department might have the use of the southern home " a hospital for sick and disabled soldiers of the present war. Now and then, how ever, it crops out that the old Civil War fellows want to gel back Brady among the others. Thej love the old surroundings in their miiir Virginia home. But the War Depaitinent has mled that it will need the home as a hospital until the present emer gencj is over. po(;m:ssMAX boyal c. johnson. of South Dakota, who made a record "over there," calls by name many Philadel phia bon with whom he was associated in ' the rank. He has a particular interest in the .'!l."th Infantry of the Scvent.v -ninth , Division for that reason. The Seventy-ninth j has been scheduled to return in June, nntl -ome question has arisen us to whether the bo.vs will be demobilized at Camp Di or at l 'amp Meade, where they started army life. Johnson thinks if they desire to go to Meade they should be permitted to do so. The War Department, however, advises that it is too early to make definite arrangements for the Seventy-ninth. The adjutant gen eral says, "All men arc sent for discharge to the camp nearest the point where tiiey entercd the serv ice. All Mm, viand men, then, in the :tl."th Infantry would be sent to Camp Meade; those from Philadelphia would be sent to Camp Div. New Jerse.v, as is now being done with the Twenty-eighth Divi sion." TJOWAUD B FIIL'NCII, of the Union -- League, has two or three loves, all pure 1 plntonie. although that pretty home of his out on the Main Line probably holds fust place. The Chamber of Commerce, of which he was formerly president, is high up in Mr. I'renih's affections, but the Phila delpliia College of Pharmacy has that sort of claim upon him which makes all pharma ceutical preparations taste to him like ic fined sugar. Therefore Mr. T'rench is for the bill which has been introduced in Con gress to increase the efficiency of the medical department of the United States navy b. giving proper rank to pharmacists who serve side by side with the medical officers. Mr. Trench knows how to conduct a congies sional I'limpjigti, and he is pursuing this one vigorously. B KNUVOLIINT societies in Philadelphia that have been giving aid to soldiers and sailors in Belgium. Frau.ce and elsewhere are having some difficulty in getting early and direct information with respect to their operations. The passport business enters into their problem very ncutely, since it is difficult at times to secure transportation for those who should go nbrotul to report upon these American expenditures. The Belgian relief committee of the Umergency Aid of Pentisjlvania, of which Mrs. Bayard Henry is chairman, is going through nn experience of this kind. The relief com mittee is supporting at Caunes, Frame, a convalescent home for Belgian officers. It is called the "Hopital de riiiladelphie." and is under the personal pationage of the Duchess do Vendome, a sister of King Al bert. This Philadelphia in-titution has been officially reiogni.ed by the Belgian (govern ment, and is said to be the only hospital of its kind for Belgian officers. MLMBKRS of Congress from Philadelphia and vicinity who have not sworn In on the question of woman buffragc need not expect to avoid the solicitous consideration of the women who believe in the right to vote. There aretvvo very active organisa tions with headquarters in Philadelphia, and each of them is getting busy for the spring offensive. The Kqual Franchise Society, headed by Miss Sophie II. Dulles and backed up by Miss Mary A. Burnhiim, Miss Mary II. Ingham. Mrs. Matthew Ilaird aud a few stalwarts like J. Levering Jones, Isaac II. (Totltfer and Francis A. Lewis, is one of these; and tho National Woman's party, with Miss Ingham chairman of the state executive committee, and that militant all- around suffrage fighter, Miss Alice Paul, of New Jersey, chairman of the national execu tive committee, Is the other. Sometimes these two organizations do not agree upon methods of procedure, but like squabbling Democrats they usually get together on the muin ibsue. THKUU is much pent-up oratory in the Kensington district. The mill workers develop a linn of speechmaking through tho unions and textile associations and many of them have become adepts. John S. Stew art miple quite a reputation through the Workingmcn's Protective Tariff League, of which the late Martin St. Legcr was so long president, but recently the eyes of Kensington have been turned toward David Martin's friend, Representative James Den nett, who has a particular stylo of his own. Bennett's speech at the Anti-Cobdeu Club the other night Is said to have Btartcd the eloquent Buchbolz toward the woods. Jim never lacks a flow of words, nor does bo fall to use to advantage the gift of mixing the ethereal with his mundane philosophy. The most coavinclng proof of the excel lence and sincerity of the peace treaty is ,the lamentation from such papers as the Iiudon Jlprnlng t'oijt and tat Echo tie Paris, ' &v V 'gB&g-'A - THE CHAFFING DISH Mother's Day (May tl. 1 !l!l J TY'A ' When ililldish tempers, childish tears Abused our patience, ere we knew What knowing was, vvc turned to you And let you soothe away our fears. Ah. how that memory endears! Kach child ou tucked in bed still hears The stairs that creaked beneath jour 'hoe, Dearest of all ! I uteitain recollection clear-. That old enchanted laughter neuis Our mil til and music while we grew, llovv could we give you all our due Or tell jon why your face appears Dearest of all? V V V Another Unknown Damsel Since leading damsels catch jour oe, Despite their prim demeanor-, Perhaps some day you'll watch me ply Mj chopsticks there at Wiener's ; For now 1 fairly haunt the place, In hopes that I shall see ou. And closely scan each chewing face. Debating which can be oil. Laih day, when it is time for lunch And noontide whistles blow, The time-clock hopefully I punch And off to Wiener's go. I prop my hook in front of me And o'er its pages hover, Airanging it so you ma sec Your name upon the cover. And, as I rend, I keep one e.ve Un the m.vsterious portals, For fear thut you will pass me h.v Like all these common mortals. If you but wore your undent guise When ou come here this noon, I'd know you by oiir brooding ejes And eke our sandal-shoon. Stay is it our approaching staff Which makes this Rtutely tap: 1 straia my neck like u giraffe My salad's in my lap! Then, as 1 try to get my food Back in my plate again, I see it's nothing but a dude With silver-headed cane. I fear that modem times like these Compel a sage to drop His uniform, lest crowds should tease And thus attract a cop. But when at last you heave in view I'll know 'it, when you look (The surest proof that it is you) With interest at my book. Though longing at the Hits to rat, (They never failed to please) At Wiener'R I shall take my scat Till I find Socrates. The B-S atmosphere Is grand, Exclusive and so tony, Hut still I hike to Wiener's and Pretend to read Cansonl. SUB HOSA. V V V To w hit h we reply : SVB ROSA, dear, by slow degrees . Yopr friendly heart we disillusion : Alas, the candid Socrates Regrets your flattering confusion. Cmiioiit is a book of wit, A book of pure delight. II Is sorrowfully wc admit- Alas, wc didn't wilto It! V V v It is with great regrrt'fhat we retract and disavow tho letter thatlappeared in the Dish yesterday, purporting to be from llrock-dorff-Rantzau to his wjfe. This was cabled to us by our Versailles correspondent, and seemed to bear as much evidence of atlthenr ticlty as most of the Peace Conference dope that zooms in. Hut Dr. Maurice Francis Kgan, in an in terview granted yesterday, states that Brock dorff is "a bachelor and the perfect type of diplomat." Our own conviction is that no bachelor can be as perfect a diplomat as the married man is by necessity; but let 'that pass. Doctor Egan says the gentleman is a bachelor, and Doctor Egan knows him. isuner urocsaorn has deliberately deceived Doetor., Hgan or I else The Chaffine Dish's eorresMBnt is at, AT THE FINISH fault. Wo piefer to lake the blame on our selves. We have dismissed our Ycr-aillos representative. V V Y Page Allin-oii sends us (he following, which he bus clipped from 77ic Outlook: Misri:r.i.srnri TIIOL'lill IKl'l. I'.riKllBh llllittni1tr. uri"at render, ImrMlnir writer, rieslrinir to know others. Invite letters from either Bex of any nun or rnnk who will seclude themselves two liourH vveeklv, nnrt vvrlle frank Is what they hnvo fell, seen, heard thouuht unci done In reluru for their emotions and observation, thought taerlou and vvhlniDleall, hope and fears, love and hales. Ideals arid aspirations (jood. bad, and Indifferent), ho offers his own looping thus to demolish that subtle harrier whieh Isolates ns from the real ll,es nr our fellows Will von write- llrlss. Tambov 10ns. Calcutta. If any of our patrons communicate vvith Mr. Ilriggs we hope they will let the Di-h -lime in Ins dilcttaiitrums. As soon as we can lind two secluded hours we arc going to wi ite to him our-elf. V V V Pierre and the Loup-Garou Lli? Oui, ntii, Mo'sicu, Sine, dnt loiip-gnroii He ces had as lull, wit' bees snail an' snap; How I know? Mon Dieu ! 1 was bite, paibleu ! Yv hen I meet mishap. wit' a -how ou say.'- 1 was walk in smiic D.il was set for hear, , An my laig, he ces caught so I dun' get out; Den dnt wolf, he come Wil' bees blood-red gum An' bees jaws so wide 1 win see hecs motit', not have mj life' For to save m.v life ; Pourqiini? Well, Mo'sieu, I have lef heeni full. So ilat wolf, he spring Lak some devil-t'iug An' I t'ink I not have an.v life at all! Bui I'm desp'rale man- So 1 light wit haus "I'll at las' 1 have keel licciu b.i choke to deaf ; But my arms are bite' When I'm done dut-Jight An' of loup-garou I'm afraid, ou bet! N. II. Pierre told this tale As he sipped his ale While we tlavvdled and talked in old Quebec's bars ; And (hough very few Of his iirns are true ', I am sure this oue is, for I buvv the scars. ROBERT J,. KELLL'M. V V V More Thoughts on Unknown Damsels "Men may be engaged in philanthropic or political movements; they niiiy lovo their work intensely; they may be consummating an ambition ; but withal their minds are pon dering on some particular woman, or on women In general, AVe hold imaginary con versations with women wo have known, whom we know, or whom we would liko to kuovv. Wo think nbout the 'feminine faces wo meet in the streets, and experience n pass ing melancholy because we are tiuacquulnled with some of the girls we see." ALBERT MORDELL, in the unmentionable book. V V V The ('ermuii peace envoys uught to be grateful to Mr. Beck for saying all tho things about the peace treaty that they would, like to say but cannot, V V V Never mind, the auld lung signature! will be along on tho date stipulated, V V V Thu event of next July 1st should prove a great stimulus to aviation, now that Halifax a very hospitable city, as we know from pcrsoual experience proves to bo only nine hour' nighi rrqtn .vcjy jorK. U . - , , S(5o'A'JPJ - Would Not Die in April j - - ..... . TWC 1 AVi "WOULD not die in April, Nor have .voiir spade disturb them ' For my sake. I prize too much the comfort Of nil the pallid shoots To grub beneath their confident Slim roots. Oh, lather in the snow time That from the newly dead The gras- may forage boldly In my head. And from my heart the violel May drink, and flame .a blue Sweet message from the heart ot God To you. Clement AVood, in "The Earth Tunis South." Even the Peace Conference, which has untied so ninny hard knots, would balk at the job of distributing a few thousand tickets for parade seats among two million people. What Do You Know? QUIZ 1. What is the method of choosing the pops called V -. Nnlnc tlnce German cities which were iepublicsv before the fall of the im perial government last autumn. '!. What is the longist distance without landing which the American trans ' utlantic fliers will have to traverse? I. What article of food bus a name that literally means "taste reviver"? ,". AVho wrote "Songs Before Sunrise"? II. What w'ar was officially ended by the treaty of Frankfort? 7.-A"hut is hellebore? S. AVho said "Theie never wus a good war or a bad peace"? !l. How is the word ovation commonly mis-ti-ed? 10. AVhat nre t!0 design and colors of the American "Union Jack"? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Nauru, for which ('rent Britain Jms been made a mandatory, lies in the Pacific ocean on lougitudc 107 west and lati lude O.tKJ south. .. Jean Grolier was a celebrated French bibliophile. He owes his reputation to his passion for fine books (regarding alike subject, binding, printing and paper). lie designed many of his Own ornaments and supervised the paper. His dates are 1470-1505. M. Thomas Jefferson, among his other ac complishments, was well versed In architecture. 1. The word coleslaw is derived from the Dutch kool, meaning cabbage, and "slaa," salad. 5. Ossip Gobrllovvltsch, the pianist, mar ried Clara Clemens and was hence the son-in-law of Mark Twain. (I, The maximum size of the army which, under the peace; treaty, Germany will bo permitted to maintain is 100,001' men. 7. Tho state governor who goes to the Senate when tho extra session openu is AA'alter Edge, o New Jersey. 8. Gustave Flaubert wrote tho Carthagin ian historical novel, "Salarambo." 0. Tho Hanscatlc League was a medieval confederation of cities in north Ger many and adjacent counties formed for the promotion of commerco and for protection against robbers, pirates and hostile governments. lO."" Belgium, has; .been called ''the cockpit of A '''T'v'V.'-, l" ' i-t j ? SPI .v? & i mBsi ' i.Ms i(. tf.'ivT! w h, . ' u eV -' , . "- - i. i ( W . !.. , ' - . j t "-