6 WHY PATRIOTIC SINGING SOCIETY WAS ORGANIZED The Singing Soldier Makes Best Contented Fight ing Man One thing we must have to hold in our hearts; the true picture of the boys on the transport Tuscania when the fatal hour came. Disci pline was' there, we are assured, but what songs did they sing? In general terms the New York Globe speaks of our soldiers as "singing the battlecry of freedom," and one wonders if by some instinct the re frain l'rom old Civil War days well ed up in "Hurrah, hurrah, we bring the jubilee," putting in the back ground the syncopations of "Over There." Whatever it was, wo can trust the Globe's. words that "the spirit of America was in the songs that came from the sinking s;liip, rather than in imprecations against the foe that strikes in the dark and wreaks his fury 011 women and chil dren." The Globe goos on in a nobly impassioned strain: "The song 3 that rose from the Hooding decks of the Tuscania are echoing in the hearts of a hun dred million Americans, cheering them on to redoubled effort. Not in hymns of hate shall our feelings find expression. Not in vain threats. Not in cries for vengeance, llut as we, too, begin to feel the wounds of the treacherous enemy of mankind the son;? that rose to the lips of our sons facing death shall swell bur hearts with the love of honor, of liberty, of justice that alone makes war glorious, that dis pels all doubts, that makes life and possessions dear to us only for what they count in the battle for victory. "Over the crushed bodies of our soldiers dashed upon the rooks of the Irish coast we consecrate all that we are, all that we have, to the cause of man lor which our fathers raised the standard our- armies tight \inder in France. Of those that have fallen as men fall it is our part to be worthy. Cheering each other, they went to their deaths; cheering each other, wo must bear their deaths, and, counting not tlre'cost, so serve that their deaths may not be in vain. Unhastily, unskillfully, we took up the burden laid upon us. t'riangrlly, un fearfully, we must carry it,, determined only that we will light as those light that know their strength and the justice of their quarrel. "They sang of America, those that bore our colors upon the water that engulfed them. So le.t us that stand iipon the shores take up their song, Ko let us still live to honor them that have fallen, and to carry on cheer fully, wisely, thoroughly, the strug gle*in which ungrudgingly they gave their lives." The singing of the army will be one of the inspiring chapters in the history of the war. Changes have already come about. The British Army is,less of a singing force than it was in the early days. There is rot so much singing of route songs, .-•ays E. B. Osborn, in The Il lustrated London News, as there used to be when the troops were be ing moved up into the forward sec tions of the lighting-zone. The offi cer who provides this information insists that this change does not mean that the fine edge of morale has been blunted. J!ut changes of personnel have come over the Army: "The men are as good as ever hey were—better, perhaps, now that •ven the conscripted recruits are be •oining wary veterans and the iron determination of the whole great brotherhood is tempered to steel. Hut it was the 'Tommy' of the old Army—who i 3 now no more—and the Reservists who were so l'ond of singing and whistling when on the road or in billets as to surprise even ihe gay, gallant poilus who have in herited such a store of quaint marching chanties —many of them closely resembling the counting-out rhymes used in children's games. The Territorials who had had camp holi days were also a tuneful race. "But the multitudes that arrived later on, taken out of industrial oc cupations which were always being speeded up, had been worked too hard all their lives to acquire the habit of open-air singing. The mod ern factory or warehouse or shop lias no use for chanties; the wheels of our vast industrial mechanism have not ground out a single joyous I'oik-song. The successors of the Territorials only knew the choruses of a few popular musical songs; and their junior officers—the ma jority men accustomed to the silent, engrossing toil and moil of business life—could teach them nothing bet ter, as a rule. Such officers and men look on war as a business rather ihan as a sport—the game of games—and there can be no doubt • that their point of view makes for a higher degree of efficiency in the end. The picturesque side of war fare has vanished forever; the late Ivor Campbell (that new Stevenson in becoming who fell on the road to Kut, after serving in I'rance with hla fellow clansmen) spoke salutary truth when he defined modern War as 'organized boredom,' and said he felt its incessant drudgery in his N ery bones. So the men of the New Armies will march songless for hours and miles—just as they walk ed aforetime to the dour day's work through the dim, echoing streets of still-slumbering industrial cities. Curious About M L ? It Stands tor the Best Cold Cough and Catarrh Medicine Ever Discovered, Which Is Mentho Laxene - Mentho-Laxenc has been on the market seven years. It is a concen trated compound of healing, sooth ing, curative extracts to be mixed at homo witli granulated sugar syrup—a full pint—or it may be taken in doses of ten drops in the "raw" state by those who do not like sweet feyrup. The very first dose brings won uerful relief in head or chest colds of children or adults. Every bottle sold is guaranteed to please or money back by The Blackburn Pro ducts Co., Dayton, Ohio. It is economy to make a. full pint. Much cheaper than buying icady-made cough or cold remedies —besides, you cannot buy a more < fl>( tive medicine anywhere, one botile will lust a season for most families, and it checks or aborts a **nd cold if taken promptly. Every well-stocked druggist supplies Men tho-I.axne. Don't take a substi tute—for your sake.—-Adv. FRIDAY EVENING, Considered aright, their grim silence is that of some tremendous machine which is running smoothly and achieving its purpose without any fuss at all." The defect might be remedied, Mr. Osborn points out, and since "sing ing breeds cheerfulness," it is sug gested that the men of the new armies be provided with suitable song-books: "The book which would be most useful to them would contain, in the llryt place, the words of the old familiar tunes that have survived so many of the wildly popular music hall ditties. The British working man turned soldier is curiously con scientious in this matter, and quite unlike the concert-singers, who think more of tune and tone than of the human significance of a song; he will not open his mouth if he has not the words by heart. If ho comes from Scotland or Wales, he almost always knows the words time has wedded to his inherited melodies. 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