- Demoreaic; aldo Bellefonte, Pa., January 21, 1921. THREE GIFTS. #Courage, Love and Fun.”—George Wynd- ham’s motto. By W. M. Letts, in the London Spectator. Bach day a beggar woman at the portal Of God’s high house, by urgent need em- boldened, I ask gifts for you, my well-beloved Three gifts beyond the wealth of djinn or mortal; Courage to stand now all the earth seems quaking And wise men grow perplexed and king- doms totter. Now faith is sifted, old tradition tattered. A broken world in need of each man’s making; Love that shall find your Kkith in friend and stranger, Brother in man and beast, in saint and sinner, And cleanse your heart or grudge or pride or grievance, Bidding you seek Christ in an asses’ man- ger; Fun ever quick to kindly speech and laughter, Swift with a jest the day your heart is breaking. Fun that shall cheer dull years and send you whistling Clear-eyed and cool to meet Hereafter, With these you shall praise or pity, Defeat shall brace you, conquest make you humble; So you shall fight and march and sing till moonrise Lights up the walls of the Celestial City. the brave not need men's THE COMPACT. The sun beat down upon the sandy road. In places the highway been swept bare by the wind, which had piled the sand in drifts by the roadside or in the near-by fields. There was no grass between field and road, and the long rows of corn stood wilting in the mid-afternoon heat. Running parallel with the road, like a dejected companion, was the bed of a stream, its sand as innocent of mois- ture as the highway. A man stood silent in the road, his head bowed like the leaves of corn, and bared to the scorching sun, his y-felt hat crushed in his clenched at. So he had stood, motionless, for the last ten minutes. A sudden breeze from the south sprang up and rustled the dry leaves of a cottonwood by the creek-bed. It struck the man’s cheek like the blast from an open furnace, and then passed swiftly to its real mission, blasting the already doomed corn. At the touch of the wind the man lifted his head defiantly, as though it had been a challenge, and felt, though he did not deign to see, the blight that marked the path of the wind. There had been no rain since June, and this was August. But the prairie crop is used to drought and there had been hope for the corn until the hot winds came three days before. Since that time Enoch Cornwall had neither eaten nor slept. At night he sat brooding by his doorstep until dawn. When the heat was most intense he walked bareheaded through the fields, lifting his head suddenly whenever the wind smote his cheek. His great frame had become gaunt, and his cheeks drawn, but a fierce light burn- ed in his eyes, bloodshot from sleep- lessness and the glare from the sun. The dust and burning heat had dulled the blackness of his matted hair. The perspiration had caked the dust on his shirt. This defiant, uncared-for figure was wholly alien to the zealous, self- confident leader that had guided the temporal and spiritual affairs of the Walnut Ridge inhabitants for more than two years. (Walnut Ridge being a misnomer for a neighborhood that had neither walnut-trees nor ridges, but was the namesake of some happier spot in that indefinite region known as “Back East.”) wall was the shepherd of a flock that gathered to worship in the small, un- painted school house barely visible on the horizon from where he now stood. But the school house had held no serv- ice for three weeks because the flock, one by one as the dry season advanc- ed, had gone into the lands whence they came, and Enoch had put forth no hand to stay them. There had been a day—and his eyes now filled with scorn at the thought—when he had babbled foolish words to his parish- ioners about the providences of God, and had exhorted them that, having put their hands to the plow, they should not look back. But that was before the summer when the grass- hoppers had riddled the promising fields, or before the sand storms of early spring had blown out the wheat, or She hot winds had blasted the earth. Three times had the discouraged people taken heart again, encouraged by the fair promises of a crop, and each time their faith had been mock- ed and their efforts returned to them fruitless. At first Enoch had preach- ed with great fervor, assuring them that God only desired a fiery trial of their faith, and at the crucial moment he would stay the forces of destruc- tion as God had stayed the hand of Abraham and restored Isaac. He charged their early failures to a lack of faith, and urged them with passion- ate zeal to greater exhibitions of trust. He was gifted with the eloquence and dominating zeal of the born lead- er. His superabundance of physical vitality and confidence carried his flock through one hopeless period after another. They became entirely dependent on him as nature failed them, the responsibility only increas- ing his fervor. But when the answers to his prophecies were continued fail- aires and the fields lay wasted and parched, doubt crept into his own heart and his message had less as- surance. His body began to succumb to the constant drain on it. He stop- ped working on the frame house that he had been building by the side of his dugout. He even ceased writing to the girl in the East who was to For Enoch Corn- ! come in the early fall, and her letters to him lay unopened in the postoffice, twelve miles away, whither he had not gone for weeks. And the change in Enoch’s mental state was reflected in the settled despair on the faces of his flock. Their dull, hopeless eyes accus- ed him. He had failed as an interme- diary between them and God. The cul- mination came one Sunday when Enoch stood before them and gave a passionate message which sounded woefully like a denunciation of Prov- idence. And now there was no need for ex- hortation, because the little flock was gone. Only a few non-church goers, single men who lived alone in the dug- out, remained to neighbor with Enoch. As for the shepherd himself, he no longer prayed—he only brood- ed. Yesterday his best work-horse had died. The one remaining was sick. His cows were dry from lack of pasture. But he made no effort to op- pose the ravages of the drought. An awful apathy possessed him. A fury was slowly gathering within aim. This morning he had noticed his Bible open on the table, and he had thrust it into the stove. But some force had made him withdraw his hand, so he had only pushed the book under a chest out of sight. Now as the wind passed over the field his eye caught sight of some- thing on the distant horizon. It was a thunder-capped cloud, such as had often formed in the sky since the dry season came on. At the same instant a black bird came sailing across the waste, as if straight from the heart of the cloud, growing larger as it ap- proached, until, to Enoch’s distorted vision, it blotted out the sky. It de- scended slowly and settled on a bough of the cottonwood. It was a buzzard of unusual size, and it seemed to fix its sinister attention on the man in the road. The sight touched some hidden spring which held the slow- accumulating fury of days. The man began to scream, jumping yp and down in the road. He hurled violent imprecations at the bird until he be- came incoherent and only babbled. Then he suddenly raised his clenched fists to the sky and hissed, “You you, you.” The effort exhausted him. Weak with the heat and lack of food, he began to blubber, muttering brok- enly as he stumbled down the road. Instinctively he sought the shelter of some bushes and lay quiet until the storm of his emotions passed. A geat calmness came over him; his nerves settled and his mind cleared. He began to speak as if to a second person, quietly and deliberately: “I have done my best, but you have de- ceived me. You have deceived my people. I have no more faith in you. I am under no obligations to you, and I withdraw my allegiance to you. I will depend on other help.” He felt stronger then, much as if he had prayed. Then he rose and looked about, as if to shake off his former personality he moved to another posi- tion. Then, still speaking quietly, he said: “If there be any other power that can give succor, come. I do not promise to trust until I have seen the promise fulfilled.” He waited a mo- ment, but there was no sound, not even of ‘the wind. So he tramped steadily down the road toward his dugout. Once he thought some one came out of the corn-field, just behind him, but it was only the whir of the buzzard’s wings as 1t passed over his head. Again he was sure that he heard the rumble of a wagon in the road, but the highway lay bare and empty in the heat. The clouds were piling up in the southeast, but he did not heed them. When he reached the dugout he straightened up the untidy rooms which had not been cleared out for days, working calmly, steadily, despite the increasing ‘darkness. The wind had fallen and the prairie was op- pressively still. He did his chores, looked after the sick horse, and sat down to supper. It was his first meal for days. He ate long and deliberate- ly, paying no heed to the increasing thunder or the spurts of wind which sprang up now and then. He cleared away the dishes and went outside, walking between the corn-rows. It was pitch dark and ominously still. A great quiet was upon Enoch Corn- wall’s soul, but it was not the oppres- sive quiet of the storm, but rather a kind of exultation, a waiting for something which was to come. Once he lifted his arms as if in invitation. Then he passed on while the wind rag- ed through the corn. He halted sud- denly, thinking a figure approached, but when he stopped it seemed to dif- fuse itself into the general darkness. As he walked he was conscious of a subtle change in himself. He felt as though he was assuming another per- sonality with different motives and purposes. He walked lightly, and power surged through him until he felt there was no limit to his strength. Once he lifted his head and listened, as if to some one speaking, then he answered aloud, deliberately, “Twen- ty-five years.” Again a figure seemed to loom before him in the road, but the next moment the storm broke with a thunder peal and lightning flash that rived the heavens and then let fall a curtain of blackness and a del- uge of rain. The man stood quietly in the field, unconscious of the down- pour. When he came to himself he was sitting in his own dugout, drench- ed to the skin. He looked wondering- ly at the window-panes down which the water was streaming. It had been raining an hour. He became con- scious of his wet clothes and reached for a dry coat. In doing so he knock- ed something to the floor. It was a part of his accumulated mail which some neighbor had brought from the postoffice. He stooped and picked up a letter which was in Marian War- ren’s handwriting. One sentence as he opened the missive caught his eye and held it: “I am coming to you, Enoch, because I feel in some way you need me.” He read on: “Maybe I feel this way because the crops have not been good. I hope I can find a school and teach this win- ter. It is not fair that you should bear all the burden. The Beals fami- ly are moving into your community next month, and I can travel with them for company.” He noted the date of the letter. It was weeks back. - He put the letter away without surprise or emotion, feeling only that the long responsibil- ity for others had fallen from him, and that his own affairs were being shaped by a superior force. He ac- depied the new administration, or whatever it was, with the passivity that follows prolonged exhaustion, and went to bed to sound and dream- less sleep. The sun that waked him in the morning was not the glare of yester- day but a softened glow that might have been shed by a sun of May. That morning might have been the first that followed creation, so fresh and sparkling was the earth it saw. Men standing in their dugouts said a mir- acle had been wrought. The corn stood upright, rustling its slender rib- bons in the breeze. A neighbor riding past Enoch’s door | called, joyously, “It’s the turning- point!” and so it was called ever after- ward. Enoch, looking far across the ho- | rizon, had muttered after him,” The turning-point,” and wondered what that might imply. The rain had been general. The cri- sis was past and the news spread quickly. Covered wagons moved down the deserted road and a new and hopeful immigration quickly repeo- pled the abandoned communities... In the van of this:immigration came the Beals family, bringing Marian War- ren with them. “And so you came, Marian, accord- ing to promise,” Enoch said. “Yes, I came as I promised,” she answered, wholly alien to his mean- ing. “And now I am going to teach.” “No; we must marry at once. You are part of my reward.” “Of course, if you wish it,” Marian answered, a little puzzled by Enoch’s manner, “but we can wait until the new church is built.” At this Enoch’s manner became more decisive. “There is no church now,” he declared, his tone strange in spite of his precaution. Then, seeing Marian’s look of astonishment, he ex- plained that the church had been : abandoned because the members had left the neighborhood and that it was not likely to be resumed again, be- cause the incoming population were of various faiths. He could not have told why the words cost him so much effort nor why the whole explanation, though true enough, seemed like a patchwork of lies. He dared not sug- gest, as he wanted. to do, that they be married before a justice of the peace and go straight to their own home. Marian’s wedding festivities seemed much like a makeshift at best com- pared with the one she had once plan- ned, so he consented to let Mrs. Beals decorate her house and prepare the wedding dinner that was too great a holiday to pass by in ordinary fash- ion. They were married within a month after Marian came, and the days preceding it were filled with mis- ty glamour for Enoch. He looked up- on the past summer as a bad dream that was over. He did. not stop to { analyze ‘other great changes that had come into his life. He rather put by | all questions that arose and accepted without question such things as the gods provided. Sometimes in those days he lifted his head exultantly and laughted, he knew not why. He had done this on the morning of his wedding, before he | tivation of their farms, about the care | Blindly he turned the leaves and be- gan at random on a chapter singularly inappropriate for the founding of a new home. He read the chapter about how Esau sold his birthright for a. mess of pottage, and could not again find it, though he sought it earnestly and with tears. He laid the book down heavily, resolved never to read it again if it gave forth such words of torure. He sat in silence while Mar- ian knelt and finished the family de- votions. Later he went out into the night and . looked up at the quiet stars and won- : dered if there was in all the universe | a being so tortured as he. He thought : of the weary days to be lived through in the stretch of years that lay before ' him, and raised his clenched hands to the stars, but dropped them again— | realizing the futility either of plead- ings or curses—and went into the house. The days that followed tested his | vitality and strong will-power to sup- i port an appearance of happiness be- | fore Marian. She knew in a vague ! way that he had fallen from grace, but try as she might she could not enetrate the barrier which her hus- and imposed between her and his in- ‘ner self, although in general he was more submissive to her than in the days when he ‘had been the eloquent, . domineering,” spiritual leader of his i flock. He was tender now where he had once been harsh and assertive, be- i ing at once more refined and less emo- i tional, gentler and colder than the ! former Enoch. i After the new church was built he , could not avoid attendance, and sat in i stony rigidity beside Marian’s absorb- ed worship. He was half touched, half resentful ove: the knowledge that this absorption was the petition of the | saintly wife for her wayward husband. During the revival services, which . were protracted agony to him, he knew that he was the subject of much pray- er and solicitation by the congrega- , tion, and that Marian was regarded as a model of wifely piety and mar- tyrdom. Painful as this was to his sensitive nature, it was better than hypocrisy would have been, and in- finitely less agonizing than the serv- ice itself. The songs sometimes woke depths of old emotions and longing, and he was once more in fancy before his flock in fiery exhortation or tender pleading. Then he remembered the barrier that interposed: between him and the santtuary,.anda feeling like ice closed about his heart. Marian carried her burden, too. She was compelled to sit dumb and help- less, sensible of a grief she could not fathom, and unable to pierce the gloom or reach a hand to bridge the gap between herself and Enoch. _ As the years progressed he settled into the role of the confirmed unbe- liever in the eyes of his neighbors, and church attendance was not incum- bent upon him. He went only at rare intervals to propitiate Marian but the i rarity of the occasions redoubled their i torture. { __Outwardly Enoch had prospered. ! He had accumulated many acres. His | crops never failed, and his breed of | stock was the best in the community. | He came to be the model for the far- ; mers in that part of the country. They j came to him for advice about the cul- The boy understood and questioned no further. He comprehended Enoch as no other human creature did. There was a bond between them stronger than the ordinary bond of father and son. It was as if from the dank and evil swamp of Enoch’s despair had sprung this rare and exotic plant. The an impression of ephemerality, as if he were only a temporary visitor in this material world. That might have been because he inherited his mother’s fairness instead of the massive mas- culinity of Enoch. He did not lack a boy’s love of merriment, but under- neath was a gravity beyond his years. Enoch trembled with apprehension when Sonny grew old enough to be sent from home for better schooling than the neighborhood afforded. The winter of his absence was one of ach- ing loneliness and occasional seasons of the old haunting fear, but it ended at length, and Sonny returned, taller of limb and manlier of bearing, but as eager to follow his father about as ever. Enoch came as near to peace as he had ever known those first few days of renewed companionship with Sonny. For once the days were too short for him. They did not contain enough hours to say all that waited to be said between him and Sonny. He could not bear the hoy out of his:sight. ‘Sometimes-he arose inthe night . to look on his face as he slept. He drank in the features, absorbing the image of them for some future time when they would be denied him. The summer opened with fair pros- pects for a good season, though it was unusually dry. But as weeks passed and the dry weather continued the people realized they were facing a serious drought. Not that a single season’s failing could ruin the pros- pects of a prosperous community, but it threw a depression over the country, and the people began to talk of the great drought a quarter of a century before. Enoch, absorbed in Sonny’s prasence, had not succumbed to the depression as early as his neighbors, but as the drought continued, with oc- casional hot winds, a strange restless- ness seized him. Something in the glare of the sun on the sandy roads, and the sight of the parched fields, recalled another scene when the land lay like an unpeopled desert. As the days succeeded one another there was going backward. He half expect- ‘ed at times to see the buildings and other outward signs of the years’ pas- sage disappear. He watched with strained eyes the water in the creek that crossed his farm dwindle day by day, much as a man might watch the running of the sands inan hour glass. Even Sonny was powerless to break the spell that was weaving upon him. Enoch no longer looked at the boy with adoring eyes, but searched the sky or sat motionless, listening, wait- ing for something, his eyes alert, but oblivious of the objects at which he gazed. Sonny watched his father closely, often following him at a dis- tance on his solitary excursions into the fields. Sometimes, waking sud- denly in the night with a sense that his father was not in the house, he sought until he found him, a lonely, silent figure in the moonlight. Occa- sionally he made his presence known by laying his hand on Enoch’s shoul- came into the house for Marian. At, of their stock, and every conceivable | der, but more often he stayed apart. | question that might arise in farm | He divined that the sight of him tor- ‘of the formal ritual, the sight of her, sweet and demure in all her white draperies, something in his brain snapped. Marian, the neighbors standing stiffly in funeral silence about the little room, the min- ister with the open book, vanished. Enoch was fighting his way through an awful blackness, battling with a wind that was destroying the world. It was only an instant or only an eter- nity, but when he came to himself he was mechanically repeating his part and staring through the window opposite at a cot- tonwood tree. A sudden hot breeze stirred the curtain. A bird flew across the sky, aiming straight for the tree. Enoch stared apprehensively, but it only dipped and passed out of sight. As early as he could do so he slipped from the house into the yard and searched the sky, but there was no bird in sight and the wind was soft. Yet he heard somewhere, like the dim toll of a bell in his soul, the sound of doom. When he returned to the house a well-meaning neighbor slapped him on the shoulder and rallied him on de- serting his bride. : “Remember, you're no longer a free man.” The words set all the bells tolling, and he knew in that hour that he would never again be free. He wore invisible but no less powerful shack- les, the more painful in that nobody else knew of them. When he next looked at his bride it was with a sense that he must share her with an invis- ible presence that walked always just behind him. How he got through the awful day, playing his role of happy bridegroom before the guests, he could not tell. How Marian could fail to see through the miserable pretense, he could not fathom. But the neighbors united in saying that they had not suspected that Cornwall was such a genuinely good fellow, and Marian noticed with surprise jokes and laughter which she had not remembered as characteristic of her rather serious preacher-lover. The day finally closed and they drove homeward. Enoch fell into such a silence that Marian jested with him, and then became silent herself, hurt by his attitude. Enoch had look- ed forward to the evening for respite, but, with the necessity for being gay removed, an awful misery settled over him, the more keen because he real- ized that his one hope of solace had failed him. He aroused himself at length and sought to appease his bride, uttering half-hearted jests that in no wise deceived her. In the gloom that encompassed him as he did his familiar chores he did not foresee the difficulties that were sure to arise from his anomalous po- sition. So he sat down to their first meal together, unthinking. Marian bowed her head and waited, expectant- ly. Then when the silence grew un- bearable she herself said grace. But she avoided Enoch’s eyes, and he knew his conduct had been inexplica- ble to her. As head of the house and as a minister of the gospel he could not avoid leading in the family devo- tions. At bedtime she brought him her own Bible and sat down, waiting. ‘ management. When he realized how casily scccess fell to his lot, it came to be a kind of substitute for other happiness, and he engrossed himself in his work more and more as time passed. His shackles galled less, be- cause of long usage—except at inter- vals, when fear caught him in its old grip. His satisfaction in his broad acres and filled granarics was built upon a definite hope after his son’s birth. Nine childless year dotted with three little graves preceded this event. Marian’s childlessness had been the chief sorrow of her life, and she yearned over the boy; but from the time he had first reached up tiny fists to Enoch, to the end of his life, he was his father’s son. On the day of the baby’s birth Enoch descried on the ti- ny fist a mark that took on the faint but unmistakable outlines of a bird in his eyes. He took up his little son tenderly and said with passion, “Little son, you are mine, mine.” At last Enoch had found a compan- ion, one who understood him and did not probe the wounds in his soul. The two were seldom separated except for the times which “Sonny,” as his fath- er called him, grudgingly gave to school and sleep. He rode the horses when he was too small to walk, and followed in the furrow, manfully holding the plow handles when he grew older. His mother complained that after she took off his long dress- es she never saw him in the house ex- cept at meal time. Occasionally he played truant from school on sunny days in spring and came running joy- ously across the field to Enoch, whom he disarmed with a guileless smile. “I was lonesome for you, fadder, and so I camed back,” he would say. After that Enoch could not chide him. It was inevitable that Sonny should ask about the mark on his hand, put- ting by his mother’s tender interpre- tation that it was the kiss which the angels had given him. Sonny was serious-minded from his long associa- tion with his father, and put no cre- dence in such foolishness. To this question Enoch had answered: “You know markers put their trade mark on their particular goods. You are my own particular son, and that is my trade mark on you; and no- body,” he had finished solemnly, “can claim you from me.” “But did the angels put it there, fadder?” “I don’t know, Sonny. I can’t say, but I hope so.” The boy ever afterward regarded the symbol with pride as his father’s “trade mark,” though he said noth- ing, realizing intuitively that it was something his father did not want mentioned. Once the boy had ques- tioned him about God and the eternal problems that knock sometimes in every child’s mind. Enoch explained to him as he had never been able to explain to any one else, without pain or effort, that it was not possible for him to discuss these questions with him, but he could learn all he wanted to know from his mother, and he must believe implicitly what she told him. | tured his father. He often caught his father’s eyes on the birthmark, but no word was spoken concerning their changed relations. It was a day in mid-August when the sky was filled with thunder-caps that Enoch wandered, without notic- ing his direction, down an unused, sandy road. The scene took on a strange familiarity. A bare cotton- wood seared by lightning stood before him, and straight from the southeast a buzzard flew across the sky and set- tled on the tree. The blood beat against Enoch’s brain. Steps came out of the corn-field behind him, and he listened as he had done for days, feeling that his waiting was nearly over. The next moment Sonny laid his hands on Enoch’s clenched fists. His muscles relaxed. His eyes met the compassion in Sonny’s and became sane. The boy stooped and picked up a stone, which he aimed at the buz- zard on the tree. The bird arose and flew into the far sky whence it had come, the two watching it silently out of sight. Then Sonny spoke: “It will never come back, father. Let’s go home. The heat is terrible.” Enoch looked at the boy and realiz- ed that he was ill. : “Sonny, you're not well!” he cried, sharply, restoring at once their old re- lationship. ; “It is only the heat, I think. Ihave not felt well lately. I’ll be all right iwhen we get to the house.” But his feet stumbled as he spoke, and Enoch put his arm around his shoulders, and the two made their slow way across the field. : Marian stood in the doorway, wait- ing for them. The fever she had ex- pected was come. Sonny fell uncon- scious across the door-sill at her feet. They put him to bed and summoned a doctor and nurse. Through the long, oppressive hours of the hot afternoon the watchers about the bed waited. For them time was suspended and life was centered on a single fact of exis- tence. an early twilight of the late after- noon. Some subtle presence had en- tered with the twilight. The docter closed his watch. His head dropped imperceptibly lower. The nurse ad- justed the curtain. Thus the great in- truder in the quiet room announced his presence, not with the blare of trumpets, but in apparently slight and casual acts. A great rage and despair seized Enoch. He laid hold of the framework at the foot of the bed, great beads of sweat on his forehead. Sonny turned his head slightly, looking with clear eyes at his father, and said in a weak voice, “I'll be all right, father, when the rain begins.” Then he drifted back into unconscious- ness. Enoch turned and went out into the night. Blacker than the thick dark- ness of the storm was the weight of doom upon him. This was the end of his weeks of waiting. But he felt no defiance, only an awful sorrow. With a great cry he threw himself on the ground and dug his nails in the dry earth. He sought pleas for mercy, but found no words. The wind shook boy was healthy enough, but he gave | came to him a curious sense that-time An approaching storm made | the trees and the lightning increased, but the man lay groveling on the ground. At last he arose. There was no power to whom he might appeal, no help in all the world. An accusing Deity did not even arise to confront him. He was utterly desolate and alone. He returned to the house. In the brief time of his absence the Presence had installed itself in the household like an undesired guest who ignores the contempt of the hostess and remains. But something else had come, too, that seemed to check the in- solence of the unbidden Presence. The hours of suffering had worn grooves in Sonny’s face, but peace had come now, and he only waited for Enoch. He could not lift his hand from the bed, but Enoch saw at a glance that every trace of the birth- mark was gone. “It’s all right, father,” he murmur- ed. “I am glad I could do it.” Enoch stumbled to his knees, a lost name on his lips. “My God, my God!” . The rain began to fall gently out- side—By Alma G. Madden, in Har- per’s Monthly Magazine. ONLY MUSEUM OF PENNA. ART AT STATE COLLEGE. George Gray Barnard’s Model of the “Kneeling Woman” Latest Ad- ” dition. The only special museum for the collection of the works of Pennsylva- nia artists that exists in the State, is maintained at The Pennsylvania State College, and was augmented recently by the addition of the original plaster model used by George Gray Barnard for his celebrated figure “The Kneel- ing Woman.” The finished product of this study was made for the New York estate of John D. Rockefeller. The model is the most massive of the many articles that have been gather- ed together at State College, repre- senting the handiwork of native Penn- sylvanians in the field of art, and was donated to the college by the great sculptor. Widely known as the pro- ducer of the famous groups at the en- trance to the Keystone State capitol building, Barnard was born and rais- ed in Bellefonte, twelve miles from State College. The model made by Daniel Chester French for his famous statue of La- fayette which stands in New York city, was given to the college by the sculptor. An alumnus of Lafayette College recently presented that insti- tution with a replica of the figure of Lafayette. City Beautiful May be Only Skin Deep. It is possible for the “city beautiful to be only skin deep,” according to Professor A. W. Cowell, head of the landscape gardening course at The Pennsylvania State College. - In teach- ing the theories of this movement that has swept the country in recent years he urges his students to take advantage of every chance to acquire rzal and lasting attractiveness in every way possible and from the prac- tical, human and aesthetic stand- points. Several graduates of Penn ! State are actively engaged in city | planning and public improvement, and ! the training there has met with such j success that steps are being taken to i elaborate on the “Country Beautiful.” | The science of city planning has taken its place among the professions and has a present following in the United States of a hundred or more professional experts, besides the land- scape architects and thousands of cit- | izens serving on local planning boards. i The principles of the city planning are studied at State College through text books and lectures by Professor Cowell, who has been a recognized au- thority on the subject throughout its development. Planning problems, real estate sub-division, traffic and housing problems are treated in a practical way, and in addition to its study by landscape architects, classes are frequently joined by students in civil and architectural engineering. Hunters Should Return License Stubs. Many sportsmen throughout the State are under-the impression it is not urgent that each man who secured a hunter’s license for 1920 see to it that the stub attached to the end of the license is sent to the Game Com- mission at Harrisburg at the close of the season, or as soon thereafter as possible. This is an entirely errone- ous impression. The Game Commis- sion earnestly requests that all these stubs be sent in immediately whether any game was killed or not, and any sportsman who has up to this time neglected to send in his report should see to it that this is done at once. The work of tabulating the data from the individual reports received is now under way but unless hunt- ers who have not yet sent in their re- ports get busy, it will delay this tab- ulation considerably. The data al- ready collected is producing informa- tion that will be invaluable to every resident of the State. Do you want your county to fall down in this matter? If not get busy; send in your report and see to it that ygur fellow-sportsmen do the same. Respectfully yours, SETH E. GORDON, Sec’'y Game Commission. Pipes to Carry Coal. New York officials are considering a plan to keep the city supplied with fuel by means of two 14-inch pipe lines extending from the anthracite region in Pennsylvania. According to R. P. Balton, a mechanical engi- neer who has worked out the scheme, there is a fall in elevation of 2000 feet between Scranton and New York and this would make it easy to force coal through the pipe by water pres- sure. The two pipe lines, he says, would carry 7,000,000 tons of coal for the city’s needs. WE Time to Go. “She said ‘No?’ ” “Yes,” said the dejected suitor. “Cheer up. A woman’s ‘No’ some- times means ‘Yes.”” “Not in this case. The door bell rang and she produced the other man.”—Birmingham Age-Herald.