Ealefonte, Pa., September 30, 1921. EE EAST. THE REQUIREMENTS OF HONOR. It’s only a matter of thinking right, It’s only the way that you look at things, It’s only yourself that you have to fight When an easier way the tempter brings. It isn’t a difficult thing to do If you stop te think as you go along; The crossing roads shouldn't puzzle you, It’s easy to choose the right from the wrong. Decency isn’t a life-long task, It’s only a matter of thinking right, It’s only yourself that you have to ask When you face a deed that may bring a blight. It’s only an instant from right to wrong, Though oft, indeed, must the choice be made, If you stop to think as you go along You will never whine that your feet have strayed. Honor's a thing that we all can keep, How’er we differ in sirength and brain, Decency isn’t so vague and deep That a man should needlessly take a stain. The line is sharp and the line is clear, As the day is never confused with night, It isn’t so hard to be honest here, It’s only a matter of thinking right. AFTER MIDNIGHT. Though it was only the first night of the house party, the big hall clock chimed midnight before Nicholas left the gay -group that had gathered around the log fire in the hotel lobby. He did not take the elevator but sauntered slowly up the broad flight of stairs that led from the living- room to the floor above. The ‘rest called up to him with laughing taunts as he looked down at them over the banisters, and he sigh- ed with relief as he reached the first turn of the wide staircase. A good ci- gar and the magazine he had up in his room; then he would turn in, to be fresh for the morning’s golf. As he lifted his eyes he saw ahead of him a black-gowned woman who was slowly going up the few remain- ing steps. He was approving of her slender, V-necked back when, at the sound of Nicholas’s feet on the thick carpet, she turned and stared down at him. He in turn stared up at her, finding her young and pleasing. Her glance was so steady that he started to pass her with a perfunctory little bow, when she spoke. Nicholas noticed that she had a creamy skin, with unhappy eyes and a petulant little mouth. “You look nice. Don’t you want to come in and have a smoke?” Glanc- ing back over her shoulder, she went on up the stairs. “She has earrings on,” thought Nicholas cautiously, remembering re- marks of his sisters about such pagan | jewelry. He followed her slowly and in the dimly lighted hall he stopped. It was quite unconventional, he ar- gued, forgetting the good magazine up in his room. “Well ?” she asked; not even a smile on her pale face. Unconsciously Nich- olas must have glanced towards the staircase. From below came the hi- larious mirth. “] have never cared much for this sort of thing,” Nicholas said stiffly. “This isn’t ‘this sort of thing!’ ”’ she retorted, her full, sulky mouth tight- ening. “I'm terribly lonely. I'd talk to any one who looked nice. All right then. Don’t come!” She turned away from him, sweep- ing down to the end of the corrider. Nicholas looked miserably around to see if any one were looking, then hurried after her. “Just for a minute,” he said reck- lessly. Though for a sober-going man his decision was tremendous, she showed “no signs of pleasure or displeasure, unlocking the door and going in with- out further invitation. Nicholas, to whom this nocturnal visit was a cataclysmic event, felt hurt that she was not more impressed with his yielding to the swaying of the long earrings. But with a nervous look down the corridor he shot into | the room. She was turning up a great many little ping lamps that revealed a sit- ting-room so luxurious that he was quite dazed—which he showed by sinking into a low arm chair to rise again very suddenly, followed by an angry, spitting ball of fur. “Oh!” murmured Nicholas. “I'm afraid I sat on the cat!” There was only a faint smile on her face and Nicholas felt as though it would have to be something extraor- dinarily funny to make her really laugh. He himself thought there was humor in the situation—his going in- to a strange woman’s room at mid- night and then sitting on the cat! “Cigarettes? Cigar?” She thrust a well-supplied tray in front of him. Nicholas had been kept so thorough- ly guarded by a thoughtful family that he had never before been with a woman who smoked. This one sank into a chair opposite him, took the indignant Angora up in- to her arms, smoothed it into purring and blew skillful little, smoke rings across the room. Nicholas had always thought-—se- cretly—it a cozy thing to smoke with a pretty woman; but at this, his ini- tial experience, he felt a little uneasy and tried to remember whether any of his house-party had rooms on the sec- ond floor. The problem of the man- ner in which he was to get out with- out being seen was already taking away his pleasure in his own daring. Then she turned on him her serious dark eyes that never smiled. “Who are you? What are you do- ing down here?” Perfunctorily Nicholas felt in his poekes for a card, but she interrupted im. “No, I don’t mean that. I don’t care anything about your name. I just mean, why are you here?” Nicholas looked at her earnestly. This was not the flirtation he had braced himself against. “I’m here,” ‘about fifty-five.” She paused. he answered literally, “beacuse, what with working at the office——" { “Qh, I see! The tired business man!” 5 The cat tucked its paws beneath it- self, curled up in her lap, and went to sleep. ‘ Ves admitted Nicholas, wonder- ing if she were making a joke. “I like golf when I get a chance, and these people asked me to come along. Then Sunday and the holiday came togeth- er, so it seemed a good chance——" “Um,” she said thoughtfully, con- sidering his words. : Fae There was a pause in which Nicho- las fought between the desire to lean back in that comfortable chair and the discreet inclination to get out of this peculiar atmosphere. mark startled him. : “I suppose you'd like to know who I am—not that it matters in the least, but you’d like to know what I do?” There was a half-frozen smile on Nicholas’s face. “I’m companion for a very rich old | sent her checks instead.” She sighed. lady.” She made the statement chal- lengingly as though he might contra- dict it. “She likes hotel life, goes from one to another all over the coun- try. I—I’m the poor relation. I have to follow on!” Nicholas noticed that her " black evening gown was very plain and that the only ornaments she wore were the dangling earrings he had been train- ed to avoid. “I'd say that was all right!” he ob- served. “You must see a lot of the country!” “Oh, yes!” she said indifferently. “Only I never see it as I like to—it’s always been from an automobile. I'm never alone except evenings like this.” Nicholas relaxed ever so slightly. “How is it you have your evenings?” he asked. “She gambles then,” she said con- temptously. “I hate cards. Wherever we are, she picks up a crowd to play with. I amuse myself. An~nd she plays late.” “Doing it now?” She nodded. “In the card room. If she wins, she’ll be nice. If she loses ——" She shrugged her shoulders. “But you ought to be dancing, or talking—or with someone——"" “Or flirting?” She pushed the cat out of her lap and began to pace up and down the room. “I don’t like it.” Nicholas felt uncomfortable. He didn’t like to have people walk up and down the room as they talked. No one he knew at home did that. Be- sides, it annoyed him to have her an- nounce in this cold blooded way that she didn’t like flirting. Why else had she asked him in. She paused before a jar filled with arbutus. “Isn’t this a wonderful per- fume?” Bending caressingly over it, she went on: “You see I've lost my taste for men as men. Since I've been—in this position—I've learned too much about them.” “How 7” “She’s married.” She pointed down stairs with a hand that Nicholas no- ticed was very small. “She did it five years ago.” “I thought you said she was ‘old,”’ said Nicholas the definite. She shrugged her shoulders again. “It seems old to me, though she’s only “She’s she said supported him ever since, slolwy. “Is he well and healthy ?” Nicholas held back his scorn until he heard her answer. She began her pacing again. “Per- fectly well and healthy.” Nicholas snorted. “He must be a dirty cad!” “I’ve come to think it wasn’t all his fault; it’s the way he was brought up.’ “But no woman can respect a man she supports!” commented Nicholas heatedly. “It’s all wrong!” She flicked off some cigarette ash as, still pacing up and down, she pass- ed him. “Are you married ?” she ask- ed, staring at him, though in a way that, queerly enough, caused him no resentment. “No.” Nicholas wondered why he did not resent her curiosity. “Live alone?” “No. With my mother and two sis- ters.” “Support them?” Nicholas colored up. “Yes and no. My mother has a small income. I— kind of help out a little.” She waved her hand. “I know. 1 have you sized up exactly.” Nicholas stiffened. “I don’t see how.” “It’s all money,” she declared, standing over him. “It’s terrible to admit it, but it’s a gauge of character. You support your mother and sisters and you can’t help but be a good sort. You let your wife support you and you are a rotter!” Nicholas fumbled to refute her. “Oh, I know!” She nodded her dark head wisely. “I know all about mon- ey. I’ve been disillusioned a long time. It’s all that counts with most people.” “You've got the wrong point of view.” | “No, I haven't.” She sat down ona little footstoel in front of the fireplace, touching a match to the logs piled within. “The reason I've always liked this hotel,” she said irrelevantly, “is the open fireplaces.” Yellow flames danced up the chim- ney and weird shadows over the soft- ly lighted room. “I ought to go,” thought Nicholas. “It must be nearly one o’clock.” “No,” she continued. “I know all about marriage and too much money, from watching this woman I'm with. It’s the loneliest life in the world. No one likes her for herself. They're just out for what she has. She feels that everyone is ready to do her.” Nicholas thought of his sisters. “Why doesn’t she go in for church work, or settlements, or Red Cross— something like that?” “She did. She told me. At first she thought it was one’s duty, partic- ularly if one had money. One ought to help the poor. And she heard that there were such fine women in that kind of thing.” “Didn’t it work?” asked Nicholas. “My sisters seem to like it. They seem to like it. They work awfully hard.” “| “I never thought of that,” She clasped her small hand around her knees. “She says—this was quite a while ago, after her parents died and she got all the money—that at first she was very happy in it. I mean being on directors’ boards and meeting those fine women. They seemed to be glad to have her one of them and she thought she was going to have some real friends.” i Her head, outlined against the ' crackling flames, drooped as she told the story, in a monotonous, unemo- : tional tone. . | “Then—slowly and gradually—it came over her that the only reason they had for wanting her was her money. They didn’t care in the least . for her, these fine women; they just Her next re- wanted some one on their boards who {had unlimited wealth. They each , wanted their charity to be ahead, just! ‘like men in business.” ! said Nicholas thoughtfully. “So she got out of every one and “You don’t know what a lonely life it is!’ Hastily Nicholas went over his lim- ited list of friends. “I’ve neve known any very rich people.” Senin She paid no attention to him. “Then the men—she told me that she thought at first that she was attractive, thought she attracted men. But she i said she got over that quickly. All they were after was her money, the same old story. So she made up her i mind she would never, never marry.” | “But she did!” It was like a fairy tale to Nicholas, this unfolding of the emotions of a circle unknown to him. | “Yes,” she said briefly. A spark flew out from the fire ‘against the hem of her soft black | gown. She hardly moved as Nicholas | stamped on it and returned to his chair. ! “I've known her for a long time,” ! she mused. “I hope she pays you well.” Nicho- {las had become an impertinent, eager 1 partisan of this slender figure by the re. She shrugged her shoulders with a foreign gesture that she must have picked up on her travels. “She pays me well. But it’s so lonely. * * *” Nicholas, confused, was always lit- eral. “But I should think you’d like the money if you’re—poor!” look since he had seen her. He had kept looking for some light in her heavy, brooding eyes. “Money, really and truly, means nothing at all to me.” Then she bit her lip hastily. “Her husband follows her around—every- where.” . “Why has she stood it all this time?” Nicholas demanded. His head, unused to domestic complica- | husband. { him?” “First of all, her religion won't let i her. Then, in spite of everything, she i always had rather conventional ideas about marriage; she doesn’t really be- | lieve in divorce.” There was another ! shrug. “So there you are!” | “But she doesn’t have to see him!” | said Nicholas, bewildered. ; “It’s queer,” she said slowly, “that the world doesn’t seem big enough to | get away from him. i “Why doesn’t she divorce hurrying from one place to another, so as not to see him.” ed to hear more about this bitter mid- dle-aged heiress, who spent her nights gambling and her days running away from a spendthrift husband. The woman did not move from her thetically. “I’m sorry you're going. I'd like to talk all night.” “It’s half-past one,” said Nicholas nerveusly. “I must go.” When she spoke her tone was rather wistful. “I suppose back home—with your two sisters—you have awfully nice times with girls?” “I havent any girls.” turned the door-knob uneasily. & “But they have one picked out for you, of course,” she said decisively. “How’d you know that?” asked Nicholas, - thinking - self-consciously of a certain buxom Louisa in the house-party down stairs. “Oh, I know! And you go off on nice walks in the country with her! And carry your lunch in a shoe box?” Once more he caught a note of longing in her voice. “Sometimes.” Nicholas opened the door, cautiously listening to see if any- one were in the hall. “I’ve missed all that kind of thing,” she said soberly. Nicholas hardly heard her. “If I could get away from everyone —and have walks in the country with a beau—a beau who liked nice——" There was no one around, Nicholas decided, and it was a good chance to make his escape. “Good night,” he said grufily. “I'll see you in the morning.” She rose to her feet, suddenly tall, her apathy slipping away from her and a note of decision in her voice. “In the morning when you see me,” she announced imperiously, “you are not to bow or recognize me.” ly. “Because I don’t want you to. Isn't that enough?” “Oh!” murmured Nicholas. Then, as there seemed nothing else to do or say, he repeated that he must go. She merely took up a magazine and he moved awkwardly towards the door. Hurrying steps down the hall made him drop the door-knob, and made his large bulk as inconspicuous as possible. : His mind was full of wild thoughts. He hoped his mother wouldn’t-hear-of this. If only Louisa and the other this floor! * * * He heard her cross the room, open the door, and close it again. “It’s just a telegram,” she said, and her voice sounded very tired. Nicholas crossed the room with des- perate speed. “I'm going!” he mut- tered. He remembered afterward that she looked white in spite of all the little pink lamps, but, bent on getting away, She flashed him the first animated I tions—whirled with this annoying: I suppose that explains in a way all this hotel life—-- Nicholas rose reluctantly. He want- | footstool by the fire, locking up apa- | Nicholas “Why not?” asked Nicholas Stupid. hasten across to the window, where he i girls of the house-party were not on: he slid softly through the door into the thall. Down its padded length he tip- "toed; no one was in sight and the only signs of life were the shoes neatly ' placed outside the doors. At the staircase he paused. “It was all right,” he thought, relieved to be safely out. “Only I don’t much like— that—kind of thing.” i Feeling curiously awake, he turned | back down into the lobby. The house- party had all gone to bed; that was , evident, for the huge room was empty 'except for the clerk at the desk, a | sleepy bellboy and two scrub-women in a far corner of the room. Nicho- ‘las, feeling lonesome, crossed to the office desk on the excuse of getting a match. { “Have to stay up all night?” asked idly. | The clerk was a dapper little fellow who liked to talk. “Yes,” he said, leaning over the desk. “Eleven to | seven * * * those are my hours.” | Nicholas, puffing at his cigar, asked {a few inconsequential questions about the golf course to which the clerk re- “plied verbosely. | The ringing of the telephone bell broke into tke clerk’s chatter. “There you are! You see some one had to be here all night to answer the phone.” His voice, however, “as he answered, was quite cool and profes- sional. “Yes, certainly, Mrs. Poin- dexter. I’ll send a boy right down to the garage. The car will be here in ten minutes. Yes, I'll send up for the baggage.” As he rang off he shook his head at Nicholas, who was still fumbling his memory for a definite picture of the mysterious woman on the floor above. “Can you beat it? Wants to leave in the middle of the night!” he whist- led. Then he turned to prod along the sleepy bellboy and to telephone in many different directions. Nicholas, still leaning against the desk, did not move, but continued smoking in a desultory fashion, only half conscious of the flurried move- ments behind him. Poor little thing, she had seemed very lonely. He won- dered if he couldn’t take her for a walk in the woods. Only she had said —very emphatically, almost haughtily —that he musn’t recognize her; she had evidently meant that very ser- iously. “Here they are now,” whispered the clerk behind him. : Nicholas looked up and was startled to see the woman he had been think- ing of, the first of a strange retinue to come out of the elevator. i In a heavy fur coat and hat, she - came towards the desk, followed by an older woman, also heavily and mys- teriously coated. A maid, bellboys, with numerous boxes, bags, umbrellas, and coats, assembled themselves in a confused mass near the door. She had reached the desk before she saw Nicholas. Then her eyes met his and, mindful of her warning, he did not show any recognition as she asked for the bill. She was very near him there at the desk, certainly not more than twelve inches away, and Nicholas longed to speak to her. Having a definite mind, he wanted to settle that question about the shape of her nose. He want- ed to see what was the color of her hair. But she did not turn again in his direction and, before he realized it, she had started for the door. Nicholas’s mouth opened wide in dismay—he was afraid that she would slip off and that he would never see her again. Their eyes met. An arbu- tus flower fe!l from her belt; there ‘was a gust or cold night air and she disappeared. Before the clerk came back from the outside, Nicholas, with the look of a . thief, had siezed the little flower, and was back leaning against the desk. i The clerk’s face glowed as he re- turned behind the desk. | “Say, that was some interesting!” he rattled on. “They told me it might happen. She keeps a suite here year in and year out, only she calls herself Mrs. Poindexter. Of course the office here knows her real name, and on the Q. T. I'll tell you that she’s the Duch- ess of Attleborough. It seems she has detectives follow her husband all the time, the good-for-nothing Duke or whatever he is. When they think he’s getting a bit too close, they telegraph and, no matter what hour of the night, she beats it!” | he Nicholas glanced at the clock which said half-past two. “Has the young woman—the one who paid the bill— been her secretary long?” i “Her secretary? She’s the Duch- ess! Couldnt you tell? Huh! I'd {know a Duchess anywhere? Haven't {you ever seen them around? The old one’s the companion, aunt or cousin or something. | The unrcomantic Nicholas’s head !swam as he climbed slowly up to bed. “She had pretty eyes,” he thought. He stared across the room. “I should ‘like to have held her hand—the hand of a duchess!” he said aloud and quite | distinctly. lunch in a shoe box!” , He started and looked around guilt- ‘ily. But the room was quite empty !and the only noise was the thumping of the steam radiator. “This must stop,” said Nicholas firmly, and he strode across the room ‘to the writing desk and began a let- ter: Dearest Mother: The house- party isn’t much and I am won- dering how I can stick it out for three days. Louisa is nice but I never noticed before what big hands she has! Still, there is the golf to fall back on. * * * * He looked at his “watch. three o’clock. “I’ll finish the letter in the morn- ing,” Nicholas said, turning out the light and fumbling in his pocket for a crumpled flower that smelled of the wods.—By Baron Gayne de Meyer, in Hearst's. It was Marriage Licenses. Charles N. Lauck and Maude M. Walker, Runville. George W. Smith and Sarah E. Dawson, Bellefonte. —Get your job work done here. “And she wanted a picnic GIRLS OF WHOM TO BEWARE Japanese “Widowed Physician” Hands Out Some Words of Caution to Susceptible Male Sex. In “What to Tell Our Grown-Up Rens About Women,” a pamphleteer wno calls himself “The Widowed Phy- sician,” has made a list of the things he dislikes in girls. He admits that he deals with “objectionable characteris- ties,” but disarms the criticism that be fails to indicate positive virtues by saying that “the nice youth needs no gualities of the opposite sex.” “The Widowed Physician” sums up his ideas in a few brief warnings, as fol- iows, the Japan Advertiser states: Beware of the girls who manicure their nadls to the shape of a claw. I dp not know why, but beware of them. Beware of girls who prefer to dress in purple or scarlet colors. Beware of grils who are heavily scented. Beware of the girl who is too obvi- cusly modest and demure. She doth protest too mueh. Beware of the girl with low, sloping rorehead and dry, straiglit, coarse, jute:like hair. Any experienced mag- istrate will tell you that this type of woman frequently summons her hus- pand for assault and battery. Beware of the imtensely religious girl. She does not meam to be dan- gerous, but the fact that she is so devotional indicates that she pos- sesses an unbalanced temperament. Beware of the girl who sidles up to you, or lays hands on you; or comes s0 close to you as to lead you readily to lay hands on her. Specially beware of “married wom- en’ of reputed responsibility, whom you have formerly had every reason to pelieve in and respect, when these swine weinen, by acts ebvious or guard- ed, show you that they would not ob- ject to your being more intimate with them than you know in your own con- science you ought te be. Beware of the mothers who are anx- ious as to the future of their daugh- ters. beware of the girl who drinks wines freely ; she will make a poor wife and a worse mother. Reware of the girl who dresses in a slovenly, artistic manner. The “Widowed Physician” recom- mends two types—the tomboy and the “pert, modern, self-sufficient learned young woman,” He adds: “She would sharpen your wits every time.” Turn and Turn About. Prof. Nicholas Roerich, the Russian painter who refused the post of min- ister of fine arts in the Lenin govern- ment and who is now in the United States, tells an amusing story of the initiation of the soviet system fin the imperial opera. The entire staff of the opera house in Moscow, directors, scene painters, singers, were instruct- ed that thereafter all were to be treat- ed on an equal basis.imo one being considered better than another, and all to receive the same wage. It may be imagined that the temperamental stars did not receive this: without emo- tion. On the night of the next per- formance the tenor in the leading role eould not be found and a frantic search was made while the audience waited. Finally he was discovered by an amazed manager selling programs in the lobby. “What madness. is this?” shouted the manager. “Don’t you know we are holding the curtain for you?” “Ah,” answered the singer with ironic sweetness, “you see we are ail equal new. Tonight I sell the pro- grams. Let one of the ushers sing my role.” The New Santa Barbara Light. Many persons are still fond of the oil lamp to read by at home. In the house it still gives the amount of brilliancy desired. But lighting engi- neers claim superiority for the elec- tric light in a fog. An electric light of 1,000,000 candle- power is to be installed in the Santa Barbara lighthouse. The light itself is not 1,000,000 candre-power, but the light is intensified by the use of re- fractors ingeniously cut and placed. In clear weather the light will not be visible any further than the old oil lamp. which shincs 20 miles. The light is 178 feet above sea level and 20 miles is the horizon limit. But in foggy weather the new Mght will be visible two or three miles in phace of | one mile, the limit of the oil lamp’s beams. Rocky Road to Knowledge. A man who was acting queerly about the rooms of the local library last week excited much comment. He was in search of some book of ref- erence but refused to accept the aid of the librarian in his search. After he had made a second or third visit ! and gone it was learned he was a member of a debating society and had been chosen to uphold the affirmative on the question: “Could you and would you order the courtmartial of a soldier who saved the lives of the members of his company by shooting the company cook ?’—Pottsville (Pa.) Journal. Artificial Limbs of Metal. At St. Themas’ hospital, London. Dr. Edred M. Corner, one of the most famous surgeons in England, has been conducting experiments with light metal artificial limbs on soldiers who had lest limhs Auring the war and whose recovery had been slow. These show that about 90 per cent of thigh amputations can advantageously be fitted with light artificial limbs, with which the men are atde to walk with , less fatigue and more satisfaction, FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. Music ean noble hints impart, Engender fury, kindle love; With unsuspected eloquence can move And manage all the man with secret art. —Addison. Train the Kiddies in Generosity.— “I am worried,” writes a mother to me, “because my little son is so self- ish. How can I teach him to be gen- erous?” Well, selfishness is a problem, I'll admit, but happily it is not unsolva- ble. That selfish little boy of a wor- ried mother can be made generous to a fault (if such a thing is possible) if she will, for a time, labor unceasing- ly, with faith, patience and tact. There are, of course, some children who are what we call “naturally” self- ish, while others are naturally the op- posite; but I think intelligent mothers will agree with me that the average child is originally neither one nor the other, and that his early training de- termines his standing. However, even the “naturally selfish” child is far from being hopelessly selfish. All he needs is help to a different attitude of mind if he has ever had any serious thoughts about the subject at all— which he probably hasn’t. The youngster of tender years, say from the first cry to five years, does not readily comprehend that others be- sides himself may desire things in- tensely. Yet I have seen a year and a half old child give up a toy smiling- ly, not once, but several times in suc- cession to his various relatives, who delighted in putting him through the generosity test. This dear little smile was the result of his young mother’s patient training and constant watch- fulness for “psychological moments” as it were, for the teaching of unself- ishness. Do not force a child to be generous —that is, to give up its possessions unwillingly. Such a method is a great mistake, for it makes the child re- sentful, besides giving him an un- beautiful idea of a beautiful virtue. Forced giving is likely to be felt as an unmitigated and unjust depriva- tion. The better way is to educate little folk up to the point where they find happiness in giving, in making others happy. Do not fail to call at- tention to this * happiness when the child has performed a generous action, thus impressing it on the young mind and heart. tories of generosity are always helpful both in training young ahd to be generous or in that greater problem—the one overcoming any selfishness that may have been allow- ed to develop. Is there anything fin- er than the spirit with which Louisa Alcott’s dear “Little Women” give away their very delicious breakfasts to a nearby poor family? This char- itable incident is especially appreciat- ed when one knows that it really hap- pened in young Louisa’s own life. Oth- er stories especially good for instill- ing generosity are “The Three Cakes” and “The King of the Golden River.” The life of Peter Cooper will be en- . joyed by the older children. i Selfishness in a girl or boy ap- | broaching womanhood and manhood i 1s, of course, more difficult to cope { with than when found in younger chil- ! dren, but the idea of sending the for- | mer upon short trips with social work- i ers, or taking them oneself to see, ‘and help where possible, cases of dis- | tressing need, is effective. Such cas- | es usually appeal to the most callous, | so that there is at least a softening of | the soil in which the seeds of gener- ; osity, tactfully planted by the home ! folk, may hope to grow and flourish. Very often laziness is the real cause ; of a child’s selfishness. I know a man who is ever ready to give away money : in preferences to his own services, not | because he is wealthy, but because he !is thus absolved from using his indo- i lent body and brain; he is not gener- | ous; he is merely paying for what he ! wants—ease. The highest generosi- | ty is self-sacrifice, unless the contents ; of the pocket is needed more than i one’s personal services. _ The poor little only child is always in danger of becoming selfish: from the sheer lack of opportunities to share i toys and goodies with other children. Consequently it is wise to encourage the sisterless, brotherless ones to seek companionship among other children and to invite those companions into | your house or garden where mother- eyes may be upon them. It is lamentable, but true, that some mothers deliberately make children selfish. What do you think of the woman who gives her little girl {wo cakes after school accompanied by the ; remark, “Now do keep them for your- i self and don’t feed the whole neigh- : borhood!” And in the same class is i the trolley-car mother who whispers | to her adolescent son, “Keep your i seat. You paid for it and you're just ; as tired as she.” Not only should children be taught i to give; they should be taught to give ! graciously. Many a shining gift has | lost its radiance because of the man- | ner with which it was presented. The | “gifting spirit” is a lovely thing which | glorifies even the passing on of an old ‘garment. To give tactfully, quietly i (even secretly); to give freely, gladly —abh, then giving becomes worth while and giver as well as receiver is en- ; riched. - But that reminds me. If few folk know how to give beautifully still fewer know how to receive graceful- ly. Make it a point to express a frank and unmistakable gratitude or appre- ciation when a little child performs a generous deed. Thus will the kiddie be set an example, and he, too, will be “generous” with his gratitude and re- ceive in the same spirit as that in | which a gift is offered. i Creole Kisses—Take one cupful of sugar, two cupfuls of milk, and cook slowly, stirring enough to keep from sticking. Try in water, and when done enough to hold just in the water add butter the size of an egg and half a teaspoonful of vanilla. Remeve from the fire and place in a pan of cold wa- ter until cool. When the finger can be placed on top of the mixture without burning heat until creamy. Add a cupful of shelled walnuts and mold in- to patties. They are creamy and de- licious as any bought from the stores.