Bellefonte, Pa., July 25, 1924. AE TSA ES, IF YOU'VE ANYTHING GOOD TO SAY. If you've anything good to say of a man, Don’t wait till he’s laid to rest, For the eulogy spoken when hearts are broken Is an empty thing at best. Ah! the blighted flower now drooping lonely Would perfume the mountain side, If the sun’s glad ray had but shone today’ And the pretty bud espied. If you've any alms to give to the poor, Don’t wait till you hear the cry Of wan distress in the wilderness, Lest the one forsaken die. Oh! hearken to poverty’s sad lament! Be swift her wants to allay; Don’t spurn God's poor from the favored door, As you hope for mercy one day. Don’t wait for another to bear the burden Of sorrow’s irksome load; Let your hand extend to a stricken friend As he totters down life’s road. And if you’ve anything good to say to a man, Don’t wait till he’s laid to rest; For the eulogy spoken when hearts are broken Is an empty thing at best. —Front Rank. DOT AND WILL’S RADIO SET-TO. I suppose there comes a time in the life of every married woman when she suddenly realizes that she is the one who is making all the sacrifices— there is a lot of kick in making large sacrifices—but just the little, dinky, irritating ones. The other day I happened to read a page or so in the diary I was keeping when Will and I got married, and I came across this paragraph: Mother was talking about being married, today, and she said how you had to bear and forbear—all that old stuff, Thank goodness, I wasn’t born back in her gen- eration. Will is perfectly crazy about me, and wants me to have everything I want. It’s not likely that this sort of thing will come up much in our lives. Honestly, it seems strange that a person can know what I know now at twenty, and have been as dumb as that at nineteen! Will and I did talk things over once or twice and say that of course we knew we wern’t perfect, and we’d have to overlook each other’s faults, That seemed to settle the whole question. It makes you feel awfully broad-minded and tolerant and everything, when you say you're going to overlook your husband’s pe- culiarities. But the first time you find that he wants tea with his dinner, it’s just as great a shock as though you hadn’t already admitted that he was less than perfect. As a matter of fact it was on this little thing of tea that I first began being self-sacrificing. As every housekeeper appreciates, it’s a nui- sance to have to make tea while you are getting a dinner. Goodness knows, there are enough things to be attend- ed to on the stove at the last minute without adding tea. But it wasn’t re- ally the bother that shocked me; it was the old-fashionedness of Will's wanting tea with dinner. At first, I tried to put him off. “Qh, if you don’t have it a few times,” I told him, “you’ll soon forget all about it and stop wanting it.” “But I don’t want to stop wanting it!” Will protested. “I like tea, and I like to like it. I’ll make it myself, if it’s a nuisance to you.” : ; I suppose if I'd been married ten months then, instead of ten days, I might have realized that, small and reasonable as this sounded, it would be the Opening Wedge. I might have taken warning right out of my own old home, too. Mother has gone all through her married life having to have doughnuts for breakfast, just because Father used to have them when he was a boy. Yet, when Will put his arm around me and brushed his cheek against my hair kind of coax- ingly, I said, “Oh, all right, Grandpa, tea for yours,” to conceal the thrill that swept all over me at the idea of being actually married to Will and living in the same house. For a long time I didn’t notice oth- er little things, as they came along, one by one. You don’t at first. I'm sure that is the way most people get to being unselfish. Surely no sensi- ble person, seeing the way unselfish people get handed things in this world, would ever set out deliberately with her eyes open to be unselfish. It just creeps up on you like some slow, insidious sickness. The first time you ever really think of it at all, you've already got it. I kept making one little sacrifice after another without thinking much about it. And then, one day, I suddenly woke up to the fact that I was making them all! There was bridge, for instance. I'm crazy about bridge, but it’s Will’s idea of just nothing at all. And, little by little, I'd practically given it up, ex- cept to play once in a while in the afternoon with just the girls. Then there was the matter of my photograph albums. I have four, one for each year since I was sixteen. The first time I got them out to show to somebody after we were married, 1 had a kind of feeling that Will was not in sympathy. And after the peo- ple had gone he hemmed and hawed around and finally came out and said he did wish I wouldn’t show my al- bums to people. “Not show them!” I gasped. “Why on earth not?” : “Well—of course they're interesting to you to save—and everything—but for other people to look at—I don’t— The fellows in the frat house always used to kid about them-—all albums are so much alike—black pages writ- ten on with white ink; there’s always pictures of the crowd out camping and a flashlight of the party at some- body’s house, and one picture that you have to say, ‘Oh, no, that isn’t me, that’s Helen,” and—" “My albums are not like anybody else’s,” I interrupted hotly. “Every- body says they're very original, and everybody likes to see them!” I was awfully taken aback. Of course, there was a picture of our| bunch up at Lake Winneposocket, nat- urally, and one flashlight of the party Madge gave for Will and me when we got engaged. And there was even one picture of me in front of Rose- mary’s that people always thought was Rosemary, just because it wasn’t awfully clear and they could just rec- ognize her house. = st But what earthly fun would there be in keeping an album if you never showed it to anybody? : “Especially the last book,” Will was going on. “I— Honestly it just makes me squirm to have you show that to people.” The last one was the really clever one. I called it “My Him Book,” and it was just pictures of Will. Every- body who had ever seen it said how- cute it was. Having known Will all my life, I had snapshots that went clear back to when he was a baby. “T could take out the baby one of you without any clothes on in the bathtub, if that’s the one you don’t like,” 1 offered generously. Just mentioning this seemed to ir- ritate Will in the strangest way. We had almost a quarrel about it before we got through, and it ended by Will’s apologizing for hurting my feelings. But apologizing couldn’t stop my knowing how he felt about my albums, | and I just naturally stopped showing them to people. Oh, there were dozens of other things, like a perfectly brown dress that I practically stopped wearing because he didn’t like it; and advice that I'd listen to politely from Mother Horton just because she was Will’s mother, whereas if my own mother had pulled it I'd just have said, “Oh, come off, Mother, times have changed since the burning of the Iriquois.” And there were things I liked to eat and that I'd stopped cook- ing, just because Will didn’t like them. Sometimes I have made up my mind to do something I simply hated, just to please Will, and then I’ve been so everlastingly tactful about it that he’d believe I really wanted to do it, and sometimes actully wind up by believ- ing that he was doing the whole thing himself, just to please me. Like spending our Christmas mon- ey, for instance. Each of our fathers had given us twenty-five dollars for Christmas, and we had a little “luxury money” in our budget box, so we decided to pool it all, and get something big and im- pressive that we’d both enjoy. I had practically decided on a really good Mah Jong set with a table and all the expensive things to go with it. Mah Jong parties are all the rage now in Montrose and some of the girls have perfectly beautiful sets. I wasn’t sure Will would care for the idea, so I be- gan cautiously, sort of preparing the ground. “I think it would be nice to get something snappy and new, don’t! you?” “You bet,” Will agreed. “No use getting a horse and buggy instead of | a roadster.” “Or a pack of cards instead of a Mah Jong set,” I said suggestively. I dropped the subject at that, think- ing I'd leave the suggestion to work : away by itself for a while, like a seed in the'spring. It worked like a seed : all right! But what came up wasn’t what I planted. I got back from staying two days with Margie Collins in Verblen, and found that Will had bought a radio! “I tried all yesterday and last even- ing to get you by phone to ask you about buying the radio,” Will explain- ed. “I had to a:t quick, because as soon as Van got transferred to the Chicago office and said he guessed he | would sell his set, half a dozen fel- lows were after it. It’s a wonderful bargain, you know. Of course I wouldn’t have got it if I hadn’t been sure you wanted one; but I remember- ed what you said about keeping up to the minute and everything.” My breath was taken away. I didn’t know whether I wanted a radio or not. I'd never even thought about getting one. I was terribly disap- pointed about the Mah Jong set, but— and this is the way selfsacrificing gets to be a habit—I didn’t say a word | about that. “Merciful heavens!” I gasped when Will led me proudly into our living- room. The whole end of it looked ex- actly like the physics lab. in high school—dials and lights and wires and batteries and goodness knows what all, and a wire loop as big as a Fer- ris wheel. “This is the slick kind of set,” Will was explaining proudly. “No aerials or ground wire sor anything outside the house at all.” “Wouldn’t it make the living-room a little more—homelike,” I faltered doubtfully, “if you could leave some- thing outdoors?” “Not with this set,” Will declared. “Sit down now and I’m going to get KYW.” He pushed me onto the davenport without giving me a chance to take off my coat, and began fooling with the dials. A bulb lighted and there came a strange whimpering, ghostly noise from the set. This lasted for some time, while Will twisted away at the dials and looked more and more worried, “Thirty-two, forty-six,” he kept murmuring. “That’s funny, I got them easy, just before you came.” A few more wails and then, sudden- ly, a human voice. coming over your own radio. I felt it myself, though I doubt it hit me quite as hard as it did Will. His face was simply ecstatic. “The formal call,” a woman’s voice was saying, “should not last over fif- teen minutes, though an informal call may last as long as an hour and a half.” “It seems to be an etiquette talk,” said Will in an undertone. B At first, you see, you're very polite to the performers, almost whispering among yourselves if there’s anything you don’t like. The first evening, of course, we spent working the radio, and I really enjoyed it. We got the Bunny Rabbit Story, then a Review of the Interde- nominational Sunday school Lesson and Radio Bible Class, then some dan- dy jazz from a Chicago hotel orches- tra, and an aria from “Aida,” then a speech on the Economics of Chain rocery stores, and an appeal .for funds for the Children’s Health and Toothbrush Club of America. | It was really ‘quite interesting. It stunning | wasn’t in fact, till the third night after we had got it that it occurred to me that the radio might possibly get to be something of a nuisance. I had been painting a bedroom set and had not been out all day. Naturally, at a time like that, you look forward to a little sociability when your husband gets home at night. And, believe me, I didn’t get much. Will hustled right up from the supper table and began fooling with the dials, and from that moment on there was no conversation except pertaining to the radio. “It’s a shame we didn’t have it so you could have heard the President’s speech,” he said. “You were envying Mariana having been in Washing- ton. gw 4 } When we were first married I might have tried to tell him that there was no occasion for intense regret; but after nearly a year of married life you learn that there are fine points the masculine mind simply doesn’t get. Any woman would understand, of course, that there would be a lot of kick in being the only person from Montrose in Washington at the time home and telling w Longworth had on, and how President Coolidge really looked, close to, and how terribly interesting his message | was. But just to listen to the mes- sage over the radio, that was some- thing practically anybody could do! “The Burrises got it so plain,” Will said, “that they could hear him turn- ing the pages.” Even that left me cold. I can hear plenty of paper rattle here in Mon- trose. The evenings were really not very sociable. Will would spend a half- hour trying to get a good jazz orches- tra and I'd roll up the rug. But we would have danced about ten steps i when Will would say he thought there was too much static, and he’d leave me high and dry in the middle of the floor while he twiddled with the knobs and dials. him, we’d dance a few steps more, and then he’d think we weren’t getting the music loud enough, or were getting it too loud, or something, and he’d go and fool with the set again. By the time he’d got everything just to suit him, the music would have stopped, and the announcer would be saying that the next number on the program would be a talk on Restricted Immi- gration by the Honorable Somebody- or-other. By the fourth evening I was begin- ning to get kind of sick of hearing one orchestra after another play “Lin- ger Awhile” and was glad it was the night that our crowd always goes to the movies together. Dulcie invited us all back to their house afterward for oyster stew and to dance a while, which turned it into a regular party. Imagine my horrified amazement to | find that Will didn’t want to go. He would rather stay home and try to get Davenport, Iowa. “Merciful heavens, Will,” I gasped, “we might as well have twins like the Mertons, if we've got to stay home ‘ every single night and sit up with the radio!” We did go with the bunch, but any- body could see that Will’s heart was not in it. In fact, it was so plain that he wanted to get home before all the broadcasting stopped that it almost spoiled the party for me. And then, i just as we were leaving, if I didn’t hear him say to Dud Farrell, in the most complacent, indulgent tone: “Yes; I got Dot a radio.” From that minute I began actually disliking the thing. I would have liked it all right if Will had acted like a sensible person about it. But Will is one of those enthusiastic souls who, if they once get interested in a thing, are perfect bugs about it. And he was interested in this ali right. You couldn’t get him to do or think or talk about anything else. He was forever bringing home new parts and trying new “hook-ups”’—whatever they are!—and talking about “radio frequency.” He had always been very handy and willing about doing little i jobs around the house, but now I i couldn’t get him to so much as put a | washer on a kitchen faucet. He'd say ' he would, but he’d never find the time. | ‘It was during these long, lonely | evenings that I began to realize I was | the one who was making all the sac- ' rifices. For, despite Will’s taking great credit to himself for staying at i heme every night, the evenings were i lonely. He was about as much com- ! pany as a man in a delirium. And I i absolutely gave up trying to get any | pleasure out of the radio myself. He’d i tune in at Chicago, and maybe a love- !ly singer’s voice would come into the room. But right in the midst of an exquisite tone Will would snap her off and begin trying to get Davenport, Iowa. I never heard anything through from Davenport either. It might be a really interesting speaker, but Will wouldn’t let him finish a sentence. Just as soon as he’d get Davenport loud and clear, he’d begin working for St. Louis. Once, after the local stations had stopped broadcasting at eleven and there was no interference, he got Portland, Oregon, and from that time on he was worse than ever. He ad- ded an aerial to the set and got to be a regular night-blooming cereus. I'd get discouraged and go to bed; and after it seemed to me I'd be asleep for hours Id hear him come prowling up the stairs—I suppose there is a time when it’s too late even to try to get Los Angeles! Sometimes he’d bring in queer- looking men in shabby old caps, men I'd never seen. Will said they were wonders at tuning, Democratic as he is, he’d never introduce them to me. They’d come in without a word, sit down, strap on the ear ’phones, and sit the whole evening in dead silence, twisting the knobs and dials. Then they’d put on their shabby old caps, and, like the Arabs, silently steal away. During my long, lonely evenings I came to realize what a mistake I had made in giving up everything I liked myself in order to make our marriage go ‘smoothly. Self-sacrifice is all right, but it ought to work both ways. Surely a modern marriage ought to be fifty fifty, a husband ought to want things to be smooth and happy, too. It oughn’t to be put up to the wife to to furnish all the tact. I guess, as of the President’s Sr and coming | at Mrs. Nicholas When he’d get that to suit | make all the little everyday sacrifices, evening after evening passed, I got to feeling pretty sorry for myself; but to everybody with any pep at all there suddenly comes a time when you cease to be sorry for yourself and be- gin to get mad. That time certainly came to me the evening I entertained the Lodge Night Club. : The club is composed of eight girls whose husbands all go to lodge every other Thursday night, and we take turns entertaining. I was half afraid Will wouldn’t want to go even to lodge, which he adores, but might ac- tually want me to put off the girls, so that he could stay home and work the radio. But he didn’t, and during the evenings before, while he was silently getting one station after another, I | consoled myself by planning the nicest party the club had had so far. Everything was to be mauve and yellow. I had some pieces of mauve taffeta left over, and I covered the cutest little place baskets. I used my yellow dishes and put mauve candles in my yellow china candlesticks. Will was to bring home a dozen daffodils, which he forgot, of course, arriving instead with a dry-cell battery. But I called up Miss Lottie, and she stop- ped in with the flowers herself, so all was well. | All was, indeed, well, right up to the climax of the evening. At hali- past ten I prepared to serve the re- 'ireshments. I had the daffodils in a basket with a great bow of mauve ‘tulle on the hanaie, and nothing could have been daintier. That was the keynote of the whole party, elegance and daintiness. I was just lighting the candies when I heard steps on the porch outside and Will’s key grating in the front door. I paused, a lighted match in my hand, with a strange premonition that something unpleas- ant was about to happen. At the first glance out into the hall, I nearly dropped dead. There was Will, leading into my dainty party the rifiraff of the town: Harry Porter and Jim Bleed and Seth the baggage i man, who drinks, and some men I'd never even seen before, men in queer, shabby caps, like the silent tuners. It seems there was a prize-fight to come over the radio late in the evening, and Will had gathered up all the men who wanted to hear it, and wouldn’t get asked anywhere else. I should say they wouldn’t! : I stood staring, simply pie-eyed. And right then and there I stopped feeling sorry for myself and began to get mad. I finished lighting the candles and marshaled the girls into the dining- room, trying to be cool and poised, while inside me something was just shaking with growing anger. It wasn’t as if Will hadn’t known I was having a party. Compared with the radio, I was nothing. The girls did their best, laughing and talking as though nothing had ‘happened. But no talk and laughter could drown out the hubbub in the t living-room. Mauve tulle bows and , daffodils in the dining-room; in the | living-room, “Markee lands a swift ' uppercut—Ferguson hands back a left hook to the jaw—" I kept up the bluff pretty well, al- i though it wasn’t easy. But the sec- (ond the girls had gone I ran up the i stairs, and with shaking hands put a nightgown, my toothbrush, and my ' jersey dress into my over-night bag. I was through. I came back down-stairs very quiet- i ly, though I needn’t have taken any { precautions. One glance into the liv- | ing-room door, blue with smoke, blar- {ing and noisy, and I rushed through | the empty dining-room. The party dishes stood on the table. Let them stand there. Perhaps I would never ome back to wash them. I was going ome. Will’s and my house being on a side hill, the garage was in the basement and warm, so we could use the flivver all winter. As I pushed open the ga- rage doors, still shaking so that I could hardly do it, I saw that it had begun to snow. Some way, that was the final touch, just like a melodrama, the faithful wife turned out in a snowstorm. I threw by bag into the back of the flivver, got into the front seat, and stepped on the self-starter. Nothing happened! No reassuring ‘“chuck-chuck!” Not even the sad- sounding brrr with which it sometimes starts on a cold night. I stepped on it again. Up-stairs, I heard the men going; evidently the fight was over. There was no time to lose. I stepped on the starter again and again, simply bewildered. The car had never acted like that before. Feverishly, I climb- ed out and tried to crank it. In vain. I went and looked out the garage doors. The snow was just whirling down by now. I couldn’ walk three quarters of a mile through town alone in a storm at midnight. Frantically I climbed back into the ear, fairly stood on the self-starter, and in the utter, dead silence, the explanation tame to me. Will had taken the batteries out of the car to use in the radio! It was fully fifteen minutes later that I came back up-stairs with my over-night bag. It was the most aw- Sal antislima; but what else could I 0? The house seemed very still. It was a little cold, too. Will had evidently aired out the smoke, and had just clos- ed the windows, I slipped out of my big coat silently and slid my oven- night bag into the coat closet. I didn’t know whether Will had gone up stairs or not, but wherever he was I was going to tell him that I was going home the first thing in the morning. And I'd tell him just what I thought about the radio, and tea with dinner, and my albums. I looked into the living-room and there sat Will all alone, =*'1l at the ra- dio, turning the knobs ar” dials, try- ing to get Honolulu or Tc¢i-in, I sup- pose. He looked up as I came in, just smiled at me without saying a word. I didn’t say a word for a m-ment, either. I had enough words tc -av, but I hadn’t decided which to say first, and for a moment I stood silent. Into that silent moment suddenly came distant music, so faint and far away it was fairylike. Will’s face lighted up and he fell to turning the knobs and dials as carefully as though his life depended on.it. But he could not make the sound any louder. It was clear and sweet, but so faint, just music floating through the air from nowhere. For a moment I forgot my anger in | trying to think what the tune was. It | was familiar, yet I couldn’t quite place it. Some one was singing, but I | couldnt catch the words, just as the ! haunting, familiar tune that, some- how, brought back something from long ago. I couldn't say anything while that music was playing. After a few minutes, Will gave up trying to get it louder and came over | suddenly and put his arm around me. 1 should have shaken him off angrily except for that queer, lonesome tune | that seemed to be coming from no- where. Then I remembered what it was: Grandma used to sing it long before she died.” I remembered sit- ting in her lap in the rocker in our bay window. at home and she would rock me and sing. I could hear her now, singing the words to the far- away music: “The green grove is gone from the hill, Maggie, Where first the daisies sprung; The creaking old mill is still, Maggie, Since you and I were young.” It always made me feel queer and lonesome, I remember, even when I (was just a tiny girl. Sometimes Grandma would stop singing, and. | when I'd ask her why she stopped, she’d say she was thinking about Grandpa. Then, maybe, she'd clear | her throat and go on: | “They say we are aged and gray, Maggie, As sprays from the white breakers flung, Let us sing of the days that are gone, Maggie, When you and I were young.” The voice that was singing in the ; alr now was so faint and far away, it : , might have been anybody’s—it might | {have been Grandma's, come back to | remind me that some day I might be | old and lonesome, sitting in a bay win- | j dow with a little girl on my lap, and | | | | | 1 ‘having to stop singing because the | song made me think o' Will; some- time when I wouldn’t have Will ever any more—even to be mad at! “The days that are gone—” Will’s arm tightened around me and I caught his hand and held it tight, as | | though just holding fast could make time and chance stand still. “Oh, Will,” I said, “I do love you, anyway.” “That goes double, Dot,” said Will. And his voice was husky, too. . I'll never know why I asked, hang- ing on Hei 4) oa hand, “Do you ever find anything about being mar- ried kind of hard 2 ? At first, Will said he didn’t. “No, honestly,” I insisted; “isn’t there sometimes something ?” “Nothing,” he said, “except once in a while some silly little thing, you know, that doesn’t amount to any- thing.” “What kind of silly little thing 2” “Oh, never anything to speak of, hon. Just some dinky think like—oh, like hardly ever getting out hunting or fishing any more.” Well, that just staggered me. 1I| suddenly realized that Will hadn't gone off hunting or fishing with the ' boys for weeks and weeks and weeks. : And I remembered how he always | used to go before we were married, | every single Saturday, sometimes to stay over the week-end. I hadn’t re- alized that he’d practically given up going now. Maybe I was too busy feeling sorry for myself for having practically given up bridge. “What other little things?” I in- sisted; and when he didn’t want to tell me, I just kept at him and made him. And I finally got all sorts of funny, dinky little things out of him, how it annoys him almost to death being po- lite and respectful when my father says that the Verblen land we’re buy- ing will never be worth the taxes—as though Will, being right in the real estate business, wouldn’t have some judgment of his own!—and how he likes steak rarer than I cook it, and how he is bored almost to death by the Sparrows, that I'm always inviting to dinner. .And so on. The same sort of dinky, irritating little things that I’d thought I had all of. And then I told him how I was get- ting simply to hate the radio because he runs it into the ground so, and how mad I was tonight, and even about the brown dress. Well, before I finished, the whole | thing began to seem like a joke. Both of us thinking we were making all the sacrifices—Will had really thought he was, too. And both of us taking everything the other one did for granted and—well, we got to laugh- ing till we got simply hysterical there in our cold living-room at one o’clock in the morning! We decided on a lot of compromises we can make, too. Will isn’t going to play with the radio all the time, and I'm going to make him go fishing or hunting at least once a month. And I'll take the steak out rare and then cut off my piece and put it baek to cook longer, and— ; But it isn’t just because we figur- ed out a lot of silly problems that I'll always remember that night. It’s be- cause of those sweet, ghostly, awe- some minutes when the mysterious voice sang Grandma’s song, and Will and I held fast together against the cold and the chancy future, and both knew—as you only stop to think in rare, awesome moments—that being young and having the person you love best in all the world love you best, too, isn’t anything to be taken for granted.—By Fannie Kilbourne, in The American Magazine. Making Insulation. Old rope and the refuse of oil re- fineries are used to make the insula- tion that covers the thousands of miles of underground cables in city streets. From the old rope is made a heavy manila paper. With the paper is com- bined petrolatum, the refuse remain- ing after crude oil is refined, and the two furnish an excellent insulation that is subsequently covered with molten lead. Saving Money. “Jim, lend me a five spot for a mo- ment—only for a moment.” “Quite sure you only want it for a moment ?” “Quite sure—only for a moment.” “All right. Wait a moment and then you won't want it.”—The Pro- gressive Grocer. 2 Youthful Prodigy Has Temperament of Genius Nini “Rota Rinaldi of Milan is twelve years old. He is a sort of three-in-one prodigy—musician, comx poser and conductor. When eleven, Nini composed an ora- torio—*“The Childhood of Saint John the Baptist”—which has been pro- nounced by those who know a very excellent thing. Be that as it may, the youthful composer came sorhething of a cropper recently at Tourcoing, France, when he attempted to lead an orchestra of 250 musicians In the rendition of his composition. The musicians, at least some of them, did not measure up to Nini's conception of what a musician should be. Per- haps the musicians themselves did not take kindly to the idea that “a little child shall lead them.” In any event a false note or two from some care- less member of the 250 brought Nini’s artistic temperament into play. He criticised and protested, stormed and perhaps cursed. No one knew just what anathemas he was calling down upon the erring orchestra. He quit In a fury after less than five minutes and could not be persuaded to try again. He did finally come before the audi- ence and complain that the orchestra lacked soul. This boy’s mother wants him to be a real boy, not a prodigy. Since | mother seems to be having her own way at present, it will, in all proba- bility, be some time before the young- ster again faces an audience.~—New | York Times, ' Increase Capacity by Variation of Labor The working capacity of persons em | gaged in dexterous physical work may be greatly Increased by varying their work from day to day, says Dr. J. P. Baumburger of Leland Stanford uni- versity as the result of a recent study of the problem of human efficiency. In work where there is a slight change in the task from time to time it was discovered that the actual work- ing capacity was about 7.7 per cent below the maximum capacity, while in other tasks which were continuous and uniform there was from 36.8 to 39.4 per cent loss from the maximum working capacity. The findings indicate to Doctor Baumberger “that men working at al- ternating occupations have an output more closely approaching their max- imum work capacity than do men in processes studied in which the same occupation was continued throughout the day.” “Many industries could easily apply this finding,” Doctor Baumberger says. “Workers could be trained to operate two machines and exchange places at regular intervals of time. I feel con- vinced that this plan would lead to in- crease of output and decrease in fa- tigue on the part of the men.” Concerning Gossip The right sort of gossip is a charm ing and stimulating thing. Men are generally understood to be less given to this amusement than women, and the most ardent lover of her sex must own that no ordinary husband would go home and tell his wife that he had met Brown wearing a fourth new suit since Christmas. The more restricted interests of the vast majority of wom- en do oblige them to seek distraction where they can find it, which is very often next door or down the street; but nobody can see a man devouring the evening paper without suspecting that this taste in him has only found a different outlet, because every news- paper is Interesting to the ordinary reader In proportion as it is salted | with gossip.—From “What I Have Gathered,” by J. E. Buckrose. Unexpected Casualties Phosphorus bombs and grenades ased in practice by the army at the proving grounds at Aberdeen, Md, caused heavy mortality in an unex- pected source. After the tests large numbers of dead ducks were found in the neighboring waters of Chesapeake bay. Examination showed that the ducks had eaten fragments of uncon- sumed phosphorus which had fallen in the water of thelr feeding grounds. Now they are using devices to frighten the birds away before the tests are meade, and the bombs are being ex- ploded either over the land or over water so deep that the ducks do not feed In it. Casualties so far are esti- mated at 500, and it is feared they may be much greater before all the poison is dissipated. Formed Ages Ago On view at the American Museum ot Natural History, New York, are three blocks of limestone from the slopes of Mount Lebanon, near Beirut, Syria. Theis age is estimated at a million years. They were taken from lime- stone which formed the bed of an ocean which once covered that area. They contain the remains of shellfish end other marine organisms which lived at that time, and which were en- tombed in the mud at the bottom as they died, thus being preserved as the mud hardened into limestone. Holds Absence Record Annie Albano, eight years old and a pupil in the East Boston schools, has been absent from school more than 100 sessions since the opening of the school term, which was little more than half over when the record for tru- ancy was announced. Her truancy was not voluntary, however, as she was kept home to care for other chil- dren or by illness due to tonsil trouble,