_ Bellefonte, Pa., October 29, 1926. EE EE. THE LAND OF “PRETTY SOON.” I know a land where the streets are paved With the things which we meant to achieve It is walled with the money we meant to have saved ; And the pleasure for which we grieve The kind words unspoken, the promises broken. And many a coveted boon Are stowed away there in that land some- where— The land of “Pretty Soon.” | There are uncut jewels of possible fame Lying about in the dust, And many a noble and lofty aim Covered with mold and rust. And oh, this place, while it seems so near, Is farther away than the moon, Though our purpose is fair yet we never ing strand To the land of “Pretty Soon.” The road that leads to that mystic land Is strewn with pitiful wrecks, And the ships that have sailed for its shin- ning strand Bear skeletons on their decks. It is farther at noon than it was at dawn, And farther at night than at noon; Oh let us beware of that land down there— The land of “Pretty Soon.” —By Ella Wheeler Wilcox. THE TYRANT. All the way up Avery Madden had had a hard grim fight. Right out of high school she’d shouldered far more trouble and responsibility than usual- ly falls upon a seventeen-year-older. That was when her father, Lundy Madden, sports writer and genial waster, came home one night com- plaining that he did not feel well. At ten o’clock he was in hideous spasms of pain. At eleven he was in the hos- pital and the surgeons were busy. At twelve he was dead of peritonitis. His paper paid for his funeral and gave the widow and her daughter a month’s salary, six hundred dollars. It was lucky that the paper was so generous, for Lundy Madden had no life insur- ance and his assets amounted to five dollars and sixty cents in cash, the furniture in the apartment, and a pair of diamond cuff links that had belong- ed to his great-grandfather. Mrs. Madden was a frail little blue- eyed woman who had lived only to pleasure and spoil her roistering, good-looking husband. After his death she lost every grain of sense she'd ever had and could do nothing but lie in bed and cry. So it was to Avery that the problem of her own'life and her mother’s was presented for solu- tion— to Avery with all her youth, her inexperience, her ignorance, her grief and bewilderment. Avery took hold bravely—but the next seven years of the Maddens were spent in constant shadow. Avery left high school and the weekly ‘art class that wads her gregtest joy, moved her- self and her mother to two cheap rooms in what Mrs. Madden rightly called a slum, and went to work in a candy factory, for that was all she could find to do. Yet the candy factory held a bright gleam for Avery—Edna Galey, a brand-new welfare worker, a college- trained young woman with theories to burn on uplifting the working classes. Imagine with what joy Avery welcomed this new friend who told her that there was a way out from her un- accustomed nauseating drudgery. Classes! All that Avery asked of her changed world was that she might go on studying art. She didn’t mind work, she didn’t mind her mother’s perpetual moan, she didn’t mind the hole they lived in, she didn’t mind anything if she need not face a future which held no paints and crayons. Edna Galey, along with her im- practical notions, had a few practical ones. "She saw, to begin with, that Avery must have lighter work in bet- ter surroundings. So she went out and got her a minor job in a publish- ing house. The . hours were shorter than in the factory and Avery had en- . ergy enough left after work to get dinner when she got home and then to dash madly out to the thing she loved, her art class. Seventeen, eighteen, nineteen, twen- ty, twenty-one, twenty-two, twenty- three, twenty-four! Seven years of the hardest kind of hard work. Only once had she interrupted her art study just long enough to learn shorthand and typing, since she could earn more money as a secretary. Then back to pencil and brush. As soon as she could she began to use what she had learned. Lamp shades, decorative boxes, hats, scarfs, Christmas and birthday and place cards, picture frames, trays—she did them all with a fantastic charm and a technique which struck just the right mean be- tween splash and niggle. She sold some of these things to the girls at the office and they begged for more and brought her orders. Then she took a sample tray and some candle shades to a decorator. More orders. Avery was twenty-four when she saw that she could actually support her- self and her mother by her painting. Her faith in herself was rewarded by commissions for two screens and an over-mantel in the first month of what her mother called tearfully her “ob- stinate idleness.” Other commissions followed. She found she could drop the little things, boxes and the cards and the lamp shades and oh, how thankfully she did so. Then came the order of her first room. That crazy-rich Mrs. Doerrs saw a yellow lacquer screen that Avery had sold through a decorator and she tracked the artist down. “I want a room for bridge in my Florida house,” she ordered. “Apple green with pagodas and storks and junks and foo-dogs and peonies and bamboos in gold and black and scarlet. Hurry it up; it must be done in two months or I won’t pay for it. If it is done in two months, and I like it, you can name the price.” It was done in two days less than two months and Mrs. Doerrs’ check was a generous four figures. “I love it,” she declared. “I'm mad ahout it. I'll show it to everybody and every- body will want one, but you must nev- er do another like it.” “Pll do what I please,” answered Avery, “but I hope I’ve got ideas enough that Ill never have to use the same one twice.” : Mrs. Doerrs looked at Avery, who was skinny and pale from overwork, red-haired and spunky by nature, and had on the shabbiest serge dress and the dirtiest old cotton smock. Mrs. Doerrs laughed. “You'd be rather good-looking if you had clothes worth the name,” she said. “Qh—clothes! I don’t care about clothes.” ir “Don’t say silly things. Of course you care about clothes. And if I send for you to come to Florida and paint rooms for half a dozen of my friends, don’t come looking like a scarecrow.” Mrs. Doerrs kept her word about showing her bridge-room—she could hardly help it since she played prac- tically every night and all night, and Avery found herself in Florida with orders for two more rooms to be paint- ed directly on the walls, and while she was doing them she picked up a com- mission for a couple of screens and a set of overdoor panels. Mrs. Madden went south with Avery and they lived in the cheapest boarding house they could find, which wasn’t so very cheap. All day long Avery worked and at night she and her mother walked out in the magical Florida nights of blue chiffon ragged out with stars far larg- er and brighter than stars have any business to be. One afternoon, as she was reluct- antly putting the last touches on a room designed to bring indoors the great tropical garden just outside, she heard a man’s voice speaking behind her. He said—and she never forgot the words nor the voice— “It’s glor- jous! The artist should be given a banquet of roasted flamingo, served on a dish of lapislazuli.” -As she turned slightly, and the speaker per- ceived that the one he’d spoken of was present, he added, smiling, “I beg your pardon—but it’s true. This is be- yond imagination.” in Avery smiled a polite, stiff little smile and made the slightest half nod. Her rich patrons ignored her social- ly,.so she had become equally remote. But this man sounded different, in- teresting. She watched him stealthily as he looked over the room, and the woman with him fluttered and ex- claimed. He looked real, and he look- ed strong, and he looked proud.: He was gone in ten minutes, but he stuck in Avery’s memory. She won- dered if the tinkling bepearled little blonde with him was his wife. Prob- ably. The thought was unpleasant. That man deserved something better than a piece of tin. . . . She gave her work a last critical survey—and was through. The check was already in her pocket. Now suddenly she was discontent- ed. She walked back to the boarding house haunted by a perception of the great gaps in her life, of warmth and beauty and human relationships she had never known, and the limitations | en>