Brow Yin, Bellefonte, Pa., January 13, 1928. WHAT IS AGE? By the late Rev. William V. Kelly, LL. D. I could not learn from words of men The real significance of “old” and “young,” And so I asked the mountains, ‘What is age? They said: “O, child of Days, Thou canst not know what age is; Neither can we know, For earth is not yet old but in its prime: And, though our brows are furrowed deep with time, ‘We hope to see -full many a thousand years Before our day of dissolution come. A century is but one tick of the great clock ‘Which counts our years. “And as for men, They grow not old on earth— They have not time; They but begin to live. They do not even come to ripeness here, But only yonder in the Great Unseen. It takes a million years to make a man! “This earth is but man’s cradle; A man of fourscore is a babe, Peering, perhaps, over his cradle’s edge, But the wide world of his existance Is yet to roam through and to widen in. Life is before him, greatness is to come! After a while he shall vacate his cradle, And go forth to seek the fortune God reserves for him. “But man on earth knows nothing of Old Age. Man's longest earthly life Is but a ripple lapping at our base. We see the generations come and go, And men say we are old: Yet are we young beside God And His angels, which excel in strength. And Paul is young yet, And John and Moses, too, Walking the hills of everlasting life. Immortals grow and grow, but ne'er grow old! “What man gets on earth Is just a Start in Life, And it is well with him, whate’er his years, Who is well started— Has learned the speech of truth, The trade of righteousness, The love of God, The hope of deathless glory. “He lives by heavenly plan. His hands are clean and kindly, His heart is gentle and his word is true; Men honor, angels love him, And his name is writ on high. He grows, but grows not old!” So said the mountains; and I said: “Thank God, who gives His children, An eternal youth, which knows advance But never knows decay! All hail, eternal youth! Eternal Life, that knows not youth nor age, grows Now!” —From the Christian Advocate ———— ee —— IN SPITE OF HIMSELF. But on through an everlasting Not to put too fine a point on it, Baird Carruthers was by way of get- ting himself disliked. He was be- coming known as a woman-hater, a designation which has lost its pre- war kick. He was the debutantes’ de- spair, the fly in the pomade of the younger married women and the zero hour of anxious mothers. Otherwise, he wasn’t a bad sort. . The trouble with Carruthers was that he was cursed with that dark, scornful appearance which is a nat- ural temptation to the huntress of ev- ery woman. In addition to this, he was distinctly eligible as far as fam- ily, background and money were con- cerned. And no woman likes to be hated by an eligible bachelor. Carruthers was a hater of modern womanhood only. He had a frown for the lip-stick, a distaste for the girlish hip-flask, a horror of feminine pro- fanity. But he was terribly in love with the dear, dead women of another generation, the women his forefa- thers had courted and married against a setting of old rooms, dusky with tradition, and an accompaniment of harp-strings touched to sentiment- al melody in dim twilights. These long-haired and alluring ghosts had been modest and womanly, and for their vanished sakes Carruth- ers was a throw-back and he knew it. There were times when he wist- fully fancied that if he threw back far enough one of them might come to life and let him do the pursuing and the wooing—a procedure which, he had heard, was not routine today. It should be understood, perhaps, that Carruthers’s major, if unadmit- ted, reason for his general grudge against the present-day girl had been blond and ultra, and had happened five years previously. His backbone had been stiff with the starch of his ideals, and although the minx had loved him more than a little, she had seen the unwisdom of life on an un- comfortable pedestal—hers were dan- cing feet if of common clay—and so she had sent him away, and later married a man of less critical nature. When Carruthers was very bored he could depart to a camp in the Ad- irondacks where he maintained a whiskery and taciturn caretaker, or he could sail for Capri where he had a villa, or he could look on a cottage at Southampton or a bungalow at Palm Beach; or, all else failing, he could drop into his down-town office and see how much money his late father’s business had made for him up to any sunny Saturday afternoon. In the autumn of 1927, having cel- ebrated his thirty-second birthday, he elected for the camp, took his guns and departed. He was tired of being hunted and determined to revenge himself somewhat upon more inno- cent and easier game. The camp was panacea. He spent a week of tramping, shooting, grow- ing a beard and eating fried food, and wondering why he had been born. He had also dreamed a little, in the healing hush of the woods—dreamed of the girl who did not and could not exist. He fancied her beside him, and ' boy, Carruthers had them all stopped ighed to think that strapped slippers SL muslins and old laces would be, somehow, what is wrong with this picture. It is rather hard to make a com- | panion of an ideal. : But Carruthers, musing upon what appeared to him a doomed celibacy, was not altogether unhappy, for it is at least soothing to the vanity to re- main faithful to a Cynara you have never met, He was trampling through a hushed noon, under a soft gray sky— a noon so still that no branch stirred and he seemed to himself to be the last man upon a deserted star—when he was startled by a husky adolescent voice near by, which said, conspicu- ously, “Confound it!” Carruthers stood still. Presently he saw, crashing through the tangled underbrush, weaving around the great trunks of trees, the slim figure of a boy with a head of rough red curls, a gun in the hollow of his arm and a dead cirgaret between lips that smiled. “Oh! Hello, there!” spoke the boy in amiable accents. “Have you a match? I dropped my infernal light- er some miles ago.” : Carruthers answered the greeting and the smile, produced a light and held it. Inhaling, the boy looked up at him from tilted green eyes, and Carruthers perceived that his new acquaintance had a tanned and merry face, and that across a short and in- solent nose there was a bridge of gold- en freckles. “Am I shooting over your proper- ty?” asked the youth casually. “If so, I'm not sorry. Let's go!” . “My property, yes, as it happens, Carruthers answered pleasantly. But yours to shoot over, of course. I'd be glad of your company, if you care to trail along with me. Where are ou from?” ’ “Temporarily or chronically? If the former, I'm staying at the Hastings camp. You're Baird Carruthers, nat- urally.” Sen “Why naturally?” inquired Car- ruthers, faintly amused. “I've seen you—in town. I'm Les- lie, Thorne, by the way” Carruthers thought a moment. Thorne? The railroad people, very likely. More than likely, as old Thorne was Hastings’s closest friend. He said smiling: “I'm glad to know you. I've met your father and mother—and you've a sister, haven’t you? I've heard—’ He broke off, vaguel embarrased. The Thorne girl figured much in the press. She was a polo, golf and ten- nis-playing hoyden, with a string of medals and cups to her everlasting discredit. He trusted that face did not reflect to her little brother what he, Carruthers, though of this hard- living, probably hard-smoking and drinking female of the species. The boy, walking on beside him, an- swered, with a small crow of myster- ious amusement: . “A sister? Rather—” . “She’s with you at the Hastings?” “Yeos.? Carruthers made fonversation the net-that-I-give-a-hang manner. Se erie is‘ a great athlete, IT believe. I've not met her, but as I said, one can’t help hearing—" “She’s not so bad,” agreed the red- headed boy and, throwing away his cigaret, demanded joyously: “Well, where do we go from here?” They went to a number of places, and Carruthers was impressed with his companion. The boy had a steady hand and a keen eye and such hon- ors as there were fell to him. His talk. slangy and witty, was enter- taining. He had a strain of sound common sense, and great physical en- durance for his physique. Carruthers found himself liking him immensely, and judged him to be about seven- teen, but wise for his years, though not with the wisdom of the sleek- haired specimens which Carruthers had distastefully encountered at home and abroad. . They lunched on sandwiches and chocolate, produced from Carruthers’s ample pockets, and shared the con- tents of a small coffee thermos. Lat- er, as a premature dusk fell and the first flakes of snow drifted downward through the still air and the hushed world grew cold, Carruthers, a little reluctantly, offered his small flask and, moralizing inwardly, watched the boy take a moderate drink. The not particularly successful ex- pedition ended near the Carruthers camp, and the two turned in there to find the comfort of a blazing log fire and old Hutchins busily engaged at the cook-stove. “Why do you go back to the Hast- ings’ tonight?” Carruthers wished to know. “It’s something of a tramp, and I think we're in for a storm. I've smelled snow all day, and it’s com- ing down thicker.” 4 Young Thorne, half asleep in his long chair, raised a flushed brown cheek from his hand and slanted his green eyes at his host. He said, “Thanks, I'd like to,” and relapsed into semi-slumber. Carruthers observed him, half amused half irritated. Youth was— rather wonderful but exasperating, somehow. “Hadn’t you better let them know ?” he suggested. “We have phones, you know.” “They won’t worry, argued the boy drowsily, but presently he staggered sleepily to the instrument and called the Hastings camp. When the connection was estab- lished Carruthers heard him ask for Miss Thorne. “Leslie speaking. I won't be back tonight—stumbled into another camp.” There was a pause, and then the boy chuckled, “Baird Carruthers in «+. No—no. Keep your hair on darling, do!” : He hung up and went back to his chair without comment. Presently Hutchins had supper ready and his customers did him justice, after which Carruthers and his guest played double Canfield at a cent a point un- til nine o’clock, when, finding them- selves putting red tens on red knaves, they decided it was bedtime. Carruthers accepted an I O U for his inconsiderable winnings, and rose to stretch luxuriously by the mantel. Thorne watched him, noting the breadth of shoulder and the trained slimness of waist and hip. There was no doubt about it, mused the lon I es Presently Thorne found himself the recipient of pajamas sizes too large for him, a shabby bath-robe and a new tooth-brush. Carruthers escorted him to the narrow guest-room, bade him good night and left. When the door had closed behind his host Les- lie Thorne sat down on the edge of a camp cot and regarded his calloused palms thoughtfully. It was then that Carruthers heard his guest’s laugh- ter through the thin walls, and smiled in sympathy and frowned in bewilder- ment. By midnight the wold about the camp was a ghost world, and two hours later the wind had risen and was singing in the branches of the patient trees. At seven the next morning Leslie Thorne rose to look out upon a driving wilderness of white, It snowed for four days, and for that time the Carruthers camp was habitation enforced for young Thorne. Carruthers ran out of cigarets, and his guest, with a nose slightly ele- vated took bravely to one of his host’s weathered pipes. But the days passed, for Carruthers at least, with astonishing speed. The boy was an entertaining companion. He said lit- tle about himself, and in answer to Carruthers’s questions about school answered “Tutors,” and let it go at that. But he appeared to have been all over the face of the globe, and Carruthers was amused by his casual, sometimes caustic and always shrewd comments upon the ways of earth and life in general. He had, of course, the cynicism of the very young, but hand in hand with it there went a tolerance that Carruthers himself had not yet reached and, therefore, marveled ac- cordingly. The wires were down, of course, and there was no communication with the Hastings camp. “Well,” remarked Carruthers com- fortably, “as they know you are with me, it’s all right,” and wondered why Thorne laughed out suddenly, rifling the pack of cards he was holding in quick brown fingers, his eyes intent upon the pasteboards, his red head bent. Cards! Every game the two could play—with the blue smoke of tobacco above the table and the flame gossip- ing on the hearth, and Hutchins shif- fling in and out, his lean face grave as he pondered on their larder and the possibility of another week of storm. And in between Canfield and Russian bank, spit-in-the-ocean. two- handed bridge and cribbage, Carruth- ers and the boy talked and laughed. It was on the evening of the last day that, the talk having turned on wom- en, Carruthers found himself speak- ing of the girl who did not exist. “I'm a fool,” he said, laughing, sor- everywhere—and she just isn’t—not in this day and age.” Thorne leaned forward, his elbows on the table, a home-made cigaret in his wide laughing mouth. He had found cigaret papers and now rolled his own from Carruthers’s pipe to- bacco, cheerfully enough, ‘“Hock-bet- fully, “and darned few guts!” Carruthers whistled. “You don’t like the word,” said the youngster, and tossed his mop of rough red curls, “and you hate to hear it applied to women.” He ac- cepted Carruthers’s silence as assent, and went on doggedly, “But that’s be- cause you don’t live in this world at all, Carruthers, or you'd realize that women have to have—well, you know what—to get through at all. Life hasn’t been made much easier for them—freedom hasn’t helped them much—and they aren’t so many gen- erations removed from your girl with the smelling-salts. They have to fall in love and get married and have children, don’t they? They have to die—I suppose you’ll admit that? I can’t see so much difference—--" ness. He said gravely: “ Perhaps you're right. I don’t know. How do you know so muck, at your age? “I have a sister——" “I never had one. Does it alter the view-point? I should have thought that your sister was so much the modern type that——" “Modern!” The boy laughed, un- apologetic for his interruption. “Be- cause she’s considered a pretty good sport? That's not modern. Even some of your genteel ladies were good sports—in another way, per- haps. They didn’t jazz it up, of course—" : “Nevertheless,” said Carruthers, “you’ve not converted me.” “I didn’t expect to,” Thorne an- swered quickly, “but all this chatter about the present generation makes —I mean, if I were thinking of get- ting married, I would draw the line at some sappy girl who would sit around and coo at me and tell me how wonderful I was all the time. That’s what you want, isn’t it, boiled down? I'd want a girl who knew a little about life and wasn’t afraid of it— a girl who was—a—well, a gentle- man, if you understand what I mean. One thing you'll have to say for the sort of girls your sort of man knows —they aren’t forever leaning on some man’s neck for purposes of support, as it were. They stand on their own feet.” . “Sometimes they—slip,” suggested Carruthers, with unworthy cynicism. He was amazed to see the green eyes darken and the widen mouth straighten. And when the breathless defense came, he was amused at the boy’s championship—and, obscurely a little touched. “Well, if they do,” said the young- ter, and his voice shook, “they don’t go around yapping about ‘the woman pays,” do they? They take their med- icine and they shut up. They don’t put all the blame on the other bozo— they play pretty darned fair nowa- days. They don’t ‘stand for mar- riages at the point of a gun and a cur- tain ring off the minister's draperies for a ‘pledge of undying love’—they don’t go and weep on a man’s door- step backed up by their entire fam- ilies. They admit that they were as much at fault as the other fellow. They're sorry—which doesn’t undo ry he had spoken, “but I look for her | the boy flushed with his own earnest- | me sick at my stomach. If I were a | matters—and they try to be on the square.” “You're arguing,” remarked Car- ruthers, “in favor of—well let's call them light women. The double stand- ard may be a pity, but it’s a pretty steadfast institution.” “I'm not arguing for light women, as you call them,” the boy said hot- ly. I'm arguing for—all women. I take off my hat to 'em. And if there's a double standard—and even you half admit that there shouldn’t be -who set it but you men!” *““You men,” ” repented Carcuthers, and laughed. “You're forgeltirg your own sex, aren’t you?!” ¢ boy flushed, slowty “No, I'm not.” He grinred a iitt'e very impishly. “2nd anyway, I'nt not quite adult enough to be in vour ciass.” “Hoy come,” asked Carruthers laz- ily, “that the flapper has sach a charapion in you?’ Thorne shook his head. “I'm not champing for anyone,” he replied, “but I like girls who see straight and don’t wear corsets on their minds or their bodies—who aren’t afraid of their own shadow—or anyone else's. I like girls who can be friends with a man, too, comrades——" “There aren’t any—nowadays.” “Were there any in the days you are thinking about?” asked the boy quickly. “I don’t mean the pioneer women—those were women, if you like. I mean the girls of yesterday you were talking about a moment ago—all frills and stays and curls, sitting around waiting for some man to come and support them. Talk about sex appeal today! Why those women were sex appeal incarnate— that’s about all they were too.” “Well, I must say—” began Car- ruthers, somewhat scandalized. Thorne laughed. “I'm sorry. I suppose I've been awfully rude. For- get it. If this storm keeps up much longer, Ill have to borrow one of your shirts—this one of mine isn’t so good.” “You're welcome to my entire wardrobe,” said Carruthers heartily. “All you have to do is help your- self.” “I probably won't need to. It’s stopped snowing, really and I should be able to make the Hastings camp tomorrow on snow-shoes. Hutchins showed me a stack of ’em. Mind if I borrow a pair?” “No. But I'll miss you,” comment- ed Caruthers sincerely. He looked across the card-table and reflectad that he never had been as and answered Kids were pretty fine, after all. He found himself wishing, suddenly, that he were a few years older, with a son of his own like this boy—clean and laughter-loving and fearless. Ev- en his mistaken championships were | somehow, endearing. He went to bed with this thought "in his mind and wondered if he were | growing sentimental, and laughed as { he substituted “goofy” for the softer i term, “Goofy” was the guest's favor- | ite insult. i When Carruthers woke the next { morning he found himself planning ot- | not to lose Leslie Thorne—not to let | tle shoulders,” he commented scorn- (him go, altogether. He'd surely see | [the boy sometimes. They’d got on so { well together in their enforced in- | timacy—surely Leslie wouldn’t mind a game of golf now and then. After breakfast, which was unus- {ually silent, Thorne announced his | immediate departure. The world was i blanketed with snow, but the wind {was down and the sun shining—it ‘would be no trick at all to get back to camp. i “I'll come along,” said Carruthers. i For the first time he saw Thorne (ill at ease as he answered reluctant- i “If you wish, of course. But i there’s no need. I’ll have no trouble | finding my way back.” | The husky voice that was more i contralto than baritone was cool, and | to steady green eyes which were not entirely—friendly. He stiffened a lit- tle. Of course if the youngster was bored with him . . . | Irritated out of all proportion, he ‘answered, as coolly as the boy, ! “That’s all right, then.” | Leslie busied himself with prepara- | tions for departure, and a rather hos- tile silence hovered over the two. But {when they were out on the door-sill, rand Thorne was set to go, he turned i back to give his hand to Carruthers ‘ for the second time. “Thanks,” he said, “a lot and was gone before Carruthers could ask him how long he would be at the Hastings’. . That, however, was easily reme- died. He would ring up in a few days, he thought; when the wires were available again, and talk to the boy. They’d been too good friends to part quite as casually as that. It was three days before he estab- ' lished communication with the Hast- ings camp and Carruthers was able to call up He found himself talking to Mr. Hastings’s secretary. “I wonder if I might speak to Mr. Thorne.” “Mr. Thorne? Mr. Thorne is not here,” the answer came in a ladylike and Bostonian accent. “He has left, then?” “He has never been here” was the weary reply. “His daughter and sis- ter——" “Oh, I see,” cut in Carruthers. “I didn’t mean the elder Mr. Thorne. I meant his son, Leslie.” Apparently she didn’t get that, for she said, with a sort of gasp, “You mean Miss Thorne—Miss Leslie Thorne? She left for New York yes- terday. She waited for Carruthers to make some comment or, perhaps, to say good-by. All she heard was the click of the instrument as Carruthers slammed it down. Miss—Leslie—Thorne . . Confound it, she looked like a boy -—the slim, straight figure and the 2” mop of curls! And talked like a boy, too, in her husky adolescent sort of voice! And acted like a boy! What the so-and-so did she mean by putting him in such a ‘position? he asked himself furiously. And what would her people think, what would they say, knowing she had spent four days with him, snowed in, away from % EER contented during the last four days. | rather blunt features and the rough: lal the world—four days and nights of blizzard? Her aunt knew—he supposed now that was her aunt with whom she had spoken when she telephoned— and the Hastings, of course. Her reputation! Well, what was her reputation to him? He hoped he’d never see her again. And he went back to New York raging, aware that he was hurt as well as angry. For he missed the boy who had been his comrade and his companion—the boy who had giv- en him back his belief in Youth—the boy he had wished was his own son. The thought of that made him laugh, very angrily. The boy had never existed. There had been only a mod- ern young woman with a boy’s head and a boy’s figure—a young woman who had shot straight, taken her whisky neat, who had sworn and laughed and played with him—who had taken advantage of his natural mistake at their first meeting to make a fool of him. He had been fond of the boy. He hated the girl. Back in New York, a note from her reached him. In it was the check for his consistent winnings at cards, and a line or two: Dear Baird Carruthers: By now you’ye found out, of course. I'm sorry if you're an- gry, but I know you are. Don't forgive me—and don’t forget me. Blame it on the modern woman, if you wish, and be gratified that the Other Generation girl would never have done such a thing. As for me, I'm not as ashamed as I should be—and I had an aw- fully good time. Take this for the bread-and-butter letter that is due you. Very sincerely yours, Leslie Thorne In the same mail was a note from Hutchins to the effect that Mr. . Thorne had had the snow-shoes sent over from the Hastings camp. | Carruthers tore up the check—a ; very senseless procedure and very an- .noying to any good bank. Then he burned the letter viciously. Not long after, he went abroad. And ore reason he went was because, picking up a smart magazine devoted i to the doings of any unusual person, he found a page of pictures—pictures of Leslie Thorne. He threw the mag- azine in a corner, and then went and picked it up again. Leslie in a rid- ing-habit; Leslie in a shooting kit— the kit he knew; Leslie astride a pony with a polo mallet in her hand; Leslie walking down the Avenue in | a tailor-made; and Leslie in an even- | ing gown—skirts bouffant as flow- jer petals, a tight little bodice, her short, curly hair haloing her face. As straight as a boy’s eyes, her eyes; as straight as a boy’s back, her back; "and yet—her lips and the curve of her woman. | Carruthers buried the magazine , under a pile of newspapers and—went i abroad. He was in Capir when the first ru- | mors reached him. He was lunching jat a hotel with some friends when he heard women talking at the next ta- ble. He heard her nanie ‘mentioned, ‘and he caught much of the general | heads-together buzz which followed. “A week, I understand ... Yes, | all alone in a camp . . . Well, I must | say, girls nowadays ... No, I don’t | know who the man was... If I thought that my Sophie would!” . . et cetera. Carruthers felt his eyes and his face burn. Leslie! Leslie Thorne! The fearless eyes and the proud small head—the eyes wounded and cast down—the head bowed ... He shuld think it—he dared not think 1t. i The lovely room, as colorful and as animated as a flower garden, turned black and misty. Carruthers pulled himself together and turned to . speak to the woman in his party, the . wife of one friend and the sister of Carruthers was amused to see how | Carruthers found himself looking in- | another. She too, had heard, for she leaned toward him, her pretty face alight with malice. “They’re talking about Leslie Thorne, of course. But then, every- body is. It was more than a nine- days’ wonder.” “What about her?” asked Carruth- ers, in a voice strange to himself. “My dear, don’t tell me you haven't heard! Where on earth have you been? Even Basil”’—she nodded at her husband—*“knows, and he’s gen- erally deaf, dumb and blind to gos- sip. But this isn’t gossip. She was visiting at the Hastings camp last winter, and went out alone with her gun—she’s always done fool things like that. She wandered into some man’s camp—one doesn’t hear wheth- er by accident or design; opinions as to that vary—and she stayed there alone with him for four days. I don’t know who the man was. The Hastings know, and her people do. Her people, by the way, have sent her to Coventry. They've always let her do much as she pleased, but they're a proud pair and hate scandal -—always have—and this was cer- tainly a large, virile blot on the scutcheon. So, for once, they called a halt, and I have heard she doesn’t go out any more. “Her father wanted to get after the man—with a good old-fashioned horsewhip, I understand—but Leslie threatened all sorts of terrible things if the man were even approached. She said it wasn’t his fault, that he had taken her for a boy, and it wasn’t up to her to disillusion him—even at the price of her reputation. Well, one wasn’t born yesterday, so one doesn’t quite believe that. But rath- er than have her leave home—she has her own income—and cause more an worse talk, the Thornes agreed to leave the man out of it. I never did like Leslie Thorne,” interpolated Mrs. Howard plaintively and virtuously. Carruthers lost the rest of the monolog. That night, under a dark blue Ital- ian sky, he had it out with himself. What a mess she had made of it all! And it was her fault. But she was, he conceded grudgingly, what she once had told him she admired in women. She was a sport and a gent- leman. It was curious that he had never thought seriously of gossip—like un- to a band-wagon—following the epi- sode? At first, when he learned who his late guest was, he had thought of it angrily and fieetingly, like a small sullen boy, “She’ll be sorry, and I don’t care!” But after that he had been too busy trying to salve the wound to his pride—for she had made a fool of him, hadn’t she? Here he stopped short and reflected that she might have made a fool of him—but not a knave. Too busy, his thoughts went on, trying to escape her—remembrance of the boy in camp, the comrade boy with the slant- ed green eyes and the laughter-loving mouth—too busy cursing the editors of magazines which printed her pic- tures, to think about gossip. Now he had to think about it. There was only one way: he reflected fur- iously, to have his just revenge, to ut her in her place—woman’s place eing, as he had always held, in the home. He sailed for New York, and stayed there long enough to discover that the Thornes were on Long Island, “in,” as some said cattily, “se- clusion.” He went to Long Island and he saw Mr. Thorne. He sent in his card with a message written firmly be-~ neath his name, a message potent enough to give him access to the great library overlooking the Sound where old Thorne stood—not so old, after all—frowning over the imcred- ible audacity of the fellow. What was said then, in the room that smelled of leather bindings and violets and salt, no one ever told— not Thorne and not Carruthers. There were grave words and deferential words, and then laughter and the sound of elderly profanity. And at the end, a hand-clasp. Then Carruthers went out to find Leslie. She was not “going out” That much her family insisted upon. So he found her, alone on the beach, in a suit of that amazing scarlet which does not quarrel with red curls and wondered, as she sprang to her feet and faced him, why he had ever thought her a boy. .The slim straight body was deli- ciously faintly curved, and a strap had slipped over one shoulder, show- ing a band of skin the color of cream. “You!” He wasted no words. ing to marry me!” “I am not!” They stood and glared at each oth- er, Carruthers said, choked: “You dear, darned little fool! As if I'd let you g0 _on—being chivalrous!” She said, flushed: “I'm to make an honest man of you, then?” .He was so angry at that that he simply walked up to her and took her in his arms and kissed her, tem- porarily, he let her go, and said: “If you want to put it like that.” “But—but—" “Keep quiet!” He silenced her effectively, for the moment. She said after a pause: “I—fell in love with your looks— ages ago. I nearly shot myself out of sheer excitement when I met you —there, in the wood.” “We'll go back for our honeymoon. I can still beat you at Canfield.” After another entirely marvelous interval she said, suddenly very grave: “But I'm not your type of gir} at all. You hate everything I do— everything I stand for—everything I am. Look at me, Baird!” He looked—at the tanned, square face, at the green eyes, tilted, and the wide mouth, which was now touched with an unnatural, glowing scarlet. And he kissed her again . . and again... and once more. . . “You're everything I love—and like. I liked that boy. He was my friend. I thought——Leslie, darling, I thought—if I could have a son like that!” of She closed her eyes and leaned her head against his shoulder. And hold- ing her, he bade good-by to the dear ghosts of another day—the ghosts who could not have given him the gay, sexless companionship of four snowy days—the ghosts who would not have taken all the blame had they ventured to an escapade and been found out—the lady ghosts who would not have been gentlemen. He said—and found that he meant it, and meant it for the rest of the lovely, exciting, undreamed-of life which lay before him: “You're all IT ever wanted .. ” —By Faith Baldwin in the Cosmopolitan msg “You're go he said furiously. Shortening Motor Routes in the Old Keystone State. Completion and opening to traffic of two pieces of road construction work in Pennsylvania, has shortened the former Philadelphia-Baltimore route by eight miles. The former road is earried over the top of the new Conowingo dam, in Maryland, while the latter road is reconstructed over what was once an old stage trail. The other construction work was on the William Penn Highway, be- tween Amity Hall and Newport, west of Harrisburg. The cut-off is built over the old stage road which follows the Juniata River, but which was abandoned in 1889 after it had been damaged by heavy floods. Whereas the old road was a few inches above the stream’s water level, the new road is 20 feet higher. With the opening of the cut-off the motorist will follow the Juniata River for about 60 miles, through some of the most beautiful of Pennsylvania’s scenery, from Clark’s Ferry Bridge to Lewistown. Practically Arrived. Hiram had walked four miles over the Great Smokies to call on his lady fair. For a time they sat silent on a bench by the side of her log cabin, but soon the moon, as moons do, had its effect and Hiram slid closer to her and patted her hand. “Mary,” he began, “y’know I got a clearin’ over thar and a team an’ wagon an’ some hawgs an’ cows, an’ I ’low to build me a house this fall an’~-" Here he was interrupted by Mary’s mother who was awakened. “Mary,” she called in a loud voice, is that young man thar yit?” Back came the answer: “No maw, but he’s gettin’ thar.”