Bellefonte, Pa., April 27, 1928 FELLOW-FEELING. (A gift of $195,000, has been made to the Johns Hopkins University for the study of the “origin, nature, and possible cure of the common cold.”—Reuter.) I knew a man, a learned man, a man of much renown, Who vowed that he would yet surprise the native of his town; He tried to square the circle; and, I much regret to say, Announced his purpose publicly. So him they put away. : I knew a man, another man of mist in- ventive vein. Who had perpetual motion rather badly on the brain; With little weights and wheels and things he used to sit and play; The neighbors got to hear of it. him they put away. And I knew a man, another man of decent, steady stock, Who tried for weeks to add a pound of tea to ten o'clock; His calculations stretched for miles and made a fine array; He sent them to the House of Lords. him they put away. So One morning as these pretty men were sitting in a row Upon the wall that hedged them in they noticcd down below Another man, a worried man, who mut- tered as he went; They asked him why his brow was sad and why his back was bent. He said, “I've offered forty thousand pounds of honest gold To him who finds a cure for what they call a common cold.” Upon the wall they looked at him, and as one man replied, “We're very pleased to meet you, sir. Hi! comrade, come inside!” —Lucio in Manchester Guardian. THE SWAN SONG. Arthur Whittaker sat on a green park-bench and glowered at two quite innocent swans which sailed majestic- ally on the smooth surface of the lake. They were as ompervious fo his hostile gaze as though they were, by some ornithic prescience, aware that his indignation was not really, directed toward them as swans per se, but merely as integral parts of a world which appeared to Mr. Whit- taker, in his present mood, to be superlatively unjust and unapprecia- tive. He was a thin, harassed-looking lit- tle man, with an intellectual breadth of brow rather over-emphasized by the strategic retreat which his rapidly thinning hair was making from its smooth and shining surface. A pair of tortoise-shell-rimmmed glasses, set on a rather high-bridged nose, gave to his kindly gray eyes a look of owl- ish wisdom which was, in fact, an im- portant part of his stock-in-trade; for Mr. Whittaker was under-professor of economics at McBride University, which fact sufficiently explains his look of intellectual perspicacity. The look of harassment was the mark left on him by the daily struggle to effect a balance between the needs of a. growing family and the utterly inad- . equate yearly stipend with which the University recompensed his services. For seven years Mr. Whittaker had been performing this balancing feat, which grew increasingly difficult as the parent-stem put forth three suc- cessive olive-branches and that para- sitical growth known as high-cost-of- living wound its horrid tentacles in a strangle-hold about the whole. The figure is mixed, perhaps, but then, so was Mr. Whittaker mixed. By such gradations had he come, that he could not yet quite see how he had arrived at this pass. At thirty, he had come to McBride's full of the energy and enthusiasm of | youth. The salary was small, to be sure, but it would increase as his fame grew with the completion of the intensive studies of certain vital econ- | omic problems which he proposed making. Both he and Alice, who had come with him, an adored and ador- ing bride, had possessed the sublime faith of youth in his ultimate success. Now he was nearly forty, the mag- nu opus still untouched, and no pros- pect before him save a dreary con- tinuance of the balancing feat already mentioned. The grim master, Life, had caught Mr. Whittaker and forced him into the treadmill from which the logical mind can vision no escape. And Mr. Whittaker’s mind was, nor- mally, eminently logical. But his mood on this balmy after- noon of early June was far from nor- mal. Otherwise, he would, at this moment, have been sitting down to six-o’clock dinner in the stuffy din- ing-room of the shabby apartment which he called “home,” instead of idly loitering in the park. As he very well knew, it was Nora’s night out, and a nice sense of domestic obliga- tions should have dictated absolute promptness at the evening meal. Bui this knowledge, which, by every can- on known to the order of considerate husbands, should have caused him ex- quisite twinges of conscience, only succeeded in awakening a species of vicious joy, to which he gave immedi- ate expression by making a violent pass at the turf with his stick. The movement caused the brief-case which had reposed on his knees to fall to the ground, scattering its precious contents—the notes of his last lec- ture to the hapless students in “Ke- onomics A”—to the frolicking wind which watfed them, like flying blos- soms, among the trees and across the glassy surface of the lake. Mr. Whittaker made no attempt at recovering them. He gloomily looked at the more curious of the swans ex- amine a sheet, apparently decide tha: it was not edible, and sail proudly off. “I don’t blame you!” he exclaimed savagely. “You've better sense than I. A swan, at least, gives voice to one song before it dies; but I'm dead, to all intents and purposes, without ev- er having uttered a note!” He stooped, ed moodily for home. ; He was, indeed, in a violent state of physical and mental revolt. Per- haps the former was responsible for the latter, for Mr. Whittaker had in- dubitably ranged recklessly and with eye among the hors-d’oe=vres at the facully luncheon in honor of Claude Gilliam, and there are sages who say that even the fate of empires has hung in the balance because His Royal Remnants, or the Duke of Who- sis, partook indiscreetly of forbidden delicacies. But. Mr. Whittaker, being decidedly of a spiritual rather than a material- istic trend, found other causes for his dissatisfaction with the world. It was the sight of Claude Gilliam, bril- liant and successful, receiving the ad- vlation not only of the semi-enlight- ened press, but of the small select circle of those who really knew, that had filled his usually kindly soul with rancor. Old “Gil” and he had been chums in their college days, and rivals for the same honors in their chosen field— honors which he, Arthur Whittaker, had won by a length. Old “Gil,” they had said in those days, was industri- ous and plodding; whereas, Whittak- er—ah, there was a man with an in- tellect keen and scintillating as a two- edged sword, bound to win a high place among the aristocracy of in- telligence. The memory, to-day, pro- duced in Mr. Whittaker a pang of acute agony, so absolutely were the positions of the two men reversed; Gil, the brilliant and sought-after; himself, the plodding cart-horse. The wound still rankled as he went up three flights of stairs to his apart- ment. Of course, the elevator was out of order. Alice met him at the door, with baby Herbert in her arms. She looked decidedly crumpled, and Herbert was dismally wailing. Mr. Whittaker noted these things with a subtle quickening of his sense of injury. “Arthur,” she exclaimed, when they had exchanged the usual perfunctory kiss, “you’re so late that I couldn’t keep Nora. I've saved your dinner in the warming-oven. I hope you won’t mind fixing things yourself. I must give the children their baths and put them to bed. Linda seems a bit fever- ish, and Herbert's cutting a new tooth %0 it’s been dreadfully trying.” He muttered something that passed for a grudging acquiescence, threw down his hat and stick, and made his way to the kitchen. There the sight of the dried-up roast, congealed gravy and leathery potatoes only served to heap higher the mountain of his in- juries. But he ignored the adage: “Never let a meal go down on your wrath”—unwisely, as it proved, for the mingling of the unpalatable mess with the undigested remnants of the luncheon hors-d’oeuvres produced in him a heavy and soggy condition of soul and body that augured ill for the family peace. Filled to repletion, he now desired only to sit and weep over the wrongs of the world. Stealing back to the living-room, he selected a new needle for the phon- ograph, and put on the most melan- choly record in his possession. It was Massenet’s Elegie. The singer’s tones soared out in cosmic sadness. He drank it in greedily, to the last haunt- ing notes. Alice’s voice broke in harshly on his holy revery. “Oh, Arthur! I wish you wouldn’t! I can’t get the children to sleep while you play! Herbert is so fretful! I'm sorry, but—” He sprang up, glaring. But a gen- tleman must not utterly give way. He "still managed to articulate with dig- nity, albeit through clenched teeth, and with stertorious breathing. { “Very well! If there is no place i for me in my own home—I—will—go —out.” He picked up his hat, and made for the door. But Alice’s last words marred the dignity of his exit. “Oh, Arthur! I knew you’d eaten something that dis- agreed with you at that luncheon!” With the cool night air fanning his aching brow, he became once more able to think consecutively. It was this cursed domesticity that had been his ruination. Nothing worse could happen to a man of genius, he re- flected, than a wife and family. They crushed out initiative with the relent- less fatality of a Juggernaut. In the home, which it took all his resources to maintain, he had not even a cor- ner to call his own to which he might retire. Why hadn’t he had the wit to remain single like old Gil, instead of tying himself down to give individ- ual proof of the theory of Malthus? Pausing at the intersection of two streets, his gloomy gaze encountered the brilliantly lighted entrance of a cinema palace. He had always chosen to denounce the moving-picture hous- es as haunts of the intellectually bar- ren. He had never profaned his soul by entering one. But tonight it fitted his mood to subject himself to this profanation. Grimly, he pushed his way through the swinging doors into the Haunt of Ignorance. Mr. Whittaker gave vent to his mental and physical agony in a hol- low groan, as an affecting bit of reel life faded from the screen, and the vampire vamped her tortuous way out of the life of the villain. He fled from the hall without waiting for the cus- tard-pie comedy. The wires of his mental apparatus were, for the nonce hopelessly crossed. He was only aware that he yearned, with all his tortured soul, for the freedom which he had madly surrendered under the influence of youth and passion. Nor did the yearning pass with the passing of the night. It burned, a clear and tantalizing flame, through the weary hours of the following day while he went about the daily duties which had suddenly become to him as Dead Sea fruit. . As he sat in the department office late in the afternoon, classifying the day’s grist of ‘notes, Claude Gilliam breezed in, overflowing with health and good spirits. “Ha! Old Whiffles,” he' said—Whif- fles had been Arthur's nickname in college—*“still hard at the toil that ‘sticketh closer than a brother’? Drop it for once, old man, and join me in a spree in memory of old ‘times. Join us, I should say, for whom do you think I'm taking out to dinner to- night? Rosemary!” i . dow / ‘t mean Rosemary that the man who had a wife and picked up the leather case, and start Not—you don’t m ary | Sho on ho had 5 Mife sm i tune. It shackles a man; he daren’t Gilder?” : “The very same. The Egeria of our “college days!” : “Why,” said Mr. Whittaker, “I've scarcely thought of her for— I'm ashamed to say for how many years. I didn’t know she was in the city.” Gilliam assumed an expression of mock horror. “And she the leader of your intellectual Bohemia! Why, Whiffles, old man, you've let yourself w one-sided! I'll venture that you on’t even know that Rosemary has become famous!” “Famous ?” gasped Mr. Whittaker. “Fact! Why, Rosemary is Jane Gold, the famous feminist lecturer and author. Pen-name, you know— guess Rosemary struck her as too frivolous. Why, you'll see her name in almost any magazine you pick up. She has a tremendous following. Cuts all kinds of a figure. Why, she’s even been in jail for distributing pam- phlets on—well, a very delicate sub- ject. Mr. Whittaker blushed. “Is she—er —married ?”’ he stammered, “Heavens, no. She’s far too eman- cipated for that. At any rate, come along and you shall see her in all her glory!” Mr. Whittaker snatched avidly at the glittering bait. “All right, I'm with you, Gil,” he said. “Just a min- ute while I telephone to Alice.” “O-oh!” said Gilliam. “I'd all but forgotten that you were married. Per- | haps Mrs. Whittaker would come?” “No, no!” responded Mr. Whittaker hastily, reaching for the telephone. “She couldn’t possibly leave the chil- dren. They’re—er—teething, or something.” It turned out a brilliant and highly successful evening. Rosemary's wit was as scintillating as Gilliam’s eulo- giums had promised. She had de- veloped amazingly since their college days, when, as a rough-haired, rather lanky girl, whose gray eyes burned with an insatiable hunger for knowl- edge, she had given the two friends a close run for honors. Her jet-black hair was smartly and becomingly coif- fured, now; her angles had softened into delightful curves, and her brow was as smooth, her delicately tinted complexion as unimpeachable as a girl’s. Yet the charming frankness of her gaze, and the yay camaraderie of her manner had not altered with the years, and the three friends met with as little stiffness and embarrassment as though their last parting had tak- en place but yesterday, instead of ten years before. Whittaker, as by some miracle, dis- covered himself again possessed of the gay insouciance of his youth. His brilliant guips were greeted with old zest. Life had once more taken on an edge; an edge so keen that it was not yet quite dulled when the alarm clock roused him from slumber in the gray dawn of the morning after. He sat down opposite Alice at the breakfast table; still basking in a sense of well-being which even the matutinal wailing of the teething Her- bert had not succeeded in dissipating. Shortly he became aware, by some subtle process well known to those who have lived for years in close cofn- munion with another, that Alice had something of importance to communi- cate to him. He laid aside the morn- ing paper with whose head-lines he hay deen coquetting during the grape- ruit. “Well ?” he inquired, genially. She flourished a letter before his eyes. “Mother writes that she’s going to her cottage at Gloucester this week and she wants me to come and bring the children for the summer. They really need the change, and if you can get along with Nora for the two weeks until the University closes, we may as well go to-morrow. That's what she wants. I hate to leave you, but you can come on as soon as school is over”. Mr. Whittaker’s eyes brightened. “If you really want to spend the sum- mer there, I've got an idea, Alice,” he said. “We don’t want to keep this beastly apartment another year, any- how. Let’s give it up now, and store the furniture. I can get a comfort- able room cheap at the Faculty club. That'll be the change I need this sum- mer. I want to stay in the city, and do some real work. I had a talk last night with Gilliam over some ideas I've been meaning to work out for ever so long. He thinks I can make a great thing out of a series of articles on Unemployment—fame and money, too—if I can only get at them. This will give me a splendid chance to work without interruption. I’ve been getting moss-grown, Alice. I've got to polish up a bit, or else be thrown into the discard.” And so it was settled. Two days later, Alice and the children departed for Gloucester, Alice slightly appre- hensive—and tryingly prodigal of suggestions concerning the wearing of rubbers on wet days, and the necessity ‘of careful diet for one of his dys- peptic tendencies. But these things he mercifully forgot in the regained joy of his bachelor freedom. He found himself, with utter lack of dignity, whistling a gay little tune—and he disapproved, on pricinple, of popular music. That night he celebrated the “cast- ing-off of burdens” with a little din- ner at the “Gray Goose.” Gilliam and Rosemary were his guests. If Gil was, at first, inclined to chaff him more than a little on his widowed state, Rosemary’s sympathetic inter- est more than made up for it. He even fancied that Gil’s flings were partly due to a jealous sense that “Whiffles” was drawing more than his just share of that lady’s attention. He was wrong in that, though. Gil- liam knew quite well that Rosemary was insatiably bent on working up material for her forthcoming book, “Marriage, a Failure.” He even im- agined she was being a bit brutal in her unmerciful baiting of poor old Whiffles. And, anyhow, he didn’t al- together fancy Rosemary’s continual harping on “woman as the one victim of marriage.” That viewpoint had rather gouten under his skin in her last book. It was not long before he, too, became imbued with the zest of argument. “Bacon was quite up to our modern theorists,” he announced, “when he wrote, a couple of hundred years ago, any longer take the chances that put the romance and keep the zest in life. Don’t let Rosemary’s argument on the woman’s side blind you to that fact, Whiffles.” Whittaker was a bit bewildered un- der this double attack. They seemed to expect him to answer them with arguments for the superiority of the married state. Yet he had a vague feeling that they would interpret his failure to do so as rank disloyalty to his order. But what could he say? Marriage was a failure? Wasn’t the fact that he was obviously growing stale at forty, the proof? Nevertheless, out of very decency, he had to essay an answer. “But,” he said feebly, “it is the duty of man to reproduce his kind, else how could the world go on?” Rosemary was back at him on the instant. “A horribly abused theory! Aren't you working on the problem of Unemployment? Don’t you know that the world is already over-pop- ulated?” And so, calling a spade a ‘ spade, Rosemary went on to demon- strate that his family was not only | the crime against himself, as he had | recently come to recognize it, but an offense against society as well. It was a bewildering, but, on the whole, stimulating evening. He fol- lowed it up by a succession of others, increasingly more so. But, somehow, the intensive studies on unemployment failed to progress. taker sought the University library in a fever of energy, but a few hours of dilatory labor served to dissipate his interest. If Alice, the practical, had been called upon to diagnose his case, she would have traced his symptoms to idigestible delicacies, consumed at late hours. Mr. Whittaker unhesitatingly attributed them to overwork, and the | pangs of soul growth. Gilliam, leaving a few weeks later to deliver a series of lectures in Chi- | cago, was frankly concerned about his friend. “See here, Whiffles,” he said as they walked home, arm in arm, from Rosemary’s apartment on their last evening together, “of course, Rosemary’ deuced clever, and all that, but you don’t want to take her ideas too seriously. I hate to admit it, but I guess I'm man enough to tell you, that, sometimes, when Rosemary and I get to harping to you against wed- ded love, I suspect it’s—well, largely because we have to convince ourselves that, since we haven’t had it, it’s not worth having. I'm bound to say, you have taken our stabs mighty decently, and that’s why I feel that I really owe this confession to you. Maybe my name is known today to a wider pub- lic than yours, but it’s a much less appreciative one. Old man, Pd give Mr. Whittaker’s surprise and dis- gust could not have been greater had the skies fallen. Crass sentimental- ity from Gil! cover that the idol he had been re- garding with reverence during the past few weeks had, after all, only fact, beeen profaning, by his very presence, the intellectual temple of the high-priestess, Rosemary. He was positively sickened. He muttered some half-audible reply—he really had to be decent to old Gil—but he parted from him as soon as might e. He enjoyed his evenings with Rose- mary a great deal more, at any rate, now that Gilliam was gone. He must lalways have been a disturbing pres- ence; they simply hadn’t realized it before. Whittaker wasn’t, perhaps exactly in love with Rosemary, bu many of her theories. As for the future, he didn’t permit himself to think of that. Of course, things, arrive, and with it, Alice and hasten the morrow by taking thought for its coming. He wrote perfunc- tory letters to Alice, whose glittering generalities were designed to hide rather than to reveal his thoughts. Her replies dealt chiefly, as wives’ letters will, with Herbert’s teeth, and Linda’s cough. Alice was incurably domestic. If she had possessed only a moiety of the savoir-vivre that was Rosemary’s! * He managed to trick his heretofore Puritan conscience into believing that he was quite justified in forgetting his domestic responsibilities, if he could during these days of primrose dalli- ance. He would have his swan song, at least, and if, afterward, he was doomed to go back to the living death of domesticity—well, what must be, must be. One morning in late July, he was carefully dressing preparatory to a day’s junketing in the country with Rosemary when the telephone bell jangled harshly. Alice's voice came singing across the wires. “Oh, Arthur! Isn’t this a surprise? I'm at the Grandon. I just got in this morning. I couldn’t bear to think of you sweltering alone in this beast- ly city. I left the children wth moth- er, and came to make you ‘comfy.’ We'll hunt a new apartment to-day.” Mr. Whittaker did some quick thinking while she talked. An un- righteous indignation burned in his soul. What right had she to come— yes, snooping into town like that? Of course, he could break his engage- ment with Rosemary; she was accus- tomed to allow herself as great a lati- tude in breaking engagements as if she had been a quite unemancipated coquette. But not all the Alices in the world should force his hand like that. He answered her twitterings in a voice of chill reproof. “You shouldn’t have come, Alice, without letting me know. It's ridiculous for you to have come to town, anyhow, in this hot weather. And I can’t possibly go apartment-hunting, I've an import- ant engagement—I should be on my way to keep it right now. No, I'm sure I can take you out to dinner to- night. Of course, if I possibly can. Yes, I'll come to the Grandon tonight. Don’t overdo. Sorry! Good-by!” He slammed up the receiver and rushed out. An hour later, he was seated beside Rosemary in her smart There were mornings when Mr. Whit- | the world to change places with you.” the regulation feet of clay—had, in | he certainly was in love with a good : the children; but he didn’t intend to | | runabout, bound for the cool river- road. But he could not respond, in kind, to Rosemary’s gay banter. He felt heavy, and a bit dull. Guilty, too; he had been unkind to Alice. It hurt him to remember how the unhappy lilt had gone out of her voice at his words. Perhaps she had suspected— why, by Jove, of course, that was it! What a fool he had been not to realize it at once. Wives were always bitter- ly jealous; they had to be, from the very nature of their position; Rose- mary had often pointed that out. He awoke, suddenly, from his rev- erie, to become aware that she was addressing a question to him. He gasped and stammered. “Why, Arthur,” she said, patting this hand in her frank, friendly way, “whatever is the matter? You are positively distrait today! I merely asked you when your wife was com- ing back to town.” He gurgled. “What—I—er—I don’t know!” She suspected, then—feared to lose his companionship. For she interpreted that look. He meant more to her than he had supposed. It was ; a thrilling, and, to tell the truth, a ‘rather terrifying thought. It was an all but perfect day, and, amid its glamour, Whittaker found ! courage to frame a high resolve. He “would not give up Rosemary and his ' new-found freedom. Alice would have to understand that. If, with unrea- soning jealousy, she chose to force an , issue—if, in short, he had to choose ‘ between them, well, he’d show Alice, {that was all! He must find means ‘now, today, to relieve Rosemary's | anxiety, to let her know that he would not give her up. When, with the falling of dusk, they turned again on to the city boule- ~vards, he hadn’t yet found the proper words, however. Rosemary suddenly broke a long silence. | “I can’t keep my dinner engage- ment with you tonight, Arthur. I'm frightfully busy. I'm packing.” i “Packing ?” | “Yes. I’m starting for Chicago to- morrow.” | “Chicago?” i “Yes. I’ve been meaning to tell you -all day. You see, it’s really you that i put it into my head. That is, it’s see- ing how perfectly devoted you are to { Alice, how you’ve pined since she’s . been away. Why, you've no idea how i you've changed since that first night. You were so gay and care-free, so i contagiously happy then; and since ! she’s been away—why, you’re positive- !ly dumpish! Don’t misunderstand me; i truly, I admire you for it. You've | mod me believe that there is some- thing besides the prosaic in marriage; i that it doesn’t kill the higher emo- j tions.” { Mr. Whittaker way floundering in a sea of utter bewilderment. He had never, in his wildest moments, imag- ined that it would come to this. That she would leave the city on his ac- count! He had no words to answer ‘with. He could only repeat, miser- It was a blow to dis- ' abl ably: | “To Chicago!” | “Of course. That's where Gil is.” | “Gil?” he gasped. “Yes. That's just what I’ve been telling you. I'm going to marry him! ! everyone does. But I've always said one couldn’t live up to them under { the present regime. You've made me Of course, you know my principles— | i MEMORIAL. In loving remembrance of my sister, Annie Powers, who died January 24, 1928.. I can see your face in the radiant flowers,. I can see your eyes in the azure skies, I can hear your sweet voice calling from heavenly bowers. A dear, kind, loving sister was taken from earth away, We are left sad and lonely And don’t know what to say. One sad in the east One sad in the west God, alone, knows what's best. I shall miss you, dear sister, As you have missed me But God does all things for the Best. You will watch, wait and pray for me Till life's sun shall set in the Golden West, And I shall come to thee. KATHRYN POWERS MASSEY. Los Angeles, Cal, Apr. 16, 1928. Must Give Warning. Another clause in this section, pro- vides that “the driver of an overtak- ing motor vehicle, not within a bus- iness or residence district shall give audible warning before passing or attempting to pass a vehicle proceed- ing in the same direction.” A busi- ness district is defined in the code as. “the territory contiguous to a high- way when fifty per cent or more of the frontage thereon for a distance of three hundred feet or more is occu- pied by buildings in use for business.” A residence district is defined as “the territory contiguous to a highway, not. comprising a business district, when the frontage on such highway for a distance of three hundred feet or: more is closely built up with dwell- ings, or by buildings in use for resi-- dences.” The proviso which prevents the driver from the requirement of sound-- ing a horn or other warning device when passing or attempting to pass a vehicle proceeding in the same di-- rection in a business or residence dis- trict makes clear the necessity of equipping vehicles with a mirror to enable the operator to obtain a view of the highway to the rear from look- ing backward from the operator's po- sition for a distance of at least 200 feet to the rear of such vehicle. It also serves to emphasize the im- portance of keeping the rear window free of any sign, poster or other non- transparent material. In view of the: exemption from the requirement of sounding a horn or other warning de-+ vice in a business or residence district. operators of motor vehicles within such districts should exercise care and caution in driving, taking care to give proper signals when turning to the left or suddenly stopping either in yrafic or on the right side of the: road. Lee Statue Unveiled on Anniversary of Surrender. The adoration of the natiom was lavished on Monday before the great. stone carving at Stone Mountain, Ga.,, immortalizing the Confederate chief-- tain, General Robert E. Lee, and those: who followed the “lost cause.” On the sixty-third anniversary of the April day in 1865, when Lee sur- rendered to General Grant and bade his veterans return to their homes, a see it’s quite possible. Aren’t you go- | vast assembly watched two flags drop i ing to felicitate me?” fs rom the mountain side to reveal the: Mr. Whittaker’s house of cards had ! features of Lee, preserved in granite. come tumbling about his ears with a for all time. vengeance. So it was all twaddle, this prating of freedom? Mayor James J. Walker, of New Only the York city, accepted the memorial for jealous cry of the unchosen, the bar- the nation. Then five-year-old Robert, ren? Suddenly, his heart leaped with a savage longing for Alice—yes, and the children. Somehow—he never quite knew ‘just how he managed it—he gave voice to the conventional phrases. “You can drop me at the Grandon. I’ve an appointment there.” He fairly flew to the elevator, and thence down the corridor to Alice's room. At his first eager knock, the door flew open, and Alice was in his arms, laughing and crying at once. { “Oh, Arthur! I knew you would come!” ; | “Of course, I would,” he said, kiss- ‘ing her again and again. | “And, oh! my dear,” she said when { she could get her breath again, “I've found the duckiest apartment! Over- looking the lake, too. And you can have a study all to yourself where the { children won’t annoy you. And oh! Arthur! Your Dr. Stiller came up on the train with me. And he told me —in strict confidence—that you're to have a full professorship next year, with all the emoluments thereof. He says that your faithful work and staunch conservatism are a wonderful inspiration in these days. Oh! Isn't life good? I never reailzed it so ful- ly before.” To hide his guilty face, he stooped to pick up his magazine which she had dropped face down at his knock. He stood staring absently at the page where it lay open. Noticing, she laughed. “I was just glancing through a fem- inist article by that Jane Gold. Don’t you think she writes the silliest stuff ? I guess she needs a good man to teach her sense!” Whittaker could not stifle a little sigh. “Oh! well,” he said, cryptically, “I’ve an idea this was her swan song, too.”—Dorothy Hull, in McCall’s. Post Card Rate Cut. The house passed the postal rate revision bill recently, reducing the rate on private post cards from 2 cents back to 1 cent. It also permits business houses to enclose unstamped self-addressed re- turn envelopes in advertising matter and these could be mailed back with- out postage. An extra charge of 2 cents per letter or card would be col- lected. Business houses said prospec- tive customers would be more inclined to answer advertising literature if they did not have to stamp their re- plies. Shenk: “Eugene, why did you say that Caesar was killed by a woman ?” Eugene: “Because when he was stabbed, he cried out ‘you brutess’!” "Then, as though by an afterthought: September must, in the course of E. Lee, IV, great-grandson of the. commander, released a cage of doves and delightedly watched them flutter: free. Symbolizing the States that contributed to the memorial, the doves whirred up as a signal for the dropping of the veils. Slowly the curtains, a flag of the Confederacy on one, and the standard: of the United States on the other, fell away, leaving in white relief on the cliff the nearly completed bust of Lee and the outline of his equestrian. figure. A cheer rang out while the ° army band played softly. Industrial Executives to Gather at State College Next Month. More than 200 industrial executives: of the State are expected to attend the annual industrial conference and the engineering extension convention at the Pennsylvania State College next month. Both conferences are de- voted to methods by which the college engineering divisions. can increase: their service to the industrial pros- perity of the State. At the industrial conference rep- resentatives of the largest public util- ities and industries will meet and will discuss the training of technical stu- dents, and will probably recommend points to be stressed by the college in training its students. In the exten- sion convention representatives of the hundreds of industries where employ- ees receive night class and home study instruction will take up problems in- cident to this work, which is rapidly increasing in scope each year. May Guests Sail. Sixty-three friends and neighbors of Walter A. May and his wife, of 5807 Solway street are aboard the Cunarder Aquitania, en route to Par- is to attend the silver wedding anni- versary celebration of the couple on: April 27. The party, which left recently from New York, includes 27 couples, three bachelors and six unmarried women. May and his wife left 80 invitations for the trip when they departed last January for a foreign tour. Seven- teen of those invited were unable to make the trip. May, head of a chain of drug stores in Pittsburgh, is paying the round trip expenses of the guests. Each member, in addition, has been: given $100 with which to meet incidental expenses of the voyage. The presence of the party at the anniversary cele- bration is costing May $75,000, it is estimated. Fifty-six of the guests are to return on the Berengaria on May 7. The others will prolong their European visit.