Bellefonte, Pa., June 1, 1928 A ROOM ENOUGH FOR ALL. Don’t crowd and push on the march of life, Or tread on each other's toes, For the world at best, in its great unrest, Is hard enough as it goes. Oh, why should the strong oppose the weak Till the latter go to the wall On this earth of ours, with its thorns and flowers, There is room enough for all. If a lagging brother falls behind And drops from the toiling band, If fear and doubt put his soul to rout Then lend him a helping hand. Cheer up his heart with words of hope, Nor season the speech with gall; In the great highway, on the busiest day, There's room enough for all. If a man with the tread of a pioneer Steps out on your track ahead, Don’t grudge his start with an envious heart, For the mightiest once were led. Dut gird your loins for the coming day— Let nothing your heart appall; Catch up if you can with the forward man There is room enough for all. And if, by doing your duty well, You should get to lead the van, Drand not your name with a deed shame, ; But come out an honest man. , - Keep a bright lookout on every side, Till, heeding the Master's call, Your soul should go, from the world be- low, Where there's room enough for all of GET YOUR MAN. Somewhere in Southampton there is a large and lavish house called, for ne particular reason, Great Meadows. It has a banquet hall, a Roman swim- ming-pool, a built-in organ, two pic- ture galleries and, on the high stone entrance gate-posts, half a dozen very evil and not a very medieval gargoy- les. It is lived in by an elderly couple with poor digestions. To the left of the house, quite a distance away and wholly hidden by the intervening shrubbery, is a smail and charming cottage, very Queen Anne. This is the alleged Dower House and it is called Little Meadows. It has a sun-porch, a garden and a very small pool with obese goldfish. Since income is income and living is proportionately higher for the rich than for poor, the cottage is rented out every summer by the owners of Great Meadows, to whom it belongs. The rental is high even for South- ampton. For it is considered that the cottage derives much eclat from the near-by benevolent presence of the picture galleries and the banquet hall. The tenants of Little Meadows are always desirable and twice a season oie with their landlords—not very well, - For several seasons the small house has been leased by Mrs. G. Cunning- ham Lawton, at no small sacrifice to herself. 2 Mrs. Lawton was a widow with three daughters and a moderate in- come. Thus in twelve words you have tragedy—in New York. For Mrs. Lawton was to the manner born and a1 that sort of thing, her position in society being impeccable. It was un- i fcrtunate that Lawton had died from : terror brought on by unwise specula- | tions, leaving his handsome and vi- vacious widow with a trio of fledgling g.1l children to educate and to marry off. It was still more unfortunate that the clever lawyers could salvage so little for themselves and so much less for the bereaved family. At their father’s death Dora was ten, Maude was eight and Letty was six. They were healthy, husky chil- den, all pretty, all well-mannered. They took governesses, ponies, expen- sive schools, silk smocks and dancing slippers for granted. : Mrs. Lawton had a good deal of hard common sense. She mourned her husband sincerely because she had loved him. She was irritated by his lack of foresight and the outburst of recklessness which had caused him to risk and to lose the major portion of his inherited capital. However, it was done and she had three growing rroblems on her hands. Remarriage did not appeal to her. It would be, she reflected, a very un- usual man who would be willing to take over the support of three little girls as well as of herself. Nothing remained to her, as she saw it, but to invest what money she had left in her daughters, thus turning them from liabilities into assets. With care and management it could be done. The girls must make bril- liant matches. They promised beauty and two of them, at least the elder two, were docile. Letty at six showed an extraordinary will of her own. That, however, might be overcome. Mrs. Lawton was no weakling. - She therefore divided her time be- tween living cheaply abroad and ex- vensively at home. It was out of the. question to educate the three girls ‘n America in the costly manner in which they shou be eduacted. Therefore she placed them in a good and inexpensive school in Brussels and she lived during the school term in a quiet and equally inexpensive pension near by. The Lawtons came home for the summer vacations. . As the girls grew up Mrs. Lawton increased her expenditures during the summer months. She took Little Meadows and she settled down to a planned campaign. People comment- ed upon the charming and gentle manners of the Lawton girls, They spoke flatteringly of the advantages . of a European education. Mrs. Lawton’s methods with her children were sound, thorough and not crude, She gradually and clever- ly instilled into the receptive young brains the hunting technique of the ages. The girls understood perfectly that until Dora married, Maude and Letty must be content with compara- tively little. They must scrimp alo as best they could. The same woul hold true for Letty when Dora had succeeded in her great quest and Maude came next into the arena. Therefore one girl at a time. Dora and Maude made their debuts. They made good debuts, solid, satis- factory and not splashy. They be- longed to the Junior League and they never lacked invifations. Turn about. The blond Dora first, for a season at Palm Beach with her delightful and expensive clothes, under the chaper- onage of a kindly and impeccable married couple. Next time it would be Maude’s turn. Thus far Mrs. Lawton’s plans had proceeded without a hitch. It was unfortunate that Dora did not marry in her first season as that retarded things somewhat for Maude. But despite the inculcated rules, aran- teed not to fail, Dora remained single for two years. She was pretty, well- bred, something of a linguist; she was gentle, domestic and just athletic enough to hold her own on links or court. And having been taught that men, or more specifically A Man, would mean her salvation, she looked up to the sex as superior and all- provident. But there are a great many preity girls in the world and not enoug young bachelors who are also million- aires to go around. In despair and also in love, Dora Lawton married the delightful young secretary of a steel magnate and settled down in the Oranges, quite happily. Mrs. Lawton made no scenes. There was nothing she could do to advantage. At least Jimmy Peters would support her child, and if he could contribute nothing to the two remaining campaigns, Dora was off her hands. Next came Maude, dark and rather dashing, encouraged to a little genteel daring and rather famed as an amateur swimmer. Mrs. Law- ton had not believed in compressing her three into one mold; she studied their types and allowed them, within limits, to develop their personalities. Maude’s debut was even better than Dora’s. She had two Florida seasons. She was a litle shrewder than Dora, a little harder. She went out on the chase with something of the spirit of Diana. She was almost within sight of her goal—bland and plenty millions—when she incontinently fell in love with a he-man from Texas who raised cattle but was no Croesus. Being by nature ardent and demand- ing, she married him forthwith, and proceeded to bury herself in the Southwest, where, she announced, she intended to have a baby a year and to study lynching. Mrs. Lawton was downcast but she was not beaten. She no longer had Maude to clothe and to feed. There remained her one last card, little red- headed Letty, the last of the trio, one most difficult in many ways the most attractive. Surely one out of three. Letty was now twenty. She under- stood what was expected of her. The other two girls had been of a decent reticence, but Letty was appalingly frank. Her sisters had failed in their quest for the Golden Fleece, Letty reflected with a grin, and it was now her turn to make an attack upon mas- culine susceptibilities and bark ac- counts and by her success honorably to retire her mother from those lists which were beginning to sharpen her classic’ features and whiten her nat- urally bronze hair. “I'll do it or die!” vowed Letty. Today, which was a week-day in July, she sat on the steps of the cot- tage, Little Meadows, with her point- ed chin in her hands, deep in medita- tion. She was reflecting upon her weapons. Youth, gaiety, good looks, good clothes and a very excellent training in the greatest of all sports—big game hunting. And an ability, she thought, to profit by her sisters’ mis- takes. For they had made mistakes, certainly, or it would have been Park Avenue and the East and not Orange and somewhere-near-Dallas. She ran over mentally the methods which she had watched Dora and Maude employ. Be athletic—if he is. Don’t be too athletic—no man likes a woman to beat him at his own game. . Cling a little but withhold a little more. Learn to cook. Be interested in food. Let him talk about himself. Never switch the subject. Never, as you value your life, pur- sue. There seemed to be a million other regulations but these appeared the most important. Dora and Maude had obeyed . all these little behests. Had it got them anywhere much? It had not! ob- served their little sister. There must be something wrong with the system. She rose and strolled into the house just as the maid was bringing the tea things. She cast herself upon a con- venient divan and viewed her stately parent, who was sitting erect in a tall-backed chair and handling the teacups deftly. “Mortimer Evans is returning to this country. He will be at Great Meadows next week,” observed Mrs. Lawton casually. Letty sat up straight on the divan; her leaf-brown eyes sparkled. Ab- sently she accepted a cup of tea and a lettuce sandwich which she nibbled just as absently. Her little ears were pricked under the thick thatch of cropped and curly hair. Her heart beat a little faster. It was as if, after hunting rabbits, she should suddenly be asked to par- ticipate in a lion hunt. Mortimer Evans was the nephew of the owner of Great Meadows. He was, so legend had it, the most bor- ed young man in the world. He had so much money that even rich folk spoke of him with awe. He would inherit more when his uncie died of indigestion. He had half a dozen houses and a couple of yatchs. He played the finest game of polo in America; he was thirty years old; he had not figured in any too-horrible scandals; he was completely orphan- ed. And yet, despite rumors, no wor man had bien i in putting her brand upon him. He was the most indefatigably hunted young man in America. “Mrs. Evans spoke of our coming to dine,” remarked Mrs. Lawton in a tone of extreme ennui. : ans was young Mortimer’s Letty gave a moment’s considera- tion to her wardrobe. “That will be nice,” she observed briefly and wriggled her slim shoul- ders as a litle ripple of excitement coursed through her being. ; Mrs. Lawton gave a nod, a cryptic gesture. Letty had, to be sure, a will of her own, but Letty, she reflected, had more brains than the other two girls put together. The night was fixed for the ten- ants of Little Meadows to go up to Great Meadows and dine. Letty stood before the mirror when the ye came to start and surveyed her- self. A silver gown. Daring but not too daring. A hint of jade at her ears, a jade holder for her cigaret. Silver slippers and stockings woven as of moonlight. Entirely new, this outfit. Her mother had remarked with utmost carelesness: “You had better come to town with me and get one or two little things. The sea air. Hard on frocks.” frocks.” Letty studied her face, its charm, its irregularities, its good points, its poor. he nose wasn’t much, the mouth wide, scarlet, laughing, the skin as perfect as nature and care could make it, the eyes very lively. There were dozens of girls right here in Southampton with more claim to beauty. She sat down in a low chair. She rehearsed all the rules. Then she thought, sitting up very straight: But —everyone knows ‘em. And—they don't always work . . . Why not, she asked herself in a flash of excitement, reverse them? It wouldn’t hurt—to try? Her mother called so she picked up her cloak and went down-stairs. The small car which Mrs. Lawton main- tained waited at the door. The two women settled themselves and rode up the driveway of Great Meadows in silence. Had Mrs. Lawton spoken she would But such words had no place in Mrs. Lawton’s phraseology. said nothing until after they reached the portals when, alighting, she mur- mured plaintively in Letty’s ear that she hoped old Mr. Evans would temp- er his meal for the prodigal nephew for once. She was tired, she inti- mated, of a thin soup, an entree, bran biscuit, fruit salad and one glass of claret. The Evanses’ dinner-party was a small one. There were two other girls besides Letty, very pretty girls, very rich girls. ere were some young men and an elderly bachelor of standing to take Mrs. Lawton In and three couples of uncertain age. e meal was not served in the ban- quet hall and was an improvement on the usual regime of the family. Letty sat opposite Mortimer Evans. He was tall and rather blond. Very tanned, He looked excessively bored. He had beautiful teeth and attractive ugliness of countenance. He wore insolent manner. He sat between the two other girls, who fluttered and cooed and were provocative, while he listened, barked at them now and then and looked more bored than ever. Letty’s eyes brightened. Very big game, very difficult, very worth while. She had determined to play —but differently, She would smash every known rule to smithereens. She had only one rule that she kept inflexible secret, her own. She look- ed at him again and experienced a breathless excitement. She thought it would not be hard to obey that regulation! | After dinner there was a little , dancing for the young people and | bridge for the elders. Letty and | Mortimer Evans danced together once. Mrs. Lawton, rising, while dummy, to view the youngsters with a tolerant smile, saw this with some | anxiety. The other two girls were much more in evidence than her own | child. She went back to the bridge table and overbid her hand out of she«r nervousness, Letty gave herself to Mortimer Evan’s whipcord arms. He danced very well. So did she. She did not utter a word during the progress of the fox-trot. When the music—which was a superior phonograph—ceased, he said suddenly: “Why so silent?” “I didn’t feel like talking,” she answered, looking at him very direct- ly with no—discernible—trace of coquetry. Mortimer Evans laughed. “And do you always do just what you feel like doing?” he asked. “Always,” was her answer and that constituted their exchange of civili- ties for the evening. On the way home Mrs. Lawton sighed against the upholstery of the car. Questions burned on her lips. What did he say? When will you see him again Why did you dance with him only once? But she asked noth- ing. She was far too wise. The following morning Letty en- countered her prey on the bathing beach. She looked at him critically. Lean but not too lean. Very brown. Nice legs. She. suffered no disillu- sionment. He did not come near her. Her cue, of course, was to remain at her distance until the Overlord signaled his approval by an approach, or else to close in by skillful and imper- ceptible means. She walked up to him as he stood smoking in a circle of young people—mostly girls. “Come and swim,” said Letty. He looked at her in amazement. He was so dazed that he allowed himself to be detached from the group and followed her into the cold, buoyant water. Letty turned over on her back, exhibited her slim green legs to the biue sky overhead and stared into the distance. “Nice,” she murmured drowsily. He said in the fashion that had never yet failed to disconcert the doves: “Why did you drag me away?” “I' wanted to.. You looked so bored, I was bored too. But do keep quiet. have said: “A mother expects every daughter, this day, to do her duty.” . So she . good clothes carelessly. He had an To his astonishment he remained there with her. What an odd little person! After a while she said: ‘I’ve had enough. Let’s go and sit on the beach. Have you cigarets in your bathrobe ?” He had. They found a sunny and more or less solitary spot and sat down tingling and dripping. Mrs. Lawton, not far off, under a scarlet beach umbrella, observed them. Real- ly she might have known she could depend on Letty. Letty was still silent. She seemed as bored as Evans usually felt. He experienced a sudden desire to en- tertain her. It was rarely that he exerted himself but he did so now. He told her, sifting the warm sand through his fingers, of an ex- perience he had had swimming off some obscure Greek island or other. He on waiting for the ex- clamations of astonishment and at- tention that usually came when he condescended to tell this particular tale—and which was not often. Letty lay back against a heap of sand and smoked with her eyes shut. “Why,” she asked, abruptly, “must ‘men always talk about themselves?” He stared at her. There seemed no adequate answer. “If you expect me to be flattered by your interest in your own exploits, Othello, &he remarked, yawning, “you're mistaken. I'm sleepy. But go on talking. I like it. It’s like being read aloud to.” She turned over, put a slender tan- ned arm under her head and fell in- stantly asleep. Evans gazed at her in wonder. He had never met such a rude young wo- man in all his life. Women were nev- er rude to him. You don’t insult bachelors and bank accounts, not if you're in your senses. He marveled why he did not rise and leave this in- solent chit. But he did not. He re- mained where he was, watching her even breathing, and smoking ciga- and unrest of blue water. Down the and the flash of white arms and the i colorful display of scant bathing suits. Here, with Letty asleep be- side him, there was rest and peace and time for reflection. In half an hour she woke up, wide awake as a child, flushed from her perfectly genuine nap, and smiled at m. “Thanks. I had a lovely sleep.” She got to her feet and held out her hands. “Come along.” Mechanically he took her cool fin- gers in his brown clasp and rose to his feet. “I'm going in,” said Letty. “What are you doing this afternoon?” “I hadn't planned—” he muttered. “Let's play some golf. ‘Ill expect you at Little Meadows at two. Give me a stroke a hole if you're any good.” She nodded, smiled fleetly and ran down the beach. Evans stayed where | he was, gaping unbecomingly. What the devil was her game? | Walking thoughtfully back to the bathing houses he wondered—had she a game at all? ‘They golfed. She played a good game, he played a better. He was as- tonished to find himself on the links at all. He had not meant to show up. But something after two o'clock found him at Little Meadows. “I hope I haven’t kept you wait- ing,” he began mechanically as she appeared, slender and gay in a sweat- _er suit of green. | “Ten minutes. . much.” | He followed her out to his small foreign car with his head spinning. It wasn’t fair. They always said, hastily, “Oh, not at all—I just this It doesn’t matter they pouted, “It's been ages—how could you?” and looked at him slant- wise through long lashes. Letty’s lashes were not long, he observed. They were short and thick ‘and rayed out from her brown slightly almond-shaped eyes like those of a Japanese doll. ey had tea. He found himself exerting himself to entertain her. When they came back to the house she asked : “Are you going over to Good. Ground for the Morrows’ supper dance tonight?” He answered cautiously : “I hadn't made up my mind.” “Well, let’s go,” said she casually. “I'll be ready at nine.” She threw him a smile and a little nod and disappearad into the house. He remained on the door-step, in deep puzzled thought. How did she get that way ? He hadn’t wanted to go. He had no in- tention of taking her. He wouldn't go At nine o’clock he arrived in the little car. Letty came out immediate. ly, climbed in beside him and sighed with satisfaction as they spun over the Shinnecock Hills under a rising moon. The supper dance proved amusing after all. He had not danced with many other girls, Letty appeared to claim him, frankly. Once they wandered out and con- templated the old figurehead in front of the hotel. “I'm going to climb up!” announc- ed Letty. : “Why on earth?” “Oh, one does. You kiss the brute or something and then make a wish.” She raised a small foot and climbed nimbly, implanted a loud salute on the impassive cheek and then climbed down again. “What did you wish for?” he asked, conscious of being on old, fa- miliar ground. “Oh, I didn’t wish.” “Really 7” “No, what’s the use? I can get anything I want by myself. I do not need a wooden figure to help me,” said Letty scornfully. “You're a very determined young woman.” “Yes,” agreed Letty simply. On the way back they stopped on the road to contemplate the silver shining of the bay. The hills were back of them, around them, lovely and mysterious. Letty sighed. I want to loaf and invite my soul.” | | minute came down-stairs,” or else i like: me—that’s obvious. “It’s a very sentimental night,” she observed. “You’d better kiss me.” Young Mr. Evans nearly fell out of the car. Of course girls had asked him to kiss them before—but not in so many words. Letty lay back with her eyes shut and waited. If her heart was pounding in her throat, if her eyes were burning back of their shut lids, if her hands were icy cold, she made no sign. : Evans bent swiftly and kissed her lightly on the mouth. She sat up. Lazy but not cold hands held him closer. She returned his kiss with an authentic, if honestly inexperienced, ardor. Then she sat up still straight- er and frustrated a second attempt on his part. “That's enough. It made it perfect. Now let's go home.” He found his hands shaking as he laid them on the wheel. He found himself unable to speak. Of course it didn’t matter. He'd kissed girls before . . . They drove home in complete si- lence. When they had arrived, she gave a firm little hand into his clasp, looked into his eyes and said, “Thanks,” and ran into the house. It was four minutes before he turned the car and started back to Great Meadows. Well, he’d be all-fired. He'd keep away from her. He tried. He was not on the beach the next morning. He was nowhere to be seen. Letty made inquiries, guarded and shrewd. He had taken his car, she learned from his aunt, and gone on a little trip. Oh, just Shelter Island. For luncheon. For the ride. Alone? Yes, indeed. Letty returned home after her swim. She lunched and then ordered the car. She directed the chauffeur to take her to the ferry at Fairhaven. Evans would return that way. Arriving at Fairhaven, she got out, dismissed the car car and went down to the empty beach. She made her- self comfortable there, produced rets. Before him there was the heave | three apples, a box of cigarets, a par- asol and a book. There she stayed beach ‘there was tal and laughter for three mortal hours, waiting and watching. The sun was low when she saw the maroon roadster. Her eyes were good—the boat was still in mid- stream. She rose, closed her book and her parasol, and walked toward the land- ing. She had had a very pleasant and drowsy afternoon. “Hello!” He pulled up the car and stared at her in astonishment. She climbed in beside him and grinned amiably. “What in the world are—you doing here?” “Waiting for you,” Letty answered. The car gyrated. He pulled it back into the road. “For me?” : “Yes, your aunt said you'd gone to Shelter Island. I drove down to the ferry and had a nice, lazy afternoon on the beach.” He was so astonished that he asked, “Why 7” “Why? Oh, because I wanted to. You are the only interesting man in Southampton. The rest bore me. Women bore me, too. There is no use trying to get away from me. You And you’re nearly as bored with Southampton and its people as I am. So why’ not be honest about it?” - He looked at her frowningly. Then he laughed. “Are you telling the truth ?” “I couldn’t be bothered to’ lie,” she answered, “and I don’t see why peo- ple do. It’s so much simpler the oth~ er way.” He stopped the car. kiss you—little witch.” “Oh, don't be silly. I don’t want to kiss you—now. When I do I'll let; you know.” But he kissed her. face, “But the other night you—" he said so bewildered that he forgot to be angry—“and you said—you liked me!” “I do. But I don’t want to be kissed. At least not here and ROW: There’s a season for all things. EF want to go and have tea.” They went. They had tea.” It was as she had warned him. It was impossible to escape her. If he ran: away she ran after him. She made no bones about it. She simply said when she had found him: “What on earth made you go to all that bother? You know that we have a better time together than when we are apart.” : “Letty,” he asked her once, walking in the magnificent rose garden of the Great Meadows, “Letty, I thought: I knew all the ropes. But I don’t. Just “I'm going to She slapepd his what sort of of flirtation is this one,, anyway ?” She stopped on one side of a tall sun-dial and regarded him thoughful-. ly. There was enough starlight. He could see her small white face, the tossed hair. She spoke deliberately: - “I'm not flirting with you.” “What on earth are "you doing; then 7” “I'm being entirely natural, I sup- pose. Obey that impulse—you know. Oh, don’t stand there like a stuffed" owl in a dinner jacket. How old are you? Thirty? I'm twenty, this is summer and night-time and a rose- garden—come here and kiss me and’ don’t talk so much.” He obeyed, like a man in a dream. She went to his arms with the fanni-. est little crow of satisfaction. She kissed. She said, “you're a darling!” and kissed him again. He said, huskily: “You—TI can’t let you go, really. You're so generous, Letty.” ’ She took his hands and led him to a marble bench over which the dark- ly fragrant standing reses leaned. “Sit down.” He put his arm around her but she wriggled away and faced him from the corner of the curved seat: “Listen to me, Mort. Do you l-like me?” “I think I am in love with you. At least I supopse it’s that—I've never been in love with anyone before— have you?” He was absolutely disconcerted. He said, with an effort: “I’ve thought ‘so. I've always run away before. You see, Letty, the money and all=-"’ —— rem tetera rte this time,” she annouriced firmly, “be- cause I want you and I'm going to have you. And I think you're an im- becile about your old money. You're attractive enough to have all the love you want even if you didn’t have a cent. I'm glad you have, though. I like the things it can buy. I'd marry a poor man tomorrow if I loved him, but I'd a darn sight rather marry a rich one—if I loved him. The trou-~ ble with you is that you have an in- Jerlorey complex due to your bank- book. You're not bored, really. That's: all legend. You've just taken refuge: in camouflage—you know—protective- coloration. For heaven’s sake, be nat-- ural for once. If you havent the- courage to take a c e in this: world you'll never get very far. You: can’t help your money, can you ?: You'd really not want to be without: it. You know, Mort, we can have a perfectly marvelous time, you and I” He understood dimly that she was. proposing to him—if it could be: called that. He did not care. He on- ly knew that the weight of gold was: suddenly off his heart and that he was: twenty-one again and as reckless and! happy as even at twenty-one he had: never been. He put out long arms and took her to him, and kissed her- savagely and tenderly, and savagely and tenderly she kissed him back: again. “Letty—Letty—I love you terri-- bly.” “Me, too,” said Letty, in a smalll muffled voice. “I'm perfectly crazy: about you. But oh, Mort, how slow you've been!” After a while she drew him to his feet. “We'll go in and tell the family,” she said contentedly. “You know, Mort, you look about. ten times handsomer now that you're: letting yourself be natural—and you: were attractive enough before, as any-- one knows. Come on in and break: the news before you weaken.” Just before they got to the house: she said “You'll never be sorry, Dar-- ling. After all, it had to happen to. you some day.” He laughed. He knew he'd never be sorry. He thought to himself . . .. all I ever wanted, all I ever hoped to. find . . . love and youth and beauty- —and absolute sincerity. He looked: down into her eyes and said to her,. gravely gay: “You're the only genuine human be-- ing I've ever me; in my life.” She answered softly: “I know. It's: not worth while to be anything else.. You're always found out.” Hand in hand and perfectly happy; loving each other so much that they were illuminated with it, that it ra- diated from them, star-dust and moonlight, they went into the house. —By Faith Baldwin in Cosmopolitan. Changes Announced in Game Regu- lations, = 5 The entire State will be open to the: shooting of female deer betweem De-. {cember 1 and 15 of the present Year,, while killing bucks will be punishable. with a $100 fine, under new regula-- tions issued by the board of game: commissioners. The board also has: announced drastic changes in the: (small game seasons. | The action of the board was taken: ! after reports had been. received from: several sectiens of the State telling- of the scarcity of forage and the re-- | sultant death of deer. he season for killing of bear has. been lengthened: and will be from No-- i vember’ 1 to December 15. During: November hunters may pursue them only: on. Thursday, Friday and Satur- days. In December the usual six day hunting willl be allowed. The Thursday, Friday and Satur-- day plan also will govern the killing of pheasants, quail, woodcock, male ring-neck pheasants and the three: specigs: of, squirrels. The season for- them will: be fram October 15 to No- . vember 30, ! The rabbit; season will be from Oc- tober 15 to. December 15 with the: three day stipulation in operation un- til: Dacember 1.. In December the us-- ‘ual six day hunting will be allowed. | Raccoansy under the new plan, may" be hunted from October 15 to Novem- ber 80; inclusive. They may be: trapped; only during November. The: season limit was fixed at 15. Erecting New. Penitentiary. G. W.. Hunt; deputy secretary of" the department. of welfare, reported: “good progress! inthe building of the- new. eastern penitentiary at Grater- ford, after an. inspection. of the work: under - way. : The railroad bridge across: the: Per-- kiomen is completed and.it.is expect-- ed, that the grading for the railroad tracks will be finished by June 1. The. temporary barracks also will: be completed then and the manage-- ment will be prepared to transfer 300 prisoners.. One. hundred’ and’ forty- six prisoners are now housed at the institution in. the. remodeled farm: house and in tents. Recently a deep well with a power ‘| pump . was completed giving the in- stitution a supply of 100 gallons per: minute of good water. The:new wall to surround the main: buildings and enclosing approximate- ly sixty-two acres will be started in: the near future: It is expected that’ three sections of this wall with the towers. will be erected" this year, a ——— Qe ———————— The Brain Athletes Compete. A new kind of college athletic con- test took place just recently when two: teams of 10 students each met in com- petition between Hédrvard and Yale, to see which should: pass the best ex- amination in English’ composition and’: literature. Heretofore, it has seemed as if the physical athletes gpt most: of the: scholastic glory. ow if ‘many col- leges and schools would go in for these: brain competitions, success in scholarship would ‘be more highly es- teemed. There seems a certain dispropor- tion when a- successful football play-- er is acclaimed over the entire length of the country, while the fine scholar may be hardly known in his own col- lege. ——The Watchman gives all. the. “Well, there’s no use running-away.! news while. itis. news.