senna eee eee Bem fskdan Bellefonte, Pa., August 3, 1928. EES ER THE TONE OF VOICE. It is not so much what you say, As the manner in which you say it; It is not so much the language you use, As the tones in which you convey it. “Come here!” I sharply said, And the baby cowered and wept; “Come here!” I cooed, and he looked and smiled, And straight to my lap he crept. The words may be mild and fair And the tones may pierce like a dart; The words may be soft as a summer air, And the tones may break the heart. Few words but come from the mind, And grow by study and art; But the tomes leap forth from the inner self : And reveal the state of the heart. Whether you know it or not, Whether you mean or care, Gentleness, kindness, love and hate, Envy and anger are there. Then would you quarreis avoid. And in peace and love rejoice, Keep anger not only out of your words, But keep it out of your voice. —Youth’s Companion. ALLEY CAT. Whether two writers should ever marry is a question. Perhaps if neither were sucessful it might work out. The Jimmy §S. Jenkses went along very well while Jimmy (Stough- ton Jenks) was writing plays that were produced in transformed cellars and garges, the kind that critics call biting, relentless, macabre and that go in for cumulative horror, and Mrs. Jimmy (Alexandra Dalymple) was selling only an occasional love story to the women’s magazines. They had a room down on Sullivan street, with an alcove for the bed and a recessed washstand that would hold a gas stove, though a curtain had to be whisked across if the janitor knocked, as cooking was not allowed. The shabby place was rich in human happiness, with Bunny Jenks develop- ing his leg muscles in the crib and Sanay scorching the dinner while she recorded an idea and Jimmy hurrying home from the office, his mind drip- ping gore and a woolly puppy for Bunny in his pocket. Jimmy worked half the night amid the dark passions of the underworld, stopping only to warm Bunny’s last bottle if Sandy had fallen asleep. Any praise or money was pure job to both. They deposited their absurd earnings with a swelling sense that the cashier was impressed, and conscientiously cele- brated, one good time per check. There was no shadow of trouble un- til Bunny’s second Christmas tree. His first had been merely a flowerpot affair, Bunny being then 6 months old; his second was a real tree, all of three feet high, covered with every bright beatity that the“10-cent store could devise. This was Jimmy’s en- terprise, and he worked over it with as devout a seriousness as though he were planning their future. It was all hours before Bunny could be torn away from it and deposited in his bed. Sandy had just made some- thing of a hit herself with a Christ- mas story of a home that was drift- ing on the rocks and was saved by a baby, Bunny, of course, and was feel- ing a bit cocklofty. : “You and Bunny are about the same age,” she told him. “He is so good with you. Why on earth don’t you give up the office and take care of him?” Jimmy could only echo: the office!” : “Then I could write all the morn- ing,” Sandy explained. “I am going ahead so fast now; I've got to have more free time. And a good woman would cost nearly as much as you are earning. In this way you could get in more writing time yourself,” she added graciously. “I would take him afternoons.” Every one knows that afternoon is a stodgy time, of no use at all to a writer. Jimmy, who was sitting by the crib, holding Bunny’s supper at a considerate slant, flushed up to his tow hair. He was the gentlest soul that ever set a heroine to strangling her lover and hiding his body in the cistern, but there was a limit. After all, it was from one of his plays, “Al- ley Cat,” that Cylvia Deane had sprung to fame. Another had come in next to the winner in a play con- test, and a one-acter had been play- ed all over the country in the little theatres. He had not exactly arrived, but he was a long way from settling down into a baby nurse. He made no answer, but that night he worked until morning instead of till midnight. And the next after- noon he dozed off in the office, a fact that was noted with unfavorable com- ment, Then a household magazine offered a prize, a vast prize of $5000, for the best dog story, to be published as an antivivisection document. Sandy tried for it, and she actually used Bun- ny for the dog—or anyway she used some of her Bunny feeling—and so got into it a quality that set the whole continent to sniffing. The prize was only the beginning of what she won. The story was spread out into a little book with puppy pictures waggling down the margins and sold by the ton, and all the magazines that cared about sweling. hearts and wet eyes were after Alexandra Dalrymple. She did her best to make Jimmy give up the office, arguing it with more generosity than tact; she was earning enough now to take a house in the country with a yard for Bunny, and it wouldn’t matter whether Jim- my made any money or not—they would both be working. “If any one thinks that bringing up Bunny isn’t work—!” Sandy urged, to comfort his scruples. Jimmy never argued it. He simply wouldn’t. Nor would he move to an apartment. Sandy struggled on with her one room and alcove and a wo- “Give up tin the garage he could swab man who came in to help but drove her raving crazy. She was at the bursting point when Jummy, burning the candle at both ends and dazed with weariness, was summarily given up by the office. Sandy war-danced. In a week she had them settled in a tiny furnished cottage with a big yard for Bunny and a quiet room upstairs for her study. “It can be your study when I’m not working,” she pointed out. “If you keep Bunny on the other side of the house I shan’t even hear him. “We're not going to have a servant until I’ve got a solid little capital put by,” she declared. Jimmy noted that she did not say, “Until we've got—" but gave no sign. A woman came one day a week, washing in the morn- ing and cleaning in the afternoon. Sandy got breakfast, tubbed Bunny and made the beds, then ran joyously to her study. By her program, Jim- my tidied the house and cooked their 1 o'clock dinner. Bunny, 3 years old now and wearing overalls, could be in and out under his eye. Sandy came down to dinner when ' he called her, cheeks blazing, eyes dopy with work. Sometimes she re- motely watched them, smiling &er great joy but unaware of what they said. The meal over, herself back to realities with a sigh that was like the rushing of air from a collapsing balloon. Then she took hold gallantly, put Bunny down for his nap, washed the dishes, sewed | and ironed. “Now..you are absolutely free. No one will go near the study,” she as- sured him. Jimmy went upstairs with a peev- ish sense of being sent to his task. He did not like the study, and he was not going to work at any one’s or- | ders. Usually he slept most of the afternoon. He had been working nights for so long that his sleep ac- count was deeply overdrawn. When he woke up he wandered forlornly about the room, staring out at the summer world with resentful eyes, idly turned over old manuscripts, whittled a boat for Bunny. There was not a spark of creation left in him, and yet he stayed up there until nearly suppertime. give an effect of not having entirely slumped down on his wife. Sandy could be trusted not to ask questions so long as he came out with the old aborbed, secretive air. Work was a strictly private matter for both them until they were ready to speak. Jimmy's daily walk from the office to Sullivan street had led him through slums and low neighborhoods where | he got flashing glimpses of the un- derworld that so fascinated him. Down here his walk led him through daisies and buttercups, past little blosséming gardens where children played house; on every cottage porch was a veiled baby carriage. Jimmy came in as flatly empty as he went out. The afternoon sleeps dwindled to naps, then disappeared altogether, leaving Jimmy a hideous three or four hours to kill. Sometimes he strode defiantly out and went down to wander about the village or to take Hong, dull, créwded trolley rides, but Sandy asked no question; she suppos- ed he was walking a scene into shape, as he often had done on city Sundays. One day he picked up a girl on a car and tried to flirt with her, but she berea him past bearing. Sandy chose that night to tell him how gloriously her book was going. Jiramy loved her truly, and was hor- rified at the surge of hate that swept him. Their home was drifting on the rocks, and a baby could not save it. He never hated Bunny, but he grew desperate at being tied to him. Sandy deposited her earnings in a joint account equally open to them both. Jimmy paid the bills and bal- anced the bankbook, so she did not know that he had never drawn one cent for himself. He ate her food, but she had forced that on him. When he had only a little silver left he took a teolley to a summer colony and got part-time work washing automobiles for a garage. It was easy to slip out of the house while Sandy was in the kitchen, though he had merely been for a brief walk. Nothing short of illness or fire would make Sandy go to the study door so long as it was shut. His garage name was Thomas James, and he gave a lurid version of his past history to his fellow workers. There was a touch of drama in that. For the first time in blank weeks Jimmy’s Imagination was showing signs of e. He did things well with his hands. Washing a fancy coupe was not so very different from washing the glass and china in Sandy’s home, and yet and pol- ish without resentment, even with en- joyment. Me was standing back, chamois in his grimy hand, to admire his shining headlights when a high voice spoke at his side: “Well, Stough- ton Jenks!” Jimmy could hide anything; not a flicker betrayed the shock of his dis- may. “Sylvia Deane!” he said, happily, polishing up a hand to give her. Her astonished gaze went from the tousled hair and greasy overalls of his make-up to the public garage set. She was flamingly pretty, emphasized at every point. “But what in the world are you do- ing 7” “Washing cars,” Jimmy said, as though it were the most natural thing in the world. “Is this yours? S. D.— of course it is. Haven't I done a pretty good job by it?” Sylvia was thinking, swiftly, visi- bly; all her mental processes wers written on her bright surface. “I know!” She got it with a pounce of the spirit. “You are laying one act in a garage and you're here to get local color!” “Sh!” he cautioned her, glancing over his shoulder. She was delighted with her own acumen. “Make a quick change and come to my cottage for tea,” she commanded. “I want to hear about this new play.” ‘Oh, it isn’t quite in shape—" he was beginning, but she cut him short. “You can give me an idea of it. she dragged ! He must at least | “Fast, near tears, she pushed opén the 1! never had a part I loved as I did Al- ley Cat. Do me something like that and I will get it on.” Her nod re- minded him that she was a different person from the unkown girl of his semi-amateur, special-matinee begin- ning. In the five minutes of his change Jimmy took a flying dive through all the nebulous ideas that dwelt in the back of his head, came up with a like- ly one, knocked the man out of its center and put in a wild and daring female creature, lawless, high-heart- ed, laughing, loving—Jimmy piled up on her every stage quality that he and Sylvia Deane adored. In that swift hour over her tea ta- ble he produced what would have tak- en weeks of cold-blooded effort. She did not remember to ask him where the garage scene came in, but he could have managed even that. Noth- ing was difficult for him, nothing ob- scure. Sylvia was ablaze. She was about to rehearse a tame, distinguished, in tellectual thing that in her opinion would not last four Broadway weeks. “That will give you just time to finish it,” she said. “Send me a scen- ario for Steinway as soon as you can. I wish you were going to be in town, so that we could get together on it.” “I am,” said Jimmy, rising. He was going to be anywhere that Syl- via Deane wanted. “I'm going back tomorrow. I could drive you in.” Jimmy had gauged Slyvia’s tech- {nique with a car in the five miputes ! that separated her cottage from the garage. | “No,” he said firmly. “We would | talk, play, and you would run into the back of an ice wagon. We can’t either of us afford to be smashed up now.” She lifted her voice in protesting lament. “How can you make your characters so gorgeously reckless when you're such a good, careful lit- tle man?” | “Well, I'm husband and father—it makes you good and careful.” “Oh—are you?” She enacted acute i disappointment. | “Wasn’t I always?” | “Husband, perhaps—certainly not father.” “That’s so, Bunny hadn't arrived then.” His hand went toward his | breast pocket, but she stopped him. i picture. It is as an artist that you i stir me, not as a papa.” Their eyes j off at his table, emotion came with | “No. I don’t care to see his or her 'B | laughed together over the joke of his ! stirring her, her hands curled about | his. “Now don’t disappoint me, mon artiste, and be quick about it.” : | “Chain lightning,” he promised, and ‘rode a winged trolley car home, an ‘hour past suppertime. His heart ran to Sandy. All was well between | , them; the sulky weeks were wiped | out. It didn’t matter who paid any- | thing, and he loved owing his glorious | chance to her. Splendid Sandy! Side ! by side, neither towing on behind! { Early that afternoon ‘Sandy had | burned her hand, a painful burn that | threatened to make writing impossi- ble for days. She had tried not to ‘go to Jimmy with it, but her nerves ‘were over-wrought and she could not bandage it properly herself, so at \ study door. ! “I have to bother you, Jimmy,” she faltered. ; | No Jimmy was there. She waited | awhile, then tied her bandage with { teeth and left hand and lay down to | Ya for him. Presently a smell of scorching took her running to the | kitchen, where the electric iron, left turned on, had already wrecked the {ironing board and might have burned | up the house. Sandy began to be an- | gry. : As the afternoon wore on, and Bun- ny made demands, and her hand throbbed, she grew angrier and an- grier. Jimmy had no buisness to £0 off without a word! And stay all the afternoon! She worked and slaved and no one had any consideration for her! When suppertime passed she grew frightened and watched at the window. Then the sight of him, ve- turning cheerful and undamaged, roused her to fury. “Look here, Jimmy—I don’t ask much of you,” she began in a hard, masterful tone, “but I do think you might be on hand when there’s trou- ble. I got a frightful burn, and the house nearly burned up, and there wasn't any one to help me—” Jimmy was dreadfully sorry and concerned. He wanted to tell her so, to see the burn, to get a doctor, but she would not let him say anything. “No. I don’t want it touched. It will be a week before I can hold a pencil. Get yourself some supper if you want any. I've put Bunny to bed—I've done everything. As usu- (al! The flaming grievance of the | afternoon mounted higher and high- ‘er. “I take all the responsibility, and , then, when you could be of some use, | you're gone. Where were you?” | “lI have been over in Westbridge telling Sylvia Deane about an idea for a play,” he said badly. “She likes it. | She says she will get Steinway to put it on if the new play doesn’t go.” : Sandy was not mollified. “They al- ' i ways act enthusiastic, and then they | ; throw you down. She probably hasnt | ‘any more say with Steinway than you { have. Is it the play you have been | working on this summer ?” i Her tone made rich hopes absurd, ideas second-rate, the chance a child- | ish delusion. Jimmy, tumbled out of his dream, grew angry, too, in his quiet, hidden way. “I haven’t been working this sum- mer.” “Not working this summer?” San- 1 dy rose up on one elbow to look at : jhim. “What do you mean?” i “Oh, I've sat up in that beastly | room but I can’t work in the after- | noon. You couldn’t yourself—that was why you gave it to me.” | “Well, but considering—!” It was an outraged cry. i “Yes—considering that you had paid for everything.” She was shocked, “1 didn’t mean that—" ; “Well, it is that, isn’t it? Coming here was your doing—I don’t like it, and I can’t work. I wasn’t cut out for | a general houseworker, anyway.” i “I suppose I can get a cook,” Sandy ashamed. ! corner and HI began in.a martyred tone, but: he‘in-: terrupted. “Get what you like. back to town.” “And leave me—with Bunny—my book not finished—no help with my house—— That “my house” settled it. my rose. “You can afford to hire 2 woman for your house. And you won’t have to pay any attention to her after your work. Not that you have paid any to me—but you do have to go through the motions of admitting that I'm here. I am going back where I belong. And when we come together again, Sandy, it’s going to be ‘our house’—remember that. I have had all of this ‘my-house’ busi- ness that I'll stand.” 7 He stalked into their room, and the banged door forbid her to follow. Ten minutes later he came out with a packed bag. “Jimmy!” imploringly, thority. “I can just make 2 train,” he said curtly, and was gone. The room on Sullivan street was empty and the gas stove lurked be- hind the washstang curtain. In the dawn he fell asleep and awoke at noon to a swelling sense of freedom. He was back! Where he belonged! All the afternoon he wan- dered about the crazy streets, grimy with soot, greasy with August heat, steaming with the smells of alien lives. Babies lay half naked on wide- spread knees, children jumped in the I'm going Jim- Sandy exclaimed—not but with outraged au- Stream from a hydrant, men dozed on newspapers of grass invited. Jimmy dined at a Greek hole in a wall and went back drunk with black coffee. No sodden country sleep for him! The old fires were leaping in his breast. Dawn found him dozing a pile of manuscriv: wherever a square under his hands. The next day he sent Sandy a pos- tal telling where he was “in case of need.” Much she needed him! She was like the female spider, who com- fortably swallows her mate when he has played his part. She would not care whether he were there or not, except for the bother of getting a wo- man to come in. Bunny would miss him—good little chap. A softening the thought of unny. He introduced a child into the new play. There were only a few States that made trouble about child actors. Besides, a small girl could easily play a litle fellow of 5 or 6 on the road. | The youngster brought in a valuable complication. The next day Jimmy got part-time work with a tobacconist, and sold cig- arettes and plug cut all the afternoon, with the elevated roaring outside and his soul singing the joy of freedom and creation. A 50-cent dinner in a back yard hung with clothesline sent him hurrying home to his work as once he hurried home to his love. In the weeks that followed Jimmy made a curious discovery. Those hai- ed walks among the daisies and but- tercups, the bored wanderings in the village, the exasperating ¢are of Bun- ny, had done something to his art. . Something amazingly good, He felt it take possession and let it have its way. Steinway, who had been con- sidering and rejecting his plays ior years, finally worded it for him. “You've got kinder human,” he said. “The drama’s there, all right, but there’s heart in it now, and it isn’t so grubby. My boy, I think this will go. I'm willing to take a chance on i, anyhow.” ! Jimmy signed his contract with an unmoved face, pocketed his $500 ad- | vance on royalties and crushed an | impulse to run to Sandy and Bunny, She would probably remind him that plays usually fail, or show him some vast check for serial rights. She was | evidently quite satisfied to be without him—she had not answered his postal. So he took Sylvia Deane to lunch at the most exotic place in town and sunned himself in her joy. She had scored a personal success in her new ' play—the play itself was roasted— | but she never grew cocklofty or open- ; ly took the lead. After lunch they | went back to her apartment, a lavish little place, exotic in color, exquisite | in its detail. Sylvia had never known | poverty as Jimmy and Sandy knew ! it. Even in the days of “Alley Cat” | she had lived delicately, had the es- | sential luxuries. | They tried out a new scene, Jim- my taking the part of the little boy; | and he found her maternal kiss on his | forehead startlingly ‘agreeable. He | stayed till it was time to take Sylvia | to the theatre, then walked home with a slight lift of the head to show how ! his pulses were galloping. The drift- ing home was very near the rocks. | Never in five years had he been so remote from Sandy. And when he opened his door there she sat. A pale, worn-looking Sandy, her eyes larger than he remembered them. | “Oh—Sandy!” He had stopped | short. It was almost as though he | had drawn back. Then, of course, he came in, closing the door. “Been here ', long 7” table es. “Yes, a good while. All the after- noon.” She spoke absently, and her , eyes never left his face. “I expect- | ed to go back tonight.” “Too bad I was out.” Jimmy could not manage the situation at all. This was Sandy, and he was moved, but he | could not seem to show anything but a blank surface. He sat on a table lit a cigarette. “And how’s Bunny ?” “Well. Splendid. He sent you his | love.” Whatever Sandy felt it was no . longer wrath. She gave him Bunny's | love with an oddly subdued air. “He misses you.” “Well, I miss him.” Jimmy moved to a chair, crossed his knees high. “I suppose you got a nice woman. How is your hand?” She showed ijt. “All right. Not even a scar. Is work—going ?” The contract was stiff in his pocket, but he did not want to tell. “Oh, he asked, laying his hat on the | and looking at her only in glanc- ! yes. IIl' have something—pretty soon. By the way, you haven't dined, have you?” : ; “No, but Ill get something at the | iS . bloodless, station,” Sandy said, in a hurried, gentle voice. “I just wanted to see if you were—all right.” She dragged herself to her feet. “And I want to apologize, Jimmy.” She was nervous about it, fumbling with her coat and hat. “I have only just found out that you never drew a cent for yourself. I must have been a beast to make vou—ieel like that.” “Oh, that’s all right—I was prob- ably a fool. Men and women are dif- ferent—about that.” His tone put her off. Anger could not have held out for a moment against a humble Sandy, but the glamour of the after- noon was a solid wall between them. He was in terror of crashing through into some bleak reality where they must face truth naked and make final decisions. She let him edge her away, but at the door she paused. “You—have money? You are not hard up?” She had to ask that. He could see how a panic vision of him starving had rushed over her. “Oh, plenty,” he said, with a show of heartiness. “I shall have good * news very soon. I suppose your work is booming ?” She did not answer that at all. She simply gave him a long, somber look, as though she had forgotten what he meant by her work, and closed the door between them. He started to follow, to escort her properly to her train, but empty forms were impos- sible over that last look. There was no anger in it, no reproach, no de- mand, no failure of courage, no com- plaint; only an utter desolation. accepted judgment with just that lock. “Oh, I'm imagining things,” Jim- my blustered. “She's got her writings —she doesn’t need me. I don’t count. ‘My house.’ ” He tried to whip up the old anger and so free himself for the new joy, but everything was spoil- ed. Even his contract. For three dreadful days Jimmy sulked in his tent. Sylvia’s notes and telegrams and Sandy’s deep silence equally tore at him. Life was resoly- ing itself into a plain proposition, de- manding a plain answer: Can you have your cake and eat it, too? But Jimmy was in no mood to see the stark outlines of his situation. Mists of pain made it a dark confusion; the vivid desire of the body fought the aching desire of the soul; Sylvia’s charm came reluctant glimpses of a new splendor in Sandy; male revolt against bondage had to put down an upwelling of fatherhood. Sunday afternoon Sylvia came af- ter him. Jimmy, usually the neatest of men, had left the bed in the alcove unmade, and the dishes of a dreary lunch strewed the table. He had gone down to the janitor’s kitchen with his little pail of garbage, leaving the door ajar, so Sylvia walked in and stood looking about her, as out of place as her shining car was in the dingy street. There was time to see every- thing, shabby male garments on a chair, old boots on the floor, the stain- ed gas stove on the stained wash- stand, and a tin pot of’ coffee boiling over; the black ceiling and peeling wallpaper, the spot on the rug made by Bunny’s little grabbing hand and the syrup jug.” Sandy had scrubbed in vain at that spot. Then Jimmy came in, collarless and unshaven, car- rying his mean little pail. Again his power of hiding came to the rescue. . “Hello, Sylvia,” he said cheerfull . and put down the pail as composedly as he had once wiped a grimy hand on his overalls. Sylvia’s very color seemed dimmed. The shock of the room veiled her eyes, made her brightly garrulous. . “I thought you had died on us. Where have you been all these days?” she chattered. “You got my notes, because they’re all over the room—" “Like everything else,” “Usually I'm quite tidy, caught me on an off day.” Her glance shuddered away from | his surroundings, yet had to avoid his unkempt person. Squalor on the stage had thrilled her as the underworld had thrilled Jimmy, but in real life she was as aloof from it as he was from brawny sin. “Well, I only ran down for a mo- ment. I wanted to be sure that you were all right.” She was moving to- ward the door. “Steinway says we'll begin rehearsing next week. This is so far from the theatre—why don’t you live uptown ?” Her very nostrils were scorning his room. After all, it had been his home, he and Sandy had been happy there. “I'm fond of this place,” he said. “It suits me. I’m a sort of alley cat myself, you know.” She wanted to be kind. “You will get over that when the play has made you rich and famous. You must have a nice place and give me lovely par- ties.” She was trying to recapture the mood of the last time; her bright nod promised that they would get it back, once he had emerged from this changeling atmosphere. “What were you doing in that ga- rage?” she asked. “Washing cars,” he said placidly. ‘Earning a little extra money.” She gave him a strained smile. ' “You wont have to do that any more,” she consoled him, and made her escape. Jimmy slowly and methodically put his room and his person in order. He was not ashamed, not even angry; the mists of confusion were gone, and ae saw with a lucid clearness that lit up every corner of his life. To Sylvia he was outcast, malodorous; she would never forget that revelation, never again want him in her scenteq life. And this revelation of her, artificial, supercivilized, meant the end of glamour for him. A woman must be real, as Sandy was real. Cap- able of going down on her knees and scrubbing; seeing disorder and shab- | biness as normal human states, not shrinking away from something four. | Sylvia had no more substance than a painted gauze curtain. And in his befuddled folly he had let that shadow come between him and the flesh-and blood reality that was Sandy. He had repulsed Sandy, shut her out when she came with all her big heart open and humbled; he had turned his back on his son. Ab great soul conscious of sin might have | against he put :n. Sylvia. You He drank the chilled coffee to save it, and so could not even sleep. Half the night he walked the streets, blind to their drama, consumed in his own pain. He came in bodily exhausted, and the place that Sylvia had scorned welcomed him like a kind old nurse. He stood looking about, his hand still on the light, his heart breaking in his side for the day when this had been home. Bunny kicking in the crib and Sandy scorching the dinner while she wrote down an idea! “Was there ever a fool like me?” he marveled. He had produced perfect order be- fore he went out, but there was some- thing on the floor under the alcove curtain, a black object no larger than the palm of his hand. Jimmy ap- proached it cautiously half expecting it to run. The more he stared the queerer it grew. He could not get over an impression that he was look- ing at a child’s stubby little fat shoe with an ankle strap. “His hand went out to touch it, to dispel the illusion and lifted—one of Bunny’s shoes. For a moment it seemed like some supernatural sign, and it wrung him with longing. Then, looking past the Sleeve curtain, he found the explana- ion. Bunny lay on the bed, sound asleep —Wwidespread, boneless, a very jelly of sleep. Sandy’s coat was thrown over him; Sandy herself, sitting on the bed beside him, had sunk down on her arm, and slept as heavily. The dim light showed her face ali expos- ed, young, tragic, beaten. Beside the ed was a heavy bag. Perhaps once in a man’s life he knows heaven. To Jimmy, soiled, bat- tered, homesick, ashamed, this gen- erous impulse of loving hearts, run- ning back to him, was just that— heaven. He slid to his knees by the bed and hid his face, Presently he felt her stir, then start, but he could ‘not look up. What she had to say came stumbling out. “Jimmy, I had to. We can't let it go like this. Take me into your home, Jimmy, and let me try again. With- out you—there’s nothing. We will go if you don’t want us, but we had to ask you—” His arms were about her, his wet cheek was against hers, Suddenly he knew the truth: “I was coming to you in the morning, Sandy!”—By Juliet Wilbor Tompkins. 1 Shapeless Legs Due to Wearing High Heels. Recently Dr. Charles Mayo, vaca- tioning declared that women were los- ing their calves through the use of high heels. That doesn’t bother the co-eds of the University of California at Los Angeles. More than 100 girl students are wearing low-heeled shoes, which, it is asserted, contribute to the beauty of a woman’s calves, These figures were revealed by a survey of the women’s physical edu- cation department. “We carefully check each incoming co-ed as to her posture and the type of shoes she wears,” said Miss Hazel Cubberly, of the phyical education de- partment. on F ! “Not only are high heels detrimen- tal to a girl’s feet, but to her general health. Most of our girls wear sens- ible shoes which enable them to take firm, steady steps and maintain good . posture.” Corrective exercises and participa- tion in such sports as tennis, hockey and archery also are resorted to for the purpose of keeping the legs of co-eds in good shape. Those few co-eds who cling to high heels are warned that a dreadful fate awaits them—the necessity of wear- ing long skirts as a beauty measure, some day. Methodists Would Banish Military Training. In order to convince its youth that ‘war is not inevitable, and that na- tions can arbitrate their differences, i the United States must cease its pol- iicy of military training in education- fal institutions, seems to be the con- ‘census of the Methodist Episcopal church in general conference at Kan- ‘sas City recently. i The conference vigorously protest- .ed further appropriations by Con- 1 gress for extending the naval cruiser | building program past next year. Action followed one of the most heated debates of the conference, in which advocates of preparedness pointed out that the Methodist church was opposing an established Govern- ment policy, which requires that mil- itary training be given at land grant educational institutions. “If that be so, let us recall that the United States Government is not the master, but the servant of the people,” thundered Dr. Daniel L. Marsh, president of Boston Univer- sity and chairman of the committee on state and the church. Dr. Marsh closed the debate with a stirring denuncia- tion of “militarism” in the United States as “unchristian.” Uniform Signs Make for Highway Safety. An important step to promote high- way safety was recently taken by the United States bureau of public roads in co-operation with the State high- way departments, in adopting uniform standards for warning signs to be used throughout the country. . The motorist will no longer be con- fused by a multiplicity of signs of various designs and degrees of legi- bility. Hazards will be indicated by signs’ which will be uniform in ail States and which will plainly indicate the kind and degree of danger. The new signs make use of a Sys- tem of different shapes, thereby in- creasing their value at night. The shape indicates the degree of hazard and if the motorist cannot read the i legend, the shape will tell him the degree of caution required. Twenty . States are now actually engaged in erecting these standard warnin i signs, and other States have signifie «their intention of doing the same.— ; Scienitfic American.