Bellefonte, Pa., February 22, 1929. NO ROOM FOR HATE. ‘We have room for the man with an honest dream, With his heart on fire and his eyes agleam; ‘We have room for a man with a purpose true, Who comes to our shores to start life anew; We haven't an inch of space for him, ‘Who come to plot against life and limb. We have room for the man who will learn our ways, Who will stand by our flag in its troubled days; We have room for the man who will till the soil, Who will give his hands to fair day's toil; But we haven't an inch of space to spare For the breeder of hatred and black de- spair. We have room for the neighbor here, Whe will keep his hands and his con- science clear We have room for the man who will spect our laws And pledge himself to our cause: But we haven't an inch of land to give To the alien breed that will alien live. re- country’s Against the vicious we bar the gate ! This is no breeding ground for hate. This is the land of the brave and free, And such we pray, it will always be. We have room for men who will love our flag, But none for the fiends of the scarlet rag. —Edgar A. Guest. CALL THE DOCTOR. George Whitney was distinguished for his extreme good looks, his suc- cess at the bar, and his avoidance of all attractive young women with rich papas. There is a reason for eveerything. Mr. Whitney was pleasing to look up- on, because he came of a long line of handsome and charming forebears and because he kept himself frantic- ally fit. He was, at thirty-four, suc- cessful in his profession because he had an excellent mind, a psycholog- ical insight into the skulls of juries, worked hard and loved the law. He avoided pretty girls with hereditary money because he had observed that young professional men who married bank-accounts were, as likely as not, apt to sit back. and wax fat upon their unearned incomes, and docilely trail their dives to Palm Beach or Europe, and thus not get very far in their professions. ‘In the rainy, blowy, sunny spring of 1928, George Whitney decided to betake himself to a mid-Western city. He was planning, once having reach- ed there, to interview in person a shy, elusive financial giant whom, in behalf of a client, Mr. Whitney was suing for a sum so large that merely to mention it would be to call forth gasps of envy and jeers of unbelief. Mr. Whitney was rather famous for his powers of examination, both cross and amiable, and he had perfectad a species of polished third degree winch was nothing short of murderous. It had occurred to him that to hop on a train and politely take the defend- ant in the forthcoming case by sur- prise would be, if not a master-stroke, then something approximately the same. “But,” said his partner, the shrewd, silver-tongued Jerry O’Hara, “if Cum- mings knows you are en route he will disappear instanter. Like as not he will disguise himself as a carbureter, or something, and crawl into one of his own motors—and then, where are you?” “Crawling after him, disguised as a monkey-wrench,” replied the younger man, undaunted, “Still, after all, how would he know I'm coming ?” “Oh, it’s been rumored already, I dare say,” said O'Hara, “and he has ways and means. Probably the con- ductors on all trains west are spies in his employ.” Whitney laughed and proceeded to his club. There he found one of his closest friends, Joyce, the stomach specialist, busily employed in ruining his own stomach with uncut rye. Whitney dropped down beside bim ard ordered a little precaution against the changeable weather. And while partaking, confided his hypo- thetical difficulty to his companion. “He's a wily old bird,” Whitney concluded, ‘and it looks as if I'd have to concoct some scheme of sneaking up behind him in a Santa Claus make-up and suddenly ranting in his ear—How about settling?’ Joyce, a fat florid man, chuckled. “As to that, it can be fixed,” he an- nounced largely, “for once upon a time—no, this is not a bedtime story, George,—I attended an official of the very railroad upon which, I take it, you will travel. He was grateful to me because I enabled him to rise from his couch of pain and eventual- ly to discard that diet of milk and | mush to which his ailment had con- demned him. Therefore, in addition to my fee—which was very handsome —he presented me with a life pass upon his road. Take it, my son, use it— flatter yourself and fool your op- ponent by traveling as me. But, for Pete's sake, don’t give yourself away, for you are liable to arrest or some- thing and if there is anything de- spised by lawy8rs, it’s arrest—when they are themselves the arrestees.” Doctor Joyce then solemnly pro- duced the pass from a pocket. And Whitney took it. “I don’t see that it helps much,” he pondered doubtfully. “And all this secrecy business is probably a lot of delicatessen. However, Tl bruit about that I'm going South for a rest-cure, and I'll go West instead. Horace Greeley was a great man.” “After all,” commented Joyce, sur- man who will i Whitney, “as you well know, having ‘sat in my father’s classrooms and cursed his intelligence. He always wanted me to follow in his buggy wheels. But I couldn't see being a general practitioner. Too much work. Those were the good old days before the ravening horde of specialists de- scended upon us. So I chose the law instead. Now, I'm sorry—when I see what you fellows get away with.” After that crack and another pre- caution, he departed for his small, at- tractive dwelling and made Mis ar- rangements. Some evenings later, Mr. Whitney, , traveling upon Doctor Joyce's pass, . was putting himself to bed in a lower { berth. He congratulated himself as he did so that Jimmy Joyce was not , given to travel—there were plenty of rebellious stomachs in New York to keep him busy-—for the conductor, ‘when gazing at the pass, had hailed its possesor as “doctor,” and Whit- ney had grinned back gaily when he realized that all was well—Joyce was not known by sight upon this particu- ilar train at least. his long legs, that the conductor . didn’t have chronic indigestion. What did you give for it? Bicarb., prob- ably, and good advice. He then re- flected idiotically that it was a good i thing railroads didn’t employ women conductors, porters and Pullman people, for had they done so, he {would get very little rest, what with a lady conductor telling him she { hadn’t been the same since little Lily | was born— With which imbecile musing he , dropped off to sleep, and was rudely awakened an hour or so later by a hand upon his shoulder. i “Doctor Joyce‘ Doctor Joyce!” | Whitney sat up in the berth, in- dignant. His frankly copper-colored hair, sleeked down to a professional ‘flatness in the day time, now stood jon end and curled absurdly. He de- i : manded: “Says which?’ Then he realized the worst. ‘conductor stood there, hand still heavy upon Whitney’s per- (son. Beside the conductor was a The . strange porter whose dusky coun- | tenance was a delicate mauve with fright. { “There's a very sick young woman in the next car,” announced the of- ficial. “She is traveling alone and 3he needs immediate atiention. I shall have t35 ask vou to comnz with me, doctor.” Whitney, struggling into bath-robe and slippers, so far forgot himself as to ask: “What's the matter with her?” He hoped that the conductor would say, ‘sore throat” or, “strained an- kle,” to which he might reply; “Ex- cuse me, I'm a stomach specialist,” and go back to sleep. For that, he mused trustingly, was the way these doctoring boys worked things. “How do I know?” answered the conductor reminded him severely: reader. All I know is, she’s a mighty sick girl.” . . As Whitney landed in the aisle, the conductor reminded him severely: “Your bag?” “Bag?” Whitney looked about wildly. Then he said collectedly: “I haven’t it with me. pleasure.” I'm traveling on With this lie on his lips, Whitney, cursing his friend Doctor Joyce, curs- ing girls who were so indiscreet as to fall ill on trains, cursing himself and his innocent client, followed his anxious leader. But as he cursed si- lently, and with a set expression, he i looked very medical and professional indeed. “Who did you say she was?” he asked as they crossed the chilly and swaying platform between the car Gladiola and the car Delphinium. “I didn’t say—I don’t khow,” re- plied the worried conductor. “She booked all the way through, and has only a suitcase. There’s not a thing on it to identify her.” They arrived at the drawing-room door. The conductor knocked and en- tered, followed by his victim. A wo- man, sketchily dressed, rose from the berthside. She was, the conductor explained, a kindly passenger who, on hearing curious sounds from the drawing-room, had summoned the porter. ¢ Informal were the introductions. The strange woman vanished, it seemed, reluctantly. The conductor stood by in a deferential attitude while Whitney approached his pa- tient. Whitney took one look at the girl, tossing and turning and muttering in the berth, and was instantly aware of | The first was that she two things. was by far the prettiest girl he had ever seen, and the second—a less pleasant bit of knowledge—that she j was, by a long shot, the sickest. | He looked—Ilooked again—at the ‘satin-smooth cheeks brushed by the brilliant rouge of a high temperature, at the beautiful parched lips, at the wide-open brown eyes which were | dull and glazed, and at the cropped, ! corn-colored curls. And while Whit- ney looked, the conductor spoke im- : patiently. “Well?” asker the conductor. Mr. Whitney came to. Apparently | something was expected of him. He | proceeded, under the conductor's | chilly eyes, to do a number of things. He longed, as he performed these un- | accustomed parlor tricks, for his | sagacious father, now retired and liv- {ing on a Vermont farm. He longed {for Jimmy Joyce. He longed for i flight. And while longing, he laid a | finger on his patient’s pulse and gaz- ied earnestly at his wrist watch the while. He had some difficulty in lo- | cating the pulse in the first place, { and when the deed was accomplished he found that he had never learned | te count as fast as that. He hoped, as he sleepily folded up his urgent | pon the edge of the berth and fell deeply and irrevocably in love with a delirious girl in a peach-colored nightgown. By the time the conductor had re- turned with the stimulant, Whitney felt it incumbent upon himself to ask: “Is there another medical man aboard?” “No,” replied the conductor, and eyed him with suspicion. “I would have liked,” explained Whitney hastily, “a consultation.” He took the flask, made his prep- arations, slipped an arm under the girl's round white shoulder, and held the little cup to her lips. Some of the liquid trickled down her throat— both inside and out—and Whitney, having mopped her off with a pocket- handerkerchief, laid her back upon the pillows. He then remembered with a start of authentic fear and horror that sometimes if you gave whisky ignorantly, people died. Good whisky, too. He had not, of course, the remot- est idea what was wrong with this lovely and delicious girl who, as he sat beside her and watched her rapid breathing, appeared to grow less rest- less under the hand he kept upon her slim wrist. He liked to keep it there. He want- ed to take her in his arms and put her poor little head on his shoulder and rock her and say, ‘‘There—there— and—" Oh, well, what he wanted was all very unprofesisonal or, at least, so one is given to understand. Presently she appeared to sleep. And Whitney rose. The conductor, who had been absent for a time, had now returned. “She’s better,” announced Whitney and, remembering his specialty, diag- ‘nosed gravely: “Acute indigestion.” And then, in case that didn't quite cover it, he added: “Or malaria.” The conductor looked intelligent buf unconvinced, and in a short time Whitney was back in his own berth. “I'll have the porter watch out for her,” said the conductor, ‘and if | there’s any change, I'll call you, doc- tor.” { Is that, thought Whitney, a threat or a promise? He didn’t get to sleep directly. He was engaged in telling himself that it was all too absurd. He couldn’t have fallen in love with an unknown girl, palpably out of her mind. He was also busy worrying about her. What was the matter with her? Had he made her worse by his administration of the whisky? And—would he ever see her again? He saw her again in about an hour. Once more he was awakened by a compelling hand. “Doctor Joyce! Your patient is “much worse! We cannot,” said the conductor firmly, “take the respon- sibility. I've wired ahead for a city hospital ambulance to meet the train at——" He named the next import- ant stop. “And she'll have to be put off there. And you'll have to go with her.” “But how,” asked Whitney, horri- fied, “shall we get in touch with her people? They'll have to be notified.” “Perhaps,” the conductor suggest- ed grimly, “you’ll discover who she is. when she comes to her senses.” ! Whitney blushed. What a practic- al man! “If she ever does,” the conductor added gloomily. ' As in a dream, Whitney proceeded to get into his clothes. This was nonsense of an Alice-in- Wonderland type. Here was Whit- ney, thirty-four and a college gradu- ate, being put off a train in the small hours with a perfectly strange, amaz- ingly beautiful, terribly sick young woman. A young woman who, he was convinced, was the only young woman in the world for him! However, when the time came— and the ambulance—it seemed per- fectly natural that she should be tak- en off and that he should accompany her. This was all nightmare-—an en- ' chanted one. | The train moved on, the conductor with it. The conductor was very much relieved. In his small way he was something of a Napoleon—a man of action. He was convinced there was a definite lack in Doctor Joyce. Why hadn’t he stayed with the girl? Didn’t doctors alweys carry black bags? (The condictor had been brought up on the black-bag theory, and it had given him an inhibition or a block or something). However, the sick girl and the probably mentally incompetent phy- sician were off the train, and the con- ‘ductor was pleased at having passed that particular buck. He was a dec- orous man and he didn’t like people to die suddenly in his Pullmans. In the ambulance—and later at the hospital —Whitney ceased to be a graduate of a medical school, which was wise of him. On the other hand, it appeared beneath his dignity to tell the truth, which was that he had ; virtually lied. But he had to make | some sort of explanation. He didn’t i know the girl’s name—he didn’t know i anything. So he seized upon an ac- count of her which might lead to the least complications. “My sister,” said he, and mention- ed his legal name. |" Whitney waited at the hospital | while his former patient and present | relative was put to bed and supplied | with nurses and doctors. After an | uneasy period of stalking about the room allotted to anxious well-wishers, | ! he was informed that his sister was ! suffering from a virulent attack of | influenza. | This relieved him. i couldn't be very bad—everybody had lit. The doctors inquired if his sister {had seemed in good health when he | boarded the train with her. said, “Oh, yes, indeed.” | “Well,” said the medical men, “that | wasn’t unusual. Influenza was a ca- Influenza | As Whit- | | ney knew nothing to the contrary, he be very angry girl, Whitney repaired to a well-knawn inn and had no sleep at all. For three days he hung around, telephoning, calling at the hospital, going to terrible movies and smoking himself to death. On the fourth day he was permitted to see her. : He did so and at once. For if she had started denying that she ever was or ever would be a Whitney, then the beans would begin rolling all over the corridor floors. Luck was with him. She had slept a natural sleep. She had had a drop in temperature. And she had come to long enough to ask where she was and why. Whitney walked into the room, and stood at the bed. The nurse depart- ed. “I'm glad you're better,” said Whit- ney. %So am I,” said the girl. “But who are you, exactly—another doctor?” “Heaven forbid!” uttered Whitney earnestly. “Then why—" But she was very tired, so she gave that up and start- ed again. She asked, rather gravely: “Do you know who I am?” “No,” replied Whitney, down. “Neither do I—very clearly,” the girl admitted. “Perhaps I'm cuckoo. or something. Once, I got on a train. But now, here I am. Someone called me by a perfectly strange name. I'd just as soon answer to it as to any other, the way I feel.” “They think you're my sister!” said Whitney. Into the girl's brown eyes came a flicker of interest. “I'm not, am I?” Whitney began to feel worried. This was more Alice-in-Wonderland- ish than ever. He stammered: “Why, no. That is—I'm sorry I—told them——" “Oh, said the girl, and managed a white smile. “Oh, that's all right, then. Now,” she demanded, “tell me all about it.” and sat And Whitney, with extra color ris- ing under his fair skin, told. “And so,” he concluded, “when they put us off I couldn't throw a bluff here that I was a doctor, could I? And equally, I couldn't come in here with you and say, I'm a perfect stranger to this girl. I just had an impulse to get off the train with her.’ Now, couid I?” “You could,” replied the girl, “but it wouldn't have been advisable.” Then she added: “I'll stay here and get well. That's that. And if you don’t mind I'll remain Miss Whitney. It would be so complicating if I changed now, wouldn't it?” “Of course. And I'm glad you're not sore at me or anything. I might have killed you, you know. And now,” he asked, “could I know your name-— just between us two?” “It’s Sally,” she said, and smiled again. “That’s a corking name,” flounder- ed the imbecile. “I've always wanted a sister named Sally. But—as to the rest of it?” “Oh, does that matter ?”’ asked the patient. “Please think of me as— Sally. It will make things easier for ‘You: “You won't get confused in your mind.” But he already was confused. Then the nurse came in and remarked that Miss Whitney had talked long enough. Whitney departed. Who and what was she? Didn't she have a family ? Wouldn't someone beside himself be worried to death? What a triple- distilled jackass he was to get him- ) self into a mess like this! And wasn't she the most adorable, et cetra— He stayed on in that city. He came to the hospital every day, and Miss Whitney’s room was bulging and brimming with flowers and fruit and books and such. And the word ran around the institution that such de- votion was very unusual, and wasn’t it a pity that so good-looking a man had a sister-fixation or whatever you call it. Sally got better. Then she was convalescent. And Whitney spent long hours by her bed and told her all about himself and reecived no confidences in exchange. When ten days had passed from the time of their arrival, he picked up a news- paper in his hotel and read that the daughter of an important Manhattan millionaire was missing. She had, said the paper, left her home to visit a friend in the West. on such and such a day, upon such a train. She was wearing these clothes and this hat. And she was a blonde, with brown eyes. “I might have known Whitney. He was in despair. He was com- pletely crazy about his first and last influenza patient. But not so crazy, he told himself, as to ask her to mar- ry—him—for— Well, if he would have been insane to ask a girl with no surname to take his own, he would be madder than ever to invite Hortense Yates to share his bed and board. For the name of Yates went into every home which had a really good kitchen cab- inet. So that was that. And if George Whitney espoused the daughter of the kitchen-cabinet maker another good man would be lost to the law. For, again, and this he knew very well, Sally could have pretty much any- ' thing she asked of him, and if she re- quired a husband to carry her sables ‘and her Pekingese and trail her to tea-fights, he would do it. He couldn’t ‘hold out against her. Not he. Be- sides, she couldn’t possibly love him. Not ever. So he walked into the room where she was to be found sitting up in a | big chair and a pink negligee, and he accused her sternly: “You're Hortense Yates,” he said. She blushed. “How do you know ?”’ He waved the paper under her lit- | tle nose, and she snatched it rudely 1 and read it eagerly and said crypti- it!” said | Meantime, the girl was as delirious | pricious little thing. You could get cally, “So far so good.” as any girl may be. | asked hoarsely: | Whitney replied weightily: “I haven't made any diagnosis as yet. o : 2 i would notify him of any change, | | Would you mind going back to my : : : | The conductor | on a train ready to lick your weight | lin wildcats, become aware of a severe | chill, and then the party was on.” They asked him his hotel, and said “Well 2” demanded Whitney. “Much better, thank you.” “Don’t be silly! You're Hortense Yates, I tell you!” “What of it?”. asked his lost Sally. veying him, “you do look rather like | berth and looking in my hand-bag? | Bewildered, but aware that his trip | “You don’t like me any the less. for a doctor—a successful one bedside manner.” “I come by it naturally,” replied with a You'll find a flask there. When the door had closed behind the conductor, Whitney sat down up- {he could straighten things out with i this’ innocent and probably going-to Whisky.” | further west must be postponed until | it, do you?” | “I don’t like you at all!” responded ! Whitney, and departed. Hin ch He told himself that she could set- tle the hospital bills now. As to that, Old Man Yates could buy the hospital and throw it away if he wanted to. But there was the possible scandal ‘o be considered. So he settled the bill and sent a note from his hotel which informed “Miss Whitney” that he was going about his belated business, and that on his way home he would stop off and see how she was getting along. And he wished her a rapid recovery and was hers sincerely. He was hers so very sincerely that it hurt him like a knife in his heart. He went on and saw his man. He couldn't have seen him any earlier, as it happened, as Mr. Cummings had been away, But he saw him now, and was so. thoroughly mad and dis- illusioned and agonized that he shout- ed the great financier down, and cowed him and intimidated him and got a settlement out of him which was the biggest thing that had ever come into his office, and then he started home and stopped off as per schedule—to inquire after his sister's health. After all, if he went on getting set- tlements and making a whale of a lot of money—But no, it was against his principles. Devil take it, he had to see her! He didn’t. “But,” said the wide-eyed nurse at the desk, “Miss Whitney left for New York yesterday. Oh, yes, quite re- covered.” Whitney said hastily, “Oh, I see— her wire must have miscarried.” And went back to New York. The first evening he was at home he saw a stack of old newspapers. Glumly he looked through them. And one, dated the day he had revisited the hospital, when he had been too upset to read any paper, had head- lines: HORTENSE YATES FOUND: RUNAWAY BRIDE Bride For one terrible moment Whitney thought that his role of medical ad- viser and devoted brother had been misunderstood by the romantic press. He read further. According to the general account, Miss Yates had eloped with a young man of good stock and no money— a young man who ran the gasoline station. This alliance of Pampered Wealth and Honest Workman was dear to the tender pressheart, and played up accordingly. Because of dread of family interference, Miss Yates had let it be kown that she was going West to visit. She had not boarded the train. She had gone to the depot, left it secretly, and la- ter picked up her waiting bridegroom to-be and whisked him over to Jersey. All was now forgiven. So Miss Yates—now Mrs. Smith— was honeymooning somewhere, and her parents had gone South to recov- er. “Now who in Hades,” murmured Whitney, “is my Sally?” He read on. The reporter mention- ed casually that a cousin of Miss Yates, a Miss Sanderson, who was employed as a comparative shopper in a New York department store, had aided the lovers. Wearing Miss Yates’ clothes, presenting Miss Yates’ ticket, and being endowed by nature with Miss Yates’ general build and coloring, this Miss Sanderson had taken her place on the train. So Sally was—Sally. A compara- tive shopper. y Which had hcen dark drab, became ‘azure once more. She had left The next morning he marched down to the shop. And weaving an addled way between counters of silk- en lingerie, he gained the upstairs office, emerging from the elevator with his heart thudding in his breast. He made a request of a weary young woman, and Sally, demure in blue serge, came out of something enclosed in frosted glass and con- fronted him. He said hurriedly: I-—you—what— Oh, to the devil with explanations. Come on out to luncheon !” It being noon, she seized her hat and came. Over a balcony table, Whitney said earnestly: “I went back to the hos- pital— Sally, how could you be so cruel ?” “You see, I had promised Hortense not to give her away until every- thing was all right. I intended to go on to Ruth’s, the school friend she was to visit. Then—" “I know the rest,” interrupted , Whitney, “but not why you ran off from me like that.” “I was going to tell you,” Sally per- sisted, “as soon as I heard from Hor- | tense. But—you went away—and I thought—Well, I couldn’t leave a note at the hospital for my “brother in case he ever came back. So I left. I owe you money, Mr. Whitney.” She produced a blank check and suggested: “If you'd fill in the . amount you paid—" Whitney said a curious thing. He said, “Very well. I hope you can’t afford it.” Sally laughed. “I can’t. ly. They pay me well,” Not real- said Sally simply, “but I have to live, and going around with Hortense’s crowd means | oodles of clothes and things.” ‘“Haven‘t you any people?” asked Whitney, his heart very tender. “No; only the Yateses. And I'm not really related to them-—not by blood.” ‘Look here,” said he, and his dark eyes were grave and ardent. “I'm mad about you. I fell in love with you the first time I took your pulse. But—later—I thought you were Hor- tense Yates.: You see, Sally, that would never do. I've always sworn I'd never marry a girl with money. I'm ambitious to get ahead. I am do- ing so. But I've always felt that a rich wife was a handicap.” Sally said, low: “I thought you— didn’t like me-—because I let you do everything for me-—because I took your name—" : “But that's just what I want yom | to take —permanently—darling.’ “Couldn’t you have loved me enough to marry me—even if I had been Hortense ?” And Whitney's skies, ' RE rr SIRE JA RR RB Ro ome, Whitney said, in an exultant whis- per: “Oh, of course! You know that! But I would have put up a fight. Sally, Sally, how can I sit through this interminable meal, when I want to kiss you so much?” But he had to wait until they were in the taxi which drove them back to the shop. They were married at once, and very quietly. The Yatesesi were away. There was no one to he con~ sulted on either side. They had made no plans. After the ceremony in the minister's brownstone house they went back to Whitney’s flat, and Whitney said: “Dearest—we'll slip away some- where—I rather like trains.” Sally came over and perched her- self on his knee. “Do you love me?" He demonstrated. She said with a little sob of con- tentment: “And I you—so much—so much.” And before we leave town. I have to: see some lawyers.” “Lawyers ! But you have one in the family, now.” “Yes, I know. And it makes every- thing a lot easier. You see,” said’ Sally timidly, I've just come into some money—" “Money ?” parroted Whitney. “Yes, Dearest, my mother had an eccentric brother—a bachelor. He was afraid of fortune hunters. So- I've had to work—really had to. And’ it’s all been kept very quiet—the leg- acy, I mean. I wasn’t to get it un- til I reached thirty, or married.” Whitney held her off a little. He- looked at her long and deeply, and he said severely: “Sally—how much money is it?” She answered deprecatingly: “Oh, well, we can give it away, or some-- thing. And there’s the inheritance tax, too. I was so amused when you had to go out to see Sam Cummings. He’s my other uncle, you see.” Whitney felt ill. He felt a dull ache, a pang. But— “Sally,” he repeated again, much money is it?” Sallie made a careless gesture. “Oh,” she said lightly, ‘something: like—twenty-six million dollars.” Whitney was mute. Then he laugh-- ed. Then he kissed her. For what were twenty-six million dollars com- pared to the privilege of kissing Sal- ly’s darling red mouth? What were twenty-six million dollars compared’ to the sound of her voice when she said, “I love you?” As to the ache and the resentment —well, she could heal that with the- “how touch of her satinsoft cheek. Loves, the Physician........ “Call the doctor!” murmured’ Whitney devoutly. And kissed her again. —Hearst’s International Cos- mopolitan. SE i COOLIDGE GOING BACK TO OLD HOMESTEAD.. Calvin Coolidge is going back to- Northampton, Mass., to the house he: left eight years ago to be come Vice President and later President of the- United States. = ok Suir wreté As soon as the inaugural ceremo-- nies are completed March 4 and Her- bert Hoover is established in the- White House, Mr. and Mrs. Coolidge- will board a train for home, it was: announced in the executive offices. The President will leave the $15,- 000,000 mansion at 1600 Pennsylva-- nia Ave. with its beautiful grounds,. ‘array of servants, policemen and: caretakers and go to the modest $36- a month, six-room half of a duplex. house on a quiet residential street in. Northampton. : He will pick up life where he left it eight years ago to become a world figure. His asociates have been diplomats, bankers, statesmen and: notables. His neighbors and associ- ates at Northampton will be villagers, trades-people and retired farmers. Here he could look out of his bed- room window, or out of his study- across acres of well-kept lawn and: flower gardens. At Northampton, his bedroom will look out on a quiet. street and the houses of his niegh-- bors. What his plans are after reaching Northampton, no one has intimated. It is possible he and Mrs. Coolidge will rest at their home for some time to be near Mrs. Lemira Goodhue, Mrs. Coolidge’s mother, who is seriously" ill. Until Coolidge decides to enter- business or maps out his future plans: he will have ample opportunity to do what he remarked some time ago he would like to do after leaving office— , whittle. Many were surprised at the White- House announcement for the Presi- dent was expected to travel or ac- cept a lucrative position with some- large corporation after retiring from. office. Few expected he would hasten back to the $36 a month residence. Coolidge is known to have saved’ a considerable part of his $75,000 a year salary and’ it is estimated he is- worth from $250,000 to $300,000. He" could afford a better house and a few" servants to make life: more comfort- able, but not in the six-room half of ~ ‘a duplex. At the executive mansion during: the last six years, he has been ac- 'customed to the services of a valet,. | waiters and a corps of servants to: | anticipate every wish. At Northamp- ton he will have to content himself" | with a general housekeeper and cook. ! and send his clothes out to be press- ed. Mrs. Coolidge also will have to get along without her personal maids, her ‘secretary, her Secret Service guard for the little Northampton house is scarcely large enough for more than | the one housekeeper—they don’t call ‘them servants in that section of ! Massachusetts. | At present the Coolidges are spend- | ing their spare time surpervising their | packing. Already 150 boxes have been crated ready for shipment to Massa- i chusetts. Pagani) a Teacher: —“Willie, name three kinds of nuts.” Willie:— Peanuts, chestnuts, and forget-me-nuts.”