Bellefonte, Pa,, January 24, 1930, THAT OLD SWEETHEART OF Stella Crane had a maid, but pre- ferred answering the telephone her- self when she was at home, which was most of the time. Calls came infrequently and were welcome—an invitation to go to the theatre with the Smalls or to play bridge at Bess Cooper’s, or to dine with the Fields. Aside from two or three of her hus- band’s business acquaintances, whom he had had at the house for evening conferences, the Fields, Smalls and Coopers were about the only people in New York Stella had met. There was nothing wrong with her or Ralph; they both dressed well and behaved respectably, and Stella played a fair game of con- tract. But they were not asked out much because Ralph, a patent lawyer, did a great deal of work after hours and was anything but hospitable, If you refrain from in- viting people to your house, they are going to invite you less and less often to “theirs. It was hard on Stella, whose life in the city was not what she had ex- pected. Her husband realized this and deluded himself and her with the promise that in the near fu- ture he would be able to afford more leisure, and then they'd repay their social indebtedness and make lots of new friends, and Stella would have no cause to complain of loneliness and boredom, She answered the telephone be- cause the maid had a tendency to confuse names as similar as Gillespie and Hammond; and on this particu- lar morning, the vaguely familiar voice at the other end of the wire began the conversation with the in- triguing challenge. I'll bet you don’t know who this is.” | ~ “You sound like somebody,” said Stella. “Just give me a second to think. I do know. Isn't it Will?” “You win! remember me after all these years.” | “Td have recognized you sooner if I had thought there was any possi- . bility of your being here.” get here, but I made it.” “And how long do you expect to T stay?” | “Not more than a day or two. | It’s just a business trip.” “Well, tell me something about yourself. . Are you married?’ “Not yet.” “I thought I'd have heard if you were,” said Stella, “I guess you knew I wouldn't be.” ! “Why ?” : “I don’t have to tell you that.” “Oh, Will! You're the same old win!” “I wish I was.” “I'd like to see you.” “It’s perfectly mutual.’ . “I'd ask you to dinner, but Ralph's them for a while; in Washington and won't be home Saafice to miss me. { back for till day after tomorrw.’ I had no idea you'd That’ “I won't repeat it.” “I wish you would.” “No. I musn’t.” Will was too intent on his spum- oni to insist. “It will be dark in the theatre’ he thought, “I'll hold her hand and see how she takes it.” “It will be dark in the theatre,” thought Stella, “and maybe he'll call me ‘dear’ again.” Her lecture on economy cost the waiter fifty cents, Will giving him half a dollar instead of a whole one as he had planned. He could not help regarding her as a bit incon- sistent when she vetoed his sugges- tion that they walk to the Henry | Miller, only four blocks away, { “I'm frightfully lazy,” she said, not mentioning the fact that her shoes hurt. i “All right,” said Will, “but if you're going to let me buy a taxi, you've got to let me take you to dinner at the Ritz” | © “I couldn’t think of it!” said Stel- |la. “For one thing, I'd be sure to | see somebody I know. And haven't you business to attend to, people to look up? I musn’t take too much of your time.” “I'll postpone business gets back.” _ “I can’t decide just now.” “You want to be sure you like me.” “It isn’t that. You may know I like you. But there are things to be considered.” v The seats were in the twelfth row “These are rotten seats!” said { Will. “You can’t get good ones at the box office.” “I got these at my hotel” “Well, they're } right. ' You musn’t worry on my account. I ; told you I'd seen it before. We had the fourth row that night, right in . the center, just perfect. Herb Small ' got them through the University Club. He always gets grand seats.” The curtain rose. | “This is the British front, in the war,” explained Stella. “It’s what they call a dugout, where the officers , stay. The whole three acts all take - place in one scene, | “That officer, that lieutenant or whatever he is’ she continued, “he’s i a school teacher in England, I mean he was, before the war. He gets killed later on. It's a terribly de- | pressing play. Lillian Fields cried the night we saw it.” A customer in the eleventh turned around and gave Stella a nas- ty look after which she whispered, | “This young boy he’s a new offi- | cer, he hasn't been at the front be- fore; at least not at this front. He's been transferred or something And the hero, the captain, is in love with the boy’s sister. i ! “Not this captain, I don’t mean,” she went on. “The other captain, the leading man, takes this one’s place. He gets mad when he sees his sweetheart’s brother, He doesn’t want anybody that he knows around pr ly till Ralph course he’s afraid people will find , it out, especially his girl.” ! The man in front of them turned round again and said “Ssh!” in none too friendly a manner, Stella thought he must be ssh-ing someone else. | “The only way he can ‘carry on’ as they call it, is by drinking, so he "drinks hard all the time.” “That man wants us to quit talk- ing © said Will, and congratulated himself on the diplomatic plural. “It’s somebody back of us he's complaining of,” said Stella. “Now when the other captain comes in vou notice him, notice how big he looks. And they say he isn’t really big at all; T mean, off the stage. Some friends of ours the Coopers, they met him at a party and they {say he’s not nearly as big as he looks. He wears some kind of shoes or something that make him look big: T mean. on the stage. You no- tice when he comes in” The theatre was dark but Will seemed to have forgotten the hand- holding test. ‘““The hero the captain, the man that’s in love with the young boy’s sister. he went to the same school the voung bov went to and he was the idol of the school. The hov. the eirPs brother worships him. Of course he doesn’t know he’s a cow- ard and drinks to hide fit. “That other officer there. that voune one he’s a coward. too. and he pretends he's sick so they'll send . Him awav from the front. But the | hero threatens to kill him unless he and mine, men who make ev- quits pretending he's sick. He points a revolver right at him and sa Ydoest’t “buck. up.’ : “I was freightend to - really’ would. shoot him, the night, I saw. it.: I’ don't’ like that part of it at all, and it hasn't anything to do with the rest of the play. but the play would have been too short without it, It's awfully short as it is. It doesn't begin till nearly nine; I mean, at night, and it’s over about half past ten; that’s half past four for a matinee.” : Will wished he had brought a box of molasses : Here's the real captain now, the hero. See how big he looks? And he really isn't big at all off the stage. He's mad at the girl's moth- er being there, After a while the brother writes a letter to his sister and the captain is afraid he'll tell her about his drinkng and so forth. So he wants to the letter and the boy doesn’t want him to, but he says he has a right to censor all mail. Finally the school teacher reads the letter out loud and it’s so complimentary to the captain that bes avhamed of having made him read it, “Isn't the sergeant funny? I guess he’s a sergeant. It makes you laugh just to look at him. They're all English the whole com- pany. I think there are other com- panies playing it put West or some- where, and they're all English, too. And it’s going to be a picture, a talking picture. Do you like talking pictures ?” “No,” said Will. *Or people.” “After a while the colonel comes in and tells the captain . that they want to find out who the Germans are in the trench facing them; that is, the number of ‘the German regi- ment or something, I don’t see what difference it makes as long as they're Germans but Ralph says they always want to know so they can figure out the distribution of the German troops, how they're dis- tributed. So the captain has to send some men over to the German trenches, across No Man's Land, and ‘they're supposed to capture a Ger- man prisoner and bring him back and then they'll know what regiment is facing them, “The captain hates to send any: body because it’s almost sure death, but he’s got to obey orders. He sends the young boy, the brother, the girl’s brother, and that school teacher and the young boy gets a prisoner and the school teacher gets killed. “The funny thing about it is that you kind of wish it was the boy that got killed in place of the school teacher. But the boy gets killed la- ter, “Of course they know what it means to do it and the boy is terri- bly nervous, but still he’s glad of a chance “to do something important, He and the school teacher recite ‘Alice in Wonderland’ before they go; not all of it; just quotations from it so as not to think of what's befre them. That's the school teach. er's way of keeping his mind off danger. Inste ad,of drinking, like the captain. © © bo “You wait till you see how the captain: drinks. - It -must be colored water or téa- or something. If it were real whisky ~he’d fall off the stage. It can’t even be tea or he'd get sick. Do you drink much Will?” ' “I've been on the wagon,” said Will, “but I think I'm going to fall off tonight; maybe this afternoon.” “Why ?” “I don’t know. I just feel like ft.” “I wish you wouldn't, You used to get so silly when you drank.” “I still do.” “But you were kind of funny and amusing, too, And then you usually got very affectionate.” 1 “I'm different now. first; not funny at all brutal and want to fight people, I get silly at whoever is with me, my best friends, in even girls.” “You don't mean really fight them? = “Yes, I do, The reason why I got on a girl, a girl I cared quite a lot for; we went on a party and I had ! about four drinks, and for no reason and knocked her down. It’s whoever .he’ll shoot him. dead-if-he, death that he . ried to his hotel where he immedi- ately called Endicott 9546. “Betty? =*Siy, I-just had another wire from Charlie Prince, He was out a bearing... at: can’t get here till haven't made another date have you? That a girl!”"—Hearst's Inter- national Cosmopolitan. ’ REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Trustees of I. O. O. F. 1032, to State College I. O. O. F. Hall Asso, tract in State College; $2,000. Anna Funk, et bar, to Jacob Shearer, et ux, tractin Centre Hall; $4,000. Sarah Vonada et bar, Corman, et al, tract Twp.; $1. John Francies, et ux, to Com- monwealth of Pennsylvania, tract in Benner Twp.; $1,700. Frank L. Baird, et ux, to Marga- ret B. Haupt, tract in Milesburg; $1, W. C. Krader, Adm., to F. P. Royer, tract in Haines Twp.; $600. to D. PF in Haines Albert Dean, et ux, to John Dean,’ tract in Patton Twp.; $1. John . Dean, et ux, to Leah J. Dean, tract in Patton Twp.; $1. Harry A. Corman, et ux, to James A. Fox, tract in Spring Twp.; $175, Robert T. Hafer, et ux, bert Ross Glenn, et ux, State College; $11,200. A. C. Shank, et ux, to D. G. La France, tract in State College; $1,- 000, Pine Grove Cemetery Asso, to J. W. Peters, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $25. : Jacob Cramer to Elmira Guiser, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $1. Evan Jones, et ux, to James E, Pomeroy, et ux, tract in Philips- burg; $1. Ella M., Bottorf to W. R. Shope, tract in College Twp.; $1. Earl H. Peck, et al, to Harry C. Showers, et ux, tract in Walker to Her- tract in ‘Twp; SL Susanna Ishler to Della A. Ishler, tract in Harris Twp.; $1, Susanna Ishler to W. E. Homan, tract in Harris Twp,; $2700. George M. Glenn to Thomas M. Huey, tract in Patton Twp,; $125. Viola ‘Gunsallus, et bar, to John W. Houck, tract in Halfmoon Twp.; $310. Bellefonte Trust company, Exec, to Bond M. Hartsock, tract in Patton Twp.; $5150. E. R. Hancock, Adm. to Charles E. Houtz, tract in Unionville; $920, Harry A. Folmer; et ux, to W. B. Rankin, tract in Bellefonte; $1. W. B. Rankin to Harry A, Fol- mer, et ux, tract in Bellefonte; $1. Fannie E. Borger, et bar, te Earl R. Bordner, et ux, tract in Fergu- son Twp.; $6.500. D. C. Kustenbauter, Edgar G. Kustenbauter, Spring Twp.; $1. et to in ux, tract ...Edggr G. Kustenbauter, et ux, to | I row at all I socked her in the mouth { { D, C. Kustenbauter, tract in Spring Twp.; $1. H. E. Dunlap, sheriff, to First Na- ‘tional bank, ‘tract in State College; $5,260, William J. Mildon, et ux, to Clar- ence Gustafson, et ux, tract in Phil- ipsburg; $1. John C. Fulton, et ux to William F. Stonebraker, et al tract in Tay- lor Twp.; $300, E. R. Hancock Exec. et al to Harry Janet, tract in Union Twp; $1,505. James J. Morgan to Sophia Cona- way, tract in Snow Shoe Twp.; $1. Mary Breon to J, Cloyd Brooks, Then I get tract in Centre Hall; $1,700. H. A.Taylor to T. M. Huey, tract Patton Twp.; $1. T. A. Meyer, et ux to A. E, Mingle, et al tract in Penn Twp.; Harry C. Rothrock, et ux, to Elea- the wagon is becaue I was with nor Gettig, tractin Port Matilda; $1. S. H. Hoy et ux, to Common- wealth of Pennsylvania, tract in Benner Twp,; $16,000. .I happen to be with when I get that | BERT LYTELL IN “BROTHERS” way.” “Then you ought never ything. “That’s good advice, times I just have to. \ And it doesn’t seem right not to and for four months enjoy myself, my first time in New York,” “You certainly don’t call it enjoy- ing yourself, to hit women!” “I do, though. I get quite a cout of it. happened to be there.” i "For to drink : i { 1 i AT NIXON IN PITTSBURGH. Bert Lytell, star of stage and | but some- screen, who for a full year filled the 48th Street theatre, New York, the Erlanger theatre, Chicago, with enthusiastic audiences, by his brilliant perform- ance in “Brothers,” will open for 'an entire week’s engagement at the the sake of those readers who took as his theme the kick | Nixon theatre in Pittsburgh next I don’t mean I pick on Monday night, January 27, in that “because he’s really a coward and of women especially, but this girl just thrilling romantic melodrama. Herbert Ashton Jr., the author, effects of have not seen “Journey's End” and heredity and environment upon twin who hope to, I. will not divulge any boys, one brought up in luxury, the more of its content, but will merely other reared along the water-front, state that there were at least two 'and with such background he de- men they could borrow the captain's gun. “Will” said Stella as they went out, “I don’t believe we'd better have dinner together, I'm tired and you look tired yourself.” “I'm not tired,” said Will. “Even if T was, a few shots of rye will fix me up.” “But I'm afraid. I'm afraid Ralph might come home.” “You said he wouldn't be home till day after tomorrow.” in the audience who wished veloped an absorbing play that teems with excitement, romance, pathos and humor, and affords Mr, Lytell a wonderful opportunity in the dual role that keeps his audi- ence bewildered by the amazingly quick changes from one character to the other. Time and time again ' this remarkable transition is made, “He changes his mind sometimes, He never stays away longer than he has to.” “That's what he tells you.” “What do you mean?” “Nothing at all. But ’'m not go- ing to urge you against your better judgment. Do exactly as you like.” “Well, T really think you'd better send me home. It’s been grand—" “Tl take you home.” “No, that isn’t necessary at all” she said. “And the maid might see vou and wonder.” “All right, Stell’. the maid wonder.” “rl get in this taxi. Good-by. will Tt was wonderful of you to give me such a treat” “I'm the one that got the treat.” “You're the same old Will!” The taxi drove off and Will hur- We mustn't let almost before the very eyes of the audience, and it is a change not only of clothes but of walk and talk; a complete change of personality. Lytell, who has become famous for his characterizations of gentle- manly crooks in the movies, will in “Brothers” do a slightly different part, and one that makes a great demand upon his versatility as an actor, He will be supported by a large Broadway cast including Grace Menken, Clara Palmer, Ben Mac- Quarrier, William Ingersoll, Frank Sylvester, James Seely, Rosemary King, Matt Briggs, Ashley Cooper, Rita Carlyle, Lloyd Carleton, Gene Byram, Russell Rockwell, Irene Shirley, Alyce Rera, Eugene Wil- liams, and Walter Shuttleworth. The production is in a prologue and three acts, and promises to he as great a sensation here as it was at the 48th Street Theatre, New York, and at the Erlanger Theatre, Chicago. tomorrow. You FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. . Such . is Life. Seid He put his arm around her And whispered in her ear:. She listened and then nodded, As he drew her near. Then he gently kissed her And talked in quiet tone— The girlie was his sister; He was asking for a loan, —When and how a man takes off his hat is a subject far from trivial, for the manner in which a man raises his hat indicates at once his place in the “polite” world, There can be no careless imitation of the act of courtesy in the way a gentleman raises his hat. re The up-and-coming American of today realizes that a pleasi per- sonality and good manners smooth the way to many a successful i business deal and a social triumph, So how a man takes off his h and what he does with it on va- Tons Secasions i 4 Sle of those ittle 'S 0 make u ng id Be There are occasions in which a man takes off his hat, and there are other occasions when he only “lifts” his hat. Generally speaking, he takes off or “raises his hat friends and acquaintances and “lifts” his hat to strangers. (The word “tips” is a word not in a ruse concerning hats. It should be avoided, and “takes off” “raises” or “lifts” as the case may be, should be used instead.) The word “touch” is occasionally used, as in the case of one man who “touches” his hat to a man of his own age But for a man to “touch” his hat when he should ' take it off is hat. unmannerly, ‘ He should try to ac- quire a poilte and graceful manner of taking off his hat—mot a cere- monious flourishing manner, or a “dude” manner of “examining the lining,” as it is called and not a “stingy” manner of seeming to point to his hat to show that he has one! A man takes off his hat: 1. When he meets a woman he knows. 2. When he is with a woman or man who bows toa passing woman, 3. When he is with a woman who bows to a passing man or woman. 4. When he takes his leave from a woman he knows, 5. When the flag goes by and when the national anthem is played. 6. When he bows to a clergy- man. 7. Usually when he passes a Roman Catholic church, if he is a Roman Catholic, . 8. When he bows to very old men or distinguished men. 9. When a funeral passes (all Europeans do this and many well- bred Americans.) 10. When he enters the elevator of an apartment house or hotel or club, when there are women in the elevator, 11, Whn he meets a foreigner who raises his hat to him when he bows. 12. When he enters "his office. 13. When he enters a church whether or not there is a service. - 14. When he bows to another man ‘on the street—if he is an old- fashioned gentlemen’ with a partic- ularly courtly manner, A man lifts his hat (that is, he lifts it slightly off his head and re- places it, without bow or smile.) 1. When he passes a woman in a narrow space or on a stairway, or stops to let her pass. 2. When he is accidentally push- ed against a woman, for example in the crush of a street car, He lifts his hat again in acknowledgement. 4. When another man offers a seat in a car to a lady whom he is accompanying. 5. When he asks a lady if he may pass her, as in getting off a crowded car, 6, When he asks a question ora direction or any information of a stranger. 1 7. When he picks up somethi for a woman that she has droppe 8. When he gives information to a woman who, for example asks him a direction, 9. When he does some slight service for a woman, or when he is with a woman who has done him a service. ; —One should consider the pongee suit when planning the spring ward- robe. The little skirt and bolero coat are easily fashioned from in- expensive materials and are jaunty and stylish, — Dead white comes in again for tennis wear and other Southern re- sort clothes, It is more important for evening than any single color. —Spring slips will be longer and often with irregular hemline. The fitted princess slips with wrap- around skirt portion are chic. — Your visiting cards should car- ry your formal name, with no ab- breviations: Mrs, Henry Oliver Burgess If you do not wish to use the middle name omit it altogether even the initial, Initials are not in good taste on visiting-cards. On your letter paper, use either your monogram —V.K.B.—or your address, The printed or engraved name in full and address: Mrs. Henry Oliver Burgess 254 Park Lane, Town, Arizona, is for onlv business letters and professional letters, The mono- grammed or addressed paper is for social use. The form you use on your Christ- mas card depends on the form of the greetings. If it is formal—in the | third person—you use your formal { name. as on vour visiting cards. If | it is informal vou use your informal | name. That is. your name and your ' husband's, For Christmas cards should be sent out jointly by hus. band and wife, whether they are formal or informal. rn es lh oe ir —We do your job work right.