aa Bellefonte, Pa,, September 5, 1930. WILD GEESE. Hark, that is going south, That cry from a cloud at the autumn sunset’s edge, As keen as the word prophet mouth— It is promise and pledge! more than wild geese in a lonely They will return, they will break on the old earth’s grieving With clear, sweet clamor, and on; And they will be more than wedge of wild birds cleaving Home through an April dawn. prevailing on Never that cry, that challenge flinging free, But I start to my feet with a laughing at death— On a sudden as sure of immortality As of my life and breath! hall, LEYLA. The little village of Isman, a cluster of green-painted, thatched, little houses on a hill tinted in red bronze by the early autumn, was un- usually alive that Sunday morning, Turkish fishermen in festive dress, followed by their women and chil- dren garbed in gaily-colored planta. loons, crowded the square in front of the mosque. Late-comers inquired of their neighbors. ; “What could have happened?” For many years now, Gypsy caravans had come to Isman, wagon after wagon, the second week of Bairam, the yearly four-week long feast of the Moslems, to buy cured fish for the winter; yet that fall not one wagon of Gypsies had ap- peared even during the third week of the Bairam month. The Turkish fishermen who had never thought much of Gypsies be- gan to miss them; not because of the money the heathens paid for the fish, but because they had be- come accustomed to seeing these strangers appear as regularly as poppies and daisies on the fields, at a definite time of the year. Veiled women and white-turbaned men join- ed their children in the anxious query: “Why havent they come? Why don’t they come? Have they gone elsewhere? There hadn't been any heavy rains to swell the brooks on the road and halt their progress, had there?” The last day of the third week of Bairam was half gone, and no Gyp- sies had come. The Turks talked about them every day now remem- bering how a horse had once been stolen, how brass kettles had dis- appeared, how fuel was taken away mysteriously. Soon, however, peo- ple began to remember also how a Gypsy has cured Mechmet’'s wife, and how another one had found the cause of the dryness of the widow Aula’s cow. “Heathens, true enough; but good heathens, and gay.” Suddenly a little Turkish boy yelled: “Burda. Burda. They are coming. They are coming. There, There.” The women lowered the veils over their faces. The men rose on their toes. From around the bend of a rock appeared covered wagons. In the clear, dry air one could hear the swish of the whip and the men talk- ing to the horses. The first wagon, the leader, stop- ped within sight of the assembled villagers. Tall, broad-shouldered, long-bearded Gypsies jumped down from their seats and talked softly among themselves. so many people waiting for them in the shadow of the mosque? Was it a good or a bad omen? Well, they were there. They had to face it out, come what may. “Manu, you who speak their language, go and find out,” an elderly Gypsy suggested, “Go, Manu.” Manu, the oldest of the group, left his whip behind and went empty | handed toward the Turks, who had sat down to fan the embers under the long-handled, brass coffee-pots that glistened at a distance. The mosque square was ‘the market. place and the open-air coffee-house , of the village. From there the Turks could watch the colored, patched sails that glided on the blue waters of the Danube below. Arrived within speaking distance, Manu, the Gypsy. crossed his arms over his chest and bowed deeply, Moslem fashion. “Hosh, geldi. Welcome,” greeted the oldest of the Turks, rising to his feet. “Hosh bourdum. Happy to find you well,” Manu answered, coming nearer. The formal greetings over, the Turks asked excitedly all at once, tugging at the Gypsy's long coat: “Why haven't you come? Where have you beey? - You are late. We have been waiting for you. It is the last day of the third Bairam week.” Before answering questions, Manu whistled to his friends to come. The Turks were anxious to see them. They could buy their fish cheaper if they took advantage of the enthu- siasm of the villagers. Gypsy men and women jumped out of their wagons before the eager, lean, little horses had come to a standstill. In one word Manu made the situation clear to his peo- ple. The Gypsies hugged the vil- lagers and called them brothers. The women pulled down the veils from the faces of the" ‘“Kadinas’ and said ecstatically: “Ah, sister. You didn’t look so well last year, You are getting younger every year. How do you do it? Tell me. Tell me.” Even the Gypsy children under stood they were to cajole the little Turks to help their parents. Packs of cards came ouf from under the folds of the skirts of Gypsy girls ready to tell fortunes. Fiddles were tuned. One-eyed Maye was already Why were there : on his reed flute. The Gypsies worked fast. noon hour, when the Turks had gone to prayers, the Gypsy had paid the previous year. Manu, the hero of the occasion, spoke wise- ly to his daughter Leyla, who was he had bought. “It is well to let people wait for you. Don't wear flowers in your hair every day. When people get accustomed to see them, they be- come blind.” : : That Gypsy caravan did not be- long to one band or tribe. Each wagon had its own master. They traveled in families. The villages dotting the hills and stony valleys of the Dobrougea, between the Dan- ube and the Black Sea, were too far apart and too small to give scope to large tribes. But it so hap- pened that they met in Sulina that fall, at a gay tzigan wedding, and having been delayed by the feast, they came together to Isman to buy their winter provisions. They were in a gay mood and had stopped on the way to eat and drink together while the children, and the young chals and chies, girls and boys, danced on the dry grass beside the road. ' The fish bought in one-half a day, a transaction which would have taken from four to five days under ordinary circumstances, the Gypsies didn’t intend to leave immediately. They were happy and unhappy at the same time, They walked about their wagons, looking at their horses, at the canvas of their tents, chat. ting, singing. Now they were a little cross at having been robbed of the pleasures of bargaining with the Turks. It was great sport out- witting such keen traders as the Turks were. Manu was sitting on the seat of his wagon beside his daughter Leyla. She was a tall, lean, copper-color. ed girl, with large black eyes set wide apart. Leaning against her father’s wide chest, she was playing with her long, raven-black, thick braids. The old man, whose long beard was the same shade-as his lamb fur cap, was puffing mouth- fuls from his long-stemmed, silver- cupped pipe. After a while he said to her: “Why don't you play as all the others do, Leyla? Why do you sit here so idly?” Without moving she looked her father full in the face and asked reproachfully. “Are you tired of me?” He shook his head and pointed his thick, black, bejeweled forefinger. “Look there, at the girls your age. Singing, playing talking, dancing. Gregory and the boys are swimming jand you, the best swimmer of them all! When we are alone, you com- plain. When we meet people, you stay away from them. Go now, Gregory's father, Tllie, want to talk to me. I will ask two thousand g0 now.” \ With a rapid gesture of her band she wound the braids around he head, saying: “Ask what you want. You want to get rid of me. You are tired of me.” She jumped down and walked away with sinuous hip movements and balancing shoulders. Suddenly, like a flash, she began to run, and run- ning, she shed her clothes one by one as she raced down the slope from the camp to the water. She was stark naked when she splashed (into the river. The older Gypsies { turned their heads. “There is a girl for you. One ina thousand; Manus’ daughter. Ah, if I were young once more!” Gregory and the others were far raway. Their black heads bobbed up anc down in the steel gray water, Leyla began to gain on them, com- ing up on top of the waves and calling: “Swim on faster. ing.” Gypsy men and women ran to the shore, applauding Manu’s daughter. “Race him. Race Gregory. Race and beat him.” The others stopped swimming. Gregory waited for her to come nearer. Leyla is com- “Let’s race to the other shore, Gregory,” she said. “Come.” ! He looked at her, laughed, and {began to swim back. . : “Why won't you race me, Greg- ory?” Leyla asked angrily. He splashed a handful of water into her face, ducked, and swam away with large strokes. Soon his sinewy, bronzed body climbed out on the sunny shore, The others were (still swimm.ng about, splashing, i laughing, playing, yet no one would | take up Leyla’s challenge to race her. { “Oh, old women, who will race me [to the other shore?” { No one took her up. It was cold, { They had enough. | Tlie, Gregory's father, stepped up {to Manu’s wagon. He was taller ‘and broader than Manu. A horse i dealer from the deserts. His voice i was louder than that of the other . man, louder and harsher. { “Can I have speech with you, "Rom?" | “I have told you already, it is useless.” | “Look at my son.” The father | pointed proudly to the half-naked | young body that was beginning to | dress. “Is there a finer man to fath- ‘er the children of your daughter? i Look at his long arms and neck and i his muscled legs. Look at them, Rom. Look at them!” “Few young men are worthier than your son,” Manu answered, “But I don't want to marry her yet. TI am alone. Speak to me next year.” “Is Gregory a cripple,” Ilie bél- lowed, “that he should wait a year or ‘do you think there are no other girls in Gypsydom ? Five hundred gold pieces and I pay half the cost of the wedding feast. What do you say?” Leyla’s father did not trouble to answer. Men and women surround- ed them. “Get busy, Roms. There: will be helping him store away the things | full of cured fish, for which they | had paid less than half of what they thought you merely remembered i i blowing a sad, sad Turkish melody a wedding. Let these poor water- drinking, fish-catching Turks see a At the Gypsy wedding.” “I have spoken to you,” Ilie cried carts were out in harsh tones. “To me?” Manu inquired. “I what Yorghi paid for a blind wife for his poor deaf-mute son, Five hundred gold pieces for Leyla, ha!” The Gypsies, Manu’s friends, laugh.- ed aloud. “You will have to pay money if you want Leyla for a daughter-in- law, Ilie.” “Shall I begin by offering you a kingdom for that thin, naked wench splashing in the water.” “Should you begin with one king- dom,” Manu replied, “perhaps we could come to some conclusion in a week or two from now. Do you think I am a poor Turk selling cured fish, eh?” Gregory sat down on the shore and waited for Leyla, while his fath- er was bargaining for her. Tall, handsome, a pure Gypsy, brown- skinned, insolent, a little over twen- ty, he gave himself the airs of a man who knew life. Ilie’s friends said to Manu: “There is no better husband for Leyla than Gregory. Look at him. No cold is to cold for him. No heat too warm. Naked in the dead of winter, in furs in the summer. She is headstrong. She needs taming. Gregory knows how to handle a wo- man. She doesn’t obey even you. We have seen that. Come, sell her to Tlie for Gregory.” “Come out of the water,” Gregory called to Leyla after a while, rising to his feet and turning his back to allow her to cover herself. A splash and a loud laugh were the answer. She was farther away from him now than she had been when he had called her. He shrugged his shoulders and went to join a group of youngsters ,but everybody knew that Leyla had earned for her- self the first beating after the wed- ding. Gregory would never forget that she had not obeyed his first order. There were two factions, Manu’s and Ilie’s. They quarreled, bar- gained, and insulted each other, stretching their long whips and lurching wildly right and left. Leyla joined her father, who whis- pered in her ear. “He has already offered a thous- and gold pieces.” “A thousand gold pieces,” Leyla echoed, and ran back to her tent to gloat over the enormous price. Gregory looked on from a dis- tance, talking to his friends and playing with the flexible handle of his whip, turning it this way and that. So she was worth a thousand gold pieces to Ilie! She remember- ed how Gregory had turned around and looked at her when she had swum away from him. She remem. bered the manner in which he had ‘danced with her at that wedding in Sulina. He danced beautifully and was strong. Only he took too much for granted. He was so young, yet. he walked around as if he knew everything. She hoped her father would not sell her for that price. He had asked two thousand. wouldn't give two thousand. She knew that, Ilie was a proud trader. He wouldn't want it known that Manu had set a price from which he hadn’t been able to budge him. No. Ilie wouldn’t give two thousand— But what if he did? She would be- come Gregory's wife—then—and go away from him and his people. Her father would be alone. Yes—but the whole world would know Ilie had naid two thousand gold pieces for her. Gypsy girls, all their jewelry on their neck, hair, and arms, dressed ready for the wedding, came into Leyla’s tent. “Ah, Leyla. soon. pieces!” “I know the Ilies,” an older wo. man chirped in. “I know them. They are wonderful people, the Ilies. They know how to manage a wo- man before they have hair on the face. I married one of them— whew!” You are going away Tlie offers a thousand gold Leyla pointed to a little dagger which she carried in the knot of her hair. “No one has ever touched me, and no one ever shall” “Ha, ha, ha,” the older woman laughed. “I thought so, too, when I was young—but when you are married to a real man, whew!” The girls went out one by one to spread the news of what Leyla had said. Ilie made believe he intended to leave there and ‘then, to see what effect it would have on Manu. Gregory, the whip sticking out from the creased uppers of his boots, his black mustache waxed, his hair combed slickly back; walked toward Leyla, who had come out to sit on the seat of her father’s wagen. “My father has offered a thous- and gold pieces for you,” he “It is his whim to have you as a daughter-in-law. Why don’t you tell your father to say the good word? Or is there somebody else, eh?” Leyla made believe she hadn't heard him. “I have been told,” he continued, “that you have been playing with a dagger and saying things.” “I am playing with my dagger whenever I want to play with seme- thing,” Leyla answered. And suddenly she cried out pas- sionately: “It is two weeks now that I have seen you ever day, Gregory. both you and your father. You are always walking around with long whips and set faces. Both of you are always bending or breaking ° something. Your father wants to buy you something to break, some- thing you would take pride in breaking. You want to break Manu’s daughter. But you never will-—nev- er, never.” “Never! Wait and see—" And, breaking the handle of his -| whip as he left, Gregory ran toward : the group around ‘his father and Manu. “Wleven hundred,” he shouted. The .. Gypsies : rose to their feet They ' said. and began to shout. “Eleven hun- dred. Eleven hundred.” It would be a wedding such as they hadn't seen im years. Ilie’s son was taking the deal out of his father’s hands. “Two thousand,’ Manu answered. “Thirteen hundred,” Gregory cried out elbowing his way to the front. The women began to dance around and around, beating copper dishes with their fists. Fiddlers began to tune their instruments, “Two thousand,” Manu said, turn- ing pale at the thought of losing his daughter to such a man. Gregory opened his mouth again, but his father put his hand over it. “Leave me bg, and count your money, father,” he ordered. The old Gypsy brought out ten little bags of a hundred gold pieces from his leather belt and threw them on the ground. Gregory threw three more bags from his copper-studded belt. “Fourteen hundred.” “Fifteen hundred.” “Sixteen,” yelled Gregory without looking at her. The Gypsies wondered. They had seen Leyla and Gregory talk. Some- thing had happened between the two. “Two thousand,” Manu repeated, taking his daughter’s hand in his. “Seventeen,” Gregory called. “Is that enough?” “Two thousand,” Manu repeated without raising his eyes. Gregory, who had emptied his father’s pockets and his own, beck- ! oned to a friend to come nearer and ‘raised three fingers, asking for a loan of three little bags of gold. He threw those, too, on the pile. “Here are your two thousand. When Ilie’s son wants something, he gets it,” and the young Gypsy look- ed at Leyla triumphantly. The trembling hand of Manu cov- ered the small pile of gold bags. The deal was closed. The Gypsies were wild. Such a deal! Tall fur caps went up in the air. Pistols were shot. Fiddlers began to play. How- ever, before Manu had gathered the pile toward him, Leyla said some- thing softly in his ear. “But why didn’t you tell me?” Manu asked sharply. “I didn’t believe Gregory would give two thousand gold pieces.” “And what now?” the old man asked, “There has been no wedding yet,” Leyla whispered. “Only a deal. Buy me back.” The Gypsies looked on, Manu and his daughter. happened ? Gregory was beyond himself with anger. “She is mine now, isn’t she?” he asked his father. “Tell me, isn’t she ?” It was an old custom among Gyp- sies. Before the wedding was cele- brated, the bride could be bought back. Until she was bought back, however, even if it took years of toil and saving, a girl was not al- lowed to marry, though the groom had married meanwhile. ; Leyla took a hand in the proceed- ings. “Quiet, Calos, black brothers,” she called. “I have told my father I don’t wish it to be, and he is ready to buy me back.” The fiddlers stopped tuning their ‘violins. The women began to cry. Gregory's friends took him away with them, while Ilie was asked to go to ‘his wagon to give father and , daughter time to talk the matter over. Manu took his trembling daughter ‘to his breast. “What has he done to you? What has he said to you? Why didn’t you tell me?” “I didn’t believe he would pay two thousand gold pieces to break some- thing-—to break Leyla. He wants to marry me so he can tame me, beat me. I did not expect him to pay so much for that.” * “I thought you loved him.” Leyla closed her eyes. ‘I thought So, too. I also thought that he loved me, me, me. But now I know, that only his pride wants me. Two thous. and gold pieces for that—and not because he loves me.” “Oh, Leyla! They will take every- thing we have.” “Give them everything,” Leyla cried. “Leave us only the two horses and the wagon. You will be hap- pier with me alone than with their two thousand gold pieces. Oh, Tatuca, father mine. The fairs ‘hat have given us more than wealth have hung. chains on our necks. The six- ty horses we have, and the goats and the dogs and the cows, and the two old men to help care for them, and the fodder we carry along are heavy chains, chains. We haven't been to half so many places this year as we have been before, We have had notime to laugh, to play, to sing. We have become sad as Gor- gios. Give everything. Hang it all upn their necks, and let the two of us drive at top speed from one pace to another, as we used to. We shall cross rivers. We shall cross the sea. Give them everything.” “I thought you loved him,” Manu repeated meditatively. “I thought you liked the bracelets and rings I bought you. I thought you loved the silks and the dresses and shawls I gave him. How is one ever to know a woman—even his own daughter? Be it so, then.” Manu'’s older brother approached them, and after filling his pipe and lighting it, he looked at Leyla’s fath- er and said, “You have brought up your daugh- ter with as much indulgence as if you were a woman Manu.” “No Stephen. I have brought her up to have as much pride as if she were a man. Call Ilie. Call them ain Leyla sat herself between her fath- er and her uncle. How proud she was of her father! She wouldn't change him for a thousand Greg- ory’s. The twenty little gold bags were still on the ground. The other Gypsies formed a circle all around them. Gregory was sitting near his father. His lips trembled. He couldn't take his eyes off Leyla. When all were silent again, Manu said: | “I have sixteen hundred gold i pieces of my own, and I offer them to you, Ilie, to »buy my’ daughter watching What had , “take everything.” aa aa" back, Such is my wish—and hers.” “If she is worth two thousand to me,” Gregory's father answered, “she is worth more than that to you.’ You have driven a hard bargain, Manu. Try to outdo me now, if you can.” “It is all I have,” Manu answered humbly. “If I had more, I would give more.” “Then let her wait,” Ilie answer- ed, rising to his feet. “Come, Greg- ory. Come, harness the horses.’ Let's go. Come.” “That isn’t all we have,” Leyla called out, “Don’t go yet. Here is more.” And tearing off her bracelets and rings, and pulling the earrings from her ears, she threw them on the pile. Gregory had taken the deal out of his father’s hands a while ago. She was doing the same now. Her trinkets were worth more than the sixteen hundred gold pieces. As Ilie didn’t show himself satis. fied, Leyla laughed heartily! “We have sixty horses and goats, Take them. and cows and dogs. There are two trunks of clothes that are mine. Do you want them? Take them also. Take everything, and leave us only two horses and the wagon. And all the Gypsies from the Carpathians to the Black Sea, from the Danube to the Pruth Riv- er, shall know how much it is worth not to be the mother of Ilie’s son's children, Had I and my father twice was much, I would tell you, No one had éxpected such a sudden turn of affairs. Brides had been bought back before that. The rep. ‘utation of the groom had never been involved. It wasa bargain between traders. It was like buying a horse one regretted having sold. Gregory’s knees sagged under him. Cold chills traveled up and down his spine. Leyla had slipped away fron. within his grasp. The light of her eyes blazed like torches, He had never seen her so happy, so terri- bly happy. He had never thought a woman could be so beautiful. Why had he spoken to her so stupidly? - What had he done—what? He loved her. Life without her was a dreary waste. It had all happened because of the talk he had heard for years and years about how one should treat women— His father looked at him, tempted by what offered to. come to his purse so easily. He would buy an- other wife for his son. He would split the profits with Gregory. Eight hundred gold pieces and thirty horses apiece—bracelets, rings—They were partners in this deal. “What say you, my son?” But Gregory did not hear. He was only thinking of the woman he had lost. He looked at Leyla, She looked at him. His pride was gone. His head hung on his chest. His eyes were like those of a sick man. He had wanted to break her, and she had broken him—He still heard her ringing voice—“All shall know how much it is worth not to be so—" Leyla’s uncle, Stephen, rose to his feet and said: “Let there be quiet and peace. Leave them alone, brothers. Come away, tzigans. Let's leave them alone.” Even Manu rose and went to his own wagon. The two youngsters remained alone. Leyla looked at the young Gypsy. Was it only his hurt pride, or did he really love her? He was only a boy now. His stupid pride had bloat- ed him until he had appeared much older, She felt so much older than he was. He seemed like an orphan who had lost his mother ona lonely road; so hopeless, so forlorn! She drew nearer to him. “There will be other. girls, Greg- ory,” she consoled. “More beautiful and kinder than I am. With the wealth you now have, you will soon be married. Do not grieve so.” He did not answer. “Another moon and you will for- get, Gregory. Believe me, you will.” He smiled forlornly. “You don’t love me. You only wanted to break me, Gregory. Iam not worth two thousand gold pieces. Iam nott Iam not worth two thousand gold pieces as a toy Greg- ory, do you hear me?” He sighed, and tears sprang into his eyes. “I didn’t know what it feels like to be broken —I didn’t.” He broke her heart. Gregory in tears! Tall, proud Gregory in tears! She had more than evened her score with the boy. He had nothing. They were both free. He was handsome and young. She loved him. He had aurt her pride, and she had paid him in the same coin. He would never again attempt to show his superiori- ty. Now they knew each other well, They both knew how ready each one was to stake everything against humiliation. There was not another man like him within a thousand miles. On fast horses they could be acrossithe Danube, far from everybody, in a couple of hours. They could be across the Carpathians before winter had start- ed, far from the voices of his people advising him how to treat a woman. He would be hers and hers alone. They would live together like two equals and not like master and slave. “Gregory, these two white horses are the fastest of father’s herd. There are no faster horses in your father’s herd. No one would he able to overtake us, once we geta little start from here. Let the Gypsies celebrate a loud wedding without bride and groom. Will you come with me now, all alone?” The same voice that had shattered him galvanized him back to life. “Leyla!” Two powerful arms lifted her on to the back of a horse. He was on the other one in an instant, The Gypsies looked on, shouting not- withstanding what had happened. Leyla and Gregory were soon out of sight. : Manu understood. No harm has come to Leyla.” And he shook hands all around. ‘Peace peace. My daughter has closed the deal.” Fiddles. tuned their instruments. The women sang, “There is not “Peace, peace. —— another woman like Leyla.” The men sang, “There is not an- other man like Gregory.” In the center of the circle, the two fathers were still bargaining. “You take the money, and her. + bracelets, and everything you have offered me to buy her back,” Ilie said. “It's yours.” i “No! No!” Manu protested, even as he took the things and stuffed them hastily into his pockets. There was no saying when Ilie would change his mind. ! “We shall be grandfathers of lions,” Ilie improvised a song. “Come, cob- zar. Play a tune to my words.” “No, cobzar. Play a tune to my words. Here is a gold piece for you. “Grandfathers of eagles flying from one crag to another,” Manu sang as tears streamed down his bronzed, weather-beaten face. “She had liv- ed in my nest until her wings had grown strong enough to raise her to taller peaks. And now—I shall be alone—forever alone.” Suddenly Manu raised his head, “Hey, ho, Roms, come all, let's show these poor Turks how Gypsies celebrate a gay wedding! Watch them come out of the mosque—Here they come. Bowed heads, heavy feet. Hey, ho, Roms! Play, sing, shout, dance. Let's show them how we can celebrate the wedding of Leyla and Gregory. —Hearst’s In- ternational Cosmopolitan. a Belted A epi eiiit sitt nts | i : A GRAND ARMY OF BOYS. The Civil war ended in 1865. An- other national encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic is now in progress at Cincinnati, with forty men who actually saw service in the war between ‘(he States at- tending from Philadelphia. That is an exceptional showing after sixty- five years, considering that virtually all the surviving veterans today are in their eighties and nineties. Yet even some quick mental arithmetic such as subtracting sixty-five from eighty fails to emphasize sufficiently one of the noteworthy features of that struggle. : “The war was fought to a finish by a grand army of boys,” Brigadier General Charles King once wrote. There were an antonishing number of tall boys between 1861 and 1865 who turned out to be tall prevari- cators regarding their ages. Accord- ing to one compilation of figures long accepted as fairly accurate, out of 2,778,304 Union soldiers who par- ticipated in the war, 1,151,438 were not nineteen years old when they enlisted. Of these youngsters, about . 300 were thirteen or less; 100,000 were fifteen or younger; an- other 100,00u were sixteen, and 600,000 more were seventeen years old. They were, largely, fighting sol- diers, too, and figures of the Con. federacy would show a parallel situ- ation. Lieutenants of sixteen and seventeen were not rare. Two of this group, Henry W. Lawton and Ar- thur MacArthur, in late years be- came lieutenant generals of the regular army. General MacArthur's son, Douglas MacArthur, was re- cently appointed chief of staff of the United States Army. It is safe to believe that most of the blue-clad attendants at this year’s encampment at Cincinnati were of that grand army of boys— an additional reason for the Nation to accord them high honor, especial- ly since their steadily diminishing roll calls must before long cease, —Philadelphia Public Ledger of Au- gust 27th. The Ledger might also have added that out of the almost three million boys who served as union soldiers in that great war less than- 47,000 ‘were 25 years of age or older. GRANGE GROWTH IS VERY NOTICEABLE. The first half of the present fiscal year in the National Grange shows morc new subordinate branches of that organization started than in any previous six months period for several years. These new units are distributed over more than 20 dif- ferent States and reach all the way from Maine to California and Wash- ington. The latter State is one of the leaders in new Granges, with Oregon and Ohio showing up especial- ly ‘well, while the extension of the Grange organization into the South is going on rapidly, with a large number of new Granges in Virginia and North Carolina, and a very en- couraging beginning in South Caro- line. It is expected that the units in the latter State will be brought together into a state organization in the early fall, in which event South Carolina will take its place in the voting delegation of the Na- tional Grange, when the latter meets in Rochester in November for its 64th annual session. A gratifying feature of Grange or. ganization work the last two or three years is the fact that new subordinates have been started suc- cessfully in many States where it had heretofore been considered that the field was fully covered. COST OF LIVING IN AMERICA CONTINUES TO DECREASE. One encouraging feature of present conditions to the average household- er is that the cost of living is going down. The TU. S. Department of Labor reports a drop of 2.8 per cent in average living costs from December, 1929, to June, 1930. In some cities the drop was as great as 5 per cent. In others it was less than 1 per cent. Most of the decrease has come in the food items, where the decline has averaged 6.4 per cent. Fuel and light fell 3.3 per cent; rents 1.5 per cent and clothing and house furnishing goods each about 1 per cent. Compared with the high point in 1920 average living costs in the United States have declined 23 per cent. The average cost is, how- ever, still 66 per cent more than in the pre-war year of 1913. —The easiest way to get rich is to find out how much your family can spenvi then rake twise as much.