Demorralic acm Bellefonte, Pa., September 12, 1930. AFTERWHILE. “I'll come back afterwhile,’” he said AS he tucked his head in his cap of gray. And muffling his throat with a scarf of red He lovingly called to his mother to say, “p11 come back afterwhile.” ? “p'll come back afterwhile,, he said To his father who sharpened his skates that day At the old grindstone. sped, Shouting, ‘Thanks, I'll give kisses for Then onward he pay. T'll come back afterwhile.” “7'll come back afterwhile,” he said To his dog that sounded a lonesome bay. “your foot is so sore: you must keep your bed. If yowre good, you may go home some day. I'll come back afterwhile.,’ “7'll come back afterwhile,” he said. But O! ’tis so long he has been away. Yet oft-times when skies are with stars o’er-spread, Out of the silence they hear him say: “1'11 come back afterwhile.” THE SIREN FROM THE AIR. When his barograph marked twelve thousand feet, Reese pushed the yoke of his warping-wheel forward a few inches, and gave a slight inclination to the footbar of the rudder. The monoplane, which had been climbing up into the wind so sharply as to remain almost motionless as far as horizontal progress was concerned, settled to a level keel and began to describe a wide circle, gracefully lifting its outside and lowering its inside wing like a bird when it turns, From behind the trailing edge of the lowered wing, its driver looked down on the creeping expanse of earth two miles below. The hangars and plyons and crowd- ed stands of the aviation-field were pressed together, made small, blur- red, as though seen through the wrong end of a misted telescope. The broad field itself seemed not larger than a lady’s handkerchief; it was almost lost in the blur of villages, boulevards, railroad-tracks, and tree-clumps of the level Long Island country. To north and south, as the great bird swept steadily on its arc, appeared expanses, smooth and polished like metal—the Atlan. tic and the Sound. Shapes like beetles represented ships. “It might be Lilliput,” said Reese, aloud bending his helmeted head over the inch wide rim of aluminum that separated him from space. The strangeness of sheer height and aloofness had written awe on his face. He lifted his eyes from the Atlantic to the curved walls of sky, dark blue with the thinness of the air, dazzling like steel with the re- splendence of untempered sunshine, ' which curved downward all around him. He was as though suspended in the monstrous metal reflector of a monstrous electric light; dizzying, blazing distance was all around him. “God!” he muttered; “isn't this—” There was a catch of awe and rap- ture in his voice— ‘isn’t this tre- mendous! And lonely! A man on a mountain-peak wouldn't be half so much alone.” Behind the glass of his goggles his wide, hazel-colored eyes shone with a dull excitement, like that following | the first exhiliaration of champagne. His rapid ascent, the thin, icy air, the powerful hum of the muffled motor, the blazing sunshine, the voice and fingers of the wind, the sweep of his winged machine obeying the circular blur that showed the tract- or's power at its head, the invisible supporting strength that thrilled along the steel nerves of the great bird into his hands—all these new and strong forces registered them. selves on the brain of the man, doubled the time of his heart beats, made him quiver more with excite- ment than with the cold that sug- gested itself despite his furs. There was no fear on his keen face; rather exultation, triumph, delight in the presence of danger. A strong swim- mer might have struck out toward sirens on their rocks with such an expression of eager, abandoned joy. “They shall mount up with wings as eagles,” he chanted somewhat wildly, glad of the sound of his voice in the strange emptiness and silence of the place. His eyes wandered along the dazzling blue-black horizon to a blazing mass of snow-like mist that was forming on the seaward side. “I wish I could go to sleep— like a frigate-bird on the wing,” he finished inconsequently. He had got little sleep the night before, the nearness of his first real flight, his first unattened trip to- ward the sun, had been too poignant. From his first lesson in ‘grass_cut- ting,” with an instructor in the seat behind him, he had dreamed of this; height and distance allured him as by some affinity with his nature. with the very blood in his veins. His privateer ancestors of 1812, his balloonist great uncle, his grandfather who had been a naval officer, had bequeathed him their love of free spaces and adventure. The care of this father, a well-to-do professor in a technical school, to bring the boy up to the teaching profession had not survived young Reese’s first sight of an aeroplane. The profes- sor bowed to the inevitable; John Faraday Reese gave up higher mathematics to adventure highways of the sky. As the machine completed its three mile circle and came once more up into the wind, Reese straightened it out again, and pulled back alittle on the yoke that worked the big double elevator in the tail. The great wings turned upward again, soaring. Playing the controls as in- stinctively as though the machine on the had been a part of him, the driver kept eyes on the lethargic needle of thé barograph, © From beneath drooping eyelids he watched it crawl upward over the lined paper strip. - Twelve thousand five hundred, twelve thousand seven hundred fifty, thir- teen thousand and two feet. Despite the sharp angle at which the big bird poised, the ascent was growing more gradual; the thinned air offered less grip for the tractor, less support for the wings. To in- crease the power of the motor, Reese cut out the muffler. The rapid musketry of the exhaust. strangely sharpened and in the attenuated air. = With some- thing like a shudder, he threw over the lever that muffled the engine. His nerves were on edge; the strange sound hurt. The barograph marked thirteen thousand six hundred feet. Still they climbed, enveloped in a blaze of sunshine that was to the tempered sunlight of the earth’s surface as diamonds to glass. De- spite. the zero air, Reese’s temples inside his padded leather helmet were bathed in sweat. He was pant- ing, and fine, red lines appeared on the smarting surface of his eye- balls. Below the mask of his gog- es his face was drawn into deep, straining lines of exultant determi- nation. | “Up we go,” he shouted. His voice seemed smothered in a vacuum but he disregarded the strangeness. Six- teen thousand and a world’s record, or bust!” He glanced again over the quiver- ing rim of the car. A fine white mist, a mist that gave back the blazing sunshine like cloth of spun- glass, had shut out the earth. It was as though a cover had been put over the mouth of the tremendous reflector inside of which he was buzzing upward, smaller than a midge in the globe of an arc light.. The very air seemed to turn to flames and ice. A great wave of melancholy gathered, rose, and broke over the mouth of the = tremendous human world that blazed and sway- ed, that burned and froze, that had no stability, that allowed him air only in searing little gasps. “Nevertheless,” he muttered, biting at his hardened nether-lip—‘never- , theless, up we go!” | He closed his eyes for a moment to get rid of a slight vertigo caused directly by the glare of the alumi- num hood that covered the engine. Colored blotches of light danced be- fore his eyeballs, and the rushing of the icy wind rang on his brain like faint voices. He could hear the - feverish whispering of the blood in the tympans of his ears, like a mag- nified replica of the sound that some- times comes just before sleep. He felt sleepy. “Sixteen thousand!” to himself, crushing down his diz- ziness and languor. “Sixteen thous- and! Sixteen thousand feet!” “No, twenty thousand!” The voice was singularly musical, thin, and clear. “Yes, twenty thousand!” In the thrill of determination that the voice gave him, he momentarily ov- erlooked the queerness of its pres. ence. “Twenty thousand feet high.” “Higher than even the condor dares!” He opened his eyes in some faint distress and perplexity of mind, and blinked through his goggles. In the forward seat, turned three quarters toward him, was a woman, a girl. He could hardly make her out at first, for the dazzle of the aluminum hood was just beyond her, and she was dressed all in white—white, a knitted cap was pulled down over her head; a few strands of hair, | blazing with the sun’s own color lay along the snow white oval of her face. “I didn’t know—I had the two- seater,” he remarked dazedly. His voice was thin and whistling; he raised it to make himself heard above the hum of the motor and screw. ‘I thought I took out the one-place machine; I'm out for alti- tude, you know.” Her eyes, blue-black and flashing like the sky, regarded him with a little look of questioning; her mouth a faint scarlet line turned down a trifie at the ends, suggesting polite surprise. : “I don't mean to intimate that I'm not delighted to have you along,” he assured her warmly. “I merely for. got; it’s the first time I've been any- where near as high as this, and it makes me feel slightly dippy, not bad enough to make me be afraid of losing control. of course, but still—not just right.” “You look—magnificent.” Her voice left a ringing echo in his ears. “Oh, I feel all right, aside from the fact that I can’t remember en- gaging a passenger for this trip.” “That's not worth worrying about now,” she assured him, smiling ina dim, dangerous way into his eyes. “What does the barograph read?” He had to bend down close to read the dial. “Fifteen thousand three hundred,” he said with a stray air, and lifted his head to stare at her. “Tll not cut out the muffler until we stop rising; the exhaust makes a ghastly clatter up here. It jabbers like the ghost of itself.” “I love it; it sounds—high,” she said, and again he was thrilled by the weird music of her voice. It al- , lured, it inspired like a bugle-note, and yet there was a chilling some- thing in it. It reminded him of the “ice crackle,” that peculiar trilling reverberation from the expanding of thin, new ice on the skating lakes of his boyhood. One glided along over the thin, glass-clear surface, one saw the steel-blue water just beneath, one heard the sudden sil- very “K-r-r-r. ring!” of the ice- crackle, and one put his whole soul into speed. He stared at her, racking his be- numbed wits to remember her place on his. passenger list. Like most of the new pilots, he was accustom- ed to earn an honest penny now an then by taking up persons with the desire and the necessary fifty dol- lars. She frankly yielded herself to his inspection; she turned far- ther around in her seat and smiled at him. “You don’t remember me?” “No; that’s astounding; but true.” She was exquisite; perfect inévery line,. beautiful with the. abstract beauty of an idealist painter's work. AER TS RRR Ty 5 Sally he muttered. mary ol An artist might have called her a “pure type;” there was no little trick of outline or coloring to give personality, character, to the flaw- less symmetry of her face, She seemed less a real woman than some ideal created to embody an idea; she might have stood for “Purity,” or, perhaps better, “Danger.” Her beauty lost nothing by its imper- onality; to Reese's sun-dazzled eyes, at least it was all the more poig- nant. The faint scarlet of her eyes, the flashing gold of her hair, and the sheer radiant white of all the 'rest of her allured, intoxicated, as. ‘tounded. He breathed quickly for ‘reasons other than the thinness of |the air. She was unhuman, almost superhuman, for sheer perfection ! of line and color. “Well, you have been staring at ‘me for some time,” she said with- 'out the slightest show of self-con. | sciousness. “Do you like me?” “Yes, wonderfully,” he declared.” as calmly frank as she herself was. “And you don’t remember ever meeting me before?” He shook his head. “If you'd recall the circumstances. The lessened atmospheric pressure up here makes my head feel as big and empty as a balloon.” “Oh, it makes no difference; ac- quaintances begin only when they get interested, anyway, How you stare! What are you thinking about me now?” He had been casting -about for words, a metaphor, to describe her; in his youth he had made metaphors, boy’s way, to put into verses. “I was thinking that you are like this height,” he cried, bending to- ward her over the yoke of the warp- ing-wheel. The great bird lurched ! wheel to bring it back into equilib- rium. He laughed, made eyes, and let it lurch in the other direction like a swooping eagle. “Yes, you are like height. You are beautiful, you allure, you call to all a man’s is something in your look that makes me tremble, as though you were a blade pointing at my heart. Come we're three miles above conventions; you won't mind if I worship you a little? For you are wonderful and beautiful —beyond belief.” “Why. and so are you. Or is it only this dizzy loneliness that makes us think so?” “Why, who are you?” he demanded. “I knew I'd engaged to take up several women this week, but no one like you. Who are you? Give me a name to call you by, Tell me who you are.” “Why, only your passenger,” she laughed, bending to- ward him. One.lithe arm and hand, gauntleted nearly to the elbow in close, white, glistening fur, lay along the aluminum edge of the car. “As “Good! T remember just enough Latin to appreciate it. Alta—High! Well—" He threw back his head recklessly—I'm out for altitude!” “Perhaps you'll attain it. Onl keep your elevator flaps well lifted!” He threw back the yoke with a laugh. In bending toward her hg had permitted the machine to the level once more. The great bird slanted upward at an abrupt angle, and poised, quivering. “You are brave!” she cried. Her level eyes dared him, her lips pro- voked and promised. He closed his eyes for a moment, made giddy by her radiance and by the blaze of the untempered sun on the aluminum hood just beyond her. The reflec- tion surrounded her with an aura like white flames, . Instictively he eased off the dan- gerous lift of the wings; he had no need to look at the needle of the level-indicator to know that the ma- chine was threatening to slide back. ward into the abyss. “Why do you shut your eyes, height-seeker?” she demanded. “Are you afraid? What does the baro- graph read now?” : “Sixteen thousand three hundred,” he said shortly. “A record, I Dbe- lieve; but whatof it? No, I'm not afraid,” he added, stiffening his neck and fixing his bloodshot gaze on her untroubled eyes and dangerous lips; “I’m not even afraid of you. It's you who'd better be afraid of me. Do you know we were ready to drop backward a minute ago?” “1 felt it. It was superb. We must have gained two hundred feet in that tremendous lift. And yet I think —you were afraid.” The blood rushed into his face; flames leaped up in his eyes. “Perhaps I can prove I wasn't by letting go the controls and coming over there to you. We'd be to- together for as long as it took us to drop three miles, anyway. Shall I22 “Oh, brave words—and true, I be- lieve you would, Now you are a demigod by the look on your mouth and eyes; you are man no longer! So, Spirit, send us upward once more till we poise over the abyss! Height and the spirit of adventure! Throw back the yoke with a laugh, as you did before.” “Yes. And if I do?” “What! A price?” “Yes!” “It is wright. @ Well—when the barograph marks twenty thousand feet, I will come and sit at your knees!” “It is what I had on the tip of my tongue to ask,” he shouted, wild with exaltation. ' “Good; and block the rudderbar! We will go down on the warp alone—a proper finish. Down twenty thousand feet, with the rudder blocked!” “Yes, Is it a bargain?” “A bargain,” he shouted, and turned his face up into the candent dome of 'sky and laughed aloud. His d | arms jerked the yoke of the eleva- tor back until the wheel touched his breast; the machine leaped upward like a diver, soared, poised trem- bling. He threw back the lever that cut out the muffler. The exhaust broke out ‘in’ a weird salvo like sharpened. rifle shots, - He eased off the precipitate dangle until théy had gained: way once: more, and - again drunkenly, and he threw over the! manhood and daring; and yet there ' grope for poor feminine | “Beautiful. ‘lover, whom I love!” for my name, how do you like Alta?” threw the: elevator up to its high- est limit. They bounded upward, — ET tear swaying, clattering, whistling through the knife-edged wind. And all the while she smiled into his face. He no longer noticed the baro- graph; he saw only her untroubled gaze of inspiration and allurement. A thin trickle of scarlet started from both his nostrils; his blacken- ed lips gasped for breath; his bulg- ing bloodshot eyes left her omly to glare over the powers at his com. mand. He was all resolve and eager- ness; he was determination incarnate. He shot one hand forward, unglov- ed, to adjust the carbureter, which was beginhing to fail for lack of air. He threw back and forth the lever that put extra pressure on the gasoline tank. With demoniacal abandon he worked the hand-pump ' that jetted oil on the flying bearings of the engine. 5 ! “Do-er! Accomplisher!” He start- 'ed at her voice. The reflection of | his own exaltation was on her; her ‘face quivered, yearned toward him. | With a steady sinuous movement she drew herself backward over the low backrest of her seat, and crept back under the curved yoke that held the warping-wheel, She sat up, sidewise, near him, lifted her face slowly un- til it curved backward like a flower on the fair, white stem of her throat, and offered him the. curved, scarlet miracle of her lips. As he bent toward her the sky be- came black. As from the depths of a dream he heard her voice chanting: “The ages dreamed of this that you have done.” Her voice was like a softened, hundred-toned ice-crackle. He trem- bled in his coma, and then relaxed as for a long fall in sleep. The voice went on: “The Chaldeans sculptured wings .on their man-gods and on their i sacred bulls. “The Greeks made their dream , articulate in the myth of Daedalus and Icarus. 5 ! ‘“Leonarde da Vinci laid aside the { brush that made the Mona Lisa to the realization of this dream that we have made real. “To fly, to spread wings on the impalpable air, and soar, to follow the way of an eagle in the air. | “To skim the invisible columns of the sky—are not men become as gods now in very truth? i “You have dreamed true, Spirit— Spirit of Dreams and High Emprise; you are all men who aspire, “How beautiful you are in the torture of accomplishment! The very chords on your throat are lute- strings to sing of victory. “The blood from your nostrils a libation to the jealous powers that you have trampled underfoot. wonderful, holy—my He was suddenly aware of a great rush of wind and of the delirious, i gripping sensation of falling. Drunk with her voice and beauty, he had forgotten warping wheel, rudder-bar, elevator-yoke, everything. The cut- ting air aroused him; frantically he threw the elevator down, drawing Y her head backward before the yoke to his breast. The great bird shud- dered, and swung dizzily to one side. He remembered that she was block- ing the rudder-bar; painfully, inef- fectually, as in a dream, he warped down the lower wing, biting his lips in an agony of helplessness. “Why struggle further? You have attained—you have attained!” he heard her siren’s voice chanting in his ears; her lithe arms sprang to meet each other about his neck. “Kiss me—kiss me, Spirit!” she cried, with her icy cheek pressed to his. “I am height!” He threw her off. “No,” he shouted, struggling to keep his eyes open and his hands on the wheel, “you are mad—we are both mad! Don’t you understand? This is death,” “Kiss me!” she repeated in her voice of ice and silver. “How wonder- ful is this death! Where are your arms, Spirit? Am I not beautiful? Look at me!” Her breath enveloped him, numb- ing him, filling him with a Lethean languor; but still, with all the strength of his instinct and training, he struggled to bring the machine back under his command. Despite her presence, he managed to get his feet on the rudder-bar, They whirl- ed downward, listing so far that he felt the grip of the straps that bound him to his seat. He worked the controls, holding her away from him with his elbows and knees. They dashed into a blinding mist, beginning to circle at last, and he threw all his remaining power into a desperate attempt to warp the wings back into equilibrium. At the same time he forced the rudder-bar over to turn the machine in ‘the direction away from the lowered side. The great bird righted, and began to swoop as lightly as a descending gull. He cut out the engine. “There!” he bellowed crazy with triumph and with the sudden in. crease of oxygen in his starved lungs. “I saved you despite yourself! Your idea was all very romantic—" His head whirled again as she lifted herself in his arms. “You were afraid,” she whispered, catching his face to her breast— “afraid! Your fear was greater than your love—of me!” ‘You don’t understand; you don’t —this isshow— I am afraid!” he concluded in a sudden deathlike abandon; and lifted his arms from the wheel to hold her to him. He felt the ineffable, keen sweetness of her lips on his. Then consciousness went like a blown out candle. The perfectly balanced monoplane con- tinued its slow, even swoop toward the earth. Some one shook him by the arm, He was sitting in the cockpit of the machine, his hands dangling limp over the sides. A corn-field was about him; his dazed eyes made out the low, green month-old stalks all about. Several men were standing beside him, and others, a great crowd it seemed were hurrying to- ward him. “Asleep! By the great horn spoon, ‘he was asl~2p!” said # man at his right hand. “Came down too fast, is How high’d you get, Slowly he made out the features of one of the officials of the aviation- field, one of the men who had veri- fied his barograph before he started out for altitude. The man raised up by the little iron step on the side of the car, leaned over to look at! the barograph, and began to bellow wildly at the crowd. “Twenty thous- and! It must be wrong. But even if it's a few hundred out even if it’s a few thousand—whoop-la! He's done it! The kid's done it! A record!” : “But where—where—"' stammered Reese, stupidly. He sat and stared before him like a man just awaken- ed from a dream. The aluminum hood came close up against the steering-yoke; there was no forward seat, not even room enough for a cat; it was the one- place machine.—By Allan Updegraff, in Century Magazine, SIX PARTY COLUMNS ON NOVEMBER BALLOT Six State parties will have a right to the use of a party square on the November ballots. Only two of these, the Republican and the Dem- ! ocratic, nominated candidates at the May primary, the others having pre- empted names and circulated nomi- nating petitions. The Communist party, of those created through pre- emption papers, alone has filed a complete ticket. Friday was'the last day for the fil- ing of nomination papers for candi. dates. Only about a score of papers were filed for candidates for Con- gress and Pennsylvania Legislative officers. : Three of the parties were created for the possible use of former Gov- ernor Pinchot, the Independent hav- ing been created by western penn- sylvania supporters of the forester and the Square Deal and Fair Play party names having been pre-empt- ed by the Republican nominee himself. The Liberal Party, supported by the Association Against the Prohibi- tion Amendment and supporting John M. Hemphill, Democratic nom- inee, has only one candidate on the State ticket. The State-wide candidates of all parties are: United States Senator—Republi- can, James J. Davis; Democratic, Sedgwick Kistler; Prohibition, 8. W. Bierer; Socialist, William J. Vaneyen: Communist, Emmett P. sh. : hill; Prohibition, Gifford Pinchot; Socialist, James H. Maurer; Liberal, John M. Hemphill; Communist, Frank Mozer. Lieutenant Governor—Republican. Edward C. Shannon; Democratic, Guy K. Bard; Prohibition, Mrs. Mabel D. Penock; Socialist, Mary Winsor; Communist, Samuel Lee. Secretary of Internal Affairs— Republican, Philip H. Dewey; Dem- ocratic, Lucy D. Winston; Prohibi- tion, Fred W. Litten; Socialist, Da- vid Rinne; Communist, Frank Note. Supreme Court—Republican, George W. Maxey; Democratic, Henry C. Niles; Prohibition, Charles Palmer; Socialist, John W. Slayton; Com- munist, Charlotte F, Jones. ! Superior Court— Republican Wil- liam B. Linn and James B. Drew; Democratic. George F. Douglas and Aaron E Reiber; Prohibition, Ida G. Kast; Communist, Max Silver and Peter Muselin. OPEN DOE SEASON IS PROBABLE NEXT FALL. Game commission officials have authorized the manufacture of 119,- 999 special deer licenses to be held in readiness in case conditions war- rant an open doe season in some sec- tions of the State. Of the total number ordered 99,- 999 will be paid licenses costing $2 each while 20.000 will be free to landowners who may wish to hunt for doe deer on their own property. Although the licenses have been ordered to be ready in case of need no formal action toward opening any counties or parts of counties will be : taken by the commission prior to its October meeting. In accordanec with a former rul- ing of the commision townships will be opened to doe shooting only upon receipt of petitions bearing at least twenty-five signatures of bonafide residents there, To open an entire county at least ten signatures from a majority of the townships will be necessary. Should the Commission decide to open any section for doe shooting a legal notice to that effect will be printed in two local newspapers, once a week for three consecutive weeks. Applications for the special li- censes should not be made prior to formal action opening counties as they will be good only in one county. Before obtaining a special doe li- cense a hunter must have a regular resident hunting license. PUBLIC CAMPS KEPT BUSY. Thirty-eight public camp grounds on the state forests are maintained by the department for the conven- ience of tourists and other forest travelers. These camps are equipped with tables and benches, fireplaces jand pure drinking water, ample parking and tent space, and other conveniences for the comfort of visitors. All of them are located on primary roads of travel and are attractively situated amidst beauti- ful forest surroundings. Many of | them have historic associations. The use of public camp sites, in- cluding fuelwood already cut, is free. {Camps may be occupied for two | consecutive days, and if a longer | stay is desired, other camping ac- commodations adjacent to the camp service centers are readily secured upon application to local forest of- ficers. —When crops go down prices go up. Thus the working of supply and demand. Tt's an-il wind lows none good. i Governor—Republican, Gifford Pin. | chot; Democratic, John M. Hemp- ' that | —— - { FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. i ‘“Whenever life is simple and sane, | true pleasure accompanies it as fra- grance does uncultivated flowers.” — Charles Wagner. —For the sick person, none but the best of foods should be served. land cleanliness in preparing them 'should be strictly observed. Serve small portions on the prettiest china in the house. It will often work wonders in the invalid’s appetite, if he can eat at all. Savory dishes and tinkling china ought to gain your invalid’s interest, All the dishes may be made most delicate and attractive. It is im- portant to do away with the monot- | ony so often experienced in the meals of the invalid. Desserts both colorful and nourish- ing can be frozen in the electric re- frigerator, or in your own freezer, and are refreshing for the invalid if the doctor approves. These are a few suggestions in a ‘field where the opportunity for dis- | cussion is almost unlimited. It takes , time and effort to supply the special | dishes a sick person can eat. But such feeding hastens recovery. i —Generally speaking, the noted women of Anglo-Franco-American society have not accepted the ex- tremely long skirt for day time | wear. Outdoors they favor hemlines about half way between the knee and ankle. —Why boys and girls leave home to spend their playtime somewhere 1 else is told plainly in a straw vote taken among 10,000 Massachusetts girls and boys in their early teens. Among other questions the chil- dren were asked, “Where do you prefer to spend your play time; near or in your home, or away from home? Why? Forty-seven per- cent of the girls voted home, more fun for leisure time. The children set very high the im- portance of home companionship with parents, brothers, sisters and friends Lack of friends was a frequent cause of disliking home, and, on the other hand, permission to entertain friends was frequently mentioned as a cause for liking to stay at home. Good equipment for play proved im- i portant to boys, whereas freedom to {do as one pleases meant more to | the girls, Parental restraint which the boys and girls thought too strict fled 16 per cent of the boys and 14 ‘per cent of the girls to find amuse- | ment elsewhere. Dullness at home | was another conspicuous criticism. A small per cent of the children ‘evaded home because of chores and errands, but a much larger per- ! centage liked home for the interest. ing things they found to do there jand indicated that household tasks are attractive if presented so. { Faults in the home itself are re- ‘ sponsible for the "majority of its : failures to hold the children, a state- ment to the American Home Eco- nomics Association concludes. Thein- vestigation was made under the au- spices of the Massachusetts Depart- ment of Correction, to obtain in- formation linking with the idea that lack of parental hold on children plays a part in juvenile delinquency. —It is always a stimulating sight when a big liner docks and her cargo of smart folk descend the gangplank dressed in their smartest. Travel coats are usually neutral in tone, but this only serves to bring into play splotches of bright or rich dress tones. When the Europa made maritime history, her passengers seemed to honor the occasion by donning scar- let deepening to :ich wine tones. These in all events were the domi- nant colors although some vivid greens were observed as well as blues, somewhat light in character and lavendar all offset by rich browns. One was further impressed by the carefully thought out cos- tume details which resulted natur- ally in establishing the ensemble as the basic fashion idea. Ensemble influence was evident in the majority of costumes, expressed even to bags, slippers and millinery, with the latter sometimes of self fabric. Pumps or oxfords, which were necessarily neutral in tone, often repeated the dominant color theme of the costume in leather trimming. Longer skirts registered, the average skirt in suit types reaching just below the calf of the leg, and a suggestion of down_in-back line was a recurring theme in the skirts, with coats following the same line, Fitted effects in suit coats prevail- ed, with jacket types cutting a pinch-back line, and longer coats preserving a belted and bloused ap- pearance. This was marked in a wine red coat which on casual in- spection seemed two-piece, with an extremely bloused waist section and a slim, fitting skirt. A three-inch belt of fabric was posed at the high waist line. Princess line longer en- semble coats were generally favor- ed, in fabrics with soft, silky fin- ish, and frequently trimmed with lavish shaw! collars of fox. In three ensemble costumes, two in red shades and one in green, all trimmed with black flat furs, black sweaters were affected. The peplum suggestion was noted on short jack- ets which were tightly belted at the normal waistline. —When emergency guests descend upon you and you lack glasses enough to give them a cooling bev- erage, try using the new paper cups. They are so attractive and handy right along. Not only for picnics but for daily supper use. paper cups and paper plates save time and trouble. Moreover, they are dec. orative, for the new paper cups come with pleasing designs on them in a wide range of colors to choose from. —One means of preventing colds is to build up a resistance against by a diet which includes foods rich ‘in vitamine A, such as’ milk, cream; butter. cheese, leafy vegetables, eggs and cod liver oil. — We wi} do your job work right.