Bellefonte, Pa., ‘November 14, 1930. | A PRAYER IN VERSE, Make ine too brave ‘to lie or be unkind, Make me too understanding, too, ‘to mind The little hurts companions give ‘and friends, He careless hurts that no one quite intends. . ; Make me too thoughtful to hurt others 80. Help me to know #'he inmost hearts of those for whom 1 care, Their secret wishes, all the load they békr, That I may add my courage to their own. May I make lonely folks feel less alone And happier ones a little happier, yet May I forget What ought to be forgotten and recall, Unfailing, all That ought be recalled, each kindly thing, Forgetting what might sting. To all upon my way Day after day Let .me be joy, be hope. Let my life sing. UN SOLDAT. The longest months in the year are January and February. The earth has ceased to breathe and lies asleep, the cells of life within its soil, hibernating. Work is to be done presently, and we must pre- pare. Energy and dynamic power are needed to ‘accomplish the miracle of spring—to shove up through the avenues of our being that which is to carpet a world with beauty. Let us store. Let us rest. Let us sleep. Snow covered the ground and the hills, taking from each outlying ob- ject its identity. As far as eye could see, there was only the hard, clear, monotonously brilliant surface. The sky kept to a gray and endless prgram of clouds—from armies ‘that pressed forever onward. High up, and running with the clouds, and keeping pace with them, a strange wind roared. But all of life that moved between these two mediums of snow and bleak sky was blown and frozen and beaten down as if useless, and better obliterated. Icy winds lashed the haggard walls, tapping a skeleton finger upon the window-pane, whispering, “Who is gone? Who is leaving? Who is next?” In Ward 17 of United States Veterans’ Hospital No. 80 the ten- sion had grown intolerable; the ten- sion of imprisoning and unchanging weather; of mien too long together; the maddening repetition of pet phrases, slang words, threadbare tales, so that when a man opened his lips to speak one knew hefore- hand what his words would be, and winced with pain, “A thing like that gets you after a time.” “Like what?” irritably. “That daran’ weed clawing the window.” “It don’t bother me none, but if Big Boy over yonder says ‘parlez- vous one more time—one more time, mind you—I'm goona bounce him off with this shoe.” “Gosh, ain't we ever eating?” “Stop that eternal radio.” “When it comes, it’s just stew.” “There's mosquitoes in this room.” “Look wild there, doc, that leg’s bad.” “Can't you smile a little jazz out of her—something jolly ?” “Some low person has poured wa- ter in my tobacco.” “Three years this mighty little progress. I'm telling you a secret. Soon as the weather clears, I'm off.” “Well, and this boche was riding our tail, so I let out a stream of fire—" “Listen; spellbinder—cut the war patter. We know it by heart.” “That damn’ weed—it says things. Talks.” “Hinky-dinky.parles-vous.” “Officer, send Jenny up to Ward 17, can’t you?” The old cry, “Call out the guard, or send for Jenny.” What was itin the way she en- tered a room, moving without dis- Pioing the air as she passed through it? at was it that happened when she stood by your cot and looked at you with her steady brown gaze? All the nerves in your body quieting, settling down; that con- fusion of the brain, which had threatened a moment before to take the top of your head off, sizzling out into nothing. The skeleton finger at the window, the storm that would not cease, despair and death and dréad of the morrow, vanished! The bed more comfort able; irritation turned into laugh- ter. Jenny's voice, never loud, never hurried, a husky, warm note in it. The way the little perky cap sat on her head, quaint and depend- able and a bit comic. “Atta boy, Jenny.” “Stay in there, Jenny.” ~~ She straightened a, shade, shook a low, loosened a bandage, put up the window and broke off the piece of yin threw it away. How had month and she known? “Thanks, Jenny.” “Could you get a fly-swat, Jenny, and kill these winter mosquitoes? They sting worse than summer ones.” : Jenny's gaze circled the room, came to rest on a pair of guilty, twinkling eyes peeping over the top ‘of 4 sheet at hér. Luke—up to something again. When she stood by him, he said. | “To hol’ de hand and smoo’ de brow.” He always téaSed Jenhy about her misgion of mercy. Not that he felt it a joking ‘matter, but it was his way to joke. : : - “Bend your edr, Jenny. I'vegot a nigger-shooter and some beans, and they think it's mosquitoes,” ‘their banners. {ed his shoulders : | the ‘ghosts of these boys come back i os! “We'll get him over to the hos. { they "Hadn't known ’ I didn’t—honest now, Jenny!” She stood motionless, mute. He. had used that word so glibly. Her hand dropped to his shoulder—Jenny passed on. : . “Jenny, there's mosquitoes—" But they didn't so much mling now. The big room ‘was bay, ‘and quickened to interest, amd ‘ready to romp. As easily as that Jenny had them laughing, joking, forgetting and ennui and that life for most of them was without hope, For one more day mutiny was averted. No one could have told what it was or how she did it. It was Jenny's little . Sr little gift! So easy to say, so quick to send for, So con- venient to depend upon, SO comfort. able to have So But for the one es that . Br and fifty Disabled Veterans, ‘enduring the tedium of hospital life in four hundred and fifty different ways. Enduring not only the present, but the irremedi- able past, and its determinate fu- ture. Jenny saw for each man a separate war, and all these wars unfolded and thundered past her, charged with their brimstone and And the shadows of them fell forward across the years, a dark fixture there, waiting for the four hundred and fifty to ar- rive by a road of slow, tedious days and stoic courage not unmixed with hope. Benjy Fram, an arm gone, working faithfully to train a left hand ne his old trade of watch- mending. The ward of spine in- juries. The gassed. The _psycho- pathics. Those who lay with ban- daged eyes. And the increasing stream who, after these many years must leave home and business and enter here—unreturning. “I wish,” thought Jenny in a moment of fire, “I wish the wise men who meet to decide, so cautious- ly and diplomatically, whether or not we are to have more wars— whether or not the little, sweet, fat babies just learning to toddle must come to—to this—oh, I wish they could hold their conferences here under this roof. I wish they could meet in Ward 17 and watch Benjy Farm struggling to fix the insides of a watch with his left hand. I wish they could talk with Erney Gray, who is whittling a little ship, and sometimes whistles, and is go- ing to die. And with Luke!” Her ‘eyes blazed. “I wish they might change places—be these boys. And these—my dear, brave lads rise and go free.” It was the second week in Febru- ary when a terrible thing happened. | An epidemic of flue swept the In. firmary Wards. The boys had been too ¢rowded in there. Dr. Huffy had known it, but what could he do? The men came ‘and came, and begged for admission, Adequate quarters and additional propria- tions must await legislation. He cotild not leave a sick'man shivering on the doorstep while statesmen de- bated ways and means. Yet now he blamed himself and aged With self-accusation, And it mattered little that these cases had ‘been all but hopeless—a word never spoken in No. 80. Bach day saw the thin- nig of the ranks. The boys came to call Wards 10 and 17 “Belleau Wood.” So many fell there. Jenny was on night duty. Near dawn, her brain so numb with fa- tigue that she knew she would make mistakes if she Stayed up longer, she stumbled down the cor- ridor to her room, pitched forward across thebed without undressing, and was asleep as she fell. Somewhere in the back of her mind a voice of warning sounded. She couldn't keep up at this. And Jenny would answer that voice: “Yes, I know. I'm not planning to stay here forever. Some day before I'm quite old I shall go. It might be soon, Perhaps this spring!” But sleep refreshed her, and she forgot herself inthe tragedies &bout her. ~ No longer any use to worry about Wally’s eyes. Wally could see now. No further anxiety lest Benjy Fram might not be able to master the intricate art of watch-mending with a slow left hand. Benjy had gone where they did not need watches to tick off the tedious hours. And Luke with the nigger and the beans and the twinkly eyes. He had sent for Jenny at last. | “What did you want, Luke?” i “You—Jenny.” A flicker of the old spirit under the drooping lids— “To hol’ de hand, an smoo’ de brow—" : And presently nothing but Jenny | there—crumpled forward— Still the vine at the window tapping. and whispering, ‘Who is, leaving ? Who gone? Who is: next?” Erney Gray, who had been mak-| ing the little battleship over in the parlez.vous, Ward Surgeon. Big Boy In a dim, anxious hour just be- | fore day, Jenny and Dr, Huffy flash- ed past each other in a corridor. He whirled and called her back. The old doctor knew Jenny's way of never. sparing herself, and watched over her as best he could with four hundred and fifty others on his hands. rg sleep these days, | , “Getting any Jennny ?” . “Are you?” His eyes, heavy with fatigue, met Jennys. “Well, but I ean stand more than you can.” : The tragedy of the Youngest Ward Surgeon rose between them. The old doctor sighed, and gather- 3 and tried to look younger an brisker. 5 “Im turning in pretty soon now. Yés, just directly 1 look in on—a, few others.” Sométimes Jenny fancied she saw to haunt the dim rooms; thing eft ‘undone ‘or unfiritshed or unsaid; br homesick for the old comrades. Erneéy’s little ‘ship hdd been ‘placed ‘oh ‘a table In a passageway becatise what 10. do with it. = Night after high enny Saw “Luke, give me those beans!” him hovering over it hungrily. And corner—Hinky-dinky- | B¢1P. “Now, Jemny—I—I'd die, Jenny, 3) on she stopped: and spoke to him.- “Pll take care of it, Ernéy, until you can finish it.” i ae And carried joke her room, When things grew mu or Jenny, she into Windy's room. With her quiet hands clasp- ed in her lap, she sat by his win- dow, her gaze ee. he line Snore te stooped, ol up the lehdened sky upon their ‘shoulders. ‘Once Windy had depended on Jen- ny for help and comfort. Now their ‘status had changed; Jenny had come to depend on him. Windy didn’t know this. At least, she supposed ‘he didn’t. There was much that Windy didn’t know, which was why she could come to him. Yet he must have guessed her need. He did not speak of the hos- pital and its tragedies, but of life beyond the window's ledge. aa y, happy race of mortals— harp: blessed of the gods who lived in an exalted state of unhampered freedom, the wide world at their feet. (Ah, were we ever of it?) the thrilling chances; the competi- tion and hurry and progress. The various means of travel flying about! They rang impossibly on the ear and were true! could lie here and be more of the the throngs shouldering its crowded thoroughfares. Nine and a half years in a hospital, and he had not only kept apace with his world, but had acquired a level-headed, un- biased, straight .from-the-shoulder slant on its politics, its progress, its mistakes, its men in high places, its general trend, that was little short of prophecy, He talked of these things. He talked of the curi- ous succession of little beings com- ing into existence and presently go- ing out of it, their mission accom- plished. From here—from this narrow, high-up room of Windy’s—the span of a life seemed about one inch long, and was not by any stretch of imagination the end of things, but a link. A link in what, Yes—in what! Thrilling, isn’t it? They spoke of thinkers who dug their minds into science and brought up treasure lore for other thinkers to catch at, add their thoughts to, {and so on and on through the unin- ‘terrupted years, forming a golden ladder that led no one knew where, but built on with hope—an element universal and necessary. And the stars wheeling and circling; the ages passing over; and the swift current of life sweeping onward. Breathless, enthused sessions they ‘were for Jenny. The air charged and vibrant, and Windy's voice com- ing across the ‘small space to her. When ~ it grew dark and they could not see each other, still it reached to her—his voice! Of course, he didn’t know how wonderful it was, 'or how it put wings to Jenny's “spirit when he said somthing like this, | “We face the impossible, and pres- “efitly ‘we have accomplished it. Or was it that Jenny, through [the eyes of ‘an undying and unre- turned love, saw him a young god —Mercury, fleet-footed and swift, {wearing winged sandals—Ah, Jenny! It was a Sunday morning. All the shutins were at church. The ambulants were writing home, most of ‘them, and some (saye the mark) ‘were shooting craps. The better were better, and the worst were no worse, and there were no new ‘cases. No. 80 had its best foot forward once more. 4 . Spring was not far distant, anda breath of it blew backward and smote Jenny full in the face. “1 wish TI ‘couldgo some place,” she thused like ‘any other girl, see- ing the sun about to shine. “AndI wonder what the new styles in hats will be this spring, and if thy will go well with a round, medium face.” She was occupied with a ledger wherein the various doctors wrote their daily orders for the patients. ‘Now, a doctor’s handwriting isa weird cipher with no known code or glossary. Yet it must be trans- lated into English so that the busi- Ress of the day can go forward. Because it was one of the hardest tasks in the whole ward it had been shoved off on Jenny—conscien- tious Jenny, who wouldn't give up on a sentence untilit actually made sense. Jenny sat and licked her pencil stub and concentrated. She shut her gyes, and visualized that particular octor’s habitual procedure, and the queer curlicue here which was a word—and presently she had it. “Though Latin would be easier,” ! { ' sighed Jenny, and wished she could Worse fro have a lark some place, ., Near noon a man came to the hospital with word of a disabled veteran in a shack on the hills, ill and alone and desperately in need of Dr. Williams, who saw the And last the Youngest | SUE patients, Prepares to goat once. “I'd better take a nurse.” The invigorating prospect of a long ride and the cold wind in her ace thrilled Jenny, begged to go. The visiting nurse | ‘Can you be ready in three min- ites?” Jenny could. At the end of an hour's climb over, bumpy trails and impossible |roads, they found the shack. In- {ile 2 man. muttered and tossed in | the delirlim of ever. : | Dr. willlams made a swift ex- amination, shook his head. | ‘Moré infivenga. Poor fellow!” They ‘looked with pity dbout the lonely, hare room, high on the hill- de, where one. more soldier had fought the good fight and lost. For he would lose it. That was evi- dent, ‘But they had learned at No. 80 never to give up, so Williams spoke briskly. pital, Jenny, and see what can be | done. . Nobody but Jake could put and ambulance. up that hill, but Jake can, and we'd better go right back for him. _ Wish Td brought him in the ‘fiFat * place.” ; “You go. I'll stay here’, The tremendous affairs out there; ’ It seemed to Jenny that Windy world, and see it more clearly, than. Windy? ' and and her eyes | . “I don’t like the idea -of -leaving 1 alone.” “Why not? I'm not a particle afraid. DIve done this numbers of times—any nurse has. It isn't so awfully far—come to the window and see. I can look right down on the hospital.” He stood frowning, trying to de- cide what was the sensible course. “If you're sure you'll be all wight— the sooner I'm off, the quicker we can get back.” He consulted his watch. “One o’clock now. You may look for us before two-thirty; I know the way, and we can make better time.” But after he had climbed into his "car, he got out and eame back. “Look here, Jenny, I don’t like this.’ Tl be darned if I do. It’s a long ride up that hill and over a lonely road. We've made him as comfort- able as possible. ‘Hell probably sleep for several hours, and I don’t see that your staying will better things. undle up and come along back with me.” But Jenny wouldn't hear of it. “Of course, I'll stay. The two hours will pass quickly, Besides, I've been glad of the chance to get away from the hospital for a bit. I needed a lark. Please don’t worry.” Reassured, he was off again, smil- ing dryly at Jenny’s idea of alark.” Jenny stood in ‘the ‘door and watched his car twist and jolt and lirch over the bad road, finally dis- appearing around a bend. It would take all Jake's skill to carry a sick man down without more injury than benefit. But Jake could do it; Jake could even jounce soothingly. What a view from the shack! Winter or summer, God's country! The hospital was a tey you might hold in your hand, and beyond that was a city consisting of a few toothpicks and a couple of streamers of smoke. Flat stretches of golden distance, and miles and miles of undulating hills. “I wish I could play hop- scotch from hill to hill.” But she must go in, instead, and see to her charge. Jenny fell to brightening the room. She stuffed something in the broken window-pane to shut out the cold, washed the dishes, stacked the wood in a neat heap be- hind the stove. She didn't dare sweep, but she shoved the worst of it into a golfer’s tee and pulled the rug triumphantly over, When she turned toward the bed, she saw that his eyes were open and watching her. He smiled feebly and spoke. (it isn't little Red Crossie! ‘the world—what? me, Crossie?” She laid cool hot wrist. “Easy as anything. I followed the mountain trail, and here you were.” | Undying gratitude shone up to Her from burnt-out eyes. “Nice to ‘be taken care of again. Homelike. Been—doing solo long time. Would have madeit but—cold got me.” She spoke hastily. “They're send. ing the ambulance from: the hospi- tal, and you're going to be fine as soon as we get you there.” * “He knew better, but he gave her ‘a smile. - The same gallant smile all the boys had. They had learned it on a scarlet field. His fingers ‘touched the white of her uniform and moved upward into the shadow of a salute. ‘Jolly. The ‘cap and uniform. Brings back— thousand things. Fine nurses” in France—fine girls. Helped a fel- low pull through. There was one— you'll find all about it in a little book—diary —top tray of that trunk.” Te His eyes begged Jenny to read it, brings its glowing events into the §mall shack where the spark of life flickered and burned low. “Got a war in it, that little book.” | Jenny dug among the war relics. | “Would this be it?” holding up a ‘small volume with a green cloth : back. | Henodded drowsily, already drift- ling again | Rmen Jenny was sure that he slept, she pulled a chair to the ‘window - and began to read. | She was conscious of a strange ;stir in the air, and a shadow walk- .ed across the pages of the book. , Startled, Jenny glanced up. Her ; heart stood still. From the north- west a black cloud was gathering | with terrifying swiftness, blotting 7 the heavens. Jenny laid the book down, tiptoed , to the door, slipped out, and closed |it behind her. : e had never seensuch a cloud. | Dense, thick, boiling smoke with , tagged $ifes, Perhaps they looked the top of a hill. Be- Cause if they didn’t—if that cloud | meant what it said—who was Jenny ito hold a flimsy shack and a sick man to the ground in the face of , such, She knew only too well what it was. A blizzard. Snow and freezing gales and driving needles of ice, and death to any one ven. turing out in it. It would be here “Tf All over How'd you find fingers about his i | "days. ; The Seriousness of her predica- ment broke over Jenny. She back- | ed against the wall, her face lifted to the awful heavens, and lived a 1 etime in the next few minutes. A jchild’s terror was upon her—the wild fmpulse to try to outstrip that storii. She felt that her feet could “éarry Her swiftly down the trail and put her safely inside the great en- folding hospital doors before the ! wind struck. Her next thought was i of wood, and she flew frantically around, looking for stray pieces— anything that would burn—to hoard against whatever was to come, She found four or five pieces, some 'chips, ‘a hoe handle, and there was {ie heavy block which formed the doorstep. Jenny dragged them in- side. The wind was already high, ‘and it took dll her strength to get | the door shut. | “If only Dr. Williams and Jake {won't try to get back here tonight! They couldn’t possibly, and it would : be rank suicide to attempt it.” | Thén ‘She realized with relief that | Williams wodld be caught in ‘the i storm Yefore he could reach the ‘hospital. 1 | in fifteen minutes, and it might last — _ The sick man slept. Jenny ran an appraising ‘eye over the supply of wood. -. Noted what ~ articles in the room she could burn. And the world darkened. And the storm struck. . She had not dreamed a house could rock so and remain standing. She held her muscles taut to meet every fresh onslaught, “If only we can manage to rollin the direction of the hospital when we start, it would simplify things. Imagine the surprise just as they're beginning to worry. The Chief Nurse say: ‘Jenny, we can’t have _ this. It's against the rules to roll the patients in. And we never ad- mit their houses.’ ” She would whisk off in a huff and never ‘Séé ‘the joke. ‘Liater she would relent and come back and tell Jenny to stand the little house up outside, three paces to the left and two to the rear. But they didn't roll. The shack that had withstood other storms and ‘other winters held against this. Jenny patted its walls with an en- couraging h-1d and said in imita- tion of the boys at No. 80: “Atta bot. house. Stand up to it, house.” now shut out the world. The dim city went, and the hospital, and the hop-scotch hills, The very ground they stood upon. And there was nothin: left to all of creation but four quivering, protesting walls balanced pr--ariously in a vortex of shrieking winds, and a sick man who breatiied with difficulty and muttered, and Jenny. Jenny lighted the lamp. She set. tled downto the book he had want- ed ‘her to read. ' The storm howled; the shack rocked—all but lifted from its foundation—settled back. Jenny was no longer there. Jenny was with the Three Gay Chevaliers. That is what they called themselves—three boys, meeting one night in a cafe after taking their girls home from a dance. America had, that morn- ing, thrown her hat into the ring, and all over the land youth must have gathered about little tables as these had, breathing adventure, shaken with emotion. They would enlist, they would go to France, they wouldwin fame and honor, When they were old, old, old men they would return here some night. Sitting in this very spot they would recall the stirring days of youth and its far-flung madness, They stood together with tears in their voices -and pledged themselves to brave deeds—in soda water. The Three Gay Chevaliers in France. Dan and Ronny and Smoke. (This one ‘was Dan.) Actually stand- ing upon French soil. Who'd have ‘though 'it? The dream held, and they could scarcely believe them- selves true. Romance, thrills, ad- venture. They were of the first Americans sent up to relieve worn- out French troops. The entries in the diary were brief and far apart. They were fighting side by side. Often they were homesick and blue, but the next ‘day ‘it was all a great s;game, On leave in Paris! Painting the old town red. Surely they left their mark upon that much marked up city! Surely Paris remembers. They did considerable wrecking; they made noise; they fell out of one escapade into another. At last, good-by, Paris! See you again some day. Back in the trenches. One day something happened that they hadn't counted on. A sort of awed astonishment in the brief en- try. “Today they got Ronny.” That was all. But the next day; “Smoke and I are going after the Hun that got Ronny. He's got a machine-gun nest over there,” Then, “Smoke and I went over and clean. ed up that Hun that got Ronny.” Other entries, short, graphic, but no longer any zest or thrill or ad- venture. The life of the book had gone out. From then on they were grim men doing a work of death. inevitable occurred, and Smoke pitched forward in the trench. “Dan—I'm gone.” Dan dropped his gun, grabbed him, started running for help. Men tried to stop him— tried to tell him something. He wouldn't hear. He kept talking to Smoke, pleading with him: “Keep your eyes open, Smoke, As long as you keep your eyes open, you can’t die.” A brand of fire pierced ' his gide. He ran on and on. Blood all over both of them. People getting in his way. “Look here, féller, you're bleeding to death, and besides the kid you've got is dead.” “Get out of my way—Keep your eyes open, Smoke—as long as you keep your eyes open you can't— These entries were from a hospi- tal weeks later. He was bandaged from head to foot. That didn’t mat- ter. But his grief— ' Here was the nurse he had spoken of. She stepped softly into the Iit- tle book, and Jenny could almost hear her voice. She came to Dan, She said. “TI lost both of my brothers—such fine boys. It's why I'm here to care for other people’s brothers.” “I ‘could ‘stand it then,” he wrote. He didn’t die. He ‘couldn't. He had to get that Hun that'got Smoke. There was no way of telling which one did it. So he started in Sys. tematically, kil.ng up the German army. Once, running forward, he ell into a trench. It was full of Germans. He brandished his bayonet and yelled. They thought he was the allied armies. They ran. He trained ‘their own gun upon them and Wiped out the lot. But first they had fixed him—takeh his lég off clean as a whistle. He had been recommended for decoration by both French and American governments. Another hospital. By and by they told him the war was over. Middle- ged, gassed, a cripple for life, the last of the Three Gay Chevaliers re- turned home ‘ahd took up his fight alone on the hillsidé. The last en- try in the book said: “Thank God, Ronny and Smoke went when they did! Thank God, it was a clean call for them! Not this.” ; Jenny Sat a ‘thirown ‘back, aching, Te sick man troubled stupor. long while, head ‘eyes ‘closed, ‘throat ‘had sunk into a He muttered and tossed. Through the hours that fol- lowed, . Jenny, “doing what she could ‘to quiet ‘him, spoke “to him as ‘he had spoken to Smoke: “Don’t give up, Dan. You're bet- ter. Doing fine! Don’t give up!” So they waged their battle. The tide of life ebbed slowly. Once she thought he was gone. But after that he spoke again. He put out a hand to caress the air. His horse voice rose toa glad cry. “Why, Bay old scout—doggone you, ‘Smoke—waited, ‘did you?” There wis a rush of wind past Jenny, ‘and something vag an shadowy and splendid blinded ‘her eyes— A log falling in the stove brought Jenny to herself. She found she was cold. The storm had blown the obstruction from the broken window pane; the room was a whit of winds, and a drift ‘of snow lay on the floor. Jenny moved to the bed and placed the sheet over the stil fate, The fire was almost out, and ‘she replenished that and barricaded the window as best as she could. Look. ing at her wrist-watch she ‘was surprised that it was ‘only seven- thirty. The night had hardly be- gun. Outside some heavy object car- ried by the storm struck the house with force, and Jenny started. She thought, “I mustn't get nervous.” There was a radio on the table, and she crossed to that and turned the dials with a mone too steady hand. Of course, she wouldn't be able to get anything, but trying oc- cupied her mind. i unday night, and all over the land people were gathered in churches, standing together singing, lifting their voices with the fluted notes of organs. Hymns. She re- membered some. “Rock of ages, cleft for me.” And there was an- other about “Ninety-and-nine that were safe in the fold, and one that was lost on the mountainside.” Chords of music with reassuring words floated through Jenny's mind, It seemed to her that she really heard them. ‘She bent her ear to catch an elusive strain, her imagi- nation and her need keyed to some overtone of sharp receptivity. Wasn't that—Wasn’t it? Out of the night, out of the deaf. ening pandemonium of the storm, a voice spoke. Clear and steady and confident. “Fear not, for I am with thee.” She stood in a sort of light, and the words did not die on the air but remained there fixed and visible. Fear not, for T am with thee. In a trench in France, at the frozen poles, in the lighted churches, or alone on a bleak hillside—what did it te Jenny went back to her fire. She banked the coals and laid on an- other stick. She was no longer afraid her supply of wood would give out. She sat down and folded her hands quietly in her lap. Fesr not—for I am with thee! The hours passed, She must have dozed. She thought she was a child again at her grand- mother’s in the country, and the lamp was going out because it made a funny smell in the room. Jenn: sat up, blinking, and saw little sparks rising from the wick of the lamp. The oil was gone. After some search she found the oil can in the lean- to kitchen. She shook the can; shook it again hopefully. Took the potato from the spout and turned it up- side down. There wasn’t a drop of oil in it. “But there must be oil where. There's got to be!” She picked up the lamp with its dimming flame, walking carefully, shielding it with a hand, and search- ed every corner of the place. hind boxes, on shelves, in drawers, under stacks of papers, under the bed, in the trunk, behind the stove. “God, put a little oil somewhere and let me find it.” Back to shake the empty. can again, to rake every corner of the kitchen once more, to lift every paper. No use. No use to look further. Jenny put the lamp on the table and backed away from it, her eyes trying to hold the feeble flame to its wick. The room was darkening. A glance at her watch told her it was only one o'clock. “And T've got to get through to morning.” Without warning terror rose within her. “The light is going, and I'll be alone in the dark with death. I won't be able to stand it, and I'll be insane by fiorniiig. They'll come and they'll find me. No—mno—I must k calm. I can ifTI try. I musn't hold my muscles rigid or twist my hands this way.” But fear of what she might not be able to control possessed her. The sight of herself as she would be in the morning filled the room— darted from corner to corner—a frantic, wild thing. And now there were two figures inthe room; the still one upon the bed, and this poor crazed one darting about— “The light is going and nothing can help me.” Jenny was crying, twisting her hands together. e room was dark. “I won't stay in here with him—I can’t. I'd rather die in the storm!” It was the only way out. Quick- ly Jenny made up her mind. She got her wraps. She put on the little brown hat with the feather that wasn’t stylish. She begin pulling oh her gloves. She would go out and meet death in the storm. Tt was cozy and safe otft- side compared with the fate that Awaited here. She ‘fastened hér fur collar about her throat and went to the door. Jenny lifted the bolt. And so, good-by to everything. Good-by to dear Dr, Huffy who had stood by her through so many errors of judgment and had believed in Ther ‘Good-by to the patient gray walls, and to the ‘Chief Niirse, ‘and to Jake. Good-by to Amos, faithful orderly, and old funny Pop Knute. Good-by to Windy—Jenny's face twisted up, and the tears rolled down her cheeks. Oh, Windy, Windy! She thought of his bright courage and the spirit that nothing could defeat. (Continued on page 7, Col. 2.) some-