AGO. old home in the Far There's a dear Away, A soft, snug nest where the children play. A realm of rest where the cold folks stay, In the Land of the Long Ago. There's a dear old home where the roses twine, | Where the Fates were good to me and mine i In the Land of the Long Ago. Oh, never a map shall point that place; Nor ever the drift of time erase, But the hungering heart the lines shall trace | Of the Land of the Long Ago. And ever the tide of my life's swift’ stream i Rolls back to the dream, And I live and laugh in the glint and gleam Of the Land of the Long Ago. | i On the north and south are the joy and | rest | Of a sister's smile and & mother's breast; | And a father's love to the east and west | Of the Land of the Long Ago. i We shall all come back from the desert | “Sigh,” | We shall all come home to the “Soul's Reply,” | We shall all return in the “By and By" | To the Land of the Long Ago. i —Nixon Waterman. | OUTCASTS Major Manners walked up the steep street between houses of gray stone. Eve was : the pave; the sky; the glass in the win- dows; the shutters; the little dens. St. Hubert climbed a cleft between green hills whose summits were dark and serrate with but even the greenness of the Decem- ber country had a tinge of gray. Manners paused in front of a house with a pretentious facade. He looked at the windows with the eyes of a man who had become ex- pert in appraising the appearances of strange houses. He glanced at his notebook. “One of ours, Fi The orderly-room clerk nodded. “Number Seventeen, sir.” “Yes; this looks like the colonel.” Manners’ field boots were well polished. They seemed to have col- lected more and more polish since bay of a blissful thousands of strange men? Four German years; now, the English, the deliverers! ingly, and much of this old conven- tional morality had suffered badly from dry rot. Suddenly he paused. A house had attracted his attention. It stood back behind a little garden, a white house with green shutters. The lower shutters were closed, and there was something about the house that intrigued him. He had a cer- tain feeling for houses and gardens, and for atmosphere, and not merely as a doctor going on his rounds. He opened the iron gate, walked up the path and knocked. There was no response. He knocked again and more in- sistently. He heard a faint shuf- fling sound on the tiles of the pas- sage. The door was unlocked and opened six inches. He saw a face, a woman's face, a thin, pale face that seemed all edge. The eves looked at him mistrustful- ly. They were curious eyes, of a dead grayness. Manners saluted. “Pardon. I am looking for a billet.” The eyes observed him. They looked frightened. They showed the whites below the iris. They were like the eyes of a creature in a e. “You wish for a room, Monsieur?” “Yes.” “But I am all alone here.” Something in Manners smiled. Even if romance ted itself to him, he did not infer that he would find it here. The woman was not more than forty, but she made him think of a yellow-skinned fruit that had been dried out. “I shall cause you no trouble, I need a room to sleep Madame. in. My servant looks after me.” Her pale eyes flickered. ‘Monsieur will need food?" “No.” “But Monsieur wil have to go in and out.” “You can give me a key. I want quiet. After the war-—-yes, quiet.” She nodded her head. She had smooth black hair streaked with gray. “Monsieur belongs to the cavalry ?". “No; I'm a doctor.” The fiickering, thin flame of her indecision steadied itself. “I will show you a room, Monsieur.” The room pleased Manners. Its windows opened on the garden at the garden fruit trees trained to them, and be- yond the garden a cended to a pine wood. the war had died a month or so be- ed to billet himself here, and return- fore, yet this luster was not martial. ed to the Hotel Bertrand, where the It suggested something more subtle. unit was to be packed into the emp- It was part of a man's consciousness ty rooms. of life returning to a gradual appre- Five motor ambulances were park- ciation of things that were both old ed in the Place, and the main street and new: the bloom upon fruit; half- was full of an infantry battalion and forgotten decencies; a life that was its rt. The same old brown not all duckboard and latrine. For crowd. Would life in the future be Manners was a doctor and second in anything but a crowd? command of a field ambulance. He _ Manners disappeared into the Hotel had known mud, but not foo much Bertrand, and got busy. He was mud; horror but not to much hor- in charge of the advance y as ror. The war had hardened and Well as of the ‘billeting, a bri dulled him, but beneath the coarsen- ade hospital had to be fitted up in ed surface there remained the illu- the lower rooms of the empty hotel. sion that civilization was worth The unit poured in on him while while and that, somehow, life should he was supervising the activities of be decent. He knocked at the door of Num- ber Seventeen. It was opened by a sallow little Belgian girl in a checked apron. To her Manners spoke briefly in bad French. “Billets for two officers.” He was admitted, or rather, he walked in with the air of a man who had ceased to regard private property as anything personal. He was in search of beds, good clean beds, and a room with a stove in it. The colonel liked space and a stove. Through a doorway he had a glimpse of a fat old woman in black seated on a sofa. He gave her a cursory “Bon jour, Madame,” followed the servant up polished stairs. Number Seventeen proved satis- factory. He chalked two doors. Barry, waiting on the sidewalk, turned an infantile face to his re- turning officer. A certain informal- ity had established itself between the two. “That settles all the officers, Bar- ry, except myself.” “There's the sergeants’ mess, sir.” Oh, we'll do them proud. We can spread ourselves here. I imag- ine that this is the first occasion on which the unit has occupied a hotel.” “And the transport, sir? know, last time—' “They are a grousing They shan't grouse here. You I've got and man with the blue eyes. the advance party. He heard the colonel's voice, and he knew at once that there had been trouble on the road, baud march discipline, some- thing that a Red Hat could guarrel with. “Where's Major Manners?” And Manners went in search of the trouble. He found a big man with blue eyes scolding a sergeant. He stood by sympathetically; he could sympa- thize with both O. C. and N. C. O. Moving a unit under the eyes of a liverish general could be a touchy business. Bad temper was infec- tious. Besides, he was fond of the big When the interposed the “I have fixed up the mess, sir. Tea should be ready. I'll show you the house. I'll fix things up here.” The big man's blue eyes grew mild and humorous. Manners and his colonel went off together. moment came, he soothing word. “Two idiots smoking, Manners, when we were supposed to be at at- tention.” ? mi “Well, there won't be much more attention, sir. Must say I feel like the men-—at times. I want to let out and yell and cut a caper right under the august nose.” “My nose, Manners?" They laughed. “No, General Fuss,’ sir. I've gol an acre of floor.” He sent a tired man in to loosen ‘em a palace.” | He glanced at the pages of his things and drink tea. Later, he | notebook and handed it to the clerk. went to the mess and found it as’ “You might take this along to the usual. Sanger, the JevoRne and sergeant major. TI'll just go and dandified Sanger, who could Bee hunt myself up a corner. Oh, and like a gaurdsman and was Bevel tell Tombs, the mess orderly, to be relied upon, sat playing a p ae, spread himself in that house just off Brown was filling a pipe. e the Place. We shall want tea.” grave Gordon sat scribbling the daily Manners went on up the steep letter to his wife. Tombs produced street of St. Hubert. Always he more tea. Sanger, revolving on a had been something of a separative music stool, fired off his usual ques- soul, and the war had been like a tion. or churn consolidating thousands of in- “Any luck for me, uncle? dividual fat-globules into butter. Al- Manners teased him. “Not much. ready he was his personal An old lady with a fringe. prociivities reestablishing themselves. ‘“Confound it, I haven't had any- Certain sensibilities were reviving or thing young and tasty in my billet preparing to put out leaves—though for the last three weeks. And the leaves mght not be quite the Sanger broke into one of the war re- same as of yore. | frains, vamp! it on the piano. He saw the tourellas of the : Sha i Ve oh a Jove you can teau bright against a slivery crevice see : in 3 brist . He was a Y— of a| Gordon grew sardonic. “It's feeling Ny pleasure, almost of ten- chronic with you. Permanently derness. Life had not lost all its polygamous. What are you going pathos. {to do when you get home? . But he kept an alert eye on the ‘Preach free love, old McTavish. houses. He had lived so much with | Manners drank his tea and, find- other men that now his inclination ing that there was fresh butter on was to remove his essential self in- the table, was patient even with the there She was both frightened and pro- tiatory. No doubt some of these had had a rough time. Man- ners had seen the reoccupied French territory, all starved faces and flies. “My servant has been here?” “Yes, Monsieur. Will it be nec- for him to come often?” “Oh, twice a day. But that won't inconvenience you, will it?” “No, Monsieur. I keep the door locked.” | Manners paused. Had this wo- ‘man been living in a state of terror | for four years, and had fear become a habit? “There is no need for locked doors, Madame, now,” he said kindly. She gave him a queer, upward, startled glance. Almost it accused him of not unders something. And then she faced about and disap- peared down the . Manners went up the stairs to his room. He felt puzzled and uneasy. He glanced around the room. Smith, his batman, had put out all his things. A pair of slacks hung on the back of a chair. But there was something alien and sinister about ‘the room. No other room made him feel as this one did: that scores of other men had slept in it, Ger- mans, enemies, men who were dead. But what rot! The Germans were just other men, noworse, no better. He put the candle down on the table beside letters and an English news- paper that were waiting to be read. At seven o'clock he went down- !stairs to go to the mess. Below him a door had opened and closed. The woman was waiting for him. He asked her for a key. “You must take the one in the door, Monsieur. I have no other.” He took the key, locked the door on the outside, and heard her it as he went down the path. i! A was she so suspicious? He was be- ginning to think that he had chosen an uncomfortable billet, and in the mess he heard other revelations. The colonel looked pink and re- freshed; he had been offered coffee and cake; he had a stove and an electric light beside his bed. r had discovered other evidences of civilization; a bottle of red wine and a girl. Brown, too, could boast of a stove. “These people haven't done so badly. Old Fritz didn't skin them as he did the French.” “What about you, luck ?” Manners replied evastvely: nice and quiet.” But he was beginning to wonder what ailed the house with the green shutters. When, full of the warmth of the mess and its whisky, he returned to ‘his billet and unlocked the door and changed the key to the inside of the lock, he felt that someone wes listening. The house struck cold. He thought he heard a door open as he climbed the stair, but he was sleepy and less sensitive to impres- sions. He undressed and t into, ped. It was quite a constortable He woke to find Smith, his bpat- man, in the room with a jug of hot water. Smith was a conversational soul, and he had become more so since the armistice. “Rummy house, this, sir.” “What's the matter, Smith?" “No water. She keeps the kitchen door locked. Had to go down to the mess for your shaving water, sir.” “No tea, Smith?” “Sorry, sir. I'll manage it tomor- row. You see, I didn't t to strike a surprise packet like this.” He himself of Manners’ ‘boots and went downstairs to clean (them. Manners, while shaving, could hear the fellow whistling. "h was a cheerful sound in this melan- choly house, and he was coming to find another billet. | The mess breakfast was at eight- fifteen; parade at nine. The day ‘looked frosty, and the house struck cold. He put on his British warmer, uncle—any “I'm and met the Belgian woman in the passage. She looked at him anxiously. “Monsieur has slept well ?" | He began to tell her that he might {have to change his billet. She ap- peared strangely agitated. “Monsieur will not go elsewhere, please. I wish to be hospitable. If Monsieur will tell me—" Manners was surprised, troubled. Why was she so anxious for him to jays sv frightened at the idea of his |lea | “I find the room very cold, Mad- crowd. You a good billet. A stove and half ame.” | Almost she wrung her hands. “I have so little coal. There is a stove. | I will do what I can.” “And hot water in the morning, | Madame.” | ‘Monsieur shall have it.” Her anxious, hunted eyes worried him, and he relented. “Thank you, Madame. (for a few days.” | She followed him to the door. She {had the air of wishing to say more to him, but no words came. She locked the door behind him. The day proved full of affairs. He did not return to his billet till the evening. He found a small fire burning in the stove in his room, and on the table stood a bottle of wine. He was touched, and a little shocked. Did the poor, frightened creature think that he had to be propitiated? And why? Had life been brutal to her? Oh, perhaps. He left the bottle on the table, sat by the stove and read. At seven he changed into slacks, and went out on his way to the mess. She met him in the dim “Monsieur is more comfortable?” He thanked her. He mentioned the to some secret corner. ‘The times foulness of Brown's unhygienic pipe. wine. He suggested that her gen- wer so prodigious, and somehow so’ It was dark when he up |erosity was charming but unneces- dead. e wanted to think. |the street to his billet. There The emptiness of the street sur- seemed to be no light in the house prised him. He liked it. Tt was with the green shutters, but when like some dim street in a deserted, he knocked the woman let him in. medieval town. It had a shut-up, | She brought a candle, but he noticed secret air. No women; no children. that her eyes remained downcast. Had these Belgian women and chil- The hand holding the candlestick dren become shy of thousands upon | was the color of wax. In the darkness her voice seemed near to tears. ‘Monsieur is very kind. TI wish to do m ” He said something playful, half gentle, and went out wond whether there had been = i I will stay | t was half Again Manners slept well, but to- wards something disturbed him; he lor a movement in the house, but he wake listening. The curtains window were turning gray with the dawn. Manners got out of bed and went to the window. Below him he saw the garden shut in by its high gray walls, and the outline of the paths with their of box. In one ‘corner stood a little summerhouse, painted blue. He was about to get back into bed when he saw a figure wrapped up in a black early. | ure was not that of the wo- man. It was less tall; it moved differently; even in that old black ‘cloak it seemed to exhale youthful- ness. It walked round and round the box-edged path like a prisoner in a yard let out for an hour's ex- ercise. The daylight strengthened. Man- ners saw a hand go up and put back the hood It revealed the face of a girl, a pale, rather broad face with dark hair and well-set eyes. It ‘was a type of face that appeared to him: sensitive, sensuous, vaguely sad. She stood and looked at the sky for a moment, and then, turning to- wards the house, passed out of his field of vision. Manners got back into bed. Half an hour later, when Smith appeared ‘with tea, he asked his servant a | question. “Have you seen anyone else in this house, Smith Smith was stooping to collect his officer's boots. “Anyone else, sir?” “Yes; besides the woman.” The man’s innocent face answer- ed the question. “Not a living soul, sir It's a rummy house. She hadn't locked the kitchen door on me this mo A “You got the hot water all right?” Ye “Yes, sir. She seems a bit short of fuel, sir. I caught her pushing bits of an old chair into the stove.” Manners, sipping his tea, reflected upon this incident. The woman was burning the furniture. But other people could get coal in St. Hubert. Was it that she had no money? And perhaps hardly any food! Later in the day another incident threw a more sinister light upon the ‘situation. Manners happened to return to the house about eleven in the morning and as he climbed the winding street he became aware of 'a crowd of women and children out- side the railings of the house with the green shutters. It was a slatternly, unwashed and | unpleasant crowd. The children were throwing stones at the shut- ters, while the women—frowsy and excited—hurled epithets. Obviously, (it was a demonstration, a mob dis- | play, by the lower elements of this little Belgian town. And as Man- (ners approached the group, his face hardened. Nasty things, mobs, even when made up of a score or two of women and urchins. Discovering him, they grew silent. The children scuttled out of his way, But one of the women stood in front of “the gate. ' v “Bad place for English officer.” Manners motioned her out of the way, and she, seeing the disdain in his eyes, grew insolent. “German women -—secondhand. Monsieur likes them so, perhaps.” She seemed to squelch with laugh- ter, in which the rest of the crowd joined. Manners went pale. “If you please, Madame. I do not understand.” She gave way, as he opened the gate and walked up the path tothe house. The crowd had its joke at his expense. He felt both contemp- tuous and angry. He had begun to divine a part of the secret of this house, and, hard- (ened worldling though he was, he ‘was shocked by it. He tried the door and found it (unlocked. This surprised him. And ‘then he saw a figure seated on the 'stairs, its face clasped between its hands. He closed the door and locked it. He went halfway up the passage and paused. The woman spoke, and her voice seemed to make a dry whispering. [“It is not true, Monsieur.” Her ‘hand dropped. Her eyes appealed ‘to him. { Manners was conscious of sudden compassion. “Madame, I prefer to believe you.” “You must believe me, Monsieur. We are reviled; we are threatened; we are allowed no food, no coal, no light. Even the water—" He nodded. “You are not alone here?” “No, Monsieur. Gabrielle my daughter.” “Yes; I must have seen her this ! morning in the garden. The woman's eyelids flickered mo- ” 'mentarily. “It was not because I did not trust . Does Monsieur understand ? would explain—" { ‘Tell me.” “It happened in this way, Mon- | sieur. For two years I had the Ger- man commandant billeted in my ‘house. he was a good man. He hated war, as we did. He had a |wife and children at home, and he was kind. He liked my daughter to play on the piano; even he used to work in the garden; he was at home with us, and friendly. He made life—the life of prisoners— easy for us. We had food, fuel. Does Monsieur understand what I am sa 2» Manners nodded. “I understand.” She was silent for a moment. “But this is the tragedy, Mon- sieur: that my enemies should be, not the Germans, but these people in my town; people who were jeal- ous; people who could think nothing but evil. I did not understand till daughter were to be named among those who had given themselves. At first I could not believe it. But then the persecution began: insults; disgusting threats: We were treated as outcasts. I had to hide my | daughter. Does Monsieur under- | stand 7" | Again Manners nodded. “But have you not asked for protection?” “lI appealed to the burgomaster, coud not say what, a sound cloak with a hood the Germans left us that I and my | Monsieur, but he is a weak man. He {advised us to go away.” “But—the police?” “We have but one gendarme, Mon- sieur, these days, and he is as bad as those others. There is nothing but your presence in my house that saves us.” | In the course of the war Manners had had to tackle many problems, and he had found a ruthless self- confidence the most active of sol- vents. He made his own plan, and ‘compelled or persuaded other men to accept it. He said to the woman on the stairs, “I will do something,” and he began by going out and chalking upon the front door the mystic sym- bols: “Under the protection of the | English Army.” The crowd still loi- | tered. He walked to the gate and point- 'ed with his cane. “Go. Clear out!” and they went. But an autocratic gesture such as this could be no more than a compromise, and he knew it. He had a heart-to-heart talk with the col- onel; he asked the advice of a bri- gade major who was a good fellow. “We can order a guard to be de- tailed. We have had to place sentries outside of several houses. One wom- an has had her hair cut off and her clothes torn to pieces.” Manners reflected. “It's very good of you. But I don't think a man with a bayonet is going to solve this problem.” The brigade major made a sugges- tion. “Why don't you doctors do something? You could co-opt the la- cal priest and the Belgian doctor. The p-iest is a sportsman.” Manners looked grave. “Yes, it's an idca. But that one should have to certify a girl's decency in order to placate a lot of sluts!” He went to see the catholic priest. He found him to be a stout old per- son, bald, buxom, and with a jocund . He was a humanist. He had a little English, and between his En- glish and Manners’ French they con- trived to understand each other. Almost the old man broke the seal of the confessional. “Monsieur, my assurance is that the accusation is not true. I have known Madame Lerrourc anu her daughter for many years. I knew the German officer who lived in the house. He was a decent fellow. I will do all I can to help these ladies.” They smiled upon each other. “May I ask you a question, Mon- sieur le Major?” the priest asked. “Certainly. ’ “Have you seen Madame Lerrou- re's daughter?” “Once, and only in the distance, from my window.” The priest nodded. “So—your com- passion is impersonal; a flower of the open mind. It is well. See her.” Manners returned to the house with the green shutters. Madame Lerrourc let him in. He showed her those mystic symbols in chalk upon the door. She looked at them witha faint smile. “Will it suffice, Monsieur?" He asked her a question. ‘Mad- ame, how much food have you in the house?’ She had closed the door and her thin figure drooped. “Very little, Monsieur.” “I see. We must alter that.” He walked down the passage to- wards the kitchen with the air of an officer conducting an inspection. The ‘door stood ajar. He pushed it open. There was an exclamation from the mother. “Monsieur!” A girl was sitting by the stove with a black shawl over her shoulders. Startled, she turned her head ana looked at the Englishman. She hes- itated; she stood up. Manners saluted her. selle, please sit down.” He crossed over to the stove, open- ed its iron door and saw a miser- able little fire in the heart of which a green log sizzled unconsentingly. He reclosed the door. He turned to Madam Lerrourc. “Madame, I apologize. I have robbed you of your coal. I will see that it is replaced.” He was conscious of the girl sit- ting there with her hands clasped in her lap, a frightened, gentle, dark thing. She was half starved and cold and afraid but she sat there with a childish dignity. Her soft eyes observed him. Manners looked at her and smiled, and moved towards the door. “You will forgive me for having intrud- ed?” He made a sign to the mother. She followed him into the e, and opened the door of an icy little salon in which a piano stood with its keyboard closed. There was dust on it. And Manners, with a “Mademoi- queer abstracted air, passed a finger over the dusty surface. “One cannot play the piano with frozen hands.” He looked out of the window. “I have taken advice, Madame. gested to me, but now, having seen Mademoiselle Lerrourc, I do not think they will be necessary. have visited your priest, and in him |you have a friend. Will you permit | me to remain in your house?” She stood very still. “Monsieur, I thank you. But as you see, it will be difficult for me to give Mon- ' sieur that comfort—" “I think I can arrange these dif- ficul’ies. There have been other occasions when we have been al- lowed to provide civilians with food and medical comforts. You will al- low me, Madame, to arrange these matters?” He was formal, kind, sparing a self-restraint that he divined to be on the edge of breaking. He went out quickly, aware of a pathetic figure sitting rigid on a sofa, with tears beginning to show. He closed the door. He said to himself in the English way, “Confound it, how do I know that I'm not a fool?” but that he did know it was part of his nature. That night abrielle Lerrourc played her piano in a room that ‘was warmed. The sound flled the dead house and made i: alive, and one who knocked at the door was | received as a friend. Certain things were sug- Ii PENNSYLVANIA R. R. IS 100 YEARS OLD Just one hundred years ago one of the oldest railroads in lvania and in the entire country pushed its first crude rails out from the of West Chester, to the tiny hamlet of Malvern, nine miles away. Born of the ambitious plans of a group of public spirited citizens ot West Chester and vicinity, back in 1831, the West Chester Railroad was projec to afford the prosperous and rapidly growing seat of Chester county direct passenger and freight service to and from Philadelphia. Its sponsors contemplated a connec- tion with the Philadelphia and Co- lumbia Railroad at Malvern and the use of that railroad's tracks into the city. So early was that day in railroad history, however, that the Philadel- phia and Columbia, itself the first railroad to be built in the State of Pennsylvania, had not been extended the entire distance to Philadelphia from its starting point at Columbia, Pa. 80 miles west of the Quaker City. So, despite the rapidity with which the West Chester road was picked through to the junction at alvern, it was not until a yea: later that passengers were able to make a trip entirely by rail to anc from the me The pioneer railway builders of West Chester started their nine miles of track to Malvern late ir May 1831 and in July of the follow: ing year they combined the celebra- tion of the nation’s birth with festiv- ities marking the completion of (three miles of track. A horse drawn car with thirty Tt was driven proudly out of town or that gala Fourth of July, the horses trotting smartly along to the ac companiment of cheers and admir ing shouts from the populace. The formal opening of the line did not take place until September, 1832 but it was made the occasion of ¢ great celebration at West Chester. The total cost of the early line i: given at $80,000. Horses were the motive power for more than a de gn the first track was mad: 0 ow pine girders plated wit} flat iron bars. inion engines wer¢ not used on the railroad until 184! when the track was s enec and heavier and more modern rail: were laid. The first passengers on the Wes Chester Railroad did not ride all the way to central Philadelphia by rail They were carried inthe cars of the railway to the head of an incline plane on Belmont teau, now ¢ part of Fairmount , Philadel Here the sectional cana boats which moved on flat cars ove the Philadelphia and Columbia Rail road were dropped by cable to the banks of the Schuykill River at ths foot of the plateau. West Cheste passengers transferred from cars tt stages at the head of the Belmon ‘plane for the trip to down-town Phil adelphia. It was not until Decem ber, 1833, when the Columbia bridg: over the Schuylkill river was com | pleted at the foot of the plane tha the railway cars were hauled inane out « of the i roper. 5 e compan rst passénger de pot in Philadelphia was establishet at Broad and Race streets. Wit) ‘the opening of the river bridge am the eliruination of the inclined plan the station was removed to 18th an: Market streets. The Pennsylvania Railroad firs took over the operation of the Wes Chester Railroad in 1859, relinquish ing it several years later to the Wes Chester and Philadelphia railroad In 1879 the Pennsylvania purchase: the West Chester railroad and agai assumed the manag-ment of the line absorbing it entirely in April, 190¢ The old route is still in use althoug’ its connections with the main linet Philadelphia was transferred t Frazer, 24 miles west of Philadel phia, shortly after the vani: took control and the line wa straightened and otherwise improve It now forms an alternate rout between the city and West Cheste and carries a light commutatio traffic. Some idea of the very early plac occupied by the West Chester rail road in Pennsylvania's rtatio history may be gained from the fac that it antedated by several year the construction and operation of th Allegheny Portage Railroad and th Main Line of Public Works of Penr sylvania, the first combined rail an canal transport system to cross th State and connect Philadelphia an ‘Pittsburgh. This trans-state rout was the forerunner of the preser Pennsylvania Railroad. “Madame, with your permissior I am very fond of music.” He was given a chair by th stove. The girl played Chopin; Mac ame's knitting needles clicked. On a subsequent Sunday, sundr Englishmen in khaki saw an Eng lish major walking to church wit two Belgian ladies. It appearedt be a family affair. If there wer grins, such expressions of huma ‘feeling were neither destructive nc wholly cynical. | The gay Sanger chose to be fact tious in the mess. “Old uncle seen to have gone in off the deep end.” He tried teasing Manners, but ws | 80 snubbed that in the future he r |frained. Old uncle was not tt man to be fooled with. His foil if it was folly, was a delicate an | personal affair. | The people of St. Hubert sa | what these English soldiers saw, an each man and each woman saw ‘with the eyes of his or her secr« soul. To some Manners was a ge: |tleman; to others he was a con | plaisant fool. Some might say 1 ‘had stepped into the shoes of ti | German; others, that he had falle in love with Mademoiselle Gabriel Lerrourc, who had the eyes of ti Holy Virgin and whose hands mac music. —Hearst’s International Co: mopolitan. Large numbers of Italian eggs a | being imported into this countr | We trust they are not the lays « | Ancient Rome.