Sena Yim Bellefonte, Pa., September 4, 1931. ————————————————— BETTER NOT KNOW Life is so kind, never to let us know, The time of our descent down the long steep hill; Never to know when he soft snow, Nor which bright last to trill bird will be the Never to konw what joy will be the last. When will fleet youth turn and wing away? But leave us know that the height is past, - Of that brief passion which no love can stay. Life dream, is so kind, far kinder than we eee, | | i | | i falls, the last have to be on at the next rise, you know, Miss Kellogg.” “Did you see him throw me all over the stage in that scene?” she demanded. ‘It nearly killed my curtain.” Hampton might be about to agree with her, but Bates said sharply: “If you in- terfere with my work, Hampton, you'll have to take the responsi- bility.” “Now, now,” the director said. “You are both nervous and wrought | “Well, for the present. Pain and grief darkens the hours, still a gleam. If I had known the day that you were to die I never, never could have said ‘‘Good- Bye.” e—— A ————— DIRTY WORK. Lawrence Bates, the clear-cut cameo of his profile a beauteous to see even while he surren- dered to such overmaste rage as this, towered above Jean Kellogg as she shrank imploringly back from him. “You liar!” he cried tensely. “You rotten liar!” His fingers gripped her throat. He choked her, shook her, threw her from him so violently that she went crashing down upon the floor. As he left her and strode toward the door she sat up and pulled her- self into a chair, trying her best to do it gracefully, but aware that this was next to impossible. Her ears strained for the first sign of the fatal titter. It almost came; there was an indefinable movement from the audience, hardly more than a breath, which threatened it. Unless she could head off the laugh, her dignity was lost, with no hope of regaining it during the one minute that remained before the curtain. And Bates, across the stage, did nothing to draw the eyes of the audience from her. She fought to take their minds away from the grotesque fall. Some- how she succeeded. In the chair, her back to Bates, she got out her hand- kerchief. She could not see him, but she knew he was standing by the door. ‘You—you hurt me,” she said. And he replied: “I wouldn't care if I had killed you.” She spoke drearily, hopelessly; a statement, not a question. “Then it's all over.” He did not answer her. In silence she wept into her handkerchief. Her anger and resentment were tempered by triumph. Bates had almost ruined her of the scene and she had saved it. But the triumph, in turn, was tempered by apprehension. If he did that again and again, she could hardly hope al- ways to save it, and it was vitally important that at this second act curtain the audience should sympa- thise with both the husband and the e. While thus she quietly wept, a forlorn and tragic victim of misun- derstanding and injustice, Bates had his chance, and took it, as always, admirably. He stood by the door, looking at her. His mobile, intel- ligent features, his long-lashed ex- pressive eyes, even his broad shoul- ders and tapering hands registered | up. It is only the second night. will settle down in the next day or two. Don’t quarrel.” “Do you mean,” Jean protested, “that you're going to let him keep on doing it?" “Of course he is,” Bates exclaim- ed, and Hampton said, placatingly: see, Miss Kellogg. It seemed to me you both got over very well, ih- deed. But we'll see.” “When?” “Oh, when things get a little more set—next week, perhaps. We're in for a run, you know. The spec- ulators made a ten week's buy this morning as soon as they saw the good press. I'll look at the scene from out front some night.” Bates was smiling ironically as Jean went to her dressing room. And she knew as well as he did that Hampton would do nothing. Hampton was a good director, but it was his first job with the Aarons management. Bates had been a pop- ular leading man in New York for five years, and Jean had no particu- lar Broadway public; this was her first big part. > Her mind raced as she made her change. What was it all about? Why should Lawrence Bates want to ruin her in the play? It didn't hurt his part in the slightest to have hers played well. He hadn't done it—yet. She had succeeded in pulling herself out of the situation tonight; perhaps she could continue to do sc indefinitely. If she couldn’t—if she failed to hold the audience in that big scene at the close of the second act—if the au- dience once laughed at her—? Her two week's notice; smaller parts again; Piovary never another chance at a lead in New York. And she had worked so hard to climb. Her first great opportunity— The assistant stage manager tap- ped on her door. “Third act!" he called. She snatched one final glance into the mirror and hurried or stage. The curtain rose. She forced herself to forget the second act and concentrate on this one. There was no place in it where Bates could damage her work with- out also injuring his own. The act went magnificently. Together, af- ter their powerful reconciliation scene upon which the final curtain fell with her in his arms, they took seven calls. . The newspaper reviews that morn- BTes ing and afternoon had not been too strong. ‘Mistaken Marriage” was a definite hit. The play had opened on Thursday night, and at the Saturday matinee another capacity audience saw it. As Jean, on her first entrance, look- ed out past the footlights into the hazy darkness spotted in the fore- with solid rows of vague pink faces, her thought was that for many weeks to come there would be houses just like this one—whether she were here to see them or not. She must be here. As the climax of the second act approached she prepared herself as best she could for the quarrel scene; tried to fall gracefully, without avail. Bates was too strong for er. she almost heard the dread- Again to all that he firmly intended never ed laugh, and again by the barest to return to her—but that he surely would; he could not do otherwise. Jean heard the door close behind him, and the house burst into ap- plause. He had succeeded in getting them with another of his wonderful speechless exits. She let the applause die, then rose and moved, first hesitatingly and then with resolution, to the tele- phone, where she called the other man-—the would-be lover whom ear- lier in the act she had repulsed and sent away, al h her husband had believed her a liar when she told him so. The curtain fell as she asked that other man to come back. There was a loud rattle of hand- clapping, and Bates came on to join her in taking the call. He smiled at her with cordial enthusi- asm, contriving to let the audience see that, regardless of how great a part of that applause might be his, he was generously glad to share it all with her. They took two more curtains’ r. The handclap- ping ceased and Bates started for jis dressing room, but she halted m. “Just 2a minute, Mr. Bates,” she said. “That quarrel scene. What was the idea of doing it differently from last night? We never rehears- ed it that awy.” “It came to me at the moment as a good bit of business,” he replied. “Went over very well, don’t you think 7?" “They nearly laughed,” she retort- ed. “These long skirts are hard enough to handle without being twisted around so that they slide up over the knees. And when you threw me you were too rough. You actually hurt me.” “Oh, sorry,” he said. i ‘her. “He makes me look ridiculous, Pily. succeeded in avoiding it. Something approaching panic grip- ped her. This panic did not last into the third act-—she was too experienced an actress for that—and the ap- plause that followed the final cur- tain was, she knew, as much for her as for him. Nevertheless, it was an apprehensive and unhappy leading woman who sat before the mirror cold creaming her make-u when a knock at the door was fol- lowed by the entrance in a kimono of Mrs. Adrian Shore, whose proud record it was to have been on the American stage, for sixty-two years, since she was 14. Slightly bent and thin with the shrinkage of age, but still an im- pressive figure, Mrs. Shore's parts in these twilight days were small; so- phisticated but kindly grandmothers, and authoritative, likable and usually epigrammatic society grande dames. She did not appear in the last act of “Mistaken age,” and ordi- narily would have left the theatre before the end of the performance, but her matinee-day custom during the run of any play in which she worked was to remain and rest be- tween afternoon and night. “My dear,” she said, “what is this talk I hear about you and Bates hav- ing — Jun-in over some rough work of on” “That sounds as though you had heard all there is to it” Jean told and Hampton will do nothing about it" “Hampton is a jellyfish,” Mrs. Shore declared abruptly. “He cut three lines of mine out of the first act during rehearsals for no better reason than that Bates knew “But you'll if I ever spoke them I would take get used to it and be able to break the stage away from him.” the fall.” “Do you it that way every “Perhaps try,” he said. 'ormance 7?” “I have to be gov- erned somewhat by my emotions at I can't help the moment—my art. being realistic.” “1 know how to make any kind of a fall realistic, if it's property re- hearsed. You don't have slam me around like a mailbag.” “My public,” said Bates, “expects my best—always—and is entitled to it. I never give them less.” “Could you two postpone the argument until some other time?” a soft, tired voice broke in. Willis Hampton, the director, had come over to them—a worried little man with longish white hair. “You mean you propose to do!on me du not exactly, although I'll out. “Bates sprang the new business the performance last night,” said Jean, “and won't cut it “A whi pper!” the old lady exclaimed. “He has been calling me ‘Miss Shaw’ ever since that re- hearsal when I tried to save those three lines of mine—and my Juliet was getting good notices from critics kg years before he was born. It's the strangest thing, because an actor learns how to walk and talk like an intelligent person, how the public get it into r heads he is one.” “1 don’t know what he has against me,” said Jean. “I never met him in my life until we began rehearsing play. And I haven't done any- thing to him since—not consciously.” ' him, looked as though he Later, we'll good ‘and this part opposite Mrs. Shore. Pw Paula Joy at liberty.” | Jean stopped the p of her toilet. “Oh, is that it?” she said. “I hadn't heard. Is she" “I dom't know. Salk i oiReye engaged. At any rate, ° ayward a rs J Ee po is oy no en- ent, she has ved with this management, and there should be a vacancy in the woman lead of this piece, she would stand a good chance of getting it.” “1 see. And he is in love with her.” “He's never in love with anybod but Bates,” the old actress snapped. “The most reasonable explanation of it is that she is clever at giving him cues that allow him to mention how he is. I can worry along in- definitely without having her in this company. I played with her two seasons ago in ‘Trial Divorce,’ and she stepped on my best line for seventy-one nights and twenty-four matinees. But if Bates can make you flop in that second act—It's bad enough to have him in this cast without having her, too. I am de- pending upon you to see to i" Jean smiled wryly. “Be assuredI shall if I can,” she promised, “but if they ever laugh when he tips me over in that second-act climax, I'm afraid I'll be sunk. If Hampton would interfere—" “He won't. You'll have to attend to it yourself.” “1 wish you could tell me how.” Mrs. Shore considered this, and then aslted: “Have you ever done much dirty work?” “Do you mean plays that are——" “Great heavens! Is every tradi- tion of the stage to be lost to this generation?” cried the veteran. “I thought every walk-on knew what dirty work means. Stepping on good lines—killing laughs-—upstaging the other woman——" “I know. I just never happened to hear it called that,” Jean said. “Mean tricks of the trade.” “Devices of the profession,” Mrs. Shore corrected her. “One shouldn't have to do them, but the only way to beat a scene hog is to root deep- er than he does.” “In this particular case, how? “I don't know. You have no chance to hit him back, have you? I have never seen that second-act climax, except at rehearsals, and I paid no attention to it then, not being in on it. But as I recall it, you have to take what he gives you.” “Yes,” Jean agreed. “Too bad. If you didn't, perhaps—" Mrs. Shore chuckled slightly. “I was thinking of a most interest- ing experience I had at the New Wallack's in 1883. My husband was on the road that season with Mr. Booth-—doing Horatio, Cassio and Edmund. Mr. Booth often said that Adrian's Horatio—but I mustn't di- s. We were playing a melodra- ma called ‘Out of the Night. I had the lead, of course. And the villain was a man named Learoyd-—he drank himself to death more than forty years ago, or fellow! He ‘had formed a dislike for me a small matter of curtain call which I received and he pretended to think ‘should have been his. And the feud got bigger, with one thing and anoth- er, he set out to make me leave the company. “We had a big scene together—just he and I—at the close of the fourth act. He struck me, and I retaliated by hitting him over the head witha pottery vase. There were two vases on the table and one of them-—the one I used—was a rubber one, of course. And he got to 80 much ‘force in that scene that I literally had the mark of his hand on my back every night when that act was over.” Unconsciously, Jean stroked her left wrist, still sore from the vio- lence of her fall in the second act. “Perhaps I should have gone to Lester Wallack about it,” Mrs. Shore went on, “but he had many other things on his mind, and actors were supposed to solve their own personal { ulties—and, after all, earoyd was the and, with Wallack, the play was the thing. MY Sear, you should have seen his rles Surface and Bene- dict back at the old second Wal- lack’'s. With the exception of my +husband—Where was I? “Except play " replied “You didn't go to Mr. Wallack about it.” “No. I stood it as long as I ‘could. Then I said to Learoyd one night after the curtain: ‘I've told |you more than once not to strike you now You it again, | you'll take the consequences.’ (And he sneered at me, and laughed | —quite in his villain character. And the next night he hit me harder | than ever.” | | A beatific smile of comf Sllection illumined the old y's ace. i | me like that. I'm for the last time. “He was supposed, after that bat- (the of ours,” she said, “to remain {unconscious on the floor until the | . And that night he did.” | ‘What did you do?” | “My dear,” Mrs. Shore said hap- | “I accidentally smote him with the wrong vase.” She added: “Mr. Wallack gave ime the devil, but I have always thought he was quite pleased.” “Unfortunately,” Jean commented, “there are no pottery vases or their | equivalent in this play.” | “This play? Oh, yes” said Mrs. | Shore, ccming beck across the half | century. “And Hampton won't do a | thing. He's got his job to keep, | and, anyway, he has about as much force as Ophelia in modern clothes. | Bates is out to kill work and | get your place for Paula Joy. I! don’t want that. you, my dear, to face upstage when |1 speak those two good lines in the ! first act.” “And it's lovely the way they are going over,” Jean told her sincerely. “And those of yours in the second act, too. It's wonderful the | way you get every word over in a low voice.” “I'm from a day when all the] people who paid their money for | seats heard what an actress said, or | she wasn't an actress,” Mrs. Shore | reminded her. “But, getting back to i Bates. You've got to fix this with | “With him > scene convincing, Spoke to her now because she was | applauded exit. It is very nice of stage | “A fine chance!” | “There's always a chance—when you're fighting somebody with less brains than you've got, y if he's all swelled up with vanity. Bates would make terms with you ed. in a minute if you could kill some big scene of his. Oh, without to do it intentionally, of the vase over Learoyd's only because he had hurt me so much that I became confused. And me with more than ten year's ex- ence already; but Mr. Wallack looked as though he believed it— there was an actor! What is Bates’ best scene with you?” “That one in the second act climax, after he has thrown me to the floor and I have crawled back in- to the chair. At his exit.” “I forget the scene—if I ever no- ticed it. Is it the way he does an exit speech?” “No. It is all business. Hesita- tion. Determination never tc re- turn. Yet a pull that is sure to bring him back—which, I with my back to him, don't see; if I did, I would never go to the phone and call Richmond. He has got a big hand every performance on that ex- ity Mrs. Shore's mayriad wrinkles deep- ened with her thought. “And what do you do,” she asked after a mo- ment, while he has that exit busi- ness?” “Cry.” “How? Show me just how youdo it, please.” Jean produced her handkerchief and showed her. The old lady emit- ted a cry of delight that was almost a whoop. “Oh, lovely!” she exclaimed. “I have it, my dear. Give me that handkerchief. You never stop weep- ing until he has left the stage, do you? Never mind how lorg he might take to de it, or how much he might change the timing of his business.” “No. I don't move till he slams the door.” Jean looked-listened—laughed. Mrs. Shore returned the handkerchief and came a trifle creakily to her feet. “I'll be getting back to my room,” she said. ‘““You have to get your dinner, and I must have a nap. If I don't, I might drop off to sleep during that long scene in the first act where I have nothing to do but twiddle my thumbs—thanks to Bates getting Hampton to cut my lines. Good luck to you. 1 propose, if possible, to be in the wings to see the denouement of this plot myself.” She paused before she opened the dressing-room door and delivered an exit speech. “He calls me ‘Miss Shaw!" she ex- claimed, “And better actors than he is have carried spears for me.” Bates crossed to the door at the end of the second act that night and stood there, doing nothing to take the eyes of the audience from Jean, who was desperately wrestling with her twisted skirt. he realized that again she had ex- tricated herself from the situation; she was in the chair, her handker- chief in her hand, and they had not laughed. He and she had their three lines of dialogue. He made his exit. The door slammed behind him. He took one step, stopped, listen- ed in incredulous and shocked amaze- ment. Not one handclap came from the audience. He blinked, seeking to recall every detail of busi- ness just past. What had he fail- ed to do that he ought to have done? Nothing. He felt certain of that. Not for one second had his mind been off the technique of that exit. There could be only one ex- planation. Old Mrs. Shore was standing a few feet away, in her second-act dress, having postponed going to her dressing room until the curtain. Bates did not appreciate that this was unusual; he had never noticed whether or not she was an offstage observer of this climax, or cared. He the only person at hand. “Rotten audience tonight,” he said. “No intelligence.” “You never can tell,” the old lady replied. It did not, could not, occur to Bates that she possibly might mean anything except that there was no predicting the mental quality of au. dleuces ust be a housed of yaps, Hissustedly. “Minds all on the price butter and eggs. And now no call unless Hampton forces it." | Jean's voice, on stage, was speak- ing into the phone, and quick upon the fall of the curtain came the loud rattle of the audience's appreciation of the act, as enthusiastic as during any of the other three performances. ' Bates returned through the door to share the call with her and the two more that followed. As Jean came off, preceding him, Mrs. Shore nod- ded to her and said: “Nice work, child.” i Bates, frowning as he went to his dressing room, did not hear her; his mind was too intently upon that un- | as it ble | that he had fumbled it? e must have, somehow. Well, Monday night would tell a different story; he | would se to that. i But it did not. With every ounce of skill he he went thro the exit business; knew he was | ing it better than ever. The door slammed shut. Silence. The true explanation came to him —harrowingly. His smile as he took the calls with Jean was no less cordial and generous than on other nights, but when they had left the and she had hurried to her room he went swiftly to where the director was turning from the) “Look here, Hampton!” he de-! manded. “What did that woman do | to me?” | “What woman?” the director ask- ed. “When?” “Kellogg. Just now. She did something to kil! my exit.” i “What?” i | switchboard entrance. can't see through the back of a| chair. You could see her from | Disappointedly Yo! {had accentuated Bates’ beauty left | controlled by “How the devil do I know? I switch. where you were standing. What a minute, Miss Kellogg. You need did she do?” (to hear this.” “Nothing but the usual business.” Jean's “Yes, she did. She must have. I've made that exit two nights now without getting a hand.” y second- a>: exit by blowing her nore,” Bat>g “1 noticed that,” Hampton remark- auaped To Hampton. “I want you u stop it.” “Well, can it be my fault?” “Blowing—-oh, no,” the direclor The director . “You fad. “You could hear it.” haven't got them.” | “Some of them can hear it—over “Have 1 done anything different on that side, down front. But the from the way I did it the first three point is that the whole house sees performances, when I did get them 2» jt. She has a handkerchief to her “I don't know; can't see you make face, and just one second before 1} that exit on this side from where begin my exit business she bunches I'm standing at the curtain. I'll her fingers and twitches the end of get out into the house some night—" her nose with it. And every eye “You don't need to get out into stays on her till she stops. Anc the house any night, ampton, to she doesn’t stop. She doesn’t stop know that I'm doing my work until the door closes and I am gone right,” Bates broke in. “I don't She does it two or three different have to be told how to make exits, ways.” and when. I make an exit like that “I'm sure I don't see what all the one, either I get a big hand or, some- fuss is about,” Jean told the direc: body has killed it. And there isn't tor. “I merely cry. The busines: anybody on stage but Kellogg.” He calls for it.” scowled suspiciously. “If I thought “You blow your nose. And twitcl you and she had put up any job on it. I had you watched,” exclaimec me—' the 1 man. “Now, Mr. Bates” the director re- “Had her watched—what do you monstrated. “Don’t get nervous and mean?” Jean asked innocently excited. If there's anything being “Surely the business of that scenei: done that's wrong, of course I'll stop no secret; the whole house sees ms it. Ill watch tomorrow night— do it. And why shouldn't I blow but I was looking tonight, and I my nose—softly—and twitch it? 2 didn't see anything.” woman always does that when sh: cries.” “Your eyes are getting old,” Bates ’ told him brutally, and turned away. Why hen Tm making on ex And the eyes with which the direc- «op put Mr. Bates!" she protest tor followed him were unquestionably oq TI can't help being realistic oid—and, as unquestionably, resent- y,, couldn't ask it. Mr. Hampto In = quiet corner at : the Lafubs, at Solilen t. And even if you did, m; mid-r ‘ght, Lawrence tes recoun “Art, hell!” cried Bates. ‘Liste ed his trouble to Jerome Wilstead, yampton! She's stealing my scen an actor well-nigh as decorative as __ every night. Are you going t. Bates himself, who for the moment gang for tat, or must I go t was at liberty. Between them Aar.ong?’ ’ go there existed a friendship as warm « : best as could be possible between any Jens pe Diphie a ar w fo Sicaway leading men of sim- can't give them any less.” r g " Eure you are Baten con. ol pl KalbEEy, tery cluded. Every eye in the house pampton said, “I 't believe M) swings ver b er at exactly the Aarons would interfere—not with th minu at exit business—I .q))5 ghe is getting every night o know it. She does something toget nat scene. You can see him abou them, and that old fool Hampton ji if you want to, of course, althoug can't see it. He can't really be in naturally I'd rather you didn't.” H on it, of course. It isn't likely he explained: “I'd be afraid, if w could be a party to doing anything called his attention to the fact tha - down, where's his your work isn't going over at tha show 7" spot, he might wonder why I a “Right,” agreed Wilstead. “It's the woman, no doubt. What a wo- sl lelting you take all those call ejaculation ma man will do to kill a man's artistic y work is unbelievable. Last season, na red SuiNng as a prayer when 1 was ying in ‘Frail Lady’ 1 pate to do it, Mr. Bates, if yo pposite Lola Trask, I had a wonler- don’t like it,” Jean said “Reall ful scene. It was in the last act: 4, But you'll get used to Rs quite the most outstanding thing in game ag I'am getting used to tha the pace. Trask—a mice Nitle Wo. fall.” man, but temperamental! ©. Hampton's old quite jealous. Oh, naturally enough, ,ressionless as he. said mildly: I suppose; it really must have been * .y pone this is going to be a ha jrargd jor Lek, tie_way, Yihda gem monious company. And while I can I a OO EY igi , 00 On gee my way clear to stopping any 8 ist a am peak BO t oid Bie thing in that scene that is good ac! at: the: ohne a ver Kell 18 ing, it does seem to me the scene a - OEE 18 5 ‘whole went just as well the firs doing, while sie js shat night as it has been going since- r, 0 , g wan to. set In the front row, tomor without either that awkward fall Tow night, away rer on hat side. ine ™*Y me Dislness | Exc on ru be lad to. Wh he locks up.” m ng ome nson, e . y playwright. He is crazy to get me The smile with which Jean wai . ed for Bates to speak, as the direc ra n eee : ag oA Pl out Tue afraig 1 tor bustied away, was in no wit can't offer you but one seat. I'll triumphant, but artless—the smi have to buy it, you know—at specu- with which she had conquered a: lators' prices.” diences when her parts had bee those of naive ingenues. And Bate “Why, of course, if you have to | after swallowing twice, became tk do that,” Wilstead sympathetically charming actor and achieved a mo: agreed. “It didn't occur to me. I Winning manner of friendly consic am always able to get paper for my eration. frignds_Sven with a sellout.” ou Sertain) 2 wi o , naturally,” replied Bates. r scene, Ogg; you 0 “But even I rt rr a special, that” he said. “I'll tell you whi definite seat, and you'll have to be let's do. It really isn't a new ide: in the front row, on that side of the I've had it in my mind ever sinc stage. That means the ticket brok- that little talk we had the othe er will have to find it or pretend to Night, but I've been terribly bus: —and how they soak you when you NeW photographs and other demand have to have a certain location! Suppose we have a little rehears: Come on back right after that scene; tomorrow and work out a way ¢ I'll tell the doorman to send you that what I do will look proper to my room. We'll have plenty of rough and yet leave you in & goc time to talk. I'm not on in the position for the remainder of ti third act for nearly ten minutes.” Scene.” “I might wait until the final cur- “That's a good idea,” Jean have no desire to hu agree tain. As 1 as I'm there, I'd “Shall we say 12 o'clock, here?” ike to robably 1 see the opening of “If that is most convenient f« the oy act.” you,” Bates said. He seemed !' “There's little of any consequence Wonder if perhaps he had not co in it, I assure you,” Bates said. ceded too much, too quickly. *“( “Still, if you want to, can hurry course,” he added, “there might | out front again, but I'd like to have Some rformance when I became : you come on back at once, while it's away by my emotions—" fresh in your mind. I want to “Of course” said Jean amiabl know. And don't take r eyes “Rvery artist has moments like tha off her for a moment. a And I know, when you do, that y¢ of how artistic my business may be will understand it—and not feel ba at the other side of the stage, watch ly at all—if I, too, carried awe her.” by emotion and 1 “Just as everybody else in the Behind them sounded a most lad house does, eh?” said Wilstead. like laugh—the sort of laugh th “You may nd upon me, old fel- would be described in the script of low. It re me of an incident Society dowager's part as “slight when I was pla ‘Discretion.’ amused” —and Bates turned to o You didn’t see me in that, as I re. serve that old Hrs. Shore, dress: call it, but you know the hit I made. for the street, was standing not f. I had a big scene inthe third act—" away. He wondered how much sl Jerome Wilstead— at a cost to could have heard. Bates of eight dollars—sat on Tues- “At noon tomorrow, then,” | day night in row AA, the third seat said to Jean, and strode toward from the left-center aisle. He re- dressing room. As he passed he mained there not only until the cur- Mrs. Shore said to him in her swe¢ tain had descended upon thelast of est other voice: the calls that followed the second * night, Mr. Butts.” act, but until the house lights were Copyright, 1931, by J. Frank Dav up ‘and most of the rush to the lob-| y Was over. en went up i through the lobby and the sidewalk | POST OFFICES DECREASIN Sow Jas al Ssunrely. Se has Rural residents receive about se alley leading to the stage door, and enteen times more mail than th he 80 acceleratd the conversation in Send in a year, according to t Bates’ dressing room that he was latest figures of the Post Office D able to return and down the partment. These show that an ave length of the aisle while still there a8 of 102 pounds of mail matt was ample light. But the talk be- Was delivered per trip, over 43,0 pp —————— ‘tween him and Bates, brief and con- Fural routes last year, whereas on | cise as he made it, was sufficient. |six pounds was collected. The ave The leading man in “Mistaken Mar-'38¢€ of 102 pounds delivered includ riage” was no longer mystified as to all classes of mail matter and co: what was restraining audiences from pu Sout “i pieces on an ave ving him his meed of exit lause. . Ene third act moved on n APR end | Although more than 340 new pc of passionate reconciliation and he Offices each year have been added and Jean made their final bows. | the United States postal § tem sin Then, as the director signaled for 1789, there were early ,000 mc the footlights to go off, the smile | Post, Mets 1 Giiten in 190 m jen Guo; humo eails | the spread of the rural free ¢ his f livery system, established a lit ea BD thous enti | more than 30 years ago.—Montrc | Independent. “Hampton!” he called sharply. And | no less sharply said to Jean: “Wait | ————— A —————— — Subscribe for the Watchman.