== Selicionte, Pa., April 3, Night long it holds us. Like the candle by the bed, God's love lightens us, Turns to day The shadows gray, And the dark that frightens us. Like the mother's good-night kiss, God's love blesses us, Wipes away : As the mother, so is God, Father most dear to us; And although The morn comes slow, Yet he is near to us. EE ——— A ——— —— CAPRICE Dorothy sat in the dark, empty hall, listening to the last bars of the Brahms violin concerto. It was amus- ing, being allowed in on a rehearsal like this—amusing and rather chic. She would tell about it when she! got back to Boston. She had had an unusually interesting time in Paris for an American, but this trip to! Biarritz with Amelita Correlli, the famous Italian violinist, was going to prove the most interesting of all. Amelita had asked the tall, blond French conductor if Dorothy might come to the rehearsal, and he bad reluctantly agreed. He hated people listening to him work. It disturbed him, and besides it was very boring of Amelita to have brought this American with her. It meant there would be no pleasant tete-a-tetes, and he had enjoyed his hours alone with the beautiful Italian last year, when she had come down to play with his orchestra. { Dorothy, alone in the rows of emp- ty seats, was somehow conscious of his annoyance. She had not met him ! yet, but Amelita had told her how | impatient he was with outsiders. The rehearsal was over, and, like a bad child, she crept from her seat and back to the door through which she had come. She would sneak out and | back to the hotel without even speaking to him. But the door. wouldn't open. Apparently an usher had unintentionally locked her in from the outside. How embarrassing! Well, she could not stay there until the concert in the evening, so there was nothing to do but face the wrath of the imperious conductor. “Amelita,” she called, “I'm sorry to disturb you, but I cannot get out. | The doors are all locked. Could you ask M. Le Stand how I can avoid | spending the day here?” At the same | time she thought: in “How I wish I were the kind of woman who could sweep up with the grand manner and carry him off his feet! But I won't. There never was any glamor about me.” Amelita had taken hold of Le Grand’s arm. “Regardez, cher maestro. Voila ma petit amie Americaine, Mme. Brew. ster, Let me present you to her.” Dorothy was walking down the aisle to the stage. Le Grand held out his hand to her. “Sautez, madame,” he said. “You must jump over the footlights.” Dorothy climbed onto one of the front seats and sp across the lights. Her foot caught on a loose | wire on the stage, to fall, but Le Grand to catch her. Their eyes met as he caught her in his arms, ana then | they stood there a few seconds trans- fixed. A warming the soles of Dorothy's feet to the | away roughly. “Thank you,” she murmured and turned to Amelita. “Come on, Lita darling, let's go swimming. It's such | a heavenly day, and | leaped forward intimate friend She could not help at the absurd incongruity of lives. Haw remote her prosaic in America seemed to her, with his absorption in his law and his mineble bridge games at night, wave of homesickness su ed her. She thought she was going to cry aloud for that monotonous : curity she had run away from. man is this? She is not like you and me. And yet,” he continued gravely, “T think T can understand why you two are friends.” Amelita laughed warmly. “You | will like her, Le Grand,” she said. “She is just une petit Americaine, a good mother and a good wife. Every now and then she escapes from her hushand and family long enough to hear some music and make friends with a few crazy artists like you and me. But always she goes back again -~to George.” Dorothy felt suddenly resentful at Amelita’'s affectionate patronizing. Why should it always be assumed, she wondered. that she could never be entirely free? She had a 2, unhappy sense that she did not fit. either here with Correll and Le Grand, or at home with George and ‘and then she was | the fields and hills ‘ed beer, Le : Ei fi : = 18 ts fs Gt i g = = pursued, A bottle of red wine and Amelita’'s good-natured but determined corcen- tration on herself soon made Dorothy forget her icy terror. Only every now deeply buried sense of foreboding and unrest. Le Grand came to the hotel after ‘lunch and they all piled into Doro- | i had gone. The sky was overcast and hills of the Pyrenees. The two wo-' thy's car to drive out into the foot- men sat in either corner of the car with Le Grand between them. It was a warm, sunny afternoon, but there was a matter-of-fact quality about which always comes during that period between lunch and tea. There were no long shadows to entice you with their. vagueness, only a frank obviousness which made you want to turn away. “Any other time of day or night has its particular charm,” thought Dorothy morosely, “but between 2 and 4 one should be alone—asleep or with a good book.” Amelita had slipped her arm through Le Grand's and they were reminiscing gayly. Dorothy sat back in her corner feeling a little out of things. Laughing, Le Grand turned to her and, lifting his right elbow, ever so casually, said: “Allons, madame, put your arm through mine, too, and then we shall be three gay comrades.” As Dorothy felt the rough tweed of his sleeve under her hand, she knew that this was no casual gesture between them, but a significant and expectant one, despite its simplicity. She had a second of panic and glanc- ed swiftly at Amelita to see if she had sensed this lightning flash be- tween her and Le Grand. But Cor- relli was looking admirably out at the handsome Basques who strode along the road. So they drove for several ® hours, Dorothy scarcely crediting her strange premonitions—and yet, at times, quite sure that she was caught up by a force beyond anything she had ever known. The only thing she could compare it to was the day when she was very little and had got scarlet fever. In the morning she had been quite well, and in the afternoon the doctors had told her she was very il! and would be for a long time. She remembered her distress then before she had adjusted herself to the idea. “What are you thinking of?” Le Grand leaned close tc her, It seem- ed quite natural that the very turn of his head should be a caress— just as it had seemed quite natural for her to have that high fever that afternoon so many years ago. “I was comparing you to scarlet fever,” Dorothy laughed. “Yau hear that, Correlli,” he cried. | “Your charming friend compares me to the most virulent disease. It is unkind of her, and most unfair. She is, most likely, tired of driving about with you and me. Let's stop in a little inn I know, not far from here. They have the best liquors in this part of the world, we can sit at a table by a lovely stream and drink them. You like good wines, madame ? avez du gout et pout les choses du corps et de l'esprit.” They drove up to a tiny inn, where, sa ue men on a court in front, the growing 1 Grand a glass of port, Dorothy a creme de men . It was cool creme de menthe, fresh and Was it this sudden awareness which made her feel it entirely legit- well acknowledge its supremacy. It had alwavs been her boast that no situation had ever caught her un- nrenared and no relationship of hers had not been planned for. She had wanted to marrv George and so she had schemed with great deliberation to achieve that end. Her bables had been wanted and for long before they started on the way. Even her affairs with men had been me- ticulouslv kent in their nroper place in her well-ordered life. But now or. der was neither her aim nor her de- 1 <8 if conscious of a But surely yes—car vour | 5 588 5 § i : g g § | : ! ; BE g : & it : i E i oF H - : 5 3 “Let's 80," she said, and slipped her hand intimately through his arm. Down the hotel the wind off the sea felt penetrating and cold. It whipped the color into Dorothy's cheeks becomingly. She put her face up to feel the cool dampness of the fog, which had started to come in. “Oh, how I love the wet feel of it, don't you?” she said. Le Grand was striding along beside her, the brim of his soft felt hat blowing back from his face. He had a marvelous face, really, with its fine intelligent brow and deep-set eyes, its sharply sensitive, aqualine nose, and its humorous, crooked mouth. “I adore the fog,” he said. “I be- lieve I like it even more than the warm sunshine.” He looked down at her appreciat- ively. “What a thrilling capacity you have for enjoying the good things of life,” he said. “It is unusual in a woman whose appearence is as sophisticated as yours. But then, all your appearance, except your eyes, and God help me if I read them wrong." Dorothy looked down at the path. “You take me for far too complicat- ed a person,” she said, “You make a grave mistake, for I am very simple and quite uninteresting and common- place.” If she expected elaborate protests to the contrary, she got none. Le Grand acted as though he had not heard her and changed the subject abruptly to talk about himself and his philosophy of life. He was an atheist, he said, despite his religious upbringing. That was the reason, perhaps, why he loved beauty so, wherever he found it. In nature or in books, in music or in people, he paid the same obeisance to beauty that the religious paid to the Deity. “For mstance,” he said, “I Sure no cleric could teel more rever- ent or more as though he were standing in the midst of shining glory than I do when I play the eethoven Fifth Symphony. 1f only people could feel the splendor of such music or the remote grandeur of the stars, they would be free to live and love and create as man was meant to, instead of being slaves to the dic- tates of their more powerful fellows. But forgive me. Perhaps you do not feel as I do, and besides, if I talk so long and so loud, I shall bore you insufferably.” Dorothy shook her head. “Oh, but I do agree with you,” she said. “I agree with every single thing you've ‘said, and what is more, I believe such a philosophy can be made to work successfully. I know that the happy people in life are the ones who | Da decency and fairness, but with independence.” | They had come to a cot- tage on the roadside. Le Grand stop-* ped and put his hand on the garden te. “This is my house,” he said, “won't you come in?" For the fraction of a second Doro- | hesitated, and then she walked be him up the path to the house. | “You see it is all very simple,” he ' said. “I scarcely sit downstairs at all, because when I am not working I love. to read and downstairs one is always at the mercy of one’s neigh- bors. My study is upstairs with all lost |v books and my orchestral scores. | Will you comee up with me?” | Dorothy climbed the stairs the | followed Le Grand into « tiny sitting room lined with shelves from | ceiling to the floor. where Le work. room was a, it a com- with | op- | sea And | for | eeded, for the wants of man were filled. ! com- i a room to rand smiled back t a glass of wine, and as she sipped it slowly Dorothy pungent smoke | cigarette. i get these in I” she said, “T've been starved | since T landed.” | “Our | said. i of to HH | down the stairs and then i ¥ 5 | E § : : ; : 3k ; g : = 8m g A] EF z 3 : ge of | e283 EE § : ir gd i g ® g Be left Le Grand's face. Gently he put his arms about her and gently drew her to him, “Tell me,” he whispered, “your eyes, your incredible, glorious eves would never lie. They never could; could they?" His tone besought her and for an answer he only needed the scarcely visible shake of her head. Then he pressed his mouth on hers. Great waves of passion possessed them both, and swept them off their feet. AL last they drew away from each other and Le Grand stooped down and kissed her hand. “I love you, my dear love,” he said. “I don't reason or explain. 1 know nothing of you, and yet I know you deeply. I cannot understand why you should jump across the foot- “lights into my life,” he smiled grave- ly at her. “I did not ask you to. I did not want you to. I dare not let myself imagine what the future holds for me. You will leave me, perhaps, but you will come back, I know.” ‘Dorothy's mouth was quivering. “I won't come back, my dear,” she whispered. “I love you, but I won't come back. Perhaps you'll under- stand--perhaps you won't. Like you, I cannot talk about it, Only believe me that I love as I never knew I could love any one.” An hour later Dorothy found her- self hurrying to the hotel. She rush- ed to Amelita’'s room to wake her as she had promised, only she was late, terribly late. Amelita would be an- gry and she would never be able to get dressed in time for the concert. Dorothy burst in, to find the violin- ist sitting before her dressing table. “Aha, my little American,” she said, “in the morning you meet a strange French conductor, and by afternoon you have forgotten the ex- istence of your poor Italian friend. . It is lucky that I woke myself in time, It would not have been easy to explain to the audience that I was late because you and Le Grand were Sr* out having a flirtation and you for- got to wake me!” “Lita, darling, don't.” Something inside Dorothy turned to ice. How impossible it would be ever to ex- | plain to another person what she had been through and how unbear- able it was to have Lita speak of it as a “flirtation!” “I'm terribly sorry to be so late,” she said. “I apologize, Lita. Please forgive me. Tomorrow I will try to explain it to you. Now I must run and dress. Le Grand wants me to come to his dressing room before the concert and I must not keep him waiting.” Amelita’s eyes stared back at her from the mirror. “You mean you are not going to the Casino with me?” she queried, “I am to go alone with my music and my violin and no one to help me? Voyons, ma chere, ce n'est pas bein poli de ta ” Dorothy had not waited to listen. She was already in her own room throwing off her clothes as she ran for her bath, “Lita, darling, if you hu with you,” she called in, ny wait for you a minute.” Of course, Amelita was not ready and Dorothy got to the Casino be- fore any of the audience. She went I'll go “but I won't to the stage and was shown up a winding t of stairs to Le Grand's dressing room. There he was, waiting for her, his hands out- tched “My dear,” he said. “My very, very dear.” “You will play for me tonight,” she said, “and I shall listen to you ' proudly.” “Monsieur,” she said, “I had for- gotten to ask you your first name. I| should like to be able to use it, with | permission.” ! “You may indeed use it, madame,” he said, with a little bow, “It is Pierre,” ! Dorothy tried saying it ‘over to! herself, but somehow it made her | feel very shy. She couldn't manage it quite yet. The callboy came to tell Le Grand that he had five more minutes. “Good-by, my love.” said Dorothy. “I shall sit close to you while you Le Grand watched her as she ran he shut his eyes to hold close in his memory | her loveliness as she turned away | from him. Dorothy crept into her seat in the | front row. How incredible it all seemed! This morning only, standing | on this same chair, she had scarcely | been conscious sf Le Grands exist- | ence. This afternoon they had been | swept as close together as two hu- man beings ever get to each other. And tomorrow—but the mere thought of that brought with it such a rack- ing pain that she heard herself let | out a furtive groan. | - molested they secretly lay The moth generally does not ‘out into the open until life laying eggs for § fetal Se REREpEREr| f ; i ¢ EEEREE: AE =E dr smiled and bowed again and finall disappeared into the wings. his stand. He raised his hands again and to her bewildered dismay, Doro- thy heard the first bars of Rimsky- Korsakoff’s “Scheherazade.” The first few measures, with their se- ductive Oriental quality, bid fair to break through her well-dressed calm. How cruel of him to have changed the program so—and she must sit there and listen to the destruction | of the vessel bearing the young the Prince and the young Princess. She knew the story well and adored the music, but could she bear it now? The fatal moment came and, with all | his power, Le Grand brought down his arms as the brasses crashed out their ominous tale. It was as though something had died inside Dorothy, and as she looked at Le Grand, she knew it happened to him, too. She was quite numb as she went back and up stairs to his dressing room once more. There he stood, waiting for her again, eagerly searching her face with his eyes, She shook her head gently. “Good-by, my dear,” she said. “You will come back, You will. I know you will.” Le Grand's whole body shook with pain. “Say that you'll come back. Perhaps something will happen. People die—oh, forgive me; I am not sane tonight. But don’t make me believe that you won't come back some day, somehow. Al- ways I will be waiting.” As Dorothy took his hands and kissed them he felt her tears fall hotly on them. And then quietly and quickly she was gone. “Oh, Lita, darling, could we start back to Paris tonight? I know you are exhausted, but could we go! quickly, in the car—away— just you and me?” : “Mon enfant,” Amelita's eyes were EES 3 of se ths supplemented b longish e gloves. y These dressy suits were luxurious in their use of fur, many having large shawl collars of blue or silver fox. Often a collarless jacket heavy cuffs of fox or kolinsky. Many of the smartest suits had no trim- ming but depended on unusual cut of sleeve and neck treatment for distinction. Skirt lengths are about same as of the past year. While the weather dictated hea fur coats for many, the short : usually in brown tones of lapin in other Summer fur, was worn fre- quently as a smart compromise be- tween Winter coat and Spring suit. Usually a bright colored dress of red, green or blue woolen ied the jacket. These gave the dash of color to the scene which other- wise seemed subdued with black, beige, brown and blue popular choices. When in doubt, this season, a ‘b’ ~olor is safe. FUR FINISHED COATS The Spring coats that did appear usually were of rough woolen, collar- less, finished with flat fur scarf of Kolinsky, baum martin and sable. Often, a gay polka dot or striped taffeta scarf was substituted for the fur and ended in a perky bow under the chin. Hats were virtuall y all of straw, shiny straw, shiny black straw, flat- crowned, narrow brimmed or of the beret type. Once in a while, a bright red hat appeared, accenting a brown or black costume. There were also several all-white small hats, worn with black suits and coats. Sandals and oxfords were favored jou Toute threatening to e ong popular opera pump. Blue shoes were usually worn to co mplete filled with tears, “I ordered the cay %% all-blue outfit, and with them this afternoon and it is ready now. The maid in the hotel packed your bag. Why didn't Le Grand listen, this morning when I told him always went back to George?" | EE ——— A ———————— LARGE WOOL LOSS IS DUE TO MOTHS If the moth population of Bloom- field is equal to its human popula- tion, the moths consume each year in the neighborhood of 72 pounds of wool, or enough to ruin all the wool- | en dresses, suits and coats worn by the people of the community. This statement of interest to every home-maker comes from the Rex Re- search Foundation, Chicago, which is engaged in a constant war on household insects which are a men- ace to life and health and a source of damage to property. It is based on this fact known to science: If 50 per cent of the eggs of a single female clothes moth are fertile and reach maturity and 38 per cent of these are female, two generations (rough- ly, one year) under favorable condi- tions will consume .10 of a pound of wool. Multiplying this figure by the population of the community yields the amazing total given above. struck Under favorable conditions the lar- They vae, which is the of existence at which the moth does the damage, | increases about 375 times or more in weight duri the feeding period, | which ex from three to nine weight of food equal to about 11 to 13 times the i. of the adult moth-the » Of course, being your fine woolens, furs, upholstery and the | 1 their is finished. When ea whatever wool, fur, or feathers at hand. which the insect is found, immediate action for its destruction should be- | gin The most effective way of fighting moths at this season is by the reg- ular use of a special scientifically prepared moth spray on upholstered furniture, rugs, and clothing not - ularly worn. In the a thorough raying of garments b put away for ye summer in cedar chests, tight trunks, moth or paper home- made bags destroys all moth life. The spray will annihilate moths al- ready on the garments, and the tight containers will prevent the inroads of new ones, “How kind of you,” said the girl, “to bring these lovely flowers. ‘They are so beautiful and fresh. I believe there is some dew on them yet.” “Yes,” stammered the young man in great embarrassment, “but I am going to pay it off tomorrow.” came the blue mesh hosiery, prom- ised as a style sensation for this Season months ago, PUFF SLEEVES HINTED All modes seemed to emphasize breadth 4 Tigaaiey and narrowness of waist and there was a hint of the return of the sleeve of long ago. The effect close to the with a gardenia center, A A.—Pe-a-nist. with the accent on the first syllable —*“If you are spring clothing and ve to being ed out. After the spots have been re- moved sponge the entire garment to avoid the of one en t in a not too fresh garment. ne are many types of spots and scains but perhaps fhe most common are ase spots. grease spots way oo easily removed. There are three general methods which are effective. 1. Sponging with soap and warm water as described for the plain 2. Using an absorbent such as blot tine paver, unglazed brown paper, white talcum powder, or fullers earth, 2. Using an absorbant such as blot-