Such a gallant wind that Sweeps my narrow street— But somewhere there is a Stronger gale to meet. Such young wild-eyed flowers In my garden beds— Somewhere sweeter blossoms Lift their pedaled heads. Such a dizzy gladness Waking with the sun— | Somewhere hearts are lighter With a gayer fun. Somewhere just beyond—we Cannot make them out— Are the lovely things we Only dream about. Down each stretching road and Up each pointed hill— Always just a little Further still. TRUST THE IRISH FOR THAT Old Maggie O'Riley sat in a wheel chair by her kitchen window. She stared out at the garden, the cow shed and the chicken house, desolate- looking in the against the | great wall of dark pines. It was late September in the north country, and there was nothing left in the garden but a few frostbitten tomatoes, For the rest there were dead beet tops, dried bean vines and weeds. It ought to be cleared off and spaded for spring, old Maggie was thinking. Last year at this time she had spaded it and worked the dirt over until it looked as square and flat as a huge stove top. And she would never do it again. The cow shed out there by the pines wes apparently no different from usual, but old Maggie knew that Daisy was not inside it. They had taken Daisy away and sold her because an old woman in a wheel chair cannot take care of a cow. The chicken house, too, was empty. The neighbor boys had loaded the boxes of Plymouth Rocks on their trucks and taken them to the dealer over at the Corners because she could never again go out to feed them. “Never!” It is the most cruel word in any tongue. The chair in which old Maggie O'Riley sat was new, of shining oak and rubber-tired. “A lovely chair,” Mrs. Schulter, her nearest neighbor, had said when she helped unpack it. The big chair had come all the way up from Minneapolis by train and truck after Mrs. Schulter had writ- ten the letter and sent the money from the sale of Daisy. Yes, it was a nice chair, Maggie had agreed grimly. But it held you with two iron hands. Its wood drew | you and absorbed you into itself, Its rubber-tired wheels sucked at your heavy old Jauba and clutched them ! tly in their grasp. Hy looked down at those two limbs that a few weeks ago had so unexpectedly failed her, had so sud- denly turned traitor to her. They had taken her back and :orth between the house and the garden, the chick- en yard and the cow shed, the woods and the lake shore-back and forth for years. They had made her no trouble, given her no complaint. They were part of her. They were herself. And then, as though they had been concealing something from her, con- cocting a joke behind her back, they had suddenly failed her. It had proved a cruel, malignant joke. For now they were no longer a part of , NO her own self. They were alien thi heavy, cumber- some, like knotted white birch logs. timber! e looked sullenly down their outlines under the gray calico dress. Dead timber—Useless! had always made use of ev 1 around the little house in the woods | where she lived alone. With a neat- ness that was proverbial with the few neighbors, she had kept up the place in the clearing. And if there Was no use for a thing she either buried it or burned it. But this time it was different. There was no use in the world for two dead legs, and she could neither bury them nor For the rest of the afternoon Maggie sat looking out toward the | shed, the chicken house and the | garden with the dark wall of pines the distance. She might hav~ sew- She might have read. But old Maggie O'Riley’s hands, gnarled and | laid. And over the Schulters had not | guessed t old Maggie O'Riley could not read. i This afternoon, Maggie was more | grieved than ever about her condi. | tion. There were peovle in the world, | she was thinking. who did not like | to work. lazv folks who shirked the burden of labor. And all she would | ask of life would be to be about and work hard again. How she would work! Up and down the little place she would go tirelessly. Never’ would she ston except for sleep, if thev would only come to life again —those dead legs. Suddenly a wave of rebellion swent her. Tt seemed that it must not be true that she was this way. Tt could no be. She told herself that she would rise above it. She would not Tet it be so. She would get out of the hated chair and step on the floor. With a magnificent strength of will she threw herself forward. But only the trunk of her bodv moved. The dead, immovable weieht held her fast. Och! Mother of Christ! T¢ t was true. Old Maggie broke into ! P E. E s | 11 FF f | | 3 ieke i] Hi g88 gie je i | : Eff g 5 ; | : f | i “3 §F § i ; E g f iy | He 1 ie 2k is pow: r. If she should put a little of that r into her coffee some morn- 5 in. | i gie sitting there so helpl | chair, while the soul of her swept up and away from Maggie—away | from those dead old legs. Her im- agination stopped at that picture. She could not quite conceive what incidents would follow. She only | knew that it would be worth the! doing—to have that fine exhilarating | feeling, that bouyant sensation of getting away. | For a long time she toyed with the subject. The church forbade it, but it did not seem It was not really like killing one's self, she ar- gued. People killed themselves with guns and ropés and in other terrible ways. But this—this was just a little | white powder. All there was to it was to drink her coffee with a little cream and a little sugar—and a little white powder. She herself would not be harmed. She would go away free. Only those old dead legs would be left behind. The church ought not to mind that. It seemed so fraught with ease, so filled with relief for such small effort. A little white powder! And then a reward-—that great moment, that laughter-provoking moment of looking back and crowing over old! Maggie O'Rilev's dead legs, Even the Schulters would never suspect. To find an old woman dead in her chair sometimes happened. They had found old Mrs. Mendenhall that way over at the Corners four or five years ago. If she sat close to the stove and threw the little box into the fire just as soon as she drank her coffee. She muffled over the details in her mind. She would have everything ready. There was no one to care a great deal. Mrs. Schulter would prob- ably throw her apron over her head and cry a little, for they had been close friends for these two. years. But after all, she would be relieved. She would not have to come over any more and get old Maggie into the chair or help her back to bed. Ernie and Emil Schulter would not have to take their time to do her chores. She ate no supper at all, When Mrs. Schulter came over to help her to bed she was still planning craft- ily. For a long time she lay of the various catastrophes that might overtake her in her present wretched state. She might get so much worse that she would be bed- ridden. The Schulters might move away. Mrs. Schulter might get sick. Some other unforeseen thing might happen. Yes, it was best. She was quite calm about her decision. The next morning when Mrs. Schulter came over Maggi ready for her. She assumed a forced the men go past her house and made out from her window that they were carrying Emil Schulter into his house. ¥mil, who had been on a va- cation from his work as a forest ranger, swinging along that very morning with his young powerful strides, had been brought home in- Jjured. Maggie at the window an hour lat- | er saw the doctor come from his | long drive through the woods. He | was in the house for several hours. It was late evening before Mrs. Schulter could get in to e. Mrs. Schuiter told her more about it. Emil had been over to the Corners in the truck. Something had gone wrong with the steering gear and he had run into a tree. “It'll be weeks before he's out again, months maybe,” his mother said, She threw her apron over her (head and broke out crying. “To see him there hopeless wantin’ me right by him all the time, always so big and strong and full of life.” ‘Then she thought of e and added apologetically: ‘“Tain't so hard for you, Maggie. You're old and you're a woman. 'Tain’'t half so hard for you.” Maggie said nothing. Yes, she was old and she was a woman. But it was hard. She looked at Mrs. Schul- ter sitting there swaying “ack ana forth in her misery ana crying for her boy. Even before this happeneaq, Mrs. Schulter had worked all day long, and now with this added bur- den of taking care of Emil. “You can't come over to take care of me anymore. 'Tis too much to ask. I ain't worth it. It's me that | ought to 'a’ died instead hangin’ on good for nothin’ 8. ul wiped her nt ay may tht again, M manage. I'm strong yet.” When Maggie was in bed she told herself that the little white powder was the answer to the problem. But she would not take it just yet. It would only add to Mrs. Schulter's burdens. It ought rather to be when Emil was over the first danger. And it would be so simple just her usu- al coffee with a little cream and a little sugar and a little white pow- der. Then sleep, and Hat, wallderful momen rising up an ng away from the cumbersome body; that great moment of looking back and laughing to see old Maggie O'Riley sitting heavily there in a chair. In a few days they lifted Emil, too, in a big chair by the window. bulky out- ter had brought over all of Maggie's roomed house, But with the arrival of her chair Maggie had insisted that such work cease. “No,” she had said, M “If it's got to be, it's. gut to be—ana | eonanggle prt ’ 's goin’ m wn ; V ve me hats g y gether; Schulter They had all been and Ernie, Schulter had come the and hammer and chisel, and off the old-fashioned threshold between the rooms smooth, so that easily from the room to gy Mo took turns bringing the water. “Anything to side, i 3 — ; 3 § : E great H still strong and active. those old lad let her go. Mrs. Schulter Maggi on the top shelf I'm wantin’ lower. There's a toothache one and the peppermint I might be needin’, Would you be kind enough to clean off the top shelf and get ‘em down close to me?” So Mrs. Schulter, nn pee. haps, of the canned pies that she ‘must make, swept every- thing into a lower shelf. : was grand. You'd 'a’ thought was in the same room.” Old Maggie listened incredulously. It wasn't sensible—such talk. The dishes and the washin’ ‘clothes boilin’ over and me havin’ to m across the Seating he waved and £ i E 1 | 8 5 | g Ef : : 1 285 E : ie | ill ft i ¢ : g ! if Fe | 3 : i | i il ; i | ! ™ : 8 { f § : 2 : 2 ; : | ‘gie lay helpless. It was after ten when Mrs, Schulter came, tired and Maggie. with the ‘hot and apologetic. “Everythin' was at once, stop in the very midst of it all and get somethin’ for Emil. IT never saw a mornin’ 80 rushed.” = hurt Maggie anew. She was put 0 pain of it. Well, tomorrow it would not matter. Mrs. Schulter could come over al seven or eleven or not at all. When she came over in the evening she would find Maggie asleep in her chair by the stove. Never to bother ' her again! All day long from her chair Mag- | ' gle cleaned the house. She put every- thing in shape. Tuesday morning it was to happen. Coffee with a little cream and a little sugar, and a little white powder—and then that high bouyant sensation of getting away from her loathsome self, away from those dead limbs, All afternoon she sat by the win- dow. The slanting rays of the pale October sun hung over the lonely little house. Suddenly something was happen- ing at the Schulters. They were coming out of the house and over this way—all of them-—Schulter and Ernie and Mrs. Schulter, Emil, too, sat leaning out of the open window, watching. The men-folks were ing a box and a big iron horn and wire--a great coil of wire. They came in the back d filled the tiny kitchen. frightened, wheeled her toward them. - oor. They Maggie, chair out “Maggie, it's for you!” Mrs. Schul- ' ter's voice was high and excited. Emil made you one, too, from a secondhand one with some parts missin’. The week and more he's put every minute on it. "Twas for this I had to quit my washin’. ‘Maggie must have one, too,’ he tells us the minute we had 'Settin’ ngin’ him the parts from another old one a summer tourist left at the Corners. And me bringin’ hammer and the bit and brace every minute of my time, till I thought I'd never get a thing done, let alone takin’ care of you. “I felt terribly neglectful, but Emil, he's that set on finishin' it quick. It made me torn betwixt the anxiousnes of you havin’ the singin’ and speakin' too, It seemed for all the world like T was harmin' my own mothar, Maggie, leavin’ you go that way—me losin’ her when I was little makes you seem like my own.” The men-folks were setting the contraptions together. They bored a little hole at the edge of the window pulled a wire through. Thev strung a long wire from Maggie's chimney to the old cow shed. Collie ran excitedly before them. “Jenkins said the old automobile battery was wore out,” Ernie was tell his father: “told me to he hii to it, ini it'll hold juice for Maggie for a spell yet.” Maggie could scarcely adjust her- self to all this commotion after the quiet of the past days. And she wor- ried about the wire when tune in bet- wrong, Ernie? What would happen?” Maggie was “Oh, 'tain’t goin’ You just wouldn's get anything. And before you go bed turn this around. There ain't a chance in a dozen there'll be light- nin’ this late, nor a chance in a mil- lion it would strike if there was, but if it did, it would run down into the | ” Maggie did not like anvthing run- ning around loose in her house, mice or lightning. And she did not want Ernie to leave her alone with the machine. : “You're all right. You'll get onto £ i i 2 § g until ten. She quivered with the | "And rough | gie. 7 g £ : | FE { ; : EE RE : , el 5 : Eis Eg E ; : i ele 538 : 1 £ £52 2 1 i Mi : » rs : i g it § i : i : a {| F EE I : g 0 tits : g little black wheels. And right in the room a man started to sing: ! fi “Oh, the days of the Kerry H Oh, the ring of the piper’'s tune! Oh, for one of those hours of glad- ness—" Old Maggie had not had one hour | of gladness for months, but sudden- | ly her heart was leaping to the pip- er's tune. “When the boys began to gather In the glen of a summer night,” Old Maggie could see them as plain as day—Michael and Patrick and Terry. Ah, well! It was because | there had been only one Terry in the world that Maggie had never married. “And the Kerry piper's tuning Made us long with wild delight.” It was all there before her. The | work was done. The peat was gath- ered. The moon shining through the trees. All the young folks had come into the glen. And Terry was com- ing toward her, "Laue ana lasses, to your places, Up Lhe middie ang auwn again, Lewy wuchea her lianas, sSne slippeua ner own into wem. Ald tneu 4 Suabge Lung nappened. uid Mag- ' 81¢ U Kuey Seemed w leave ner boay. She rose out or it ang Joined tne lurong oi young people uunecing on the green. She wus red-cheekea ana lithe anda spry. With lerry she was dancing. Au the magic of youth she had in ner teet. And she looked back at the old Maggie O'Riley sitting | there so helpless with the immovable limbs. Threw back her head, she did. and laughed at old Maggie, so old, 80 helpless, with two dead logs for legs. She made sport of her—old Maggie tied to a chair. “Is it grind- | Stones ye're havin' for feet?” she mocked. “Watch me!” she called and danced the faster, “Ah, the merry-hearted laughter Ringing through the happy | glen!” Faster and faster she danced.’ “Look at me,” young Maggie O'Ril- ey called to old Maggie O'Riley, “you , wid yer dead legs! Is it the wings | like the lark I have? : | the thistledown I om!" They had whirled to the trees at ‘the edge of the glen, Terry held her close and kissed her, so that she | half swooned at the sweetness of it. | i thought of my neglectin’ and the | : ! “And the sound of the dear old music, Soft and sweet as yore.” The song died away on its last lovely Neng note. A man's voice | was saying briskly that this was Minneapolis. Old Maggie sat back heavily. Sint John She ing! It was so. away in Minneapolis a man had sung to her up in the pine country--sung the gayest and dear- est old tune of them all. And now Ernie in days of up he was, to go after his girl at the Corners. gil “How you comin’, Maggie? he call- | ed. “Did you like it?” “"'Twas heaven itself,” said - And then she was wantin’ know: “Who did it, Braie? REFERER oo EE tten the old legs that wi like dead birch logs. Now she would always to forget them. With a few | the little black wheels she r | to rise up and away from ol | gle O'Riley sitting there so hea in the chair. On Tuesday morning she poured her coffee. She put in a little cream and a little sugar, And that was all. When she had finished her breakfast she wheeled over to the cupboard. From it she took a little white box. Then she wheeled herself over to the stove and put it in the fire. All the morning she worked at her accustomed small tasks. She would not permit herself even to glance toward the enchanted box. It was. after eleven when she finished. She wheeled herself over to the J : { : { i : = = « 1 help hurrying over again. Fei roused yd whole over an open fire, the food for a festival banquet. The matzoh cakes were eaten together with bitter herbs, as reminders of the unhappy lot of the ancestors who lived in bondage and of their hasty departure from the land of oppres- sion. Drinking of wine, singing of songs and recounting of the wonder- ous tales of the Jewish past, helped to make the festive eve y and joyous. That the children might be provoked to curiosity and be led to ask questions of “whys and wherefores,” every effort was made to introduce novel and unusual ac- tivities during the course of the eve- ning's ceremonies. In modern times the festival ban- quet is still held, and constitutes the most interesting and exhilirating “function” of all the Passover ob- servances. It is called the “Seder service. On the Seder table, three cakes of matzoh are placed, one over the other. Over it are laid bit- ter herbs, a sheep's shank-bone or a fowl's wing roasted over an open fire, a green vegetable, an scorched in the flames, and a dish prepared by mixing ground nuts, scraped apples, cinnamon and wine, which forms a paste symbolizing the mortar used by the slaves who. built the ancient Egyptian cities and monuments, The youngest child is required to ask at least four ques- tions, and in answer to these, the story of the birth of Jewish freedom is recounted, embellished with tales of marvels and miracles. Four of wine are to be drained by each person. The matzoh and bitter herbs usher in the Seder dinner. Children's songs close the evening's entertain ment, of which the oldest and most popular is one of an “only kid who was eaten by a cat, who was bitten by a dog, who was struck by a stick, which was burnt in a fire, that was quenched by water, etc.” Synagogues, the S the Bass. with free- to furnish messages preached during over festival usually deal dom as a human ideal. SNOW STORM COST STATE MORE THAN $200,000 The State Highway recently announced that snow March 6 blizzard 000, The department engaged 3 and 750 trucks and tractors work. The department also gave ance in where former 000 m Ee 5 f access for give access to cemeteries, E § | | BY LOCK HAVEN MAN Charles E. Orner, of n, is the 16 published in Signing off! You couldn't fool old Maggie a second time. Signing off meant quitting. She chuckled at her wheels and heard a violin pla: But at the moment she saw Schulter drive into the clearing, wheeled herself hurriedly to window and raised it. e She the that!"—By Bess Streeter Aldrich In the Cosmopolitan,