Frank Saldo left the act to concentrate on writing lyrics, going on to work successfully with the pianist Courtlandt Palmer, among others. Saldo wrote the lyrics for a song for
Dame Nellie Melba before moving to the United States for a period where he had a successful career as a lyricist. He wrote the lyrics for the musical
Victoria Amoris, which was performed in New York. Later he also travelled extensively in Europe. During the
First World War Saldo served in the
Royal Army Medical Corps and was based at Frensham Hill Military Hospital. He was not sent to the front owing to health reasons caused by gastric problems. Leaving the army in 1919 with the rank of
Sergeant, from 1920 until his death in 1939 Saldo was employed as a lecturer in physical training at
Goldsmiths College, part of the
University of London. Here he was President of the Homers and Diggers Society, and was Treasurer of the college's Dramatic Society. In 1922 he was awarded a qualification in hygiene and won a travelling scholarship to
Scandinavia where he visited physical training institutes and schools. At about this time he became a Member of the Royal Institute of Public Health and Hygiene. He married Gertrude Ethel (née Timmins) (1885–1965) in 1914. Their daughter Marion Ethel Francis Palmer (née Woollaston) (1916–2006) became a medical doctor and married a Member of Parliament. Frank Saldo died in the Middlesex Hospital in June 1939 aged 57 following a stroke. ==References==