mnt ————————————_—_] Bruel Bellefonte, Pa., January 27, 1928. ET Rm Sle ARE THE CHILDREN AT HOME? a Each day when the glow of sunset fades in the Western sky, And the wee ones, tired of playing, go tripping lightly by . I steal away from my husband, as he sits in the easy chair, And watch from the open doorway their faces, fresh and fair.. Alone in the dear old homestead, that once was full of life, Ringing with girlish laughter, boyish strife, We are waiting together; and oft, as the shadows come, With tremulous voice he calls me; “It is night; are the children home?” echoing “Yes, love!” I answer him gently, “they’re all home long ago,” And I sing in my quivering treble a song so soft and low, Till the old man drops to slumber with his head upon his hand, And I tell to myself the number, home in the Better Land, Home where never a sorrow shall dim their eyes with tears; Where the smile of God is on them through all the summer years; 1 know—yet my arms are empty that fondly folded seven, And the mother heart within me is al- most starved for heaven. Sometimes in the dusk of evening I only shut my eyes, And the children are all about me, a vis- ion from the skies; The babes whose dimpled fingers lost the way to my breast, And the beautiful ones the angels passed to the world of the blest, With never a cloud upon them, their radiant brows; My boys that I gave to freedom—red sword sealed their vows! In tangled Southern forest, twin brothers bold and brave, They fell! and the flag they died for, thank God! floats over their grave. I see A breath and the vision is lifted away on wings of light, And again we two are together, all alone in the night. They tell me his mind is failing, but I smile at idle fears; He is only back with the children, in the dear and peaceful years. And still as the summer fades away in the West, And the wee ones, tired of playing, go trooping home to rest, My husband calls from his corner: “Says, love! have the children come?” And I answer, with eyes uplifted: “Yes, dear they are all at home!” : —Margaret E. Sangster. I hr HOME. Swepston Quarles was standing on a front porch in the nine-hundred block on West Park Street in Butte, Montana. And that, Charlotte Cragg realized with finality, was the climax of twenty-nine years. Her life would not be the same henceforth, could not be. This she knew as surely as she knew Quarles to be standing before her in the flesh. tone which stung her anew into head- loug talk-making. “I'm so sorry Jim isn’t here today. He’s off hunting ancther mine, as us- al. This one is down near Durant, west of Butte. He’s been away since yesterday morning. I told him March in Montana was no time for such trips, but he’d go in December. He has done it any number of times. There’s a cabin on his claim, though, so I suppose he’ll not freeze.” “A mine?” Quarles’s tone said that, since she insisted, they would talk of mines for a space. “Yes. A—a mine. Jim has been developing this piece of land for a year or more, with two men and a windlass. He has a pair of mining experts with him on this trip, from one of the local companies. Hopes to interest one or another of them in sincerely trust he Behind her forced animation she was frightened by her last words. They seemed to furnish an opening for intimate questions. “He will succeed, too, sometime,” she rushed on. “Jim’s a wonderful all-around mining man. ‘Your hus- band, Mrs. Cragg,’ one of the high Anaconda Company officials said to me once, ‘has a nose for ore deposits —and that’s the important thing in this game.’ The operators come to him sometimes for his opinion when their regular staffs are puzzled. Jim makes them pay for his services, too, I assure you. Oh, he'll find a mine of his own some day!” “He isn't on any regular staff, then?” Quarles said. She had thought to set at rest any inward curiosities Quarles might have about the unpretentious brick house and plain furniture. He had spied the single weakness in her story. Fear of those level blue eyes was chilling her. “Why, no. Oh, no. He's a sort of unofficial consulting expert. It’s too detailed to explain. Swep, say ‘regu- lar’ again. Please.” : He said it, with some bewilderment. “Delightful!” It’s been years since I’ve heard anyone talk without trampling on his r’s like a—dray- horse. Tell me, Swep—in Charlottes- ville, do the people still speak of the University of Virginia simply as ‘the University’ 7?” 3 el He smiled then. With Virginians, home is the topic that cannot fail. “Yes, yes, they do, bless ’em! As if it were the only university in the world. In many ways it is, too. . But Charlotte—" “And Swep. Does Lewis’s Moun- tain in October still look like a big, brilliant Indian blanket hung in the sky to the east of town?” “It does. Hasn't changed, except that it’s called Patterson’s Mountain now. Charlotte—" It had become a battle, no less. Her ears heard the words %hat streamed from her tongue. “Ill warrant everything else has changed, though. The people, I mean. I remember how, when I was a girl, the idea most girls had of the true romance was to marry a Western man, rich—all Westerners ware Jat of 2ourse—come out here, bring u tall, biond half . en children to be ing Magnates or cow-girls, grow up with the country. All most girls want nowadays is comfort and an au- tomobile and an able bootlegger. Per- haps they're more sensible than we She had last seen this man in Char- lottesville, Virginia, in 1895; had ex- | pected never to see him again. Here he was. Flanking his head in her sight, the wall of blue-black moun- tains to the south of Butte stood up like blurry stage-settings that might | shift or fall at any moment. He was extending his right hand and smil- ing in a way she astonishingly well ' remembered. ! “Why—Swep Quarles!” It was a well-bred grasp she gave him, and a light quick handshake; the ! kind of greeting that glosses over, ignores, forbidden excitements pound- ing in the throat. ‘Come in!” she said, “So glad to' see you. Just hang your wraps on' the rack. What brings you this | way 7” . , “Jove!” This is a cold city you live in!” he exclaimed. She had not heard a man say “Jove” in years. “‘Hot afternoons have been in Montana,’ ” she forced herself to quote smilingly, “but not in March with the wind off Mount Fleecer. I keep the house warm, though. Come into the front room. Whey’d call this the parlor back home in Char- lottesville, wouldn’t they?” By the time they were seated, with an electric heater spraying its rays over them, Charlotte had recovered her grip. You're Charlotte Cragg, of Butte, Montana, she had told herself; and you're forty-eight, and it’s now thirty years since you were Char- lotte Bainbridge, telling this man that yes, there was some one else, and though you don’t feel that old by ten years or look it, either, still you mustn’t have foolish thoughts about him, simply mustn’t have them, do you hear? His blue eyes were unhardened and honest still. Also, they were light- ing alarmingly, and his fingers were drumming his watch-pocket. She perceived that chatter, a frustrating cloud of talk, was what she had to supply. “Oh, I read your book, Swep,” she began; “just last week. The latest imean—*Dreamy’s {Endy’ Thought it splendid. Your big success so far, isn’t it? Nine large printings in six weeks, I read in some review. You're certainly to be congratulated. I sup- pose your short work in the maga- zines is just a pastime for you, isn’t it? Start them talking about them- selves: that was the way to parry whatever romantic notions they might have brought twenty-five hundred miles with them. There was a clean crispness about his thick, slightly graying hair; the same air about his necktie, and the trouser cuff above his swinging right foot. He looked seasoned. The negroes at home would have called it “quality.” “Thank you for mentioning the book, Charlotte,” he was saying un- interestedly. Here was a setback, in- deed; a writer refusing to discuss his 1 1 {have settled d own work. were. Have you ever thought of writing a book on the younger gen- eration, Swep?” : “No,” Quarles said succintly. He sai too: “Jim Cragg wasn’t rich, then?” Whereupon her defenses crashed. Striving like mad to hide, she had but clumsily disclosed things that | fermented in her mind for years. uarles leaped the smashed barriers, blue fires aflicker in those eyes. “Charlotte! Are you happy, or aren’t you? That is what I came to this place from Charlottesville to find out. And I don’t propose to be put off.” One can always retreat to dignity. “Have you any right to ask me that, do you think?” Quarles Was on his feet. She watched his burly grained oxfords shuttling over the carpet from stand lamp to hall door and back while his words hammered at her bowed fore- head. 3 “Any right? Why, what about the right of rtyonine come back to an old friend? You said we would al- ways be friends, you may remember.” Furiously ironic, the tone he used there. “Isn’t that enough? Or say, if you prefer, that it must be more than friendship brings me here. I'd admit that much to Cragg himself— wouldnt hesitate a second. I sup- pose I'm talking like nineteen years old; but I tell you, Charlotte, there hasn’t been any one else since—that time. Oh, here and there naturally; what man doesn’t But—any right! Let me ask you this: what right have you to play-act to me? ere’s a real question.” : He was talking about himself now, in all conscience. He waited for no answer. “Oh, everything works for the best, looking at it one way, Ive knocked around the world, had an experiecne or two, unloaded a good many hun- dred thousand words of print on the ublic. If things had come out as— P hoped they might, once, why—I'd own in a Courthouse Square law office in Charlottesville and told my brain fevers through the years to you instead of to a typewriter. I'd have been an everyday person, and as happy as must. As it is, I'm a reasonable success in a hard game But I'm forty-nine—which is the part that matters. I've a little house on the Lynchburg road, out beyond Ob- servatory Mountain. Oh, I won't commit the ancient hokum about the lonely fireside. I have a—an able bootlegger, as you say, up in the Ragged Mountains, and plenty of friends to drop in when those red- clay Albemarle County roads are at all passable.” ; He drew breath, pounced again on his subject. “Well, at any rate, Charlotte, here I am! Seeing you face to face, I'll admit the motives I left home with seem a bit fantastic. But:I think you might at least tell me whether—it’s “Er—Charlotte—" he began, in a well with you, or not.” + | taincy, and just twenty-two. and Excelsior. The blue fires receded from the sur- faces of his eyes, and he sat down again, staring up at the picture- moulding. The blood was churning in Charlotte’s throat. She was not old. Years were liars. “Since you put it so, Swep . . . . no. Jim had a position, for a young man, waiting for him here af- ter he left the University. That was all. With one of the—I always think of them as pirates. They were fight- ing in those days to control the Butte Hill and the ores underneath. Jim’s pirate finally sold out; some say for ten millions, though I doubt that. Whatever it was, it was a big sum for that time, and he never tried to come back for more. Jim's position was good, but not good enough to admit him to the—shall we call it the division of the loot in the captain’s cabin? The pirate’s crew was set adrift.” . She drew a cigarette from his prof- fered case. She seldom used the things, but at this moment she craved their comforting sting in her throat. “Don’t think I'm complaining, or ever did. We were young then, and I've lived in Butte too long now. It was in the game. Buccaneers all! If you won, you won. If you lost, you didn’t whimper. The winners didn’t crow, you expected no one’s pity, and no one insulted you by trying to ex- tend any. That’s Butte, Montana, Swep!—or what I've known of it. It’s something, after all—the thought never occurred to me before—but it’s something just to have lived in a place like that.” She looked over laughing uneasily. “I can almost feel this old town frowning in at my window,” she apol- ogized, “because I'm being weak enough to breathe my troubles to anybody.” “What happened after that?” Quarles prompted. “Oh, we lived along. People do, you know. That’s the truth, that Jim’s a good mining man. He’s made several stakes, as he calls them, in his time. He always puts them back, though, into another hole in the ground. ‘Sometime,’ he tells me, “I'll find the big hole.” He thinks he has it now. But he’s thought that so often . . ” “The half-dozen children?” asked Quarles. “All cowgirls or whatever it _ “We've had two. A girl and a boy. He was overseas; rose to esp e passed—he d—oh, why not say it! He was killed, in the last days of the war, just outside Sedan.” “Qh, Charlotte!” “Yes. Well—the girl. Dorothy Montana Cragg. Jim insisted on the middle name; it was fashionable here, until people realized the cold truth that Montana simply doesn’t do as a girl’s name. We call her Dorothy. She would study medicine, at North- western. Said that was her bent and she had to live her own life. We were able to arrange it; she helped herself considerably after the first year or so. These modern young- sters! Now she’s a mayor.” “A what?” “A mayor. Isn’t that too pe ly Western—women Governors an the like? She’s mayor of Melbane, a little railroad division point over in the prairie part of this State. They elected her to fill out some man or other’s term—he died, I believe. We her shoulder, stream past the window—her town for twenty-nine years. People walked on cement, drove on macadam, in Park Street these days. They had simply walked, on wood or in mud, when she was a young mar- ried woman. There had been a bridge of the numerous gulches that gashed Butte’s landscape. Smoke from sul- phide ores roasting in the open on the Flat had lain like a death’s blank- et over the city through bitter win- ters. Ore trains had run up and down Montana Street, the High School was just going up, there was no Phoenix Block, no Metals Bank building, there were log houses close to Main on West Broadway. This afternoon brisk, prosperous- looking Americans bustled on the West Side. They gave way as the car rushed down East Park to crowds of the South Europeans who latterly Charlotte had come here in the era of the Irish miner, three-fifty-a-day, those faces outside the car window, though, wore the same expression as formerly the others had worn. All were shrewd, impressive, controlled, I full of a salty, knowledgeable umor. The mines and the moun- tains did not change; they ironed their philosophy into the features of whosoever came to their city. After Gaylord Street and its stom- ach-stiring nose-dive, the mines for a space lowered on the car on its leftward side. frames, chutes, bins, sheds, and red board fences the mines stepped away up-hill into a sky of aluminum brush- ed with cotton. ; She became conscious of 2 tender- ness for this city. She wished that before leaving she might arrange somehow to put her arms around fortingly. During that ride Char- lotte genuinely believed she was about to leave Butte. The turn at the old Butte-Duluth workings swept the city from view, and the sprawling white dance pa- vilion stared down at them through a notch in the hills. Behind Columbia Gardens the Main Range gleamed grayly in its patched suit of old snow. Two minutes more and the car stood ed after its climb. The two people, arm in arm, began to walk aimlessly through the park. Green benches that in summer had held picnicking families were piled ers grind and thrum of the Ferris wheel were absent from the air. Charlotte had not visited Columbia Gardens since the children were little, but she missed those noises instantly. Swep pointed to a twenty-foot cir- cular depression in the snow. “Looks like a fairy ring,” he said, “where the little people have been.” “Why—that’s what it is!” Char- lotte was thrilled. “They have the merry-go-round there in summer.” They. were not talking as much as they had expected; but neither were they greatly excited or depressed. Charlotte, thought a good deal, as they walked, of the numberless Chil- dren’s Days in summers gone—Thurs- days, no carfares—when she had brought Bob and Dorothy out here. They had always enjoyed and loved the place. She had always enjoyed the didn’t even know she was running. It happened only three or four days ago... She: telegraphed ‘us; seldom ! writes. .She’s been three years this July on the railroad hospital staff at Melbane.” “Does she ever come home ?’’ Quarles inquired. “Why, no. It’s so far. One scarce- ly realizes Montana distances. This is the third largest State, you know.” “Ever ask you to come and visit her?” “Why, she couldn’t—entertain us. She could hardly see us. She’s so busy.” : “Living her own life, eh?” His tone again was sarcastic. In- stinctively she went to Dorothy’s de- fense. “We're proud of the child, Swep. Please don’t think we’re not. well, I rather wish sometimes that I'd had the common sense to live | mine.” : She hadn’t intended to say that; she knew it meant nothing really; it had come out of the desire to set Swep right as to the adored Dorothy. Altogether it was an appalling utter- ance; the more so because it flung Quarles from his chair once more. “Life’s not over yet!” he said, through teeth set as if they chal- len time and eternity. “If you think it is, youre wrong. Twenty-five, thirty years yet, maybe forty. We can’t tell. What is there you have to live for out here in this hole, Char- lotte 2” She was thinking; there were big !1 oaks and rounded hills down Lyneh- burg way, kindly, soft-voiced people in old Charlottesville, flowers through all that country. She had always felt herself a misfit in this West. De- feat, the boy’s death, fisapne ments; it couldn’t be that s longed here. The front room’s walls were pressing in on her like the walls in that Poe-chamber of hideous mem- ory. She rose in her turn, as though stifled. “I can’t stand it in this house,” she said, thick-voiced. “Take me somewhere, Swep. Where we can tal.” “Anywhere!” he muttered. When they stepped forth on the porch three minutes later, Charlotte’s face was composed. She knew her Butte as a gossipy city for all its nerves of steel. A West Side car was screeching into Park Street at the Emmett Street curb, two blocks | away. “The very place!” Charlotte ex- claimed. “Columbia Gardens. A sort of park, east of town. This car runs out there.” The high-slung yellow monsters two-thirds a Pullman length, halted convulsively at the corner of Park They took a leg- cramping seat near the rear. Ta being impossible in the thunderous interior, Quarles gave himself to scanning the people who got on and off, Charlotte to watching the town point- e be- | H That was all long past. she was not old. several times that the years lied. They gravitated to the conserva- tory, with its bulging maroon domes and its flashing glass roofs. The old German caretaker was genial, as most men are who work with flowers. He introduced them to the two parrots who lived with them, Polly and Mike. They learned that Polly was seventy years of age, while Mike was over a hundred—on hearing which Mike laughed like a banshee and executed a giant swing around his perch. “Up there,” the old German told them, pointing with his pipe, “the fish-hatchery is. But in vinta-time of at the foot of Park Hill, spanning one | manned the copper and zine mines. | “When Bryan Came to Butte.” All| A tangle of gallows— houses, people, mines, and all, com- in the terminal, swaying as if it pant- along the boardwalk; the nickel ar-: cades were shuttered; the roller-coast- crowds and the Canadian poplar- | | trees. But "ough as that of the cow-county legis- lator who at once thundered against it in the State capitol as “the Babylon | of the Rockies.” One had to live out long years in Butte to know the place it really was. Charlottesville, of course, was home. She was still trying to tell herself what Butte was when they reached the brick house in West Park Street a few minutes after five. In the front room -they discovered not only Jim Cragg, returned from his two days’ questing, but also Dorothy Montana, mayor of Melbane. The two were holding hands and leaning into the warmth from the electric heater. | “Here she is!” bellowed Jim, seeing Charlotte in the doorway. She had to submit to a double smother of kiss- ing and pawing over. You started out across the world, you got as far as Columbia Gardens, you come back “to this. “Real news, girl!” Jim shouied. Then he saw Quarles, standing un- “certainly in the hall. “Why—why—" i “Surely, Jim, you remember Swep- ston Quarles . . . Mr. Quarles, my daughter Dorothy. . . . An old Char- lottesville friend of your father’s and mine, dear... , Just—passing thru.” Charlotte carried off the situation deftly, as did Quarles. He managed, even, to throw a convincing warmth into eyes and a voice gone dull. 1 “Say!” Jim boomed, the amenities barely over with—“I’ve got to talk. I've worked thirty years or so to be able to.” Her husband’s neck, his big, rough- cut face, the scalp under his thinned hair, had all turned a coppery red. Head thrust down between his shoul- { ders, hands planted in corduroy hip pockets, one heavy boot-toe caressing the carpet, he faced the three of them. But his eyes were on his wife, shyly. “Charlotte; old girl, I've got the Hammerhead people and a Utah crowd started to bidding against each other for that hole in the ground down near Durant. Wasn't telling you about the deal till I could get i it somewheres near clinched. But I’ve been hauling rock-peckers for one! outfit or the other out there for the |b past three months. It’ll be a mine now, I guess. Thought I—I’d give you a surprise.” As he talked Jim Cragg’s voice grew more and more hoarse, chesty, he-mannish. In this, Charlotte recog- , nized, he was following one of the ways of the West. When you laid your life’s achievements at the feet of a person you worshipped, you must make believe that it was nothing, hell’s bells! nothing to it at all. Oth- erwise you were no true Westerner. “Oh, wonderful, Jim!” Even that was a little excessive, by Western code. “Now, you two sit down in front of the heater, and we’ll get years in her own city. Life was not over yet. A : When Quarles took leave of them about nine o’clock, Charlotte accom-~ panied him to the porch. She shut the door and walked with him to the head of the steps. Even night had brought no softness to the city; the darkness stretching away from their feet was the ghost of blued steel, stippled with diamond light-points. “Do you understand, Swep?” she asked him. “Yes, I understand, “he said. “Well, at forty-nine, a man lives along, no matter what happens. This was a fool’s errand I came on—though I ‘don’t regret it, Charlotte.” “Shall I see you in?” “I think not. Spring should be on the way up from Lynchburg. It's warm now, or will be soon, at home —my home. Good-by, Charlotte.” By Reuben Maury in “Home.” Pennsylvania Farmers Are Best in the Union. Harrisburg.—In spite of bad wea- ther conditions existing during sever- al of the most important spring and summer months, Pennsylvania farm- ers, in 1927, proved themselves among the best farmers in the United States, says the Department of Agriculture at Harrisburg. e total value of crops produced was estimated at $249,084,000, which is $560,000 more than that of all the New England States and New Jersey combined. While the acre yield of corn 39.5 bushels—was below the five year av- erage, still this yield is three bushels more than was produced in Iowa and 9.5 bushels more than in Illinois. The winter wheat crop, which with one exception was the lowest since 1911, was produced at the rate of 7.3 bushels more per acre yield than in Iowa and 10.5 bushels more than in Illinois. The potato crop was the most val- i uable produced in any State of the Union, excepting New York, and the: acre yield of 120 bushels was the largest on record in Pennsylvania ex- cepting 1923 when the yield was 1283 i bushels. The 1927 acre yield was 28 i bushels more than in Wisconsin, 19 bushels more than in Minnesota, 40: bushels more than in Michigan and 40 bushels more than in New York— all of which are leading potato pro- ducing States. The acre yield of tame hay—1.65 tons—is the highest on record for Pennsylvania and the total crop with the exception of 1916, was the largest since the Civil war. The buckwheat crop was the larg- est since 1921 and the acre yield the highest since 1918, giving the State first place in the production of this crop. ; The acre yield of tobacco—11360 dinner.” : ! In the kitchen the two women tied each other’s aprons. Looking at her daughter’s splendidly shaped head | and the strong, springing curves of , her back and shoulders, Charlotte was | ‘swept by a sudden wild exultance. She had achieved this. Out of the i years she had wrenched this ‘perfec- : tion, to make up for anything the | years had withheld from her. { The?girl must have ‘sénsed her; mother’s inner triumphing, for she ; swung about the instant the bow-knot | tightened against her back. She | , seized Charlotte in a fierce, hungry embrace. ,ing you. But I had to—show I was worthy of you and dad.” : Another Western humbuggery, thought Charlotte. You must put your sacredest loves and adorations on strictly moral grounds, that none | might acuse you of out-and-out emo- tion. i ' She said aloud: “Dear, we're so proud, so proud”—and meant it, this time. : | i. Altogether, Charlotte had a beau- ; tiful evening. If Jim wondered at all about Quarles’s presence, his face did not show it. By dessert-time he fell ‘to reminiscing of the wild days and | “It’s been so long, mother,” she ' : She told herself Whispered. “I’ve never got over want- Twelfth in oats. pounds—was the highest of any State, being 136 pounds more per acre than in Connecticut. Pennsylvania’s rank among all the States in crop production is as fol- lows: First in buckwheat First in cigar-leaf tobacco. Fourth in potatoes (second in value). Fifth in grapes. | Seventh in all tobacco. i Eighth in commerical apple crop. Eighth in tame hay Fighth in pears Ninth in pears. Ninth in winter wheat. Ninth in rye. Ninth in peaches. Seventeenth in corn. Sixteenth in value of all crops. State Hunters Kill 15,000 Legal Deer. Final figures on the large game kill in Pennsylvania will show the greatest number of deer on record. John B. Truman, secretary of the commission has said. ? At the meeting of the commission preliminary figures submitted indi- cated that final results would show 15,000 legal bucks, 8,000 more than in 1926, and 25 elk, also a new total. The bear kill during the past sea- this place that part they shut down.” times the city had seen. He told of son was little in excess of 300, only “Fish-hatchery ?”” said Swep. “You mean hatch-fishery, don’t you, my friend 7” “But no—" “Both of you are wrong,” Charlotte announced primly. “He means fitch- hashery.” They giggled, tear-stung eyes meet- ing and clinging. Swep pressed her arm tightly to his side, whispering “My dear! My dear!” Red and purple flowers bloomed in the conservatory, in raised beds, waist-high. The air had a fragrance, a moisture, and a warmth from softly murmuring pipes, which intoxicated the two wanderers among the flowers. One could almost believe the warmth came from the steel-bright sun that giiitered above the roofs of glass. ey stayed long there, hating to eave. Where the flowers and par- rots were was endless false spring. At last, Charlotte’s left arm swept her wrist-watch up before her eyes. “Gracious! It’s a quarter after four and dinner’s at six, and Jim will be starved after his trip! We must fly. ave dinner with us, Swep.” The whole thing took place before she realized what she was doing or saying. Dinner had been at six on ten thousand days of her life. Swep made no comment; perhaps he saw then the end of all this. As they “flew” down the long bridge from the ball park to the danc- ing-pavilion, ‘Charlotte had glimpses of Butte, two miles away. The city clung to its hill, lapping over into the ancient lake-bed that was the Flat. Blue haze barred with steely sunshine hung above it. The mountains that ringed it were hard like glass, blue like polar ice, white like refined iron. The sun glanced off sundry windows in town and dazzled her eyes. Out- wardly Butte was all hard surfaces, harsh lights, smoke, stone. On the homeward car Charlotte thought again about that city. In its way it was a famous place. News- papers and fictioneers had tacked catch-phrases to it. “The richest hill on earth” . . “the city of the copper collar” . , “perch of the devil ... “toughest town in America.” . + . What the world knew of Butte, it knew from those tags. And the world’s knowledge was ahout as thor- the big explosion of 1895, of the A.! iP. A. riots, Bryan’s visit in '97, the j mine shut-down of 1908, the dyna- | miting of Miners’ Union Hall, fol- lowed by martial law in ’14, the boom | days during the war, when Butte | claimed to have reached the hundred- thousand mark, Bloody Wednesday on Anaconda ‘Road, the Speculator Mine disaster. Quarles listened with inter- est, occasionally making rapid notes in a little pad jerked from his vest pocket. He seemed largely to have cast off the depression that had weighed on him visibly before dinner. Red episodes all, these of her hus- band’s telling; they appealed to men. But they were no more the real Butte than were the pictures called up by the catch-phrases. They were merely the things that got into the newspa- pers. What was Butte, then, now that she knew what it was not? She had grown in Charlottesville, in the mellow State of Virginia. In this sere mountain mining town, she had ridden the tides of life. She had brought forth her children here, had lost games and won them, had met death and sorrow and learned to defy those forces that could not conquer short of killing her. Now, at forty- eight, she was seeing her husband’s eyes turning to her incessantly as he talked, that shy look in them as of one laying everything he had in the world at her feet. She was seeing her daughter well started in the way she had chosen and thanking her, Charlotte Cragg, for all she had and was. She was remembering the boy; with pain, true, but she had lived af- ter even that frightful wound. The place where such things came to people, she concluded, was the place that was meant by the word home. Wherever those things came to any one, would be home for that person. It might be London, Cape Town, Peoria, Unalaska, where-not. For her, Butte was home. It must be the same for thousands of other people who were living their lives there, and who never got into the newspapers. She was deeply gladdened over her discovery. It brought a feeling of knowing at last exactly where she be- longed; a very comforting feeling, she one-half of last year’s kill. Scarcity of food and resultant scattering of the animals is blamed. The rabbit kill, the figures indicat- ed, will exceed 3,000,000 and that of the squirrels was estimated at 1,200,- 000. The wild turkey total may reach 10,000 as a result of the 1926 closed season. Hunting fatalities totaled 67, an increase of 20 over the previous year. decreasing the hazard of hunting. The commission discussed methods-.of several members suggesting longer seasons to prevent concentration dur- ing short periods. 2 The new license ‘law will wake available $200,000 for land purchase by the commission during the pres- ent year. Option already has been taken on 61,500 acres. The commission elected Ross L. Leffler, McKeesport, as chairman, and L M. Reis, New Castle, viec presi- ent. tment pies. Origin of “Passport.” “Porta” is the Latin for gate, the word turning into “porte” in French, the language of diplomacy, and, as it were, the international tongue for travelers. We have plenty of traces of it in our own English, as, for in- stance, in the word “portal.” Passport originally, then, was “passe port” and meant “pass the gate,” or in other words, a safe con- duct either out of or into a country. Which is just about what our mod- ern passport really is now. a : : —*“He was always full of quips,” a Boston banker said, speaking of the late Thomas Lawson. “A few years ago I attended the funeral of a mil- lionaire financier—one of those ‘high financiers’ whose low methods Law- son loved to turn the light on. I arrived at the funeral a little late. I took a seat beside Lawson and whispered, “How far has the service gone?’ Lawson, nodding toward the clergyman in the pulpit, whispered back tersely, ‘Just opened for the de- fense.’ "—Boston Transcript. ~The “Watchman” is the most found. ‘She began planning useful readable paper published, Try it.