v Djf Return T.. CIIC4M fCATIV1 ll Ac nri i "Seems mother." Utile loni'ly at times, "Now, pa, you know it's all for the test" '1 ain't arguing It ain't all for the best. I was saying it was a little lonely that's nil." Mrs. Free pulled the big wooden Tocklng-chair up nearer the stove, which was sending . a warm g;ow Into tho room, and took up the soft white wool whie'u she was to trans form Into "one of those shoulder things" for Rhoda Rhoda would need euch things now that she was in tho city. But instead of beginning her work she turned a little in her chair and looked out nt the broad expanse of white. The hills were all cold and chining, and more snow was t-ven now Dying in the air. Winter had come in earnest. "Of course, mother," said the old Tanner, with a quiet, kindly sort of hu mor in his voice, "you ain't ever lone ome." "Wben I do get lonesome, pa," she said, picking up her work, "I Just keep thinking how it's all for the best and that's consoling." John Free walked over to the win dow. "If Rhoda was home now and was teaching the school, I'd just obout be putting Nellie to the cutter. Rhoda never did much walking over bud roads when 1 was round." "And Rhoda appreciated It, pa." said Mrs. Free, after a pause in which she bad been silently counting si itches. "Rhoda was the best teacher they ever had round here." And then, as his wife was still counting stitches and did not answer, he continued, hall'-ag-tressively, "Everybody says that." "Fourteen fifteen sixteen. You never heard me say, pa, Rhoda wasn't good teacher. All I said was a girl who could sing like Rhoda had no business teaching the Hickory Grove tehool or any other, for that matter." "Brother Williams Fays there ain't the same inspiration In Ins preaching now that Rhoda's left the choir; and I.will say," Ills voice sank to the tone ' of one making a confession, "that while I go to church to worship thq Lord, the worshipping was a little well, a little more pleasant, like, I night say, when Rhoda was there.", "More than one has said that," re marked Mrs. Free, complacen'ly. "I never saw anything to heat the: way this whole community leaned on Rhoda! 'Twas Rhoda this and Rho da that! Nothing from a barn-raising to a funeral could go on without hr-r, They can't ever say our Rhoda was Btlngy with her singing, mother." ' "I guess our Rhoda wouldn't be her pa's daughter if she was stingy with anything," said Mrs. Free, quietly. She had a way of saying these things when least expected, and they never failed to be disconcerting. "Now I wasn't counting on that having any thing to (Jo with it," he said awkward ly. ' "Mother," he went on, after listen ing patiently to "thirteen fourteen fifteen sixteen," ''shall yon ever for get how she sang 'Lead Kindly Light' at Tim Powers' funeral? Seems like of all the times I ever heard her, that was the most moving." , The soft wool fell to Mrs. Free's lap. "Rhoda's ko sympathetic," she said, softly. John Free chuckled. " 'Pears to me she wouldn't be her mother's daughter If she wasn't some sympathetic." "Fourteen fifteen sixteen turn." was the only response. "6'pose I might as well be about the chores. Does seem like this winter wbb going to be mighty long.". "Now, pa, don't be so restless four teen fifteen sixteen there! that's wrong." He stood by tho window, putting on bis heavy coat. "Looks like Fred Bar rett's cutter coming," he remarked. "If Rhoda was home it wouldn't be bard to guess where he was making for," remarked Mrs. Free. "Coming 'long pretty brisk. Cold out, I reckon. He's got some one in with him and 'tain't a man. Moth xx" he cried, excitedly, after a mo ment, "Fred Barrett's opening the gate! Mother," he added in a choked voice, "come here!" She stood beside him at the window, and be pointed down to the gate. "What do you think?" he gasped. The woman's face grew strangely white. "It's it's it can't be 'tis " "Rhoda!" They stood there in a daze, and then two pairs of hands were fumbling at the knob. How Rhoda got out of the sleigh, who carried in the valise, how Fred Barrett got away without being so much as asked in, they never quite knew. It was all a strange whirl, and then the door whs shut, the sligh-bells died away, , and Rhoda, after one strange, frightened look round the old room, threw herself into her mother's arms hut, -snowy coat and all; and there burst from her the wild, uncon trollable sobs which follow a long, bit ter strain. The mother stood holding her in ut ter silence she was a mother, and she inew that was best. But when John Tree could bear it no longer, he put a band on the girl's shoulder, and said brokenly, his own rugged futie wet with tears, "Rhoda, girl, you're home now. No matter what's happened, it's all Tigit now." cit Khnda. She raised her head then and grop ed for her father's hands. "It was a mistake," she moaned, piteously, "a mistake!" "Now, what's a mistake?" said John Free. "I Just want to know." "Mother," cried the girl, her voice still thick with sobs, "it's gone! Our dream's gone, mother! I I oh, I can't sing!" 6he sank to a chair, her head fell to the table, and sobs such as the old room had never heard be foro crowded upon one another in hot, passionate succession. "Something's happened to your voice, Rhoda?" asked the oil farm er, timidly. She grew more quiet then. "Oh, no, pa," she said, "nothing's happened to it. It never was there. I never could sing." "Wei, I guess we know better than that! And whoever said " "Now, pa," broke In Mrs. Free, "this is no time for arguing. Come right up to the fire, IXulie, and we'll get off those wet things and get a good, hot drink. You'l take your deatli of cold sitting there as though no one cared whether you were wet or dry!" After her feet were warm, and she had taken the hot tea her mother had made for her, and the old surroundings had taken a little of the sting from her wound, the girl began casting about in her mind for words which would not distress her parents. They were sluing on each side of her, eager to know, and yet reluctant to ask ques tions which would bring pain, their sorrow, after all, tempered with glad ness because she was at home. "You see, pa." she began, quietly, "there are no really great singers round here. I am the best there ", and so, because 1 can sing a little. Miss Parsons all of us, made a mistake and thought I had a great voice, when 1 haven't." "But I can't see " began the old farmer. "Now, pa," protested his wife, "Just let Rhmla 1 el 1 it." "The city is full of good singers, mother. They come from all over the country. There are thousands of them who' can .sing better than I can." "Now I don't believe that!" cried her father, slapping his knee hard. The girl smiled at him fondly. "You'll have to believe it, p;i, for my teacher, one of the best ia the whole city, said sri." "He did, did he? Weil, what had you don? to make him mad? There's something behind it!" "Oh, no. pa. And yon mustn't reset. t it. It was very kind of him. He might have gone on taking our money for a long time, but he didn't, you see. He was very good." . "Hum!'' .'runted John Free, dubi ously. "And he was so very kind about it. It. was after my lesson, and I was standing there, putting on my gloves, when he looked over at me in a strange kind of way and asked me just what I hoped to make of my voice. I didn't quite know what to say, and then he asked me pointblank if 1 expected to make money out' of it, to make back the money I was putting Into it then he asked me some'hing about our cir cumstances, here at home. oh, very kindly, pa," as an angry exclamation burst from the old farmer, "and when I told him we wern't rich, that that it had been an effort, you know, he looked at mo very qucerly. and then he sat down and told me the truth." She hesitated, and then went on with a little catch in her voice: "And in spite of all I've suffered, I t hank hiin from the bottom of my heart." Her mother reached over and took one of her hands. "Just what did he say, Dodie?" "Merely that it wasn't great, mother; that it wasn't worth the money We would have to put into it. He says voices can he made now with out much to start on, but it takes a long time and a great expenditure, and when there are sd many who have have something good to begin with, why, my voice would bring us nothing but disappointment. And I can see that he's right. "He says it's a nice little home voice," she went on, trying to smile, "but that is all it ever will be, you know, and 1 can't afford to pay five dollars a lesson forr-don't you see, mother?" Mrs. Free only pressed her child's hand tighter, fighting the lump which kept rising in her own throat. "I wasn't very philosophical about it ut first," continued the girl, her voice shaking as if It might give way with any word. "Of course I didn't cry or make any fuss before him, and I told him so, and that 1 wouldn't take any more lessons. Oh he was so good about it! He told me that we couldn't all have great voices In this world: that it wasn't ourfault of we didn't have them, and lhat if we did the best we could with what we had, there was nothing to he ashamed of. He shook hands with me, and said he had liked me so much, and that it was just be cause he liked me he had told me. "I knew that what he said was true ubout our only being expected to do our best with what we had, and yet 0 mother! mother! you know how foolish I've been! You know how I've stood up in our little church, and dreamed It was a great city church wit thousunds of people you know , how I've gone to sleep at night drcni- ing 1 was taking great armfuls of flow ers, while people clapped and clapped to hear me sing again! Mother, you know!" and she pressed the worn hand she held close to her cheeky while the hot tears ran down her tired, white face. "When was all this?" demanded her father, his voice gruff with the effort to keep back the tear3. Rhoda hesitated. "Ten days ago," she said, at last. "And where under the sun have you been ever since?" She pushed backed her hnlr wearily. "I've been trying to work in a etore and I was almost as dismal a failure at that as I was as a prima donna." "Now, Rhoda how could you?" cried her mother. "Oh, you don't know the feeling 1 hnd! I wanted to come home, and yet I Just couldn't. It seemed like coming home defented. It seemed I Just must do something in the city, and fo one of the girls got me a place in a store." She paused, and then laughed tho nearest to a natural laugh they had heard since her return. "I was an aw ful clerk! I hated It! Tho air was so bad, and some of the peoplo were so snlpy and horrid. And then, father, one night I came home with my head and feet both aching, and all tired and sick, and I found your letter about Mr. Childs .wishing I was home to take the school, and about you and mother be ing so lonesome, and and that letter brought me home." John Free cleared his throat and looked over at his wife with an air which defied contradiction of rebuke. "It's a curious thing," he said, "that I was telling your mother this very afternoon that 1 had nine-tenths of a notion to go and 'telegraph Rhoda to come home. I I ain't feeling any too well this winter." "Aren't you. pa?' she asked, in quick concern. "What seems " "Oh, I'll be all right now." he hasten ed to say, and looked boldly over at his wife. He went out to see about the chore then, and the girl sat down ami talk ed her heart out to her mother. When it came time to get supper, she went about some of her old duties naturally, almost gaily, and she more than once brought joy to her mother's heart by letting her laugh ring gladly out through the old kitchen. "Mother," she called from the win dow, where she was standing beating an egg, "where under the sun is father going this time of night? He's got Nellie hitched up, and he's going off!" "Now I do say!" cried Mrs. Free, and hurried to the doer to enter pro test, but only in time to see her hus band wave his hand In provoking fashion and drive away. "Well, if that isn't funny!" laughed the girl, and went on beating the egg. When he came back, about half an hour later, he sat by the fire and watched Rhoda set the table. "Joe Childs was mighty tickled," he chuckled, at last. She put down the sugar-bowl with a thump. "Now, father, where have you -been?" "Hum! Guess I've got a right to go about my own business. I had an er rand tip to Joe Childs", and while there while there," he repeated, eyeing her defiantly, "I happened to mention that you were home and say, he jumped right out of his chair, and waved his arms and shouted at me, 'Look here, John Free, will Rhoda teach our school?' and I replied that you might consider it." "Now father!" She laid the knives and forks round, mid then stood there, looking at him with eyes a little misty. "But it is nice to feel you're back where Borne one wants you, where where you're a suc cess," she said, tremulously. "Never was a teacher round here like you," said John Free. It was after, they had finished sup per and the dishes were cleared away and washed, and Rhoda was sitting bf the table, reading, while her mother sat close nt hand, knitting upon the soft, wool thing, that the old farmer shifted in his chair and began, a trifle nervously: '"if it makes you feel had, Rhoda, don't think about it; but many a night I've sat hre before I went to bed, and tried to think how it would seem to hear your voice in my ears again, a fid" 1 "Now, pa," broke from his wife, "how can you?" "Tomorrow, father," said Rhoda, termulousl. "All right just as you say," and the old man turned back to the fire. For a long time Rhoda sat there, pretending to read, but not seeing a word. She was thinking of what the teacher had told her of doing the best she could with what she had, thinking how kind they had been to her in her home-coming how they had made it almost happy, instead of sad. She was thinking that to them her voice would always be beautiful that the world's cold shoulder could not thrust away a faith born of love. She rose then and walked over to the little organ which stood in one corner. "I will sing a little, pa," she said, "if you want me to." They drew their chairs round where they could see her, .jtnd waited for her to begin. Her mother's face was wet with tears, and the old farmer put his hand to his mouth and coughed. Rhoda sat at the organ for several minutes In silence, her hands resting on ;he keys, wondering what to sing, wondering' if, disappointment' had not ruined all the voice she ever had. And then it seemed that the spirit of that home, that little country home where thcr-e was love and peace, wrapped hir round as with a mantle. She raised her head, and her voice, sweet and tender, carried out into the old room, to the two faithful hearts, the beautiful, never old words: "Mid pleasures and palaces though we may roam, Be it ever so humble, ther's no place like home. A charm from the skies seems to hal low us there, Which, sought through the world, Is ne'er nut with elsewhere." Rhoda had never sung so well be fore, for she was singing out her grati tude and love singing out her heart's thankfulness Tor this refuge from the stress and sorrows of the world. Youth's Companion. AFRICAN SLAVE GIRLS. Transported in Ship and Sent to Plan' tations In Interior. The slaves on deck regarded the scene with almost complete apathy, Some of the men leaned against the bulwark and silently watched the points of the island ns we passed. The women hardly stirred from their places. They were occupied with their babies, as usual, or, lay about In the unbroken wretchedness of despair. Two girls of about 15 or 16, evidently sisters, whom I had before noticed for a certain pathetic beauty, now sat huddled together hand In hand, quietly crying. They were just tho kind ot girls that the planters select for their concubines, and I have little doubt that they are concubines or planters now. But they cried because they feared they would be separated when they chme to land. In the confusion of casting anchoi I stood by them unobserved, and in a low voice asked them a few ques tions In I'mbundu, which I had crammed for the purpose. The answers were briel, in sobbing whispers; sometimes by gestures only. Tho conversation ran like this: "Why are you here?" "We are sold to the white men." "Hid you come of your own free will?" "Of course not," "Of course not." "Where did you come from?" "From Blhe.'' "Are you slaves or not?" "Of course we are slaves!" "Would you like to go back!" The delicate little brown bands were stretched out, palms downward, and the crying began afresh. That night the slaves were left on board, but next morning (June 17) when I went down to the pier about 8 o'clock I found them landed in two .Treat lighters. When they reached their plantation, which would usually bo on the snnio day or the next, for the island is only thirty-five miles long by fifteen broad) they would be given a day or two for rest, and then tJie daily round of labor would begin. For them there are no more journey lugs till tho laf.t short passage when their dead bodies are lashed to poles und carried out to bo (lung away In the lorrst. H. V. Nevinson In Harp er's Magazine. QUAINT AND CURIOUS, In Spain drug stores are permitted to sell drugs all day on Sunday, but to deal in perfumery on that day Is unlawful. Candy cannot lawfully bo sold later than eleven o'clock In tho forenoon unless no clerks or assistants are employed. Carrier pigeons tpleasod during the recent eclipse of the sun in Europe seemed much puzzled by the darkness. Some of them started off in a direction directly opposite from that in which their cote lay. When, however, the eclipse had nearly censed, other pigeons took the right direction at once. Gustavus Nordlin, a Swede, has just made a trip from Stockholm to Paris In a tiny canoe. He arrived in first class condition. The hardy Norseman says that he was originally a confec tioner, but having injured his diges tion by sweet-stuff and pastry, he re solved to nourish himself on bread, fruit, milk and honey. It Is proposed in France to require that chauffeurs shall pass a medical examination In-order to have only men absolutely sound In charge of automo biles. Many instances have been found In France of chauffeurs in poor condi tion, with various physical Infirmities. In one case an epileptic was fgund in charge of a motor car. Some suburbanites near London have organized a club for individual improvement. It is called the Silence Club. There are ltf members, whose weekly fee is six-pence. It is estab lished so that the members, ticket hol ders on a surburban railroad, can read their papers in quiet on their way to town. The subscriptions go to the guard who reserves a carriage for the members. A Viennese baroness, recently mur dered, carried the art of being at war with servants to the highest degree of perfection. She had a secret system of tubes leading from her sitting room to the kitchen and servants' room. By means of these she was able to hear all manner of uncomplimentary refer ences to herself. She enjoyed this strategic advantage very much, for Ehe was always haling her servants into the courts, and she slept with a loaded revolver under her pillow, for fear of assassination. Innuendo. "McYorlck, the tragedian, is feel ing pretty good." "Why?" "It seems somebody has named a cigar after him." "Huh! Somebody ought to name a ham after him," Von Behring, Who Found Consumption Cure Mm , 1 Dr. Von Behring Is famous as the discoverer of the antitoxin for diph theria. Ho is connected with the University of Berlin. After ten years of study on the subject he hns ngnln astonished the world by announcing the discovery of u cure for tuberculosis. His paper on the new cure, rend be fore the Tuberculosis Congress in Tarls, has cuused discussion in medical cir cles all over the world. His final report on the consumption cure is being awaited w ith keen Interest. IMPROVED FAMILY SCALE. The illustration shows an improved family scale of the dial type, the par ticular feature of which is the slanting position of the dial, thereby enabling tile Indications of the pointer tn be read with greater facility. The ordinary vertical dial requires the user to bend over In order to distinguish with any degree of accuracy Its Indications. In liter particulars the scab' lonfonns to ili conventional design of this type. Philadelphia Record. nil: is!:i.r, i'..t.i. iK.nif.MiMi.Mi t iii: i.v.vi ;i ration of WASHIXCTOX. PHF.SEXTF.il JO Till: 11 A LL OF FAME,. GIFT TO THE j HALL, OF FAME! Chancellor MacCriickou, of the New York University, was able to announce "he first Important gift to the Hull of j Fame. The gift Is a celebrated bronze relief by Thomas Crawford, represent ing the InaiiLturiition of George Wash ington in ITSIl in New York City. The prominent persons represented are George Washington, John Adams, who stands on his right; Alexander Hamil ton. Generals Knox and St. Clair, Rog er Sherman and Baron Steulwn. The relief Is a replica of one of the panels of the bronze doors cast for the Sen ate wing of the Capitol at Washing ton, and was cast from the same Idolds Special Teth i'or Tam. dentist lu the lower part of the A city was at work teeth that, to the sconr.'d fearfully made. Outwardly on a set of false casual observer, and wonderfully they appeared to be .ail right; but on the Iiiikt side the artificial molars were Untied, riv-ct.'il- and otherwise reinforced. "Tliey are for n sailor." be explained. "I have to make teeth unusually strong for them. 'The ordinary kind would koou succumb to the tougl salt beef ICE SHAVER. Jari f 111 If If If 1 1 .V Minnesota man is the patentee of the simple ice shaver shown in the il lustration. Peter Litr-on. of Montana, is doubt less the richest Scandinavian in Amer ica. and at the same time. The doors were cast in 1StiS by James T. Ames. Chancellor MiicCrneken said: "This work was executed for the United States Government to form one of the panels of the. Senate doors nt Washington. The total cost of the doors was over $.KMHK. They were cast by James T. Ames, who before the models and mollis were broken tip was authorized by the Government to exe cute for himself a single panel, which ever of the six panels he might select. He chose the scene of the inauguration, which has been in the possession of his family ever since. The present repre sentatives of his family, becoming in terested ir the accounts of the Hall of Fame, counted this a fitting place for the permauent preservation of this sculpture." and granite ship biscuit and lenve him toothless pemars for u long voyage. "As n rule sailors have good teeth, and false ones among them are scarce. Sometimes it happens, however, that their teeth are knocked out by ticideut and then the false ones are inserted." New York Press. Vtaillvo-toK Silll n Pre Pari Vladivostok Is still n free port and not under martial law, says the Japan ese Official Gazette. ' : : ; SCIENCE NOTES. A stecll of special hardness, patented In Germany by F. Munster, results . from subjecting the molten metal to a blast of nitrogen. With a tensile strength often ex ceeding three hundred thousand pounds per square Inch, steel piano wire Beems to he the strongest material known, and It possesses the additional valua ble property of a very high elastic lim it. A peculiar process for sepnratlr.g non-niagnetie particles like gold from sand has been patented by L. T. Weiss. The metallic particles in mass are elec troplated with iron, by a special appar- -ntus, and can then be separated ty any magnetic method. The use or milk of lime for quickly and effectively extinguishing fires in coal mines is recommended by inspec; tor Wolfgang Kuinmer, a German. The suggestion is not new, but has been newly tested with satisfactory results. The emulsion which can be used with hand or power pumps runs into and fills the crevices of the coal or min eral. The efficacy of bomb firing in break ing up hail storms has been questioned. M. Vldal, the originator of the plan, claims new evidence of its value from a recent severe storm that rapidly swept down from the Bernese Alps ... through the Rhone valley and over the north end of Luke Leman as far as the Lake of Neuchatel. The entire district was badly damaged by the hall except two small villages from which bombs were thrown. ( A French physicist, A. Baldlt, hns found that the odor corpuscles affect the leakage of electricity from electri fied bodies, and he proposes to use this discovery for studying the character ol odors and the part they play in plants. In his experiments, performed In un favorable weather, a rod of resin and an electroscope were enclosed in n glass jar, when the admission of va nilla odor sensibly lessened the loss of electricity from the charged rod. DELICACIES IN THE WOODS. Frozen Ants Better Than Lemonadl A Week's Fare of Red Squirrels Skilled men are employed to travel through the Maine woods on .snowshoes all winter for the purpose of estimat ing the value of the standing growth and to pick out sites for lumber camps. Through Information furnished by these men the proprietors of the timber lands are able to fix the stumpage rate to be charged. Cruisers Is the name by which such men are known. They go for weeks at a time without seeing a human be ing. They carry their food In packs strapped to their backs, nnd sleep un der brush shelters before open fires built among snowdrifts. "There is no need of a healthy man's going hungry in the Maine woods," said Orion Southworth, who has acted as head cruiser for Win. Engel & Cu for the past eight years. "Give a crufe ser a good gun, a thick blanket, a small axe, a frying pan nnd a few matches, and he can pick' up his own living anywhere in the spruce forest. "Last winter when I was reduced to two pounds of hardtack and four pounds of bacon, a sneaking bobcat crept up on me while I slept and stoic all my bacon from a limb above my head, compelling me to forage for' al most a we..k. I lived like a king, hav Ing three meals a day and coming out to the nearest camp in fine condition. "My diet was fat red squirrels dres sed and washed and roasted on the end of a limb hung above the frying pan., which rested on hot coals. It toolt from six to ten squirrels to make a square meal but the meat was sweet and tender, and the fat which dripped frii the cooking bodies into the hot frying pan was just the food I need ed to fortify me from the cold. "When I was cruising in Michigan one winter I learned that the State had protected hedgehogs by law, so as to have them Increase and fifrnish food for the cruisers, but I am not fond of hedgehog flesh as a steady diet Hedgehogs are lazy and stupid crea tures that, may be killed with a club. Their meat is sweet and white and ten der, but the fat portions of the bodies carry a parasite as big as a horseshoe nail. "In my cruising I have eaten and relished nearly everything that walks or creeps or swims or files in Maine. I have probed open springs of water until I have secured enough fat frogs for a menl. I have shivered with cold and hunger until I have caught a mesa of pickerel through the ice. "I have eaten and relished roasted bobcat, muskrat. skunk, fox, mink, fisher and bear. I have filled my pock ets with shelled acorns and beechnuts from the hoards of chipmunks and been glad to eat them. "Often when hungry and feverish from long tramps I have chopped holes Into the sides of dead birches and pick ed out the great frozen ants and made a lunch of their bodies. They have a pleasing sour taste which is very re freshing when one is thirsty. On the whole I think frozen ants are more pleasing than the iced lemonade one buys at the drug stores." Left It to Her. "Ethel," said a clergyman to one ot his parishioners, whom he saw with her hair in curling pins, "If Nature had wanted your hair to curl, She would have curled it for you." "She did, sir, when I was a child," was the reply, "but I suppose she thinks, now, that I am old enough to do It myself." Punch. . v L,