ON TRAMP. Hush, littlo ton ie:!nt- I'nim thy walling-, Dark (crows the night 1 can Journey no more; Look nt the ships on the black water sail Ins. Hoar th Rrpnt waves, as they crash on the shore. O Thou. O little Thou! No man can find us to trouble us now! Wl:at salth the water? "The darkness Is deep, The sea Imth a song that shall lull thee to sleep!' Look nt the sew, little Thou, little Thou And the sea shall sins thee to sleep. The Figure in How John Ridgewjy Came lo Go Back to It After Thirty Years. (W. n. Rose in Cleveland Plain-Dealer.) A man was fumbling with tho lock of the long low shed at the foot of the sloping lawn. The man was John Rldgeway, and he was the owner of the sloping lawn and the low shed and of the red tiled roof that showed bore the trees. Yet John Rldgeway was acting tnore like an Interloper than a pro prietor. He looked around nervously a he fitted the key In the lock and finally pushed open the wide double doors. The sun was forcing slender red and yellow arrows of light up troni behind the low eastern hlll3. Some where In the distance a rooster sound d a faint call. There was dew on the trrass and the night wind fluttered the leaves. It was light enough for John Itltlge way to find his way about, and the darkness paled with every passing moment. He had not slept well for several nights. The quiet of the place failed to soothe his Irritable brain. The sim ple remedies given him by the line, old doctor whom he had reluctantly consulted, proved unavailing. "What you really need," said the line old doctor, "Is not complete rest, but complete change, with something to lead your interest along a new channel. Haven't you a home some where I don't mean a palace or a hotel, but an old fashioned home? Where do you come from?" "Michigan Southern Michigan." "And Isn't the old home still there?" "I believe It Is." "Why can't you go there for a month or two? Look up the old haunts, and the early friends. Be a boy again." "I couldn't think cf it," said John Rldgeway abruptly. But he did think of it. He had thought of it that night as he sat by tine open window and biuorcu aim scaiu wrarii- ai uiw trembling stars. Had he reached the limit of hlB powers? Was he going down as Silas Rankin went down, and Stephen Gur ney? Was the mind that had served him so long and faithfully growing Indifferent to its duty? ' He leered across the lawn as he drew from the low shed the hidden aeroplane. It was lightly borne upon Us track and he drew it away from the shed and did not halt until It was In the exact spot whence he and Orandall had taken their short flight tho day before. He and Grand all would have tried the craft again that morning, only Orandall could not come. He had 'phoned John Rldgeway the night be fore that his mother was dangerously til and be bad been called to her bed side. His mother, Crandall's mother. Somehow John Rldgeway had looked upon Crandall aa quite alone in the world alone with his workshop and bis inventive genius. He had never mentioned his mother. This was Crandall's aeroplane, built with Jdhn Rldgeway's money. John liked the eager young fellow and believed in him. And here was the craft he had planned and perfected tinder John Rldgeway's watchful eye. For John might have been a fair me chanic, a creditable handler of tools, U fate had not called him to more Strenuous things. He knew the aeroplane almost as well as Crandall knew it, but after his usual cautious fashion he inaae no boast of his knowledge. Now he was going to take flight In It alone. It bad behaved so well the day before in its short flight that he bad perfect confidence in it. "It only needs a light brace or two and a general tightening to be entire ly seaworthy," Crandall had said as be glanced the craft over. "Airworthy," John Rldgeway cor rected him. And they had planned that Cran dall would come up early from the Tillage and they would enjoy an ap petizing flight before breakfast and vow John Rldgeway was going alone. Everything had been placed in readiness for that early flight. Rldgeway carefully attached the huge planes and tried the levers. Then he raised the craft on Its spiral Jack and took the navigator's s?at. A moment later the throb of the motor arose on the still air. As the speed Increased the craft tugged at Us moorlrrg. Rldgeway threw off the retaining clutch, the aeroplane slid forward amd slowly arose. ' He drew a quick breath. This was line. It gave him the old thrill of power. His pulses stirred, a new light came into his eyes. He floated across the little valley, gradually rising, and cleared the woods on One ride beyond by 200 Fenre, Utile son what use is this crylopt lieur the dry grass, as It bends to tb wind j None hut the breeze shall discover lylnK With black sea before, and the bins downs behind. O Thou, O little Tbou, Water and wind will take oare of ui r.ow! What salth the breeze? "The darkness is deep, The wind hath a sons; that shall lull thee to sleep!" Turn to the wind, little Thou, little Thou And the wind shall sing thee to pleep. the Doorway. fent. Then he tried the steering gear and swerved to the right, it was done a little too suddenly. He would be more careful nexttlme. He brought the craft around In a wide arc, pass ing over the woods on the south hill, and over the fond above the mill, and back toward the village the village where Orandall lived. He wondered how Crandall's moth er was. Now that he had tested his control of the aeroplane he grew bolder. He was a man Who had taken risks all through life. He took a new risk now. He arose higher and yet higher. He had felt no fear, only a little anx iety. He was sensitive in a way. He never wanted to undertake a task that he didn't carry through with credit to his skill. He only took risks when he felt sure of the final outcome. A tiny clock hung to a support In front of him. He had glanced at It as ha took his seat. It was then 6.23. As he lifted the aeroplane he glanced at It again. It Indicated 0.27. He laughed. Only four minutes. What would Crandall think of this wild venture? What would the grave and reverend doctors wilth whom he occasionally met think of it? What would Jim Maddox, his rival In the street, think of it? He arose a little higher. He would make another circle. As he changed directions a pult of wind struck him and the planes sud denly canted. With an Involuntary movement he threw the steering wheel over. There was a sharp cracking sound and the left plane seemed to crumple up. John Rldgeway was thrown from his seat, but clutched at a metal bar. Then the great planes collapsed over him. The aeroplane and Its human freight was falling. A boy was staring at an advertise ment in a weekly country paper. He was a stout boy of 15 and as he read tho lines before him his face lighted up. "Listen to this, mother," he cried. Then he read the advertisement aloud: "Wanted Strong boy to go to city. One who understands horses and Isn't afraid of work. Ask for Mallory at the Fowler house." The mother looked up at the eager young face. She was sitting by the BACHELORS' At a wedding breakfast the bachelors were called upon to give their reasons for remaining so. The following were among them: "I am like the frog in the fable, who, though he loved the water, would not Jump into the well because he could not Jump out again." "I am too selfish, and honest enough to admit It. "I prefer, on the one hand, liberty, refreshing sleep, the opera, midnight suppers, quiet seclusion, dreams, cigars, a bank account, and club to on the other hand disturbed rest, cold meat, baby linen, soothing syrup, rocking horses, bread pudding and1 empty pockets." "I have a twin brother, and we have never had a secret from one another. He Is married." Chicago Record-Herald. glass lamp at the table with its red cover, sewing. "Well, John?" , It was suoh a pleasant, sympathetic voice. "Mother," cried the lad, "that's me strong boy who understands horses. Can I go?" The mother hesitated. "See the man, John, dear, and af terward we will talk about your go ing." Then the boy noticed that his mother's eyes seemed to bother her and that he bent close to her sewing. He saw the man at the hotel early the next morning and suited his criti cal taste. "Can I go, mother?" -r "Are you so anxious to go, dear?," "Yes, mother. It's a bpiendld chance." The mother sighed. "You will come home soon, dear?" "And write often?" "Yes, yea" Her eyes were bothering her again, but the boy' scarcely noticed this he was bo filled with delight. But he did feel a little subdued when the hour of parting came. He couldn't quite understand why his mother foH ao bad about it and why the clun to bin la nob a tear? way. No doubt she was worried be cause she feared he couldn't take care of himself. But he would show her. "Goodby, mother." "Goodby, dear son." She was standing In the doorway as he went down the road with his lit tle bundle. He remembered that plo ture a long time. And something choked htm as he looked back and he broke into a quick run and the picture was gone. "What's your name," the man asked him. "John Rldgeway." . "Coin" to make It famous, ehT" "I dunno. Maybe." "Well, you stick by me, then." But he hadn't stuck by Walker very long. He was not an easy taskmaster. Moreover, he was a hard drinker and forgetful about the boy's wages. And one day he had come to the stable drunk and struck John blindly and unreasonably and John had nimbly eluded the blow and run away. He didn't go back. Instead he knocked about the streets doing odd Jobs and often wtehlng he could see the patient figure in the doorway of the old home again. He wrote now and then and made hla letters as opti mistic as possible. And whon times with him grew still more hard and bitter he wrote oftener perhaps be cause he had more leisure. His affairs were at a very discour aging ebb when the tide turned. He had quieted and subdued a young horse that was driven by an elderly man, and the elderly man had been so much Impressed by the boy's cour age and cleverness that he had taken him into his employ. It was a rather dull position In a dull old house with no chance w rise. The boy chafed against his narrow opportunities. One day he went to his employer and unfolded a plan through which he could by prompt purchases of a certain commodity profit by a rise that seemed Inevitable. It was a sim ple deal, only relieved by the boy's shrewd reasons for believing the stuff would rise In value. But his elderly employer received the scheme coldly. Tho house didn't do business In that way. Not to put it too mildly, the boy's plan was merely a gambler's chance. The boy withdrew from the dingy office. He withdrew as far as the es tablishment of a customer of the house, a keen eyed man who had spoken to him In a friendly way on several occasions. The keen eyed man had listened to the boy's plan with an amused smile. "And how much do you expect for your share in the deal?" he asked. "Ten percent of the net profits," the boy quickly replied. "Modest youth," said the man with a laugh. "Goodby." A week later he handed the boy a folded slip of paper as he passed him In the big wareroom. "Your share," he abruptly re marked and passed on. The boy unrolled, the paper. It was a check for $360. Let It be said to his credit that he sent $100 of this amount to the lov ing mother. That check marked the turning point in his career. From that mo ment he prospered. , And as he prospered the patient figure of the mother In the doorway grew more and more Indistinct. He H EXCUSES sent money to her with unfailing reg ularityand occasionally he wrote. But the picture grew dimmer. He went abroad. He mixed with great captains of Industry. They rec ognized him as a rising force. He sat with them. He was one of their num ber. And the patient woman In the far off doorway looked in vain for the coming of her boy. John Rldgeway was a busy man. His interests were many. His time was brief. Small wonder that the old home grew further and further away. In time tt quite disappeared. Men trembled at John Rldgeway's name. The financial power he wielded had been fairly equalled. Clutched In his strong right hand were threads that ran in many directions and con trolled many Interests. .. And then one day he saw the pa tient figure In the door way again. He hadn't been quite himself that day. He was dull and heavy and he knew it And being capable of think ing of his schemes and plans, he sud denly thought of himself of his boy hood, of his early home. It was after this that he went to the fine old doctor. The touch of senti ment worried him. He feared a men tal breakdown. And lo! the doctor had confirmed his fears and what was stilt more strange, had brought up the very vis ion that disturbed hlra. When he left the doctor's office be took a letter from his pocket and read it through. Then he carefully put it back In the envelope which bore the postmark of the old town. "Bah," he suddenly growled, "I'm getting childish." He had bought a country home to help the owner, whom the money market had wrecked. It was grand and lonely. If It had not been for the airship experiments he would have gone back to the rooms In the city. But the aeroplane engrossed John Rldgeways attention. It quieted his mind. It was a soothing plaything. What was that? Where was heT Then he saw the picture again. The mother In the doorway, but her face wore a look of terror and her hands were stretched out in agony. A sudden sharp chill came over him, a crashing blow stunned him. He remembered no more. When John Rldgeway opened Ws aching eyes he was lying In a dark-' ened room, but he could faintly make out the anxious face of the fine old doctor. He tried to speak. The doctor went down. "How long was I falling?" he whis pered. "One of the villagers happened to have his watch in his hand when he caught eight of you," the doctor an swered. "He saw the aeroplane col lapse and watched your fall. You were buoyed up by the planes and the descent from the moment of the dis aster until you dropped into the mill pond was exactly thirty seconds." The pnle lips moved. The doctor bent again. "It was thirty years exactly thirty years." The doctor drew back. He did not smile. "That must cover the period of your public life," he gravely said. The eyes said yes. The doctor bent to catch the com ing message. "I lived it all again," said John Rldgeway. The doctor slowly nodded. "You have had a miraculous es cape." he said. "You have been se verely shocked and badly bruised, but you are going to get well. What are you trying to say?" "How soon can I be moved?" "In a few days, I hope." "There Is something I want." "Yes. What Is It? Take your time." "I want to go home," whispered John Rldgeway. "Home?" "You know the home I mean. You asked me about It." "Yes, ye9, I remember. Go on." "There Is a letter In my coat pock et. Yon will find it." "Yes, yes." "I haven't been home for thirty years. It's a long time. You get pret ty tired in thirty years." "Yea." There was a little silence. "Somebody is waiting for me," mur mured John Rldgeway. "She Is stand ing in the doorway, the old doorway with the vines about it. She has changed. Her hair Is gray and she leans against the casing, but her hand Is stretched out to me and her face Is smiling." A softened look crept over the bruised face. The old doctor laid his hand softly on John Rldgeway's limp fingers. "I will take you to her," he said. WOMAN, OUR HOMEMAKER. 8omewhat Sarcastic Slur on Mascu line Supremacy. Ae we men frequently admit, it la our chivalrous regard for woman' which leads us to desire that she shall confine her wholly admirable energies to the making of our home and the keeping of our houses. She is tender and frail, and so we urge that she shall not for a moment drop her role as the goddess of the house hold. There Is nothing that so rouses our almost sacred admiration as to see our own particular goddess with a dishrag In one hand and a frying pan in the other. Let us never desert this high Ideal of womanhood and Its lofty purpose in life. Particularly, let us net do so be cause if a woman does not keep the house it will not be kept Would we men engineer and preparo 1,095 meals In one year? Would we wash dishes 1,095 times, wipe them 1,095 times, sew, darn, mend, devote our lives to a gray monotony of treadmill effort? Not on your life! Our chivalrous re gard for adored woman would not permit it. And we would go crazy within six months If we tried. I know of nothing that we should cling to more closely than this chivalrous re gard for our womankind it saves the cost of many and many a hired girl. I have penned thU little tribute to man's chivalrous regard for woman because anybody can see that It de serves It. Woman, the , housekeeper (and nothing else), the fried goddess of the fireside; the queen of her do mestic domain, with a stewpan for tiara and a stovehook for a scepter, let ue together pledge her, while we register our chivalrous vow that we will keep her where she Is, unless we men need her as a stenographer or something else in which event our chivalrous regard may stretch a few points. California Monthly. Certain lands in East Barnet are exempt from tithes, but Sir Thomas Lipton, who owns them, has to be ready when called upon to provide "facoU for the burnmga ot heretics." j. uur ueuer ovij Ey Elbert 0HERB Is not so very much difference in the intelligence of people after all. The great man is not so great as folks think, and the dull man Is not quite so stupid as be seems. The difference in our estimates ot men lies in the fact that one man Is able to get his goods into the show win dow for goods. v "The soul knows all things, and knowledge Is only a re membering," says Emerson. This seems a very broad state ment, yet the fact remains that the vast majority of men know a thousand; times as much as they are aware of. In the silent depths of sub-consciousness lie myriads of truths, each awaiting the time when Its owner shall call It forth. And to utilize these stored-up thoughts you must express thera to others; and to express thorn well your soul has to soar into this eub-consclous realm wher9 you have cached these net results of experience. 'x,. The great painter forgets all In the owivious to his surroundings; the singer floats away on the wings of melody, and carries the audience with her; the orator pours out his soul for an hour, and it seems to him as If barely five minutes had passed, so wrapped and lost is he in his exalted theme. When you reech the heights of sublimity, and are expressing your highest and best, ycu are In a partiul trance condition. And all men who enter this condition surprise themselves by the quantity of knowledge and the extent ot the insight they possess. And some, going a little deeper Into this trance con dition than others, knowing nothing of the miraculous storing up of truth to, cells of sub-cor.sclousness, jump to the conclusion that their intelligence Is be ing guided by a spirit not their own. When an individual reaches this con clusion he begins to wither at the top, for he relies on the dead, and ceases to feed the well-springs of his sub-conscious self. The mind is a dual affair objective and subjective. The objective mind sees all, hears all, reasons things out. The subjective mind stores up and only gives out when the objective mind sleeps. And as few' men ever culti vate the absorbed, reflective or semi-trance state, where the objective mind rests, they never really call on their sub-conscious treasury for Its stores. They are always self-conscious. But what think you is necessary before a person comes Into possession ot his sub-conscious treasures? Well. I'll tell you: It Is not ease, nor prosperity, nor requited love, nor worldly security. "You sing well," said the master, Impatiently, to his best pupil, "but you will never sing divinely until you have given your all for love, and then been neglected and rejepted, and scorned and beaten, and left for dead. Then, If you do not exactly die, you will come back, and when the world hears your voice It will mistake you for an angel and fall at your feet." And the moral is, that as long as you are satisfied and comfortable, you use only the objective mind and live In the world of sense. But let love be torn from your grasp and flee as a shadow 'living only as a memory in a haunting sense of loss; let death come and the sky shut down over less worth In the world; or stupid misunderstanding and crushing defeat grind you Into the dust then you may arise, forgetting time and space and self, and take re fuge in mansions not made with hands, and find a certain sad, sweet comfort In the contemplation of treasures stared up where moth and Tust do not cor riirft And where thfeven An not break through and stpftl. And thus looking out Into the Eternal, you forget the present an(d enter in to the Land of Sub-ConscloiiBness, where yet dwell the gods of ancient and In nocent days. New York American. f Being a Good Neighbor By Giselle SjaaMBssssaassjfj HE spirit of neighborliness is being manifested even by cor I 1 porations. The International Harvester Company is one of 1 saassBS; I the large corporations I action is particularly I fl the only organization Iy I commonly called "welfare" work, but It has its efforts In I this direction well systematized and Is constantly seeking akssassssjasaa) to embody in its own operation practical and helpful Ideas gnthered from other sources. The International Harvester Company, representing, as it does, $120,000,000 of capital, which dispensed, in, one year. $21,763,307.95 in pay-roll wages alone, and $16,783,000 in sales com missions, has a large field in which to neighbor" to its twenty-eight thousand has stated that "the employer who wants the people employed In his business to work under the very best possible roundlngs, and who feels happier when he knows this state of things is at tained; the employe who takes satisfaction In his work, because of the im proved environment and because he knows that. In providing it, the employer has no ax to grind these two men can not, in the nature of things, remain at loggerheads, and, In their co-operation there can be no question but that the utmost advantage comes to both." The World To-Day. Marriage By Lurana RS. Margaret Deland is quoted as saying that "tbe college u 4nlba a twin r mamHatTA And t.hft birth r&Ld Vij I in a way to make her mother blush," and you say editorially I VI I that the fact that she does so talk makes of her a "trouble- I some problem." I ., t if hosoiiea her mother could not Possibly pj iiiuj a cwyiv m--wmmw .w appreciate her Intelligent understanding of both matters -71 1 named, the college girl must forever remain sileutT Is she K, , .winoMarato nt her mother's and erandmother's opin- uyS OV IV . " " " ions that she must cease to hold opinions of ber own and so walk out of step ... ... i 1 .5 li. 1 In" Dii4hAHmWA m the "line of progress" In which you iranmy aaiuii, u i tu.u.., ,i . v v..- ho oroHi nf mnu of these mothers if they had WUU1U It UVl UttVO UWU w .uc v.i. ' - - - i.... mt.io ic tpnnrnnt nr Dossibly had a few less cbil- dren? And why should the college OUUIO as w j of herself and so ridding men or some man of this especial burden? mwwiAm v To aha not rtpmr-r.rRTratLn jz ner eutii w uiuodb -j ioao -. v Certainly "marriage and tne Dinn raie are impuimut iur w i, - - nho i.n-1 tn xnnsinr n.rurl the fact that she calls a college giri vi uj vnjit. o-i. 1 - spade a spade only proves her earnestness and sincerity. Fortunately the habit of blushing over important topics U.. .jranrail nnllotra women, uu. uue icwm. roses if asked to marry and bear mothers. ' hW"M"M"M- Woman in America Glna L. Ferrer a nmip lo nn itrvnht c.tiaon kn innria world Is the American of modern feminism, the new condition of Hnone of the Inconveniences that being who had known howj to assume masculinity in all that regards independence anti .iU liberty of action, and remain feminine In grace, charm anal altruism that American beauty, tnai American genius whose wonders are seen and felt in all the American and European reviews whose writers declare her to be engaged almost enUrely in severe study, it masculine work, sport and similar occupations. Europe, moreover, is right. The American woman is not only one of th most Interesting phenomena oi worm - ' . . . 1 . 1 Of thO new world uai migm nave me BirttLeot. uiu cyi m uio .k.un. nn Hioir fAundarlona the essential nrinclples ot our female Instruction tad training, overthrowing the society which rest, to a greater .extent than la woman la tha family ana in society. Hubbard presence of his canvas; the writer le-J D'Unger whose endeavor to put that spirit Into worthy of notice. It is by no means of the kind that Is carrying on what is exercise the virtue of "being a good employes. Mr. Cyrus H. MoCormick conditions as to hours, wages and stir Birth 'Rate IV. Sheldon girl of the present be found a trouble- oi cuihwmuuu umB clrll tndaV WOUld tUHl SJ red &fl c.. .v - children as thoughtlessly as did their that the most interesting thing to the nn the northern shores of the new woman that happy, victorious heroinef who has discovered now w extract ironj woman all the advantages with almost! America, qui is uw .us yireutmieuuu L . r A rrn .!.!, aM.u am !. a nllW of the old continent, or continent realized, on the antique functions ol rumam a jajE..