' 1 *7“'* v yv' v yj ‘ : ** < *Viv'^ - '►.*"•J- y, ‘ <-si 1 ~' - . /• r .t* ’ - . fejCi / j 1 1 Vi / j# »I, / 1 A \ I \ C { 4mp / I :\ V ? > | ; A THANKSGIVING SACRIFICE. | Italian morn, to judge by Cantus Bow* beej a* he hurried aft; end the tvopuHnsenvto tossed over the nil of the Forest Queen, watching the foamy create of the waves, looked af ter him. **▲ good fallow that,” mid Mr. Ay msaoonrt. "Walt, I, far one, dull he gtod to hear tha church bell is the old square steeple at home. And yon, Mr. Dayrsl?" “Home!” repeated the gentleman addressed, a toll, dark, Spanish type el individuality. "D may sound odd, butaowyou amotion it, I hare no homer Mr. Aymeseoart looked quickly up at his gleaning eyes. - "But I suppose won had one ones?" “Homes ore not immortal, anymore than people I*' answered DayreL “la las a riddle for me to guess?” “Ho; it is hardly worth the trouble —unless you eared to ltotoa to the eternal sell-repeating story of human Ml*." ‘'Human nature to the worthiest study to which I can aspire.” Mr. Ay* meeeonrt answered. v'And if you deem me worthy of becoming your oonfldent '* "Hero it to, thoa,” interrupted Day rel almost impatiently. "I was bo toothed to a girl m beautiful as aa sngel, and, aa I believed, true. Wall, I had occasion to take sneh a journey aa this one has been. When I returned she was engaged to another man.” “And she married him. Why do you look surprised? The fickleness of woman is no sneh new development, I suppose? But then I belong to ea ua- Iseky family. The Dayrms seldom succeed in fortune, and they always die sadden sad violent deaths.” "It is not possible that you era so superstitious as to— ’’ “Not superstitions, Mir. Aymes erart Call mo a fatalist, If you'will; 1 oaly report the unerring record of the peat. Since the time I mention, I have boon a sort of waadarer to and ho on the faoe of tha earth. I hear efthmr people talk of homes; to me it to the merest catchword." . "But-” . “Stop a minute,” said Dayrel, low er lag his votes, and laying his hand lightly on his companion's ana. "Do you eoo that yoaag maa by the oabin doer? tha tall, handsome man, who ban a smile tor everyone?" “That to he—the men who married Mary Ami tags." "Does he know—" "That lam hto defeated rival? Vo. Helms talked to mo of hto wife at heme—of tha two little children ooeat iafe the days till hto, return—of tbe bright hearthstones whore tha Thanks giving Area are all ibtose; and I have fistoned, aad aaswsred him ‘Tea’ and ‘Nay with tha calm philosophy of a •toje. After ell, there to a otrtoin grim humor iu tho game sailed Life." Aysseseourt looked sadly Into the **/"Andfdoes sll tide please your "Please sse? Tee— about as m«eh as it plasssf the writhing hospital pa tfaot to teat tha surfftm’afcdfe. 1 could bars mardtrad that sum mors than ones aad fall ft *a» sla. Ton aaad not start; the»Osla-lik* tospalas has paaaodawsy. lam quit# harmless to*eoi°ltod3]MtowardiSTSw has bulsed hto whole fatar*" Let poeta aiog the lark a iring, * The thrush’s silvery suing, The mocking-bird to rapture attired, The robin’s rhythmic wooing; Aye! let them praise in lyric lays The blue*jay perl and pesky. But O lor me each time, perdie, The plump Thanksgiving turkey! Fair Madge may pet her paroquet As wond’rons wise ana wary, And Mistress Maud may loudly laud Her canning young canary; - Content am 1 os days slip by, And pkies above grow murky, H it’s my look to hear —‘‘elnokl clock l”- The plump Thanksgiving turkoy. ! Then let prevail the love of quail,' Ye skilled men of the cartridge, Give meed profuse to grease and goose, Te woodcock and to partridge! Faith, naught I care how others fare, If sour they look or smirky, When holier me is served, perdie. The plump Thanksgiving tnrksy. —Harry Delouse. LEASH God we shall all of us Ml our Thanksgiving dinner at home this ytar.” The bleak No j vember day might ; have been bine and glittering with the eunahins of n And Dsyrel turned'stray and re sumed the slow, msssured walk up and down the upper deck, which his casual meeting with Amyesoourt had interrupted. And all this time the Forest Queen was plowing the yeasty tides nearer and more near horns. Captain Boss had calculated that tike brisk little craft would ride into the rook-bound harbor of the Maine port to which they were consigned early on Thanksgiving morning. “It’ll bs n close Ton,” said lie; “but somehow I don’t like the idea of epending my Thanksgiving on ship board. It isn’t orthodox, as Deaoon Posey would say.” And the captain laughed. And just at the gray break of dawn, when they could almost hear the church bells ring through the fog and darkness, there went a thrill and quiver through the Forest Queen from stem to etem—a sudden pulse, like the beating of a heart. Gay Dayrel started up in his berth and topped at the board partition which separated his sleeping quarters from those of his nearest neighbor. - J 3 “Aymescourt!” be cried, "wake op! There ii something wrong!” Aymesoourt alerted from hie dream*. “Wrongl What ia it?” "We have ran aground aomewhere, or atrnok a rook. Stop—don’t aak nap move questions. Seep poor breath end atrength; they will both be needed* Drees a* quickly aa yon can. When Aymeaoonrt came on deck, amid the darkness and ohilL and oon foaion, bo eonld learn only one foot— that the ahip had struck a rock, and was fast leaking away her life. "But yon needn't be so alarmed, ma’am," said the captain, to a pale young mother, who was kneeling on the doer of the deck, with her arms round both her children. "We can’t be far off Wayne’s Beach, and oar •adors would know the way through these shoals if you war# to blindfold 'em. We hare two good life-boats. It'a only leafing the Queen to go down by beraell” The captain rubbed Ms shaggy sleeve lightly across his eyes as he spoke, end then turned away to issue the aeoaaaacf orders. The raddy shine of sunrise was tipping the wafts with erssts of osr neusn, when tbs first life-boat rods oa, manned by true bands and fear " Make haste!” the captain celled to the man who were preparing to launch the lash “She's filling sash” . “How long do yon think she will last?” ashed Guy Dayrel calmly. "HalfjU hour perhaps—not longer.” . The passengers crowded into the .boat with ike headlong haste of those who are dosing from death, and aha was full, whOetwo men yet stood on the deck of the total vessel—Oaptain Bom and George Yasser,. the man whose bright eyes had stolen Mary Armitage away from her first lover. An old sailor started up from hie oar. “Captain! Captain! this meant bet Tike this oar! I’m not such a lubber M to save myself nan Jee you pariah!” “Sit down, tor!” roared the captain. “Do yon suppose discipline isn’t disci pline now, just as much as ever it was? I am oaptata of this craft, and I mean to stand by heir to the last. Only,” turning to Mr. Vassar, as the dircom flted old salt dropped down into his seek 'Tn sorry for you, sir! I have always expected som such end an this; but you—” George Yassar had become deadly pale—he clasped hie hand to his eyes. “Hey God have mercy on Mery and the little ones," he uttored. With a sudden movement, Guy Day rel swung himself past Aymesoourt once more, on to the deck of the toet eettiing ship. “Mr. Yasser,” he said qnistly,“t«kc my place. You have a wits and chil dren. I hare no one to care whether I perish or not. Don't stop to thank me—go at once. And if your wife should aak you who it was that rooked so little of his life, tell her it was one Guy Dayrel 1” There was a crash and splintering of the timbers, as Dayrel almost poshed Yassar into the boat The Forest Queen settled lower and lower, and went down in the very sight of the horror-stricken survivors. ' George Yassar sat at his Thanksgiv ing board that afternoon, with rod and whits chrysanthemums decking the [feast, and wreaths of autumn leaves rivalling the coral shine of the red em bers on the hearth—sat with wife and little ones at his aide, and warmth and brightness all around. , Four or five miles below, washed ashore by the cruel rush of the waves, with his white fees turned up toward the dark ening autumn sky, and seaweed in his wet looks, ley the corpse of Guy Day rel. But perhaps there woe no night ever to overshadow his Thanksgiving Day! A Tfcaaluglvlns Dinner, Hard, Angh Pleasantly Kara id. Day was certainly behind time. There we eat craning our nooks to lo cate the glorious bird, but it was too dark to sea them in the foliage of the magnolias. When the aky began to clear up we took standing positions, and made our necka ache by looking upward. I was the first to see the game, and this one was directly over my head; audit was only slew momenta more when each, except the boy, was sighting along hie gun barrel waiting for the word “Beady.”' All of us pointed out m splendid shot to him, but his eyes were stubborn and ha could not sec the turkey we had se lected tor him. * One moment he would see him, and, when we were all ready, he would say “Wait,” in a stage whisper. The turkeys had dis covered that something was wrong, and were sonndiug their signals of alarm in shrill “pits” and 'puts.” We ware especially anxious for the boy to bag a turkey, as he had never killed oua. When wndidget ready to shoot, my neck wee almost broken. As. the four reports rang oat in oonoert, two fine turkeys* a gobbler ends hen, fell to the ground, the victim* of my brother and nephew, The rest of the dock flew away in the wildest claim. Everybody has seen a gobbler strut, but the pride of the male turkey was •orpaased by mj nephew that morn ing, as he shouldered his drat turkey. —Outing. Plum readier ea Ms Xaslfeh Make flt. Bor English plum pudding-dean, wash aftd dry one pound of currants; atone one pound of raisin*. Mix the currents, raisins, one pound of cost, chopped dns, three-quarters of s pound of stals brsedcrumbe, a .quarter of n pound of brown sugar, the grated rind of one lemon, half a pound of minced, candied orange-peel, a quarter of a pound of dour, half of a grated nut meg. Beat dm ages: sddto them half a pint of orange idea, then pour over the dry ingredients and mis thor oughly. Peek into greased email kettles or moulds.. This will make about six pound*. Boil for too hours. Serve witnhard aiuoe.—Ladles' Homs Journal. . THftfISKS « For whet ara we thankful? For this: For the breath and the sunlight of lifej For the love of the ohlld, aad the kiss Da the lips of the mother ead w lie. For roees entwining, i For bird* end lor bloom; • And hopes that an shiatog > bike stan la the gloom. For what are we thankful? Foe The strength end the pattanee cf toll) For even th» loy« that we miss— She hope of the seed in the soil. For souls that an whiter From day unto day; And lives that an brighter From going God's way. v f — 1 ’ ’“V For whet are we thankful? For ell The sunshine—the shadow—the song; She blossoms may wither sad tell. But the world moves in music along! / For simple, swoet living, (’Tls Love that doth teech it.) A heaven forgiving, Aad faith that can reach It! —7. JL. Stanton. FIRST THANKSGIVING DINNER. Indian Chiefs W«n Hospitably Xaler* Sslned hy Pilgrim Fathers. The first Thanksgiving was ap pointed by Governor Bradford, at Ply mouth, Massachusetts, in 1621, *tho year following the landing of the Pil grims, in order that the Colonists in u more special way could rejoice together at having all things in good and plen ty, writes Clifford Howard, in the Ladies’ Home Journal. In prepara tion for the feast “gunners were sent into the woods for wild turkeys, which abounded there in great numbers; kitchens were made ready for prepar ing the fetuit—especially the large one in Dame Brewster’a house, which waa under, the immediate direction and charge of Priscilla Molin.es, she who afterward became the wife -of John A]den —while a messenger waa dis patched to invite Masaasoit, the chief of the friendly tribe, to attend the cel ebration. “Early on the morning of the ap pointed Thursday—about the first of November—Massaeoit and ninety of hie warriors arrived bn the outskirts of the village, and with wild yells an nounced their readiness to enjoy the hospitality of their white brethren. The little settlement, w hich now con sisted of seven dwellings and four public buildings, was soon astir with men, woman and children, who gave the Indiana a hearty welcome as they filed into the large square in front of the Governor’s house. Soon the roll of a drum announced the hoar of prayer, for no day was began without this religious service. Then followed a holiday of feasting and recreation, which continued not only that day but during the two succeeding days. The usual routine of duties was suspended; the children romped about in merry jflay; the young men indulged in ath letic sports and games ria friendly rivalry with the Indians; the little American army of twenty men, under the leadership of Miles Stan dish, went through its drill and manual of arms, to the great delight and astonishment of the natives, while the women buried themselves in the careful preparation of the exoellent meals, which were eaten in the open air.” The Pumpkin Pie. Ob, on Thanksgiving Day, when Cram sari and from west, From north and from south come the.pll jprlm tad guest: When [the gragdijalratt New Englander sees The old broken links of affection restored; When the oeie-wMried man seeks Us mother once menta And the worn matron ffillea where the girl smiled before— What moistens the lipe and what brightens What the past Ilka the. rich ‘’*” pU * *•' _wu*». • . 1 • • ■V MMMmsmmmtaamtaSMmaMsaNMswmmMasHMS ...gm Mis He feels thankfol became he our imL . SCIENTIFIC SCRAPS. In every mile of railway there are seven feet four lnohes not oovexed by the rails, the apace left for expansion. Gas is to be utilized in the burning of bricks in Atlfca, K. Y., whore a gaa well baa been struck on ground near a brick kiln.' A copper pan, said to be the largest ever made from one piece of metal, has been turned out at Swansea, England, it is twelve feet four inches in uiatne-’ ter, three feet three inches deep, and weighs two tons. Dr. Edwin Klebe, the well-known bacteriologist, formerly of the Uni versity of Enrich, but now of Chicago, has just returned from a visit to Eu rope, and ia going to New Orleans te atudy tiie epidemic of yellow fever. The Spring Garden institute of Phil adelphia has just received a bequest of $20,000 from the estate of the tale Samuel Jeanes of Philadelphia. The money will be used to strengthen the mechanical and elootrical departments of the school. Investigations made by the eoimu tists of file agricultural department ahow that the pith of the sunflower •tern ia the tightest substance known, with a specific gravity # of 0.028, si compared with 0.09 older pith, which has heretofore been considered the lightest cf all materials. Sheep shearing by eleotridty la suc cessfully carried on at Great Falla, Montana, one of the largest wool-ship ping points in the northwest. The shears need are much like hone-dip ping machines and power ia trans mitted to the shears horn a nearby street railway power house. - The government of the Cape of Good Hope is now regretting the money spent in securing Koch to elaborate a protective serum for nae against the rinderpest. The undertaking has ended in absolute failure, for the in oculation treatment has hod no effect in preventing the cattle from dying of the disease. The New York Journal of Hygiene aaya that many people eat altogether too much salt. The result is that the akin and kidneys are excessively taxed to get rid of the salt, and both are injured by it. Few people have healthy skins, and it ia believed' that many cases of derangement of the kidneys are due to the salt habit A enbetitue for coal ia now being brought forward in the shape of meant, a by-product in the distillation of pet roleum, which has for some time been extensively used in Buss, a and Italy for firing steam boilers, for marinev locomotive, and industrial purpose*. A German inventor is also audio have recently succeeded in extracting meant from a cheap brown coal in connection with which a new industry has sprang up in Saxony. Paper SottlM. A German papermaker recently ob tained letters patent on bottles mads of paper, for use on board of ships particularly. It has bean a cause of much damage to steamer lines that in bad weather a large number of bottles of wine and other liqnorn are broken in the storerooms in spite of every precaution. The new bottlee are male of a composition which, with the solu tion in which they are made water tight, ia still the inventor’s secret. After being impregnated with this fluid the paper bottles are slowly dried in gas stoves, and this process of dry ing must be watched carefully, for otherwise the bottles would remain porous and allow the fluids kmt therein to leak ant. Those bottles can be handled roughly without the least apprehension; neither the pitch ing nor rolling of a great steamer dur ing rough weather, nor the breaking down of a truck upon which they are loaded loosely Would he apt to dam age a single paper bottle, —Hartford Times. _ Ml| Flayed. Mr. W. H. Preeoe, the well known electrician, tells an amusing story about the early days of the telephone. That the Queen might test the new invention,he put Osborne, Portsmouth and London in communication, and arranged that a band should play while her majesty was attbeothar and of the instrument The Queen waa detained, says the Youth’s Companion, aad before aha arrived the hand had been sent away. Bat * happy thought struck, Mr. Freeoa. Why not himself act aa the band? Ha stepped to the instrument and hummed into it “God Save the Queen,” and naked if her majesty rec ognised the tone. “Yea,” aha said,.“it was the na tional an them, but verybadly played.” Diplomacy* Wiggles—Whose picture is it on the $lO silver certificate? Garfield’s, isn’t it? Waggles—No, Hendricks’. Wiggles—Tm pretty sqre it’s Gar field. Waggles—lt’s Hendricks, I tell yon, and Fre got a bill right her* la my pocket that will prove it. Do yon aeethal? (Shows Mil.) ; >*■ Wiggles—That settles 11 1 don't know how X came to be so eurekhaf 11 wna Gprftald. (Fifteen minutes Jeter.)' By the way, old maa. lead me $Hk will yon?—Boston Courier. £