cfc II UN w I n t or rlotliuH th earth In white, When coldest winds tuo blowing. Winn shortlist day lirliiKH loliKost lllltllt, When Icy streams aro UovvIiik riicri In thi' shelter of tlio homo We know tlm Joy of living, And In tin' cheerful lliesldo ;lovv Kind cause, for truo ttiutilt MKlvifir;. When sprltiK returns with svveottiBt breath, When birds u rr jcnyly sltntlng, When llft prevails where onco wan death, Kellef mid nladncPM IuImkIhk Then In the lcalltiK 'f the treus, In verdure new ami tender, We see tin- work of Providence, Anil heal ty priilse wo render. When Niitiiiiinr'ii dtoiimyfllays aro ours, And In the vali-H and iiiinititalnii We view the heauty of the lloworrf, The cleainliiK of the fountains Then from the Klory ofthohlllH, From splendors wide iilioundltiK, From all things wiinn anil bright and fair A call of pralMo Is Hounding. 15ut ehlelly when the auliiinii coniOH, With all ItH weight of treasure, And rich reward of care and toll lleatowH In ftillcHt mensiirt A invrlad or Imnls, tli Ids, and vines l'lni iilm to all tile living. "A loving Ood HiipplliH your nerd Oh, praiHi 1 1 1 in with thanlt.st Ivlng1" -Mary Joanna I'ortor, In Harper's Unznr. SS," iiaitl Mrs. dates, de- L'iflfill v. "I'm goin' io do it!" J3W Her IiiihIiiiikI looked at Iter transfixed wilh horror. "Hut listen to reason, Marthy," hi' said, pleadingly. "You ineaii nil right enough, but it's n tumble roshy experiment. You'll tipilu tlu' hull day ior lliem and us too." "Jest wait and see, 'llijiih." "A nice Thanksgivin' we'll hev!" groaned Farmer Gates. "It's jest rcn dikcrlus t he way ye'regoin' to act. I'll go and tell .lams about it, and stop her coniin'." ".Now see here, Mlijuh (Jates," said his wife, turning around upon him .piiokly. "If thorn's any roedikcrlusncss about this hull business, L reckon it'll all be owin' lo you. Hero's .lane and John lUiberts hain't spoke to each other for 1iftc;en year own brother and bister, too all on account of nothin', as ye might say. She's livin' on the old farm ill alone with old Jehu, growin' crank ier an' bitterer ev'ry day. As fur him, he's (jot, a pretty little w ife an' baby, an' yet I'll bet his heart keeps a hnnkerin' after the sister that was a In uz a mother to him. An' I say it's a shame, an' I'm jest a join' to bring 'em together!" He shook his head. "It can't bedone, Marthy," he said. "If you bring Via together in this house it'll make it on jileasant for ev'ry one. Mcsiijcs, it'll be 4i queer Thunksgjvin' for poor Tom and .Susy, fur we've ulwuz had sech good jolly times on this day. We'll all be iike chunks o' ice." Tom and Susy were as blue lis their lather over their mother's decision. "Lots of fun we'll lme," complained Tom. "L don't see what mother can and in Aunt Jane, a regular straight laced old maid. 'Her cry looks would turn sweet, milk sour." "1 kno-v i shall laugh at her," said Susy. "1 do just love to do something u little bit improper, just to see how shocked she looks. She thinks I'm the boldest, Norst-mnuncred girl she ever met, 1 know she does. And she thinks Tom's Die sulkiest." "Susy," said Tom, scornfully, "I do wish you'd be u little more particular about your grammar. One would sup pose I was the sulkiest girl she ever met. Don't underrate my dignity any more than necessary. It'll be crushed enough when Aunt Jane comes. She isn't our aunt, either only our second cousin, thank goodness!" "Oh, mother," tauntingly cried Susy, "here's Tom talking about losing his dignity because my grammar made him out a girl. My goodness I 1 reckon there Isn't any such thing as dignity unless it's connected with b-o-y, boy." "Now do stop your quarreling," ex claimed Mrs. Gates. "It's very strange that you two can't talk without saying somcthiu' hateful to each other. I don't see why you can't behave ami treat each other politely as you do other people's brothers and sisters." "Hut Susy is so unladylike," grum bled Tom. "And Tom issodignified,"sureatical ly retorted Susy, 'that even his own sis ter can't touch him with a ten-foot pole!" "lJosides," said Mrs. Gates, severely, "Aunt Jane's had enough to make her Btern and unloving. She was a pretty girl when her motherdied and left John, only three years old. She was goin' to ho married, but gave that and every thing all up, to make a home for her father and John. Then her father got Hick with old-fashioned consumption, and for long,' weary years she took rvfit-r.ttf ; V;M7', lSg' ff J i in re of him anil managed the farm, and too); care of John, till her health give nut an' her nones got all unstrung. Then she grew awful fretty, an' ev'ry -thing bothered her. An' John, he never understood howJtwiiH. An' after their father died they had a few word, which led to bigger ones, and John called her a mean, hatefulold maid, that the world would be better off if she was out of it, and she retorted that that was all the thanks she got for givin' up cv'rythin' for him. So they parted. She give John half of what the place was worth, an' he bought another in Stamford. An they've never spoke Hence. Hut I know hIio's most broke her heart over it, an' It's a shame." "Hut how In the world. Marthy," said Mr. Gates, "kin you reconcile two peo ple if they won't be reconciled V" "That's jest what I'm goin' to try to find out, father," said his wife, "I reely dou't know nothin' about it, but Itdoes svein to mens if they two couldn't be in the same house together, an' at a Thanksgivin' dinner, too, without thlnkiu' of this, pust an' kinder nieltin'. An' there's the baby, too! I s'pose it will be kinder einbarrassin' at first, but if c use tact, an' be reel keerful " The unsuspecting brother und sister both accepted their cousin's urgent in vitation to spend Thanksgivin' with her family. I'oor 'Hijnh's heart misgave him more and mote as the time passed ft ASh S .. 3 M&& Mm mm ) . i mmMr,Ai'm,MM , '.ry w ' i-av.fc. .i.i?Wl. ' mm slt I 1 fJ VT dnmii MinRis I I T Ml In I ! fffl I " ' t41 - 1! li'i AW TgSSSZZ-Jkvzi 'THAT uini.n UAH oot o'i. He didn't have the heart to speak 1. s discouraging thoughts to his troubled wife, ami he felt that it would not be loyal to her to appear to blame her to Tom and Susy, so he made a fre quent confidant of old Sorrel, the horse, to whom he would shake his head nnd say: "1 never looked for'ard with dread to Thanksgivin' day before, Sorrel, an' 1 hope I never willag'in." OuThnnUsgiving eve, Mlijah Gates and his wife were at the depot to meet their guests. The train from the easy-nine in and deposited John and his pretty young wife, ami his wonderful baby. Then the tiain puffed away westward. Mlijah placed the three newcomers on the back seat, then they waited a few minutes before starting, ostensibly for the purpose of talking. Then the train from the west slid in. Now Mis. Gates' heart gave a great jump, and Mlijah became very nervous aim um.isy. What would Jane, say when they brought her to the carriage, and she saw who were there'.' Mrs. Gates slipped away to meet Jane. "Thank heaven, it's too dark for her to see! Now if the train'U only start be fore she llnds it out! Then she can't do nothin', but come with us to-night, anyway, 'cause there isn't another train till to-morrow morning." This train also putVed oil. Mrs. Gates began to feel a little slinky, as she es cort el Jane to the carriage. What would June and John do? "Wall, Jane," said Mr. Gates, heartily; "glad ye've come. Step right in on the front seat with Marthy and me." Then, with a fast-beating heart, to let her know who was in the back seat, he culled out: "Now, John, 111 take care of Jane, an' leave you to take care of your wife an' baby." They felt Jane suddenly start and then grow rigid, and then felt more and more sure, as the miserable time passed on, that she could never forgive thmn for their good-intcntioncd deception. She would not speak one word on the way home, but sat upright and motion less. The others talked to "keep up appearances," but a strange wall of ice seemed to have frozen up between each one there. Tom and Susy met them at the door, filled with mingled humor and appre hension. They were too young and in experienced and thoughtless to feel the tragedy In the scene before them. Their bright, iiiqui&itive,laughing faees WW' 7 L: 1 1 1 hi! 4 i: k m , r 1. 1 v m, , i i.i filled the lonely, middle-aged woman's heart with new bitterness. Then, when they entered the warm room, ever body crowded around the baby and John's pretty young wife. They tried to in clude Aunt June In the brightness, lint she kept herself persistently aloof. She wouldn't even take oil' her hat and cloak, nor wait to warm her hands, but march jng straight up to Mrs. Gates, said; "Martini, please tell me which room I'm to have." She added, sternly: "I'll never, never forgive you, Martha Gates!" I'oor Mrs. Gates showed her the room and left her. Then she went into the kitchen. 'Ilijali was there alone. "Oh, .Marthy, Marthy," he said. "1 wouldn't hae had this happen for the world." "She's a-goin' oil" on the six o'clock train in the mornin'," half sobbed his wife, "an' she won't cat no supper nor breakfast, an' she says she'll never for give me. Oh, MSijnh.'l did it all for the best! Surely, God'll help us out. He alwuz did before when we did the best we could." It was only about six o'clock in the evening when they reached home from the train. The day had been very mild and the heavy snow of the day before had rapidly disappeared in the warm sunshine. Suddenly, however, a keen, fierce wind arose, and when John and his wife went to bed their panes were covered with a thick frost in spite of the SH's A ,tm r J. .57 : X."-A KSN vnWA r r-S K v &&&&. c 1 w 'izipiaw " 116 ' R . T " K tiii: sn:.Miii!ANoi:s cuout. fire in the little stove, which on this night proved inadequate to keep the large room warm. John, too, was considerably annoyed at Martha Gates' deception. lie would have done anything to spare his wife the unpleasantness of this ill-advised Thanksgiving gathering. "I hope ma's satislicd now," said Tom, sulkily.as he anil fiis sister wire getting ready to go to their rooms. "She probably is," tittered Susy. "1 think it's so silly for a girl to be gipgling all the time," said Tom. "And I think it's just delightful to have a dear brother find so much fault all the time," ,aid Susy. And even far into the night Mrs. Gates lay wakeful and restless beside her sleeping husband. Her strong, resolute spirit was completely humbled. "Oh, dear Lord," she whispered, "L meant it all for the best! Ain't there no way to bring eni together? Oh, make a way!" At last a feeling of hweet peace stole over her troubled .senses and she slept. She awoke very suddenly. Someone was moving about in the kitchen. She could hear the stove covers rattlingand other sounds, then startled voices. She lit a lamp, half dressed herself and en tered the kitchen. There were John and his wife, also half dressed, trying to ghe the baby a warm drink. Everything was confusion for a littlu while. The only thingdellnitely known and understood was that the baby was dangerously ill. Then Mlijah was aroused and star'e.l olY posthaste, for the doctor. In th-j meantime the baby grew less and les.s able to breathe. The young mother was cryiivg pi eously as she held the baby to her breast. John walked about the kitchen in a perfectly frenzied condition and Maitha looked on helplessly. Suddenly a gaunt, stiff form appeared in the doorway. It was, lane. "Don't any of you people know any thing?" she exclaimed, vigorously. "That child's got the membraneous croup. Give him to me this minute. I saved a bab.v 's life once before the doc tor came, and I reckon I can do it again. Martha, I want steam. Set thekettles on boiling and give me steam." How she did fly around! ' She made a little bed some way and raised over It a blanket tent. Then under cover of the blanket she slipped the spout of the tea kettle, meanwhile ordering them to place the baby in the bed. Very soon the little tent was filled with warm, moist air. and a hot poultice was placed on i he child's throat. When the doctor en me the little one w as breathing easily. Jane told him what had been the condition of the child and just what f-he had done and he said, very emphat ically and respectfully: "Miidani, you have undoubtedly saved the child's life. I should lane come too late." He remained a short time, then left, and there was a deep silence amid the little company. The pretty young mother went up to the stern, lonely old miijii, put hernnnsnround her neck mid sobbed on her breast. "Jane," she said, "dear sister J ane I" And John'.' John was crying like a big baby, and Martha's eyes shone, and Martha's lips said: "Oh, Lord, J thank t lice ! " l'odney lllnkc, in American Ag riculturist. Com fort Ink Though tn. We are not unmindful that during the past twelve months many hearth stones have been left desolate, or that riches have taken to themselves wings and plunged the household into pov erty, or that worse sorrow of dishonor or disgrace lias quenched the light of joy in the once happy home. Such in deed have tasted of the bitter waters of Marah, but even these trials may have been blessings in disguise. The One who suffers them to be must know that the discipline, however grievous, is for good, and in His own good time lie will turn the bitter into sweet and reveal the well of lClIm to t lie burdened and despairing soul. Could we but see with ierf'et vision in our greatest Korrov, s wV might find oil; selves uicoin passed with a celestial host sent to min ister to us in our hour of extremity. Our journey Heavenward is ever be neath the watchful eye of our Father; if He chastens us it is what we remiire. and He loves us too well to pass it by; in every experience He is leading' us, and He will not suffer ns to be tried beyond what we can endure, and in the end He will give us comfort and peace. Let us remember that not one of us is called to wander alone; the Lord goes with us step by step ready to bear our burdens and carry our griefs if we let Him, and though our eyes may he tear-dimmed and our voices falter as we uplift them to God to-day is not the though that He never leaves nor forsakes his children a cause for praise and thanksgiving? Can we not then say from the inmost depths of our hearts: Pratso to God. limiiortnl prulso For tho love that crowns our days'" Christian Work. FOOLISH AM) AVISi: TUKKUVS. MKmi M x - - ff The foolish turkey, who indulges his appetite to its full extent and waxes fat totally forgetful of the fact"that Thanksgiving day draws near and that "pride goeth before a fall." ir. fiU i rNSftS . .- - " f V -V . i a y Tho wise turkey, who is mindful of the great nationnl holiday and rigidly follows the anti-fat regimen. The foolish turkey as he appenrs tho day after Thanksgiving showing tho third stage in the developmental meta morphoses of the great American bird. -Chicago Mail. SoiiH-thliif- to Me TliunUdil i.-(,r. If you have nothing else to bo thank ful for on Thanksgiving day, you can at least be thiuikfiil that vou arc not a turkey. Uchisou Globe. ' . 'W C2.-I I fit 4&. w-rfV-TJ NINETEEN DKOWNED. A Olovolnnd Blootrio Onr Plung09 Headlong into a Bivor. Fifteen Itoilles Kecovercd and lilenl Hied, unit Tour Are Still MIihIiik I'nthotlo SJL'i'liiiS In the Vlellilty of the Terrible Dltuster. Cr.r.vr.i.AN'D, O., Nov. is. About tho hour when tralllo is heaviest on tho street railway lines, Saturday evening, the West Clovolntulors, on their way from business to their homes, crowd ing the ears, one electric motor car, loaded to tho steps, approached the viaduct at an ordinary rate of speed, when a cry of warning arose. The draw was open, but for some unaccountable reason, the signal was not received In time, and the car, with its human freight, shot over the edge, plunging 101 feet to the river below. There were about twenty-five people in the car and all who did not jump in time were drowned. The car approached the draw just as a vessel was Hearing it and tho bridge attendants had closed the big iron gates and were preparing to swing the draw. As is the rale, the car stopped and the conductor went forward to releaso the switch in case the way was clear. He must have been blinded by the oleetriu lights, for an eye witness declared that although the gates were closed and tho draw was already in motion thu con ductor raised the switch handle. Thu motorman applied the current and thu car shot forward and struck the gates- with a crash. There was only a moment's imtso and then the heavy car ground its way through the wreckage and plunged over the brink amid the screams and frantic strug gles of the passengers, who at the first intimation of danger rushed for tho rear door. The car struck the stream with a great splash and disappeared from sight under the water. As it went over the brink the motorman jumped from the vestibule front, but all the other occupants of the car with the ex ception of tho few who had managed to jump as it toppled over went down to certain death, everyone of them be ing drowned. Within tlve minutes after the accident the surface of thu river revealed nothing of the tragedy that had just been enacted. The wa ters had closed over the ear and its passengers and the work of reseu inir the bodies in the uncertain light was slow indeed. Thu scenes about the river Saturday nitfht and Sunday while the work of rescue was being prosecuted were pa thetic in the extreme. In the center of the bridge men, women and children went this way and that way, scream ing, jostling each other, women tear ing their hair and culling upon God to save their dear ones. Women fainted and were, trampled upon by the mad, rushing and insane crowd. It was im possible to keep any kind of order and the effort was linally abandoned. Thu number of victims recovered is fifteen. All of the dead have been identified, but four persons who were supposed to Iiavo been on the ill-fated car as it made its awful plunge are still miss inir, and there .seems to he no doubt that their bodies will be taken from the bottom of the river when the heavy iron trucks of tho wrecked motor aro raised. AUTHOR OF "AMERICA" DEAD. IJv. Dr. Smith SneeiimlM lleurt DIseiiHD, suddenly lo Hosto.v, Nov. IS. Dr. Samuel F. Smith, tho composer of "America," was on his way to Hyde l'ark, where he was to preach Sunday, and was taken ill at thu New York and New RAMl'i:t. I SMITH. England depot Saturday. He was re moved to the Emergency hospital, where he died at 5 o'clock from heart disease. The writing of America's national anthem was enough work for an entire lifetime. and it is by this alouo that Dr. Smith will bo remembered by posterity, his other works, several of them about his missionary labors and travels, for hu was a minister, aro not of a character or nature to command wide attention. Dr. Smith was a native of lloston and 87 years old last month. Last January, just previous to thu celebra tion in his honor, ho wrote the account "ris f 'jm - "u to wrltu "My Countri' Work of H Miiryliiuil Slob. FiiKDintiCK, Mil., Nov. IS. James Goings, who assaulted Miss Lizzie. Jones at tho home of Hamilton Gcis hert, near this city, Saturdav night, was taken from thu jail by ii mob of 300 men yesterday morning innl hanged to a trcu in a Hold on thu Jefferson turnpike, a mile from tho city. v NT'