THE RAFFLE AT CLANCY'S. ' There's a raffle down at Clancy'; They are throwing for a "turk." By the way the dice box dance You can see It bard at work. Whew! the air la close and smoky! Therc'i a crowd about the beer; Every stalwart thirsty bloky Downs hli pint without a fear. "Twlnty-wan" called Jerry Clancy. And he pounded on the bar. "Shure." the game is rather chancy. Lucky divil that ye are! Come, O'Brien, tak' the blr-r-d!" Then said Clancy with a wink: "Whlrra, boys, an' haven't ye hear-r-d u urlen aahk yei all to dhrlnk?" There were twenty-seven husky men Gathered there about the bar. "Whisky here!" each shouted then. Clancy answered: "Here yes are! "Tin clnts alch, ye lucky sinner!" "Falx!" O'Brien said, "that's nate! 'TIs a motghty coshtly dinner Eight years old, four pound In weight. : The Broken String, Tinkle-tinkle, tinkle-tinkle, tlnkle-tln- ie. The leading man. engaged In an at tempt to remove a black spot from his areas cravat by means of an applica tion of whit grease paint, paused and listened. "It's a mandolin," he said. 'That's a new wrinkle. We've had all kinds of fiend In this company since we start dout, everything from cigarettes to bicycle Who's the musician, I won. der? Oh, I say, Jenksl Jenks! Who's the band wagon?" There was a step in the narrow pas sage-way that led to the dressing rooms and Jenks, the property man, appeared In the doorway. "Shi" he said, "not so loud. The old man '11 hear you The leading man started. "The old man, did you say not MerrlamT' "Yes, Merrlajn," Jn a whisper. The leading man sat on his trunk. "That beats me." he said. "The An cient Mariner tinkling a mandolin. Now I'm prepared to see Father Time playing sentimental ditties on a Jews- harp. ' Jenks did not laugh, a fact which helped to sober the other man. "It's no surprise to me," said the property man, gravely. "I says to Mrs. Jenks before I left the hotel, says I, 'Mrs. Jenks, you know what night this Is?" Thanksgiving?' she says. 'Why, light,' ays I, 'and it'll be a hard night for Merriam.' " "Poor old man says Mrs. Jenks, a-wlpln' of a tear. 'Poor old man, I suppose he'll be a playln' of his mando lin again.' 'That he will,' says I. "He hasn't missed It, as near as I can Judge for thirty years. As sure as Thanksgiving night comes, Just so sure he gets out that old mandolin of his and tinkles away. And it's always the same tune, God! But It does make my mind go back. I'll never forget the first time he played It. You gee, me and Merriam have been together, off and on, so lonir that I know his story "most as well as he does himself. Not that he ever talks about It. To night, after the show, that instrument II go back to the bottom of his trunk, and it won't come out again until this time next year." The leading man was all ears. "Thirty years ao 1 was stage door keeper at the old California theater. Now, the stage doorman ain't so un important as some folks think. There's mighty little goes on that he don't know something about. He gets the flowers first, and he usually sees the cards. He's a good friend to the actor when the actor's a friend to him, and he can do a favor now and then that's worth the while. Merriam was just beginning to climb up the ladder in those days. He had come Into the stock three years before aa utility, but he was a handsome chap, with brains and ambition to back his good looks, and It wasn't long be fore he got to playing leaas. oay when Merriam went on a Romeo at the matinees you couldn't see three rows In front of you for the bonnets. Mrs. Jenks used to live In a regular garden those days, for Merriam would not have any of the flowers the silly girls used to send him. When I'd offer to bring them home to him he'd laugh, and tell me he reckoned my wife cared more for flowers than he did. "But I often noticed that he came lato the theater with a big bunch of violets or roses that he'd bought him self to give to the little woman who played opposite parts to him. I asked him cmce why he didn't give her the flowers the girls sent him, Instead of spending money that way. I took a kind of fatherly Interest In Merriam In those days. Ur bless you, to look at him now you'd think he was my grandfather. He looks that old. "Well, I M how things was going with, him anu :eine aiw, u nr body else sen It, too. When she was on the stage he stood In the wings, and his eyes followed every move she made. I remember one of the women saying that It was worth while to have a man care for you like that, and cer tainly Nellie seemed to like It. Hhe came to me one afternoon the Thanks giving I'm telling you about and said that she was too tired to go home after the matinee. She asked me If I'd run across the way and order dinner for her. Then she whlHpered In my eai that she wanted It served for two, and asked If I couldn't fix a bunch light on the stage, so she and Merriam could have a cosy Thanksgiving dinner all alone. "Of course I done U for her, and while they was eatln' I went over to my boardln' house. There was to be a change of bill that night, so I came bac k early so as to get my props In shape, as I had them to attend to as well as looking after the door. When I came back Into the '.heater I heard Nellie Moore playing a mandolin. She was always fond of music and carried the Instrument around with her. " 'Now, you try,' she said. 'There's n air I want you to learn and remem ber ""AH right,' said Merriam, and he ijr th mandolin from her. She .k..il him where to place his fingers, and kept humming the tune until he could play It with only one or two breaks. Then she went to her dressing room to get ready, and Merriam sat then thrumming until the half hour was called. That night there was a goad deal of hand-shaking, and the word went around that there was to be a weddln' at Christmas. "The nt night, on my way to the theater, I noticed a crowd around the rtag door, and heard talk of a ru run- war. nurneu up, " mm Merriam cam out. his fac a whit a a gfeott's. -Tor Ood' tak, frt a doctor, jakr fee erid. m TmM to the tMntt ra Mar, .mA laekltr. fd MM OMO. WMa VmmwSmt. mm. wiwM-Jt 9 Wf4 led us to a sofa In the wings on which Nellie Moor was lying. Th doctor bnt down over her for a minute, shook hi head and said he was too late. An understudy played Juliet that night, and Merriam, as usual, was the Romeo. The audience didn't know the real reason for the change, but in the tomb scene I don't see how they could neip reeling it. "Those of us who saw it from the wings will never forget It. The wo men were in hysterics and the stage nands and flymen were nearly as bad I don't know how Merriam ever lived through It, but this I do know: He was a different man from that nlsrht. He seemd to lose al his ambition and he withered up so that when I met him at a rehearsal two year later hardly knew him. He was bent much a you see him now. and he was play ing character old men. Every year he dropped down further until they wouldn't trust him with anything bet- ter than bits and servant. Tea. sir, that old man ha played Romeo with the best of them." The story was finished, but th man dolln still tinkled. The leading man' face was drawn, and Jenks sat think ing. Perhaps the former was thinking or his own high tide of prosperity, and rf what th future had in store for him. But sympathy and curiosity are closely allied, and soon the two men were tiptoeing through th passage' way. They paused before th old act or's room. A ray of light filtered through the crack In the thin pine door. Merriam was dressed and made up for a comedy servant. His green livery coat hung on a peg on th wall, nd the red wig with which he covered his own white hair lay on th dressing table before him. There, too. was the faded portrait of a pure-faced girl lr the dress of Juliet. The actor was bent over his mandolin and the leading mas nowcaught the tune for th first time broken, but recognisable. "When other hearts and other Hps Their tales of love shall tell, Then you'll remember, you'll remem ber 1 Twang! There was the sound of i broken string. "First act! All up for th first act!' The call boy came tumbling down the passage and the listeners hurried up to the stage. A few minute later the call boy came hurrying up, too, and he found the stage manager fuming. "Where' Merriam?" h cried. can't hold the curtain all night for that doddering old fool. Hurry him up, will you?" The boy disappeared and reappeared almost Instantly. "Mr. Merriam " The tears choked his voice and he got no further. The stage manager made a rush for the stairs. Ten minutes later he came up dressed for the comedy servant, but the man whose name was down on the bills for the part lay In his dressing roo clutching an old mandolin, with his eyes fixed on a faded photograph. Adolph Klauber. With this Reason of mlBts and mel low frultlessness cornea our Thanksgiv ing day and the festival of the family History tens us mat mis annual cele bration of the fireside Joys grew out of a moment of great peril and marked deliverance therefrom. This new con tinent gave our pilgrim fathers but cold welcome, for the Mayflower entered Plymouth harbor midst a driving snow storm. Wading ashore through treach erous surf men cleared away the drifts and erected rude log cabins. But exposure told heavily upon the pioneers, already exhausted by a voy age long and tempestuous. Six of the heroes died during December, eight in January, seventeen In February, thir teen In March, and when the last snow fell It lay like a soft, white blanket upon the graves of half the immortal company. If the nrst summer was pro pltlous, the second refused rain, while autumn sent an early frost. When the harvest had failed In the field the game departed from the forests. What was worse, the Indians now became un friendly. Because winter and starvation threat ened the remnant of the Intrepid band. Governor Bradford appointed a day of fasting and prayer. But ere the ap pointed day arrived the colonists wak ened one morning to find that during the night a good ship from home had dropped anchor In the harbor, bringing letters, food and medicine for the sick, seeds and roots for a new sowing bringing also old friends and new colo nists. Never was deliverance more dramatic. So the day appointed for fasting was changed to a day of feast ing and thanksgiving. Since that first far-off event 379 autumns have passed over our favored land. Other Thanksgivings, perhaps, have been unique by reason of national peril and striking deliverances there from. But perhaps no other one sum mer has Included dangers so many and so great, or deliverance and gut" so strlklnir. For filling storehouse, ami barns the sun has been kindly, the clouds propitious, and the soil full of divine ardor. Each month of advanc ing summer has lent new -wealth to meadow and vineyard, pasture and or chard. ; Surprised with unexpected treasures, even now the threshers surround the fat wheat stacks and must borrow from winter some days in which to beat out their unwonted harvests. In the great states where corn Is raised already the bins and barns are filled, yet many yellow shocks still wait the coming cf he huskers. Vineyards and orchards hve not been less fruitful. How rich The crisp apples, pears and peaches. Sweet Juices have filled grape clusters to the point of bursting. Au tumn has also plumped the nuts and their ripe kernels. How ruddy tin wholesome roots and vegetables. PREPARE TO CELEBRATE. When they've counted sll the ballots. When the votes are gathered In; When the razors, guns and mallets That are raising such a din; V Public time no more are wasting When the turkey comes In state. We will give the bird a basting And prepare to celebrate. Fashions have been changing lately; Innovations still Increase; And th gobbler, large and stately, Now supplants the dove of peace. i When Thanksgiving time are hasting,' On and all In spite of fate. Join and give the bird a basting - And prepare to celebrate. "Mamma said we were going to have a Thanksgiving dinner like mother used to cook." . "Well, when you get home, tell moth er that I have an Important engage ment at th club." It wag th day before Thanksgiving. "Alas!" moaned th gobbler as b faced th Nock. "I thought the treats.! of th ArwMfilan would hav Uraed th ptopl s gainst Turkey, feat It Sll X." : Thanksgiving, j TH! TURKEY'S FATE. They trampled on the vlc'lm and They tore him with their claws. They swooped upon him In a band, They pecked him without pause. They stalked across his aching form, They made him roll and shriek. They swooped upon him l.i a swam, And ripped with claw and beak. He rolled and tumbled all about At last he gave a scream. That In a Jiffy put to rout That horrid turkey dream! A CURIOUS CUSTOM. The opening ceremony of the festivi ties connected with Thanksgiving day In New York used to be making drunk the turkey that was to be the most important feature of the holiday feast. When the bird that was to occupy the place of honor on the table had been selected, it was taken to one corner of the farmyard and a cup of brandy was placed before it. The turkey would drink this eagerly and would then give a first-class exhibition of being on a "tear" of the funniest sort. He would staggeringly strut up and down, his wings trailing on the ground. At one time he would seem to look extremely wise and then would appear to be over come with the hilarious aspect of his condition. All the members of the family and the relatives and friends who had come to spend Thanksgiving with It would gather in the yard and enjoy the sight. Finally when the poor fellow was exhausted and overcome with drowsiness he was killed. The good housewives Imagined that It anereasef the flavor of -the turkey SO per cent to kill It when It was drunk. Familie that would not allow a drop of liquor to' be brought Into their houses at any other time except as medicine, would not think It wrong to make their Thanksgiving turkey drunk. Perhaps It wa thought that the bird would feel less worried over Its fate If the headsman's hatchet was put to It when It was In a state of blissful Ignorance. A WORD FOR THE MOTHER. Thanksgiving brings together the scattered - members of the family. "Mother's turkey" and "Mother' chick en pie" reached out from the kitchen of the old homestead in Maine to the shore of California, and from the green hills of Vermont to the sandy areas of Florida, and bid the wander ers come home to Thanksgiving. t The smell of "mother's doughnuts" come across the continent, and lure back the prodigals to the old rooftree. Grandfather and grandmother, a lit tle grayer and a little more slow of step, perhaps, than last year, brighten up at the thought of Thanksgiving. They will see the children always "the children" to them, though they may be gray-headed and the little folks, and the baby, who, since the last Thanks giving, has taken up the burden which we call life. The kitchen Is filled with spicy odors and the smell of sweets. Everybody Is willing to help now even the ordinary lay boys are ready to crack nuts and sample the mlnee pies, to see If they are sweet enough and spicy enough. The mother of the family is full of care and bustle. Oh, dear, if there was only something now that one could cook. If someone would only Invent an entirely new specimen of pie! A kind that nobody had ever heard of! If there was some different method of frosting cake! If one could find some new recipe for pudding In the cook bookl THINGS TO BE THANKFUL FOR That we are alive and kicking cV peclally the latter. That we are a humble, healthy citi zen, and not a dead hero. That we owe less than we can pay. That Christmas la coming, and with It another turkey If we are In luck. That the bilious attack from which we generally suffer on the first of the month Is yet some days removed. That we have never abused the trust of our fellow man particularly that of the grocer and butcher. That we have never written poetry for some other unfortunate to edit That we are a cheerful giver of a fine assortment of good advice. That we don't believe all we hear, and don't say all we believe. That if we have a cross to bear we don't go forth Into the market pi are and Invite all men to gaze on It. That we never lend anything on any occasion except the light of our coun tenance. That we can live within our means, though sometimes we feel rather mean n doing so. That we admire all womankind with Individual exceptions. That "Vox Popull," "Old Subscriber" and "Constant Reader" still make life feasant for us. FOR THE ELIERLY PEOPLE. Thanksgiving day Is a festival for elderly people. The movement on thut day Is toward the home where the father and mother, the grandfather and grandmother live. It matters not If we have made a home for ourselves, and If it be ever so happy, It Is to the home of boyhood or girlhood that we turn on this day. It Is to the old folk we must go to relate the sorrow and happiness of the year, to sit again at the bourn I ful board, share again In the hospitality and warmth of the family hearth and receive again the blessings of those who watched ro carefully and lovingly over our early days. It was In those days that we first learned to give thanks for the benefits of a kind provi dence and the spirit then Instilled in us turns our thoughts ever homeward when the great annual feast of Thanks giving occurs. Christmas, with Its lighter current of happiness, Is for the children, but Thanksgiving, with Its deeper thoughts, is for the old people, and It Is with them that we wish to spend it. THE ABSENT ONES. There will be vacant chairs. There re always faces to be missed on this Thanksgiving day, which last year were bright and smiling. This year there will be more whose light will not shine at you across the Thanksgiving table. Many of the bravest and bright est of our young men have been laid to sleep under palmetto trees of the Phil ippines, but let us hope that the saerlr flee of their hopeful young lives is not In vain. Let us hope that In the mys terious marching on of events the go ing out of the one we so dearly loved may hav helped on the Grand Inevita ble and that the hand of Destiny has written that one dear name where Ood and th angels can read it, and decree It blessed. CULTIVATE OOOD CHEER. Gratitude Cheerfulness, Unselfish ness all those good spirits which Inev itably bring peace snd Joy In thrlr train com not without Invitation, and must b warmly entreated to stay with ua Strang that w are so diligent to cultivate th things which make not for or psbi. and neglect the best frlsads, when pfinc might makt Rf a perpetual thanksgiving. THANKS FROM THK HEART. Ood, I think Thee for the strength with which I make my fight: I had been conquered, aye and crushed but for Thy might. I am not wholly overcome, 1 bow and bless thy name: I stood and waited for the strength and lo, it came. God, I thank Thee that while tests of truth found me untrue, I have been faithful to my duty in few. That though my failures sicken me, realise my blame. And have enough sincerity to suffer shame. God, I thank Thee for my failures, ter lible their truth. But they taught me self-control al though they took my youth. I thank Thee that I still can struggle. still believe and try. And that my faith in human nature did not die. Ood, I thank Thee that the conflict did not make me cold: That my pulse leap as quickly as of old. That my sympathies still lead me, and though worldly wise. That I still can look about me with kind eyes. Ood, I thank Thee through my tears I still can see the stars: There Is of music In my soul a few sweet bars. With gratitude which has survived the sordid grind and strife. Oh, God, I thank Thee for th love which glorifiies my life! MINNIE M. LAING. One Thanksgiving. We had never spent "a Thanksglv ing" in the country. And In town the Pilgrims' holy day was degenerated in t an 'Airy and A met "blowout." It was decided In family council to hie us in a body to a country box among the hills, where we had enjoyed four Idyllic summers, and there keep the hoary old rests as Yankee pre- Raphaellte aquaraelles tell us it should be observed. ' Snow fell two days before the im portant Thursday. All the better! It would have been all the best had the storm held off until we were actually housed and could read "Snow-Bound over blazing logs answering roar for roar, the "grand old harper" smiting and twanging the oaks and hickories of the grove. We took the 9 o'clock train from the city. It was crowded, mainly with one sort and condition of men. Each of them was presumably going to the old homestead gray, yellow or white, backed by the Invariable red barn "for Thanksgiving." Some chewed or ange peel to tone down their breaths to the decorous prejudice of the old folks at home, others Inhaled bad ci gars In the "smoker," and brought the evil incense Into our car. At least two-thirds mummed peanuts and strewed the floor with the shells. One and all talked loud and laughed bois terously. A red-hot stove at each end of the car blew the reek of whisky tobacco, orange peel and roasted pea nuts Into a nuisance. It was an accommodation train, halt ing at every "turn-out" to set down trinDers moved by filial piety or farm house romance and poetry to maintain the traditions of the day. At the end of the fifteenth mile we came to a dead standstill. A coal train had been wrecked and must be cleared away before we could go on. We were stranded In the exact center of an un comely expanse of field covered with sodden snow and criss-crossed by blackish stone fences. Now a farm stead was visible for over a mile on all sides of us: half a dozen mean huts knotted Into a sort of settlement bout some railway coal sheds and twenty disreputable loafers lounged from them to Inspect the wreck and our train. The one sort and condition of men affiliated right speedily with these, and whereas paterfamilias made divers abortive ex cursions in various directions in quest of a draught of milk and slices of bread for his hungry children and a reason ably clean spot where materfamlllas might retire for awhile from the grow ing strife of tongues dashing against the becalmed train, It was but too evi dent that the mountain dew and Jersey lightning were to be had for good fel lowship and for money. All babbled, more or less tlpsily, of the day we were celebrating, drinking to it with every Imaginable form of expletive, and some that, until that unhappy hour were quite unimaginable by materfamlllas and her terrified younglings, rne av erage American's one idea of a holiday is license, and the one Idea increased and prevailed as the hours dragged by. We were halted at 10:30. At 3 tne rails were free and the celebrants of the honorable anniversary tumbled tu muluiously into their seats, the one idea uppermost. All over the. brpad and teeming land turkeys had offered their brown breasts reeking with richness, to the carver's blade; cranberries had bled by the million; pumpkin pies and plum pud dings had surfeited the tens of thou sands ct sensible people who had stayed at home and feasted conven tionally. Since our early breakfast we hud eaten Just one water cracker apiece; and we were lame w ith long sit ting, sickened in body by foul air and in soul by foul language. What was left of spirit and soul re vived with each mile left behind us. Materfamlllas told stories- to the con fiding Innocents of the sleigh drive they would have from the station, the dinner and flree and fun awaiting us at home. We hud managed to get off a telegram to our caretaklng gardener at 11 o'clock, ordering him to send to every train until we came and to keep the dinner hot. At 4:30 we alighted at the shabby lit tle station nearest our Idyllic cottag3. No rlelgh was in waiting; not a living creature was in sight, and the station was locked. A bitter wind moaned up and down the valleV, and the unsym pathetic sun was hardly a yard above the hills. Paterfamilias shouldered the two-year-old baby and led the for lorn procession "across lots" of un broken and stiffening snow. By the air line we had projected for ourselves the walk was a mile long. We were wet up to the knees with snow water and exhausted to falntness when we reach ed the gardener's lodge at the entrance to our grounds. It was shut fast; no answer was vouchsafed to our knocking; no faint blue streak arose from the chimney. The children had behaved heroically up to this Instant. When the father announced darkly that the villains had never got his dispatch and hsd taken themselves off upon a Thanksgiving of their own, baby began to sob, and silent tear glazed the purpled cheeks of 'he Ideal girls. This Is the tassel upon the cap of th climax!" said th mother In deadly calmness. "W will go to th hows and bleak our way In. Mac starve w roust we will starve In our bed, under plenty of blankets," Hhe took a child by each hand, pater familias reshouldered the weeping baby and we pulled our feet out of the congealing snow. A plantation of ever green hid the turn in the path at which we had our first glimpse of the cottage. A weak cry fiom U:e children an astonished snort from the paterfam ilias, a devout ejaculation frlom the mother, broke Into the gusty air. For royal banners of smoke, tinted by the glowing west, streamed from every chimney, each window was stained by scarlet fire-gleams from within; Frank our faithful watchdog, bounded from the porch with a bay of welcome, and at the Joyous yelp the front door was flung wide open. Our telegram had arrived in good season; the sleigh had gone to meet us by the road, and, being a little behind time, had missed us, who came across lots. While our trusty retainers mad breathless explanations the odor of roast turkey was borne to ub upon the flood of warm air pouring through hall and doorway. Dinner would be on the table by the time we could get our selves Into dry clothes. Never did another dinner taste so good; never was wood fire more Jolly than that in which the children roasted chestnuts, and beside which paterfam Ilia smoked the cigar of content and materfamlllas dreamed and moralized. To the home nook, "curtained and closed and warm," came the shout of the wind-god, a very paean of rejoic ing for mishaps overpast and for the abundant compensations that crowned the outgoing of our one eventful Thanksgiving day. Marlon Harland. PUMPKIN PIE. The greatness and supremacy of the pumpkin are universally acknowledged, and the fact that It is sometimes called "punkln" does not detract from Its fair fame. A golden seed, a golden blos som, a golden fruit, and, finally, a golden pie, that lifts one to the realms of fairy gold, it is not wonderful that it should gild our passing thoughts at this particular season and fill our spirits with liveliest anticipation of the glories of Thanksgiving. Whether the pumpkin pie be made at horn by hand, or n a factory by machinery, th effect seems to be the same. You can not taste the wheels in the factory made pies because th pumpkin pi 1 a wheel itself whose magnificence dwarfs the other wheels into insignifi cance. Furthermore, it is pumpkin pie, and when you say that you hav no room for hostile argument Th pumpkin pie, whether square, round or oblong, la warranted to adjust itself to any stomach, and that most gracefully exerting all its powers of elasticity that the pie may be comfortably located, to assimilate with the turkey, until th spirit is suffused with dreams of peace and resignation, and the diner feels so kindly toward everybody and every thing that he refuses to doubt the ac curacy of Ice-scales and gas meters, while the fact that the plumber Is re garded as a moral monstrosity strikes him as an empty fantasy. THEY GO TOGETHER. It Is believed by many thinking peo ple that Thanksgiving was invented to give the turkey a distinction and a prestige and to give us a medium through which to offer our gratitude while experiencing perennial thrills of pleasure. The selection of the turkey for the star part was happy, because every one likes turkey, be it hot, cold or canned. Unlike veal, corned beef and fishballs, the turkey is a concrete symphony that causes every soul to ripple in song. Old and young are alike victims to its peerless quality. The young eat It with their first teeth, the middle-aged attack It with their second, and the old masticate it with their third or store teeth, and it is even toothsome to the toothless. The cranberry' chief distinction is that which it enjoys in being the tall-end of the Thanksgiving tcket. The cran berry sauce is sometimes strained, but not in Its relations with the turkey. They go together so harmoniously that several poets say that the cranberry's ncarnated smile Is Intensified by the turkey s flush of pride. The turkey Is a bird among birds, dish among dishes, a dream among dreams. THE qRDER OF THE DAT. Now the festive rural dweller Descends Into his cellar To begin a very pleasant Task, task, task. While his mouth he opens wider As he engulfs the sparkling cider, In his effort to empty the Cask, caak, cask. And the college footbal player Prides himself he is a stayer To smother his opponent, whom he'll Malm, maim, malm, He smiles how he will mangle him, mother, kick and strangle him, Till he's taken on a stretcher from the Game, game, game. Now we take relaxation rrom work-day life's vexation, Waiting gleefully till the dinner bell is Heard, heard, heard. For, even where we're boarding Mrs. Hashcroft Is affording Up a turkey that simply is a Bird, bird, bird! 'TWAS BUT A DREAM. saw the well-filled bin of com, 'twould last me all the season. With nuts and bugs and grasshoppers, enough for more than reason, gave a gobble, gobble, as loud as I could scream, Then I awoke and saw the axe alas 'twas but a dream. Mr. Gobbler What on earth are we to do, wife? All our supply of anti-fat has been used up for Thanksgiving day, and there's Christmas and New Year's day still on the calendar. "No," 'exclaimed the mother turkey. "I would prefer my children not to as sociate with those incubator chicks." "Because they are so heedless and don't know how to feather their own nest?" inquired the duck. "No, it Isn't that so much I have brooded over," replied the turkey, "but there's something so artificial about them." However, when th Incubator chicks heard this they thought of the funeral baked meals of TTiankgivtng and re marked significantly, "Death levels all ranks." MEMORIES. Memories of Past Thanksgiving days will come to those gathered around table today, and as the old people tall of the wonderful events of day now long gone by, many a youth will sigh a he thinks they are not half so tin now. Let him Md hi time, for In fu ture dsys he will make the young sigh for th glorle which h will describe. And so It will run on generation after feneration. ALL ENDS WELL. "Why, hasn't Mary got back jrttt" Mr. Blair asked, as be cam In at MMf and Ralph Duncan, one of Mary's ad mirers, who wss with him, scowled. . "No, she hasn't come yet," Mrs. Blair replied. "And she said positively that she would be home to tea." "If a lovely evening for riding. J think they've come around by the lake," said Laura. Nine o'clock came. Mrs. Blair walked about uneasily; the boy camped dw to wait, refusing to go to bed antll Mary had disclosed to them a pr -ulsed secret. Ten o'clock. "This begins to look serious," sal) Mr. Blair. "Perhaps she went at once to her room," suggested Duncan. "No; I looked before dark," said Cissy. All pretense was thrown away; thy were openly anxious and went in a body to search the house. "I'll go and see If anything has been heard of Dick," said Duncan, wtoa they gathered again in the parlor. He rushed away and they waited si lently, in about twe"r minutes he came back accompany. ay an excited young man. t "I brought Mis 81 Jhome about 6:30," the other said, . "Impossible!" exclaJV Mr. Blair. "I swear I did!" hewclared vehe mently. "I left the bora standing aad walked to the door with her." They looked at each other blankly; then said Mrs. Blair solemnly. "Not S soul in this place has seen her since she left with you at 3." All efforts were useless, and aa the crowd of searchers gathered toward evening of the next day there were many open expressions of opinion that there had been foul play. "It is unaccountable, unaccounta ble!" muttered Mr. Blair, walking th "Just one person can explain It, aad that's Dick Roberts," said Duncan fiercely. "I have told you all I know over aad over again. I brought Miss Stan tea safely home last evening," Dick re plied. "You were seen about 7 driving en the Harris road with a woman," Dun can went on. 'The person could .net say whthe it was Miss Stanton or net. Explain that!" Dick was silent "Roberts," said Mr. Blair, sternly, "M you can say anything In explanation you had better do it." "Mr. Blair Laura!" Dick cried sud denly. "Does it seem to you poasibt that I could have harmed Mary? I love her. I asked her to be my wife. I was to wait for an answer until she had returned , to her home. Do you think I would harm her under such circumstances?" "That's your story," Duncan sneered in Jealous fury. "It remains to be proved." "He'll have a chance to prove it It he can," said 'Squire Woods. "Here comes the officer to arrest him." But at this instant wild shrieks were heard, and Cissy flew In screaming: Papa! Dick! Come come, Mary!" and she turned back, followed by the crowd. Down the hall she darted, through the back entry Into the old wing where there was a large room with a closet the length of one side. Into this Cissy dived. "She Is here! She Is here! I heird her!" 2 lushing her, Mr. Blair listened a moment, then exclaimed: "It's true! She is here somewhere." He struck a match, disclosing a small door, against which Dick flung him self furiously, bursting it In. In a moment he dashed out into th air with Mary lying limp in his arms. Half an hour later she had recovered sufficiently to tell her story. "I found that little dark place a few days ago. I was making a secret of It to tease the boys because they never had found it, and they play in those old rooms so much. When Dick left me last night I went there, intending to show it to them. They were not there, but I thought I heard them com ing, and I called and then ran to th little closet and pushed the door to, and somehow it fastened so I could not open it i "I called for help, and my voice sounded so muffled I grew frightened, fearing no one would ever hear me. It. seemed to be sealed up almost air-tlgEt and but for the ratholes I believe I should have smothered." A woman came pushing her way In. "Dick Roberts was with me last night!" she cried. "My son came home so crazed with drink that I could do nothing with him, and I had to go for help. I met Dick and he went home with me and stayed until Frank had gone to sleep. I came as son as I heard, for I asked Dick to say nothing about my trouble last evening. I am very glad that Miss Stanton has been found. I think you might have known Dick Roberts better," and she departed as quickly as she came. "Oh, Dick, did they think--" Mary began. "I don't blame them," Dick broke in. "It looked hard for me." "But to think that any one would suppose that you would" She stopped and held out her hands. Dick took them close and kissed the bruises tenderly; he saw his answer in her eyes. N. O. Times-Democrat. COUNTING BEES. A shrewd old farmer once outdid a jeweler In some transaction and the Jeweler complained of the way In which he had been treated, says Tit-Bits. 'Well, 1 11 tell you r.hat I'll do wr ye, said the farmer, "i n sen ye all my live stock at five-bob a head, and I'll let ye come and count them yersel'." The bargain was struck. The day was appointed to count and hand over the stock. The grasping jeweler and his assistants In due time arrived at the farm. They totaled up horses, cattle, sheep, pigs and the rest. The Jeweler then asked when he could remove the stock. 'Bide a wee bide a wee," said the keen old farmer; "ye haven't seen them all yet." He then led the party close up to a dozen beehives, overturned one of the hives with his foot, and, amid the yells of the flying party the farmer was heard shouting: "Count now, ye ras calscount, count, count!" NO TIME FOR BILIOUSNESS. Don't talk about dyspepsia on Thanksgiving day. Don't allow the yellow-vlsaged ghost of biliousness to sit st the fesst. Forget your liver for the time being. Time enough for that tomorrow, or next week. Tou have got all the rest of your lifetime to talk about your stomach. Keep silent about It on Thanksgiving day. THE FUNNY BONE. That which is popularly known as th "funny bone." just at the point of tne eiaow, in reality not a bone at an, out a Mfse tnat nee near u ir. r, , '-3 race ana wicn, on getting a Mew knock, oauees tne wen known V sensation la the srms and tafA