The MILLSB6R VOJ HILLSBOUO, OREGON. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2G. 1806. NO. 36. V ... 1 EVENTS OF THE DAY Epitome ot the Telegraphic News of the Worid. TERSK TICKS FROM TUB WlfiKN An Interesting Collection of Itinii From til Two Hemisphere FreHnted In Uondeused Form. Hon. Lafajitte Laue, hu ex-con-gniHHitiiiii of Oregon, died at his resid- euoo at Koseburg, Or., November 23. Baker ooutitv's assessuiint roll has been Hied, and shown the total raluo of property iu the county to be fa,271,2H4i total valoe of taxable property, f 2, . 198,879. Washington county's assess ment shows the Mai valuu of property to be t, 827,4:15; total taxable prop erty, f4.4Cl.dl5. Hon. T. T. door, of Marlon comity, is spoken of as the moat likely candi date for the honor of oarrying the eleo , jforal vote of Oregon to Washington mid repreieut the Webfoot state In the electoral college. The sago of Waldc hills polled tho largest vote of all the " Oregon electors, and has always been nnnmally populur with his party. . The numerous hold-nps which have ooourred in Taooina and Koattle during; the past two weeks have caused many citizens to tuko the precaution of de positing their money and valuables in some safe plaoe before venturing itito the streets after night. In none of the bold-ups which have ooourred have the " robbeis secured wore than a few dol lars for their paius. Mrs. Mary B. Stevens, of Yale, while acting as chaplain of the Daugh ters of Kebekah, at their annual session In Hpringiiold, 111., and as she was juat beginning a prayer dropped to the floor and died of heart diseaae. - A late rider in the American soldiers ,': of Buffalo bill's Wild West show, was most brutally murdered by a oomrade in Omaha, Neb. The rnotivo was evi dently robbery, and the murderer has ,'. fled from tho city, after a most remark able exhibition of coolueas after bis ortme. "' Edward W. Curry, ohairman of the DemoorAtio state oouimittoe, died in i Des Moines, la., of blood poisoning, tie result of an initiation into the Elks' lodge a few weeks ago. He was tested in the eleotrio chair and was horrilby burned b fore those operating it realised what they were doing. Mrs. Foley, a widow, aged 00, and ; hor unmarried daughter, Fanny, agod 40, were found murdered in their home near Liberty, Mo. It was a cold-blood ed murder for the sole purpose of rob bery. The robber or robbers first dis patched tho women, then ransacked the bouse. Fifty dollars, all that was so cured, was taken from the foot of t bed on which the women had slept. A correspondent of the London Daily Mail at Ht. Petersburg says he is able to oonflrm the report that consternation existed while the ozar was on bis visit in Kgland over the discovery of a plot against his life. The Belgian polioe seized a parcel of bombs, which were eh route for Paris, just before the ozar was leaving England. On the same night the Paris polioe arrested forty suspects, In the absenoe of absolute proof the matter was dropped. The Philadelphia & Koading Rail road Conioauv was reorganized at Philadelphia. The railroad was sold tinder foreclosure on September 38. Under the plan of reorganization there will be three oompnuies the Philadol ohia & Beading Railway Company, the Philahelpbia & Reading Coal and Iron Company, and the Reading Oom psny. The latter is known as the Na tional Company, but an application bas been tiled in the oourt to have the title changed. " ; " George W. G. Fettls Dead, , Pittsburg, Nov. 25. George W. G, Ferris, who conceived and built the world-famous. Ferris wheel, died at Mercv hosDital in this oity, at 11 o'clock this morning, of typhoid fever, His illness was brief, and it was only Fridav that he was taken to the hos nital. Attending physicians say his system was greatly run down by over . work. ' ," i ,, Chinese Returning Home. Taboma, Nov. 25. The steamer Walla Walla today arrived from Ban Francisco with-over 100 Chinese pas- sengers, who will sail on the Olympia ' for the Orient, leaving Thursday. Sev eral dozen Celestials have arrived from the east to take passage on her. The ' exodus of Chinese to their native land is greater this fall than usual. A Cmliler Speculated, Lebanon. Pa., Nov. ; 25. The monnt of the defalcation of Cashier John H. Holler, of the First Nation al bank, will reach 100,000 or more. Sundav. Hotter sent out for General Gobin, director of the bank, and made a olean breast of .. the affair, xne ai rectors are able to make good the loss mid sav the depositors will not suffer, floffer was a heavy speculator in real estate, One cannot know what a man really is by the ed of a fortnight. . The railr'ittfei'trom Coquille City to Marshfleld and Myrtle Point was meatlv demolished - by last week's freshet, many bridges being afloat and the roadbed badly damaged in many places. " Last week's snow storm was ranch more severe on the Sound than in Port land. At Taooma fully nine inohes covered the ground, retarding to a con liderable extent railway and street-oar traffic. The Sound cities have reoeived Officers ... Itd1t. Deputy United States Marshal Mo rtlin hy has had a fight with Black .lack's bandits, at Separ, N. M., kill ing the notorious Bob Hays, and wounding George Mangrove, alias Olivia, who escaped. None of the posse was injured. Black Jack, Frank An dersnn, Bill George and another es caped, and the pose is in pursuit. The fight ooourred near the Southern Pacillo road. This is the most desper ato gang that has ever infested Arizona. (inn. fur Ilnolo Rum'a Soldiers. It is reported that partial orders have boon placed by the United States gov ernment with the Winchester Arms Company, of New Haven, Conn., for 100,000 gnus of the Lee pattern. The information is given by a commercial agent who male a business call Upon the onmpany. He was told by the offi cers thut the government was oontfaot ing for the rillfH on aooount of a pos sible war with Spain. Wires Were CruM.d. O. C. Udell, a street oar oonduotor, of Los Angolea, Cal., while telephoning the central station was knocked own and instantly hilled by an eleo- io shock. The telephone wires and trolley wires of the street railway had beoomo crossed. Struck hy it T-nln. Al Pullick, a young lawyer, and the MlH-ea Lulu and Lizzie Lind.'dangh tfiH of the proprietor of the Lind hotel, were instantly killed by a railway train while uttetupliug to cross the traok in buggy at Concord, Ky. Murder at Suit Luke. The body of Edurado Delveoohlo was mud iu tbn suburbs of Salt Lake with two bullets boles in the side. No mo tive is known for the murder. Hams Midnight Oil. Presidont Cleveland is burning mid- ight oil in the preparation of his an nual message to congress. The mes- Bageis being written in sections, and will be put together in oonseontlve form just before it goes to oongress. Allot Mr. Cleveland's messages have been distinguished by neatness and clean penmanship, and the forthoom- ng will be no exoeptlon. He li writ ing eveiy word of it by hand. Paaofi In Armenia. A Conatantiuople dispatch says Mon- igoore Mahal Ormanian's eleotion at the new Armenian patriaroh is an ex cellent sign of peace in the future. An imperial lardo will be issued, approv ing the eleotion, anil the next day the patriaroh will enter upon his funotions. lie has already decided that religious councils shall take immediate steps to examine the rules of organio law, which will doubtless be modified. Selling Their Children for Bread. Rev. R. P. Maokay, of Toronto, Can ada, foreigu seoretary of the Presby terian church, has reoeived a letter from one of the missionaries in India which tells of a terrible tale of distress and suffering beoause of the failure of the wheat crop in that country. Peo ple are on the point of starvation; parents are selling their children for bread, while some are leaving them to perish from want - . Mint Stand Trial. Mrs. Susie Martin, of San Franoisoo, declared innocent of murdering ber huBband, must stand trial for insanity. Her oouusel claims the proceedings are irregular, but Judge Wallaoe refused to release her, ansd the case was con tinued two days, when the jury will pass npon ber mental condition. Ll Hung Chang Disgusted. A Singapore dispatch says it is rumored that Li Hung Chang will re turn to private life, being disgusted with the treatment he reoeived on his return from his journey around the world. This dispatch also states that the new Japanese-Chinese treaty gives no concessions to foreigners. Another Bank Falls. The First National bank of Sioux City, ; la, , . has closed its doors. The failure is due to heavy withdrawals. The bank is one of the oldest institu tions in the oity, Bnd was considered one ot the soundest. The amount of liabilities has not yet been mad known. ' .,' , . Insurgents Defeated. An offloial dispatch from Manilla sent to Madrid says the insurgents have been defeated in an engagmeent with the Spanish troops fought near Santa Cruz. The enemy lost 500 men killed, the government loss being slight. The Shortage in, Cereals. Aooording to the offloial report the yield of prinoipal cereals in fifty gov ernments of European Russia and the UauoasnB in 1806 is 16,250,000 quart ers below the average of the last thir teen years. A Colliery Horror. A firedamp explosion ooourred in a oolliery near Berlin, Germany. Twenty-five bpdies have been reoovered. Forty or fifty men are known to be still entombed. ; ' ' , Fatal Bolter Kxploslon. The boiler of Reno Bros.' sawmill, twenty miles northeast of Sedalia, Mo., exy'.oded, demolishing the mill, kill ing John Reno and severely soalding Edward Reno. ": Bear Caused a Stamprde. A Paris diaputoli &ys that during a bull and bear fight at Figueras, in Spain, near the frontier f France the bear broke his chain and scrambled among the audience. Many persons were injured in the stampede before the bear was killod. By a clever ruse a man disguised as a postman easily secured a bag of regis tered letters of the value of 43,000 franos from a mail oart in the Rue dn Allemagne. Pans, and deoampea. BROWN'S THANKSGIVING It Made This Speculator Think Life Worth the Living, ANDTOAGAYTYTEWUITliRGIItl It Brought Sweet Peace from Out Life's I Dluy Whirl. EOItGE CALDWELL -;rmii of Gotham town the mora be fore Thanksgiving Frum sleep awoke, bo nearly broks life hardly seemed worth living. Now tli Ik iiiiiu Drown had been thrown down by Wall street's fluctuations: To rise again seemed to Dim then beyond all calculation.. "My race In run, I'm dulte undone." Blown mused a he was dressing; "I nevor knew things quite o blue ior cred itors so pressing.' And then he took his pockethook and count ed tip hi. money. The dollars four, there were no more, so few were they seemed funny. It made him smile thut little pile and then his blues departed, For Ilrnwn had pluck, believed In luck for othose not chicken-hearted. And to his breakfast gaily down went spec ulator (icorge .Caldwell Brown. While he drank his coffee hot to his band a note, was brought, And the writing on Its cover made him turn It o'er and o'er. When at last he broke Its seal Us contents fairly made him reel; Made the blood rush to his bead, for this was what the letter snld: "George Caldwell llrown, Esq.; "Dear Boy It gives me several kinds of Joy To send a check made out to you to pay the hundred, long since, due, You kl.idly lonncd when I was broke. "Most sincerely, It. T. CHOAK." As he picked tils way down town, thus mused Speculator llrown: "On the day before Thanksgiving, life Is always worth the living. Every cloud bna Its silver lining; somewhere, always, sun Is shining. -Now It really seems to nie I should very -thankful be; Yesterday the sky was murky; now I'm sure to havo my turkey. THB POM.AHS FOUR. But holy smoke! As I'm a sinner, no one's asked me out to dinner. Last Thanksgiving I'd a lot of bids to feed, but this year not a soul, so far, re members me, Jlmlny crickets! Well, we'll see." Thinking thus, Brown stood before his six teenth Btory office door, "Would or would It not affright her If I asked my young typewriter How to work this plan, thought Brown, as he went and sat film down. And as he rend his letters o'er, he' thought about bis plans tne more, And as he thought he grew perplexed, until at last she thought mm vexed. "To-morrow's Thanksgiving," ventured she. "A dav when nil. It seems to me. Should eat lots of turkey and mimokln Die. and all sorts of lliln's that money can ' buy." Thus quickly to the girl's amaie, Brown moao reniy n renewing unruse "And," h went on, "1 have a jlau, and you Then he told her how the borrowed money came. And how he sorrowed much before It came. He said: "The landscape blue, It turned to red: It filled my heart with thankfulness. It drove away my wrctcneaness. But," he continued, "then I thought of other : men dead broke. I ought to see some other luckless sinners furnished with Thanksgiving dinners. The maldeu listened to his words. "You want my help to buy the birds. The celery and the pumpkin plea and other tuints. she said, her eyes Bent on the floor. Then he replied: "That's It exactly; If you tried You could not closer speak my mind, And further, If you'll be so kind And help me at the dinner, too, I'll always grateful be to yon." The mnlden s cheek was like a peach, and as she listened to his speech, Into it crept a rosy pink, so comely, that It made him think: "Well, 1 vow"; In all the city there Is no other Bin so nretty. ' Do to the market forth they went, on benev olence Intent. On the way the girl observed: "Where Will you have the dinner served? If you have not g it another place; I'm cer tain that my mother Would be happy If you were to have It cook ed and served by her." "A very good Idea, my child," said Spec ulator Brown, and smiled. "How many guests, then, will there beT Have you asked them yet?" said she. "No, by gracious! I forgot. When we havo the dinner bought, I'll find fellows out of work, and bid them THK DINNER. come and feed on tnrk." So they planned and so they talked as to the market place they walked. At the market place their eyes filled with wonder flnd surprise. Food was there from all creation; food enough for half a nation. "Where does It come from?" Brown 1 pro pounded. Thus a market man ex pounded: "Should you ask me whence those turkeys, Whence those birds of rounded plumpness, Stripped each one of ruby wattle, Stripped of all Its glorious feathers. Drawn and ready for the oven, rri.up., ,n hulro un.l lirnwn nnd slzsle Till the cook, with wise decision, takes It from the torrid recess, Beady f ir Thanksgiving dinners, T ahmiM loll Villi. HllSWCr I SllOtlld: from the plains of Illinois, from the hills 6 rfrTi w its rrrmrt fri rri rrrk'.-; of Pennsylvania, From the vales of Massachusetts, from New York and from New Jersey, Where the farmers feed and feed more. All the summer, all the autumn. Till Thanksgiving is not far off; i Then they send them to the city, That New York may not bereft be Of the pleasures of the table." "That's enough of rhyineless rhythm; send two turkeys, and send with them- " Brown began, stopped, perplexed. Turning to the girl: "what next?" Then the maiden skillfully filled the order out, and he paid the bill admiringly. How Brown went out guests to Invite would be too long a story quite, But he scraped ud hair a uoz half a dozen, and him- self, the maiden's cousin, And her mother, all sat down next day to feast on turkeys brown. Who was there? Isaiah Btout, who for six weeks bad been out. Next to him, contented, sat Candy Maker Israel I'ratt. With his wife, John Henry Stiles, employed In irood times making tiles. Just serosa the groaning table sat the boot black, limy cable. At his right his face s-grlu, was the news boy, Tommy Qulnn. Ne'er was dinner better cooked, never maid en sweeter looked. Whlls the guests devoured and gorged, Co-1 pld Bhackles lightly foYged. Brown's heart was the heart they bound, as he very quickly found, And before the meal was over, Brown was a devoted lover. When the guests had gone away Brown ask ed it be might longer stay, And to the maiden, with a flush, he told a tale that made her blush. "Won't you help rne, If you can, with this better, sweeter plant Don't you see, a wife I need? Must I with you hopeless plead?" Bald the maldeu: "Of the other plan I coun selled with my mother. If to this one she'll consent, to marry you I'll be content." Nothing more this scribbler tellsi listen now to wedding bells. t: HE night before Thanksgiving the lty was ablaze with lights. ine Bret snow had fallen and the air ltaelf seemed light hearted. The massive mansions that surround Oramercy Park were brightly lighted. In muffled silence a young man cloak less and gloveless hurried by the Iron bars that fence in the little acre of the rich toward his lodging place. For five years Jack. Fleming Had lived alone. No one knew very mucn about him. except that he was a thriftless, In dolent genius. 'When his father died the fortune that might have gone to Mm bad endowed certain wealthy charitable in stitutions. His mother had died in his Infancy, and Jack Fleming had grown up with the servants ana nw dooks tor com panlons. He had never seen enough of his father to love him. In his childhood Jack had had one friend, Dora Goldth wait. She was a beautiful girl, several years his junior, who lived in the house adjoining his father's, and every day one or the other would climb the fence that separated them and drop over, into the little yard for a romp. Dora was proud of her protector and plnymate, for even then Jack was full of book knowledge, and Dora soon learned to love Shakspearo and Milton as read aloud by her hero. Another great tramping place for the little people was Grainerey Park, for both houses faced the handsome playground and Mr. Goklthvvait and Jack's father were among the favored rich who pos sessed keys to the great iron gates that shut out the children of the poor, who often 'ined the iron fence and peered wistfully between the bars at the smiling awn within. The children were Inseparable until Jack was 15 and Dora 12. Then Jack went to college, but every holiday found him at home again, and often books went by the board and Jack came home on the sly to see his little sweetheart. Of course, on these occasions he was smuggled into Dora's home, and good ratured, easy-going Mr. Goldthwait would have thought it the basest treachery for any member of his family to Inform his next door neighbor, Jack's father, that his son was playing truant After three years at college Jack was hopelessly behind in his studies, and his father, still ignorant of the reason, called him a blockhead. One day Jack received a tender, loving letter from Dora asking him to come home at once, as her father had just received word from England that he had fallen heir to a large property, Including a theater In one of the large cities, and the business of the latter was in urgent need of his immediate attention. The family would sail for England imme diately, but Dora wanted Jack to go with thetn, if he could. L few hours after receiving the letter Jack stood in front of the Goldthwait residence on Gramercy Park. It was closed. No servant an swered the bell,, and Jack's heart fell like lead. Again he looked at the letter. It was dated two days before and had been delayed in the mails. A' home he found his father, but lq a mood In which he had never seen him before. "You young rascal!" he shouted, as Jack entered. "So you have been wasting your time next door, instead of studying." No pleading on the part of Jack could induce the turbulent old man to tell where the Goldthwalts had gone, "Never mind," thought Jack, "I will hear from her soon, and then " But no letter came. Weeks lengthened into months and Jack grew tall and thin. One day he went up to his college town, and an inquiry at the poatoffiee elicited the fact that several letters had come, up to a month ago, but they had been for warded to Gramercy Park. That -night father and son faced each other for the last time. . . : 'Where are the letters Dora wrote to me?" demanded Jack, as he leaned bVer toward the old num. who stood smiling sarcastically In his face. "I told you that if you refused to return to .college you would regret it," was the reply. Jack turned on his heel and passed out of the house. He found It a harder struggle than ne expected. His Income fluctuated from next to nothing to nothing Itself., He be came first a wanderer among apartments, then among boarding houses, and at last an Inhabitant of "furnished rooms," who ate at cheap restaurants when he could eat at all. He had lived a week in a rear hall bed room on Twenty-second street before he discovered that Its windows were only separated front those of his old home and that of Dora, on Grametcy Park," by the brief New York back yards in which they used to play together. The Goldthwait house was dark. It had been ever since the day Dora left. Next to It, where his father's mansion loomed up ngalnsC the trees beyond, lights were often seen. But strangers occupied the familiar rooms. On Thanksgiving Kvo Just nve years since he had left his old life behind him Jack went to his dingy little window to zane at the two mansions. He shivered with cold; but the blood rushed quickly to his face when he saw thtf home of the girl he still loved, brightly lighted up. For an Instant he stood still, amazed. Then he sat down on his bed to think. Finally, downhearted and discouraged, he turned to a great pile of manuscript and rubbish on the floor, and picking a book from the nondescript mass he turned over the leaves. "Twelve plays out," he muttered to himself; "fiveof them probably lost." Only that day he had sent his best nnd latest comedy to the new English actor who had arrived the day before. As soon as It was rehearsed (ns he doutted not it would be) he would send the others In rotation. For months he had expected success to come with the dawn of every new day, and to-night ns he threw himself on his bed, hungry and broken-hearted, he real ized the mistake he bad made In living In a dream. He made Ann resolutions to re form, but as hiB fingers jlinched in new born resolve his eyes Strayed across the way ugaln. For the second time that evening his heart stood still. Behind the soft lhee curtains of the Goldthwait man slon shadows of people. flitted to and fro. The house was inhabited againbut by strangers, of course, he thought. Thanksgiving Day found Jack poorer and hungrier than he had ever been be fore in his life. For forty-eight hours he had not tasted food, but he determined to breakfast In spite of the almost total emptiness of his pockethook. He turned his face toward tie lower portion of the city, determined to accept, whatever work offered Itself, but it waa a holiday, and after several hours spent In tramping the quiet streets Jack turned his face home ward. As he trudged np Broadway a clatter on the stones behind attracted his attention and a driverleas cab dashed in to sight An elderly man was gesticulat ing wildly from the window. With a bound Jack responded. In another mo ment the runaway horse stood panting in the roadway, and Jack's sinewy hand was on the bit "One dollar to drive me up to Del monlco's," shouted the man. "But your driver?" asked Jack. "Drunk In a saloon," was the response. Without another word Jack leaped up to the cabby's seat and whipped up the horse. It was the first time he had ever earned a dollar by manual labor, and as he clinched his teeth firmly a flush mount ed to his cheeks. , "' When the once- familiar restaurant came Into sight Jack thought with mois ture In his eyes, of the many times he and Dora had lunched In the great dining- room. As he reined up before It, hag gard and mud bespattered, totally differ ent from his old self, he started with amazement There, standing on the side walk waa the subject of his dream not the Dora of old, with bhort frock and curling hair streaming in the wind, but the beautiful woman into which the years had changed her. For a moment Jack could hardly re strain himself from rushing forward and declaring his identity. But a thought of his clothes and his wort made him stop. He became as anxious to hide his face as he had been a moment before to tell hla name. Dora and her father passed. Into the restaurant and Jack earned a second dol lar by getting a new driver for his paa: senger's- coupe, - He passed and repassed the restaurant in an unsuccessful attempt to get another glimpse of the woman he loved. before he even satisfied his hunger. It was dark before he went back to his little room and Btationed himself once more at hla window to gaze at the lights in the Goldthwait mansion. He was filled with a conflict of love and pride. He had no reason to believe that Dora had not forgotten him, but his love for her was at strong as ever. He longed to go to her, but the knowledge of bis poverty and shabblnees kept him back. The windows of the great old dining room were bright with light and their raised curtains gave him a clear view of the place where he and Dora had spent many happy Thanksgiving reunions to gether. ' He saw her flitting about the table as of old, putting the finishing touch es on he arrangement of fruits and flow ers. He could see her plainly. She look ed even younger and more beautiful than she had that afternoon In her heavy street Wraps. Half an hour passed and some one else came Into the room a tall, handsome man. Dora seemed to forget her house hold duties, for she hung on the man's arm and seemed to plead with him. At last he sat down, and then still another person came In; it was Mr. Goldthwait. They sat by the fire, with Dora between them, She was talking earnestly, and the handsome stranger seemed to be Ha tching intently. Occasionally Jack could see that Mr. Goldthwait spoke. Then Dora would beam with happy smiles. Suddenly she Jumped up from her seat, and a moment later wnen she returned she had In her hands a fluttering man uscript. ' She read it The old smile played about her lips. The gestures waved the grace ful hands. It maddened Jack. lie felt that he must be near her once more--must hear her voice again. A wisteria vine ran down from his wlh" dow. Clasping the strong, dry stalk, Jack descended until he stood on the fence so dear1 to his memory. Softly he crept along until he reached the little veranda at the rear of the Goldthwait mansion, and "IN THE MtTLE BACK YARD." ; peering through the window he feasted bis eyes on the face of the girl he loved. Jack was overcome as he saw again all the little details of the room which once had been so familiar to. him. He bowed his head. He pushed against the glass of the swinging window. The window opened a tritlc. Jack started back fright ened, but the air was still outside, and the Inmates of the room had not noticed. How he could hear Dora's voice. It said: "Now. Mr. Langdon. let me read the cli max to you before dinner is announced." Langdon was the name of the Jbiigllsn actor to whom Jack had sent his play, and as Dora's sweet voice read on, Jack real ized that it was his own comedy she waa reading. ..v . The cliniax was rendered with telling effect. The two men leaned forward with interest. , , ' "Capital! Capital!" cr'ed Langdon. Jack was filled With intense excite ment. His hands were clinched. "Do you accept It?' asked Dora, tri umphantly, of the actor. "I do," was the reply. "It Is the com edy that I have been waiting for." "I will write him to-night, then," said Dora. The beautiful girl sank back in her chair and went on: "And now I -will tell you a story that will explain why I was so anxious to have you take the play." Jack listened breathlessly. "You see," said Dora," I used to have a friend here named John Fleming. When we went abroad I wrote to him, but he aid not answer my letters. I lost sight of him, but I did not lose my well, my regard for him." "A splendid fellow,' interrupted Mr. Goldthwait. "There never was one like him," said Dora. Then she went on: "Well, when we reached New York last week father and I began to look him up, and we found In the first place that the reason he bad not answered my letters was because his father, who was angry at both of us, had Intercepted them; In the second place, that father and son were never reconciled, and that the old gentleman disinherited Jack when he died, and In the third place that Jack had been, ever since barely making a living out of literary work and trying to get some one to produce hia plays. "We finally got track of him this morn ing, and this morning also I saw the man uscript of this play lylrg on the table where you had left It when you brought It up from the theater. The words "By John Fleming' caught my attention at once, and I picked it up and read it It "HB SAT ON HIS BB AND THOUGHT." seemed to me so strdnge that I made up my mind that you shouldn't send it back without reading it, so I read It to you myselfr And now I shall send for Jack to-morrow, and . when he comes I shall have good news for him. And and good news for Jack Is Is good news for for me, you Bee. . 8p I am very happy." There was a noise of an opening win dow," and Jack, wild eyed and unkempt, but very joyful, stepped in. For a mo ment they did not recognize him, but when they did "Well," said Mr. Langdon, "this climax beats anything In your play." "Yes," added Mr. Goldthwait, "and It la doubly good because It will be followed by a "eal Thanksgiving dinner," New York Press.' Thanksgiving. Decoration. The old question comes up again and again as to how'to devise' something novel for Thanksgiving decoration. The day is one pre-eminently homely and simple in its spirit and traditions a day set apart for returning thanks because of the neces sities and 'every-day" comforts of life. Nothing la so appropriate in commem orating the occasion as embellishments from the harvest fields. In drawing rooms. nothing is more effective than In dian corn and diminutive yellow pump kins, the corn with its 'long stalks and golden ears stacked on either side of the wide doors or grouped In corners, the small pumpkins with more ears or corn piled at .the base: Vines of cranberry , crowded with the tiny red globes Can trail across mantle shelves or twine up and down columns, while garlands of red and green peppers, all sizes and shapes, and great bunches of ripe wheat and oats are rich and beau tiful In effect. Fruits, of all kinds ... grapes, late pears ahfl peaches, rosy ap ples and purple plums; mingled with their own foliage are unique and highly typical of the harvest home. For dlnlng-table ornamentation a novel and most attractive mode is to cut from the ordinary vegetables shapes simulating flowers from " the .beet a deep red rose; from the yellow turnip, a tiger Illy; a white lily or chrysanthemum from the potato,' with lettuce leaves for foliage, while cabbage, celery, cauliflower and the dozen other kitchen garden production! add blossoms to this .original bouquet One of these orahtnents serves at each plate as a favor, while a huge group mingled with fruits forms a fine center piece. ,. It is a very simple matter to shape these mock flowers, a sharp knife and a little skill is all that Is required. They may be prepared the day before Thanksgiving and kept fresh in a bowl of water. "Give Me the Wishbone." 1.1 U 1?.,nl.nn Vtn,l TtV H WAnlT .