I A Thanksgiving Celebration ii) irriiix wi:i:ks Coi.Hi(ht, IWItt, hy American Press An- W II, I, I AM sat on I tic bottom Step, hllKKlllg III knee. This attitude III William's en hp not hull, ntlve of trouble- OHM' tt !!' M1N III t lit- process f Hi'lll (Ion. I'll o minute went by. Hud.lonly a kIii-UI I II l !c girlish u Ills tie brought him "I' Miunllng with a Jerk. A III He fclrl, minds! In of it blue irtin, n rod swcntcr and a turned up UoHO, llppcnrtvl. "I'UI your tun it'-l a 1 urU V nuked Wlllinm. Suy, hugging herself, shook her bend. "Nope; in. I j it ii hp hasn't. Slip Miy may ho we'll hnie the doctor come If tliii l.uln don't get lH'ttir, nml If tin roinpi Iip'II hike the, money tlml 'u'd liny (Iip duck. I ri 1 n't pit tip 1 1 ) t it - It en tlmnlii .in fpf 'Mi.iiil.hgivlng yet. Tho tlllH lilltt ipinNVlcl llMflll too" "I nln'1. illher." sympathized Wll limn "It's r i j i - to Iip Just like Sitn d.i I Jii-n found 11111 It Isn't going to p any fun 111 nil l.nt ji'nr Aunt Amy got numicd to a Jolly new liuilo, II I'll to it) I' 'ill w. is jolly too." At n !-- for v.ouli. YVIUhini drew- In n iriHli;:,inw 1 ri'-i!li uf uiisfa Hon. "I ist ; i .ii I Ii hI tlni'p pie en of cake ami inorp'n siipii doon chocolate ireiium Ami i.i. t!i i my Hint Aunt Amy I' n't even i .'I u: lo bo at gratid Umi'h Ioiiioi -row, :in I my new niiclo nml Aunt l.u Is up il-.lllni: her, nml she Inn't going to come i itlipr," "Why don't you huvo unollipr wed ding thin your'r" Wll lilt III Ktllled. "Why. Indeed?" ho mused. "Hut who'll get married 7" ho demanded. "WIio'b Hutu li-ft In your family to get married?" "There's t'ni'lo .Ihil, Imt lip wouldn't do II." Mn Ul Wlllinm. "Hp kiiM at Aunt Amy's wedding Iip wouldn't dure ever." "There's you!" burst nut Hur.y. Wlllinm lookpd tlnzed, Sumy's thoughts were sonrln:: upward ut a take your breath away pace. "Who'll I marry J" ho asked. "Mi-," answered 8ny. Wlllinm sighed heavily nml rublod the frost front the window with oup finger mid for the seventh Unit' peered out Into Hip drear out of doors. Why didn't 8uy comer It was most dinner time. AftiT in tic It discussing of Aunt Mary's now, dross, ,,'iiindinn's rhourna tlHtn mid tlio tipiv family next door ami William's nlilllty for growth his mother and nuulH wort.' now gathered close in whispered consultation. Ills Kl'iuidfa titer mill tini li'M wero talkltiK elm'tluti with Wlllliun'M fatli.T. WIHIiiiu lluttpiipil his ticiHO xtlll don or lo tile window, It lookr-d like yea, It really wiih Puzy. Ho lioinnlpd to thn door ii ml lUKK'pd nt tlio knob with all Ida might. It opened with a Jerk that nearly niiido him Ioho Ida balance. A cold, bod rn uclod trio, Stizy and tbo twins, atood revealed. The uneles Hlnred, Tlio whlsiwred coiivorHatlon of the nitnta waa, as It were, concealed by the sudden elilll of out of doom. Hut grandma, after one at art led look over her k'hshps, roao so quickly her ball if crochet cotton bounded gayly neroNs the IliMir. "Why, yon poor lltllo thliiKa! You're ao cold. C'onio stand over tlio roKls ter." Suzy'a teeth wore chattering, but a lie drew William Into the corner. "Ma wouldn't I Met ua e-c-eomo, bo I I TRFPWW7?T TT- mew w.i.i rni-rrnrn , . vlLJmmmrt ii.TJiWfrfir iff I wm miwiu " - f 4 .- 'I h.yLAjy ' ' " : Jiwt bad to aneak. I wa-wa-wanted to (I dreaa up." Wllllnin'i fathi-r waa looking at tlii'in. "William, are thwo your frlendar William tnxlded. "Ild you ak them to come herer "Not the twlna, I didn't, but Buiy alio knew abo eotildu't coma without them, ao 1 aald they could las flower k'trla." "Itn what'" " "Flower itlrlx. Wo're kIiik to hats a weildliiR. It'a a aurprtao. I thotiRbt It up, like Aunt Amy's hint year. TbiinkuKlvluK la ao tnurb more Jollier with a wedilhiK. Pou't you think ao, Tni'lo JIuiJ" Hut the blic. Konliil uncle who had never ln-foro failed Ida young nephew only Mnred, tlrt at William and theu lit 8uy. The twlna huddled over the register. Now, be kuew he wax the only un married member of tho family. Ho had been told that repnmi b fully many times Therefore he continued toatare at Huzy. and Kuzy wax not attired In holiday Krnndeur. I'ucle Jim wild: 'Well, but don't you think she's rath er )hiiii for an old cikIkct like mcT William could Imnlly control Ida tern xt now. "Hhe'a koIhk to marry M Kl Khe prom Ixe.l me! Pldn't you. Kuy?" Kuay tiixldisl. Slie couldn't for the life of her aay tl word. The atarlnis unrips and minis and even the kind lltllo white haired lady were xo terrl fytiiir xhe fell like crybiK. Vet William hud Mild a WeddtiiK wax Mich fun. Bho took In a bit; breath urn! watted for I'tulo Jim's next wonl.i: "Why, excuse me! I'xcuxe mo! CoiiKiatulntloiix, old man!" "Jim!" H wax William's mother. "Jim, atop that nonsense. William, tell me what tlilx means." "I thouuht till wan B'ljint to I auch a-a alow Thanksjflvlnit, dull, too, so I -ao Kiir.yxo Su?.y and I thoucht we'd Ret uiari led today mi' " "Well." suld I'urlf Jltn, "I'm Rlad there's one baebclor In this family that tins the apuiik an.l Fie bruins to aecure ain h'a nivlsliliiK bride for our Thanks Klvlnn i elel'i-.itioli. HIkIiI this way, my yomiK lady. Now, Leonard (drag rIiik a clerical Itxiklnit Individual to ward William), "do It up brown. This la gobiK to 1 a Joyful occaxlou or I'll know why." Here ho boRnn to whistle the tuna appropriate lo such occasions. "I'll have tho honor of giving the brldo away," aald Uncle Jim. William's cheat swelled with prldo. ruclo Jim understood, liven his moth er wax biii'.IIiik falnlly, and bla father wax chucltlliiK audibly. ruclo Jlm'a voice contlnutHl, evident ly prompting U'onnrd lu the wordx of the marriage ceremony, when Inter rupted by the telephone rlngtng. anindfnthcr reached It' first "Hello!" he fairly ahouled. "Yea. Eh? What's that? What? Well, 1 declare! 1-mothor!" "What?" asked bis wife. ."Mother, Amy's got a girl; born this morning. She a to lie nametl arter you. Ueorge aaya." Ornndfather was putting grandmoth er on the ahoulder and trying to an swer everybody's questions from what meager Information ho hud acquired In two minutes. The aunts wero all talking at once. "Did you ever!" "Just think, grnndmn, a girl!" William, very much puxzlcd nt this abrupt Interruption to his wedding cer emony, was trying to get some clew ns to this new source of hilarity. Hut Suzy, though two months younger than William, was fur wiser In some things. Bho burst Into frightened, angry sobs. "I won't! 1 won't! F.ven If I did promise cross my heart I won't marry you. William, so there'" Klip stamped her foot ami fairly i.liilekcil her deter mination. All were attiring nt Suzy that Is, all but t'ucle Jim. lie xlnppod bla knee and roared with luughter. William's wall broke forth without rest mint. He felt the thing be had started had got beyond li in. "You have my sympathy, old man, my ah deepest sympathy." he could bear 1,'nclu Jim Haying. "It la lndead heartrending to Ix rejected by so fair and r-fiery a bride at tho altar, and It would ah. Indeed make a strong man weep. Hut I really think you must not blame her too much. She evidently feela this Thanksgiving oele- Cbanfcsgiving IVoclairolion By OToo3iwl0fl$on lia$l)ccn cwlong mped cutim as awpk lo him in praise ait3 forlS iwnifoU mcrcks antlcss hup to us a$ aHal i on. Thw If03oo5iwQIi1$on,Pixsl3ciit of k CJtttf a Sbk$ f Unycrkzjlc hcriby cfesigrak Tbela$lQ)urs3 of Dove idbcr ml z$ a fayd Qtjnks jgmnj and prayer, aiwt tnvii iKe people ISroiisTwul Ik1an3 U cas from fbciT tvwt3 ocaipalioits ani in their several hemes attcl placesof worship rcn3rlhanb!o Hlmijlily w Mi -i. it. - fy " brut luti to promote the family cheer is, as shown by previous experience, a contlnued-ln-our-next affair, and she nil evidently doesn't hanker after the second chapter. She, I think, feels that she has her hands full already." And ns he concluded with a nourish of bis hand toward tho twins, now sleep ing on tho Moor, light broke on the as tonished circle, and It laughed till It cried. And when it had finally wiped Its eyes Into vision again It beheld the erstwhile brldo and groom unrestrain edly dovourlng chocolates. Several hours later a very tired, sleepy William, clinging tight to Ms father's hand, suddenly opened his eyes wide. "This has been the finest Thanks giving, hasn't It? We didn't need any wedding to have fun. New cousins make folks have fun and Uncle Jims and everything on Thanksgiving." Undo Jltn looked around at his nephew. "But you did your part, old fellow. Wo won't forget that. Shouldn't won der if I'd dnro tho deed myself next year." Send a Thanksgiving Box. A Thanksgiving box of gKl things la nccepiulilt; lo almost any one who d'x-i not make one of a family group on Thanksgiving day. While teachers and students In boarding schools and rollers are usually assix-lated with these Ijoxcx from home, the young man or woman In business with a boarding bouse for -a home will lx? quite ns ap Iin latlve of urn Ii a remembrance as any one else. For the woman keeping house lu a anmll apartment a well stocked Thanksgiving box is a real Joy and furnishes the wherewithal for a festivity worthy of the name of Thanksgiving. ood iit- Tho first national Thanksgiving may be said to have been the one offered up at St. Taul's cathedral, London, for the defeat of the Spanish armada, Sep tember, l.'SS. The English settlers lu this country naturally adopted the cus tom of their native land, and at an early period In our colonial history Thanksgiving became quite common. Tho Institution may be said to be the lint ura I outgrowth of human nature and has probubly existed In some form or other from the earliest times. For Benefits Enjoyed. A God fearing nation like ours owes It to Its iiiliorn and sincere sense of moral duty to testify Its devout grati tude to the All tllvor for the countless benefits It. has enjoyed. William II. Tal't. Reason Enough! An American you and don't know why You should Bivo thanks, you pay! If you lack for words. Just go outside And simply yell "Hooray!" THE PILGRIMS' THANKS. They Fund Ys Lord to B WKh TKtm In AH Their Ways." The aboriginal American Thankaglr log, parent of Innumerable festivals of gratitude and rejolelng In the course of nearly 300 years. Is perhaps famil iar, but It deserves recollection now that Thanksgiving Is with us. It was Ui Plymouth as the end of that first toilsome and dangerous year drew on. In September they had sent their "shalop to the Mas'aebusetta, with ten men, and Squanto for their guide and biterpreter, to discover and view that bay, and trade with the natives, the which they performed and found kind entertainment" Boston was a hospi table place, we perceive, long before there was any Common on the slopea of the Iteaoon hill. And the Bay was already a place to be envied for resi dence: "They returned in safetie, and brought home a good quantity of bea ver, a ud made report of the place, wishing they had been there seated (but It seems ye Lord, who assigns to all men ye bounds of their habitations, bad appointed It for another use). And thus they found ye Lord to be .with them in all their ways, and to bless their outKolus and Incomings, for which let his holy name have ye praise forever, to all potsterltle." This was the spirit of remembering and forelooklng gratitude in which Governor Bradford brooded on the project of a common time of thanks giving. The harvest time had fully come. "They begane now to gather in ye small harvest they had and to fit up their bouses and dwellings against winter, being all well recovered In health end strength, and bad all thkacis In good plenty; for as some were Hrts lmployed in affairs abroad, others w exercised In fishing, stoute codd Ihil bass and other fish, of which they took good store, of which every family had their portion. All the somer there was no want And now begane to come In stora of foule, as winter approached, of which this place did abound when they first came (but afterward de rrpnsed hv ii,.oriipsi. An,l helds wstep- fowL ther was great store of wild Turtles, of which they tooke many, besids venison, &c. Beslds they had aboute a peck of meale a weeke to a person, or now, since harvest, Indian come to yt proportion." No great re serve, ont) may think, against the bitter dnys of cold to conic, pitifully small In deed In comparison with the holding of a single modern prairie "elevator" with its stores of wheat, but enough to form the basis of a very real Thanks giving. WHO NAMED THE TURKEY? Thanksgiving Bird Does Not Owe Its Name to the Mohammedan Country. How the turkey came by Its name has been a moot question for a long time. The Thanksgiving fowl is an Amer ican bird which was bitroduced to Europe from the new world and had nothing whatever to do with Turkey or the Turks, The name turkey, how ever, was originally applied to the fowl which is now known as the guinea fowl, and some authors hi the six teenth and seventeenth centuries con founded the two species. As both birds became more common and better known, to quote the En cyclopedia Kritnuulca, "the distinction was gradually perceived, and the name turkey became restricted to that from the now world, possibly because of Its repeated call note, to be Byllabled 'turk, ttirk, turk,' whereby It may be almost said to have named Itself. The turkey, 6o far as we know, was first described by Ovledo lu bis 'Suniario do la natural hlstoria de las Indlas,' said to have been published In 1327." Thanksgiving Ode By JOHN CREENLEAF WHITTIER. a NCE more the liberal year laughs out O'er richer stores than gems of cold; Once more with harvest song and snout nature's Woodless triumph Is told Our common mother rests and sings Like Ruth, among her garnered sheaves. Her lap is full of goodly things; Her brow is bright with autumn leaves. O favors every year made new I O gifts with rain and sunshine sent I The bounty overruns our due; The fullness shames our discon tent snut our eyes, and flowers loom on; tlt We murmur, but the corn ears fill; We choose the shadow, but i he sua That casts it iho.es Le'.iii.J us still. God gives us with our rupred soil The power to make il Lr J( a f.iir And richer fruits to trc.ts oi r lai Than summer v, Cci-i ii .!.. bear. Who murmurs at hn let today? Who scorns his native fiuit and bloom Or sighs for dainties far away Beside the bounteous board of home? Thank heaven, instead, that free dom's arm Can change a rocky soil to gold; That brave and generous lives can warm A clime with northern ices cold. And let these altars, wreathed with flowers And piled with fruits, awake again Thanksgivings for the golden hours, The early and the latter rain. Causes For Thankfulness. It Is worth while In this Thanksgiv ing season to contemplate the marvel ous privileges enjoyed by all ieople In such a land as America not simply that plenty of all abounds, that la bor is employed, that harvests are abundant, that prosperity sings the song of contentment uuil hope, but that all t!i!ngs arc working together for the bet.crment ' f the i.mdiiions affecting the weil b !. g of in uiU':,. !. Chancellor S. B. Mccormick. f.tU'-urg'a. Two Kin;!s of Turkoy. There u.e two : .ih.s u turkey, the North American and Hie smaller and more brilliant la: mala, Honduras, wild turkey is no v. the southern v'bi il !'.u:i;,l lu (iuate etc The northern i.Uiiost extinct, and i :n!;e- Is rnr. ""