SEMI-WEEKLY, WTrZF&SFl&Tu,. I Consolidated Feb., 1899. COBVAIXIS, BENTON" COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY NOTEItBEK, 26, 1901. VOIj. II. NO. 31. : II Doctor fjiletnma 1 Si . . i LiS By Hesba ii t l'M'"t't lI"M"t"l"t"I"I'I't 1 l4A'i-V't CHAPTER XX. (Continued.) "Ton love her?" said Johanna. . . "Certainly," I answered, "as my sis ter." "Better than any woman now living?' he pursued. "Yes." I replied. "That is all Julia requires," she con tinued; "so let us say no more at pres ent, Martin. Only understand that all Idea of marriage between her and my brother is quite put away. Don't argue with me, don't contradict me. Come to see us as you would have done but for that unfortunate conversation last night. All will come right by-and-by." "But Captain Carey "'I began. "There! not a word!" she interrupted Imperatively. "Tell me all about that wretch. Richard Foster. How did you come across him? Is he likely to die? Is he anvthina- like Kate Daltrey? I will never call her Kate Dobree as long as the world lasts. Come, Martin, tell me everything about him." She sat with me most of the morning, talking with animated perseverance, and at last prevailed upon me to take her a walk in Hyde Park. Her pertinacity did me good in spite of the irritation it caused me. When her dinner honr was at hand I felt bound to attend her to her house in Hanover street; and I could not get away from her without first speaking to Julia. Her face was very sorrowful, and her manner sympathetic. We said only a few words to one another, but I went away with the impression that her heart was still with me. At dinner Jack announced his intention of paying a visit to Richard Foster. "You are not fit to deal with the fel low," he said; "you may be sharp enough upon your own black sheep in Guernsey, but you know nothing of the breed here. Now if I see him I will squeeze out of him every mortal thing he knows about Olivia." Jack returned, his face kindled with excitement. He caught my hand, and erasped it heartily. "I no more believe she is dead than 1 am," were his first words. "You recol lect me teeing yon of a drunken brawl in a street oS the Strand, where a fel low, as drunk as a lord, was for claim ing a pretty girl as his wife; only I had followed -her out of Ridley s agency of fice, and was just in time to protect her from him. A girl I could have fallen in love with myself. You recollect? "Yes, yes," I said, almost breathless. "He was the man, and Olivia was the .girl!"- exclaimed Jack. "No!" I cried. "Yes"!" continued Jack, with an affec-. tionate lnnge at me; "at any rate I can swear he is the man; and I would bet a thousand to one that the girl was Olivia. "But when was it?" I asked. "Since he married again," he answer ed; "they were married on the 2d of Oc tober, and this was early in November. I had! gone to Ridley's after a place for a poor fellow as an assistant to a drug gist, and I saw the girl distinctly. She gave the name of Ellen Martineau. Thost letters about her death are all forgeries.' "Olivia's is not," I said; "I know her handwriting too well." "Well, then," observed Jack, "there is only one explanation. She has sent them herself to throw Foster off the scent; she thinks she will be safe if he believes her dead." "No," I answered hotly, "she wonld never have done such a thing as that." "Who else is benefited by it?" he ask ed gravely. "It does not put Foster into possession of any of her property, or that would have been a motive for him to do it But he gains nothing by it; and he is so convinced of her death that he has taken a second wife." "What can I do now?" I said, speaking loud, though I was thinking to myself. "Martin," replied Jack, gravely, "isn't it wisest to leave the matter as it stands? If you find Olivia, what then? She is as much -separated from you as she can be by death. So long as Foster lives it is worse than useless to be thinking of her. "I only wish to satisfy myself that she Is anve, I answered. "Just think of it, Jack, not to know whether she is living . or dead! You must help me to satisfy myself. This mystery would be intolera ble to me." "You're right, old fellow," he said, cor dially; "we will go to Ridley's together to-morrow morning. We were there soon after the doors were open. There were not many cli ents present, and the clerks were enjoy ing a slack time. Jack had recalled to his mind the exact date of his former visit; and thus the sole difficulty was overcome. The clerk found the name of Ellen Martineau entered under that date in his book. "Yes," he said, "Miss Ellen Martineau English teacher in a French school; pre mium to De paid, about HO: no salary reference, Mrs. Wilkinson, No. 19, Bell- ringer street. "No. 19 Bellringer street!" we repeated In one breath. "Yes, gentlemen, that is the address," aid the clerk, closing the book. "Shall I write it down for you? Mrs. Wilkin son was the party who should have paid our commission; as you perceive, a pre mium was required instead of a salary given. We feel pretty sure the young lady went to the school, bnt Mrs. Wil kinson denies it, and it is not worth our while to pursue our claim in law." "Cab you describe the young lady?" inquired. '. "Well, no. We have such hosts of young ladies here." "Do you know where the school is?" "No. - Mrs. Wilkinson was the party,' he said. "We had nothing to do with it, except to send any ladies to her who thought it worth their while. : That was all." - '. As we could obtain no further informs tion we went away, and paced np and down the tolerably quiet street, deep in . consultation. That we should have need for great caution, and as much craftiness as we both possessed, in pursuing our in quiries was quite evident. Who could be this Mrs. Wilkinson? Was it possi ble that site might prove to be Mrs. Fos Stretton ter herself? At any rate it wonld not do for either of us to present ourselves there in auest of Miss Ellen Martineau. It was finally settled between ns that Jo hanna should be entrusted with the diplo matic enterprise. - - . Johanna put in the next day following down the clews Jack and I had discov ered. "Well, Martin," she said that evening. "you need suffer no more" anxiety. Olivia has gone as English teacher in an excel lent French school, where the lady is thoroughly acquainted with English ways and comforts. This is the prospectus of the. establishment. You see there are 'extensive grounds for recreation, and the comforts of a cheerfully happy home, the domestic arrangements being on a thor oughly liberal scale.' - Here is also a pho tographic view of the place; a charming villa, you see, in the best French style. The lady s husband is an avocat; and ev erything is taught by professors cosmog raphy and pedagogy, and other studies of which we never heard when I was a girl. Olivia is to stay there twelve months, and in return for her services will take les sons from any professors attending the establishment. Your mind may be quite at ease now." "But where is the place?".! inquired, "Oh! it is in Normandy Noireau," he said "quite out of the range "of railways and tourists. There will be no danger of any one finding her out there; and you know she has changed her name alto gether this time." - -.-. 'Did. you discover that Olivia and Ellen Martineau are the same persons?" I ask ed. "SITTING BESIDE "No,' I did not." she answered? thought you were sure of that." I j But I was not sure of it; neither could Jack be sure. He puzzled himself in trying to give a satisfactory description of his Ellen Martineau; but every an swer he gave to my eager questions-! plunged us into greater uncertainty. He was not sure of the color either of her hair or eyes, and made blundering guesses at her height. " - . What was I to believer It was running too great a risk to make -any further Inquiries at No. 19 Bellringer street, Mrs. Wilkinson was the landlady of the lodging bouse, and she had told Johanna that Madame Per rier boarded with her when she was in London. But she might begin to talk to her other lodgers, if her own curiosity were excited; and once more my desire to fathom the mystery hanging about Olivia might plunge her into fresh diffi culties, should it reach the ears of Fos ter or his wife. - - -" r "I must satisfy myself about her safe ty now," I said. "Only put yourself in my place. Jack. How can I rest till I know more about Olivia?"' "I do put myself in your place," he answered. "What do you say to having a run down to this place in Basse Nor mandy, and seeing for yourself- whether Miss Ellen Martineau is your Olivia?" .-, "How can I?" I asked, attempting to hang back from the suggestion. It was a busy time with us. The season was in 'full roll, and our most aristocratic pa tients were in town. The easterly winds were bringing in their usual harvest of bronchitis and diphtheria. If I went Jack's hands would be more than full. Had these things come to perplex us on'y two months earlier, I could have taken a holiday with a clear conscience. - "Dad will jump at the chance of com ing back for a week," replied Jack; "he is bored to death down at Fulham. Go you must, for my sake, old fellow. You are good for nothing as long as you're so down in the mouth. I shall be glad to be rid of you." . ' . . .- -. In this way it came to pass that two evenings later I was crossing the Chan nel to Havre, and found myself about five o'clock in the afternoon of the next day at Falaise. It was the terminus of the railway in that direction; and a very ancient conveyance was in waiting to carry on any. travelers who were venture some enough to explore the regions be yond. - . I very much preferred sitting beside the driver, a red-faced, smooth-cheeked Norman, habited in a bine blouse, who could crack his long whip with almost the skill Of a Parisian omnibus driver. We were friends in a trice, for my patois was almost identical with his own. and he could not believe his own ears that he was talking with an Englishman. The sun sank below the distant hori zon, with the trees showing clearly against it, and the light of the stars that came out one by one almost cast a denned shadow upon our path, from the poplar trees standing in long straight rows in the hedges. If I found Olivia at the end of that star-lit path my gladness in it would be completed. Yet if I found her. what then ? I should see her for a few minutes in the dull salon of a school, per haps with some watchful, spying French woman present I should simply satisfy myself that she was living. There could be nothing more between us. I dared not tell her how dear she was to me, or ask her it she ever thought of me in her loneliness and friendlessness. I began to sound the driver, cautiously wheeling about the' object of my excur sion into those remote regions. - I had tramped through Normandy and Brit tany three or four times, but there had been no inducement to visit Noireau, which resembled a Lancashire - cotton town, and I had never been there. There ' are not many English at Noi reau?" I remarked suggestively. . ' "Not one," he replied "not one at this moment There was one little English mam'zelle peste!- very pretty little English girl, who was voyaging precisely like you, m'sieur, some months ago. There was a little child with her, and the two were quite alone. They are very in trepid, are the English mam'zelles. She did not know a word of our language. But that was droll, m'sieur! A French, demoiselle would never voyage like that." The little child puzzled me. Yet I could not help fancying that this young Englishwoman traveling alone, with no knowledge of French, must be my Olivia. At any rate it could be no other than Miss Ellen Martineau. - "Where was she going to?" I asked. "She came to Noireau to be an in structress in an establishment,' answered the driver, in a tone of great enjoyment "an establishment founded by the wife of Monsieur Emile Perrier, the avocat! He! he! he! how droll that was, m'sieur! An avocat! So they believed that in England? Bah! Emile Perrier an avo cat 1" " : -' - -:r- "But what is there to laugh at?" I ask ed. "Am I an avocat?" he inquired deris ively, "am I a proprietor? am I even a cure? Pardon, m'sieur, but I am just as much avocat, proprietor, cure, as Emile Perrier. He was an impostor.: He be came bankrupt; he and his wife ran away to save themselves; the establishment was broken up. It was a bubble, m'sieur, and it burst." - " My driver clapped his hands together lightly, as though Monsieur Perrier's bub ble needed very tittle pressure to dis perse it. "Good heavens!" I . exclaimed, "but THE DRIVER. what became of Oli-of the young Eng- usn iaay, ana tne child? "Ah,-m'sieur!" he said. "I do not know I do -not live in Noireau, but I pass to and fro from Falaise. She has not re turned in my omnibus, that is all I know. But she could go to Granville, or to Caen. .mere are oiner omniouses, . you see. somebody will tell you down there." - It was nearly eleven o'clock before we entered the town; but I learned a few more particulars from the middle-aged v, uuuiii iu lub uuiiiiuus oureau. one rec ollected the name of Miss EUen Marti neau, and her arrival; and she described her. with the accuracy and faithfulness of a woman. -If she were not Olivia her self she must be her very counterpart. - I started out early the next morning to find the Rue de Grace,' where the in scription on my photographic view of the premises represented them as situated There Were two houses, one standing in the street, the other lying back beyond a very pleasant garden. A Frenchman was pacing no and down the broad erarol path , which connected them, examining uiiiicaiij ute. tiuc9 giuwmg against, the walls. Two little children were ram- boling about in close white caps, and with frocks down to their heels. Upon seeing me he lifted his hat. "I returned the salr ntation with a politeness as ceremonious as his own. - . "Monsieur is an Englishman?" he said in a doubtful tone. "From the Channel Islands." I replied t Ahl you belong to us," he said, "but you are hybrid, half English, half French; a fine race. I also have English blood in my veins." -i ; I paid monsieur a compliment upon the result of the admixture of blood in his own instance, and then proceeded to un fold my object m now visiting him. : "Ahl" he Baid,. "yes, yes, yes; Perrier was an impostor. These houses are mine, monsieur. I live in the front yon der; my daughter and son-in-law occupy me otner. we had the photographs tak en for our own pleasure, but i Perrier must have bought them from the artist, no doubt. I have a small cottage at the back of my house; monsieur! there it is. Terrier rented it from me for two hun dred francs a year. I permitted him to pass along this walk, and through our coach house into a passage which leads to the street where madame had her school. Permit me, and I wilt .show it to you. -j - - - - .... . - He led me through a shed, and alomr dirty, vaulted passage, into a mean street at the back. A small, miserable-looking nonse stood in it, shut up, with broken persiennes covering the windows.' -: My heart sank at the idea of Olivia living U ..l. .j : . . , . jicic, iu sucu uisi-uiuiun ana neglect and sordid poverty. Did you ever see a young English lady nere, monsieur?" I asked; "she ar rived about the beginning of last Novem DPI. ', , - V . , . "But yes, certainly, monsieur," he re plied, "a- charming English demoiselle One must have been bjind not to observe her."; A sweet face, with hair of gold but a little more somber. :. "What height was she, monsieur?" inquired. , "A Just height," he answered, "not tall like a camel, nor too short like a mon key. She would -stand an inch or two abova your shoulder,, monsieur." It could be no other than my Olivia! She had been living here, then, in this miserable place, only a month ago; bnt where could she be now? How was I to find any trace of her? .7 I will make some inquiries from my daughter," said the Frenchman; "when the establishment was broken up I was ill with the fever, monsieur. We have fever often here. But she will know will ask her." He returned to me after some time, with the information that the English demoiselle had been seen in the house of 'a woman who sold milk, Mademoiselle Rosalie by name; and he volunteered to accompany me to her dwelling. It was a poor-looking house, of one room only,, in the same street as the school; but we found no one there except an old woman, exceedingly deaf, who told ns that Mademoiselle Rosalie was gone somewhere to nurse relative, who was dangerously ill, and she knew noth ing of an Englishwoman and a little girl. I turned away baffled and discouraged; but my new friend was not so quickly depressed. It was impossible, he main tained, that the English girl and the child could have left the town unnoticed. He went with me to all the omnibus bu reaus, where we made argent inquiries concerning the passengers who had quit ted Noireau during the last month, iso places had been taken for Miss Ellen Martineau and the child, for there was no such name in any of the books. But at each bureau I was -recommended to see the drivers upon their return in the evening; and I was compelled to give np the pursuit for that day. - - (To be continued.) SPOILED THE FLIRTATION. Pony Was a Bacer and Had to Keep in the Front. A gentleman who is a member of the Meadow Brook Hunt Club and delights in horseback riding received a few days ago a wiry "cayuse" or cow-pony, as they are called in the Northwest The animal had some -speed and an easy gait, and, after riding it around the country roads a few days, he rode it, one evening, with a party of ladles and gentlemen who were out for a moon light canter. ;T The party split up into couples, and while the gentleman in question would much prefer to have taken the rear of the line with the lady whose escort he wag, yet the pony developed an unex pected ambition to lead the procession, according to the New York Mail and Express. ; He let the "cayuse" have its own way only to find that the head strong animal insisted on being at least one-half a length in front of the horse ridden by the lady. There "Was no holding - that pony back on even terms with the other hosses. It pranced about, jumped from side to side and pulled the bit and would be quiet only when it had its nose well to the front. The lady en Joyed it immensely, but the gentleman well, he"-left unsaid many - things which he had planned to say to the young lady when they started on the ride. Subsequently the gentleman found the pony had been used for rac ing in the West and had been trained to "go to the front and stay there." Where Centenarians Dwell. More people over one' hundred years old are found in mild climates than in the higher altitudes, according to the Family Doctor." According to . the last census of the German Empire, of a population of 55,000,000 only 78 have passed the hundredth year. France, with a population of 40,000,000, has 213 centenarians. In England there are 146; in Ireland, 578; and in Scotland, 46. Sweden has 10, and Norway 23; Belgium, 5; Denmark, 2; Switzerland, none. Spain, with a population of 18,- 000,000, has 401 persons over 100 years of age. Of the 2,250,000 inhabitants of Servia,- 575 hare passed the century mark. It Is said that the oldest person living is Bruno Cotrlm, born in Africa, and now living in Rio Janeiro. He is 150 years old. A coachman in Moscow has lived for 140 years. - Further Information Wanted. In one of ."the later settlements of New South Wales a man was put on trial for stealing a watch. The evidence had' been -very conflicting, and as the jury retired the Judge remarked kindly that if he could give any assistance in the way of smoothing out possible diffi culties he should be happy to do so. : Eleven of the jury had filed out of the box, but the twelfth remained, and the expression on his face showed that he was in deep trouble, ; , - ,r "Well, sir," remarked the Judge, "Is there any question you would like to ask me before you retire?" , - . i The Juror's face brightened, and he replied eagerly: ' - "I would like to know, my lord, If you could tell us whether the prisoner stole the watch." .. ij: I .' Wanted to Be Heathen. ' Little John (after casting his penny into tne luna lor me rmiuuiuiu lsiana oT-oiT wish I was a heathen! Sabbath-School .Teacher-rOh, Johnny! Why do you wish such an awful thing as that? y- : - - f ----- "The -heathen, don't never have to give nothin' they are always get&ui somethlnV Harpers Bazar. What He Was Doing Of. Mrs. Kelly Did yez hear of the felly ocrosht the way dyin' of Anglophobia? Mrs. Googan Yes mean hydrophobia Mrs. Kelly No; I mean Anglopho bia! He wuz cheerin' fer King Ed ward, an' de gang heerd hiini-Judge. Bnmd of Ocean Steamer. - The speed of our fastest ocean steam era Is now greater than that of express trains on Italian railways.-- Few Millionaires in France. There are four millionaires . in En gland to one in France. - A second-class joke has caused many a man to lose a nrst-class friend. ' Fair Dorothea, a goodly mayde, From Puritans descended, In klrtle, cap and kerchief prayed That famine sore be ended. Though plnmp and fair albeit she kept. She tired of frugal living. Bo prayed she while the Elders slept, - "Lord, send a true Thanksgiving.'' The canning lass. She had no lack - Of gown or ermine tippet, Of mettled palfrey's pinioned back. Or pretty fawning whippet. The roses in her saucy cheeks Are not by famine shrunken. Her wholesome appetite bespeaks . -- The pies of quince or pumpkin. But ah, her secret you have guessed, Sharp eyes her tricks discover; For Mistress Dorothea is vexed To miss her soldier lover. - 'Who; with his bullets, powder, match. In forests dense Is living. That he the bounding roe may snatch To make their first Thanksgiving. - - . - . Ah, Miss Dorothea, yonr face In smiling beanty painted, " . Looks on me from -a panel's space Long, long, have you been - painted. May we, though centnries apart, In peace and plenty Hving, Voice yOor petition of the heart. - "Lord, send a true Thanksgiving." I JIMMY'S THAN KSGIV.NG. $ BY PAUL. INQELOW. T fr-fr-fr . ! ! ! ! ! V ! ! ! ! ! ! PROCLAMATION By virtue of authority in me vested, -do here by appoint as a day of thanksgiving " - - In sonorous, well-rounded accents the sentences rolled forth. Little ' Jimmy Quinn, newsboy and waif, listened, catch ing not all that was spoken. But he un derstood the import, and he thought how. grand and majestic did the name and the official designation. Governor, fill out the dignified, well-worded announcement. He was outside the hotel. Now he tip toed and looked over a"creen into a lounging room. - -' ; t : '- J Jimmy saw a person he thought the nicest-faced, noblest looking man he had ever met, standing facing a mixed audi ence, who' had been listening while he read the Governor's Thanksgiving proc lamation, though Jimmy, not seeing the paper he had just put aside, supposed he had been speaking it out. - ' "Further," said the' pleasant faced, fine- eyed young man who held the interest of , the group by his magnetic oratorical grasp and general good fellowship, "be it ordained that I, the Governor, command that one ten-pound turkey be given to every poor family, family with no father two turkeys, family with no mother three turkeys.'1- . ' Jimmy got down from painful tiptoe poise, full of the rarest excitement, wrought np by a vivid imagination. -."Crackey!" he exploded. "Here's news !". and "bolted down the street lor home.. - ' "" . ? .f: '-'Home" was a rickety cabin in an un kempt yard. -It had known no woman's care for three weeks. Jimmy and his brother, had been "ke nng i bachelor's hall" while she was in tUv hospital. . Across the back yard was stretched a taut wire, and against it leaned a balanc ing pole. Just near it wag an impromptu spring-board, with an old torn mattress under it. -"- - "". - - - . - -. . - . Jimmy's older brother, Ned, had just turned a double somersault as the former burst npon the scene with a prolonged: "Say!" "Hello! what's up?" queried Ned, pos ing for another tumble. - . "Hold on! Say great news!" . "Welir - "The-Governor's in town!" "Heyl what Govercor?" challenged Ned, suspiciously and incredulously. "Why, of the State the big nob, see? I saw him!. I heard him speak his proc " lermation go ahead." "He promised one turkey to every poor man, two to half orphans, three to " "Gwan!" J Ned disdainfully turned the cold shoul- der on his brother. - I "But, say " ' j "Naw! There's nothin' to it. Some- body's been kiddin' your j "But it was the Governor! . Dldn t he loi. wub ius iiw.-mui,uuu I iuu i no look a Governor all over? Two turkeys." "Sav. Jlmmv." eravelV interrnntod Ned, "drop it. You've been hoaxed. Get down to business now, if yon ever expect j to make a man of Yourself." i Ever since the last circus came to town the Quinn boys had been "making men of themselves" in a way unique-r-the ac robatic way. They were spry, supple, daring. Ned was "India rubber!" He could flip up in the air like an expert tumbler already, after a month's practice. And as to Jim my's wire-walking feats Ned declared they would soon be earning "fifty per" as "the celebrated Flying Brothers!" And they had a sacred motive in view, "for mother's sake." She had scrubbed, washed, worked day and night to raise them. Now, even out of the trivial amount they earned selling papers, they had saved a small sum to buy her a new "comfort-rocker" when she came out ofJ the hospital. Jimmy went through his practice in a half-hearted way. His cherished hopes had been "sat on." He believed in fairies and luck, and therefore in "the Governor" and his turkeys, and he determined to find out more about them the next day, without saying anything about It to the scoffing Ned. '' Opportunity presented the following af ternoon. Jimmy was getting rid of his last "extry," when he recognized a splen did figure coming up the street it was "the Governor!" , With due awe and hesitation Jimmy approached him, and the smiling, good natured young man noticed it, " "Well, youngster," he said, "you act as if yon wanted to speak to me." "I do, Governor." " : "What's that?" exclaimed the other, puzzled. - "Oh, I know you!" nodded Jimmy In a mysterious, Masonic way and blurted out his story, and asked to be put on "the two-turkey list." An amused expression crossed "the Governor's" face. He was only a trav eling jewelry salesman, but he could not mar this lad's bright faith. He looked interested and grave when Jimmy told an his story of hardship, hope and en deavor. - "Jimmy Quinn," he said, taking out his note book and making an entry. "Keep quiet about my being the Governor, be-J canse I'm a modest man, and don t like to attract attention." "Yes, sir," promised Jimmy fervently, proud of the confidence implied. : t "Thanksgiving day, when your mother comes home, you shall have two turkeys, I pledge the Governor's royal word for it, friend Jimmy!" - - ; Jimmy turned over in bed with a yell. rid his brother grabbed him. He had been dreaming of ten thousand turkeys roasting on a spit a mile long, and thought he fell in among them, so - 'Fire!" he shouted. 'Bet your lifer cried Ned. "Get up! There's a corker of a blaze somewhere!" Sure enough, there was. The town was astir. Half-dressed, the brothers were soon scudding wildly down -the street. - "Jimmy," said Ned, breathlessly, as they turned the corner, "the Central's all ablaze!" - .. ' . -' v. ' - The principal hotel of the little inland city was doomed. In the crush the broth ers became separated. Jimmy was hurrying past a building ad joining, when he gave a quick stare. - A man in his shirt sleeves, hatless and barefooted, dashed past him. ''Why!" said Jimmy, electrically, "it's the Governor!" -v - The man darted up the dark stairs of the vacant building, next across a brief court to the hotel, v . - . V: ' Jimmy pnt after him, he hardly knew why. : Up one flight, two, three the roof, through a scuttle, the man went, before Jimmy overtook him. . ;j - "The Governor" ran to the edge of the eaves and looked down. .-..-: "No useP' Jimmy heard him groan. "Mr. Governor, what's the matter?" asked Jimmy, presenting himself in view. "Hey? Oh, it's yon? Well, my boy, I'm ruined, that's all" "Yes, sir; but why are yon up here?" - "Because the fire drove me out of my room. In the excitement and peril I left behind satched containing but It's) gone up! I hoped I could cross to tb roof " tWhich room, sir?" demanded Jimmy.' In the sparkling ardor of a mighty thought. "That where this wire crosses to an arm, and cuts above the court. Boy, stop! 1U1U1 . Whiz! Jimmy had seized the wire. Like a snrltn ho mnHo dHnnt tn Vhinh hi. practiced hands were inured.. Into the open window lost ' in the smnltp moment- intn vinw nin hitnH. ed, spluttering, a satchel strapped to hit I've got It!" he yelled hilariously. For mercy's sake, be careful!" remark ed the anxious "Governor." But Jimmy laughed. He even cut an acrobatic caper across the dangling wire, and, flushed and happy, landed on the opposite roof, tendering the satchel with the words: "There you are, Mr. Governor!" . That satchel contained "the Govern or's" samples, $20,000 in precious gems. When he wrote to his firm and then to the insurance people explaining Jimmy's brave and daring exploit, one sent a check for $300, the other for double that amount. The happiest woman in Christendom the bright Thanksgiving day ensuing was Mrs. Mary Quinn. Her "brave lads" had placed x900 In bank to her account. And, true to his promise, "the Gov ernor" saw that their merry dinner table was actually graced with two turkeys! The Meaning; of It. ' Little Erastus Poppy, why dey say Fanksgibbin' turkey, huh? Poppy Dat's er cause yo'- fank de owna ob de coop fo' leabin' de do' open. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. -' Cansea for ThankSKtvinff. For all that God In mercy sends; For health and children, home and friends. For comfort in the time of need. For every kindly word and deed, For happy thoughts and holy talk; For guidance In our daily walk - For everything give thanksl Vnp hnnnt-v In th!a worM nt nnr9 For verdant grass and lovely flowers, For song of birds, for hum of bees. For lilll and nlaln. for streams and wood. For the great ocean's mighty flood - - For everything give thanks! For the sweet sleep that comes at night, For the returning morning's light. For the bright sun that shines on high. For the stars glittering in the sky. For these and everything we see, O Lord! our hearts we lift to thee For everything give thanks! Our New Subjects. t Chief of .the La Drones I have just been out reading the President's Thanks giving proclamation to the tribe. Have we a dinner fit for the occasion? His Wife Yes. my lord, we have two missionaries and a bottle of domestic rye. maue iu jveuiucay. t Tommy's Thanksgiving. I'm thankful I've papa and mamma, And tarkey and cranberry sauce. And mince-pie, and brothers and sisters, I'm thankful I never am cross! I'm thankfm our school has decided To close tor the rest of the week; I'm thankful I'm stronger than Jimmy, '. And never feel backward to speak. There'll Be No Parting There. First Turkey Gobbler I hear your so had a terrible experience on Thanksgi v ing day. -' . Second Turkey Gobbler Yes; he wu all cut up by it. " dfo 'li A fit rA3