valentine democrat. (valentine, nebraska) 1896-11-26 [p ].i rstr it made this speculator think life...

1
I rstr it Made This Speculator Think Life Worth the Living -- JIND TO A GAY TYPEWRITER GIRL - 4 ItBronjht Sweet Peace from Ont Lifes a zav Dizzy Whirl rC fn EORGE CALDWELL Brown of Gotham town the morn be- fore ¬ Thanksgiving From sleep awoke so nearly broke life hardly seemed worth living Now this man Brown had been thrown down by Wall streets fluctuations To rise aaln seemed to him then beyond all calculations My race Is run Im auite undone Brown mased as he was dressing I never knew tnlngs quite so blue nor cred ¬ itors so pressing And then he took his pocketbook and count- ed ¬ up his money The dollars four there were no more so few were they seemed funny It made him smile that little pile and then his blues departed For Brown had pluck believed m luck for othose not chicken hearted And to his breakfast gaily down went spec- ulator ¬ George Caldwell Brown While he drank his coffee hot to his hand a note was brought And the writing on its cover made him turn It oer and oer When at last he broke Its seal Its contents fairly made him reel Made the blood rush to his head for this was what the letter said George Caldwell Brown 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 Tou kindly loaned when 1 was broke Most sincerely R TCHOAK -- As he picked his way down town thus mused Speculator Brown On the day before Thanksgiving life Is always worth the living Every cloud has Its silver lining somewhere always sun Is shining Now it really seems to me I should very thankful be Yesterday the sky was murky now Im sure to have my turkey V M - - - mm THE DOLLARS FOUK But holy smoke As Im a sinner no ones asked me out to dinner Last Thanksgiving Id a lot of bids to feed but this year not a soul so far re- members ¬ me Jlnilny crickets Well well see Thinking thus Brown stood before his six ¬ teenth story 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 him down And as he read his letters oer he thought about his plans the more And as he thought he grew perplexed until at last she thought him vexed To morrows Thanksgiving ventured she A day when all it seems to me Should eat lots of turkey and pumpkin pie and all sorts of flxins that inouev can buy Thus Quickly to the girls amaze Brown made reply in following phrase And he went on I have a plan and you must help me if you can 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 Tt filled my heart with thankfulness It drove away my wretchedness But he continued then I thought of other men dead broke J ought to see some other luckless sinners furnished with Thanksgiving dinners The maiden listened to his words You want my help to buy the birds The celery and the pumpkin pies and other things she said her eyes Bent on the floor Then he replied Thats It exactly if you tried You could not closer speak mv mind And further if youll be so kind And help me at the dinner too Ill always grateful be to you The maidens 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 I vow In all the city there Is no other girl so pretty So 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 gat another place Im 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 be Have you asked them yet said she No by gracious I forgot When we have the dinner bought Ill find fellows out of work and bid them 3 f i t iftt x rSff i THE DIXXER come and feed on turk So they planned and so they talked as to the market place they walked At the market place their eyes filled with wonder and surprise Food was there from all creation food enough for half a nation Where does It come from Brown 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 ef all Its glorious feathers Drawn and ready for the oven There to bake and brown and sizzle Till the cook with wise decision takes it from the torrid recess Eeady for Thanksgiving dinners I should tell you answer I should ZiFroni the plains of Illinois from the hills 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 Then they send them to the city That New York may not bereft be Of the pleasures of the table Thats enough of rhymeless 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 lie paid the bill admiringly How Brown went out guests to invite would be too long a story quite But he scraped up half a dozen and him ¬ self the maidens cousin And her mother all sat down next day to feast on turkeys brown Who was there Isaiah Stout who for six weeks had been out Next to him contented sat Candy Maker Israel Pratt With his wife John Henry Stiles employed in good times making files Just across the groaning table sat the boot- black ¬ Billy Cable At his right his face a grin was the news ¬ boy Tommy Quinn Neer was dinner bettor cooked never maid ¬ en sweeter looked While the guests devoured and gorged Cu ¬ pid shackles lightly forged Browns 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 bad gone away Brown ask- ed ¬ if he might longer stay And to the maiden with a flush he told a tale that made her blush Wont you help me If you can with this better sweeter plan Dont you see a wife I need Must I with you hopeless plead Said the maiden Of the other plan I coun- selled ¬ with my mother If to this one shell consent to marry you Ill be content Nothing more this scribbler tells listen now to wedding bells IrtSfs J 4f J night before Thanksgiving the THE was ablaze with lights The snow had fallen and the air itself seemed light hearted The massive mansions that surround Gramercy 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 much about him except that lie fas htEriitTess In- dolent ¬ genius When his father died the fortune that might have gone to him had endowed certain wealthy charitable in- stitutions ¬ His mother had died in his infancy and Jack Fleming had grown up with the servants and his books for com- panions ¬ 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 livpd in the house adjoining his fathers 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 playmate for even then Jack was full of book knowledge and Dora soon learned to love Shakspeare and Milton as read aloud by her hero Another great tramping place for the little people was Gramercy Park for both houses faced the handsome playground and Mr Goldthwait and Jacks father were among the favored rich who pos- sessed ¬ keys to the great iron gates that shut ont the children of the poor who often Uned the iron fence and peered wistfully between the bars at the smiling lawn 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 Doras home and good ratured easy-goin- g Mr Goldthwait would have thought it the basest treachery for any member of his family to inform his next door neighbor Jacks 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 ofhis immediate attention The family would sail for England imme- diately ¬ but Dora wanted Jack to go with them if he could A 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 Jacks 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 in 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 Goldthwaits 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 postoffice 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 over toward the old man 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 he 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 from those of his old home and that of Dora on Gramercy 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 fathers mansion loomed up against the trees beyond lights were often seen But strangers occupied the familiar rooms On Thanksgiving Eve just five years since Le had left his old life behind him Jack went to his dingy little window to gaze at the two mansions He shivered with cold but the blood rushed quickly to his face when he saw the home of the girl he still loved brightly lighted up For an instant he stood still amazed Then lie sat downon luVbed o think Finally downhearted and discouraged he turned io 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 and latest comedy to the new English actor who had arrived the day before As soon as it was rehearsed as he doubted 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 as he threw himself on his bed hungry and broken hearted he real ¬ ized the mistake he had made in living in a dream He made firm resolutions to re- form ¬ but as his fingers clinched in new- born ¬ resolve his eyes strayed across the vrrx f again For the second time that evening his heart stood siill Behind the soft lace curtains of the Goldthwait man ¬ sion shadows of people flitted to and fro The house was inhabited again but 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 pocketbook He turned his face toward the lower portion of the city determined to accept whatever work offered itself but it was a holiday and after several hours spen- - in tramping the quiet streets Jack turned his face home- ward ¬ As he trucged up Broadway a clatter on the stones behind attracted his attention and a driverless cab dashed in- to ¬ sight An elderly fman was gesticulat- ing ¬ wildly from thewindow With a bound Jack responded In another mo- ment ¬ the runaway horse stood panting in the roadway and Jacks sinewy hand was on the bit One dollar to drive me up to Del monicos shouted the man But your driver asked Jack Drunk in a saloon was the response Without another word Jack leaped up to the cabbys 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 Inuched 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 ¬ was the subject of his dream not the Dora of old with short 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 work made him stop He became as anxious to hide his face as he had been a moment before to tell his name Dora and her father passed into the restaurant and Jack earned a second dol- lar ¬ by getting a new driver for his pas- sengers ¬ 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 stationed himself once more at his window to gaze at the lights wSmm -- Vjjib v i ii t- - Y7iriMHvH-rir- - IN THE TITTLE BACK YARD 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 as strong as ever He longed to go to her but the knowledge of his poverty and shabbiness 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 rne arrangement or truits and liow ers He could see her piaigly She look- ed ¬ evenyounger 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 mans 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 lis- tening ¬ intently Occasionally Jack could see that Mr Goldthwat spoke Then Dora would beam with happy smiles Suddenly she jumped up from her seat and a moment later when 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 He felt that he must be near her once more must hear her voice again A wisteria vine ran down from his win ¬ dow Clasping the strong dry stalk Jack descended until he stood on the fence so dear to his memory Softly he crept along until lie reached the little veranda at the rear of the Goldthwait mansion and peering through the window he feastee his eyes on the face of the girl he loved Jack was overcome as he saw again all the little details of the room which onco had been so familiar to him He bowed his head He pushed against the glass of the swinging window The window opened a trifle Jack started back fright ¬ ened but the air was still outside and the inmates of the room had not noticed How he could hear Doras voice It said Now Mr Langdon lee me read the cli- max ¬ to you before dinner is announced Langdon was the name of the English actor to whom Jack had sent his play and as Doras sweet voice read on Jack real ¬ ized that it was his own comedy she was reading The climax was rendered with telling effect The two men leaned forward with interest Capital Capital cred 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 o 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 did not answer my letters I lost sight of him but I did not lose my welirmy 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 had 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 pver since barely making a living out of literary work and trying to get some one to produce his plays We finally got track of him this morn- ing ¬ and this morning also I saw the man- uscript ¬ of this play lying 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 HE SAT ON HIS BED AND THOUGHT seemed to me so strange that I made up my mind that you shouldnt send it back without reading it so I read it to you myself 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 see So 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 is doubly good because it will be followed by a real 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 is 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 Yines 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 and peaches rosy ap- ples ¬ and purple plums mingled with their own foliage are unique and highly typical of the harvest home For dining 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 lily a white lily or chrysanthemum from the potato with lettuce leaves for foliage while cabbage celery cauliflower and the dozen other kitchen garden productions add blossoms to this original bouquet One of these oranments 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 lirtk skill is all that is required They may 1 prepared the day before Thanksgiving and kept fresh in a bowl of water Give Me the Wishbone -- - - 1 1 y - -- 35Jv3ir m m x lPL MAPS -- ON POWDER HORNS m Maps Thronch the Wilderness I3n Craved on Kjrly Colonial Horns The- - horns made and decora fed dur ¬ ing the period of early French colonial wars from 1739 to 1745 when the fight-in- g- was In the New England States are quite plain when compared with those used in the French and Indian war when the finest and most artistic work was done far surpassing the rev ¬ olutionary war productions Te British coat of arms was a proii dnent feature covering a large space of the surface and making a very beauti ¬ ful decoration In 1755 when the last French war began one of the objects of the British armies was to force the French out of every post south of the St Lawrence river and- - iinall y to drive hem from Canada The fighting throughout this campaign took place in Pennsylvania Maryland and New York the interior of these States being then a comparative wilderness and the various routes being almost unknown except to the fur traders This fact caused a new feature to appear on the horn of the soldier a map of the route Such horns showing the routes of Gen Braddocks and Col Bouquets expedi ¬ tions arc quite rare while those show ¬ ing the northern routes are numerous the country portrayed varying greatly in extent Many begin with the city of New York showing its churches andr other prominent buildings and its bar J hm- - o nfl AlTlflTlV W1S TVlCtlir- - ed surrounded by istoekade amKV crowned by fort on hill and its g church steeples topped by the conven- - tional weathercock Then came Sche ¬ nectady and the numerous forts and military posts Such maps include the Hudson and Mohawk river regions the country and lakes in New York and sometimes the intervening sections of Canada to Montreal and Quebec These were not only handsome in ap¬ pearance but extremely useful to both Hie officers and the men as the maps showed the roads and told where sup ¬ plies could be obtained when needed At that time few printed maps existed even for the use cf the higher officers who were forced to depend on these horns for maps of the wilderness espe- cially ¬ those showing the routes of the fur traders from Canada to New York and giving the various camping places The maps also told where boats could be obtained to make the voyage easier and to make the land journey as short as possible for roads were almost un ¬ known and the trails were often very roundabout A soldier placed the great ¬ est value upon the implements he car ¬ ried considering his musket or rifle and his powderhorn his companions during years of dangers and hardships as his greatest friends He learned to love and cherish them and at the close of the war he hung them upon the wall of his home over the great fireplace where they were constant reminders of his war experiences He never part ¬ ed with them but at lifes clcse willed them- - to his descendants or to somV dear friend St Nicholas yN Society f Perhaps nothing in the world receives so much criticism just and unjust as what we call society Every one seems to feel privileged to throw his or her particular stone at it and most peo ¬ ple do it with an alacrity and an ener gy which do not characterize all their actions Sometimes it is the wholesale denuc ciation of the pessimist who thinks that everything is going to ruin and sees in society only the combined agency of the general downfall Sometimes it is the verdict of those who through ignorance or fanaticism want to break down the very prin ¬ ciples which uphold social or political welfare and who cnarge society with being the author of all the wrongs which exist in their fevered imagina ¬ tions Sometimes it is an honest criticism of real evils which good people see and lament and the blame of which they freely and indiscriminately layX at the door of society And then again it is the weak la ¬ mentation of some who conscious of wrong in themselves hasten to escape the responsibility by casting the blam somewhere else The charitable-mind- - ed and the liberal minded are not among any of these critics Tartar 3Iedicine Formerly musk was used as medi cine in various parts of the world out doctors in civilized lands do not hold musk in high repute In China it is still thought to be very good medi ¬ cine but the Chinese have queer no- tions ¬ about cures and charms Abee Muc distinguished traveler says that when Tartar doctor finds him- self ¬ without his drugs and medicines he is not in the least embarrassed He writes the names of the needed drugs on slips of paper and these being rolled up in little balls are swal ¬ lowed by the sick man To swallow the name of remedy or the remedy itself say the Tartars comes to pre ¬ cisely the same thing St Nicholas Jackya Wisdom Papa said Jacky would you like to have me give you perfectly beauti ¬ ful Christmas present Yes indeed Then now is the time to double my allowance sos Ill have the money to buy it when Christmas comes Harpers Bazar Effect on Their Business Does the bicycle hurt your busi ¬ ness Yes The junior and the confidential buyer are in the hospital And the man of affairs sighed heavily Detroit Tribune That which is called the sacred flame V of love originates in many cases in laziness and an agreeable filaceto loaf f V A W v a a a a a a a a a 11 v i iJ ifc1 K in I

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Page 1: Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Nebraska) 1896-11-26 [p ].I rstr it Made This Speculator Think Life Worth the Living--JIND TO A GAY TYPEWRITER GIRL-4ItBronjht Sweet Peace from Ont

I

rstr

it Made This Speculator Think Life

Worth the Living

--JIND TO A GAY TYPEWRITER GIRL

- 4ItBronjht Sweet Peace from Ont Lifes

a

zav

Dizzy Whirl

rC fnEORGE CALDWELL

Brown of Gothamtown the morn be-

fore¬

ThanksgivingFrom sleep awoke so

nearly broke lifehardly seemedworth living

Now this man Brownhad been throwndown by Wallstreets fluctuations

To rise aaln seemedto him then beyondall calculationsMy race Is run Imauite undone

Brown mased as he was dressingI never knew tnlngs quite so blue nor cred ¬

itors so pressingAnd then he took his pocketbook and count-

ed¬

up his moneyThe dollars four there were no more so few

were they seemed funnyIt made him smile that little pile and then

his blues departedFor Brown had pluck believed m luck for

othose not chicken heartedAnd to his breakfast gaily down went spec-

ulator¬

George Caldwell BrownWhile he drank his coffee hot to his hand a

note was broughtAnd the writing on its cover made him turn

It oer and oerWhen at last he broke Its seal Its contents

fairly made him reelMade the blood rush to his head for this

was what the letter saidGeorge Caldwell Brown EsqDear Boy It gives me several kinds of joy

To send a check made out to you to pay thehundred long since due

Tou kindly loaned when 1 was brokeMost sincerely R TCHOAK

--As he picked his way down town thusmused Speculator Brown

On the day before Thanksgiving life Isalways worth the living

Every cloud has Its silver lining somewherealways sun Is shining

Now it really seems to me I should verythankful be

Yesterday the sky was murky now Im sureto have my turkey

V

M

- -

-

mm

THE DOLLARS FOUK

But holy smoke As Im a sinner no onesasked me out to dinner

Last Thanksgiving Id a lot of bids to feedbut this year not a soul so far re-members

¬

meJlnilny crickets Well well seeThinking thus Brown stood before his six ¬

teenth story office doorWould or would it not affright her If I

asked my young typewriterHow to work this plan thought Brown as

he went and sat him downAnd as he read his letters oer he thought

about his plans the moreAnd as he thought he grew perplexed until

at last she thought him vexedTo morrows Thanksgiving ventured she

A day when all it seems to meShould eat lots of turkey and pumpkin pie

and all sorts of flxins that inouev canbuy

Thus Quickly to the girls amaze Brownmade reply in following phrase

And he went on I have a plan and youmust help me if you can

Then he told her how the borrowed moneycame

--And how he sorrowed much before It cameHe said The landscape blue it turned to

redTt filled my heart with thankfulness It drove

away my wretchednessBut he continued then I thought of other

men dead brokeJ ought to see some other luckless sinners

furnished with Thanksgiving dinnersThe maiden listened to his words You

want my help to buy the birdsThe celery and the pumpkin pies and other

things she said her eyesBent on the floor Then he replied Thats

It exactly if you triedYou could not closer speak mv mindAnd further if youll be so kindAnd help me at the dinner tooIll always grateful be to youThe maidens cheek was like a peach and

as she listened to his speechInto it crept a rosy pink so comely that It

made him thinkWell I vow In all the city there Is no other

girl so prettySo to the market forth they went on benev-

olence¬

IntentOn the way the girl observed Where

will you have the dinner servedIf you have not gat another place Im cer-

tain¬

that my motherWould be happy if you were to have It cook-

ed¬

and served by herA very good idea my child said Spec-

ulator¬

Brown and smiledHow many guests then will there be

Have you asked them yet said sheNo by gracious I forgot When we have

the dinner boughtIll find fellows out of work and bid them

3

f

i t iftt x rSff i

THE DIXXER

come and feed on turkSo they planned and so they talked as to the

market place they walkedAt the market place their eyes filled with

wonder and surpriseFood was there from all creation food

enough for half a nationWhere does It come from Brown pro¬

pounded Thus a market man ex-pounded

¬

Should you ask me whence those turkeysWhence those birds of rounded plumpnessStripped each one of ruby wattle

stripped ef all Its glorious feathersDrawn and ready for the ovenThere to bake and brown and sizzleTill the cook with wise decision takes it

from the torrid recessEeady for Thanksgiving dinnersI should tell you answer I should

ZiFroni the plains of Illinois from the hills

of PennsylvaniaFrom the vales of Massachusetts from New

York and from New JerseyWhere the farmers feed and feed moreAll the summer all the autumnTill Thanksgiving is not far offThen they send them to the cityThat New York may not bereft beOf the pleasures of the tableThats enough of rhymeless rhythm send

two turkeys and send with themBrown began stopped perplexed Turning

to the girl What nextThen the maiden skillfully filled the order

out and lie paid the bill admiringlyHow Brown went out guests to invite would

be too long a story quiteBut he scraped up half a dozen and him ¬

self the maidens cousinAnd her mother all sat down next day to

feast on turkeys brownWho was there Isaiah Stout who for six

weeks had been outNext to him contented sat Candy Maker

Israel PrattWith his wife John Henry Stiles employed

in good times making filesJust across the groaning table sat the boot-

black¬

Billy CableAt his right his face a grin was the news ¬

boy Tommy QuinnNeer was dinner bettor cooked never maid¬

en sweeter lookedWhile the guests devoured and gorged Cu ¬

pid shackles lightly forgedBrowns heart was the heart they bound as

he very quickly foundAnd before the meal was over Brown was a

devoted loverWhen the guests bad gone away Brown ask-

ed¬

if he might longer stayAnd to the maiden with a flush he told a

tale that made her blushWont you help me If you can with this

better sweeter planDont you see a wife I need Must I with

you hopeless pleadSaid the maiden Of the other plan I coun-

selled¬

with my motherIf to this one shell consent to marry you

Ill be contentNothing more this scribbler tells listen now

to wedding bells

IrtSfsJ 4f J

night before Thanksgiving theTHE was ablaze with lights The

snow had fallen and the airitself seemed light hearted The massivemansions that surround Gramercy Parkwere brightly lighted

In muffled silence a young man cloakless and gloveless hurried by the ironbars that fence in the little acre of therich toward his lodging place

For five years Jack Fleming had livedalone No one knew very much abouthim except that lie fas htEriitTess In-

dolent¬

genius When his father died thefortune that might have gone to him hadendowed certain wealthy charitable in-

stitutions¬

His mother had died in hisinfancy and Jack Fleming had grown upwith the servants and his books for com-

panions¬

He had never seen enough ofhis father to love him In his childhoodJack had had one friend Dora Goldthwait She was a beautiful girl severalyears his junior who livpd in the houseadjoining his fathers and every day oneor the other would climb the fence thatseparated them and drop over into thelittle yard for a romp Dora was proudof her protector and playmate for eventhen Jack was full of book knowledgeand Dora soon learned to love Shakspeareand Milton as read aloud by her hero

Another great tramping place for thelittle people was Gramercy Park for bothhouses faced the handsome playgroundand Mr Goldthwait and Jacks fatherwere among the favored rich who pos-

sessed¬

keys to the great iron gates thatshut ont the children of the poor whooften Uned the iron fence and peeredwistfully between the bars at the smilinglawn within

The children were inseparable until

Jack was 15 and Dora 12 Then Jackwent to college but every holiday foundhim at home again and often books wentby the board and Jack came home on thesly to see his little sweetheart Of courseon these occasions he was smuggled intoDoras home and good ratured easy-goin- g

Mr Goldthwait would have thoughtit the basest treachery for any memberof his family to inform his next doorneighbor Jacks father that his son wasplaying truant

After three years at college Jack washopelessly behind in his studies and hisfather still ignorant of the reason calledhim a blockhead One day Jack receiveda tender loving letter from Dora askinghim to come home at once as her fatherhad just received word from Englandthat he had fallen heir to a large propertyincluding a theater in one of the largecities and the business of the latter wasin urgent need ofhis immediate attentionThe family would sail for England imme-diately

¬

but Dora wanted Jack to go withthem if he could A few hours afterreceiving the letter Jack stood in frontof the Goldthwait residence on GramercyPark It was closed No- - servant an-swered

¬

the bell and Jacks heart fell likelead Again he looked at the letter Itwas dated two days before and had beendelayed in the mails A home he foundhis father but in a mood in which he hadnever seen him before

You young rascal he shouted asJack entered So you have been wastingyour time next door instead of studying

No pleading on the part of Jack couldinduce the turbulent old man to tellwhere the Goldthwaits had gone

Never mind thought Jack I willhear from her soon and then

But no letter came Weeks lengthenedinto months and Jack grew tall and thinOne day he went up to his college townand an inquiry at the postoffice elicitedthe fact that several letters had come upto a month ago but they had been for-warded

¬

to Gramercy ParkThat night father and son faced each

other for the last timeWhere are the letters Dora wrote to

me demanded Jack as he leaned overtoward the old man who stood smilingsarcastically in his face

I told you that if you refused to returnto college you would regret it was thereply

Jack turned on his heel and passed outof the house

He found it a harder struggle than heexpected His income fluctuated fromnext to nothing to nothing itself He be-

came¬

first a wanderer among apartmentsthen among boarding houses and at lastan inhabitant of furnished rooms whoate at cheap restaurants when he couldeat at all

He had lived a week in a rear hall bed ¬

room on Twenty second street before hediscovered that its windows were onlyseparated from those of his old home andthat of Dora on Gramercy Park by thebrief New York back yards in which theyused to play together The Goldthwaithouse was dark It had been ever sincethe day Dora left Next to it where hisfathers mansion loomed up against thetrees beyond lights were often seen Butstrangers occupied the familiar rooms

On Thanksgiving Eve just five yearssince Le had left his old life behind himJack went to his dingy little window togaze at the two mansions He shiveredwith cold but the blood rushed quickly tohis face when he saw the home of the girlhe still loved brightly lighted up Foran instant he stood still amazed Thenlie sat downon luVbed o think Finallydownhearted and discouraged he turnedio a great pile of manuscript and rubbishon the floor and picking a book from thenondescript mass he turned over theleaves

Twelve plays out he muttered tohimself fiveof them probably lost Onlythat day he had sent his best and latestcomedy to the new English actor whohad arrived the day before As soon as itwas rehearsed as he doubted not it wouldbe he would send the others in rotation

For months he had expected success tocome with the dawn of every new dayand to night as he threw himself on hisbed hungry and broken hearted he real ¬

ized the mistake he had made in living ina dream He made firm resolutions to re-

form¬

but as his fingers clinched in new-born

¬

resolve his eyes strayed across thevrrxf again For the second time thatevening his heart stood siill Behind thesoft lace curtains of the Goldthwait man ¬

sion shadows of people flitted to and froThe house was inhabited again but bystrangers of course he thought

Thanksgiving Day found Jack poorerand hungrier than he had ever been be-

fore¬

in his life For forty eight hours hehad not tasted food but he determined tobreakfast in spite of the almost total

emptiness of his pocketbook He turnedhis face toward the lower portion of thecity determined to accept whatever workoffered itself but it was a holiday andafter several hours spen- - in tramping thequiet streets Jack turned his face home-ward

¬

As he trucged up Broadway aclatter on the stones behind attracted hisattention and a driverless cab dashed in-

to¬

sight An elderly fman was gesticulat-ing

¬

wildly from thewindow With abound Jack responded In another mo-

ment¬

the runaway horse stood panting inthe roadway and Jacks sinewy handwas on the bit

One dollar to drive me up to Delmonicos shouted the man

But your driver asked JackDrunk in a saloon was the response

Without another word Jack leaped up tothe cabbys seat and whipped up thehorse It was the first time he had everearned a dollar by manual labor and ashe clinched his teeth firmly a flush mount-ed

¬

to his cheeksWhen the once familiar restaurant

came into sight Jack thought with mois-ture

¬

in his eyes of the many times he andDora had Inuched in the great diningroom As he reined up before it hag ¬

gard and mud bespattered totally differ-ent

¬

from his old self he started withamazement There standing on the side-walk

¬

was the subject of his dream notthe Dora of old with short frock andcurling hair streaming in the wind butthe beautiful woman into which the yearshad changed her

For a moment Jack could hardly re-

strain¬

himself from rushing forward anddeclaring his identity But a thought ofhis clothes and his work made him stopHe became as anxious to hide his face ashe had been a moment before to tell hisname

Dora and her father passed into therestaurant and Jack earned a second dol-

lar¬

by getting a new driver for his pas-sengers

¬

coupe He passed and repassedthe restaurant in an unsuccessful attemptto get another glimpse of the woman heloved before he even satisfied his hunger

It was dark before he went back to hislittle room and stationed himself oncemore at his window to gaze at the lights

wSmm-- Vjjib v i ii t- - Y7iriMHvH-rir- -

IN THE TITTLE BACK YARD

in the Goldthwait mansion He was filledwith a conflict of love and pride He hadno reason to believe that Dora had notforgotten him but his love for her was asstrong as ever He longed to go to herbut the knowledge of his poverty andshabbiness kept him back

The windows of the great old diningroom were bright with light and theirraised curtains gave him a clear view ofthe place where he and Dora had spentmany happy Thanksgiving reunions to-

gether¬

He saw her flitting about thetable as of old putting the finishing touches on rne arrangement or truits and liowers He could see her piaigly She look-ed

¬

evenyounger and more beautiful thanshe had that afternoon in her heavy streetwraps

Half an hour passed and some one elsecame into the room a tall handsomeman Dora seemed to forget her house-hold

¬

duties for she hung on the mansarm and seemed to plead with him Atlast he sat down and then still anotherperson came in it was Mr GoldthwaitThey sat by the fire with Dora betweenthem She was talking earnestly andthe handsome stranger seemed to be lis-

tening¬

intently Occasionally Jack couldsee that Mr Goldthwat spoke ThenDora would beam with happy smilesSuddenly she jumped up from her seatand a moment later when she returnedshe had in her hands a fluttering man-uscript

¬

She read it The old smile played abouther lips The gestures waved the grace-ful

¬

hands It maddened Jack He feltthat he must be near her once more musthear her voice again

A wisteria vine ran down from his win¬

dow Clasping the strong dry stalk Jackdescended until he stood on the fence sodear to his memory Softly he crept alonguntil lie reached the little veranda at therear of the Goldthwait mansion and

peering through the window he feasteehis eyes on the face of the girl he loved

Jack was overcome as he saw again allthe little details of the room which oncohad been so familiar to him He bowedhis head He pushed against the glassof the swinging window The windowopened a trifle Jack started back fright¬

ened but the air was still outside and theinmates of the room had not noticedHow he could hear Doras voice It said

Now Mr Langdon lee me read the cli-

max¬

to you before dinner is announcedLangdon was the name of the English

actor to whom Jack had sent his play andas Doras sweet voice read on Jack real ¬

ized that it was his own comedy she wasreading

The climax was rendered with tellingeffect The two men leaned forwardwith interest

Capital Capital cred LangdonJack was filled with intense excite-

ment¬

His hands were clinchedDo you accept it asked Dora tri ¬

umphantly of the actorI do was the reply It is the com-

edy¬

that I have been waiting forI will write him to night then said

Dora The beautiful girl sank back inher chair and went on And now Iwill tell you a story that will explainwhy I was so anxious o have you takethe play

Jack listened breathlesslyYou see said Dora I used to have

a friend here named John Fleming Whenwe went abroad I wrote to him but hedid not answer my letters I lost sightof him but I did not lose my welirmyregard for him

A splendid fellow interrupted MrGoldthwait

There never was one like him saidDora Then she went on Well whenwe reached New York last week fatherand I began to look him up and we foundin the first place that the reason he hadnot answered my letters was because hisfather who was angry at both of us hadintercepted them in the second placethat father and son were never reconciledand that the old gentleman disinheritedJack when he died and in the third placethat Jack had been pver since barelymaking a living out of literary work andtrying to get some one to produce hisplays

We finally got track of him this morn-ing

¬

and this morning also I saw the man-uscript

¬

of this play lying on the tablewhere you had left it when you broughtit up from the theater The words ByJohn Fleming caught my attention atonce and I picked it up and read it It

HE SAT ON HIS BED AND THOUGHT

seemed to me so strange that I made upmy mind that you shouldnt send it backwithout reading it so I read it to youmyself And now I shall send for Jackto morrow and when he comes I shallhave good news for him And and goodnews for Jack is is good news forfor me you see So I am very happy

There was a noise of an opening win-

dow¬

and Jack wild eyed and unkemptbut very joyful stepped in For a mo-

ment¬

they did not recognize him butwhen they did

Well said Mr Langdon this climaxbeats anything in your play

Yes added Mr Goldthwait and itis doubly good because it will be followedby a real Thanksgiving dinner NewYork Press

Thanksgiving DecorationThe old question comes up again and

again as to how to devise something novelfor Thanksgiving decoration The day isone pre eminently homely and simple inits spirit and traditions a day set apartfor returning thanks because of the neces-sities

¬

and every day comforts of lifeNothing is so appropriate in commem ¬

orating the occasion as embellishmentsfrom the harvest fields In drawingrooms nothing is more effective than In-dian

¬

corn and diminutive yellow pump-kins

¬

the corn with its long stalks andgolden ears stacked on either side of thewide doors or grouped in corners thesmall pumpkins with more ears or cornpiled at the base

Yines of cranberry crowded with thetiny red globes can trail across mantleshelves or twine up and down columnswhile garlands of red and green peppersall sizes and shapes and great bunchesof ripe wheat and oats are rich and beau-tiful

¬

in effect Fruits of all kindsgrapes late pears and peaches rosy ap-ples

¬

and purple plums mingled withtheir own foliage are unique and highlytypical of the harvest home

For dining table ornamentation a noveland most attractive mode is to cut fromthe ordinary vegetables shapes simulatingflowers from the beet a deep red rosefrom the yellow turnip a tiger lily awhite lily or chrysanthemum from thepotato with lettuce leaves for foliagewhile cabbage celery cauliflower and thedozen other kitchen garden productionsadd blossoms to this original bouquetOne of these oranments serves at eachplate as a favor while a huge groupmingled with fruits forms a fine center ¬

pieceIt is a very simple matter to shape these

mock flowers a sharp knife and a lirtkskill is all that is required They may 1

prepared the day before Thanksgivingand kept fresh in a bowl of water

Give Me the Wishbone-- - - 1 1

y ---35Jv3ir

m m x lPL

MAPS --ON POWDER HORNS

m

Maps Thronch the Wilderness I3nCraved on Kjrly Colonial HornsThe-- horns made and decora fed dur¬

ing the period of early French colonialwars from 1739 to 1745 when the fight-in- g-

was In the New England Statesare quite plain when compared withthose used in the French and Indianwar when the finest and most artisticwork was done far surpassing the rev¬

olutionary war productionsTe British coat of arms was a proii

dnent feature covering a large space ofthe surface and making a very beauti ¬

ful decoration In 1755 when the lastFrench war began one of the objectsof the British armies was to force theFrench out of every post south of theSt Lawrence river and- - iinally to drivehem from Canada The fighting

throughout this campaign took place inPennsylvania Maryland and NewYork the interior of these States beingthen a comparative wilderness and thevarious routes being almost unknownexcept to the fur traders This factcaused a new feature to appear on thehorn of the soldier a map of the routeSuch horns showing the routes of GenBraddocks and Col Bouquets expedi¬

tions arc quite rare while those show¬

ing the northern routes are numerousthe country portrayed varying greatlyin extent Many begin with the city ofNew York showing its churches androther prominent buildings and its bar Jhm- - o nfl AlTlflTlV W1S TVlCtlir- -

ed surrounded by istoekade amKVcrowned by fort on hill and its gchurch steeples topped by the conven- -

tional weathercock Then came Sche ¬

nectady and the numerous forts andmilitary posts Such maps include theHudson and Mohawk river regions thecountry and lakes in New York andsometimes the intervening sections ofCanada to Montreal and Quebec

These were not only handsome in ap¬

pearance but extremely useful to bothHie officers and the men as the mapsshowed the roads and told where sup¬

plies could be obtained when neededAt that time few printed maps existedeven for the use cf the higher officerswho were forced to depend on thesehorns for maps of the wilderness espe-

cially¬

those showing the routes of thefur traders from Canada to New Yorkand giving the various camping placesThe maps also told where boats couldbe obtained to make the voyage easierand to make the land journey as shortas possible for roads were almost un¬

known and the trails were often veryroundabout A soldier placed the great¬

est value upon the implements he car¬

ried considering his musket or rifleand his powderhorn his companionsduring years of dangers and hardshipsas his greatest friends He learned tolove and cherish them and at the closeof the war he hung them upon the wallof his home over the great fireplacewhere they were constant remindersof his war experiences He never part¬

ed with them but at lifes clcse willedthem-- to his descendants or to somVdear friend St Nicholas yN

Society fPerhaps nothing in the world receives

so much criticism just and unjust aswhat we call society Every one seemsto feel privileged to throw his or herparticular stone at it and most peo¬

ple do it with an alacrity and an energy which do not characterize all theiractions

Sometimes it is the wholesale denucciation of the pessimist who thinksthat everything is going to ruin andsees in society only the combinedagency of the general downfall

Sometimes it is the verdict of thosewho through ignorance or fanaticismwant to break down the very prin ¬

ciples which uphold social or politicalwelfare and who cnarge society withbeing the author of all the wrongswhich exist in their fevered imagina ¬

tionsSometimes it is an honest criticism

of real evils which good people seeand lament and the blame of whichthey freely and indiscriminately layXat the door of society

And then again it is the weak la¬

mentation of some who conscious ofwrong in themselves hasten to escapethe responsibility by casting the blamsomewhere else The charitable-mind- -

ed and the liberal minded are notamong any of these critics

Tartar 3IedicineFormerly musk was used as medi

cine in various parts of the world outdoctors in civilized lands do not holdmusk in high repute In China it isstill thought to be very good medi ¬

cine but the Chinese have queer no-

tions¬

about cures and charms AbeeMuc distinguished traveler saysthat when Tartar doctor finds him-

self¬

without his drugs and medicineshe is not in the least embarrassedHe writes the names of the neededdrugs on slips of paper and thesebeing rolled up in little balls are swal ¬

lowed by the sick man To swallowthe name of remedy or the remedyitself say the Tartars comes to pre¬

cisely the same thing St Nicholas

Jackya WisdomPapa said Jacky would you like

to have me give you perfectly beauti ¬

ful Christmas presentYes indeedThen now is the time to double

my allowance sos Ill have the moneyto buy it when Christmas comesHarpers Bazar

Effect on Their BusinessDoes the bicycle hurt your busi¬

nessYes The junior and the confidential

buyer are in the hospitalAnd the man of affairs sighed heavilyDetroit Tribune

That which is called the sacred flame

V

of love originates in many cases inlaziness and an agreeable filaceto loaf

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