A Thanksgiving. A little brown bin! sail a sunbeam On a leadens thorn at (lay ; This foot, that foot, under his wing. From dawn to evening gray It lifted its bappv, grateful song Tirra-lat tirra-la! tirra-la! And ! thought in tho one slant sunbeam That au angel waiting staid. The church bells broke into merry jieals. And the little children played ; And prayer and choral and grateful lay Filled all the air on Thanksgiving day. "Oh Ancient (liver of untold years," Cried many a happy voice, " For ihe eora and wine, for love and life, Thou hast made us to rejoice!" And tho organ peal, and song and prayer, Thrilled with their muSio the clear cool air. Still in the sunbeam the angel staid. Though the streets grew empty and still. Festival lights were in loving homes. Feasting and peace, andfgood-will, Why did the angel linger, pray? Was it to hear the little ones play? The little brown bird on the bailors thorn Hat still in the beam to sing, Till the amber west had turned to gray : Then he tucked his head under his wing, With a soft.Jlow, lingering "Tir-ra la!" And the beautiful angel went away. Mary A. Harr. A Thanksgiving Story. ." There is no position in life, my l daughter, so bad that there is nothing in it to bed to mamma's room with the note. "<>h! such a handsome fellow, mamma, snch a handsome fellow," I repeater], as mamma drew forth the card I waring the name: EMIT.k CABIS U.KT. " Erailn Cardolet," exclaimed I; •• Why, mamma, this is a young man." "He must be about thirty-six," said mamma, " I will see him." I arranged her silver curls abont her frail face, drew her fleecy crape shawl a little closer, laid the bnncb of bright pinks I had brought her on the stand at hor side, and then ushered up the hero of last evening's story and of my night's meditations. | ,()n entering he approached mamma and bent over her dainty hand with a manner almost reverential. Then mamma presented me to him, and as soon thereafter as I could I slipp.il from the room to wrestle with the, to me, herculean task of preparing a Thanksgiving dinner. With conntless qnestion* and donbta did I torture my self. If 1 bad only kept that little maid she wonhl have known abont the fire, and possibly abont the turkey. Then I oonld hare gotten along well enough. 'I con 1.1 lay a very respectable table in mamma's room for three, and oar guest, if he remained, need not know of onr extreme conditions, but that assistance failing, the holiday hav ing been given, and taken at onoe, the maiden was now so far from mo as were the poles. Then I began to lay out the articles required to prepare the dinner, for I was determined that mamma should not be disappointed, when new horrors began to assail me. Mamma would have given me foil instructions if it had not been for the untimely hap pening of onr visitor. •< f'erbaps he will not stay long, after all," thought I at last. 1 will go back and wait a little, and if he does not go, I will get mamma to whisper me one or two directions, end then 1 can get along. 80, quite flashed with anxiety, and altogether considerably disturbed, I made my way to mamma's room. Mamma had finished speaking and Mr. Cardolet, Othello like, was telling qt "disastrous chances, and moving accidents by flood and Arid," which lie bad encountered during h • long ebxc nee. How ten years after his abrupt departure his family had loft America and gone to live upon an estate in tho south of France, which had been for centuries the property of his father'** family ; how two years previous to this visit ho had returned to bis home, ami siuce then conducted his father's affairs; how now, that ho was again in our country, he had hurried to claim the offer of friendship which my mother had once made him, and which ho hod ever pri/.cd, and how startled he had been on meeting me by my likeness to my mother. " For you are her second self," said he, addressing me for the second time. Now was my time. "Yes, every ono savs that I look like mamma," 1 re plied, adding, "pardon me ono mo ment," and then whispered quickly iu mamma's ear, " Will pot-herb* do for tho turkey-dressing ?" A smile broke over mamma's face which showe d she was amused at my embarrassment. " We need not make a state secret of this," she said, and then addressing her friend, added: "My little girl lias had but poor preparation for her present occupations." And Mr. Gardolet, gazing at me, the picture of discomfort, said impulsively: "Pray, what is the mat tor; can I help you?' "Oh, Emile,"criedmamma, laughing with a merry, almost youthful laugh, " you are impulsive and generous as ever, but you can hardly help h.-re. Itita has given the maid a holiday, and is now in a quandary about preparing a turkov for dinner." "Of eourso I can help," cried our guest. "Miss Rita, your mamma and I are very old friends, and as you are your mam ma's very n-lf, von and I are old friends. And as I never allow a friend to be in trouble without lending him a helping band, I intend with your permission to help yon cook the turkey." Tie- thought of taking him into the kitchen was too much for me, and I fairly cried: "Oh, indeed, lam not so stupid, I can get along, indeed I can." Mamma had no opportunity to say anthing. Mr. Caidob-t and I had it all to ourselves; poor little d< ar, she could only laugh at my evident confusion, and his eager offers, as sh- had not laughed for many long years. " Now let me help," continue*] be, " and if I have not lost the skill of old camping days, wben I not only cooked the turkeys, but caught them, and sometimen, I fear, nono too lawfully, I will make yon a dinner that a gourmet might be thankful for." Just then the children came in from church. Nellie, tho youngest, an enfant terrible, delighted with the merry stranger, in our gloomy house, entered at once into any plan that would detain him, aud, bringing one of my cooking aprons, gave it to him and offered to show him the wny to the kitchen. " See, I am unanimously elected, Miss Rita; yon will have to let me join your staff." Mamma, to my astonishment, offered no objection, but said: "Go on, Rita, dear, and meantime I will read tho let ters Emile has brought me from his family." And so from our first meeting he has been shouldering my hardens, and mak ing life, which looked so gloomy, a con stant joy—l had almost said a jeet. T hat Thanksgiving dinner wss a success. The children said so, and Emile and I have sinco said so. It was not long after it that Emile Cardolet told me that he had a big love for me. "Yon may know how great it is, my darling," he said, " when 1 tell you it haa been growing more years than yon have been growing. It wan planted by your like ness when you were yet an angel in heaven. I have crowded it down, buried it, smothered it and believed I had dwarfed it; lmt when I met you on the step Thanksgiving morning it sprang into full life, and overwhelmed me with its magnitude." Dear reader, need I tell you that it also overwhelmed me with its magni tude, or that Thanksgiving Day was for me a day of thanksgiving, indeed? bnltrsn an a Dead-Meat. Gnitoan save that be was enabled to travel from Toledo, ()., to Albany, N. Y., withont paying a cent of fare. " How did yon manage it?" he wan asked. " Eaay enongh," said the aasae ain ; " when the conductor would come around and ask me for my ticket I would jnat tell him 1 was a theologian lecturing for the Lord. These con ductors are very clever fellows, and are generally Christians. I traveled free until once 1 was on a train going into Newark. Although I told the conductor I was lecturing for the Lord, he aaid I would have to pay. As I bad no money he told the brake man to turn me over to an offloer at the next station. Aa soon as the conductor left the car and the brakeman went to fix the fire in the Move I went out on the platform and after getting down on the lower step let go. 1 did not think It would hurt me, but it shook me up aud tore my coat when I struck the ground." (iuiteau say* the t-ain was running thirty miles an hour when he jumped oil; but he was determined not to be turned over to a polieemar. The Precious Metal*. Gold is valuable not only on account of its scarcity, but for tho peculiar pro perties which it possesses and which render it preferable to any other mineral for particular purposes. Its extreme malleability renders it easy tube worked into the thousand delicate and com plicated forms which we find in articles of adornment nnd ornamentation. Its rich color and brilliant luster render it peculiarly attractive in the eyes of the people, and its perfect unchangahility whon exposed to the action of tho ele ments, a property possessed in an equal degree by no other metal, makes it at once pleasing and valuable. When pure, gold is so soft that it may be beaten to a thicknoss not exceeding 1-250000 of an inch, that is, 250,000 of the sheets of gold placed one upon another would make a pile only an inch in thickness ; in this form it is used for gilding. Gol 1 is measurd or reckoned by carats. I'ure gold is said to be twenty four carats line. In this coadition it is too soft to bo useful in manufacture i ar ticle* so it is usually mixed with some harder metal—generally Hilvor, which then receives the name of alloy. If gold has four part* of alloy it is termed twenty carat gold; if ten parts alloy it ia fourteen carat gold. Gold is practically insoluble, nitro ruuriatic acid being the only substance which will dissolve it. It is, with one exception, the heaviest of known metals. The specific gravity of platinum is 20.337, while that of gold is 18.268. The next three metals in order of weight are mercury, 13.580; lead, 11..'5.*>2; and silver, 10.474 Gold is seven times heavier than granite. One cubic inch weighs H 1-3 pounds, and a cubic foot 1,200 pounds. At tho present rate the cubic inch is worth 82,700, and the oubicfoot $.384,000. Silver weighs 4 10 |tound* to the cubic inch, which is wort h $75.90, and the cubic foot weighs six hundred pounds, and is worth $10,852. It is estimated that up to tho com moner ment of 1880 the amount of gold in existence was $8,000,000,000, of which two-thirds was coin and bullion, and one-third in jewelry, etc. Next to gold in value, as also in mal leability, comes silver. It is readily dissolved by nitric acid. Pare water has no effect upon it, but if it contains any animal or vegetable matter it black ens the surface. This is' due to the presence of more or less sulphur in the water. Long exposure to the air will tarnish silver. The amount of silver in existenoe is estimated to lie $5,300,000,000, of which $3,300,000,000 is in coin and bullion, the balance being in jewelry, orna ments, etc. If all the gold and silver in existence were made into one solid cube it would measure leas than seventy feet on each side, and would weigh atotit 3,331,400 pounds. The United Htates is now producing annually atout $100,000,000 of gold and silver. Three-quarters of the gold now in existence has been mined within the last thirty-five years. It is estimated by a writer in the Boston Eamomitf that from the earliest times to the Christian era the amount of gold ob tained was 81,400,000,000, and of silver $2,900,000,000. From tho Christian era to the discovery of America: Gold, 83,900,000,000; silver, $500,000,000. A Plucky Little llrummrr, A gentleman now raiding in New York Mid that be was onco a witness of a singular occurrence at a dano ball in Ounnison, Col. A *ru irt little drummer from the East stood at th side of the hall watching the dancers through bis eyeglasses, whirls were balanced on the edge of his nose in a ra'.her comical manner. The drummer was attired in a nobby snit of clothes, made from a rory striking pattern. Ho presented altogether too foppish an appearance to please the fastidious taste of the frontier roughs. The bully of the hall was waltzing with the pride of the flats, the best dancer in town. When she caught sight of the drummer she laughed in her partner's face, and as they came around again he brushed her rudely against him. Supposing that the col lision was the result of carelessness, the drummor paid no particular atten tion to it On the nest turn, however, the bully threw his girl against the little fellow with snob force aa to knock his eyeglasses from his nose and nearly npaet him. Hiding his time the drum mer placed his glasses in his poeket, and when the ruffian camearouad again struck ont with his right swiftly, taking the bully directly under tho ear and dropping him as su Manly as if he had lieen shot. When the rough regained his feet, with his hand on his revolver, he found the drummor'a pistol within a foot of his breast, "You have the drop on me, pard," he exclaimed, "and I apologise. And now, M he continued, "if you'll permit me to introduce you to the pride, I'm blessed it you ahan't dance with her." " I don't desire to dance," replied the drummer; "but hereafter, as here tofore, 1 shall always stand ready to defend my right to wear the style of garments which suits me best." TOI'ICM OF THE It AV. The only place where cremation seem* to lw thoroughly established is Milan, Italy, whore about 160 bodies have been burned since the crematory was built— scarcely a year ago. Tin* amount of cotton manufactured in Great Britain in 1880 was 1,405,- 000,000 pounds. Tho amount manufac tured in tho United Htates was 930,- 000,000 {rounds. Great Britain manu factured only about fifty per cent, more than tho United Htates. The Indians, Lieutenant Brown of the United Hiatus army reports, have seen the results of the training received by Indian children at Hampton, Va , and appreciate them. They are now anxious to hare their boys selected for the school, but they are not so much in fa. vor of educating tho girls. Their idea is that if the girls were educated " they would get like the white women and not do any work at all." From statistics recently published iu France it appears that there are 1,108 centenarians in Europe. Bwitzerl&ud claims to have the oldest inhabitant, in the person of an aged farmer living in the Canton Orisons, who has seen 109 summers. Female centenarians arc in ; the ascendancy, there being 1,864, while | that of the males is 1,244. A majority j of the old people have spent their lives ' in remote country districts, where they 1 have devoted their time to outdoor I labor. A stati tician lias l>een figuring upon j the annual consumption by American manufacturers of the precious metals, | which he estimate* a* $13,000,000 gold and $3,000,000 silver. Two-thirds of the latter is used in making plate. Of j the gold, the greater part goes for rings | tad watch cases. It is estimated that there are about '250,000 wedding rings given in this country every year, aver aging $2 each in cost. There are l 100,(100 more rings given as gag** amour ! and a still larger number bestowed in holiday presents. _____ The importation of opium by this country, wLich in IMSI was 109,530 j pounds, in I*7l had grown to 815,121, and in 1880 amounted to 533,451 pounds, i These figures indicate an immense in crease in opium eating. In 1876 it was ! estimated that the number of people having the habit was 225,000, and now it is thought to l>e fully 500,000. Bom<- pcrsons Is come so accustomed to the drug as to take immense doses. A Missouri farmer took forty grains of morphia at once without apparent injury, and there arc revcrai casus reported in which sixty grains a day were taken regularly. The following advertisement roeently appeared in a Philadelphia paper: • Wanted— A toy about sevente- n year* old to run a steam engine. No men need apply." The reflections which this advertisement suggests are not agreeable. In commenting upon it the ! Philadelphia R*car*rt, to the oarc of bov*, and that, " although the department of toiler inspection ia empowered to ex amine such applicants as may present themselves, and to certify to their abili ties, it cannot compel a single <3 earn - uscr to replace an incompetent man with one skilled in his duties." The grest whest exporters of Russia are becoming alarmed at tho tremendous competition they have to encounter. Hungary and the Danubian principali ties were the first to appear in the Western markets, but the construction , of a railway to Odessa restored the equilibrium. Then the American com petition commenced, and has ruined ] the inhabitants of the wheat-producing districts of the Muscovite empire. Wheat is abundant in the interior more so than for many years past—but there is scarcely any communication with the seaboard. The great military railways run right through the country, but there are fow feeding lines. The roads and canals and the care of the wheat in transport are in as primitive a state as when Russia had no competitor in the field. If a prompt move is not made by the government—which ia scarcely to be expected at pis-sent— Russian wheat will soon be driven ont of the Western msrkeU by United States enterprise and the new field opening up in India. Among the gigantic enterprises of the present day there are few that in world wide importance can compare with the proposed construction of a ship canal across the Peninsula of Florida. AU tho railroads and canals of the country are not sufficient to carry more than a third of the grain prodaeta of the ooun try fc the seaboard. Nearly twenty millions of tons cannot roach a market. The Mississippi valley ia capable of producing three times aa much as it does at present; but oven now the facil ities for transporting cotton, tobacco Mid other articles to market are entirely inadequate. Tho farmer* of several of the trans-Mississippi KtaUs bare to pay ton cent* a bushel more for carrying tlc-ir wheat to tho seaboard than it c.'sita thct farm era in California to Bond their* around Capo Horn to the city cf Now York. Such aro the dangers of the Ouif of Mexico that sending freight* around Florida is impracticable a* a relief measure. To send cotton by rail from Montgomery to Havannab, and - thence by an ocean vessel to Now York, coat* about 82H a l>alo. A *hip will carry it around the Florida peninsula and thence to New York at somewhat leu* rate, but at greater risk. The ship canal will reduce freight charge* at least fifty per cent. What lire* Accomplish. By far the mo*t aerion* difficulty in the process of honey collecting by bees arisen from the extremely minute quan tity of nectar which each flow, r yield*, and from it* being dilute—in some case* o poor in *accharine matter that it* *we< tneiis i* not appreciable to the tongue. The *tr ngth of the sugary fluid varies in different flower*, and even in tbcamo flower at different times- Con* jucntly the most direct way of estimating the yield of honey is to ascertain the actual quantity of sugar in er of flower*, wash out their ne. tar, and determine the sugar in the solution, we can calculate from the number of flowers used the average amount of sugar in each flower witL the greatest precision. Experiments conducted in this way showed each flower of tho fuchsia to contain little more than tha tenth pirt of a grain of sngar. In monkshood the amount was rather less than the tenth of a grain, while in tha everlasting pea it was found three-twentieths of a grain for each flower. In smaller flowers the quantity is proportionately lest. Thus each flower of tho little naturalized American water-blink oily contained six-hundredth* of a griin, and in tb *e minute flowers which grow together in compact ma.sse the amount was *LiiJ smaller. A raceme, consisting of twenty flowers of the vetch, only yield ed Ave-hundredths of a grain, or little over one five hundredth for each floret. One head of common red clover gave a little over one-tenth of a grain (exactly 0.1221). Now, each hy their peco liar dress and strange cries, and play an important part in the comedy of the city life. At dawn, long before the shopkeepers have quitted their mats, the kami kndzn-hiori (paper scrap collector) emerges from his squalid hut and com menees his rounds. He is usually an old, old man, clad in patches and shreds, and wears a very braad-briinmed reed hat, while, for sanitary or other reasons, his note and mouth are covered with a ragged blue towel, people of his claas beiog no longer compelled thai to conceal their faces. Upon his left side he carries a hago bat, light basket, and in his right hand two long bamboo rods, used lika tongs. lie seldom speaks to any one, goes about his work in a systematic manner, and is to Tokio what the ragpicker is to New York, though, unlike his foreign brother, be generally confines himself to the col lection of waste paper, not a scrap of which eaapft* his ferret-like eyes. Having formerly belonged k* the de spised Eta class be ia very humble, and bows to all the well-dressed person* be encounters. As he silently moves along the street he carefully turns over every little pile of rubbish with his slicks, and, picking out the piece* of paper, jerks them into bis capacious receptacle. It is wonderful how doiteroudy be handles the instruments, one moment using tbem to tear *. duuering fupssnl of placard froru a fence, and the next inserting mem between the bars of a window and filching a book carelessly left in night by its owner. He ia n wary, thievish old rascal, and many a boy's kite and servant-girl's novel that have mysteriously disappeared from the house have found their way into hia basket. In addition to having a I tad reputation for appropriating anything in the shape of paper, h is said to be a dogstealer. , *