II ; if , ft Jctcl.o.cmtern. In the pleasant cornfield. All the su:nmer through, Such a funny playmate Waited long for von. Smiely housed and hidden Where the jay, green leaved, Bending close together, Made his rustling eaves. When the corn wns gathered. When the flowers were dead, From the lonely hillside Peered hid golden head. Now at last behold him, With hia open face, Bmfling broad and cheesy In the dnrkest place. Hear him forth in triumph Through the autumn light. Jolly jack-o'-lantern With his eves so bright. Cemic little fellow. Come to make yon fun, When in gray November Summer sports are iee. HANKSGIVING IN OLD NEW YORK BY MARGARET Loi:,s ot-fore New York bore its English name it was worthily christ ened New Amsterdam by the brave Dutch colonists who were its earliest settlers. In 1613, the vast cosmo politan city now known as Greater New York had for its nucleus four little houses, occupied by people whose business it was to collect beav er and otter skins and sell them to traders from Holland, whose ships had dared the wide ocean in search of profitable ventures. At that period Holland led the world in commerce and the Dutch, then as now, were dis tinguished for shrewdness, sagacity, enterprise and an unconquerable love of liberty. The word "Dutch" signi fies folk or people, and contains, strangely enough, a prophecy ot the cosmopolitan character of the town that in 1614 was named New Amster dam. In 1644 New Amsterdam was taken by the English and re-named New York. Archbishop Fenelon said long ago of New York: "When one beholds this city, one is inclined to believe that it is not the city of a particular people, but the common city of all the peoples of the world, and the centre of their commerce." New York itself is a collection of cities, as it were, merged into one, under a single government. It is cos mopolitan, and the stamp of its char acter was given it away back in the early days of New Amsterdam. A stone's throw from those residential parts of the city that are the chosen abodes of wealth and fashion wo find crowded quarters where the older in . habitants speak foreign tongues, and the children only are familiar enough with English to use it in preference to the language of their parents. There are French Swedish, Danish, Finnish, Italian, German and Hunga rian quarters in the great city of New York, and more and more in recent years has it become sought by an im mense and steadily increasing rein forcement of Hebrews, who find here a refuge from the persecutions of centuries, and a place where their peculiar commercial genius may find room for expansion. The beneficent agency of the public schools, more than any other, brings to bear upon the children of the foreign population the spirit of American liberty and trains them In the elements of good citizenship and in ardent love for the flag of the republic. One is sometimes tempted to won der what Father Knickerbocker would think, could he visit to-day the city or Peter Stuyvesant. . Fancy the ghosts of the people in our pieture trying to find the localities with which they were once familiar. Few- traces linger in the New York of the twentieth century of New Amsterdam In the seventeenth. The hurrying, bustling crowds, the hurling forward of the motor cars like the rush of me teors fiercely projected through space, the demoniac clang of electrie cars. , the never-ceasing ebb and flow of 'pe destrians, and more than all else, the towering structures twelve, fourteen, Tomato Soup. Roast Turkey. Cranberry Sauce. Mashed Potatoes. Boiled Onions. Baked Sweet Potatoes. Celery Salad. Cheese Wafeta. Pumpkin 1. CoffMr Ml Km- E SANCSTER sixteen, twenty stories high and more, would amaze any visitant who left the earth when New Amsterdam was a little trading village. Imagine such a ghost In tha neigh borhood of the Flatiron Building. It might feel more at homo on the Bat tery, but Broadway, through Its en- OLD-TIME MINSTRELS IN tire lenstl', would prove a bewilder ing specc:3. What would a matron or maiden of the leisurely ways and generous hospitality of that quaint period think of modern apartment buildings, rich beyond compare in their appointments, but often stinted for air and sunlight, where families live In successive layers of brick and stone, like the cells in a vast hive, and where a cuest chamber or any provision for entertaining friends has become traditional? Maiden Lane was once the favorite haunt ot young people, and many a troth-plight was changed there. The Bowery was a place of gardens and farmsteads. The most rapid growth of the city, how ever, and Its almost miraculous changes, hare taken place in the last 100 years.' Instead ot bridges span ning the East River, a century ago people crossed in row boats, and as tor tunnels beneath the rivers and underground railways they were not thought ot In the wildest dreams of those who lived in New York so late as 1S07. Certain characteristics bestowed upon the town by the Dutch are still Ineffaceable. The city is fearless, friendly an! far-sighted. It plans al ways for the future. It still keeps Thanksgiving, Christmas and the New Year very much as those days were kept by the fathers and founders. In the pietnre, one sees minstrels going from door to door, singing to the praise of Almighty God, while their friends step over the threshold to Join the song and give them a hearty welcome. Perhaps we may call the little processions ot children dressing in queer eottumes and gaily masque rading, processions we are sure to see in new York at Thanksgiving, tha blstorto seqnenee of th. prettier cus tom of leaf age. -Thaaksftrtnc, wherever It hat been kept in America from the time of Its introduction by devout New England era, has been not only an occasion when we recognize what we owe to Almighty God, but as well a time of good cheer and abounding hospital ity. Kinsfolk hasten from far and near that they may sit together at the family bonrd on Thanksgiving Day. Parents and "children, grandparents, uncles, aunts and cousins and mem- Itrlnglng Home a Fine Thanksgiving Turkey, litf "f.' A. 1 1 fi f -T '8 ivri Will 0. llelwig, Ohio, m Leslie's Weekly. bers of the clan to the remotest de gree unite In the celebration of this peculiarity American festival. Father Knickerbocker again, and any of the Immediate circle of the Pilgrim Fath ers, would be horrified beyond meas ure could they observe the absence from church on Thanksgiving Day of younger people who have seized upon the holiday as especially appropriate to outdoor games. College football interferes not a little with the mid day dinner once universal. Notwith standing this, which we may hopo is transitional, our churches are open and soodly congregations assemble NEW AMSTERDAM. to listen to patriotic addresses from the lips of eloquent clergymen, and to sing with heartiest devotion, "My County, 'TIs of Thee." House par ties fly from the city td the country to spend Thanksgiving, but they sel dom lose the distinction of belonging primarily to kjth and kin. The life of the Dutch in Manhat tan was full of homely Joy. Domes tic fidelity was the rule and there was a great deal of wholesome hilarity around the fireside. The ladies were fond of rich dress and wore it on state occasions, as did their good men. Mrs. Amelia E. Earr, In her beautiful story, "The Bow of Orange Ribbon," h,-iS Tainted a realistic pic ture of social life In old Now York. The book is of perennial attractive ness. In this year of grace shall we not find that the list of mercies sent- to us straight from, God Is by no means short! We thank God for health and strength, for honest work and honest wages, tor free schools and open churches, for good government, tor the love-of kindred, for the smile on the faee of the mother and the clinging hands of the little child. Alike for the son who reaehes his manhood and the baby who laughs iij the cradle we offer thanks to our Father In Heaven. When the barn and brve are safe, when flocks are in the fold. When far and near the burdened fields have bowed 'neath harvest's gold, When clusters rich have drooped from manv a blushing vine. And genial orchards, wide and fair, have owdpi me toucn nivine, , Then up from grateful hearts let joyful nraise arise To Him who gives the waitiig earth the blessing ot the skies. The Christian Herald. Central Park, New Yoift, Is to be lighted by eleetrielty. Tl will take 14 arc lamps to light the park. Hard Luck. Turk (gasping) "Well, to think after training and starving for six weeks and escaping the ax, a party of Thanksgiving Joy-riders should hand it to me!" (Expires.) Judge. Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving Day is welcomed as a social and religious festival. So thoroughly la It pervaded with tho old New England spirit, love of home and the need of rellgiouB worship that it does not loso its own peculiar distinc tion. Each year our blessings broaden and deepen, but on Tlianksglvlng Day we do well to compare them with the days of our forefathers. To them their mercies were abundant, and they rendered their grateful thnnks to the Lord of life. It seemed go much to have one day of comfort, and oven .luxury, after the kindly old earth had done her best and the precious harvests had been gathered in. The Pilgrim said, "God bo praised," at every step, and he kept an open hearth and a generous heart for a less fortunate neighbor. If one of those bleak country towns could have cnught a glimpse of lighted Btreets and well-stocked libraries, of dainty home fabrics stitched on pol ished machines, of grain cut and gath ered without hand labor and of whis pered messages of kindness to friends a hundred miles away tho vision would have been as bewildering as a sight of the Eternal City was to St. John at Patmos, and the electrls cars would have seemed to them like the chariots of fire In which Elijah as cended to heaven. What Incredible distance between their holiday and ours! Their grati tudo for blessings received was main ly expressed In an ascetic way, out sldo ot the home in the "meeting house." Only a vestige of that upward-looking thankfulness remains among tho moderns. Is l because we have thought to enshrine religion In the home or tried to Instead of keeping It apart In some mqro formal ly consecrated place? Partly so, but tho prevailing quality of present-day religious feeling is more than ever a love-quality and a heart-sympathy, and in this we have been gainers, whatever of loss there has been in other respects. Deny it as many a descendant of Pilgrim or Puritan may, our November holiday is no longer tho Thanksgiving Day of old. Transformed by tho latter-day re ligion of humanity, which makes tho most of hearty, kindly fellowship and sympathy, tho festival Is now a time for tho warming of hearts rather than tho giving of thanks, and doubtless it is all approved by the Divine Giver. To-morrow is n day for gladness, and to turn the searchlight even upon sorrow and suffering for what allevia tion It may reveal. The hard times of life are so Bharp nnd severe, their experience Is so vivid that tho short nets cf thdlr duration, as compared with length of days, is apt to bo over looked. Tho hurricane and tho storm blot out tho memory of the long, peaceful days when the outline of tho hills stood soft and purple in the dis tance. The past season may bo recalled as peculiarly Interesting on account of the weather. Each month has brought a surprise. August and Sep tember apparently changed places, each offering to the other the best it had to give. The result was a com bination of which our climate may well be proud. The lato summer and fall came as near perfection for hu man enjoyment as New England could glvo. Tho Indian summer, hazy and mellow, was prolonged beyond its usual stay, and the lato flowers have persisted in their right to blossom. Small Souls Ungrateful. There is nothing narrow or nig gardly about the thankful heart. In any environment the broad, deep, lov ing, magnanimous nature will find abundant reasons for thanksgiving. Those who are most thankful often seem to ordinary observers unreason ably so, they have so many burdens and crosses to bear and suffer so many afflictions. To the heart that believes and loves gratitude is as natural as song to the bird or frag rance to the rose. La Salle A. May nard. Give Thanks in Everything. Am I to thank God for everything? Am I to thank Him for boreavement, for pain, for poverty, for toil? . . . Be still, my soul; thou hast misread the message. It is not to give thanks for everything, but to give thanks ia everything. Rev. George Matheson. New Bteel orders over the last four months have been coming in at a rate that would warrant the statement that a temporary lull in business was near at hand. It would be Impossi ble for steel companies tot continue booking business at the rate reported in September and October for any great length of time. The belief pre vailed thac buying would show consid erable reaction by tho first of the cur rent month, but Instead the demand has developed record-breaking propor tions. Ail the mills are conKosted and would welcome a slackening up In de mand In order to aiiow them to catch up with deliveries. No better proot of the extraordinary activity of ttie steel industry could be had than in the dully average orders of the steel corporation for the first three weeks of the current month. Ac cording to a high authority, orders have been averaging close to 70,000 tons a day, which Is at the rato of 21,000,000 tons a year, not Including Sundays. Should the steel corporation continue to book business at this rate for tho next six months and operate full capacity, it would have a full year's business on its books at the end of that period. This would mean congestion in the worst form possible and throw tho entire Industry Into a state of contusion. It is because of this that the steel companies have ex ercised such extreme caution In ac cepting orders for steel. No specula tive business will bo countenanced, and orders aro Immedltoly cancelled when not specified against on the dates agreed upon. Many of the Bteel companies are now asking advnuces of $1 to 4 a ton on steel calling for delivery in the first half of next year. As a re sult, it will not be many weeks before prices for material nre close to what they were in 1907 unlesis some con certed action is tHken to check the advance. So far the large companies have maintained prices at what con sumers regard as a reasonable level. The former realize that exorbitant prices mean demoralization In the end, and it is because of this that they aro not taking advantage of the heavy demand for material by succes sive advances In quotations. Tho steel corporation today has an unfilled business on its books close to 5,500,000 tons, or approximately 3, O00.U00 tons below tho hljh level reached in tho latter part of 19'iti. These 6.000,000 tons, however, ure more substantial than the 8,600,000 tons reported three years an. It will be remembered .nat tho corporation, as weil as other steel companies, were then not so particular as to the char acter of tho business booked as they are today. As ono steel manufacturer put it, nearly all the business now on tho books of the steel companies will be spociiled against, whereas in 1900 CO per cent of the unfilled business was of the doubtful class. The railroad3 are regarded as . the greatest consumers of steel. Many trade ' authorities estimate that tho railroads consumo close to 40 per cent of all the steel produced in tha United States. For tho past several weeks the railroads have been the heaviest buyers of steel and equipment, and orders from this source are expected to reach large proportions before the end of the year. Based upon actual orders atd inquiries, the equipment companitd aro assured activity for tho next twelve months. This will also mean activity for the blast furnace and steal mills. There are no Indications of a falling off in .the reduction of finished steel for six months. New business could fall oft 75 per cent and the steel com panies would have all they could do to execute orders calling for delivery up to the end of April. There has been a seasonable falling oft in the demand for certain lines of finished steel, but this has been more than oft set by the demands from the railroads and equipment companies. The earnings of tho steel companies next year will establish new high rec ords in the event of a continuation of present activity. Ono steel manu facturer estimates that the combined net earnings of the blast furnace and steel and allied mills of this country next year will run in excess of 'J00, 000,000. Washington, Pa., county court in a final decision by agree ment involving the use of safety ap pliances in bituminous coal mines, settled a question of great importance to doal operators and miners. The case grew out of a report made by Mine Inspectors Pratt, Adams, Ross and Phillips, following an examina tion ot the Manifold mlnea of the Youghlogheny and Ohio Coal Com pany, two miles north of Washington. The decision is to the effect that all parts of the mine be worked with locked safety lamps, except those por tions which are unused and the work ed out and isolated portions and ex cept in main haulage passageways which are to be determined by the mine Inspectors and company. The safest known explosive recommended by the state mining departniont shall be used. Similar conditions exist 'In a major ity of the mines in the Pittsburg dis trict and similar "agreements In most cases will be made. When steamers first came into use very little attention was bestowed upon the consumption of fuel. It was not until the Cunard steamers were started crossing tho Atlantic In 1S40 that reliable records of fuel consumption began to be kept systematically. "Increasing industrial activity, better demand for coal and better prices sure to follow, will warrant the de mand on the part of the miners at the next Joint convention for better working conditions and possibly bet I ter wage rates." National President Thomas L, Lewi of the United Mine Workers mad this statement Monday while in Pitti burg en route to Toronto, Can., as delegate to the annual convention ( the American Federation of Labor. Asked as to what the probable n vance in wage rates would be tl mine workers' leader said it was ti far Into the future to safely predl the changes to be asked in workin conditions. 'Things may change before the con ventlon is held; they may Improve and may not, but In any event the national body will adopt a policy mat will give ample protection to the min ers and their families and secure the best possible concessions from the op erators," he said. "The United Mine Workers as a body has grown In membership and in power, through the value of experiences of the past." The fact that the dominant faction In the Pittsburg district miners' or ganization has been one of the more active opponents to the re-election of President Lewis made his statement concerning his own candidacy the more interesting. 'I'm a candidate for re-election, all right," he said, "and I guess you can see by my appearance that I am not worrying much as to the result. Nom inations in 'the locals all over the country closed lr.st Friday and the in dications are most satisfactory. In fact, I personally believe it Is only a question of majority that will be set tled when the count begins. However, I am ready and willing to defer to the judgment of the men at work in the mines to determine this issue They will do this December 14. In the" meantime I shall consider the many matters thut are to be present ed to the joint convention of the op erators and miners and to prepare to meet the operators between the con vention In January and the expiration of the biennial scale. April 1." At Cleveland, O.. on Nov. 8, a con test over the wage scale between coal miners and operators In the Pittsburg bituminous district is forecasted by statements issued tonight by Presi dent F. M. Osborn of tho Pittsburg Vein Coal Operators' Association, and by President T. L. Lewis of the Unit ed Mine Workers of America. Mr. ORborn announced here tonight that conditions will possibly demand, a decrease in wages at the expiration of tho present contracts in the spring. This, following tho earlier statement of President Lewis In Pittsburg that the miners will nslc for an increase, indicates that the lines are already being drawn for another contest be tween tho employers and employes. "It will not bo possible under pres ent conditions for the operators to consent to an increase in the wage scale," said Mr. Osborn. "Operating expense must bo reduced Instead of Increased. Although there is a great er demand for coal, the prices are lower and there la a shortage of -cars, which has its deterrent effect on bus iness. It may be found necessary to reduce the scale." It is announced that the H. C. Frlck Coke Company, fuel end of the United States Steel Corporation, will grant an advance of more than 15V6 per cent on present wages for the coming year. Tho advance, a restor ation of the wage scale of 1907, tne highest in history, will be announced as a Christmas gift to 25,000 em ployes, with the hope that 5,000 emp ty places may be fined at better wages. An increase of sixteen cents on the present estimate production cost of $1.04 per ton of coke, is the arrange ment to bo submitted. The rapid in crease in the price of coke has made this Increase In wages possible. The scarcity of labor has made it imper ative that the corporation bring its working force up to the standard of 1907, when 50,000 men were employed all the time. The H. C. Frick Coke Company is admittedly five thousand men short of its requirement, to get out the coke demanded by the corporation mills for next year. The wage increase, it la hoped, will draw to the coke region five thousand more good men. A great percentage of the foreign element which left the coke regions for Europe at the opening of the panic of 1907, has not returned. Near ly all have returned to America, but have gone into the west. Industrial centers there have offered them in ducements better than the coke mak ers and they have gotten the men. Thla Is why the Frlck company finds it imperative to offer additional in ducements to workmen to come to the region and assist In getting out the coke required. A feature of this ease is that the independent concerns will be forced to follow the lead of the Frlck con cern. SPOKANE, Wash., Nov. C More than 150 members of the Industrial Workers of the World were arrested here on charges of disturbing' the peace by speaking In the streets with out police permission. Riots appear ed to be imminent during the day but tonight leaders announced there would be no night street gatherings because ot the danger of serious disorder. Two companies of the National guard and the fire department are held In readiness to assist the police If necessary. Among the leaders ar rested is James Wilson, editor of the Industrial Workers' paper. Lord Strathcona, Canadian high commissioner in London, has given halt a million dollars to McGlll unl verstty.