ho — Democrats T— — Bellefonte, Pa., November 20, 1931. THANKSGIVIN® JIM. He always dodged ‘round in an old, rag- ged coat, With a tattered blue his throat. His dusty old cart used to rattle and comforter tied on bang As he yelied through the village, *‘Gid dap!” and ‘Go ‘lang!" You'd think from his looks that wa'nt wuth a cent— Was poorer than Pooduc, to judge how he went. But back in the country don't reckon on style To give ye a notion of any one's pile. When he died and they figgered his pus’'nal estate, was mighty well fixed—was old “Squealin’ Jim Waite.” But say, I'd advise ye to sorter look out How ye say “'Squealin® Jim’ when the's widders about, he He They're likely to light on ye, hot tar and pitch, And give ye some points as to what, where and which; For if ever a critter is reckoned a saint By the widders ‘round here, I'll be ding- ed if he hain't, For please understand that the widders call him, Sheddin' tears while they're saying it— “Thanksgivin’' Jim." He was little. Why, Wa'nt skerce knee high To a garden toad. But was mighty spry! He was all of a whew; If he'd things to do "Twas a zip and a streak when Jim went through. But his voice was twice as big as him, And the boys all called him ‘‘Squealin’ Jim," He was always a-hurryin' all through lite, And said there wa'n’'t time for to hunt up a wife. So he kept bache's hall and he worked like a dog Jest whooped right along at a trottin’ horse jog. There's a yarn that the fellers that knew him will tell If they want to set Jim him out well. He was bound for the city on bus'ness one day And, whoosh! scooted down pot, hooray! The depot man says: Mister Waite, For the train to the city is ten minutes late.” Off flew Squealin’ Jim with his grip, on out—and set to the de- “Hain't no rush, the run And away down the track went he, hoofin’ like fun. When he tore out of sight, couldn't see him for dust, And he squealed: ‘Train be jiggered. I'll get there, now, fust!'-— So nervous and active he jest wait When they told him little mite late. Now that was Jim! He was stubbed and slim, But it took a spry critter to stay up with him, His height when he'd rise Made you laugh. But his eyes Let ye know that his soul wasn't much undersize. And some old widders we had in town Insisted, reg'lar, he wore a crown. couldn't the train was =a As he whoopity-larruped on along his way There were people who'd turn up their noses and say That Squealin’ Jim Waite wasn't right in his head; He was ‘cranky as blazes," growlers said I can well understand that the things he would do Seemed looney as time to that stingy old crew. For a fact, there was no one jest him in town; He was 'most always actin’ the part of a clown, He would say funny things in his queer, squealin’ style And he talked so you'd hear him for more than a mile. But every Thanksgivin’ would start And clatter through town in his rattlin’ old cart. And what do ye s'pose? whang down the street, Yank up at each widder's; the old like time Waite he He would from under the seat Would haul out a turkey or yaller leg- ged chick And holler: ‘“‘Here, mother, h'ist out with ye, quick!” Then he'd toss down a bouncer right in- to her lap And bolt off like fury with there! Gid dap!” Didn't wait for no thanks—couldn‘t ‘em on him! Couldn't catch him to thank him—old Thanksgivin' Jim. ‘Twas a queer idee ‘Round town that he Was off'n his balance, and crazy's could be. They'd set and chaw And stew and jaw And projick on what he did it for. But probly in Heaven old Squealin’ Jim Found lots of crazy folks jest like him. —By Holman F. Day. —— Sp— A ————— HANNAH JANE'S THANKSGIVING “Come out, Cherry. Don't you want to come out?” Hannah Jane fastened the door of the canary's cage open with a twist- ed hairpin, and the bird spread its beak at her, uttering the fiercest “G'lang, work scolding of which her little throat was capable. She withdrew a pace, and out he flew, perching on a picture frame, from which inaccessible vantage he continued his bully challenge. “The ingratitude of ycur sex!” said Hannah, laughing in a repress- strode past her door Hannah Jane again as if afraid someone would jifted her little shoulders and listen. | dressmaker, ed way, overhear her. There was no danger. The walls of the building were thick. Hannah Jane's room was her castle, invaded only by the customers whose old gowns she made over. Hannah Jane's was a humble line ‘of dressmaking, but none the less ‘necessary. She liked to go out by the day and sit at a good home table for her meals; but she had learned how it heightened ularity to be willing to eet tom jobs of sewing at her room, and so it was that her meals were nearly all taken from the little gas stove, which heated her pressing-iron, and were shared only by the belligerent canary, who considered her his vassal. There was some good points in the arrangement, because it gave Han- nah Jane opportunity to rest oc- casionally when she was tired, and to read a little poetry. She was a bit of a philosopher. If she sometimes felt inclined to realize that Cherry was a rather slender dependence as sole compan- jon and care taker for a maiden lady who was getting on, she limit- ed herself to humorous literature. It was only in her brightest mo- ments that she indulged in the lux- ury of melancholy; and how aston- ished Hannah Jane's customers would have been to suspect that she read poetry at all! ‘Laugh and the worid laughs with you, Weep and you weep alone.’ were the lines she often quoted to the canary, feeling quite worldly wise and cynical as she did so, and naively unconscious of the loneliness even of her laughter. A popular writer has said of one class of women that if they live to be eighty they still die young. Of this class was Hannah Jane. The women who received her pa- tient suggestions for renovating their old clothes, called her good na- tured, prim little thing, and rec- ommended her as reasonable. She had lines in her forehead and silver threads in her crimpled front hair, and wore spectacles while she sewed, and to the hurried women whom she fitted she was merely a convenient machine; but Cherry knew that she was still a girl who giggled at him, and who, when the moon was clear could scarcely stay in her bed, but sat long by the win-| laudatory Li dow murmuring rhymes of the serene Queen of Heaven and seeing such visions and dreaming such dreams as come to the pure in heart. The janitress of the building knew her as well as anybody in the great city, for Hannah Jane had more than once lent her a helping hand, and at one time when the little seamstress fell ill, and the rainy day fund had to be encroached up- on for rent, Mrs. Hogan had come, like a good Samaritan, to her aid. One morning Hannah Jane met the janitress in the hall. “It's yerself I was wishin’ fer,” said Mrs. Hogan with a groan. “I'm full o' rheumatiz this mornin’ and two o' the roomer’s bed left to do— Mr. Jenks and Mr. Wyman. Would ye have time to help out a poor “Just as lieve as not” said Han- nah Jane, briskly. “You go right and keep warm.” Mrs. Hogan departed, uttering blessings, and the seamstress flitted down the corridor and entered one of the rooms indicated. There she whisked the bed clothes about to the accompaniment of nimble consideration as to whether the gray braid she had bought to bind a customer's skirt was a good enough match. Then, after a hasty dusting, she repaired to the next room. Its character was very different from the last. Hannah Jane suspended judgment on the gray braid and ex- amined the photographs of men and girls standing about.. She observed a pipe on the table, a smoking jacket flung over a chair. A faint odor of tobacco, which the air from the open window had not entirely banished, smote upon her senses not unpleasantly. A hasti- ly opened laundry bundle lay on a chair. Hannah Jane knew by sight and hearing the young man who owned those starched linens and the hose that had fallen to the floor. She also recognized his long, firm step as it passed her door, and the easy, deep heaviness of Wyman's voice had often stirred her admiration. She picked up his socks now with some like shyness, and mechan- ically turning them saw the effect of the vigorous strides she so ad- mired. Hurriedly she examined all the (socks in the bundle. Not one but had its little or great ventilating Y' gaps. The sight was sufficient to stir the inhibited tenderness of the woman heart. “Poor fellow!" she murmured. Then a positively exciting inspira- tion assailed her. Supposing she were to mend these socks and re- turn them before their owner came ‘home. It was too bad. He would never know. Hannah Jane's hands moved deft- ly while she finished the work of the room and her cheeks burned guilti- ly as she stole back to her apart- ment bearing an unaccustomed bur- ‘den. “A. Wyman” was written on a tape and sewed to each sock. An envelope on the table was addressed to Allen Wyman. “A nice name. cided Hannah Jane. This was a red letter day to the little dressmaker. No school girl {could have flushed more eagerly than she over her bit of surrepti- | tious benevolence. She even turned her back to | Cherry's cage as she drew the first sock over her hand, and when the bird flew to her shoulder she gavea 'little cry and tried to hide her work. | “Don’t you tell!” she exclaimed. | That night when the long legs It suits him,” de- led, with a warm consciousness till | Wyman's door slammed. | “What will he say?” she asked | herself, thinking of the carefully re- placed hose. Hannah Jane was as ignorant as the canary of young men's ways, or she would have known how long it takes for com- forts to stir their curiosity. After this the in day of the week to the dressmaker was She an to feel a proprietorship in the flexible whistle with which a Wyman sped his own march throug the hall night and morning. Her familiarity with his clothing increased and spread. There were no more buttons missing, or rips widening, or holes left unpatched in the garments of the lucky possessor of that musical voice and physique, who litle dreamed that the rose color of one woman's life con- sisted in ministering invisibly to his needs. Hannah Jane in these days often smiled through her spectacles at her sewing, and her customers, some of them, were moved to marvel at the cheer of the lonely dressmaker. "jer day dreams took one more tangible shape. “What a wonder- ful thing it would be to have a lov- er like Allen!” This thought, often entertained, by imperceptible degrees captured Han- nah Jane's fancy, until hour after hour would pass in a delicious make believe, at first ridiculed gently by the dreamer, but at last becoming a habit of thought as precious as opium to the victim. She began to bid her fancied lover goodbye as he passed in the morn- ing, with a tenderness that should have insured his good fortunes through the day. Boldly telling Mrs. Hogan that she was in charge of Mr. Wyman’'s mending she obtained access to the room, which she kept with an ex- quisite neatness quite foreign to the ahilities of the Irishwoman. At night she welcomed him home with a devotion none the less ar- dent that she had to imagine the pausing of the footfall at her door, and the word of tender greeting that met her when in imagination she opened it. She ceased to be shy in handling the young man's belongings, for were they not in a way part hers well? She mourned lovingly over an occasional spot of blood on 'his shaving paper, and in short in- ‘dulged in an intoxication of devotion to her ideal. A customer arriving one morning with a pressing bit of work, was astonished at Hannah Jane's firm refusal to promise it at once. “You've never been unaccommo- dating before,” ejaculated the irate woman. “I'm sure there's nobody you ought to favor more than me. You just said a minute ago you hadn't much work on hand.” “I can't do it right off,” repeated Hannah Jane, gently, looking far be- yond the speaker. She knew just what clothing would come home from the laundry, and just what had to be done to it. “Very well, then, I'll never trouble you again!" ejaculated the other, and flounced away. The dressmaker had lost a cus- tomer. She turned to the canary. “Do you think he'll bring me a rose to-night, Cherry-—or some pinks? I like pinks,” she whisper- Hannah Jane was not crazy. She was only having her first love af- fair, and like measles it goes hard with the mature. Sometimes she met W: in the hall. What a happy face he had, and how the light shone in his eyes as he gave a passing greeting to the little woman, whose timid yet search- ing glances amused him. “It's a fortune Mister Wyman's after gettin',” said Mrs. Hogan to the dressmaker one day. “Sure he often does be givin’ me money of jute and sayin’ I'm the dandy jani- ress.” The color that swept under Han. nah Jane's skin would once have made it peachy. Familiarity with her happy new duties rendered the little woman ‘bold and at last careless. Oneday she had just laid some mended cloth- ing into Wyman's drawer and was packing it into place when a sound startled her. She turned, and the sight that met her took all the strength from her limbs. It was Wyman himself, standing speechless in the doorway, his lips apart. Hannah Jane lost her head completely. “You're too early!” she stammer- “I'm a litle early. What"— Wy- man smiled—"what can I do for ou!" “Your mending—I've just finished —I was putting it Way.L “What!” Wyman looked pleased and enlightened as he advanced to- ward her. “And you are the Brownie who has haunted my den ‘lately? And I thought it was Mrs. Hogan!” He uttered a laugh’ that 'ravished Hannah Jane's ears. “I knew you sewed. 1 saw your sign. Why, you have made a re- spectable being of me!” The young man continued to gaze at her in | puzzled fashion. “But the mischief of it is, Mrs. Hogan has reaped | ‘what you sewed. Ha, ha! That's | | pretty good, itsn't it? Why didn't | you tell me what you were doing? You want to sue Mrs. Hogan right off.” { “Leave that tome,” returned Han- ‘nah Jane, blushing and trembling. | She had edged little by little to- | ‘ward the door, her eyes held by his, | land now she broke away in a little | trot for her room, where only the | canary knows what palpitating con- | fidences he received. | “Brownie! What a pretty idea!" thought Hannah Jane. | | The next day she again met Wy- | /man in the hall at an unaccustomed hour. His arms were full of bundles. | | “Here's the Brownie lady | i !"” he cried cheerily, while the as she paused, wonder- | |ed if any other woman ever had so | many pleasant things happen to her. | “Here are some clothes that won't | (require mending for a while,” he | ‘ went on, indicating his parcels; “but I tell you I shall remember you for many a long day. I'm glad I didn’t go away without knowing who was really my benefactress.” “Go—go away!” “Yes.” The young fellow flushed with his happiness. “I'm going to be married.” upon her. The dressmaker’'s lips contracted and moved mutely. “Yes; tomorrow at high noon ‘ll be rid of me.” “By Jove, that little woman must need the money!" was the thought Hannah Jane's face left with him as he moved on to his room, suddenly sobered. Cherry stirred uneasily on his perch that night, and even trilled a soft and reproachful serenade to re- mind his mistress of her inconsider- ateness. It was midnight, yet both gas jets were burning brightly, and Hannah Jane still sat, a book upside down in her lap, and an odd set smile on her lips. What an empty, bare room it was! What an empty, gray day-—week— month—year--no, no-—years await- ed her. She dared not go to sleep and wake up anew to the realization. Such a dead, dead weight of monot- onous oppression settled upon her. “0, Cherry, don't sing!" she moan- ed, unobservant of the book that fell to the floor as she rose and moved to the cage. “ ‘How can ye sing, ye little birds, When I'm so wan and fu’ o' cares?” How did we use to get on—you and I—birdie? We did very well,” she said, softly. “It's dreadful to be an old fool, because they're the worst kind, birdie.” The canary, excited and daring, flew straight through the open door to her neck and pecked at it cross- ly. She closed her hand on his lit- tle body and held him close, as she walked softly up and down the room. “It's one o' the girls in those pret- ty low necked photographs,” she murmured, and the next time she reached the bureau she stopped and resolutely scanned her haggard face, the thin hair her restless hands had ruffled, and her spare figure. “Oh, oh!" she moaned, meeting her piteous eyes. The silky mite she was clinging to in the agony of her humiliation writhed indignantly. She clasped her hands over her face and the canary whirred back to his cage as to an ark of safety. “If I only knew how my soul looks!” she sobbed softly, her thin shoulders convulsed. “I might not feel so dreadfully ashamed!” The following day was Wednes- day. There was a card on Hannah Jane's door which read, Back Thurs. ay- She heard Wyman's gay voice de- ploring to Mrs. Hogan the fact that he could not bid his new friend good bye, and soon afterward saw a let- ter stealing under her door. The long step and the gay whistle had died away before she picked up the envelope. It containd a scrib- bled word of farewell and a sum of money. Still she sat there, deaf to the noises in the street, deaf to the noises in the building, to all save the voices that spoke in her inner ear, until toward evening thirst drove her from her room. She met Mrs. Hogan in the hall. The Irishwoman threw up her hands, evidently in wild excitement. “An’ ain't it a dreadful thing, and I can't take care of him. I loike Mis- thur Wyman, but ye know my rheu- matiz and—" “What has happened? Mr. Wyman?” Hannah Jane, weak with fasting, leaned against the wall. “Sick in his room, and the doctor lavin' him, and I've just told him—" Here a gray haired man came to- ward the stairway. “Are you the doctor?" cried Han- nah Jane, turning. “What has hap- pened to Mr. Wyman? I live here. What caa I do?” The doctor bent his shaggy eye- brows in quick scrutiny. “Several things,” he answered. “Come into my room.” Hannah Jane threw open her door, and Mrs. Hogan limped away murmuring. “The evening papers are full of it. Haven't you seen the head lines?" asked the doctor. “Nothing.” “The poor fellow’'s bride dropped dead just as she reached the altar. Forgive me. Take this chair. I didn't know you had a personal in- terest. There now—I'm afraid I've unfitted you to help me.” “Mr. Wyman is stunned by the shock!" said Hannah Jane, faintly. “I'm not sure of his condition yet. The whole situation is strange. As you may know, Miss Frost was the poor relation of rich people anxious to marry her off, and they had no interest in Wyman, save as a means to an end. I know them well. The girl had heart trouble. The end came right there. No one seemed to know what became of Wyman after the catastrophe. He was found in the street and brought here Where is and there was delay in getting me. He may have had a fall. At any rate, he is in a stupor, and if you would stay with him, until I can get a nurse over here—" “Don't send any nurse! No one must take care of him but me!” cried Hannah Jane. The doctor gazed, surprised, at her pale little face. “Very well, then,” he returned af- ter a moment's hesitation. “By tomorrow, unless he reacts well from his conditon I will try to get him into a hospital.” “Never!” exclaimed the other. “Ah! You are a relative?” “No—not exactly. A-—connection by—by—"" The doctor was too busy to care why the eager, agitated woman was willing to help him. enough, and Hannah Jane accom- panied him to the dismantled room, where the strapped trunk of the bridegroom still stood, while its owner, unconscious of the subversion He kept radiant eyes The fact was | of his world, lay in what proved to be the first stage of an attack of brain fever. But it was not in this room that Wyman first came back from the reaim of his fantasies. He lay ina where the sunbeams stole through the shade and birds flitted about. “Still dreams, dreams” he thought; then some one coughed. It was a woman whom he now first noticed. She was sitting across the room, with a cap on her head and an apron over her dress. With a pang nev- er in after years wholly forgotten, w realized that she was a he had been ill. The nurse's work-worn hands pressed convulsively together, for all at once there came weak-long drawn sobs from the bed. For a while she let him weep, then she drew near and bent over him in the shadow, her own eyes raining. “The doctor will be here soon. Try to rest now, Mr. Wyman.” “Torturers—torturers—to bring me back to life! O Amy—and I might have been with you!" Hannah Jane had grown familiar with the name ere this. “Is there anybody-—your own peo- ple—you'd like to have sent for! We couldn't find any address. “Nobody. I have nobody. Nei- ther had she. But we had each oth- er.” “Poor boy!" Hannah Jane took his hand in both of hers and they wept h:art-brokenly together; and in upon this unprofessional weakness of the hitherto wise nurse walked the doc- tor. “Here, here, my lady!” he exclaimed. “He knows everything, doctor!" lad—and my “And is that reason enough for ‘you not to know anything?” de- manded the doctor briskly. He leaned over his patient. “I understand, my boy; but we can't die just when we'd like to, and you have some blessings yet. A little of the stimulant, please. You want to get well if only to thank your nurse here. Such devotions as hers isn't to be bought.” It's only women who can make love take the place of sleep and muscle.” Upon this Wyman looked long at Hannah Jane as she bent to him with a glass. “It's the Brownie lady!” in feeble astonishment. It was the doctor's turn to stare. Here was a puzzling situation. In another week Wyman sat up for the first time. No one was more rejoiced than Cherry, who had almost resigned himself to an eter- nal night, and who welcomed the partial lifting of the shadows with alternate hymns of rejoicing and animated scoldings for past hard- ships. He had lightened weary hours for the patient, with whom he was al- ways on terms of armed neutrality, and now he perched on the back of Wyman's easy-chair and sociably pulled his hair. “The bells are ringing,” said the sick man, watching Hannah Jane as she moved about the room. “Is it Sunday ?" “No, it's Thanksgiving Day.” “Oh, Thanksgiving Day.” Wyman's hollow eyes studied the carpet, now for weeks bare of shreds and clippings. “Yes, and it is for me, laddie, sure enough; the best I ever had,” said Hannah, cheerfully. She had doffed the muslin cap and was dress- ed in her best black gown. “Wait till you see the nice dinner Mrs. Ho- gan is going to bring us in a little while.” It was a good dinner, and Wy- man's mournful big eyes brightened over it, for his nurse was so happy, and Cherry so absurd in his assump- tion of the role of taster to the com- pany, as his own big frame was crying out for food with a convales- cent's appetite. When all was finally cleared away the three took naps—Wyman on the bed, Hannah Jane in the big chair, and Cherry, his feather packet stuf- fed with celery, blinking sleepily on the mantel piece. At twilight Hannah Jane put some large pieces of soft coal on the open stove, and she and her patient sat before the fire. The snuw had be- gun to blow outside. “This is cosy,” she said. She had learned to smile above a heartache. Wyman had days ago told her the story of his short, swift courtship, ending as it had in total eclipse, and his sorrow was hers. If only she could comfort him--could be some- thing more than a mere cipher in his life. Yet it never occurred to her to blame him for his self-centered de- jection, or to dwell upon the uncal- culating sacrifices she had made for him. Her eyes were fixed on the oily flames, and so she did not know that Wyman was observing her cur- ously. he said A realization of the singularity of impressing | the situation had been him today in his returning strength 'as never before. ‘“‘Brownie,”” he said at last. “It's a very, very strange thing you've done for me.” “Why? What?" Hannah Jane's face turned hot in| the firelight, for his tone was a new one. “The doctor said your loving de- votion couldn't be bought. I'll swear to that.” The dressmaker screened her face from the fire and him with one thin ‘hand, then because it trembled she | dropped it. | He went on, “You have given up your work, have lost customers | probably; at any rate weeks of | time, have overdone—" I “No, no!” | “Now,” bluntly, “would you have ' done all that for any forlorn chap? Are you an angel?” Hannah Jane cleared her throat. “I used to think you took care of my clothes and my room with an eye to the main chance. I don't | think so now.” i nurse, that he had been ill and why | “Why don't you?" The little woman was beginning to brace herself to explain in some ‘way the inexplicable. “Because you haven't any. You've done all this for some reason that I've been hunting for for days.” “Women do things without rea. son,” said Hannah Jane. “Not for such a length of time. I've hit on : ma its’ because I've been so light-headed. But I wish you'd tell me if I've struck it. Am I like somebody you were once in love with?” All the girlish soul of Hannah Jane blushed through her spare, careworn body. It would soon be over. Wyman would soon be well and gone away, and again there would be nothing in the world but customers and the roofs, the moon and the canary; but she would for- ever have the memory of the de- licious shame and relief and triumph of this moment. She met the dark, insistent eyes as Wyman bent toward her. “Yes,” she answered; ‘you have guessed it.” “Forgive me!” exclaimed the young fellow. “What can I say to you, Brownie? If I could make another guess as clever, and find out how in the world I am ever to repay you! You ought to go away and have a rest; and how will your business start up again! My em- ployers are holding on for me, but how about yours?” “I don't know, and I don't care. I've always been taken care of, Mr. Wyman." “Don't you ever call me that again. I'm Allen to you, and your Allen at that. I'll take a hand in helping Heaven to help you after Hannah Jane's eyes filled with bright tears, and her heart beat fast. “If I can just hear you step and whistle as you used to,” she said brokenly, “and if I can only see you sometimes I shall be repaid for everything.” “You have been using your sav- ings,” said Wyman, reflectively. “Well they were mine.” He drew his lips together in a thoughtful, noiseless whistle. “See here, Brownie,” he said last, gently. ‘“‘You're alone and I'm alone. Let's have a little flat, where you can be a swell modiste and I can be boarder. It will keep me from going to pieces to believe that I'm some comfort to you. Hannah Jane sat up very straight her eyes big and wistful. “You don’t mean it!” she ejacu- lated. Her movement knocked dowr the tongs, and Cherry, his luxurious siesta disturbed, circled about the room, tweet-tweeting angrily. The little woman's joy made Wy- man forget all woes of the moment The canary lit on his head. “I shall have a home as well as you, you beggar!” he exclaimed. “You won't mind if IT cry a bit, said Hannah Jane, sobbing softly “You don't know what it means— it's only my way of —of Thanksgiv- ing!"—Clara Louise Burnham. at THE TURKEY SUPPLY IS FALLING AWA) Turkeys are no longer plentiful a: they were in the days of our fore fathers. No longer can one go int the woods of Virginia and com: back with a wild turkey ready to b roasted; for this bird, on account o huge market demand and high deat! rate due to diseases, is steadily join ing the ranks of extinct species. I order to combat turkey diseases such as blackhead and limberneck the government is issuing pamphlet to the farmers carrying instruc tions as to how the birds should b reared and cared for. Accordin; to the publication, the Poultry Item: farms have been started—notably farm on Manitoulin island—wher ideal conditions for breeding turkey prevail. The turkey birth rate ha not fallen off to any great exten’ but cold-storage holdings show falling off. The southwestern part of the cour try leads in the number of turkey ‘sent to market each year. Texa takes first place Cs margin about 5 per cent. e consumptio is largest in the centers of populs tion—especially in New Englan where the holiday had its origi The North western States are ir creasing in output each year an soon promise to rival Texas. Driving the turkey to market is picturesque scene. Six or eigl 'men escort a flock of a thousan birds about ten or twelve miles day. Sometimes they are drive to dressing plants, where the owne: have them dressed and sold to cit dealers. Farmers near cities ¢ this themselves, thus saving expens Some sections of the country have day known as “Turkey Day,” which ali the growers of the neig! borhood kill and prepare their bird |The next day they take them town. Although turkey is traditional supposed to rule every Thanksgivir feast, such is not invariably tl} |case. Not all can afford so expe: |sive a luxury; and if they cou there would not be enough birds Supply the demand. Those who pocketbooks are equal to a Thank giving dinner but are not quite 1 to turkey celebrate instead wi | goose, chicken and Long Isla: duck. MARRIAGE LICENSES. | Harry J. Page and Margaret A na Faust, both of Oak Hall. | Edward N. Smith, of Lanse, P. land Freda L. Faughner, of Oscec | Mills. | Albert John Mileski and Mildr | Virginia Williamson, both of Lar | downe. James I. Reed, of Pine Gro | Mills, and Emma Louise Hendersc | of State College. | James Andrew Spangler and E\ lon Thelma Gardner, both of Blanc | ard. |