The Middleburgh post. (Middleburgh, Snyder Co., Pa.) 1883-1916, July 13, 1899, Image 9

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    CURRENT SUPERSTITIONS.
HANDLING HAT RACKS
A Simple Contrivance Which En
ables One Man to Do All ta
KnKiurr Work.
One of the hardest am! most Incon
venient operations about farm work ia
the lifting on and off of the hay rack
from the wagon. The usual wny of lift
ing over the wheels takes from two to
four men, and then it is heavy lifting.
This Job can be ensily and quickly per
formed by means of rope and pulleys,
the rack being lifted up and the wagon
run under, when it CBB be lowered into
place, and vice versa. To do this It ia
necessary, of course, to have some con
venient place for fastening the pulleya
high enough to let the ruck swing clear
of the wagon, and some way of holding
fl
J U
Be sure that for every fog you get
In March you will have a frost in May.
If the sun goes down behind a bank
of clouds on Friday it will rain on Sun
day. While peacock feathers are kept in
the house sickness will never be out
of it.
If the thread knot while sewing
the sewer will live to see the garment
worn out.
If one mends n garment while wear
ing it every stitch taken represents an
enemy which will be made.
I If a pen drops and sticks to the floor
the owner's lover lives in the direction
1 toward which it inclines.
If u spider is found on one of your
I gnrmentslt signifies that you will soon
' have a new one of the same sort.
If n person's two front teeth are wide
I enough apart to place a gold coin be
, tween them he will always be rleh.
A ring around the moon Indicates bad
weather, which will lust as many days
us there are stars Inclosed In the circle.
If a peahen calls, a donkev brays, pigs
enrry straw, geese flap their wings, n
! pot boils dry or the clouds move north
ward, it will ruin.
If a silver coin or fresh-laid egg 1r
placed in the hand of n r.ew-liorn babe,
long life and prosperity will be assured
j to it.
If a hairpin sticks out but does not
fall the wean r will have a disappoint
ment! If H fall h f lover is thinking of
her.
EFFORTS OF THE POETS
I I'm lust as proud of Dew ay as a foliar well
jj b.
No Kockerbllt or Vsodergould can Ilk him
mora than mi;
1 No millionaire In all the world, no matttr
what tola nut,
' Can take mora prtda In Dewey and U
ihing. that Dewey don.
! But they have much the best of It makin'
Dewey think
That they're the only pebbles when It
comes to meat and drink;
. They're askln' him to dinner, and a-blowlD'
In their stuff
In wads so big you'd hardly think the
world could hold enough.
' They're a.ndln' swords out to blm that are
made o' solid soil.
Enough to Hll his cabin and to stock bis
b.oomln' hold:
They're buyln' city houses and a-glvtn,' 'em
to him.
In such a way as I should think would
make his thinker swim.
Hot 1 I ain't got nothln' for to show him
whnt I thlr.it.
Hut you can bat I'll not set by and get the
rlnky-dlnk!
An' what I kin do I will do. and sort or
kinder teach
These millionaires they're not the only
pebbles on the beach.
So I have written Dewey Just a slnsle lit
tle line
To offer him the freedom of a patent
leather shine.
And told him If he'd call on mo I'd blow
him off rlKht here.
To Just n half u portion of a nickel's worth
of bear!
Ilnrper's Unmr.
KIDNEY Ix h deceptive (lis
TnAiiai 12 e llouaud
1 KUUOLCbtve it aud don't1
know it. Jf you waut quick results ,
uu cnu make ui) iniHlitk'f bv using
Dr. KiltllHl's SttlM Root, tile great
kidney lemtvlv. At druggist iu fifty I
cent and dollar aigva. Sample but
ties by iu ul frae, ulsu paiupiilt tell-1
ins you how to Dud out if you Lave
kidllfV trouble. Address,
Dr. Kilmer A Co., Biuirhniuton, N.Y. 1
J
M
ODD AND CURIOUS.
HAT RACK LIFTER.
the rack up until wanted again, Tim
bers or props can be arranged for this.
Where there la a driveway in a barn
with room enough overhead, or an al
leyway between u double w rn-eril, a
convenient place is at hand, and when
Ibe rack is not in use it will be housed
from the weather. Hut for those who
have D0 such place at their disposal, wo
glvs the sketch of a handy and cheap
i r ime for the purpose.
Four posta are set in the ground In
some convenient place, wide enough
.;:irt to allow the wagon and rack to
be driven between them, the height of
the po:-t.s varying with the kind of rack
used, All that is necessary is to have
them high enough to lift the rack well
:il)Ovc the wheels. Across the tops of
these posts (A, Fig. 1) bolt on two
beams (11) to strengthen the frame and
to serve as a fastening for the pulley
block (C); Zxl's should be bolted :.
between the two nets of posts (D). If
the posts are firmly vat In the ground
this will insure solidity, but If desired,
more braces can bo spiked on nt the
sides.
Then with an inch auger bore holes iu
the corner posts at (K) and get an iron
pin from a foot to 14 iuulieajiu lougth to
lit in these. A pole (If) strong enough
-jo bear the weight of the ruck and long
:iough to reach from one post to the
other by resting on these pins, is se
cured for each end of the rack to rest
on when In place. Kings are bolted in
tae rack nt (G), into which a six-foot
iliain with a hook at cither end, aud
ring in the center, is attached. The pul
ley block (C) is attached' to the beam
above by a chain and hook, so us to be
easily detached.
One man can handle a nick with tnsc.
To put it on the wagon, he has only to
book the running gears Into place, hook
the six-foot chain into the rin.-.'s in the
rack, hook the pulley block to the chain
of )he lenm above, hook the end of the
rope into the ring in the center of the
six-foot chain, raise the cud of the rack
an inch or so, fastening the rope to
hold it there. Then remove the pole
K) and lower that end of the rack Into
place on the wagon. The other end is
let down in the same Way, the whole
operation consuming only a few min
utes' time. The ropes, pulley and chain
can be hung up In the barn out of the
weather. K is not necessary to lift the
rack high enough to drive the team
under, as the wagon can le easily
backed into position by hand, and
when the rack is on the wagon and the
poles (F) removed from the pins, there
will be nothing to hinder driving into
position for hoisting the rack. This
device is a groat convenience on a farm
where hay racks ure frequently Is use.
J. L. Irwin, In Ohio Farmer.
THOUGHTS AND FACTS.
As the period of lactation advances
the butter fat grows lighter iu color,
harder and the fat globules smaller.
Although it has been studied a great
many years by our greatest scientists it
is not definitely known how milk is
formed in the udder.
There is more difference between in
dividuals of the same breed than there
is between different breeds of cows In
the quality of milk they produce.
Butter fat is composed of nbout ten
separate and distinct fats. It is the
linest flavored, most easily decomposed
and easiest digested of all fats.
As the period of lactation advances
the percentage of fat Increases, not
only absolutely but also in relative pro
portion to the other solids of the milk.
The feeding of cottonseed meal tends
to harden the fnt In milk and conse
quently makes a harder butter than
would be made if linseed meal were
fed.
Some Philadelphia milkmen ore
producing such a high grade milk that
they guarantee thut it does not con
tain over a certain number of bacteria
to the quart.
Billiard, bolls, bocks of hair brushes
and combs, etc., arc made from skim-,
milk, and large quantities of this by
product are utilized now in the manu
facture of paper.
S wanni-artia-i tw tats. nnai Inuaatlrratlnn n ortv't
UQt is about one-seventh richer at the
Mom of period of lactation than at the
-XaoonaJ Stockman.
The Bermudas arevjot Included in the
term West Indies,
Gov, Stanley of Kansas smokes cu
i beb cigarettes.
Kingfisher, Kan,, has an ordinance re
quiring the dogcatchar to produce the
' tail of every unlicensed dog killed by
j him.
Criminals sentenced to death In
Utah have a choice between hanging
and shooting.
North Carolina has paid In confed
' erate pensions in 2.1 years nearly
$1,000,000. The pensioners number
I 5,400.
ISusiness was dull In a Boston resttiu
' runt when a thief entered it and discov
ered the cashier nodding nt his post of
i duty. The thief walked off with the
easli register) which contained only
' but the register was worth $100.
i The postmaster nt Bethel, Mo., ro
: cently put a telephone in his office and
announced that for the benefit of those
'. out-of-town patrons w ho are connected
! by wire, and who may desire it, he will
I open their letters and read the contents
to them over the 'phono.
I The female Samson of Texas Is Miss
j Jennie BobinsOn, a colored woman, of
BuTleSOn county. Her age Is 22 years,
i and her weight is 147 pounds., IUt
I strength Is equal to that of five ordinary
; men. An Insolent trump abused her
mistress one day, and Jennie was sum
moned. She. grabbed him by the collar
1 of his coat and t.hc seat Of his trousers
an1 whirled blm over a fence.
GOSSIP OF THE STARS.
I Klchard Mansfield has taken out a
life-insurance policy for $100,000.
There are about 300 women's musical
! clubs in the United States.
"Jolly" John Nash, a popular comic
I opera Blnger of Loudon, Is 70 years old.
Lillian Itusscll Is said to carry an 80,
000 life insurance policy In favor of her
daughter.
Jean and Edouardde Besske, the sing
ers, ure said to know as much nlxHit
horses as about music.
Mrs. Voynich has dramatized her
novel, and it will be performed In this
country next fall.
Maude Adams, the actress, is the
great-granddaughter of Joshua, first
cousin and Intimate of J. Q. Adams,
Mary Dickens, a glnddaughterof the
novelist, is about to bring out a piece
of fiction dealing with theatrical life.
A first-class theatrical company,
when on tour, carries between 000 and
H00 tons of scenery, costumes and other
property.
The pensions paid to retired artists
by the imperial opera of Vienna
amount to above the relatively enor
mous sum of ,'100,000 fruncs.
The oldest theaters In London ure:
Drury Lane, opened in lfii',3; Sadler's
Well's, started as an orchestral assem
bly room In 1883) Hay market, 1720;
Covent Garden, 17D2, and Lyceum, 170J.
It Mletll Ha' Itrrn Wmir."
When failures beClOl lha blue of your
ky
And troubles heirm in torrents to pour,
i Just think of the Hoods that others liavo
whelmed
And say to yourself: "It nilcht ha' been
wuur,"
You're il reached but no drOon'd : It nilcit
ha' been wuur!
1 Whin out on life's sea your vessel Is
wracked.
Beyond the relief of a humanly nhore,
Cllnn fasl lo the spar Uod's put la your
hand
And say to yourself: "It nilcht ha' been
wuur."
Some haven't a spar; It inlehl ha" been
wuur!
When Death, blanching Death, stalks tato
yoeir street
And knocks with appalling hand at youi
door;
Hold fast to the hops Qod'a put In youi
heart
And say to yourself: "It mlchl ha' bean
wuur,"
What If you'd line hupe! It n.lcht ha
been waurl
And when jou shall stand before the Rfc-ut
Judge,
, Who 11 open the book and scan your life
o'er,
May He In Ills love forrjlvo where you'vo
iritd,
And say to your soul: "It mlch ha' been
wnur."
"dang yo Wl' the sheep, tt nilcht ha' been
wuur!"
-John U. rialcy, In Chicago Interior.
Jo nr.
The bumblebees delvo In the thick red
clover,
TouslliiK and tumbling It over and over;
i The far sun shines and thu wlndl go hy,
And a sparrow-hawk poises above la the
sky.
There Is tittle to loam from the Right of the
swallow.
Who kails where his gathering comrndes
follow;
The stream runs ilow and tho hills are
high,
And the sparrow-hawk poises above In the
sky.
And a clear, sweet nolo from the ground Is
ringing.
Where s bird in the silence now In singing;
I Like drifts of snow do the White clouds II. .
And the sparrow-hawk poises above in the
sky
In the pasture's breadth Is a brown song
sparrow 1 There's a rush of wings like a whistling
nrrow-
Corever nnd ays must the sweet notes die,
And a spsiTOW-hawk poises above In tho
sky.
Ernest UcOaffey, la Woman's Homo
Companion
FROM A WOMAN'S STANDPOINT
Any chauge from a routine is picas
unt. Hating alone is the cause of half the
Indigestion iu the world.
The electric light Is about the only
thing that can be brilliant to order.
There is no one iu the world beyond
the power of (lattery.
A woman prefers a man who worships
her to one who waits upon her.
One is just as happy looking into an
other person's garden as owning one
1 one's self.
A woman who marries a man younger
than herself is never half so sorry us
the man.
When we find a spool of thread that
we thought, lost we feel as gratified
ns though we had discovered a gold
mine.
A woman has her work beautifully
cut out for her who endeavors to recon
cile a pet dog and a pel cat to each
other.
The whole world may admire a wom
an's frock, luit if the man she loves
says it isn't pretty there is no beauty
in it for her.
Again w e inquire, why are commence
ments so called when they come at the
end rather than the beginning of the
BChOol year?
The modern method of di nying the
engagement up almost to the duj of
marriage seems to indicate that neither
party is willing to take any chanci
on having it said that they were jilted.
It is us useless for a man to try to de
ceive the world into believing that his
last year's straw liat is of t his season's
crop as it is for him to endeavor lo look
innocent when he knows he hasn't paid
his fare. Philadelphia Times.
Com pen unt I on.
O little curly head of mlno. you play about
all day.
You've- mnny n Inrk out In thepurk while
I must work away;
You never have a single care to mar your
childish Joy
Your little sphere Is far more, fair than
mine was as a boy.
O little curly head of mlno, thero oro no
cows that you
.Must go to bring Just when there's some
thing else you'd rather do;
1 There Is no churn for you to turn, r.o hoo-
Ing to bo done,
! N'o pump to work, no wood to burn that
you must chop, my son.
1 O little curly hend of mine. It sometlmci
grieves me that
You should be shut up hero In town to lan
guish In a Hat,
Dut still there are i.o briers here lo scratch
your legs lo-iluy
Thero are r.o weeds to pull, my dear, wbtn
you would rather play.
-S. B. Klser. In Chlcngo TImcs-IIcrald.
FOREIGN GOSSIP.
Brazil will exhibit 500 varieties of
serpents at the 1'aris display in 1900.
The smallest camels belong to Per
sla. They are not more than 20 inches
high.
llerlin has the smallest elephunt In
the world. It is but 89 inches high and
Weighs 100 pounds.
Only one person in every four of the
1 Inhabitants of Londt n earns more, than
five dollars a week.
Australia is the one place in flic
world where the towns are more beau
tiful than the country.
Western Australia bus un act in force
prohibiting the landing of anyone who
ennnot write out n given passage in
English.
At the Antwerp horticultural exposi
tion an admiring amateur collector of-
fcrcd 4,000 for three orchids and was
refused.
According to a competent French stn-
tistlcian, France lost 130,000 men by
tho Franco-Prussian war. Germany's
. losses were only 38,278.
A new fashion wns Introduced at the
! earl of Crewe's wedding. Lord Chester
i field, the best man, carried a cane, lie
did not seem to find It in the way when
attending to his duties, such ns handing
the groom the ring, etc. However, it'is
not likely the Idea will be universally
adopted.
When Virtue Triumphed.
There was a man who tried to do
The very best he could;
He held that being rich was rot
As fair us being good:
Sly tempters tried to pull him down.
Their schemes wero all In vain;
He would not turn from righteous ways
For power or for gain.
Full msny n snare was laid for him
fly men of evil minds;
Ha passed unsmlrchcd through troubled
scenes
Of many various kinds;
Whero others would have faltered ha
Still held to honor's course,
Unhindered by chicanery.
Unterrltled by force.
He was a good man through ar.d through.
A better never was;
He always scorned unlawful means.
No matter what the cause;
With honor as his watchword ha
Pursued his righteous way.
And won out at the end, but, but ah!
This man was In a play.
Chicago Dally Newa.
The nanqnrt Habit.
Man's a product moat refined;
Evolution shows
, How he's leaving far behind
Earthly Joys and woe
Yet our brave and brainy men
For discussion nv-et;
Speak their burning noughts and tae
All sit down and eat.
On a battle-lighted sa
History Is made:
Foemen In confusion flee
Stricken and afraid.
Home the hero comes ssala;
Dp and down the street
Cheers of welcoma sound and tbaa
All alt down and eat.
-Washington Star.
wfat
gloated
RIPANS TABULES
are intended for children, ladies and all
who prefer a medicine disguised as con-'
fectionery. They may now be had (put
up in Tin Boxes, seventy-two in a box),
price, twenty-five cents or five boxes for
one dollar. Any druggist will get them
if you insist, and they may always be
obtained by remitting the price to
The Ripans Chemical
company- ,
NO. !0t NEW.
v an j w
FROM THE CRUCIBLE.
lltmincss ui:iii:i: l'romi-i' a man the
earth and give him a cemetery lot.
The mongrel is often the most Intelli
gent, but it is the pure-blooded lo;r
whioh gets the prise.
There is no complicated mechanism
baakj of 0 steam whistle, luit it's no use
to try to compete with it in Its line.
The way to iroem is to lick the
strongest man of those you would rule,
anil then make blm rule over the oth
ers, i
NeewsHy is raid to be the mother ol
Invention hut is not oftentimes inven
tion the mother of necessity? Most in
ventors go broke.
A man often catches the popular taste
in his writings because tin' reader says:
"That is good, but I could have done It
better.'
I f you are In trouble am! gn to a man
who has none, he c,ies you advice; hut
(he man of many troubles helps you
through sympathy.
The time when n man always takes
you al your word is when you tell hit:)
he can pay what he owes you at his
own convenience,
The phrnse "I'm monarch of all I sur
vey" should be rewritten to reail "I'm
monarch of till I laugh at." Even the
power of, idealisation is not as valuable
as the power of turning off u trouble
with tv Vautrh. l'ennv Mnrn7ine
The average woman who scrimps to
buy clothes ami gets old over worrying
over ask of money is apt to gnash her
teeth over the coin richer women throw
away. The majority of women are
lucky if they have 9300 or $400 u year to
ipend on themselves. There arc lit
least a dOCen Women in New York who
have 175,000 a year for mere pin money,
their dress bills being a separate account.
-.I
T '.1' : TT". ; -riVaLEISfZSS
The Hoaartli of Stagtii is
r "V".' , &
:V-f. ' ; , '?
e 'ir.
i mm
hum
in .
S&W&
oSA.i .,. .. .- 4.v
fi wa 7 i
I , fr4 BH H t
OJ S K rj t! A f Jm
V' W' -LA tJ iitY ...1,1, jl
i .. ... ..i ;:;: n .::.)
!'.s streneth ccmea from It?, x.v V: la nil ouro coff
I freshly roasted, nnd la Gold only In ouo-pound si .! jrf
, p.tck..go3. Each packajro will make 40 oupo. Tno pack- a;
J nffu ! ,' .-de .1 at tno Mllla po that the a.'omn Is never U
j voakonoc. ;c h-.?. a u un .:".. lnoorrparasiQ
I clroncth. It 4.3 a luxury vrilh.n tiio roabh of c-J.
Prerhlutn List In overy pao'tacro.
Cut out vouit Lion ;i . - ltndirot
': vaiuablo uromluim i
ft ra hi ." n 'V.r-"" It hi rtoro.
. , - n ' n i n store,
U-fc- VTAKO' I S '-' -fk " Q ! ""MTuM "lit WD
m yoiii urocci -
I
MM
I To PATENT Good Ideas
may bv noortd by
our aiil. Aildreu,
THE PATENT RECORD, ,
Baltimore. Md. .
8ulicrltlun8 to The I'aicDt Hocord ll.uu ptT svuuuiu.
hi
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It la a monomeut ut l . ... .. teformatlou.' UluuaapuUs
latlnn.) Trlliune. ,
"A wondertul pleee of wort."-Waahliurton National Tribune.
-The catalogue l a wonder "-ManeheatercS. II I I nlon.
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Th. bla -.toio.no forma one of Uw aoat abopplng medium that could poealWy StSSSi Into dUtrtet."
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AMrtss, SEARS, ROEBUCK Si CO. (Inc.), CHICAGO, ILL., U.S. A.
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