The Middleburgh post. (Middleburgh, Snyder Co., Pa.) 1883-1916, January 09, 1902, Image 6

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    TURKEYS FOR MARKET.
ffteree la Net Evvri-thlasr.
rltif, Still Urnl Ural Ue
prada Looks.
f
Ton much can hardly be i-aid in favor
of appruraiice of turkrys when
shipped to murkrt. We ahall not no
so far as to uy that everything, but
w will s.iy a jrrent leal is in the looks.
esjH'vially with turkeys, when bent to
market. (ireat caie tilinuld be exer
cised in having them in good, lij:ht,
new, roomy c-oops that will permit
them to stand ereet. that will slir w all
the birds separately as nearly us pos
sible, ho that the buyer ean inspect
them with but very little trouble.
They should be in condition to uttract
the eye of any passer-by. If the tur
keys are well fattened and in fine
fchape and appearance, then the com
mission man can almost name the
price.
If turkeys are well fattened and nre
sent to market in a dirty, .shabby,
eramped up coop they nre apt to be
left until late in the day, and nine
times out of ten if the market is well
supplied they will not sell at nil, just
because their appearance knocked
them out. Again, if turkeys nre placed
in a close coop, so that they are com
pelled to sit or stand in a cramped con
dition, when dressed the breast and
thighs will be very black and not fit
for sale at any price. The people who
buy turkeys for holidays nre people
who understand all these things and
will not buy them at any price even
if they are well fattened. Turkeys
should not be fed for 24 hours or at
lenst 12 hours before shipping, as
when not fed they wiTt not drift near
ly as much und will be in better con
dition for dressing.
Another point should not be loRt
sight of, and thnt is to always try to
put your turkeys on the mnrket when
the demand is likely to be good. A few
days before Thanksgiving is usually
a first-class mnrket for turkeys.
After that dnte the consumer is sup
plied and the market is dull. A few
years ago we knew a breeder to mar
ket his turkeys just after Thanksgiv
ing. lie struck n bad mnrket and he
had a black eye for turkey breeding
ever after thnt, while if l,e iuid known
his business and marketed them at a
proper time they would nave been re
munerative instead of a loss to him.
There is as much in selling ns there
is in buying. J. C. Hipp, in National
Stockman.
SYMPATHY.
i w tnourr. In our n-.:drlcht of sorrow,
Alon In our crying ar.d iam,
K the plu.tsi tact u. '1 u.uirow
Appalls wilh us vittj ci yts.it.
Kt shrink from the :o:i 1: c:sclosta
The tint uu.il biu.c a'.cni-.
The thorn wlnre wt j.ud for roses
The music that troic .n -noun,
Ve kncfl !;!: -. h .-it thM ' r-roksn
i"or lai.il.ni.-i-. .ii v!:.g ar.d dnad.
Art! prck ;r. u ur.p'iivi.
Tl'.c ar.sntrttss ips of our td,
The Kaihrr in pity jurrrljn
Uur ight with a luminous star
That ilow.y and swiftly uprlsts
Ai d btaions this hope Hum afar.
kura kU Terj blood. Theercp u J WORKIXG MEN AKD W0SO.
bed. That was sure. The quarter!
section waa mortgaged and in the cot-' EigU hundred 0rganiaert of tne
tae near the village his wife was American Federation! Labor are now
scowlina; at the prospect of poverty actWey at work In the United States,
and loss of social prestige. Already , The m ow , thousand
she was bemoaning the monotony of tride un,on, , u thtn
.the western country Once the bad ac lh , th. wer , lhn
tually to.d him that he was a brute; 400-
and at ft, ..m. i m LIm.ajI I. a ll
b.. , 7 u. t j Nfsr'.y 5,000 colored workers em-
Iw V u",nf; nnuso"'" 1 ployed in the southern tobacco fac-
me urn uuic. .MMumir ever was so
Tl.tlr disnird and darkness have ended
And Ir..tlnrhood ktilr.clh In might.
So iven our mldr.'ght of sorrbw
Kuritohkis a juy Irom above
A ptum!-.- of Liauty to-morrow,
hm . uth may be lighted by Lore!
Workers' union.
The average weight of a British sr
tisan 30 years old is about lOst. Sib. A
farm Isborer of the same age averages
nine pounds heavier.
Some of the South Wales miners
very clear after those horrid, carmiuc
, tinted disks began to dance vindictive-
ly before his eyes.
t-,,. , . v. . . . . . , . . I une aJi nd this be remembered
Tuat ht-ar-.s wh en affliction hath blended, ,:,....; , . .. . .
i::umir..d t,v hMv.r.:v nhi ' with vivid distinctness, some men took
Dis awav. lie uin nor rtiiKr tipcAti i
thev reuresenteri .om. ..ri.. i.n.l.. ! leaders sre of opinion that if some
fined uower which he had alwav. re. fhin& ! BO don MoTt Prent
Ispected. Then followed a perii-d oti,'la,D ,e' ?"'me" terminates
i solitude in a Dadded cell. The reJ soot. ' next Je,r' th,re w in 8,1 Probability.
. i i . ' i , . i ... i i
uciniuiumuim oam, with r ,..,.. , oe auuiner greui sirme in loe weisn
Ktr.nt .Wal Lyon. In N. Y. Independent. came w,,n Sreater freqjencj now. A
irrav-clad vounc fellow was alwava . COB1 uela'-
watching him. One day he eluded his 1 Ahron 1-) Central Labor union has
keeper and made his eseaoe. For a resolved against further lobbying for
whole night he wandered about. The ,abor ,awl, an(l ls in ,avor of Inaugu
next day he hid In the timber near a'ratnK an "eTgressive campaign of edu-
streain. That nieht he found himself c,"on na """ng ior tne election
on the threshold of his cottage. lie
opened the door. There was a scream
nnd an oath. Dr. Scott, the man he
hnted. K4!Yfft llilll f. roa n ,uiitamKa.Li1
l- I KU the gaping three-inch gash ,hat his wife hid her face , ,
Site SILENT
CONVICT
Ar ir.u lue gaping tnree-inch gash lhat his wife hid her face , ,errop
.u the head of Prison Guard Thrn the red spots danced mocking! v.
-Morgan hud been dressed by the Kor n ortg time he w lbe centep .
n ne unary pnysician and a
rye given the wounded man
nip oi , gapinjr crowd by day. At night he
he Was uns ..Kninerl In n nrntlnniu.!! tlnvcl.
, " . "r" unemotional voices discussed the pro
warden to tell how it all happened.
"Vnu see, it was this 'ere way, war
of uniou men to fiU all offices, law
making and executive, in the state and
I nation.
The Italian bakery workmen of Bos
ton, Mass., who recently organized a
union, have raised their wages two dol
lars a week, reduced their working
week from seven to six days, and
gained the concession to have pay day
every week, instead of every month.
tectum of society and other topics a Iorn,er.y.
which he could not understand. Only Lo Angeles, t'al., is certainly well
d. n he began, after he had saluted once ir,d lh anything to him. ' organized, having a central labor
his chief and dropped into a comfort-. Thtn he coniprehended clearl,. what ! union, a free labor bureau, county
able position on the sofa in the pri- thej. ,,.,, 1Iad he kiiled Scott? Of council of labor, a building trades'
..... ........ . i. ,i..niM.r, o.i.ce. collr he had And he was so glad of action, alUed printing trades' coun-
MV III 1IU U'..1-u nil . , h u ..u I.. .tin I.h ..... .. .....
..... ... .i.i ... , ii, i.iiv i.i i, if- UIMUUH
it that he laughed loud and long. The
cil, a woman's label league, CI locals
and a good paper, the Union Label
shop cleanin' up the yard a bit. Kid Knrr,a ,.. ttnrH s
"'-I.V were comin the rake nujKed each other. Finally the judge to take watchful care over them.
act. I t.Ml (.reen to take a spade and began tnlkin(r of gome awfu, pllt" . M
hr;.w some loose dirt up agin the too, A sudden loathinrselied him: he hntedi " ""
sudden loathingseiied him; he hated
all mankind. Springing to his feet he
defied the entire assembly and vowed
never to speak to anyone again. His
only fear was that this pledge might
some day be broken.
A key grated in the lock. The door
U U U fl II ! iv ritton o Arwid u. A 1 ! V .
, Take it easy," said the warden, sym- J mied the cell. Vhe convict pressed his
.... , ! hands over his closed eyes and almost
I hen. continued the guard, "I trrmrli :,, if..! i
.aught 1,,,,, b, the shou.der and gave cam, fpom hIg ti htl y COIlipressed ,,.
h.m a p.i, toward the to.d house, nt In giience( he wa, par d ,
the Mime time tellin him to iret a inili-l ,i- i . 1.1 . . . .'. J
house, lie was stnndin' in one of them
cat fits of his'n and paid no at tent ion
to me. He just rolled his eyes and
win ked his arms."
Morgan paused and pressed a huge
gtinrle.I liami against his bandaged
cranium.
GUARDING THE CHICKS.
f 1 r-o frir .. A t 1, 1 ...... a . al I
tary move on himself, ne reached treme end of the line of steel cmr.s. .
UnlVn irt-'i liliix? ttia mnA ..-1. I . .. J i n
i ft.M....... mi o.nur a.iu niltllltLU
ne across the noggan with it. When
:!ie stars scattered out a little, 1 saw
Ron and Coop Covered with 'Wire
Setting- to rrnfrrt llelnleia Illrda
from llawka.
Where hnwks abound young chicks
must be closely guarded. If shut up
closely in pens, grow th will be greatly
retarded. A good plan under such cir-
cumstnnccs is shown in the accom
panying cut. Tlow two furrows par- ;
nllel to each other and just fareno-igh I
;.... i i i.i ... . .... ......in uic ftiouii ninq, OHU
ll,v."dtwof the other boys before the guardS were 'changed
w re li.i.dm h.m. I whistled for help j midnight, the deputy warden detei
him yanked back to his cell."
i'ann Hill reached for the huge
i'f-!oiind volume in which the daily
rie.i:- iiitiieies of the prisoners were re
cn iiri!. The page' allotted to Convict
''H- imprisoned for life, was blank
save for the entry made in a neat,'
roui-.i !: !iid. stating that all attempts
t' inn hr the prisoner talk sinee his in
earci tation had been unavailing. Mur
der was the crime and the date of the
commitment papers showed that right
years of the life sentence had been
served. The warden looked perplexed.
Recently appointed, he had not yet had
time to look at the majority of the
prisoners in his charge. Itesides, more
important matters awaited his atten
tion. He closed the volume and turned
t i the deputy warden.
"(live Convict Green five days In the
dark cell on bread and water," he said.
Confusion reigned supreme that
night within the prison walls. Shortly
at
arden detected
a dense cloud of smoke that seemed to
be pouring up from the Inner cell
house. Gaining admittance to the
prison yards he was almost struck
dumb with amazement. Klatf were
J bursting from the roof of the building.
.us ne looitea, me cupola, a mass or Are,
fell outward upon the upper gallery
disclosing the fierce headway the
flames were making. Even as he list
ened shrieks of terror and yells of
a'arin came from the Imprisoned con
victs in the cells. j
Coolly he hurried to the prison gong
and gave the danger signal to the
guards. Next he signaled the peniten
tiary fire corps. The warden now ar
rived on the scene, nnd took personal
command. At a sign from him the
guards rushed forward and unlocked
the doors, allowing the frightened,
half-clad convicts to escnne Into the
TO PP.OTKCT TOt'NQ CHICKKNa.
apnrt so that the distance from the
outside of each shall be just six feet.
Make the furrows VM feet long.
Stretch a roll of six-feet wire netting
along the furrow s, fastening the edges
down with loose stones. This L'ives
a long run on both grass ground and
plowed land for the chicks, und hawks
ci' aunt molest them. The coop can be
set ut one end, the other end being
stopped with sod. The plan is shown
in the cut. Orange Judd Farmer.
imnoiily known among the prisoners
as the hole," the door was unlocked
and Green thrust inside. The bolts
were shot and the guards retired.
NOTES FOR BEEKEEPERS.
Windbreaks in winter nre beneficial.
He sure that each colony has a good
fertile iucen.
Arrange so that no stock shall run
in the apiary.
It will not do to confine bees on
combs of pollen.
I'.ees must be kept very quiet if they
are to w inter well.
Do not leave on the hive any upper
Morics or boxes of any kind.
You can feed sirup only on warm
days before cold weather sets in.
Division boards should be used in all
weak colonies, thus contract ing the
space.
Chan cushion divisions are prefera
ble to boards ulone, n.s they are
warmer.
Itees may readily be wintered in a
cellar if un even temperature can be
kept up.
The cheapest und best way to pro
tect the bees in winter is by using good
ckutT hives.
A good way to keep the extra combs
is to hang them in a rack in a dry
room. Toronto (Out.) Mail.
How to Stamp Out Roup.
If one of your birds shows signs of
roup take it away from the flock at
once and place it in warm, dry quar
ters. Hub the heud with coal oil and
squirt some up in the roof of the
mouth, allowing the bird to swallow
a small amount. Should the bird sot
be a valuuble one it would be better
tc kill it at once and avoid spending
more time with it than the bird is
worth, and a'.so kicp the disease from
spreading farther.. Give the rest of
the flock a good stimulant like cap-
Mcum or ginger and it
I i n minutes later. Convict (1
closely guarded was escorted to the j tired employes stood with threatening
ha. ...wed niche beneath the tier of cells! rifles read v for instant use
In order to save the penitentiary and
the lives of its inmates, the fire must be
confined in the ceil house, which com
nuinieiited with the remainder of the
prison by u narrow nrch. Two men
sealed the wall and directed stream,
of water on the flumes raging within.
Overcome by heat, one of these faint
ed, and his companion bore him from
the wall. The flames were gaining now
at an alarming rate. With a word of
caution to the guards, the warden
mounted the wall. He had scarcely
directed the stream of water on the
flames when he perceived that he had a
With inky blackness on all sides of
j him. Convict Green pressed his sweaty
palms against his throbbing forehead
and tried to think. Dull, agonizing
pains seemed to hover between his
temples and dart toward each eye. lie
a rose from the oaken plank upon which
he had been crouching anil extended
both arms. His hands touched a stone
all on either side.
With a groan he sank back on the
damp stone floor of the dungeon and
tried to think. Tor a time lie was con
scious of only pain and anguish, but
at last the darkness which hungike a
pail over his clouded intellect began
to clear away. The red spots hail
come again. What they were. Green
had often tried to find out, but he
never could. The huge patches of lurid
red came and danced before his eyes.
After a time they left, but terrible
pains remained behind torturing him
almost beyond endurance. Jf he tried
to find out what the red spots were
they always came back so much the
quicker.
The convict crept nearer the wall of
the dungeon and laid first one burning
cheek and then the other against the
damp stones. The mental anguish of
the man became less wracking; peri
ods of intellectual calm followed in
which detached sections of conscious
ness became clarified. Now and then
he cuught blurred glimpsesof the past.
A few faint, half-obscured recollec
tions of his childhood days actually
made the miserable inmate of the cefl
smile with delight. Names he no long
er remembered, but familiar facei
wearing pleasant smiles so different
from the scowling visages which he
now saw every day seemed to bright
en up the cell. Hut finally one face,
smiling, coquettish, with dimpled
chin, and gracefully curving lips,- re
mained. Her he had
No Time to Lose
You cannot afford to disregard
the warnings of a weak and
diseased heart and put of! tak
ing the prescription of the
world's greatest authority on
heart and nervous disorders
muS's' Heart Cure.
If your heart palpitates, flutters,
or you are short of breath, have
smothering spells, pain in left
side, shoulder or arm, you have
heart trouble and are liable to
drop dead any moment.
Major J. W. Woodwork, ono of the
beat known oil operators In tlio coun
try dropped "dead from huurjt disease
recently, at his home In Portland, Ind.,
while mowing his lawn. The iYeit.
Mrs. M. A. Birdsall, Wstkins, N. Y
whose portrait beads this advertise
ment, says: "I write this through grat
itude for benefits I received from Dr.
Miles' Heart Cure. 1 had palpitation
of the heart, severe pains under the
left shoulder, and my general health
was miserable. A few bottles of Dr.
Miles'Heart Cure cured me entirely.
Sold by all Druggists.
Dr. Milsa Medloal Co., Elkhart, Ind.
-v .-v - -I -in -SIT 1 1
for Infants and Children;
The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the al&rnsv.
tare of Chas. II. Fletcher, and has been made under his
personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one
to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
' Just-as-good' are but Experiments, and endanger the
health of Children Experience against Experiment.
The Kind You Have Always BougK
.Bears tne Signature ox
In Use For Over 30 Years.
TtiT, n tw yeaa err.
New-York Tribune Farmel
A
NEW
OLD
PAPAR
or lxty years the NEW Y0KK WEEKLY THIBUNR ha b
national weekly newspaper, read alrnont entlielv by tarnii-rT
lias enjoyed tne eonfldence and mippnr' of the American Dvm
a decree never jOIaI mmH k. & .. H..i.u
J J Ul UtJMiaiIUIl.
THE
New-York Tribune FVit-m
ta made abnnliitely Phr farmers and their families. The flmt n J
waaiKsued November 7th, tktl.
T, . i""' -Kriiumirai inauairy la corered by nJ
HTK ui 'Viul-t". if?er" ,l,eir ""I"11 . an.1 111
HI Nh r ARM h,K will be In vrv ki..i. ..i.r .... . 1
live, enfa-rprisina- RKrlcultuml 'paper, protunely illustrated ,
pictures .if live aMck, model farm building, and homes, airritu
al machinery, etc
r'armerV wlvea, sons and daughters will And special paKt.
Uu.,lo. at nn .. . . .
.r i. T i"r rr, o' you ran buy it with ,
favorite home weekly newspaper, The Middleburir l'oT one '
or 91 fiv. "
Send your subscription and money to the Middleburg- Pokt.
Send yonr nnmeanil nddrraa lo the NEW. YORK i
Ill'XE FARMER. New York City, and m tree aiun
copy will be mailed to yon.
Liberal Adjustments-, Prompt Payme
f?EW EMBER
H. HRRVEY BCHDCH.
GENERAL iNStrKANCE AGENCY
vmy tiie uidest, strongest Cash Oorapanies,
Fire, Life, Accident and Tornado.
No Assessments , No Premium Not
ine Aetna .Founded A. D.. 1819 Assets 11.0 .13
Home " " 3853 " 9,83,62
American " " " isio 2 40
it
Wouldn't Have Time.
First TcncluT Do you understand
liis labor question that everybody
talking about?
Second Traveler (emphatically)
I do not, sir.
First Traveler Well, I will explain
It to you.
Rf.nnfl.1 'I' fl I'uluK VnuMI I.oua . n . v
?"P?nlni.,.n- '.W S,litiWh ' Vou ee, I'm going to be
b axely fighting he Are by hi, side. 3lt thIs train onl ' holfri.iL!le's
1 lie flames began to grow weaker; the AVekly
lurid glare was dying out. Exhausted.
the warden turned to his companion
ana commanded him to retire. Thenl fk CANDY CATHARTIC . M
he started to descend. ;
No sooner had he reached the earth'
than a cry of horror arose from the'
guards and convicts. A cloud of smoke
had lTivelnnci! tlm
confusion he had faKen from the wall G0 tbmfti COG Never sold In bulk.
a"y CANDY CATHARTIC . M
into the smoking ruins of the cetl
house.
Jn the gray dawn of the morning the
prison clrk called the roll. Convict
Green did not answer.
Blackened, lifeless, still clutching
the hose nozzle. Convict Oreen was dis
covered soon after when the healed ru
ins cooled sufficiently to allow n search
to be instituted.
Suffocation had apparently caused
his death, for, although one foot was
burned to a crisp, the clothing of the
victim was only scorched here and
there. Utn fare had been cruelly disfig
ured by a fulling s'one. Beneath his
prison jacket the officials found a faded
photograph of a smiling woman with
dimpled chin and lips with adrooping,
scornful curve, ytt parting"1n a co
quettish smile.
Of course the newspapers blazoned
the deed of Convict Green to the world
in all the somber murkiness of scare
worshiped heads. One enterprising Omaha tour.
throughout his childhood and courted jiial placed the picture of the woman
In his youth. Like a flash came th 'beside thnt of the prisoner and hinted
memory of the joyous wedding trip, -at a dark tale of a wife's unfaithful
tb farm on the outskirts of a Ne- ness. Vague as was the suggestion s
braska village, his valiant struggle for , superannuated society woman of that
fortune. city still fears that some of her friends
Then the scene shifted to a vast Held .or discarded admirers will detect ths
wners withered corn rustled harshly unmistakable likeneas between a faded
8a M si tfea tfer who tries to sell
I hut a good."
Partially Trae.
A person of an investigating tsrn
)f W nil hud taken the trouble to run
liifii one of the miraculous cures.
"Is it true," he asked, "that you have
seen n sufferer from neuralgia for 17
years?"
"Yes, sir," replied the man.
"Is it true that you have been cured
.f it "by taking six bottles of Dr. lly
hold's celebrated Extract of Unipty
gump?" "Well, that's partly true. I've taken
the six bottles." C4iingo Tribune.
Retrnaprct.
With Miss DeVlne I played to-day on Bras
seywasey links, .
And as we played sny memory sped to
roller-skating; rinks
Where I went with her mother more than
twenty years ago.
Then further did the current of my reminis
cence flow;
It took me to the days when I, a happy
swain, did pluy
With Miss DeVlne's dear grandmamma,
the game orluwn croquet.
Brooklyn Life.
The Standard Accident Insurance Co.
The New York Ufe Insurance Co.
The fidelity Mutual Life Association.
Tour Patronaja Solicited.
DURINQ
HOT WEATHER &
BLUE FLAME COOK STOVES
"New Rochester"
VICKLESS
SAMPLE,
SAFE
rjOOKINO under tbese circumstances is a pleasure. The Rochefltel
y Lamp Co. stake tljeir reputation on the stove in question. Tbf.
best evidence of the catisfaction enjoyed is testimonials galore and aV
plicate orders from ail parts of the world. I
Send for literature, both for the "New Rochester" Cook Stove anli
the "New Rochester" Lamp. 1
You will never reijret having ictroduced these ecods into your housef
The Rochester Lamp Co.,
ark ace and 33 Barclay St., New York. -
Buy and Try a Box Tonight
While you think of it, go buy and
try a box of Cascarets Candy Ca
thartic, ideal laxative, tonight You'll
never, regret it. - Genuine tablcta
o McGlures
yJRE yu interested in jour fellows f Art you concerned in the
f affairs of life t Do you care anything about the great men who
have brought about the conditions in which you live, and those
who are in power to-day t Do you enjoy wholesome, animated stories that
are true to Ufe t Di you tare for beauty in any form T Then there is
no escape for you you must join the army who read McClure'i regularly.
A FEW FEATURES FOR 1902
New Romantic Love Story by booth tarkington.
author of "The Gentleman from Indiana " and "Monsieur Bcaucaire,"
a tale of love thwarted but triumphant, of gallant men and beautiful
women. It deals with life in Indiana at the time of the Mexican War.
True Story of the. Standard OU. By ida m. tar
bell, author of " Life of Napoleon," Life of Lincoln," etc. A
dramatic, human story of the first and still the greatest of all trusts not
an economic treatise, but an exciting history.
Clara Morris's Staee Rccollec-.
lions, atones ot balvim, Bern
hardt, Mr. Siddont and others,
A Battle of Millionaires. By
the author of "Wall Street Stories."
The Forest Runner. Serial Tale
of the Michigan Woods.
Josephine Dodge Daskam. More
Child Stories.
Emmy Lou Stories by GEORGE
MAUUiilM MAKTIN.
Greatest of tbe Old Masters.
By JOHN LA FARGE. Interest
ing and helpful parpen on Michelan
gelo, Raphael, Rembrandt, etc. , their
finest pictures reproduced in tints.
Mr. Dooley on His Travels. His
views upon the typical New Yorker,
Philadeiphian, Bostonian, and in
habitant of Chicago and Washington.
William Allen White on Tillman,
Piatt, Cleveland and others.
Vhttrsttd prnftttui, iticrikini in full many itkir ftsmrti, fm I any aiirtu
8. 8. McCLURE CO., 141-iSS Eaat ajth Street, New York, N. Y.'
ONE DOLLAR. A: YEAR
E But at any price THE BEST
1