THE CITIZEN', FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 1000. GUILD'S BODY IN COTTON BALE Baby Disappeared In Texas Corpse Was Strangely and DIs- Its covered In Liverpool. Galveston, Tex. The disappearance of Alfred Hartnian, the two-year-old son of George and Angelina Hartnian of Gillespie county, Ave months ago, has been solved by the finding of the dead body of the Infant In a bale of cotton opened at a gin In Liverpool, England. It was early in December that Hart man, who Is a prosperous farmer, took a load of cotton to a gin a few miles from his homo and had It ginned. Ills j little son. who was the youngest of several children, accompanied him on , the trip to Fredericksburg and in ' some manner became separated from his father. Search for the missing boy proved unsuccessful, and it was finally believed that the baby had I fallen into a creek niul his body had i been washed away In the current. , The finding of a body answering the , description Indicates that the child crept into the press while it was open and, falling asleep, was haled up In . the cotton. The cotton was sold to a j Texas concern, placed iu a warehouse i for several weeks and finally export-1 cd to Liverpool. The bale was open-1 cd a few days ago and the flattened j body of the child discovered. Through 1 the various channels the cotton was traced back to the broker who bought j it'ln Texas and the identity of the In- J fant established. , The body will bo shipped back to j this country for burial in the family j lot. j TURKEY'S MAN OF THE HOUR. i MAHMUD SHEFKET PASHA. The leader of the constitutional troops In their advance on Constanti nople to depose Sultan Abdul Hamid. WOMAN'S BITE KILLS SURGEON. Dies of Blood Poisoning After Saving Would-Be Suicide. London, England. Dr. Angus Bow ley Wilson, nged 82, a house surgeon at the London Hospital, is another of the many martyrs of science. Dr. Wilson was performing an operation on a woman suffering from laudanum poison, the result of an at tempt to commit suicide, and in her struggles she bit one of his thumbs. The operation was entirely success ful in the case cf the woman, whoso life was saved, but in the case of the doctor blood poisoning fitot in from the bitten thumb, and Dr. Wilson died. At the inquest concerning Dr. Wil son's death another surgeon said that it was necessary to gag the woman while the operation was in progress. She struggled all the time, and, seiz ing Dr. Wilson's thumb between her teeth, bit it. The Coroner said that Dr. Wilson lost his life owing to a woman whose existence was certainly not worth It, from the public point of view, she hav ing attempted suicide on several oc casions. "A great deal is heard," added the Coroner, "of doctors' fees, but little Is heard of their generous sacrifices." The jury returned a verdict of death from misadventure. WILL WHIP MAN WHO KILLS HIM Plttsburger Objects to Continued Pub lication of Obituaries. McKeesport, Pa. William A. Long, of McKeesport, read in the Pittsburg newspapers a neat obituary notice of himself. A relative of Long's had died In a Pittsburg hospital, and In some way Information got to the news papers that It was the McKeesport man. As this was the sixth "mis tako" of the kind In five years, Long became angry and communicated with some of the papers as follows: "Once again I must prove an alibi. I am neither dead nor near It. It be comes monotonous, however, to be kept busy asserting that one is alive when the newspapers have you dead. The man who wanted a glass coflln so ho could see what was going on had nothing on me. I am fairly well equipped now to write a book on 'funerals I have missed.' I will whip the next man who 'kills' me." AVOID KI88INQ AND PYORRHOEA Dentists Say Disease of Gums Goes with Artificially Colored Hair. Birmingham, Ala. Kissing and pyor rhoea were discussed at tho annual convention of the National Dentists' Association here. Pyorrhoea is a dis ease ot tho gums, and is held to be communicated by kissing. The assertion was made in tho dis cussion that nearly every woman whose hair is artificially colored is a Ylctlm of pyorrhoea. i nr mm JUDGING THE AGE OF AN EGG, If It Is Fresh It Will Sink, If Old Float. The age of an egg can be pretty definitely estimated by use of the simple method shown In the accom panying cut. If the egg Is fresh it Will Blnk In the water and rest" on fresh O MONTHS OLDK. KOLIt STAGES IX AX EGG'S AGE. Its side. If about 3 weeks old the large end will be inclined slightly upward At three months of ago It will float with the large end more or less out of the water according to the stage at which it has arrived. Where Poultry liaising Pays. One of the most lucrative occupa tions in southern California, when It succeeds, Is poultry raising. But, perhaps, more people fall at it than In any other business, because so lit tle capital is required to begin on a small scale. Although the climate Is balmy all the year chickens do not thrive unless cared for In a skilful and hygenlc manner. Roup, which Is a kind of dlptherla for fowls Is the most fatal and prevalent dis ease, and once it breaks out the de struction of all chickens in the cor ral is almost certain. Then, too, the cool nights are said to effect them, and for this reason the coops are made warm. It is the dream ot many who go to southern California to own a few acres and raise chick ens and sell eggs. A small percent age only of those who give it a prac- ; tlcal trial succeed. Thousands of dollars are wasted annually In vain I attempts, and in some sections ab I andoned coops and incubators can be seen frequently. Hut those who presovere and sue I ceed are richly rewarded. The most successful egg farm that I know uf is not far from Long Beach, off the I coast. The owner now produces daily an output of live hundred eggs from one thousand five hundred chicken?, besides getting a fair price for the superfluous roosters. All of his chickens are white leghorns, and he asserts they are the best layers. His income is about seventy-five dollars per week, less a total expense of three dollars a day for chicken food, oil tor heating the Incubators, and incidentals. He and his wife attend to the chickens, ai d the outdoor life has cured her of n,cipent pulmonary troubles. He made a total failure in the beginning, lest one thousand dollars the first year, but he saw his mistakes and courageously started again. At first he took the advice of neighbors, left his coops open at the bottom, and the cold nights killed tlie fowls by the .Tore, noun came and finished all he had, and then he plowed up his three-acre farm, sow- ed It In barley, and did noting with chickens for six months. His second trial was successful, because, as ho asserts, he relied upon his own judg ment. His coops are closed, and a small aperture, left for the chickens to enter, Is the only ventilation for the night. Each coop, each runway, Is kept absolutely clean, and If chicken shows the slightest symptoms of illness it is, as a rule, killed, un less he knows how to cure it. Fre quently he cuts open the craw, takes out the offending matter, and sews it up again. Mites are great enemies to chickens, but his system of clean Hness keeps these pests away. All of his chickens are wild and' the sound of a human voice startles them as it would an animal in the forest. Neither he nor his wife makes pets of the fowls, and at feed Ing time they are called by hitting a stick on a tin bucket. The theory is that a petted chicken, too tame lies around, waiting to be fed, and does not wprk and scratch for a liv ing. His neighbors, who vstartoil wnen be did on a large scale, are now following other occupations. He says lawyers and doctors, have to study for years to acquire their pro fession, and It stands to reason that a man cannot, at onco, raise chick ens successfully. He has to learn by experience and good judgment. unicuens are so expensive to huy in the market that every household er, if possible, has a few in th backyard in a wire corral, and often leading an al fresco existence, 1. e with no' coop whatever to keep them warm at night And, strange to say these few fowls aro often hardy. Try lng to raise them on a largo scale seems to be mora difficult Sorie of the swell residential houses In Los Angles, in West Adams Street, the Fifth Avenue of the city, havo chick en corrals in the backyard, aait tho chorus of tho chanticleers makei mu sic in the early morning. Cbjickoa raising pays handsomely in d)uta era California, if understood R, E in .Leslie's Weekly. jffjort Jtemuin For a THEME: iloval Courage By WILLIAM M. GROSVENOR IRrctor, Church of llie Incarnation, New YorltJ And David said unto Saul, I cannot , go with these; for I havo not proved them. And he took his staff In his , hand, and choso him live smooth stones out of the brook, and put them I In a shepherd's bag which he had, j even in a scrip: and his sling was in i Iii3 hand; and he drew near tho Philis tine. 1. Samuel, xvll., 39. part 40. ! Thus early in his career did David j the shepherd boy assort the dlstln-1 juio'.iing quality ot his life. He must iu himself, lie was gracious, tactful, I eady to try means which other peoplo wanted him to use; ho was willing to put on Saul's armor, but when it came 1 to the battle he must havo his own ! oft used weapom; lie must fight In I his own way. j All of us are sinners; all of us have I our faults; but wo venture to say that i for i ll of us to-day there is one clean i cut dllutiuctlou that always remains in i our moral and intellectual judgment of man do they ring true? When we saj, "That man Is square; he means , what, he says; you can trust him," how that covers a multitude of sins! I He holds opinions with which we ut terly disagree, but we say he is sin cere, and we respect him. He Is per haps Irritable and cursed with an un fortunate manner; he is tactless and blundering, but he Is as trustworthy as time, and as straight as an arrow, and we believe him. And without U all the gifts of nature and of grace are marred and value less. Though ho speaks with the tongues of men and angels, the mo ment we find him out and know that It is all honeyed words and glittering unrealities the eloquence becomes as sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal. Though he has faith, and goes to church and sings hymns and utters prayers, and all the while is doing it for social recognition or political influence or business success, the mo ment we finnd him out we call him hypocrite and (.isriss him. He may feed tho voor nnd build hospitals and colleges, and churches and libraries, and yet when we know, or even Imag ine that we know, that ho has op pressed the poor, and been hard as flint and stingy and unmerciful to all those who workta for him or deal with him, no amount of explanation will ever redeem his one irreparable fault. There is something very rcmnrkabk about our Lord a discrimination be tween men. He has compassion on the multitude; lie is most sympathe tic with physical suffering; He is most merciful and tender with sinners and social outcasts; lie is most tolerant with honest doubters; Ho takes Into the wide embrace of His arms, out stretched upon tho cross, the whole tragic life of the sin-sick world, but He turnns with almost savage fury on that mental and moral insincerity which made many of tho leading classes oi his own -ay children of the devil. Ho seems to say, Bo true to yourself, bring better Ideals into your life. It is that kind of manhood, sim ple, frank, open true to itself, that nlona will save our politics and our society from the demoralization of its sins and unrealities. What we need supremely to-day Is moral courage. Thousands of young men and women would be saved from moral ruin If they were only bravo enough to be true to themselves and to tho real convictions of their hearts. If we know that gambling, intemper ance, sensuality, are dragging us down, tho first step to victory is to fling compromise and all excuses aside and speak out frankly to our friends. If we think a thing is wrong let us boldly say so, and then there will come to us the larger courage to go on and win a greater victory. Herald Blasts. Some fools and their money won't part until death takes the fool. Education liberates a man from a prison whose walls are ignorance. The faster a man lives, tho easier it is for the devil to keep up with him. The man who can't quit drinking alcohol might try somo of the de natured kind. When a woman wears tho trousers. she generally does It because her hus band won't Instead of thinking 'twice before they speak, some people speak twice before they think. The dead tree which stands through the storm, but after the clouds have rolled away and the sun smiles upon it, falls to the earth with a crash, is like the man who withstands a storm of criticisms anr then falls under the calm of compliments. Perfection. Michael Angolo, the famous sculp tor, was showing a visitor over his studio and pointed out how, on the great work Jn which ho was engaged, he had polished this part, softened that, retouched this since his last vis it "Yes, I see," answered the visi tor, "but these things are such trifles." "So they may be," replied tho great master, "but remember that trifle? make perfeclon, and perfection Is nn trifle." 0. & M. Alliance WORTHY OF THEIR STEEL. Militiaman Asuaged His Thirst and Then Told His Rank. During a strike in the coal mines of West Virginia some years ago, appre hension on the part of the State au thorities led to the calling out of the Militia. There was really no troublo, but the situation was tense and blood shed was looked for at any moment. One day a soldier in uniform, off duty, was strolling through the main streot of the town wherein the great est violence was feared, when he was surrounded by a crowd of strikers. "Honest, now, Bill," asked one o! tho men of the militiaman, "would you fire at your fellow men?" "No, I wouldn't," promptly replied the man in uniform. "I never shot at any one in my life, an' I ain't goln' to do It now." The crowd cheered, and some one Invited the militiaman to have a drink, an invitation which he accepted with alacrity. When he had satisfied his thirst the question was put: "If you are In sympathy with the strikers, why did you answer the call to come hero?" "1 ain't said I was in sympathy with the strikers," was the unexpected re joinder of the man In uniform, "But you said you wouldn't shoot at a miner; that's the same thing," pro tested one of the men. "Well, fellers," said the uniformed one, after a moment's hesitation, "to toll you the truth. 1 never carried a gun in my life. The fact is I play tho cornet in the band." His Tears Had Been Shed. President Hadley of Yale is apt in story telling, and all his tales have an application that those for whom they are intended cannot fall to per ceive. At a reception given for him by an old friend some 500 miles from New Haven one individual with a better memory than tact asked him what he thought of the recent base ball game. As Yale had met with a disastrous defeat, the subject might be called unpleasant. Without hesita tion President Hadley said: "There was a boy who lived In a village whose uncle died. The next day a man driving along the road was surprised to find the boy working in a field. Thinking this did not show proper re spect for the dead uncle, he called the lad to him and said, 'Johnny, didn't you know your uncle was dead?' John ny slowly approached and drawled out: 'Yes, I know it I have cried.'" His Deficiency. A certain Chicago merchant died, leaving to his only son the conduct of an extensive business, and great doubt was expressed in some quarters whether the young man possessed the ability to carry out tho father's poli cies. "Well," said one kindly disposed friend, "for my part, I think Henry is very bright and capable. I'm sure he will succeed." ."Perhaps you're right," said another friend. "Henry is undoubtedly a clev er fellow; but tako it from me, old man, he hasn't got the head to fill his father's shoes." Eggs Boiled to Music. A well-known evangelist tells a story of a visit to a small town in one of the Southern States, where he " as awakened one morning by a soprano voice which came from the kitchen singing a famous hymn. As the bishop was dressing, he meditated on the pie ty of the servant. Speaking to her after breakfast of the pleasure It had given him, he was met with an unex pected answer. "Oh, thank you, sir," she replied, "but that's the hymn I boil the eggs by three verses for soft and five verses for hard." INSINUATING. Madge I never eat such things be cause they spoil the complexion. Marjorle But you used to eat them, didn't you? A Fair Offer. "No," snapped the sharp faced wom an at the door, "I ain't got no food fur you, an' I ain't got no old clo'es. Now, git!" "Lady," replied Harvard Hasben, "I could repay you well. Give me a square meal and I'll give you a few lessons in grammar." Not the Way. "Why have we stopped, captain?" "On account of the fog, madam." "Oh! but, my dear captain surely not! Look!, It's perfectly clear up above." "Aye, ma'am but we're not goln' that way, unless the boiler busts!" Unusual. "Yes; we were disappointed in the peasantry." "As to how?" "They always seemed to be work ing. We never found them dancing or alnerlnci In ,)iami. Lili.l ilnf .I. itiiliitnlnti.l..l.il..l..t..t..ti.l.il..l..f.i.l.it. f t fTTTTTTI i ITT t rrfTTTTTTrTTT HUMOR i OF THE. HOUR I $ $ lh if"t",T' T T"fr f T T i' T $ T ! T frT i i-i'i-iii-r-r-r----ij--j----n-r n-.i-ir-.r-.i-.rin Book Work. Frank Lincoln, who used to be well known in Chicago as an entertainer and humorist, Lad been appearing in London for a time In a monologue. One afternoon he had Just made his bow and was about to begin when a cat walked in and sat down on the stage. "You get out!" said Mr Lincoln, severely. "This Is a monologue, not a catalogue!" Quiet All Right. A little chap In Philadelphia whose father Is a prominent merchant, and, as such, never loses an opportunity to descant upon the virtues of adver tising, one day asked his mother: "May Lucy and I play keeping store in the front room?" "Yes," assented tho mother; "hut you must be very, very quiet." "All right," said tho youngster; "we'll pretend wo don't advertise." THE KIND THAT FIGURES. s 1 Vnn cav Vio'c n prnnt rpfnrnipr! what's his specialty?" "Corsets." Domestic Economy. They had automobiled in twenty-five miles to see Mr. Highflyer's pet ocu list, and on the return trip three tires, one after another, had blown up. Whereupon Mrs. Highflyer remarked plaintively and with intense convic tion: "My dear Alfred, it would have been so much cheaper to have kept you at home and bought you a glass eye!" New York Times. Evidence Lacking. Master What part of speech Is the word egg? Boy Noun, sir. Master Is it masculine, feminine, or neuter? Boy (perplexed) Can't tell, sir. Master Is it masculine, feminine or neuter? Boy (looking sharp) Can't tell, sir, till it's hatched. A Home Trader. A surgeon in a Western town, en gaged to perform an operation of minor character upon a somewhat un sophisticated patient, asked him if he wore willing to havo only a local anaesthetic. "Sure," replied the other; "I be lieve In patronizing home Industry when you can." And ho meant it. The American Habit. BrlErcs I suiinose if I accept your invitation to ko to that dinner you will want me to make a speech. Griggs No, my dear teuow, you see It's this wav. Everybody we have in vited so far wants to make a speech, and what I am trying to do now Is to get together a few listeners. A Rising Fall. A certain member of the British government, who was admittedly great failure, was being discussed by two of his colleagues. "And now," concluded one, "they want to make him a peer!" "No," said the other, with greater acumen, "they want to make him dls appear." Poor Child! "When 1 grow up and marry, moth er, will I have . husband like papa?" asked Mary. "I hope so, dear," said mother. "And if I don't marry, will I bo like Aunt Sue?" "I hope so." "Gracious," said Mary, as she turn ed away, "what a fix I'm in!" Half Awake. There had been a railroad accident and the absent-minded tourist awoke to find himself with a mouthful of sDlinters. Turning uneasily in his shatered berth, he remarked: "Maria, this breakfast food wouldn' be so bad If It had a little more cream on It" His Job. Tnwne He's emnloved. by tho P. n. O. Railroad now. I believe. Browne Yes; he has charge of the puzzle department Towne The nuzzle department? Browne Yes; he" makes out the time tables. Not StoDoed by Trifles. Mistress (who had detected' her mlnrod ook in theft) Why. Dinah I Youv been to communion after rnkln the chicken? Dinah -Sho re, mum. Ye don't think I'm going back on my churoh Jea' fot one cMckenT $4.50 Fancy Rocker for $3.15 because wo make them. Only $3.15 For this handsome nnd comfortable tancy KocUer In Golden Quartered Oak nnd MnhoRany llnlsh. Larcnslr.csrnpcd wood seat, ca9y arras, shaped b.inlstcr baclt. A llrst-rlnss fancy Uoclter In every detail. Retails for i'l ."0 and. above. Buying direct from us elimi nates the dealers and jobbers profit. Write TODAY for our latest catalogue. Free. IS BINGHAMTON, N. Y. If you don't insure with us, we both lose. iNGER k General Insurance White Mills Pa. Tooth Savers We have the sort of tuoth brushes that ar made to thoroughly cleanse and save the teeth. Thev are the kind that clean teeth without leavlns vour mouth full of bristles. We recommend those- co'thi" 23 cents or more. a wu can euaraMec them anil will re- ilaci'. tree, any that shnw ilefcetsiof manu acinic within three months O. T. CHAHBERS, PHARriACIST, Opp.D. & II. Station, HO.NESDALE, PA. JOSEPH N. WELCH HOB h Fire Insurance The OLDEST Fire Insurance Agency in Wayne County. flflieo- Rnpnml flnnr Mnsmiip. Rnild- ing, over C. C. Jadwin's drug store, llonesdale. k One of the best equipped farms in Wayne county-situated about three miles from llonesdale. Everything Up-To-Date. Over 13.000.00 ins been ex tended wlth n the last live years in bulldinss, tools and Improvements. years in bulldlna 165 Acres of which 75 acres are eood uard- oou timber. Ill be sola reasonaoiy. A Bargain. --For further particulars en quire of W. W.WOOD, "Citizen" office. For New Late Novelties IN JEWELRY SILVERWARE WATCHES Try SPENCER, The Jeweler "Guaranteed articles only sold " HIT Hi ARM a SALE